rtw Weather hnn r^Hui 3L, THE PONTIAC, PRESS Home Edition 118th TEAK * * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1900 -88 PAGES Senators Flare Up as D Program Slumps Frans Our Mown Wins • WASHINGTON - Political tempers flared in the Senate today as Democratic presidential nominee John F. Kennedy’s legislative program , neared general collapse. I joumment of the pre-election s Kennedy's running mate—Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson—engaged Sen. Barry Goklwater, R-Ariz., in sharp debate on the Senate floor. He charged that Republican ‘‘obstructionism” was delaying ad- be passible. Goklwater quoted Kennedy as saying in effect that ‘‘we might as well go home.’* cide to permit mbiimum wage, housing and education bills to go to conference. He said the Republicans are following obstructionist policies, and "obviously want to make a political session of this.” Johnson said adjournment will become possible when Republicans on the House Rules Committee da- te adjourn befpre a long list of ‘ Ills is considered. He mentioned an imntlgn bin, a housing biH, an area redevelopment bin and a farm ' 'which he (Kennedy) said he would introduce during this ■sues Mm Committee Is two-thirds Democratic. Be said “It Is saepelslag to me that the Peas: Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y. said “many of us” will fight efforts Sea. Thruston B. Menton of Ken-j tucky, Republican national chairman, said in a statement no recent Congress has "had so many Democrats floundering so much and producing so little." "We should not adjourn.” Keat-I said, borrowing a favorite phrase of Johnson's, "until have attended to the people’s eraMy —**«g a sorry spectacle ot themselves to the sation—all at the tnxpeyera’ expense,” Morton said. He said the Democrats had planned the present session "to provide a free political- forum for their ticket.” "Instead, they have spent wearisome days biekeriag, floundering aad politicking and gen- 'Sen. Johnson's political strategy has blown up right in Sen. Kennedy’s face. Sen. Kennedy’s frantic appeal now is: How do we fold our tents and steal silently away in the night.’* today for a compromise on Kennedy's minimum wage legislation. By a vote of *3, it cleared the way for Senate and House conferees to work out differences between the bills passed by the two | branches. j The Senate bill would hike the minimum wage from U to $1.25 hourly and extend coverage to about four million more workers. Senate-House contorere nnared final agreement on a compromise version of Senate- aad House-approved proposals lor medical care to the aged. But fhay pot off final action on the legislation until later today. The conservative House Rules Committee gave a go-ahead signall The House bill would provide for 11.15 an hour and coverage for a million additional employes. A spokesman for UJS. Sugar Company interests to the Dominican Republic urged Congress to reject President Eisenhower’s appeal for power to curb sugar im-| ports from that nation. Publisher Skims Alps; Rome 'Infernally Hof By HAROLD A. FITZGERALD Publisher, The Pontiac Prow ROME — The flight into Rome from Paris is truly spectacular. Perhaps this Is one of the great scextlc flights on the globe. • ★ ★ ★ We crossed the Alpe and th/Alps are universally awarded International championships for sheer beauty and grandeur. ★ ★ ★ We swirled across this tremendous spectacle at ■lightly better than 600 mti— an hour and took an hour and a half to accomplish a trip that requires three days’ hard driving In an automobile. The captain announced we were at 29,000 feet and yet at times the peaks seemed uncomfortably close. Some Clouds, Little Warmer j Friday Forecast Friday will be partly cloudy a little warmer, the weatherman ■ays. High temperatures will reach near 84. The low tonight is expected to be 62. Considerable cloudiness with scattered showers or thundershowers is the forecast for Saturday. Southeasterly morning winds at 2 miles per hour will become 10-20 miles. I’ll guarantee one thing: The Alps afford no informal landing fields. Snow capped peaks are connected by deep ravines that seem bottomless and the grand old j patriarchs of nature stand 'there silently and grimly but | full of defiance. Fifty-eight was the lowest ther-| mometer reading in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The temperature at 2 p.m.'was 80. “Just try us, hash but good.” they challenge. “Well settle your - Here Is Nature’s most Impressive range of lofty peaks. It’s her mountainous masterpiece. ★ dr ★ But the newest manmade device sails along serenely at speeds the old gal never contemplated. Occasionally fleecy clouds surrounded some of the loftier tope and provided a softer, ethereal background than the overall picture. . -V $1*** it it it When we left P&rts, the mercury stood at an even gjAjMktihwjge touched our wheels on the airport at Home, tne temperature had soared into the 906. . Rome’s infernally het^ bit the Roman* dent seem to mind, and when in Rome do ns the Romans Aye. That’s the program. MNpaaXKHKSMMnMHN Jailed in Breach of Curfew Law Candidates Slip On Traveling Shoes BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS * No slack is being allowed in the tight schedules of the two hard-driving presidential contenders, back in Washington today from speaking dates in Virginia and Michigan. Sen. John F. Kennedy, the Democratic candidate, heads for New York City and then Detroit today while Vice President Richard M. Nixon, his Republican op- ponent, goes on television. In his first campaign swing into the South, Kennedy questioned the experience of Nixon Wednesday night at nearby Alexandria, Va. "Mr. Nixon is experienced—experienced in policies of weakness, retreat and defeat, ” he said. In recent years, he said/ there has been a decline in the nation’s prestige, “driving our friends neutralism, and neutrals to < right hostility.” anti-Catholic component in this ampatgn Is going to be a wretched one," said Felknor. The privately supported, nonpartisan committee, which screens questionable material, is backed by both major parties. Felknor emphasized there was no indication any of the material came from responsible GOP quarters. Nixon told the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention at Detroit that the United States "must always be firm without being belligerent.” Kennedy Is to address tbs VFW convention Friday morning. He stop* la New York today to speak before a national Zionist meeting aad flies to Detroit immediately afterward. Nixon is to appear on the Jack Paar television show tonight. Paar will conduct the interview before an audience in the Washington studios of the National Broadcasting ,Gv—...... DEBATES CLOSER The way was cleared for joint TV debates between the two candidates when President Eisenhower signed a bill lifting certain equal time restrictions on radio-TV broadcasts. There art reports of increased activity over the religious issue in the campaign. "The circa lotion of rabidly nati-Cathode material already to assay times greater than we’vo over seen It,” said Bruce L. Felknor, executive director of the Fair Campaign Practices "Every indication is that the Olympic Games Launched in Rome Lenders fo Back City Renewal, Furnish Loans Hesitate, However, on Special Liberal Terms Designed by FHA Pontiac Youth Guilty of Encouraging Minor to Violate Deadline Putting teeth into the state’s new curfew law, Birmingham Associate Judge Edward .Emery sentenced a Pontiac youth to four days in the Oakland County Jail Wednesday for encouraging a minor to violate the midnight deadline. Representatives of Pontiac’s three main lending institutions promised cooperation Wednesday with the upcoming urban renewal program, but hesitated to commit themselves to granting special, liberal term loans designed by the Federal Housing .Administration (FHA) for urban renewal areas. Conventional loans wQl be available for relocation to new homes and rehabilitation of existing ones, said the representatives, including Earl Bartlett, vice president of Pontiac, State Bank; James Clarkson, executive vice president ot Pontiac’Federal SavingB A Loan Assn.; and John Niggeman, vice president of Community National Bank. Ralph E. Wilkinson, 17, 1|7 Orchard Lage Avenue, pleaded guilty to a charge of inducing a minor to violate the curfew law. He was ordered to pay. $5 court Arrested at 9:46 a.m. Tuesday when police found Mm with a 14-year-old bey in Ms ear, Wilkinson was tin tint youth to be arrested aad convicted in Btr-pr tit* new law. This is just about the same thing as contributing to delinquency,” said Birmingham Juvenile Court Officer Jack Kalbfleish. “We’ve got the law aid as long i we baby the individuals we on’t get anywhere. ... ‘The law without enforcement is useless,” he added. "We've got it and we’re going to use it.” Typhoon Fatal to 10 SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -South Korea today officially listed 10 persons dead, 4 missing and 81 injured by ^Typhoon Carmen. There were 6,190 persons left homeless, 161 boats sunk wrecked and 5,000 acres of farmland flooded. Tjie1 three spoke at City Hall during a city-sponsored urban renewal clinic attended by 50 Pontiac real estate dealers and contractors. They shrugged their shoulders when asked about the availability of the special FHA loans. Another speaker, Janies Conway, director at the Detroit FHA office, said after Ike meeting that local banks aad savings and loan Institutions generally shy nway from the FHA’t urban 'But mortgage companies and other institutions that make practice of reselling mortgages tog investment interests generally do deal in the urban renewal loans,” he said. In its urban renewal legislation, Congress made special provision for the FHA to insure loans low-cost housing at full value over tt 40-year period for families displaced through urban renewal. In Pontiac, the loans would be on new homes of np to fit,-000 In value, with a $900 down payment and an Interest rate of 644 per cent. The city already has .asked for certification as an area that qualifies for the special loans, said Robert A. Stierer, Assistant city manager and urban renewal coordinator, who led the clinic. Protest Entered by Nationalist China Athletes They Must Take Part Under Name of Taiwan^ Gronchi Delays Start U.8. OLYMPIAN*—American Olympic eflp letes parade across the Milvio Bridge art thSJC way to the new Olympic Stadium In today’s opeijhR parade in Rome. The flag Is carried by .tlLS/dfecathlon star Rater Johnson of Kingsbury, Calif. ROME (*) — The 17th modem Olympic Games opened five minutes late today amid ancient pageantry, modem electronics, intense heat, brilliant sunshine and a minor note of discord. The delay was caused by the late arrival of President Giovanni Gronchi of Italy. When be did enter Rome’s new marble stadium, 10 trumpets . blared, and the long march of the athletes representing 16 countries began. The discord was sounded by Nationalist China, told by the International Olympic Committee earlier this week that it must compete under the name of Taiwan. The Chinese leader said his athletes would compete under protest* and the team marched into the sta-designation, although Won’t Walk Out on Parley Castro’s Man to Harangue the Identification patches on their uniforms carried the Nationalist flag. The intense beat—the temperature was well into the SO*— caused the officiate a minor SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) — Foreign Minister Rani Ron of Cnba said today the Soviet bloc is Cuba’s friend and accused the Uhited States of meddling in his island republic, creating Caribbean tensions. Their efforts changed Cuban Foreign Minister Raul Roa’s plan walk out on the conference after he delivers a blistering indictment of the United States and its foreign policy. SAN JOSE, .Costa Rica (UPD-A threatened Cuban walkout on the Western Hemisphere foreign ministers meeting was averted today after nightlong secret conciliation sessions. Party Worker Quits Dem Post Cuba has agreed to remain at the conference, but it is insistent proclaiming itself an enemy of the United States, conference sources said. Mexico aad Venesaeln were reported to have spearheaded the drive to keep the CWbnns MSUO-Today and Tomorrow With a toast at the new Democratic Party leadership in the county, Mrs. M a d 1 y n Scott, dropped earlier this month as a party officer, resigned yesterday as chairman of the annual fundraising congressional dinner. AN asewsas- VIEW — This aerial view of the Michigan State University Oakland campus shows not only the existing buildings, hut also the buildings of tomorrow. These include the $1,500,000 Kresge Library and Am $2,000,000 science engineering building^ Ground-breaking for these buildings will be in late September, . with completion fchtduM for the fall of lStil. The playing fields are expected to be completed, by the time school begins Sept. 19. University officials hope that work can also begin this year on an intra-mural athletic building just beyond the playing fields, and on four dormitory Units which wdtdd be off the picture to the left. conciliation meetings, however, did not change general belief that the conference would formally con- (Picture on Page 2) The favorable outcome ot the . They had cut each country’s number of marchers to the extent all would pass in review in 45 minutes, But the heat was so great that most countries couldn’t provide even the curtailed number and a hurried call had to be sent to the Olympic village for volunteers. ances. Madlyn Scott Resigns as Dinner Chairman in Letter of Protest i Cuba’s Communist afli- Cuba's Raul Roa was the main speaker aa the conference went Into its fourth and possibly last session and he vowed to hold the floor “perhaps seven hours — perhaps one hundred.” Informed sources said Roa was under new orders from Havana to make dear once and for all Cuba’s scorn for the United States and the "pawns” which sit with it in the Organization of American States (OAS). The clue to what would happen when the diplomat was finished came in the announcement that a special airliner was arriving from Havana today, ostensibly to take home some Cuban newsmen. TO APPEAR LAST Conference Chairman Julio (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) a letter or resignation to James M. Ginn, new chairman of j scheduled passengers, the Democratic County committee, Mrs. Scott complained: "I have tried very hard to get real Democrats to work for the dinner bat have found It was impossible due to the makeup of the county committee selected by precinct delegates and confirmed by delegates In the county.” Ginn took qyer the reins of the party earlier this month when a labor-liberal faction succeeded in seizing power from former chairman Carlos G. Richardson. The faction successfully backed (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) In Todays Press ,61 Comics ............. « • * • i County News ..............'49 Editorials .......... v /. • Food Section ........... p-39 Markets ...............1 69 Sports*............... 46J* Theaters ..........'/.. 94-96 TV A Radio Programs .59 Wilson. Earl ............. 89 Women's Pages ......... 30 53 Bus Plunge in Brazil Fatal to 60 Persons Not Beaten, Birmingham Boy, 1, Says SAN JOSE DO RIO PRETO, Brazil — An anticipated celebration turned into tragedy late Wednesday as a bus plunged into a river, killing 60 of the 63 persons aboard. Fifty-nine of the passengers were members of this city’s high school band, traveling to Barretos to take part in anniversary festivities there. The bus plummeted from bridge into the Turvo River. Authorities said 45 bodies had been recovered by this morning The students were 16 to yean old. The accident occured Olimpia, about midway between San Jose do Rio Preto and Barre-w. 40 miles to the northeast. San Jose do Rk> Preto .is In Brazil's Interior about 156 miles northwest of Sao Paulo. The mysterious accident involving Mark Creasley, 7-year-old Birmingham boy, who sobbingly told his mother he had been beaten Wednesday by three young toughs, has been cleared up by Birmingham police. Questioned at William Beaumont Hospital by Juvenile Court Officer Jack Kalbfleish, the boy, who had been in a coma for nearly eight hours, admitted that he had fallen off his bicycle while riding in Eton Park. Two 5-year-old boys earlier Had told Kalbfleish Mark had been with them I in the park and had fallen off his bike while riding no-handed. Mark is the son of Mr. and Mrs. David E. Creasley, 1718 Holland Ave. News Flashes DETROIT (AP)—The Untied States Army, Navy and Air Force were pictured today as awesomely powerful by their leaders In speeches to the aa Usual convention ot Vetermas of Foreign Wan. LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (AP) — Congolese police fired ever the heeds of satigever*. meet demonstrators today side the Conference of I dent African Nationo I JA \ ' m KENNETH F. NAG LET TWO THE POXTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1960 Still No School Offered I for Negroes of RO Twp. I Two dozen ninth grader* in lfoy-| tweed to accept the** ehMdrea Corruption at youth \» one of ai Oak Township who have no! if It eboaoeo eat la." ho said. the worst feature! of the towc-j school building for classes next Everett Spurlock executive sec- **»ip,‘aaid James* Roberts, assistant jmonth won sympathy Wednesday retary of the Pontiac Urban piwcutor ass*8n<>d to the area, i*** “** wW!iLM«ae. said there were "moral; "Kid. diep from wheal hoping the Pontiac Lrban League andconsiderations'' in the re- to better their lot hy earring iMked help in raising living *tan-;fusai 0f outside school districts to awne money. Had they can’t get dante in the tiny all-Negro corn- take the youngsters. a Jeb hecaoac at their age and jouaiity. | "This could become another na- lack at education, then turn to * * * tional issue, like the Little Rock' crime and vice,” he arid. I The 24 elementary school gradu-i fracas.” he said. [ _ , . ales are the first victims of a The township has its own firac- Spur oc* Prom“e<1 action, decision not to accept new en- tional school district — the Carver * . „ , _ . n_.. O'—roUe** from the township into theSchool District — but only one .9*°?* °*i*fy^ Otk W™** £)OV OCOUtS already crowded Detroit secondary school, and this lor elementaryh.*v* tW 1 school aystete. pupils only. -much, he said. "It wffl be our ■" . . . _ . . . purpose to take a good look at t School superintendent, fra mi 'The meeting asked Spurlock to L*- probt,mj, * eomething neighboring Oak Path aad Fere muster a seven-member committee!pbout tiwm dale told the grenp of Oakland of county officials to delve into thm . ^ ■■ County Demoerat. who aaked for : problems of the township and find,1 the meeting that their districts [if possible, means to alleviate |aoL ll0 „* Tfiaca Tim«« A Pontiac man has been honored: also are Jn» crowded to accept them. • w _____ ^ , hy the Boy Scouts of America as! mmn ratsldere. The school situation, it was Wotch Echo Tonight one of the outstanding cubmastenj Superintendents Roy E Robinson! rated, reflects the poverty of the in the United States. j«f Ferndaie and Dr. James N.j township. Its low standard of Uv- + . i, a [Pepper of Oak Park said the ban} tag- Ha ghette-ltke extsteace. a . . . _ _______ . [was based on questions of policy, Ht is John E. Stepleton. 41 Miller -.«* racial discriminatioo, St. Scouts Cite Local ' Cubmastei Fare to do say Echo watching | tonight? Here are the times aad I courses America’s balloon aatei-Six-tenths of a square mile in| Hte will pass over Poafiac: 'size, the township has 7,500 in-l * * # i i. i Ferndaie already accepts many habitants, but this amounts to only1 '7:45 p.m., high south, northeast; J *W’ “• i<*«rahip to boys township children in its schools, half the number that lived there, high north, northeast: 11:17 through scouting, the national re-j * * * in public housing during World: p-m., high north, southeast; 1:44 istiqnships committee of the Boy ^ Lynn Bartlett, state supenn-war II. j a.m., medium south, southeast; Sn*. miM hm . ^ *1 TV ™ dewriVd « one *■“-•«> — tor tor Phtovo. ml«* —• “ * b~d“» w— 4 to. <**r « a. Phitav tea CZ. SWto. - JSSt w SLS. “a Ranch near Cimarron, N.M. -------------———-------->—------------------------•—--------- \ Ho attended the Natieaal Cab Leaders Training ' Stepleton Ms cubmaster of Packj 8 Iponsored by Crofoot School Par-eats Teachers Association. Hy has been active in scout lead-, ersjfip work tor three years, aerv-lngdhe last two years as cubmae-ter of Pack t. Kellis Cold to Backing From Teamsters Union By MAX C. SIMON | Washington office, said Whenever file question of back )opposition to his re-election “em- nacrTTcrucrsjl’frim'tuT*» j10* frra J«nea R Hoffa s Team-|Phasized the etfeettveaesa" of the Gsaeh Dhrldw. the to year-old sters Union comes up, James l*bor law. Expect Castro's Man Will Quit Conference (Continued Fran Page One) Cesar Turbay Ayala of Colombia nild totr M assured him there would be no walkout. At the same time, however, the Cuban requested that the order of speakers be reversed so that he appeared last. The pattern tor Rea’s deaaa-latlon was set Wednesday by Dastiw hi a two-hour harraagae Stepleton Is active ia the Onto- Kellis, Democratic nominee for flap Service Brigade, the First Oakland County’s congressional ■Mist Church Sunday School, seat, is taking the attitude: thq Natieaal Rifle Aseoctelfaa. {"Thanks—but no thanks." an! toe Society el Automotive I * * * Feelers from the giant Teamster He ia married and has two sons, organization have reached Kellis. Both boys are active acouta-John, 13, as a member of Troop 150 sponsored by the Crofoot PTA, and Chris, 8, a cob in Pack *• Detroit area Teamster organiser. to the Roosevelt Hotel lobby last sight. Wendel apparently didn't offer Teamster backing. That's alright by Kallis. ; • ★ A He flatly states that he doesnt want the union't endorsement or money behind Mm. Holla has declared he'll go all out lor the scalp ot U.S. Rep. William S. Broomfield. R-OaUand County, a supporter of the Land-rum-Griffto labor law which Teamsters bitterly opposed. Kellis doesn’t like the law either Bat, of the Teamsters, he says: Tm not going to get entangled. 1 Party Worker Quits as Dinner Chairman (pootinued From Page One) a whole new elate of candidates for bounty committee posts. AAA Mrs. Scott was one of Richardson's group who fell by the way-side. "Inasmuch as I am not from fife group selected for the county committee. I honestly don't feel I could get any of these persoosj "I'm against the bill on princi-to work for me—as many of fiientjgle?’ he said. "Not because of are not even in the county during!what it does to the Teamsters—but tho day. to the auto workers, electrical ♦ ♦ A trades, pipe fitters . . } " V,J "I therefore did not feel they am would be able to contribute much ‘ '* _ to the success of the event," she! Kelli* “w lMt wrafinf *aa~a had been arranged by Carlos G.l { „ . .. ., __ . _ (Richardson, former Democratic; 1 *»• ■-«, who *«■ is a Wa- \CQmty Otord Towaahip precinct Me- i ^ t0 it wouldn't hurt ftStoTLwTl i- party to the state aad national . Kellis said he’d welcome the j teveh." ' support ef Individual Teamsters. ‘•When I accepted the chairman-1 He doesn't want the union’s or-stop of the dinner. I did not an- SUfintiOTto help, he stressed, tiripate such a Aide and definite A : A A split among Democrats and other; "That is my policy for any] guana within the party." groups I have doubts about," Kellis i W * A" ' asserted. ' ^ Scott dropped off her let-| ^ bat that I he ha. "drabt." Wtbe Ten.- j quahers yesterday afternoon. She . .. was unavailable ior comment latte*. "I can’t take backing from a. i "I was very surprised to hear group I have doubts about just beef this," Ginn said. "She's a very {cause they’re against my oppo-fiqa person and an active party nents," he declared. sto0wr." * A A ‘4 AAA What puzzles Kellis, he said, is I Mrs. Scott was appointed dinner .why the Teamsters have contact-chairman by Richardson before]^ him now. thojliberal-labor forces took over. *R*ffn aMtetomad that Teamsters — fighting re-eteettra of Griffin to a third term la the ■Sana have raised $40,000 for the fan campaign. /'While he had every right to vote for or against whomever he pleases, the people of Michigan's Ninth District will rightfully resent this arrogant attempt on the part of Mr. Hoffa and his associates to dictate their congressional repre- Griffin said. I It was felt the Latin republics I A A A lhad an “enemy ef taanaaity,” mock-tag the preseat tater-Americaa system as a creation of "Yankee Imperialism’’ and boasting that Latin delegations hoping for some last-minute conciliatory gesture from the Havana regime were completely disheartened by Castro's new attack. The Pay In Birmingham School Board Makes 10 Changes on Staffs BIRMINGHAM — The board afijamin f. Robertson n and WJJUaa education has announced the pro-|D. Robertson, all ef Birmingham, motion and appointment ef 19 peiM A A w sons to administrative poets in Birmingham schools. She appointments, including three to the central office atoff. were authorised at the board'aftasl meeting. Keaneth F. Nagtey, former Graves High School priaclpal. was aaaaed director #t net, while Walter t. PM. Mrs. Lera L Thanfaa dr. Service lor Mrs. Leon I. (B. Aghcst Thurston Jr.. 53 of 2719 Road, will be at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in Bruce Township Cemetery, near Romeo. Mrs. Thurston died Wednesday after a long illneae at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital to Pontiac. Surviving besides her husband are a son, Leon I. Jr. of Birmingham; a daughter, Mrs. Walter Lux of Naperville. 111.; mother At the same time Lloyd Van- Mrs. James R. Dugan, of Gohiaon. S . . M_______ • • a_L. ffk..LM.Ual__ . ^ «- —Ai--Am,ft eirtaea aiut Buskirk, former L’Anse Public School businesa manager, was named director of finance. A A A. James A. Burchyett. Derby Junior High School pridpal«.will take Nagley's place at Grovea High School, the board announced. Four persona in all were promoted to principakhips. "Although we cannot hope to match his huge slush fund, Mr. Rpfta’s statement will serve to alert the people of my district : the seriousness of the threat,” ti Michigan congressman declared. Weak Quake in Tokyo I no other choice than to fall line with Secretary of State! Christian A. Herter’s demand that Cttba be condemned for “encour- ^ . m aging” Russian and Red Chinese ;Gen. Lemnitzer to Key "intervention” b the Americas, AnnuQ| Confab EcutefiSf Wednesday night joined „ ____. Colombia, Argentina and Peru to MIAMI BEACH (UPI)—Gen. Ly-a final cafi for Cuba to renounce ro*11 -. Lemnitzer, chairman of Russia’s offer of military protec- Chiefs of Staff, will key- TOKYO (UPI) — A weak earth- tion and return to the friendship]rate the opening of the Amvet* quake rocked downtown Tokyo of the inter-American community, j annual national convention ■ ‘ " * ‘ *oday. About 2.500 delegates are cx-ipected to attend the first-day sessions. buildings today but caused no But there was no sign of an af-jtpday. damage or injuries. firmative response. rd ef s. Kathr; the late vigorous educational program to our schoals we hope fa continue to encourage exceptional leadership. "We look toward their working as an effective team with our new superintendent to a forward-looking approach to the challenges which Ite ahead.” . . .: or Sometime Wednesday night thieves broke wen a safe at the home of Robert L. Brown, Parkman Drive, Bloomfield Hills, taking over $500 in cash, Bloomfield Hills Police reported today. This was the second ouch theft at Brown’s home wtthla a year, police said. Last October Brown reported over $1,600 worth of household furnishings taken. He told police that Wednesday night the thieves completely ransacked his home, possibly stealing! his recently-married son’s wedding^ gifts stored in the basement, asi well as the cash. A A A Mrs. Benjamin F. Robertson Service tor Mrs. Benjamin F. (May! Robertson, 79, of 1000 Forest Lane, will be at 11 a.m. Friday] al the Bell Chapel of the William -4R. Hamilton Co. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. . Mrs. Robertson died Wednesday after an illnesq of one week at New Grace Hospital, Detroit. A graduate of Rollins College in Roanoke, Va., Bln. Robertson a member of Christ Church to Grosse Potato, Detroit Athletic Club, St. CSair Chapter of the DAR, Beach Club Of Hyannia, Mass., and the Wianno dub of Wianno, Mass. Surviving are three grandsons, Benjamin S. Robertson Jr.. Ben- Miss.; one brother, two sisters and two grandchildren. A A " 'A Mrs. Irate 6. Raley Jr. Mrs. Lotos G. .(Ruth) Roiley Jr, 3$, of 1738 Banbury Road, died today at Palmer Osteopathic Hospital. Detroit, after a long illness. Her body is at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home, Surviving besides her husband are her parents; Mr. and Mrs. O. | A. Shippey of Birmingham; brother, 0. / . toy and a sister, Mrs. Nancy Dob-ot Birmingham. Gunman Shoots Man, Grabs Girl Youth Abb to Doscribt Kidnaper, Now Being Hunted in Iffinots CAR BOND ALE, |d. - A gupman invaded a lover's lane early today and kidnaped a blonde waitress after shooting her boy friend. Police cordoned off surrounding roads and planned an air search hut the gunman apparently made a dean getaway with his kidnap victim, Mary Lilly Roberta. IT, a Meet 2-inch attractive blonde from Cbbden, HI. Tho wounded youth, John iryant, 20, of Carbondale, was taken to a hospital to fair condition with n bullet wound to Ms head. He gave authorities a description of the kidnaper’s car, then lout consciousness. Living Cost Rises Tenth of Pet. in July WASHINGTON (AP) — Living costs rose ooe-tenth of 1 per cent to July to «et a record for the fifth straight month. A boost to the price of haircuts helped send Detroit's cost of living up .6 per cent from June to July. The Bureau of Labor Statistics of the Department of Labor reported the increase today, fisting Subway Dog It Dead NEW YORK UB—Tho dog that disrupted subway service Tuesday by walking through tunnels ^ front of trains died Wednesday. The - ___. ____ . ,w 14-month-old mongrel had brushed* 5.1 per against the power line and sustained shock, burns and internal injuries. Reds Jittery Over Rome VIENNA (UPI)—East European Communist regimes have shown signs of nervousness over the possibility that some of their athletes may defect to the West during the 17tit Olympic Games opening to| Rome today. sonal care" among the particulars. A A A The TJthnr Department national living-cost index rose to 126.6 per cent of the 1947-49 base. The July increase, while It raised the figure to a record, was the smallest Juae-July rise since 1954. Increases for food and gasoline, and a continued increase to prices for sendees, were main contribution to the record. % WHY PAY MORE? Check Simms Prices! % ” — ^ BOYS’ and GIRLS' ^ ifHERMOs LUNCH KITS With METAL or Soft PLASTIC Comb Regular 12.95 VALUES Gnaranteed Brand How Electric lazott at DISCOtfMT NICKS Friday aad Saturday Save or Fanois ELECTRIC RAZORS! $24.9S NORILCO SPEEOSHAVER With sera end eeae .. 13" $24.05 NORELCO SPORTSMAN Par ear end battery .. .13" $22.90 SCHICK POWIRSHAVER With eerd eaa eae* .. 11" $22.90 SCHICK CUSTOMATIC , With eord end eese ... . 13" $21.90 RONSOM CEL SHAVER Ctoee, tut Sheree 14“ $20.90 SCHICK 2-SPUD AD|. With cord end case .... 16" $20.99 REMINGTON ROU-A-MATIC Adfuttable rollers 16" $84.90 REMINGTON ROLLECTRIC " ^ 17" $29.99 NORELCO New Fleeting Head Newest ittl model 17" $34.50 REMINCTON ROU-A-MATIC 11 volt Auto-Home — 19" $31.50 SCHICK AUTO-HOMI I-tpeed is volte ^rara 26"! $15^95 REMINCTON ELECTRONIC Neweet model resor s rate’ errs 24" aa M...V AAA ajuitl RAZORS ! un. ATmSim —Mam j rl*er | The Weather •WW, Twrnr par Mitef ■■raw. T*ta,'i MAnIiU **- TM I WSHl Mitl; II U P W: "They barked one ef nay opponents la the primary." hr raid, “and poured a lot of money Into that campaign.” ! Kellis said Wendel questioned {him extensively about his stand on labor issues, but. never actually brought up the question of support. "I think he'd been appraised of my position earlier." Kellis said., AAA f code of ethics and AP rklUfat HE TAUtft FOR CASTRO—Foreign Minister Raul Roa of Cuba was expected to walk out of the foreign ministers' conference in San Jose, Costa Rica, today after making the main speech of the day. But a nightlong secret session, mainly with Mexico and Venezuela, changed his plan. However, it ia believed he still will deliver a blistering indictment of the United States and its foreign policy. Following that, undoubtedly the rest of the delegates will formally condemn Cuba's Communist alliances. "I have 1 [conduct to uphold," he added. M ; Hoffa. meanwhile, left no doubt ra this week that Ms favorite targets £ !in November will be U.S. Reps, w jPhil Landrum. D-Ga , and Robert,^ iP. Griffin, R*Traverae City. co-!J| authors of the labor law passed] after disclosures by the Senate! Rackets Committee. I ^ :* Owe at their opponent*, bra- W '.!'.'.!te ever, wam’t exactly overjoyed V 1 by the means Haifa was aalag la i J ! bag tea game. j In Lawrenceville, Ga . congress L j atonal candidate F. Quill Sammon £ aiffcMi tad Loom* Tweniim Jr., denied accepting a $1,000 cen-!% TMr Bate !■ 0S Taaft IIsdlMitinn fmm Uriffi fur Mt ram. L’ 09 te tMB a PrMar St I.M • m ____j Ttiurads? it IM p i a rtstt Pridoyst 10 W t.n. , WnwlM h> PootUi (Al Recorded OoVBtoOBi MllWwt tmplrit ure ........ loose toaasrotaro ............ M*Sb temporsturs .............. . IraMbtr inany. Bfick-Tt-Sck—I Sh—» ChI LESS at SI—$ GIRLS' - MISSES' - LADIES' TTBStSSu*1 St Usaphli „ so Miami. S St TS MUoothee a* 47 MtBDIipoUl j tribution from Hoffa for his c jpaign against Landrum. Dstratt 77 is Ph*«att tt Til MHl st *t PMiirp is (1 Krt worta m 7» at Uu’i m ts'i O lajpun to .IS a. Pioacueo ft Mil laasMto 71 St a. S. M»rle 77 ly rnSmit. Si 7t tt»*tm c. ti m i ■jpttU \ Woe but (to* to i>< I 7*j Hoffa had said in Washington, £ ll]that he made the contribution fromim ”]hia personal funds Sammon said k ti he knew nothing about it. ^ jj! A A, .A k If Hoffa does want to help O ." Sammon added, "that ’s a M heck of a way for him to do it/L by aayiiR he is for me." rfifiin, in. a statement frbm his SIMMS PRICE— Simms NEVER Run Phony Comt-On' Advt, -WE SELL WHAT WE ADVERTISE- lf you've ever responded to 'Mit* sdvt and were told "Sorry', Sold Out" about/ 5 minutes after store-opening . . you know what wa nriean: • For 26 years SIMMS has earned customer confidence by backing up every adv. with honast values. Popular FPM Model — Medium Site OJCTRIC Fry Pons mplato With 10 Os THERMOS Bottles SAVI NEARLY $• New at Simms Choice of 8 styles and' decorations. GUARANTEED 1st quality. THERMOS bottle hat cup-cap. Regular 119.95 List- law size for average family. Complete with cord. (Cover extra). GENERAL^ ELECTRIC Automatic 2 SLICE Toasters SPECIAL PU1CHASE! Bar Now for Ckriitus i 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, I960 m three! Forest Fife End .Expected Soon No Privileges' , for Unions, Urges Indiana Professor 3,300 Mtn Secure Lines Around Blaze In High Sierras TRUCKEE. Calif. (UPI)—For-catry official* expressed optimism today that their five-day battle againat raging fonwt fires to \ High Sierra may soon be over. Ait it will taka a generation to EAST LANSING 0 - Trade unions should be tolerated at best, said economist B. A. Rogge of Wabaah CoOege. restore the charred 75,000 acres of timber destroyed by three biases, which caused an estimated loss of five million dollar*. The situation was Oeueribed as “very gee*” at Danner Ridge, where seme SJN men secured They should in no way be encouraged or given special privileges and immunities, the ” ana professor wrote in the summer issue of "Business Topics." a publication by the Michigan State University graduate school of business administration: of the, 71-mlle perimeter of * fire north of Lake Tahoe. Officials hoped to have the Mate completely contained today. The Donner Ridge fire destroyed 40,000 acres and burned to within 2tt-miles of Truckee. a railroad and resort town of 2,000 persons. A 30,000-acre blaze at ForesthiU •till was open on an 11-mile front. However, five smoke jumpers were! dropped into the area to prepare a heliport for the landing of 300 firefighters by helicopter today. The fire was expected to be contained Friday. A f,« I acre fire at aarth San Jinn was rnnftland Tuesday aad brought under eoatraf protection of trade unionists vto-| before the law, he basis as •> ether grsaplags la He is opposed to rigM-to-martt laws, he said, but regards their popularity as symbolizing the kind of authoritarian answer that is almost certain to become more popular. Co-Champions Defeated ALTOONA, Pa. « — Louisville scored three unearned runs in the eighth taming to beat defending cochampion Cincinnati, 4-1 today in the National Amateur Baseball Federation tournament. In other first round garnet, Youngstown (Ohio) trimmed Cleveland 3-1, Dayton (Ohio) shaded rales apply to the other* would Chicago g-5, Detroit walloped apply to unions as weU,” he j Philadelphia 10-2; Maryland State ■aid. beat Buffalo 8-4, and Gambrills Government encouragement and I (Ohio) defeated Pittsburgh 8-4. Forestry officials explained that containment did not mean control. It means merely the lines have been forced around the Area but' they are not strong enough to hold in the event of adverse weather conditions. today, but chances of higher temperatures and lower humUHties could hamper the fire-fighting efforts. Don't Rub Your Eyas Exactly as fidiwf NEWEST 127 Modal Flash CAMERA With Slid! VIEWER $5.95 Folia *199 THIS WEEK 3s . . . color prints , . . 2x2 < slides. TWELVE exposures 127 size roll. Gift boxed. TONITE - FRI. - SAT. Sove On Smokas Yen Favorite Biandi CIGARETTES 231 Par Carton Lucktot,0* ow,lla^^cius>rtiiBii etc, (7c TAX) ____ (Wags A Fitters) ^41 tor Cartas............. Mm eeVeeeeeeeesoooooaao Popular ‘FMFICTO Sl*e S3 Falsa _ ____to stock. eeeeoeeooo••••••••••• Popular ‘SPECIALS' ion Popular -arat-JAM DUTCH MASTER CIGARS hm »*• “85 SIMILAO-RAKERS-RREMIL Ligaid Baby Formulas Res. 27c Cm Year Choice Famous baby formulas in fresh stock cans. Limit 12 cans per 21 I NATIONALLY ADVERTISED RRANDS f ■ SAVE ON DRUGS|| 1 LOWEST DISCOUNT PRICES I | No need to pay high price* fee famous DRUCS—Jui# moke SIMMS E | your DRUG STORI — Wl pay torn for the hatot Stop thh week- E I end fer these MONIY-SAVIRS. — Righto reserved te Unto quanti-j^ BUFFERIN TABLETS 19 Regular $1-21 value — full pack of 100 tablets. Fast & effective. liSTEIME Ml | ANTISEPTIC 0| 1 Regular 89c value — large bottle —14 ounces. For sweet breath. PEPTO- fine BISMOL 09 Regular 91c value — large 8-Ounce size. For upset stomach. BAUME CAc BEN-GAY 09 Regular 19c value —' Ben-Gey analgesic for muscle ache & pain. DOANS 119 PILLS 1 Regular $1.95 pack of. 85 pills that aid the kidneys. Large size. EX-LAX C4c LAXATIVE 90 Regular 79c value — peck of 48 chocolate candy laxative. DRENE fiftc SHAMPOO 09 Mbefuler a$l *•*# Royal Drone filprnpoo for all Vtypes of hair. GELUSIL fit LIQUID I i Regular $1.75 sisa — 12-ounce \f gastric antacid. Popular liquid, i P0LBENT 7ftc Denture Bath f 9 Regular $1.09 Rental plate ^cleanser end bath combination. SLEEPEZE 07* \ TABLETS Of I Regular $1.25 value — peck of [1 20 tablet* for safe, long sleep. [| UPJOHH'S Elk KA0PECTATE 39 Regular tic value'— treatment -for intestinal ufgof*- diarrhea. N0XZEMAS JAc \ NOZAIN 49 1 Regular fj c value— effective First Aid Cream. Save 26c. BAYER $<» ASPIRIN | 800 tablet battle — a regular . $1.59 value. Limit t bottle. MURINE AAe for EYES 09 Choicy of eye-wash or drops : Regular 00c sis# at this price. : BACTDTC fifle GERMICIDE 09 Regular 98c value — 4-ounce j bottle with sprayer applicator. DRISTAN C7c !j TABLETS 01 \ Regular 98c value — effective decongestant for nasal passages. FITCH OOe SHAMPOO 09 Regular 59s Valeo — Dandruff Remover Shampoo & brilliantine Z0MTE AAc ANTISEPTIC 90 Regular $1-29 value—14-ounce bottle of germ killing antiseptic. Gleam Push-Button A Afi Tooth Part* 09 Regular 9le pressure can of famous Gieem tooth paste. VALCREEM JJc HAIR GROOM “Kt Regular 65c value — large tube of men's heir dressing. Limit 2. t ROLAID £QC k TABLETS 09 Rpgaler 98* value — pack of 75 antacid mints in bottle. SCHICK Q7C Rami Bladei 91 Regular $1.29 value — pack of 20 custom injector razor blades. " C0RRECT0L fiAe * TABLETS 09 1 Regular 98* value —. pack of 'dO—-mild laxative and regulator. PREP CAc FOAM SHAVE 99 Regular $IJ5 value — whisker wilter shave in pressure can. | f] BABY NEEDS I TOBACCO -ANto Wow ‘ A 49* Fletchers Casloria Ocuvreua aln ef faaMut toby loxnUvo-now only 34* 19* Baby Soap -3 Bars Famous John ton * Johnson baby loop. Unit S bar*-.... 39* 73* Baby Pander • la Oaa Uifd eemornr **to Johnson * Johnson brand powder .. 56* 98* Baby Pradacts - Each Johnson * Jehaeoa Mr ceuam. baby oil or baby lotion 72* 2.78 Baby Traval Sat Johnson * Johaeto eeS baa everything lev trotela r m DRUGS | -Main 1 floor •Simms Is OPEN TONITE ^9 HOUR SALE Boryaihi Effective Until 9 P.M. ‘ ■R fmtewti.. Tonite-Friday and Saturday Specials! Savings on Everything —for Every Student, Kindergarten to College • fur Children ~ far Misses — /of Girls — for Ladies ! Anklets and Socks Ton its, Friday and Saturday -Values to 39c-lst Quality and Irregulars SPECIAL PURCHASE! Flannel-Lined Slacks 2 far $2.50 •olid colon (4 Fain 94c) $ E N S A T I O N A C SAVINGS! We * bought 8000 pairs to be able to bring you these super-bargains. No , limit — buy all you need. (Girls' PRESSES) I ootoooooo************ LITTLE ams Suspender SKIRTS A Uses 1 te 6X P Special “BUY”—Big Savings! Girl's Dresses ! 591 $JJ9 te S2.49 Quality- Newest style* tn print*. Guaranteed 1 far $2.50) Wools, rayons and washable. M a styles. Local communities may adopt their own law or make stricter regulations as they see fit. For the areas that do not have statutes provided, no method is now avail-[ able to get the teen-agers off the streets at a respectable hour. It would seem that the control that this law will offer some of our unincorporated areas should be helpful. Idle youngsters congregating on any public street or highway between midnight and 6 a.m. can be up to no good. ★ ★ ★ Let's give it a try. At least it is some definite action that could lead to some better all around study of the whole curfew*' problem. mier naively feels he can come to some agreement with his relative and so unite his country. ★ ★ ★ Under the terms of the 1954 Indochina settlement Laos was intended to be neutral and under the protection of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organisation [SEATO). As a further safeguard United Nations observers are on duty there at the present time.. One cause of concern Is the fact that a junior captain was able to rally 1.000 men and take over a country guarded by 30,000 men and to dictate its policy. Furthermore, despite U.S. aid to I tan, turquotOO. Washable. Juy a charming, complete roomfull at on# wonderful pricni Hardy bunk bods save space . . or separate into twins.-‘ladder, guard rail Included. Chest is handsome, with 4 huge drawers and large matching desk. Hurry! ?eMf Hotel-motel type coil oi coil nattress, box spring sets Modern as here-and-now, deluxe 7-pc. dinette set, reg. 89.95 •Kipeisive hotel osvsr •Veited' air flaw • Sag praaf Ionian • Slarly bandits Superb comfort and lasting durability are the qualities demanded by the country's top hotel-motel owners. Seaiy made them to their strict specifications, with top workmanship, the best materials possible. Now Federal's offers them to you at an amazing, low 2 for 1 price—you just can't pass up. More than twenty dollars-off on this stunning special! Hugo 30x48x60" table has high-pressure top and resists stains, heat, Brass-trim blonde ash, six 2*tone matching vinyl,cushion-ed chairs. See them at Federal's now! DOWNTOWN STORE ONLY OKN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday OT THE PONfftc PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1960 Girls’ cardigan Orton® sweaters Washable. White, pae-tele, prints. Rayon cover*. 72x84" ike. Save! Orion* acrylic-trimmed. Interlined. Plaid*, solids. 3 to 6k; 7 to 14. •Dupont's Rtg. TJt. . on uli while rail, twin size. Plain, patterns. Six colors to choose from r tl Hand-washable cotton. Plaids, sheen gab. Red, blue, tan. 3-6x; 7-14. Cardigans in a variety of classic, collared, novelty, bulky. 8 to 14. Double woven cotton gloves in new fashion lengths. Sizes 614-7%. Limited Quantities corduroy jacksl sets “CHARGE IT” Combed cotton t^ v s&"S5 I “J;, YoJll 144 BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS I Wash and Wear I ffianding values. I Broken »i»s. 4-W- ^MMdaiSeys' ,1 SHIRT PART RETS I r.lor coordinated I shorts Size* 2-3-v l All machine wa*h-I able. You'll want 1 several. 160 Ponnoy** Coidloo WALKING SHORTS iSS.iSNwSS 1 Men's sizes. ^ <144 [137 Howoiio" Print | SPORT SHIRTS Is**®*’1® I Men’s sues S-M L <*J44 FOR MEN! 4( MEN'S CUT LENGTH SUCKS 100% cotton twill. Rope belt, Black or whifo^ (144 Broken sizes. I SO PUD BOXER SWIM SUITS Quality Galey and Lord wash and wear tdrpoon $1 *t4 plaids. Asst, errors. S-M. , I SS MIS. WISH and WEtt SUMMER SUCKS Broken sizes and colors, but find your size and $300 you got a real buy. 30-38. v, FOR BOYS! 120 Mil CORDINO WALKING SHUTS SoHd colors plus few plaids. Machine washable, $133 Aset, colors. University and continental styles. | Sizes 6-16. 72 Taddler and Junior loyi* PLAY SHORTS Cotdinos, poplins, denims. Boxer styles. Assorted colors. Sizes -2-12. S3 SHORT SUIVE SPORT SHIRTS Wash A Wear cottons. Plus some 100% rayon*— Aset, prints. Outstanding Values. Broken sizes 4-18. f ff S3 PRS. ROTS' REWORD CORD SUCKS Cotton corde Just right for back to echool. University $y66 grad styling. Broken sizes and colors. 6-16. mm 66< FOR THE HOME! 3f-77* 210 GUEST TEIRT TOWELS A quality thick terry towel in a wide range o! colors. You'll wgpt severed at this low pries. 120 2S-PC. PLASTIC PICNIC SETS Each set a complete service fottour. lndud- j. Q Qd ing plates, cups, utensils. Ideal for picnics rvr QQ* or partMM, indoors or out. 20 ONLY... 5-Ft. Folding Redwood TUUS This set indudes 'heavy' duty picnic table and jCW AM 2 benohos. Big savings at this end of season “ I l;!** I ^ 48 ONLY... Women'i Rayon HEADSCARFS excellent assortment of pastel colors .. 2 18 ONLY... WOMEN'S PUFF-1T BAGS use as a tote bag, pillow cr In the water ... v|00 24 ONLY... WOMEN'S BETTER SLEEPWEAR group of batiste baby-dolls, short gowns and $^00 long gowns ..................... BASEMENT 30 ONLY...WOMEN'S COTTON DRESSES sleeveless and short sleeve styles, misses' $188 and half sizes .................. 20 ONLY.. . BOYS' LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS white poplin and blue or tan cotton cords .. 80 ONLY... Bays* Craw Hack Sweatshirts white or assorted colors, sizes 4-18. REDUCED! QIRlS' Belter Sportswear REDUCED' Hisses' BoHor Sportswear auckor, P°^^Lld iamaleoi. slacks aid blous 1144 REDUCED! MISSES' $|Mv«Un BLOUSES 3louses, $|00 REDUCED! . WOMEH’S better DRESSES \ot suBUDwr at ego l©4r price. »A66 RIDUCCM nriHTaak todrur ' GUIS' SPORTSWEAR lniento and Wdd‘#r glrto fportawear. REDUCED! MBSES* ff* OPURRHS CANVAS rOOTWBAR e rod. bluo or black canvas eelords «• to rnisit^ au mmar $188 MIRACLE MILE PENNEY'S STORE HOURS: Opan Doily Monday through Saturday 10:00 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. , V DOWNTOWN PENNEY'S STORE HOUltS: Opan Monday and Friday 9:30 A. M. to M0 F. M* All Othar Weekdoyt 9:30 A, M. fra 5JO P. M. JV ; / t THE PONTIAC PRESS THUHSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1960 ELEVEN broke op the Parte summit con- Yuaolsnvian WerlHina holing enthusiasts, took their vows lerence in May- - ? ® |ln overalls and white helmets alter There would be no arrangements! rlOW III LOV# !their 40 guests had clambered dow for Eisenhower to meet Khwsb-L/ *?*"* T*8"? tadder * *ttend ** .... ___Mon fa leone, Yugoslavia, 30 miles mony. - chev and no possibility of asgetia* L^g Trieste, was conducted teaj^ ---------------------- tions oo disarmament or any other!cave 130 feet underground. | The chemical industry uses 68 subject, they said. * I Tbs bride and groom, both pot-!per cent of the salt supply. J ! Elephant Gets Write-Ins g** Caroline i , o» Democrat Gals Job “SSemt r», ' ASHEVILLE. N.C. an elephant in the Asheville zoo, ., t received 13 write-in votes in a re- Blue Whales a ■cent short-term election in the long when bom. LOWEST PRICES— ran ESTIMATES FI 2-2671 mlm Ml MIN ar rhour, i PRESIDENT — John W. Lederle, director of the Institute of Public Administration at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, is the newly appointed president of the University of Massachusetts. Lederle was born in Royal Oak. vBMir ffll ,mm ,.mMB HI mktWl Don River's 100% Combed Cotton Gingham Shirts For Boys Den River’s 100% combed cotton gingham plaids rate high honors for new-Iooks in sport shirts. All Penney tailored with I MX 2 pockets, a short point collar and simulated pearl buttons. Ail wash 'n wear, top ... machine wash, drip dry and they Ye ”*■" off to the school again with little or no ironing. Stock up! ■*¥* Sizes UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. UJPIlj aider consideration to have — Authoritative sources said Wed-j Eisenhower, hi a forewell U. N. nesday that if President Eisen-1 appearance, replace Christian A. bower decides to cotne to next ifrrler for the speech, month’s General Assembly Session, _ he RriU not meet or consult with RuMi* suggested a head*-of-Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrush- government disarmament debate chev. in the assembly and Khrushchev These sources said no decision has said he would like to come to had been reached on whether the such a' session. President would decide to deliver However, authoritative sources the United States speech in the said that.' if Eiaenhower and assembly’s general, or policy, de- Khrushchev both should come here, bate. there was no possibility of holding Usually, thin in done by the (heir first conference since the secretary of state. But a plan Is Russian insulted the President and The Penney Plus!Our Boys Cotton Cordino Slacks Students rate these easy-care slacks high on their list of fall fashions! Good reason, too! Slacks feature trim plain front, tapered leg and separate waistband! Boast smart new stadium tones as well as blue, black, suntan, charcoal, antelope and Spanish moss! They wash ’n wear — need little ironing 1 Shop, compare... take advantage of the Penney value now! < Boys' Six** 4 to 10 2.98) BOYS' SIZES parents; THE NEW LOOK IN SHAWL COLLAR SWEATERS BOYS' NEW FALL COLORS IN GALEY & LORD SHIRTS NEW COTTON CORDENIM IN STOVEPIPE JEANS U Fine new rib cord with con- ^■MHHjjjBH tinental style extras — ad- jus table waistband, back flap pockets, cuffs, new-look I /-m i A front pockets. The fit, the I w RTPy wear boys need. Colors! I x ihw1 *« colorful dog-patch saddle with black crepo sole and heel, sizes 8V2 to 12. 1214 to 4. Talk about style! Talk about value! This hl-bulk, bulky knit Orion® acrylic sweater takes honors for both! Features neat shawl collar with contrasting stripes and tipping! Features ’60’s smartest shades of white, black, loden! Features a hard-to-beat PenAey low price, toot Superior combed cottons . . . -prepared 4n new burnished tones colorful as fall itself! They machine wash ’n wear, need little or no ironing! BOYS’ SIZES SIZES like and Parents approve \ . OUR CREW NECK SWEAT SHIRTS advertised in PARENTS BOYS' SPUN NYLON SOCKS SHAWL COLLAR COAT SWEATER DURENI COTTON, BRIEFS styled after Dad's, mode for rugged wear and priced right i.. sizes 3 to to 6 in B-D widths, black. 3 for 1.95 Bn*' Sis#* 4 te If Get combed cotton T-shlrts with nylon . reinforced collars. Get Dur-ene® cotton briefs with heat resistant elastic in waistband and leg openings. Stock up. Snug - fitting, more absorbent, softer feeling ... that’s Penney’s quality blend socks of combed cotton and nylon. All machine washable, medium set. bw’ «i*«» 4 t* 16 The kind boys like best! Soft, absorbent cottons ... ideal for sports and leisure wear! Colors ? Peacock, navy, scarlet, white, grey, gold, others. b*r*' *>>*> 10 t* II Lamb’s wool and orlon acrylic team up in Penney’s bulky, knits. Result ? Just tne warmth he needs. New fashion shawl collar, contrast color trims. An all-time favorite now in Penney’s plain front University - Grad model. Now in wanted fall colors, too . . . find antelope, black, grey, bronze, olive 1 Penney’s ribbed knit briefa get a double seat panel ror more comfort, longer wear! Check the heat resistant elastic in waistband and leg openings. Open Monday end Friday Nights 'HI 9 P.M. PENNEY'S - DOWNTOWN: Open Monday and Friday 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 P.M. All Other Weekdays 9:30 A.M. te 5':30 P.M. PENNEY'S - MIRACLE MILE Open Every Weekday — Monday thru Saturday 10:00 A.M. te 9:00 P.M. 73 NORTH SAGINAW STREET ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY! THE PONTIAC PRE^S, THURSDAY,1 AUGUST 25, I960 He had been given a traffic sum- gjshop $ay$ Abstainer lmilitant •brtainer can drive a man So|ar Ertoray Practical worid’‘ dwindlil ions that directed him to zhow.. C ^___________to drink — even waan'tj * according to a* p at 4:30 a m. Police told Mm ™/ *• OvOrZOalouS headed that way. OS World Fuel Source sdentiat visitim lie time was in error and advised; north oqnway NN ftiPli ♦ ★ # r_ . .Mcnir ut. ,tTDI. University, im to come back at 4:30 p.m. B.sbop HaU «ud that “we mwtl^f7 Dr. Nfeto Art. . ...— i ■ n R1, ttev- Charles F. HaU. that alcohol to with ns Energy from the «un rather than nmm of pcoduc First printed advertisement in Episcopal bishop of New Hamp-jand that we are not going to geti from nuclear reactors offers the does not appear Dior was for a rag. ‘shire, says that the over-zealous.'rid of it by turning off the spigot.”‘greatest possibility of replacing the at the moment >aint •Ml Wallpopor Co. 14 $. Segtoaw-P* Z-WOt where court was being held. Koriba Dam Backs Up j Waters, Provides Feast for Bafonka Natives comparison days sale! 1’t beat Sears for honest values ! SALISBURY. Rhodesia (UPI> — The Pied Piper of Bings is keeping a sharp eye on Lake Kariba, hoping tor another plague of rats. But Dr. James Mundie would be satisfied if they never came back.! shop and compare Mundie. a government medical; officer at Binga on the shores of j Lake Kariba, wrote in a privately-; circulated Ministry of Health News-; letter not long ago that the rats were eating him out of home, hospital and typewriter keys. “To date, they have eaten the fly-sheet of my teat, two fetta, three pairs of nock*, the inside ! wife’s clothing sad the shift-key of this typewriter,” Mundie wrote. The rats, it seems, were being! driven out of the valley by the! rising waters of the lake, backed up by the huge Kariba Dam, Af-j rica’s biggest. Salvation came in the form ofji the African pied piper, whom Mundie did not name. This laborer, he said, discovered! that rats were a real delicacy to; the local Bafonka tribesmen. So] the Batonka women put down their! two-foot-long calabash pipes and! went hunting rats for the men’s] suppers. Steam-Dry Iron Travels with You 8-cup Coffeemaker Is All-Immersible 1188 grantors QUO Charts it Charts n e automatically! Iron out travel wrinkles! Fold l-year replace- handle down, slip Into Kippered se. Chrome on bag- Compart, light weight. UL listed. Steams quickly. masker ....Ml Bet piste, 1 burner ................M4 Electrical Dept. Sean Mato Basemen! clip this coupon! oven toaster is ideal for small cooking jobs console machine toward the Purchase of Any Console Machine REDUCED! Kenmore cleaner The enterprising pled piper or-j ganized rat catching on a com-j mercial scale, netting, ait average] Of GO a day from traps along the] lake shore. Then he sold them to j the villagers for a penny each. ] Within days, he had cleaned up] the plague of rats. But, Mundie noted ominously, the waters of the lake will start rising again when the rains come.! And when the waters rise, so do] the rats. Cooks eggs, steaks, chops, brown and serve rolls, TV dinners CHARGE IT . Just the appliance you need to cook small meals falter, easier and more economically! Chrome-plated. Black plastic trim. UL listed. 1-year replacement guarantee. Hurry and save! With Coupon Darns, mends •.. does all the household sewing! Only $5 Down Sew-it-ypurself! Save many dollars on clothes, drapes, pillowcases, etc. Also does everyday household sewing, darning. Attractive cabinet becomes your sewing headquarters. Shop Sears tomorrow night until 9 p.m. SawlUff Machin# Dipt, Soars Mato Floor Four Cars Crash Inside Display Room Economy Model Portable ... does a good job of drying air under usual humid conditions. Easy Water Disposal Has slip-on hose connection .for quick, easy venting into drain. SYRACUSE, N Y. (UPIi -Police reported tint a four-car accident occurred in the middle of a local automobile dealer's showroom. Glenn Burdick, owner of the] agency, said a mechanic was work- ] ing under the hood of a car parked; The mechanic apparently crossed the starting wires and the car, parked in reverse, bolted through] a plate glass window and into the other three cars. Damage was estimated at $1,000. ] There were no injuries. Better Arrive* Too Lola; Proprietor Is Arrested BOSTON 0* dCt\ is Uwsrot onlyH ¥*”lj in the thfeatricaixnl a' -X J| field, but in sochOl life, at home and ^W in business. It is j one of the secrets f JrT of not getting in lyR/ bad with y o u r * stomach.'’ BOYLE Berle is a man who practices wforf he preaches. During a recent luncheon he was interrupted by a series of telephone calls. At each he erupted as regularly as a geyser. Get Guaranteed Protection ...HOMART 3 1 Shingl Beautiful HOMART Insulating Siding Low ad Msg. ft. Chars* » Never needs painting. Cuts fuel, cooling bills. Sears Installs with 10-year guarantee on labor and materials. Installation arranged for! "Everybody thinks I'm Alexander Graham Beil,' he grumbled. But he currently is in a State of personal euphoria and wide good, will. Next month be acts as host on a bowling program. ‘‘I’ve made so many comebacks I couldn't count them," he remarked cheerfully "This is something new in my career, but I've been a sports enthusiast all my life." no goal Left At 52, a veteran of 42 years in: show business, the fast-talking comic says he has no real professional goal left to conquer. COMPLETE INSTALLATION ARRANGED Adjustable Pitch Step Railing Chars* » For safer steps and beauty! Sturdy metal construction, 31-ln. high. Easy to Install. 8.95 Railing, t-ft....SJS He has starred in vaudeville, movies, radio and television, and he is still one of the nation's highest-paid night club performers. , Average for 24xS0*ft. House —1/3 Pitch Hexagon Shingle Roof, 24x30x%_____________ A lifetime contract with the National Broadcasting Co. guarantees him a six-figure income annually until 1980. "I kept a copy of every routine I ever did, and I’ve done thousands," he said, flicking the ashes from a fat TH-inch cigar. He says he smokes or gives away 25 of these expensive cigars a day. w hich makes bis annual bill in the neighborhood of $10,000. Up to 36 Months to Pay on Sears Modernizing Credit Plan You’ve never realized how beautiful your home can really look until you see your roof covered with HOMART 3-in-l shingles! Only top-grade raw materials are used to insure maximum weather protection for your family and possessions. FREE Estimate Ask Sears about your own particular roofing needs. There’s no obligation. Do it now! Call FE 5-4171 : “I believe 1 have one of the' largest joke files in the world. It has about 2Vj» million cards on which are cross-indexed between eight and 10 million jokes. HOMART GUARANTEE covers repair or replacement of defective materials or workmanship on Sears-installed roofing for a 10-YEAR period. Homart Aluminum Combination /Door SS Dm - 3195 Never needs painting, all necessary hardware Included Screen Insert, piano hinge. Grille and initial extra. Other 1-tn. doors 29.88 to 54.95. SPECIALS 59c Ceramic wall tile yellow, aqua, pink ,49e 34c Plastic waU tile ...29c 28x98 Fiberglas panels.......... 8.98 “I rarely use it myself—I keep about 200,000 jokes ready in my head—but I’ve made it available free to young comics coming up. and I've willed it to the Library' of Congress." Many people have wondered bow he has stayed on top so many years, but Berle, still as brash! “400’’ Electric Glass^Lined Tank Water Heaters Homart “400” Gas Furnace Bonn Totals Count on Russian Spies 15 Down Wrap around element heats water faster. Thick insulation holds heat, cuts electric hjils. Fully automatic. Glass lined tank guaranteed 12 years. 810 trade-in allowance when installed on Detroit Edison Lines. BONN, Germany (APi—A total ' of 1,270 Communist secret agents surrendered voluntarily to West: German authorities in the first six! months of this year, the govern-' ment reported today. A spokesman said West German courts sentenced 1,799 spies for East bloc nations between Aug. 30, 1951, and the end of 1959. An additional 17,182 agents were caught but were not punished for: compassionate reasons or because' they readily confessed their guilt, he said. NO MONEY DOWN Single gallon Replace that old furnace with this efficient Homart "400” unit. 80,000 B.T.U. capacity Is perfect for the average home. Call for a FREE estimate and receive your Indoor-outdoor thermometer. Save at Sears! 198,8H B.T.U..........1199 Deeor-eze Floor' and Trim Paint East German' security officials who defected said the Communist bloc currently is using 16,000 agents in West Germany and West Berlin, and that this number is being maintained despite the yearly loss of 2.400 to 2.800 agents, the spokesman reported. Choose from 8 smart colors to give good protection to floors and trim at a very low price. In Light Gray. Oak, Green. Dark Gray, Rust Red. Brown. Save at 8ears! Shop tomorrow ’til 9. Installation Can Be Arranged for Also! FREEZER SALE! Our Beat Mark n lf)083 ^ Jet Pump ****m Regularly at $112.90 m Saw* ’» H P. delivers 50^ more water pressure than Industry standard. Self priming. Equally efficient in shallow or deep wells. Extremely dependable. Save wt-Sears! ■ ■—■■■■ ’,-H.F. let Pump, Lm Jet ...............1MJ8 All Homart Furnaces INCLUDE ELEC BLANKET At No Extra Cost! Famous Make UPRIGHT FREEZER *169" Free Blanket Included With Homart Gas Furnace Work master 7-in. Roller Set 100,000 B.T.U. . $270 120,000 B.T.U. . .$299 16 28.95 12.81 7.60x15 L 30.45 } 17.31 Free* Tire Installation Shop Friday Nile ’til 9 ATTENTION all stop-start light delivery men TYREX TIRE AT LOW PRICES Express “55” ~M XX *** JL «' Pl-Vax NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED 6,70*16. ..... t..21-88 plus tax w 6.50^16. . . .23.88 phis tax ' 7.06x15. .....29.88 plus tax O Perfect in the city traffic or suburban roads • gmer strong Tyrex cord takes constant road poundings O Tough trend and sidewall resists cutting, tearing 1 ? a ft * i :/' _ "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS • Hundreds of extra traction edges in the tire tread help prevent skids in all directions • 20-month nationwide road hazard guarantee • Made with super strong tyrex cord construction • High mileage “emulsamix” precision blended rubber 154 N. Saginaw Strteet Phone FE 54171 NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED Tabe-Type BlackwaU Bay lat The at i ne trade-in price phn tax Get tnd tire at this low price plas tax 6.70x15 19.95 7.81 7.10x15 22.45 9.31 7.60x15 23.95 13.81 Tabe-Type Whitewall * 6.70x15 23.95 9.81 7.10x15 26.45 11.31 7.60x15 | 27.95 15.81 Adjusts to All Temperatures and Speeds for Better Engine Protection 10-Qt. Charge It Enjoy the benefits of multi-grade oil at economy price ... only 28c a qt. in 10 quart can! Highly detergent to prevent power-robbing sludge, carbon, acid and varnish. Change to ALLSTATE. 12-Volt Allstate 15.95 •MiHMMr Reg/ IMS! Has ample power for accessories. Charge It at Sears. 6-Volt Battery 12.95 Reg. 15.95! Guaranteed 30-months! Save at Sears! ALLSTATE ALLSTATE Spark Plugs Charge It 0 for ^49 Shock Absorbers Chargo It 498 Long life electrodes, giant spark for better gas mileage, faster pick-up. Enjoy smoother, safer ride. ALLSTATE shocks are equal to or better than originals. Bonded Brake Linings 1^88 Expertly Installed FOR MOST CARS Exchange 4 Wheels Be sure you can stop quickly! Get complete brake service at Sears — parts are reasonably priced — workmanship guaranteed. 25,000 mile guarantee on linings. MORE QUIET POWER more gas economy, more zinc for longer life . . . More power . . . free flow design lessens back pressing. 1/3 heavier, zinc costed steel guards against acid, rust. Fbrd Fair!. ’55-56 . 9.99 2[dreary ’55-56 .......13.99 hsvrolet ’54-56 .....9.99 Piym., Dodge ’55-59 10.48 vWaO 1894 aaS Later Model Can ONLY CULVER $so.oo TT GENUINE HSOI8TSHBD \eepsaKg OUR GRAND OPENING IS COMING ... WATCH FOR ANNOUNCEMENTS! 'MICHIGAN'S LAMES! JEWELERS' SIXTEEN/ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. AUGUST 25, 1960 The Famo^ Robert Hall Back-to-School Jamboree at both salesrooms! DIXIE HIGHWAY (U.S. 10) JUST NORTH OF WATERFORD HILL PONTIAC: 200 North S^nowSftMt^ , a— WITH THIS COUPON ONLY—August 26-27 Shoe Repair Special! HALF SOLES Genuine Oak ^ d* mm Leather or Com- C g Q position Sole) Sewed on While You Wait or Shop Servica BARGAIN all work cc*ftANTE£D Fri. and Sot. Only S. S. KRESGE'S JULIET $575.00 Abo $500 Is 2475 Wedding Ring $175.00 RIDLEY Wadding Ring $125.00 *225 WELDON Wadding Ring '6*7.50 *300 24 NORTH SAGINAW STREET Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Lucille Ball in Hospital for Minor Foot Surgery NEW YORK (UPI) - Television end movie star Lucille Ball is in New York Polyclinic Hospital for minor surgery. CENTURY *100 Wadding Ring $62.50 Wedding Ring Modest or magnificient, your Keepsake diamond ring Wilhbe of the finest quality. You can be sure of true and honest value for the price you pay. Come in soon and see our grand selection in all price ranges. DIXIE HIGHWAY (U.S. 10) JU$T NORTH OF WATERFORD HILL * THE NEW ROBERT HALL CLOTHING CENTER IS OPEN FOR PREVIEW SHOPPING! Yds, we've opened our doors so thousands moro could got « in our fabulous clothing values for boy and girls# - ^L^lReaction to ‘Manipulation’ Slow surgery on her right toot, probably f would be out of the hospital in a a Jf [Easy Money About two million bicycles are Or Or sold annually In the U.S. .1 Trend Pokes Along Average 30 yard job includes Genuine Allen Rubberized Pad and tackltss installation. $17995 Payments as low at $6.20 per maittlr “Phone Vs! We'll bring samples. See Actual Samples In Your Home!" MILL FLOOR COVERINGS FE 4-2778 Noun: Open Daily 9:30 la 5:39 Monday—Thursday—Friday 'lit 9 P.M. "Free Parking in the rear" •I SOUTH SAGINAW STREET CORNER AUBURN AVE. By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (API—How far and how fast will the trend toward easier money ipread? Short-term interest rates turned downward months ago. The first 'signs of easier mortgage terms [have been reported. But It was only this week that the banks took [ the first step toward making business borrowing cheaper. The stock market greeted the jcut in basic interest charges by many top U.S. banks as a promise Convict. Ex-Con in Sex Slaying Killed 11-Year-Old Girl Jury Launches Probe of Perversion Causes BOONVILLE, Ind. (UPI) - Ex-Convict Emmett Hashfield has hem indicted on first-degree mur-der charges in the sex slaying of Avril Tfency, 11. last week. A WarricklCounty grand jury Wednesday returned the indictment charging Hashfield, 53, with premeditating the kidnaping and slaying of Avril, the daughter a Boonville physician. The jury then launched a citterns’ probe of the causes 1 and cares of sexual perversion. The panel ordered nine civil leaders to act as sn Investigating committee to examine the problem. that easier money would needle a sluggish economy. The bulls saw it as inspired by government fi-. nancial agencies and aimed at getting business on the go again. But many brokers aren’t so sure that the easier money trend will spread to all bank borrowers soon. The cut to 4‘ j per cent'from 5 per cent was in the prime rate, And that is afforded only to a relatively few of the biggest corporations with the best credit ratings. These are the ones that are said to ; suffer least when money is tight and dear. ★ * , The majority of bank loans are made at higher rates. And each bank—'with aft eye on what his competitor is doing — determine how prime a customer is and how much he should pay far whatever money the bank is able and willing to lend him. Even the charmed circle- of those enjoying the prime, or lowest. interest charge is subject to contraction in times of tight money, or to expansion when the banks have idle money on their hands they need to put to work. BANKS LOANED UP Many banks complain that they j are loaned up at present. This is especially true in some booming sections, such as the Pacific Coast, where bankers are saying there’s no slackening in demand for loans and no reason for them to cut interest charges. And lending conditions and rates are often quite different in the big cities and the smaller ones. While these banks may drop the prime rate, they dan prune the prime list. And some spy they may. I The Federal Reserve Board has taken pains to see that the banks as a whole have more money they can lend. It has tfrici cut the costs of borrowing such money from its banks, once in June and again this month. And between today and next Thursday it is relaxing various bank reserve requirements so that in all some 600 million dollars more will be made available. These added reserves Could be used to swell loajts by about billion dollars. , This should come in handy, since demand for business loans normally turns upward fit the tall as factories borrow to produce and retailers to carry stocks lor the Christmas trade. And tbe banks will find, it handy in bolstering their profits. Some see the added supply of lendable funds and the expected increase in demand for loans bringing in enough to offset any cut in interest charges likely in the next few months. But for the banks’ customen the question still is: When can I get money cheaper and how much cheaper? For the lucky few on the prime list the answer is a cut of one-half of one per* cent right now. In terms of earnings this means a drop of one-quarter of one per cent, since corporations charge off Interest costs before splitting earnings with the U. S. Treasury roughly 5030, Kor the majority of bank borrowers the answer is; It depends oft the conditions where you are located, on your bank’s opinion of your credit rating, and whether it is already loaned up or has some idle money to lend. Prosecutor Fred L. Mock said! Hashfield would be arraigned Sept. I 20 in Circuit Court. He will be defended by Jack Broadfield, an Indianapolis attorney. Broadfield agreed to represent Hashfield after several other lawyers turned down the case. Hashfield has served lour terms in Indiana penal institutions for sex crimes against children. Police Spend Three Days on Nutty Matter JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP) -Police Sgt. W. G. Mintz spent three days tracking down a man at the'request of a Sylvania, Ga., resident. ^ The Georgian. In a letter, said he needed to locate the man on a very important matter. \ j\ “Oh, yes," the man told the po-lie^sergeant when he finally was :focatMb\‘I know what he wants. He sells perans to me each year and wants to kftow if I want any.” MICHIGAN'S LARGEST JEWELERS" Weddtog Ring $175.00 BALDWIN *400 FRAYER'S 17th ANNIVERSARY Park of Our Door SPECIALS Open Eros. 'til 9:00 Sat."'til 6:00 PRICE TVI2«2*g. In. plctare. Taft# Guard. “Ona-Sat’’ fine tuning. Stereo lack. 4 fMehoe. 210-M9. With Tr*4o We Have fht Finest Selection of RCA VICTOR COLOR TV IN THE ENTIRE AREA SALE Priced TO SELL REAL FAST! NO CASH DOWN ON ANY SET IN EITHER STORE TERMS TO SUIT YOU! DON'T LOOK AT THAT OLD SET ANOTHER MINUTE Buy Now! The HARPER. Magnificent wood raw »Hneay. U1 •q. to picture. 11% brighter picture. Lfaded with excluwre RCA Vic tar feetarw. Como in a tick Mahogany fiaiah. Available is walnut, cherry end oak — alight!, more. Model 210-K-2H. touch. Glow _______________________ nut, cherry end oak weed cabinet* •lightly more. Many extra-valut per- . formaace feeturee. Model 2I0-K-J1J. f And Many Afore Exceptional Value: on the Entire 1960 Television Line! I ■ - - oca v/cron nor. con/, iwve« 1 rca Victor . .. the most trusted name in television FRAYER’S FURNITURE and APPLIANCES 589 Orchard Lake Ave. PONTIAC • FE 4-0526 4410 Dixie Hwy. DRAYTON »\ OR 4-0415 MAMMRMtoWIWIMl CARPET SUMMER SPECIALS tSSgtfSi aX«HM \ji cW><*r*n „«on'P0" _ Our reg. 7.99 Boy’s two-in-one REVERSIBLE ZIP-JACKETS; SEVENTKEir ... L,^. ■ , . 