The Weather VOL. ,l*g NO. 3io THE PONTIAC PRESS Hoad Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1901-06 PAGES l INTB8N ATION At .Chooses Home Over Husband • HEADS FOR HOME - Mrs. Alexei Golub, wife of defecting Russian chemist, is acoom-paried by the Soviet ambassador to the Netherlands, Panteleimon K. Pononparenko (right), and Dutch state police as she heads for a plane at the Amsterdam airport and her flight home to Russia. Dutch police fought with Soviet officials at the airport Monday to prevent the departure of Mrs. Golub until they were certain that she was returning of herown true will. Forced to Stop WorfejCity Seeks OK Red Decided to Run jon Improvement Plan at Airport AMSTERDAM (UPI)—Russian scientist Alexei Oolub said he defected to the West because Con&nunist officials forced him to stop work on a nuclear fallout research project, Dutch police reported today. Oolub, who broke away from a party of Russian tour- 7 : r". '• ' J : ' lists during the weekend, told Dutch officials he was “deeply resentful” because State of Syria Is Recognized $388,100 Program Will Be Submitted to State Aeronautics Dept. U.S. Announces Move Today; Names Envoy Chorge D'Affairs he was hampered In his scientific investigations. The 35-year-old scientist said he had worked on the research project with his wife who was the center of a wild custody airport battle here Monday between Soviet embassy officials and Dutch police. * WASHINGTON (API—The United States today recognized the new state of Syria. The State Department, nouncing this, said that the government of Premier Mahmoun al Kuzbari was informed today about the U.S. diplomatic move. The V.S. consulate general Damascus will be .raised to the status of an embassy. Prior to' the appointment of an ambassador, Ridgway B. Knight, the present consul general, will act as charge The State Department announcement said: "The United States government, having taken note of the declaration of the government of the Syrian Arab Republic that it intends to respect and observe its international obligations, has today extended recognition to that government. ‘‘The government of the Syrian v Arab Republic has been appraised of the desire of the U.S. government to raise the status of an embassy the American consulate (Cbntinued on Page 2, CM. 6) After a free-for-all In which Soviet Ambassador P. K. Pm-smareahs was punched in the nese by a Met policeman, Mrs. Golub ehone to leave her and dew eft to Mesoew. The city will formally request approval of an estimated $388,100 airport improvement program for 1962 sometime this week, it was announced today. Homer D. Hoskins, manager of Pontiac Municipal Airport, said Golub said he had been studying means of removing Strontium 90, a cancer-causing radioactive, fallout product, from the human body. (Scientists have reported finding that removal of this substance it exceedingly difficult because in humans it allies itself with cal- Thumbs Down on Teamsters Hoffa Told W by AFL-CIO Teamsters Go Back to Work On Mission of Cheer DETROIT (Jl — The Teamsters Union quit a statewide strike today, assuring a quick return to. construction work on highways and bridges. More than 6,000 teamsters who left their jobs Sept. 27 on hundreds of thousands of dollars in state projects were ordered back tot work. Some were expected' back to work today. A strike settlement was reached on the basis of an overnight tentative contract agreement with the Michigan Road Builders Associa- Parttoalars of the agreement wee* not announced. However, Teamster? officials mid a rati tlcattoa meeting on the teems Winter Worries Road Builders The strike had tied up vital highway and bridge construction in many parts of the state. Announcement of the peace terms came shortly befsre noon in the wake of an afl-night negotiations meeting. Canter ears of apeaka for organised contractors. called off beeaaae of the “great public Importance” of the highway program. About 390 project! had been brought to s halt by the strike and 10,000 workers' other than teamsters had been affected. Frank Fttzaimona. secretary-treasurer of the Teamsters Conference and a Teamsters international vice president, said the today that final plana were ready I tentative agreement includes and would be submitted to (he Michigan Department ‘ of Aeronautics by Oct. 15. They will then go to the Federal Aviation Agency for approval. If the request is okayed, the city would get an estimated $294,300 in federal'and State aid. Strike Which Snarled County Projects Over, but Cold Weather Near Now that the strike which has snarled road Improvements in Oakland GBuaty has been settled, officials here have another problem confronting them. That is, how much work, which as lost since the strike of the Teamsters Union began Sept 28, can be made up before winter weather sets in? l, a ‘‘fitting wage pattern,” and adjusts extra apart of warmth. Paving of the first c section of Interstate 15 in Oakland County between Davlsburg and Grange Hall rands might get under way by next week and be completed before cold weather, according to James Dykatra, construction gineer for the Pontiac office of the jfitete Highway Department. LACK OF FREEDOM Police said Golub told them he “deeply resented the lack of freedom in the Soviet Union.” "But when I was ordered to stop all work on my pet project, I decided to leave for the West Final approval of the project would not come until sometime in January. Contracts for improvements would probably be let next summer, Hoskins said, a-POINT PROGRAM The proposed program includes five paints: The federal govern- was quoted i adding. His chance came when he aad Us wife Joined s Soviet latonrist travel agency party tor a va-ratios tour of Western Exrape. | Fight Off Sharks j in Pacific Waters MMHj 1 “Of the total estimated coat, the city’s share would be about IM.3M.” Hoskins said. "The state would pay *»1,«» and the federal share wsdM he about Chance of Rain, Cooler Weather Seen Tomorrow I V. roent would pay hslf the coat of fi *1“ ^ “ , Chancebe abou(. acres a^y purchased tor remote control antennae.! The total cost of the land was $4,190. This point will not directly effect 1962 construction at the airport The largest single item would be widening of the airport’s east-west runway. This Is the airport’s major ■trip measuring 5,300 feet long aad 100 feet wide. He said despite the strike gyad* I big continued along the new road to prepare for the laying of n foot of sand base before the concrete is spread along the initial 6-mile stretch. DELIVERY DELAYED I Delivery of concrete, steel and (beams was delayed by the strike.] tay Claims Ousted Union Heads Corrupt AT Phrtrtam COMES TO SEE SAM — President John F. Kennedy walks through the lobby of Baylor Hospital. Dallas, on his wi$ to Speaker Sam Rayburn’s roam to visit the ailing lawmaker. The President spent 14 minutes with the 79-year-old House speaker who has cancer- Kennedy went 3,000 mDes out of his way for the visit. JFK Travels 3,000 Miles to Visit Stricken Rayburn Also Criticizes Kennedy for Not Doing Enough on Jobless Situation NEW YORK U1 — The AFL-CIO Executive Council today voted 25-2 against permitting the International Brotherhood of Teamsters to rejoin the merged labor movement as long as It has Its present leader-ship. AFL-CIO President George Meany said the position taken by the council was in link with the organization's constitutional provisos against memberships fay groups under corrupt domination. “There is eve _ that the Teamsters t'nion Is msro the Influence of criminal James R. Hoffs heads the Teamsters Union. He has been the target of frequent attacks hi ro» bent years, both from members of Congress aad others Including Kennedy administration officials. OUSTED 4 YEARS AGO The Teamsters Union was ousted from the AFL-CIO four years There’s a chance of showers and Dykstra said, however, that cooler temperatures tomorrow, the weatherman said. Temperatures Thursday through Saturday will average near the normal high of U to 07 and normal low of 41 to IT. Tonight’s tow will drop to 00. PrecipHattou wtB total’ three-quarters to see tack In rain today aad again about flatnrdey. Morning southwesterly winds at 5 miles per hour will become 10-18 contractors were far enough ahead of schedule that not too much ^damage was done on the first 25-Section of 1 75 under construction in the county. He said he hoped work could continue immediately on the rebuilding of M59 east of Pontiac where a detour had to be continued longer than expected because of the Strike. the lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m., The mercury reading at 2 Atomic Worker* Strike Again$t Wage Freeze DALLAS, Tex, (A—Ailing Sam Rayburn has probably received the best medicine there is for a lifelong politician: a visit from the President of the United States. President Kennedy went 3,000 miles out of his way Monday to spend 14 minutes with the 70-yesr-old speaker of the House who has cancer. The President ^originally had planned to jgo directly to Washington from Newport, R.I., where he had spent the weekend. John Holton, Rayburn’s admin- Steel Worker Slays Four Men That would mean over fhrt million idle.again. Meany was asked to a news Gary, Ind, Laborer Wounded Four Others Before Being Killed tire family was gratified and pleased fay the graciousness of the visit. They were pleased indeed.’ Holton said Rayburn told him at, he and the President discussed everything from politics to events. A spokesman for the Oakland County Road Commission said it will probably be a race against the calendar now to continue three county projects affected by the strike of drivers. They are Middle Belt Road from Grand River Avenue to the new SALWICK Eng. (AP) - More than 1,600 atomic woitera staged one-day strfee at the British Interstate 60S; Joslyn road to an being reprimanded today for loaf- l ing on the job and Idlfed tour men! 1M4 SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — Eight persona, including three ! nil-line stewardesses, today were recovering from a harrowing * r 2( hours spent clinging to n capsized sailboat in the shark-i infested waters 0! the Fiji Islands. Pan American stewardesses Gudron Meisner, 32, of San i Mateo, Calif., Estella Navarro, 29, of San Francisco, and Mrs. j Margaret Kfareher, 32, 0! Riverside, .Calif., were recuperating at Hoooiulu’t Queens Hospital today. GUptala J. W. Adrinace aad first officer W. K. Lang * borne of Pan Am were (town here, laagherer. who lives j la Atherton, to a nephew »( England's Lady Astor. Also to the group werer Paddy Doyle, owner of the boat, Captain Inn Gemmel and flight engineer Derek Stubbs, both of New Zealand’s overseas airline. They sailed from Nandi, Fiji, Friday morning in a 26-foot stoop. Alter n .day of picnicking and skin diving, the sloop 1 was hit by a gust of wind and capsized around 6 pan. “We got Miss Navarro, who can’t swim, secured to the side of the boot, took stock of our situation and realized that with night faHtwg there wasn’t much chance of our being found,’’ Adriance recalled. Atomic Energy Authority plant interchange with I 75; and Wat-here Monday in protest against the kins Lake Road , from Dixie High-The n^t big item,-with an estb government’s wage freeze policy, way south. ” . mated cost of 1160 006 would he Pickets carried placards reading William Mercer, assistant chief IjMll u widening of the eakt-west taxiway "Atoms on the Cheap" and “Ban,engineer for the commission, said . M“sA“: P1*”1 t^rat la jjying with his head proppe widenin' of the eakt-west taxiway. -----------he didn’t expect the asphalt to be *or »* The President stood for a time. L .. .. * . " T. . . hum Imwh IrlllmH u mu raiaisfaii _* * J __ Arbie Davis, 29, Gary, also wounded four other men in the wild rampage through several buildings of the U.S. Steel Go. sheet and tin mill. Wiled' before the laborer died with a guard’s bullet in his head were Joe Guydon, 37; Donald Moran* 46; Royal Rutt and Neal Wolfrath, 48. 1 tampering It wHh lest. It was to 1034, that, contrary to the'usual pattern, the party to power picked up extra House seat* in a year to which the president wasn’t running. Naturally, Democrats hope that wifi happen again next tall,- and here was Sam Rayburn, on Ms sickbed, carefully planning ahead. HEAD PROPPED UP who has been speaker Meany said nothing had happened stace then to indicate it had been cteaneed of corrupt influences. Then he added his opinion that it was now more than ever under influence of criminal and corrupt dements. way spoke at a news confer CIO meetings got under way here Monday, whether he was satisfied with Kennedy sdmtototrntion programs to solve the idle worker situation. “No, I am art,” the tapers- iltsmmltm of the work of the now-adjourned session -of Congress was scheduled today by the 29-man AFLrCIO Executive Council. Previously, Andrew J, BiemiUer, the labor orgatPmttan’s legislative director, had praised the Kennedy admiristntion. f Plans call for the taxi way, nowise Freeze.” The labor chiefs also a vately talking over succession possibilities House of Representatives in Washington now that Speaker Sam Rayburn has been afflicted twice as long as anyone else was1 with incurable cancer. [tying with his head propped' up. 1 ——....... ■ y , ... it* feet wide, to be 75 fee* wide. Along'with all other workers in|J«d « I £ £ s^ta^S^TSS fe to‘the “roSfwitoti "These two improvements will help us handle larger aircraft,” Hoskins, said. they decided to swtan the five mies ta the Island of Mala Main. * •We were nearing the island when we were^set opt* by 9 Mack-fin sharks. ’Paddy Doyle ritot the larger one with n spear gun and we frightened the other away and we finally made the island.”' They drawled exhausted to shqre, but still continued their survival preparations. Doyle used his spew gun to shoot dawn a coconut and' the gun's recoil broke his nose, but Adriance said “ere art it.” A private plane spotted them as it was getting dark Saturday night and four hours Inter the group was beck in Nandi. 1 calls far the to-stalfatten of Mgk Intensity Ight-lag on the east-wart lawway aad rStocattoa of lights on ona side of the raaway which would ha necessitated by the widening. New lighting would cost about $37,000 and relocation, $25,000, according to Hoskins. The runway now has medium intensity lighting. government service, employes at|«* Nov. 1 terminal date for pav-the atom plant have been told I ~ they must go without wage raises The first two projects were held Ate* wounded were Ben Proft. - the nation’s ecwwmte situs-i up because the sand for tbe*txue Gerald Myers, U, aad David 'wasn’t being delivered, he said. I Shader, It. Allies Hedge Over Berlin Talks “The overall project, proved, should remit ta our being WASHINGTON (AP) — France | and West Germany are expected give reluctant approval to further Washington-Moscow talks able to offer present airline tral- aimed at a Berlin settlement Hie fic much better faculties and provide suitable ferllltfes lor bigger planes ta the future,” he arid. Flashes WAMONGTON (AP) — Prrsl LONDON (UPI) - Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko snid today “taste is a possibility" •( a peaceful Berlin erttiemcpL Shortly afterward he France and Weal Germany Kennedy, who said he found Rayburn "somewhat thimer, 'extremely lively,” kept the visit short In order not to tire the speaker. He left the room to talk With Rayburn's physicians, then went Sack-in to say goodbye. euctouRes would be at the am- However, file French and Wert to hold oft on further East-West exploratory contacts until fiw Western powers agree to n united approach to the Berlin problem. This was mode clear by dfeto- ■toertag group met for SH hours Monday night wHh Foy D. Kohler, asototaht secretary of state. The British, French and West German envoys-, and their sides have been meeting almost dally with Kohler, head at the State De- force for Ger- partment'i many. Diplomatic sources, to disclosing the French and West German views, conceded that the gap between the thinking to Washington, London, Paris and Boon was not bridged when the Western foreign ministers met here ta September. To underitoe the French position, Ambassador Herve Alphand, attended Monday night's meeting, also saw Secretary State Dean Rusk alone. Alphand and the' other envoys were not available for comment after the conference. Kennedy told reporters: not share the German and French)!**1 • «•* <*nvemtion. I was Gromvko taPWr to hav* » good chance to _ „ f italic with Mm lid’s mlsslr nl nMHwta talks. Specifically, some Wasfong-ton authorities disagree with WO-helm Grewe, the German, ambaa- Finish Training Pact PARIS (AP)—FwmaUtias were completed Mayday on an agreement for the United States to tor street the French on uses of tie weapons, the American Embassy reported. * In Today's Press sador, who said on Sunday that the Kennedy-Gromyko meeting seemed to him “a step back- The Eawpaaa allies and Bnvtrt ror-Andrei A. Ore- U.S. 'officials wan) reported to jiavit told the diplomats they do talk with him. He’s sick, of course I was glad I could be with him. He was to good spirits aad ■bowed courage enough for any- French Troops Nearer to U.S. N-Arm* Training PARIS (UPD-The French For- Love Field is iM tram Bayfer Urtver- ilty Medical Center, Kennedy moved an briskly ke was able to that plans to train French NATO troops In Germany in the use of U.S. nuclear weapons have moved closer to roaHty. i Convicted in Slaying A spokesman said that Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Mur-vfite and U.S. Ambassador James M. Gavin exchanged letters n view to putting the to operation.4 *m accord signed July 27. CHICAGO (AP) -Lis Hester, 14, at fifth-grader waA convicted Monday right of ' / stabbing a woman school teacher. 1 sentence 'at. Murder or Suicide Was CX.U.N. official a suicide ta I960, or was he killed by Bad PAGE M. Wanted or Not Sea. Fulbright facing tough primary — page it. Dovfct Soviet } Navy scoffs at Bad data to heat subs — PACUB A Aren News ............ Comics • «* H Editorials Markets ,.vi§ j j Obituaries spurts v> ■■«■■■ j . '« j 14-17 TV A Kadto Programs WUsaa, Rut '«««.. ... $S j Wsawa’s Fagea ...... IMS TWO THE PONTIAC PRBjS, TCTSDAY> OCTQBBR |0, I9$l lArmy Training Period i Extended in E, Germany motorboat in tfc« |fm Mvn to- I Mi falaa la Bant nrqpaaj fcy and Hwtm for their Ives to ticn hi fact a nwhUhatiaa of BERUN\ (Un> — Communist East Germany today extended the taogte of military service beyond t|* ncidar two-year training Ported hi a move to bolster East “2n» East Gana_________________ ■*W in an official communique ®«t the defense ministry h^i been empowered by the cabinet to beep soldiers scheduled for dkdmrge tUs fen ia toe armed services for another six months. The communique made It clear Kama left tp the dfacfcettonof the, RKKUN (UPI) - Communist i two beys and a girt — to abaadea their disdHIie soldiers or.order the continuation oI their service. The move was seen by Western military experts as another step tor mobilisation of the Communist armed forces. The Weal German defease ministry iMaanl Monday that (iaat maaeavers by toe Soviet*. Ea*t Germans, Coeeheoievahtoao Allied military experts in said the Communist mohiliaation and maneuvers to East Germany comprise the fraet|rt military threat to the West states (he and of Worid War H. AN 0TECHNIQUE But they said the mat tlon does not prove that the Reds actually plan to fight a war. More likely, they said, the military moves are a variation of the time-honored Communist technique of jttaing armed might for political purposes — to this case to force Western concessions over Berlin. Cuba Charges That U5. -HAVANA (AP) — Fidel Castro's Octant accused toe United States Manley night of training invasion forces at fo U.S. bases her of Central-Amejican govern- sault on Cuban shpree. It said the forces included paratroops and were stronger than those cut down to the abortive landings last April. — Actng Foreign Minister Carlos Olivares called, in tbo diplomatic corps to press the charges in a 1',600-word note. He claimed toe invasion training network extended from Guantanamo Bay to the Panama Canal Zone. He contended tost 900 paratroopers were among the forces being readied United States was setting stage lor invasion by trying to disrupt relations between Cuba and the other govenm through the uw of forged docu- OBvaret asserted that a num- The Cuban note apparently was a preview af tba policy ^mrh Cuban Foreign Minister Raul Roa is to give in the U.N. General Assembly in New York this afternoon. Except far toe details on training id ahti-Castro exiles, moot of the chargee had been aired by Castro and his spokesman in recant weeks. Cuba also sector, has submitted a complaint to the UJf. General Assembly charging the United States is planning new against the Castro re- East Sunbathes as North Stews Over Chilly Deal ~ ly The Associated Preaa October’s spell of mild weather ■continued in moot of the eastern Sail of the nation today but it was cool in northern areas from the Plains into the Plateau region. - Fair sides and nearly summe like temperatures extended across moat section* from die Miojgiewypf Vafley eastward to the Atlantic Coast Temperatures in the 7040 raiwe, simpar to~th£ Readings toe putnewrel days, were nficatM. LAW OP M Chilly air covered areas in the Rockies and Plateau region offer toe season'll first heavy snowfall, with a lew of 21 reported in Bryce Canyon, Utah. Readings in the cod belt were mostly in the 90s ^ In the eastern half of the country, temperatures were high 50s and 60s with 70s in parts of the South. lOME WET SPOTS “There were some wet spots, kato and drizzle fell in the soutb-fm and central Plains and the Jjpper Great Lakes region. More -than one Inch of rain fell In Eons of Kansas and Oklahoma during toe night. Fort Riley, "tit rain in a six-hour period. Near-, ly two inches fell in Ponca City, Okla., and Fort Worth, Tex. Wert Berlin pottoe said toe Incident flared when the Wert Germans gathered ia the Amari-qpetor near the border, yelled In and then threw rocks at patrolling Communists, Then they began snipping the win with cut- gfane. NO REACTION OUvaree’ charges drew no immediate reaction from toe State Department in Washington. Press officer Lincoln White declined to comment. Olivares assembled the 32 eign envoys before large maps of the United Mates and the Caribbean on which he pointed out the alleged training sites. He pinpointed the Florida location as West Palm Baach, Pompano, Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood, Opalocka, Hialeah, Homestead Tavernier, Islamorada. Big Pine, Long Key, Marathon Key, Key >Wert, St. Petersburg, Sere-end Dry Tortuga*'- weak of Key Wert.. NAMES ‘TRAINING CENTERS* Olivares claimed other training centers in the United States were at Fort Worth, Tfex.; Norfolk, Va.; Fort Bragg, N.C., and New Or- He asserted that one of the biggest training centres is at Vue-ques, an island nine miles east of the Puerto Rican main Wand, hat many anti-Castro Cubans much supporting military equipment are being massed at the U.S. naval bare on Guantanamo Bay. * * .fr The spokesman claimed that U.S. agents are repainting American twin-engine bombers with Cuban air force colors and imdghia for use in the invadon. He said the United States had grouped the planes at Santa Isabel, Puerto Rico. wmtm u0MR they Mod to atop tog rooks and Insults at On asmo After the________J| |_________ by toe East Germans, Wert Berth) police arretted right at the young Wert Berliners and dispersed the at them. Four other toar-fas grenades hurtled into Wert Berlin when a Wert Berlin sound truck began transmitting news along the border. Wert Berlin police promptly tamed beck the grenades which discharged their gas hi the Eastern Consider Action to Rezone Land City Commission OK Would Affect 9 Acres Near Shopping Center The major item on the agenda for tonight’s City Oommiseten meeting will be a public hearing and second reading of an ordinance for rezoning some nine acres of land in the Glenwood Plaza Shopping Centre area. If approved tonight, the otto-nance would go Into effort to 1* days, enabling developers to get expansion piano under way. The planning commission last week approved the ordinance which will rezone land on the east and south of the site from residen-tial to commercial. *. fr A- ■•»*—•' Agreements concerning suitable access to the centre and methods of providing buffer zones between the center and surrounding residential areas must be signed before the ordinance gets final approval. The Weather Full CA Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly sunny and warm today, high near M. Partly cloudy tonight, low M. Wednesday partly dandy with a chance of showers and'taming n little colder, high 74. Winds southwesterly 8-15 miles becoming 10-1S miles tonight. uanCe will be ap for otewi reading and approval. This would resuae properties at W. Huron and Johnson streets for the construction of a medical »■■)« across fr era! Hospital. A. I Commissioners, will slab get five 'reports from the planning commission regarding requests to rezone or vacate properties. Threat Charges Are Not Proven Agriculture Qf^icUjiU Cleared of .Prewiring], Farm Organizations ARRIVES IN LONDON — Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko gestures to nowsmen on arriving at London Airport from tho United States today. Withtoim is Alexandre 8oMatov, Russian ambassador to Britain. Gromyko came to London for a brief round at talks with Prime Minister Macmillan and Forefen Minister Lord Hume. See story on Page 1. Air Proposed Ordinance to Screen Food Handlers and May before congressional hum hearings were held. A A * ‘ The subcommittee released its nuttings to e report on doaod hearings hold Aug- 15, . to krytog to? wto toe soppsrt of C- W. McMillan, emiMvo vies prtridiat of the Cattlemen’s Atosttelit* The Waterford Township board meeting last night centered around the issue of whether to enact a food handter's ordinance. have to b* Uconaed," McGee Mod. Johnson appointed a survey committee of McGee,' Anderson and John Coleman to study reaction in Waterford Township to the ordinance. The purpose of reopening discussions for the ordinance stemmed from file conditions of outdoor fruit stands which have mushroomed all over the township -thtf year. In most cases there are no indoor lavatory facilities and the fruit and vegetables are left In the open for Insects and flies, board members said. The aew ordinance, which was patterned afire the one used by Pontiac, weald require stand* to be screened la. Some fruit market merchants in the township deep in trailers and have outhouses on the premises. After a two-hour discussion, Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson asked for individual opinions on adopting the proposed ordinance. Clerk Janies E. SeeterUn pointed out that township merchants are already paying for health inspections through the county and state departments. The new ordinance would cover all food handlers. LEAN TOO HEAVILY1 Trustee Loren Anderson kakl, ’I’m in fever at this ordinance. We are supposed to be growing and we are leaning too heavily on the county for support. Sooner or later we've got to get out of this lagoon." Another trustee, Joseph McGee oaid he was against toe Duncan f—Hfiod that he reminded McMillan that the Agriculture of their responsibilities. Department had about POO million available for buying goods for the' school lunch program. But Duncan denied Rflrwu frfiaiK. Girls Ponytail Causes Death ifl Machinery MOUNT CLEMENS if) — Everybody admired 9 • year • old Lois Clara Kaiser’s ponytail hairdo. It was 32 inches long. It won her a prize at the recent Michigan State Fair. A A A Lois died of brain injuries in si Detroit Hospital Monday. A- A A With a sister andtwo brothers, Lois was helping her father, Ralph Kalder, 38, cut sod. She bent too dose to the machine as she was rolling turf. The ponytail caught in the flywheel. Lois’ head was yanked into the machinery. food would be effected-“this would mean that approximately 50 per cent or more of the 750 business establishments would Charles Ferry to Resign Post With GOP Unit Charles A- Ferry, public relations director of the Oakland County Republican committee, will re sign his poet effective Oct. 15. -Ferry’s resignation was announced by Charteo L. Lyle, newly alerted county GOP chairman, who laid toe organization's Arthur G. Elliott Jr., outgoing GOP chairman who recruited Fer- Ferry is one of the moot effective public relations men the party has ever had. His services will be sorely missed. A Ferry Joined the Oakland GOP in August of 1960. The P«y in Birmingham Survival Plan Approved by Civil Defense Office WASONCnON (UPI) ■■ investigators today cleared Agri- B1RMINGHAM — The City Commission to expected to uteri to two dr three weriR to fffitorijy discuss toe taplmertrtto of toe civil dsfouro plan for n*v Manager L. R. Gare said Administration's farm MU'. Walter E. Tamer Service for Walter E. Turner, 81, of 1214 Graefleld fit will fcrfpja. Bnuntoar at the Manley Qafiey The Birmingham Survival Plan fuareai Home. Burial will ha to received approval free* w Mt. Royal cemetery, PfBtoorgh. Utah Awertatloa. Loulsl- department offidtla- of -peltol State Ctvfi Defense office today. j report oa how foe •Merged plea should b» «•**•* w“ •ebmltted to the uimuiMou by ptee City Maaifer Bobort nine bat ao action was token. Ike report contained to rtepo that would have to be taken. Councilmen agreed they would ■art In the near future to deter ■nine the various ftsps that would have to be initiated to put the ■arrival plan Into operation. A fr * Tr*** commissioner has received a copy of the Plan, incorporating all the previous policies and procedures established In tho etty tor civil defeoM, and h currently studying It. it weald be up to the omn-nisolon to make any correcttoas, HUM— « addttt—. Once the CD program to ap proved by the commlsrion, Kenning aaid contact should be made with the private organization! involved in order to apprise them Under federal law a person coiv victed of threatening a witness before a congressional o would be tubfcct to a maximum penalty of 15,000 fine and five years Imprisonment. 53.9 Million at Work Set Record for U.S. WASHINGTON (AP)-Employ-ment ia the United States reached 53,900,000, a record I September. Unemployment dropped 450,000 to 4.1 million, but the Labor Department aakl the decline was mostly seasonal. Secretary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg said the total of employed was about 200,000 above the previous record, set in September 1900, and 2.6 million above the level in February, when economists say the recession hit bottom. A A A Seymour Wrtfbein, Labor Department manpower expert, said the employment figure tor September would have been higher except for the strikes in General Motors auto plant* last week. “I am particularly happy to say that a full half-million of the rise in wage and salary employment has occurred among the hard goods industries which bore the brunt at the recession,’’-Goldberg He said that the city should to expand the preaeit training of volunteers fop fire, police, rescue and medical care. State of Syria Is Recognized (Continued From Page One) general in Damascus and to ap- ! ry into tba GOP fold, eald "Mr. pnire widgwsy k—Knight charge d’affaires.' U.S. officials made it dear early this month that the United States would recognize Syria as soon as some of the more ' Arab cauntries recognize the new f regime. 'May Build600-F ______| staff of the personnel of flee to adequately handle a jpeet-ly enlarged dril defense program. Mr. Tuner died yeaterfbqr af St. Joseph Mercy Hoatftal, Ppntiec. ' He w«s a specification writer for the Detroit Arsenal and had been a sales engineer with General Motors Truck and Coaoh for 33 yean, retiring in 1160. He was a member of Btarming-ham Lodge, FAAM 44, tho Scottish Rite and the Moslem 8hrtoe, Pittsburgh. * Surviving are Ms wife Either; a daughter, Mrs. Robert Hearn of Warren; two sons, Allen of daw-son and P|ri at Birmingham, and Mrs. VlrgB Write Service for Mrs. Virgil (Jope-phine) Welle, 73, of 1491 Birmingham Btvd., waa bald yeeterday at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial was in Napoleon. Mrs. Walls died Saturday at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, following an Ulnae of (even tooths. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Lehoy Hooper of Birmingham; a son, William Slack of Freeport, Grand Bahama, British Wert Indies; one grandson and three tten ef the arrival plan, Ken- the public should be conducted In boric civil defense for the In- Two Patrolmen Ordered Fired The necessity of hiring additional personnel to work on dril defense will be decided by the commission in determining how toon each step outlined will be initiated, ac-cording' to Kenning. \ A A A “It would be Impossible for the Man Is Killed Crossing Road John H. Kristola, 64, Walks Ife Front of Car in W. Bloomfield Twp. 64-year-old West Bloomfield Township man was killed night when he walked In front of automobile while crossing Maple Road at Middle Belt Road. AAA Fatally Injured waa John H. Kristola of 6615 Middlebelt Road. The driver of the car, Carl E. Reisig, 30. of 3315 S. Milford Road, Milford, was not held by Wei Bloomfield Township Police. Police said that according to wit-nesses Kristola waa several feet rtf tfm ruth Umlring 'he was reading, the newspaper he carried, When he was struck. Reisig told police that the ber caution light was bright and he didn't see Kristola until he was 10 or 15 feet away from him. The accident occurred shortly after 7 p.m. bull Umpcraturt | , At • ».m.: Wind velocity’ I Direction: Southwest. ; » aim MV Tunday *t S U p m ' imam rites Wednesday at d:40 a.m ...ii-Moon sets Tuesday at l:4f p m . Moon Irises Wednesday at S:M a. Oaa Taar Af* In fastis# l. Highest temperature ........... tersest temperature J. Mean temperature .........1 Weather—euany ■Ifheet sad Lew ret Teasperateree Tbit Data la ■* Tear. M lh IMS _____ » In 1101 M—day*. Tifirataei Chart i n M Miami Baach L,„ uerqu# TJ 16 MttvatUtae 7» II jwftHM*' to H M £ NATIONAL weather - Warm weather is expected to con-2* tinqe tonight in die eastern third of the nation* while cooler tern-/ r ferettates are forecast for 0m pacific Northwest and tl\e Northern * Rockies. It wifi bp generally fair except for tome showers in scattered spots in the Midwest NEW YORK (UPI)—If you’ve ever wondered what a scientific nightmare looks like, Just fire up your imagination and envision a space rocket the size Of the battle-I ship USS Missouri. It's a spine-rattling possibility {that makes the nation’s new Nova moon rocket, by comparison, a building game for children. The future of America's ambitious programs tor mind exploration trio deep space will depend upon the eeteome at a sort of apace-age “David and Goliath" batf|e between the ttaqr atom and the giant chemtcnl rocket. Unless U.S.:- scientists tame nuclear power for rocket propulsion purposes in time, they fece the prospect of having to build rockets weighing up to 100 million pounds, Chauncey J. Hamlin Jr. of North American Aviation, Inc., said. A A A Hamlin presented the “probability’’ of the 100 million-pound rocket as an idea to the American Rocket Society’s “Space Report to the Nation,’’ a week-long in which more than 15,000 acton-tists and engineers throughout ths country .are taking part. ‘ARE FEASIBLE* Hamlin said the Nova program to land men on the moon this decade “is Indeed but a Wright Brothers approach to space ex* jploratipn." ..... . He added that “it would appear that 100 million-pound space vehicles are feasible’’ but that “It . , . we can develop nuclear rock- 3 V eta there may. be little necessity tor our 100 million-pound vehicle.' A -A. A Hamlin said the problems would be so enormous that “we should not undertake' the development’ of a giant chemical rocket this size except as a last resort. The reckrt that Hamlin discussed In theory would stand MS fort tall, sr lit tort taller than the Washington Monument. It might have a booster tank 250 feet high and 60 feet in diameter. Should such a rtckrt Mow up, It could cause blast damage equal to that of a 50 kiloton bomb—two and one-half times the force of the atomic weapons that devastated Hiroshima and Nagasaki. A A A Hamlin suggested that the price for a minimum of 50 launchings would run |30 billion over a 10-year span, but that fids “does not sound unreasonable to the light of estimates regarding our present lunar undertaking which range up to $40 billion.” The Neva racket, enly one-tenth the else of Bandin'* proposed “super-giant,” Is still a M per cent “paper project.” The Federal Space Agency enly recently bought land far launching tt at Cape Oaqavetal. Meanwhile, work on a nuclear rocket haa continued to ((program, called “Rover." Scientists era developing Rover, which power of the atom in cotphlnatton .with liquid hydrogen, aa an upper- stage tor the Saturn booster" rocket. super-land Saturn-may be married for their first flight to 1965—possibly M*v MAICK H if ht • well in time to head off the head- MAY MAKE FUGHT f jachM oi a 100 million-pound pure It the timetable Is met, Rqvo* chemical booster of the type Ham- - j nn outlined. Britisher Has Sniffles i LONDON (UPI) - Selwyn Lloyd, chancel lor of the exchequer, today was reported ill with influenza. Air National Guard Calls 2,250 to Duty WASHINGTON (AP) - Another 2,250 Air National Guardsmen have been ordered to active duty Nov. 1 by the Pentagon. The callup Monday waa for three Jet fighter squadrons to South Carolina, Arizona and Tennessee. They will report to their home bases. . A ' A A The -three unite have 65 F104 Jet Starfighters, bringing to more than 500 the number of fighter planes and accompanying personnel - called by the Air Force. Eighteen other Air Guard and Air One UJS. scientist revealed Monday that plans are already under way to map traffic control lanes from the moon— though the Nova rocket program was barely oft paper. Walter C. Nelson, design fen-gtoew at the Marita Osmpany’s Orlando, Fla., dhrteteu, outlined twp corridors each hundreds of miles wide—branching off the Oct L ORDERED TO DUTY Ordered to active duty Monday, were the 197th Fighter Interceptor Squadron of Phoenix, Arts. 157th Fighter Interceptor Squadron of Eastover, S.C.*. the would be uaed as landtag and departing tones tor aU lunar vehicles, Including Nqva and other rockets beyond teat. Meanwhile, another company, Hughes Aircraft of Culver CHy, Calif., unveiled a full-scale modal of an ion engine, a form of propulsion that eventually may send a manned space'craft to Mars at a speed of better than two miles per day. A' A .fr Hughes, is building the engine for the National Aeronautics,and Space Administration, and plans to fly it for the first time next iSirt Fighter interceptor Squad- year aboard a Scout rocket. Trial Board Hearings for Beach and Taig Back Up Suspensions The Pontiac Police Trial Board has ordered that two patrolmen, suspended to August, be fired. A A ★ , Former Patrolmen Jack C. Beach and Richard E. Taig were suspended Aug. IT on charges of official misconduct, incompetency, neglect of duty and conduct unbecoming an officer. Beth men dented all charges and demanded a hearing before the trial baud. Four bearings were held beginning Sept. 97. “The trial board found both men guflty as charged last idgM,” said H. Malcolm Kahn, pnsUwit, this morning. AAA “The board has ordered their immediate separation from the department.’’ Beach, 26, and Taig, 24, both Joined the force In August 1999. They were suspended by Acting Chief Joeeph Koren who recommended that they be separated from the department. 2 Reds to Die for Theft MOSCOW ut—Two men have been sentenced to death and 3D to prison terms up to IS yean for stealing state merchandise In Kazakhstan, the newspaper Kazakhstan Pravda aaid Monday. It reported that^one group of 15 worker* In the district supply admin-istration made off with $60,000 rubles of goods, including a nil-way car loaded with sugar. The head of this group was sentenced to death as was the head of another group, which also consisted of 16 persons. Sworn In on U.S. Job WASHINGTON (UPI) - Donald ’■ Alexander, 57, former vice president of the Whirlpool Carp., was sworn in Monday as U j. maritime administrator. ron of Knoxville, Tenn.; and supporting maintenance, materiel, and medkial units. ' Once last summer. 156,000 Army, Navy and Air Force Reservists and Guardsmen have called to duty. Ion engines develop comparatively little thrust but can deliver power avef a great fongtb of time. Chemical rockets, on the other head, can deliver huge amounts of power, but for only a few minutes at tiie maximum. tt GOT PKMIDK.vriAl. HANDSHAKE — Thiee youngsters who show hands and spoke with President Kennedy while he wag to Baylor Hospital are shown after their meetb« with the Presi-«nt They are tarry Falhaber (in b4d>; Debra Garner and Ted Owtareorth. MI of Dallas. The President sported the children as I* was leaving Speaker Sam Rayburn’s room and popped to to greet them and wMi a speedy recovery. See stunt on Pege. L THE POflTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1961 THREE Say Sovleto May Have Small fr.Ffret m *Ndvy Scoffs at FledClaims to Fastest Sabs (AP) — ''Wsjctolm that the Soviet Unioa haaito be quoted by name, aald the don t believe It” was the reaction the world’s fastest Abet of nucleariNavy thinks the Soviets have. a teday of a top Wavy antisubma-1 submarines. small Aset of xnef—r submarines. rtnewwtoe authority to a Soviet! The authority, who did not want! But he added: 'Of they have a 2 Found Dead, 1 Alive After Wreck of Plane DAWSON CREEK,' B.C. (UPD— The bodies of two men, including a newspaper editor, were fecov* ered today from the wreckage of a light plane which crashed near here I^day. One other person survived. ' * * ★ The plane — on a 75-mils flight ■ from Hudson Hope, to Dawson Qreek, went down in a snowstorm 50 miles weqf of here, killing pilot Ron McAuliffe end Ron Murphy, editor of the Dawson Creek New*. The lone survivor, Tom Humble; also a Ipcal resident, walked out of the bueh Monday night. He was admitted to the hospital 'with exposure and burnt. N.Y. Board of Health CIoms Tattoo Parlors NEW YORK The board! of health .Monday ordered the city I wetoht. tattoo parlors closed in anl effort to fight the spread of hepatitis. > I The board sakl it issued the order, effective Nov. 1, because a recent survey disclosed that tat* too needles have, helped transmit hepatitis, an inflammation of the submarine up to the state of the Nautilus we’d.be surprise*]." EVOLVED BETTER MODELS The Nautilus was the first nuclear submaribe. it was commissioned about seven years ago and the Navy since has evolved more advanced models. The U& fleet now has >14 clear -attack submarines. A ] will be commissioned shortly. 'A * A -Thirteen others are in various stages of consrtuctlon. Also with the fleet is a nuclear submarine armed with 500-mile-range Regu-lus guided missiles. IMPORTANT ELEMENT An increasingly important element of U.S. striking power is the Polaris submarine, capable: of firing atomic-tipped rockets over 1,300 miles. She of these are at sea or close to combat readiness. Thirteen more either have been launched or are being built. , I The Navy has concedsd the Soviets the capability to build nu-j dear submarines, but has not reported sighting any. ■„>" A. * - A ' One authority estimated the Soviets are between seven and eight yean behind the United States— in Abet he called, a rudimentary state of the art SCORE AT CLAIMS Navy sources scoffed it the Soviet delmqpubUshed by the Soviet newspaper Izvestia, that "Soviet nuclear submarines. are the fastest in the world.’’ officer put it: ‘‘we’ll break any record they want to set." * :■ About 10 days ago, Adm. ■eorge W. , naval opera) believed the Soviets a ballistic missile that' can be launched from a submerged submarine/ as is done by Polaris APPEAL CONVICTIONS — Part of the 15 Episcopal priests who returned to Jackson, Miss., to appeal their city court convictions on breach of peace charges in desegregation of a Trailways bus terminal file into court Monday. Wearing dark glasses (rear) is the Rev. Robert L. Pierson of Evanston, HI., son-in-law of New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller.' Ail pleaded innocent and trials ,wers set for May. ARRIVII 1 WEDNESDAY—2 f* I JO P.M. REMINGTON Electric Shnver RECONDITIONED ’Pennsylvania is named far Wiliam Penn and means Penn’s for- S OILING S ADJUSTING S STERILIZING » CLEANING i Msrjr WsdoMdar i Electric Shavers —Main Float (Als\sWiMt Sines ItSI toqeeta*ArtkT5 SINUS CONGESTION tort obetos t My Iwsr TRUMAC TABLETS HjU Asis iM sight Am I_____________________ niton trw Ireattiint. It yw suitor Iron any it the tbtvi conditions r~* *— tstnsd sstoisst rswllt flirt fsnssli sTsflT* AWejll NR SlWiUlUlf*. SMMa 00 N. gaoinow St —Mate fleer Pop 6 or 12 VOLT SYSTEMS Regular $2.50 Value Sealed against moisture and dirt... far single or dual headlight systems. Limit 2. -2nd Floor SHOP SIMMS TOMORROW 9a.m.foS p.m. t For DOUBLE-DEEP DISCOUNTS Everyday prices cut even more for mid-Wook shoppers at ■ SIMMS . .. hurry for these advertised values plus look for V the many un-advs rtised bargains in the store. WEDNESDAY ONLY Auto Headfirst ,vr\. R am 14 uait rvcTryj^ II WEDNESDAY ONLY 9x12 ft. Drop Cloth of CLEAR PLASTIC Regular 75c Value Protects furniture and floors' against paint j splatter. Limit 2 cloths. —2nd Floor WEDNESDAY ONLY 15”x20”RUBBER “WELCOME” Floor Mat WEDNESDAY ONLY GIFT BOXED Glass Tumblers 8 for 78 i Regular $1.20 Anchor glass&jf ‘Happy Home’tumblers in color-! ful designs. Large 11-ounco beverage size. —2nd Floor WEDNESDAY ONLY Introducing the style of the year Is getting to be a habit with Pontiac I One right after another, the Wide-Tracks have introduced the style that's been the year’s most it and longed for. And along comes the '62 with the kind of freshness and fineness that only comes up with. New length. New twin-sepop grille. A crisp, low silhouette. Cleanly curving talllights. You don't have to look twice to tella '62 Pontiac! And you only have to drive it once Why not take the wheel and go Wide-Tracking soon! The ’62 Wide-Tracks are here! CATALINA • STAR BONNEVILLE • GRAND PRIX PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE CCNERAL MOTORS CORPORATION 55 MT. CUMINS. PONTIAC, MICH. SE| YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALERS IN METROPOLITAN* PONTIAC: JACK W. HAUPT KEEGO SALES and SERVICE, PONTIAC SALES and SERVICE N. MAIN fTRUT. CLARKSTON, MICH. HOMER HlGHT MOTORS, INC. ffo 150 S. WASHINGTON; OXFORD, MICH. INC 1010-ORCHARD LAKI RD., KIICO HARBOR, MICH. SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK, INC. 22* MAIN STRUT, ROCHESTER, MICH. u RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES Sturdy 5-Sewn ‘Corn Straws Household Broom $1.59 Seller —New 1 17 Nature! corn straws firmly sewn and bound for extra strength. Limit 2 brooms.