The Weather THE PONTIAC .Home Edition PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 19B2—56 PAGES Roberts Wins Handily By RON CANTEKA Sen. FarreH E. Roberts snuffed out theincometaxHs apolitical weapon against him yesterday , by •coring an overwhelming victory over two fellow Republicans ‘for the GOP nomination as state senator'. Roberts, criticised by opponents Richard J). Kuhn and Robert J. Huber for supporting an income tax earlier, this year and liter reversing his stand, walked off with 17,778 votes when unofficial tallies were compiled at the county . clerk’s dffice early this morning. Kuhn was credited with 9,573 votes and Huber, the mayor of Troy, was given a,*92. In the 1960 primary‘ a two-man race with Roberts, Kuhn finished less than 4,000 votes behind. Thyestertay’ithree-f test, which would tend to weaken Roberts’ chances' of a big the incumbent senator came close to 'matching his 1900 total of 19,950 votes. EXECTED TO LOSE Kuhh blamed his decisive -defeat I 'ballot designation carried by Roberts. The con-con delegate I to declare ballot designs- After the State Supreme Court Election Results State Vote (Unofficial Tabulation, MM of 8,199 Pet.) REPUBLICANS DEMOCRATS « GOVERNOR John B. Swainson,. 318,396 LT. GOVERNOR. T. John Lestnski... 251,774 CONGRESSMAN AT LARGE Neil Slacbler. 200,587 GOVERNOR George M. Romney. 446,398 LT. GOVERNOR Clarence A. Reid.. 194,567 John H. Stahlin.121,049 Roekwjeil T. Gust Jr. . .... 104,767 CONGRESSMAN At LARGE . Alvin M. Bentley.. 364,975 County Vote MMflfla Afro - GOVERNOR John B. SWalnaon 16,414 LT, GOVERNOR T. John Lesinski... 13,751 Clarence A. Reid... 13,540 C" CONGRESSMAN John H. Stahlin .. 12,642 Rockwell T. Gust Jr. 7,906 CONGRESSMAN AT LARGE Neil Staebler 11,878 AT LARGE AIvin M. Bentley.. 25,873 CONGRESS George L. Fulkerson 7,435 CONGRESS Williams. , Broomfield 32,198 George E. Lennox.. 5,803 STATE SENATE LelandH. Smith... 13,060 STATE REPRESENTATIVE 1,798 1,456 (District 1) John Si Coleman... (District 2) Arthur J. Law..... (District 3) John F. Foley.... (District 4) Albert A. Kramer.. Archie H. Bailey.. Maxwell M. Gunman (District 5) Harold J. Robinson (District 6) Bill S. Huffman. John C. Hitchcock Lee Walker . . . Thomas Kalezavich COUNTY OFFICES PROSECUTOR S, Jerome Bronson 12,909 SHERIFF Kenneth G. Hirt . .. 5,727 William A.Smith.. 4,629 Homer Hlght..... 4,418 GLERK David 8. Lees..... 12,991 TREASURER Betty H.McVay... 12,682 DRAIN COMMISSIONER Roy J. Russell..... . 7,398 Daniel T. Berry-.. .* 7,336 SURVEYOR Stanley'F. Dunn... 12)973 1,632 1,608 1,425 1,956 2,270 1,726 1,384 175 REPUBLICANS , GOVERNOR George M.( Romney 35,114 LT. GOVERNOR STATE SENATE Farrell E. Roberts- 17,778 Richard & Kuhn.. 9,072 Robert J. Huber... 6,692 STATE REPRESENTATIVE —•'..■ (Piatriet 1)—— Lloyd L. Anderson 3,425 Michael L. Carl. (District 2) Robert.C. Smith.. ■ (District 3) Henry M. Hogan Jr. (District 4) Raymond L. Baker Terrence E. Nagle (District 5) William Hayward.. Donald W. Sargent \ District 6) Kenneth Waller.. 1 COUNTY OFFICES PROSECUTOR George F. Taylor.. 29,371 SHERIFF ruled again# him. Kuhn ~*Hd fur 'expected1* to lose to'Roberts. ""I don't think you can beat bat-lt# d«Tpaffd7ir“ire said: ..... • • ★ ★ dr In the 1960 conte • t between Roberts and Kuhri. Roberts was seeking his first term and did not •arry ballot designation. Kuhn, despite his vigorous, attack on Roberts’ program during the pre-election campaign, pledged to support the Incumbent in his buttle for re-elec- Roberts’ senate opponent in the Novefnber general election, Leland H. Smith, collected 13,000 votes ..... jne Democratic candidate in the senate raee.. Smith’s total- highest of any county Democrat. ' ", •HOME” SUPPORT Roberts’ support came largely FARRELL E. ROBERTS from areas near his West Bloomfield Township home. Birmingham voters gave him hiif biggest'"margin of . the election— I, 503 votes—with a total of 2,045 compared to 540 for Huber and 420 lor Kuhn. - snator’s other high-vote n Royal Oak (1,979), Bloomfield Township (I,-857), Pontiac (1,1IS) and West Bloomfield Township (762). Even in Waterford Township— Kuhn’s home ground rr Roberts emerged the Victor, chalking up 947 votes against 736 for Kuhn and 202 for Huber. Roberto -said-' the election Went about as he predicted except lhat the vote was heavier. He said’he had estimated he would outpoll Kuhn and Huber, 12,000 to 6,000 to 4,000. ^ \ Huber ensured Oily one el the 49 communities balloting In the elec Hon. That wa* In M* home town of Tray, whom ho collected 49S votes compared to Roberts’ 284, which wa^dHwMBI, Kuhn m communities, Including Berkley, \ * where his brother George KUhn Is mayor and leads the Vig|lancf Tax Committee opposing Detroit’s Income tax on nonresidents. BEST OHOWlNfl On the Democratic ticket, the Unchallenged Smith made his most impressive showings in Royal Jak (1,363 voles), his home town Oak Park (1,239) and Pontiac 41485). Robert*' overwhelming victory undoubtedly will quiet criticism of the proincome tax stand he took during this year’s senate session. Along with n group of so-called OOP’ moderates, Roberts voted tor n tax but later re versed tax gre \Ma Duncan Executed at San Quentin SAN QUENTIN, Calif, (AP)< Elisabeth Ann (Ma) Duncan, s all-possessive mother who hire the murderer* of her son's pregnant wife, died today in the Sah Quentin gas chamber. A last-minute petition tor a stay of execution wds^lenled Mrs.'Dun-only five minutes; before she was to enter the gab chamber. Stays also were denied Augustine Maldonado, 28, and Luts Men, **, the mj>a she hired to ktt her daughter-in-law. .She wds pronounced dead a 1:12, Pontiac time, eight minutes lh|~ the gas started. bvPuHCan entered the chant- She’ said not a word as three guards,strapped her into the metal chair. V She Stared straight ahead, with eyes level, at' the door through which shek entered. The governor's office reporied her last word to the warden Innocent. I want to my eon.” ' es blinked hut she held her head level .until a trembling shook her body aS the Jdthal fumes started their effect. for November Impressive Vote Total Marks 1st Campaign for Major Office By The Associated Press Industrialist George Romney raised Republican hopes for victory in November with a strbng “popularity con test” victory over incumbent Gov. John B. Swainson in yesterday’s state primary election. Michigan voters — deciding on a new look tor the legislature — dislodged several veteran lawmakers In a primary which featured a number of surprise upsets. | Romney, firmer American Motors president, rolled Up an impressive vote total in his first campaign for a major political office! He is'regarded as a possible GOP presidential candidate ir 1964. With 6,198 of the state’s 8,199 jmeimt* reporting, including all of Wayno County, Romney’s total -was 448,898 while Swainson hud 818.896. Both Democratic and Republican cad or s cautioned, lioweve r, against reading too much inlo the results of fhe ''popularity poll.” T.wo prominent and longtime members of the state Senate — Sens. Carlton Morris of Kalama- Related Stories, Pages 7, 16, 18,20 Baldonado and Moya, tavern ! drifters who executed their murder *’ contract in November 1958 by " beating, strangling and burying 30-year-old Olga Duncan, were to Roth Kuhn and Huber stressed be marched into the gas chamber (Continued Onu’afce'itrCo). 6) 1 |at 3 p.m... r ----------l.-.fs 1,650 9,115 5,035 3,462 4,888 1,462 One Incumbent Defeated in Representative Races Only one incumbent lost his bid for renomination as Oakland County yesterday named competition for the November election of State Representatives leaving familiar names to appear on the Pontiac and Waterford ballots. The defeated Incumbent was Democratic R6p. John* C. Hitchcock of District 6 in southern Oakland County. In Waterford (District I), Lloyd Frank Ik 30,737 CLERK Daniel T. Murphy.. 28,057 TREASURER Charles A. Sparks 28,195 DRAIN COMMISSIONER Dsnlsr W. Barry. , 19,538 Art Becker ....... ' "11,305 ] SURVEYOR »h A. Main.... 25,45% 1 In Today's | Press I 4-H Fair Opens I. First day's awaids given ] I to deserving youngsters in 1 county - PAGE 18. . I , Pros and Cdns ’ j i President’s business polj- • cies evaluated — PAGE 13. ’ Marilyn ■ She’D be remembered as a star - PAGE 44. , .... 'Wonder Drug' I ThaUdomlde had great future; German firm thought— ] PAGE!. L. Anderson; 54,> the three-time Republican representative, with 3, 425 votes, comfortably doubled the 1,280 In returns (or his young opponent, Michael L. Chrl, 27. Anderson now faces Democrat John S. Coleman ’ who won i yesterday, rtinnini opposed. In Pontiac, Rep. Arthur J. Law D-District 2) was unopposed in the primary as was the Republican contender, Robert C. Smith. Law tallied 1,456 votes—nearly ,200 be-, hind Smith with 1,650. it. dr * In the only primary uppet, Madison Heights‘Mayor. BID S. Huffman, with 2,270, displaced incumbent Democratic Rep. John C, Hitchcock who was after his third term as the 6th District’s repre-dive., Hitchcock polled only zoo and Charles Feenstra of Rapids — were displaced by newcomers, In (he House,‘at least five representatives not the thumbs down treatment. They included veteran Rep. Harry Phillips, R-Port Hu-m. nn:l four Wayne County Dem-•rats — Rons, Joseph Jackson, 15th District; - Edward 'Jeffries, 5th District; Chester Woznlak, 14th District; and Edgur Currie, 1st District. The No. 3 lieutenant governor spot ou the Republican ticket was captured by Clarence Reid, who held that post In 1988-84 and ran Unsuccessfully for the job two years ago. Reid won over stale ken. John Stahlin of Bolding and Rockwell Gnat Jr-, a (t raise Folate Farms attorney. Swainson’s running mate, who was unopposed in (he primary,, will be Lt l Gov, T. John LeQnsal, a Detroit attorney. ‘Other nominee* on the tickets ..ill be chosen al party• conventions Aug. 24-25. These include the secretary of slate, attorney’ general, state treasurer and auditor general. FOR HOFFMAN BEAT hotly contested pace for the GOP nomination for congressman froirrthe 4th Dtstrict.former Sen, Edward Hutchinson -of Fehnvllle heal out three other hopefuls for the seat of retiring Rep. Cloro Hoffman, They Wore Chester Byrns, a St. Joseph attorney,. House Speaker Oon Pears, R-Bucbanan, and Lee Boofhby of Niles a delegate to the recent constitutional coll veil I ton._ The battle for the running-mate spot to Romney provided the only statewide contest in the primary. It pitted the quiet handshaking technique of Reid against some high-powered publicity and speech making formula followed by Slah-lin and Gust. The nlXh to get on Ihe Romney bandwagon was not unanimous, however. Token opposition was launched against the former auto maker as the result of a dash between Romney and Richard Durant, vice chairman of the. I4tb District Republican organisation and a member of. the iritracenserva-tlva John Birch Society. A handful of Durant backers, announced they were , distributing write-in" stickers in opposition to Romney, whom they said wai liberal in his views. Two other Democratic candidates on the primary ballot were con delegate, Lee Walker, Thomas Kalazavich, 175. The latter did not campaign after elding to drop out of the race too late to have* Ms name removed from the ballots, -a* Mayor Huffman will clash la Although) the y announced that 10,000 stickers 'bearing Durant’s name had been ordered, there were no reports in the tentative unofficial returns of any having appeared. . DOUHT HAROMETER’ f Although’ fhe comparative1 size of the Ronyiey-SWainson vote was viewed with interest by political observers, Uiome experts doubted Whether It' provided an acchrate (Continued on Page f, dpi-1) GOP Incumbents Reap -Wide County Margins Republican Incumbents roiled up their usual wide primary margins in traditionally Republican Oakland County yesterday, overwhelming their Democratic counterparts by more than-24 margins in light balloting. ■ V-The only race on the Republican slate saw IncmfflMtnt Drafn Commissioner Daniel W. Barry defeat his challenger for the nomination Art Becker 19,538' to 11,305. In two content* on the Democratic side, former Oakland County Sheriff's deputy Kenneth G. Hirt gained his party’s nomination for sheriff alnd Boy J. Russell edged Daniel T; Berry for the drain commlenloner spot ou the ballot, 7,898 to 7,898. Berry’8 (backers naid today he probably would seek a recount. Tally sheets show that Russell got only 19 of the 46 cities anfl townships in the county, but they added' up to more thqn the 27 which Berry claimed. ' Russell, 88, «f Pontiac Township, will be getting a second crack at Barry's job. He font to the Incumbent In th - lait elaotlon by some 28,(too votes. Bar^y, 89, la seeking his fourth temf, " * Hirt will be facing his old boss, Sheriff Frank Irons, who continued his history of leading the ticket for county offices. Irons polled 30,737, ' Kept from the sheriff'! spot on the November 6 ballot by 34-year-old Hirt of Ferndale were William A. Smith of Maffison Heights with 4,629, and Oxford auto dealer Homer Hight, 4,418. Hirt polled CHECKS COUNTY RETURNS — George Romney, Republican candidate for governor, takes time out from breakfast'at his home to study Oakland County election returns gathered by The Pontiac Phess for today’s paper. Ob- FmUii Frw* Fk*t* viousiy pleased with the results, he returned to his breakfast of milk, toast, cooked cereal; and berries from the family garden In Bloomfield HlUs. raee. Hlght captured 15 of the 46 townships and cities in the county; they were ail in the northern or middle part of the county, and couldn’t offset the high South Oakland votes counted by Hirt. Fulkerson Gets Shot at Rep. Broomfield George J. Fulkerson can thank yoters in Pontiac and Waterford Township for paving his way to victory in the race to choose a Democratic nominee for tJ.S. Congressman from Oakland County^. In defeating fellow Democrat George E. Lennox, Fulkerson received nearly*-------------------- half of his unofficial winning margin of 1,632 from voters in the two area communities. Final unofficial returns showed the 35-ycur-old Birmingham attorney with 7,435 votes compared to i.SO.T for Lennox ‘generally" as he expected, pressing disappointment at light voter turnout, he said his margin of victory seems less impressive because of the small number of total votes cast. OtmgramHnsh .William .8. Broomfield, running unopposed on the Republican ticket, polled 32,199 votes to lead all Oakland Cquety candidates. Broomfield drew 1,904 vote* in Pontiac and another 1,705 in Waterford Township as little more than 10 percent of the. registered voters turned out In each community. ' ’ ' • -V - „ . \ INSURED WIN While the Pontiac and- Waterford totals were meaningless to the unchallenged Brownfield * except as a popularity index; Fulkerson used sizable margins in ioth areas, to insure his victory iver Lennox, In Pontine, Fulkerson drew his highest Vote total and his Mggest winning mnrght In nay Oakland community, tallying 922 votes to Lennox’s^Ti, a difference of 444. Waterford voters gave, the winner a spread of 248 votes, 457 to 211. Fulkerion-aaid the balloting went "I thought I would be strong In Pontiac and -Waterford," the nominee said. Lennox, making his second uri-icccssful attempt to win the Democratic congressional nomination, gained his. biggest advantage in Hazel Park whore he owns *nd manages an industrial fool supply company. , Voters In the South Oakland* city gave LennoX 729 votes and Fulkerson 479. One look at the Combined county totals of both Fulkerson and Lehnox should fell, the new Democratic nominee that he faces an uphill'fight against Broomfield In the Ntyv. 6 general election, TOP DRAWING CARD Together, Fulkerson and Lennox mustered 13,238 votes, nearly 19,000 less than Broomfield. Fulkerson, however, has shown lit the past that he Is a ’ top drawing card for Ms party. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) ■- : tu ; \'r A\ JU LOST IN ’80 Hlght unsuccessfully opposed Irons two years ago in the general election, losing 25,$94 to 34,424. ' Ballot totals for unopposed candidates .mere: For prosecutor—George F, Taylor, Republican Incumbent, 29,371; S. Jerome Bronson, D-Oak Park, 12,909. Clerk-Register of Deed*—Dsn-I T. Murphy, R-Incumbent, 28,-9871 David S. Lee*, D-Troy, 12,- Troasurer—Charles A. Sparks, R-Incumbent, 28,195; Betty H. Mc-Vay, D-BIrmingham, 12,682. Surveyor—Ralph A. Main, R-incumbent, 28,454; Stanley F. Dunn, D-Bloomfleld Township, 12,- Only 15.0 per cent of the county's 328,615 registered voters turned out for the primary. County Clerk Daniel T. Murphy said an unofficial tally showed 51,528 persons voted here, where approximately 85,000 had been anticipated. 01'Sol Will Smile on Area for Awhile OT Sol wilt continue fo beam on Pontiac residents for the next flw days, sending temperatures to highs of near 83. !;• ■e's a ehanpe of a1 late afterthundershower today nut: skies will dear and remain fair Thursday. Variable morning winds at 2 miles per hour .will become mostly northeast to easf at 5 to 1$ m.p.h. 1 '/ i-A* . { ", -fc1;. , Sixty-ive was the low temperature before 8 a. m. in downtown Pontiac. The recording at 2 ft.m. 84. News Flash WASHINGTON tl) - Sncratury an early .advocate ot a quick tax cut, did not renew the raooos-mcndHtlon when he appeared today before 4he House Waya and . M«.«. iWss>EU| <. ' ' . , i pr!M THE JX>KTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 196? The Day III Birmingham Matched Nov. 6 Fulkerson Set for Broomfield on November 6 _ (Continued From Page One) MBhN tor prosecutor, he led CountyCandidates Noted Sculptor Head Department at Fulkerson Is a graduate lawyer ||f|| of the University of Detroit and plpl operates his Own practice Jn Bir-mingham. He holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of CM- gl cago. , nBI One of nine children, Fulkerson ■ was born in Harrisburg, III. and was graduated from Pontiac Cen- I tral High School in 1944. He and ■ his wife, Ruth, have two young H children, a daughter, Ann, 9 and ship. In his home1 community. Fulkerson’ outpolled Lennox, 159 to 37. His margin in Birmingham was 212 to 98. KENNETH 0. HIRT Dem. Sheriff ________ DANIEL T. MURPHY OOP Clerk-Register Veteran Solons fall by Wayside Pair of GOP Senator*, "Morris and Feenstra, Lose Out in Primary 7 i- By The Associated Press A handful of veteran Michigan legislators i- including two of the key Senate spokesmen lor the Re* publican party — fell by the way-side Tuesday in a state, primary electibn highlighted by upsets. •*; .Most incumbents . In the Senate and the state House of Representa-| flveswon the; right to seek re-election in November, but among the victims of unexpected defeat .. were Republican Sens. Carlton H. Morris of Kalamazoo and Charles R, Feenstra of Grand Rapids. Morris, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee and leader of the anti Income tax fight In the last legislative session, was spilled In the Sth .District by Attorney Garry E. Brown of Schoolcraft, a former-delegate to the const" * -* convention; Feenstra, a GOP leader in the Senate for the past 12 years, lost out to Robert VanderLaan, 32-year-old member,of the Parris Township (Kent Cbunty) Board of REPRESENTATIVES LOSE But the voting took Its toll ot Reps. Edgar Currie, lat District; Edward H. Jeffries, 5th District; Chester Woznlak, 14th District, Jo- seph I.. Jackson, 15th District; and Hugh Smnlp, 12th DtatrleU— RALPH A. MAIN GOP Surveyor The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY Mostly sunny, not quite so warm today. Chance of an afternoon thundershower, . . fsis'r BPssiiss At « S.W.: wind velocity, I in.p.h. Direction: iMt. mm sits WMMsdsjr »t i:« p.m. js hi:: 1 at rt«wai NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered showers and thundershowers an .expected tonight from the northwestern Plains into the northern'Ptoteap and in th* southeastern Rockies, upper Mtsaourl ValieE tbe northcentral (bl^statm-and into the southern Appalachians. It will continue hot '*nd Humid in the southern tterot states and warn in the middle Atlantic area. It will be /cooler in the Ohio Valley and into the north Atlantic states as well as in 1he northern Rockies. I i The House lost a number of familiar faces, among them. Rep. Harry J. Phillips, R-Port Huron, •year veteran and one-time 60P floor leader, and five Democratic incumbents from W a yn County districts. , Phillips ran last In a three-Man race for two seats, trailing Hep. Raymond C. Wttrsel of North Street and newcomer Donald Wlsmer dr. of Port Huron. In heavily-Democratic Wayne County all five incumbent senators survived the primary. In Allegan County, complete unofficial returns showed Rep. Ben E. Lohman, a Republican, was ousted In the primary by constitutional convention dele-gate dames 8. Farnsworth, 4,577 to 3,ON. daek Martin, Otsego, Rep.« Clarence -B>< Meggison, < R-Charlevoix, was far behind newcomer Don Gordon of Leland, but were still to come in from least halt the precincts in the district which covers Charlevoix, Antrim, Leelanau and Benzie ties. AAA Other former constitutional convention delegates besides Brown Farnsworth were making showings in the primary. Fpirner delegates won Democratic nominations In Wayne County’s two vacant senatorial They wore • Charles N, D. Ford In the list. David F. Upton, another former constitutional convention delegate, won the Republican nomlpatlon state representative from Berrien County’s 1st District and will Democrat James A. Simmons in November. AAA, In the Houghton district encompassing four counties of the Upper Peninsula, Republican Ruth Butler, still another former delegate, was well ahead of two other OOP aspirants in early returns, seeking the seat held by Rep. Russell Heilman, D-Houghton. Clawson Chiefs Say 'So What' to Election A storm turned the lights down and the city council turned thptr noses up on election proceed--tags In Clawson last night, de? laying final tallies by an estimated two hours. City Clerk Mrs. Gertrude Cadger said final election reports were not sent oft to the county clerk's office until 1 a.m. today because she was required to attend a city council meeting last night between 8 and midnight. Mil. Chdger eald she had reminded the council about the election In hopes they would .reschedule It. "They more or less said *ev what',’’ sho said. County . Clerk Daniel T. Murphy said Clawson’s report was not received- at the courthouse 1:39 a.m., 10 minutes after 'all other reports had been turned to. Mrs. Cadger also blamed a storm which doused lights to the City’s headquarters for 2ty-hours delaying election proceedings. Oust One Incumbent; Law, Anderson Win (Continued From Page One) ; can candidate, Kenneth Waller, who totaled 1,864 vote*. -The only other primary race in which candidacies were contested in both parties was in District 4. Here, incumbent Republican Rep, Raymond L. Baker, 5,035, will face Democratic nominee Albert A. Kramer, 1,608. Baker, 55, who made good to I960 on his first political try after retiring as a .pharmacy owner, yesterday turned aside competition from Terrence E. Nagle, 37, In the opposing party, Kramer's candidacy was contested by teacher Archie H. Bailey,- 1,425, and public relations man. Maxwell M. Gurman. lfij. In, District 5^*vR6tiubUcans selected incumbent Rep. William Hayward as their Noverol bearer with 4,888 votes, over Donald W. Sargent who yron 1,462, Hayward is completing his econd term as state representative, after being a Royal Oak city commissioner for 14 years am) mayor for eight. The Democratic candidate, Harold J. Robinson, was unopposed and mustered 1,956 votes. In District 3, where there was i contest within the parties, incumbent * Republican Henry M. Hogan Jr., with 9,115 votes, is opposed by Democratic candidate John F. Foley with 1,632. Romney Surges to TopinPrimury (Continued From Page One) barometer of what may happen to Democratic Slate Chair-man John (Joe) Coffins recalled (hat la every campaign except one, former Gov. G. Mennen wri/7 In the pri-I; 'The Democratic party,; except in primaries, which involved major office contests, traditionally sets its sights on the ultimate victory, "Now that the primary b shown Goy. .Swainson maintaining traditional strength despite the low turnout of Democratic vbters can concentrate qn tne Victory in November/’ early returns were, still being tabulated, agreed that the .lw •nits of the primary were not necessarily Indicative of the future. "Most of the issues In . the race Tuesday were strictly local ii character and thus any attempt to apply the votj totals to the statewide campaign for governor would be misleading," he mented. - - «.<■ ; — "GET TO ISSUES’ Swainson said that all candidates Swainson predicted a hard-fought campaign in the coming months. "On our part," he said, "it will be waged to accordance with the time-honored principle of honest debate. We will appeal to reason, not emotions. We will cite the record and the facts, not generalizations or conjectures." Pi:- " A w Both Swainson and Romney have campaigned hard to recent weeks, sometimes following schedules that got them up before dawn and to bed after midnight. Timetable for Echo I Just after dark tonight, at 8:58, the Echo I- satellite, will pass over Pontiac skies, coming from the south, 13 to 15 degrees above the horizon, moving to the southeast. To Vie in November of my administration and the record of service to the people of Michigan by the Democratic party Will bear the scrutiny to whloh It will be subjected to the Violent Storm Snaps Power Many Pontiac Area Folk Without Electricity, for Short Tima Last Night Roberts Polls 2J Margin Over Richard Kuhn (Continued From Page One) the tax as a major campaign issue but Roberts later said he was opposed to an Income levy. A A A Kuhn also criticized the incumbent for "riding George Romney’s coattails." A A A Roberts’ primary election victory puts him to line .for. a second mmwsm the can defeat Smith. He pVeviously served two term!’ to the state House of Representatives. A. A , A Kuhn’s loss was his sixth to row in the Republican senate primary. A A A He said he did not consider the end of his political career, noting that "Abraham Lincoln lost 11 times." Schmidt, 39, received his bachelor of tine arts degree from Oran* brook Academy of Art to 1952; studied with Os-si iTZacIk&e |n Paris and at the demia' di IBelle Arti in Flor-[cnee betorg reiving Ms mas-r of fin e arts degree to 1955. Foilowirtgtosgraduationhewent to the Kansas City Art Institute as head of the sculpture department. in 1958 he taught Sctllptitfe At the Rhode Island School of Design. He returns to Cranbrook from the University of California Art Department. ’ MAJOR influence Schmidt has developed a number of techniques for working to cast metal sculpture., His cast iron sculpture has been a major influence to the revival of this medium. 1 He employes what he refers to A brief but violent thunderstorm - whipped along by winds estimated at 50 mites per hour toppled trees; snapped power lines Picture on Page 55 and teft many. Pontiac area residents without electricity and telephone service yesterday evening. A large elm tree which fell across Oakland Avenue south of Baldwin Avenue Caused the mosf extensive damage Of the storm. The tree snapped two mpjor Consumers Power Co. circuits to front of the Pontiac Motor Division Offices, 196 Oakland Ave. It also ruptured a Water line lead-tog to Spadafore'8 Market, 197 Oakland Ave. Consumers Power customers on the east side of Pontiac were effected momentarily, but many residents and voters at polltog places on the west side were without electric service until 1:55 p.m., according to eompsny official*. Police were called out to reroute traffic around the fallen tree on Oakland ^Aveune. Detroit Edison Co. zpdlfesmen reported scattered pbwer failures in Pontiac, Troy, Milford, Addison Township and Independence Township. Edison crews had most service restored in 2% hours. Telephone service also was af-ifected in some areas due to broken cables. —- -------------- The storm dumped 1.7 Inches of rain on downtown Pontiac in less than half an hour. How Pontiac Voted (Total vote S.897 6T36,634 registered voters, 19.9%) GOVERNOR REPUBLICANS Man Killed by Wasps SALISBURY, MD. (UPI) 4-Robert W. Walter, 49. was stung to death by wasps yesterday working pioyerr* Swainson 1799 ’ Romney 2098 LT. GOVERNOR Lesinski . 1427 Reid 900 Stahlin 818 Gust CONGRESSMAN AT LARGE Staebler ., Bentley .1305 CONGRESS Fulkerson 922 Broomfield 1904 Lennox 478 t. STATE SENATE Smith ..... ,„Tr. Roberts Kuhn 727 Huber 203 STATE REPRESENTATIVE (District 3) Law ...I486 Smith COUNTY OFFICES ’ Proeecdtor Bronson .. ...1207 Taylor ... , ' "w"*" Sheriff Hight Irons 1875 Hirt ...... 372 Smith ..... ...K 334 Ctoifc-Regtster Lees Murphy, 1699' Treasurer McVay . .7 7. 1170 Sparks 1683 1 brain Commissioner ’Berry 994 Barry ........1343 Russell ... Becker 494 Surveyor ........1644 Late rs From Our News Wires GENEVA —The United States offered today to olash by more of control flee a mi- States Is prepared |o accept "around 80" control pools Instead of the 180 It has previously ttuMcd on. m*-* WASHINGTON "'JPhc Soviet Union set off another atmospheric nuclear teat yesterday* the Atomic Energy Commission reported today. “The detonation occurred at the Soviet teat site la central Siberia and was In the low kll- LONDON — The British government today extended until Friday, mktalglit the deadline tor El Al Airline to take fugitive spy Robert Soblen to the United States. This pot off a showdown in the n head at midnight tonight. BUENOS AQMBi from northern Argenttnq said today Gen. Federico Toronto Mon WASHINGTON — The United States made a ima plea to Russia today te move forward In Seerotary of State Dean Raak made thq, appro! la a RNulairte meeting with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin at the State Department. In a piece la carved to reverse In blocks of baked sand, creating a mold Into which the molten metal 10 poured. A In anbther academy change, Donald C. Willett, 17333 Cornell Road, Southfield, has been named to painting during the year’s leave of absence granted Jack Madison for study to Japan. 'A A A Willett received his master of fine arts degree at Cranbrook Academy, studying with Sepeshy and has recently completed a year of study under a Fulbright grant at the University of Paris. < Satellite Bill Filibuster May Resume Friday WASHINGTON (UPI) - Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield said today the Senate probably will be to for another filibuster when the satellite communications bill comes back to the floor Friday. ■ A “A; . A / j -“I expect the Worst," Mansfield fold newsmen. This apparently meant that a handful of liberal Democrats who are opposing the administration bill were prepared to pick up where they left off last week. The Senate was tied Op for nearly a week by a talkathon by the opponents. The floor fight was halted by a temporary truce. District 1 Rivals LiromuHikwiaiiui How Watertord Voted (Total vote 1,581 qf 11,836 registered voters, 11.8%) GOVERNOR DEMOCRATS REPUBLICANS Swainson .., .... 743 Romney ........mg LT. GOVERNOR .... 645 Reid - - - Stahlin Gust ... ........243 CONGRESSMAN AT LARGE Staebler ...... ... 570 Bentley ......... 1399 CONGRESS Fulkerson ... ..... 457 Broomfield .......1705 Lennox ______......211 STATE SENATE ...628 Roberts ..... .....Kuhn .. J.....PH ’ , Huber ..............,..202 STATE REPRESENTATIVE (District I) Coleman .... 874 Anderson ..........14a • r- ' ■ ■-' ■ *' cart.411 COUNTY OFFICES Bronson ...re,....... 580 Taylor............1542 Hight 360 Inna .......iW;.........17a Smith 113 Hlrt if.......*aH..v-.1182 Cl Lees ......... 7_: McVay ..... Clerk-Register FONTI^ », I9&2 Clean Out of Water, Unit Begs for Main bom near Vevay; tod, I Thurs., Fri*f Seri., Mon. and Tups. WITH THIS COUPON - m«ws • Crystals Fitted White You Wait • WATCH BANOS *1.95 9p NEISNER’S Watcli Rapaii 41 N. Mm, H MM) HALF SOLIS r e NEISNER'S SHOE REPAIR WHILE U WAIT or SHOP SERVICE MAIN fU BIRTHDAY BISC0UNT PRICES Raduoad More for 9-Hour SALE-SHOP NOW! Only bur Birthday Sale combined with our Famous 9-HOUR SALE could bring YOU super discount* like these. Remember—SIMMS • became BIG by keeping price* LITTLE .. .we've been dSlrtg It for. 26 years and will keepnon-dolng Hi* , , SIMMS Reserve* the Right to Limit Quantities on All Items in Thit Advertisement So That More May Share in the Super-Savings! \ BARGAIN BASEMEN! First Quality Cdtton Boys’ T-l K |00 $ First Quality Cotton j_ Men’s T-Shirts ' for $1.09 Value 49° Regular 39c Value—American mad* •:$; Breast pocket style, choice of 6 color), with no-stretch nylon neck. White, Sin >E Small and large tin only. ' ----- ------ jj -CLOTHING I medium only CLOTH ING • Better Bedroom Curtains and Drapes 1“ Values to $5 ' Fair CANNON Top Fitted Pastel Sheets ■ $2.1$ TWIX $2.11 FULL 59 152 • Boxer Sty led—Lined . Boys’ Swim Tranks 64* folly lined swim trunks with _. wolit. Cotton ploidl* ouorted color*: Size 4 to 14. _j| , -CLOTHING lasementi ' Travel and Home-Folding Baby Potty Chair 199 tS.50 Value * Sturdy wood from*, fold* compactly for storage and traveling. With pot end de-| fleeter, -IABV NMD* iaeomont Popular Half Style Girls' Can-Can Slip 100 $2.00 Value Save half.on tiered can-con clips In white, sires 6 and 10 only. Limit 2. -CLOTHING Main Fleer MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS DalkioutCoM Drink Kool-Aid Drink In Dark Box Container Mail EnvghqMs: 5 18c 100 35 r“—. -CANDY Mein Fleer | • 13x13V4-lnch Size * $ Charmin Napkins Regular 49c value—decorator desk box has tod extra quality white weave envelopes. Umlt t, - SUNDRY Main Floor • Imparted —fInaQuallty Mar Pipes Pkg. 9® j ^79° SS Fine Imported all brlqr bowls In ehc Full 60 count of fin* Charmln.napklns for home or picnic. In poly wrap pock, limit 1. ^ -SUNDRY Main Floor Boxaf 16 Cratton Fin* Imported all brlgy I of shapes and sized for of shapes and sizes for all smokers. ■— -TOBACCO Main Floor CASCO Thermal Electric ' . ,v AH ecttoH—over 130 thread count,fzy- rrt*0n!’ '.ST ■ 1 Malic corner*. Bias taped, lit quality. Big Lot All at On* Low Prica—Sa'rtTB ?225 to *3" CURTAINS tCafes, tiered,,panels In rayon chromeipunL, Your drip-dry cottons, textured acetates, no-lron ~ Qigjgg viscose, flock daerons ,t op to 54*l(ich ■ solids, florals, dots, etc. • ■™ ' ”• • -DOMESTICS Balament. I 90 MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS Soft, Absorbent Terry Cloth Children’s Training Pants Si, 99? 29c Value ■ Heavyweight ferry doth, are ideal training pant) for the children, Size* 0 lb 6 in assorted coldri; Limit 10* pair per customer. * -CLOTHING Main FI Winter Weight-100% Cotton Jri Children’s 2-Pc. Sleepers .............99? 11.99 Value 2-piece grow ikf style pa|oma$ with extra long ihlrt, rib. knits, gently .napped. Piaitlc gripper feet./Choice of 4 colon In ilzee 1 to 6. Sonf*‘ • tiled for hygienic protection. ‘ Xu -CLOTHING Main Floor Stretch Nylont or Tarry Knit-l et Quality Children’s Swim Suits Values to 91.89 1“ Auoried styles cynd colors in strip**/. . . .iilze* JL'to, 6*. Stretch for aerfeclflt. Buyotiovwrievwjkfcercompptoon^ ^ 7 - V “ uCloiTHINO Molri IstQuoilty-oBaotnacfc Ladies' T-Toppers $1.29 Value 53* l quality, U.S.A. most*, boafnack * In *trlp« qnd solids. Six** S-M-L. -CLOTHING Main Hi# Ladies’Pedal Pusher I” $2.98 Value l*n*r piidot pushirt In at*ort*d colors »llz*S into 14 and 32 to 38. -CLOTHING Math Floor Sisorts—Pusher— Tap Girls’3-Pc. Set 1 00 Thr**-pl*c* play mhos p*dal pushers, ■ short* and crap top. Sir* 4 only. -CLOTHING Main Flour Many Color* and Stylo* \ Girls’Knit Shirts' 49° 'T ___ y csrfor* and *tyl«*. (O 14. Slight Irragular*. -CLOTHING Main Fluor Strip** arid Solid* Ladies' Pedal Pusher 60* A«*wt*d fabric* In rirtplt and *0«d*, •Izm tO So 14 only. I iff j . -CLOTHING Main Floor Fr**h tosssmur Truat Marshmallows Futt I Pound 22* R*gwlor 29c vdlu*— whit* morthmol-low* bs callophon* bog for *xWo faMfa, in***'. . -CANDY Malts Moor' Coloring Crayons g # Massage and Vibrator 4Ms-lnch Diamutar Ashtrays 15c Value 96 Alt M*tol osh tray In choic* of UMortad popular color*. 4 Vi-Inch *1**. ; -TOBACCO Main Hear Diysmoke Pipe Set 12.50 Vfitise light- •feather pip* with 3 Inter-'• briar bowl*. Nylon *t*m. -TOBACCO AAaln Flea* For Hama U*a—9 Power Flash Magnifier i. $1.50 Value 98* 3-pow*r nognlfltr to check tlompt, Mol*, signatures, photograph*, »K -SUNDRY Main Floor SIMMS •“The Best Friend Your Pockeibook Ever tiwFt 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS WHITE Enamal Wood Toilet Seat Gonuino 'EAGLE' Dour Mte Lock 199 WJ9 Value 1*7 IWh complete with lid, •:•: Pin tumbler lock for any door, Easy to rustproof hinges. Easy to install. Limit 2. S Install youmlf. With 2 keys, limit 2, <* * -HARDWARE 2nd Floor SL „_ -HARDWARE 2nd If Famou. •SUNBEAM' Steam ’n’ Dry inn i Galvanized 10-Gallon Garbage Can 5 Q97 | . a W i::; Regular $2.39 value,—*te*l gorbaf $iM,f Value ___________ __ || Regular $2.29 value,—steel garbage, T ElecMe Iran far steam 'n' dry Ironing^ $ eats with tear, bait hondle. limit 2 * Fabric control dial. Brand new. limit I. $ per person'. -ELECTRICAL 2nd Floor ^ —HARDWARE 2nd Floor Famous Creston coloring crayons in box of 16 assorted colors, limit 2. • » -IUNORY Mobs Floor -SUNDRY Main Fluor DRUG DEP'T. SPECIALS Rdgularar Super vi Modes* Napkins “ Economy Sin* Tvbf ' Colgate Toothpasta 40?96e 39° ai ^BW *9 W,W ?j• Sov* 30c on famous Colgdt* w Regular $1.45. pack of Modest sanl- ;!;! tory napkins for feminine hygiene. :S limit 2. -DRUGS Main Fluor $ Save 30c un famous Colgdt* With, Gardol, cleans teeth and helps stop 2 Famous Brands qf Creme Rinses § 33° -DRUGS Main Floor HUDNUT 20-Curl Home Permanent 69° .Choice of luilr* Creme bt Helen* .!>• ’ Curtis hair rinses. 3Mi-ounce size, -2 Limit 2. -COSMETICS Main Fluor Haw Svpar Speed Gillette Rgzor COSMETICS Main Fluor Famou* Craam Typo Mmn Deodorant 66‘ 39° Save 34c on GKIetl* double-edge safely razor. Cut* whiskers off dose. " * -DRUGS Main Flour- Site Save 30c on regular 6% |i Cream Deodorant—long fatting pra-~ tectlon. -COSMETICS Mein Float” rginnii nvxniun Aspirin Tablets 250144' Antal 'French Touch' Hair Spray 49* toufar B9e pot* Of 240 otplrlnt- *' 14rtHtK* *pray pan of famous Chari*. Ml 4 groin riranj^Um^^asto^ , g Attfal Yran^To^Infr spray. —COSMETICS Main Ffaof • PHOTO DEPT. VALUES To 2 Deck* of Card* Card Shuffler -SUNDRY Main Floor Famou* H*i«n* Curif* Enden Shampoo 29* Endow Liquid Shompoo thot realty control* hair dandruff. Umlt 2 per person. -DRUGS Main Floor. Famou* BRYLCREEM Hair Groom a 29* As advertised on IV—“Just A Utile Dab tyflFDst Vast.*' Sov* 14c per tube. -DRUGS Main Fluor Helena Custl* Famou* EggShampoo $9e 44C Site 'If W, l Shompoo for luxurious, blllOwy Is, good far oil hair types: Limit 2. -DRUG! Main Floor > Aluminum Foil Bant 5 *"28* Regular 59c pock of 5 pans. 12*7% mch size. Bail*, servo and freeze In *°m HOUSEHOLD 2nd Floor (MM*Fq«f Peg Boards *59° [ Mix Hot and Cold Water - : Water Mixer Hosai $1.49 Valui Completely perforated boards | ‘ chen, garage, basemenl s extra, limit 2. -HARDWARE2nd Floor 77 m In kitchen, garage, basement shop, fit Y-hos* to mix hot end cold water whhjjg. Hook* extra, limit 2. S out costly plumbing installation, limit 88a -HARDWARE 2nd PidS fill 60-Yard Rell Masking Tape • Round UtHity Tubl a MC I 91S9 ' OO * |; OO %-lnch width, f while pblMIng or for loping box** and carton*.IMt2.‘ ’i •. -HARDWARE 2nd Floor ; Galvanized tub* Mth boll handle, hap*. For hpmth garage, shop, t«. Limit 2. •*» -HARDWARE 2nd Fleer HOUSEWARES Thermae 'KIAPSIT' Thermos Bottle 99® j ri. 47' Famous 'EASY OFF* Oven Cleaner ^ 4,; Glass vacuum battle keeps liquids hot or cold limit't. 6-ounce far complete with applicator, ,„ Now screw down stopper. % Put ‘Easy Off' on, wipe great* off, ' f •............. fi: UmH3. I , ’*H$ HOUSEHOLD 2nd Floor -H^ljEHOiJP 2nd Flw Stainle** Stool 3-Qt. Mixing Bowl a 97® J !•' Piqco*—Plastic Salad Sets 9? $1.50 Value Glearning stainless Is *a*y: to car* far, §? Ring handle far easy gripping. LlmW 2. iw -HOUSEHOLD 2nd Floor $ .Durable pply plastic set with 8 Indlvfd* ■ ual, bovyls. serving bawl, fark and* Ipodn. Colors. -HOUSEHOLD 2nd Ftdari Utility 12-Ploca Plastic Snack-Set Ov*Hh*fUip TV Snack Trays i ft# 117 | JJ ' ' »'• torn, MWiuta 9ZIA,lnrK for picnic or TV snacks. 4 cups, 4 plates, 4 large plates. A -HOUSIHOL lUSEHOLD 2nd. Floor I 16x22-lnch tray [ ,h* ®r< 1 * m -HOUSEHOLD 2nd Floor I'UlRBSff sqrt|| Hi Hi-Fi Sound Transistor Battery | Raconling Tape Former T $1.35 ' Value m radios, fresh stock. #216 buttery. \ - -CAMERAS AAohi Fleer j 1290 Ft. Acetate.. 84c 1190 Ft. Acetate. 1.89 1890 Ft. Mylar.. 1.49 Values to $4.95—unbranded namet becauto Skim* cut priept to kfw..»„' -CAMERAS Main Floor- m Ai u Vi jsija J 1 If li ii 1 wy rwA rnvnui qfki , N|lghbof» Siqco 1934 } 98 N. Saginaw St. ' \ Ml ■ I ■ J . ■ Wo Coeh Your Pay Chock* , Fr*o-NoC I THE PONTIAC P^ESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST A 1962 GLENWOOD PLAZA • THURS.-FRI.-SAT.-SUN, • OPEN lOtolO SUNDAYS 12 W 7 PADDOCK ami NORTH PERRY mm Black or Brown Adjuitt 7'6" FURNITURE FOR GRACIOUS LIVING fTT*PLAIPORM-ROCKER • EXTENDS FKOM H^OOR TO CEILING. • LIGHTS ADJUST TO ANGLE DESIRED • MATCHING BULLET SHADES All enameled with 3 separately wired lights. Fits anywhere. K-MARTDISCQIMTPRICED! Rocking comfort without cumbersome rockers! Amply proportioned in rich Salem Maple finish „wood, Smcmgs cushioned seat Choose eekmiai print upholstery in brown, beige or olive./ POLE LAMP Adjusts V C" tort" New, modern way . to better lighting at better-than - ever savings! All Brads — with 3 separately wired lights. Fits anywhere. ’fQMs If” at K-mart ■ Shown Above: { BOLSTER LOUNGE 74” Sofa lounge becomes a bed when the ■Or bolster is off. Coil spring comfort. Brown, #V Beige, Olive. Reg. 1.45 MODESS, 40’s.... 99° AQUA R»g. 59c . ALKA-SELTZER.. 39* PRELL Reg. 1,98 UMBUI CHOCKS, mi.,.T* J!CP MATCHING CHAIR Warm Salem Maple finish arms and legs. Comfortable spring-filled seat padded with cotton and foam. Brown, beige or olive print jW' Early American 5 LOUNGE CHAIR For 20”—24”—26" Bikes All rubber, deep-tread replacement tires at a special low price! In the three moit popular sizes. Save now! Vv^ ^ ■ j' ' ' - ■ ' ,*e Spray Point Lubricants, Chrome Cleaner, Discount Priced it I Rood King 4-PLY NYLON AUTO TIRES.. 13.98* 6.70j^ M«<*wNI tube t™. Olhw sizes ot comparable seviims. K-Mert'e finest! Installed; free. No .trade-in needed. , *Plus Fed. Tax. Comfort Without bulk! Matches all pieces above ... In brown, beige or olive colonial print. Buy a pair at this very special price! Ask about Easy Terms on Purchases 1 of $60 or Moire. Months to Pay t ASK FOR A K MART CREDIT CARD, You’ve seen on TV how DuPont #7 cleans and waxes In one ONLY' ■ § 11* easy operation. Leaves a car looking ahowroom - new. Save I O *t K-Martl . ' ' v ■ . ■ w Discounts on Batteries, Car Seat$9,S0at Covers,* Oil, Accessories! YQVR KRESGE CREDIT CARD GOOD AT K MART TOILETRIES and HOME REMEDIES TRE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY; AUGUST % 1962 I {‘Doctors* Prescriptions at Opposite Poles FIRST TO WAITWl|I^g increases in productivity should be revised to provide a catchup in SHOP THORS., PR!., SAT , and MON. NIGHTS till 9 capacity to avoid Inflation. With industry operating at less than capacity, Keyserling aces no need for further business tax concessions on top of the .new depreciation schedules said the administration tax biU now in Mix or Color-Match Girls' Sweaters, Skirts, Blouses and Socks! .Humphrey Denies U. S. fropasalC Trials for Future Concessions WASHINGTON (AP) - Sat. Hubert $L * Humphrey, D-ftthm., ttfy a reduction in the number'hf inspection rites needed to oollce a i test ban.1 He insisted that critics who contend the United States is making concessions in its bargaining position are wrong. What is' being done, he said, is to adjust die American position in 2-trouser Dacron®/ Saulnier Worsted Reduced from’50 Dacron® and OQ9( Fine Wonted W previously believed. Humphrey came to the administration’s.defense after Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., told the Senate die government is floating trial bid-loons in an effort to convince Americans that on-site inspection can be dropped as a treaty ban requirement. The United States haa contended that any effective treaty must be priced by international!/ manned inspection posts. The Soviet Union has rejected this. Details of the new U5, proposals have not been made public but they are based on the new test-detection findings. Reportedly the proposals would ease American demands for inspection posts. However President Kennedy has Blouse Complete .Orion Acrylic Bulky Swoafor Sizes 7-14 Sublet With Matching Sox it 3-6x, 7-14 Subtoons $2*« $3*8 Dacron® and Crisp Rayon Has Joined Our Staff as Manager of Our Life insurance Department. MIL UNO is available at any time for consultation. Dacron Blond or Nylon Slips Our Collection Arctic Steepen IIM alt tho prtny Kyltl. most or* (amour I quality Goy plaldi. lowly print* pnd Mild color! I* lliert or to llaou* uyl**. The Natural Gas industry has spearheaded toa spectacular growth and progress because of popular demand from industries and modem homemakers. Customers, delighted with the economy, cleanliness and comfort that Natural Gas affords, are demanding more “stored— “ sunshine.” And there’s plenty of it because year after year moire Gas is discovered than is being used. *i In giant industries, hospitals, schools, and in commercial establishments, Natural Gas is a flexible, versatile power source. It plays a key rdfe in the management of the home withaccurate, automatic controls for cooking, house and water heating, refrigeration, laundry drying, incineration and air conditioning. In short, versatile Natural Gas is a part of today’s modem way of life. WHILE THE SUN gttlNIS— , CONVERT TO CLEAN, ECONOMICAL OAS HEAT m tour gas nratino dealer lME^m^Ihusky Young Gent's Corduroy Outfit -SCHOOL FASHHMS OH WAITE’S SECOND FLOOR CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY Voice of the People: TOr PONTIAC Feel* Abortion in Thalidomide Cases | a British 'crown colony tho government Is patterned after England's. The Press Welcomes Annual 4-H Club Fair ‘ A warm welcome is extended to the 22nd Annual Fair of the 41 clubs of the Oakland County 4-H—symbolizing Head, Heart, Hand, Health. This national youth-development program has had a long praiseworthy history. Its forerunner, dating back to the 1850-60 period, consisted of a couple of exclusively agrarian units : calf clubs and corn clubs. ★ ★ It was not until 1914 that the organization as we know if came -into being. Under the Smith-Lever Act, Congress created the Cooperative Extension Service as ap educational branch of land — grant universities. Federal and matching atate funds were set up to provide supervisory and field Staff, j ?;■') \ ' :r‘ 'V / ★ . ★ • The 4-H txmcept of character and talent development is a basic “tool.” Each member selects a project from the variety of handicraft, agriculture, homemaking and personality categories, and under guidance pur-sues his specialty, at the same time' broadening his outlook as result of general familiarization with the entire field of activities. ★ ★ ★.............. Oakland County currently has 1,500 members under direction Of 250 volunteer leaders. Statewide, the totals are 71,000 and 13,000, respectively. We express best wishes for a most rewarding and stimulating fair how In progress and the continued progress of the local and national 4-H movement. Now Jamaica is breakirig off this tie and has asked and been accepted as a member of the British Commonwealth of Nations. It is not as though it was becoming completely independent. But it hr a step in that direction. ★ ★ "★ . The new head of the gov-eminent is Sir Alexander Bustamante,. the nation’* first prime minister. At 81 he is a . strong, vigorous man apd owes _JM&-Vii*L**althjU> buying on the ... . U.S. stock markst after the crash in 1929. He said on his last visit "to the United States: “We are pro-American .., we are antl-Communist. We belong to the West and we’ll stay with the West.” f At least for the time being there is no indication of any veering toward Castro-ism. This is good and we hope democracy can continue with these friendly island people. If theqhild is bom' with complete mental faculty, I’m sure he would never forgive his parents for bringing him into the world to that condition knowing that they could haVe prevented it. ■' * ★ ★ ★ ;tU"' And, please, let’s not blame God lor this diabolical situation. . That would be bringing Him down to lower than' man's level. The drug was made by imperfect men, but perhaps their motive, wap good. WhYknowS? : • H. B. ‘Will Officials Have Their Way Again?’ ‘What’s the Matter^ With Lawrence?* if Lot_officials, “ram an unwanted-, airport down the throats of people/* They rammed us with a ‘‘nuisance tax.” Government is- supposed to be ‘‘for the people, of the people,', and by the people.” We didn’t have a chance to vote. Now comes a state income tax. Will we get a' chance to vote? Never! Wd will -Jit back and be a“sport" American. ■ ' : • •: r ____ W. T- LaQue Milford with everyone? Claims If s Costly ♦ to Ride Ambulance ! The Director David Lawrence Says: Dems Condone Criticism of FBI Sends Answer About ‘Retarded’ The Man About Town Jaycees Score Present Super Program to Football Fans Good News: Machines Haven’t Beaten Us Yet By HOWARD V. HELDENBRAND To President of the Pontiae Area Junior Chamber of Commerce Wm. J. Dean Jr. and his co-chairmen Richard M. Fitzgerald and Raftr P. Rnmmsi a well-earned salute on the highly professional Job done In staging the second Lions Intra-squad scrimmage at Wiener Field last Saturday evening, • The entire production went off with precision and on time, WASHINGTON - Is there a faction in the-Democratic party today which considers the fight against communism' in the United States as just a lot of nonsense? If there is a renewed tendency in that direction, it is quite possible that the Demo-i cratic party itself! will be facing! again the charge! of being "soft onl communism" which led In part to Its defeat in the 1952 presidential and congressional elections. 13-stale Democratic party conference, seemed to level his attack particularly at J.. Edgar Hoover. This is not a new tactic. Mr, Ford was probably the best' example of how one jman can build individual “Uncertain" has reason to be so. What was meant' by the words “retarded child"? The word ‘ire-tarded" gives no more meaning, than does the word “fever.” Everyone who hay a fever does not have influenza. We cannot pass -judgment on the retarded as though all were In one category. Some months ago there were articles in The Press regarding ambulance services going broke because people don’t pay. Thp common, working man can’t afford their rates. One of the city ambulances took my'son and myself to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, a distance of olid-half mile and charged $25. I took my time paying. Every two months I received a phone call about ft. Four years ago another ambulance service took my husband 10 miles to Pontiac General and charged $15, which in more reasonable. For many years now, many persons have been trying to damage the prestige of the head of the FBI, but have not succeeded. Not content with his blows at the •FBI and its efforts t» ferret out Communist subversives, Ferry aimed a few swipes at American business and industry. He took issue with those who have suggested that President Kennedy now is trying to “woo" American business. this country hqs ever jefeh. He might never have piade the success he .did if American business had been regulated to the extent that It is today. It's strange how often the funds bequeathed by mien who are pilloried as “big business” are used by so-called “liberals” to create antagonisms against business as an institution. (Copyright, 1988) parents, the institutions, lack of. community labilities plus legislation are so complex right now that one has to search mighty deep for an. answer. . Mrs. Wallace Newman Union Lake ,. (Editor’s Note: If “H.C.D.’’ wity please submit .iris name and address for our files we will publish his letter.) Reader Misses Comic Strip * Young Negro Man Can’t Find Job THOUGHTS FOR TODAY That tiny computet error that cost our missile program $18 million draws quite an audible gulp. After all, if a missing hyphen in ah equation can lead to destruction of an Atlas-Agena rocket, what could a missing comma do? ★ 'a" ★ It all brings out a very gratifying point: despite the ultra-pre-coclous electronic brains that are all but running this atomic age, there's still room for man's good old fashioned power of reason. - ^if ■, ' - For all the amazing devices that put those capsules in space, It’s the astronaut, the human factor, that guides them out of some pretty fatal-looking situations. So don’t sneer at human errors in experimentation. Man is known for getting out of what he gets into. That’s more than you can say for machines . . . po far. every feature of if hearing the stamp of advance thought and planning. The crowd, despite the threatening weather, was near capacity—which should turn In a tidy little sum to swell the Chamber’s1', Youth Activity Program. Moreover, the comments on all sides wore unanimously enthusiastic with complete enjoyment of the-program pMinly apparent. ’ .... ★ ★ ★ ft is nice to report the prominent part played by a Pontiac family hi the recent Lutheran Synods Conference in Detroit's Convention arena. The. Danish, Finnish, Oerman and Swedish bodies had met.to formulate the organisation of L. c. A. (Lutheran Churches of America). It seems strange that the 13-state conference of western Democrats at Seattle should have given its time to listen to a speech by W. H. Ferry, vice president of the Fund for the Republic, denouncing as ineffective “spy-swatting", the efforts of the Federal Bureau of Investigation' in lighting communism. Ferry apparently differs with Attorney General Robert Kennedy in appraising the significance of the activities of the Communists in this country. For the attorney general has repeatedly said in public speeches that Communist subversives cannot be ignored. Ferry said' in one, part of his speech: “No one Circs to have.spies ami saboteurs percolating through the,republic, and If the FBI is not up to finding and Ferry said: “Industry ShouId TOr he wooed, -but watched, and tolerate^-. and reined in when it gets out of line .... They (the corporations) are hot there to be loved but to be used." Ferry, ns vice president of the Fund for the Republic, has a lot ,to say nowadays about how the money accumulated by the late Henry Ford should be spent. And I tell,you,youare Peter, and on this rock I will build my eburah, and the power* of death shall not prevail against It. — Matthew 1S:1S. Persecution’ has not crushed the church; pow'-r has not beaten it back; time has not abated its forces; and stoat is most wonderful of all, the abuses of its friends have not shaken its stability. — Horace Bushneli. Why is it so vary hard for a hard working, ambitious young Negro man to obtain a job? Anyone will tell you to get at least a high school education. You get it, and what do you have unless you know someone who knows someone who knows the boss? Mrs. Claudia Blakemorc 66 Florida What ' happened to “Adam Ames”? It was ths only cartoon that I thoroughly enjoyed. . \ Mrs. Cogger Jr. * Davisburg (Editors Note: The Hall Syndicate has discontinued the comic strip “Adam Ames.") * Portraits Smiles Facts on Appendicitis! Deaths Still Run High Fish are said to be good brain food. They sure develop the Imagination of some of the men .who catch them. . President of the Another Nation, Jamaica Gains Independence Recent ceremonies in Jamaica have changed’it from a British crown colony to an independent natiop. This Is following in line with a world trend. V Synod (SUOMI), who installed first officers Of BOW organization, was the brother of Philip J. Wargelln of S3S Voorhels, whoso lather had been president before the brother of the Synod founded 75 years ago by the grandfather. ★ dr * The recent Interest In hoes brings a nice letter from Mrs. Grace McKinney of Lake Orion, who thinks she has the daddy of "them all. Doing some fast, computing. but without revealing any secrets, the MAT thinks the hoe must be about 70 years old. an agency that can." Ferry talks as if all the FBI has to do to get rid of persons suspected of Comniuhlst activities Is to jarreat them/ and that they will-then, of couraq,’ be convicted and put in jail without much difficulty. To appraise whether it is good or bad would certainly be pre-" sumptuous for an outsider. Yet, to one who has seen this tiny country it appears odd. Why not hang on with both* hands to England? ' -Ar- . ★ . ' This Island which Is 90 miles south of Cuba is only about the size of Connecticut. Just what the future is fop economic development might he summed up by saying it appears cloudy. The welfare of the 1.5-mlllion natives Is a problem. The population Is either “haves” or “have note,” with absolutely no middle ground. ★ it, ★ ‘ Aside, from a Yew strikes and a little unreet the administration has been highfr efficient. Bejng The lady’s early connection '‘ with the land goes back to the “John Stoat Farms,” a- couple of miles out of Clarkston. Now she has flower and vegetable gardens, uses the hoe dally and “wouldn’t take a million for It." - Huree - huree - huree! Tho Weather contest closes at noOh on Friday, Aug. IS. You can become the proud possessor of a $100 U.S., Government savings bond by merely making the most accurate * prediction of ’ date and time of the highest . temperature registered between now and 6 p.m. on Labor Day . . . Address your card to tho MAT. f Tho Pontiac Press will Judge all entries and Its decision will be final. The contest la not open to employes or relatives of the ’ newsgaper^^ KEEP OUT OF JAIL But the truth of the matter is that Communist agents are not Only subtle and skillful hi their methods, but they know American laws very well and they have the benefit of resourceful American lawyers who manage to keep them out pf jail. For the past two weeks newspapers have been publishing the story of Robert Soblen, who escaped from this country even though he was under $100,000 bail. He was a convicted spy sen- • fenced to life Imprisonment. But the FBI Is powerless when a man Is granted ball who never should have been. glven even temporary' freedom. The FBI doesn't control the courts, Feiry has been quite a controversial figure, arid has loir years taken an active part in belittling the Communist menace in this country. ’ Not so Jong ago, he tried to com-. bat the efforts of the New Hampshire legislative committee which investigated alleged Communist infiltration, of educational Institutions. T& By HAROLD T. HYMAN, M.l). Important facts jjou should know about appendicitis — compiled by surgeons at Massachusetts General Hospital: / Acute appendicitis develops in more than 200.000 Americans each year. It is accountable lor over 2,600 deaths yearly. - WhAMhe Inflammation Is seen In Its earliest phases, the death rate Is less than one-tenth ol 1 is accompanied by fever and nausea or actual vomiting, the tiiqe for amateur observation has come to an end and the problem had best, be turned over W the nearest physician. For those who are broke at-vocation time home is considered n Inst resort. r When fall arrives all of the beau-, ttful paths through the weeds will’ lead to rdam. * By JOHN O. METCALFE 1 In this life is almost nothing ■ ■ • M Quite so wonderful to. me . . . As ■ those happy rare occasions . . Y I When my children I can see . . .. 