The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition 118th YgAR *★ w PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1960—82 PAGES QNITWI rUM INTEHVATIONAT, ---------- ---- PRESS f ^ First Scheduled Service Jordan Premier Slain Bomb Explodes Burying Bodies; 10 Die, 50 Hurt Curfew Put on City After Explosions; Police Patrol Streets LONDON m — Premier Hazze Majali, 44, of Jordan was assassinated by a time bomb that exploded in his office, reports from Amman said today. Ten persons were killed and 90 injured by this bomb and one set off in another Amman government office, unofficial reports said. Majali’s death was announced by Amma§ radio. The radio mid the announcement wan made an orders ol King Hussein. The bomb in Majaii's office went oft at 11:99 a.m. Majali and It'll Be Cooler —Temporarily— Thanks to Rain Pontiac's hot spell was eased hr showers today — at least temporarily. Today’s high will be about 85 with a low tonight of 68. The temperature dropped from 82 to 74. Tuesday wlU be partly dandy and on tier- The high WlU be At 10 a.m. the wind velocity was 8 to 10 miles per hour, blowing south southwesterly. Winds will increase "to 15-20 m.p.h. tonight and tomorrow. it it it Seventy-two w a s the lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. Hie reading at 2 p.m. was 75. PREMIER UAZZA another official were reported led under the debris. About the same time, a ae bomb was exploded in the office of the government’s director general of publications. There were unconfirmed reporta that officials of the Foregin ministry were among the MS-aalltes. A curfew has been ordered and troops are now patrolling Amman streets, the reports from Amman said. PLOT UNCOVERED Government authorities in Amman announced last Much that security police had uncovered plot to assassinate Majali along with Nasser Ben Jamil, an unde of King Hussein. At that time, the government announced a number af persons, who bad arrived from the United Arab Republic by. way e( Leb-. anon, bad been arrested In the ptot. In returning in 1968 as premier of Jordan — he had held the post jkiefly in 1955 — Majali announced file Arab kingdom would steer dear of military pacts with the East or West. it . it it One of his predecessors, Premier Ibrahim Hashem, was unseated in 1956 by rioting in Amman against his attempts to take Jordali into the anti-Communist Baghdad Pact. MajaH’s policy of nonalUance was not enough to Bold off atticism from the United Arab Republic of President Gninal Abdel Nasser. Nasser called him a stooge for the British. it it Majali served as rietdture in 1951 an ister in 1958 and 1968 nsunning the premiership. Plane Crashes in Sea; 63 Die U.S. Resident Aboard; Air Franca Constellation Hits Atlantic, Explodes DAKAR, Senegal (UPI) — An Ajr France Super Constellation circling for a third attempt to land at Dakar Airport in a blinding diantic appar-•board, outside Greenwich, Re was an assistant to the Singer firm’s vice president la charge ol European and African sales. at Dakar as far as infer-ivailable was con-riesns were aboard, list contained nine In Command at Convention Bagwell’s the Boss Now By MAX E. SIMON Paul D. Bagwell has taken over as commander-in-chief of the Michigan OOP. Exercising a firm, controlling hand in his party’s state convention, the Republican candidate for governor virtually dictated all4----- major decisions to the 1,504 _ t l_ . r-r . Beal While Man in Jacksonville Is Member of NAACP; Just Received 90-Day Sentence for Rioting delegates. He spent all of Friday night grilling candidates for State Administrative Board posts on their political views. Hi wanted a slate which could 'speak with one voice,” he explained. he’d “wide open” convention, the delegate* all knew before the convention formally began In Detroit's Oobo Hall Saturday who “Bagwell’s men” were. His men became theirs. And so did his liberal platform. Oakland County’s huge 140-member delegation was among the first to learn that Bagwell had become [a political five-star general. it it it. Local Republicans went to the convention Friday backing Huntington Woods Mayor David R. Calhoun for the auditor general's nomination. After their candidate bad made the rounds of congressional district caucuses la Detroit’s Matter Hilton Hotel, they wen supremely confident their HUB was “to” for the job. Oakland GOP Chairman Arthur G. Elliott Jr. came out of a 2:30 a.m. huddle with other party leaders optimistic over the standing of the county’s favorite son with the delegates. More than six hours after the crash, French navy craft had recovered 80 bodies. All were mangled and their clothes had been torn off when the big plane hit the sea and exploded. ★ * * The plane had 55 passengers and eight crew members aboard scheduled flight from Paris to Dakar, Monrovia, Liberia, and Abidjan, Ivory Coast. they had decided on Mm V. Ctomeats, a Baraga insurance broker for the auditor general’s slot He was the nominee la 1968. Calhoun agreed to run for state treasurer, although he had preferred the other slot. "The important thing is that I’m m the ticket,” said Calhoun. He had expressed strong Interest in the auditor's general office. The 48-year-old Calhoun ha served five terms as Huntington (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Beach JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI) Racial tempers in this strife-torn city exploded into new violence today when a white member of the NAACP was beaten minutes after he and 92 others were sentenced in connection with riots and vandalism of the past weekend. Richard Frank Parker, 25, Tallahassee, Fla., was attacked anteroom of the M u n i c p Court shortly after Judge John Santora had handed down a 98-day prison sentence, stiffest of the day, against him. Parker, whom 8aatora called a main “Inciter” of racial disturbances which swept through the city Saturday and Sunday, waa raahed to a hospital. His mediately, but it was reported be may have lest several teeth and suffered a skuH fracture. Parker’s attacker was identified as Merrill Adrian Imus, 21-year-old Jacksonville construction workers who was sentenced for fighting in the street during * riot Saturday. ’ ' * * * Imus said he swung on Parker after “I asked him if he was a leadef of them niggers and he got mad and started Cussing and swinging.” Parker, who pleaded Innocent to a charge of vagrancy, told the Judge that he was not leading the NAACP members whose “sit-in” and picket fine demonstrations touched off the race riots In downtown Jacksonville Saturday- “They (the Negroes) are nonviolence passive resistance (sic),” (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Pontiac’s first scheduled commercial airline service was approved today by the Civil Aeronautics Board’s long-awaited decision in the four-year-old Great Lakes local service case. For Pontiac air travelers the CAB awarded: 1. Service on a north-south route between Detroit and Sault Ste. Marie via North Central Airlines. 2. A connection via the same airlines with Cleveland out of Detroit. The first service had been recommended for Pontiac a year ago but the second was the subject of special picas to the CAB earlier this year by Rep. William 8. Broomfield, R-Oakland County. Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mkh.. and members ef the city's air transportation committee. “The connection to Cleveland represents a Tremendous victory for Pontiac and Oakland County,' said Broomfield. *■ 0 h It means that recognition has, been given to the community of interest between the industrial centers in southeastern Michigan and those of northern Ohio. “While wo had asked the CAB for a direct link between Pontiac and Ohio, the connection via Detroit Is a big slop in the right direction.” Broomfield said he would urge the CAB and North Central to schedule flights so that the connection between Pontiac and Cleveland could be made conveniently. Pontiac industry had made a strong plea for service to Ohio and its many supplier and affiliate plants there. John W. Hirllnger, manager of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, said he hopes the Detroit-Cleveland flight eventually can be added as the southern segment of the Detroit-Sault Ste. Marie route which affects Pontiac. “That way we could get direct flights to Cleveland, not only for passengers bnt for freight, also,” said Hirllnger, a member of the three-man sir transportation committee. Hirlinger called the newly approved-service "a good beginning. “We will continue working for (Continued on Page 2, Cbl. 6) Transplanted Canadian Wows ’Em at Rome Li'I Wolverine Ernestine's a Gym Dandy SWARM TO THE LAKES — It was a hot. sunny weekend and thousands swarmed to Oakland County's parks and beaches, including athletic CaroF Raines, 2881 Lanadowne Rond. Waterford Township, pprioiming n neat balancing trick at Dodge Park on Cass Lake. Carol’s hatlH hwi Plila Companions are (from left) Kathy Kantarian, 7738 Locklin Road, Waterford Township; Mike Fitzglbbon and Robert Brickner, both of Detroit; and Charlene Egret, 2227' Marston Road, Waterford Township. Williams Turns Over Reins Swainson at Bern Helm By HAROLD A. FITZGERALD Publisher, The Pontiac Press ROME — Many correspondents •wear Ernestine Jean Russell Carter is the best looking contestant [in Rome. This assertion will be challenged by a babbie of global tongues, but the little transplanted Wolverine is something special. Her vital statistics would com- mand attention on Mount Olympusi Roman Olympic Library show or the corner of Saginaw and Hup. she’s 35-24-34. Right after this over-The lovely little gymnast is loll statistical triumph, they threw an even five feet tall and 22 years the tape measures in the Tiber, old - and figures culled from the I was bora In Canada and compete* lor the Maple Leaf but she married a senior la physical education major at Michigan state University and the two of them reside la East Lansing — ju*t a good Olympic broad jump from the Oakland GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) - The Michigan Democratic party, with a new, young captain and an old ex? perienced crew, was ready today • sail into the 1960 political war. State Democrats set their course for keeping control of the governor’s mansion mid the administrative board at a weekend convention in which Lt. Gov. John B. Swainson officially took over the party helm from Gov. G. Mennen Williams. ’Our candidate for governor has I crammed so much experience into his 35 years that I would run time if I tried to list in any detail his record of efficiency and integrity,” said Williams as he stepped down after 12 years in which Michigan Democrats had their greatest successes. Swainson Immediately established his leadership. The party backed his stand against raising the state sales tax from three [ to four per cent. At the same time, S?w'aiFison dem-j onstrated his ability to smooth [ troubled waters by steering clear; of a showdown on a constitutional! convention (con-con) plan. j Democrats are divided on taking n stand on con-con. The incumbent members of the State Administrative Board were renominated by acclamation, assuring Swainson of his ability to ask Michigan voters to elect an experienced slate. Secretary of State James M. Hare, defeated by Swainson in his bid to lead the ticket, headed the re-nominated list of state officers. Auditor Gen. Otis Smith, the [first Negro to hold state office in Michigan, was given the nod to seek his first complete term ■ He was appointed to the post by Williams to fill a vacancy. Atty. Gen. Paul Adams and State Treasurer Sanford Brown were also picked tor the ticket and State Supreme Court Justice Theodore Souris, another Williams appointee, was picked to contend on the noa-partisan ballot tor his present jobS , Swainson told delegates to the convention, “the Democratic per-(Continued on Page Col. 4) News Flashes WASHINGTON Ori—The Senate backed President Elsenhower today by voting to restore lit million of the Mi million dollars Congress cut last week from the foreign aid money Mil. ROME ID—Gary Toblaa of Glendale, Calif., won the first U. 8. gold medal of Ike 17th Olympic Gamca by capturing the men’s 3-meter springboard diving today. It doesn’t take a sharp-eyed senior in physical education to spot little Ernestine. You can a mile away whether you’re an engineer, a medic or partially blind. She went to State on a scholarship and met John Carter, varsity third baseman. John didn’t know a giant swing from a parallel bar, but they were married in December. He’s now in State’s athletic department. RESPECTS SOVIET mxntg Ernestine spent several weeks this summer working out all alone in the dismal vastness of John Hannah’s huge and deserted field house. She thinks Russian women are the world’s greatest gymnasts and she ought to know, for this petite Canadian was the only feminine contestant among athletes invited to a special competition in Moscow. ’ / )■ ■ Ernestine has been named Canadian Amateur Woman/of the Year six times. When you conjure a mental pletaTo of a girt gymnast, per-------- • page 2, Col. 2) Waterford Boy Survives Supermarket ' ' Except for a wee bit of tummy ache, a deven-year-old !i£ n7 ^irSUi!!|Wat“tor'1 Tomahtp boy was in fine shape today after cans win support both proposals, his weekend “ordeal.” Democrats are unanimously The boy, Bradley Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Truman JSES“J5—-h*. 986 st - T they’ll be permitted to decide in-the object Of an all*night divuduaiiy on con-con. police search Saturday eve- he realized jning. His parents became worried when Bradley didn’t show up for supper. They called township police. A call for the missing young-i star was Issued. State police and I sheriffs deputies Joined the hunt. Neighbors of the Davis family scoured the area near the family’s Echo's Healthy Despite Change in Temperature WASHINGTON (UPI) - The National Aeronautics and Space Administration reports the Echo J communications satellite has suffered no ill effects from its quick trips through tin earth’s shadow. vi.it * a The satellite, launched Aug. 12 now is beginning to move more into the shadow, causing a temperature change that some feared might affect the cellophane-thin balloon. But a NASA spokesman said Sunday the shadow hasn’t meant a thing to Echo’s orbit. JF *, ' * Echo's schedule tonight (or Pontiac Srea viewers: 8:03 p.m., high north, northeast; 10:09 p.m., high north, southeast; 12:15 ajnM high south, southeast; 2:25 a.pv, tow south, southeast. home. _ No clues to the whereabouts of the missing boy were uncovered, until ... Motorist driving past the ARP supermarket ou Huron Street nepr Telegraph Road were startled at 8:30 s.rn. Monday st what they saw peering out the window. It happened to be Bradlpy, police found upon checking. They found him sitting on a box | munching a candy bar. . Nor had be gone hungry throughout the night. He’d eaten eooldes, lee cream and sH the goodies he could find. He’d become “tost” by hiding in a backroom till the store closed Friday night, be, told his parents. BRADLEY DAVIS Accidentally on purpose, police commented. > One of six children, he’d come out after employes went home, and had the time of his life. Later he slept on a carton. J He’d resumed his feasting, he explained. when officers ended his ’’ordeal " _TWO THE PONTIAC PRBS8, MONDAY. AUGUST tt, 1W0 m OAS Condemn Red Cuban Foothold Fidel's Delegate Walks Out After 19-1 Vpte Jalaps Castro Regime SAN JOSE, Costa Rlca(AP)—• Tfcp meeting of foreign ministers rt, the Organization of American Aes drew to a close today after cendemning the campaign of the $$et and Chinese Communists to ukt Cuba as a willing spring-b%d into the Americas. iT a a * 4he conference by a 19-1 vote F&nday night also, rejected a Cuban resolution calling on the United States to refrain from aggressive acts' against Fidel Castro's regime. When the ministers also turned down ^ Venezuelan proposal wafer down the anti-Communist ,, “declaration of San Joe*," Foreign Minister Raul Roa and the reE«f the Cuban delegation walked out of the conference and packed for home- A A- A It was the second walkout of the. two-week conference. The delegation from the Dominican Republic quit the meeting Aug. 30 after the other ministers found Generalissimo Rafael Trujillo’s regime guilty of plotting to sassinate Venezuelan Presi Romulo Betancourt and voted political and economic sanctions against the Dominican Republic. *. £ A *■ A "Two dictator* gone one from the left, one from the fight,” one diplomat remarked after die Cuban walkout EFFECT UNKNOWN But he and others wondered about the effect* on the 70-year-old inter-American system. Some felt die ministers’ tough action Atiuld restore public faith in the Wstem. Others feared it aet an unhealthy precedent for the American family of republics. *■* A With the United States pressing f&c a firm line against the Communist threat to the hemisphere, tan ministers compromised only to the extent of omitting specific Asptian of Cuba from their declaration of San Jose. But their opposition to Castro's friendship for tfc Soviet and the Chinese and to bis deteant reject of the OAS was clear. , a, A A ..»* . - , The ministers in their declaration said they “energetically con-demn intervention or the menace qj^Mnfeiition . . . by an extra-continental power in tfe affairs of toft, continent or its acceptance by mi American state.” -' This referred to Soviet Premier Nljdta Khrushchev’s threat to'IM MCkets to defend Cuba if she v attacked by the United States and tiM Castro regime’s acceptance of fdbh help. .. it it A In anodut obvious slap at Cuba, the ministers said they “reject dm aim of Stoo-Scriet powers to utilize the economic, poUtical and social situation of any American Kate to break continental unity and endanger die peace and security of the hemisphere." Ministers Wrap Up Today^j^ STRETCHER CASE — An unidentified crew member of a U. S. Globemaster transport plane Is removed by stretcher on arriving at the airport in Leopoldville, the Congo, Sunday night. 