—2nd Floor WEDNESDAY ONLY HI-DOME COVER Regular $3,95 Voluo CAKE CARRIER I 68 Gleaming aluminum cake carrier with 6-inch hi-dome cover and 13-lnch tray to hold large*! cakes.' Limb 2 per person. mi min Ironing Board It steel ironing board with ventilated top for faster, cooler ironing of doth-E ing. Adjustable style for most com- . —2nd Floor fortoble posbipn. Compete anywhere... WEDNESDAY ONLY Children’s z Pants FIRST QUALITY - American Mada Regular $1.29 Qualify Choice of cards, flannelsj corduroys. Pre-sfirunk 100%l cotton in plaid and assorted! colors. Sizes 2 to 8. —Mein Floor ildren’sS™ Sleepers 2-FC.STTLENTTI PLASTIC FEET $1.29 Quality 95 10(1% cotton wM nylon nip. terwU Hitching in nock. Shrink rsiittent. Snap hock, 2 glees »tyto. Anortsd pott.lt. Sim 1 •o 4. . • —Mom Hsisr 1 NEWCHEVYH Sentibilily at H* Sunday best in a totally new (ins of ear*! Hera’s sturdy simplicity to NTS money in service and maintenance. Uncompromising economy (your choice of s 4- or 6-cylinder engine In moot models). Steadfast Chevrolet dependability. Body by Fisher craftsmanship. Engineering advances Hits the Mono-Piate rear springs to eliminate the squeaking and friction of multi-leaf springs. Nine new-etos models in ail (including the soon-to-be-available hardtop, convertible and wagons) with roominess to spare. Mora details? Your dealer’s loaded with ’em. UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEE WE HAVE A PLAN FOR YOU! Wo unconditionally guarantee in writing all labor and materials. Our reputation of ovor 20 years of fair dealing assures you of a lob woll dona at an honest price. Evan if you don't qualify for FHA or Mortgage Consolidation wo can help Get Our Honest Price-Call FE 3-7833 Can FE 3-7833 for Details KOtm THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10. KM1 Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths NBR BONIER C. AXFORD Mrs. Horner C (Maude M.) Ax-ford, 71, of 40 Blaine St., died eoriy this morning at Bandac General Hoepital after a long flhwss. A former tencher at Kingsbury, sill was a nrarntsr of tbs Ladtas* Auxiliary of Metropolitan dub of the Pontiac petto* force. Mis. Axford leaves her husband who has ratirad from the police (tree; and Soda sons. Lseter of PosAUc. Kenneth of Drayton Woods aad Homer w. at home. ■; : * - *& *. Sendee will be held at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at UN Huntoon Feneral Home with burial in Perry Mount SARGKY ROSIN ley Rosin, 13, of 70S Lake-Dr., Waterford Township died yesterday at Pontiac Osteopathic HtMpRal after a brief Bi- Mr. Rosin'was a member of All Saints Its—Ian Orthodox Cathedral, Detroit and an employe of Wholesale A Retail Tobacconist, Detroit daughters, Mrs- Genevieve Cooper of Radford, Mrs. Sonya Zoch, Mrs. Mary Moore and Mrs. Amy Row, all of Pontiac; two eons, Gerald D. of Southfield and Lt Cmdr. Alexander Q. Rosin stationed at San Diego, CaUf.; “ grandchildren; and 14 great-grandchildren. - ft ■ ft ft Mr. Rosin's body is at the Voor-hces-Siple Funeral Home. MRS. ROBERT T. BARBOUR OXFORD TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs. Robert T. (Lillie M.) Bar-86, of 256 Metamora Road, will be at 3 p.m. tomorrow at Boeoardet and Reid Funeral, Home, Oxford. Burial will be in Evergreen Cemetery, Lake Orion. Mr*. Barbour died Sunday after four-year illness. She Was a member of the Oxford Congregational Chinch and had been a Her only survivors are three FRED BRAGA ROCHESTER—Service for Fred Braga, Tl, of 223 Romeo St., will be at 1 p.m. Thursday at Ptx- IT’S A ley Memorial Chapel. Burial will ba in Mount Avon Otmetery. A lifelong resident of Rod—-ir, Mr. Braga died unexpectedly l a heart attack at Ms home yesterday Surviving are three brothers, August of Ann Arbor, and Albert Enraat. both of Rochester; and several nieces and nephews! siMPgoN c. rams HIGHLAND TOWNSHIF-Serv-tce for Simpson C Fisher, 65, 2725 WanUow Rond, Highland. wiU be 1;M p.m. at'ttw Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will IpUow at the Highland Cemetery. A veteran Of World War 1, Mr. Fisher died at home Monday after a six-month iOnem. Ha was member of tbs Oldenburg American Lagien Poet, Milford. He la survived by Mi wifei| Lylan I.; two daughters, Mim Lori-ralne Davis and Mrs- Virginia von Kleist; and a MX), William L. Davis, all of QtoUornia. Also surviving are a brother, Homer Shingledecker of Pontiac, a sister and 12 grandchildren. MILO A. PRRSSEL OXFORD-Serviee lor Milo A. Preesel, 76, of 1M Minnetonka St.. will ba 2 p.m. Thursday at the Boaaardet A Reid Funeral Home with burial at Rldgetawn Cemetery. ‘ Mr. Proasel died of a heart attack at home Monday. He was a member of Lodge No. 84. FAAM of the Order of the Eastern Star in Honor, and a past mister of the FAAM lodge in Empire. He la survived by Ms wile, Zina C.; two daughters, Mrs. Minnie Ttiroop, Oxford, and Mrs. Mildred Boyd, Drummond Isle; and a son, Milo A., Pressel, Traverse City;! grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. t FREDERICK J. WEIR LAPEER r- Service for Frederick J. Weir, 6ft, of 145 Coulter Road, will be 1;30 p.m. Thursday at the BairtLFuneral Home. Burial will be in Caro Cemetery. Mr. Weir died yesterday, at Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit,' after a! Short illness. Surviving are his wife Caroline: |a son, Ferris Kerkau, Flint; his mother, Mrs. Thomas Weir, La-- . 1__- peer; a brother. John. Lapeer; “* retirement three years ago. grandchildren and four great- Lakeville Lake's Level Is Set ; Now Official* Mutt Acquire Dam to Sat It It Maintained Now that the level of Lakeville Lake In Addison Township haa been established by Circuit Judge WUUam J. Bear, county drain (♦ licials must aoquira the dam to Judge Beer yesterday set the level at 902.3 feet above* tea level after but one objection was votafcl at a bearing held under the new 1961 law'which haa simplified the DR. WELDON P. CROMLAND flnancin* lake levels in the Mate. ■ V j! « . The sbjectl— came from Pea- Former Minister ^ who ewes property ea the lake, fws ■ , ■ p . Wllmot said Chutes Dies in the East I rjrjxz* _ Dr. Wtldon F. Crotsiand at Control Mothodist From 1923 to 1932 A famGy service for Dr. Weldon F. Crossland, former pastor of ^ ^ previously owned ant Central Methodist Church, was — - - - w. __ held this afternoon at Asbury-First Methodist Church, Rochester, N. Y. A memorial service will be Md there at 4 p. m. Sunday. * * * Dr. Croesland, 72, died of a heart attack at his home Saturday after an illness of two yean. A gfaieste of Nebraska Wet-teyaa University, he was a level Is raised a Inches above the present level. * * ft Robert P Alien, corporation ropnsel for the drain office,, said now his office mult “by negotia tkxi or condemnation" acquire the operated by ten brothers, the level established b; Lakeville Lake is the flnt of many Oakland County lakea which pre expected to come under the Before coming to Pontiac in 1923 to serve at Central .Church until 1932, he was assistant minister at Central Methodist Church, Detroit and minister of Nlnde Methodist Church, also In Detroit. 1 ft ft A He left Ponfiac to become minister at the Aabury-Church until MSUO Reports Theft of New Building Material More than 3250 worth of building materials was reported stolen yesterday from a building under construction at Michigan State University Oakland, according to Oakland County Sheriffs deputies. grandchildren. OUR PfftSONNtl MAS MIN SPICIAllt TRAIMD IN INI AIRANOIMINT OF FlOBAl OFFIRINOS Sparks-Gri£Sn * FUNERAL HOME "THOUGHTM SBMCr 44 WILLIAMS ST. SHONE SI 2-5*41 Embarrassed Police Seeking Safe Burglars DARWIN, Australia (UPI) Embarrassed police today sought the thieves who stole a 300-pound safe frotq under their noses. . The safe, which contained approximately SOO checks, was stolen from the Motor Registry Office Jnst 60 yards from the police station. While policemen worked nearby, the thieves backed a truck to the rear wall of the Registry Office, removed the sate through the window and drove off. Dr. Crossland has served on the General Board of Evangelism of the Methodist Conference. Hg was a delegate to the National Council of Churches, an accredited visitor the World Council of Churches 1 a delegate to the Ecumenical Methodist Conference, Oxford, England 1^1951. Author of several books, he iht has contributed to church publications. He was a Rotarian and a 32nd degree Mason. Dr, Crossland leaves his wife Ruth; two married daughters, Mary of Philadelphia and Janet of Rocheeter; and several grandchildren. A ★ ft. The family suggests any me-mortals be made to Central Moth-odist. Church in Pontiac. Now«**A New Woiid of Worth ftom Chevrolet The values are up f no Increase iti prices on comparably equipped models. Officer said 41 easae of asphalt tile, S oak panels and a case of rubber stair treads were taken tram a locked storeroom in the Nominations to Head Retiree Unit Agenda Nomination of officers top* the agenda at tomorrow’s meeting of Chapter Seven of the -American xsociatkm of Retired Person The business meeting will t at 1:30 pm, at the Community Center Building, 132 Franklin Blvd. Officers wiH.be elected at the November Hilt" hi meeting. | Aleo fa be discussed tomorrow are plans to celebrate the lint anidversaiy of Chapter Seven In Pontiac. All members ate urged Jack Seebald Says Come out and see thoboau-tfful now Rambler for Itfg big cor roominess, a small Cor your bast DISCOVER CLEANER BURNING FUEL Ol L OIL OIL ... and right in your own neighborhood! The richest blend of heating oil ever developed through coetly research and modem re-dnAg techniques. Gulf Solar Heat treats you to a wealth of indoor cIaht* heat—comfort ’round the clock, lets your family enjoy the safest, kind of automatic heat. It means low-cost halting—more clean heat per dollar; efficient burner operation—attains peak efficiency fast; fully automatic comfort—you set the thermostat and forget it. And, best of all, dependable Gulf Solar Heat is but a phone call away from your burner! Thieves gained entry to the! storeroom by opening panels above the doorway, police said. Hro tracks were found near the building after the robbery was discovered yesterday. Deputies believe the material was removed in a| truck. I fa) M for your supply of GULF oil coup. _______________________ 392S. Sanford, Pontiac FE2-9173 hooting oil SOLAR HEAT lover* qfgood cars-what more could you want! $2 CHEVROLET Stop right to—and feel luxurious. Ftoe, comfortable car, isn’t It? * A ear with Jet-smooth ride... wWi a new choice of V8 power... Isnger Need beauty (hunt tenders hare toad underskirts to help fend of rust and stones). For ’(2, here’s more than ever to like. Hasn’t this one got it, though! Fourteen lovely, lively models to choose from, with your pick of an economical A or your special favorite of five vigorous V8’s (right up to a, 409-hp powerhouse*). For putting that power to work just the way you want it, there are four transmissions. More? Plenty. You’ve got Jet-smooth rids, Body by Fisher craftsmanship, and handy helper* like longar lived mufflers for all engines. Still more? You bet. And your Chevrolet dealer’s Just itching to tick it off for you firsthand. -optional at axtra coit DO IT NOW-PAY NEXT YEAR Remodel Your Home ASK ABOUT OUR BIG BEAR PLAN (Financing Without Headaches) EXCLUSIVE! Mtrteagt Consolidation Plan DON’T Let a Let of Bills Keep You From Remodeling Colt Big Bear for Information Pay existing balance on house, outstanding bills, home improvement.'Gives you deed and title to your home. Our Payment Reducing Plan Don’t Delay Call Today FE 3-7833 Don’t Wait Call Now FE 3-7833 See the ’Off Chevrolet, the new Chevy II and '62 Corvair at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's Oil OAKLAND « CASS E-.’Lv MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, IRC. PONTIAC, MICH. wmrAKt Our Prices and Our Workmanship Before You Buy 1% I Eft JF A Vft CONSTRUCTION CO. 92 W. Huron DIU DCHU CALL NOW - FE 3-7833 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10. 1961 FIVE. Gambling Ring Broken in J/X Chevrolet Plant TARRYTOWN, N. Y. (UPI)_ Aa alleged $100,000-a-month aa-•em^r Una Rambling operation waa broken up Maoday by federal and local offlctala at a Chevrolet taken almost everything movable— < sheets, mattresses, carpets, chairs, tables, stoves, even ash trays uid an ancient Chinese gong. Eriimat- ] ing her loss at more than 4,000. pounds ($11,200), the baroness said1 the bdrglars even made otf with 1 her riding boots and riding crop. I 268 Alpine Climbers Die ROME ID—The Alps claimed tne lives of at least 26B climbers in a survey showed Monday. Jlhat West Virginia and Ceylon are total is 22 above the 1960 toil, but about equal in ana. Ry BEN PHLEGAR AP Automotive Writer DETROIT — Strikes at General Motors and ford have delayed — -------------probably until after New Year’*- plant wen ae*~ a hill test of the public's response •smpsny com- to xthe so-called in-between rise Idespread policy can of the 1962 model year.. VowMMlatfiSJ' twewsrewAurr hstiSi^Jlj Mexico’s Jose Garibi Y. Rivera Tha U£. Internal Revenue Service and undercover men from tbe office of Westchester County Sheriff John E. Hoy conducted an investigation leading to arrests at the plaht which employs 2,000 About 100 other prelates are on hand, including Archbishop Miguel D. Miranda y Gomez of Mexico Ctty, head of the Latin American Episcopate Council.. i Dooley's Aides Get Help KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya (It— The Malayan government announced Monday the arrival of $100,000 in surgical equipmert, stores and a small mobile X-ray unit from Medico Inc., New York, for use by medical technicians of the late jungle doctor, Tbm Dooley. The team is stationed in Kuala Upis, in the heart of jungle Malaya. . the Fords of the mid Ms. As yet neither the Fairlane nor the Meteor has gone into production. Original plans called for some assembly line work on them starting today, But the national strike which hit Ford last week delayed the staff’indefinitely. Showroom introduction was scheduled for the Fairlane in early November and the Meteor several weeks later. This, too, may be.de- Frilly, frothy— eosy to cor* for * DACRON POLYESTER ★ TAILORED f * VS *2.57 42 by 83" Ref. 3.49...2.! 42 by 81" IUf. 3.69... ,|J TIERS M *2.07 42 by 38" Reg. . 2. Valance, Reg. 1.29 ....8 RUFFLED 48 by 81" Reg. 5.89 ...... 5. CURTAINS Those arrested were identified as Kermit David Atkins, 34, of Tarrytown; Joseph J. Esperiot, 56, of Yonkers; and John O. Gaydos, 44, of North Tarrytown. * FIBERGLAS ★ TAILORED W *3.5: ,42 by 83" Reg. 4.39 42 by 81" Reg. 5.49 TIERS 42 by 30" $4% *< Reg. 2.99 XOi 42 by 38" Reg. 3.49 . Valance, Reg. 1.79. RUFFLED 48 by 81" Reg. 8.99 . 1st to Get Award for Rocket Research NEW YORK (UP!) - Dr. James Van Aden, credited with the discovery of two high-energy radiation belts around the earth, today received the first annual American Rocket Society Research Award for contributions to **■«*'• research. Carlsias .. . Fsur(b Floor Recommends Ruling Against Flint Dairy The award, carrying a $2,500 honorarium, was given for Van Allen’s <*a r 1 y application of rocketry to' cosmic ray research and lor his discovery of the radiar tion belts that bear his name. Van Aden is head of the department of physics and astronomy at the State University of Iowa. Woshabla... 4 popular lists... LAMP SHADE SALE Minn’! Juniors'! Half sizes! FAMOUS MAKER DACRON UNIFORMS WASHINGTON IVPI) - AN. tional Labor Relations Board trial examiner recommended Monday that the board find Miller Road Dairy at Flint, Mich., and its officers guilty of unfair labor practices in discouraging and interfering with union membership. The charges were brought by Local 332 of the Teamsters Union. Trial Examiner George A. Downing said a hearing in the case indicated the company had discriminated against employes active in the union, had discouraged union membership and had sought BUDAPEST (AP) - Hungarian redskins armed with bows and tomahawks have retreated from this Communist capital for the year — but they served notice they’ll be back again next summer. Prof. Evin Baktai, a scientist, is chief of the self-appointed tribe that for 30 years has taken over a small island in the River Danube to live like Dakota Indians. They make their own canoes, I wigwams, bows and arrows, war paint and other paraphernalia that goes with playing Indian. “I’m just an old romantic,” says' Baktai, who assumes this title of j Chief Black Fox. Famous maker no-i»ort Dacron potysatar uniforms in many sty!at for nurssa, waitresses . . . wherever you weer a whits uniform and want to look your bast. Sixes 10-20, 7-15 and l4Vi-22V4. UaUormt . -. Third Floor 1 LIQUEURS C0RP., DETROIT, MICH. PROOF, DISTILLED FROM ORAIR Two patterns in antique satin XFRINT DRAPERIES Several stylos in cotton KNIT PAJAMAS Reg. 5.95 Bast neck,, crew neck or — collar sty la* hs stripes, . plaids, ftorsl prints and 1 knit-in pattams. Combed _w cotton knit, many colors. U Sixes 32. to 40. announces a limited supply o£ Funeral Service Friday j for Ex-Sen. Sadowski DETROIT (UPI) - Funeral service will be held Friday for formin' Democratic congressman and state. Senator George G. Sadowski Sr., who died at his i home Monday of a heart attack. Sadowski was 58. He had served 'ETERNA27 Revlon and represented the First District' in Congress for five terms, ending in 1960 when he lost out to former! Rep. T. M. Machrowicz who is how a federal judge. For two years, scientists in Switzerland and America secretly tested a totally new kind of skin cream On hundreds of women, 24 Die on Egyptian Bus CAIRO, Egypt 'Twenty-four agricultural workers were killed when a bus veered into the Non-1 Springy 100% cotton pile FOAM BACKED -"IRIS" RUGS A Reg. 2:99 24" round, j contour or 21 by 38" Misses' solid color and print aged 26 to 74. Now, the facts about CORDUROY SUCKS this remarkable cream for aging skin can be told. Now, the cream is here! of Cairo Sunday, the newspaper AT Ahram reported Monday. It! added that 22 other workers in the bus were rescued.. selection of fine pinwato cotton cordu-cks with Mlf bolt, tip ctaainos. Sixot1 3.99 27x41” ....... 4.99 lOfcSO"......... 4.99 24x60”.......... 1.99 Kd cover........ White and 7 rotors. Table separates for parties! MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS 8.95 to 10.95 value* Can a Cream really make dramatic improvements in aging skin? Today, the probability exists as never before! Doctors and research scientists from four great universities tested ’Eterna 27’ by Revlon. They saw remarkable results in’6 out of 10 cases. Usually, the skin with the most apparent signs of age showed the most improvement! 'Etema 27* costs $8 plus tax and has a money-back guarantee. It has no hormone activity—no hormone effects Waif.i Coim.liex ... S»r.ot Floor , Fkoa. FI 4-2511 Regulation 5-ft. by 9-|t. PING PONG I TABLE 39.95 Voluo • 3/16" motonito I h , • N«n-W»rpk»f JAAA . • Sturdy wh( tog* 1 VlOO • Friftv Warmth without waight! THERMAL KNIT MEN'S UNDERWEAR THE PONTIAC PRESS TOTSDAY,.OCTOBER 10, ISO. Hannah for Governor Shonld Win Support Several Republicans have quietly suggested the name of President John A. Hannah, MSU, as the next OOP candidate for Governor. The party could do no better. ' ★ ★ ★ Whether the capable, energetic and personable head of Michigan State University would accept the aed is an open question. And he aaight he opposed by some of the old, old stalwarts who feel traditionally this honor shook! go to a party wheel hone. ★ ★ ★ President Hannah it already an elected Coo-Con delegate on the Republican ticket and stands before' the State clearly identified. His exceptionally wonderful record at East t .Muring is known from one end of the State to the other—indeed from coast to coast—and voters generally should rally to hh» and the things for which he stands. * , ★ '4'"" Retirement most loon ahead for the East Lessing executive sad perhaps he could fittingly bow out of one State calling into another. Certainly the people of the Wolverine Commonwealth would benefit. Hero in a groat ilder. He took over a Relatively «! campus and has worked it nto one of the greet educational institutions in the world. ★ if. ★ He has been recognized and tapped for extracurricular duties by a President Of the United States. It is a long time before the next candidate is selected, but here’s a powerful name with which to conjure. and safer would make the oldtime car dealgimra* eyes pep. ★ ★ ★ “More and more small — pardon, compact — cars are earning off the assembly lines and being snapped up by the public. As we were saying here some years ago, U.S. manufacturers could be counted on to outdo virtually all or the foreign makers of compact cars once they put their minds to it. ★ ★ ★ “It looks, in Short, as if *the 1962 models are getting Off £o a fine start; and we hope they sell in record-breaking numbers, as we believe they deserve to do.” . The Man About Town Bigger and Better Things of Many Natures Growing in Pontiac Area Voice of the People ‘Lottery Is an Easy Way to Pay Our National Only Three Years to Go David Lawrence Talks About: Gentler Sex Is Going , After the Rough Stuff Now the gals are taking over the pigskin. They already were in the majority on the horaehlde. For several years most of the winners in our baseball contests have boon women.- 1 ‘ ★ ★ ★ NoW a feminine signature appears on a majority of the 4,706 entries in our 1961 football contest. And, rget this: most of the eliminations in the early games have a male name. ★ ★ ★ So which sex has the best analytical mind in sports? The New York News Appraises’62 Cars Michigan newspapers for the most part, are understandably prejudiced when it comes to appraisals of new automobiles. Hence, we look with great Interest an the views of outsiders. ★ ★ ★ The New York Daily News falls completely in this category. They don’t manufacture cars in New York and no one has any prejudices for or ( against.. it ★ ★ In commenting on the 1962 automobiles, The News says editorially: “The 1962 automobiles have begun rolling; and we must shy we like what we’ve seen. “Body styles for the most part are sleek, slick and efficient looking. The exaggerated tail-fin has done a fade-out, for which we say Heaven be praised. ★ • W * “The emphasis in the advertising is mainly on economy, durability, workmanship and comfort. Some of th# new devkm for i life easier Autumn: Best time •( the year te get out and commune with nature. The red raspberry bushes of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Frcnsdorf of Rochester are not only bearing a second 1961 crop," but those now being picked are much larger and juicier than those in the first picking last summer. In reference to the growing of sugdr beets, Sanford Keeler of Lake Orion asserts that the few now being produced in Oakland County have a much larger sugar content than when there was a large acreage here, and also grow bigger. A self-seeded volunteer squash vine that, came up taa the strawberry bed of ' •, Mr. and Mrs. Kuril CrasgaOa of White Lake haa 53 squashes on It. ' A few ef our trees are taking an faint autumn tinges, but the real kaleidoscopic display will net fee ready for several days. This column will telLyau when and when to find it at Its heat. On the doth anniversary of that event, Victor Bacon of 23 Orande St., brings In an elaborate booklet about the death of President . William McKinley at Buffalo on Sept. 14, 1901. Incidentally, It was on Sept. 5, 1901, that I put out the first Issue of the Holly Herald. McKinley was assassinated the next day, and died eight days later, the Herald issuing extras on both occasions. "We also had cold late September nights in the old days," phones Janies J.. Pursefleld of Rochester, who quotes a diary kept by his father when they lived in Pontiac. On Sept. 27.1886, he wrote: "Heavy frost last "night killed most everything " For another Oakland County man who refuses to make k bow to Father Time, Clarence Pittinger of Rose Township Is nominated. Although celebrating his 91st birthday, he doea all of his own housework, and cares for a garden- that hardly knows a weed and produces much of his livelihood. If the con-con convention bunches our elections, it will, make^ us a better state, in the opinion of ... ■ . 1 ' Graham Sholes of Bloomfield Hllla. He feels that If they were all put together on a single date, more people would get out and vote. We now have many elections when a majority of the voters do not know what it is all about, hence stay at home, and vital questions are decided by it minority. A twin carrot from the garden of Blanchard Barrington of Waterford resembles a human form, with arms, legs, head and other appendages that would prohibit the use of Its picture In a newspaper. Just returned from a Northern Peninsula vacation trip, Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Elmer of Lake Orion say the fall colors there also are somewhat behind schedule. Rayburn... Friend of Presidents LAWRKNCB WASHINGTON — Once again a president of the United States goes to the sick bed of a valued member of his administration to say farewell. Fortner President Eisenhower’s parting with Ms secretary of state, John Footer Dulles, three yean ago was a sad moment. Today tragedy recurs, and President Kennedy has made a flying trip to the hospital at Dallas where Speaker Rayburn is slowly moving to the end of his life. Just two weeks ago, Sam Ray-bom gave what may be his last interview. He gave it to W. B. Ragsdale of the staff of U.S. News ft World Report whom he has known for many decades. After the interview was transcribed the next day, Rayburn went over it* carefully. The con-■ chiding paragraphs may well prove to be Sam Rayburn's parting words to posterity: "I have absolute faith in the American people. I believe that men,, than M per cent of the . American people have mere good in Bern than had. And, when properly appealed to, they will napand—new as they have In the past. ' "The American people have never failed to respond to the best interests of the country when this country was in danger anil in a crista. I just know they wiU do it again If they are called upon. “The great body of the American people is sound, patriotic and willing to sacrifice to the limit to preserve, protect and to perpetuate the great future of this great-country. TALKS OF PEACE “So I look forward to living "in this country at peace, 1 hope, and in friendliness for all good peoples of the world- We want other people to have their own life, and we want ours. ..." Speaker Rayburn has been present at many a conference of party leaders that President Kennedy has held at the White House and. indeed, at many held by President Eisenhower. Presidents, irrespective at party, gave him their ronfi-deacee became they knew he would respect them. He was always sfejectlve In his comments. Though inclined toward the con- 1 serVatiCe side, he frequently repressed his own political feelings as he steered legislation through Congress that President Franklin D. Roosevelt nought. He helped the New Deal immeasurably. He was also a dose friend and coworkcr of President Truman. ft * * He favored Lyndon Johnson for the Democratic presidential nom- The Country Parson ination at the I960 convention at Lon Angeles, but quickly announced his support of Senator Kennedy when the latter won the nomination. „ * * * Rayburn has served as speaker of the House longer than any man in history. Had anything happened to sweep away a president and vice president, he was next in line for the presidency. Until Htoeee took him away from Washington this summer, his 79 yean was net regarded as a handicap. It was rarely mentioned. He looked vigorous and noted accordingly. The Texas congressman has been a natural leader, a capable public servant, and he has won the re- spect of both parties. He has always been a man of his word-some thing that is deeply respected by members of Congress, so many of whom know the wiles and equivocations of party politics and maneuvers. ft ft . ft' Kennedy's trip to Dallas is symbolic of the interest of the nation in the man who has aerved the people so well in the House of Representatives these many years. Lots of men -aspire to the presidency and some achieve renown because they hold the highest office In the land. Speaker Rayburn will live long In the history of his country as a constructive lender of the House of, Representatives. (Copyright INI) Representative Paul A. Itoo, R-N.Y., an i aspects of gambling, has a national lottery bill drawn. The pNfl* should demand M be Introduced. ' - « * ★ it , % nan are IN satloos In the UJf. and 44 have ssHsnsI lsBlrtii. The total sales were smre than a MBtaa and a ha* and total eenstoy could esll Bat many ahanees alone. LMOe Veto Germany, a nation of pesple noted Mr Brill and epsnsnqr totaled • quarter si • MHtoa. i -T- A ★ it,.... - . If this taboo staged a billion dollar lottery, sold dianeM through the poet office and gave $100,000,000 in prim (tax exempt), Be tickets would go Hke wildfire. I brink we could stand turn or three a year, with every dollar marked to retire the national debt. it ★ ★ . ' ,V#i This "»jgM kill the illegal and crooked numbers racket and other fraudulent gambling schemes, in which people are milked and bilked by crooks. There who are eppoeed dret have to take part H want east Iks protestors a penny. Tha rest af Bs pesple wM pay Be (feM re them. Out they kick «a Bet? This Reader Favors Honesty Crusade Jack Paar is back from Europe and Asia, and he’s started a crusade. One that Tm wholly in favor of—honesty In our daily i peril How is It that c ents of three leading newspapers In New York CMy could writs reports to the American people taO-ing that Dag Hammankjold had arrived in Ndola In Rhodssta and met with Tshombe of Katanga Province when actually the man lay dead? I’ve never aecf a be printed la The Pontine Press, to Bs bast af my knowledge. I leal Bat It is a fins paper. Bat I aim tool that all newspapm hare n moral Dr. William Brady Insists: Good Coffee, Like Tea, Should Steep, Not Boil ‘Cafeteria Workers Earn Their Money* As one taxpayer to another, it’s time the truth was known. Pontiac school cafeteria workers don’t work because they’re bored. It’s a necessity. Why? It’s no one’s business. No cafeteria worker need be ashamed to pick up her check. She earns every penny of it. I’m one who knows. Retired OriMerla Worker WIB 20 Years Experience The Bible Explains About Pork Eating* The controversy on eating pork is very well explained in the Bible, Deuteronomy, Chapter 14:34: “Thou shall not eat any abominable tiring. These are bp beasts which you shall eat, the ox, the sheep and the goat, the hart, roebuck, fallow deer, the wild goat, the pygarg, wild ox and the chamois. And every beast that parteth the hoof, and cfeveth the cleft Into two daws, and cheweth the cud among the beasts that ye shall eat. Nevertheless these ye shall not eat of them that chew the cud or of them that, divide the cloven hoof; as the camel, the hare and the coney, for they chew the cud, but divide not the hoof. Therefore they' an unclean unto you and the swine it divideth the hoof, yet cheweth not the cud. It is unclean unto you. You shall not eat of their flesh nor touch their dead carcass.’’ Bible Header the troth. I believe that our Pontiac Prew has nothing but the good of the country in mind as I recall how h dealt with our elections last fall The paper was w|H)iiilla| Mr, Nlxoa editorially which It had every right to do. But after Be election, "taM Krififl " I hope The Prew wiU continue tc give us the news as it happens. Mrs. Wrote Nelghkan Oxford Portraits Verbal Orchids to- Hans Hoffman of 349 Auburn Ave.; 84th birthday. Mrs. Howard Clark of 2720 Square Lake Rond; 97th birthday. Mrs. Anna Reasoner of Waterford; 82nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Pierce of New Hudson; 56th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Mary Brawn of Rose Township; 80th birthday. Friendly Jackson of Lapeer; list birthday. • \ “Whatever are save hy net >rdng ear churches will to heady for building “Your recent article indicates coffee should never be boiled, nor should the aroma be evident. How does one accomplish this with an electric coffee maker or with a percolator? How much time does it take to make good coffee? (Miss B.J.S.) ft ft ft I said: “If you can smell coffee all over the house when it is being prepared you may ___be sure., it to Hf ruined. That aroma should he jkept in the pot” [1 have never at-I tempted to master [the intricacies qf la Rube Goldberg ______________Jgadget for mak: DR. BRADY jeoffee , “where you can taste it, and is not driven off into the atmosphere.” Coffee should be steeped Hke tea, not boiled. Here’s how to make good oof- 1. Grind yoUr own, just enough tor each brew. 2. Let the freshly ground coffee stand in cold water in a cool place/ tor an hour or two .or maybe overnight. 3. Put the pot on the fire Just before time to serve, bring the coffee nearly but not. quite up to boiling, snatch off the fire and serve immediately. ft * *' It is quite simple, if you don't get tangled up in the machinery. The smell of coffee cooking i» pleasant. I agree, but not pleasant enough to compensate for the taste of the hitter sotntion of tannin left la t|e pot. Mont people know that steeping extracts the pleasant flavor of tea, but boiling extracts the bitter tannin and tannin solution is not very palatable. The same principle hdlda true when making coffee. good For health The author of “An 80-Year-Oid Doctor’s Secrets of Positi/e Health’' (Prentice-Hall,’ Inc.) seems to agree with me that moderate use of good coffee to good for the health of most adults. He “Many valetudinarians deny themselves coffee because they lake seriously the propaganda of .certain commercial interests,. which implies that coffee drinking causes heart disease and/or high biood pressure. “People with heart trouble, particularly coronary trouble, derive real benefit from one or two cups of coffee at breakfast and, if desired, another cup at dinner time. . The happy effect of coffee in such moderation is to keep the coronary arterioles dilated, open or relaxed so that they/ deliver the full supply of blood (oxygen) to the heart muscle.” ft ft ft For readers who may write to enlighten me about blood pressure, I shall have this stereotyped answer: Never mind about your blood pressure. That is a subject best left to the judgment of your physician. JotSTpowsm mm, ptenie/ hush. (Copyright, IM) Hy JOHN C. METCALFE The wind that walks this time of year ... Is like a beggar clothed in rags . . . With emptiness in sunken eyes . . . And scrawniness of legs he drags ... He shuffles slowly by my door . . . And rarely lifts his heavy head ... To show a sign of interest ... In anything that lies ahead . . . The lonely wind that comes around .. . When yellow leaves from branches fall ... Is always pitiful to see . . . Because he does not smile at all... He whispers something in the dark ... About another brighter day . . . But none of us will ever know 1 . . Just what it is he to say . . . The wind that passes by in Fall... I tMnk must have a broken heart . . . But he wffl find Ms love again . . . When Springtime breezes play their part; (Copyright mi) The Almanac Today is Tuesday, Oct. 10, ths 283rd day of the year with 82 to follow in 196L The moon is approaching its first quarter. The morning star is Venus. The evening stars are Jspiter and Saturn. On this day in history: In ms. the United Staton Naval Academy was .spewed formally at Fort . Severn, A nan petit In 1913, in Washington, President Woodrow Wilson pressed a button that blew up the last re maintng obstruction in tht Panama Canal. ft ft ’ft ' - In 1943, Genralissimo CMang Kai-Shek was sworn in as president of Chins on the 32nd anniversary of the founding of the republic. - A thought for today: American poet Emily Dickinson said, “Hope is the thing with feathers tint perches in the sold, and sings the tone without the words, and never ■tops at all.” Case Records of a Psychologist: Compliments Can tlelp Children By DB. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE K-420: Jerry L, aged 12, has been the despair of his school teacher. i “Dr. Crane, I am at my wit’s end," Ms long suffering teacher confessed. , “Jerry is a bright boy but he causes me more mischief than mil l the other 34 pu-|pils in my room. "He teaaes the Igirls until, he ■makes them cry. DR. CRANK O* P*0*® 00 tfee other boys and starts fights. “Be seems te be restless and unhappy. I’ve had te ssad Mm te the priaripaTs office twice Bis week, aad Bat’s about average ter Jerry. "What, rise can I do wiB him? Or is he just destined for naughtiness and later delinquency?” CHERCHEZ LA FEMME The French police motto to "Cherches la femme," meaning “Seek the wdtnan.” The bread interpretation Is stay and help her clean the blackboards. Then they had the heart talk. Aad she leaned that Jerry frit unwanted aad unloved. His par-cate were divorced. He vaguely of ether member* of Ms class at school. So, when he was most hungry for affection, he would be most naughty! That seems paradoxical, but it’s the way people often behave. For when he was feeling low and unloved, he wouid look at his happy classmates and feel envious. Then he would grow angry at their greater enjoyment of life. So he would try to whittle them down to an inferior level. If he corij make them cry, the* Ms deflated begaa to "rrilap. Far a krify to usually in a secret alliance which the other kids didn’t know about And his sincere compliments tor his classmates soon changed their dislike for Jerry, into friendritlp-As he saw Bat he waa gaining in serial prestige and group live.” fls I urged Jerry’s teacher te aad try te svertesk some ef Ms naughtiness for Bo next day er fwa. Then, when she had Jetty's confidence^ schedule a long heart to heart talk with Mm. piex. When he picks or other folks and makes them cry. this makes Mm feel superior. That is especially the rule among child bullies. For tears are a mark of sissiness or babyishness. So Jerrr frit like a Mg boy when be could make other 12-year-olds ay. * POSITIVE STRATEGY So Ms teacher enrolled Jerry, along with herself, in the compliment dub. Just the two of them were to be in it at the outset, was te pay a eempthneat aay huger. In 30 days Jerry was a changed personality. And Ids teacher admitted that it had done Wonders for her, too. So try it yourself and day. Then Bey wsaM report to ft* _ ____* * * t This new strategy worked won- She agreed, and began following ders. For Jerry frit included in fids prescription at once. Tha a closer «wswpRi»iwhip his following day she asked him to teacher. II infleted Ms ego to be ----------------I aDTalopv aad IS tha AMoetitad Praia la auUUad uBiiBna, UBMMt. Living-ston. Mftcomb. LfiBMf bq4 Wift* SSEWriKiffi y A Syracuse inter* newspaperman, his big brothc Catholic Univei Washington, D ' 11th in class a Waiting lor r ' gan bar exam , lor several ra FURNACES • BOILERS »CONVERSION RURNIRS '■'This is s thing that every lawyer would a p p r o a c h with some trepidation,” he said, "bat I hope to bring to the court both industry and objectivity. I'm going to give it everything I’ve got" Giving tt “everything I’ve got" has bear Smith’s trademark, and IA 7-MOO 23»Voo>hei» Rood hrSktymtl Kehrinator doesn’t waste money making costly annual mode! changed—mere “dumgs for change’8 <*!«•" instead, Kelv.nator eonoentntse «u making GAS HEAT rmiSALE / “Superb” ... “luxurious” . . . "beautiful” . . ; "brilliant”—them are many words that might be used to describe the new 196] Cadillac car. But If we were to select from the Cadillac vocabulary the one word that most completely captures the essence of this latest “car of cam” —we would Choose "masterful”. For heels is a motor ear that had already established its mastery in everything that makes an automobile good and fine and desirable. In appearance, it la dearly a Cadillac mastsr-picce—graceful, dean-lined and elegant. In performance, it is a revelation. I ta power plant is a reservoir of dlken power—and the car tides and handles with an instinctive cam I In safety, it is in a dam of ita own—with a host of axdudvo features, indoding remarkable new In craftsmanship, It Is simply without rival. Every 1962 Cadillac will undergo mom than 1400 inspections to assure to quality and goodneee. On and on the Hat could go. But however lengthy, that list could never replace the experience of inspecting the car and driving it. Your deckr will happily 1st you do both. Ones you have, you’ll understand why the word has gone out so qukkly that this la the finest motor car ever to bear'the Cadillac name. VISIT YOVR LOCAL AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER • JEROME MOTOR SALES COMPANY 276 r 280 $. SAGINAW STREET PONTIAC, MICHIGAN - PON SIXTY YEARS YMR •TANOANO 6P tM* WdNUO *> 102 B. Huron Stmt FE 4-1214 thsbe are MORE ACCIDENTS Dtriif Small Gama Season Than in Datr Hunting SEASON Gleaner Life Announces New Birmingham Manager Coverage o* Low os J $160 Charles E. Keaton, Jr„ is a friendly neighbor who has been named manager in this ana for Gleaner Life, a fraternal insurance Society. A graduate of tho University of New Hampshire, he has specialized in insurance program- ming and estate planning. He can help yon to choose tho right program of *douan for future dtHvery” — providing security throsvh lower-cost savings, college, mortgage and retirement plans. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1961 |___________SEVEN UAW Local to Sfriko Evan Though Pod OK d METUCHEN, N. X (UP!) — A union spokesman said today that United Auto Workers at a Ford Motor Co. assembly plant here would not return to work although It bad been reported tat Detroit that a local dispute with the firm had been settled. * * * B. E. McKenzie, a member oI the executive board of UAW Local 980. said “Even if the agreement has been reached locally we will continue to picket until there has been a national settlement.” PONTIAC ' *1 N. Secinew S». FE 2-0*71 , < Pontiac Cewseaien Coop 1220 M*. Petty St. PI S-1679 f. P. Goodrich 111 N. Petty ft. PI 2-0121 i F rotter AppUooco Miracle MNe BIRMINGHAM Milks Appliance! ' 1493 S. Woodward DRAYTON PLAINS WALUD LAK1 UTICA Mpera (iff c RE 2-2531 ROCHSSTBR 411 Mask to OL 1-1861 Charles E. Kenton, If. OFFICE IIN RmII Woodward Art. Birmingham Midwest 6-6600 From Memphio Shoeohine Boy to MIAipn Jmlge First Negro to Sit on State Supreme Court Today By TOM RMAWVEB LANSING UR — A former Negro sboeshine boy who grew up k depression-ridden Memphis, Tenn. dons the black robes of a Judge today to become the first of his race to sk on the State Supreme CoUrt. Otta M. Smttb, Sfirtdg—»q audl-«■ general until today, a{. Is new Job with a mixture of awe and determination. “That’s the Mg lefgne ap there," he aaM, pointing ap te the Supreme Court chamber, two floors above Me office In the By this tone, Smith had wen he respect of a geed many ndaeate, termer dev. “TJuit loot Ms etgaMeaaee a I teak the P*0 Job," he said. Be added, however, that appeiatmeet might give Negroes “greeter Identification wtth the HABP STUDENT A husky 4 feet 4 inches, Smith was a natural for the Washington High School football team in Mem-phis. He was also sharp scholastically, but It soon became apparent that he didn’t have time for both books and ball games. Education won out Equipped With a scholarship, he carolled at Flak University In Nashville, Turn., and took on four Jobs simultaneously to pay for his oling. He swept floors in a gym, waited tables for his meals, wrote letters for the football coach and read for a blind student. Seen after the enthreak of WerM War II, Smith fsteed the Army Signal Corps and came set up a big backlog of cases before the Public 8ervice Commission, he was under treatment for hypertension and ordered to work only half days. He still drinks a pint of milk In nddmondng and midafternoon to keep Up ulcer ider control. It was Smith’s drive sad capable administration on the PSC In 1954 he became assistant prosecutor In Genesee County. Three yean later he helped plan the campaign that gave John. €. Mackie, n fellow Flint resident and a political unknown, the Democratic nomination for state highway commissioner. tor general two years ago when Frank Sxymanald resigned to become n Wayne Couaty probate judge. He was elected to s year term last ton. SECOND YOUNGEST At 29, be Is the second youngest member of the Supreme Court JtMtlce Theodore Souris, 26, hi thsl nr to serve on the] New Rally Planned by Antibomb Group LONDON (UPD—The “ban-the-bomb” committee of 100, headed by Lord Bertrand Russell, planned today to stage a new protest meeting in Trafalgar Square against nuclear arms on Oct 29. ★ W * A similar meeting last Sept. 10 resulted in the arrest and Jailing of the 89-year-old Russell and 30 other*. Russell served a seven-day sentence. The committee has received permission from authorities to hold the new meeting. 8roith brushes lightly over Ms precedent-setting role as the first pay will be 625,000, the new rate that went Into effect this year. He declines to hang s label on his political philosophy. “I am liberal In some things; conservative in other*/’ be said. “But I know one thing; My decisions wfll not be written with a 19th or 21st Century viewpoint I’m living In the mkl-20th Century—as a lawyer and ss n person.” Live Better for Less mitt "No-Frost” FOODARAMA by KELVINATOR Yet, you con live better and save money, too, with Foodarama! All in one cabinet only 41' wide, it gives you a 12 ctt. ft. refrigerator and a 6 cu. ft. upright freezer. You can store abundant foods for better meals and have room for budget-saving food "specials,” too. You also save tune by shopping leas and there's no defrosting of refrigerator or freeeer. Come see Fooduama during this giant Kelvinator New Multi-Cycle KELVINATOR Automatic Washer with 5-Year Free Parts Guarantee ■miy onlu Kelvinator gets everything cleaner— * without harsh beating or jerking. In-JR JWAC steed, it energises the wash water to ▼ I U|l** do the cleaning. It’s actually so safe | it won’t tear a paper napkin! And Kelvinator gives you automatic pro-With tn00 scrubbing, special wash-wear cycle,' lint filter, bleach dispenser! with trade Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE Fra* tsHmi—I Call JE 9-0200 MIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1061 Frustration Walks on Berlin Streets Pontiac's Oldest Insurance Agency INSURANCE to RANCH .'r*. Next beet heat to sunshine I for feet dolfvary end friendly, expert heating oil service. Call FE 8-0416 PONTIAC PETROLEUM Division of Leonard Refineries, Inc. 2600 Realise M. at Opriyko Ri. Whara style comet first, Old*mobile’s magnificent Ninety-Eight Holiday Sports Sedan is first choice/ He elegant Interior Is beautifully fashioned to add to your pleasure and comfort! And Its precision-built 9S0-h.p. Skyrocket Engine ... teemed with 1962 4-S Hydra-Matlc, the psrformsnes transmission with the smooth new "feel"... makes driving an exhilarating experience! Whot’a more, you enjoy a new concept of quality and reliability that makes every Oldsmobile a ear of superiority! ----------------eaa aiu tme >e* OLoeMosii.es ... at voun local authoAixbo olosmosils oualitv okalkn'si JEROME MOTOR SALES CO., 280 South Saginaw, Pontiac, Michigan tunc in avtnv tiibsoayi don’t miss "the oanhv moors show" • cbs-tv -~\r. ;..