9 Now, I have a son and daughter I . . . Who for sometime have been ] ?rown . . ’. And they each have little children . . . Who to me are like my own . . .' Well, my son has ninny talents . . . And his lovely wife has too ... But I thiqk their greatest blessings . . . Are their boys who number two . And my daughter and her husband . . . Have an equal happiness . . . Tor along with all their talents . . . Two small girls they now .possess . .. So it is that half; 6 ddzeh . . . Are the children I adore . .{,1 And thpse days when I can see them ... Now is all I'm longing for. (Copyright, 1968) Reviewing Other Editorial Pages When .it Is seen a little later, after -the. inflamed appendix has burst, the death rate rises to 3.6 per cent. Tax Cut Lift And, if the operation is still further delayed, for Whatever reason, and an abscess forms around the inflamed and burst appendix the death rate exceeds 13 per dent. Despite great advances in surgical treatment, including use of miracle drugs, the death rate in the last group of appendiceal ab* cess had not been significantly reduced. The word is around that the President would like to ask for a tax cut before.the middle of August but is worried about how Congress will react. Congress is jumpy because there has been no grassroots clamor. Senate Finance Chairman Byrd, a> budget-balancer from way back, is dead against It, and Pennsylvanla’s Senator Clark, a •‘liberal” Democrat up for re-elect Ion, opposes a tax cut now and says, “I'm for a balanced budged.— - , President Kennedy emphasized “Increased use” of plant capac-Ity, but this Is not the same thing as modernizing to compote. •Congress would almost certainly refuse to pass a corporate tax reduction without cutting personal income taxes. Economists are worried abput whether the slowdown will become a recession — only about a year and a half after the last one. Gross national product is running at 'a rate $15 billion lower than' the Administration hoped. ' We think there should be a tax . scientists, conservationists and sportsmen. Now that the scientists seem to have the slimy critter on the ray of hope brighter, some would have, them chuck the whole thing and |hjt up tho lakes to the hordes of lamprey eels. There Is no way of knowing what Lake Superior would be like It jo effort hud been made to kill off infant lampreys. Nor do wo know (or sum II Lake. Superior would be crawling with lake trout It commercial fl*hlng had been curtailed years HIT AT HOOVER Ferry, in his address before the The Country Parson ' Verbal Orchids to- |Mrs. C. Hr Myers of 313 Elizabeth Lake Road; 90th birthday. Mim. Minnie B. Cross of Union. Lake; 90th birthday. wi*,.; And, what Is especially Important to prospective patients, tho record shows that persons with appendicitis - are seen no earlier In their disease today than they were S3 years ago. In their report, the surgeons tend to excuse referring physicians for this delay. If their conclusion is correct, and if it is applicable to the country as a whole, then the cause for the continued mortality must rest with patients, especially the elderly, and with the parents of young patients wrho delay seeking medical consultation at a time when the Inflamed appendix can be removed almost without risk. ' For that reason, it may be wise to consider ‘ the early signs of scute appendicitis: Pain In the right lower region of the abdomen that may, as a matter of experience, first begin In pit of the stomach'-before It It suggests that the I’.S. may be at a big turning point In economic policy. There Is more public Interest In such policy than at aity lime since the Dcpres-nIou. Almost everybody agrees our tax structure Is Indefensible. It tlie principle that high deficits arq ih« wjrong bus become politically popular, the way may be opening up for a real attack on federal expenditures, now running at to per cent of the national Income, Income taxes, corporate and personal, are way out df balance and have been for years., The tax structure Is also responsive to (he demonstrated ability of the ted-, eral government to spend as much money as It can get Its handa on. It It a mess and something should be done about It — npt, however, out of panic. corporate In com whether It comes now or early next year Is less Important thaw tho broader objective of reform. A cut should certainly not be limited to lower personal Income brackets. That kind of cut would make the tax structure more lopsided than K Is now. The 91 per cent lev$ In the top brackets, ’ which even liberal economists no longer defend, should be sealed down' to around 65 per cent, We could have one tax cat this summer, with more to come next * year In over-all tax reform, A tremendous amount of money has gone into research,In many other phases of gtfrfle and fish management that have paid great dividends in recent years. Wax It wrong to push these programs;In -the face of opposition? Should they bave been abandoned as hopeless? Should the people In medicine throw up their hands in the fight to stop cancer? Could the money speqt In research hava been put ' to better use in a known productive endeavor? Which Is Which? Salt Lake Tribune * It Is possible (hat the battle will be lost, and, that the Jordan Valley Hatchery will stand as a monument to one of the longest Urn most useful Item In the The industrious neighbor down' the Mock s«iys that both of his jobs-are working out so well he-can’t decide which one he la moonlighting on. . / , waged on the conservation front. But thou tho battle may be wen, and the Great Lakes may abound In lake trout ortce again. Vtf nbver know until we try. settles down below; fever, however slight, perhaps .only a few tenths of a degree above normal; tender-when the painful region Is so gently poked. la the corporate Income tax from the present 59 per cent to, say. #7 per cent. Such e , cut. as David Rockefeller wrote, would Lamprey Eels 1 Michigan Out-Of-Doors wants—which may be very little or greaj luxury.*' And, In the case of infants and * children too yourigto express them-selves, wntiUHg and crying, wjth a tendency to draw up the legs when j^prtmehed. If and what distress persists and make It more competitive. This be a powerful psycholog-taster and -weald help «et' There are many who feel that the monumental battle to eradicate the lamprey eel from Great Lakes waters Is lUg* stuffing money a rat hole. Ordinary, lavel-h back toward the it per oent rale this country once maintained. people have asked that officials “threw1 M the towel", in the middle of the greatest battle ever to face as MxreJ&a'm, plioacin the Unit'd Btatas Ktt.00 • • / l I SEVRlf Tflfe FQNTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 196$ Rule Assessment j by Union Not the Same as Dues j PHILADELPHIA W-Union as-' gessments cannot be ' considered the Bam* as union dues" under a E labor-management contract. says the U.S. Third Oicult Court of SHOP IN COOL AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT Outcounty Returns Put Way n e lncumbent in Load Over Sullivan DETROIT Iff) _ In a tight squeeze, Wayne County Prosecutor Samuel Olsen wain Democratic renomination in Tuesday’s primary over Joseph B. Sullivan, 40, who resigned as Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh’s administrative assistant to make the race* Complete but unofficial returns gave Olsen 58,404 to 52,- mands to pay the assessment to help striking employes of-another food chain. Hie union involved is local lM5 of the Retail Food Clerks Union. Most of its members, About 1,600, paid'the assessment direct to . the union. The local subsequently naked Food Fair, under its’ contract, to deduct the John L-, resident of a small downtown hotel, was a political unknown when bis name was entered in the prosecutor’s race. Besides Portugal Boasts Surplus LISBON an — Finance Minister Pinto Barboea reports the Portuguese government ended 1961 with its 33rd consecutive budget litap You Another MoneySavlbg SPECIAL PURCHASE Rugged ALL-STEEL Frame Seat SWINGS ~Stykd Exactly tu Pictured- A-foot galvanized steel slidu, non-tilt bas®. (8 only). - -----—- Sheriff Andrew Baird, who is 82 and who has held the job SO yean, Democratic renomination over rivals. Complete unofficial re-turns gave Bard 34,517 to 29,531 for runner-up Philip J/ Van Antwerp, a retired'Detroit police inspector. , * Olsen, If Ms vktory ls upheld Jn the official canvas, will be opposed in November by Republican William H» Ferguson. Unofficial bat eSmpleto returns gave Ferguson a narrow 41,931 to 39,MO margin oyer Robert De Mascio, a former U.S. assistant district attorney. ( William G. Jeffrie* with 28,412 votes, won Republican nomination to oppose Baird. Runner-up on the GOP ticket was Allan Casinelli, with 15,437. COUNT CHANGED Olsen trailed Joseph B.Sulli-in in the ballot counting past midnight and well Into toddy. 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He vistied SHAPE prior to lunching with French President Charles de Gaulle. "The. spirit of NATO . . .readies Into the recesses of all free countries,” Eisenhower told ambassadors. military commanders and honor guards of NATO countries. "We are bound together by one devotion to a particular concept -*• the freedom and dignity of human beings.” Her husband, Robert, told newsmen his wife, a Phoenix, Arte., television personality, will see the doctor again Friday. He said the application for the abortion probably wtU be - submitted to the Royal Medical Board one day nextweek. Rip Van Winkle coahMI sleep frith nagging baduefee Mrs. Finkbine, tor Confer Abortion. Application Expected to Be Made Early Next Week WASHINGTON (UPI) - The figures which will help President Kennedy decide whether to ask Congress for a tax cut this .year generally show that the economy held Its own in July. In general, there were no i... swings in the major business bar* ometers. ARRIVED SUNDAY , The Finkbines arrived Sunday to. seek the abortion which was refined legal sanction by an Arizona court- earlier. The 30-year-old brunette had taken the tranquilizer thalidomide during her early pregnancy. The drug has been blamed tor the birth of several* thousand European babies deformed arms, legs and internal organs. Unemployment dipped slightly. Retail sales picked up a little. Industrial activity may have risen a little, perhaps showed no Significant change, dob holding Improved as expected. To those who feel the Economic upturn has run out of steam and needs a stimulant, the figures argue for tax reduction now. Suing for Damages in Montrose Sinking be mild bladder irritation following wrong food and drink —often wtting, Up a restless uncomfortable feeling. ways: I.by speedy pain-relieving action to ease torment of nagging backache, headache*, muscular aches and pains. 2. by soothing effect on bladder irritation. 3. by mild diuretic action tending > increase output of the IS miles of The Royal Medical Board has sanctioned abortions for seven other pregnant women who took thalidomide. Finkbine said his wife, nearly threw months pregnant, had hot seen a doctor earlier bhcause Ire- . porta Iroro -Amerlcfot -cfoctora.onJI her condition had not arrived. appeared relaxed After talking, with reporters, the Finkbines met two American teacher friends who are, vacationing here. Mrs. Firtkbine stylish red dress and relaxed." Tuesday night the couple checked out of their hotel and went to stay at the apartment of [Swedish friends. [ Meanwhile in Oslo, government medical councilor Jon Bjoemson iaid five deformed babies have been boro in Norway to mothers ’who took thalidomide. The drug was withdrawn from the market Norway last November. More tn a thousand deformed births were blamed on the drug In Germany, where It was devefopedr Billy Gets His Goat over (0 year*. For convenience, , ask for the large aize. Get Doen’t Pill* today! Doan's NEVADA, Iowa (Pi — A want ad in the Nevada Journal said: Found. Oho tial^-grown billy goat. Owner may claim game by paying for ad, one partly eaten sack of red clover need, one chewed-up pony saddle, two boles of hay land a broken toe.” Economy in July Held Its Own This impression was strengthened yesterday by Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon. In a dosed-lion with the House JVays tt Means Committee, TMUai said nothing to. suggest that Kennedy would seek an immediate tax .put. DETROIT IB — Damages of $3-5 million have been asked from the barge and tug involved in the July 30 crash which sent the motorship Montrose to the bottom of the Detroit River. —______________ Dillon has opposed auehflCtfofl. It has been urged upon the President by several other advisers, induding Budget Director David E. Bell, Labor Secretary Arthur Goldberg and Chairman Walter W. Heller of the Council of Economic Advisers. Organized labor and business also hayg called for tax reduction this summer. But there has been widespread enthusiasm for it in Congress. Montshlp Lines, Ltd., a Canadian firm, filed suit in federal court against the tug B, H. Becker, the barge ABL 502 and the Frank Becker Towing Co., alleging 13 "Counts of negligence. The suit charges the tug and bargq were not properly attended, that a proper alert and watch was not maintained, and that the dug and barge lacked adequate towing or running lights. The, $3.5 million includes estimated costs of raising and repairing the 444-foot freighter. The Becker firm was given until Sept, to file an answer. Funeral Director Wins GOP Senate Nomination GRAND RAPIDS Estes’ home town. The congressman has acknowledged arranging for Estes to confer about cotton allotment difficulties fo, Washington.; Little Things Count BUFFALO, N.Y. (B-The mom* tog-after breakfast to ft west side tavern offeror "Black Coffee, two aspirin and JUNK CARS l mNTED f IBED MTO PUTS j KII SUE i FE 2-0200 f so»a> II1BMHIW1, SPEND A LITTLE! UVE A LOTI Add a Room... A Patio. . . A Porch illw DO IT YOURSELF OR WE DO IT FOR YOU AT TREMENDOUS FACTORY-TO-YOU SAVINGS! Or you can build , a complete house with our pre-built, pre-finished, insulated wall panels, prime and combination windows and doors, garage doors, siding on our easy pay*as*you*bu(ld plan. 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Sgl Mm- THE PONTIAC gRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1962 ■NINE GffiCldlS Probe ^€rman ^rm New Tiamqiilltoeir lane Accident JFAA frt%hftigating £rash of Small Craft JMear Fenton • Benton mi- Avtetim. author, itfifs planned to continue' their search tor cluea today in the cradt ofa light plane that kUled a Toledo, Ohio, racetrack operator and hOi park’s maintenance, chief near here yesterday. State police mid witnesses reported seeing the plane bank sharply. before telling but could provide no explanation tor the craCkup. Killed Livingston County were Stanley Jechura, 49, president of Kneeway Park, Ins., and Cecil J, Tayter, «. Wreckage was strewn over a 205-yard area nil the plane’s whip and propeller wens shorn off and the bulk of its fuselage flattened into a hillside. The impact sent the engine hurtling another SS yards, Federal Aviation Agency officials searched the crash scene yesterday and tvere to be Joined today by investigators from the Civil Aeronautics Board in Chicago. The men had left no flight plan before taking off . from a small field near Jechura’s home. Police were told that the wives of both tn$n were driving to Higgins Lake in* northern Lower Michigan and'' .th£y speculated that the men were fljflng to meet them. , Thalidomide Began Wonder Drug (EDITOR’S NOTE-rFollow* inn/ is the first 0/ three dls-patches on thalidomide f— its development, its delayed-action effects and of the steps being taken to eafeptuajl against hidden effects of drugsJ -• By PAUL R. ALLERUP LONDON (tm» - In the spotless, busy laboratories of Chemie Grunenthal in the Rhineland city of StMberg one day in 1953, there ps a rustle of excitement. There was every indication the German scientists had found some-thing — a tranquilizing ■tually free of any of the acute toxic effects so common to barbiturates. If the ladteatfaa was borne out by tests, here would be a re- Distillers Co. became interested, and as early as April 1956, before thalidomide went , on the German market, the company began its wn tests. wW The British teste confirmed what be takM with no after-effects of Waterford Twp* Planning Dept. Budget Okayed A proposed 1933 budget of $25,-294.61 for the Waterford Township planning department was approved lag night by the planning commission. - ifj^' te.y. :" Included in the budget is a provision of 33,142 tor the ”701” general development program in addition to the $22,152 operating budget for the department. gn estimated $6,000 to $8,000 could be returned to the township dtffing the first year of thf "701” program, according to planning director Robert Dleball, as reimbursement tor thd^owHship for planning related services. The current budget is $18,700. It was called thalidomide, a contraction of phthalimidoglutarmide, its scientific name. Chemie Grunenthal, or Grunenthal Chemicals, one of the largest chemical firms in Germany, tested the drug for 3tt years on rats, lice, guinea pigs, rabbits and its. In Grunenthal’S own laboratories, the new drug passed every trial with an '“A" mark. The diecking and further’ study were turned over to an’ independent research 'clinic. Grunenthal was sates In April 1958, with the approval of the committee for the dassifica-tion of proprietary drugs, thalidomide was put on sale fo Britain under the. trade name "WstavaL" In the neat three years the tranquilizer spread through much of the world, to Brasil la South America, to Canada, through most of Europe, , ■. .It was given many other names in the different markets, among them Softenon, Sedi-Lab, Lulamin, Neurodyn, Neurosedyn, Algosediv, Grippes, Valgraine, Kevadon, As-maval, Expectorans. Some were tmitptkyii of the original but all eontatoed' thalidomide in varying propoitims. Many chemical firms wen now involved in manufacture and sale of the popular sedative. verdlets "Hie preparation Is compatible, H Is excellent.” Al required by. German law, the governmeat-Ueensed clinic Issued a certitlcate approving the drag for public sale, Grunenthal named it "Conter-gan,” the federal liealth bureau registered the product 1957 it was placed on the general market to be sold without prescription. QUICK ACCEPTANCE Contergan . found quick accept-nce from the public. Doctors recommended it as a sleeping pill or general sedative. Users awoke re* ting-after headache1 or bad taste in tae mouth. Doctors found that highly-disturbed patients were calmed by the drug. for Contergan was discovered. It proved a boon to women In the early stages to pregnancy by easing the dread “morning atok-nesq.” . Sales 4xx>med. - Meantime word of the new "wonder tranqtflllzer” had reached-Brit-ish chemists. In Britain the big In November 1961, Lenz spoke on.the ihatter at a medical meetingin Duesseldorf. suggesting a drug — which he' did not then name — was linked to' the strange births. Second thoughts about thalidomide were slow in coming. When two intents were bom in Germany late in I960 with no arms and hands growing out of the shoulders, no one connected the cases wifh any drug. Such births are rare, but not unknown to the medical profession. In the esse of the German babies It was found they were vto- St. Clair Republican Loses Oat in Primary PORT HURON «—Former House floor leader Rep. Harry J. Phillips, RrSt. Clair, was defeated for denomination In the Republican primary last night after serving 20 years In the legislature. Port Huron insurance agent Donald M. Wismer Jr. polled 10.914 votes to 9,913 for Phillips to gain his party’s nomination With incumbent Rep. Raymond Wurzel, who scored 12,680 vdteB. - Wismer, who conducted a door-to-door campaign in his successful bid’, would not claim victory nor would Phillips concede even when All but two of the district's 106 precincts showed Phillips more 1,000 ballots behind. Lenz predicted that Germany could expect between 50' and 100 malformed babies to be born each month." TAKEN OFF MARKET Grunenthal was not willing to take any chances either and on Nov. 19 Contergan was taken off the German market. By then 100 million of the pills had been sold. In some places thalidomide also had been sold in liquid and suppository form,------rf—-J | The West German health ministry 'tow formally confirmed the worst of Dr. Lens’s tears and ea- Author Succumbs at 54 YONKERS, N.Y. (AP) - D Werner Leszynskl, 54, an author of serious scientific studies under his own name and of mystery and detective novels under the name of Werner Schoeller, died Tuesday. He was born in Koenigs-berg, East Prussia, and came the United States in 1940. \ Drive downtown and pork in any ono gjl of the lots marked with ths Blue Me-dajlioh. Give your parking stub to tho , vl clerk from whom you mako your pur-iSP chases. She will gladly stamp your ! jT ticket, tho parking lot attendant will < 4km then charge you for the difference in the parking ft# and the amount ’ stamped on the ticket. ; ARTHUR'S ‘ I N. Saginaw It. i BARNETT'S CLOTHES SHOP - ISO N. ISghuto It. BOBETTE SHOP IS N. Saginaw St. When shopping in downtown Pontiac ask tho clerk for your free but ride token when making a $2.00 purchase. This will entitle you to a free but ride m -on the Pontiac Transit But in Pontiac, "Jp the Bee line But from Keego Harbor, L Rochester, Commerce, Oxford, Lake 'Of Orion and Auburn Heights, and the “ § Airporf Lines Bus from Waterford and Clarfcitofl. CONN'S CLOTHES t! N. States* St. I i $ c CUOIU * DIDO CO. M. MM. 17 N. Saginaw Si. GALLAGHER'S MUSIC SHOP IT «. Huron ft- - LESS PITS H. Patty it- 08MUH1 SHAW'S MirSWIU JEWELERS fll N. Sagteaw St. 24 N. Saginaw FREON. PAUL! JEWELERS WARD'S HOME Wf 2| W/Natan It. OUTFITTING CO. I PONTIAC IH00ASS 4i s. ujL st. M JEWELRY CO. HT 2S N. Saginaw St. WYMAN THE PONTIAC FURNITURE PRESS If I. Huron It, 4t W. Huron It. II W. Mbs It. I m tens of phoeomella—or «senl* melta” to deaerlptSon of the (Upper-like appearance the malfor-matlon sometimes takes. The ■nese' comes from the Greek. ' But suddenly there were, more birthi to phocomeliac children — too' many to be coincidence. In Hamburg, Germany, Dr. Wldikud Lenz learned to 20 malformed births. He questioned the ihothera and learned moat of them had token Contergan In their early preg- I directors to te- timates there have been at least 4,(WO malformed birtha tn the eountry ttaee 1167. j- . Dtstaval and four other preparations containing the drug adap were withdrawn Immediately by the British. The London (Side Medical Jotgnal reported that doctors believed at least 800 malformed .Intents had been born In Britain al-though only 50 had been officially reported. The warnings did not luring immediate withdrawal of the drug everywhere. In Italy there was no public awareness of the German and British actions until June of this year when doctors reported at a Turin .meeting that three recent malformed births could be traced thalidomide. That was on June jl6, -.... On Juno 80 the Italian government suspended production and sale of ooven tranquilizers containing thalidomide. A week later Italy banned the drug. One by one, Holland, Denmark, Switzerland, Sweden, Belgium, Portugal and Austria ordered the drug off the market. France and Spain, among European countrira, never approved use of thalidomide although in France it was reported to have been sold illegally. WIDE PUBLICITY One case has been as widely publicized in Belgium as that of Mrs. Sherri Finkbine in the United and with even greater tragic coneequences. The Belgian case Involved vf' despair was such they she would kill the child. Whfea ' police Investigated Oto child wa* dead. The mother, 25-year-old Suzanne Coipel wag arrested, along with her husband. Her mqther,. her sister and her doctor The parents are accused of having administered the infant a fatal dose of barbiturates, and the doctor with coliniving in the act. it h ____________ Somehow, the story of thaUdo- “seal-meHa” baby born to n woman tn liege* When the mother loft the hospital for homo p«£ Japan' Hoping to Uso Facilities of Telstar TOKYO (AP) — Japan's postal affairs ministry said Tuesday the Japanese plan to open Negotiations soon for use df U^.-launched Telstar satellites. . ‘ w. .. ★ ★ a The postal affairs ministry said Japan wants to sign an agreement simitar to those Weet Germany, fiance, pad sign* I, Britain, Italy and Bnftril signed with the U.& National Aeronautics and Space Agency. The Army’s Nike Stout antimissile missile now under develop, ment will be Vsteered” from the ground by electronic (trains to int,. tercept intercontinental ballistic missiles safely outside the dty being defended. SELLING OUT ODD LOTS mide made no great impact in the Unitcd States untll mld-July when the Washington Post disclosed the story of a woman doctor ln the Pood and Drug Administration and her determined fight to keep the drug off the American market. White the drug had not been certified for general use In the United States, It was being test: And suddenly, many women and some doctors remembered that they had obtained a new. and ‘effective sedative drug abroad or had received samples from a-U*S. manufacturer. The labels may have said "Contergan” or *.‘Dis-taval” or "Kevaidon.” dr ★ .'•# However spelled, it was Still thalidomide. Stories of deformities fortunately tew — cropped up in the United States, too, and a nationwide search began tor all outstanding supplies, SMITH’S TILE OUTLET Start Saving NOW on Fall Fashions! Styles Galore in Girls' DRESSES Plaids, woven stripes, rich solid color cotton broadcloths. Beautiful new features —look much more expensive! 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They’re made for long wear and your child’s comfort, lit and proper foot-development in mind. That’s why there’s such a wide range of sizes and widths. So that you can be sure of finding just the right one for your bhiid. Now, in time for back-to-school, at outstanding savings! Use your Hudson’s Charge Account. / ALSO; Boys' nationally known BLUE STAR SHOES; block or brown leather oxfords in B, C bind D .widths, sizes SVz to 3................................... •. .SALE! 4.17 black black widths E. GIRLS Strap, mulber- ry. m to ‘12 and 12% to ; 3, B, C.D. a«87 Weitinghonii Portable Dthniftidifitr TOWELS in bright checks 1 ' rl^aj^iWtbtr coll rev move up to 4 gallons of water a day from air. For the average room or basement. 22x44-inch ' , ‘ ; • i| 5x25 hand towels, 50* « v 12x12 wash cloths, 38c K WHITE SALE! By well known ‘Cannon’ S in predominate shades of brown, blue, g| green, gold, pink. Soft and absorbent 11 terrycloth with ‘Beauti-Fluff finish. II Fringed ends. 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Mk A U.S.D.A. Choice Table-Ritn It 1 BONELESS fib? CHUCK ROAST R| U.S.D.A. CHOICE TABLE-RITE CHUCK STEAK - 59 \i\ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, TWELVE Business^Pbtictes Pros andCons of Kennedy's Do these “changed conditions." He linked n*»ro With the question it the role of government in the collective bargaining i*oce». He •aid government must have a voice, 'adding: ' ' ?. £ .★V* •/Note that I apeak hot o( a governmental veto but simply of giving the government an opportunity to be heard U a apokes- ducer. The European Common Market is developing.; ‘ THe dollar afro te strained by American. military mmithwarts oversea*, foreign aid, riaing coata of equipment bought there, simply paying . the American fighting men,. Gold haa been going out for much is the government going to [stand acids from the collective allow management to manage?" bargahriftg process. * Labor and In the year* following World Wdqanent We permitted to War II, neither Europe nor Japan)8ett,e ™e*p MWPfrms alone, could offer much competition to) Today, the picture Is different, the American producer. Exports | ™MPWTmnv, ■ flourished. There was no problem I ___1 _ ____\ of a deficit in the balance of pay- Th®' foreign manufacturer, ments. Except for a few excep-sometimes 'with more . modern tioAal cases of broad national im-'equipment, la pCmpettof every-portance, government tried to,where , with the American pro- J (Editor's Note ~ Tn general, the American business community distrusts the Kennedy administration. What are the reasons? what do adml/iistratian spokesmen say in reply? -if reporter Reiman Mortis presents the arguments from both sides in this third of ftoe articles.) til other question. It may be elated in two ways: ---By RELMAN MOIUN WASHINGTON (AP)—President Kennedy has tried to convince businessmen that he is not “anti-business." He meets them in groups. He exchanges letters with David Rockefeller, president of Chase Manhattan Bank. New York. OUt-lining his economic policy and philosophy. Or he invites the individual businessman to the White House, seats him on the long sofa in his office, and says, “I’d like to hear what you think I should do. And these are the answers government officers— • 1. Business had confidence presidents Herbert Hoover and Dwight D. Eisenhower. but four i developed during their administrations. Business confidence Is baaed, in fact, on the ability of the economy to invest, produce and consume. GAVE TAX BREAK Kennedy expresses concern over the outflow of gold and deficits in the balance of payments. He aays the dollar will not be devaluated. And he recently gave business a tax break—long in the which was estimated at $1-5 billion, on depreciation of plant equipment. A Cabinet officer point* -out* -^that-break could hayO been given at any time in the past 10 years/* . . 3. Policy advisors advise, but policy is made in the deliberations men who would not be described as “wild-eyed.” But- the Jtapact -on the business community ** e whole -ha»- not been notably deep. In many quarters, the belief persists that he is ,.HaiUWw8in«Mr',~'~:—t"i BELIEF PERSISTS -In some cases, the motivation is visceral, an instinctive feeling that Democratic presidents are unsympathetic to business. The more specific reasons that emerge in conversations with businessmen go like this— ir the Ateel case, Kennedy* considered the competitive position of American steel and the i infract of tool priww-ow-the prices of other commodities. He cafculat-ed that the increase would take $3 billion from the economy. He also felt a “question of good faith" was involved, since the united Steel Workers had accepted a contract that the admihiatra-ttionfary. tlon considered ‘ 1. “I don’t have any confidence In him. He saya one thing but does another,’1-/ —2; "He never had to meet a payroll, so he doesn't know the value of Jhe dollar," „ 3. “Kennedy may be all right, but I’m scared stiff by some of - the wild-eyed theorists around him." . ■ _______ hold any brief for the way Roger Blough (chairman of the board of U.S. Steel) handled the price increase. But Kennedy’s reaction was bound to frighten, business." 5. "He played mighty rough with management in the steel case, but I don't , believe he will play rough with labor.” 6. "He" says a budget deficit is Just a ‘myth.’” (a reference to the President's speech at Yale, last June-31,1.___________ (Advertisement) How To Hold FALSETEETH floro Firmly In Place Do your falMtMth. Minor uutem- twrrmw by tUpplns. dropping or wob-------- (Advertisement) Pile Tortvie " Soothed in Pew Minnies Act now for feet relief from torture of piles. Don't wait another day. Apply Peterson’s Ointment at once. This cooling, soothing, astringent formula has given Joyful relief to thousands for 40 years. Relieves itching quick' All druggists, box 00c, or api cator tube 89c. Peterson’s 01 ment delights or money back. 5. A high-placed officer says, "I know of a lot of pressure on the unions." He points out that, In the steel case, the government began “exerting the pubHc interest’’ by discussing the contract with the unions. 4,-At^afe;*KenhedrK»^ct* several “myth*." He said one was that "federal deficits create Inflation and budget surpluses prC-y»Ht It " He noted that the txw^ World War II surpluses "did not prevent inflation and persistent deficits for the last several years have not upset our basic price stability." PRESIDENT DISAPPOINTED | The President also called for a 'serious dialogue" in all lectors of the American society on these questions. It has not developed and he la disappointed today. : his remarks did provoke an exchange in hearings of the Senate Finance Committee between D-Va., and Secretary of the Treasury Douglas DUlon. It went, like this: 'What doep this word myth* mean? If lias been handled Byrd - bjick and forth a great deal lately. We have been hear[pg about myths In financial matters. There is nothing mythical about debt far as I can find out. You have go( to pay it back with interest. you don't___regard it—as -a myth?" ‘ Dillon—“I don’t regard the federal' debt as a r . I. Byrd—“You 'don’t regard your requests as a myth?" FISCAL PROBLEMS Corollary to these intricate problems of fiscal policy, and the increasingly serious economic competition from overseas, is an- IS THE PAINT ON YOUR HOUSE BLISTERING "PEELING? Vii r! 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(AP)-^8pon«w» of the upcoming New York high fid- ” Khrushchev certainly want* to talk publicly about Russia’s claimed economic advances, and to shoot some mar*- about cokm-ialism to offaet criticism on the Soviet Upton's nuclear testing.” ™ ' ft ;| Told that there had been a tie-, nial in Washington that Khrushchev planned another visit to New York this year, Stevenson said: “That information may be later than mine but I was definitely informed 4n Rome that'he would Stevenson TeHf ofHi* Information but Finds It Is Disputed Fatcilh *%ovw bf Villagers Seeking U. S, Party Leader LONDON (AP)«—Angry villagers led by the local publican stormed k {iijd camp.’ In. the English ebun-byside Tuesday night in search of George Lincoln Rockwell.£$ They leveled the. camp end muted the Jack-booted fascists but found no trace of the self-styled American fuehrer. ,7: The vigilantes from the Gloucestershire yiliage of Gutting Power launched _lbeir attack in> a woodland area known as Dead and Bury Hollow a few hour* after the British government ordered the leader of the American Nazi Party deported. STILL NOT LOCATED Scotland Yard was ordered to find Rockwell, but the Home Office said today he still had not been located. -._______ ■ . Rockwell slipped into the coun- Expert Claims Landing of Reds Reported by Travelers ittap)-**', cabin H Cord Reel VACUUM CLEANER MiAMLire. news specialist . than 4.000 Soviet troops have landed in Cuba recently. • in a Sp—broadcast from a Miami station Tuesday, Dr. Salva-dor Leu attributed his information to travelers from Cuba ins position to know. The program, ”V WEDNESDAY AUGUST 8, 1962 Open Tonight Until 9 P.M Pearson © e f e a t% Am in Kansas' Factional GOP Battle KANSAS CITY, Kan. (UPI) U.S. Sen. James B. Pearson, a political newcomer, triumphed yesterday in a Republican factional light by defeating Old Guard leader Ed Am (or the Kansas GOP senatorial nomination. son • Royal Oak wash ’n wear shirts save NOW! Golden Brent underwear The primary election also saw the Democratic party saved from relegation to minor status in Kan- His write-in votes exceeded the 18,147 votes needed by law to maintain major status lor the Democratic party in the 1964 presidential primaries. ^ An sitr vuttoby Republican Gov. John Anderson ^swept to easy victory in his bid for nomination to a second term, swamping firmer-teacner Harvey in packages of 3 regularly 3 for 3.79 Athletic Shirt. Fine Swist-rlb knit retains shape, won't sag. Extra soft, absorbent. Comfortable binding. White. S-M-L. T-Shirts. Crewneck, with raglan sleeves for freedom-in-action. Reinforced shoulder seam won't stretch or sag. White. S-M-L. Crouch by an almost 6-to-l margin. Pearson, waging Ms first statewide political campaign, never was headed from the time the polls dosed, although Am (ought hard. With 2,663 precincts of 2,978 reporting, Pearson had 103,161 votes to 63,273 for Am. The 42-year-old Pearson, serv- highly resilient. Heat-resistant elastic waist,Meg openings. Double fabric crotdt. S-M-L Talk about exceptional value ... here it is priced at a money-saving Wards low! Deluxe Royal Oak "Gold Label" sport shirts in popular pop-over and button-front stylos with snap-tpb or button-down .collarsl All skillfully tailored in famous Wamsutta Mills premium Am, a 55-year-old conservative Republican mid former governor, was making an attempt at a political comeback after seVen years out of office. Pearson whs considered h leader of the '"Young Turk" GOP faction In the state. Pearson will face Paul Aylward In the Nme-mber general election. Aylward, an Ellsworth attorned, was unopposed la the primary. Keep Mum on List of Those to Attend HOLLYWOOD .(AP)—■ The complete . list of persons Invited to funeral service for; Marilyn Monroe bis been kept secret. Spokesmen laid “slightly more than 15 ’ were Invited. Among those definitely scheduled to attend the rites are: Ex£allplayer Joe DiMagglo, second of her three husbands; Ms son by a previous marriage, Joe Jr„ 21, a Marine; Mil. Bernice Miracle. Miss Monroe’s haltais-ter; Mrs. Inez Melson, her former business maiugsr; Paula and Lee StraSberg, her drama coaches. President Kennedy’s stater, Pat Kennedy Lawford, reportedly was flying here from Hyannis Port, Mass., to attend the services with her husband, actor Peter Lawford. . Other celebrities expected to attend Included Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Gene Killy, DiMagglo, Mrs. Miracle and Mrs. Metajin made the final ar* WIN lUROMAN TRIP A two week adventure in Europe I for two via Pan American Jet I Clipper PLUS $300 ki cash to the care; Ivy prints, new fall colors. 8-20. smtry blank In Wards Man's Shop. BONUSt Am Pan Flight M Bag with purchase of 3 or M ^ more underwear mk - iQL, • irowiQai; • Scotchpard* treated • Wrinkle-shy weave • 511m cut/unpl.at.d.~ Handsome cord slacks resist grease and water stains, wash and dry In your machine; Save mere by buying 2 for 7.70, 3 for 11.40. rawest slacks ... at a 1 . slim. Wards price. Cord I welt beesom pockets, In- [ j side adjustable tabs. Handsome colors. 10-20. J World's finest 100% cotton—super absorbent, soft, comfortable. Size* 4 to 16. Combedcotton. Poop comfortable terry-lined sole. White with stripe. 8-11. v Hamtramck Mayor Lets Deadline on tax Pass HAMTRAMCK (A — Mayor Albert J, Zak did not veto the ordinance at yesterday’s deadline and residents and nonresidents alike will begin paying a one per cent tax op their income Oct. 1. The ordinance had passed the city council in a 4-1 vote last week and Zak had said he Would not Veto the proposal u Income tax Special purchase! Made-for-aefion Antron* Nylon lightwoight, washable. Coal blue, lo-Vrt%S8 den green, tan. ■Tr WASH AND WEAR FLANNEL 4COTCHGUARD DRESS SLACKS Consolidation Propdsal Losftt Out at Muskegon MUSKEGON IB — Proposed consolidation of Muskegon and Muskegon Heights into one governmental unit has become a three-time loser despite carrying by a three-to-one margin yesterday in Muskegon. I It required a majority in both communities; to start formal moves toward a merger.-The Muskegon vote was 3,192 yeS. 1032 no. Muskegon Heights scored It 2,047 ho, Boys' Royal Oak AcYi I an# flannel slacks. Acrylic and rayOn university styles with no pleats. Wash and dry by machine. Fall colors. Sizes 12-20. If you con hear, but cannot understand, we con help you!! CALL US FOR A FREE HEARING TEST... In our office or at your home. , iiHH Just like dad'll Smartly styled vinyl with 3 rodmy pockets. Sturdy reinforced edges. JM6 Smart-looking uniined jacket in iustrbuS, easy-core blend of raypn and cottah. Chboj# white, light tan, sage aneen!pr steel JUST SAY CHARGE KAtftRMS. CORPS, : wok mm&s, TELEGRAPH at ElIZAIETH UK IK THE PONTIAC PflBSS, WF^BSPAY, AXl&tmj$111 Crash Kills Salesman, ; GRAf® RAPIDS — Clothing. Ann salesman Sidney Rattner, 73, of Detroit «i)S jpjiffl yesterday in a'tmgMtor. (nUidof Injured three others in nearby PaifelUWn-ship. Ifeat "County Sheriff Arnold |p Pigorsh aUid Rattner’s car crossed pe centerline of the road end skidded 142< feet into an oncoming vehicle. The injured were not Immediately identified. WCf Comsaitt ae IS Pfieusses N-War,' A Catholic Council 5* • > ■ ■> ‘ r \ , " ■ bex PARIS (UPI) — The cwitrid1 committee of the Wortd Council of Churches (WGO moved today to n diecusdao of nudesr warfare gf, Jail Term, Fine feivenCity Youth in Assault Case AlSpMUHdd Pontiac youth who admitted assaulting another teenager in a fight July 4 wa&plaeed for New Soo Bridge SAULT STE. MARIE PLB ( MISS! Beverage Glass With Furchaie of $S or More except beer, wine,' cigarette* and baked good*. With tMi coupon thru Set,, Auf 11, Llnlti One Coupon P Coffee fKtEi JU STAMPS With Purchase of $5 or Mora npt beer. wine, dgerettet end belted gootb. W a coupon thru Set, Ann. tt. Limit: One CoOppn FRIEl PLASTIC COFFEE MEASURE SPOON WITH JEACH 2-POUND CAN. Meewoia ip EXTRA l&H. GREEN FREE! 25 stamps With tbi* Coupon and Purchate of * S Faad F«k Caffaa with thta Coupatl through Saturtay, *■ ine 11 I teat it Ana ITniiiwui 1 * Drayton Plains—Dixlf Hwy. at Williams Lake Rd. * Mirada Mil* Everywhere You Look You’ll Find BUDGET FOODS at LOW BUDGET PRICES! FOOD FAIR POOP FAIR COUPON All Food Fairs Open Daily—9 to 9 ... Saturday—8 to 9 ... Closed Sunday! B BANQUET Campleta I Frozen Dinners , ! ' . :"\‘k '' ■ ' ..‘vSIUe.,1,3?^ 1 BIRDS EYE Fanay Quality 1 Orange Juice ...... ...5&99« I TRHSWliT Ragul.r or 6-Ox. b'as 1 Fink Lemonade Can 10- 1 CHEF’S CHOICE Cyiekla Cut 9-Ox. | AS .. .. .. rS .10 FB THE Prtwn'AC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. AtJGPST tewriatrf- ’^be conducted'. In constable appointive rather than eratn IBM, wu continued for the. wot lire yenre-by * vote of m, ■torn*.:, . . "* **' The tax wl|l be levied on . each $1,000 Of assessed valuattott and will provide the township with about $50,000 annually. ;/ . 1 .i. * .~i SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP J Authority to sell 12 vacant lota yesterday's primary election.; ■ : * +' fito to Farmington, West Bloomfield and Southfield Township voters approved proposals while others were turned down in White Lake, Highland, Independence and Shelby townships, and the cities of South Lyon and Madison Heights. tags- wKF ' A 1955 state law gives voters )p townships with a population of 5,000 or more the power todeter- MADISOM HEIGHTS Three proposed amendments to Madison Height’s City Charter were defeated overwhelmingly by voters. Approval of the charter township status would have increased the township's bonding power from 214 per Wit to 20 per cent of Ita tax bate. also woukl have given the township authority to raise taxes from one mlU to fl^jmlls for each SUjOO of assessed valuation. The calf Is tip offspring of the prize Holstein coW presented last year by Joe Haas to initiate the award. Winner war John. Wilson, 15, a Oakland Tfiffnshlp, who Will take Virginia! better to the atete show this summber. •hownnumlilp, swine Judging and , • livestock auction also are scheduled for tomorrow. Friday's program will include dog obedience competition, junior and senior dairy showmanship, hone halfer classes, trail classes rotation of a Holstein hitter to a 4-H’er for outstanding club work and naming of a freckles champ. Area Dairies Fail to Follow Milk Price Hike Independent dairies and s nationwide firm In the Pontiac area have tailed to follow several De- Exhibit at 4-H Fair Residents of the Oakland County area will have the opportunity to, Visit "This Atomic World;” one of the United States Atomic Energy Commission’s traveling exhibits at the 4-H Fairgrounds, Perry at Pontiac Road, during the 4-H Fair which la open through Avondalefiremen; to Pump GasoKrie A "fire” sale on gasoline. That’S what’s coniine up Friday^ and Saturday when Avondale firemen man the gas pumps at Everett's Bay Service, 2045 Auburn at Crooks roads. . A.1026 Reo fire wagon will be Op display and a half dozen clowns (firemen in disguise) will prance about the gas Station to promote the-sale from noon Friday tiafifi closing time SatWday night. ' ship at the AH fair last night fay LeeWinbom, Pontiac Press area news editor. The calfs Details on each community’s vote follows: FARMINOTON TOWNSHIP A one-mill tax to finance the con struction of water and sewer fadl ities to the industrially zoned area of Farmington iWnship wai pledged fay voters. -----tlia tot, which was approved - W rip is M* vote, vriU be . levied whenever needed lot, the not cover Qie cost of paying off the bonds that wtii have to fae sold to ttmusof construction to the water and sewfcr MBfae the" fStobf ihKTlBtoual fnedt- chsiifer township' proposal was rejeotegi with a vote Of 1,025 — pBft: ' Five days of 4-H fun and fanfare stepped off to a frolicking start yesterday as the first wave of visitors by the thousands to-vaded the fairgrounds for opening activites of the 1962 Oakland County AH fair. ■ Flaal tanahaa were put oa some 2,see exhibits as the crowds began to ntesaareuto faj fair-grounfia lag the blggeot event of tho year tor Ijm AH boys and girt* teem throughout Hr Some 60 award winners to five categories «f exhibits were chosen Reigning over the fair as AH king and queen are l^le Mrs seek the coveted county awards and trophies.' for their year’s projects. Scheduled for-judging this morning were home economics and genual exhibits, poultry and rabbits. DETROIT (UPD - The value of the constitutional convention as political springboard was somewhat in doubt today in the,wake ot one of the state’s roughest elections in recent history. Thirty-six of the 147 persons served as delegates to the convention were on the ballot for major state office. Also slated tor today were plowing contest, a tractor operator’s contest, an automotive operator’s "ifeonteat and children’s dayt Tonight’s program will feature j -yparade of firsts around the show tton for lieutenant governor, found Ms convention service no match for veteran Clarence A. Held and 8en. John H. 8toh-,lln, coming to a poor firird, II In ,state Senate raws, Demo-"crat Charles N. Young Wood Jr., Detroit, eased out two fellow delegates, Arthur J. Madar and Robert G. Hodges, for the 1st District nomination. Edward A. McLogan, Flint, another delegate, won the dubious honer- et opporiJteDemocrstGwv land Lane who has held his seat' Since 1949. Others were not as fortunate. Jaek Faxon failed to unseat Sen. Stanley Novak in a Detroit Democratic battle. Charles Figy, who hoped to combine con-con experience, a long record of public service in agriculture and experience as mayor of Morenci, to defeat 26-year veteran Elmer R. Porter, Bliasflejd, in a 19th District Republican battle failed to his primary attempt. Ten con-con delegates won House nominations while ievliji others failed to their bids. SCENE STEALER — A pinto gelding ii caught in the act, not only nibbling; the posies, but also stealing file scene from a startled Ricki turn Hoxie, 15, and Lyle McLachlan, 19, just after the two were crowned AH king and queen lest night at tfae AH Pontlat Frau Photo fair, Ricki ann and Lyle will reign over fair actlvties through Saturday. They-were ctojuen for the. honor, early last month. . Ricki is a member of thf Wept Bloomfield Club and Lyle, East Orion.— First Day WjfnnBrg Fanners Union AwardHpnors at 4-Says Vote W, Outstanding achievement to six project areas earned awards for some 60 Oakland County AHers ~ several clubs on opening day of the annual AH-Fair yesterday. Thp biggest division that was judged was vegetables wjth the East Orion Oufa and several ol its members walking off with top bbnors. Other classes included potted plants, flower gardening, flower emuigemrotg. photography. and entomology. "Twlowing is a list of Muikogon-yoton Okay Pdrk Site Annexation a?Wtopwed'ani nexation of ,720 acres of Muskegon Township land to Muskegon for industrial park purposes was approved Tuesday by a total vote ol 1,356 to 1,486.' It required a combined majority _n Muskegon and the totenshlp. The site in question has no residents. Muskegon voted 3,019 to 679 for annexation while the ship voted against it by. a count of 807 to 337. »7SuPer M«rkets Save et AAP ivory Flakns ' Ik- Downy Fabric Softener WEDNESDAY, AlftfoST 8, 1962 j Vote interesting in Kansas Qty JFK'S Man 'ling Wty Out Ahoad by 300,000 for Senate Bid Used 56-Million Gallons • A record monthly total of 56,-362,100 gallons of water was pumped by the Waterford Town* ship water department during July, surpassing thSRPivious high maoth, May of this year, by near- Congregriopal Roundup Mackinac County OKs New Medjcdl Fci'n , t - 1 ■; 1 ' '.'{"TOE^rOMt^'lWssy^riD^aSDAY/AOdCST^'W j ‘"-.'.i at Dem Convention State Atty. Gen. Frank Kelly • will be the featured speaker Aug. 15 ^t the county convention of the rSpifinwt County Democratic Party. The convention will convene at 8 p.m. in the Courthouse Annex, 1 Lafayette St.. ’ Precinct delegates to the convention will elect delegates to the Demoeratlo 81 a t e ‘Convention, scheduled tor Aug. *4 and 25 In - Grand, Rapid*. 26StateWomen ot Age^ Got Pills of Thalidomide 3 Young Swimfoers Overcome by Gas 1 Delegates also will adopt resolutions outlining the convention’s stand on current issues. WASHINGTON (API—Secretary Welfare Anthony J. Celebrezze said yesterday that 26 women of child bearing age have received thalidomide tablets on an experimental basis in Michigan. It was not revealed if these women were pregnant. Ceiebrrtue disclosed that, in ,all( $19 Michigan’ 'patients had been treated with the drug. u The European-developed tranquilizer, which causes a rare disease in the fetus when taken by ah expectant mother, had been distributed to 36 Michigan doctors. Four of them still have the drug on hand with 487 tablets in their possession, Celebrezze said. KANSAS CITY (AP) — iWt* children were overcome hy chlorine gas at a swimming pool Tuesday. : ; ■. ftj., j, dr A safety plug in a filter tank at the Eastwood Swimming Club blew out, spraying the poolside with the gas. Tommy John Lauderdale, was hospitalized. He war believed to be in good condition. Sheila Ann Cooper, ' W. and her sister,' Jeanne Ellen,* 11, were treated by. a private physician, Chlorine, commonly used as a sanitation agent in water treatment,. can be lethal in form. Jqmam Would Ailoto U. S. Base-No Strings Attached campaign-style schedule bp,; had, • Johnson mad® a helicopter visit Tuesday to the- mountain camps of the Jamaican youth corps, also are at work. KINGSTON. Jamaica lAPl-If the United States ever needs military base in'newly independent Jamaica, it can establish one withQufOpmmj^ehu; Prime ~ ister Sir Alexander Bustamante said Tuesday night. one up on this Caribbean island 90 miles south of Cuba. Bustamante said the. United States and Jamaica "are friendly nations and "the United States can. come in when and If it pleases.” Bustamante, told a news conference the!: United States has not asked for such a base nor should his statement be construed as an invitation' to Washington "to set! I The United States maintained bases in Jamaica during World War H under the destroyers-for-bases deal made by.the United States and Great Britain. The returned after the Since then*Jbe bulwarks of U.S, defense of the' Caribbean approaches to' the Panama Canal have been Puerto Rico* and the U*s. naval base at Guantanamo Bay,.Cubs.- BRITAIN HAD CHARGE Britain handled Jamaica’s foreign affairs before tjie island became independent Monday. Bustamante declined whether he discussed an increase in uB. aid to Jamaica with Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, wW led the U S. delegation to the Jamaican independence celebrations. . -?f He said Jamaica had "no immediate plan” to establish diplomatic relati&na with Cuba ot \yith Iron* Curtain countries. Johnson appeared weary Tues- The Jamaican government announced that it has ashed Wash- i ington to send 70 -more Peace Corpsmen here because of the success of the present group of fyudb C^an’t !jJin J 3U er*jhner produce! •MM Homeqrown Zucchini or YiLLOW SQUASH Californio, Whiff, L«r|* Clutter. SEEDLESS CRAPES . * 25* ENDIVE LETTUCE Cellfomie,. lore* Sixo, Fre.h NECTARINES . , The Better Banana with Better Flavor Lb. Yellow Bow California With Pork "3C Off" label, White or Cqlored Michigan Made Sliced Campbell's Northern ^Pioneer Peaches Beans , -v.' ;i r' Tissue Sugar 9C 4fQe JQ -■“IE-■ Bag ■ *■ f^» ; 100 FREE STAMPS -With coupaa bolaw. and porohaia of on* Chois# Loooft or PoIfNlf Chair Sturdy Aluminum CHAISE LOUNGE l..<7w Sturdy Aluminum, FOLDING CHAIR $399 FREE With This Coupon f f Extra Mftr Stamps j h Hi# purchoto of on. ifurdv aluminum CHAISI LOUNGE OR FOLDING CHANT Rodeem Thh Coupon ut Notionol Food Store.. Coupon Expire. Sot., Aup. II. ' SQt Rich Tomato Flavor Heim Ketchup O "0 14-Oz. SAVE lOc-• Orchard Froth rrason ,-.mm Strawberries .. .. 4 ot National's So Frosh Graham Crackers § #• 1-Lb. Box Top Tasto Crocked Wheat Bread Top Taito Sliced , ‘ WhiteBread U-Oi. 0 0 0 0 -O 0 Welch'. Dolicioui 20-Oi. Leaves Chof's Doliokf el# ' pdA. m Cheese Spread . .2 & 59 Grape Juice 17* 43* , w-RS* RavioTi . . ^ 59* Tenwto Juice . ... 3« *100 sjraghetti \SB£ » . . 59* talefil Dressing . t 419* MoMfi'PioU Drlnko *...■'• mm QMAtt mm mmrn "AM." v "PJL" . 3 *100 Rasp Life . . . 29^ Sweet er Buttermilk Pillsbury " Biscuits *8-Oz. Tubes Jfc r.r. . FREI With Thh Coupon j 50 EXTRA STAMPS-I ji With 10. PyrchOM of • 15-lh. So. 0# , ] { I RORIN ROOD FLOUR '* j j • Thh /Coupon of MutfalSt * * Cooodw®iS»mJwo Xoj. F>F. FRCI With Thii Coupon n—— 50 EXTRA MS2T STAMPS. with fho PwAdto of Aw 8 rhut. of MRS. GRASS' SOUPS ME .Redeem Thh Cwom ot ttoUodW food JBOh W Mom. Coupon Ultimo tot., Am, fUL REP t.f. FRIB With Thh Coupon SO EXTRA igtt, STAMPS WHO tho Putoftom of o IMh -tor of TOP TASTI INSTANT COPPII Rodoom .Thh Cooooo of NaNtmof food' JNG Mom. Coupoo l*»lro« AO# tlm.' W TWENTY-THREE THE PONTIAC TPBIiSS. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 8, I»62 Congress to Leave Pile of JFK Legislative Wreckoge cussed at the Whiti House do not necessarily have priority for congressional action. He noted that both houses have patted a higher education aid bill which has been Tile Senate Judiciary Committee which is 'working on drug fegHUdipn is considering a Hum-ber of tightening amendments proposed this week by Kennedy. ate removal of a drug from the market if the secretary of welfare found an imminent hazard to the public health In its continued use. * ' - ft ' ft ' ft The other would require affirmative approval by the secretary before a drug could be markets. At present an application to mar* ket a new drug becomes effective automatically in GO days unless the government tikes action of some kind on the application. _ Mansfield said the 10 billd dis- Businessman-Editor Dies RIDGEWOOD. N.J. (AR)-Glenn L. Gardiner, 66, business executive, editor and author, died Tuesday. Gardiner, wbo recently suffered a stroke, was vice president and director of the Elliott Service Co. and for many years was editor of the firm's Management Information publication. He H® mentioned a House-passed postal rate increase measure. The Senate postoffice comi$j^ee may attach a federal employes pay raise bill to it. Resides Kennedy legislative proposals, the Senate and House have still to act on several regular appropriations measures. One of these, for foreign aid, promisee tectlr lenythv controversy. leader said there is likely to be "quite a bit of wreckage from the Kennedy program left behind" when Congress adjourns. Sr Sr Sr Betide the trade and tax bills, Dirksen said he thinks Kennedy Mansfield said the drug bill will Mow the farm. bill. He would not go beyond that in scheduling any Dirksen made no predictions about the fate of a committee-approved mass transportation bill. If (Seat ^Lat. *¥jational Iffleat! SAVE WITH YtilS COUPON Top Tatti-Hickory Smoked "• FRII W*h Tlili Com" 25 EXTRA -“m STAMPS W' WNb Mm Vurctiat* «f Any Wh.ta " WATERMKLON larau^uratia. SO IXTSA *ar STAMPS FOOD STORES WASHINGTON (AP) Senate Republican leader Everett. M. Dirksen of minds said today Congress still will be here 1% October if President Kennedy pushes a "must” * legislative program. ’ Sen; Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, die deputy Democratic leader, has p^tlined a 16-point pro-gram discussed at a White House meeting Tueaday. He has . said Congress cab pass ft and wind up its work by Sept. 15. IS HE KIDDINGT "Is he kiddihg?" Dirksen asked in an Interview. "The Senate won’t even get the trade expansion bill until after Labor Day. The Dejno-cratic leaders are holding up | CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) -Armlatead M. Dobie, 81, former University of Virginia law judge, died Tuesday. Dobie, associated with the university’s law school 32 years, served on the U.S. Court of Appeals since 1939. 50 FREE STAMPS With Coupon Below Armour Star Credo 1 ' ^Froth Ground (Btof-Vtol-Pork) Pork Sausage . v o Vis 39* Moat Loaf . .• u\ 59 Skinless Franks . . 55 Canned Hams ; . 5& 93 Armour Sror m NoMomI’o So Frook |MjflL Grad* "A" Ducks . - 49* flih Sticks ..... *r 79* Top Taste Thick SLICED BACON 99*= FreshFryer Parts ttYIR BREASTS' mm THtoHS ~ FRYER LEGS W DRUMSTICKS SAVE lOc-Natco Cut Orchard' Freih Longhorn Cheese .. V 39* 3«. $aoo ■ Orange Sherbet .. . -49* Apple • Elderberry Apple - Blackberry Applt* Strawberry Apple-Grape Apple - Raspberry SAVE 10c—Top Treat Lime or Chef's Choice Frozen Crinkle Cut French e < e e SAVE 10c — Downyflafce / Frozen Waffles SAVE 9e—DI»ty,.|^|»e' A . Pool Stew . . . . 3 ^ 89 &3KT :t. ^. 7.. » 95* i#«Wirtt i - S jS9* .Li. "ii. Orchard Frooh frown ' ■ m 59* Orange Juice . . 6 s 89* Natco Grade 'A' Fresh AH White With Coupon Below THE PONTIAC PRfcSS, WEDNESDAY; AUGUST TWENTY-FOUB "Tho ro*pon*o to our gnat 2nd anniversary solo wot boyond my fondoat expectation*—I know of no better way of spying "Thank*" than giving you valuoa that will •ova vow many dollar*-you can bo *uro of bottor buy* everyday at Hoffman'* Pontiac Fleeter Toad*-But these •pocials are worth driving mil** to got. Harold H. Hoffman ■mm SIKH OWED CANNED PICNICS | lb. 5039 DUBUQUE Guaranteed Tender or Double Your Money Beck | Pontiac% Raving fibk. About ’em!«■f ,, 'iU LITE FLUFF BISCUITS V 92 SCORE _.'i Countif Fresh Creamery Butter The winner of the Shetland pony was MIKE VANDERWORP. His facilities being inadequate to keep the pony ^ie has generously donated the pony to the Domini-clan Sisters of Oxford for their annual bazaar. : ? Thanh you Mr. Vanderworp Cut-Wrapped-Sharp Frozen IMB: ISTOCKYOUR FREEZER PARK FREE IN REAR HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOLESALE PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST. wi reserve the right i YOUR CHOICE green omens 1 RADISHES 1 GREEN PEPPERS I CUCUMBERS f CABBAGE BOLDEN RIPE BANANAS Qt W\b. TW&yTY-FIVE TOE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8,1962 Rhino Hoof8, Zebra Legs Auxiliary Chairmen Announced WorsterHome Has KOngonie or Hartebeste'and * Fringe Eared Oryx. Their big, soulful brown eyes look doom benignly on a email stool made of an elephant’s loot and a few rhino-hoofed ashtrays. " The gazelle families, Grant and Thompson, share the den “nidi an eight-foot, six-inch leopard, a Greater Kudu.SBfflJ-ing 54-inch long horns, Impala and the 10-foot, one-inch Bengal tiger (the largest on record is 10 feet, 11 Inches). TWO CHILDREN ', Other occupants in the household? Pam, 13, and David, 16. Both attend West Bloomfield High School, and though David shoots with his father, none of the family has accompanied him oh either trip to Africa or India. Flerre,.-the -Erendt poodler expressed an interest in the leopard’s ears. He was soundly informed that he was re- President Mrs. S. V. Sekles announced this year's chairmen ot the Women's Auxiliary to the Pontiac General Hospital during July’s hoard meeting. -The chairman and their committees include: Mrs. Charles Barrett, social and hospitality; Mrs. Howard Waider, clinic; Mis, Helen Reese, program; Mrs: Harold Tripp.-pediatrics; Mrs. Andrew Stimer, orientation; Mrs. Mel D. Stapp' and Mrs. J. A. Rafrimes, membership. . ^ ■■ -The list’ of chairmen continues with Mrs. Matt- Shelton, historian; Emma Howard, sewing; Mr. and Mrs. Don Erk-fritz, ‘’Follies;” Mrs. James Morton, auxmobde; Mrs. Harry Stowell,, visiting ladies; Mrs. W. H. Bedard, scholar-ship, Mrs. H'. Russell Holland, eenstltution and by-laws; Mrs. Aleck Capsalis and Mrs. Sekles, gift shop. FABULOUS LYCRA* 15 years. ’He qualified tor membership in the Shikar Safari,, an international hunting club, which stipulates a prpapective member must have hunted' in either Africa or India. in a very practical manner. Rhino hoofs, minus the rhiho of course, make excellent ash-trays. The legbones of a zebra (four zebras in this case) convert info eye-catching lamp bases and the hide may be used as rug, pillow cgyer or an attractive handbag. ............. The producer of this household hag is Mrs. Worsteds husband, a Pontiac doctor and part-time big game hunter. Never has slimming power —b»wso itrm/urfUNRTAref „ yet so whisper light! It’s Lycra® spandex—our modern miraclel TWO CAMEL SADDLES Two very oomfcctableddok-ing camel saddles In the living roomsitbeforea coffee table from Mexico. On the table are items from Egypt, Africa and ; Hawaii. Talk about conversation pieces! Betides furnishing her split-level Home with trophies and furnishings from-all over the world, Mrs. Worster has acquired a full-length leopard skin coat,, a stone marten' scarf, and zebra skin handbags—thanks to the hunting prowess of her hunter-husband. Though she accompanied her husband to several Shikar Safari Club conventions, and recently'returned from a two-month trip to Europe, Mrs. Worster confides she's ‘‘hot a Descending the stairs to the lower level, the first thing to meet the eye is a rather flattened zebra—a rug. This ropm, also dated .British East Africa, 1957, boasts the head of a 2,500-pound Cape Buffalo, a Wildebeste (gnu to you). Dr. Worster has literally, well, almost, brought home The We6h,~l>ut’Ih Its most un-edible form—skins, tusks and hoofs. ffidtever Follies, sponsored by the' W omen’s Auxiliary to Pontiac General Hospital, has as its ■ general cochair men, Mr, -arid Mrs. Donald S. Erkfritz of Clarksutn. The “Terrific 20’s,” theme of the follies this year, will be held Nov, 2 and 3 at Pontiac Northern,High School, .? -............... Concluding the list ot- committee, heads are: Dr. Mary Guthrie, clerical; Mrs, Lloyd Tinder, work records; Mrs, Fred Fuller, hospital week; Mrs- Fritzi Stoddard, mem* orials; Mrs. Harpld Tripp, baby photos; Mrs. John Dow, federation representative; Mrs. Raymond Rapaport, Detroit area contacts; Mrs. Floyd Compton, finance and steering committee for^Follies; ” and' Mrs. Joseph Belant, nominat-, Ing. ’ of a homebody. September finds her husband flying to Alaska to hunt griBly bear, moose and caribou. On his return trip in the spring >he’U be seeking polar bear, i Like most women with adventurous husbands, Mrs. Worster worries, but not about 5 or 6 tons of charging elephant or 10 feet plus of tlgeri She worries about his Hying, „ Girl Lauded for Music Go With Knits —Wool-knit travels well. Consider at leairi We woor knit In your wardrobe. For Better, for Worse HER FATHER ABBY: What’s so about a 9-week-old ' if you use those feather-light foam toe-separators at ..pedicure-..time, be sure to swish them through Warm water suds before you put them away. Home furnishings, a la British East African motif, is the intriguing theme in the Orchard Lake den of the M. C. Worsterfhome on Erie Drive. Here* '^MftfW&rsler displays the satne’trSflF*. nuk that is pictured with her husband , *B the lampshade photograph. She specially ordered the Greater Kudu (upper left) which Mr. Worster obligingly bagged on his- birthday* The white-fdngedfendtvdnihefloor cfejtfihffbih India, the hoof and tusks from Africa. On Tots, Trips Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Day (Ellen Boston) and daughter Julie have returned to their home in Milwaukee, Wls., after spending a few days with Mrs. Day’s parents, the Carl Bostons of Thorpe Street. > ’* , ★ ★ ★ i _ Mr. and Mrs. JertF Martin and sons, Brian and Greg, returned to their New Orleans home after a vacation visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ned Frisseii of Orchlrd Lake and Mrs. 1 Earl Martin ot’Mohawk Road. Mrs. Eloydt House and daughter Diane of North Preda Street, Waterford Township, and Mrs. Louis West of Monroe Street motored to Springfield, 111.,... to visit Mrs. Rouse’s daughter and son-in-law, the Kenneth Roaches. Mrs. Rosche returned with her mother,for her sister Judith’s wedding Aug. 95; Mr. Rosbhe Will arrive later. ★ ★ ★ . Mr. and Mrs, Larry Timm (Ann MacDonald) of De Sota Place announce the birth of a daughter, Nancy Kay, Aug. 4, at Pontiac General Hospital. The grandfather is C. L. MacDonald of Oriole Road and the great-grandfather Is Frank W. Mowbray of Chippewa Road. 4 ★ ★ tir - . Mr. and Mrs. Dan Driscoll and sons David, John and .Peter, of Philadelphia, Pa., .spent a month visiting at the Elizabeth,Lake home ot Mrs. Earl Martin. . Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Skrlne (Marilyn VanBusklrk) of Euclid Street announce the birth of a son, Walter Ray . Jr., Aug. 5, at Pontiac General Hospital. Grandparents are the Amos VanBusklrks* of Wilson Drive, Drayton Plains, and the Wendell Skrines of Lake Orion. Great-grandparents are MTs. Lueila Cook of MDkewood Driven Waterford Township, and the Thomas Wilsons of Coleman; Mrs, George Skrlne of Judson Street and the Ray Johnson* of Hot Springs, Ark. , ,< U ] *" ^ w vfir ' jb »' ?.v Air Force 1st Lt. and Mrs. Winston-M. Boyer (Sharon D’Arcy) are home visiting their parents, the Harold Boyers of Myrtle Street antf the Benjamin D’Arcys of North Anderson Street, After spending a two-and-one-half-year tour ot duty In Anehovagis, Alaska. ' . The couple ls sp routs to Boulder, Colo., where Lt. Bovar will enter the-uplyenlty of ColoMtdcr tor attain liis masters’ . degree In electrical engineering. Zetas Plan Dance for 1957 Class General Chairman Mrs. Robert Joss is assisted by Marjory Neubeck, invitations; Mrs. Lawrence Brown, decorations; Mrs. James Arnold, publicity; and Mrs. Charles Cowls, location and music. Will Bid Farewell You Can Try, My Dear Martha Kurzwell of, Orchard Lake was concert mistress of. the All State High School Or-’ - cheatra at the National Music • Camp, Interiochen. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN ; DEAR ABBY; Our son was overseas for 18 months. When he arrived in San Francisco for separation, we want to seem possessive, but company with a man who how can we discourage , this owns his own business, mqrrtogt? Q“r ann i« only-21. They are notengagedand so —SAD PARENTS far T haven’t seen any signs She played a solo part with gueet soloist Oliver Edel, cel-< list* at the final concert for' the All State High School Division Sunday. * Si&i eagerly await-• ed a phone call w h 19 h never came. Two days* h» called from Los Angeles to tell us he had gone directly to see his ‘tirl^Wa didn’t even know he had a girl. At his invitation we flew to . .Los Angeles to meet the girl and her family, as our son fcakl they- planned to get married «ul soon (is he found a lob. She Is a very ordinary 18-year-old girl who. has a lot to learn. Her parents are common people but they tried to be very nice to us. The romance bloomed through the mails when his buddy gave him his sister's address, picture, etc. Our son’s college plans are now abandoned. We don't DEAR. PARENTS: Ask the boy to defer marriage for six months to think about, (a) foregoing college; (b) taking a wife- before finding a satisfactory job and (c) promising to of It. He has been taking up her time for five years.; They are not- kids. She's 31 and ha’ is 39. If she doesn't have -sense enough to ask this guy when Martha was awarded a two-week scholarship by the Walled Lake Rotary Club and at the close bf the concert was named first alternate for a 1963 summer scholarship to Interiochen. - Embroidered front panels, double back panels for spa-dial control. Famous Hollywood Vassarotte soft knit at Wailt and bottom bandar -White onlyi 8-M-L Pantit girdle 188, $8.95. Girdle 189,. $7.95. _ 1 love, humor and obey « pen- he is going to marry her, don’t If this doesn't slow him down, you've got a daughter-In-taw for betteror for worae^- DEAR ABBY: What does a girl do after she has Just received an engagement ring? Does she stick it under everybody's nose? Or does she wait until somebody notices lt and asks to sed it more-closely? t PUZZLED EAR PUZZLED: She i usually waits for someone to 1 ’.'notice” it. And It shouldn’t be. difficult to “notice” because most newly-engaged girls suddenly become “left-handed.” ★ ★ ■, w DEAR ABBY: 1 halve a,harebrained daughter who has , been teaching school for nine years. She has been keeping DEAR FATHER: A 31 year-old “girl” doesn’t need her father, to run interference for her. Sit tight, Daddy. Maybe daughter Uke» it-this way. baby turning guar by itself and a 2Mt-yeaFma cWh Wd doing the Twist? My baby did the Twist and turned oyer BEFORE he was born! PROUD MOTHER Unload your problem on Abby. For a persbnai reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to ABBY, care of The' Pontiac Press. Zeta Phi Zeta Sorority is sponsoring a reunion dance for the Waterford Township High School Class of 1957 Jtug. l* in the . Waterford Commqnity Cen- . ter, 9 (km. to 1 a.m. The-theme Is "Halls of Ivy” with music by the Mello-Mates from St. Clair Shores. For Abbv’s booklet. “HoW To Have A Lovely Wedding,’ ■end 50 cents to ABBY, Care of The Pontiac Press. Kathleen With Suds Ann Powell, daughter of the Bernard F. Powells, Bloomfield Hillst and John M. Archangeli, son of the Martin D. Archangel is of Birmingham, were'■wed, today in St. Hugo vf~ WONDERFUL SAVINGS ON DRESSES-COATS-SUITS SPORTSWEAR- SWIM SUITS 1A TO YjOFF and more MINK IN AUGUST? Y#*/ when the selection is so great! the Hills, Bloomfield Hills, MRS. JOHN M. ARCHANGELI Archangeli-Powell Vows Any 1957 .graduate not receiving, an invitation or' anyone deslrinfe further information may contact Mrs. Ralph Morgan. Tickets are available by res*" ervatlon or at the door. -Three hundred invitations have been sent out and a large turnout is expected. Marry at Noon The Bloomfield Hills home of the Bernard F. Powells was the setting for a reception fpl-. lowing the vows of then* tuna The public is Invited to at, t tend' 'a farewell open house - Friday evening after the S:30 service for Rabbi, Nathan* Henthfleld of Temple Beth Ja- , cob on Elizabeth Lake Road. Rabbi Herahfuld is leaving for Hqvtford, Conn.:1 President of the tfmple Dr. Sdhnel Jk oiafeta wflt be on btgh^ ter Kathleen Ann to John. M. Archangeli, at noon today In St. Hugo of the Hills, Bloomfield Hills. ‘ - iWW Rt. Rev. John D, Fitzgerald of Oak Park, 111., officiated at the small family ceremony. V ★ A Alencon lace, touched With sequins and pearls, detailed the bodice and wrist-point sleeves of the bride’s princess-line gown of whlte peau de Sole, with chapel tirain. A Paris ring of illusion held bar short veil of imported silk illusion. .White gardenia!.centered her i cascade bouquet of White Ste-phunotts and ivyi . ’ attended SISTER '' Susan Stjrr Powell, her - at*-' ter's maid of honor and only attendant, appeared in white Chantilly lace over yellow peau de sole and held a cascade of m Ini a t u r e yeltoyyhroatei white Eieganco'ieranral End ivy, *45 Fabulous FUR .The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin D, Archangel! of Birmingham, had Fred Woodworth oP Birmingham tor hit best man*, John Ledyard of Grosse Pointe, and Bradley Mack, Birmingham, ushered. Sets tho Fashion After a honeymoon at Palm *8MscHTrla'* the couple Grill rp*._; side in Birmingham; The bride attended Manhattanyille Col- - See our new liat collection of lateit silhouettes In new n^nk;.«oforsl; Every woman, needs one, so we chose with special care for beauty and | vqlyev Whether your cbmplementing a mink coat or adding lu^tiry tp ,v. cloth coots. You'll feel WariderM it^4-teftf 'hot:- - lege of the Sacred' Ifearl, Pur-' ......... ‘ ‘ eltf h chase, N,,Y. Mr. Archangetl graduate of Cranbrook School and Hobart College. Genevi >.Y., is affiliated...... Alpha Society. n A Small Deposit Will Hoid.Yobte in LayaWay foVENTY-SlX ,J fWednesday, atcto . 8, TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS PADDOCK and N, PERRY mart Safe! Dark Woven PLAIDS $1 2 YARDS., I Fin® Wash ’n Wear, Easy-Care Cottons! CHARGE -^5^L IT/ shirts, skirts, _ blouses. Save! D. Scriven, Royal Oak, son ufthe Clare Scrivens of Oriole Road. MRS, JOHN D. SCRIVEN John D. Scrivens Fly to Arizona After Vows J£ OPEN 1046 DAILY—12-7 SUNDAYS nuuuujunu For her ..marriage to John D. Shriven of Royal Oak Saturday in St. Benedict’s Church, Judith Ann Warrilow chose a gown of candlelight Irish silk linen styled with bolero jacket and detachable chapel train. Her elbow-length veil of silk illusion was fitted to a pillbox hat and she carried a Freneh rose of Mary Jo- roses. Her heirloom handkerchief was loaned by her grandmother, Mrs. Lynn D. Allen, and a diamond pendant was the bridegroom's gift. Rev. Fabian Weber of St. Clement’s Church, Center Line,-performed the one o'clock ceremony before some 350 persons who were guests of the bride’s parents, the David H. Warrl-lows of Dick Avenue at the church reception. Matron of honor Mrs, Gary McGee and bridesmaids Mrs. Laurence Reamer, Connie Scriven and Carol Warrilow, sisters of the bridal couple, wore champagne taffeta with lace bodices and green velvet belts. They carried colonial bouquets of tangerine carnations, Mary Jo roses and pompons. .★ ★ # The bridegroom, son of the Clare Scrivens of Oriole Road, had William. Eisertblaer of Chelsea tor best man. Ushers included Laurence Beamer, John Osier and Peter Karaer Jr. The,newlyweds flew lo Phoemx, Ariz., for their honeymoon and will live In. Royal Oak. Mrs. Warrilow wore .white denias with her green polished cotton sheath dress with organza overlay. Mrs. Scriven chose willow green satin, with overskirt, and a corsage of white roses, ........ *6®° CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP i iwt rssiiiitiwruiir'i......iuirw'inrun'iro. STOP’S . FOR QUALITY jxfcr*- swi: ; recommended: The%oe so many doctors recommend has -to be btet for young feet,. . that shoe is , Stride Hit®. And best, too, is the way w® fit Stride Rite to young feet. JStoideRite vy shoe * EXTRA SUPPORT BLACK NYLON VELVET PRICED FROM... (according to slzf) STAFF’S OPEN FRIDAY TIL 9 "Doctor#' Proscriptions Accurately Fitted" FAMILY SHOE STORE 928 W. Huron at Telegraph (Open Frl. to 9—Set. to 8:30) „ JUVENILE BOOTERIE 28 E. Lawrence $t„ Downtown (Open Mon. to 8:30, Prl. to 9) /' JUNIOR SHOES 4l8»Meln fiii Picnic Held by. Auxiliary to Plumbers Women’s Auxiliary to the Plumbing and Heating Dealers Association held their 14th annual summer picnic Saturday at Avon Park, Avon Township. .. # * * £ Attending the outing were the Gerdon Comptons and children, the Curtis Thompson family, the Ervin Schilke family and the Charles Prltners. -- Also present were the William Williams family, Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Mason and their grandson, Ezra Mason III, Wilfred Fleming, Mrs. Ellen Duffy and Mrs. Georgia Seeley. .—:—_—-------------r— May Infect Never borrow or lend a brush or comb. Besides exposing your hair to someone else’s soil and oil, this exchang may infect you with a case of dandruff. Shower at Church Bride-Elect Honored Carol Sue Beltz, bride-elect of Floyd W. Chancy, was honored at a bridal shower Tuesday at the First Social Brethren Church. Mrs. Ephrlam H. Wiley and Mrs. Luther Gaskins were cohostesses. ★ ★ ★ Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Beltz and Mr. and Mrs. Louie Chancy, all of Poplar Street. Clift .Pankey, Mrs. Sebourn Pankey, Mrs, Dewey Pankey, Mrs- Harry Pankey, Mrs. Charles Pankey, Ruth Ann Pankey, Mrs. Herman Shaw, Mrs. Peter Romeos, Mrs. Jack Clause and Mrs. Anthony Swiastyn. Others were Mrs. Lloyd Feller, Mrs. Clarence Griffith, Mrs. Alfred Lewis, Virginia Brewer and Mrs. Clarence Chancy. The engaged couple plans to exchange vows Sept. 7. Adrftit Error and Write Right Now By Ttw> Emily Post Institute Q: My ton’s engagement was announced six months ago to a young woman in a distant 'city. I’ve not met the girl or her family and as they are complete strangers, I never ’ have written either to the girl or her mother. I wrote, to. my eon, naturally. We seldom see him as he is “working away l«Mn:hdme.'Naw™ I learn that I should have written to the girl and possibly her mother and they are quite upset because I have not done so. Is there any way to make up for my mistake, and how in the world do" I go about writing to complete strangers? Also how do 1 explain my . delay in writing? A: Very.definitely you should write «t once. Much better now than not at all. The' only Way to bridge this gap is to face it and write:" "All this time I have been waiting to, hear from you and now I am told that I was the one who should have written. * "I am very sorry, dear Jane,' because I certainly’ want to Welcome you and dp hope that I will meet you very soon.”" (This of course is. just a general idea.) . , - W A ★ Q: When entertaining at a rather large buffet supper, how can the hostess get her guests to go to the buffet table to help themselves to the food? It seems each guest Is reluct-' iuit to be the first one to go to the table and they All sit back waiting for someone else to start. May the hostess iead the way so that others will fol- lOJV? . . ...-. A: She shows the way to the buffet table saying, “Supper is ready. Do come and help yourselves to anything you like.” - -- Marilyn ' Jean House, daughter of Mr. and Mrs: Glenn A. ^ House of West Beverly Avenue ; exchanged vows with Michael L. Hudson, son o f the Cordell Hudsons of Georgia Drive, Orion Township, Saturday in the Sylvan Lake Church of Christ. MRS. MICHAEL L. HUDSON Hudson-Hatise Held Lake Marilyn Jean Hause exchanged wedding vows with Michael L. Hudson before Minister Clyde Balderson Jr., Saturday evening in the Sylvan Lake Church of Christ. White and viofet gladioli-and carnations adorned thfe altar. A reception in the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland dub rooms followed the candlelight ceremony. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Glenn £ Hause of West Beverly Avenue and the Cordell Hudsons of Georgia Drive, Orion Township. Alencon lace applique accented the 'round neckline of* the bridal gown of while silk Cpufcf Be We Don't Want Simple Things By klJTH MILLETT Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Are you a little tired of trying to keep up an elaborate hairdo that requires constant care and keeps you from swimming, riding in an open car, getting out in the wind or rain? If you are, you might be interested in what a New York hair stylist has to say on the matter. __He says he thinks any woman who Isn’t constantly making public appearances ought to lenvo elaborate hairdos strictly alone, except for very special parties. Not only are they too much trouble for a woman who can’t afford the tlme or money to have her halrdressed everyday by pert but such hairdos look out of place for everyday wear, the hair stylist maintains. He says the woman who adopts n elaborate hair style doesn’t realize that she is trying to copy for everyday wear a style that has been designed for special occasions Snd important public appearances of women in the limelight. h dr dr No wonder the average woman fdeli frustrated at what It costs her in time and effort to try to keep up ouch a fancy ediffurer- ft dr ★ ★ What the hair stylist recom-lends fqr Mrs. America is a simple, easy-to-manage. hairdo (the doesn’t have to be a slave to with now and then a more elaborate “set’’ for a special occasion. But Instead of that simple solution to the hair problem, what are women doing? o try to stay In style. Maybe; women just don’t want easy solutions to Yheh; problems, and the hair stylist is Wasting his time pointing out one obvious one. - dr ★ dr For all parents—Ruth MiUett’s “Tips on Teen-Agers.’’ Just send 25 cents to Ruth Millett Reader Service, c/o The Pontiac Press, P.Q. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station, New York. 19, N.Y. They’re beginning to buy wigs Niblick Goiters, Scottish Guest at Picnic Lunch Mrs. Arthur Bames of Motorway Drive, Elizabeth Lake, entertained the Niblick Golf Club Tuesday at a picnic lunch: Thirty-two members and a guest from Scotland, .Nancy Grant, were present, d" ★ dr During last month’s meeting the group was entertained by Mrs., ’Nonhand Durocher of Bloomfield Hills. They visited Mrs. Durocher’fr summer homo on Haraen’s Island fiT Lake Huron and played golf at the Mid Channel Country Qub. Prizes were presented to match play tournament winners Mrs. Dave Warrilow, first flight; Mrs. Manley Young, second flight; MrS. Louis B. Livingston, third flight; and Mrs. Paul B. Jones, fourth flight. At *Hig and Hers’ Shower Young Couple Honored Jo Uligian, daughter of the Charles G. Uligians of Starr Avenue, and Lee Aplin, son of the Arnold Apllns of Crest-view, Fla. were honored dur- ing a "his Snd hers” shower 'Tuesday. Host and hostess for the Hawaiian themed party were Mr, and Mrs. Enar West of North Hammond Lake Drive. ‘Also attending, were Mr. and Mrs. John Blamy Jr., the Ralph Strangs, the Edward Vieriechs and the Howard Powers. Other guests included Mr. and Mrs- Donald Lucas of Ann, Arbor, Judy West,. John Blamy. Barbara Strang, Lynne Vleriech, Gerald and .Robert Powers, Sue and Greg Uligian, and the bride-elect’s parents The couple will marry Saturday In the First Congregational Church. , ' Color Television HEADQUARTERS Complete Stock el Redie Batteries | KCA ^ zemth TBANSISTOH KADIOS | TELEVISION end RADIO efaMNI * SALES and SERVICE 1187 W. Huron te*a Nq.uk FE 2-6967 taffeta Styled' chapel ' train. A Shoulder-length veil of. illusion foil from a tiara of pearls and crystals. White g!a-“ mellias, Stephanotis and white orchids comprised the bride’s bouquet. Matron of honor, Mrs. Sidney Oolyer and bridesmaids, Mrs. Robert' Carlson, Mrs. Thomas Reeling and Joyce Reynolds, wore lilac silk organza sheath tlresses. with Yrverskirts. They carried lilac-' tipped whit® carnations.. Tam-ela Lotan was ftowergirl. Douglas Black of Rochester was best man. Seating some 250 guests were the bridegroom's brother James Hudson, with James Hughes and Earl Brown. After a northern Michigan honeymoon the couple will be at home in Drayton Plains. The bridegroom is enrolled at Lawrence Institute of Technology. " V Ivory glamelllas centered with orange rosebud centers accented Mrs. Hause’s beige cotton knit sheath dress. The mother of the bridegroom wore yellow rosebuds in complement to her mint green linen sheath dreaa. ---------------a Plan Dinner for Couple _ Mr. and Mrs. Milo Struble will entertain Aug. 17 at a rehearsal dinner for their son, prospective bridegroom.David S., his bride-elect Mkrlene Lazenby and their attendants. Parents of the bride-elect are Mr! and Mrs. Royce Lazenby. The engaged couple plans an Aug. 18 wedding. .... Miss Lazenby was honored at a bridal shower recently at the home of Mrs. Herschel 0. As-bury of Woodbine Drive, Waterford. there nothing- "JUST AS ■"GOOD" 'CUSTOM TAILORED SUIT The Discriminating ; Mart Knows This Wuvwaaii CUSTOM TAILORS and CLOTHIERS 908 W. Huron at Telegraph FE 2-2300 . J Finer Tuxedo Rental* UNIFORM SPECIALISTS GO MODERN... wear a self-winding S,,:Q../ OMEGA Slsinlett steel, wish bracelet, #225 No "forget-to-wind" with this watch! Natural wrist motion powers it, Water snd shock-resistant. Perfect for the executive or sportsmsa Other Sesmaster models from , 889.30, Fed. tax incL Redmond’s fowelry 81 N. Saginaw St. AUTHORIZED OMEGA AGENCY go casual In ftffow fashion Foam cushioning heel to toe, bald* 0 , shoe that’s knowingly styled for your dash-about life. Pillow Puffs. •. pretty assets to every wardrobe. jaunty-top-Dniert colors, materials, sizes ^ Isi ifoclc and Brown - WILLIE—Sixes 5Vi to 11 , in Bfocfc* Brown and Beige 20 Wait Huron Stmt . \\ ■ ■.i—**. FE 2-3821 T Mattress and Box Spring WflOTY-SElfe: THE BONTIAC PRESS. WDNESpAY^AUGUS^jm mmx ' By SANDRA HAYN1E \ Written Mr MSS There is not, or shouldn't be, ’ any rushing in golf. • i Unlike many hurry-ecuny 'games that require Instantantr., ous reflex action, golf is com* paratively slow — sometinies’ tantalirtnglyscr ^ Having time to think is one of the things that can mEake the sport so aggravating at engagement of their daughter Diana Lew t» Timothy M. •Fame? ton of Mr. and W. Farm of Joy ceil Drive. .I__ J . DIANA LEW BUTLER But the'time on your hands can be used to great advantage, if you employ it in thinking your way around and out of trouble. --------:—■ I play every Ohot mentally before taking my swing. As part of my mental picture, I In Honor of Jeannine Garnett Shower Bride-toBe at * Jeannine CMrnett, faride-elect I home of Mrs. Stanley Wlsel-of Arthur Ray Schumaker, was man of Rochester. Jean . Tank ; honored Tuesday evening with I of Ortonville wss cohostfss. » HareJIageous shower at the * Attending the shower were Fashionettes Make Tout of Convalescent Home Fashtonette Club members met at the Curtis Convalescent Home Tuesday evening, and toured the home as guest of Mm. Leslie Curtis. Refreshments were served honoring the birthday of Mrs. Martinas Hanson and Mrs. Curtis. After the weekly weigh-in Printed Pattern 4629: Half sizes 14%, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%. 24%. Size 16% requires 5% yards 35-inch fabric,' Fifty cents in coins for this pattern—add 10 cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St„ New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. Over 100 answers to "what-to-wear”—in our new full color Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. Casual, dressy, school—all sizes! Send 25 cents now. the award for most poundage lost was presented to Mrs. Daniel Navarro. '< Program chairman 'Mrs. Jesse Villereal announced the tertheomlng hayride and bowl-ing. Next week’s meeting is gym night and includes a discussion on dieting and personal appearance. Fashlonette Club welcomes any. Interested women, to attend the weekly meetings 'at the Adah Shelly Library, Tuesdays, 7 to 9 p.m. : mothers of the couple, Mrs. Merritt Gamett and Mra. Arthur J. Schumaker; Mrs. Jane Garnett of Berkley, grandmother Of the bride-elect; and Mrs, Paul Tindall of Lapeqr. Others were Mrs. Harold Tank of Ortonville, Mrs. Walter BeaMrof Utica, Mrs. Rob-. j»rt Olsabeck of Drayton Plains and Mrs. Harold Tipolt of Waterford. V Attending from Pontiac were Mrs. John Harrington, Mrs. Lorena Adams, Mrs. Larry Sherwood, Mrs. Dahret Prueute^ and Mrs. Ransom Crane. . «JUM UUUUl cvcijr uws par three offers at least two ways it can be played on the drive and from the fairway. From the fairway I always aim for the cup. If you try this you won’t always make it, of course, but you’ll be surprised how, many times the ball will wind up in the hole.1 It you miss it, you’ll be a lot closer to it than if you Just try to roach any part of the green. * Have confidence in every Shot. If you have a pet dub, use it whenever you can, even if it isn’t the proper dub according to the book. Write your own book in your own mind. - Fewer businessmen would lose their shirts — if they tdied up their sleevfesl Exercise 'Em Your feet will feel better with e few daily exercises. Try roiling a medium-sized rubber ball back and forth with your bare feet to limber the muscles. ENTIRE STOCK of SUMMER DRESSES % off Suzanne Off Honored A miscellaneous shower was given Sunday afternoon for Suzanne. Virginia Ott, bride-elect of Barry D. Calnpbell, by Frances Goff of Linda Court, Drayton Plains. Parents of the couple are the Harold Otts of Waterford Township and Mrs. Larry Campbell of Drayton Plains and the iate Mir. Campbell FHedds and relatives from Pontiac, Waterfordt . Detroit and Mount Clemens were In attendance. The bride-elect was also honored at a shower Jtily 31 given by Catherine Lobb and Kay Campbell at the Lobb residence on Silver Birch Drive in Drayton Plains. The engaged couple will exchange vows Aug. 18. Professional PERMANENTS Styled os YOU Like It! IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON 219 Auburn Ave. FE 4-2878 ELI*’lhaiffv,jr- - ---i SHOP IN COOL AIR-CONDITIONING COMFORT FOWERS growing in OUT LAKE pRION GREENHOUSES FE 8-7165 Flower* 101 N. Saginaw ■vswVMMM^toWnreglM LOVABLE'S "GRADUATE" BRAS frhraa styles in fin# whit* cotton designed aspociolly for tho young toan-ogo figure «, "Freshmen" by lovable. stitched cups, give get----------- - Cotton. White. Sim 21 to 34AA, 30 to 36A ..........,1,gU , « ■ ’ b. Lovable's "High Hehors", removable foam pads. Cleverly eon- ;•>“* ceded badettes. Sim 32 to S4AAf 32 to SdA .. *. "Little Ringlet" by Lovable, growintp styling for the "Grow- ' v Ing-up" figure. In dm 90 to 34AA, 32 to SdA A...........A... ’'every fashion needs its ownfoun dation . trained compere. lit you eofraydy W romfor! and figure flattoryl flvnv ttMMT Wf ‘ ' BOWt4TOWH AMD Storewide Reductions Up to 40%! Contemporary, Danish Modern, French Provincial, Early American, Traditional Fnrnishings, Accessories ISteams MATTRESS and BOX-STRING ~ "SET” SALE This Midsummer Sole event is your opportunity to purchase the finest mattresses and box sprlnQs available . . . at "sets" savings you'll appreciate! We and our associates in the bOme furnishings business believe* thot quality for quality and dollar. for dollar, STEARNS, & FOSTER Is Americo's greatest mattress value! Buy now at STEWART-GLENN^ exclusively in the Pontiac area. Stearns & Foster "LADY^HADWICK" Mattress and Box Spring Twin or Full Size -$41.80 Each Unit. Save now on this fine mattress and box spring, carefully constructed to give you the firm support which contributes to real sleeping comfort. Constructed with Seat Edge,—Insulo Cushion and Pre-built Borders for lasting comfort. All Units Guaranteed by STEARNS & FOSTER and STEWART GLENN CO. Stearns & Foster, "Tuftless Ouitflex" $9990 Twin or Full Size $52.50 Each Unit Beautifully quilted mattress style — buttonless and tuftless—-to provide new. smoother sleeping. Weight-balanced units with locked edges, pre-built borders, muslin-pocketed coils, seot-edge construction. TME COiLSi of highly tempered steel specially designed, offset, helically tied, Interlocking--thus malting a quieter unit. Special SEAT EDGE* construction pro- ■ vents sides sagging. THE INBVIO BPRiNG CUBRI01W which is e famous exclusive Steams & Foster quality, feature eliminates coll feel, makes for lasting shapeliness end extra comfort throughout the many years of use. TUB BORHEHSi pre-built with specially developed inner roll construction that wrap* thick cot-fan fait over and around all edges top and bottom to prevent slipping. Open Thursday,Friday,Monday Evenings 'til 9 P, M. .Interior Decorating Counsel at No Extra Cost Air-Conditioned fpr Your Comfort Convenient TerrnfV 7 Just South of Orchard Lake Road Free) Forking Front and Side of Store THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEljyR^DAY, AUGUST U.S. CHOICE ... TENDER .FRESH... LEAN GROUND STEAK * li Mon than 40 madam merchants ond wrvic at Mind. Mil. Shopping Cantar hav. bamf annual Baak-ta-Scboof .Salat Svant. Hu9»*»t«k« at womtoftM, frith, quality marehandlw, your selection ... with prices sensibly geared to fan# bu^BOti. Yotfll PMKi w®^ B&: w M f«; / r**. f»ji m • * wmi iiiisi |bfr/ I TM****** j ws MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE ROAD ■CV,, -| - ■ THE POyflAC PRESS, •< . ■■ .. >-M ONE COLOR 111 i n Miracle Mile Has What It Takes for Their " 'I t ■ '•■ ■ ' ';. .1 I ■ t / ‘. .V is , -1. IIP m T" 7] " w .'--nL f'1' s'V 4 .* ' x r ^ 7 i Miracle Mile to Celebrate j i|hLj :iL, 89j THIRTY m TTTR PONTIAC PBESfe. WEDNESDAY, AUGPST 8, 1992 * Festivities at the Miracle MOe Chopping Center have been sched-hled for August. September and pcfober. climaxing with a birthday celebration Oct. U, 12 tad 13. 4th anniversary celebration wilt once- again aid Pontiac area organizations with their moneymaking projects. T Mirade tae-has events planned ^4«arhUha.. SCcotaUeaiUhat. - the Birthday Fair, allowing organizations to let q> fund nte- •'"fi------. I to cover nearly every person arid Organization in Oakland County, ■including a beauty contest for girls il6 years, and a birthday fair enabling organizations to operate money-making booths at the {Mile.'* ‘ Miracle Mile shoppers win (have a chance to win an ail-ex-| pease paid three-day vacation for ;tw0 to New York City or Wash-jlagton, D. C-, beginning Friday-* The trip, sponsored by the center and arranged through the Hir-Jingcr Travel Center, will be won by some lucky shopper whose JSfc ' fey-blank is drawn on Sept. 1. Entry blanks will be available at all me shopping center stores, j The trip to Washington includes accommodations at the Sheraton-f>ark Hotel and visiting _ such places as the MMMt ‘,1‘* The date for the Fair will.be Oct. 11*13 with Miracle Mile assigning each proup a 15 x 20-foot area adjoining the cruising lank, ★, tk, Booths and stands may be set and memorials, Georgetown lit. Vernon. ] In New York, the Jstay at the Hotel i Just off Times Sguain, j He-would h*ve his choict of feral tours and attractions, sucl Broadway shows, dining attbsGte bacabana, sight-seeing toum| of Chinatown, Radio City and United Nations, and boat It (Wound Manhattan lahuid. f The winner in the drawing, will nave hi* choico between the two trips, ; Thera is no ago limit on the trants. The contest OlMhNI Aug. 31 |ind the deadline tor use of t fnirai«Nov.30. Rack to school a program centered on Ponti area student* Aug. 17 featuring ‘contests, parades and shows for youngsters of nursery, grade school, Junior high and high school ! Otft certificates will be award- Red-Backed Festival Fun hut Political Flop but a failure politically. T^f O/f gatlons—about 14,300 youths from 144 countries -were leaving this capital of the north today. Meet of HELSINKI, Finland (AP)-The Communist-sponsored eighth world talth festival appears to have eubcesshil as entertainment, U.S. Legal Body Elects Area Mali I runner an in ar first place [the prise will be a l r girls M yean old at 7 p. m, _» The bicycle parade will be held In the Miracle Mile parking area (with contests held in two categories. There will be a contest for the best decorated bicycle, and for the best decorated float powered inr a bicycle. » Thi 0m will form at the J-ocket ship in the oenter of the parking area. • The twist contest win take t place m the platform beta* ! erected la the middle of the shop-* plug area. Couplet may enter In lone of two categories: ever and i under IS years old. I The Miracle Mile contest is believed to be the first shopping center twist contest in the Detroit hrea. Contestants may wear any }ype of clothing and music must be provided by the contestants’ Rwn phonograph records. Reality contest * The bathing beauty contest for it to 5-year-olds will be the first in h chain of competition between girls 3-16. F The young beauties will compete ^"MfMtriafttfhHajUdilng WTlTBe ■ L- beauty of face, figure, posture Henry L. Wooifenden, con-con delegate from ttoomfiold wee today elected vide president of the American Judicature Society at its annual meeting in San Francisco. Wooifenden, 56, of 1575 Kenslng* >n Road succeeds Edgar N. Eisenhower of Ttooma, Wash. The Oakland County lawyer is a former mayor Of Bloomfield Hills and former president of the gtate Bor of Michigan. •' • ■. .Ar I Three other Michigan elected to posts in the national or* ganjzation. Mate Supreme Court Justiee John R. Dnthmers, was, reelectedchairman of the hoard of directors and’ Raymond H. Dresser of Sturgis and Charles W. Joiner of Ann Afbor were aeleeted She 10-13 age group on Aug. 24 and the 14 to 10-year-olds on Aug. 25. » As part of the entertainment during August, Miracle Mile will Sponsor the Land O’Lakes Seventh international Baton Twirling Con- t The contest, one of the top tin the nation Is expected to at-'tract tome of (he best talent * In the twirling circle*. It will bo j hold all day Ang. IS. j Aug. 24 and 25 will be devoted lo pets at the Miracle Mile.'At | Jp.m. youngsters wilt compete for rzes tn a pet parade. According Qray Graham, manager of Miracle Mile, there will be four categories for the contestants: Dogs, Rati, animal* and miscellanoui. (Judging Will be based an grooming, •costuming and originality. * . it it it ‘ • The following day, the shopping Renter, along with the Ken-L-Ra-Won Dog Food Co,, will sponsor ja kid’s dog show. In this contest, (the prizes change. { In the categories of bestNH {turned, longest tail, most spots, [best trick, and shaggiest, the first (prize will be a trophy, a ribbon land the choice of a bade ball (purse. Second place will bring (owner a trophy, ribbon and T-shirt. * Third place will receive a trophy jand ribbon and the fotirth place (will get a ribbon. The prise fee ."Beet Hog la the m 1 be a toy's er glrt’e receive a (tret can of Han4rftatlon. A dog jobedlence demonstration Will to tint on by the Southern MfcF*—“ Utodlenoe Training dub. • Wrapping up the Back’ to School program at the shopping o prill* be a high school pennant Jy. offering something sMdgl for each of » ana Ugh schools. . Mirapie Mile, as a.part of their up, in the area and . gtMunds will protect them day and right. Everything, including advertising and, pjpomotioiial expenses, and electricity for lights, will be supplied thejixoupsJree,hy.tlv:i„sJ3op-ping center. MIRACLE OF FLOWERS On Sept. 14 and 15 the Lorraine Manors Branch of the Women's National Farm and Garden Association and the Michigan Divison of Flower Show 8cboot for Judges wi)l. stage "Miracle 0f Flowers’’ flower show at Miracle Mile. The show wiO feature floral displays of area members of the farm and garden association. capital o them came here to • selves, am (my did. ....di,#—*. * The official Finnish attitude wee reserved but correct. Riots took piece in flio hesrt of the capital for fpur successive nights at the start of the festival. The police ‘ ollgsns and eild they no evidence of local Wooifenden, Con-Con Delegate, NamedVotp - I ... of liirtirntlllM larlitr' Trfi* dlsturtanosg ceased when KMipilfMIOlIf the police used tougher measure* Several nights of hard rains also helped. MOST NONPOUTICAL Michael Myerson, 22, a University of California graduate tad head of the 450-member U.S, contingent, said 75 per cent of all the festival events were nonpolitical. There were parades, sports vents, concerts, movies and knees, East European* showed the moat interest in the political meet- Society members also presented their first Golden Anniversary Award to Roscoa Pound, dean emeritus of the Harvard law school, and honored U, S. preme Court Justice Tom C. Clark for his contributions to recent judicial reform movements. ★ ★ to _ Sterry R. Waterman of the United States Court of Appeal* was elected president of the society. To Toll Bell in West Berlin Over 'Wall' BERLIN (AP) — West Berlin’s Freedom Bell will be tolled at noon Aug. 13 to markjhe first Red wall dividing Berlin, the city government said Tuesday. it it it All traffic lights will be switched to amber to bring street traffic in West Berlin to a stop tor three minutes. Factories and offices are asked to atop work. ★ it it The sound of the bell will be broadcast over the wall to East Berlin by loudspeaker trucks. The Freedom Bell is a copy of America’s Liberty Bell. It was an American gift to West Berlin. Income Tax Question Goes to Dearborn Vote DEARBORN (fl —The Dearborn City Council last night agreed to ask Dearborn residents in the Nov. 6 election whether they prefer an Income tax on a statewide basis or a city tax. it it it A 1 per cent tax similar to Detroit’s new payroll tax' has been drafted, but action on the ordinance has been held up pending further study. Dearborn residents who work in Detroit proper are subject to the Detroit tax. Veterans Are Passing Up Big Betwfits, , • ! l:r . WASHINGTON (UPI) — Half a minimi veterans and their survivors aiy passing'up SB mlllion a year in increased pensions provided by a 1960 law, the Veterans Administration (VA) told Congress yesterday. VA benefits director Philip N-Brownstein made the statement in testimony betore the House Vet-enns Attain Committee. a said about 630,000 per-i now covered bjr the pre- change would mean a pension increase. ' 7 connected disability could be eolleciing almost *7 million mere «peh mouth If they switched to Browristein said the VA surveye3 pensioners who .delayed making the switch tad found 'that (3 per cent Ad not know facts. Another 134 per cent been misinformed about the new law, be said, while others had checked in- am «* cent of thooo eligible for benefits of the new law had missed out by fltog too fate. ' , The estimate of monthly benefit losses was based on a VA survey , of applications to twitch programs.- . It showed that 52 per cent of applicants woujd benefit by dunging. and that the average increase would be $13.69 per month for veterans and $12.28 tor veterans' survivors. • Thus, he said, more than bait • of the 1,124,00 persons still under provisions of the old law were P«s«ing up better benefits despite "the widest possible pubttefty” given to the change. The pension m«|pmn . <»vera needy veterans who cannot support themselves because of agu or non-service-connected disabilities and drion until Btey were j ..f TOKYO TRAIN PILEUF - A rescue worker dimbe over trucks of derailed coach after •' crossing accident In the outskirts of Tokyo, Japan* yesterday, 'nwiting in two deaths and injuries to 30 persons. A packed tfhwiH commuter train hit a tbiek at an unmanned crossing* then wee struck by a /econd train. The wounded were taken to five nearby hg*- : H the Communists have won few new friends and followers, however, the uti-Communiet groups did not score any remarkable sue-■sun either. r The biggest split was the walkout last week of 44 non-Commu-Hist* Of the 101-member Ceylonese delegation. Headed by the delegation’s official leader, Hema Da-bare, 38, they left in protest against the procedure at political meetings, where Communl I speakers, were favored, t DEFECT FROM LINER Nine East Germans have defected from the liner Volker-freundschaft, which has served as quarters for the 576-member East German delegation, a spokesman of the West German permanent trade mission here announced. A reliable source said an East German girl, a member of her delegation’s choir, was seised by Red agents when she sought to defect to join her fiance, who had fled earlier to Finland. " a 1 i ★ - Some of the groups, such Yale University Russian chorus, have been working on an Intellectual level far above the average of the assembled young people. Events outside the festival which drew the biggest crowds were cul- Benton (iarbor Track in Preliminary Stage -BENTON HARBOR «“ A plan to build and operate a |2-milllon horse race track with peirl-mutuel betting near Benton Harbor was in preliminary aettm riaRei today. It was disclosed Monday night when retired farmer John Bury obtained permission from the Benton Township board to establish the.proposed track on a 78-acre plot of hie tend. The Bite Bee about four miles north sad east of Benton Harbor near tto Junction ef expressways 1-M and I-ee. ' Bury told the board ihat a group of investors, represented at the meeting by Jack Vandeveer of Chicago/ had taken an option on hie land and , planned to build the track. —Th» board granted IheJnvestora. 60 days to act on the option. Bury, declined to identify the Investors but arid thy Included Chicago and Gun 'GaiRt,..KUI« Boy; Detroit Youth H«ld . DETROIT UP—Steve Hearnden, IT, was shot fatally through tha toad yisterday by a15-year-oid ‘ the young* Prosecutor Tries to SaV&Money for CadillacrArea er toy called a- game, police said. The younger toy, Michael Sullivan was tufnad over to juvenile authorities. Frferidly Conversation MOSCOW wm Premier Khrushchev and President Leonid Bre-zhnev called on visiting King Mohammed Zahir of Afghanistan at a Black Sea resort Itt the Crimea. Tass reported the three had a friendly conversation- Old Salem, N.C.. was founded by Moravian pioneers In 1752. ^NOWOPEN. ** THE NEW CAREER GIRL HAIR STYUSTS CADILLAC (UPI) — Wexftwd County prosecutor Burton A. Hines yesterday offered to put bhnsrif on 24-hour call in the interest o< saving the county money. The offer was om ef la Ms pita to avrid Jalitag aa ble. Any persons arrested In Wexford County at the present time must be transported at an Increased cost to jails in other counties because Of a recent circuit .court .order which doted the 50-year-old structure here. Hines proposed to dty, county and state officials that felony offenders be brought to the attention of toe prosecuting attorney* immediately, whether night or day, . .. ^ medefs. Airwcph^and Young America Presents’’ exhi- bition. HEAD OF EXHIBIT The head of the exhibition was Alexander Garvin, 21, of Yale University. Housed in an art gallery opposite the Helsinki railway station, it draw between 2,500 and ,000 people daily during the 10-day festival. . Garvin estimated that about half of the visitors were festival participants. "• i An organisation called ‘Tnde-pendent Research Service, formed at Harvard University, was active along, a different line to counter Communist propaganda. Some 120 American youths tried to establish personal contacts and fight private oral battles with Communist propagandists. -nJA-fV Of the U. S. contingent, 120 youths are now going on a 13-day ir of the Soviet Union. The tour costs $120 par Person and everybody Is naying his av," Myerson said. Seventy other Americans going on a lOMay, $92-tour of the Soviet Union. The rest are going home by various routes. _ YOU WILL FIND HERE ALL YOUR Qt W 7T NEEDS FOR SCHOOL OR CAMPUS. ulCHahCn J AUTHENTIC COLLEGE STYLES BY 909V9AMERICA'S TOP BRAND MANUFACTURERS. SWEATERS By "Jantzcn'^ "Puritan" and "Revere" Large selection. Cardigans, crew, V and zipper From SPORT SHIRTS "Arrow" and Casual" "Norris Muted plaids, batiks and neat foulard patterns. Ivy button down and snap tab models. Sizes s, rn, I and xl. __________ ___: From $3« WASH V WEAR SLACKS By Farah, H.I.S. and Uvl. These are real smooth, slim cut, trim-and terrific. New fabrics in 21 different models. Sizes 29 to 38. Vte Your Security Charge Account —AT MIRACLE MILE A FREE SHAMPOO and SET FOR YOU OPENING SAVINGS _HALE PRICE WAVES- Reg. $19' 950 Custom cut, shampoo and set included Just now when you need a good permanent and a budget break, you*get both at Career Girl Salon! It’s the big, BIG beauty evefe you've been waiting tor. __ free Shampoo and Set Offer. • < Not Good on Permanent Wav# Special* >■ Reg. $25 Summer Protein Permanent you change your costume! are a bland o< synthetic and human hate so _T ______r can to worn without detcettan, in their nawral hair shadee. Our iMisto are specially traktodlii wig styling. So axdttei you’ll want one ink minute you tie Tt, ao inexpensive you’ll want sevsral. Wig and Cuatom Styling, Complete ... $50 I MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER HOURS 9 to 9 APPOntTMEIIt NOT (ALWAYS NECESSARY THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST vj 1962 the tape 'recorder Pith e mOjEfN .the most amazing value all-new portable ‘tape-o-matfe* TAPE'. 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DISCOUNT PRICES political developments of the Seething Sixties; however, will inevitably be legislative reappor- Fashion aoen to classes in As too balance of power shifts from rural to urhan legtolatora the political make-up to also expected to change. Proportioned POLISHED COTTON SLACKS Newest trends In school basics.., sissy look; wide-belted tiara style with jacket; TV medico with fringe; long torso with'plea ted skirt; cummerbund dress with Tap quality wash and wear fabric la smartly tailored. Sanforised, less thanl% shrinkage, 5 colors. 6 to 18. Irish Fall solid colors, end cheeks. Classic in 65% Dacron ‘polyester, 35% cotton drips dry. Embroidery motifs in color on white cotton style. Roll sleeves. ENJOY LOWER PRICES EVERY DAY AT GRANTS AND GST S.if. GREEN STAMPS, TOO! HUE SHOPPING CENTER Complete Watch Jpverhaul Plus NeedfA Part# for. • ■ .Stinto 'A*—i» the Price Includes. on——— < — Thorough cleaning and oiling asms w*tro —Necessary parts replaced —Genuine Factory p«rta wed — Expertly adjuated and timed —12 Months guarantee on labor rapairing Men’s Nylon Watch Bands.. II AH Work Expertly Bond on Opr Premises miracle MILE Shopplnf Center JEWELERS Farmers are historically Republican, while toe city dwellers-are predominantly Democratic. . g.....jfizsSpf** Some of the inequalities of toe present western Speak tor themselves, A voter in the hamlet of t^tory, -Vt,, has 10,000 per cent more representation in the lower house of his state legislature than his counterpart in Burlington. The latter city has a population of 35,-OOO, toe former 35, but each town electa one lawmaker. Thanks to this hundred-year-old Farn 2«W1 EMM1- Inn Ion a Hrlgbta and Onalee J. Thom w. university, Awmo Robert W.CMiptoU. SWM Areada, Madtaon Heights and Marie F. Walla, •K«rrau C. Adkins. 30 E. Longfellow Mid Nancy S. Nagel, 11* Judson Thomas M. Qodau. M0 tggg, mlnaham and Mat and Bsrbsra _A. Ki Lawrenoe R. Hs Lane Road, Blrmlnt-B. Petrak. -Monroe ton Plains and Mary CIFrankrHancssk, 2010 Mann And Laura j. Hughes, SMO Mann tofdTnfl EvelynS,.' JU^Xl. US. WyBfl*®-- and Kathonna F. Daniel E. Stocker, MS MiTe ^Roa^^, Southfield and~ and'Earla*^3! Pnnnte L. Raker, MT0 Harrison. Rocb-**Csr! A. Jones.-Oil Baldwin ^ohn*^. Lusk. ma^ayi»j>».. Blrmtnm TOeraid .. F. Vought, in^'^IenV Tr^^kiS "W™ -„~a , Kh Rl- Ruth Michael 1. ”ffi|d«on. .WT dJ teorgla leverly This would seem to run counter to the phlkwophy underlying the U.. S. Constitution, since its framers deliberately set up only the House of Representatives population basis, and the Senate by political geography. TWO SENATORS Vermont, tor Instance, to entitled to two U,... S, senators who vote equally with the two senators from New York, although the latter represent nearly 17 million citizens, the yermnwtery -dmiy JgBQOBr- The writers of our Oonstitation — men like Jefferson, Washington, Madison, Franklin and Hamilton — felt that too senators could act as a brake on too “rabble” In toe House, who were elected by popular vote. These Founding Fathers gave us i republic, not a democracy. They lid not believe that every person should have an equal vote, regard-lew of ignorance, indifferenoe, station to life. The Supreme Court may alter toto conception by giving every citizen an equal vote for his state legislators and senators, regardless >f geography. If it does, the suburbanite will ultimately profit even more than the city slicker, because he has less representation than either city or country cousins. This fact to the one ray of hope for Republicans In the reapportionment upheaval. 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Flatly knit of combed cotton for added strength. Ityll-ciit for utmost comfort. Wide choice of wash-fast blazer stripe* antf solid colors. Sizes 6 to 16, W.T.GRANT CO i ■ a Vj t m THE POOTIAe4ltE8S, WEDNEStfAY, AUGUST 8, 1042 m m i£a,ll nfM SB m wm, SAIGON (tflrtMWiUe gn'un-easy peace; has settled, over Laos, a war that claims a thousand lives a Week rages on in South Viet I Nam. p • People ha* are. now themselves wheflie$ the settle-met in Lawever- uncertain -win make the struggle against the Communistsjn South Viet Nam any easier. ’ • ..... ^ Many " a«W !su« H win be harder. They are convinced that the Oomnoatsts can now tarn attention from Laoe to China-lndia Border Fight Grips Nehru •;C•_' .......'