10 Beaten Troops ‘Lucky to Be Alive* ■■*7'...—- l#-, Only U.N. Saved GIs in Congo AT TtoMu He and seven offier American crew members and two Canadians had been attacked at the Stanleyville airport by Congolese. the Day In Birmingham Schedule for Schools Announced by Board LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (AP)—Dr. Ralph J. Bunche said today only the intervention of United Nations Ethiopian troops saved eight American airmen and two Canadians brutally attacked Congolese at Stanleyville airport .Saturday. The io men “had the hell beaten out of them and are lucky to be alive,” said Bunche, the U.N, undersecretary, who has protested tlw attack strongly to Premier Patrice Lumumba’s government. A A A 'These men bad a brutal beating—a terrific beating,” Bunche said. "They live today only because of the intervention of the Ethiopian U.N. troops. They are still under shock and need great care.” Meanwhile threat of fighting along the Katanga border grew today. Congolese forces loyal to Lumumba were reported within 20 miles of the rich secessionist province. READY TO REPU, Katanife's rebel' Premier Moi£e Tshombe rushed troops to the northern frontier and prepared to fly to the front himself to roily Ms men against invasion. "My troops want to see me and ufaut to see them to show diem I am still in charge in Katanga,’’ declared Tshombe, who has proclaimed Ms province independent Lumumbas central government. Tshombe s military command- ers said their forces had blown,none of these was In a dangerous up rail bridges and mined the condition, few roads leading south from Ka j * * * sai province into Katanga. U.S. Ambassador Claire Tim- berlake delivered a strong protest Katanga army spokesman placed Congolese troops in Luputa, an agricultural center about 20 miles from the frontier, but said patrols were probably probing border defenses. Bunche made Ms statement to group of photographers who asked permission to take pictures of his visit to die wounded men in the modernistic hospital at Louvainium University,, about 15 miles outside Leopoldville. Bunche spent half an hour talking with all the wounded men. With Mm were Andrew Cotdier, executive assistant to Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold who arrived in Leopoldville Sunday, against tha attack. The ambassador said Foreign Minister Justin Bo^rako apologized. Swainson Grabs Dem Party Reins (Continued From Page One) ty is to a marching mood sad not even the dismal thicket of Republicanism caa stay oar course.” He lashed Republican Nominee Paul Bagwell as “an architect Of auri” Swedish M~aj. Gen' Ctari von ; doom who has managed only to Horn, commander of U.N. forces blacken Michigan* reputation in the Congo. A U.S. Air Force officer told The Associated Press the condi-the injured men is good ■■P and ftIt “there is no ctongerof loss of life.” American officers at the hospital declined to give detailed physical reports on individual casualties, explaining they could not do so until the roedfcat staff completed examination of each man. One U.8. officer said among the American casualties there were two possible skull fractures and tHie possible fractured spine, but from coast to coast’ He said that contrary to Bagwell’s statements new industry was moving into Michigan and the state was in a period of impressive accomplishment. A In platform matters the convention adopted the following planks: Aging — pledged to continue efforts to achieve good, comprehensive health care for the nation’! senior citizens. Education — went on record for a minimum teachers salary, expanded adult education, federal support of education and academic freedom. Reuther Warns Jack of Jobless Danger * WASHINGTON (UPI) — United Auto Workers President Walter P. Heather has told Democratic presidential nominee John F. Kennedy that unemployment is “growing 1 dangerously higher.” AAA Reuther’s statement was based Sunday night in a "fact sheet” published by the AFL-CIO Industrial union department. A A- A The publication said Reuther Shapely Little Ernestine Sets Rome Afire Again haps you visualise one of ample beam, big muscles and a huge frame. Perhaps yen picture he{ shouldering n canoe and striding off through the An 8aMe underbrush. But our little Ernestine couldn't IUt n M-ponnd shot In lets than three fries. And since this seems to be Ladies Day at the Olympics for your peripatetic reporter, let’s glance at three of the most remarkable competitors in all this worldwide athletic strife, the fantastic members of the Santa Clara (Calif.) Swim Club. These American mer- (Continued From Page One) Von Saltsa to primed for the battle of her life. She haa what it takes. Bagwell Entrenched as State GOP Chief (Continued From Page One) Woods mayor. He to a past president of the Michigan Municipal League and serve* on the executive board of the American Municipal Assn. Both Calhoun and dements were unopposed at the convention. The two other races for the state tickets produced contests, but those Bagwell’s blessing were whelmingly nominated-They were Wendell A. Miles of Holland for attorney general and former Wyandotte Mayor William E. Kroger for secretary of state. The huge convention arena In Cobo Hall was jammed Saturday afternoon as Republicans looked confidently ahead to victory to November. Keynoting the session, Bagwell urged Ms party to “cut (Hit lit stone” its support of the constitutional convention proposal on the November ballot. Ripping into his Democratic opponent,'John B. Swainson, Bagwell Said: "More than a year ago John Swainson took a stand in favor of a constitutional convention matter of principle. Then he sold out principle and declared against con-con in favor of Gus Scholle’s support at the pedis jin the Democratic primary. “He woa — but ut wl price!” Bagwell also pledged the party ■to produce the 100,000 new jobs a year that we not only need but must have for our people.” ‘It is up to us to change the national image of Michigan — an image based on the black picture of a state gone broke, deeply in debt, beset by constant tax problems, un-certain of the future, fussing and feuding and arguing to a senseless stalemate while progress passes us by.” Congressman Alvin M. Bentley, GOP nominee for U. S. senator, also ripped the Democrats ‘‘tor their policies toward industry in Michigan.” "Our governor took a bull whip to some of the finest Industries to the state,” he charged. “He brought some of them to heir knees and drove others com-pletely out of the state,” he added. Noting the “strong possibility” of Gov. Williams being appointed Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare In event of a Kennedy victory, Bentley declared: Filot for $30 Million Against Sol Dann for Slander and Libel DETROIT UR — Chrysler Carp. yn today It has filed a 30-mil nondollar libel and slander suit against Detroit attorney SoL A. iann. Thu suit was filed in Superior Court in Wilmington, Del., today. Dann is a plaintiff in three pending suitsag&inst Chrysler. Chrysler sakl^jk charged Dann with attemptin'* to undermine and destroy confidence and faith of Chrysler’s dealers and stockholders. . It asks 30 million dollars plus punitive damages. Chrysler claimed Dana haa acted oat of maSce and. for the deliberate purpose of injuring the Dann and two other stockholders filed suit in Chancery Court at Wilmington two weeks ago against Chrysler, its 20 directors, 15 supplier companies and various other individuals charging gross mismanagement. Dann amended this suit last Friday, adding additional charges and 33 additional defendants. Dann also has pending in a New York court a suit to void Chrysler’ incentive compensation and stock option plans, and he has a third suit asking the courts to require Chrysler to furnish Mm a list of company stockholders and their addresses. In today’s aet lea Chrysler asked the Superior Coart to attach Dana’s stockholdings In General Motors, Ford Motor Co, and Chrysler Corp. He owns approximately 5.100 shares of Chrysler stock. Chrysler said its suit asks damages of more than 10 million dollars each for various “false, malicious and defamatroy” statements wMch it said Damt made at different time* concerning the company’s financial statements and condition, its credit and financing arrangements and the counting of proxy votes at the company’s annual meeting last April. Chrysler said the statements Involved dealt with the corporation, not with individuals. BIRMINGHAM - A new schedule for the daily opening and doling times for Birmingham schools has been adopted by the board of education. The new plan is exi cause lass, hut not eliminate entirely. inconvenience to Students, parents and teachers, according to Mteol Supt. ptis M. Dickey. The revised schedule calls for * staffing tone of 9:55 a-m. and • dismissal tone ef kll pm. for Adams, Baldwin, lloemfleld Village, Midvale, Pembroke, Pierce, Quartou aad Torry elementary schools. The lunch hour, from 11:30 *Jn-to 12:30 p.m. remains unchanged. % . A ’ A ★ Beverly, Greenfield, Franklin. Harlan, Valley Woods and Walnut 1 schools will also start at 9:55 a.m. but will close at 2:50 p.m. to permit children to be bused In reasonable time. The same length of school day will be maintained by scheduling a 40-minute lunch period In shifts beginning at 1L30 a m. Seaholm High School aad Der-by Jqol|r_ High will open at 9 a.m. aad ctoea at 9:U pm. ■um^ftil* ■WI AIB begin at g:W a.m. and dismiss af 9:49 Along with the a Dickey has proposed that para* ha hired at 2L50 an hour teg schools requiring supervisory help. The revisions to scheduling ware made alter the school administration expressed concern over teacher morale in supervising children during the noon hour. To hire additional supervisory help would mean about $7,000 yearly, but Dickey said he considered reasonable in light of afi the factors involved. - Parents of pre-achootan are invited to rircle Sept. 6 on the family calender as the day registration opens for toe first of die 196041 aeries of per-echool story hours at Baldwin PubHe library. Mis. Ann Burch of the beys' and girls’ department staff reports flat afi S to 5-year-elds whew families live la Btrintog- Civil rights dvtl righto plaak adopted by the national convention aad urged state legislation to prevent Incidents such as the present case where an American Indian veteran was denied barlal next to Ms wife In a cemetery because of Ms nee. Economic growth — took recognition of the fact that Michigan’s! “Williams succeeded in bankrupting Michigan JX12 years. We caught up with Mm because this state is limited in the amount of money it can raise. "This would not be true in Washington because when deficits occur there they do not have to be admitted. All file Democrats have ever done before there is print more money. “So whereon It took him 11 years to break Michigan, I eaa see Mm doing the same thing la Washington la 12 months,” Bentley said. Fears of opposition to the Bag-well platform were proved groundless. State Sen. Lynn O. Francis of Midland, pleading for party unity, took file speaker’s rostrum to ask conservatives not to split the party. “I am a conservative — and proud to be a conservative,” he said. Are we going to sit quietly by Go get ’em, Chris. A A A Donna Da Varona is the midget and the darling of the U S. team. She's probably the youngest Olympic competitor in any sport. Donna’s 13 and she made the relay team. Give her another few years and she’ll spot her Olympic opponents an outboard motor and a head start. economic health is closely related I and destroy ourselves in a dispute to economic well-being of the na- over 5 per cent or 10 per cent of tion, and gave its support tojthe whole when we are in agree- sat * rent economy and during the) AAA last rig1* years. | Chris Von Saltza tried out for Cuban Catholics Object economic goals spelled out in the national platform. Freedom of information — affirmed the belief that public government is the public's business and declared party policy to be that the public shall have access wherever public affairs are officially transacted unless it infringes on national security or the preservation of individual rights. ment on toe other 95 per cent? ‘This is no timefor us to sulk our tents.” Although GOP senators nn- Latest Population Dope Bagwell’s support of con-eon, they raised no objections to the party’s platform plank on the Issue. The GOP platform also called for i Michigan civil rights commission, a four-eent sales tax, a state labor relations board, establishment of a state crime commission, The Weather —i, 7 .—~ mavaina un — in an ouviuus mem oi a siaie crane commission, (the Olympic swim team four years reference to the growing influence NEW YORK The world’s jand changes to admission policies ago m the 400 meter event wnen ^ communism on Fidel Castro's j population is increasing by 48 mil- for mentally retarded youngsters she was 12 years old. And she missed winning, a place by five-r fo™uc' wS^nOTin — rsrtij tenths of a second. The three older ^ and blS8er 8^1* who finished ahead ■ub t, | Clara are Lynn Burke and Ann i Warner. Ann’s 15 while Lynn Is | an “old toner” of 17. Ann won the 200-meter breaststroke at De-j trott and Lynn set a world’s J, record in the backstroke. ; ?5 j Chris is now a veteran of 16 and she has won 16 national titles and set 23 American records at dis-u fences from 100 yards to 500 met-[ft. era. She broke the world’s record *jin the 400. Two Australians are ganging up to “take her” and well ... -to jthey may. She’ll meet them at two ' ........! «> distances These Aussie* are spe- fr—tn«r—Psrtiy cloudy jcial feminine swimmers scheduled —aai uwnt T'u»*r»tir» to be unveiled for world inspec-T*fe nafe to ••rmrt" u tier at the Olympics and Chris [faces the challenge of her life. *•' Chris beat Use Konrads in semifinals 100 meter freestyle but Dawn Fraser had faster time than eith-j Her. Finals of the 100-me ter free-}M t* style come tonight. iilaybc the can beat them, i Maybe ahe can’t. The world has : ■ever aecp, to* equivalent of these aquatic star* from down under. Anywpy, ear grand-Mfse ' regime, the Cuban Catholic Youth lion a year and now stands at Cangress has expressed opposition! 2,900,000,000 the United Nations to the subordination of Cuba’s'Demographic Year Book estimates, sovereignty to any outside pow-j Communist China, with 669 mil-era or interests. I lion, has the largest population. in state institutions. The only rhubarb ot the convention came to the nomination of candidate for State Supreme Court justice. Pontiac Air Routes Announced by CAB (Continued from Page One) direct service tn'OMo and also te Chicago,” he said, Approval of the Detroit-Sault te. Mayie route had been expected. Hie CAB upheld this route and almost all the other recommendations made by examiner Barron Fredericks a year ago. The new short4iaat routes In the Great Lakes ares were spHt between North Central Airlines ana Lake Central Airlines. Pontiac had asked for « route lo Cleveland, Akron, Canton, Youngstown and Pittsburgh. These five cities were linked on a new route awarded to Lake Central, with its northern termtooua to Detroit. Pontiac and other cities across Central Michigan had asked for route to Chicago, also. This was turned down. 'The service that has been awarded to Pontiac is the first step towards providing the badly needed air transportation that Pontiac and Oakland County so richly deserve,” Broomfield said. North Central Airlines officials have Indicated that It may be several months from now before the Pontiac service Is to-angn rated. The company is planning daily flights out of Pontiac Municipal Airport, but first must receive official notice from the CAB and then wait during a period in wMch any final objections can be heard to Washington. Boats Crash in Fog; 11 Go to Hospital ' NEW YORK * — A large cargo .esael and a ferryboat carrying hundreds of passengers collided today in a Hudson River fog *| Lower Manhattan. At least U penons were token to hospitals. One woman was reported seriously injured. The vessels were the Sea train Georgia and toe ferryboat Chatham, crossing the river from Hoboken, N.J. to Manhattan. Passengers said there was no panic aboard although some persons rushed for life preservers. Marilyn Monroe Hospitalized With Acute Exhaustion HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Glamour girl Marilyn Monroe was hospitalized here today suffering acute ex-laustion, according to a spokesman for the sultry actress. Miss Monroe’s press agent said her latest picture, “The Misfits,” was suspended on location to Reno, Nev., idling costar dark Gable and director John Huston. “Marilyn needs all the rest she can get,” said publicist Harry Mines. “The picture is more than tialf finished, but we still bav another fiye weeks of shooting.