— L—l^aAu'__________________Vklzi -V.i;. ‘/fyc#zpr- 7 MOB Michigan Mutual Liability Company Automobile • Fire • Homeowners • Workmen's Compensation a Inland Marine • General Casualty Insurance ... homeowners have needed protection against financial losses from fire, lightning and storm. Coupled with these age-old threats, today's homeowners also face the possibility of ruinous legal actions arising from accidents on their property; of losses from explosion, falling objects; and a host of other hazards. That's why Michigan Mutuaf Uability’s new Home-Gard Policy-newest of Homeowners Policies— warrants investigation. With it you can protect yourself, in whole or part, against all insurable risks ... at a cost of pennies a day. What’s more, you can pay for this protection on a monthly basi&_ Sound sensible? Then phone now for full particulars-before you sustain a loss. M PONTIAC TJ W. HURON ST. —NDIRAl 2*0141 TOPS IN QUALITY Low in Price! The "HOWARD AQ2" * iritain or SPINET to much la demand throughout America. True, It U Baldwin'* loweet priced iptnet . . . yet, it is aaaleUkaMg Baldwin ... Is eoaad ... Be toosb . in ovary respaet. Stop la today I YaaH agree. Be •OW to far yee. f / /n r— Small Down Payment 'TSXLX& *695 Up to 36 Mon fig to Pof Opea Fn. and Mm. long. Co. WHY WE USE A CHAMPAGNE GLASS TO WK ABOUT Ireland Readying Troops for Congo LONDON —The Irish Republic is readying a new battalion of troops tor service in the Congo with U.N. forces. ♦ ♦, ★ It will relieve the 1st Infantry Group and the 3Sth Battalion, which figured in the recent bitter j fighting at ElisabethviUe and Ja-dotville. Katanga. ' * * * Informants said the near battalion would include a number of jtroope who have already done Congo service and volunteered for a new tour of duty. FUELOIL! We*ve found there’s no quicker way to show you how deer and clean Leonard’s new Superheat really ill Just a pun, golden liquid-—the kind of fuel oil you want in your burner. We made it that way to give you cleaner, hotter end better beet for lest money. So, try new Superbeat— and start saving money. Call us today! British Colony, Uganda, to Receive Independence j LONDON (AP) — The Uganda . Constitutional Conference ended Monday night with the annoupce-ment that the territory would at-j tain internal self-government next March l and independence Oct. 9.1 . * * * Benedicto Kiwanuka, now chief! minister, said the dates were announced ■ by Colonial Secretary! Iain MacLeod after MacLeod had consulted by telephone with Prime Minister Harold Macmillan as the conference ended. Israeli Army Puts On Big Training Exercise TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - The Israeli infantry staged its biggestl training exercise in years Monday. Army spokesmen said the | exercise was geared to meet the) inputted—Soviet-styled mnjjafyj tactics newly adapted by Arab armies, particularly that of Egypt.1 / •// \ '.'Vy-l. .;. ; ■ £ ;: yr,*: THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 10. tori v . . t v fcy Lewis Horner, engineer at Wis-ner Elementary School, and Local 719 of Public Employes Council 77. The board heard the grievance two weeks ago tat delayed decision until a future meeting when all board mefnbers would be pres, ant, IT'S THE GREATEST! OCTOBER 7 13th and 14thl HOME LOANS Do y°u rt ' i you^0,nt' h°w our l hoi”* 1030 I pltnO"' 1 hdP Dr. Stanley W. Black Optometrist 3513 Klisabeth lake Rd. w Carner «f Cass Lake M. *Evenings by Appointment Phone FE 2-2362 Closed Wad. School Boa rd to Review Plan The Cafeteria Employ at Would Short Profits Undor the Proposal A profit-sharing plan proposed tor cafeteria employes of the Fob. tlac Public 8chooi system will be reviewed at the Thunday meeting of the board of education. The searion begins at 7:30 p. m. in the board room, 40 Patterson St. Offica Spoea Avoiloble in Our Building Capitol Savings & Loan Am. Established 1*90 75 W. Hu ran St., Pontiac Pi 4-0361 CUSTOm PARKING IK KEA1 OF BUILDING wU be presented st' this Brat i'gator meettag ' expected to be deterred i be New. j. Further echeduUd tar dtscueeioa ire: peeeible policy manual ra> view, sfter-echool intramural ■parts and physical rocreation programs, participation of tbs school district in the National Defense Education Act in 191143, and report on the 1981 audit for Central Senior High School activity funds and' the June 30 audit report for the school district. ■■mmmi Old British Case Saves Defendant on Trial in Iowa DES MOINES, Iowa (UPD-Mu-nicipal Judge Luther t. Giant dipped intp British law and acquitted Earl D. Wendt, 30, of a charge of interfering with a police officer. Wendt was charged Mooday^w'tli holding.up a sign at his servi station to warn motorists that police radar speed detector was operation a jew blocks ahead. Clanton found a 1910 British case in which the'defendant was aim tlarly found innocent on the ctoond police would have to prove that motorists were actually speeding before they saw the sign. K Offered Presidency of Baldheaded Societies ORLEANS, Fraser a-ftvM Premier Khrushchev has been offered the honorary presidency of the" World Association of Bald- NEWSPAPERS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID WE PICKUP CHURCHES and SCHOOLS dFE 2-0209 •f the Preach Brotherhood of the Bald toM a national convention Monday. AT Phetetaa volunteer WORK - Charles Armstrong, secured by ropeo wields a brush to scrub the gold-tiled dome of Nebraska's capital tower, some 400 feet above street level. Downtown Lincoln forms e backdrop for the picture. Normally a photographer tor the State Department of Roads, Armstrong volunteered tor the lofty assignment. 1 ftVl riWitfiBa i* *l«f 79 NORTH SAGINAW STREET WEDNESDAY ONLY SUPER SPECIAL! TENDER BEEF L VER SPECIAL SEAMLESS HOSE 2 Pair normal A special feature just for her. 100% nylon 400 needle point, 15 denier. Top quality, long wearing. Fashion colors. Sizes 8Ys tl. Charge It Now at Penney*8! snort Whenever you want a beer that not only quenoheB your thirst but also^deeply satisfies—remember this—Stroh’s has a lighter, smoother, finer flavor no other American beer can equal...bocause Stroh’s is America's only fire-brewed beer. Have you tasted Stroh's? Anrehcas only fireVedWhcer ... lire brewed it 2000 degrees! tMiAj ..BETTER! mu LIKE 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1961 Fulbright Faces Tough Arkansas Primary * WASHINGTON (AP) — A king ] ^bright, who heids the Sen-ttaed effort apparently la gobt to ate Foreign Relations Committee, be made by conservatives to uin- took notice of this Monday when •seat Sen. J. William Fulbright, he announced in Little Rock that JbAlk', in next year's Arkansas!he will be a candidate for ra-ctec-•enatorial primary. ^ tioo "unless it Is obvious the peo- caOed an afaftort news conference to say that his remarks were directed at the “dilatory tactics" employed by Western tedders hi ISM and 1945 and not at current talks about perUft. dum' to i Secretary ot Defense Rob- conaervattee groups' has given ert S. McNamara In which the •v«y lJtn thnf-he intends to con-senator complained about military Fnlbright tor .the nominate. ZSTSLl'JSm ea" .bout alleged CUmmuntotl* ^ *■» nomination. in My «vnt, FulMcht knows o\ MivzMMi b. to goto, to h... rtrw owoto- ON MVZXUNG tioa. likely to be weU financed by In the storm over the alleged conservatives from within and muzzling of military leaders, Sen. without the state. KNOWS THE FEELING Fulbright added that he was aware of some dissatisfaction Some Republicans have talked oft putting on a major effort to- ‘“K- JSMOra, LMUI., WHO has aligned himself with several Movie Giants Together in Hollywood Western REBUILT ELECTROLUX VACUUMS Completely Reconditioned — indudes Hose, Gird, Bag, Filter, Motor ALL THIS FOR ONLY *13.95 net none — oeuvBrr — atmuisals VACUUM CENTER — FE 4-4240 | When I- arrived on Stage 10 at Paramount, both stars were bi e their dressing room*. Charae{eris-, tically, Wayne was on the tete-1 phone, Stewart was on the couch. Thyy scarcely had time to say hello when they were called to I school. f At least It looked like a school . a canvas-enclosed classroom where the actors sat around a ta-1 bte and rehearsed the next scene, i - Sitting at the head of the table : was taskmaster Font, a rare j figure with black eye patch, base-1 ball cap, faded yachting jacket,; rumpled cotton pants and brown j and white saddle shoes. drilled cast Over and over 'again Ford, drilled his cast: Wayne and Stew-are as the. Western heroes, Ed-, mund O’Brien and Ken Murray a9 the town's drunken editor and ( doctor, and Lee Marvin as\ the soon-to-be-perforated Liberty Valance. . \|] “Okay, let's shoot it,” eaklh Ford.. ; i The scene called for Marvin to i try to get himself elected delegate to the territorial convention so he could sabotage statehood, on f behalf of his rancher bosses. Ob, viously he had no chance against <] the combined strength of Stewart 4 and Wayne. ( they emerged from the scene for! a brief respite. “Never worked with Duke before.” Stewart said. “Like to.| Good, working with Ford, too. G«y keeps a tight rein on the While thing." ML Com Pain Stops Nerve-Deep Rilof Starts In Seconds— ■■■MMwr “He a good actor," Wayne said of his costar. “You never have trouble working witb good actors, j It's the lousy ones who might be picking their'ribses or scratching, their rear ends white you're doing your big scene. But they don’t get away with it when a guy like Three, actually. James Stewart and. John Wayne are being directed in "The Man Who Shot Liberty Val- S. Telegraph at Square Lake toad I |i Q y OPEN 6:30 P. M.—SHOW STARTS 7 P. M, ALL COLOR PROGRAM ofoeMmntf NEW 100* at that old old cognition EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUN Open 6 :B0—Starts 7 P. M. Superior Court ’approved the Settlement Monday. Stompanato was stabbed to death in Mias Turner’s Beverly Hills home April 4, 1958, by.Iter daughter, Cheryl Crane, now 17\A coroner’s jury . . . ALL IN COLOR . . . EXCLUSIVE FHtST RUN They appeared in their classic rotes—Stewart as the lean, earnest lawyer in his Easterner's tweeds, Wayne as the rangy, slow-talking' cowpoke with six-shooter dangling at the ready. Stompanato’s divorw Sara Stompanato of a Ind., sought $750,000 fr _________ Turner and her former husband, Stephen Crane. She claimed negligence caused the death and^de-prived Stompanato’s son, Jam HI, of support. imond, firms NoUmit ToThe/r Off-limits V fun: V ADVENTURE IN AFRICAl LIVE ATOMIC AGE ADVENTUM On Lend...In Outer Spece... And Undnr The See! ARP \ — 1 ROBERT WACNIkX • \ JEFFREY HUNTKR \ 'I VOYAGE AT THE BOTTOM OF ---THE SEA* and ALL HANDS ON DECK' STARTING WEDNESDAY Tho Hub Men's Clothiers, will bo closed starting tomorrow, Wodnosday, October 11 th to prepare fora most unprecedented event. mmPtomnJoMFonwm BimuEoameim ROBEKT SmiHGMlCHAELAHSMA JO/mumm Shorts at 7:00-9:05 Faeture 7:00-9:25 COME EARLY — BRING EARLY BIRD COUPON The reason for this unusual action will be announced next week in The Pontiac Press. It will have a direct effect on every family in the Oakland County area. WATCH FOR THE NEWS Coming October 18th IN THE PONTIAC PRESS LOW ANDLWU WEN... y® FOR PROGRAM INFORMATION ' CALL FE 2-Hfy 18 North Saginaw Street BUS SERVICE DIRECT TO OUR DOORS! I EAGLE fl ** M fSO> $> HI»| BJUKVEN THE PON liAC jHKJSbb. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1961 _____________, rr' ^ .....‘ '".:''111."'^ ■ ;.*...■■ ■■ ‘ . ' . , 1 • ■ ' cemed can and styling of tbs hair. Martha Hoyt of South Marshall Street will ha the Novem- Womeris Se&ibn Abby Advises Man Should Take His Wife When Picking Out New Suit % AW}AIL VAN HU REN ’ DEAR ABBY: I am in the mail’s retail clothing business, and would She to know what ^haa happened to the backbone the Ameri-iean male? He |doean't atom tO tMi* {for himself any more. About 10 per lent of the men ■who * come in Hare unable to ehooae' their own clothing without a final okay from their wives who - fancy themselves experts on fabrice and style. Hie other 90 per cent have nothing to say ■bout fit. color or price. If the husband likes the suit, and hit wife doesn’t, he ends up buying what she likes. Many of my friends in the —men’s clothing business have told me they have noticed the same situation. Can yon ex-■ plain it? CLOTHING SALESMAN : NEED FEWER MISTAKES * DEAR SALESMAN: Only a man who wants to please his wife will take her along when he buys a suit. He. in my opinion, is more of a man than the male who disregards all opinions but his own. More women would do well to take their husbands shop-. ping. There would be fewer “mistakes’’ hanging unworn in the clothes closets of America. fr ★ * DEAR ABBY: Do you think it is a good idea to make a and carry daisies. They don’t tell. Gobd hick! fr > BROKEN-HEARTED AT »: Ted your husband you found the letters and get it over with. Things might not be as hopeless as you think. - . fr fr fr What’s troubling you? Writs Abby, earn of lha Pontiac fr fr ♦ Ear Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,’’ ssnd 90 cento to Alto cam of The Pontiac Press. College Campus Notes Describe Busy Days while to keep him on Ms toes? YOUNG WIFE DEAR WIFE: Forget It. Instead of keeping him on HIS toes, you are apt to find him on YOUR heels. fr ♦ fr DEAR ABBY: When I was 'much younger (17, to be exact), I was married, but it didn't work out. My parents bad the marriage annulled and now it is as though it never happened. PLAN TO REMARRY I am grown up now, and, thanks to my forgiving and understanding parents, I am going to marry a fine man. He is 32 and I am 26. He knows Gretchen Ruhl of Birmingham is participating in toe production of the musical comedy . "After Five,’’ this year’s original Junior show at Wellesley CoQn«, Wellesley, Mass. 8be will portray an American diplomat in fee gay farce about a semester at tbs mythical Women’s Institute far Various Embassy Services and has served as rehearsal pianist. Daughter of Mrs. H. Simms Ruhl, she Is majoring In Eng- Two University of Michigan seniors from Pontiac have been designated Distinguished A1 r Fofee ROTC Cadets. They ale Dustan T. Smith, son of the Marshall E. Smiths of Edge-field Drive, Waterford Township, and John E. Howell, eon of fiw John A Howells of Jud-son Street. Smith, a senior In science engineering, it commander of his cadet corps at the university and also commands a group of Arnold Air Society honorary squadrons located on six college campuses. He hopes to complete law studies prior to entering active service with the Air Force. Howell, a political science senior, command! a cadet squadron in the AFROTC officer training program. Both win graduate in June. ★ fr . Among students selected for the Sterling College Concert Choir on the Sterling, Kan., campus is Gordon Meaner, who is the eon of file Walter Metiers of Pinegrove Avenue. A concert will precede file Christinas vacation period and an extended concert tour next spring is planned, ft* National sororities at Danism University, Granville, Ohio, Among pledges are Catherine Lake, daughter of the Robert C. Lakes, Lake Angelua Shores Road, CM Omega. From Birmingham are Sally McOanathan, daughter of the John A. McClanathans, Delta Delta Delta; Brenda Maynard, daughter of the H. S. Maynards, Alpha Phi, and Martha Stedfeg whose parents are file H. Richard Stedings, Alpha Omicron Pi. dr * * At home hi Cornell Courts on the Eastern MWrfyw Uni- Arts Council's Drive for Members Nears End The Michigan State Univer-\ sity Oakland Community Arte Council is entering the final stretch of its membership drive. campaign chairman, reports that a check of area- representatives has shown the council at the halfway mark in ticket ■alee. Memberships win be limited to 1,000, the seating capacity of Pontiac Northern High School’s auditorium where the major concerts will be presented. ■ K- ♦ , fr. Presenting its first series, the organization is ottering lour .major programs at Northern'! auditorium and eight on-campus functions featuring lesser known groups and-freraoiv alitiea. Admission Will be by, membership ticket only. Poet James Wright will open the season Oct. 17 at the university’s Student Center. A professor on the staff of the University of Minnesota, he has authored a book “The Green Wall,” published in 1907, and is a regular con- * tributor to Paris Review, Se- . wanee Review, Kenyan and Western Reviews. Thirty-four-years-old, he is studying on a college grant in New York. TO APPEAR NOV. 7 Eugene List, pianist, the first major artist to be presented, will appear at Northern High Nov. 7. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Lind- ' quiet head ticket sales in the Pontiac area, assisted by Mrs. Ralph Norveil, Mrs. Addison Oakley, Mrs. William Chdal and Mrs. Raymond Rapaport. Mrs. A. A MUler of Quartan Road is the Birmingham-Bloomfield Hills representative. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Spra-glC' are Waterford cochairmen. Working with them are Mar-l garet Ann BeSttfe. Mr. and •* * Mrs. Norman Chenl, Dr. and Mrs. Chri Bolton, Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Byers and Mr. 'r and Mrs. Edward F. Dalton. Others are Mr. and Mra. Rueewli Grinnell, Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Kline, Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred J. Lobb, Mr. and Mrs. David MacLaian, Mr. and Mrs. John Radenbaugh, Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Salathiel, Mr. and Mrs. Neil Stranahan, Commander and Mra. Garrett Pri-ble, the Charles Witooqe and the E. L .Windtlers. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Austin are White Lake representatives and Mrs. Alice Smith, Union Lake, the newlywed Alfred KoUttas (Beatrice Anne Pedan), who are seniors. She is file daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh D. Ped-era of Anders Street Waterford Township and ia affiliated with Delta Zeta Sorority. Her husband la a member of Sigma Pi fraternity. Women's Clubs Federatidn Has First Meeting Mrs. H. Russel Holland of East froqueis Road was hostess tor fee City Federation of Women’! Clubs’ opening meeting Monday afternoon. ★ dr ♦ John Hooyer, assistant Urban renewal coordinator, spoke on Pontiac’s Oty Urban Renewal Program which is expected to bo complete in ltffi. ★ * * __Eontiac-Juntae_£hamtoe_of_ Commerce Auxiliary members were in charge of hospitality. Presiding at the coffee table were Mrs. Wiliam L. Befeaey and Mrs. William J. Freyer-muth. Women of Our Lady of the Lakes Church in Waterford Township are busy sorting out hundreds of hats to goon sale at 7£0 pan. Saturday in the high school gymnasium. Mrs. Jock Cuybord of Percy King Road 'Hat Party' Scheduled Saturday She hundred fall hats will be on display at the “Hat Party.” set for 7:30 p. m. Saturday at Our Lady of the Lakes High School gymnasium ia Water- There will be pill-boxes, sailors, wide-brimmed, brim-lees, flowered sod ribbon bedecked huts In a variety of color. Velvet and fur hata will highlight the show, and women may purchase any one of Jhe 000 on dfoplay. Qudrman for the affair Is Mary Effien Sharps who will be —1 by commentator Jean Elides, Mr. spd Mrs. Gerald Roberts and Floyd Zielniski. ★ * ★ , There will be entertainment, door prisse end refreshments. Eight women of the church will earmarked for the Dominican Sisters of Oxford. A tell theme of red and gold will prevail. The public is Invited. -* Umbrella Art (UPI) -r- Elegant umbrella handles'and hooks look like something straight from the local museum — modern or an-The nwdfw carved hi wood that parades as a handle for one umbrella symbolises the form of a woman. One ivory hook handle umbrella has a hand carved ebony design. PTA Fellowship Meeting Slated This Evening A Parent-Teacher Fellowship meeting is planned at 7:19 this evening by the Emmanuel Christian School. Members will meet In the gymnasium. A pep rally has been planned , to acquaint the group with the ' school song and cheers. Letters will be awarded to cheer leaders and athletes for hut year’s activities. fr fr * Several teachers and parents wiU take part in a panel, discussing questions pertaining to school and family life. Written questions from the audience will be answered. Selections fay the school band will precede refreshments. New officers presiding will be Earl Spring, president; lbs. Lois Mandrell, vice president; Howard Newbanka, father vice president; Charles Joes, teacher vice president; Mra. Mary Wright, treasurer; and Mrs. JuUa Blade, secretary. Sorority Greets Three Pledges Barbara Frasa of Wed Colgate Avenue waa October boated to PM Alpha Kappa Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority- * New pledges Patricia Shaw, Jovita Benavidas and Mary m mfflm (standing) is shown adjusting the hat of Mery Ellen Sharpe, Maceday Drive, chairman, as models Sharon Weil, Warringham Street (at left) and Carol Wolo-siewicz of Mann Road, admire the effect. Have Yoa Tried This? Tang of Sour Cream Is I Foil for Bland Potatoes By JANET ODELL Poetise Press Home Editor Potato salad is not Just a summer dish any more. Cooks have found that the special flaver associated with tide salad combines well with many masts throughout tbs yesr. Today’s recipe is. for a different potato salad. • ★ ★ ♦ Mrs. Paul H. Everett of Walled Lake likes to invent recipes. She also likes to grow unusual plants Hke the shrimp plant and Mosee-in-thwCradle. Antique collecting ie another hobby. POTATO BALAD By Mrs. Pant H. Everett For each 2 cupa of odd boiled diced potatoes, use l to 1% cups at sour cream. Sea-ion to taste with salt and pepper. cmh well before serving. Club Opens Year With a Banquet Junior Pontiac Women's CMb opened the season with a dinner meeting Monday evening at the Pontiac Gmmtry Club, fr- fr.fr Speaker for the evening was Mrs. Dean Coffin of Btrming- two shows with Ann Sothem, two wtth Doby Gillis, appeared in “Reals 66”, “River Boat”, and “The Defective” Mrs. on humorous | Mrs. Frank A Anderson, president, announced the following committee Chairmen: Mrs. J. T. Engle, membership; Mrs. E. Verne McCall, program; Mrs. ,E- Milton Evans, social; Mrs. Vilas L. Newcomb, hoese; Mis. G. F. Brinkman, press sad publicity; Mrs. A F. Gamas, flower; Mrs. B. D. Scott, welfare; and Mrs. C. J. Hinckley, finance. Mrs. H. Russel Holland of East Iroquois Road (at right) opened her home to the City Federation Of Women's Clubs Monday, With her at the refreshment table were Mrs. Charles H. Crawford of West lawn * Street (at left) and speaker John Hooyer, assistant Urban Renewal coordinator. Personal News The Detroit Athletic club will be the setting on Wednesday. for the Kuhn family celebrating the 78th birthday of tfcelr mother MM. Charles F. Kuhn of North Lake* Angelos Road. Named Michigan’s Mother of the Year In 1953 Mra. Kuhn will be joined by ten of Her 11 sons and daughters and their respective spouses. Mrs. Robert V. Friable and her husband presently residing in Sno Paulo, Brazil, will be unable to attend. MT. Friable Is assistant chief engineer for the Ford Motor Company there. Dinner party arrangements wsrs made by Ur. and Mrs. Henry H. Kuhn, the John J. Kuhns and ths Paul J. Kuhns. Other family members Who will attend are Mayor and George W. Kuhn, ftpfrfoy; fr» Bichard D. Kuhns, Lansing; Dr. and Mrs, Robert E. Kuhn, Blrmlnghsm; and Dr. and Mrs. Albert A Kuhn, the Donald Orahama and the Junior Charles F. Kuhns aB of Detroit and Sdward J. Kuhn of Pontiac. . . it ft ft, ' Mr. and Mrs. Edward V. McNamara (Marilyn Ashby) of Lotus Drive Waterford Township announot the birth of a son Edward F. Jr. on Aug. 17. Paternal grandmother. Is Mrs. Frank McNamara of Sylvan Village. ft ft ft' Mra Anna E. Youngquist was sleeted president of the Reliable 13 Club at a luncheon meeting Thursday in ths home of Mrs. Goldie Creeley on Moreland Avenue. Mrs. Earl Johnson will servo as secretary. Members will assist ths Oakland County Society for Crippled Children and Adults as a fall project. Mra Clinton Hall of Auburn Avenue wiU bo hostess for the next meeting. ft ft ft The Arthur Ouys of Buena Vista, Ga. arrived Sunday to mend a week with his brother and sister-in-law Mr. and Mra Ernest L, Guy of Brookdale Drive, Waterford Township. ft ft ft IL * -A Mrs. Russell Brackett of Beverly Road and Mrs. J. B. MifaUetn were cohosteaaes at a farewell party last welk in the letter’s home on Lowell Street honoring Mra Leo BUI of Liberty Street who leaves soon to live near Tlmpa, Fla. Quests were Mra Frank McCue, Mra Ian Stevonaon, Mra George T. Pudduek, Mra Clare Bcrlven, Mra James Hatton, Mary Eleanor and Mra George Psnttuk. Aloe invited were Bfta B. B. Most, Mra Qelfett Miller, Mrs. 8. A. Lockman smd Mrs. Irving Taylor. ft ft ft A son born Sept. 13 to the William F. Willsons of Second Avenue, In Pontiac General Hospital, has been named Daniel Lee. The baby’s grandparents art Mr. and Mra Bernard W. Muse dr Fremont Street* Waterford Township and ths James Willsons of Maywood, HI. ft ft ’ ft • 1 . Mrs. Loren Beach, Mra W. R. Brown and Mrs. Howard Smith of the Ladles Auxiliary te Chief Pontiac Canton 3. Independent Order of Oddfellows, attended the opening of a 'new canton and auxiliary Saturday in Moailro#. They wen accompanied by their husbands. ft* ft . 'ft Sj 'V The Charles l.1 Fentons (nee Barbara KurkoWski) of Wqgt Hopkins Avanue announce flit birth Of a son Robert Charles Oct. 9 at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Orandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Frank F. Kurkowakl of Troy and Mr. and Mrs. Jesss S. Fenton of Chandten-vtlle, Ohio. ... ,.f g "ittid Other chairmen an Mrs E. Cfeo Wiley, hospitality; Hazel Potts, telephone; Mrs. B. F. Griffin, constitution; Mrs. Ronald Mountain, donations; Mrs. R. ft. Hodge,, projects,- Mrs. R. D. Terry, news tidbits, and Mrs. Charles H. Crawford, representative to City Federation. Welcomed as new members -ere Mrs. Laura E. Holmes, Mrs- Paul L. Horidm and Mrs. Geoigs H. Reuter. ★ ♦ ★ Social committee for the evening was . Mrs. Bindley G r Scott, chairman, Mrs. Chsries Ball, Mrs. Albert F. dunes, Mrs. Charles H. Hannan Jr., Mrs. Patricia Kenney, Mrs. William B. Moon, Mra. Allen W. Palmer, Mrs. Everett Basse, Mis. Harry J. Rice, Mrs. John Sheehan, Mrs. IVed T. Sytz, Mrs. George a Watters, and Mrs. Horses H. Young. Women to See Program by Top Decorator Jamas Bnuartrom, noted interior decorator of FNnldin. will appear at Wednesday’s 12:36 mooting at the women of Threat Lake Country CMb. “Where Do You Start in Decorating?” wifi be the program. Mr. Bramstmm will arrange for vans to bring furniture, limps, fabrics and art treasures, transforming the club loungt into s theater-like atmosphere. On the stage he end Ms crew will arrange new settings as in a play. $ fr ' fr fr A question and answer period will follow. Because Mr. Bram strom’e collection is large, seating capacity wd be Dmited to 119 woman. Credit for the novel idea in entertainment fuss to Mra. James Tenney of Woodcreek. She has been assisted by tei Kenneth Wagoner, Mia, Alan Mrs. Marvin Gielow, Mrs. Harold Dtttriek. Mrs. Richard Rupps! sad Bin. Hany Robeson. Get Down to Business St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Auxiliary members met Monday in the McAuley School at Nursing auditorium for s regular business session. The session followed a meeting of the baud held ssrtier in the bonding library. tian to appropriate 31,000 toward the OL099 repair bill .of ths hospital's deep therapy machine, which was originally purchased in pari by AuxSfeury funds. Mra. John S. Mahony, president, announced several addi-tiond to her list of standing committees: Mrs. D. M. Ettas, program chairman and Mra. James Q. Goudie, ways and Plans for sewing “play Mbs’* were set to directly follow the business masting in November. These Mbs win be designed to hold the crayeias and coloring books purchased by the Auxiliary to be given chDdtan during their hospital stay. Bin. Estes announced a series of brief talks to be given by department heads of tea hospital at each meeting as part of a “Know Your Hon- Mrs. Meyer Simon presided as tea hostess ft ths social hour which followed ths bust-item at the day. Advance Showing for Bazoor Items TWBJUVK THE PONTIAC PBBSS. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 10, 1961 London jrtMW him to return teftatatolphte m Mi detk. tike to Take a Trip by Ship? ^Organization CoonisiPontiac PTAs Starting Fall Work "in Getting Work Done We do everything except pack ydur bags! Wa have the talent, the experience and the staff to hdp you plan, arrange and book unforgettable South Padfk, European and World cruisee. Call today and turn over your cruise dreams into exciting reality. Coaveaieatly located (&$$) 76 WILLIAMS STRUT PONTIAC PHONI: PE S-4ISI Don't waste time what the woman who with bait the effort baa that jam don't bP**. The aaewer to bound to be ofgaatoatton. lor the aa day. One will aecompltoh everything rite has to do without feeling rushed or pushed. The otter ends !the day tired and fiuatiated, with half the things she meant to do left undone. The housewife use wife executive or| errands, awihtotag, « pitob the moat Witt the least p amount of time sad effort spent, Instead of Jumping to tor car a r iu times a day to run erraak. ahtoty. The housewife executive burden herself with cbona and reqnaribOlttoa that can and be handled by otter members of the family. She divides tbs work, and expects each member of the family to do his share. k k k ' Because she starts that system when her children are small, doesn’t waste energy through the years being a servant to her family. The heusewtle executive to always looking for better and easier ways of doing things. She makes the asost efficient use of htogTflAt/she does ‘f I Jobs When she ha. I It la organhatkn and executive ability that raabka a i run her bane, instead of letting tar home keep her on the ran. ♦ k k Common senae hints lor happier living: “How to Have a Happy ’’ Send S cents to Ruth MiUett Reader Service, care of The Pontiac Press. j a new labor saving de- ------CLIP THIS COUPON”' Tittle Miss” Introductory Offer PERMANENT WAVE ‘Tittle Miss Pretty" Wave apecteOy Designed to Ornate Young Hair Beauty Mery lee Davis and Marf ShmkmkL oyoretois KENJ ALO’S BEAUTY SHOP Ul Auburn Are (Beat te Dolan's Drag!) The housewife executive pienr her days a week to advance, but keeps her schedule flexible enough) to allow her to change it to H herself, and to meet unexpecteoi demands upon her time. ' 1 1W Church Women Set Progressive Dinner Oct. 19 Central Methodist Church’s Women's Society of Christian Service is planning an Oct 19 pro- ve 2-2311 Pint coarse will he served at the home of Mrs. Charles Craw-on Weattown Street, and wain coarse at the South Avery Bead htone of Mrs. Robert E. Field. Dessert wll be served at the church office bniki ag ea MR. The group also plans a benefit sale in the Drayton Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars Building Oct 27 and IS. k k k At Thursday’s meeting reservations were taken to attend the con-jiference fall assembly Oct. 24 to PERMANENTS Cl—IHi With Haircut and get Me Appointment Necessary FE 5- Saturdays Only_________ J Detroit. Following branch and . «• ‘lu^pg meeting Dr. John Hall presented a program “How to Live a Victorious Life.’’ Etta Nagler Circle served with Mrs. Hercules Renda as chairman. Ike civil defense program Vtiac will be dtocurao d at Her-PTA’s 7:19 p.m. Wednesday ibeeting. David Teel, administrative as^dstant 'to the Pontiac City manager, will be gueet speaker, showing a film, “The Dual Pur- LOUIS *4 through Fri. A Floor Naxt to Bnckner Finance About 90 per cent of all the United States mail is transported byrail ways. -(Utm's- \ Committee Mrs. Fred Bran, budget aad finance; Mrs. Russell Brawn, health; Mrs. Richard Perkins, historian; Mrs. William Jensen, hospitality; Mrs. George Beauchamp, legislation; and Mrs. Robert Jackson, li-rmy. Otters are Mrs. Wayne Weaver, tagazine; Mrs. Raymond King, membership; Mrs. Henry Morris, preschool; Mrs. William Vaughan, program; Mrs. Robert Sumpter, pubUdty; Mrs. David Woodling, room representatives; Charles Center, safety; Robert Jackson, youth; Delbert Dunn, savings stamps; and Mrs. Carmen Tosto, scholarship. WILSON 'Fun for Halloween” will be the program presented by Mrs, David Scese at Wilson FTA’t 2:30 p.m. Thursday meeting. Mrs. Marguerite Suggs, special teacher, will lead a choral group. Following a council report by Mrs. Richard Davenport, the group will hear Kenneth Harger of the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department discuss trophies the school has won. Mothers of six-graders will provide refreshments. WILLIS The first fall meeting for Willis PTA is set for 7:30 p m. Thursday in the school multipurpose room. Perry Ninotti, principal, will introduce his staff. New teachers this year are Betty Heinmiller, music; . Mrs. H. £ Green, publicity; Mrs. Fred Crosaman, safety; Mrs. Fetor Wotila, youth and Juvenile protection; and Mrs. Ralpk tom. In the school auditorium. A with too theme “Leaning About toe Ik—.Far^F—pn—' flw-rantattnu, Preveutiua eqd praam- Special ■■■PH toe Field of EducwUoo will be WB-«ht, Pontiac’s special ncatlco director. Slides will Mrs. John Wood aad Mrs. William Vandergriff, homeroom mothers, will arrange the annual Halloween Serving with the new president, Mrs. Donald Smith, this year win be Mn. Ferret, first vice presi-dent; Clayton Lee, father vice Tnerident; and Mrs. Charles Brown, teacher vice president. Otter officers are Mrs. Law-ranee Curtis, secretary; Mrs. Delbert Burnett, treasurer; and Mrs. Lee, historian. Council delegates are Mrs. Albert Martin, Mrs. Gaston McGirdy and Mrs. Robert Hoffman and Mn. Howard as alternate. Cochairmen of finance scholarship are Mrs. Thomas Me-Keever and Mrs. Louis Campbell. Home room mothers are Mrs. Wood and Mrs. Vandergriff. Hospitality chairmen are Mrs. Donald Agar, Mrs. Gerald Livingston, Mrs. Charles Austin and Jqjm Ferrel. Important Event Tomorrow, Oct. 11th Donna Burt, elementary hard-of-hearing; and Wilfred Duff, physical education. Mn. Willis gehnekenborger, president, will Introduce her if-fleers aad chairmen. They In-rlude Mrs. Donald Swan**, vice prerideat; George Plekeriag, father viee president; Mrs. Charles Hampshire, teacher vice president; Mn. Joseph Rath, secretary; Mrs. Geerge Gronsky, treasurer; and Mrs. James Miles, .historian. Mrs. William Davis, Mrs. Sylvester Cndaohatsky and Mrs. Alfred Da ridge are council delegates. . : f * ’ ■ Others serving are committee chairmen Mrs. Schnekenburger, budget and finance; Mrs. Edward Rockwell, hospitality; Mrs. Albert Krueger, publicity; George’Gronsky. stamps; Mn. George Pickering, room mother; Edward Rockwell, recreation; Mrs. Robert Bentley, health; Mrs. W. L. Good, good cheer; and Mrs. William Davis, Completing the list are Mrs. Efic Kretschmar, magazines; Mrs. F. J. Curtis, membership; Donald Swanson, civil defense; Mrs. Edward Jenero, pre-school; and Gary Fangboner, safety. Mrs. -Marvin Andrews is parliamentarian. Mrs. J. F. Warren, welfare at* ordinator for Oakland County, John Aramini, guest speakers, will show a movie on civil defense emergency preparation. The public has been invited to hear the timely talk. EMERSON First tall meeting for Emerson's PTA will be at 7:3D p.m. Wednesday hi the school. Lewis- Sullivan, principal, Schoot’a be the meeting place for PTA members to t:r * follow the talk. Mrs. OUvwr Broome to group’s chairman lor participation to the PTA’a Membership Moatt to ptaansd for McCairoU School’s flat PEA meeting at T:9H p.m. Pontiac Public Schools, will talk concerning children's intelligence and talents. “You and Your Child'i IQ’’ to the diacuaaiop topic. Children will be tendgd to Helen Mercer’s daaa roan. Home room mothers from Mrs. Martha Rob- OOBA BAILEY tag handled by Mr*. L. D. Me-Laaehfla. Otters heading com- ■eoata; Sam Dew, boy scout*; Mrs. Sharon Crist aad Mrs. High-fleid, health; Mrs. Lawrence Ammon, PTA magazine; Mrs. McCurdy aad Mrs. Gene King, telephone; Mrs. Louis Campbell, defense stamps; Howard Caldwell and Rick Zwiefel, juvenile protection; aad QtoytmJLm aad Donald Smith, ctvfl defense. Mrs. Jack Pritchard to librarian. Completing the list are Mrs. Joe h e m w e 1L safety; Mrs. Leslie Ebay and Mrs. John Flanagan, pop corn; Mrs. Martin. Mrs. Lee, Mrs. Hoffman and Mrs. Francis Ryan, social; Theodore Breher and Charles Austin, legislation; and membership chairmen Mrs. Halit and Mrs. Ernest Thomdy-craft who will accept memberships before the meeting and during refreshments. MALKIM An officer from Pontiac’s Youth Protection Bureau will talk MaDdm PTA’s 2 p.m. Thursday meeting in the school muttipuf-pose room. Arthur Durham is toe group’s youth protection chairman. Room mothers Mrs. Cart Scar-ro, Mrs. Ralph Huttenhower and Mrs. Lester Fitts from the fourth grade rooms of Mrs. David Blaine, Mrs. Edward Booth and Mrs. Ronald Gilmore, respectively will serve refreshments. DANIEL WHITFIELD • Marilyn Goffing who was an exchange student In Germany under the American Field Service’s sum-program win ipeak and show slides at Daniel Whitfield PTA’s 7:30 p.m. Wednesday meeting. Mrs. WIIHam Cofflng, president. has announced chairmen for the year. They are Lee Crandall Jr„ civil defense; Mrs. Lynn Baker, budget; Mn. Raymond Smith, finance; Mrs. Howard White, health; Mrs. Arthur Webster, home room representative; and Mrs. Anthony Osier, hospitality. The list concludes with Mrs. William Cotter, legislation; Mn. William Furlong, magazine; Mrs. G. A. Schwartz, membership; Mrs. Howard Webb, parent and family life; Mrs. Merle Haanes, A complete collection of imported knit suits and drosstt for holiday, cruise and spring. REFRESHMENTS AND INFORMAL MODELING / OF PONTIAC HURON at TELEGRAPH Mm. TWm. M1I01* *—Tm., Wa*. to. I# w f Floor Samples We have a few odd pieces we have used as floor samples that are reduced at substantial savings. Here's a chance to get top grade furniture at low, low prices. Open Mon . and Fri. UU 9 p. m. I | 5390-5400 Dixie Highway OR 3-1225 be conducted Wednesday by Cora Bailey School’s PTA. Hours for parents’ visits to individual rooms will be staggered throughout the (toy, giving them an opportunity to meet their diikfrea’s teachers and to observe the dally class room routine. RAGLEY Joe Singleton, Pontiac PTA Council’s civil defense cochairman, will be guest speaker and show the film "Dual Purpose Room” to Bagfey School’s Thursday PTA meeting. The program will begin at 7:30 Groups Tell of Church Meetings Women’s Anociatton groups to Oakland Avenue United Proahytoi-tan Church have completed Oa Officers will he introduced by Mrs. 8ktoey Olson, psuridrat They include Mrs. WOltom Klllen, vice president; Albert Hennin'g, father vice president; Mrs. Milton Mc-Eacbern, secretary; and Mrs. Ray Pardaa, treasurer. Council itolaihtoa are Mrs. Hubert Heariey. Mira. Dental Hutchens and Mrs. Ray Meggitt. usrittoaa are Mn. ... . Qus—It Group past to the charchHi Dorcas Sort's Wife Feels She Is Left Out By The Emily Pari Institute Q. My son waa married several months ago and ha and his bride are living in another city. I write to my son on the average of once a week telling him the news. I have been addressing my letters to him alone, although I always ask about his wife and send her my love, In the last letter I received from my son he told me that his wife complained to him that she is hurt and feels like an outsider because my letters are not addressed to Mr. and Mrs; I was quite taken back by her attitude and think his wife very picayune in objecting to my writing to my son alone. Will you please tell me if I am wrong In writing to nty son alone? A. There to no reason why you should not address some to your letters to your son alone, but especially because your daughter-in-law feels left out of things you might write an occasional one to her and others to them both. ♦ • ' k' • jR Q. At a cocktail party I went to the other (toy, the waiter came around with a tray of hors d’oeuvres. I took two from the tray but I noticed that everyone else took only one. I felt rather embarrassed and have beat wondering whether I did the wrong thfav* Will you please advise me? A. At oocktail parties the gram will be explained to parents. Speaker will be Gerald White, elementary coordinator for Pontiac public schools. Babysitting will be provided, and a social hour will conclude the evening. Officers for the year are Mrs. Bernard Tontant, prerideat;-Mrs. i deegvree are pushed mill grain nnH grain m flam# __ _ *. around again and again so that it to quite unnecessary to take two at one time, but there to nothing wrong in doiigt so. fr dr k Q; When using the typewrit- ■ to write to a friend, may the signature also be typed, or must one sign the letter by hand? A: Always sign letters, by hand. A typed signature to very rude. The only occasion token it la permissible is wheq it to printed below a hard-to-read signature, for information, dr * k The Emily Post Institute cannot, answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this column. Others are Mrs. Hercules Rends, legalities; Mrs. E. P. Showers, defense stamps; David Crawford, safety; and Mrs. Claude C. Hap roan, publicity. Pariiamentarian to Mrs. Oedl Mullinix. Marietta Spring, school prind- who am lfrs. lYed Hendricks, Mrs. Dan Skeen, Frances Hayes and Mrs. James Marshall. Refreshments will follow discussion of a fund-raising project WILL ROGERS The October meeting to Rogers School's PTA will be to n:30 p.m. Thursday In the school gymnasium. Alter a business session, the ete- tetrad by ttfehostasa, Mn. Emal Lloyd. A Bus study from the Gospel according to St Mm was offend by Mrs. Donald Wilson. The year’s sewing waa oollsetod for the annual fall Nesdlework Guild blithering. dr k • ♦ ■ Mrs. Johnnie Bee to East Chicago Avenue was hostess to the Eleanor VanLierop Missionary Group. Derattans.entittod "It Is Finished,” from St. John's Gospel, were tied by Mia. Clyde auk. Mrs. Witter Napersky was chair-u« to ttt program “Possible Ate* xnpHahmenta for the Comb* Tsar.” ■■ k k: k The Savoy Drive home to Mrs.' Gerald Barnhart was np*»»i| to to* Pag Creswell Group. Officers for 19R were elected st the business session. They indude Mrs. Omar MacNott, chairman; Mts. Donald Upton, vies chairman; Mrs. Cart Comer, secretary;' Mrs. Walter Hill, treasurer; Mra Ernest Johnson, devottom choir-mu; and Mrs. Ruth MaddoekTkey service chairman. Gusto speaker was Mrs. Hugh Dale Caswell, father vice president; Mrk. Alee Henry, toaeher rice president; Mrs. Glean Waller, secretary; Alex Glygar- Council delegates are Mrs. Elmer Granflaten, Mn. Rich a id Mo-Knight and Mn. Ranald Sabins with Mrs. Robert Zelezic as alter- others are Mrs. James Severs, program; Mrs. Roger Pomeroy, lfrs. Donald Crabill and Mrs. Richard Avery, membership; Mrs. Arkm Pony and Mn. Donald Knapp, room mothers; Mrs. Wilson Garner and Mrs., Jack Roerink, scholarship; Mr. and Mrs. George Morgan, safety; Mn. Jack Moor, Mrs. Luther Briggs and Mrs.' Harold Batters, telephone; and Alex Glygoroff, budget The list continues with Mr. and Mrs. William Hanley, adult education; James Brockman and Donald Crabill, dvil defense; Mrs. James Richards, good cheer; Mrs. Allen Reamer and Mrs. Elton Dexter, health; Mrs. Glenn Hartung and Mrs. Granflaten, hoepitality; Mn. Bernard Gauthier, Juvenile; and Mrs. Alex Glyfeoraff and Mrs. Neil Bartholomew, library. Mrs. Ray Reed to mags sine chairman, and Mrs. Charles Rhine in charge of publications. Others heading committees tat Mrs. Ted baa been engaged in missionary work hi Bremen, Germany for the part five yean. Mrs. David Du-, Vail reed devotions. Cancer pads wen sewn during toe meettu. k k k Mrs. Theodore AUebech offered devotions tar Lucille MeHan« Grotto at the Slocum Street tonne of Mrs. Noble Meredith. Mrs. John Hsu, gu Christianity.’' k k k The Marjorie Peters Group as-sembled at the Cadillac Street home of Mrs. Betty Henry. After devotions by Mrs. A1 Jacfo_ son, the group sewed on garments / for the Needlework Guild’s annual , Ingathering. Marine Diamond Carp, plans to * try underwater diamond prospect- ; ing oft South Africa, PoweMul Jets of water will be used ‘to line sediment, which may eootaln gems, up from the ocean floor 1 through a tube. Sorority Hears Talk The October meeting to Kappa Chi Alpha Sorority was at the Some to Era. Michael • Patterson Once Kay Court, Waterford. Guest speaker was John „ dole, assistant dvtt defense (to- teachers who rector for Pontiac. Plans were completed for the group’s participation in the Miracle Mile Shopping Center birthday celebration this weekend. , ways Richard McKnight, parent and family life; and Mrs. Tputant, pubUdty. LONGFELLOW A get-acquainted dinner will begirt the season for Longfellow PTA members who will gather at 6 .m. Thursday. At 7 p.m. a speaker from the Detroit Branch of the American Cancer Society will present a film, 'Questions About Cancer,*' ring Arthur Godfrey. Mm* WUHam Hegwood -will be dinner chairman. McConnell A Big Ben alarm dock will set the theme “Awake and Grow with PTA" at McCOniieU School's 7:30 p.m. meeting Thursday school gymnasium. Thomas Tsmpfe. principal, will introduce fata staff; and Mrs. Francis Schell, teacher vice president, will introduce gueata Mrs. Wendell Green, Mrs. Melvin Johnson and Mrs. Howard Booker, help'ing ................sham new trends arithmetic with mothers and fathers present Room 4 will be a nursery for small children. Rafrahments conclude the program. ©Mscouxr mas AmUNCB-TV TOM'S ELECTRIC What is a PROTON? A proton la tbs positively charged nucleus of an atom. Study of the proton may bd a key to scientific progress in the United Statea. Yet many potential scientists may never study it because they may never go to college. Many colleges art overcrowded and in 10 years application* will doable. We will need more and better college laboratories and thousands more of the highest quality professors. HOP THE COLLEGE OP YOUR CHOICE NOWI Uarn how you ran hrip. Write tor (ho bee booklet, "OPEN WIDE THE COUIOC DOOR" Ion 36, firsts Squire Stotton. Nsw Vark 36> N.Y. r itrrhr to THI PONTIAC PRESS RANDY | W( w GEORGE NITA / BUD r DELORES ; 'M^RIE - j 1672 S. TELEGRAPH ROAD Between Stewart-Glenn and Malls New Home of RANDY WEST Hair Stylist Often Per appointment—Call FE &8085 press, tuksday, October 10, mi THIRTEEN Planning Bazaar Manbas^af PM chapter, Sigma Bate Sorority, met at the North Perry Street hose of Mrs. Morgan E. Siple Jr. Mrs. Georgs Barit was cqhoete*# tor the ecfteb hour. ventlon Oct. M-M la Vert Wayne, Ind., will he Mrs. Wayne Booth O'Brien sad Mr. Brio Blaegri Tentative plana were mat the chapter's first ampul | early to December. International ” 50 PC. STAINLESS STEELWARE This exercise for the thighs is one described in the Marathon booklet. Make large circles with the leg. If you'd like to have the Marathon booklet which lists exercises, a oalorie than and gen- Uses ‘Won’t Power’ to Lose Couple Weds in Episcopal Ceremony Bonnie Joy Campbell exchanged use and rings with Douglas J» Black Saturday In St Mary's fat the Hills Episcopal Church, Lain _h». Rev. WShur R. Schutm performed the ntidaftcrnoon can- era/ direction fir losing up to 20 pounds in eight weeks, tend 10 cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request to Josephine Lawman in care of this newspaper. Michael CakhNll. Lake Orioa, gave Ms cousin In marriage. Shi la the daughter st Mrs. Harvey Campbell el Laks Orion and the late Mr. Campbell. The bridegroom’s parents are John D. '"•Black, Drayton Plains, and Mrs. Edwin Norton, Glendale, Calif. Bouffant veiling fitted to a lace Juliet cap com pie mealed the bride's gowa of white, bouquet taffeta styled wMh basque bodice aad chapel train. White ear Rad and pink sweetheart f Mountain Seeks Molehill By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN 1 have Just received an Into eating aad inspiring letter that want to print part ol it tor you. "Dear Mia. Lawman: “Just a year ago I weighed M3 pounds. Tbs amount 1 needed to loan seemed to be an uusermount -able mountain ,of blubber. My bust meeueed 44, my waist 41 and my hips SO inchss. Now, altar ons year, my bust measures 40, my waist M and my hips 45 Inches. 