1 ^ THB PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, i960 _____:______p- “% Back-toschool JAMBOREE '• Washable! Water-repellent! • Colorful knit roll collars! • 2 slash pockets on each side! • Green, gold, blue, gray! • Sizes 6 through 18! Special purchase! OUR REG. 2.89 GIRLS’ DRESSES Best-quality woven combed cotton! Costly details! Wide-swinging skirts! Lace trims, ric-rac,vbelts, pockets! Bolero-looks, weskit and 2-pc. effects! ' All guaranteed machine-wash-and-wear! Bright colors! Newest plaidslrf-li BOYS' WASHABLE SLACKS REO. 2.89 & 3.99 EACH 2tf-$5 Sanforized Cottons! HaniMbl OUR REG. 1.89 BOYS' SPORT AND DRESS SHIRTS 3for$5 $ Our Regular 1.89 GIRLS’ SHIRTS 2 for • Finest-quality woven combed cottons! • Costly tfnbroidered monogrammed styles! ' * Pleated fronts! Tucks! Lace trims! • French cuffs! Roll-up styles! Long sleeves! • All machine washable—easy care! • Buy ftto—save plenty! Sizes 7-14! SEE OUR TREMENDOUS SELECTION OP SUB-TIEN DRESSES AND SPORTSWEAR I and sateemi Adjustable ridb tabor Ivy »tyleal Olive, Hook, ton or utelopel DOLLAR- SAVING SPECIALS! • 2-ply rayon flanaeb... amartly detailed, Quality tailored in the new trim atyleiObve argttjrafcedn. including wodi’n » Lot and abort lUevarl • Du River plaids! Knits! • Madras cheek*! Novelties! • Lot ilaava wfaito draw ahirtal > Sixee 6 through 181 ONUS' NEWEST RICH WOOL SCHOOL GIRLS’ FULLY-LINED CORDUROY SKIRTS Pkid! SofeUPlKtol 089 SUCKS, p^SoUilAO 4)89 , Circlet! 7-14 „ O WAshablel 7-14 A GIRLS' MIRACLE-fMRR WASHABLE *^f*ATIRS Brushed Orion*. bulkies, Ben Iona! 8*14 4 BOYS' RAMCOATS WITH MATCHING Buckled front, corduroy collar! 6-14 OUR NEW SALESROOM: PIXIE HIGHWAY 4U.S.-10) JUST NORTH of WATERFORD HILL PONTIAC 200 NORTH SAGINAW STREET MU'S WHY PRICES ARE LOW AT ROBERT HAIL * W« toll for cosh only I • No high rontsl • No fancy fixtures) * No show windows! £r • IVItv FLOOR AIR-CONDITIONER "I'm interested in getting television across the ocean, but I guess the time to that event must be measured In years,” Jakes said. 32". assy to Inflate. Many uses including station wagon bad. ONLY AND TAKE 6 LONG MONTHS TO PAY jJL ^$u|| cSj^ 18 N. SAGINAW STREET mmmm AND YOU CAN CHARGE IT AT THE HUB Rsrsraibla rayon and wool.•'* 9 by 12 ft. ROOM StZE BRAID RUGS 39.95 Value Only * Mir These beautiful rugs are perfect In traditional or con. temporary settings.. ,ydir» for only $27ICho*m yours with green, or rod dominant colon. Rovoralble'for twice the wear .*% . else Is approximate. -t - Wait*'i fags .. . Devastate EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1960 Want to Bounce TV Signals Around Earth Space-Talking Scientists Just Beginning HOLMDEL, N J. (UPI) — The i more weeks. “Even if It deflates I pleased with the results of-the re-two scientists who probably have •“»- *» «*«»» *»***• may still ley message testing so far, and be useful to us,'' Victor said, |hopes the testing can continue tor At Hbhndel, Jakes is equally [quite some time. held telephone conversations via outer space than anyone else say their early talks are only the beginning. If the recently launched Echo I communications satellite balloon stays on course for a few more weeks, the men hope to do even more talking. They also have their sights set oh boundng television signals around the earth. Up naen are wmiam C. Jakes Jr.. S8, engineer Is charge of the scientific sad technical teem I at the Bah Telephone laboratories here and Walter Victor, else SS, section chief of communications at GoMotone, Calif. Since the 10-stoty radio mirror balloon was launched from Cape Canaveral by the National Aeronautics and Space Agency (NASA) Aug. 12, Jakes and Victor have held frequent telephone conversations across country, by relaying their messages off the balloon, 1,000 miles in outer space. His long-range plans include some day sending television around the earth. The balding scientist, who lives in Middletown, N.J., joined Ben Labs in 1M9, and since that time has been engaged in research on microwave radio antennas and microwave propagation. Last week the scientists participated in the first radio transmission between Europe, and the United States by bouncing a message from Holmdel to Issey. France, and at the beginning of the month they continued with each other via the moon. Tnreday night voice message* and a recording of “America the Beautiful” were transmitted to the Jodrell Bank Experimental Station in England. The main problem the two scientists face right now'is how long will they be able to use the satellite baloon. THREE-WHEELING — Mrs. Calvin Bublin of Point Lookout, N. V., shows how the probleni of airing her triplets was solved —1 three carriages joined together. The middle pram even has an extra seat for the babies’ big sister, 'Therese, 2. Jakes served as an officer in the U.S. Navy during World War II and was concerned with radar maintenance aboard an aircraft carrier. Jakes credits his parents with helping to develop his interest in science. He says his biggest thrill in science to date is “when we heard that first message coming in’! on Aug. 13. He said the first time he talked on the phone via the satellite also “excited” him. When he .isn’t dabbling In extraterrestial messages or in relaying signals off the moon, Jakes likes to take his family to Vermont to j GOOD RECEPTION “So far we’re very pleased about it (the satellite),’’ Victor said in Goldstone. “The quality of the voice is good — at least as good as the telephone lines, and Its better than hi-frequency radio. “The only complaint we have. Is that we eaa’t talk long enough to each ether,” Victor aaUL “We’re nloo wondering how long w« will be able te look at It. The uMIttfi to Is the aon Ml the time, '.aUd noon will be In the earth’s shadow, whet happens then, we don’t know.” Victor and Jakes hope the balloon will stay up for at least two OAKLAND CUT RATE PRICES CHOPPED 37 SOUTH SAGINAW Open Moe.. Thirty PH, fat Until It PJf. Tees, and Wed. Until •— All Day Sunday Fountain Specials Choose o HOT DOG-MALT French Fries tv Shake 19? Reg. 69* DRISTAN For Hoy Fever Suffarers M OUR PRICE 77 KOTEX or MODESS Sanitary Napkins OUR PRICE 29‘ Beg. 49c to S1.9I SUNGLASSES •fcSESS.* 2si Psir FREE I corduroy suit with reversible vest Handsome Pinwale Corduroy in new shades of Olive, Antelope and Ebony ... Ivy tailored with one side of the vest of matching Corduroy to harmonize and the other side in a smart paisley pattern for contrast A great value! SHOP FRIDAY NIGHT TILL GIANT 6-FT. AIR MATTRESS IHM Save on this big, heavy gouge Low Choiica! plastic air mattress I 72" by Loaf Chance! Rtf. 2.99 Sire*! floor Waite’s Notions BACK-TO- SCHOOL SPECIAL! 9-DRAWER SANDED CHEST 29.95 $4 A88 NO 29.95 Value MONEY DOWN Here’s a lot of snug storogo spaco ... in a good looking^ chest that is sanded, ready to varnish, paint or stain, tl” long, 15* daap and 34” high. And just look at th« low, low price! Waita's Hoaaowartf . . . Fifth fleer 26 Imported Deluxe Fleetwing SPORT BIKE 39.95 Values U4 NO MONEY DOWN—Months to Pay! • Chrome Medan • White oldewam • Headlights • Luggage Carrier and kick-stand • Strong frame • Coaster Wake • Ben* or gkfr atyW* Waite’s Bicycle* . . . Downstairs Fri. and Sat. Only! Our own Ambassador. . . spacs saving SLIMLINE 21" TV HO Fringe orea twitch; controls 0 |/l| MONEY grouped at side. Matching ■ Ml DOWN bose .....$7 Deluxe Slimline 17“ Portable, Reg. 159.95 139.95 WMfe’s TT ... Downstair* I POWERFUL 25” ROTARY WITH AUTOMATIC STARTER Not 59.95 ... Not 54.95 .... Not 49.95 Bit $ •Tubular ckrens* handle * | H.P. Brifjga Or Stratton engine SHOP... CHECK... COMPARE... feature for feature you get more for your money... . new at Waite's! "FOCUS" FIBERGLAS RANCH DRAPERIES NSW IMPULSE SELF STARTER m ofieUnof** old Stylo pulling and tagging. MONEY DOWN Months to Pay! 50" wide $/J99 p,. 1 by 45" long O 50 by 63" long................. 7.99 80 by 45" Mag........ - 9.99, 80 by 63" long.......10.99 ^ 100 by 45" long.......... ^.. 4; 12.99 | 100 by 63" long . -.......... fl.99 | Here's o beautiful jyinf that blends with most every y type of furnishings. And you get all the easy cores qualities of fiberglas. . . wash and-dry in 7 minutes, | no ironing) sunfast. They're seamless, too. Choose 1 copper or blue basic colorings. Many sizes, for all I windows!... -......-—— j_______I___:_____■ I Waiter Draperies . . . foerib floor THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1960 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, NINETEEN States Alaska Homesteaders Really Rugged (Mltor’i Note: Thl, U tb« first of two Morin by outdoor, writer Md lecturer Howard Shelley of MS 8mm St.. who this summer mat 28 don n Almsbo. Port of hi, Journey vssj» voak’s stay with IdlchloB * Here.) By HOWARD SHELLEY (Special la The Pontiac Preaa) The foremost item of interest in our recent 2Sday jaunt throughout Alaska was' the week spent living with the Michigan homesteaders, the ’59ers. Following our initial visit to the Susitna Valley is August ^969, we were eager to return and'to learn first-hand of their progress and the number remaining, and to film a story of their pioneering activity. We arrived in Talkeetna, Hie tiny gold-mining supply cotter 113 miles north of Anctorage/oa Aug. 2, and secured the services of ace bush pilot Don Sheldon to fly us across the turbulent waters of the hall-mile wide Susitna River. A quick hop-atep-and-Jump, narrow runway la Shorty Bradley's aata field. The bouncy land-lag caaaed the right deer to fly •pen, aad we wore aprayed with mad and water. A chap from the nearby sawmill hauled us by jeep the remaining two and one-half miles west on the Cache Creek' Road to the homestead of Jerry and Bertha Donald-Kilt was just like repaying a visit to old friends. Instead of staying two days we enjoyed the Donaldson hospitality fur a full week. In turn we visited other homesteaders and learned directly of their trials which I personally prefer celling “the bard knocks of experience,” during their lint Mtetoaring, nearly 25 acres, whtielKula. Steve Panchowitz, Bill Or-| will vastly Improve.the value of 1 through the open hack door. The Marino Sik has upwards of SoJsechowski and Tony Jurasek are hoMtagn. They*U have bear was about SO yards away. The Donaldsons have nearly ^jwith surveying crews, railroad w*y* *° Burtot ttelr V1**10®- and after being struck in the mid- acres, and other somewhat smaller ' ® „ The first morning with the Don- section, collapsed in a heap, areas. building demolitton crews ana on . Mtore Blood wa, everywhere. *5^ ai m various other odd jobs. In the clearing operation, the) The Cache Creek Road will even-bulldozer would push over ti*jtuaJ1 north*** to McGrath, trees, then shove them Into mam-moth piles, or windrows which eventually would be burned. Additional aid. la the form «f of . great help this summer to several of the men. Donaldson and 81k are working for the Alaska Bead OMumlarioo on the gravel road running east and west directly by their homesteads. This pays thus opening up new areas of South Central Alaska, while the newly proposed highway running north from Anchorage to Mount McKinley and Fairbanks has already been surveyed and will run north through some of the homesteaders’ property. A bridge to to he eoastracted arrou the Saattea River at a ■arrow spot aeven mfleo saath, near a whiatle-stop known as 8atoMne. Thl* wtU place the homesteaders within easy driving distance et Anchorage (117 house trailer 75 feet-away, she thoughts was us who already were tip and about. She quickly learned differently- Looking through the small window of the back door, she was lace to face with a blade bear who was standing up and peering through the glass at her. Knowing of my desire for pictures, she tried her best to make us calmly slumbered through the entire episode. GOODBY BEAR Jerry, still sleepy-eyed and in! pajamas, grabbed his 30-06 from ling INDOOR GARDEN—Here Mrs. Jerry Donaldson Blows Mrs. Howard Shelley through their greenhouse. The growing of all vegetables Is started In the greenhouse. They are later transplanted in outdoor plots when the weather permits. Seemed He Would Campaign Nonpartisanly Ike Finally Sets POLITICAL Speech By FRANK ELEAZER I Republican fund raising dinner injhe said he didn't like to be talk-WASHINGTON (UPD — Thank I Chicago, Sept. 29, Hi will talk for goodness President Eisenhower finally has decided to make a political speech dc two in behalf of Vice President Richard M. Nixon. . * * - A - ■ He sayl he will speak at a IJxon again on the eve of election day. ^ It had looked tor awhile like all Bek campaigning for the GOP Octet was going to ha the Accuse College of Press Curbs Studflnt Editors Cite Instances of Violation He and his press secretary, James C. Hagerty, have tried repeatedly to explain to reporters how this typo of campaigning ing all the time. ★ Currently, as I said, he seems like talking. And you can look I was clearing ground for them. His for. him to do a lot more of It—[charge of $25 an hour was dirt mostly »»nqpniiH«-ai jn the best cheap, and many\of the tome-. Anne Wheaton sense of the word steaders were availing themWvw of course,—between now and Nov. [of the opportunity. ~ i Thny.jurasek has the largest! The way the president puts it, he won't actually do much campaigning. But ho will be out a lot making non political speeches between now and Nov. 8. He always smiles when he says this. months in Alaska. I FROM MICHIGAN Presently the homesteaders in [the Susitna Valley comprise 25 in number, of which 20 are . from Michigan. Make no mistake about it, these hardy settlers can qualify as pioneers. Just ask an old-time Alaa-sourdough the meaning of the term, and hfe will quickly state that it Implies, or refers to an outsider, gteenhorn or "Chechako” who has weathered the storm and withstood a full year in the bush, and henceforth is appropriately considered a genuine Alaskan sour- «» ^ ET-ST learned this nom de plume. | CMItiBae tat* mid-September. Thetr cooperative efforts of j Rubino |s doing carpenterl _J ■ —---------■- the test summer brought about |work in Talkeetna, while Ray! miles) sad the outside world, and (the wall rack and fired discouragement la some aad a ' fighting spirit la others. This resulted In their agreeing te disagree, and the originally Intended cooperative phase of the venture thus ended last fall. Now, each homesteader is primarily on his own. However, they still trade labor, borrow much needed items, and visit their neighbors much as before. A A A The first exceedingly difficult year in the bush has taught them many things. They have definitely proved that things will grow in the Susitna Valley. It was heartening to see their well-tended gardens. Each family has its own greenhouse—usually built of logs, with transparent plastic for the roof. The warming winter sun does wonders. Seeds are planted as early as late February and early March, and nearly every vegetable common to Michigan is found growing in Alaska also. Both Mrs. Donaldson aad Carol Sik enjoyed fresh onions sad radishes by mid-May. Thetr larger outside gardens are presently producing quite well and will continue doing so through early October. An excellent crop of green peas whs gathered dur-tag pur visit, f 1 j Gearing the; land is without a doubt their most difficult task. iiy -hand, it is/alow, tedious, and almost back-breaking. A gold mining engineer with a huge bulldozer atdsons found excitement galore. | Blood was everywhere. While Bertha rose at 6:30 upon hearing Jerry was hurriedly changing into a noise at the back door. Ihis clothes, Mr. Black Bear Since we were sleeping in the'bounced up and scrambled out of the clearing. Turn days later, neighbor Danny EhsreU missed three sboU at a black tear' after It had poked Its head Inside Ms cabin door and then fled Into the bush. Another morning, three, tiny black bear cubs scampered across the narrow gravel trail directly in front of us. Seldom does a day go by that moose are rot seen. Incidentally, the Susitna Valley is presently considered on a par with the famed Kenai Peninsula as be- and Ruth Shelley is Mrs. Jerry a Michigan ’59er. The photo was taken In front of the Donald- where the Michigan home- -EXsEKilS- Carload Purchase f Freedom Principles HNNEAPOUS, Minn. (UPI) -ident editors have accused four leges of violating freedom ol - press and charged the nation's % services with unfair news atment. Just a few mornings age Hagerty, who has proved Ms ability to expiate anything from the federal budget to tieitto, was further trying to straighten us tudent editors at the U. S. N» •1 Student Association (USNSA) gross approved a resolution inesday accusing the colleges, i in the east and two in the Iwest, of violating student press ha wire services, a resolution 1, has been guilty of “rough'd gad biased” reporting, par-■larly 1a connection with sit-in at Nashville, iul Dubrul, former editor of Student Arrow at Hunter Colin New York, said wire serv-reporters favored eegregation heir coverage of the story. » four colleges criticized were ter, and Brooklyn College of r York, the University of oia and Rooeevcdt University, He said the President would make throe nonpolitical speeches on Sept. 26. Ike will fly that morning to Philadelphia to address some accountants and some educators. And he wUl proceed to New York to speak that night to a charity dinner. GOOD OV ANNE That afternoon Hagerty was out of the office. His assistant, Mrs. Anne Wheaton, took 'over his chores. Somebody asked her whether the White House was ready to announce yet any of the president's plans for political speeches. "None beyond those Mr. Hager-toy told you about this morning.” she rested. Honest, open-faced Anne, we call ago. resolutions, the student ed- iaid Associate Editor 'Harvey er had been dismissed from Brooklyn College Paper f o Otto reason the ooesn i na ■* >■«• >® get Mt on the hustling*, at he puts It, to that a president can always • pm* OTHIOTCUUC. swwua Baa held three te three weeks rince returning from Mo vacation la Newport, R.I. -tt - _ In some nonelection years -bej !W*lyn.. hasn’t displayed quite this enthus- m of the college admlnistra- ™ ^ ^ uke ^ «* i a column. • * . *___ .. . „ president Truman, in his seven ibapproved 1 tMfittte white house, met the rf 1^ Uo KodisgjJJJ ^ t[meu fa, « little [goal for advocating conrn ,o wd ggg press 1 B» this week^hebl — «k« oac, i. j»- explaUi«J o. . c* n grounds « woum oe whv he doesn’t set tiy” tor the school. I IHU BA|HW»WM am. w - ' WW " 1 of occasions why he doesn’t set himself a regular schedule of, say, one press conference weekly. never Mke to conform taa much,” he *ald once. “And Just to my that one particular day - .,^1 each week I am gulag M ha te irglars who entered a^dte ^ ^ the -------- Hire Wedtoreday and filled ^ Too Much Loot :e Workers to Help S8APEQUA, N. Y. (UPD - giurc npmjMr-r. — Unto ssrt at pate me down.” .......j i’’Now I> have tio objection, * ttem solved thelkiM as we have got the time and Smething else isn’t on my mind, found three cleanup menj1 ^ ,?bjectk,n to doto* tt writing automobile «uttf flrt.lp«rfiy * 2 fori Mattress and Box Spring - BOTH FOR 95 Complete Never before a bargain in bedding like thisl Dobbs purchased a carload from Simmons, maker pf Beauty Rest,' ih order to bring this tremendous value to you. A full 39" twin size mattress and matching box spring, both for one low price—$49.95 complete. These famous Sirpmons-iftattresses feature multi-coil construction, pre-bullt borders, and heavy, durable striped covers. For quality, for comfort, for economy these? sets are your best buy. See them today! It will pay you to buy 2 sets at this tremendously low money saving price. Comparable savings on Simmons full size and king size mattresses and box springs. Expert Design and Decorating Service Terms to Suit You -rarannre- furniture Bloomfield Hills—2600 Woodward ' K 3-7933 & the panty girdle designed for tiny jwaists and full hips medium length panty girdle Featherllght power net with a 099 dip waist that can’t “roll.*’ /, White 1 nsizes XS-S-M and L. Beg. 3.98 Charge It long leg mesh panty girdle Soft mesh leg bends mold thighs gently. Power net with dip waist. White in sizes S-M and L. Reg. 4.98 Ch Corsair? Dipt.. Second floor Teen Creation Come be charmed by our collection of tiny coiffure toppers. See how alluring these cut-out caps, shells, profiles, pillboxes in rayon velvet or feathers look on you. Black or jewel-tones with flattering vetting. At one low price so you can buy several. Mftteery Dost. Nate flow Chart* H .....1X7 1W St. Phone FE 54171 TWENTY PONTIAC PRESS* THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, I960 | Arab Nations Will Seek Help Whodunit Writer Starts Chills «To° With chimrt I PARIS (AP)-W. Averell Harri-man, former U.S. ambassador to Moscow, says V. M. Molotov Is ice. while s deliriously cold shiver races up the spine. To Call V OI U n te • r S wmAJS aATTELLE , And men are touchy about thatfhsve, he admitted, “taken s week ... At • NEW YORK - It is hot andlsort of thing. |or more to write.’ , | -l . to Join Algor ions humkt upper lip j, more The philosophical Mr. Gardner) h> Ms lectures Gardner^pointed Comes TOO Cleon, Jailed out, he takes pau» to advise an Against France pretty good." On hot, humid days, we always think back fondly on that meeting wttti Erie Stanley Gardner . • ■ being removed as Soviet ambas-feellng our hands and feet go to to La -All- m rf.H^—1%, /vilH .hivor *aQOr W UWer he was getting We friendly wtth Red China. Molotov hat been assigned to the International Atomie Energy Commission headquarters SHTAURA. Lebanon (AP) - collar, and the eyes have given Nine Arab League nations have over their glow to the nose, and agreed to call for volunteers to;the only thing dry is the palate, help the Algerian rebels fight) All in all, an excellent day for France, but they balked at a rebel murder, demand that the Arab world sever This was the rather macabre all ties with the French. |oplnion of Erie Stanley Gardner The Arab League Council wound jwhen, ** *5® •om* up debate Wednesday on appeals -«* «•“» * gratifying X actio, by the A4erianW^l to^b^®thecOOVer' hm gone the way of the .torched Pldr-uP ^ Ji£^te *« collar and the eves have civen the hot months, he often does hls!^ JZ. w. rn.inA.Mrf a«rf was years ago. "I tamed eat my first book. The Cano at the Velvet Claws,’ la tVj days, bat I*ve slowed dewa "Save yea ever thought seriously of getting murdered?” Inquired Mr. Gardner poUtely. "Why. no,” we said. "Not esri ously.” “Perhaps—this is Just a sugges tion, of course—you might. The weather is beastly hot. And you know wbat hot weather does to | the murder ratio, don’t your sioaal government and agreed to two other pleas from Foreign Minister Krini Belkacem: 1. TV> intensify efforts tn the United Nations Assembly to get self-determination for Algeria, 2. To “exert effective diplomatic efforts with aB friendly countries” for early recognition of the Algerian rebel government. Tbe Arab foreign ministers also; agreed to warn the North AtlanticjInadvertently, he glanced at the) Alliance of “grave consequences” e e 111 fl g. “Goes up,” he said, of French use of (NATO! arms “Rather sharply.’’ against the Algerians. Belkacem I * * *• V had wanted the league to go tarth-j The literary papa of Perry er and force evacuation of FrenchJ&iason and one of America's, most and NATO troops from Arab [prolific authors of “whodunits”— states. although, in the literate Gardner’s . i, ■ ■ -■ case, “whodidthems” is preferred Erni a:m | auanad —went on to warn that women are f-ra» BIOS Lessened p^tJcularly susceptible to murder PORTLAND. Ore. (AP)-Sigma [between tbe ages of 25and 35. Nu fraternity baa approved a Not to being murderers, he qualified easing of its ban on ad-[hastened to explain. But to im. one day be murdered. And those based only on the inspiration, you see. But be a notj w . nearly as fast now (at 72) as be KN0WN murder8- mission of Negroes and Orientals. The fraternity's high council may now waive the ban when a chapter’s existence is threatened by university antidiscrimination rules. These are critical ages, because 'at these times women are more inclined to rebuke one man once 'too often.” Two Flavors—Whisky, Cognac Candies Stagger British LONDON (UPI>—Candies with a kick—up to 11.7 proof— reportedly art Jolting sales upward tn Britain and raising fears among temperance leaders that youngsters will develop new exotic tastes. - ★ * ★ The Dally Mirror said the new sweets, imported from Italy, are sold in two new nippy flavors In candy stores— whisky at 11.7 proof and cognac at 9.7 proof. The alewholic content has been tested by aa offi- . ctol analyst whs verified the strength. Three pocks of the whisky candy are the equivalent to i two fluid ounces of whisky. Three and a half of the cognac flavor will give the sweet-toothed customer the same Jolt aa two ounces of brandy. Each pack has 10 pieces of candy. If a easterner eats only one piece of the eegaae candy, he win have taken in the same amount of alcohol | as ho weald get In a half-plat of very strong beer. The Mirror said Britalh’s candy store owners have been j warned by the eandy's Importers and temperance leader! -nothing equals the genuine ZERO KING GOAL COAT We’d he** to offer you anything but the genuine Zero King Goal Coat, because the Goal Coat’s got It all! The big, button down knit shawl collar of 100% wool, the big 8” button-op aide vents, end tbe casual continental ahoulder. It's corduroy-by Crompton—ruggedon the outside i; and plaid-blanket warm on tbe inside . . . it's the genuine $££95 Zero King Goal Coat. 106 N. SAGINAW Opfit Friday /HI 9 P. M. Many of tbe Perry Mason novels “There are a beck of a lot more murders that people don’t know anything about. For instance, lot of deceased people, if dug up and examined, would be found to be full of arsenic. ‘So you’d be surprised,” Robert J. Mott washing his clothes | Watermelons are grown com-In a self-service laundy — stark mercially in 22 states, naked. Taken to court dressed tn| the still wet clothing, ELKO, Nev. (AP)—Police found in Vienna, Sales of snow-type tires during 1969 totaled 5.4 million units compared with -4.6 million the year Dost Control MA 4-4521 EM 3-0203 comparison days! shop and compare ... you’ll find you can’t beat Sears for values ! Kerrybrooke sweaters light -as-a-thistle pullovers regularly 5,98 Q88 9-P Charge It bulky knit jackets J.88 A Charge It Regular 6.98 Softly styled with push-up sleeves and many collar styles. A sweater-jacket is as flattering as It Is newsmaking. Many colors and stripes to choose from. Sizes 34 to 40. lottos' Heady-lo-Weor. Second floor nylon specials Royal Purple reg. 98c mesh seamless CHARGE IT For the smart bare leg look. Misty sheer 1J yet tang mu Can run up, not Royal Beige, 8and. _ 8*ve at Sears! wearing. Ci down, non reg. 98c teen’s stretch nylons Cheek These Jc PLYWOOD j m-tt 4’xr Shwt...... ** BDKH—% 4' x I’ ftwt. .«We «|. 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Ideal for fashions that will mate stay your wardrobe. Hurry to Sears for your share of these fabulous buys. In 54-In. width. "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” TgE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 23. I960_ TWENTY-ONE A COFFEE BREAK—A Help Prevent Files" . sign is stuck on a tree as a trio of fire fighters takes time out for coffee Tuesday in the Hobart Mills community ip Nevada County, Northern AT niMu California. .Fires in the Sierra Mountains Wednesday were being contained as volunteer armies of men banded together to extinguish the various blazes. Money Scare Rocks Korea Bank False Alarm £ofc • Off Rumors of Exchange • of Army Scrip SEOUL IUPD — A false alarm 'ef.theft at a U. S. bank here last night started a black-market "bear raid" on U S. Army scrip, reducing Its value nearly TS per cent before tbe mistake was ditcoimgL * ★ ♦ When the burglar alarm at the Bank of America’s branch in U.S. Army Headquarters sounded about 7 p.ra. all the headquarters gates were dosed and no one was allowed to enter or leave until investigators determined that the alarm bells were set off by faulty wiring. Outside, a rumor that the Army was calling In the scrip that UA ■old ten hem we ter money raced through the streets. Be-reaas hnliliag quantities of the enets money barimed to change It at aha sot any price. The pries of a scrip “dollar" plummeted from 1.150 Korean hwan to 000 it the height of the scare, but by noon today It was back up to 1,000. * * * The Army periodically calls fat its scrip and issues substitute certificates to curb black-market activities involving the special currency. About half the population of pi a d e up of Indonesians Surinam in South America is Hindustani. PARK JEWELER’S SPECIAL 50Pf*c« Nationally Advertised SILVERWARE SET Sarvka for 8 PARK JEWELERS I lu. 1 N. SAGINAW Colls Jack 'Foundering' Father of New Frontier WASHINGTON (UPI)-Rep. Wil-| ham E. Miller, R-M.Y., has called | Democratic presidential nominee John F. Kennedy the "foundering fattier of the new frontier.” Kennedy has used the "new frontier” term in his speeches. Miller, Chairman of the Republican Congressional Committee, said the Senate defeat of the Democratic medical care plan for the aged "proves conclusively Kennedy’s lack of leadership over Ms own party.” - Special OF THE WEEK Standard Spark Flags 39 Each, in sets uf 4 or more. Tested and guaranteed for 10,000 miles. LB02-« A8-10-H 162 N. Saginaw St. V. R. CHRISTENSEN boys' or girls* 26-in., regularly 52-98— boys’ or girls’ 24-in., regularly 49.98 j. G Higgins 24 and 26-inch Bikes merlcan built for rugged use and ears of fun. 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Sizes 2 to CZ. / reg. 1.29 Honey- a beau knit shirts i Charge It 99* * Satisfaction goaranteid or yonr money back* SEARS Cotton shirt with plack- | et dollar, long sleeves,' 1 taped reinforced' neck. f Assorted stripes, solids. f: 2-6x. Save at fiearai a 154 N, Saginaw Phone FE 54171 TH$ PONTIAC PRESS,- THURSDAY, AUGUST. 25, 1060 IPERSAVWJSLEFT! SUMMER Suits «.IT THtY GO AT ONUT need the money. --2 ,B,rN«^dS^r-r ""II1 . nr^tfht Suits Stta. S***" ^as»*T „rf _ Get Your* CHARCt 'T 0,1 ^ ITg Repeat - ftiy /Votr rhik You Con Sore So Much l TWgXTV-Tivo Reich Socialist Party Nominates Presidium Picks Brandt to Oppose Adenauer in November Election BONN. GERMANY (UP!)—The opposition Socialist party nominated West Berlin Mayor WiUy Brandt Wednesday to oppose Chancellor Konrad Adenauer in next year’s West German elections. - * * - The 46-year-old mayor was named by the presidium, of executive committee, of the socialist party at a three-day meeting and is expected to be confirmed at a party convention in Hannover in November. Brandt promptly accepted the the M-year-oid Adenauer who haa served as cbaaeellar sace INF. The Socialist leadership also nominated Carlo Schmid, vice president of the Bundestag as its "No. 2 candidate" but did not specify the office Schmid should seek. f> Mrs.ll Richard M. Nixon will hit the 9 campaign trail on her own again 1 Saturday, flying to Buffalo for the I annual Republican family basket! picnic at the fairgrounds there. * ★ * , As guest of honor at the Affair, II the wife of the Republican presi-1 dentiai nominee will make a short! talk of greeting in the afternoon. If ■artier, upon arrival at i Buffalo airport Mrs. Nixon wtfi J| meet with women reporters, the | vice president’s campaign headquarters announced. She will go from there to the P fairgrounds grandstand building for [I a noon luncheon with about 1001 members of the Federation of Re* publican Women’s Clubs, Then in advance of the 2 p.m. political speaking program hi I which she will take part, Mrs. Nix*|| on will ride in an open car fo greet the thousands of picnickers expected at the fairgrounds. : She plans to fly back to Washington in late afternoon. Natives Dub Echo 'Star* 1 NEW YORK (AP)—Natives ofi New Guinea have dubbed die U.S.U balloon satellite Echo the "Amer-1 ican Star,” says a Seventh-Day I Adventist church official recently I returned from that Pacific island, f Presidents Zachary Taylor and I jJames Madison were second cous-jf Bar nett ; Enrollment Up to Maximum at U. of M. ANN ARBOR (UK) — James A. Lends, University of Michigan vice president tor student affairs, said Wednesday enrollment for tbe fall term in some colleges andj schools of the university "has reached its maximum.” He cited die college of literature, science and the arts in particular. Lewis said some well qualified students could still be placed « waiting lists in colleges where the enrollment peak has been reached and would be accepted in case of cancellations by those already enrolled. He said U*M enrollment this tall would total about 24,300—an increase of 300 over last year. Fungus Hay Replace Mice in Cancer Lab EAST LANSING, Mich. (UPD— Mice may be replaced by a common fungus as a means of testing potential cancer deterrents ifjfl technique developed by Michigan; State University scientists proves itself in further tests. The usual method of testing unknown substances is by applying! them to tumor-infected mice. MSUi researchers have tnrmi in prelim-! inary tests, that an easily grown fungus “achyla flagellata" yields quicker indications with less preliminary expense. Korea Seeks Cash SEOUL, Korea (API—Premier! John M- Chang’s new government has asked the United States to! provide 50 million dollars in extra funds to combat a mounting economic crisis. Every delegate to Congress from Hawaii since 1920 introduced statehood bills. Thrifty Folks Opportunity FINAL WEEK of Our 25th Anniversary PLUS—MID-SUMMER INVENTORY CLEARANCE! Everything goes! . . . Our entire stock! And all ot competition-defying prices! Hurry in and get first choice! And as for credit terms . . . you name them. Whatever you need in furniture ■— you will no doubt find it here, marked down to sub-bosement clearance prices. Before You Buy Any Furniture Anywhere - Compare Values Here! You Dollar Will Never Buy More Value! Days or liigef Terms — Up to 24-3040-90 Month — Charge It EASY TO PARK—JUST DRIVE UP OPEN MON., THURS. AND FUI. TIL 9 P.M. I HI-WAY FURNITURE MARL /5J2 WOODWAPD A V£. BIRMINGHAM. M/CH. J 4 MOCKS Ho OF M MAM.«.. . MONTH-END( Clearance! Save on floor samples, odds and ends! Becsuditioued Cut Dowu Upright With Mirror, Refim»h«d. Fro* Deli*«ry .. Beautiful Kimball Piano.............. SAMPLE EBONY SPINET PIANO HAMMOND CONCERT ORGAN, Used HAMMOND WAL CHORD ORGAN, Used HAMMOND TONE CABINET, Used *165°° 190" *495“ *1455“ *895“ *125“ HUMPHRY CLARINET, Used PAN AMERICAN CLARINET>Used RENE DUMONT CLARINET, Used HOLTON CORNET Used GIBSON STEEL GUITAR, Used GIBSON AMP Used HARMONY GUITAR Used Last 3 Days ffi That's all — JUST 3 DAYS MORE to get in on these Big Savings! By all means, come in . . . pon't be sorry you missed these terrific bargoins! jfc ** On Sal* Friday9:30 AM. to 9 PM. Saturday 'tilS;30 and Monday right up to 9 PM. Remember - You Don't Need the Cash! FREE BUS RIDES Barnetts FREE PARKING 27 S. Saginaw St. 150 NORTH SAGINAW STREET (Next to Sears) TWENTT-THREE CHEVY’S CORVAIR THE YEAR'S AWARD-WINNINGEST CAR Corvair—already proud winner of Motor Trend magazine’s Csr-of-the-Year award for engineering advancement—now walks away with another one: the coveted Industrial Designers Institute Gold Medal. The award was presented to William L. Mitchell, General Motors vice president in charge of Styling Staff, in recognition of Corvair* “finely scaled proportions and with a minimum of ornamentation." These two top awards make Corvair the most honored car of the year. And your Chevy dealer’s waiting to show you VWWOjJjl it’s everything the ■■■■HI THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY/ AUGUST 23, IMP Political, Educational Philanthropic^! ^ ' »'*! - . • ( " V-' Brother Bob Hands Out the Money Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas Britons Dovolop Now Super-Penicillin By RUTH MONTGOMERY | suited, since Jack anAhis brothers his eldest son, Joe Jr., kiUad dur-.dren. because the Kennedy* have; WASHINGTON—President Bobby; and sisters are the sole trustees of ing World War 11 in Europe. ! an afflicted daughter. It ordinarily .. enrv r0riiHosDital Detroit Frida Kennedy thinks things have come'the foundation established by their' The foundation initially compt- (divides an sversgeof $1,200.000L #eveJml ^ekT^ebecame ili Chapel a If a man can’tj*>th*f 15 years agi'in memory aflrated on helping retarded chfi-jannually between varknit.<*arities,|whjj€ ^ m briimingi earilcr **y* ??**]h*r home and. was dead on arrival! jyfr* «■—*. l<\ Pontiac General Hospital. lUnlversity to establish a Ken-’ to a pretty pass f money I having Ms politics examined. Robert, campaign manager for presidential hopeful John F. Kennedy, hr already a president twice In his own right. He succeeded] Jack as president of die Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Foundation, when his older brother captured the Senate ■eat of GOP vice presidential hopeful Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. He Is also president of the Africa Foundation, whose only ■<__ section with the Kennedy family millions is Bpbby himself. Bobby's duel presidencies may be dm key ts the political squab We dwt is ragtag la as the Resale Meat the Fotuiatlso’a after ta kick , LONPOWMiy ^British jd- j MRS. CLDTORD PENDLETON j Surviving are a sen, Gerald V i Surviving besides her husband|penic{gto wbjch does what ordtn-* Mrs. Clifford (Edna J.) Penette-iof Pwtdac, ■ brother and three,are two daughters, Mrs. Lseajary penicillin cannot do, The Daily of 3GJ4. Eastway Dr. died [sisters. Rowney of Flint and Mrs. Charles Express reported today. ! Service will be held at 11 imL. (Up^ hrodier Fk»d The newspaper eakl the dim. to Friday at the Voorhees^lple * ^I^Tlbe made available soon, will L *«“ °* Mw1*t*’ • >Wsr and Etc ki„ gm(U whlch M onttlwy ] grandchildren. ipenldBin, such as the staphylocoe- ALVIN R. blinidw i j|er will be at the Bairdicut responsible for serious gpi-TTiitirarritif to establish a , LFuneral Home, Lapeer, until noonjdemlcs in hoepitalsbotfi here and rU^rch!^' Mrs Pendleton's body is at the Ahrtn R. Blincow, 44. of 314o|Friday. *, to the United States. J*.' Spark*-Grtttin Funersl Hqme. h*» St will be at 2 prn Satur- | the cause ormmtal retardation in>day bi the C. J Godhardt Funeral, children. PresidfentEIaenhower’sl MRS. BETA M. HOWARDS Home. Burial win be in Oak Hill; youngest b r o t h e r>^. Mfltsn Mrf r*,* M. Soward* of 246 N. Cemetery, Pontiac. Eisenhower, Is president ^ y^terday after] Mr. Blincow died Wednesday at; Hopkins. ^Vlsng illness, &ew«s 51. Pontiac General Hospital after aj . Two years age the foundation | sh*^was a member of Firstling illness, gave a half-million dollars tajAssemWy'^etOod Church and had' Surviving betides his wife Altered the Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. [been employed^** a waitress. Iberia M. are two daughters, Pa- Home for Retarded Children to j----------------------------itrida L. and Patricia Ann, both at] Washington. home: parents. Mr. snd Mrs. Roy! It has endowed similar establish. PLa Uoalfk 01 ^2’ ments in Los Angeles and Jeffer-111000 NOdlm LMlCrfo^. Mrs. Frfd Boe of Waterford] son. Wis., which am also named L. . V . -n Totftishto and Mw. Eari Duaen-! cr°omtd;PiBS of Cancer at 78s!?^!!^]w: " | Mmoj onCAOO m - Dr Herman »J *“• COMiraV-aMAM tkm. according to Bobby, am •tBm„,mu,n 7* ^resident of the KEEGO HARBOR - Serht home tor aged Italians in Boston,]-. »td a recreational home tor Negro children in Harlem. Both bear the] Kennedy name. oT Health since Mrs. Charles F. 1931 and nationally known health!Graham. 85, of 2030 Cass Lake authority, died of cancer today in [Road, will be at 11 ».m. Saturday Wesley Memorial Hospital. Dr. Bundesen. who had been i the C J- Godhardl Funeral Home. Burial will be in North Farmington Cemetery. Farmington - He says th< anonymous, mained so. if Scott hadn't spilled; the largesse. To "prove” his point,) he took the wraps off another action by the foundation several years ago.' “Remember when West Polntl kicked about 80 students out of the] Army tor cheating in exams?” he! asked this correspondent. ‘‘Most; of them were football players, including the*coach’s son.” “My father felt sorry tor them, and offered scholarships to all who needed money to go to other colleges. About 40 of them accepted.”] Bobby readily concedes that this. Is the Kennedy Foundation’s first' venture into overseas charity, but so what? Hem is his report on how it came to pass: Sea. Jack knew of Bobby's In- tab°r Porty Newspaper p0|jce Hold foundation, of which iaterior Turns-Independent Secretary Fred Seetoa Is honor ary president. | LONDON «t’Pl» - The Daily When he heard that the State'1*****,or years *** of,icUl Department had turned down a re- dt the Labor Party, proclaimed its , quest to finance transporation for rebirth today as an "outspoken in- members of the opposition Ini-a group of African student*, he dependent ’ newspaper ]P*rty were held under "preventive asked Bobby ifthe Kennedy family A frontrfaKe ^toria, ^ ^ detention” by the government to-Foundation could pick up the tab. ... . fri_,L1|u . day They talked it over, and decided, apaper w 1 the chairman of the Kumast that it could Labor movement, but will* "speak its mind with foil independ- Some endowed dormitories in girls’ schools have been named fort _____ _____, ,u_ r«riniuKi< r. ... , .. .. . public office since he joined the __." Kathleen Kennedy Imrnngton,,.” ________________ . 10,, .„jiTownship. Jack’s eldest sister who died in a ^ hospitalized since April 11 1 Mrs. Graham, a member of Trin-plane crash in England. *£! who firsf Jrvedi'ty Methqdist Chwcfa, died Wednes- Sargent Shrtver Jr., husband of as city commissioner of health ^ af Ponrtar Osteopathic Hospital jEtinice Kennedy who will be|{rom ^ t0 ,l927 and was Cook aft‘'r n illness, traveling with brother Jack during:County coroner irom 1927 to 1931.! Surviving are her granddaughter the campaign, is executive director was a widely know n authority on Mrs. Milton Batten of Keego Har-of the family foundation, and also baby caM> a^ a nattonaliv syndi- bor and two gmat-grandchUdren. of Chicago’s vast Merchandise catw, wrtter on ^alth s^ct,. Mart which Kennedy owns. j ■ __________ As to the political squabble over t»1 . nil Cl the African students, Bobby avers: |Y dlST 1 0 (TO I | HfTl "We’re going right ahead with it.' ]2KU$S£T,S£ Ato Be on TV Tonight Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Rgcrea- ROBERT D. POTTER HADLEY — Robert D. Potter. ,39. of,5630 Stewart Road, was dead on arrival Wednesday at Lapeer County General Hospital. He had suffered a stroke. : Mr. Potter's body is at the Baird NO PLACE FOR COWARDS—Manning helicopter and launches. New York City policemen patrol the waters off Coney Island on the lookout for sharks. The armed harbor police went on their . ---------------— - —— v shark hunt following a scare arising from an attack on a swirryr^er South Korean navy announced^ to-!doors Show-off Sea Girt, N.J., Sunday. No sharks were sighted and swi at New York beaches had their usual fun. tlonal Home in Harlem as a'place] The Oakland Countv Sheriff's Funeral Home, Lapeer, for them to study, or relax.’ [water Patror will be featured < ^;------------ 'television at 7 o'clock tonight. Gunfire Off Korea j A color film, showing the pa- r jtrol's water safety program Political Prisoners MRS. DONALD TRAVIS METAMORA—Service for Mrs. Donald 1 Leone* Travis, 56, of 4849j S. Metamora Road, will be held; af 2 p. m Friday at the Metamora] day that one of its'patrol boats eX^The Him shows deputies in ac- .JW" (’hareh- 'Burial M ^ ln] changed gunfire with a ship be- tioh cgi area lakes enforcing what Mriamora cemetery, lieved out of Communist North!has become one of The nation's Mis. Travis died unexpectedly! Korea Wednesday night in the]outstanding water safety pro-of a heart attack at her homej |Yellow Sea. The South, Korean grams. 1 'Wednesday. craft said there was an. explosion! ------*----—, She was active in many civic] in the hull of the unidentified ship] Death Valley 'National' -51onu- organizations in Metamora and I but dense fog prevented determin-lnient covers two million ai res'-of also a member of Metamora Chap, ling whether it sank or got away. deBert land. ■ t?2, OES. ' * *-*■ , MICHIGAN AMERICA’S FINEST LIVESTOCK AM FARM SHOW PUN SOS IVISVONI N Mart CeRntt halm UamlMkttM CHtats brink taMkti tote Skew WTaatawt nim ■rta Mianttis toarSIww ktEriM Pally FREE Concerfs ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE RAND TWO GALA COLISEUM SHOWS Sept 2.1.4* » NT BOONE 'sea* v. 10.11 HARVEST OF STMS ; Brian Hylane IrMM Ln JglRMf • Ik toeiww > Th# Irsthsri Fsur LENNON SISTERS HER* ; Slavs «Imm 4R*R*4**s* FREE GRANDSTAND SHOWS ACCRA. Ghana lUPI* — Several’ v Se* the CkevyMyttcry Show in color SObdiyt, NBC-T THE YEAR’S BESTSELLER No outsiders needed to be con- i DR, HENRY A. MILLER Optometrist wmmm I ? North Saginow Street ir 1 1 Phonr FE 4-6842 ■ 1! “Better Things in Sight” C nntnrt letup t Open -Friday Evenings — Closed Wed. Afternoons among 11 men known to have been arrested by government police Tuesday night and ! Wednesday. Although there was iid-official] statement on the arrests, informed sourc:es said .the government; blamed the L’niparty for inciting; workers -in recent industrial dis- j turbances. Poison Kills 100 Robins RIDGEFIELD. N.J (APi-Po-i lice are trying to find out today; who is poisoning birds in the area, j Bergen County animal welfare of-], ficials said more than 100 robins and starlings have been killed by; eating bread crumbs mixed with; rat poison. CHEVROLET You couldn’t pick a better time to buy your new Chevrolet (or Corvair) than right now when more people are busring them than ever before. Chances are good you’re going to like what Chevy’s got just as much as everybody else. (Especially the money you’ll save.) Check your dealer on the details while there’s still a-wide choice of models. SMART FASHIONS FOR SMART SCHOLARS GONITS Bays’ sail Ilea’s Wsar al 8REAT SAVINGS! SUITS GO VEST Ft! DtRH* Drassan PRICED TO SELL Now $39* COTTONS _ common *400 riunu *5" Conn** Where Quality, Style and Price Meet NEW SHAWL COLLARS $595 1 NEW HI V WITH POCKETS $795 Up NEW CARDIGANS SHIRTS ufl Men’s EYELET SHIRTS SfM iTyi I Ploids 1* Chocks SO** OTHER POPULAR ITEMS • Crm Sbsso sad iOraas • Sweat Ssa oCatoor f • Vario ; tlab TUXEDO RENTALS—it Mmi Pitelf fg CLOTHES O 71 N. Saginaw Sm Chevrolet cart, Chevy’* Corvair* and Corvette at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, Inc. 631 OAKLAND AVENUE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN FE 5-4161 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUQUST25, I960 T WEN Tt *FOUR Enjoy Oiio-Stop School shopping in air conditioned comfort and save ot discount' prices. 10-oz. Boys' Double Knee Junior Boys' CORDUROY SUCKS Sizes 6 to 14 Full Cut Back-to-School Special Heavyweight, thickset print corduroy. Sizes 6 to 16. BARGAINS GALORE - LAYAWAY NOW! bAck-to-school ESSENTIALS Velse Pack 64 Color L PENCILS CBAYOLAS i 12 for 19c A waffle weave, plastic front trim, 2 pockets. A real value. A large selection of boys' and girls' snow suits at great savings for you. Loyoway now. Boys' Polished Cotton ^ Wash V Wear Zipper fly, in blue, gray antelope and sand. Sizes 6 to 18 Compare $2.98 Nationally advertised brand, long sleeve, needs little or no ironing to Idok neat. Woven plaids — Assorted prints. Fall tones of red, blue, green, gray. Sizes 6 to 16. Othpr Specials at ...».94* DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE 178 N. Saginaw St. PLENTY OF FREE PARKING BOYS’ _ 1 SOCKS §y Hemphill Wrap Socks H 3P , 87C /00M We Garry a Complete Line of Boys’ Accessories! r n - X Leather Belts.. 44- Mercerized m Blazer Stripe Bow Ties.... 37' 4^87* Suspenders 18s'• 28* NYLON STRETOH SOCKS Fit.ei.eVior9t.il 23* SHOES - Misses' and Women's ^ LOAFERS Ulriltr upp.n. long wMfin|%Bg g 1 tolei Rubber heels Sites 4Vi^ M to 9. R.ful.r $191. Jg V SHOES - SHOES school'shoes 5957 Up Latest stylet ami colo’rs. Usually $3.88. Now for achool opening Sites 8 Vi to 3 Big Boys' and Men's . DRESS SHOES Genuine Goodyear Welt $ jPB Top Groin Leather Uppers Sizes 6V2 to 12 ethers $6.17 Misses' and Women's FALL FLATS ^ Mon mode leathers and suedes in newest styles. Regular $3.88 Sites 4Va (• 9 Men's and Boys1' I LOAFERS 3097 BBS Black and brown toff leather uppers with long MM | wearing soles Sties 6 to 11. Usuelly $5*56. TWENTY-FIVE THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. AUGUST 25, i960 Wide selection end sixes for oil, from kindergarten crowd to college senior. Everything is first quality and no sole is final unless you ore 100% satisfied. r Beautiful Selection for Back-to-School Various stylos. Assorted, plaids, prints., and plains. Ml sizes — Save at Consumers. Compare discount prices. SWEATERS LAY-AWAY NOW Cardigai or till Over Assorted Colors Sins 7 to 14 Full FasKioned~ Girls' Everybody's going to wear tights — tots to teens, coed and housewife. Get yours early in the season when you save so much. Black, red, royal Assorted Colors Children's Small .. 4 to Syn. Medium 8 to !0yn. Large .. 12 to 14 yn. GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS All Cotton Built-up Shoulder Ruffle Bottom Dupont Orion Acrylic Brushed PETTICOAT Ladies' Roll-Up Sleeve SWEATERS Cardigan or Pullover Polished Cotton FULL SLIP Assorted Style* Solid Color* Paisleys, Strip* and Check Sizes 32 to 38 Trimmed with Lac* Sizes 4 to 14 Ladies'—Bulky Knit jd Girls' Nylonized Pdnties All first quality hi bulk orlon acrylic. Lovely over dresses, smart on its awn with §kirts, club collars. 3/k push up sleeves, in white. Sizes S-M-L Tricot Fancy Trim Assorted. Colors Sizos 4 to 14 Others at 27<-34‘ DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE TWISTER SOCKS 2Pr-1 Extra Heavy Anklots TWEN'TY-SIX THE flQXTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, I960 Wounded Priest Jailed in Cuba Facing Trial Before Castro's Tribunal A Wasteland Only 50 Years Ago Katanga Guards Its Rich Uranium Mine WASHINGTON — Katanga Prov-^ But the bulk of the mineral | habitants are Immigrant!. For-jly wooded savannah land sprinkled; 'Hoffa Angling for Air Control' * ^ 32 People Offer _'lnre,. which has seceded from the wealth lay untouched until aVoupImerly, * isolated tribes eked!with towering termite hills. The! 1 (urn* pjinuu^ Su rvmwk mrmm Bint Rttioian aiwt **—iu-v ^Out h living from scrub forest and m*appaKt rise to the greeneri' He said thf Teamsters have made overtures to flight engfawen for Continental and Eastern air-well as to other employes, such as stock delta and mechanics. Their Blood lor Little Girl WTNSrrOff-flALEM, N.c. (AP)-A caravan of eight station wagons, escorted by stgtpl troopers. (. _ . . new Republic at the Comm, was ajof Belgiag and British business- Antl-Government P*0t mysterious wasteland in the heart|men-formed the Union Miniere du » living from scrub forest and unproductive soil. ”L_ . *i - Kundeiungu highlands, inhabited; at Africa only half a century ago. Haut-Katanga and financed the; *h* L’den Miniere brought la [w, antelope zebra and! HAVANA (UPI> — A Roman: In 1901-08, jt took a convoy ot|1907-08 prospecting expedition. The: Bahuida and Italaba tribesmen rhinocr,^*. ’ j Catholic priest wounded in an inci oxcar*® *n entire year to make: huge firms hoi* "a mining con-j *"»*> near-by Kasai Province to 1 dent outside Havana last week wflfer tor*uous info Katanga cession of more than 13.000 square •»** ** the, keye Jr . . ” l The carts carried metallurgical [miles, be brought before one of EWeijtestlng equipment-the key that j The Onion Miniere transformed Castro’s revolutionary Tribuni as an antigovemment conspirator, informed sources said today. Father Marcial Bedova, a Spanish Jesuit, is interned in Havana hospital with a leg wound. He would be the first member priesthood to face “revolutionary justice.” unlocked the riche* of the area, the mineral-rich southern half of Immense mineral deposits werelKatanga, or High Katanga, from a found beneath the dry, infertile primitive wilderness into a mod- si. He two-thin of tSqjfoemer ionarv K*PUbli< plateaus of Katanga, the National Geographic Society says. The subsurface wealth contributed almost ifods of the revenue of the ler Belgian Congo, now the public of the Congo. URANIUM MINE GUARDED Today, the carefully guarded The government was maintain- j Shinkolobwe mine in Katanga lb Ing official silence about the one of the largest producers of bethvtlle. the capital of KaUuiga. Bedoya case, but reliable sources! uranium. Katanga’s vast copper EUgabetltville did not “*"«•••»i«!b,ll yield, .bo«, 7 per rent ot «,mint™ b^m production. Cobalt. *inc. towns but followsVrtanned do-tin. and lesser velopment. with flower bechb^iady ■at houses, and inviting shops. Located 4,000 feet abov level, Elisabethville has a cool. em industrial center. A network of railroads spread over the regloa. Subsidiary linns sprang ap to furnish electricity, make explosives, min floor, provide bossing, and product og chemicals from mine byproducts. The company also planned and developed Elisa- become a major force la the provtace. The Balubas, who have a highly developed civilization, are superb wood carvers. Their ceremonial masks are simple, yet strikingly dramatic. The mining plateaus are sparse* Pilots' Chief Reports of Overtures to Many! ,Th* Teamsters ani flight en- brought 32' people 'from Wilkes , _ - 1tgineers are known to be iq ac- County Wednesday night to qffer Industry Employes live contact.” said .Sayen. "Hoffa!blood for a 12-.vear-old girl who {would like^idthiiig better than tojundergoes heart surgery today. CHICAGO (APi - Teamster ** ^ the cockpit by brining| ^ gW( <**1 Cockertam. weighs ody'S* ppunds as a result of the heart condition. Though agriculture still it Jwnes R. itoffa T*-ah-j'he engineer, intoThc untan. ^“'” t“*NiXon Will Wc „„i— aircraft industry, says Clarence r,,Awn “ Line Pilots Association. grown. Huge cattle ranches stretch industry, says Clarence over a 6.500-foot-high plateau in N. Sayen, president of the Air the eastern section of the province. Albertville, in the far northeastern corner of Katanga Tanganyika, Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Cockertam, met the'cara-WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice van of blood donors. They said President Richard M. Nixon hasjthey did not even know some of been scheduled as top speaker at the people. "Should Hoffa succeed in his | a conference of GOP candidates ...... «im« be could tie up air tran*-!for the House of Representatives j Americans 30 to # are the portation any time he had a lit-1 Wednesday and Thursday.________1 heaviest coffee drinhw. group of ' ’counter-revolution- world . aries” driving from. Havana to ihej manganese 'Northern coast of Pinar del Kio amounts of otl province to pick up an illicit armsmined. shipment. _ -S Centuries ag< According to the sources, Esther Bedoya was arconi . pan led by two union members and two military intelligence ot-then who were In tbo anti- ! Castro underground. minerals are native rulers, binding the eMef (or whom ; healthy climate. Katanga was named, a melted j Hundreds of huge termite hills green ore in adobe furnace*, gave way to the city’s broad ave-('raftsmen hammered erode cop- nues. The streets are literally per crosses of many sizes to he paved with copper, since the used as a medium of exchange pressed slag paving blocks con When the group reached the throughout Tentral and Eastern tain traces of the metal, town of Bauta. 15 miles southwest! AWr*- 1 /'Uny of Katanga’s 1.600.000 in- of Havana, one of the officers, Capt. .Alberto Jerez, exposed himself as a counter-espionage agent, j pulled out a pistol and told his! companions “the comedy is over,! you're all under arrest/’ the! sources said. e it h The other officer drew his revolver and in the ensuing battle, both he and Jerez were killed and Father Bedoya was wounded. j The survivors were quickly found and arrested by local police, according to the report. Government newspapers carried! an obituary yesterday on Capt. Jerez, saying only that he died in! a “tragic accident.” There ' no further explanation. 100 Soviet Subs 'Big Threat' to U.S. PEARL HARBOR. Hawaii (API —The Soviet Union has about 100, submarines in the Pacific, says Adm. Herbert G. Hopwood, and “we have to assume they can fire i FINAL 3 DAYS W THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY Clean-up Of All Summer Shoes Our Regular Values to $12.95 in Woman's Summer Shoes . . . while present stock lasts. $288 He fold * flews conference' Wednesday the growing Red underwater fleet, which six years ago totaled fewer titan 30 In the' Pacific, is the greatest sitfele threat to the Uiitted States. Hopwood. 62. of Shamokin. Pa..1 will retire Aug. 31 as -commander I fat chief. U.S. Pacific Fleet. He; will be succeeded by Adm. John! H Sate*, former director of the; Defense Department's Weapons System Evaluation Group in Washington. Loosen Navy Liquor Lena; WASHINGTON (AP)-The Navyi has eased its regulations to per-; mit transportation of alcoholic beverages on ships and aircraft, for consumption ashore. Drinking aboard ship is still banned. PAIR 2 Pair *5 DON'T MISS IT! BRING A FRIEND! DIEM'S PONTIAC'S POPULAR SHOE STORE 87 North Sagniaw Street Next Door to Federal! — Downtown WALL BOND WHITE HUNT S 1.6) gal. MILES of TILE i Oae-Coat Enamel Paint | 10 Ox. Co" Assorted Colors SPECIAL SALE Floor Covering Vinyl Plastic Tint Quality 19 Kentile Solid Vinyl or Rubber TILE ™ 1Q< * Spotter Asphalt TILE 4 ESSENTIAL VITAMIN AND MIN-ERALS NEEDED FOR A LOW DAY S 1 DIET. SO EASY TO TAKE. 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Chang naked j ‘ m,~~ theUnited Statea to give South Fake Bear Bitten , Korea'enough modern weapons to BOURNEMOUTH England .| * * * adverfba a local garage, Uoanl At a nxeing with U.S. Ambas- Maraia, 24, was bitten by a dogl 'jsador Walter P. McConaughy, Wednesday .when be trtodto fright-* AUGUST 0LEARAM6E SALE NOW IN PROGRE&: 4945 DIXII HWY. DUTTON South Korea Asking Weapons and Cash Western quartan have appeared to make it, according to aome students o! Sino-Soviet attain here. Some reports say the Communist Chinese are getting ready to challenge the Russians lor the leader ship of the Communist bloc. But there are few firm signs to back up this speculation. There is little doubt anywhere teat the Chinese would dearly love to take over the leadership of the Communist bloc and that someday they may try It. But today is not the day. The considered opinion of some of the j closest observers of the China scene here is that this day still is ter off. CHINA CONCEDES In fact, hardly a day passes that | Communist China does not publicly | concede the Soviet Union the posi-i tion of leadership. “The east wind continue* to ; CONGO IfOfOUWUJ TUESDAY, WIPNISDAY TILL 6 P. M. tea forces of 'peace over the force* of war." Bed China broad-casta Mare oat almost daily, “and tee sorlallst bloc under tee leadership of the mighty Soviet Union Is smashing the Imperial bis, led by tee United States, at Rgg. $12.95 A.TREMENDOUS VALUE! Lay-Aways< fane Zee TWENTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PEKSS, TftUBSDAY, AUGUST 23, 19^0 Jane Lee FINAL CLEARANCE SALE TOY-TOWN 23 N. Saginaw Street FI 3-9144 EASY CREDIT TERMS BIG BOYS' 0XT0BDS Bill* far tourer 1 Every smart summer dress in our stocks must go . . . exciting dresses ot o fraction of their original price. Casual dresses, dressy dresses in one ahd two piece styles. ONE LOW PRICE I - DETROIT W*—A three-week de-[ lay has been granted Detroit at-I tomey Sol A Dun in Ms stock-holders’ suit against Chrysler I Oaife ; Chrysler attorneys had notified] JDann to appear fcu Wilmington, Del., today to give preliminary j | testimony in the suit which he | filed It days ago. charging gross] f mismanagement to the corpora-* tto, | Granting of the delay automat-1 * ically postpones the . Delaware] f Chancery. Court’s deadline for f answers by tee defendant—which ] ■■ includes the 20 directors of the i corporation, former Chrysler] President William Newberg, seven t o’her individuals and 15 Chrysler t supplier firms. | The court in effect has seized the Chrysler stock of the defend-- ants pending their replies to the - suit. 2 Die in Jet Collision BOGOTA. Colombia —Two] Colombian array air force pilots were killed Wednesday when their F80 jet fighters collided Northeast] of Bogota. ONE CHARGE ACCOUNT ig good ot both stores I jnjtatjrSttjueMRrM - Next to WririiiW? - Lightweight, Portable Discount Pries Reg. $69.95 I No Substance to Story of Russian-Chinese Rift By CHABUES R. SMITH ifrequently — probably are no more TOKYO (UPI) — Forget all tWa •«*>“» than ** a*W*an.................... talk about a rift between Russia that occur frequenfly between the and Communist China. It just isn't]United States and some of her » — yet. ] closest allies, such as Great Brit- - That’s the studied opinion of *“• «nm. of the most informed ob- The dispute between thrf tw serv ers of Communist China and I countries over the Interpretation «f Sino-Russian relations. ]of Marxist-Leninist dogma beers Dtaagreemeot, yes. But a ser- isome significance and may be tee leva rift, no. seeds for future aertoe disagree- Even the disagrremente that ments. But at the present time it arise occasionally — or perhaps* Is not nearly so Important, as some 41 N. SAGINAW ST. MIRACLE MILE Boys' Denim JEANS Sturdy weight denim. Bar tack and copper rivet re-infarced at sQ^ points of hr rtototu AIRLIFT IN CONGO — Congolese troops rode airlift Wednesday from Leopoldville to Luluabourg, dotted lines, in Congo, pouring Iran the troubled nation’s capital into Kasai Province, upset by strife and threatened With secessionist movement Fighting in Albertville, underlined, in Northern Katanga Province, was reported ended. Rounding oat the day's chaotic picture, was a statement that Belgian soldiers had entrenched themselves in the Lower Congo area. U. N. soldiers were asked to oust than. Darn Gets Dela» .^r‘"°5" i in Chrysler Suit * 3-Week Postponement | Pushes Bock Deadline i for Firm's Answers green fire hydrants in {city are getting a coating of phosphorescent yellow-so they'll glow in the dark, the Fire Department says. There is no doubt that the Communist Chinese leaders are per-’ , turbed if not angered -*• by! Sixes »7* occasional Russian slurs on their 6-6 Vi-12 efforts to, communize China, particularly such digs as Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's reference to the controversial people’! nines as '‘old fashioned.' such things as this m not likely todriv^a wedge between two such powerful nations who need each other as much aS the Russians Chinese need each/other. w tfffirf is little likelihood in the j ear future of Russia turning on China or China turning on Russia as they both have on tee Yugoslav “revisionists" in spite of their bas-j ic disagreements. They need each other too much for that. j Lnrliae' Certalnly. many omervers here WHI" believe, this is not likely to happen] FLATS befwe American recognition of the] Peiping regime. Boys Chevron Sole OXrORDS SOTS* & GIRLS' OXFORDS Boys'-Men's BEDFORD COBD SLACKS I GIRLS* CHTJCKA BOOT |99 Sixes SVi - 3 EXTRA SPECIAL tw____»- Vilmtol Mto women s m mr. SUEDINE -OXFORDS 259 Women's Growing Gills* LOAFERS Beys Blazer Hose 7f m. Boys' Knit Sport Shirk 99 Sixes m ANKLETS Triple BaU Bobby Sez.'VtaM oeteboS cotton. Nylaa Ba-taforeed at point* of strain. 6^I7C Reversible JACKETS SQ66 Waekakto MM M M — tonfm to » . rtoM mi r>M Pat-torn. Sim S-1S. . Girls' Orion Boys* Raincoat Sots Complete Set STS PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. AUGUST ah i960 ?rlUfKhr'cn^NfrrfT; ^frfrr;nr:;TTr:Kr!Rs:?• i» '.:! ONE COLOR wmm TwiNfYvNlN*- m m India Is Urged to B He Rescues Child for Adequate Nourishment With Speedy Sprint LOCKPORT, N Y. M — Patrol-mao Joseph Montedoro was man* ning Ms port on a downtown! corner when a 2-year-old boy! broke from Ms mother’s hand and dashed into the street. NEW DELHI (UPI)—India faces:able to cope with the country's an intense food crisis and a Ford demand lor enough food? Foundation inquiry committee has! The Ford Foundation committee! ‘urged fighting the food battle on concedes that India has enough ja "war footing.” resources to tackle the food prob- | Experts have warned the govern-;I*®• But the defect is that they ment that if the country does not have not been channeled in the , , . . . , . accelerate food production three'right direction. Montedoro sprinted in front of 'times the present speed there may The committee has suggested the an oncoming delivery truck and be a 25-million ton shortage in food-i following mspsures:— ; swept up the youngster. The truck grains in 1916 ( —Cultivators should be asked to narrowly missed them. India presently produces n. practoe the latest methods of culti-million tons of foedgrains. But to; 7^ view of the rapidly growing pop- KwOW THE BARREL - Bourbonwhis-ky hovels, which cost $30 before use, tit on —Agricultural labor should bei . ^ utilized to the maximum. l ^ —Irrigatlonal facilities should be! .............. I1®8* than its requiremrots. . ikscgvmaed and cultivators should. a Louisville cfirtiUVs dock awaiting sale for »l£?i* jSX. ^r^gffe "IgiSd'“ffltgtegated Then Montedoro discovered who he had rescued — the sen of Patrolman Gerald Landtigan, who was walking his beat a few Modes away. 3$ cents apiece. $30 flown the Drain about' 360 pillion. By 191646, itj _______i mTT mf, „ , J ^ is estimated the country’s fotalltMiout 15 per dent of the total food- PlostlC Projectiles Save -----t-«~. will be 480 million. Bourbon Barrels Provide jSot> Story, Gives [SS Headaches for Distillers least U0 million tons of foodgraips will be required to enable this num- tie). « „ tt ^ wui oe cequireo io ena Panhandler Gets ber qt people to eat "just well,’ 'according to the investigating Food production titouM wsi N£W YORK (UPI) — Reusable! j Victim' Money , tatroyrt by M, c.b ^ ^ Troining C|oU HUIffl trig t* By DORMAN CORDELL Says Julian P. Van Winkle Sr., LOUISVILLE. Ky. (A—Bourbon, president of Stitzel-Weller DistU-Vhisky dirtiilers get more briery, ’'For yearsihey (scientists) *r. ) BALTIMORE U» — As Lee Poist. a soft drink supeiVisbr, sat in a truck the other day, a man approached and asked him for mon- Boiurbon ifiy*be aged only ln|<*uce ^tiiisky overnight and never panhandler pulled out a roll of $17 new charred white oak barrels. |use a charred barrel. It's a damned They coat about $30. After the resale value is about 15 cents. how to salvage used whisky barrel* he’d never have to Work again.'* says one distillery executive. ' > f - _____ to do whatever necessary to im- __hat wttl also prove food production without going tor the Communists through bureaucratic channels for prime Mini,ter N*u Tb Wd, a, m» .*»«. MS »100-ra minion« - >■«» “se «“ *•! to tin. armed forces in handling mor-] tars, according to Modern Plastics! magazine. thought, he poured out his own sob story about how tough things financially. Then he gasped as the ptdmLoui add-peeled off tflor Poist. Poirt says Jte’ll keep It for life. ; of foodgrains will be required by1 the magazine reported. I Short on Cash, Honesty new methods can save India’s food situation.” % He had agreed 'with major rec-. A target of 1M Fp»nrf, r.iiiansln South America of new methods.’’ The Nehru government is [its monthly publication: + new way to age bourton. A sign|sends one senator and one deputy India' has vast tracts of srable alarrned and )• J°L in Ms distillery warns: “No sci- to the French' National Assembly land, enough water and ample re- must be given the highest priority,: d°[«hnuts and #roto w^ted for[ Van Winkle I entists allowed in this distillery."'in Patris. ! sources. If so, why then is it nqt ff t|jf country is to survive. a loss of only $15.64 during M|y.' But a man whose firm buys used! barrels said, ”i don't even like fo-mention the subject. Everytime anyone does, We get a million let-j tern suggesting ail sorts of crazy! things to use a whisky barrel for. j None of them are ever any good.”; The barrel - buying firm sells 1 them mostly to pickle Makers, foreign distillers and blended whisky' firms. Skante bourbon distillers don’t; even bother to sell the used barrels. “Mostly we knock die hoops j off and burn them,” says one of-' fici&L BI LGING VaUR About.two million barrels are used each year in die whisky industry. A barrel holds about 50 gallon* of bourbon at first, but durifljg the four or more years of aging required about 15 gallons are lost by evaporation and absorption. Some enterprising persons from time to time have steaased the whisky from OH barrels oad drank or oRsM "It. The Internal Revenue Service frowns an the practice. Besides, the product isn’t very good most of the time because of tan pic add from the wood or fusel oil and tars absorbed from the bourbon,. “The barrel represents about 50 per cent of die cqrt of producing whisky," said Joe Scholnick, public relations director at Rrown-j Forman Distillers. “Actua&y It is One of the most! Important factors in producing! good bourbon. We must use oily the best white oak, and it’s better than furniture oak.’’ FoR BackTo ScHoo Brown-Forman am) several otherj distilleries have created their own I cooperage companies to make the barrels. Distillerka fan making Mended; whisky gpn use barrels five, tixj or seven times to store grain al-j coho! used in the blend. The weight of whisky barrels is one thing that cuts down the pos-j sibility of reuse. A new baml; ' with inch-thick staves weighs from! 80 to 85 pounds. After one use, it - ’ weighs about 100 pounds. To ship an empty barrel bom Louisville to! New York costs $7. All Chi] ’s Shoes and fadies’ Casuals d Flats All Hill Bros.’ Shoes are New, FirstrQuality. You Save Because of Hill Bros.’ True Self-Service! Only Hill Bros.’ offers you more new styles, far greater saving: Men’s Dress Shoes All Ladies’ Oxfords A suggestion that a way to found to age bourbon without using charred white oak barrels gets rasps*** raagtag from mild disgust to uncoaeealed outrage. JJ99to799 Youths Often Forge! Data About Parents SPRINGFIELD, Maas. (J) -I Daniel J. Murphy Jr,, manager ofj the district Social Security Office.: says a lot tf young people have poor memories when applying for a Social Security card. A common shortcoming he says, is not remembering their mother’^] maiden name—or die Hate of their birth. Recently, one youth, filling in file space calling for Ms mother’s name, wrote; "Me. & Dress Shoes Sizes 4 thro 10 399&499 pair Violators' Hop* Soar* f‘HEAD FOR THE HILLS’) PORT ARTHUR, Tex. ,IR-Pranksters were blamed for placing a Sign by the police department’s traffic violation walk-up; Window 'that had motorists’ hopes! soaring. The sign proclaimed the) department gave "Top Value Stamps." " r , : ,r j 0K« 9 m 9 DAILY AND SUNDAY 125 W. HURON • AN HILL IROS. Shoes ora first quality, no seconds or aojacts. • All HILL BROS. Shoos woor the HILL BROS. LABEL. • AH HILL BROS. Shoos ora American made, with American motoriob by American lober. You Save on Clothing Too, at HILL BROS. CLOTHING MART Plenty of Free Parking "Sere'ra^atiSST leres a Federal Modemizatieii Customer Near You" Anniversary Sale WITH A GIGANTIC BONUS Sabs Tax IstliM is AH Prim!' Guaranteed 1 Full Inch Thick ALUMINUM STORM DOOR SAVE *17.67 flH PiSSS Nit COMPARE THESE FEATURES FOUND ONLY IN S39.95 DOORS WATERPROOF 0R1P CAP • FULL LENGTH PIANO HINGES-^ e I SCREEN, 2 GLASS PANELS l' • PNEUMATIC DOOR CLOSER ^ • KNOB LOCK * e STORM CHAIN • FULLY WEATHER STRIPPED * Tax Included PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED ON INSTALLATION 0RDEHS ONLY $31.95 At Last! A Window With Everything! Deluxe Two Track Triple Tilt Actiea Aluminum STORM WINDOWS Woven Pile Weather Stripped Storm Windows. Cleon without removing any panels. , % Hssvy Extruded Aluminum Never Needs feinting Reg. $24.95 Per Window Per Window Auy Sixe Up te 38x60 Inch Opening $15.95 FHA Terms Free Measuring Service Within 30 Milas When You Modernize CALL FE 3-7033 FOR FREE HOME ESTIMATE Visit Our Showroom Open Daily 9 A. M. to 8 P. M. Plenty of Parking in Our Lot ■ M' j THUtTY IPQQ Wwk *ti9W%§ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, i960 Have a Cup of Tea? ... Let’s Go Swimming'... Watch Out, Don't Tip Lake Angelus Folk Bask Under Blue Summer Waving to family on shore and singing as they sail around Lake Angelas with grandfather Robert M. Cr itch field are Thomas, left, iSusan, Jeffrey, Mary Jean and James Smith. The children and parents, the H. L. Smiths of LoGrange, III., will vacation with the Critch- Gliding along on the calm waters of Lake Angelus are James Houlett of East Iroquois Road and North Lake Angelus Road, and Dolores Jliddle of Abington, fields over Ldbor Day. Wearing a captain*s hat, Mr. Critohfield of North Lake Angelas Road cruises around the island in his Century runabout, mahogany with white trim. The children alsa have fun splashing and swimming in the lake, climbing trees and cooking out. Not Correct to Order Costly-Item By EMILY POST Dear Mrs. Post; The other day I. along with', two other women, was inwtle3*t)y a mutual friend to hatch in a restaurant. One of the women guests ordered {he most expensive dishes on the roknu. Although I myself like this particular dish vary much I Vdid not order it Because of the price and ordered something else instead. In discussing this later with a friend. I said that I thought this woman showed very poor taste in ctoing this, but the' disagreed with me saying that when a mfenu is handed to a guest she has a right to order whatever she* likes froth it. I think some consideration should be shown for the hostess* pocketbook. Am I correct? Answer: If the hostess had suggested is as being a specialty of that particular restaurant, it would have been quite right for her to say, 'Td like that very much." But to * just pick out the dish of highest cost on the menu, was very unreasonable. Rosalie Lake, left, of South lake Angelus Shores, teaches swimming in front of her home at Lake Angelus for the American Red Cross. Ready for a big splash is Scott Hudson of Gallogly Road. Sister Susan, sitting on the dock, anxiously waits her turn. - M Womens Section Va. The two agree canoeing is one of the most pleasant ’ ways to enjoy a cool breeze and a summer sunset. Mr. and Mrs. Edmond L. Prince, left, of Soiuh Lake Angelus Shores, are having afternoon tea with house guest Mrs. Robert £. Carter of Wilmington, NJC. The Princes enjoy many meals under summery sunny skies in the shade of the old apple tree just outside the kitchen door. Reports on Personal Happenings in Edgar A. Guest m and his bride the former Pamela Maull of Union, N. Y.. who have been playing summer stock with the Denison University Players since their marriage in June, are visiting his parents, the junior Edgar A. Guests of Bingham Farms. Arriving Friday from the East will be Ellen Guest who has been assistant unit leader st Camp Farnsworth, Thet-lord, Vt.. after completing fix weeks with the Eastover Elementary School recreation program. ^ Her younger sister Jane who has been summering at Aloha Camp in Fairlee, Vt., will drive home with her. Mrs. Milton L. Reid and Mrs. Glenn G. Diederich. both of Litchfield Drive. Drayton Woods, have returned from a California vacation. Mrs. Reid's daughter Bette Joyce, who went west with them, has accepted a teaching position at Lincoln Palisades Elementary School near Sacramento. Highlights of the trip were visits to Salt Lake City, Reno, Lake Tahoe and Squaw Val- **• ... The Herbert G. Glenns have lUtumed to their home on Hairy Clay Avenue after two weeks' camping and fishing in the vicinity of Copper Harbor in the Upper Peninsula. * * * Announcing the birth of a daughter. Debra Louise. Aug. 23 m Yeoman 3.C. end Mrs. Lee Lewie of Waukegan. Ill Grandparents are Prof, and Mre. Keith Stem of East Lan-sigg and Mr. and Mrs. Edward r Laois of Qub thrive, Bloom- Petrida Rorun., daughter of. the Benjamin Ronans of Iroquois Road and Nickl Folsom of South Tilden Avenue, daughter of the C. Dallas Folsoms, are driving to California. They will visit friends in Salt Lake City and Denver en route and Barbara Wilkinson, formerly of Pontiac, at San Mateo. Calif. Patricia will be a graduate student at Stanford University. Nicki, who received her bachelor of arts degree from Michigan State University wfil teach in Monterey. Mr. and Mrs. David L. Schroeder of Thorpe street are parents of a son, Mark David, born Aug. 23. * Grandparents are Mr: and Mrs. Edgar Stokes of Melvin-dale and the John F. Schroe-ders of North Johnson Avenue. Joanne Campanello. daughter of the Joseph Campanello* of Menominee Road, left Wednesday for a 10-day visit with friends and relatives in Racine, Wis/Shc will also attend the marriage of her cousin Elaine Fucilla. WWW Mrs. Peter Keshigian of Illinois Avenue has as her house guest, Mrs. Doris Kirby Pope HI of Norfolk, Vs., formerly of Birmingham. The George Bakers of Flushing and the Stefan Karpdiang of Pontiac were dinner guests of Mrs. Keshigian Wednesday evening. WWW Mr. and Mrs. Dexter J. Kennedy of Draper Avenue arp receiving congratulations on the birth of a son. Robert Louis, on Aug. 10. Grandparents are Mrs. Harry G. Bower of Woodbine Drive, Waterford Township, and the William A. Kennedys of Wenonah Drive. WWW At their home on Cedar Creek Road, Noth Branch, the" Warren B. Edward* were hosts at the annual Edwards family reunion. Present from the Pontiac area were Mr. and Mrs. Wil- * liam Guy Edwards, Mrs. Julia Edwards and her house guests, the Walter Gogertys of Philadelphia. The Beecher Beving-tons brought their guests, Mrs. Rig Ochoa and family of Tampa, Fla. Other guests were the H. Guy Bevfogtons of Honor, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Seleski of Spring Lake, the Eugene Moran* of Ypsilanti, Mr*. Elisa Moore of Fowlerville and the Robert Moores of Detroit. The 1961 reunion will be held . at the Log Cabin at East Lansing. WWW ■ Raymond A. Winkelman of Honored by Auxiliary DETROIT •*> - Mr* Edgar McConnell of Des Muinqp, la., was named Department President of the Year today by the Auxiliary of the Veterans of Foreign Wars With the selection went a SUM cash prize. More than, 90 per cent of Iowa's aupilwry M n i ♦ * took part over the last year in all auxiliary programs, Mrs. McConnell’s citation said adding that the state also reported a membership gain. Mrs. McConnell I* a Des Moines school teacher And her husband is adjutant -\ quarter-master of the Iowa VFW. Sherboume Drive, Waterford Township Hew to Tampa, Fla,, recently, to visit the Rev. Otto G. Schultz and family of Indian Rocks. The Rev. Mr, S c h u 11 z is former pastor of Pontiac's Grace Lutheran Church.. After Visiting his great-aunt and uncle. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Haynes at Bradenton, Raymond will return by air early next wlek. Future Bride Names Wedding Attendants Barbara Kucera was feted with a miscellaneous shower Wednesday given by Mrs. Michael Clever of East Boulevard. Miss Kucera announced her bridal attendants will he her sister Mrs. James Glynn, matron of honor. JoAnn Mows, Patricia Harberi. Christine Kleino. sister of the prospective bridegroom, and Mrs. Gever'fcre to be bridesmaids, w w w Cynthia Goodwin will attend as flowergirl for Miss Ku-cera’s marriage to Dean Kleino Oct. S at St. Michael Catholic Church. .Parents of the couple.are the Frank J. Ku-ceras of Oliver 8treet and the Albert Kleinos of LoweJl Street. Guests present included Mrs. Kucera, Mrs. Kleino, the bridal attendants, Betty, Cronan, Carole GI yn Ij, Phyllis Raymond, Susan Green, Mrs. James Wyzgoski, Joanne Prud-horn me,' Edna Powers, Joyce Qropps, Mrs. Thomas Thorn-berry, France* Goulet, Barbara Mclnnis, Mary Degg and Mary Aim Johnson Dear Mrs. Post: I have been told that it is not good manners for a girl to stand talking to a man on the street. Is this true, and if so, why is it Improper for a girt to stop and folk to a man friend to whom she may have something to ■ay? Answer: The street has nev-er been considered a suitable place to garry on a long conversation, either between a girt and a man or between two girls, and still less by a group. She may perfectly well stop a man if she has something to say to him, but if they begin a long conversation, he should join her and walk in her direction. Planning Parties in Bloomlield Hills By RUTH SAUNDERS BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Mrs. James Q. Goudie entertained at luncheon Tuesday for committee members, working on the Denim Dance to be given Sept. 34 to benefit St. Joseph Mercy Hospital through the Woman's Auxiliary. Mrs. Goudie and Mrs. Jack R. Davis are cochairmen for foe affair to be given at the Bloomlield Open Hunt Club. Among committee members who met with Mrs. Goudie JUDITH ANN WURTH MAN Graduating from Borges* Hospital SchAOl of Nursing, Kalamazoo, Sunday is Judith Werthman, daughter of the J. A. Werthmans of Windside Drive, Cass Lake. A 1967 graduate of St. Frederick High School, Miss Werthman plan to work hi Pontiac. Says Fall F to Be Bright Bulky ifartr r«.p*cuv. reiloc. r*n*tn« from tfao E«t SwTw.rt | . CoasM By PATRICIA COOK RadcHffe College ’« BOSTON — The new look on the campus this fall is going to be startlingly different. The colors will be brighter the skirts shorter, and the sweaters bulkier. The fashion trend is toward more and more accessories: armloads of bracelets, big necklaces and earrings. The skirts this fan ate gresf fashion news. The new length to one er two- inches ketow the knee. The knee-tickler length In the ftirt, a little above ; the knee, wUl be extremely popular, too, especially for | casual wear. it it. ★ t K good rule to follow In, wearing the knee-tickler skirts, calotte skirts, and knkkers is to wear them for the same type of occasion that you would wear bermuda shorts. ^ The sweaters this year are higgtr and bulkier. Most | popular among these are the rid sweaters, bulky knits I with the big big turtle necks, tooat-necked sweaters, and | sweaters with draw strings at the waist. it ★ it Blouses, too, have taken on a new look. Biittondown | collars are still Very popular and there is a gijeat eift- § phasls on feminine collars on shirts. ., ' mmkiMmm'dmm Wf were Mrs. William Beatty, Mrs. Rocco dl Marco, Mrs. A. C. Girard, Mrs. Frank J. McGinnis, Mrs. Irving A. Duffy, Mrs. Edward E. Rothman, Mrs, Walter Williams, Mrs, Harwood Bacon, Mrs. John Maddox, Mrs. E. A. Christie, Mrs. Ray E. Cunningham, Mrs. John A. Reid. Mr*. R. E. Lawior and Mrs. Ralph L. Polk. ★ ★ ' ♦ Mr. and Mrs. West Gallogly have invited friends for dinner Saturday in their Lake Angelus home. Their guesta/at another of a series of small dinner parties win be Mrs. Elliott 8. Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Parker of Metamora Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Thom, Col. and Mrs. Irving A. Duffy and Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Perry Williams. * ★. * Mr and Mrs. William R. Ewald Jr. of Washington, D. C., are visiting Mr. Ewalds parents the William R. Ewalds of Franklin. The senior Ewalds are planning a cocktail party Saturday for their guests. # „ jfc * Bride-elect Sally Blanchard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Blanchard, arrived home Wednesday with just a Uttis over a week to plan the final arrangements for her Sept. 3 marriage to Charles Richard Cadigan. Sally has been doing secretarial work in Cambridge, Mass. Saturdays evenb^*Mi*.Bia Mrs. Austin Harmon wU] give the rehearsal dinner at Orchard Lake Oountiy Chib and Mrs. Sheldon Noble, Mr. and Mrs. John W, Sanders and Mr. and Mrs. J. Morrison Taylor will give a luncheon lor members of foe wuVHng party and out-of-town guests hi me Taylor home on Lincoln Court. Tins PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 83. 1960 THIRTY-ONE [/ Thomas Jefferson became Pres-! Scientists say {he earth!*, rqta-[Meat by a one-vnte majority 'in tion is slowti* down at • rate of the electoral college. j1-1,000th of a second a century. Women Voters Outline Plans for Executive board members of thelian Davidson of Pontiac, Mrs. strata voting machines and give! League of Women Voters met at j Jack &wroth of West RtoomfleMlout voter information. A State Fairj the Niagara Avenue home of Mrs.jand Mrs. Bonnie Tracy of 8trti»M*-tefcnralttee composed of area J. E. Scott Tuesday evening to out-j ham win arrange the rally, a bien-t^__ m ^ for line plans for the Leagues eariylnial event of the Pontiac League T™ fall activities. • - (since I960. thLdU^tlSk°f,,thC Publications chairman Mary Ru-j * ★ > i b?rt presented the latest literature j The group discussed ways mch i* *l *^d h0,P® °*: from national board and that need-|as poster displays, registration re-jMr»- B " Habei. j led for the finance and member- minders and a League display for} t • . > (ship drives were ordered: Serving getting out the vote. Mrs. Floyd HOSC Are Cooling las cochairmen tor the local finance Smith wijl designate places for the jdrtve Sept. MO are Mrs. Roy B. reminders. Laura Betz.. president.! »NEA1—If yon think you're MacAfee and Doris Walker. prompted the grot® in preparation, cooler without stockings, you're ee* for presenting Con-Con to the pub-1 wrong. According to the New In cooperation with the Binning- lie before the* Nov. * election. j York Hospital lor Special Surg- | ham and West Bloomfield Leagues Mrs- Donovan GUlraore. Mrs. ery, stockings ai* a boon to la bi-partisan political rally is set Robert Matheson and Row Seibert! hot feet because they absorb for the last week in September at (will supervise the League booth at j' heat. Of course, they should j For Your Wedding QUALITY At rrfces Yen Can Afford and Quantity i it nan la HI ttn C. R. HASK1LL STUDIO 1 ML Clemens Sb Ft 4-MSS At Arthur's Friday and Saturday Advance Fall Showing ie rwMu The amused spectators are Australian boxers Allie Taylor, left, and John Bukouiski. Olympic gymnast Sharon Richardson of Jackson sits with hair awry at a shop in Rome's Olympic Village as a stylist preppies, to set her long tresses. Mark your calendar well, for Fridoy and Saturday Arthur's presents a really big fashion event ... the advance trunk showing of Arthur Jays fall and winter suits and carcoats. Shown by Mr. Jules Goldberg, the collection features beautifully well-bred imported tweeds and fine Forst-monn woolens ... Come see this most exciting Fall '60 collection,, rich in glowing colors, in Jr. Sizes But Scared of Grasshoppers Jexrie Posses Tests; Hopes to Be Astranette Dyed to Match NEW YORK (DPI) — Jerrteiher birthplace, are enthusiastic! Misi Cobb. 2&, who admits grasshofipen »bout her plans, she said. latition scan her, said today she is sure. Her tether, a retired lieutenant I’m si that one day she will fly into! «**<**• In the Alr Faroe, taught [u an outer space and that the prospect ber 1| * I Mi doesn't worry her a bit. *“ Miss Cobb, a fetching, pony- rec tailed blonde from- Oaklahoma m City, is the first woman to undergoj'.ove and pan the same grueling teats her Avoid Irritation (NEA>—If you have any cuts or scratches on your scalp or neck, it would be wise to put off having a permanent wave until they are healed. The waving lotion may cause painful irritation if it gets into them. Fur-bland sweater in novelties, elastic lints. Sele< yours in: Cold, purple, red, blue, black, brown \ ' or prey; Pick a pencil tli> skirt dyed to match, In^ t00«* wool flannel but as a crew member la a ! apace vehicle. She says rhe will enter a gov-j ernment-sporisored training j»wej gram along with a number of other women to be chosen this tell. A veteran pilot, U.S. Aviation’s Woman of the Year for 1969, MM Cobb says rite sees nothing extra, j ordinary In women preparing for apace travel. “After all. it is obvious that women wiR fly in space—certainly as passengers and probably as pilots,” she said. Why does she want to gd into apace? “I’LL BE THEBE” “Why I think it wymld be thej greatest adventure a pilot—no, a person - could ever experience.” she said. ”1 can’t imagine anyone NOT wanting to go into space.” , Miss Cobb says her training is, not theoretical at all. , * “As ter as I*m eaneemed fl I be there. I don't knew when bat Exclusive But Not Expensive! y Make Your fait \ Selection Now! Favortd for Foil all wool tweed patterned with a-shadowy check. The jacket loose and easy and empty defined with a double breasted panel that starts at a wide fringe-edged collar and notches at fhs waist Lodge Gowns $on95 up Bridal Gowns SJA95 up Bridesmaid Gowns with a busy casual ward rob# . By Arthur |ay In corduroy. Sizas 5-15. INGRID’S The female program so far isi not officially sponsored by the National Aeronautic and Space Administration, or other agency. Miss Cobb underwent the tests given at the Lovelace Foundation in Albuquerque, N.M., given to the male astronauts. She said Hi other women were now’ being selected lor the same experiments and that out of the dozen will cornel the first "astranettea” ! The first disclosure — and; Jerries first word that she bad| passed—came last week from Dr.i W. Randolph Lovelace at a aqjfn-tific meeting in Stockholm. Love-' lace Is chairman of NASA's Life: Sciences Committee for “Project j Mercury.” ★ * * • The tests showed that Miss Cobb compared favorably to menj in Her reactions, including the fact, the men "complained more.” Miasj Cobb said today die understood one thing that bothered the men} most was having electric-charged needles stuck in their arms to teatj muscle reaction,, AGE t» TO M The women to he selected must! all be experienced pilots, she said.} with the age range of 29 to 38. Shej said it was evident so ter that! children could not pass the teste she underwent. Miss Cobb ft taking a leave efj absence from bet flO.OOO a year Job as advertising and promotion manager of the Aero Design snd Engineering Co. of Oaklahoma City, which makes twin-engine planes. ■ Her parents, Mr. snd Mrs. William M. Cobb of Ponca City. Okte.; Bridal Salon One of Oakland County's Largest PERRY AT PIKE FI a beautiful testimony to Italian Craftsmanship Bssstlfsl 3-Piece Befreon Set double Dresser, Chest and Bookcase F11Q50 EASY TERMS Others to *7998 As Lew es $1.25 Weekly Our very own Braunda trio of surperb knits! Full fashioned for a perfect fit, they are in light, bright and dark shades for fall. Sizes for Junior Miss. OLGA'S LADY LONO LEGS Super-slims.hips, thighs, legs for lean sheaths, skirts and pants, via powerful satin side panels! French Secret .waist dipt *nd skips, leaves your want free. Curved fegs cling with 6r without stockings, can't pinch:— Firm white nylon power pet, concealed garters. Small, medium, large. 10.95 Maat Year Mari* let Mia* HIKER FOUNTAIN Foundation* — Sacond Flow l / THIRTY-TWO THE POXTiAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, I960 Of the 105 counties Jn Kansas, i Coffee loses 12 to 20 per cent Amarillo High School Senior Win* $500 35 are or have been producers of jit* weight in the roasting process 1 .... "" 1 •' .. " 1 [Shower Honors [Linda Bellows 'bat incmsef Its bulk fegr one-third. SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! Berkshire stocking ends September^! It won't happen again for another year! Buy tkeer seamless and full-feshioited Berkshire stockings now —and save! Berkshire's sensational oooa-a-year sale ends next Saturday! r. S. Chooeo from Berkshire’s new selection of beeutiful stocking color* too! dm HERE’S WHAT YOU SAVE! REG. 1.35.. ..NOW 1.09...Speke 3.19 REG. 1.50. .. NOW 1.19... S pdn 3.49 Satire on Adults Wins Teen Essayv£dntestE Beryl Jean Ward, a 17-year-old self-confessed “juvenile delinquent” from Amarillo, Tex., won the $500 first prize in the nationwide Eugene Gilbert essay contest today with a witty satire aimed at adults. Writing on “What's Right About American Youth," the subject assigned for the contest. Beryl Jean wryly confessed what's wrong with herself. n’t trip “Our generation,” she wrote, ‘has known nothing but war and the threat of drar ... 1f we are confused and insecure, it is because we have never known peace and security.” * h Many pointed to specific poignant instances of where teen-agers had performed services, to their community and their fellow man. Ke—t, Hawaii by way ’tot Honolulu Star-Bulletin. It toob4he form of a letter to her parents on the eve of her 20th birthday, her last day as a- teenager, and detailed /her. "happy, worthwhile years’’ as a teenager. FROM SWITZERLAND One essay reached the Indianapolis Star all the way from Lausanne. Switzerland, where its author, 18-year-old John R. Tritt-schuh of New Castle. Ind., was attending the Ecumenical .Youth Assembly. ar rh«t*ri* why. I don't hot rod it barely ram! I don don't nil adult*. 1 little old ladies. | “Obviously, my biggest fault is •the fact that FnrlT,” ★ * " *■ „ ; The high school Senior's contention that adults tend to judge all teen-agers by the well publicized ' crimes of a few was a fairly com-' mon Jheme in the thousands of 1 essays received, but her sprightly handling of the subject gave her the nod'over 1,200 other finalists. Fiften young essay fats, ranging in age from 14 to It, and coming from »uoh tar flung states ns Hawaii, Arkansas and Sooth Dakota, won prises of Itf each. The winners were announced by Eugene Gilbert, president of. the Gilbert Youth Research Co. The contest was sponsored jointly by the Gilbert organization and by The Associated Press. > PRIZE LIST INCREASED to misunderstand American youth Youth," the young contestants I schools were dosed because of even t^P most Because of the number of ex-was entered in a rontert conducted;were fervent and unanimous in;the segregation problem. lean produce. cellent essays received from all * Amarillo GtotasTimes. [their plea for understanding in a Like jnany^other contestants ----- co-dlttans i parts of the country, the contest * * * 'T* '^y nevei\m?te and, fpi^be? ® “‘’fSl we tave been forced to mature | sponsors dedded to award 15 sec Taken as a whole, the 10 win-!the.v fmd as confusing and full to the Arkansas Democrat pointed ™ rrepm*tb.H- ! ond prizes, instead of 10 as origi- ning essays provided an illumi- of doubts as most adults do. [to the n^berof teen-t^ers fin-, ;£er thM ,ny V^vlou, nally announced. I rating insight into what teen-agers | if feen agers act a little crasy, ^ generation.” — Judy Hubbard. think of themselves and what they: 8 little wild, well maybe they ** rB®*C^n? h*ril**ei |{a|eieh y, c. think the world thinks of them. have n right to, ns 19 y ear old !°* kiitiative that has made the * I "I personally was thrilled by) hi.— .« ah— r.nt ! United States strong. ’ j “We are not juvenile delinquents (these intelligent and quite sensi-j pointed out In an essay sub- i An unusual essay came lrwYt*^ Beryl Jean Ward, 17-year-old Amarillo, Tex., high schjbol student, smiles as she learns she has won first place in the Eugene Gilbert Research Co. and The Associated Press nationwide essay contest. The subject assigned for the contest was “What's Right About American Youth." the adult world continuesi"What’s Right with A me [pervision from adults. THEIR GOOD DEEDS Fifteen-year-old *M C r t a i Greeley of Vancouver, Wash, an essay sent to the Vauooqver Columbia told a story of how teen-agers organised car washes and sponsored dances to defray th# coats of a major operation for a classmate who had only a 50-50 chance to survive. The bey died, despite their efforts. * | “If the people dho see no good in youth today." Marianna wrote, “cpuld have been' at the funeral. I’m sure some of .them would have changed their minds. Have you ever seen 50 teen-agers crying at once? t ■ ! “Six sturdy young men, pal-( hearers, carried the casket and I ***ed tar thehr Mead. This I ------ j raw, lor wlt| them I cried. I ffai success.”— Charles L. Ham-I am one of thooe teen-agers.” berg, Stillman Valley, HI- | j Irving Spitzberg Jr., 18, of Little ★ *. # Rock, Ark., told how teen-agers “We have never known a timet Jin his town organized theirvownU^ from the appalling threat of! (study groups and tried as best wir. not as our parents knew it! they could to keep in contact with but a ^ fond 0f war with pos-1 a n an educational environment when sihiliti«-s more horrifying than! rfvid imagination! Bride-etoct Linda Bellows was honored recently with a miscellaneous shower by Kathy Warren Willow Rpad, Orchard Lake. Miss Bellows will wud James Hollister Sept. 3 at Orchard Lake Community Church. Presbyterian. Parents of the couple we the Pat Bellows of BencMand Street and the Robert Hollister* of Warden Court. .r In ease any adult readers are still wondering “What’s Bight About American Youth,” here L ue some telling quotes from ; other prise winning essay* < “You call us irresponsible, yeti, you leave your children in the carer of thousands of us each evening.” < - Margaret Smith. IT, Alvord.j: Iowa. AST NORMAL KIDS Today's American ywith to Hv-; ing tnone of thr'most turbulent), and tumultuous epochs in man's j; history. This coupled with the age , of automation, which tends to,) make man indolent, placed two], .strikes against him in his struggle, Many of the winners, like first prise wtmer Beryl Jean Ward, advanced 'to the finals by way of eliminations conducted by newspapers In their own locality. Miss Ward's winning assault on* Rising to the challenge oil tive essays.” said Mr. Gilbert of mitted to the Oakland Tribune. 1 Melanie Toyofnku of Uhne. the caliber of the entries received. |------------------------:----- - ..................... NEW and SIMPLE to KNIT SWEATER KITS and SOCK PACKS The OXFORD SHOP Come-Hither Wiles Are Best Bet, Dear i beating up little old ladies. Neither are we all going (to put the first rocket on Mars, j I "Teen-agers today are a normal, i healthy bunch of kids, not muchi i different from any other generation.'' — Sherry May Laing, 15, Spokane, Wash. Our Very Own Exclusive Millinery LeShaw Debbie Schiaparelli 26 W. Huron St. . . . AMERICAS FAVORITE FAMILY TOILETRIES/ COLGATE DENTAL CREAM Best Tasting Way to Fight Tooth Decay REGULAR 53* SIZE REGULAR **31* SIZE POWER PACKED 98* SIZE 10 $O 6 $O 14. man feel she: ★ * * . thinks she knows more than he That men are usually charmed * ^foes. • ^ by a woman who to a good lis-g That the woman who calls af-lt”1*'. the kind who cun draw!| tent ion to her own faults makes out until they are happily I a man uncomfortable. tolldng about themselves. L _ . i That men shy away from worn- S That when one woman run* fn who ^ to >rgw and who I I down another woman, no mat- <*, having the last word, 1 j ter how Justified she may be j !1 | In her judgment, a man I* sure \ j to think she Is Jealous tor some ;GollOnt Computer i . , , ' Lies on Gals' Ages j Tqat men hato to be fussed over • [in public by a woman and resent! LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Gen-, | such, proprietary gestures as hav- eral Motors, Corp’s Delco Radio ■ing a necktie straightened, their,Division Wednesday displayed a 1 (grammar or pronounciation. cor- sn^ali computer with built-in gal- I jrected, their facts challenged, or lantry ! their manners corrected. The computer tells men's* ages i ! That imen hate to hear a woman through a mathematical formula 1 [complain. after receiving answers to 10 ques- ,1 That men are leery of the wom-;tions. The last question is: Are you ! an who to always bragging about [femaleft •how she got the best of someone’ If the answer to "yes," the com- | or put a person in his place < DEL FEY sf tha Psntlae State Bank FASHION DISCOUNT ST01E 22 NORTH SAGINAW STREET BACK TO SCHOOL DRESSES SIZES FOR ALL PRINTS • PLAIDS Reg. $1.99 Dresses Now 81.78 Reg. $2.99 Dresses now 82.58 Reg. $3.99 Dresses now 83.58 • SOLID COLORS DSC OUR CONVINKNT IAY-AWAY PUN YOUR CHILD will go Back-to-School BRIGHT and RIGHT m classic togs'for young folks. Mothers wilt know the quol ity and volue of Arthur's Bock*to-Sthoo! Clothes. SCHOOL DRESSES in easy cars cotton $498 te $798 easy care prints, (trips* and solids. Sizes 3 to b. BOY'S LINED CHINO JACKET v * *598 The all weather school lacket Zip front closing and fully borg-pile lined. Tan, loden or red. c, BOY'S 3-PC. LINED SLACK SET in corrfnroy SPICIALLY PRICIO $498 Fins vvjlf corduroy sljcks# fouidfd Of pi Rid fljnn#! shift with NiltchinB bolt. Sizes 3 to 6X. SUPPLY LIMITED... BUY TODAY! Tossg fefks Shop — lower love! THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1960 Abby Say; One of Thnoo Thlnfr« You Did Your Best, Forget It! II AUT By ABIGAIL VAN BVRKN DEAR ABBT: My grand- fat her died at 96 and it waa up to me to notify all the relative* *o they could come to his funeral., I sent out 14 telegrams and made 5 long-distance calls. wStmLiL , J couldn't contact a ml* Vative who lives hi Omaha because he vis up in Canada fishing, ; which was no fault of mins. All this happened a year ago but I bring it up now because the will was read and the Omaha relative only got a dollar instead of $9500 because he wasn't at the funeral- Now he blames me. Was it my fault? TRIED MY BEST DEAR TRIED: If you tried your best and couldn't reach the fisherman, he shouldn't blame you. AH he can do k write if off as a $9500 catch that got away. * * * DEAR ABBY: Please give your readers the Ipwdown r-are you "Miss".sir “Mrs.”r Is that your picture and when was it taken? And while I'm getting personal, how old are you? NOSY DEAR NOSY: I am MRS. and have been for 21 years (same man; I take my own advice). That picture k recent and I was 42 on July 4th. ♦ v# ' ★ . DEAR ABBY: I got the ihock of my life thk morning when my 10-year-old daughter asked me a question about sex. I had no idea she knew as much as she did. I told her she Was too young to know, Which .she certainly is. v, I think thk modern method of child-raising k all wrong. I mean -telling children everything they want to know. 1 must be right because ate-tktics show that every year more young girts are getting into trouble. 1 would like your opinion. OLD-FASHIONED MOTHER DEAR OLD - FASHIONED: Girls get into trouble because they know too little—not too much. You’re lucky your daughter comes to you with her questions. Don't discourage her.wtth that foolish dodge. “You’re too young to know.” It she’s old enough to ask, she’s old enough to know, dr * ★ DEAR ABBY: A few weeks ago my husband and I gave ' his niece a very lovely present tor her 17th birthday. We took a lot of time selecting thk gift, and also the card that -went with it. .The niece Just said, “Thank you” and die laid it on the piano and didn't bother to open the card or present while we were therf. We stayed about an hour. Shouldn't a gift be opened when the giver* present it? HURT DEAR HURT: It should. WWW DEAR ABBY: When a man and hi* wife are eating together hi a restaurant, what should die man call the wait- My husband calls. AD the waitresses “Honey” and I have even heard him call them “Dear” and “Darting.” Thk bums me up as he calls me Hazel, please print your answer. I'd like tobettle this. HAZEL DEAR HAZEL: A waitress should be called "Miss” or “Waitress.” It is never proper (although it is sometimes effective) to call a waitress "Honey” "Dear" or “Darting” but it tow* beat, “Hey, you!” CONFIDENTIAL TO KATHY: The surest way to mike a man wonder what he ever saw in you k to keep -1^*. *i 36 N. Saginaw S*., A Pontiac Skirts for the Little Hiss FROM. $499 All .woof flannel ond felts. Bold plaids ond solid colors in straight, pleated ond flare styles. SWEATERS Bulky knits —- All the newest colors to select from to match our skirt* *199 to *399 $1 WILL MOLD YOUR SUCTION M OUR CONVIENIENT IAY-A-WAY Chief Bachelor Bites the Dust, Wedding Cake LONDON (UPD — The president and founder of Britain'* Bachelor Association betrayed his follower* Wednesday and got married, "Ah,, well, the last of the great bachelors must go some time,'* sighed Michael Medwin, s 37-year-old television actor who had ‘ Britain’s No. 1 bachelor. • ' * • * * > ] Medwin met his Wateribo in the j person of Mn. Sunny Back, a 31-year-old divorcee with two children. The bridegroom bad been acquainted with Mrs. Back for 13 years.' [ Members of the association shook their heads and moaned that Medwin lasted only five months from the time he started the group in business. Mr: and Mrs. Earl A. Morrison Golden Pays for Morrisons Return for Anniversary Strikers Ask Prince to Help; Chance Slim LONDON OB — Two dozen women strikers have asked Prince Philip for help in their dispute with the British Automobile Association, but chances are slim any aid will come from him. The royal family keeps hands off anything that smacks of politics or trade union disputes. The prince k president of the automobile association and takes an active interest in its work. The Eart A. Morrisons, who; were Pontiac residents for 25 yearsi before' his retirement from Pontiac Motor Division in October 1952. have returned to the area for their gqldeu anniversary’ month to renew friendships. They have taken residence on Glenwood Street, Sylvan Village, few thk month. At their anniversary dinner thk evening at the Botsford Inn will be their children the Rev. and Mrs. Stephen Muranyi of Brooklyn, N. Y.; the Glen Howells of Grosse Pointe Woods who will open their home at Leamington, Ont.j for a family picnic Friday; and the John Thompsons of Royal Oak. Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Morrison win come from Waterloo, Iowa, and the Jambs R. .Morrisons, from Birmingham. Mrs. Morris— operated a eon YsJeocrnt home here daring 4 war jfars mad waa aettva k Mm First Presbyterian Church aad the Parliamentary Study Group. At the Memorial Homes Community, Penny Farms, near Jacksonville, Fla. the Morrisons are active In many groups for retired couples. Mr. Morrison k exhibiting an oil painting at a Philadelphia art show. * ★ ★ The couple has five children, 16 grandchildren and tour greatgrandchildren. More than one-third the passenger automobiles in the U.S. are [more than 10 years old and almost 2 per cent are 19 or more years old. MALIN6 SHOES Mr. and Mrs. Donovan D. Wharff of Middle Belt Road are shown at Waikiki Beads during a recent three-week August vacation in “the Paradise of the Pacific ” The Wharffs and the Howard Peeks of Tucson. Arix., formerly of Birmingham, had a surprise meeting upon walking through the International Market area. After visiting the islands of Oahu, Hawaii, Maui and Kauai, the Wharf fs visited friends in Los Angeles and toured San Fra/tcisco. -ftjRMMtfl lifcc. More.-than evfer/ MAUNG'S BACK-ia-ScHOoL CASUALS 3^4" like more then over—Moling'* new foil styles will gas you! like mere then over—The selection is so widesville you’ll go wHdiville, And all for so little bread (hardly a biscuit, to bo facetiousville)! Ilka more then ever—You really ought to make the Moling itodayl Maling Shoes N NORTH SAfilNAW STREET Open Monday and Friday Evenings thirty-thebe ABIUST SALE! Coats trimmed with very elegant Mink specially priced during our August sale! Buy yours now at savings! tit PONTIAC STORE OPEN EVERY NIGHT '■! • BIRMINGHAM STORE OPEN DAILY '111 5:30 FRIDAY NIGHT 'ifl • A Deposit Will Hold Your Coot in Layaway! frDfrn We know what you want and we have it , . . for on or off campus . . . those striking tweeds . . # beautiful flannels . . . those classic camel tones ... in all the terrific coordinates, vibrant colors, from SEVENTEEN... (jLAMOUR ... MADEMOISELLE ... in junior sizes 7 to 15 . . . and priced to help balance your budget. . . See them! Our Golden Dragon Bag. Handsome In Black, Beige or Navy Leather, $18.50 GCG—"the elecjonl- cjredTcodt The Beauty of Mohair and Dynol woven in a special way to achieve the warmth and luxury of otter. Warm without weight in rich honey or beige Sutton Place gives yoii. the look of fur, $95.00. I TH3 PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 3960 Taxes and State Constitutional Reform Issues; Not Names, in Spotlight for Dems GRAND RAPIDS (UPD—Wb«n|of the State Supreme Court Michigan Democrats gather here January, this weekend for their tall state| Williams appointed Souris where the caMxoveny could I This proposal won a spot on the develop. baHot through the efforts of the _ Michigan Junior Chamber of Com- The tag issue facing the^ Demo* tfe Michigan Uague of convention, issues—not candidates} justice after Voelker stepped down crats are constitutional reform and I,™6*?' “™ ‘nc —wiU he the prime consideration!with about 7's years still left in^^^ Women Voters, in this presidential election year, his term.Souris, too. is expected swainson has openly presented) WllBams has' said WR cam* And; of course, party members to get the convention s nod. L, opposition to a measure on the P■»*■ toT lhe W"1, will be looking to see how.Lt. Gov. Thin leaves the convention | November ballot to set up the V** contrary to Swainoon, the John B. Swainson. Democratic! with the main job of hammering [structure necessary to call for a] leoder. gubernatorial nominee, conducts J , platform far the eandl* [constitutional convention. I Both Williams and Swainson say himself now'that Gov. G;^5lennenJ—T------------—5-**——w— v —— Williams is stepping out after » he^ng in the leader's spotlight 12 ^ years. ^ j | Swainson has said he wants all the prevent members of the State Administration Board up for reflection in November to be on theDemocratic ticket with him and Rep. T. Join Leainski. the party’s lieutenant governor candidate. The convention is expected to fullfill Swainson'* wishes when it I completes the party slate. This means Secretary of State! James Haro, Atty. Gen. Pauli Adams, State Treasurer Sanford Brown and Auditor General Otis! Smith should all be nominated by! the convention. WANTS SO URLS Swainson also has expressed the) desire for the convention to r nate Theodore Souris of Detroit to run in the nonpartisan race to fill the unexpired term of John D. Voelker. who resigned as justice they agree constitutional reform is needed, but they differ on how to go about it. Swainson tavors Ole idea ol specific 2nd GREAT HIT the State Constitutional, leaving the task to the legislature rather than a convention. August SchoUe, president of the state AFL-GO and very influential among state Democrats, also is opposed to the constitutional convention plan. He is considered an important backer of Swainson. TO 4 PER CENT Another November ballot issue will be a proposal on raising the state’s sales tax celling from 3 per cent to 4 per cent. Democrats are generally opposed to such an increase, and instead want to install an income taxto. finance state operations. " ★ A party spokesman said the c tion, medical pare for the aged and an aging program—ayhas where differences with the Republican Party are generally E. Coast-Alaska Northern Trail r Blazed by N-Sub WASHINGTON *AP) The American nuclear-powered submarine Seadragon, ducking under huge Icebergs in the arctic'* northwest passage; has pioneered a short sea route from the eastern j United States to Alaska. The Navy announced the Sea-dragon's feat Wednesday. It saidj the sub had blazed the trail for a Brasil grow* shout two-thirds b( the world's coffee. ispelled out. Michigan** economic climate for industrial growth also I* ex- ________ ^ pected to be a ptetfarm Ismh. | possible military and. commercial The convention also Will select ) presidential and vice presidential electors who would go to the electorial college if Democrats get the majority in the presidential election. The convention opens Friday with registration and briefing sessions for legislature and congressional candidates. A pre-convention platform committee will aim start work friday. Gov. Leroy Collins of Florida will be the main speaker at a convention keynote dimer Friday niihL.. vention also can be expected to Convention floor action gets deal with federal'aid and educa-junder way ^Saturday morning. Claim Russ Handing Out Anti-Peiping Manitesto NEW YORK (AP)—The Soviet most of the Iron Curtain countries Union was reported today to bejfboth at the Bucharest meeting route through the Parry Channel. The trip aim helped develop technique! and teat equipment for submarine under-ice operation*- The SeadragAp left Portsmouth, N...H.7 Aug. i. It headed north between Greenland and Labrador through Baffin Bay. then west through a series « sounds and straits designated as Party Chan-| nel. Part of the trip was made the surface,•vpa*’* under water. _it one point the submarine nosed down more than 300 feet to get under an iceberg 879 leet wide and 1,471 feet long. r N-Conference Opens ROCHESTER. N. Y. (UPI)-The| 10th annual International Conference on High Energy Nuclear] Physics opened today at the University of Rochester. M PERSON Pontiac's Own BILLY MARTIN Friday, ( August 26th 7 to t P.M. Buy Billy Martin's latest recording arid hove if autographed by" hj nr> personally! GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 18 E. Huron, Pontiac FE 4-0566 Open Men and Fri. Ives. and after) have gone along with the Khrushchev thesis about the need for peaceful coexistence. The exceptions, in adidtion to Red China, have been .Outer Mongolia and Albania, which have tended to sit on the fence.” HKIkffiM’M STARTING FRI. at 7:00 P. M. “ADVENTURES HUCKLEBERRY FINN” A REAP OF LIVING—All New York appears to be In ruins as this towering pile of rubble seems to bury the Empire State Building, far in the background; The mountain of bricks and girders and wood Is all that remains of hundreds of buildings demolished in a six-square-block area between Eighth and Ninth avenues, and 23rd and 29th streets. Scheduled for completion in late 1961, the Penn Station South development will consist of ten 21-story apartments. After the initial payment of about {650 a room, each apartment will have a monthly carrying charge of about {24 a room. SAMMY KAYE AND HIS ORCH. DUKES of DIXIELAND WALLED LAKE CASINO BALLROOM Preparing to Try RB47 Crewmen Together Alone at Last Wife, PHof Say Goodby distributing to Communist parties throughout the world an anti-! Peiping “manifesto” designed to enlist mass support against Red China’s challenge to Soviet leadership of the Communist world. A dispatch from Washington to the New York Herald Tribune said existence of the document ha* been established “through information from behind the Iron Curtain and elsewhere and a summary of the manifesto’s general line is available in high government circles.’ ★ The story speaks of a struggle for dominance within the Soviet bloc of nations and adds: Peiping is not soon brought to acquiesense with Moscow—or at least to silence about its disagreements—Washington would not be surprised if Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev attempted some n of Communist-bloc ’ideological quarantine’ of Red China ... 1 * * Or • j 'Intended to serve as a guide liqe for Communist agitators to rally the masses for Mr. Khrushchev’s case against the ‘dogmatism’ of Red Chinese boss Mao Tse-tung, the document vividly film trates, experts here say, how paper thin was the facade of unity that the Communist camp tried to present in the final communique at Bucharest which purported to bridge over the differences between Peiping and Moscow. ’• ’■*- -♦ ★ . t 'The anti-Peiping ‘manifesto’ fas tt has been dubbed by Western diplomats) condemns those 'dogmatists’ who mechanically interpret what Latin said 40 year* ago to mean that nuclear war la inevitable and that war is the only/ means by which the revolution can be made to triumph. “This of course, refers to the Chinese argument that nuclear war is not to be feared because H would mean the triumph communism over capitalism LONDON (UPD — Western dipr MOSCOW (AP)—Barbara Pow-lomats reported from Moscow to- ers had a final secret meeting day that preparations appear to) Wednesday with her husband, be well under way .for the trial Francis Gary Powers, her law-of the two American crewmen of J*B disclosed today. The young an RB47 plane shot down by the oouple werttjef* completely alone Russians July 1. * * » The proceedings are expected to differ considerably from those applied by the Kremlin In last week's [trial of U2 pilot Francis Gary [Powers. behind the dosed door of Ms prison cell for more than an hour. It- was the first privacy they had had since before he left Turkey for his May Day U2 flight over the Soviet Union, which * * * [touched off an explosive situation i Soviet authorities have main-Internationally and led him to a tained silence thus far on the date j 10-year sentence for espionage. [of the trial and its nature and! # ★ * scope. Newsmen in Moscow have “Barbara is much brighter now [been unable even to determine [than we've seen her for some [whether the trial will even be heldjtime,” said attorney Frank Rbg- TUESDAYS and THURSDAYS FAMILY BARGAIN NIGHTS ALL RIDES ADULTS sad CHILDREN Fro* Parkinf Fro* Admission in public. Barbara Powers Turns Down Movie Oilers MOSCOW (AP( — Since her ar-| rival in Moscow, Barbara Powers 'has had several offers to make; j Hollywood movies. “She declined immediately.'-‘at-] torney Frank Rogers of Roanoke, j Va., said today. “I don’t know what sorts of roles were offered. She did not give the offers serious consideration.’' i He gave no other details. t of Roanoke, Va. Rogers and lawyer Alexander Parker of Richmond, Va., also told newsmen they had been unable to get satisfactory receipts for Barbara’s mercy petition to Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev when it was delivered today. ★ ★ * Consequently, they said, they took it away with them and mailed it from a postal box in downtown hotel. ★ *- * The two lawyer* had gone to Brezhnev’s officq to deliver a short handwritten letter from Bar. bara begging the Soviet President to arrange a reduction in the 10-year sentence. to why, in the nuclear age, the war would be madness, especially since the triumph of communism is inevitable anyway. He Sells Papers to Busy Man Who Forgot Pay DETROIT Ufi—A Detroit newspaper boy coipplained he needed more than a signature for credit. ■k + k Denny J. Jacobs, 13, was seeing souvenir newspapers to VFW conventioners Wednesday when he stopped a man in a hurry. The prospect said he would be right back, as soon as be had made a speech, and rushed into an auditorium. The man did come back and sign the application blank. Then he handed Denny' a pen and whisked away, saying, “Don’t forget to send those papas.’’ ,★ ★ ★ Printed on the pen was “Vice President Richard M. Nixon.” Unimpressed, Demy simply bemoaned, “He forgot to give me the money.” MA 4-3135 Show Starts at S 7:40 The Adventures of Jin WILKINSON that piAy-em 1 Out of 3 Englishman Receive Social Security LONDON (UPD - One Britisher in every three receives regular weekly benefits under Britain's Social Security system, the ministry of pensions disclosed yesterday. The ministry’s annual report said millions more are getting occasional payments during brief bouts of sickness or unemployment. The report said the ministry makes a monthly payout in t *1& • COCOa hy DC LUXE • 'The paper goes into detail as fits and allowances of {280 mil- which puts the annual expenditure at about {3.36 billion. The ministry’s figures do not include money paid out for free medical care under the national 'According to information here, [health service. I'.'MHrliliEl? DRIVE-IN THEATER FISH FRY EVERY FRIDAY 11:30 A.M. 'Oil Closing All You Want D C D U Fried Lake Erie ■ ClxV^rl ira> I Bkiik nf the nutiUndlnr re f 'B*»K te lut week’i fteh fr] J »c »1U wellnte l• alter eei wy tSZ£M.rt,tk $119 / Children Inter It ., ..?lj HOWARD JOHNSON'S I 3650 Diaht Hwy. DRAYTON PLAINS - NOW -SHOWING PONTIAC I i Leh«-Airp«rt K—d»—!•* Offke Opaat 7 P.M. • NOW SHOWING • i ALL COLOR |TMEHgMM42*fG Show Starts 7:55 Open 7:00 F.M. EXCLUSIVE! - FIRST RUN I onJBRYlENB -^22^ MMin nmms ERNEST D. QLUCXSMAN iJBRY URNS wane iPMAMOUUT RELEASE -ond- TARZAN'S NEWEST THE UNRIVALED NERO OF THEM ALL BRINGS YOU HISTORY’S MOST AFRICAN ADVENTURE! FINEST! mCEHT mraiifc-ai m 3 Dimension and WarnerColor •PHANTOM ofTHE RUE MORGUE' BBr&UO-OAJUIlIWi FMMQAMEDDi-STPf FWOT £S& ‘ •.ryX> Box ol Matches Carnot ] Death of Miami Woman MIAMI (UPI) - A box of matches caused the death of Mi* Jeanette Graham, 36, Tuesday. Police said when Mrs. Graham struck a match to. light a cigarette the match head burst and set other matches la the box afire The flaming match host sat fin to her pajamas, and aho waa homed to death. " i X" f r || THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 246 I960_. THIRTY-FIVE ESS2 KEEGO EAGLE: NOW Thru FRI. Janes STEWART "Thu ANATOMY A MURDER” Arraign Bartender on Rights Charge DETROIT tin — A Detroit bar-j1 tender waa la be arraigned to-| day on chargaa of ass—It sad bah tery and violation ai the Michigan clvfl rights law la the ejecta of a Sepgalesc exchange student tram ha bar. A warrant was Issued Wednesday. against Steve Mondalek, 42.1 by Recorder's Judge W. McKay; Skillman A customer in tie bar.' David Hutton, 27. arms also named I the assault warrant. The student, who la touring the! United States under the State Department's cultural exchange program. charged that Mondalek refused to serve him in a Detroit bar Monday. YFW LISTENS TO NIXON — Vice President Nixon ia shown on the rostrum at Cobo Hall in Detroit as bo addresses the Veter- ans’of Foreign Wars in convention Wednesday. Shown are half the delegates and others present to hear the GOP nominee. Speaks Modestly Nixon Belongs to DETROIT CAP)—Vice President Nixon was presented credentials Richard M, Nixon, n member,(of a delegate as he left the hall — “* ™ its lint seven national encampments. Dim added: ”TMs will he the last time U speak to yoa 'as vtce preal- happens la November, It may be the last time as an elected official of the United States." There was a chorus of “No, No” from the floor, to which the VFW had admitted the general public, including some wearing Nixon-for-President buttons. * * * Sen. John F. Kennedy. D-Maaa., Nixon’s Democratic rival In the November presidential election, also is a VFW member and will address the convention Friday. Ex-MSU Gridder Traded LITTLE ROCK, Ark. W—The Denver Broncos have traded center Larry Cundiff of Michigan State | to the Boston Patriots. They received defensive tackle Gordyj Holz of Minnesota. Both were starters of their respective American Football League teams. The Broncos, however, recently acquired center Bill Kourtz of Dayton bom the Los Angeles Chargers. The Broncos play the Dallas Texans here Saturday. Diggs Helps Picket , WASHINGTON (AP) - Four congressmen joined a picket line at nearbpy Glen Echo, Md., amusement park Wednesday night to protest its ban on Negroes. The sign carriers were Reps. Charles O. Porter (D-Ore), Adam State Trooper Wouldn't Leave Motorists Flat DELTA. Colo. (AP)—Travel on U.S. Highay SO north of Delta was mulcted to one-way while state Patrolman Red Ferrell spent an hour and 20 minutes picking up a spilled box of nails. —----------------—-.....——j The 25 pounds of asbestos sid- ing nails scattered over the mad Clayton Powell (D-NY). Seymour after falling from a lumber sup-Halpera (D-NY) and Charles C- ply truck. Diggs (R-Mlch). I “ * * * | Feature for Women? — Pdweil’s sign said ‘‘Freedom and Justice for All.” The others! RALEIGH, N. C UP — A theater called on Democrats and RepuhpWfciBed this triple feature: "Outlaw cans to ‘‘support your party plat-[Women," "Swamp Women,1’ i form, stay out." rPrehlatoric Women.” MIRACLE MILE MICHIGAN'S MOST FABULOUS DRME-IR THEATER Telegraph of Square Lake Rd. FI 2*1000 Box Office Opens 7:00 P.M. EXC-L-US-I-V-E PONTIAC AREA 1ST MIN DOUBLE FEATURE! NO FILM EVER DARED TOUCH THIS THEME BEFORE! ‘‘n’SlKAUNSEYMPbKTJ ON THE CAMPUS"._J | ON THE LARGEST SCREEN YOU'VE EVER SKN1 PREMIERE SHOWING — IN OAKLAND COUNTY-^ SHATTERING RECORDS FROM COAST TO COAST! | * No one... BUT NO ONE... will be admitted to the theatre after the start of each performance of PSYCHO. STARRING STEVE ALLEN JAYNE MEADOWS WALTER WINCHELL MAMIE VAN DOREN _ CO-STARRING -------- MICKEY SHAUGHNISSY CATHY CROSBY - HERBERT MARSHALL . GUEST STARS - Rocky Marciano, Sheilah Graham Earl Wilson, Louis Sobol MUM 2nd Feature - -i THEYEAR43 FRESHEST fun ...when two teen-age elopers AND A CARLOAD OF MIXED-UP CHARACTERS LEAD THE LAW ON A MERRY CHASE/ Chartroose Caboose COLOR. {L I** MOLLY BEE P/S m BEN COOPER lw Lj EDGAR BUCHANAN AKMummcrai SHOWN AT 2t$5 - 5:55 • 9:00 THE PONTIAC PRESS* THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, I960 THIRTY SIX FREE! COTTON CANDY IFOR THE KIDDIES! All the Credit You Want at George's' Come join the fun Friday and Saturday and save money to boot on nationally fdmous Quality for Bock-To-School and Fall. Chorge what you want. We'll make terms to suit you with no money down. Free Holden Red Stamps as your bonus. BOVS GIRLS Ve WIN A NEW BIKE FREE! Just enter M sseoDd no Drawing Sept 17th ^■■coupon Free to all Boys and Gris accompanied by Paronts FRIDAY ONj.YI DOOR BUSTER $3.99 LADIES' DRESSES DOOR BUSTER LARGE PLAID BLANKETS DOOR BUSTER 69C MEN'S UNDER SHIRTS DOOR BUSTER 29C LADIES' PANTIES DOOR BUSTER $1.00 FIRST QUALITY NYLON HOSE DOOR BUSTER $2.99 Birdsty* DIAPERS $179 FREE STAMPS Bring coupon to first floor. Expires August 26th. SALE $1 49 Cotton 3-14 School Blouses Sale of $29.99 Imported FRENCH KNITS New-Fashions In 3 to H Cotton School PLEATED JERSEYS Simulated Leather . Ladies' Smart Centerol fur Blend Ladies' Fall Styled SWEATERS JACKET $1Q99 SLACKS $2" "MOLLY GOLDBERG" DRESSES $jj99 Others $3.99 to $1.99 Orion Pleated , SKIRTS $399 Plaid All Wool SLACKS $399 "Sue Brett" Sheath DRESSES ORION SHRUGS $3» ^Complete selection of Chub-bette Dresses Slips, Blouses, Slacks, Skirts. [$25 Dynel Lined Woof CAR COATS For School or Work Ladie's Blouses by SMART NEW STYLES IN Sub-teen DRESSES nacSMJSlNv ST. MART’S COATS-SETS COTTON PANTS Complete Sub-teen Department. Skirts, Blouses, Lingerie, Slacks. Budget School Blouses .■ r Looks, Fools liko leather r* Dynel lined cdat of * BURLMERE ONCE A YEAR SALE $1.35 Nylon HOSE BERKSHIRE Ladios' Leather Fall Styled PURSES LEVI SLACKS $399 SKIRTS 1.99 $100.00 Imported CASHMERES $59°° others $2.99 to $5.99 SWEATERS $399 $1.15 SEAMLESS SHEER NYLONS “Preston Girl” SCHOOL BLOUSES $4,99 "kittle Scout" school Boys'-G iris' SHOES & $3.99 While They Lost 1.69 Sturdy 3-16 JEANS and SHIRTS For Bock-ta-School Nylon Slips by; / VANITY FAIR It Heady-Made PRINT DRAPES aewpanatae CANNON •SHEETS j $199 $5.99 ORLON BLANKETS 13 oa. Weetern BOY'S JEANS POLO SHIRTS Vanity Fair Pantiat ... Boys' Poplin School Jacket’s Fruit of the Loom T-Shirts Stock up on Ivy's and Continentals Smart Men's NEW YORKER SWEATERS Boys' Sturdy Slocks New Color Bedford CORDS 1.99 Men'* Hanes Sweatshirts Mosterbilt Lo-Hip BRIEFS Cotton B.V.D. SHIRTS $199 Marlboro All Wool Sjuits PANTS ‘7.99 MEN'S SLACKS Sweat Shirts 74 N. SAGINAW NEAR HURON FREE DOWNTOWN PARKING / ..ladies'.. Fall Robes $599 Fur Blend Sweaters j Canterbury 1 $899 miMm&m. I * < m■ 1MM8 GIRDLES BY IPLAYTEX $695 Ladle*' Bra 1 PERMA-LIFT ] $250 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, IMP SUGAR DOMINO sugar; Pound Bog SALE DAYS - Thursl, Aug. 25 thru Sir., Aug. 28,1950 Del Monte TOMATO CATSUP Grade A WHOLE FRYERS - ' L M|| , 1 Chicken IKS.... • I Chicken BREASTS,. I Chicken THIGHS... Del Monte SWEET PEAS 55*: BACKS and NECKS, 49« \ Roasting CHICKENS Hygrode's Conned PICNICS BUTT ROAST Pork SAUSAGE Del Monte QUALITY Lean Meaty RIB CHOPS . ... Shoulder Steak . Shoulder Roasts Breast df VEAL VEAL Patties . Golden Beauty Your Choice RED TOMATOES LIO—HOME-GROWN HEAD LETTDCE frozen FRUJT drinks CRISP—HOME-GROWN • n^ihVuulffi' * orang* - wm*Y LEM0N * kasmerry lemon TOP FROST FRESH FROZEN VEGETABLES rMKCH nuts a «,jnn WAS |% 10 «. *1UU Plus 50 FREE -KRAFT DELUXE CHEESE SLICES -*■ n f« »00 or •% ■ StaiO* w Plmtntt ■ • GM^"U PINCONNING MILD CHEESE PHILADELPHIA CREAM CHEESE •ms •PEASulCABBOTS Tit Fro it Froxtn VEGETABLES or ANY 4 ERGS. OF BEEF RQAST CEREALS FOR TASTE AND ENERGY! SUPER MARKETS AIL FOOD TOWN MARKETS-OPEN SUNDAY 9 A M mifcTT-EIGirg * L THE PONTIAC PRESS* THURSDAY. AUGUST M, 1900 Just Smell That Camp Food.%t£ By JANET ODELL FobUm Prate Home Editor SMOKY MOUNTAINS NAT’L PARK — This is probably the only typewittor within miles around hen. We're camping at Cosby Campgrounds which la one of the most isolated in the path' There wasn’t room in any of the others. The path ranger sold I could typewriter. Any resemblance between our campsite and what’s typical is purely accidental. We don’t have things laid out so precisely. And we DON’T have steak eveay sight. We’ve had It name. This year I added two new items to my cooking supplies. 1 brought along my small pressure cooker. It’s so much better for cooking vegetables than the thinner camp pot. One night I made beef stew in it which tasted Just right. summer. Wo eeefced our sue steak an It, kombwgen several timea and a sirlala tip reset Then we*ve aaed It as an evca. Having hot breed in camp is reel luxury. With the biscuits, let them wok about 10 minutes to thdtt took them out of the pan and turned them over on the grill to brown. The cornbread mix came with Its own httle pan. Just about five minutes before it was done and jit took the aame amount of time as the package said for an I flipped the whole thing over on a piece of aluminum foil to brown the top. Wonderful! We had bought some Kentucky sorghum the day before and that added the final appetizing taste. Fm always tatorested to see-what other campers have to sot. Of course, maay of them live out ot cam Just as seme city talks do. But others are trying to vary their menus and to get away from the eternal iamburger, hot dog routine. Our next door neighbor in the Mammoth Cave compgrounds was simmering pea soup with a ham bone the day we arrived. She, incidentally, was from Kalamazoo. A group of men camped near us at Lake Cumberland, Ky. tried up all the fish they caught and had triad chicken the other meals. Their wives would have been pleased to see how tidy their cooking ana, was before they left for the daily fishing trip. Gatlinburg was mobbed, but I understand that is its usual condi- tion at this time of year. Aa urn were etroUtag down die main street after dinner, we met Eileen Muir, who for a number of year* was director of the Pontiac YWCA. Yen knew that everything la rotative. If I had to heat water at hams every Urns I wanted akes Place of Potatoes.at Times Simple to prepare and good. la aethtag pushing yen. Wo have Lamed to leaf away a day wNh- be glad to fit bask to my elec-trie raa_ aad a wanking Things I will remember include the hot biscuits and mountain honey served with dinner one night ... the fun of shopping in strange stores and of finding unfamiliar foods to try .. . the baby who couldn’t have been more than a year old who was alternating swigs from his bottle with bites of doughnut his father was feeding him (be teemed to prefer the doughnut) . . . and the unfailing courtesy of the local storekeeper*. They also say, "Thank you. Y’all come back again soon.” Unfortunately we can’t. We’ll be home next week. WaStr l^ruww notary seed &3tr #» Stir together the corn meat nit and 1 cup cold wafer, in mediumsized saucepan heat 3 cups wafer to boiling; pour hi com meal mixture, stirring constantly aa you do so. Cook over lose bant until thickened, storing often. Cover and cook 3 minutes or longer. Stir in celery seed. * * * Turn into loaf pan; chill. Turn out; slice % inch thick; cut each slice into 2 triangles. Coat flour; fry slowly in hot buffer tO lightly browned on both side*. Long Time Planning If you haven’t made plane for your first meal upon returning from your vacation, the American Meat Institute suggests you frees* a dinner before you leave. Shape ground beef patties, layer with waxed paper and wrap securely in aluminum foil or other freezer wrap. Freeze the hamburger buns and vegetables, toot Watermelon Gelatin Is Food for Conversation Tim wonderful fruits of am ready for tot table right now in a Watermelon Stow Salad furnished with sheet of melon and green grapes. The salad is mads from the new watermelon-flavored gelatin, one of the moat tafleed-about food .flavors to ha introduced to the American home-taker. Moat people are flighted with the sweet watermelon never of the gelatin; ethers are not rijhuw thusiastic. The beet way to settle the controversy is to serve; this Watermelon Stow Salad, with Am delicate pink gelatin whipped to is molded froth that no one can resist. This recipe adds 1 tablespoon of lemon Juice to toe water in which the gelatin powder is dissolved. The lemon Juice is sup _____on tbs package lor giving Hie product a tartar flavor. Almost any trait hr a special delight In combination with Aa Watermelon fisnr Into*. Freeh or traeea melon balls, of ooarse am Meal. Melon and grapes am pineapple or apple lag at slices Interesting accompaniments. Be- Thh whipped gelatin require* no caloric dressing, so figure - con-. sdoos members of the ftimlly will beer till Wai it- ’Mastiffs v tin in fioflhig water. Stir in cold water aad lemon Juke. Chill un-slightly thickened. Beat egg white until stiff. -Beat thickened gelatin until light aad loamy. Beat egg white into gelatin. Pour Sato gelatin mold or into 8-inch square pan and freeze until firm, about S boon. Cut la squares. A * * 'm Serve gambhed with melotr slices, grapes or other fruits.* Yield: 8 servings. crowd, allow two cope af filling lor 13 slices of bread or frgo rounded tablespoons of filling for each slice of breed. KB (BEAM treat - Ice cream Selection of syrups and sauces makes a delightful Afternoon treat. Sauces can be as simple as maple or chocolate flavored syrup poured straight from the bottle, or a Mend of syrup and fresh fruits. One favored sauce combines maple-y flavor syrup and peanut butter. Male Cook Originates Salmon Strogohoff omitted, if desired. Top lemon-buttered fish with sour cream and herbs; foil wrap and cook 10 to 19 minutes on each side. Here Is something out-of-the-ordinary to try on your own backyard barbecue. It is Salmon Steaks, Stroganoff, a unique method ot cooking this delicious fish over charcoal. The steaks are brushed on both sides with lemon Jules and butter and then placed oo individual strips of quilted foQ. After browning lightly over the coals, tour cream is mooned over each steak and a mixture of basil, onion salt, roeemity and paprika is sprinkled on top. Then each steak is aeafed in k quilted tofi packet and grilled for five to seven mbaifes. This mouth-watering recipe Is tM Inspiration at njekbaatolef Bead fa*. Mr. Backbarth decided to safe* this recipe to the Kaiser M Cookoff aad fee next thing ha knew ha woo on Me way to Hawafi as one of the tacky ttoal-Iris. Salmon Steaks. Stroganoff Use quilted broiling or heavy duty foil OR, double thickness regular household foil. 4 (Mash) thick trash sslraon steaks ft teaspoon onion salt teaspoon rout miry ft teaspoon paprika Z cups commercial,soar era Line firebox of grill with heavy quilted foil. Add charcoal, light and let burn until flames have subsided. Cut 4 strips of quilted foil three times the width and 1% times the length of the steaks. Brush steaks both rides With lemon Juice and butter, and place ob one-halt of individual foil strips. Place on grill and brown lightly on each aide. Remove^ Mix paprika. Hpoon a De- fourth Of BOOT I forth of kerb mlxtara. Fold fell over each ateak, then triple-told edge* to oeaL Return packets to grill. Cook for 5 to 7 minutes,, turning frequently. Place on plates and let each one cross-slash packets, folding back flap* to open. Note: Browning salmon may be Three Fruits Blend in Loaf of Quick Bread Here is a quick loaf to serve with cool crisp summer salads. Whole-Wheat Bread % cup pineapple cyrup (from caanc plDMppM) W cup hotline water ft cup attend dried eprlcote 1cup diced pitted dote. 1 CM m tecopoono celt • 1 teaspoon Tamils ^ m rape etonetround 1>» tesopoono double -1 ft cup chopped walnut* Heat together pineapple syrup and bqjling water to boilingi popr ttvef apricots and dates; let'stand until cool. Beat egg until thick with salt aad vanilla. Stir la trait mlxtara. wefL Turn into buttered small loaf pan (about 8 by 4 by 3 inches); bike in slow (250 degrees) oven until cake tester comes out clean— about 1 hour. Turn rack; cool. May be diced thin shortly after baking. (FREE with nan-in certificate in tO-lh. sacks) This offer is eur way of inviting you to try Pfllsbury’a BESfr Flour. Itrs the flour that bltndtt ao smoothly, For your beat baking (and a steak knife offer, besides) look for the specially marked seeks of Pillsbury a BEST Flour. Ono Steak Knife 2* with offer from 2 and (Mb. sacks 5 more Steak Knives fest $1.00 with offer from any size sack The flour you find in kitchens where only . the BEST tnttefe RED ROSE TEA BAGS c 100 Ct. Fkg. 99* [ GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE ] NSW CROP MICHIGAN DRY ONIONS 3 “-25’ Viatic Now Crop POLISH DILL PICKLES, Qt. Jar . .,41 33* CLOROX - Gulfen Jug FREE! Spuiifu on Ivoiy Jug! 55‘ HEINZ SWEET PICKLES 25 Ounca Jor 39' VLASIC MAX Z AN ELLA OLIVES, No. 12 Icebox Jar .. 39‘ ...... VALUABLI COUPON —- DUET LUXURY MARGARINE With This Coupon Thais., Aug. 25 Thru Wad., Aug. Si, I960 Limit 1 Coupon Nr Customer PRICE WITHOUT COUPON 39c Lt. n UNIT LIQUID STARCH HOME-GROWN CABBAGE “O FRESH BLUEBERRIES PL ( FRESH FROZEN FOODS j VALLEY FROST FROM FROZEN Strawberries 5 SS1 Soa tak Freak From* 1 FISH STICKS 3 "*• *1 | Sea Trooaora Faoah Crinalri Frank Froeee Frasoo Iraadod Jimbo Shrinp French Fries "* 39* «*. 10* Stone Horn: Moo., Taw, Sri. 9 to 9 —Friday 9 to 9 Imf • Win# • Liquor to Take Out Comur Baldwin AvC/add Wulton Bird. Phone FE 2-5192 / , ' ij L / ' '; / THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1060 THIRTY-NINE Beef Brisket Simmers in Vegetable Broth CnOUEN AND RICE CREOLE — Chicken continues to be an inexpensive food. Chicken cooked in a creole sauce rings a change in the dinner menu. Slivers of ham add more flavor and color while flee supplies the needed starch and heartiness. Cook Frying Chicken With Bice in Skillet Pot roasts are delicious but they do qsed a* bit of watching. Some enthusiastic about boiled beef with horseradish others are not To suit both tastes what about Boiled Beef with Brown Sauce. . . * * * Boiled beet-brisket or chuck will [be midst and tender and flavor ful. And the Brown Sauce will add the rich brown color and flavor of the pot roast gravy. If you like the flavor of vegetables cooked in broth, just add carrots or potato young parsnips atxhit Jhirty minutes 'ie/ore the meat is done. You will have enough broth tor the bhuyn sauce and an extra to refrigerate for making A savory soup. gavwy Boiled Beef 1 eup^teg law * 1 tablespoon* srtMSST 4 pound* at bant MM a In f large kettle or Dutch oven combine all Ingredients except the meat Simmer covered tor 30 min* utes then add meat and simmer covered, SH to 4 hours or until fork tender, replenishing water if necessary. When meat is tsnder. remove from liquid, slioe, and place on hot platter. Serve Brown Sauce. Make in a Jiffy Serve on Fruit Cut Wedges in Muffin# Fill With Cream Cheese itte-^JPpUP^ 1 teaspoon parsley I 3 tablespoons flour 3 cups strained beet broth - H teaspoon «Mt . I tablespoon horaeradlah 1 teaspoon kitclxn bouquet Melt tat in saucepan or small! skillet and stir in flour. Add strained broth in which meat was cooked, salt, horseradish, and kitchen bouquet. Cook stirring con* stantly until gravy thickens. Serve| in separate bowl. Ttoenty years ago this recipe could not have been printed. It Is one of the many we find nowadays that take full advantage of partially prepared foods. You’ll probably want to keep it to use in the winter too. Orange Sauce far Finite 1H cups cold racoostltuted qulek-osen oraatt Juice 1 package lemon or vanilla lnstaoi pudding mix Dash of soil Pour cold orange juice into mixing bowl. Add pudding mix and salt ahd beat slowly with egg beater just until well mixed, about 1 minute. Do not overheat: [mixture will be thin. Let stand to thicken slightly. Serve over gingerbread or cake squares, fruit or [cottage puddings, fruits, or ice] cream. Makes IV cups, l Note: Sauce may be stored in refrigerator. When seeking new twists to add originality to your entertaining, remember the time factor, it’s sometimes effective simply to invite your guests for an unusual hour. Breakfast, for example, has iany possibilities if hostesses tooae to use them. Brunch Muffins, simple bran muffins elegantly finished off with filling of marmalade cream! cheese, and coffee team up to! complete the easy-fixing but festive repast. Fill the muffins by cutting a wedge-shaped cone from the top! and then spooning the cream [cheese mixture into the, hollow.j Cap"the muffin with its topknot to; serve. These muffins also accompany ■ scrambled eggs and tomato wedges tastefully, should you wish to serve a later morning brunch. cop lifted Omit j JS _ *» cap augar Combine bran and milk; let stand until most of moisture to -taken up. Add egg and shortening; beat well. Sift together flour, baking powder, salt and sugar. Add first mixture, stirring only until * [combined. FBI greased small muffin pans two-thirds full. Bake in moderately hot Oven (400 degrees! [about 20 minutes, or until nicely [browned. While muffins are baking, whip [cream cheese until fluffy. Fold in marmalade, (hit a small round wedge-shaped section out of top of each muffin. Ful cavity with cream 'cheese mixture. Replace “top-knot” lightly. Serve immediately. Yield: 15 muffins, 2 inches in [diameter. k Newsprint is Canada's biggest export, followed by wheat. If you can't go-to New Orleans, why not bring it to you — in the tantalizing Creole and rice dishes fog which the French Quarter cooks have long been famous. . Just making this Chicken and Rfce Creole will give you a lift The bright color and zest of the traditional Creole sauce sets off the white, delicate rice, and the aroma that fills the kitchen will announce that dinner will be .special tonight, , * It’s all made la a skillet, and na you win find, rice Is n natural for a skillet meal. It Mends so well with meat, pool-try, and seafood, with bruit or vegetable, with herbs had spice. In most skillet dishes, as with this Creole specialty, the rice can be added to the simmering ingfedieats Just as it comes front the package. There to no ‘‘prepara hod’’ required. Chicken and .Rice Creole is a| meal-in-a-dish. Just add a tossed green salad, mellow cheese for dessert, and you can enjoy the delights of New Orleans on the home porch, Chicken tad Rice Creole 1 frying chicken, out In aarvlag pieces V. cup flpnr 3 teaspoons salt -« teaspoon popper . —-jo* hotter or niartarteo I fomatoee,"quartered t cup* chicken Manama, I boy leaf | tablespoons minced ptreley V cup rice, uncooked W cup ham. silvered % sup sherry Dredge thicken in flour seasoned with salt and pepper. Brown on all sides in butter or margarine in a large skillet., Lay chicken parts to one side, add onions, green onions, and green pepper and cook 5 minutes. Place chicken to fit in paa. Add tomatoes, oeanerame, bay leaf aad parsley. Cover tightly For a Picnic Dessert Have you discovered bow good Juicy canned apple slices'are as a picnic dessert?'When ready lor dessert, open the can and sugar » taste. One can ia enough for 4 ALL US GUYS TREASURE Here’sthesrreatesttreas- wOJ^®Wtt«®/ureamongthemalI-the OF CALIFORNIA delicious orange soft drink from California’s “Kingdoms of Fun.” Mother, treat your “guys” to a “strike it rich* thirst quencher... a drink they will , lore. Pick up a six-pack or two today. Keep a supply of Nesbitt’s on hand always. . NisBrrrs or California Bottled nnder authority of Nesbitt Fruit Products, Im. of California by Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Pontiac, I SIZE PKG. 3 SISTERS 608 W. HURON ST. ^^^^^^HIGAN 1 | POTATOES 11 50"*’l29 11 MARKET Open 7 DAYS to 1*p.n». Our ^ 1 FRESH DRESSED , 1 FRYERS 1 u 29* LEAN SPARE RIBS *29* CHOICE CHUCK STEAK *69* ' CHOICE CUT POT ROAST *45* HICKORY CURII SLAB BACON Whole Of » FRESH DRESSED I STEWERS I ■ Lb. |9< GRADE I HOT DOGS 3^85’ LEAN MIATY PORK STEAKS *39* ASSORTED LUNCH MEATS *39* HICKORY CURII SMOKED PICNICS *29* } FRESH DRESSED 1 RABBITS : *45* I HOMEGROWN HAVEN ORACHES 2*15* HOMS CROWN HEAD LETTUCE iHP HOMI CROWN CRISP CARROTS 2*'1P HOMI CROWN RED Tomatoes 2*45* NOME GROWN H ONIONS I CUKES )tefp I SOLID CABBAGE >10* CALIF, oranges Dos. 29* Hat tii«m Gnpvfriil *59* •0 lb, A» Cnh Watermelon 69* + t RIPE i ‘BANANAS 1 3^25° | TABLE KING 303 Cons iblefcl •tOWCOP] DIXIE BELLE SALTINES FOUND BOX • PEAS • CORN • KIDNEY BEANS • GREEN BEANS 9S° BIRDS EYE MEAT JPI.ES BEEF - CHICKEN - TURKEY 4Fn89* GRADE "A" SMALL HAMILTON EGGS DOZEN ^ DOG FOOD CANS GARDEN FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES JUMBO SIZE HEAD LETTUCE Each TO HOME-GROWN CUCUMBERS or GREER PEPPERS IN DRAYTON PLAINS FANCY Grade "A" Me WHOLE W 29’" CUBED Oft, STEAKS 07*1 1 LARGE ! BOLOGNA ,391 ECHRICH ROASTED I SAUSAGE 79. YOUR CHOICE CALIFORNIA IMTLETT PEARS 2 ib$. 29* IN PONTIAC FELICE QUALITY MARKET 238 S. TELEGRAPH I Open Every D«y Including Snadey 9 a.i. lo 10 p.