The Weather PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 18. 1888 -30 PAGES Differences Unresolved LONDON (UPD—The United States and Britain today were reported agreed to resist any Sdviet attempt to drag out the nuclear test ban talks opening Monday in Moscow, Diplomatic sources said U.S. presidential envoy W. :----- ♦ Averell Harriman and Brit- ish Science Minister Lprd MSlSlnm AiHAfr Hailsham, heads ,of the miMIflry ViUlClJ Western delegations, have instructions to seek a speedy nAmAnrlrotnrr Kremlin indication on whether it uemonsiraiors is ready to agree to a test ban ___________________ now -. without political strings attached. National Guardsmen PRAYS FOR RAIN—Commerce Township farmer Alfred Vaedie depends entirely on what he raises in his little truck garden to keep hint-self and his wife through the winter. His little road-side stand, usually bristling with activity this time of year, is quiet. His drought-smitten fields, usually a cornucopia of vegetables at this lime of year, are relatively barren. End Maryland Terror Disagree on Damage DrdugM^turfs No one is more seriously affected by the month-long dry spett than the Oakland County farmer. Although the farmer wel- vest time, his crops need rain to grow, pnd crops are his live- As the drought goes Into its 33rd day, farmers are by ho means in agreement on the damage it h«i omqfl,,, 1 Carlos Long, a Milfordfarmer, called the crops the worst he’s seen In 25 years for'the time of year. The corn and oats are terrible, he declared. _______ He said he got in one good harvest of hay, but doubted that he could get in a second. With his pastures drying up and little hay to fall back on, this spells trouble, he said. Long termed the problem "really serl- Holly iarmer Bob Bt agreed with Long that the dry weather had "dried up the crops to a considerable degree.’! ___"It would be amazing the progress you’d see if a little rain were to come along,’’ he said. Barger warned that the danger point is close at hand, though. "With corn close to tassellng, we'd better get some rain pretty soon,’ he said. Cooperative Extension Service director Lyle B. Abel agreed that Oakland County farmers can expect trouble if the dry weather persists. He cited the slow development of fruit, especially In Today's Press Ecuador Military Jaunto takes steps against possible Rod strike—PACE I : ' ;';v- Woman Info Space jerrie Cobb Falls, ini W-PAQ5U. Agatha Christie ..... j 15 3 Astrology.............’.fit J nudge «} Church Noels'........ .10*11'■ I Comics ................II Editorials ........ florae Mection .....17-20 |j .Obituaries |..........21 H Sports ,.fi|Sp:....2**S Thoulhers ........pt5 iwomeiii’s Pages' J/ift,| 1, peaches, early apples and berries, Strawberries, in contrast, de- veloped too soon, he noted, and as a result are small and of poorer quality. Because of the dry weather, grass has gone dormant forcing farmers to use stored .’hay for fei^r Me observed. However, the crop mpst endangered by the drought is corn, he said. - Truck farmers throughout the county—especially those without News Flash VATICAN CITY UP) - Pope Paul, VI agreed today, In a significant gesture toward the Russian Orthodox Church, to send two ehvoys to the Soviet Union for the Golden Jubilee of Patriarch Alexis of Moscow. The week-long Jubilee observances open tomorrow. Pulls Out Bid for U.S. Okay of Drug Use JHICAGO (UPI) - The most bitterly fought medical battle of the -decade took a dramatic turn yesterday when the discoverer of krebiozen withdrew his application for continued experimental status of the drug. 1 The move, In effect, meant at legit a temporary hdlt In efforts to win federal approval of the controversial cancer drug and put it on the market. Dr. Stevan Durovlc, Yugoslav physician who first extracted the substance from the blood serum of horses *18 years ago, withdrew his application in Anthony J. Celebrezze, secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. He1 said the government had waged p fight against "an un-biastd clinical test” of the drug with "unheard-of pressure, the spreading of false statements to pirns, an attempt to frame and now an attempt to Indict me.” He told Celebretse he had "lost hope that your department will e/er solve this controversy In good faith.” Ttyf,.latest attempts to secure an evaluation of krebiozen from t National Cancer Institute and the Food and Drug Administration bogged down in a welter of charges’ and countercharges: Federal d f f i c 1 a Is maintained that information provided by the drug's sponsors was Inadequate thbrough test. irrigation—are finding their i tables tough and stringy. One reported that his potatoes were like marbles. Last year at this time, he had new potatoes five inches in diameter,rhe said. WILLIAM H. WILMOT Local Lawyer Dies in Court W. H. Wilmot Worked 30 Years in Pontiac William H. Wilmot, Pontiac attorney for more than 30 years, died unexpectedly of a heart attack in-the Oakland County Court House yesterday afternoon. He was 85. 1923 graduate of the law school i^the*Univ«rsltyof4tiehL gau, Mr. Wilmot received his refugee bachelor of arts degree from |mj ~ Michigan State Normal College. From Our News Wires-National Guardsmen marching along the main business thoroughfare in Cambridge, Md. ironically named Race Street signified a return to order Saturday in the terrot^rjidden town on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. State troopers were on duty In racially embattled Savannah, Ga., and units of'the Georgia National Guard were alerted. But a tentative agreement for a biracial truce Was reported. The two negotiators aligned strategy in extensive consultations yesterday, and their political and scientific experts today were putting final touches to their preparations for the Moscow confrontation. High scources said the Allies are m full agreement on their approach to the talks and are sidy to plunge info full dress negotiations immediately. The Allies hoped to ascertain Soviet intentions within a week or 10 days, though they have set no deadline. More Parleys Might Follow 8-Day Confab Reds Duck Open Split; Sino Newspaper Says 'Problem Can Wait* MOSCOW [B—Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mi-koyan, often the Kremlin’s chief troubleshooter, took a hand today in the faltering unity talks with the Red Chinese. MAC STAYS Meanwhile, Prime Minister In Cambridge, where'4,000 Ne-|yjBro|(j Macmillan appeared de-groes live on one side of Race termined today to hold on to his Street and 8,000 white persons on‘0ffjce at ]east unm 80tne con-the other, about 250 demonstra-jcrete progress is made on a nu-tors started a march toward the dev, test ban with Russia. White- section.jJastonigM- in mt&gmWmtmti • ' . . .. the 60-. *' PLENTY OF SUNSHINE - -When Mrs. Rebecca Plympton, 75, was awflkened4iy Dolnytsin. Thus fAr, the Defense Ministry itself has not publicly confirmed the Identity of the Russian who, informed sources said, hag given the Central Intelligence Agency ’ (CIA) in Washington the names of many — If not all — Russian secret agents working in the West. The sources said the defector, who went over to the west 18 .months ago, also has tipped the Rodgers, delighting the gafleif TnATTTfimh^ CHINESE WORRIED The Chinese admitted they were worrying whether the Central Committee of the Communist painty of the Soviet Union wants to push Chinese-Soviet relations to he brink of rupturt.” The statement said: "It must be (rankly pointed out that the present situation is very grave.” > Communist agents. Many Soviet agents have been recalled behind the Iron Curtain in recent months. UNDER GUARD Dolyntsln is in hiding, under guard, bding groomed for a identity. It is considered vital that he should be unrecognizable to the Soviet agents who for months to come are sure to press an intensive manhunt. The playoff, first In the British jH*n since Australia’0 Peter Thomson beat bave Thomas of Wales in 1058, was staged tn sunny, breezy weather over the 6,707-yard, par 72 Royal Lythafn nod Si. Anne’s course, Dolnytsln’s defection is believed to have dealt a severe blow Soviet intelligence services. The Soviets will want him eliminated —for revenge, and as a warning to others, Informants noted. —Plastic-surgery may he used to give Dolnytsin a new face— as It did for many British secret agents during World War II, It generally Is believed that Dolnytsin defected while serving in a Soviet satellite country after first contacting the U.S, embassy In an allied country. One report said he defected Ini a town in North America. 9 Shower Relief Expected for Pontiac Area Drought-stricken farms and thirsty lawns and gardens will welcome the occasional rain or, showers expected In the urea late tonight, through tomorrow Afternoon. 1./ * r The mercury win dip to A low of 85 tonight and climb to a high of 80 Sunday. fair with moderate temperatures. Winds today are southerly at 10 to 20 mltoi per hour. They will shift to westerly tomorrow afternoon. The lowest temperature reading, in, downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a,in' was M. At f p.m., tho thermometer read • warns m l\ ;i - ■ - -________________;.| THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, 18; I9tfr/*,& r ' Ecuador Junta Alert for Strike Prom Our News Wire* junta, that ousted President Gar- QUITO, Ecuador — The Military junta that seized power Thursday took steps today to hekd off a general strike called by~th« Communist-led Ecuador Workers Confederation 1CTE). Julio Arosemena as a drunk and Communist sympathizer, outlawed, Ecuador’s C o m m u n i s t party Friday and rounded up about 150 leftists. Persons^whoattendethrpresi-denttaHtenquet^ednesday_night Th* miliurv "rulers ordered!said Arosemena disgraced him-,lr™ sppliei.f-iMrW mStE "voked by leftist extremists.” The It* CO! Jt I Loses Race I \ fo Cabbie | NEW YORK (UPI)—The mayor of River Rouge met with citizens, the police and the judioiary yesterday, but unfortunately it didn’t happen in his home town. Arosemena was sent into exile Panama. He .has made no comment on the coup except say he did not resign. Tanks guarded the national : palace where troops! shot and killed IWo leftist demonstrators and wounded 17 .others after the military seizure Thursday. I The CTE ordered a general strike to protest the military action, but has not set a date. The junta quickly warned that strike leaders would be prosecuted for “military crimes . . . subject to severe summary punishments.” Donald Nettlow, 34, up for re-election in River Rouge this fall, Village here and ended up on the wrong end of disorderly conduct Along with banning Communists, the junta shipped Vice President Reynaldo Varea Doooso into exile, canceled elections, proclaimed martial law, and imposed curfew and censorship. At least a arested for violating the curfew, The citizens involved in the affair were, a taxicab driver who Nettlow claimed drove him a number of bystanders who materialized during the ensuing dispute. The policeman was* Michael Iannato, who arrested Nettlow for allegedly using loud and boisterous language, which caused * crowdtoassemble;' IZZZJ THE JUDICIARY The judiciary was represented by Criminal Court Judge Irving L. Schreckinger who listened to Nettlow’s innocent plea and set bond at $25 pending trial Aug. 5. Nettlow, visibly upset by reporters and cameramen in court, said he and a companion had hailed a cab early Friday and asked the driver to take them someplace tor “a hlte to According to Nettlow, some $3.85 later, they still were riding ' and around. An argument started the cabbie called the policeman, who made the arrest. At his home this morning in River Rouge, Nettlow stuck to his story. “The cab driver was running up die bill unwarrentedlv. Mv cll ent and l askedbim about it and he’got very indignant. He was taking me for a joy ride. “the policeman, without even hearing our side of the story, demanded we pay him his fare and get out of the cab. One word led to another. 1 feel that it was unfortunate and regrettable." The deposed vice president, who tried unsuccessfully to rouse Congress to challenge the armed forces takeover Thursday, joined Arosemena in Panama but planned to fly on today to Houston, Tex. It was not known whether Varea would 'stay in Texas. Navy Capt. Ramon Castro Jijon, junta president, told the nation Friday night that he is -“determined to completely eradicate communism’* and restore moral and economic order. Possible Rain for Michigan Raises Hopes BURNING MARSH - West Bloomfield Township firemen (from left) Tom Ball and Bazil Stoddard hose down part of a peat bog along Richardson Road. The firemen ate battling a marsh, fire that has burned continuously since July 4. The blaze, which began in West Bloomfield Township just off Detroit Road and burned west toward Union Lake Road, covers an PwIIm Pren Phato area a half-mile long and about 100-150 yards wide. Since cross- ing into Commerce Township, it has flared up several times. Most of the time, the actual burning occurs underground with only smoke visible. But when a surface blaze does appear, the two fire departments hose it down. Detroit Ready Mias Pictets _ TFX Hearing Flares . Cancel Police Leaves; tyegro Protests Set DETROIT UP) - With police leaves canceled; Detroit took precautions against possible trouble today from two anti-segregationists’ protest demonstrations. The Detroit Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of. Colored- People planned demonstrations at 20 apartmerff houses Which the NAACP said discriminates against Negroes. NAACP, officials said the demonstrations would be peaceful. All policemen’s leaves for the day were canceled by Supt. Eugene [Route?, however. Reuter said he wanted to make sure of adequate police at all 20 sites. WASHINGTON (AP) -- Tern-pers are flaring again-®s tfine over a performance chart—as a a t e subcommittee presses ahead with its probe of the TFX Warplane contract. The prospect of rain throughout the state Saturday: day brought new hope to Michigan residents caught in one of the worst droughts, in recent memory. In many areas, it hasn’t rained for a month. Detroit entered its 30th day without a measurable rainfall, the long-est dry spell since 1916 when no rain fell for 32 days. The last rain reported in the Detroit area was June 13 when two one-hundredths of an inch fell. Since then, a few scattered showers have hit, but they quit before they did much to alleviate dry conditions. zTJm Weather Full U.S. Weather -Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Increasing cloudiness and - "warm today; high 86. Occasional rain or shoWers tonight ending Sunday afternoon. Low tonight 65. High Sunday 80. Winds south-* erly 10 to 20 m.p.h., becoming westerly Sunday afternoon. The apartment Duildings; 'eluding two in the Motor City’s &un’“art center” district containing the Detroit Institute of Arts and the Public Library, are generally in Detroit’s midtown section. The neighborhoods are mostly mixed. Abraham Ulmer Jr., chairman of the NAACP Hnualng Committee, said.demonstrators would be assigned to 14 teams of about 20 members each. Police headquarters in down-town Detroit also was chosen for a .demonstration — by another group. FATAL SHOOTING The Group On Advanced Leadership (GOAL), an all-Negro organization,- said it would picket headquarters from noon to 6 p.m. in connection with a policeman’s fatal shooting of a Negro woman on a street July 5. The woman, Cynthia Scott, 24, who police said had a record I of nine convictions for accosting and soliciting, was shot by an officer who said she slashed him with a knife when he tried to arrest her. , GOAL representatives said the picketing would be carried out I after Miss Scott’s funeral by nine *| cars and the hearse containing ii^jher body- Angry Exchanges Birmingham Area News; Wednesday Deadline for Recreation Program BLOOMFIELD HILLS-Wednes-day Is the deadline lor registering in the second three-week session of Bloomfield Hiila’ summer recreation program. The program, scheduled * f o r five days a week, includes a day camp and classes in golf, tennis, basketball and lifesaving. Day camps arexheld at Con-ant, Pine Lake ind .Eastover elementary schools for kindergarten through sixth grade stu-dents. Children are transported by bus to Cass Lake for swimming instruction. Besides the regular fare of handicrafts, camp crafts aha in special activities such as trips games, the children participate in special activities such as trips and overnight camp-outs. SPORTS CLASSES Golf classes are from 9-10 a m. for advanced beginners and from 10*11 a.m for beginners. Tennis instruction is offered to adults and teen-agers from 10-11 a.m., while advanced beginners meet from 11a.m. to noon and beginners from aoon tolpoa.erl>tp,m. The two basketball classes are held from 9-10 a.m. and 10-11 a.m. Those taking trampoline ffosMMi will meet from 11 a.m. to noon. v 1 . - Junior lifesaving is a W p.m. By G. MILTON KELLY Navy.” However, he agreed to prepare a newVhart fol the subcommittee. The lafost angry exchanges pit Secretary of the Navy Fred Korth against chairman John L. McClellan, D-Ark., and the senior Republican member of the panel, Sen. Karl E. Mundt of South Dakota. Korth spent his fourth day on the witness stand Friday as th/ subcommittee probed the award of the TFX contract to General Dynamics Corp. of Fort Worth, Tex., and Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp. of New York. Senators want to know why Korth and other civilian defense chiefs overrode military evaluations that offered by the Boeing Co. of Seattle^ Wash?,” promised a-better and cheaper plane. McClellan challenged a chart which Korth used to support his contention that the General Dy* namics-Grumman design is superior. “The way you are presenting it, you are distorting the per-formance of the Boelng plane, based bTTthrrecord,’’ he said. Mr. Chairman, I deny that we1 are distorting it,” Korth retorted. Mundt told Korth he could not understand why the contract went to General Dynamics-Grumman unless there is some reason that you want to favor General Dynamics.” . ’‘.Houihtol Munkeiio » oNV Patrolman Theodore Splcher, ___ ^j^nWForwT]*'^ated by Wayne (Detroit) Coun-indi»n«poii» m «|ty prosecutor Samuel B- Olsen. uHnwio. M M;Olsen held that Spichef acted • MtSrd. t«x. inn im properly in line of duty. ! “mTo?i5'm *» “ The Detroit Branch of, the i J? American Civil Liberties Union Continuing the exchange, a censored transcript of which was made public Friday, McClellan argued that the. chart failed tb reflect last-minute optional design changes the Boeing Co. had offered to make. He said the changes would have wiped out a claimed 320-mile an hour speed margin 'for the General Dynant-ics-Grumman plane and would have given the Boeing craft greater maneuverability at . high altitudes. . Korth replied that the contractors knew that only the earlier designs would be evaluated and that technical teams neVer had evaluated a report spelling out the changes. “You can talk about ‘it has not been evaluated’ from now until doomsday," McClellan said. ‘'It was your duty to evaluate if you had in mind the best interests of the Navy, the country and to get] the best plane. MUM civilian secretaries read- the military evaluation report to the point where It said either design would be acceptable and quit reading before the point where the military evaluators said the Boeing design had a “clear and substantial” advantage. Korth replied with a defense of the- decision, He returns to the witness stand Monday, To Check Mine for Three Boys will meet from 9t4M p«. The program this year has a new director, Ed Wichert, basketball coach at Bloomfield Hills High School. Registrations can be made at the high school office. The first of the two 3-week programs will end Monday, and the second will begin Tuesday. Wirtz Confers With Rail Exec Holds Private Session at Labor Department PITTSBURGH wi - A three-ian rescue team crawled through a tiny passageway in an abandoned mine today in a list-ditch search for three teenage boys missing since Thursday. WASHINGTON (UPI) -% Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz met today with the chief negotiator for the railroads in the Kennedy administration’s continued efforts to block a nationwide rail strike. Wirtz and J. E. Wolfe, major spokesman for the cairiers, con* ierred privately In Wlrtz's office PITTSBURGH (AP) - Officials planned a final probe into an,old abandoned' mine this afternoon in the search for three boys missing since Thuriday.: ^. They announced their decision after a six-man rescue team emerged from the mine earlier, today and reported they had dis* covered no clues that would help them determine whether the teenagers are in the suburban Castle Shannonminc.___ Everett Turner, a USrBureau of Mines in8peetor, said exploration into the last area should take about eight hours. Once this is| accomplished, he said, officials win have been satisfied that the at the Labor Department. ^either Wirtz nor Wolfe would say what subject was under discussion, but it presumbably concerned the President’s promise to seek legislation that would settle the four - year • old dispute over work rule changes advocated by th* railroads. -- ■ ■ “This is Just a private-diet,” Wolfe told a reporter before entering the secretary’s office. “That's right, that’s all that it Is,” Wirtz added. The unannounced meeting was the only sign of activity in the railroad dispute. Some officials predicted it would .take legislation by Congress to resolve the crisis that .could result in a na-tlonwide strike after July 29; President Kennedy's six-man fact-finding committee adjourned until Monday its investigation of mine was IWHrched4tou»u^^ Jfofi. four-year-old battle over rail- Turner said, a large pressure fan was to be used to clear deadly black damp gas from the area. road demands for rule changes to abolish alleged “featherbedding,” or unnecessary jobs. Area. Gi Killed as Car Hit by Train [ IJjitook issue with Olsen's tnvestiga-| JJ tiort, declaring he had been "per-Ifunctory" and demanding that the case be reopened. The ,ACNR lald„°l?e,K I that included Dr, Martin Luther his duty am harmed the cause ^|ng Negro Integration leader. of lawfullaw enforcement.” Korth replied: "1 have the best) aide, is In the background. HI, DADDY! — President Kennedy was greeted by hisfsonN John Jr., as he arrived at Otis Air Force Base, Mass., yesterday afternoon to spend the weekend at his summer home at HyannisV -------------igjj....... ... . -j. ------ -‘litaryj Port, Mass Major General Chester Clifton,, presidential military Military Brings Order to Maryland Town The 17-year-old daughter of a Birmingham executive and her teen-aged companion were killed yesterday 20 miles east of Winder, Ontario, when their convert-lble was struck by a Canadian National Railway train. Cheryl Ann Martin, 17, of 7215 Parkhurst, Birmingham, and Louise Deziel, 14, of Windsor, died after the smashup at an unprotected railroad crossing. Ontario Provincial Police said* the train, traveling at 65 miles per hoar, struck the car squarely with its engine. The car was dragged nearly « mile. ,Miss Martin, who apparently ras driving, was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold 0. Martin. Martin is president of Research To Reality, an invention marketing firm. Miss Deziel was the daughter of Judge' Lawrence Deziel of Essex bounty, Canada. Both families have summer homes near the accident scene. (Continued From Page One) tee a photograph which he said was taken at "a Communist training school" and showed a group tract were dismissed in court when Wilson declined to prose- First General Audisnct Held by Pope Paul VI VATICAN CITY (UPI) - Pope Paul Vi held the first general au- m hill i nlpn~MHnv anri|rnnld succession yesterday compared the crowd of 5,000 persons of different nationalities Ini • In Lbs Angeles, Integration-ists who have been demonstrating for weeks against what they called discriminatory policy at a suburban bousing tract won three victories. These developments cam* in 1. Builder Don Wilson told a St. Peter’8 Basilica with the uni- news conference Friday night he yersallty of the church. , had accosted a down payment from a Negro on a home in his NATIONAL WEA|her - Scattered showers*and thundershowers are due tonight in Great Lakes, Mississippi Valley, portions of central and southern Plains and western Gulf states. «Warmer weather will dominate the eastern seaboard as far west * as the Ohio and Tennessee valleys except for Florida, Elsiwh^re llttljf tempefature changes are expected* MS The Pope, brought, into St.sPe-i tor’s on hist /gestatortal chair, spent about 45 niinutes with the gathering of pilgrims and religious from Spain, Gerrpahy! Franca and English • speaking | countries. \ ! i Torrance tract. Previously he had cute. Wilson had made citizen arrests of the defendants. A temporary _ injunction blocked enforcement of an emergency Torrance ordinance establishing a 7 p.m. weekend curfew for-nonresidents of the tract. • In Baltimore, Negro leaders called off weekend demonstrations at segregated Gwynn Oak amusement park while accepting the recommendations of i county commission of media-tors. | -Besides asking for an end to the demonstrations, the commTi-siop recommended yesterday: That the park bipgln admitting Negroes July 26. —Thm the parties Involved^ ro- ll mr It I, m denied there was any racial dls* examine the situation Jen. 1,1964. crimination at the tract: , —And that ahy disputes under * a * the suggested agreement be w- 2: Trespass and peace disturb-1ferred to' the commission f o r ance charges against 40 persons [settlement. • / „y arrested In demonstrations at the' In Albany Ga./a fedpral “judge i[ i.'v W.H. Wilmot Dies in Court (Continued From Page One) Mary-in-the-Hills Episcopal Church, Lake Orion; Pontiac City Club, Orchard Lake Country Club, Rotary Club and a Ufa member of Phoenix Lodge No. 13, F&AM. He also served as a member of the Lake Angelus Village Council and president of Oakland County Society for Crippled Children. Mr. Wilmot leaves his wife, Gladys and a sister, Mrs. Clayton Butler of Milan, Service will be at 2 p, m. Monday at Sparks-Griffln Chapel with burial following in WbRe Chapel Memorial Cemetery, The family suggests any memorials be made to the memorial fund of St. Mary-In-the-Hills Church. Pallbearers for Mr. Wilmot include Judge Clark J. Adams, Judga William J. Beer, Jack L. Banycky, Smith Falconer, L. Campbell W*™et and Mac T. Whitfield. ordered the integration of schools in South Georgia's rigidly segregated Dougherty County (Albpny), U S. District Judge J. Robert Elliot directed the county board bf education to. submit , to him within 30 days a ptah for desegregating the local public schools. In Savannah, units of Georgia’s National Guard were on standby today for possible use in this seaport while racial peace hopes brightened with a secretly negotiated truce. Gov. pari E. Sanders said Friday night he had ordered iila,,ii mitts alerted “to meet any emergency whlrii iecai au-thorlties determined as being beyond their enforcement cap- | abilities.” The governor's action followed two successive1 nights of violence; Negroes* He also sent in SO morej state troopers, bringing the total j on duty here to 100. NOTICE Because of the present emergency In the City of Pontiac caused by a serious water shortage and pursuant to Ordinance No, 1094, notice Is hereby given that no person or persona aholl use or cdtlie to be used, water from the City of Pontiac Water System far sprinkling, seeking or Irrigating any lawn, garden, ihrue, tree or vegetation In the City of Pontiac an any day, Including Sunday, between itOO o'clock a.m. end 9tO0 o'clock p. m. Water uses during thlc period •hell be confined to basic household and sanitary needs of the dtfsenc of Pontiac end te essential Industrial ondbuilneMuCM. — These restrictions shell he In effect until further notice due te the aerieuc water •hertage In the Clih of Pontiac which constitutes >e health end fire haiei 17. €Ky~HeJL__ Pontiac, Michigan Robtrt A, Stbrtr City Managtr Olqq Igrktby , / . CHr Cferk ' m jjsjtSiil md'i A ■ W ;,'-1 *. J 'I# THE POyTIAC PBE88, SATURDAY1, JULY 13, 1963 THREE Council in Florida City Beact> °n the Gulf of Mexico. ' The resolution passed 5-1 by Votes Public integration ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AF) —A resolution by the City Council has directed desegregation of all elty-ownoddr operated public fa- cUltles-lncludlng St. Petersburg of perch, a fresh water fish. the council Thursday, also included a clause prohibiting the use of race, color or creed in the hiring of city employes. There are about 125 species Molten Steel Scalds 7 NIKSIC, Yugoslavia (AP)-Six workers were scalded-to death Friday under a cauldron of molten steel, Another was reported in serious condition. The molten steel was being transported from the furnace at a steel mill. Okay Shelters Against Fallout SIMMS Is _ OPEN TONITE ’till 0 PAL WASHINGTON (AP)-A House Armed Services subcommittee approved yesterday a Kennedy administration plan aimed at providing fallout shelters for 11 mil* lion more Americans during the next year. • Chairman F. Edward Hebert, D-La., said the subcommittee uib animously endorsed the concept of the $175-miIlion shelter con-struction program proposed by the administration. It would offer incentive payments to public and [nonprofit institutions id provide [shelter space. But he said the subcommittee intends, to rewrite the bill before seeking action by the Armed Services Committee to send it to the House. We want it a tight one, a clear one, and one which keeps Con-in constant control of- this program,” Hebert said. Hebert said House approval of the measure won’t come easily, but added he thinks the job”can be done. The bill would be the first of its kind to face a House vote. 5 MONDAY STORE HOURS! 9 A.M. to 10 P,M. PARK FREE in City Meter Lots Long Handle GARDEN TOOLS SHRINERS CLOWN AROUND - Shriner members made up as clowns entertained youngsters at the Chicago Shrine Hospital for Crippled Children during their national convention^ ’ MM fberwmuf-Dayton, umorgives Tull attention to a boy on a merry-go-round. 400 Prisoners Riot on Singapore Island SINGAPORE (AP)—Secret society gangsters among 400 convicts took over Singapore’s prison1 several hours in bloody rioting yesterday. Unofficial reports said they butchered Warden Daniel S. Dutton by gouging out his eyes and slowly hacking him to death, guards were reported slain and 30 injured. A barracks was burned. Riot police and surviving guards finally restored control of the Puiau Senang Prison, 10 miles south of Singapore. It was not immediately known what touched off the violence. FAMILY GETTING BIGGER? ENLARGE... REPAIR ... MODERNIZE We Have a Special PACKAGE can WASHINGTON (UPI)-The House Foreign Affairs Commit- Eleven Pairs in Arkansas to (Re)Marry tee was reported • yesterday to have virtually agreed to limit its cut in President Kennedy!s foreign aid request to $430 million. LITTLE ROCK, Ark., (AP)' Eleven Arkansas couples—caught between a state law and opinions of tiie State Supreme Court, state authorities and the Social Security Administration on ivhat it means —Will retie their nuptial knots this weekend. The Social Security Administration said that under the 1941 statute the couples aren’t married legally enough to qualify for wives benefits. That announcement prompted a Star City, Ark., couple to place .ah- advertisement in a weekly newspaper, “mass wedding, bring your I 1 I I NOW NATION AFFECTED The chain'of events has reached California, Oklahoma and other portions of the nation where Arkansans have migrated. The wording of Act 32 indicates it was passed because “numerous marital contracts entered into between persons of immature ages continuously create serious domestic relations'problems. .” ! James C. Hale, the legislator who introduced the law, says he did so because* too many persons were coming across the state line at Memphis, Tenn., to take advantage of the youthful age at which Arkansas then permitted marriage — 14r I ROME (AP)—Giuseppe Cappi, lt former president of Italy’s highest coiirt, died Friday.,Cappi led the Christian Democratic ' partyin the Chamber of Deputies 1948-55. He then was elected by parliament as judge of the Constitutional Court. In 1061, justices ejected him president. HOME LOAN SERVICE to Meet Your Needs NO DOWN PAYMENT NO LEGAL FEES Oakland County's Largest Mortgage Lending Institution r m' ' 111 W, Huron Street • 111. Uwranoe.lt. 40T Main Street-Rochester * 4411 Dixie Hwy— Drayton 1102 W. Maple-WaHed Lake •• 161 M. Main Street-Milford 4711. Broadway-Lake Orten • Dor. M-IS-Clarksten Tx-Judge in Italy Dies Committee Agrees to Cut Foreign Aid Durable Ribbed All Rubber 19x18-In. Stair Treads This would cut the foreign aid authorization to slightly less than $4.1 billion, an amount the President has indicated he would accept. Kennedy had recommended a $4.5-billion authorization. A separate bill actually appropriating the funds must be passed later, and deeper cuts could be made then. Informed sources said the major committee cut would come in the military assistance program.~ Pick New Firm Chief in Top-Level Shift DETROIT (UPI) - Milton J. Stevens, a financier*with offices in both Los Angeles and New York, has been elected to the presidency of Briggs Manufacturing Co. in a top-level shakeup. In a brief announcement made yesterday, Stevens said Cl W. Betz, a director and vice president, was made executive vice president in charge of operations. * BIBLE REBINDING ■ CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 39 Oakland Avo. FE 4-9591 WARRINGTON'S Vconowa&h ^COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTUt ttEmfflfceil Open Evenings’til 8:30 882-11H famous notional breind shoes ... . STAFF'S Monday & Tuesday Specials Downtown Pontiac Store Only! Girls' Casuals Girls' Oxfords Regular $8.99 Brand Bring the girls Monday and Tuesday. Chooee these nationally known brand casuals or oxfords at this value-packed pricel Casuals In the new popular antiqued luggage tan. Oxfords In a combination of gleaming black .patent and stark-white kid. Shoes! that go to school and party tool Sites !2Vb- 3. Widths B-C-D-E. This value limited to stock on hand. BOOTERIE 20 f. Lawrence St., Downtown (Open Mon. eve. to tn30) -HARDWARE 2nd Fleer Heavy Wall Poly Plastic FREEZER BOXES Ptot Boxes 36*" 98* ] I’A Pt. Boxes l'" I39 Qt. Boxes 0 for 119 For treeser dniT refrigerator use All hove jite-flt elvers. Fomous un- -Tabele4 nome^brand.------------ -HOUSEWARES 2nd Fleer 50-ft.xl 5-in. "Alcoa" ALUMINUM TOIL Housowaroe -2nd Moor 66H Boys’ Summer PAJAMAS; $ 1.98 Value * Short sleeve, long leg styles, in, plisse pullover 1 or tine cotton coat tops' Wash^ 'n wear - 1st quality. Size 4 to 16. •BASEMENT For tho Youngsters - Pocket Size Transistor Radio 9 - complel» Ideal lor the with . battery_______ teletcohlng antenna tgr power' pick-up. CAMERA-Main Floor Contains Hexa-Floride Formula 69c value-Nou) New Ipana Tooth Paste: 38*! tain. Hexa-Floride to help i tooth decoy and. light bad breath N.w Stainl.ll St*.I — Kroqa Plus Schick INJECTOR BLADES Pack of 7 Blade» je jm $1.00 volue—italnleu steel rotor ( Q Ol FREE—Purso Container with Pkg. of 40 I Tampax Tampons: Regular $ 1.59 Value-NOW “ 97° i el coldrful, washable 1 Now Plastic Bottlo—Trovol Six* “JERGENS” lotion 79c volue - beoullliei he place notural olli loit to ' weather. 8-ounce travel si 49* i : Casco Thermal Electric Massager 88 Regular $19.95 value - 'Casco' automatic . electric thermal massager with = 8-way control. You gel the magic of massage and the miracle-of heat. SUNDRY-Main Floor 8‘ i i 10x12-lnch Wading Pool I jJ where they are made, but take a look upstate and outstate. . ★ They’re ahead of you and behind you on the highway! You find them on either side of you zipping down the express-■ way! . , '1. ,.... It’s a fine year for Pontiac, Fisher Body, all the employes, the suppliers, and' the community at large. Congratulations. said, and it wasn’t, any serial number;/' That car broke the 1955 Pontiac production record of 554,090. —It was completed 71 days earlier in. the model run than the previous but now passed 1955. But that wasn’t all. Cars keep right on coming off -the line. Catalinas, Tempests, Bonnevilles, in a stream of multicolored beauties that are already Lodge Assigned Sorry Asia Mess By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON MV-Henry Cabot Lodge is walking into a mess, one of the most dismal sipce the United States tried ,to help Chiang Kai-shek save China from the Communists. President Kennedy recently appointed him ambassador to SoUth Viet Nam. From 1946 until 1951 the colonialist French tried to smash the Reds hr Indochina. By 1951 they were doing so badly, militarily and financially, the United That’s right. Pontiac has been jumping to keep up with sales all year. There weren't^ states had to bail them out, dozens of them standing around at or try to. MARLOW dealers storerooms all ovei(7the Na- * It put $2.5 billion into the fight. No good. -----_______:__ Tha French quit in 1954. The Cotomumsts Willian Tyndale believed that all men had the right to read the Bible in their own language. In the early 18th century he was determined; to translate and print the Bible In English. As a result he was branded a heretic and forced to leave England. In Wittenberg, Germany, the city qf Martin Luther, he found refuge and translated the New -Testament from the Greek into English. , - / ’V His search for a printer for his translation lead to Worms, where his new Testament % was printed. When his edition was smuggled into England, Henry VII decided that all . the books should be confiscated and burned. The books continued to circulate throughout England. Henry had Tyndale arrested in Antwerp, Belgium, and he was held in a prison near Brussels for 16 months. He was fried for heresy, found guilty, and burned at the stake Auguste, 1536. ThbJire of his faith and of his burning books only kindled the flame in the hearts of his followers so that God’s Word would be set free for English-speaking peoples throughout the world. , ^jknow howdangerous it can bi^TbF-ChttdreiulsL mn into the street from between parked cars. Could an accurate report of acr cidents of this type be obtained and printed for the b e ft e f i t of those who see nothing wrong with cars parked one right after another on ft block where there are 36 children under six years of age? X y ' / Concerned We impugn the intervention of an outside power in Intonation-al affairs, and we declare that the real intentions of Soviet Imperialism are to remain permanently on the island of Cuba regardless of afty agreement which Implies withdrawal of their military force; Cuban Student Directorate Miami ‘It’s Our Obligation to Free All People’ tion. • These cars were on the move from the moment they started down the line. Pontiac has in- ' creased its share of the market, ...and pulled far ahead of the lines which once challenged it for the position of third in. the industry. ★ ■ ★ The people who walk around the Oakland A v e n u e administration gftHjaifinnaRdiinar---—-- Days of All Faiths, Then the U.S. moved in and supported—- , Blessed Anne Helped the Negroes Railroad Brotherhoods Hold Unrealistic Stand Strike action in the cliff-hanger railroad situation has been deferred untirJuly29. By that time, if an agreement between railroads and unions is ' not effected, the government will have developed seizure or legislative steps to resolve the deadlock and keep the trains rolling. Neither carriers nor unions welcome such Federal action. ★ ★ , ★ At issue is the railroads’ determination to introduce new.work rules approved by two government investigating commissions during four years of study. Application of the rules would eliminate some 65,000 unnecessary jobs and otherwise update the mainly obsolete bo S. Agriculture Department employes held a song-writing con-r- test to pick a department theme From another woman pilot who gong( \vord got around to the Rer also has passed her astronaut publicans and they decided to tests, Jane Hart, wife of Mlchl- give USDA workers some song suggestions. They included: Since Secretary • Freeman with freedom. When the time came to let them take over their own lives* Anne had seen to it that each family bad t cottage, some land, enough money for a start, and a knowledge of how to make a living. The order established by Anne Is known as the Sjsters Of St. Joseph of Cluny. \ CHRISTIAN SCIENCE July 16 is the birthday of Mary Morse, born in 1821 in Bow, N.H. Later She beqame well-known as Smiles Two women were arrested in a New Jersey town for forgery. Bad signs of the times. “And at 18,” added Chaae Manhattan Bank’s research director William F. Butler, “as economic statistics, they become subject to the hazards of matrimony.” this remark; “I’m tempted to go out to the barn and toll the whole story to my horse and listen to proposed a year ago that farmers be sent to federal prison If they failed to keep records the way he wanted, yon might hold a song-fest called, "Slag Along With Orville or It’s Slag Slag For You.” And for those who Invested In Billie Sol Estes’ fertilizer tanks, At the recent Denver meeting of too Republican National Com- 004 Ptenty O’Nothin’." Summer cabins always are equipped with a place where Mom can spend her vacation continuing to cook and do the Using “himself” as a nickname mittae, Kentucky’s Sen. Thruston to designate President Kennedy Morton took note of a phenome-ahnoftt any high official you 4Mrilj Have you ever encountered a Mary/Bakcr Eddy, who foundod/ waiter with enough nerve to put XjnrUtian Science, the check-down face iig? can thit/k of is a .current way of conferring status in this status-conSctous age. , Je ether day a reporter wd late toe Justice Depart-t’s information office, seeking Edwin Gatham, Atty. Goa, Robert F. Kennedy’s proas 'chief. '■■■."