*1 cards are eligible to attend. Registrations may bo made either to person or phone. The maximum number — 25 boys and girls — Is expected to be readied quickly, according' to Mrs. Burch, since the popular programs wiQ be held to the colorful Storyland Alcove to the needy completed wing of the library, . Hie story hours begin Sept 13 at 10 a.m. and will continue every Tuesday morning through Oct. 18. White Man Beaten in Jacksonville (Continued From Page One) said Parker, described as a sociology student at Florida State University. Fifty-seven Negroes also were convicted and sentenced to the cases. Only one of the 94 persons charged to the disturbances was freed. Most received 925 fines, but Santora warned that stitter punishment might be to the offing If more demonstrations arose. A A A The judge said ”1 don’t intend to pre-judge these cases, but to order to maintain peace and dignity, I we will have to be more stern than e are today.” AAA He ad*ad that “I hope wn won’t have any mole demonstrations, ’ ’ which he called “shamefhl” for ton city. Authorites late Sunday had imposed drastic police measures in an attempt to stop t)» violence and vandalism. To March at Chrysler DETROIT (UPI) - Members of United Auto Workers Local T planned to march at S p.m. today to protest ’inhuman working conditions’' at the Chrysler dorp. Jef- DlrtcUon: South ana MU Monday at 7:11 p.m SUa rla« Tuaaday at S:»» a m. Moon aria Monday at U:M p m. Mooa rlaaa Tuaaday at !:M P * (mUn Taaparaturaa • am.......lla.m................ Sunday la raatfec , (aa racardad fenMta) Hllhari Umparaturt ........ Lowaat Mmparatura ......... — ‘unparatura ............. CORRECTION: THIS IS THE WAY OUR AO SHOULD HAVE APPEARED SATURDAY, AUGUST 27th. Fashion Design ft*? Ona Tax The Spaceaester 1,400 Squort Feet of Living Space • Payad atraata, Buffalo *7 71 HavOrU thicaco *7 75 nrir Turk Cincinnati St n Omaha Cltvalaud M 71 PfUatoD- h ibaaaia ipolla ‘ EMMS I —] IUNVM ROOM | • o’.M* UTHITY ri»u* wncsMtt □ MAIN OFFICI ! and p« it rnubwvh to M IrSfe !i tj pSL-.jj M fin* * * SSr Phone: OR 3-0001 Open 1 to 9 P.M. Deily SALES MODKL 9220 WilliMM Ipha Read as Utns take SLAVIK • StttMMMM a Stut* MaUiaii JSmtLAXM 13,990 $290 DOWN plus cotta 30 year FHA TERMS 104^0 WIST MINI Ml11 ROAD OAK PARK. MICH. > JO 5-P9I4 As Low USE YOUR CREDIT BUT USE IT WISELY FOR THAT BACK-TO-SCHOOL BUYING! A good credit standing is a real convenience. It enables you to buy and use the things you need at once, pay for them the following month ... or on deferred payment purchases, over a longer period. , But a good credit standing also involves an obligation, to pay your bills promptly on the due date. Use your credit but use it wisely this fall when securing fall fashions for back to school wardrobes. Buy only what you know you can pay for and pay all bills when due. In this manner you protect your good credit record. To Maintain a Good Credit, Bay Wisely, Pay Promptly PONTIAC CREDIT B BUREAU, Inc. The Credit Bureau of Pontiac Organised July 12, 1923 338 North Perry Street Pontiac 16, Mich. Protect Your Credit end ft. Will Protect Yeuf _ X' THK PONTIAC PBE38. MONDAY, AOQPST ! THREE WlND * Pu,h Button • ELECTRIC ' iovie Camera I RIectric Drive— Never Naads Winding ! Fas* #f.9 Um • Mm Viewfinder • mported Fujlta "8" uses inex- J pensive 8mm film. Battery • operated for uniform perfect 5 movie*. * Kf EW I NEW 19 87 2 in 1 Combination * AM I Sheri Wan; TRANSISTOR { Radios I 29 87 Their Optnong Flow Freely as Oil Texas Talkers Gab at 8 Transistor Complete with Battery Car-phone. Leather Casa, ’owerful station-getter (regular • short-wave) w i t h true* one. Uses inexpensive transis* e batary. \ \ • • : I felt TRANSISTOR S Radio BATTERIES: "Maxell" Impart* • BY DICK WEST WASHINGTON —U nobody la using this corner to dis-ciMMbe Congolese or the Kennedy! or Nixons, I might as wall ■ay * tew words about Texas. I have just spent/a pair of fortnights back-to-back sojourning in the cow country. What I was doing waa taking a vacation, but ptaiae don’t tell the Internal Revenue Service. Far income tax purposes, I waa sampling grass roots opinion. T Intend to deduct my travel «rests as a bastarss expense because 1 spent meet ef my vacation time making a political survey. This was set the way I planned It, but It’s the way things wsrked out At first glance, Texas might seem like a difficult place in which to sample grass mots opinion. There isn’t any grass to speak of and what grass there is likely hhs a snake in it. But if there is a shortage of grass roots, there certainly is no shortage of opinion. A visitor will find that opinion sampling in Texas is not 'only easy bid unavoidable. Upon learning that I lived in Washington, the, Texans I met would invariably ask what 1 thought about the political situation. The first couple of times this happened, I made an honest effort to give them a fair, frank and informed appraisal. “It looks bad,” I would say. It soon became apparent, however, that my Interrogators weren’t really Interested In hearing my opinion. This was just n gambit they need to Introduce the subject se they could tdl me their opinion. By vacation’s end, I had collected enough opinion samples to keep the Gallup poll running for the next six months. Incidentally, when I mentioned snakes in the grass I wasn’t just using a' figure of speech. Some portions of the state apparently are having a reptile population explosion. When the nights turn cool, rattlesnakes crawl out of the did yua/iif 0 New Fresh Stock • F u I I dnngth forj longer fife. Guar- •• an feed. CAMERA DEPT. -Wain floor • ooosooooosoooooooooa Khrushchev Finally Pays U.S. Hotel Bill PITTSBURGH (UP1) — Soviet Premier Nikita S- Khrushchev’s credit rating af the Carlton House Hotel has improved, but it probably caused many "red” faces at the Russian Embassy in Washington. Hotel officials had been wondering about the unpaid $1,000 bill Khrushchev ran up during his visit here last year. Embassy officials, when asked about the money, said a check had been sent to the hotel last February. The hotel management replied they never receivd it. A certified check arrived Friday and the credit rating of the Russian boss took a turn upward. TONITE ondTUISDAY • 2nd Floor Special! KING SIZE 4 Place Sorving TRAY Sets Styled Exactly As Illustrated Tubular brass finished lags (on* tray has casters for stand) with over-size 22x16 inch trays. Palimino horse decorated. •SMSSSSSStSSSMIltSMStS Polyethylene PLASTIC Ttfin Mop-Pails Divided far Wash sad Rhus $2 quality. Full 15 quart capacity. Reinforced handle — choice'of colors. MIRRO-MATIC 4 Heart PRESSURE COOKER $15.95 Veto*—NOW , Saves time and cooking costs. Adjusts to 5. 10 or 15 lbs. automatically. Add blni Hanging Specs fa Any Um OvBf-Tha-Door CLOTHES HANGERS 58’ ii [LA pastures and curl up along the asphalt roadways, seeking warmth. Many townspeople consider it diverting to drive out along some rural road in the early evening and spend a couple of pleasant hoars slaying snakes. I read about one Texas lady who had UM 1M rattlesnakes alaee last tanary. This has nothing to 4s with politics, but I thought I would throw it la Politically. Texas is in a state of ferment. Will it go Republican again this fall? Or will Lyndon Johnson swing enough home stats vqtes to save it tor the Democrats? . ;■* * * ' ftom my involuntary optoion sampling. I believe I have the answer. I would like to tdl you the, results but I think I had batter fry to sen them to the highest bidder. I need to have something in reserve in case the Revenue Service doesn’t allow that deduction. Sensational VALUE! TONITE and TUESDAY Boraoins 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS HMvy Duty — Corrugated Steel Rubbish BURNERS Complete With Cover Regular S4J95 Quality Raised bottom for complete draft and complete burning. Perforated. Complete with cover for complete safety, •eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeei >e 6 Foot l Sturdy STEP • Ladders! ssjs /M4;| Value “ *| Rig i d braced,* Folds compact when not In Steal rod rein-* Tubular aluminum, rubber tip fetoc&foqps. * legs. •*eee***f*eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee *2L«"■ "“fo«!•**: ySrt hTaM MhJ ^ m • - n—■ Sot Regular 11.29 rt^rotec- . |—hit plastic 2 d rope lot h - taHHi I—iuik. •••••••••••••••••••eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee Limit 1 to customer. ' _. easier painting. $C95 BssT O ‘ Outside WHITE Mai: TOftl LATEX PUNT •••••••••••••eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeqeeeeeeeeeee All tilipON Cl * Assorted Grits Paint Tkiaaor 30c OuulUy M paint, eloaaa bras ee. Limit V. ..... SX — rJiuTAArJlsafl SIMMS Givos o Lesson tn Thrift With Every Purchote! SAVINGS for STUDENTS — from Kindergarten to Cbllege Coaptre SIMMS Mcm! Haavy INNER-FLEECED Boys' Sweat Shirts Choke ef While or Colors SIMMS It OPEN TONITE W 10 o'tlwk fi t* VahM 07' Xlsoo *(•».. 3* I Nylon relnlorced stretch neck b—. shape. Casy to iavn-der. Why pay more? Washable SANFORISED Non-Sirink Boys' Flannel Shirts Vaises lo SIM Popular plaids in alt colors. k ALL FIRST quality. Easy to launder. Extra long 97’ eeeeeeeeas7eeeeeeesssesssseeessseeee*seee*e** Wathable Pre-Skruak Coiions Boys' School Pants « Colerfel Irrldescents $2.29 Quality AJI. sizes 6 to 16. Full cut and well made. Choice, qf fall and winter colors. Lace trim, built-up • shoulders. White cotton washes beautifully. 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Boys' and Girls' School Shoos 0XF0RDS-STRAPSSANDALS 96 1 Sizes ftt to 12—12V, to J Genuine leather uppers, composition soles. Broken size ranges and 'discontinued styles. Pontiac's Own Bargain Store Sine* 1934 Check Simms Prices On SCHOOL SUPPLIES Not 250 ... not 300 . . . but' 350 SHEETS Notebook Paper Regular MfBy ff JUS 77‘ Fits ell standard 2 or 3 ring notebooks. Ruled, AH 1st quality. ••#•••••••••••••••••* ESe RULED PATER 5.Hole Pastel Cetor.. 25c TYPING PAD Pack at Paper...... $1 TYPING PAPER 240 Sheet Count.. ••»**•»*••*•••••«••* ZIPPER BINDER tlJS .oil. m 19* 19*- 79* a m s Xiager 2 or S Ring—Bine.. Box of 64 AsMrtod Calm ‘Crayola9 Crayons ISc lex ef 8___12c 19c Box of 12 . . . 13c 23cBexcf 16.17c 33c Bex if 24 24c 75c Bex of 48.. .490 eeeeeeee#*eee*eeee*e 50c Value 39* Me PENCIL BOX £Q4 SUtcs * Capitol*;... 027 49c PAINT BET • Celora........... BOSTON Pencil ShiipMBf $3 Boston PENCIL SHARPENER ....... $3.85 Boston KS 041 PENCIL SHARPENER * Swivel Floor Stand WORLD 6L0BE Pull IS-inch (lobe U up to date — vuhabit map surface. Metu ivlvcl floor (tend. Bettor than ihowa. oooooooooooooooeooea Eagle Paacil Sal 49c Seller 39’ • 12 PeiKite ; • 6” Ruler » I FOUR MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1060 FACTORY AUTHORIZED LOWREY ORGAN Studio Replacement SALE! Every six months we re-equip oar studios with brand new LQWWCY IoROANS. All LOWREY ORGANS [that have been used for "demos”, teaching and practicing must be sold quickly, at tremendous reductions. Only during this sale can you buy a LOWREY ORGAN at less than the nationally ^ advertised price. Hurry ‘taf today, only one of a kind available. TERMS: $25 Down, Balance 36 Mdnths , LARGE STOCK ... Organ Books — Chord Organ Books We Teach; Piano — Organ — Accordion! 18 E. Huron. Pontiac FE 4-0566 Open Mon., and Frt. Eves. To Seek Delay for Integration Orleans School Board ! Wants One-Year Wait After Court Order Sarny Key to Pay Scales for Millions Census Under Way to Determine New Cost of Living NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP)-The Orleans Pariah School Board, under federal court orders to to-tegrate public schools here next week, today .made plans to seek up to-one year’s delay In die order. i Board President Lloyd Rittlner land three other members said they would ask a conference with me. Dist. Judge J. Skelly Wright i this week to request the delay. CHICAGO (UPD—Another census la under way across the country- .. ■ ‘•■I This one may bear an important influence on the pay scales of millions and national economic policy decision. The near survey is being conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, whose cost-of-living index is the key to pay rates in many industries. The object of the twe-year •tody la to find out how much the eeaatry’s living and spending habit* have changed since * ★ * | the last each survey in IK# and The fifth member. Emile Wag- *• •**■* »• ****** tade* ner Jr,, opposed the idea. He said he would ask Gov. Jimmie Davis to close the public schools rather than accept integration Sept. 7. Judge Wright last May Interviewers last week began calling on selected households in 13 major cities. They will gather tacts over a six-week period on family characteristics, lacomci, expenses, housing fadlitiss, rents or taxes paid and other information about dwellings. 'X.w. _ # * The study is a first step in a major survey which, in the next two years, will cover 86 cities and town* in the United States bring the consumer price index up to date. "We frankly de net know hew much the Index will be changed by the survey," Adolph O. Berger, regional director In Chicago, told United Frees International. "We do know that there have been bid changes since 1950, however," he said. "Income lias gone up faster than consumer price?. As Income rises, people tend to buy more luxury Itemaand spend their leisure time in different MUST BE DEFINITE Barger said the index has become so important as a of the natkm’a standard of living that we can’t have any doubt or controversy attached to E” Millions of Americans have their wages and salaries geared to the index, be said. It is also an important consideration in decisions made by federal and local governments, professionals, businessmen and labor groups. Berger said there hre many commodities which have become more important to family, living today than in 1%0. Other item* are now less important and will be dropped from the index, he said. Head F. Callahan, regional price analyst, meatiseeg toad as one major Item which may ha leas weighted In the new Index. “In 1950, almost 30 per cent of all expenditures went for food,’! she "Now people spend mare money for such luxury items as boats, a second car, a hi-fi, or pn extra television or radio," SBOONP PHASE OF PROGRAM Following the initial household survey, the Bureau wUl begin a second and much more comprehensive phase in the two-year program. prices they pay, how site they shop for food and other Mated tacts. Berger emphasised that-all information obtained through the can. vasses will be kept In strict con- Beginning in January 1981, interviewers will visit a smaller number of families. They wifi seek detailed information about the kinds and amounts of goods and services that consumers buy, the MTHMIK SUFFERER A syndicated column by a well-known doctor, recently printed an article on the benefits of sea brine for human con-sumption. He said, x Review “i* h» •* interview that Ms com -tpisMon, which is studying the problem, has “a unique and exdt-int opportuaity” of vital importance to thecountry. > * A A A "We hope to establish outdoor KcreaOOn as at basic need of all tb% people.” he declared. “Outdoor recreation should be the supply of land and other pCre-ioom for a great difference of ation resources availafals to tits opinion as to whether the future local (municipal) basis to meet the needs of the people. That’s our Rockefeller panted out that the population of the United States is growing rapidly, and that its people have rage leisure time, more money to spend and better transportation than years ago. At the same time, he warned that people is diminishing. The cemmisato* beaded by the EO-yesr-sId Oertralelhr, graad-mb of the fa mass Ms D., was oothliilil by Ctmgren In UK to stady the idliu raestsa sf ths lands and waterways sI the IMtod States. Its purpose la “to review present outdoor recreation resources and those that will be required by the year 1978 and the year 3000." The 15-member commission is scheduled to report its findings and recommendations to the President and the Congress by the fall of ML At a recent meeting of the commission and its advisory council at Jackson Lake Lodge, Wyb., Rockefeller repotted that “excellent progress” was being made. BeckeMter toM UPI at Ms New Ysrfc office that “the een-(tractive tie sf leisure time Is sue «f oar major objectives.” He recognised that the five-day work week is now the general rule in America but added “time is No Matter Who Wins Most U.S. Ambass Won't Lose Their Posts WASHINGTON W-U.S. ambassadors around the world will be turning in their badges when the next president enters the White House. But prospects are that most of the envoys will stay on the Job, whether their new boss is named Nixon or Kennedy. ★ A A Of the 90 or so American ambassadors — the exact number keeps changing with the word scene — about 25 are now political” appointees while 65 are “career” diplomats who have risen through the ranks of the foreign service. Hie ratio was about the same during the Truman administration. v v Actually all ambassadors are "potitteaj” -— the posts are filled by presidential appointment, with Senate confirmation, rather than through examination or. civil service. promotion. An ambassador is traditionally the president’s. personal representative to the chief of the foreign country. AAA For this reason, Mi ambassadors customarily hand in their resignation when a new president takei office. But actually only the noncareerists are likely their resignations accepted, and not necessarily all of these. ONLY A PEW Thus the prospect is for a few changes in the 320,000 to $27,300-a-year Jobs. Ait not a wholesale sweep with tits advent of either a Democratic or another Republican administration. And of course, the career diplomats normally are reassigned from time to time anyway. ♦ A * The White House changeover may be reflected more dearly in the State Department’s top echelon in Washington. Secretary Christian A. Herter, for instance, plans to resign at the end of President Eisenhower’s term no matter who wins in No- The two underyc Herter, are preskjeptially appointed and Senate confirmed. They are Dougas Dillon, a Republican and not a foreign service careerist, and Livingston T. Merchant, a career man. Of the 11 