«. BEER-WINE-LIQUOR I J' FORTY THE PONTIAC PRRS8, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1060 Peaches in Heavy Supply Prices Lowest Season Sommer’s offering of fresh fruits)ness you desire . . . and nothing beats tree-ripe flavor. Imports of bananas are heavy, and with so many other fruits in peason, they are selling at prices. and vegetables is a bountiful states the Marketing Information . Agent. Mrs. Josephine Lawyer. Miefrffn peaches are in heavy supply and the lowest prices for the season are expected by the end of the week. This week there are features in several kinds of meat Beet flyers, and smoked pork cuts ant receiving most emphasis. Peaches are the fruit of the season! According to some retailers, the hugest supplies of the season are expected this week. Many of these will be the Hale Haven va-________ riety — one highly recommendedl Tomatoes tbit must be shippedtnomical choices will be found in by Michigan State University toriacross the state are picked before!chucks and rounds, canning or freezing. . they are fully ripe. Otherwise, " x (there would be a substantial loss There's plenty of variety in color and texture in fresh vegetables. Retailers report that tomatoes are in peak supply. You may not agree that they are in peak condition. Weather conditions do affect shape and quality and shoppers have no control over the weather. But you can control ripening to in many instances. at low seasoaat prices Let’s study the current meat situation. You are wen aware of the fine supplies of grain-fed top quality beef which has made this summer’s eatbig^ better for nil. Ah most retailers wholesale prices about the same as they have been, you will find many cots featured. Hie tender steaks, cut float the loin section and need | a™ in greatest demand and cost ‘the most per pound. Tbe-more eco- It’s up to you — whether you buy fresh peaches to can or freeze for future use. Remember the figures? When a bushel costs $3 to $4 the cost for home canned or frozen peaches is IS to 17 cents for a (2 cups). Last year’s crop of canned peaches Is now a thrifty buy in many stores at about 25 cents for the 2% size can (3Vfc cups). It's disappointing to find many fresh peaches are being picked “too green." Year attempt ts ripen them at mom temperature before me will be Hrile lost If the background color la green. There's no chance for development ef sweetness and flavor. Local orebardists advise that this is the time to buy some of Michigan's best peaches. If you pick your own, you can pick the ripe- before they reached the shopping cart. If you want luDy ripe tomatoes you May need to allow some ripening time outride the refrigerator. Or you may choose from i local growers who pick them ripe [and ready for eating. CHIU, CORN Less than a nickel an ear. That’s the story on corn this week. If is hydracooled (chilled in Ice water) or iced in the sack in the field it will hold more of its natural com sugar. Displays in most stores are on ice or in a refrigerated case.' As an extra precaution. hurry it into the home refrigerator and use it the same day. Warm temperature changes corn’s natural sweet sugar to flat tasting Starch quite'rapidly. Once this occurs, therein no reversing the proc- Pork supplies are not large and price of fresh pork has been fluctuating. Since smoked pork can be stored longer price is more stable. This week shoppers will find smoked ham, bacon and franks getting special emphasis. eg. This situation will continue during September. A check in the fish and seafood department is convincing. Compare cost per serving with other meats tor this proof. Fillets serve three Ipeople pqr pound; dressed fish will serve two. If fish is undressed, allow one pound per person. Undecided about bow to take advantage of the low prices size eggs? If the family gets otherwise adequate protein and if a small or medium size egg “looks like enough" on the piste, serve then*. If you can’t affirm these two “ifs!’ . . . you can confirm the use of smaller size eggs to cooking where the budget and quality Of the product can tell the difference . . . and let, the family eat larger eggs. Some talks think the perk Bos* tea butt, a fresh eat flam the •boulder, ha/ a lot of tat and waste. Te«a show Oils Is the leanest fresh pork cut. Boned and rolled, it makes a good roost iar the rottsoerie. Or hay® It cat Into y4 ' In, l Inch steaks and grid with barbecue sauce until well-done (attest'd Urinates). Have you noticed how often fryers could be grouped toowg the moot economical meat buyathis summer? There’s a good supply and shoppers have had an opportunity to enjoy lower prices because of the generous production. Clever Chef Invented Popular Melba Toast Melba Toast was originally 'created by a world famous chef, Es-coffier, around the turn of the century, and In self defense! Opera star Nellie Melba, noted tor the greatness of her voice — and her appetite — never had enough room to spare after dining to sam-Chef Escoffier’s choicest delicacies—his desserts. After much scheming, he decided to substitute thinly sliced bread, well toasted, for the usual bread and rolls. He aptly called Ms creation “Melba Toast”. Today, Melba Toast is qn all-aroud adult bread which fits in perfectly with modem ideas of lower starch consumption and lighter meals. ........ef fc Mat Greenville’ .. last month to curb racial violence, wee lifted. Hopewell, Vo. Negroes Asking Burial Rights 1a Federal Lawsuit By Urited Press IntcrnaUoari Negroes picketed segregated C ' lls ’ *s • eta were arrested Wi SeeklirtegrafiOfiasSi^^r. in City Cemetery Florida eni\M “ South Carolina Wednesday, and) Police at Jacksonville. Fla., took four young Negroes — 14 to 16 years old — to juvenile court for taking part In sntlsegtvgartna picketing. Chief Probation Officer Joseph M. Lorimier Jr. said they Were too young to demonstrate and'their parents would be subject fcs arrest if the .youngsters Negro leaders at (Hopewell, Va. vowed to fight tor integration of city-owsed cemetery. Eight Negroes filed a Federal Court suit last week demanding equal burial rights in Appomattox Cemetery at Hopewell. The dty voted Tuesday night to sell the Cemetery to private interests, stead, but Negro leader Curtis Harris said anyone who buys it "will buy a suit along with it" Harris also promised new anti-segregation protests today at drag stores la Hopewell where eight Negroes were arrested Wednesday tar seeking lunch counter service. Six'Negro antisegregation pick- Wesfowo OPEN 9 A.M. to 11P.M. DAILY ludodiig SUNDAYS U.S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN WASHED POTATOES Gi«ud Freeh Eveiy Hour GROOM REEF 25‘ EXTRA FANCY HALE-HAVEN FREESTONE Hssso Crown | Hems Grown GREEN ONIONS Tomatoes BAHAMAS 5< ]0‘“ 10* Lb. Large Home-Grown GREEN PEPPERS •r CUCUMBERS FRESH EGGS Large, Ripe, Sweet MAi WATERMELON Each Only Home-Grown — Fancy MM P# CAULIFLOWER 7*1 Large HEADS, Each ■“ WONDER BREAD 2 Large QQ** VA lb. Leaves ■■ J U. S. Gov't Inspected CHOICE BEEF ROUND / A STEAK Qt Boneless Rolled RIB ROAST............ lb. Choice Boneless Rolled il QQd RUM? ROAST ...... lb. ' U.S. GOVT INSPECTED CHOICE POT ROAST of BEEF Short Ribs of Beef.•*- 29* Prutictlly Boneleii BOSTON BUTT PORK ROAST U.S. No. 1 Skinless Hot Dogs 29 15* 15* 4«-0x. Cm Table Kim TOMATO JUICE tarf# 2Vi Can Resedale. Sliced Peaches in Heavy Syrup tomatBes ...............2r” 10* 59* 6-0*. Cam Fresh Fresan LEMONADE U.S. No. I Ring BOLOGNA 1 ICE COLD BEEB—POP—^1 Bob Kennedy Stumps NYC for Latin Votes NEW YORK (UPI) - Sen. John F. Kennedy’s brother end campaign manager Robert stumped for the senator in New Yoric City all day Wednesday in a drive to Urn up Spanish-speaking residents to register and vote the Democratic ticket. Robert Kennedy quoted hi* brother as promising to name Americans of Mexican and Puerto Rican descent to ambassadorships South and Central American nations if he is elected president. Stolen Money Found; Woman Hugs Sheriff PROVIDENCE. Ky. (Aft - “ newy'i "When the sheriff told caught them two men happy that if he’d come gut rd hug him.” Hid motherly Mrs-W. H. Blaine today. “And he did. and I did, too! That, said Mrs. Blaine. IS, was her reaction to newt of the arrest of two Indiana men and wwwury of moat of the more than SR3.000 stolen from her home 10 days ago. I He FBI sald .it r B , 000 in bands and HO,** m'fteh from file Bodies home at Morocco. Another S3,ISO was recovered from the home of Brownfield's to Mrs. Blaine and her husband. 73, have operated a small grocery store In this western Kentucky town of 5,000 for 31 years. They work long hours and save their Last week, thieves smashed a, indow in the Blaine home, snatched a puree containing savings bonds and cash and fle^. FBI Special Agent Wallace R. Hoaglund of Louisville said federal agents a r re a t e d Charles H. Hodges, 25, and Richard Lee Brownfield, 21. both of Morocco, Wednesday in connection the theft. They face charges of unlawful flight, Mmatate tnqp-portatkm of man property, aid ; Lester James Brownfield. The feun&r Brownfield * rested in HMience, Dl., about 20 miles west of Morocco and 40 miles south of Chicago. Mrs. Blaine said it was “green of me1* to W carrying so much money, but “we just neglected to it hi the bank. Why, I’ve been carrying money Hhe that for the 38 years we’ve ^had our jgraeery here, and we’ve never had any trouble betore.Mr ’ After Andrew Johnsod became President of the United States in 1865, he was nicknamed “Sir Veto" because he vetoed as many congressional bills. IW ‘DLicvunt ‘Jmcm- Mean Value Sailing* HEALTHY STUDENTS MAKE GOOD STUDENTS ffiug IJnwc Vitamin& at £oia Vi*ceuni JWice*. JVmu Lnjeg. Cuexyday £em ‘J)i*aiunt NEW MEDICAL MAIVEl VRIES VP AU sms CAVITIES R.it.r.i Fr«. Br.athin, Vkfclr rail*,*, •!•«• gam, •(!« *• ilnw, tatltlai, flllavlaa annoying drip, yaa broatho aarmally. SCHOOL LUNCH KITS For $199 only mre&N 23 loi 9tc DSCONGESTANT TUUIS ! Assorted designs; (or ■ boys and girts: Vi pt. ^ vacuum included. BARBER OUTFIT 8 pc. SJOB Lustre Creme SHAMPOO TUSSY SHAD0RAMA 60c Site If you can comb hair, you can cut hair, t kit., 48 i«s-T Clear liquid shampoo, biassed with lanolin. Beautifies hair. 6 glamorous colors fl 1 Stick; pita purse site. TRUSSES • Reek • llaatie drug store 1C A pack. tiJ, " *4895 DIXIE HWY Iv H LIQUC PACKAGE (o1 LIQUOR STORE j Fifties Rosin >t Saaatawa Slat* Oaly) City WUa Pres Prascrigtiae Delivery. Hava Year Darter Call Yarn Nsarstt THRIFTY Far PROMPT FRff DELIVERY. s PRESCRIPTION 148 North Saginaw St. Huron Street 4895 Dixie Highway ",nr THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, I960 CROWD GREETING VICE PRESIDENT — free President Nixon received an enthusiastic reception from people all along hie route from the airport to downtown Detroit Wednesday. Here AT n*toh> arms are outstretched to greet the viae president as his car is nearly mobbed. He had arrived to address the convention of . the Veterans of Foreign Wan, Sgnta Claus Id Coming to Town? SAUGATUCK (UPI) -Santa Claus is due to dock here tonight. this Lake Michigan summer resprt community will stage .“Christmas in August” fete tor the ‘ benefit of local charities, which sponsors hope wtU become an annual event, - Stores will have their windows decorated In the spirit of the Christmas season and Santa Claus will come down the Kalamazoo River and land at the Hotel Sauga-tuck dock where a "Christmas party” will be staged. Horse Jumpers Get Jet Pilot Commands strutting in n jet bomber or in the art of horse jumping. An Air Torch'lieutenant colonel and command pilot, Morgan helps train young pilots at Lock- COLUMBUS. Oboi m - Whenij™^ ^ ■tJ'N , . m. ... ithe BIT bomber. He i also pro- Walter Morgan advises keep o{flcer tor the base stables, your hands steady, ask, for the where he trains' jumping horses power, take off,” he may be in-'and their riders. v ... ‘Peer Friends,’ They Say Soviet Olympians Overwhelm U.S. By EDDY OBJMUjB ROME UUP)—In blazing Roman heat Wednesday the Ruslans broke first lee k) a dramatic cold war with the United Statee—at leapt fair the Olympics. Jb do this, a delegation of Soviets marched to UJ3. Olympic headquarter*, smiled, held out their hands and presented gifts to ttt Americans. •Dear frfanda,” began Leonid Komtnikov, Soviet Olympic official, “perpiit me in the name of country to greet you and wish you great success in the 17th f%mpie Games.” \ >4t 4r h He was speaking to Kenneth L. Wilson, of Chicago, president of the U.S, Olympic Committee. “As a symbol of our friendship we’d like to present you with our Olympic flag and wish- your athletes the vary beet of luck,” Komtnikov said. I'm presenting this symbol of endshfc), wgM like to stress that i do if fromthe hearts.” "Dan, Dan,” they chorused, 'here's Don.” They pronounced the name as If it was speUsd 'Den.” V,'” ’ '■ . *™y- s bottoms of o OVERCOME Wilson was almost overcome by the warmth of the greeting. He swallowed hard, and then replied: **We appreciate very much your kind wishes for success and we-hope to have the opportunity of visiting your headquarters and are looking forward to it” i * + L At tikis point the Russians | Might sight of Daniel J. Ferris of-New York, honorary secretary of the Amateur Athletic Union. Kominikov hugged the haired American. Ferris beamed and warmly took hands with the Soviet liters. "We hope to see you soon In Moscow, Dan,” said Gabrail Korobkov, Soviet track coach. "Finer fine,” replied Ferria, "1 hope so too.” Wilson then asked the Russians to have some refreshments, pointing to two refrigerators packed with American soft drinks. Some accepted. As the Russians and Americans were talking, n member of the U.S. Olympic delegation began distributing, gift packages to the Soviets. "* 4 Tim packages contained a tact book—printed in Russian—about the United States, a paperback encyclopedia and a roster of an officials and athletes at Rome. The Russian official countered by distributing copies of an ath- New! Pepperidge Farm, freezes Pastry Patty Shells Puff ...for you to bake at home! I This U a package*of.hew Pepperidge Farm Patty Shells. There are six frozen g p«tty shelb inside... each made of paper-thin layers of delicate puff pastry. 2 Don’t bother to thaw the patty shells. Put them on a baking sheet, still frozen. # Pre-heat your oven to 450*—slide in the baking sheet, and reduce heat to 400*. 3 About 25 minutes later, your Pepperidge Farm Patty Shells are all done—puffed gup 6 times their.original height. And you’ve made homebaked patty shells! Cool these golden brown cups of tender 4 puff pastry, and remove the caps. Now' # Pepperidge Farm Patty Shells are ready to ML What will you fill them with? ' f There are 1001 ways to fill a Pepperidge . Farm Patty Shell. For meatless meals, fill |cpatty shells with shrimp. Or try lobster, or crabmeat, in a cream sauce. 6 A wonderful main dish: Pepperidge Farm Patty Shells filled with chicken & la king. aThe French serve patty Shells this way— with their little caps on top of the filling. Serve Pepperidge Farm Patty Shelb at rt either end of the meal. For dessert: straw-Nrriati, topped with whipped cream. Or blueberries. And peaches, too. What could be easier than filling a Pep* ) peridge Farm Patty Shell with ice cream? /g This young gourmet likes vanilla, covered with chocolate sauce, who doesn’t? TjjT) KVT71 Recipe booklet, "Anything J/ Ivillij Goes In A Patty Shell”-is now gvgilable. Write to Pepperidge Farm, Inc., Box 2W>, Mt. Vernon ID, N.‘ Y. / lettc magazine — printed in The editorial pleaded lor "peace and friendship" at the Olympics. Seth Low aerved aa mayor of two large American dtlea—Brooklyn (1882-85 and New York 0902-08). Brooklyn became a borough [way tor of New York In 1888. FORTY-ONE Grand Rapids Will Buy 49 Acres of Star* Una j GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) — The city will buy a acres of Lake I Michigan shore line property south of Grand Haven aa a step toward broadened 121.935.000 water supply system. 4t 4t W The city commission approved the purchase of the land, located at the Southeast corner ai M50 and Lake Shore Drive,-at Its meeting Tuesday. This paves the new water filtration plant tor Grand Rapids. GAS HEAT If you wont quality in a furnace and duct work, cull for a free hooting survey. 3 BASEMENT HEAT BEGISTE1S Inr of thn, furnaces Installed stth new custom flat ducts. All R. J. HEATING CO. 32316 Hearthstone. Farmington GR 4-4554 Dial Operator ask for ENTERPRISE 7216 TOLL FkKI Warehouse and Floor. Sample 36-Hour 10-NE0E BEDROOM GROUP Grey Mahogany, double dresser, mirror, chest, bookcase bed, inn'erspring mattress, box spring, 2 pillows, 2 boudoir *129" Bunk Beds $29.00 Night Stands 12.00 Odd Beds 15.00 Foam Mattresses—Box Spring. 59.00 Twin Sixe Foam Mattress 29.00 3-Drawer Decorator Chest.... . 24.50 Foam Rubber Pillows 1.39 5-Pc. Dinette Set 35.00 9-Pc. Dinette Set 59.00 Fruitwood Buffets . . 45.00 20-Pc. Starter Dish Set .97 2-Pc. Sectional 99.00 TUFTLESS MATTRESS $ j 1A 10 YEAR GUARANTEE III Bex Spring-Seme Lew Price i Lv Dovtnport and Chair........ . . $ Chairs ..................From 3-Pc. Sactional........... .... 1 Colonial Sofa...........1 Sofa Pillows................. Coffaa Tobias......... ...... Tabla Lamps.................. Carpet Samples............... Child's Rattan Chairs........ Sofa Bed..................... 3-Pc. Danish Sectional....... 1 Step Tables ................. □21 Ji MODERN SLEEP SHOP FE 8-9551 FURNITURE and BEDDING FE 8-9551 Limited Qvontities-No Phone Ordert-AII Prices Cosh end Carry Me Refunds—Ne Exchanges—AN Sabs Final-Small foe for delivery MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER IA1AA1 AREA (Next to Bank) FORTY^TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, IMP $ "V r * ■ i 1 Something's Missing in Willed |Expcc>mg 4,000 Clarkston Pupils Police Parade Without Bands Official* Pros* to Find M u s i c for Saturday's Homocoming Event WALLED LAKE — Did you ever see a bin) fly without wings’ # ■ * O' Did you. ever see a parade march by without music? The city hasn’t reported anything about birds but M does have a homecoming parade without a teat Walled Lake’s police department, happy with a chance to participate in the local homecoming, has scheduled a parade (or 11 a. m. Saturday, but, alas, no They have accepted 45 entries fur the procession, planned to run about 10 blocks from the Lake Side Market to the junior high school, but alter scouring the area lor available bands the policemen have come up empty-handed. "I am at my wits end.” said Police Chief James A. Decker, "everything else has cum atoag hut music: I started looking before school was out iart year hut haven’t found a thing." “I suppose well have to resort to a loud speaker truck and records," ha added disappointedly, dr * W It appears as though the rest of the city’s Second Annual Homecoming will come off as scheduled. The affair begins at • P- m. Friday wNh a family midway DOO students are expected to enroll Spruoed-up quarters no Fait* street la the Clarkston School District --------- - beginning at 9:15 a.m. Sept, t and I, according to Dr. L, F. Greene, mperintendent of schools. The Sept, t opening of the new •nior high school will result in the separation of the junior and nntor Ugh school 'students lor the Brit time la the school district’s Coolest rodeos will be staged on the athletic Add of Walled Lake Junior High School at S p. m. Friday and Saturday with a special matinee slated lor Saturday at 2 p. m. dr dr ★ Featured will be buddng-bronc-riding, wild Brahma bull-riding, bull-dogging and call-roping by proletsional cowboys from throughout the Midwest. ★ * * Sunday will be Firemen’s Field bay with fire-fighting demonstrations, water battles and a giant tug ol war to he held from 2 to 5 p. m. on the junior high school athletic field. dr d * . It aO sounds very gay., but what’s a parade without a band. Oxford School District Lists Data for Opening MARTHANN GOODALL Mr. artd Mrs. Thomas Goodall ot 297 S. Detroit Bli/d., Lake Orion, announce the engagement of their daughter Marthann to Donald Bruce Northcote, son of PERFORMING TRIO—All ready to take part in the grand entry which will open the rodeo contests, featured attractions ol Walled Lake’s second annua} Homecoming celebration this weekend. are Lynn Brooks astride her white-maned Palomino, Sue. Lynn, who lives at 39955 14-Mile Road, is holding a pedigreed haliu Tntt Hub French poodle, named Babette. The dog will be mi entry in the Children’s Pet Show on Sunday. The rodeo contests will be staged Friday and Saturday at I pm. at the junior high athletic field with a matinee slated for 2 p.m. Saturday. OXFORD — Elementary students in the Oxford Community School District will enroll lor the 1960-61 school year Sept . cording to Thomas Gilbert, elementary school administrator. ★ if - it . New students attending the Daniel Axford School this year may registeP Monday through Wednesday ol next week, Gilbert said. The first full day of* classes will be Sept. 8. Kindergarten pupils will attend the first day of school the following day. Leonard School and Lakeville School kindergarten students are asked to register at Leonard. A decision as to the location of a kindergarten room for the two school areas will be determined alter registration is completed. Gilbert reminded parents that Gear Lake School will contain only special education facilities mid grades one through five this year. Thomas School will have grades one through lour. Sixth grader/ from the Clear Lake School area sad fifth aad previous assignment. AO sixth grade euroMees will report to the junior high and grades 9-19 will report at the aew senior high school at 8:14 un. Sept. 8. All eaJeterlai wifi be la operation beginning Sept. as. Bus transportation will follow as nearly as possible the same sched-led routes as last year with the exceptions that sixth graders will ride the high school buses. Students who have not previously attended any of the Clarkston Community Schools may enroll their respective buildings Monday. The bookstores in the junior high and all elementary schools will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. beginning Tuesday. The senior high bookstore will not be open util 1 f>.m. Thursday, Sept 8. The school faculty will hold orientation and in-service training meetings Sept. 6 and 7 beginning with an informal get acquainted meeting at 10 a.m. Tuesday. Judging of exhibits will Open Friday's program at f a.m. foi- ______a little League all-star gamr and a hand In addition to the regular ex-ibits, free grandstand acts will be pre rented Saturday and Blindly. New picnic tables have been ' at the fairgrounds this year tre by visitors to the tour-day Jast southeast of the grandstand. Officiating at opening cere-monies this evening will be the king and queen of the fair, Rich-are Moeckle of Mount Clemens and Detphine Browarsld of 3925 W. 32-Mile Road, Romeo. Both Sfe 18-years-old sad 4-H Club members. Queen Delphine and King Richard will be crowned at 8 p.m. Friday prior to the start of a talent show put on by 4-H members at the grandstand. Festivities at the falrgreends actually started at 1 p.m. today with the opening of tie King Carnival midway. A 4-H horse show at 7)45 p.m. and a gigantic fireworks display' m. will r« Honored in Detroit LAPEER - The First tfetional Bank of Lapeer, one of the nine the state, will be honored in Detroit Sept. 8. ★ , * * The local bank, founded fat 1856, will be given a plaque awarded to nine Michigan banks over 100 years old by the Michigan Economic Development Commission. Officials of the century-old banks will be guests at a luncheon at the Michigan State Fair, where the presentations will he made. GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY—Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Rummins of 62 Robertson Court, Clarkston, will be honored at a 50th wedding anniversary celebration from 2 to 6 p.m. Sunday at their residence. Hosting the open house will be the couple’s daughter Mrs. Robert G. Phillips of Clarkston. Mr. and Mrs. Rummins, who also have two grandsons, wow married in Pontiac Aug. 29, 1910. AVON TOWNSHIP-The township board here Wednesday night passed on requests for construction of sanitary sewers and sidewalks for this area to Oakland County officials. - fk if Acting i on a petition signed by home fawners in the BeHermine Hills subdivision, the board voted to ask the county to establish a special assessment district in that area in order to build sanitary sewers. The township ikt will request s county survey of Red Otk lane for the purpose of road improvement aad sidewalk coa-structiou there. A communication received from the Northwest Avon Inter-Association Council was turned over to the township zoning board. ★ * d The letter protested building of proposed commercial development at Adams Road and Walton Boulevard, a matter currently under study by the zoning board. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Smith, of 2880 Seymour Lake Road. The bridegroom’s parents are the Lawrence Gingells of 3980 Metamora Road. Far her wedding the bride chase a princess style gown with a fitted bediee etched wife sequin# aad pearls aad a sweetheart neckline. The full skirt ef aylsa net had a back panel ef matcniag lace ending la a chapel toala. Mrs. Richard L. Carlson, sister of the bride, was matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. David Kirby and Laurene Gingell, both sisters of the' bridegroom, and Gen-toe Collier. Serving as best man was David Kirby, and seating the guests were Wendell Smith, brother of the bride, Stewart Gii«eU of Lapeer aad Duans WUdey of Pontiac. Viewer girt was Aaa Chrises, , atom ef fee bride. David Kirby. MM. FREDERICK E. Lakeville and Brewer School Reunion Saturday nephew of the bridegroom was ring bearer. Following the ceremony the reception was held at the Thomas Community Hall. The newlyweds are on a honeymoon trip to Washington, D.C., and the Smoky Mountains. Upon their return, they will reside at 200 Davison Road. I LAKEVILLE — The 36th annual reunion of the Lakeville and Brewer schools will be held at 12:30 I p.m. Saturday in the recreation {room of the Lakeville Methodist Church. if if it Former pupils, teachers and friends are asked to attend. A cooperative dinner will start the festivities to the church. This you should know... Food costs up $136 since 1947.. farmer’s share: down $8 ■ ^ ■ -'r» • pips I Yes, for the average family, the cost per year of food products has gone up $136 since 1947, according to official government figures. But the farmer who grows the food gets$8.less than he did in 1947. How, in the face of rising costs for everything he buys, ha* the American farmer managed to get along? The answer is the wonder of the world—the astonishing, growing efficiency of the hard-working, businesslike American family farmer! Today he aqueeses 51% more food out of an acre of land than thirty years ago. In the past 18 years alone, the farmer has boosted his efficiency as ^tuch as in the preceding 120 years ... and through progressiveness and mastery of new ^ farming methods, he grows more and more efficient every day! The increased efficiency of the American farmer benefits you, the consumer. Because of it the percentage of your income ^ you spend on food today is the loweet in history. Had the farmer received price increases at the same rate as inostother cost-of-living items, you would be pegring as much as 25% more ' today for food and clothing! This ia a record of which all Americana can be proud. Increased productiveness of the farmer is one of the moat important factors in keeping America the strongest nation the world has ever known. WHIRS YOUR MONEY GOES Art Club to Hold Show Saturday and Sunday ROYAL OAK — Members of the Tints and Tones Art Gub will display their work, at an exhibition here this weekend at the home of Mrs. Michael ApostoU, 1318 E. 14-Mile Road. The art show is open to the public from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, according to Mrs. Verne Davidson of 762 Robin wood! fit, Tkoy. » Higher Labor Coats Added $60 / Transportation Addad (M* ^ Other Buelnoaa Costs Addad $47 , Higher Federal Taxes Addad $7 . FARM PRICES DOWN $8 4 A THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY! AUGUST 23, I960 FORTY-THR1E ( Ttfi-M g—— In iu iceived a tank statement Wednes-1 pon4lvu wheelchair and toflanked by tier husband Oliver, a Pound, Ya., shot repairman, and Mrs. Jessica HUeman, sister of the convicted pilot. In the background are newsmen anf totyort officials. WASHINGTON (AP)-UA. offl-tials said today Moscow has promised an answer soon to repeated requests that an Ameri-• can Embassy official be allowed to talk with convicted U2 pilot Frauds Gary Powers. However, expectations were that the Soviets for their own purposes, would not agree now to eV ther personal or offical clemency pleas for Powers. ★ ★ ★ Chances for winning freedom for Powers, under to 10-year sentence for spying were regarded as likely to be better later on aftpr the tumult over his case subsides. He has been in Soviet custody since his plane went down deep inside the Soviet Union last May 1. Powers* wife, Barbara, is preparing an appeal for clemency to President Leonid I. Brezhnev of the Supreme Soviet, or Parliament, the body which formally deals with such requests. She also has asked tor a personal interview with Premier Nikita Khrushchev to plead tor her husband. p . it h ' ... The pilot’s parents, Mr. and Mrs, Oliver W. Power* of Pound, Va., arrtyed to New York Wedneaday night after attending their son’s trial The elder Powers told newsmen he doubted that clemency appeals would succeed. But the parents still were Ringing to hope todr son soon could come home. Speculation that the Kremlin wants to bold onto Powers tor the time being included the reasoning that: 1. The Soviet government does not want to turn him looqe quick- ly lifter having staged a campaign to whip the Soviet people into toe frejizy over the case. 2: The Reds want to "teach lesson” about spies. * A A. 3. If quickly released, Powers might change his story as as he reaches free soil and damage the Soviet propaganda build “p-.v * a mi .-,A* it ♦ ■ 4. Sfcvlet officials may still want tc^ question Powers from time to tone. CaroWinch Split Apparent Now Evidence Setback for Ex-Modol; Doctor! Steers Clear of It Polaris Fires Itself in Underwater Test LOS ANGELES (AP) - A Polaris missile has made a first and 'highly successM" blastoff—from under water—under its own pow- The fleet submarine missile has previously been shot from uqder water by compressed air, then igJ nited to the air. • * * .; * Tito Navy announced that a modified Polaris war Ignited for the first time Wednesday under the sea. If was find from a tube at tta Navy’s test facility at San Clemente Island., * ■'.#» A The tube Was the same type ild on the USS George Washington, the nuclear submarine which'has fired Polaris missiles more than 1,000 miles from under the ocean off Cape Canaveral, Fla. LOS ANGELES (UPI)—The lawyer for Dr. R. Bernard Finch Jockeyed today to disassociate the surgeon from seemingly incriminating evidence lodgedagainst Carole Tregoff. - , A A A ' Tta couple, once lovers, now are coijefendants in a retrial on charges of murdering Finch’s wife because she sought his {1750,000* fortune in a divorce' suit. A rift between attorneys for too coo pie Immediately became apparent Wednesday when 23-year-old Carole suffered n major setback. The. trial judge allowed the prosecution to introduce contradictory statements by Carole about n so-called "do-it-yourself murder kit.” The- statements were^regardedj as potentially-incriminating against Carole) They had been kept from] the first trial after a bitter argument waged by her attorneys. When Superior Court Judge Leroy Dawson upheld the prosecu-l merits should be allowed retrial, Finch’s attorney, Grantl Cooper, moved to have toe jury instructed that his client was to no way affected by admission of the statements. 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FE2-8181 X 1 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, I960 3fei FORTY-FIVE 85 Nations Gather to Compete lh 18 Sports Solemn Splendor Opens XVII Olympiad Today RQ*g ***** r ‘n>* P1”1 °* nMdy 8,000 athletes from 86 na- ww — and thb most costly ever heML *« vte to 18 sports. ***** houses wMh Olympics at MMI, and Ru* called Ottia th®.Eternal CMy as claae and dramatic straggle dium that la the center of $32,000,000 athletic plant un- More than 400,000 tickets were aold (or the opening ceremonies m jmPL IHK £ Nr £ i.1 ¥ c r< if "S Steelers Coi ne 'Hon ne' 1 to 1 ii leet 1 .ion is Tonight pa ted in the colorful parade — bat even this exceeded the 3,539 who competed at Melbourne. iMiM i.irtir MM Mm hw The big United State* team 3o unwieldy waa the entry B9tf mareM* smartly la aatfarma et Blue aad White with the girls carrying red handbags to complete the national colors. am games held la Athens la lM - simple aad deeply tnov- Old Memories Recalled With Parker, Layne Brown Replaces Veteran Gil Mains ig Starting Defensive Unit OLD HOME WEEK—Briggs Stadium in Detroit is a familiar site for these four visitors from Pittsburgh. (Left to right) Tom Tracy, coach Buddy Parker, Bobby Layne and John Henry V Johnson, will be. with the Steelers when they tangle with the Lions tonight in an exhibition game. Witson of Is Tired 'Taking Rap1 George Wilson said today he is "sick and tired of being the fall guy” tor Detroit’s skidding pro football fortunes. "I’m not going to take the rap any longer,” said the coach. » "We’ve had lots of problems, and maybe people don’t understand them. We didn't have the personnel to win, I know that -could have been better the last two seasons except for some real problem guys on the squad.” ftea Wilson, who was shoved Into the head coaching Job in 1917 when Buddy Parker walked cot, led the Lions to the world chain- do say that there were times-when I questioned whether a guy was giving his best.” He eited quarterback Tobin Rote and fullback John Henry Johnson, both now departed; as the stopn centers. Role never signed a contract last year and instead played out his option. At the end of the season, he was a free agent and signed with the Toronto Argonauts. Johnson was traded to die Pittsburgh Steel- through two told of the problems that have confronted the dab. "We’ve had some clubhouse lawyers, some real politicians on our team and we had some dipsert-sion,” said Wilson. "There was Jealousy because acotiple of guys were maktag^tbp money and weren't giving top performance. "Fto not saying that a guy didn’t give ioo per bent because there’ no way you can prove it f* but selection. During the 1959 season, tfte Lions were getting many of their plays from, the bench after mid-season. .V ' ★ ★ ♦ Johnson was an outstanding ball carrier in 1957, his first year with Detroit. But in the past two seasons he was in and out of the lineup with assorted aches and pains and fans heaped abuse on the veteran fullback for frequently ning out of bounds. "Every—e knew Rote was ptayta* oat hi* option. Every player on the squad knew how much Rote and Johnson were making. Ahd It’s a fact that both of them had lousy yean. Wo didn’t have good pose protection from Tobin—that was one of oar troubles — bat whoa are did have It, ho didn’t pom well. "We knew he was a hot-and-cold quartertprek when we got him | Green Bay in 1957. But for the past two seasons, we kept waiting for one of those hot days — and it ■.never came.* Ii Wilson aiao criticized Rote’s play 'It’s a fact we’ve had practically no running attack for two years," said Wilson. "Johnson was getting good money here and' frankly, some of the, players felt he was Wilson plans to send Jim Ninow-ski to the firing line as the quarterback to match the able Layne. Nluowskl has been the outstanding passer In two exhibition games thus far, having Completed *1 of 33 peases for three touchdowns. "Last year, we started off poor- Etokies will dot the offensive ly. and little things mounted up and defensive lineups for the into big things. We never got to a Lions. point where we were pulling to- Veteran defensive tack* Gil gether in the same direction. It Mains will have, to relinquish his has been the type of club that Job tonight to 2$0-pound rookie • - • and Roger Lee Brown, we got plenty of thefn.” Her said- the Lions will be iffl- Dodoring Your Golf By DB. CAST MIDDLECOFF PATIENTS COMPLAINT: “Hitting from the top.”. DIAGNOSIS! A practice gimmick needed. TREATMENT: As we have observed, the greatest swing wrecker In golf Is hitting fr&m the top. By "hitting from the top," I mean starting the hit with the hands from the top of the backswing — before the hips have started tifFhing to lead the way. ' For some golfers, this faulty action seems irresistible. "I will not hit from the top on this swing,’’ they «ay to themselves, and then go right ahead and do it. One Way to get around this fault Is to make sura that the first o«,tten of the downswing M planting the weigh* firmly os the left heeL Just jam the left heel into the groan*. This will automatically shift tbs weight over to the 1 left side, start the hip turning around to the left. and m keep the Hands out of the act lour enough to at leaat eome cloae to the proper downswing action. Use this gimmick on the practice tee until you overcome the tendency to hit from to top. proved la 1960. They were 3-8-1 last year and 4-7-1 the season before. * * * •We got rid of a lot of people and the turnover will be good for he safal. "The spirit in WEIGHT TO LEFT FOOT By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Prana There will be sepme new faces1 and plenty of old faces when the Detroit Lions and the Pittsburgh Steelers meet at Briggs Stadium tonight. Oddly, more of the well known old faces will belong to the visiting team and Detroit football fans will have plenty of memories to associate with them. Lioa's fans can look back at the “great years,” and recall when coach Buddy Parker aad quarterback Bobby Layne brought Detroit four division titles In 1952-1963-l 954 and second place finishes In 1961 and 1966. Of these great teams only Yale Lary,‘ Jim Martin, Joe' Schmidt, Gil Mains, Harley Sewell are left along with later additions Hopa-,long Cassady, Darris McCord and! OUie Spencer. , * w to ... Most eventful,period during this great decade of Detroit pro football Championships, was the banquet night .of 1957 when Parker quit tip Lions. Then came the big trade in 1958 which sent Layne ot the Steelers. Sandwiched in between' were the deals which sent Tom "The Bomb” Tracy, the pride of Birmingham, and John Hetjry Johnson to Pittsburgh. Tonight It will be "old home week” in the Motor City. They all return to meet the Lions and possibly to haunt them. AMERICAN LEAGUE Was LmI Pet. Bek r York ....M 48 .588 — 418 WEDNESDAY’S RESULTS New York R CMeass 9 SaHMwf* 9. Detroit 1. night “----- —ly s, Weditngtoo 4, night j. Roe ton 1, night TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland (Newcomb* 1-2) at Boa (Moitbouquett* 1J-8). 12:30 9.IO. Detroit (Lory 11-11) at Baltimore (Eet So 1M). 7:05 pm Kanioa city (Laraan 1-0) at Waahlng (Stobba S-5), 7:00 p.m. Only game* scheduled. FRIDAY’S GAMES Cleveland at New York 2. f Russia was In white with little peters in medieval costumes, alga of the famoes Communist wede shoes, and natural colored straw hats with small rad. white, ■*. vane me races on me am- and blue bands. The girls were Mia. white pleated skirts, blue jach- The only difference waa that ***•?*? oboes, white bents, and this time the Italian flair ter S&& grand opera showed in fin su- ^ ****** behtod the Amer- perb management and auch *>wad “orehed Russia, also touches as a fanfare of tram- to 8 *“ri»g show of The combined east and west German team — favored to finish third behind the two big rivals — wore Mae. ♦ to ' to President Giovanni Gronchi of Italy proclaimed the games open, the giant torch was lit by a flame kindled on sacred Mount Olympus in Greece -- it will bum day and night until the games end — and Adolfo Consol ini, veteran Italian Olympic d i a c u s champion, took the oath of amateurism on behalf of all competitors. WWW Cannons boomed, thousands of doves circled into the roman sky. and the great choir of the national academy of Santa Cecilia sang the Olympic hymn. It was a ceremony almost aachaaged from the first mod- It waa late afternoon when the parpde began. While the bands of Italy’s Carabiniere played, the athletes formed in tfte spectacular Marble Stadium outside the main oval, and then came into the Olympic stadium through a tunnel. ♦ a a Hie teams marched ih alphabetical order, according to the spelling of their names in Italian, except that by tradition, the Greek team, 34 strong, came first. Near toe end of the parade, immediately following Spain, came toe United States, at toe maximum parade strength of 948. The reason for this position la too parade is that la Italian the name Is Slate Ualti D’Amerlca. The American men wore blue jackets, white trousers, grey * City t______________ _____.1 et Washington. 7:05 p.m Chicago at Boston. 7:15 p.m. . NATIONAL LEAGUE Wen Lest Pvt. Behind Pittsburgh ...... 75 45 .025 — I Milwaukee St. Louts . Los Angeles San Francisco . u ct *ll '•* Chicago PhUadelL WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 10. Chicago 6 Cincinnati I, 8an Francisco I. 13 In Philadelphia 5. St. Louts 3. night Los Angeles 5. Milwaukee 3. night TODAY'S GAMES X. | Pittsburgh (Mlaell 04) at Chicago (Hobble 12-10). 1:30 p.m. Cincinnati (Maloney 1-4) at San Franctaeo Lot . Angeles Only-games scheduled. EEtDAYK GAMES Philadelphia at Chicago. 1:30 Pittsburgh ot St. Louis. * P ~ Cincinnati at Loo Amain 2. Milwaukee at San Prone' Hot Day for Olympics HOME (8» — The weatherman predicted a blazing hot day for toe igtoMug of too Olympic Games today. Coach George Wilson wants to win this one badly; so does Park- i,*lf:U p AP Ptiolefas TORCH BEARER—Giuseppe PanzareUa, a Rome student, arrives at city h*ll with the Olympic torch which waa lighted on Mt. Olympus in Greeceand borne to Rome by runners. It offietoUy opened the games today. white. ♦ * * At the end of the parade, again by tradition as the host nation, was the Italian team of 1FL They wore electric blue Jackets, white trousers, and white straw hats. Avery Brundage of Chicago, president of the International Olympic Committee, spoke briefly, and then President Gronchi said ”1 hereby declare open the games of the seventeenth Olympiad.” The Mg wMte gltk Olympic flag wlto the live circtoo that represent the five continents of too world waa carried Into the stadium by eight Italian athletes, and ceremoniously presented by the city of Melbourne to the etty of^Rome. Preceded by three salvoes of cannon and the release of the doves, emblematic of the Olympic peace, the torch bearer entered the stadium in the dimax to the brilliant ceremony. He circled the bright red running track holding the torch high fold then stopped before the great brazier. After a dramatic pause he plunged the torch into the bowl and the Olympic flame leaped up. The ceremony came to Its end wheti the teams inarched out In the same order as they had entered. > Competition starts, tonight in boxing and water polo but the full panorama of the games will not unfold until tomorrow when basketball, boxing, canoeing, cycling, field hockey, the modern pentathlon, soccer, swimming, water polo and wrestling all go into action. Trade and field, which is considered the heart and center of the games and in the men’s division of which the United States is favored to dominate by winning 10 to 14 medals, starts next Wednesday, Aug. 31. It ends with the 26-mile marathon down the historic Appian Way on Saturday, Sept. lOr In the past the track events were held at the start of the games, and there was a general feeling of letdown after they finished. This time the Interjnattonal Olympic Committee hopes to build up the games to a climax in the marathon followed by the spectacular Equestrian events tg,fhe malh stadium on Sunday, Set*. 11. the' dosing day. .★ * * Concerning U. S. Women Swimmers 'Pep Pill Feud Still Sizzling ROME (UPI) — Jealousy and suspicion cloud the waters for Unde Sanf’r Women’s swimming team in the Olympics today and it well could effect the gold medal production of the Yankee water babies. The feud has on one side coach George Haines and Harry D. Warner, a Sunnyvale, Calif., business- man whose daughter, Anne, is one Haines’ young stars. On the other side is Vikko Ruuska, father of veteran Sylvia Ruuska. The situation seems sure to wind up la a court of law when the team returns home. It all started because of Haines' proficiency as a coach. The hahd- Brown, who won four letters In football and four in track at Maryland Stafte College, saw limited action last week since his return from the All-Star game where he and Alex Sandusky of the Colts tangled most .of the night. our chmp now is as good as any I’ve eyer aeen. It’s A long way back to the top and I'm certainly not predicting we’ll snake it right away. But we’re on the right track — simply because everyone is working together now.” Mrs. Falco Is WMGA Winner at Rochester A sudden-death playoff was required yesterday at Rochester Country Club at %*• W. H. Falco won the weekly women’s Metro-poBtau Golf Association tourna- backfield is Dick “Night Train’ Lane, acquired from the St. Louii Cardinals this week in exchange for veteran tackle Jerry Perry. Lane’s presence gives the Lions nine defensive backs and it is customary of the team to carry only six. Gail Cogdill, speedy end from Washington and Center Bob Schotts are the rookies who will get into the offensive lineup. Kickoff is 8:15 p.m. Gresham Easy Mrs. Falco defeated Mrs. Joseph Koas on the 2nd extra hole after the two golfers completed their regulation 18-hole rounds * deadlock at 83. ' Mrq. Falco won the playoff witn _ par four when Mrs. Kross had tree trouble. The two players m-t in a playoff earlier this year and Mrs. Koto was the winner, to to/ to Mrs. Charles Fox took 3rd place with 83. followed If Mrs. William Rodgers and Mrs. C. L. Zahin with 84-apiece. Mrs. Lawrence Kidder had 87, Mrs. Mix Evans 90 and Mrs. W. D. Wright 91. CHICAGO (AP)—Gene Gresham of Detroit has started his climb up the ladder of lightweight con-•ndcra. The polished 22-year-old former National AAU champion impressively hammered out a unanimous 10-round decision over follow townsman Leroy Jeffrey Wednesday night to a nationally televised bout at Chicago Stadium. $r- f *'7 r the 27th victory Gresham, who is ranked No. 9 by the National Boxing Association. Carries U. S, Flag Johnson Leads Yanks Into Olympic Stadium ^ROME (AP) — When the cream of America’s sports talent marched into Olympic, Sfadhim today, the imposing body was led by a tall athlete with a majestic air. He was Rafer Johnson of Kings-burg. Calif., decathlon ace, the United States' official flag-bearer for these 17th modern Olympic fames. tKs was soly Ms second Olympics. Behind him marched nine competing In their fourth. Ho never had wou an Olympic gold medal. A number of gold medalists marched la Ms wake. Traditionally, in the Olympics, the honor of carrying the stars and stripes for Unde'Sam goes to the oldest or most successful competitor. -*** In Johnson’s rase, tradition was broken — not once, but twice. Never before bad a Negro ctrried the flag. Why was Johnson chou ’We thought Rafer represented the best to Americanism,” a«ld Louis J. Wilke of Bartlesville. Okla., a mejnber of the U. S. Olympic Executive Board. "We not only felt he was probably fine [greatest all-around athlete in the country, but also an example of our finest traditions.” WWW The decision met universal acclaim among the U. & team mem-ben, all of whom Jook up to John- l as ‘‘something special.” •Rafer hi the AO-American boy,” said hurdling champion Lee Cal- ./\.W- r-.. ! . J houn of Gary, Ind. “He doesn't drink. He doesn't smoke. He never blows his top. He is always nice and accommodating. To most of the guys on the team he represents perfection.” some young man from Indiana went to San Jose State and after graduation decided to remain on the West Coast. He is a Santa Clara High School teacher but his forte has been developing young international swim stars. * * ★ As coach of the Santa Clara Swim Club he has three of his boys on the nun's Olympic team and three of nis girls on the women’s team. He took Steve Clark at the age ef eight and built Mm Into an 800-meter and freestyle .relay i star at 17. He took Chris Voa ! Saltsa, star ef the women’s team, at the age of 10 and now at 19 she Is sue of the World's best at 199 aad 409 meters. 1 Thur«Ujr i ROME (AP)—Olympic li EMtern Standard) to Friday with U.s entries THt'ShDAY M n.m—Opening ceremony. 1 p.m—Boning preliminaries (only U S. eanpatSsc ta bantamweight Jerry Armetrong. Pocatello, Idaho ' • M p.m -Opeuln^ round! waUl 2 a m —Modem penthathlon: SAM mater eroaa country (U. Robert L. Beck. San Diego. Calif.. Lt. Jack T. Daniel*. His other proteges on the U.S. I be analyzed, team are 15-year-old Miss Warner, * * * 17-year-old Lynn Burke. 20-year-old: In a cloak and dagger opera-Paul Bait and 21-year-old George tion, Haines obtained some of Miss Harrison. It was Haine’s cradling Ruuska’s pep pills and — like which also gained a place on the! Ruuska—on analyzation found they team for 13-year-old Donna Del were nothing but vitamin pills. Verona of Lafayette, Calif. j "Mr. Warner insists on a retrae-During the Nationals at Indian- tion of Russka’s charges that we apolis where—significantly—Miss were using pep pills," Haines said. Ruuska (fid not do too well, her! "Ruuska says he won’t apologize, father fumed when he discovered lit looks sure like we’re going to that Haines was giving his swim- wind up in court when we get back mere what Russka charged were) home. We want an apology.” One U.S. Boxer on Card __ ^..n— Swimming: Ladle* breaatatroke— (semifinal* >. M p m -Waterpolo M pm—Swimming, men, breaststroke (Paul W. Halt.________ Calls. WUltsm D. Mulllkaa, Chanv pllls. Haines denied the charge flatly. “They were atm ply Iron vitamin suppUments because the kids burn ap so much energy.” Haloes said. “I also give them ell ef wheat germ ia capsule form. But you can buy this stuff In any drag store without a prescript)on. So they definitely are aot pep pUls.” Ruuska fretted even more when his daughter was beaten by the 13-year-old De Varona in the Olympic tryouts at Detroit and was relegated to a mere spot on the rielay team for the Olympics. He ussertedly questioned the youngster and asked her what she was taking. He is alleged to have taken some of her vitamin pills to Olympic Ring War Begins ROME <*l — Bantamweight Jer-| Russia won three gold medals, ry Armstrong of Pocatello, Idaho, Britain and the U. S, each two at battles Stoyan Petkov ot Bulgaria Melbourne, in the Olympic boxing that opens The U. S., as other top nations In tonight with 15 bouts. He is the boxing, is fielding a foil 10-man only U. S. boxdr on the opening squad. card It was feared for a while this Two defending champlona-iight- by coach JulJsiJulie) Merv w»ian t8a.m' .. _ ,. . are listed among the 290-man Five other med.Hsts from the 1956 hosp.talized in New York with games in Melbourne also are among the entries. - Workout* Indicate Great Britain, Russia and the United states figure to repeat as top natteaa I la the ring competition. penumonia. ahd the Olympic committee rejected the request for a substitute. But Baldwin, of Muskegon Heights, Mich., was cleared by doctors and released in. time to m FORTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. AtJOttST 35, 1W0 Hunting BOWS Ntw and Used pites ARROWS Cutoi Hunting and Targat GRIMES ARCHERY CO. •Mac Municipal Airport Hanger No, M Daily and Saturday 9 to 5 — Thuredey Evening 1 I PF“ OR 1-2277 rj faiimiiimmmiig roit's Winning Streak in Ruins Major leafjue Boxes ISji?- Cass Avenue Brake Service 109 N. Cots Avenue ’’Pealiec’s OMesf Broke Sorvico" wi FORD CHEV. } s1695 / Up to '58 LINING LABOR Up to '58 Other Cars at Low Prices FRONT END ALIGNMENT.........$5.95 Up FRONT WHEELS BALANCED $4.00 inclndoi Weight* We Guarantee Our Work! BEAR WHEEL ALIGNMENT Upset Specialists Faces Doubles Favorites Today BROOKLINE. Man. (Af> - A couple of English upset makers go after big game — Australian champions Rod Laver and Bob Mark—in today’s feature match the National Doubles Tennis Tournament. England’s Bobby Wilson and! i Mike Songster, fifth seeded for- j eigners, pulled the only upset in! [Wednesday’s action on the grass!* [at Longwood Cricket Club, turning back highly regarded Barry Mackey, Dayton. Ohio, and Ron Hoimberg. Brooklyn, N.Y., 11-11. 8-6, 7-5. The Americans were the third-seeded domestic team. TT WASHINGTON assn — 1\mS^ - j 4 i s MMaisa p 4 t 1II Bailey 4 no!Cook 3b __ >, _______, , x 11 PMoon ef Mk wad* a Onf a - - . _ 2*tSW“ lb JitiSu?* c* ■rasas 4ii( vmidiT M Tw.il* cf iijfbyais Hamlin *4 4 111 dpapwa Kucks p lIMlininrp r . 11 miwu p Herbert p HU lfcV|ll|r 1*4* Niefidra 3 Itilmm * **!!•! W'dethlck n n n o e cB*U rf • 0 fl 0 ,5'EJw 'stslgeg . jtiii In. »» I I II a—PU«1 out (or * ut rsixcsco ibrbM ab r k M 4 4*4 Davrap't 3b lift Am'fltno 3b m bbsiuari cf 4 44 1 A1W U (•SI Capbda CoSmbB IS ill t Kirkland rf SSI Cut at Seven by Baltimore iiiissr AS Ml for NuxbaU-i _____ _ __ Aneelfttaaa 1 Walbad far Broenan 111 IN 4M iiii EiihMi i m upu. as *#** p *••* MS MS Ittb; b— r Vekfilwu* to ah: cOrouadbd out Mr jbtonHtJI 'oOdeshiok in Sth; dR-aa lor Vato in 8th; CtaelBbjto ■ *A—eachnd Mir on trror Mr Clevenger In'Sib Frbneiee* Hh: fStruck out Mr Cdkbolo 1 — uiba CW ■ ■■■■■■■■......... #*•*»_.— --------------------— — . a ..blogtoo *b# Ml Ml—4 tno and Ceped* LOB-Ctoclnn*tt CIBertota. Lemon. II. Throne berry. PO- Frbncleco U. XB—Mayi. ------------ AKtana* City 37-13, Washington 27-13. Poet, XtrkUnd. AmalfUl Un, Lump# (oku city bnd It. Throoeberry. LOB_______ • Wbbhtngton S. 3B-Oreen. OToblb But nothing happened to switchL, the favorite's role from the No. 1 foreigners. Australia’s Neale Fraser and Roy Emerson. They won their third straight without being extended, dropping veterans Gardner Mulloy, Miami, and Billy Talbert, New York, 6-2, 7-5. 6-4. Madison Square Garden lost about $200,000, when it promoted the Gene Tunney—Tom Heeney fight in New Ytn’s Yankee Stadium in 1928. Wart hwlMiir ■■■—I " LABOR DAY Tire SPEEDWAY-PROVED TIRES CHAMPIONS PRICED FROM... PICK YOUR OWN sm AND TYPE... 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'll i n»-7-> r SIM Nam p 31 4*30 gMautlUa Hit ' ” fill _____ Isis McManon p 0i*S Total* 33 I I 3 TetaM St I a—Grounded art Mr WUlay In Mb; Singled far Brunot in ltd: e—Kan fl| d—Ban far Koach M Big Innings, Fielding Mistakes Hfclp Orioles Trim Tigers, 9-2 ■ft . BALTIMORE t.T> - The Detrojf Tigrrs e ruins of • sev-tl en-game winning streak today—a" streak that equaled their longest' ^Davenport ""l 1 since 1996, l But they didn’t' even come tool dose to stretching it last night as the Baltimore Orioles romped to a 9-2 victory. Another ninth-inning rally toll | way short for the Tigers when Oz-zie Virgil struck out, leaving Frank Bolling and Lou Berberet on base. The Oriole's Jack fisher had _ ------- „JM. lUjiBiMM 34-31. Lob Angelo. 27-14. DP — Login and Adoaek; Nwl and Li LOB—Milwaukee 4. Loa Angolbb 4. Crandall. Lnrkar. Ml Mblbawa, I Howard S. Moon. SB—Wlll», Neal. ir ■ a er* Buhl (In 13-7) ... IN 4 I }, WP— Brewer L rella. Drummond, “ ‘ 1*. A—ISAM, Royal Oak Enters 'B' Softball Finals Podros tW. ll-t> rrmatmoa 14 * Ash burn ct S 1 2 # • • • b Santo » Clemente rf 9 2 4 S Zimmer 1 Join the mr increasing numbsr of sophisticated peopto who enjoy root driving pleasure and yet travel most economically. Whether you'll drive the boaifttfkl VESPA -400" automobile or • VESPA motor scoottr, you wilt bo ditlfblfld ntf Mini by jP* sparkling porformonee of thoso two preciston-angifsaercd product*; ^ ^ , World fimous VESPA service is available to you across tho Unit/d States. fdsCdnva i VESPA today and too why VESPA owners uy ’ it's tho only 'fun-wiy' to g» VISPA "400“QJLf \ VISPA ) MOTOR ' SCOOTERS when the Tigers abated twice « a walk to ATKaBae, a double by Rocky colavlto and Lm Berber* iTl |‘ Baltimore bunched aeven of its 13 hits into two innings, scoring five runs hi the second and lour' in the seventh. h: Detroit used three pitchers, with Bob Bruce blasted oil the mound in the second and Pete Burnside knocked off in the seventh. Paul Foytack finished. Air of erron I second contributed heavily *1295. Camelnowd , Law p . }21S bl'aylor * ** Oreeo p Iff! fbu. > Loblne p -----------1 Me eg* ..................Ml .S3* MO— S B—Zimmer. Clemente. Thacker. Thoro-bt PO-A—Pittsburgh S7-1L Chicago 27-11. DP—Thomae. lutb and Thome* LOB— nitotMTOk I. Chicago X 2B-Vlrdoa. Abb- ----X, SOAto. Skinner 2. 3B—Burgeai, hr—Hook. Stuart. ClembOtc. S—Ei- Oldtimers Play Sunday The Pcwitiac Oldtimers baseball team will meet the London (Oik tario) Oldtimers this Sunday after-at Wisner Field at 2 o'clock. There is no admission charge. Playing with the local Oldtimers will be Walt Honchell and Jack Farms, former City League stars. PHILADELPHIA ST. LOL’tS ah eh hi i Cbillion rf lWln 2b .Carry If Ocnbbleb cf frattb 3b Lepclo 3b — . j * amemon 4 111 totiwar m 0 0 0 0 white lb 4 11* Boyer 3b ;B2. . Wokaff it Mr Tartar 1T*1inniis1r*,fffl Walked for Crowe in IthT b^ McDaniel bt fth; d—Filed eat In Mb. PSSbdiMkla gl, AanM iE—Wells. PO-A—Philadeiphla 27-11. a>. oula 27-13. DP—Lepclo. Taylor ODd Her-era.' LOB—Philadelphia I K Louie S. _B—Amaro. Curry, Ooniales. Bit—Wall*. ITaylar, Boyar. SB—Taylor. SP—Horror*. Robinson came in to score when Colavito's throw from right field J went wild. Burnside pitched well until the! seventh when he walked Gus TH-[ andos, gave A1 Pilarcik a single,! Breeding a double, Fisher a two-run single and Woodling an RBI single. Fisher, on winning his ninth game against nine losses, walked! [ five and struck out six Tigers. The i loss1 made Bruce’s record 2^4 for the Tigers, DETROIT l Toot 3b aVlr(ll 3b midy tits HoblnMn 3b 1 _______________ P'ntndea a* 0 o * * oauttl* lb 4b*S cuh ib s f if Bsaacn «* 3 # l * Maxwell If 4 I • # THandoe c 41*1 * a a a Kaltoe cf 3iie|Mh*M rf 3 • 11, glee Cotavil* rf 4111 Wfiholecn 1004 ” ™ ’ * Bolling lb 3 S t S POarelk rf 1 i I f ChitI o 10 0 0 Breeding 2b S 3 11 fBtlko 10 0* Fibber p Bruce p 0 0 0 0 ptbrTVbldl p 3 0 S 0 too 3 0 0 0 ssi si OOt 020-4 toil tl 111 Totals 20 OtS l| —nan lor Toot in 9th: b—Struck put __ Stephen* bi 9th; c—Ran for Woodling, la 7th: d—Oroundod o— *— -------•=■ Largest Selling 4-Dr. Impart We Have 12 New Dauphines jn Stock. Some Demos at COST PRICES! v. OLIVER MOTOR Sales lax Immediate Delivery — Credit Checked by Phone S Ponfiac Area’s RoaakJf and Fwwgwof Debtor w 12 COURTEOUS SALESMEN TO HELP YOU. * 51 W. ra», FI 4-1501, 210 Orchard Lake Ave. f BOWLING SHIRTS — GABARDINE AND CHALUT Expart Laltaring — On* Woak Dalirary ^ Brooks and Spalding Football Shoos with Nylon Cleats, ■ - V* SALE Of GOLF CLUBS • *| $40.00 5 POWER BUILT IRONS ........$2400 $38X0 5 SPALDING TRU-FLITE IRONS ..S22JB $12.00 SPALDING GOLF BAGS .........$ 7J0 ALLSTAR BASKETBALL SHOES WELDEN SPORTING GOODS 51 ML damans St. FE 4-6211 CARTER THE CO. (Formerly MacDonald Tire) 370 S. Saginaw FE 5-6130 5 I. 0 Silffittl THE PONTIAC! PRESS, THURSDAY AUGUST 23, I960 FORTY-SEVEN Pirates Me Big Step Towards Pennant as Milwaukee Bows Happy Birthday, Ump Th^ J!e Pfm j'if ?5r^3> with a lM last-inning| Milwaukee home runs Tuesday i burgh and lecond-pUce Milwau*.Francisco. Jim .£ ■ P“ales> [victory over the. Chicago Cubs, night, came from, behind with four jkee. beat the third-place partis (foe winjer in 7 *J1> V* fP**116*' Wertoesiay. Apd they, moved 7Va hosiers for all their runs against nwm^nPw Can start thinking:games ahead once more when the the Braves and defeated one-time toot the National League pen-mt •££ official basis. If you tl||°u to think more and more about ;the penitt0" he used to say. !*Then you either run but of games ' to play, or get da for ahead that , they, tell you the magic number is zero. "Then," Southworth would add. "you can start talking about a pennant, too.” The Pirates put themselves 30 games above the break-even point, Lm Angeles Dpdgers and Frank Howard slugged second-place Milwaukee *-3 in a flight game. ' * ; % • * Third place St. Louis slipped nine games behind With a 5-3 loss to Philadelphia, Cincinnati beat Ban Francisco 3,3 #13 innings. the Pirates, railing-up 22 victories in 30 games since slipping out of first place for one day jolt a month ago, blew a 6-3 lead be- . with « five-hit fob. He needed re-lief help from Chris Short, than ethers to ghe empires a Broanan (0-3) was■ McCormick tll-9> went all the way .rtme’ **'T ***_*. relief. Loeer Mike flowing nine MU. WwtoM->y nemesis Bob Buhl (13-7) for the fourth thne in aeren decisions. Hosraid socked twfi at the home runs, giving him 20 for the season. He's hit nine of , them, and driven hi IT runs, against the Braves in 13 games. Tommy Davis and Wally Moan, whose two-run shot off reliever Carl Willey clinched H in the fifth j inning, hit the other two home[ ever, after Ken Boyer’s 28th home run in the eighth, the Cards’ onty earned ran. Lee Walls and Tony, Taylor homered for the Phils, who beat Luty Jackson (1411) with three runs fat the eighth. PancHo| Herrera’s sacrifice fly scored the1 winning marker. A two-out single by Vada Pinson finally won it for the Reds at Sto! in support of Johhpy Pod res p in;„rArl e_ii hind 18-game winner V>m Law be-l (11-9) The Dodger southpaw ro** injvrou in run tore nailing the Cubs in the' ninth, gave up eight hits, one a two-run’ nA].FSniTRr. in hpi i;m A double by Bob Skrnner. who hurt homer by Ed Mathews in the first „ \ Ms leg adding into second, and inning. That made Mathews the|m,e ’Fat* * membcr ol b**c‘ consecutive home runs by. Dick first ever to hit 30 home runs tn hall’s Hall of Fame, was hospital-Stuart and .Roberto Clemente'eight consecutive seasons in the1 ized Wednesday with a back lb-broke it up in a four-run rally that NL. He also tied Mel Ott’s NL jury received when he fell down beat reliever Don! Elston <®-7). Elroy Face (9 -4) whs the winner with two innings of hitless re-Ef The Dodgers, beaten by five record for most 30-home ran sea- basement stairs in his home. Isons. ! Foxx, reported in good coodi- Unbeaten rookie Art Mahaffey Itiou, Was to begin work with a of the Phils, whose other two vie-ihorticultural 'nursery in Rocky torles were over first-place PittHRfowr, Ohio, Thursday. LOOK AT IT THIS WAY...______ 0£> for only firf more’ you can buy full-quality GENERAL SAF-T- MILER TIRES *more than the price of so-called bargain tires! MORE STRENGTH! MORE SAFETY! MILEAGE! Drive in today let us prove the difference only i2°° can make in tires MMIMBMl ANY QfNIRAL TIRI AT AMY FRKI IS A QUALITY BUY ANO ... GfNERAL STANDS SEHtNO THAT FACT 100% Tew as (jcu tut ED WILLIAMS 451 S. SAGINAW comparison days Shop and compare! You'll find yon can't beat Sears for honest values! PROTECT YOUR FAMILY AND PROPERTY WITH DAVID BRADLEY CHAIN LINK FENCE 4B-ln. high—rag. 40< ft. 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No-splash tenders. 3 MODELS SALE-PRICED! 25-in. Ijtwn Sweeper Is 4-7 Times Faster than Raking Good Regular 21.95 Charge-It Just push! 4 brushes revolve—.clean grass clippings, leaves, twigs from lawn) walks, 5-bushel hopper, sturdy metal bottom. Height of brushes 'adjust 0 to 2 Win. "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back ■’ SEARS Better 25-in......24.95 Best 30*in ..... .29.95 (Hardware I)ept.. Main Basement 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-1171 t . |rm rUKTV-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. THUftSPAY, AUGUST 25, i960 County Caddies 1 Win Scholarships A's Buy Delsing v | KANSAS CITY (AP) — The Kansas City Athletics Wednesday announced the purchase of outfielder Jimmy Delsing from DtUo-Ful Worth of the American Association. A veteran of, many years of major and minor league play, Delsing Former Pontiac Central track •tar Larry Banner is among 38 caddies who have been awarded CMck Evans college scholarships by the Detroit District GoM Assod- will fill in foT the injured Whltey Herzog, who is being placed on the disabled list. Rick McKinnon, who has been a will join,80 returning upperclass-foot ball-basket ball star at Troy, men to form a record number of and Lake Orion’s Tom Sura are 10l Michigan boys enrolled this fall some of the others to be honored, through the Evans program. A to-Bearner was a raddle nt Tam tat qf 15 «* the new winners wfll O’Shanter Country Club. He will enter Michigan. 12 Michigan State ww, Us scholarship at MicMgan and one at Marquette, as will Dale Stuart sad Art * Wright of Auburn Heights, Mike | E.O.M. SALE Sporting Goods ' Each scholarship covers full tuition and room rent and is renew-pbie for the next four years. * * * The operation of the natfoo-wkfe program is financed lor the most part by the contributions of Individual gollers. Mora than 31000 took part this year. ,, Chapter houses are maintained at both WT and MSU where the scholan live and conduct their group activities. Stuart and Wright worked at Bloomfield Hills Country Club. Kinski was at the Black River try Chib and Dent was em- "9 LOW OVERHEAD LOCATIONS BIG SAVINGS FOR YOU IN LAKE ORION—2 LOCATIONS Authorized Postiec-JtanhJer Deeler Russ Johnson Motors Broadway Corner ef Shedbelt — M-24 Comer of Shzdbolt MY 2-287! Ocean City By Casting and Trolling Bools 50% Off McKinnop,' who was at Birmingham Country Club, will enter Michigan State next tall as will Sura and Oakland Hills’ caddies Larry Jeffers and Larry Hansen. Jeffers is ja Utica resident and Hansen is ifrom Detroit. Sura was at Indian-wood Country Club. KaeOwoed Country Club com- Joe Matalavage (38) right foreground is captain this year. The Middies will train at Quonset Point. R.I.- MTODIES’ DEBIT—U S. Naval Academy'! 1980 football squad pours through “portholes" at they opened practice this week at Annapolis. Fullback ' Takes Eastern Cage Job YPSILANTI. Mich. (AP) — The appointment of John Adams as head basketball coach at Eastern Michigan University has been ap-i proved by the college. Oakland 11 Beats Buffalo PCH Grid Ducats Are Now on Sale in all the .Buffalo scoring, passing for a pair of touchdowns a.tj plunging for another. -'The game was less than two minutes old when ParHU pitched a 53-yard pass to acatback Jack Larschied.' The second score was just sj sudden, Parilli catching halfback Ron Drzewiecki in the open for a 14-yard scoring play. Then, with a little more than seven minutes remaining, Parilli Parilli, making his return to appeared trapped on the Bills 14-football a memorable one, was the yard line but broke through the key man, throwing for two touch- maze of linemen and plunged into downs and scoring the third. the end zone. BUFFALO. N.Y. UB-The Oak-land Raiders struck for three first period touchdowns, added two field goals and withstood a determined rally by Buffalo for a 28-31 American Football League exhibition victory Wednesday BAHNES-HABGBAVE Adams, taach at Henry Ford Community College in Dearborn for the put six years, will also SHOCK ABSORBERS t£95 ERIE INSTALLATION_____W „ : ' 0*000*01W1 A Tickets may be ordered by writing to the ticket manager at the HOLD EVERYTHING flltt NSTAIUTWH These tickets do not include Central’s 5th game at Wiener Stadium, the Nov. 18 duel with Pontiac Northern. Games covered by the $4 book are; Sept. 24, Wyapdotte; Oct/ 21, Flint Northern; Oct. 28, Flint Southwestern; Nov. 11, Flint I Central. duced by Larry Barnes who booted two field goals of 27 and 42 [, yards. Tommy O’Connell, former Cleveland Brown quarterback^ figured! Limited quantity at 1950 prices B.F.GOODRICH FIRST-QUALITY SILVERTOWN FORMER SALE PRICE e SilvertQwn-same tire that comas on today’s now cart, o Silvertown—tha first-quality tire for normal all-purposa driving, a Silvertown—naw “Quiet. Rubber’’ tread takas the noise out of driving, squeal out, of comers, provides batter traction, a Silvertown—the original tubeless tire with patented inner liner that changes bruise blowouts to siow-outB. - a Silvertown-built togiveyou more safe, trouble-free miles (weoel it Smileage) then any other tire in its class. WHITEWALLS ALSO REDUCED IN PRICE. Special sale price on BFG SAFETY- S me mg #fo pa «.70-is slackwai NOW ONLY $||95 ---a pint (Jl ltd yttt a No better value in economy tires anywhere ■ ■ * TWO DOLLARS DOWN PUTS TWO TIRES ON YOUR.CAR With: e Heater • Defroster • Washers • Directional Signals REMEMBER Matth«ws-Hargreaves Hates to Be Undertold! I 111 North Parry StrMt*fornar Mt. Clement Stroat K 2-0121 . ■aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaanaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaea>*s*eBeaBaear*BaaaNemieeN>etieipi Pontiac, Michigan j Commerce, Michigan i Oxford, Michigan 5 Rochester, Michigan 5 Wixom, Michigan % MOTOR MART ■ ED HOLMES ■ ED’S TEXACO* 8 , STAUFFERS J WIXOM GULF 1 SAFETY CENTER ■ & SON J SERVICE | ~ SERVICE ■ SERVICE v 123 E. Montcalm 5 980 Commerce Rd. J 66 N. Washington ■ Auburn aoi John R ■ 49395 8. Pontiac Trail FE 3-7845 §1 EM 3-3374 ■ OA 8-3871 ■ UL 2-4340 g MA 4-2273 ■! ■■Bl|BIIBBIIBIIIIIIIfllBIIBI«BatfBBaBBBaRbBiniinVIIUBBllBB9BnBilBlltB«lBBBBBBBIBBBB4 Pontiac, Mich. jttl Oakland at Cass MUFFLER SPECIAL THE PONTIAC vPRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23. 1960 roRTY-xiygr Michigan Open Tourney Starts Friday , * 3$* -** * * * . ^ ★ Yanks Get Even With White Sox Mjr The Associated Prsss If you listen cioitt, you almost can bear the Near York Yankees resting. After slipping past the Chicago White Soac 3-2 .ends regaining a l'i-game American League lead Wednesday, the Yankees had a day off tdday—then head into a loog, make-or-break weekend. They face three doubleheaders in tig** days, all at home, with a somewhat strained pitching staff and only an outside hope that «imyfSr Roger Maris can.get bade into the lineup. Maris, the AL home run leader with 35, missed trine games, bxecause of bruised ribs. Cat! Emmanuel Gridders The Pontiac Emmanuel Christian ScftoaTa junior high (grades seven through trine) and varsity (graces 20 through 12) football teams wiO begin practice sessions next 'Monday at 0 amt., it his been announced by bead coach Frank D. Thompson. ~‘v * - > ' % AB Interested players who have completed (heir physical examinations should report with full equipment tt that tttit. For further Information, call' Thompson, FE-5-3625. \ The work starts with a twi-night pair against Cleveland Friday and the Indians say around for two more on Saturday. Then there’s a Sunday twinbill with Detroit __. Manager Casey Mangel, what opthnisticaUy, has act up a pitching nation tor the six gai which piled up after ralnouts earlier visits by the Indians. Bob Tortey and Whitey Ford face ti» Injuns Friday with roolde Stafford and Ralph Terry going Saturday. The Tigers will face Eli Grba and Art Ditmar, the ace of the staff who won his sixth in a row Wednesday for a 23-7 record. Baltimore moved back into a second-place tie with the White Sox by belting Detroit 3-2 Wednesday night, ending the Tigers’ winning streak at seven. Cleveland bounced back into a fourth place tie with Waahington. defeating Boston 3-1 while Kansas City spillid the Senators M. The Yankees managed just four hits in seven innings off Herb Score, but beat the*"tough-Hick lefty with a two-run single by Hector Lepes in the first inning and * clinching, seventh inning home run by Tony Kqbek. It was Scon’s eighth loss, third to New York, against four victories. h ★ * Ditmar, 3-0 against the Sox, al- lowed six hit*, half of them by Roy Sever*. wbo was 3-tor-3 and banged two homers for Chicago *' runs. Ditmar left with two out in the ninth, after Sievers* 25th home run and singles fay A! Smith and Minnie Minoao. Reliever Luis Arroyo put it away on otic pitch retiring Gene Freese on a grounder to second. two-run homer by Johnny Romano put the Indians back at .500, breaking a M tie in the seventh at Boston against Tom Brewer (7-23). Barry Latman, who had lost five in a row since Manorial Day, won his second with his first complete game hi 22 tries. He allowed nine hits, walked just one and struck out seven. WWW Kansas City scored four irned runs in the jBfth, then nailed it with a two-run, pinch single by Haifc Bauer in the sev« | Bauer's hit came off reliever Woodeshick, but tagged the loss on Camilo Pascual (12-7). Johnny Kucks (4-7) was the winner, with relief help from Ray Herbert. JpE’SSR SURPLUS FE 2-0022 Wt Rent Tent* HEKEJUBWml To a Larger Store at 19 S. Saginaw SPECIAL OLOSE-OCT PRICES ON ALL HETTRICK TEATS! "Wiennrf'-—- -tplrtiimii" - me (dun MANILA ROPE 'dvr Tp uprote V»" lVic ft y."2‘/icft l/II"tcft ..8cft * Ft. Spiu-Cest Red $A98 2>Pc. Tabular Glat* A Ft. Fly Rod 2-pc. $498 Tabular PiborplM .. V IS" Landing Net MM Alum. Pimm. ■ Kit Mil Style .. Scout Style w/Covar States Finest Golfers Invade Lakepointe C.C. 102 Pros, 49 Amateursl Are Listed in 72*Hola| Medal Play Event wnNNMT* HU ms Michigan Open, Golf Pairings, Starting Times Friday and Saturday pairings nd starting times in the Michigan Open golf tournament at Lake-pointe Country Club with Friday times listed first: 7:Xkll;<*~*Bob Orundemen. Bill Oe- 7:27-11:47—-C. A. BTOtb in. *Toat Rue-Mil 11:14—eherrr WeUone, -Cherlll By BOX CORNWELL There will be many favorites Friday when the annual Michigan Open golf championship begins its three-day, 72-hole grind at Lakepointe Country Club. Thera are no dear-cut choices for the stremfous medal play tournament, but it’s impossible to over look the (rid standbys in state professional and amateur circles. Oa the prsfoMtiaal front, pant champions like Chksk Brobert, Walter Burkenw, Bag hUttag John Bant uni and' At Watraos must always rate high consideration. Pontiac’s Gene Bone, the Warwick Hills pro who has yet to win a big-name tourney, is long overdue to crack the winner’s circle. This could be Bone’s weekend to shine. * - * * * Going even further, names lilt* eteran gOdon Briggs. Bob Ingiman and Horton Smith pop into mind at a time like this. Than there's host pro John Dal-rympls, the farmer Keego Harbor athlete who knows the tricky Lakepointe layout like the back of Us hand. Age is the one big thing working against old pros like Watrou? and Smith. The venerable Watrous is now 62 and the gentlemanly Smith has passed the half-century mark. KIVRUI LCAOt’E AT Fhotafix SAD SACK — George Snellen-berger of Angola, Ind., has a reason to lock frustrated. In the Grand American trapshoot at Vandalia. Ohio. George went 600 straight birds in three different events but lost each in a shoot-off and not a single championship. frtt-Uih *aa»h XlUtram. •ok. -Dos Cochran Jr. 4:14-11:44—Don White. Chorlci Mattock. __ __ | _____ _ On the amateur front, the big hiciiM,UvMdow^ - ----- name y,at immediately comes toL,_. ^ I mind is incomparable Chuck Koc- jUst l-li:SS—Wtl Douglas. -Rot Cull,n--Tom Carmichael Kocsis, the state* amateur for more than U yean, has won the Michigan Open three time* and Ms golf game la in raser-sliarp form at the moment. Another talented amateur in the { field is Pontiac’s Mike Andonian, three-time State Publinx champ, I PHILADELPHIA (ARi 4:44-11:44—Bdon Brlggi, Tom tea. -Mike Andoolan 4:13-14:03—boa Powen, Tomi— *------ Tommy Coimoi 4:40-14:14—Tomm; Want to Play Soccer, Fellows? Try Bavarians Hey. lUtewa! Are you interested in playing soccer? If you we. contact Birmingham’s Len Morgan, player-manager of the Detroit Bavarian soccer dub. ♦ * Jf Positions an available on all three Bavarian teams — seniors (18 years of age and over), juniors 15 to 18), and juveniles (under 15). 