?l.,; f.') .i- • .fv The preacher 'who delivered the InvocOtloB one day seemed somehow to infuse his message t with strong political overtones.' When Introduced later, be drew heavy, applause from assembled RepabUcAa leaders. “Thil ls toe first political gathering^ I've ever attended where FaSTSiS m LERi M&w THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1963 FIVE ., t, > ■ .—’V” —r" Soviet Bloc Foreign Aid Falls Short of G Algeria By ANDREW BOROW1EC ALGIERS MV-The Soviet bloc ha* suffered a series of setbacks ■its efforts to establish a solid IbcM in independent Algeria. Thb, Algerian government’s ban on the Cpmmunlst Farty and its strong nonalignment course have Jolted the Soviet Union and its satellites. Their did program appears to be withering away, replaced by a wait-and-see policy. However, the bloc continues to try to influence the Algerian army. It has taken several hun- dred Algerian officers for training In the Soviet Union and Bui- Red technicians are con-mine removal operations •la’s frontiers. The laid by* the French to keep out Algerian rebel forces based in Tunisia JtflA Moroceo. DISAPPOINT POWERS, Jn general, the attitud^of Algeria Is a disappointment td eastern powers Which aided seven-year nationalist revolt against French rule. ‘The Russians thought they would be received with open arms,” a western diplomat said. “They appear to have under-estimated seriously the country’s geographic position and economic dependence on France/' Another diplomat described the result of die Russians’ military aid to the Algerian revolution as a fiasco. The Russians sent two shiploads of wheat and five army helicopters. They also shipped in sardines—to a country where fish is abundant. “They got absolutely nothing« put of it,’’ he said. , The advent Ml independence mat year was followed by a rusaof Soviet bloc diplomats to AlglersN- banned to them un- der French rale — I shipments of aid. PUZZLE OFFICIALS The Chinese sent several ship* i The most practical effort came in the form of medical personnel, particularly from Bulgarin and Yugoslavia. There are still some 890 -Communist dec tors and nurses in Algeria, although Bulgaria recently withdrew 25 doctors. mrnmm loads of wire rolls, although Algeria inherited stocks pf barbed wire from the departing French, and steel rods. These puzzled Algerian officials-Poland and Czechoslovakia dispatched small quantities of foodjj The Algerians decidedly prefer French products. The effort of Yugoslavia stands out. Yugoslaviahas given Algeria 506 tractors and Trade missions from Poland. Czechoslovakia and Romanis thus far have failed to produce Solid agreements. A member of one of the satellite trade .missions complained privately “it is impossible to do business with these people.” technicians to maintain them in repair and contributed a number of doctors and other medical personnel. Borne Algerian officials openly Three People Carry Dagwood Sandwich SEATTLETWSsh. MB —It took three people to carry the custom-made sandwich which publicized the Pacific Northwest Restaurant convention and exhibition here. The eight-foot-long loaf of French, bread was loaded with eight pounds of lnnch meat-42 different kinds. A local bakery, produced sev-i eral of the loaves, longest it: had ever baked.- ? -I express admiration tor Yugoslavia’s political, economic and diplomatic systems. Red China is represented in Algeria by several score diplomats and experts whose task is obscure. At this stage, there is no known Chinese aid effort. Premier Ahmed Ben Bella removed ail known Communists from important^overnment posts id electoral lists last September. .. * » it ■In November came the ban on -the Algerian* Communist~ party, officially explained as an “effort to maintain national unity.” . m , M ONTGOMERY WARD MONDAHEUAIS LIMITED QUANTITIES! A GOOD SELECTION AT EXCEPTIONALLY LOW PRICES. SHOP EARLY! REMNANT SALE Ha OFF Ruth to Wards for a value-packed fabric clearance! Find smooth fabrics or textured, bright colors or subdued; mostly one of a kind. Many wash ’n wear, need hardly any Ironing. Take advantage of these sensational buys •.. scoop 'em up lut the armful for a season's sewing! $evr|gnd •avel Hurry In today for first choice! SAVE BIG NOW! popular cotton playwear lor the young set BUY 2 AND SAVE! GRAY GOOSE GOWN PILLOWS, 38% OFF Enjoy true relaxation dish- jm q ioned In clouds of down— #M v « imported from Europe for vniir romfnrt I Dnwn-nrnnf Savings too good to miss at Wards now..«and right when you need them most. Youngsters love these casuals; you'll love the low prices. Other exciting buys; Cotton dresses, cotton and cotton-nylon blend swimwear, cotton knit blouses, shirts, cotton 2-plece' coordinated sets. Sizes 7 to 14. Not all sizes in all styles, of course, so hurry in for first selection. PILLOW 1.55 OFF! STA-PLUMP® WITH DACRON®, FOAM Dacron® polyester flberflll is wrapped around an inner foam core for firm support plus plush comfort... long-lasting, built-in buoyancy. Cotton broadcloth cover. 444 PRESS SHIRTS WASH-WEAR SHORT SLEEVERS 1 99 RIB. 3.9S Cheese either Supima® cottons or Dacron® polyester-cottons In modified spread, snap-tab or button-down collar medals. White and assorted colors. 14W-16 RED. 6.98 HAIR Clipper outfit Regular 2.96* Combed cottons and Dacron®-—«sot-tons in broadcloth, oxford or batiste. Now only. .1.99 5'Vm. Set Includes electric —dipper, accessories, instructions—all you need far professional looking home hglr cuts. Bleached Muslin Shoots . 72x108 Reg. 1.99 1.45 nivlQft P«g-^QO~ 1i63 * PILLOWCASES Rea. 99c 75c DRIP DRY COTTONS mortly tailored spread if washable cotton sailcloth. Authentic colonial print in redsr golds or browns. Twin 72x108 STQRI HOURS 9>3p A JM. to 9sOQ Monday thru Saturday Pontiac Mall stfEi.-bi lUrle • ■tiii 1 n ■>Vf %Vm: li Phone 682-4940 f Tslograph at IlizObOth Lako Read Si IS M 1 llSl v M Area Pupi/s at Workshop on Fine Arts More than 190 high fdtool students, including four from the area, are attending the first annual fine arts workshop at Olivet College. ’ I d 111 111 * i jjjfj H ■ * * 1 | * * > f*f j 1 v* & b I Gifts Okay From Dead Chum's Dad Schimmel - Cowan iefemony Held at St Valentine Church ored specifically for high school students, Include instruction in drama, art, orchestra, choral music and creative writing. ★ • it *_ .. Among those enrolled are Larry Kostecki, son-of the Ray JCosteckii; Robert Gors-lihe, son of the Robert H. Gorslines; and Richard Wix-om, son of the Wayne M, Wlxoms. All are from Milford. Also attending is Bela Kru-soc; daughter ot Mrs. Clara Krusoc, Walled Lake. . • * ★ *, Getting a taste of campus life at Western Michigan university, Kalamaftto, are 2,500 new freshmen, including 10 from this area. ■( ' * * ★ ' Participating in the two-day orientation period are Shari Logan, Hilary Macfarlane, Judy Hillman, Connie Clinton, Christina Carlsen and Rob-, ert Readier, aU Of Pontiac. 1 ' ★ a ★ ■ Also present at the sessions are Sharon Mathews, Virginia Fagen and Kathie Cosgrove of Orchard Lake. mels. Thursday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Puhiay, Devonbrook Drive, entertained at a buffet dinner for the young couple. following a Bermuda honeymoon. The rehearsal dihner at to-pinka’s Friday evening was hosted by the senior Scbimr = St. Valentine Church - in Redford Township was the setting for the marriage today of Mary Alice Cowan and LoUis Henry Schimmel Jr. Rev. James McGurrln officiated, Parents of the couple are Mrs. J'. Earl Cowan, Weno-nah Drive, and the late Mr. Cowan,"~and"the~senior Louis H. Schimmels, West Iroquois Road. By The Emily Post Institute Q: Since the death of a girl friend of mine, her father, a widower, has taken to sending me gifts. For my birthday he sent me a purse and at Easter he sent me a'very pretty compact. Will you please tell me if it is. proper to accept these gifts from him? A: If you are certain that he is giving you these gifts in memory of his daughter and not because of any interest he may be developing in you personally, you may accept them. The bride, dressed in imported ivory linen with Alen-con lace accents on bodice and petal skirt, was given away by Dr. Neil J. Hannon of Jackson. A cabbage rose and pearl cap secured her bouffant veil of silk illusion. White orchids, Stephanotis and ivy formed the bridal cascade. Honor Bride-Elect at Spinster Dinner Forster and Mrs. Norman L. Miller, Grosse Points Park, wore matching gowns of white tiered lace over pale yellow, sashed in velvet. Headdresses were Flemish-styled bonnets. Bridesmaids had bouquets of yellow daisies while the maid of honor carried an arrangement of whjte daisies, f A reception in Oakland Hills Country Club followed marriage vows today ot Michal Forster and Lt. Edward Bigelow Baker Jr., USNy in St. Hugo of the Hill# Church, Bloomfield Hills. Parents of the bride are Mrs. Clarence Hatch Jr. of Bloomfield Village and Lloyd M. Forster, Bloomfield Hills. Her husband is the son of Pr. and MrfljEdwnrd B. Unitor MIsffMtiiil ~ engagement of *their daughter $ally Ann to Robert Dale Hobson, Graves Street. is announced by the Delbert H. Schdmakers of Fraser. Dec. 7, vows are planned. Lt. James E. Murphy, Hy-annis, Mass., was.best man for the bridegroom. Ensign Michael J. Callahan, Newport, R.I., William J. Storen III, Royal Oak, Lt. Robert Meier, Chicago; Lt., John Moran, Midland, and Capt. Richard Madded, Glouster, Mass., ushered.* The couple left for a honeymoon in Montreal and Quebec and a motor trip through New England, After Aug. 1. they wUfmake their homir in Newport,R.L ^ A gown of white organza over dotted'Swiss for the bride featured a yellow Swiss embroidered skirt border which flowed into a chapel sweep. 1 Yellow satin' encircled the Empire waistline and a mantilla of Belgian princess lace completed the ensemble. She carried Alstroemerla. Honpr Maid * Krtotl Forster and bridesmaids Kaye Saxon Baker of New York, and Ann SALLYANN SHOMAKER LEE BEARING Mr: and Mrs. C. H. Whitelaw of Birmingham flew from Metropolitan Airpbrt Friday on the first-leg~of~theiiL_ trip tasome.of Europe’s top golf courses. He is a member of the V.S. Amateur Seniors. golf team which will play matches in Belgium and, France through mid-August. •...... Q: I am having a large reception and several of the guests have not let me know whether or not they are coming in spite of the r.s.v.p. husband thinks I should ^^^jtRlinDutDJbtak the leasTpeopte^oan_dpj^en ~ they receive an invitaSon~iS"~ to have the courtesy to reply and if they don’t, it means they are not interested. What is your opinion? Competes in Europe A. If it is important to know exactly how many are coming, it will be necessary to telephone those who did not have the courtesy to reply, and ask whether or not Golfer’s Dream Realized they will be present since their failure to answer does not necessarily mean they are not coming. Golf can not make many' dreams come true. But it did for C. H. White-law of Birmingham who often wanted a chance to play,some - "f Europe’s top golf courses. ■' golfing tour, which will last until mid-August, will be the tournament July 24-27 at Deauville, France. events are slated. They will be climaxed with the ambassadors' dinner at Deauville the night of the 27th. Whitelaw and his wife departed from New York’s International Airport this morning as part of a U.S. Amateur Seniors team which will play a series of golf matches In Belgium and France. Feature of the extended y ^~-Some--oLJhe,,lJ.S. players players age 55 and Over will compete against players from nine other foreign countries. Selection of the U.S. team was made from the leading result8 in the country’s senior amateur held last February at Bet-Air, Fla. ' , How ahd when to introduce , people seems to puzzle many. The rifew Emily Post Institute booklet entitled “Introductions” gives helpful information on this subject. To obtain a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a self-addressed, ' will continueto~i5cottand-WKt---^tamP*rtraits- 61 W. Huron' FE 8-4888 Why Don't More Americans Display Flags on Holidays? By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Could you please tell me why so few Americans hang tip flags on special holidays? On opr streets there was only one flag out on Memorial Day— ours. We are English born and America is our new home. We love it, but can’t understand this about the American -people. They . . .. praise Amer- - IM ica, sing the ABBY from every house, large and small. It was the same on my daughter’s street here in America. One flag 4- theirs. It makes me sO-mad I could CANOGA PARK DEAR CANOGA; The colorful tradition of showing the flag seems to be fading in America, And it’s regrettable, for my taste. But REAL pa-triotism doesn’t have to be demonstrated. Some of the most confused un-Americans are frantic flag-wavers. We have our Colonel Blimps, too. DEAR ABBY: I was under the impression that my husband was working seven days a week, night and day, for, five months. One afternoon a young woman came to my apart: ment and told me that my husband has been living with her practically all that time. She said she loved him and wanted me to give him up. JWhen my husband came home and saw her there, he almost jumped out of the window. 1 * He told her in front of me GEORGE’S The Sale You’ve Waited for T-Tops'7. . Blouses. .. Shorts . Jamaicas. . . Capris. . . Slacks 2.98 Twill Shorts, Crew T-Top . .. . . ..1,68 3.98 Twill Jamaicas, Knit T-Tops ......2,38 4.98 Calf Huggers, Knit T-Tops ........... 2,98 5.98 Surfer Pants, Linen Shorts... 3,58 9.98 Capri Linen, Rayon Slack* . . , ....5,98 Ju»i Say Charge It that it was all over between them. She said she’d never let him go, He practically had to throw her out. I never felt so sorry for a woman in Ml my life. My husband has tried to make it up to me in every way possible. He is begging me to forgive and forget, Should I let him share our bedroom again? BROKEN-HEARTED you order, fell the waitress you are a small eater and prefer small portions. DEAR BROKEN-HEARTED; Yes. DEAR ABBY: I am a very shtall eater and we eat out a fet. It is very embarrassing , to me when a waitress notices that I haven’t eaten much and asks, “Was there something wrong with the food?’ I tell her there was nothing Wrong with the food and she gives me an argument, and says, “Are you SURE there’s nothing wrong with it? You hardly touched it.” Abby, I’m hot a child, and I don’t need to be coaxed into eating more than I want. How can I get waitresses to stop calling attention to the fact that JNten*t eat^it^r,s:gs^ SMALL EATER DEAR SMALL: Don’t „blame the waitress for inquiring as to the quality of the fobd she serves yom She’s only trying to be certain that you are satisfied. Next time Club Crowns New Queen FashionYourFigure-Qub members crowned the year’s weight-toss9 queeri during Thursday’s meeting at the Adah Shelly Library. This year’s winner, MTs. Thomas C. Lewis, was crowned by former queen Mrs. Robert R. Tucker.___ Laundry Aids for* Delicates GEORGE'S 74 North Saginaw St. LAKEWOOD VILLAGE - LAKE FRONT BRICK Open Sunday 1 -5 P.M. Immoeuldt* Roman brie)T horn* bull* In 1958. Large carpeted living ‘ room; with Tennemf ledgerock onpl marble fireplace, family room 1 15n24 with Roman ■ brick and ledgerock railed hearth tlreplpce, 3 bedroomi and den, or, fourth bedroom, large modern country kitchen, ji/j baths, 2V4 car,attached garage. Circular paved driveway, large wooded jot, good btjqch.'Only 5 mlies from Alpine Ski Lodge, 35 milo^ from Detroit, $34,900, terms. Dlfectloni. Ouf M-59 weit to Bogle Lake^ Rd., louth to Blicoyhe Dr,, Spit to $«M*r (ftt|,, #971. (ppei| ilgni, ■ AhlNETT INC, REALTORS ■ 28 E. Huron Ronliac Federal 8-0466 pp#n Evohing* and Sunday 1-4 ^ NEW YORK (UPI)—Today, even laces and delicate tea napkins can be made machine - washed by encasing "luxury” cloths and pfica mats in a net bag or pillow slip. But very fragile or heirloom pieces are best washed by hand in warm suds and rinses after removing any Bureau Ihero. CONFIDENTIAL TO MR. S.: If you want to make your teen-ager feel grown up, give / him hto own telephone bill. it Hr ★ / What's on your mind? For a personal reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, in care of The Pon-TERTPfessV.. For Abby’s booklet, “How To Hav^A Lotvely Wedding,’ send 50 cents to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. Somi Raincoats Are Washable Many raincoats have special water repellent finishes which can be washed safely" in the automatic washer. Finishes such as “Scotchgard,” “Zelan” and "Cravanette” arb not harmed by regular washing. Moreover, most -washable rainwear is a blend of polyester and cotton, or all cotton, and can be laundered beautifully. Keeping these garments clean actually will help maintain their water repellent qualities. Use a Soft Cloth Remove crayon or penciL marks on an enameled sur-face with a few drops of detergent on a soft cloth. Kansas Couple Weds Rev. Robert Frisbee officiated at the marriage of Theora Mae Gideon to Ronald J. Correll, both of Hutchinson, Kan. today in the United Presbyterian Church in that city. The Theron H. Gideons, * Forsyth, Mo., and the Frank H. Cowells, Saline Drive, are parents of the newlyweds who have p 1 anned,their honeymoon to include a week in PuuUacr MRS. RONALD J. CORRELL At Work, on Vacation Grooming Is Important By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN An attractive appearance is essential in toddy’s office. The woman in business does not have to be beautiful, but she must be well-groomed, andattractively and appropriately dressed. The other day I wrote about William Olstep’s Secretary Vacation Plan. Even if yon do not wish to spend your vacation working on a temporary basis in New York City, Boston, Philadelphia, Atlanta or Chicago, yon may be working this summer at home. Therefore, I think the advice which Olsten gives to his applicants will be helpful. back the cuticle. Massage with a good hand cream the same way that you stroke your fingers into a new glove. Apply polish. Important: Re- place polish when it’s chipped. Don’t patch it. ' Wear your hair in a style that becomes you. Keep it dean and combed, and save the elaborate hairdo for the evening hours. Hospital Jobs Go Wanti Dress simply. A skirt and blouse, or* a tailored dress, will do nicety. Avoid tow necklines. A business suit, ,, clean pressed, is alsq appropriate? Be surq slip does not show. Important: dress to' fit your shape. Hosiery is a must. Shoes should be polished or brushed — heels not overrun. CHICAGO (UPI)—The American Hospital Association urges youth in search of a career to look to the local " hospital. The country’s nearly 7,000 hospitals employ almost 1.7 million persons in some 200 job classifications, ranging from accountant to. X-ray technician. . Even with this large number of persons em-1 ployed, toe. association reported that many positions in hospitals are unfilled because of shortages. of personnel, - j Wear jewelry sparingly. Avoid dangling earrings and jangly jewelry. Don’t wear sive jewelry if you’re petite, or fragile jewelry If you’re large. Perfume, if used, should be applied sparingly. Stay fresh and clean. Bathe or shower every day. NAILS, TOO Keep your nails well manicured. Don’t skip that weekly Martinique, a French island in the West Indies, was the birthplace of the Empress Josephine. , * Keep make-up fresh. Avoid excessive make-up during business hours. If make-up is applied, the skin should first bp thoroughly cleansed And freshened; otherwise, the cosmetics will^not look their best or stay on tong. Speak charmingly — modulate your voice; emunciate clearly; use your natural voice; build courtesy into your voice. Work charmingly — be prompt and keep good attendance; keep personal phone calls for after-hours; listen carefully to instructions; avoid talking too much.; leave your troubles at home; ash questions when1 you don’t know the answers; be interested in your work; show a willingness to co-operate. If you would like to know more about Olsten’s vacation plan I mentioned, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your re-quest for it to Josephone Low-man in care of The Pontiac Press. OCk* Register and Tribune gjrndloate, For the candlelight service and church reception, the bride ' chose ballerina-length ; “wfilterslitr organza and Chan-tilly lace dver taffeta. A "pearls’ Tiara *T0ppeii' her-bouffant‘ illusion veil and white Cymbidium orchids centered her bouquet of cascading white roses. Matron of honor Mrs. Leon Gideon of Forsyth and brides-maid Mrs. Erland Wallace of Hutchinson wore Javendar taffeta brocade with matching headpieces and shoes. They carried white carnations. Erland Wallace was best man and Richard Partridge, groomsman. Seating guests .were Patrick Hall, James and Bud Partridge, all of Hutchinson. The couple will make its. home in Hutchinson. Use Towels in Small Toad When drying only one or two lightweight items, add a .couple of towels to the load. This keeps clothes tumbling and billowing, producing faster drying and more wrinkle-free results. . Dextrose, a form of sugar, is found in the blood. Our firm and Bigelow Give You a DUAL WARRANTY The Femes* Clsanhig Metlwi • Takes safe snt 4f • Right Ik yser ewe heme The most satisfactory cleaning, proposition . wt’ve ever coma acrossl It's speedy, it's efficient and it's Inexpensive. Call vs and. well tell you ail about it. Phone FE 2.7132 NEW WAY . RUG and CARPET CLEANERS 42 Wiener St., Pontiac Let Ue Photograph YOUR WEDDING NATURALGOLOR from $49^ Coverage of churcb and reception. Beautiful Album "of IS — 8x10 eolor photographs from 848.88. FE 4-1701 VARDEN STUDIO S3 E. Lawrence FACTS ABOUT PHARMACY by HOWARD L DELL Your Neighborhood Pharmacist THE LAW PROTECTS YOU Federal low bans the refilling of prescriptions for certain drugs'without, your doctor's tnqwlec|ge and approval, •This low was passed to protect you and your health. Your pharmacist will gladly contact your doctor for you. fust prescription refilled. know when you. Chaos* Your Pharmacist a - Would Your Doctor Baldwin Pharmacy 119Baldwin FE 4-2620 stains, says the Cleanliness manicure. Remove old polish. Soak nails in cuticle oil, and push Polly's Pointers New Clothespin Idea By POLLY CRAMER DEAR POLLY — This idea was really my boy friend’s but I am passing it on. \ When you are trying to raise the hem on a net dress that will hot hold pins, place clip clothespins over the folded fabric. Then put your hem in. CAROLYN DEAR POLLY — Carry a packet of gummed name-address labels in purse or pocket. They save the annoyance of having to spell your name to sales clerks. They are also handy to use on,tiny blanks for store drawings lind contest entries. At home, they neatly label books and records. All tilts besides titelr main purpose of use on stationary. "EASY DOES IT’ DEAR POLLY — “Where is my ruler?” is a familiar cry in every household where there are school children. There is po need to play Sherlock Holmes in order to find this lost item because it is easy to keep it at your child’s finger tips. _j^JDrHMl61eiln a ruler to match the rings in the loose leaf notebook so that the ruler can be stored here when not in use. Here it can also serve as. a convenient marker for immediately opening the notebook to a desired subject or reference material. MRS. A. R. T. it ’it it DEAR POLLY —While my husband is at work, I often think of little things I want to be sure to tell, him — amusing things the children have said or done, ideas .that have occurred to me, bits of news, jobs that chould be done, etc. I keep a pencil and paper handy to jot down these many items as I think of them through the day. I find that our conversation at the dinner table is more interesting and constructive when I take a, few minutes during the day to do this. MRS. W. P. Share your favorite homemaking Ideas . . . send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You'll receive.a bright, new silver dollar if Polly uses your ideas in Polly’s Pointers. IP EIGHT ONE COLOR MORE SAVINGS for YOU! I "A delay in the flooring stopped lit from moving Into our new building at 41 last Walton. I "Our present store at 1467 Bald* win is |ust jam packed with merchandise which we are selling at unheard of low prices. Come in, get your share of these bargains. HURON These low prices effective thru V July 20. Saturday, New DuPont Luclto $459 e 22 Lovely Colors e No Limit 'U Heap of Cleaning for a Wee Bit O'Money” CAVE UP OK or With Ossh Oflf E TO 00/O and CsriyI &SELECT-UR-SERVICE ■ PROFESSIONAL DRYCLCANINQ SERVICES FOR KVERY BUDGET AND TYPR DRY* CLEANING DESIRED. ECON-O-DRY CLEANERS AND SHIRT LAUNDERS SO Yoon in iho Dry Cleaning Butinest n A A V* Sleek Weet e» Teleireph Reed, duet 744 HURON ST. Oppeiite Huron Theater And A A P iters f COUPON"* ”** With thi* coupon Mon., Tue*., Wed. «| l SHIRTS LAUNDERED 4 A. j Jhrrdlophen*___3 ]IK . 5 FOR 1.15 « J! COUPON ~ ”| MEN’S OR LADIES’ SUIT* . OR PLAINCOATS I I SUNDAY ONLY THISAP j Tender, Juicy lONILISS SIRLOIN - i-e4ndi*Wue%£dlool | Poclttd with Drycl. Order of $1.50 Of A * “ 1 10 Finish : STEAK SSI HAMBURGER S t S1°° I HAMILTON previous Model Closeout ELECTRIC DRYER only a limited supply. Only $10 Down Free Delivery . COUPON i eniRt’ A|«N ,W™ OH SWEATERS MEN. PANTS Complete Selection of All Colors j -'■£» Kflc i Hggi OH© 1 ^ MqcKInftlnUM WW J Mnktoe tlnliti«l ..J DRAYTON PLAINS STORE ONLY BAZLEY X, # SuinleM, *Im eoeud nielproef dram. ■ eDuel eyele timer, eermel ■nd week’ll weer. e lebrie diet temp, eestrel • S Temp. MUinm eDielexeetheetfer •duel febrlo type, e Interior light and Sun-E-Dey lamp a Uphted control penol e Automatic wrinkle-free e Meier etop Pdteh end Open Daily 7 A.M. to 6 P.M.-SATURDAY 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. 4348 Dixie Highway - Droyton Plaint n The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC S1W.M Hmon~WRE~" FE 4-1SSS Super Kem-Tone $098 V pi. # a m # • • # • • • a a • * a # # a m a • • •••••• • # • • • • • • • • • ( SHOP IN YOUR CAR AT DIXIE DAIRY 48 N. TELEGRAPH ROAD Complete Selection of MELM0R LAWN SPRINKLERS AUxit........ 777777 25 BETWEEN TEL-HURON and PONTIAC MALL /O Off GOODRICH RUBBER DARDEN HOSE 60 Fact-Regular $9.95 1(95 MIDWAY READ CARE/LLLY OUR EVERYDAY LOW mULPRICES 35* In lete of few er more H gallon.. ... tincle Mi gtllone no, Glass V* Dal. ft Carton Vt Gal. H UDSON'S hio^lr discount e.. Single Vh Gallons 3m EVERYDAY LOW DREAD PRICE FRESHLY BAKED 1467 Baldwin,at Walton Open Friday SA.M. to 9 P.M. All Other Weekdays 9 AM. to 6 P.M. Sunday 10A.M. to I P.M. FE 441242 B R E A D 6 Large Ift-lb. $1 ‘ Loaves s—6 MICHIGAN PEAT □ SAT., SUN. A B i y and MONDAY 0 Dl URGE SELECTIONS OF ANNUALS! Complete Line of * BULK GRASS SEED • SPECIAL • on SEABORD’S LAWN PRODUCTS Pet Supplies • Bulk Vegetable Seeds Packet Seed* e Water Softener Salt Hudson Sprayers and Parts • Feeds and Garden Plants EVERGREEN LAWN and GARDEN SUPPLY (We Feature Greenfield Lawn Products) 20 FRANKIIN RD.— ; Ft 8-6483 100% Acrylic LATEX HOUSE FAIN Slitter and peel reeletant, felt painting. Latte50% longer...« bruihet with loop and water. FILLMORE Hardware-Drayton 4180 W. Walton Blvd. .A. OR 3-INt SHOP iniiiimii OPEN DAILY 10 to II SUNDAY 12 to 1 JMMpP SUNDAY Umarf GLENWOOD PLAZA Paddock and N. Perry at Glenwood Big 12-Oz. Glass of HAWAIIAN FRUIT PUNCH Jack ’n Jill 15* FREE! 12-oz. crystal clear glass with fham bottom. Danish Crown ^ SLICED BACON out JL49K POUND can, delicately flavored aeon ttripi. Needs no re-rigeration until open. Ideal >r camping trips or “cmer* ency” shelf. PRICE Offer Expires July 19th SYLVAN CLEANERS 869 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. FE 4-9891 White and All ISIS Decorator Approved Colors in Stook! He* J|29 $6.59 f Gal. Gal. Whit* and All 1963 Decorator Approvad [or Approvad Oolors In ttookl *7% , 195 Gal. TOM’S HMDWARE 905 Orchard Lake Ava. FE 5-2424 ii i iB,¥'em. my letue' mil 'imp mir'ifr' HT' mm 'id|;'%iM 1 nyiiiMiny NMP1 *WL T M "t MiiJLidWliidHr ^ ^M. M M ■ ™ c*nr/if jr r n Grand Opening Sale! Regular $24.95 Tailor Made iran Plastio ■ Leatherette Trim ur..SEAT COVERS Tantalizing Party Fara — _ POTATO CHIPS 49* Full Pound. T Elam 100% Purt INSTANT COFFEE 56® 96® Regular $90.00 Nylon Vinyl CONVERTIBLE TOPS *57.®? ICOwPlUl A full flavored blend of first-gr^de coffees.. Instantly delicious steaming hot or icedry ! ,f ii SEAT COVER KING 816 MYRTLI ST. JUST OfF TELBQRAFjt RD. ' ““ " "" Cemw ’ lilmirTT Directly Oppeiite Tel-Huron Shopping Cetl ‘rif ' PHONE FE 2-Aie SPECIAL! SUN.-MON.-TUES.-WED. U.S. No. 1 California Long Whit* New Potatoes!! 29c SWEET RIPE Watermellons 39‘ nui nvVJE Tomatoes 29 d Westown «mi 706 W. HURON BEER i WINE • LIQUOR » PONTIAC MALL • DRAYTON PLAINS • MIRACLEMILK •TEL-HURON Monday Only Special! Fringed Tarry Cloth DISH TOWELS 16>lnoh x 26-tnoh Chooso from a large selection of ehaolti and •tripes. Colon lively enough to dress up any kitchen. Buy eeverel at this large savings. o Available At • • Mlraolo Mila • Pontlao Mall a Drayton Plaint • Tal-Huron Stores Monday Only! "CHARGE IT" AT KRESCE'S i s A ” Bi • • • • • •••• • m m m m m • • • THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 19, 196a NIKE EMHm SPECIALS wLJtLJKLMbmMJKkJtkmMLJL»AJKL*MkJlNJKh FREE SHOCKS ICE COLD LEMONADE to Cool Off, •Ml With . TOILETS! TOILETS! TOILETS! baldly noticabl*. Famav. Nama Brand. |xeai glai* pur* whit* finish. Ballcock tank parti art fin* quality. $1|95 Sr$2995 llUklauia BlimaaaaawA I UU Ha micmgan riuoresceni Ligm no* 393 Orchard Lake Ave., Pontiac Ptumblng Dipt’ HAN DI-HANG smmm IN STOCK Pre-Pasted and Trim mad Plasticized and Washable „___Matching Fabrics Soffit Borders $]59to$229 Per Single Boll The Sherwin-William Co. THIS STORE ONLY 71 W. HURON ST. FE 4-2571 Free Perking In Rear WITH WHEEL ALIGNMENT Ceiter, Cambor end Toe-In .•*«.. $9.05 2 FRONT SHOCKS OeuM* A«tlan-Quallty Honutai * , ($2.00 Installation lath) Spadal Fartary Off.r far LlmHatl lima Only. Intradwln* tha Hanulai Oaukl* AlHan Heavy-Duty Shack Abcarbir. Ouarantaad (or 30,000 Mila* #r Ona Yaar. ntm BUS INSTANT CREDIT—NO MONEY DOWN OPEN EVENINGS TIL 9 P.M. Market Tire Co. 77 WIIT HURON AT CAM AVI. T144 WIST MAPLK WALLED LAKE MA 4-9042 r Hmart tikes m HA( Cat After eel Ibnltat Ybttl "inryw SUMMER SALE! 1963 Schwinn Typhoon Never Before _ 20-Inch Such Quality At $ O O 9 5 Such A Low Price I WA 14”...$38.98 20”.*, $39.98 e Built-in klokstond e Two-tone saddls e Tubular rims Monty • .avlna b« hunter, will walcort naw Schwinn Typhc lot of blka lor llttla n DOWN DELIVERS! ijuifti SCARLETT’S SS 201. Lewrdnoo PARK FREE IN REAR *| Service Quarantte! BICYCLE end if i| FE HOOVER SWEEPER Authorized Hoover Service Station SUMMER CLEANING MADE EASY . J ' With Heovtr Sarvlead Vacuum Cleenert e Some day oorvlet e All makes o Work guarantood PAINT NOW at These LOW PRICES! Ceiling White . . . $3.29 o*1- __Exterior White ... $4.80 m. Floor end Deck Varnish.. $3.29 «•'. Drop Clothes .... 20.'. WALLPAPERS - WALLTEX- SANITAS and Many Othersl WEST END end Wallpaper 49T ELIZABETH LK. . FE Ml® m m kite Baptist Get Converts ; in Japanese Crusacle TOKYO (JR - A Baptist evangelist crusade in Japan — the “New Life Movement’’—has concluded, with a total of 22,214 “decisions for Christ’’ in a five-week period. “The response far beyond anything we had anticipated, | a leader in tiie drive said. Before the crusade,- there were only 14,000 Baptists in-Japan. ' 1ST GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH of Drayton Plains 3010 Morlington Rd. (Off Hatchery Rd.) Rev; Clemans to Assist Youth ReViRieharcbL. Clemans, new minister of Christian education at Central Methodist Church, comes to the Pontiac area • from First Methodist Church in Liberty, Tex. where he had served for the past four years. Rev. R. L. Gregory SUNDAY SCHOOL.. tO,o.m. WORSHIP.........11 o.m. EVENING WORSHIP 7:30 p.m. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT for SUNDAY SACRAMENT Sunday Serving and -Sunday School 11>00 A.M. Wednesday Evening Services 8 P.M. Reading Room 14 W. Huron St. Open Daily 11 A.M to 5 P.M. Friday to 9 P.M. First ChurcH of Christ, Sciehtist Lawrence and Williams. Streets PONTIAC Marimont SerWcwAf Scho°' Youth on New Chapelto Open Prior, to ministerial work he [was with Wesley Foundation at Tarleton-State College in Stephen-vilie, Tex. and East Texas State. Rev. Mr. Clemans, a' graduate of Southern Methodist University, he also studied at University of Teras. A former member of the Texas Conference he now. belongs to the De-troit Conference. With his wife and children jBrenda, Laura, David and Becky age boys and girls are iehving the Marimont Baptist Church Moodl^iit 6:30 a.m. for Camp Co-Be-Ac at mm«iWT■ Girls and boys will be attending Vicki Gavette, Christine Frick, Lynanne Clark, Susan Tits-wortb, Gay la Grammer, Terrie Smades, Nancy Somers, Cynthia and Deborah Vaught, Danny Matthews, Sidney Lewis and Kenneth Tabor. Twenty-one Jinlor and senior high-young people under the leadership of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Matthews, the Amos Vaughts, Rodney Attwaters, Sandy Stewart, Karra Lundeen, Bob Hassenxahl and Denny Vincent are canoeing down Jhe An Sable Itiver over the week* he makes his home at 4011 Shad-dick, Waterford Township. Philip Somers, will to a combined junior and high girls’ group at 6:30 Pastor Clemans will work Dr. Milton-JL-Banky minfetar Central, ancj _____ t"rady, associate pastor. Rev.etarenceJackaomminis* ter of Christian education at Columbia Avenue BapUat Church, writhe pastor of the newly organ-] ized Herrington Hills Baptist Chapel. Serviced will open tomor-i row in the Herrtogton-School. Sunday School is scheduled for I 10 a m.; morning worship at 11 ] a.m.; training union at 6:30 p,p>. and evening worship at 7:30. Pastor Jackson came to Pone tiac from the Vine Street Baptist j Church in Louisville, Ky. in 1960. A graduate of Mercer University, he attended Georgia Tech and did graduate work at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary where he received a master of religions degree. Mrs. Jackson also attended Georgia Tech. The Rev. Mr. Jackson, presi* dent of to Marit^mJn P^has ^ the training union preserved in the Second Ponce de . Leon Baptist Church of Atlanta, ® \ £ , . ^ j Ga. and the Cherokee Heights ^ Baptist Church at Macon, Ga. bT JJlumbla A B pt t I The Rev. Mr^«n^“Mrs. Jack80EL?hurch• i REV. CLARENCE* JACKSON ^CHURCH of GOD: East Pike at Anderson, PARSONAGE PHONE V FE 2-8609 Sunday Schoql. 10 A.M. MorningWorship 11 A.M. Evening Service . . 7 P.M. Young Peoples Service Wed., 7j00 P.M. . Junior high young people under direction of Mr. and Mrs. will meet at the church Friday at 7 p.m.. to play putt putt golf.. Other chapel leaders include Gene Elliott^ Sunday* School superintendent; and Paul Veazey, A FAMILY SINGr-Coming to Central Methodist Church as . minister of Christian Education is Rev. Richard L. Clemans. Besides Attending church affairs, picnics and other out-dolor activities the Clemans* family likes to sing. Here they are (from left) Dav|d, Brenda, Mrs. Clemans, Becky, Laura and Rev. Mr. Clemans in back. The parsonage is at 4011 Shaddick, Waterford Township. Calvary Baptists to Present Quartet St. Mary's Members Sponsoring Program The Biota College Male Quartet will present a special vocal: Members of St. Mary’s AME Zion Mission, 601 Pearsall wil) present Bishop Stephen G. Spotts-woo dand a 50-voice choir in a musical program at 3:30 p. m. Christ's Church of Light ' NON-DENOMINATIONAL' __ Lotus Coke School, Waterford Cor. Percy King and Harper St, • Sunday School 9:45 A.M. -taformotira call OR 3-7650 or OR 3-4710 [. and instrumental program of mu- CROSS OF CHRIST Rev. Calvin Fiege, ^arrf»hiP vidence Missionary R a n t-i-s-tJeste:------------------------- I n • ■ ■ ■■ . I * TV *l'i i'i ii'm r:' I n n r'^wwleutn A 11am f [counselor of-the MlehipTfe-jtnurchTPastor Claude Goodwin PONTIAC CHURCH OF CHRIST 1180 N. PERRY ST. FE 24269 Listen to the "Herald of-Truth" Eoch Sunday—CKLW, Chan. 9—11 A.M. Also WXYZ 1270 at 10 P.M. BIBLE STUDY------- .. 9:50 A.M. Classes for all ages MORNING WORSHIP 10:50 A.M. “Riqht-oMtVfenep7---------- EVENING SERVICE______6 P.M. "A Letter To a Young Church" First Presbyterian Church HURON AT WAYNE ’ REV. GALEN E. HERSHEt Pastor REV. PAUL D. CROSS, Asst. Pastor —..- ALBERT A. RIDDTrTNG, Christian ^ Education Director , Worship Service ...........10:00 A.M. Church School...."..'.....10:00 A.M. FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 149 . North East Blvd. FE 4-1611 Pastor, WM. K. BURGESS SUNDAY SCHOOL , v. . . 10 A.M. WORSHIP . . . . . .. __11A.M. EVENING WORSHIpTT. . 7 P.M. who is on vacation is touring the Holy Land. At 3:30 p.m. Rev. R. H. Me-Ewen with his choir and congregation-of, Bray Tempje CME Church will be guests. The board of deaconesess will conduct the service under the direction of Mrs. Willie L. Reese, president. Rev. D. N. Ford of Mt. Ararat Baptist Church, Detroit wiir attend the 7:30 p.m. service accompanied by his choir and congregation. Richard Reese will conduct the service sponsored by the board of trustees. The public is invited. FIRST BAPTIST Rev. Robert Savage, vice president and field director of Radio •Station HCJB in Quito, Ecuador will preach at the 7 p.m. service tomorrow in First Baptist Church, The son of Dn H. H. Savage, pastor of First Baptist for nearly 40 years, now retired, the Rev. Mr. Robert Savage will soon re-turn to South America. ST. PAUL LUTHERAM Under the shade of trees in Oakland Park, Rev. Maurice Shackell, pastor of St. Paul Lutheran Church, will preach to his congregation on “Fishers of Men” at 10:45 a.m. tomorrow. trict, Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod, will be guest preacher at [Cross of Christ Lutheran Church; Bloomfield Township tomorrow. The congregation of Cross of Christ Church is worshiping in the Little Theater of the Bloomfield Hills High School until the new building is completed at Lonfe Pine and Telegraph Roads. Service of worship scheduled lor IMS a.m.1 will be followed by a coffee hour dn the covered walkway. Rev. Delayne M. Pauling is pastor. MESSIAH Members of "Messiah Baptist Church will present Patricia Ann Keel in a vocal recital at 7:30 Sunday evening. The church is lo-jeatedat 168 Prospect. Patricia, a member of the Children's Chdlr at Macedonia Baptist Church, is«a student in Whittier Elementary School. She plays cornet in the school band and is a member of the school service squad. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Teel, sTriTstudles music with Mrs. Sarahinton Moore. The program will 1 n c I u d e “Bless This House,” "How Great Thou Art,” “The Holy * City,” “My Father Watches” and other numbers. ----------- * AUBURN HEIGHTS U.P. | “Did You Receive the Holy the United Presbyterian Church “Wed by tbe churclv; Games and in Auburn Heights. . „ ■ Melvin Boring a member ShackeU said there, will [Southfield United Presbyterian L a\atermelon eating contest, Church and assistant to the pas-1 limbo game, a spek race, leap [frog raceT baseball game, rope- pulling, orange and balloon con* Members are asked to dress casually as the annual,,church picnic will follow. Dinner j| COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave. - FE 5-9960 Sunday School9:45 A.M. Morning Worship ..... 1 LOO A.M. Training Union ....... 6:30 P.M. Evening Worship .. 7:30 P.M. M|dw««k Service (Vj/ed.). 7M5 P.M. Be our Outil bnd Yeu'il be Blest * End your search for a friendly Church , E. CLAY POLK Pastor (Affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention) CLARENCE B. JACKSON, Minister of Education CARROLL HUBBS, Music Director . tor, will be guest, preacher. I, After graduation from Sterlihgl College where he majored in psychology, Mr. Boring taught in public schools before entering Princeton Seminary. In the fall he will return to Princeton for this second year. — Members of youth choirs from grades three to 10 will sing "The [Lord’s Prayer” during the service. Judy Willhite and June Lock-amy will sing the duet, “I Lovel [to Sing Abput Jesus.” Boy Scout Troop 23 will get to- Allen Campbell, recreation dir rector of *the church, is in charge of arrangements. MACEDONIA Men of Macedonia Baptis Church will be In charge of the breakfast in Macedonia Church Center at 7:30 a.m. tomorrow. The Young Adult Choir will present a mock wedding at 7 p.m. in the church center. Vacation Bible School will begin its second week Monday with classes from 0 a.m. until noon. Women of'Macedotl!