assistant secretaries, likewise > chosen by the presiden-tial-Senate constitutional process, seven are earner diplomats while four are not. SEPT f*,n DETROIT Army Just Isn't Same Any* More —Honors a Cook WASHINGTON (UPI) — Attention chow-line veterans; now the Army is awarding a medal to one ontAOjdks. The chief of engineers announced that he has presented the Army Commendation Medal to James T. Mahjer. specialist fourth class,,for his cbefmankMp at the North Pole spring during “Project Pole Hop.” A * A Mahler, a one-man kitchen crew, was cited for his "outstanding initiative, ability, imagination and devotion to duty” in providing meals for 66 days under arctic conditions. A " A A 'He performed the combined duties of mew steward, cook and kitchen police, working untiringly for approximately 15 hours a day,' the Army announcement said. the work week will be “modest” over the yean ahead. jk A A “I do not think a continuing diminishing work week is sound,” Rockefeller said. “I don’t think it Is good, or practical, or that it will happen. “Our neighbors, sack as Russia sad China, are. net going to da tut. We need work to maintain ear peaitlen la the worfcf. “Work is the key to leadership and success as a nation. The individual needs it It gives hint satisfaction and happiness. Work gives dignity and meaning to our individual lives. The nation needs hard working people and people need work to be happy.” . - „ A- A A Outdoor recreation, Rockefeller said, is “one ot the most favorable keys” to a constructive answer to the wise use of leisure time. He saM If a man site around and drinks beer, or spends too much of Ma leisure time Just watching television, it is not constructive. Nor is attending horse races constructive, he added, “because it encourages people to gamble.” Pointing out that the population I of the United States is now nearing million, he said there is every indication that it wiQ be more than 300 million by the year 2000. Rockefeller said he was, “exdt-led” over the fact that the state of 'New York at the coming election will vote on a $75-million bond issue for park and recreational areas. ‘This Is important,” be said. “If the people vote this money, It will demonstrate that not only Is It needed bat It is wanted. It would be evidence that the people believe outdoor recreation |* a basic need for nil the people. “Similar programs have been considered by other states, and some of them| are actually being implemented. If various states do not buy land for park and recreation use now, they won’t be able to afford it later. Land values are steadily getting more expensive as resources are being put to other! uses.” Rockefeller's commission is working on a $2.5-million appropriation in conducting its comprehensive study aU over the nation. Baptist Student Center Planned for MSU Site EAST LANSING Ob-Plans have been announced for the organization of a Baptist student fdunda-tion at Michigan State University, to be financed by a $55,000 grant from the American Baptist Convention. The foundation will provide guidance and counseling center and chiirch services for Baptist students at MSU. Plans an to spend $35,000 for a foundation building and $20,000 tor the campus program over the next five years. SHOP TONIGHT TILL 9 Ml DAL0ME FOOD CONCENTRATE FOR A WEIGHT 00NTR0LLED NET work week wifi go down and own." . He expressed the “personal opln- RockeMler said he Jiqpsd tiw com- of government—federal, state and nisaion’s final report will produce municipal—will cooperate in devel-‘action,” and that the three krveUloptng a well-coordinated program. Molaria Drug Hailod DETROIT (UPI) - Parke and Co. has announced development of a new anti-malaria preparation. The firm claims the new medication is the most effective against all stages of the malarial parasite in the human body. SHOP TONIGHT find NITES TILL 9 Till 9 { Uso • Flexible CCC Charge l First 21" TV-STEREO COMBINATION *269" Mahogany Reg. 299.95 Blond, Reg. 309.95 .. 274.95 Wolnat, Reg. 319.95 279.95 Wail*'* TV . . . Downstairs • Four stereo spaakars—two woofers, two twoetors • Tinted TV foco plate, sot pro-focused • Acoustically designed cabinet; 55" long ,# Power rating: 125 watts, 115 volts, 60 cycles AC • No monuy down, months to pay Big . . . Powerful . . . 3-speed 20" FAN O Shop and compare! No • Quiet Westinghousa motor • Fall 5-year motor • Use as window fan or circulator Everyone Is Invited to the MICHIGAN PRESS PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBITION "Best of the Best Crisp, flouncy littjo or no iron cottons . . . PRETTY SCHOOL DRESSES Sixes 7-14 Come make your selection from our saucy, f un-toving collection Of school dresses! Plaids, solids . . t luscious trims. Others, 3.98 to 10.98. Famous HEALTH-TEX LONGIE SUITS $2** Here’s e cute little wash suit . . >a combed cotton knit shirt teems perfectly with sturdy corduroy flecks Navy, brown, gray or blue; sixia 3-6X. See the top winners in the State's biggest photo contest os, selected by a board of judges from the National Press Photographers Association! See the dramatic, the sentimental, the human interest, the news photograph; all at their best, made by Michigan cameramen working for Michigan newspapers and TV stations! ^29 3-6X Beys' "vintage plaid" SPORT SHIRTS Wash 'n wear, sanforized cotton, long slaava sport shirts in new vintage plaids. Sizes 6 to 18. Boys' little iron polished cotton PROPORTIONED SLACKS The Ideal s I a e k f o r school or casual wear! Smart Ivy style little-iron ’polished cottons in taupe, charcoal, olive, black or tan. Sizes 6 Go bock to school with o 8:00 AM. TO 5:00 PM. 8:00 AM. TO 5:00 PM. 8:00 AM. TO 5:00 PM. Tim Wstwwiof. The thin, handsome watch with one-piece case maaNy tend in more axpenan watches. From $gJ5 pies tax Thess famous Timer watches tra iff camplstsh waterproof*, shock-resistant, Mti-mognsbc and have enbrtakable mainsprings. AN priest plus tax. Waile'f Watch Repair Counter.. From *935 pies tax THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan MONDAY, AUGUST 39,1160 ___ Owned and Published Locally by The Pontiac Press Company A^JTTROHULD Builoeae HlMIN Advertising Director liu it. Tnimu. ClreaMMa Mens ter Where’s Sen. Kennedy’s Emergency Farm Bill? Campaign promises oftentimes go by the boards. This has been true in the past and will continue. On occasion, however, someone will challenge a promise and ask what gives. ★ ★ ★ According to the stalwart team of John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson has really messed up the farm program. They charge the farm situation is in a hopeless tangle and offer as the only solution a Democratic national administration, to do the untangling. it ★ ★ ' This they promise to do if the public will just make them President and Vice President respectively. Now Sen. Kennedy is reminded by Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, R-litah, Benson’s home state, of his promise prior to the Democratic convention that he would introduce an emergency farm bill in the post convention session of Congress. ★ ★ ★ The post convention confab is now in its third week and already talk of adjournment has come up. The question is now asked when does Kennedy rpeke good on his promise? Was his promise just so much campaign fodder to be taken lightly? Yun and the premier recognize the Communist menace and stand for close alliance with the West. Named as foreign secretary was Chung II Hyung, president of the United Nations Association of Korea and a representative of South Korea at the U.N. in 1948 when that country became a republic under its auspices. Premier Chang also desires to improve relations with Japan and to resume the trade which had been cut off by Dr. Rhek in pique over repatriation of Korean nationals from Japan. Due to fear of one-man government, as under Dr. Rhxx, South Korea now has parliamentary instead of presidential government. Some observers believe, however, that Chang's regime will be short-lived due to strong opposition by the old guard faction which dreams of unifying Korea by force. Let us hope that Dr. Chang will be allowed to institute the much needed reforms and to develop his country along democratic and self-supporting lines. The Man About Town Will Lodge’s Successor Stand Up to Russians? Good times: When people who used to go barefoot complain about the price of shoes. We have been fortunate to have a man like Henry Cabot Lodge that can get tough and talk up to Soviet Russia. * . Russia demanded a United Nations General Assembly debate on our spy planes, and Lodge’s quick retort to Khrushchev was a demand far a debate on Hungary after the Assembly convenes on Sept, 20. ★ ★ it Why not? It sounds perfectly reasonable to us. Since 1958, the time of the Hungarian anti • Communist uprising Russia has refused to let U.N. inspectors enter the nation. This itself Indicates that the Soviets are not acting in good faith. ★ ★ ★ Time and time again Lodge has come up with the right answer to Moscow. Usually he is quick to answer and oftentimes embarrasses the Russians. This seems to be the only language they understand. ★ ★ ★ v Now that Lodge has resigned effective Sept. 3 to start campaigning, we trust that his successor James J. Wadsworth will stand up and be counted in the same forceful manner against the Russians. The tSh corn honors are shifting every day or so. Just now they rest with Buchard L. Janes of Lake Orion—18 V2 feet. A large sunflower In the yard of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Drierson of Waterford Is twisting its neck all out of shape In Its efforts to always Tice the Aim—and the sun’s reflection In the slant* lng windows of a greenhouse. Dahlia blossoms that measure eight Inches across are growing in the garden of Mrs. Angella Orrlson of Birmingham. They are of a new variety called “Super Monarch.” Autumn tulips, something new In flow-era, are first tried out here by Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Felchman of Drayton Plains. They now are Just coming into bloom, and are produced only In the original tulip color, yellow. The disappearance of the original Golden Bantam variety of sweet corn is claimed by Orson Padgett of Oxford to be caused by a mixing of the breeds, when it was planted too near other varieties. He still raises the original, by keeping It Isolated, and some samples which he gave me prove Ms theory. Nothing as delicious. A special feature of Pontiac’s centennial year Is called to my attention by Sandy Hilderley of 3219 Joy Road, who points out that 1961 Is still 1961 when you turn it over. Now let somwof my calendar and astronomical experts figure out when that will New Korean Regime to Battle for Reforms happen again. This column Is quite In agreement with Pete Crympfield w of Birmingham, who phones that the De-Newly appointed Premier John M. ^ Tigers would win the world series if Chano Of the Second Korean Repub- it went to the team that could lose the lie has formed his caMfat mostly moat *n«r seemingly having them from members of the “new” faction won‘ _____ of the ruling Democratic party. The a letter to this column, with an Ox-premier was thwarted In his efforts ford postmark, and signed, to get members of the dissident group “A Real Non-Grafting Dirt Farmer,” to Join his government. »*y*: "I note what you said about the Dr. Chang, a graduate of Manhat- small wheat yields In Oakland County this year, but watch us on oats.” So we’i tan College and former ambassador waging to hear of the big oats yields, to the United States, headed the re- ........... volt against Synoman Rhee and led ypL,,i a. his party to victory with a two-thirds T C1 uai WUUUB majority In the Assembly. But his Mrs. Orris Butler confirmation by the National As- of Drayton Plains; 83rd birthday, sembly was by a very clo$e vote due Radney Butterwerth to a split In his own party. The pre- of Bloomfield Hills; 83rd birthday, mier, therefore, will not have the strong backing he should have In dealing with lack of army and police discipline and official corruption. Id the international field, however, Dr. Cluuig is in a strong position. Both the new President ni Korea, British-educated Posun Voice of the People White Chapel Plot Ototter Telle Other Side of Story People sure jump to conclusions without knowing all the facts ^bout tWhtte {Chapel Cemetery. I’m not defending the cemetery, but die rules probably should be changed or relaxed eomewhat. I have talked to the personnel at White Chapel aid found sat that a funeral director purchased a bunch ef Iota and that It was he who sold Mr, Nash the let. . ' it Ttaeeb rules and regulations apply to moat cemeteries la the^stnte, end it wae stated in tut week’s Time magazine that several other cemeteries’ also refused Mr. Nash’s body. : ★ * All these cemeteries under this regulation an la the same beat, the rnliags are brought oa by the people themselves and net really ) cemetery associations, and, of course, when rules are made they have to be enforced. ★ * * I agree this is an unfortunate situation as on Judgment Day the Lord isn’t going to look at our racial being. But it la the people themselves who have to alter rulings, not the cemeteries, as they just represent the people’s wishes. White Chapel Plot Owner Hie Almanac Smiles Communism’s Cocoon By United Press International Today is Monday, Aug. 39, the 342nd day of the year, with 124 more in 1960. The moon is in its first quarter. The morning star is Mars. The evening stars are Jupiter, Saturn and Venus. squarely hi the eye when asleep on the Job? An optimist is any fanner who has Ms peach ami apple trees growing right along the roadside. ‘ David Lawrence Says; On this day in history: la ISOS, American physician, poet and essayist Oliver Weadell As grapes are made iaio wine Dad won’t be the only pep to the basement In some Mines. Labor Should Stop Endorsement Holmes was born. ... , ,,_ A slice or a hook, as any golfer In 1853, Brigham Young signl- knows> put, the bunk in bunker, fled his approval of the practice * * * of polygamy among Mormons. In 1882, Belgian dramatist and Avoirdupois Is like compound WASHINGTON — The AFL-CIO has just endorsed Sen. Kennedy, the Democratic nominee, and so has the radical organization which calls itself self would for the most part avoid endorsement of any presidential nominees. r Maeterlinck was interest—you start with a small figure and keep adding to H. Big and Unusual Growths Are Reported By Readers of This Column Lawrence 'Americans for Democratic Action” but which believes in centralized government. There are 13,-500,060 members In the AFL-CIO and, w h 11 e the general board which voted the endorsement This policy waa proclaimed for the AFL by the late Samuel Gompere who, though making no secret of Ms own preference*, avoided any commitment by Ms national labor orgaalaatton. Another paragraph in the AFL- M » u r CIO’s endorsement of Sen. Ken- '* * * nedy has caused a raising of eye- M 1901, Carrie Nabon Kansas * * w brows among many people who temperance agitator, descended on you can always get the best of hitherto have regarded that organ- • New York saloon operated by any argument by not taking part ization as a strong ally of the anticommunist cause in America. The paragraph says: “Quibbles over precise wording cannot conceal the fact that Nixon It is ironical that the Compere impugned the loyalty doctrine is now being reversed in gretoman, a nominee for the Sen- former boxing champion John L. Sullivan, armed with a hatchet. In 1945. U.S. Marine hero Maj. Gregory Boyington was found alive in a Japanese prison of war camp after he had been missing for 20 months. * in it. We wonder what callage alumni are doing this summer with no football couch to pun. many other ways. Thus, Gompers ate, a secretary of state and a argued for years that no employer president of the United States in should have the right to make his various decimal adventures.” * * * A good sport is a fellow who Thought for today: American thinks any kind of fun is worth cannot “deliver” the votes of its members, the Impression sought to be conveyed is that it can. In fact, the AFLCIO maintains a clow watch on roll calls in Congress anti to every campaign points to whether a member'has gone down the line for union labor Or has failed to support its proposals. The citizens are supposed to reward by their votes in the presidential and congressional elections the candidates who have supported the cause of labor. It isn’t a “bought anil paid for” arrangement in the sense that a money bribe is offered or accepted, but the truth is that many millions of dollars are collected from union members by the AFL-CIO leaders acting in behalf of supposedly separate political organizations. These funds are contributed to state and local as well as notional election campaigns In support of those candidates who have a record of doing the bidding of the trade-union leaders. Sen. Kennedy says he is “proud of the endorsement,” and one wonders if this mepns that, if elected, He will feel beholden to the AFL-CIO. The Democratic platform has already pledged that the next Congress will enact legislation taking away from 20 states their right to keep on the statute books—and in their constitutions— a provision enabling a worker to join or not to join a union without risking punishment through the loss of his job. The custom Is for the labor unions to threaten costly strike* against employers who refuse to sign an agreement to fire anyone who doesn’t join n union. If the National Association of Manufacturers or the U.S. Cham-’ her of Commerce, using the prestige of their positions in the business world, were to announce that they endorsed Vice President Nixon, the labor press would be the first to jump on them as having made a "deal” with the Republican presidential candidate to help -him get elected in return for the support he would give measures they favor. . While many businessmen as individuals will be for the Nixon-Lodge ticket, they do not in their trade organizations make any such endorsement or formally call on their members to support a candidate. .In fact, until recent years the American Federation of Labor it- nonmembership in a union a condition of employment, and finally Congress wrote such a prohibition into law. essayist Oliver Wendell Holmes said: “Sin has many tods but a This is alf the more surprising lie is the handle which fits them But now the labor unions them i selves favor discrimination as loag as It is to their favor. They oppose “right to work” laws on the specious argument that those who favor such laws would be able to Interfere with collective borgsinlwg, which simply Isn’t because the AFL’s own statements were critical of the failure of various officials during the Truman administration to deal more vigorously than they did with the Communists. To say now that criticism of this Portraits Too many people suve tar • rainy day as If they expected only a light shower. By JOHN C. METCALFE __P _______________ I have been token for many a kind "impugned' the loyalty” of wa*^ hy a Great Dane .... And anybody kg to indulge in a "guilt- cradled a Dachshundtosfeepin by-inferem^technique which the niy arms . «. .. 