______ar niMu ORGANIZES VICTIMS — German attorney Karl Schulte-; Hillen father of a child whose deformity is blamed on the drug thalidomide, checks indexed card file Monday in Hamburg, Germany. File is supposed to contain names of 400 families with children similarly deformed. He has started an association for the families and hopes to expand its organization to other.; countries.' ‘.li’V.'V'.r Urges Private Firm to Tie Global Med SAN- FRANCISCO (UPI) -David Samoff, board chairman of the Radio Corp. of America, today called for the unification of ail American international communications systems into a privately owned company. ing System, all have used the satellite to send and pickup television programs to and froiVi Europe, via the satellite. i before the annual meeting of the Judicial administration sec-tifin of the American Bar Association. Tito, speech was delivered by Samoff’s son, Robert, board ’ chairman of the National Broadcasting Co., because the general . i« convalescing in New York from a recent operation. all the advantages made possible by modem science and Samoff suggested that although the recently proposed communications satellite corporation establishes a form of legal monopoly, most of the companies authorized to participate in the project “will be in competition with each other.” He said the formation of a unified company nt the same time would enable the V, 8. firm to deal with foreign govern- The nation’s only communtca-tions satellite, Telstar, is ov and -operated privately by American Telephone & Telegraph Co. NBC, a subsidiary of RCA, and the American Broadcasting Co. and the Columbia Broad “The ultimate tlons will arrive when an individual, equipped with a vest pocket transmitter-receiver, will connect by radio with a nearby switchboard and be able to see and speak with any similarly equipped individual in the world,” | noff said. jungle and mountains. The. Viet Cong (the Communist guerrillas) can run back hod forth across, that border any time they want to. And we won’t bp Able to do anything about it.” South Viet Nan;. As one American military man put it, “the whole northern part of South Viet Nam is now out- \/\ the infiltration of Viet Cong guerrillas across file border info South Viet Nam’s central highlands since the truce land that the buildup q< North Vietnamese regular troops continues in southern ____the end of the fighting in Laos, officials fear that North Viet Nam will gradually shift Its eat-imated 10 battalions—lO.OOOmerv— there into fighting in South Viet Nam. ' '' T . The shift, In fact, has already begun. U.S. observers say SAM to 3,000 already have crossed (As TTuong Vlnh Le, president of the South Vietnam National These officials confirm—despite denials from Washington—that flanked aldng a 170-mile border of there lias been a marked increase Assembly! puHtr”! do POtTielievc Communist troops in Laos “may I AT DIEN BIEN PHU Among the thousands of regular • VieliOimese Communist troops-in the Attopeu, Sara vane and Tehe* two regiments which helped defeat tb# French at Dien Bien PHU eight years ago. Negotiate on Peiping’s Terms? By HENRY BRAD8RER NEW DELHI (H—India’s angry territorial dispute with Commu-ilst thlna is forcing a difficult decision on Prime Minister Nehru. He must decide whether to negotiate on Peiping's- terms in the hope of ending aggression along India’S mountainous northern border. The Chinese want to negotiate Without withdrawing from the disputed territory they hold, India has insisted. Nehru’s agreement to- talks would imply renunciation of the disputed territory in bleak, three-mile high ; Ladakh which the tbe Chinese. The realization of China’s dominant military jxnrt-tton In Ladakh has come hard to New Delhi. . When flaMThinese began pressing into Ladakh in 1957, India had no army troops in the area. By last spring India has managed to establish 3,500 to 5,000 troops in this area behind the world’s two high-mountain ranges, the Hima-layas and the Karakorams. This created a feeling of confidence in New Delhi. Chinese already control. This is m an area of 12,000 square miles. India controls another 39,000 square miles of the disputed Himalayan borderlands. - Angry cries of “appeasement” are beginning to be heard as signs Increase that Nehru might negotiate. Critics assort, that whatever Influence India now has In Asia will evaporate If Nehru accepts the Chinese It had been eroded recently when the government realized the Chinese had the ability to bring superior force to bear any time they chose. This,is what happened month in the GAI$Van Valley pf Ladakh when the Chinese rushed up hundreds of troops to menace Indian outpost. The outpost’s supply line is still threatened and the ^slt«atien--ftieranrHfili^ plosive. Nehru apparently is " drawn towards talks, however. He_ thought India and Red China, the world’s two most populous nations, would stand together as the friendly heart of Asia. Now, in his weary old age, Nehru seems to want to make another, perhaps last desperate attempt to resolve the quarrel with Pieping. ‘ARROGANCE* HIT Rather than being cooperative the Chinese have been he has said. “No force in the world could oblige us” to withdraw from the .disputed area, Chinese Foreign Minister Chen Yi said last week. India lacks the force to evict draws), The note’s failure clearly state a demand for withdrawal led some members, of parliament and newspapermen-: to conclude India had weakened its demand, DISAPPOINTED ,;f,i The Chinese reply, which Nehru called “rather disappointing,” said Peiping is ready to have talks as soon as possible—-without any preconditions, meaning no .withdrawl from the disputed territory. Nehru said the Chinese note is under sideration. Recognition of the Chinese strength Is believed to have been an Important factor in India’s note to China July 26 which Nehru made public yesterday. It said India was willing to hold discussions with, the Oilnese as soon as the proper- atmosphere has been created. An official spokesman was unable to clarify tor correspondents later whether tbs requirement of proper atmosphere meant Indian There were signs In early ISM, when Chinese premier Chou Entail visited New Delhi, that Nehru was willing to trade away a few thousand miles of Ladakh for settlement of tbe dispute, Including foe Chinese the rest of their claim of 51,0M square miles. He found himself unable to do lt because of angry Now public opinion is no loudly heard. The sharpest critics Nehru’s governing Congress party have been silenced by giving them official posts. The non-Communist opposition parties am weaker. Only a few newspapers have spoken against negotiations without Chinese withdrawal. One leading paper, The Hind-ustln Times, said “the hour of. dishonor is near” unless public opinion halt’s what the editor considers the drift toward negotiations insistence on a Chinese with-1 on Chinese terms. Maav observers here doubt—as ,Viet Cong and North Vietnamese .units, officials say, keep its Geneva ~ pledge that torclga troops WOl not be allowed on Ms is that the rank and file of the guerrillas are rOcsuited in the south and trained either there or As the Thai minister said.-! change their uniforms, but the Weapons The only difference between the in June1, which said, ‘/Jo t** of necessity, -the people of South Viet Nam and the South Viet Nam National Liberation Fhmt wiB. use i their legitimate and effective right to appeal to the people and government M North Viet Nam . . . requesting that «cfive iappwt; to- Liberation Front for Sooth Viet Nam,” may ask for open assistance from North Viet Nam. One Indication was given in an be afforded to file just struggtorof the people of South Viet NtUxi." The NLF has always gone to great pains to insist mi its independence. But it is known to Jbe pamphlet puplished in Hanoi, controlled by Hhnoi. Dodge Seeking Fifth Divorce Auto H«ir Trying to Shed Wife No. 5, Says She Assaulted Him DETROIT ID-Auto heir Horace E. Dodge, whose four ex-wive* netted millions of dollars in divorce settlements, Is trying to shed wife number five, former showgirl Gregg Shenyood.. - Details of the suit became pub. lie today when acting Executive Judge Horace W. Gilmore^ “de-suppressed” the suit Because of reports: of Mrs. Dodge’s conduct when detectives tried to serve divorce papers on her in New York. Mrs. Dodge. 40, whose face has appeared on 144 magazine covert by her count, dropped the papers Four Seasons night spot and ran away screaming, the detectives reported. Dodge, 62, alleges his present wife alternately assaulted him and ignored him Sid that she spent her time mostly outside Michigan. He said she retumed to the Dodge home in Grosse Pointe only to demand more money for her adventures outside the state. Dodge asks custody of their eight-year-old son, John Francis. He alleges Gregg, whom he mar-rted Feb 20. 1058 at Palm Beach, Fla., has a vicious, ungovernable Dodge alleges she inflicted physical damage that required medical attention, and that he feared for his safety. The suit says the couple separated Aug. 4,1961. The divorce action was filed Aug- 7, 4961. stay at home? pay-by-check! If your home-work la making It more difficult for you to get out and pay Mils, try out checkin* accounts. You can make out the ' checks, at your convenience, right in your own home and leave the leg-work up to the mailman. And of course checks are safer than cash. Open s modern checking account soon and you'll never want to be without one again. " Nov Paying I 12 Month Savings Certificates PONTIAC ISTATl BANK main,office, Saginaw at Lawrence Auburn Heights Baldwin, otTale Drayton.Plains Miracle Milo M-59 Plaza 9 to fji, 4 E* Lawrence' ‘ 1 member FXLI.C. CHILDREN’S SHOP MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER • TELEGRAPH AT SO. LAKE RD. E Bi EST BUYS FOR...__ C] Kl foS | ■ c GIRLS' SWEATERS Sites 3-6x GIRLS' - SKIRTS Sta.,4.14 GIRLS' 4 jfcl SNOW SUITS 1 Q Sizes 3-6x WHITE SOCKS 4 99 i BOYS' I PANTS-4-14 | BOYS' : —. ” 4 4 1 Winter Jackets t Slzee6«14 ■ 1 199 >ont BOYS'4-12 A 4 BRIEFS A for 1 OYS' w 4 1 I” 119 BOYS' WATERPROOF TRENCH COATS-Sizes 4-14. mm- OPEN A CHARGE ■USE OUR UY-AWAY Children's Shop j MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER-SQUARE LAKE and TELEGRAPH RDS. 16 to 9 P.M. Monday to Saturday fE 8*9522 NEW YORK (AP)—Attention New York fortune teitereV . AP Pho»«f»* NEW SENATOR — Len B. Jordan arrived ify Washington yesterday to assume, the U.S. Senate post left vacant by the recent 4Mth of Idaho’s Sen. Heo-ry Dworshak. He is'also a candidate in an upcoming election to'fill the remaining four years of the~termr Jordan is a former Republican governor of Idaho. | Fortunes Look I I Dim for Phony I I Soothsayers | Sometime in the near fUtnre, a urn will come to you for advice. You* will give it to him, , and he will pay yoiii for it. You will accept the money, and then the man will give you a summons. He will be a detective. _ . -J-. This prophecy wai. made. Tues-day night by City Maricets Commissioner Albert S; Pacetta, who ordered a citywide probe of tor-tellers, tea leaf readers^ spiritualists and .other, soothsay- -He-* plaints from astrologers that many disreputable characters purport to peer into the future. Pacetta said an investigation of astrologers also is In the stars. MIBACLE MILE « SIBLEY’S THU REDUCTIONS ON ALi WOMEN'S SUE SHOES KOW-EXACTLY VIXAUTY . 9 ACCENT - • DISCO GOLO • GEMS • MOXEES * GRACE WALKER • MANY OTHERS Fina Quality Brands Reg. 14.95, Klow 7.47 Reg. 9.95, Now 4.97 Reg. 13.95, Now 6.97 Reg. 8.95, Now 4.47 Reg. 12:95, Now 6.47 Reg. 7,95, Now 3.97 Reg. 11.95, Now 5.97 Reg. 6.95, Now 3.47 Reg. 10.95, Now 5.47 Reg.5^99, Now 2.99 MATERIALS SO Calf, patent, mesh, suede. DOLORS White, navy, black, bone, red, and HERE ARE BARGAINS... of a lifetime, all sizes but not in every style:. ALL original prices on boxes. Take Vz off and ^you have a« terrific deal- Many styles suitable for fall or baCk-to-school wear, . ' ■' ' * L”. Michigan's Largest florsheim Dealer USE YOUR SECURITY CHARGE || WO IWVR JAVVHII I VI1MKVC Cr ■ shoes i Cmtot Op»n Kvaalng* 'HI f V PRESS, wapffESDAY.AUGUST Bad Credit Ratings for FHA Taxpayers Millions : i Ira ■ W min SffiESas mWHt W&k ' WSl ‘ > • ■ ", . %• ft , ■ i . _- ■ . «JL_ >v. ^ -1 the Press. “but it still does not insure that beat reporting agencies with complete information files will furnish the reports. No Detroit agencies can possibly have the credit Information on Ypsilanti FHA officials had no figures bn Dwight K. Hamborsky, Detroit what value thorn homes repre- FHA director,, told tee Press: • rented, but the, press saW fi toe ne ^ appai,ntly the soine TOO houses reported in toe ^ * trouble on home Detroit area, were representative. |(wned by the FHA the total valuation would be nearly tn- « Butrin gl4 million. tion ot Mortgage Brokers two mortgages ot flMM. Ypsilanti Townsl^p area mortgage foreclosures have totaled some 63-miUllQn in the last 18 months and some 1630,000 this year. S :V- ★ W The Press said similar foredo- In a copyrighted story, the Press said a three-week investigation fit rising FHA mortgage foreclosures in 26 southeastern Michigan counties,- has revealed A problem which, “in terms o| money ' lost/ dwarfs any recent report to FHA officials in Washington. Hamborsky told the* Press the problem was one of a coast-to-coast nature.___________________ a “dealer” would give a family $100 jac so for the deed to a foreclosed ‘house. The "dealer” then would rent the house until the nqjnmal foreclosure routine—efime- He said the flirst step in the new program of tightening, mortgage credit rating requirements was to ignore such ratings from suspect game area. These new mortgages, further depress fits resale market for toe foreclosed homes. The Press said the foreclosures and the millions of dollars they rating report submitted by a seller 'Beware Sharks tract to make credit ratings. The FHA said it will not reject a report from another agency, but may ask for.supplemental report from the agency under cpntract. The Press said the Detroit area agency is Credit Data Corp. of Detroit. The Press asked Peter B. Fletcher If the new FHA credit reporting, method will solve the problem. 1 "It’l good that the FHA recog-nizes the scope, of the credit re* “ Fletcher told the habit of gtving somewhat audacious compliments to beautiful foreigners. It to a habit perhaps deplorable but completely Innocent, and not a tew queens have beta! victims. “La Signora Kennedy should not have fear if she will team that Italians would be ready to face the sharks of the Ravelin seas to defend her, but before a beautiful woman they are absolutely 4nca-pable of containing their expires* ■Inn* nf Admiration ” Waterford Fir# pwpt. Had 52 July Altfrm* The Waterford Township FlreDe-partment responded to 82 alarms in July this year, five more torn in the same month a year ago. During the first seven months of this year the department bandied 516 calls ccMMUtad, money down, Id-year1 mortgage.” .if it it The lending institution makes its money on Interest as long' as the The only one not protected in the long run is the FHA. It may wind up with the house—by this time probably badly run down. porting problem, 1 The Press said the key to toe problem all too often is the credit report issued on individual mortgage applications. ADVERSE RATINGS The Press said its investigation the Ypsilanti area whose homes werr foreclosed this year, 34 had advene credit ratings at the time their, mortgage was issued. The Press quoted an Ypsilanti credit source as saying there were instances.Qf credit companies calling up a person they were rating ^iYIVERSk* and getting a credit rating without a check of ledger accounts, merchants employment records and other means' of establishing >a record. situation. The federal agency, last July 1 instituted a new procedure due to "grave inadequacies" in the former system. “The new procedure is toe culmination of nearly a year of tightening up on credit reporting, munity picnic In Mukwonago Sunday. Campaigning for a fifth term, Wiley to senior Republican in the U.S. Senate ... and doesn’t appear to be a trombone player. CAMPAIGN CLARION — Alexander Wiley, R,-Wto., woufd, no doubt, highly resent the inference that he to a windbag — despite his appearance-in this picture snapped at Acorn- Use Your Penney CHARGE CARD PICKET ’NPOST COLLECTION Back-to-School BECKONS And Penney’* collection of Back.to*Scho5f jackets is* Dashing 'n Different. Styles are full of smart, new looks with a conservative touch. Rabbit* has joined Raccoon* on the collars of Jackets heading tyr the classrooms. Linings continue warm, soft, and fluffy with thick acrylic pile. This smart pile also peeks put on collars. Coldt-cued knit, scarfs are “in” for Fall '62, along with muted plaids, Wic and solids, twinkling tweeds. For sporty occasion knit collar and cuffs takt the spotlight. It all adds up to a bright fashion picture far Bai»jr.faiJtehool ’62. Select your jacket today and let us store it ''i»x;l#y»iVay-'for,'you.' ■ ■ >■; , ■■" i , OPIN MONDAY .THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A, M. to 9t00 *. AA PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE THIRTY-SIX Baldwin Rubber Sets Pi' ;;. Wdrketsmtf Kin The 14th annual picnic of Baldwin Rubber Co. UAW Local 125 at Walled Lake' Park, will be held for all active, layed-off and retired «wrk«W:atad time families Saturday starting at 10 a.Wv Attendance Records Smashed in Waterford ’’' niTr4'1''1 V < v; ■ * 7. of lands Paid Less Recordation Program Really "Tops T9 keep his pauwaigen from frees-ing, Campbell rented them a motel toorn and.be took an adjacent ties at 13 elementary school play-, ford Township in the finals at grounds in the township. IgeOe foie. Ninuly 2,200 youngsters ,have Nearl m cWU|ren participated registered at the playgrounds fori. '’ the program which concludes Fri-I® day. Last year’s registration total' HB staff of eight playground directors ..weekly contest. According to Cameron Wilkinson, chairman of Baldwin Rubber’s recreation committee, the races end contests will begin at 10 «.m. with the parte rides opening at 11 a.m. The rides will dbse at f pan. The swimming prograni conducted at Uve' area lakes by director Fran Spencer Ond her staff of live expert swimmers has attracted 780 registrants this summer com- The department said countries entitled fd the full domestic price —except the Philippines — have supplied only 25 per cent ef their totil quotas for the last half of the -year. The: Philippines has sup-' plied 66 per cent. ARTIST AT WORK — Doralje Cross, 7th grader at Pierce Junior High School, concentrates as she paints (ii plaque, an indoor activity of the Waterford Township summer playground program. Both Indoor and outdoor events are conducted at" 13 schools with a staff of 16 supervising thy proceedings. Youngsters displayed their art work- Tuesday at the Community Activities Inc. Building and also put on a talent show as a grand finale of the summer program which ends Friday. Mrs. Carol Wolfe directed the event*. . UNIFORMS MATERNmiS M44UCIE MI IE :$HOPPJNQ CtHTi* . OPEN IVENINOS UNTIt NINt . BASED ON ABILITY Youngsters are divided into five groups based on their aquatic ablU-ties and are instructed accordingly. Swimming also will endiflF day. Day camp activities are held In the Highland Recreation Area, White Lake Township, In a pic-..turesqne wooded site adjoining ■ Teeple Lake where the campers take a daily dip. Youngsters are instructed in woodcraft, nature study and fire imlldlngl-And-jeach week there Is an overnight camp-out. Mrs. Warren Allen directs activities aided by five experienced assistants. Camper registrations this year hive reached 333. A year ago 271 youngsters registered for the camp-Jhg program- Camp opened July 9 and will close August 17. The 40 to 4s persons working in the summer recreation pro- proud of the big Increase In activity. CAMPERS LOWER FLAG - Youngsters at the Waterttord Township Recreation Depart-,meat's day camp in the Highland Recreation Area conduct flag raisihg and lowing ceremonies each day.. Boys from Unit No. 3 at the camp take their turn lowering the Hag as boys ' Pontiac Press Phot* and girls from ,the other four units who have formed a' large circle around the flag pole stand at attention and salute. A highlight of the children’s week In camp is the overnight experience scheduled each Thursday. “I think the fact that the population of Waterford Township has risen is one reason for the big boost,’’ Lawyer explained. MORE TIMJILTOihkAN “We als .had. more time to plan and promote this year’s program which may also be a factor, and the added activities this year such as the tennis Instruction series certainly helped." A mid-season highlight of the recreation program was the Junior Olympic trials held last month. Teams comprised of youngsters .from all 13 playgrounds competed for the right, to represent Water- APPLIANCE BUYERS! 0LLIE FRETTER SAY ■ i mm GETTING A GOOD DISCOUNT HERE IS NO PROBLEM! OLLIE FRITTER And I really mean it. Did you know we have over 1500 new, nationally advertised major appliances, television and stereophonic units in stock and every one is for immediate sal# at an exceptionally good discount pricol Also I know sooner or later the cuitomer will ask One e/ Michigan's Original Discounters "how much" so we give you tho lowest price possible, the first time you ask, this saves y hoi your time and wnl No bargaining is necessary here! P.S. 0ur Service is Awfully Good Tool FLOOR MODEL SALE 10-ael. Water Heater......... $ 44.00 Caay Spin-Dryer............. $111.00 12 Du. Ft. Refrigerator, 2-Dr... $110.95 Kelvinator, Auto. Washer..... $151.05 Emerson 1-ton AirCond.......$111.15 RCA-Whirlpool Dehumidifier.. $ 65.00 CMERtON Dehumidifier...... FROM OUR TRADE-IN DEPARTMENT REFRIGERATORS—Frigidoire-Westlnghouie Kelvinator and Admiral Name Rrand 19" Portable TV " * in Crates................$117.00 Zenith 10" Portable..........$119.56 from $29’5 AUTOMATIC WASHERS-Reconditioned $88.00 Model 820-180 378-lb. FREEZER QIC 10.8CU.fr. DIU CAPACITY 0RANC0 Radio, AM/FM 5Tubas..................I 24.88 Emerson JDlook Radio.......$ 19.88 21" COLOR TV...............$171.15 VALUE PRICED AT $168”° Owning e new Norge f renter It //ke, having o supermarket In yevr*home I BUDGET TERMS 30 DAYS EXCHANGE GENEROUS TRADE FAST 24-H0UR NO MONEY DOWN COURTEOUS, AFTER 36 MONTHS TO PAY If Not Fully Satisfied ALLOWANCE DELIVERY ON ANY PURCHASE THE SALE SERVICE FRETTER DISCOUNT APPLIANCE MIRACLE MILE CENTER FERNDALE STORE (BETWEEN KRESGf S AND KROGER'S) S. TELEGRAPH AT SQ. LAKE RD. OPEN: Mon. thru Fri. 9:30 a.m.-IQ p.m. FE 3-7051 Sat. 9-9-Sun. Closed BBaBBMMMBBBBWMMN FINAL WEEK OF CONNOLLY’S FALL JEWELRY CLEARANCE! (both stores) Save 30 to 50% and Even More! FURTHER REDUCTIONS HAVE BEEN MADE ! NOTE THESE EXCEPTIONAL VALUES . . . SOME ARE SECOND AND THIRD MARK-DOWNS ! ALL ARE ONFINE QUALITY MERCHANDISE. YOU WILL FIND MOST ITEMS IN BOTH STORES, BUT WE CANNOT GUARANTEE IT. WHY NOT STOP AT BOTH LOCATIONS? DON’T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY TO SAVE LISTED BELOW ARE ONLY A FEW OF THE BARGAINS TO BE HAD DIAMONDS v SILVERWARE 14K 2-Dlamond Pendant Necklace ............. 14K 8-Dlamond and C/Pearl Pendant Necklace 14K 5-Diamond and C/Pearl Pendant Necklace. 14K Z-Dlamond Heart Pendant Necklace ........ 12-Diamond Watch Bracelet .................. 9-Dlamond 14K Bow Brooch#................... 32-Diamond (Pr.) Barring* .... ............. Ladles’ 14K Wh. Oold 3-Dla. Ring >/, Ct. T. W. Ladlen’ 14K Wh. Gold 7 P.O. DU. Cluster ..... Ladle*’ 14K White Gold ((.Diamond Eng. Ring .. Ladles’ 14K Yel. Gold 4-Dlamond Kng. Mntg.... Ladlen’ 14K Yel. Gold S-Dlamond WeddUg Ring Ladies’ 14K Wh. Gold 40-Dla. Circle Wed. Ring Ladles’ 14K Wh. Gold 7-Dlamond Wedding Ring . >9.00 .273.00 .247.50 250.00 Most trays, sugar and creamers, bowls, vegetable dishes, etc.......................Seduced 25% Sterling Dresser Sets .......... Reduced 331/3% Odds and ends of Sterling Silver and Plate Steak Knives, Forks, Spoons, etc. . . Reduced 50% 3 Sets of discontinued patterns j>L Sterling Silver Pay only ..................*... 1/3 of Original Price 39.53 395.00 85.00 Now Modem OH Set Style, MEN’S RINGS CLOCKS Reg. Sale Sunbeapt Wood Alarm ......... 14.25 5.45 Assorted Kitchen Clocks.. ......Reduced 50% General Electric TV Clock 1X85 ~ 8.25 Assortment Small Desk, Bedroom and Travel Clocks .^. ............ 6.60 3.85 Assorted. Battery Wall Clocks— Walnut Finish ................22.50 16.49- Reg. Sale Man’s Yellow Gold 8yn. Krinlde ............... 35.00 10.48 Man’s Yellow Gold Hemtto Cameo ...'........ 40.00 '18.10 Man’* Yelldw Gold Masonic Signet ......-....... 30.00 18.40 Ail Bablee’ and Children’s Blrthstone Ring* .........Vi OH GTS Yellow Gold Sapphire Moose Emblem .... 83.00 15.40 GTS Yellow Gold All Metal Elk Emblem....... 80.00 10.05 GTS SterUng Air Force Ring ................... 11.00 3.85 Boys’ Yellow Gold Blrthstone and InlUal ....... 8.9Q 4.08 GTS Yellow GoM Black Onyx and Diamond .... 82.50 10.48 WATCH: BANDS Spiedel-Flexlet and Krtesler. All Styles and Colors of Gold....... ....... Reduced 50% CHINA and CRYSTAL WATCHES Ladle*’ UK Movado Bracelet Watch .......... Ladles’ Yellow Gold Balova Bracelet Watch ... Ladles’ White Gold Hamilton Sport Watch ........ Ladles’ 14K Movado Sport Watch ...v.....>....... Ladleo’ Yellow Gold Croton Bracelet Watch Ladles’ 14K Connolly's Ante. 8. Watch ......... Ladles' Yellow Gold Hamilton Dime Watch .... Men’s St. Steel Connolly’s Ante. 8. Watch . ... Men’* St. Steel Movado Anto. S. Watch .......... Men’s Yellow Gold Name Brand Anto. 31 Jewel Men’s St. Steel Hamilton Electric (trap watch... Men’* Yellow Gold Croton 17J Waterproof......... Men** Yellow Gold Hamilton Autowind w/Date Men’s St. Steel Croton Watertlte Anto. ......... Crystal, Bowls, Vases, Candlesticks, Candy Dishes —, ., \........... Reduced 50% Broken Seta China......... ........Reduced 50% Odds and Ends China : — ..... Reduced 50% MEN’S JEWELRY Cliff Link Sets, Tie Tacks, Ident. Bracelets,, Lighters, Money Clips, ClgtRW* C^986r" ..r Reduced 50% LADIES’ RINGS Ladleo’ Yellow GoM Syn. Bine Sapphire ........29.50 10.95 Ladle*’ White GoM Genuine Turquoise ......... 30.50 13.48 Lhdles’ Yellow Gold Syn. Aquamarine ........ 49.50 37.43 Ladloo’ Yellow Gold Genuine Black Onyx ..... 38.03 13.33 Lad lea’ Yellow Gold Tiger IByo cameo ....... 33.33 10.95 ladleo’ Yellow Gold Byn. Blue Sapphire .... 33.03 3J3 ladleo’ Yellow GoM I Cultured Penrla, ......n 33.33 13.31 Ladleo’ White Gold 4-Dia. and Cultured Peario 113.33 43J3 STOREWIDE SALEe-ONLY A FEW RESTRICTED ITEMS HELD BACK. EVERY ITEM f$AT IS ON SALE HA$ THE ORIGNAL AND SALE PRICE TICKET ON IT. SORRY1, NO LAYAWAYS . . . But You Can Charge All You -Wish and Take 10 Months to Pay! COSTUME JEWELRY Bead Jewelry, Broken Bet Summer Jewelry, | Jewelry jPay Only 1/3 of the Original Price We have many, many more exceptional values in all items—many are second and jthiid mark-downs. You will never realize the values unless you see them. / f Of.* Master aai frlter Nlffcls ff " MW. Nana ' R MM jMM If It’s on Sale It Has a Sale Price Ticket on It \ w m THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1882 tHiaTfr-SEVEX1 SolePatton bi Imds Jjrip 'Chummy? LONDON «!> — A British grandmother thrilled her neighbors yesterday with an account ot haw she, enjoyed the world's most exclusive airline flight. '.‘There were 106 seats,” said jfamnt Nelson, &'IukLL the only passenger. What a % derful trip it .was. Everybody made a great fuss over me.’ Mrs. Nelson — flying from Montreal to Manchester aboard British Overseas Airways Corp. scheduled flight No. '648—was the only passenger. ★ ♦ " ♦ There were five crewmen In the cabin and five stewardesses. Airline officials estimated the cost of the flight as 12.600. Mrs. Nelson paid 6226.80. AIL TOOK TURNS . Stewardess Margaret said: “We all took turns with Mrs. Nelson. It was a real chummy trip.” > "It was a bit lonely at first," said the grandmother, "but they asked me to move up front and | did. Then they gave me every sort of attention." • '★ '★ ★ A BOAC spokesman faid this was Only the second direct Mon* treal to Manchester flight. It started a week ago. On the same plane's outward illght,-there were 101 passengers aboard; “We can only hope that in the flitura thta flight becomes more popular,” the spokesman added. Mrs. Nelson was returning from a two-month visit, with her son and his family in Vancouver. Killed Head-On S parr o w III S cores Unprecedented Hit; Both Factor Than Sound RedChinaTrack Outstrips Russia Ships $184.8 Million ' More Goods to Soviet jjnion Than Imported WASHINGTON (UPI)-A missile launched from a fighter plane has jdkxiked down a 'winged guided missile in a head-on interception, the Navy announced yesterday. The Sparrow III, a missile which scored the unprecedented kill, was fired from a Navy Phantom jet fighter against a Regulus II guided missile while both were flying faster than the speed of sound. The Regulus, a guided missile Capable ef flying about I,MO rnUea an hour, was never put Into production as a The Regulus missiles which already 4^ been Milled tore cancellation in ISM have been used as target drones. Powered by * Jet engines, they are similar to fighter planes. LONDON (UPI)-A top British trade association reported yesterday that Communist China slipped about $184.4 million more goods to the Soviet Union than it- imported from the Russians in; 1961. The China Association, which represents almost all British firins which do any significant bdslhess with Communist China, sadd this was one of many surprises In a recent official Soviet publication giving figures for tr6ds in 1961bctween the biggest Communist powers. to the China Association’s ’ latest Information bulletin, hi that trade between the two ■tettohs I* "mu* lower than It said that In 1961 Soviet exports to the Chinese mainland wore worth $336.8 million $551.8 million which the Soviets received from the Chinese. ★ * * The total two-way trade between the two nations last year was thus far less than half the $2,055 billion lor the peak year of 1950. The------------------- — ly logical Explanations are |hly Illogical” In trying to aeoo the reasons for the igo surplus In Chinese exits ta ttw Soviet Union, i said that the 1961 trade itocol between the two nations ognlzed that China, with Its ent crop disasters, would n6t able to export foodstuffs and t shipments of cottpn, casings I bristles would he reduced, he protocol also said that ina was $319.2 million in del-i on trading accounts and repayment starting In 1962. srefore China was not exited to make any contrtbu-is toward repayment in 1981. he association said it is “im-ibable’’ that the surplus would used for either balancing quanta within -the Communist c or outsldo the bloc since Chinese hav» been keeping so more pr less In balance. JThe North American raven Is about 24 Inches long, compared with 20 Inches for the same species in Mexico. Give • Very Special GUI «t Oil SEASON’S LOWEST PRICES o Mtvb Osmsras • Prsjssto" • SIR Oasieru • Ssnsst o Tripods • Gadgsl Bsp SMALL DIPOSIT HOLM IN LAYAtl Jg____lee the "Yellow Tog" Vetoes Wa*N tsHi pfics-cuts on auy ptoso of aqatomaiw CMEMSMt 1201 SohHi was made high .over tho Pacific Ocean in the test range area oft_ Point Mugu, CillL-—T—" It declined,, on security grounds, to gay at what altitude and speeds the test wife conducted. The Regulus was completely destroyed, the Navy atidv ijjj designed for interception of enemy aircraft. It is 12 feet long, weighs pounds and can reach a speed of ',500 miles an hour. A Phantom fighter can carry as many as six Sparrows. Waterford Teens in Combo to Play at Airway Lanes The "Coronadoes”, a five-piece band comprised of, Waterford Township boys, will provide the music” for dancers Friday at Airway Lanes, 4825 Highland Road, Waterford Township, Band members are Ricky Stockwell, Tom Evans, Bill Goddard, Bob Staton and Scheme!. All ore from Waterford Kettering High School except Stock-well who attended Waterford Township High School. The group has performed as a unit for more than a year and is planning its first recording session soon. Dancing will begin at 7:30 p.m. In the Coral Reef Room and continue until 11; Waterford Police Handle 608 Complaints in July Waterford Township’s police department handled 608 complaints during July? bringing the total for the lontha of the year to 3,800. Misdemeanor complaints taled,„ 208, noncriminal, matters 148, traffic 124 and felonies 121. There were also four fire bureau complaints and five in the accident-general category. Ambassador to Iraq to Get Another Post WASHINGTON (B - The White House announced today that John Jemegan has resigned as ambassador to Iraq and will return to Washington for reassignment by the state department. Press secretary Pierre Salinger said Jemegan is leaving Iraq at the request of the Iraqi government, which has asked the United States to withdraw its ambassador. This country, in tunv has asked the withdrawal of the Iraqi ambassador. FI 4-5W2 * mmww ............. m |HR mm ' \t . .V \) • \tjg. •., ::? *>\.vy'—t '^>1 v /\ ’ !/ ‘j l’-1, .' * I , , TWR VnVTTiVrttiltftit. WF.BN15SBAY. AUGUST 8. 1962 \ ' 1 1 ] M se a LION Charge With Delightfully Air Conditioned For Your Shopping Comfort I VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON 1 5c Off Special Label rwith . Coupon With Coupon Cairns" Soup* ...........• Good Taste Save Saltine* j|" Grapefruit Juice Wesson Oil Scotties Lemon Juice ^ Banquet Chicken Tree- Sweet Save 20c SAVE 6c Save 10c Whole Cooked 99e Gal. 189 Can I 4400-ct. 100 Boxes I Qt- CQe Bottle Oy 3 79* I-Lb. Bag With . Coupon MEL-O-CRUST ENRICHED Buttermilk Bread SAVE 20-m. 7e K| Loa Gaylord Pure Creamery—SAVE 6c Buffer H Djning In—SAVE 10c • Salisbury 1-lb. Print • Chicken m Dinners If Mott's A.M. or P.M. - 3 Sr 89* Applesauce Tomatoes Tomato Juice Qrange Juice Save 19c 4”r 99*4 Etna Save Economical 17c Food Club Birdseye Frozen Save 20c Save 10c * 4 EL 49* 4 tS99* 5 Ss 89* Chef Boy-Ar-Dee—SAVE 6c with Beet 40-ox. Can 59* 39* 59* ALWAYS LEAN, ALWAYS FRESH Ground Beef 3&13* ■ s> * Plus 50 Extra Cold Bell Stamps with Coupon Below RnvioL * U.S. No. 1 RED HAVEN PEACHES Center Blade Chuck Cut . am Swiss Steaks 69 Naturally Tender g^ gj^ Rib Steaks ^ Hygrade Mich. Grade 1 Mb. Cello Roll Pork Snusnge 39c C ib. "f4” 2Va" & Up Prices effective thru Saturday, Aug. It. Wu reserve the right fe limit guaatltht. H Glint Size Liquid Cleaner Sdlvo Detergent Tablets ^ 79* Mr. Clean Far Washday Gentle . Premium Duz 2\£*• 59c *yorV Liquid For Brighter Washes For Dishwashers Cheer 34* Cascade King Size ' Mild Oxydol Pk| 13T Joy Liquid VALUABLE WBI0LET COUPON fjjH SPS^I- VALUABLE WRIOLEV COUPON 4 39 y b£&69* 22-o*. M Cc Bottle OD nT 49* 12-os. Ac Bottle jy Feel Really Clean Zest Waxtex Sandwich Bags Shur-Good ■ Coconut Macaroons Nabisco 1 Sugar Wafers 2 Beth Bert 45* Hekman Choc. Fudge Sandwiches 30c Off ^•39* p£25* 12-os. Iftc Pk|. 07 9*/4-os. Gfi Pk|. ZD Nescafe Instant Coffee ,0/“‘ |w Velvet Peanut Butter '®;f 39‘ Etna Pure Grope Jelly or Jaw 2i?r 39* f* VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON $j§j t 50 Extra 'Stamps With '.this Coupon arid Purchase of .......l-IAsh et-hhwr--- Bananas . ■xplrot S.turdBV, Aueuit |l film Rl NER rV- >>- . . I mm THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST/ 8,1962 Israel Defying British Order to U-St LONDON (AP>— Israel’s state- Dr. Soblen, it will have to change owned airline .stood firm early, today In defiance of a British order to fly Dr. Robert A. Soblen to the United States by midnight tonight. :'vv s Israeli Ambassador Arthur Lou-rie expressed hope Tuesday night that the three-nation dispute over its attitude,” the embassy spokes- ’ But an embassytspokes-man indicated that no -solution UL,.J.LJ1JJ_..... has been found for the interna-) WITHOUT SOBLEN tional deadlock. •It Britain wants to get rid of York flight until Friday. However, holding to its order to the airline Ma. J — t _1 _ _ _ 1... M itLL fla. flAlkliftia Am T CtnlAO it does have a plane leaving tor Israel about noon today. . Home Secretary Henry Brooke has ordered the airline, El M, fly Soblen out of Britain to N York by midnight. The Israeli government told the airline to * MM v---------r-, - it trawfa^httir barto-to Israel -only,' hortly be rettottctoniiure-qndg. no circumstances to New Yolk." Ten Guerrillas Killed An El A1 plane for New York left without Soblen Tuesday. The airline' doesn't have another New The Home Office said it was to fly Soblen to the United States, ^tf- E3 A1 doesn't make a move by midnight, .the hofae Will have to consider his next step,” a spokesman said. New Yttfk life in June and, using for wartime spying for Russia. tary source reported tonight'government forces killed JO Viet Cong guerrillas today to a.search arid clearing operaUon 25 miles south-west of Saigon- Vietnamese forces lifted into the area by 10 U.S. Armyhelicopters. a dead brother's passport, fled to escape a life sentence Soviet Delegate in Bonn Sobien, 61 and dying of mia, remained in London's Brix-. . SAIGON,, Viet NfUSL.il — A JgjJi; ton Prison, hoping to go to. Israel. If he gets there, he plans a.court fight to remain as a Jewish immigrant. If that is unsuccessful, he probably will go to Communist Czechoslovakia, which has offered him asylum, Israel put him on a plane for the United States with a U.S. marshal but he stabbed himself in flight 'and was. landed to .-Britain for treatment Soblen jumped $100,000 bail in'lin. BONN,;. Germany W — Soviet Ambassador Andrei Smirnov returned today after three weeks of consultations in Moscow. Though the Russians were silent on the purpose of his tripv.'Vest German political circles speculated that it was linked with the Kremlin’s recently increased attention to Ber- NO hampered because the U-S.-Brit-ish extradition treaty does not cover espionage. The government can return him to El. Al, the airline which brought him into Brit* without an entry visa.. But COURT ORDER The* Israeli government has been under heavy fire at home for turning-him over te a* U.S. marshal without a s court totiilr-The prospect of the United States getting such an order is doubtful sincelsrael and the United States do not have an extradition treaty. yh^British government also is any Britflb attempt to tom Soblen over to another airline for depor- tation to thaUnited States will set off a “ I WBfotow I___another round of court ac- tion by Soblen’s attorneys. . Fever Claims 70 Lives ffiriioBd hemorrhagic fever epidemic has land, the hsaltlt ahfolry aald today. Bangkok hospitals alone have treated 1.300 cases of the disease since January. The . United States meanwhile, stepped up pressure oo both Brit- _ ain and Israel to j$t Soblen back to America quickly. A bore Is a guy who runs out of el«twi*d at least 10 Hves to Thai, listeners before be nins out Of topics. • . 7 A ltay foflow to gw»-. erally itching for something he Isn't willing to scratch for. -Earl Wilson. if' ^0$ , l Hiif" tl SI LORSHE IM HOES SELECTEDSTYLES.. ALL ONE PRICE $14 OO Regularly $19.95 to 926.93 STILL GOOD SELECTION OF STYLES Cl IMQTFDQ Now Only ’ KEDETTES M Discontinued Patterns 88 ACCOUNT SERVICE Tel-Huron Shopping Cantor FE 4-0269 "Oakland County'» Largest Shot Store” .. and TO SCHOOL ABBEY FUNNEL by Milliken 45 Inches Wide 50% Acetate—50% Rayon Hand Washable Resists Wrinkles Plaid and Herringbones Makes up Into aa q Stunning Skirts, ^1^0 ~ I JL Yard . Suits, Jumpers or Jackets. SEW ’n SAVE FABRIC SHOP Ph. FE 5-4457 TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Security Charge llonorvd Here TRANSISTOR RADIO SALE. 30% DISCOUNT On All Models Complete With jyrrrmrmTinq O EARPHONES • CASE • BATTERY : 10-Day : FREE. TRIAL i Smumnuil! BIG SELECTION OF • 6 TRANSISTOR • 7 TRANSISTOR • 8 TRANSISTOR • TO TRANSISTOR CHARGE IT . , . NO MONEY DOWN CAMERA MART 55 S. Telegraph Pontiac "Tel-Huron Center" These are not toys. They are made of the highest quality materials. Before you radios and you. will not be'disappointed. Hole-In-One Shotwell Scores Again! Charles (Chuck) Shotwell, the old maestro, who sunk a hole-in-one, six-iron shot in May, won the August Tel-Huron Distinguished Service Award for courteous, friendly service. Customers were unanimous in backing up the decision of the judges in the close race for the coveted merchandise certificate and handsome imported plaque of ceramic tile. Chuck can always be counted on to render the kind of helpful service'that is playing ^ suuBlfi7'”' a ttf 5”Tnffr2?1^ii Wt * ^ 'in"'the'^^'rv ■ increasing success of the Compact Center ... Tel-Huron. Manufacturers' Close-Out ASSORTED LINGERIE Slips Vs Slips * Gowns / etc Early Bird SMO-SUIT • Certified Values to $12.90 • Washable • Pile-Lined • Attached and Detachable Hoods $J88 _ $088 Toddlers' 2 to 4 Boys'-ariti Girls' 4-6x itL-nunuN . * _ CHILDS * ^ llta Yniir Sacuritv fihirM / STORES OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 9:00 PM. EXTRA SPKIALS THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY *5 short wool coats *o, ' formerly *16V19* Wool* ond wool blend* in button and clutch style*. Many one-of-a-kind style*. Mls*e». . WIN^EIJMAN’S shop to 9 p.m. monday thru Saturday OSMUN’S GREAT TOPCOAT SALE Starts Tomorrow in Both Store* on svery Yes, you may charge or layaway your purchase 20% I ^*1i Id-HurM Mw**m« Cw» this month Some Things Gan Be TOO BIG for COMFORT butMOT TEL-HURON You Park Close to All the Stores Walk Lett, Shop Easier! \ I ' Charge It Jayson Jewelers "Yei»r Friendly Jeu rlry Store" Open Evening* 'til 9 FF 4-3.557 i- ' WRIGLEYS WRIGLEY CRISP POTATO CHIPS 1-Lb. Bag with coupon on page 39 to WO%OL PLAIDS and Matching Solid Colors 54 Inched Wide . . e*i no 60% Wool-30% Nylon * | ""10% Acrylic ^ 1 Yard Makes a Beautiful Skirt SEW ’n SAVE FABRIC SHOP Ph. FE 5-4457 TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Skcuriiy Charife ltonored Hetie Tel-Huron Chocolate Covered .RAISINS IB Reg. 69c lb. 57: SKIRTS SWEATERS THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ONLY FOIttY-ON^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1962 Jacfc/e ancf Garofine Now /n Sunny Italy ^Sweden; V/S. Partof CoatHanger SfuckinBoy's lung Fire 2nd Rocket in Science Study STOCKHOLM (^P)-A Swedish-American team sent up a second racket lor scientific observations Tuesday night at Vidsel in north- Chatting with them, she and Caroline strolled 100 yards from the jetliner to a small chartered plane^ to continue the flight. . Mrs. Kennedy and tyer 4-year-old daughter will spend their two-week holiday at an 11th century villa at Ravello, 20 mtles soutbeast of Naples, it has been rented by Mrs. Kennedy's sister, Princess Lee Radziwill, and her husband. Prince Stanislas. Wafted Into Office v BALTIMORE (AP)—The Allied Florists Association of Greater. Baltimore has appointed tar chairman for the 1963 Festival of Flowers, to be held. Oct. 27. IBs namer. Don Flowers^ - PADUCAH, Ky. (AP)- Kendall Ray Harris,. 11, has a piece pf coat hanger wire Sticking through his. heart and lodged in his lung. The inch-long wire is still there today, one week after his acct-dent. J 'C\ Kendall’s atrehgttv is being built up so that surgeons con remove the wire. ^ Kendall was mowing his parents' lawn near West Gilberts- The reception at Rome’s modernistic .fnternatiuhal Airport was brief and informal because Miss. Kennedy’s visit is private. Then was no crowd. Italian government protocol officers and the U.S. charge d’affaiTe, Outerbridge World a Bit Too Small? SYRACUSE, Y. (AP)—Dillon of the 6-foot-7-inch American Areas rocket exploded and formed an artificial cloud for study of the winds of the upper atmosphere: * American experts said , the rien coordinates Chock the irresistible price togged on these captivating cottph coordinates! Costumed for a world of living in cool, dark prints, see our newest collection in sizes 10 to 16. One shown in blue or-gfeem hurry, limited quantities! Every yearthtfOsmun’s August TopcoatSale Is eagerly awaited by value-conscious Oakland County men. And with good reason: They know that nowhere else will they find such distinguished namerat such off-season prices. And they know something else. An Osmun’s topcoat fits right *«• looks right... and wears right It’s & tradition that’s been carefully guarded tor over 30 years.; Come in to either Osmunds store now. We’ve got a freslr shipment of 1963 models that’s just been unpacked. junior, misses dresses formerly *8.98 to *14.98 rain-shine coals, summer suits formerly *10.98 to *25 CHOOSE FROM:IMPORTED WEEDS. . CHEVIOTS... SHET-LANDS.. . CASHMERES... MANY ZIP-LINED MODELS ... SPLIT-RAGLAN OR SET-IN SHOULDERS tee-tops, bouses formerly *2.98 to *3.98 bras and glfdies formerly *2.50 to *8.95 a part of Pontiac since 193T SMUN’S summer jewelry formerly *1 to *3 ,. fTEW TEL-HURON STORE HQURS: OPEN EVERY NIGHT ’TIL 9 P.M. FftfePARKING Both Stores DOWNTOWN (N«X> to old Courthoou) Qpgn FRI, yiON. Evenings 'til % My pm. monday thru Saturday ■RAND Rag. Prlca NOW Ranald Raaaamba Zip-Llnad $ 59.50 $47.60 Ronald Bsscembe 69.50 55.60 Cagla 15-00 66.00 Barron-Andanon MM 76.00 " Cintam-Quallty Imparted ioo% Caahmara 1MM 95.60 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY^ AUGUST 8, 1002 ^^ICukaaiidOiMOns bvwJL Naturals for Salad popular menu Marinated cucumbers are alii days: Aa color- ways a delicious addition to a 2? tomato hahws Scandinavian4ype buffet, ith grated cheese .. ***? Ow-be*1 a ~ ■ ‘ 2 medmmrgized cucumbers • 1 medium-sized sweet onion toot null could be ,,_SIB _ hmallow. Bo* of g ... L partners may be * ^ r-~r h the chops as 1 teaspoon salt - j—;- So You Want Quick Cooking Recipes? tHani and Peaches Joufle Sandwich Smoke Cooking *y-your barbeiwic -has a «rtk make-a-tent of toil over the spil to-concentrate the smoke. Good 1 pan (8 ounces) cut green beans % teaspoon nutmeg White pepper to taste HNE SPRING pT~ vearung if yq- Oven-Ready • to 10 II. BnltsvIHo Turkeys CENTER CUT SAVE 10 - FRESH FROZEN 14-OZ. BUS. CALIFORNIA THOMPSON SrMO| pack Freestone PEACHES i Michigan POTHOtS 10 39 STAMPS from M«ln*oc t# of 2-lbs. or mor* l 30 EXTRA TOP VAjJ WASHINGTON 6 size muons riady to eat BwdbBielsBetit ' • ® nta'Buftah.'pAsAbecC hwzin m Mmn sauc*, BIRDS EYE PEAS.... H..... im mo. mozwar butter sauce, BIRDS EYE. LIMA BEANS.... iooz. mo. BIROS EVE'S' BIST IS BUTTER DRESSED CUT CORN o>.««*.... io-oz. mo. OBUOOUt BUTTER SAUCE AOOEO, BIRDS EYE CUTMEENBEANS.......... ... » oz mo. POR SPARKLING SINKS * TUBS 49* COMET CLEANSER .. CASHMERE BOUQUET FOB BlSHRS OR LAUNDRY VEL DETERGENT..... All PURPOSE—lV .OFF Mall VEL lIQUip......... FOB WSHIS'O* LAUNDRY 3 bars 49* AD JOB AUTOMATIC «** T OFF H} 2 mm 23* MAX CLEANSER.... POLISH SAUSAGE RING BBIBBBA v*’ CHUNK HOLOONA - UtBM BilHABI *** «, 49',, ’Pi THE P0NTIA6 PRESS. TODNESfaAY, AUGUST 8, 1062 4, InstantTza Provides Base for Plain or Fancy Hot Weather Drinks FILLS Vi OR MORE OF YOUR SAVER BOOK WHEN YOU REDEEM COUPONS IN THIS AD AND YOUR MELMAC BOOKLET COUPONS. Stamps TOP VALUE WHOLE COMPLETELY CLEANED FRESH BOSTON BUTT FRYERS SO EXTRA STAMPS WITH COUPON and purchase of one Cut-up Fryor Of 2 pkgs. CHkkon Fort*. LEAN SLICED TWIN POPS or fiMHES KWICK KRISP THICK SLICED HV6RADPS SKINLESS KROGER SLICED WHITE WITH THIS COUPON-KROGIR . I Strawberry Pfaiarvas t 2n-or. Cb ■■ap 50 EXTRA STAMPS FROM MEIMAC MAILER - KROGER VAC PAC COFFEE SAVE 4* - FOR HAMBURGERS 33-OZ. I JAR DAILEY DILL SLICES SAVE UP-EASY TO PREPARE BISQUICK...... WITH THIS COUPON-WHITE BONNIE SWEETMILK OR BUTTERMILK CREAMERY FRESH SAVE 50 a piece Place setting ^E3M e£ti!?NERWARE tfct 30(l EXTRA volu. Stam„ SAVE 10-BORDEN'S Cottage Cheese ViniRAiuvni vnwnn • . SIS IXTU VALU! WITH Tins COUPON AND PURCHASE OP 29 BXTNA vauii WITH THIt COUPOH AND PURCHASE OF 10-PX. APPLE OR ORAPI 12-OZ. LIQUID WITH THIS COUPON AND *5.00 PURCHASE OR MORI EXCEPT BEER, WINE OR 9OARITTIS. ALUMINUM FOIL.. MADS BY MAPI BARBECUE SAUCE PINEAPPLE CHUNKS....2 i: ANOTHER OP DOLW PaMoUI PROOVCTS PINEAPPLE JUICE...... 3 * VALUABLE COUPON ALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON There is more than one way to serve iced tea. Far example* in addition to the conventional method, > it can be' made with' ginger ale dr lemon-time soda in place at water, topped with a scoop of lemqn or -lime sherbet, flavored With fruit Juicfet; combined witti ffuit chunks for a complete snack in-a -glass or blended with, ice for a frosty Italian-style beverage. The fallowing suggestions, gar- nered from imaginaUve hostesses in various parts of the country, are easy enough for overydayen-joyroent; ,ytet gala enough for party occasions. The reason for theta* quick preparation is the use of new irtstant tea, the tea that dissolves instantlynuid completely tat cold tap water. IjAVpil llytbe Glass: Place 1 teaspoon Instant tea (more hr less to suit individual taste) id a glass. Fill glass ha|( full with cold tap water and stir until tea ip dtonlved. Add ice and serve with sugar ana lemon as desired. Star the Pitcher: Place 3 table-spoons instant tea in a large pitcher. Add 1 quart cold Upwater and stir until tea is dissolved. Serve in ice-filled glasses, For 30 Servings: Use one %-Ounce Jar of instant tea and 5 quarts cold tap water.; Hot Tea By the Cap: Place 1 level teaspoon instant tea. (more oir less to suit individual taste) in a cup, Add buying water. Stir until tea is dissolved. Serve with sugar and milk as desired. By the Potful: For each serving use 1 level teaspoon instant tea far each cup (6 ounces) of water. Or, measure the capacity of the teapot and allow 1 teaspoon instant tea far each cup of water. • Wm ai .'.Servings:,; Use one flounce jar of instapt tea and 5 quarts of boiling water. Iced Tea Drinks Sparkling Ginger Tee: Place 1 teaspoon instant tea in a tall glass. Fill about 2-3 at the way to the top with jchilted ginger, ale, Add ice cubes and garnish sprigs of fresh mint, and pineapple cubes Impaled on wooden picks. Makes 1 serving. 1 • Ceylon Tea:/ Place? 1 teaspoon instant tea in a glass mug. Fill about 2*3 of the- way fa the top With chilled lemon-lime soda. Add ide cubes and garnish each serving ' with about 6 very thin slices of trash lime. Makes 1 serving, Frtdted lced lea: Place 1 teaspoon instant, tea tat a stemmed goblet. Fill about 2-3 the way to the fap with cold tap1 water. Add )|ce cubes and Mte-atee chunks of pineapple, whole strawberries, Orange sections and a. maraschino cherry. Garnish the rim of the glass with a lemon slice. Add's sprig of fresh mint and a long, cocktail pick for spearing >t h • fruit. Makes 1 serving. . FipstF -Tea Beoft y till glass half full with crushed Ice. Combine 2 teaspoons instant tea, 1 tablespoon fine granulated sugar, 1 teaspoon lemon or lime Juice and 1 cup cold water; Stir. Pour over crushed ice. Bfidces 1 serving. 4-4—-4 , Umon Sherbet Ten: In -a large pitcher, combine 2 tablespoons in- ' stant tea, 1 quart watfj;, 1 can (6 ounces) lemonade concentrate And %”pi0t Temori sherbet Stir until dfcaolved. Chill. Serve in punch cups Or short glasses. ——fftl. i f y>.1f If A' iBii THE it^KTIAC : WKPI^DA^^ Dahti Queen Take-Home Treat Boeonvwintio 4 ketpJnyoarfreezerI HI2424 and ao delicious! Buy a supply today! v Marilyn Will Be Remem a Star OOORS ©PIN 6:45 P.M. SPARTACUS 8:00 P.M. ONLY EZ2KEEGO KIRK DOUGLAS LAURENCE OLIVIER JEAN SIMMONS CHARLES LAUGHTON PETER USTINOV > JOHN GAVIN ' TONY CURTIS H _=_er__OTTC_ TfCMNICOIOR* ' ’ VHT^MNm "BEAR COUNTRY" *5» ^ WINNER OF ■ACADEMY AWARDS AP Movle-TeJevtrfoB Writer HOLLYWOOD - Memories of Marilyn. When I taw Marilyn Monroe far the last time, she had the figure of a starlet, but the a 1 st a le able aura of a star. It was turn months ago on the of “Some*: thing's p o l. to Give,”-, and aha gave one of her last Interviews. Actually it was THOMAS more like a conversation with old friend, for she was warm and witty; She was atilLglowing from her tumultuous reception at President Kennedy’s birthday celebration in Madison Square Garden. ★ Ut it . She looked great. Gone was the pot tummy that she had displayed in recent movies. She had dropped 15 pounds and £ asked her how she did it. [fert helps to have a bad said Marilyn, who had hen removed a year ago. “The rest is low cholesterol: Avoid aid* mal fats. Who needs them? Eskimos, maybe. Not us." She talked gaily of her forthcoming 36th birthday and said: f life celebrating birthdays. I enjoy knowing that I’m alive. She WAS doing arStifefte with two <$Hd acton who wen playing her children in the ©Ink Her concern for them was strangely touching. Ifie boy was shivering after a swimming scene; and she wouldn' continue until an electric heater was installed to warm him. : * ' . -it, ' Between scenes , her. conversation was punctuated with high laughter. Despite her exhilaration, there was an undertone of the trouble that lay ahead. mrtMtat unhappy with her Mswnce be-she went to the President' birthday party, especially since tele bad been out of the picture many days witiTiUness. I told the studio six weeks ago that I was .« “I consider it before the President of the United shortly aftorwaraibat relations with the studio erupted wig* her firing and of threats and lawsuits. Marilyn dropped into seclusion. Everyone haa his of Marilyn Monroe, back to her early days lot, when she was a young [and eager starlet. She seemed little different from the .throng of starlets in the talent factories of that era, except periiafe that she gave a better interview, And when yon saw her on the ». My owrgo for file first time—slithering on a couch as Louis. Calheijn’i mistress tyu“A»haK Jungle”— you knew that she had that quality (bat separates stars from star-lets. There.were other timet.'1 she appeared at-an awards banquet In a dinging, eye-popping metallic gown and emcee '*f«YY Lewis expressed the thought of everyone: “Is she for real?’' When she slinked Into another dinner; late and tosekwa, and evoked a tirade from Joan Crawford for "poor-taste.” •/, w MethodistsCofT tor Many More Missionaries NEW .YORK AL MINEO in “ESCAPE from ZAHRAIN” ^ V Thrilling In Technicolor | I UNIT N0.3- FEATURETTE f “THE AMAZON TRADER” iJ 40 Min. of Action In Technicolor FREE Rides for the Children on ' Plus Sky Circus Train! HMS Bounty on Seas Again Rtplicq of Ships Built for Mutiny Movie to Visit Many Ports Gogs After Golf Balls, Has Mind of His Own NOGALES, Ariz. (A — Terrance Leonhardy's dog, Tammy, is trained to retrieve golf ball?. Leonhardy recently sent Tammy to fetch a shot into the rough. A half hour later Tammy returned. She didn’t have the golf ball, but proudly placed a gopher at her master’s feet. Cly Chiefs to Consider Bick-ooWater System tonight by City Manager RobertA. Stierer. The report will concern issuance of licenses to Pontiac Cab Co. has been acquired by tho Yelk>w Cab Co., accordingto Stier- TO HEAR PETITION Also to b£ heard is A petition for traffic pattern improvements in the Pioneer Highland Subdivision, west of Telegraph Road. would lovohte mafe ing some streets Into one-togy streets and prohibiting left turns at s number of corners, according lo.. Stierer., . 4 short-term lease, requested by Jerome Motor Sales for two ehy-owned lots to be used tor ose storage 'serosa from the firm’s protest location at 280 8. Saginaw fife, to aim np for op* proval. Commissioners also will be asked to approve a City Han Commission recommendation for expansion- of tfe First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland main office building at 161 There was the time a tearful Marilyn appeared on -the arm of Jerry Giesler. before the Beverly Hills home she shared no more Joe DiMaggio. A happier timq one Halloween at her New York apartment when she was married «to Arthur Miller. Kids came by to play “trick or treat” and she' didn’t understand—she had never played such "ibtnfe7 - - a child. ...... There were other places. Other times, but there won't be’" more. The'Marilyn Monroe story is over. It will tong fe debated whether fee.. .Was an actress. Nq ens will everdoubt that she was * star. imrlMf... 