* Church will sponsor a tea at the center at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow. FIRST METHODIST Rev. Carl G. Adams will preach oa “Can You Tate It?” at both morning serviced tomorrow in First Methodist Church. Janet Livingstone, summer * organist, will play several numbers. Senior and Junior high Methodist young people will meet at the church at 5:20 p.m. Tuesday before going for a swimming party. Members are asked to bring a sack lunch. Counselors for the evening Include the Robert Murphys, Mrs. Charles Jacobson and Mr. and Mrs. Chester Arnold. Women belonging to evening circle groups will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Bible study and is I prayer fellowship are slated for 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Senior citizens of the church are Invited to a served luncheon Friday. Each member is asked to bring a picture of himself taken some 20 years ago. Mrs, Chester Caughell ta In charge of the program.' BloIa~College Ts one of the five schools of The Bible Institute of Los Angeles Inc., half century-old Christian educational institution located in La Mirada, Cnlif; In order to qualify for membership in the quartet, individuals must maintain acceptable academic standards, and. display the highest type of Christian character and conduct. This year’s quartet which will travel in 10 states Includes George Jones, Tom Heiser, Charles Ivans and John Ebeling, all in California. Accompanist Is Robert Polley of Walunt Creek, Calif. Rev. Gordon Llndaav. pastor of the Five Points Community Church, will speak at the 10 a.i worship service at the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church Sunday. Kirk in the Hills Names Ministers for Summer Kirk In The Hills will present six of America’s most celebrated Protestant ministers in an out- WWV kJGUUl IIUUI/ M mu MCI Wl , „ a , * ___ get her at 7 Monday evening andjstan‘llnR ^rles of seven Sunday the board of trustees will meet services this summer. * at 7:30 p,mi Tuesday. | Throughout the summer months i, , P,s80r Gairett Bib- FIRST PRESBYTERIAN i the Kirk In The Hills will con- “ca* SemlnaTy and author, lec- Rev. Paul D. CM. wffprM* ** with »rvlc M* *ill KL"!’ mission on the arts and worship of the National Council of Churches, he is widely known for his published works. Rev. Dr. George A. Buttrlck, MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 68 W. Walton * FE 2-7239 SUNDAY SCHOOL .............10 A.M.‘ MORNINGWORSHIP HOUR... ,...,....‘11:00 A.M. , , "THE ROLL CALL,' | L,QF THe; FAITHFUL" EVENING SERVICE................ "THE JUST AND TH^ UNJUSE * ,; \ | PASTpR SOMERS, prtaching at both strvic* Public Cordially Invited ,7:30 P,M. ‘"VW‘7T .vLm i "awlTi'M.i m The full!sermons on Aug. 4 and Sept. 1, on How to Think About God' at “'T* . 1, . nn a„0 << n„v » mvant slstcM 5sn svzsa “«. Church School will be held at the|Klrl< sch°o1 w111 be held concur-same hours. \ ' rently with the worship services. John Ward will sing for "He , First of the guest preachers, Sent His Word and Healed Them" th0 Rev. Dr. Ernest Gordon, by Humphreys for the Offertory | dean, Princeton University i Hi IBfBK,-1 A-: ('j . , IP i't solo. Organist Lyndon Salathiel [will play “Largetto” by Mozart and “Help Me, O Lord”: J>y Schroeder. | Mr. a)id Mrs. L.“ t. McDowell [will gervq as hosts lit the coffee hour following morning worship. PROVIDENCE 1 Rev. WilllartpH. Loug, assistant jpastor, will be In charge of the iVM Chapel, will give Ihq sermon on July 21. On July 2tfr Rev. Dr. Shmuel H. Miller, dean of [Harvard Dfvlnlty School, wlll be In the Kibk pulpit. Dr. Miller Is a national leader In the parish ministry and in the field of pastoral theology, A member of the com- nue Presbyterian Church, 1 York City, will be g Dr. Oliver Powell, pastor of First Congregational Church, Oak Park, III., Is scheduled for Aug. 18. -U The final preacher In the sum-met* series will, be Rev. Dr. Eugene1 Carson Blake, stated clerk, General Assembly, The United Presbyterian Church In the U. i A. Dr. Blake is Inter-nationally known for Ns leadership -in both the Nationaf and World Council' of Churches. , sic Sunday evening at the Cta-vary Baptist Church, 3750 Pontiac Lake Road.------ The program which begins at 7 will include spirituals, hymns, religious classics, 'and special arrangements of outstanding gos-| pel songs. Vocal and instrumen-[ tal selections will also be presented by individual members of the group. Sunday in Maoedonia Church, 512 Pearsall. Pastor M. L; Washington said the publicisinvlted. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCI Mooting In tho Plrio Lk. School, W. Long Lk, RcL, noar Orchard Lk. Worship, Church School, 10 A.M. HARRY W. CLARK, Minister CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH Airport and Williams lake Rds. Sunday School 9:30 A.M. ‘ for all ages ___Services 8 and 11 AM. NURSERY PROVIDED AT H AM Wayne S. Pennon, Pattor Rev. Lindsay Speaking at Oakland Ave. Elder Thomas MUckie will preside and Mrs. Stephen Hubbell and Carl Matheny will, sing a duet. Youth groups meet at 5:45 p.m. with Pioneers discussing “No Place Else to Go.” Builders will enjoy a program called “You Can’t Be a Hermit.” Elder Roland Williams will preside at the 7 p.m. service when Evangelist Billv Waiker ls ttuesf speaker. Mrs, Gray Graham will tell the children’s story > and special music will be given by R. G. Crites. Evening Vacation Bible ScJiool tor Junior and senior high young people will be held Monday through Friday from 7 to 9:30 p.m. Bible study and prayer hour is held at 7 p.m. Wednesday. A FRIENDLY WELCOME AWAITS YOU AT THE GQOG SHEPHERD ASSEMBLY OF GOD 10 A.M. Sunday School, Morning Wonhlp,. Evo. Ivongnl $«r,....... / 30 p.\ Honnttl (,'wiwr S38-62S3 _ BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH W, Huron at Mprk Worship Sorvlct al 10:60 A.M. Sormoni "IIVINQ UNDER PRESSURE" 1' pr, Emil Kenit, PoWf 9t00 A.m: Church School Cloifd lor All Agoi ‘ WnHnndoy. 7i30t h,Mr , Quarterly Buonou Mooting9, "An AffltrlcOn MppHU Conuiniloit CkuMh” •Waterford Towtuhip American Baptist Church" CRE^J|kl4MT'ST Sunday School 9M AM. Worihip 11 A.M. 6:30 RM. Baptist Fellewship Largo Forking Lot __ Nursery During All Sorvlcos Dm Dehor k AOono Mor APOSTOLIC CHURCFronCHRIST" 485 CENTRAL Saturday Young People..... 7:30 p.m. .Sunday School and Worship.10:00 a.m. Sunday Evening Services... 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday Services... -7:30 prm. Church Phone ........... FE 5-8361 Pastor's Phone .. 852.-2382 CHURCH OF $PIRITUALFELIQWSHIP MALTA TEMPLE-2024 PONTIAC ROAD ^ r (Formerly Si. Luk.'i Melhodiit Church) # SUNDAY SERVICE 7:30 P.M. Rev. A, Hawkins, speaking July 21 — Fellowship Day! Rev. Hector Wlneman The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET Sunday School 9:45 o.m.-Young People's Legion 6 pm. Morning Worship 11 a.m.-Evangelistic Meeting 7.00 p.m. __ Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. LIEUT, and MRS. GARY B. CROWELL Goad Music—Stuping—True 10 the Word Prrarhinp God Meets With US -You, Tod, Are Invited FIRST NAZARENE .60 STATE STREET SUNDAY SCHOOL - 9:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP-11:00 A.M. SiRMdfMi \ "GOD'SjCHGSEN. VESSEU'-YOUTH FELLOWSHIP . . . . 6:00 P.M.* EVENING SERVICE, . . . . 7:00 P.M. Sermon "THREE MINUTES TO.LIVE" V BURTON. Minli 4. , QUARTET-ARAMA TONIGHT SAT. JULY 13 7:30 P.M. ’ EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 645 S. telegraph Rd. ifir ☆ ☆ ☆ ifir -jftr ☆ ^ it AIR CONDITIONED AUDITORIUM • AMBASSADORE QUARTET —Allen Pttrk i CALVERYMENS QUARTET » -Flint . y H t tempelaires, — Nationally Known Ptus LOCAL TALENT MR. LLOYD ORRELL, Mailer pf Ceremonlei jA^hjtlss :\V ml mm Jk-L. - Public Invited m mmmm pmH THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1963 ELEVEN Mrs. Gallant . Honored at Adventist Rite Mrs. Laurie Gallant, 637 Lake-view Dr., Union Lake wan honored in “Layman of the Year” Nazarene Women Meet Missionary tSpeak WESLEYAN METHODIST . 67 N. Lynn Sr. SUNDAY SCHOOL..... 1000 A M. WORSHIP........... JliOO AM W.Y.P.S............. 6,45 PM EVENING SERVICE....... 7.30 PM WED. PRAYER AND BIBLE. t 7.30 PM Space for Tents and Trailers on Grounds # - The Foreign Missionary Society Convention of the Churches of the Nazarene to be held Tuesday at the. Eastern Michigan District Camp Grounds near Howell will be well represented by women of local churches. Dr. G. B. Williamson, general iuprlntendent, will preside. Rev. Stanley E. Wilson, mis-sionary from the Philippine Is-landsPand~arnative~oLCass City, will be guest speaker. Mrs. Ray Hewett, district publicity secretary, Mrs. Don Lytle, Airs. Val Gene Younger and Mrs. Richard Surre will be delegates from the Williams Lake ChUrch, and Mrs. Norman Curtis and Mrs. Jamies McGuirewill represent the CHntonviUeChurch. CHURCH OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN 4780 Hillcreit Or., Waterford SERVICE 7 PM Dorothy Wyllie, of Lovonla Spooking For Inlormotioo Coll FE 2-9824 Twenty-fivq laymen received recognition for their cuhrch and community work. The citations were presented by Watsop- M. There are cabins Tor guests and.ampie space for trailers.and tents, Pastor A. J. Baughey said. Rooms and meals are on the freewill offering plan. Evangelists will be Rev. P. 0. Carpenter of Ashland, Ky. and Rev. HaTry Hock of Leopard. Director of music will be Prof. Byron Crouse of Wilmore, Ky, The daily schedule includes prayer meeting at 7:30 a.m.; breakfast at 8:30 a.m. Preaching will follow at 10:30 and p|p|ii Another preaching service is set for 2:30 p.m. Dinner will be at .5 p.m. and youth, groups will get together for a sing service' W'itso^mwThi, jwship service the ^ Young people are assisting the pastor and his committee in painting, cleaning, repairing and constructing new cabins for the annual camp meetings. Williams Lake Church of the Nazarene 2840 Airport Road Minister 40 AM-SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 A.M. — WORSHIP HOUR 7 P.M,—WORSHIP HOUR The Eastern Orthodox parishes of Greater, Detroit with some 150,000 Michigan Communicants are joining to celebrate their-sixtliJLnnual Eastern Orthodox Festival 6n~^unday-.al.. the Michigan State Fair Grounds^ Detroit. < Taking part in the gala affair will be members of Jt, George Greek Orthodox Church. PONTIAC UNITY CHURCH . 8 N. Genesee (Corner W. Heron) 335-2773. EVERETTE A. DELL, Minliter 11 A.M.-'SUNDAY SCHOOL "UNITY IS A WAY Of LITE" H A.M.-MORNING WORSHIP Morculu Bach SyNNYVALiCHAPIL , 5311 Pontiac Lake Rd. Sunday School , . . . 9)45 A.M. Sunday Worihlp ,,. 11 <00 A.M. , Y.P. Meeting ...... 6:00 P.M. Evening Service ..... 7:00 P.M. ““‘““Wea: Evening iTT'.,TT7:Wf.M^ V. L. MARTIN, Pastor FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 3411 AIRPORT ROAD ' fundamental—Premlllennlal Sunday School 10 A.M. Morning Worship 11 A.M. Evening Worship 7<30 P.M. All Our Deaf Friends 6re Welcome to our SILENT CLASS 10 A.M. 5 Conducted ky Nfi Ojxf Mri. M. Ken Rauttdln| CHURCH of CHRIST 210 HUGHES ST. PE 4-IIM RmnwIi Iretii, IwMfetttf SUnday Blblo Study tor all ages, 9.45 a.m. Sunday Worship Period* 11 d.m. bnd 7 p.m. Tuesday Weekly HWe Study 8 p.m. tMOuiMti mac "IjmCi Mike * Oracle* of God" , (PITER 4t II) CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH ^WrAir^uiiningham, Minister Bible ScteoTTT^'T^-^SJL.KC Morning Worship ... 11,00 A.M. Youth Servi<(# .... 6.00 P.M. -Evangelical Smvice ... 7:00 P.M. Prayer Mooting dnd Bible Study Wednesday . . . 7:30 P.M. BETHEL TABERNACLE, first Pentecost Church of, Pontiac Sun. School 10 AM Worship 11 AM . EVANGELISTIC SERVICE Sun., Turn, and Thurs.—7:30 P.M. Rev. and Mrs. E. Crouch 1348 Baldwin Avu. , FES-8258 Buckman, Lansing, lay activities director for the church In Michigan. , Mrs. Gallant, who !| a member of the local church, has been active In missionary work of the church.' I In presenting the citation, Mr. Buckmair told fhe assemblage that “the work of the church progresses directly In proportion to thd cooperation of the lay- July 18-28/1963 EVANGELISTS P. O. Carpenter Those attending from First Church of the Nazarene will be Mrs. J. E. Van Allen, Mrs. Steve Cannon, Mrs. Wendell Baird, Mrs. Charles Montgomery, Mrs, Howard, E. Brian, Mrs. Lee Baker and Miss Leah Sawdon, Representing the Zion church are Miss Marjorie Merritts, Mrs. Charles Loucks, Mrs. Clarence Douglas and Mrs. Silas Johnson. Women of the Hillcrest Naz- — Reorgoni,ed — CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST Ol LutWr Doy Saint, 19 Front Si. *11 A.M. Elder John Moses -7;Q0 P.M. Elder A. R. Curtis Of Ashland, Kyt< v Hgrry Hack. Leonard. Mich. ’STrigefS------- Prof, and Mrs. : J. Byron Crouse, ?! —W|l«t«ro Ky Daily Servic.es at 10.30 - 2:30 - 7:30 MRS. E. E. SHELHAMERLOT Winona Lake, Ind. CKLW Son. 7:30 A.M. EVANGELICAL" MISSIONARY CHURCH 2800 Watkins Loke Rd. . *, FTRSTSOCfAL,.. BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin - FE 4-7831 Sunday School.... 10:00 AM Sunday Worship.. 11:00 A.M. Wed. Prayer . . . 7r30 P.M. Saturday Service .... 7:30 P.M. Rev. Tommy Guest, Pastor FE 2-0384 CABINS FOR CAMP MEETING - Rita Kent of 77 Westend assists J. C. Hodge (left) as he works on cabins in preparation for the com- ' ing camp meeting at Evangelistic Tabernacle, 2808 Watkins Lake Road Thursday through July 28. High up on a stepladder Roy Linson of 1272 Schoman tightens screws at Windows. Churches Announce Annual Affair Festival at State Fa EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH . 212 Baldwin;Avo. , Phono FE 2-0728 i SUNDAY SCHOOL - 9:45 A.M. Worship 8:30 A.M. Ond 11 AM.-Sermon "laying Clo(m fo iho Futurt" Communion Sorvlcos ’ ‘ ,No V*qjff Sarvlc* for Sunrayr < Rov. DWIGHT REIBLINO, MlniiliF . , MISSIONARY ■■ALLIANCE CHURCH Si S, 9:45 ajn,- i» m‘ worship i . "THE MASTERY 0F THE CHURCH" —-EVENING SERVICE 7 P.M,-- SOLO TRIO QUARTET' : "CHRIITIANITYi VOCATION OR ADVOCATION" UJNt Eight nationality groups participating will include Albanian, Bulgarian * Macedonia, Car- pa tflo-Russian, Greek, Ro-nlanian, Russian, Serbian and .Syrian - Labanese. National foods and customs will lie ex* ^.Members of each Orthodox ChurchTwHt-ebserve Divine Liturgy in their owner morning worship. At noon a combined service of thanksgiving will be celebrated at the State Fair Grounds with i choirs singing responses. During the afternoon the WWIIIIMlIlWIWWMEIIIIIIIiliaMll Commandments for Teen-Agers ' In 1855, the Boston school committee adopted what is called commandments for. pupils In grades seven through 12. The committee directed that the commandments be read every other week to all pupils of those grades, and a copy be posted In each class room: These 10 suggestions for yoiith have come to be known as “The Ten Commandments.” 1, DON'T LET YOUR PARENTS DOWN. THEY’VE BROUGHT YOU UP. “ 2 STOP AND TSpI BEF6r1Ty6u DttWK.™ 3 BE SMART, OBEY. YOU’LL GIVE ORDERS YOURSELF SOMEDAY. , 4. DITCH DIRTY THOUGHTS FAST OR THEY’LL DITCH. YOU. f 5. SHOW-OFF DRIVING IS JUVENILE. DON’T ACT YOUR AGE, :,;6. PICK THE RIGHT FRIENDS TO RE PICKED FOR FRIEND. ,7. CHOOSE A DATE FIT FOR A MATE. 8. DON’T GO STEADY UNLESS YOU’RE READY: 9. LOVE GOD AND NEIGHBOR. 10. LIVE CAREFULLY. THE SOUL YOU SAVE MAY BE YOUR OWN. grounds will be turned into an international festival of food, entertainment, music and dancing. Exotic foods of all kinds will be featured by each nationality. Singing groups amt roving musicians will add a continental. touch. There will be pony carnival rides and games for the children. The highlight of the afternoon festivities will be the Spectacular Show featuring dance groups and acta from each of the eight nationalities In their colorful native costumes. Rev. Thomas Ruffin, president pf the Council of Eastern Orthodox Churches of Greater Detroit, said the public is invited. There will be a small entrance fee for adults but children under 10 will be admitted free. 'Steps That Save Theme of Sermon At Emmanuel Baptist To Show Civil War Film Steps That Save” is the title of Rev. Ronald Thompson ’ s 10:30 a. m. sermon before the congregation of Trinity Methodist Church, Waterford, tomorrow. Following the service at Schoolcraft School a coffee hour will be Hostesses for the morning are Mrs. Dan Hosier, Mrs. Kuga Kojima and Mrs. John Foggiiano. Thursday evening the Woman’s Society will present a Summer Supper on the lawn of the parsonage, 8440 Maceday Drive. Mrs. Thomas Patton is general chairman. Next weekend the senior youth fellowship will take a 28-mile canoe tfip on the Rifle River, north- of Standish. Accompanying the youth will I be Mr. and MYs. Clarence Ball, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Couturier and the Rev. and Mrs. Ronald Thompson. 'Red Rung the River,’’ a production of “Unusual Films,” will be shown at 7, p. m. Sunday at Emmanuel Baptist Church, 845 S. Telegraph Road. Ths Civil War drama, filmed in cdlbr, tells the true story of incidents In the life of Richard Stoddert. Ewell, hero of the Confederacy, Dr. Bob Jonee Jr., president of Bob Jones University, plays the tie. of the hard-fighting Southern general whose life Is changed completely through hie contact with “Stonewall” Jackson, played by .Jack But,tram. Bob Jonee III, Is the daring cavalry officer. than sectionalism and broader than the boundaries of nations. It is a story of aourage, of conviction, of sacrifice. Novena Starts Wednesday At St, Michael Although the principal tcharad-Up are Confederates -» com* men soldiers and geherals—“Red Runs tha Rivar” is not a story ot the South. Us theme is larger St. Anne’s; Novena starting at 7:30 p. m, Wednesday in St. Michael Catholic Church will continue through July 26. Everyone IS 'welcome to the evening meetings,, Rev. James L, Hayes said, Felice Petipren apd Barbara Fliher are taking reservations for > the Women’! retreat scheduled for Aug. 2-4 at the St. Lawrence Retreat House. The Nazarene Camp Meeting: will start Wednesday and continue through: July 28 under the supervision of Dr. E. W. Martin, district superintendent. President of Synod Urges Use of Bible Intensified use of the Bible by individual Christians and congregations in their daily lives was cited in St. Louis, Mo. by the CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 12 Worren St. Speaker 7:30 PM Horace John Drake 'Silver Too, Wodtto«doy7.30 P.M. Rev. Dr. Oliver R. Harms, president of the 2,500,000-member Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, &r"tfte^«»«£t-Ja_JheUnited Court’iT3gCtBtoft| outtewing^^Te^nrea3ing=^an•:•( Rev. Wm. H. Brody, Assoc. Min. — Rev. Richard L. Clemons, Asso. Min. j AIR CONDITIONED Morning Worship 9:15 and 10:55 “THE NEW AND LIVING WAY" Dr. Bank, preaching CHURCH SCHOOL 9:15 and 110:55 A.M. FIRST METHODTST CARL G. ADAMS, Minister JOHN A. HALL, Min. of Visitation South Saginaw at Judson MORNING WORSHIP 8:30 and 11 A.M. || “CAN YOU TAKE IT?” Rev. Carl G. Adams, 9:45 A.M:—CHURCH SCHpOL V/ed. Bible Study and Prayer Fellowship 7:30 P.M. ' 165 E, Square Leke Rd. Ft 8-8233 Ft 2-2752 Morning Worihlp 10i00 A.M. and I lilS A.M. ijijjijj Church School 10:00 A.M. Intermediate and Senior Youth'Groubl, 6:00 P.M. I-vAmple Pi e F!orkln|,. rn\/PDT !$: «t 11 txp'e ' ’■ 11; COVERT METHODIST CHURCH 2773 PONTIAC LAKE RD. ST. LUKE'S METHODIST CHURCH 2012,PONT)AC RO. Way«» IreeklKtOt, Mminer Church, School....!IMJAA |;i Church School: 10:45 A.m. Mor.etng^AAarefciy,.. . . IOiOOAM. 1 LIMWOOD MirilODIST CHURCH Wh ft-: - • OreniSt. et Auburn R8.-trlc q.WeMI, Pester [S» Sunday School s,;. (i r, t0:00 A M, »Ivenlng .Wefshtp^weile - 740 PM. | All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike St. The REV. C. GEORGE WIDDIFIELD Rector .... . The REV. WM. E, LYLE - || Associate - II The REV. ALEXANDER T. STEWART Vicar .. 8:00 A,M.—.Hgly Communion ----.IQ A.M.—Morning Prayer and Sermon -—by the Rector.iChurch School. Thu ri^ulY'18r^'GrAA,L~HoLy^Communictn-. immiini CHURCH of the RESURRECTION wlii' meet In Clarkston Elementary School, (North Side) Rev. Maurice Shark-ell & •;L' Early Smrvlcn , . . . SiOO A.M. jfe; S Sunday School.......9,05 A-M.:J} Lot* Service ...........10,45 A.M. % PEACE I V’. Senkee Md at Waterford Township High School, Highland. Road of Croseont lake jSL Sunday School 8,45 A.M. Worship Sorvico 10,00 A.M. Richard H. Feucht, Pastor | Grace | ■:•: Conor Gonotseo and Glendale :j:> (Watt Side) § Richard C. Stuckmeyer, Pastar Church Sorvico ....., r 9,00 A.AA ® Sunday School........ 9,00 A.M. % Church Sorvico..... M ;00 AA4.. Sunday School...^'11,00 AAA :::: "Th# Lutheran Hour" over $ . CKLW 12,30 P.M. Every Sunday Inmate Hat to Qfvt Up Hit Practical Education APOSTOLIC FAITH TABERNACLE 93 Parkdale Sunday School..... 10 A.Ki). Sun. Worship .... 11,15 A.M. Eye. Worship . . . . . , 7:30 PM. Tues. Bible Study... 7:30 PM. Thurs. -Young People 7:30 P.M. Eldar Ernost Worded. Pastor FE 4-4695 Installment VI By JERRIE COBB With Jane Rieker There was one- flight on the South American run that stands out in my memory above all oth- IEhI Pastor, C,W. Kyorner SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. WORSHIP 11 A.M. EVENING SERVICE 7,00 P.M. CHURCH SCHOOL 9:30 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 40:15 AM. First Christian Church DISCIPLES of CHRIST Rev. Jack H. C. Clark, Pastor < 858 W. Huron Sf. FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN nrth Roselawn Rev. LoRoy Shalor, Pastor Sunday School 10 AM. Morning Worship 1.1 AM. *7 PM. Evangelistic Message ' No Prayer and Bible Meeting This Week FIRST ASSEMBLY of «01 M *210 N. PERRY ST. Woman Into Space Jerrie Falls in Love (EDITOR’S NOTE - Jerrie Cobb, likely to be one of America’s first space women, tells ‘ I story of her Ufp in this book. earlier installments, she told . breaking into the male world of flying and of meeting Jack Ford, who hired her to help him ferry planes.) Two planes were flying in for-mation through a needle-thin pass in the Andes when clouds and fog came from nowhere. In a matter'.of seconds the ground was completely closed in, the mountains hidden. The pilot of the second plane dropped her hands and bowed her head, literally handing the control of the aircraft over to God. A glint of light pierced her lowered eyelids. Then, as they lifted, she saw blue sky and the sun overhead; foe clouds were receding below. She Hadn’t touched the controls sihee entering the “soup.” The compass show e d that the airplane was flying back over the way it had come. VOICE CALLING She became aware of a voice calling her name. were off with hardly a word exchanged. The static on fog radio was fierce. V " “I can’t hear you.” . “Oh, for the love of Pete,” snarled foe baritone voice, “I’m trying to. “Jack, you’re not g e 11 i n g through to me,” LOVE YOU’ “I saidliovej'oui’^------—— Then there was nothing hot silence and foe drone of foe en-gine. ‘Jerrie?” The voice was lower now, soft and uncertain. My^replfwas even softer. ‘‘You -you got through that time.” The moment we landed, I slid from the cockpit and ran to him across the field. He held out his arms, and when he kissed me there was a streak of grease on my -face. My boss and teacher, respected and admired by all who knew him as a great pilot, had suddenly turned into a man. Actually, I don’t think any red-blooded woman, It or 68, could have regarded Jack with-out Interest. He was a charmer, a happy handsome extrovert. Alternately the little boy and the domineering male, he had been a star college football player, a movie stunt man, bit player, an^ war pilot. BRIEF BUT PERFECT On the Atlantic run, our >ut perfect. The YesrJack, I’m fine. ‘Thank God, I was afraid you didn’t know that trick. “What trick?” “The one- where you' make a 180-degree turn when you’re heading into the mountains and get closed in.” closed her eyes for a moment, then said, slowly, rever- ently, “No,* Jack, I didn’t know the trick.” WAITING At our stop, Jack was waiting for me in the field. Usually when L followed him in, I’d find him checking his airplane or chatting It the men in the office or the || "THE CHURCH THAT BRINGS THE HEART M OF THE'WORD T6 THE HEART OF THE .LIVING _ II SOUL" YOUR CENTRALLY LOCATED CHURCH. .< Great Sunday School Hou„r 9:45 if "EVERYBODY IN YOUR FAMILY WILL BENEFIT P FROM THE ADULTS DOWN TO. THE NURSERY | tHUD" lLOO A.M. Morning Worship m THIS SERVICE IS DESIGNED TO HELP THE CHRISTIAN AND REACH- SPIRITUAL NEEDS. II 7:00 P.M. e I FOR EVERY PROBLEM EVANGELISTIC % ll RALLY WILL ANSWER MANY QUESTIONS. “Meu Spirits” Pastor A. Gi Hashman Ministering , ATTEND M 1jSfew* m THE CHURCH WITH A WELCOME hangar. Not tonight. He helped me down. r . “Any more trouble?” ‘No, not a bit. She’s got all her screws on tight. lief. C’mon, I’l male. I spent a restless night. Next morning when I joined Jack he looked a bit puffy-eyed himself. We did a check of our planes LAKE ORION RESIDENTS Fellowship BAPTIST Church SUNDAY.SCHQOL...., 10 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP . . J1 A.M. Jay McCau'ghniio, Pastor : ORION and KERN RDS. DRAYlbN PLAINS BAPTIST CHAPEL 3800 W, Walton BM. - David Grayson School SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 AM. MORNING WORSHIP 1V AM. For Transportation Call FE 5-3958 Fundamental, Bible Believing REV. BILL DINOFF______________ “Roughs Well don’t worry, boil, We’ll have you out of this rut before long.” ‘It’s no rut, Jack. I like It.”' DRIVE MB NUTS “Boy, it would drive me nuts. I couldn’t stand it for more than a “And I would wonder, would he beabletoitand marriage for more than a week? Jack was willing to sacrifice much of his boundless freedom. But there was another Jack, the eternal youth. This part of Jack cried out against being cor* nered, against responsibility, against the convention of routine living. He wanted to be married by a justice of the.peace; I wanted a “Jerrie, can you bear me?” LumBM^ftawFa^Bvar-m Lnndsr year x d not like to he radio, of course! and wou|d get a qau from gan again. I never return* Francisco. . “Hi, honey,” a deep voice would come oveiMfoe noisy ca* ble. A rainy night in a London hotel would suddenly take on a„ golden shimmer. “Just got in from Japan, Look, [ have to,pick up an airplane in Burbank and eome on over.” “Darling, I’m leaving in the morning, back to New York.” ‘I know — I’m- meeting y o u there tomorrow night. Got some-thing for you.” Jack always brought a surprise — a native trinket or perhaps a coin for my collection. Once in Prestwick, we plaeyd golf in mid-winter. We laughed at foe sight of ourselves on the “greens” Wearing flight gear including boots, long under-., wear, wool slacks, fur-lined jackets and gloves. Fleetways fellows and I bought little jokes and gadgets arid gimmicks.- We dumped the beer and ice into foe bathtub of our larg-room and Jack was like a delighted little boy when we ' “surprise!” GOODBYE TO ALL THAT My ferrying, days came to an end in 1955 though I didnlLknow. as-a test day, flying airplanes inside oat and backwards?” wedding in church. He’d happily honeymoon anyplace an airplane lor possibly two airplanes) had to be ferried. I had visions of long, warm leisurely days on foe sunlit coast of Florida. He’d get restless. I’d be resentful. In foe last analysis I was just like every other girl who thought of marriage. Orange blossoms, vine-covered cottage. Maybe I’d never marry, but if I did it wouldn’t be on a day off to a guy whose head, heart and sonl. were in foe clouds. I set Jack free. It was a year heft J 0| - battles cam* to an end. It time-honored “draymen’s drap-pie,” beloved by beer truck haulers, has been ended by Scotland’s biggest beer combine, Scottish Brewers. A “draymen’s drappie”1s a truck man’s drop of drink—a thirst quenching pint offered by hotel ai ' : .. live over returned to Fleets way. “It took all my remaining moral strength to make the breajk.M).............. In 1959 Jack and his navigator-radioman were lost in foe explo* sion of fofir airplane. A “Flight Magazine” editorial paid him tribute. “He was one of foe completely dedicated pilots ... so intent in their love of flying and its'perfectionism tljat they became out of place and impractical anywhere but in foe I could have added so much more. , Life Sentence Given GRAND RAPIDS (M-A mandatory life sentence was handed He spiled. “Well, that’s a te- On time In London we daraL-uasterdav- bv^ent-fintmtvj a temporary restraining or- MH buy you a te-|^ hirthday“party"for^ The circuit Court Judge Stuart Hof- der was issued by Circuit Judge EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 645 S, Telegraph Rd (Near Orchard Lake Rd.) A Fundamental, Independent, Bible Believing Baptist Church THE BIBLE HOUR ... 10 A.M. Departmentalized Sunday School for All Ages., -with NO Literature but the Bible. PREMIER SHOWING—SUN. JULY 14 7,00 P.M. * "RED RUNS THE RIVER" It hai bum »ald that "Hit water* of Bull Run ran rtd with the blood of valiant mm at the rain waihtd over tht field* oi Manana*"Rtd Runt th* River" ,ell, abaut brave men who ihtd thtlr blood In dtftntt of what they btlltvtd was right. But th* film It mort than a tolt at conflict, at brother agalmt brother* 1 n ||tht ttory pi warfare wlthln th* very toul of a man. Th* climax of the Him occur* by the lido of a little itream named Bull Run, but th* real dory It about - muck broader river Hewing through hltCory, >. IT A.M. 7 P.M. TWO GREAT SERVICES In the 1,200 S«at Auditorium Baptlsm Every Sunday Night Hear Pontiac's Largest Choir Plus Musical Extras NURSERY AT ALL SERVICES BUS TRANSPORTATION CALC FE 2-8328 Or. Tent Malone, Paitor WPON 10.15-10.45 AM. I BEGINNING SUNDAY JULY 21 , thru Aug. 4 . IMMANUEL'S 4th SUMMER TENT MEETINGS -With Of- Hymqn Appleman and Ellis Zehr It then. I was needed pilot in Burbank where I would see Jack more frequently. There seemed to be more bugs and clinkers in these planes than in any I had ever flown. By foe end of foe day 1 was far more tired'than I would have been after a 20-hour flight across the Atlantic. The formula is to take the airplane up and wring it to the limit of’its performance. If nothing fails,-falls-off, or folds, there a , reasonable assumption that foe craft i8 fit for service. Jack would ask, “How are you bearing up with the sedentary life?” “Sedentary? Haven’t you noticed that I spend all day, ev^ry Circuit Court Judge Stuart Hof-fjjus .to, admitted wife slayer Robert N. Weess, 41, of Grand Rapids. Weess was convicted June 29 of first-degree murder in the Easter Sunday gunshot death of his 40-year-old wife, Alice. Judge Hoffius presided at the four-day nonjury trial., A' defense claim of Innocent by reason of Insanity was upset by the court’s rtiling that Weess “is sane within the definition of foe term in this state.” Judge Hoffius said the offense was “planned, premeditated act.” Hollywood/Man Dies; Insured Unusual. Assets COOL CHARACTERS * — These Siberian tigers, denizens of foe Hagenbeck Zoo in Ham- burg, Germany, relax by foe pool to knap cool as summer sun pushes temperatures up. Brewors Bounce Bit 'Draymen's Drappie' Dropped GLASCOW, Scotland (0-The next delivery and there Is no danger of foe men not, being fit for their work, or toX^lrlve safely.’ There' are 400 to 500 bre\ transport men "affected by ban. lEeff^^U^h*^ tew.' delivered. The draymen, as the beer barrel shifters are called, are annoyed. One of them said: “It’s dry work heaving barrels and crates into cellars all day and foe ‘traditonai is one of foe ‘perks’ (gratuities) of foe job We sweat it out again by foe end of foe Union Battles Court Orders LANSING (UPD-State Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie skid yesterday a department release concerning foe proposed Grand River freeway ^ Ich stirred protest in Detroit both accurate* and author- ORLANDO, Fla. I* - “Women are women even in the banking business” agree foe five women vice presidents of Orlando hanks. When the five meet for lunch, they choose to discuss children, than foe stock markets. The five women Include Miss Margaret Schmidli, vice presi- SUPERIOR, Wis. (UPI)—The Seafarers International Union (SIU) today battled severaljn-junctions against picRetlhg—ih-cluding one issued yesterday in its dispute with a Canadian shipping firm. dent of Citizens National‘Bank; Mrs. Marjorie Lindsey, also, a Citizens National vice president; Frances Jones, vice president of Florida National; Mrs. Vivian Blessing, assistant -vice president of Winter Park First assistant Vice president of Colonial Bank. Alan Kinney yesterday until July 22 which prevents foe SIU from picketing Upper Lakes Shipping of Canada. Judge Kinney said foe order would be continued until he decides whether his court has jurisdiction In the matter. RALEIGH, N. C, Mb—A lot of honest people are turning up af local department store to report that they owe the firm money. Oppose Spain Ships Voyaging to Cuba A burglar who stole a large amount of cash from the store's safe also carted off records of charge accounts for foe date. 1 HOLLYWOOD UP) — Arthur H. Stebbins, an insurance agent who served the unusual requirements of the motion picture industry, is dead at 72. . . Stebbins issued policies on Al Jolson’s voice and Jimmy Du-rante's nose, as welt* as underwriting other unusual assets, He died yesterday. WASHINGTON (UPI) - The United States has told Spain it does not approve of a proposed resumption of Spanish ocean liner traffic to Cuba. For Navy Recruiters *1 U.. S.: officials said Assistant Secretary of State Edwin-M. Martin told enquiring Spanish Ambassador Antonio Garrigues yesterday foe United States was determined to isolate foe Castro regime as much as possible. Spain waips to resume sailings of transatfaitica Espanola passenger shlpito Cuba. They were suspended during the October Cuban missile crisis. Of Teeth and Money WASHINGTON (AP) - Too many Navy pien chosen for recruiting duty need their teeth fixed or have money problems. This irks foe Navy’s Bureau of Personnel, so it has ordered commanding officers to look at foe regulations “with a view toward more discriminate* selection of individuals for recruiting duty.” 'Recruiting duty is independent duty and, quite often, foe individual so assigned is foe only Naval representative in a community,” foe bureau said. CONSTANT 8CRUTINY* “Because conduct and personal and military bearing are under constant scrutiny, only high caliber petty officers are desired for this duty.” The personnel bureau says a large number of men transferred to this duty during foe past year were not fully ^qualified. One officer said about 86 per cent of th# recruiter candidates . foil /short of standards. >,,« The bureau said they were con- sidered below qualifications because dental work had not been completed at their home stations, some were having financial difficulties—and some lacked Navy driver’s licenses. „1 ‘ , 1 Why. foe need for a license? A bureau spokesman explained that recruiters—there are 2Jfl60 of them—canvass small towns and drive Navy cars in making their rounds. 8 SNAGGLE-TOOTHED Did foe lack of dental work mean foe Navy had a buhch of snaggle-toothed men out around foe country, repelling rather than attracting new men? Not at all, said foe spokesman. The trouble is that recruiters whfi don’t get their teeth repaired while on a Navy ship ‘ or base must have foe wofk done by civilian, dentists, The result: bigger dentil bills for the government. As for personal money troubles, a bureau, official said “We don’t want .any man who can!t handle his own affairs out doing recruit- M Mr ■ j ms Ing let foe ffovy|\\ ll Hi i Music Union File Suit te End 'Biot' Mackie Says Freeway Plan Was Acc u ta te T don’t know why anyone should be shocked ,or embarrassed bVfoe release setting forth our plana, and target date for foe Grand 'River freeway,” Mackie said. *\ ~ V “No one is arguihg with foe Common Council’s right to a prove oii disapprove. within foe city of Detr< Mackie said foe -1987 i first announced in January 1 in a listing of projects in the\ second Highway Department five-year plan. Press statements are not issued by the Highway Department over my name without authorization,” he said. “If foe members of the Com- National. and Mrs. Sarah White. mon Council don’t want the free- way, they will have-ample Op-portunity to stop it.” Customer Is Always Right day,” manager Carl Reichenbach reported, “and I believe that more will come in when they receive their bills and find the charges aren’t on them.”1 ‘But we’ve had a number, of people come in to report they had made charge purchases that U,S. Troops to Conduct Transatlantic Maneuver Paris uyu. s. troops will conduct another transatlantic maneuver in mobility July 19-22, Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Powers in Europe (SHAPE) announced yesterday. Gen. Lyman L, SHAPE commander, said a battle group of about 1,500 men from foe 1st Division will be airlifted from Kansas to West Germany. The maneuver is dubbed “Exercise Long Thrust.” ‘ Belgian Thinks Nikita Sincere About Test Ban PARIS (AP)—Soviet Premier Khrushchev sincerely wants a nuclear test ban pact, Belgian Foreign . Minister Henri Spaak believes. Informed sources quoted Spaak i that effect Friday after he briefed North Atlantic Treaty Organization. officials on his talks With Khrushchev in Kiev last week. U.S., British arid Soviet negotiators open test ban talks in Mos-Lemnltzer, cow Monday. tLS. Urnwriecretary of State ain’s Lord Hailsham completed W. Averell Harriman and Britain’s Lord Hailsham completed their proposals for foe tallts Friday in London, COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)-The first suit aimed at ending alleged segregation of a labor union on national scale has been filed in federal court here, it was announced yesterday. , The suit was filed on behalf of three members of Local 589 of foe giant American Federation of Musicians International Union. Actor Montgomery Clift Had 'Freudian' Trouble LOS ANGELES Uh-Film star Montgomery Clift suffered “anxiety complexes” causing costly delays during the filming trf “Freud,” |ays universal Plc- tures Co. *yhe Company and foe Firemen’s Insurance Co. report that a faoo.ooo auit by foe film coni- 3‘ ny to collect Insurance because .foe alleged lllpess has been settled out of court B Lot Angeles. « MUSIC MAN - Actor Dick Van Dyke is all loaded down wifo instrument! of a “one man band” on Hollywood ret. He > plays role of a musician atrolllnp In a London park.,, , 7 i rfim:; THE POyTTaC^tiESS^lSATlJRDXy, JULY 18, 1068 THIRTEEN Longrlasting Bouquet Color Photos Will Show Off Your Flowers A collection of color photo* graphs or slides of your best flow-ers will give you • long-lasting bouquet that you can show the year around or use in your gar- den planning when the snow is deep upon the (ground. The picture-taking process can be particularly rewarding anti, il you follow a tew tested pro-^edures. tt'riHjt ^iifficuir at all to get good results. ____The flrst and most important step is the preparation of the flowers themselves. Just as we don One of our best outfits be-fore stepping In front of a camera, so toe, we should see to It that bar flowers are at fbelr Dead leaves should be removed along with dead flowers, seeds, fading petals, and anything else that’s not part of the picture. In trimming out dead blossoms, particularly on roses or other flowers wheire there is a relatively ldJgajJtexnr^-as^fi^^tfc camera positron; ■■■ If the cut stem of a rose shows it becomes a distracting white dot in your picture. HIGHLIGHT PHOTO For a detailed cleatHip of your flowers, the best magician’s wand to use is a soft camels hair mish. If you want your flower to open up a little Wtntora, brush the petals open gently with the brush. Your camel’s hair brush can also be used to brush any dust or rain spots away and it is the SIX DAYS ONLY! MON. thru SAT. JULY 15 thru 20 best possible way to gnat dew on your roses. Just dip the brush in water and shake H ever the blossom. Yon get finer, more dew-Uke drops than you dw by sprin-kling water on by hand. If there Is-any spray residue or dust on the leaves, wash it off. The ^y^lawsandthcTbare ; earth -provide- natural backdrops for your photographs, or you may want to pick up some inexpensive poster boards at a stationery store. With a variety of colored boards you will be able to select one that complimenta the color of your flower and gives the final picture a professional touch as 'well. ------ — BIG 11x14 BUST VIONITTE portrait of your child Only PLUS SOt h* | JACK B. NIMBLE* PORTRAITS ARC COMMCNOIO RY PARINTS' MAOAZINI No appointment noceiiary. Photographer will bo on duly regular iloro hour,. Comploto lolocHon of flnlihod Phologropht to cbooio from; SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACKI Limih-me par-child,- fworpor family—ogni 5 wooks to 12 yoan. Children's groups takon ........... >9^ per child. Telephone 682-4940 PONTIAC MALL Talagraph Road at Elizabeth Lake Road Open Daily 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 PJ Auto Thefts Night Activity CHICAGO IUPD - Most of I this city’s auto thefts occur be-| tween 9 p.m. and 4 a.m., reports the Chicago Police Department. -More than ff per cent of arrests for anto theft in past years were persons m The department said 75 per cent of auto thieves are joyrld-orawhtrsteal^ecausfLtheoppor-tuntiyexSto But it adds that motorists make it'easy for the thieves. J More than 50 per cent of stolen cars have keys' left in the ignition or the doors unlocked at the time of theft.' 0 n e of the strangest of all sheep is the Fat Tail ofFafEast-era Asia whose tail was turned into tallow. Its tall used to be so huge that a small cart was needed to carry It round the jhfniyanL ., -- J i About 11 billion cubic feet of uew wood grows to U.S. forests : each yejtr. ; The Chinese are credited with first using paper money in 119 BC. * There are about 220,000 licensed practical nurses to the country, with 25,000 more expected to graduate this year. Nursing officials claim . supply cannot keep up with lii de- fugitive OKs Extradition MIDLAND VH — George R. Phillips, 50, arrested here On a fugitive warrant Wednesday, yesterday waived extradition to Alabama. Phillips escaped from Kilby Prison at Montgomery, Ala., WithIntent to rob. He was arrested at a Western Union office shortly after Midland police had been notified he would try to pick up a money order. Phillips pleaded guilty to the fugitive charge and waived examination at his Municipal Court arraignment. Cuba to HaveTund I for Mission to U.N. UNrmrNATTOI^^ —The United States will not inter-1 fere with the financial operations I of the Cuban mission to the~Unit- | ed Nations, a U.S. spokesman 1 wys. ;■ •.;■■■ He was replying Friday to all Cuban complaint that the y.S. de-1 cision to freeze Cuban assets in § tills country would choke off funds 1 needed to operate Cuba’s U.N. | mission. i Theapokesman saiddetails are! 1 Mac Was Determined to Survive /Tart' Threat LONDON (AP)-‘‘I was determined thBt no British government should be brought down by the action of two tarts,” Prime Minister Harold Macmillan told the Daily Express in an interview Friday. He appeared to be trying to shake off the aftermath of the scandal involving party girl Chris-I tine Keeler and his former war minister, John Profumo. The other girl referred lineVfriendTliland^Rice-Davies, who also figured in the scandal. Proclamation Honors LANSING W—Gov. 