4. h*ve heard the Safety first really means something only when you make it last. Rise new AFL-CIO pronouncement : self professes to condemn. (Copyright I960) joyfiA tunes of dofc tails . . . Drumming the floor under my bed And sauntered through the darkness just before dawn . . . With a A pastor In the South gives cough drop* to Ms congregation. To stop coughing or make folks Cough up? Thieves robbed an Ohio night Dr. William Brady Says: Cheat Foods Account for Most Calorie Intake sad-eyed bloodhound at my side club of three cases of liquor. Police . . , I have been guarded by an wete not on hand to take any ‘unknown mongrel dog . . . While shots, resting under a tent of stars . . . Signed letters-persona!” l*** Growth of the nails, like growth of the skin as in the healing of ^ „ ________. wound or ulcer, proceeds at a rate which depends on the state of nutri- straent, will be Hunted with rollicking, yelping water spaniels . . . Across the. sun-soaked plains and prairies . , .1 have dried toe eyes and washed the wounds of dogs . . . And they have licked my ears and cheeks . . . I have heard of the heaven for humans . . . But, dear God, if there is also one for dogs.... Let me spend my eternity among these faithful. (Copyright, 1960) ' THOUGHTS FOB TODAY Net a novice, test being lifted up with pride he fall lute toe condemnation of the devil. — Timothy 1:6. Deep is the sea, and deep is hell; but pride mineth deeper, it is colled as a poisonous worn about the foundations of the aoul. —Tupper. gri m'oel™1^ Case Records of a Psychologist: daily calories directly or indirectly from can cheat-food, or what more polite nutrition authori-_ 1 ties call iqade- ~M —mg quate food, mean-ing the stuff has been deprived of most of tM vita- ) Women Equally Intelligent to Men in Congress. Indeed, Congress vtould probably be far more efficient and more likely to keep the country solvent if we had two hundred more women members. The latter half of this 20th century may be the Qolden Era of Womanhood. In primitive days, muscular strength urns at mins and minerals before the food, a premium, so the male sex barons consider it pure and refined dominated society.” But our tor women are good bargain enough tor the namby-pamby Yan- machine age has changed mat- era. kee digestion. ters greatly. Women are fust ★ coming into their own, both in In other words refined white flour, business, science and the pro-wad refined white sugar yield most fessions. of the calories to the everyday * ---------rHAVr diet of most Americans. So we Bv DR- OEORGE Wl CRANE CASE F-455: Marie G.. aged 16. is a brilliant high school junior. “Dr. Crane, some of the boys In my class say that women are The professions now can also boast oil women lu almost every field of science, and a number hold these two high calorie food staple):, which keep so well that they may he shipped anywhere and store indefinitely, mainly responsible for the national malnutrition. lishing American newspapers. Medically, women Bv# longer such as president of altruistic societies, but tt is women who keep the wheels moving-Women see that the preachers get paid and the FTA keeps flourishing. Women tend to he more Interested la people wMte men urn more coace rued with thlags. For happy marriage, tt to dso vitally essential to understand the A diet of refined white sugar aad-«r refined white flour will not keep animal or maa alive as long as a diet of sugar cane or beet The Country Parson If by any chance you come across crude brown or “natural” sugar in the market, you’ll be, stymied by a trick notice stamped on the bag, to the effect that it is suitable tor animal feed. That is not to say It to unfit for human ^ m.u consumption, but, after all, suppose the clerk asked what kind of animals you keep at your house? than men, so from that angle, men are really less rugged. Psycholocially, women take orders with less resentment so they are more docile students and employes. Their school work tends to be neater* toe, aad since many teachers contuse neatness with math or other mental ufetUo, the DB. CRANE Mr. and Mrs. James G. Middledorf of Birmingham; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mrs. Anna Ogden of Walled Lake; 82nd birthday. / Stephen M. Hegel ' of Ooodrich; 90th birthday. Mrs. R. J. McKee of Lapeer; 93rd birthday. If your nails do not grow as fast as they should — it takes three to four months for the nails to grow their full length normally — or if they are brittle, ridged, pitted, ij The reasons are fairly obvious, first, women am faster and more nimble fingered, purity because they am smaller. Since their arms are shorter, the nervous impulses from the Women give men an advantage, however, in usually reposing more confidence to the male doctor or lawyer or teacher or clergyman. For women win choose a male doctor in preference to a female physician. This habit of looking up to men In height, ■teuMia^f carries ofsr to the bmlness and different sex viewpoints of men vs. women. So send for the bulletin, “Sex Differences Between Men arid Women,” enclosing a stamped, return envelope, plus 2Qp (nonprofit). , It has salvaged many marriages where divorce seemed inevitable. n even prefer cooktog Or d uvej arc wnuc, uuguu, u . . .. . ,4 . vuiumupei w vvwpiwt um w isn't just the damage done by {he t0 nngw’tipa non t nave ^ love and marriage. . . . #.. i. . .. Z.' . - . .MiiMee am 1/tsMP kn MV* flA th» I . .. hideous “polish" The trouble Is «•«**“ malnutrition and if you hope to re- iMs Urns have a natural advant-gain a state of good nutrition you’ll *6*-* have to cut out most of the .cheat * w * foods on which you worry along Since this is an age whereto This natural prestige of t£e male Is universal and a lucky break for men. - at present. Actually, women ere the chief “Some folks have more s ual growth than they reveal -Just ai.BMne women have mar years than they talk abate.” . In the pamphlet Young Folks and type of work has been taken over Old Folks, sent on signed written by machines, women can even run request, if you provide stamped, a farm without/any great strain self-addressed envelope, I tell how oq their physical strength. to supplement your ordinary vita- A woman who can drive an auto-min and mineral deficient diet to mobile, can now easily operate a combat malnutrition, evidenced by tractor or • combine. most of the heavy, back-breaking custodians of culture and moral- They asne wsmteed soldiers beck id health while the man never leant bet keep on .ptaft- Mhn stand In tM pulpits end are We now have many able womto usually given the. show-off jobs, Th« Pontiac Press Is delivered. u carrier (or U cent* ■ * wash;-Where maUed to Oakland. Otneies, Llvln*-»a4 Waah- •ton. Macons. Lepeer an teen* counuet U Is StMI _ elsewhere In MSsMsmuwS all other stotss to ths osnii eufi* in to a KArfcssTrwreffi M ji» fod store r**» at Poetise. MIcMsan. MsaSer sf ABC. MAKS'®.1"* mack* »uw®fS^2& ySr»»»- Grj^S^00' otnosnw n-HBW. *«r*rJ£i ™raw«. u cubic nn H«M; ””7h,lh| -Srjhs 1 SSST2SSS-.V U)kut£poo6 SHBYgy THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, AUGUST 29, i960 will certainly be defended and refuted." * Marjorie CULLKN . I Gary, Ind^ three tirtert, Fbrn, _ Prayera will be offered U a.m. Donna, Shcryll, all at home; and •RRMffJt at Donelaon-Johns Fu- two brothers, Edward and Howard, neral Hone for Marjorie Cullen, both at home. Want daughter of Mr. and Mrs. The body is at Voorbeet Siple Oiarleo Cullen, of 184 Loberta Funeral Home. Lane. Burial wBl be in White Chapel Cemetery. EDITH ANNE HARTLAND The child was dead at birth MILFORD — Service for Edith Mtarday at JSt Joseph Mercy Anne Harttend, 83, of 3» W. Cbm-HTplt?U &2t S £ f mere* Road, will be atj p.m. et Surviving besides her parents t h e Richardson - Bird Funeral are one sister. Sara R. at home; Home. Burial will be in Wixom two brothers, Michael B. and Ter- Cemetery at Wixom. rence R., both at heme. Mils Hartland died Saturday Rochester; a daughter, Mrs. tbeb ma Altenburg ot Davison; a stepson, Irvin Wilbur of Flint; and six grandchildren. GRAHD RAPIDS <» ?- Funeral rervice will be Tuesday for Melvin T. Snyder, 74, R. C. Allen Business Machines, Inc., senior vice president who died Saturday after a long Illness. He was a native of! Scranton, Pa. And came to Grand Rapids as treasurer of the Allen firm after! 'TAKE-OFF,' by TANTAlflNE Bowling time's here again! Mi % ZBmriAUHck. j SJjodiSeaJuMf IRflU/lAwick-. Block Beauty Dynacore-center ball 95 Dynomic balance, Dy nocore canter, Durojet Finish for more occurocy. Custom-fit to your gripl Initialed free! 10 lb. Fetherwote ..... 15 to 16 lb. 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ALBERT LAV V fit five weeks: A member of Macedonia Baptist Church, he was employed by Pontiac Motor Plant. Surviving are his wife, Louise; One son, Joppa Haskins Jj\; at home; one brother and four sisters, Service will be 8 p.m. Tuesday at Macedonia Baptist Church,' The body is at Frank Carruthers Funeral HOme: li will be shipped to Plains Dealing, La. for service and burial there Sunday. ROBERT HE8SELGRAVE Robert Hesselgrave. 75, of 213 State St., died Sunday at Pontiac General Hospital following an illness of four years. Employed by Fisher Body Division, he is survived by his wife. Ruby M.; one son, Wayne E.; four grandchildren; five 'greatgrandchildren; and one brother. ninii Service will be held 10 a m. at|iJ£^ide Cemetery.' C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home with! Duchess Socks Duke With Suit Over Stepmother Her body la at the Muir Brothers . _ JL LONDON (UPJ) - The Duchess Mrs. Wilbur died Saturday after . „ ' J ^ ” an illness of one month at Henry!0* <5, said today that she Ford Hospital, Detroit. mad named her stepmother, 46- Sutviving besides her husband!year-old Jane Whigham, as co-are a son, Frederick Scbtmeman of Laat September, the duke secured an tejonetteo Muring respondent in her divorce petition against the 57-year-old duke. Mrs. Whigham, who no longer j lives with the duchess' 80-year-okl Grand Rapid. Ex.cu.iv. Will Be Buried Tuesday In Scotland. « Two months later, he filed suit tor divorce, charging adultry “with more than one man on more than one occasion.'* * * # The duchess, whose maiden name was Margaret Whithant, countercharged that the (kike’s “excessive drinking'' in public and private had made married life impossible. Predicts Handicap Aid , NEW YORK (UPD — Arthur S j Flemming, secretary of health, education and welfare, predicted Sunday night that the next session, of Congress wUl enact a federal-state program to aid the handi-l capped. Charge Korea Attack PANMUNJOM —• Allied! authorities charged today that the Communists launched an "unprovoked attack” on a South Korean naval vessel Wednesday, but the' Reds denied that any such attack! occurred. DRAYTON PLAINS - Service for Mrs. Albert (Clare E.) Lay, 45, of 6853 Forest Lawn,, will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the COats Funeral Home. Burial a rangements are not completed. Mrs. Lay died yesterday after an illness of two weeks at Providence Hospital, Detroit. Surviving besides her husband are four sons, Donald of Utica, (Ap, _ K . k , M Carl of Drayton Plains, Arthur of TOK,Y.l.,AP' ~ K,en ,#nu”ai- 64 Rochester and Robert at home; «* °f th* archnecta of Japan s three daughters. Charlene and »?‘twar fverement died Sunday Mary JanT both at borne, and|°f Jx>mplicatr8 r?m Mrs. Roy Walker of Elizabeth. Penn.; one sister; a brother; and six grandchildren. Jap Party Founder Dies son of former Prime Minister! Bokudo Inukai who was assassi-jnated in 1032, helped to found t^e! R. K. wells Democratic party, the-progressive! llrt., „ * ' _ . , n ,, wing of Japan’s conservatives, and, WelH 50 oT^SSnT SUwU.K ^ P^dent. I be at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Dryer Funeral Home. Burial w|| be in |mpost#r Fatally Shot \ ■ . . , r.._ „ , Mr. Wells died Saturday at St. YONKERS, N. Y. (API — Stan-I bjffial In Edon Cemetery, Ldon, Joseph Hospital, Flint, after a long]iPy Weyman, 67, a fabulous im-' illness. iposter, was fatally shot by two: Surviving besides his wile Elsie,robbers Saturday while serving as re two sons. Oliver and Ralph. L night hotel manager. Weyman. both of Holly; three daughters, reai name was Stephen Laureta. Cherie and Nancy, all of Weinberg, spent 50 years posing Ho"* j 11"^ brothers, Harvey °*j fa everything from a foreign dip-Milford, Alfred of Toledo, Ohio, Lomat to the man in charge of and Harold of GaUfornia; three sis-|Rudo,ph Valentino's funeral. FREDDIE A. McMAHAN Fredie A. McMahan, 56, of 1149 Hospital Rd., died Sunday .at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following an illnCss of eight months. He is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Barbara Waters of South Lyon; one son, Ronald of Jackson; two grandchildren; three sisters and two brothers. Service will be held 1:30 p. Wednesday at Huritoon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Cemetery. GEORGE L. RICE . I ■\George L. Rice,'46, of 7875 High-lari? Rd., died unexpectedly of a heart attack Sunday at Port Austen. A restaurant owner and a member of Elks Lodge 810, he is survived by his wife, Vada; hi* lather, Wallace wee; a daughter, Mrs'.! Robert R. Em try of Pontiac; onej grandchild and three brothers. i Service will be held I Wednesday at Done Ison-Johns Funeral Home with burial in White; Chapel Cemetery. An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be conducted at 8 p.m. Tuesday. DENISE ANN VAIL j Prayer service was held 2 p.m. today at Purvey Funeral Home fori Denise. Ann VatL7-day-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ira G. Vail II, of 71 Spokane Drive. Burial was in White Chapel Cemetery, She died Saturday at Pontiac General Hospital. JOSEPH H. WALLIS Joseph H. Wallis. 72. of 186 W. Rutgers Street, died Saturday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following an illness of one and a half years. A former life Insurance salesman, he was a member 'of the Church of Christ of Sylvan-Lake. Surviving are his wife, Josie A.; four sons, D. O. Wallis of Pontiac, F. E. Wallis of Kansas City, Mo.; J. H. Wallis of Kent, Ohio, J. C. Wallis of Royal Oak; one daughter, Mrs. Arthur Bunch of Fort Smith, Ark., six grandchildren; five great-grandchildren; one sis-! ter and one brother. Service win be 11 a.m! Tuesday at Pursley Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cerhe-j tery. Pontiac Lodge 21, F and AM, wiU conduct grayeside service. ^ GRACE A. BALGAARD TROY — Service for Grace A. Balgaard. 