1 ★ ★ * Hie Bavarians are the 2nd oldest soccer team in the Detroit Major! league. They were organized inj 1932 and only the Sports Club,; founded in 1924, is older. Hie Bavarians currently t r a i l the league-leading St. Andrew Scots by' point. Anyone interested in playing soccer with the Bavarians should call j Morgan, MI 6-8161, or visit him at his home, 1391 Bird. Arizin Signs for 9th Season With Warriors Rgaahr, Spun :54-12:24—Ocn* Bant. Ron LiPirl. ijjmSKS watrous, Boy Setttit, five-time city king and a semifinal-! * rizin^Vwrd^hiehest liaS tkifl a In tlaA a ti/ana I DlihliA . _ .... Paul ------ — r ----r— —------'T'^TrJTTir'Lrr lAnnii, imiu mgucu ncui’Cr in Na- • os-12 3*—chick Birbert. Orm bmu- this year in the National Ptthlic Basketball Association his- .:lQ:^^gurafa. Chick H.-]Link* ***%« t ^hucki Watrous has -won the State Open' t lob wiiii, *c*iviib took*, crown six times, Herbert owns (our t:}2l3£fthn aaiuum. Lorry Tamo-1 titles and Burkemo and Bamum ?Oro«_w«ofar<_ ___have won three apiece. . There 4S inw-* »< Pwoo L.roah (Mb. SWarl jlTtL Ctom-tc H foor wtiools toprovMo . top officioncy A Ropack and Adjust front whool boarinfo 1 Refill master cylindor—as noodod OPEN EVERY RIGHT HL 9 P,N, Daytan Tire Cd ^ 11:40-________________ •Df. Blohord Schwori ________ 11:50- 7:27—Ken Baker, CtoariM Mitchell.! • ' - 12:0*°7:At—5li?le Mosley. *A1 Whited. Local Keg Leagues •Jobs MR , jr. John Lyoa, Seek Players, Teams 12:17- 7:10—John Monlte, Danny Blanco. |Nrom_Ahern . ___J Two, local bowling leagues neekht-e kcgk>*v f.;r the ,cjmiiK UNn- ku- vam Williams. -Donat* Mc-Inerney. -Terry Kelly 12:30- A:t4—Larry O’Palka. George Spencer. ‘Velkko JuhoU 11:45- 4:44—Ben Davis -Jack Aldred 12:44- 4:33—Jerry BtrleA. Bob T are 12:44- 4104-Terry Shook. Steve Miller. *Mtko Conroy >ason„ The Waterford TotvnahS Ba MtiHsrg nosstman’s loop leant* three four more teams to bowl Monday’s i Howard Brown .at 9 p.m. starling in two weeks. U:lOoi^&bamSl‘Mle<‘*,li Anyone interested should contact | i:04- »:ii—Prank Wilson. Bob fan»ty», Lee Miller at Land-O-Lakes. | rn-Ywlaorry Lour, atom Kosut.k, Bowlers with a 150 or better! ! i Bjro Reynold*, job. xn.pp, *verage or team. 750 or higher | •Jerry PllM4M» 1:24- 4:44—Bob Duehane. -Prod Blelskl. Jerry OBMO1 1:44- 4:14-Jock Winney. Lowell LeClalr. are needed for the West Side Ladies Classic Tuesdays at 9 p.m. | More details can be obtainod from Margaret Young at FE 4-7434. IXAIlKlT/TmB GOJJ 77 W*«t Huron StrMt FE 1-0424 BOWLING SHIRTS and BOWLING DRESSES HEADQUARTERS for Buddy Bomor Shirts * King Louie Shirts Service Pot o' Gold Shirts Good Service Now! -Finest Embroidery Jf§ in Rnr Authtriitd Wborito BtBlifllsn Wg All# Flag Sails ’ A ' ---24 Btu S«nric«- ROSEITC KCREATION GO. SPORTS CENTER 20 K FIRRY of LAWRENCE THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, i960 /im Only a few Left I First Come - First Served | Scott-Powered A Combinations \ -—J - N#w and Uwd ‘ \*Sst BOATS I Tt|n MOTORS J^gT TRAILERS fe=J 20% - 30%. Off on Boot CutliidiOl wT/' fed Jacket*’ CRUISE NT NAT SUES S3 t. Walton BM. pf o.4402 Withdraw From Silver Cup Race fhompn May Retire, Miss Saturday Event KEEP BOAT LEVEL — Proper boat trim is important to performance. At top, the couple has too much weight on one side of the boat, causing .it to lean and plow through the water. In the lower photo, the load is evened and the boat rides level in the water. Protective Steps Now Will Help Boat Later Steps taken to protect your boat from marring now will minimize f your maintenance and repair prob--lems this winter. Mercury outboard authorities offer these suggestions: ★ ★ ★ Gravel beaches raise hob with the akin and finish df an outboard boat when landing and embarking. If you operate off a beach. find a waterlogged board and set metal contacting the hull Often Win Jhe sand. By gliding up on its I additional padding will be desir-slick surface when, landing, you *^e to make the chock fit your win spare tiie>hoat much wear. ^oat- Use rubber ante floor mats anger fishing tackle bona, tael containers, and anchors, and when catting bait, to aave the boat’s Interior from scratches. Rubber mad flaps behind your ear’s wheals will ds much to keep flying pebbles from pitting the sides and bottom of the the toll when Irsvrcring poor naftorw . If your trailer fenders are skimpy they probably let bies strike the hull, too. Good ones should cover the wheels over an arc of 1W degrees. Much finish scuffing is due to sand tracked aboard on people's feet. Place a cocoanut mat at the beach end of your dock so pas- mann and Don Del Monico, 1959 National Champions, who have competed in tournaments throughout the United States and Europe. Some of the tournaments have taken them as far as Malta, where [they ddvc with the United Sta’es jteam that competed in the 1959 [world championship tournament, whichtook third plat*,v Sirin diving, which requires only a mask, snorkel, fins and a sorar I to- a camera), attracts the majority of underwater enthusiasts, but each year thousands are 1 graduating to the more elaborate land expensive equipment required by the so-called "scuba" devotees, j Underwater explorations open I up new frontiers tor sportsmen | on every stretch of water front, j whether ea sen, bay or lake. | The pioneer who would explore I these unknown lands of the marine world need travel only a ] tew miles. Dammam and Del Monico insist that it fa the safest of sports, I providing the participant follows the simple rules. Despite , the growing numbers who now devote some of their time to the activity, practitioners insist that more people are kflled and injured as the result of the kick of a mule than suffer injury a, the result of skin - S5e two champion dWers •» Bri^. .*«* like many of the true adherents * ^ *** to the sport. They engage in un- ^ ** “"""l,day ot a derwater exploration, and also in (wiling meet Wednesda. . fishing and photography. Appealing to most divers is treasure. hunting, and many bring Up inter- j this, 22*4 points to 27. A second esting and valuable trove from old race had to be cancelled because, wrecks. [of. a lack of wind. In some areas, young skin divers! The teams are sailing in Alpha have managed to pay for theiriboats with mainsails and jibs, equipment by diving for lost moor-j The 4-mile course was set three ings, anchors and other boating [times around a triangle in Chi-equipment lost over the 'Side at Chester Harbor. DETROIT (Ate* The ,nd L J The British made a good start ImSS1™! those who are really hob-1, ^ COVfml fitor lead ^ blbto^toe ac^lty mt only’ de-j John GroKOno of Lmd£ Uplv^ .pacing stake m Michigan — will mands most of their spare time, or even accidental, this is the approved method of going over the side with the bulky ’’scuba" outfit. sengers can wipe sand off their shoes before going out to the boat. ld ghosts of their usually build up. TbeyTl vary in springtime fullness. size and location defending on the Mercury outboard authorities j comparative speed of the two cur-Mggest checking with local author- rents, so enter one waterway from ities before trailer! ng your boat to [another carefully, a distant river. The one you re- River channels change from year member as being deep and fast to year and last year’s deep chan-moving may greet your arrival nd may be filled with rocks and with a sluggish, trickle too shallow i sand bars. The outboarding fra-1 lor boating. Keep Your Boat Ship-Shape the Easy Way ’■’r.'ncfctoti. Boaters—Time skin diving areas within dins of 50 miles of their home base of Miami, Florida. They pad their gear wagon and a traltered beat and £ ** —• ** ;/or Midseason JE 2T &3S, Safety Che seven in number, but ttay port ant: Most outboarders start the boating season with a full complement Never skin dtve alone. Take 'of safety «roulpment on board, but manv tend to neglect these things as the seV” Now would b» r good time fa 'run a midseason "safety check" on your boat to make sure that (everything is as it should bfe. | Commonly neglected items ini _ _ (many outboards are the life jack- p‘ jets'and buoyant cushions. Checlcto/'®*1 New Boating Guide ' ** that M ^p* and Jjj ing by its nature presents a statewide problem and Is not a matter which is peculiarly subject to local regulation:’’ The court also found that the ordinance vvps never valid because it fa “an arbitrary, unreasonable and capricious use of powers delegated to said village by the legislature of the state of Minnesota Know the waters where yon are diving, especially If they are Influenced by tides or car-rents. 3. Have an operating base, preferably s beat, for reel. 4..Know your ewa physical llm- Pleasure Boatmen Relying i Boat Event Schedule -i i n .inn!.# ni , Jl Aa* is—silvar Cup, Detroit completely on tfw > Sept. IS—PrwMaM’l car. Wa»hing-- —“-“w :■>, Oct. 1—OoTirnort cua. Madiaan. ind Mot. IftocM Cup. Lea Vegu. Her under the general welfare provision." a reference to a phrase in the statute which authorizes communities to provide for the safety and general welfare as they deem proper. In another finding on the sarm\ - . case, the court ruled that the qr-|,l®I*5t that^outboarders too dimmer was, in effect, automati- P1"0^ from some tips about the] .....-- cally repealed by the Minnesota wind to make tlwir b«*UnK m«rr . Water Act adopted by the Minne-|P*®as1u^)>*^; sot a legislature tot 1959. mcttc. 111. . Aug. I7-1S—Nation*! Rchrl Ragat apnogfieM. iu. I Ana ta—Won wind, the sailboat skipper learns * early in the game that a good knowledge of its effect ofr t j water and his boat are a vital " part of his seamanship. HPB. The Mercury, outboard people,aouing aungMuiun, Aanapoita. mu' latest that--outboarders too cahLjJJs^fej aoATsnows Seat 11-25 -tnternallonal Marine In-duatry Boat Show. Fort Worth, Ter I Oct: 15-11—First Annuel Marine A long outboard ride with iri^Faciti<*ioast1 Boat sko« [waves is more enJoysb'e than one Tr>^. *n'' I against them. When possible, plan Feb. n-it—orenteP tnchigan Boat y«ur trips to take advantage of ****"’ Attul*fr- “t11' towtv. the prevailing winds, _ * ■* V . jFirst 'OliBoat The summer sun neats land jms faster thlm nearby water\MOtOr Released ^ [Hot air over the land nses and! The Mercury outboard people j™01 air from toer ^ watrir flows fg 'MetC 800' have come up with a llstotjwf-r11 “* creating the sa*| gestione which, will help youW^”1 "*e»*hre«es‘! •[ The first of the' l»t outboard keep your rig ship-shape with in “ motors. Mercury’s 'new 90 h. p minium of extra work. The se- R3iMere MO. has been announced by in the Cool of early morning and .. ... _ *. late afternoon. Save the mkWay !^_^W'.h*ffcL..^oraH« " tor picnicking, fishing, or exploring ashore. cret. they say, fa to keep ahead of the Mefjt by performing your upkeep chofera little bit at a time, perhaps five oMra minutes before and after every use. While wafting for guests to arrive, clean the windshield and forward deck, checking all fittings for tightness, and unkinidng any lines Which may have become tangled last time out. Examine bumper tie lines and life preservers at this time. Working your way back along the hull, check all controls at the B!, *** Guid# ' as-vsr rr When on the river, you can learnlone, so don’t be afraid to ask local! A new publication ’’Recreational j If the life jackets/ have been^^FKtowd Highway Act of 1959, . ° * much about its depth if you know [boatmen you encounter lor tips [Boating Guide" has been published! stored hi the forward hold orPart.of *he US^ excise taxon _.. . .,1*,^,.,. the "code.” The deepest part of and directions about present condi- by the Coast Guard. It Is an 80- under the seats, examine them for 8**°""® fa refundable M the fuel • * the river is generally the darkest!ions on unmarked waters. page booklet with detailed into-any sign Of mildew or rot. Make1* Us*d for purposes other than) c In color. On a straight stretch.: The federal government marks|matlan an numbering, minimumL*ure that the covering of bouyanta r8*1^ Ve’‘;c,1' I deep water wtil be In the center:, channel and obstructions in rivers I equipment requiremenU, recom-j cushions has not worn through, and L . I'ne Jor "!"K C,a,m* ,s M tha ®nd of a ('rui8C. 8>ve the but you’ll find it deeper toward as far upstream as they are ”itav- mended additional equipment, op- that the Stitching fa. tight and se- *P,en“«’ •» Claims must cover .boat a quick once-over. Wipe up - - 1 ... - -- lttaa.i»rtorf fmm !..i« i iofio >n any spilled ail or gaaoline Imme- diately. . A clean transom is the Goodwin Victor in Qualifying Finals at PYC Two races at Pontiac Yacht Club have wound up the qualifying contests for 19 skippers. The Cham- helra“7L1,vi959 Shallow water is more subject j first lockless dam. Most rivers, [gallon, safety precautions, ether- Cleats and other hardware J • *™ n'~ iaa®* to rippling by the wind than deep however, are navigable by out- gency procedures, etc. should be checked tb see ttat they ^ *nternal He^ue Service fdrm stretches. Watch for rough patches boards far above this point. They’ll Known officially as CG-340, the are secure. , r~ wwen caq be obtained at any or swirling ripples; they indicate probably not.be marked, so move booklet may be secured from the The inside of your boat *^°^( .iT, that there is some obstruction un-1 cautiously as you get further up- Superintendent ot Documents at der water. nfatun. 40c a copy. OUTBOARD RECORD - A. new world speed reoord for outboard* is set by Burt Ross Jr.,. at Spokane. [Wash., as he pilots this custom-built hydroplane powered by a production 60-eubioinch Mercury outboard motor through a one-kilometer, course on Sewttfe’l Lake Washington at an ever-age speed of jl5J4T mph Ross, who wont faster If there fa any woodwork on your boat, check for splintering. A file and sandpaper win remove the possibility of any splinters causing injury to yourself or your passengers. Smooth down the rough spots and revarnish them right [away.' I You have a fire extinguisher on board, and some sort of whistle or horn. But what about a first aid Idt? If you have, one, check its contents; if you haven’t till fa an important item you shoaldn’ put Off acquiring. Finally, ^ive yourself a safety check. Go over the rules of safe boating. Review your knowledge of the law* and practices of the [waterways. Exotic Birds Thrive RICHMOND, Va. "* £at **■ ..h-V o, mr -a ot the largest inboard motorboat speed records 1^ ^ ^ ^*£^25 set with engines al least larger than Ron’ . j^f th4. United Mates. The Iranian Mercury. blackneck »s a aiightly smaller % -1 ■ -77^■■ V ""7 be given a thorough inspection. About two-thirde of tile Aaiep also Are aU seats tight? Are steerii* »»"* stat* 8a*0‘ine tax stands to wj»eel and control lever secured |Plca*urg craft operators, firmly? mark of a careful boatman, you wipe it down, along with your motor, and remove all traces of dirt after every run. there'll be tar less chance of stains working their Way into the finish. Goodw:n-twice captured top honors With Bob Flack coming in 2nd and. Andy Roualet Jr. taking 3rd. . ★ ★ I dr Winners of the seasdn's qualifying races were’ Bob Flack, lst?^ Garence Holman, a close 2nd^ and Andy Roualet jr., 3rd. Betty Hitman gtas thaewinner of the over-all Wednesday Nite Owl series. Andy Roualet Jr. took runnerup honors and Teddy' Flack, a junior sailor, placed 3nL, WEEK-END SPECIAL Thursday* Friday, Saturday and Sunday 14# Fiberglas Boat Complete 35 HrP. Mercury Electric 900-Lb. Copacity Trailer Rag. $1599 ,>1900 W#flk-End Sp«ciol 1 CDCC z Set of Skis ,end Ski Rope With loch Purchase 20% Off Close-Oit Sale Im Lakes Sales 3127 W. ^eeeii^ FE 4-7121 HOURS: Mow., Wad., Fri. 'til t ' . - —- Tnssu Thntair Aea. W d I—day Mfog. Bond du Lag, Wise The Merc 900 fa tdfered to 1961 either (1) as a fair forward- neutral-reverse gearshift engine, or (21 as the direct-reverse engine pilneered by Mercury and preferred, by many experienced boaters. Bbth motors, the most powerft|{ family outboarda ever put on the market, are now being shipped to dealers across ‘ the natioa. The announcement fat advance of the customary . fail introduction date for the new line comes because the heavy demand throughout the season reduced' stocks of the 80 h. p. Mercury below seasonal requirements, officials said. The balance ot the 1911 Mercury line ill be announced In Souther. An aluminum^ propeller,’ alternator-type generator, shock ab-' sorbers, fuel line assembly/ and six-galkdl fuel tank will 'be“ included in thfc engine price. I DETROIT — Veferart linebacker ’ and kicker Jim Martin fa the "Old Fro" of fl»« Detroit Lions fci' his eleventh season' in the National FootbaUr League. EVERYTHING GOES Our Loss ls Y ^ : : £& - J ' '1 4 1 ’ t , _.£•$ ' THE frOMTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25. 1960 FlFlY-OyE (Mi Yet, the Olyrnife Gaaw, too Double Chaos in Rome; Traffic and Gina By BOB OOiraOINE ROME — 9 was hard to decide, for ftp.visitor at least, which was the greater event: The bpentag of the Olympic ountl w the arrival back at her estate on the Aroian Way of Mrs. Milko Skofic. Both event* were disturbing to many Romans. The. Olympic Games are causing some serious problems in regard to auto traffic in fao|e. 4 There is bring made an undoubtedly crazy attempt to bring onto? to what had been one of the tion by Leonardo da Vinci some years baric. . . Some erased official figured ant It might facilitate auto passage to and tram the Olymjic area It there acre proper signs, one-way streets this way sad that, traffic tops and similar oddities all lodged Insane by the free-wheeling Roman driver. ' The streets of Rome ring witf curses and baffled shouts as Roman drivers, all descended from charioteering ancestors, try to ad-juri themselves to the modern norm. AO the fun and sport and mayhem have been taken from motoring in Rome as a result of these preposterous new laws — one of which prohibits drivers of scooters from tooling through your antipasto as you try to grab a bit of sustenance at a sidewalk cafe. Mrs. Skofic caused a greater concern and more editorials. One magazine announced in a long story she hhd a 13-yea pold daughter whose existence and parentage had newr before been revealed. ' In fhe body of tee story an to-set containing the editor’s prorafee to look into die whole question raised to the article! Mrs. State's maiden name is Lollobrigida. Getting back to the troubles the Olympics are cawing Romans, threw are complaints that toe influx of tourists, athletes and officials will bring about a water shortage in many homes in the irity. It’s had enough.to keep the fountains going through late August; they argue, but fids crazy Invasion to too much for toe aqueducts. directed by Atobert Mulligan for Universal-International. Gina and bar shrewd Yugoslav doctor iwbufid have officially departed Italy to take up real-“ted' tax esi- She rebelled hnd fought the bite dawn to half that sum, or less, but atm rebelled at the system — and thus was told to pay the full grant or rise. A MU for income taxes in Italy depends to a great degree on the believe them, then I cannot Uve. assessors personal assay of howll cannot do my Work, So I just writ you are living. kk> my work-' MEA Eyes Shift to Battle Creek Awaits Ruling From Tax Commission Its Exemption LANSING (UPI) — The Michigan Education Association , was scheduled to study a plan to shift Us headquarters from Lansing to Battle Creek at a meeting Saturday, officials said yesterday. But a positive move to build a St-million headquarters will probably wait until a decision is made by the State Tax Commission. The MEA has asked H H Ml be classified aa exempt from local taxes because of the nature of its organization. The tax commission waa expected to rule within tto or three weeks, an MEA spokesman said. The organization has not Iwd to pay local taxes on its prerent building to Lansing since 1929, a spokesman said. \ "We cannot hope to continue tax exempt if the tax commission says we should pay taxes," the spokesman said. "We’re not trying to put pressure on the commission or anybody else.” Atomic Age Cave: Ifs Furnished LONDON (UPI) — Aa atomic-age “caveman” waa heM without bafi today pending trial on charges of fwnMriag Ms erode dwelling with all the comforts of somebody doe’s heme. * * * Lawrence Say, M, a drugstore cleit turned hermit, was accused to eenrt yesterday of making off with nearly S1.SM worth of laxary goods, including a TV set, a radio, movie cameras aad a record player—not eight bottles of milk stolen from a farm near Ma cave. The milk theft was Say’s un doing. Police Investigating the loss, found the entrance to the 4SS-yard long, ah rub-shrouded cove under the Sham Castle taelf Course where he had been living alace February. Ho ragged. Ill-groomed aad unkempt prisoner was charged oa 11 counts of theft and shopbreaking. "I don’t know how got Into tho cave,” Say * "Pvo never teen th aftoT all, IT! dark In there.” ■ f——* I Poirit (freek Church £«ts Annual Picnic Sunday GOODISON—The annual church and Sunday school picnic .of the Paint Creek Community Methodist Church will be. held here Sunday, starting ’it 12:90 p. m. Those attending are asked to bring a pot-luck.* dish to pass and tMkr own table service. Beverages and ice cream will be' furnished. GstoftTand a hymn sing are also scheduled. * "ir—r—---------- DONALD DtJCK There hi aa plaint that Roman shopkeepers and restauraateura are getting to nearsighted that they are presenting bills to regular Romans which they should and do present only to Olympic visitor*. Rome’s ladles of the evening are offended by the presence here of toe games. Cops have been brought in from toe provinces to enable Roman police to make a complete purge of them, at least those addicted to the pavement Rome’s night dub operators are equally incensed. Potior have been a salted to these smoky places to Insure that The guy with his load on is net gypped too badly. I IW filKA.. . As tor Gina, a startling beauty with (teat brown round swinuping pools tor eyes, and a body that makes the marble maidens of Ancient Rome topple, she has bravely returned to her native land to the accompaniment of a rasping blast from the generally Irresponsible Italian press. Beginning Sept. 1 she is shooting a film named "Come September," with Rock Hudson and Sandra Dee, produced by Robert Arthur and But it was a brilliant party she or bar producers gave at batata, where the sweep of lawn Is like a spjendid green carpet. We had a word with her. We asked her how It frit to be back in the land that once kissed the hem of her garment and now curses her as "Italy’s richest emi-(rep” * ★ * She shrugged her expressive shoulders, "t read today that I have a 13-year-old illegitimate daughter. There are many other things. If I read these things and ADAM AMES By Lem Flat BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES By Franklin Folger By Edg*r Martin Wl’h te.'d'UtTVRSKrctefeto TO toCH TVfc tollte 900 UKffiftS THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert I X PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25,1W Attend National Gathering 5 Area Students Conclave Thin, Mixed Trading 1 MARKETS (Profit Taking Blocks Grain Gains t* following««top price,|^Q^0^ $03 rd \ CHICAGO ill — A thin, ’mixed trade held the grain futures market within a narrow price range today in early transactions. A A * During the first several minutes most contracts were unchanged or only minimum fractions away from previous doses, on the board of trade. The following are top covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Fanner’s Market by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Wednesday. Detroit Product Applet, Dachau, bu. Applet, Early McIntosh. Applet, Qtoenlsat, bu. Applet. Wealthy, bu. ‘—*“ “-•* River*, bu. Dealers said commercial busi-__________ ness was negligible and that there BlueSme* were not, incentives to attract more[ cujtieopw ........... than a meager speculative trade. |p£«h5; Halt iu*e'n. bu.' Poland took 668,000 bushels of bu‘ ' wheat overnight and there was a piumt. Buraa’nk, m! bu..... report that a good volume of export bu- •••• •• • business probably will be done next! vegetables week with several nations. :Bum. green. Fiat, bu. .... Brant. Oreen. Round, bu. ... Beam. Kentucky Wonder, bu Chicago Grain iSZ iuSu hi.::::::::: CHICAGO GRAIN {Beane, Wax. bu.......... CHICAGO. Aug. U iAP) — Opening I Betti, doc. bcht......... — ------— {ButA tapped, t" i.'l*H Oct. Nor. . .*M» Dec. 7IS Cabbage,’ early, t Celery, dot. atalki . Celery, Faecal, lh Corn, Street, 5 dot. Cucumbers. Dill, bu. Cucumbers, Pickle, Cucumbers. Sltcera, Jackson Convict Killed in Break Shot in Scuffle Over Guard's Gun He Had Taken in Elevator JACKSQN (Jt—A Southern Midt-igan Prison life tenner was shot And kilted in a scuffle with a guard over a gun today in a building in downtown Jackson. The convict. Jack Bielac, 59, sentenced from Wayne County for first degree murder in 1957, was shot as he tried to escape white being taken for an eye examination, prison officials said. ■fetaevAo the eantody of Lt. John Slewtaski, was belag takes Jfulutrd. far the examination la the Re- NEW YORK (i* — The stock market declined on profit taking early this afternoon after a four-day advance. Trading slackened. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks fell .50 to 324.70 with the industrials off 1.30, the rail! off .10 and the utilities up 10. > Booses of fractions to about a point were taken by key stocks which have picked op considerable ground recently. Autos, steels, dls. chemicals, aircrafts and mail order-retail issues were among the losers. A scattering of small gains appeared in various grodps. [ A break in the market’s advance was regarded by many analysts as I not only normal but overdue, in recent declines, there was no great rush to unload and the slower trading on the downside was rev garded as a bullish sign. The business news background] {contained nothing to stimulate continued rally. In fact, a portent, [of a slackening of industry’s expansion plans came with news that machine tool orders for July were lower than both the previous month and July 1959. Losses of a point or more were taken by U.S. Steel, Jones and Laughlin and Lukens Steel. Ford and Chrysler fell about a point apiece. General Motors, which has been a pacemaker of the recent rally by autos, dropped a fraction, as did American Motors, another volume leader. Allied Laboratories picked up ass- e-ELT-r ... about 3 points in continued jjv*; itaSVvJ bo. .77.7.7.7 i so sponse to news of government ap- tokt" "! JJ proval Of a live polk> vaccine. Day- Tomaioea. bu. ' .7.iflo Co skidded 3 points on word of a Turnips! toppM^bu. 7 7!'. Jigp dividend omission. H. L. Green advanced about a point and McCrory traded about unchanged following publication of a report that McCrory has invited Five Pontiac area teen-agers are among the 89 official delegates from Southeastern Michigan at the 17th annual National Junior Achievers Conference being held lis week at Indiana University. The Junior Achievement delegates began their conference Sunday. It will fast through Friday. Official delegate from Pontiac la Jerry L. Yocum. 17, of 2M* Kaollwood St., Pontiac Township. Army Chutigte Blown Off Course IK' Inplant. MturabL ___________ Leak*, das. bcht. ...... Okra, pk.,............... Onion*, dry. SO At...... Onions, man. dot. bchi.............. Parsley, Curly, dot. bcht..............75 Pamw. toil. baba. .......... • “ Parsnip*, das. Packs ....... toss. Blacksys. bu.......... Pepper*. Cayenne, pk........ Pepper*. Hot. bu. .......... Peppers, PI man to. pk. ---- Peppers. Red Sweet, bu. .. Pepper*. Bweet, bu........ Potatoes, to-lb. ba« ....... Radishes. Red. dot. bchi. Radishes, White, doe. bcht. Be Utah. Acorn, bu.......... Soua*h. Buttercup. H bu. Cor Faithful in Death ATHENS, Tem. (AP) — Athens Fire Odef Bill Khox said an auto mobile owned by Leonard Rue was parked by tie Rue home whan He is a representative, of the ItyCo Co., a JA company sponsored fay the General Motors Truck k Coach Division. Yocum is -the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard W. Yocum. Other area delegates are William J. Sabo, 18, of 32273 Auburn Dr. and Rodney K. Lhyte, 17, of 31636 Auburn Dr., both of Beverly -lUIla; Karl Kanzler, 18, of 1663 Fairway Dr., Birmingham, and Marie Val- Winds Cause Jump Injuries FT. BRAGG, N.C. (UPI)-Mfli-tary officials blamed turbulent winds and a navigational error today for causing 37 paratroopers V: Murder Suspect Demands Exam Arraigned in Shotgun Death of Pontiac Man; Held Without Bail OBSBN* Ctbnr, Cabbage, dot. CoUsrd. bu...........? Lettuce. Bibb, pk. Lettuco, Boston, do Lettuce. Leaf. bu. Arrested by Pontiac police detectives Wednesday*, Matthew Hall, 23, of 255 prospect St.', demanded examination when arfaigned in Municipal Court on an open murder charge. AAA Hall is charged with the slaying Monday night of George Taylor, 51, of 343 Irwin St., who was killed by a shotgun blast in the cab of a pickup truck in front of his home. Judge Maurice E. Finnegan ordered Hall re turned to the county jail without ball and scheduled his hearing for Aug. SI. Hie odd-jobs worker had been the dwelling fifonwfi*» «•“*** Portugal oocs lad tht world to it mysteriously burst into flama».lttia '****• caniant, IS, of 244? Big Bearer Road, Ttoy. taking part in a massive jump to receive injuries from falling into wooded areas. 1 **%•,. A A Eighteen paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division were hospitalized Tuesday as a result of being blown into trees during the mock combat eternise Bright IStar/Pine Cane HL , AAA An Air Force spokesman said a Cl 19 troop carrier from which most of the injured jumped, flew off-course because of a navigational error.. Only about 20 of the men in the eight troop carriers actually landed in the sandy loam drop zone. The others drifted into pine trees which lined both sides of the jump Zone. Injuries ranged from ruptured spleens to minor lacerations. IAC. Co., spsasswd by Chrysler Corp-t while Lhyle repwwiwls the Fomoco Co., gpsaaswd fay Ford Motor Ch. * ,7 Miss Valcaniant is representing the kilowatts Co., sponsored by the Detroit'Jlgispn Co. A JKjjr The young executives bare joined more than 1,000 other aehtarera from coast to coast for the confer-. recognized as the only teenage trade association convention of its kind. The 8euthreatens Michigan delegation Is twice as large as It wm last year aad the Mggeet single delegation ever to be seat to the national JA conference. Under discussion will be business problems and ways of Improving the performance of their duties in JA companies. Delegates will take part In contests for business acumen and Friday will elect their national officers. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Chamber, City Hall on Intention to Construct sidewalk on u»e following streets: ' . East Boulevard (east aide) team Alky Ckmeaa Street to Granada Drive „ Mono load from Innflwoetitl Avenue to Bolt Ltae UM. Fuller Street from Madison Avwm* toRret Avwie (to fUI aapa) Went aide Jessie 8trw*t from M#«hanle Street to Avenue Seward Street from Oemun Street to Murpky Paris Interested property i ffe; ADA R. EVAHB City Clerk Far further information eee fegc^ noticee. owners are urged to appear. _ />s77 By order of ft* City Commission Dated August 24, 1660 ‘ 1 Dies, 6 Hurt in Flint Accident Seven in Speeding Car ] Which Crashes, Rolls Over Five Times Poultry and Egg. ■PH Che-< Between the second and third Turnipa, bu floors in an elevator, Bielac took SfowimU's gun away. As* the two left the elevator Slowinskr knocked deteoit routTUT . | 1 DETROIT. Aug. 15 (Apt—Price* per pound delivered Detroit lor Skljiuflty : poultry. „ leavy type heal 31-33; light type t bent 11-13; heavy type roaatera over 5 the gun from Bielac * hand. GT They fought for the gun and it discharged, striking Bielac in the heart, officials said. He was dead on arrival at Foote Hospital. No one else was injured. large 45-51: lari* 45-41 •nail 34-3* * •- —Oroda i _________ ..... large 40'i-43. medium ] check* 3S-3T I 35-38; ... browni l large 45; Livestock Indiana Train Skids Off Rails; 23 Injured EAST CHICAGO, fed, (APH The locomotives and 11 cars id a New York Central passenger train left the rails and skidded half a mite along the right-of-way Wednesday, injuring 23 persons. Only one of the injured, Sophie Purcell of Huron, Ohio, remained hospitalized. She was reported in fait* condition in St Catherine's Diked food and cholca steer* 34-34.50; iair conauiMi in ot. cainerira; a |*-£ Jow choice noo-ml Hospital with head injuries. The —------------ — — - ~ - -- others were released after treat- ment. FLINT (UPI) — One person was, .... ____ kilted and six others were badly the object of a two-day search, injured Wednesday night when a Green shareholders to tender their I Detectives found him at the homejipeeding car into which they were] stock. of friends on Highland street. crammed struck another car and' AAA crashed into a free. New York Stocks Police believe Hall mistook Tay-j All the occupants of the careen-tor for his employer, Klmbrewjing car were from Flint, Killed! (Early Morning *»u°n* ,.hl I McCain, 42, of 347 Irwin St., after fo the crash was John Wilson, 29. Figurca .nar d.c.1 j ^Lportedly barreling w i t h him ^ (our „ womM1 ^Monday over wages and two men, were rushed to kludge Finnegan wUl deckle what n « T degree the^murder charge should | K , jj j carry upSifhearing evidence pre- State police estimated the car| ■1.4 sented at Hs&’aexaminatton. was traveUng at about 80 miles gf —— an hour in a 35-mile-an-hour zone] us J when it struck the rear of another g5;*!a my zi 116 ilu^7-^ car, bounced off, rolled over five Admiral. .. Air Rvduc AUlad Ch . Allied stra Allla Chal k Coal ifryera 1-4 lba. whltea 30-31; Barred Rock* 34-36; duckling* M. DETROIT BOOS DETROIT. Aug. 35 (AP)—teg price* dtoMlM by flrat receiver* de-DatrOlt: loot# In 30 doaen DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT. Aug. 35 Made high choice hellers g5>-404 lb. batten 74.40 early; load high cholca aad prime 004 lb. belters at 34.40; moat choice halter* 33 50 to 34 00: good to low choice helferi St-33; standard belters 14-31; ourti* pu utUlty helferi ».St-lf; utility cop* U-lnSSJ, .. ~ — -•- Del Edit DM C 8eag Corp .. Bath Bteel .. Baalac Air ,, Bond atri . Borden ..... Borg Worn . Brist My ... Brunswick .. Bud d Co .... “ irrougba .. _al Pack ... Calum ft 8 Campb Soup Can Dry ____ CdnPsc Capital Alrl Carrier Cp . Case. JI .... Chrysler __ Cities 8vc .. Clark Equip Coca Cola .. ~ do Palm . —(lum Oaa . Coo Edit .. CcoROoa .. Coot ___ .... Coat Can *.... Coot Cop ft 8 coat Mot .... Coot Oil .... Copper Rng .57 lal l— . 44.4 Johns h . il j Jonas ft *, . . 31.7 Kelaey Hay . . 73 § Kennecott .. 301 Bmb Ok ... 315 Kroger ...... . 53.0 Lear . os.3 LOP Ola** .. . 34 Ub McttftL . . 33 5 toff ft My . . 70.S Lockh Alrc . 43 4 LorllMrd . gs.4 -Mack Trk . . 04 3 Martin Co . ! 37' Monaaa Ch . . 50 4 Moat Ward . N STOCK 11 . 11.4 Mont Wheel . 314 Motorola ... . 30.1 Mueller Br . .313 Murray Cp . 00 Nab Cash R . 33 Rdt Dairy . . 345 mk Laaa .. 0.3 NT Central .n No Am Av . . 114 Nor Fac ... . 34 0 Ohio Oil ------r. . 03.4 Owens HI Ol 00 3 .44 Fac OMB ... M . 41.4 Fan AW ft|r 30.4 , 31.7 Fanh M - •,4* . 04 Parsm Ftct . 334 Parka Da __________ . Si Peqney, jc .. 43.1 . 044 Pa RR . 40.3 Paptl C . n.3 Pffier . . 414 Phelps . 31.1 Phlleo . 1* Phlll Fl. .......... ■■ ----- ft O 130 3 ■ 53 • I ou 1 RCA ... I Republic 8 ^Funeral Service §; for Hammergtein • j HARTSDALE, N. Y. (UPD - A 144.3 private funergl service was held Jij j here Wednesday for (hear Ham-413 merstein II, the Broadway lyricist .* grille ^collaborated with Richard *|.4 Rodgers in producing such hits as “ * *‘S 0 u t h Pacific,’’ “Oklahoma,’’ “The King and I," “Carousel" and 3 the current “Sound of Music.’’ AAA About 50 relatives and family friends attended the service in Ferndiff Cemetery, 25 miles north of New York. A A ’ A N Playwright Howard Lindsay, friend and associate of Hammer-stein, said in a eulogy, “As certain ” jlas one can be about a'contempor-®| ary, I am convinced that Oscar Hammerstein had greatness.'' times and hit the tree. | ^0 one in the other car was 14 50-31; cannvra down JI Dow Cham Sammy Kaye and Band Saturday at Walled Lake steady to jj, , Air L rime teller* 14-30, few up 57.1 K01I and choice 34-34: utility Eatton a»b to 3I.M: and etandard 14-25: culls down to lS.Od., _ Sheep—Compared last week sMughter Eme7 Ra clasaee and feeder Mmba .teady; moat Lie RR Sx-Cell-O good And choice _ . .good If-if; cull hi cnoice Dancing fans can swing and U-«: good end choice feeder ■way with Sammy Kaye for onel^cat^is^umttN^eari^ti night only — Saturday. The famous | unchanged but not enough “Se You Want to Lead a Band "|up8S?‘*^ot „0UIh t0 , maestro is making on of his rare ballroom appearances in this area and be is expected to set a newWgJJJH Firestone ___ Food Mach . Ford Mot ... Preep Bui ... Pruen Tra Oardner Den “P Dynam I4A Ro^M^DUt .. 171 St Reg Pap . Mi Scovtlle Mf B ? »«[• ,!•* Sinclair > 77. J J Sou Ry ..... " Rj'iTrJIS::: ll.T Std OIICa! . li ft Sid OU Tnd li ft lid 011 nj .. 4ft Stevens JP * . 11.1 Stud Pack ... Castro Grant&.Guiana Loan, Rice Supports HAVANA (UPI) — The Fidel Castro regime has granted British] Guiana a $5-million loan and also agreed to buy Guiana rice at premium prices, it was announced Wednesday night Guiana Minister of Industry and Trade Dr. Cheddi Jagan, on his second visit to Havana since the Castro takeover, said the loan was for the development of his coun-j try’s timber industry and would be paid back over 10 years at 2 per cent interest A A A Jagan said he had been consider-ig giving Cuba some timber con-Hammerstein, 65, was cremated I cessions in Guiana “but decided] Tuesday morning, hours after he not to because of possible imperil died of cancer at his farm in ialistic connotations.” The minister described himself as a “socialist and an enemy pfj private property.’’ He added that] some of the “feactionaries” in his country opposed the Castro regime. 37 4 Doylestown, Pa. ■_______ ■ „, Ocn Fda .. in cnougn vo , . - „ ,1 —— borrows aad gilta ^'V.^ifi?” attendance record for the Waited 100 lower, tows 40-75e lowar. o*n Ttm* Lake Casino Ballroom. ---------6---—** |o*n Tira Friday, the Dukes of Dixieland Queen Mary Sets Sail will be the dancing feature at the [After 2-Week Strike Casino. ---------------- SOUTHAMPTON, England (AP) Why is it that the silver lining]—The liner Queen Maty sailed for always seems easier to find in]New York today after being stuck somebody else's cloud? . . . Par-1 two weeks in Southampton by a ents' spend the first years of a]wildcat strike of British seamen, child's life getting him to walk The liner missed one round trip and talk, and the rest of his child- to New York, hood getting him to sit down and The liner sailed with a full crew be quiet—Earl Wilson. [and 1,025 passengers. D*rb«r Prod 4*3 Un Carbide 120 jjj Rockefeller Plans iijCampaign Opening ' 40 .11 ; TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Gw. * J};} Nelson A. Rockefeller of New oil York will launch his campaign for ! 3*1 the Republican national ticket in ' us New Jersey Sept. 9; '. 37.3 r. for a 1960 0LDSM0BILE Delivered Check This Model Close-Out Special *2696°° 2-Door Sedan, Jetaway Hydramatic Drive, Heater, Windshield Washers and All Factory Equipment. OTHER MODEL OLDS AT EQUALLY LOW PRIDES! HIGHEST DOLLARS FOR YOUR TRADE-COME IN NOW FOR BEST SELECTION! WE DIE KMJM AT JEROME OLDS CADILLAO 280 S. Saginaw FE 3-7021 THE FLOOR SHOP 99 SOUTH SAGINAW at AUBURN Open Friday end Monday 'til 9 PLENTY OF FREE PABK1NG IN OUR LOT REAR OF STORE OUtetU lOoebcl Br ... Ooodrlch ____ Orth Paige .. Ot AftP ...... Ot No Ry ... Orvy hound .. Gulf Oil Namincr Pap Romeatk ...... “ " » Ch .. lag Raiad . Inland Stl .... Inaplr Cop . Intcrlak Ir ... In National VFW Drill Rae-Vens Win Second Pontiac's all-girl drill team, thelRae Voorhees of 255 Dick St., the Rae-Vens, entered their first na-j 22-girl team competed against 14 tkmal contest Wednesday night other teams, many of them past and missed taking a national national champs, championship by the slimmest margin. Competing in the Veterans of Foreign Wars national girls drill team contest at Briggs Stadium, the Rae-Vens ended up in second place, only one and three-tenths points behind the leader. Winning the coveted chain-pionohlp were the 8t. Anthony's ■too Diamond*, of Boo ton, Mmm. Under (he direction of Jvif k The local team is made up of girls from 13 through 17 years of age, and will begin a recruiting drive Sept. 1 to fill three vacancies left “by members leaving tor College this fall. AAA Parents of the girls, have begun plans to raise funds to send the team to next year's VFW convention in Miami, Fla. Unit Air Lin Unit Aire . Unit Fruit . Un Oaa Cp .. * US Lines *.. US Rub .... * Us Steel ____ US Tob ...... ] Walgreen !! Warren Sd 1 West Un Tel ' Tale ft Tow Rockefeller’s office and New Jersey’s Republican campaign headquarters said today he had accepted an invitation to kickoff the New Jersey campaign with afternoon and evening swings H.7 [ through several populous North Si Jersey counties. 1 Zenith Ri DETROIT STOCKS 1C. J. Nephler Co. I Figures otter decimal points are el High Low Alba Elec ft Equip. Co. 3 7 1.7 Baldwin Rubber Co.*— 17.1 Rosa Oear Co*........... 34 O. L. Oil ft Cham. Co.*.. I I Rowell nee. Mtr. Co.* 10 Fentaeular M. Prod. Co.* 0 The Frophet Co.*......... 30.4 Rod]' Mfg. Co.*................ 0 3 ■ -oledo Edleoa Co.........IS O 11.6 11.6 •No oak; bid and atked. DOW-JONES f F.M. AVERAGES 15 lads. 036.16 oft 3.36 30 Ralls 140,41 oft 0.34 16 Utils. 66.31 off 0.11 * 00 Stock* 111.31 Off 0 *0 Volume to 3 p.m. 1,160.000. News in Brief Frank Shir Ida of 7M Third 8t„ told Pontiac police Wednesday that I someone stole a 20-gauge blue steel I shotgun and carrying case from I WALL COVERING 29 Rea FL PLASTIC WALL TILE |< And ^ COUNTER TOPPING 29H Bon fl. Wide George Firman, maintenance I man at Wisner Stadium, reported I to police Wednesday that vandals I broke the plastic covers and light I bulbs on the stadium scoreboard. I Jameii CMtrlll of 731 St. Clair St., [ reported his power lawnmower [| stolen from the frontyard of home yCsterday, city police said. | Hwur rnmni i»d hv! Rummage sale Fri.. 1 to 9, and I Th77,^f.".d p,».( P b, 8at.. 9 to IE. ItS West Pike 81. L 30 14 11 oo (Between Caw and Williams) I bdiMt.RalbUui atacka Womans Aid Society. Adv. in* 130 0 INI 3143 Rummage aud bake sale, 8at,|| in.* iis.1 loo s mi Aug 27th. • to 3, Pint United Pen- H 314 0 Jit-6 103 5 3i3.i|teco6tal Church, 178 Oreen St. Adv.l SANDRAN 9x12 Leu Than *2Q°* ' INLAID LINOLEUMS '■ IB. 354 4 1M.3 106.4 311.6 Marbles * Spatters -. Futuresq - 63.4 3115 dr. Lafayette. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1900 2%; FIFTY.THREK Northern Resorts Trying to Catch After Coot Start By BOB VOCES LANStNG Cool weather eariy in j£e put the iftorfg.. - - uoa behind me eight b« ________ t start. The cash rr|idii| are ringing up “bo sale” when they shouMbe bringing in the bucks. The resort,hotel, motel end touriqt attraction operaton, who depend on those green dollars to help keep Northern llickfgaa greet# are still trying to catch up. “In, general.” admitted Robert . Furlong, director of the Michigan Tourist Council, “the tourist volunti is running below last; He said, queries to the tourist Omncfl were running 12 per cent below last year.* Furlong also criticized the fact that the council] was forced to cut its advertising! budget by-about 9 per cent this year. A recent upswing in business hasi bees noted. Furiong laid, giving hope the late spending would put the Michigan tourist business up dose to the GO-mHUon-doflar take last year. One of the moat reliable barometers on the Northern Michigan tourist business is the car count at hie Straits of Mackinac Brkfee- The count showed 118,885 vehicles 1M per eewt from the S4S.4M at tM» Haas last ymr. The I960 car count so far Is 786,615, down 74 per cant from the 838,MS at this date last year. ‘It ia definitely the weather,” ■aid a bridge authority spokesman. It has been very disagreeable up heqr for vacation weather. Another jover the bridge in June, down itetjfactor, however, might be that the per cent for the month from the!Detroit auto plants haven’t been 130,588 last year. paying as much overtime this; 1 In July, the car count was summer.” a8,M2 down 15 per ceiOMm the 3 to I BELOW NORMAL 373.5M last year. J The UJ. Weather Bureau at East t in August I Lansing said the summer tempera-1 ture has been from three to five degrees below normal. "That was bad tar those people “Also them ham baas no rangy hot, humid spells to drive people eat at too Mg eittoe like Detroit These facts checked with reports of tourists coming back from the northern resort areas. I "I was able to get into my! favorite place," one reported, think I passed 50 hotels and motels “We got served right away in] Eleanor Beadry, secretary of the beet restaurant in Mackinaw Copper Country Vacation League: City,” another said. “Before we * * * “We had a 29 per cent drop in tourist travel eariy hi the season because of very cool weather. Business picked up, however, and new accommodations are near capacity !at Isle Royale, and at Eagle Harbor and Copper Harbor. This year's business should come close to 1959 if fall vcoior season is successful.'' i The Btato Conservation Com- : It np well in late July. All in aB, a satisfactory season, with weather the chief deterrent to a better The latest < simple Hto taking a trailer along or pitching a teat to n state park. This reflects la toot revenue to hotel, motel and resort operators. Spokesmen for major resort] Dwight Dexter, secretary of the! and only saw two ‘no vacancy’ areas were asked to comment.! Cheboygan Chamber of Commerce: ' 'These are their reports: “Season started slow but built up; Many Factors in Jack’s Aid Defeat "Business about even with last year eariy in the season. Retail business held up although truffle was slow." * * * ^ Leonard Thomson, secretary-manager East Michigan Tourist Association: “Most reports indicate June and .early July business vas down as much as 10 per cent. However, tourist business picked up tremendously in late July and August', Major factors for decline were [weather—too cool and la£k of hot weather in cities.” By JOE HALL not pay medical bills. WASHINGTON tfl — Doctors, politics and money helped defeat $en. John F. Kennedy in his spotlighted Senate floor fight on the issue of medical care for the aged. i e Democratic presidential nominee called it the most important issu* of this abbreviated session. Yet 19 Democrats deserted him in the showdown Tuesday and he picked up only one Republican vote. Talks with Senators on t both ] sides of the argument turned up major reasons for the defeat: . The feeling of Republican liberals that they would be pawns in a Democratic political stroke if they backed Kennedy's plan. t. The view of some Southern Democrats tint they would Jeopardise highly attractive financial benefits already In the pending bill by voting with the Massachusetts Senator. They believed Inclusion of his plan would aenure a veto by I* resident Elsenhower. ithe Social Security System would! “They talked to a lof of Sen-i They felt they were left with be expanded to provide health ators,” said this source, who important issue to take to the federal' funds would pay up to J9j per cent of the costs of this pro- r?* " gram in low income states. MostIu,ure' Southern States are in the low As income category: 18 of the 19 Sent Democrats opposing Kennedy were with the fight said many doctors Southerners came to Washington to oppo Some of these Senators said they the Kennedy plan and played were sure thaf' eventually the! potent role In the outcome. move to do this in thel“I have 3.000 doctors in my state himself promised to do this. [and I don t know any 3.000 people xoricw or intention to cob-„ „„„ I I'd rather have tor me." struct sidewalk on s*w*rd street, a O U»e tilled pointy one ... You ore hereby notified that it Intimately connected ! * * * >M“'atyB'S»toVeSti ‘h' ffiK! I ■ | Some Democrats were not too__________ HI „ discouraged-over the outcome, * .Tailing as it must have been to related work ^ 7. j i tides, from O \rnnedy. park at an ei Talk About 1961 Models May Hold Up 1960 Sales Highly effective opposition by doctors ^marshalled by the American Medical Association. Tourist business was light in June and eariy July. Many resort operators complained of cancellations caused by cold weather. Business did pick up in August. Boat sales have been off in this area .'reaoittUrar*it was this year, another indication of a >«ruct*0tidewa?k Vnd decrease in vacation travel.” “------ Street, both ★ * ♦ ’ $gSl\ Aurey Strophaul. secretary-i estimate [manager, West Michigan Tourist or pu and Resort Association: im r vement" i'n M»ccord»nc*n,wHh 'the! “Summer season generally suc-pT*Pn°Vroftl« end estimate, end that theCessful, despite slow start due to Tai" and cold weather. Scattered that ail of the loti> and p« reels of land i reports of drop in business at some Streetn*fro'm0,O»mun Street tq Murphy j American-plan resorts.’ Perk thall conetltute the special assess-ment district to defray I1.I34.M of the] estimated coat and expenses thereof and that $1,135.20 of the oetlmoted coat and expenses thereof ahaU bo paid from the I Capitol Improvement Fund. ________ NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN That the Commission * “ Death Notices By REN PHLEGAR AP Automotive Writer 1*1* only manufacturer which DETROIT (J1—As a potential *™™* customer would you buy a new car “J«W*ned t0, ** the tim *° now if you kneV what the 1961 1,8 warM Simi‘“r _ . . barriers are bound to be erected ^ as the preview season progresses . | Pontiac, Michigan, will ir w. O. 7561 These compacts are the Dodge D,ud Au*u,t Lancer, Pontiac Tempest. Buick Special, and OldsmobUe F85. Al- . n August 30. 1N0. at hear avggesilona ond! I bo made by partloa] ADA R EVANS City Clerk Aug. 25. 1000 IN A HOLE—Charles (Tiggy) Birkbeck, 34, nephew of Britain's Earl of Munster, looks right at home as he labors on the demolition of a.London building. After five days of this he spends weekends at the family manor near King’s Lynn. He says he took the Job after ha was fired from an advertising agency and found himself flat .broke. Overlord iii Overalls This Calloused Aristocrat Hacks London Structure ... ...... .. . inrun tMtwftlk OB Fuller Street. Will be the last Of these to go You ere hereby notified that it ... sale fin mid-Octoberi, one ““ Pontiac dealer in the Detroit area Augur •‘-cun Most dealer's are convinced you next weej{ t0 studebaker-Packard, wouldn't. Manufacturers doub 1^^ Oldsmobile, and that you would. About one million later t0 the other cars * a . 'I960 models still are unsold. _ 11 k w w Chevrolet, for example, ha* has started early with his teaser Ur On the first point, Kennedy Th“»- added station wagons and small advertising. iM said quite frankly votes of tot are busy staging previews^oftheir ^ (o ^ ^Kct Cors air However or six Republicans were essential ^.el* to . ^ .Tl nfii ’ **“*• t’ndoubtedly these will be the trade tor adoption of his proposal to **ir. ^alers "* ,or rePrMenta' t.,ked .bout next week, but it ' fives of newspapers, magazines, , ’ radio and television, they remain' jg '*"* ** Or,ob,*p bf,ore extremely touchy about what they regard as premature publication or broadcast. * iIm inti______ -MB to eoo.truct ildtwalk on Puller street from 1 Michigan, ■'.■"“it the aty write medical care benefits into the Social Security System. In the 51-41 defeat, the only GOP supporter of this was flea. Clifford P. Clue of New Jersey. For months, the newspaper But others, such as Sen. John yoa arr now reading and various ■ Cooper, R-Ky., who talked about i may again I they become official. Last year produced : a current Issue of [| paper Automotive ] News says: "Dealers .call up a I I variety of reasons In their | j attempts to Explain the sudden abrupt' slowdown In new ear sales this I I 06.024.50. and ind' estimate of r Intended to conatruit ?*« •Mmfiu f land fronting u change in many of the secrecy summer. Many Are inclined t« practices mainly because the Bigt b I a nt e heavy pre • Introduction Three were introducing compie ely[ publlcjty of *«l models, partle > . _ ... inew products in their compact atari' on entries tn the compart 1 shsii cd popular magaaines have been r field” - I district t< friendly to the social security ap- running descriptions and tat some r ’ .. . ,, , .. , ^«u nt —a. J—n—. __ -»— ’t'u- * ^ ... Ford in one shot gave out every. He has o big sign on his show'“I* thing about the Falcon except the [windows: “Were getting ready 4jc»piM improver price. Chevrolet went Ford one [Tempest.” The Tempest'1* d .N9TleJ[11 better aqd included the price on [cylinder car. ifrxy | LONDON (AP)—An aristocrat I would never get to top clan in n overalls swings a pick andjthat Arid.” shovels broken bricks on a demo- Three weeks ago he persuaded lition job near Piccadiily Circus, [the weatlwr-beaten foreman of (he He develops callouses five days wrecking crew to try his hand with a week, knocking down an old a pick. building along with a lot of Cock- “He’s a grand worker,” said the :iey mates. Weekends he retires to foreman. “And he's got persis-,iis family's stately home nearltence. He came along every day; King's Lynn and gives orders to asking for a job. You should have preach declined to go along. The raMfl p|(.turel, „ drawing* Kentuckian said he considered it tomr, # the ^ models. “cruel and cynical to treat people , >•', . . over 65 as footballs in a political You probably have read, for example, that the Rambler American, which has not been seriously the butler. He is Charles (Tiggy) Birkbeck, 24, nephew of the Bail of Munster. His mother is Lady Joan Maiy, sister of the earl. Tiggy, educated at Gordonstoun, Prince Philip’s "old school, might have found polite occupation in thi financial district, where .the traditional uniform is bowler and umbrella. But he chose the overalls and the shov# to “get dowif to something essential." “But the real reaon I took the job is that I was flat broke,’’ said Tim- - \ , sacked Iran my Job in an advertising agency. I was told him, all dolled up in bowler hat, stiff collar and carrying, of course, an umbrella. He finally broke down my resistance, and now I’ve got a fine hiuid. His workmates love him.' h Sr Old habits Sot Tiggy into a bit I of bother at the start- When the lunch breaks came there seemed fo be nothing more natural than to,eat in a posh restaurant in the neighborhood. Tlien one day the manager called me aside and said, very poUtely, that he would be obliged campaign.” The second point was regarded]” Kennedy’s supporters. duced 10 years ago. Will have a complete new look—shorter, tower Several Of the 19 De»ocrats|and narrow, who voted against him said they) tfhich brings up the Wsfton: were doing so because (he bill i Would you buy a 1960 model before the Senate contained ta'j American if you knew the exact creased federal funds for their! nUmber 0f inches the 1911 war states, which they tong had sought, changed in each of these direC-KE OPPOSED | tions, remembering dealers cxp«n>ei thereof i niteuton Chamber t o'clock p.m. to ne objections that may I locust 30, 1300. at tueitlona and | adc by parties They said the Eisenhower Ad- Advertising the car ministration consistently had opposed such increases. Now that it had agreed to accent them in an effort to stave off the social security ' medical care plan, these Senators said they were going to do nothing to throw pway this opportunity. Eisenhower had stated repeatedly he would not approve Legislation linking a health benefits program to Social Security. The additional grants in the •re tor medical roata for pboutlon ce|| with a Russic.t, his moth-$1,605 compared with a .sticker er revealed today, price Of at least $1,795? Mrs. Mary Downey 6f New Brit-1 And then there’s the matter ■!". Conn., who returned today] of aluminum engine*. No IM from a visit with her son. said] I if I didn't come in there with myl peraona on the relief roll or with overalls,” said Tiggy. ! such low income* that they can- American Held in China Sharing Cell With Ru|- Streti. x i Yoa irt hereby notified that at a HONG KONG (UPI) — John was closely cropped, he looked f**ulV„ m**t,lnL th* .9?>ir.'?l,-*lon- ot Downey, an American imprisoned neat in well tailored trousers and August 5j, iri^b£ rosSsum^it wJSJ for espionage by th? ’ Chinese, ir^ils were immaculately clean,” .commission *?« ^onuruet0siriewaiir flfJ * has been sharing his Pciping pris- she said. ^ Ireutsd^work^oo^the west stps tf Dated August 24. 1060 ADA R EVANS p City Clerk Aug. 25, 19(01 NOTICE OP INTENTION TO CON- model car built In the Lnited States with conventional water roofing baa an aluminum engine. Rambler has been reported to havq one- in the works. At the preview a six-cylinder engine using an aluminum cylinder block shown, just as the reports said it would be. But from Presi-George Romney down, nobody wanted to talk “on the record" about this power plant. (-street from Mechanic Street i Downey, captured by the Chi- *p'i‘rK‘t.n°d nese In 1962, Is nerving a life of Mid improvement u on flit for public term for eoplouage. He alleged- ‘“u^Vs “further tateoded _____________ ly was shot down while on n *•'! Improvement In acpordnnee with l - ~ plan, profile and estimate, and that tns I over Manchuria. cost thereof shall be defrayed by special ___Rap Bit_____________ father pt Patricia Ana and Phyllle Lynne Bllncow; dear brother ot Mrs Fred Boe. Mre. Earl Duaen-brrry. William and Mark Bllaeotr. Funeral aervlce will be held Saturday, Aug 37. at 3 pm from the C. J. Oodhardt Funeral Home. Keeao Harbor, with Rev. Robert H Benedict offlelettng^ Mr. BlUa- Oodhardt Funeral Home. Keego Orion: aee eg; beloved husband of laabelle Elsenman: dear father of Marlon Akers. Louise Oymer end Harry Elsenman Jr.; also survived by six grandchildren and three greet-grendchltdrsa. Funeral service was held at 2:10 p m. today from Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Almont. Intermeat in Dry- , den Cemetery, Almont. ________ ORAHAM. AUO: 24. 1M0, OBR-trude J 3020 Cass Lake Road. Keego Harbor: age 35; dear grandmother of Mrs. Milton Batten; also survived by several nieces, nephews and two treat-grandchildren Funeral service *111 be held Saturday Aug. 27. at 11 a m from the C. J. Oodhardt Funeral Home. Keego Harbor, with Rev. Robert H. Benedict offlclatln$. Interment in North Parmlnston Cemetery. Farming-ton Township. Mr*. Oranam nut He tn state at the C..J. Oodhardt Puberal Home. Keego Barbor. O DBa! AVQ. 21. I860, J. DANIEL Sr., 271 N. Ferry St.; age Ttt\ dear father of fltelil O'Dea Jr . Loren F„ Catherine. Robert J. and Michael J. ©'Dee; dear brother of J. M. iPati O’Dea and Alice O’Dea; also survived by seven grandchildren end t h ret great-grandchildren. Parish Ro-sary wlji .be Thursday, Aug 25. nt 3:3« p.J». tt Sparks-Orlffln Funeral Home. K. of C. Rosary will be Thursdsy, Aug 25. at 2 pm. at the Sperks-Orlfflis Fu-hersl Horae Funeral service will be held Friday, ‘Au(. 2d. at 10 a in. ffom St, Michael Csthoue Church, interment in Mt. Hope Cemetery. MrXTDea win lie in state at the Spa>ki-Orifftn Pu-k torsi Hmbw. _ PENDLETON, AVO 24. I J.. 9# N Eastway Drive: oe Wife of Clifford Pendleton Pi al arrangements are pending the Sparks-Orlffln Funeral I where Mrs. Pendleton will 1 I. EDNA John mentioned his Russian cell . laeseumem according"’ mate only in passing and did not) His mother said Red Chinese °f- #f th* tgu »nd parcels of i tell her what kind of crime the[ftotals had told her he might be s'tremfrolnMechani"stmtdtoMich' man was accused of committing, released eventually for good con- I duet and other considerations, but esUmated cost and expenses thereof ghe emphasized these assurances j were made unofficially. jc»piui improv«mtnt Fund. ! NOTICE 18 HEREBY OTVBN ———— i That the Commission of the Cltl He said the Russian waa ( with him only occasionally, I did not elaborate. SOW ARDS. ADO. 24. ISM. RITA May. 346 N Saginaw St.: age $1; dear mother of Oersl L. Sowarde; dear eleter of Mre. O. E. Pinkerton. Llnnle Roe, Mre. Chester Schroder and Herbert Rue. Fu-service wiU be held lYIday. Aug 21. s.m. from the »-wio< chapel with Rev. Anderson officiating. Mrs. Mali Still Split After Parley Mrs. Downey said she found her Elephant leafher is so heavy that j chamfer1'®"Uiu« t io iaeo—t' son looking “wonderfully heal- a hide takes three years to tan. • o'clock p.m to heer^suggealions and I thy." ‘ Cattle h des can be tanned in only m&2XSJ th,t may "• by p,rU,‘ “He was in good spirits. He h few weeks with modem meth- J-.^ia1 . n man seemed normal mentally. His hair I ads. I * ada r Evans i AugUfc.C!eMj To Return Twice More Before November \Nixon Promises to Help GOP in Michigan Une Rallroi Talks With DeGaull® DETROIT » — Vice President] Fall to Heal Senegal !Wchapd M Nlxon’ **vin* Mich' Rift With Sudan PARIS (AP) -v* Senegal's Premier Mamadou Dia headed home today after talks with President Charles de Gaulle that apparently failed W Iheal the rift splitting the Malr federation of Senegal and the tortner French Sudan. 'TtB first concern is the construction of my. country, the cpn-solidation of the independence of Senegal," Dia told reporters as he boarded a plane tor Dakar Wednesday night. ★ W ' De Gaulle invited both Dia and Sudanese Premier Modibo Kelts to Paris in an effort to mediate the aboggle for power between die leadapr of the two former FrenduflflRtae, Th« French are :ertaffi that Senegal will remain n the French community; but they tear that Keita may turn to leftist-led Guinea, another former French colony that refused to join the community and ls now getting h4lp from the Soviet bloc. Dia made dear on hU arrival Tuesday that Senegal's break.from the #iton wdth the Sudan was final but he appeared ready for some sort of link with the neighboring terrUpcy. ■ Keita has not set a date to come to Peris, but be sent a telegram warnMg the French President that if he recognized «* “secession” of gfiffiftl. “this could have fK-tremefy grave consequences inter- igan its tint sample of his presidential campaign style, says he return at least twice more this fall to help swing the state to the Republicans in November. The GOP presidential candidate, waving and handshaking his way through Detroit, told Michigan Re-] political publicans Wednesday they “havej dress ~ Nixon’* six-hour lot or (Ity was bll ippearanre for an ad-the National Conven- i Commission of to construct sidewalk on I Ide of Festberstone Road orth Avenue—to—the Belt < I at tn estimated cost of J (tel Ol plxn. profile i prediction on his potential Cab- tu*t ^ Islt to the (into a hotel banquet room where]a a non- j nearly 200 party officials andiii Wayne County candidates for pub-' Noting that Williams is retiring]!! Uc office were toasting Paul D.[as governor, with hopes of becom-]*1 of said Impr ler m tended the horses" this year to close out] Mon of the Veterans of Foreign Bagwell, the GOP governor can- ing a Cabinet member, Nixon said: ] string of Democratic victories War*. u’ ‘ ........ at the polls. But GOP leaders hustled him i didate, at a birthday luncheon. , , . ___ . _ ,, / ' .... I "I've been ashed scores of I Bagwell, who turned 47 Wednes- fmm aboUt whom , would day. grinned from ear to ear as rhooM, for ,h<. Cab|net. I’ve aF , , Nixon told the group that the| wayB dwllned (oramellt but you i MlfiMflOn Clnla T ?Hiua*wUi> es^fa. I - ____ - * 1______ can be anre that Williams .N88VI be In It.” * I Thst the CommisI 1 Pontine, Michigan :her Rl —Jll b» defrayed by nent according to frontage] of tno lots and pareela of Feathcrstone Road from Ksnliworth! i Avon no to Belt Line Railroad shall :on-l stltutc the special >un,n..nl ai.tr,., I | to defray ll.S57.44 thereof and that (3,2(l.tii be paid from°tho ’TO! _______Fund. NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN I Michigan State Universitv professor's showing against Gov. Williams in the 1958 gubernatorial: _ , "/- v- race was "one of the bright spots TraUin* in the Vice President’s I shadow most of the day was Rep. and objections that may bo made by [Alvin M. Bentley. Owosso con-j^w'o 7raL,“*d [gressman and GOP candidate to D,u<1 August 24. ism.^ ’ BagweU led the OOP ticket and unseat Pat V. McNamara. D- cuj cSrk gave the six-term Democratic gov-jMIch.. in the U. S. Senate. ___________________________________A*t- fa, ism In keeping with the non-political notice of intention to con- of the year.' LEADS TICKET > notified I emor his closest race in the. ____________ thro® elections. [nature of the visit, Bentley kept I S^utavsrd"’1* "Anyone who could come ihm I silent, content to bask in the lime- Lj0.u -r,----- -- - - close to winning for the Republi-]light of the GOP standard bearer. ]th«u city of Pontiac* Michigsnonheiii ’ertain(y will Nixon praised him as “one of the j intsnuounof th“ city I most respected members of the commiss' ' House.”' norm of Mt. Clemons Btrsot- Lawrenee B. Liademer, state GOP chBlrmna, and John B. Martin, Michigan’s Republican "Democrat* are trying Just ns j national committeeman, both hard to win the state no we are, greeted Nixon warmly, and we accept their challenge." | a real a** in tf* arm ■ said Martin. “It will [ *,.d® cans here in 1958 certainty win in 1960," said Nixon. The Vice President said he regarded Michigan as, a "major battleground” in the 1960 cam- FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. in 9 p.m. ' All orrurs should bo reported immodlatoly The sibilitv for errors other than to cancel the charges for that portion of the flrat insertion of the advertisement wnleh has base rendered vslueleas through the error When cancellations are mad* be eure to get vour , ••kill number.” No adjustment* will be (loan meals containing typa else* larger than, regular Ogata typa la 13 o'clock noon th* day previous to publication NOTICE TO CASH WANT A additional eharsa of _____—_____-jtimated t„. , and that the plan, profile and tstlmate] ot said Improvement Is on file for public! Inspection. R Is further intended to construct! said Improvement In accordance with | the plan, profile and estimate, and that the cost thereof shall bo defrayed by special assessment according to front-1 s» and that the following lots and fronting Upon the east ______________jlevard from alley north I of Mt. Clement Street to Oranada Drfvt m________—.is t» the tpeclal as-! defray (SM.M of: i expenses thereof Mlicrra Tin CANDIDATE® - Vice President Richard Nixon, center, in Detroit Wednesdgy to address the Veterans of Foreign Warn National Convention, chats with Psul G. Bagwefi, left, AF Fbotofox GOP nominee for governor cd Michigan, and Alvin Bentley. GOP candidate for U.S. senator from Michigan. The occasion was a birthday party for Bagwell at a Detroit Hotel. [help us to fight a little harder, desci__________ "Not only does Michigan have even in Detroit where Republicans I n*,h 7 COATS VWSUXf BOMS DRAYTON PLAINS OR WB; Donelson-Iohn^, FUNERAL HOME man oripfin cwm Thotmhtfal Barvtoe 9» 949*1 Voorhees-Siple CwNiy Lot*_____5 OAKLAND HILLS MpfOBLAL I tour inn kata. Section I. Sell all «r wSX rfTtm. •___ PERRY mt. park curbt. TjwttMII (rare lot. Will divide. At II a.nt. Today there i were replies at The Press I office la the CASHIER * Office and Poctlns machine O- —-irwNT. Ant n to Children Grown Up? IP YOU ENJOY MEETING PEOPLE. YOU CAN EARN MO TO IH A WEEK IN SPARE TfifET^ NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED. DIONIPIED. REWARDING WQHK.POB INTERVIEW APPLY Ml W~ HURON.______ _ Help Wawtad Faiiiali 7 WOMAN FOR OENERAL HOUSE — ttTsar WANTED CURB GIRLS. DAY AND -------*• “■“***••, *** working condition*. Apply In per-ton. Reels Drive In. 9334 Hlgh-land Rd, aarooa front at-------* woman OR oirl out tebdoi. To live to. Care^ DAT SHIFT ____ A lap repair wqrh, OR 1,__ ■ULLDOBno - EKCAYATlife . TRENCH1NO - TRUCKING Septic Tank and Tfle a Klemetak__________EM 34411 WAITRESS CURB GIRLS CURB WAITRESS 'cd't have Immediate openlni s [ TED’S \ WOODWARD AT SR. LAKE RD CREDIT OIRL. SINGLE. 18 TO 13. high aetiool graduate, upper half of class good typist, able to Help Wanted 8 ADD TO FAMILY INCOME ■BOW- EARNING IMMEDIATELY. NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED. APPLY M1W. HURON.________ IP YOU CAN 'SELL FOR A BUILD-ER - BROKER OR WANT TO LEARN — CALL PACE CniSNT WORK OP ALL KINDS. Free estimates. OR Mill. ,■ CEMENT AND BLOCK WORK. ttaRh O. MagwaN. nl Mil. CUSTOM CONCRETE WORK TO fiNV Mdi. PS 14133. PE Chrtsti 1, I, S. 7, *, 10, Id. dl, *t, Tt, 75. 7*. 86. II, 03, hi, M, 99, 100, IM, 105, Help Wanted Male h regular ln-cck. paid va> . ________ bonus, phis [ many fringe benefits. Apply In ?erson. Beneficial Finance Co.. West Lewrenee St COOK - MUMUiliR - CARR-• . TAKER . COUPLE, Fall time for ! both; Permanent; RXPKRKNCR8. ! For Information call Mrs, Kelly. I jo 44057. COUNTER AND CURB GIRLS, 18 < and over. Pandy's Drive In, 4420 Digit Hwy . Mt s. Saginaw, DENTAL ASSISTANT. WALLED Lake area with resume. Write Pontiac Press, Boa 44.___ EXPERIENCED WAITRESS WANT aluminum awning manufac- Hirers, OR 4-0418. ___ MEN. YOU CANNQT APPORD TO overlook this, if not earning 1100 weekly. Opening In Pontiac where L-----products are welt known. 1 lsboretory technicians. Por CUSTOM BUILDINO, RE8IDEN-tial and commercial Remodeling and dert^tog. FB 44340, DRY WALLaQUARANTEED WORK. I Proa aetlmatoa. PE MBl. DRY WALL TAPINO AKD PINISH-lng. Proa eetlmatas. PE. t-OTtl. ELECTRICAL BERV—FREE EST. PARTNEY Electric. PE 4-5434. EXCAVATING AND TRENCHING (Or septic tanks, drain Acid*, footings and U(M dosing OL 2-5404 ; ■ ' ___ ELECTRIC HEAT. INSULATION, and wiring. Ragltn Electric. EM 34234 or MU 4-0333____ NA* ff’w'."Hurotr'PE~ 5-d43l. 5-4101. Egt, M. renlng shifts. PE > person. 3505 Dixie, aemoT Iheludlng set-up Wolver- EXPERIENCED EX PRB88ER. i A PART TIME JOB may bo able to qualify for » EXPERIENCED WOMAN. COOK- —v,------•------- - ,eneral, local references place, own room. ------ ------- -------„----area. MI 6-1887. Mr. Alien OR J-0022, 13 noon to EXPERIENCED YOUNG * 9-0-_______________________| mlddleeged woman to help with AUTO GLASS INSTALLER. MUST! light housework and 2 small chll-have experience. Apply at City dren. Days only. MI 0-7538. Glam Service. 300 state St. Fob- j EXPERIENCED WAITRESS AND tlae- ........ ....I curb girls wanted, apply la per- A TOP RANKING NATIONAL CON- son only, White Swan Drive In, cern needs 2 married men 21 to; M59, Pontiac Lake Road. servlee establlshed custom- experienced waitress ' Apply at 107 North Bag- Sect'y No shorthand required for this executives secretarial position. Oood typing, able to handle dictaphone. Aged 25-38, 5 days, pleasant surroundings. Salary $400 to start. Midwest Employment, 408 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. PE | 5-0227, , | WANTED; MAN OR WOMAN. MID-! dleaged to work In Cafeteria counter In Birmingham area, Must have experience and ret-; erences? Write to Pontiac Press, I Box 84.