'George! Romney has issued a proclamation honoring a murdered official,-' of the National Association ..(ortffi the Advancement of Colored People. Romney issued the proclama- |j tion in connection with a me- r morial service in Flint for ■ Medgar Evers* a Mississippi | field representative for the NAACP who was shot in the beck outside his ' home last month. HARI-KARI the Rage in This Country? ' " ' ' ' / '' - : Yes, only we don’t do it with a^fceremonial sword— we use everything else that we/Can think of including automobiles, boats, or anything that we can get moving fast enough to dd the trick._ Who is interested in stopping this needless -— : slaughter? ?— ' .. ..The Safety Committee.of your Chamber of Commerce takes a very, active part in public . safety. . , Mor° than thrao hriridr^dp^letrelFediie make~ the Vehicle Saf etyCheckfjust ended7:ar^uccess^-= .... The committee also has many other projects such as water safety, bicycle safety and pedestrian safety. Support the Work of Your Safety Committee PONTIAC AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE REDEEM COUPONS BELOW AT YOUR CONVENIENT NATIONAL FOOD STORE OPE 10 A.M UNDAY 6 P.M. SUNDAY SPECIALS ONLY! Top Treat ICE CREAM oi 29c With Coupon . Refreshing Beverage COCA-COLA 619; n- BBSEBBEaSBBEiah- WITH THIS COUPON! j r*5 Purchase or Mora I , ' ■ A Top l roar V r ICE CREAM.... .M. Radoam THU Coupon at National Pood Starts Sunday, July 14th Only kj SAVE WITH THIS COUPON! I And $3 Purchase or Mora k Refreshing Bavaraga 'COCA-COLA.. .6 Regular Slit oop« Radoam This Coupon at National Pood Storts Sunday, July 14th Only 19 With Coupon • 2375 Orchard Lake Rd., Sylvan Lake (At Middle bolt) • 685 East Bird., (at Perry) Pontiac • 3415 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Waterford Twp. (At Huron, M-59) • 8040 Cooley Lake, Union Lake . t (At Union Loko Road) > I • 1249 Baldwin Ave., Pontiac (at Ypsilahti) I0TH IK YANKEES OPEN SUNDAY Until 7 P.M. OPEN TONIGHT Til 10 Ifs Time to Paint and Time to Save at Yankee WEARWELL VINYL LATEX ■m PERfiY at MONTCALM I MIRACLE MILE SHOPPINQ CENTER Fourteen THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1963 Kaye Blast* Red Films on Return From Russia NEW YORK (AB) - Comedian Danny Kaye returned from Mbs-cow Friday with a complaint that most of the films he saw in the Soviet Union were about war and filled with propaganda. - Kaye spent ten days in the Soviet Union as An observer for the United Nations Children’s Emergency Fund. Reject N Free Zone ANKARA, TurkeyHTAp) -^Pur-Key has politely but firmly rejected a Soviet proposal that the Mediterranean be declared a nuclear tree zone. Answering a note of May 20, the foreign office said it found it impossible to believe the proposal would contribute to world peace "as this would involve a one-sided reduction of ★ • ★ *r“ * * ¥ * ¥ -M ★ ■ ★ * ★ • ★ ★ it- Jr ★ ★ * * I* r * $ * New Folk-Singing Breed Arrives ij The Town Buml/secf to The ruler of the kingdom of Bhutan in the eastern Himalayas if Maharajah Jid-Me of Dorjl Wanchuk. A new sodium vapor lamp gives a white light and is said to be twice as, efficient as any lamp { now in general use. . ■ METRO-GOLDWVN-MAYER presents the NEW MARLON | TREVOR I RICHARD BRANDO I HOWARD I HARRIS MUTINY ON TOE BOUNTY FILMED IN ULTRA PANAVISION 70* - TECHNICOLOR1* - AN ARCOLA PICTURE By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - I can remember -when a toHr singer was a guy who wore sloppy clothes. He played the guitar "by ear,” w h i c h; probably sound-j ed better than if ; he had used, hist HILLS AIR CONDITIONED ★ NEW ★ THEATRE ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN Now Showing—One Show Daily! Box Offtco Opont: 7:30 P.M.-Sunday 1:45 P.M.-OL 1-8311 ' ¥ it it ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ M- He could sing all 102 verses of “Lonesomel Freight Train" and insisted onl d o i n g soTTn’ some states, this WEST was recognized as grounds for divorce. , ff' it it it • Almost every community had folk singer, along with a town ' drunk and a village idiot. In many communities, all three of them were the same fellow.____■ Folk singers performed mainly ifHatentrT^^ = high school gymnasium to raise money for the volunteer fire department. They were not paid for these appearances, but as a reward for their services they were allowed to start, two fires. All of this, as anyone who has looked put the window lately is aware, has drastically changed. Pontiac Theaters HURON Sat.: “Hud,” Paul Newman, Patricia Neal; “Papa’s Delicate Condition," Jackie Gleason. Thu.: “Bittersweet,” Jeanette MacDonald, Nelson Eddy. 'Fri.: “Mutiny on the Bounty,” Marlon Brando, Trevor Howard. EAGLE Sat.-Mon:: “The Earth to the Moon,’’JosephCotton{‘‘TheLost World,” David Hedison; “Pape, Cantasflas, Shirley MacLaine. Tue.-Thu.: “Phantom of the Rue Morgue,” Karl Maldenm, Patricia Medina; “Love Is a Ball,” Glenn Ford, Hope Lang. STRAND Sat.-Tue.: “Hud,” Paul Newman, Brandon DeWilde, Melvyn Douglas; “Hell Is for Heroes, Fess Parker, Bob Newhart. Starts Wed.: “The Nutty Pro-Jerry Lewis, 'color; Who’s Got the Action?” Dean Martin, Lana Turner, color. Folk singers now-travel'"ft group;, partly fof harmony and partly for safety. "'f.' IVY LEAGUE BARDS Clean-cut young men in Ivy league clothes, who studied business administration in college, are making fortunes by musically recounting the misfortunes of immigrant coal miners. . Their link with the working string-plucking fingers and they wear union-made neckties. Which are real sincere. 1 with Hie Kingstons, who are appearing here this weak. “Everybody is a self-appointed folk music expert nowadays,’ said guitarist Nick Reynolds. “Right now it’s very ‘in’ to put us down as prostitutes of f o ‘ ‘ musle.”' • .. 1 Ij As much as Any group, and more than m'os t, the Kingston Trio is responsible for the folk music transformation. -Having been together for five years now, the Kingstons are regarded as the elder statesmen of the new breed. This makes them a prime tar-class is authentic, however. J get of the traditionalists, as' I let our next-concert,’ They have callouses on their [found out in the course Of a talklist Bob Shane. , PONTIAC’S ONLY- BWVE-JILSH0WIH6 'BESTPICTOMr If we so much as add an minor to ‘Dear Betsy,' they pick-said guitar- MACHINE’S PICK TO CLICK - Picked as an ideal couple by a matrimony agency computer, Rev. Lemuel Conway, 81, and Mrs. Gladys Cooper married and left for a Paris honey-• moon this week. Both are-widowed Texans. Rev. ConwHy is a , retired-Lutheran miiristerr Building Firm Subs State for 1-94 Payment LANSING (A —Charging that the State Highway Department asked bids on misleading specifications, the Holloway Construction Co. of Livonia has filed suit for $1.25 million in additional payment for a freeway construction job in Berrien County. The State Administrative Board already has approved an overpayment of 8422,574 forthe proj-ect—7.8 miles of Interstate 94. The company was awarded the contract on a $3,676,378 bid. The suit, filed in the State Court of Claims, contends that while department specifications reported fill dirt was available near the construction site, the department had not obtained rights to the dirt and additional fill tad to be transported to the construction site from tome distance, across a swamp. Problems resulting from a spring thaw added more costs, the company contended. Highway Department officials $aid the overpayment questions' had been negotiated with Holloway, and the department did not feel its obligation exceeded $120,964. Three-Ton Price Protest * CAVAILLON, France (UPI) -Office workers in the tax bureau were startled - yesterday when angry farmers forced open the doors of their office and dumped three tons of potatoes, beets, carrots and string beans oh the floor. .'*:**■*.] The demonstration was a protest against the low prices farmers receive for their produce. Egg Disease No Epidemic LANSING (UPI) -- Associate Health Commissioner Dr. J. E. Altland said today there is no danger of a salmonella derby epidemic in Michigan. Altland’s statement was In response to a Public Health Service warning issued in Washington against buying unclean eggs. Salmonella derby, an intestinal infection, has hij 77S persons in 2$ states, according tjo federal health authorities. i * Altland said the usual number of cases have been reported in Michigan, but by no stretch of the imagination could this be compared to an epidemic. The Health Department warned persons against using cracked or unclean eggs and added, persons who are ill, especially infants, the elderly and individuals suffering from gastro-intestinal diseases or malignancies, should not be fed raw or undercooked Igs. " An undercooked egg is one in which the white Is not firm, Health Departmeht spokesman said. Salmonella derby in many cases is called summer flu, the spokesman said. Hungary Won't Trade With South Africa BUDAPEST, Hungary (UPI) -First Deputy Foreign Trade Minister Gyula Karadi announced yesterday that Communist Hungary has severed all trade lations with South Africa. ~~He"3Hia:T,he action wus to i test the colonial racial policies of the South African government. PONTIAC TOMORROW AFTERNOON ONLY ELIZABETH LAKE AT TELEGRAPH RD. AOS. PONTIAC LIONS CLUB I Winner of 10 Academy Award*! 1 Natalie Wood George Chakirls —Rita^Norano IN TECHNICOLOR -150 PERFORMERS 200 ANIMALS—15 ELEPHANTS 22 Tents—Seats for Thousands $1,750,000 Capital—$8,500 Daily Expense ★ CARLA WALLENDA * SENSATION OF THE HIOHWIRE CIRCUS DAY The Happiest and Bast Holiday In all the Yaar. Teaming with Wondroue sights, Brimming with Thrills and Lit with' Laughter,,, Filled with Thoutanda ypon Thousanda ot Moving Marvels. Tha PAY OF DAY8 Looked Forward to with Longing by tha Children of dll Agee. Twice Daily 2 4 4 P.M.^J'jTm. CHILDREN .00 ~ ADULTS $1.90 GRIFF'S GRILL; 49 N. Saginaw St. Paramount Pictures prawn*" steveMcQueen BOBBY MflIIN-FESS PMNHpi HARRY GUARDINO -HICK ADAMS -BOBNEWHART. Doors Open Today and Sunday 12:46 P.M. ITS AIL TRUE! • TREMBLE to l/ie brutol.itever-bafore filmed r|t*i of a tribe' from the dawn of time. SEE .... “MON 1)0 CASE" in color... Start* WEDNESDAYf JULY 24th. EXCLUSIVE-FIRST RUN-NEW! CHILDREN^Under* 12* **4. Jr*!; f*. < THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1963 Fifteen iafelyville Teaches FLINT IRi — A tiny village near Flint has baan added to the map. It la called Safetyville - a place wlmra children 8 to 10 will ha taughniB8T«le»4Mhe_rgatbe* hind the wheels of miniature bat tery operated The village was opens} in KearslayJ^Mk. It Is designed to teach good^walWng"and--drivlng habits to the younger set. Safety* ville was established on the the* ory that rules learned young are It is an aspbalt*paved area with painted streets and side* walks, traffic lights, stop signs, small buildings, bridges and other ordinary traffic “sltua-I tloni” In miniature. ! Children take a course in traffic safety and driving rules before they are permitted to drive the miniature cars through the course. The project was made possible by a $25,000 grant by the Industrial Mutual Association of Flint. thief Faifs 330Police TOKYO if) — Nakahiro Mura-kamt, )8, a burglar with nine con* victtona on his record, was taken to Tokyo's west side to reenact his. tateet critim.^— Detectives took handcuffs off w ©T hls wrlsts when he He twisted away 830 poUcmmb who surrounded the area. Police learned later Murakami broke into four bouses, outfitted HI with a new. wardrobe. Community Theaters gSyl tezM* WM' HaMnSbl B J““- ......ann, oof* With Mt," Dolor*, Trojan Hoc**," Star* Kilter Claims Third Victim BLUE SKY I "I must thafik you very much for your statement, Mr. Fenn. As a matter ofform, I shall have ML I P&rdrink' By AGATHA CHRISTIE Installment XXXVI “I would suggest, Inspector, that Jason Rudd is die person to question about Miss ZicUti-sky,” Ardwyck Fenn said. "Naturally. We have donr But there might be an off chance that you might know something about her that he .does not.” "I'm afraid that is not so. I know next to nothing about Ella Zlelinsky except that she was a most capable yonng woman, and first class at her job. About her private life, I know nothing at all.” 1 "So you* have no suggestions to make?” Craddock was ready for the decisive negative, but, to his sur-prise, it did not come. Instead, hear Ardwycl rather heavily at the other luae. He © . Ur ' ---- It was past midnight when Miss Marple. ‘Ah, but we mustn't catch cold, must we?” said Miss Knight archly. "I’ll tell you what. I’ll just pop out and make you a nice egg nog. We’d like that, wouldn’t we?’ _Irom MuchBen-the last train on the branchAificrto:^ had gone. He was in very good spirits. He paid off the taxi at the gate, and took a short cut through, the shrubbery. He opened the back door with his key. The house was dark and silent. Giuseppe shut and bolted the door. As he turned to the stair which led up to his own comfortable suite of bed and bath, he noticed that there was a draught. A wlndow open some- "I don’t know whether you would like it,” said Miss Marple. 'I should be delighted for you to have it if you would like It." "Now, now," said Miss Knight, shaking her finger, “so fond of our joke aren't we?" 'But you were going-to tell me something," said Miss Marple. 'Well, you mustn’t Worry about jt^saia Miss Knight,“and you ■MH I H make you nervous in any way, beci^TmrsureJt!s nothing to do with us. "But with all these AmeHcan gangsters and things like that, well I suppose it’s nothing to be surprised about.” "Somebody else has been killed," sal} Miss Marple, “is that it?i’ "Oh, that’s very sharp of you, dear. I don’t know what, should put such a thing into your head.” where, perhaps. He decided not EXPECTED MURDER er* "As a matter of fact," said Hewentupstairs smiling and fitted a key into his door. He always kept his suite locked. As he turned the key ahd pushed the door open, he felt the pressure of a hard round ring in his back. A voice said, “Put your hands up and don’t scream.’’ Giuseppe threw his handf up quickly. (He was taking no chances. Actually, there was no chance to take., The trigger was pressed—once —twice. HEARS SHOT Giuseppe fell forward. . . Bianca lifted her head from her pillow. -— Was that a shot? She was almost - sure she had heard a shot. She waited some minutes. -Then she. decided she had been mistaken and lay down again. "It's too dreadful," said Miss Knight. She put-down her parcels ahd gasped for breath. "Something has happened?” asked Miss Marple. i “I really don’t like to tell you about it, dear, I really don’tv 4t might be a shock to you.” “If you don’t tell me," said IS YOUR IB. fg* homM iwmm! Hoy* BIG BEAR Build You GIANT ROOM ADDITION Roagh duly ‘ * 1y Finished with nd Doors W~ Exterior Completely Finished with Windows and Doors For as Little •• No Monty Down No Payment* Until Foil USE IT FOE • Bedroom • Family Room • Kitchen • Utility Room • Dining Room • Extra Storogt FINISHED Exterior and Interior Completed with Heat, Electric, DrywaH, Flooring I« .. UM, .. $2^70 No Money Down No Paymente Until Fall Per Month BIG BEAR QONSTRljCroN CO. Miss Marple, will.” ‘somebody else "Deer, dear, that’s trne “Yei, Everybody talks tee mnch, they say. And I’m sere there’s • lot in that. I never repeat ‘‘You were saying," said Miss Marple, ‘‘that 8on»thIng rather . “It really quite howled me over," said Missjinight. "Are you sure yo(Td RESTAURANT • I OHcs. I. d T*l-Hur»n on Tslegraph “ ----- nmmm ONE REASON FOR HIIYING A HOME OF YOUR • II Any growing young family who fids evertried raising children In an apaitmonf or rentUN homo can tell you... the only way to raiso a family is IN YOUR OWN HOME. The stringent, and in many cases, unreasonable rules laid down by landlords can have an everlasting effect upon your child or children. Let's face it * . . living is "twice" as much fun in your own home and you're theN boss. Why not stop in today, and discuss your housing problems with one of our expert home loan counselors • • • you'll be amazed how easy home ownership can btl 75 WEST HURON FE 4-0561 , luUublbh - a regular ■ A ld|| $199.98 seller S ||M NO MONEY DOWN T|US $9 MONTHLY - cu^Tbn*. Choose 1 Foam re modern colors* 2 9.95 } MONTHLY Foam reversible cuihioni, inntripring motlrtiij choice of colon'. COMPLETE a.regu]lur $149.95 seller NO liiOlTEY DOWN' With jnntnpring mattren, box spring, Itgi and headboard. « regular, $59.9$ teller • hSpeSSfy' Loro* trip* KSf^nlddU. Shadow k P^wtthbookeata.wa arepdar 219.95 INNERSPRING MATTRESS g monthly SOFA BED cushion IIW Walnut dresser, mirror, 11 E chest and bed. regular $1.19.95 teller NO MONEY DOWN Opens remember Sale At Pontiac Armory 57 E. Water St. THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, JULY 13,1963 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. seventeen {(ground for LIVING^ j/Ve Home Unique Charm FILLED WITH CHARM - This little subdivision house looks just like many others on Walce street near Sylvan Lake Village, but all of the warmth and charm of Early American has been captured inside. Rugged furniture is mixed with down-filled sofas and chairs — just perfect for teen-age growing-up and entertaining. ' -I PHOTOS AND STORY BY REBA HEINTZELMAN r_L»Ju^T Pratiae Press Home Editor ’."'"7’ — * goTi chinning house filled with six happy children, a lowj of hard_work and a "heap o’ good living," you’ve really got a HOME. That sort of sums up the way of life for the Edward J. Vallier family who live in a subdivision /near Sylvan shopping center. , Although Mrg. Vallier inherited many lovely antiques from her grandmother, the artistic couple has collected and restored many more, thus producing an Early American atmosphere that is truly unique. »< the soft green carpeting shows a little wear—and it well should, with the Valuers’ own children plus friends bouriclng in and out of the house constantly. There’s William, 18, Dennis, 16, Mary Francis, 15, Peggy, 14, Robert, 12, and Rosemary,. 11. Wien Vallier found an old student lampSn^an antique shop, it was coated with kerosene oil and"was rusting and in a deplorable state. However, thp two green lamp shades were in perfect condition, sq he went to work. PLACE OP HONOR . Now the big lamp, that other lamp makers try to imitate, stands with a shiny brass finish in a place of honor iniheli«in(pnftro^ ——— Chairs, tables and hutches have had a thorough going over by members of the family. The whole setting Is one of restful charm. >{' Soft French cathedral wallpaper coyers the music alcove, and the pine "grandmother’s” clock, that Vallier made in his spare time, slowly {ticks away the hours. Its soft chimes can be heard throughout the house every 18 hiinutes. finally let through the wall and is growing merrily — spreading its vines all over the ceiling of the room. Yei- four-poster bed in the master bedroom is complimented by an old walnut dresser with porclain knobs. * * ** »# *3 ; ; r& iSa sbsHS Fronv what the. Valliers described as a "klunky” old bedroom* set has emerged a beautifully refinished antim^bite room ful) of furniture for the girls. The glassed-in back porch is the happiest place of ulL-Ardetermined gripVIne that refused to die was COOL AND COMFORTABLE ~ There’s not too much of anything in the big, uncluttered L-shaped.living room. To the right, arantique dry sink holds a century-old student lamp. The JSil painting above seems to come allve by the pots of bright, flowering geraniums in the copper compartment of the sink. The. primitive hutch at the end of. the dining area backs up against tiny red and white print wallpaper. Chairs, table and hUtoh all blend together. VINE GROWS INSIDE — This was once the Valuers’ patio, and when a persistant grape yine refused to , die during cohstructlpn, the family decided to keep it. So the wandering vine was brought through' the wbll and trained to grow up under the plastic roof. Each fall, luscious purple grapes hang in bunches, making interesting conversation items. INVITES RELAXATION — From the time you set foot in the frontdoor, there js a feeling of comfort, uncluttered living and relaxations That brown, red and white print sofa has cushions that are bulging with soft down. The old Vene- tian carriage lamps office. ner. The? two pans hanglng*oft the alcove wall, were formerly old tin milk; pans and are painted in .beautiful oil colors. HALLWAY’S AMERICAN — Those golden eagles in the Valuers’ charming hall look like they're ready to fly right off the wall. Natural wood stained louvred doors form the entrance to this area. The dry sink at the end crotches like a little oMi fashioned model used by salesmen long ago. f ■v'M--:'-, 6#' Uft Aitov'*; EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1368 A building board made bylto sheet asbestos Is practically I About 35 per cent ofnewlconstrocted in ^called modern laminating natural wood veneer I fireproof. [churches in the United States are! architectural style. Children Need LOT OWNERS jj i r jji 'V*- THE SEISTA —With Oversize, Large 20x26 Garage Picture yourself in this beautiful, 3-bedroom ranch, 56' long 43 MONTHLY PAYMENTS LESS THAN R|NT .. pi MONTHLY PAYMENTS ,,,,,,,,..,. For Only HOURS: Saturday 9 a m. to 6 p.m. ^- Sunday 12 Noon to 9 p.i PHONE CADDIE HOMES ItiCe Price includes 20x26 double garage. Delivered to your lof-"We unload". Free construction supervision. 625-2611 - Daily 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. PHONE 625-2612 J if you can't call — Malt thTs •CADDIE HOMES INC. I Name.......... Between Pontiac and Flint I ------ 9700 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston Post C it Office; | Address. jCjty ^ I • * y-• .......................................................i .... V.. ................... Phone................ • • ..... J As youngsters grow older, their hobbies and interests change. And so do their needs for living space. Homemakers can keep pace with these changes by converting their children’s bedrooms into 3-ln-l activity centers that ?AK I LIFETIME guarantee 1 » m.time of comfort SS§S RlSWf?niT R«VndOokClr«Jllr2; will b« r*plf«? ” serve as bedroom, party room and general fun room. Besides meeUng the needs of the child, the 3-in-l activity center is designed, to provide a substitute forgiving rooms and family rooms, thus keeping the rest of the house more quiet and less cluttered. Because the floqr design determines the overall decorating scheme, it’s wise to start there. Resilient coverings that resist scuffs and ataSSrsueh as vinyl asbestos tile are ideal for the | h wear youngsters will give, the floor. They can be obtained in gay colors and combinations and can be kept bright , and clean with a minimum of care. A charming floor for a girl’s room can easily be created with dainty madiera pink or egret white in a marbleized style of Kentikf vinyl asbestos that will hide any signs of dirt. : '> Suburban and rural homeowners are learning that the pur-cbase~of-a private swimming pool can pay big dividends not only in pleasure but in protection agalnstjlrev Where—the water supply Is limited, or where there is no organized fire department, a swimming pool is an all-important stopgap. For a boy’s room, colonial blue v shannon green are ideal marbleized colors. And hop-scotch or ;i checkefboard patterns as well as complete shuffleboard game insets can be built Into the floor to provide many fun-filled hours for the youngsters in this all-’round room. Chandler Heating Co. OR 3-4492 OR 3-5032 TERMS AVAILABLE '^FrecFBglrting^anun^ke modern living more^enjoyST bright, well directed beam of light can enhance the pleasures of reading room or a sewing nook, but it can spoil the subtlety of a secluded comer. On Your Lot - No Extras Tri-Level 3-Bedroom Home With Finished Family Room-Carpeting-Screens and Built-Ins as Fire Fighter All-Important Stopgap Whom Water Limited The value of a pool as a resource for successfully combating-fires was seen In California little more than a year ago. White fires raged in the Bel Air vicinity of-Los Angeles, j domestic watef supply reserves were drained completely in a, few hours. In at least a dozen -cases, homes with private swimming pools were saved, white those without them were seriously damaged or leveled by fire. The' person who lives beyond ‘the city water mains, especially where there is^no official firefighting force, is wlHs to consider, the installation of a pool. Completely Finished Model At 3161 AIRPORT RD. Open Daily 9 AM. ft PM. Take the short drive from Pontiac to this ideally lituatfd suburban area on Farm Road between M-59 and Pontiac Lake Read (See Map), then drive over to 3161 Airport Road and see the finished model with carpeted Living Room and Hallway, Built-In Oven and Range, Gas Heat, Finished Family Room’—ALL ON MINIMUM TERMS. ' J...” Models Under Construction Know How Your Home Is Built! GO MODERN-GO GAS Why Buy An Older Home When You Can Enjoy A New One for Lets I Hilltop Realty Better Built by Booth !, Sale* HrjHrsrntntn rs or 673-5234 Im ; T -suburban dwellers will find that the local water systems dealer can provide them with a water supply'and purification system for die pool and an important plus—a special pump^ ing system. The special pump can be used to draw water from the pool to fight fires When other help is not available. ,, -Any experienced water systems dealer will be able to provide exactly the right pump and system for the secific needs of rural and suburban howeowners. LOT OWNERS SKI THE MEW SWIFT HOMES FOR 1963 THK DOVER NEW !« YEAR PINANCINQ INCLUDES BASIC HOME ERECTED PLUS FINISHING MATERIALS NO MONEY POWN HO PAYMINT FOR 90 DAYS Townsend-Swift Homely Ins. 2110 LAPEER RD. LAKE ORION FE 8-9636 PONTIAC Rockcote PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE FAINT WALLPAPERS << South Call 332-4643 Consider Wood Panels Stimulating to Learning Wood paneling frequently appears as the interior finish for walls of school classrooms. Many educators regard the material as stimulating to learning. in addition, there Is the factor of low^iaTfitenance. Hard surfaced woods have high resistance to blemish or marring. SAYS .,. "SEE OUR MODEL-BUILD NOW!" ON YOUR LOT OR OURS FACE BRICK ft STONE RANCH 42 Ft. Basement “7 Only * r ’12,950 Your Housa In Trad* Or 10% Down C. SCHUETT FE 8-0458 /* A back-yard pltnic can be more fun and twice as easy as fighting traffic to find a silvan glade. So, make this sturdy table with attached benches now. Pattern 202, which 7 materials, shows steps and even gives guides for cutting supports, is 55 cents. This pattern also is | In the Lawn and Garden Packet No. 38 which contains trellis and] flower box patterns as popular (furniture numbers—all for $1. The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept. Bedford Hills, New York Vidt lh. Exciting “VIRGINIAN” 4-ID100M COLONIAL 3667 Lortno St. Watkins Hills Subdivision KAMPSEN REALTY COMPANY 1070 W. Huron FE 4-0021 “dream kouse"home sites [Waterford Hill Manor SAMUEL BRODY and SONS licensed Contractor CUSTOM FIATURI5 DESIGNED FOR YOU Commercial and Residential « ADDITIONS f CONCRETE WORK-MASONRY • ALUMlWl 0 ATTIC CONVERSIONS • KITCHENS • AWNING WINDOWS-Awnlnf! • FAMILY ROOMS • RATIOS • DINS 0 OARAGES • BATHROOMS • IRIIIIWAY* • Storm anil Swoon Doors and Windows - ---------D 2f]4 ,T0RY addition* p'SgJ” e CUSTOM DISIGNID 2. FHA No Hawn I'armrnl UR TO 3 YlASl TO RAY (LM RINAMCI RUN CumMMWvMI RwWtfJMHt CONSTRUCTIOR/CO. Builtlinn in Pontine Since 1943 - Opormor on Duty 24 Houn Dally 2256 Dixit Highway FK 2-1211 T mv hk&Li M : THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 13, nineteen KLEEN AIR ; TN only Fumaco Cleon«r$ ; in town to clean only. 8KT OUI PRICE FIRST JIM LON IE OR 3-0100 Develop New Flooring Modern chemical research has yielded a completely new type of resilient flooring material that is considered to be as close to “perfect” flooring as any material ever produced. This new flooring resists permanent indentation, cigarette burns and all types of staining. It is as quiet and comfortable underfoot as natural cork. hIoSss:^ j^sr's.soo IN DIVANT CO NO DOWN" "TRADE FE 2-1164 PAYMENT! LOT OWNERS/Custom Built FINISHED 3IEDI00M HPMI«/m»m‘42"MOUTH MODEL HOME OPEN 04 2580 S. TELEGRAPH RD. SOUTH OF SQUARE LAKE ROAD ProtPol children, pels, properly ANCHOR* FENCE ■ Bright all-aluminum or sine-dad steel construction ■ Tight standard rfmln link or cloaer-woven Moderameah ■ Famous square poets and gates rfjjggx ■ Installation by factory-trained crewa ■ Oldest, largest fence-maker for homes *, (FAREHTs ) —coast to coast A3 LOW AS $3.00 A MONTH rirtlkl* Dal Rum AtllllUl , FE 5-7471 No Down PsymenF 36 Met. te Pay • 1st Payment October BLENDING PERIODS - This tastefully furnished living room in Robinson Bros. Woodbury ‘‘Idea Home” at 18620 Walmer Lane in Beverly Hills, is open for public inspection. The hint of Japanese in the ming tree mural and high-back chairs blend well with semicontemporary furniture. This is only one of 18 “Idea Homes” in the area. ; Pocked Floors Can Be Saved A simple way to remove floor pock marks caused by women’s spike heels, which have resulted in an estimated one-half billion dollars damage to the floors of offices and ISheT public buildings, has been reported by a manufacturer in the building maintenance field.. With the new technique many types of commonly used resilieht flooring materials can be smoothed down to remove dents with > an ordinary commercial floor niachine and abrasive discs. The process is comparable to sanding a wood floor. The greatest potential use SEE OUR NEW WATER FBOHT MODELS CAPE COD and TRI-LEVEL Priced From $21,490 'Z BEVERLY ISLAND Cm* Lk. Rd. 1 Blfc. S. of Elisabeth Lk. Rd. for the method is in offices; retail establishments, and other public buildings where women work, walk or play in high heels in great numbers. ' Do-it-yourself eforts by home-owners are discouraged because of the need for commercial equipment, ELEPHANTS WELCOME Fashion dictates have caused the women to troop about in a manner pleasing to the eye, but to the floors herds of elephants would have been more welcome. An elephant foot exerts 50 to 100 pounds of pressure per square inch. Women in spike heels exert from, a quarter-ton to a full ton Pfr square inch for each heel, Ana if the spike i$ exposed at the bottom of the heel, the load pressure can go up to more than 25 tons. Greece had a 175 per cent increase in • number of motor vehicles from 1954 to 1961. Peppers Are Cool Looking What’s the coolest - looking plant you can'grow in your garden? 'Sweet green peppers. Yes, peppers! Hot they may sound, but cool they are — t6 look at - andtoeat.Crispand sweetly P^ect for slicing, salads or stuffing. =.--wjr .*....* ~ Growing, theyW7r~dekgM^ have The sturdy, decoraBvr plants with their shiny,- dark} green foliage create an exciting: note of contrast in your flower beds and borders. (Bonus idea: if space is at a premium, your home - grown pepper plants will be both decorative and handy when grown among clumps of evergreen shrubbery.) ; f| Green peppers are perfect, of course,, for summertime ’ But there are so many .other uses for them! Sliced and served with alternating slices of fresh tomatoes sprinkled with bleu cheese, they make a wonderfully colorful and tasty side dish. Serving corn off, the cob? Add in chopped peppers for de* lightful added piquancy. A wheelbarrow load of potted plants on your lawn and a tiny cart with a vine for the house have great charm. Both planters are easy to make with the actual-size guides and directions in Pattern 344 which also’ gives numerals for a house number pn the wheelbarrow if you wish. This pattern is 35 cents. It also is one of four patterns in the Yard and Garden Brightener and Packet No. 59 — all for 117 -The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept. Bedford Hills, New York About 62 cents of the consumer’s food dollar goes for marketing — a total of 42 billion dollars last year. Texas leads as the greatest oil I Chesapeake Bay is about 200 refining state as weil as theiarg- milek long and up to 40 miles in est single producer of crude oil. I width. ______ YOUR HOUSE EQUITY WILL MOVE YOU IN OR $90<» DOWN • MO- x 120- lot • J I • Range and Oven —A Paved Streets • Full Basement • Gas Heat ___£_AII Brick —---------Ceramic Tile Beth • LowestFHATerms------- ---^ See Models st 2107 Pontiac Trail at Welch Rd. <^Ops« Doily 9-6—Sat. and Sun. Noon-6 Yai^ BHiUlng Co, Phone! 6244711 Peppers are 7Tsin0St!fca=5;4mi your family and friends will rave over this fabulous Oriental dish. And don’t forget stuffed peppers —delicious as a main dish and so easy on your budget. SEE MODEL HOMES AT 23S0 PONTIAC TRAIL Between Deeker and Hmff.rty TRI-LEVEL $10,800 on Your Lot or Oura Frank Marotta & Associates USED HOMET^ FOR RENT OR SALE CALL FOR LISTING 363-7643 EMPIRE BUILDING CO. BATEMANS TRADE-IN POST OPEN SUNDAY in 2086 FRAN Cl SC A TRI-LEVEL-qlmost new and beautiful condition inside and oat^ room*, 2 full baths, fireplace and family room. ^Beautiful lake privileges with sand' beach and boat dock ju%t on^BtScfcr-Wfluita wonderful place to livo. Just on joy yourself and grow y<^ungT~Only 10 minutes from Downtown BATEMAN TRADE-IN PLAN Now you can avoid tho risk" of owning two homos when you TRADE tho Bateman wayl We guarantee a sale of your present home, so call today for an appointment at you# earliest convenience. Action Today—Not Tomorrow BATEMAN Realty 377 South Telegraph - PONTIAC FE 8*7161 ' v‘ 1 ■ 3 Bedroom Colonial with 1,514 Sq. Ft. of living Area ■ Full Basement ■ 2-Car Attached Garage ■ Compartmented Main Bath ■ Handy Half-Bath on First Floor ■ Vestibule Entry ■Panelled Family Room with Optional Fireplace Wall ■ Immense Activities Area Provided by Combination Kitchen-Dining Space Adjoining Fathily Room FHA TERMS *16 Open DlHjf t Sunday From 12 N«Sfl Is 1:00 p.M. tit. Noon Is I P.M. clowd Wsdnstdiyt Modil Phons.., EMpIre 3-2123 ALL SM0KLER COMPANY N0MEI ARE COPYRIBHTED, 1113. GOLF MANOR If you like city convenience—but enjoy a quiet, village atmosphere, you’ll love Golf Manor, an established community! Only Golf Manor provides paved streets, curbs and gutters, storm sewers, city water and side 4 walks—plus Smokier-built quality homes! THE PONTIAC: PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1668 TWENTY Mexico's population is now 95 Four barrels of water from iduce rafter evaporation process^, Great Salt L|kef Utah, will pro? [about one stahdard barrai of salt. home can be minimized through the use of sudi permanent materials as ceramic tile, glass., and quality plumbing fixtures. Measured against the life of the home, these materials are inexpensive because they eliminate, costly replacements, redecorating and repairs. The coit of building or remodeling bathrooms — often the most expensive areas of the Pedy-Bilt Garage Co. •UILDIM or UNI GARAGES 7722 Amton, Waterford YOU OAN PAY MORE ... OUT YOU QANNOT BUY BETTER Let us come out and show you our models, and give specifications arid prices on your garage 'jSidhT direct With the builder for GARAGE AND CEMENT WORK CUSTOM BUILT ■LOCK .HICK . ..AMI to your own specifications! — For "Better Custom Homes' Frerick’s Bros. FE 2-2951 URBAN RENEWAL Wmoney ’WWN ROSS HOMES COMPLITI MODERNIZATION PROGRAM FREE ESTIMATES — FH A TERMS - CEMENT WOI rc.llon'Rooms o Br*t»tw*7S 0 FGmSm 0 BWlnf Mon. thru Fii. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday 8:30 a.m. to Noon CORWIN lumber and Coal Co. 117 $. toss FE 2-8385 HOUSE TRADE-IN FUN 1941 S. Telegraph FB 4-0591 Serving AH Your PLUMBING NEEDS for Over 50 Yeors EAMES& BROWN, Inc. THE MEDITERRANEAN FEEUNG - This dining set with its sunnycolors and accessories is the decor preferred by the majority of retired Americans.; With the warm brown butternut of table, chairs, and china cabinet, there is a three-drawer chest in a terra cotta painted finish. Chair seats repeat the terra cotta with an orange and beige stripe: Orange and antique gold Spanish spread used as a rug and wicker basket light fixtures complete the theme. This Boll Haven 3-Bedroom RANCHER Blocks Ease Upkeep of Ceiling mo pictured 510,500 Cracks and “‘cricks” of ceiling upkeep -can be eliminated from woes that plague the home own- Thecraeks Well • Pump • Septic Pleat* Send Mt Yovir Big, Colorful Book of Liberty Ham** ~~ _ „ S.nd Fra. Catalog Call or Malt lot ' '■ ALPINE BUILDING 00. ___________________ 784 Bonn.-Milford, Mich. ---:----------------- 117-5310 pr KM I-I2M Cl*7 • ' -----------Custom Building to Your Plont niimHiBiaaMmmiB QUALITY VINYL SIDING! • Costs more, but worth much, much more • Made to last the lifetime of ydur home . • Much tougher, color clear through, not just a paint IF YOU ARE WILLING TO PAY MORE TO GET MUCH MORE IN QUALITY, BEAUTY AhID DURABILITY . . . CALL JOE VALLELY CO. PHONE FE 5-9545 IHA T.rmi • Licanttd • Injured • References Furnished FACTORY m vom KLIN6ELHUT REAL BRICK COOL . Downspouts l§?g>r M & S GUTTER CO. pear in the ceiling surface to mar the appearance and the "cricks” are those pains that settle in the home owner’s neck when he has to spend, long hours at redecorating or cleaning the ceiling. A combined remedy And preventive; for such difficulties is to cover the celling with a plastic-surfaced hardboard ceiling block. Cracks in the ceiling do not need to be filled; the blocks, applied with adhesive, can be put on over disfigured surfaces without tedious preparation. Insurance against future ceiling cracks is afforded by the unusual strength of the blocks, which have a base of tempered hardboard, a material tough enough for workbench tops. And how about the “cricks” in the neck? A baked plastic finish which guards the beauty of the paneling means an end to the customary need for periodic redecorating and the' neck-bending work it entails. The hard, smooth surface resists soiling; -can be damp-wiped clean. The 16 - Inch square cell! blocks. available^at4affi^fvards In white and parchment colors as well as lace and nugget patterns, can be used appropriately in any room of the house, they can be arranged in different ways /to form interesting patterns with joint lines. 1 i urn moans COOLER homts ALL WORK GUARANTEED 0M1NUM siding FREE ESTIMATES! SAVOIE INSULATION CO. 4112 W. WALTON BLVD. OR 3-3619 PEAL NOW and SAVE! No Money Down UF TO 20 YES. TO FAY CEMENT WORK ^ DIXIE Garage Construction, luc. 5744 Highland Rd. (M-59) BtSwuso CNSMOI Uko OMI Mftrt Ms. Call for Free Estimate OR 4-0371 Open Daily and Sun. 9-7 ML ATTICS—REC. ROOMS—ADDITIONS PORCHES—BREEZEWAYS INSULATION—ALUMINUM SllMIMI THE “IDEA HOME” 1 * OF OAKLAND COUNTY * 2902 SHAWNEE AT WALTON BLVD., JAYNO HEIGHTS Ilf ««iy Rite's Rfwnl Idee Horn, of Oikl.nd County Is decorator furnished end ‘—• hdd for your approval and intpe 1 ~ MU MR e to expect from “Beauty Rite” i professionally landscaped for your approval and Inspection. All the vary wonder* (••i •Sines you’ve come to expect from “Beauty Rite” ere here, the sunken living i, the ultra kitchen, the glamorous bath and family room, plus the Igundry ful thing ic ultra kitchen, the flam,--B. .. ...... m on a tingle level. The exposed basement provides a lot of window wall leads out to the lake front. Whether you intend to build i veers from now, you are rrrtaln to art Inspiration and Ideas for adaptli ilylltr 111 Yf“lr F'nlmt- Mi'. Lswls-wjfM.e v.Hti1 host. I' ll MtoE OPEN DAILY 2 to 9 P.M. O’NEIL REALTY CO. 262 9. TELEGRAPH ROAD, JftmiAC, FE S-t 103 ATTENTION LOT OWNERS,.. ' If you don't own a lot, ALBEE wilMiolp you find one of your choice!^ ADD AL6EE KNOW-HOW, ALBEE QUALITY, and EASY FINANCING to your own do-it-yourself ability and you add up to owning MORE HOME PER DOLLAR! 1 THE ALBEE "GRAND PRIX" voted the home of tho year at tho National Raal Estate Show Juno, 1943. HERE’S HOW ALBEE MAKES IT POSSIBLE ... ALBEE MAKIS IT IAIY TO DO ALL TNI LABOR YOURSILP with the following do-it-yourself aide: Free expert guidance— precision pre-cut materials — simple step-by-step Instructions. DO ANY PART* OP THK LABOR YOURSILP and Albee will show you how to obtain local craftsmen to. complete Construction of your home gt a tremendous saving! IVIN IP YOU PRIPIR TO DO NONI OP THI LABOR your-, self, Albee will show you how to obtain qualified craftsmen to do ALL the construction and,yogi will STILL save thousands of dollars! Every ALBEE Customer Benefits from This* Built-In Savings Features ... A. VOLUME BUYING POWER . . . Direct purchase of No. 1 old-fashioned quality, materials In huga CARLOAD volume puts middleman profits In YOUR pocket! B. PRECISION PRE-CUTTING . 