56, of 1761 Rochester! Road, will be at 6:30 a m. tomorrow at St. Paul Catholic Church, Salem, Ohio. Burial wUl be in Grandview Cemetery, in Salem. Miss Balgaard died Saturday after an illness of one week at Ardmore Hospital, Femdale. Sho was a member of the Women's Auxiliary of VFW Post 4037, lYuy. Surviving are three brothers and five sisters. Funeral arrangements | were handled by the Price Funeral Home. CLARENCE RAY EZELL DRAYTON PLAINS—Graveside service was to be held today at the Lakevlew Cemetery lor Clarence Ray Ezell, intent son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ezell of 3620 Lawrence St. The baby was stillborn Friday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Poo-tiac. Surviving besides his parents arc his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ezell of Pontiac. VICKKI r. HALE Service will be held 1:10 p.m. Wednesday in St. John Lutheran Church for Vicklde F. Hale, 2%1 year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Hale of 37 Senecaj Street. Burial wifl be In P Mount Park Cemetery, Surviving' an her grandparents. Richard D. tundiy of Chicago, I1L. Mrs. Florence KunU ot St. UmfeJ Mo., Mr. and Mrs. Rufus N. Hale in Ridgeway. Ohfo; her great-grand I parents, - Mrs. Omega Watkins of St. Lbute, Mrs. EriMria Maddin of ters, Mrs. EvelynOUyer of Pon-tiac, Mrs. Thelma Stewkrt^of Cljo| and Mrs. Ethel Sanzini of Gaylord; | Fish Die by Thousands i. , j 7 _ ________ (AP)- MRS. JOSEPH WILBUR IMLAY CITY - Service for Mrs. Joseph (Irene M.) Wilbur, 65, of 13220 N. Van Dyke Highway, will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at St. Raid’s Lutheran Church. Burial will be in Imlay Township Cemetery. GRANVILLE. N. Y. Thousands of dead fish are caus-j s health problem here. Trout, i northern pike, black bass and j minnows are floating on the Met-! tawee River, a well-known trout stream that runs westward from; Vermont into Lake Champlain^ OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday Downtown A Drayton Plains ‘Take Off panty or girdle by TANTALINE slims instantly Tantoline'i exclusive controls trim waist, tummy and derriere to a minimum. Front and back panels smooth and flatten with the aid of power net sides. White nylon. S-M-l-XL ^99 'Choree It* Let- Federal's expertly trained corsetieros fit you correctly for comfort, figure flattery. A SPECIAL LIMITED-TIME OFFER FROM CONSUMERS POWER CO. - X)NLY PUTS A NEW, 1960 RCA WHIRLPOOL GAS REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER . IN YOUR KITCHEN To PROVE Whirlpool's Superiority TRY IT! TEST IT! IF YOU DON'T AGREE THE RCA GAS WHIRLPOOL IS FOR YOU, WE'LL TAKE IT BACK AT NO COST TO YOU! You just can't lose on an offer like this! The very first day you'll see why only RCA Whirlpool dares make this amazing offer. A NO-FROST REFRIGERATOR, NO-FROST FREEZER, AUTOMATIC ICE-MAKER-TRY IT IN YOUR HOME TODAY! CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY l THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST gD, 1960 JUST OPENING FREE ESTIMATES SERVICE Sales-Serviee and Repair Oscar Ferrell OSCAR FERRELL Licensed Master Plumber EIGHT • New Acquisitions by Main Library The foil wine books are now available lor circulation from the main library: fiction Chekhov, at Peter* Daj and Other ----; Dwiu, It n Motm. Skint* It; nr. TheUncoln Lord*; Uourtoc. r forty; UlUer. Ntebtehadt; _________xh oim: a won. ra# hu»- *ar: Shew. The BWl Flee*; Snow. The Xffolr: Btrateht,cSrrtafton; Wfaita. Tho Vic* from the VortltthFloor. aimai. WBBTIBN, IK Benton. The Prlehtened Ladle*, Bor-Und. The OoTtnth winter; Hare. An Mat-lish Murder: Thompaoa. Bitter Wcter. BIOGBArKT Beebe. Weihtaetoa'i Lady; Brtend. Demhter of TheSkj (Amelia Berhert): DooTey. The Bight They Burned the Mountain. GENERAL SCBJSCTS Bo* en A Time In Borne: Mdor, fodor t J* 1 AC* Outde to Europe 1(60; House Beeutiful, Houses end Plans; Kir-•an. A History of Polar Exploration: McCarthy. The atones of Plorence, Shatter. Pie* Finger Exercise; Sinor. History of Bimgary; Sitwell. The Bridge of the . Brocade Sash; Sports Aflald. Boating; Toceutetll*. Journey to America; Wittenberg, Adolescence and Discipline csnnwt Lindquist Alaska; Loomle, story of the ,D.S. Air tern; Mtnanx. Father Beer Come* Bom*: Nath, Custard The Dragon; Schleln. Homo-Tala of a Haua*. Sees'61 Wheat | | Over 1.5 Billion Bushels 5,000 Cuban Couples Legally Married at Last HAVANA fUPD—Fiv« thousand couples who have been living together as man and wife for years were legally married Saturday at ceremonies throughout the island.! The Justice Department sponsored the ceremonies in accordance with a government program aimed at legalizing all common law marriages or simple cohabi-! tation. AP Phetofai GOING BUND — Sir Henry Holland. & ont of the world's great eye surgeons, is going blind. He worked for years in Asia. He leaves today from London for the Philippines to collect the Magsaysay Award for his work. He says: "Yet, I'm going blind; I'm also losing my hearing. And I've got arthritis in both knees." But he still had a grin. WASHINGTON (UPI>—The Agriculture Department Friday predicted the wheat surplus would reach a record 1.550 billion bushels next July 1 and shoot up another 100 million bushels by July 1, This projected estimate of the wheel carryover was contained in the department's 1961 outlook Issue of “thr Wheat Situation." The c a r r e a> cerrysver, at of July 1, IBM. Is uu.we.aoa bushels, only IS milHoo bushel* burger than that at the start of the previous wheat marketing year. The feastm for the big bulge in! the carryover next July 1 is the! whopping 1.362.000.000 bushel 1960 crop now almost harvested. The 1960 crop is the second largest in history—234 million bushels morel than in 1969 and only 100 million bushels under the record 1956 out-1 put. ♦ * * I Although it is far too early to make an accurate estimate of the still-to-be-planted 1961 crop, the department assumes that with the minimum acreage allotment in | effect next year, some 35 million 1 acres may be harvested. Should the IBM-49 average yield of ftJ baskets u sera he ebtaWed. a crop et about I.W.* ooo.ooo bushels would be produced. Assuming domestic consumption and exports about the same as were estimated for 196961, the carryover on July 1. 1962, be increased to about 1,65 billion bushels. Domestic consumption tor I960-61 now is estimated at about 610 jnillion bushels, about the same as a year ago. Exports are tentatively estimated at 525 million bushels, compared with 508 million bushels in 196060. Of the total carryover of 1,313.-[OOO.OOO bushels of old-crop wheat on July 1, the* government owned 1,196,000,000 bushels. This was 50 million more than a year ago and 361 million more than two years ago. Farmers* who voted In the July 21 wheat referendum approved for the 1961 crop the same wheat program which has been in effect tor the last nine years. Wire is estimated to have more than 150,000 different uses. granee. Try this basting sauce lor r of lamb on a spit "**“**~||M spoons Spanish spoon wine vinegar, crushed cumin (sometimes < cumino), Vi -mary and 1 teaspoon l— lamb frequently as it turns t- About 85 per. cent of the i tion’s com goes to market in 1 form of meat, s 31st ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS RCA VICTOR Mew VERI-THIN SportieN 17 Inch . PORTABLE TV Tub* Overall Diagonal 156 U In- ptetere 1 YEAR PICTURE TUBE WMIMlY. 90 DAY SERVICE 2 YEARS TO PAY! HONCY-SAVfMG 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH FREE — Lady's or Mon's Watch Sot with ovary Maytag during this solo only. CLOUD WKD. AFTERNOON DURING AUGUST DOWNTOWN ft-SHO OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY NIGHTS ‘‘Your Appliance Specialist” till N. Saginaw St, FE 5-6189 STORE HOURS OPIN THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY UNTIL 9 F.M. CLOSID SUNDAY AND MONDAY. SIPT. S. LABOR DAY. Enjoy the tong holiday week-end and when you shop at Kroger this week you 11 enjoy these special^ low, low food prices. WITH THIS COUPON 50 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS and $5.00 Purchase or Mora of Merchandise (Except Beer, Wlop or Cigarette Purchases) Coupon Valid a* Kraft* in Detroit and Eastern Michigan through Wad., For th£Sw»k only—these prices or* effective t^ftKSptutdoy Sept. 3. "locfci/fVeryday big things , p hafflsnat nroaer « 12 TO 14 POUND SIZE SMOKED — HYGRADE, SWIFT AND IMPERIAL HANSOM WEIGHT ALL MEAT PRESSEL 1 WHOLE HAMS ...» 49* HOT DOGS . . WHOLE OR HALF — LEAN SMOKED SKINLESS, DEFATTED, IMPERIAL Semi-Boneless HAM > 59* READY FOR BAR-B-Q OR OVEN — 4 TO 12 LB. AYERA$E\ Beltsville TURKC FREEZER SALE! FAMOUS 13 EGG RECIPE — SAVE 77c ON 3 EL FOOD CAKES , . ■ FILL YOUR FREEZER — COUNTRY GLUB — S DELICIOUS FLAVORS ICE CREAM lllf . a- 49* IN THE NEW FLAVOR SEALED PLASTIC BAG - KROGER FRESH SUCH) WIENER OR Sandwich BUNS w 2 - ■ 39* SAVE 17c ON 6 BOTTLES Del Monte CATSUP. 6^*1 SAVE 7c ON 4 CANS — DELICIOUS CHUNK STYLE STAR KIST TUNA. 4-99* U.S. NO. I ALL PURPOSE MICHIGAN CLEANED, WASHED AND BAGGED POTATOES .. 10- 33* Get Low, Low Prices Plus Free Top Value J ■>■',;;:/■ \/>>:.::;I.' ->, ■ :f:<;:% ;v\v' \ THE PONTIAC PRESS* MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1060 '"■'i '4^%:' XT AK , York and San Francisco — J22L15?riiiSL!II! Population Will Break Barriers turnpikes — to 3,093 miles. (toads in map ^ - ■ 1 • - - ■ " ”1 ' Stopa»9kmdsoflTCH tie way doctors do! WHERE WHY . do you ffcfcf dtjfwMI ‘V • Alargk Itch Cots tr Lp Under Anas If 4 \ e Eczema Itch a 1 e Racial Itch Hondo r £%^\*** Body Oroto#w^^*\ \ l • Insect Bites e Heat Rash Ow e Rohan Ivy Rectum 1 L—T~ / i Tore* l* e Sunburn Itch • Pruritus CALAMATUM IRIM8$ RELIEF BEST Home Building Lags but Soon Will Surge Graham Warm Again End of World Is Ntor Graham, who waroad the saint thing three days ago in Bern, said ' many things foretell the end of the world. ZURICH (UPI) — Evangelist, * * * tatty Graham told an audience of "Jesus Christ will come soon 15,000 Sunday the end of the world and all of us should get ready*”; was near. |ht-said. ■y 8AM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK The population growth has yet to trigger another big jump in home building. Had It already done so* the whole economic picture would be brighter. Builders would be happier, and as would building material pfitrs, appliance makers* and construction workers. That another building surge to coining, the industry to confident. But, as in other parts of today’s economy, the timing is a current This drop is in the face of reports that more money is becoming available lor mortgage financing hi many parts of the nation and that in a few the terms of financing are more favorable for home builders. As far as home builders are concerned, the trouble with the unquestioned jump to total population to that the growth has been largely confined to groups that buy few homes—those under and those over 60. Home builders find their biggest! gone through the early stage of apartment dwelling and with a family coming along look for homes in the suburbs. But those now turning 20 were born not tong before Pearl Harbor and those now 90 were bom after the big stock market crash—this entire group of potential home owners belongs to the depression baby crop, a notably small one. In toe next few yean the war babies, a large crop, will be took- Ttto failure of easier money to perk up building much ss yet Inspires a number of explanations. 11m moat hopeful is that there’s a time lag between relaxing toe tight money squeeze of a few months hack and making financing plans and starting construe- Others given an that the price of new houses has climbed too high for some income groups, and! that while more financing money tog for housing, and in a few more to available the interest or dte-the postwar babie»-and then, look count charges haven’t gone down; disappointment. The date to being martrets among the young mar-;out. A lot of housing will be need- enough yet to stimulate the mar- put back. The growing populationjj-iecto—Particularly those who haveied. should exert its pressure in anoth- .. ■ ;■' ------•—»*,----------- two or three years, The other spark that bad been ftoollttle Asks Sacrifice ket. New formula contains 6 anti-itch Inradiants to sodthi. pain J speed healing, stop itch fast! Science has developed s remark- on spreading itch like poison ivy. able new formula that combines 6 because it helps dry open weeoinc anti-itch ingredients to relieve all lesions, prevents spreadingTPre-9 bindsl of debi to seconds! Called vents risk of infection from scratch-CALAMATUM* Ointment, tbit ing, because CALAMATUM turns counted on to warm up home building this year—easing of money costs and supplies—has so far failed to catch fire. But it’s there to turn housing wants into buying demand when the population growth catches up. Government figures shdw that housing starts in the first half of . nsw medicated cream stops Into Us own pink bandtw*—\ .itching and burning on rub off until you waohn off! Get X rrmtnrt—ndindhmn nain mmImw —— r * * - - - eontact-eoothes pun cooling, soothing CALAMATUM ^^^^n^tjjdshsattagtoo. Ointment in convenient tuba or ^Effective even economical aerosol dispenser. I ITS OWN PINK BANDAOt O 1951 Isodine Pharmacal Corporation, Dover, Delaware . Finally there are those who. [think the chief trouble is that the great number of those seeking A Says WeVe Gone Soft this year ran well behind last LOg ANGELES (AP)-"Wf as nation have had it too good for too long,’’ Lt. Gen. James H. year. Latest figures by the construction news specialist, F. W. Dodge Corp., show the dollar volume of residential building contracts in July was 20 per cent behind a year ago (although a subtotal, apartment building, waa 6 per cent ahead of last year) and the number of dwelling unite involved was 23 per cent below July 1959. Doolittle told a meeting of I tists today. "I am afraid we have almost lost our past willingness work hard and our ability to think dearly,” Doolittle said. "Our unwillingness to work Is Indicated by our desire for ity without effort. Our inability to think to indicated by our willingness to let others think for u»." chairman of Space Technology Laboratories, gave the . keynote address to 1,000 at an Air Force symposium on Ballistic MtosQe and Space Technology. Admitting the remedy cannot e popular, Doolittle called for national sacrifices. ‘The investor must be willing i ride his money for a smaller return,” he said. "Industry must produce more at a lower profit. The laborer must be willing to do a full day’s work for a day's The retired general, board!pay without featherbedding." Shop Monday Night ’til 9 P, M. — All Day Tuesday From 9:30 to 5:30 108 NORTH SAGINAW TONIGHT and TUES. ONLY!! First Tlnte Anywhere New 17-Inch Portable TV So Compact, So Light, So Easy to Carry Wherever You Go! • The new vogue in televiewing! Lighter, more powerful! Exclusively. yours from WKG.‘ Sets everywhere! Ptoys Ilka < console. Big 17-inch screen. B0ilt-in antenna end carrying handle. Giant 13 Cu. Ft. 1960 GENUINE FRIGIDAIRE 2-DOOR Refrigerator-Freezer MATCHLESS Top Burners 30” or 38” Fenton GAS RANGE »•» Q dnk, M Ne Money Down—$1.50 Weekly Top burners light automatically. Has large family size oven, smokeless broiler, spacious storage section. 36" or 30" wide. A greet Dows • Whole Week's Wash in Less Then en Hour! SPEED QUEEN WASHED • Bowl-Shaped Tub Speeds Washing! Tub Has Double Walls; Keep Water Hot! ipe food fresher and aafsr longer, capacity to both asettooh saves on « to the super-market. Not just 3, 4 roomy sbehrea, 2 large hydratore, tper storage doom. FSmopsnteter- . - er" compressor to dependable. Meny Months »e rey Priced at Only 88 'Pay 'Only $2 Weekly Don’t put up with that old worn-out washer any longer for only SSI you can own this wonderful Speed Queen. Big 20 gallon tub save* on aoop apt water. Big time and work \Vk( . 108 \.SA(»IWW...FK 3-7114 gEsssa 71 North Saginaw St TUESDAY ONLY f JUPER SPECIALS AT BAZLEY'S FRESH FRYERS Pan LbeORC \tUadY MZm SUB BACON mu. 1 Ik A Ac A;} I} Skinless i FRANKS 3 “ 1.00 COMPARE PENNEY’S LOW PRICES IN CLASSICS TAILORED IN PROPORTIONED SIZES! V; 7 TlxTHMfitK THE PENNEY PLUS LADYTOWNCRAFT SHIRT...HAS FRENCH CUFFS eeeSKIRTeeeHAS SEAT LINING, 6 WALKING PLEATS PENNEY PLUS VALUE! 29J6 95 SKIRT DOWNTOWN ONLY Classmates you’d hardly expect at these low prices. The meticulously detailed wjtite -shirt in wash ’n wear, little or no ironing combed pima cotton broadcloth. Petite, average, tall in sizes 32 to 38. The skirt rates straight A’s in hand wasnable wool and nylon flannel. Heathers, fashion colors. Petite, sizes 8 to 18; average, size* 8 to 20; tall sizes 12 to 20. PENBEfS - DOWNTOWN: Open Every Mendey end Friday -—9:30 A.M. to 9:00 F.M.—ell ether Week dqys 9:30 A.M. to 5:^0 P.M. PENNEY’S-MIRACLE MILE: Open Every Week day — Mendey through Saturday—10:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. | sshi ;= THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 39, I960 Not All Democrats at RO Twp. Meeting Wednesday's meeting in the Community Services Building hoe in Pontiac to discuss problems plaguing Royal Oak Township was attended by representatives of state 'RaSWrfe?" Tliburn Aglow As a neutral agency, the PontiacU^ RefillII FlOtll Urban League had been requested v by the liberal-labor faction of the county Democratic Cbmmittee to conduct the meeting. * A story in Thursday's Press In-! Ad Man Tells World „„ ^ ----------------IV--------- SAN ANTONIO, Tex and county agencies and leading When advertising man Join Pra-N«n citizens interested in tin zier couldn’t find a suitable greet- ing card for his wife's birthday and their wedding anniversary, he „ ____ _____________i- had a large, sign erected stop advertantlv referred to those at- building, resdthgv " Happy Birthday - ---- - , tending as a group of Oakland land Happy Anniversary to Mar-jbrought back was a three-weefc-County Democrats This four of Russia NEW YORK (API—Piartist: Van Clibum returned Friday nitfbt from his second concert tour of the Soviet Union. •‘The last trip was wonderful,’’ be told newsmen at Jdlewild Airport, referring to his initial Soviet four in 1958, when he won the Tchaikowski competition, “but this was even more wonderful." Among the many gifts Clibum lohd puppy. Quebec Rail Building Tops Rest of Canada NEWPORT. Que, (UP1) -r The Canadian NationaFRailways have built more new lines than any other system in North. America, mostly in Quebec, Transport Minister George Hees said in opening the nevr CNR station here Saturday. “Sihce the war there have been a total of 333 miles fiN I way lines constructed in Quebec at a cost of S44 million,” Heea said. "The total constructed in ail oth- er provinces for the same period was 333 miles, or 10 miles less new railway lines than were built in the province of Quebec alone." Sea Diver for 17 Years Enrolls in Swim Class CHARLESTON. S. C. 49c Frankfurters • • • ,&49c MARVEL—SAVE 10c! Vanilla, Neapolitan, Fudge-Marble or Butterscotch-Marble Ice Cream 49! SULTANA BRAND Pork and Beans ■2i:l 52-OZ. CAN SPECIAL! SAVE 16c Jane Porker Apple Pies 39* 8-INCH SIZE HOLIDAY SPECIAL! Jane Porker Potato Chips A&P—OUR FINEST QUALITY Pineapple-Grapefruit a t& 99* TWIN PACK LB. BOX 59’ SPECIAL A&P BRAND YELLOW CLINO IN HEAVY SYRUP—HALVES OR SLICED SALE CANNED PEACHES SAVE 61c 12 2.95 1 * CTN. J 4 as 99c SAVE 20c on 4 CANS SAVE 1.2? f 9.89 CAN* #|W 71.1 ALQOA BRAND Aluminum Foil HOLIDAY SPECIAL! 