22ndAinial |-H FAIR 4jh fairgrounds NQNTH PIRRlr STREET • PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE Gi-j •. ' • CARNIVAL ON GROUNDS • CHILDREN'S DAY WEDNESDAY • (Reduced prices on all rides) • WEDNESDAY—PARADE OF FLOATS • TRIAL CUSS FOR HORSES FRIDAY • JUDGING AND AWARDS-SATVRDAY- .r&'-r PONTIAC DRIVE-IN THEATER .NOW-J EXCLUSIVE T FIRST SHOWING I In QaMditelCouGfy 1. ..Uproarious, Romantic Free-For •AlTi Miracle Mile Orive-ln 2103 S. Telegraph-FE 2-1000 NEW YORK (UPI) — A replica of the British three-masted HMS Bounty, famous for a mutiny that resulted in settlement of Pitcairn Island in the Paclfi'- has embarked on a voyage that will it to leading United States, Canadian and European ports during the summer and foil. The new Bounty, a faithful eopy of Captain William Hugh’s historic veseel, was bnltt especially tor filming ot a motion pie-tore — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s “Mutiny On The Bounty.” Its first port of call will be Vancouver, B. C. After a few days, the Bounty will proceed to Victoria, B. C., and then for a 10-day stay. > Seattle A request to rezone from residential to commercial-l an area at 26, 3Q and 36 Union Street, behind the new Central Fite Station, again will be up for commission qctlon. A City Plan Commlsoloii report to deny the request was handed to commissioners a month ago. However City Dick M- Kirby requested the delay before action would bo taken. Hie Commission also will be asked to approve a resolution canceling a lease for Lot 6 at Pontiac Municipal Airport. ★ * The area consists of eight sections each of which baa a hangar built on It, Three of the hahgsrs ____! damaged by a windstorm April 30, and the owner does not with to rebuild, according to Oty Clerk Olga Barfeley. Visits to other cities on both the west and east coasts will follow and the veSsel is fepectad to cross the North Atlantic for stops at several European porta befort arriving In New York for the premiere of “Mutiny On The Bourn ty’’ late this yaarr-★ it it Visitors will be Invited aboard at each stop to inspect the ship, which was built in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, and then sailed via the Panama Canal to Tahaitl, where most of the ptetof® was The Bounty had been docked at Los Angeles since the film’s com-" in several months ago. State Woman Diet at 100 CHARLOTTE (AP) - Longtime Eaton County resident Mrs. Katherine (Kate) Horn, 106, died Monday after reaching the century mark earlier this year. She leaves 26 great-great-grandchildren. Jj‘BS8Aas CHRISTINE KAUFMANN in 1 .' *1WMI WITHOUT MfY* HMjir .. fe ‘ SHOCKER! FEATURE NO. 2 ' « new «NN> iFiwi (mm “WALK ON THE WILD SIDE” FEATURE NO. 3 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER SOPHIA LOREN 1 “TWO WOMEN” FC»TY-|T THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1962 WASHINGTON (UPI) — Stive Boros has suddenly become the Grant was credited with his fifth win' (gainst four losses, and his first victory since June IS. Bunning went down to his eighth defeat against XI triumphs. The slumping Tigers now stand DftrMossl, who has won 8 and lost 11, end Ron KHne. with a record of 2 wins and 3 losses, will —MUXS'' — READY) BUT NO CONTACT — Defensive captain Jpe" Schmidt is unhappy about sitting nn the airieltne* while the Detroit Lions go through contact work in.,.saj»jp...ft!.. Cranbrook, Schmidt was even, more unhappy when he was told* he would not he used in the first exhibition game against the Browns Saturday night. The coaches don’t wanrto take any chances On the shoulder which was operated on in March. ■ Blow- STEF—- Second basfetnan Jim Mahoney ofCleveh steps high to get out of the why of Bob Farley, Detroit o fielder, who was forced at second in the ninth inning vesterd Cleveland won the game, 4-2. ' one gaiter (Clint).. U-y, Chylftk. > Same Quarterbacks indifferent Dres? LIONS DOMINATE I’LAY . The Linns have domtnaied-pre* season and regular season play With the Browns, having won 12, |ost. five and tied one in exhibition gpmes and taking eight of nine games in regular . stuMon and championship playoff games. The same starting quarterbacks. Milt Plum against Jim Ninowski, will go against each other as they ^did last year-When the Lions wal-v loped the Browns 35-17 at Cleveland in theft' t second exhibition sheeting of the' ^uron. Detroit also won 35-7 with Earl Morrali starting against Plum 4n Tiger Stadium. 3 Saturday night, however, the circumstances and the Jbrms different. Plum was named to start against the Browns and Ninowski, who went to Cleveland Jh the trade for Plum, will go against the Lions, It Will be the .first exhibition game of the season for Doth teams In an annual pre-season series Which dates back to 1950. Hebert Likes • Akron Layout American Classic Opens f Tomorrow; Burkemo Hot in Practice Round A AKRON, : Ohio m- Defending champion Jay Hebert, who seems Ho own a lock and key on the 7,-165-yard Firestone Country Club Course, predicts an even- par 280 will be the ,whinh»g score in the • 150,000 American Golf Classic, ' which starts tomorrow. ■ 1 ’ : Hebert won the PGA title With .a 281 on the Firestone ‘course two years ago' ‘and posted a 278 In ■ capturing the initial American Classic last August. to crash the winner’s Circle since last year's American Classic. “I have to get reacqualnted with this course," Hebert-said. He Is ’ jlst on too pro ll*t -wHh fl8,* 687 tola season. Tommy Jacobs fired, a1 nifty 65 In a practice round, which Included an eagle on the 500-yard par 5 No. 2 hole. Doug Sanders closed with three straight birdies and a 66 after getting a double _ bogey on No-. 9. ., Walter Burkemo, Mike Souchak and Jon Gustin also broke par with 69s, while Howie Johnson, Lionel Hebert, Dave Ragart and Paul Bbndeson matched par with 70s. ESSBOX ‘ Bay CRy downed East Detroit, 44, and Holland whipped Lincoln Ptxk, 114, yesterday, in opening games of the state Junior *Ameri-can Legion baseball tournament on leg tV fey toe Amy 1 Elgin Baylor, star forward for the Los Angeles Lakers of the Na-tlonai 'Basketball .Assn., has been released. from the Army, Harntramck’s Ray SenkowsW;;;;;;;;;;;;j was ousted'yesterday from thejroc- f®— ond round of the 74th Meadow Club g Invitation Ttamls tourney by Lar- f *y Nagler of Hollywood,-Calif., 4-2, i 64. Coach George Wilson said he would use the alternating quarterback system in pre-season games, with Morrali starting the game against the Dallas Cowboys; in Cleveland Saturday, August 18th. This will be a doubleheader, the Lions playing the Cqwboys at 6:3Q p.m. and the Browns meeting the {heelers immediately afterward. Wilson said last Saturday’s full dress scrimmage In Poo-Mac’d Winner Stadium was toe best In five years and dally drills In camp have been more That year, the Lions had only mediocre success in pre-season games having woji 2 and foil 3. Missing-tor the starting lineup Saturday night will be pro-football’s most heralded linebacker, Joe Schmidt. , Second Guessers Question Strategy The all-time Lions’ all-pro star, playing hislOthyear in the fiBFL, is being held out of all epntact worlc by coachT Wilson so as not to take a chance on re-injuring the shoulder' which forced surgery in March. Sclunidt doesn’t agree with Wilson’s extra caution; “It’s as strong as it will ever bo- I’m not worried about it at all,’’ said the Liops’ defensive captain. "There’s no doubt that Joe’S shoulder is perfect and maybe it’s a one-in-million chance, he may hurt it, but it’s one chance’ I don’ want to take,’’- said Wilson. OTHErR NFL CAMPS Meanwhile, the Sad Francisco 49ers sweated out an examination of linebacker Karl Kammeror’s ankle.-He was injured in i drill, but was pronounced all right for Saturday’s exhibition against ib£ AQtA. Vikings, The Pittsburgh Steelers have four players who probably will not get into action against the Chicago Bears at Atlanta Saturday because of . injuries. - The most Important is end Ray Mack, who sMIl Is suffering from ! separation of the left shoulder. The others are linebacker John Reger and ends Preston Carpenter and Harlan Other pro football camp jot* tings: Green Stay’s Paul Hornung said he had declined an offer of f 000 to leave the Packers and play tor. another dub, with the observation "Nobody's . worth that much,"' .He refused to name the chib.'" ■w ' * 1 *. v Veteran backs Jerry Reichow and Hugh McElhenny returned to the Vlldiigs alter being sidelined with minor injuries and probably will play against San francisco Saturday,'.. Log Angeles Rams’ Coach Bob Waterfield thinking of Using Mins Olsen, All-America rookie from Utah State as defensive tackle Unsj "Washington Saturday i^-InoludW r«l«M«d pl»,#ri. ; I J % JL M ■" ■ t L : P STAYS with it — New York third base-man Clete Boyer has ‘a hard time with a hot smash off the bat of Minnesota’s Hannon Kills* / ' . ap rtiMu / brew in yesterday's gameat Yanjcee Stadium. / Boyer retrieved toe ball, however, and threw to first in time for toe out. Hie Yanks won, 14-1. Bosox Get Wild, Lose in 9tti, 3-1 Baltimore, Cleveland trimtoed Detroit 4-2 and Kansan " City trounced Washington 10-3 in the only night game scheduled.. go to -the bullpen? r Higgins who had only one guess, did. Arnold Earley came in( wild pitched‘toe runners along, walked Leon Wagner to load toe bases, and yielded a two-run single to Bob Rodgers. Dick Rgdatz took oyer and gave up a third run. on a sacrifice fiy. Final score: Los Angeles Boston 1. Well, better luck next time, Mike. Elsewhere In the AL the New York Yankees shoved Minnesota five games back with a. 14-1 pasting. Ray Herbert pitched the CM-White' Sq-c to a 4-0 win over The regular Wednesday ; ig of the American League ond Guessers Society will now come to order. The subject of today’s session ; Manager Mike Higgins of the Boston Red Sox. You all remember the rules: the manager gets Only one guess, but we get as many as we need. Now, to the discussion. This Is the situation: The . Los Angeles Angels are playing the Red Sox Tuesday and no-hit pitcher Earl Wilson is sailing along without allowing an Angel past second base. The Sox are leading. 1-0. Wilson gets toe first man in the ninth. Then Billy Moran bloops a single to rijjtt. Lee Thomas gets, the first walk off WUeon. WHAT NEXT? * *»»■■** «*»’* The Yankee-Twin* game was played between two violent rain is that came too early and late for Minnesota, Tony Kubekj in his first time at bat since he retained from nine months of Army duty, smashed a three-run homer, that capped five-run Yankee first Inning. Camilo Pascual (15-7) was 1 victim as- the Yankees snapped., a three-game losing streak. Ralph Terry (164) got the victory. “ Belinsky, another no-hit pitcher, hooked up with Wilson and gave toe Red Sox only three hits and one run before he left tor a pinch hitter in the eighth. The went to Dan Otlnski (2-1), The White Sox got alt their runs n five singles in the fourth, with M Smith and Camilo Camon each collecting a two-run hit. There was no reason for Kansas City to go to the bullpen as Bill Fischer pitched his third straight complete game. It was also the fifth straight win for toe A’s apd their 10th straight over the Senators. ond All-Star, game, was overpowering against tod Orioles. He perfect game Walked Dick Hall in the sixth and no-hitter until Russ Snyder opened the seventh with a single. Herbert, allowed three hits in all. The A’s got six runs In toe fourth when the first seven batters reached base safely., George Alusik hit a three-run homer in the seventh. Speeding Along Flats BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, Utah ((A)—Dr. Nathan Ostich, jet-car driving Los Angeles ilctan. made six, n day, the fastest at 909.5 miles per Ostich said he now to make an attempt at the world record of 394 m.p.h. Thursday morning. It was originally uled for Wednesday. Sprite Rodney Wins Stake By The Associated PitW Hambletonlan contender Sprite Rodney ran away with the Matron THE PALMER METHOD CLUSHIAD SLIDES " UNDER SAIL IN SAND In succtatM send trop shell# .toe clubheod naver actually touches toe bail. Instead, Is * should slide completely under the ball — all toe way under and out Wether side. Of eouise, by then, toe Nil j Is jane, sett on I ts way through ptopsufo fsatn toe IMs IspsaNMy toa boss end easiest shot lor salt ssssd,... Won to Ms the sand with the laodlne edge of toe elubhaad about anjnch or so behind the ball * V,you accelerate your stroke "through" the ball, and finish the i'll make good ShWS Item trips. fy AuM “Palme* The Sprite Rodney won by two lengths last night In the firpt and a full length In the Second to win 313,262, pushing her lifetime earnings above $119,600. The $26,525 stake at the Wblver-toe Raceway was the richest ever held In " ‘ The groat Rodney filly of Baton Ridge Farm, Norwich, 1.Y,, was one of six Hamble-tonlan hopeful* to the . Matron. .YMlIQMI- FrankiErvin. waa trainer suid driver of the winner. In the seated dash, Lord Valentine placed second, to the Sprite’* wiitoingtime of 2:07.3. Sprite Rodney, $100,000 property of Mai Baton ‘ his son, Tom, took to .the slow traek. One of too Sprite's other two victories this yepr was on a sloppy flack at Buffalo Raceway. The other was at Vernon Downs, In the first dash of tog!:Matron, the Sprite finished the mile to 2:09.8, two lengths ahead of Ham-bletonian prospects Nathaniel, second, and Happy Newport, a dose third. ' ' Sprite-Rodney took the lead at the gate end was never headed to4 Before the Matron, Ervin won vo fillies' breeders’ stakes: His toners were Fascination Tims to a $4,078 event for 3-year-old er Honey in a nn«J Cheer Hfoey to a $q,848 si foti&year-old trotters, s 3 Top NL Hrnlers Enjoy Victoriei By The Associated Proae On a Tuesday night when two tef* nt «h» pitching frattmltv —Don Drysdhle and Joey Jay-continued their staling efforts, there was a half hour stretch Ernie BrogUo was hottest pitcher in the National League, if not the majoto. BrogUo posted his second con-1 secutive four-hitter for his fifth straight victory as St. Louis blanked Pittsburgh 54' and continued to pitch while a fire blaged behind him to the right field stands at Forbes Field. The blase, which started among some tarpaulins and empty rubbish hampers, broke out while BrogUo was coasting along with a two-hitter in the seventh toning. With tiro flames clearly visible. BrogUo got. two more outs and gave Up a hltMb ‘ MUM halted. NINTH VICTORY BrogUo sat down while the men of the hook and ladder brigade did their work, then returned after r~2T-mlnute wait. He yielded ato hit, but ‘ “ sparkUng job ^ ^ comeback efforts. The 21-game winner to i960, who feU to 9-12 last year, now to M. Drysdale, the 30-y*ar-old righthander trying to become the first 30-game winner since Dizzy Dean to 1934, recorded victory No. 21 and Me lith to a trow as the NL leading Los Angeles Dodgers beat the New York Meta 7-5. Jay, who along with. Milwaukee’s Warren Spatoi ware the only 20-game winners in the NL last year, won'No, 17 by limiting Maury Wills ’ each . contributed run-scoring stogies, tagging Meta starter Craig Anderson (3-13) with his 12th loss to a row. Jay (17-6) didn’t allow a base runner beyond second while becoming the second biggest winner to the majors. Only Drysdale 'has won more. Jay aim extended the Oolte’ scoreless stmsk-tO)25 innings, posting his shutout after the Reds’ Bob Purkey and Johnny KHppstetn combined for a 14, 13-inning triumph Monday night, Coleman hit-a two-run homer oft Ken Johnson (643) teid BobtosoalBravea scored agatost Cal^itooiMe (9-5) in the tint on- atoftaa by hit his with tile bases empty. Maridkal 4144)- “ (15-10) each aUowed nine hits, bftt a thnto-run sixth toning started by Harvey,Kuenn’s burner wen it for the Giants. After Kuenn’ jB Houston’s punchless COlte ter-four the lower right fieM stands of hits while hoipers by Gordie Coleman and Frank Robinson powered, third-place Cincinnati to a 34 victory. ■ It was a pitchers' day all around. In the other games, Juan Marichal defeated Art Mahaffey the second-place San Fran- cisco Giants remained 4% gatoe? behind the Dodgers by defeating Philadelphia 4-2 and Lew Burdette hurled Milwaukee to a 4-1 triumph over the Chicago Cubs. CONTROL SUP . Drysdale (21-4) was touched for „*“"hito"^and ttowrurnr iffrlhe first three innings, but recovered and spaced five more hits, although allowing his first walk to 52 2-3 innings to Rod Kanehl In the seventh. Drysdale, who hasn’t lost since June 15, -tripled across two runs in the sixth that proved to be decisive for the Dodgenr after forcing to a run with a bases-loaded walk to. the fourth. Ron Fairly doubled home two runs and Frank Howard and shot, Chuck Hiller and Oriandb Cepada doubled and Felipe AilU hit a sacrifice fly, John GtUtaora homer gave the Phili the edge'll the first but Alou's triple and is sacrifice fly by Jim Davenport tied It. Singles by Don Deoaetet, Clay Dalrymplo and. RUbtel Amaro sent PhiladetpMjk aheml again 2-l.j Than Kuetto stepped uj. Burdette (Vt) scattered eight hits, bdt lost his Md foe a ehutott ■ —wkmw'' when George Altman homered * the Cubs ;to. the seventh. The Gin Bell, a walk, an infield o|t and Joe Adcock's stogie, ^ then | of reach on Hank Aarotrs two-run homer to the third. It Wa% No, 30 for Aaron. | Blaze af forties No Hotter Than Broglio PITTSBURGH (AP)-lt takes more than the Pittsburgh Fire Department to extinguish the Maw to the right arm of Ernie BrogUo. The St. Louis Cardinals hurler find a masterful four-hitter for his fifth straight victory in bcat-li* the Pittsburgh Pirates 54 Tuesday tthtiti, But*a fire that erupted below Forbee Field to the seventh toning almost cost Broglio his shutout, and possibly Ms victory. T was* worried about the fire," Broglio said afterwards. “I kept sneaking looks back at it from the mound and I thought it looked Serious, PLENTY WARM ■ 1 figured it would delay the game - tor a kmg tlme and cause my ami to' stiffen up. But after that delay (37 minutes) . I got plenty of time to warm up and it ‘kta't bother me." Broglio:war coasting on a two-, hitter at the start of the seventh when the flames shot up through one of the exit tunnels in right, Several hundred fans filed out to safety. Police patrol care and ambulances raced onto the field And firemen quickly brought In hftwp attached to hydrants outaido^the park. The flames were extinguished. When play resumed, BrogUo gave up a single to teacher Don Lepper but pinch-hftter Jim Marshall lined out to snprt-stdp Dal Maxvlll to end Him threat. Cardinal Manager' Johnny n would stiffen -up because or the long delay. And it did a tittle. But he came back to the eighth. " nd ninth." The fire caused several thoti-said dollars damage, according to Pirate Genera! Manager JotLt, Brown. Two grounds meMMHlig usher and■«-.^ front1■ were overcome by smoke. Wey were treated' at a first akl*'iBii''' and released. , Fire officials said the bfiuMH# : parently started when lliiilfMipi dropped a match or -dgarrito Sto ;, a rubbish hamper beneath Tna / stanb. Play continued as smoke feoured out of the stands. Broglio got nicked for another stogie by Dtok Schofield sandwtehed between two ‘ | outs. Then time caUed, little League Playoffs Set at Rochester 1 1 2 :Sil CJnclud Chleuo Dttron TvOSDAT’S H M*W York M. Mjnnmot* Ml* S. PltUMirstt.-O, ifnitl 3, Houston O,. SJtWyU* ihlnd' (DoMfM 1M) *1 a&a (Coo-nwotk (knSflak 7-4) M jna*a* CMS mama j-u) u mu**ukm «s «5£ cmcmo K«W T Minn mot* *t X Detroit It" Biltlmor* *t The first annual Rochester Little League playoff tournament wtil be Saturday. The bass B title will be de- A champions will take on i star team made up of "A*-* players to the second contest. Avon Youth Service and Rec- reation Assn, (AYSRA) officials expect 2,000 fans 5 for the title o torts. They toe planning to’ expand the tournament to fear games next yatov_;- ' a • . ■BI19S 1 Didn't Say That/ Says Zephyrs Lane CHICAGO (AP)-Cenerto Man-^ ager Frank Lane of the Chteagn Zephyrs to the National Basket-Nto Magw hM ^ tte . accused AU-America 3myLucas of signing a contract with the Oeveland Pipers when he p*«» • A charge hy Commissioner AN Sapeniteln of the American Basketball League.that Late)’map brought thfk quick demal from SIX THE FOWflAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AtTGPST g, 1M» i rofi m J£ADING ^NKwftANCE SERVICES ■ Compiet* cariiwi»i»oov««ge at low cost ■ Prompt, convenient, satisfying claim service ■ Unbroken 40-year record of returning a savings check to aB policyholders I Original and unparalleled "Fallow Member CtoUMon Protection” As an Bxchange>insured member of the Auto Clubyou receive the finest in service and pro-tection with every courtesy s^own for your iosuranoe needs. Ask any one of the mors thyw half-a-million satisfied Michigan motor* iota who enjoy the convenience of Michigan’s * leading automobile insurance. Better yet, stop in at your nearest Auto Club nine wham, a_ courteous Exchange representative is waiting to serve you. It AliewMIt Clak ef Michigan VISIT OR PHONI YOUR NIARHST OFFICE H. I. HIUMANN. MGR. 7iWILUAM$ — a. A. Wilfew. SOT-1MI mSmt.r**n, ra**»....... • C. R. Wilton. (M-Mll C. B. Burnt, TX MUS E. O. Tjntn, SI4-11U S. V. Xteatr (Holly) H. W. McN.lley, OL * 770 Jack Home, VI SSMS I, J. Bailor, CR MW The big Professional Bowlers Association tournament at 300 Bowl is any eight days away now" leavinf J little time for area men to. attempt to qualify for th^ | Open or Pro-Amateur tourneys. Joe Puertaa and his staff are still holding eliminations for both parte of the meet which combing flit haVe a $28,500 purse. I. ' Other Pro-Am qualifying sites are Auburn Lanes, Lakewood Lanes, North* * SIGN-UP NOW fol 111601 M* INDIVIDUAL BOWLING Non-Alcohol Establishment ISIMH SW AUBURN LANES 7 Squirrel Ad. AUBURN MIGHTS UL 2*1710 Uth Frame •y CHUCK AJUIB Hill Ijrnes, Howe’s Lanes and West Side Recreation. Advance tickets are on sale at 30CT lW' slie^foi» ”eIflier ftf W dividual sessions or the entire event. An economy tourney book is available. The respones had been" good as _jcpected tor the lfi berths held (or local amateurs In the $23,400 main battle. But it is down in the one-right Pro-Am which has a $5,-100 purse'.'’ Some bowlers seem to ge looking lor. ressens not to enter meets that are so good lor the community such as this 0OS. lt Is probably the biggest sports contest ever to be held this close Dick Weber, Billy Wdu, Harry Smith, Jim Schroeder, Carmen Sal-vino, Jjm St. John, Pat Patterson, Stove Nagy, Ed Lubanski, Bob Kwolek, Earl Johnson, Glen Blakesley, Ed Bourdase, Bob Crawford, Buzz Fazio, Ron Gaudern and S. Cass Lake Rd. alleys. Greats Don .Carter and Dick Hoover may maket.lt ” An excuse we have heard ever since it was tawwn toe tourne: would be held has be£n: "I don’ think I’ll enter because I am not ... my game fids' time of the year.” Ins answer to that is no one else Is either except a possible few who continued bowling in summer leagues. Most of the good ones quit at the end of regular play. W6 sent along cur flat of ten top caiMiditif ihr “Bowler o Year” in Bowling Writers Associ- ation of America poll along with comttfnnt: that Pontiac's Monroe The Pro-Am, like The Press Bowlerama, is aimed at the average kegler not the star allowing the use of handicaps both in qualifying and in the main competition. The $6,100 to all going to be In that pert of the meet There Is also the opportunity to bowl pointers to their toammstai. It should be ■ wonderful expert-enoe for those who take part Pro tour action resumes thii week after a layoff with the $20, 200 Chicago Open. IDE TOTALLY HEW VASTLY DIFFERENT CUSTOMBILT PREMIUM F RETREAD THE LUXURY RETREAD TRAPS YEARS AHEAD! Today wd announce the retread of tomorrow—tha totally different luxury rafraad -whisper-quiet, soft-riding, foster stopping CUSTOMBILT PREMIUM V.I.P. This now tread compound is a giant stop forward In retread quality and par-fotmanca—with handling and ride characteristics you can actually fool at the, wheal, i ■ .. - : i‘ ' Coat? Just a fraction of the price of premium tiros It outperforms! Drop In and arrange a road test on your car! « ENGINEERED TREAD RUBBER GIVES YOUs • SOFTER, SMOOTHER BIDE! • SILENT, NO SQUEAL CORNERING! • EXTRA-SAFE, ROAD-HUOGINO ACTION! • TIRE MILEAOE YOU NEVER DREAMED possible' 1 CARTER TIRE ML 370 SOOTH SAGINAW STREET MMiFE 5-6136 I tears Should make ft a natnral for the Isas. They will have M opportunity to watch" them practice and compel - autographs. Moororated ahead of some of the 31 on the list to choose from. TwoBtotemers especially seemed out of place, onp .named because he ht4.*»fl>2 league average and ^ .» the other es a Syracuse 1ftdt"ot himself for about five minutes. Fame twmjfcnr. AU MbOro did .was |||— .jyfoi&§|||§ go 10 weeks OH “Make T1l|t Spare'* and do well In some PEA tourneys besides jocttl accomplish mentsJttfo typical of how Pontiac sports pfople seem to get Ignored outside of Pontiac. Detroiters only get excited,about our crime. Don Carter was top choice. ★ dr EXTRA PUTS BPAA National Junior Championships had record performances 'in all categories . . . .Archie Moore trying to organize classic , league to roll Wednesdays at 9 p.m. at new Shelby Lanes. First prize will be $900. It is open to all averaging 170 or better . . . Sunday loaded , at Lakewood for regular season from afternoon to Midnight. Idea of having “Mr. and Mrs. Proprietor’s Bowling League’* to SoftfeJl Playoffs Continue iamond Action Li# Because Rain washed out the major por- Arro defeated EU»N®. 810 as Jake flat "of yesterday's dty league that were played were In the early morning or late evening. In junior action the Foodtown Mazur pitched a three hitter, 34). No nlaver on either team manafeed one hit, but Arro had four doubles among it? seven T3ta. Lou £eay, Wes Roberts,' Daton Hornets walloped the CUbs, BO-7 in Patterson and Mazur, had doubles. fiffiFlofBfigi; IT Wit a regulation Since tt was called because the 10-run rote, la elass F action of the ;Na-mud League, the Rebels won rir Columbia Ave, 4-6 as Bob his also struck out 13 winning effqrt. -In “B” playoffs, Hi-Way whipped Howe's, 10-1 withRoger Reynolds getting the wth. Pete Landino, Don right was rained out. The games will be made np tonight v A & W‘ meets Hasbtn Chevro-let wifi) a chance lo He Bob A Larry!* Bar for the regular season Class C crown. The root beer , team to a half game behind B*L which has completed Its schedule,* ' y * V Should- A&W win-this, contest, a* playoff for die title will be need- GREAT COACH — Matt Mann D, who developed championship swimming teams ct th* University of Michigan and Oklahoma University, died Monday taQn- In Major League action, To m McWethy pitches a no-hitter and struck out 12 as Pontiac Township defeated Madison Twins, 16-1. Auburn Heights Boys Club won a 7-0 forfeit from CUbs in the American League. OlfV SOFTBALL ACTION Moorhead find Bob*Overcashier each with two hits,' supplied the bat power for Hi-Way. *'* ft | A' -A Class A and B finals, will be played tonight at Beaudette with the same teams meeting in the double elimination tournament. The games at Narthside were rained out yesterday and they wilt be' played tonight in CD playoffs. In tonight's second contest, Stroh’s and Spencer Floors open the Class B playoffs.-----* Olympic tank squad. Memorial Service Thursday for Mann The Red Sox edged the Angels,' " 11-10, in the American League of • Federal Savings actlon yesterday < Rich Jimenez scoring the winning | run when Alex Tosha bunted. Since ‘ being “traded” from the Orioles,! Alex has won two games. ANJT ARb6r W» — A memorial service- is tentativafy tp bo . held hero tomorrow for Matt Maim It, swimming coacfr at the University of MleMgui lac fit jo®" *od 3MB U.S. Olympic team coach. * ./.*/ -*,*• . The 77-year-old coach died Monday at an apparent heart attack after directing some races at Buries Falls, Ont., and. swimming |... dbo4fmr:C%rt moro Auporiant wssihe fact that 10 Inspired f« thonsands of pong mm Whh his philosophy of opM- He .was the greatest coach In the world,” Crisler said, “but he was even greater as a developer of youth.” Bud Wilkinson, Oklahoma athletic director and football coach, MOST FORTUNATE “The University of Oklahoma feqdlng keg bosses drew Interest from Just two places — Collier Lanes and SOU. Not surprising the way things hsve been the time of day . . . Government charge that AMF, Brunswick and BPAA conspired to restrain building of establishments would not seem to apply bore whore kog people have blamed firms for Installing equipment la too many nearby places. WIBC has had rash of triplicates Including record 227. Three women in Texas Trio loop hit 366 same night. A couple did the trick as mixed teammates in Ohio. AHOY BOATERS! See Vs lex Ovr New 3-in-1 Outboard Motor and Beat Policy. Offering • "All Risk" Physical Damans Protection. for your boat, motor, trailer and miscellaneous boating equipment. • Bodily Injury end Property , Damage Liability. • Medical Expense Coviragd for you, your family and your guests. We would like le foifie mere , .m. j------»^u. |.1M NMPONPV IRraNM'-NIN^p^mNVMMNsR N™mF VSwfiY LaZelle AGENCY, INC. FB 5-817® T Edna Stengel Gets Blasted by Flying-Bat He coached several years at the Ustrtit Athletic Club and then went to the University of Michigan in 1929. During his 29 years at Michl-an, Ms teams won 16 Big Ten titles and 13 NCAA titles. He started from scratch In 1925 and had a Big Ten championship team by 1927. Mann’s Michigan teams never finished lower than second after 1926 In Western Conference and national /Intercollegiate competition. ’ His record earned him place in the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame. Wife of Met Manager Not Seriously Injured When Hit on Jaw LpS ANGELES (AP) - Mrs. Edna Stengel, wife of New York Met Manager Casey Stengel, was bruised on the' jaw when hit by a flying splintered bat during, the Met-Los Angeles Dodger game Tuesday night. The bat broke when Willie Davis fouled off a pitch In the fifth inning. Hie upper part of the bat shot into the stands and hit Mrs. Stengel sitting in one of the front rows. Tbs injury was not serious- tors and driven to her home nearby Glendale. She said she join her husband in New York Sunday as previously planned. Another woman, also sitting in M of the front rows, was struck in the eye by a foul ball off Frank Howard’s bat In the seventh inning. She was not Identified. Dodger attendants led her td the clubhouse dispensary for treatment. was most fortunate to have Matt _____ as a staff member years. His, devotion to college ath- spfenitian toour entire department. He ranks with the great coaches.' swam fir OMfo iusand London OnlfM* started Ms coaching career In USS at Syracuse Unlver-affjr. BS alas coached teams at Harvard, Yale sad tbs Now York Boat Club brought him tq the Michigan, la IMS, Mann went to the University of .Oklahoma, . " eight straight Big Eight titles, would have returned to Oklahoma tola fsfl. Mann arrived at Camp Chikopl June 27 with his wife, Mary Lea, and family. ^ He had, planned return to his home lh Aim Arbqr, around Aug. 2flt With him when he died were his wife; his daughter, Mrs. Rosemary Dawson of Ann Arbor,, and Ms son, former Michigan ming star Matt Maim III. His son and daughter will continue running Camp Chikopi. TOP COACHES Many of Mann's , top intedcolle-late swimmers went on to coaching. They Included Ms own Michigan successor, Gus Stager;. Tom Hainey at Stanford; Ben Grady Bob Muir, Williams Collage. track Authority Dtfad PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP)-Rob-ert L. (Dink) Templaton, 69, one Stanford University's most famed coaches and a world renowned track and Held authority, died Tuesday of an acute heart attack. IjftYOUIt CONVINHNT *B.F.0OOOMCH STORE rt 14121 m X. Ferry Car Service Center SHOCK ABSORBERS (AMMUCAN CAM ONtV) DIICO SUPMIDU SHOCKS WHEN YOU BUY O UR , FRONT IN D ' ALIGNMENT ml the National League, the < Mets won A3 over a .team which ] was not named when ’the game; summary, was turned in, -and the ■ Giants defeated the Colts, S4. It! was brother versus brother as Kev- j an Dtishane won for the Giants * and Lee Dushane lost for the Colts.! Waterford-softball action last! Predicts Settlement in Amateur Dispute FUSSY about your car; PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)-Execu-l! tive Director Walter Byers of t National CMlegiate Athletic Asi elation said Tuesday he believes file group’s differences whh the \ Amateur Athletic Union will be < settled before the 1964 Olyotpic \ Games. Byers, here ior ths NCAA Exec-! utive Committee’s annual meeting < today and ThuMdey, fold news-1 men he hopeS,to see the Olympic j team selected by a federation rep-1 resenting all segments' of sports, j '< including the AAU. > , Get tharightrouffler for your make and model of car imtalled • by an expert In just 15 minutes at youae including the AAU. Moat Olymi^c team members ; are currently chosen in meets , directed by the AAU. f Byers said that within a year , e hopes all amateur sports \ groups will recognize the value of < the new United States Track and ' Field Federation. The Federation, governed by a council representing high school, college, postgraduate and turned service [ groups, plans to start operations -Sept. 1. • ' ;'v: ‘ " ' Both the AAU and National A*-'; sociation of Intercollegiate Ati*1! letica, (NAIA>, an ontartisatton of ; smaller colleges, have refuted t~ join, he said. Midas mufflers are GUARANTEED for asi long as you own your a OPEN DAILY 8:30 A.M. Mon., Tuet., Wed., Thun. 'Ill 5:30 — Friday to 7 Saturday 'til 5 P.M. " T-T CRIOIT TIEMS 435 S. Saginaw FI 2-1010 ' Cut Bow Lines Cause DamagS to Cup Yacht “WHfff NEWPORT, ft. I. (AP) * Tfo America’s ' Cup hopeful NefeHtii suffered slignt damage f early Tuesday when her two bow lirfes The 12-taeter yacht, built spring gt a cost of $300,000, swung around, with her stern lines still fast, and scraped against a gfer pier at, Kir Park. A spokesman , at the ship yard where the Nefertitf Underwent an overhaul and repaifo said Jhe damage was minor. He said her stem was “chewed up a little" and the. hull was. scraped sllgbtly above the- water line. ’ Police guards were assigned to the shipyard area near the Neter-tiff. The other America’s Cup hopefulsi Easterner. Weatherly and Columbia, and the Australian Challenger Gretel, hero for the[ races beginning Sept. IS, also will beguarded. I i TRAVELLING I j MONEY? j I $25 up to $500-~for I I Vacations, bills, other I | needs. Money quickly, 6n j. sensible plana. Payments [ you pan afford. . « com m tod Art * LGENERAL ' WIN $101 Knock the “0“ Out Of Oimun't St Our BASIIALL RANGE CARL'S DRIVING RANGE w much use would be mad# of forest part.-_____-——' Wolverine Match Set at Farpngton The sixth annual Wolverine Dog Training Club’s Fun Match wilf be Sunday at Farmington High School. Judging will get under way at xrn and is expected to last six hours. Entries will be' accepted until the starting time, There will lie classcr In all obedience work Including graduate novice and brace.| The judges will be fearl Williams, Charles Franks, L. G. Le-Blanc and William Kelly. Attention Home MUM OTTER With WHITE DOWNSPOUTS with any complete ALUMINUM SIDING JOB Offer M» August 31, 1962 W! CdVOI AU EXPOSED TRIM rar FREE ESTIMATES 3 | summon wurcows p awnings Authorised J)M>tm lor Alcoa aid fleynoldi Aluminum STAN PISKET. Owner , CUSTOMIZES ALUMINUM SIDING CO. ISPtl pUMUID RR. <*W» I Operator eu Defy 24 Keen Del’ | Phine 335-2331 Shooters Alter Perfect Score at Williams' No shooter has ever run a perfect score in. the Michigan Shotgun . Championships at the Williams' Gunaight Co. fields near DaViaon. ‘Die eighth annual event is scheduled this weekend. A lire- nminary event will be belt urday starting at 8 a.m. The championship shoot will get t | way at 3 p.m. the' same day continue through Sunday. Fred Baueom of Lapeer eai dose 1* a perfect score when tied with two others at the < of the 76-target regulation «h< jast- year^wttb a 74, Gunners pulled1 down an 16 clay If A each eu the trap> akeet and Baueom, who shot only one pra'ctlce round, of skeet: before the 1961 tourney, dropped one bird on the trap range where he had been doing most of hi* shooting. He proceeded to set a record by runing 50 straight, in the field to win the championship In * shpotoff. This year The JPonttac Press stereotyper has been concentrat-tig more on skeet during practice rounds. Underwafer Specialist Exhaustive legwork, scientific analysis and pure deduction lead to solution of most cases, according toOscar A. Brunettl, assistant microbiologin in the Wildlife Investigations Lab. . “A warden knows that a suspect makes « career of killing deer oat of season,’* says Brunettl. “He ts smart aad difficult to catch. Like Scotland .Yard, the warden doean’t give ap. One day In searching the violator’s premise* .the warden Rada a few shreds of fresh meat aad aente hair m a fitw d hoard. The teboratory identifies the flesh and hair to be from a deter. A conviction.” In another rase the head and tegt of a recently killed deer were found where a violator ' dumped them. Timber Doolies \ From Michigan Like to Travel Recovery reports of woodcock? banded jn Michigan during thef spring of 1961 give further proof dial this tong-billed bird winter* far and Wide along the southernf tapstal “states. . One woodcock banded east bp Honor In BenZie Countywas shot! In Texrfs during last fall’s hunting season. Another timber doodle . banded at Gratlot-Saginaw state gama'area fell victim toot cat itf •, accords^ searched and a quantity of frozen meat found. The laboratory was able to match thev bones in the frozen meat with the-legs found. Examination proved two deer had been killed. The hunter was convicted for killing two deer, instead Alabama last December, ing to records of th*U.S. Fish affif Wildlife Service. “A man suspected of killing pheasants out* of season Had no birds In his possession when apprehended," relates Brunettl. ."There were a few spots of bloo0 on a newspaper in his car and a couple of feathers. He claimed this was from pheasant killed during the season. "7 “The newspaper was dated much later than the close of the SoEinar Tables The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s Solunar Tables, .plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times. ‘ A.to - -ME,, Minor Motor Minor Mojor ... B:B0 1):0S «:15 Wr l l li jjfHj!:R season,’’ Brunettl recalls. “Thai pretty well dated the vtotettoa, If. any. • & ** :3':’ “When, the warden ttywateMB to submit the evidence to technicians to see if the\bkMd and feattn ers came from pheasant, the viw lator confessed. ' .. ..' Ifi Both birds were banded a*|' chicks by Conservation Depart-under a special project launched last spring to team more about migrations of woodcock and their moveihent* -lit Michigan before the hunting' Over- the years, records have shown that Michigan woodcock ala* winter in Louisiana and Gewgia. ; Barbecue Is Planned § by Lakeland League | Lakeland Conservation League will make plans'for its first social * event, a chicken-and-corn barbecue pn Sunday, Sept. 9. ’ * J Committee assignments will be announced at tonight’s meeting., ’ which will be at 8 in Chief Pontiac « American Legion. Hall' on Lake J Oakland where the barbteue event f will-be held, ,7 • -;;=rJp: Audubon Society Gains NEW YORK - The membership of the National Audubon Society has Increased 24 per cent in a single year. Aa of June 30, 1962, It stood t 41,036. One year earlier It was 33,092. TA* 12-Meter Boat Boat* racing for the America’ Cup this September are known as thtarnational'lS-Metar sloops, or 128 for Short The term 12-Meter refers to the construction formula of this design class,not its overall length. The "Vim,"typical of this class actoristics: overall length i, 70 feet; waterline, 45% feet; beam, about 13 feet; draft, eight, 82 feet; ■ail are*: main-^ . sail, 1289 ksquare feet; genoa jib, I 56,000 and ' 60,000 pounds, depending upon ballast. A “12” carries a basic complement of 10 ealle in order to take maximum advantage of the varying wind conditions. America’s Cup rules permit an il sailors. AMERICA’S CDP RACE TO BEGIN SEPTEMBER 16th, Just Off Newport, RX America’s Cup, the silver trophy that Is the most coveted for international yacht racing supremacy, is named for the U. 8, schooner “America,"which won the 100-Guinea Cup against England's beet at the Isle of " Wight in 1851. The trophy was •• deeded aa the Amesica’s Cup by its owners to the New York have bean IT enccwsfuldefenses of ..the clip by the New York Yacht Club with U. 8. boats never toeing a eerie*. The moat famous challenger was Sir Thoms* Lipton, who epOnt millions racing his five Shamrocks hero between i860 and 1980, only to loss each time. Thecomne-tltionn revived in I, after 1958, THE TRIALS The biggest sporting event of the year for boating enthusi- asts, the America’s Cup Race. - * the Ji yBr‘ is right around the proverbial corner. Intensive summer trial* to select a U. 8. defender of the America’s Cup against Australian 12-Meter sloop “Gretel,” began on June 4th, near Oyster Hay, L.L The series allows the America’s Cup Committee .of the New York Yacht Club to mako preliminary estimates OI the contenders. Whenever possible, trial races duplicate both the course and conditions of the Cup competition. A second e0-rle* of training races was held at Newport, from July 2nd to July 16th. Tfe Anal sea trials, also at Nswpprt, will occur from August 16th to September 8th. The dvfkkder must be chosen by this. date. THE RACE The Australian stoop “Gretel’ is the 18th challenger for the America’s pup. Competition^.be- gins September 16th, T^e start and finish of the Cup races this year, the America’s Cup Buoy, . will t* located some nine mllca SSE of Brenfcn Reef Lightehip, just off Newport, R.I. This is apbroximateiy the sime layout as the 1968 Cup races, Maximum at seven races are scheduled on successive weekdays, with Sunday as a day of rest The first boat to win four raeaS takes the America’s Cup. Series consists of two separate 24-mile courses, raced alternately. lapae,wlMln 70-foot PIn-jjg sloops were flrat allowed to raee -instead of tho 180-foot JJteflll ■ ’ * r.lklap. of Thomas Liptou'a day. temiMV,195frtlte"Colw^^ defeated tha.Brltiah challenger, “Sceptre ” In four straight raoaa In a bestnof-seven series. In i960; the New York Yacht Club accepted the Australian chalteng* to race in September, 1902. POINTS OF SAILING The points of sailing are similar for all one-design sailboats from the smaller classes, such as tha “Blue Jay,” to tho larger 12-Meter ocean-going yachts. A1-, most all such boats aro jibheaded sloops; that is, ono-masted boats with a sail after the mast (a mainsail) and one beforothe mast (a jib). Such a boat can sail straightaway from the wind or leeward, but It cannot go directly Into the wind, or windward, lb sail upwind, u boat must zig-zag, or tack, aa close aa possible into the wind; alternating port-to-starboardrto maintain its course. A bfnt tacking into the wind la sail! to fit boating to windward, or sailing close-hauled to tho wind on n series oj port-and-starboard tacks. Seaworthy Wap To. . Watch The Race Whether you'ra watching from your own-special vantage-point afloat or an shore, you'll enjoy tho dean, lean taste of the dry* •st gin overt Seagram’s Extra Dry Gin.Thi*ginis amber-dry: dryed by nature until eviry trace of awaotneaa and parfom-, ery is gone. So signal for Seagram’s; it makekih* uryest martinis, the meet refreshing tail Summer drinks, as well. The Language SEAGRAM’S lAtTXA D*Y OtN SB. lon pa with ogaCpovy Mviwq 't i*mmvri>mirv*i t nmi | Pleasant Summer Slows Up Foil Study x Ham*, bd. » V'V PniN»r o* Education University of Southern California Even bright atudenta may be slow btartefs when the new school There are reasons for slow JinB REASONS During summer vacation, ; {rained after disuse/ fifteen minutes a day of cises for a WMS school starts wfll Their minds aren't tuned to education. They die still thinking abofit swimming, vacations, trips and all toe wonderful things they did during toe summer. * Often the first semester is halt over before they swing Into action. By that time they are B or even C students when they should be getting As. . Every chil-should be held, his highest poh tial every day of the echoed year. No excuse should] be accepted foiling grad poople ^uae their Latost muscles ' in strenuous sports like rowing. htktog and - swimming. Smaller muscles weaken from disuse. Among these are the small.hand muscles used in writing. When echoed starts children have difficulty controlling them. It may take two The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by-name of father).. : he is forced to do it. Listening In dam comes hard. PupUa find It difficult to think about history, mathematics or science. It’ takes will power to turn from toe pleasant activities of summer to the study of school subjects. Homework, especially reading, futile to the stow starter, thoughts wander. He lacks swe. “Francis R. Vlsnlekl. «8J LakeetdO iSlE’ t t. ©niwATwjSwsr _ there should1 incentives for DR. NASON good work. ■ Writing- muscles must he re- JACOBY ON BRIDGE By OSWAlD JACOBY Here is a hand whore a couple of experts really managed to. go wrong. The scene was the Aabury Park jiectlonal and they wore playing together tor the first time so there were some extenuating circumstances. Expert West chase South’s opening heart bid and wait developments. After North responded one no-trump, South passed apd West decided action was indicated so he bid two spades. North tried three dubs and when that was passed around to West he chose to double. It was one of those duplicate doubles designed and ntkr West underled the ace of diamonds to put his partner in for a heart lead. East missed that cue and led a second spade, where-upan NwthTnade the rest of the tricks. Of course, It made little difference. Three dubs- doubled, malting either four or five was a top score for North and South. Incidentally, if East does bid diamonds he can make five by means of a spade-heart squeeze and end play against South. The play is not too simple but you can work It out if you remember to ruff a dub aind run out trumps. NORTH I A10CJ fl •_-__!—__L $w~ **1098533 WBBT BAST (D) *AI?» *Qf VAQII ¥»t« -■ ♦ AMS ♦ KQ109 54 *r : »a SOOTH ARJO* WK J 1084 ♦ I V*CRRD Sensed Q—The bidding has beep: Sonth WeS North » tv Pass 2 e Pi You, South, hold: ♦IVARtf AOIM WIW What do you del TODAY’S DOBgftON Your partner continues with a bid of three spedes. What do you do now? - two before »this prob- lem. Ease in hand Wrttfog wUI pay immediate divldends. Ytrst assignments are easier to produce and grades are higher in earlyjteste. County Births ready to Ostea. RffiiiiRl M lag Is done agahwt a backgrw of Ipwwiedge in the subject. It is difficult to grasp the Idea* a teaeher puts forth if bo uses words unfamiliar to you. JEiach ne^r word causes you to puzzle Just enough to miss the main point. KSA'SSWWffir Robert W. Robertson, to HMneld -----• Alfred O MUch*U,' ii Richard C. Smith. W TJlroore SLi^",'*-A^jracR«ni James Matthew*. MS R U9’’AM t. nanme, emm Kcl«on *. Wim*. nw_A«l Rtchard Wyatt. 7170 wmall . HP PSKeh lM Herchel J7, wanh lit, Robert H. Collins, ** pstir ■HI Her*itnV‘«wi Voutu’bttry Robert L. Tutor. SS Jackson mVrn^a'rstm.i- SE Get jet for purposeful reading. Examine the whole, book, including the table of contents to get an Me*, of what you are to lew#. Baad to find cut something. Itecite hack . what you have learned after each Parents can assist by setting Up the rules at toe very start Provide a comfortable, pleasant place for your child to *tudy at home. Set study times and hold the youngster to uium priodsr- Send your young student off to school the first day with a resolution to do his best from the very start. When learning seems important to parents, catch toe spirit tout (You may obtain a cow of Dr. . aaon’s “You Can Get Better Grades” booklet by sending Si to “Bettor fhadem^ Post Office, New York.) “Huh? A baseball player’s picture in with a piece of gum? Who’d go for a thing like that?” to produce a plus score of 300 points, but it did not work out that East opened the queen of spades. Dummy's king lost to West’s ace Astrological! By mm OMAKR “me < •W%ftCOsi*o!« bis destiny . .J,MmJS points tbs »•»." arum (Mm. It to Apr. »):■■■ rf aboh rHe owottone today.. Refuse KS^Sn'5S«Si. to bsrlght. Oihorwles, you p»y flnen- riMlly end emotionally. TAURUS (Apr. SO to Mmy 30 : Stress on making agreement to schtere a In tUbdihS UP for rights, beliefs. Cycle ^SSSwIfx%STl toPJune 111! Dlplom-s«> tMH win the day, You ere ebli to wla your way with smile, kind word Be .|guMM% »• workers. You get CAKCXR (J»M t» to thero *ro js«*o ■WprUM metiers. But recant ideas. contacts duo to IM? ttStT Knowing thU, fuse to jrwb (toy or brooding, cheerful. opumietic. s LBO (July S3 to Aug. 3D ■ Su< change offortune Indicated In Y( FAVOR. But you should keep on - — course. ■» potudderets, accept elotory preciously. You could i * * 1| % You coult - --down" y to (Cette. „..J should be'oteroome. Oo ilowly. Check ' deUule. But be willing to BWHlRMlB muBjB,opiaept. M to Ooi ' you .mist try fut------------- g facta Skit toto'opea.'iTryi »1Sr..lM...sMnsone limply rk to. anyone's - edeutege. regret. ■CTi portunltlee. but Ine* be one ' SAOl $n SS --- M s. Uar IMi OfiunL Uittf owM1 N r;‘'m'-iwitoisfiAT to Toon nnrraoAT i. .L trmber stenlslAit *• youk^moet Ugnlfl* I oent awatK. ^ ^ qbmxral wuroanen*: ua«« •»«At of speeuUUon could effeot fATO (Copyright, Ugg» . BOARDING HOU8B muifOfOND \ ; DONT CAJX&MXH ) 1 POR THfiM/AND I V KNCN/LO&OF / f •meREfeoNe t OFTUett NOW/ y o' •.'< »T ,£SKJ ..... immm S±Jt r-~r ^ f' ' VH’, H | frx HB9 KBF ■ ■•„ ; THE PONTIAC PRESS. ^DffESDAY, AH^^ w1 TOKTY-'KTMJSl r The following are top covering tales of locally grown produce by growers and add by them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau o| Markets, as of Tuesday. ’* * Product ■'•f ' non , Apple), Duchesi, bu. ...W.80 S»rSSr‘:. BlueberrtM, art. .... Cantaloupe*, bu. Cllerrte*. gwoot, ort.. fiNM Peachei, Kale Haven Fean, Clapp), bu. Plum), mrasiik. '/t-\ Reapbemu. Market in 3rd S early this aftem6on aS >the stock market ,headed - for its third straight decline. The trading pace continued only moderate, giving emphasis to some Wail Street talk of summer doldrums.' , 1 As In the last two of the losses were relatively small. The trend was lower from tint start but as the session con- fuapberrtd). red. art. . i, grata, rot t, Kentucky. !• *HM8i * Cabbage’, aSmdard variety, lit Carrot!', S'd*.’. Carrot*, topped, bu, ... Cauliflower, d*. SwA'sfilriS Corn, »wo*t, 11 as. • • • • ■ ■ • • Cucumber), dill slxe. *«• . Cucumber), pickle (Me, tyi. Cucumber), sllcera, bu, .... Dill. d*. bob. ... . .... • • ...... NEW YORK (AP) — Corporate Southern Pacific 4%s of 1981 rose rrpo bond prices were mixed and gov- % at 81 ' 1J emment bonds slightly higher in [» moderate (gening trading today. The greatest activity among corporates was in the rafi sector, with half a dozen issues showjng price changes in the, fractions. Dower were Canadian Pacific 4s perpetual at 7314 and Louisville .ft Nashville 3%s Of 2003 at 75%. Onion), dry. Onion*, sr|| KP ry. 80-lb. 1 PMeiey, ittrtjr.Vd*."" bah*.’ peat, blackeye, bu. ...... Peppera, Cayenne, Rk...... Pepper), hot. bn. ........ Peppen, tweet, bu. ....... Potatoes, 80-lb. bit ....... 5M: SSL? «Hobr/: Hquath, acorn, bu.. ... .. .™-™e)1ftli>. bkt. ..... Turnlo), dot. bob....... Turnip), tOMMd ......... GREENS Cabbage. Celery Csbboso, ds. . Lettuce, Bouton d*. Lettuee. head. bu. Lettuce, leaf, bu..... Muatard. bu.......... Romalne, bu. ........ Poultry and Eggs DKTBOrr POULTRY DETROIT. Aug. 8 (API — Price) ( perpound st mitrelt tor Eo. 3 «n» ^iliXry typo hen) tf-18; light type h g-10; heavy type router) over ) lbt. JJ moItly SjijWOWr* *nd_ lb>. white) JO-51; Barred Rook 10-duekllnt) 30; iurkay*. hena M; S3 M). DETROIT BOOS DETROtT. AU,.t las tj.s.1; browha—Or*d*A UtlTk fun Hwi SPIN 32Vb*3dMi; medium 3S; .mill 11; check* I8'i-Sliiv CHICAGO MERCANTILE EXCHANGE cHicaoo. Aug. • (API—Chlotgo Mercantile Exchange—Butter lt*‘ Ml* "buying prloe* unchangj AA -mBubi anttn J>4A11 58? »H. LIVE POULTRY CHICAOO. AUf. S (AP)-(WSDAl-- v Wnoleegle buying prloi .» 1 higher; roaaUr* Jf-Ju as unchanged ...„-■pedal lled Whit* Plymouth Rook fryers CHICAGO POTATOES White* 3. NEW YORK (APWPrlcw fell finued b few more small plus signs' appeared. Drugs, steels and rails led the way downward. Most other 1 jor industry groups also fell. An exception were some of the building material issues. Johns ManvUleandUiL Gypsum wot both ahead major fractions. Construction activity, although off from the spring pace, continues at a high level. Increasing signs there will 'be Income tax, cut this year seemed to' fit in with the conclusion already reached by Wall Street, \ .. » Scuffle Short at EvamPlant Among industrials, advances of % were registered \>y OT Finance 3%s of 1970 at 94% and Sears .Roebuck Acceptance 5s of 1982 at 106%. Wedaecdaj') 1*1 DIvMebda Djelara^ ............ Bate rled Record able Monarch Mach T . 8 RAILS LOST * Many of the rails showed fractional losses as *the possibility of a strike next week mounted. New Yortc Central added a small fraction. A handful of firms in the Inter-national Communications field poited declines of %.to almost a point. Late yesterday the chairman of RCA proposed creation of an independent, privately owned U.S. monopoly in the field. Qhryaler was off more than % while General Motors, Ford and Studebaker were down less. - American Motors picked up Vs. West Branch Officials Gat Help From State Police in Strike WEST BRANCH UB-State police •ported a brief scuffle on the picket line at strike-bound Evans Products Co, today as about 25 non-■trikers entered the plant. » Capt.! Vincent Neering of the West Branch Post said a toree of about 18 or 20 troopers helped city .police and sheriffs men to restore order and that no arrests were made. American Stock Exchange as ,1^i!!rjl?^"i5iu>a>)*. b-» 4MWWW gening. Trading was 4P»*L ww-fiE ^ SfM>lwnrk#ni Newtrlng said n woman whom ha Identified as Harriet Whitt-mare, si, a nonstriker, was .taken from the plant to w hoapttai far X rays. He said he did not know* whether By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst • NEW YORK — Business as usual rather than Jitters or retreat has.marked 'the summer In most of die United States. Seasonal quietness has been jn evidence in many industries but only as expected. The stock mar-ket break of May and June has (ailed to panic either the IM er or the. businessman. FALL PICKUP That is the most common reading of the current statistics. And a few figna of a fall, pickup already ire belng sighted, along With pleasant predictions by many businessmen that the fourth quarter should be a good one. Consumers are spending about _s usual toe this time of year, Some say they are inclined to be cautious. But businessmen WASHINGTON (HI _______ ----------------- unions disclosed today they have starting to bet on a good roted ordered SSMOO train operating erama opened.Mate on a 33,400-share block down more than a point and* continued actively traded: Also down- about-* point or more were Aerojet - General, Mead Johnson, Spencer 'Shoe, and Goodway Printing.’______ The New York Stock Exchange NBW YORK Of selected York -- ^ l.r Iftij mm taaa.t High tow LaatCkk. fie on the United Steelworkers picket line. .Earlier this week a group of non; strikers went to Lansing to protest over violence at the plant when they went to work. Several per sons have been hurt In picket line outbreaks. The United Steelworkers Union Local 5591 went on strike at the two weeks ago, seeking dosed shop and overtime provisions in * new contract. The injuries esune when nonstrikers tried to enter the plant iiipi ” 15* 13'/. 18 Vi. m Scott Pap .St *4 27*4 aa atfesli; m ho nv* io% » ...j. inf 11 si*z iPfcfegi:* A group' of nonstrikers carried petitions to Lansing Monday claiming police protection at the plant was inadequate, visiting Gov. Swainson’s office, state ppHc* headquarters at East Lansing and the attorney general’s office. Several claimed they had been beaten up in clashes with union 'ptdtets*’............ Wheat Futures Lead Early General Drop August but Business as Usual the third quarter nears its halfway point, this summer took* like mosHrammers. Theh why the .continuing gloom in many circles; Partly it is because of the psycho-, logical effect of the downward revision of. stock market indues. *. . And, to no small degree et the . moment,' the’ uncertainty h due to the Involvement of all eeonomle planning—whether tak cutting, in- Mostly it* is because the economy has advanced’ moderately rather thdn at an accelerated pace as hoped at the start of the year. more Incentive toe private enter-prise-in politics. Ih many news item* today if * hard to ten where economies ends and politics begins. - | ' ’ “T Strike Call Expected Denies Rail Union Suit Chicago «* — wheat futures led another general decUiwTtoday during the first several minutes of activity on the board of trade. Setbacks in wheat ran In the major fractional range while steady la rather stow deallnpi. Old crop months poatod aiwall Thd jsWstire In wheat was understaipd to have been largely liquidation, but dealers saM it may have included some hedging. Commercial support Was slack and other buying showed up oply on the declines. sale pickup in the fall. Business loans at commercial banks have token their -flint ttpward jump, apparently as manufacturers and merchants prepare to produce and up loir the fall and winter trade. • ' / Employment has risen. Some of this has been in manufacturing industries, reflecting the increase In tadttstrtaV output. Much of the employment has. Ween in the service industries, as consumers demand and pay tor more services of all kinds.------------- — SUMMER RALLY The stock market has managed its summer rally, keeping up a long tradition despite the gldom that shrouded Wall Street in May and June. Steel production is rising. Part of this is the seasonal recqvery from the lewnoiat of the July vacation slowdown. But-part apparently,reflects A return to the market of a few of the customers who [have been living off their built-up inventories since the threats of a strike or price rise were dissipated to March and April. Despite the downturn in steel, .jtput from April Into July, the total production for the year to date is ahead of that for the like period of 1961. Many steelmen are now expressing modest -hopes tor a fair pickup of orders from Labor Day. on. All the talk about economic certainty hasn’t hampered the „ to industry. It has enjoyed me of its best years in sales and production. It now enters its usual lull tor changeover to new models — and its traditional uncertainty' a» to how the public will accept them, always a .gamble. —-------- Construction continues at a high level. Building of new homes Spurted ip the Spring and leveled off to the summer. But commer-j|L structures and apartment houses continued to rise at an u slackened pace. Personal income totals are at peak. Savings have Increased de spite, high retail sales and a cwi- workera to be prepared tor a nationwide walkout E the railroads go ahead with arauwoeed job curtailments on Aug. If. CHICAGO IB — A suit to block the firing of 40,006 railroad firemen next week was-formally dismissed today in „ U. S. District Court. _______ I. Judge Joseph Sam Perry signed order confirming his earlier Informal ruling that the courts lack authority to go Into the dispute. Decision Due on IRS Center Boy Struck by Car in Commerce Twp. Livestock iWistocs DETROIT. Aug. S (AP> — OatU* ~ w%.,kisa»*afe,8"!S ■teert 3180; acatMrlps oholc* jteatl 38.00-27.35; good to io% ^ojoio* ■»t*ar* a.i.50-20.00; atifitr cowi looo-io oo, rew atrong ywib to 1S.N; cutter) IJ.IO-ilSS. S T g&nm,mo.W "“Si ,,!"',,,"" „ t’n6 fiH, 18.80: 100-330 ll.IJ-lOl/; 3.JJ4 3 A 7-year-old boy, Injured when struck by a car near his Commerce Township hbme yesterday afternoon, is in fair condition today at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Hospitalized with . a fractured leg and a head Injury is Aaron F. Wheeler of 8948 Shady Pointe Chive. ™ The driver of the car, wt Elizabeth V, chludzinski, 41, of, Allen Park, told Oakland County Sheriff's deputies the boy ran in front of her, car on Union Lake Road, sbuth of Cooley Lake Rood, Announces a Dividend .... ...J5-18.75; Unchanged, prime J'Wiff 36.0«-l*.