________ "1 Employment Agencies 9 luusiuHCAiiun, aeiiuuaujxiu, poured walls, residential and commercial. Dale Cook Cnnitrue-tlon Company. OR 3-8023. PLASTERING * REPAIR. REAS. Pat Lea. PE 2-7023. 3-0163. By Frank Adams Rest Apts. FmtmMM 37) Rmi Apt* UsfsraMjil tt 3 NICE ROOMS PRIYATE BATB 3 BOOM Burnished APAJtf-ment. Private WkOMO. heated-C. PAHOUS. REALTOR 00 BOUT* ST. Ortonvllle_______ MA 7-3S1I HOSPITAL, >RM AND BATH, WORKING OR mlddleeged couple. Refegamaae — 130 Draper. PR 4kWM. 3ROO‘“ 3 and 4 rooms, newly decorated. &ZST* Mr,. Anders 111 maB M. — fOPnAC APIB, 3 urns. Stove Refrigerator. COLORED 4 ROOMS - PRIYATE EN-TEANCE AND BATH — MBJIO-ERATOR AND OAS RANOE — BEAT AND WATER FURNISHED Aam mA nARfU >PAWU OTIV. Rest Ho—q Usftw. 40 brick. . -,-- --— heat, garage, bpmt. Hear Oen- eral tBnm. fSr ogwr. LAKKFRONT BRICK 1 BEDROOM. 94919. MOD. I IK Sheffield, block -—=-2 S?JF baa. SRI b month. Or will sefl. OR 3-1004. ROCHBBTER AREA. 1 BEDROOM brick, fun baeement, ell boat, carpeted, fireplaoe, 3 ear garage. 3 joia- UL 3-U43. WILLIAMS - LAMpHjOMT, 0 »OQM .LED LAKE, LOVELY-» r oowpUMArktt 4-H93. ROOMS. PRIYATE BATH AND entrance. 40 R. Johnson. » ROOMS. NEWCY^nKORAWD. t:xw» ha adStoTw Norton. _____________________RestLaki Cottages 41 CLEAN 3 BEDROOM,..LOWEJt, | taw---------------------------- pvt. entrance, M0. Children wel- AT SQUARE LAKE — CLEAN 3 come. Bald Mouatala Rd. PE rama tXlt ** , —• , ——! Pirtiil. clean; 5 i^m".-' -JKr£h; qQLORKD UPPER. 3 BOOMS AND , ■ ul, candy teSdt~BI 3-WOO, hath. PR 0-3003 r|LAKEPRONT A O E IN o town. PE 0-0304. 3 LARGE ROOMS, UPPER. WASH; lag. 102 Parkhagst. PE 8 *003. 3 ROOM WrfH BATH. OARAGE. For couple only. 104 Henderson ",.. and another thing... we call it “"the ground safety rules'... not the ‘flight pattern’.. Lost and Found 26 Wtd. Miscellanrous 30 TICK RAVE Davlsburg . We c right man. OR 3-0505. AUTO BOOT MECHANIC. OR SAJ-kjUENCED COOK, H I O H T 3-2075, after 0:30 p m. MY 30303. | work only. Pasquale’s Restaurant COOK - BOUBEKEEPER - CARE-| C*" botS^PerinarmnL* KSfTf^tCK.!FOUNTAIN OIRL 35 AND OVER. Par information Call Mrs. Kelly, must hsre some experience. Ex JO 4-0057. cellent_ working conditions, — Phono Pd LOST - TWO BLUE wm». , _______./ | Hounds. Vicinity of ROOF REPAIRS I n EAVESTROUOHINO PE 4^1444 j QOLDEN RXD MCTTER \V^T^RPROOFING Ar^-H^ on^AuS* Work guaranteed. Preo estimates. n. children very upset, reward ______ . P» O-OTIT ' for Information, as — —— ’ COLLEGE GRAD Man between the ages of 33-1 with aervlce obligations fullfllli for position with prominent i ttonal company to learn flnan and sales. $425 to start. Mldwi Employment. 400 Pontiac Sti Bank Bldg. PE 5-0227. Business Service RPBIP A TYPEWRITER, adding machine or piece of office! furniture or equipment not Inn USED PORTABLE SEWING MA- BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS I biact hound vicinity C WaU and windows. Reasonable. viilefcrosby Lake Rd. on 3-jwi 11 -2:1??1.-— --------LOST: ENGLISH PUG DOG IJOETf) , — ' Moo. night, fawn-colored. Vicinity ; , Hudson Arenue. Reward. PE *-3-4334 EVELYN EDWARDS FRUITS I LOtifrBLOND MAW PEKlhOEM j lfew crop pie cherries, pitted, blue- I Jji., Creicent Labe area. PE j I berries, dry pack In bulk cans I _M8*i_____________________ . ■ I for freezing or canning. Open LOST SINCE AUO. It;..SIAMESE I ---------,ge,pt Mlodsy. 1 *---------------------- i. custom cut t Instructions 10 pay. I 0-3535. CHINA PAINTINO LESSONS POR beginners. EM 3-6713. WOULD LIKE TO HEAR PROM reliable men who would ilka to train to Install and service air conditioning, heating, and refrig- your freeaer or locker. Royal Oak Protea Foods 1802 Crooks Rd._________LI 1-8400 PAY'S PARTS AND SERVICE Wholesale end Retail fedtofel PE 2-4021 06 Oaklai LOST: 3 YR. OLD ORANGE AND white female Brittany, OR 3-2085 ------------ 3-3102. Wanted to Rent C. PENNEY OO. ASSOCIATE •tag transferred here Sept. I .ants 3-3 bedroom house tor 185-ta* month. Phone PE BOOM. LANDLORDS TENANTS RENTAL SERVICE 3 CLEAN ROOMS CHRISTIAN __home No drinkcre, FE 3-T304. THREE ROOMS. PLUS KITCHEN and bath. All have one separated bedroom. As tow as 105. SLATER APTS. *3 N. PARKE ST. AFTER 5 AND SUNDAYS. SEE CARETAKER MR. CARROLL. Al ARCADIA CT. « ROOMS AND BATH. PRIVATE1 ~~ i entrance. $15 per week. ChUd aY welcome. Inquire at 373 Baldwin ___ Ave. Phone TO 5-1081. rVoOM MODERN. PARTLY 32 turn. MA 5-5000. 4-ROOM PURN. ACROSS ---- S«S. faffiR^D^A Associates. 1004 W. Huron St. PR 4 " VERY NlfcE ROOMS, ALbG-3 school, children welcome. .OR LOST - BROWN MONKEY IN vicinity of Osmun * Sanford. Ro- l^Tla^” WHIT,. AND RJ- (Dick) VALUET brown Beagle with r* nu®8*/ i Realtor FE 4-3531 »»“«. °WB*ra SSfy' Ph0n* Bob 340 OAKLAND AVENUE Childers. UL 2-3085;-----,------ OPEN 0 TO 0 SUNDAY II TO 4 I Hobbies and Supplies 2t>k |: EXCELLENT OFTONTUNITY TORI -r SALESMAN WITH PROVEN L»*- 08 M». Tran BALES BACKGROUND. NATiow-j portatlnn necessary. _________. AL COMPANY. SUBSTANTIAL | OENERAL HOUSEWORK — LIVE DRAW. PE 0-0030 POR APPOINT-, la. S'days. $25. MI 0-3035. MOTT, ' ; _______-----------— ----------------- EXP MIDDLEAOED MAN FOR dairy farm, exp. with surge QEOROES TOYS ARE 1 equipment. Cecil Gordon, 2100 back offering to party host- Darlsburg Rd.. Holly. ME 4-0401. | ess and toy demonstrate's. EXPERIENCED MECHANIC AP-j Learn uow to earn. Call plr 535 Elizabeth Lake Road. j OR 3^007. POUR MEN OR WOMEN WITH ein to fill TiciMlii Full •rl——... -- ----------. ■ I part time Opportunity to tarn' OR ILL COOK WITH SOME COUNT-good Income. 154 N. Perry. 0:30 er work. Minute Lunch o E. Pike. to 11:30 a.m.'_____________ DRILL COOK. AFTERNOONS — FARM HAND OR GROOM TO i Good wages. 921 W. Huron_________ -- horses, good OIRL TOR OENERAL OFFICE --------------------- ■ a_lnsurance office. Apply loQ4trl Inst.. Dept, olt 14. Mich. 5-0173 0:30 U &ear''snd""hot water furniSed. Close toWsher Body. FE iWf. I RMS. AND BATH. LOWER. 3 bdrms. 74 mAtltydir' 70 MOHAWK 3 rooms. Block bus _ and Tg-Huron. JTn* nslghborhood. BSD ROOMS. 2 i Northsrn MloMgaa. #» MIM. ADULTS ONLY ___________ ____ MOD. BLM.. idl. APTj STOVB and rniw. iiwihf Bus lino. Free parkmf. Oood oond., $47.50 room apMtmtBLmD room, bulto-tn oven I range, alr-condltloned. Just koaullfUlll It's a drouMflliriM iBBMh. Avail- able October 1st. WUl SfU English Chippendale dtotog room eulte. William Bends rofr PE 3-7033.-NEWLY DECORATED - LARGE living room, MI stood bedroom. aU big slosjfa. Pine raeoptloo hall. BuOt% bathtub. Tito man. Largo dinette AIM stoable kitchen. Oas heated buUdlng. Just ltoory walk-up. Automatic gas hot water. d»y or night. TUod hallways. High school, ailso grade school within start distance. 404 E. pike. fE N B wLy DBCORATED apaHt-ments n - — - lion M ---- or goto 1 nvk h. lay thru P -0430 N >1 ________ 9UABAHT APABTmnrr, OOP PER month, ga« heAt. refrigtnt--- stove Included. Hi 0-0433, wagrmTL.^ ttto baft aad kMrtm.oMSiMUf heat fura., plus garage. No small childCta. OR 3-3314. Rent Houjcs Furnished 39 1 BEDROOM. C OZ T CLEAR. I CM 3 TEACHERS. I ROOM bouse ou lake. AutomaUc oil heat, attractively furnished. Close la - reasonable. -• _ Lake Orlpn, wi HIM. y^GjAr -r— ^ , Fsr Rent Rsum 42 BUB BTOPPINO AT POOR- ,LOB. froct ptirnctif rm. TB CLEAR ROOM, NEAR WOOS ward, excellent reetauraat, house grivjlegee. single woman. .MI. COUPLE! WITH NICE DESIRABLE ROOM. GENTLEMAN, ■ private home, close la. f tdtli GIRLS, NICE HOM^ OP YOUR Rooms with Board 43 ROOM A BOARD WITH OR WITH-out. 13Sto Oakland Ave. fE 4-1054. ROOMS, _'bxasonaxu, board Opt. l4m Oakland, ri 3-4140-_ and- Convalescent Hooms 44 WAHT 3 LADY CONVALESCENTS, in Christian hcmt. good rare and pleasant surroundings. North-branch $-455._______;______ STORE. APPROX. 24 X W. HEAT STORE AND OFFICE. SPACE. Drayton Plains, OR 3-7812, STORAGE SP'Ada 20 X "fll Adelaide, FE *342_________________ OIL fflCAT. !W Me *r ULTRA NEW V Work Wanted Male 11 8neclal orders t< A h CARPENTER. SMALL JOB8 A specialty. PE 8-1*41 or-TE 5-2017. 1ST CLASS CARPENTER. NEW and repair. PE 5-7240. ____ 2 FINISHED CARPENTERS. NICE work by hour or job. PEi $-3393. A-l WALL WASHING. CARPET to Uphol. Mach, cleaned. Pi 4-1077 A-' CARPENTER WORK. NEW> and repair. PE 4-4210.____ A-l CARPENTER - RECREA- Notices snd Personals 27 reasonable rent, pg 3,0077. Dressmaking, Tailoring 17 AEROTREDS KNAPP SHOES DRESSMAK1NO. TAILORING. AL- | FRED HERMAN OR 3-15*3 ! FREE RM.. BOARD. ALL HOU8E- .—..— - wij-n mm ' i _——— _ . I hold privileges, possibly small i none. •»«■ ARE YOU selery for Tesp^».. ... ♦ ^tak. coupl. only. | 3 BB3RM.. J-mYJK m SO. | ____ ___ ______ _._r Malden. 1 Maceday Lake, Waterford. BEpROOMS. JfEAR MIDDLE { JJ4 rrowNELL, BIRMINGHAM Rent Office Space 47 ______________:1Outl»nds, *c R'dlng Stables 23175 W. 14 MUe |_I-3. 901 Pontlac Bank i ___ TOini'ntfB^fiOEPrr company ffOUSEKEEP ER needs salesman, good rate of pay. Come in for interview. Ill Joalyn, , For motherless suburban home, earner of Madison. . | Live In. Private quarters. 4 In ■ family. Modern equipment. Call _ FE 3-0101. Miss Oreen. HOUSEWORK AND LAUNDRY IN s A additions. . o ceil-! O O-Oln. 5 to 7 p.m.___________ ‘ Garden Piowint , ;lf UtD 1 O I Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. 35 . _________________District. 4 r - terrace. suitable fog office, shop. store. $10Q ELgln 5-35H.___________ SND flq<6r. 0 ROOMS OP OP-tlce spa** All or part. In heart of downtown area corner location. Lawrence and *rry Streets. Pontiac Community Finance Com- __pany. Call John Lot. PE 8-0431. 1300 SQUARE FEET OP OFFICE space toad atorage room, vicinity of Saginaw ana Orchard Lake on- ! ----r--------------------- l Rd. Call E 1-4141. High- | 5 ROOM TERRACE IN LIBERTY j DESIRABLE OFFICE- SPACE 1,400 M»°dr, *ttractlvi» turnlahedf^a-1 y. a„d floor Huron Theatre. _OR w- rS parking «pace. ISOLIDATE ALL TOUR BILLS ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST AC- JVm and LET US OIVEYO^ tlon on your land codtract. Caah | — tb^aad i—_ — -—nuuw, wming to train-3 week, at eo- pieaaL_ __ psny expense for a Job that Will age children. One toddler "no cook, give you a lifetime security. For tng stay nighta 3 days off. 435. ttrod < from job to Job______- . opportunity tor ffieu who steady employment and wl have a lay-off Our poalttoi_____ UmltOd. Pull time tody. Apply Ift! ---------■ person With your wife, 341 Oak-1 plele charge weekends off . land, PUt^wupen of West Mich-' — MA 5-lWO._______, HOUSEKEEPER FOR MOTHERLESS home. 3 children. OR 3-5407. HOtTSEKEEFER. UN E M C U M- , 11-11. Rochester, Mich. OL 1-1527. LOCAL WATER SOFTENER MAN-(HOUSEKEEPER. LIVE IN. WHITE Oftjcturer? has openllig tor, fee-, with good references. Lovely home tory direct talesman. Highest in Rochester, l I3-vear-old child commission rats la area. SonaoL - Please call aftr 8:30. OL . leads furnished, outstanding aqulp-| t-OgOO Saimaa*Trr.if?1iTtrry iSi^To "i;ivic_iN-"MORrFOR MA 0-2588 eves. MA M321.-1 home wages. FE 4-2744. jLADV POE PART TIME SECRE-.. tarial work. Must be efficient In | short hand, typing toad general — u..1 . ______office work. Must be non-smoker _H11W FIRESTONE RETREAD | between ages 25-45. Typo re- IH EN Experienced moderntaatton peaters. 7IS West Huron Bt. 5-3203. CARPENTER. NEW AND RE-mqdeUng FE 5-90*5. CARPENTRY. 10 YEARS EXP. Kitchens . a specialty. Repairs. Ress. OR 3-4389 CABINET MAKER AND CARPEN-ter. Kitchens a specialty. FE . /■_?>, _ CAPABLE MAN WANTS A N Y kind of clerical work, can operate many machines- Full or. pais time. FE 5-0«X __________ CARPENTER WORK^ OF ANY kind.- Reasonable. CbH after I p.m. PE 4-0434. ^ EXPERIENCED PAINTER. WALL washer, and odd Jobe of any kind. FE 8-3304. __________ FAMILY MAN NEEDS WORK OP any kind, FE 5-7068.__________ JEFF PETERMAN • Cement work of all klnde. Sidewalks, basements, floors, driveways: PE 2-0147. 254 Prospect AL WARNER’S ROTO-TILLING, I JAJ°» and gardens. rE_4-8044.— ^^ANDTif D8~Blvi"YO® - ,™ —u PLOWING. GRADING. OI8CINO t> ONE PLACE TO PAY.' buyers waiting. Call Re I - .... .............BUDGET SERVICE ‘ ’* HURON UHL Jept. to Juno, ... ___________ tences nicely furnished. Rent f 441 Lakeside Road, - Lake Estates. | Partridge. PI 4-3*41. 1050 W. ] ROOMS. BEAT. bachelor light., and linens rum. saw s 1701 Baldwin FE 44H7, -----, (ZZ rnnlrirtc I BACHELOR APT. N. KND._S ANY OIRL OR WOMAN. NEED- UUVCTS IOT LontraCtS Main fir., vary ntoo. TV. rm P _ , tog a friendly advisor phone PE ! CLARK REAL ESTATE...... 1-4370.■ , _ he.... nm». COMPLETE FAMILY . LAUNDRY | 3?123. Alter _5. p.m. .or If. no an- f pg 3-7444 res._ 4-4813 ’ AP^CMJtNT, J7 ------- ------- Laundry Service 20 j ” OFFICE OR STORE BOTLDING I ■:■■■:.,■ -■ -j-j--j, for rent at 4713 Dixla Highway, r 1 AVAILABLE UNTIL SPRING WtL- I yg 2-2812 a. i ■■---Lake front. 4 -rms.., bath, i ----------— ------- -------------- - -------------^“‘,*•44 | rear round home. TO 1-3023. . For Sale Houses Laundry 2-4101. . Telegraph. rOtStr'/BonfidentlaL * ~AflK POr'MR CLARK °^rl _ COLD WAVE SPECIAL. 48 50 COM- I CASH FOB LAND CONTRACTS. Osmun. FI 8-904*________ ~ I K?lt, jj.'*1""1' ovps. w r ,---, . plete. Dorothyla, FR_3hl2*4.- H. J. Van Welt 4540 Dixie Hwy. coupLE PVT SATH AND ENT. —j—wtaWgSi'—dkrSe" Landscaping 21 DAINTY MAIDSUFPLIES - 7» __________________'1 PE 4-M47.____________________________________-Tyw earpotodlto^r «an2e! - -------------------—-------Menominee. Mrs. WaUace. rE IMMEDIATE ACTION DOWNTOWN 1 nook* BACHELOR I basement In Herrington HUle 2 •-1 MERION BLUE SOD. DE- ] _±Z~?;----- --------------------| 0n any eood landeontractl. -New | -KI month ” | Sub. CaR PE $-7437. _____antlac Press Box 14. shop I LIVE IE - CHILD CARE. LIGHT housework. Must be dependable. edu- PR 3-4404 after 5.________ ■ J MIDDLE AGED^LADY TO HELP Pm BOYS Who bad stroke. Must lire In. MOTOR INN RECREATION I 1344 Clyde Rd , Highland. pspt mraaw I NURSES AID, EXPERIENCED Needed at once — * men for; only And housekeeper for nurs-evemne work. 1CkR Mr. Taylor, tog tame Must have own trans-to 8 o m aortatlon. Call between 0 and 5. IS ten V*. -MSI' _ ■ Jut;; PART TIME, SELLING COSTUME 8ales and Service. I Jewelry on party plan. No In- OR 3-4*23. SALESMAN WANTED. NO Experience — work. Call PE 4 MARRIED MAN WANTS WORK desperately. PE 5-4402.______ WORK OP ANY BIND. FE 5-7883 _________ | WALL WABHINO BY MACH . RUOs - uphol,. cleaned. FE 4-4424.__j YOUNG MAN DE8IREB PXRMAN I eat Job, minimum $1 an hour. FE ; ry or plek-up 2401 Crooks Rd. | wt.9-4443. _______ An ACE TREE SERVICE ' STUMF REMOVAL Tree removal, trimming, get our bid. PE 2-7188 0T tt 8-0735. | SULLDOZINO. LANDS C A iP I N O. road work, and beach inktailing. EM £3415. EXPERT TREE SERVICE. FREE f estimates. FE 5-4303 or OR 3-3000. KNIBBS LANDSCAPE TRUCKING PE 5-9708. PE 5-2040. LAND8CAPINO. LIGHT HAULING and- plowing, ran*. OR 3-4350. LANDSCAPING. SIDINO AND 1 seeding. Top aoll delivery. $11.50 1 first load. PE 2-5403. TRIE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL j , reasonable rates. FE 8-1608. Top Soil Light and heavy trucking. Bob-1 blah, llll dirt grading ahna. gravel and front end loading. FE 2-0803. "FREE" —PLUS 100 INFORMAL*— With Ivory Order Of Wedding Invitations ^Backentose Book Store 19 EAST LAWRENCE FE 2-1414 ON AND ~APTER THIS • DATE August J2, 1060. I will not bo responsible tor any debts eon-tracted by any ether than myself. Templeton, K. L. Templeton, Realtcu- 2330 Orchard Lake Rd.. PE 4-4563 LAND CONTRACTS.TO BUY OR i POR RENT LOB. HOME ON SYL-!. 1 van Lk. Esc. neighborhood. Oae 3 heat furn. or unfurn. AVall. Sept. 1 to June. Call MI 7-14*7 or Ml , .1 S«B. ^ . - I OREEN LAKE. YEAR AROUND! ! ' home, lakefront. excellent schools |; “B.m. shrubs, will take houeetraller or dwB. pay t. 1225 Lockhaven. pon-tiac- FE 5-4610. , BEDROOM. NEW WITH PURHI-ture. near Commerce Must tac-rlflce due to Utoeee. BM 3-4611. BEDROOM HOME, LAKE PRIVI- legea, reasonable. EM 3-5302._x ID R OO M S NEAR OWEN 4-8472 [EfficiiEncy Apartments iilviat room, kitchen, b'athrtiom, 280 N. Paddock. FE 2-2044, 'FIRST: FLOOR loJ?r4liUEMU,|-2m I Attractive 3 rooms $s bath. .. 3 .08A I pletely furnished, washer. ...- . , D . IT I f.™“end»jUT. ______( x 36, lot 100 a 150, full baaamant. MODERN ’4 ROOMS AND OA- septic and drain ttto to. 04800 rag* 4471 Pontiac Lake Rd. I 0454 down. 4154 Prank well off IIEI*!*r 1 TO JULY t m A 1^0* PgltOP. _ gaa heat, nice and clou, on Wl- i S RSbROOM HOMt, PAYEQUITY van Lake, noi Rustic Lane, wtd toko orer payment or 3-7753. .. ... 3 BDRM. 2 STORY HOME IN 7. UTIL- good oond. On west side. A rent HIam■*““—%. can ft 3-5430 or PE ---- between 4-4. Da,warn A BuRertltM. . BEDROOM I.,,,, ,.il basement, auto-!. 1 heat, nicely furnished. 13 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. ------- to~*Tolli«-srW*VnWnrridiry Rent Houses Unfurn. 401 eventnga. 8aturday »nd Sundays. -------------- -------------J BEDROOM HOME. Itb BATH. I BEDROC 1-A-l RENTALS fireplace. 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX ................... Automatic Heat — Pull Bn WILL DECORATE $75 PER MONTH ' FE 4-7833 544 EAST BLVD. N. AT VALENCIA BEDROOM. NEWLY DECOR- Portiac Farm and I Industrial Tractori Co. I. t><425 s. woodward^ Ht# j GiveYou 1 Place to Pay Dally Including Sum*— Help Wanted Female 7 _ Michigan._________ I SECRETARIAL SWITCH BOARD,! ATTENTION f school education. 2ft or OW. . TOY DEMONSTRATORS -I ROjWW- Apply In person only. We are now hiring a limited _!*.w_ “•*,*“*_________________J number of demonetratort tor tbe;SALES HELP PART TIME. MUST' NAME ^Or’aNDWTOY8 °OIFtI —■•°-Ver — 13 and GADGETS DISCOUNTS VP pins Ct TO 10 PER CENT OFF Win a Florida catalog and TOY DEMONSTRATORS. ' d early, top commissi e Shop-fET Building Service A-l FLOOR AnDINO WITT THE FLOOR 8ANDER FE 6-3722 | FABULON - WATERLOX - BRUCE ADDITIONS REMODEUNO | Tom Labev A Son Finished Carpenters Celling tile Rec. room* Cabinets — Miscellaneous Ease Your Mind WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN GREDIT # COUNSELLORS I KM 702 PONTIAC STATE BANE i paymi E «1« 143 L__. FI 5-7*71. ■ . . - ■ WEST SIDE. LOVELY APT. FOR single lady. Air-conditioned, private Hath and entrance. All furnished. Only *85 per right party. PE 5-3433 , PE Warren" Orlve,' Drayton i_____ 4 Bedrooms, By Owner’ Close la, near bus and school, modern, garage. 4500 -dswn, PE 8-4144 OT. OR 3-1785. 5 ROOMS! BASEMENT" OARAOE? Lot 441413. 10000, tl.000 down •— Hlllfleld. PE 5-5030 attar * Painting & Decorating 23 1ST CLASS PAINTING AND DEC-orating Cash or Urms FE 4-55*0. lit CLASS INT. AND EXT PAINT! I lng. Reas. Don Beck, OL I *"' !. PE 4-0255. 1 PAINTINO INTERIOR. EX- i Assoc. Credit Counselors [ HOME PARTIES 1NCORPOR- ____ A TED FOR APPOINTMENT. WA TOY DEMON8TRATORB — GET' 3-3540 or FE 4-0387_ started now — Earn morel “Go 1 EXPERIENCED OPERATORS Sandra " Ml 4-6305 or FE 441300 _ In_person 10 West Huron TOY DEMON8TRATORS______MAKE AMATEUR MODELS FOR LOCAL more "ll5 POLY PARTIES. 360 , glamour ptau^ra " - PE 5-3243 A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR. WAS IT YOU FRITZ ASKING FOR Papering. FE 44343. ______ car isle? Please do call FE A-l PAINTINO $1 DECORATING. 4-3013. Thank you. Dora. Paper removed. FE 4-4818____! AAA PAINTING A DECORATING. 36 years experience. Reasonable >. UL 2-54*3 oi AIDE. MEDICAL. FOR PHYSICIAN T°Y Kerf’uo ! ' to ^percent ‘commission. CaS , ‘ the Toy Chest. PE 5-4721. • WAITRESS WANTED AT 3517 i h _ Elisabeth Lake Road 0 WANTED CHRISTIAN WOMAN - Modern, a __ West side. Start 8225 a i Aged 24 - 40. Must hive experience. CBC. Urinalysis pie chemistries, telephone a applicants only. Write !u ”—“—a Boa 72 ATTENTION TOY DEMOS T| !ir"’"'co"uple.' cooking" and "general. I "Sanda" has limited number of!. Own_room_. PE 4 5801.__ epeatosi for the toy season. Com-woman FOR KITCHEN HELP plot* ltoo of toys, gifts, and gadg- and also to help cook. 5171 Dixie | •U TWt counts to 50 per cent I Hwy . Drayton Plains___ m 3° problem with free Polaroid cam-j r-aafiBSSi?fsfs'. saw6* ber nearest you OR 3-3630 TY- ■ u*c press, box a* ---------- 7-1550 WOMAN TO CARE FOR TWO Show Room. *73* Grand River. De- »«hl age children. May If poe- j - A-l CARPENTRY — . Additions — Basements Attica — Oarages - GET MY BID PIR8T - PE 3-7204_________ < CARPENTER A CABINET work, aew A repair work guar-K 'fd OR 3-974S. I ._PES or l&a _______________________ L-l RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL! and Industrial Mason and gen. contracting. Also stor^ fri>nt Free estimates. Phone UL 2-1348. EXP Raintino EXTERIOR AND Interior. Freeoattr-*— M — ruaranteed. FE .......R J O R AND EXTERIOR painting, wnii washing. P-oo-eati- mates. PR 8-0378.___________ PAINTINO A PAPERHANOIN0. Free estimates. FE • 4-1040.__ PAINTINO, INT A EXT. PAPER ■ WE PAY ALL YOUR BILLS Ottr service include* fro* tag service, bookkeeping, checks, postage. photocopier A$ ““ and payment of if desired H0MEX SERVICES f__________________ Rent Apts* Furnished 37! Rent AptK Unfurniihed 38 1 BDRM. DLX. 1ST PLR. KJTCH- 1ST FLOOR, 3 AND BATH, UTTL-enette motel apts. Private entr. I Itles. couple. School Street, PE Day, week or mo. PB 3-7755. , _2-742S.__ 1 RM. ' KITCHENETTE. UTIL. 1 BEDRM UPPER NEAR GMT. torn. $10, 230 s. Parke, rear. I stove, automatic oil neat and hot l ROOM QErrCHENETTE, VflLT- wktor furnlahod. Modern, clean. ties. PB 4-4123. 51 Pine St., 2% 8-3S64.____ , IIMt. ■ 1ST FLOOR, 3 RMS. AND BtoTH, * APARTMRJRT*. separate dnt.. couple. PE 2-3M2.1 Wl 3-210. MDTROOM BOMB CLOSE TO 2 ROOM MODERN HOME. FOB* sh^g «n?er snd taT 115? tihle duplex t*A«4 EM 3-»24 .stove and refrigerator furn.. t ROOM PlIXS 2 BATH RANCH couple preferred. References re- home nt HAMMOND LAKE' by qulred. Between 2-6 p.m. FE owner. A real buy. 2216 ft Ham- ----• I »««4 Lk. py. PE t 1 ROOM KITCHENETTE BACHE- 1 LAROE CLEAN 3 ROOM APT. 3 CLEAN ROOMS. PRIVATE, utilities Mar OMC. whits only. 774 8. Edith. PE 3-0434. ROOMS. ttT FLOOR. EVERT* l paid, utilities j- LAROC ROOMS. PVT. BaA and ant., utilities. Clean, nicely furnished, child welcome. Olngel-vlile. PE 5-1427. N. 8AOINAW, modeling John W. 3-1128. ______ ILL KIND* CEMENT WOM. Drives, floors, etc. Jensen. PE 3-2340_______________________ 18 A OROUP OP BUILDERS WE offer low prices through volume purchecea on custom Quality Built'' homes — 100 pinna. Ws'tl secure mortgage. No obligation. Builders Exchange •E 3-7214 OR UL 3-3443 i-A-i ALUMINUM SIDINO PAINTINO INTERIOR AND EX-tertor, FE 44037. PAINTINO, " PAPERINO. REMOV- rAINTING, FAFEKINU, al. WiitAfay , PR t-tott ._____ A Op 1 EAKLE’S CUSTOM UPHOLSTER- Insured Work_*t_ Rock Bottom . cootoy Lake Rd. EM . . ______________i ii ^iiiidwin ' “ 3-2841. ;A8H FOR SldAtL RADIOS WORK- J?* g*1*1"1" , - THOMAS' UPH6LSfERB4G7^ tog Of not. FE 5-075*. • 3 ROOMS AND BATH^ PRIVATE WW««^MT Sr ATTENTION! ‘ entra^e.Il^tor^MbwIrtV cr C tlafifl' Soot cash for used tale visions, ! 3 AND 4 ROOMS CLOSE IN. PE ■ ■ . -_______furniture and miscellaneous. Tree 4-0*0* ov PE 4-1137. ~r I oat and Found 26 eatlmates. PE 3-6347. 1 J^ROOMS AND BATH. ADULTS L-OBt ana rouna ao ^ dsbuy rTonoEu.1T J onto. »i» nt f..k hty how- . n n r • BIJtCK AND BROWN fW you. OA 1-3*41________________Qrd W? 2-**M W PE MW. LDachshund with collar and tag. USED FURNITURE BOUGHT AND 5 RM. PEI. BATH, NEAR POtT Nam* MuH*y.E*W4fd. PE 3-49D. * hauled. PM 0-23*7. <■ ^laa Motors, adtulo. PB 9-74*4. Television Service 24 I CREST TV. 1 HOUR SERVICE day and night- PE S-4478. DAY OR NIOHT TV SERVICE. ___M. P 8TRAKA, PE 5-12*4 JENSEN S TV SEBVICEL_APiER~ noon and evening call FE 2-0046. Upholstering 25 Wtd. Children to Board 28 B^by^weiccwnlP tu.so par ml ----------------------------JS, ' PE 4-4643 after 1 CHILD CARE, LICENSED ROME,---------------------- Saahabaw and Marta* Road ana. OR 34437. CHILD CARB IN LICWtBED BOMB. Wtd. Houiehold Qceds 29 UNWANTED ARTICLES PICKED up tree of charge. Phono "THE HELPING HAND STORES." MA 6-1341. If no answer. PB 4-714*. 1-7 ROOMS OP FURNITURE Alrfl appliances needed. Will pay more cash Please phone FE 3-4442. CASH POR FURNITURE AND Appliances. O'd pieces' or housgtult Prompt courtooue service. PI ..-Jl^yso, ti3 weekly, 1 - AND 3-ROON _le Highway. 3-ROOM CABINS. 4174 DIX- t modic apartment, tio week! Util, furnished.. 75 Clark._ 2 OR. 3 ROOM APARTMENT. Ineluilng TV. Wan Bid*. CaU after S. PE 4-4374. 3 FURNISHED APARTMENTS for rent at 343 E Pika 81. lac- __fk* Ag. A. ' ■ 3 ROOMS AND BATB. PRIVATE operation Position' open ; i* H. Moore A Co, BABYsrnEiCM day. re[3-6454 BABY8ITT1NO " houekeeplng 1 tram, needed, WAITRESS. PULL TIME NIGHT work only Pasqtisle's Restaurant. Must have transportation. CaU after 4 MY 3-1421. _ WOMAN WANTED TO LIVE IN. OL 1-SlSt I 3 ROOMS AND BATH. MURPHY tap. all utilities, a tows and refrigerator furnished. Dal-Rio apts. 2*1 Oaktono.____________ 3 j|k m entrance! jtova, Ref A utlMtla*. mo. Adult*. PE 9-7334 after 5:34. m RM. UpWB PIfAT. WT. ^rt. and bath, 1*7(4 8jan< welcom*. PI MHa 3 LARGE, CLEAN ROOMS. PVT. bath, clot* to downtown and aetaolt. 333 N. Parry Bt.. Mr. 1 Mlaad 4-2833 and EM 33431. BEDROOMS, 3 CAR 1 acre of land, lake i to school. EM 33*44 3-ROOM HOUSE. _____Inquire 13 Myra Avi bedroom" DUPLEX. ! 4-0476. oLs neat, near ecnoois. a enuaren. PE 44419. _____ BDRM. ALL 1 PLR. EMIT. *4* Lounebury Off Oaklaad. PE 44744. BEDROOMS, GAS HEAT. 110 w Rundol. Pontiac. PE *4724. _________■ DRAYTON Plains. lJk ear attached garage. Urge lot. 4144. PR 944B. 3 BEDROOM, PULL BASEMENT. Stttte* 4 BEDROOMS, P BATES, 3 PIRE-placee, dishwasher MM JpipOW. Rent with tmtkm to ta*. PE 1-4444. *4 I 3 ROOMS A’beth’w*. t ROOM, BATH, GARAOE. COL- SSiftSS-JK” utility! Twxwile ana anni-ri * ROOMB AMD BATH. UTILITY! •M^OAkhlll 8t. UL>_37i» nbl* tenant*, lane* or option. OR NICE R06MS *- BATH C1 BAN. ^ -T7C7. T -w —*'(tlea tor-Inqulra 4 ROOM HOUSE POR RENT, HOT Tj.(Dick)‘VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 30* OAKLAND AVENUE Opau 4to o_ Bun. .11 * RM. BUNOALOW NEAR PISH- Prtces ca" owner JOE VaIXELY OL 1-6623 _____ A i BRICK BLOCK AND CEMENT _ wnrt Also fireplaces. OR 3-0402 ADDITIONS — MODERNIZATION t 50 E. Kennett DeGroote Bros, OL - . AND BATH. LOWER. 3 it. 70 Ntwtarry near Web-Ichool. Heat, garag* lnclud-130. FE 5-3323. 7* POSTER STREET. 3 ROOMS, ground Door, private entrance and bath, some furniture. Rot KE Stiili"' K,M m ‘Mt • ROOMS ON PADDOCK, NX Alltap, ra 34304. MW t " ro6m home $55 MO.! WEST SIDE! room, dlnlpg room, kttelmn. bath, full basement, and garag*. only mortgage coat* of approx. 1344, to move Unfit Full price 44.444-Look this over at'M Henderson and call W. W. Ross ROMM at OH 34431 for further Information. 30% ’Dsicounf *304 DOWN — 464 MO. South Pontine. Nice I room* and bath. Pull basement, garage. FE 919James KBlvd. We Invite you to tile showing at this new lake-front homo featuring 2Vi tatne, stepped-up basement. Intercom ay stem. Drive out Inspection OtJ^OOe PE 4-3304 A cutlet West suburban.* A 3-bed-roam home with carpeting. IV ear garage and priced only *4,544. Phono PE 3-3484 or PW 4-3240. RUSSELL YOUNG REAL ENTATK A BUILDIN0 l BEDROOM HOME IN LAKE Orion, ft aero land. 3 ear .garage, far gala or rwd. by ownar. Call aaytSa after Tpe 4-43M $9,250 aerea on U. S. 14 highway. 4 bedroom modem ranch home, near Grand Blnne. $44. and bath. PI 4-1431: «us*. pony tarn, corral, will Ink* I bedrm. ' 1 Unitor. UL 3-3413. BY OWNER. l’ BEDROOM HOME. BI Drayton Aren, newly deaeratoi and anrpeted. OR 94347. X THIS PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1960 riFTY-FIVB /ftrMHiwwi m ATTHACnV* HOB AND • LOTS - UMK an M(*. Whit* Lak* privllasaa furniture. h« ridhu M* Realtor. Livonia. OA W" ” reeentBtlee MW '4-tWi, F«rld»ft« nan t i—" typa hmm*. I aaaaeant. all best, ______________Oxford. n HMD. modkbn tunut ROvn i» a eehooU, qulat nelgl ■ ) Mtn. Wet r SSL sar^ blacktop et. Near .eb‘‘ on a. lait countr- iSm. tv OWN**. PI ON] 1 badTOBBi Wt*k______ ... _ garage, lo Webeter and parochial Include* carpet ing. draperie. and watar (Often er. Full baaement. aU beat and lak* prtrfflltlg. 3M Plaaeer. Open a ,_____________iSSoehaad. 334 tijtrOKD, ] TML OLD. ) *DBM. —tent. One beet. Storm.. jalwarMP aggjg. 49 FwlahiHwif O MARMADIKE * By Anderaoa A I*wlf Far Sait Htf* V a.. GwunuwT water chool and (hopping center erg* lot. CBy Mai In lb* r. low down payment. OK ol i-*iit. n mm. ' kuSTUXL 11 M J Allies o*., nuiw, • rmi mt, |tric«. Betl cash ells MEIER MATCH THUS — With other hoaei rou re HiBm at. | room brink, hr*place, pan beaement, *U heat furnace. * lota, lake prlv. M.tta and only MM down. I HIGHLAND ~S', TO SETTLB ESTATE. St.. Pontiac. I ran. mm. Beat oath offer EM mi or QK HM. MOST SACRIFICE, NEED ills ■y owner, garage bane*. i room, utility and bath, t bad room. (TM down. MO a month. Pall price. t3.ee*. f E M441.______ , ■mw « f"K*« - - ON THE LAKH — 11.410 dawn, f roam* and bath. 4 bedroom*, clean aa a whietl*. lull iaeament. oil beat, l ear attached garage. Oood beach. H you enjoy bhb| and baattng you'll Had it hart. MINUTE FARM — Nearly 1 acree SMITH A-LILLYl — NORTH HILL — TBI-LETEL I bedroom plue dan. II* bath*, tel* bl raage. oeen and diehwaeher. 31* ear carat*, sunken patio, bar-haw*, velvet lava attraetlTaly fenced. Located tat Bacbeeter area providing all eMy Improvement. New fiaaaaMs available or pewoont mortgage can be aaesmed. ONLT Bias DOWN — CLINTON RIVER — Jtt FEET Along the Kiver bonk. iSjrwafefcfr7 i $1,650 DOWN FE 2-0263 - DUE TO — Open ’til 9 COLORED ■irsitoi $2.47 Per Hour KENT WEST BLOOMFIELD-Cue Lake prl*. Luiurlou. brick ranch home fn excellent tact*. 3 Badna*.. 3 tiled bathe, fireplace la living rm.. family rm. and paneled ree. rm. BuUt-in ireexer. oven and range. Kata floor In veet. entrance. Full bem't. Kir sarage. By ---- ment only NORTH SIDE - Immediate pee- MULTIPLE USTINO CEB TICE IRWIN LA EE PRIVILEGES Commerce Lake, 3 bedroom bun-e*low with full baaement, 1 ear garage fenced M. *S.fM VIM BRICE BUNGALOW * acre*. I bedroom home, full baaement. automatic heal 1 . Ff Stls Hff tF GAYLORD Oood elae window. Hi hnae-ment. Dire* bedroeme. Lt»-lng roam la well arranged la mm year fundtre. an (Baa 1» good Mi and eaey to van in. m t* well built Hardwood floor., ft___ school and bus Nov vtlh 11.000 da. Can no Near ST. MOTS - i 4-bedrm bom*. Pa**** food beach. 3 bedroom home with cony relent kitchen tb* wife will enjoy. NOV carpeting to living room end ball. BpSrat KrvanoL* im O'NEIL | |p§i m *t To Sell? —'DiSW L-I-S-T-I-N-G ASSOCIATE BROKERS ^COLORED "toy KAMPSEN ANNETT '..asg11 DORRIS Recreation Area Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor - SCHRAM I ’SEfB** IVAN \V. SCHRAM ! REALTOR Fli 5-94711 n vi i ftasftg Realty & Building Co. . F E 4-0921 BATEMAN! REALTY SEVEN LAKES HSIJ KAY O'NEIL, Realtor t____ Sb CRAWFORD AGENCY 2 ?: sar iff ills HAYDEN •eco^JT Blxemeit "NSrtb”’^ |S£*n*» l^owcr Olrapis LaKC Ni.>w, term*. ■ ™ coit Excellent S B R. homt. 011 ARRO Shs® HHRI HflHKiMBnilFJS WILLIAMS fK™ AND m?lV£Z “MODEL 4581 KEMPF don McDonald SMITH WIDEMAN Jtnusts,-•wH Roy Annett. Inc., Realtors freehand’clear’ hom#OU' Open ?Tenlng?UAn>Sunday 1-4 feW’ ‘ GILES Vd-U-Way ! FE 8-G466- ROCHESTER AREA BKsH.' Pcfftridge^|,gfs;ar WATKINRJ11 M S 1 T“ U ROOMY RANCH NEW MODEL TFI-LEVEL WHITE ^^5 GILES REALTY CO. ! "Aasag TRIPP AttilHoUr%ra SMITH-WIDEMAN REALTY FE 4-4526 Partridge 3UWSB____ P^lid Only the rich AFFORD TO PAY P f 4-3441 Model Open Lp(B STOUTS Best Buys Today IP ■ « R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 ^OAHLAND Aim. ^ BLAIR _"bar(;ains Crescent Lake Area j Efifes IMBH GIROUX CIVILIANS $190 DOWN Johnson $750 DOWN Jn^TaK^APH-Spili? El5281 WEBSTER BROWN "SMITH" . J. A. TAYLt • Low Down Pa) |”BcfviLIANS ' $190 DOWN t 1 fc^M43, John K. Irwin & Sons $9,500 ZEST SUBURBAN Big Family? move *So NICHOLIE & HARGER CO. "BBS* isk -Mir 53)4 WEST HURON HAGSTROM 16411 Mr- A. JOHNSON, Realtor TH—wThing'doWFT ml clark : i Stout, Realtor av st. n M| >en til I p m m HOYT BARGAIN INCOME LIST WITH STEELE REALTY HumphnOS nm,y«. , JIM WRIGHT. Realtor I CLARK SalTeSTATEI L. II. BROWN. Realtor ‘ risajP^Tfeir1w**- *ut~M wm U3d*x:’i .wsm u it FIFTY-SIX THE POXTIAC PRESS, tfimSDAV, AUGUS^ 25, TPf Sdfte H—we 49| _ "'BUD' West Side Income 2-ftonilF Income home within waRtot distance to downtown For Sale Lots 54 Business Opportunity* 59 3 ACRES NEAR CLARKBTON CALL GROC Nl EATS. SDM efter ». ^ «-2m | LOCATED IN LAKE AREA - “ CLARESTON ESTATE LOTS. 75* Pontiac, grossing *—*" . 198 N « nr eeefjttta^, P«eed | $1]5m , me I sisr- ir rt j Builder and Broker Inquiries Money to Loon $1| CARNIVAL (Licensed Money Lends re' Si.. LOANS DESIRABLE BUILDING LOT. 100 modem h •ad Ml equipment, _ rely Ike I 1 today. I ecrewne. ottered at 111.to* wtl Xtt.NI down; balance on 1*« >• cdalyaet. HUBRYI Edr tbeGqlfer only 3 block* from Pontli Country Club lakOvOrlTlleges < beautiful Ellaabeth Lake KEEN TOO* EYE ON jlCherokee Hills! I Watch thla new west suburban [I community grow. Discriminating i people arc selection sites now j I tor custom quality homes — , See tor yourself. Drive out Ella-sbetb Lake Rd. to Scott Lake ! Rd.. turn right 1 Mock* to La- [ PHI—sranch ___ 1 automatic gas heat and bat . rage, paved di nqUd living ‘waKud screens. Insulated Priced gKJU.450,. Do yourself! ■K Lear t r. Features ct fLAKB PRIV tit DN.. t» WK | Bafanelder. MA 4-1384_________ i FOR BALE LOT 100 x 285 FT. ON Pine Knob Road IHOO cssh Csll between5_a»47 p.m. O* 3-3404. | Water fo r d”Kifl s Estate i contract In trade. Illness forces STATEWIDE | Real Estate Service of Pontine B D CHARLES. REALTOR 1717 g Telegraph fe 4-052i; HAGSTROM j MONEY! MONEY! I dream about it. Bores to make it. Only 010.000 | n°Michigan* town* Excellent j — fixtures *«a I Don’t Just d included. I DINEHJi H|i„ . julpment land 11 000 down plus stock. \J1. R. HAGSTROM ■ REALTOR ■v. 4900 Richland “ ’ I'OXTIAG^ INVEST »40 000XtND SERVICES. _ Pqntisc Press_Bor--X_ '\LowEricC\ 828 TO WOO loan co „ ....... FE 1-0421 FRIENDLY SERVICE; Get $25 to $500 ON Y OOR Signature j. Dp to M Months to Repay ! PH. FE .1-9206 t OAKLAND ) Loan Company | 302 Pontiac State Rank Bldg. Borrow with Confidence ! GET $25'TO $500 -Household Finance I Corporation of Pontiac S BagSaw 8t FE 4-0635 I BUCKNER ! FINANCE COMPANY WHERE VOV CAN ■ 1 BORROW UP TO $500 ORT0358 Pontine - D^^F^ns - Utica "Vailed Lk.. Birmingham Plymouth WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 , We will be glad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. tog Pontiac State Bank Bldg. \ FE 4-1574 Credit Advisors 61A By Dkk Turner, ’Sole Ho—held OydB6l| Fer sya 1 AND THAT’S A FACT 2 GALS. FOR THE PRICE OF . ONE Nationally Advertised HERCULES PAINT Now, 2 Gals. For $5.95 All "Hercules Feint Finishes 100 Per CM! Guaranteed Exterior Rouse Trim SARUC OMENTAL BOO. » I ITS", excellent coadKlon. PE mM. iNOER’a SALE OF USED MA-chlne*. rortables from tit t» «p: csblnete from «3MT up. Many makes aM models to choose bam At Your Singer Sewing Center, 102 N... Saginaw. FcsttlX*. SODdafToMC. TV* JJAYTAO, good shape. 82>. OR 1-fo gjimmar. nu RPOS. 934.98 itc-8 LcodCarpet Woodward st Muar. Lk Just below Ted's. FE 2-7701. — SELLING OUT - ENTIRE STOCK OF MERCHANDISE WILL BE SOLD BELOW COST _ . 8YEN'S FAINT * UNOjJtUM «1 W. HPBON____FB *•"** TAKE YOUR CHOICE refrioerators ..Prom IN Renewed, Guaranteed. _ •fY'i ..............From M* Rebuilt. Guaranteed. t*oood housekeeping shof^ II WEST HURON FE 418». TAFFAR OA^ANOE PON SALE. trade OAS RABOE #0N ELkc-* trie range. R B. Munro Electric m him w. Huron. ____________ Used Trade-In Dept. Buffet ..... ......»!«» “It costs about 50 cents a mile to run—counting hot a TsED ' OUL^AN BENIAS-I Vs S. SAGINAW FE 3-70531^ancj rug.Si g x g red, (80. t X lT-powdfer' blue 875, cash. FI Console, 21" Mshog. 8129.50 ____________________!____________________________. THOMAS ECONOMY 3619 gaatoaw jffl* Sale Household Goods 651 Sale Honsehold Goods 65 [ JjfSTO' ! OSED-REFRiaERATOR. .75Tan6 SUITE. VERY I Mortgage Loans. 62 j Open T days a week. 3 room homes In Suns* Oakley Fork. On 01 97.888, 1496 down * month. OU vour lot, 87 DIRECTIONS: Off Dnloo Lxk near St Fatrlck'i Church 1 slfns Follow S. Oommerti to Oakley Park Rd. and STEELE REALTY (Main Office) 41 N. Milford Rd. between HI -KENNEDY w 110 ACRES. 9 MILES WEST OF i Travers* City, 88.500. FE 4-4848 BY OWNER. 2 1-3 ACRES 325x425 i on Lake Angelus Road, call FE .. 44114,________________ _____ DAVISBURG AREA - 15 ACRES, Hardware Here i a hardware with living qtrs. that can 85.000 down buys property, fixtures and Inventory. The only other thing you need MICHIGAN BUSINESS' SALES CORPORATION JOHN A. LAND MESS SR. BROKER , Z? >813 a Telegraph Rd. *PI 4-1882 — T OUR FRONT DOOR Voss & Buckner, Inc. 1 National Bldg. FE 4-4730 Get Out of the Rut! 1 PIECE BEDROOM OUTFIT, springs and mattress. EE.8-5804 t" ROOMS OF FURNITURE. 323 EXLMlIe. Royal Oat. LI g-3127. I PIECE FRENCH PROVENTIAL blond Mahogany dinette set. drop leaf table forXtale rwks.. oait Joyce, Drayton Flatus. $169 I contract, porsoal I PIECE SILVER ORAT BEDR|f. outfit. Double dresser, bookcase bed. large chest. 2 vanity limps, All tot 889.50. Pay only 82 weekly^ Pearson's Furniture. 42 Orchard EM 3-28271 Shelf ms* in-fed pond. Rowing wells, : MAJOR OIL CO. HAS SEVERAL i. Terms 83.100 cash. H. C j service stations for lease. Good ME 4-4871______ For Sale Farms o entertain your friends in This lovely 3-bedroom home; with fire©i*ci In dlnln« \$ ACRES. 4-BEDROOM RANCH and recreation rooms Closets ft-; near Holly. 2 Large tool buildings ‘oM. Rlisooshl* j £5M rdQwnvolL Cq ShsHmMter LARGE HOME . w “E-4^71--------- N«sr Sim Lmkt with TtCTtu on n,ACRB FARM 114.000 WITH room with full busement Nice, tfrms sacrifice Oood building', landscaped lot. ll»<4r llriI* t on M34 between^apeer^and^M^ay- I.AVIXCER OR, «2£l _ ,k p. tooen gun Fireplace Osrsge Located on 1531 WUUams Lk RO. up«“ ° l good rotg 935.000 Terms. hvtv i vk-p Dorothv^Sinder Lavender 7001 Highland Rd >M50i Swaps 63 1151 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL FOR tractor or 7 FE 8-0373.____ 65.000 BTV OAS FLOOR FURNACE* suitable for city or bottle gas. Oood cond., all attachments, will seU or what have you? MY 3-1221. f-FIECC WALNUT DINING ROOM suite for tale. Inquire at 237S W. Walton Blvd. PIECE DIN1NO ROOM SUITE tor sale. 830. FE H228....... 7 PIECE LIVINO ROOM SUITE. Brand new davenport ‘ Not Damaged — New In Crate* Includes Warranty — service — DeUvery AND USED *--- "Ur automatic washes, 825. FE 5-2028. I 823 East Walton. I USED TVS 818 95 AND UP. ( ored TV, RCA. J275 Sweet > dio and Appl., 422 W. Huron. WESTINQHOUSE REFRIOERSTOR 940. 9*Xl2' ■ol-twlet carptt, 830. __Immediate delivery No Money Down — 81.88 BimaB WYMANS little's FURNITURE'A APPlV’ I 'waTE^HIATER D.14150 J21T Dixie. Drayton OR M558 REBUILT^ WABinra 839 15 FORMICA TOP TABLE AND * 2 PC. UPH. SUITE ..IJ» »» chairs, rood pond. 850. Ml 8-I27B. | METAL BEDS “ ™ WE MATCH COLORS j Now — From FEDERAL Modernization 2836 DIXIE HWY Ff S*k MI*c*B—per 67 ROOF LEAKS? Call your Advisor tor a frag »»-timato. Save % on too cam. FB fry With »w«i« mmm vmieihi mim value Lavstorlt* twmplete with i*Ma|(/a». TuttoU..Ml_50 Michigan Fluorescent, 3KI Or-tkaHTUfu lounxe, to settle estate 09 3-77C. BFDtWf FIANO. BEDROOM 8UTTE •hop ujjfUn jSun aw: Whh boo. FE M12». ■EARS IM EOQ ELECTRIC IN-cubator. perfect oqodltton. 1 *r»Pe press and a • ■ » toot, .traitor. Cail aftor • FE MB. TANDEM TRAILER - UMRFWl ItormslVA. 5x8 MB. W MIR OSTTU M. oianuauc tor.RMBdStC - ms rr SEAT* fMS VALUE «jm. 383 Or* TABOTT LUMBER Sa.arvrtJ'- *** Special Panehng Offer 4x8 pwli W" mahoganv V-groove. ff. gra^* , ♦**» •»“ ..... 85.38 sach HK Oak Floonog V-groov*' c grada.' BENSON LUMBER CO. tion. 810- 'FE 84373. CEMENT g^EFt. READY MADE, all sixes Splash Mock, door sttls. chlmnev cuds Pontiac Pre-Cas SMP C0Yb W. Shtfflold. FI FREEZERS NOROE FREEZERS Chest aqd Uprights ! Mtisfc "CABINET Mew models slighttv scratched or I fSilS'C. ££51!!? i,, crate marred. Mod< vrd LOUNOE"cHAIM J- --WOOD ARM DIN. CHAIRS 82 88 WOO 83 85 FRIOIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR A stove, excellent condition. 8100. . FE 4-1378. _______h PRESSURE COOK- ______ 48 Mechanic, .after 5 p.m. r Orchard FOR SALE. SET OF MAPLE TWIN I ■' - FE 2-4713. i CA8H~FOR~USED~TViB RADIOai »«17 0VAL WOOL BRAIDED RUG PRESTO FRENCH FRYER FAM-nhonos and tans recorders FE with pad. 880. 2 Provincial love Uv sloe, used once. 818. A Bsn- Phono*. to«» f P0 recorders, fe ,eau lOO e. L.rge davtoport. dr.„ no,r covering. 8 by 28 ft.. PER MONTH. ! DEEP FREEZE FOR SALE OR t~~~ ! trade tor 14 ft. aluminum boat. JIM WRIGHT. Realtor | or i-72^__________________ - 345 Oakland Ave. Open U1 « 30 EIGHT ROOM HOUSE. MODERN. FE 5-9441 FE 5-0308 ! Will take housetrsller or late car 8TANDARD~a*™tToN AND 5 I rtTment or will rent. rE buildings. 1 MY 2-2211. y Brown, Lake O enport. 1 drsn floor covering isslng table, 88. MI H1W. _new, 822. OB 3-8538._____________ X 12 REVERSIBLE RUGS. Ill 85: i FREEZERS — UFRIOHT FAMOUS Foam rubber backed ruga, 818.85; name brands, scratched. Terrific Tweed rugs, <28.15; Axmlnster, values 8188 85 while they last. 848 95; Rug pads. 8515. Pearson No phone orders please, Michigan Furniture, 42 Orchard Lake Avo. Fluorescent, 383 Orchard Lake r TV. 1 BREAKFAST SET Ave. . Antiques AUCTION SALE. SAT. * 1 p.m Old slais, chlm copper.' furniture. Copper Antiques, HSl Long Ls] Troy. * --■* • Closes IHH ty of parking. _______ _____Jward. Fri. Aug. 28. Plen- DO YOU HA'VB A FAINT OR decorating problem THundrcd* of colors to choose from. Interior or oxtorior. See jour wall P»P*r and matching fabric selection. Berry "Vros. J.llsd Magic mwlrlp ^OAKLAND FUEL h PAINT 438 Orchard LUe Ave, FE 5-8150 DELUXE DELCO OIL CONV.. A-l condition. FB 4-1118. )(tburg pipe ..... 83.85 *S. >1 culvert.........82.55 ft. t pieces for extenslooa. r sumps and graase traps rlth 2 holes ...... $0 50 so. 1th 2 holes ..... 80 90 es. nanhole covers and grates. BLAYLOCK 81 Orchard Imke A SYLVAN LAKE best of alu you name the down ■“jack LOVELAND ..X...-1 .v. M FE 2-4875 >3313 c . __MU 4-8417 Eve CLARK8TON K ...... nice buildings. 142.500 is Oood buy for country It or investment. 7130 Oat _____Rd , Osrkslon^Mlch.______ FOR SALE. MY 135 ACRE FARM 218S can - Auburn Height: Brtutlful ranch bungalow, large locked at 1060 Rose ebrpeied UyIxk room. bHCDfp yy . Holly. Illchliop. ciofcu Rent Farm Property 5oA tfiKhtoh. breeiewdy. stuchto. . ......... =. g.tog^ tovelv tow«» now»iv »Bd ABOUT w ACRi: FARM TO RENT thftdy buy. Rtquirea Hou*^ furn. or unfurn. Nr. Crook* . OL i-arif , j **rt* Sale Business Property 57 ___ I „ IU BUILDING FOR. BALE I wd” 132x200'. Pay M1“' ' “ " 'ta TOR SALE OR TRADE. '58 MER-rury 4-dr A-l condition. For IS TWO FAMILY — OFFICE ROOM \ UIl -2~20*1—-- 30 x 30 garage, lust off W. Huron : LADY'8 BEAUTIFUL DIAMOND on.Cass A\e A good buy 14, j J 1 liam Benderoff, ___ BRICK BUNOALOW COMMERCIAL ty)VBLY~HOME 13 MILEB WEST ; FRONTAGE DIXIE HIOHWAY - Lot 82‘s X 302 overlooking Silver ] . Like, ideal for medical ccater, HiFi, TV and Radios 66! PORTABLE RECORD FLAYER. RCA. Esc. unit. Used very l|ttl*. 83750 FE 4-1898. RCA HI-FI CONSOLE. LIKE NEW. FE 2-4288. __ CASH WAY STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS 4x8x4b Pegbosrd ....... H-H 4x8xV> Pegbosrd /...... J4.89 Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY 940 Choley Lake Rd. EM 2-817 Open I ».n». to 8 p.m. dally Sunday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. DOUBLE SINE, COMFUCTE 828.M with trap X grade. FE 5-4712 Montcalm Sunnlv. IM W. Mont calm. BINDER SEWING MACHINE - Standard modal, still under wirramy. Pay off I payments of 85 40 per month or 8W, If paid cash. Unlvoreal CO. FE i«8tt SPECIALS! Many Other Bargains tal New Aad Used Bulldtog Materials FREE ESTIMATES FHA TERMS SURPLUS LUMBER & MATERIAL SALES OO. 5348 Highland Rd, tM-Ml OB 3-7082 THE 8ALYa¥iOM ARMY RED SHIELD 8TORE ' 3-7833, WU- UL MS 13 M1IJB WWl i . Completely modern. | take houtetr»Uer. good used c i. Will BPmPmHPbllNP_________ . Water Softeners 66A electric light fixtures all 21 IN TV SET. 828. RED NAUQA- LITTLE'S APPLIANCES, 8217 331--— -------------mm “ ---- ------------ . hyde chair and ottoman. 825 Dixie Highway._______ electric automatic WATER Wenuebt "R** OBRXFRIOIliATOR^ LIKBNXW. '^to^r^gltolO^r ^ttjarsnlto. acb. 2525 Rsmsbury, | jus jfsi 5.3037, __ Cnolev Soft Water Co- FE 4-4404 rH.TnM'uinf «AE» IJEE HAVILAND CHINA AND ANTIQUE RAIN80FT WAITER SOTI'ENER CUSTOM MAM TOFA UKE | u# cUk( Tes cart eet of , tuuT sulowatlc, rea*. FB 4-1008 ^5* "j* «»„ 4?5g, °' R. ROOM SIZE. ---- --------‘ I WE8T LAWR1 if tables. USED >h0M HOUSECLE ANINO_A ND RUM- I UlC . Co. 10S0 W. TWO STORES^-— MODERN BUNOALW I good'' used (term windows. OR j . I 3-1148 sfter O p m IA swap EQtrtrv, mm ‘ “ * - - ' r s hat h BEDROQM iSl FREE STAND1NQ TOILETS SIS.eS ...............- - - I JWPHi W Huron, ~FE ^W*to‘?dw,e0,“ ...............................* ‘ " e sale, antiques cherry drop 5-8431-_______________ '20-in lengths ............. ......ltott. iL»-2»t5._______! be? c?mpW%f*“s$rt«>^” For Sale Miscellaneous 67 ] **ffiBh*ifng?>?HPPtr 24* ft. ».m.c.J522s?I tsa*cSsinr*crth rr.r^ n.En1222;« shape 4 burners. 835, FE 4-1S7J, chrome tables end also Thor Automeilc gisdlrori ’ .m™ Hnn.i ulse. E , Just a modern home. 1 __i. OB 3-8139 i P _ ;7» 3t-j8» FT. ON“ORCHARD LAKE ; WILLI^L BRF.WF.R | rK^eoo harbor. « room JOSEPH F. RELS2. SALES MOR kind of buslnest j 14-99 E Huron 81. _ F* 4-51911 ^ jij ooo ettb 15 000 down fe mnar ,cMur:.r?%fer Z OWNER’S ^ Must ee|L Only 887g DORRIS A SON REALTORS ------- ,ron(r j. WE TRADE / M FE 4-8S72, ___r^TtntfE'mvTMS ramwET MifwT! 10 - 4 46S Berwyn. Blrmlnghi » W . H“ron__?hon',”L-i:1M7 TRADE EQUITY IN TWO~BED- I pp?,Ac* to g2« M ! IRONRltE IRONER. FULL SIZE. | I room home tor truck m anything: (.(hh _ - Deluxe'' modeL $188. 2 years to1- rar4^MMV*oreFE 8-4290_____ j A^^.UE_FIf*E CORNER COP- *">• yyAYNt: OABERT WATER SOFTENERS TO RENT ; I 121 N. SAOINAW FE »•««* TAKE A LOOK porch. 81.58. irregulars, samples. AT THESE PRICESt Prices only factory can give — Birch %"x4'xr-2-2 Orsde 81380 Mlchlgsn nuorescent, 313 Orchard Fir Vtt’d t-D Ontt...........8 271 uv. S»« _ II Fir H *4 x8' C-D Shop.......8 3.88 I 1 z UPRIGHT PIANO, MUCELLAN-eous painted furniture, slide aad tsble**snd chslri, *umbrell*Bt*Se! youth chair, bar stool, work bench. 14 ft. aluminum row boat. It ft. aluminum canoe, MA 8-1882. OIL FLOOR FURNACE. USED ! £ COU C0PP*r..... 50e. ft. | WORK BENCHES AND .*TCNlC plumbing. u»ed 2x4, 1 UMd ].pc bxth Mil with trim ft ml>c On diking ^ ■- Partridge Sunday morning. _—------- corner of Venice Cotir1FX 5-2»l NOROE ELECTRIC 8 TOTE N IN. ■ Nerge refr **totor ' B "BIRD" TO 8EE SY GROCERY sell. 13 59 month. OR 3-2360. 1 APARTMENT S MltcheilDlstrlt«iting_Co. WILL SWAP A 1949 INTERN A-t tonal ‘ i ton truck tor good 2 wheel farm wagon or good row-boa*. FE 8-1104.______________________ home* ln”ox£ prof. 85,800 t ---‘3* EM 3 y 24liS~8TORE BLDG. NR. DRAY-; fdeonie Properly 2 FAMILY HOMS INCOM* 1. mo. 314 8- Marshall. Cfft 3-3488. | 18 FAIRLY NEW APTS QN PON-tiac Lake front. 811.190 down ) _ Owner leaving state. OB 3-8185. j FOR SALE It UNIT APARTMENT Colored. Will sell cheep. Frank, Walter MY 2-8181. Lake Orton For Ssie Lmke Property 51 10 FT. LAKE FRONT. NEW 3 bedroom home. 810,tll». EM 3-4591 ; 00 FOOT LAKXFRONT. INDIAN-j Shopping Center. I . era home re*r of bldg Lot SOx 400 Terms 83009 down OR 3-0721 INVESTORS: TAKE NOTEK Business building In Lake Orton. Income. 84.330 per year.. Price, t 833.008 with 810.000 down. Also. | 1 vacant (or 828.808. terms. Peterson Real Estate 50* S. BROADWAY MY 3-1681 ORCHARD LAKE RD. Incom* home showing good return | and located on back of large commercial lot. Ideal for any type of business. Can provide your living quarters. Income end business. 18 TS BU A well-established corner grocer) than 8140.000 • year. Same own FoThcutonuito price of stock down at cost — sp-1 "Sf1- Mu pcoilmstely syitASdi gas dryer, I1 Or MY 2-4401. 8 STOVE, 840 ' both i IRONRITE IRONER-OOqb C ou“ ■> hn.n.r elec nlste. TV Even 2 burner elec, plate. ------i JOB 3-1378. _____________ . vntt want IRONRITE tRONER. PROVE — ABOUT ANYTHING TOO want v«vne*el» that Ironing time sen ^U» jntE . HOta^CAg BE ^ ert ,“hoH w3l ease apd comfort. Rent an iron rite tor gules a day. FE 4-3873 Crump spring and i a and screens 2 - able br s 125 l 3-pc bit. ____ ‘ White or colored Factory 2nds - Irreeulsra SAVE FLUMBINO SUPPLY 172 S Saginaw FE 5-2100 t FOB SALE ALLSTATE CAR RA-I Thompso I ft. bathtubs, 835. i — 7005 M58 w— r '57 o • 871 ■ _______OR 3-8544 M OM BTU » OIL FORCED ro air furocce —#"'u ai” FOUND AT L 6t S SALES. A little out of the w»y * less to peg. Furniture a WE BOY - SELL - TRADE ________________ Barnes & Hargraves. 748 W. Huron pendent WILL TAKE TRAILER A* PART down payment on Sylvan Village DAIRY BAR _home. FE.8-2730.________________ Top location, DetnttLjiuburb — | WILL TAJIK HOU8ETRA1LER. Long established —1 '** 1 TRADE paymen >r other real e LANDMARK. ^ LIQUOR. INN A-”*7 . iresslve brick bulldtog Seats ; WILL SWAP ( 2 bed-Balsnoe 175 per We buy. tell or trade: Come o end look around. 3 acres of fri perking. Phone FE 8-8241. OPEN MON. SAT. 8 TO • FRI. I TO 8 24 MONTHS TO FAT 4 miles E. of Pontiac or 1 mi E of Auburn Heights on Aubu; . .... ... SELL A-l FIVE mi.__________________________ . Sea King tor U or 14 guegs Clemens end Port Huron. Two pump or auto, fe o-szae.-------- bars. Banquet facilities. Overnight WOULD LIKE TO SWAP A '59 accommodations and owner’s! chevto 84 flat for any model ‘i apartment. BDd package take-out box OR 1-8744 , This ls complete. Terms, or will __ _ . ■ _, . trade. ! For Sale Clothing 64 Write Box is. Pontiac Press. 350 FT. FRONTAGE ON WALTON. “1; 555 'w 1 p “ suildito ^ Hi** Ktnt Bttg. Prop.~S7A BRUCE PENINSULA, CANADA - ^ ' Over 1000 ft Lake Huron wstor OFFICE — STORE frontage. Beautiful birch Partridge Furniture, 4? Orchard Labs Ave. BUNK BEDS 810. RSTRIOERATOR tit. electric stove M0, 3 piece living room suite 831. gas stove 835, 21 In TY J940. complete dining room set. Esc. .condition 856. garden tractor with cultivator 880. wringer washer 840. electric dryer I. FE t-2786. ' BOYS CLOTHINO. SIZE 14, LIKE new, FE 2-3884 after 4 FE 4-3581 j COATS 1 OBEY REVERSIBLE > 828 di 'service station for lease. SHOP SPACE Walled Lake sre* Excellent paid. Phone EM i ’rntlsl. Call FE 2-8101. After •. ifl 3-8558 Eli 3-4152 ___ _ t OR 3-0450 Pure OU Company. 1 Business Opportunities 59 ^^ttl/0 p.«r.seR J. L. HUDSON MATCHED WASHER —1 dryer. 1125 cs. 8225 for the r, Frigldatr* automatic elec- eelvinator refrioerator, good cond.. Westlnehouse freeier. never used. 1 x 15, and 7 x 12, bound green carpeting with pad*-• x 12 brown rug. 1 piece dming I OffSAl.E, THERMOID BELT. 810. nwee >■» ----------- ,—- , Call MH Norton Avenue. Coleman 80.000 BTU'a «»» *LU8H DOORS, REJECTS OOlNO lorceu air furnace and con- out o( business sliding doors, rols 8180 .i new Uxatr* oil (0idin. doors, ttr* doors, and lountorilew IbroWSalr fursac* and table tope, at reduced prices. 8834 ■ontrols. 113.000 BTU *1211 ] Orchard Like Road lecond taws* ised gas conversion burner »na south of Walnut Lake Road. Call ila. t«5 Ace Heating BCboL before 11 a m. or after 4 p m but -— - williams Lake before dark anytime gat, or Sun ■BPORJUUE wAlL FURNACE, Excellent for cabin, OR 3-8253. FOR SALE: ALUMINUM STORM doors. 3S Tjsa, new. IIS. FE 3-8873. 338 North^Casg. n! ^ktR"OR 3^jT THERMOPANE PICTURE 77 In. FE 8-0735 between 7 and lO O.B. 3 wheel trailer. ________ UL 2-4128 _________ ; WOOD OVERHEAD OARAQE doors. 8 by 7 with herdwere. FE 2-3828._____________________ “X 10. H AND U FT. LONO: * 8 6, It bad 12 ft. I ‘ ' "eap. Bob ; plus sheet-er 8:88. MA FOR SAL* - USED BATHTUBS SIS. O. A. Thompson. 7008 M-M OAS AND (ML FURN ACM. SlftK 5-1501._______________________ }. B. OIL FIRE SYSTEM HEAT- Must dispose of at bauu defaulted contract 838 90 o over paymento of |4 per i Capitol. FE 5-0407, Sale Musical Goods 71 AUGUST BALE ON TRADE IN organs. Baldwin Orgatonle with Percussion 1005, Conn Rhapsody Tel ^TelegrajTh^ Rd., acroe* ft ALTO BAX. CHEAP FI Mill BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR. BT factory expert. CALBI MUSIC OO. 19 N, SAOINAW _____r M222 HAMMOND LAKE Berg* ___130 FT LAKE with beautiful trees i beautiful home site. 2-in*One buildings for 8200 per mo. C. PAXGUS, Realtor ORTON VILLE BUILT IN ’ OVENS AND COOK tops, complete line of ges end electric. SIMM and op. R. B Munro Electric Co., 1060 West Huron. _________ blue spring 1 tan car coat, n BALDWIN MAHO. CONSOLE Fuqua knit**1?” sttFlO*CaU FE ; BLOND BOOKCASE V— --------------- 2-2310 after 5:30.__________! _»ol*. Like new. FB 3-7707._______ CLOTHINO STORE FOR SALE. I BIO FREEZER REFRUJ. A RICE thousand* of articles 8450 total stove 885. 810 dn. rE.2-4843, price. 277 Baldwin. After 7 pm. CASH; FOR SMALL RADIOS, .■all FE 3-7762 ________ working or not, FE 5-8755 FdhMALS SIZE 10 AND, 12, FE CARPET TWEED. 'NEVER USED ! U||| j with foam pad. |40 FE 5-7240 | 1 ! CHEST. DESK. ROLL-A-WAY BED. , Rug. 8 by 13, living room suite. FE 8-8378. LAROE GREEN UPHOLSTERED chair. Ilk* new. FE 2-0677. LAROE CRIB AND MATTRESS, brand new, 115.16 Pearson’s Furniture. 42 Orchard Lake Are. MUST SELL. SINGER ZIO ZAO cabinet style sewing machine. This one does everything without attachementa. Just dial the stitch. Pick up payments of M. per month or total 887 M. Capitol. FE 5-0487. ________ . MUST SELL AT-ONCE. LIVINO — -"-‘hg roam suite, bed-V, rugs with pads, re, kitebon gas •VHin,MVXT“n 40 np. Mercury 4 INCH son. PIPE *saW plSWbinq su»l\ 172 8. Saginaw_______FE^llOO 10 INCH DELTA CTRCUyR 6AW. mode**99. 870 «' ” — 8. Marshall. _____. .... with radlatori and —— 9199 5 yean old. 140.000 BTU. MI 829.95 8-6434._____________. " . . ?.... I n. E. OIL FIRE SYSTEM HEAT-lag plant with radiators and tank. 8 years old. 140.000 BTU. MI 4404 988.95. _»b.UslnkFandP"wngs"ito,l4up. Laundry trays And »taod ana fsueets 919.95 Cosh and carry. SAVE PLUMBING m a inflnaw FE L3Mj 200 ANTIQUE FENCE BAILS. GARAGE DOORS Factory seconds, oli stondard sixes in stock from .028 and up. Electric door operator*, folding closet door* and disappearing stairways. We give estimates on gorego re- BALDWIN OROANSON1C ORGAN and bench. Luxurious blond finish. A bargain nt 11005. Wiegand Music Center BAZAAR AREA MIRACLE MILE ____PHONE FEderal 2-4924_ CLEARANCE bale electric piano Organs 8110 NOW 888.80 ACCORDIONS — NEW AND USED AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS CHOOSE FROM LAROE STOCK LAYAWAY OR PAYMENT FLAN EDWARD’S______It 8. SAOINAW 2 USED GRAND PIANOS Spinet o trailer 5ESS. .WyaWn'torVio $130 l___ puyments ORD 8KYLINER. I. 1ft Outboard wi 10 ft. hydroplane: 1 condition. All tor 1371 S. Paddock__ I pedal boards. Practice piano -805. Just arrived l from Kimball Plano Factory, lit years of building flat pianos. > Mahogany spinet for 8485 lo year . ■ 827.84 I 8400 balance. 3:30 p.m. Pontiac. FE ~ 4-4508 LI 8-7111 _ “HAGSTROM" PLEASANT LAKE LOTS Choice lot STORE APPROXIMATELY II x 80, located 07 W. Huron. For rent or lease FE 2-Mlt. ___'j_ 1 1 " SAGINAW STREET j 2 stores now rented. 3 apart- > , ments with separate furnaces, , ■ Paul M.1 Tonnes. Real Est. 832 West Huron Street _ PE «.|550________FE 8-1275 ;1 W. WALTON BLVD. L ZONED COMMERCIAL , a We hate available^ j**rronu e Sale Household Goods 65 cash for used tvi.. furni- ture A Ml sc. FE 2-0107.__ 1 COMPLETE BOUSE FURNITURE ’ FE 2-8288. n PRICE "Baumrltter-Lane-Locke-ArtUne" M APL E-M AHOO AN Y-W ALNUT LIMED OAK-CHERRY-EBONY NUT MAPLE Step Tables - Lamp tables -Coffee Tables - Drum Table) - Bookcases — Record Cabtnr" - Sofa Tea House. ——— Dinette Tables - l____- Flint St-7 Lake Orion. MODERNIZATION SALE ON N1W and used furniture and appliance* 1220 Baldwin * FR 8-7188 | ggogt BTU TIMKEN COUNTER- ; I W* buy. sell and trad* no* oil Furnace with controls ■ to*. Consumers approvi MOVING"" COMPLETE HOUSE OF and 275 |al. t*nk 8100. norm* furniture FE 8-0878. .___ Ironer, 835. 1186 N. Casa Lk. Rd. NAUOHYDE jw~H I T it STUDTO | ATTENTION. ^7* good condition. . Consumers approved, 008.50 ■mMSmI 50. marred. __ bottled sas ilgon Fluorescent, 303 Tables stands CRIB 810. YOUTH BED 810, HIGH ! chair 85. 811 Alpesna, FE 8-2803. , _iovi \cHROME DINETTE SETS. AS- NEW i 'semblt yourself, save, four choirs. wit > | table. 000.08 value 838.16. New up. ■signs, formica tops. Mlchi- nViv ----------* -A3 orchard Lk. 1 ° coach 840. Blue chrome t 120. 3 | chairs mohet OR 3-0162 after 8. ELKCTRIC DRYER, 1140. r either lio r. personal ‘ e local office FE1 II. R. HAGSTROM REALTOR 4900 HIGHLAND RD. _ ________ ______ PONTIAC OR 4-0358 beauty shop available sef- —*. barber abop .WA ixwvwwi m nmmm ___ _ I’cash”' 3881 Dili Rd. north of Walton OR »-”*« __________zM LAKE ORION LAKEFRONT COT ; tage, MY 3-0071. or FE 3-7407 ■ LAKE FRONT HOUSE I ROOM8.: g;ru.” SIMMS 25 SOUTH SAOINAW tolly 3 to 0 Bat 10 to 5 FE 8-883 FOUR POSTER MAH. BEE t 811. Lara* wall « at tronlne hoard. T fsts, lamp* end c! Deluxe 3-Room Outfit Double dresser cheat, bookcase bed. Box springs. Inneranringa. * tables, chrome set. Llv- 3-4114. Peer Appliance Co. 2-DbOR CLOSET. O N E _____er. FE 8-8235.___________ ■ ■ i ONEfcO MPLETE BEDROOM suite. All glass-lopped. One solid cherry double bed. two blond end tables. Three pair* of lamps. Excellent condition. Reasonable -Phone MI 41602 between 8 and 2 FREE Imperial Dish master with each new Conn Electric Organ or Story h Clark Plano, Limited time only. MORRIS MUSIC 34 8. Telegraph Rd. FE 8-9847. Across from Tel-Huron, tiS.eo p JOSEPH Lake FT 7-1845._____________1 PONTIAC LAKE PROMT. SELL OR rent. 8768 Arlington.______ ' WILLIAMS LAKXFRONT YEAR around, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, j basement, excellent beech. 117.-1 Mj." OK 3-504>.______ WHITE LAKE. • ADJOINING LOTS.. Win sell all or pari al a bargain or cash, or make offer. WA 44244; or DR 1-9413._________________; Sale Resort Property 52 3 BEDROOM MODERN LOO CAE in al St Helen, Michigan, reasonable terms Colored only. Write ^witlac_Fr*s» Box 84____ 3 *ROOM~CABIN ON l’ « ACRES of land. Tj ml. east of Orsyllns TAVERN — Oood City loi established Plenty ot mruu, Good income from ebufneboard. skillpool, etc. Equipment In good , ; condition. Seating capacity Of 100 Terms to rejponslbl* party. William Miller Realtor HE 2-0263 070 West Huron Street _ Open 0 to 0 ___ DRY CLEANING PLANT. CALL aft*r_0 p m OR 3-5015. OOOD BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY --------- '-anehlse Richardson’- ; SMITII-WIDEMAN RE.\LTV 1 412 W HURON' OPEN EVES j FE 4-4526 Sale Land Contracts 60 LAND CONTRACTS TO B to tell. Earl Oarr*is.-.El ! or EM 3-4086 Iriginally old for 924* a steal Terms, tearoom Outfitting Co, 4783 Hxie. Drayton Plalnr PRICE - REJECTS. BEAU- ANCHOR FENCES No money down, FHA smproeed. v- FREE B7BUTM F* E7I»I WALTON TV ltUrE' sSw0" I bathrow raTORB^oa^ANp Piano and' BENCH AT LOW bol'lerUrlAutomatto Wwator healer- price. EM 3-0383.________Hardware, elec, tupplles, erock * PIANO, 3O0P FOR PRACTICE. plpe^ and fittings Lows Brother Needs tuning. Best offer takes Faint. Super Kemtone and Rust- It. in Converse Ct . Lake Orion. Oleum._v REraiOERATOR 13 CU. aFT. ^ u^ bT ” ” Mttl , Hand mower. : l-ltto. . See plctt PROPERTY FOR BALE AT rhamnel* Dam eff Highway 85, the heart ot the Flnm. Leg c* fully furnished, hot and c water. Alee tog ear port aad ■ (hod. cm OR 3-2770 LOANS $25 TO $500 On your signature or other security. 24 months to repay. Oui service la fast, friendly and help ful Visit our office or phone FE 9-1121. HOME 8c AUTO __________I PHHI LOAN CO; StMoaal franchise Richardson « . .. p corner 1C Pike Driee-In. good location. New 7 n perry r“r ^wS|"5w *F* cToio. *ob- m * TEAGLE FINANCE CO. LEASE-LAftOE~3-BAY“8ERVICE 202 S. MAI N Sutton on busy highway. OR, |J| p. STXI.AIK OL BEAUTIFUL^ I.AROE-HOU8lfc-OV- , ROLHLS I LK i ROMEO _ ..j, jri-- *— ---- 2-8843____________________ AMI PORTABLE E LECTRIC CLOTHES WASHER — BRAND NEW -Full Factory Guarantee. Regular 859 05 - NOW 820 90 SIMMS 25 SOUTH Saginaw. Opei — * - ~ 1. To to I. rE DINETTE BARGAIN STORE JUST opened. One of the Is rtest selections In Oakland County. 830.50 I ” U^tto.^i TeBar’oF” Off 'joaijrn. I BULMAN HARDWARE ! REPOSSESSED . ^P.rECKUVINO ^_elizabeth_lk_ fe„44771 ■■Mm MRMH dltion. 8100 MI 8-2045. 1 REFRIOERATOR OOOD CONDI- j. 160 Servel gas refrigerator. 0175. FE 49058._____________. De-Humidifier Westlnghouso deluxe model. Retail. lUO.M. 3 only, $74,06. Fay as little S| 11.25 per week. Ooodyear Service Store, 30 a. Coos. Pontiac, FE 9-0121. _________ DON’T WASTB MONET HAVDtO a' lamps. Llke new. "83 weekly. Pearson’s Trade-In Dept. SINOER PORTABLE FORWaAd and reverse stitch. $39.80. Curt's Appl. FE 44040, coffee table. | OPEN DAILY ’TIL SUN. 42 ” BARGAINS 4x|V« in. V-grooved mah, 84 SO 1x13 sheeting 180 per ~ laundry ihaib. I 821.85. 53 )>l heaters, electric. Cash and tarry, 10 year glass lined. 172.80. O. A. Thompson. 7008 M 88 weft. _______ LA V ATOR3BL60MFLET*! ISAM value. t<4.96; also bathtubs, tol-late, shower Mb. Irregular• Terrific value*. Michigan Fluorea-cent, 283 Orchard *"*" m * METAL BUILDING 24 X 98 FT , for storage or shop. Muat be moved. Cheap FE 41887. PLASTIC FIFE «iTO. I sscvpsa jrater tested. SbM ““ 7005 M5t. West _ | ORINNEL 45, MAHOGANY. »r.„-yrs. Reas. F* ^ piano, 6 vrs. Old. 144 Owaw. QfwVg MEDIUM SIZE UPBldHT PIANO. ?I ,; .M I too cash. Oood cond. OR 3-8802. RESTYLED PIANO WITH MIRROR -re-conditioned. Immediate tree delivery — Only 11(1. GRINNELU’S __Saglnbw . FE 3-7100 TORINO AND REFAIRlliO. 24 1— service, all work gaaraa-bv factory trained men calbi inne co. Saginaw FE 8-8222 fE 8-0838. eriookitu. lodging point merit, call FE 2-0818___ n. GROCERY AND OAS STATION | LOANS 125 TO 8590 ! 2 PIECE LIVINO ROOM SUITE. 2 SEWING MACHINES. reanonabtf. FE 477t5_______ 2 PIECE LIVINO ROOM SUITE, good condition, 830 After 8 p.m OR 3-6300 | 2 PIECE SECTIONAL 829. DRESS-’ . Oas _ es. 920. FIRESTONE 141 8. SAOINAW ___ n 5-2020 ELECTRIC STOVE ISO. O* RE-(rlgerator 888 Both **“ Sola 825, all to very FE 2-2084. VERY for SALE WE8T1NOHOU8E tomatte washer, 838. ITT , F RIG 1DA1RE RERFIOERATOR good condition. 830. FE 3-7884. FREEZER UFRIOHT, BRAND! Plywood ............. new in eratot. 8 year warranty, putttc Wall TUe 8151 Pa/ only 83 weekly^ Fear- Eavestrouah and Outter STUDIO*COUCH 120. REFRIO. 880. Auto washer tot. Television 33 In. 880. Electric stove |30. EM 3-4378. ______ '<_ SINOER SEWINO MACHINE, ZIO-sagger tor blind hem. design, applique, etc. Balance vary tow 168.40 Including Moad art cabinet or can be | " month Universal Co._______ TILE AND LINOLEUM 88 WHOLESALE tg FAINT INSIDE—OR OUTSIDE blond drop last be paid 80 per I Co. FE 40108. food opportunity, UL 2-1680 a WHI HOUSEHOLD OOODS Refrigerators es- ! <>M Fty only $2 weekly. Fear- Eavestroush i ns Drm leaf *on* Furnltur*. 48 Orchard Lake Asphalt Ttte '• Avenue I LlnSeomJOa 3 year warranty Free set Toilet I18.U -- Cqren Bon. 10-3 WOLVERINE LUMBER 330 B. Faddack . FB M7»8 Bolens—Wheelhorse Tractors and TlUsrs Power and riding mowers. Jacobsen. Yardman and Tory. I model* of riding mowers, selection of used equlp-ment We service what we sell. *&3ss$sr j ,q as MAple 47878_____ OR 3-7824 ! beef and fork - Nalf and a? ft. to l 0»»rton Opdyke Mkt nC 47041. , I* JJ;! Blacktop Driveway \ FAINT WITH EOTON — AVOID blister and peal do# to motxtsr* Now at |I savlnta per gallon. WAFTHCeV 8878 ORCHARD Ij RANO» HOOD AND FAN, COFPM tone, IM.M. Rome* wire at per ft. Neater cable' Zte. O. / BtoSaaos. Ttot M8t Wait. ' RCA PORTABLE _ TV. LADOa ••If clubs aad hag. Wtddlcomb 11 vlng roem farattare. MI 8-2008. RECONDITIONED TYPEWRITERS Sale Office Eqolpnwat 72 adding machines from I The only f n»c tori aol--- branch offlcaa In Oakland t.uu Macomb County where you can buy new or factory rebuilt eash registers. Ths National Cash Register Co., 862 W. Huron. Pontiac. -----M’ fmmim, ml DDINO MACHINES. FROM 835 CASH REOISTER8 FROM 845 PONTIAC CASH REGISTER -----sss--- FEI)08M 337 S. SAOINAW Sale Store Equipment 7$ Sale Sportlng Ooods 74 30-08, 820. t 12 OAUGE 8INOLE. ill. 1 bow aad arrow, 41 lb. 818. FK 40010. &------ 13 OAUOE STEVENS PUMP, PER fact eowdRIao Including case and cleaning kit, MO, FE 41887. is oa a Uto. Remington Browning Fat. $80, 22 taUber revolver, BAR $20. OR 42871 aft- *49 95 up. Desks 830 up. New Jf to*-.....’ , ' _ steel wall desks, 81000. Chair* M i 340# AUTOMATIC /BOX'- —------- ----* **•”, .*40.50. | (heels. Case. $85 OR 47888. . RkMINOTCN 308. MODEL up. New t drawer I w*lnqt dining >, 1 Til* a "FRIENDLY «ER’ !YIcfe’’3:l 190 a. SAOINAW repairs? save 40 i lall yor- — ■__R PARTS P____ __ I *1*. RoyaT Auto Part*. m 1 ebvuu wr-“— a ft c«*>. Call your Advisor, FE 4 rTn parts vor -as TO ‘18 U safe. Forbes Printing and Oftlee Supply, tit B. Frash It. ttr-* muifham. MI 1-2010 around eer-—r from Turner Ford Bale*. oSlss ul FE 42480 1 Clemens. Pontiac. mavton”carrle. new QIaR aMg. ’igrTLsavgai Ufc^WWTvatta; Bank. 4M0 Dixie. OR 40787. MuUot t-*»ck. lo Begley. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AU YIFTY-SEVRN Sflto O—4» X| hffchuwnwfc u WANT*), MU day 49c PLEASED WITH THE ATTENTION AND BA VINOS YOU GET PROM US. BILL’S TWIN LAKE MARKET 5100 HIGHLAND ROAD (Mttt PONTIAC. GO 3 miles west or tMr a re- sale Farm Equipment 87 fJmiHi louse Trailers 89 _____ofTIt *___HP .Small trailers,. Iso. flood selection cl- need al ctscoi 1 mile S. of Lake Orton on MIL . MY »BWE-., WHERE QUALITY COMES FIRST FOR RENT. 15 FT. #ACAfclOB trailer. OR 2-4707. SHORTS MOBILE BOMBS ------ am mmnam . im and Beamer travel m pitta Ban tt parte —. oar* wind and: I an tew SAVE $1,000 3 BEDROOM 54.755 PULL PRICE 5555 DOWN 3 AT THIS PRICE STOCK NO. 533. 934 .THU WEEK ONLYH Bob Hutchinson Mobile Homes Sates 430i Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains 4 Ml. N. of Pontiac OR 3-1253 Open ‘7 Dale j . Bduto 4k ArwBBBrleB 97 VACATION TRAILERS Pixie Trailer Sales and Rental, loss North Lapeer Rd., Oxford. VACATION TRAILERS ■15 new Trsller-Blaser, Apache Camper*. Sale or rest. Car top carriers. Make reservations now. F. H Howland, OR 3-*—* Clearance Sale I only. Mg flberglas hi 5455. Alum.. JIM; wood. END OP SEASON DISCOUNTS ROBERT'S MARINE Oakland County’s Correct Craft Dust. Rent Trsier Space 90 OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR those who want the beat. 4S‘xS0' lot*. U’x45 cement patios, etc. One mile east of Oxford on Lake- vlUc road, OA 5-3032.__________ PRIVATE AND MODERN TRAIL-or lot. 79l Doris Road. Auburn Heights. No domestic animals. For Sale Tires 92! A l USED TIRES 93.50 UP. WE buy. sell. Also whitewalls. STATE TIRE SALES 558 8. Saginaw St PE 4-4557 LOOK! 750x14 BLACK TIRES. ALL name brands. Off new ears 519.30 plus tax and exchange. Mate. Tire Salcs^50J 8. Saginaw. END-OF-THE-SEASON CLEARANCE ON USED BOATS AND MOTORS ALL TYPES * SIZES 13’ TO 17’ BOATS 3 H. P. TO 35 H. P. MOTORS v ALSO REDUCED HOW jlBBT SMALL CUTTER BOATS HARRINGTON BOATS YOUR EVDfRUDE DEALER EASY PAYMENTS AVAILABLE 1533 8. TELEORAPH PE 3-5583 CLOSHOUT SALE '. -- ' EMPIRE Seville Call UL 2-2519 a REAL GOOD SELECTION OP jfsrden tractor*, Roto Tillers and HOUGHTEN & SON IM N. Main, Rochester. OL 1-9761 Plants, Trees, Shrubs 78j CLEARANCE SALE USED EQUIPMENT 1 riding and walking tractors rotary ttllerc. PRICED TO SELL CREDIT TERMS PE 4-0734 PE 4-1113 KING BROS. PONTIAC RD, AT OPDYKE NEW AND REBUILT ORAIN drills and corn pickers. Davis Mchy. Ph. NA 7-3292 Ortonvllle. USED TRACTORS: ~A GOOD VA-rlety In wide price range. We trad* and finance. Hartland Are* Hardware, Phone Hartland 2511. Auction Sales 88 I AUCTION AT EVERETT’S, 25029 For Sxle Feta 79 5 ARC DACHSHUNDS AT ITUD. Puppies, Jamor's. PE 9-2539. AKC RBOISTKRED COCKER SPAN-ids. PB 4*3307. AKC REGISTERED BOXER PUP.! IM. SrV 3-1151 x ■ AKC ENOLISH SPRINOER SPAN-: Id, 3 months old, PE 2-2903._ 1 AKC LOVELY POODLES AND PER Ingese. pupa and elder doge. Res. IM 3-OWL ________ : BEAGLES 3 mala beagles. l«Wm. 2-lto yro. eld- An sired by lnt. rd. Ch. WlUcltff Bannister. flood Plaid Inst prospects. lt-Uleh class. a.K.C. Res- Trial given. public sale of power ----------- New. used and demonstrators. Tractors, mowers, tillers midget can. go cart*, sprayers, outboard motors, air cooled engines. Also attachments and related Items, brands Include Jacobsen, ____, Wheel Horse, Panser. Farmsll. etc. 1955 Ford Pick-up. 1157 Malco economy car. inspection prior to tale. Bank financing available. AU talcc final. Everett Aug. 27, beginning at 10:30 a 5 rooms complete of furatt Including davenport and t ‘ Zenith TV. dining room suit BASSET HOUND. FEMALE. AKC. 1 months old. AU shots. $35. 99 Farkhuwt St.______’ OCK. CURT ----------------------- __________HOUSEHOLD AUCTION - SAT UR- piow. disc, and cultivator. Large quantity of small tools, plumbing tools cardan tools, and many other ttema. P. C. Wing, Prop. Paul Hillman. Auctioneer. STANDARD BRAND NEW TIRE8. trade Ip on General Safety Tires. Up to 50 per cent qff. Black or Whitewalls. ED WILLIAMS 451 8. Saginaw at Raeburn POOD USED TIRES KUHN AUTO SERVICE Rink Motors 4455 Highland Road FREE LUBE U Automatic transmission adjustment automatic transmit- Brake adjustment . OB 4-0301 for appointment CRANKSHAFT GRINDING ...______ car. Cylinders rebored. Buck Machine Shop. 23 Hood. Phone FE 3-2553. SAFETY SPECIAL. FRONT END top, cpccdoa ins 35 H P. 91359. ' * DEMONSTRATOR —15' Oeneva flberglas runabout. 45 H.P. Erin-rude Lurk, controls, battery and bog. Try it for performance plus 9115*. MAKE US AN OFFER -Our used outfits bay* to go. Financing available with 10 is ;o pay Hlehlam ry Ridge at TIP8ICO LAKE. Phone Main 9-2179. Open every night tIU 9. ‘ - LOOK! Plsy-A-Pon Was 91599 NOW 51425 Sun-A-Pen was $79* NOW 9500 Bel-Air* Cabin Craft Waa 91795 NOW 91350 Bel-Alre Pontoon Craft Wac 91155 NOW 5595 20% OFF bN BOATS. MOTORS. TRAILERS. SPORTING GOODS. MOST SUMMER ITEMS. SPORTSMEN’S HEADQUARTERS M24 at the Double Stoplight Open 7 days a week MY *4511 Lake prion TIZZY Fflfxifn mi Syt Cetb MB cmtieoN 1557 DS-19. GOOD CONDITION. 91.008. futf price A at* —--- 407 Auburn. FE S99I43. CARRAYEL 1980. 4 SPEED 3 tope other mSW- PB 4dl5S. TS 1TOA. OOOD CONDITION -RAH. 9 new Urea, bam offer. PE g-lSTl. ■60 DART D-400 STICK. SPECIAL trona and rear and., Call after •:3f. PB 5-1430. T R 3 CONVERTIBLE, WITH W-W ALLS, RADIO A SPORTS CARS NEW AND U9ED HEALY. MO. SPRITE '59Austtn Healy •90 Used Austin Btaly HOUGH*TEN & SON 933 N. Main. Roahaater OL 1-P761 TAKE A DEMONSTRATION RIDE in tho new Vespa 400 economy ' For Sals Cars ’59 CHEVROLET PARKWOOD STATION WAOOH I A ipsitona S passenger, luxurious- ■ to appointed wagon wlthVg engine and effortless powargllde i . transmission. Radio si lwi| with convenient electric rear window. tho solid turquoise finish > sat off by. gleaming white-vail iirw.uito. ki« goMlHon inside and out The beat feature is the '----UwS Crissman ROCHESTER OPEN EYES. TO, S. OL 2-9721 54 CHEVY BEL AIR HARDTOP as? sx BMI tton, 10.900 actual fer, PE A2I57. '55 CHEVROLET, V-8, PO, EX-_ cellent condition. 9035. PTE 4-4551. 1591 CHEVROLET WAOON. RADIO A HI A TER ABSOLUTELY NO Cuas MONEY DOWN. AMume payments - of 95.53 per no. Call Credit Mgr. tAx I Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7500. Harold luo! Turner Ford. __ 1959 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON- WT V7542.~H. Rlgjlns] tertor* AutomaUc" HI f |j '•97 BUICK. 4 DOOR, HT $1190 .............. For Sale Cars ‘53 Plymouth, Wagon. ISM HARDENBURQ MOTOR SALES Corner Casa A Pike ' PE 5-7151 e-iS* #tf MMRAn lASsMMM “I’ll have another super hamburger and another banana milk shake, but I’d better loosen my safety belt tint!”. For Sale Trucks 103 JEROME "Bright Spot" TRUCKS • Are Our Business SPECIAL 5-DOOR roon and wblt* finish. .... J351-C. Priced to eetl •156. NORTH CHEVROLET cu. 10S0 8. WOODWARD. BIR-MINOHAM. MI 4-2735.__________ Grand Opening Sale ■57 Pl^m. V9 Push — ’55 Bulck Convert. Wna 5735 ............. now »»*• ’56 Pontiac H-T Was 5995 NOW 5595 *55 Ford station WeaiSBS ............... Now 5555 ’59 Chrysler New Yorker Qoovcrt. Was 5955 .. ......... Now 9715 FISCHER BUICK, INC. IM 8. WOODWARD AVK. MI 4-9195 JO 4-5424 REPOSSESSION 1555 Chevrolet 3 door, beautiful Jreen and whit* finish. Pull prlee 495 Only 927 month. No cash needed. First payment due October 4th. Ring Mr Bing, FE Lucky Auto Sales, 193 8. Was 9795 .. --- ’55 Packard, 1-dwner Waa 5435 ...... 54 CTiev DelRsy. ^ Was $435 ............... ’52 Ford Station Wgn. Begin* EVROLKT _______ __ jedan. V-a engine. Power- glide, snowerest white. Only 5V 895. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. l.r-M 8. WOODWARD. BIRMINO-HAM. MI 4-2719. ______ MY DADDY SAYS; E YOU OETTINO THE MOST FOR YOUR CAR? __WE BUY — — TRADE DOWN — — TRADE UP — LLOYD MOTOR SALES I “ 33 8. Saglnsw Tt. 3-9131 CMC WC BUY AND TRADK OOOD 57J TRACTOR ON AIR CLEAN CARS AND TRUCKS ,, Economy Care 22 Auburn 1 ’54 INTERNAT L STAKE R-1S0 55 Bulck H-T. Wat 3685 . 55 Che^ ^ ■ "“'HI IT’S A DEAL 1M. \ WITH STEELE! ’5* CHEVROLET B AIR 2 Door. « cylinder,^ powcrgHdt. Rtdio i$ Ly$199$|SV^i- 1,ow ,M r IftlSl ■ .. .. Now 5145 STEELE FOftD. 3275 West 1 CHOICE OF 25 MORE*CARS Huron, FE 5-3177 : 2755. Orchard $12,900 Superior AutTSales lu. Rd , fe i-iiir 550 OAKLAND *53 Chevrolet, excellent. I 1175. 33 8. Francis. . . $4760 j iH5~BUICK SPECIAL, 2 DOOR — “* ’1 BILL -SPENCE “RAMBLER” 54 CHEVROLET $ 450 j WILL ACCEPT C dl C 1 TON, DUAL WHEELS 5456. y v x xwwe-.