1. Modem production methods and advanced engineering KNOW-WOVV reduces costly on-the-job materiel and labor waste I C. FREE EXPERT CONSTRUCTION GUIDANCE ... Experienced factory-trained supervisors are available to help guide you front start to finish. Their technical and trade knowhow will prove Invaluable to you, leva you outside fees, end help make home ownership a thrilling pleasure! SEE WHAT YOUR ALBEEMAN CAN DO FOR YOU! OPEN SUN. 1 TO » SAT. 9 TO f DAILY » TO » ALBEE COMMAND HOMES 53670 GRATTOT/ Rt. 25 NEW BALTIMORE, MICH. •Biel Al.BKB I May H*m« Ownership T TITK PONTIACTPItESS. SATURDAY, JULY 1 JACOBY ON BRIDGE 499$ ¥682 ♦ K 10 5 ♦ KQJY 4 Q979 ¥Qim 419 Ail 4 BAST fi?u ♦ QJS4 *10 6 33 SOUTH (D) ■ - * AX i ¥ AKJ88 ♦ A833 No one vulnerable Sdndi West North Bart P*** •if: Pass 4N.T. Pass S-A Pass « N.T. Pass 6 A 22 «¥. Pasa Paw Pass Oponin* lead—AK before leading even the ace of trumps. Then he could have led • trump to dummy, taken his 1 b discard and none after dia-nds. West would have gotten the lead, but would not been able to lead a third trump because only one trump would have been played. Of course, this play would lose if someone: had ^uffwMhr Urtrtf Spade but it was a far-better play. The odds are 3 to 2 against a 2-2 break and better than 3 to 2 in favor of a 4-3 break. Hence South had taken a play with only a 40 per cent chance of success instead of one that had better than 60 per cent in its favor. By OSWALD JACOBY My old friend the unlucky expert really is unlucky. Other players make their own bad luck. He sits South'today. South wasted • no time losing his slam. He won the club opening, cashed the ace of trumps and ace-king of spades,] led a second t rutflp to dummy, discarded his losing club on the queen of spades and played the ace and another diamond. West won the trick and was Unkind enough to lead a third round of trumps, whereupon South was able to ruff only one of his two remaining diamonds. Had South stopped^ to think’ before he led the ace of trumps he vtaukfhave noted that danger and considered the possibility of playing his ace and king of spades M £*” 2* Pas. 41 E8** ** Pais *4 PMa 5* paig Wf P#« «¥ Pass . You, South hold: T10S 0AJ7 AX*4 wnat do you dp? «..7I?M.,,V,,a4«s. P*rt- »ou ° *eve“. but hav-h J h*h°W“. ever>,‘l1ln» yoi • a !*. ^ want* » fraud •lam let Mm bid it Mmself. TODAY'S QUESTION Portner responds, two your openins spade bid. What do you do, holding: ♦AKQ J8 7 6 T3 OK6 5 ASS Van Cliburn to Perform INTERLOCHEN (fl-Pianist Van Cliburn performs irreonewt . July 25 at the Interlochen National Music Camp. It will be a benefit concert with proceeds going to scholarships. , Driver Faces Exam for 2 Irens' Deaths MUS.KEGON MV-John F. Schmiedeknecht, 41, of rural Montague, faces examination July 24 on charges of manslaughter and negligent homicide Jn the traffic deaths of two teen-aged Montague girls. Muskegon County sheriff's deputies said Schmiedeknecht’s car crossed the center line of a road and struck Laureen Mae Scott, 13, and Marjorie Gay Herman-son, 15, from behind as they rode. bicycles near their homes Thursday night. Officers said the car was running without lights. Municipal Court Judge Matthew C. Locke f e 1 e,a s ed Schmiedeknecht on $2,600 bond at his arraignment Yesterday. Army Claims Success irf Missile Interception WASHINGTON W-The army skid yesterday its NUte-Zeus. anti: missile missile successfully intercepted a target warhead from an Atlas intercontinental ballistic missile fired 5,000 miles over the Pacific from California. It was the seventh such intercept claimed by the Arftiy since its antimissile testing series began last year.j •; N^Power Firm Gets ABC Okay to Start Reactor LAGUNA BEACH <0-Power Reactor Development Co. (PRDC), now. with an Atomic Energy Commission go-ahead for fueling its nuclear reactor, estimated yesterday it will be about, one month before the reactor staftsoperatuw- By Neal Adams Astrological* Forecast Bv SYDNEY OMAltll For Sunday ilrltual advisor could provide — -I..- -*‘*-,rama. \ M .. — .Jay 20): Cycle Personality, abilities, po-■*vd, Loved once re——* view, Fsmily dli uve, , , „ mensauy as we ly, Spiritual advisor coul ,PTAURdsh (iPpr^O* to m! your .point , of view. Family, disputes can be settled If you take Initiative. Stress INDEPENDENCE. ORIGINALITY. GEMINI (May 21 to June 21): - else Intuitive powers today, Sirs earitv. Avoid those who offer fat jElrlJ.ua! values hlehllghted. Thoae BjjdHP ^"CANCER (June Skt# JJ ruKuaivsi. uooa qay rpr losing wun friends, to help you fulfill hopes. wishes, LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21): If your advioe is sought, civs It. Tou nave unique "and' of VALUE! j^jfiv* iial M jm liiends, t( LEO (J.., .. , advioe Is sought, much to offer Because you are am I see through sham, pretense. Build up reserves —• Includes personal strength, vitality. Oet enough rest. VIRGO (AUg. 22 to Sept. 22): Ifeelti lion today eould lead to lose. Mean-be sneclfle, aure of your own Intentions. Take lead to tors. Moans be specific, euro of your own Intentions. Take lead, help others to forge. ahead. Don t falter — •- necessary. Key IS , fruit MM _-yTo ln'Tiu'NoiiiW'”.'.Mil• you have tmger on TRUTH, nils makes you omflamti lnepfre- meUlHil “ -tamplo. others. Set < Scorpio (Oot, 21 to Nov. 21): I RELAX. Caioh up on hobbles, |WI|d^hee.^B| with people who ma full rein to your a yjfite ^ live nobbles. Let "special p ' you DO care. Don't be it "mw (jkh. 21 to f»u, ,^M" aW‘MSf to b# discovered within family Hntll/.e thIn and ranch out to ......VBI.S1 : Avoid AVAILABLE. strength. Weart-to-heai. . close to«,you may tea naadad. if sundayT* y&ur birthday ., you are lively, Imaginative, dynemio ii dividual, , .-wT-.i-x tendency tt word to BpORFiq:. Avoid trying r FORCE major decisions. ■day ' to Apr. If): Your . |H .0 costly. Means be wary lest you .throw good money after T'XoWr’lApi. „ ..... .... ... can assart yourself and find listener*! Public in general beootnes awir a your effort*. Your own olrole of ri associates reaote favorably. Move ahead. liBfv m P9PI ...... a*.— — \reakthfougr^jiirj“ present fttb ^feelings" for future. Check THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JtTLY 18, 1968 TWENTY -TWO Freehan, Colavito Pace 7 Like Action/ Says-Cakher^63 Rteying. CHICAGO UP) ~ Young Bill Freehan and Rocky Colavito collaborated in steering the Detroit Tigers to a lighting 7-6 victory in 12 innings over the Chicago White Sox last night. The scrambling, overtime battle was settled When Freehan, getting a single to go with a prior home run and single, drove Colavito home from second base for the winning run. Colavito had doubled. and won the fourth with a birdie three. He went three up at the seventh, coming out of the rough for another birdie four. Rodgers got one back with a SIEGERS This he cites as his biggest thrill in softball. Another point- he; notes with- Detrolt’s victor after the loss ini one-puttedJorj|_birdie four at the 411h and wwni~lftinpjft~Tip again. They^wi^4lw=WHEt=two holes as Charles sank a 30-footer on 13. Then Charles canned a 12-foot birdie putt on the 15th. year's entry has won every game he has started. expects to develop into a fine player. _BjMERE-CRAM»—— ■■i-'lJSfer fh act torn1* -These words explain why 63-year-old Martin Siegers "still writes his name in 'the starting line'up for Poponea’s Market occasionally,'' instead of sitting back and letting his younger teammates do all the . Siegers is the . playing manager for the city Class C softball team. A catcher, t he does not play regularly but easily qualifies as the most active old timer in the circuit. jc **i love to catch," he says with pride. “I’d be hi there every game if we didn’t have all the young players.” By contrast, one of his new hopefuls is outfielder Bob Shampine, a 1 Siegers himself has I enough children and II grandchildren (19) to field » two teams, although one I would have to be an all-1 girl nine. 1 What makes his continu-I ing appearance on the I playing field even more I unusual is the fact he I stopped playing several i years and then resumed ' | his diamond-career at age That happened when his church decided to enroll a team in a church soft-ball leagqe. He joined and the following year took over the coaching duties. LEAGUE FOLDED When the. loop folded Siegers kept the team together playing-exhibition , games. Last season the squad, entered the city “C” league as Dixie Tool and Machine and walked off with the championship. The graying Mt. Cte* 1 mens Avenue resident began bis ball playing . on the baseball dia-monds around Holland as a teenager. He played on a Industrial League hardball nine that captured five straight league titles. ( After moving to Pontiac in the late 1930’s ' Sieger played baseball for the old Phelp’s Electric team; be-fori? he switched over to get his first taste of soft-ball. He doesn’t limit —physical activity to soft-ball, either. After a day’s | work for Dixie Tool he 8 has been known to shoot I a round of 50 on the golf, 1 - course-During the winter - --; he averages in the high 1 160’$ on the bowling lanes. || Obviously, Martin Siegers is a man who does f like action. is I t- I ST. ANNE’S ENGLAND (AP)- Bob Charles, the left-handed New Zealand golfer, led Phil Rodgers of La Jolla, Calif., by three shots today at the halfway point in their 36-hoto ptoyolf..tor the Lettish Onen Golf Championship. Charles shot a _697iSI par, and Rodgers a 72 to the toorning round over the 6,757-yard, pgr 70 Royal Lytham and St. Anne’s course. They had tied Friday at the end of the regulation 72 holes with scores of 277. Charles took the lead at the third hole and never relinquished it as he continued the red hot putting streak that carried him into a tie. He had a round of 33-36 agains par of 34-36. Rodgers shot 35-37. Charles holed A 45-f0ot putt for a birdie four on the third hole City Approves Project to Make \\ Hot for Birds PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The city told a contractor Friday to go ahead with d $62,234 project for “electrical bird-proofing” of the .city hail., ' —• The oity has tried several schemes to rid the city hall of birds, Including broadcasting a recorded starling’s distress call and trying to trap the birds by feed-ling them tranquilizers. In Forest Lake Tourney Babbish Keeps Rolling By BRUNO KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Bob Babbish, recent winner of the Pine Lake Invitational, switched partners for the first Forest Lake Invitational, but still took the role of favorite after Friday’s opening round. Babbish teamed with At Con-ner of Forest Lake to score a one-up victory on the 19th hole from qualifying medalists Tom Clark and Chuck Newton of Ann Arbor. Clark and Newton led the field of 94 teams in qualifying with a 67 Thursday. Babbish, who teamed with Lou Conroy to win at Pine Lake, had a 70 with Conner )n qualifying. The match was decided with a par on the 19th hole. Today, Babbish and Conner will face the father-son combination of Paul Jackson and Pete Jack-son from Red Run, who scored ci»rp »naian upset, one-up, over Bob Podel-v.popnasjgjltand Frank Jerrard. •nri lb too. • Longest match of the dfly took if. woodara piaCe in.'the championship flight cup with an eight-iron and he and and Flack-:when George Anderson and Pon-!partner Marv Gielow defeated carmichaoi|tlac’s Dick Robertson won from!Jack Lelich and Jim Youngblood, oreen and Gene Woodard and Ed Nolan of .three and one. Detroit, one-up in 22 holes. The semifinals and finals will be played Sunday at Forest Lake. North Carolina University after leaving Seahdm recently led the state amateur qualifying at Charlevoix. He was beaten however, to the semifinal round of match play. A team which established itself as a favorite is that of Harry- Nederlander and Gene Eyler, four and three winners over Gale Stringer and Jack Gei88 of Birmingham. The highlight of the first round took place iri third flight. Roy Potzin of Forest Lake scored a hole-in-one on the 145-yard 10th hole. He dropped the ball into the It looked'like a breeze for the New Zealander until he took a double bogey six to Rodgers’ five on the tough . 17th. Charles had only 26 putts for the round and 11 one-putt greens. He also made some magnificent recovery shots. On three holes—the first,-sixth and 14th he came out of bunkers within four feet of the cup to halve the holes and he got a half on the 15th after being in the rough afi the way by holing a 12-foot putt. POOR LIE ’ | On the monstrous 462-yard, par four i7th, Charles drove into the on the 15th fitter being in the rough apd could barely get out of a bad lie. He had a seven iron gfggn He left that bunker, pitche3“"up' and two-putted from 12 feet. Rodgers was to the bunker sand on the same hole, ’ blasted out to 20 feet and also two-putted. On the last hole Charles missed 20-footer and Rodgers’ 12-footor stopped an inch from the cup. The pudgy, good-natured American drew a laugh from the crowd by holding his putter down at the head to tap it in. RIVALS TODAY - Bob, Charles (left) of New Zealand and Phil Rodgers of La Jolla; Calif., shake hands after tying for the British Open Gold championship yesterday. They are fierce rivals today as they engage to a 36-hole playoff for the coveted: title* They finished the regular 72-hole tournament with 277s on the par 70 Royal Lytham course at St. Anne's, Eng, The left-handed Charles took a three-stroke lead after the. first 18 holes today. Ramos Favored to Keep Title Against King t. Eynon ti Long tnd Hardy UoKPnbrrg tnd Roghberg drf. HuM »nd *»( and Moorfi dtf. 8mtad and J* ^Mworfik^and Worinlak dtf. Nancar* r7H:rin«dim,2,d«1.l. Orr .nd Du* h»m, 3 »n the morning semifinal COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) -The NCAA basketball championship will be held in 1965 at Portland, Ore., for the first time. They will be March 19-20 at Memorial Coliseum. Next year's NCAA finals will be played at Kansas City. . against 17-year-old Joyce Kazmierskl of Detroit, Mrs. Werner also used sharp putting to gain a 3 and 2 victory. Miss Shook kept the championship match from being an Alt-eland County affair by ousting Mrs. S. E. Gawne of Bloomfield Hills in the semifinals, 3 and 2. Mrs. John Hume of Royal Oak. In yesterday’s finals, Mrs. Werner had a 2-up lead after nine holes, but Miss Shook evened things by winning the 11th and 12th holes. Freehan clubbed his fifth hom> ,___ er in the seventh but Jim Landis A 12-foot putt put Mrs. Werner bought the Sox even again with ahead again on theJ4th. and then his 10th in the same frame. went 2-up with an eight-footer on the 16th. The two golfers halved the par-5 17th to end the match. 1 was scared to death I’d never pitch again.” , That’s Sandy Koufax, remembering how things were exactly one year agp. The brilliant left-hander was to the middle of a spectacular season and the Los Angeles Dodgers Were sailing ahead in the National League race-when misfortune struck on July 12,1962 at the Polo Grounds In New York, ,between two Okinawa. 1 Sandy No Longer 'Scared' The 7-7 tie went unbroken thrpugh the 11th in a duel between Wilhelm and Fox, then Colavito and Freehan broke it up in the 12th. , Koufax s Foes Numb By The Associated Press lowered Mt earned" run average A numb index finger on his pitching hand forced Koufax to the sidelines after he had blanked mannings, the victory his last of the year. The unusual circulatory ailment lpter idled him for over two motiths, and the Dodgers wound up losing the pennant to the San Francisco Giants. But the frightened and disabled Koufax of a year ago Is now the hottest pitcher In baseball—a fact he emphasized Friday night, On he anniversary of that dark hooter in his career. THIRD STRAIGHT Again at the Polo Grounds and ignto facing the Met*, he fired f hree-hlt 6-0 triumph. The shutout vas his third in a row and hint! ,f the season. The victory was hh t'lghth straight and 15th of the ■esr-hlvb In the majors. Ills If Strikeouts boOsted his total to 188 oh* in the big lea^. sn^ 'Ht to a dazzling 1.64 In his 13th complete game. And the Dodgers? They’ve now won five in succession and have a five-game grip on first place. The Philadelphia Phillies tumbled the second-place San Francisco Giants another length behind, 7-5, despite the continued lohg-range hitting of Willie Me-Covey. In other NL action—St. Louis i beat Milwaukee 5-3; Chicago trimmed Cincinnati 4-1; and Pittsburgh shaded Houston 2-1. A three-run first inning by the Dodgers started the last-place Mets toward their 13th straight setback. Ron Fairly hit a two-run double to the first, Doug Camilli brought in two runs with a homer in the second and a bases-loadedi walk In the third, and Tommy Davis singled nl the last run of the game to the sixth. Lefty A1 Jackson was the loan. ehaiettTtirti^ eighth, but Jack Baldschun checked the Giants the rest of fit* way. The Cardinals > clinched it against the Braves with a four-run third inning, capped by Gary Kolb’s first major league homer. Bob Gibson won his ninth, with relief from Barney Schultz, and Tony Clininger was the loser. Gene Oliver and Mack Jones homered for Milwaukee. Koufax, who has lost three of his 18 decisions, finished strongly by retiring the last 14 Mets to order. The Phils rapped Jack Sanford for four rups in the first Inning md three In the fifth, With doubles by Roy jjlevers, Don Demeter md Ctey Dairymple the telling dotes. McCovev smacked two-run for the Giants In the A1 Kaline’s first of two singles and singles by Colavito and Freehan gave Detroit two runs in the fifth. Pete Ward put the Sox back in front with his 12th homer in the Chicago half but Detroit went ahead again in the sixth on Wood’s double and Kaline’s single. °.n i 9 Hmmmi «, * * MoOraw 1 Cnrron o Martin e Plr.urro p ....... Wflhalm p soda H-Pafir*1 o A 0 0 fcCaA FjSmjlh j>b Kudo* 0 n u •In IA A-Bruton of 3 0 rfjy.r'iifYUv. ,.... £»f)n(]M for .KoMlJn «... _ rut for Noholion In 0th; c Walk ml fi.. Vilhelm In 11th: D—Bin for Maxwell Chloaao «0 010 ioooofco |urd *. 3l~wek Wood. Colavito, HR—Wood, I--.War^rraar-- - --11 ■r~>hfr ■eelian, Landl*. Fox .. 4 , ■ntfuin. . . r roman (L 9-0) I 3 111 HfiP Ward (hr | gg P»li*rjh». lion on I (by MoenlI, U Haller, oonlok, Smith. T—1:43. Souchak Breaks Slump; Wins Hot Springs Open HOT SPRINGS, Ark. Mike Souchak’s decision that tits golf gamo was off and- he bettor go homo and do something about it paid off in tha $26,000 Hot Springs Open tournament Friday. The Grossinger, N. Y., pro came out of a slump with a 33-34-t67 to take a one stroke lead to the second round. The <7, put with his 09 of Thursday, gave hi~ a 136 through 90 holes of play . bird and' elghth-hls 26th and.NEEDED WORK ‘>6th—and Harvey Ruenn also 8ouchak » Macon 3 Chattanooga 6. Charlotte 1 Nashville 7, Lynchburg 4 BIRMINGHAM SOFTBALt _ W L . W Blffi 4 1 Jaycees 4 Yanks Beat McBride Yaz Paces Boston Win that tagged Minnesota with its fifth straight loss. Yastrzemski, a 23-yeiar-old student at Notre Dame in the off-his third season as Williams’ successor in left Reid No one has and Yaz is beginning to make Boston’s old batting master look Hke an oracle. Young Yaz, the. American League’sleading hitter, lashed an lj for Boston and is-offtohisfini opposite field home run in the top in-Uie league. year. He leads the league in hitting, .334, and doubles, 23, is second in hits, 164, has a very respectable 43 runs batted in and xissessos one of the best.arms of the 12th inning Friday night and powered the Red Sox past Minnesota 3-2 and into second place, The Chicago White Sox, 7-6 losers to Detroit In 12 innings, slipped back to third, one-half game behind Boston* and six behind the leading New York Yank-ees. ' BEAT NEFESIS The Yanks,, powered" by Yogi Berra’s three-run homer, solved Old nemesis Ken McBride and his Los Angeles Angel teammates 44 and "Baltimore beat Washington by the same score. Cleveland at Kansas City was rallied out. Yastrzemski, a left-handed hitter, sent hts eighth horrtfer of the \ season 'over the left centerfield .'fence, a drive of about 420 feet 'A Teams Eye A lively battle shapes in the final four weeks of the season for the fourth playoff spot in jthe city Class A baseball race. ★ it Hr.. At the conclusion of the 17-game regular season schedule, the loop’s first four teams will enter a playoff to determine what team will represent the city in the state playoffs. . Huron-Airway and till Clippers appear to have excellent chances for two of the playoff berths. Cranbrook, barring a slump, should also enter the post-season play. Fourth place Talbott Lumber, which has been hot and cold all summer: currently- ha«i a mw-game lead over LocalMST~BQt no team in the eight-member circuit has been eliminated from contention. M.G. Collision has been on a hot streak and could slip ahead of the union and lumbermen. Still with outside chances are the Barbers and the Oxford Merchants, The latter two Ire the seventh and eight-place teams in the loop but have shown sufficient improvement lately (a cause trouble for thdse higher up in the closing weeks of the season. The loop will resume action with a. doubleheader tomorrow night.beginning at 6 p.m. oh the Jaycee No. 2 diamond. The Barbers will play Talbott in the opener, and Cranbrook will meet Local 594 at 8:30 p.m. LOOP* STATISTICS The only significant change in this week’s statistics is in the pitching department where the Clippers Bob Readier has as-sumed the leadership. Readier in 34 innings has pro- -Optimist Posts 'D' Waterford Victory The Optimist Lakers built up an early lead to defeat-Frostop Drive In, 10-2, in Waterford Township Class D action yester-Jay.: ’ . . Leonard Cote was the winning pitcher. Pistons Slate Area Clinic Did U No U Can Buy I a brand new 1 1963 OLDSMOBILE 2,588 Dollvorad $ $ $ $ $ and 4 4,999 A Brandi Hpw 1963 CADILLAC wiok’eham I '"jjjjj 0,1 I Grant Ole oCormlok Bal 82 77 The Tigers, continue to plod. There is a stirring in the Lions den. No, the pistons aren’t blissing either. Although it is summer, basket-in the sportUght. ............. '■ The Pistons, Detroit’s entry in the National Basketball Assoda-tion, in conjunction with the Waterford Township Recreation Department, will have a basketball clinic Aug, l at Kettering High School. The session, will begin at 3 p. m. and anyone may at* , tend. There will be no admission charge. The Pistons’ new head coach, Charley Wolf, will conduct the ilinic. Scout Earl Lloyd will assist him and several team members will participate. The pistons will have a summer camp July 29-Aug. 3 at Cobo Hall that will Include veterans Ray Scott, Don Ohl, Bob Ferry and Walter Dukes, plus top draft choices Eddie Miles and Jerry Smith. Several of these plus other camp attendees are expected to appear at the Kettering clinic. Following the 90-minute discussion of fundamentals and othen, phases of the game, players from the audienup will be invited to scrimmage against the professionals. 1 3 3.93 '■ ;»8t Mlil 123 137 23 77 8 I, lilllol* With 87 77 33 56 3 I Wnovan Clo 114 111 13 43 6 ,5 JtMolph WM 101 103 18 38 4 8 , Duckworth WM 76 68 41 43 3 7 Jtcnhouse W*ih 87 90 45 46 3 9 Ltimon Clo 70 TO 36 78 5 3 4.36 , A«ulrr« D«t 114 128 30 68 7 8 4.86 i Delook B*l 30 5t 15 33 1 5 ''Ml Dot, 81 83 7 40 4 5 8 Dot 43 14 14 M 4 4 ......... , ..All KC 74 98 36 64 4 3 4.75 I runwr cm 14 - ft u M i f i,r Bowsfleltl KC 74 II 36 48 4 8 0 | llillord NY 67 71 20 31 1 I I,: ducted a 4-1 record and a 1.02 -ruh-average. Cranbrook’ Larry Demrick is second with a |i record and a 1.16 ERA. jpelix Brooks, the Clippers’ rightfielder, maintained his leadership in the hitting race. Brooks has a .480 average and is tied for the .lead in rbi’s with Mel Taylor of Local 594, both having 14 for the year. - ★ , * '★ CLASS A STATISTICS Team Illtftlnir 7 TODAY’S AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit ......... 36 48 .420 Mtfc Washington ...30 58 ,341 24V2 FRIDAY’S RESULTS Baltimore 4, Washington 3. night Cleveland at Kansas City, night, post- Huron-Alrway ...... TaFbott* Lumber'' i I ] Local 804 ......... Barbers ..... Cranbrook ....’... M. O. Collision ... Oxford Merchants . Individual Hitting this season and the Orioles’ eighth victory in their last nine games: He singled in Boston’s first run in the first inning against the Twins and won it for ace relief man Dick Radatz with his homer. Radatz came on after the Red Sox had' tied' it with a run in the ninth, worked himself ~out of a bases-loaded jam in the bottom of the inping, then set the Twins down without major difficulty. It was his 10th victory against a single loss. ,',3 Berra’s sixth inning homer off McBride brought the Yanks from behind, but they needed a ninth inning run to make it stand up, when the Angels rallied on Charley Dees’ two-run double. X It.was the Angels’ 10th straight loss and the first time McBride had lost to th$ Yankees since Aug. 7, 1961. \ John Orsino belief a two-run homer in the top of the ninth, driving in the-tying and winning runs fer-scrraklnr M ■ which trailed 3-2 going into the inning. It was Baltimore’s eighth straight triumph over Washington Spencer Upset Softball Victim MERCURY-t SCOTT MOTORS BOATS • Giastron • G & W • Traveler - e Scott • Aluma Craft • Winner BOAT TRAILERS • Alloy • Sterling Camping Trailers CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES 63 E* Walton FE 8-4402 Apache Camp Trailers Opon All Day Sunday Bill Coller 1 Mila I. of Lapeer on M-21 Berkeley ....... Taylor (Local 8.. Estes (Cranbrookl Lovell (Local &U4) Ollmore (Talbott) Honchcll (ClIpBers Detroit a< West -Side. Lanes threw-an axe into Spencer Floor’s clinching the Waterford Township Class B soft-ball title last night by dowhing the floor covering nine, 3-2. ★ ★ ★ 1 A solo home run by Ted Whar-ry in the sixth inning proved to be Spencer’s downfall. The loss j® snapped a six-game win streak. -4471 Winning pitcher Harold Kunkle .408 had a no-hitter going into the J °ne Coming On 0 Sold Domrlck (Cranbrook 4^£’^*dL«*^!hOm#r by Bob Casteel. er-Vera’-i 6? Kunkel received strong field-wagner (H-Ai i„g 8upport from Phil Felice Levy (Cranbrook) who made several difficult * ★ ★ I plays at third base to keep .. ...Jk (Cranbroik)0""......'.63 Spencer’s in the hole. ‘---- J^LamptorV (m. o.)to In the other Township softball Angolea gjgjjjjg, Cranbrook) . 21 contest last night, ROCkCOte chioago (Hor-1." * scored six times in the eight in- 8u„d.Tla^k'?,8C®VtLELumb.r nN *9 beat Huron Bowl 11-5. p m. cranbrook vs, Local 504 6:30 p m. George Adams was the winning °n *y“-uron' rwty • 0 ’ pitcher, Dave Wells took the loss - IDMook 241) at Washington boM'p.mrOkjwSRjarohanJ1va?^Upp«rs(despite his big bat that produced * Wednesday—Local 894 vs. m. a., coi- three hits for the losers. "■Hi” r*d»y--’Oxford Merchants va. Huron- NO games are Scheduled for llPINTERSlI BOATLAMDl Detroit «. Chicago c. iz innings, nigni , Boston 3. Minnesota 2. 12 Innings, mght. pci New York 4, Lok Angeles 3. night’ ,'Bao bert 8-5) Cleveland (Krauea v-o ana ..,... - — Kansas City (Segul 4-3 and Drabow- Boston' (Heffner X-0) at Minnesota (8tanga'„.?(§fdV' # Sea-Ray-MFG - # Penn-Yan-Steury # Johnson Mtrs. # Hull-Guard Trailers Complete Marine ACCESSORIES FA 4-0924 1310 N. Opdyke Rd. (M-24) (Duckworth 3-7) SUNDAY’S GAMES Boston at Los Angeles. 2 New York el Kansas Cltv. 2 Cleveland Baltimore at CMcago, 2 - waehlngton, 2 NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost P Angeles Now York ............333 2412 FRIDAY’S RESULTS Loe Angelee 6, New York 9. night Philadelphia 7. San Francisco 8, PlUeburgh 3. Houston 1, night St. Louis 5, Milwaukee 3, night Chioago 4, Cincinnati 1. night TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles (Miller 3-4) at Net Chleaji (Tsilouria . Milwaukee (Spuht ii-----TIB 7-4) SUNDAY'S HMWMRRp-Nfu Yerk. Loe Angelas at Philadelphia, San Franciso« at Pittsburgh Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 3 Chicago at St. Louis. 2 I11 j FI 3-7021 280 S. Saginaw) Advoncii Got* OoMlruf 11.11 Us,10 Reserved 3.00 I 1.10. ' 41.00 POLAND VS. AUSTRIA Pollen Champions of Vienna . ., At 0. of D. Stadium MeNiekole al Llvemtia -a Detroli Sunday. July II at TiHO P.M. Miles of Unused Transportation 141960 DCO-MOBs FIVE 1959 Will Paint Your B-42 MACK Color QAS TRACTORS TEN 1958 TEN 1960 H-67T MACK DIAMOND T DIESEL Model 931 SLEEPERS Shepon WE TRADE AND FfNANCE INTERNATIONAL . HARVESTER COMPANY 591S West Warren, Detroit 10 Telephone 898 0579 TWENTY-frQUK THE POyflAC PRESS. SATURDAY, -JULY‘18, 1968 Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas BERNARD K. ERIKSON Service for former Pontiac res* ident Bernard K. Erikson, 35, of 201 Roberta Dr., Liverpool, N Y. will be at 10 a.ni. Monday in the Frazier Funeral Home, 1217 N. Sabina, Syracuse, N.Y, His body will be brought here to the Oakland" Hills Memorial Gardens Cemetery for burial at 2T>.ttt. Tuesday. Mr.* Erikson, a research en-gineer wi fh General Electric, Corp. in Syracuse, died yesterday er a long illness. Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. 'Eugene Dean of Pontiac; Mrs. William A. Dale of Milling-ton; Mrs. Harvey Breeding of Union Lake, and Mrs. George Sloan of Southfield; a son, John E. of North Carolina; and three sisters. MRS. GEORGE W. PEEL Service for Mrs. George W. (Florence) Peetr 39, of 7302 N; ^* Shaker, Waterford township, will after a brietillnejs. He attended |be .held 2 p.mj^onday at^ ^^*a l^threan Church. ” Surviving besides his wife, Alice are two sons Douglas and Gregory, both at home; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Erikson of Pontiac; a sister Mrs. Joseph Charter of Pontiac; and two brothers, Ralph and Robert, both of Pontiac. MRS. ILA KAYGA ■Service for Mrs. Ila Kayga, 70, of 185 W. Howard, will be 11 a.m. Monday at the Voorhees-Sip-le Chapel. Burial will follow in West Deerfield Cemetery, Deerfield Township, Lapeer County, with a graveside service at 1:30 p.m. Mrs. Kayga died yesterday aft-Chapel. Burial will follow at Oak Hill Cemetery* Mr. Roberts dies Thursday after along illness. Surviving art a daughter, Mrs. Edna MaUey of Pontiac; three sons, Perry F. of Pontiac, Frank •Shappelle of Manistee and Jim Shappelle of Lapeer; 13 grandchildren; 26 great .grandchildren; and 3 great great grandchildren. CHARLES M. DULMAGE its Funeral Home. She died Friday. * Surviving beside her husband are five children, Gary, Elwin, Doyle, Dorris Ann and .Jackie, all at home. Also surviving are four sisters, Mrs. Albert Bust and Mrs. Gene Felmy both of Pontiac; Mrs. Felton Agee of Milford and Mrs. Robert Greyv of Grand Rapids; and three brothers, Albert Hem-street of Pontiac and Wayne and Jack Hemstreet, both of California. GEORGE W. ROBERTS -Service for George W. Roberts, 91, of 19 FJddis, will be 1 p.m. Mpnday at the Voorhees-Siple Sjjarks-Griffib FUNERAL BOMB 46 Williams St. Phone FE 1*5841 Remember Your Loved Ones With o MARKER OR MONUMENT REVERE, Mass. (UP!) - A mother and her two children were killed early today in a fire that swept their tenement house here. Charles M. Dulmage, 94, of 151 Grace, will be. 10 a.m. Monday ?nQ_"ei, In OwTPhdev F»r»»rnl burifl in PerryMounL ParkCem-etery, Pontiac. 4 Mr. Dulmage died yesterday after a brief illness. Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Ida Axford of Rochester; and three brothers. ROBERT S. MARTIN KEEGO HARBOR — Former resident Robert S. Martin, 79, died Thursday in Los Angeles, Calif. * , • .. 77 Surviving are his wife Hattie; and a son, Robert Jr. , of Los Kepnes, 46, her son Stephen, 11, [jaftd her daughter Naomi, 7, were NIGHT SHADOWS; Children claim more Night f haa cartoon*. My grandfather showed me a wolf, lamb, hone, end elephant. Shadow! are without aubitanee and ately there are intelligent human beingi - ----- demons and malignant terrible part of thanhadow la people believe It, become dlaturbed, unbalanced. A woman project* an ogre of Illness, receive* sympathy, feed* on it, project* greater monsters, receive more sympathy; her harbor of aecurlty I* (hadowt. A man wa* named an official of hi* Company, Hi* ego wa* inflated to finlattlc proportion*; hit projected shadows cover every wall of hi* existence, they are monilen of »uper.|mportanee-until the light- -Mure* I* extinguished. He'll thrlnk to normal and grow, or go. Imagination create* all the wonder* of *ei*nc* gnd It al*o create* *ome mighty frightening moniler*.. We create Night Shadow*, interpret them i clean fun, something to laugh at or a* a turtle for amaalng progrett. , M. E. SII’LE VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 268 North Perry Street Phono FE 2*8278 i. L. VOOIUUUSS >g point MRS. CORRELL McCABE LAPEER—Service for Mrs. Correll (Emma) McCabe, 52, of 2520 St. Helen, St. Helen, will be 1:30 p.m. Monday at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Lapeer. Mrs. McCabe died yesterday after a short illness. The McCabes formerly owned grocery stores in Lapeer and Imlay City. Surviving besides her husi are a daughter. ’inckney; three grandchil-dren; three brothers; and three sisters. MRS. OSCAR MELBYE KEEGO HARBOR-Mrs. Oscar (Etta M.) Melbye, 71, of 2416 Cass Lake Rd., will be Monday I at 2 p.m. at. the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home. Burial will be in Pine Lake Cemetery. Mrs. Melbye died Thursday. Surviving besides her husband are one daughter, Mrs. Lavon Anderson of Topeka, Kan.; One son. Clyde E. Gibbs of Keego Harbor; two sisters, Mrs. John Bennett of Pontiac and Mrs. Mary Moorman of Detroit; one brother; four grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. MRS. HARRY D. SPICKLER OXFORD — Service for Mrs. Harry D. (Sylvia R.)’ Spickler, 75, of 637 Mechanic, will be Monday at 1 p.m. .at the Arbaugh-Pearce Funeral Home, Salem, Ohio. Burial will be in Hope Cem-•etery Their German shepherd dog was killed. ..... Three other families escaped from the flaming building in their nightclothes. The fire, which started in a nearby vacant tenement, spread rapidly to three adjoining buildings, all occupied. Only one of the structures, that occupied by the Kepnes family,J was destroyed. One fireman was reported injured. PASSERSBY ENTERED Authorities said passersby discovered the Rallies about 12:30 a.m. (Pontiac time) and entered the building to arouse the occupants. They awoke third-floor residents Mr. and Mrk. Janies McNulty, who fled with their three children, and told police they also knocked at the door Of the body may viewed at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home until, 9 tonight. Mrs. Spickler died yesterday following a onei-week Illness. Surviving are one son, Wilbur K. of Oxford; two brothers; and ie sister. v ROLLIN I. WICKERSHAM WEST BLOOMFIELD - Serv* ice for Rollin I. Wickersham, 71, of ,7195 W. Maple, will be 1:30 p. m. Tuesday at the Richardson* Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Burial will follow in Pine Lake Cemetery. Mr. Wickersham died this morning after a short illness. He was a retired real estate broker. Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth; his mother, Mrs. Laura Wickersham, of Walled Lake; two daughters; five grandchildren four brothers; and five sisters. . Call Donelson-Johns First While vacationing or traveling away from home and faced with the necessity of making funeral arrangements —- CALL DONELSON-JOHNS FIRST! # Only by notifying your home-town fundral director, with whom , you have faith, can you be assured of thlTiShdce you desire-Only in this way can you be confident that the many details will be handled by a competent organization. Only in this way can you save money, time and heartaches. Call Donelsoh-Johns first — wherever you may be. ITalking O, Our 3W FEdkral■ 4*4911 J)onelson.-Aokns FUNERAL HOME 859 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC 3 Die as Fire Hits Tenement Mother, Two Children Perish in Apartment Don't Look Directly Sun Eclipse LANSING (UPI)—state Health Commissioner Dr. Albert E. Hen-stfo today warned Michigan residents not to look directly at the sun during the partial eclipse next Saturday (July 20). Tito rays from the sun can cauie permanent eye damage unless speciarcauiion is used in said. "Although most of the direct light is gone during an eclipse, dangerous invisible infra-red rays are , still present," he said. W -fir' . it "And contrary to popular belief, such, devices as sun glasses, exposed photographic flbn, smoke glass, and even welder's goggles will not protect the eyes from these rays." * • ] The ray* can literally burn a hole in the retina of me eye in the same manner that sunlight passing through a magnifying glass can burn a hole In a piece of paper, he said. Heustis urged parents to supervise children closely during the time of the eclipse to see that this warning Is carried out. Service Scheduled for Businessman Service for businessman Eugene F. Lawson, 83, of 42 Clark, will be held at I p.m. Monday at the Voorhees-Siple Chapel, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. He died yesterday. * * * Mr. Lawson operated a market on East Huron Street prior to going into the real estate business. Surviving are his wife, ^Carrie; three sisters, Mrs. Clay E. Win-of Detroit, Mrs. William Birkhahn of Royil Oak, told Mrs. Ads Barton of Pontiaa; and a brother, Frank of Union Lake. swered, “Okay, I'm coming.” They, said they also heard a dog barring .in the apartment. ★ - ★ Fire Chief Alfred Long said the victims apparently suffocated, Before firemen could reach the apartment, however. The bodies also had been burned. Detroiters Want 'Bill of Rights' in Suburb Area DETROIT (UPI) - A Detroit homeowners group opposing a proposed open Occupancy ordinance wants suburban officials to adopt a “bill of rights" for property holders. ★ ★. J Millard Uitz,-i Man ancTGirl Injured Area Mishaps A Union Lake man and a 6* year-old Orion Township girl were Injured in area accidents last night. “ — James A. Sfopbiehir 26, of 8447 Arils, is In serious condi-tion at Pontiac General Hospital with chest Injuries end lacerations of the forehead. Ih the same hospital with severe lacerations of the scalp Is Pauline Michaels of 1083 Eftwn. “Damage to the eye woiild not She is in satisfactory condition, be felt while looking at the s(m it it It - becausfr-th**-4nfrajed ravs burn Stephens was injured at 9:45 J - ------- • p:Tn: when his car left Carroll take^Rjoad^ereTtends-atCool-ey La keRiHRMfiS&ifflmerce Township. " - ~ [jn Witnesses told sheriff’s deputies that Stephens was traveling at a high rate of speed when he wen^. through a stop sign. Pauline was injured when her bicycle was struck by a motor scooter on Jamm Road shortly after 7 p.m. ____ ■ ★ The driver of the scooter, Clare Buxton, 18, of 3265 Brockhurst, Walled Like, was ticketed by sheriffs deputies for driving without an operator’s license. ich is insensitive Heustis*; cited several ways to enjoy the event, although most are fairly complicated. The simplest Is to observe the reflection of the eclipse in a swimming pool, plastic Wading pool, or old-fashioned wash tub with at least 12 inches of water in it to absorb the infra-red rays, he said. *... ~ ----------* ... “The eclipse will last just two hours and 17 minutes from beginning to end, but part of your sight could be eclipsed forever if you are not careful," Heustis warned. Hayloft Collapses, Injuring 2 Workers Two youth* .working for the summer at a Springfield Town- er of the Greater Detroit Home Owners Association, said he and association cochairman Thomas L. Poindexter would make their plea today. They planned to attend a meeting of the Vigilance Tax Committee in the Warren City Hall this morning. The committee is composed of suburban officials and was organized to fight the Detroit income tax which imposed a one per cent levy on anyone who worked in Detroit even if he lived in suburb. ♦ ★ ★ Lutz said he would give. the. suburban mayors a copy of the “bill of rights" which 44,060 Detroiters signed. It was submitted to the Detroit Common Council yesterday. Newipaper Head Dies MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) -Harry Johnston Grant, 81, board chairman of the Milwaukee Journal Co., who helped build his newspaper into one of the nation’s finest, died last night of complications resulting from hemostatic pneumonia. One Hit, but Other Ran KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Ralph Anthony, a police patrol-man, chased down a hit-and-run [driver yesterday and returned to I the* scene of the collision with the culprit. He found that the other motorist had fled. tor the oonitNotlon and com* yesterday afternoon when an over loaded hayfoft collapsed, causing the entire barn to fall. ★ ★ , * Richard Trassell, 16, of 4277 Meyers, Waterford Township, and Danny Gray, 14, of, 8325 Eaton, Springfield Township, were loading hay in the barn. Both -were treated at toe Clarkston Village Clinic and released. Both the Springfield and In- City Man Held for Inyestigatipn of Knife Assault . _jld Pontiac man Is being held for "Investigation nf felonious assault In the knifing of a neighbor last night. James L. Chambers, 565 Montana, however, has denied stabbing Jessie Williams, 38, of 599 Montana, during an argument in front of Chamber’s home. Williams, who, suffered an ab- Botn tne opringneia ana in- domen wound ,8 in satisfactory1 dependence Township fire de- conditlon at Pontli>c General partments answered the 2:30 p.m. Hospital, emergency call at the Holiday -Farm on Big Lake Road. City Fireman Suffers Burns A, PontiacJire fighter suffered second-degree burns on his arms Pontiac police, said the fight began when Williams was told by Chambers to stop blocking bis driveway with his car. No weapon was found at the scene by police. Cuba Blames Yankees for Ecuador Revolution MIAMI, Fla. fAPLsrr Havana house fire at 28 Esther. Treated and released from Pontiac General Hospital was Je-ome Lauinger, 29, of 411 E. Montcalm. „★ ■ ★ ★ Cause of the 7:30 p.m. fire, which started In a four-car garage and, spread to the home of Grace Munson, has not been* determined. No vehicles were In the garage. Total damage to the garage and house is estimated at $1,300. An adjacent home at 22 Esther was damaged slightly from the blaze. States of instigating the military coup which ousted President Carlos Julio Arosemana of Ecuador. A commentator cilled on Epa-dorenas to wage “open fight without truce against the puppet military junta which has taken power and also against its instigator, Yankee Imperialism," Crown King, Queen of Weight Losers LONG BEACH, Calif, (UPI) - SAN JOSE, CaW. (UPI) - El-wyn V. Starratt, accused of "wilfully delaying a peace officer in |jgSm.,- Bloomfloid AM.T2? .1**- Rcnlaci bias oniw&oHon end completion oi m to ih* Hickory Orov* Ble- pirlvKiS ™*-,—............................... m . . . ■■ ■ S?; bIowhJw tti1,* woman who lost 143Ve pounds the performance of his duties, '"open*1/ iwreStf fleid""lifo a year and a man who shedlgot a pat on the back Instead of propotele wm be received ** 78'/* pounds have been crowned * date in court yesterday from [queen and king of the fat |>eopIe Diet. Atty. Louis Bergna. Policeman Louis Murlslo, aid- s::: i iat the annual tOPS natlomil cim- 1n^eood^oondlFlOTl, i^hln1 ..... day* of (he openlni of bide, funSetf Perf5rm*«,c»r^oi{d lend Lebnr and M«t«ri*j Bond, etphjn the amount of I do-A of ih*oon|^*|i Jji* Oder. «(l* i Alta M. Baker of Los Angeles ■ Garner of La [;[ Puente, Calif., were crowned night before more than 3,-TOPS (take off pounds sen-the Long Beach Area*. Mrs. Baker’s doctors had warmed her “either to diet or die." She dropped from 297. HRIP '| Where she once wore a size 48 rt$i" bfnKii d,r8M- »h«J ntow "“p* out j»*j»i»i w «*i»« •nr informeii* of a 14 and sometimes even * 12> BBffVUMr ' wa Jim Garner, whose mother, Frances was a runnerup to Uto queen last year* now weight 201% pounds. ed by radar, stopped Starratt for speeding Wednesday night; Starratt quickly made up • cardboard sign with the words "radar ahead" and held It up for approaching motorists. Murlslo. curlom because traffic waa passing htm eo afowly, investigated and found SlarritT with the sign. He promptly arrested, Starratt on the “wilfully delaying" charge. ★ ♦ ♦ Bergna refusal, to (lie charges with tne comment, “we couldn’t •ep where It was a Violation of the taw. In fact, it might be the sign fulfilled our purppee by helping to afosw down traffic." Death Notices mass Sloan, and JwS JB. Kayfa, dear ■later of Mrs. Addle Boy. Hr* Llealo Morrill, and Mrs. .Nova Irwin, Funeral aorvloo will be Funaral Hem*._h y , LAWBON.JULY I}, 1M3. BUQENH F.. « Clark St.; as* IS; beloved huaband of Carrie Lawion, dear day. July ts at 3:00 a.m.