«0; JOOd SB^ New j^ick 17, Q) "fVe have fl7,ssa la sariaga York. ■: . . Iw ■ ouds and fltfa* saving* ac- ■ ' t V V f ; , , " V I' | 1 ‘ 1 > \ counts. Over a long P«riod we have sqeamnlatod 019 share* of Northern (Mateo Power. Would advise holding that or may- A) I like Northern States Power. It te a strong and conservative public utility with a record of steadily increasing tamings and dividends in recent years. The shares yield over 4 per centjmd arc a relatively stable and secure Investment. I suggest you jteep your present holdings — represent-Ing about <15,000 at recant level* — but I would branch Cut a little from now on-. Both of the other stocks you mentioned *— Texaco and Com Product s — tost favored ll*t. With _ advise you to buy some of each and you will be well started on ~ solid Investment portfolio. Mr. Spear caftnot answer all mall personally but will answer air questions possible In his columh. Write 359 management, Rounsavllle said, he meant a higher author-' ity, particularly In Washington. I Business Notes ELLIOTT Appointment of . Hugh Arnold of 730 falmouth Drive, Bloomfield Hills, as manager of the Argonaut Realty Division of General Motor* was announced by the corporation. Arnold has been assistant manager of the division since October 1949. Appointment of Harold W. (Doe) union of 2603 Worcester Road, Orchard Lake, .............. announced by I United Moto Service, a. d sloit of Gene Motors Corp. Dunton job GM as an accept- @ ance corporation L field tel live In 1936. Ha isl married and has" three sons. DUNTON John A. Carpenter of 22290 Brook- ___■ to succeed William J.", Franks of 5455 Beach St., Birmingham. as director of General . Motors Commonications Systems. Carpenter joined General Motors in the OidemobUe division la. 1996. He has been assistant dlrec-»' tor of communications since Mayl,.'. Wit. J.. * " " if Franks, who will retire under provisions of the GM retirement program, has been director of the rommunications “ 1941. American Stock Exch. NEW York (APi—ABWrleas SOMka; lFigure) after deeltnal* S3* In eighth*’) - Mim *1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGtJjST 8, 1962 PontidC/ Nearby Area MRS. HENRY R. LEI8MER Mrs. Margaret Buerger'of Auburn pack .yesterday at Lapeer County Service fop, Mrs. Henry R. (Louise A.) Leismer, 59, of 6844 Hatchery Road, Waterford Township, will be 1p.m. Friday in the North Bay Church, Walloon Lake, wittrtwilah therefHer body was taken from the Coats Funeral Home; Drayton Plains, to the Briggs FUneral Home, Petoskey. Mrs. Learner died yesterday after a long illness. Survivors include her husband: two .daughters, Mrs. Clyde Shelter Of Pontiac and Mrs. J Marquardt of Pefoekey; a Robert of P o n t i a c; and eight grandchildren.s —Also surviving are two afsl NEW MIRACLE FALSE TEETH RELINER 1 DENTURITE, a miracle piestic, now, on tnd set, in five minutes, wear mar pistes and est anything immediately. Stops clicking. Eases sore gums. Prevents food particles from getting wsder-youririeterimgh; talk; tne«Mr-witnout feu of embarrassment.: DENTURITE stays firm yetplW Lasts ■ yeu and morel Peels out easily II replacement it needed. Uppers, lowers or ptrtialt fit firmly and securely without daily use of powders; putts or cushions. Euy to use; tutelest, odorless, harmless to plans and gums. Money-back guarantee. At yvordrug counter. denturite ■ JPAtat TkRTH klUNlIt^. ATTENTION CREDIT MEN Poritl*c'$ only true cross-index is used by more. credit men than eny qther directory. Use Bresser's Cross-Index. DIRECTORY to; • Cheek by Addreet • Check by Phone Number • Oet names, aggreaaes and phone number, ot nearby llstinfs mast anywhere In the United Hlalea il — Call for Dalailt — BRESSER'S CROSS-INDEX TR 4-0570 Heights and Miss Emma Hart-wick of Petoskey; and three broth-John of Pontiac, August of Petctekey and William in Florida. ' FRANK S. LONGMI JHt Service for Frank S. Longmuir, charter member of Sashabaw United Presbyterian Church and retired farmer; will be at 1:30 p.m. Friday in the Voorhees-Siple Chapel. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Longmuir, 87, of ,710. W, Lake Angelus Road, died yesterday hi Pontiac General Hospital after a long illness. He had served one of the first three rural mail carrier routes established in .the area. Surviving are a son Stuart G, of Pontiac; great-granddaughter. He left no Known survivors. GEORGE G. SPENCER ROCHESTER — Service for for-ler Rochester-resident George G. Spencer, 89, of Croswell, will be 2 Friday at Pixiey Funeral Home, wijji burial to fojlow ih Mount Avon Cemetery. Mr. , Spencer, police chief tor the Village, of Rochester from. 1922 to 1936, died yesterday at his home after a brief illness. Surviving, are three daughters, Mrs. Edna M. Brown of Croswell; Mrs. Gladys Hamilton and Mrs. Rhea Chaffee, both ofDetroit; two. Glenn of Jeddo and Keith of Glendale, Calif.; -«ight grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren. Tfie Rosary will be recited at tonight in ihe Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home for Mrs. Joseph (Cedlia A.) Marius, 7! Whittemore St. tl service will be at 10 m. Thursday in the funeral home with1’ burial' following in Mount Hope Cemetery. * Mrs. Mart us, a. m em ber - of - St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church, died Monday fo St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. She had been 111 years;-"----Surviving are two sons, Basil of Pontiac and John of South Lyon; two daughtei»,^Mli- G*vrtfta Clevdaptf and Itfrs. Florence Sharpe, both of Pontiac; two brothers, Floyd of Pontiac and Stews* of DeerqeM^aa«MwirTm«OTr^gr« AfiltesCourtney and Mrs. Susan Fuller, both of Livonia. We# hi Partis, Hot in South; Tuesday Weather Bgck - By The Associated Pres* - The nation’s wmjtter.. patten showed only minor'ehanges today, with stunvers in scattered sections and hot and humid air dinging across, southern regions. No severe storms were reported during .the night. But heavy rain splashed some, areas Tuesday as thunderstorms rumbled across the eastern areas, including N e w York City, Philadelphia and in Massachusetts. Teamsters Me -Two Trucking Firms A hundred members of Pontiac Teamsters Local 614 this morning struck two trucking firms in Oakland County; ★ ★ The firms affected are the Farm-ington - Transportation Co,. of Ox-foi4-And -FaiTO}hgtfln--ein(h-Er S. Mather, Inc., of Farmington according to froyd Harmon, financial secretary of the local. JOSEPH KOI TMK ADDISON TOWNSHIP — Service tor Joseph Koutnlk, 72, of 2985 Lakeville Road, will be 2 p.m. Friday at Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford, with burial to follow at Oxford Cemetery.-Mr. Koutnlk died of a heart at- "faemti* production, refill' I covering approximately m <10; month period, for Oakland County Heating * for Information aha Office of the Director ' floor, County Office Street, Fontiao, Building, #1 Lafayette Stri Michigan, after August 8. OAKLAND COUNTY I —— ___________r BOARD OP AUDITORS Purchaalng Division Bugeno A. Oump, Dlreotor ----- ■ AugUli % 8, 10, 188 Harmon sold the local was claiming violation of contract-by the firm. 'He said the firtn had refused to settle a nmber of longstanding grievances. ’TVS' official of the two fir fected could be reached for immediate comment. Breaking-Enfering Brings Prison Term 7Vi to 15-year prison term was ordered yesterday'for a Pontiac man accused of breaking and entering at a local supermarket. Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland handed down the Jfckson Prison.r sentence against Elmer 0. Blnga, 46, of 269 W. WJson St. Binga pleaded guilty last month to the July 2 burglary of Surf Side Super Market,- 213 Branch St. He Was apprehended by' police as he lelt the store, minutes after a burglar alarm want off. Bazley Market 78 North Saginaw WILL BE CLO SED THURSDAY, AUGUST 9th Due to the Death of E. S. BAZLEY Business Will Resume as Usual Friday, August 10 9;30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. DRAYTON PLAINS STORE WILL REMAIN OPEN AS USUAL THURSDAY^ AUtrmir - «'*—“ Nearly 2 .inches of Tain doused Philadelphia in a six-hour period, with about one inch in New York City. Hail Far Worse ! JgWg Than Twisters^ More Costly: Destroys Crop*, Property Up to Millions of Dollars ‘ BARNES, AUOU8T 8. 1882. ErFIE . M.. 481 C TtjwmtfFlMjL . 8i; euer ii«ir H^VMhnK - % ■»*»■:, Miiftu, mmrsm WrmmmMLO* to**** and i 5 j Funeral Home with Mr, C Precipitation during the night and early morning was confined mostly fo the northern Atlantic and Pacific coasts, Great Lakes region and 1r.jmw>. (ions of Waterford Unit OKs Incorporation Study Waterford , Township’s Greater Waterford Community Counci (GWCC) last night endorsed i recommendation made by 'the tfiwn s h i p planning commission last month calling, for the establishment of a study committee to explore the feasibility of incorporation. Mrs. Edmund Windeler, president of the civic organization, said a GWCC delegation will appear at ( Monday’s Township BoanrYhcet-ta#-4irTff5rimmediate action on setting up a 15-member commit-| e.. The Township Board discussed the planning commission recommendation briefly at a meeting three weeks ago but no action wag taken. ..—— WASHINGTON - As sprln. moves northward in the United States, hail follows closely In its verdant wake. Hailstorms occur most frequently In June, though they ai? man earlier in thg south and later in the north. Trite hail falls oply during thun- erstorms, which unfortunately reach their peak during the growing season when the icy pellets can do the most damage. Hall la net as a tornado, bat I •troys more omw and property than tfcs Jean-frequent twisters. Kansas and Nebraska (suffer the greatest losses, _ A. historic 1881 storm in Nebraska drove through roofs and even house sidings. Hail stripped orchards, flattened grain, and severely Injured livestock. Men were-hurt trying to rescue frightened animals. Anothr hailstorm, on July 1953, smashed three million bushels of standing wheat "in Nebraska. The disturbance began ih Wyoming airi sewpt a devastating path 100 miles long and 8 to 16 mfl«* wide. The most costly hailstorm oh record struck Wichita, KaA., on Jam 28, 1961, Property dam- Euler to Serve Again on Hospital Committee Harold B. Euler, administrator of Pontiac General Hospital, ■ again on the government __ lotions Committee of the Greater, Detroit Area Hospital Council in 1962-63, it was. announced today. He alio served on the groups Jast year. The l$-man committee is made p of hospital personnel from Southeastern Michigan interested in improving legislation""!! pital-government relations. Occupancy Rato Down at General Last Week Pontiac General Hospital occi pahey last week dropped to 88.71 per cent — one of, the lowest weeks of the year, according to Administrator Harold B. Euler, Billings to patients were -the smallest for any week of this year at 1118,955, Euler reported. $5,500 Damage by Fire Estimated at Residence Fire of undetermined cause yes-terday resulted in an estimated I $5)500 damage- to the garage and home of George Moultruy, 5914 Southward St. The attached garage was gutted land there was considerable heat and smoke damage to the house, township firemen said. In the east, North Carolina, is particularly subject to hail loss be-castle Us tobacco crops are so> vulnerable. A single storm in 1952 destroyed almost $2 million worth of tobacco, the -National Geographic says, A FOOT OF ICE 1 Some storms have dropped iflore than a foot of ice on level ground and piled up six-foot drifts,^ Sioux Falls, S .D., has had to break out snowplows in June to clear hail from the streets. Twenty Carloads of glass were needed to replace windowpanes knocked out in a Denver hailstorm. Simple Funeral Slated Today tor Marilyn Monroe HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Marilyn Monroe, the waif who won movie stardom but couldn’t find happiness in her own life, goes to her final resting place today In a plain green dress. Although invitations to final rites for the 36-year-old blonde sex symbol were limited to about 15, police prepared for the worst—a mob scene that could involve thousands- of fans and curiosity seekers. Police and movie studio guards were assigned to keep order outside the Chapel of the Palms, nearby Westwood. By midnight crowd of 100 already had clustered around the entrance. vuisan. aooobt a im. har- dld WWard. MU Lansdowne, - Drayton Plain,; aft (t; beloved buaband of Muriel Shew Fleeber: dear father of Dallaa J.. and ' *rl° b BtoeraeUi ' .-----—, Jerry Redman ofllclat- tot- Interment In Ottawa Park .Cemetery, Drayton Plain*. Mr. • Fleaher will lie In' state at tbt Coata - Funeral Home, Drayton . age - «. win he Bald Friday. Ansuat io. * at- S p.m; at the BoiaArdet Pu-nerAl Home. Oxford, with Bev. LEISMER. AUOU8T 7. 1181. UuRw Amelia. 8144 Hatchery ltd.: Waterford 88; beloved wife IT^ orTHule ;;; " Use Ponttae Press WANT ADS Office Hourf ___ 16*5 p.m.—- Cancellation Deadline 9 a.m. day following firat insertion . Funeral Directors COAT3 DRATTpyiSADhl ^^OH 1-7717 employment, good earning oypor- - jag’ eoSiwf - mBunmc1 wrtn s5di . - - dkirabig. .... is. tefets, t Ihfiifd ttA and computlt n an extejitlvi n nt project. Ooot 'Im.'^MBprijlr,. _____.... John and William Hart wick; alio ovrvmd by eight • grandchildren. Funeral eervlce will be held Prt- Funeral eervlce — ---------- day, Ausuet 10. gt I p.m Mm North Bay Church, Wahuun Lake, interment), In North Bay . Cemetery, Walloon Lake. Mra. Coate Funeral Home. Drayton Matas., — gr"rr LONauuiR. Ayovtrr i. im. Frank •.. 710 Wait Lake Angelus Rd.: ace' ft; dear- fame «> Stuart O. Longmuir; Algo survived by one grandson and one . groat • granddaughter. Funeral Tirrm* -will be hold Friday, 11 at 1130 - - Horae.__ sSrassr* AUOVeT 8. 1*83. CB-cina Ann. 168 whtitemort at.; age ‘ 71; Near mother of Mrt. Oeorgla Cleveland, Mre. Florence 8harie. Basil and. John Msrtus; dear sister of Floyd Barlnfer, Mre. Susan Fuller. Mrs. Agnes. Courtney, and Ceorge Barlnger. Recitation ot the Rosary, will nt today ; *------- *■— *»-•-*- - ieivin a. schutt Funeral Home. Interment in Mt. Hope Cemetery. —|----rUI lie In etate at :. Schutt Funeral THATCHXR, AUODST ». 1181, Hlland M. 3868 Lakepolnt St.. Orchard Lake; age 71; beloved httghand of Nova Thatcher; 'be-n of Mrs. H. H. Thatch-I service wlll be held August I, at J p.m. PHPWUPaUpArfce-Orirfin Funeral I Home with Rev. William E. Lyle officiating. Interment In Cak Hill Cemetery___Mr. Thatcher will lie In - state at aparke-Orlf-fin Funeral Heme. Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME “Designed lor Funerals" ;ic.3JvgjBa>HARDT Foii'uiib Home, Reese Harbor. Ph. an-Qiioo HUNTGOIL,. 78 oqiaad Ava~ - FB^dllS D. E., Pursley FUNERAL HOME Invail^.^B/rrieo SPARJ^-GRIFFIN °*mt>et your iob and Credit or Olnoo Appointment* SPECIAL — COLD WAVE. ISM-Dorothy’s, *88 N. Perry, . FB ■^jMLOPWLjmtaM| MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 70S Pontiac State Bank Bldg. IlMm 1 Pontiac's oldest • ) PONTIAC MALL FLOWER* ANY OIRL OR WOMAN NEEDINO s*iSWrj*tsr'or'Ti) ty ewer call FE F87M. Couftdentlal. DAINTY "MAlb 8UF|>UEa. 738 Menominee. FB 8-7808. , oil WB tWh TH10 DATE £T-62 I will not bo responsible for any debts contracted by any oth-t£-»>an myself. Btsned Robert A. rillema. 272 Havana. Union Lake, «Sif and tern - Tkia toric Aug. I, IMS I will not be responsible for any debt* eontraet-od by any other than myself. Signed John Ihrka Fontlac. Michls ON and AFT*. August 7, IMS, responsible for any debts, book- . Reply to Boa 21, The Pontiac ‘' '' REAL BStaTB* dlfilgMAli . 7 ' FuU timo. Experience profomd. Member of MultlMo Listing Service. Phone FB M471 lor appolnt-- mont. lean W. 9ohram. Roaitor. WATNED EXPERIENCED . ALL-around furnace InsUtUor, call FE WANTED;' CARPBT YnSTALLBRS. , . Imperial Floors. 7211 Cooley Lake ' Hd*6). ' - ' ■ YOUNO -MARRIED MAN TO train for grin man work. Apply ' at Big BOy Drive-In. 3488 Dixie . Tf EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES and grUt help. Day and night shift openings. Apply 332 & . TUMnH . Rd.. Pontiac. 78J PcoUao Trail. . Walled Lsksaod 37W N. Woodward — Royal Oak. . , “ 823 WEEKLY FOR WEARINO lovely dresses supplied to you -by us. Just show FfiMoa Frocks to ATTENTION Mothers EARN |1S TO $20 PER EVENING BELLINO TOYS. NO DBMONBTOATOR'S kit to BUY. Cash earnlnfs each eve-- ning plus bommisslon clucks twice m month, bonus**, prises and many other kdvantage*. Ovtr 200 top quality ni catalogue. ' Toys and Td~M i _. ■m____________ CHAND18B. CALL OEOROB'S TOYf AT OR 3-0007 OR OA_____ horhood .through TV. Be an AVON represeittetlve end turn extra bourt Into money making hours. Phone May PE M800 or write Drkyton , tomers. average it ui BOOKKEEPER FOR LINCOLN-Mercury dealership. Call Lloyd Motors at FE 2-0I3I. BOOKKEEPER. FULL TIME, PER-manent job. 0120 Highland Rd. . (M-001. COOK WANTED FOli PART TIME THIS DATE. keeping, or tax service _____ traded by Richard H. Verwey cl 1210 Airport Rd., Pontiac, Mich. Bookkocplng *"■* “— «TwT Mm ~ Bowee, Perth___ J LOST; OOLD AND WHITE COLLIE to vicinity of Olddtoge Rd., anewera to Laeele. reward. FE 4-X808. LOST: idto ATUtUB OR AY POODLE. Pontiac Boltodlum area, reward." , FEO-3877. LOST; BROWN MALE POODLE puppy, vlolntty of Perry Park. Blue collar with rhinestones. Re- ward. 477 Cameron. ________ Eotf! DACHBHUND PUPPY, 8 months. Vlelnlty of E. Columbia . between Ivy and Laurel. FE 4-1742. too B. Columbia. Reward. | H»» WtHHH Mato 4 A, NEW UNIT OF INDIANAPOLIS _ Ins. Co. now formlhft- Wo Top Commissions—Fringe Benefits Two year training program with tratotog allowance. If you are be-, tween the ago* of 23 and '48 you might bo the man we're looking Wrtto A. B. Norton, Pontiac Press A PART TIME JOB , bonus. Call Mr., Oroon. i A YOUNG MAN J men, 1IK28, needed Immediately lor full tbno employment. Character reference and ear neceeiary. 1ST Mormatlon. call Mr. Mcllroy, Oil H p.m, "are you the man S.“7.J*rS**t organist tlona in us ruin ku -n opening for 3 COOK WANTED. 4 A.M. : ..9.mtijhlft.' No phone ea Inn. ,878 Orchard Lake A CURB WAITilESfl, ORILL AND ------n girt. Super UNDER ONE-ROOF You’ll Find Comploto Banking Service We are a full/service Bank helping just about everybody, everyday in some financial way— from Savings to Safe Deposit Boxes, Checking Accounts and Installment Loans for dvery worthwhile purpose—You get it all PLUS BANK PROTECTION. benefits. 176 tain t~ .... night. We deliver, collect and guarantee. Your hostessei got 18-28 per Pont. FE 8-4731, DEPARTMENT MANAGER For Womens SPORTSWEAR Large retail ori experienced mat_______ opportunity for woman wi strong retail baokground. « tlve ability and smart appoar-snee. Write Box 78, The Pontiac Jpnix....Tikib . cotfNTER om, Huron AftPly ln per>on’ 131 West FULL TIME HOUSEKEEPER BY elderly gentleman. West Side residence. equipped for comfort and tull^efftotency. Preference will be d in running a Huron sf. between t a EXPERIENCED" WOMAN, t DAYS, Jnlgble, must like children. Mt Restaurant,' 1 g«rr 1UL. Rochester, after 4 . .... EXPERIENCED SHIRT PRESS OP- EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES wanted, must be over 18. Apply to person only. Airway Lanes Coif-fee Shop, 4838 Highland Road. EXPERIENCED COOK WANTED, must have references, no other* FM Kr A! White swan. M-3# and PontlaSTakJ Apply to pern • Osborne alter YOU EARNING 61 WEEP* “* in route sales. Qualifications: rled, 22 to to.' high school educe tlon, dependable car, bom* phone good prevtoua work record. Ph FE 4-8818 lor appointment.___ A MANAGEMENT POSITION FOR A Iet“ oompjuiy to Rochostor f oualuioa men need apply. EXPEMBNCBD AlWQ mI|C||AHIC with tools,' fPr used car lot. Ap- ply Lucky Auto Saginaw, Fontlw. EXPERIENCED FRUIT MAN. Phone Ma 6-3018 after 7 p.m. booft kUDMobliLiko MiN. 8 -T . n, FB 44878, . HANDYMAN. PAR'i' TIME. EX- ----«d property, upkeep and Writ* Pontiac Prate Box tor rout* tale* opening ------- teach you now weekly. AMU-' high school -education, dependable car and Mil appearance. For personal Interview Mom OR 3-8888. Bi^*5t»u4ANCB Ial8TiAEptr Cleaners, Road. HOU8EKEL. _ drive, slop u.. . Bos 77, Pontiac Press. --- HOU BE KiEPEfi TO LIVE IN~tl Mutt be neat, dean, reliable,.Cleaning. Ironing and cooking. Ref. re-_qulred,_Oood salary, 844-4278. HOUSEKEEPER, EXPERIENCED, KITCHEN HELP AND WAITRESS, night work, Pasquales to Lake Orion. OaU after 4 MY 3-1421. LADY BABY BITTOr' aND LIGHT , for home tl___ HM after <■ OR 4-Otii; , NUMBER' 3 OIRL FOR INS0R-*"*• typing required, ago arsajg-ggto?”Mr-otomB' PHONE SALisTlXPERIENCiD Salesladies Experienced, minimum age 36 yea re. Pull lima and part time l toUowlng da- GOATS DRESSES SPORTSWEAR CHILDRENS WEAR , YARD GOODS DRAPERIES remodeling SALESMAN AND ESTIMATORS airport LUMBER '' m 4-im , AUGUST 1068 - WANTED:- WOMAN TOJUVB IN ■ad to generalhousewort and care WANTED I jupyfiES | j| FLOORS, PATIOS. DRITIA. CON ' wort tint can't be excelled. |M,n ■■ J J>----m.— j. M fimvi ,fwpyiwiiwii vpni •• \ Blue Bird Auction. We'll tSHXW*. JOE VALLBLY iltoirtad fNiiscslloitooiis _ ,— BHRrprtSn^iul" S. Uintr M. OA Mdtt WOtfflf WANTED OAKLAND PARK _c=ai. hour* wMhTFB»fag vicinity —. wHIfc i.wNfw.-...____________ . . woman pM'Vboosnkehipino. 6wn treneportatlon, 3 evenings * ---- laundry. I days r Diversified office etmoephere. I tng end order experietao* men tory! ■ "■ D PLAYER Pi pl rum. VowST TO BUT lifetime—faaclnattog r the gel with geed • Curb Waitress Ted’e have opening* tor young Previous legel experience « *»ry. ■, *i > . Personality important. Typing N BOOKKBimNdL ALfcT, ,!!awsstt DrWtwaltfngt, Tdhwteg 17 WAMTTO-l’WO OB 2-BEDltoOM ■Haas Kssgyfc IWM .'to* Short Ihrtaf ferarters PRJWTON, WALKER, SMITH ../..CieiwMNo, sbrvkP- MB.^ Maple , BMgjtan LRTMENT8 CARETAK mple. Free rent end utUltlee unmlsstone, 1 block from d wn. rnim-llri. BUllnxs. BI-OOD DONORS WANTED ' "hursde Instrucfioni—Schools '10PP 8SS__________ lOlffifcTi: LAWN won*!, # Idled grading end tan eoU. C dShpl«~i~-*^ ■ to me-el » A.m, Tuesday. Wednesday a Detroit Blood Service. ESTABLISHED WATKINS K0VT£, Open for right man or woman. Age 36 to <5. Average earnings for fair deafer El to j} — c~~ « Finish High School . No olaeeee. rapid progreet, P»re now for college. Study....... jlOKi* Hi spare time. For free booklet write to National School of Horn' Study. Dept PP. SS CM, Detroit 34. Michigan ; LAWNS MOWED, "‘ WE NEED” Lake Properties -COTTAOEE-YR. t SALE AND FO Buyers Galore t.i.'A TAWgs o - RED RASPBERRY PICKERS. Monday. Wed, and Frt Johnston, northwest corner ; Seymour Lake Rd. and Sash Work Wanted Malt H fainter. FE Mill, ConvalsscsRt—Nursing ELDERLY PATIENT FOR OCR modern country home, good «nd excellent cere, veciti ALLCASH^ 7m OR fBa equity It you are leaving state or mauey quickly,call u* fot 0 PHARMACIST. ■■■ _je hospital centreUi state age salary, and exporter ReplyPontlaePm*. Box 17. :. ; Work WmM Fomolo jS^Or S-S3M itevcwm.L0W. 2-TON STAKE-PADDING. OEN- CA8R FOR EQUmES MIDDLETON REALTY CO: • Etoa. FE Hill WANTED: COUPLE FOR APART. —it caretaker*. Full-time Job. Sal-1 " -^ivfltva age CASH aryplus living quarters- c - — nvmnMi jr»i plovment — References ply PontUc P COLORED WOMAN WISHES OK era! housework. Experlsnci days. 334-1821, LADY DESIRES DAY WORK. sMeartH yi^/FlOSc*. Painting & Decorating 23 Salss Help, Molp-Fpmale t-A FULL OR FART TIME SALES - work for- men and women In a profit sharing organisation. Set your own hours. work near home. Write. Pontlwtr Pres« 'Bnx 11 for further Information. MIDDLEAOEDLADY DESIRES light won, live in. More jn home than wage*. FE 3-S3B7. TWO WOMEN blSIRE Wt ------ . . v-r-. 4.1131, \ right l Oakland Ave. 1 :. ■: cash ____ _i SPARE-TIME OREBTlHa Card and Gilt shop at hpyne. Show friends, samples of our new 1962 Christmas and All-Occasion Greeting Card* and Olft*. Take their aiders and-earoto 100 per cent profit. No experience necessary. Cette nothing tk. try. Write today to- samples on approval. Regal Greeting*, Dept. 148. Font-dale. Michigan, BuiMlHg SsrvlcB--S>ppBs» 13 BUILDING MODERNIZATION. M^ffi *SwWE 84110. Hi-Fi Service ; MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICE , DAYb DR EVES.. PE 3-13*8 Tree Trintming Servles I SERVICE 1EMOVAL E**s^y ACE TREE SERVICE STUMP REMOVAL Tree rrnwwmmilMmHfeB bid, 632-26.0 ______ CAB TRIE SERVICE. TRIMMINO Genera! Tree Seryi,ce i-iiiel* mc mom. VATBRFORG trimming HAULINO AND — Pt Service ■ Ooiff HAULiMo .... Tffr oleanup. FE 3-7133, FE 3-73 JOHT UtD dEAVr Rubbish, fll< dirt, grading g| M-evel and front end loading, t TiwcitRurtal Trucks to Rent W-Ton Pickup* 114-Ton stakes TRUCKS - TRACTORS A1TOEQU1PMKNT Dump Truck*—Seml-Trallert Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor- Co. Opso Dally Ineluding Suodty IT waWcP _ T FAINTS INC. A. JOHNSON & SONS REALTORS FE 4-2533 1704 8. Telesraph Listings Needed Listing you# property? Incomes or stogie houses or selling your present equity. Call Mr. Reus. CARNIVAL By Dick Turner Sale Heussi I BEDROOM NEAR GENERAL Hoepltal. Carpal, gas h • r.---------- —-, tt mw. t. «ar*ge.. » T LEAST LC her. living Moft-i-> kltchen-«tt»ched Body, new taitt Sept., nle* neighborhood. immediate occupancy. W.-300. 3301 down, Call after J " “ FE 241364. ..jT, gas haat. baaement with ram. paved straet. only 8U.333 -AMO car mo. Bv*«. MM330. BRAND MmTlKDROOIt bRick. Tri-level home. Waterford Township 214 'baths. Oas hot water heat. Recreation room. Flro-piece. Built-In bar. ~ Family room. 3-ear attached garage and swimming pool. LUO privilege*. Woe 824.000. Owner will »*—•- Farit. .Diaylait Flaw*. ■ ...7 BY OWNER. LOVELY UpHIOOM ■; horn* on 3 e»tadqd..lr''^K=!r’--mtg. 2-3943. edrooms. garage, patio. I, -Sharp! 138 N. TUden. BY OWNER $600 DQWNL 3 bedroom brlbk. Oas heat, ‘‘Lofdt, Freddie! I’ve got a deal with tty* Hm> Y don’t fix flats! ” tmtirstnnfia~ra Apartmsnts-Unturnithsd 38 lint Housss, Unfurnithtd 40 3 ROOM AND BATH APARTMENT on WMhtasua tt. Adult* — Prefer working couple or working lady. 346 per modi I ROOMS. NEW KITCHEN. U WlL- _ ham* Straet. 373.33.' Key tot Number 13. i ROOMS1 AND BATH, 6a§ HEAT 173 id. FE 3-3331. t aid*. Oood lo- -^artmenl.. east _ oatlon.TO-i»OM»r ROOMS AND BATH. hUaY. HOt water, refrigerator -- NORTH SIDE ' Nearfr' now 8 room bungalow, * nle* kitchen, basement, oil beat. tie peop”.°233 Rutgem^TB^Bwd SMALL 3 ROOM A Lakevlew. H U J Couple 7T “* < MaYTON PLAINS. 3 BEDRpokt Wm* Aath. upPSr, bedroom IMnnSetaway jmt .. gnraga-. Ms acre. 1 OR3-m7 4 ROOMS AND BATH, UPPER. _________ BEDROOM. ,.. screened porch, large ge. lake prfvUegei. MA rjUBAR'-^TEL- WALLlb LAKE, RENT OR SELL, 3 bedrooms^ large living W“ screened ba and . dining ' glassed and porch, S-onr gnrau-. _______ lege*. LI t-ini before U a perfect beech. MOO monthly. ^ Klwood Realty 6*34413 FRANKLIN BOULEVARD 4 bedrooms Executive type home, many lovely features. Cqmer llOx 200 Jot. Oarage. Only *31.303. Apartments-Furnishsd Water, rang*, laundry mtdentlid loonUon, car ■amt*. OR 4-86W, _ 3 ROOMS AND BATH, PACE REALTV OR 4-0433 BUILDER LOW dSWn FAYilENT, 3 "Sip- I. Clerkston are1*. BRICK upper, clean, gas heat, stove —J refrigerator furnished. 130. | rooms And bath. First 8 ROOM LOWER FLAT. SEMI-FUR- neu. FE 8-— i ROOMS, PR seml-fumlshe . Newly ■H MuyiTE wnudidlt. il-furnlshed, nee • 3-3133. 2 ROOMS AND BATH. UTTLITIES - r~ * PTC 3 “ xxr-~ ROOMS, 1 COLORED 3 rooms and bath, near town, |18 per week. FE Wt 3-7333. _________J». M3 per li beach and boaik 373-1040._______ ~elSSS1Vh lake>ronts‘ Rent with option to buy - attractive 3-bedroom home. Oas heat, perfect beaoh, *103 monthly. BBAUTTPUL 3-ROOM Aft. Completely furnished in Early Amenean. Private terrao*. Until Labor Doy, 3333. _ . llwood Reolty 363-3410 NORTH O# PONTIAC $40 WEEKLY apartments, living quarters, 960, toko land contract " LAKE FRONTCO itiloi N, r* * MA 3-3333, Pontiac, 11.300. call . 34 Belvlew. 3 ROOMS: ADULTg ONLY. M . WOlt-MA 8-3433. PRIVATE , LARGE C O T TAOS 01. ---- ■ • -nd Lake. MaiPSa'jlwnJMb ___t 11 383 a weakTEM I-oooo lakefront" b o'tt a o e s at Lewiston. FEB-tOMalurB p.a SUiiCtfIT FjawsrsFJrs gvaaafrg II. OB 4-3383. I Modem 5 Room APARTMENT IRRACE, fireplace. 1V4 batha. 3 car i LAND REAL ESTATE i 6-6442 AT til BLOOMFIELD i«,n»«vE. NEXT TO ST.. J SEPH'S HOSPITAL. FE *-3>2I. Orchard Court Apartments ................ man; ... vat* entrance and ahower, $7 week. FE 2-2416. IF VQU ABE LOtMCMOJOB AT-tractive room, call Fl 8-7333. PRiviLiaEs, payment or trad*. FE 3-73M. ■ SmssnHs —iaiaDam wIaIhIIv • IMR . LADY, ■ L_______ SLEEPING ROOM. OARAOB. BUS. FB M437, Ml Chxmborlxto. ^ ar m FE 4*861S : M II lalmar lit. FARTtr ' "vURNisHED intOOH apartment., FE 8-3w3. Rooms With Board Rent Huusts-Furaisliod MEN ONLY. REASONABLE. 141 Vk Oakland, FE 3-8103. ROOM AND On iOARD 13614 Oakland Ave. FB 4-1334. 3 fiiAtt W6hf«IfcW MbR = — 1V4 bath., eeparat* dln'"« Full baaement. 1'4-car FE 3-3224. ( Root 0fflcs >pws 47 1 ROOMS. NO CHILDREN. AFTER 6p.m. FE 2-4467, * “TOUls AND BATH CLOS1 Mown and high ««hool, a ROOMS. MODERN. furn. MA 8-3030. 8 ROOMS. PARTLY FURNISHED t RENT. 4840 DIX- ' Lake i ___ .. ___ (with payment). EM 3-4213. ACROSS>iiCM aiBNBa** lu per n 3-7033. 3 ROOMS Frlvata bath. Clo.a_to I Utllltle. turn, FE 4-3873. 3 ROOM8 AND BATH. OAS HEAT. ‘—ir floor, private entrano*. FB BUM,. Mi ... „„ __.... couple Sent Ito Jua* I. FE MUC X MAbtFUL LAKEFRONT HOME fn - Im g $9,500 -HK^SS 49 Mm Hoesss am up. newly rei d bath. IlnUhed i --lace. 14 bath 1_PPRWIPP .fenced yard. 3-ear garage. WALTON ABBA _ . | *.*** mLSmMM m >• » w MB BWMMMh faflBt N Mg lot. 3360 move* you fc7»a*aa ®s.nr ■ “VWhossel^. NO MONETDOWN" NO MORTGAGE COSTS: Brand , new. wat. a job movaa you jn. LarseiV 3-bedroom with In. MTSO 3«edroom with OfUt- ; ' In OMMM,*' 00b flow*. - iMoifcJ £ NEW HOUSES ng-I —IOA1 Huoaou Touns rw 1 NEW HOM&5 Wo hava semifinished h terlor finishing. Large lota, b menti, aluminum sldfig. SIM di_ NEW MODEL HOME lahodr ga* hoatrm ittVU, black-topped Otraota. will taka trade Mo, 10 par cent down. BUILD'NOW We wUl build on your lot or Batte-BIH. MoUrtolt furnlabi Visit 3 bedroom model* on Oar OPEN 13 TO S DAILY OFOTLITE BUILDINO CO. ARTKU.I C. COMPTON A I 4600 W. HURON. DAYS OR 3 ... EVES.. OR MSA. OR. iff 3-7083 ■ BY OWNER a *11 modern, full buomont, street, lakefront. MY 3-371L 133-FOOT CANAt r’ "°iS«te8T8 with or wlthmitjaseroents lb 34 ft. kitohoa aod family w MODRI AT 700 COAWDf I block B. of Oakland SSSFkn TEMPLETON ELIZABETH LAKE' PRIVILEGES 3-ROOM COTTAOB — LARGE LOT Gitr of Sylvan Lake -WtJrtibNEtfg- adjoining dlntog. .room, modem buULto"kltob4n OtUtttoa, very nice recreation room on lowor lovol, > ss,t£sejrs5s"^& WRIGHT aklond A?*. FE K. L. Templeton, Realtof ^BEDROOM Norm and. WILL BUILD “toin-aroPofflif* BtsVaeot1^ode™lol 8 Don McDonald COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK NICER THAN NtCE HAYDEN ECON-O-TRI 2-car garage. F "«r fetfced lots vas i s shrubs. In ths D . This home I* part basemei 80x200-foot A 4340 Dili* fiwy.. Drayton Plain*. L-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL $9,995 GAYLORD INCLUDES M’ LOT FINISHED FAMILY ROOM PAINTED INTERIO” % CAR OaRAOE OAS HEAT 164 OAR GARAGE OAS HEAT $1,000 DOWN attention Doctors. Nun'si, 1 Hospital Workers, wo have four nioi hotting within half Jo, two Hooka Of Oonoru Hospital. A ■ —-teous salesman wUl bo Mod i show rou thesa homes. Doll . MODEL OPEN DAILY ’Tit 8 P.M. NICE 8 room hqUM on East ’ Princeton. Ha* tm MU hath*. Extra lot. Eitra opartmont rent# for 163 per month. . LAKE PRmLBOEE Largo 3- i rYHY— —Ok out 1 bathe. M-58 at Teggerdln* ltd.. WtLL DUPLICATE ON TOUR LOT J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor , gas htaT U paymenu. CaU MY 1 SCHUETT INDIAN VILLAQE BRICK; 3 “bed-mi, kir “ ansMir11 Skll new ray, now sidewalk*, paved Reasonable lor this loca-,t $14,600. Term* arranged. Lawrence W. Gaylord * I Btffl GAYLORD in Waterford. EMERGENCY SALE. I • bed.,— tanok, biitmlni. ihady lot, shady street, Walking distance to Fon-Motors. onfji 67.980. Where COLORED; 3 Bedrooms "O" DOWN * DON'T mss OUT ON THfSCTANCB OF looai from ] over 33 loooUona to Moiel at Ml (Between FrankUn and Mo i'-Seij11 EIGHT-ROOM HOME. basement, garage. Everything In god fio.aoo total prTo*. 2-2621. I bedrooms, condition! •call MY $250 DOWN 3-bedroom raaoh, bloo living non -'ll picture Wtodoy. Urge kltchei FOR LEASE-OFFICE ( ....... TOWN, Con work out non rent. OR ridOkOhlVATE RATH. EN-trance. ill week. Heat lum. 7264 Ues from. FootUo to June. EM 340M. SaUWOI. HOME. 3 ROOMS, 3 J -- —ige. Waterford area, <— ltd or teen-ager.MS. 3 r furnished, freshly dooorot- •d, boat furnished, separated bed-•opms laundry faollltlM, children velcom*. near school. SLATERS '33 N. Perk* St._ Days FE 4-3643 Nlghts FE 4*6137 I and Hatil''BecorateB. Xy **3 „a1rraber thr°u*1' kANDON jAitk.........siikALL. MoS- 3 OR 3 HedIioom, corn!r~Lot! garage, 33.630. UL 3-3313, j-beOroo’* kXlcK. iMaioo Lot. Ben*dfor*f,bonaliion. mS pBEDRoOk home Tor saLe Nights FE 4-6137 Fisher Boby. 376. 334-3612. kOOM PRIVATE nifTtANCE and bath. Inquire It Clark at. "ROOMiHtdBLY FurHuhXd, Rent Houtsi, Unlurnithed 40 TER-HOME, L£M ^n^y3m-^.P*V * TRADES andexchanoes 2-family income - frame, r™- ‘ “*■ heart . BEDROOM R AMO .. ■ race, twT call FB 4-16M. J bmdroom~wIbt side h CLARKSTON AREA 3-bedroom lot 173 x 138, l Oreon Lake privileges, Ml.------- 3100 a month, tncludss taxes and Insurance Olt 3-12M. FB 4-4809, ~ ' ~ ~ Coroprallon. .......... Floyd Kant, Realtor. i' HOoii House. $4i pEr m<5n7h. 1 Mupl^ pref.rrad, IMS Cass Lake IBEDROquit!' iti^BATilt...........Iease- moot, Sylvan Lake privileges. 3120 3 iibROO'k HC^lE, 1 2 MILES west of Telegraph, near grad* aod Junior high school. EM 3-4774. BiDROQMa. kitchen builT- l*w HUecnon Lew Hileman Rehlior -----Un W. HURON . ROOMS, LOWER. ALL,-adult*, close in. FE 2-171S. . aROOM*IX)WER. CHILDREN WEL-come. Close to downtown Portia* OPd OOhOOle. FE 3-3437. i« Weekly, 3 rooms, private bath. MM entranci. Heat, Utlll-tles. parking. Apply 80S gt Clair. BACHJBA3R 3“ ROOM*, CLEAN comfortable. Privah;' bath. «■ trance 3* block t» Tel-Huron. PE 4 REDRboii HOUSE. PULL BASE-ment. Oil hoot. 178 mo. or loos* ...on. FB 4-8134. lI1ftiwUf~FOR" RENT. SUIT- 3JB®OTO^rON Jb acrI, iliioj'. aewlng room, 2 ft furaaco. noujy dw i(*, fireplace, sen ioraled. FE 3-23M. Harry 1 i child, newly terms. Owner, I mi home ni dEayTOn Wood* no children, BIOS per “ ‘ bolqimTtSS^ child weloom*.'ill l orchard Lake A*mw*. Fbona 8 rooms aod both. All on 1 Ho, Newly decoratal I children p -"ted. Hand fired coal fumai per month. Inquire K. .jr^oit*.?.fwra.! t4m. i ROOMS ANb tfTILITY. FAViB mt Mat fmnrmrf v»f $1. $6,360, $600 , Holden N«d ii@r? fl“"” INDIAN VILLAGE — » room* and bath w)lh unfinished upstalra, A very attrectlv* hem* with alum, aiding, and epotlessly a I * a n throughout. A dream kitohen, TaKinnio _____ „„____.... 11,800 down. C. Schuett, Ml MM3. I ' ROOMS ' AND BATH, VIMsT JOSLYN^ I $55 A MONTH | wow including a—r— BEAUTIFUL Completely iuiimi w < American. PrlvaU torraee. ; Uwjr READY SOON . .J-Oorwiiri tdwk eart land, I nock north it 3 1:88 “wiKScmjt RSALT1 own on saleo movas ROOtt HOtiiE. OAll HEAT. 2 :ar garaga with store to front, mtonabi*. 33» wessen. 1,11 A3@wiiRo«e'"'r2 'rankiln Bird, W 3-3333 nnA 3110 Highland Rood. ■HUi 14> Franklin_____ _________ XlKHAVEIf. I BEDROOMS. -TSEjWm lit, stJ leoT, com put« i eoupta “j KSJS i ,Ei®B irtvllegas, IlM- L “ 1330 or M2-I7I4. _________________h horns T baaemanL On your lot Howard ,1. .M 5 UnTON. COUBT APARTMENTB j I Are you looking Mr ole.ana““-um opartileiM JfhMV wo i RENT $55 MONTH-NEW 3 BEDUpWm CARPETED 1 r oioniiAT wiih attached jjtri I______{^ wlndowi. W’Y* ; LARUE OININO AREA , ' AyaJuthio Soon, . KMSVtK $ KETTERING •q. i. a.» - " TvSTv tlR * pan* windows. lull bat______ kitohen with buUMi*, earpirt ail drapes. Below PHA apmalsal with ■mall down na/ment 3333 Denby Dr <» J.230* bp appointment only.. WMm, uburE heiohYe AEEA. dWinii l1 * ipsrs ' Alburn Hcightg-Q6vnei\ Aubu ■ „ ■ J-hcdroom ranch. Baaemtnl UL 2-3384 aftor « P M. & I. with 3 bedrms. each, . ttlon, good oondltlon throughout. 333,804, 34,800 down. Will trod#, naturally I MILLER ABEA—Brlek, alnglj etoiY. •In ranio and ovojtfc hug ly room with district. MAKE OFFER. Deslribl* 3-bedroom frame, lorg# laudMapod lot-via plenty Of Ohnitu and traea. 164-oar garage, oeranuo HU bath, oak noon, plaatered walla, baaement. ga* automatic furnace., AakUtg 114.300. Moods extorter printing, oood neighborhood, mown by kp- > Motion. eSWip. iter and IrTvan-r 17,330. *1.000 rtroom, ranch. 1. Vacant, tot- 4 ("“ttiiOOr REAL EfTAI < ^ MuliStSo iuiit^imrvt MmM., 90-FT. LAKE fronUge, V ----cottage of 4 foot,.., ■ Lawrence W. Gaylord Indow. Urge kitchen ' _.ea, foneed lot. Only t 37Y80.lt'* vacant, oatt now. ■- NEED ROOM ? Then ion this 7-room borne with * •*—— heat, urge lot, 3-car go- > - steal at $7,000. See it fSKr."'1 CRAWFORD AGENCY WaltCO 323-2303 Flint MY 3-U4* MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE IRWIN HOYT North Fnd lovely 3-bedroom homo 1 located' close t large kitchen with dining tUlT finished bpaomrpt, motle hoot, I6t-eer go attached jpitNo riUMrfMI You chould *ao drooms, 164 story, ohmo to 'r^fuirsSiUrre r taiagt drive. Near Clarkston 3-bedroom ‘tri-level family room, flropUi range and oven, 164 toched 3-0*r xaroge . #n lovely wooded lot OHM -— tapped street, will toko trade- bJsa; Iho, M-loceted NICHOLIE Near Fisher 4-tWdfMm TOM*; located J walking dleUne* to liahor 8 ho* full D*s*m*nt,aautomoUo few.1mifvra, cant August 1*. Muet son. Owner moved out of state. Mipt ooU. WATERFORD WM MENTI LIKE RENT. ranch With carport. ru Vay&hAS* ANNETT EAST BIDE 2-famlly near dow« entrances, tors* tootle hoot Your for this, ooll to • Near MSUO V 3-btdrm. bungalow 1 condition, built to 11 Eve*. Coll Mr. CesteU fb mtii* Nicholie & Harger Co. 8364 W. Huron St..,__H H)U Welt Side—3-Bedrms. owner win s»U or accept ■nritor bom* In- trod* on thla attractive bungalow, .full baaement. — cr-‘ *---- Paved, shaded %Si Near Fisher Body 2-famlly. brick, f rih*. and bath dn. (» bedrma.), 1 jrma, Md hath up (4 hodima ). Separate baaeoMnU, each unit ft* lia own goo *Uam UPPER-L0NG“ r-ty-— LAKE ESTATES ftoSS^riol .Warn.* rtt Largo living room onq dtolng r/aar»n—1 - for swimming tal to) as..« isa.' 5-Apt. Brick gffS'l PRIVILEGES OK TWO LAKES ^11; Jrf Executive ^ torUk.rrncA^tmh r, ahaded. li SELL OR TRADE gotnt b ■ ooraor lu.. ________ 7x21. liana ttraplaes. 1 windowi. oaipottoi, , modal littohon, Hot- rs-rs,' WE WILL TRADE . - ANNETT INC."R VALUET REALTOR FE 4-353t STOUTS Best Buys ..Today WILL TRADE or SELL This hssrly-new brick ranch which features a Malt-foot living .room, -------mCC----------- family na, Tt4 rnnm, separate din f kllehen with ell landscapaa l--. . — -ago. outdoor grill. A good ie at m.000 with 12,000 dn. I * chopping. I to, Imm» AUBURN-CROOKS AREA—Dellghtli CALL-TODAY.. Drayton Woods *ute, Sv bedroom home JetWUtog. CanieLd'X- F oak itoorg. gas heal. Ited. storms ana set.. Large kitchen with dinme wWTirwafi LOCATION I CALL TO Warren «Stout, Realtor 77 N. lagtosw gt. Ph. FE MISS FOR A QUICK BALE, CALL UBI BATEMAN Auburn Heights 85ft?1hllvlng''room W?th'dl 20 Acres dinme ... Unenl block OPEN' Colonial and Rancher Daily 5-8 Dutch Colonial 4 bedroom. El!_______ „ MR_________ •Me irui and a realistic price J8I»!« tTOUf BL_. ee! Oyertosed. a-cai hue at door. Phone for in One of cj onlytt MAY WE Ranch Bungalow Only 4 i ■■ . ■ Breeaewey with MropiaMi _______ _____ntebur ________ , in (he City: paVbd Itrofli. itda-walk* and all ally ccnvtnlancaa. Humphries FE 2*9236 city Just taka over gfpar coats. Approx. $1,600 w Don’t wait too Ion*. A Buy Of tbs .%ri$ i area eonvenwnl to schools shopping. Priced for Quick s Only $lo.7»0 with 41.100 di b3&«. ss BSU*SP3r,S.T» 8X ' One bedrocen up. Beseroenl. gas .RSTdo^'^d ff» Country Living . In the' city. A nice ■ HB water, v*e < ; Suburban Comfort At only llt.BM, a-bedroom brick ranch on torm wall-landscaped lot with fmeed reap yard. Base-msnt, go* heat, dlumilllt ' !tM“ Mai weal of town. Only il.45l If You Are . - ■ A pwXetbookjjtoehrr you n SOS ft- “diixf « Sr: heat 'and carpot^tochided ‘ t Ssm-.s^sftir"1 i They Say We Are Trading Fools! May We Show You? Zi& ar DRAYTON PLAINS - 41,000 ------ will put to this 4 bedroom rancher with nice large rooms. Oil AC Furnace. Largo w x .IN lot. Anchor fencing. Children belong here. Only is,wo. ______ i kitchen. 4 largo bed roan Its. glassod-ln sun porch, ago. goto on largo lot, I ir clsrkston. 114,044. Torm 0 wall carpeting. Built 1 range. At modem . Large N - *** “ LOOK! A BARGAIN! Nawly painted ranch -turn wall-to-wall carpi large living iH A family eleMRIMR extras, on n large tot a chain link fence. Own or trade for A larger 1 chard Lake vicinity. WATER FRONT - With 107 1 cnrpetlng and l bo naloead w or wlu a You Don’t Need Gash to Trade Your Home LUT WITH US — Wt end trade. 23 yr«. Open Al:40 Multiple L Bass & Whitcomb L-. H. BROWN, Realtor - ON Elisabeth Lake Rood Ph. PE 4-SMt or FH I-NIO EALTORS FE 3-7210 30M Auburn near Adama Rd. • SPECIALIZING IN TRADES1' O'NEIL TRADING 18 TERRIFIC KENT HUNTOON LAKE PRIVILEGES: THIS ONE OUTSHINES THEM ALL. only 1 .Mock from Huntoon Lake. S bed- CENTRAL HIOH AJIEA—Here I a fine weal side 4 bedrm. horn that Is In ttn* condition. Plaaaar -kllohen, tiled b>u>. nlutoMA welYi carpeted living hogany paneled family with natural fireplace, tog gtoai door wall , h ■ out- Yd a California -re etelned fenced-in hack plus attached a‘.*X OXBOW LAKE AREA -moving, must soil. AUuetlv 3-bedroom ranch homamn fl dtUon. lli iDed haUi«wHtol place In llvtno family room mu oMfmnut recreation rooir CLARKHTON — Here 1$ a good 4 bedroom homo that eould be con verted to 4 bedrooms. 40-toot Uvlni gas heal, % lieges. 114,SOI Jot. City, sewer end weter, well to wall carpeting, lovely recreation room with Vt bath, aluminum patio. 115.500. 4 weak possession, Will toads I BEACHWAY . PRONT BEAUTY I miP Lake wood Village. This a bedroom trl-tovol has t full baths, lovely spacious kitchen with bullt-ma, double tofMffdi room. 4 car h WEST SIDE S-FAMILY — Inoomi Esslly converted to six-family -Three bedrooms, separate bnsi ments^ond jiss fumscra for esc — Pries reduced to $11,000. Terms your ontortalnment. wall to wall carpeting throughout, family room IW o|r-------------- ?&n Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 44N Dixie Hwy. ti Telegraph PE 4-0114 — Open Eves. Free Perking EAST SIDE BEAUTY. 4 bedrooms, fun basemwl, nice kitchen with., gating area. . breeseway, IVk. oar garage, fenced yard, A rill Stlrb DORRIS LAKE FRONT — LATE REASON OPPORTUNITY — Owner transferred to Wisconsin, wanls to buy then. Investigate Ihle white -—~ 3-siorv home on a bssutlful to over 300' of ■ J of too aual-uy loaturoo of tola fine homo, bdar attached garare. Profeselcnal landscaping. Im- DRAYTON PLAINS-RETIREMENT ROME: tb.090 . . . 2 loti, gtotUI wlto jjreat^ abundance o^ flowera gtoastd-to porch, j from Loon Xakt. WEST SUBURBAN toll true. A brlok 1____ USA «n*w„h'« jard^fenced, all this LAKE-FRONT PRIVACY: An leland. ----------wdhull L&a. widli ■ sharp Ajoadroton G.I. No Money Down —m, Is aU n wffi, 00»t Eg ahimtoum Mojji»! and •r college. Access NO tola - -T) boom auppor Lake prlvUsgas tor awlm-mlntoJtoMnl and pionKir is. sum. PONTIAC WATKINS BBTATMj —I Brick rsnch home, Mistom-buUt to perlsolton. I bmrpams, lull base-ment. country kitohen. lMxlli lot and s 2-oar garage, 7 OFF JOSLYN - tt-MO:. NN down. 3 a. month, Included tain and luranct. vaoanl, newly decorated. ' DORRIS A SON, REALTORS jffmiSfiiwi WEST SUBURBAN RMtCH-■ BR With 4 bedrroms, wall to ' wail carpeting throughout. IHEn mwtoage eoeu l to handle, gll.500 full price. RAY O’NEIL, Realtor S' FAMILY APARTMENT BUILD- CASH LOANS $600 to |2500 n Oakland FUEL OIL TRUCK AND ROUTE fl for 'jEtoi With dtojr“ “ ,;,, : .-Pwy MoBo»aMon. ,i ^ iK inn On hOBOf any place County. ' Tou receive full ainoupt in oaeh (no dodueUonsi. toe fome or eery noxt .day after making Awwlii. I MU, -ue oondlltoP- PE MSB- )AVENPORT~ 1 YEAR OLD. ALL *P*'PSSi mlral refrtocratto iklto frootong unit and an aledtne range. IIA Borrow fi Mile, you *tTStotI SDM. Complete Uno of BM» fmnis 'fngiWii' gfT rrnir mm down taclwUng stock. • • . ‘ MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION jSn^‘SifemSsEH. ‘ FREEZERS -, v... PRICED F^M $146.88 or Detroit WA closed ^brands, sorotoltod. w- . rtto ysjues.: timm whno thg, lest. Michigan Fluorescent. 403 SUDS-N-DOGS Along with dairy ourl makau -_ roglner ring on buoriiM4. Yours for small down payment. E-z monthly payments. Also' $-room Voss & Buckner, Ine. ROOM 40*. NATIONAL BUILDING rm **» ■ HAGSTROM 'CGMMim^YliPfoM.At- DAMP For Hom- Ownership and SB......... SUBURBAN TAVERN less H___- hour from Detroit Rear, malar .. autn-ptomr aniif approx. $3,000. Mo. rent lncludst fine large be—* and apt. ranted for git- 1 CASH AVAILABLE NOW 0 pay off all your bills, on tract or mortgage, pro hshles. PE XiM. oooD useB 1 Peer Appliance- EM 3-4114.__ | AND 3ROCERtE8 CASH :er. cake lake area grocery northwest o Detroit. 171,000 gross with abson ten ownership. 3-room apt,1 WII TRADE. Bed estate Included e 45.500 down plUI IJoek. BHafiHW?-' WflhtoSTf. ...jeasary *-1 tofrHj1 “Huw do you expect to join the Peace Corps- when i you dp Is fight with your bipother?” ’ PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE, REALTORS Member Fertildga Loans to $2500 Lodoe avellable to home purchases fe yip ygeaWlni totormatlon.1 EM 3-HM » to O- . ___________________jniyr. IBM W, Huron T " * FE 4-4011 TAVERN WITH TAKE OUT AND turn. 44-4* months t all your debto with meiim’ poyRtont. . ,,, Fadiily Acceptance Corp.- — NetouM nd|l- fi4* * j Pearson’s Furniture, 44 Orchard Lake Ava. ~ 1 |Y 1 .. FRIGID AIRE DRYER., 474- t»-PC. ' green secllotial.eio. Dlrlsdco i, size 4, *3.50. 444-4487. REFRlOERAfOR if now, single, door 178. 844- , Sale Houses SEWARD NEAR AUBURN 4 bedroom*. lull hosomont, carpeting and drapes. *100 dOIRI, apprOx-lmstely i«* par month. Real sharp homo on corner lot. PAdE REALTY SBUm________BUILDER BEDROOM HOME , .JU. combination storms TAVERN With SDM near Pontiac. Oroi etoso to M0,m. Only M.4S0 d 4SMM BOITLANDER CAMERA, AC- HOT' WATER HEATER. 30 OAt- $89.50 valuo, 148,88 , marred. Michigan t 393 Orchard Luke. — 18 MI 7-acSl Erea. OA UNO HiiTER' Lots—Acreage ; WETBUILD *9,500. J bedroom Trl-Lovel, plastered WIkllS, oak floors, blron — boards tormlee counter tope, - T'-yfficiOTTRST on^stihuno 81. with sidewalks, eurb and blacktop. >l,300 *aoh. PE *-0521. 4 ACRES—NEAR Ug-Hh—WOODED 8 ADjbSfSw WOODED LOTS — 03.000 takes " ^ OA *-1888. . , JT „ 'will sell kBw sfAWiiina steel 'HaUnii'ant bqulpment and {trampolines along with lease a or midget goH coarse. In thrtv- * Ing Union Labe, or----------- location. 383-8488. y , _ TOOETHOTMlpg FOOD Rdrt- S Sf ^n fvtSF^I^NRITE l^iNER AND 4 L1VINO ■' o tor hougotralier. IRON PXRsSmXn . PUP •toker. auto, control!, inter*, blower. OR 3-4888. KBLVINATOR I PRIVILEOED LOT I because of hoelth. Exo. buy. II take land bontrairt^or uamfll 'jraLjsftwV MODERN ^ I. In good oomlltlon. UL 4-1 i top -2207. ON THE WATER, brink *»"«** home family ______ with glaaa sliding stove and oven, nil bedroom __. element, and diplnp L ACRE* Overlooking Big Lake — private easement .** WE ALSO HAVE SEVERAL TRACTS (•■ OF LAND PRICED RIOHT AS ------ -- - ^»aa* » miles from Sals land Contracts Real Estate. FE 4- n TRADE. WILL ACCEPT AUtO. * nd contract, home or equity u I or port down on 0-room mod-■js Woot atdo.horeo at W^-M?. Clark, FE 4-71*8, Res FE 4-4413. SZ£ Real Botato. refrigerator, electric jrockor, rag. OR 3-7824. Evans livino room furniture: DUN- can-Phyfe dining room set, Ironer. FE 4-4433 kit. 8408. down FHA. bath, largo living i ■Un porch. tuU basameni, z » garage, Jl.OOt down, call B. SsSl!kl»' - OXFORD DISTRICT lies from Pontiac City sandy loam. Wolf nd suitable for $15.- . Brown. FE 2-4410. Evo. year contract. OR 4-0104. An iMkBcWifif ior tour Land Contracts «XtLMlL. SHtrL1 bit lor ti ton pickup. 4M‘ » Dr.. Waterford. Inis Clallilni MOVING, . ---------------- ------ pen, baby-tenda. swing set, 4 mahogany end tables, mahogany oof-toe table, maple end table, lamps, OIRU' CLOTJUNOjnZBS »3 1 Call nftornoona. FE 4-4*10. i- Sale Houssfiold Goods 65 I College. Holly, MH ID OR WHY I apartments, { —... .43 Chamberlain. 1 DUPLEX, EXCELLENT lion Inside and oak. , dura and FE 8-t718( < t/m to Springfield Twp m 1-75expressway 1100 per acre on torm*. ith, Realtor, PE 8-7841. CONVENIENT ________■ _______l_ Watkins Uko *0x170. Lsrge oak tree. 81,188 — Lot too cosh holler. once owing of 88,488.40 at cent 4182014 to bandit. So | years. Several ' other cotww C WtS1 Realtor a MM uSSf0*™** ha T-88I8 AUTOMATIC DEFROST REFRIO-eretor and freeser. Soil or U—'* Schleks. MY 4-4711. Atf CIOdtHTIONBR. 110 OR 440; apartment (1*0 electric rani lit; 50 olonn. guaranteed irigarntora, stove*, and wssba ROCKFORD DININO ROOM 8ET. glass covered table and bulfet. 0 chairs, walnut. Cheap. FE 5-0717. , M ArFF>AY LAKE'S^ Blue water near tola 80x110 altt REALTOR . 4900 W. 1~ WELL SECURED LAND CONTRACT with a 11.455 discount. to pi 04.170. Monthly pavir 1 payments E Wantsd Cantractt—Mtg. 60-A 10 6~ ACRES. L. COFFINT n deep - dlsnv family ______ this house Is ■ — svorything fit_______I I Custom buUt — will oonsldoi land contract go part of dot 3-BEDROOM BRICK~ — fireplace YOU SHOtlt.D SEE THE NEW BU1LD1NQ IN Cherokee Hills l Controlkd to protset bet homes. It's 100 ft. wooded, n AN IMMEDIATE SALE FOR mirrors, lamps, rusa, and do*k*. Everything In used furaltura at bMgateprlCSS. ALSO NEW LIVING ROOMS, BEDROOMS, #t*ttos, rugs, and mattrassss, factory aoecods about ft price. $24, 5-pleco wood dinettes *15. gas and alsetrlo stoves $10 up, Frlgidalrs electlc Ironer Md electric dryer, chests, bod*, 0-ploco Duncan Phyfo during set, odd buffets, all ilgea. *5, table and floor lampiiToeoier Babe, ohlld’a dreeslng^ti cans Furniture, 43 Orchnrd Lake FE 4-7001. 3.ROOm"%s5i?ATED COTTAGE - ft mu^hjom^mitor.^elea e out Blliabeth Lain Rd. 1 W O’ Ponilac Mall to t Lake Rd. — Turn right on your land contract largo or 2 small. cal' Mr. Hitter, FE 4-3W, Broker, 3M0 Bill Lake Rd. LAND CONTHACIS , PLASTIC TILE, Booh ...... M WALL TILE, 04” ......... 40c PI. 1 0X14 RUOS ................ 14.08 "BUYLO" TILE. 104 S. Saginaw -..J TELEVISION. VERY OOOD. *40, Peer / ----- 9 4 ROOM* OF SHELL COTTAOB NEAR LAKE - furnished — porch CARL W. BIRD, Realtor ..... ~ W ,h,r si-.r-b avhti Crescent Lake UNDERWOOD R MA 5-2615 OB 4d AVAILABLE FOR DRAYTON PLAINS Walton Blvd., comer of Melnoi 70x300 ft. corner. Commercli Oood business locoUon. Borgoln. PONTIAC REALTY ra 8*275 CASH_ load oontract, equity ifr * . Call Tod McCullahgh 4 ps. living room suite stop tables, 1 cocktail ti 4 table lanr J-- ' • ., RUGS Ixlt Foam Back ..... 410.45 up 4x5 Bralda ..........» ISO up 0x14 Braida •r?lM»Sf40.''No obligation. ARRO REALTY, 4144 Oaas-Ellsabeth Rd. -CASH FOR LAND COlrtRACTS. * H. J. Van walk 4040 DUli Hwy. OR 3-1480.1 PONTIAC 1 ‘ BEWINO MACHINES; i all. Now. * ' 4 AND ft ACRES, In Don HURON RIV- south of Commoroo Rd. El 3-3436, except Sunday._______ LAKE FRONT LOT 50.FOOT, : gg arafafi: miles N. .. MA 6-3333. , |41400, M*-77n,Ps>lo^rt4m^3or»t-—■— at EXCLusmo brbHdeL Lake 4 ACRES * HOME. OOOD SOIL Live Imam, fuff -- Ymms , ISO TO 8800 - 040 - MW COMMUNITY LOAN OO 40 E. LAWRENCE “ ---iidSw HIOH FIDELITY • rm radio, 21-lnch. T.V. combination. iron-rlto -Ironer deluxe. 8400. 974-1740. - • ■ • , r BINDERS 133.94 CASH. LATE MOD-•1 .console styls sewing maohlne, SqulptPfl .to make buttonhole*, fancy work, end slg-sog Avail* jjwsif Age:- “.^J^^WAIIHER, THOR; LIVINGSTONE __ ___t# Rank Buiidin FE 4-1538-9 Inc room, dsn, carpeted, 1 bath*. 4 fireplaces, attached 4-car sorags, 19 ft. drive, beautifully landscaped, mtntues from Alpine ski loan, many extras. 441,801, term*. EM 2 BEAUTIFUL lots Privileges on Oakland and Woof hull Lakes. Oood. fishing and goo. heoeh, n good oil year homo, oil furnace, full ' hath. I '.ledrooms, 'country kitchen, largo living ror~ enclosed porch oq front, .1 useable expans ten attic. Nlee (hi Ai^cTii^ 'ii^’TlPl-... About It A. e*. Lend rolling. 1 > parcel wlto good- bidg«., beautiful Undscaplng, jimall _*r*enhouse. 57 WHEN Y6U NEED $25 TO $500 w* win bo glsd to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. Ml Psat'OC Mate Bank RM*. FE 4-1574 ft PRici — REJBCTg. BEAUTI-ful living m. end. bedim, suites. 470. *1.80 week. Bargain House, 104 NT Css*. FE 44W. BIRDS - EYE MAPLE BEDROOM BINOER SBWINO MACHINE, D*f-luxs csblpet model, Mg-ssggsr tor dsslgns. sto. Pay off account m 6 months *1 *8.59 per nuiplb or «2 cjsh balance. Universal Co. 4841 Dixie Hwy. BEAurmiL 11 te? M x 490 COMMERCIAL LOT. g room houao on M34. Lake Orion. • lota north. W new branch office fclPrsTT#**!* savings and Loan Association of Ookland, *40,-089 terms Clarence C. Ridgeway $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE s Auto or Ototr Securlly FAST. CONVENIENT 84 Months to Ro»*y Home & Auto Loan Co. 7 H. Perry it. >B 8-8141 Need $25 to $506 grounds Sunday. Lake Orion. COTTAGE. DUCK LAKEFRONT. OR 4-1717. Williams Lake Fipnt Business Property Largo triangular oonunereial prop-' ‘-idudlng | house* jel busy IU sell on See Seaboard Phone FE 3-7617 1185 N. Perry St. PARRUia NO PROBLRM . . Seaboard Finance Co. BIG-BIG VALUES 1-of-a-Kind FLOOR MODELS Easy. Spinner. New ..... $138 Hamilton, Auto.. Washer — *188 a rebuilt dryers'.......j, i 71 Frasier, (smily sis*, new j SIM •1 Ft, Admiral Refrigerator iiu Ir Conditlonsr, 10,OM btu »M8 GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP^ W. Huron______________P»Tl»*i SINGER CONSOLE Sewing machine. Makes fancy designs. monograms, button holes, ate. a* month or new full prlns Phone Waite's. FE 4-48lT _ A DIAL SINGER •wing needle sewing machine, cabinet model. Makes fancy de-elgni, monogram*, button notes, blind hems. Just by fUhllhg ... |fe ‘ •hmsnts used*7 —to full pries | Brewer Real Estate JOSEPH F. EEMBSi. PALES 8»G^ Ml* Of OakMd County’• ft m lakes, todudoo flreplec family rotn. RMFlPMSV fenced lot, nlee oandy baai tor to* kUs^A real bona at UI.S9S— Terms. ie&xBP'* Get $25 to $500 ^ ON YOUR . Signature AUTO or FURNITURE OAKLAND Loan features, for ds-- laranteed. Par saoh. -Call FE ■* center for 8-9407 -eppolntm Sofa. eLu_______H chest. Reas. 944-1199. SiwiNd MACHINE. BIO-ZAO Ftji. ceIlii fiaep._________..... _ ______ Bb^1 TOe0rE<4-M57. lW W.llurou CToailir BHjLVApdoa~TuiFRiG- •utomutlc, needs y» poRHe«Pfd. you ain’t buy. K«w tu«rM)t«« OtUttr, r* A rSTORE > toe only drugstore — O covering to iMiifa* ___.JS to aU dlraotlOBS. The _ tocludln" IbV'buSd£[*AMFLES ^ Bedroom eottT Mmjmrta^nndniat- ■ Used Refrigerators A Mortgage Prpblem J ".Wd moke mortsid* k“l —*r rodulromr-, ommmt 1 Conaumers "Power Co. • "W, W; Lawrence DPRidlfT ' PIANO ISO. BLONDE dining .room oepeol* tibls and 8 ehalra fee. Ml 7-9479. r uMonilStSHErc g-rairE. good ' JSSr^hy4^ ■M joh^^’I'radio « and TV ,114lfB. Walton near Baldwin BURMEISTER’S LUMBER COMPANY 1940 Cooley Uke _ EM $;4471 - PB >7104, TALBOTT LUMBER Point, hardware, plumbing, electrical euppllee. Complete (took el soaklani TO MKI ...____ mi tneohlne, M singer Sewing Center. 333-7128. • demonetretlon at Warner 1 er Salee. 3009 W, Huron. (Fit- .. ]oln one ot Wally Byem’a exciting caravan* * 90 h.p. Mercury ■■HR and Oator tan* trailer. 636 e. Tennyton. PH MW after » p.m. its HORSE MOTOR. BQAf. TRAIL-or. and skill. 9195, Oaya FE 5-1544, alter 0 OH HMi. M9 SCOTT ATWATER. ll 'kORSH- COMBINATION STORM DOORS 913.90 and . BLAYLOCK COAL A 81 galvanised nipt, %" galvanised gngg. O, A. fa ' rTON AlR CONDITIONER. NEVER ueed. PH 5-3934 after 9, &U3 RIIO^"”..!............. 93.05 WOODEN 8TORMS AND SCREENS. WALL ttLE, 94" ...... 39c FT. IE »799T -... CEILING mi ... . «M M- ft. “BUYLO" TILE. 103 8. BAOtKAW A-l AtOMINDM HDINO, OENU-lne BRICK VENEER; slum, etorn windows, owning!, eavel-trougbl, ehuttere. Alt available In oolor. Installed or material! only...“Quality wort only ' e«t prices" PHA term*. JOB VALLBLY CO. Ot 1-0033 “ Cameras—Sertfok 94.99. Watt*?* Bint Houie. _____at. St.. Boobsste*. ol POODLE AKC POODLES • GOOD STUD -lores nidi 949. OR 3-3411. poobiiia__ $1.25 A WEEK .......... unt's Pot Shop_______PB 9-3113 play. Now! Also MM—Ml 15'. » PRA5W^NS..9N DMPtAYl RESERVATIONS FgR RENTALS I YOU M-FOplf CHRIS CRAPf ■ V4r " IMp traitor, completely rodnlr*—■ dim eluding upholstery, very r« at; Quit pH**", m —FE 54)110. A DEAL—SEE US NEW 55 FOOT x 10 3 bedrooms.' gat boat and h.. water, doliroroa and sot up. 93.T99. Bob Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales, Inc. ------ Highway , Mlchlgi ’• REGISTERED . 