* --- lutboarde. boats, refrlgera- ind appliance*, ett On our .555 Ramblers or any good ear as part payment. 1 FEDERAL ....$1195 I LOAD PACKER | ’^orTationT 9507oR 3-53M ’56 CHEVROLET $ 675 i STAKE $50 TO $595 ITS TRUE, DON'T MISB BE ONE OP THE LUCKY 0> ’53 Buleks 2—W Fords Beautiful *33 Pontiac . __ . . , Nice ’53 FOrd Bslllllilt Sharp ’58 Chev Bel Air, AuS*. Y-d NleevOtds 51 3 Poor THIS 18 JUST- A mew, WE HATE MANY Mona IN CHECK THESE B^YS. __ FRANKIE & JOHNNY’S" 255 W. MONTCALM FE 5-3712 OPEN EYENIBOB________ BY OWNER, 'S3 CHEVROLET 1 door, standard, extra clean, free of mat. PE 53527 aRer 3 n.m. 1958 CXMT*OIXf~ ajtb aSTT door eadan. V-5 engine PoWOr-gllde. power steering. 3 to choose , from. Your choice at $1,335. -NORTH CHEVROLET CO. ISM 8. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM. Ml *-2735. - ’53 CHBVIE. 4-DOOR. A-l. _______FE 4-6549_____; ■ LOOK! •55 CHEVROLET IMPALA HARDTOP. AU Whit* flnUih with red interior. Powertude trans., Radio k ha* tar____W.Walls. 91.455 | OLENN 8 MOTOR SALES. 952 HURON ST. PX 4-7371. | 'Across Prom Huron Theater! I960 CHEV. IMPALA 3-DR. HT-250 h p. engine, power eteerlag. standard transmission. 92.395.50 or take over payments at 954.40 mo. tor 30 mot. Call Dlek. FE »3333. ’50 CHEV.. 4 DOOR, STATION I wagon. RAH, very nod. 1 own-I er, 7dlt Coolsy ut, na, s. Conway. DOWN AMuma payments of M.55 per mo. Call Credit Sfkr. Mr. Parks at MI 5-7150, Harold Turn-or Fowl. ’53 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER. 51M PE 5-0555. _______ ’ 1157 CHRYSLER WINDSOR 4 door, hardtop, power steering I | Harris PE______ ___________ ’56 INTERNAT’L $3500 ms buick special 2-dr. hard- CO 230 TRACTOR top. 3 tone: black and white. I ittlAMaMa toaittmidilrtfl raH n I Buy from the owner. OR 3-2119. 1557 DESOTO ADVENTURER CON-vertlbl*. AU whit* with o white top. Automatie transmission, radio. heater, white side walls. Pull power. A rare special. 91335. FISCHER BUICK, INC. 90S S WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM MI 4-9100 JO 4-3434 1354 DeSOTO 3 DR HARDTOP BIRMINGHAM , ___________________jP_t***l SALES A SERVICE 62 BUICK FOR GOOD TRANS- j 259 8. SAGINAW Tt 1-4941 CHEVY AND ’56 DeSOTO FOR Very ( 3-7065. . PE 2-5202. and used electrle starter. 25 h.p. Evln rude motor. $575, terms. Kelly’s Hardware 3554 Aubifrn Ay#., at Adame Rd. HRMBM TTI FE 2-5511 »'iUu.r;.nin^h5iU.0,tai WALL BOAT M^OR AND OARS 95 per mo. Eddie Steele Ford. ***■ FE....3:7J.1i:-—- . ... Inc. 2705 Orchard Lake Rd,, Kee- REPITCH — BALAN*T5 “* WELD so tearbor I All Six** Carried In Stock TrANKSHAPTCAMSHAFT ORIND- 24-HR. PROP. REPAIR ------— 2274 Telegraph, j/ CONSIGNMENT wUI sell your car for you ur prlee for 9*5, NO SALE. NO CHARGES Pontiac Auto Brokers ’58 GMC - 4-9100 1357 CUSHMAN EAGLE. OOOD EAOLE, EEC. FE 4-7561. 1 ,E. OOOD CON- PUPPIES. 15 EACH Road cunf-.. .. _ __ _ 4531 Maybe* Road DASHCHUND PUPPU____ — Arlington off Ponttno Lk Rd. DAdfimuND. male, approx t mot. old. Black and tan. Kail shots. No papers Likes children.; Pood watchdaf. PE 5-5513. ENGLISH SETTERS 2-two year old fomatoa. veil traraod bird dogs. 2— live month old pupa, 1 male, 1 female, flash poiatlag. AT.D.S.B. Keg 7Vtn sell or trado. OR 3-0153. day, August 27. 12:30 p.m Thame* St. i r"* —“■ , mile East oi fiocnesicr. uo piete household furnishings, ru I. I — (tights. 17 Inch TV i !’ *iSlekmoM 1151 'CUSHMAN EAGLE. coud. Only 9155. PE y*~ ’55 CUSIOfAN EAOLE.________I dltlon. OR 3-0563. csU evenlngi IMS CUSHMAN SCOOTER. OOOD _cond. Many access. EL g-9739. ■59 CUSHMAN MOTOR SCOOTER. *11 extras, used 5 months, new M00. Will sacrifice for $250. Call P« 4-2310. CUSHMAN — 97 EAGLE," MAKE | . TOtflT. Ml 4-5253. ■ \ ■ I NEW J, USED CUSHMAN EAGLES. I Simplex A Track Rabbit Cars. : I no E. pike, Pfaons PE 3-4305 i POWER MOTOR BOY’S OO-CART, [ i $55. 50 South. AvblYS . . . f Newkirk s Boat A Prop Servlet 2150 Case Lake Road. Kctgo KII BOAT, 15’0" DUNPHY LAP-strake surf rider. 0 ft. beam. 1(60 model. Has Mark 70A Mercury Engine, complete with shocks and i lets than 50 hrs. on host and motor. Ha» compass, complete tsrps special spring stats Also has now trailer, with Mr-rlde shocks, and 1500 pound capacity. 9350 down. Min per mo. BIRMINGHAM-RAMBLER. 500 S. BwOODWARP, MI P3000. THOMPSON'S AQUA-RAMA. 3131 M-55 and Duck Uke 1 '* N. Perry at Madison__ TEACHER WILLjPAY UP TO 1500 for dependable Chevrolet or Pon-tlac. STUlwcll 1-3026. I CAN’T HELP IT! I NEED CLEAN USED CARS QUALITY MOTORS 040 ORCHARD LAKE_FE 3-7041 PRIVATE "PARTY VfANTS TO PAY each for a good aar without rust •50 - ’54 model. OR 3-3135. $19951 .$2595 $ 695 ' 1 ....$ 595i ..$1695 Suburban OLDS 55 BUICK HTOP j y sharp, 3 door, radios heater, | n car 41.000 - — ___ _____ either .. Esc. cond._Cs\l_PE_9-121*. 1 CHEVROLET 1957 DODGE CUSTOM ROYAL 4 door hardtop, power steering and brakes, radio and heater, white side walls. 1 owner *llld. RAMMLER-DALLAS 1001 Main St.___OL Mill ' CONVERTIBLE * ____trade FE 5-5623.1 3-»M5 after Just Make Payments ' 87 - *'* ' 3350 I ________ je?BI_ _ SB S-CYL. TRACTOR to demonstrate. PEOPLE'S AUTO SALES ’56 FORD ..........$ 6954!*-^^—= ■ * P-250 PICKUP limy ’56 FORD ........ ..$1695 P-000 TRACTOR, CLEAN ’57 CHEVROLET BEL AIR SPORT COUPE A striking solid Sierra Oold fl Ish with cold and beige tri makes this BOSSES CAR ft ?•! m srh«a _______ CYLINDER, 8TAND- ■d transmission, radio and heat-mt. Priced to sell. 0825. RAMMLER-DALLAS 1001 Main St,_____OL 3-0111 CAR PAYMENTS TOO 1____________ some? Come In and see us and let us help you adjust to o toe* expensive ear. DON’S USED CARS 677 M24 Uke Orton MY 2-2041 •53 FORD 2 DOOR. $300. WILL trade FE 2-5073. CADILLAC. DEVILLE COUPE, I —Vll tlro* or* a few » the hoi iwer eeat. 4.000 miles, l features of tills mi 2217 North Lake An- j jewe| immaculate ^ condition I J. dlstelyt ’56 GMG , 3EE JIM HARTLEY OR JOHN LIBERTINE for TOP DOLLAR for clean cars Will alio trade op or < _____DIXIE U8ED CARS ...$6100] l-CYL. DIESEL TANDUM TRACTOR Road" I last CADILLAC CLUB COUPE Best offer over ttVW. FE 2- ooene 1565 chevy sedan, nice _ I bergaln. rE 3-7542. H. Riggins. AVERILL'S Storewide | MU 4 Mercury Motors: Ymsti example at savings, aluminum 555. flberglas bo*t>. 1150, run-about flberglas. IS’ windshield, steering wheel $355. 1151 HARLEY 74. FREE TO OOOD HOME. FEMALE Tiger cat. about 3 moe. old. CsU FE 2-5575 aftor 3:30. LHASA APSO “I AUCTION SALE FRIDAY*™*1.™?. .7 P.M. SATURDAY ....7 P.M. SUNDAY ....2 P.M. NEW AND USED FURNmre.“i“AmItNu» IS? & °°°R PRIZ“ *V*Rt AUCTION Dellwoad off Hatehary, williams Lake. r 1 , FUPFIK8 AND KITTENS — ALL Fft Shop, M williams. FE 4A433 POODLES, 3 ISOS. BLACK AND apprleot. $58 to *100. I free puppy trim, brush and book/ In- elulicd. MA 9-1750. ’______ POODLES A N D_ POMERANIAN ----T~ ■“* df pedigree Call 1500 TRIUMPH MOTORCYCLES. Anderson Sale* * Service._ 330 E. Pike “ * “** 1955 TRIUMPH CORONET. 300 C electric starter extras. A-t so dltlon. Beet offer. PB 04715. 1950 TRIUMPH. TR-5 MA 5-2473 . WE REPAIR ALL B 6c B AUCTION 5069 DIXIE HWY. Luneh Room Open BveryAuetloh Aerate from Drayton Plain* New Shopping Center_ ‘.wj-M —« iv ft .»n Match this space lor Ty* Irr s Auction Sale Open-upchurch’b saddle boy at mg Soon. 705 W. Uarks-- Umit-d jew^ Am. pteid| to|^ j^oa(ji Lake Orion. 4RAEEETS ouar. to talk na REO. LAB RETRIEV*R. MALE, shot*, paper*. MA S-I570. RSOISTBRBD COLLIE PUPS FOR] . XOJ w. Momcsim Harlev* Davidson Sales k Service TRIUMPH THUNDERBIRD. 1151. 5SOCC. 5775. PE 5-3125 after For Sale Bicycles 96 1 INCH BOY’S ENOLI8H BIKE. 919. 50 8. Avery. _________ IRL’S BIKE. 20". OOOD CON- U8ED BICYCLES. 55 k UP. NEW bike*. U4.55 fe up. Over 100 to choose from. Scarlett a Bike and Hobb^Shop, » E. Lawrsncs, Boats and Accessories 97 MOTORS Clearance Sale Big Discount ON ALL Boats & Motors A COMPLETE SELECTION OP USED MOTORS AND USED BOATS 35’ C. C. COMMANDER LIES NBW 2-US’S. CALL OH THIS ONE I CAN BE SEEN AT MT. CLEMENS LIOHT HOUSE INN. GLABTRON PIBERGLAS PONTOON RAFTS FEATHER CRAFT__ and FREELAND ALUM. STERLING BOAT TRAILERS PROP 8BRVICX MARINE SUPPLIES MICHIGAN BOAT SERVICE. INC. BILL HICKSON, INC, 55S0 W. HURON______n 9-9941 -[SAIL BOAT FOR SALE. SAIL-IS l fish eln»*. I yr. old. lit 3*5551. ’56GMC ..........$5500 4-CYL. DIESEL TANDUM I "**» **»frp l»t* mooeui ror warn TRACTOR | Rjarket, ' , —top S^lar— I ’57 GMC • • • -________________________,.$595o! TOP DOLLAR tor •» to Uiodtto —* m age cars wanted lor out ^denier*. , v WFlT I’W GMC .........................$2750! >>«n Rfelf. EM ^ «s n» Lthii n-532 4-CYL. DIESEL 1954 CHEVROLET. HEATER AB- 4540 Dixie Hwy. Ph OR 34355 T , SOLUTKLY NO MONEY DOWN “7GH t POR LAT1 MODELI ’52 (»MC ....................$2450 Assbm« payment* of 917.0* per DP-752 4-CYL.' DIESEL' ST Ml“ 4^7500* 1 Ford. 2 CHEV R H . 9139. CHUCK S. 33dl_ Elisabeth Lk Rd_ 156 CHEVROLET 3-DR. BELAIR. Like new, 1 owner. EM 3A115. -i’57 GMC................ .$5950! J »-CYL. pnaiL TANDUM 2025 Dixie Hwy I J ■ TRACTOR PE_2-P57$__________PE 4-11548 ’53 GMC M7SAf‘i3^CilEV. 2 DOOR VERY GOOK^ $1395 Crissman $5 Down —- $5 Per Wk. i LLOYD VALIANT CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES Main St.. Clarkston MA 5-9141 Out where the overhead to low. Suburban OLDS ^ 1955 Ford Oalaxte, 3 door'hardtop. Black with hold top. V-9. Automatie. Power steering fe brakes. Dual spotlights. Radio fe Haworth * Seattle ■ MA 9-1403 See M & M Motor Sales I 2527 Dixie Hwj>. _____OR 3-1553 For Ssle Trucks 103 13 FT. WINDSHIELD. 8TEERINO. 1 Evlaruda motors. M year* —■* "“t* “ a " JehMdn. repg(r experience. 5W6 Orchard I Lake Rd.. FE 5-0112. _________ Registered. Call OR 3-7733 after j _ ~wi CAN iPURCHASE ANY FET POODLES $10 DOWN FE 5-3113. HUNTS, EASY TERMS Sale House Trailers 89 Trailer and eklle Inei FE 5-4870 after 5 p.m. IF RUNABOUT BOAT. tin engine. 550. FE________ 14' CEDAR STRIP BOAT. 535. PI 2-3333.___________________ 14 FOOT FAMILY SAILBOAT FOR Pop Trained, Boarded 80 ii,»: 1 ,AEC BEAOLE, MALE, 1 YUS. 1 English setter, female, 4 yrs., . and 1 cooker Labrador* i. FE 4-5M3. iter», ran. Aft< TCOON 1 Straight 1 fDOGS ___I doss with trial. Tear old walker pup*. MA 5-1911. OiRMAN SHORTHAIRBD POINT-er pupplea. AKC regtogered. field trhu (toiek. Also 314 yr. old male, 5BMlilMHAHHyU|Md able. HI 4-7470. tras, excellent condlt OR 4-0034. ir ALL METAL. CLEAN, BOTTLED gas and site trie. PB 2-4753. APACHE. TOUR-A-HOME CREE (The BIS Three), w* tUU have a large seltetlon to shoot* from. Several used travel trailers and used mobile homes to select from. ma: RINE AND COACH SALES. 15210 HOLLY RD., HOIXT. i« 4-rm TRSir REAM UaHTThBOHT Travel Trailer Slate 1913. Guaranteed for life So* them and |et s demonstration at Warner Trailer Sale* 3055 W. Huron. (Plan to Join one «f Wally Byaa’* *xett-ing caravans.' Hay, Praia amd Fflfld 82 2<> TEAR OLD BUCKSKIN FILLY With tack- Partly trained. Call KM 3-3333 alfetr ■ ‘ I GOOD YOUNO PONIES 1 Dapple mare. I yrs, old to foal. I sMttml mares. 4 and 9 yr In foal, trots to drive. 3 black S' ags. broke and' gentle OM . old registered stud. Sorrell, man* and toil. Larlgo breed- _ FT HOOTCTRAILBRS-1755 Goodell Trailer Sales ' 3305 SOUTH ROCHESTER RD. Jacobson’s -Trailer Sales and Rentals VaKa-ahun-Ette. smallest self-coutalned travel trailer on the service, hitches ,and 85591338* stalled. Compl -be dtobpnetnto liook-up. Don’t Lake Road, Drayton Plain*, OR 3-5|981, , £rr 98 SELL YOUR TRAVEL trailer or Mobile home for yon. We hive several buyers waiting for everything from 15 ft. to 55 ft. SUIT StARINK fe COACH jMtLlE^l*310 Holly Rd., HtOj. 9 FT. PIBERGLAS 48 MERCURY motor, light*, remote coo™- skits and trailer, 91155. PE 4 „ ARDTOCRAFT BOAT AND traitor. COtt 11399 - sacrifice for 5655. Call OR 34358. 39 nr~~OWKNg SKIFF EXPRESS, LOADED. SLEEPS 4, DEMO. LI8T8 *5.557 NOW. 54,500 WILL TRADE. MAZUREK MOTORS & MARINE SALES FRANCHISED OWENS DEALER Saginaw at South Blvd. If INBOARD. REEDS. BOTTOM. Gray Marina engine, fehosp. MY 3-9176. _______________ 3-i»4t-_____________________ SAVE $$$$ Big discounts on quality Boats—Motors—Trailers All kind* — AU sltea Easy budget terms Oakland Marine Exch. "Outboard Specialists" 351 8. Saginaw PE 8-4191 Opel Evsi SPECIAL Up tn 9* per seat discount on i! aluminum and flberglas boat! OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES 3*8 Orchard Labs’Art. _________PE 3-5528______ . Trailer. tSferaa. MA CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES U K. Walton Open M. FE 5-44I5 •OAT FOR lULE — tt *t: dflB-about, 25 H. F. Johnson iM., remote controls, etc. Must sen. MY_MW9. BOAT C L I A R A N C K - NEW, guaranteed 14 II. semi V, 13 Inch Seam. 31 Inch hew depth. II HP cap at III. Save MM an pontoon boat* $245 up. Over 33 boat* ft eaneei on diepby. we are overstocked and need money, our lot* to 'year gain bay tends BUI Colter Bosto fc Mo-' mils east -- - — - — — THE ONE AND ONLY 100% Boat Repairs EWElRK^ Soft ftHFROP 8ERV T rangportafn Offered 100 4 ENGINE AIRLINER. LOB AN-York. M0. Fdrry Service Inc. OR HEAVY DUTY TRUCKS 7 New '60 Ford F750s and F800s PRICE? They Have To Go MAKE US AN OFER — 50— NEW AND USED TRUCKS IN STOCK W* need good need track* and will pay or allow "Top Dollar tor Your Track.” EASY TERMS — SPOT DELIVERY Ask for Truck Dept. FE 5-4101 GMG I FN 1 7 I WHITE 1543 CORVAI Factory Branch I Suburban | SKS5 OLDS MOTORN5ALE8 232 J SAGINAW PE _L»I3t 1958 CHEVROLET 3 tSOQ^ RA- I lull-price 924 99 per mo . BlR-1 M1NGHAM - RAMBLER. 694 8.) WOODWARD_MI 8-3900 CORVAIR 4-DOOR 1 Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 1969 DODGE PICK UP . t«_ TOM, ^.n^ NcoMmlcal O eyllndVr I 4-speed transmission, tl76. V. \ gtreight stick Only 91495 Harrtt. PE 5-2766. _______| SUBURBAN - OlDSMOBILE ■52 FORD DUMP. HEAVY DUTY ; 5*2 B. Woodwsrd Birmingham | rear end. MY 3-3046. 1 _________ML_4a4M___________ CHEVIE. 9 PASSENGER 8TA-**8l' 3^1 • older ( CHEVROLET 1*54. 2 TON CAB and ebaetto, 1*3 In. wheel base. , 2-speed axle, good cond, reas.. I . equity_. , LI 1-3327 after 5 p.m. MI 6-5848. ; 1*54 CHEVY. Bit AIR. POWER-BEFORE YOU BUY A NEW or. gild*. *255. Phone OR >2565. used truck get our prlee. Ask for j ’59 CHEVROLET truek dept. FE MIN. Cr Owens. BROOKWOOD STATION WAOON. Inc. ______________________ 4 DR. AUTO. TRANS, BEAU- ■56 FORD H TON PICK-UP. 8 FT. I TIFUL TWO TONE FINISH box, automatie transmission. Eh I 616*5 _ c«u*»[ condition, FE.5N47. | VanCamn Chevrolet. Tnc. aND,CHA88I8 I MILFORD ___________MU 4-5225 ’59 CHEVROLET BEL AIR. 2 DR SEDAN Power Steering, * Power Brakes. V-S. Auto. Trans.. . ----- ---- CONDITION $1845 XT r A.7VM) __irrH nootiE inc ! *Y11 n r Juu 3-7055.________ 155 CHEVROLET SEDAN. HEATER ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Assume payments of 917.M per WILSON pontiac-cadillAc CLEAN Birmingham Trades 1350 N. ' ———j Woodward • | BIRMINGHAM_MI 4-1930 Close-Out Sale L _ DF.MOS AND CO. CARS | J_/IVi.V_^ Automatic transmission. This is ilk* brand new. I1.SM. OR 11 daytime, or Mutual 4-5931 1% TON CHEVY, I box. 6 now tires •51 Ford Pickup % t ’*1 Inti Plekun 1 tn ECONOMY 4 r" dTEEL I JOHN J. SMITH DODGE INC $1695 Harold Turner, Inc. 464 S. Woodward 1 JO 4-6266 22 AUBURN | 1953 OMC SUBURBAN 4 SPEED | hydrematlc. Excellent for hunting and fiehlng. Has good rosd 1 clearance. In excellent shape, gale Price *245. No money down, i 814.95 per mo. BIRMINGHAM-RAMBLER, 964 8 WOODWARD Ml 4-3650. FOR SALE OMC PICK-UP, OOOD , condition. UL 2.1042. Lit* green fe Ivory finish with whit* Ur**. An excellent vtlue. $895 Crissman .. Call ( MI 4- OLIVER'S Sacrifice SALE I Transportation Specials 1 FOR DO-IT-YOURSELF MECHANICS MODEL Hardtop __ Hardtop ... 1957 DODGE Vk TON PICKUP — -Good rubber. Runs Ukt new. 9*95.! STOCK NO RAMMLER-DALLAS M.g 1001 Main St. OL 2-0111 I 13) (M Mtrcui. -----------1 139 '»• Rambler Amerlcai ' “ Plymouth Sedan “ ‘‘ i Ht. 'Cy' Owens - REO - • AUTHORIZED DISTRIBUTOR TRUCK MART Superior Equipment Co. 538 Oakland Avenue - Ponttae BIGHT SERVICE - USED TRUCKS ___________________— 1808 CHERRY HILL ROAD 5 TON MACK 13 YARD DUMP YPSILANTT. MICHIOAN bos, EM 3-4179.______ HU 3-4779 “Call Collect MO 3-3474 TRUCK OOINO NORTH PART load etOsar way. FE 5-4544 Waattd Uifld Cart 101 ATTENTION WE'KE'FJrtnMfl' j TOP $$$ DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS > Glenn’s Motor Sales t *53 W. await St. - FE 4-7271 | DEPENDABLE USED CARS “ HARDENBURQ MOTOR SALES ----1 Pike___ PE 5-73*4 SCHRAM TRUCKS AND EQUIPMENT 253* Dixie Hwy._OR 3-1258 I 1 ’58 CHEVROLET to TON PICKUP | * foot utility boa. Tory superb _ condition Solid turquoise flnleh. f-radlo snd heater. Spar* never d'W*‘ . $1395 Truck Parts 103A Auto Insurance TOR MOST C . _ 120 FOR 8 MONTHS i PE 4-3*38 SALE I960 Olds 98 CONVERTIBLE FULL POWER $3495 1960 Olds IMPALA. 4 DR. I IT V-l POWEROUOB $2495 1960 Olds 88 HOLIDAY COUPE HYDRA.. RADIO and HEATER $2595 1960 Chev. PARKWOOD STATION WAGON 4-DOOR. V-S, AUTOMATIC $2695 1960 Chev. PARKWOOD STATION WAGON 4-DOOR, 5UYUNDER. AUTO. $2495 OLIVER SHELTON TAYLOR'S ; 1954 Oldsmobll* .. 9200 : 1957 Plymouth . 19* I 1963 Ford Station Wagon . $1*5 It Houghten i 6c Son j ig Your Frlendlv Oldsmoblle Detier if f 535 N. Main. Rochester OL 1-9751 I TAX* advanoaoe —------------------------ I •stocked condition. ACT We’re getting ready for I ONES The ’*1 BUICK her* shortly and the used car pricer —* “■* 172 '58 Wlllya Pickup 173 ’5* Bulck * * 153 ’48 Wlllya_____ 157 ‘57 Chevrolet 2 Dr. Ml *58 Bulck Super 201 ’54 Bulck Century . 212 ’It Pontiac I Dr. ... 31* ’58 Ford 2 Dr. . 881 ’58 Bulck 4 Dr....... 240 ’5* Bulck 1 Dr....... 371 ’B Plym. Convert. . 278 ’*d Buick Wagon . 285 '97 Bulck Hardtop . 358 ’** Butr*- LOOK! BUY! SAVE! PRICE I -go Bonneville 4-dr H-top 532*5 *1*5 I '40 Dart Pioneer 4-dr. wagon 924*5 1795 J '*7 Bulck J-dr. H-top. Dyn 913M $12*5 ! '54 DeSoto 2-dr "if-top. Auto. 14*5 *W* f >54 Pontiac Bta wagon. Hyd. *895 t**5 t 'go Pont. Ventura 4-dr H-top 92*95 94*5 i 'se ponttae Cat. 2-dr. RftH ll**s Bulck Eleetra 4-dr H-top 93*95 - ----- * H-top *1795 economy 91395 r. H-top $10*5 [-top Hyd. 9*95 r. lLTr- X Bulck Spec, ,, J* Opel 3-dr _ | '56 Bulck Spec. t Hardtop . FIDENCE AT . oe nuicg spec. •• -96 Ponttae 2-dr.----■ ------ - ***? ‘55 Bulck Super 2-dr. tf-top 1 i >5* Ponttae Cat. 4dr. H4op 62395 t*M '5* Bulck Elect. 4-dr. H-top *25*5 • ■ HE! '57 Chevy 4-dr P-gltde, RAH 9M5 • 55*51 '5* Ford Oalaxte Mr. H-top 52095 •Ilf? ’5* Old* "**•’ 4-dr. H-top 529*5 62*5 '57 Bulck Court. All power . *12*5 *97 Ford Oust. 3-dr Extra* 9195 Vl ’56 Chevy Impala 2-dr H-top 916*5 ---- ‘67 Mereury Mr Mereo .... 611*5 CON- -9* Bulck LaSabre 4-dr 92305 I -67 Peottae 8-Chief safari *1405 ’51 Chery Impala Convt. 54 Ford Croi --------- rt-yi Foreign and Spt. Cars 105 J DATUITCTI.’D i SL* domeatle and foreign ear*. / KUCHJLMiLK PB 9-OOet. 773 Baldwla Avenue, OPEN EYES. TIL • OL, 3-9731 Ponttae. Motor Sales 310 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-0101 T , Open Eve , BUICK J ) RENAULT OPEL JEEP1* Ponti 1 Rochester :iac - Buick I r OL 1-8133 chevrolet-oldsmoMle OPEN EVENINGS MARKET 4-4SRI walled LAKE FIFTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, I960 ~ Ft $ri» Cf» 106 5S .4 FORD >C'*«a. S Mi» lari Btori. et Awbura •si FORD WITH w aif. IN A-l shape. PE 8 1313 kitei ‘m* rojj~ Waoow^ovekdiuve For Sole Cars 106 GOOD CARS »-*» CADILLACS HT AND 4-DR ■ '55 HO, very nice. *56 Chrysler Convertible 3 Pontlacs. 'S1- SS- S3 *M Ford 8-Dr Wagon 3 '55 Chevy* 3 Packards '56-'»-'M '56-'57 Volkswagen •M Dodge pash button _*5» ciievv Impale I •58 Ford-O-Matic | '57 Mercury HT •53 Cadillac HT For, Sale Cars MY DADDY SAYS: Fpr Sale Cars 1061 For Safe Cars 106 I Ramblers ^ Ramblers Price* slashed Big discount. AB model* In stoek-Ruy nop and Just Make Payments Id PLYMOUTH. 5355 ’ay only 532 mo. Du* Oct. 1 Rite Auto. Mr. Bell. FE 8-4635 , ... rSffifFrSi RACRAMBtp STEERING. PADDED D A 8 H. I EM J.4.M1re—mmwm ‘“n «« tone PAINT. POLL 1 jcroNOMT!CARB"*33'^PBDR H __________ r55 FORD \DN WATON. VERY rOR -SALE: 1555 MERCURY good. Chuck's. 3551 EUsabeth Lk. j hardtop, good condition. $550. MA e offer •54 FORD, STATION WAGON. CON-alder trade. EM 34581. S. Conway, [ 53-pGRD-VICTORrA. Y-6.-»hH. • - ™ ™ .....—....... | Call MA 0-1141 alter ». ________ , -57 FORD CUSTOM « F DOOR. H Like new Inside ft out. New WW llo tires. New brake*. Auto, trans. rpj RAH. $750: Pvt. FE 5-2110. ^ IT'S A DEAL WITH STEELE! >5 MERCURY 8 Doer Hardtop Bright Are engine Ml. Almost new W Walla. All this ■ tor MM. SraELE°,F5RDf*r«i5 Orchard w?>?LLjeb ** P0BMA ® fe^FE^i^. W‘ W,4t PRICE $1,395 1 block south of M55. . _ _______1c transmission, r« and hentor. Surf Blue. A sb Birmingham trade. $1555 MY DADDY SAYS: IT^A DEAL REPOSSESSION I I 1957 Ford, hardtop Fairlane 6#0. no rust Full price $1,095. Take! . over small monthly payments J First payment due October 4th. 1 ittog Mr Btn*. FE 4-1006. Lucky k‘ ) Auto Sales. 193 S Saginaw_ FORD. 1657 2-DOOR.~ RADIO AND ! heater automate transmission,.$ * •57 MERCURY 9 PASS. COMMUTER STATION wagon Power 8teering, Radio, AND WITH 38,908 ACTUAL MILE! $1,295 BRAID Gleaming blue umsn, new man* i I h“,Ad “ LOOK THIS OVER B.95&,IN£r, . I '57 Btudebaker, V4 station wagon, *** §■,, M>to- MUMM, MU 4-171$ copper and w h 11 », automatic '40 PONTIAC CATALINA VISTA. transmlalton. beater, white wall one cdlid- OR 3-8908. i WW, '53 PONTIAC STATION WAGON. 9- ClarKStOn Motor StlCS pass Hydra., RAH. >150 OR 3-4194 CHRY8LER-PLYMOUTH BtAI.gR •90 PONTIAC CATA. 4-DR. 12595 Main. 84.. CTarkston MA 4-4141 •57 Bulck Special 4-Dr. JMop —' " 1 Just Make Pavmertts' 'S3 OLDS. HT ,” 1125 iv only $7 mo. Due Oct. Rite Auto Mr BeU. PE M639 HARDENBURO MOTOR BALES Corner Casa ft Pike FE 5-7358 _ Open Ews U1 9 059 PONTIAC 3-DR. SEDAN, j 11.925. ] 4-3559. BOB FROST. INC WITH STEELE! •56 THUNDERBIRD CooyerttbU I H.mSrD.n*lheD°fodd 'urss^and rS^tS^r. s: jswmi _______- Low down payment! EDDIEj;geo paLCON 4 DR AUTOMATIC STEELE FORD. 2705 Orchard r. * R . white walla, deluxe trim. Lake Rd.. FE 32529 , 3275 West just Uke new 1980 Falcon. 3 dr.. Huron. FE 5-3177. heater, only 9300 ml, excellent condition. H J. Van Welt, Deal-—■-------------------------1 , Fh. OR 3-1355 PMMmH Radio at heater. 1 owner. OR 34371, *33 FORD 3 WINDOW COUPE,] NO MOIST DOWN ® %rh*BK>attMrnF'UOS AND CO. CARS 8 OLDS.” 3_DR. HARDTOP. DEL j *** ■ .I*****!: l„t*rWir *-tnn. Stow W W. 1108 U“ *° “* Keego Sales & -Service ; Keego Harbor ___ '50 PONTIAC CATALINA.' 2 DOOR hardtop sharp. ’5d Chevy, j -* FE 4-023V or 755 N. Perry i . Joalyn. • '.. •53 OLDS. 'HAROTOP, 1250 BEST otter. FE 4-4171. k.„ I860 OLDSMOBILE SUPER FIESTA station wagon. 2 tone: bronae and betge. 3.543 mUea, heavy duty hydramatic. Full power, anti-spin dttterentlal. Over tiae white wall tires. Super deluxe radio. Deluxe heater end.defroster Factory Installed utggege. rack. Many other extra*. Full warranty. Sat# 11,380. FISCHER BUICK, INC 806 8. WOODWARD AVE. Ml 4-9100 JO 4-6424 1941 FORD, 2-DOOR IN GOOD; condition. Just bad recent paint job. 975. HU 44921 or con be, seen at 2595 Wtxom Rd. full power. FE 2-681 $1695 Harold Turner, Inc. 464 S. Woodward MI 4-7500 ’ JO 4-6266 j 210. V-8 win trade- Webb'i '54 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN. POWER brakes and steering. 9120. MA 5-2370. 1954 PONTtAc, RADIO A HEAT1R. HYDRAMATIC. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments Of 119.09 per md. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Parka at MI 4-3500. Harold Turner Ford. McrbLgggroW.7toL%cAt7imL POlrftAC STAR CHAp-CON; er' 81>arp' »3M. FE 4-74W._t v*rtibft. Hydra , reasonable. Call 1953 OLDSMOBILE, RADIO ft | FE 2-2354. .. ; heater. nesdsUttlec^nework. , -50. 4 DOOR PONTIAC. OOOD CON- ;tle engine _ _____________ BIRM1NGHAM- RAMBLER. 966 S. WOODWARD. Ml 6-3900. $5 DOWN •50 FORD CUSTOM V-8. 4 DOOR.! JSujprte?^ oTeNN?S MOTOR. *caM^sfter WMdonR? SALES, 952 W. HURON 8T. FE 4 30' 8,64 Waldon Rd, 4-7371. I ----------------- lAcross From Huron Theater) j 1BS7 FORD "100" CONVERTIBLE. FORD -54 3 DR. VI STICK. OOOD Y-8 engine. Fordomatit dltion. After 4 p.m.' FE>2787 ,r54 PONTIAC1. R ft H. 32.000 AO-Jual mllei. shsrp. 99 Mt Clemen*. 1868 BONNEVILLE^TATION WAO-_oiL_ltke new._OR 3-7555. 1959 PONTIAC, CATALINE~VIST A, power steering, brakes, hydra-matte, 69 8. Avery. Elisabeth •59 PONTIAC, 2 DOOR STARCHIEP after 5 p.m . FE 1 MY DADDY SAYS: steering, red trim. One owner. | Birmingham trade. Only 91295. ~ NORTH CHEVROLET CO, 1000 I 8. WOODWARD. BIRMINGHAM. Suburban OLDS 1959 Olds Super M. Convertible, j -3’7U3-- Power steering ft brakes. Radio ft heater. Whitewall tires. Me- ’« PONTIAC ^SUBURBIA N^OLD^fioBILE ! NATION WAGON 592 8. Woodward Birmingham , 8*l"‘ 4 ^o® 1954 OLDS. 55. RADIO ft HEATER. I. Ford-1 ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY; n»«— . DOWN. Afttume payments of $10.06 per mo. Call Credit ICgr. ! _____ T^ri«”’ta"paV i Mr Pmr^s at MI 4-7500. Harold,. GLENN'S MOTOR SALES, >$31 Turner Ford. ____I HURON ST. FE 4-7371. j '« OLDSMOBILE 55 DELUXE. 2- $1495 V.Walls. Turning Signals, Under IT’S A DEAL WITH STEELE! •59 FALCON 2 Door Solid White. Badlo ft Heater and all equip-' ment. 10 per cent down EDDIE' STEELE FORD. 3705 Orchard Lk., St'Z&v”"* *”* WM‘ Hur00, dove Wasbe're;™Neir FE 6-3177. cowl. 8170 Paulsen c. JIPMWW -11550. FORD 2 DOOR. R * H.-FIR8T *** e^momh '53/52 Chryt* ___ » From Huron Theater) _ I FORD 2 DR VS CUSTOM-‘ * ' Heater. Win- I . MI; They Must Go! 535 takes It ( 1566 FORD 8 DOOR, RADIO AND; Lk Rd hentor, whites very clean. 5595,------1----- MU price 936.99 per mO. BIRMINGHAM - RAMBLER, 869 8. •WOODWARD, MI 0-3000_____________ OUR Biacfest Sale EVER! STARTS FRIDAY AUGUST 26 AT MY DADDY SAYS: IT’S A DEAL WITH STEELE! 58 FORD F-Lane 2 door 500 H-Top. Easy to buy at 11491. Only ilJSX EDDIE ’steIle FORD. 3799 Orchard Lake Rd, FE 2-2529; 3278 Weat Huron, FE 5-3177. I *52 Plymouth 3k Oids —..... •53 Dodge .......... •48 Cadillac comnletely OH. ! ’SO—‘53—'52 Ramblers . 6155 ] $5 Down — $5 Per \Vk. "LLOYD hard toVPPVlillWm pn.i^rse, one. Up to thirty months t< 81295 fUU price. ’WIJNCOLN Premier Hsrdtop. full power, elec trie door locks, nsw llres. tintei Riga*, a real savings oil. this bt, ear/ 52350. ^ Larry Jerome ROCHESTER FORD DEALER ECONOMY CARS. 22 AUBURN . REPOSSESSION ft56 Plymouth. 4 door. Full price 6455 Only 527 month. No cash needed. First payment due September 23rd Ring Mr. Bing. FE 1 4-1006 Lucky Auto 8ales. 193 8. r PONTIAC 4 DOOR, HT. OR Suburban • OLDS 1955 gtudebaker Champion. 4 doot sedan, g cylinder, overdrive. Ex eeptkmaUv clean. Excellent run nine condition. 5355. . SUBDR BAN-OLD8MOBILE 552 8. Woodward Birmlngban ■ Ml 4-4456 1555 8TUDEBAEER 3-DOOR 8E dan. • cylinders, standard shift Look! Only $695. NORTH CHEV ROLET CO, 1090 8. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM,. MI 4-2725. Just Makfr faymentg ’65 PONTIAC. $165 ay only $11 mo. Du# Oct. Rite. Auto. Mr. Bell. FE $-5535 IPS East Bivd. at Auburn . HASKINS SPECIALS 1958 Chevrolet Impala Moor hardtop, V-6 engine, radio, beater, powergitde. Dower brakes, power steering. Ltk$-new condition throughout. 1957 Chevrolet 210 2-door sedan. V-S engine, powergtlde. radio, heater. Beautiful red and Ivory dto. heater, ltke-new Bulck 2-door sedan. Radio, HASKINS CHEVROLET CO. 0751 Dixie Hwy. at MIS, Clarkston MA 5-5071 Open mtes ’til t Suburban OLDS 195$ OldsOtpbUe. 98 Holiday coupe 4-wav power, exceptionally clean, low-jnileage ear.. 51106. sUburban-oldsmobile 92 8. Woodward Birmingham LINCOLN PREMIERE. '59 4-DR^ full power, factory air condl-tioned No rust Must sec to ap predate. 51300. MA 9-7142. LARKS TERRIFIC DEALS NOW MERCURY. 1956 2-DR. HARDTOP. Automatic transmission, radio and heater. Black and white. Up to thirty months to pay. 9795. BOB FROST, INC. V CARJL0TJ8B_J-79J1.________ 15*7 PLYMOUTH 4 DR NO RUST, extra clean - and good condition. FE' 4-2190.________________ Just Make Payments . ’$2 FLY, 2-DR.'tS95 Pay only $37 mo. Due Oct. 1 Rite Auto. Mr. BeU, FE 8-4539 195 East Bird, at Auburn 1956 PLYMOUTH, 6 feYLINDfS. suck, heat and _mu»lc. clean tn- RAmiLER^DALLAS toot Main St,___ OL 9-5111 1955 PLYMOUTH 2 DOOR. PULL price 1116. B1RMINOHAMR AMBLER. 665 8. WOODWARD MI I A3*??____ PLY -60. 4-DR. SUB. V6. RftH. I Chry. exec. MI 6-3200. _ I '53 PLYMOUTH, EXCELLENT condition, stick. RftH. EM 3-0041, S, Conway. _______ I-barrel carburetor. ____ wall tires, rear teW speaker. all courtesy lights, excellent condl-tlont ji. $00 MY 3-5661. ^ 1959 PONTIAC CATAUNA COtT vertlble, white walls, power steer> Ing and brakes. OR 3-9023. 1900 VENTURA 2 OR. HARO TOP. Hy dramatic, radio, heater, power •teertns and brakes, o-s-eye glass. Many extras. 9 000 mile*. Blue and white. OR 3-0500. '58 PONTIAC BOfiNBVlLLE CON-vert. Red and white beauty, tow mileage, PE 5-8315 after t. '58 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN CON-vertlble. Power windows sod brake*. Corvette floor shift. Mint condition. tlH3. FE 4-2554 or OR OUT ' THEY GO! AT DEALER COST VALIANT PLYMOUTH DE SOTO Liberal Trade Allowance BANK RATES SCHUTZ \motor8. me. 91S S Woodward, B’ham Midwest 6-5300 FISCHER FOR BUICK - 1960s -SAVE MONEY NOW — UP TO — $1500 I960 Buick Invicta 4-DOOR HARDTOP, CORDOVAN AND BEIOE I960 Buick Electa 225 CONVERTIBLE. 1559 MILES I960 Buick Electa 225 6-WAY WINDOW. HARDTOP, LOADED WITH EXTRAS 11 "I960 Buick Demos" "1960 Buicks, Used" ALL CARRY FULL NEW CAR WARRANTY FISCHER BUICK, INC. 808 S. Woodward, Birmingham MI 4-9100 IQ 4-6424 8ALE8 171 8. SAGINAW, 1956 POftTIAC 8 DOOR HARDTOP, radio, automatic, whites. $595 full price, 829.99 per mo. No money down. BIRMINOHAM-RAMBLER. 868 8. WOODWARD. liP 8-3990. 60 PONTIAC CATALINA CONV. Power accessories, ”• **“* E 8-7589. A beautiful light g •58 PLYMOUTH STATION WAOON. ; 2-door OR 3-0953 or PE 2-3721. FOR BALE: ’51 PLYMOUTH 4 DR; Matthews-Hargreavesj | Chevrolet Ear"' REPOSSESSION • i Mereury hardtop, beautiful1 and white finish $495 full price. Pay only 527 month. No —sh needed. First payment due I ‘ 'th Ring Mr. Bing. FE ____ Lucky Auto Sales, 153 8.; Saginaw:__ 154 M E Rfc UB Y MONTEREY hardtop, radio ft heater, auto-: —... ----8245 No--------- 1559 Pontiac convertible, power steering and brakes. Full price 67.495. As little aa 6109 down. Flint payment due September 30th Ring Mr, Bing. FE 4-1004, Lucky Auto Bates, 191 8. Saginaw r extras. Lew mileage. >56 RAMBLER AMERICAN, 2 door, radio ft hekter, whites. 555 down, $21.36 per mo. BIRMINOHAM-RAMBLER 658 8. WOODWARD. MI 5-3500. WHILE THEY LAST! New 1960 Chrysler REDUCED FROM ' 53,722.10 TO $3,037 Includes Torque FUte Power ----- windshield wash- walls, undereqat-rtpers. wheel cov- Steering, be* ing, electric ers podded da. ___ Sales tax and license - RAMMLER-DALLAS 001 N. MAIN ROCHESTER _________OL 2-9111________ THE BIGGEST "Barrage Of Bargains" IN OUR HISTORY See Tomorrow’s ‘ GIANT CLASSIFIED AD MORE VALUE IN STORK THAN EVER BEFORE The BIG, BIG Lot - 631 Oakland Ave, OAELAND COUNTY'S LARGEST CHEVROLET DEALER FE 4-4547 v ’60 FALCON 2-DOOR $1795 ’59 THUNDERBIRD 2-DOOR $2845 ’59 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR $1195 ’55 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR $595 'Cy' Owens! 539 OAKLAND AVENUE Back To School Time SHEP'S CAN AFFRD TO DRIVE ONV OF THESE GUARANTEED RECONDITIONED BEAUTIES. I PLYMOUTH, HARDTOP. RADIO ft HEATER. AUTOMATIC. V-S. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of $21.05 per mo. Catf'Credit Mur. Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500. Harold Turner 'MY DADDY SAYS: T ITS A DEAL | WITH STEELE! I1 WE HAVE A l$fti PLYMOUTH S Door Red paint and really for only $?$$ — $$9 down EDDIE * ’57 Pontiac Station Wagon — 4-door STEELE, 2705 Orchard Lake Rd a ! $*P*a»«nger — Radio and heater FE 2-252$; 3275 West Huron, FE Hydramatlc. W-walls. A red and I 5.3177. white Jewell. Low down payment. I 2^DOOR j tr!n*nfce Stoc^^No* lfiM^ Only ! I $l*$5 NORTH CHEVROLET CO. * I 1000 8 WOODWARD BIRMINO- ' HAM MI $-2735. 1 t59 PLYMOUTH WAOON. RAH' SPECIALS '59 Pontiac Catalina 4-door. Hydramatlc. Radio add beater. White-walls. Beautiful blue. Low down payment. '57 Pontiac. 4-door sedan. Black with toned Insert. Hydra., radio. c 2-door Hardtop. Hydra-radio. heater, whitewall tone paint. A little jewel. 1654 Chevrolet 2 dr. sedan. 6 160 1555 Packard 2 dr. hardtop 5 MS ' '. Starchlef I 245 HAUPT PONTIAC CLARKSTON M15 one mile north of U.S. M Open Eves. rntU 9 t 2 dr. hardtop....62095 '55 CHEVY 4-door •57 chevy Wagon 4h '55 OLDS 4-door 8up« '56 FORD F-Lane 4-door I '56 PONTIAC 4-door - ■'55 FORD 2-door | 55 CHEVY B-Air H •65 PONTIAC 8-Chle. ■ . / 54 FORD Custom 4-door . '54 PONTIAC 4-door sedai i -53 CHEVY B-Alr 4-door '53 FORD 2-door '32 HUDSON 4-door "DEMOS" 5 Btudebaker Lark 4 Dr.. tUSt ._ . s*. ... ^ . v „ „ . 1960 Pontiac Bonneville 6 Bulck LeSabre 2 Dr. Hard- CONVERTIBLE, power steering and °P I brakes. New 6ar Warranty, 81,000 5 Old* 66 6 Dr. Hardtop...! 715 dl,counl1 s Plymouth 4 Dr. sedan. Auto- ‘ 1960 Ambassador uatlc transmission .6 545 STATION WAQON. power steering 1 —1 brakes. New Car Warranty. 005 discount! 1960 Starchief 1 Dr. Hardtop. Exe.! BRAND NEW, 2-door sedan, loaded. ! 1555 Pontiac H-T Shep's Motor Sales FE 8-4J07 1 Oxford. M»sh, HOMER HIGHT MOTORS *T5 Minutes From Pontiac'* Russ Johnson ! Motor Sales LAKE ORION MV 2-2871 MY 2-2381 1 H - ^ RUSS JOHNSON AT LAKE ORION ON ALL NEW 1960 MODELS! SAVE UP TO $800 ON BRAND NEW CARS. COME IN! TAKE YOUR CHOICE OUT OF STOCK 1960 Bonneville Convertible SAVE $1,000 POWER STEERING AND BRAKES. 1960 Starchief ............. .SAVE $800 2-DOOR SEDAN. LOADED! I BRAND NEW. I960 Starchief o............. \.. POWER STEERINO AND BRAKES. 6.000 MILES. $2995 I960 Rambler American .......$1795 . SUPER WAOON. 5.000 MILES. I960 Rambler Ambassador............ WAOON. POWER STEERINO AND BRAKES. mponstrators At Bargains' .$2995 "Den "Used Car Bargains Galore?" '57 Buick 4-DOOR Full Fewer $1495 '56 Pontiac SEDAN ^ Automatic Transmission Sharp! $595 '56 Pontiac STARCHIEF HARDTOP One Owner $995 '55 Ford '56 Buick $599 $599 '57 Buick 4-DOOR SPECIAL $1195 RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES' 2 LOW OVERHEAD LOCATIONS North Broadway at Shadbolt "Pontiac Division" MY 2-2871 . M-24 at Shadbolt "Rarftbler Division" MY 2-2381 FORD DEMONSTRATOR SALE Beautiful, low mileage cars* like new, specially priced to move now I 1960 GALAXlE S-CYLINDER TOWN SEDAN. Corintolaa W^te white ttrec, Ford-O-Matic. radio, beater, wind shield washers, pedded d5i3 ylseta. wh6rf9QTera.peier to6er§w_8nd fcraMA back-up lights, electric clock, aljr ejeaner, oU filter, outride mirror, udereoet. IT’S THE BOSS’ CAR. 1960 FALCON 4-DOOR BELMONT BLUE, deluxe trim, radio, heater, Ford-O-Matic, outside mirror, undercoat. A NICE ONE! 1960 GALAXlE ' BEAUTIFUL CLUB SEDAN. AeyHnder engtoa. JW* finish, radio, hentor, washers, wheel coven, back-up Tight*, electric eleek. air etoaner, oU filter tad undercoat. A REAL DREAM BOATI 1960 FAIRLANE 4-door 4-CYLINDER. Ford^-MaUc, heater, washsre. a^ cleaner, oU filter, undercoat. A CAR YOU'LL BE PROUD MANY OTHER LOW MILEAGE DEMOS NOT LISTED HERE1 USED CAR DEPARTMENT 1957 FORD 4-Dr. Country S«lan ...... . .11145 6-PAS8ENOER, 8-cyltnder. Ford-O-Matic. radio and heater. Don't pasa up thla sharp earl 1955 FORD Fairlane Club Coupe--- v.$ 695 FORD-O-MATIC. radio, heater, power steering, green and white finish. Thla ear mutt be seen to be appreciated. 1959 CHEVROLET Bel Air 2-Door....$1545 DON'T OVERLOOK Our 30 Years of Selling Dependable Used Cars and Dependable Service BEATTIE MOTOR SALES, INC. “Your FORD Dealer Since 1930” AT THE 8TOPLIOHT IN WATERFORD 5806 DIXIE HIGHWAY OR 3-1291 'Service and Parts Dept. Open 'til 9 p.m. Daily ‘SAFE-BUY LLOYD MOTOR SALES LINCOLN — MERCURY — COMET ENGLISH FORD * ’60 FALCON 4-DOOR 8BDAN Automatic transmission, radio, heater and whitewall*. Deluxe $1795 ’59 MERCURY 2-DOOR SEDAN emaUe transe ' $1895- ’59 ENGLISH FORD - 2-DOOR Healer and whitewalls. Nlae. $2195 ’59 CHEVROLET BI8CAYNX 2-DOOR Radio, heater and whitewalls. $1395 ’59 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN 4-Door v-6. Automatic transmission, radio, heater, white-wails and power steering. One "”'$1995 ’58 LINCOLN CAPRI HARDTOP 2-Door. Automatic transmission, radio, heater, whit*walla, power steering and brakes. like new. Obe owner. $2095 •57 PLYMOUTH walls. Ntee earl $895 '59 FORD / - AIR LANE 2-DO V-6. Automatic traniml Extra idee I $1695 ’58 EDSEL CITATION 4-DOOR taUe transmission, ri r. whitewalls, power si $1395 *57 PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP natlc tranr - $1095 ’57 FORD ■ ■ CUSTOM VDOCML 300 4-CyUnder. Standard transn slon. e'drtva, radio and heat One owner. $995 $895 LLOYD MOTOR SALES 232 S.v SAGINAW FE 2-9131 tot ^imad pbk'ss. thtjksday. auguS^ m, mo —Today's Television Programs- - fw|— *F rtsOsne it —I— u> sabjasi to cfcaag* wMbant nan • oto-i umnvrt omm 4-wwj-tf cbuei i-wximv ciuuhh »-oklwtv~ tonights tv highlights B99 (2) Movie (beau at S p.m.) (4) Trackdown. CD Newe, Wee., Sports. (9) Popeye. (56) Consumer vi. Market. <:U (7) Naas, nil (4) Weather. 9iM (2) (4) Newt, Weather. (7) Undersea Service. (9) This Is Alice. (56) Neve Magazine. cm (2> News Analyst (4) Sports., CM (2) (4) News, Sports. (56) Redo* With Royalty. 7:09 (2) Tiger Baseball, t -(4) Mich. Outdoors. (7) Adventure Playhouse. (9) Huckleberry Hound. (56) Escape From Cage. 7:10 (2) Baseball (began at 1 p.m.) • (4) Law d Plainsman. (7) Steve Cmyrn. (9) Movie. Ava Gardner, 'Who Went, to the Races," cm (56) Anthropology. CM (2) Baseball (began at 1 p.m.) (4) Bat Masterson. (7) Donna Reed. (9) Movie (began 7:90 p.m) 8: SO (2) Baseball (began at p.m.) (4) Bachelor Father. (7) Jeannie Carson Show: (9) Wrestling. 9:80 (2) Baseball (begu at fJE) (4) Wrangler. (7) Untouchables. (9) Wrestling (coot) CM (2) Baseball Scoreboard. 1CM (2) Adventure Theater. (4) The Best Of Groucho. (7) Uttouchables (cant) (9) News. 1C1I (9) Weather. 1CM (9) Telescope, 1I:M (2) Tell the Truth. (4) Phil Silvers. (7) Sllents Please. (9) News. 1CM (9) Hazel Path Race Results. 10: M (9) Movie. William Powell, "Another Thin Man," (’39). U:M (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports. (7) Racket Squad. 11:16 (2) Movie. Ginger Rogers, Rogers, Fled Astaire, "Dot-low the Fleet” (16). il:M (4) Jack Pear Show. Cl) Flight. FRIDAY MORNING (2) Movie. 9:91 (7) Exercise. Faye Elizabeth. ltlM (4) Dough Re ML (7) News. laU (7) Heartthrob Theater. (9) Billboard. Mttt (9) Ding Dong School. (7) Hows ot Fashions. (4) Play Your Hunch. ID 99 (4) (color) Price Is Right (2) 1 Lobe Lucy. * (7) Divorce Hewing. (9) Romper Room. Iltll (4) Concentration. (2) Clear Hqpiaon. t (7) Topper. FRIDAY AFTERNOON 19:96 CD Love ot Life. (4) Troth or Consequences. (7) Reads— Gun. (9) Cartoon Classics. 1:19 (2) Search lor Tomorrow. (4) (cder) It Could Be You. (7) Love That Bob. (9) Terry Toon Time. 19:46 (2) Guiding Lfeht. (9) News. 1:99 (2) Our Miss Brooks. (4) Bold Journey. CD About Faces. TV News and Reviews 9: M CD Fwews. 9:M (2) Meditation. 9:99 (2) On tbs Farm Front. 7:99 (2).TV College. (4) Today. (7) Breakfast Time. 7:99 (2) Felix the Cat. f:M CD Johnny Ginger. 9:11 (2) Captain KengMoo. 8:80 (7) Stage 3. 9:99 (4) I Married Joan. .■IS (9) Movie. 1:99 (2) As World Tone. CD Ufa ot Riley. 9:99 ») Medic. (4) Queen for * Day. CD Day in Court ■ 9:99 (2) House Party. (4) Loretta Young. CD Gate. Storm. (9) Home Fair. ... 8:00 (2) Millionaire. (4) Young Dr. Malone. CD Beat the Clock. (9) Movie. 1 8:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours. (4) From The— Roots. (7) Who Do You Trust. (56) Escape From the Cage. (2) Brighter Day. (4) Thin Man. (7) American Bandstand. 4:99 (2) Edge of Night (4) Buckskin. , (9) Robin Hood. 9:99 (2) Movie. .CD Johnny Ginger. (4) (color) George Pierrot. (9) Looney Tun— and Jin glee. (56) Redman’s America. 9:99 (7) Rin Tin Tin. (56) Sing Hi—Sing Lo. 5:86 (9) Jac LeGoff. These Blinking Billboards Outfox Wily Reviewer By FRED DANZIG NEW YORK (UPI) — I’ve noticed diet TV’s summer doldrums do funny things to TV reviewers. John Crosby is writing reviews about books he didn't like and tion pictures he didn’t see. Harriet Van Home is writing reviews about books she likes. Since this new form, the non-TV television column, seems to be in order, I’d like to Jump la quickly, and briefly, wife a review of a creative activity not y*t covered by TV reviewers. I’d like to say a word about outdoor billboards. White driving the other day, 1 jaw a billboard decorated with a big picture of Ann Sothem. As I pasaed Ann, I clearly saw her wink at me. Repeatedly. * * * Of course, I blamed the phenomenon on TV’s summer doldrums and drove on. Farther along the road, eon of a. gun (aa Joey Bishop would say) if Danny Thom— didn’t wink at me from his billboard. After ngabiag control of fee wheel, 1 started to see myself sjirtlnfr syiglssees. 1 also began tojtag myself that I must never breathe a word about this shuttering experience to anyuus. Not oven ay wile. Well, yesterday I teamed that It wasn't my eyesight. Ann end Dan-jy really were winking at me. There’s s gimmick the ad men attach to fee poster and it creates the eye-wink illusion as the motorist whizz— by. Okay, fellows. When are you going to animate the whole billboard and turn It into a giant-size outdoor TV screen? We’ll all go off .isawu- 31 MniUUns mammal 31 U.8. Toleaao. 1 1 - IT 14 IT II IT r II J r F S H B | b N H 11 r r IT J m r W a n II <5 u r r u r II the road then and the traffic problem Is solved. And now to the business at hand. Hie “U S. Steel Hour" resembled an adult version of "Walt Disney Presepts’' last night "Bride of the Fez," the CBS-TV play by Budd Fishel and Barry Hyams, told a story that resembled a "Swamp Fax" episode that Disney showed this year. Each was about an Army spy going through enemy lines in order to reach the girl he left behind. With Disney, it was Col. Marion of the Revolutionary War. The "St—1 Hour’’ dealt with Capt. Thomas Hines of the Confederacy. Richard Kiley, as the foxy Capt. Hines, was believable as a man equipped with many disguises and an overriding single passion - to marry his Nancy Sproule. Ina Balm, as Nancy, didn’t register the grand, romantic, Bravura style required of her familiar rote. In order to up-grade the story from the Disney approach to the grownup level, fee players in last night’s mellerdrammer occasionally paused to explain Hines'’ motivation. It had to do with man’s Instinct tor survival, gpopagation and love, ri buy that, but I couldn’t help thinking of the soldier lads who stayed on the line to finish the job — all of them thinking of .(survival, too. The play had m tog rasuMnts, as Kiley outfoxed the Ueton Army, bet the story anangeueat wm too predictable and pat. Garry Moore delivered the best ■poof of "I’ve Got a Secret" that I’ve seen thus far during last night’s “I.GJLS.’’ He had a guest come on wearing a cap and, in each ear, a large carrot. To complete his little joke Gany staged things *so that the R^nel didn't get much of a chan— to guess the man's secret, which was, of course, the obvious as Mr. Carrot ears walked off, Gany tried to keep a strafeht face as he said, "I guess we'll never know what his secret was." Nutty. But Ni—. THE CHANNEL SWIM: Ted Mack’s Amateur Hour, now seen „ ABC-TV each Monday night, returns to CBS-TV’s Sunday evening scheduled beginning Oct. 2. Vice President Richard Nixon’s appearance aa "The Jack Paar Show’’ tonight Is sehMnled for airing following the midnight station break . . . Edgar Peters— has resigned as prodaeer if ARC-TV’S forthcoming serf— based on the Winston Churchill memoirs. Brenda Lewis, soprano, ani Stephen Douglass, baritone, Join Patricia Neway and Jerome Hines in "Golden Child,” the original Christmas opera to be presented on NBC-TV Friday, Dec. 18 as e Hallmark Hall of Fame" special. rreTY-inW Preliminary Teeta Snccaatfttl Sees Hope of Eliminating Harm by RH Blood Factor SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - There may be a way to prevent destructive and sometimes fatal reactions ause$ by incompatible human tiood factors, a medical researcher QUIET ON THE OUTSIDE—Before the National Theater in San Jose, Costa Rica, Tuesday, the National Police break their line to allow the passage of a horse-drawn cart. The street is kept clear while the Organization of American AF restates States holds its session Inside the theater with some of Cuba’s Latin neighbors speaking critically of her leftward march. In Havana. Fidel Castro tossed back a defiant vow of friendship for Russia and Red China. 'Motor' Car Companies Hang Heads Sheepishly at Definition JACK VANDENBERG ■ UPI Automotive Editor DETROIT — The tycoons who founded auto industry goofed when they named their companies^-lt’s gasser. Engineers Insist that a device that converts the energy of cam* bustible fuels, such as gasoline, into mechanical energy is an engine, not a motor. ★ ★ ★ But the names of three of the nation’s auto companies, General Motors, American Motors, Ford Motor Co., still use the word ’motor.” And the faces-of toe engineers turn red whenever they’re reminded of it. W" them live and work In and around "toe motor city." The non technical personnel of the auto companies are of little comfort to the engineers because they often prefer to use the word ’motor" to describe what the engineers call an engine. QUIBBLE OVER NAME A General Motors engineer says he on— became embroiled in an argument with a publicist about toe wording of a news release announcing development of a new He insisted that we use the word motor and I insisted it had 3 be engine,” the engineer said. 'He settled the matter by asking me: 'Who do you work for, General Motors or General Engines?’." --Todays Radio Programs t.ts-wjn. nm WWJ. Rm CM * IteU* -WJBK. Rm WCAR. MmM _________ wpon two*. Spore i&SU WCAk W"«1HBS . WJBK, BxUboy ■JsSS-WXT*. m >1 StSS-WJW. BUS teste _ - “WJ, Ltaoo Buttsll , FteSWfMx CKLW.K, SM«ta IMS—WXYS. Bus. tonsl im mfm_. . «1U bus. rtasi M:*S—WJR, Osuetrt WJUR-. jwws, nw____ SSSt Iias-WJR. Mull HtU CELW. jfcrs opsost WJBK. BMt wxvfc. UM*. Writ WJBK, hutmtr . CULW M«t Toby O WCAR. Hsus. SlMrtitai WPON Ntfi CUM s*A mwwm. rmim 111 win. Moss tsrttasr ware, mu won CKLW. Nm DstM SiSS—WJH Susie RaB CRI.W. ■*««, J>a*W WJBK, Htui. Larimer »:«• WJR Nava. Murrae WWJ. Neva. Martana WSfB. Biaaktaat CMS CKLW, Nava, nm wjbk. IN**, mM WCAR Neva Martyv wpon Btva Lark SiSto-WJR Jack Rarrta l*:te—WJH, Karl Baas WWJ, New*. Martana WXTS. Nava, Share-n CKLW. Joe fMj .. IS:8S—CKLW. Joe VS* IKSO-WJR JR HaaNh CM Nava, Ljnkar CKLW. _ ._ WJNK. Nava. RaM WCAR Nava WPUN Churl Lev* lliSS-WJN rime tor M FRIDAY AFTERNOON ISMS—WJR Neva. Pam WJBK. Navi, CKLW, JM Vl wxyz. MaNaalay I.-SS-WJR Sbovaaaa WWJ, Nava. Martana CKLW. tea Van WJBK, RaM WPCM. —ate La via 30-WJR Compoalta WWJ. Neva, Max vail WCAR Nava WPOW ate Lark WJBK, Itava, Laa CKLW. Dartal WJBK Muala, Laa. Traffic «8tt STiJr~ I——CKLW Itava. OsYtat wxtk. wuitw Claw, itava. naataa wjbk. Muiic. Laa WSYiTwiaMr cklw. aporta l _ WJBK, Mtaata, Laa. Traffle wcar isaa. testa Wri. BoaUasTIpa Snags 'Can Be Found on Most Excursions m the baby’s red blood —Or Often the child's blood has to be replaced by I The reaction can be partially stopped In test tubes, he said. This is a long way from a preventive treatment but It suggests, he reported, that some day it may be possible to tC-it a pregnant woman ‘ :ave the life of her child without resorting to total replacement of the infant’s blood after birth. This finding was reported to the America* Association of Blood Bond* by Dr. Emanuel Hackel of Michigan State University. Ho mixed certain derivatives of ribonucleic odd (RNA) with Mood somptoo. This checked the destruction of red blood cells by. the RH factor, he sold. Nobody knows exactly what the RH factor Is. But -about 85 per cent of this country’s white population have it. If a man having Dde factor , mates with a Woman king it, the woman's system may forna antibodies against the RH factor. If her unborn child inherits the RH factor from his father, the woman’s antibodies may destroy A transfusion of RH positive blood into a RH negative person way also cauee a destructive rs-tetion. Dr. Hackel soM ton RNA, a rinspiaisf of the bmM of fiv-lag eale, asttag as a ktad «« decoy In the toot tubes. RH anti-bodtea to toe Mood samples attacked the RNA Instead of the red cells. This may mean, Dr. Hackel said, that the RH factor and RNA are chemically related. RNA is closely associated wife DNA, a substance that plays an important part in fanning the genes or hereditary factors of —lls. So the RH factor may be subject to genetic influences and possibly could be attacked by manipulating hereditary determiners, the researcher reported. By KARL WILSON NEW YQRK—sAre you a snag? A snag can bees exasperating sometimes ag a nag. A snag Is a What-iffer? A snag, who Is often a lady, la the kind of killjoy whom lire wonderful husbands often marry when we let careless. The old snag, this What-iffer, starts out with you on some nightclub excursion, let us say, and before you get to the front door, this old snag says: "What If we can’t get a cab?” So you got a —b and ahe says, "What If they’re so crowded at the Latin Quarter tonight wo —n’t get a table? What if the dan—r, Rie Tanluchi, sprained her ankle and is out of the show?” WILSON You sit ringside, and Rie never danced better, and the old snag says. “But supposing ...” ★ ★ ★ forgot to tell you that the But-Supposlngers are as bad as the What-lffers. Then there are Yes-Buters, the Aren’t Youafralders and the Don’t-say-I-dldn’t-waro-youers. In the magasine, Horn— and Gardena, I read an article by Constance Goodall on snaggery. It undermines your confidence, that’s what snaggery do—. I have always called it, for want of better description, worrying—and yet It tent worrying. It’s pessimism. it it it Generally conservative, I'm wildly optimistic about some things—such as flying. People say to me, "Yea but supposing the weather’s bad ... aren’t you afraid of the jets . . . what If the pilot’s got a hangover?” I Just stick my little Bible in my hip pocket and I never orry. I suppose somebody —old aay to mo, "What If yen’— nuts and the world Is going to hell and we’re going to bo killed by the fallout? Yon ought to help alert people to THAT instead of feeing such a crazy optimist. What if ... ” My answer would be a What-lf right back: "What If I die In a plane crash and never know about the world going to hell?” What If I’m getting boring? THE MIDNIGHT E&L... Andre and Gamble Pernmbeana turned down a $2,000-a-week otter to appear in summer stock; the show was “For Love lor Money” ..! Tony Perkins is studying French in Parte while [waiting to start the Ingrid Bergman picture, “Time On Your [Hands” ... ik it it WISH I’D SAID THAT: Our son Slugger -doesn’t care tor beards and the Bohemian Ufa, but he sure loves to eat—In fact> he’s »n Xatnlk.... That's earl, brother. \ k 4- • - (Copyright, lf*> — % Although aon-technlca! personnel of the ante companies still refer to "motor vehicle production" end "motor cars" toe engineers have the 1964 edition of motor service’s "new aoto-mottve encyclopedia on their side. The glossary of the encyclopedia' carries there definitions: ’Motor: Actually this term' should be used in connection with an electric motor and should not be used when referring .to an engine of an automobile. "Engine: As used in automobile, the term applies to the prime sour— at power generation used to propel toe vehicle.'’, In the same year that the encyclopedia was published, however, a new auto company was formed by the merger of Nssh and Hudson Motor Car CoTTbe name chosen for the new company was American Motors Corp. A few engineers protest sheepishly that the onto companies do produce motors for such things as starters and windshield wipers. Bat they agree that’a not the reason why their companies are —tied “motor companies.’’ They excuse the founders of the! industry for goofing by insisting there were no clear definitions of engine and motor at the time the industry started. Car manuals published by Find Motor Go. for persons who bought its cars referred to “motor" until 1913 when all the references were changed to "engine" for the first time. For engineers, standardization off meanings apparently came sometime between World War I and World War II when the Society of Electrical Engineers adopted a resolution which reserved “motor" for devices converting electrical power into mechanical power. West Coast Dems Await Jack, Lyndon SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - U S. Sen. John F. Kennedy, the Democratic presidential nominee, and U S. Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson, his running mate, will make a two-hour airport political appearance here Sept. 3 en route to opening their campaigns in earnest In Hawaii and Alaska. San Francisco Democrats have announced plans to set up an open air auditorium at International Airport for the candidates’ use. Kennedy will go on to Alaska and Johnson to Hawaii. ALUM. SIDING 'w • Sloims- k’/ inp vVriT JOE VALLELY *01 1-6621 * 01 1-9191 SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Hafiring Tests Free Paring at Root of "Opoo Ivor by Appoint—I" A 143 Oaklaad FEderal 2-1225 PONTIAC, MICH. FE 4-1515 CSV ILKCTRO MART 1SS OattaaS TV RENTAL BY DAY OR WUK TV Features By United Pi _____________ TIGF.K BASEBALL, 7 pV (2). Detroit plays the Orioles at Baltimore’s Memorial Stadium. DONNA REED SHOW, 8 p.m. CD. (Rerun) Jeff (Paul Petersen) works out a plan to regain his lost allowance money after being criticized for going Into debt. UNTOUCHABLES, 9:30 p.m. (7). (Rerun) Eliot Ness (Robert Stack) goes after Vincent "Mad Dog” Coll (CIu Gulager) after the psychopathic fugitive kidnaps an aide to| bootlegger Dutch Schultz (Lawrence Dobkin). BEST OF GROUCHO, 10 p.m. (4). (Rerun) Groucho kids with football coach Jack Curtice, actress Patricia CUtte, a modern poetess and a watch repairman. SOLENTS PLEASE, 10:30 p.m. CD. A condensation of an early Cecil B. de Mille film, "Yankee >er,” starring William Boyd In a story about a typhoon and mutiny off the coast of China. JACK PAAR now, 11:30 p.m. (4). Alexander King, his wife Margie, and actress Elsa Lanchester are Paars guests. THESE VALUES AfcE>< TOO GOOD TO MISS Over 65 good used TV Sets now to choose froit>. Thty hove been fully checkM^ond ready for many hours of entertainment. Get one for the kids room today. 30 day exchange privilege 195 and Up *141 WALTON TV and RADIO 515 W. Walt** BM. Cor. at Jotty" ltd. FI 2-2257 GRAND OPENING SALE ot Phelp's Electric UP TO 25% Off NEW and USED TVi it BARGAIN PRICES NEW LOCATION 2616 Dixit Hwy. OR 3-1217 Open Weekdays and Sat 9-8 Sunday 10-2 Jap Commuters Panic OSAKA, JapairsiAP) - A thousand passengers stampeded from a commuter train today after it bed into a dump truck and Jht fire. Two persons were killed and 33 others injured. BUY WHERE YOU RET SERVICE! • Factory Trained Technicians O Genuine Approved Replacement Ports • Modem Dependable Test Equipment All Sorvice Guaranteed McCALLUM & DEAN 409-11 E. Maple Birmingham Midweft 4-5230 SAFE—CLEAN—ECONOMICAL—FHA TERMS ELECTRIC HEAT FREE Estimates Phone OR 34792 •r FI 5-5499 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 19(H) Sixty comparison BOYS’ BULKY KNITS shop Sears tomorrow nite ’til 9 Shopping’s so s i m p4* when yon “CHARGE IT” with Sears revolving CHARGE PLATE in wanted new coldrs ; msm _ and styles A. I know what a problem this I can be. There's nothing subtle! about Ms odor. I’ve seat cases ! where the owner couldn't stay in I the same room with the pet. Unfortunately, your dog can't help himself by chewing gum or brushing his teeth. Nor has he the tact to breathe! through his nostrils and turn his bead sway. The most common! otuse of this unpleasant condition! is ifirty or decayed teeth. Infected tonsils or post-nasal drip can pro- Fraternity Prep Bedford cord Continental styling, with triny Q9I Italian cut pockets. Black, v blue, olive, tan, brass. 8 to 20. , - ? Polished combed cotton pants Polished combed cotton pants Q91 Zelan finish. Black tab pock- A et. OUvt, blue, brown, gray, t tab, black. Sixes 8 to 80. *Mnt* » Fraternity Prep tapered pants Fraternity Prep tapered pants n in Sanforised cotton Bedford v / cord in tan, black, or light » > blue. Back flap pockets. 81zes ct,^ n 8-18. Priced Way Low For This Quality insufficient stomach acid retards 4§estion, and this could well be dm root of die problem. Kidney ••ease is another possibility. The dfcise can be detected and usually awed by your veterinarian. If a check-up reveals no clinical dis-turbance, your bog’s social acceptance can usually be restored by ■waking a chlorophyll tablet in his ntd two or three times a day. Charge It two-pocket Orion9 coat sweater Bulky stitch Orion acrylic In solid jpotor with two-tone trim pocket tope, shoulders and sleeves. Charcoal, red, gray. 4-12. ,r neat Orion* acrylic pullover New bulky sUtch In solid color mixtures. Lapover square crew neck, no-seam ribbed bottom, cuffs. Loden, gold, gray. 8-18. Boys’ Shawl-Collar Bulky Knit Pullovers .. V Boys’ Wear, Mala Floor Kebey-HayesCo. to Move fo Romulus Boyville Jacket Jamboree JpETROIT (UPI) - The Kelsey-Bayes Co., which makes auto parts, has announced it will clow Jfs McKeesport, Be/,* plant and move the operations to Ms new Ilint at Romulus. iester R. Downie, executive vice president, said the move Indicated the firm’s confidence in Michigan Ugd the Detroit area. -About 800 persons are employed at McKeesport. "The company bought a former ■ivy Jet plant at Romulus last February and plans to spend at least |4 million improving the plant SPECIAL! Mothers, come in now while Sears colors and selections are complete! You’ll find the latest styles in long-wearing fabrics in Sears complete collection. boys’ handsome cotton flannel Jr. boys’ corduroy touchdown coats Cotton corduroy coat with bulky knit -■ a qo wool continental crossover collar and I /A. . all wool plaid lining. Cape shoulder XT? sleeves with wrist tabs. In brown, loden green. , Prep Touchdown Coats .......1AM I corduroy surcoats ■ Bulky cotton knit 1A98 ■ collar and cuffs, 111®^ iWB ■ plaid lining. 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Lee there Ur Peek Set la-rleCee e Retatebte note heUer with note neper, » new pen stand, a bandy raier, tnU paneled pnd aad Matter, rrkool apprered ball pen. lVKC’s Exclusive THESE EXTRAS INCLUDED %4 Serving Piece*ft 'i • Swear Sptoa r l I * 2 Serviac Spoo«s gT V t I • MW Kwift / / / Now, Today — oH three of these Seautifut pieces are yours at the ^Pfice you'd expect to pay for only ’pne. Don't miss this chance to npave money on luggage! ~ FAMOUS •RANO PRODUCT Fram The Deiipn Studies af Oneida Ltd. Severs faiths YOU GET^m au $ Hnllaw Handle I* Teat poem Dinner Knives * Iced Drink S Dinner Forks Speene 8 Salad Forks 1 Serving Sp. S Snack Forks Rutter KeH S Soup Speene Super Seer 50* Weekly • All metal portable rallaway typewriter table. NO MONEY DOWN! ff&oaele/iA,' STAINLESSWARE Phone FEdersI 3-7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW 35-Pc. POLAROID LAND CAMERA KIT With Excliuide Nett Wink Light '•Model 800 Poloroid Comoro -%"• Wink UghA • 2 Rolls Film IP • 25 Poet Cords • 2 Albums IP • Comportment Carrying Cose • Fitter • Electric Eye Shutter 1 50 Weekly f * Now 1960 Nationally Famous 17-JEWEL WATCHES r DINNERWARE ' COMPLETE SERVICE FOR S Every Piece of "ROYAL VISTA” it mad# from original Copperplate engravings I ivory piece COLORED BY HAND, by eld world ortists! The domic pattern b sharp, brilliant, deed In addition to die M S3-pc. Service for S, you get included FREE o magnificent 13-pc. match-lag Aceemory Set. Radi piece b GUARANTEED DISHWASHER-PROOP end DETERGENT-PROOF! Yeu get S-KT DINNER PLATES-• SOUP PLATES • • BREAD A RUTTERS • S FRUIT DISHES-8 CUPS and 8 SAUCERS-SERVING SOWL-llVi" CHOP PLATE-SUGAR A COVBt • CREAMER • SALT A PEPPER • OR A VINEGAR • SUTTER DISH • MUSTARD JAR YwrCrefiiiM Pay WsoMyl ()b PC. IMPORTED SERVICE FOR 8 Original Copper Engravings, Hand Colored by Old World Artists! Fired for Lifetime Service Under Glaze! /ZJ* v 6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1060 TEN BOLLAWAY BED aid COTTON MATTRESS SIT .HOLLYWOOD BED FRAMES ... Perfect m» fee extra sleeping apace . . . C4PQIi fer Hm cottage or #H|fV wtakeaj gaeati. Mb I nw>amy and rofla *w mnt fer eeay atdfega. 50c WirUf 7 New « o« aaay-rolUNf Mi •M af tbit vacant Durable, al ■Otll M Mm Hnm to Make a b . ^ J THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1960 > ELEVEN Buy Now!..Save Now!..Pay later!..No Money Down! WITH THE BEDROOM PURCHASE BELOW . . Serta INNERSPRING MATTRESS and BOX SPRING Plus 2 Boudoir Lamps and 2 Plump Faathar Pillows Budget Priced Smart Homemakers On* low price gives you o complete bedroomful of designer styled furniture in popular Eider Cray finish. Featuring loads of storage space in the never-stick drawers, this suite of huge Double Dresser with Mirror, spacious Chest and contemporary Bookcase Bed wiN give you years of carefree use. Plastic finish tops protect surfaces from unsightly marring ... and clean in a jiffy with a damp doth. Today, compare this suit* “that gives you 1 with others at similar price .. . then select it for your hand. all 9 pieces... NO MONEY DOWN w H % 108 X. W...FE 3-7114 ' r NO ^ MONEY DOWN TWELVE_________________THE PONTIAC PBESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST M. 1W0 Bnv Now!.. Save Now!.. 1 • Pay Later!.. N «/ o Money L t/ •own! NEW |i 1960 Complete y/Hh Brass Rollaway Cart! Philco Super Value Price BIG VALVE! ONE Horsepower Air Conditioner Install It Yourself ... with FREE Adjustable Mount KIT! BIG cooling capacity in a compact unit! So quiat, you hardly know it's operating! 7 - position control thermostat. ---------- Ha Moaty Vewn Outperforms All OHiors! Amana Deluxe Portable with Humidistete control! Remove* up to 10% more - moisture! Big capacity! Oaf Me a Day! SAA95 THIS WEEK ONLY! Powerful 9b N. P. Meter Pepor Oust Beg • Clip-On Tools Vinyl Swivel Hese lift* • Quiet • Querent#ed PH LCO !• little Is Ne Meaey Dowb-2 Years le Pay This low price includes this value-packed 17" TV and the matching roll-awoy cart. The TV has a powerful console-type chassis . . . it's actually thinner thanks»to Philco's -exclusive new semi-flot tube and wrop-around chassis. NEW I960 KING-SIZE 11 ON. FT. FULLY AUTOMATIC REFRIGERATOR Sale Priced Fully ee«ippe4 storage deer with belter eM cheese keep- m etc . «e«ieai*e *»*. MHh shelf hold* half-yellon carton. H's Aeteeiatic mu? ru. The tofcat — and you get tell 5-yeac ->rrant| e“‘“‘ -* *600 Dancan Hiaes BARBECUE SET WHI Year Now Eartka SB LIVE DEMONSTRATION AT OUR STORE OR PHONE FE 3-7114 FOR 10 RAY HOME IRAN " ‘ V V'*?* - ft# V-, ■ WK€, 108 X.SAGIMW...FE 3-7114 TRADE-INS bigger town PRICES WfUVXN IrtlTOMATlC ► pRFROSTlHC . HAHOoo^s THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY,'AUGUST 25, 1960 THIRTEEN YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MOrI WH^N ’ YOU BUY -PRIGlDAIRCI Biiv Now!.. Save Now!.. Pav Later!.. No Money Down! A Famous Sparlua LECTUC TV CONSOLE CLOCK* FREE! WMi Any Purchase . •# $29.95 or Morn | ^T/WWMf f! 1960 Giant 13-cu. ft. 2-Door FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER NOW PRICED AT ONLY ... No Monty Down Up to 3 Yoors ' to Pny Keeps food fresher, gofer longer! fig capacity oaves trips to the super market. There's a place for every-' thing within easy, fingertip roach. 4 shelves, 2 large hydrotors, huge 88-lb. freezer with separate door, super storage door for toll containers. Plus work-free, mass-free automatic defrosting that saves you hours of work oitd bather! With famoiis "Meter-Miser" compressor for"tool money-saving economy. MINT AND BACKED BY GENERAL MOTORS FOR YEARS OF SERVICE! Evtrylhhig You Need for Better Washdays! same wuaounr NOW PRICED AT ONLY... NO MONEY DOWN $1.50 « Weak Hate's the biggest laundry bargain you've overlaid year eyas oat Includes serrything you need for foster, easier washdays and cleaner, brighter wash. All years for only $tS. JUST SEE UL THAT YOU 8ETI • Mejfleg family the waehar with adjustable position safety wringer. Does a whole woglrg wash in • Jiffy. Fully guaranteed. A Aryfn metal Ironing board. •• 6 months supply of TIDE. YOU GET THE A Adiurti for Sit ir Stwd Ireninf Arvin adjuitable metal iroa-ing board with perforated top. Plot tufftax pad and siliconized caret eat. WKC. 108 N. 3-7114 Iwlmw Headboard — Hillywiod im^yi ^ tMflm with laaor-spring Mattress, Itt ------‘ **--I-----.11- 9priitg vn nnn tumhmhi* tie*. M 39" (win tilt. MfWrf M IWph *««- ■! ill ---* WITH rlVIlHnVlWViiVf 1*1$, l»wnfri>| Mitw Inti mi Box Spring effect combination. Toll 39" twin tin. Deluxe 10-yeer gearon-food Box Spring and Mottrott in twin or foR tixo. A good regular boy ot $49.95 oacb -How wh&e they Inst — COMPLETES*. BUNK BED OUTFITS INCLUDING 2 FAMOUS SERTA INNERSPRING MATTRESSESt Complete with guard rail and ladder. Ruggedly built in glowing Maple finish. 50c Weekly Complete — Nothing Ebo to Boy! Converts to 2 Separate Bods! Converts to 2 Separate Beds! 8-fe. Mease Style Outfit 2 Serte Innerspring Mattresses A real deluxe outfit! Smart styling, superb comfort, sturdy construction plus convenient bookcase headboards. Maple finish, 2 Serfs Innerspring Mattresses, 2 springs, ladder and guard roil. 2 Serte Innerspring Mattresses! Popular Wagon Wheel design bed serves as double-decker or 2 separate beds. Select hardwoods in Maple finish. With 2 Serta innerspring (fiattresses, 2 springs, ladder and guard rail. NO MONEY DOWN EASY TERMS FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1960 Biiv Now!..Save Now!..Pay Later!..No Money Down! WKC* 108 W.SAC1MW...FE 3-7114 —to m A*i Si- Mill & THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, I960 FIFTEEN Famous rtit Willow - ^ 20-Pc. Imported Luncheon Sot FREE! With lit Purehato oi T•• Dinotto M or Diningroom Stows is This Piece, ^PLASTIC TOPS ^ Prevent Sums * Stains * Scratches 0 Chipping ^ dean Easy with o Damp doth . Her*'* O h« log to gtoddoo th conscious hofl,*r< ,mort-*hopp#r p* of Umed PS Swwe with any color •«»•»* um dining room. 1 nook*. MiltcK H 9- .^.. S5®SP plastic top*. Cohort #n$embl# today. ns * 12 *v STn^^^j WohMi»'«W*h »o W*"d -- this groop*«a P*/” „ kitcheo^.^*^0^ * jJi to otto* yo« *° ***V°^j. Table ond *«* proof high Pressure this df*iO"*r **£•“ , ot tWIor price*. iter your hot**. 29-PIECE DELIXE 3’x6’ DINETTESET We bought the manufacturers entire stock to bring you an unbelievable savings! Lustrous, gleaming chroma finish , stays sparkling for years. King-size 36x-72" extension table with beautifuJ solid wood grain top; resists stains heat and marring, 6 choirs with comfortable pillow-soft seats and backs; upholstered in washable, scuffproof plastic. Automatic self-leveling glides on table. 7-Pc. Limed Oak or Walnut Dining Room Group * BUFFET — 52" * HUTCH 1 * EXTENSION TABLE — 60 x 36" * Sot of 4 CHAIRS COMPLETE 7-PC DINETTE GROUP NO MONEY DOWN WKC, 108 IN 3-7114 4 JWOOOK so JTe«Wy. W «W«* UOHT METER. TMMi Of Rl A K«M mete, built into top of the earner* measures light for you . .. tells you lens setting No fi|urm|-•# juessmg. You get perfect color movies every time. ★ nrSTOM K 25 NOME CAMERA »* fart #2.J Mm. TMok of Nf A color movie camera so simple to operate Hut MyoM - even a chiM — con take beautiful sharp, dear color movies the first time. No tear dim how — it’s aH fun, no fuss. Your family and friends will say you’re an eaoort. But you'll say movies with the Keystone K-25 are as easy as snapshots. ★ EVERY ACCESSORY you NECBINCLUOEO! You get thg camera, the proieciar and all the accessories shown in this ad at om low, low price Carry them homo in Ihe new handy package Mustrated. ^ ★ IWETBRI K-RB MOVIE VROJCCTM with It J Magna Scope Moo aoRSuper-Bptte heart ThMft af IMA smaB, compact, movie projector rtaTs easy to carry sod simple as ABC to run. Throws a bit bright. SOO-wett picture, fining your screen with color, motton and life. 309-foot reel can. Keep a complete movie show sale and clean for years. . .COMPLETE WITH. L Handsome genuine J ^ Mather camera carry- J mg case for camera / ^^^orotection. y' INCLUDED! INCLUDEDI Projector carrying case tor protection from dust and weather. Made of handsome brown leatherette. a ,1 COMPLETE ----1 WITH Movie Scene Record Boob — the HoHyweed like shooting script for your homo movies. *« a pro by MiMwing the , ^YOU GET: Qoil Splice Kit f* « speedy spacing and W'WMIVnO W— easy editing. Cot and rearrange scones bfce a Hollywood film editor — as easy as putting on adhesive ape. > Extra 300-foot reel Keeps movie ready to urCTMOuapamB wo isee sonnet rouev Registered in your name on Keystone Camera and Projectors gyjptJift.’gS.'SS fc—UM.MmrtiiM« the Turvo River. Ap- whri) the diplomat was finished ^ ^ ^ came in the announcement that a recovered by this raor"i"g. special airliner was arriving from The students were IS to M tf fhtafia _______ HE TALKS FOR CASTRO—Cuba’s Raul Roa was to- be the Most observers believed Roa and main speaker today at the foreign ministers’ conference in San his delegation actually were the Jose, Costa Rica. Roa vowed to hold the floor “perhaps seven «cheduled passengers, hours—perhaps one hundred.” He was expected to proclaim Cuba TO APPEAR LAST an enemy of the UA. and the inter-American system, and then Conference Chairman Julio storm out of the conference. Informed sources said Roa was under Cesar Turbay Ayala of Colombia n* orders to play up Cuba’s scorn for ths Organization of said late Wednesday night Roa had American States. San Jose do Rio Preto Is to Brazil's interior about 136 mites northwest eMao Panto, "vjfeji Birmingham Boy, 7 Is Beaten Into Coma assured him there would be no walkout At tite same time, however, the Cuban requested that the order of speakers be reversed so tint he appeared last. The pattern for Ron’s denunciation was set Wednesday by Castro to a two-hour harangue denouncing the United States aa an “enemy of humanity,” mock-lag Mm peastm tater-Ameriean system hs a creation of “Yankee Rockefeller Plans Campaign Opening Birmingham police today art investigating the wanton beating of a 7-year-old boy. Mark Creasey, son of Mr. and Mrs. David E. Creasey of 1718 Holland Ave., If believed to have been knocked Into a coma by three older £. Coast-Alaska Northern Trail Blazed by N-Sub The dty already has asked for certification as an area that qualifies for the special loans, said Robert A. Stierer, assistant city manager and urban renewal coordinator, who led the dink. The main subject was relocation of approximately 38Q famines Into new homes and rehabilitation of 433 substandard dwelling units. Typhoon Fatal to 10 SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -South Korea today officially listed 16 persons dead 4 missing and 81 Injured by Typhoon Carmen. There were 8,190 persons Ibft hometeer,- 161 boats sunk or WASHINGTON CAP) m merican nuclear-powered marine Seadragon, ducking under '___Icebergs in the arctic’s northwest passage, has pioneered a short sea route from the eastern United States to Alaska. The Navy announced the Sea-dragon’s teat Wednesday. It said the tub had biased the trail for a possible military and commercial route through the Parry Channel. The trip also helped develop The Seadragon left Portsmouth, N. H., Aug. 1. It headed north between Greenland and Labrador through Baffin Bay, then west through a series of sounds straits designated as Parry Channel Part of the trip was made on the surface, part under water. At one po^it the submarine nosed down more than 300 feet to get under an Iceberg 879 feet wide and l,47l feet long- youths Wednesday because he would not ride a bicycle, ft- ^ A Ho was reported '“much Improved and quite alert” this, morning at William Beaumont Hospital Royal Onk. Nunes there said tee bey la no, longer to a coma aad that bto condition to faMy good. Suffering a concussion and multiple bruises, Mark staggered home and coU speed in his mother** arms, telling her that he had been beaten by three older boys because he would not Ode u bicycle. DESCRIBED It TWICE His mother Mrs. Patsy Creasey, 27, said her eon dazedly told of the beating when be arrived home and also when he regained consciousness to 7:45 Thursday night Latin delegations hoping for some latt-minute conciliatory gesture from the Havana regime were completely disheartened by Castro’s new attack. It was frit the Latin republics had no other choice than to fall line with Secretary of State Christian A. Herter’s demand that1 Cuba be condemned for “encouraging” Russian and Red Chinese ’intervention” in the Americas. Ecuador Wednesday night Joined Colombia, Argentina and Peru in final call for Cubu to renc Russia’s offer of military protection and return to the friendship of the inter-American community. But there was no sign of an affirmative response. Kennedy's Program Falling Around Him Mrs. Creasey said he had been going to the park at Eton Street (Continued on Page 2, CM. 2) MSUG-Today and-Tomorrow ; AN AERIAL VIEW — This aerial view of the Michigan State University OaKlaad campus i tare “aw toafrwiSKltero strong emotional couvIftMM reactions to ftnjta tratyj^.. Kreage Library' and the J2,900,000 science engineering toiUdtog. Groundbreaking toe these buddings wffl .be ft bft September, with completion scheduled for the fad of ML The piajrmg fields 1 are expeicted to be completed by ftt time school begM Sept- Ik* IJntTflRpjyffKijft < type tlyt work can also begin thto year on : >lust khyond the playing fields, and on four dormitory wits, which would be off the picture to the Tift. i ; . ■ ■ The accident occured near Olimpia, about midway betwem San Joae do Rio PTOto and Barro-40 miles to the northeast. TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller at New York will launch his campaign for the Republican national ticket New Jersey Sept 9. * * ft Rockefeller’s office and New ^ Jersey’s Republican ' campaign * headquarters said today he had accepted an invitation to kickoff New Jersey campaign with through aevtral populous Norih Jersey counties. Look Up at Thaw Times to Watch Echo Tonight Care to d* any Ecbe watnhtof tonight? Here are the times aad courses America’s hafteen lid- 7:24 p.m., Ugh south, northeast; »:«, high Mrih, aertbeast; 11:n pjau, high north, siutesust; 1:44 S:H s.ra., tow south, i FROM OUR NEWS WIRES WASHINGTON — Democratic Presidential nnminnn John F. Kennedy's legislative program for the shirt-tail session of Congress appeared today to have collapsed. Democratic leaders were licking their wounds, mapping a salvage operation, and planning a quick windup of the session, probablyt------ - ....... late next week. They denied they had thrown in the towel. They promised passage of half-a-loaf /legislation on medical care for.the aged. They also intended to enact a moderate in- WASHINGTON (AP) —The House Buies Committee gave a go-ahead signal today tor a compromise on mialmamwage legislation. By vote •( 8-S, It cleared the Way for Senate and House conferees to work out differences between the bills passes'by the two general housing bill, and it has issued a thinly disguised ultimatum that if efforts are made to pry those two bills loose, a minimum wage bill may suffer -he same fate. 2. The postconvention session isn’t making the Democratic leadership look too potent, and the (Continued on Page 2, CoL 8) Living Cost Rises Tenth ot Pet. in July crease in the Jl mintmum wage with some expansion of its cover* |m, 1 , • { However, Kennedy already has written off each compromise bills as “hopelessly Inadequate." He haS reconciled himself to taking to the voters Issues rather than legislative accompMshmenU la thaw areas and alas to thsrtlelda of school coat traction aad houa-tag- L Tty House Rules Committee seems determined not to let school aid binwo toa-compreml committee, ft still to Mocking a t: WASHINGTON (AP) — Living costs row one-tenth erf 1 per cent ta July to set a record for the fHth straight month. The Labor Department lhing-cost index rmw to 126A per cent of the 1947-49 base. * The July Increase, while ’ft raised the figure to a record, was “ the smallest Joae-July rise since 1444. Increases for food and gasoline, arid a continued Increase in prteto for services, were main contributors to the record. But food prices rose leu than theywisupUy do in July. Prices for automobiles, appli- ances i dsfitot. s sm m im THF gQXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. AUGU&T23, l9tia JOHN E. STBPEETON Boy Scouts Cite Local Cubmaster Military Chiefs toTalkforVFWg A Pontiac man taM been honored by the Boy Scouts qS America as ant of the oat rinding eubraasters to the United States. v • W ■’ ♦ * ' He is iohn E stepleton. 