1 have lost 0 I .till have a bag way to ga far my Ideal figure, but having tost this mneh, I am sura that I win eomplele the ta*. “I thought that through your column I could share the Joy ol my new figure with others, noticeyou often print letters from these who have lost 15 or 20 pounds, but tboae who have much CRESCENT LAKE BEAUTY SALON Permanents iwm $6.50 WNfc Cel end Styling MARGARET MU, OWNER HELEN HOUERBACK Fine Upholstering by TOWN HOUSE M4S Orchard Lk. Rd. PE S-41M Always GOOD COFFEE BIKES FOUNTAIN 37 W. Huron WASN'T EASY “I do not say that it has i earn. 1 Just love to sat, and I had to use my ‘won't’ power a lot more than my will power. However, the feeling ol well being and satisfaction which cams from shedding thorn pounds, la worth any (Ms-comfort felt while dieting. ♦ * # “For instance, meeting people on the street or at a gathering and hearing their compliments on my new figure, mentioning how much younger I look; bring able to riwp for smaller aim Instead el ‘aty-lish stouts’; being able to walk past a store window end be somewhat satisfied with what is reflected back; tbs pleasant ’work’ taking my dram In —not to mention how much better I fed and how much easier it Is to get the “I must admit that during the hot weather I slipped up on some .oI my Marathon exercises, but with cooler weather coming I Intend to begin them again with re- ”1 could not have lost this much without ths help el my ftunily. emphasize too strongly how vital this la, far I tool that the mental attitude la so important in an un- Church Women Plan for Benefit The Episcopal Church Women oI Christ Church Gran-brook, will meet Oct 17 to spend the morning preparing lor their feu benefit sale, slated Oct. 38. A fashion show during the luncheon will offer members a preview ol many garments donated for the sale. The semiannual event provides funds for use by the church women In the fields of service to which they are committed. wish me luck fat shed-•t of my overweight" WMh the saeeeee story she royal blue tulle muffs for ol honor Barbara Beach, Pleasant Ridge, and bridesmaid Julia A. Federico, OxtKd. * * * Their gown were royal Mm peau satin. Judy Ann Giddings, the bride’s niece, was flower girl. A * * Michael Hudson was best man. Harlow Crawford, Clio and Delbert Gman, Flint, students at General Motors Inatltute ushered far their classmate. After raerivtag guests hi t (set flgnrat This is Mm last time I will u Marathon until 1983. i ir ♦ ♦ If any of you would like to follow it for a toss ol from 15 to 30 pounds in Just eight weeks, or it over a longer period, send 10 cents and a stamped, aelf-ad-dressed envelope with your request far the Marathon booklet Adt Josephine Lawman in care ol The Pontiac Press. A transistorized electronic device converts 13-volt storage battery current to 110 vott a.c. to operate Appliance*, tools or radios where household currant la not United Fund Solicitors Attend Training Class United Fund training sessions tor Pontiac and the Waterford area are being conducted today, Wednesday and Thursday. Solicitors may attend nay one of the surioni. scheduled for I evening and again at 10 ajn. and 8 p.m. Wednesday In Water ford Community Center and at 10 a.m. and 1:10 pan. Thursday In pie with Problems,” a slide film will give the trainees an inside took at the work of cadi agency. Mr. Schultz will explain methods of solicitation and ths,us* of materials. Questions from ths floor will be answered. Refreshments will be served at the dose of each meeting. Mrs. Welter Neffalager, Women's OsmmHtis campaign shslnnan, aanoonme, “The goal hr the heme ts hs—s oanvaes la 97AM. To sohfevo tMoVal we Assisting Mrs. Nottringer at ths meetings win be Mrs. Joseph Fox and Mrs. Elmer O. Johnson, Pontiac aad Waterford cochairman. Joeeph Schultz, aefltor project engineer for Pontiac Motor Dtvtoton, The program will supply information about the aprviem ti the M United Fund Garden Unit Meets ot Waterford Home Mrs. John Campbell served dessert to members of tin Holiday Forma Branch, Women’! Notional Form aad Garden Aseodation, at her home In Waterford. Mrs. Lyle Gibson Pledges Given at First Baptist Dr. H. H. Savage officiated at the marriage ol Judith Ann Gibson to Robert T. Brian Saturday evening in the Flret Baptist Church. ReV. Otto Yates ol Southfield, of the Daqutadre Community Church, brothers of the I The new Mrs.. Black is a psychiatric aide at Haven Saattorium, Rochester. She attended Western Yellow end gra roses accented Mrs. Campbell's dress el moM green peau de sole and magenta-tipped beige cym-bidium orchids complemented Mrs. Black's dress ol beige brocade. Visit Auxiliary The Ladles’ Auxiliary of Chief Pontiac Canton No. 3, International Order ol Odd Fellows, was visited by ths president, vice president and treasurer ol tha'huxfliary assodattop Department el Michigan at Thursday's masting. Ton guests from Flint, Detroit end Port Huron also ware present. Following the meeting a party was given for state officers. Philip For the ceremony and church reception, Mrs. Gibson chine sapphire peau do sotoTwMh gold adeems arid wore gold Mary Jo roses. Neva Brton, aunt oI the bridegroom, appeared in odve grey sheer WOOL with magenta scceesories. Her corsage was pale Pi* Cam Amling coses. ’♦ w • W Upon return from a honeymoon rip to Niagara Falls and Canada, the couple will make their home in Auburn 'Heights. The Mexican yam is important to pharmaceutical firms. It is a source of diosgenin, which yields cortisone as well as other hormones and steroids used in treating rheumatic diseases and some forms of cancer. . Abort 60 per eat ot the world’s, arm tractors are la uee on U. S. mop 1 COVER [' Absorbs dust on 1 walls, woodwork, ' floor's. Solo for > i waltpupor. Adjust- • r ablo-Fits any Mop. * MRS. ROBERT T. BRIEN Utica, assisted at the double-ring candlelight ceremony. Daughter if (to George E. Gib-sous of Rochester, the bride etooe floor-length white SeMffll Mura. White butterfly r aad rtephsuptis eeutered he cade of white canmttaae. Round cascades of bronze and mahogany dot pompom Complemented emerald green ailf taffeta dresses for the attendant*. Mrs, James Gibson served her sister-in-law as bridesmaid with Patricia’ Brian, sister ot tho bridegroom. Croton leaves end cattails, added to her bouquet, designated maid ol honor Sylvia Koaa of Troy. Robin and John Wilaon, niece aad nephew of the bride, were flower gtri and ring baarer. The brldegreem, ton ef There* V. Brian el teeth Hart Irtan, had Ethaa Rogers, Dray-tea Plates, tor Ms tort max. STERLING PATIOS Patio Awnings ef Every Description FE 4-4907 BnMiQmg. Up Baby. MISTS COLLECTED BY BM. DM MtMR. M One thing .you can count on when baby reaches the grasping and hold-I tog stags: almost everything will end up in that sweet, rosebud mouth. A couple of preceuttoM: * Toy* should be smell enough to hold, too large to swallow. of (hasp edges. Amid toys with smell parts that may be- Anothor thing you can count on: when you serve Gerber Strained Meats, your little one win get plenty of high quality protein* to help him grow strong and healthy! Thaw quality Armour outs are specially processed to protect precious food values. Of course, they're 100% pure meat, With Just enough natural broth left in to ' bring out the vors aad give a delightfully smooth, moist texture. 9 varieties including the new Strained Ham. Per Interesting menu planning, don't forget Gerber Dinners — tasty vegetables blended witks vory mest-to enhance flavor. Aadfl "cssseroim w type’’ dishes^* f Gerber High Meat Dianers with 3 times si much as tbs regular dinners. Irosheg lessen. You can’t start brushing baby’s silken tresses too sooo. Even ths merest down warrants smoothing with a soft brush -(usurious tresses rat* firmer strokes. No reason why baby shouldn't have lustrous hair. Gerber Menu magic, witij lip-smacking leanings and hearty nutrition. orCMehsJ All the above come in strained or junior varieties. P5. A toddler will enjoy Gerber Junior CooUee with his fruit Garber Baby Food*. Fremont, Michigan. Hoy reported on the recent luncheon aad council mooting for the Michigan Dhiokm, WNFAG, at the Gram Points Yacht dab. Brenrii mnmtere will mete mi-. door figurines aad specialty items for the annual workshop and Greene Market Dec. 7 fan the Waterford Community Center. Fiberglas Customized DRAPERIES LOVELY PRINTS Modern, traditional*, scenice ... in now pattern* and colors. SOLID COLORS Glowing new decorator shades from which to choose. LIVING ROOMS, BEDROOMS, KITCHENS 8tyles suitable for any room. BETTER Better than average In fabric and workmanship. ALL STYLES All style* can tie had In yard good* If you wish to Length 1 Width 1H Width S Width* 3 Widths sr MM fltJ* I1SM 134.30 . 46” IN n.ee KM 35M Mr 7J6 1XM 17.00 MM or i IM is.ee KM KM 1 nr tM ltM 18.50 * MM 1 n* 166 KM 1*M 31.00 •4” M4 ‘ UN MM MM •r ' Ml KM MM S3M Prices Very Slightly According to Pattern Open Friday and Monday Evenings FREE PARKING AT OUR DOOR 1666 S. Telegraph, Pontiac FE 4-0516 Quality Carpets and Draperies Since 1941 BRING YOUR WINDOW MEASUREMENTS Approximately 2 Weeks Detttery Si[offs Glllf Oil CORPOKjmtN IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THE APPOINTMENT OF THE ECONOMY OIL COMPANY DRAYTON PLAINS, MICHIGAN^ DISTRIBUTORS OF GULF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS GULF GASOLINES—GULF LUBRICANTS AND GULF SOLAR HEAT HOME HEATING OIL — BURNS CLEANER — BURNS HOTTER — The addition of the Economy Oil Company services, now makes GULF Quality Products more readily available, to more people, In the greater Pontlae area. GULF OIL CORPORATION PONTIAC, MICHIGAN / FOURTEEN_______i THGft PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1961 And these Yankees smoke He’s “Mr. Home Run/’ who came within one homer of tying Babe Ruth’s all-time record. Then he went on to set a new record for modem baseball with 61 homers for a 162-game season. Roger says, “Camels give me everything I want in a cigarette. They .taste great!” A record-breaker, too, Whitey’s mighty left > arm won the most games in the past twenty-seven years of Yankee baseball. The leading pitcher in both leagues, Whitey says, “No other cigarette compares with Camelsfor real rich taste, real easygoing mildness.” The legendary Yogi finished the 1961 season by setting a new record'KnTWorld Series appearances. And he furthered the legend by converting to a sensational Outfielder. Says Yogi, “You just can’t beat Camels for real satisfaction eveiy time you light up." ^K, Eight years a Yankee,“Moose" held down first base with his typical brilliance —and took advantage of an injury-free season to become his team’s Number Three home-run hitter. Says lie, “Camels taste richer and better —come out way ahead in pleasure." Some Other Major League Camel Smokers: HENRY AARON (Bravos) ED BAILEY (Slants) .f ERNIE BROBLIO (Cardinals) LOU BURDETTE (Bravas) DON ELSTON (Cubs) ELROY FACE (Pirates) DICK 8R0AT (Pirates) —DON HOAK (Pirates)— GLEN HOBBIE (Cobs) JACK JENSEN (Rad Sox) TED KLUSZEWSK1 (Areals) JIM LANOIS (White Sax) DALE LONG (Senators) JERRY LYNCH (Rods) MILT PAPPAS (Ortotos) PETE RUNNELS (Rad Sox) AL SMITH (White Sox) WARREN SPAAN (Bravos) You can depend on a champion to know a champion. That's why these great baseball! stars are all enthusiastic Camel fane. How about you? If you’re smoking more these days but enjoying it lees, why not discover the rich, satisfying flavor...the easygoing mildness of Camels? You can’t smoke a better cigarette I Have A Real Cigarette- THE BEST TOBACCO MAKES THE BEST/SMOKE I -------------——‘ffin.pt V ♦ ._____F1FTRBW of Series ★ ★ ★ ★ * . fl U Another Crown in the Books Chomps Irsszs 13-5 in Clincher Featuring Lopez, Blanchard Hero #< of Annual Classic CINCINNATI (AP)—Thi« will be Known as the World Serin In which the Qnrinnati Radi eent up IS men to pinch hit—and pot one double, which had no effect CINCINNATI Unlike many baseball players who grow grim and uncommon!- outstanding success, Ford—winding up the regular season with the majors* best record of 25-4—displayed delightful hu-superb pitching la tying the Reds into knots which they never untangled. was a wide open Scrim for Hero candidates. They popped from the width of the Yankee bench tat varying degrees. They Gets Rewarded Staying With Yanks CINCINNATI (UPI) — Ralph Houk's gone fishing — and while he's at It he can congratulate himself for not snapping at the baft of three other managerial offers last year. resembled a college football team straining to win one for the coach. (left to right) are Daley, right-anchard, first baseman BillSkowron and catcher The Yanks won the game, 134. Furthermore, me x emcees wot with little help from their Mg guna, Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle. Mantle played only one full game and pert off another, and Maria was held in check except for the third game when his ninth inning homer won for New York 32. for Starts Planning Title Run Monday’s game opened with a bang. In tfafe first, Bobby Richardson singled—tying the Series record for moat hits, with nine, in a five-game Series—and scored on John Blanchard’s mighty homer to right. Elston Howard doubled end scored on Moose Skownm’a single to center. Then Hooter Lopez tripled. SJcowrce, end (Me Bioyer doubled, scoring Lopes. The flew Yorkers added other run in the second on Tony Kubek’s single followed by Marie’ bloop doable to left. The Reds came back in third for three time when Don Btaafngame and Eddie Kaako singled and Frank Robinson bam-mgred a home raa. Hut the Yankees opened up ggain in the fourth. Kubek i was intentionally walked, __ Skowron scored Kubek and Btoih chard with a single homer. The Reds got their final two rune in the fifth when Gordon Coleman was safe at first Daley’s error and WgBy Post homered. ' The Yankees came up with two more in the sixth. Blanchard walked and Howard was safe on Eddie Kesko’s error. Blanchard came home on Lives’ sacrifice Daley’s fly. Wings Wallop Hershey by 6-1 in Last Tuneup Even with Mantle end Yogi Berra out of the last game, and Maris held to a double, Ymjue , pewer waa too great for the National League champions. It's All Over • » Brosnwi p IS ggMb roam (tusum^ i ft-FouUd cut far K. Jatanaoa ______ _ WSi *111*—1“ no .......m m me- • H LOB—Kr* Tort (A) IS. CSmSMMI *• pHed. “Yop Hd s |TMl )9M ■) matter what happened Thanks . . . thanks a lot Hutch, for coming over.” Pro Cage Teams Fighting in Court to Get Barnett CLEVELAND, (AP) - Dick Barnett was described in a Common Pleas Court bearing Monday as a pawn between two rival professional basketball leagues — the National Basketball Association and the new American Basketball League. mighty futile. Naming of Hitchcock likely at Baltimore BALTIMORE (AP) — Billy Hitchcock, 43-year-oid former major league player and coach, was expected fo be named manager of the Baltimore Orioles today at a press conference celled by Lee MacPhail, president-general man- MacPhafl has aaid that tour men were hi the running for the The Associated Press reported Saturday, that Hitchcock noted get TBd jab. H Hitchcock, of Opelika, Ala., is named manager at the 2 p m. press gathering, ha to expected to be given a one-year contract t an estimated 830,009. Others named by MacPhail a! still in the running were Harris, a former coach and later manager of the Orioles after Paul Richardk departed; Joe Gordon, fired as manager of Kansas City this year, and Mayo Smith, onetime manager of the Philadelphia Phillies and New York Yankee trouble shooter. Daryl Spencer and Dick Farrell Dodgers; Jack 8anford and Dick Lem ay, Giants; Bob Miller and Alex Grammas, Cardinals; Hal Smith and Don Leppert, Pirates; Barney Schultz and Jim Brewer in September. George Weiss, president of the Mets and Paul Richards, general manager of the Colts, met Sunday night to dtocusa the lists and preliminary selections. In general, the Mats are expected fo go heavy for veterans or estate fished “name” players while the Colts will concentrate on youth, "Walker has % strong tog,” Wil-» said. “He practices every day with Martin. He can do the job for us.” X-rays showed yesterday that Martin fractured fate right shoulder Sunday’s 3147 toss to the Bears, He will be loet to the Liana' to# from four to six week*. ■Ifop- skatedsr sffletels Stei Martin’s waste be pnt an Marita kicked five Arid goals in Detroit’s- four gamas this season and one of fate boots gave Detroit tbs' winning margin in its 16-15 victory over fit* Baltimore fata, Coach George Wilson mid Whyne Walker prqbabty would take Martin’s piaoe. 49ers' Rookie Halfback Suffers Broken Ankle with the Bears were Gary lawe aste Curl BretteckneMer. Urn The Lions aren’t the only dub bothered by injuries. The Los Angeles Rand aaid yesterday middie guard Marlin Mc-Kepver would miss Sunday’s game against the Uooa to Detroit. McKeever suffered severe damage to his left eye in tbe San Francisco game last Sunday and hat been hospitalised for examination. | The eye to badly swollen and dseter^ any one of the facial hopes waa damaged. iting Barnett from playing with Judge Charles W. White timed the bearing until Friday land allowed Barnett to practice with the Pipers for tbs time be- SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Dale Messer, San Francisco’s rookie halfback from Fresno State,, wifi be out for moat of the remainder the 49ers’ National Football Barnett, a former Tennessee State star, scored more than 2,000 points for Syracuse to two aone, aad was offered a $11,500 contract for the 1961-62 season but [did not sign it. . The Pipers said Barnett sighed one-year contract' with them early in July for $13,000. Team "physician Lloyd Mllburo said Mesaer suffered a broken bone in his right ankle during the waning.minutes of the 4Bers’ 354 pasting of the Loo Angeles Rams Cards'Halfback OK ST. LOUIS (AP) - Halfback Billy Stacy of the St Louis Card!-nato who suffered t concussion ta Sunday’s gams with the New York Gianfe waa ‘ ■ today. ram Waterford Our Lady of tba Lakes remained unbeaten ta CTO grade school football Sunday by whipping Lake Orion at. Joseph, 394. Thn Mullen, Doug Springs! and MM Comps each scored twice as OLL won ta third gams. •• • * m * - m h. Houston May B«nch Cannon, Other Starters Oil FEB-CANNON BJT ... HOUSTON (AP)—Bflly Ca the powerful Hetoman trophy win-^ a Inutotana State, may the HouatoU'Ollfra try to Improve * miserable 14 record in American Football League. Coach Lou Rymkus said he ta J thinking of be and eeveral other Houston ngtol Albuqutrqus has beta a tors—in an effort to revitalize the to hnteftars whoee Cate died to the statea Monday in a start d Halfbacks Dave Raimey and Benny McRae, injured hi MtohL gut’s win over Army, tra spsti ad to bs ready lor thn tonhurtoss Saturday. ‘ SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10,1861 1 Mississippi Replaces Hawkeyes Atop AP Poll Affing Card Improved *M* Lit Von In 19S5 ST. LOUIS (AP)r I Billy Stacy of the St. Louis Foot- | brain concussion in Sunday’s 24-9 loss to the New York Giants, was reported improved Rpnday. State Duel Saturday ANN ARBOR UB — The Michi- WJH _ in-Michigan State game, once a quiet neighborhood affair between an agricultural college and its big brother has turned into a football loud 0( national importance. The unbeaten former cow co at East Lansing and the similarly unbeaten Wolverines Dram Ann Arbor meet Saturday in huge Michigan Stadium. A ssBsat crowd numbering I a national trie- little - er nothing - to anybody outside of Michigan. The game has bean In the at tional gottighf ever since Michigan State made It big in major cob lege tothnll after World War 0. are than the i the mooting NO. 1 SPOT Each is bidding not only for Big Ten honors, but is hoping for recognition as tfas nation’s No. l team Ait Loses Another Bout LOB ANGELES (UPI) - Call, nula's one-time wondsrhoy of boxing, Art Aragon, was booked on assault charges last night by In Fine Whiskey... FLEISCHMANN’S is the BIB buy! 90 PROOF is why! ouilnt ■LENDED WHISKEY • SO PltOOF • 08% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS THE PLgtSOHMANN DISTILLINa CORPORATION, NEW YORK CITY Kemp and Low New Leaders of AFL DALLAS AP)—Nsw leaden in passing and rushing appeared in the American Football League last weekend but the nam— were familiar. Jack Kemp of San Diego, the ague loader In passing last year, pulled into first place with his performance against Boston. He replaced the idle A1 Dorow of New York. Paul Lowe of San Diego needed only 31 yards to take over the nulling lead from Jack Spikes of Dallas. Spikes didn't run at nil againet Denver because of a sore nee. Lionel Taylor, the wizard pass-eceiver of Denver, and Gino Cappelietti, Boston’s scorify demon, held their places. Kemp leads the passers with SI completions in lid throws for 854 yards. Dorow is second with 82 of 124 for 780. two pottoomfn who said the former contender for the world » a downtown sidewalk. * * # .. Aragon, now a hail bondman, mt expected t* appeal for a writ of habeas corpus and post hand The two eMeeee, Gerald Bay noticed Aragea pa stag ap aad -----la heat of Me perked ear This year Michigan — unheralded in prs mason sstl mat ion, after four mediocre seasons — is accorded its best chance of winning sines it upset the Spartans in 1MB. The two rivals art similar In Whsn they stopped to question Jm, they, mid, Anson began throwing punches until they subdued him. Calhoun is n part-time Junior college boxing instructor. Cousy Has Ailing Elbow WORCESTER, Mass. AP)-A one spur on Bob Cousy’s right elbow is bothering the Boston Celtics star. But Cousy says he will forego an operation until liter this season. * * dr 'It’s not a painful injury,” said Oxuy, "but it is very irritating. L intend to play all I can and maybe with occasional rest everything will be all right” . m GULF OIL CMPOMTHNI IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THE APPOINTMENT OF THE ECONOMY OIL COMPANY DIUYTON PLAINS, MICHIGAN DISTRIBUTORS OF GULF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS GULF GASOLINES - GULF LUBRICANTS and ? GULF SOLAR HEAT ' HOME HEATING OIL — Burns Cleaner — Burns Hotter — Th® addition of the Economy Oil Company services, mow makes GULF Quality Products more readily available, to more people, In the greater Pontiac Area. GULF OIL CORPORATION PONTIAC, MICHIGAN and Army 584. ty have decimated the . _. _ _ games in this St-game series, winning tour and tying tbs other. Ones it was the Wolverines who commanded the series that started in Of Michigan State's U vie-lories over the Wolverines, eight have occurred since 1960 when the Spartans styrted moving into the Michigan State in 5th Position, Alabama, Texas Others Ahead of Area Teams; Ohio State 7th ■y The Associated Mesa took over as the nation’s No. 1 college football team today, placing Iowa of the Big Ten. > Miss, with a SO record this roar and unbeaten in its last IS games dating back to 1961, was •verwhetming choice by The LARGE LOOM They posersi huge, mobile Knee — each averages above 220 —that have restricted the ground program of their opponents. The Sptrtane have yielded a total of only 94 yards rushing in their two victories, the Wolverines only 129 yards. Its victories. Michigan State, with am* depth, haa gahnd IN yards reaMeg while completing only three psesee is the twa games, the Wstveetosa have gained lit only six passes sgatost UCLA aad Army. Michigan has a veteran backfteid vhile sophomores have helped Michigan State. ♦ A A De way Lincoln end ShermAn Lewis,- both halfback newcomers, were the big gainers in the Spartans conquest of Stanford. George Saimes, a junior, was the strongest runner in the Wls cousin tri- perts, gaining M first-place votes. A A A tapra, named the top team for' the first two weeks and in the poll, edged Mg__ for 2nd pUce. Texas was fourth, while Michigan State and MJchi-who meet this t Saturday, were fifth end sixth, respectively, and Ohio State seventh.’ Notre Dame made its first appearance in the top 10 since early in 1969 for a No. 8 ranking after winning its fjptf two games. Baylor, 10th last -week, moved up to No. 9 and aurprlrihg Maryland, after three wins in I Marts, was 10th. Ote Mias, which hardly misses its graduated AILAmerica quarterback, Jake Gibbs, with Doug Elmore pow running the team, has not allowed a touchdown ,ln beating Arkansas, Kentucky and Florida State. Kentucky got pair of field goals. The two Mate of Michigan teams also won handily, State besting Stanford 31-3 and Mkdflp^M testing Army 38-8. Ohio, State rebounded from its 7-7 tie against Texts Christian and defeated UCLA 13-3 while the Irish over Purdue 22-20. Baylor was idle last wekend. [ - • AP RATINGS RUGGED RUGBY — American football can be rough, but British rugby has its moments as evidrttced by this palm-ih-the-face play during a game at Headingly, Leeds, England, between Britain and New Zealand. A New Zealand player; clutching the hall with one hand, slams Ms palm into the lace of a British player to ward off an attempted tackle. New Zealand won, 29-1L «. hw (WO) ........... 9. uidiltan State 04) ( «. Michigan (MLU) .. ’ Ohio Mat* (14-1) mini bum (M) (1) Baylor 0-0) ..... Maryland (3-0) -An recelrlng vote, Korthweetem. waahlagton,_____ , ,, . OqonUa, Oaorfta Taeh, Bloc. Navy. Mary- Syracuao Arkanaaa, Halfback Bennie McRae and fullback Bill Tunnicliff, both seniors, and halfback Dave Ralraey. a Junior, form the hard core of Bump Elliott’s Michigan backfiekL Boston Latest Club for Guard Antwine BOSTON AP) - The Boston Patriots acquired offensive guard Houston Antwine from the Houston Oilers Monday in an Amerl- .... —1 1 can Football League trade. Iowa's Hollis Sidelined UPI RATINGS IfltW YORK DPI) — The United Pnu International major college leek mf wenn — loit reeoidi MlaiUalppI (Ml 04) . Mlchlgen (3) CM) 3. Tnue (i) oeT «■ *la>aw» n> 04) L Iowa f- — ** State O) c •a (I) (M) • (1-0-1) Wildcats, Irish Other Picks Wire Service Selects Michigan by 2 Points CINCINNATI football seer’s hatting average looked much better than the Cincinnati Rads’ last weekend with a dean prognosticating sweep for e sason mark of 10-2-L Here's another bounce of the crystal ball: Michigan M, Michigan State 18—• shahy bet ea sad ragged Uneaten. The game Is at Aaa Arbor aad Michigan'* Mg bewi wttl be Jemping with Wetveriae whooping. The contest coaid be the key he the Big Tea State’s laws s Northwestern 19, Minnesota 12 —Are the Wildcats for real? The Gophers figure to be much tougher than Boston College and Illinois. Both clawed badly as the Wildcats loosed a surprise runner, fullback Bill Swingle. Northwestern could make the mistake of looking ahead to the following Saturday's dash with Ohio State. Iowa 2L Indiana 7 — Iowa’s Hawkeyes may not get I breather they expected against Indiana dub which refused to be pushed around by Doubtlees coach Jerry Bums this week cracked the whip over Hawkeye defense that was real mushy against Southern ChU-spirited Trojans. lows wfll have to perk considerably to remain the ranking Big Ten contender. Boston gave up its No. 3 draft choice for 1962 to get the former Southern Illinois lineman. Antwine, 22, was with the Del-Cowboys of the National League until last month. Ohio State 24, Illinois 7—It looks •j like a long, long season for Pete Elliott’s green Qlini. The Bucks 1 can make it, .trying fancy stuff o&' j Just typical Buckeye cloud-of-dust- 5!?’ IoT*..fAP)~9u^‘ tlpurdue 18, Miami of Ohio6-The the 22-20 squeeze past Purdue may have launched the Irish on their long-awaited comeback to national Wisconsin 19, Oregon State 13— One of these Saturdays that touted Badger aerial attack haa to start dropping some real bomba. HUNTERS ACCIDENT INSURANCE PrMKljM flM GEO. S. BARRY ASSOCIATES >57 West Huron St. PI 4-0511 terback WUbum Hoiks probably will miss Iowa's game with Indiana Saturday because of a wrist Injury, Hawkeye coach Jerry Buns said Monday. UNITED TIRE SERVICE DfCI ON NEW TIRE PRICES r Coupon Speciel Free Moulin; BRAND NEW RATH4C 6.70x15 "4 14.88 WHY BUY A RECAF? •RAND NEW SNOW TIRES NOT A SECOND, CHANGEOVER OR NEW TREAD YOUR CHOICE 1.70x11 OR 7.60x14 Blk. T.T. Ilk. T.T. EXCHANGE PUIS TAX NORKAPPABU TIRE NEEDED NO MONEY DOWN! S095 SPORTS, IMPORTS and COMPACT, NEW 1st UNI 100 LIVIL Mm’Iim *12** MM to. *14** "mSd* WBTIWU1S „trt£L. 0.00.14 $14.95 Op— Wsaday. Thwadeyt Friday ’819-Cfasod leader UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Miami Redskins have pulUd the nig from under Dig Ten teams before, but the Boilermakers wiD! be tough after being licked out by Notre Dame. Notre Dame 19, Southern California 14—The Irish ahowed steady improvement In whipping both Oklahoma and Purdue. They’D* have to keep gathering steam against Southern California'which nearly up-ended law.. However, 'Frisco Cagers Win Exhibition Under New Plan stockton; cam. (AP)—superior height and the shooting of Ken Sears and John Berbtrich helped the San Francisco Saints to an 112-105 American Basketball League exhibition victory over “to Los Angeles Jets Monday ight. The exhibition marked the first California appearance of the ABL’s two-goal scoring system in which goals rix>t from 25 fact out count three prints. Closer In goals count the usual two points. Both the Saint* and the Jets each Mt STONEY'S OIL SERVICE 1995 CASS LK. RD. Keefe Harter 682-2651 PROMPT SERVICE 25 fsfen srdars aad up Sears, with 23 points, and Ber-berich, with 20, led the Saints although the Jets’ Hal Lear took game honor* with 29. FALLOUT SHELTER *495 OENUINi PRESTONE PERMANENT ANTI-FREEZE 144 Rugular43.2S ■ ota* LIMIT 2 OAL IPEROAL. Pit CUSTOMER ACME AUTO PARTS ffwawrly Isrii’i (f sis Pom) 986 OAKLAND W gg 2-9229 Onu of Pontiac's Largest Auto Wreckers THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUE3DA yr, OtifyOBBB >0, 1061 SEVENTEEN 1961 NHL Season Opens Wednesday Liston Sgns to fight Bout in December gaii’s high school football season. ★ * * A -/ Handy, a 61-0 winner over Alpena in its fourth straight victory without defeat, ranked as No. 1: in the Associated Press Class A poll today. Manistee, unacoted upon in its (our straight triumphs, was the new leader jit Class B. inning Monday. Red catcher John Edwards is set to take the throw. Skew ton's run was one of five in the first inning. COME ONE! COME ALU OCTOBER H 13th and Kalamazoo University, last week’s Class B leader before its 12-6 loss to Otsego, fell to 10th. Handy wu'IRond in Class A last week and Manistee was third in Class B. Lansing Sexton (44), which beat Ann Arbor (3-1) climbed from fourth fo second in Class A. Ann Arbor toppled from third to , seventh. Flint Central (1-1) moved from a lOth-place tie to a deadlock Northern Entertains Farming^ PACES OL LAKERS - Fullback George Sharpe sparked Our Lady at the Lakes to its first varsity football win Sunday at St. Benedict by scoring all three touchdowns. He also has the only other TD the team baa made in its six triumphs, getting at ieast four touchdowns in each game. The poll results on the basis of 10 points for a first-place vote, nine Ortonville seeks its second straight Genoese C victory at Montrose. The Black Hawks will be underdogs in this coolest. ★ ★ ★ Birmingham Seaholm takes on Eastern Michigan League power Femdale on the Dales field. Birmingham Groves is on the road for a Tri-River game at Dearborn Hasten. Saturday action will have Cran-brook after win No. 4 at Buffalo Nichols la an Inter-State game, and Emmanuel Christian trying for its first victory at Wisner Stadium against Grosso Points University School. AP Prep Rating Romeo, soundly whipped by Smith’s diarges wifi bn heavily favored to down the Skippers. Berkley could experience trouble staying even with Walled Lake When the Bears meet Southfield. The Blue Jays had some trouble on pass defeme in their win over) Waterford, and Berkley's fine quar-1 terback, Phil Krmnm, could take i advantage of this weakness. ' tough foe 1 Top game in the Wayne-Oak-, laud League has North vllle meet-) Oxford win be favored for the first time this season when the Wildcats host North BrtUKh for a South Central game. Although winless hi four games, Oxford has played tougher competition. Imlay City should pickup its third league win at home against Millington Sold by Authorized Gilbert Dealan Laker Harriers Win. West Bloomfield ported a 24-33 cross country victory over dark-ston Monday. Jack Luhdy of Clarkaton was first in 11:01, followed by Mike Grulke, West Bloomfield; Rich Ecker, West Bloomfield; and Ken Misldn, Cl arks ton. Wt invite you to plan your problem in the hands of our investment spccielitn— local men who hare e gee! stake in die future of their customers and the community. Juday and an experienced line are expected to more than offset West Bloomfield’s speedy backfield of Jim Watkins, Jim Ferguson and Mike Paddy. It is doubtful if Roger Stewart of Bloomfield Hills will repeat last week’s performance of five touchdowns, but the Barons should have little trouble posting a home victory over Milford. * ★ * Use Redskins have had trouble mounting an attack this fall and must contend with the Bloomfield Hills winged f and single wing offense in the afternoon contest. darencevllle, Its bubble burst by Bloomfield Hills, eaa expect ao sympathy at Holly. The Broncos appear to he on the move after lorteg to highly naked Grand Blanc and NoriftvUe. Clarkston will attempt to rebound from two straight setbacks against winless Brighton. The last ALL ORDERS EXECUTED AT REGULAR COMMISSION RATES Former Avondale players will be on hand for tiw Yellow Jackets homecoming game with Madison. These ex-players will be introduced daring the half time festivities. ON VERGE Madison has been on the verge of breaking loose and this could mean that Avondale can expect a 107 Squirrel Road BREED NEW 6:70x15 TRANS TROUBLES? SAVE MONEY at r Reliable Transmission Co. 41 K. PARKE ST. PE 44)791 POWHA Wading, Lerchen & Co. Members New York Stock Exchange 40a WOMTIAO HTATH HANK BLOG. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN • PHONRi PH « GGTG Please send free booklet ’’Dividends Over The Yean!’ • If you would like to know how to introduce extra paydays into your future, now is the time to ditaut OH investment program witha Wading, Lerchen & Go. representative. Call visit us today. WRITTEN 90-DAY GUARANTEE ON ALL WORK SPECIAL PRICES On All TrantmifisiGM Powerglido PowerfUte Hydromotic Ford-O-Metk Dynoflow Mg*c-0-MgH« ADDRESS. i—rpuowins u 0( Mtetead stock trsnuc"------ York Stock Sschaoto 1 ” wt H)i M% + % 8%^- i.so ti tm J SON 13% soli— % 29 67% 61 43 31% 31 _ . H m 30% 30% Imortsj > xd Poultry and Eggs •more poclthy pronorr. os • »- rum p*u pw poa>s ** "■ *“ “* * 1 dctsoiy nos t raeltara (including U.8.1 Brows* nod* A targe 43%; Medium %-3*%; Small 31-33; Orsdo a check. CHICAGO eOCLTBY CHICAGO. Oct. .It (OK)-... Lire poultry .poital (ed White m----JMl) rosoten 13-30%; Butter »te»dr *0; Of .core 37%; ________________ ■sc* About otasSj. White torso extra. to mixed Mrs* extra. 41%: —---------------- i' - —s 31 Drr O 2.3* I M% 34% 06V. +1% mM. 1 30a 1* 37% 37% 37%. , Cat Lto* la M 43% 41% 43% All Sons 2.40 U 31 03% 43% HU 3% 3% 3%..... .Mb 1 31% 11% 31%— % Atm Care •* 34 34% 34% 34%+ % BabcocksW 1.43 13 41 salt: standard* 34; dlrtlaa 31%; e _ __ - Chicago oroaatUa uchanst: Butter steady: rbolaaata buying price, unchanged; M aor* AA 40; 12 A 60; S3 B 4: d C M; car. 30 B M%: M C 80%. Bn. steady; whelaaal* buying arlcaa unchanged; To par cant or bet'^r Oradt ‘white* 44%; «M0I%: nudluteo 33%; —J—■- 34; dlrtlaa 31%; check. 31%. ma Alto JB 43 11% 14% )*%+ % I 33% 33% 33%.- a 4 31% 21 » • . 12 133% 131% 13Mb- % _ 41% jjte+.li Rare *Pdr .Tie “THR* ssnfti ■ 1-551 He"' Wh. 3 M% M% J»%-3 11* 117% 111 -I 9 1*% 1*% M%- I 1% 3% 1%. „ Cam 41 31% 11% 31%— % STcani * M 47 40% bland SU 123 bterlak b 144 I; dlrtle. dow loros I rji. averages 3* Ind. 708.4* Ott 2 7* 34 Balia 13043 up 0.14 It ottta 137.3* re 223 *8 Stock. WJllB lJI . VOLUMB TOI Ml 3.000.00* 73 41% 41% 41%— % I? 8. H. ♦ 13 30% 80% 80%-f 2 07% *7% 17% + 14 45% 43% 45%— Ijgl Budd Co .13 Livestock 1m{ 1 « IT, 17 ... 13 13% 13% 13%— % 1 13% 13% 13%+ % 4 18% 18% 10%— % 3 »% 30% 1*%-% 4 31 *3% 31 + % Joo Logan .7 JoneskL 2 5* Joy Wl I DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT, Oct. I (API—Cattle 3,330. hulk early supply »tau«t' heifers, good aad choU grades pro- Cdn Pac 14* 7% 7% 7%— 3 111 111 111 — 4 34% 30% 24%... I- Cater Tree 1 llty cow* about needy; 1----H — . C toad, mixed high choice and prime Cut) In .' jund 1100 lb. yearling steer. 25.50; CanASW 1.42 _ (derate ihovtat high photce r M 34% 34% 1 high choice to prime heifer. *433: around three load, high 21.75; tow to high ehole# 21.80; good awdtototehtomd >h choice baiter. ________Ice heUer. 11.71- low choice heifer* 3144- iteert Cert-tecd ,40b -—* —ana Air » —lamplln OU 1 CMGES&Oh 4 ChMSPAPac 141 I 67% 67%+ % 33.M: Utuity MW» 1100-16 *0; latter price paid .parrally; tanner, and cutter. n.(d-134li few'thin Ught oaaaura daws two .hort Iota Ho. lb. butehon 1 1081330 lb. 1*0-33* - rjsra ___ .1 mo«t No. 10.05; mixed No._ 1 and 2 (fO-XOT IK ...40-18 5*; No 2 and I 1*0-130 lb. Ute-lMIjN*.* “J * 200 lb. 1740-13.00; Ho. * h 17.38-17.10, - t Hi- I 3M-300 1 r 17.25; No. 1, * *1 k 15.75-17.00; 3 Ml Ml' lb- MW. i4.ie-ir»: boar* 12.30-14.00. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK cHicAOO. Oct. * 1 UK 1 r- Wy_____ Fairly actlv*; barrow* and |Bh so"? •tead; to weak; “J* if. .5 CTlilnan 1.00 Cllta. Sec 2 4* Simm 3 Coca Cate SOS Cota Palm 1.20a Couin. Rad 1 23% 23% 23%..... 12 58% MV. 80%+ % 17 10V. 18% 1«W % 14 33% ML MU* H 83% 58 U — % 1 *4 34 fi-eft * U> 31% 51%+ % , «%+. % 6 86% 16% Wgv .. 16 46% 46V. 44%— % 14 33% 31% 31% - ■' Cocnw Ed lb MS-MS to. „ mk 300-400 111. SOWS 15.75-17.5f- imSl tpHjf 50- .tear, ^' bat rtoody to M hifhor. - " T*. .toady to M high- 1 alow, steady to w*M; r early gated Meeker, .nd feeder.: bulk choice and prune Jtetrg jB-lSejh. ll-Tt^-M; moj^tood and a£ad rood and obotc* 300-13M lb. 32.25-24.00; f*W f htllinji 7 »% 20% 2S%— - 13 31% 30% »%- % 4 51% 51 B - % 9 37% 37% 37%,.\.. T 97% 97% 97%— % I 17% 17% 1T%—" 19 K% 93V, 32% + ____ _ . * 43% 43% $%— ConNOa. 2 30 Xd 4 65% M% 65%..... Canaam Pw 3.40 11 ff% 77% 77%—% Ccotalner Mm p 11% S3 35%+ % Coat can 143 B 41% 3 43 - ■ Cant lag I.M 17 «% M% N . 62 .10% M% 10%. 1 4|% # 41 . I 15% 15% 15%' U 13% 53% ^......... 5 22% 22% 22%+ % i cm Moc cm ou ... Copper• Rot Corn Pd i n primp SB ^■rJ^SVu, lamb, not fully Mt*bUMcd:-lCk-opcntaS aataa wooled iamba about steady; awe* ateady; Can 1471 M 37% 37% 17%+ % .lao.ljt .M 5 11% «iT+ % SvjQr Tit'r “ 2 eawby_pb 1 a. i _ ..... cwua Pub O HUt u + % CurtlM Wr 1 12 17% 17V. 17%— % -D— I 4 is 1 3 U 1 Pay** Dayatrom .3*p Paata Re* 1.24 Paaro t , DelAHud 105* Sup la ____BOW 1 IS*.!? 1 [ Net chans* : 3M T 1134 mi 1574 mr. Day .....iSi 1334 140.7 HI.' WMk Ago .....MS 1J4 * HKIS-i Month As* .....HI * J2 * SS’i HH Year Ago ....•■jS’I M0.3 is i Plans Fa|t Cargo Ships WASHINGTON S' J 5S Jftt S5L ' ffi S5 Sf 4 44% 44% „ _______ J 74% Mi SM KolU .734 S3* 33% 31 „. m ltd OU Cal 3 12 M% '41% K— % Md OU M 1.40b fi 47% 07% 47%— % “ IMt 117 43% 43% 43% ‘ 4 30% M 10%- rar i 30 3 13% 9% M%- a> Ch 120b 4 4* \ 44% 4t%—1% ‘— 1J* M 31 10% N)j+ % Std OU b Stand Pk 8taTan.JPl.30 xd ( U N 8 E-jt U 33 33% 33V —K— _ 5. 32 31% 31%+ % Mb 5 35% 25% »%V % HOI 1 04% 04% 04%— w Kroger I.M B » *■* 30% L^. ,1 U-7, 11% U% • _____ __ | fi% fi% .BK+ Swlftlrtto 1.40* I 40% 41% 43% .. —T— 1 31 22% 11% 0%... 72 4S% 43 .43 — I 23% 25% 25% + % UgAMy* 1 1) tiw.J SVasr iS'laru 123 *4 54% M% gh-,%1 tSLS 121 50 M% *2% gh+1% It1— 111 ,71s 1 42% 41% 42%— % ■ 'll” Meek 33 »%+ 1 lay D Str 2.2* imaa a v l lead Cp 1.7* lerck 120 4 M 57% 37%+ % bCh 50b * 30% 30% 24%.... tot* I 3 104% 144 MM+I 19 53% 11% 53V-6 35% 34% »% + ___ ■ . 177 Mi Mi 31%+ ~ Molec tod 1 44 10% 11% tt%+ % 4 73% 73% 71V— % —N— NAPI Cp 25* 3 33% 11% «%- l—. .T s 73 73 M 41 ___________ 14 15% 13% 13%+ hSmTIii lm 9 u* lB .ft.-, ..1 iji m S% IS* ii%+ -AS*9 i w% ' yJNYNHAHart Nta H Pw 1.M NoriAWeit 4a Ho Am At 1 I 41% 41% 41%— % Nor Fee 1.33 4 40% 43% •%- % 3 37% 17% 37%+ % * 41% 43% 43%+ % i m ah m%- % 13 Ml 44 44%+ l a 77% w + 13 9% 14% 3 33 par. Parka lto I* ________ 34% MR iM%^ Paabedy Co*- M f 37% tf% 17%+ toy,. JC 1.3to I 4I%- 43% drib PMU I.S 7 53% 33% 9%+ .. RR -25e * 15V. 11% 13%- % U CaU i« fx S3 ■}% ■ + % ir .14* .• )• 40 44% 6% 44 + % Ip. .D 3 i- S 57% 37% 17% + % ail 1-M • •» *L-iu kSdg lb 3* 34% 43% 44%+ 1% * U4% U4 114 — % 23 50V. 55% M ... “ “ 9% M%+ % *3% *2% 42%—1% 3 23% 31% «%.. Interested Parties Have Until Dec. 15 to Submit Briefs in Case By SAM DAWSON AP BHsiasee N< N £ W YORK —More light i the subject—both in factory and office—ii giving a boost to an 80-year-old industry. Makers of commercial and industrial lighting fixtures and in-gtallattoot report sales to taetpr-and offices this year will reach 1900 million. That is more than five times better than the industry did Just 14 years ago. Sales in-1947 were 960 million. More, the industry confidently predicts the figure wOl reach MW million by 19b. Interstate Commerce Commission Examiner John L. Bradford gave attorneys for aD interested parties until Dec. IS to submit briefo. His recommendation to the ICC will be baled on hearings arid briefs. CAO called witness Monday la aa attempt to defeat a Md by a Recommended Ught levels' for office aid plants have risen per cent since 1947, according to the Illuminating Engineering Society, the technical voice for the industry. And the Increased amount of light provided for office and factory workers has gone 1 up 2,000 per cent since 1917. A leading reason is that writers were found to do much better work and turn out more products road, New Yoffc Central, to either gain control of the financially alttag BAO or Join with' CAO In a three-way arrange- Charles J. Meyer, transportation consultant from Hanover, N.J. testified that New York Central officials had erred sharply In predicting a 923.4 million saving their railroad Joined in the deal. 13 31 32% a — % ' 32 9% 37% ■%* % 1 14% M% 13V- % 15 17% 17V. 17%... I 5 48% 48% 4S%+ % I 3S% MS J*% . He said R. R. Manion, assistant to the New York Central president, had overstated savings in earlier testimony. Meyer also said some of Manlon’s proposals for consolidations were impractical. Before Meyer testified, Bradford heard from labor leaden opposing any ooaoolldattoa of the CAO. They contended control by the CAO would result in a loss of 1,000 Jobs and that if New York Central Joined CM) it would mean almost 6,000 fewer jobs. CAO officials have testified that employment actually would be increased. They have announced (dans for a 9250 million modernisation program if the ICC approves the union which stockholders of the CAO and B&O already have approved. 1 M% 5*% 5*% + (way SI 123 >. Lead 1 a «n «w wr ___Sanr 1 111 MV 14% 15% St Has Pap 1.41b 9 21% 9% M%- tu D tap 2M 47* 17% MV 15% _ ' 4 28% 28% MV-V. M l to “ “ 17 Scott Pap 2.: ScabALRR 1 1% 8% 8%— + 1% Wti— 12% 12% * 37% 37% |Hb+ If 1«% 16% MV.. 1 23% 31% 23%— 3* 26% 36V< 36%+ . 7 114 111% 111%—3% 5 27% 26% lftT^ M 13% 17% 9 . " M% M 69 Stocks of Local Interest figure, after daefaitl point. atValj^bth. ACP-Wrtslejr Store., lac. . Aeroqulp Corp............. Arkaaaaa Louutana One Co. ______ Baldwln-Mont Cheat. C*. P7*. 18.4 15. Borman Pood Store* .........61.6 *3. Curtl..-Wright Corp. ......17.2 17. HMPWrtehtl DavMooa moo. federal Mogul-B ..if mMlAMpatol . r Bearing. 272 M Hoover Ball * Bearing . Leonard Rallnlag ......... MMhjoaoa Bhaattoal Prophet WoiliwoM or office items as the light level TWO BIO SEASONS But there were two' other big reasons for the spurt since 1947. First, the fluorescent lighting fixture, introduced in the late 1930s, caught on rapidly in plants and offices in the yean immediately after World War II. The society sags this fixture helped create awareness ef the useful-good lighting in work Second, the spurt in construction of office buildings and plants that started in the late 1940s opened sride markets to the lighting industry. All tills gladdens the makers of fixtures and the utilities that furnish the Juice for them. But there are some major problems, too. For one, as more light is being created, so is more heat. The fat-creased heat from the extra lights can overburden air conditioning systems, as architects and engineers -will tell you. Engineers are working on the SALESMANSHIP The second problem facing the Industry Is -one of salesmanship. Although making big sales gains in recent years, fixture makers and installers contend that manor' factories and offices are still well. below the standards set by moat of the newer buildings. Wall Street Chatter of heat from the fixtures in the heathy installations for buildings. Another solotion proposed is dissipation of the haat from lighting fixtures into cooling NEW YORK (UPD—Third quar- Tit M I_m-'TgrM- a ■ AM..-- „ ter earnings o? 52 industrial firms showed a 29 per cent gain over a year ago, according to a special analysis released today by Spear A Staff, Inc. These firms, where third quarter ended Aug. M because they operate on a fiscal year baste, have previously proven to be a bellwether of reaalts to be announced a month la tar by firm* whore qnarter ended Sept 30, Spear A Staff mid. According to Roger E. Spear, president, "this striking increase in average earnings points up well the rapidly improving business outlook. As ont result, we can now expect 1961 total dividend payments to slightly exceed 1980’s record rate of 914 billion.” " i late on the extent of any further recovery in the Hst, It is our reasoning that a potential base formation U in the making, according to W. Sparks A Co. Consolidated Paper Buys Meyers Corrugated Box CLEVELAND (UPD-Consolidat-ed Paper Co., of Monroe, Mich., has bought the Meyers Corrugated Box Co., of Cleveland. The sale announcement Monday said the Meyers firm would be operated as a division of the larger Michigan firm, which has annual sales of about $48 million. International Statistical Bureau says last week’s market action suggests very strongly that the declining trend of recent weeks has probably about run its course. There are many signs that I stocks may be entering a phase of strong earnings growth, according to Investors Research Co. Rails Battle Over ‘WF Before ICC Officials James Dines of A. M. Kidder A Co. says to concentrate buying in defensive issues while also maintaining adequate buying reserves until the market stops modulating and makes up Its mind. He .would continue to avoid aluminums, oils and steels but the coppers, he says, are corning down into a possible buying ares. sarlly represent sstaal luiiasnllMi .Sal — intended aa s suld. M the approx' • trading range of th* Mearltle*. I 13% H% M%....... 13 1*7% 106% 1*7%+ g _ 30% 3* _ 3 40% 4*% 40% m 9% 9% »%- « 33% MV 54% v 2 12% 13% 13%+ V 24 32% 32% MV— t 14 13% 13% 15%— 1 U— Martin Gilbert of Van Alstyn: Noel A Co. tells clients that the technical position of the market warrants s further expansion in stock prices in the immediate period ahead. Maas. Investor* Trust . Putnam Oravrth ________ T.l.vl.ton Electronics Wellington Equity ______ .....in i.7i .....liM 11.81 .....13.34 17.04 Soybean Futures in Good Demand Miracle Mile Will Celebrate . ii%-% 08 L__ US Steel 1 *1 l5>~1 ! CHICAGO UR—Grain and soy- +''%'bean futures were steady to firm under good demand on the board of trade today. Demand for corn continued in early transactions following Monday'r upturn in that market. Much of today's buying was attributed covering, higher market stemmed from various reports that the government was planning changes tn commodity credit poration selling policies. Rye and oats also moved u. much as a cent a bushel shortly after the opening. CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAOO. Oct ll |AP) -(rate pries.: Wheat—- Oats— 85 Un Carbide On Elec l ie i in tn II . 52% 51% „.r _ _T „„ ifl )|% 36*4 m%. Unit Air Lin .Sib S 41% 41% 41% .. TT“‘* mt t ; U 45% 45% 45%— % «F3 117a Gas Cp LM M 35% 35% ---MAM I 103 3»% 38% 6HPBII — Jorax ,45s 5 34% 31% 15V- K os rratteT 3 71 71 ™ Oypaum 2.41s 4 Ml Ml HI 14% 4% Udh 3b S W Sit * F ii 88 Match .M MS >3% 13 33% Optohn M . 14 35% 55 15 . ^V— Van ad Cp .41 4 34% i<% 24% Vartan As J3 43 41% 41% Vs EMPow 1.34 7 •*% 45% 45% —w— Walworth f 7% 7% 7% 5 7 Ii M so - % 34 M l M — % 3 »% MV **%- % 1* 41% 43 9%-V May . d. special IfeMtoT Miracle Mile Shopping Center will celebrate Its fourtii anniversary Thursday, Friday and Saturday by helping other organisations raise funds for 1-nnxmnnHy projects. ■ 2 *7% S May . . 3.11% Jul %m- .13% . 1 33% :lt& Noon TVs*. 712 1*1* 352 Pray. Day TS2 1*18 *5 S As* WJ Mi (5 4 ---~A*u 7*4 10* | Ef Y**r Afa 77.7 '*4.1 M.7 ---High TIT MJ2 Ml S! B* 5| JP' to 8 1 *72 722 3L4 312 196* High » Treasury Position taaptorttug data * year •Kl. tosMte fl July 1 , Withdrawal, ftaaai ye*r Jjlni.M,ra.j tSd*a Withdrawal. Tckil dete . 393.343,17*.7*7.43 17,331,034.317.33 oet. a lit (.721.133,710.33 23.336,454,Ml 11,75*253,33! SM.345.97423 19.415,347,13 Ject to atatatary j Joseph Granvflle of E. F. Hutton A Co. says the strength tie* in the drugs, tobaepos, foods, la, eosmstics and utilities: Santa Fe baaed its arguments on formal petitions of Interven-whfie SP maintained that jthe ICC alao should consider letters from groups snd individuals. Th* IOC is required by law to Mride the case "In the public interest” hot petitions snd letters do not weigh heavily as evidenoa toward a final ruling. While it seems too early to specu- To Mark 4th Year by Holping Organizations Raisa Funds Sane 55 organizations cupy the space offered by Miracle Mile tor booths, hi turn, the Miracle Mile Association will award 1250 in cash prises for the best decorated booths. Entertainment 4*U1 each evening frpm S to S. On a stage, individual perfatinert. Including anyone present ' who wishes to participate, will ea- Follies-A-Poppin booth, sponsored by Pontiac General Hospital Auxiliary, will stand directly across from the stage. Observers, as ttsU ss participants, will be entertained toy Land? O-Lakes Majorettes, Rae-Vens Drill Team, Thunderblrd Rifle Team, Skyliners Baton Team, and the Rae-Vens Color Guard Unit of the Drill Team. Each marching unit will perform in the cruising lane, marching from Food Fair to Kroger, then return to the stage. American Stack Exch. NEW YOIUC (API — AMMteaa SI I Kataar nates S.4 saps* Cratea Fvi . Dynam Am . i 4 , Mtad John ...147.3 Hatt ttaarp . Imp Cham . One maker of commercial and industrial lighting equipment, Day-Brite Lighting Inc., St LoUis, Mo., says many of the older office buUdtngi and plants still have their original equipment, while others aren’t yet up to recommended levels. Officials of ths firm say that the recommended light level Is 100 footcandles, and the national average is less than V foot candle measures the in one square foot given hy one candle. lighting industry bases much of its hopes of doubling its [sales volume in the next four [years on this large refixturing market. The indurtry contention is that better lighting has increased production up to 25 per cent, that it has cut rejects up to 20 per cent, reduced accidents up to 50 per dent, snd boosted employe morale hy unmeasured amounts. The sales pitch by George J. Taylor, trice president of Day-Brite and past president of the Illuminating Engineering Society, is: “If worker productivity is increased only 5 per cent by better lighting, the average office irith 10,000 square feet can save about $12,000 a year on an investment of 94,500.” Should Industry and business buy this, the refixturing market could be estimated in the bfiUous of dollars. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—The struggle between Southern Pacific and Santa Fe Railway tor public support flared today at Interstate Commerce Commission hearings Into efforts of both railroads to gain control of Western Pacific. Both SP aad Santa Fe, which have campaigned vigorously be- fore Western Pacific will be mrel-lowed up by some bigger firm. Therefore, he said. It ereUM b* better If H happened new rather than later — and better if the b Beats re rather Western Pacific Trent into business in 1906 to break a Southern Pacific monopoly and is a natural extension of Santa, Fe lines, Whitman noted. He said Santa Fe’s after of one and one quarter shares of stock per share of Western Pacific stock and reasonable, while SP** one-for-one otter ms inequita- | arlng Monday’s session Weston* Pacific Preside at Feed- er* Pacific of seeking a general transportation msaopolj la the WP area. ! John J. 'Brian, former Pontiac resident, as iroria manager of the Trane Co. manufacturing facilities at La Ooms, Wls., to announced by the Trim supports Santa Fe, said {CP’s first step would be to taka over WP * parallel and competing lines so as to eliminate rail competition. He said SP irouH be unable to operate lto on filiate in genuine competition with itself. ULTIMATE GOAL He predicted that a complete merger was SP’s ultimate goal, followed by new laws making it easier for SP to become a general transportation company, dominating the market. SP already owns highway carriers and pipe lines and plans to go iitfo the huge business. O’Brien Joined Trane, one of the world’s largest manufacturers of Hf air conditioning, heating, ventilate lng and heat transfer equipment, in 1953 as manager of At industrial engi- i neering depart-ment. He was O’BRIEN Western Pacific to willing to be taken over’ by Santa Fe because it haij been handicapped by its relatively small else and financial resources In its competition Tritb SP, Whitman said. The currant trend for rail nm era to so strong, he said, that It to "Just a question of time” Engineers Get Award for Paper on New Building aEVEtAND UB—Two engineers of a Detroit, architectural firm named winners of a 91,000 award today for their paper on the new afl-rrekM building of the Michigan Consolidated Gas Oo. In Detroit. \ Peter P. Petkoff of Dearborn and Un Y. Hoang of Royal Oak, engineers for Smith Hyndunaa A Grylla Associates, Inc., dsstgmre of the building, received the award the; Jaraee F. Lincoln Are Welding Foundation of Cleveland. The Michigan Consolidated Gap' Business Notes named general superintendent of Crosse manufacturing operations in 1965. A graduate of General Motors Institute of Technology, O’Briaa to the son of Mr. and Mn. M. J. O’Brien, 74 Ogemaw Rd. Manley, Bennett A CO. announces the association ef David C. McClary irith its Bloomfield Hills office as a registered rap-tative. In the securities busi-far a number of years. Modify was recently q^noected irith Goodbody A Co. Royal Oak of- fice. News in Brief Fear watches valued at 6M1 were reported stolen yesterday afternoon by Eugene Rash, 21, af 358 Howard McNeil Ave. Rush told police the watches were taken from oar or home some time between Sept 2$ and yesterday morning. Thieves entered bar home through an unlocked rear door and took clothing valued at $150. Rose Angela Humphrey*. 261 Whitte-more St., trtd police yesterday Bammagi •______________ erla/lMl, 9 un. to 4 pm. First tethodtot.Church of lluntoahsm. West Maple at Pleasant. Shape H| and Fra* Parking. Bargains to reflntohad ftorrttm* at the Salvation Army .Red Shield. store. ,116 W. Laanrtoae itrtoC '-SS; jj&riBftenpSto mm. pm. lathTetjn. terian Churoht. 1 W. Maple, Thure. GJPHfiHP to | PJL. aad m, Oct. 1Mb. t un. to » pjo. ■ ' .«■ ^SSt, % . Twkitty |gjispagr»| • 3 Smm Coaplelcly Septyicd THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, mi DRIFT By Dr. I. M. Lwitt, Toni Cooks >ii Phil Eni 31 More Dixie School Districts Integrate NASHVILLE, Tenn. (DPI) — Thirty-on* >MH—I KM dis- rooms thi* M, Southern School Nm said today. This la districts h Fall since 1957, the pubttcatfan re- TweMy-aae of the fostttote With echool tatagrotton developments hi 17 Southern nad Border The integration at theM districts brought to SM the number a( districts where whites and Negroes attend school together, compared to TO at this time last year. Southern School Newa. a monthly publication of the Southern Education Reporting Service, keeps up Three major Southern cities, Ah lanta, Dallas, and Memphis, sent Negroes to daas with ........... year lor the first time. whNm la New Otfaaao marched Is fastest the admisstoa at bar Negroes to two whMa ectwiht Dallas, formerly the largest desegregated system in the nation, admitted It Negroes to dene i with whites. Atlanta JH||| Brat integrated district Ip Geor-it opened the llth and Hint Ex-U.N. Envoy's Suicide in '59 Was Murder by Reds WASHINGTON (API—A subcommittee — raising th Hon “Murder or ndddef" suggested that former UJf. official Port Bang Jensen may have been slain by Soviet agents. The Senate Internal Security . subcommittee, looking Into the • Danish diplomat’s mysterious death two yean ago, challenged the verdict of suicide. *. * * “There are too many solid arguments against suicide,’’ the subcommittee said, “too many unanswered questions, too many serious reasons for suspecting Soviet motivation and the possibility of Soviet Implication." In New York, a police spokesman said “the case is still aa tar as we’re concerned.' The 120-page report described the diplomat's role aa secretary of die UJf. special committee veatigating the 1956 Hungarian revolution, his subsequent quarrel with UJf. superiors, and finally the circumstances of fats death, mu UNCLEAR’ “About the moat that can be aaid on the heals of information available today," the report aaid, *% that if is still unclear whether it was suicide or murder." * * * Bang-Jenaen, 50, left hia home on Monday morning, Nov. 23. 1969 for his office. He was employed at that time by CARE, a charitable organization. We‘ Nov. 25, Ms bod/ was found in a Queens park. 'Hr had been shot in the right temple with his own gun and then eras a suicide note in fate pocket. Then eras no satisfactory explanation of what happaaed between Monday, whan ha waa last Grayson School Rife Thursday Dedicated 8 P.M. With Speakers and Program by Children “Then and Now," is the subject William Shunck, Waterford Township superintendent of schools, has chosen for the dedication of David E. Grayson School at 8 p m. Thursday, #. 6 h Located on the comer of Walton Boulevard and Dill Road la Drayton Plains, the 14-room elementary school waa opened in late September last year, and has an enrollment of 347 pupils from the kindergarten through the sixth grade. Mr*. Gerald Justin win explain why David Grayson, ■ mat wa a sf the school. He was karn In Lansing in 1S70 and Wed In lM, leaving many edu-ratlsaal bosks for historical research and Information. In 1940, Grayson won the Pulit-zer Prize tor his edition of ‘‘Woodrow Wilson, Life and Let-1 ten.” Later he wrote "Native AtMrican’’ and “American Chronical'’ which wen autobiographies of Mb life. During the dedication ceremonies, Eldon Rossgart,' president of the school board, will present the school to the principal, Henry Kansas and members of the Par-! ent-Teacher’s Association. ♦ .♦ -W Fifth and sixth graders will \ give several vocal selections under the direction of Daniel Addis, i music instructor, and the evening will be climaxed with refreshments and a social hour. Jensen died about 48 hours after M left his home. The Soviets, aaid the report, •d good reason to kidnap Bang-ensen to pry from him what he knew about Communist infiltration in the United Nations’ staff and in UJL intelligence agencies and how much of this knowledge he bad handed on to American authorities. ’And if Bang-Jencen was taken B custody for such interrogation. Ms liquidation would have been an inevitable sequel,’’ said the report. The subcommittee put forth the following arguments against suicide: • In November 1967, two yean before his death, Bang-Jenaen wrote a long memorandum to Ma wife odudadf "Under no circumstances whatsoever would I ever commit suicide. This would be completely contrary, whole nature and to my convtctioos. If any note waa found to the opposite effect in my handwriting, ft would be a take.’ DATE SUSPICIOUS “The suicide note was dated only '‘November," although Bang-Jenaen waa a precise man who mada it a practice to date fully all is letters and notes. An apparently meaningless ”6A" had been written in the right-hand bottom comer of the note. The subcommittee found that the place where Hungarian refugees testified before Bang-Jenaen in Vienna was CA Wallnerstrasse. The report asked: “Did he intend to convey some meaning that he unable to sayf by Dag Htm-the late UJf. secretary-general, because he refused to tarn oy the list of UJf. special conn Hungary. A month later the list was dramatically burned on the root of tike UJf. building in a result of a compromise between BangJensen and Hammarskjold. Subsequently he was dismissed for “insubordi- Red Envoy Working for African Trade FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP)-V. N. Myshkov, com] rial counselor of the Soviet Embassy in Accra, Ghana, arrived -by plane Monday to conduct a trade survey for the Soviet Uh-j ion. Myshkov, the first Soviet official to visit this former British oniony since It gained independence last April, said the UJ.8JL is keenly interested In the African market and hopes to sign l » Sierra Le- * - *-"*«• on. te, i*. M| on. is, it. » THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1961 TWENTY-ON* CLASSIFICATIONS INDEX ANNOUNCEMENTS Oud at IfcaakE fa 1 Cemetery Lota ......... EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Mole ..... Help Wsatad Female .. Help I *mplO Work Wanted Male . SERVICES OFFKKED . IS . IS IB. 17 Garden Plowing ......... It |>ar}a?lahmj5s uiuijevtx1 income Tax Sendee IlSft 13 Pi wm jEjii itoh tk-"—Fiintrsl I husbendHof*Lyiiu father of Lorrxlr-_ Lm Mm Jr. it Moving A Trucking .... Painting A Decorating . Upholstering .... Nursery Schools . . fa . 25 ...25A NOTICES Lost A Fodnd .......fa HobfakA SappUta.... Notices A Personals ...... 27 WANTED Wtd. Household Good* ..,, fa Wtd. Miscellaneous Wanted to Rent ........ Share Living Quarters ... Wtd. TranaportatMi .... Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. .... Wanted Real Estate .... RENTALS OFFERED Rent Apts. Furnished .... Rent Apts. UnfumWwd ... Rent Houses Furnished ,. Rent Houses Unfurnished . Rent Lake Cottages .... For Rent Rooms ........ , Rooms With Board...... Convalescent Homes...... Hotel Rooms ........... Rent Stores ........... Rent Office Specs .'... For Rent Miscellaneous .. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE For Sale Houses ....... Income Property For Sate Lake Property . For Sale Resort Property Suburban Property......53 For Sale Loti ........54 „ For Sale Acreage For Sale Farms ... Rent Farm Property .... 56A Sale Business Property .... 57 Rent-Lease Bui. Prop. For Sale or Exchange .... 58 FINANCIAL Business Opportuhltlaa .... 58 Sale Land Contracts'.^.... 80 Money to Lon......... Credit Advisors...... Mortgage Loans ...... MERCHANDISE Swaps................ For Sale Clothing ...... Sale Household Goods . Antiques ............. 85A HI-FI, TV A Radios .. Water Softeners...... For Sale Miscellaneous Christmas Trees...... Christmas Gifts ..... Machinery ........... Do R Yourself ....... Cameras A Equipment Sale Musical Goods ... Sale Office Equipment Sale Store Equipment Sale Sporting Goods ... Hunting Accommodations T4A Balt, Minnows, Etc. ...... “ Sand, Gravel A Dirt..... Wood, Coal A Fuel ..... Plants, Trees Shrubs .... For Sale Pets ......... Doga Trained, B'rded .... Hunting Doga .......... Hay, Grain A Feed.......I FARM MERCHANDISE For Sate Livestock...... Wanted Livestock........I For Sate Poultry .......< Sate Farm Produce.......88 Sate Fam Equipment ....87 Auction Sates ...........88 Death Notices nmimne* fwipl iwmt will be hate numterTpet. 13. at 1:34 j-jsh lm the Byhardaon- Mn. HlMl SUM ul of^th* etholle Church, in-K— m Cem- rmunt la Furr? lit. try- Mn. Mock will „ the Bparks-Orlffln ar’swysar •M Mm A. Prat... ■ ----seven ■■telir mt-graniehlldren. 1 will be held Th 30 gjWi^^TS ■ 2%fl ‘statsT imws.O*forA with Act. Prcd Clerk officiating Interment m Rldtelawn Cemetery Oxford. Mr. Prase! will lie toMato et the Beeeerdet * Mid Fhnerei Bom. Oxford. ~"xx.—'* -' •" MtBarr. r~e.~'iMT~HlRC le Drlre, Elisabeth l etertord Township; £o*h!!' Sir? fMen #Mooro, ®Mrs* Qlellhri Cooper, Mri. Amy Roue, OernM D. ira end u. ewer. Alexander D Itbeln; eUo eunrlTrd hy IS granushtUra end M greatgrandchildren. Pu&ersl arrange- « survived by U grandchildren, —3j, wuF he held Ml S ■ i Punt .....................to Bur____ Offlcietlnx. Interment In Ottawa Perk Cemetery. Mrs. Rowiton S&Jj jsjsjP «a6sL~gFr 1 Mi'l&mZ « . MTl Item Court. S’-------- bor, edR0Yg*Ltoto rental Ser vice 3 IWOMS^PIUVATE SA Tomato. waBtos- Call K. J. Valuer Realtor. 345 Oakland Avenue, pi 4-3531 1ST PLOgt.^^ND BATH.^UTIL Share Living QfMHtcrs 33 PROFESSIONAL COLORED WO*f-aa desire* earn to share tar home; CaU altar A 334-7749. * reCIe-»raQOia«’ m^araeM/sl trance end bath.’ Ill N. Telegraph WIDOW TO gfUAE HOMS WITH «Mtt| Udy . SIC 3*7914 iflur 4 Reaeonable ratal. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, west slbE. very stirscUve. mail see to appreciate. single tody only. Apply 371 Voorhels Rd. S e.m Cm 1 p.m. Waited Trawaportatktoi 24 OIRL WANTS RIDE PROM PON-. Mac to Ml rale wit, s am. dally with another girl. PB 9-7714 after «. 3 ROOMS 1ST FLOOR. EVERY-totog furnished adults Nartb end. PE 4-313S. P*t hath aad entranee. ? child welcome OtogalWUle. PE 9-10*7 WtfL Ctwtracta, Mtga. 38, ability To get eaeh for year Lead Com traofe. equities aad mortgages. 3 AND 1-ROOM APARTMENTS decora fed. util. 383 WKIttemore. 1 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH, NEAR hospital aad high school. West Moron coraerofPraU, ogptyTmrs- payee etol* too^muetTtar ^ouf *Let aa oapart aouaael withyou. Can TWd MoCttltoata tto-Wto ARRO ltEALTT 9143 Cass-Ellsabeth Road 3 unfurn3|shsS*^Utu!ue?*SMud»? ^4 B. Howard. Haftywoed Apart- AN IMMEDIATE HALS POR IIRI Land Contract eg Mortgage! See aa before you dealt Warrea stout. RMltor.^77 M. tngtnaw. PeoUac Mb ROOMS. ALL PRTgATE, LAKE jfWlsg’L couple only, tm Avondale. Sylvia Lake. M3-07H 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH, EN-trance, baby welcome. Pa MM3.- ACTION ,. On your land contract, torga or ! small, call Mr. Hitter. PE AMI*, j Broker. 3440 alto. Lake Rd. ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST AC- 3 ROOM. COMPLETELY PUR-HihiM. Cqavealeut location. Ideal for couple er individual. Mi Brewer, IS Sotoitr to. Pb. PI time. PE IcfirSITl I k*1_______ ■jtopped im tort. I». A. Taoat. INSTALLATION OP woob >ANEU la*. Osar tea, aaUtoa dfi -ceramic floor and wan R56f§: MtW, REPAIR EAY—TROOOEINO Mto.... Business Service insurance oal ................. Experienced la noBey Wflttas. fire and chaaeSy. Dead typtas. Owa traneportaUon. ' CURB WAITRESSES’ Ted't hare Immediate opening, far curb waftrmea. ca the nlini shift. Muet he II. Apply In per-son only. TED’S Woodward at .square Lake Rd. COMUffc SALES HELP WILL train. 464 W. Huron._ COSMETIC CONSULTANT «?*»«» »"»«- deriement of SOC IETY c~ MAKEUP ARTISTS. Free col PE y-1431 g repair ^Pree e?Umatte UL a-1314* PUMP WILL REPAIR SBRVtCX. M Lrar- °it. pit-mT i SHARPENED. ______________ gxlrlnc xqd rew^dlay. ns £ Pike HOTPOlSf WmRLPuoT ■igaff City Adjustment Service FE 5-9281 LEARN NSW EASY METHODS to reflnleh, paint. |gf Mlil furniture. Prut Stair■■■»! mu onetratlehS. Call tar FS l-Mll. Brown Bt CASH •oil. homea. equine, WRiGTir akland Art. FE 8-1441 POR LAND CONTRACTS-H LAND CaNTRACTS fO~lgV~5it to ean. Earl Oerrele KM 3-toll - EM 3-COtt. IMMEDIATE ACTION Ob any gcai land aawtraeta. Maw or aaMaiad. Tear each upon aad lafaetory laapecUoo af property aad tltla. Aek for Eon Templeton. M3 00CXV 233t Orchard U Rd Hunter’s Insurance PNd Red path U MN* HAT Rffig. " klTCHEN AY1AL able for macke. P> MM LOSE WEIOHT uffay economically with aawly n “X8B SELECT^ WALLPAPER A SCEN1CS | in your home. CaU PE Mill Shows moi. tat W. Huron | WE CUT AND W*AP DEER POR fracaare. Community Shper Market SR Mm Arc.. MSm Drive-In. Oh Woodward I or 3-cwa 3-ROOM APARTMENT. EVERY thing furnlehtd. lit N. Paddock 3 ROOMS PRIVATE ENTRANCE'. bath, utilities Hm, 41 Rath 3 ROOMS. 1ST FLOOR. NEAR ,chool. children. TI Washington 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH. UTIL ltlee furnl«hed. FE M8ta. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, BAS ■araie, , pvt. aMMBfM furnished |U per We, PE 5-iasi. Kreninat._______ 3 ROOMS AND BATHJWEST ETOE. gvmgtray.. ,mRe mdy. PE 3 mLAROB ROOItt^ AND BATH SK 1 belanre Local poat- MEN* i3M Bookkeeping A Taxss 16 - experlamea MhnT'llN audience, port- ’ ■ Audition, data attof fi" ALL TAXES; MI MM, Mk — — W MS34 CM MAW Dresamaklng, Tailoring 17 DRESAMAKINO. TA1LOR1NO. Air teretlonx Mre. Bodell, FT MOM Oerden Pfawhii IS 1 INDUSTRIAL BAUM ............ One or twa years eellete. < transportation. ig^drs- . ESTIMATER 1 Production ai EXPERIENCED , LEGAL SECRETA^V Par permanent position la a Pea-emnurj. tiac law find. Wrtte lVnUac Frees DIXIE | Boa as ELDS ELY LADY UROENTLY heeded Iat 3 mar old fMlM the day. Live la. After 4 PE 44854. "baker to dam, ealery EXPERIENCED PIE BA] aaewar. Write Bm 1U. portunlty for the right man. Big bear Const ruction, M W. Huron See Mr. Rom. CANTCcTTTarsrwoRiN. MfMt aamtoera adrertleed house- Par iwibr^ ,iii . —SttOBTfl SsfMVHS MUl stair A aja. CATHOLIC PRESS DiTOTIONAL — —Q Ijire eevsrcl s& M -»rrs l*nt cooittlMtMi. ftincs JMM|Ma •u«h u lift iBturmnet, bospithll-■anew mater maltoal and res allowance are pMM ler added Toys for X^hrtstmas Hare a Toy CSeeKthy party Re-eelve Id per cent ei ealee la toys plua party nliht elftx PE MWl. NEW LOCAL omdrlittDS I telephone snlecglrls to work from our office or their MhlkOlrt ^SrSrS^^ If No Answer, Call \i LU 2-6614, Mr. Peters --- OPEN 1 . . familiar ' __________,______j. Muet read ., blueprinte Age to to* 41. [ EVELYN EDWARDS Vocational Counseling Service S4tb East HUMP Suite 4 Telephone PEderal 4-4144 Instructions 10 EVENINO TUTORINO AND SAT- EVENINO TUTORINO, SCIENCE and mathematics. «fS44Sa-after 3:34 P.m. kAra sdiEitdc, kkoiipH bAn- Work Wantud Mate .-A WALL WAAH1NO, CARPET. sofas, much, cleaned. PI 4-1077. A-i CARPElFfSfl AbDlffShs. tiding, repnlre, ela. F8 B-7840. CARPENTER AND C EMENT work, new and repair. PR 1-1341. -----CARPENTER IVoRg------- OR Milt CABINET MAKING, REMODEL-lng. all kinds lneludlnx bomb shel-ters. Pre-estimate. rE 3-1314 WI4 ChWdrtto to BrrwI 28 J TO ROOM MID BOARD in licensed home MT I-4M3 LADY WOULD LIKE CHILD CARE by the dayln licensed home OR Wtd. Household Qoods 29 ^ALL ULLS AuT MOfuTcAJM for furniture aad appllaaees Bar- gain House. Pi 1-4*41._____ CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP--------- * ptooe or aoutofal. w—mufaii Bdm te ANNETT NEEDS LISTINGS Annctt Inc. Realtors me Mama at. pe MW Opea Evening, and aunday 1-4 ALL CASH Ol OR PHA RRgnUBI If you lie leaving giito or aaad money qulekly stU as for Imrat- R *? WICEERSHAM 144 W. Mamie MAytalr HIM! BUILDER 1 •wliSEiFJr s a.a auiLDiMO oo . LIST WITH US POR SALS O-TRADB. WB CAN CrtT YOU ■ CASH ON AN PHA OS OI SALS. * JUST PHONS PS 3-TMS AND . LET US IRON OUT YOUR R BBT ATX PROBLEMS CLf first floor, TS I _____&Ol' 3 CLEAN ROOMS- ADtfLtf. Nf drinking. SU.M. Ml Sana. PI RObUd anFbaTH rtfRffiiiiir - Adsha toeraaad. - litre to Dwight -D BATH. tUA I. 144 Dresden Rl®®D—PAl i bath. Couple g "apart __ A*r gg ferred. ltd it. Cue, - PS 1-4491 h^HUtat?KBm am •itiUttaa toatadad — ftojae. 1 Partridge, MtlT » I MRRtOM BLOB SOD. SOc-Sto A rd. at field. DegnrM* made. 1 Crooks Rd. PL I------------- town mtlntenance. Thomas a! Porter h Iona, PI A3841. OR Beading, sodding, black dirt. . Tag eoU,tmeJrtm»la(ai- -—— I Dorothy Snyder Lavender thy Sn NJM i MH WANTED __ ___ . . .. ___ Call na ah aay houeai. farmi uUaaeea. QUMtom^towIture^ri i PONTIAC REAL™ I-3ITS. TIT Baldwin PR MR ' rRoosan j MtiiBr n iaS^tfiuip WANTSD: —it«g. Pa s-toaa. TREE TRIMM1NO AND REltoV-al. top soil, cerd wood, PE 3-4144. Moving and Trucking 22 A-l MOV1NO SKRV1CR. MASON-Ibis rates PE 9-34*4. PE MW LOW open are d terrltorlea % n TISKRS lion after tha ft NOTICE I advertising ssgeartog "he Pontlae Prate Kelp ted Classified Cotv Jins produet to besifi slat the aeetiiad it pudmwmtuou m be lauRMK Any saw of ■ laMaNMptaBd la employment advertising should H reported te the Classified Advertising Manager. CASK WANT AO RATES Liana 3-Day 3-Oaya 4-De/s » 41.to »ta 43 44 < l« 3.34 U 4 M4 4-to 414 * IX Ul Ml i (a s.44 f.aa i I I I 44 years af aparMaii Baa never aad a strike or layoff. Steady rear 'round work, 414 par week far fuU-ttme man and MB per weak far part Ume man. Phone Mr. John tea/ OR MW, M p.m. Ta'fcdMAM BWiiWit ' or are rat daiag a lot m wishful tniakiagt; wasting your time looking around for something that doesn't sxlslf I believe my company. the largest pad hut knowa of tta kind, provides toe finest permahaat money making opportunity to Arartea. if you rally mean huetataa, art alaaere and a: conscientious xrorker, I will show you how yob ussy earn tram 4144 *• te* Jit !»*k in Mlaa and ssrrtS; tSu PB 4-4114 or writs UpgStaS Pop tin, to arrange iw. I would he happy > fchd talk with both ________MT wife at your home- EXPERIENCED BODY MAN WITH — tot te myaito of making k. ASiB Auto service, 3»M 9 Lake Road. N«aeD a p Ys inrhtLE - -jd train. I.____... HAUL! NO~3X RUBBISH. ’ N~A Mil- AaphRlt Pavfag Battariea iyton Plains. P. O. Box ll MOTHERS School — Home — Co-ordlnxilng work It to 34 h/s. * week, ochaol, church or IH work helpful. Exc. cornttgs H xcctpted. Phone Mr. MaUory. OL 1-1944. Tbes and was. katw-- * ~ and S - “ lata to ears tor I ehlldra. have tranaportattoa. CaU af SBCRtTARY'.____ m Ingham profeeeiom Kail attractive, 33-44. RtotahTtoag k tlnent queUflcetlone in expect- yf„l*afe' MWrlu t0 f Pea tor wIM^ l&fe HBuCTHtthto Work Wantad Female 12 Sauuno~Tn if — . load, anytime. PE 4-4344. UOHrHAUUNO" AND wTndOV. etoanlng. reaeonable. PE 3-4313. LIGHT AND' HEAVY TRUCKING Rubbish, flu dm, greding, end gravel and front end tending. Top A? an," * "X------------ZZ r°* MU U4ED MATERIALS. Pabltiflg fa Decorating 23 i see. oil, ooal fuma.ee Kitchen. -------------bath nxtuca, lumber. , brisks. , BOAT - TRUCK - AUTOMOBILE 11 MM Exebangr x—===3 KAR-L1PE Bt 303 AMjanrAvo. Baiyirtg Malarfate .94 Exchenyc. Ouartntsed LAR-L1PE BATTERY OO |m M ' Cae. ------ W .5-1414 r?L.";Jg**. Plywood * all 'rTncE^tssas' and'hpVc o-t wt prtoaa aefore you bm 1 SHEET OR CAR LOAD PlywtiOf* Distributor PR 8-043* |' 1ST CLASS PAINT1NO ARP PA- IS lag. IS yean exp. Sana. Free es-• tlmatee. PhoncUL 3-1344, _____ flkMM*, btoake. garage doan. widows SSraffroiilK* cS| Sewer Contracteri Stsmpe for Collectors STAMPS OR APPROVAL Squirrel Stomp Shop • ““ Auburn -Height BOAT NUMBERS BuMbtf Motemliatteii A-l ADDITIONS. PALUOUT SHEL-ton. Raaea Rnlslhg, oarages, can. PAUL oSaVM^YtRACTINO • Pres RaMmntoi Cm Mill tad child' (care. Live to. Welled Pa ana.-MA Qtol WHITE BABY SlfTER. OVER X. Aa additional charge at a wlfl be made tor St 9 Far late Hooaatraiters . Rant Trailer Space...... Ante Accessories........ —For Sate Tires .............82 Sate Track Una..........BA Auto Sarvica ............M , . Sate Motor Scooters.....94) For Sate Motorcycles ...... 95 For Sate Btcyciea........96 Boath ll Accessories.... 97 Flbtagtea ..3........... -98 For fate Airplanes........90 Transportation Offered ... 100 Waited Used Oars ...... \0i Ussd Auto Parts......... 102 Comm. Trailers .........102A Sate Used Trucks 108 Ussd Track Parts.......IMA Tell Everybody About it with a Pontiac Press Want Ad That's because of the greater selection of.everything from automobiles jto employment offered every day; Pcntlaa xarvlcc branch. At- MM^pSsiur Si£ --- ----- lading % Pot Mr P. SafSQhunr* daily. Some ChfsflYlWrfWWjia. VWin-heby sitting tor 4 veer old Bloom. •— a field Hint ago*. Own truuporu-Mca. Rcfcrcacot. Pontlae Press fANTED: WHITE WOSfAll. CAP. able of taking chafsc Sf •oapletc “*7 week^ livc^ or Proo oat, work gear, it i dto, far cash, altel. INTER f6^~ AND "fitTERlSR pxtnung. wall washlag. Prcc gw innate*. PB 4-11376.__________ }H TO knjto ate to. lT Iw — fir•« tats.... 4tik on Waterford Lumber etn9om Lira 3413 Al .wav* IRONtNOS WANTED. TKL-HURON vicinity, PE 44444 IdlMEOORAPHlNO TYPtNo. akc- Mark Nelson, PE g-lto PAINTING AND PAPER HANO-lag- references, ft I UN cr ink* on payments gf to par month. Uatvsr.al Co PE 4-0»0a pain¥in6 and BARGAIN _________ KTsajv'ej.. ruuMmarje work He ca. ft. PHA tony. . " more . IVto ^— Construction. PE Mlaa.. » 4||*FL. ...JSi AIRPORT LUMBER7 Land supply ca Television, Radio and HI.JFi Service . MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICE Dance Instraction Nursing Homee SBM pjgMf Mitediag pud vacations aad hohdaya. Por rsonal Interview, PtiWIC Mr. P. Wetahuhn, PB Ml ti er ay— at RCA Sare. Co, Itll Blxab lust Dial FE 2-8181 "og.uTsrSvZZjg:. coOecttoa, rated eontract*. . vanoement unlimited. Send re me to Pontlao Press, Sox 111 >odh UwWAklC NBBDI steady employment. Phone Oeo UHM. han6tVa«.y ST-TpMCO: jflfeSi— -*ges"to to to. Bhlory, tcmmli- 'u^F&lrTO^iAt Meter Redder Batory 33.17* ^T^be^^Uot COUPLE TO LIVE I I Mad. Mlaa stating details aad satorr ggasatod. : eYperienced KtntttD • Naodl to Mi«H MiaJSfH to Pontiac office of our 4-offlee Real ■Mato aalaa orienlaatwa. Earn extra BsawU. work to large office building under excellent work-tag ocndlUou. Phono>PK l-toll lor eoandestUL personal totor- C. SCHUETT ___jlal gervlso. SM 3-_ low available DiSISo S555 manager — Lady 14 years m k rto-h iaidoi)ootCii warn baby gHttog Job part MM vl------------ —^ aMSEka- ■ claliy of Dodge f beth Lake. 441-m BSBPRKYwffi SLIP COVERS Excavating ' EXCAVATDtO—BASEMENTS AND bomb Atltw. EHtU. Floor Sanding DRYDEN REST HOME ’ Tree Trif.iming Sarvica A4TUMP*5sfi?VAL* Tret removal, trimming 0*1 IB: #u3&3tfaL Me Cook Construetlon Co. T-JS-S: K’TU'jSft Chair cmiag service. < ~ Loat aad Pound ” LOST: OOCRWt SPANIEL, BLACK, vtelnlty sf John R apm Adbanl Road. Children desperate. Reward Pontiac Fence Company Continental ehala link feoea. Co-pleta lastaUaUon. nr dSb-To in. Easy terms. Pr*e Bst. OR 3-6595 Pfastariut fcrvto IATE SERVICE ON ALL k WIMMI , Era KeRmatei PHA T* CalJ JOW VALLELT Now fold, vicinity « dock Sts. Rowi blacC SIll-Wsllsad a. Pad-rd PE 9-9404. T^r‘?5S? businuj OR SERVICE AD DIAL PE 34141 WAVI P Rentels-EquipmenL •jnSMfjMFW Rug Cteanlny TS.’aa'™™' Truck twill 1 Trucks to Rent Dump NTru« Pontiac Farm and' Industrial Tractor Co. Uphalatertu| U oendiUoo. Ida rate, drivers Bet All tapM. Pig tree nett mat* aad _ ____quick service, Cali John.W. Oapu IisSOUb SECRETARY I QPrwPHAteT^ .wygR Polldir-1 nSkiatoT mS[ ^rak.^C&ueol , -„J SfiraBdi. 4MraM3. Ap |ly kP*r9taartr City Hall, 31 i | LWt- efrv fiBtavAl ssa ^ LOST: BLACK" M ‘ vicinity of BpaSIratE juephrPlraa eall 3fi I-34M or THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, ittei V $75 PER MONTH EHsahett Lake Road. #-room and bath, MA 4-ISM. Eve. MA #336*. CLEAN 1 ROOIjM.^PRIVATE KN-LraeA Auhera^^HeigbU. ^Ml-Mto! DOWNTOWN- PONTIAC — QVAtt Peat Citato. 131 WT Huron. PE FE 4-7833 344 am Bird. N. at TatoKto 2-BKDROOM, OIL FURNACE. HOT non!°t 1 lo’a'montt. OR SAlS?. JJJWLJi completely furnished. Tour choice of Early American or modern 1 3 BFDROOM8 AND BATH, FENCED bick ymrd, oil hoot. Itf month. ang 1 eadroom .partment*. Quiet, ;Sk Exoeprioiial^y^derirab^. 3-BEDROOl^ HOME. (33 MONTH. ' Call SUBaei 7-1333. Print. Utlimee fura. Reference, re-ELWOOD REALTY 383-3410 3 ROOM* AND BATH. CALL OR M1I3 after 3:33. 3-BEDROOM BRICK WITH 115 cxltchen. Fenced-tn tat. ____Immedlete poteer- le*«e. Phene FE 5-2672 RatAfb. UiifmnlrtH>d 38 2', OR “sSr” ROOMS. FINS. QUIET I Extra |g*. moani. pet. No children In bid* LEY APTS. MW 133 E. Huron FE 6-4614 ROOMS WITH TILE BATH. KXW Maea and Fr let del re Well heated. Inquire Apt. I it <1 Charlotte. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. BASXMSNT. - arteata, haw aad *-------- Adult. FI MM 4 ■OQMB AMD BATH. Oft l-ftttft ori&am. ___ laiUlV ROOMS AND BATH" eO— HR. PliElfl. ““ 1 ROOMS PRIVATX ENTRANCE ■M bath. hast, hat water, ataea J refrigerator Win. PE Mtg. * CtSAN LABOR ROOMS AND tntodvi tacmSe**- CYUMtc* wet- ~SLATERrs“* I BEDROOM. TSAR, home. Ml basement. el Maea aad refrlg Lake cell m-SM______________ can ri wan. Canter. Reply Res 14, Foatlae FUdroom OAS RSAT. I weak. *3 8. Jessie, lnquti Euclid 3-BBJdtOOM BRICK WITH 1 Pm SrIs Upend* 49 o Fries •SACS AVAILABLE t Available AIR CONDITIONED Capitol Savtaca a Loan Bldg. PON-TRL CENTRE-) Will in decorated Rolle *‘ ‘l—c 3-134t. WrnSl _____ _ .jM taW Smith. Realtor. For Rent Miscellaneous 48 STOUT STREET hhce^-Mmllr on If*, lot.^l rm. trance*. Oat beat. 3-car Vara|t. tltoto. Terms SYLVAN VILLAGE . AUractlva Maa. uvlnc room vR fireplace Sttcben. Dinette, a b*d-rooms and Vlad bath down I nice bedrooms up Oaa hot water hear Oar**o. Fenced lot. FBA Brewer Real Estate 1 Joseph F. reisz. sales mor. *1 4-flll Eves. Ft Mm °SffLg.iL c client oendmea aad ta wonderful west side leettlon with MR* arivh leg**. Large let. Attached garage. 3 large Mreetrn IwYSfleRi heater. Pmeoe alr Mnmaa. anti A. Zuehlke Custom Bldr. OR 3-07111 to 7 p m HAYDEN 3 BEDROOM TM LEVEL. Large *— “T Ha mertgegs cost. mJSLommt aq. family ream, i Full pcta-“1 It. afil,„ „ am your M or aai See "our Zol.? I credit. 3 BR boat*. Full pria* FE L3M3. FR 4-3118. MULTIPLE UmO |EET3CR IRWIN 4-BBDROOM I ,„_L MM3#m I dining one*. Bear I large tot. Ban or WHIFFLE lake privileges 2-bedroom buagalew - with base-meat sad urge let. Has sleeping left. 3-ear gang* and nicely land-scapad. Almost on lb* lska. NORTH END 221 Chippewa 3-bedroom corner brick. By owner Open Sunday 3-5. (3 R. FARES ST. ae 35#. Unfurnished Day# FE 4-35M —- $9,500 Will bal'd 3-bedroom ranch-style FE 441311 P” month, PE 3-6»7i 4 ROOMS. HEAT AMD ROT WA-—^ “t WBUdS. OR MM3. AND BATH PARTLY month Include taxes and In Urban RENEWAL CUSTOMERS CLOSE TO Wlsnsr Lawrence W. Oaylord 13# E. Ptke St. FE 8-6963 ASTEAL! ” Attractive 5-room home near Williams Lakn. New oU furnace. New garage. 3 glassed-in porches 3 nicely shaded lota. Outside barb*. — jMgMy* —— **“ -— Keego Harbor^ 3-bedroom^ home. I Better Take A Look "*---^---------1 3-famUjMn- . . whet ode Owner leering rrtili.l bed! IHeheaT wf baeementnlgas ’ COUNTRY AIR at but eloee to scht «. transportation aad That'# the lecntlau _ >e hum# with 3 bedrooms. "r °*21# M?ny( . Priced I SCHUETT FE 8-0458 W. Haraa n ew r^T ej e I r sph "BUD" PARTLY FURNISHED ---go Harbor. 2-bedroom HP Oar heat. Oarage. Rice corner lot. 5300 down too month. EL WOOD REALTY___________5*2-2410 MODERN 2 BEDROOM BASE- ■ Priest*. FE 4-550#. S ROOMS AND BATH OARAOE Bear general Hospital. Utilities J furnished. FE MIM 1 3 ROOMS. CHILDREN WELCOME 3 ROOM TERRACE ON a. EDITH. ___ Near school. Whit# tenants Ph. 321-323 N. Perry St. ; 2-famlly duplex. 3 rooms and bath j each] tide, good condition, gat heat, good Investment. $10,500 — t, OR 3-4558. FE 3-1055 HOYT “For That . Personal Interest" stairs has carpeted dinlhg room, tpoUe 3 bedrooms end full .. stairs Includes large ---up. T1 — —uwiu. Prtllt trees, cheery kitchen, dining roam end large living room. Even a woods for ''cope aad robbers." 3lift# with 33,500 down. 43-ACRE PARM with 1 room house, bom. silo, aad outbuildings. Front t&*M0. "**“ 01 *"4U *“”■ CRAWFORD AGENCY Walton FE #43M MY 3-1143 33# E, FUnt DRAYTON-CLARKSTON ABBA Threo-bodroom bungalow, living aad dining ares. Kitchen and utility room. oU HA boat aewS decora tod and vacant. SEVERAL TO CHOOSE FROM. Call uo Idday. WHY PAT REHTf Wo have several l-bedrdam — Rom* 3-bedroom bnngalowt la and out of lowe to oboes# from. s^iirv.rsaSdC’ffia Evening caU FE 443M, ask for NICHOLIE - HARGER 03 Vi 1^ “ For Sale Houses 49 HIITER jjyj^^hw.ih.Thm convenient to veGooktng Keego Harbor, o.reaau and bath. ■momiar oil fprenoi. prlv. ** , MtVOR **— ' ■ oar or paymwa wo-bodroom modem home, over JUST LIKE RENT OiWlM of (pH hondymo specials. Low maathly paymeata suraace. Mov* right In this largo 5-room ffimui^wMh'itUlty had 3-car esa ^1,v.V’tik%s5.t53 For _ FALL-OUT shelYers INaUDED (OPTIONAL) WITH 3 BEDROOM HOMES Facebrick Front Pzym’ts Less Than Rent $10 Moves You Ini No Mortgage Costs Oas beat-carpeted Bring room DON'T WAIT—BUY NOW! No Down Payment 714 CORWIN FE 5-8183 UNION LAKE VILLAGE AREA Cony aad warm. Ltriag rm. M x 15, f bedrrns., maoter hod-room 13x13. Full bath, oil fur-nee*. ale* fleeced porch, heated —rag*, fenced yard Privileges Round Lake, Mitt. 11.300 da. Builder Must Liquidate Trade-In at Only $79 313 a NO OTHER MONET NEEDED A BEAUTY AN EXECUTIVE - Can.-----* . *•!* '•ttiJSESr I «qOTH SHAKIR 4155 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 3-room English Tudor. 3-bedroom living room, dlutag room, kitchen looking Crescent Lake***** * * j water aoftener. garage. Offered Fart o [ Within Your Means . 3-bedroom brick terrace, handy i north side location, includes! ! separate dining room, convent- i eat kitchen, full bath. b*»e---------| gas bet Water. Total pi' Templeton j West Suburban Exe. neighborhood. AttraeUv* No credit ebeek. Immediate pos-whlte ranch. White feaee. Picture aexxlon. Half hMek from Imerac-wlndow overlooks Lower Strait* I School, 3 Mock# from Rertbei Lake. Beach across street. Lge. High, carpeted living rm., TV rm. or I 3rd. bedrm., dining rm., oil fur. ----- *—**• gerage. 3 land- 3 bedroom, large r very auhcteetlsl d per a i. HURRY! AVON APARTMENTS - 4 line,' will decorate tc Pika »f 3-HM. 6esirable 3-1330. JEMnBnpOPHpiHMI 2 bedroom, basement, fenced fdra, automatic heat. FE 3-4BM. Ql wanianx ! home*. Nothing i . large Hetng mem. “BUD” Nicholie. Realtor 41 Ml. Clemens St. F£ 5-1201 I After 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 j f LAST DESIRABLE LOCA- ROCHESTKR-UTICA. 2-BEDROOM. -------- S • “ rooms aad bath, gaa heat. M# Dawson A Butterfield FE MtM or ri 3-7*45 OFTION TO BUY • JOHN i. REAL ESTATE 301 S. Telegraph Rd. VERMETT ■'---r FE HM MgML 1 b*_____________ dlnrite. both ft gang*. Refen COUFLE. FfttVATZ BATH AND entrance FE 4-M41. COUNTRY APARTMENT. 3-BHD-room. Mg yard, ithidl ban line. No pet*. IE t-MM. FOR COLORED. 3 ROOMS. BATH. ____ Partial basement. Oak floors. Urge ML I River frnatega. JRk)r Dabltn end , St. Fattier* Schools. H3M14 | OR (ALE — CLARXfTON j . 3 bedrooms, RiegtMt, ceramic til* both, fan hacomcaL t«-raj*.^Reference# required. |tt me. •TLTAN LAKE RANCH ROME. 3 b«drm>. and family room.Plre-£•««, dlahwaaliar. ate.. I1M mo. | BY OWNER I Eedreata Reach, large ldd* WM. T. (TOM) . 150' tot to suburban area. Rea-1 3441 Auburn onable down payment. * -2514 for appointment. i Voorhela Rd. 1 REAGAN Real Estate I -441 Auburn Ave._UL 3-2505, SCHRAM JOHNSON 33 TEARS OF SERVICE COLORED 01 terms. Hie* 3 bedroom 3 3-3541 j story home to oxccUcat^ coadmoe STOUTS Best Buys Today eretCT end nil utilities FE 4-1805._____________ NEAR TEL-HUROK r. fenced beck yerd. Fh. 1, ___________ SMALL 4-ROOM MODERN. OA-rege N end. PH 5-8863. WEST SIDE • — 3 BEDROOMS, basement, gaa heat. 3-car ga-rage. FE 3-6503 after 3:30. . YEAR AROUND HOME. WATKINS j 24ft W YP8ILANTI 4-year-old home on Bored street In clean pleasant residential neighborhood. For only $1,000. If you hav* 12 00# to tsSe our equity. Some more home* to this neigh-, borbood selling for much higher I price «Vb per cent mortgage with monthly payments of *47. Has .-listing room, kitchen and dining -apace. 3-bed room, bath and utility 1 room. Nicely landscaped. AuttM NORTH SIDE * bedroom brick. Large rooms.! ill basement with tow gas fur- Ff *«i_3H «ar garage. Low down jgJM walls 3 fireplaces. All, eoms. Built In lid#, a real value? See MO. Requires aub- fenced corner 1. ... ... _, wSSLk'hirailS!*', Tennessee | PINE| LAKE AREA garage. Fenced ”ltT , MA 4-2104 after | « B*UD,IS» $100 Dow* ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS ■ 1 and 3 bedrms. An conditioned Adults. - Ft «-#*U ! Maaacer, it sslmer st„ Apt, t. j RENT FREE FOR BOARDING i -Owner, couplet only.- FE 4-cess. | L* p m. ___________ . ROCHESTER - UPPER 2 , BEDRM ! apt. Li M173 for appointment. . OFFER 3 ROOM. AND BATE 3«. Palm Villa Apt*, 41 kitchen mid Call 731-02# For Rent Rooms 42 i-ROOM DELUXE APARTMENT Refrfgerttor. Sleeping rooms 331 N Ferry.____________ . .• AT BUB STOP. PLEASANT QUnW [ room. FI #-1333. [ : I CLEAN 8LXXFINO ROOM FOR 1 man. 34 Norton t— U| I WEI ST, 160 AUtiUBN Nice -clean s rooms., glove, re-, Irlgeretor. and utilities turn. Park- Rent Houses Furnished 39 1 BEDROOM. t&« A MONTH TO responsible patty until Juno 1st. 4M3 Bhcrwell, off Cass Elisabeth _ _* Rd #" Elttabett Lake 3-BEDROOM HOUSE rOR RENT OR 4D14# 3-BEDROOM HOME. OIL HEAT . Furatohed. Call MT 3-34" I BATH. A HALF. *pOBBM ft SON. REALTORS 3glg BtXto Hwy QR 4-*334 4 BOOM*. AUTMIATiC H U'i f 3J4# Lantdownc. VllUama *l2to. Open Sat. and Sun. GENTLEMAN NICE ROOM. PRI-vat* home, close to. FB 30314. DOUBLE, PRIVATE ik- to I BRICK TERRACE BUILD . In LeBaron-Madlsoi SCHRAM — . FF- 5-9471 j j overlooking golf court*. Price 33,003. 31.530 tows. After 3 call Sonet Johnson, OR 34333. A. JOHNSON & SONS REAL ESTATE-INSURANCE 1704 8 TELEORAPH FE 4-2533 >. 410ft LARGE CLEAN ROOM. NEAR GEN- tral Hoiptfl WWtei. ______. NICE CLEAN RCX>M FOR OENTLE-maa. Pvt entrants. 24ft Nelton. PE 4-4271. -------------------------m PROFESSIONAL GENTLEMAN, excellent condition. 333 W. Yptl-Inetl. after 3. QUIET 8LEEP1 NO ROOM. 15 GA- I rage. Lady or map. FI 5-5863. 36 ! W. Tennysod. I ROOM ON 1ST. FLOOR. NICE I •STf— 'Art Mayor RUss McNab BY OWNER RECENTLY HE decorated 3-bed room home, paneled living room, tile bath, fenced ia backyard. 1336 oekfleid Rd 3 miles south of OrtonvlUe mod 1 block east of M15 31.(03 total price, 31,388 dawn. Shown by ep> polntment only, NA 1-3343. COLORED 3-BEDROOM HOMES Brick ... . Or will trad* Dorothy Snyder Lavender ! <- 7001 hlihlanri Rd. (MM) MU 44M11 tome In excel- "lord It with $333 down: \ WEST SIDE SPECIAL — Attractive and clean 6-room. 115-Story bungalow, located oa quiet paved I strict. Basement, stoker beat, garait, well landscaped lot. Low priced at only 31.383 with only 315# down. SHARP CLARK8TON BRICE! — 1M# -built 3-b*droom brick Witt 13x32 living room and ceramic tUc bath trith- shower. Plastered wall* and oak noon. Basement with recreation room, breese-eray and giant 3-ear aluminum sided garage. Lake privilege* BRING TOUR HORSES WITH YOU to this deluxe, ranch setup. Mod-era 3-bedtoant brick ranch home with 16x34 family room for entertaining) living roo with cut atone.fireplace, kltchc-. with breakfast bar, attached garage, 30x34. hors* barn, small tgriag fed pond. 4M rolling acres. Located la Rochester •clwol area. Priced to “ to only 636.(03 with O'NEIL MULTIFLl LISTING SERVICE "HANDSOMX CONTKMP" between Poetise and Flint. Hat 3 extra large bed-rooms, m bathe, family rooai pad 3-cer attached garage all on one level. Our Lady of Lakes end Waterford Village ecbeola. Attrac- CLARKSTON. OVERLOOK-INO CRANBERRY Lia. Alt brisk. 3-bedroom ranch home, attached gear gang*' Owner eexlcae to sen, will trad* tar s lesser boxes in Wntorford Townehtp, or you could buy for itM 61.400 down. You could act dupll- Chapel: Deluxe, one owner rod brick bap(#lcw having 3 khgtlw >irrwi and ill ceramic baths I Dream kitchen. Basement. 1-car garage. Solid, value at iit.ioo with only It per’ cent plus closing costs down. You can derful year round, almost new, large 3-bedroom bungalow. to per out down ORION TOWNSHIP. New 3-bedroom rancher. All aluminum 3-bod room, extra nice wardrobe closets. It i-ring for a steal, chance. Full COLLIER ROAD: Neat end clean, home, fireplace — — ett heat — two — located on one a — available on O.I at^OMOf — 1mm AUBURN AVENUE: - Priced stg pos- LAST CHANCE! ' Four 3-Bedroom Homes Left 1 V DOWN NO MORTOAGE COSTS NOTHING TO MOVE IE THIS IS TIB "DIAL OP DIALS" 851 STfkClNG (Firry Hrttox or**) MODEL OPEN M p.m. Dolly liiiftoilF for B*Xt 1 WOWS uTars. INDIAN WOOD LAKE l-ft«W ORION Roman Mck ato^MM to bsths. eeraml* tox. Drsnee and carpeting, marble sills, hot water heat he* ih. OUdorama therm open* (cento window*. 3 natural fireplaces, gear garage attached end tolly plastered. 1 masonry porches. Beautiful area. Fully toed basement. School bus at door. Owner must e*lL 2fT glltt. RED BARN . SUBDIVISION No Money Down The Orion Star Face Brisk—On* Beat The House of Ease Tho Expandable adroome — Full Basement i Beet — SHE OHitoto Large Wtfeta Ctoietg ■I Weal of M-M an TEELIN itad Alban's 0*1*7 Cousin iwcen Lake Orton and Oxford. EH 11 n.m. to I p.m. Deny KAMPSEN md ***** ~ 00 *u" let the otter apartment yeur ^paymant* Priced apartments: B a apartment consists of . .... -. dying bedroom, kitchen and — baaement — gU boat . i ear garage — exeittl condition — near Huron gtreet and Pontiac Central High Behool ' - “ ‘U.600—Term*. iDcnt . all Colored GI. Nothing Down Two family,, income — g and bath down — 3 and ban up. alto basement, gas heat, mg treat perch, corner let, paved xtreeie. FINE STREET: tievcll older ____- condition. IP large 1 — rant by lb* ream < JOHN K. IRWIN MULTIPLE LI8T1NO SERVICE ARRO TOUR FROHLEMB — Are solved when you buy this t bedroom home featuring targe 13 I 13* S? «.( | WEST SUBURBAN - -Bedroom Tri-Level W* ere proud to offer this lovely. hem*, large family room, with aaturefflroplaee. Cheerful kitchen with breakfast noi carpeted ttrough-out, screened In veruda, to t ached plastered garage, blacktopped drive dto all landjicaped — a close in location, gee heat And community atwsae er—mlldw m unity water — (mall down payment — will trad* too. W. Strathmore ‘ \ Make an Offer Owner asking 36.503. WU1 \ COLORED INCOMB. 3 and bath on Irt floor. 3 and bath up. All neatly decorated. Ednutlxui hardwood floors, fenced* yard^S eneloaed^gorchea, beat, alto garage. 313,333, term* BRICK RANCH TTFB. 4 yeerx old. MILLER * »f the, FE _ 18#3 CABS LAKEFRONT Keego Harter. EH------- place, get heet ____ AvaUeble 3- 7131 or PI 1- BRfCSt HOME - _______________ Child over to. (11* Mr mo. Ditto Highway. OR £l831. ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT ** -Completely fnndxhe' ~— - of Early American LI 3-4311 er LI 3-7331 after WE8TOWN REALTY i * i CLAWSON ' - THREE-BEDROO& tw« Sharp ... Aluminum elded 3 bedroom bungalow on - beautiful wooded lot. Watkins lake privilege,* nearby. If,348 fun price. SEE IT! $300 Down ... COLORED' 3-BEDROOM HQMES Only . $10 DOWN r'iSw SELL OR TRADE *- LOVELY modem rancher tbit needs Interior decorating. Attoehed breeee- Warren Stout, Realtor IT R. Saginaw St. FB t-Btd Dally YU * SLEEPING NEAR PONTtAC MO- | Rooms With Board 43 IN ROOMS. ~ 3-MU. - CLEA1 tela. FE MTUtED MAE. apdSjiPP A board- Private home. FB 3-3135. REASONABLE. BOABD OPTIONAL 141 <5 Oakland Avenue. FE 3-9100. ROOM AND. OR BOARh. 135W qai^_Avr_Ftt_tljto^_-___ Convalescent Homes 44 j ’ HOMES SHELL OR FINISHED TOUR LOT OR OURS Blegwsrt Construction JUat oU tn. ill ----- urane«*It' Humphries LAKE FRONT. #300 DOWN 3 room*, big bath, sun porch, c bent, near Bell s Inn. Full prtc 33.303. 338 a month. Cell L< Motdoch. FE 5-3313 or FE 3-33* I convalescent home, VACANCY. BED OR « Exeeptfaoelly deelrabto. | -ottoot. Row Lao* L y*tT -,r*—* >h»m« FB 3-43*1^ 683-2410 | > furn. Ref. Rent Store* In rear. Also 3 room eparMP oa second floor, Oas beat. Total (, rent 3133 per month. Fg 3-3104. MAIN BUST o6rNER LOCATION ELWOOD REALTY__________________ FURNISHED LAKEFRONT HOME. . 1* tor t»r*«e. gaa Rent Call LEAS* WITH OFTION TO BUT! Pfetprson Real Batate, MY 3-1681. | Kk»3i*4«*v» ith7 innAin. w*«vi, FULL BASEMBHT. WALLED LAKH area 316 mo 3-bedrm MA 4-3446. ,Iake 6ri6n. s Vi a L L Height! Heed. MT 3-1334. Sr^L^tr “^1 2-v.fifcr ?!S2S« S5*J-!h ■ ‘ ed blinding._____________ _____ day tod night Newly decorated. JwjpBl,-Ji* ~ Urtw. 40 Rtnt Office Space 1 NBD3K30M NEAR PONTIAC DENTAL BUTTE USED IT Stoii* Mil tor II peon. 4343 Dtxto High atitld. oil OK 3-4T73. I Oreyton Fiaina. OR 3-1351 OWNER TRANSFERRED muHE HAL. I«0 MO.. INCLUD- TRACTIVE 3 BEDRM. FLUB bEN-BEDRM. HOME. FOLL_jgrgT. DKLCO OIL HEAT, ALUMINUM SIDING. MANY EXTRAS, BUILT-IN CONVENIENCES INCLUDING LOUVRE DOORS. BIRCH KITCHEN CABINETS. YEAR AROUND STORM WINDOWS, BATH VAN-ITY; 6 ROOMY CLOSETS. CASH PRICK UNDER 810.180. 8KB TO* DAT. _______ OWNER QR 4-3356 DOWN — hotti* that neads torn* finishing, vaa Very livable hem* Witt basement, — ell furnace, oak floors, rtneterw \ I bargain for tort* family. ' *!" LOW FHA TERMS — Near Nerth-... ern High. Modern Bungalow with >to |(* neat. Fun basement. Large auic with Malls OR n’ bett- Flattered 4-Bedroom Ranch b#™9^d' Ahm* t%o7n4SK2.“pK5U- a ■ef-aaaB'-i’BsM ^wri'ti.i* srwTt.a1 Y grigs it. meed Clarkston Mil! Pond 3-bedroom home siding, convenient ipcatto 333 wet deep with ample frontage dgr iwlmmlng —-lug 12,00# down at r«du I COLONIAL mud - Choice neigh- MfB LAKE ESTATES 1 gehool. i COLONIALS - TRI - QUAD LBV- Pull baa , ELS - RANCH HOMES^ Pvt. garait. ' beach, park for residents. Priced i sacrifice at 333,500 Including Unproved lot. j HOWARD T. KEATING OO. ' W. Long Lake Rd Vk mllc east of J Orchard Lag* Rd Models OPEN .<■13-1:33 daily except Thursday. I FE 3-1X43 and beat- rage. Full basement, t —3 price. large fireplace. All bull. anew. Fun dining roe .easy terms as owner « own paper- Can p* bo Webster | below. present day cost*. 4 3-car LIST WITH US ‘•IS DORRIS WELL PLANNED RAM-■UNO RANCHER. Located In Lake Angelas Mead- . ows, spacious Tiring room w*u to wall carpet-tog. full d i nlng room, raised heXrth fireplace for beaulitoV'kltche"* balf'baSi plus beautiful full b *'h with glaae paneling, ■ i ment with fireplace, 1 ed gnra !» ____ We buy, tell I __ trad*. 33 years experleno*. Open 3-3. Multiple Listing Service L H. BROWN, Realtor to* EUaatott Lake Road Ph. PE 4-36*4 or PE 2.4*10 . bedroom bungalow on Fon-ttoc't north side, beautiful pettog, basement “with an exceptlonaUy beautiful pended recreation room with fireplace, burit-ln bar, gaa heat, ceramic bath, owner lot. expertly landtcaped, 111.633. Easy term*. DREAM KITCHEN In ttU 4-room modern bungalow g! Oakland, baaement with ' INCOME _______________ M«M Income. 3 exceptional r of veto awn with 33* a month Ineoma from the up par apdrtment, aluminum aiding dneher fenced let. OPPORTUNITY OL 3-bedroom bungalow with Anchor kitchln, nmifTKe." — ' Including taxes S eoatx. 1 my tor q Handy kfitoto GX's No Money Down fjnd 4-bedroom family home, breexeway. garage! Nothing , to compare with tt at 112.- 603. cloilng coeti only to hnndtol Bettor look I - HATE TOU BEEN THINKING of an aert or io out In the country? If a# here's a cut* bungalow with oik floor*, plastered walla and a basement at only ##,500. About MM should move you neite* low monU>|r p»i- FOR SALE-U.S. GOVERNMENT PROPERTIES THE VETERANS ADMINISTRATION ARE OFFER-1NO TO ANY FAMILY IN NEED OF BETTER HOU8-INO HOMES WHICH ARE Df ''LIEEjnCW" CONDITION - These properties axe offered at tubitontlal SA VINOS TO YOU — YOU NEED NO DOWN FAY-ment - You can pursbeae these heme# on * long term -contract with low monthly payment* and lew tutored ratoc — 3 and 3 bedroom a tTou'^YOU*PQ POT HAVE to be a nrau" if an' ern: Eanaoer by the oov- Ray O’Neil, Realtor in TEUCORAFK Opcah* pm. Pi 3-1183 ”7 Tn» 3-43M WHITE LAEB TWF. - _____________ - story hem* In good repair. 