- at the Voorhea*-8iple Chapel with the flelaUm. Interment » Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Mem fill II* •- -* *'*- Voorheea-SIple eorttMipL. •v. Theodor*i femeral* H&ne. MrL . Harbor; (Maar OTIVfl .... — Mr*. Lavon_ (Nanoy) Anderson, and cfyde ll. Olbb*, dear slater ™ (Edna) Eehnett. LBYE. JULY U, IMS, ®TTA Mil Caa* Lake Ed.. Koofo irbor: in 71; beloved wife Of icar Melbye. dear mother of If. Lavon (Nanoy) Anderar-_.,d Clyde ®. Gibb*, dear all of Mrs. J&n (Kdna) Sohnl b: M Wn*rny) Sfl vived by four irandchildrriiii a three u|nM)Mu|ibm. Fun' al loryioa will no bold Monday, " ily at ];M p.m. at tfia; C J. nihardt Funeral Horn a with Re v. MORRIS. JULY IS, IM3. JAMES L.. 1318. Tllden; Aye 64: Belovea nuaband of Dorothy V. Morrla; dear father of Mr*. Norman «, .Porter, Mr*. CaroF Stephenton and Ml** Judy C. Morn*, dear bjolh. er:,.of Mr*. Mary Flyglns, Mrs. Julli; Robinson. Mies Tre*o ^ and Collin*. Morris. Also survived by Four 4rKndchlidr*n. Recitation cur the Roearr win be Sunday at 6 P.M. at Donelaon-Johns Funeral Homo.. Funeral Sorvlcea will bo M^BonedlV (jhur*oh. ?Interment In Mt. Hope Comotory. .'Mr.Mor-rla will liejn state at the bonel-son-Johns Funeral Home Otter 7 pTm. Saturday. i Hu. JULY 11 IM3, FLOHBNO® liii 7303 N. Shakor; aeo wMo of Ooors* W. ww, Doyi*. .Dorrl* . Ann. and jackl* Pool, dear sister of Mr*. Albert (Marsaret) Bust. Mr*. Gene (Rp*emary) Felmy. Mrs. Felton tvincIWa) Agoo. Mre. Roh-ert (Joanne) Oroy, AlsmOrairn* and Jack. Hemstroot. Funeral service wilt bo held Monday. July 10 at 1:00 p.m, at the Coats Fu* neral Home' with the Bov. Robert -D, wmne officiating. Mre. Feel will 11* Jn state at the Coat* _Funerai Home. __ _____ __ ROBERT8.~JULY 13. 1043, OEOROB W„ 10 Flddls St.; an* Ol; dear father of Perry F; Roberta, Mr*. Edna Malley. Frank ' Shappelle end Jim Sh*pp*lt»i- also survived by 13 arandchldron, 36 (treat-nrantlehtldron. and ihro* .groat-araat-arandohtidron. Funeral service will be held Monday. July 16 at 1:00 p m. at the VoorhsM-SInfe Chanel With th* R#V. J. ®. Van Allan officiating. Mr, Robert* will UO In (tat* at ih* Voorheel-dtpt* Funeral Home. ____ __ Dear mother Of Wilbur_K. flolck-ler, dear lister. Of .Mr. Elijah Lelpper. Mr. Rotten_Lelppar and Mr*. Trestle Lans. Funeral eorv-Ice wlU be Monday July 16 at I p.m. at the Arbauch-Pearoe Fitneral Home. Ohio. Interment In Hose Cemetery, Salem,. Ohio. Mri; Spickler Will U* Ih, state at th* Donelton-Johns Funeral Home from 3 to3 0 p.m. Saturady, when •ho will b* taktn to the Arbeugh- , Peirce Funeral Home for service*. > SMMJfavr 11. mi. l«o'o!. 6961 roster Rd., Clarkston: A|e 06: Beloved husband nf ft. Evelyn Brooit. dear father of Mr*. Lonnie Presley, Elmer,' Ralph. Kenneth, and Clifford, ale" survived , by14 grandchildren and 16 Great-* grandchildren. Funeral eorvtcee will be Monday July ts at 3 P.M. at 8t. Steffens Church, Drayton Mr. Brook Will ..v Sharpe^Goyette Funeral WLMOTTjULV 13, 1163. WILUAM H., 8260 Private' Dr„ Lake t An-gelus; age 66; boTovod husband of Gladye Wlfmot. dear brother if Mre. Clayton Butior.. Funeral -YBbih*M Monday, July l------------- - 4pgr=-r Rev. Wilbur R. Bohutxe officiating. Interment In Whlta 'Chapel Cemetery. Jr ^ ‘ J J. ‘ Memo^aPfeini oibtJie’at.*M*rjf'»| In - The - Hills Bpieoopal church would be appreciated by 'Jh* _famify._ > -------’ Card of Thanks * ______________1 O EXPM88 MY SINCERE f LOVING MSMORY OF CLAR- . enoe D. Bergeron, who paeiod away 1 year ago today, J\ily 13, 1363. Often a lonely heartaohe And many a lonely tear; But' always beautiful memortee 1 eo de* y nla “get out of debt , with psymenta a* low aa 310.00 BUDGET SERVICE 16 W. Huron FE 4-036 OEf'dufof DEBT ON A pLAt you can afford. \ MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 703 Pontlao Slate Bank Bldg. FE 3-0*66 Pontlao'* oldeei and target! bucks el ***i|i«no* company._ ■ssslpts ISS?'' Dex A Diet tabiste. gimm*. Pay "Off Your Bill* — without n loan — Payment* low tl MO Wk Proleoi your Job and Credit Homo or ofiioo Appointment* City Adjustment Service 7l4 W, Huron ____FE 6-9261 • H^^H^j|,Jf3i-3163 urfo* O J. OODKARDT.FUNERAL HOME/ bleep Htibor. Ph, M3-o»Q0, DnAYTO^^CA^a H0MEOH 3-7787 D. E. PUrsley FUNERAL HOME Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME "PMinna for Fitutrsli"_ HUNTOON Voorhees-Siple -6 married man 1 nave a good ' Interview oall Jewel Tea^CoT 437-3360: A SEmT-REITOBD MAN to" WORK nlghl*. 6 p.m. to 13:30 a.m. th com laundry. Must be in good health and reliable .Apply 33 W. Ypailontt Bt. AGE NOR BEI’NO ABLE TO PLAY, Is not the most Important requisite in the prooetslng of thle well pay- nbltlon with the ownerehip model oar Will' place you oai enviable and well pay* ' ' vg fringa benefit* and inqulr* at once par- ing job i _ paid vacation. ,#B*IVg1TP^iELL’S pontlao — MUsfttBTORE ... YHE tVORLfJ ^ ____ ABK FOR MANAGER g, BaglnaW Bt. FE 3-7166 Above-Average Man S worth 111! weekly guarantee .ur special type roule^ work. 66 •nee or Investment^We^relm^Oli 33-43 AUTO PERIBNCE E DbaL-.. Chevrolet. Milford. ^ shop e^xperlonc*. acting CO.. ....... -i 7.3370. 1 gqodaPpricntick. _________3-1603 after 7, Blood Donors URGENTLY NEEDED 66 Rh Poilllve. 17 Rh Negative DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE 16 IQU* ___FE IN AND A, Jooii, ..r_, _____16 Dixie Hwy. coIXege STUDENTS' Openings for college student* who are looking for full time cummer employment. Brand tdenlllloutlon ana promotional division of large New York Jlrm (alary too per week. Call Mr. johmidt at 334-0389. Mon. through Frl. 0 a.m.-9 p.m. <5o5k WITH OltlL L EXPURi-enoe; must ba neat; fait; Pled . Piper. PE 1-6741. \ 6aB DRIVERS. STEADY AND PART time, day or nl(ht ahtfta, 101 W. DISPATCHER Must be experl'enoeri' in handling a large amount LTL trade, and know tho territory Within radius of 23 .miles and eapabln supervising night operation*. Exoolleht opportunity for right man. Reply to Pontlao Press,. Box 66. . ixVmilNdiD or tTl WiffT. Good wage*. Vacation with pay. Hoepltallgitlon. Apply at Big Boy Driva In. Telegraph and IkPIkllMrab wool i apply Mam Cleaner*, 44110 Ellis- IxpicRTiNafuTu^Aft'BTX^ man, exo. pay, ri i-oooo. IxTOil®CT6“W&fFLi1rXND brak* man, with own tool!, 373 - Orchard Lako. IxPifiSHcKb' nmrttYXrk. laleiPeople needed — for full time i»i» (weenYandgnm tit "*mx tnet or wiTir tofttnor Hrvleo tiul limtalldtion. Mini h»v« raforonmi. n.1’ PI»”"( c.,n<’* *• T*iw,ia emfmtBTMfETIHRBO'XV LA fH'C tt AWB“WaRTED , kUii)Tft biia Rooheiter Rd.. nyaf 13 Mil* Lathi only, * mull' have °Job jlmri # V 1 lfiiA Roohetter Rd. sin 13 Mil* Ma'n roii biiY dtHAkiMb Roufi) over 36, Aj^y Main Cuenneri, 4410 '‘SfSwwsra. and weekend*, eaperiene* or will- , lag to Jonrn, berunal ref*, req, TH1 till of inuitery elnnriard and ordinance >i«WAHrg''mff>i8irw''f:iiiT > ; . Pontlao Sport Osil ny ■1 ow’in:cxu»yWBTfXirn: needed for itaatai repair* on III AjmertHB rare, knowledge on : ‘Wmrm *3 Idvantigaoue, * Year qrotuia,. * teeny job, good u ' Wage* guaranteed for th* right men, Apply In pereen to Andy, 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 13,1933 TWENTY-FIVE H$l» Wanted MeIs sfm « fc 3® Wrfp WanHd 9 £SU ' train.‘C— P Mr. Sbfttain. I fif WWj. RECfiirmscRARSsi) VETERANS-and HIGH SCHOOL-GRADUATES Wftajga ^penlnji In outside asT K m SALESMEN:...BARN ' COMMISSION em^coidsol *hoplijSi U»«om**uS —Leads — rjH mivii. ii you MV* iMM UoinHd lit past 5 yr«. this ts a real opportunity to make a (Olid connection. Bone-(It Truit Lite, phone Detroit, .col- lect. briars*, Dfl Salesmen Montgomery Ward Plumbing and Heating -Building and Materials Hardware mm *»•«.- aapir "ontlao Mall iA'clWlits • i. .... .....I Immediately, Allard Contracting do,, Hudson, Mich,, ox 7-8370. “Wanted m > Saginaw. * in person irvica Dept. WANTED EXPERIENCE#'DRAFTS-man. Johnson and Anderson *— MOO Dixie Highway, Pontiao. WANfld: ‘-- A man who la Interested In making more money than he la now earn* lng, we oan now otter the right min an opportunity to go Into business (or himself without 'Investing p*r,on%i *nurv'*i Hatp Wanted F#mal« Dry Cleaning * , , Cleaners. 034 South Wood Birmingham, AUTOMOBILE MILLING BABY SITTER WANTED, I JMY .k reljnmo.. required, eau aft- --.*i«dltlonod shop. Holly- sa-s'ssl**a k - wiwi louowine, up a ■also muff Operator WAlHm apply In peraon, no sight work. •WOlltl A to I, 331-IMO. Holly-Beauty shop. BUSOtUa MAN AND WJF*. (NO children) living in one floor- home peraon Mullaney'e fine .foori. 2331 Opdyke. en«e; must bp neat; that; fled _f?per; fit a-6741. 24’^Bu^er Chief Drive-In, Telegraph department heads AND ASSISTANTS for sports wear and ready to ..... ?* to 40, Experienced only. Liberal hepatite, Apply in person. ALBERT'S' DENTAL ' ASSUTANT-itodifTKn. let, Drayton Plains area, hours 10-7 reply Pontiac Press, Box Qg. DEPENDABLE BABY SITTER TO live in.FE OAIU; iJoCtOR’B FAMILY NEEDS Experienced woman, Hve In, Thure. and alternate Bus. off, general housework, mother's helper, 0 children, pvt, room, TV, (W per week, Bloomfield HIBe; 334-MOB. WSSSY UOT ' WANfXD TO, live In; ears for 1, children; more for home than wages; fl 3-0003 be 10 years or older. Apply In person. DeLlsa's Ber and Restau-mat. 0010 N. Rochester Rd., Rc 1 EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, MUST be It years or older. Apply In person. DeLlea'e. Bar and Res-taurgnt., 0900 N. Rochester Rd. Rocnllter, I — EXPERIENCED BAR -waltreia, EM 3-0113, Unlc., _JBW IJiPERiBNC*6 WAITRESS,' GOOD starting pay. Apply 333 "'-legraph. EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER grill oook, day waltreeeea, per nent position, Raol'e Drive In. EXPERIENCED WAITRES8' WANT-ed, apply In person at Carter" Restaurant, 7000 Cooley Lake Rd Union Lefts. : ., , oiWl Bor counter, hfARKiNo k, apply Pox Dry Cleaners, W. Huron. Wanted FanMrtn 7 HELP POLIO PATIENT. LIVE tN, child welcome. MA 41172. XlTCHEN BiLf'for N It O HT t. —r Xornere Restaurant, corner of ton and Perry. Apply la per- folgg Hplp, Mels F»mali M Manager We have good ^ opportunity for t SALES OPPORTUNITY WITH SECURITY Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall MANa61mBNT OPPORTUNITY, local area, cultured women. Bxc. earnings, flexible hours, ear help-- ful. LI 4-2070, NURSES AIDES, EjtPlhlENCED tor all shifts, nursing hoir~ Rochester, ll per hr. ot 1-001 bales piirSon wanted 7 work liLjewelry department Yankee Store Mlrecle Mile - wr stating age, family, and quallflt tlon,.Np teen-r— ply to Pont! d apply. Re-ix IM. WAITRESS OVER 21, >OR SHORT order and dairy dept. PE 4-3303. WANTER 3 EXPERIENCED BAR and dining room waitresses. Town and Country Inn*. 1737 S, Tele- whi/e lady for general housework, exp., ref, MA (-0004. fSSSf TO LIVE Uf TO CARE 7~ a young children, fl 3-4704. WOMAN POR- dHILDRBN,' DAYS, MA Q-0047, pniy aftar 7 p.m, WOH1 ok irdukn with cab, eetatailehed Watktna Route, Walled Lake area. Make $2-13 por hour tor- , actual time worked. Apply “ ££SLJs ‘S‘ NEW;-AND USED 'olp MU' new houeee, very sale able in Waterford. Also building jobs and usaa nou see, experienced preferred or REOisTER NOW POR FREE REAL ESTATE CLASSES. Agee JKLio 56. Lake and sail euburBad areas. C. rruDEN'l's. OPPORTtrttlTY" . . cam $3 to I] per hour selling Wetklne quality product*. Apply 150 North ferry. 8:30 to l:3f - ■ Salat Htlp, Mala—Ftmale 8-A -Real estate ham# project In Pontiac, excellent opportunity. - Call Builder, 333-76»8- or WE 3-4200.____ day week. Must have private i REAL ESTATE -Experienced man or woman, new home proleot In Pontiac, oxoollent ASPHALT PA VINO., BONDED. Oeneratore-Jtojtulalore—Starters Batteries $5.95 Exchange 3377 W. Huron 303 Auburn FB 0-01M PE 8-1914 Building Modernisation t-CAB OARAOE, SgW Ind, On Doom, Concrete Floors Additions, Home Rolelng PAUL PRAVES CONTRACTINO Free Eetlmelee ____ OR 4-1011 ALUMINUM STORMS — SID1NO Awjilnge Poreh • petto • footing. C WEEDON CO,_______FE 4-3607 GUINN' ... CONSTRUCTION Idltlone, All types of- ot ........jrk.paiioe, driveways, em eldewelke. Terme, FE 8-0132, CARPENTER V IRK, NEW AND Cary! StvIbb SCHWKITifiER CARPET SERVICE. oleAnlng, ropairmi) laying, free estimate!, FE0-M33 or FB 3-7003, uwttacr wunn, ■ auu < (He estimate, OR >-8741, ALL RINDS CEMENT WORE. I sonsbls, Jeneen, 4M-I3M. C E H I N T CONTRACTOR, oeneed oily sidewalk bulldei terme. FE Hut. Poured Concrete Welle Rockwall Co. HE 7-1000 tr OR 30488 PrtiniMifaur tplleriiii, ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES. KNIT dreeVee. Itflntr ootft, OR 3-IIW. DRYWALL-REASONASLERATEt. frit tetimetie 1 PE H701 Itertrlwl Cawtrartari Floor Sanding CARL L. BILLS SR.. FLOOR Bunding, f8 3-8788, 858-8088. _ joHN WYLOH. FLOOR LaVWET, sanding and flnlenlng. 38 yeara experience. 133-0878. C^OTInyder, Floor LaVino; aandbig and finishing, f h o n t YE OARAOES BUILT TO SPBCIFICA- commercial HowfRST w88t>, niuwing; and tractor : mg ann in .-...J, OR 3-0808. merTon' BLui~sodTpick ttf> or delivered, IMl Crooke, Ul 3;4043. OttEDiNa^SObDiNO, BACK HC in^^bulldoelng. free eetbiiatee. 1 SOD - PE 4-7017 x-tuaUW oRitwfrfijeiprgob laid, •««dlna or, redressing old lawns, free estimates. Breeoe LendioepIni. FB L014I. FB. 8-3303, LAWN MOWER REPAIR, 18 YEARS exponents. 1 to 3 day eervloe, pick ur and delivery, OR 3-0187, GENERAL CONSTRUCTION I. A. ROUSE Aliynlto luminous oellinf, remod- ZT tiVKnVn% m Talbott lumber Qless ineteiied In doore and win- INSIDE AND OUT. WORK OUAR- anteed, FB 8-483* or FE 4-1198. r rT U^I?Alhi1M6 -- Exterior Speoialleta Ta® Porch Kncleiarei Olaee, screen, jaloulti. Pre 1(1 ,w, Montoalm fl Wallpaper Steamer floor eandcre. polisher., h i senders, furnace vaeuum ele. I •re, Oakland Fuel ft Print. 438 Orchard ‘ d Lake Ave.. FE 8- liquid chloride ot road oiling, ROAD OILiNdrWbMFf^RVicE ----JST. BAVBSTROUOH IN O general Maintenance - - - - felsviiion, Radio and Hi-Fi Servlet rebuilt and OUARANTEBD TV' (10.88 up. OMLW and Radio:" . 3480 Elisabeth Lake FB 4-4848 Tirei Trlmiwiwg Seryiw ACE TREB-BTUMP R E M OVAL Trimming. Get our bid. 883‘tOtO^ §ii,LT trIe miiJMiNG ''A¥B removal. Very low epei. FB 0-380" CUT ThWSXt TRElRiMQVXr General tree Service Jiy else lob. ‘ FE 0-1088 li40iNlfRbsB",,piB 8ERV1CE 8-001flor 888-8778, Trucking , ASH, TRASH AND CLEAN UP. fl 4-4383 hauLTno and ruBbIBh, naIie your pfioo. Any time, filhOOM. LktHT ihucKino Xnd hauLino. OR 3-8043 u5fr~XH5mvV^WMS3'. dirt, y ' TRUCKINO, 'eding and gra-I loading, fe TOPsbilL," FEAl BLAtig road gravel, and fill diri, Ek .. 'wplyrcjs Claeelfloatlon No. E TrucFi Trucks to Rent - TR&,Uk' and equipment Dump Trueae — seml-Trrilere ' Pontine Farm ami Industrial Tractor Co. 1 . 83 8. WOODWARD FE 4 0481 . . * .FB 4*144 oneu Pally Including gunaay Ughoiterlng BLOOM Fl Wall* ana winaow*. w**i, brik iMiUm tttfl. lTB . "Wanted Houiehdd Gaeds office waiting for ■*------ mature men a mall your resume to Be-JiM W. McNlohols. t. 38, Mich., for. a private interview. EVELYN EDWARDS Bookkeeper, Full Charge FEMALE PLACEMENT PRESTON WALKER SMITH 380 W. MAPLE. 8UITE 331 Birmlnriiara. Michigan 646-3(563 Midwest Employment 405 Pontiac Stats Bank Building Work Wanted Mak ALL AROUND DENTAL _____.... elan wants employment (n Birmingham or Pontiac area, full or part Tlme. 082-0418. MAN WANTS WORK Of .AnY _kmd.^e»n^after_8:30._ra 23, wmf vTaNted: CAkFBNTSTt WORK, additions, garage, eablnete, *** \Mm i, elding, rooting, etc. Work Wontod Female 12 .Eaa.a R YEAR OLD WANTS JOB A* receptionist, experienced. Reier-encee offered. FE 4-9808. BAB^SITljiNp" M^MjO^T H E it 'I GENERAL HOUSEWORK. ' RBFlIk-ence». Cell after 0:30 p m. 334-24)11. CHltb CARE '' WHiLE PARENTS work. 33.00 a day. Lieenied --- OR 3-0072. _________ lining by week. OR*- Building Servlcs—Supplies 13 A>1 BRICK, BLOCK, AND 1 nient work, also remodeling, Under pinning and bMement under present home. 031-3812. FREE KBTIMATKB ON CABINffe and kitchen remodeling; FB 6-6010 after g. ■ RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL building and remodeling. John, Cawee. MY 3-1138.____________ Business Service : 15 ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN repaired by factory trained . Oeneral Printing U Office Supply Co., 17 W, Lawrence 8t. CEidENT bftlVBWAY AND PaTiC work, FE 8-3487._______ . ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE- pelrlng anu rewbiduig, 210 B. Pike. Wione FB 4-3381. FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL WIR- 8TERI NO, ALL KINDS, H. Dressmaking & Tailoring 17 DRESSMAKING. TAILORING, AL-terations, lira. Bodeu. FB REMObEUNG, TAtioRUTO r workTEdna Warner, FE 8- Cenvn>e»a>nt—Nursing 21 A LOVELY HOME FOR ELDERLY Moving and Trucking 22 ___ i 2-3090, 818- ISH, TRASH. L I O H ¥ HAULING, itorm cleanup, ga: Con tree ti. FB 4*4368, Bob’e Van Service MOVING AND STORAGE REASONABLE RATES Padding—18 Years Expertenee ROBERT TOMPKINS OR 4-1813 HEiSLERA LIGHT TRUCKINO *14-1001. Painting & Decorating 23 nimMiRmu dlecounti for —... —.. A LADY INTERIOR™DECORATOfi. Peperlng^FE 0-0343 ,_ expert 'painting, decorat-. inx, paper removing. OR 8.7384. POR INTERIOR"" AND EXTERIOR ____deooretlng, 330-2088. ' Griffis brothers Commercial - Residential Painting, and decorating, OR 3----mason TTi6Mhs6"N-DibqitATdfl, Ir'jrl.ir-Exterlor. FB 4-«804. PAINTING, LOW PRICES, WORK guaranteed. 338-8I72, . PAINTINcT aND PAPER HANGING, rcaeonable ratee. FB 8.8402after 8. prfNTTSo": paperWoTwalI waehliig" Tupper, OR 3-7061. FaINTINCL PA piftlNO, REMOVAL. Washing. 073-2012. 0_Whlte R AND H~PAINTiNb AND DECO, rating. PE 8.0338. f»i#vlslan»Badla Servlca ^4 HAVE YOUR RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE r B YOU SHOP Trained Servtee Men. Reasonable prloee. Free Tube Testing. Montgomery Ward1 font! Transportation RIDERS, SERVICE MAN kBAVlNO for CkWoiyut, share expeneee, 338* 5 7?oAei!,C^.T/il-CT0^ Wanted Children to Board 28 MARMADUKE By Andersoh & Letmlng ENG I N BER RELOCATING TO South Pontiac area wishes nice 4 Or 3-bedroom home for occupency shout Aug It. Writs. Pontiao RESPONSIBLE—PARTYNEEDS 3 or 3-bedroom unf, bouse, wart lide.i let; floor and basemen! Wanted Real Estate BUI ML Jo**eraunliilom' MrTbftil*.- 028-0070. Real Valua-Reottfr^ Cash For Acreage WE HAVE BEEN OFFERED $1,000,000. NOTHING DOWN FROM VETERANS QUICK SALE WE CAN SBLL ' NO DOWN FAY-ment” to,a veteran. On a *10.- Sffiy «5rtWA»frtn‘li»*oSS only 882.84. pfue Taxes .and Incur-ance. This Is Ea.lerti money, avatiabl - •-—*-— actively ■MPraJI houeee accepted. Anywb«rr1n4^ County. Pub-no Law 384 of Mth Congress makes It permttelblb for you to take a reasonable dleoount for,this qulek, all-cash sale. Minimum loan about t7.00oTMM!mum about gis,-. ooo A few to no.000. CaU, write or see us for fast action. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR . FE 4-3531 848 OAKLAND OPEN I * We Need Your Home Have more buyer, then homes. For a QUICK BALE or TRADE, call us. We have e large experienced sales staff to serve you. WARDEN REALTY Wan.t-.lt..Sold _ CALL US and Stdrt Packing l Warren Stout, Realtor 77 N. Saginaw FE 8-8185 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE FOR FAST ACTION Selling or Trading Call . • W. H. BASS REALTOR FB 3-7210 BUILDER NEEDED All types of Roal Estate. If you have property to sell call us for help m disposing of it. No obll- WANT TO SELL? GIVE US A TRY WE NEED LISTINGS Tames A. Taylor, Realtor 77*3 Highland Rd. (M80) OR 8-0300 We Need Your Home Hav* more buyers then homes. For a QUICK SALE or TRADE, call ue. We have a largo experienced sales staff to serve you. WARDEN REALTY 3434 V 33-7187 Apartmenti-Furniihad 37 -BEDROOM EFFICIENCY APART-monte. Fully furnished. Perking. North-Northeast elds. FE 8-3381 or FB 4-4200, ANb ,-Roota backEL6r 'apartment, bn Pontlae Lake front. Bandy beach. 030 and 835 par week. AU utilities Included. 8180 Highland Road, Mrs. Llley. Phone 872-1190,_____’ 'ROOM ANlT'klTCHEN, 1 GIRL, aSSjiT LaAoH, hdAV, W*AR 3 b^to86ms7 kffElilN, lIvinO room, 1083 LeSelle. 870, I KOOMr AND BAfHT ?aiVATE entrance, 830 Baldwin, r^r«;~OTiiOT''wn i Child, Ad»mi lte»lty, FB A-406A, , .. 8 y.ere Lol?d,BLlo.med,CiiAo!S: | ritM**, M?6k|fWBrill FIB JZIAU—l,r t PA -t—x-x r"lo5iif^pS1^"f"T8BE55Ei, ilnpo.lt. FB 8-8502. ilS'SoM APAftT?TOfT^K‘W0RK-Ing couple. No ehlldren.. Bvery-thjiie furnished. 38 James, FB l VWTilc'rioo^AHSlJTii,r- Wqntod Household Goodi 29 AUCTION SAL* EVERY SATVR-dey jet Blue Bird Auction. We'll buy furniture, tools and appliance*. OH 3-8147 or MEIro.e 7-*188, CAiFpSIC FUkNfTTOi ANDAP-pTlanoee. 1 piece or nouseful, Pear-T 4-7081. — FH "t ...JWdK tf .Mb. ” a WantednjUciflaniOUS 30 USED OFFICE FURNITURE, files, portable to((gnm end qthOT bijxlne.e^ maohlnee. OR wOTfaSjMWBY sHfffUkfAl, 6r>k», 1 basement, gas heat, exeellent con-I dltlon, $350 down. FHA terms. BLAIR REAL ESTATE ROOMS. BATH, UPPER. STOVE, ioohlldren. 880 a month. 3-room; General Hospital .......... Seminole St., 845 a month. 3-room; stove-and refrigerator; Auburn Ave. 813 a week. Call bet. 3 and I; 332-8300: Paul ‘ Kern, ‘ AMBER PLATLEtS; IN AMBER Park Apartment Colony. Royal Oak hear Birmingham. Extraordinary accommodat'— lilone (or ccuimopolltane. ^ epmg cnamSere, modern contlnenta1 decor, amenities Include -Raat-Vah wop^bumlOT-hearthr^miio ter- ———— recee, charcoal gridiron, duet bine, — * | ..,_h6cL.._ 30 Oulnea. monthly. Ring Mme. Amber, 3494043 for translation -motor to model, 3007 Crooke Rd., Chester, ltf. vat* entramia and bath, tytaln Hour. 01 Norton PnlraRRK5'‘Stt lUMg^-^np^OTmklng; ...ilthlni ______________ tqDTOB TM'JTKiSHfS Wit llnjirpvt, entrance, FE 5.0484. .... H.qinfrr'uim6m'........... Beetrtlf’w' apt. 3 rooms and baiti Private erttranoe. Quiet, Secluded, tloilr Exit, >llh, Exetuelvel Mrs, Elwuod M8-S410, ■ . ■ FiksV Ii68f, ABULTI, Hiio Ftll5!IHIIB*T0*Alfdfcf(TsT"Ai,®f) aleeplhg' rooms, 3 hiunks from Seafsi Y> MST8, , bNiF'l^OT" Atirir"oKlT room furnished nntt, itloiim et. private entrsnoe end hath, near ituspllql. FE 8-0174. ieiit Storee^ A 80 X 130 AIR CUNDITTONBD store, with well llxturee, in Sylv Shopping Center, gylven, 083*33 STORE "FOR* RENT, NEAR FIS er Body, 30x80 or 40x80, 8130-82 Heat turn, Ideal lor restaurant grocery store. WB '3-1888,_____ Rent fliwIcE igaca 47 OFFICES, ORflUND FLQl narxlng. Heat furniehed. oak{and. Btrenahan, Hwy. OR 3-1333,___________ , _ Rsnt Butinsts Proparty 4li-A null,DIN 48 18 W, MAIN. NORTH. ML feel,!' multtpurpoae, , ,*WB6r mo,, FI 0-1488, T MoDERN SToitE BUILDING FOR “-dfuletore, Naxt to supermarket. Plenty perking. CaU OR 3-0808, FE 3-8383, lisnt Misctllanious tales Houidi 1 FLOURi I^BDROOM; 3 HEUnofilti litlMIH, IffdiVIk* l-BEDROOM WITH BASEMENT; CROTTY DR., YEAR ROUND 2 bedroom house at Oxbow Lake, newly painted, oak DRAYTON PLAINS, 3 BEDROOMS, screened porch, (Urn., 2-car garage, basement. ga« heat, lake privileges. 39.000. OR 3-1488. Bun. EM 3-8384, t $7,000 -*- open . | MONTH Excluding tax and insurance Immediate possession! north pert t Pontlae, almost n No Credit Check 3-Bedroom, Nearly5 New IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Elveryorie Qualifies * LAND CONTRACT TERMS. BPOTLITE BUILDING CO. lake privilege, FE 8-0300. i, i88M0*’ I 3-0140 or VI 3-0131. $9,500 ART MEYER ANYONE — HOMES ON LAND CON- ATTENTION! WE BUILD 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL FEATURING; built-in vanity. c< ---- galore, formica count lak floors, pleetered wa rtm, 19,595 on your lot. >del, call Hllter Realty. 1 full basement, acre of real country living, o 17,500' with (700 down. Newlngh Realtor. UL 2 3310, UL 2-3373. without basement. Bloomfield Highlands St. Hugo Paris Brick colonial, 2 bedrooms down 1 very large up, everything n<' and .modern, full basement, taohed garage, close to eehoo... churches., stores, etc, Vsoent. Price 817,300. Easy terms, RORABAUGH FE 2-8083 R Woodward et Square Lake R. BRENDEL , HEIGHTS. 10 M , LI BY^WN¥Rrr¥EDROOMS RANCH til plastered home with tU"* hen. Nicely landscaped 80x100 lot. Attached garage, maee heat. $3,800 cash. Write ___ itlao Press. Box 4, BY OWNER, 4 BEDROOM HOME — “Tddle Straits Lake. Oarage reezoway. Large lot. Call aft* ■m. EM 3*3888. . LEAN, CLEAN, CCEAN oom, lMi car garage, —J Carpelf —- ,m. Feni Move In I living room i I. Stairs HILLTOP REALTY 872.8934 t>UTCH COLONIAL,.....4' IIMooRsT Bloomfield Township, Approximately 2 acrea with lake privl-leges. Close to elementary school. i *•■,i >--*.- 19x24 L-ehAped - 3 full ................................ Uy room i opens Into paneled llv* mg room. 3,000 square feet plus full basement, Ity-oar garage, aiu-minum elding, storms and eoreene. Tennis court. Offered et 830,000, by owner ■ being treneferred. FE 3.3420, Cheaper than rent NORTH PONTIAC $69 Down NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME $55 Month Bxeludlnl laxei and Insurant)# Everyone qualifies t Widows, dl-vorcees, oven: peraon! with e credit problem." FEATURING Wall topsail carpeting . Furniture finished cabinets Heal value cWiLlAl'iS BpYj At^or CUSTOM BUILT HOMES' YOUR LOT "OR OURS >J WATTS REALTY . -JO M-18 at Bald Eagle Lu-„ UNION LAKE-FRONT. 3 POUMS 1 4.bedroom, 2-car garage. 822.300— terms. Immediate possession/ EM 3^703. HACKETT'REALTY. of ground. By spipU ‘apffiSem room ranch, gray briok, fe basement, screened, paved, ‘ softener, 90x140 foot lot, lag# Uegae, OR 3-3470. __________ WATERFRONT, , ( bodi WATERFORD—3-BEDROOM BRICK, „„ frill basement, gee beat, aluminum “root pubUo and paroohTal WILL SACRIFICE OUR ATTKa£-ttve 3 bedroom basement home, near Pontiac Northern High for Like c tVOtJLDYOU? ^separate z oearoome, aen, sepal oom, full baaement, i— ■e shaded rear screened 9,200, 0300 down. 172 mo. -. _ . tax and Ins. HAOSTROM REAL ESTATE, 4900 W. Huron,, OR 4-0308. Eves, call OR 3-0229. LAST CHANCE NO DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COST NO PAYMENT 1st MQ. , - With or Without Basement Model open dallyjfrom 1 p.m..-.- 'Cor. Kinney ana . Corwin. .1 block oait of Oakland, 3 blocks North of Montcalm. FE 8-27«a ■ 1 to » Ll 3-7337 Attar 7 p.m. WESTOWN REALTY 3-ROOM BUNOALOW, 8 LOTS, 2- to gas :e, glaai 6-ROOM HOUSE, IV. oatn, tuil baeement, otl heat, two-oar attached garage. Full half acre garden, fruit trees, and shrubbery, cement block tool shed. On paved street In walking distance of 3 schools. Phone 037- Attractive all modern full t lOokino for a good buy? A SPACIOUS HOME NEAR UNION LAKE, Beautifully landscaped lot. patla, 2-car garage. itrge family room with flreplaoe, large living room with fireplace, separate dining room, 3 large bedrooms. Immaculate condition. Only >14,960 or beet otter. Might accept trade. Call Mrs. Snyder, OR 3-1975, representing Clerk Reel Estate. — Shown by appointment, LOTUS' LAKE PRIVILEGES, 3-BED-'rl-level, attached garage, lri carpeting, trees, OR 3-0829. NEW HOMES Full Basements $00 ■ - DOWN $68 per mo. Visit 3-bedroom model on Carlisle off w, Kenrett, 3 blocks from Fisher Body, OPEN 10-8 DAILY BPOTLITE BLDO. CO, FB 4-0983 isk about our trado-lw plan tie at Stanley 0 59.69 A Month del Open drily and Sundays MICHAELS REALTY 168 WE 3-4300 UN 3-2382 “Jot gri'Sl* Q IIJx896Kri onti COLOnED, NEW FAMILY HOU M i'ke' ov.r paymeme of H B*»twoof Di.vedp.nent ^ iimUh 76t)8 OJliilotivlll* Rtl,, Clarks-1________________ —i. (129-ilMM. ' . Use Pres* Want Ads \toJ5ell, Buy. Rent pr Find a job* Low Cost Fait Acting • t COLORED ioevT,*!r (iSSr(iIHMASfoVrK It 0 II I -> l..blti* ........... OH TjtSSr REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2251 N. Opdyke Road FE 2-0138 FE 2-0187 Near 1-75... Lake Orion area. OVER 3 ACRES . . . excellent area and setting for this 3-bedroom ranch home. Screened porch, .also a glassed breeaeway to 2-cir garage, room In baeement. Fine gi eoU — an orchard. Say. there • ■ email bore* bam. Prloed right a 818,000, terms. City... --good neighborhood. 2 bedrooms. plastic til* bathToiniasl. 00,200 -with 3 per oent down to FHA mortgage. Price, Reduced Ranch bungalow and 3 ntee lots, corner location. 23 *" 13 Uvlng room. Two 13x12 bedrooms ana possibility of third. Double ga-rag*. Call for datalla, " ' Humphries FE 2-9236 answer call FE 2-3922 .. N. Telegraph Road -Member Multiple Lliitlna ganvlos Why Build? WARDEN / WILL BUILD ’ On your lot or oUrt Your plan or ours don McDonald Licensed Builder OR 3-3837 Associate NO MONEY DOWN Mixed Neighborhoods Land Contract, VA, FHA wr r, drapes copper plumbing. i wired, Ik Sore landscaped Many other 6-bedroom bomee to . OPEN. • MODEL HOME* 1 Customized to Suit YOUR NEEDS » r Ferry, N. ot Sllverbell. LADD'S, INC 3839 Lapeer Rd._ (Perry M2 fe 3-9291 or dn 3.1231 altar 11 open LAND CONTRACT WE MAVl BItVKRAL |, 3, AND 4-BEDROOM HOMM—Wi WOUM3 LIKE YOU TO SEE AND MAKE US AN OFFER ON- THESE ARE IN NICE LOCATIONS -VOU C‘ I HOME OWNER WITH MONTHLY PAYMENTS CHBAFIR THAN RENT - OUR FRIENDLY SALESMAN„ WAVL EE MORE I THAN OlMt TO TAKE YQO JON A OUIDjiD TOUR /-- HOUSE HU^HOr WRIGHT ■ - 813 Oakland Av< lead Avenue 3iM TWENTY-SIX ,« '■• (^Kv,r’W v^^-t . 2 y^| :vi-M7' Kv'l/S '\ mm*ty AWNING SHOP ... MICHIGAN i Sales, Inc. VALUABLE DISTRIBUTORSHIP \TOinroTuv A ; gift srtopp ;j CONTACT PARTRIDGE BUCKNER' FINANCE COMPANY BORROW^UP0 TO $500 Oct]25“ouR Signature AUTO or FyRNITURE OAKLAND 0/ I.OAN COMPA LOANS TEAGUE F 202 N. MAI! ROCHESTER ROMEO 214 E., ST. CLAIR V'.’ 1030 Dixie Highway OR 4-0411 Open 7 days a week MARINE INSURANCE 62.00 PER 6100 and up. Liability $10— I $10. Hansen Agency: FE MASTERCRAFT....BOAT TRAILER. aood condition. PE 5-1614. U2 Wontsd Cors-Trucks - 101 ” $2^ MORE For that/nlgh grade used ear. aee us, before you sell. H. J. Van WelL. 4940 Dixie Highway. Phone OR- Msed Auto-Truck Parts 102 1993 CHEVY 6 New and Used Trucks 10£ 1936 CHEVY TRUCK. lVi TON CHAS-8lS. '46 6 cyl. eng ne, 879. 6892 Coolldge, Troy. 1983 CHEVY 6 CYLINDER, V/i panel. 6173. 6892 Coolldge. Tro] 1996 ' CHEVY PICKUP. *350. 4373, Address QO Otenwood. ---1999 ^-TON CMC. *600' • OPDYKE MOTOR SALES HUTCH IN SON, SALES 3939-BALDWiN RD. PE 3-2741______ PE 6-0037 New and Used Caff 1*57 BUICK SUPER equipped. Oood running Best olfer. QA 8-2490; - — - FULLY1 AUTHORIZED DEALER. FOR JEEP-......... TRUCKS . -WAGONS' ,rAll Wdels OnDisplay— See Us Today! BILL SPENCE' Rambler-Jeep . 6673 Dixie Hwy. at M-l* CLARK8TQN MA 8-9*61 1962 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, LIK1 ' new, low mileage, Full powet one owner.: *2.699. "BRIGHT SPOT'’ — JEROME - ---... Orchard Lake at Cans— CADILLAC - SEDAN DeVILLK all'power. lMWacan *twt-strari .^-One-OWtiefT »30. PE 2-4144, 1 I ..--HOMER'Hrr.HT - MOTORS. INC. Chevrolet. Pontiac . Bulck OXFORD ' ^ '' OA JH 1937 CII1CVY :’-DOOR. '36, OLDS B 1954 CHEVY 2-DOOR, 6 CYLINDER. standard. *125. 6892 Coolldge, Troy. 1956 CHEVY 2-txJOR. 8150 AS IS. PE 2-1*16. 1965 CHEVY V-8 AUTOMATIC. 195t> CHEVY 2-DOOR. DELRaJy. UL 2-4496 1997 CHEVROLET. 6 CYLINDE1 ............PE 5-6304 lew nnd Used Cuni 106 NEW CAR TRADES - Not repossessed cars that . have been neglected 90 to 75 care in stock at all limes Priced from 696 to 8L600 *[ Liquidation Lot 189 Oakland at Sanderson . 'inrMgai ' Prlce to suit__y* Eg 5^278. , ■ .________ - riSF^POSS" V-i CON VERTfflLiF: 6176. OR $-9628. mini FORD, CONVERTIBLE,. GOOD _ji«sr-4eprnti»7‘SeTfvToe mag's oar. —- jaffiM FORD. 1997 RETRACTIBl-E, OOOD. - condltloh- 6MS24L JI -1 1937 FORD 2-DOOR HARDTOP, NEW tires, eXc. condition.' radio, heat- er, *498. 994 Frankltn Rd.____ 1957 FORD 2-DOOR, RADIOTRBATI7 ER, AUTO. TRANSMISSION, WHITE SIDEWAXiL-TIRE8. ABSO* Fold, MI 4-7999. - 1957 FORD WAGON. RUNS OOOD. body good. >145. FB 9-9393.______ 1957 FORD 2-DOOR' HARDTOP, "’-'rlane 500, radio and heater, pow-steering.^ Ireland white, low eajEReOMf: FEROU80N Rochester FORD Dealer OL 1-9711 brakes, radio. heat< new paint, excelent. 1999 FAIRLANE 500. , whitewalls 126-2344. 4 DOOR VS JEROME FER&U80N-Rochester FORD Dealer ‘ /OL 1-0711 1956 FORDFAIRLANE 500, J-DOOR. Interceptor V8 engine, autor>*,“> transmission, radio, beater. — 6-6122 af‘— * 1957 CHEVY STATION WAOON, V8, | 1958 FORD WAOON, REAL h I "BRIGHT 1958 Chevrolet . Blscayne 4 door, 6 ' cylinder, standard transmission, turtone green. *695v Van Camp Chevrolet SPOT'-' JEEP "Your Authorised Dealer” OLIVER BUICK and JEEP FB 2-9101 ________ 1947 *350. PEARLMAN Motors, 756 Oakland Ave, JEEP PANEL. 2 - WHEEL STOiVLOOK—SAV E atmtomfRydrodyne tremboards i L,arson-Duo-ChctekFeathCrcraft v™ ________________IEVINRUDE MOTORS and TRAILERS'^ 14-FOOT ALUMINUM BOAT Sylvan Pontoon Floats MA.-2-9421 1 " Alum and Wood docks 14-FOOT LAP8TRAKE. 29 HORSE- Orumman, Old Town Canoe . power motor. Reas, OL 1-9988. ■ "Your Evlnrude pealer 14 - fo6t,, i8 horse with con- Harrington Boat \\ o trols and trailer, 6350. 687-4624. liana s Telegraph‘Rd. 332-8033 14 FOOT PLYWOOD RUNABOUT. "n * - - n n motor, ejqp. starter, treile C 5-04021 4015 Oak Knot • 1963 CHEVY 2-Ton Fleetside Pickup HEATER 2 SPEED WASHERS DIRECTIONAL SIONAtS Elizabeth Lake._____________ S'- FOOT^LAPSTRAKE. ^HORSE- j - WOo!%-1477*rll>< >nd Wlnd>hltl11' to' FOOT FIBEROLA8, EXTRAS, ISFOiOT PABSX~BbAT. 36.HP 1 • Mercury motor Electric etarttng. radio and windshield. In perfect condition _EM 3-0247. _ n'-FOOT FIBERClLAS. 75' H P. EV-! I Inrude; Alas trailer: manv-wteaer^-—tnehidtiig" ^rAdlo^ all In excellent 15 POOT~~WOLVERINE MOLDED i mahogany, upholstery. New Ta " lor top. lights, hardware, pli many extras. 60 H P. Scott ele plus generator, 2 tanks, TesNi trailer. 2950. FE 4-4171___ 15 "FOOT BOAT. MOTOR AND ^TRADIN^DAY N iar springs PINTER'S . I --BOAT 12tND-OF-BAROAllifl2-— 11370 jgjaudiUt^-eMarr-Fg 4^0024 J TERRA MARINA .-HOUSE BOATS CARSON’S BOATS WE TRADE 123080 Telegraph al 9 Mil ioOMIS BOATS _LECTRIC WIPERST HEAVY duty rear am ALL TAXES $158 Down $12.95 Per*Week vMattlicw s-llargreave \ Clievyland \ll Oakland Ays*-- 1959 CHEVY WAOON, FIRST $700 JEROME FERGUSON , Rochester FORD Dealer BEATTIE "YoOr FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIOHT .. 01^ 3-1291__ 1959 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE _ 4-e«peedP>E34-6Ml af&r””* 1959^"CHEVROLET STATION” ON. RADIO. HEATER. Auto. TRANSMISSION. WHITE—-S4PB--WALL-JWES^ABSOUITELY NO --—MiJnEY DOWN. PAYMENT8 OF *59 Ford. 6'cylinder, Kirfg Auto Sales 118 S. Saginaw________FE 8-0402 1958 FORD, 6, 8TICK PE 4-0603________ 1050 P6HD 8LWB -eOUPE, EAlBi lane 500. real good shape, radio ^SLTKPI.U^ MOtORS FE 8-4036 UPEBIOR RAMBLER Ntw aiwi Uggd Curg 1069 FORD COUNT* wagon, auto * ““ ’ CARS. 677 8 MY MtflT W'"tS good SEDAN s USED ORION. SIDEWALL TOtBST AUTO. TRANS-MISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO .MONEY DOWN. PAYMENTS OF 184.75 PER MO. See Mr. Parks at Harold iMS-.EQRD STATION WAOON 6 ( an and°wU?ttral|fenPE ^56*9. FORD^ OALAXIE-TOW-MIEE^ -Age; good meohu $890. MI 6-0213, call 1080 FORD 2 DOOR, V-8, AUTO-matlc, *406 lull-jartea-^-wttlr —notlvlug down. . LUCKY.AUTGSALH& "Pontiac's Discount lot” l03 S. Saginaw ___FE 4-221 1959 Ford BEATTIE. lYoUr. FORD DEALER Since 1921 AT THE STOPLIOHT ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD OR 3-1291 Ntw and Um4 Con 1M Ntw tad Ustd Ctrs 10* ruSptei, Fj 1963 FALCON $1,806. FB 3-2J Ormond Road. Davlsburg. EXCELtENT CONDITION, Thunderbtrd, 61,400. Oan be aeen . Sanor'a standard Bervlee, Elisabeth Uke Rd. and MOO 00 Tues.. Prl . and Sat., alter B;30. On ■on. and Mon, between 10-4. !R PAYMENTS ON 10*3 ' wagon. FE 6-M34. »»*» PONTIAO BONtWVUL* ■7u^a^ssr"‘,TS5a Little doll. *140* full price with nothing- down.-.. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Fontlac'S Dlacount lot" ^~ FE 4-$ai4 -43.A*0r«BiBl»re ____„„„ , steering and brakea. MY 2-onin. 1420-g.. Lapeer Rd„ Lake Orion: COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK Oft orchard I S Thomas. Pontiac. braok. Blocmfleld °u,.:- I960 PONTTAU ^CATAUNA l-DOO*, ^8*9^46!” “ 1896 PONTIAC, 4-DOOR, HARDTOP. A-i ihape. full power. 2*78. "BRIGHT SPOT" . .JEROME -Orchard Lake at Cass -EE-80488 -- 1990 PONTIAO, 3 DOOR. AUTO-matlc transmission, one owner, 4702-full-price. - LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount lot" . 103 B.* Saginaw FB 4-3214 ' station wagon hubs. Yours for only (100 JOHN McAULlFFK FORD I960 FORD 0. STICK. BLACK, 2-door. Whitewalls. *720, FE 4-2081. i960 FORD FAIRLANK ' 200, 2 door, whitewalls, radio, -heater, V-8, original. owner, open for SUPERIOR RAMBLER i957 MERCURY CONVERTIBLE, beautiful condition, runs like nc~ full price *495. SURPLUS MOTORS 171 a. Saginaw 81. FB 0-4036 • 1026 MERCURY MONTEREY, ^2-DB. clean, sacrIfIce/’OR 3-3472. MERCURY MONTEREY. 2- LUTELY NO MONEY DOWN — PAYMENTS OF 226.75 PER MO. See Mr. Parks at Harold Turner Ford. MI 4-7500. FORD FAIRLANB SPORT c Lk I 18-FOOT CRI8 CRAFT; MAHOO-any; utility; 105 HP. with trail-er 682-1473. 18 FOOT HENRY WALT MAZUREK'S LAKE & SEA MARINA Pontiac's Largest Display New - ehria-Craft-speed-boat .17' *364*_ Thompson __“ _ _______________ Owens and ChrKt-Craft flbergias $795 \Su a»t? MANY USED RI08 a I TTV^ TMC1TD AVrtT ’63 EVINRUDE-PANCO TRAILERS) AUIU lNbUKAaAtr. 8. Boulevard at Satflnaw r*" J Wanted Cors-Truckt A BETTER DEAL _____Junk cars and true EVJN. Pick 1959 FORD WAOON, REAL NICE | ,rBRIGHT SPOT" , JIC ROME. Orchard Lake at Cass ['._8-0488_____ OLDSMOBiLE. AUTOMATIC. '■'BRIGHT , SPOT" JEROMEa Orcluird Lako at Cass F„K 8-0488 "ford btation wXoon. .....ck.^ red^^ and .UCKY AUTO SALES full convertible lop and trailer. many accessories. 682-0974._ I',-FOOT HIOHLINER, 86'' BEAM, canvas .top, tilt trailer. 75 Horse, power Mercury .Engine, 6850. FE 8-6484, 12 to .2.- i-FOOT 3-INCH ORADY-WH1TB JYEK OF JUN* CARS _______OH 3-2936. ALWAYS BUYING AND PaViNO | MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS ASK FOR BERN1E AT- BIRMINGHAM - I CHRY8LER-PLYMOUTH UN DOLLA JUNK CARS JUNK CARS 24-FOOT* BOAT FOR ’bALE mF00|‘CHRfi-CifAFT CRUl^ER “ 0~H(^^F6WER~JOHi^iSON JAVE 30-H P JOHNSON; *1958 JOHNBpN " MC i ABO We tarry a Auto Sales 1076 Maklwin Ave. hleld - Curved or flat 535-5900 Specialising In cuMom tYr We wilrfuy your M^iiiodel lock of pIstHic sheets. car! We pay moie. X , Ics Co. EM 3-6460 Prop dollar pa i it’ ____OL 1-0668 BOA1. MOTOR AND tfRAILft fuUjr equipped. UL 2-1353. _ boatTrailer. ALMOST NEW. i HdlBTB—DOCKf MERCURY-SCOTT WEST BEND MOTORS INBQARD~OUT DRIVES “1 SERVICE ALL MAKES 3AMPT1U JCEBSORIE t TERMS CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES «2 E Walton * to 0_FB 6- , feU^HANA^iS— 12- alum. Koala—8116. 18' flbergias “*6. 16* flberglss—1728. New.— 'cants.-ge ralltrs I 6309. . Elgin 71. oanvas and trailer: i 496; eon.lder trade OL. 1-001 fcMIUa'- CRAFT SKI ROAT. horsepower. Ilka new 6476, 6 . ■pDtWr~ Tiki nIWTcaEL Toiii Balonian Fi l-7161. Wrren in Doubt Ute Fait Act in(j Press Want Ada driven, as good as new In —- 62.222 for qulok sale. . . . state eoon. Pnone OR 3-1701,________________ jgHJEOto—OAfcAXMr 5W, BUR-gundy hardtop, power steering and brakee, automat'- — neater, plus many e„ .. ^Heage.pvt^owner^OioqiSto^ SEE THB~i'DBl*BNDABLB8” KESSLER7^ 1 «»A 8-1400 or OA e-ii)D«c i95r1idLb3lil&i!LE WAOON, RED and White, full power. $1,399. "BRIGHT ""SPOT JKROME Orchard Lake at Cass 1 PE 80488 COMETO 1 PATTERSON CHEVROLET For a real good deal. 1000 S. Woodward Ave.