5 months. 071 Drayton Phone OR 3-1202 NRM -________• rwtoguvowor*. service ■ repair and parta. EVANS EQUIPMENT, 6501 Dixie Hwy.. 635-1711. BURNHAM OA9 PURNACE. NEVA., ueed. 100.000 B.T.U. 3ft H.P. Wbeel. Horse rldini tractor with plow and cultlvatoraUaehmtuU. 05*4)151. Broken sidewalk for retain---------'LFB 5-5643. Cone* “TSiSM Bargains at Betterlys Genuine savings, on all new at ueed plaupe and organs. * Coma and aea (or yourself. No .money dnjm — « months pYbw betterly MUSIC co. TaESNO STRAIN PARAKEETS, canaries and tNPloal flsb. Crane’s Blrd^ Hstchery, 3499 Auburn. UL ioROtlOHBRED OERMAN SHEP-bord, I wseks. 935. 6734)357. ItouoHBRED Boxer pups. ------------MQ. EM 3-6325. Sales and Rentals Vacation trailers^ 13, 15. IT ft. Wolverine P I e b u p camper*. Apache and Right campers. HAKE RESERVATIONS NOW F. E. Howland, Rentals O'Day Bs Chrysler iMten pi.... _w_. ■ •MOT-WEST BEND MOTORS ALLOY ntAlUlM-BpATHpIPrg MARINE AND SPOBTtNO SUPPLIES CRUISE-OUT BOAT SAUES 63 E.- Walton *'—— Dali? M , Sunday 1-9 BUCHANAN'S BOAT LAND H * —^3 Buddy Quality Moblla tlf-way between Orion I on M94 MY f 14014 _____ ___ CHRIS CRAPT..50 HORSEPOWER rsaslOE MQ03. MORRIS MUSIC 54 8. Telegraphy xel Rtuwi ^ HAWAIIAN OUfTAR. OIBSON AM- * -••“er. ISO. 731-WiB, after f'** AUCTION SALES PIANO SALE Gallagher's had* many phon* asking to extend our pleno CIRCLE FLUORESCENT LIGHTS, newest lights lor kltphen. 913.95 value, 56.95. factory marred. ‘ Michigan Fluorescent. 193 Or-ehard Labe. — 13 , l CABINET MAKING KITCHEN CABINETS Pr’ee Estimates Dap or Evening FORMICA TOPS PONTIAC WOOD PRODUCTS FORMICA TOPS 9996 Bsschgrovs PE 9-9995 ENAMEL MATCHED C6LOR paint sat-up includes oablnet, f“ mula book, over 6S eallona paint and eomglota 941 fcxCERCYCLB, LUCE NEW. WILL saermoo. 93ao. ma 9-n«. ! ELECTRtc FUMP. LAWK BWWQi .-■;r.::Udil tm)lflii:-PE U228, _ - ■ ■ BXERCYCLRi 'IkobLLkf dltloo. 9339. PB 4-3433. ENGLISH RACER. $36; ' 920; kiddle Speedster, 5-9044. F6r" buiTY coNcABte floors Use Liquid Floor Haraentfr Simple Inexpensive Application. Boice Builder supply FB 9-9191 are several bargaUM left. over — blond*, mahogany* and watoula. You can save more by .pure big now I - 39 -mentha to pay GALLAGHER'S I E. Huron St. PE A SPECIAL SALE Used planoe and organs. Estoy Chord Organ, slightly usod, with i expression pedal and " Sporting Ooade — All Type* Door Prlaea EVWT Auction We buy-sell-trade, rstall 7 daya Consignments welcome 069 puis Hwy. OE 9-3717 [• AUCTION EVE R Y SATURDAY !* ' Wa want to buy furniture. and appliances. OR 54M47 or was 7-5195, iHolly. 159M Dixie AVALAIR illy sslf-oontalned Jyavsl trot Ellsworth AUTO SALES 5977 Plata Hwy. ~ _» » Jacobsen trailer sale AND RENTALS Bee-Line. Trot wood. Holty, Oar* way. Lsyton and Huron, travel trailers. Trade-Wind camper and -truok pamper. Make ypur - M william* Lake Rd. OR 3-9951 S«6RT8 'tt5BlLE Hbttif ?0Op,ERC^NT°S5w»?,>C*rsr wlrefl and hlteMs Installed, compute »»« of part* and bottto ***. ■t743 _____3173 W. Huron 1 CLOSING OUT ALL BOATINO ACCBSBORI1 t 3.99 Plastla ski rope, — * *32.54 Thompson skis. ilf.M Hr* sxttogishors,_HR »27.9a Boat boras, now slIM Boot Ladders ........50% Oft 50% Oft on All Dock Hardware , Ufsjacksts, 40Y ■ Used Motpr*. Maks KELLY’S HARDWARE ___________________OR SWOP for 7 MA 7-3931. LAROE H&LSTEIN HliiPfRS. 1 fresh, ealf by stdsv 4 due now. Calfhood vaccine ~~~ 9-im I. Perry Ssrylos, OR '^Xnijf^upXh? f I*, exo. conditio-csbygrsnd, hon f finish. bsauUf Terms, small down payment, bi Tirto-Auto-lruck USED AUTO AND TRDCK TIRES °snw. tomtit' 93.96. Motor Mart, *• rfyutifN. t;rewomo hMiperI ...... .... 14 off MR windshields eomplet* with l war*. Perry Servloe. 6129 1 land Rd. hritts cHapt. riViHra. it roAr. exe. eondltlon. hoist and raok. L' 9-9191. EM 34905 evening*. __ —CLOSE-OUTS-' ON ALL BdATS — MOTORS — TRAILERS Paul A. Yoiing, Inc. f 4010 Dixie Hwy. on Loon Lako OR 4-Q411 ----* — CLEAR OX3-. 1-45 H.P. 1-40 H>P. neg. ww BUDOET TERMS—grp 1 Fwfs^ONB STORE H rthlng for the boat _ MARINE SUPPLIES 955 Orcbiurd Lake Ave. PE 2-5 fiberolab."boat, motor chine Mop. 33 HoPd. Phono PE Cruuer. 100- H.P. Meroury. 9350 otb TOWN DUPLICATOR, only 0100. EM 3-4308. NEW NATIONAL CASH HEfilS; -ters from 0100 up New National adding maoblnos from ON up: The only factory autbortsed Yranen offices In Oakland and' Macomb RIDING OSS^NS ALL APPALOOSA HORSES Children, Teenagers, Adults GOLDEN H CORRAL 1000 Hiller Rd.. Pontiac * INSTALLED FRtift" . Auto spring* jaotort rebuilt. On your c*r |14.05 each or metS]} them yourself and pay r JOHNSON MOTORS SEA RAY BOATS AERO-CRAFT ALUMINUM O'DAY A AQUA CAT. SAILBOATS PORTA-CAMPER TRAILERS Wa welcome Trade- — KESSLER’S MARINA .) N-Washington, OA I-I4N Oxford nSw, . BIO 13-FOOT AltoiflNUH Hoods. Sink*. Stove*, 0 PONTIAC KITCHEN 2060 g 4-633, Closed Thurs — Open Sunaey. FE 6-4713. Montealm supply. IU W. Montcalm FURWACBCLEANINa 16 Mil* rsdlus 34 1... JRWWg Bush Cleaning **3-1649 FORMICA stock lists and odd sliei Special - Mica 35c sq. ft. and up. * Mr ssMi'W floor samples. Kitchen. Nook with taWe, coffee lALUCRAirTERS SX 10 REOBlVilt wltb R47 epeaker. Like new. $po. OR 2-asm. atftsr 5, . . LAVATOmi^COMPLETE^^tH* I. Irreguli . —.Juged Pli —---eieent. IN orchard Lake. - - L^KtvALE - tBOI. SM KUgrWMT). . . _ . WM Salss-Servlee-Storage HOME OP JOHNSON MOTORS Dally ( to t Sunday 10 to 4 157* N~ Ondyk* (M34) -FE 4-0*34 HarimH ^suRance — -r "^-'fid. jnn Evlnrude motors, terrific discount on boots and supplies. W* repair all motors. Labor guaranteed. Ph. 662-3660. 26,9 Orchard Lake Rd., Kiego Harbor. w 'SEE THIS’’ , •WE CENTURY SKI DART like new. Tiki. tow. top > TANDEM ALLOY TRAILER W I^AZ^1kS LAKE & SEA MAftlNA* ^ WQWWAJ^A^^ aHLVO^; j01 AS MUCH^AS^W FOJi USED JUNK jUSk car'bTTrucks TON Jurat-powtlic9 _ MW& snr 'NKjIH ... ALWAYS A BUYER OR jtlNK ‘id? DOLLAR PAID’ OUT-STATE MARKETS - Extra Top Dollar FOR LATE MODELS -44 MOTOR SALES Marvin MoAnnally.- owner pale McAnnally JUST N DP PGNTIAC DRIVE-IN 3537 DIXIE HWY. OR 4-0309 OR t-0300 hi DOL1.AR. itoNK Pars and trucks, FB 3-3059 daya. eeaulngs. $$ TOP DOLLAR $$ FOR Clean Used Cars JEROME "Bright Spot" 19H CADILLAC I DOOR HARDTOP. ROSE RAMBLER UNION lake 3-4195 * "sharp caif7 Pull price M97. ElSS^A^TS^sRSsf'mV Huron »■ WE 9-4055. Used Auto—Truck Parts 102 *91 BUICK ALUMINUM V-5 EN-glnsT 166 H.P. WO*. OR 34977, IEBUILT 1M0 CHEVY 6 ENOIN New and Ueed Twfct 101 1*94 CHIVY PANEL, RUNS OOOD. 9150. UL 2-9339, ___________ 1053 DODGE PANEL. SEMI CAMP 1. 9375. MY 3.19*9. 1957 TON TDRI). 539 ■PE 9-3991 (9 FORD tb TON PICKUP, ‘ cyllnde LONO - _____ .nglns. oustom radio, heater. Extra sharp ■mi almost new. Only 9999. JER OME . PEROUSON, Roehestei Pont De»lsr, OL14TU, IEEP "wira sNOW PLOW AND rebuilt engine, complete, must be seen to be appreelatsd. Lucky Auto Salts, i«3 8. Sag- DIESEL. 1750. . eondltlon. 1HI Ford, truck Panels 1*59 poao V5 engine, ti Ion 1050 CHBVHCTJET U ton M90 1060 CHEVR^ET * cyl. J, ton 1*99 FORD^Econollne Tractors 1953 FORD F9M 332 VI ... 4909 FORD F490 5M VS _ 1919 PORDF1600 934 V* *9350 - Tandem Dudips 11*0 FORD fooo 333 v* Stakes, and Vane 3 FORD F700 14 ft. produce v 0795 1958 PORD F600 12 ft. stake liiTolic i 'TON' itb 1883 PORD DUMP TRUCK, NOTH-‘nj down, ^take^ever^psyments, .... Better.. Used Truck* GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS foiVBRINE yiBSfcl-—— 1335 8. Hospital Road. EM346 Union Lake' peeler. | 104 For Safe Drivers $22.M QUARTERLY 9 1.600 MATH BENEFIT . J.OOO UNINHURBp MO'm»«' COMPREHENSIVE (fire. 1 -------- ■ Deductable) ROAD SERVICE PLUS MANY ADDED BENEFITS Wil ALSO TrEnf CANCELLED AUTO PRANK A. ANDERSON AGENCY #44 JosKn PB 4-553 KVENINOS PH MM9, fereiiRter*"’ 10$ 0. m Joslyti. I Renault BUICK and JEEP A ,CHOICE OF..:::: 25 NEW IMPORTS V TRIUMPH, SUNBEAM •"LLMAr I, OR 3*1494 1*57 BUICK SPHCUIjL' 4-OOOR hardtop, e very clean ra- dio. healer. qitUPrl^ right we will trade. Pea»fY 68 Oakland. FE 34351. 1967 BUICK 9PHC1 AD 4-DOOR hertltop, radio, heator, auto.^wmw- a — SOSPUH Oakland- FE tevarimi, — - y AVE.. BIRMINGHAM■ MI 4-3735. ^■7 1956 CHEVY S-deor- Bel Aim .radio, beater, (tick 'sinfM-us MOTORS ' feaw________FE 5*493# .. „ BKLAIRE VI 4 dobr. . equipped wltb power pae. jots of extrae. 1962 FIAT $2295 JEROME "BRIGHT SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 Cadillac meabse. i54i. ready for oMiage. Runs wall, good rubber b. Many extrae. FE <»5979. INI C A DILL... _________ full power, only WiMe, Baev let PATTERSON CHEVROLET < 1000 S WOODWARD AVE., I MnWHAM~MI 4.3799._______ 1959 CADILLAC 4-door hardtop, wltb all powei . die. heater and whltewafle. gleaming lurquolsa paint, one own*-Is a real fine earl $2695 JEROME "BRIGHT Spot" Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 '• “BUICK I960 Wectr* 4-door sedan. Desert fawn with gorgeous* tan and oordovan Interior. Radio, heater, dynaflew. power steering.-power brakes end t beautiful Plrsstone Supreme whitewall Urea. Thu oar you will enjoy l Pull ^Uloe^ Remember, we encourage you to check our cars with a mechanic you know and trust. FISCHER' BUICK 784 S. Woodward, B’liam MI 4-6222 ACROSS PROM OREENPIELD’S $3595 ‘" JEROME 'BRIGHT "SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass * FE 8-04P8 mA n sh^rn^ffilPi DEVILlN, im4 1 caOuxac, dio, hfieter. and whitewalls.. One owner, low mileage and a real I""1’C"1 $3395- ‘JEROME • - ! . 'BRIGHT SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass .■FK 8*0488 . MS CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE. Horlsou blue with matching top and trim. V4 anglnef Powergllde. dower steering, power Really loaded, ttily *1. terms, ^ PATTERSON ■M, MI_ HAUPT PONTIAC Open Monday; Tuesday and Tht day until * p,m,/ jl Ons MIle North of US-10 on M-19 clarkston T MA 9-9540 iisife- Ford 338 * Saginaw PB 3*0lL 1MT CHEVROLiT 310 2 DOOR with 9 cyl. angina, radio, heater, one owner and extra clean lit* arwSy. MTcW®: Lincoln, Mercury, Comet, Meteor, English Ford, 339 8. seglnew St. PB 2-»»l. U67 CHEVROLET 21* 4-DOOR .... ‘ hooter whitewall*. 3-tone tri finish. Extra sharp. MW. Tl TERSON CHEVROLET CO. 8. WOODWARD AVE. HAM. Ml 4-373*. 960 CORVAIR 706 4-DOOR SEDAN. Powerglid*. radio, hsatsr. whlto-walls. 2 to ohoos* from. Only II,. 396. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. MW £ WOODWARD AVE. birminokam. mi ■4dW*. Powerglid*. 1 \ 4 DOOR WAOON, V-*. ROSE RAMBLER UNION LAKE * EM 5-4159 , KM >-415* CHKVY CdNYERTltoUi. ItXC. 1|6( CHEVROLET .... extra aharp ear. Pull price *1*7. - Huron St., PE *4*04........... dltlon, no money down. Pull fric* lilt. Assume payment as 1.90 a week. Call oredlt BM ager Mr. Whlto at King At Rales. 119 Bsglnsw. 1 9-0403. ' • 1M0 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE « door. Standard trqpsmlsslon. rad iwSmft e^awafisTlHiail finish Only 91,395. Easy term*. PATTER-soN CHEigloygr be ■ WOODWARD AYE.. MI 4-2733. ., BIRMINGHAM 1157 CHEVROLET BEL AIR .2,00 hsrdto'. V-5 sngln*. powergllde, ffi 1957 CHEVROLET 3ll i-bbbfc'S#-dan. V-g engine, powerglid*. * tone „_______ SSi.W"SS: SS.’Y'SSSdS® AVE, BlRMINOHAM, MI 4-3755. 1959 CHEVROLET tt, power steering, e mstic, radio, heater, .wRiW6.1 ; Van Camb Chevroltt, Inc. s* r I MU 4.1035 STATION wTos^'rambler M0B8, 1956 DESOT6 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth «* 8 woodward MI 7-3*14 1961 MONZA COUtak FOWlWfc glide (rsnsmleslon, radio, heater, whitewall tlree, ftt ded dash and beautiful metallte green finish. This fully equipped gem sells for 11519. CRljWMAN CHEVROLET. ROCHESTER, OL 2-9721. Need a Car? Bad Credit? No Money?^ Bankruptcy? If you want to gfet re-established, call Mr. Cosby, FE 5*9232. « Pontiac convertible, Universal Auto Esobenge, 31* _W. Mont* calm Av*p « block s, et Osh- A8SUMi~PAYMENTs "0F *» ON 1*95 Dodge, 5157 balance. PB A 1MM1ALAXIE. PRICE SENSATION ON'fl^fiMdS NEW CAR WARRANTY '13 Crown Imperial, 4-door hardtop l53Uctory*ieL.,.Mirt eonvortlMo.^ buck-ft 806 J0*®*® MANY OTHERS AT 1 SIMILAR VALUES , , , SEE US BEFORE YOU SAY YES TO A DEALT, l ., R&R MOTORS WKLAliraf. 1960 FORD . Peirlano 9 cylinder s - BIRMINGHAM . > Chrysler-Plymouth 111.• S, ■ TfoodWard , ' ; MI 7-SS 11*0 PORD ' PAIRLANE door oodan. V5 engine, Fo__ ^beautiful blue flpTah. Only ■ 11,395. -Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEV-ROLET CO.. 1000 S. 770ODWARD AVE.. BlRMINOHAM, MI 4-2735. iMT'FOkoCOfTOMW lt.IWO mllos. OB 3-5*47. , . 1 Wt POilto. EXCELLElW MOtoR. transmission sind Ursa. 974 Ml. Osman* JIT *, 1 u iWU' wjitp ousroii'^iiir; klFORn*-DOOH. RADIO. kEAT-881, WHITEWALL WEft. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEf DOifN. A*-sumo jpnymonto of ,15.79 par mo. CaU Credit Mgr.. Mr. Mrtjh at I 155* WHITE FORD CONVERTIBLE, ' Made top. radio, heater, whit*. walls. cToanrlre 4-13*4. IN* POND SUNUNBR CONVERT-Ibis, radio. toMter. Power ateortog and Power brake*, a root sharp carl *200 dawn, perjnonthl SSW6ra!S new N. PE lao engine. Sul alter 4 p.m. PB ATOM. 1*47 FORD VI STATION WAOON. KM' good - bargain. '■ I. Conway alar. 3*3-7355. 15*« ford rAXHUW'iarKX-dlo and haater, oxootlont Oondl-tion, no money down. Pull Sloe 9117. Aattnna paymeats of .9* per week, ciu Credit ’ manager, Mr. White, at King jiMABMee. Ilk S. saglnaw. PB $1395 John McAuliffe, Ford *50 Oakland Aop. FE 5-4101 KFaBc atlo *— Only'’ *1.3*1 OMaf - PI_ Ford Dealer OL 1- EiLoyd MOTORS. LtnoohL 1|er-Jot, Comet, iMawTiMUgh— Ford. S3S a. Saginaw. St.. PE iWrii^to^cgsixiN1' Tbto*. iif^TOHD^iTOoli;''—‘jMmjrnm U4SMTSA— TRANSMfflStON ER, WHITEWg LUTBLY NO L__ _ gaBflgtt i down payment - Marvel Motors Mf VORO OALAxIE, ^8VtKf(. •■ bl*. radio, wKjP ■rr*-r lo tranamlatlML lot Maek topf m* dow ird-O-Mat-kwlC» Year* Wiirran'tyT ] |ilo>qto, Kltroury. vuumi m«wwi ggBCTrUway ilfltoRD ootrtmi'Y fBDAk, ji H4«tdr7 Pord-o-Matlc, transmission, sharp red ■ *MwhH930|M this mmithi*1 LioYD^idO^Rk1 fin- ' fe Eord 5 SURPLUS MOTORS - 71 a. ^■ Russ Johnlii:'',; Needs Clean, Sharp Late, Model Used Cara to *r* offering high trade-in - allowance* on our wall roundsn stock of now ear*. Deal today and saval OUR LAST 1 IM DEMONSTRATOR , ,, 963 BONNEVILLE convorllbl* *3.095 All white. Mtto interior, now ear warranty. P o w * r sleortog aB brakes. Only I.90A mllos. . ~ USED CAR SPECIALS; 19*9 PONTIAC CATALINA ll.lM toll VOLKSWAOHM S-DR. .. *1,995 A blue beauty, radio. Malar, white* 10 JRAJkpTOP .. *1,61* , 1*57" TORDJI^So{}to’....4., 9*55 #Sr ig^ag^patto......... YOUR CHOICE $$95 4 Ford *4loor ivd* Ford station wiMfl ----- 0*9 laa^o^./^ss 1 Vo have a large stock of . ; * NEW 1962T PONtjACS : NEW 1962*RAMBLERS ria.m,— RUSS JOHUSON o w "P BBHBSrav • vv ; 8 T^tE POtfTIAC PBBSS, trisflyESpAY, AUGUST S^im1 'T ¥ Economy Perforiiiance ss&i^ssrt.. ■■ iflptfMm and etendeW transmji-*lSC AU white with blue interior. Full Btfcf .... ..'$im _________ Remember,-we encourage you to check our cars with a mechanic'you know and trust. * FISCHER BUICK 784 S. Woodward, B’ham MI 4-6222 <* ACROSS FROM GREENFIELD'S 1959 Fbrd Fairlww ••500” Mw victor]*, turmoil* white finish! V* am transmtssioe. ««. ------ whitewalls, dew throughout! ':; ^$995 TeT4101 . 1959 Ford Supliner. wMtewiU* _c • 1959 FORD - COUNTRY SQUIRE with V* endue. automatic transmission. power $1495. JEROME "BRIGHT -SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass FR8.U488 .‘SPECIAL .PAYMENT PLAN Buy Here - Pay Here , Credit. No 'Problem Cer Model ‘ m ■58 CHEVROLET 4-D00r Wagon .............................N« '8» RAMBLEB' Btetlon. Wogoo. jtpd ...............-.......«»» •53 MERCURY, suck. Overdrive .........,.. --rwvTVTtMl" •68 GHBY8LER Convertible.- All Bl*5f '...' ..............$288 •57 CHEVROLET 4-Door BnrStop ............... ............*507 •M ford s-Door, s-CrUnder, Automatic ........ ....... :s« CHEVROLET. Stick Shift, All White ...................03*4 •54 OLDS Hardtop. Green end Whit# ......................$387 •47 FORD Station Wagon, Automatic ................ ...$4$T •67 Plymouth 4-Door, V-*; Automatic..... ....... ........$387 '»* PLYMOUTH 2-Door, Blue •.... -V.■ .rm-r.-r.■$$$?- •53 FORD 3-Door. «-C]rUndcr, Stick Shift ................. » •M FORD 2-Door, (-Cylinder, Stick, Red and White ........»i$$ 'SS CHRYSLER 3-Door Hirdtcp, Black ............... 8**5 'AC FORD 3-Door, V-S. Automatic ...............w.........t$8S ■AS MERCURY 4-Door Hardtop ..............................$3*4 All Cars Have Been Drastically Reduced IMMEDIATE DELIVERY i 185 Oakland Ave., at Railway Crossing FE 4*6000 - LIQUIDATION LOT Nsw ftftdUssd Cm NSW flltd Dwd Om USO LINCOLN beater,, power steering end brakee, a reel sberp .•B»*7ai4."Wi4»' aiaa XAMf piylfiiBtl IMA FORD 4 DOOR. AUTOMATIC, $1495 ’"John McAutiffe; Ford 430 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 - • —Today Only—• 1959 Ford ' 4-Door Station Wagon With * « cyl. engiiw. .radio heater, real afeO throfighout! SPe dally priced to »e|ll ' „ BEATTIE ir FORD DKALBR^ce l93(r irvrm uta/v TV ViTRRFDRD WANTED!! Reliable persons or families to assume the payments on 78 cars that must be liquidated immediately. A good chance to establish new credit or re-establish bad credit. NO CASH NEEDED! Choqse from many such as these examples: ’55 CReVy Delray "VS ......... ’57 For# Wagon, Stick ....... ’56 Pontiac Convertible ..... '58 Edsel 4-Door Hardtop ”56 Buick 2-Door Hardtop .... ’55 Olds 98 Holiday *........» ’58 Plymouth 4-Door, Stick 6 . ’54 Meteor, Likh New ^....... *57 Ford 4-Door, Stick 6..... ’57 Chevy 2-Door Wagon .... ’55 Ford Customline 2-Door *. *56 Chevy Bel Air 4-Door .... ’57 Mercury Hardtop, Stick .. PLUS MANY OTHERS WEEKLY PRICEPAYMENT8 $2.21 ..$197 ..$397 ..$197 ..$397 ,.$297 ..$197 ..$497 ..$197 .,$397 ..$497 ..$197 ..$297 ..$597 $4.45 $2.21 $4.4$ $3.33 $2.21 $5.56 $2.21 $4.45 $5.56 $2.21 $3.33 $6.69 PLUS>MANY OTHERS Universal Auto Exchange (yi Block East of Oakland) . FE 5-9231 »- Open Dally I AM. io A P.M. — Saturday $ AM. to A P.M. DISCOUNT DAYS! Lucky Auto Sales jl flow having a big discount sale on all cars in ftioek. The biggest sale in our 15 year histpry. All. cars with NO MONEY DOWN 1959 Pontiac 2-Door Hardtop, automatic trans-f" , mission, new car trade. Full price $1195. 1960 Falcon 2-Door with automatic transmission, fit full price $1045. 1961 Plymouth 2-Door, V8 engine with automatic transmssion, a municipal car. Full price $1195. 1959 Ford 2-Door with V8 engine and automatic transmission, full price $695. M 1961 Ford 2-Doors with V8 engines and automatic transmission, formerly municipal cars. Full price $1195. }957 Chevrolet 4-Door Station Wagon, 6 cylinder I., - with stick shift: Full price $695. 1958 Ford Station Wagon, V8 engine with automatic transmission, radio and heater. Full It ' , price -$695. 1957 Oldsmobile 4-Door Super 88, automatic I transmission, radio and heater. Full price $895. 1956 Ford 2-Door, stick shift and full price, $195. 1955 JBirick 2-Door, full price $145, ■ ALSO IUVE. SEVERAL TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS ^ WwmVt BEFORE YOU BUY - ,•*■» WHK uo iMiFViuu ivu oua — # "'Car ‘'pat Car 'We/ Will Not fie Undersolid I LUCKY AUTO. SALES |£ “PONTIAC’S DISCOUNT LOT’’ . ji93 S. Saginaw ... f | " ’ FE 4-2214 1 ••Y6ur FORD DEALER «nc* Wgr ON DIXIE IWITtN WATERFORD V AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 j COMET, 1$«1 WHITE 4 DOOR BE den. must sell wife's car, «A0( M(l.a redln h»fttd»r SUtMlfttiC miles, raaio, nnwr. sumbmbwv transmission, white sidewalls. 170 nglne, fashion trim, red end rhM* upholstery, tl.8M.~MI' f-g-LaSALLB. 1838 80 MODEL JB-dan. Odod shape.-Best offer over MW. FE AA804. ■ . , one FuytE»*R,Warranty 1941 Tempest fl| Ernie Felice M NEW and USED ______________________QllUtt. 1861 Chevy Bel Air 2-dr. hardtop ■“* " >rlane 2-dr. hardtop ' John McAuliffe. Ford MO Oakland Ave. One Year Warranty ON ALL USED CARS BOB BORS.T lincoln-meRCury HASKINS Extra Special Used Cars A BUICK Moor, hardtop. tomatlc transmission, radio, al 1959 OLDS mane ti________ Ine and brakes, solid whit* finis" I860 MCI Roadster^ with low mileage IMS CORVAIR Monsa HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds Need Tran,spprtatiun ? No Money Down LIQUIDATION SALE 1M7 PLYMOUTH S-door, stick, radio 1954 PLYMOUTH Wseon, (harp tin . 1958 FORD t-door automatto 13(7 19A7 MERCURY Hardtop, sharp $497 1986 OLDS^M” Hardtop I, radio 14 FORD 3- $197 $397 1954 CHEVROLET Bel Air 1$A$ CHEVROLET KM. stick $1*7 1953 FORD Vlotorto hardtop isn 15 MERCURY Moor clean MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM I 150 S. Saginaw N«w and UsedCan .106 Nsw and Used Cars 106 soil CHEvfSSgHcS^WW WOODWARD AVE.. BIRlillMMAM tO 447IS. 1055 OLDSMOBILE SUPER ss. n excellent con price $87. Assume peymei.----- 41.60 a week. Call Crsjdit manager - Mr.- White at Une Auto Sales. 115 S. Safin**, FE power * steering, power brake*. pewie-'IWlWk Newer seat. Beautiful 2-tone balse finish. Ato LET CO. 1005 * WOODWARD AVE. BlHJllNOHAM. MI BUY YOUR NEW OLDSMOBILE HOUGHTO1& SON 63$ N. Mam. Rochester Ot MIS! 1957 PLYMOUTH SAVOY. RADIO ■ ■ beater. e«c*Uent eeipljwi. money- dewn, full price $IV<> ”” t CASH AND Marvel Motors DOOR HARDER, 4nd looks good, brakes, seats, end Power, eteerin*. wlhdows. Low 4-3601 before 0 pjm. L 3AS OLDS, S DOOR. HARDTOP^ ehnrp. $1490. ROSE RAMBLER UNION LAKE EM 3-4155 EM 3-4164 ry. Elizabeth Lake 855 8. WUODWARD MI 4-4485 Everyone is Happy Who DEALS WITH PONTIAC-CADILLAC —13^rNr— Woodward BipmtngtTam Ml 4-1930 1M7..HriimtaWl' CONVERTIBLE, tin. ALEX MOTORS. 824-3182. Bonneville 4-dr. hardtop Ford Country Sedan wagu ■ Pontiac Star Chief Moor 960 Pontiac Moor sedan 859 Chevf Impala Mr. hardt X 961 Pontiac Sta/chlef sedan I960 Falcon 4-door wagon. Power. —• Pontiac Catalina Moor sedan Bul-k Super 4-door hardtop Chavy Bel Air. Stick shift EXTRA SPECIALS 912 8. Woodward 1950 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOB ■ with radio, hewter. paw— 1 and brakes. $200 dew payments of $53.93 p ■Mi LLOYD MOTORS. LlnCo! Mercury. Comet, Meteor.* Engll Fowl, m ft. Saernaw. FE 2-911 SHELTON PONTIAC-BU1CK Main St. Roch OLlv* 1-3133 -Special- 1961 PONTIAC Tempest r Sedan and u ls a llttje all tb. little aktrae for matlc transmission, whitewall I ■ much more. Priced $*-*•* $1895 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE , 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 95$ PONTIAC CATALINA 3 DOOR. Conway rfaeeter*3$"!73>i6.*1 196Q PONTIAC VENTURA 2-door hardtop, r Sy m whitewalls, ei brakes, hydramatlc $2295 JEROME 'BRIGHT SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 OLIVER BUICK The Hem* of the Double // Checked .trSEDCARST OLIVER BUICK -!» YEARS -S10 Orchard Lak* FE 2-9101 Haw and Ussd Cars PONTIAC CATALINA. SAFARI. Her* 1$ a'reM beauty. It’s oandy-•pple red with ea yfayl red and White Interior. Power brakes and WLSON —,jmmA^1mt^#MARKs^' price. 1$»1 Blreherest. Scott Lake. 1957 PLYMOUTH automatic transmission. Bargain :PrilgiMh*l BIRMINGHAM Chryster-Plyraouth THE CREAM OF THE CROP 1950 Buick LaSabr* Moor hardtop. tender lovlne bare glean bv Remember, we encourage you to check our cars with a mechanic you know and trust. FISCHER BUICK 784 S. Woodward, B’ham MI 4-6222 , ACROSS FROM OREBNFIELD'S ’ Auto iSales S$S Mt, Qamcns at E. Bled. F* A4W$ . ~ ■ 1987 PONTL5C SAFARI WAOON^RA^ 'clean with ’very 'good rubber, to and *** tftS^ooe. People’s •UeeTW Oakland Are. FE ffi* tm PONTIAC CATAUNAr I DOOR dip, UMar. Sparkling green finish wnh mitek)n$ Interim. Only $1.695. Easy term*. PATTCRSON CHEVROLET CO. IMS WOODWARD aVET bohonoham. in 4-2739. 1$$$ STAR CHIEF CATALINA. 1 eellent transportation, fully, eq pad. bObi *mr ■. 1961 PONTIAC 8TARCHIEF. AUTO- —----------------b good motor .hie, 339-3387. 1866 PONTIAC. RADIO AND HEAT- er. HydremaUcTTF»w t rTTret. .owner. $300..;FB 2-4665 after SELECT Used Gars ' "T959 Rambler Wagon walls, radio, neater, - 1962 Rambler 2-Door Deluxe with radio, heater, whits walla. B-SUokl 1961 Falcon Custom 1961 Rambler Convertible 1961 Pontiac Convertible 1962 Rambler American 4-door with radio, htater. whitewalls. 3300 mao* an this beauty 1 1956 Willys Pickup With a “19” 2-door hardtop v er, Ilk* hw ooKUtmnl . . . 1960 Corvair 4-Door I95rChevfblet' Pickup BILL SPENCE Rambler-Jeep New and Used C«n 186 !?UL» 1959 PONTIAC toeiVlklg. low mileage. I owner, Cslslln* 4 door. Power ^steering . Birmingham: Chrysler-Plymouth, US'-a Nwedtoud , IP 74214 RAMBLER 1958 d beater. As Is special- $595 FISCHER BUICK 784 S. Woodward, B’ham , - Ml 4-6222 ACROSS FROM OREBNFIELD’S f m mu get our dealt' __tr reconditioned used gar* at low prieeal homer hight' 2 1 S^fetlg%d4fc MUST GO! ■94 PentlM. ’radio, heeler . 7 :Bulcks..‘53-'$t ... wTOmtor VS.» ROSE RAMBLER . 'do UNION LAKE I *-413$ - EM $-4184 IT RAMBLER WAGON SIXTY New and Used Cora ^.V^ensln.. overdrive v Font 233 8. Seglnew St. FE Mill. ■■■ -Samwo CHEVRofi^T. *c85%s5*R^ROOD- ^RD AVE.; BIRM1NOHAM. MI 4OT9. VOLKSWA6n»_HA R SWOP.' .. - BUY A*** R L CRONEY Used Cara ‘560 Auburn Avenue FE 5-7131 CLEAN-UP 4962 CHEVROLET'S GET YOUR CHOICE BEFORE IT'S GONEI 384 TO GOI ■59 PONTIAC Catalina------ power brakes end eteertng, ■ k heater, whtteweU Hydnunntle transmission. It Is • solid imperial Ivory finish and reel moe. $1699 '59 CHEVROLET Impala Convertible MyHnder I ....... transmission, radio, heater. ---i; solid lot Meek will lor. Really enerpl $1399 '61 CHEVROLET ImpaJa Hardtop ' A etrikUb Moor with ^ power eerlng^ y-8_en(|lne end_ auto- $2199 ’56, FORD Victoria Hardtop With V-8 engine, autometle $499 ’59 CHEVROLET Parkwood Wagoii ' y-» .engtoe^ powergUde ^tren^ re VHiWVi. *F rniwlon, radio, tr gold flush. A ewell ei Tk-end pleasure trip*. $1399 ’60 RENAULT Dauphine With * Jet black finish, wells, toator end defre Economy^ spool el I .i • $599 ’58 VOLKSWAGEN, Club Sedan Here te e reel gem end It hei radio and heater. There Is • sparkling coral finish and 1 Is eUsMutely i9|-" h try and then $1099 ■60 RAMBLER American Sedan ' $899 ■60 CHEVROLET Corvair “700” nlsslon, radio, rail tires., T ___ aaby blue end i priced right »t^ $1399 ’’60 CHEVROLET Parkwood Wagon $1699 '58 CHEVROLET Biscayne Sedan This clean Moor has power-glide transmission. V-S engine, radio, heater and eolld Jet $899 '58 CHEVROLET Impala Sport Coupe ■ Impale Sport coupe with V-S engine, eutom.efio. transmission nna power steering. A solid white finish with turquoise interior.It'e rosily sharp. $1199 Matthsws-Hargreaves 631 OAKLAND AT CASS FE 5-4161 FE 4-4547 HURRY - HURRY HURRY BIG ,SALE AT BIRMINGHAM' RAMBLER New 1962 Rambler -2-Door , $1689.50 * Credit No Problem ! 11 $99 Down. . OVM ;I00 FINE CARS I’d CHOOSE • FROM - Also:'’Select" Used Cars - SERVICE FINEST EVER 666 S. Woodward, * BIRMINGHAM m 6-3000 ESTATE STORAGE CO. OF DETROIT NOW COMES TO PONTIAC Hear Us on WPON From 6:30 P.M. Till Midnight August 6 - August 18, 1962 ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY_DOWtt- „ 1955 Ford Beautiful 3-Door Fijlrlane with V-5 engine. Payment* of $1.$0 ?197 1955 Pontiac S-Door Hardtop and payment* of $130 per weekl $197 1956, Ford 3-Door with (-cylinder engine end stick shift. Payment* ot $i.w> per weekl *197 1958 Ford Convertible with V-$ engine end '‘automatic transmission 1 Payment* of $4.30 per weekl *597 '57 Plymouth 3-Door with automatic transmls-ments ot $1.00 per weekl *197 .1955 Olds’ . 2-Door ‘W. llftflU «1MI. Pay- 1956 Ford L 4-Door W e g • n. j Very nice throughout! Payments of $1.$4 '55 Chevrolet •toMoa w»ion. 91Ut It mt tut you hive bttn looking lor* '57 Chevrolet 4-Door Station Wagon wUh e-evUnder engine 1 Payments of 1958 Edsel S-Door Hardtop with everything ment! ot $1.10 per wookl s197 *197 Payments of II.M par weekl *197 $5.80 per weekl >497 weekl *497 '55 Chevrplet Bel Air 4-Door with V-t engine. Payments of Sl.M per weekl . s197 . 1957, Ford 4-Door with V-S engle*. Pey-' meats Of 43.50 per WSfkl *297 1955 Dodge EDoor Hardtop. Baal clean throughout! Payments of $l.$0 per v*t||ti , ‘197 1958 Mercury 4-Door Montclair with many extras. Paymedts of 4**0 per weekl ‘497 1956 Dodge 4-Door Hardtop with V-l engine. Payment* of ll.M per weekl *197 1956 Studebaker A butuUful 1-Door with many 1955 Buick 4-Door Haidtep: Meat nice in and out! payments of $1.$$ 1959 English FORD Anglia. Reel nice. The on* for the eool Payment* of 1956 Buick 4-Deer Special Hardtop. Hot too -many of these Mea one* around! 1958, Edsel Convertible -with automatic transmission end V-S engine. . Payment* of 45.00 per. wtok 1 WIIm loll in lit' Pay mint* of *197 *197 >497 Payments of $1.10 par waafcl *297 *497 , 109 S. East Blvd. at Auburn FE 3-7161 ..OPEN EVES. FE 3-7162 Mr m U. .. V 1 12 J (; m V TP' mm............a i ■aai................. Todays: Television Programs-- •I *-#«*•♦»•* Channel fc-WW-ir OmmI’ 7t-WXYE-TV Channel MUtf-n CImmI ‘w-wtv* ----4tmJL—:-ZSaecL_r ........*---i------ THE PONTIAC rRESS. WEDNESDAY, AlfctJST 8, 1962 r^T WEDNESDAY EVENING 6:00 (2) Movie (cqgf.) ■' 'X «y m ' , (7) Action Theiter (Cant.) (907 >N«W« Magazine 0:15 (56) Introductoty Psychology 6: *5 (2) Weather * (4) Weather J 0:90 (2) Newt (4) News •• , - . ,* " (TFNwJi ■ ».•. • (9) Yogi Bear, 0:4ft (2) Sports (4) Sporu \ ' 0:IB (2) News : > (4) News .% —(7) News, Weather, Sports 7:0 (2) Mister, Ed V . . (4) Best of Groucho (7) Dragnet -w " — (9) Pioneers ^ (56) Written Word p 7:80 (2)^gassword •____ (4) (Color) Wagon Train (7) Howard K. Smith (9) Movie: “Stand Up and Fight.” (1939) Slavery, and Jteud between stagecoaches and railroads,. fdrm background of this imlodrama set in Maryland. Wallace Beery. Robert Taylor JR 8:00 (2) Danger MrfT —(4) Wagon Train (cont.) (7) Focus on America (9) Movie (cont;) ‘ (56) Africa Today 8:80 (2) Checkmate (4) Rebel (7) Top Cat X (9) Movie (cont.)' 9:00 (2) Checkmate (Cont.) (4) Mystery Theater (7) Hawaiian Eye (9) Sightline , 9:80. (2) Dick Van Date (4) Mystery Thtftfer (Cont.) (7) Hawaiian Eye (coht.) (9) Hancock’s Hall-Hour 10:00 (2) Steel Hour (4). (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Naked at;* . (9) News 4 10:15 (9) Weather , 10:80 (9) Telescope UA\V 10:80 (2) Steel Hour (Omt.) (4) (Color) Brinkley’s Jour- . (7) Naked City Jcont.) (9) Home Fair * 11:00 (fy News (4) News • (7) News (9) Movie: “Horiky Tonk.’ (1941) Con man gets elected boss of western town where gold strike has taken place. Clark Gable, Lana Turner, Frank Morgan, Claire Trevor, Chill Wills, Marjorie Main. " ii:U (7) News, 'Sports 11:15 (2) Sports' P (4) Weather 11:90 (2) Weather (4) Sports (7) 11:85 (2) Movie:" “Seven Angry Men?* (1885) Factuhl story of John Brown’s crusade to free slaves culminating in attack on arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Va. Raymond Massey, Jeffrey Hunter, Debra Paget, John Smith, Leo Gordon. (7) Movie: "Frontier Gal.” (1945) Escaping from posse, young man runs into a girl TV Features By United Press International WAGON TRAIN, 7:30 p.m. (4) “The Hobie Redman Story.” Scott Miller and wagon master John Mclntire attempt to persuade others to follow new trail. Repeat. HOWARD K.. SMITH, 7:30 p.n (7). A panel, including U.S. Secretary of. the Jnterior Stewart Udail, discussesBfttempts to attract tourist* to Hterics KRAFT MYSTERY THEATER, 9 p.m. (4), "Chez Rouge.”. Janis Paige, Harry Guarduio and Ray Danton costar in a Panama nightclub drama. Repeat. FOCUS ON AMtBRIGA, 8 p.m. (7). "Designed for Deterrence*' ABC newsman Bill Shadel hosts this documentary about Kansas THE REBEL, 8:30 p.m. (4). "The Waiting.” Nick Adams'as "Johnny Yuma” is-used by desperate woman. Repeat. CHECKMATE, 8:30 p.m. (2). \ Chant of Silence.” Detectives track down two hoodlums who shot a policeman and hide out in a monastery. Repeat. STEEL HOUR, 10 p.m. (2). Gary Crosby and Larry Blyden costar in a World War n ctynedy entitled "Male Call,” set on Pacific Ocean island. Trouble breaks'out when two ladles pay the base a surprise visit. DAVID BRINKLEY’S JOURNAL, 10:30 p.m. (4). A group of painters, including an at plished • chimpanzee, show their work. ' Color. Repeat. TONIGHT, 11:30 p.m. (4). Merv Griffin hosts. Guests include United Press International White House reporter Merriman Smith, musical conductor Mitch Millar, Skip Haymes, and George Kirby. (Color.) VtBooaAkmr lesson r r r r 5 r- r ft r nr 12 13 14 15 19 17 1ft Ift £ I 2r 9 r r 23 24 25 J H F u 37 3ft 3ft 36 F 33 • 3T 9 F 3T J HP w 39 Bl F J! •k 43 0 F 4b r 47 4ft , w 59 51 5T 53 54 55 5ft 13 Conner II Southern if rinylni illpanlin _____ - 10 Frenon novaUit 00 01Xneriy • B Cooking »*«**( 11 Kind o) braath 10 Ahnoya ip 3]Fadora 40i(ounUUn pasa anBiaataaf^pl or i)SLv.r «t Chip.** 'river 3 Melody 3 Egyptian a Slew Han 5 Feminine title 6 Sorrowful ary 7 Negative vote 31 Observed 3a "Lana —— State" 30 Enlarged 37 Opposed 38 Steal 83Table acres' 03 Pannaylvanla Bjtfljr 10 me " 30 Flttanm who owns a saiodn and i> married to her at point of gun. Yvonne De Carlo, Rod Cameron, Andy Devine. Ut99 (4) (Color) Tonight THURSDAY MORNING 1:89 (2) Meditations 0:85 (2) On the Farm Front 9:99 (2) Spectrum *02 7:00 (2) B'wana Ddn (4) Today * (7) FuneWs 7:99 (7) Johnny Ginger 4:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo 0:90 (7) Jack La Lanne 0:09 (2) Movie: “Bdchelor Bait.” (4) Living (7) Movie: “East Side oi Heaven?’ Part 2. T (4) Say When 10:99 (7) Tips ’n' Tricks 19:95 (7) News 10:90 (2) I Love Lucy ' (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Life of Riley 10:91 (9) Billboard 10:49 (9) Tower Kitchen Time 11:09 (2) December Bride ... (Color) Pric ETnie Fort) 49)4foiiday in Canada 11:80 (2) Brighter Day (4) Concentration „ . (7) Yours for a Song ' (9) Movie: “The Wedding of Lilli Marlene.” :5I (2) News THURSDAY AFTERNOON 100 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Your First Inipression (7) Jane Wyman 18:80 (2) Search .for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Camouflage 18:45 (2) Guiding Light 18:60 (9) News 18:56 (4) News (7) News 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Best of Groucho (7) Gale Storm (9) Movie:. “Anchor Aweigh,” Part 2. 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) People Are Funny. (7) How to Marry a Million, aire 1:65 (4) Faye Elizabeth 1:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Jan Murray (7) Day in Court (56) British Calendar 9:16 (56) Industry on Parade ):S6 (4) News 1:80 (2) House Party .(4) Loretta Young 1 (7) Seven Keys (56) Secret of Flight 1:00 (2) Charles Boyer (4) Young Dr. Malom* (7) Queen for a Day (9) Movie: "TTie Three Musketeers." (56) Dr. Posin’s Giants 8:80 (2) To Tell the Truth - (4) Our Five Daughters _________________wpon —wjbk e* I /wpon, Man*. 18:3*—WJR. Modern I WXYZ. JU* AUa . WWJ. Weirl* Newe WWJ, rfewe. muiio wxyz. Lee Alt*a CKLW, JOt OenUle •WCAR, Newe Sport* w WPON. Newe, Tin* iIllH—WJR. Mud* ^ WWJ, Millw CRLW, B. Staton WCAR. O. «e»*M THCRItIMY MORNING 8:00—WJR, Vole* Of ASM. i WWJ, Newe. Roberu , , wifi, Wolf, town : CKLW. toy* opontr WJBK, &*>• ATiri. • ^ WCAIt, Net'i, Blieridin • WPON Newe, Art*. W**toa SOB—WJR, Muila Hell wjbk, N»w», Amt WPON. Sport* IlfO-WJR, N*w*. Muele Htll WWJ. Newe. RoberU win, W«S. N*w« ^ ' / CKLW. Newe. Toby D*tM 'wg*“ 1 u .tit*-WWJ, . News, J-BIrOe ksteis WJBK. mb* A*er» WCAR. New*. Sl'erlilan 8:88—WJR. N»w». B Ou*et WWJ New*. Rob*rt* WXTi, Wolf, Newe 1 -if: NewV pool Mel 1 8:88—WJR, WXVZ, Wol WJBK, N*< WCAR. J i VMrn WXVZ. Oordon. Wml cklw, Jo* vaaB . WJBK. N*W8, ANTI ... WCAR. M8R8 I8:88-.WJW K*rl KM* N**». J. Mia 9ssi fia&raR 11ts-WJR. Time fit MMb ww#^-.hLrai« iw WjBi. New*. JIMS WyAB. New*. Pur** WPON Newe, Oleen BhO > WWJ, K I CKLW. _____ , WCAR. M««*. I l:*8—Wjh, Rem WJBK. New*. C. Reid WPOH Newe. Don McLeod 1:3*—WCAR. N*w*. Puree WPOH, Newe. Oban Show 8:68—WJR. . New*. Bbowceil WWJ. N«W*. Hullmen WXYZ. Wlnwr CRLW Jo* V8B WJBK. Ham. Lee . ML. — WCAR, Newe. Sherlden *:*•—WJR. New*. Bhowcae* wwj. fir*w*. Kuttmaa WXYj, libaetlen • 8:**—WJR, Muele Hell WXYZ. B*b*«ll*n, Ntm CKLW, New*, Dtrlf* WJBK. NtW*. U* 4:88—'WJR. Ntm. Clait Sb WWJ. M*m. Bumper C ' WXYZ. a-"—— WPON, Saw*, Bob br**n WIR. Mjuilr.HaU wwj. Buibpdr dub WXVZ. SebtlUM N«W* I:**—WJR. mwi. Mull* Hall WWJ, i*W*. Bumpar aub: WXVZ. Sebeetlen Newe CKLW. Bporte, 0*VI*e : WJBK, Newe. jtt WCAR, New*, ihertdjn WPON, N*w*. Bob Oreea 8:81—WJR. It—1« nil ' s&jsspu. Francis I paid 4,000 gold florins for the portrait a few years after it was completed. The Mona Lisa fell from favor in the frivolous reign of Louis XV, but the romantic 19th century took her to heart. WASHINGTON—At a time astronauts have orbited the earth, parts of it still compete with for men’s imaginations. it it it One of the remaining unknowns is New Guinea, a divided flung 1,500 miles across the tropical Pacific. Many of New Guinea’s lush mountain valleys and Stone-Age jungles await their first explorers. WASHINGTON—Life. for the Lapps is not all reindeer and colorful costumes. The 20th century haw belatedly arrived in Lap-land. it it it About 32,600 of the hardy artlc people live in an ethnic region tjiat cuts across boundaries in northern Europe. * * * There are 20,000 Lapps in Norway, 8,500 in Sweden, 2,300 in Finland and 1,800 in Russia. Most them are fishermen famers. Only about a fifth-reindeer herders, and a small piinority of these are nomads of Did Religion Help Kitty Recover Her Voice? By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Now I can tell you that Kitty Kallen—who dramatically recovered the voice that .was lost for four years —believes that the keystone of her comeback was religion, after she’d given up hope of help through psychiatry. Kitty, at led»t, has become actively religious since |HHH| overcoming the ‘*pariay5l|'’ J.t l'er vocal cords that allenced her for ao long. She’s now doing tum-away .business at the Plaza Persian Room, hi midsummer. Currently Kitty goes regularly to the Jewish services, and observes the Friday night ritual. Cheering her from the audience last* night was Rabbi Arthur Herizberg. (Look who’s telling you all thlsr-a backslide Methodist.) I did a "sprtnterview” with Mamie Van Doren-a faatle, sitting in a car parked on . Broadway as ahe was en route to New Jersey to perform in "Wildcat"—and she told me she’s giving up Hollywood and moving to NY, hoping to become a top stage actress. “Are you reully looking for a hew guy?” I asked, referring to Mamie saying that she, at *9, had busted permanently with Tony Santoro, *3. ____' . ... . "Yes, he didn’t want me to leave Hollywood. All he wanted to do waa atay there and ro to twlat clubs every night,” she sutd. Mamie said I should be her date bureau. You guys got to clear everything with me. Better be nice to me in your letters or I may lose them on the way to telling her about you. ★. ★ it- '...... Talent agent Martin Ooodman, competing now for Hollywood business, spent $4,000 for a private extra plush, extra lush powder room very important to those Hollywood actor folk. THE MIDNIGHT EARL. .. Betty Hntton’a getting r$vea out-of-town lor bumplng-ijnd-grinding In “Gypay” though she Just had a baby a few weeks ago . . . Anthony jQnlnn’s ion, Duncan, It, went to Mexico to become a bullflghter . . . Pahl Anks, whose 21st birthday was boisterously celebrated, is reaUy growing up. They say he walked off with a date that Eddie Fisher, brought to a party . . . World Traveler Bob Krlendler says he finally found the most breathtaking scenery right ln th? UJB.-ln our own state of Alaska. BAAL’S PEARLS: “The time to start worrying about a boy is when he leaves home without slamming the door"~£aul Light. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: The smash hit comedy team of Don Porbes and ^oe Villa at the Copacabana said: "We can't break upyet. .. Why? . • . Because nobody ever heard of us yet." WISH I’D SAID THAT: "What You Don’t .Owe Won’t Hurt too.” ) The difference between a beautiful and dumb secretary, alleges Leo Fuld, Is, you can fire the dumb one ... That’s earl, John Scofield, i editor of a national magailne, recently traveled from the western wilds of Netherlands territory to the Idyllic South Seaa villages of Australian Papua. Scofield photographed the largest (rlbal gathering ever to take place In the South Pacific, a sing-! sing of 50,000 to 70,000 peqple. ! He made the first color record of head-hunters and cannibals of the Asmat and Cnsuarina Coast re Michael Roekefeller disappeared. CKBEMONIAI.N NOT ABANDONED "The Inst head-hunting in the Asmat—real organized headhunting—took place about five years ago," SCofield was told. “But the ceremonials connected With It still grtm.'1* - it h h In both Dutch and Australian New Guinea, pioneering teachers, doctors, missionaries, and government officers are working hard not only tp dispel the dark terrors of ignorance, but to prepare the islanders for their leap Into the future saye the National Geographic. it it it Dedicated young men think nothing of walking for days through remote country to extend govern- meht control over men who have never before seen an outsider. (Copytight, 190$) Honor Chiefs Request SOUTH CHARLESTON, W. Va. —Funeral arrangements for Charles Schmidt, who died after wt 40 yeara as South Charleston fire chief, were carried out in accordance with a request he made years ago. The casket bearing Schmidt’s body was taken to the eemetry not In a hearse -but rd a fire engine. Voters Okay Building of Marino at Chessel CHASSEL several years from now, the Vasa- should stand again as proud as on that unhappy day in 1628 when it took Its first brief voyage. - But even before then, she’s still tye newest sight in a very old city and well worth a look. Macomb Voters OK Community College District MOUNT CLEMENS (D—Macomb County voters yesterday approved creation of a community college district to be financed by a millage increase. ★ * 4 The millage proposal passed by vote of 18,087 to 16,439. There will be a tax of one. dollar for each $1,000 assessed valuation. It is to be effective for 20 years, producing an estimated annual $1,400,000. *i The college district will embrace the entire county. Plans call for permanent campuses for three junior colleges, including a present college that operates in high school space. ♦ ★ it Western Wayne County hae undertaken a similar community college program and another if under consideration in Oakland County. Former Circus dancer Leaps 50 Fee* to Death SAN JTRANCISCO til--. Gerdt, Marie Hovious, 38, a former circus dancer reported disturbed over the death of Marilyn Monroe, leaped 50 feet to her death from a third-floor apartment yesterday. I think Marilyn Monroe set her /' her husband, Raymond, 51, told police afterward. Sierra Leone, which recently be- 1 ime a country, had been an English Crown- Polony since 1800.. Falls From Boat, Dies ANCHORVILLE W - Richard Hopp, 13, of Richmond drowned Tuesday when he fell from a cabin cruiser into Anchor "Bay three miles south of here. Princess Grace to Conduct TV Tour of Monaco NEW YORK (AP) — Princes* ’ Grace of Monaco will conduct American viewers on a one-hour television tour of the 370-acre Mtdlterranean principality ruled by her husband, Prince Raiider III, next February. The announcement Tuesday by Chemstrand Co., the sponsor, said the exact date of the show and the television • network which will carry it had hot been determined. SOFT WATER 4$H FIR _ 9 9 MONTH Hard Water Trouble? CALL US W« Service All MakM LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. Division ol Mich, Healing, toft 88 Ntwbsrry St. FK Httl 1962 AIR CONDITIONERS $161.00 SWEET'S Radio& App. He lived in Chicago.' X HH REFRIGERATOR BARGAINS 10 Cu. Ft. General Electric ...... $179.95 12 Cu. Ft. Fhilco . .......$199.99 13 Cu. Ft. Gibson, 2-Door ™-™$1t9Jl. < with salable Made 14 Cu. Ft. RCA Whirlpool with Large Bottom Freezer, St $279.95 h triable trade: Open Erminp 'til 9 Except Sotwrdoyi ELECTRIC COMPANY 825 fW Hmi ft. ..... PI 4-2520 • 09329670 AC PRESS, ]^EDNESDAY? AUGtIST ! Wc^^BrezzelitTt StickingTlts^Neck Out inNew Job By JAMES MARLOW M New* Analyst WASHINGTON -- Anthony J. , Celebrezze sounds even more cautious than Abraham Ribicoff, the main he succeeded as secretary of health, education anil welfare. Ribicoff. a pollticlan and now runhihg fat* the Senate in Conner-“—I here thing to make anybody mad at him or really to indicate exactly • where he stood on tho^e two touchy problems.. ' EARLY 4VK, Jk(tt > One of Kennedy's earliest act* s president was to propose federal aid to education,, leaving out parochial schools.. This got Catho^ lie leaden angry. ' * T" that would make* people mad at him. ,He was a very mild member’of President Kennedy’s Cabinet. « And he was quite a man compromise. For example/ the "|mj hi was. willing to .compro-miae with the conservatives, in Congress on Kennedy’s plan of medical care for the aged. So far the most distinguishing mark of Celebrezze, five-time mayor of Cleveland, has been . great unwillingness since getting hi* new assignment to stick his neck out even a little bit on anything- DECLINED OPINION After, the President had picked him, but before the Senate approved ibis nomination, Celebrezze declined to Hay where he stood on the, big1 national issues. ' This wasr understandable since he Still didn’t have the job and the Senate could be unpredictable. But he’s here now, with the job, ’ and Tuesday at his first Washington news conference he had his first chance to > «ay where stood on the two biggbst issues involving^ bis department. These Were federal aid to public elementary schools (but not parochial • schools) and medical care for the aged, Traffic Deaths in State Down Safety B o a r d Ts Told" Fi g u re Opposes Rise in National Rate LANSING IM—Michigan's traffic death toll Is below last year while the national fatality rate is climb-iifg, the State Safety Commission sms told here yesterday. State pplire reported the latest Count shows 820 deaths to date, 51 below a year ago at this time and about a five per cent drop. The national total shown about a 7 per cent Increase and If the trend continues the death toll (or the year may reach a record 40,000, police said. Commissioner Joseph- A. Childs j warned, however, that a few bad months could offset the gains. "A lot of people, think the bad accident months end with Labor Day,” he said. ’’That just isn’t would seem That between then and now Celebtezze. -particu larly . since he wag mayor oi Cleveland and had school problems, would have fchad time to study the/ aid-to-ee# cal care plan on the grounds that Its cost woul Roberts, Criticized by opponents Richard D. Kuhn and Robert J. Huber for supporting an income tax earlier this year and later reversing his stand, .walked off with 17,778 votes when unofficial tallies were compiled at the county clerk’s office early this' morning. In the 1900 primary, in a -two-man race with Roberts, Ituhn finished less than 4,000 -votes behind. In yesterday’s three-man contest, which would tend to weaken Roberts’ chances of a big vote, the incumbent senator came close to matchhing his 1960 total of 19,950 votes. EXPECTED TO LOBE Kuhn blamed his decisive defeat on ballot designation carried “ Roberts. wn,f| Kahn was credited with 9,072 votes and Huber, the mayor of Troy, wan given MM. ruled against him, Kuhn said be '’expected” to lose to Roberts. "1 don’t think yob can beat ballot designation," he said. The con-con delegate from Waterford said a victory In his suit to declare ballot deslgna- In the 1960v contest between Roberts and 'Kuhn. Roberts was seeking his first term and did not carry ballot designation. Kuhn, despite Ids vigorous attack on Roberts’ program during the pre-election campaign,® pledged to support the Incumbent In Ms battle for re-elec- have made1 It a lot cJoeer.’ After the State Supreme Court Election Results Roberts' senate opppnent in the November general election, Leland H. Smith, collected 13,060 voles the lone Democratic candidate In the senate race. Smith'* total the highest of any -county Democrat. ’HOME” SUPPORT Roberts' suppprt came largely from areas near his West Bl< field Townshipu home. State Vote (tlnoffldal Tabulation, 8,MB of 1,149 Pel.) DEMOCRATS GOVERNOR John B. Swainaon.... 318,396 LT. GOVERNOR T. John Lesinski... 251,774 CONGRESSMAN * AT LARGE Neil Staebler...... 200,587 REPUBLICANS GOVERNOR GeorgeM.Romney. 446,398 LT. GOVERNOR Clarence A. Reid.. 194,567 John H. Stahlln... 121,049 Rockwell T. Gust Jr. ...... 104,767 CONGRESSMAN AT LARGE Alvin Mi Bentley.. 364,975 Birmingham voters gave him his biggest margin of the election— 1,505, vote*—with a total of 2,045 compared to 540 for Huber and 426 for Kuhn. t The senator’* other Mgh-voto communities were Royal Oak (1471), Bloomfield Township (1,-857), Pontiac (1,188) and West Bloomfield Township (788). Even In Wefcrford Township— Kuhn’s home* ground — Roberts emerged the victor, chalking up 947 votes, against 726 for Kuhn and 202 for Huber, County Roberts said' the election went about a* he predicted except that the vote war heavier. He said had estimated he would outf Kuhn and Huber *by 12,000 to 6,000 to 4,000. tuto dealer Homer High), 4,418, Hirt polled 5,727. It northern County versus southern Oakland County In the Democratic FRANK IRON* Leads county GOP Fulkerson at Rep, Broomfield Highf captured 17 of the 46 townships and cities in the county they were all Ih the northern or Middle part of the county, and couldn't offset the high South Oakland votes counted by Hirt,, LOST IN ’SO flight unsuccessfully opposed Irons two years ago in the geiw ernl election, losing 25,694 to 34,424. Ballot totals for unopposed candidates were: For prosecutor—George F. Taylor, Republican incumbent, 29,371; S. Jerome Bronson, D-Oak Park, 12,909. Clerk-Register of Deed*—Daniel T. Murphy, R-iocotftbent, as,-687; David S. Lees, D-Troy, 12,- George J. Fulkerson can thank voters in Pontiac and Waterford Township, for paving his way to victory ill the race to choose a Democratic nominee for US. Congressman from Oakland County, In defeating fellow Democrat George E. Lennox, Fulkerson received nearly*-half of his unofficial winning margin of 1,632 from Treasurer—Charles A. Sparks, R-Incumbent, 28,195; Betty H. Mc-Vay. D-Birmingham, 12,682. Surveyor—Ralph A. Main, R-Incumbent, 28,454; Stanley F. Dunn, D-Bloomfield Township, U,-. 973. voters In the two area com’ munities. Filial unofficial returns showed the 35-year-old Birmingham attorney with 7,435 votes compared to 1,903 for Lennox. Congressman .William Broomfield, on the Republican ticket, polled 82,1*8 vote* to lead all Oakland County candidate*. Broomfield drew 1,904 vote* In Pontiac and another 1,705 In Wa-terfonf Township as Uttle more 10 percent of the registered voters turned out in each community. INSURED WIN While /the Pontiac and Water-font totals' were meaningless la the unchallenged Broomfield — except as « popularity Index, Fulkerson used sizable margins In both areas to insure hit victory ’generally” as he expected, pressing disappointment at light voter turnout, he said his margin ot victory seems less impressive because of the small number of total^ votes casi. 1* Pontiac, Fulkerson drew fil* highest vote total and Ms Mggeat winning margin In any Oakland community, (allying ret vote* te Lennox’s difference of 444. Waterford voters gave the winner i spread! of 248 voles. 457 to ill. Fulkerson said ' ‘ " d the "I thought I would be strong in Pontiac and Waterford," the nominee said. * i Lennox, making his second unsuccessful attempt to win the Dem-ocrratic congresstobal nomination, gained his biggest advantage In Hazel Park where he owns and manages an Industrial,-tool supply company. Voters In the Mouth Oakland dy gave Lennox 72* vote* and Fulkerson 474- One- look at the combined county totals of both Fulkerson and Lennox should tell the new Detnj ocratic nominee’that,.*be faces uphill fight against Broomfield in the'Nov,. 6 general .election! TOP DRAWING CARD Together, Futkerwn and Len- »x. tr 1,000 mustered 13,238 votes, nearly less than Broomfield. Fulker- past that he is k. card for hit party., In MW* a* (Continued oi the Democratic Page 2, Got. 6) Only 15.6 per cent of the oeun-ty’s 328,615 registered voters tumed out tor the primary, 1 County Clerk Daniel T. Murphy said an unofficial tally ahowed. 51,528 persons voted here, where approximately 85,000 had been; anticipated. / 01' Sol Will Smile on Area for Awhile or Sol will continue to beam on ' Pontiac resident! for tha next few days, tending temperatures to htgha of near 83. There's * chance of t tale after- i noon thundershower today but skiea will clear and remain fair Thursday. Variable morning .winda 1 at 2 miles pef hour will become • moatly northeast to east at $ to 15 m.p.h, f ■ ; S Sixty-five was the low temperature before 8 a. m. in -dpwntown Pontiac. The recording at 1 p. m. was 83. . Kennedy Doctor Dies COHA8SET, Maas. (II Frederick-L. Good, the gynecologist son, however, has shown in the daltvtfted all nine children of Mr,,.and - Mrs. JoetMh- P. Kennedy,. parents Of the President, died Iwt night at his-summer tome. He was 7 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1982 jjftc/ic/ofes Matched Nov. 6 The Pay in Birmingham Gas Chamber Awaits Molher Clawson Chiefs Say So What' to Election Noted Sculptor Head Department at A storm turned the light* down and the city council turned fitelr nows up on election proceeding* in Clawaon last night, delaying final tallies by an esti-mated two hours. City Clerk Mn. Qertrudf Cadger Hid final election report* were not eent off to the county clerk's office until 1 a.m. today because the waa required to. attend a city council meeting lent Mrs. Dan can Slated to Pit Today at Noon for Hiring Killers County Clerk Daniel T. Murphy said Clawson's report etna not received at the courthouse until 1:30 a.m.*, 40 minutes Idler all other report! had been turned In. Mn. Cadger alto blamed a storm which doused lights in the city’s headquarten lor 2tt-hours delaying election proceedings. Romney Surges to Top in Primary Law, Anderson Win RALPH A. MAIN OOP Surv eyor PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly sunny, not quite se; warm today. Chance of an afternoon thundenhower, Mil hi PmtlM Lowiit tcmpintun preceding I “ ■ wind vtlMltr, I m p fgj Sum mm Wtdtui Hood ruu Tburi. WjasstSay st. 1:44 p.i*. Thuridiy u 1:14 a.m. Wldniidiy et 11:41 Vm. Thureday at 1:14 p,ra. SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (AP)< Elizabeth Aim Duncan, who paid two hired killers $300 to murder I for eon’s wife, Is condemned to die in Sea Quentin's gas chamber today for the crime inspired by her warped mother love. Barring an unlikely last-minute stay, Mr Duncan, 58, was to be iped into, one of the chamber's two death chairs at noon, Pontiac time, Augustine Baldonado, 21, and Luia Moya, 23, the two tavern drifters who executed their murder contract in November 1958 by beating, strangling and burying 30-year-old Olga Duncan, will be marched into the gas chamber three hours later; , Frank Duncan, the ! attorney son whom Ma Duncan could not bear to riiara other woman, was turned down by Associate Justice William 0. Douglas of tfo U.S. Supreme Court Tuesday in a plea to have his mother's execution postponed for a third time. puma: plea Duncan, now 33, and S. Ward Sullivan, Los Angolea lawyer, flew I Glenwood, Wash., where the vacationing Supreme Court Justice granted the futile hearing. The record now Is that the U.S. Supreme Court has twice denied appeals, the California State Supreme Court has upheld the death penalty, and Gov. Edmund G. Brown last week refuted clem* • ency. “Leave the room just as it and don't 1st anyone else have the 11-times married Mrs. Duncan told Corona Women’ Prison officials Tuesday before departing on the 400-mlle auto drive to San Quentin. ‘Til be back," she declared, confident she would escape foe California death chamber. Roberts Polls | 2-1 Margin Over [Richard Kuhn (Continued From Page One) the tax as a major campaign issue but Roberta later said he opposed to an Income levy. Kuhn also criticised tfo incumbent tor "riding .George Romney’ coattails." *r . . ★ Of Roberts' primary election victory puts him in line for a second straight term in the senate if he can defeat Smith. He previously served two terms in the state House of Representatives. * Kuhn’s loss was his sixth In a row in the Republican senate primary. ★ ★ ★ He Said he did not consider it the end of his political carter, not-ing that "Abraham Lincoln lost U times." residents and voters at polling place* os the west side were Without electric service until l:M p.m., according to company official*. Police were called out to reroute traffic around the fallen tree on Oakland Aveune. Detroit Edison Ot>. spokesmen reported scattered power failures to. Pontiac, Troy, Milford, Addison Township and Independence Township. Edison craws had most service restored in 2tt hours. Late News Front Our News Wins GENEVA —The Untied States offered today to slash by more than half tbs number at control posts necessary to polios a an-clear teat ban. American Ambassador Arthur H. Dsaa told tbs 11-aatlM disarmament conference the United States Is preparad to accept "around 80“ control poets Instead of tbs 111 it has prevl- * pssr Trtv. Cltr Albuquerque TwMUj'e TrauMreiore Cksrt. * MM JMkMPVlU* 41 •be IT it SlUU City $1 Hon if M pee Annin It iiette #5 ts Miami Beech to f4 Milwaukee at it M New Orieem 44 ft ft New fork “ Si it Omaha St. Pho.nl* PUMburih a s no n ySi 8 ......■Bn I it. it Seattle it M 42 63 Tampa W ft i 100 14 Waihlneton 40 jj t 13 f. Lake C I U O. Franc! I U I. 0. Me the northwestern Plains Into southeastern Rockies, upper states and Into the southern WASHINGTON - The Soviet Union eet olt another atmospheric nuclear tost yesterday, the Atomic Energy Commission reported today. 