11* living rm., has natural fireplace, 1 bedroom down end 3 up, baaement, oil furnace, storms screens. Total price, 311)308. id dtolto ELIZABETH LAEB ESTATES large *e choice lake privileges. 6 rooms '• xnd beth completely furatohed. Vacant, move right In with only Mt* down, call ‘for detail. WMT SUBURBAN A Chetrful older hom* aititoied « • ■«.. wltt garage i MODELS OPEN DAILY 4-7 BEAUTIFUL "FOX BAY" ALL BRICK BXTmlpR <-1 AND 4 BEDROOMS — ATTRACTIVE 3 CAR 0A-RAOE8 - WALK-OUT BASEMENTS - i',.j AMD 2Vi CERAMIC JMS —' PLASTERED WALLS -NUMEROUS OTHER PEA TURES. Cal! for further information and directions. TED McCULLOUOH. REALTOR OWNER SAYS “SELL” "Is—ZERO DOWN - West suburban are* 3 roomi 2 bedrooms, taitt. Living room. 13x11 ft. Large kitchen, loo. tier TOUR itaVt here. CITY SOUTH $500 DOWN P0* » room frame home. 3 bedrooms, living and dtnlne room*. Full bath. Plettond walla forced air oil bast. Fared TRIPP Choice West Side Brick Bedroom a—"walk-ln", cloa- ._ ------ , ggm drapci, carpeting and „ ----- —ifebl ly paneled library. DI s b-wasner end cupboard, aa-lora In the efficient kitchen. pern jewee tarct i full jbem~ two half baths. Excellent beMUIMt with fully IM floor ji plai-tered celling. Softener end • Incinerator. JLnrn* 3-cer at-. tached xeregw. 10#* site nicely landtcaped and fenced, choicest west side location Beehiveajly ,priced, gee R , Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 13 Weat Huron Street FE Mill or FE 4-43H 4-oniiwin on wuimmi lj B I V sniSfiiXU:. William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 If. HURON OPEN 3 TO » price - WATKINS n LAKEFRONT g.r*.n,C.l<-OrtooJrMrC5v.,,I A*TdM8!SS.‘TlJSrfm> Wmn SMITH WIDEMAN “SHIPSHAPE” crythlng (_ . „„ tjon. Large, lot, attach MM at fSUTVJ* m7^. ~ PARTRIDGE For Sal* House* THR PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER llfclMi P»r Hu*** 49 TWgXTY-THBRK Gvilian*$190 WILL BUILD iMflyrarag * I Don McDonald ANNETT Osmun St.—4 Bedrms. ^.jsrtsaL^ bedroom on M floor, 1 b*4-rooini and bath on m, all intar redecorated. Bata* Kwwsh.1* West Side—3 Bedrms. WalkkMT dlatanca to down-tevD, 7-room homo too targe mr^jojob. Shmtod tot. Drayton Area Brick Madras, wart, large living room, totally kitchen, lull ttlod baaament, «aa bar* E e Inara tor, water oat Att. Soar aeraea with ? » 4-Unit—Brick Apt. ■ excellent rental area,_ ear location, pared atraeta. Each unit baa a bcdrm . ft. Urine room, dlnm* full birth and kitchen, rata baaemant. t untu ... nlabad. 4-car (ara«a. jn,M Oak wood Manor—1-Acre Lake privileges With thli mw MCirm. brick trl-Wrel with ba.am.nt ltk hatha, into Urtai room wMh dte-loo area, modern kitchen wlb boflwaa. IS ft. aett ' ttea roam wtm fireplace, ■one BW beat. Interao many extra. Att. 1-ear | ra*e. 431.700, terme. WE MU TRAL ANNETT INC Realtors 20 E. Huron It. ' Open Bventnfa and Sunday 14 FE 8-0466 GILES multiple urrmo service 4-Bedroom Tri-Level \ Beautiful be ' \ larva Roman I living room, I ceramic tile' hatha, hardwood floor., irte and Snore. SjlStat flaaa^yWTi^h din- kooimiot. recreation room, tarist, torso matHSM tarred giving u> a special price. Northern High Area A^^yiOTtaoyomsofoy BATEMAN REALTY, MULTIPLE USTma SERVICE WATER FRONTAGE •lea^o 5° Bird rantkm room, tone backyard ■•rage Vacant, torn to toi right party an land coatn BRAND-NBW — Ikalmem I —tit built-in ora* I both*, full baaai four* far about rp‘X. down, and LMOST NOTHING — dor thla tnto 3-bedroom ban Often st. doa beat and gang*. Vary low monthly pay menu.-Cxll BARGAIN-DISCOUNT «UB OTP Prta* raducad bacauae the flo atoata. but tha t_badrdma boa-la vary clean. Well deesratad. Bag alumlaum * * terms, aaiuaaa. for tellers equity. Will help —-apartalbto party with port to I down payment. 4*3 par mm mahtotag take* and manrao* GI’S—$50 Vote w* hart tevaral homes I YOU that require only $4* to to mar* yon to. Lakarraat. to ROCHESTER Large • 7 roam home aa mi_. a treat. Vary ate* aaodlttart and R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 348 OAKLAND ATE. OPB---- YOUNG-BILT No Money Down No Mortgage Costs raw - BIO HOUBS t I noma - Waik-ta etoaati half atoad kttMM — L._ Bast RUSSELL YOUNG COLORED A REAL BARGAIN I ROOMS AND BATH. PBLL BASEMENT, GAS HEAT. 4400 DOWN 01 TERMS nr. 3 bbdbo LdROB FAM:_ I CAB GARAGE. S WRIGHT UNDERWOOD REAL MJLSffiLSl ,*ygA 4*031 NOTHING DOWN Ctortatea area. Only lll.tto. New-ly daeomtad nice J-hedroom ranch - Large center tot. Ilk bathe, large Minty, nfl farced air boat. Closing aott* mera you to. $350 DOWN NO closing coat* New Lbadraam home. Hardwood floor*, ktofrto •tore, plenty of cupboard*. Large kitchen with dining am. Ota tonne#. Bear Northern High, (to »,»0. B. B. HA05TROM. REALTOR PONTIAC . ‘ ^ ^ NEWINGHAM Auburn Htlgbt* area, tea thla 5-roam newly decorated bungalow with part haamaaat oa Una Mirror lot with fruit treat. Priced I Newingham. Realtor UL B8318 -ACRE ESTATE Located to the watt suburban area, about 1 miles from Pontiac. into Immaculate 3-ttury help* faautrea I bedroeafe, fuT dtotog raasa. iw bathe, full i basamaat. atoaated *a-amt, aad aluminum riding. Lake Minnewanna Area CELLE NT STREAM. POSSIBILITIES FOB ilfA.LV-I, AKETiI ROOMS AMO BATH, TOLL BASEMENT. LAROB FARM EXCELLENT TERMS. WRIGHT 341 Oakland Av*. Open 'til t: FE 5-9441 Nice barn aad 0 NEAR ORTONVILLE M acre farm. Trout atrana borders property. Hit* pond. Many springe aa property. Mr*-—*— 3-bedroom torn homo 1 finished l or outbuliamgi. nue m a wo picturesque farm am t psaati atmoapbara. Ideal . for miat horaas. 434.M. |6,t0t down. C. PANGuSTReiltor ORTONVILLE 4 to South street____BA 7-toll Sale RuBiny Property 87 M-15 BUSINE88. IN’. «to MOOT. L. Coffin, LI 1-8010. WATERFORD. CENTRAL LOCA-Uon. approximately 3.000 square ft. building, any butlaeaa. Terme. H. LaPerlc. Broker. OR 3-8809. Rent, L*«c Bub. Prop. BA ON DIXIE __^__,. ______r aad nrage Moat tor auaamua type* of bturt-neea. 0138 a month. DORRti * SOM. REALTORS toto Plata Hwy. — Business Opportunities 59 AUTO SALVAGE YARD DOING ----- ■—1, aiMttto over too Borrow with Confidence GET $25 TO $500 Household Finance 3*4 8. Ssgtnaw Get $25 to $500 OK TOUB Signature Up to 34 moadta to repay. PHONEFE 2-9006 v OAKLAND Loen Company to Pcattoa Btata BaakTIdg. LAND CONTRACT, BALANCE DUX 07.540. Can b# pwrehaead at M par cent dleaamd. WM. T. (TOM) REAGAN Real Estate 3441 Auburn Am. UL 3-1 LOANS “SoSJSU&rJP 30 E LAWRENCE PE 4-0431 . acUoa for chain law. OA 0-3700. WILL CONSIDER SMALL BOMB, aaatmc* For Sale Clothing 64 iautotlcoatb burb. bob • ft at pwi: CLOTHINO OP ALL SIZE8. PRI-vata party. OR »«iu. L'S WINTER S FE 3-0833 8 to 0 p m la. aim 0, U i 13 aad a SbI* HoBiehold Poodi 65 m^^toH.ma.OT. bedroom ai "iTTttgh X —suites w tot. Tier be SET MAPLE BUNK BEDS, COM- Pleta $81. Big ptotur* TV 010. Duo-Therm all heater, m Hus guaranteed. Btevag m and washers. AH ktodi S3 to gut. Bedroom Ting room suites 030 tea* IIP. Dinette eat Sda.* Suaaaml^ahatta chairs an?*mga. Everythfngn*n used furniture at bargain prlc-ALBO NEW. badrooma. fiwti rooms, bunk hkdi. dinette*, rm framae. bead boards aad nuu taaaaaa. Factory seconds About to price. E-Z terms. BUY—SELL—TRADE Barraia Beuaa—IM n. Oi Lafayette FB 1-0043 Open 'UU 0 Monday and Friday l-PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE bad, aprlnga aad mattraw. 3 aabl. net radio's. Telephone FE 2-3088. 1 ROOMS OF BRAND NEW altars, davenport aad shah Mat, lamps, bedroom suite, manta unto UJg * Weak. Pear-toilmW lake ‘ 4 R06M OIL SPACE HEATER* aloe, range new yeilww stool aad atrtwr. Reasonsbl*. FE 3-0238 or WVtot*. 8 YEAR CRIBS, BRAND NEW 013.05 up. Pearson's Purnlture, 41 Ordhnrcf Luka Ava._______________ "Need $25 to $500? See Seaboard" Phone FE 3-7C17 CLARKSTON-D1XJE HT^Y. AREA* load contract FOR SALE BEAUTY nootlcm JB Live i-0011. GULF Bus available far lea** aaveral ataUona la the Pen Hoc area. Minimum Investment. Paid trntolns If Interested, call FE 3-*173, toad to pay for. It. Ineludea email maaoary building, id eel tor wady mta firm or '■MMl dealer. Only 434.100 45,000 dawn. Call J. A. Tav-OR 4-0300, INGS IN PONTIAC. ■■■■■mip (MtoBytog. totawa 0 par qaat net, approximately lit.000 to handle. For particulars wrlta or call Schafer Rsalty. If-8. Grand Traverse, Punt, CEt 4-3883. PAMlDGE I THE "BIRD" TO SEB MOTEL—$5,600 DOWN Rtally a than metal on boaf U.S. highway. I alas unit* plus owaar’s SAwdroom apt. BhasDaM groat tar 1 aadu oparation frat trad* far ham*. Send Far FREE "Michigan Bust-nasa Quid*.-' PARTRIDGE * Asaoc . Businesses tl W. Huron RIVERFRONT STATEWIDE Baal Batata Sarvlea of Papuan B. D. CHARLES, REALTOR ri7 a. Ttoograph iemui WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 STAmF^ANCE’ea TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO uwjnTOtm UyXSTOCE HOUSEHOLD OOOD8 OL 8-0711 .66 PL Stoll PL itott •TRIBNDLY SERVICE- CfBiflt Advitora iU BUDGET YOUR DEBTS' * SV&Sr JSf i CONSCLIDATX BILLS—NO LOANS .-«^Sto,. Opart 0 f-Por four Boat BO* to (tat Out oW>*bt. Baa Financial Advilera. Inc. 3to S. IAOIMAW FB 3-7003 Mortgage Loans 61 $600 to $2,000 Da Oakland County homes, mod- Vou k Buckner, Inc. 30C National Bldg. FB 4-47W MORTGAGES ON 1-ACRE UP. With 150-foot frontage. No apprala-al lea. B. D. Chartaa, Equitable Paim Laaa larrtae. 1717 1. taa graph; FB OMl MONEY AVAILABLE MOW To pay off your bina, toad Mm tract or mortgage. Ale6, to Mta prove year heme aad lawar your mcolhly paymeata. You must Swaps 30.4# KRAO | SHOT I binoculars or MS. B ------34MU. uzrg i. FB 4-T7tt. 114 ' » « FOAM BACKED RUGS. 816.04. also tweeds aad Axmln-“* Bads 44.44/Pearson's 43 Orchard taka Ave. Olio to n. UH1VOS.UJS. »S». ... Ma •BPTLO" TILE. l4i 8 8AOINAW 1.6X11.3 ROSE BEIGE RUO. CALL aftar^> FB BkBl " n«m ?8rUS!S“..:::::::: SS Lif7=S. BfS. v..v.«S “TRArasOPEN,B0 TO g r _ FB Mfl Walton, corner of J GAS STOVE. OOOD CORDI-uon. sacrifice, 435. FB 1-3334. 80" ' SOFA, LIKE NEW? Sale Household floods 65 Carpet Ctrpet Remnknti KAREN CARPET MM Dixie Bwy, O* M31I DAVENPORT AND CHAIR; TA-ble jadloi. nreptace eel; electric moebtoa to coaeaU, i SINOER 8EWWO i muli. mat K button*, blind ____________ almply by dl Only to ll par Ugh or price: can FB ttoli. Duncan fgpi ijuino room suite, comp, with china eap—‘ and asnr oirn wm mrT EXPERIENCED —RmKIBBATOIW— Admiral, PhUco, Prlgldalrc Service Bxperta PULL BIZB ELECTRIC RANO? taod neniwieg — shallow u„ jump, toll Sawyer Strati, OB USED APPLIANCE BARGAINS FrlgMalN Befrlgarator .... atom OB AatotWaabar ...... t70t6 OB AulaWaabera ....... SUMS gtoBMlIi Washer ....... 1140.01 Free delivery. OOODYBAB (KRVICX STORE 30 8. Cam___________rE 4-0131 PRBE^ERS—$148 Bam# brand frtaatrs. Ml ft frtta* shtives, handy door — H*. teal ad to unit, new In si LITTLE'S APPLIANCES '•* y_ Drap— ” fllllams ‘ ____JJKEEPn _ SPECIALS BatortB dryer* . WAYNE OABERT 131 H. Saginaw F________ GAS WATER HEATER. 025. AU-tomatle washer, Ott. Rafrlgarator. 040. dao aliro, ait Electric etovr W. BWtahnlr, to- Harris’t, FB electric dryer, RCA __ _ stove and mice. FB 1-4085 HOTPOINT REFRIOERATOR, EX- it condition, PE 6-6768, KELVINATOR REFRIOERATOR, 7rdR “mmunSy LIVING ROOM FURNITURE refrigerator. 338-3003.______ PAIR OP LIVINO ROOM LAIH MPRIOlkATOR — PBlihbrtiflh Ito’ with freasar cheet, |7». Iso. cond, CaU FE 4-1401 after f. REamLT VAcPmda, oi£mT6 RETIRED LADY MO VINO TO CaUtorala. Selhng I roams ]—j tur* and appliances. All Ilk* 13043 Elgin, Oak Pork, MR SPRINGS AND MATTRESS, OOOD pains**4. Over 76 madam K M.MLr SIEGLER OAI - OIL HOME HEATERS Faya tor Itself With .to* futl it ears*I MONEY BACK OUARANTKE SCHICK'S MY 3-3711 SPECIAL IXU RUGS. 824.06. 5 Laod Carpet, Woodbsrd at Bqua Lk, Just balow Tad'*. FE 3-T4 0" ELECTRIC R A N O E. Four Appliances 4141 Comm« Band at Union takr — ‘ 3-4114. "S 180 yabds. used commercial carpeting, Slat BM, Olto. ' Used tote beds, to aad up. Used BUa- ^grTBCTh 6ii sole Big Sag eealpoed sewing maehUia, that embroiders, button holoa, eta. Will sacrlflee far only Ul.lt or $4 paymanta. On defaulted contract, Call Capitol Sew. tog Cantor, rm 4-S407 425 FE 3-0087, ATTENTION W* carry a large selection of rebuilt radios gB TTs/aII ruarantaed at least 30 rtty — “ 1*84 and up. Wa __ YVa or other article* wto* || w* bwy .sad or trade, (tame att and took around, 3 aanp to fret parking. Ptoaa te 0-M41 OPEN MOH.mAT. I YO ,1 34 B^5a"g-mifl cfltt couplets. good cond, 414. Mt 7-8173. BETTER buys &&S KidCSM? Innvrsprtxkc maUr«M .. I ) pe. bedroom itriS . 2 ?BDRoSb?°OUTFrrnNO c ^erry Garage' Door Factory Seconds AvslltbU at slaeabl* dlacaatt . . . STw1! WABHINO MACHINE, 5536 — utlii iWFBkiitiTflfli — Reconditioned—1 ygng gaffHMp ~ HM> lag BF — FBB7TERS APPUANCE MIRACLE MILE CENTER 18ED PHILCO REFRIOERATOR, cu. ft. with freeaer across heater, $U. s*i total, gas water Crump Electric, Inc. UU Auburn Rd. PB 4-3573 USED REFRIOERATOR. 434 USED 31 INCH RCA TV CON-4010, 835, 33Ma8S, '■ .. - Used Refrigerators Fan close out ea all aumm trade-la refrigerators. All raaa dlUaned aad JtttattOH by aV . flat service gapl. We alto have on aato naad auto- waahara, dry-art, gas aad qtaom rang*#, w ry to fir Btofc iMmHom-CON8UMER8 POWER CO. 30 W. Lawrttte WYMAN'S TRADE-IN BEDRM. BALM Bail- toto value, to* trade to < your old suite regard!ate at 0| or oendMIan aa Ihia new .»-p bedrm. outfit, bookcase b a . double iicnit, cheat, fjatoWN springs, comfortable KfKKKK. SSaw0,uJffUr*&ly"&UwlS pe i (Ml 10 W. Pike E-Z Terms FE 3-3100 Wanted to buy household Imr buy tool». CaU Holly ME 7-1103. 1 "WYMAN'S JFor Sill Mhcilwtoto P ■ aa attar, too rtrataij siad. Oom-plau hooaahoid fanUaataga. " — tof irtataj no raaaonabla of ITO gna foraad air ftunaca aad eoatraKr Olto FREE ESTIMATES OB Installation. Ace Haatlng * COoUag Co. OR ----I'liXN'USfcflPRnlC ROBCOE ALUMINUM. S8L storing wtodaws and acreei taiecnabl*. PE o-3»7i. '."iii*' 0X0 ~wa ClfNAW • toj» _____ rucT^ .. . . ASPHALT TILE, ea. Plastio.' flMLa. toWIWPWtolP "BUTLO" TILE. 10f g. SAOINAW 10 TEMCO 30.000 BTU OA8 SPACE heaters, too tajh. Ate Harttag too OALLON BOTTLE OAI TANK. Reasonable. UL 3-4544 Boles Builder Supply quarters. Opdyke k DEEP WELL iff Mkt. PB MP4I, cl6se-out sale Cloalag about Oatabar Uth. 1 power mowers. Milan aid rldt mowers, win sail at II par oa over oast, MOM at son. Tl aa*4ntequtpmaat «nmtM *with •now btodaa dad attachaMote. Evyna jjydgiasjil, ilMDtsta Bwy. " — ' i • P-m- CAMPINO STOVE, ] view taat. CaU ' 1-llto. . s CASH WAY I Shfl^mSs*.. li Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY 7040 Cooley Lake Rd. EM 3-4171 Om I a.m. tol p.-^ *“ Sunday 10 a.m. to :ement steps, rEa all Bliss, aplaah Mock, mi ..u., adlmaay saw Poatfia Pra-Cast 8t^o<3o., 04 W. ghefflald. FB ILECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES'ALL rooms Itot designs. pH down, kanaaas, stars. Bedroom 410*. porch 11.14. toMBtoTr-350-Prlcea only factory am tftatogaa Fluorescent, 1 chard Lake. — ** PLAT CONCRETE. BLACK DIRT 3" single hak toll pipe 4' L J U.W S' copper, M ft. lengtt* ... 37c R. «■" copper, to ft. att ..... to{ 3 pc. bath seta with trim "B" too.01 173 g. Saginaw_________FE 4-3100 ------ .. eat, rta dltlon. FE 4-3641.____ . OOOD I CYLINDER PONTIAC MO- BAYS TOUR PARTY AT W4 Hall. Wattaa aaf ~---- or MY 8-3001.__________________ IOT WATER HEATER, 30 OAL. gas. raaiummu anarovad. MOM value, 030.00 aad (Cto. marrad Also electric, oil aad bottled gas Michigan piuorascent, 303 Orchard Loha — 18. sgmrxr imax with giwm -30 OAL. heater i .. toe LOT tl* ft. 1% ----- glaa* lined WARWICK SUPPLY C( 3678 Orchard Lake Rd. e i t c h k n Cabinet sinks. scratched 43“ models. TL mnreiswa. 383 or- ikw......nnar ____________ with 8 a u Chandler-Price, drawers si torn*, to “t«-3 ft. g g ft. Ml to-477? R* LAVATWUEg, COmFlETE 434.M yalae,. M4.to._ qtaa.katakpka, tot-ilgan jKu'ores- called tor ahataima aad rl&a. Corner Orchard Lake aad Bugler MEDICINE CABINET^ LAEOK L mlmr, slightly marred, 43.44 — Urge selection of eablqeti with or without lights, sliding doors, ter-tWO BUpt. Michigan Pluorascant, 1303 Orchard .Lake -i- ML NEW SHIEMEN3 USED S»4—3X8 . frceltaat quality, priced tu mB. Bae^ua fa* all poor building SURPLUS LUMBER & MATERIAL SALE# COMPANY 8340 Highland Rd. (M-40) OR 8-7003 "— **““ TAB AND OIL $y. ja» M* ■ aarfSTLZTa GUN sale " aygjgsrf>asf° SPECIALS to 4M fff”aS*'. W ta In. 4x7 osh ahlttbl ... $3 34 Yf to. 4x1 pra-flnlshad Mahog. MM [ANY ofuER^IZU*i^VArLABLE BL?thbeit COAL**1 ^L??G 41 Orahard Lake Ave. FE j-TIQl REMINGTON A HI Take Over Payments ^xcr---------- { 00.40 1*7.70 • . 04.70 weekly ....... 04.M waffi ....... 84.78 weakly O-TOBBELBRS fALBOtt LUiiftlER Hardware, plumbing, elect rlcsl tuppllei and toll Una of lumbar. l^nik‘l'Sd AV**'*' *"$**448*4 USED BUh-blNO MaTXRIAL: Solid lumbar, bricks, r"^ “ 4-aooo days. Tt Farfm. WALL FURNACE. THERMOSTAT, Sale Musical Goods 71 I*» f. JottPMao. PB 8-8*88. SSL S5?ltLnSTJSrSff. 8M^.»p,rtiTVSi Oulhranaea organ with tranxl aad ~MMi apaakara, used. GALLAGHER'S > B. Baron PB < Spkial - fiiL btaak I f tree a I. FE 0-1 A^wiN^ROASONIC.^ MOTjb. MI *M0M** ' ~ BRAND NEW CONSOLE PUNO LEW EET^^LY^'M^JBIC TCO** OPPOSITE B’HAM Dally 8:30 to 6 P.m. Prldayt TU BUY NOW AND SAYB ON ALL INSTRUMENTS. BB READY WHEN SCHOOL STARTS, CHOOSE PROM LARGE SELECTION LIBERAL TRADE ALLOWANCE STUDENTS RENTAL PLAN LAYAWAY OR PAYWbrr PLAN EDWARD* . II S. SAQ1N/ ~ BAND INSTRUktlNT REPAIR Voaa h tana Oread piano. MORRIS MUSIC N S. Telegraph_____FB EttHI LEEDY DRUM SET, EXCELLENT MIRRA PIANO AND BENCH, SPIN. o&m& Viola alectrle TO 1 A HO TUB! • oar Da via Used __________ luH key beard. Yours for only MORRIS MUSIC *« •• Talegrapb ____FB MM Across from Tal-Huron BELL YOUR UPRIOHT OR 8PIN- hour service all work guar HP H. SAOINAW_________-_____ THOMAS ELECTRIC ORGAN good condlUon. OH 3-1038. RELIVE ~ BROADWAY'S THRILL- score, from your favorlto smash hits, torn 47.50 par score with complete score aad mtu. MORRIS MUSIC 34 f. Telegraph FB MMl Aatnss From Tel-Huron VIOLIN. LUCE ) rwrir i. Sste Office Bfiripfaewl 72 IEW ABO USED OI china*. Typewriters, chinas, catottlmoilfK ........ photocopy matodnaa aad dictating mschtacs. Oensral Printing k Office Supply, 17 Wait Lawrar- ------------ —rttas. FI 3-ttSS. 13 8. Orattot, Mt. damans. Howard 34313. VICTOR ELECTRic 3 TOTAL CAhtt I tojlcifY. .Ml down. $11.10 ftor mo Us* ta grocery, hardware or VaLLEY^BUSINEU MACHINES 74 Aabura AVI FE 43107 Solo Sportint O—alto 74 LOT ON M73. JUST WEST OP .^t'sShi^i&oWrs^ material tar "to log" cabin; to ft of w«U In: oU stave, gaa stave; and soma cabin tamttara. AU Ma plane needs Is an ambitious SbIs ^ortfM OH* 9i' m §w«wr Briggs Sporting Goods Hunting Accom’tions 74A ACCOMMODATION# P ars wtth board and FE 41314 alter 4 a.m. m Sand, Qtev>» k BLACK SANDY -_l. Wyt, to" “ at#***”1 itfc Yards black ‘Uff' M ■ peat, prompt delivery. OB 34004. ■A ELACK DIRT. F*At, TO> _________Utf* reach sand/ 00-40 OR r6ad Me yd. Pan O ravel,. II yd_*i Orevel, too 4644 Stone 1_ Overslaad Stone, to rd. FIB.Dirt. 30e yd. DaUvarxextra. AMERICAN STONE. 038 8ASHABAW HD. MA UOtL _______ rich daIiM &a Y 1PS3S. foiF-Boi^lm.L~ Ai» r'6 a b jwveL Dattuarad promptly. FB Wood, Coal k Fast 77 u^*-lMS,KS uk.^0 ■AIfNCL COAL. THU IDEAL WR* mTShni nrrRgs OAK. .BICKSr Y tifi rouwval. or Mm. Plants, Trees, Shrubs 75 1-1. EV^ROBBMBS, SFBUCB pine, f». arttortltai. juniper, yewa and mngbo. Dig yaai#wi. RmS ^mllM wart**1’' C? Village and ilk mile eaet"3'the intersection of Dick Lake Bond ol sm# : pWWilWBkt UUL iss*rt Flowering shrubs 4* tall, 71* ** lifalte leNafla 4 Dixie asaa H—tit User. U. AKC _________ ___________ year, old, gtt. F» MML BHITTAiffg ‘ - jsra.* ■*» 1 Hsy, PeBir;jB T-FOUR TOT PONTIAC PR&38, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1981 | Rnii. ‘ - wS swss iflUAWUH. BAK1LB1T rttJUW, M MV UTi (B and apple* DaConiek Bma. OrefcArd. Mmpto «M Or- u«ll*nUJMT HhMJW Pontiac Jest o(f Telegraph. Ol momingc, 7:00 to Mr i w;r gr* * r V* pick. Squash! potatoes a umpkin. Marvin kfddleton 8 Sale Farm EqVpwt 87 -iOlWBROS. rV&risc HOAD AT OTO1 ‘ BARGAINS WK. HATH A TUg LAROX INVENTORY OP (MALL WAima AMD I TRACTOR* “ ' ALL in PRICED TO SELL. Woodward Ava. PK MW. 1 wl row. Darla Machinery John OWN New Id " and HsmaHU aaw Deal ykMLOMiiftoi.- ten accepted tl Equipment. 640- t-vSTSk >i« B&B CRY WEDNESDAY .. 7:J0 p.m. Sale Hoosetraflere 80 13J4- TO 29-FT. 1961 CREES Now On Display at '•tarn fltoooanu" oily Marine I'fiia mJ l______ OpenSundays ALUMINUM TRAILER. TOP PONTIAC CHI -MMg. (LON. PK [ Palace, sxtr. Nan. (MM. into L. lord. Lot Z. M FAMOUS MAKES /TO CHOOSE FROM (ee Mo latest 47x1* wide • . Oxford Trailer Sales lju* (. Of Lake Orir MTHM ■ Travel Trritef. ate** 1 tnteed lor life. Sea thi I demonstration at W> Or (ales MM V. Hurea. (Plan t loin on* of —"----------~ ^JIH4’ HOU8ITRAILI Jluminum, l«« condition. *3458. i DETROITER , AND 12’ BEDROOM. IP ALSO. HAVE A LA ROE SELECTION OP USED MOBILE HOMES ON DISPLAT AT BUDGET PRICES. SEE US TODAY AT THE "SION . OP THB SPINNING TOP." Bob Hutchinson >bile Home Sales. I WjflUW TRAILER. trail SUN — AsmmOnsmv Reese sad Draw-ttt# Hitches Staging ^MKgrs# (ftt ntrta'&H Parkhurst Trliler Sales wr IN MI •taring New Jacobson Trailer Sa^s and Rentals •’’"TrW-’ » Sale H oasEtndbrs «9 Wanted Uaad Can IN SiaWK! ^ ms W. Itar*. Check tee rest aadtry fata AVERILL*S MM Strip Hwy. ra (mm pe (tm . TOE TlMfe IS NOW 1 ’ POn US TO PtCX UP AMD gHLL > HOLLY huutbtx ATroACH SAIJM WANTED Rent TraHer Space 90 is VI PONTIAC3 AVERILL'S ra (MM*** B-* (dm OXFORD (araeaijn MANOK POE ^ Uaed Aato ^arta 102 W^VSte%tL> ’ll PLYMOUTH, MOTOR, TRANS-mlaelon. sale, ate. AX parts ta good condition. Ouif Oas sutlon. Square Lake and Woodward. For Sale Tires 92 M USED tnUB. 93AO UP. W* Sale Uaad Tracks 103 Ttni Mt4iM |N*Mtow M PE 4-CM7 or PE (MM. M* W. Bone PE (1719 ‘IT JBEF PICK-UP^* ^WHEEL ’*1 DODOE H TON PICKUP Wim a solid reel finish, wow tires, H dess to and aril “YrahST Auto Discount-U s' Royal tlrrs. Bad Bird, at Mt Ctatomn (t- OOOD, USED TRUCK AND PASS-anger Uml Tilri* D Tire s*rv-i Ice. 3221 Dtxi* Hwy. (73-1441 SHUCKFORD MX AT BUCEBORN LAKE t.AXp ky 2-M1I •43 te-TON CHEVDC PICKUP. *275 OR (ASM look! TttaU sack THtECAEl naw brand*. OR now once $14J0 plus tax and exchange. Btate Tire WANTED; SMALL STAKE DUMP er date track *r pick-up. PE s£?S?2r5js£3S . STANDARD BRAND fflt# WU. Trad* ta ea General Safety met. (ms up to H at He.'s i EDWILUAMS *61 S. Sastaaw at Rattan U. Bd. C. Manring, dorior. 193* FORD te TON PICKUP. ONLY 9416 Easy terms. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 100* S. WOODWARD AtfC BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1*55 CHKVROLfcT PANEL FOR I3M and a UM Chevrolet banal for ‘44M. Bote to vrisieri ten-dltlon, NORTH CHEVROLET CO., I4M 1. WOODWARD AVE.. BIB-M1NOHAM. MI 4-3735 Auti Service 93 CIlkllXgHtyT CHUNDOtO Dt THX ear. Cyttedars rebored. Bask Ma ehhg Stop, a Hood. Phone PX Better Used Trucks GMC Factory Branch oAEi^Q^^cteaa Per Sale Bicycles 96 Beets & Accessories 97 Ante Insurance 104 SO AND 60% OFF MAXIHX PADIT as sjsjsaatfnsLmy. Regatta. Baltimore. Valentines and International Alee dock bent and eoaae paint 2* and Maar earn off New and (bed heats and meters. Bent and mater vyt- etassts CRUMX-OUT BOAT SALES « X. Walton PE MW Dnfly UM Closed sun $37 Complete coverage on Most cars tor * months Canceled AM* sad young driver Insurance also Phone Is* details Prank A. Andersen Agency 1*44 Ml A (343* Eve*. Phene PE MW or PE (4343 Mtb' CHRIS-CRAPT WITH 34 HP CMhearA water aktts, trailer. IM ril going to service. M( jg FOOT CHPtOKkH llilt boat sad trailer. 24 honspowei Foreign & Spts. Care 105 condition. WIB aril or trade tm ^WEifjltt»r value. PI in ii ^ihlBHWIW eltctric, trailer, cover and extra*. OR 3-3327 after • p.m. EM ENGLISH FORD STATION wagan. good candkton. (44*. MM Austin 1 door. A-l condition. 4415 Jo* Mate Service. EM (toft. 1960 FALCON, STANDARD, RADIO, Mack, «xc. cood. FE 8-1799. M HORSE ELECTRIC START XV-torade. It gaUon took. aU con-trota. New Condition. *175. 3441 Emtareedera. Lake Oakland. Drayton PlaUw. •59 MOA. BLACK. jtjfT ASSUME payments. FE 8-3874. 115* VOLK8WAOEN. FINE CONDI-Hen. 1*74. UL 2-4047. VOLKSWAGEN'S! NEW AUTHORIZED DEALER tM DOWN M6-I1 MONTE ORDER VOCE tm VW NOWI UM IT THOMPSON BOAT. 71 boreepower Uihoenn meter. Qatar trailer, tally equipped. (MS Letarl off Sashabtw. Drayton Plains (OAT storaSx EM (MM ARXANSAg TRAVELER BOATS Thompson Clinker Britt Boats It JOHNSON MOTORS GASOW —SPORTS center— 3171 cnee Lake Rd. (((MM KEEOO HARBOR. MICH, WARD-McELROY, INC 44M W. Enron OR (*4M DART-KART. (3 HORSE WEST Bends trite seat tank. KxcelHnl condition PE 5-5234 between ( 1 sad 1 p.m. cr S to t( pa: For Sale Care . 106 DOCK BOAT. MOTOR AMD EQUIP meat. Bert after toko*. Oil 3-T3M BVINRUDB MOTORS Boete and Accessories Wood, aluminum, n berg las 1 "HARD TO >D»D" • BUT BAST TO DEAL WITH a tujrixsTDkWSON'S sales' Tlpricd Lake MAin 9-2171 GRAY CHRIBCRAl^T MOTOR AND transmission, 109 h p. Used about M heurs. Em. undhlim Also is tt. ball and traitor far above. Cogperarnttk. PE *-*127. I UM' BUICK CONVERTIBLE. BEAU-I tlful rad and white, radio and heater, antomatte transmission, brand new top, tan price. (IM. Southfield Motors io9 e. Bird: ra am 1955 Buick Har 111.74. per mo Call (be«Ut Mgr.. Mr Park, at MI (TMg. Harold WINTER STORAGE (Bride or Outside) Complete motor repair and bent repair, and reflnlshlng. Harrington,Boat Works , TOUR EVIRRUDE DEALER 1899 g. Telegraph Road PE 3-M33 1157 CHEVROLET BEL AIR ( dear hardtop. V-l engine. Power-glide, power steering, radio, heater. whitesralle, Turquols and white finish. Extra clean. Only 9*44. Easy terms. NORTH CHXrVRO-LET Co. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM. MI (27X. YOU WERE SMART TO WAIT! Now Anal clear tea deck gave on one of our remaining ’61 OWENS CRUISERS -I OLEAMINO BEAUTIES 2T Skiff Express 21* Deluxe Sportsman , 29* Flagship cruiser 25’ Sea Skip 21’ 8klH Express Mazurek Marine Sales SOUTH BLVD. AT (AOINAW ’54 CHEVY WAGON This beauty is an ld* door aadan. with trt-aarh, m> boghda — BILL SPENCE li.? II.Ma Van Camp Cheyrolet Inc. VS engta*, Power--rakes, radio heat-Copper and beiga IS. NORTH CHEV- _________-.00 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM, Ml t-2735. 5tldvx:*.ri; MSI CHEVY 3-DOOR. OL 1-1223 _________ M CHEVROLET 4 DOOR. GOOD oawrtttton.8bap*l PE 4-41M. M5« CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE. V-g. Automatic. Radio, haatar. ---------ii. -----Blrmlng- p^a" « trade. BIR- Woodward. f mlnutea from Pon-Uac. B tSM. IMS CHEVROLET %itc£fvE. i Ki CHEVROLET, 1M P A L A amt coupe, tall prtee SUM. Lloyd Motort, Llncoln-Mercurv-Comet. 233 8- Saginaw. PE 2-S131. 1M0 CHEVROLET IMP ALA CON-' ItaQbta. y-S, automatic.. power itaering and brake!, radio, haatar, whitewall!, white with red trim. «1SM. NORTH CHEVROLET 00. ISM S WOODWARD. B1R-MINOHAM. MI 4-3735. For SalaCara 106 s'Tgragf pNS&n nv^MEY D0W fe«av.rij MI U» HM, T.rn PUBLIC NOTICE I tMau^lm ^ ek sad Uni fin-M S3M. Ms cash PrtaTnsf. 1--------- . . LUC*Y AUTO BALES John McAuliffe, Ford S3S OAELANP PE 4-41W mm . kne..#sj|n, '..dwttiniff. finance plan. (IMS par m Lav cash down or old t_____ BIRMINOHAM-RAMBLER, 6M S. woodward, I mlnutea from Puo-Maa. 1956 FOftJD t-door. radio and M straight sttefc, whitewall t ___WAOON. 4 DOOR. AU- Sja. Radio. Btator.Mh ___i. A sfcarkttag white finish. A sharp Birmingham trade. (22-d* per ■■nth with now Bnaaca plan. Lav cash down or oM trade. BIRM1NGHAM-RAMBLER, SM B. Woodward. • minutes from Pa, Mac. Mil MM. 1M0 4-DOOR DELUXE PORD PAL- con fUttoi wagon * — ““--- 1H W. Strathmofi C 2-DOOR, AUTOMAT- 1f PORD tXWNTNT SEDAN JEROME-FERGUSON ROCHESTER PORD DEALER ______OLI-fUl_____ IMS PORD AUTOMATIC. RADIO and heater, flood eond. US I. Josephine, PE HIM ■M PORD PAIRLANE I 1»5« FORD CONVERTIBLE. Sparkling hM*k and gad, fan price 1344. We will finance. Lucky Auto Sales, ltl S. Saginaw. PS ’55 FORD CUSTOM VS 2 DOOR Pull Price (US Surplus Motors 171 ».' Saginaw St. PES-M3S UM PORD CONVERTIBLE. V5t Automatic, ltadla. Easier. fthttm. * -k-y an Mack with ’ ar For gala Care oP’tlOM, Lloyd Motort. Iterate isrwn-OMd. 232 S. Sastaaw, 1151 PORD VICTORIA 900 2-DOOR, tan price (SM. Llord Matora. Llncoh-Marcurj^Caui et, “ ’6s Potto I______ shift, PE MM. 1M7 PORD 4-DOOR, EX*TRA GOOD 1 PORD PALCQN. J-DOORBTA- |------on. IN W. Mfrigilm bw- i. Cau or ».ims attar ■tearing ■________ __________ •r. whitewalls. Black with Mack top and rad trim. O ‘ ‘ " NORTH CHEVROLET S. WOODWARD AVE. gSMlaB ASM. ICE wim uacx . Only ll.Mt. rST BIRinlfCL IMS IMPERIAL « DOOR HARD. R&R MOTORS IMS LINCOLN OAHU HARDTOP, _sgr . Lloyd Motors Lincoln ^fercury-Comst, 932 8. Saginaw, PE (dUl, 1953 MERCURY IN GOOD RUN- blus finish. 91799. NORTH___ ROLET CO.. 19M S. WOODWARD. BIRMINGHAM MI 4-2739. I DOOR, DODOE ROYAL, 99M. EXCEL-icnt condition. V-4 automatic transmission; power gtoortas, whitewalls. 4 door, «** •« haater. Only UM vate owner. Call PE I DODOE. (DOOR HARDTOP. prtee MM. Lloyd Motors, Llneoln-atercjir^Comct, 232 S. Saginaw, Ml DODOE 4-DOOR SEDAN. V9 ryTnt. automatic, radio, heater. Extra nice and priced right. Only SM4. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. t«M S. WOODWARD AVE., BIR-MINOHAM. MI 4-3735, leSOTO, 1IM. OOOD CONDITION, win consider trade. Malta altar. Jadab Lake EsUtes. 1972 Minton. FE S-621S. A REPOSSESSION M Ford 2-door automatia transmission and 9 cylinder engine, tun price el 93M and payments tf Ma month Pint payment ■ due No«ember 3. KESSLER'S Inside Uscd Car Lot All Inside — AU Sharg^ ‘ft kt»y wd c*r» 1 rau!> mm Washington 1 pm REPOSSESSION I Pord Station Wagon, real nice, full price (144 and payments of M a month. Pint payment due November 3. Lakeside Mtrs (31 “» W. Montcalm r u ■ OR 3 BUYING OR SELLING (EE US BEFORE TOO DEAL HOUGHTEN & SON M N. Main, Rochester OL 1-97(1 Marvel Motors 211 OAKLAND AVE. OPEN EVES. PE9-4WI9 UM THUNDERBIRD HARDTOi*. Crneomelte. -SMBW .(MeMn(. and brakea power Windows. Royal Unite. Only 923M. Easy NORTH CHEVROLET CO. _ WOODWARD A”” "*■ M1NOHAM MI 4-2739. 1955 FORD 9-DOOR. 9-CYLINDER, STANDARD TRANSMISSION --ABSOLUTELY NO MONET ■ 4-7500, Harold $17.0* per me. Ca Mr. Parks at IP Turner, Pord. 1*55 PORD PAIRLANE. VI 7 stick. No money d— Superior Auto Bales 1050 FORD CUSTOM 300 2-DOOR eofiae, Pord-O-Mattc. beater, whitewall Uree. t AVE BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-2735. REPOSSESSION UM Pord (tattoo Wagon. I door, straight stick. S fllMdet |W overdrive. Pull pries of MM and papments ot (PI b month. 1100 FALCON 2 DOOR. RADIO, whitewalls, very sharp, $13M. ph. (74-1(21 after I, 1957 PORD WAOON. AUTOMATIC. RADIO. HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Assume pay- 1961 FORD PAIRLANE 2-DOOR, 4-cyltnder, automatic, power steering and brakea, radio, banter. Plr# • engine res. Only tl.795 NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1000 (. WOODWARD AVE.. BUtMINO- CHEAPIES •53 Chevy, good running .. ‘56 Metro. Cone. .. ...... ■54 Pontiac, A-l running . ’91 Chevy, Coupe, 1 owder . '53 Mercury, Sharp ...... Superior Auto Sales 540 Oakland______ PE 44400 HASKINS i Owner trades •nick super 4-d« flow, power bral lug, radio, heater, tloo throughout. ■ olds. Dynamic M : top. Hydramatlc, nowe power brakgs. radio a Solid fawp^belge finish. I Pdrd 4-door stall llo and boater, solid Clean throughout. 1M1 corvair Monos Moor. M b.p. engine, 4wpeed transmission, rjullo and neater. Pawn beige fln- Financing No Problem HASKINS Chevrolet-Olcis kvlngf" *1 CltrUttg Large Selection ON NEW 1961. Fords — Falcons at Drastically Reduced Prices Even Greater Savings on our ' Remaining > 1961 Demonstrators BEATTIE HOMER HIGHT Small Town Trades: UM BUICK 2 door hardtop Eteetro Power steering, ond brakes. Radio and hsater. Automatic transmission. Like now . *2,495 UM PLYMOUTH ( door, ftadlo and heater. Au*---- ■ten. ( cylinder. MO PORD eon Power ileeilM _ _ dlo and beater. Automatic h UM CHEVROLET EM Aire ( d hardtop. Radio and beater, cylinder ........ (1, UM PORD Panel . ■“ ' DOOI power iteidar » ....... .... Ot,ne Transportation Specials -9M and up . , Chevrolet -Pontiac^ Buick Dealer I960 COMET. 2-DOOR. RADIO AND neater, iMaMSU* transmission, full price (UM. Lloyd Motors, II fnetln Mt uuti ibMte^taJJ Sagtaav —— _ MERCURY, NMtak’ hMMT. W_________ ___ tires. Clean, rune good. 195. PE 9-33S4. * 1955 MERCURT 2-DOOR HARD-top, full price MM. Uoyd Motors. I lueiln uintwAu r* 8aglnaw. PE 2<131 MERCURT 1957 MONTCLAIR deor v-9. Automatte. Power (tearing. Power bmkeg. Radio. Beater. TVhltevaUs. See the finish on Ibis 921.M per smote Trtth MUIW Lbw cash down L.MHHM BIRMINOHAM-R AMBLER, MS 8 Woodward, S mlnutea from Pen-. tlac, IQ S-M40. MECHANICS SPECIALS U47 Dodge Adeor. like new body, motor needs some work, full prtee (MS, wo flaineo. UM Mercury 2-door hardtop, ■mokes a little, tan prtee (191, W* finance. „ LUCKY AUTO RALES 1*3 (. Saginaw PE 4-3914 1959 OLDSMOBILE, 2-DOOR HARD-*9P power brake# and power '■‘SSJ'rJui 13 B. Sagl! M CONVERTIBLE. .« OLDS 99, 4-DOOR. POWER itiirtOR and krtkestol—‘- I OPEL. CONVERTIRLW Hester ' Whitewalls A See" ' (S3( —- __,|C| Low Cash down or old trade. EIRMINOHAM-RAMBLXR 966 8 Woodward, 8 minutes from Poo- flac. MI 4-3940._ >7 OLDS M CONVERTIBLE -Sharp I 9490, in 8-T104 REPOSSESSIONS -BANKRUPTCIES STORAGE CARS ETC TAKE OVER PAYMENTS As Low as $1.08 ' Per Week ABSOLUTELY NO $ DN. Here are some examples and their TOTAL BALANCES DUE: Almost 100 Cars to Choose From ' tin For Sate Cw» •IT PLYMOUTH 1 :.v£m |*56 PLYMOUTH t DOCK STATION ---- ---- --- ER. EXCELLENT CONDITION RADIO. HEATER, POWE-STEEltafO, BRAKES REASOl ABLE. PHONE 949-9487 1169 PLYMOUTH CL0B Lloyd . --Jit r, power brakes. _ —--------1 94.88 per Week. d Motors. Unealn-Mercury-iet, 232 S. Saginaw, PE 1-SU1. PLYMOUTH 8TA IMS PLYMOUTH STATION WAO-oo. radio sad banter. paTror cury-Comst. 233 8. SagfateW. PE REPOSSESSION UM Pcnttae Hardtop, a real ear for tbeWjprieoof *9*5 and payments of * ■M PONTIAC. 1 OWNER. 1M1 PONTIAC SAFARI. RADIO. Hester. Whitewalls. In bar-1— electric power lew mucaie Panttacm SPORTS COUPE. Buck Ik ta beige hi color. Power -equtped and fun line of factory aceee- •NtdAS Utteew Inn this phe I $1095 1957 NASH AMBASSADpR. 4 deer, (tone green with matehtag green Interior. Au-tomatlc transmission, power steer-MR JWWOe hraBee. radio, heater, wwnowell t l r s s end reclining aerie. A real beeutyi $995 WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC' 1350 N. o Woodward hhucnoham Tin 4-tsM1 SAVINGS OF A LIFETIME Our low overhead and sharp new car trade-ina add up to' a better deal lor you. The sale of a century will be going on from now through Saturday. Don't wait until they’re all picked over. Hurry! < 1961 ECONOLINE ...............$1895 Pord pickup track. Radi*, heater, whitewall urea, chrome WRMfR raetem cab. ItttetiT. a deluxe model. Ouaranteed 1.00* actual mllaa. still Ilk* 1959 PONTIAC $2195 brake*, whim Tydramatlc. radio, all*, bucket seats BJt.r 1958 OLDS .... .$1395 “It" Moor sedan. Power steering. power brake*. BrdramaUe. radio, heater, whitewalls. 29.99* actual miles. Drives Ukt new. 1957 FORD ....$495 4-door Mdan. 4-eytlndsr engine, 1 standard transmission, radio and neater. One owner, any 1960 CHEVY ...$1795 Bet Air (door with sutomatlo transmission, t cylinders, radio I960 PONTIAC $2295 (door hardtop with Hydramatlc, . radio, heater and whitewalls. Beautiful green finish Plastic covers. Bun like now. 1959 PONTIAC $1795 Catalina Moor sedan. Power steering, power brake*. Hydra-matte, radio, heridr, whitewalls. .Chrome on doors and Mg wheel covers, Bendy to go. 1960 PONTIAC $1995 Moor sedan with Bydramatie. radio, heater and .whitewall Urea. The pries la right. 1958 BUICK $1395 Meor sedan. Dynaflow. radio, heater, white wall urn. Beautiful grid finish. One owner. 1958 CHEVY ...$1095 Blaeayne, I cylinders, standard transmission, radio, heater. Bme finish. U.*M actual mile*. 1960 PONTIAC $2495 Venture (door hardtop. Power •teerihf. Sower brakes. Hydra* matte, radio, heater, whitewalls. 1959 PLYMTH $1095 9-door Savoy- Standard trnao-mission, g cylinders, wonderful gne mileage.^ (olid Mae Uriah 1961 PONTIAC $2995 Bonneville (doer hardtop trite Bydramatie, whltewaUa. ‘radio and haater. SeUd red flriah. 1960 PONTIAC $2395 Catahna convertible. Power (toeripg and brake*. Hydrmmet-Ic. radio, beater and whltewaUa. andeyeftU.W™* l#0' 11,10(17 1959 BUICK ....$1895 Inrieta 4-door hardtop1 with nowor steering, power hruee. Dynaflow. radio and heater, trsAttfia.^ 1955 BUICK ....$445 Moor eedan with Dynaflow. ra-dlo and heater. N( raei-OaU-fornla oar. 1959 CHEVY * $1895 4-door Paikwood station wagon. V-d engine, radio, haatar, Power-glide, whttowril*. Like aaw. 1961 PONTIAC ...... Save $800 ' Star Chief 4-door hardtop with power eteering and brakea; Hydramatlc. radio, heater, whlto* ssF f^Sri..*^. ^ «“• 1960 BUICK .. $2395 LoSnhr* hardtop- (ewer otoor. % P»V! brakea. Dynaflow, radio, haater, writewaUi. Like new Inside and ori. 1959 CHEVY ...$1795 . Impaia convertible. Power EfflZMjWss Beautiful green finish. 1959 OLDS ’.....$1895 4-door sedan. Power iteeilni ETC J£*"±£«t*** n- 1959 BUICK .. $1695 1958 RAMBLER $ 695 Mem sedan, euper, « cylinder, standard tranamlaslpn, radio, 1958 BUICK $i; CtenvettlMs with power eteei and brake*, Dynaflow, n hrater, whltewaUa. gtonriag 1957 BUICK $ < Oratory Adder hardtop. D: Jew, radio, beater, wMtewi Extra clean. 1956 BUICK $ ( Mrar hardtop., Dynaflow, re 1960 BUICK ..,..$21 SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK ROCHESTER . - OL 1^133 Across from New Car Sales ■ OPEN TIL 9 P.M. OR LATER Posed Wednesdty, Frklay and Saturday at 6 p.m. THg PONTIAC PRESS* TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1961 TWBNTY-FIVR 1 r -Today's Television Programs- I Mb]Mied ii cfeu|t without nottoe «*■■■* *—WWJ-TT TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS •:M (2> Movie (Coot.) , (4) Broken Arrow (7) Johnny Ginger (CUM.) ■ (9) Popey* . (56) Big Picture DM (4) Weather •:» (3) Newt TV Features , By United Pieae International BUGS BUNNY, 7:30 p.nj. (7). S e a s b n premiere. “Bed-time Story.” Buga'introduces a g . of hia frienda end tent abaft "Han-ael and Gretel.” ALFRED HITCHCOCK PABSENTS, 8:30 pan. (4). Si premiere, “The Hat Ban,” (tarring Paul Bird and Billy Gray. A student suapecta Mi profetaor of a fiendish net. DONE GILLIS, 8:30 p.m. (3). Season premiere, “Tlfa Ruptured Duck.” Dobfa (Dwayne Hickman) and Maynard (Bob Denver) return to civilian lift and are inspire ‘ continue their education as college freshmen. * CALVIN AND THE COLONEL, 9:30 p.m. (7). “The Polka Dot Bandit.” The Cofcnel believes Me aiater-in-law la the jewelry atore burglar. A A' A , BED SKELTON SHOW, 9 p.m. (3) . Jay North appears aa a wealthy youngster who aide Freddie the Freeloader (Skelton) and Mug-ay (Jackie Coogan). NEW BREED 9 p.m. (7). “Prime Target.'’ A mysterious szdper baffles Lt. Adams (Leslie Nielsen) and the Metropolitan squa& PREMIERE, 10 pjn. (7). A new aeries of suspense dramas begins with “People Need People,” a factual account of the Navy's experiments in group therapy conducted at their Oakland, Calif-naval hospital. LeC Marvin stars as Marine Sgt. Hughes; James Gregory is Chief Driscoll and Arthur Kennedy portrays Dr. Harry A. Wilmer. Fired Astaire, host-narrator. DICK POWELL SHOW, 10 p.m. (4) . “Killer in the House.” Edmond O’Brien stars aa an escaped criminal who threatens dm life of his brother and family. GARRY MOORE SHOW, 10 p.m. (2). Tony Martin and Comedian FTank Fontaine join Garry, Dur-ward Kirby, Carol Burnett and Marion Lome. JACK PAAR SHOW. 11:30 p.m. (4). Elm Maxwell, (color).. (4) News 47) News ' (9) Quick Draw McGrow (81) Notes on Music • (3) Sports B (3) News (4) Sports -ft) News, Weather, flporta i (3) Highway Pptroi (4) Jim Backus (7) Brothers Brannigan (9) Movie - “The Locket. (1948) A girl's abnormal obsession has a terrible effect «i the lives at four men who love her. Larfrine Day, Brian Ahsrnt. (96) Foed For Life B(3> ■ (4) _ (7) Bun Bunny (I) Movie (Coot.) (56) Anatomy Of Revolution » (2) Sea Hunt (4) Laramie (Cont) (7) Bachelor Father (9) Movie (CUM.) (56) Last Continent B (3) Dobie Gillis (4) Alfred Hitchcock (7) Calvin And The Colonel (9) Front Page Chaltonge (56) Introductory Psychology B (3) Red Shelton (4) Dick Powell (7) Wrestling (9) Wrestling B (3) Ichabod and Me (4) Dick Powell (Coat) (7) New Brood (9) Wrestling (ConL) B (8) Garry Moore (4) Cain'SgHundred (7) Premiere * (9) News II (9) Weather B (9) Telescope UAW B (2) Garry Moore (COM.) (4) Gain’s Hundred (CUM.) (7) Premiers (CUM.) (9) Golf Tips B (9) Sports B (3) News (4) Nows (7) News (9) News II (3) Weather (4) Weather (7) News (9) Movie — “The Seventh Veil.” (English; 19£) A sitive orphan ia subject to merciless discipline by her guardian. James Mason, Ann Todd. ^m m (2) Sports (4) Sports ■ (3) Movie — “Beet of the Badmen.” (1961) Union officer joins tha outlaw acthrt-ties of Ha Confederate prisoners. Robert Ryan, Claire kN (3) College of the Air (4) (Color) Continental C (2) Bwana Don (4) Today (7) Funews (2) Felix the Cat (2) B’wana Don (7) Johnny Ginger O) Captain Kangaroo (88) German for Teachers (56) Anatomy of Revolution (7) Movie (3) Movie (4) Ed Alton (56) Spanish Lesson (4) Gateway to Glamour (96) Art for Everyday Use (4) Debbie Drake (7) Hair Fashions Today (7) New* (7) Weather U;» (4) (Color) Jack Paar (7) Movie — “AD Quiet on the Western Front.” (1930) Seven idealistic students, in 1914 Germany, join the Army at the urging of their super-patriotic professor. Screenplay by Maxwell Anderson and George Abbott. Lew Ayna, Louie Wolheim. ^ WEDNESDAY MORNING •:M (4) Continental Classroom «:to (2) Meditations 8:88 (2) On the Farm Front * SrhriirV"11 IS Hawaiian »6S£. }5EKhm. 14 Meulns IT Bafor* 15 BonneM wood •prltM - IS Ibsen character 11 lt»UM etty M wrens (prefix) si Notoriety u.Dfenintt IS Feminine . appellation . St Forape grass r r • 1 IT nr II. II rr r| II IT ir IB b ■ r ir B W ■ 41 u IT li sr 0 H IT H R .*<£ U Ignited SS Competitor St Swlat canton M Olrl's name ST Inactlye SS Fiber kaolS ss oraa •4 Flexes SI Ooddeie of UK IS Burlec It Stop M Artletle ■trewlnf ST Indian deer IS Chat W Hiilli -SI Baarf Wo* M Interpret I 14 Street (ab I II Ifeaaure of — 14 Opera hr V it Marcs will SI Teara SI .Bone 64 Lleutenanta 1:88 (3) (4) Say When (7) Jack La I Ann* (91) Onr Scientific World k« (9) Billboard Ii99 (3) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Kay Your Hunch (7) Jackie Cooper (99) English V kg! (9) Nursery School Time 1:88 (2) Video Village (4) (Color) Pries to Right (7) Texan (9) Romper Room (98) Spanish Lesson HIS (96) GUrman Lesson ItM (2) December Bride (4) Concentration (7) Lora That Bob! (91) Eastern Wisdom ill! (4) (Color) World Series WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON UN (3) Love of Life (4) Truth or Cbreequencet (7) Camouflage (9) Myrt and Doris (96) Science in Our World UN (9) News UN (2) Search tor Tomorrow (4) (Color) It Could Be You (7) Make A Face (9) Susie (96) Spanish Lesson UN (2) Guiding Light (96) German Lesson :N (2) Star Performance (4) Groucho (7) Day in Court t») Movie :18 (56) French Lesson :36 (7) News . : 19 (2) As the World Turns (4) Californians (7) Ufa of Riley (96) World History IN (4) Faye Elizabeth :N (2) Amos 'n' Andy (4) (Color) Jan Murray (7) Number Please (56) Adventures in Science UAW Is Faced With Dual Task Pressing to Complete Ford Contract, Smooth American Motors Issue BY BEN PHLEGAE DETROIT (AP) — The United Auto Warfcem Union today faced the dual teak of completing a tional contract with Ford Motor Go. by Thursday and noothlng out problems which arose suddenly in Its historic profit-sharing agreement with American Motors Corp. * * * UAW President Walter P. Brother expressed optimism on both jobs. 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keys t (96) French Lesson i (3) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day (6) News (86) Ordeal by Fir* (9) Movie (3) Verdict Is Yours (4) Frixa These Roots (7) Whg Do You Trust? (56) Memo to Teachers (2) New* (2) Brighter Day (4) Make Room for Daddy JT) American Bandstand (3) Secret Storm (3) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (t) Adventure Time (7) American Newsstand * (4) News (3) Movie (4) (Color) Georga Pierrot (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles and Pinocddo (56) Science in Our World (96) Americans at Work (9) Rocky and His Friends (N) News Magazine (4) Kukla and OIHe Record Number Eligible for New Jersey Election TRENTON, N.J. (UPI)-A record number of New Jersey voters for a gubernatorial election, 3,036,691, are eligible to go to the polls Nov. 7, Secretary of State Edward J. The major party candidates for governor are Democrat Richard J. Hughes and Republican James P. Mitchell, farmer u.S. labor secretary. -Today's Radio Programs - - wwj (Nsi wm (i«4i was* ,i WFON (1444) WJBK (ISM) l—WJR, Builnea* 14:44—WJTt, Concert \ WW ’. Web. Frt«on« Win, t, Shaman WCAII. D. .Conrad :**—WWJ. W«4t M«*a ■44—WJR Ntwa WWJ, mOmk ,■ J* ss&Krtu 1:44—W JU, MaA* rare. Mare —U:S. Navy heli-■ . copters sped ahead of the fleet A UMiSm tinimni ■■ a Iof them Americana—from freighters driven aground by typhoon w us cuiy ouw unc.l _ . , , , n’t be able to understand ^orty-aeven men were picked up i Jfrom the 9.200-ton American' y ambitious to becbiite fMaghter Pioneer Muse, stranded | j on tiny KKa Daito Island Monday by Typhoon Violet. The other 27j came from the 7,300-ton Lebanese L ship Sheik, which ran aground s | eight days ago under the lash pi | an earlier typhoon. j Violet brushed Japan's east- * WE'RE ALL I GOING! J OCTOBER iJlUl 13th and 14thMi I "The master of (be Pioneer] Muse, Capt E. M. Williams, and six other crewmen remained on] the island last night," a Navy ami nouncement said. “Williams and two men plan to stay near the ship for possible salvage operations.’' The other four were to be flown out later today. BAKER HANSEN lasvBiM Coapaay INSURANCE ALL FORMS- HOME OWNERS PACKAGE POLICY A SPECIALTY 0ldat40,50,60?” -Man, You're Crazy —with features no other stereo offers at anywhere near the price ? Fine furniture *tj ling • 3 channel* of round output • 3 teparale speaker systems • 3 * the Peace Elmer C. Dieterle They are Ivan Batten, 46, 29460 Fall River Road. Southfield; Peter Lazaros, 27, 2410 Dalesford Road, Troy; Gino Ronchetto, 33, of Garden Cityi Robert Levine, 27, Detroit; William Tees, ,39, Detroit; and Frank Beznos, 12925 Wales St., ] Huntington Woods. They are charged with obtain- j tag money under false proteases, j conspiracy to obtain money un- j der false pretenses, and conspiracy to avoid paying the state sales tax. Police accuse the six—there were originally eight but one man was never apprehended and the second? was named just a coconspiratbr—j of forging names to credit statements;, selling low-cost household! goods to had credit risks and then putting loans through the Ferndalej branch of the General Public Loan | Co., 22848 Woodward Aye. The six remain free on bonds from fl,000 to 310,000. • + =* SYMBOL OF EXCELLENCE MARKS THE AND THEY’RE Sinriif Iutnuuit Sen S3” $2500 Drawing Boards French Curves — Protractors Architect end Engineer Scales Beam Compasses — Pantographs SLIDE RULES 754**26*0 Everything for the. Draftsman or Student Clock controls allow you toast oven to turn on and off automatically. Built-in, motorised, removable Rotisaerie frees ovens for ether baking or broiling. Low-temperature oven Control keeps food ready-to-serve without continued Burner-with-a-brain raiorn and lowers frame for automatic cooking perfection. asols in wonderful flame-kiaoed flavora for mouth-watering treat. ttBNirikSqissirg WUm office equipment cp fin f©' The Weather VQK* 119 #0» sio THE PONTIAC PRBfij&Vffl PAGB ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1961-26 PAGES luCTBfciMTlAM * ■ HULU Fjght Off Sharks in Pacific SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Eight persons, induding'three airline stewardesses, today were recovering tram a harrowing 34 hours spent dinging to a- capkized sailboat in the sbark-lnlested waters «f the FIJI Islands. Pan American stewardesses Gudron Meisner, 32. of dan Mateo, Calif., Estella Navarro, 21, of San Francisco, and Mrs. Margaret Kircher, 32, of Riverside, OsHt, were recuperating at Honolulu’s Queens Hospital today. Captate' i. W. Adriaaee sad first sfheer W. K. Lang* 1 home of Pan Am was flown here. Lsagherae, who Hves ia Atherton, Ip a nephew of Engtand's Lady Aster. v Also in the group were Paddy Doyle, owner of the) boat. Captain Ian Genunet and Bight engineer Derek Stubbs; both of New Zealand’s overseas airline. They ealled from Nandi, FIB, Friday morning In a 38-foot sloop, After a day of picnicking and akin diving, the sloop was hit by a gust of wind and capsized around 8 p.m. ___"We got Miss Navarro, who eaa't swim, secured to the side at the boat, took stock of our situation and realized that with night failing there wasn’t much chance of our being found,’’ Adriance recalled. City Seeks OK Hits JFK on Unemployment on Improvement (0 Bar Mongolia Plan at Airport l^sf Mala Mala. V, "We were nearing the island when we were set upon by 9 two black-fin sharks. 