- Birmingham ___Ml 4-2733 AUGUST SPECIALS IN JULY! 060 PONTIAC Catalina 4-door hardtop, Hydramatlc. radio, heatar. Power steering and brakes, white- HXOYDS BUYING i Good Clean Cars , 202.1 Dixie Hwy. :! M & M ■ MOTOR SALES i . . ... -More Money- 3.1 FOR SHARP LATE MODELS , BOUT-STATE MARKETS >• 2527 DIXIE 1 MANSl'lI GLENN'S Clean Used Ca JEROME "Bright Spot" Ellsworth AUTO SALES I lion, br.l offer—flllOAfUft:- • 6277 DI«l« Hwy « » ^ 1L.Lm*—WI117V i iririn CONDlf t 'ifowu in.■„ in, j _ . J“:l ..hr..„e°^l|ac ^ ‘“"WK Nfkb”AND WILL l*AY~ | TOP DOLLAR Foil Cl,FAN LATH MODELS BIO OUT STATE MARKET PATTERSON Averiil's whitewalls. Low down payir Haupt Pontiac Open Monday Tuesday a; Thursday until 0 p.m. One Mile North of U.8. 10 oi OLIVER —-BUICK-'::'" "Where Quality Counts" HASKINS Vacation ; Specials : I960 Plymouth 4-door wagon. *ai say-mUiTon; Beautiful (olid black finish, UR Mom*. p; •yiut HASKINS Chevrolet-01d3 "Your Crossroads to Mvlngi" 1963 UNCOLN CONTINENTAL 4-door. VH. Crulse-O-Matlc, full power. sir conditioning, Llneoln Vice president'! ear, Uke new. JEROME PEROUBON -Rochester FORD Dealer OL L97lS FOR WHAT WE 1 best used car^. SUBURBAN , OLDS 4*0337. Ml OLDSMOBILK HME perfect, green, 6392. FORD7 hardtop, full "power, II Oakland Ave, FE 8-4079 Niw mi pblriraAC STATION WAOON, very clean, 6970. OR 3-6274. I960 BONNEVILLE SPORT COUPE. Wlthovft a doubt flits Is one of the, ^.^li'cradD^ equipped. in$jddin^p°WBf price »L943.H _ ! SUPERIOR RAMBLER 220 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-9421 i960 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, real nice car, power steering and brakes, automatic. 61,692. "BRIGHT SPOT" 1961 PONTIAC CATALINA C vertlble. metallic green, whttew Immaculate condition. Taka i payments, EM 3-69g4. .Pontiac ; Retail Store 65 Mt. Clemens St. - FE 1961 'tkMPiBT BPORTB Wn, See, SHELTONPontiuc-Buick Rochester, Mich. : OL 1-8133 1962 TEMPEST LBMANB CONVERT- ibie 4-sneed, white, lot* of cxtrac. beautiful, call William WhUflald ai FE 2-7041. »1013- ' )62 TEMPEST LeM gvSSSb,c%di{L“jf|»3B; »i?,^^agT78iTOr... im ^OjTIAC^CAT^INAr miles. MA 4-3011 or MA <-41M. 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-vertlble. dark blue with white top. low mileage, pvt. owner. 12,99*. OR 4-1943. RAMBLERS . 19M NABH-RAMBLBR 6325. Fl 2-7681. riuti over paymbnYb. iioi Rambler ' Classic Wagon. FI •- -6769. COME VISIT RUSS JOHNSON’S top, 61.600. FE 0-8796. 1962 PONTIAC. IMMACULATE CON-dltton. 348 tri-power, 4-speed. Ven-1 tura Interior. 9,000 miles. 62,472. In-(crested parlies only. Call FB 0-6048 ; after 6 p.m. ' » r — 1958 Chevrolet Wagon . $1098 . 1861 RAmblqr Wagon $1398 1039 Rambler Wagon | 2*3 1956 Pontiac 4-Dpor 1 105 mo-Ramblcr American * 6*3 1926 Bulck 2-Door ..*190 mac Tempest T.M.n. flgys 1961 Tempest *1405 1*87 Mercury 4-door $ 193 * • 19*1 Anglia i 795 105* Rambler American S BBS 1*56 Ford 3-DoOr 6 103, 1036 Dodge Wagon $ 242 1860 Ford 4-door *1208 1061 Tempeat wagon *1485 '055 prmtm 4-D-rcr ,T- ,. i, *-406— ■■ DON'T BUY BEFORE YOU TRY - BIRMLNUHA”M" RAMBLER <66 S. WOODWARD MI 6*3900 WEEK END SPECIAL 1959 CHEVROLET Bel Air Parkwood Wagon Hai. radio and heater, VS engine with automatic transmission, sparkling Jet black and haa heat-er and directional signals : J:r$949-^ Matthews-Hargreaves 631 0akland.Avf. ‘ FE” 4-4547 ‘ 1962 Comet .... 11603 1961 Ramb'er Super Wagon ... 61395 1063 Corvalr 31892 1960 Valiant i 809 1080 Ford Plek-un i 193 102* Pontine Catalina *1205 1001 Bonneville Convertible ... 62203 1*2* Pontiac $ 003 1950 Rambler Super 8 895 ..RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac-Rambfer Dealer M24 at th# stoplight. Lake Orion - MY 3,6*66 1059 OLDS SUPER 86, InV. 3f.’o(foOWaotuar miles.” giofis LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac’s Discount lot" 1*3 8. Saginaw FE. 4-22Ki 1934 PLYMOUTH STotK, OOOD ] body, needs new Interior — 11001 Or' best otter. Between 0 and 0. j 062-4017. 1963 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR. NE'W tires, good running condition, cheap.M1 6-3280._______________ 1963” PLYMOUTH FURY, hardtop, cxo„ condition. I DOOR MA 8- - Will. Deliver New 1963 Plymouth, heater, was., era, variable speed wipers. Freight ant) all federal taxee. This I—i a compact. 61,963. R ikR MOTORS Imperial — Chrysler I Plymouth — Valiant 1 724 Oakland_____' FE 4-3821 1955 PONTIAC, OOOD i’llAN8POR-1 tatlon. beet offer. FB 3-3387. 1096 PONTIAC 3-DOOR HARDTOP tm OR 4-0945 1927 PONTIAC 4-DOOR HARD-! top; power steering and brakes, continental kit In baok. 20 6. Pad- 957 PONTIACii t HARDTOP.1 1967' PONTIAC WAOON, POWER Marvel Motors WAVE OH ft IW AND USED CARS AT WILSON, PONTIAC s CADILLAC Have you been denied the privilege of buying a car rec6r Hardtop. Full equipment Including ^jj*r**' "Jeering. ' Now $1275. 4-Door Redan, > Now $795 , Chevrolet Ford. Now $1975_ “—Y96TTMPAXA 4-Door Hardtop, Red, beautiful Interior. 0-oynnder, automatic, Car la Ilk* new. WAS 63110 Now $1985 , 1959 IMPALA . 3-Door Hardtop. I^cyllndor, *uto-matio. power sMaring, Sharp and ciOMi, - ' ■. WAS *1365 Now $1185 • 1959, PARKWOOD Wagon. ' l-oyllndtr, , automatic, blue amt , white, Bsautllul lhi,- Now $1175 1 1961 FAIRLANB. 3-Dobr. 6-oyllnder, white, beautiful blu* Interior. One owner, WAS *1283 ^Now4H7S- 1960 STARI.INER 3-Door Hardtop, Luggaga tan. beautiful malohlng Interior. Loaded with extr*r WAS 11406 Now $1285, . I960 FORb ’ A u tom a tie, radio, htatar. Clean *• a pin. , , WAS 11003 Now $895 1959 RANCH-WAGON. EOOutlttil Condition , WAS 61085 Now $795 Many more in stock to’choose from. Com? in now and m?kc your selection! Credit no problem , DODGE INC. . 211 S. fiag|flaw iijt. " '• , . FE 8-4541 “It pays to bqy you^ used car from a new car «• ■; dealer," 2 year GW Warranty, 1' • .* - TWR .PnWTTAr. PHWSS SATTTfmAV. JltTT.Y 1R. 1Qfi3 TWENTY-NINE ' —wp Show- of the Week. (9) News, Weather, Sports, Golf Tip 10:30 (2) What’s My Line > (7) ABC News Reports (9) Telescope UAW Faulty Generator Factor in Crash of Jet Killing 7 WILLOW GROVE, Pa. (AP)-A faulty generator was a factor in the jet fighter crash last Sunday that killed seven persons enjoying a family picnic, a Navy officer says. Capt. A. C. Waldman Jr., commander of the Willow drove Naval Air Station, made the statement at a meeting Thursday night of the Liaison Committee of Horsham Township, a citizens’ group formed to maintain-contact with; the naval base, which is in the townsjiip. Waldman said the generator failure was one reason the pilot was unable to control the plane and ejected himself. He said a board of investigation would detail the entire cause of the crash when it has completed its task. MONDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) Meditations 0:20 (2) On the Farm Front 0:28 (2) News ’ 0:30 (2) Spectrum 7:00 (2) News (4) Today (7) Funews 7:05 (2) Fun Parade 7:30 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo 8:30 (7) Big Show 8:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round. 9:00 (2) December Bride (4) Living (?) Movie: “For the Love of Mary.” (1948). Edmond O’Brien, Deanna Durbin. (9) Gene Autry 9:30 (2) To Tell'the Truth /". 9:55 (2) Editorial 10:00 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When (9) Robin. Hood 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Colof) Play Your Hunch (9) Movie: “Father Takes a Walk.” Paul Graetz. 10:45 (7) News 11:00 (2). McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jack La Lanne 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (7) Seven Keys MONDAY AFTERNOON } (2) Love of Life ' (4) (Color; First' Impres- (7) Ernie Ford (9) Hawkeye 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best -<9) Dr. Hudson’s Journal 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News i (2) Star Performance (41 Leave It to ihe Girla . , (7) General Hospital (9) Movie: “Mejj ^Against the Sky.” (1940). Kent Taylor. 1:30 (2) As the World Turns — (♦) Best of Groucho —ff^GirLTallr - — 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) People Will Talk * (7) Day in Court 2:25 (4) (7) News 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (?) Jane Wyman 3:00 (2) Star Playhouse (trLoretta Young (7) Queen for a Day 3:15 (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say! (7) Who Do You Trust? * (9) Vacation Time 4:00 (2) Secret Storm > (4) Match Game (?) American Bandstand 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Millionaire (4) Make Room for Daddy, • (7) Discovery ’63 (9) Mickey Mouse Club rrfS-d^HAmericanNewstend’ :00 (2) Sea Hunt (4) (Color), George Pierrot ; (7) Movie: “Courageons Mr...Penn.’! (1944). Deborah Kerr. ’ (9) Larry and Jerry 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:30 (2) Whirlybirds (56) What’s New 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends. 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall Clifford Ann Leads Tourney Miss Creed One Up in Sight Golf Open Security in Germany ExpectsShake-Up BONN, Germany (AP)-West Germany’s top-secret Gehlen intelligence service may be in for a shakeup. The government press chief, Karl-Guenther von Haase, said Friday the trial of three Gehlen agents accused as Soviet spies "would have consequences” for the further work of the intelligence service. There have been reports that the organization would be merged With West Germany’s two other intelligence services, the Military Counterintelligence Service and the Office for the Protection of the Constitution. ELLICOTT CITY, Md. (AP)— A slender rookie professional in quest of her first tournanjgpt^ls; tory took a one-stroke the second round of Sight Open today. Cliford Ann Creed of Alexandria, La., 98-pound daughter of a Louisiana-pro, toured th«L (L368-yard Turf ' Valley. Country Club course in par 70 Friday to pace a field of 30 pros and 30 amateurs. Miss Creed, who left her school teacher’s job to, take a fling on the Ladies’ Professional Golfers Association trail, led three other touring pros by one stroke in the 54-hole tourney. Tied at 71 were defending cham-pion Kathy Whitworth, Jal, N.M., Sandra Spuzich, another newcomer from Indianapolis, and Marlene Hagge of Delray Beach, Fla. Veteran pro Marilynn Smith and Gale Davis, who played in the tournament as an amateur last yearr tied tor fifth at* 72 strokes, one ahead of Betsy Rawls and Sandra Haynie. Mickey Wright, the leading money winner on the LPGA tour, was in ninth place but only four strokes off ihe pace With a 74. —Weekend Radio Programs- WJR(760) WX¥Z(1270) CKLW(BOO) WWJ(950)WCAR(1130) WRONG 400) WJBKQ SOO) WHFI-fM(94.7) l:M—WJR, Nt«i. Sporti CKLW, N«wti, Abnormal Hoalth WWJ. NjWt. Mnlnrtlim WXYZ, D. Frlnot WCAR, Bkoartlla WHFI, iiiiwjn, WWJ, Mon wxyz, Loo A ion WJBK, Joak. HUM WCAR, Don Loton fill—WPON, Bon Ji !, MgLoll Moodo 1i|f_WJR. kound llorr liM—WJR. Now* llll—WJR. Hollo III* Con liW—WJR. Rrood«or HiJOwwj. Idlorloohon WJR, Donoo Oro. ioioo ww.i. Toooonlnl II10*-WJR, Neva, Bporl* WWJ, Now* WCAR, N«w«, apnrto 11 lip—WJR,, Muolo ■ lWWW. Tomnre LO|BB WCAR, C RUNWAY MOKNINO HiWV-WJR. Form Unlit cklw, Album Tlmo WXYZ, Bludlo Bhowokao whpi, Sun. Boat Mualo WWJ. Mualo 'III Down IiM^-wjil. Orton Enrorai tot Thor Paonla 1 WXYZ, Amtiioon I CKI.W, Church of Air H few wiirt!' lion-w,)R, Form •rati Fjjn ixfb,"outal'mar. ttoliiilon ISS WXYZ, Dr, Bob Tlaroo CKLW, You- Worahlp Hoi WJRK, Mualo with Wordi Wl’ON. St. Jolm'a Clmrch a:*o—WJlt. Renfro Vallojr WJBK. Protaatont Hour OiH—WJR, Newa, Hart WWJ, Church Croaaroada WXYZ, Radio Blbia Cloaa OtO*~WJR, Rolanoa, Mualo WWJ. Ntwa, Mualo WXYZ, Morning Chora lo WJRK, Ncwa. Lltcrotiira WHFL' Nata.^pilo *** Oil*—WJR, Moaoow Boana, WXYZ, Plitrlnmii CKLW, Pnntloc Raptlat WJBK, Newa, Town Hall WPUNl Oe'i'rol Malhmllat WHFL Newa, Mualo limb-WJR. soil Lk, WXYZ, Chrlatlin In OKI W, Nawa, AiirI WJBK, From tba f BUKUAt AFTRRNOON WWJ, Tluer Baaaboir WXYZ, Newa, Dora I WPON, Dwluhl Wheel , Newa, Dave K I ISO-WJR, dlowa WWJ, Newa. Mi WCAR, Newa, L< limtlAT ICVKNfNO 1:00—WJR, Newa, Mualo WWJ—Newa, Chnmmor WXYZ. American Vlelta „ jDurope WJBK, Newa Aaaion. Detroit WCAR, Newa, Lnijofl e Pro WXYZ, Btboallon, Newi CKLW, Chrlalidaluhlan wpon, Youth Forum YitO—WJR. Newa, Itorr Hour wwj, Nowa, Monitor Convorimtlon Fleoo KLW, r People 1:30 WJR, Latin A mark. WPON, toophor'a Rtport Cord Pontlao Reporti WJBK, Human Bohovlor WfyN ( WJBK, WHFI, h of Hmph II of Week i America,: liSO-CKLW, Tht C WJBK, Name 1:00—WJR, Newa. Religion WJBK, Low, Newe, llcallh WCAR, BrotheiliM Hliuw i:i, Bob wuilott OilO-WJIL Cl WJIIK. Re lei io no*-WJR, Laymen'a Ifou WWJ. Concert Review WXYZ, Truth Herald, 0 CKLW, Hr. of iJeulelon , WJRK. Newa, Concert WHPI, Newe, Muelp , il'ilV mm- A, J ii; IMJiL WJR. t Light v.iviivv, an or Heaven WXYZ, leauee and Anawere MONDAY MORNINO 1:00—WJR, Agriculture _____ Form Neve WJBK, Newe, Avery WCAR, Newa, Jherldan WPON, Newe, Weelon WHFI, Rom, Mualo SKLW, Bye Opener, Dgylrt ioo-wjr, Newe, B. Or IM>~WJIt, Mualo Hall lOO—.WJR, Newe, Harris iSO—WJR, Lea Murray CKLW, Mary Memoir WXYZ, I a Van i Roll WPON. Newa. 1 WHFI, Newe, Burdick JFK Relaxes for Weekend HYANNIS POET, Mass. (AP)-President Kennedy^ shucking rail strike and civil righto problems for the weekend, relaxed today after getting in another quick five holes of golf soon after arrival. Within the hour after returning Friday to the family homestead on Nantucket Sound, Kennedy was on the links at the Hyannis Port Club for an abbreviated round of fcilf with Paul (Red) Fay, undersecretary of the Navy. Fay, a Kennedy pal during PT-boat days in the Pacific in World War II, was weekending bene with his family. don't toss (all on os ££0&>’Ui 1U«S Any of the TESA of Oakland County membert listed hero for your elootronie service needs. I Radio I TV FE 4-5191 149 W. Huron, Pontiac Cole’s TV OL 2*3800 2267 Auburn Road, Pontiac C A V TV, Inc. FE 4-1515 158.paklond, Pontiac UOfldOHRadio ATV FE 4-0136 730 VV. Kuroij. Ponliac. _. Oalby Radio I TV FE 4-9802 348 Lehigh, Pontiac Dobat TV i Radio OL 2-4122 104' W. University, Rochester Grogan's Radio I TV 025-2100 4730^Ctor)tJiao-Rood, Clorkston Hod's Radio A TV FE 4-5041 770 Orchard, lake Ave., Pontiac ' Johnson Radio A TV FE 8-4569 45 E. Wpllon, Pontiac Lakeland Elect. OR 3-0111 —"•yemfaghland good. Ppnlioc Lake Orion AppUanea MY 2-8111 158 Broadway, lake Orion ■©WybJiLilc Obel TV . FE 4-4046 3480 Elizabeth lake Road, Pontiac ......TV MY 3*1124 900 Joslyn Rd., Lakb Orion Walton Radio A TV FE 2-2281 "515 J. Walton, Pontiac WKO. Ino. Service D«pt. 20 W. Alley, Pontiac FE 3-1114 China Reds Withdraw From Posts in Ladakh FURNACES GAS OR OIL GAS CONVERSIONS NEW DELHI (AP) -The Chinese Communists have withdrawn! from the military post in Northwest Ladakh, about which India; made a strong protest last month,1 an Indian foreign qffice spokesman announced Friday. j The spokesman said the spot i T as four miles inside the so-called , line of actual control of 1959! J criunmijc which marked the high tide point!! „ •UFHJIUnt* ■ of the Chinese advance in last! ( itrv’oV* and iMppliV*tor” the disputed Himalayan border. TIRED OF PAINTING? Aluminum Siding for Avorago 5 or 6 Room Hous# ■Idzs / . CALI INSTALLED Based on 1000 Sq. Ft. CALL ' t MICHIGAN HEATING 88 N«wb«rry St. FE 2*2214 Site! idmrn, rr m aa MmMUm IWr!.' S Till ItTY m TIIE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 13. 1968 SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO no phone orders, G.0J).’s or deliveries * * except large item* Store His. 9:45-9 p.m. Mon.—Thorn. FrL and Sat. Shop From 9*45 to 5:30 Tuesday and Wednesday MONDAY ONLY Ass’td Styles, Men’s Gold Bond Cushioned Shoes pair Charge It Black or oak brown'dress oxfords in ass'td styles . sizes 7Ma-12D. All have,cushion insoles. Limit 2 pair. Men’s Cotton Slacks in Continental Style 2^6.6 MONDAY ONLY! Regularly at S3.99 Monday Special.--. Just s , “CHARGE IT” at Sea Continental cuffed styles with adjustable side button tabs in tan, charcoal, black or blue. Choose your easy, care cotton gabardines Monday, save $1.33. Waist sizes' 30 to 36. Mep's Sportswear, Sears Main Floor 45-Piece Set! Pastel Melmac Eg j Q99 k*!. 1 .■ Xt.' Charge It . Stellar diniierware in exciting, lat|ractive pastels;-four decorated colors included, i Brighten your table .. . with Melmac®. Lamp Dept., Second Floo MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! Sale! Master-Mixed Heavy Duty Porch and Floor Enamel 466 Jt1 gal. In-The-Curton! Boys’ and Girls’ Bikes 24-In. Size bikes. Boys’ bike is red; trim. Built to Iasi. Boys', Girlfe' 26-in. She Defies wear and weather, gr oil, acids; stays brilliantly glossy. Easy Jo apply,, dries overnight. Choos^ front nio< lead-free colors. Hurry in Monday . . . save $1.32! ... eu! 28.88 ■I.krtt hi," lake-Wilh Sporting Load** FerrySt. H(moment ... Charge It Reg. $1.79 Quart. 1.33 Faint Dept., Main Basement __Space Saverg OM Poles Add Storage Area to Baths , 4" , Charge It Bright rfironie-plated steel' poles with two large wire shelves, one plastic shelf. Includes two handy towel rings. Extends to 8-ft. 2-in. high ceilings. Save Monday! . ~ FiberglaS® Draperies Domestic Dept., Main Floor 099 pe. Charge It Easy-care fiberglas draperies ( . . . simply wash and hang; dry in just 7 minutes, never need ironing. Choose from three exquisite styles. 50x6j and 84s inch, Shop early Monday fop ‘ best selection. Save! Drapery Dept. , Main Floor MONDAY ONLY! Our ‘‘Best” Corlon TESSERA Inlaid Vinyl Reg. $£.49 Charge It Long-wearing, extra heavy vinyl. Smooth surface wipes clean. Clear cushion back adds underfoot com-Tart, quiets footstep*^ Flexible for easy instatlai-tion. Choice of 3 harmonizing colon. 6-ft. wide. - Float Covering, Second Floor cool your entire home . . . *59,95 Attic Fan NO MONEY DOWN SSEE Exhausts 7,800 cubic feet of air per minute. Vi-lLP—ntotor. V-helt drive. Wide, deep pitch aluminum blades move the air quietly. Tubular steel hrueing. ' 3«”, Keg. ft. 95 17.8« 36", Reg. 69.95 52.88' H Dept., Ferry St. Bsmt. 42". Beg. T4.95 57.88 MONDAY ONLY! ALLSTATE Heavy Duty Oil Filter Refills Reg. $1.59 77C Moat Cora -A I Charge It Better titan your original filter ... exceeds car manufacturer's specifications. Change every 4000 miles to keep grit, sludge from harming engine. Save Monday! 12.29 Screw-onType 1.66 Auto Accessories, Perry St. Basement MONDAY ONLY! SAVE *31.99 . Silvertone 19-inch > (overall diag.) Portable TVs Ca.y Payment Plan Built-in, 2-pole antenna for good reception in any room, Removable, tinted glass shield cuts glare.. Upfront controls. Sears. HadUvdi Tr mpl.; MulnFton MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! Save *60.95 Roomy Swivel Rockers with Soft Pillow Backs Frostless Refrigerators Regularly priced at $59,95 Leather-look vinyl cover! 38 with E|ig True Freezer 3-pc* Barbecue Sets in California Redwood 0,—r Wash Any Fabric in Kenmore Automatic Was at$319.93 Left Door Only Regularly at $19.99! 5-ft. table, 2 benches Regularly at $259.95! No Trade-In Required' NO MONJEY DOWN a Soft living sthrte/ here . . . in Sears handsome,, rocke with puffy polyfoam-filled, back and ,. „ . - . . , usliioii, Sagless spring Interior., Noiselessly Iwivels a complete circle, Color choice. Save $21.95 Monday! VSO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan V oii never defrost the refrigerator—fan-foredtr air slops frost before it starts! Tnic freezer keeps l(*2 * lbs. zero-safe. 13.3 cm. ft. capacity. Has magneilc doors,, butler idlest, Twin erispers. Save! Just say, "CHARGE IT” at Sears •Furniture Dept., Second Fhtpr Applint risper e Dept,, Septs Main Basement Ruggedly rustic and ideal for carefree outdoor dining. Rich redwood is weather-resistant and treated to rtftuin its rich color. Sturdily built with wide! leg spread. Nrtlsl hard ware. Save $5.11! NO MONEY DOWN on gears Easy Payment Plan 2-Speed, T-cyele Kenmore Automatic Washer launders rdenims, delicate* to wash wearables safpFy.4n** UK*itv. lint fills.s. . • htmllun* lh’iH,, Stu ouil Hoar finite wilier Mel. 12-lh. pepacIlyJM filter, Electric Dryer ,, ,'$ |^9 Ca* Dryer , V. t l# : Satisfaction guaranteed or yoiir money back” SEARS Downtown Pontiac Appliance Dept., Main' Hntemeut Phone FE 5-4171 rfT« i ip !l| , j1 i'3 \ \ I'M :^Sh. mm ‘Mm mi mi ir WmBFT- ONE COLOR THE PO^TEVie jPREsPe Tho Weather U.|l. -W*»ther kmi hrmit l ' Rainy ■ , 0 / r*f«. 2) PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, SATURDAY. JULY 13, 1963 —30 PAGES A Flap/Say Chinese LONDON (UPI) - The United States and Britain Jtoday were reported agreed to resist any Soviet attempt to drag out the nuclear test ban talks opening Monday in Moscow. Diplomatic sources said U..S. presidential envoy W. Averell Harriman and British Science Minister Lord Hailsham, beads of the Western delegations, have PRAYS FOR RAIN —' Comerce Township farmer Alfred1 Vaedle depends entirely on what he raised in his little truck garden to keep himself and his wife through the winter. His little road-side stand, usually bristling with activity this time of year, is quiet. His drought-smitten fields,'usually a cornucopia of vegetables at this tirtle of year, are relatively barren. Disagree on Damage Drought Hurts Farmer No one is more seriously affected by the month-long dry spell than the Oakland County 'farnier. Although the farnier welcomes dry weather around harvest time, his crops need rain to grow, and crops are his live* As the drought goes into its 33rd day, farmers are by means in agreement oii the d|m-age it has caused. Some it has hit hard; others , not quite so hard. Carlos Long, a Milford farmer, called the crops the worst he’s seep in 25 years for the. , time of year. The corn’arid oats are terrible, he declared. He said he got in one good harvest of hay, but doubted that he could get-in a second. With his pastures drying up and little hay to fall back on, this spells trouble, he said. Long termed the problem “really seri- director Lyle B. Abel agreed that Oakland County farmers can expect trouble if, the dry weather persists. . He cited the slow development of fruit, especially peaches, early apples and berries. irrigation—are finding their, vegetables tough and stringy. One reported ihat his potatoes were like, marbles. -Last year at this time, he had new potatoes five inches in' diameter, he said. Holly farmer Bob Barger agreed with Long that the dry weather had “dried up the crops to a Considerable degree.” However, he felt'that none of them were beyond hope. “It would be amazing the progress you’d see If a little rain were to come along,” he V said. Barghf warned that the danger poltit is close at . hand, though. “ With1 corn cibse to tasseling, we’d better get some‘rain pretty soon,’ he said. Cooperative Extension Service Because of the dry weather, grass has gone dormant, forcini farmers te use stored hay for fCed, he observed. However, the crop, most endangered by the drought is corn, he said: “If we don’t get rain soon, a short crop could' result.*’ Truck farmers throughout the county—especially those without Pulls Ou for US. Okay of Drug Use CHICAGO (UPI) - The most bitterly fought medical battle of the decade took a dramatic turn yesterday1 when the discoverer of Itreblozen withdrew his application for continued experimental, status of the drug. The move, in effect, meant at least a temporary halt in U. S,, Britain to Hit Ban Military Quiets Demonstrators High scources said the Allies are in full agreement on their approach to the talks- and are ready to plunge ihito full dress negotiations immediately. Nationa] Guardsmen End Maryland Terror By The Associated Press National Guardsmen marching along with main business thoroughfare in Cambridge, Md. — ironically named Race Street — signified a return to order Saturday in the terror-ridden town ,on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. - * • . State troopers were on duty in racially embattled Savannah, Ga., and units of the Georgia National Guard were ' alerted. But a tentative agreement for a biracial truce was reported. In Cambridge, where 4,000 No-grWs live on otte side of Race Street and 8,000 white persons on the'other, about 290 demonstrators started a march toward the wh|te section Friday1 night in defiance of a ban imposed under a modified version of martial law. WILLIAM H. WILMOT Local Lawyer Dies in Court Brig. Gen; George M.. Gelston Stepped out alone, held up his hand and stopped them. The general explained why he was there, removed his hat during a prayer, then asked the demonstrators to go back to their church. They did. 9 In Washington, supporters of In Washington, supporters of President Kennedy’s civil rights legislation challenged a southern Governor’s, claim that current Negro demonstrations are “largely communist inspired.” efforts to win federal approver* torndy for more than 30 years, of the controversial cancer drug* died Unexpectedly* iff a heart at- In Today's Press and put It on the market.. Dr. Stevah Durovic, a refugee Yugoslav physician who first extracted ■ the substance from the blqod serum of horses 16 years ago, withdrew his application in a letter to Anthony J. Celebrecze, secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare! • Ecuador ■ • M Military jaunta t a M s steps agalnit possible Red strike—PAGE 2. ~ He seld the government had waged a fight against “an unbiased clinical test” Of the drug with “uphOard-of pressure, the spreading of false statements to the press, an attempt to frame me and now an attempt to indict Woman Into Sparer Jerrie Cobb tttile Love~f AGE il; w' Agatha Christie . 1mm Astrology ....... Bridge Si Church New*..... ...16-11 Coiqici .......... ...w,'Sl: Editorials Home Section 17 three Mroke, at the II-g”'2 pm. altttth.Chlam hole lunch intermission, main. ^".'*2?^!"* *> their .mbtuay. tained that advantage on the first n nine holes of the afternoon round as both finalists shot a one-over-par 35. Charles had shot a 33-30—00 pn the morning round and Rodgers a 35-37-72. It:Would be impossible to stop the stampeding elephant' of government waste. , 1 But we would like to affix a burr to Us tough hide. On Juljrl2, we received a news release from the Office ! of Civil Defense, Department of Defense, stating its contents j could be revealed to the public on July 10. It foas mailed j from Battle Creek on the afternoon of July 11. In order to somehow try to make up for the time " discrepancies, the letter was sent by air mail special ‘ delivery. Certainly a message that must be sent by such expensive methods must be Just short of a declaration of war, we thought. But the envelope spilled out only a tnossage that a course In fallout shelter design would be available to architects at the University of Wisconsin In September. 1 ordering special mall service (or such a' message. I That’s the burr. I Now I suppose we’ll never get another release from the I Office of Cjvil Defense, Deparmenl of Defense. Rodgers narrowed his deficit to one stroke at the 24th hole, but Charles regained his three-shot advantage byjhjL afternoon turn. /The New Zealander shot two birdies, a bogey and a doublebogey on the first nine of the aft-irnOori round; Rodgers carded three birdies and four bogeys. ., Charles Increased his lead to five strokes when he pafrrcd the first two holes of the afternoon rtpind, but he drove out of bounds on (he third hdle and wound up with ii double bogey six, cqUing his lead to three stroke. Rodgers bunkered hla drive on the first hole of the afternoon round to card a bogey, four. The American also bogeyed , the sec-end ’ hole / when he, missed, the green with his, approach end then failed to link a five-foot putt. ■ mv' to the Soviet agents who f o r months to come are sure to press! intensive manhunt, Dolnytsin’s defection is believed to have dealt a severe blow to Soviet intelligence services. The Soviets will want him eliminated —for revenge and as a warning to others, informants noted. Plastic, surgery may be used to give Dolnytsin a new facias It did for many British secret agents during WdrldT War II, Then he would be unrecognizable even to (hose who knew him during the eight months or so he lived in London while on a tour of duty here. ; '• It generally is believed that Dolnytsin defected while serving In a Soviet satellite country after first contacting the U.S. embassy In an allied ‘country. One report said he defected in a town North America. For nbout\ a year Dolnyhln was quizzed by the Central Intelligence ;Agency in the United States. After he,requested asylum in Britain, he was flown hero and Interrogated. '* . ’ Shower Relief Expected Pontiac Area Drought-stricken farms , and thirsty lawns and gardens will welcome the occasional rain or showers expected In the area late this afternoon, through tomorrow afternoon. . The mercury will dip te ft Jow of 65 tonight and climb to a high of 80 Sunday. The outlook for Monday Is fair with moderate tempera-lured. *Jp|| Winds today are southerly at 16 to 20 miles per hour. They will shift te westerly tomorrow mmm 1Fninrlrir HL PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 13. 1903 Ecuador Junta Alert for Strike [ From Oar News Wires ' QUITO, Ecuador — The Military junta that seized power Thursday took steps today to head off a general strike called by the Communist-led Ecuador Workers Confederation (CTE), junta, that ousted President Carlos Julio Arosemena as a drunk and Communist sympathizer, outlawed' Ecuador’s Coromunis1 party Friday and rounded u| about ISO leftists. 1 The military rulers ordered strict application of martial law and a I p m. to 0 a.m. curfew. They, promised to, wipe out all civil disorder and terrorism “provoked by leftist extremists.” The Politico Loses Race to Cabbie Persons who attended a presidential banquet Wednesday night said. Arosemena disgraced himself not only by getting drunk and vomiting in front of the guests, but-also by slurring the U.S. government in the presence of U.S. Ambassador Maurice Bernbaum f NEW YORK (UPI)—Hie mayor of River Rouge met with citizens, the police and the judiciary yesterday^ but unfortunately it didn’t happen in his home town. f Donald Nettlow, 34, up for re-election in River Rouge this fall, ran afoul of the law in .Greenwich Village here and ended up on the 1 wrong end of disorderly conduct Arosemena was sent'into exile in Panama. He has made no comment on the coup except to say he did not resign'. Tanks guarded the national, palace where troops shot and killed -two leftist demonstrators and wounded 17 others after the military seizure Thursday. The CTE ordered a general strike to protest the military action, but has not set -a date. The junta quickly warned that strike leaders would be prosecuted for “military crimes . .. . subject to severe and summary punishments/’ Along with banning Commu-iists, the junta shipped, Vice President-Reynaldo Varea Donoso into exile, canceled elections, proclaimed martial law, and imposed a night curfew and censorship. At least a dozen persons were arested for violating the. curfew. The citizens involved in the i affair were a taxicab driver who Nettlow claimed drove him a number of bystanders who materialized during the ensuing dispute, The policeman was Michael Iannato, who arrested Nettlow for allegedly using loud and boisterous language, which caused crowd to assemble. THE JUDICIARY The. judiciary was represented by Criminal Court Judge Irving L. Schreckinger who listened to Nettlow’s innocent plea and set bond at |25 pending trial Aug. 5. Nettlow, visibly upset by. reporters and cameramen in court, said he and a companion „ had hailed a cab early Friday and asked the drivir to take them someplace for *ta bite to The deposed vicjE president, who tried unsuccessfully to, rouse Congress to challenge the armed forces takeover Thursday, joined Arosemena in Panama but planned to fly on today to Hous-Tex. It was not known ■whether Varea would stay in . BURNING MARSH - West Bloomfield (from left) Tom Ball and Bazll Stoddard hose down part of a peat bog along Richardson Road.. The firemen are battling a marsh fire that has burned continuously since July 4. The , blaze, which began in West Bloomfield Township, just off Detroit Road and burned west toward Union Lake Road, covers an FontlM Prcif Photo area a half-mile long and about 100-150 yards wide. Since crossing into Commerce Township, it has flared up several times. Most of the time) the-actual burning occurs underground with only smoke visible. But when a surface blaze does appear, the two fire departments hose it down. Detroit Ready Cancel Police Leaves; Negro Protests Set Texas. DETROIT U) - With police leaves canceled, Detroit took pre cautions against possible trouble today from two antl-segregation- Angry Exchanges TFX Hearing Hie program, scheduled f o five days a week, Includes a day camp and classes in golf, tennis, basketball and lifesaving. Day camps are held at Con-ant, Pine Lake and Eastover elementary schools for kindergarten through sixth grade students. Children are transported by bus to Cass Lake for swimming instruction. Besides the regular fare of handicrafts, camp crafts and in special activities such as trips games, the children participate in special activities such as trips and overnight camp-outs. SPORTS CLASSES Golf classes ere from 9-10 a.m. for advanced beginners and from 10-11 a.m- for beginner;. Tennis instruction is offered to adults end teen-agers from 10-11 a.m., ' while advanced beginners meet from 11 a.m. to noon and beginners from noon to 1 p.m. or 1-2 p.m, 1 , The two basketball classes are held from 0-10 a.m.and 10-11 a.m. Those taking .trampoline By Q; MILTON KELLY According to Nettlow, some $3.65 later, they still were riding around. An argumentjstarted ana the cabbie called the policeman, who made the arrest. At his home this morning in River‘Rouge, Nettlow stuck to his story. “The cab driver was running up the bill unwarrentediy. My client and I asked him about it and >he got very indignant. He was taking me for a joy ride. “The policeman, without even hearing our side of the story, demanded we pay him his fare and get out of the cab. One word led to another. I feel that it was . unfortunate and regrettable.” Navy Capt. Ramon Castro Jijon, junta president, told the nation Friday night that he is “determined to completely eradicate communism” and restore moral economic Order. Possible Rain for Michigan Raises Hopes Hie Detroit Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of polored People planned demonstrations 'at 20 apartment houses which the NAACP said discriminates against Negroes. NAACP officials said the demonstrations would be peaceful. All policemen’s leaves for the day were canceled by Supt. Eugene A*. Reuter; however. Reuter, said he wanted to make sure of adequate police at all 20 sites. The prospect of rain throughout the state Saturday and Sun* day brought new hope to Michigan residents caught in one.of the worst droughts in recent memory. In many areas, it hasn’t rained for a month. Detroit entered its 30th -day without a measurable rainfall, the longest dry spell since 1011 when no rain fell for 32 days. The last rain reported in the Detroit area was June 13 when two one-hundredths .of an inch fell.' Since then, a few scattered Showers havje hit, but they quit before they did much to alleviate dry conditions: The Weather • Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Increasing cloudiness and warm today; high 86. Occasional rain or showers late this afternoon and tonight ending Sunday afternoon. Low tonight 65. High Sunday II. Wladi southerly 10 to 20 m.p.h., becoming westerly Sunday afternoon. Dlrtctton: South Sun Soturdoy it t:M p.m. Sun rlili Bunn,/ ,t 8:0# n.m. Moon ««ti Bund,7 at 1:11 p.m. Moon ruti Sunday at lt:ti a.i Friday-la Panllaa ... „ . <*• rooarStS diwnlawa Hlihdt temperature low,it tar —----- II Fort Worth too 14 Helena 14 (8 ImllenepoHr 88 81 MtanU Leh. 18 Mueaegon Pelluton Xlifanyf*!*. Amarillo iliilnse Browmvllle C^trlYeUm, ists’ protest demonstrations. The apartment buildings1, In: eluding, two in the Motor City’s art center” district containing the Detroit Institute, of Arts and the. Public Library, are generally in Detroit’s rrtidtown section. The neighborhoods are mostly mixed. Abraham Ufmer Jr., chairman of the NAACP Housing Committee, said demonstrators would be assigned to. 14 teams of about 20 members each. Police headquarters in d o w n-town Detroit also was chosen fpr demonstration — by another group. FATAL SHOOTING ' The Group On Advanced Leadership (GOAL), an All-Negro Organization, said it would picket headquarters from noon to 6 p.m. in connection with a policeman’s fatal shooting of a Negro woman on a street July 5. The woman, Cynthia Scott, 24, who police said had a record of nine convictions for accosting and soliciting, was shot by an officer who said she slashed him with a knife when he tried to arrest her. - GOAL representatives said the picketing would be carried out after Miss Scott’s funeral by nine cars and the hearse containing her body . WASHINGTON (AP.) - Tempers are flaring again—this time over a performance chart—as a Senate subcommittee presses ahead with its probe of the TFX warplane contract. ( The latest angry exchanges pit Secretary of the Navy Fred Korth against chairman John L. McClellan, D-Ark., and the senior Republican member of the panel, Sen. Karl E, Mundt of-South Dakota. Korth spent his fourth day on the witness stand Friday , as th; subcommittee probed -the award of the TFX contract to General Dynamics Corp.' of Fort Worth, Tex., and Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp. of New York. Senators want to know why Korth and other civilian defense overrode military evaluations that a design ottered by the Boeing Co. of Seattle, Wash., promised a better and cheaper plane. McClellan challenged a chart which Korth used to support his contention that the, General Dy-namics-Grumman design is superior. “The way you are presenting it, you are distorting the performance of the Boeing plane, based on the record,” he said.1 “Mr. Chairman, I deny that we are distorting it,” Korth retorted. interests of the country and the Navy.” However, he. agreed to prepare a hew chart for ttye subcommittee. Mundt told Korth he could not understand why the contract, went to General Dynamics-Grumman unless there is some reason that you want to favor General Dynamics.” Mundt said he suspected the civilian, secretaries read the military evaluation report to the point where it said either design would be acceptable and quit reading before the point where the military evaluators said the Boeing design had a “clear and substantial” advantage. Korth replied with a .defense of the decision. He returns to the witness stand Monday. Patrolman Theodore Spicher, who shot Miss Scott, was exonerated by Wayne (Detroit) County Prosecutor Samuel B. Olsen, j Olsen held that Spicher acted •o H properly in line Of duty. » I Detroit Branch of the ij m American Civil Liberties Union '• Si! took issue .with Olsen's Investlga-|S tlon, declaring he had been “perfunctory” and demanding that the case be. reopened. •* * f, The ACLU said Olsen failed in His duty and harmed the “cause of lawful law enforcement." Continuing the exchange, a censored transcript of which was made public Friday, McClellan argued that the- chart failed to reflect last-minute optional design changes the Boeing Qo. had offered to make. He said the chang-would have wiped out a claimed 320-mile an hour margin for the General Dynam-icS-Grumman plane and would lave given the Boeing craft greater maneuverability at high altitudes.. Korth replied that the contracts knew that only the earlier designs would be evaluated and :l)at technical teams never had ivaluated a report spelling out the changes. “You can talk about ‘it has not been evaluated’ from now until doomsday,” McClellan said. “It was your duty to evaluate If ,you In mind the best interests of the Navy, the country and to get :he best plane." Korth replied: “I have the best HI,' DADDf! — President Kennedy was greeted by his son, John Jr., as he arrived at Otis Air Force Base, Mass., yesterday afternoon to spend the weekend at his summer home at Hyannis Port, Mass. Major General Chester Clifton, presidential military aide, is in the background. iflUiMrYi ’• , i ’ ,, ■ , #i* mmmm ’ NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered ahowera and thunder-ahowera are due tonight in Great Lakes, Mississippi Valley, por-itena of central and southern Plains and western philf states. Warmsr weather will dominate the saltern seaboard as far weat gious from Spain, Germany, I astha Ohio and Tennessee valleys except for Florida. Elsawhere France and' .English - speaking -1, little tewpoWthfe changes are expected. First General Audience Hold by Pop# Paul VI St. Peter's Basilica with the universality of the church. The Pope, brought Into, St. Peter's on his gestatorlal chair, spent about *45 minutes with the gathering of pilgrims-and rail- lountrles. Military Brings Order to Maryland Town (Continued From Page One) (arrested in demonstrations at the j tract were dismissed in court the demonstrations follow a Com-(when Wilson declined to prose-munlst pattern. .. - jcuter WIlaon had made citizen ar- Barnett also gave the commit- res*s °f the defendants. « ,as, ouiTnS was taken at “a Communist training school” and showed a group that included Dr. Martin Luther King, Negro Integration leader. In Los Angeles, Integration-ists who have been demonstrating,for weeks against what they called discriminatory policy at a suburban housing trfcct Won three victories. VATICAN CITY (UPI) - Pope Paul VI held the first general audience of his reign today and compared the crowd of 5,000 persona of different, nationalities (n -These developments camq in rapid succession yesterday: 1. Builder Don Wilson told news conference Friday night he had accepted a down payment from a Negro on a home in his Torrance tract. Previously he had denied there was any racial discrimination at tye tract. Trespass and peace disturb-, ance charges against 40 persons gency Torrance ordinance establishing a 7 p.m. weekend curfew for nonresidents of the tract. In Baltimore, Negro leaders called off weekend demonstrations at segregated Gwynn Oak amusement park while accepting the recommendations of a county commission of media- Besides asking for an end to the demonstrations, the commission recommended yesterday: ■That the park begin admitting Negroes July 26., »<**— —[That the parties , Involved reexamine the situation Jai). l, 1964. —And that any disputes under the suggested agreement be referred to the commission for settlement, Park owners asked and were granted until 2 p.m. Monday to answer the commission's proposals.. The integrationists said th e demonstration! were being called i off before the park owners agreed j to a settlement “to show that we are acting in good faith." in Savannah, units of Georgia's: National Guard were on standby j today for possible use In this seaport while facial peace hopes brightened with a secretly negotiated truce. Gov, Carl' E, Sanders said Friday night he had ordered guard units alerted “to meet any emergency which local authorities determined as being beyond their enforcement capabilities,” ‘ f The governor’s action followed two successive nights of violence in the wake of mass marches by] Negroes. Re also sent In 50 morel state troopers, bringing tha total] on duty here to 100, s: t Birmingham Area News Wednesday Is Deadline for Recreation Program BLOOMFIELD HILLS-Wednes-day is tha deadline for registering in the second three-week session of Bloomfield Hills’ summer recreation program. The program this year has a naw director, Ed Wlchert, basketball coach at Bloomfield Hills High School. Registrations can be made at the high school office. The Brat of the two 3-week programs will end Monday, and the second will begin Tuesday. To Check Mine for Three Boys PITTSBURGH (AP) - Officials planned a final probe into an old abandoned mine this afternoon in the search for three boys missing since Thursday. They announced their decision after a six-man rescue team emerged from the mine earlier iMLn and reported they had discovered no clues that would help them determine whether the teenagers are in the suburban Castle Shannon mine. Everett Turner, a U.S. Bureau of Mines inspector, said exploration into the last area should take about eight hours. Once this is accomplished, he said, officials will have been satisfied that the mine was searched thoroughly. Turner said a large pressure fan was to be used to clear deadly black damp gas from the area. WASHINGTON (UPI) u Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz met today with the chief negotiator for the railroads in the Kennedy administration’s continued efforts to block a nationwide rail strike. Wirtz and J. E. Wolfe, major spokesman for the- carriers, conferred privately in Wlrtz’s office at the Labor Department. Neither Wirtz nor Wolfe would say what subject was.under discussion,„but it presumbably concerned the President’s promise to seek legislation tint would settle the four -year - old dispute pver work rule changes advocated by die railroads. -“This is just a private chat/’ Wolfe told a reporter before entering the secretary’! office. “That’s right, that’s all that it is,” Wirtz added. 