'The detonation occurred at the Soviet toot alt* ho central Siberia and was In tin low hll-otoa range," the brief announce- Mit said. LONDON — The British government today extended until Friday midnight the deadline tor El A1 Airline to tab* fugitive spy Robert gobton to the United Mates. t off a showdown to the three-nation wrangle ever Moblen which had been due to come to a head at midnight tonight. BUENOS AIRES - Report* from northern Argentina ssM today Gea. Federico Toranso Mo*-loro had declared llmsslf commander-in-chief of Argsattna’s army. “ i was oeM to have demanded the reolgaation of the war s*c- w WASHINGTON •ecntaiy * Ambassador Anatoly P. uocrynln ( today, repostoRy to urge progress on the leng-atalled Violent Storm Snaps Power Many Pontiac Area Polk Without Electricity for Short Time Lost Night A brief but violent thunderstorm — whipped along by wind! estimated at 50 miles per hour — toppled trees, mapped power lines end left many Pontiac arm residents without electricity ana telephone service yesterday evening. A large elm tone which fell across Oakland Avenue south of Baldwin Avenue caused the most extensive damage of the storm. The tree snapped two major Consumers Power Co. circuits In (Continued From Pate One) campaign in the coming months. "On our part," he said, “It will be waged in accordance with the time-honored principle oil honest debate. We will appeal to reason, not emotions. We will dto the record and tha facto, not generalizations or conjectures." -Both Swatoson and Romney have campaigned hard in recent weeks, sometimes Mowing schedules that got them up before dawn and to bed. after midnight. Picture on Pago 55 front of the Pontiac Motor Division Offices, 196 Oakland Ave. It also ruptured a water line leading to Spadtfore’s Market, 197 Oakland Ave. M the east side of Pontiac were "Now that the primary has shown Gov. Swatoson maintaining traditional strength despite, the low turnout of Democratic voters can concentrate on the victory in November.’1’ Romney, who retired while the •arty return were still being neceossrtly Indicative of the futon. “Most of the Issues in the races Tuesday were strictly local in character and thus any attempt to apply the vote totals to the statewide campaign for governor would be misleading," he commented. ‘GET TO ISSUES’ Swatoson said that all candidates should now get down to serious consideration of the Issues. 1 am confident the record of my administration and the record of oarvlee to the people of Michigan by the Democratic petty will hew the scrutiny to which It win bo subjected la tbo coming months." Swatoson predicted a hard-fought To Vie in November longtime legislators Unseated in Primary (Continued From Page One) man race for two ooate, trailing Bop. Raymond O. Wane! of North Street and newcomer Donald Winner Jr. of Port Huron. In heavily-Democratic Wayne County all five incumbent senators survived tfo primary. REPRESENTATIVES LOSE But the voting took its toll of Raps. Edgar Currie, 1st District; Edward H. Jeffries, 5th District; Chester Woznlak, 14th District, Joseph 1. Jackson, 15th District; and Hugh Smaie, 12th District, i la Allegan County, complete Ben E. Lotunaa, a Republican, was ouotod Ik the primary by gate Jamas 8. Farnsworth, 4,677 (Continued From Page One) in both parties was in District 4. tlon ITOm Terrance E. Nagle, ST, making his first attempt at public office. Nagle totaled 3,4*2 jlorof fine arts de-from Gran-jbr ook Academy * Art to 1952; [studied with Os-Zadktoe to and at the Ac*£entia di 1 i Arti to Flor-before receiving M* mas-'tar of fine arts ............degree in 1955. Following his graduation he went to the Kansas CHy Art institute as head of the sculpture department. A 1959 he taught Sculpture at the Rhode bland School of Design. He returns to CTanbrook from the University of California Art Depertment. MAJOR INFLUENCE Schmidt hat developed a- number. of techniques tor working in east metal sculpture. His cart Iron sculpture has been a major Influence In the revival of this me-utn. Be employe* what hs rotors to to the oppoetog party, Kramer’s candidacy waa contested by teacher Archie H. Bailey, 1,425, and public relations man, Maxwell M. Gunman, 804. e ★ * In District 5, Republicans selected incumbent Rep. William Hayward aa their November standard bearer with 4,868 votes over Donald W. Sargent who won 1,462. In I piece# l« earns hi re-verso to blocks *f baked sand, creating a mold tato which the motto* metal to peumd. > Schmidt, who was represented to the i960 "Sixteen Americana" at the Museum, of Modem Art, has exhibited internationally and to represented in collections at the Museum of Modem Art, Art Institute of ChtoMP. the Nelson-Atkins Museum to Kansas Cite, the Kran-nert Art Museum at the University of Illinois, Museum of the University of Nebraska and Washington University to St. Louis. * - * *• In another academy change, Donald C Willett, itm Cornell Road, Southfield, has been named instructor in printing during the yehr’s leave of abaraoe granted Jack Madlaon for study to Japan. Sr '-Sr 'Sr ' Willett received Us master of fine arts degree at Cranbrook Academy, studying with Sepeshx and has recently completed a year of study under a Fulbright grant at the University of Paris. completing his i state representative, after being a Royal Oak city commissioner tor 14 years and mayor tor eight, Sargent, an attorney, was making his second try for public office. Sr S’ ★ In District 3, where there whs no contest within the parties, cumbent Republican Henry Hogan Jr., with 9,115 votes, opposed by Democratic candidate John F. Foley with 1,632. TimBtabl* lor Echo I Just after dark tonight, at 8:58, the Echo I satellite will pass over Pontiac skies, coming from the south, 13 to 15 degrees above the horizon, moving to tfo southeast. 826 Traffic Toll In 1962 EAST LANSING (AP) - Traffic accidents have killed 926 pen-eons to Michigan ao to^ this year, provisional figures compiled by state police showed today- Tfo toll at this date last year was S74. How Pontiac Voted (Total vote 8,8*7 of SS.SS4 registered voters, GOVERNOR DEMOCRATS REPUBLICANS Swatoson ..........1799 Romney t..........2096 IT. GOVERNOR Leslnskl ........ 1427 Reid ...............900 Stahlin ............ 816 Gust ............... 258 CONGRESSMAN AT LARGE Staebler ..........1241 Bentley ...........1305 Wayne County’* two vacant senatorial potto. They were Chart** N. Youngblood In the lint district and William D. Ford In the 21st. David F. Upton, another former constitutional convention delegate, the Republican.nominatloa tor to this Houghton district encompassing four counties of the Upper Peninsula, Republican Ruth Butler, still another former delegate, was well ahead of two other GOP aspirants In early returns, seeking the seat held by Rep. Russell . Heilman, D-Boughton. STATE REPRESENTATIVE (District 2) ...1456 Smith ..... COUNTY OFFICES Prosecutor .....1207 Taylor . Hight .......................MS Irons ... Wit .Li.........372 Smith.......................334 Cleik-Regtater Lees .................,....1216 Murphy . McVay .................IWO .. 994 Barry . .. 530 Backer finrrapwr , ..1190 Main .. comer Don Gordon of Leland, but returns were still to come to from at least half the precincts to the district which covers Charlevoix Antrim, Leelanau and Benzie counts. Other former constitutional convention delegates besides Brown and Farnsworth were making strong showings in the primary. District 1 Rivals Fulkerson to Get Shot at Broomfield (Continued From Page One) though he lost the election to Republican Incumbent George F.-Taylor. Fulkerson is a graduate lawyer ol the University of Detroit and operates his own practice to Birmingham. He holds degree from the University'of Chi-*go. Gfoe of nine children, Fulkerson born to Harrisburg, HI. and Man Kllltd by Wai^i MD. (UK) r. 49, whs stung yesterday w» home of his c SALISBURY, MD. (UBI) ~ Robert W. Waller, 40, tots stung to death by wasps worktog at the |How Waterford Voted | (Total veto 2,Ml of 9UM registered voters, uj%) GOVERNOR Swatoson ... Leslnskl .... LT. GOVERNOR 645 Reid 853 Stahlin 680 Gust 243 Staebler . .. CONGRESSMAN AT URGE 570 Bentley Fulkerson .. Lennox ..... CONGRESS 211 Smith STATE SENATE .. 628 Roberto **T Kuhn Huber wee graduated from Pontiac Can- Coleman 674 Amhrxni tori High School In 1944. He end Cart his wife, Ruth, have two young ‘ COUNTY OFF8C— children, a daughter, Ann, 9 and *Wonson ...... a son, Derek, T. Taylor ........... The Fulkersons live at 3611 Mid- till niff dlebury Line, Bloomfield Town- Might , 390 .........1121 ship. In his home community. Smith . Fulkerson outpolled Lennox 156 to Htot 37. Hte’uuugta to Birmingham wee Clerk-Register ' / 92 to 98. Lera Mterphy m m 7mm .’f'o v ;•'.'* \ ’ '•■■ -, A THE PONTIAC? PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1962 Offices Probe German F^rm New Tranquilizer ♦fNjHj- ' '■ •vV-r Plane Accident Thalidomide Began WohderDrug FAA Investigating Crash of Small Craft FENTON »- Aviation tothor-itiea planned to continue their search for dues today in the crash o| « light plane that killed a Tola-do, Ohio, racetrack operator and his fade's maintenance chief | here yesterday. State police said witnesses reported seeing the plane bank shan> ly before feUiag hot eodld provide no explanation for toe crackup. MM | | n Into • wooded ana In northeastern Oy* (EDITOR’S VOTt—renaming is the first fit three itt-patches on thalidomide — its development, its delayed-action effects and of the etepe being tsMn to safeguard against hidden effort* if drugsJ l ng; paul -mr allerup LONDON (UP!) In the «pot-less, busy laboratories of Chemie - Grunenthal in tbs Rhineland dty • of Stolbtrg one £ay in 1953, there we a rustle of excitement. There was' every indication the German sdentiats had found something — a tranquilizing drug virtually free of any of the acute toxic affects so common to bar- way PMk, Inc., add Cecil J. Taylor, 4S. Wreckage was strewn over a 200-yard area as the plane's wings and propeller Hme shorn off aiid the bulk of its fuselage flattened Into a hillside. The Impact sent toa engine hurtling another 35 yards. Federal Aviation Agency officials searched the crash scene’yasterdsy and were to be joined today by investigators from the Civil Aeronautics Board in Chicago/ The men had left no flight plan before taking oft from a small field user Jfedtura's home. Police were told that the wives of both Distillers Co.- became interested, and as early aa April 1956, before thalidomide watt on the German market, the company began its mi tails.- The British tests confirmed what the German clinicians bad found. In April 1956, with the approval of the committee tor. the classification of proprietary drugs, thalidomide was put IK sale in Brltair under the trad* name “DIstaval.’ „ ----------borne out by testa, hen weald be a M* markable asw sedative. It could be tehee with no after-effects of gngghwoe or :aauesa> ft ®re*d bo a ean sleep lnducer. It was called thalidomide, a contraction of phthalimidoglutarmide, its scientific name. Chemie Grunenthal, or Grunenthal Chemicals, one of the la chemical firms in Germany, ed the drug tor 8te years on mice, gubtea pigs, rabbits cats. births of pbocomeliacy children — too many to be coinddenoe. In Hamburg, Germany. Dr. Widikud Lenz learned of SO malfernted births. He questioned the mothers and learned most of ,them bed taken Contergan fit their early preg- men were driving to Higgins Lake in northern Lower Michigan and they specidated that toe men were flying to foeet them. rice, toe new drug Passed iwty trial wito tto "A” mam The checking and further study were turned over to an todepenfiant research clinic. , •/ B NEW MIRACLE 1 FALSE TEETH RELINER Grunenthal WM JWW W required confirmation/ The din Ic’o verdict: “The ptofNuratton la Ifljgi IN DO YOUR PALM TBBTM MISBRY Samoa saw Mm Moto nliow sl*w uw mmpattMo, M Is excellent." Aa required by Geiflba^ taw. the n” certificate approving toe drug tor public sale- Grunenthal /named It “Contergan," the federal health bureau reglatered toe product *~ end In 1957 it waa placed on the general market to be sold without preimrip- m Canada, t of Europe, given many other names rent markets, among pit, Sedi-Lab, Lulamin, ,J Neurosedyn, Algosediv, / Valgraine, Kevadon, As-/ Expectorans. Some were ' I of the original tout all I thalidomide in varying hhuuOA Many chemlcalfirms .»stow Involved in manufacture I sale of the popular aedatlve. .rJMTT m> INCIDENTS Second thoughts about thalidomide were slow in coming. When two infants were born in Germany late in I960 with no arms and hands growing out of the ahotdder*. no one connected the case* with any drug. Such blrtha are ram, but. not unknown to the medical profession. In the oaae of the German babies It was found they were vie- In November 1961, Lenz spoke on Hie matter at a medical meet--tag in Duesaekforf, suggesting a drug — which he did not then name — Was linked to the strange births. - ' Leu wee convinced he knew the cause. Qa Nov. If, 1961, he and urged Me directors to to Lon predicted that Germany could expect between 50 end 100 malformed baUea to be born each month. etude, fowl oa »nd ut» ia Rochester, Commerce, Oxford, Lake yf Orion and Auburn Haights, and tho 4 Airport Unas Bus from Waterford and jk Clorkston. ; AATHUB'S I n. isgtosw i». ROOTIES SHOP r* 110 N. Ssgiaaw If. ^mintsMop On 1< N. Segleaw ft. J CLOONAN 5»OT«C0, 4 71 N. Isfleew ft. CONN'S CLOTHES OSMUH'S Tt N. SeMaew ft. NBM*S WEIR II Isateaw ft. »™12* rUDN.HDU •7 n. mm. ». mam GALLAGHEl'S ai W, Mesas ft. MUSIC SHOP II B. Hem rn,- McCANDLESS CIIPETS ItM.Pamr'ft. SHAW'S JEWELERS 94 N. Ssgimw ft. jswBunrct. 25 ft. Sagtaew ft. THE PONTIAC ,nus 41 W. Horen ft. WANTS! OUTFITTING CO. 48 S. Isgtosw ■ lit . WYMAN W '’pmmmmw*P • / ....n------ not willing - .take any chances either and on > Nov. 19 Contergan was taken off the German market. By then’some 100 toUUoa of the pills had been gold, in some places- thalidomide also had bean sold in liquid and ttmatee there have been at least "aeal-mella'' baby bora to A nan In KJag* When the moth-left the hospital (or home po- DIstaval and four other preparations containing tt>e drug also wine withdrawn ’ immediately by the British. The London Clinic Medical Journal reported that doctors believed at least 800 maitomfed infants had been born in Britain al-though only 50 had been officially *Of*ted*/ iHi warnings did not bring immediate Withdrawal of the drug everywhere. In Italy there was no public awareness of the German and British actions until June of this year when doctors reported at h Turin meeting that three recent malformed births could be traced to thalidomide. That was on June If. ' On June SO the Italian government suspended production .and onto of seven tranquilizers eon- er Italy banned foe drug. One by one, Holland, Denmark, Switzerland,, Sweden, Belgium, Portugal ami Austria ordered the drug oft tho market. France and Spain, among European countries, never approved use of thalidomide although in France it was reported to have been sold illegally. 1 WIDE PUBLICITY One case has been as/ widely publicized in Belgium as'That of Mrs. Sherri Fbikbine in the United States and with even greater tragic consequences. The Belgian case Involved i was such they suspected Mia would 1tUI tha child. When pottre investigated the child waa land. The mother, 25-year-old Suzanne CoipeL was arrested, along with her husband, her mother, her sister and her doctor. The parents are accused of having administered the infant « fatal dose of barbiturates, and toe doctor with conniving in the act. W * Somehow, the story of thalidomide made no great Impact in toe United States until mid-July when the Washington Post disclosed the story of a woman doctor in the Food and Drug Administration and her determined fight to keep the drug off the American market. While the drug had not been certified tor general use ta the United States, it was being tested on nn experimental basis. And suddenly, many women and some doctors remembered that they had obtained a new and effective sedative drug abroad or had received samples from a U.S. manufacturer. The labels may have said "Contergan’’ or "Dla* taval” or "Kevadon.” W % dr W However spelled, it was stlU thalidomide. Stories of deformities ~> fortunately few — cropped up ip the United States, too, and a nationwide search began tor ail out* TOKYO (API p Japan's postal •flairs mJnisteyjnrid Tuesday the apanese plan to open negotiations xmiaruse of U.S.-tounched Tel-Lar satellites. ,>/-.‘;dr''dr. 'dr ■ *-The postal affairs ministry said Japan, wants to sign an agreement similar to thoae Wert Germany, The Annjff Nika ! ^ site missile now uniter development will ba **steered’’ from tho ground by electronic brains to in* 1 tercept intercontinental MUstlo missiles safely outside toe city being c SELLING OUT ODD LOTS SMITH’S TILE OUTLET MmsaBy eoaflnned the —--- tionwide search oegan mr au ;werat:■■if-litfeftresfe ftwra aad es-'1 The Belgian case Involved a '{standing suppUesi -.'MHMHHHHMBHMMMHHBMM^^^^^^^^^^W Start SavingNOWdnFall Fashions! incite Solid Cottons Styles Galore in Girls' DRESSES ' Plaids, woven Itrlpei, rich solid color totton broadcloths. Bdiutiful row features — look much mote expensive! Shop Kresge's now for choice selection. Thur.4ri.-SdtOnly! Tasty Fresh Toasted/ t., COCONUT L(H Jr. Miss Nylons^AO SoamliMmath. Alimitxes8Vk«10H* drpi New Roll-up Sleeve SHIRTWAIST DRESSES New Fall Prints and Colors Reg, 491 jbt ttuciou* peanut brittle coftod with candy and toasted c en's Ban-Lon RDIGANS 096 2 96 at Kresgt’s! Quality Ban-Lot)* textralized nylon aweateri at Kreige savings! In colon, white, ana blade. BaetrofU Jew • Now Woven Chn Phids • Now Dork Broodckthi Dressy dark shirtwaists to /"'k wear everywhere! Smooth, rustling cotton broaddodn, embroidery trimmed. Bold, handsome wqven cotton plaids. Ghooae several! Downtown Drayton Tal-Huron *' '• , | Rochester A^lrada Mila/ Shopping Pontiac i Plaint 1 Cantor / Plaza Center Pontioc Moll CHARGE IT AT S. S. KRESGE S ■M \ ' f/WTOf; ' < / . sag a i hum pi wnm | ’ ' | ,w1 I ,. p i 11, I . i BK I M1. 111 ■. 1111 irt TWB3STTY-SIX TUB POXTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1962 rvr j v ■ Marilyn ’ Jetin House, ‘ THESE IS I NOTHING- ; ?” daughter of Jiff, and Mrs. ' Clean A. AS House of West Beverly GOOD" 1 ' Avenue ■ ^ ] ASA exchanged * vows with CUSTOM 1 Michael L.,-> TAILORED Hudson, son of the Cordell suit fan toi fawn TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO OITROIT AND INTERMEDIATE fOINTS ms. JOHN 0. SCRIVEN John D. Scrivens Fly to Arizona After Vows PADDOCK and N. PERRY Sate! Dark Woven PLAIDS $■ 2 YARDSy. KOPEN 10-10 DAILY-12-7 SUNDAYS kkjuulkkkkkM. For her marriage to John 0. Scriven of Royal Oak Saturday in St. Benedict’s Church, Judith Ann Warrilow chose a gown of candlelight Irish silk linen styled with bolero Jacket and detachable chapel, train. Her elboW’letigth veil of silk illusion Was fitted to a pillbox hat and she Carried a French rose of Mary Jo roses. Her heirloom handkerchief was loaned by her grandmother*, Mrs. Lynn 0. Allen, and a diamond pendant was the bridegroom’s gift. Rev. Fabian Weber of St. Clement!* Church, Center Line, performed the one o’clock cere-mony before some 350 persons who were guests of the bride’s parents, the David H. Warri-lows of Dick Avenue at the church reception. Matron of honor Mrs. Gary McGee and bridesmaids Mrs. Laurence Beamer, Connie Scriven and Carol Warrilow, sisters of the bridal couple, wore champagne taffeta with lace bodices and green velvet belts. They carried colonial., bouquets of tangerine carnations, Mary Jo roses and pompons. N. ★ ■ ★ ' The bridegroom, ton of the Clare Semens of Oriole Road, had -William Eisenbiser of Chelsea for best man. ushers included Laurence Beamer, \lohn Osier and Peter Karner Jr. The newlyweds flew to Phoemx, Wtm m 'Mk 1 will live in RoyakOak, Arts., for them honeymoon and Mrs. Warrilow wort white gar* denrias with her green polished cotton sheath dress with organza overlay. Mrs. Scriven chose low green satin, with overskirt, and a corsage of white rosea Picnic Held by Auxiliary to Pluihbers Women's Auxiliary to the Plumbing and Heating Dealers Association held their 14th annual summer picnic Saturday at Avon Park, Avon Township. * ■ * *- Attending the outing were the Gerdon Comptons and children, the. Curtis Thompson family, the Ervin Schilke family and the Charles Printers. ★ Also present were the William Williams family, Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Mason and their grandson, Ezra Mason III, Wilfred Fleming, Mrs. Ellen Duffy and Mrs. Georgia Seeley. May Infect Never borrow or lend a brush or comb. Besides exposing your hair to someone else’s soil and oil, this exchang may infect you with a case of dandruff. Shower at Cfrurch Bride-Elect Honored Early Week Special! BUDGET WAVE CALUE’S BEAUTY SHOP 116 North Perry WMISMWiRMSIMINfMilWIINM mmmMmm&mmiiOMMMt I STAFFS FOR QUALITY Carol Sue Beltz, bride-elect N Of Floyd W. Chancy, was honored at a bridal shower Tuesday at the First Social Brethren Church. Mrs. Ephriam H. Wiley and Mrs. Luther Gaskins were cohos tosses. ♦ ■ many doctors recommend has to be best for young feet,, . that khoe ib Stride Rit«. And best, too, is the way we fit Stride Rite to young feet Stride Rite \Ss SHOE EXTRA SUPPORT | BLACK NYLON VELVET PRICED FROM ,.......... (according toftlss) STAFFS OMN ntIDAV 'TIL t "Doctors' Proscription. Accurately PfttoeT FAMILY SHOE STORE 928 W. Huron at Telegraph (Open Fr|. to 9—Sat. to 8:30) W JUVENILE BOOTERIE 28 C. Lawrence St., Downtown (Open Mon. to 8;30, Frl. to 9) JUNIOR SHOES .Alt Main Rochester Admit Error and Write Right Now By The Emily Post Institute . Q: My son’s engagement was announced six months ago v to a young woman to a distant city. I’ve not "met the girl or t her family and as they are complete strangers, I never* have written either to the girl or her mother. I wrote to my son, naturally. We seldom see him as he Is working away-horn home. Now ’ I learn that I should.have written to the girl and possibly her mother and they are quite upset because I have not done so. Is there .any way,to makeup for py mistake, and how in the world do I go about writing to complete strangers? Also how do I explain my delay in Writing? ’ A: V e r y definitely you should , write at once. Much better now than not at all. The only way to bridge this gap is to face it and write: "All this time I have been waiting to hear from you and now I am told that I was the one who -should have written. ."I am very sorry, dear Jane, because I 'certainly want to welcome you and do hope that I will meet you very soon." (This of course is just a gen-. eraj idea.) „ ★ A .A Q: When entertaining at a rather large buffet supper, how ‘can the hoatess get her guests to go to the buffet tabie to help themselves to the food? It seems each guest is reluctant to be the. first one (o go to the tabie and. they all sit back waiting for someone else to start. May the hostess lead the way so that others will follow?.'' , '■A: She shows the way to the Jjuffet table saying, "Supper is ready. Do come and help yourselves to anything you like.” , , * • MRS. MICHAEL L HUDSON Hudson-Hasue.Nuptials Held at Sylvan Lake Marilyn Jean Hause exchanged wedding vows with Michael L Hudson before Minister Clyde Balderson Jr., Saturday evening in the Sylvan Lake Church of Christ. White and violet gladioli and carnations adorned the altar. < A reception in the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland dub rooms followed the candlelight ceremony. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Glenr) A. Hause of West Beverly Avenue and the Cordell Hudsons of Georgia Drive, Orion Township. Alencon lace applique accented the round neckline of the bridal gown of white silk Could Be We Don't Want Simple Things By RUTH MILLETT Newspaper Enterprise Asm. Are you a little tired of trying to keep up an elaborate hairdo that requires constant care and keeps you from swimming, riding to an open car, getting out to the wind, or rain? If you are, you might be inter-rted to what a New York hair stylist has to say on the matter. says he thinks any woman who Isn’t constantly making pub-, lie appearances ought to leave elaborate hairdos strictly alone, except for very special parties. Not only are they too much trouble for a woman who can’t afford the time or money to have her hair dressed everyday by an expert but such hairdos look out of place for everyday wear, the hair stylist maintains. He says the woman who adopts an elaborate hair style realize that she Is trying to copy for everyday wear a style that “ been designed ton special occasions * important public of women In the limelight. A \ A No wonder the average woman feels frustrated at what it her to time and effort to try to keep up such a fancy coiffure. A it A 1 What the hair stylist recommends for Mrs. America is a simple, easy-to-manage hairdo she doesn’t have to be a slave to with now and-then a more elabor-'set” for a special occasion. are women doing? They’re beginning to buy wigs to try to stay to style. Maybe women just don't easy solutions to their problems, and the hair stylist is wasting his time pointing out one obvious one. ' A A A' For all parents—Ruth Mttlett’ 'Tips on Teen-Agers.” Just sen 25 cents to Ttuth Mttlett Reader Service, c/o The Pontiac Press, P.O. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station, New York 19, N.Y. Niblick Goiters, Scottish Guest at Picnic Lunch Mrs, Arthur Barnes of Motorway Drive, Elizabeth Lake, entertained the Niblick Golf' dub Tuesday at a picnic lunch. Thirty-two members and a guest from Scotland, Nancy Grant, were present. A "A A During last month’s meeting the group was entertained by Mrs. Normand Durocher of Bloomfield Hills. They visited Mrs. Durocher’s summer home on Haraen’s Island in Lube Huron and played golf at the Mid Channel Country Club. Prizes were presented to match play tournament winners Mrs. Dave Warrilow, first flight; Mrs. Manley Young, second flight; Mrs. Louis B. Livingston, third flight; and Mrs. Paul B. Jones, fourth flight. ■>* At ‘His and Hers’ Shower Young Couple Honored Jo Uligtan, daughter of the Charles G. Uligiane of Starr Avenue, and Lee Aplln. son of the Arnold Aplins of Crest-view, Fla. were honored dur- ing a "his and hers” shower Tuesday. Host and hostess (or the Hawaiian themed party were Mr. and Mrs. Enar West of North Hammond Lake Drive. Also attending -were Mr. and Mrs. John Blamy'jr„ the Ralph Strangs, the Edward Vlerlqchi and the H o w a r d Powers. Other guests, included Mr and Mrs. Donald Lucas of Ann Arbor, Judy West, John Blamy, Barbara Strang, Lynne Vieriech, Gerald and Robert Powcrk, Sue and Greg Uligian. and the bride-elect's parents The couple wilt marry Saturday to the First Congregational Churchv , , , Color Television HEADQUARTERS Completo Stock sf Radio Batteries WmBmi TELEVISION *nd RADIO z SALES and SERVICE 1167 W. Huron mm., tesa UfoiiM PE 2f 907 taffeta styled with chapel train.. A shoulder-length veil of illusion, fell from' a tiara of pearls and crystals. White gla-mellias, Stephanotis and white orchids -comprised the bride's ■ bouquet." v ' , Matron of honor, Mra. Sidney* Colyer and bridesmaids, Mrs. Robert Carlson, Mrs, Thomas Reeling: and Joyce Reynolds, wore lilac silk organza sheath dresses with overskirts. They carried lilac* tipped white carnftions< Tam* ela Lotan was flowergirt. Douglas Black of Rochester,! was best man. Seating some 258? guests were the bridegroom’s : brother James, Hudson, With James Hughes and Earl Rrown; After a northern Michigan honeymoon Jhd couple wUl b* at home-, in Draytorf Plains'. The bridegroom is • enrolled at Lawrence Institute of ’Technology. Ivor y glamellias Centered with orange rosebud centers accented Mrs. House’s beige cotton knit sheath dress* The mother of the bridegrooni wore yellow rosebuds ' in itomple-ment to her mint green linen sheath dress. ' Plan Dinner for Couple Mr. and Mrs. Milo Struble will entertain Aug. 17 at* a rehearsal dinner tor their sort prospective bridegroom David S., his bride-elect Marlene Las-enby and their attendants. 5 Parents of the bride-elect art Mr. and Mrs. Rbyce Lazenby. The engaged couple plans an-Aug. 18 wedding. \ y Miss Lazenby was honored at a bridal shower recentiy. at the home of Mrs* Herschel 0. As~ bury of Woodbine Drive, Waterford. ras# lANtstrs 4L (Uaruioniil CUSTOM TAILORS and CLOTHIERS 9M W Htirpn it Telffrgpfc fi 2-2300 Finer Tuxedo Rentals UNIFORM SPECIALISTS GO MODERN... wean self-winding O OMEGA StsinUu tfstt, with brscslst, $12S No "forget-to-wind” with this watch! Nstural wrist motion powers it Wan* and shock-resistant Perfect for the executive or , sportsman. Other Seamaster models from 189.30, Fed. tax incL Redmond’s * ■hwotty 1 ’ 81 N. Saginaw St. AUTHORIZED OMEGA ACBNCY go casual in fMahfon Pfffow foam cushioning heel to too, inside • shoe that’s knowingly styled for your dash-about life. Pillow Puffs ... pretty assets to every wardrobe. JAUNTY, top- (Insert colors materials, d»l S */v to II In Black and Brown WILU|~SI*« 5ft *• I t in Black, Brown emd Beige - H20 West Huron Stiff# 1 fi 2*3821 T&E PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY^ AUGUST S, 1962 The Mowipg are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Product mint Apples, Duchess .............$1.00 Apples, '------- " Blsckbe NEW YORK UR — The stock market started off "generally lower In moderate trading today. Prices have been falling tor two days in a reversal of the trend of the previous two weeks. Only a few gatoem dotted the list. Most of the losses fere tree* tlonai as they have beea to the The drug companies, among the big losers this week, again were among the leaders in the decline. Celery, < ......... Celery, 3 to-1 do*, crt. , Celery. PMesl............ Corn, aweef .... • • - Cucumber, dill a Squash, summer . Tomatoaa, t--1--* Turnips, dot. , Turnips, toppe Stock Mart Starts Lower Merck was oft a point and Pfiser and Sdiering about half a point. General Motors, Pond and Chrysler were all fractionally ‘tower while American Motors picked up %. Martin-Marietta, 'the market volume leader the last tom days, opened on a huge block of 43.S00 sad toss trading oft about Much of thu selling has been credited to # large but uuideufl. fled mutual fund. Coprate Bonds Mixed NEW YORK (AP) r Corporate bond prices were mixed and government bonds slightly higher to moderate opening trading today, df ★ . v ★ The greatest activity among corporates was to the rail-sector, with half a dozen issues showing price changes to the fraction*. it . itto Lower were Canadian Pacific 4s perpetual at 78% and Louisville & Nashville 3%s of 2003 at 75%. Southern Pacffic/4%s of 1981 rose % at 91 %. L * ; ★ ■ Jf. J Among industrials, advances of % were registered by’CIT Finance 3%s of 1970 at 94% and Sears Roebuck Acceptance 5s of l$82at 105%. The, United States merchant fleet accounts for 27,344,000 tons of the world total of 97,422,000 tons, of shipping. , A number of firms to the international communications field showed small tosses. Late yesterday file chairman to! RCA recommended. creation to a jingle, independent and privately owned U.S. monopoly In the field. .... OFF Mr OR LESS Off .-about % to less were RCA, AT&T and TIT. WWW Bucking'file treikPwere several stocks to the 'building material group. U.S. Gypsum was up^a point and Johns Manville about half that. Metro - Ooldwyn Mayer fell hack abate 1% and Sears, Roebuck tae^abeuf as much. Major steel shares were down % or less. Oils also were mostly lower.1^ small fractions. jt *to A Syntex picked up more than half point and Mead 'Johnson lost more than a point.. Fractional losers included Kawecld Chemical, Loral Electronics and Sherwin Williams. Higher by fractions were Technicolor and Anken Chemical. Evans Products Reported Quiet State Police Ready to Quell Violence at Strike-Sound Plant By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Business as usual rather than jitters or retreat has marked the summer of the United States. Seasonal quietness has been to evidence in many industries but only as expected. The stock market break of May and June has failed' to panic either tb er or the businessman. The New York Stock Exchange WEST BRANCH UR — State police reported an absence of any trouble at midmomtog today at file strike-bound plant of the Evans Products Co. • '.jlr W : W The West Branch post said it was not prepared to give a full repent but that pickets were at the factory and that none of the non* strikers who earlier this week had protested over violence to Gov. Swainson had attempted to enter the property. Previously, State'Police Commissioner Joseph A. Childs warned that troopers would step to if there was any violence,. Several persons have been .Injured 'and hospitalized in picket line outbreaks at the plant, which manufactures bicycles and tricycles.. , The. United Steelworkers Union Local 5591 went on strike at the plant two weeks ago, seeking closed shop and Overtime pi visions to a new contract, The Injuries came, when nonstrikera tried to enter the plant, VIOLENCE RUMORED m Childs said reports have circu-lated there may be violence when t portion of the . employes of the 2 plant attempt to return to work 4 this morning. Childs said he hoped j the reports were not true. ’ he said, ‘if local an-i thoritlcM find the situation be-sir control, the state police will suppress any acts to A group g>f nonstrikers carried petitions to Lansing Ktonday claiming police, protection at the plant was inadequate, visiting Gov. Swainson’s office, state police headquarters at East Lansing and the attorney general's office. W '■ W ★ Several claimed they had been beaten up' to clashes with union pickets. Brother Presidents BUFFALO, NX UR —The Very Rev. James J. McGinley, president of Canisius College to Buffalo is the brother of the. Very Rev. Lawrence J, McGinley, of Fordham University to New York City. My Teeth Are Killing Me August Sees Pfc jmew but Business as Usual steel teeth. The 11-year-old bovine’s teeth were worn down with age so her owner, Dr. Ray Wil-cox, had the choppers made special: Grain Prices • 1.1654 . S.30M 1 . j.nvJ i : £$ . iim . l.Stw News in Brief Miscellaneous articles valued at |73 were stolen last night from a car parked at 8994 Terrell St., Waterford Township. Gerald Wo-jctoskl of Detroit Is the owner of the unlocked car. Four windows valued at about $100 at the Donalson Baptist Church, 2227 Elizatpth Lake, Road, Waterford Township, were report-, ed broken yesterday. Two large windows were shattered by bee bottles and the others broken by stones. An estimated $60 In os ah was by burglars who entered the home to Casey Jones, 12 N. Paddock St., it was reported to police yesterday. Jones said thieves entered through a bedroom win-took the money from his wallet and escaped. Thieves entered the First Assembly Church of God at 219 N. Perry St., ransacked an office and fled with about $64 to cash b£ tween io p.m. Monday and 11 a.m. yesterday, according to Pontiac police. FALL That is the most common reading to the current statistics. And a few signs to. a fall pickup already are being sighted, along with pleasant predictions by many businessmen that the fourth quarter should be a good one. Consumers are spendiag about i usual for this time of year; Some say they are Inclined to be cautious. But businessmen are starting to ngt on a good retail sale1 pickup in the full. Business loans at commercial banks have taken their first upward jump, apparently as manufacturer* and merchants prepare to produce and stock up for the fall and winter trade.' Employment has risen. Some to this has been to manufacturing industries, reflecting the increase to industrial output. Much to the new employment has been to the service industries, as consumers demand and pay for more services of all kinds. SUMMER RALLY The stock market has managed its. summer rally, keeping up a long tradition despite the gloom that shrouded WaU Street in May and June., Steel production is rising. Pari of this la the seasonal recovery from the lowpotot to the July vacation slowdown. But part appar-renfiy reflects a return to the market of a few of the customers who have been living off their built-up Inventories since the threats of a •trike or price rise were dissipated to March and April. Despite the downturn to steel, output from April into July, the total production for the year to date to ahead to that for the like period of 1961, Many steelmen are expressing modest hopes for a fair pickup to orders from Labor Day on. All the talk About economic uncertainty hasn’t hampered the au-industry. It has enjoyed one its best years to sales and production, It now enters its usual lull for changeover to hew models and its traditional uncertainty as to how the public will accept them, always a gamble. Construction continues at a high vel. Building to new homes spurted in the spring and leveled off to file summer. But commer-stnurtures and apartment houses continued to rise at an slackened pace. Personal income totals are i peak. Savings have Increased spite high retail sales and a < ttoutog modest rise in consumer as the third quarter nears its halfway point, this summer looks like most summers. Then why the continuinggfodmin many circles! * * * t It Is because the econo-is advanced moderately rather than at «n accelerated pace as hoped at the start to the year. Partly it is because to the fQid» logical effect of the dowmvnidro-vision to stock market values. And, to no small degree at the moment, the uncertainty is doe jte the Involvement to all econoims planning—whether tax cutting, Increased government spending, more incentive for private enter-prise—In politics, to many newt-items today it’s hard to tell wberj economics ends and politics begins. Appeal or Strike Rail Unions Musf Decide WASHINGTON (JR—Rail onions are expected to announce today that workers operating the nation's trains will walk> oat a week from tomorrow If the carriers go ahead with plans to cut to Jobs. - CHICAGO (AP) - Two possible courses to action remained today for the five unions representing the 200,000 operating employes in their fight to prevent the nation’ railroads from eliminating thousands to jobs. “'V W dr., dr' They could appeal a federal idge's decision which ruled out court intervention to the dispute, or they could call a strike, sending the dispute to the White House; The railroads have served notice that they will place into effect Aug. 16 drastic new work rules Stocks of Locat Interest Figure, after decimal point! «l|hth Borman Food 8 ___ Mogul-Bo Harvey Alumln Hoover BallCjk soar "Sard Refining . ■Swell Standard ' Eli OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Aunt Jsno'i Food . __________ .rratal .......... Electronics Capital ........ Electronic* International frljo ■ . Se^nUcea e Pe Drilling . . . icoont. Oaa Pint Lin ora Olngor Ale ... Rummage Clearance: Thursday. Thrift Shop, 674 Sunset, Orion. image I gust 8, Methodist Church, Lake Rd. off Woodward. Open 7 a.m. Benefit St. Joseph Hospital. _ Thursday, • to Baldwin and Indianwood Road. —ndv. Rescue the Rescuer STILLWATER, Okla. (JR-Vlckie Damron climbed a traa to rescue a hat, The eat climbed down. lire, rescued Vickie from Is 0 if IS P" re,CUed Vickie from lM las 3 t,u is-i* perch some 30; feet up the tree. MUTUAL FUNDS SI Affiliated Fund ........... 7. imonwoalth Stock .......13 ■tone Income K-l ...... 1. ■tone Growth g-l ....... 4, a. Inventor* Growth .... 1, ____a, Investor* Truat .....If. Putnam Orowth ............ f* Televlalon Ilectronlca ...... Wellington jjqulty . .......11. ft Decision Due on IRS Center Washington Source Says Word Expected Tomorrow or Friday -A decision is due tomorrow Fridayon whether Pontiac will get the $5.8-mllUon payroll Internal Revenue Center coveted also by Port Huron Snd Detroit, an IRS source laid to Washington today, dr 'dr '■ dir"" Regional IR8 Commissioner Douglas Barnes of Chicago has recommended a,rite to IRS Commissioner Mortimer Caplin. His recommendation has hot been announced. However be .js. te confer today or tomorrow with Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon about (he rite. Only yesterday St. a air County voters put to a last-minute bid to get the IRS processing center in Port Huron by approving to bond Issues to erect a $2.2-million building to lease to the federal govem- which would eliminate the jobs to 40,000 diesel firemen and grant no “ pay increases tar on- The unions represent the engi- ductors, brakemen and switchmen. U.S. Dist. Judge Joseph Sam Perry informally dismissed Tuesday an injunction suit filed by the unions to an effort to prevent the job cutback. Lester P, Schoene, attorney for the unions, said no decision was reached Immediately on WMtfcer to appeal. . / 1 ’ STRIKE THREAT Spokesmen for 'the unions bad no Immediate comment on their future pl*M. -During negotiations the unions threatened to strike if the carriers put file job cutbacks Into effect without union consent. If a strike Is called, President; Kennedy could appoint, under the Railway Labor Act, an emergency . board to review the dispute. SUch action would postpone a strike for at least 60 days. Judge Perry’s dismissal to the unions’ injunction petition was a tactical victory for the carriers, which sought to force the issue to a White House settlement. Placed on Probation In Theft of Clothing - > Louise Stroman, 306 E. WtlMB St. was found guilty to simple lar* ceny yesterday and placed on one year probation ty Waterford Township Justice Patrick K. Daly. She was arrested July 16 euteldi the J. L Hudson store to the FMf> tiac Mall and charged with the theft ot clothing articles valued at $36.'* .. Flight Engineers Expected to Veto Eastern Proposal MIAMI (UPI) - The Flight Engineers International Association (FEIA) was expected to (pject today an Eastern Air Lines proposal offering to take back striking engineers only on piston aircraft. ♦ W it The union’s big chapters to Miami, Boston and Atlanta met swiftly last night and turned down the proposal, according to Jack Robertson, president of the Miami EAL engineers chapter. W ’★ ■ * No official of the two firms affected could be reached for immediate comment. Breaking-Entering Brings Prison Term A 714 to 15-year prison term was ordered yesterday for a Pontiac man accused of breaking and entering at a local supermarket. Ctreult Judge H. Russel Holland handed down the Jnckson Prison sentence against Elmer G. Mnga, 48, of M» W. Wilson St. Binga pleaded guilty last month to the July 2 burglary of Surf < Side Super Market, 213 Branch He was apprehended by po- ___as he left the store, minutes after a burglar alirin went off. Bazley Market 78 North* Saginaw WILL BE CLOSED THURSDAY, AUGUST 9th Due to the Death of E.S. BAZLEY Business Will Resume as Usual Friday, August 10 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. DRAYTON PLAINS STORE WILL REMAIN OPEN AS USUAL THURSDAY, AUG. 9th Hailstorms occur moat frequently in June, though they are common easier in the south and later to the north. Thif hail falls only during thunderstorm*. which unfortur reach their peak during the growing season when the icy pellets can do the most damage- Waterford Unit OKs Incorporation Study Waterford Township’s Greater Waterford Community C o u n c i (GWCC) last night endofted i recommendation in a d e by thi township planning commission last month calling for the establishment of a study committee to explore the feasibility of incorporation. , Mrs. Edmund Wlndeler, president of the civic organization, said a GWCC delegation will appear at Monday’s Township Board meeting to urge Immediate actkto on setting up a 15-member committee. The. Township fipard discussed the. planning commission, recommendation briefly at a meeting three weeks ago but no action was taken. than the less-frequent twisters. Kansas and Nebraska suffer the greatest losses. A historic 1881 storm to Nebraska drove ice through roots and even house aid-togs. Hail stripped orchards, flattened grain, and severely injured livestock. Men were hurt trying to rescue frightened animals. Anothr hailstorm, on July 1953, smashed three million bushels of standing wheat in Nebraska. The disturbance began in Wyoming and sewpt a devastating path 180 miles long and 8 to 15 miles wide. Euler to^rve Again on Hospital Committee Harold B. Euler, administrator of Pontiac General hospital, will serve again on the government relations committee of the Greater Detroit Area Hospital Council in 1962-63, it was announced today. He also'served on the group last year. The 18-man committee is made b of hospital personn Southeastern Michigan interested to improving legislation' and hospital-government relations. Occupancy Rate Down at General Last Week Pontiac General Hospital occupancy last week dropped to 88.71 per cent — one of the weeks of the year, according to Administrator Harold B. Euler. lings to patients were the smallest for any week of this year $118,955, Euler reported. $5,500 Damage by Fire Estimated at Residence Fire of undetermined cause yesterday resulted to an estimated $5,500 damage to the garage and home of George Moultruy, 5014 Southward St. The attached garage was gutted and there was considerable heat and smoke damage to the house, township firemen said. Is This Planning Ahead? COLUMBUS, Ohio <* - The Social Security office in Columbus is at Young and Gay streets. fliaii Twisters More Costly: Destroys Crops, Property Up to Millions of Dollars WASHINGTON — A# spr 1 ng moves northward to the United States, hail follows closely to Its BARNES. AUGUST 6. 1962. EFFIE - *>* nephew#.. PiuumT service wn w held mmSgLJSSI #. at 1 p.m. at (he D. & radio Funeral anna with Mr. CMe Beldoreop Jr. officiating. Interment to: Perry UtT Park Oeme-to? Mrs. Barnes wUl lie to state , at tbg D, E. Punier Fit-nerel RffffjEEg ■ . flesher. august i. uts. Ran. “ , MIS {dUtedOMak Jatorai Did MM ■.sirs leer far irlo O. : trs. Joe W$8m. JuT tout. n- record shriek Wichita, Kan., on June $8, MSI. Property damage was |14 mlHion. Two years later, almost to the day, hall caused S* million In damage In the same area. In the east, North Carolina ia particularly subject to hall lost be-casue its tobqcco crops are so vulnerable. A single storm in'1952 destroyed almost $2 million worth of tobacco, the National Geographic says. A FOOT OF ICE Some storms have dropped more than a fret of ice on level ground and piled up six-foot drifts. Sioux Falls, S ,D., has had to break out snowplows to June to clear hail from the streets. Twenty carloads of glass were needed to replace wtodowpanes knocked out to a Denver hailstorm. Simp fa Funeral Slated Today for Marilyn Monroe HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Marilyn Monroe, the waif who won movie stardom but couldn’t find happi-in her own life, goes to her resting place today to plain* green drew- Although invitations to final rites for the 36-year-old blonde1 sex symbol were limited to about 1?{ police prepared for the worst—-a mob scene that could involve thousands of fans and curiosity seekers. Police and movie studio guards were assigned to keep order outside the Chapel of the Palms, to nearby Westwood. By midnight a crowd of 100 already had clustered around the entrance. Gals Warmly Dressed —Hangers and All MIAMI, Fla. W — Police put the heat on three warmly dressed women arrested to a South Miami shopping center and charged with larceny. A policewoman said the three were wearing “enough dresses to I fill three large shopping bags.’’ The policewoman said one of the three had on eight dresses, “h ere and all.’* .Ausmt », at a B.m. at MwuCoat* . Mint Home, Drayton Plains, »miaV ______ .A Ottawa Perk CUHMij, Drayton Plains, .'.fib, Flesher will U* to state at the Coate Funeral Horae, Drayton KOUTNIK. AVO0ET 'v.' lMt, Joseph, 2*M LakevUte ML. >1B ford; am 73. Funeral service will bo Mid toMM. 'MUB.IK’ . at 2 p.m. at too Booaardot Fu- ' rural Homo. QtfmL. wttS'Rav. aeon# smith Mpma mw-mint to. Oxford Cfemetery. ■ Mir, Koutnik will He In state at the Ol- ford. ^_______AUGUST 1, im, Loulae Amelia, MMd Hatchery Rd.: Waterford Township; aaa M; beloved wife of Henry A. Leiemer; near, mother of loe.; Clyde (Alice) Sheffer, Mre. Jack ; (Shirley) Marquardt, Aaguet. and Robert teiemer; - dear aitter of fifi*. ASrgar, Banna, John and Wnllam Rartwick; aUo ourvlvod by eight grandchildren. Funeral eervlae wllf be held Friday, AuiuetT#.,i 1 ■ ■ the Nflrth —-Lake, Xv‘ Cemetery, ___rtU lie to - elate at, the Brigge Funeral Home. Fetaaky. Funeral arrangemknts are by the Coate Funeral Home, Drayton Stuart ?l. Lon* rived by. one gi„____■ greet - granddaughter. Funeral' eervlae w® >' i August 10, at ■ Voorheee-Blple Chapel . 'Donald M. Sinclair c__________ interment, to Oak mn Cemetery. Mr. Longmuir will lie to state at the Voorheee - Siple Funeral Home. ' ■ . . MARtUB. AtlOOSt «, 10& OK-cilia Ann, IN Whittemore St.: eie 12; dear mother of Mrs. Georgia Cleveland, MR.WMM' Mrs. I Courtsu., I___ Recitation of .... —.— be today at S p.m. at the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home. Funeral service will M held Thursday, Auguet 0, at to a.m. at tha Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home. Interment to Mt. Hope Cemetery. i. Martus « I Thatcher: La-loved son Of mre. H. H. Thatcher. Funeral service will be held Thursday, August 0, at 2 p.m. . at the Sparke-Oriffln Funeral Home with Rev. William E. Lyle officiating. Xntarmant in Oak HIU Cemetery. Mr. Thatcher Cwrtl ft Ihawltt THE FAMILY OF J. EARL Holliday wish to extend hoart-felt thanks and appreciation to all relattree. frlenaa and neigh-bora for their many expressions of kindness and sympathy shown to ue in ins recent bereavement in the lose of our deer husband and father. We especially wish to thank Rev. Carl O. Adams for hie comforting - words, Lynn Jewelers and employees. Pontiac Fire Dept., Doneleon-Johne Funeral Home. Special thank* to Lodge No, 110 and dn that* Pay Off Your Bills — without ■ loon — Payments low as lift wk. Protect your Job and Credit Home or Ofiloe Appointments City Adjustment Service lit W, Huron__________FH b-etit ATTSartlON CHURCH GROUPS. pot,0‘-‘ —iy|- *“«*— SPECIAL — COLD WAV*. At «0. Dorothy's, 4(1 N. Perry. PE 2-12AI. Open arse. LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY AN6 OET OUR OF DEBT ON A PLAN MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS C MALL FLOWERS UNDER ONE RODF You’ll Find Complete Banking Sunrice We are a full tervice Bank helping just about everybody, everyday in some financial way— from Savings to Safe Deposit Boxes, Checking Accounts and Installment Loans for every worthwhile purpose—You get it all W.U8 BANK PROTECTION. To Buy, Rent, Sell or Trade ’ Use Pontiac Press' 1 WANT ADS Office Hours 8 a.m. to 5 fi.ni. Cancellation Deadline 9 a.m. day following lint insertion COATS • prurrowRijmts HO*co« »im Donelson-johns fiSe, • FffiiilAL HUNTOOR . . FUNERAL HOME sSSlSL!^Sh D. E. Pursley funeral home Iavelld^Cer^^Serylce SPARKS-GRIFFIN **Tl>ongh^lMr^e'^:>M1&E maoi Voorhees-Siple --BOX REPLIES— to the fottowing | boxes: t, 8, 6, 10* It, to, 56, | 88, to, 84, 88, 7», 76, SS, I 89, 98, IN, lto. (Cemetery Lots 4-A -wMewe-e-ee-eeWeeaV' 2 ADJOINING 4-GRAVE LOTS. OAK-Uj^HUle. Cheap or fride. OB fterA Vil OfiBroo en-il FE f*l3t. Confidential. DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES. 1)1 1 AND AFTER THIS DATE 8-7-A3 I will not be responsible for any debts contrasted by any other than myself. Signed Robert A. Tiiieme, 212 Havant, Unlop Lake. y H. Bowes. Partner. to Lassie, reward. Fl 4-A8AA, ! LOST: IIAMZBX MALE "CAT. 2S4 Eileen Dr., FE 2 Nr. Green. OR 2 A YOUNG MAN reference______ ,, For Information, cell Mr. Mollroy, OR Z0M2, S-l) p.m.__________ ' “aIe You the man One of the lorteet orgenliatlont In Its field hoe an opening tot i men. If you ero looking for a Sermattent position, high income > advancement, coll FI t-0431 for appointment. ALb AROUND MACHINIST RE-qulred for does tolerance expert-mantel engine parts, wuiiams Re-Renrob Corp.. 2280 W. Maple. Walled Lake. I TOO EARNING U2A mm bnrvi PE 4-C53« fi I to 46. high school educe-|ob|| — borne phone, record. Ph. A MANAGEMENT POSITION F new oampOny 1 only qualified mi Rounds. OL 1-84 AOCOfniTANT -r CPA Fliui HAS opening tor t aggroeelve accountant with experience In privets or pubUe accounting. Salary open. Excellent opportunity for aavanfeement with growing ftrm-Send returns to Jana At Knight, UOA North Woodward, Binning-ham, Mich. i ■ THI. EXPERIENCED mill hands and Pallet! nailers, MY 1-1418. . ■ witu tool#, lor uied carte. Apply Lucky Auto Sales. IM 8. Seelnew. Pontiac, EXFBRlfcNCiD FRUIT. MAN. Phone MA 8-2A1A alter 7 ’Sgt.’S- HAND1MAH, pAkf iTMB.. perieneed property upkbep repelt. Write Pontlao Pros* route #elB« * opening •a. Wo tooch you how ill up weekly. Apptt-■t have high sohool dependable car and appearance. For personal ■u*»*ylsw nitons OR T-IIAe. LIFE INgutUltCB BaEeS. S ALART end cominlealon. veoetlon. retirement end pw» benenta. A— 42 PE t-m iiiXMANVl,--- . • MERCHANDISE SUPERVISORS 2D REA I ________iEWAig HARDWARE, excellbn PORTUNI IT FOR AD'.™—_ IPK APPLE MR. KANf. SPARTAN DEFY. STORES 2048 DIXIE EWY., FOimAft " " 1.bWNER OFERATOES " - Needed Immediately lVb or Ston tote model, dual wheel truck*, or able to purcias* Uam, to null mp. bile homo* ttotogltout^m* United ioSfitwceE*Agtof*to to*4» j'*"’ Pft personal Interview, report to: MORGAN DRIVE AWAY. INC. iMdl Marlett Airport__ TcgfiBasr REMODELING 7 SALESMAN AND ESTIMATORS AIRPORT LUMBER m Highland Rd. OR 44*to T PS?* j field iteta and eompuUng eteva-. ■■ Uone #8} BIS : llTton tontie teak !______j work. Apply at Big Boy Drlve-ln. 2480 Dixie MARRIEP I for grIU toon « “T Welled Lake and I7U8 N. woodward ~1awaroak. fc- *^elyr*dr5»»M goppUod to you by us. Just show Fasbkm Frock* to Irtende. Np Investment, eenvasalng 1 or axperleue* necessary. . Fashion Frocks. Dept. K-1178, Ctoclnnattl. TO •VO- _ ^ heike Mi | month, bonuses, prlsee and many other advantages. Over 200 top quality noma brand toys U catalogue, feya and service guaranteed. W* deliver to your hostess with each order tedividimlly wrapped. -Euaellent . HosT4ree*wiixr,wwMyi°w CHANDWE* m ^OBOROE'S TOYS AT OR 3-0001 OR OA 2-4811. AVON OALMNO IN YOOlt klltoH-borhood through TV. B* OB AVON representative and Rum extra hour* info money making hours. Phone cM1 SJ HL"! on^ "BMP UlS0INorthUp«- )OKKEEPER FOR EK! Mercury dealership. OaU ------- NCOLN- ______ —J Lloyd Motors at FE I-2121. BOOKKEEPER. FULL TIME, PER- co6k WAkrlri) for time work, must be experienced. Apply In perecn. Multanef'e. 2021 Opdvlte COOK WANTED, • A.M. TO 2:30 -- -L— No phone dan*. Park-bora Like Ave. Oitnx AND fnn. 978 Orchan CURB WAIT CURB WAITRESS. Mg DEMONSTRATE TOYS WITH THE TOY CHETT We offer you 15 pur cent and free use of a sample kit and - fringe ‘ 10-20 per cent. Fl 8-472L DEPARTMENT MANAGER For Womens SPORTSWEAR Large retail organisation needs experienced msflMW. ItoaeUsnt s/rong nmf background, Executive ability and _smert appearance. Write Box 10, The Pontlec FULL TIME COUNTER filRL. days. Apply to person. U5 West . .Huron at.___ • ■ FULL TIME : vsctmtmrn full efflslency. Preference will no given mature woman who I* a goad plewi gnt t,hom*r fot^lMraelf end the owner; For Interview, writ* bos 2. Pontlao Free*. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS OVER 21. Apply -Mlko’e Coney Island, ' Huron St. between > a.m.-t p.m. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. 18 OR over. Apply In neriOn; Detlea's Reetaurant, 8080 N. Rochester Rooneeter. alter 4 p.m. EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES wanted; must be over It. Apply in person only. Airway Lane* om-fee Shop, 4828 Highland Road. EXPH^N^EDt COOX WANTED. need apnlv. Apply In person only, Pled Piper Drtvu to, formerly White Swan, M S* end Pontlao Lake Road. EXPERIENCED WAlTIUm.' "fiXYS. Jack's Bar and OrlH. 22 E. Ken-nett. Apply to perecn, **k tor James Osborn* after IB a.m. rE 1-7211 EXPERIENCED ALTERATIONS and repair lady, Apply Main Cleaners. 4410 Elisabeth Lake Road. - - HOUSEKEEPER. MUST &>OX. drive. Sleep In. 3 OdUlte. Reply to Boa 17, Pontiac Preee, lug. Ironing and cooking. Ref. re-qulrcd. Pood salary. S44-4275. HOUSEKEEPER.' EXhERIENCBD, " KITCHEN HELP AND WAITRESS, night work, Pasquolo* to Lake Orion. OaU after « MY 2-1421. LADY BABY SITTER AND UOtti houeework. 11-2 day*. R*f. N-qulred, FB 44W1. LIVE IN. LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING and cart of seml-invalld, Liberal benefits t74-UM. cr" T“ - - - — MIDDLEAOCD LAI ahlldren, light b tor home titan « after 8, OR 4-oiis. NUMBER 3 ofiuL rat INSlrit- iVt5a”%t,4“‘w5i?.U,l»y*1S Pontiac Pres* Box II. PART TIME . Needed at epee- 3 ladles far part time sole* won. Coll Mr. Oiamo. OR 3-0822. 5-5 p~m. PHONE SALES. EXPElilENCED Salesladies Bxperleheed, minimum as* 21 . year*. Fun time and .part time aasignmenta In tha toUowlna department*: ' , COATS DRESSES SPORTSWEAR CHILDRENS WEAR YARD GCk)DS DRAPERIES APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE MONTGOMERY WARD siLkhfinisSer$ Experienced to tanoy finishing o*£Hr^rr“o« TAILORESS M to ape’* end lodhto’ mSSm WANTED CAP A ill IM *- lake MB charge M l. end 5 ohfidren. s3S« houaekMpincs Prefermbljr to l . . wllTB WOMAN,TO liriB ' to'' Mfi W£^r8VBr*mm‘‘ WAiritEosica WOklbN FOR ' H „