41 MiUeri St. ' For his leadership to beytj through scouting, the national relationships committee of the Boy Smuts tiMnlei him a scholarship for the rtflmont Volunteer Train-tag 6—ter on the Philmont Scout lUnAiaar Cimarron, N.H Ho atteaded the Nati—ri Cab Still No Schoof Offered for Negtoes ofR Two dozen ninth grade pupils] Cousty Daamcrst* who asked tor _rith no school to attend nest] toe aeeettog that Unto totHto month dramatized the plight of atoa am toa crawled to tempt them. SnaT Osk Township Wednesday. I msramlriirr*. ^ Tky hriongdi to a group Mat superintendents Rop X. RobinsoA called on the PantUx Vrboii|0< reradale and Dr. James N. league to help raise Uvtof |p*pper of Oak Park said the ban ards in the tiny all-Negro commu-L,as based on questions el policy. W elementary school gmdu-j shenfr'arc^ numjlff;. *** “‘[Son'of theVeterans of Foreign ntes are the first victims of *it0Wluhjp chiMw, u, its Wars tod“y- ~ decision not to accept new en- * - * .# * * half the .number that lived there * * A tron> !<>*■■!*> into thej ^ ^ garttoU. state superin-j^iij>**hc housin* durta* WorW! The roH csll includes: WOber M. already crowded Detroit *e«mtary,ttng Btirke, ehief ef nnval operations. t*"** lor criminals. sppe^ce ri the ngtotary Common of vOuth Is one of » 11?**™**^ Everett Spuriock, execuUv* sac- the warstfeshir«s-ntths4ou«r —,mldfanmR*«rls.«Blrttort *“ IM-fr ^ noted, reflect* the poverty •( the township, Ms low standard et Uv-tag. III ghetto-tike extotenee. The Day In KMwp School Board Makes '0 Changes on Staffs Brucktr, Sharp, Burke on Program Today With KmmtUy Du# Friday DETROIT roe to the central < were authorized at the board’s last meeting. M* *•***• neighboring Oak Par* sad Per 1 dale Ml Ike greep of Oakland 1 Pontiac Urban "moral considerations” involved In the refusal ef outside school districts to Gunman Shoots Man. Grabs Gin -nta« kM»Mi>ri, r tionsl issue, like the Little Rock Youth Able to Describe ^ ^ ^ Kidnaper, Now Beingl*"* achom aetiict-the Carom n t * |»|, _. School District — b Hunted in Illinois school, ami * this % pupils only. CARBOtiDALE. IU. IUP11 + A 1*0 meetfaf poked Spurlock to invaded a lover’s lane mushy a neran-mamber committee early today khd kidnaped a hlende|of cepnty officials to dries * waitress after shooting her bey Mend. —3tepk 8 sponsored by Oddest School Par-enta-Tfeacbert Association. prosecutor asrigned to the ana. i tram school hoping wir let by esretog , flsd they eaa’t get task ef edaentton, teen tain I crime and vtoe," be said. 1 Spurlock promised action. "The people of Royal Oak Town-Alp have been kicked around too much.” he said. “It will ha pur purpose to talto a goad look at tha problems and about them." At the same time Lloyd Van-Buskirk, /former L’Anse Public School MM r. Kmnedy. .Nixon draw a tumultuous welcome from both the VFW and the Detroit population during Ms one-day visit Wednesday. Kennedy, an the other hand, may Have trouble filling Coho Hall when he speaks Friday. ‘ . a, a *:* . By'that time, moot of the business of the convention will be over and many ef the liMQ delegatee will be heeding borne. The only major chore left toC the conventions rs Ig the election of officers. James A. Burchyett, Derby Junior High School prlcipal, will take Nagfaw’a place at Grama High Foot persons to all were promoted to prtodpalriilpd Police cordoned off surrounding roads and planned an air aearch but the gnmaa apparently made Hehaab^aerimtommrtlead-V*" ership work tor tone years, serving the last two years as cubmas-te^t Pack & victim, Mary liBy Roberts, IT, hot at Osnsral Motors Track A. (tod DtvMoe. Me Jg-year^id Stenloton la nettve la Me Chris-dsS ganrlee Brigs 8s, Me Ftrot to|M Church Sunday School, The wounded youth. John Bryant, 20. of Carbond token ton bodpitol In fair condition with a bullet wound to Ms bead. He gave authorities n descrip-on of the kidnaper s car, then and Mo Society of Automotive He to married and has twp sans. Both boys are active scowtorJohn, 13, M a member of Troop 130 sponsored by. the Crotoot PTA, am1 t Chri^ R a cub in Pick «.__ George Taylors l Sued lor $50,000 [ in Auto Accident George F. Taylor, Oakland County prosecutor, and Mrs. Taylor i were adtoed Wectoentoy a*_eede-i fendpnts to a $50,000 damage suit fBetr to Ctoatif Court, as ap out-I growth a< ** auto accident March I 18 eb East 13-Mile Road, west ef I Lshaer Road. 1 . A ' A 'A . ' The salt Was filed in behalf of . Melvin B. Human. 27682 WlUtag-| tow St.. Farmington, who daimed [ drifcagea tor leaaes and tajwiea I suffered when Me Taylor family driven by Mrs. Taylor. ~ed aot,af control on wet pave-and hR his car headon. Birmingham Boy, 7 Beaten by Toughs fCeateued Fyem Page (toe) and Lincoln Rood all summer to play and watch ball games. A neighbor, whom Mrs. CKeasey did not know, told her that she tw two boys aboaLJ2 years old. Mostly Sunny Skies Enjoyed Over Nation Bf TW Ams Btatoi V . The nation's rain pattern ■honed only minor changaa today, with more showero to thn pluMtonl weather to moat pmn of the country. A* A ♦ . !- Heavy rains hit many during Mg night The wet weather rotlied from showers along the Washington const to thundershow-en in Florida, with an onthraoh Oakland, Detro to Force Sewage Start "Shan we get b that one said, again?" m':r ■ " Mart to to enter the first grade at Tony School-Min faO. He had the usual anaber of ffcAte tor a boy fela age, bis mafber sakL Mrs. Ckeasey baBevad Ms at-toehtrs to be bagn a tow yean Ito* filed suit In Circuit Court to tone Oakland County dgf Detroit to starts Evergreen newer Interceptor gys-un. ' " v • Circuit Judge Stanton G. Don-dero scheduled a hearing Sept 6 for the county and city to show cause why they should not be ordered to open the right-community project. iy five wmwmiibi mi ming am, Bloomfield Hills, Troy, Southfield and Bloomfield Township—specifically asked Mat a writ of mandamus bn Issued. The salt was filed by Dean 6. Brier, attorney tor Btnntogham Birmingham police reported this ______ and mid he woufcd go to the station to discuss the alleged t have "We have no leads,” Robert Pepperell, 'hud d to Me bay regained consciousness.’’ Mark's father, 38, n Ferndale chemical company employe rushed to file hospital as soon as he heard ef Ms son's injury. The Qeaaeys have two other chldreu. Jay. S. apd Susan, 2. ern Rockies northeastward to Mil Torrential rain and winds up j 104 • m.p.h. lashed northweri Teas Wednesday night. Nearly 4 inches of rate drenched Childress jb g one-hour period. Strong winds * IPBd several homes and hufld-and disrupted tritphone aerv- The Weather i c Preparing foTiy RB47 Crewmen LONDON (OT» —Western diplomats reported fttxn Moscow to- Im MAM ntki- WM< BNU? H V n mail Mu nt to- Mil h rraUu Baler said that if tha writ Is issued, tt also wm stfcri tha deadlock between Detroit aitf Oakland County over the 6.T wtonq dollar Farmington totorceptqr sewer sys-i both the Evergreen and the Farmington funnel tote Detroit through n commy oatlet INDEPENDENT ACTION The action of the lira communities was independent of negotiations by the county with Detroit to open up the two big interceptors, designed tn relieve health of pollution proUema fa Detroit’s northwestern tttourbe. -*■ A A* A Earitor thto month the board of supervisors authorised Me .Cafe land County Department of Public Works to Initiate legal actio i against Detroit if Detroit should toil to honor a December 1989 contract to treat the sewage gathered by the two systems. Kellis .Cold to Ming From Teamsters Won Whenever the uueation of backing from Jama It Hafto’s Team- Kellis, Democratic nominee Oakland County’s congressional seat to taking fh* “Thanks—but no thanks. ‘T had to apee it wouldn't hurt o meet,” he said. Kellis IkU hrid sappsrt if ________ He doesn’t want the unioo’s or- Kantoatkm to brio, be rtwmed Feelers from the giant Teamster organization have readied Kellis. Be met wtM Otto Weadri, a Detroit area Taaasntor organ-tier, to Me BiiaeraK Hotel tabby "That It my policy tor groupa I have doubts about,” Kellis Wendol apparently didn't offer Teamster backing. That’s alright by Kellis. A * * He flatly state* that be doesn want the tndon’a endorsement or money behind him. Hofto has declared he’ll go all out for the scalp of UJ. Rep. day that preparations appear to William 8. Broomfield. R-Oakland be wen under way for the trial (County, a euBporter of Gw Und-of Me two American crewmen pf irum-Grtffln labor law which Teaman RB47 plane riwt down by the stem bitterly opposed. tHssjam July L Kellis doesn't ike the law either. Tbg proceedings are expected to Bri, ef Me Tea meter*, he ■*?*%. differ considershfy from those ap-j -rs» net going to get entaagtod. "I’m against the bill en prind-tetol of U2 pilot Francis Gary ^ -Not of Fowm*. ^ • S Soviet auMorities have maintained silence thus far on the date bf the trial and its nature and scope. Newsmen in Moscow have been unable even what It does to the Teamsters but to the auto workers, electrical tradea, pipe fitters WOUURNT HVBT Kellis said last night’s meeting whether the tri*l will even.be held had been arranged by Carioa G. in public. Wind velocity I m. i •eti Tbunioy *t 7.W *•*• • vitolwrMiliu. ' ’* Widitoiiy te>*SM*» .; 1, jfito B»»*rO*e powwtovsi nr vtSsorSm*.. Ur - -—r~.... .... ...... m* vnea**8wp*vtu' Ipowcgt toaiperatur ’ mn$tLstj? Site Tar Communism in Broadcasting WASHINGTON (UPI) — Communists wUk access to radio facilities could play havoc and create panic in At event of an attack on- this country, three communications experts have warned the House Committee on Uo-American Activities. The w itnesses told miner Wednesday it is essential to the nation’s defense that Communist agents not be allowed to get their hands on radio conuaunica-MS. The eawimMtes-ta miiHsrtig i MU to dsnp ra i Richardson, former Democratic county chairman. mer, Detroit luu sot altewed the R. J. Alexander, DPW director, daimed Detroit la using the lookup a "a dub” to force the county first to install storm sasvers to prevent rain from flooding ac Eight Mile Rood Into Detroit I SnrttofeM toi Oak Park. A A ♦ The.' Evergreen system would serve Lathrup Village, Pontiac Township and Beverly Hills. The Farmington gystam Keego Harbor. Farmington Tri?9< ship, most of West Bloomfield Towufhip, and part of Southfield. A A * The participating communities aU have contracted with the DPW to pay tor the systems. Ike board of jamin F. Robertson H and Wfiliam D. Robertson, al of Birmingham. ^ . * * ♦ , Mis Lite*g Ttowtol Service tor Ifrnk Leon L (B. tocluding Agnes) Thurston Jf.. 53 ef 2710 -----Buckingham Road, will be at 1 p.m. Saturday at the MpiiK Briley Funeral Home. Burlri rial be to Broca Township Cbmetery, meats. Board of Education Pwslimt Mre. KStkrya Losm-to said, “to tie Interest ef a Kennedy's Program idling Around Him - (Continued fain Fags One) ogcr it lari* the derimr the picture may be. Mrs. Thurston died Wednesday after a lmg illness a$ St Joseph Mercy Hospital to Poetise. Surviving betides her husbsnd are k son, Leon L Jr. ef Birmingham; a daughter, Mrs. Walter Lux ef Napagvflto, BLt mother Mrs. James R. Dugan, of GoUson, Miss.: one brother, ti TjMj two grandchildren. tor quick ad jour n- ___is camtaK fmm Me Senate, which normally drags Us tori to .to »— l Legialatioo acted on m fat. during the abbreviated session is tolling tote a pattern men to the, liking of President Eisenhower than .of Kennedy and Johnson. There still wqs earns talk qjja possible adjournment Rifs week-v D-Tta., said be d Mre. lento «L Mtoy tor. Mrs. Louie G. (Ruth) Rrifay Jr. 38, of 1730 Banbury Road, died, to-day at Palmar Osteopathic Hospital Detroit, after a long illness. Hg body ta M Me . Manley Bailey Funeral HOBOS, f"* Surviving besides her — are bar parents; Mr. ndvMM; O. A. osppay of Birmingham; a will not veto them, faptbm, O. A, SUftey 9-<* Bark- * m» ley and a sister, Mrs. Nancy Dob-son of Birmingham. Subway Dog Is Dead "We-took toward their working new YORK Uh-The dog that as an eflfcCtfve team wftli cur Hew disrupted subway aervlec^TVnaday rrsPifTA MnnihfmuiitMKrill tog approach to the rimBengmUg trains died ]faieeeday/ The Which He ahead." rtjj. 14-month-old mongrel had brushed Sometime Wednesday night thieves brake open a safe at the home cf Robert ,L Brawn, Fartanan Drtve, Bloomfield HDU, taking over $500 to cash, Bloomfield Hills Police reported today. TMs wm Ms soesni seek Matt it Brawn's tome witeta a year, pstioe said. Lari October Brawn reported over RtiO worth ei T furnishings taken. He told police that Wednesday night the thieves completely ransacked fate home, possibly stealing his recently-married son’s wedding against the ppwer line apd sustained shock, burns sfri toternAI Reds Jittery Ovtr Ronf* VIENNA (UPI(-Bast European Communist regimes have Mown signs of nervousnem ever the pos-sibility that some of far otriefes may defect to the West during the . . Illh Olympic Games opening infhpMch Congrem handed to the Do-Rente today. wellasthe Nik Service tor Mrs. Benjamb F. (May) Robertson, Ip, of 1008 Forest Lane, will beat UH *1 H—» S GIRLS' - MISSES' - LADIES' I „ ______L 1 M to HSisiiiini u is M m sow Twk rr «i a m o**k» it n j-ggsa. 8« !■■■ PHUburth 11 ___jr«rtk to to et. Umb to O. a*pw>7 M M e. rrmsui ml uTTUh w m aSsttB^0* U W emi ifsncy radio system. by a federal agssry. Joseph F. Resting, vies president of thf Mbtual Broadcasting System, said only a tow Oonrniu-rist agents eg sympathtoers could I ••play tomes"- wtto Ms Cmefrad THE PONTIAC PBBM. THURSDAY, AudPST M, iw Too Friendly Wtrti China? Whodunit Writer Starts Chills ttttuti... Pn-TUsM % T 8ntf« ' such—nr...tw (TuMr «i Mon ia Ihktytar) ' PLYWOOD distributor*, S7SM. Com Aw. FI 2-043? Dust Control comparison days! shop and compare... you’ll find yon can’t beat Sears for values! 1 Kerrybrooke sweaters ' light-as-a •thistle pullovers PP9IP WIJ«l KVSUKI uuw IV > the murder ratio, doit yotf?” : Inadvertently, he glanced ad On ’ceiling. *,Goe« up,” be aaU. regularly 5,98 Charge It two Flavors—Whisky, Cognac “South of Border” Poncho Pajamas Tailored Cotton Corduroy Duster A wonderful bleat of lamb*! wool, angora ribblt hair and nylon fashioned Into the kind of topping that tana a aktrt Into a costume! Muted colon, State 34 to 40. Candies Stagger British LONDON (UPI >—Candles with a kick—op WllYproof— reportedly art Jolting sales upward In Britain andraislng The Jilrrar said Britain’s candy store owners have bean warned by the candyk Importers and temperance leaders not to sell the liquor-flavored candles to children. reg. 98c teen’s stretch nylons nothing squab the genuine ZERO KIMS GOAL COAT Your Choice wopl flannels, orkm and wool nylon and wool Wd hate to oft* yoo anything hot the poniM Zen King Goal Goat, because the Goal Cost’s got ft all! The Mg, button down loiiM-shawloollarof 100% wool,thebic8* button-up side vents, and the caAial continental shoulder. It’s oorduroy— by Crompton rugged on the outswie and plaid-blanket warm on the inside ... if a the genuine Zero King Goal Coat, only [ ...Ikmmktf : CHARGE faoric sate : Tod Goods. Nate flow Creation Charge It a wee bit of hat that’s big fashion! , Cone be charmed by our collection of tiny coiffure toppers. See bow alluring these cut-out 040, shells, profiles, pillboxes in rayon velvet or feathers look on you. Black or jewei-tones with flattaring veiling. At one . low price no you can buy several. Mlgasnr Dw*- Male Fisas ’’Satisfaction guaranteed or fear money hack” SEARS 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 54171 , • ,W I li------ V .• 'll i ill..-------■ I |‘.......... |\ - ft ------ .. ■n.;.. Royal Purple reg. 98c mesh seamless lair ITT lsg look. wm ruu uP, Dot Check These Prices! PLYWOOD r na-% « ir st««t bulky knit jackets Regular 6.98 . JL Charge It Softly styled with push-up sleeve* and many collar styles. A sweater-jacket n Is as flattering as It Is newsmaking. Many colors and stripss to choose from, gins M to 40. Youthfully styled with button tabs at hack to restrain full swsagfc-tttes • to U. Shop Sears and Save! Mias' tsedy-ta-Wsaa Second flow the panty girdle designed for liny .waist* and full hip$ medium length panty girdle 2" Charge It WathsrUght power net with s dip waist that can’t “roll." Whtto 1 nstses Za-a-M and L. Reg. 3.98 long leg mesh panty girdle Soft meVh leg bands mold thighs ( gently. Power net gtth dip waist. White in sixes s-M and L. • Reg. 4.98 Charge It Osissby kg. girseg lpwv Spanish Inspired Toreador Pajamas Cberfo 11 4r* Ruffled white cotton broadcloth top with velveteen tie contrasts with red pants. 33-M. British Styled Bluer Pajamas So British with a crest on the pocket of brass-buttoned cotton broadcloth pajamas. 33-40. tlsgsri* DspC M«ia flow m THE PONTIAC PRES& THURSDAY, AUGUST 25. 1960 H>n a Cupot Tea?... Lefi Go t v. Watch Out, Don’t Tip Lake Angeles Folk .Bask Under Blue Summer Sky, Waving tv family an shore and singing as they sail around Lake Angelus with grandfather 'Robert M. Critchfield are Thomas, left, Susan, Jeffrey, Mary Jean and James Smith. The children and parents, the H. L. Smiths of LaCrange, III., will vacation with the Critch- fields over Labor Day. Wearing a captain's hat, Mr. Critchfield of North Lake Angelus Road cruises around the island in his Century runabout, mahogany with white trim. The children also have fun splashing and swimming in the lake, climbing trees and cooking out. Rosalie Lake, left, of South Lake Angelus Shores, teaches swimming in front of her home at Lake Angelus for the American Red Cross. Ready for a big splash is Scott Hudson of Gallogly Road. Sister Susan, sitting on the dock, anxiously tpaits her turn. Gliding along on the calm waters of Lake Angelus are James Rowlett of East Iroquois Road and North Lake Angelus Road, and Dolores Riddle of Abington,ly} Va. The two agree canoeing is one of the most pleasant ways to enjoy a cool breese and a summer sunset. Reports on Personal Happenings in the Area SHgar A. Guest IQ and Us bride the former Pamela Maull of Union. N. Y.. who have been playing summer stock with the Dfedson University Flayers since' their marriage hi June, are visiting Us parents, the Junior Edgar A. Quilts of Bingham Farms. Arriving Friday from the East will be Ellen Guest who has been assistant unit leader at Camp Farnsworth, Thet-ford. Vt.. after completing six weeks with the Eastover Elementary School recreation program. Her younger sister Jane who has been summering at Aloha ftoip in Fatrlee, Vt., will drive home with her. ‘ A * .★ Mrs. Milton L. Reid and efys. Glenn G. Diederich, both of Litchfield Drive, Drayton Woods, have returned from a ChiUMmia vacation. Mrs. Reid's daughter Bette Joyce, w%ft went west with them, has accepted a teaching position at Lincoln Palisades Elementary School near Sacramento. Highlights si the trip were visits to Salt Lake City, Reno, Lake Tahoe and Squaw Val- ; Herbert G. Glenns have ■ to their home on tfttoty Clay Avenue alter two . weeks’ camping and fishing in the vicinity o1 Copper Harbor , hi the Upper Peninsula. Sg " A** Announcing the birth ot a daughter, Debra Louise. Aug. 23, are Yeoman 1C, and Mrs. | . Lae Lento of Waidtegan. Hi. QMtodparents art Prof, and MM. Keith Stato ft East Lam UhB Mri Mr. and Mrs. Edward fyLewtoaf Club Drive Bloom- die Benjamin Ronans of Iro-. quois Road and Nidd Folsom of South TUden Avenue, daughter of the C. Dallas Foiapms, are driving to California. '''"‘‘They will visit friends in Salt Lake City and Denver en route and Barbara Wilkinson, fbr-merly of Pontiac, at San Mateo, Calif. Patricia win be a graduate student at Stanford University. Nidd, who received her bachelor of arts degree from Midi* igan State University wfll teach in Monterey. ★ * * Mr. and Mrs, David L. Schroeder of Thorpe street are parents of a son, Mark David, ' born Aug. 23. Grandparents are Mr. and. . Mrs. Edgar Stokes of Melvin-dale and die John F. Schroe-ders of North Johnson Avenue, dr A A Joanne Campanello, daughter of the Joseph Campanellos of Menominee Road, left Wednes-■ day for a 10-day visit w rfTT” friends and relatives in Racine. Wis. She will also attend die marriage of her cousin Elaine FudUh. ★ A- A Mrs. Peter Keshigian of dllnols Avenue has as hnr house guest, Mrs. Doris Kirby Pope IQ of Norfolk, Va., for-merly of Birmingham. -T.be * George Bakers of Flushing apd the Stefan Karadians of Pontiac were dhmer'gueste of Mrs. Keshigian Wednesday evening. ♦ * * Mr. and Mrs. Dexter j. Kennedy of Draper Avenue are, receiving congratulations oa the birth of a son, Robert Louis, on Aug. 18. Grandparents are Mrs: Harry g. Bower of Woodbine Drive, Waterford Township, and the William A. Kennedys of Wenonah Drive. . » A A A r At their home on Cedar Creek Road, North Branch, die Warren B. Edwards were hosts at the annual Edwards family reunion. Present from the Pontiac area were Mr. and Mrs. William Guy Edwards, Mrs. Julia Edwards and her house guests, the Walter Gogertys of Philadelphia. The Beecher Beving-tons brought their guests, Mrs. Rig Ochoa and family of^ Tampa, Fla. —Utter guests were . Guy Bevtegtons of Honor, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Seleski of Spring Lake, the Eugene Morans of YpsUanti. Mrs. Elisa Moore of TowlerviUe and the Robert;Moores of Detroit. The istt reunion will br held at the Log Cabin at East Lansing, A A A .. •*—- Raymond A. Winkelman of Sherbourne Drive, Waterford Township flew to Thmpa, Fla., recently to visit the Rev. Otto G, Schultz and family of Indian Rocks. The Rev. Mr. Sch U11z is termer pastor of Pnnfiac’s Grace Lutheran Church. After visiting his great-aunt and uncjle, Mr. and Mrs. Thoshas Haynes at Bradenton, Raymond will return by air* early text. week. Honored by Auxiliary * Patricia Ronan, Whghu'r'of auxiliary DETROIT — Mrs. Edgar McConnell of Des Moines, Ia^ wto named Department President Of the Year today by the Auxiliary of Hie Veterans of Foreign Wars. With the selection went a S100 cash prize. .More thaA 90 P«r cpnT of nits took part over the last year to all auxiliary programs, Mrs. McConnell's citation said adding that the state also reported a membership gain. Mrs. McConnell is a Des Moines school teacher and her husband Is adjutant - quartermaster of the Iowa VFW Future Bride Names Wedding Attendants Barbara Kucera was feted with a miscellaneous shower, Wednesday given, M^s. \ Michael Clever of East Boulevard. Miss Kucera announced her bridal attendants will be her sister Mrs. James Glynn, ms-iron of honor. JoAnn Moore, Patricia Herbert. Christine Kleino, sister of the prospec- . five bridegroom, and Mrs. Clever are to be bridesmaid*. A ■ A A Cynthia Goodwin will attend as flowergirl ter Miss Kn-cera's marriage to Dean Kleino Oct S at St. Michael Catb-: olic CbuftaiTParehts of - die couple are the Frank J. Ku-ceras of Oliver Street and the Albert Klelnos of Lowell 1 Street. Guests present included Mrs. Kucera, Mrs. Kleino, the bridal attendants, Betty CronteT Carole. Glynn, Phytyt Raymond. Susun Green, Mrs. James Wyzgoskl, Joanne Prud-hoitime, Edna Powers, Joyce Dropps, Mrs. Thomas IhoiR- . berry, Frances Godlet, Barbara Mclnnis. Maty Degg and Mary. Ann Jobhaop. ■ -:_^r~ Not Correct to Order Costly Item By -EMILY POST Dear Mrs. Post: The other day I, along wftb two' aUmt^ , women, was invited by a mutual friend to lunch to a. res-> taurant. One of the' women guests ordered the most .expensive Ashes on the mend. Although I myself like this particular dish very much I did not. order it because of the price and ordered something else instead. In discussing this later .with a friend, I said that I thought this woman showed very poor taste in doing this, but die disagreed -with me saying that when a menu is bedded to a . guest she has a right to order “* Whatever she likes from it. I think some consideration should bejdwwn for the hostess’ pocketbook. Am 1 correct? -^Answer: If the hostess had suggested is As being a specialty of that particular restaurant, it would have bees quite right for her to say, “Fd like that very much.” But to just pifck out the dish of highest coat on the menu, was very unreasonable. ' A 'A A Dear Mrs. Post: I have been told that it is not good manners ter a girt to stand talking to a ipan on the street. Is this true, and if so, why is Jt ini' proper for a girl to stop and talk to a man friend to whom she may have something to »*y?: Answer. The street has never been reraMwH a suitable place to carry on a long conversation, either between a girl and a man or between two gifts, and still less by a group. She may perfectly well stop a man if she has something to say tb him, but if they begin a long conversation, he Should join her and walk in her, direction. t §Hi Womens Section Mr. and Mrs. Edmond L. Prince, left, of South Lake Angelus Shores, are having afternoon tea with house guest Mrs. Robert E. Carter of Wilmington, N.C. The Princes enjoy many meats under summer*s sunny skies id the shade of the old apple tree, just outside the kitchen door.' Planning Parties in Bloomfield Hills By RUTH SAUNDERS BLOOMFIELD klLLS -Mrs. James Q. Goudie entertained at luncheon Tuesday for committee members, working on the . Denim Dance to be given Sept. 24 to benefit At. Joseph Mery Hospital through the Woman's Auxiliary, Mrs. Goudie and Mrs. , Jade R. Davis are cocbalrraen for the affair to be given at the Bloomfield Open Hunt pub. Among cotnnfltteir member* who met with Mrs. Goudie Soys Fall Fashions to Be Bright, Bulky COMt.t ru JUDITH ANN WERTRMAN Graduating from Borgess Hospital .School of Nursing, Kalamazoo, Sunday is Judith Werthman, daughter Of the J. A. Werthmane of Wlndside Drive, Cass Lake. K2KH graduate Of St. FMerick -High School, Mias WeRkman plans to work in Pobtisc. By PATRICIA COOK Badellffe College ’61 R08TON — The new look on the campus this fall is going to be startlingly different. The colors will be brighter the skirts shorter, and the sweaters bulkier. J * The fashion trend Is toward mow Amri motet accessories: armloads 6f bracelets, big necklatjes and earrings. V* ' '.V, - The skirts .this fall an great fashion news. The - now longth is one ar two Inches belew the knee. The knee-tickler length tft tM skirt, a little above the knee, will be extremely popular, too, especially for casual wear/ it it it A good rule to follow In wearing the knee-tickler skirts,k culotte skirts, and* knickers is to wear than tor the asms type of oocasion that ^ou would wear bermuda shorts. Tlie sweaters this year are bigger and bulkier. Most | popular among these are the «kl sweaters, bulky knlte With, the big big turtle necks, boat-nested sweaters, and sweaters with tjUrftfNdrl&gi at the wnlft •V*. 'ft ★ '★ . , Blouses, too, have taken On a new look. Buttondowo collait nrsrtiB ussy pegalarand there Is a great emphasis oh feminine collars oft shirts, . were Mrs. WiUtem Beatty, Mrs. Rocco di Marco, Mrs. A. C. Girard, Mrs. Frank J. McGinnis. Mrs. Irving A. Duf-• fy, Mrs. Edward E. Rothman, Mrs. Walter. Williams, Mrs. Harwood Bacon, Mrs. John Maddox, Mrs. E. A. Christie, Mrs. Ray E. Cunningham, Mis. Join A. Reid. Mis. R. B. Lawksr .and Mrs. Ralph 1* Polk. * •• A A •• • A ■ Mr. and Mrs. .West GaUogly have invited friends ter dinner Saturday in their Lake Aqgelus home. Their guests at another ef a series of small dinner parties will be Mrs. Elliott 8. Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Parker of Metamora, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Thom, Col. and Mrs. Irving A. Duffy and Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Perry Williams. ’ A - A A Mr and Mrs. William R.«v Ewald Jr. of Washington, D. C„ are visiting Mr. EwakTs parents the William R. Ewalds of Franklin. The senior Ewalds are planning a cocktail party Saturday for their guests. A A /. A Bride-elect Sally Blanchard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Blanchard, arrived home Wednesday with just a little over a week to plain the final arrangements for her Sept. 3 marriage to Charles Richard - Cadigan. Sally has been doing sec-. - retarial work in Cambridge, Mesa. - Saturday'evening Mr. and Mrs.' Austin Harmon, will give the rehearsal dinner at Orchard Lake Country Club and Mrs. Sheldon Noble, Mr. and Mrt. John W. Sanders and IBr. and MnC J, Morrison TMFfcr will give a luncheon for mUm-bsreCf the wedding party and iftown guests in the Taylor sJrfUncdlh Cowl T. THE frONTIAO PRESS, THtfllSDAY, AUGUST 25, I960 Taxes and State Congtitqtipnal Reform iIssues, Not Nantes, Spotligkt for Dems tkfc, lelnl care for the aged and, an aging program—areas where differences with the Republican Party are generally spelled oat Michigan's ee—amlc climate of* the State Supreme Court inf where the cmtreveny January. WllMms appointed Souris a justice after Voeflcer stepped down with about TH years atfD left hi Ids tarn. Souris, too* is expected to gat the convention’s nod. Thti proposal won a spot on the ballot through the efforts of the Michigan Jenior Chamber of Commerce and die Michigan League of Women Veters. yv Pontiac's Own I the idea of specific amendments to the State Constitutional, leaving the task to the legislaure rather than a Convention. August SchoUe, president of the state AFL-CIO add very Influential among state Democrats, also la opposed te the coastituttonal convention plan. Be h considered an important backer of Swainson. TO « PER CENT 'Another November ballot issue 9ffi*7a proposal on raising tbe slate’s sales tax ceiling from 3 j per cent to.4 per cent* Democrats | are generally opposed to such an i increase, and instead want to in-1 stall an income tax to finance state operations. Swainson has openly presented his opposition to a measure on the November ballot to set up tbe structure necessary to call for a constitutional convention. petted to be a platform Issue. , The convention hi so will select 20 presidential and vice presi-1 dential electors who would go to the electorial college if Democrats get the majority in the presidential election. The convention opens Friday Fridayr August- 26th 7 to 8 P.M. Buy Billy Mortin's latest recording and have It autographed by .him personally! . uflftr “ f^piEratfenn,ran3' briefing sessions for legislature and congressional candidates. A pre-convention platform committee will also start work Friday, Gov. Leroy Collins of Florida will be* the main speaker at a convention keynote (firmer Friday night. Convention APPROVED — The five virus polio vaccine developed by Dr. Albert Sabin of Cincinnati was approved for use in this country next year in an announcement made Wednesday by the government. The- live virus vaccine which can be taken orally in pill, liquid or candy form will not replace the Salk vaccine, but complement It. the party's lieutenant governor A party spokesman said the convention also can be expected to deal with federal aid and educa- floor action gets under way Saturday morning. MUSIC CO. 18 I. Huron* Pontiac Deer fawns do not have any telltale scent, 'which helps to avoid WANTS SOURIS Swainson also has expressed tbe desire for the convention to uomi* nate Theodore Souris of |ppuH fa run Hi the nonpartisan' agee to fiU the unexpired term of Jdhn D. Voelker, who resigned as justice marauding predators. IA 4-3135 Show Starts at 7:40 NEW YORK (AP)—The Soviet most of the Iron Curtain countries Union was reported today to be (both at the- Bucharest meeting distributing to Communist par* and after) have gone along with ties throughout the world an anti- the Khrushchev thesis' about the Peiping "manifesto" designed to need for peaceful coexistence. The enlist mass support against Red exceptions, in adidtion to Red China’s challenge to Soviet lead- China, have been Outer Mongolia ership of toe Communist world, and Albania, which have tended A dispatch from Washington to to sit on the fence." file New York Herald Tribune 1 ....' ........ said existence of the document T» YT T • has been established "through In- Jj £ yy qS XII formation from behind the Iron ' Curtain and elsewhere and a sum- n n/w (ZnAn kir mary of the manifesto’s general CtllKA VJUUUUjf fine is available in high govern- . \T ment circles.” in V QCfd.S Exclusive I Behind the I Scenes Story of the /etching figure. She reached stardom by using *11 her nature- El gifted channel —June WILKINSON •i* CHARLES ROBERT KEANE The story speaks of a struggle for dominance within the Soviet bloc of nations and adds: “If Peiping- ir not soon brought to acquiesense with Moscow—or at least to silence about its disagreements—Washington Would net be surprised if Soviet Premier NilrttU S. Khrushchev attempted some form of Communist-bloc ‘ideological quarantine’ of Red China 2nd GREAT HIT ALSO DUm Don in "TIE&D SOFTLY SmXCEl" "Intended- to serve as a guide fine for communist agitators to raBjr the masses for Mr. Khrushchev’s case against the ’dogmatism’ of Red Chinese boss lfao Tse-tung, the document vividly fl» lustrates, experts here say, how paper thin was the facade of unity thatjthe Communist camp tried to present hi the final communique at Bucharest which purported to bridge over the differences between Peiping and Moscow. his biggest Milford claimed _______________ splurge occurred In Las Vegas while hg was attempting to impress Miss Esberg, a vacation- ning Secretary from Chicago. He '»a arrested when he presented at a local hank a phony flOJOO draft supposedly from a Florida hank and then tried to draw cash. 23rd- and 29th Streets. Scheduled for completion in life 1961, the Penn Station South development will consult of ten 21-story apartments. After the initial payment of about $69Q« room, each' apartment frill have a monthly carrying charge of about $24 a toom. A Reap OF LIVING—AU New York appeals to be in ruins As this towering pile of rubble seems to buty the Empire State Buihfing, tor In the background. The mountain of bricks kid gfrders and wood is all that remains M hundreds of buildings demolished in a six-square-block area between Eighth and Ninth avenues, and STARTING FRI, at 7:00 P. M. _j*Tj»e anti-Peiping ‘manifesto’ fas It has been dubbed by Western diplomats), condemns those ‘dogmatists’ who mechanically Interpret what Lenin Add 40 years agio to mean that nuclear war la inevitable and that war ia -thc only means by which the revolution can be made to triumph. , - “This of course, refers to the Chinese argument that nuclear Son of Rockefeller Heads GGP Negro Unit NEW YORK (UPD—Rbdman C. Rockefeller, 28-year-old son of the New York governor, has been ap- pointed chairman untie Negro Activities Committee and of the Puerto Rican Activities Division Of .the State campaign committee. I Announcement that the eldest son of Gov. Nelson Rockefeller would play an official part to too I960] it would mean the triumph of communism over capitalism . . , "The paper goes into detail as to why, in the nuclear age, the resort to war would be madness, especially since the triumph of communism is inevitable anyway. Phone] l ORJando [3-2683 By JOE F. KANE WASHINGTON (AP)—The Senate has passed a 23.999,054,000 foreign aid bill to help friendly nations, while barring aid to countries which hetoi Cuba or the Dominican Republic.' Republican campaign in New York!] State was made Wednesday at GOP campaign headquarters. their economies can sustain without outside help, They are Korea, Formosa, Viet'Nam, Turkey, Pakistan, Cambodia, Greece, Iran, Laos, the Philippines, Spain and Thailand. * NOW SHOWING • - NQW- SHOWING The measure, which now goes to a Senate-House conference, Would give President Elsenhower almost all tbe money he asked. The Senate restored all cuts made by the House except 200 million dollars tor military aid. It also added an axtra 100 millions to deal with unforeseeable crises such as the Outgo situation. I THE MOgT AMAZING OFAUPOSSlBlf ML WOfttl*! I Other ltoOte intliide 172 million dollar* in .technidi .Assistance and TOO mlUiqj|| for toons to underdeveloped dountries for economic assistance to friendly but not heavily armed nations. EXCLUSIVE! - FIRST RUN! Democratic presidential nominee John F. Kennddy and Ids running mate, Senate' Majority Leal er Lyndon B. Johnson, led 39 ottew Senate Democrats in backing tn) President s requests. Twenty-six Republicans voted for the mean If* AlllIC DP Cl ALL COLOR SHOD NOW SHOWING THE HflgTAMAZING ofallpo$$ib£\ TUESDAYS mi THURSDAYS FAMILY BARGAIN NIGHTS mdu« ADULTS and CHILDREN Free Parking Seven Republicans and 19 Deal ocrats voted against It, bringing the tally to ST-M. *. Eisenhower originally had asked 14.115,000,000. But in earlier legislation authorizing the program. Congress limited spending1 for the next year to |4,(iH,300,000. Tbe ap» prdpriation last year was $3,900,-000,000. mmm ERNEST 0 GIDCXSMAff sJBlRY LEWS nmreaai - sPARAMOUNT RELEASE —Olid— TARZAN'S NEWEST — FINEST! EVERY FRIDAY 11:30 A.M. 'HI Closing All You Want DED^l Fried Lake Eri«^ ■TBII.wwF - * dmp ftiwt fte a mem mom ronsoifs DRIVE-IN THEATER THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN PONTIAC DRIVE-IN THEATER ±4 FORGOTTEN WORLDS OF ADVENTURE! ARZAN THE APE MAN TECHNICOLOR 1 Tto PONTIAC PRESS..THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, lOflQ Grand Ropids Wil wff 49 Acre* ©f Share Line GitAtfO rapids (upd city will buy « um of Lake *Detr Friends,’ They Say By BODY GILMORE ROME (AP>—In blazing Roman beat Wednesday the Russians braise first ice in a dramatic bid ib end the cold war with the United States at least lor the Olympics. To\do this, a delegation-of Soviets marched to U.S.. Olympic headquarters, smiled, held sot The dty cammlarinn approved the purchase sf the land, located at die Southeast corner of M90 and Lhke Share Drive, At lie meeting Tumday. This paves the way wr a new water filtration plant lor Grand Rapids.________ to die Americans. “Dear friends," began Leonid Kominikov, Soviet Olympic official, "permit me in the name of our country to greet you and wish you great success In the 17th Olympic Games.” ,* A * - He was speaking to Kebneth L. Wilson, of Chicago, president of die U.S. Olympic Committee. “As a symbol of our friendship we'd like to present you with our Olympic flag and wish your athletes die very best of luda” Kominikov said. "la presenting this symbol of friendship, we'd like to stress that we do It from fhe bottoms of our hearts.” OVERCOME - Wilson was almost overcome fay the warmth of the greeting. He swallowed hard, and thep re- _____________|_____ {died: "We appreciate very much An Air Force lieutenant colo- your Und wishes for success and - -«— m s elpa train young pilots at uKk*l)ooldng forward to it." GAS HEAT Moscow, Dsn," Paid Gab rail Korobkov, Soviet trade coach. “Fine, fins," replied Farris, “I hope so tow" Wilson then asked'the Russians to have same refreshments, pointing to two refrigerators packed If you wont quality in a furnace and duct work, call for a free heating survey. fP|||> 3 BASEMENT HEAT r/,k:: $MK registers *• , lVaflV._______ *«r w. with American soft drinks. Some accepted. As the Russians and Americans were talking, a member of the UJ6. Olympic delegation began distributing gift packages to the Soviets. arms are outstretched to greet the vice president as his car is nearly mobbed. He had arrived to address ti£ convention^ the Veterans of Foreign Wars. CROWD GREETING VICE PRESIDENT — Vice President N1|m received an enthusiastic reception from people all along hif route from the aitporHo downtown Detroit Wednesday. Here R. 11 HEATING CO, ■HorseiDmperr6ei j Jet Pilot Commands ["CWtetraas in August'Mete tor the! benefit of local d»ritiesT^»B® sponsors hope will become an ait-Inual event. I Stores will have their- windows j decorated in the spirit of the! Santa Claus Is ^Coming to town? Warehouse and Floor Sample; At' this point, the Russians caught sight of Daniel J. Ferris of New York, honorary secretary of the AiAateur Athletic Unkfa. resort community will stage alparty" will be staged. New! Pepperidge Farm, freezes \PuffiPastry Patty Shells ...for you to bake at home! Gray Mahogany, double dress- mirror, chest, bookcase bed, 1 nnirspring mattress, box spring, 2 pillows, 2 boudoir lamps. ■ * ' ■ ; Bunk Bads .. Night Stands Odd Beds Foam Mattrassas—Box Spring Twin Size Foam Mattress.... 3-Drawer Decorator Chest.. Foam Rubber Pillows.. 5-Pc. Dinette Set.......... 9-Pc. Dinette Set.......... Fruitwood Buffets....... 20-Pc. Starter Dish Set 2-Pc. Sectional............ About 25 minutes later, your Pepperidge Farm Patty Shells are all done—puffed jip 6 times their original height. And you’ve made homebaked patty shells! * Qon’t bother to thaw tbfc patty shells. Put them on a baking sheet, still frozen. This is a package of new Pepperidge Farm Patty Shells There are utrfrazin TUFTLESS MATTRESS $, 10 .,TEAR GUARANTEE Box Spring-Sum Low Pries Davenport and Chair. . Choirs ...... ........ 3-Pc. Sectional....... Colonial Sofa...... Sofa Pillows........ Coffee Tobies........ Table Lamps ......... Carpet Samples....... Child's Rattan Choirs, Sofa Bed ... ....... 3-Pc. Danish Sectional Step Tobias ...— 1001 ways to fill a Pepperidge A wonderful main dish: Pepperidge Farm 1 Patty Shells filled with chicken A la king. •0The French serve patty shells this way-with their little caps on top of the filling. /patty shells,with shrimp. Or try lobster, or crabmeat, in a cream sauce. Pepperidge Farm Patty Shells are ready to fill. What will you fill them with? FE 8-9551 FURNITURE and BEDDING . EE 8-9551 I lirtti i liwhii Ik Nmm OrOr» Ai Prices Cash and Carry Recipe booklet, “Anything r JxJhSlt Goes In A Patty Shell"—it now available. Write to Pepperidge Farm, be*, Box 200,.Mt. Vernon 10, N. Vk, ' What coukHie easier than filling a Pepperidge Farm Patty Shell with ice cream? I • This young gotyipet likes vsaiUa, covered •with chocolate safes. Who ddesoV? • ^ 4bm. Pepperidge Farm Patty Shells at j either end of the meal. For dessert: straw-jgpifeMtopped with whipped cream. Or blueberries. Aid peaches, too. ooiiiiMmNiHM gsgzM m I Ford ■ Chevrolet W Plymouth /UOfcrU.mH.a Absorbers FREE 60-DAY UJ TRIAL OFFER III Faulty shock W absorber* an extremely DANGEROUS, and an not eaaily detected until it's too late. See ua. A* low 088 •* W Term Quieter, etronitr, built to le«t longer. Made exactly lot your car. Let us return your car to “new-car" specificatione. where your dollar buys MILES rtiore Always Plenty of FREE PARKING (Formerly MacDonald The) 370 S. Saginaw FE 5-6136 FORTY-SIX j i A;'''- ' ■' ; ; THB PONTIAC PMSSS. THURSDAY, AUGUST M. 1*90 Hunting ROWS New and Uled pues ARROWS Castein Hunting and Target DMES ARCHERY CO. iliac Municipal Airport Hanpar No. 3 . Opon Daily and Saturday 9 to 5, —< Thursday ivanmp 7-* OK $-1217 Detroit's Winning Streak in Ruins EKfKg’F Major League Boxes favorites —“ ■“ A j | if Pinson cf « 8 3 I Am’flt'no 2b 3 01 • ■ (te a., Hlilby Baltimore a lb 4 118 9 lj oi cm BROOKLINE. Man. (API — A .Jcouplc pi English upset makers B go after big game— Australian || champions Rad Laver and Bob || Mark—in . today’s feature match . nf the Matinnol the National Doubles Tennis ’oumament. FORD Gass Avenue Brake Service) 109 N. Cota Avenue "PoaUac'f Oldest Into Serriee'' , 11^95 lining CHEV. J J®,. ~ r . Up to 58 Othor Carp at Low Priee* FRONT END ALIGNMENT $5.95 Up FRONT WHEELS BALANCED $4.00 include* Weight* We Guarantee QwWork! BEAR WHEEL ALIGNMENT , England's Bobby -Wilson—and Mike Songster, fifth seeded foreigners, {wiled' the only ups^t in Wednesday's action on the grass Longwood Cricket Club, turning back highly regarded Barry Mackey. Dayton, Ohio, and Ron Holmberg, Brooklyn, N.Y., 15-11, 8-6; T-STThe Americans were the third-seededi domestic team. V * * • p But nofiiing happened to switch the favorite's role from the No. l foreigners, Australia’s Neale Fraser and Roy Emerson. They . their third straight without being extended, dropping veterans Gardner Mulloy, Miami, and BlBy ralbelt, New York, 6-2, 7-5, 4-4. Madison Square Garden lost! about <200,000. when it promoted the Gene Tunney—Tom Heeney fight in New York's Yankee Stit-dium in 1928. eft—etched MM Ml ei WeekinfUm 11 um. B. inrrm.„„.. _ w [ton 27-11. Oordner. VsUhvielM and KUlebrirW: _____ City 27-Ut' BfCaray. luunpe and M Gardner. Vftldivlelao and K1_______H _____ lln. Lumps and M. Throneberry. LOW laiuMS and a. Tbrooet is City 6. Washlnkton * iar, »-Ora«B._T Kurka (W, M) Herbert fehNjNU >lOeioman lb b l if Bliiid it Tutfle cl 4 r* I bVale • i i • : Carden*, aa 4 4 1# dBadsara in gbMtn aa lliylfeMMa 4 4 4 4.OTocl. p • •19 BEK « 442 P . 3 3• • Oav.a«tr p •••• IhabaU p • •••■OUeU • •• Karbari p. ill * bnem||lL;^J i alt .ten.. tea* w 2.2 Paacual p ... -! W’daahict a llll . » i»oo Cbatoto or 4 o o e l£fti3MmniHS os a 24 4 t 4 IMrit , ftlll ____„__lar Lumps to 7St; bWalktd ter Vakilvielao to 4U). eOreunded out for ' lek In Mb. dft-aa for Vale to Mb; Cteeancer hr »rv i. if'. TbratMerryT PO^ eBelTrf 9 >HH trial. 44 2 ( 3 Trial, a—Filed out (or Nuxhall l routed sal ter Amaifitano l_ __ •HH for BraMun In 13tb; d—Struck out ter UridanU » tub: e-Raa ter — ..... • WSIIS ••• 4-4 _ . ______wpiJPebtcianaa raw. ban Francisco 39-13. DF—Davenport. Amalflt-»no and Cepeda. LOB—Cincinnati 4, San Francisco 12. IB—-Wan. Davenport 2. Post, Kirkland, Amalfitano. 3B—Dai g>rt. HR-Robnson. S—Cardenas. S 11 • f dRapulskl f 1 • 0 » 4 0 10 llriaone 3b Hif 4 to • Williams tf 4 1 1 • Xlxan « , . 4*3 t OUe lb 3 111 Tasby TIRE SPEEDWAY PROVED FOR TURNPIKE SAFETY _ ______ FO-A—Cleve- 274. Belton n-U. DP—Malsone. Oile. LOB—Cleveland t aT Let An*ele* . ,....... E—Crandall. WtUs. ro^wueiuptew 34-11. Le4 bacewa 27-14. DF - BtST Mian and aieoak; Nani and Larker. Wig f Yif 1H|im 4. 2B— HUT Larker. HR—MriWt, bavls. •d 2, Moon. SB-Wills, Neal, ir (L, 12-7) ... 3: Big Innings, Fielding Mittaltes Help Orioles Trim Tigers, 9-2 BALTIMORE « - The Detroit Tiger* sat amid the ruins of a aev-. en-game winning stceafc today—a) streak that equaled their longest since 1956. But they didn't even come too j close to stretching it last night as Baltimore Orioles romped to ■ a 9-2 victory. Another ninth-inning rally fell way short for the Tigers when Os-rie Virgil struck out, leaving Frank Bolling and Lou Berberet oh base. I The Oriole’* Jack Usher had a shutout going until the ninth when the Tigers seared twice ea a walk to Al Ksllne, a double by Rocky OslavWo and Lon Berber-et’s pinch single. Baltimore bunched seven of its 13 hits into two tnnings, scoring five runs in the second and four the eeventh. ■ ■ • I dCbr’to’her Clmolt II pr c ■ Hoaks 3b M'scr'skl 2b UMU9 tot. SPEEDWAY-PROVED TIRES CHAMPIONS PRICED FROM... Royal Oak Enters B' Softball Rnals Fyke A Sons of Royal Oak willji battle Thompson’s of Flint tonigijt| ^ at Northside Park at 7 o’clock forigteundtd.tt the Class B regional softball cham- jtofiteina«r pionship. If a 2nd game is necessary in the dbabTf^timination event,“THe two teams will square off at 8:30. Royal Oak earned its berth in the finals with a 4-3 triumph over the Snover Merchants here last night on the Northside diamond. The Royal OaT< club tallied three runs in the 3rd inning, then broke 3-3 tie with one run in the 4th to eliminate the Port Huron-aree team. PICK YOUR OWN SIZE AND TYPE... SAVE! SIZE RAYON NY|>ON TUBS-TYPE HACK* wHin* HACK* WHITE* 6.00-16 10.95 12.95 1440 6.70-15 I1.9S 14.95 12.95 16.50 7.10-15 13.99 17.9S '14.9S 1S.95 IJmf 1S.9S 19.95 14.9S 20.95 7.50-14 TUBELESS 14.95 18.50 *Wri to» and remppoMe Hr* Oldtimers Play Sunday The Pontiac Oldtimers baseball [team-wUL meet the London (Ontario) Oldtimers -this Sunday afternoon at Winner Field at 2 o’clock. There is no admission charge-Playing with'the local Oldtimers will be Walt Hope hell and Jack Farms, former City League stars. DP—Thomas. Bank* and Thomas. LOB— Pittsburgh t, Chicago I. 2B—Vlrdon. Ash-burn 2, Santo, Skinner 2. 3B—Burgess, wot. HR-Hoak. Stuart. Clement*. S—*1- Detrolt used three pitchers, with! Bob Bruce blasted off the mound in the second and Pete Burnside knocked off in file seventh. Paul FoytaCk finished. A pair *f errors by the Tiger* in the second contributed heavily to the initial Baltimore drive. Second baseman Frank Bolling dropped Eddie Yost’s throw when Marv Breeding hit Into an apparent doable play with Gene Stephens on base. One out later, Jackie Brandt singled, scoring Stephens, and Gene Woodling walked, loading the bases. Brooks Robinson provided th£ crushing blow for Bruce-with a triyto>{,;.. /' > ‘ —s------ Roblneon came in to score when ColaVtto’s throw from right field went wild. ’ Burnside pitched well Until the Beventh when he walked Gus.Trt-andos, gave Al PUarcik a single. Breeding a double. Fishgr a two-run single and Woodling an RBf single. j Fisher, on winning his ninth I game against nine losses, walked! five and struck out six Tigers. The tMjlobs made BYuce’s record 2-4 for j jj][ttto Tiger*. ■brbbl IIMHM ■ 4 0 1 i| vision 7 0 0 0 cBusby cf_ 9 0 0 DETROIT lea*. 3* i *Vtr*U 3b 0 J J eChrlsloy 35 S10 5 -Total* •—Announced lor Flsod Wilt I* te Crow* In Mb; * I_________ McDaniel In 201; d-PUed out tor Javiri gtoMteJUa ...............*1* «W BM E—Wilts. PO-A—Philadelphia 27-n st Louis 37-13. DP—Lepclo. Taylor and Rar-rera. LOB—Philadelphia 5. tt. Lout* S. 3B—Amaro. Carry, Oontales. HR—Walls. Taylor. Boyar. SB—Taylor SP—Herrera Pai>a*r p (Berberet Trial* a—Ran I ter Stepder • 0 4 • Santa* ib 3 0 0 0 Hsftwn a* 4 0 4 0 Triaadoi c 3 1 1 1 Stephens rf 4 111 bnleholson ) 0 3 0 POaretk rf 3 4 4 0 Breeding 2b 1410 niter p out "Sir Burnside in I r—8h,|ted for Veal to 8th; f—Struck for ChRl to »i; *-«ln*led — ____to Ml. Detroit ................... lit'__ ■0 ON 4to—0 VESPA A Vi*tnillttr Siohl Jerne* AMFRIl'A pleasuce MR) pot trivet most economically. -Whether you'll drive in* ossuum vurn ‘‘400” automobile or a VESPA motor scooter, you will be delighted md mind by the sparkling performance of these two precision-engineered products. World famous VESPA service is available to you across the tfeited States. Test Orv* • VESPA today and sea why VESPA owners say “it’* the Only ‘fun-way’to go ptaces." VESPA ^ -400“CUf ns?. mbtSKx. Como In ond "Triol Drive"* VESPA Today I HARKLESS-OTT Sales & Service bales Telegraph Rd.-Acress from n^jlsi Ceeter, n RENAULT PRICES9 REDUCED Americas ImrfM Selling 4-0r. Import We Have 12 New Dauphines in Stock. Some Demos of COST PRICES! OLIVER MOTOR se* i«. Immediate Delivery — Credit Checked by Pbone Pontiac Area’s Mongol! and" Poofopl Doalor 12 COUBTEOTT8 SALESMEN TO HELP YOO. | 58 W. Pike, FI 4-1501, 210 Orchard Lake Ave. N BOWLING SHIRTS — GABARDINE AND CHALLIS SALE OF GOLF CLUBS $40.00 fi POWER BUILT IRONS ...,.$24.00 $38.00 5 SPALDING TRU-FUTE IRONS .$22.50 $12.00 SPALDING GOLF BAGS ... $ 7.95 - ALL-STAR BASKETBALL SHOES- WELDEN SPORTING GOODS 51 ML Clemens St. FE 49211 ☆ S/F, Safety-Fortified cord bodies ☆ Full lize... no quality compromise ft Husky 7-rib Champion tread design ft Speedway-proved... turnpike safety fluAAf SPECIAL PRICES END KeUnED iRANTEED | yeai with recappable tire plus tax GUARANTEED | YEAR er 20,000 Ml. lilSHL INCLUDES LABOR AND MATERIAL ■S6(vlC( Drive In er Call hr Appomfmenf /LIFETIME MAKE fimraetoodieWHUh an IIICTbaChlT Seed bOete At your FORD DEALER’S. He geU ALL MODELS In trede and has the know-hoftrand~ facilities to put them in TOP CONDITION! LABOR DAY SEPT. 5™ shock — tmmeS BSORBER5 INSTALLED FREE ?? Where can I get the Bi$T DEAL on a USED CAR? r lifetime-f .guaranteed/ mufflersA TAIL PIPES It EXHAUSTS EJtdMSM We InsUB the mw Alumi. Hum. Cadmium, Lead md Zm Coated mufflers you rood about in sramary replecaf lscoops them all! I Mufflers EM 3-3874 4 66 If. Waeliington FE 5-4161 ’ontioc, Mich. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, IMP Attend NatiomI Gathering 5 Area Students at Thin, Mixed Trading | MARKETS (Market SpilllS, Blocks Cram Gains CHICAGO UR - A thin, trade beld the min futures market within a narrow print range today During the first several minutes mot! contracts were unchanged only minimum fractions away from' previous doses on tbs board of trade. Dealers said commercial business was negligible and that there were not incabftvesto attract more than a meager' speculative Poland took 668,000 bushels of wheat overnight and there was report that a good volume of export busTneei probably will be done next week with several nations. The todosffag are to covering sake of localy grown produce brodgbt to the Farmer's Market hy growers and sold tty them in wholesale package lota. Quotations art fUndehed by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, ns of Wednesday. Detroit Product A»pWil.WmUitOB..to.* U... Chicago Grain OOCAOO GRAIN CHICAOO, ASS. W UP) — Opening 2SJP"e*...............»ks Mm.......ijtK *»*- :g ftp.'........T»js ..TT. ” i5 Dm. .. 1.10% _ Lsre (drum*)— Mm......l.i«£ s«p.»n 8*1 FolksStarV li Church Barroom LONG BEACH, CaUf. (AP)-A newly organised, suburban United Lutheran church couldn’t find otto er temporary quarters—so it meet in a race track’s clubhouse barroom. The first services will be held st the Los Alamitos race track Sunday. Sept. U. **I admit this is highly unusual as a starting place for our church," said the Rev. H. Carl Roessler, pastor of the new "coo* gregation. But it Was use the race track facilities or nothing, Roessler said. He said 100 to 150 families have indicated latent in Joining the church. -Ordained-last moatorSt the Pacific Lutheran Seminary in Berkeley, Calit, Roessler, 25, was assigned by his Board of Missions to organise a congregation in the new Roeamoor residential area in Orange County. A committee of residents began seeking a temporary site for services. Rossmoor has no theater, mortuary nor dance hall. The nearby Loa Alamitos youth center has provisions barring use by religious groups. So does the Orange County school system. “We tried s long shot—the race track,’1 said the Rev. Mr. Roee- sler.. Owner. Frank Vemeb Sr. fered use of track facilities v out charge. Roessler met Wednesday njght in the shadows of the pari-mutuel betting windows with Ms steering committee to complete plane for the find service In the Western Room. Thfe bur will be coveted during services.' Indiana Train Skids Off Rails; 23 Injured EAST CHICAGO, Ind. (AP>-The locomotives Mil 41 cam of a left the- rails and skidded half a mile along the right-of-way Wednesday, injuring 23 persons. Only one of the injured, Sophie Purcell of Huron,. Ohio, remained hospitalized. She was reported in fair condition in St. Catherine’s Hospital with head injuries. The others were released after treat- The train, Itound from Cleveland, Ohio, to Chicago, carried nearly ISO passengers. Most of them were taken from the scene in buses sent by the railroad. Sammy Kay* and Band Saturday at Walled Lake Dancing fans can swing and spay with Sammy Kaye for one night pfdy — Saturday. The famous "So You Want to Leid a Band" , maestro is making on of his rare ballroom appearances in this area Lake Casino Ballroom. ^Friday the Dukes of Dixieland wilL4»e the dancing feature at the Casino. Then Goes Drab NEW YORK OR — The stock market dipped early today as profits were taken on a rise of four straight sharion*.’ Trading stowed aftir an active start Steels, motors, oils, tobaccos. sis headed downward. Rails, chen teals and utilities were mixed. ......see Oim, VMS, ML ...................toll „ 1*1. »u. Bmtl. do*. bchs. rsf a Cpbtafi. Curly, Du. . •Sunii. dM. Deh». ........................................ B OijOT. dot. ittRi .. Celery, VmmTSH 4 OMR, Bvwt. I Cm. ——tan, on, Ml ______ tor1*** Mi.< ........ I«fpi«nt, MRS typt. *k V, aMiMast eta. bena ...... Utid, a«a. be hi. .. i€i a Onloni. dry. M Ibi. .................3 50 ORliRi, MR, do*, bchs.............. Jj Ptratey, Curly. dot. bchi..............V* Five Pontine area teen agree are mong the B official driegates from Southeastern Mirhlgaa at the ITth annual National Junior Achievers Conference being held ttdFtmek at todtoaa UMyeraity. The Junior Achievement delegates began (heir conference Sunday. It will lait uirough Friday. Official delegate from Pontiac to lurry L. Yocum. 17, of MM Knollwood 8t„ Pontiac Tsweskif- Some hesitation * after the long advance. Meanwhile, economic news remained drab. Machine tool ostlers, a barometer of indaatry’s expansion plans, were down sharply in July ^compared with a year ago and Akkan^dM^froops Defy Congo General Motors, off a fraction, paced a alight decline hy nutos. u.g. gtad and Lukena fell more iM« • point as other steels took Allied Laboratories rose 2% to S2V« in further response to gmqsrn-ment approval of ajive pol' cine developed. H. L. Green spurted to 28% on two successive blocks of 2,500 ■horaa as it responded to a pub- lished report that McCrary Gorp. has invited Green stockholders to tender stock. McCrory was un-changed at 13% on 2,000 shares. |8R ....ir»|by Kennecott, Eastman Kodak, Un- »* •.........HMZs. ParhiHp Wmtinehouse Electric. Goodrich, Anaconda and Air Re- ___duction were tel about a point T S each. Fractional losses were taken F»PP«r«. R8 Rsdkwn, iuq, aos. ocas. . lUdlshn, WML dos. bch«. Sqaoih, Acorn, bu. .... Ssusih, Bill Ml »»■, M Ml ... Squull. Butternut. bu. .. Umk, DeUc'oui, % bu...... gsfiK Hubbard. % bu...... Squuh, ital.. % bu. ..... ■SSHb. Summer, % bu...... Tomeloei. 14-lb. sskt... Jrtt'::Sr. ;2I ion Carbide, Westinghouse Electric, 1'BSMlS’••*••••••••*•••• ISaSre York Central. Standard Oil - - - - .....'jej (New Jersey) snd American To- isJbacco. so Moderate gains were shown by n Lockheed. DuPont, Pfizer, Scher-[|{ Ing and Chesapeake ft Ohio. piMry: Ciinb«e». dos. . “ Utc, bleeched, bu. . IMW, j^L v. ;.......... Escuroto, ■Msrofc. Kelt, bu........... Lettuce, Bibb, pk....... totteos. isstsB. Sss— Little, Leaf, in LiWiaa, laid. Lettuce. Bead, Sorrel. NRN Spinach, ML . atom Okies. Turnip., Ml . •Poultry and Eggs AtefctiaB .. AVco Corp an y-^.R^RI M . BA i sm'mriawuw*- New York Stocks (Barly Morning Quotations i Figure* .attar decimal paint are eighths Admiral ....... »•« Consumer Fw 1 Car Faithful in Death As the . fire roared,, the ante upndto hpw Started JtogI and backed . ATHENS; Tenn. (AP> - Athens i«> ru.* ran vMLu — auto- the dwelling from fire damage. Fire CWg Ml Knox laid 'mobile owned by Leonard Ros teha parked by ths Rue home when] Portugal once tod the world in it mysteriously hunt into flames.[the export of spices. He is a representative of the TrwG» Co., s JA company sponsored fay the General Motors Truck ft Coach Division. Yocum it too son of. I Mrs. Leonard W. Yocum. Other area delegates are William . Sabo; 18, of 322T3 Auburn Dr and Rodney K. Lhyle, IT, of 31838 Auburn Dr., both of Beverly Hills; Kyri Kanzier, 18. of 3683 Fairway Dr., Birmingham, and Marie Val- J.A.C. Ca., spsasorad. by Chrya-ler Corp., while Lhyle rrprrsrnta the Fornoc* Co., apaRRored by Ford Melor Cu. Mias Valcanisnt is representing the Kilowatts Ok. sponsored by the Detroit Edison CD. ‘ * ■: » ....... The young executives have Joined! more than 1,000 other achievers from coast to coast for the conference, recognized as the only teen- ItT kind. LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (API—Sudanese and Ghana U. N. soldiers dug in at Leopoldville sir-port and set up machine guns today in the face of Congolese demands for return of the airport to Congolese control. The United Nations remained rm in the face of threats that the Congolese army intended to move back into the airport, from which Premier Patrice Lumum- ba's unite were ousted last week after a series of dashes with U. N. personnel. irmv the present phase of its airlift of men to Kasai province. The last of 12 planes used in the airlift took off this morning with 40 soldiers. Murder Suspect Tribal war cofttiltuei in Kasai snd Lumumba’s political opponents there have declared their intention of setting, up a province with Jl large degree of autonomy. Demands Exam Arraigned In Shotgun Death of Pontiac Man; Held Without Bail Nearly 3,000 workers at the Utexleo textile plant went on| [strike, .highlighting the economic and -social dangers facing Lu-mumba. Arrested by Pontiac police detectives Wednesday, Matthew Hall, 23, Of 255 Prospect St., demanded examination when arraigned in Municipal Court on an open murder CMUrgD. Hall is charged with the dating Monday night of George Tfeylor, 51, of 343 Irwin St., who was killed by a shotgun blast in the cab of a pickup truck in front home. The men gathered outside the plant only a few hundred yards from U. N. headquarters. Large] detachments of police stood by. / j Confusion was apparent at the Palace of Culture where the conference of independent Airicart states was scheduled to open late today. Telephones in the building were jnot hooked up and nobody was quite sure how the loudspeaker system with simultaneous interpretation was going to work. ! 54.4 Cont Cop At 8 . 10 Alcoa . AT Am Can , a£2*bw . 73.6' CSFpcr Rng . ,. .... Deere . .. HI Dot Mb .34 Ob C seas . . 23 5 Dow Chem . 70.5 Da Pont . 54 3 Bast Air L . |3.4 Bast Bad . (3,4 Baton MT| n.4 n as . 44 3 Boiar . Ra4 Judge Maurice E. Finnegan ordered fbU returned to the county )ai| without bull tern scheduled his hearing for Aug. DETROIT POULTRY DrntOIT. Aug. St (API—Frleos paid per pound delivered ler 140. I auantrig ,^.. live poultry: ” (Joad Btrs Heavy typo hens 11-31; light typo hens 11-13; neovy typo roasters mr 5 lbs. 33-37: brolbro aad Irysra 3-4 bo. whl*--30-11: Sanud nocks n-M; ddinwa heavy docks II; youaf turkey* hoi typo hoas 38; youny toms 31. OoRMHBort‘srado (Included 05.1 0 41-43; browns medium 13-54; ■ Livestock ' (UBDA)- _____ _________________md heifers lew oolee 35 cents tower; saws easnlni steady; demand very narrow; lew toads ehotoo~iitFw. arwu St-st: toed to tow eholeo steers 33J4: standard "50-30.50; Bos»-150; butcher. 30 early; this steady to ~, Ko. | fid30 Ik. 11.00-14.75: 1 3M |l. UJ0 1 aad 3 1*1-130 b. 10.M-10.04; Bo. I* New York Central passenger tralqji i»Mw..Ui .. tOs-io-g:^. iS| raTl Mr, 13.50-13.lb! Viators—73: stoady; prime 14-30; seed aad sfeeiee 30-34; utility end standard --------------------- sates la act >—300; unehanfed, not oaoufh Brtst My . Budd Co .. Burroughs Cal Pock .... Calum A H ... Cemgb Soup .. Police believe Hall mistook Taylor for his employer, Kimbrew McCain, <42, of 347 Irwin St., after reportedly quarreling with him, Monday over wages. Judge Finnegan will decide what degree the murder charge should carry upon hearing evidence presented at Han’t examination. 0.3 ora tin . [1.1 Oerter Prod Clark Bqulf Coca Cola Cols Palm . ij4 l _ . 31.1 Olltotta Oatbal Br . . 43 Ooodrlch .. - 41 Qptjlrejr •• . 04 04 A*P . , 3t Oreyhound , Fifty Attend Funeral Service for Hammerstein *11 naan LOOO.OO 1 Out oi3 Englishmen Receive Social Security It's an Honor to Be HillbiUy So No Divorce. SPRINGFIELD, Mo. UPV-Jndge Jystta Ruark revoked Lnwell Moore’r divorce Wedaesdty aad ruled It Is not aa intolerable Indignity to he called a hillbilly. It’B a Judge, who has Mved all of Ma H years la the Osark Mountains. "An Osark hUIMIIy Is an jadi-vtdaal who has learaed the real texary of Mag without the ea-tangling-compltcationa of ‘things’ which the dependent aad ever-pressured city dweller Is required i necessities,’’ ha In National VFW Drill Rae-Vens Win Second PuqUac’s all-girl drill tpam, the Rae-Vens, entered, their first national* contest Wednesday night and missed taking "a national championship by the slimmest mafgin. * Competing in the Veterans of Foreign Wan "national girls Tirill team contest at Briggs Stndm, the Raift-Vm ended up fat second place, eniy one and thwe tonths points behtod the leader. Rae Voorhees of 255 Dick St. the 22-girl team competed against 14 othar teams, many of team national champs. | ' ...t ’ ■ algt i a c k 1 a girls from 13 through 17 years of pee, and trill begin s recruiting drive 8ept. 1 to fill three vacancies left by members leaving for College this InB. Puente Of tbf girls have baft* . lima to raias funds to sand the team to next year’s VFW conveo-tion in Miami, fla. . LONDON (UPI) - One Britisher AT every three receives regular weekly benefits under Britain’s Social Security system, the ml&P istry of pensions disclosed yesterday. The ministry’s Annual report said millions more are getting oc-payments during brief HARTSDALE, N, Y. (UPI) - A private funeral service was held here Wednesday for Oscar Ham-merstein II. the Broadway lyricist who collaborated with Richard Rodgers in producing such hits as ‘South Pacific,’’ "Oklahoma," ’The King and I.” “Carousel” and the current "Sound of Music.” About 50 relatives an) family friends attended the service in FemcHff Cemetery, 25 miles north of New York. Playwright Howard Lindsay, friend, and associate of Hammerstein, said in a eulogy, -“As certain as one can be about a contemporary, I am convinced that Oschr Hammerstein had greatness. Hanfmerstein, 65, was cremated. The report said the ministry makes a monthly payout in benefits and allowances of 3280 million, which puts the annual expenditure at about 33.38 billion. The ministry’s figures do not include money paid out tor free medical care’ under the national health service. N-Conference Opens ROCHESTER. N. Y. I UPI)-The 10th annual International Confer: ence on High’ Energy Nuclear Physics opened today at the University of Rochester^ News in Brief Frank Bkiekfc of IN TMrd St. told Pontiac police Wednesday that someone stole s 20-gauge blue steel shotgun and ckrryiiig case from man at’WliMr Stadium, reported to police Vfadnesday that vandals broke tye plastic covers and light bulbs on the Stadium scoreboard. Jaasea Osttrill sf Ttt St. Clair it, Jds ~ ___*- ._ n(stolen from toe frontyard of Ms The local tenth is made UP of^ pou^ said. s AM lhwity. Adv. Rimmate mt hake Sale. got. Aug 2WM to 3, Pint United Pen-tocostal Church, lit Often fit. Adv. Jh Lftfayette. . -Adv. stem. The odd-jobs worker had been the object of a two-day search. Detectives found him at tits home of friends on Highland street. Castro Grants Guiana Loan, Rice Supports large-'as It Under discussion will be business problems and ways of improving the performance of their duties in JA companies. Delegates wifi take part in con-teats for business acumen and Friday wilt elect their aationid officer*. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The Pontiac City Commission has scheduled public hearings for Tuesday, August 30, 1960 at 8 p.m. EST, m the Comioi»**oR CltT Hall An Intention to Construct sidRwalk on the following streets; \. - Cast Boulevard (oast side) from Alloy north ol ML CUmens Street to Gremada Drive North aide Feathsr-etone Hood from Kenilworth Avenue to Bolt Lino RJL Poller Street from Madison Avenue to First Avenue (to fill gape) West ride Jessie Street from Mechanic Sheet to Michigan Avenue Seward Sheet from Oamun Street to Murphy Pork. ' For further information see legal notices.' Interested property owners are urged to appear. ADA H. EVANS City deck By order cl the City Commission Dated August 24, 1960 Lumumba, who has been calling on file Soviet Union for more and more advice in recent weeks, welcomed a group of delegates brought to Leopoldville in a Soviet plane Wednesday night. Eleven nations will be repre-sen ted at the conference in addi-j tion to the Congo—Algeria, Cameroon*, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia; Morocco, United Arris Re-j public. Sudan, Tunisia and Togo-land: 1 Dies, 6 Hurt ITT Seven in Speeding Cor Which Crashet, Rolls' Over Five Times FLINT (UP0 —■ One person was; killed and six others tvere badly, injured Wednesday night alien aj speeding car into which they were crammed struck another car and; crashed into a tree. All the occupants of file careening car were from Flint. Killed in the crash was John Wilson, 29. The Injured, four young women and twe men, were rushed to FUnt’s Harley Hospital. jftate^paUco-mriflairiqd-tba-eacJ was traveling at about- 80 miles j an hour hi a 55-mile-an-hour zonel when it struck the rear of another! car, bounced off, rolled over five! times and hit the-4rt«: No one in the othef car was] injured. '• Check This Model Close-Out Special $269000 0LDM0BH.E Delivered 2-Door Sodan, Jotowoy Hydrowoftc Dri v^Htoter^Wind-shield Washers and All Factory Equipment. OTHER MODEL OLDS AT EQUALLY LOW PRIDES! HIGHEST DOLLARS FOR YOUR TRADE— COME IN NOW FOR BEST SELECTION! *E ME HUM 41 JEROME OLDS CADILLAC 280 S. Saginaw FE 3-7021 HAVANA (UP)) — The Fidel Castro regime has granted British Gdiana a 35-milhon loan and also| agreed to buy Guiana rice at premium pricer, it was announced Wednesdsiy night. ' Guiana Minister .of Industry and. Trade Dr. Cheddi Jagdn, on hiv second visit to Havana since the Castro .takeover, said the loan was for the development of his country’! timber industry and wmild be paid back over 10 years at 2 peg cent interest. [THE FLOOR SHOP I 99 SOUTH SAGINAW at AUBURN Op«n Friday and Monday 'til ▼ PLASTIC ▼ PLENTY OF FREE PARKING IN 0UI LOT BEAR Of STORE WALL COVERING Jagan said be had beemcoaaidee-ing giving Cuba, some timber concessions in Guteha "but deckled not to because of possible'imperialistic connotations." The- minister described himself as a "socialist , and an enejfny of iprivate property.’’ He added that apme of the "reactionaries" in his country opposed the Cfutre regime. Run Fi. WALL TILE 1 * ^ 2 COUNTER TOPPING 29 i Boa Ft. vrtir Gan. Umnitzar to Kay Amvets' Annual Confab MIAMI BEACH (UPI)VGen. Ly jan L. Lemnitzer,. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Trill keynote the opening of the Amvets1 16th annual national convention! today. -j.„. About N.50ft delegfRcs lire ex-1 kttelld the first-day ws-| SAHDRAN till leu Tku *20°° INLAID LINOLEUMS I- tratotouiteh. rraiuiram WjlSPHALTUL^ Closing Ouf Y mw'! n/ib. Morbhes — Embossed Spattirs — Terra zzo Fne Eitimstsi Closing Out ALL CARPET $y qg ftlf J and Up ASPHALT TILE 4vr KENFLEX VINYL ttr Corktont B‘ ■ up|i v -.»« ^ 4 .m W« Lo«fi To* tks Toels . Futuretq—T.tMrra FREE We Leaa Tow tks Tools ms