2532 29* All prices in this ad effective! thru Tuds., Au*. S in Eastern Michigan A»P Super Markets ^SuperMarkets t oiPiNotsu iooo annum *mu uw A&P—Our Finest Quality Tuna Fish Solid Pack—Whito Moot 4 » 99* SALAD DRESSING Miracle Whip 49« QT. JAR ANN PAGE QUALITY Salad Dressing 45c QT- JAR BONG—Plain or Kosher Pickles W ■■sc ANN PAGE-RID Raspberry Preserves SPKIAL LAM.' 2 * 59* YOUR CHOICE Canada Dry Assorted, Royal Crown Cola or Vernor's Ginger Ala 6 ““ 59* SEOUL (UPD—Hie prosecution demanded the death penalty today FAMOUS FOAM RUBBER MATTRESS & BOX SPRING With 10-Year Guarantee You've never »lept well until you've »lept on rubber TMs la the haw KmHmi mattress . . . The ha* quality team rahher . . . won't pack doom ... won't ana haadaa . . hoops Ka buoyancy. You sloop awahlwad ea, mlWIsas of tiny ah bubbles, hold by a firm boa spring csrofuNy dosignod to •he yea cocroct spins sappstf. BOTH FOR *59 Including Any M for $1 OPEN TONIGHT TIL 9 Open Tuts. 9:30 to 5:30 THE PONTIAC PRESS* MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1960 ELEVEN Florida Plane trash Kills 3, Injures f LAUDERDALE. Via., (APWThree persons died and « four® was aeriousiy injured Sun-dr* when r tingle -engine plane fradtaR-fb the edge flt Broward DittnfaQwwrt L Airport. /. , VkpOOa of foe crash were Cad 0. Henaen, 41, an airplane me-Atanid: and ins wife‘ Murid, 40. bo0 of Fort Lauderdale; apd Mary Ida Burke, 51 5, Ootid. > Barbara Sehva, 23, Detroit, was boapMUlW^S serous condition. She to Mrs. Burke’s daughter. Dow Reveals Stock Deal With Spanish Chem. Co. MIDLAND (UPD - Dow Chemical Co. has announced an agreem-ment for purchase of stock of Union Quimjca del Norte de E-spana s. A. (Unquinesa), a leading Spanish chemicals and plastic firm, and plans for participation in petrochemical production in Spain. Dow said the ' agreement, approved by the Spanish government, will result in Dow’s purchase of a new issue of Unquinesa stock at par value and Dow’s provision of technological, engineering and marketing help to the new company, to be called Dow-Unquinesa S. A. IB DAYS OF FUI FAIR SEPT 2 thrall DETROIT on your reading list THAT DAY SHALL tOME by William Taucey A dramatic novel which forcefully and unforgettably delineates the power of evil And the havoc It wreaks on the members of a proud family. M^micoosowjoo*^ CARLTON PRESS" S4 nab An. Hot y«rk It riOTMiw«Mrif That Day Shall Come SEARCH FOR CLUES — A crowd gathers to watch investigators search an abandoned farm house near Herrin, 111,, where the body of Mary Lily Roberts, 17, was found. She had been kid- Arntwu raped from her Bailee’s car tour days ago IS miles southwest of this rundown shack. Her body was found in the bottom of a well, shot through the bead. » Find Kidnaped Waitress Dead in Old Farm Well HERRIN, 01. (AP) - A pretty waitress kidnaped by a blond gunman frobi a lover’s lane four days ago was found dead in a ell at an abandoned farm house inday. She had been shot sough the heed. The FBI, which took over the investigation from local authorities, apparently was without a major lead toward the identity of foe killer. The kidnaper fled wit Lily Ellen .Roberts, 17, in and white car > after wounding her fiance, John ant Jr., 20. The couple had been parked gt a remote spot oiT Crab Orchard' Lake in a wildlife refuge near Carboodale. That was IS miles southwest of | the weed-choked farm where the body was found. The FBI roped off the area, I | frequently used by picnickers, for ] painstaking search for any articles, the killer might have left. A spent cartridge and a bloodstained mattress found near the well were to be analyzed, t MEN CLEARED The body was brought out 6f the Well in a wire basket after Police Chief Charles Edwards of nearby Mmk 111., was lowered to the water level on a rope. Oh no, that's my Mary Lily," said, Mary Lee Roberts, the lotber. Two men were cleared in the kidnap-slaying Sunday night after lengthy questioning. Both established alibis. They were Joe Harry Milan). 3B, an ex-convict of near Herrin who had been questioned in the case Friday, and Joseph Mattingly, 40, a St. Louis mechanic, arrested in nearby Murphysboro at the wheel of a bloodstained car. Mattingly explained the blood was from cuts suffered when he smashed a car window with his fist after an argument with his wife. He proved he was at work in St. Louis at the time of the kidnaping. for six former high-ranking South' Korean officials charged with complicity in a 1956 attempt to assassinate Premier (then vice president) John M. Chang. The defendants, first among 48 alleged plotters to face trial in' the case, were Seoul’s ex-mayor 5^ State Bar Exam* Ybn Hung Soon; former Interior! ^ ARBOR (Aft ~ Semi-Minister Yi Tk Hung; former Se*t annual examinations for the Mlchi-curity Chief Kim Chong Won, and gan State Bar will be giveo at the Chang Tung Bok, Park Toh 11, University of Michigan. Sept. 8-10. and fob Choong Wan, former po- The exams will be to Hutchins Bee or security officials. Hall at the U. of M. Law School. Hopefuls' Wives Stumping Texas to Garner Votes HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) — The wives of several leading Democrats start a four-day vote-seektog tour of Texas today. In the group are Mrs. Lyndon Johnson, wife of the Texas senator running for rice president; Mrs. Price Daniel, wile of Texas’ governor; Mrs. Sargent Shrtver, sister of sen. John F. Kennedy, democratic candidate for president, and Kennedy’s sister-in-law, Mrs. Robert Kennedy. '* . $ In Mexico, Brazil, and other; Sole Prices on ROUGH ADDITION NO MONEY DOWN! $19.60 Far Month First Payment Next Year FREE BONUS All Drywall Headed (or You to Finish If You Boy Now! COMPLETE BUILDING DEPARTMENT • Perch Enclose res • Attic end Dormers • Recreation Rooms • Garage and Breeieway • Kitchens USE IT FOR • Bedroom • Family Room • Kitchen • Utility Room a Dining Room • Extra Storage Room Additions FINISHED ADDITION NO MONEY DOWN! $28.95 Par Month First Payment Next Year FREE BONUS White Root Mahogany Paneling If Yea Order Now! CALL NOW FREE ESTIMATES Operators on Defy 24 Hrs. Estimates Given 8 A.M. te 10 P.M. (AFE 3-7833 , 100% GUARANTEE ON ALL 1 I LABOR AND MATERIAL | I I Tbit Guarantee It Backed hr I I • YEARS OF DEPENDABILITY j I • FINANCIAL STRENGTH I • HONEST BUSINESS PRACTICE BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION CO. 92 West Huron St., Pontiac MWMWOUX PART-TIME TOY ROUTE VEST HUU STABTWd CAPITAL GOOD INCOME OTSBATE now sons imku. caoics tbsbit oans AVAILABLE SOON ■lore., eve. seen 1UI gnu, money. Simply replace to) * REQUIRES ONLY FEW HOURS EACH WEEK Thle la at e^ Job bat j» chance U ___________may hare SI*. weye wealed, a buetoeee el your own One tut can be handled la •pare time and ettU leave room for tuU time enaaetoo. . NOT A GET-RICH-QUICK-SCHEME If you hart a desire to better your-■elf—If eober, honeet. really elseere. have a ear (min. tSM ret > apply at onca — Wains eompleta detalli about youreett, phone number. Air- Brother's Plea Murder Suspect Was On* of FBI's 10 Most Wanted Mon KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -Clarence Leon Raby, 27, one of the Fill’s 10 most wanted men, surrendered meekly to a sheriff Sunday night in answer to the plea of his brother. Raby, credited with two slayings and three kidnapings in less than a month, escaped from the Knox County workhouse July 7. He, reappeared in the Hetskel, Tenn., area Aug. 1 and had been: the object of a search by many posses. But Raby, an experienced deer hunter and outdoorsman, eluded them all. His brother Frank, who said "I went into the woods and looked until 1 found him," spent three days trying to talk the desperado into giving up. Ask Weapons Control WASHINGTON (UPI)-Chalrman Hubert H. Humphrey of the Senate disarmament . subcommittee has film) for an international conference to study controls of “hop tor” weapons using gas, germs and radiation. GAS HEAT If you wont Quality in • furnace end duct work, coll for a free heating surrey. 3 BASEMENT BIT §- <595 wflet duete. AU R. J. HEATING CO. 38310 Hoartiutoae. Farmington OR 4-4554 Msl Operator ask fee ENTERPRISE 7210 TOLL PREE THE PONTIAC PRES^, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, I960 TWELVE Sec No Hope of Early ^Freedom From the Reds Hungarians Cynical About Any Help From the West Kennedy Group to Study Winthrop to Represent ... . . 1.1. ■_______i.. UlMMI By FRANZ CYBU8 i Western observers make a dis-VIENNA (UP!)—The Hungarian! tincthm between two periods in the people have never forgotten that development of affairs inride Hun-(he West stood idly by when they 8®^ sinc* '*** eveatK ol ***• made their courageous bid for free-l *1® the fhst period, the Krem-dom from Communist oppression11” inri^«* ot c°m* in | munist Party Chief Janos Kadar, _ .•«___.. . .. .v ;Whn succeeded in establishing an ^ §* * II* even more oppressive pdioTwie WeMt had helped them KS before the revolt, revolution would have achieved! . . victory. \ ^4. * * 1 I have met few Hungarians whoj. T^usands of Hungarians who discouraged all Western contacts. But in 199S Kadar began to encourage cultural and scientific ex-change with the West, partly with the aim of winning international acceptance for his regime. At the same time, the govern* merit, with economic help from Russia and other satellite, begun t improve the living standard. During a recent visit to Buda-pest. I observed that the economic raising of the -Hungarian qu**-!™* Permuted wnh unprecedeut- drably improved. Jon" before the United Nations; ^j^J^^uted or sent to will have any concrete results ~~ aenefits for them. ,rkoncentntion camps, where far some time a total of 40,000 persons were held. GOOD GOODS There were more consumer g Mon than 70 per ^ent of ail arable huid in Hungary bad been collectivized by Febrnary this year. A new drive is expected to be launched .by the regime after the harvest work is eempta°—Maybe she’s just beeping up with the newest fashion, bat Princess Margaret has taken to wearing a tentlike swagger coat. The London gossip columns consequently are freely predicting a royal Bhby is on the way. ★ ★ ♦ Margaret donned the all-concealing coat for an early morning visit Sunday to Cratoie Church in Scotland. Her husband, ex-photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones, walked the regulation couple of paces behind her carrying an umbrella against the rain which has. soaked the royal family's vacation at Balmoral Castle. * * ★ With her swagger coat, Margaret wore a matching hat and — unusual for her — low-heeled shoes. Margaret usually wears high heels to add a little height. Rumors that toe may be expecting a baby started flying on her 30th birthday eight days ago. Her first child will be fifth in line for the British Traditional Sacrifice Lot of Mrs. Kennedy § By RUTH SOLLETT .ness concern, dean of a college or As wives without number hate president of the United States. done before, Jacqueline Kennedy probably now going through toe experience of drastically altering her own life to fit her husband’s. it it a • This sacrifice, usually lost In the glare that opmunds a husband’s accomplishments, is though sometimes subtle. It will be dramatized, I’m sure, in toe changes toe public, sees in Jackie. First gthnpses of bet show her to be a peraon who glories la her youth, love* comfortable, brightly colored clothe* and the tumbled hairdo* which are now popular la toe younger set. But, unless I miss my guess, it will be goodby to all that. It has been a painful wrench for many another wife to Have the strings to her youth njdely sundered but it s a universal sacrifice demanded of wives and must be endured. For a wife must share her husband’s role when he is aspiring to a high position—whether file job be is after is executive in a busi- When the husband’s youth is no in Ms effort to get the job, file wife must underplay her own youth. Right or wrong, it seems helpful in these situations for the wife to look the part she win have to play if the husband achieves Ms ambition. As a potential first lady. I’ll be greatly surprised if you don’t see Jackie Kennedy start looking more mature in her public appearances. She may love orange sweaters with shocking • pink Capri pants, one of the resort costumes she was recently reported wearing. But you'll see her in more matronly garb and with a more dignified, controlled hairdo. Mrs. Kennedy ia now going through the experience many of us have had to face up to as our husbands rose in their chosen field. For one of the prices-a woman must pay for her happiness as a wife is that she must subordinate her own whims and fancies in dress to the position of her mate. For file world has made her appearance a factor in judging the abilities of a rising husband. Name is Beta Omega New Chapter Formed Beta Theta Chapter of Lambda!Cook, Mrs. Gotland Townes and Chi Omega installed a new chap- Mrs. Janies Hudson. Jeanetta Brat-ter Beta Omega, Saturday at Ro- tain and Janet Evans Mao were tunda Inn. tnatalted. Installed with the new chapter chapters attending from out of were Mrs. Bruce SanfLMrs. Rich- toWB were from Royal Oak, ard Klstner. Mrs Frank Mul- pleasant Ridgo. Ypsl- holand, Mrs. Richard De Shetler. ^ ©hio: Ports- by Aledo FALL DOs Each jeason calls for something new as far as fashion forecasts are concerned. It will take one of the current hairdos to with the new trend ln clothes. First of all your hair must be restored to top condition after a season of surf and sun. Hair conditioning wUl do wonders for it Now you are ready to have a special coif adapted for you alone, With the highlights restored to your hair, you are ready for your very own "do.” It must be created with you in mind. Make an early appointment with us. Aleda’s Beauty Salon Fonfiae State Bank Building 26 */i North Saginaw St. FE 4-8611 National officers present included Ann Maxwell, president; June Hanf, treasurer; Mrs. Nadine Pierce, organizer; Mrs. Elizabeth Howell, corresponding secretary; and Mrs. Ginger Pazker, editor-in-chief. Two members of the National Jurisprudence Committee also were present. Mrs. Donald Bryson is the chapter organizer for Beta Theta. Why Do Poodles Act So Snooty? (UPI) — The poodle is an aristocrat among dogs. But dog experts say his ancestors were just rough-and-tumble water dogs that crashed high society. He became known as the French Poodle because ladies thought it fashionable to get their dogs as well as their gowns from the sophisticated Paris shops. Soap Away Bugs (UPI) — Many country dwellers like to keep a barrel of rain water or tap water .standing in their garden for use in the event of fire. They can prevent mosquitoes from breeding there by dropping a cake of soap into the barrel. Your Sally will start making ■peischea about her righta to privacy if you express an adverse opinion on her new hairdo. Bob will complain of your nagging when you ask if he’s received acceptance letter from the college of his choice. Ask Anne if her plans Include going out on Friday night with her new boy friend — in an explosion similar to Dave’a she’ll accuse you of interfering with her independence. # *. * We may really conclude that these young people are losing their mind* unless we can begin to understand these bowls for pricacy as expressions of their uncertainty. It also helps to remember that our uncertainties also involve irritability. Though we are not adolescent we want privacy ourselves when we are struggling with a decision to protest the meager raise our boss has given us or to tell our mother-in-law a visit will be inconvenient. The “Different9 look for You # ... permanents $5—$6-$7.50 Styled Hair Cutting t| KA from ...... Jr""-. We Specialise la CMMnb's Bah Canto*. ANNAUESE BEAUTY SAIXJPT 80)4 N. Saginaw St. (Over Tasty Ratary) FE 2-5600 VACATIONING? % Try Our lUesnanine Budget Department SPECIAL §4100 A*ete #Q AA I VERY SPECIAL $f|50 Our $10.00 Permanent v Beauty Shop 35 W. Huron FE 3-7180 PRICES SLIGHTLY HIGHER TONY'S maemmaamaaammm For a happier life and a happier marriage, send tor a copy of Ruth Millett’s new booklet, "How to Have a Happy Husband." Mail 25c for each copy to Ruth Millett Reader Service, c/o The Fdhtiac Press, P.O. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station, New York 19, N;Y. Mrs. Lester Bell Honored at Shower Mrs. Lester Bell of liberty Street was honored with a stork shower Wednesday afternoon by Mrs. Leo A. Martell of Dwight Street. Following a luncheon the guests enjoyed games. , Attending were Mrs. George Bodnovich, Mrs. Alex Fenton, Mrs. James Berden, Mrs. Jasper Kuril-on, Mrs. Jerry Supemault, Mrs. Glenn Moses, Mrs. George Tate, Mrs. Alex Winspeare and Mrs. Allen Reed Jr. Black pepper is made from pepper berries harvested before they ripen. White pepper comes from ripe berries. An ingeneous new development brings you eyeglass comfort never known before SUAVE by Flairspecs WITH THE NEW "SNMNG-ACTION TEMPLES' Thus* revolutionary new Spring-action Temples Kelp comfort and secure wear without annoying ear irritation, slipping or binding. The Spring action remains gently constant at all timas. You'll be pleased with the handsome styles, tool See them soon at Nu-Vision! Available in o SATIN BUCK o SATIN MAY o SATIN IRONS BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE 109 N. SAGINAW ST. E. STIINMAN; O.D. Daily 9:10 AM. to 5:30 P.M. Friday 9:10 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. ELECTRIC 1960 - 9 CUBIC FOOT MGFRATOft-FKEEZffi WITH Dial Defrost 168 NOT A PENNY DOWN! WITH TRADE LONG EASY TERMS 90 Days Same as CASH N Service After the Sale Free Delivery — Free Installation sISBBrS 8’ TRANSISTOR RADIO 1 7^GOOD HOUSEKEEPING FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL •COTTAGE • DEN •PATIO •KITCHEN Shop Tonight *til 9 P, M. DOWN WEEK of PONTIAC 51 West Huron Street FE 4-155$ Open Your Account ( In Minutes On tha Phone If You Wish! ^ tHR PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 20, I960 fifteen Wiffiam K. Cowie Shampoos Daily Takes Heap o* Understanding Umm %iahiwy tt Tn. af Practical Expcricnc* M5 VMM ML VB 4-»57 * Orckii* Uka (WD~Jbda Allyeon keeps her “trademark”—Her gleam- hV Pageboy coiffure—in perfect condition by ■hampnrZry her hair every day! Foe Toot Wedding QUALITY At Maw Ton Can Afford and Quantity NeumodeHosiery Shop 82 N. Saginaw FE 2-7730 '‘Snap and Body” by Realistic POLL-PARROT ... for back to school I Pledge to fit each child as if he were mg own! Hart at George's Family Shoo Dopt. fitting your children's shoos is more than a business ... wo toko a very personal pride in fitting each child's foot properly. 