1 “Paddy Doyle shot -the larger one with a spear gun and 1 we frightened the other away and we finally made the island.” f The crawled exhausted to shore, but still continued their 1 survival preparations. Doyle used his spear gun to shoot down a coconut and | the gun’s recoil broke hiagmse, but Adriance-laid "we aet it*” I A private plane spotted them as It was getting dark Sut-1 urdty night and four hours later the group wa hark in Nandi, Dutch May Ask Recall #5oviek Ambassador Be Submitted to State Aeronautics Dept. The city will formally request approval of an estimated $388,100 airport improvement program for 1969 sometime this week, it was announced today. Homer D. Hoskins, manager of Pontiac Municipal Airport, said today that final plana were ready and wouMf he submitted to the Michigan Department of Aeronautic* by Oet. 15. Jr They will then go to the Federal Aviation $gency for approval. It the request is okayed, the city would get an estimated $294,300' aid- TAIPEI, Formosa (UPI) — Nationalist China has decided not to use its veto to bar Communist Outer Mod-from membership in the United Nations, diplo-matic sources reported. The sources said Nationalist Chinese officials have told foreign diplomats in Taipei that the government has decided the use of its4-veto in the Security Coun- “Of the total estimated cost, the city’s share would be aboat MS,335,” Hoskins said. “The I Mate would pay 1*1.174 and the ; federal share would be about | S203.300.” | Final approval of the project would not come until sometime in January. Con tracts for tmprove-ments would probably be let next summer, Hoskins mid. Won’t Cast Vote On Mission of Cheer cil could spell disaster for its U.N. seat. They said the Nationalist government could not risk of lending the 13-nation Brazzaville group of Frend*African nations .who bad applied beayy pressure to prevent use of ffie veto. ft. ♦ . ___________ The Soviet Union has threatened to veto the. membership application of Mauritania if Nationalist China.bhra Outer Mongolia. The African nations were reported to hove agreed that if this came aboot they would retaliate against Taipei by! supporting Communist China’s bid for Nationalist China’s U.N. seat. Recent dispatches from the Unit-id Notions have reported that Taipei was reexamining its position on Outer Mongolia. Nationalist - ambassador to the United Nations, Dr. T. F. Tsiang, [ said Sunday in New York he was awaiting new instructions from his government. AMSTERDAM (UPI)—The Netherlands may demand the ouster of Soviet Ambassador! P. K. Ponomarenko because of the role he played in Monday’s tfcqffle at Schlpohl Airport government sources said today. The sources said the government ana debating whether to declare Ponomarenko and other Russian em-who .took r rauQRAM. Consider Action to Rezone Land City Commission OK Would Affect 9 Acres Near Shopping Center i major item on the agenda for tonight's City Commission meeting will be a public hearing and second reading of an ordinance for rezoning some nine a6res of land In the Glenwood Plaza Shopping Center .1 .ft * * If tassy officials part In the fist fight with Dutch military police ’persona non grata.” This, hi effect, would be u de- TOO feet wide, manti for recall of the officials to Moscow. The proposed program include* five points. The federal government pays half the cost of about 214 acres already purchased for remote, control antennae. The total cost of the land was $4,100. This point will not directly effect 1962 construction at the airport. applications only briefly last week and then adjourned to let the Nw-tionalist government consider the problem. The UJL General Assembly III debate the China representation i*»ue thin year for the first The largest single Item la widen- time. Pwvfoualy the United States agd way. This if the airports majorWMfen Allien have hem able S’CTZF1 SJ“ -* 5 UAW Is Faced With Dual Task Pressing to Complete Ford Contract, Smooth American Motors Issue BY BEN PHLEGAR DETROIT (AP) — The United Auto Workers Union today faced the dual task of completing a national contract with Ford Motor Cb. by Thursday and smoothing out problems which arose suddenly in ita historic profit-sharing agreement with American Motors Corp. UAW President Walter P. Reu-ther expressed optimism on both Jobs. r two major Issues remain at Ford — for additional company - paid representative* to preceaa grievance* In Ford plant*. - The UAW struck and closed Ford a week ago today. Negotiators reached agreement on economic package prior to the strike but failed to settle noneconomic portions of the contract. Agreement was reached formally Monday night on two. major I .... non-economic problems. One con- At the United. Nation*, Western rem* the outside contracting of mips irpIromM flip rpnorrM m. j ii. _______________ __a for widening It to 150 feet. Esti- 'circles welcomed the reported de-jtooi antj die work, tS^other out-The battle-broke out Monday! w .! \ ’• ■ , |Cmnese circles were confident theH— con*ractln* ot maintenance whenponomarateo and nine oth- J* SSM^mutJ move would present the seating of B^ftTSS S^wherS}^i4^5 theSBS&tBMCemmuniat Oda, in the orthntzJ said the total AMC ^ JreA,P°: Plans call for the taxi way. nowtion for at least another year. vote “c*: A,ex-|40 feet wide, to be 75 feet wide.! H .............. During the exchange of Mown, Ponomarenko was punched In lays, tmMsg develsperi to pT expansion piano under way. The planning commission last week approved the ordinance which will rezone land on the east and south of the site from residential to commercial. * ft' Agreements concerning suitable access to the center and methods of providing buffer zone* between the center and surrounding residential areas must be tigped before the ordinance gets final ap-■ proval. Another' proposed zoning ordinance will be up tor oecond reading end approval. - T h official* pretested, “but he's the Later in the day, Mrs. Golub sealed her choice to leave her hus. band and go hack to Russia when presumed here that the 'These two improvements will j Nationalists merely would abstain help jus handle larger aircraft,' | from voting when Outer Mongolia’s Hoskins said. membership application comes up -s, - sr *«-?- i™ OI IKU, on » ,!*■ 1°“™ '“**• wwmnail. of the runway which would be ” T acceasltated by the wldeatag. | Rep. YoUlig to Go Oil Trial New lighting would about | DETROIT lif^lLnoOTattriRite ’ Rep.' Maxcine Young ' i bound she told Dutch officials. ”f wish! $37000 arrf'rriocatkin, $25,000,1 to return to the fatherland. 1 love accordlng t0 Hoskins. - . Ma. v , - m HUSBAND IN TEAKS ft .* ft She then boarded a plane for ' overall project, Moscow while her husband, Alexei. far stands IJN-tJM for apsrsval with oaa Meal el 88 JMeany Claims [Kennedy Not jPoing Enough Predicts Jobless Total A decision on what to do next will be made by the union's international executive boat'd at a meeting later this Week. ★. ft ft Edward L. Cushman, AMC vice prettdeqt, said he «u sure the local would ratify the agreement as soon as the members receive Information.__________________ UAW spokesmen said the execu tive board could ratify the new contract regardless of whether It AP FWMll COMES TO SEE 8AM — President John F. Kennedy walks through the lobby of Baylor Hospital. Dallas, on his way to Speaker Bam Rayburn’s room to visit the ailing lawmaker. The President spent 14 minutes with the 79-year-old House speaker who has cancer. Kennedy went 3,000 miles out of his way for the visit. ■ JFK Travels 3.000 Miles to Visit Stricken Rayburn DALLAS, Tex. Ailing Sara Raybjum has probably received the best medicine there is for a lifelong politician: a visit from the President of the United States. President Kennedy went 3,000 miles out .of his way Monday tospend 14 minutes with the 79-year-old speaker of the House who has cancer. The President r •;1. “ ^originally had planned to Chance of Rain, PAGE M. ; Wanted or Not | Sen. Fulbright facing tough-■ primary — PAGE is. r” Doubt Soviet i Markets .................it 1 Obituaries ’ 4 [ Sports .............. 14-17 | Theater* .............. to [ TV A Radio Program* .. « • Wilson. Karl .......... M [ Women’s Page* . ....11-1$ John H. Krittolo, 64* Walks in Front of Gar w**tern |/% | * T II wW| ™ Gromyko to Talk— With Macmillan at a Berlin aettiement. ‘nwjto hold off on further East-West Texpioratory, contacts until the Weston powers agree to a united [seemed to him approach to the Berlin problem, ward.” TWs was made clear matte sources after the Western ambassadorial steering met for hours Monday with Foy D. Kohler, secretary of state. The British, French and Wrat German*.envoys and their aides have been meeting almost daily! with Kohler, head of the State De-| partment's task force for, Ger-! many. ** - LUES BRIEFED Diplomatic sources, in disclosing the French and West German! views, conceded that the gap be- , . tween the thinking in Washington.! »Mini*ter Andrei Gromyko today London, Paris and Bonn was not bridged when the Western foreign ministers met here in September. To underline the fYench position, Ambassador Herve Alphand. .who .attended Monday night’s meeting, also saw Secretary of [State man Rusk alone. Alphand and the other envoys were hot HEADS FOR HOME — Mrs. Alexei Golub? wifeiof defecting Russian chemist, Is accompanied by the Soviet ambassador to the Netherlands, Panteleimon K. Ponomarenko (right), and Dutch! state police as she'bends for a plane at tf motets*. tiie Amsterdam airport and hre ftigM KMWTS' Russia; Dutch poitoe fought with Soviet officials, at the airport Monday to prevant the departure of Mrs. Golub until they were certain that she was returning “oTber own fre^wilL .1 Rayburn had been told about .trial! nf Izi m jhwM !>«■■■ Ikwdown I helm Grewe, the German a sador, who said on Sunday that j Kennedy-Gromyko meeting Kennedy, who said he found a 64-year-old West back-[Rayburn ‘'somewhat thinner, but j Township man. was killed last . Icxtremely lively," kept the visit night when he walked in' front of . short in order not to tire the automobile while crossing Maple * * I speaker: He left -the room to talk Road at Middle Belt Road. [with Rayburn's physicians, then* Fatally injured was John H. went back in to say goodbye. !Krtstola of 6615' Middlebelt Road. ~ *• * ' .....The driver at Kennedy told reporters: "We had a good couversatieu. : happy to have a good chance to talk with Mm. He’s sick, of course but I was glad I could be with Mm. He was in good spirits and showed courage enough for anybody.” ^ Soviet Foreign Minister Sees Peace 'Possible' for Berlin Although Love FMd f, about ■eveu mile* from Baylor (Jafver- LONDON (UP!)—Soviet Foreign moved so briskly he was able to laud, drive in and see Rayburn, drive buck and take off la au ■four and is oitaate*. Not once did the newsmen see the President unite. «k and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gre-myko and the two-hour meotlug last Friday between President Kennedy and Gromyko. U.S. officials wjere reported to have told the diplomats they do not shire the German and Fraich arranged a meeting with Prime Minister Harold Macmillan ai said “there ia ~u possibility” t>f peaceful Berlin settlement. Oromyko arrived here eu a 24- j " - hour stopover eu route home FreflCn TrOOpS Nearer from Ms Bertie ertois talks la 11 c kj ’ --- - r_________.. Washtegtou and New York with N-Arifll Training **"*• PARIS (UPlj-Tho French For-l eign Ministry announced Monday that plana to train French NATO troops in Germany m the use of U.S, nuclear weapons have moved closer to reality. ’ * spokesman said that Foreign Minister Maurice Couve dt Mur-villa and U,S, Ambassador Jiunes M. Gavin exchanged letters “with a view to putting the agreement in operation.” The accord signed Jriy 27. tary of State Dean Rusk. Macmillan’s office sal meeting late this afternoon at the Admiralty House was arranged at Gromyko’s request. • Gromyko told g news‘conference at the airport on hlg Lrrtual following his talks with U’.S. officials, “I can say definitely . that there is a possibility of a peaceful settlement” of the Berlin crisis Highway Toff in ’61 72 the car. Call E. Reisig, 30. of 3315 S. Milford Road. Milford, waa not held by ' We at Bloomfield Tvwn-ship Police. Police said that according to witnesses Krtstola off the ctirb, looking dawn as if he was reading the newspaper he carried. When he was struck. * * * ' Reisig told police that the amber caution light was bright ibd he didn’t see Krtstola until he was 10 or 151 feet away from Mm.--. The accident occurred abaitly after 7 p.m. Flashes WASHINGTON WMlRa United States today ranagahwd Hw saw state at Syria. - f - DETROIT (te-4h* Teamsters Union today called oft No ottHtl 4-- THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, im lrmyTraining Period Extended in £ Germany JpfekZJN lic relations men the party has The Waterford Towidhip board meeting last night centered around issue of whether to enact a food handler’s ordinance. Tabled two years ago because the board child not agree fo several major Issues la a proposed ordinance. ' township attorney Paul Mandei revised the Charles A. Ferry, public relations director of the Oakland County Republican committee, will resign his post effective Oct. 15. Fury's ___________________ by Charles L. Lyle, new ly elected county GOP chairman, who said the organisation's executive committee was accepting It “with deep regret.' 7air sides and nearly temperatures extended across mofo sections from the MitsimiH>l Valley eastward to the Atlantic Coast. Temperatures in nuqge, similar to- the readings the past several days, were indicated. LAW OF to I lions as West Palm Beach. Pom-|Pu^*c . - . .—. - pano, Fort Lauderdale, Holly-1had. Hi» _ services will be wood, ^Opalocka, Hialeah, Ho;meijsorely mlMed " stead .Tavernier, Islamorada, Big; * Pine, Long Key, Marathon Key. Ferry' joined the Oakland GOP Key West, St. Petersburg, Stow- in- August of I960, sota’ and Dry Tortugas west of —-......- Chilly air covered areas in the NAMES TRAINING CENTERS' I Blame Vandals Olivares claimed other training Rockies and Plateau regitoi after the season's first heavy snowfall, with a low of 26 reported in Bryce Canyon, Utah. Readings in the mol belt were mostly in the 30s and 40s. •-In the eastern half of the coun-W*y temperatures were in . fifeh 5 h 50s and 60s with 70s in parts df the South. SAME WET SPOTS -There were some wet spots, 0in and drizzle fell in the southern and central -Plains and the #»er Great Lakes region. Mote than one inch of rate fell in sec- ~ flBns of Kansas and Oklahoma (tiring the night. -Fort Riley, Kan., was doused with 2.5 inches <£rain in a six-hour period. Nearly. two inches fell in Ponca City, f and damaging property at: five I, Pontiac schools over the weekend, a school authorities said yertardaiy. y Windows were broken at wthune il Elementary School, 154 Lake St; l" Longfellow Elementary School, 31 N. Aston St,; Herrington Elementary School, 541 Bay St; and Whtt” The new ordinance would cover all food handlers. TEAN. TOO HEAVILY' Trustee Loren Anderson. said, "I’m in favor to This ordinance. We are supposed to be growing and we are leaning too heavily on the county for support. Saner or lata we’ve got to get out of this lagoon.” tier 1 Elementary And Longfellow " Junior High School., both* at 600 Motor St. J An outside barbecue pit and e shrubbery were broken at Whittier a School. Total damage was estimated at $83 by custodions at the - schools? The vandalism was-dis-, covered when classes resumed ’ Another trustee, Joseph McGee said he was against the ordinance "because we cannot possibly enforce It.” Stores, restaurants, hamburger stands and all establishment* handling food would bp affected. ( "Thi* would mean that approximately 50 per center more to the 750 business establishments would ■ yesterday. The i patterned after the one used by Pontiac, would require stands to be screened in. Some fruit- market merchants ip the township sleep in trailers and have outhouses on the premises. After a two-hour discussion, Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson asked for individual opinions on adopting the proposed ordinance. Clerk James E. Seeterlin pointed out that township merchants toe already paying for health inspections through the county and state At Detroit airports, airlines will take advantage of the day to put some of their planes on public display. IGNORE WEATHER The air defense exercise will be carried out regardless of weather conditions over the entire North American continent, north of Mexico. Large numbers of both bombers and interceptors will-participate. _____*____ft * Sky ’ Shield II is described by NORAD officials as “the most real. istic afar defense exercise in Ameri-can history.'' LANSING (UPI) — The first fullblown floor’ discussion of Michi-fifth constitutional convents expected today when rules of procedure come up for adoption. A morning hearing by the com-mltteo on organisation should Iron some of the bugs out d potentially controversial Items. The' organization committee adopted tentative recommendations for the full con-con at meetings last week- While there were any number of items that cause problems on the floor, major stumbling blocks id the 74 rules governing operation to the convention appeared to be.in such things as open Or closed committee •dons, how to shut off floor debate and certain voting provisions. Today's session, scheduled for p.m., was, also expected to bring out the names of members of 12 mote standing committees. The committee on administration appointed by convention president Stephen S. Nisbet and approved by the convention Monday night Air Newsman Dies io special puns, ground displays of aircraft, have been made for'(he 12-hour ported -here. “The time will be used by maintenance crews to stork on aircraft. There won’t be any airline planes grounded here *-they’ll all be grounded elsewhere,” said Homer D. Hoskins, Girfs Ponytail Causes Death in Machinery Lola Clara Kaiser s ponytail hair-do. It was 32 inches long. It won her a prize at the recent Michigan State Fair. ”* * ft Lois died to brain injuries in a Detroit Hospital Monday. ~ ft ft ft » With a sister and two brothers, Lois was helping her father, Ralph Kaider, 36, cut sod. She bent too close to the machine as she was rolling turf. Hie ponytail caught in the flywheel. Lois' head was yanked into the machinery. , Each commissioner has received » copy to the plan, incorporating all the previous policies and procedures established in the city for Civil Defense, and is currently studying' it, . R would be up to the commission to make say correction*, deletions or additions. Once the CD ^program is approved hy. the commission, Kenning said contact should be made with the private organizations. Involved to order to apprize them of their responsibilities. ft ft -He said that the dty should continue to expand the training of volunteers for fire, police, rosette and medical care. A volunteer cadre should be established for the welfare section of the survival plan. Kenning added, and classes for the public should be conducted in basic.civil defense for the individual. -1 . The necessity of hiring addition personnel to work on civil defense will be decided by the commission in deterinlning how soon-each step outlined will be initiated, according to Kenning. ft ft ft "It would be impossible for the Walter E. Timer . ' Service for Walter E. Tuner, SI, ii 1714 GraefleM St will be 1 p.m~ Thursday at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will btt in Mt. Royal Cemetery, Pittsburgh. Mr. Turner died yeftarday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac. He was a specification writer tor the Detroit Arsenal and had been a sales engineer with General Motors' Truck sndVCooch for 23 years, re* tiring in ISO. He was a member of Birmingham Lodge, FAAM 44, the Scottish Rite and the Moslem Shrine, Pittsburgh. Surviving are his wife Esther; a Warren; two sons, Allen of Clawson and Paul vt Birmingham, :and a grandson. V ■ ’ .--------r “ .: Mrs. Virgil Wells Service tor Mn. Virgil (Josephine) Wells, 73, Of 1491 Birmingham Blvd., was held yesterday st the MafQey Bailey Funeral Home. Burial was in Napoleon, Mrs. Wells died Saturday at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, Mowing an illness of seven months. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. LeRoy Hooper of Birmingham; a son, William Slack of Freeport, Grand Bahama, British West 'Indies; one grandson and three great-grandchildren. Dutch May Ask Recall of Envoy (Continued From Page One) tor Mrs. Golub test Saturday night when her husband told ha planned to remain in the West. The couple had walked for hours through the streets of Amsterdam before he finally made up his mind. They had' cone to Holland as members to a Russian tourist iMwty- . ■■“ ~ *- ★ *. * Early. Sunday morning Golub LINCOLN. Neb. IP - S. Byron I knocked on the door oTw small Krasne, 34, news director of tele-1 hotel and, in broken German, in-vision station KOLN-TV, died Mon-1 formed the proprietress he wanted day after an illness of several I to ask fa political asylum in Hoi-'weeks had been associated!land, but “my wife did not want with KOLN radio and television [to join me because her parents since-1951 |are still alive in the Soviet Union." Berserk Worker Is 4, Injures 3 , GARY, Bid. (AP)—Four persons were killed and three others were wounded today by a man who went berserk at the U.S. Steel »r sheet and tin mill. First reports from police did not give any names of the victims, or say whether they were employes of the company. Several . calls, for ambulances, were made by police. The shooting occured shortly before 9 a m. Full (1.8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly sunny and warm today, high near M. Partly cloudy tonight, low 64. Wednesday partly cMudy with a chance of showers and turning a little colder, high 74. Winds southwesterly 8-15 miles becoming M-W miles tonight. . - ■ 'May Build600-Foot Rocket' \2nd Polio Vaccine Now Licensed by Health Service Washington (api-tim second of three oral polio vaccines licenced by the Public Health Service-fa manufacture by a pharmaceutical iinn. Pfizer, Ltd., will maba the hrich, England. It also received the license for Type-1 vaccine last Aug.‘ 17. The third, type of oral vaccine is not expected to be, available for several months, the health service said. ’ Surgeon General Luther ~L. Terry stressed that Salk polio vaccine—given in a series of shots—is the only vaccine available that protects against all three types of polio. Terry said the health service is ordering t.g million doses—at .? cents a dose—of tjie tasteless, colorless Type 2 vaccine to go in .its 1 NEW YORK (UPDr-If you’ve fets there may be little necessity ever wondered what a scientific for our 100 million-pound vehicle.," nightmare looks like, Just fire up * * * [ your imagination and envision a ' '“space rocket the size of" the battle- ship. USS; Missouri. Hamlin said .the problem*.would | be so enormous that "we should .... spine-rattling possibility not undertake the development’ that makes .the nation’s new Nova Lj a giant, chemipal rocket-this moon rodket, by comparison, a sjze. except as a last resort, building game for children. ' The rocket that Hamlta dls-The future of America's am- rUMed )a theory would stand «M bittern programs tor manned fri>t t,Uj or us f<5j tgller than exploration into deep fptoo WfS the WasMngtoo Monument, depend upon the outcome .of ~ sort of space-age “David and Goliath" battle between the tiny atom and the gtant chemical rocket; UnldSs U.S scientists tame ,nu- It might have a booster tank 250 feet high and 80 feet in diameter. Should such a rocket blow up, it could cause blast damage equal to that of a 50 k.iloton bomb—two one-half-time* ihe force of the for the Saturn "super-land Saturn may be married forl*PM«nic stockpile at Atlanta, Ou. present staff to the. personnel office to adequately handle n greatly enlarged civil Defense program. Two Patrolmen Ordered'Fired' Trial Board Hearings for Beach and Taig Backs Suspensions The Pontiac Police Trial Board has ordered that two-patrolmen," impended In August, he fired Former Patrolmen Jack C. Beach and Richard £• Taig were suspended Aug. 17 on charges of Official misconduct, incompetency, neglect of duty and conduct unbecoming an officer. Both men denied all charges and demanded a hearing before trial board. Four men rings were held beginning Soft *7. ‘The trial board found both men guilty aa charged last night,’’ said H. Malcolm Kahn, president, this r— “The board has ordered their immediate separation from the department,” - Beach, 26. and Taig, 24, both joined the force in August 1959. They .were suspended by Acting Chief Joseph Koren who recommended that they be separated from the department. Reds to Dio for Theft MQSCOW (D—Two men have been sentenced to death and 30 to prison terms , up to l5 years for stealing , state merchandise akhstan Pravda said Monday, reported that sne group of 15 work-in the district supply administration made off with 100,000 rubles to goods, including a rail-way car loaded with sugar. The head of this group was sentenced death as was the bead to another’group, which also consisted of 16 persons. Sworn In on U.S. Job WASHINGTON (UPI) — Donald r. Alexander, In, former vice president of the Whirlpool Corp., was sworn in Monday as U.S. maritime administrator. MSV M*KK FLIGHT ~ well in time to head off the head- MAY MAKE FLIGHT laches ft ft ft Hiighea is building the engine for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and plans to fly It for the first time next year1 aboard a Scout rocket. Ion erigtoes develop comparatively little titrust but can deliver power over a great length of time. Chemical rockets, tot-the other hand, can deliver huge amount* of power, but for oniy k few minutes at the maximum. | „ ...Ipi < AP ntefai GOT PRESIDENTIAL HANDSHAKE - Three youngrters who shotoc hands and spoke with President Kennedy while he was in Baylor Hospital are *hown after their meeting with the President. They are Larry FaHiaber <4n bed); Debra Garner, and Ted Collimworth, all of Dellas. The President spotted the children as he was leaving Speaker Sam Rayburn’* room and popped in to greet them .and wish a speedy recovery. See story on Page. 1. TEfe PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1061 Planning Bazaar Membete ofPw thaler. Sigma Bate Sorority, met at the North Perry Street home of lira.' Morgan E. Siple Jr; Mm. George Baril yaa cohostess for tee coffee hour. Delegatee to the nefionel con veattoa Oct. t»» la r*rt Wayne, tad., will he Mrs. Wayne Death Tentative plans *were made for the chapter'! first annual bazaar early in December. ■ International SO PC. STAINLESS STEELWARE Genu? J JEWELERS I f. 'Huron FE 2.W in Episcopal Ceremony Michael Caldwell, Lake Orion, gaveJiis cousin in marriage. She is the daughter of Mia. Harvey Campbell of Labe Orion and the late Mr. Campbell. The bridegroom’! parents are John D. Black, Drayton Plains, and Mrs. Edwin Norton, Glendale, Calif. This exercise for the thighs is one de-scribed in the Marathon, booklet. Make— large Circles with the deg. If you'd like to have the Marathon booklet which lists exercises, a calorie chart and. gen-, eral direction for losing up to 20 cenar and a-stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request to Josephine Lowman in care of this newspaper. Uses *Woa,t Power* to Lose fountain Seeks Molehill Their gown* were royal blue peau satin. Judy Ann GkkUngs, the * i’b niece, waa flower girl. By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN I have Just received an interesting and inspiring letter that want to print part of it for you. "Dear Mrs. Lowman: "Just a year ago I weighed 242 pounds. The amount I needed to lose seemed to be an uneurmount-abte mountain of blubber. My bust meaused 44, my waist Hand my hips SO inches. Now,, after one year, my bust measures 40, my waist 34 and my Ups 45 inches. 1 have loet i I still have a leaf way to ge for my Ideal figure, but having lost this much, 1 am ears that “I thought that through your column I could share the Joy of my new figure with others, notice you often print letters from those who have lost 15 or 20 pounds, but those who have much more' to loee need encouragement. WASN’T EASY “I do not say that it has been I just love Jo eat. and I had Permanent* m$6.50 Wilt Cal sad Sifting MARGARET FIELD,'OWNER HELEN H01LERBACK Fine Upholstering IV TOWN HOUSE **45 Orchard Lk.Rd.FE I-41N Alwovi GOOD COFFEE RIKER FOUNTAIN <7 W. Huron to ur my ‘won’t* power a lot more than my will power. However, the feeling .of well being and satisfaction which came from shedding thoae pounds, is worth any discomfort frit while-dieting. “Fbr instance,'meeting people < hearing, their new figure, mentioning how much younger I look; being able to shop for smaller sizes instead at 'stylish stouts’; being able to walk past a store window and be somewhat satisfied with what is reflected back; the pleasant ‘work’ and how much easier it is to get around. WeH, there are Just a few at the compensations. It Is ue rewarding, coneiderlag everything. “I must admit that during, the hot weather I slipped up on some of my Marathon exercise!, but with curiar weather coinlng r tn-tend to begin them again with renewed vigor. FAMILY HELPED 1 could not have lost this much without the help of my family. Their encouragement was moat ap- "Please wish me luck In shed- predated and needed, emphasize too strongly how vital this Is, for I fed that the mental attitude is so important in an undertaking such as this. Church Women Plan for Benefit brook, will meet Oct 17 to spend the morning preparing’ for their fall benefit sale, slated Oct. 26. A fashion show during the luncheon Will otter members s preview of many garments donated for the sale. The semiannual event provides funds tor toe by the church women In the fields of service to which they are committed. • ’ ding the rest of my overweight. With HR success story she already has achieved, 1 am tare she will win through to a per- This la the last time I will offer my 8-Week Self-Improvement Marathon until 1962. If any of you would like to follow it tor a leas of from 15 to 20 pounds in Just eight weeks, or use it oyer e longer period, send 10 cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope, with your request tor the Marathon booklet. Address Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press. A transistorized electronic device converts 12-volt storage battery current to 110 volt a.c. to operate appliances, tools or radios where household current is available. United Fund Solicitors Attend Training Class United Fund training sessions tor Pontiac and the Waterford area are bring conducted today, Wednesday and Thursday. Solicitors may attend any one of the sessions, scheduled for 8 this evening and again at 10 a.m. ‘ pm. Wednesday in Water ford Community Center and at 10 a.m. and 1:90' p.m. Thursday in the Community Services Building. Mrs. Walter Neffllnger, $27,ow. To achieve this geal we will be meeting with ever 1,300 solicitors at those sessions.” Assisting Mrs. Noffslnger at the meetings will be Mrs. Joseph Fox and Mrs. Elmer O. Johnson, Pontiac and Waterford cochalrmen. The program will supply information about the services of the 54 United Fund agencies. "Peo- ple with Problems,’’ a slide film will give the trainees an inside look et the work of each agency. Mr. Schultz will explain methods of solicitation and the use of materials. Question* from the floor wilt be answered. Refreshments will be served the dose of each meeting. Couple WedslBrien Gibson Pledges mmms Given at First Baptist Bonnie'Joy Campbell exchanged Mm and rings with Douglas J. Black Saturday ta St Mary’s in the tfifis Episcopal Church, Lake Angriu*. Rev. Wilbur R. Schutze performed the mldafternon candlelight emmiony^ Dr. H. H. Savage officiated at the marriage of Judith Aim Gibeon to Robert T. Brien Saturday evening in the First Baptist Church. Rev. 'Otho yatees of Southfield, of the Dequindre Community.Church, eg fitted toatoee Juliet eap complemented the bride’s gswa of white bouquet lee and chapel train. White carnations and pink sweetheart rases rested oa her white Bible. Red and pink sweetheart roaes and shattered carnations topped royal blue tulle muffs tor maid of honor Barbara Beach. Pleasant Ridge, and bridesmaid Julia A. Federico, Oxford. Michael Hudson was best man. Harlow Crawford, Clio and Delbert Green, Flint, students at General Motors Institute ushered for their classmate. After receiving guests in the church undercraft, the couple left so a brief honeymoon. chiatric aide at Haven Sanitarium, Rochester. She attended Western Michigan University. Yellow and green sweetheart roses accented Mr*. Campbell’s dress of moss green peau die soie and magenta-tipped beige cym-bidium orchids complemented Mrs. Black’s dress of beige brocade. Visit Auxiliary The Ladies’ Auxiliary of Chief Pontiac Canton No. 3, International Order of Odd Fellows, was visited by the prerident, Vice president and treasurer at the auxiliary association Department of Michigan at Thursday’s meeting. Ten from Flint, Detroit and Port Huron also were present. Fallowing the meeting a party was given tor state officers. **4 60 par cent of the world's turn tractors are in um '«■ U. S. For the ceremony and church reception, Mrs. Gibeon chose phire peau de sole with gold accents and wore.,gold Mary Jo mats. Neva Brien, aunt of the bridegroom, a p p e * r • d In olive gray sheer wool, with magenta accessories. Her corsage was pale pink Carol Amling roaes. Uponjoeturn from a honeymoon trip to Niagara Flails and Capada, the couple will make their homer In Auburn Heights.' The Mexican yam Is important to pharmaceutical firms. It Is a source of diosgenin, which yields cortisone as wpU as other hormones and steroids used in treating rheumatic diseases and some forms of esneer. MRS. ROBERT T. BRIEN Utica, assisted at the dodble-ring candlelight ceremony. The new Mra. Black Is a pay- «*°»« floor-length wliite 'ScWffli lace over satta, won with iUk Illusion veiling and a Jeweled tiara. White butterfly roues, Ivy and stephanotis centered her cascade of white carnations. , Round cascades o' bronze and mahogany dot pompons complemented emeral green silk taffeta dresses for the attendants. Mrs. James Gibson served her sister-law as bridesmaid with Patricia Brien, sister of the bridegroom. Croton leaves and cattails, added to her bouquet, designated maid Of honor Sylvia Kosa of Troy. Robin and John Wilson, niece and nephew of the bride, were flower girl and ring bearer. Theron V. Brien of South East Boulevard and the late Mrs. Brien, had Ethan Rogers, Drayton Plains, for his boot man. James Gibson and David Brien, brothers of the bridny couple. STEALING PATIOS Patio Awnings of Every Description FE 4-4507 (ASnrtlMmmt > i Advertisement BnmQmQ. Up MINTS COLLECTED *Y HRS. DAM CESSES, MOTME* OF I One thing you can count on when baby reaches the ■ grasping and hoid-9R ing stage: almost everything will end up in that sweet, rosebud mouth. X couple of precautions: • Toys should bo small enough to hold, too largo to swallow. ____• Hard —Aff i- ft— of sharp edges. Avoid toys with small ports that nuy be- For Interesting menu planning, don’t forget" Garber Dinners -tasty vegetables blended with savory meat-to en-' hance flavor. And! for “casserole-1 type’’ dishes-Gerber High Meet 1 Dinners with 3 times as much meet at the regular dinners. Another thing you can count on: when you serve Gerber Strained Meats, your little one will grt plenty of high quality protein* to belp him grow strong and healthy I Them quality Armour cuts are specially processed to protect precious food values. Of course, they’re 100* pure meet, with iuit enough natural broth left In to f. bring out the flavors and give | delightfully smooth, moist texture. 9 varieties including the new Strained Ham. bring IpP? deTl ’Armour Meet Protein is complete protein, supplying all the tiunllsl amino adds that build and re-build vital body tissues. Oreeb-up lessen. You can’t start ; brushing baby's silken tresses too soon. Even the merest down warrants smoothing with a soft brush luxurious tresses rets firmer strokes. No reason why baby shouldn’t have lustrous heir. or Menu, mogle, with lip-smdEkiag leaning* end'beany nutrition. All the above come in strained or Junior varieties. PA A toddler will enfoy-Geiber Junior Cookie* with his fruit Gerber Baby foods, Fremont, Michigan. Garden Unit Meets of Wbterford Home 'Mrs, John Campbell nerved dessert to membesmof the Holiday Farms Branch, Woman’s National Branch, Farm and Garden Association, her home in Waterford. Mra. Lyle Short was cohost ess. They reported on luncheon ahd council meeting tor Joseph Sehultz. renter project ei» the Michigan Division, WNFAG; at the Groeee Pointe Yacht Club. Brandi members will rank* outdoor figurines and spedalty items tor the annual workshop and Greens Market Dec. 7 in the Waterford Community Center. liberglas Customized DRAPERIES LOVELY PRINTS SOLID COLORS CHowing new decorator shades from which to choose. UVlNG ROOMS, BEDROOMS, KITCHENS Styles suitable for any room. BETTER Better than average in fabric and, workmanship. ALL STYLES All styles can be had In yard gbods If you wish to make your own. »•... Length 1 Width ltt Width 2 Widths 2 Widths W 66.6# tlM# 115.66 124.66 45” 6.50 11.00 16.00 25.00 IT 1J0* . 12.06 - 17.06 20J0 63” 8.06 M.60 18.66 28.00 72” Mi 13.50 18.50 2*JO M* * 8.5* 14J0 16.66' 11.00 ; •6" - 9.00 15.00 26.66 22J6 r M0 16.00 ’ ,26*6 ' 32.00 Prices Vary Slightly According to Pattern Open Friday arid Monday Evenings FREE PARKING 'AT OUR DOOR 1666 S. 'telegraph, Pontiac fe 4-0516 rr Quality Carpets and Draperies Since 1941 BRING YOUR WINDOW MEASUREMENTS Approximately 2 Weeks Delivery Molls GULF OIL CORPORATION IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THE APPOINTMENT OF THE ECONOMY OH COMPANY DRAYTON PLAINS, MICHIGAN DISTRIBUTORS OF GULF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS GULF GASOLINES—GULF LUBRICANTS AND GULF SOLAR HEAT HOME HEATING OIL BURNS CLEANER — BURNS HOTTER — The addition of the Economy Oil Company services, now makes GULF Quality Products more readily available, to more people, In the greater Pontiac area. GULF OIL CORPORATION PONTIAC MICHIGAN. /;• M mm .t. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1961 Hunting Laws Couple W ■ | NEW MANAGEMENT! ■ NEW LOCATION—NEW MANAOIK New Measure Requires Land Owfters to Obtain Permits, Special Tags NOVJi-A new ordinance to con* tot hunting here win adopted by the VUlaft Council last .night and will go* into effect immediately. ■ Studio Houm Men. 12:30 to 1:10, Tees. thru Sat. »iiO to 9:00 45 W. Heron Opposite Pontine Prats PI 5*9322 4 ■This Offer Expires Nov. 24, 1941 ■ ■rated by Robert Middleton. m ■ •'4. * Following pie reception held In the church parlor*, the newlyweds left on a honeymoon tripto MSUO Director the study would come tom the ,-/ city itself and the project would WEST. BLOOMFIELD TOWN-he free to operate without outside SHIP — Daniel Mei-aughltn. resupervision, city derfc J. Lawson gional director at .Michigan State Lockhart ■aid. University-Oakland, will be the In other business, a proposal to guest spraker Thursday at the Kione a residential are* tor cam 8 p.m. meeting of the Green E3e-] ihwtiui t* »*th»r % rimpping re*b ittrhta ry ^School Parent • Teacher er or an apartment building was Aaaociation. rejected by the comm lesion. McLaughlin will dtacueu ‘The is northeeet of the tatereection of Rising Necessity of Jenior Col-Adami and Big Beaver raids. Sug- leges.” gestions also were heard on bow a a proposed amendment to the zoning ordinance might be amend- organUntJon’s charter will be dla-1 ed.to allow recreational use of laudlcussed and voted on by the PTA presently zoned tor light indoktry. members at the meeting, accord-, The matter was referred to tbe[tng to Martin Lawrence, PTA prto city attorney for further study. ident. School Mon to Moot With Pastors' Assn. INDEPENDENCE The ordinance is similar to a hunting law in Livonia, be said. ' w ★ * The new law, however, does not supercede the hunting baa in village subdiviakKie. The no huntiiu law tor the residential areas wdS Joseph C.«Blrd Chapter Coromony Sot Saturday In Clarkston TOWNSHIP v Clarkston School Dfortict officials and the Independence Town* ship Pastors’ Aasodattan will meet M noon tomorrow topromoto a closer relationship between the two, units, according to Rev. William Special Talk on Christian Science Slated inutuMing officers will include mistress of ceremonies, -Mrs. Lloyd Sibley. Honorary installing officer will be Sonoma Woodruff, past Grand Matron of the State of Indiana. Incoming Worthy Patron and Matron are Mr. and Mrs. Herman Gentry. Mrs. Clyde Boner will be Installed as Associate Matron and Guidon Stayt ns Associate Patron. Other newly elected officers are Mrs. Robert Morse, conductress; Mrs. Jesse Sparkman, associate conductress: Mrs.- Robert Gowans, secretary and Miss Wilma Doebtoffl, | treasurer. Jr ■ as they arise. Tfwy will convene at the Village Cupboard to Water* font. ROCHESTER - Francis William Cousins will speak on spiritual healing Friday at 8 p.m. at the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Woodward and Main streets. Confirms 2 Appointment* Southfield Council OKs Shopping Center Study I and local members have fanned r the public to attend. / J Mr. Cousins is on tour as a member d The Christian Science Board of Lectureship and is a . former member of the Christian {Science Cpramittee for Publication I j of Lancashire,- England. SOUTHFIELD — Two m tions taken by the City ...Planned tor construction in the near future are the Nelson Shopping Center, Evergreen and II Mile roads, and the' Lockwood Shopping Center on the east side! of Southfield Road, between 12.1 and 13 Mile roads. Avondale Citizen! Unit to Hold First 'Meeting at Senior High Oct. 25 The company’s recommendn* The Avondale Board of Educe* j tfen is forming,* Citizens’ School Study Committee to study, pro- < Ject and plan for the future development of education UA the , IamI -eNuml diitrUt * \ * Mackie Named Officer Ofy Attorney James C- Allen , , . .. i . named Muer Snow as his assis-l, of U.S. Highway Assn. tant to succeed Chester C. law-M DENVER; Colo. * - Michigan Highway Commissioner John C. ttve m serv*ce’ ................. Mackie has been, elected first vice CAMBRIDGE STUDENT .... j | president of the American Asaoda- Show, 36, an employe in Al-n tion of State Highway Officials, ten’s law firm,' Is a graduate of!' * A Cambridge University, England,! Mackie, elected at the organise- and the University of Michigan fidn’s annual convention, will be- Law School. I come president automatically at ~ ■> ________ , i the 1982 convention, the State * T”7w‘r'. ****BI I Highway Department said, ■ Thcl l"*ramed deputy- tre^rer | association maintains an office to * «y Ttoawww (hr, Lane! ( Washington, D.C., and periodically * * * j1 makes recommendations to Con- Both appointments had to be {i greas on highway questions. - I confirmed by the council. I\ In other business, the deadline for paying 1981 township taxes without penalty was extended through Feb. 14. WALLED LAKE - The annual | parents' "Back to School Night" | at Walled Lake Senior High School will be held 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Mark Golden Wedding CLARKSTON Parents are asked to report to their children's home room to obtain a schedule which they will follow during the evening. __________ Mr. and Mrs, Frederick John Court of Detroit! celebrated their Gplden Wedding’ anniversary Sunday at the home of their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Kriss and family at 9720 Sashabaw Road. Students who are members of the National Honor Society, will serve as guides. Refreshments will be served. and the adfaool plant. ca ^repair headaches? the only "true method of determining public concern and interest in schools is to work to dose relationship with all persons and organisations to the entire community." Choir Clinic, Performance Is Set for Oct. 24 ROCHESTER-An all-day choir clinle and evening performance is planned for Oct. 24 by Frank Irish and members of Rochester High School choir. Bernard Stone of Jackson will work with the .choir during the dajr and wifl be guest conductor at the evening performance. . Included to the program for the evening concert will be selections from various operas plus fob and sacred mode. The conceit will, be presented to toe high school student center at t p.m. Tickets will be- available from members of the choir and'at Why spend money on old-car repairs? Buy a new one and {finance it at Pontiac State Bankl Where you’ll get lew bank rates, forms to fit your budget. Life insurance covering your loon included. Free gold ignition key. IARK NEWi Fine-line fine car styling plus as much usable room as Amer- ica’s biooett care-ell yours with compact handling ease, compact economy, end at compact'priqes I . Discover for yourself—NEW big car interior room. NEW comfort-high, contour-til ted easts. NEW lavish interiors. NEW higher, wider doors. NEW conveniencs. Fist floors, no floor' wells. NEW engine efficiency in 112 to 225 hp-responeive OHV Six or V-8. NEW giant safety bonded brakes, 76'/a longer life. See all ten eeCWng new Lark models... the big car comfort at compact prices Surprise Car of the year! Test drive the NEW IARK DAYTONA —America’* new Action Car SEE IT TODAY AT TOUR STUDEBAKER DEALER I MAZUREK MOTOR SALES , V DAY as South Dlvd., Easy Pontiac, Michigan 1 606 M, Main SI i Main OfficJfSaginaw at Lawrence Branch Offices* Auburn Heights f Baldwin at Yale • Drayton Plaint Miracle Mil* a 9 to 6 Service, 4 E. Lawrence l ’ u Member F.D.I.C. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1»61 Mice T Industry After More Light The following ue tog price* covering sales el locally grown produce by grayer* and sold by them in wholeaale package lots. Quotations an funiabed by tbs Detroit Bureau ot Markets, as of .Friday. Detroit Produce Apples, Wolf Rinr . Apple abler. 4 gal. ................... fj» Blaeberiit*. 11 pis. ................. 1# Cantaloup*, ta. .................. 24* NEW YORK » The stock market was irregular t erate early trading today. Changes ot most kay stocks were fractional. OwHnwtng labor difficulties In the auto boslnese and the Ived international problems formed part of the Wall Street background, along With the drop In steel output, reflecting the Mart-down at Ford. yams, rSausa ■ B*,ns. fjma T Celery Paaeal Mary, i to t doa. . Celery. root ......... Celery. See. (talk, . Cera, iweet, bat ... HoTMradiah. W. Kohlrabi, doe. btke. ..... Okre* ybii’ ’ lii r. '■A’. ’. Onion,. U-lb. ba* ........ trees, doc. bobe. .. ________k bcha. . Parnfpc, bn. ... .......... »3 Xadlthe*. black ... Redlejee. ng kaji Squaah, acorn, bm. . Squash, Buttercup .. Squash, Butternut .. Squash. Delicious . Labor Trouble Slowing Stocks Hearings Ended on C&O Merger American Stock Exchange, Falr-llosses. Syntex gained about child Camera was off mete than paint. More moderate advances point. Shenrip-WUliams, Hell-|ware made by Aerojet-General, coil and Kratter “A" took amaDlBudc Corp. and O’Oklep 'Capper. On* at the features was a s-point Jump by «W now, split stock aI Reynolds Tobacco, ap-" la hopes at favorable NEW YORK Ill-Corporate and U.S. treasuries were mixed at the opening .today. dividend action In the near f Montgomery Ward and Inter- tive and fractionally higher as the Street gave further study to their proposed merger. Other retail stocks showed tittle change. A fractional gain by Ford enough to put that stock- at still another new high. The other auto issues showed little or no change. Steels were very narrowly mixed, U.S. Steel nudging ahead slightly. Prices were mixed the Rails, Industrials Higher WASHINGTON Ill-Eight weeks . of hearings on the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway's bid for control of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad no dear trend in top quality i bonds were higher, utilities at the start of trading on the New York Stock Exchange. There was Suffers Heart Attack LANSING te-Jack F. Wolfram, Q, general manager ot the Lansing OldsmobUe Division and a General Motors vibe president, has been hospitalised at the Lansing St. Lawrence Hospital after he suffered a heart attack Sunday. Wolf-was reported resting comfortably with no complications. Over-the-counter dealers quoted distant government metur- itias off 1-32 to M2s- With Msrh —-------.-*■-------*• . .kA.rf uiicta. Interstate Commerce Commission Examiner John L. Bradford gave attorneys for all intehfeted parties until Dec. IS to Submit coupon intermediates ahead about the same fractions. Corporate price changes were fractional with"* tow exceptions. The only gain exceeding V4 point pushed New’ York, Lacaka wanna and Western 4%al of 1973 up 1% to IS. On the losing side, Texas and Pacific Railroad 3%s of 1985 were quoted down 1 at 68. MJMX IS raptor craS* nil* ... The New York Stock Exchange He said R. R. Manion, assistant to the New York Central president, had overstated savings in earlier testimony. Meyer also said some of Wanton's proposals for’ consolidations were impractical. ..... - ■ Squsih, Italian. V« bu. .. •*"* " *• Squaah. cummer, % bu. . * ayyawyyl NOON STOCKS ... NBW TORX (AP)—Following li J ubietad itock transaction, as I Yarfc Stack Kachan** with Boon • IJSiACF md tit la.) mss Ut US Cb«. 4 70'. ass HV u Mb MJS B%--% Coltard, bu.Ty... Endive, bu. ...... Endive, bleached . Eacarole. bu........ Am Cyan l.M 74 41% «b «b- % Am B P* lJtb. II » «%'«%+ 8 Arab? P» .SO I JH *44 4%— v, Poultry and Eggs r pound at Detroit fi Hardy .90 40 42% 4114 42%-% Mot <9 1.4* 41 SMi Mb. ___ Hot 1.H 71 17% 17% 17%. AmNOaa 1JS id a ail ali aa, Aaa Snail 1J9» five poultry: Heavy type hen, 14; UtSI typo haas 7-T %: Broiler, a Pryere 1-1 lot. White, 10-17. paid POT 4isan own 'ineiu4*4Tflfind ny IIret rotifer, Itncludlng U.B.) Whltaa — Orwl* a Jumbo 44-43; Xxtra ler*e 41-SO: tart* 44-49; Medium IMS; Small 21-74. • Browne trade A tarn 41%; Medium 3214-33*4: Smell 21-22; Orade B check* 27H-20.' Chicago. Oct. is 7»i: t* ecoro 17%. Egge about etoady. WhlM largo ax tree «4; mixed largo extra* 41%; BtaSIWM 37%: etandarda 34; dlrtlee 11%; ohaeki 31%. CX1CAWO MERCANTILE CHICAGO, Oct. < (API — Chicago mercantile exchange; Butter iloasf; wholeaale buying prlcoe unchanged; 91 Score AA 00; P2 A 60; to B 4t; li c Hi cart MX SS%: SO St%. —_. Bad itcedy; wholcule buying prtea* unchanged; IS pgr cat or better Orade .A whltaa 44%; mixed 41%: medium, 32%; etandard, 34; dlrtlee 21%; check, 21%. DOW JONES t P.M. AVERAGES —30 liil 705.44 MI 2.7* so RaUa 196.44 up 0.14 » 14 Utils 127.36 up 943 44 Stock! 242.25 off 0.34 VOLUME TO S P.M. S.4S4.044 Livestock 49ni»a>KHllHHBWL around la head .locker, aid feeder.; opening trade MHWfnmnaa f 2V4 _______ ______ _______ and batian mbd- erately anti**, fully etoady; cutter and utility eowa about ateady: ear-"— two load, mixed high choice arOUBd' 1166 lb. yearling at moderate ehowlng high 24.00; moet low V high ----24JS-S4.lt; ------- -------- -.-..low choice 74 00; good ......_____________ __________- .— • ‘ prime heifen . 2440i ^«^m^ la 2* «% 41 It ... 42 f|% St 21 ... «4 24% 34% Mb.... fi ---- s*»«- i a -*f% *t% ■ u it% 17% mi—% 1 44% 44% 44V4- •' 11 44 4t 4t — 95 44% 44% 44%— 2.20 11 72 71% 711 ____11 44% 44% M...... Orace a Co UM 14 72% 71 72%+1% U *7% S7% 67%— 1 1 24% 20% Mb... 120 *0 Mi Mb- 1 I 1.4* H Mb Mb »%... i so* 41 40% 40% 40%— I Ck 1.40 11 74 W 74 + ____ Oil 1.24 ‘ 4 24% 24% 24%- . Aaed Dry O 2.50 I 46% 04% 14%+1% Mchleon 1.20a IS 27% 27% 27%. id oi Law 2a 14 41% 44% 41% Si “ 49% 49%. Area Corp M 94 24% 24% 24% > % Bald Lbna 45* Baltaoh Mg Mb 19% 14% 39% 22% 22% . .w 21% 31 St — % 12 13* % 124% U 1 44% 44% ■%.., ’* 44* C 44*7.!. 72 41% 4Mb 41%— 1 14 H 17% |* + I 22 40% 50% 40%+ 1 * 17% 97% 97%+ i 14 44% 45'. I 9% 9% 29 «% *1% trr| CaoM Bop I Can Dry r Cdn Pac I SO MajN 1 14 7% 7% 7%— % Cater Tree 1 Colanee* 1.20 ColoUx | Conco In 40g ConASW 1.02 049*9 CD 1.10b Bprl49W .00b ' eeit Cbairmlln OH 1 .ndCMGtsaOh 4 nrn 23.44- j ChMSPAPac around three load, high choice heifer.j errr 23.75: low to high choice belter. 22.75- CUlea ovc i.wi 23.50; good to low choice heifer. ai.W- Chwini S 22 M; utility eowa 1S 00-11.00; letter DriotlCoM Cota 140 paid eparingly; canntr. and cutter, [ Col* Paun ^ 1.20a 11.00-lMS; few thin light eauntrt down j ColBne^Std °Hog» OOO. Butcher, atfd towe iteady; CBS LW . two .hort lot. N0. .1, 219 lb. and. 3)3 Co urn Oa, uo lb. butcher. 14.47 and 15.44; moet No. Col Put 1.371 i 1941320 lb. 11.14; mixed No 1 md 9 g»>> CrM 1J4 190-239 lb. II.4S-1I.M: BoT I and i]Coml iolv tob 190-220 lb. 19.00-11.11; NO. 3 and 2 2»-|CmnW Ed lb 296.1b. 17.60-16.64; No. 2 266-266 -a. 17.26-17.20, many 17.24; No. 1, 2 9 *_ *<>HW JS: -OTI li W-llAO^ NO. Canoum Pw 10 34% 24% 2 26 26 jo ... $ S7 67 a ... 15 4|% «% 42%— M f ,, 145 69 67% 67%+ % 4 26% 26% 26%... 17 U% 16% Mbw M 22% 21% 21%— % 26 25% 45 “ ■' 1.26%. 69% 99%: Pitney BW .1* PS PtataO 2.3 Nra M LB 79 7f% 79% 79%—1 129 56% 40% 164b— % 27 It 26% 12%+ % OS 12S 126'V-l v. o a co mm FwsgJT^ d Un ,60b ! 46% 46% S%+ % ______ 6 26% No Ry 2 ■ * P W Pb> .66d Oreytwund 1.16 iSafiSLOs « 26% Mb 29%♦’ ]b Sta Ut 1 _____^44% Jfigl *■* ' 4 S% «% 4Mb+ % Stamr 5’S»‘5s'S»*A»o^ L" S*rS*n~NP« .«H 7 24% 19% »%+ — Hoff Elect 5 14% 19% 1M. Htaktr 6 1 1} 4J}jk Hotel CD Am S 4V« 4% 4M». Houeah Pin 191b J 64% Mb M% Houat LAP LB I 111. Ufjb IB : SS5f Sd “ * «c laab. Safeway 81 190 2 44% Land i i 2i% _mP 1 111 19% in u-> ft Hat Pap 1.46b 16 39% 26% 36% ■-^la M 47t mb 16% ft% ___yT i m an Sibirbw 1.61 I CP .29# —I- Int Harr 2.46 SB Mar MS B Nick 1J6 6 46% 4Mb Id 61% H% 61%— % 2 14% Mb 14% 122 22% 27% ft 6 12% 22% Mb— % 66% *65*. 45%— % 23% 23% »%- % 47% 47 67 — % *7' —K— Kaltar At .70 5 » Kayaer Roth .40b 5 25% KounoaoM 3 .79* 9 M Earn C Ld 2.49 2 64% Emv McOcc 92 » 41% j-w j;- +. Korvettc » »% »% !L,~ > Kreage. fi 19* * fflb Mb- KST sb’ 4 21% Kroger 1.1* 26 M" 12 « 62% tt%+ % 16 96% 26% Mb— % 12 21 Mb 22 - “ 2) 21% 27% 26% b%i% Mb 19%- a 17% 27%. - 5 46% 46% 46% * Mb Mb Mb 41 77% 76% 76%.... 2 44% 44% 24%— % 24 24% 24% Mb. 4 12% . 12%. 13% jb ja t II 129 122 +S% 1 12% 12% 12% I 27% 27V« 27%+ % U 11% 14% M% . 6 22% 22 22%— \ 24 24% 24% JfK+J 7 114 111% 111%—21 * 27V. isg 24% ... I Mb aw 1 tlWbiruOl Ut M 66%. 66% 10%— SouNOae 2 10 43% 43% 43%.- touPac 198 U Mb Mb' Mb+ . SouRy 2.60 3 H% M% 69%— % ■parry Xd 1.12f 64 24% SMi ST —32 74% 74% j|%"-% SquareD la ■Id - Brand IP Md Kalla 74t _ _ _______ Std OU Cal 2 12 49% 46% 46%— % MS OH B>d 1.40b 9 4l% 47% 47%— % Ml 00 NJ 1.44g 117 42% 42t - atand Pk* 4 Mb § .... .. ““ • “ * 8% Mb Mb— % — •taa war Ut ■wutaco i Xd 4 20% 20% 26%- 107 12% 1Mb 11% .. 2 26% 26% St%+ % 1 « 46% «% 49% —T— 21 Mb 22% 12% h CRN .90* 17 14% U LOP Olaaa^Vota Lib II*KM+ .61 HP » .* w-wevw—----» “ 5k 4 Mb 26% 2W.+ % I W M i%+ % I 30*. 30% 20% II « “ ** 11% H ... , _ li a— % 14 l3% 101% 1Mb+1% 1134% 124 124 ■' » gT 44%—M S Cm i ___ s Oat i Long 1.1 Lt 1.1 Lorlllard 2 20 .ukrni Ml 75g 9 24%, 24% 24%.. R 24% Mb 24%-4 94% *4% Mb— 1 29% 31% 3 4H-4H ». ,ow. i4 H.12.il; Aim, OoMOa. I CHICAGO UVESTOCK CHICAOO. Oct. t tmi — HOI Palrly active; barrow* ad gilts atway to wmk;. tows steady ... H higher: mixed No. 1-2 and 1-2 200-330 lb. butchers 11.35-11.50: bulk mixed No. 14 and 3-3 IM-919 H). 11.00-11.35; mixed No. l-2i 300-400 lb. towe 12.72-1799. Cattle. 19.999, celvee H. Slaughter steers alow, but steady to 21 hither; heifers fairly active, steady to H htgh-i— and bulla alow, eteadjjo weak; ■ idy; no early eaUieltoekert „ -w-i— -nd prime VRRPI|PaipapaUIBI|IMPfenaMr|Md end mixed MWd and choice 000-1206 lb. 2394-24.69; few loads mixed chofte and ”^-1* 23.9999.7»; standard and ■ 1*90-29*0 vealers staady; ad feodare; (bod: realm 1 Sheep t full] ly eetabl tambs al opening teles * mm pT OKfOBr silm i___________, w ooled lambs 11.99-19799; Mod and cholca natives 14.10-17.H; cull to ■laughter twee 3 40-4 40. I Tuoa . Day I 144.4 207.4 Mi l 141.7 244. ...2119 124.4 I2M I WiOk Apt ..........^ Month Ago ..........Hi UI.2 ikj.1 BU Year Ago .......2H.7 104.2 MU .2M4 1901 JNBI ........172.9 130.0 149.7 3994 Hli Low .........nM 113.2 1119 US/ 1M High ...... 324.9 1349 111.7 2HX 1999 U* ..........299 4 MIA 444 2H.9 Plans Fast Cargo Ships WASHINGTON fUM) - Hie . Maritime Administrstion plans to xu^stdhe construction of six 31-kiwt cargo skips for Moor McCormack Lines, Inc. It skid Monday they will be “the fastest cargo ships in the world.", Com tee t Cent Mot . Com OU l m 12 11% * Bib 51 21 . 9 37% 27Ve 27V«... IV.S !& w%—% 5 17% 17% 17%— % 10 92% 12% 92% + % i 42% «% n m 4 46% Mb ■60 11 77%«77% 27 litb 22 24%. 43% <3 42™. Mb H . 42 10% 10% 10% + •2 49% 42 49 ., 1 15% 15% lj% 13 42% 52% jg%.. ? Sa »♦! Craw cm. 1971 H *7% 27% n%+ Crown Ml US I* 61 «% 11% + --- X 7 20% 20 ,J(4 _ i Da Xlv H 91 ' Dayco Dayetrom 90p 13 12% 11’. _ U 17% 17% 17%— % —IX— '. MAPI Cp .25* Docca Roc l.M Darn sup la DenAROW 1 Dot Stl Cp 1 Disney .40 Die C 8e*f l.| 17% 17% 17%.. i W Mb+ % Dow Cbm i n st li Jj% 32%— * ___ Mtg US ElBondbd 110 ni e Mm .ii« yjr iss:1., 16 31% 11% llgl ‘ “ 1 " ii%£ *.“3 U3M W“fPfF: I FW .66 , 1 47 47 43 — tt ' 4 72% 791% 1 17 37 J 37 i 36% 1 32%+ % 74 35% 24% 35 + > 6 M 57% sr%^ < 6 24% M% Mb— 1 1 47% 47% 47%— ' 1 «% 47% H%+ It 46% 47% 4SJb+ ■ ml* —N— Nat I I 3.60 i to- _ Cao .621 14 13% 12% 15% + % math ass 1.20 It 1M *“ III • •* pain S 6 8) Ouun i so it M,._ MR s%. S%7% _________ 1 » H% K-l Nat ThoaAT 1 6% 6% 6%- 1 ---w-----US I ““ 1 NY ChASL S vJNYNKaHart MS li Pw UM Nortawest 4a I 41% * i M% + . 41 Ve— 2 50% 56*. Mb— 1 am Math i 1.66b " . j Mb 36% Mb— * OU* Haler 196 6 71 77% 1 I IK 16% H% j m ti% to . Park* Da 1 Peabody Cc_ . ham, jc 1.S Pa PwALt 194 RpHlMS 1.4 Pflmr Sa Pbolpo D 1 P.^1 44% 44%—1% 11 i W+» 2 46% 46% Mb... 7 U% 13% 23%+ I 15% 18% U%- .6 97% 57% 57% j H. 43% *4 ... . 14 Mb Mb MbVt% 24- 21% Mb 73 IHsSb" 12 34% 34 34 — % Tex PCaO 1.20 * 1 92% I 12% 3% 12%+ % By SAM DAWSON AP Butineas News Analyst NEW YORK —More light n the subject—both in factory and office—is giving a boost to an 80-year-old industry. Makers of commercial and'ito' d us trial lighting. fixtures ml into factor- Interested Parties Havw Until Dec. 15 to Submit Britfs in Cas« CM celled ss - S rebuttal witness Monday is an attempt to defeat a Md by a third rall-road, New Yetk Central, to either gala central of the fleas-dally alileg BAO or )ofai with CM ia a three-way arraage- 80*Year-Old'Business Booms WtNBfflSB or office items as the light level offices this year will reach 8300 million. That is more than five times better than the industry did Just 14 yean ago. Salas hr VM were 880 million. More, the industry confidently predicts the figure will reach $660 mUUon by 1965. TWO MG BEAMNS But there were two other Mg reasons for the spurt sines 1MT. First, the fluorescent lighting tbfiure, introduced in the late 1830s, caught on rapidly in plants and officer in the yean immediately after World War II. The society says this fixture helped create awareness of the useful-of good. lighting in work Recommended light levels for office and plants' have risen 333 per cent since 1947, according to Illuminating Engineering Society, the technical voice for the industry. And the increased amount' of fight provided tor-: flee and iactory workers has gone up 2,000 per cent since’ 1917. A leading reason is^ that work-en were found to do much better work and turn out more products utilization St heat from the fixtures in the heating inataUattcua buikhngs. Another aoiuUan proposed is dissipation of the heat torn lighting fixtures Into cooling Second, the spurt in construction of office buildings And plants that started til the late, 1940s opened wide markets to the lighting industry. All this gladdens the makers of fixtures1 and the utilities (hat furnish the Juke for them. But there are some major problems, too. The second problem facing the industry is one of satosmamhip. Although making Mg sales gains recent yean, fixture makers and installers contend that many factories and offices are still well below the standards set by meet of the newer buildings. % ___ .____________heat. ■ T1h h>- creased bent from the extort light* can overburden air conditioning architects and glneen will tell you. Engineers are working on Charles J. Mcyor, transportation consultant from Hanover, NJ„ testified that New York Central officials had erred sharply in predicting a 123.4 million saving if their railroad Joined in the deal. ter earnings of 52 industrial firms shewed a 29 per cent gain over, a year ago, according to a special analysis released todajrtiy Spear A Staff, Inc. Before Meyer testified, Bradford heard from father leaders ■_______ of the CM. Them firms, whom third qear-ter ended Aug. U because jhey operate on a Bocal year basts, have prevlsasiy proven to be a bellwether ef resalts to be aa-aawsead a msuth later by Bras* wham quarter ended !Sept. BB,. Spear BdStsft aid. According to Roller E. Spear, president, "this striking increase They contended control by the CM would result in a loss of Jobs and that if New York Central Joined CAO it would mean almost 6,000 fewer Jobs. in average earnings points up wen the rapidly improving business outlook. As one result, we can now expects 1961 total dividend payments to slightly exceed 1960's record rate of $14 billion." CAO officials have testified that employment actually would be increased. They have announced plan* for a $250 million modernization program if the ICC approves the union which stockholder* of the CAO and BAO already have approved. Stocks of Local Intorost International Statistical Bureau says last week’s market action suggests very strongly flat the de-clining trend oi recent weeks has probably about run tta course. There are many signs that bank stocks may be entering a phase oi strong earnings growth, according to Investors Research Oo. rkMMM Louisiana Ou Co. Baldwin-Moot. Cttem. CD. Ftd. 1M 1 Borman Food Itotfi .........|IJ | CurtlM-Wrj|M Corp..........11.1 '! d d. James Dines of A. M. Kidder A Co. says to concentrate buying defensive issues while also maintaining adequate buying reserves until the market stops modulating and makes up its mind. He would continue to avoid alurn- Lscnard RcflnUn Ch's mleai .’ The foUcwtac quotations_______ sarUv represent actual transact tan bi are fntsndstf M • (ulds to 14m approx: ■nit "~ras ft aft H ti-r cceunttes. American Mart Dctrattar MeM Electronics Cap! rtatta Co. Electronics International . Wyandotte Chemical ... MACHINE 20—NEtt— ■■ . ___MUTUAL rUNPS Key.tone Growth E-3 . Putnam OravUl . 74 22% »% 22%-% M- 15% U% ^ —u— Un Carbide 3 69 17 1204 129% 129%—t fi Va IN 2 49% 49% 49%.. ■ — 11 92% 51% 92%+ i M 29% 29% H% ... 4 5 41% fig 41% . . U 49% 44% 46%- % United Cp , M( 5 9% »% -• " Unit Pnslt .99 11 29 24% OUM 09 l.M M 35% 35% llUWt I 112-21% SHT .......... — Borax .45* 17*% 36% *%-M U8 Freight 3 2 71 7| 71 OS Gypsum 2.40s 4 141 Mr MI — % OS Wr M JZZcA 4% 4% 4%... OS MM • S 13% 1S% 18%. OS UM 2 b 1 21*. H% 31*4— _________r . 6 OS SmoU i 22% 9% K. US'Steel 1 11 H% H% 90% Un Wbeia .90* M M% 14 M — Univ Match .« IN 11% 22 23%+ Upjohn 90 14 H% 88 H ... —V— ---- 4 24% 24% f9%+ Varla A. - 13 42 41% 4l% + - 30 7 99% 96% 69% + —w— CHICAGO W—Grain and soybean futures were, iteady to firm under good demand on the board of trade today. Demand for corn continued in early transactions following Monday* upturn in that market. Much of today's buying was attributed to abort covering. Monday's higher market stemmed from various reports that the government was planning changes in commodity credit poration selling policies. Rye and bats also moved u. much as a cent a bushel shortly after the opening. CHICAOO GBAIN CHICAOO. Oct. 10 (API -Srata^rtta.: Overseas Cargo Tonnage Increases at Muskegon MUSKEGON IB—Overseas commerce this year for the first time totaled 104,673 tons handled at Muskegon, an increase of more than 100 per cent over the 1900 figure. Port Director Joseph V. Cook re-ported Monday In a trade and tonnage survey through Sept. 30. Late season cargoes, he said, will push the aggregate near to 130,000 tons — wall above the 1900 record of 68,107 and more than tevdn times the full season aggregate of three A beluga whale's heart beats only 12 to ft times A qsinues, compared with a man's average of 70 to 72. Wellington Eqalty . Wellington rue# ■ U.tl 10.76 ..tsji 17.64 . .1144 81.24 .. 642 4.72 .17.21 1644 tM44 17.64 Soybean Futures in Good Demand : HR to.:: 35 2.11% July . Rye- . 1.10% DM. . : m Ky . : m BON QAVXBAOBS M by tto Aooeriatai Pro*, Ml# MM M ' BaB* M. Utile. -»'**. L.Y6. Year An 14 ,ML4 SS.I 64.0 114 >4 Ml 8 H4 (84 1)4 U-if 65 4 Ki 61.1 Dn 44.6 14.6 M.4 Wall Street ChQtter One maker of commercial and industrial lighting equipment, Day-Brite Lighting Inc., St. Louis. Mo., says many of the Oder office buildings and plants Hill have their original equipment, while others aren’t yet up to rec- For one, as more light is being ommended levels. Officials of the finn - say that the recommended light level is 100 footcandles, and the national average is less than iootcandle measures -the light in one square foot given Ay - I. lighting industry* bases much of its hopes of doubting its sales volume in the next four years on this large refixturing NEW YORK (UPD—Third quar- late on the extent of any further recovery in the list, it is our reasoning that a potential base formation is in the making, according to ~ W. Sparks A Co. Consolidated Paper Buys Meyers Corrugated 6ox CLEVELAND (UPIi-ConaoUdat-ed Paper Go., of Monroe, Mich., has bought the Meyers Corrugated Box Os., of Cleveland. The sale announcement-Monday said the Meyers firm would operated as a division of the larger Michigan firm, which has annual sales of about $48 million. Rails Battle Over JWF Before ICC Officials pm, he says, are coming down into a possible buying area. Joseph Granville of E. F: ton A Co. says the strength ties in the drugs, tobaccos, foods, ice, banks, cosmetics and utilities. Martin Gilbert of Van Alstyn: Noel A Cb. tells clients that the technical position of the market warrants a further expansion In stock prices in the immediate period ahead. While it seems too early to speco- The industry contention is that better lighting has increased production up to 25 per cent, that it has cut rejects up to 20 per cent, reduced accidents up to 50 per cent, and boosted employe morale by unmeasured amounts. > The sales pitch tgy George J. Taylor, vice president of Day-Brite and past president of the Illuminating Engineering ’ Society, is: "If worker productivity Is increased only 5 per cent by better lighting, the avenge office with 10,000 square feet can save abort $12,000 a year on an investment of $4,500." Should industry and business buy this, the refixturing market could be estimated in the billions of dollars. SAN FRANCISCO (UPD—The struggle between Southern Pacific and Santa Fe Railway for public support flared today at Interstate Commerce Commission hearings into efforts of both railroads to gain control of We*tern Pacific. Balk 8P and Santa Fa, which fore Western Pacific will be swat towed up by some bigger firm. he said, It would b* Western Pacific went Into business in 1900 to break a Southern Pacific monopoly and is a natural extension ot Santa Fe tines, Whitman noted. He fetid Santa Fe’s offer of o Santa Fe baaed its arguments and cne quartar afcarea ef stock on formal petitions of fnterven-tion, while SP maintained that the ICC also should consider letters from groups and individuals. The ICC to required by law to decide the case "in the public but petitions and letters do not weigh heavily as evidence toward a final ruling. ’ During Monday’s session Western Pacific President Fred-fie B. Whitman aocuod- Southern Pacific of aeekfag a general transportation monopoly Si the John J. O'Brien, former Pontiac resident, as works manager at the Trane Co. manufacturing facilities at La Crosse, Wis., is announced by the Will Celebrate To Mark 4th Year by Helping Organizations Raise Funds Whitman, who supports Santa IFe, said BP'S first step would be to take over WP'» parallel and competing lines so as to eliminate rail competition. He said SP would be unable to operate its own affiliate in genuine competition with itself. Miracle Mile Shopping Center will celebrate its fourth anniversary Thursday, Friday and Saturday by helping other organizations raise funds for community projects. ULTIMATE GOAL Ke predicted that a complete merger was SP's ultimate goal, followed by new laws making it - easier for SP to become a gen-era] transportation company, dominating the market. SP already owns highway carriers and pipe tines and plans to go into the barge business. Some 59 organizations will occupy the space offered by Miracle MUe for booths. In turn, the Miracle Mile Association will award $250 in cash prizes for the best decorated booths. Khtertalameat will continue each evening tram 0 to S. Oa a stage, individual performers, la- i High 714 H.I *7.1 . M4 Bit HI 1990 Low 75.2 *1.4 FolUes-A-Poppin booth, sponsored by Pontiac General Hospital Auxiliary, will stand directly across from the stage. . I Observers, as tvell as participants, will be entertained by Land-O-Lakes Majorettes. Rae-Vens Drill Tram, Thunderbird Rifle Team, Skylinert Baton Tram, and the Rae-Vens Color Guard Unit of the Drill Team. Each marching unit will perform gjljln the cruising lane, marching Iran * Food Fair to Kroger, then return to the stage. Negro Gets U.S. Post, First of Kind in South! HOUSTON, Tex. (UPI) — Carl Walker Jr., was appointed Monday as an assistant U.S. attorney— believed to be the /flr»t such port 1 awarded a Negro /in th* South." Walker, 37, a supporter of Sen. Ralph Yarborough, is a long-time Mend of Vice President Lyndon Johnson , . - American Stock Exch. raw TOME (AP) — Amtricu ■ Oomt Ma Dram An .. 12 PUrOai ...Its ter Tiger .... II l wwrfl T Mahavk A NJ Sine MsOifBfeBfeMe Peclfle P. Ltd 194 :L;K O'Brien Joined Trane, one'of the world's largest manufacturers of air conditioning, heating, ventilating and bent transfer equipment, in 1953 aa Whitman said that with Weal era Pacific e(tinlasted as a rail enmpetitof, there would sat be "the slightest donee” for a eoM- i to be established in tbs Western Pacific is willing to be taken ovgr by Santa F» because it has been handicapped by Its relatively small size and financial resources in its competition with SP, Whitman said. The current trend for rail merg-ers is so strong, he said, that K is "Just a question of time' ‘ Engineers Get Award for Paper on New Building CLEVELAND (ft—Two engineers f a Detroit architectural firm were named winners of. a $1,900 award today for their paper on the new all-welded building of the Michigan Consolidated Gas Oo. In Detroit. Peter P. Petkoff of Dearborn and Lin Y. Huang of Royal Oak, engineers for Smith Hynchman A Grylls Aaaociatea. Inc., itealgnrrs of the building, received the mraid from the Jamaa F. Lincoln Air Welding Foundation of Cleveland. The Michigan CoMoUdAted Gas Op. building Is dsscribsd ss tbs welded skyscrapej* of its mV type. per share of Western pacific stock was fair and reasonable, white SP's one-forene offer was inequite- Business Notes industrial a neering dtp meat. He was O’BRIEN named general superintendent of La Crosse manufacturing opera-tlons !■ fBfc,’- —;"r!—-— A graduate of General Motors Institute of Technology, O'Brien is the son of Mr. and Mrs, M>^J< O’Brien, 74 Ogemaw Rd. Manley, Bennett A Cb. announces the association of David C. McClary with UT Bloomfield Hills office *s a legistersd representative. In the securities business lor S number of years," Mto-Clary was’recently connected with Goodbody A Os. Royal Oak office. News in Brief Vsar watches valued at 9M7 were reported stolen yesterday afternoon-by Eugene Rush, SB, of 359 Howard McNeil Ave/ Rush told police the watches were taken from his car or-home soma time between Sept 26 and yesterday morning. Thieves eatCred her hams through an unlocked rear door and took clothing'valued at $150, Rose Angela Humphreys, 30 Whltte-more St, told police yesterday afternoon. ■HMPVHMk to' 4 Bib SSmS Methodist Ohureh of Binnlnaham. West Maple at Ptoaaant. Snaek Bar and RSt Parking. BarraIim la refteislied furnltara at tha BOvraaB Artsy §, ill W. Lawreno* Street. snd Pri.. Oct II - W h 9*^511 Ml Clirkston Opmmunity Otpttr, TriE PQNTIAC^PRKSS, TUESDAY, OCTOgRR 10, 1961 --Today's Television Programs-- jwwl I >1 If • .Oiinl MW»rr Ciirt 1-WIW-TT fllilJ MteW-tt TONIGHT’S TV HGBLIGHTS 6:eo (2) Movie (Cent.) (4h Broken Arrow. (7) Johnny Gihger (Cont.)-(9) Popeye (36) Big Picture 6:26 (4) Weather , 6:90 (2) New* TV Features By ( ailed Pfeaa International BUGS "BUNNY,’ 7:30 p.m.'(7) Season premiere. “Bed-time Story.” Bun Introduces a group pf his friends and tefls about “Han-j sel and Gratel." ALFRED HITCHCOCK P R ESENTS, g:»i p,m. (4). ‘ Season premiere, "the Hat Box,” starring Paul Ford and Billy Gray, student suspects his professor a fiendish act. DONE GILUS. 8:30 pJn. (2). Season premiere, "The Ruptured Duck.” DoMe (Dwayne Hickman) and Maynard (Bob Denver) return to civilian Ufejuid are inspired to continue their education as college freshmen. CALVIN AND THE COLONEL, ___|:30 p.m. (7). "The Polka Dot Bandit.” The colonel believes his sister-in-law is the, Jewelry store burglar. *• * * BED SKELTON SHOW, (2), iay North appears as a wealthy youngster who aids Freddie the Freeloader (Skelton! and Mug-sy (Jackie Coogan). .. NEW BREED 9 p.m. (7). "Prime Target.’’ a mysterious sniper baffles Lt, Adams (Leslie Nielsen) and the Metropolitan squad. | PREMIERE. 10 p.ml (7). Anew series of suspense dramas begins with "People Need People.” a factual account of the Navy's experiments in group therapy conducted at their Oakland, Calif., qaval hospital. Lee Marvin stars as- Marine Sgt. Hughes! James Gregory is Chief Driscoll and Arthur Kennedy portrays Dr. Harry A. WQmer. Fred Astaire, host- * *:JS (2* ! \/ (7) * DICK POWELL SHOW. 10 p. (4). “Killer Jn the House.’’, I mond O’Brien stars as an escaped criminal who fhreatens the life of his brother and family. GARRY MOORE SHOW. 10 p.m.l (2). Tony Martin and Comedian! Frank Fontaine join Garry, Dur-ward Kirby, Carol Burhett and, Marion Lorne. JACK PAAR SHOW, 11:30 |WnJ —if). Elsa. Maxwell, (color,).- I Prfvlou Ppmlt (4) News - (7) News (0) Quick Draw McGraw * (56) Notes on Music ; f:M (2) Sports 6:45 (2) News (4) Sports (7) News, Weather, Sports 7:N (2) Highway Patrol f (4) Jim Backus _ (7tt Brothers Brannigaa . (9) Movie — “The Locket. (1946) A girl's abnormal obsession has a terrible effect on the lives of four men rr who Jon. her. Laraine Day. Brian Aherne. (56) Food For.Life ;:M i2!^Mar*hall Dition_______ (41 uhramie (7) Bugs Bunny , (9) Movie (Oort.) (56) Anatomy Of Revolution 8:86 (2) Sea Hunt (4) Laramie (Cont.) (7) Bachelor Father (9) Movie (Cont.) (56), Last Continent 8:16 (2) Dobie Gilhs _]) Alfred Hitchcock (7) Calvin And The Colonel (9) Front Page Challenge (56) Introductory Psychology l:W (2) Red Skelton (4) Dick Powell . (7) Wrestling (9) Wrestling v EM (2) Ichabod and Me (4) Dick Powell (Oort.) (7) New Breed 19) Wrestling (Pont.) II: M (9) Garry Moore (4) Cain's Hundred (7) Premiere (9) News 10:16 (9) Weather 10:90 (9) Telescope UAW 10: SO (2) Garry Moore (Cont.) . (4) Gain’s Hundred (Port.) (7) Premiere (Cont.) (9) Golf Tips IttlS (9) Sports 11:00 ,(2) News (4) News (7) News (9) News liitf (2) Weather (4) Weather (7) News ' (9) .Movie — “The Seventh Veil.” (English; 1945) A sensitive orphan is subject to merciless discipline by her guardian. James Mason, Ann Todd. 11:91 (2) Sports (4) Sports 11:96 (2) Movie — "Best of the Badmen.” (1961) Union officer joins the outlaw activities at his Confederate prisoners. Robert Ryan, Claire Trevor. (7) Weather 11 :M (4) (Color) Jack’Paar -----(7) Movie » “All Quiet or die Western Front.’ (1930) Seven idealistic students, in 1914 Germany. Join the Army At tbs urging at their super-patriotic ■ lessor. Screenplay by Maxwell Anderson and George Abbott. Lew -Ayres, Louis Wolhelm. (2) College of the Air (4) (Color) Continental C (4) Today | WEDNESDAY MORNING __________6:00 (4) Continental Classroom Ill7l«|al 6:20 (2) Meditations iSlfiltiSl 'KrlS Hr Of* the Farm Front appeared 01 • 5Tb an ■ ID Har^uanr 19 tSia 14 Lou* fish lft Legtl polo 19 MeaOinc 20 Ibsen character >1 Italian city 2| Wrong (prefix) 94 River barrier ' 91 Prince tf . Wtiiii 99 Notoriety S3 Dtfnlfiei 31 Pfmlntive Appellation 99 ranee (race r r r It r 14 n Hi IT it SI ft Si U ii r a- M ■ N U \r JT w rr IT 12 56 ■ U It ro i 7*06 (2) Felix the Cat 1:10 (2) B’waha Dan (7) Johnny Ginger 9:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (56) German for Tteacbers 8:M (56) Anatomy of Revolution (7) Movie . -; 9:00 (2) Movie (4) Ed Allen (56) Spanish Lesson kH (4) Gateway to Glamour (56) Ait for Everyday Use 9:46 (4) Debbie Drake .(7) Hair Fashions Today „ (7) News 9 (2) Calendar (4) Say When (7) Jack La Lanne (56) Our Scientific 10:25 (9) Billboard i#:M (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play Yocor Hunch (7) Jackie Cooper (56) English V / 10:46 (9) Nursery School Time (2) Video VT (4) (Color) 1 (7) Texan / (9) Romper Room (56) Spanish Lesson 11:16 (56) German Lesson 1I:M (2) December Bride (4) Concentration (7) Love That Bob! N (56) .Eastern Wisdom 11:46 (4) (Color) World Series WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:90 (2) Love of Life (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Camouflage (9) Myrt and Doris (56) Science in Our World U:M (9) News ^ 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) It Cbuld Be You (7) Make A Face (9) Susie (56) Spanish Lesson 12:46 (2) Guiding Light -(56) German Lesson 1:09 (2) Star Performance (4) Groucho (7) Day in Court i9) Movie 1:16 (56) French Lesson 1:95 (7) News 1:39 (2) As the World Turns (4) Californians (7) Life of Riley (56) World History 1:U (4) Faye Elizabeth 2:00 (2) Amos ’n’ Andy (4) (Color) Jan Murray (7) Number Please v .. (56) Adventurer in Science 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keys (56) French Lesson. s. oe (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen fos a Day (9) News (56) Ordeal by. Fire 1:19 (9) Movie 1:96 (2) Verdict Is Yours (4) From These Roots (7) Who Do You Trurt? (56) Memo to Teachers 3:66 (2) News 4:06 (2) Brighter Day (4) Make Room for Daddy (T) American Bandstana 4:16 (2) Secret Storm 4:M (2) Edge of Night (4) Here's Hollywood (9) Adventure Time ,4:50 (7) American Newsstand' 4:55 (4). News ----(2) Movie (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles and Plnocchio j, (56) Science in Our World 6:96 (56) Americans at Work 5:46 (9) Rocky and His Fripods (56) News Magazine 5:55 (4) Kukla and OIHe By FRED DANS1G NEW YORK (UPI) — Television, having disposed of "The Fhb-ulous 50s” last year and deeply involved with the sounds of the Roaring 20s this year, took hour off Monday night to deal with i Sound of the 60a.M The full-hour NBC-TV special, first in a series, was calm, tasteful, intelligent and gentle enter- SELFRIDGE DART—Examination Oat and fastest U.S. military Jet aircraft, the F106 Delta Dart, will follow a film and bin tour of Selfridge Air Force Base’s flight line at 1:90 p.m. The complete tour of the base located on M58, Auburn Road, two ndlea east of Graft* is open to the public who will be goseto at the Institute at Aerospace Sciences. . Will Tour the U.S/ Camel Driver to Visit SOUNDS Written and .produced by Dare Schary in aaaprtatkm with Rub-bell Robinson, the special ticked off a few of what the script called “The lighter sounds of people’s relationship one another.” One eeedea dealt with communication via the human voice. Different cliches were neatly, By SPENCER DAVIS WASHINGTON, (AP) — Bashir Ahmed, the friendly camel driver, has a date With Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson in Washington Sunday. * .* dr The vice president's office said final arrangements for the much-postponed visit are expected to be worked out today. Bashir gave family reasons for not keeping a date with Johnson last July 4. HOPE FOR SUCCESS This time both the Pakistan Embassy and Johnson’s office hope the project wili go through as a simple and friendly people-tofpeople exchange. “This is not a circus," said a Johnson aide. “It’s a visit of very friendly man. We Want to do what we can to see that be this country as it really is, warm and friendly to him and the Pakistan people.” W d- ★ The Johnson aide said that In Pakistan, camel driven ar something like American tax drivers — knowledgeable people Defector Plans to Enter Clinic Former British Diplomat j Might Have Hardening of the Arteries MOSCOW CAP) — Guy Burgess, who defected from the British Foreign Office in 1951, said today he may have hardening of the arteries and will enter a hospital for examination as soon as is available. Contacted by telephone, he laughed at reports that he is seriously ill. 'Churchill once said that no man ia wdrth his salt who doesn't have hardening of the arteries by 4) or 50,” said Burgess, who is 50, Burgess is seen Iran time to time in Moscow and appears to be in reasonably good health. Don-MacLean, another Foreign Office official who fled with “ gess, is rarely seen and generally refuses to talk to newsmen. Recreation Dept. to Start Dance Clashes Tonight .Hie Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department will start Its Beginners Novelty Round Dance Class tonight at Alcott Elementary School and its “Ladies Night Out” program tomorrow night at Crofoot school. W ’ A ♦ The dance class will be held each Tuesday for eight ..weeks. Class periods start at 7:30 and last two hours. Tees for the entire course will who have a good idea at what Is going on. WON’T SEE N.Y. "This is a chance lor the people of Pakistan to see tor themselves through Ms eyes,” file aide said. As the plans are now Bashir un’t get a chance to eee York.' Instead, he will be givon a good look at rural a may even spend some time at Johnson’s LBJ ranch in Texas. * ’ ★ ★ The visit is being privately financed by some men who heard of Johnson's meeting with Bashir and thought it would be a good Idea if he could see the United States. The two men met last May at the side of the road outside Karachi. He was besieged by photographers and newsmen as well as friends and strangers. ★ * ★ Embarrassed, Bashir dropped out of sight for a time. He said the publicity hurt his camel-driving business and made it hard to support his wife and five children. 99 for persons living oetride Pontiac. Persons may register at the **—* fltflffT *—*—___________ The eight-week Ladies Night Out series will be held each Wednesday froo). 74). It is cosponsored by the Crofoot Parent-Teacher Association. The programs will include cake decorating and physical conditioning. Registration fee is 61 for the eight weeks.' * .* * Persons interested in sewing and flower arranging classes may call Jeanne Steplrton, secretary at Crofoot. If enough interest is shown, these will be included in the series. Claims Were Too Big MILWAUKEE (UPI) — Thomas uue, 28, drtew three years pro* afton end $200 pne tor claiming four exemptions' on his federal income tax return Monday. Internal revenue service agents found that Luise is a bachelor. M Unit W Com 9 Chemical tufts Record Number Eligible for New Jersey Election 1 TRENTON, N.J. (UPI)—A record I number of New Jersey voters for |a gubernatorial election, 3,036,(91, V£rdi are eligible to go to the polls Nov. its 7. Secretary of State Edward J. n ( Patten announced. | The major party candidate? for governor are Democrat Richard J. Hughes and Republican James P, I Mitchell, former UB;^abor^secw-'* ) tary. - - Today's Radio Programs - - Student Deaths Still Mystery Chapel HMI Police Now Study Possible Poisoning in Foodstuffs - WFON (MM) WJBK < Mtwr daw, n««i WCAR, Nswt. WISH,' NfWs, WPON. Nr»«. «.**—WJR, ....W.WJ. But WJBK. Robt _._____ WCAR. r. SbtrMsa WXYZ.-Altx Drier WPON. Date with Ifuel 7:SS—WJR, Ouetl Heuae • WWJ. Phone Opinion : WXVZ. E Morjan i CKLW Jae LeOotf > • WJ9K. Bellboy . , WCAR. D Conrad ** WCAR D COOfAS *:*#— WWJ, Faye KUsabtUk Si4A—WJR Toiit(ht At • CKLW R. Know lea ’ P:S0—wjr. WathinstoB Vlr 10:n-WJR Concert WW', Mich. Prlaona WXnt t. Sherman WCAR. O. Conrad MtSA—WWJ. WotM llW * 11 :OA—WJR. Nava WWJ. Neva - . CjjKLW Hapwood WCAR Neva Sporta ? It S*-WJR Mualr . . WWJ. Utialv •;st—WJR. Jack Harris ' WPON. Comm. Cat..' Olsot WJBK. Marc Avtry WPON, Early Morn J I, Nava, Music Hall WXIS, Rapa. Wolf cklw. Nava, band WJBK. TralUc-eopter Weill, Nova. Sheridan WPON, CaL Barly Morn. MS-WJR. Neva. Murri WWJ, Niva, Manana wxyz, Paul Hirrcy. w lltSS—WJR. Neva., Health: WWJ; Nitre. Lynker ,WXrZ, McNeeley cklw. Joe Van WJBIt, Ravi, Sots---- WCAR. Nova, B. Martya WPON, Oban. CalaoSar WPON,' Obyn. Nava WSONSlbAT AFTERNOON IMS WJR. News Farm ' WXTll.^MrNeele?/Nevk ' cklw fit Van. WCAR. Neva, sPvraa WJBK, Clark RalS WPON, Man on St.. La Via liras—WJR, Time tor Music WITZ. MoNeobr, Nrr WPON. Lsvla. Neve WWJ. Nava, My True Story WPON, Chuck Levis v iras—wpon, Lewis Near* liras—wjr, Nava! Shoveai WWJ. Neva, MaxvtU wxyz.' McNeeley, Neva cklw. Joa Van WJBK. Lee WPON, Don MeLeoS t:SO—CKLW Nava. Bhltt'bl WPON. Don MeLeoS S:SS—WJR,. Neva. Bhovcat WXYZ, Paul Winter cklw. Davies WJBK. News, Leo WPON; Don McLeod 4:00—WJR. Nova. Clark WWJ. Neva, MaxvtU wxyz, Paul Winter CKLW, Nava, .-avies WJBK, Nava Lae WPON, Don McLeod OiSS-WJR. Music Hall «WWJ, Neva, Music WXYZ. winter. NeVe flaw, Joe Van r WJBK. Sporta, Muaie WCAR. Nava. Sheridan WPON, Don McLeod HMI-------j. Music-Hall WWJ. Neva, Allison . WXYZ. Paul Winter. Neve CKLW. Sports. Davies WCAR News’ Sheridan WPON. Don McLeod Connors Asks Minow to Be More Specific By earl Wilson NEW YORK—Chuck Connors la protesting to FCC Chairman Minow about the charge that "TV is a vast wasteland” -—not that Chuck denies he's a vast wasteland ... but he says, "mey should be specific and. say what westerners they like and which they don’t 41ke.” "The way they’ve put It, Chet Huntley la a vast wasteland too since they haveh’t said he Isn’t” Chuck said here. — “I Know ‘The R i f 1 e m a n’ isn’t any Shakespearean epic but it has a good influence — and I want to be told where we stand. Don’t just throw me hito the pot to make the soup taste better!' Bob Preston spent weeks at his home in WILSON , Rye growing a beard for "How The West Was Won”— then Ute Hollywood big brains saw the shrubbery-and ordered him clean-shaven. Irving Berlin’s writing songs up in his Broadway office just like in the old days . . . When Marilyn Monroe was not much more—than an—unidentified wiggle, David Wayne appeared in films with her. Now he hankers to join Paul Douglas’ shapely widow,' Jan sterling, In a Broadway version of “Venus At Large,” all about the MM-type star. . Rita Hayworth and beau Oarjr Merrill tdld Producer Herbert Swope to rush extracts to Rome for them "to do his Broadway show, “Step'On a Crack,” late next year. - CHAPEL HILL* N.C. UPI) -CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (UPI) — Out cm possible lead in the deaths of two North Carolina University students Friday from a dose of cyanide, but they expect more information on the case today. AW ♦ s Results of tests on foodstuffs which may have been eaten by the students were expected later in the day. Police chief W. D- Blake and at least six men were working almost around the dock to tiy to piece to-the many missing links in the case- The arrest of a UNC student Sunday who possessed several cyanide capsules developed into a dead ead. Police said there was “a* coaaection whatever” between Balph Sargent, 96, of Burlington, N.C., and William Harrison Johnson, 24, ot States-vllle N.C. Sargent told police he took eight mercuric cyanide capsules New Jersey dental lab three years ago. Still puzzling the investigators are the questions of how the students took the poison and what was the motive. Accident poisordng was ruled out Sunday, but the door is still open to a passible double murder, suicide and murder or. a double-suicide pact. A AY A" Officers first thought janitor William Holt, who discovered the bodies, might have literally swept away some of the clues when he cleaned the boys’ room. But Holt said he only cleaned the room in Cobb dormitory as he normally did. Iraq Recognizes Republic of Syria BAGHDAD (AP) -..The Iraqi, _>vernment announced today it Tiad recognized the new republic of Syria and would exchange am-with it. THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... preston Richard Burton can make 91 million if '‘Cleopatra” takes a year , to film . . . Singer Dinah Washington expects to marry her . 7th: a well-known fighter; Rhonda Fleming’s escort around town is realtor Walter Trautman .... Deborah Kerr’s asking price for a TV dramatic show is 300Gs . . , w it it y r EARL’S PEARLS: Every time you hear youf-wife talking abottt the guy she could have married, just remember hla wife is probably doing the, same thing. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: There’s one elderly gal (notos Phyllis Dlller) who, had her face lifted so many times there’s nothing toft lneidf her shoes.../. That’s earl, brother. /Copyright, INI) osft* Tags, the Soviet news agency, apnooheed that Romania’s government also has recognized the new Syrian government and would exchange ambassadors with it. It was the sixth Communist government to recognize Syria’s breakaway from the United Arab Republic. 'Sound of the ous Was a Treat to See has tbs police adding two-ami-two and getting "SurCrido 6.” And the playboy private eyes are Ml following can and gtria and doing their daradari to avoid obvious dun to order to pod out the hour. to Show 'Faith' Hope for a Quick End to the Maritime Strike on West Coast ear regional aeeeota. Here, the “message” was apset b hard-sell wet bj\s sum-- by hoshJohn Daly. The segment alas hieked the provocative sound of itiiirnl Andre Previn presided over a sprightly musical portion that lad us through singing commercials, classical selections and pop tunes. A A A Dore Schary gave hlmaelif a charming, humorous essay on the problems of the entertainment media and followed Into a pitch for satire as a bright, hope of TV’s future. A troupe that Included Pat Harrington Jr., Joyce Jameson and Len Weinrib performed * bit from a New York supper dub revue, “Dressed to the Nines,” and touched some refreshing, brightfaced comedy chords. • Before all this took place, Sohary’s script took note Id graceful style of sal Breads” — fit sted by nature—sad moved Into arch technological contributions as satellites. Jets, computers and, ominously, the H-bomb. “Bless This House,” movingly sung by Mahalia Jackson, tied a note of reverence, optimism and hope to the finale. MALPffl.AND FIIJNO I wonder if Tom Ewell is losing sleep this season trying to figure out why his TV series flopped and ’Pete and Gladys” goes on and n. It’s one of the questions keeping me awake. The big thing wrong with CBS-TV’s “Window w Main Street” io the casting of the starring rale. The part of the busybody anther, Cameron Garrett Brooks, not Hebert Yow«. I see that the miserable Monday night crime-fighter aeries on ABC Florida League Wins Charter; Wants Gambling TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI)-The Florida League for the Ex-itenfiota of Legalized Gambling has taken out a state charter as the first step in a renewed campaign to bring state-operated casinos and lotteries to die state. A charter , was Issued to the nonprofit orgaittation Sept. 27, the secretary of state’s office reported Monday. Harry Levy, Miami Beach insurance man and president of the organization, said he hoped to push a bill, through the 1963 legislature setting up a referendum on legalized gambling. Union Meets SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—Mem- ! bora of the negotiating committee of Hasten, Mates and Pilots Union met in San Francisco today to show ‘‘good faith” in their dssire to end the 12-day West Coast Maritime strike. '• AAA Gapt. Robert Durkin, West Coast president of the MMP, called the meeting of delegates from all Western ports. He said he felt the strike could be ended with ”46 homo of good faith negotiations.” The MMP and the Pacific Maritime Association gave their aa-swers Friday sight to a com promise proposal submitted by a three-man panel appointed by labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg. ■ Details of the answers were not announced, but spokesmen for the union and shipowners said they were waiting to hear from the panel members, who returned to the East after meeting with Durkin and President Paul St. Sure of the PMA. -A A * About 40 West Coast vessels have been idled by the walkout, which could eventually tie up 136 ships belonging to 13 members of the Pm A. Udall to Receive an Award From Manhattan Assn. NEW YORK (UPI) - Interior Secretary Stewart L. Udall will come to New York today to re-, ceive a William Randolph Hearst Commemorative I960 Medal of Award of the Downtown-Lower Manhattan Association. r awards, tor their cos- ’tire sad Improvement of •OU Now York’ In Lower Manhattan,” alee will be preoentod to Keith g. McHugh, New York Stele conAnleoioeor, of corn- dent of the Grace National Bank of New York ead Pierre S. do Pool ID, chairman of the executive committee of the American Museum « While in New Rork, Udall wifi inspect the Flushing Meadow site of the 1964-65 New Yoric world’s, fair and the construction site of -the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, and visit Liberty Island and the Statue of Liberty. Atomic Workers Strike Against Wage Freeze SALWICK Eng. (AP)Moral than 1,000 atomic workers staged one-day strike at the British! Atomic Energy Authority plant here Monday in protest against the government’s wage freeze policy. Pickets carried placards reading Atoms on the Cheap” and “Ban the Freeze.” SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Hearing Testa Free PbrtdwrM Rear of BuUdtng "Open free, by Appeiafarear ’ 143 Oakland F Ed era! 2-1225 PONTIAC, MICH. Along with all other workers in government service, employes at the atom plant have been told they must go without wage raises unfit-thr nation’s economic situs-j tion improves. .. .. - Get Our Pric6 on GAS HpAT : Chandler Heating Co. OR 3-4492 OR 3-5632 {II UK LIONS NOME FOOTBALL GAMES ON YOUR IV .. . Mm; Back OuriatM— Call w Cssm la to ■ . . CONDON’S TV 710 W. Huron FI 4-9736 Recognizes Syria BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) — Ra-io Damascus announced Monday Communist Poland haa recognized the new Syrian regime. S-P-E-E-D-Y SERVICE TV REfAIA Radio Dispatched FE 4-1188 SWEETS 11910 & TV 422 W. Huron St Changes Conference WASHINGTON (UPI) — Presl- as originally scheduled. The White House gave no reason far the change, which was v nounred shortly after Kennedy returned to Washington Monday night from a flying visit to cancer-stricken ,8am Rayburn in Dallas; •' SHELTERS fob ruuiT riu out protection 'Solid Concrete — Stool Reiniorced Couplets Ventilation ail Drainage Stool Dear m Hatch — Includes ID CFM Sir Blower Submersible Samp Damp and Manat Bftfi fiup Chemical Tailat — 17'iiO* Completely Underground NO MONEY DOWN • FHA TERMS ft 5 YES. TO PAY APPROXIMATELY $37 FIR MONTH Installed Models — foody far Tom Inspection MICHIGAN $HiLT!R CORF. Robert (fob) Kring —- Representative Phono 682-1673 for appointment NO OBLIGATION