1 'Area Girl, 17 Killed as Car Hit by Tra The i7-year*old daughter of a Birmingham executive' and her teen-aged companion were killed yesterday 20 miles, east of Wind' sor, Ontario, when their convertible was struck by a Canadian National Railway train. Cheryl Ann Martin, 17, of 7215 Parkhurst, Birmingham, and Louise Deziel, 14, of Windsor, died after the smashup at an unprotected railroad crossing. ^Ontario > Provincial Police said the train, traveling at 65 miles per hour, struck toe car squarely with Its engine. The car was dragged nearly a mile. Miss Martin, who apparently, was driving, was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold G. Marlin. ‘Martin is president of Research To Reality, an invention marketing firm.,. Miss Deziel was the daughter of Judge ^Lawrence Deziel of Essex County, Canada. Both families have summer homes near the accident scene. clad. Senior lifesaving will meet from 6:45-8 p-m. W. H. Wilmot Dies in Court daaiti will meat from 11 «.m. to noon. Junior lifesaving Is ai-4 p,m. ■ .. ' students Wirtz Confers With Rail Exec Holds Private Session at Labor Dfpartmont The unannounced meeting was the only sigh of activity in toe railroad dispute. Some officials predicted it would take legislation by Congress to resolve the crisis that could result in a nationwide strike after July 29. President Kennedy’s six-man fact-finding committee adjourned Monday its investigation of the four-year-old battle over railroad demands for rule changes to abolish alleged “featherbedding,” or unnecessary jobs. No negotiations were scheduled by rail union and management representatives, and Wirtz said he had no plans for a renewal of mediation at this time. - (Continued From Page One) St. Mary-in-the-Hills Episcopal Church, Lake Orion; Pontiac City Club, Orchard Lake. Country Club, Rotary Club and a lift member of Phoenix Lodge No. 13, F&AM. He also served qs A member of the Lake Angelua Village Council and president of Oakland County Society'1 for Crippled Children. Mr. Wilmot leaves his wife, Gladys and a sister, Mrs. Clayton Batter of Milan. Service will be at 2 p. m. Monday at Sparka-Griffin Chapel with burial following in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. JUd family suggests any me- { mortals be made to the memorial J <1 Uini . in . tha . IlilU - fund of St. Mary-in-toe-Hills Church. Pallbearers for Mr. Wilmot include Judge Clark J. Adams, Judge William J, Beer, Jack L. Banycky, Smith Falconer, L. Campbell Wernet and Mac T, Whitfield. NOTICE Because af tha present emergency in- tha City at Pontiac caused by • serious water ahartaga and pursuant to Ordinance No. 1094, notlea la hereby fIvan that na parson or parsons ihall'usa or causa to ha used, water tram tha City af Pontiac Water System for sprinkling, Banking ar irrigating any lawn, garden, shrub, tree dr vaaatation In tha City af Pontlaa an any day, including Sunday, batwoan 8 >00 o’clock a. m. and 9:00 o'clock p. m. Water uiaa during thia period * I * *‘wd to * ‘ i | “ shall be confine------ MUVH IRI, needs of tha citizens of Pontiac and ta essential Industrial and business uses. Those roitrlctlona shall bo in affect until further notice due ta tha carious water shortage In tha CHy of Pontiac which canctltufet a health and fire hazard. City Hull * Pontiac, Michigan Robert A. StUr+r Clir Noaoftr * \ Olflo Barkibv Gltr Cteto ’ ' . : * Marimont Youth on Vacation a* A Baptist avail* in Japan — the “New Life Movement’’—has con-cluded, with a total of 22,214 “decisions for Christ” in a five-week period. “The response is far beyond anything we had an-ticipated,” a wader in the drive said. Before the crusade, there Were only 14,000 Baptists in Ja* Texas Minister Comes to Detroit Conference Rev. Richard L. Clemons, new minister of Christian education at Central Methodist Church, comes to the, Pontiac area from First Methodist Church in Liberty, Tex. where he had served for die past 1ST GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH of Drayton Plains 3010 Marlington Rd. (Off Hatchery ltd.) Rev. R, L. Gregory four years. Prior to ministerial work- he was with Wesley Foundation at Tarleton State College in Stephen- troit Conference, With his wife and children Brenda, Laura, David and Becky, he makes his home at 4011 Shad-dick, Waterford. Township. CHRISTIAN ' SCIENCE Pastor Clemans will work with Dr. Milton H. Bank, minister at Central, aqd Rev. William H. Brady, associate pastor. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY^ JULY 13, 1968 SUNDAY SCHOOL . V10 am. WORSHIP . ... . .11 art. EVENING WORSHIP 7.30 p.m, SUBJECT for SUNDAY SACRAMENT, Sunday Services and Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Wednesday Evening Services 8 P.M. * Reading Room 14 W. Huron St., Open Daily 11 A,M. to A:P.M. Friday to $ P.M. First Church of Christy Scientist Lawrence and Williams Streets \ PONTIAC 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY STATION CKLW 800 KC CHURCH of GOD East. Pike at Anderson PARSONAGE PHONE « / FE 2-8609 Sunday School . 10 A.M. Morning Worship 11A M; Iventhg Service . , 7 P;M. Yourra Peoples Service . #Wed.,'7:00 P.M. ■ Christ's Church f ' - of Light NGN-DENOMINATIONAL Lotus Lake School, Waterford Cor. Percy King and HorpepSt. Sunday School 9:45 A M. Worship J 11:00 A.M. Information call’OR 3-7650 or OR 3-471Q Twelve Junior age ■ boys and girls are leaving the Marimont Baptist Church Monday at 6:30 a.m. for Camp Co-Be-Ac at Hatton Lake. Girls and boys will be attending Vicki Gavette, Christine frick, Lynanne Clark, Susan Tits-worth, Gayla Grammer, Terrie Smades, Nancy Somers, Cynthia and Deborah Vaught, D&nny Matthews, Sidney Lewis and Kenneth Tabor.. Twenty-one junior and senior high young people under the leadership of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Matthews, the Amos Vaughts, Rodney Attwaters, Sandy Stewart, Karen Lnndeen, Bob Haisenzahl and Denny Vincent are canoeing down the Aq Sable River over the weekend. Mrs. Philip Somers will' speak to a combined Junior and senior high girls’ group at 6:30 p.m. on “Problems They Deal With in Their Social Time.” Junior high young people under the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Vaught will meet at the church Friday at 7 p.m. to play putt putt golf. Rev. Clarence Jackson, 'minister of Christian education at Columbia Avenue Baptist Church, will be pastor of the newly organized Herrington. Hills Baptist Chapel. Services will open tomorrow in the Herrington School.' A FAMILY SING-Coming to Central Methodist Church as minister of Christian Education is Rev. Richard L. Clemans. Besides attending church affairs, picnics and other outdoor activities . the Clemans’ family likes to PontUe Press Phot* sing. Here they are (from left) David, Brenda, > Mrs. Clemans, Becky, Laura and Rev. Mr. Clemans in back. The parsonage is at 4011 Shaddick, Waterford Township. Calvary Baptists to Present Quartet The Biola College Male Quartet will present a special vocal’ Services Af Scnool Sunday School is scheduled for 10 a.m.V morning worship at 11 a.m.;- training union at 6:30 p.m. and evening worship at 7:30. Pastor . Jackson came to Pontiac from the Vine Street Baptist Church in Louisville, Ky. in 1960. A graduate of Mercer Uni-versity, he attended Georgia Tech and did graduate work at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary .where he received a master of religious degree. Mrs. Jackson also attended Georgia Tech. The Rev. Mr. Jackson, presi-^ dent of the Mark Twain PTA, has.... . , . „ . „ served in the Second Ponce de of the training union pro-Leon Baptist Church of Atlanta, 8*T‘ . **?> j Ga. and the Cherokee Heights The n*w chawd Is sponsored Baptist Church at Macon, Ga. by Otlugibia Avenue Baptist The Rtiv. Mr. and Mrs. Jackson.Cnurcn. , REV. CLARENCE JACKSON make their home at 223 Gage. Other chapel leaders include Gene Elliott, Sunday School superintendent; and Paul' Veazey, St. Mary's Members Sponsoring Program PINE HILL ,T CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Meeting In the Pine Lk. School, W. Long Lk. Rd., near Orchard Lk. Worship, Church School, 10 AM. HARRY W. CLARK, Minister and instrumental, program of mu- Members of St. Mary’s AME Zion1 Mission, 601 Pearsall will present Bishop Stephen G. Spotts-woo dand a 50-voice choir in a musical program at 3:30 p. m. PONTIAC CHURCH OF CHRIST 1180 N. PERRY ST. FE 2-6269 to the "Herald of Truth" Each Sunday-CKLW, Chan. 9—11 A.M. Also WXYZ IR70 at IQ P.M. BIBLE STUDY....... 9:50 A.M. . 'Classes for all ages MORNING WORSHIP 10:50 A.M. “Right or Wrong" ^EVENING SERVICE . ... -6 P.M. “A Letter To a Young Church" BOYD C. GLOVER Evangelist First Presbyterian Cfiurch HURON AT WAYNE | REV: GALEN E. HERSHEY, Pastor REV. PAUL D. CROSS, Asst. Pastor ALBERT A. RIDDERiNG, Christian ' Education Director Worship Service ............10<00 A.M. Church School............... 10:00 A.M. CROSS OF CHRIST |H a!m. service tomorrow at Pro- pulling, orange and balloon con- Rev. Calvin Fiege, stewardship vidence Missionary % B a' p t i s t tests, counselor of the Michigan dis-Church. Pastor Claude Goodwin Allen Campbell,, recreation di-trict; Lutheran .Church - Missouri [who is on vacation is touring the, rector of the church, is in charge .Synod, will be guest preacher atjHoly Land. . jof arrangements. Cross of Christ Lutheran Church,] At 3:30 p.m.-Rev. R. H. Me- MACEDONIA 'Bloomfield Township tomorrow, pwen with his choir and con-. Macedonia Bantlst ■ 3b FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 149 North East Blvd. FE 4-1811""' Poitor, WM. K. BURGESS SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . 10 A.M. WORSHIP^. . . 11A.M. EVENING WORSHIP , 7 P.M. COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave. — FE 5-9960 ' Sunday School........ 9:45 AM. Morning Worship .... 11,00 A.M. Tratnlng Union 6,30 P.M1. Evening Worship...... 7,30 P.M. Midweek. Service (Wed:). 7:45 P.M. Be our Quilt and You'll bs Bint End your March for a friendly Church HpiP (Affiliated with she Sovtlwrn Baptlit Convontlon) -CLARENCE B. JACKSON, Minister of Education CARROLL HUBBS, Music Director MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH , 58 W. Walton FE, 2-7239 SUNDAY SCHOOL........ 10 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP HOUR....11.00 A.M-“TH6 ROLL CALI OF THE FAITHFUL", * EVENING SERVICE ,. «t....T... 7.30 P.M. ^ , • "THI JDST Ah|D THE UNJUST" s , PASTOR SOMERS, pregchlng at both lervleei < } . Public Cordially Mvlieti ' *. »■ ItoISI Christ Church is worshiping in the Little Theater of the Bloomfield Hills High School until the new building is completed at Lone Pine and Telegraph Roads. Service of worship scheduled for 10:13 a.m. will be followed by a coffee hour on the covered walkway. Rev. Delayne M. Pauling is-pastor. MESSIAH Members of Messiah Baptist Church will present Patricia Ann Keel ,in a vocal recital at 7:30 Sunday evening. The church is located at 168 Prospect. Patricia, a member of the Children’s Choir at Macedonia Baptist Church, is a student in Whittier Elementary School. She plays cornet in the school band and is a member of the school service squad. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Teel, she studies music with Mrs. Sarahinton Moore. The program. will i n/c 1 u d “Bless This House,” “How Great Thou" Art,” “The Holy City, “My Father Watches" and other numbers, AUBURN HEIGHTS U.P. “Did You Receive the Holy Spirit” will be the theme of the morning message tomorrow at the United Presbyterian Church in Auburn Heights. Melvin Boring, a member' of Southfield United Presbyterian Church and assistant to the pastor, will be guest preacher. After graduation from Sterling College where he majored in psychology, Mr. Boring taught'in public schools before entering Princeton Seminary. In the fall he will return to Pripceton for his second year. Members of youth1 choirs from grades three to 10 will sing “The Lord’s Prayer” during th$ service. Judy Willhito and June Lock-aniy will sing the duet, “I Love to Sing About Jesus.” , , ■ Boy Scout Troop 23 will get to. igether at 7 Monday evening and the. board of trustees will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN Rev. Paul D. Cross will preach on “Howto, Think, About God” at the 10 a.m. service In First Presbyterian Church tomorrow. Church School will be held at the of deaconesess will conduct thejbrajMast in Macedonia Church service under the direction off ’Center at 7:30 a.m. tomorrow. Mrs. Willie L. Reese, president.] The Young Adult Choir will Rev. D. N. Ford of Mt. Ararat present a mock wedding at 7 p.m. Baptist Church, Detroit will at- in the church center, tend the 7:30 p.m. service accom- Vacation Bible School will be-panied by -his choir and congre- gin its second week Monday with sic Sunday evening at the Cla-vary Baptist Church, 3750 Pontiac Lake, Road. The program which begins at 17 will include spirituals, hymns, religious classics, and special arrangements of outstanding gospel songs. Vocal and instrumental selections will also be presented by individual members of the group. Biola College is one of the five schools of The Bible Institute of Los Angeles Inc., century-old Christian ec tional institution located in La Mirada, Calif. In order to qualify for membership in the quartet, individ-must maintain acceptable academic standards, and display the highest type of Christian character and conduct. Sunday in Macedonia Baptist Church, 512 Pearsall. Pastor M. L. Washington said the 'public is invited. gation. Richard Reese will conduct the service sponsored by the boara of trustees. The public is Invited. FIRST BAPTIST Members are asked to dress casually as the annual church picnic will follow. Dinner is planned at noon with coffee, milk, soft drinks and ice cream provided by the church. Games and races will follow. Pastor Shackell said there will be a watermelon eating contest, limbo game, a sack face, leap frog race, baseball game, rope- same hours. John Ward will sing for “He Sent His Word and Healed Them* by Humphrey* for the offeriory solo. Organist Lyndon Salathlel will play “Largetto” by Mozart and "Help Me, O Lord’’ by ScHroeder. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. McDowell will serve as hosts at the coffee jhour following nwning* worship, PROVIDENCE Rev. WUHan^H. Long, assistant pastor, will be in charge of the Rev. Robert Savage, vice president. and field ’director of Radio .Station HCJB in Quito, Ecuador will preach at the 7 p.m. service tomorrow in First Baptist Church. The son of Dr. H. H. Savage', pastor of First Baptist for near-iy 40 years, now retired, the Rev. Mr; Robert Savage will soon return to South America. ST. PAUL LUTHERAN Under I the shade of trees in Oakland Park, Rev. Maurice Shackell, pastor of St, Paul Lutheran Church, will preach'to his congregation on "Fishers of Men’i at 10:45 a.m. tomorrow. classes from -9 a.m. until noon. Women of Macedonia Church will sponsor a .tea at the center at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow. FIRST METHODIST Rev. Carl G. Adams will preach i “Can You Take It?” at both morning services tomorrow in First Methodist Church. Janet Livingstone, summer organist, will play several numbers. * Senior and junior high Methodist young people will meet at the church at 5:20 p.m. Tuesday before going for a swimming party. Members are asked to bring a sack lunch; Counselors for .the evening include the Robert Murphys, Mrs. Charles Jacobson and Mr. and Mrs, Chester Arnold. Women belonging to evening circle gh>ups will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Bible study and prayer fellowship are slated for ":30 p.m. Wednesday. Senior citizens of the church are Invited to a served luncheon Friday. Each member is asked to bring a picture of himself' taken some 20 years ago. Mrs. Chester Caughell is in charge of the program. This year’s quartet which will trjsvel in 10 states includes George Jones, Tom Heiser, Charles Ivans and John Ebeling, all In California. Accoihpanist Robert Polley of.Walunt Creek, Calif. Rev. Lindsay Speaking at Oakland Ave. Kirk in the Hills Names Ministers for Summer Rev. Gordon Lindsay, pastor of the Five Points Community Church, will speak at the 10 a.m. worship service at the/Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church Sunday. Elder Thomas Mackie will preside and Mrs. Stephen Hubbell and Cdrl Matheny Will sing a duet. Youth groups meet at 5:45 p.m. with Pioneers discussing “No Place Else to Go.” Builders will enjoy a program called “You Can’t Be a Hermit.” Elder Roland Williams will pre* side at the 7 p.m. service when Evangelist Billy Wglker is guest speaker. -w Mrs. Gray Graham will tell the1 children’s story and- special music will be given by R. G. Crites. Evening Vacation Bible School for Junior and senior high CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH Airport and Williams Lake Rds. Sunday School 9:30 A.M. • for all ages Services 8 and 11 A.M. “Waterford Toumthip American Baptist Church" amt&Mumspn Sunday School 9:45 AM. Worship 11 AM. 6:30 PM Baptist Fellowship Largo Parking Lot APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRIST 485 CENTRAL Saturday Young People...... 7,30 p.m. .Sunday School and Worship..10:00 a.m. Sunday Evening Services.... 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday Services... 7:30 p.m. Church Phone..............FE 5-8361 wStomaTiSSItK Pastor's Phone................852-2382 CHURCH OF SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP MALTA TEMPLE-2024 PONTIAC ROAD ' (Formerly St. Luke's Methodist Church) SUNDAY SERVICE 7:30 P.M. Rev. A. Hawkins, speaking July 21—Fellowship Dayl Rev. Hector Wlnemon Kirk In Thp Hills will'present six of America’s most celebrated rotektant ministers in an, outstanding series of seven Sunday services this summer. * Throughput the summer months the Kirk In The Hills, will continue witty service etrch Sunday at 9:30 and 11:30 a. m. The full' Chancel Choir will sing at both hours and ‘two sessions of the Kirk school will be held Concur-rently with the worship services. First of the guest preachers, the Rev. Dr. Ernest Gordon, dean, Princeton University Chapel, will give the sermon on July-21. On July 28, Rev; t)r. Samuel H. Miller, dean of Harvard Divihity School, will be in the Klfk pulpit, Dr, Miller Is a national leader in.the parish,fhlh-istry and in the field of pastoral theology. A member of the com- mission on the arts and worship of the National Council of Churches, he is widely known for his published,works. Rev. Dr. George A. Buttrlck, visiting professor of Garrett Biblical Seminary and author, lecturer and preacher, will give the sermon* on Aug, 4 and 3ept*4. On Aug, 11, Rev. Dr. Bryant H. Kirkland, pastor of Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church, New. York City, will be guest preacher. Dr. Oliver Powell, pastor of First Congregational Church, Oak Parkj ill., is scheduled for Aug. 18. The final .preacher in the summer series will be Rev. Dr, Eugene Carson Blake, stated clerk, General Assembly, The United Presbyterian Church in the U. S. A, Dr. Blake Js internationally known for his leadership ip both the National and World Council- of Churches, people will be held Monday through Friday from 7 to 9:30 p.m. . Bible study and prayer hour Is held at 7 p.m. Wednesday. A FRIENDLY WELCOME AWAITS YOU AT.THE GOOD SHEPHERD ASSEMBLY OF GOD' Svlftjoy School........^ 10 A.M, Mernjpg Wouhtp.......... II Ev»„ Evongal Ser.....,,7i 30 P.l /'Mr HohiiUI i!miter S3B-62S3___________. BETHANY BAPTIST- CHURCH* W. Huron at Mark. Worihlp Snrvlc* at 10:00 A.M. Strmon. "LIVING UNDER PRESSURE" WtidnMclay, 7:3,0 PM, Quarterly Suilntii Meeting Sunday School 9:45 a.m. - Young People's Legion 6 p.m. Morning Worship 11 o.m. — Evangelistic Meeting 7.00 p.m. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. , LIEUT, and MRS. GARY B. CROWELL Coed Mtuic - Statin?— Tree ro the Word Prtaehin? God Meets With US—You, Too, Are Invited FIRST NAZARENE 60 STATE STREET SUNDAY SCHOOL-9:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP—,1 liOp A.M. SERMON: “GOD'S CHOSEN VESSEL" YOUT.H .FELLOWSHIP .... 6iOQ P.M. EVENING,SERVICE .... 7.00 P.M. . Sermon “THREE MINUTES TO LIVE" ¥ QUARTET-ARAMA TONIGHT SAT. JULY 13 7:30 P.M. EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 645 S. Telegraph Rd. ☆ ☆ it "it it it it it AIR CONDITIONED AUTORIUM ► AMBASSADORE QUARTET —Allen Park • CALVERYMENS QUARTET ' - - Flint • TEMPELflRES v* \ 'U\h At Nationally Know/ty „ ' PLUS/LOCAL TALENT * * - ' MR. LLOYD ORWELL, Master of Ceremonies JlMAdmlMlon ■ ' ‘ ' - PybU| THE jPONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1963 TWENTY F our -bai^tf -of: water fromiduce, after evaporation procoga«a,| Mexic Great Salt Lake, Utah, will pro-'about one standard barrel of salt.|million. The rest tf|buil$| JrJUjDe j* U ^"minimizedj modeling batferdgms wlwlUfftire through, the use of such peRpaa-niest*^^TOSu?e* areas of the [nent materials as ceramic tile, ----i---------jglass and quality plumbing fix* tures. Measured against the life of tbfe home, these- materials are 1 _ , | inexpensive because they elim- I flliiiinfl I [inate costly replacements, redec-l ' tilHSRn I hating and repairs. Pedy-Bilt Garage Co. •UILDIM or FINE GARAGES' 7722 Auit.ri, Waterford YOU CAN PAY MORE ... BUT YOU CANNOT BUY BETTER Let usj come out and show you our models, and (jive specifications and .prices on your garage -plans. 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Blocks Ease Upkeep of Ceiling Cracks and ‘“cricks” of ceiling upkeep can be eliminated from woes that plague the home own-r., The cracks'are those that appear in the ceiling surface to mar the appearance and the ‘cricks” are those* pains that settle in the home owner’s neck when he has to spend long hours at redecorating or cleaning the ceiling. A combined remedy and preventive for such/difficulties is to cover the ceiling with a plastic-(surfaced hardboard ceiling block. Cracks in the ceiling do not need 'to be-filled; the blocks, applied with adhesive, can be put on over disfigured surfaces' without tedious preparation. , „ I Insurance against future ceiling cracks is afforded by the unusual strength of the blocks, which have a base of tempered hardboard, a material tough enough for workbench tops. And how about the “cricks” in the neck? A baked -plastic finish which guards the beauty of the paneling means an end to the customary need for periodic redecorating and the neck-bending work it entails. The hard, smooth surface resists soiling; 4can be damp-wiped clean. The 16 • * inch square ceiling blocks, available at lumber yards ini White and parchment colors as well as lace and nugget patterns, can be used appropriately in any room of the house. They can be arranged in different ways to form interesting patterns < joint lines. mm eh a r.Fowgaa»si.' mean* COOLER hom*. ALL WORK GUARANTEED ALUMINUM SIDING FREE ESTIMATES! SAVOIE INSULATION CO. 4112 W,'WALTON BLV0. OR 3-3619 - DIXIE fiarafi Construction, Inn.. 5744 Highland Rd. (H 5>) Coll for Freo btfmoie OR 4-0371 Open Pal|y andl Sim. 9-7 P«M» MODERNIZATION ATTICS-REC. ROOMS—ADDITIONS PORCHES—BREEZEWAYS INSULATION—ALUMINUM SIDING ATTENTION LOT OWNERS... If you don't own a lot, ALBEE will help you find one of your choice! 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PRECISION PRI-CUTTING ... Modern production methods and advanced anglnaarlng KNOW-HOW reduces costly on-the-|0b material and labor waste I C. FREE EXPERT CONSTRUCTION GUIDANCE ... Experienced factery-tralnad supervisors are aval labia to help guide you from start to finish. Their technical and trade knowhow will prove In. valuable to you, sava you eutilda fees, and help mgka home ownership e thrilling pleasure I , SEE WHAT YOUR ALBEEMAN CAN DO FOR YOU! OPEN SUN. 1 TO 9 SAT. 9 TO < DAILY 9 TO 9 NEW BALTIMORE, MICH. 51670 GRATIOT, Rt. 25 ALBEE COMMAND HOMES M & S GUTTER CO. This Boll Haven 3-Bedroom RANCHER There are new uses for: the old-time box that was so handy for carrying knives and forks to the -table. Now we carry books, mending and odds and ends in the box to a stand with pull-1 is 35 . It also is in the Pine * ’ r zam )v - L ': * //H ^ 1 * *’ ^ f .'y, THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1963 •IAtfif OWflJ f TwiNTY-IWlii#’ Breaks From Fourth to Win Mile Event TORONTO (*> — Gary Weisiger, formerly of Duka University, cut loose from fourth place on the last turn last night and Won the mile run in 3:58.8 at tile Globe and Mail Invitation track and field meet. Now a lieutenant id the U.S. Marine Corps, Weisiger flashed by Jim Beatty, Jim Grelle and Witold Baran in the last 75 yards . with his explosive finishing kick. The other three also finished under four minutes. Baran, of Po-. land, waB‘second in 3:59.2; Grelle third in 3:59.3 and Beatty fourth in 3:59.7. Drum Beats hr Mefs NEW YORK <11-A big bass dram with, “Let’s Go Mete” painted on the side was tqrned over to the lost and found department of the Independent subway system Friday. It was found, apparently abandoned, on a subway train Thursday — the day the Mets lost their 12th straight baseball game. WATERFORD CUB SCOUTS Softball League Donation Pack No. SI ____ Strlngham No. 87 ...... ..... i Waterford Cantor No. 81 ........ 4 - Lake No. lit ....... . 5 Major League Averages _0U|S, Philadelphia Pittsburgh NATIONAL LEAGUE CLUn BATTING - - H HR KBI Pet. 8017 384 780 80 377 .383 2843 388 727 64 348 .247 2381 388 898 81 328 .248 3040 328 748 88 306 .245 2807 388 711 101 888 .248 eau 388 881 #7 8*7 322 678 51 303 Sadi's Almost 'Climbed Out' DETROIT (AP)—“On the very first lap 1 almost climbed out of die cockpit and said the tell with it.Then I got adjusted.” Eddie Sachs, a veteran of driving racing cars at death-defying speeds but a novice at handling a boat, took his first ride behind the wheel of an unlimited hydro: plane Friday on the Detroit River!, He liked it and plans to double j as a driver in top powerboat races. /. , I’m very sincere about It,” said Sachs, whose outspoken criticism of winner Parnell! Jones after this year’s Indianapolis 550 provoked a fistfight between them 'I’m going boat racing.’ Sachs steered the 11,000-pound Such Crust at straightaway speeds approaching 140 miles per hour in’his first trial as a driver on water. Afterwards, Jack Schafer, Such Crust's owner, said the Indianapolis veteran probably would pilot the big hydroplane in the State Boxing Commission /Studies Time Championship Bout Foes Seek Waiver of 2-Minutes Diamond Cap at Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, July 27 and the Seattle Seafair two weeks later. COACH RIDES “I don’t know what to do there,” said Sachs before hopping into Such Crust and heading for his spin accompanied by Leo Mucutza, m veteran hydroplane driver and mechanic. 'That’s, the toughest thing I’ve ever come up against,” said Sachs after his boatride of several laps around the three-mile course where the Gold Cup was held last Sunday. “I never dreamed It’d be this difficult as far as control is concerned. “It’s realy a daring business. Things all over this world are coming at you. You have to hay,e a real good pair of hands and arms to do it. I’ve got to get these wrists toughened up.” Sachs didn’t touch Such Crust’s is pedal, letting Mucutza do it throughout the 30-minute run. He’ll do it next time, he’ll have full control,” said Sachs’ instructor. Mucutza said Sachs will, need about 10 hours boat experience before he’ll be able to handle a hydroplane in a race. DETROIT (AP)-The Michigan axing Commission will take another look at Its controversial _ Inute round rule that’s •eatCning to cancel .the Kenny ' Armstead fight billed •rid lightweight cham* Jrf the rule likely will so the 15-rounder ir Aug. 19 in Saginaw’ Memorial Park cart be under the standard three-lute round system. ie boxing board is going tp to consider a wavier for ie championship attraction only’ said Dave Gudelsky, state boxing commissioner, from his office in Muskegon Friday, “Lane Armstead have asked to waive the two-minute rule. They feel they’re hi good condition.” Gudelsky had said Thursday all of Michigan's new rules, designed for greater safety in boxing, would be in force for the bout he’s sanctioned as a championship fight. But Gudelsky said Friday he and the four members of his board will Vote on waiving the two minute round rule only at a special meeting next Saturday at Jackson. “This fight Is for the world boxing lightweight championship and we’re not going to sell tickets and turn around and have these guys fight two thirds of a fight,” said Julius Piazza, co-promoter of the Saginaw bout. “I feel for a title fight this ruling should be waived.” ■ Yanks Beat, McBride Yas' Paces Boston Win SWEET WIN Ham-, tramck’s Peaches Bartkowicz yesterday again won the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association’s Girls tained her title by whipping Californian Lynn Abees, 6-3, 6-2. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Richmond 9, Jacksonville 2, 18 Innings Atlanta 3. Arkansas l Indlanapolty ■ 4, Syracuse Knoxville 16, OHRMPUP Asheville 11, Macon 8 Chattanooga 8 ------‘ ' By The Associated Press The first time Ted Williams saw Carl Yastrzemski swing a bat, he made one of his rare predictions: “Don’t let anyone change his swing and he’ll be a\great Jjjtter.” | No one has and Yaz is beginning to make Boston’s old batting master look like an oracle. Young Yaz, the American Leaguers leading hitter, lashed an opposite field home run in the top of the 12th inning Friday night and powered the Red Sox past Minnesota 3-2 and into , second place. The Chicago White Sox, 7-6 to Detroit in 12 innings, game behind Boston and six behind the leading New York Yankees. \ ' • ' BEAT NEFESIS The* Yanks, powered by Yogi Berra’s three-rurt homer, solved old nemesis Ken McBride and his Los Angeles Angel teammates 4-3 and Baltimore beat Washington by the same score. Cleveland at Kansas City was .rained out. Yastrzemski, a left-handed hitter, sent his eighth homer of the ^.season over the left centerfold jhfence, a .dri.ve..of-about. 420 feet 'A' Teams Eye Playoff Barths A lively battle shapes in the final four weeks of the season for the fourth playoff spot in the city Class A. baseball race. ★ ★ * At the conclusion of the 17-game regular season schedule, the loop’s first four teams ..will enter a playoff to determine what team will represent the city in the state playoffs. Huron-Airway and the Clippers appear to have excellent chances for two of the playoff berths. Cranbrook, barring a slump, should also enter the post-season play. Fourth place Talbott Lumber, which has been hot and cold all summer, currently has a lead Qver Local 594; but no team in the eight-member circuit has been eliminated from contention. M.G. Collision has been on a hot streak and could slip ahead of the union and lumbermen. Still with outside chances are the garters, and the Oxford Merchants. . 1 The latter two are the seventh and eight-place teams in the loop but have shown sufficient improvement lately to cause trouble for those higher up in the closing weeks “of the season. The' loop will resume action with a doubjeheader tomorrow night beginning at 6 p.m. on the Jaycee No. '2 diamond, The “ bers will play Talbott in the opener and Cranbrook-will meet Local 594 at' 8:30 p.m., LOOP STATISTICS The only sipificant change in this week’s statistics is in the pitching department where the Clippers Bob Readier has assumed the leadership. Readier in 34 innings has pro- duced a 4-1 record. and a 1.-02 earned-run-average. Cranbrook’s Larry Demrick is second with a 4-1 record and a 1.16 ERA. Felix Brooks, the Clippers’ rightfielder, maintained his leadership in the hitting race. Brooks has a .480 average and is tied for the lead in rbi’s with Mel Taylor of Local 594, both having 14 for the year. ★ * * j CLASS A STATISTICS AB Huron-Airway ..........331 78 » Lumber Local .884 ......... 38J 88 68 Barbers ............. 288 48 68 granbr«^c .. ......... 288 51 65 M. O. Collision..... 287 80 87 Oxford Merchants i.... 278 38 87 ■ TODAY’S AMERICAN LEAGUE Optimist Posts 'D' Waterford Victory The Optimist Lakers built up an early lead to defeat Frostop Drive In, 10-2, in Waterford Township Class D notion yesterday. Leonard Cote was the winning pitcher. Pistons Slate Area Clinic The Tigers continue to plod. There is a stirring in the Lions den. No, the Pistons aren’t missing .either. Although it is summer, basketball Is back 4n the sportlight. The Pistons, Detroit's entry in the National Basketball Association, in conjunction with the Waterford, Township Recreation Department, will have a basketball clinic Aug.'i at Kettering High School. The session will begin at 3 p. m. and anyone may attend. There will be no ad- mission charge. The Pistons’ new1 head coach, Charley Wolf, will conduct the clinic. Scout Earl Lloyd will assist him and several team members will participate. The Pistons will have a sum-camp July 29-Aug. 3 at Cobo Hall that will include veterans Ray Scott, Don Ohl, Bob Ferry and Walter Dukes, plus top draft choices Eddie Miles and Jerry Smith. HUNGARY' ENGLAND- BRAZIL • AUSTRIA - SPAIN • POLAND. MEXICO THRILL-PACKED ACTION! International PRO League SOCCER POLAND VS. AUSTRIA irnlk «f Kibrse wiener R.C. illuk Champions nl Vlsima 1 . . At U. it 0. Stadium MeNlib|i/ti Llvtrniiii — hrinll IlNfc July »l kt 71311 P.M, Several of. these plus other camp attendees are expected to appear at the Kettering clink Following the 90-minute discussion of fundamentals and otter phases of the game, players from the audience will be invited to scrimmage against the professionals. FRIDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore 4, Washington 3, night , Cleveland at Kansas City, night, .postponed. rain . Detroit 7, Chicago 8, 12 Innings, night Boston 3. Minnesota ‘^MSBilStoMSa NOW York 4. Los An TODAYS R________ York (Bouton 11-4) at Los Angeles GilllUfl 8-0) t Chicago (Her- >ta 3, 12 Innings, night. Angeles 3. night tY’S GAMES t 8-8). n (Hellner that taggd Minnesota with its fifth straight loss. Yastrzemski, a 23-year-old student at Notre Dame in the offseason, is ip his third season as Williams’ successor in left field for Boston and is off to his finest year. He leads the league in hitting, .334, and doubles, 23, isfpec-ond ip hits, 104, has a very respectable 43 runs batted in and one of the best arms in the league. He singled in Boston’s first run in the first inning against the Twins and won it for ace relief man Dick Radatz with his homer. Radatz came on after the Red Sox had tied It with a run in the: ninth, worked himself out of a bases-loaded jam in the bottom of the inning, then set the Twins d6wn without major difficulty. It was his- .10th victory against’ single loss. _ , ★ ★ t [Berra’s sixth inning homer off McBride brought the Yanks from behind, but they needed a ninth inning run to malce it stand up, when the Angels rallied on Charley Dees’ two-run double. It was the Angels’ 10th straight loss and the first time MciBride had lost to the Yankees since Aug. 7,1961. John Orsino belted a two-run homer in the top of the ninth, driving in the tying and winning runs • for, streaking Baltimore, which trailed 3-2 going into the inning. It was Baltimore’s eighth straight triumph over Washington this season and the Orioles’ eighth^ victory in their last nine games. Spencer Upset Softball Victim West Side Lanes threw an axe into Spencer Floor’s clinching the Waterford Township Class B softball title last night by d the floor covering nine, 3-2. - Individual Hitting (Baaed on 28 at bai Barkeley (fi.'A ) :: Taylor (Local 584) Estes (Cranbrook) Fleser (H-A) ..... fund (M. a.) .... Lovell (Local SB4) .. Gilmore (Talbott) A solo home run by Ted Whar-ry in the sixth inning proved to be Spencer’s downfall. The loss snapped a six-game win streak. Winning pitcher Harold Kunkle 7_!i liw had a no-hitter, going into the n ^seventh Inning, but a single by li iK Jim Patterson and a double by ciK) :::: 37 s ” Tom Bryce ended Kunkel’s shut- * * * lout aspirations. Baied^nT*2 West Side scored twice in the -Uppers) fourth, one tally coming on a solo Demrick (cranbrook homer by Bob Casteel, saokett (HA> ^H^ER-V lcRT-i.fl? Kunkel received strong field* Wagner (H-A) ,„g gupport from ph|1 FeUee Levy (Cranbrook) who made several difficult * ★ plays at third base to keep Demrick............................gjj Spencer’s to the hole. :::::::: g| In the other Township^ softball BUpesdoii ^(Cranbrook) '!. !!. ! '^21 Contest last night, ROCkCOte ★ ★ ★ scored six times in the eight in- sund.V-sJbB.?.K'?.%H.,fbDoVi,'EL«mb.rlning to beat Huron Bowl, 11-5.! &S.d£^^ George Adams was the winning | MERCURY ft SCOT MOTORS BOATS • Glastron • G & W • Traveler • Scott • Aluma Craft • Winner BOAT TRAILERS • Alloy • Sterling Camping Traitors CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES 63 E. Walton FE 8-4402 Apache Camp Trailers Open All Day Sunday BiU teller 1 Mila E. of Lapaar on M-21 .. ...^ Cranbrook . ..__ ) at Minnesota (Stabga lu,“}JJ^-rS.uron-Alrway Washington Baltimore (Delook (Duokworth 3-7) SUNDAY'S GAMES Boston at Los Angeles. 2 New.York kt KkAiki City. 2 Cleveland kt Minnesota. 2 Baltimore at Chicago, 2 Detroit at Washington. 2 NATIONAL LEAGUE Wen Leet Pot. Behind Los Angeles . San Francisco Clilcag .332 Stt .847 8 Milwaukee...... 44 42 .812 4 Pittsburgh , .... 43 43 .800 10 Philadelphia "*... 42 45 .483 llVb Houston ......... 34 88 .378 21 ~~ r York ......,. 28 88 .333 24V» FRIDAY’S RESULTS Angeles'8, New York 0, night laaeiphta 7, San Francisco J, night TODAY’- Los^ Anjjeles Miller 8-4) aj New York Sun Francisco (Pleroe Ml ' (Duron 3*3) Droll 3-6) kt Pittsburgh (Law Chicago (Jaokson 1 8-7) (Tsltourls 4-3) Milwaukee (Spall (Swimons 7-41 12-4) at 8t. Louis SUNDAY'S GAMES “ York, 2 Philadelphia. 3 Miles of Unused Transportation 14 1860 D00-406s Will Paint Yonr Color FIVE 19N B-42 MACK BAS TRACTORS TER 1958 TEN 1960 H-87T MA0K DIAMOND T DIESEL MoM 931 SLEEPERS Sleeper* if, WE TRADE AND if , FINANCE INTERNATIONAL ( HARVESTER COMPANY y porr„ 5915 W.st Warran, Dstrolt 10 T«l«p>0Ni 898 0579 111 It rBlTy • Sea-Ray-MFG • Penn-Yan-Steury • Johnson Mtrs. • Hull-Guard Trailers Complete Marine ACCESSORIES FE 4-0924 1370 N. Opdyke Rd. (M-24)