16 years' experience provides us with a vitol background for the most important safeguard for your children's foot health. lifflSrTTfffl moil roi I son and oitts Girls’ Nylon Saddle Washable Do your child’s shoes fit? Aak US to check your child’s foot she. No obUaatkat Boys’ Oxford Black and Brown Scoff proof toe GEORGE'S taf... Morin Floor Wt GIVI MUMS KID HAMM STAMPS 3-Generation Problem nat^Ung body . . . tagaUint ter white and gray hair Bair Cata by Oscar 9* H Parisian Beauty Shop JZ, 7 W. Lawrence (Upetaln) FE 2-495S By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN Millions of senior citizens live with their married children or with other relatives. In the United States more than three million do ao. This can be a very enriching experience or it can be miserable, os. tNP - tt At best a three-generation home baa problems—both tor the elderly and for the younger people with whom they live. It takes a M of loving and a 1st of understanding (or the ability to imagine eaeaeif la the other ‘ tost to make a sue-of thie situation. It Is not la! It is hard he the grandmother to that she should give her married children some time alone, and also the younger people and their friends some time alone. No matter how greatly lowed or how attractive the older person ie, it is thoughtless If she is always a member of the party. Husbands and wives need some companionship by themselves and they should be able to wjtertain with tost their own age {group sometimes. Another problem apt to be encountered is that it often is difficult to tone down the tumultuous noise of the grandchildren while grandmother takes a rest WWW. To be honest, the grandmothers I know never rest so far as i can toll. They are out on the golf course or at chib, but if they live long enough the time will come when they wish to take periodic rests during the day. On the other hand, If the younger generation does not understand how much Its companionship means to the senior citizen and does not provide this la generous measures gladly; If the younger relatives are not tolerant of the eccentric! fifes which some-times oocar with advanced age, they are aettag In a cruel and unimaginative maaaer, and when the same thing happens to them, win look back with regret. Of course books have been written on this subject. Today I am mainly concerned with one of the strong tendencies which may arise with advancing years. Many older folks become careless about personal hygiene and grooming. They are not ao careful as they about the daily bath and nail and hair care. Even those who were paragons of bandbox freshness in younger years may begin to neglect basic grooming necessities. ★ ★ ★ There are many reasons for fids; decreased energy, boredom, loss of sight of themselves as individ-because their lives have changed so drastically — and fear of slipping in the tub. Also, many are imbued with the idea that too many baths are bad for the older person. This latter conception no doubt arooe became dry aUa is one of the problems of the old person. However, with proper diet, butt oils and body lotions and vitamin and hormone therapy, there Is no' reason why the older woman cannot be personally dainty. One can overcome the fear and danger of slipping in the tub with a good rubber mat for the bottom of the tub. Then there are metal hand rails, steps and grab bard which can be attached to the bathroom wall or to the tub itself. * * * Good grooming and meticulous, personal hygiene are great asaeta for the older woman! Friends as Kids, Now Double Date Again as Widows LONG BEACH, Calif. (UP!) — Two women who as teen-agers | used to double date in hfisrouri are double dating again—50 years, later. Adelia Mitchell, 65, and (Mile Martin, 06, both widows, met by chance the other day In s park, it dr■■■ *T thought she looked like someone I knew,” said Mrs. Mitchell today. "We started talking, first found we both came from nuri. We narrowed it' to SeUgman. Then I asked her maiden name. It was Oilie!" Many older folks become careless about personal hygiene and grooming. But this well-groomed grandmother knows that personal cleanliness and neatness are even more important now than they were in her youth. owe, “We were farmers’ daughters. At night we doable dated. Wo were the belles ef SeUgman, Mo. So we thoaght, anyhow. Bat It was just good, clean fan, early home and early to bed mad op before sunrise.” The friends said they have joined a singing group which meets weekly. ‘And we’re back where we started,” said Adelia. "We’re double dating again!” Win at Cards Sixteen tables were in play Saturday evening when the Pontiac Bonneville Duplicate Bridge Chib met in the Hotel Waldron. Winners were Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Weadley; Ernest Guy and Edwin V. Clarke; George Armstrong and Ray Walmoth; Mrs. W. H. Barrow and Mrs. Herbert Bronson; Dr. Carl Bolton and Dr. Charles Patrick; the Jack Wrights; . Mrs. Elliott Heugh and Terry Bladen; Mrs. Carl Bolton and Mrs. Charles Patrick; Melvin Smail and Frank Sparks. Hollywood One Price Plan ALL PERMANENTS COMPLETE WITH CUT AND 8ET NONE «; HIGHER! AO This Costs Less With Hollywood’s One Price Plan A Carefree Haircut A Permanent by an Experienced, Licensed Operator A Styled Set A Our guarantee, a Complete Wave for 93.75 A No Appointment ' Necessary A Air Conditioned Comfort HOLLYWOOD Beauty shop 78 Yi, North Saginaw Street Over Bazley’a FE 8*3560 Educate Your Friends Those Off-Color Stories! Don't Tell or Hear Them By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; I have never seen my problem in your column but I imagine other women have the same prob- I am no youngster. I am married with a family. We Aa ve our social lite^as other couples do, but I find ABBY myself thoroughly disgusted with the company if someone tells a dirty story. First someone tells a "cute" off color joke to start the ball tolling. After that they get so filthy I want to disappear. My husband says it’s time I grew up and got over it, but I can’t help it, Abby. I have sat through evenings red-faced and tight-lipped. I don’t want to break friendships by telling them off. How does a lady act under the circumstances? DISGUSTED WITH FILTH DEAR DISGUSTED: A lady educates her friends to keep the conversation clean in her presence, she can be subtle, sweet and altogether charming in the way she lets folks know she doesn’t “tell ’em” and doesn’t care to "hear DEAR ABBY! I am 55 and my wife is 47. We’ve been married 29 years and have children and grandchildren, M y wife is a very attractive woman for her age but lately she uses so much' gook on her face that I am ashamed to be seen with her. She looks false and cheap and foolish. If a man tried to pick her up while my back was tinned I would not blame him for trying. She is a fine woman otherwise. How can I convince her hot to put all that stuff on her face? She won’t listen to me. IGNORED DEAR IGNORED: Women rarely listen to their husbands in matters of makeup—but they should. Enlist the cooperation of a few well-groomed women friends whose opinion your wife respects. Together you might be able to penetrate the gook barrier. jA Arthur Murray's All students art Invited to special partita to gfva them poise and confidonca Ye*, M fan learning to de nee the Arthur Money Way dunks to Ml Studio parties. And it’s quick aad easy, too, due to his "Magic Step" method of teaching. Your success is guaranteed when you put yourself in the bands of an Arthur Murray ea* 111T...... TO PLEASE A MAN, CALL CAIEFUL DAN FOB FLAWLESS DBY CLEANING Not only his v a I u a b I a clothes but the whole family's deserve Pontiac Laundry's gentle can and expert workmanship, And it costs “ ho more to have finer dry cleaning. Cat Careful Den at PI 2*1101 Enjoy Insured Mothproofing FREE DRY CLEANERS 540 S. Telegraph 2612 West 12 MNe -911 S. Hunter CONFIDENTIAL TO D. E.: Go bade to school and graduate. An education is a collection of gems that will grow more precious with the years. Fur on a Budget (NEA)—The woman who has always yearned for furs but never invested in them can have fur trim almost any way she likes this fall. On a suit, on a coat, as coat or suit lining, in a vest. And the cost won’t be astronomical.' DAY SCHOOL CLASSES BEGIN TUESDAY, SEPT. 6 NIGHT SCHOOL, SEPT. 8 GET A BETTER JOB AND MORE PAY Check the courses below which interest you and mail us this advertisement today. We will send literature immediately. □ Higher Accounting □ Speedwriting □ General Business □ Gregg Shorthand □ Executive Secretarial □ Machine Shorthand Q Comptometer □ Typewriting Free, permanent employment service Pontiac Business Institute, Inc. 7 W. Lawrence FEderal 2*3551 Since 1896 air eoNomoNia DOR YOUR COMPORT Unique bra designs .. for 'custom' flattery by 'Just a Just' with Magic Tab gives you cuslom-At, flattering contour In front. Just pud tab up for cup dopth, leu separation; down for last cup depth, more reparation. 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Three coon dogs located the fugitive qnd it was captured j with a rope. TILE OUTLET II TOD Don't Bay Tour Tile Proof US. Wo NOTH Loso Honor 1055 W. HURON FE 8-3717 Plenty of Forking Hours: Mon., Than-, Fri. 'til 9 —» Taos., Wed., Sat. 'til f Pontiac's largest Armstrong Dealer PLASTIC COUNTER TOPS Va OFF Some romantic motorists have been heard to say that "Cars Love Shell!’ Down-to-earth engineers put it differently. They say, with Shell’s TCP’additive, motorists have the benefit of a major improvement in gasoline. U.S. Patent 2889212 covering gasolines with TCP was granted to Shell for creative research and discovery. A Shell gasoline with TCP will let y°u discover, perhaps for the first time, how smooth your car can run - how far you can go on a gallon. Your Shell dealer is the man to see. * Trademark for Shell's unique gasoline additive. Gasoline containing TCP ia covered by U. 8. Patent 2889212. cars love SHELL SHELL mw SIXTIES '"A-Z THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY; AUGUST 2ft, ONE COLOR Teen-Age Idol | Needs No Talent Adolescents in Vent for Emotions Eagerly! Take to Hero Worship CINCINNATI. Ohio (UPI> - Any good-looking youth can be built Into a teen-age rode n’ roll idol.] according to a Cincinnati Psychol-j ogist. He doesn't even have to be] talented. ♦ * * Lucien Cohen, an assistant professor at the University of Cin-i cinnati who specializes in adoles-iirent psychology, explained that | such idols merely satisfy a psy-i etiological need in the normal.; growing-up girl- V Teen-agers who scream, swoon •nd stomp at the sight and sound of them, he added, don’t even really cue wbont their “heroes.” ; “The adolescent crush comes at; a time when girls u^qutgrowing- ■ exclusive affection for thek par- KlOS Interest FallS Off ents and are reedy to deposit thet{% .....■ • , , m ■ love on someone else," he skid. But they are not able to make a smooth adjustment from parents to outsiders. “The entertainer presents himself a handsome pack- YORK (NEA'—^Hi dtddlefers who woulo do almost anything I “Tliere are no big acts ony- Jdee dee, no circus life for me." j“jpst to be with the circus” in more, no big names to capture! SEEKS INFORMATION—A scout drone, the U. S. Army’s latest device for gathering data behind enemy lines, is displayed on its mobile launching platform at Ft.. Myer, Va. The instrument-packed, pilotless craft is 36 feet long and has a 24-foot wing span. Circus Losing Some Sparkle age which others want a ’,He™ That's apparently the song of thej^ays gone by. thing to , .**| tlwfr down the block and the girl] Irwin Kirby, outdoor editor of {the public’s imagination." and many girls are swept along I involuntarily." ith the lovely blond locks. He may want to swing a mighty baseball bat but he propbably has little desire to "fly through the air with the greatest of ease." She may dream of being a Hollywood starlet but rarely, if ever, does she see herself looking down from a high wire. This despite the fact that almost COLLEGE STATION, Tex. every American youngster with the (UPI)—Treating cattle like cattle, price of admission (and some with-during a trip to market can reducejout), will have a circus almost at a stockman's returns on his invest- his door step sometime during the ment, the Texas A&M Extension season which unofficially kicked off Stockmen Warn of Loss in Cattle on Trip to Market There’s no Mickey Mantle, no of Billboard Magazine, blames Marilyn Monroe, no EMvo Pres lack ol Circus tradition" m the |*y ta the eirros business in the United States. | l otted States. Circus life seems too ham. to > many. William \ Fields of Ringling i A every rule needs an ex- Brothers says. jeeption to prove it: John Citnep is , __________ tlikt exception in this case. LITTLE TRAINING \ ^ # Few training grounds are pro-j & vided by or for the circus, cording to Dewey Bardo, national outdoor representative ' Service says. The service warns that undue excitement at loading time, lack of feed or rest during shipping, exposure to wet and cold, and improper bedding and footing increase shrinkage. "Cattle shrinkage can cut down on profit or, In some cases, it can mean the difference between profit and loss," the service said. with the opening of Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus at Madison Square Garden in New York March 11. * * ★ Playing 11 months of the year In Indoor arenas throughout the country, Ringling Brothers will be la competition with 16 tent shows. In the New York City area, for Instance, at least four other circuses— the Clyde Beatty, Royal International, Wlrth, and the Comaek—will open this spring. Baron's Kin Gels Pr*dkh Famil>r Rent—1 Red Rose Princess Margaret will have two daughters and a son, according to TaUya Almahdi, a woman fortune teller ia Cairo. The first child will be a girl, says the gypsy, who has been employed ia the past by King Soud of Arabia and the Shah of Iran. To forecast Meg’s future, Taldiya threw 12 Nile snail shells on the ground near a paper bearing the ORRIED OVER DEBTS Contest Winner Recounts Woes in Baking Cake GASTONIA, N. C. (AP)—Even beauty contest winners have their troubles. Mrs. North Carolina — Mrs. Nan Leaptrott, a minister’s wife-explained her woes of cake In the national contest to the Lions Club here; The pan she was given had a hole in it, and the cake batter ran through and burned, time to let It bake. After transferring the batter to another pan, she didn’t hav* After she pulled out what cake she had and arranged It on a p 1 at t e r, another contestant brushed it and made It crumble. "In spite of all this,” she says, T put a lot of ldng on it and and covered up the bad spots.” S placed third in cake judging. American Guild ol Variety Artists. Few mothers need worry about losing their children to the circus as the reasons pile up. Among lem: An estimated 55,to 90 per cent of an average circus troupe is foreign bom. The circus is clannish, founded on "family heritage.” Most of the families are of European or South American origin. Jail Visitor Fino—$15 MONTPELIER. Vt. (UPI)-Win-, _ fred Valentine, 22, a Norwich Uni- The lack of interest among versity cadet from Orange, Conn., youngsters today in participating was fined J15 for trying to break I >n this spectacle which they seem into a county jail to pay a social enJ°y watching Perplexes those call. Valentine said he only wanted associated with the business, to vtoit a buddy. >. '- I They cite cases of fellow work- The public often confuses the circus with the “camy (carnival) where every customer is a suck- ; Circus life is transient; standards have not kept up with| those in other professions many respects. But perhaps animal trainer John Cuneo conies closest to a banc answer. Ij Son ol a multi-millionaire, John, 29. is a Chicagdqative. Formally education at Georgetown University, he started out training goats to fill spare hours, theft progressed to leopards, polar bears, llamas. sk, ★ * In the aniiftal ring which he enters wearing a full dress suit, he contradicts the image the American public is likely to have of a typical circus performer. But Cuneo also offers little encouragement to the few 'youngsters with clowns or animals in their eyes. His act is tremendously expensive to maintain, trained help is bard to get, and the "big money" in entertainment is else-j living I where. variety of Australian termites, appropriately called ‘‘compass termites,’’ construct slablike nests with narrow ends invariably pointing due south and north. ^ SEE US FIRST DAWSON l BUTTERFIELD n. J. Di.nn, J.hn BetUrfMd a. tofiM* st. t s-nss rraibt Cockroaches Written Guarantee From Houses. Apartments, Groceries. Factorial and Restaurants. Remain out only one hour. No signs used. Box Ex Company 1114 Feat. St. Bk. Bide. R l-(iil TILE l One-Coat Enamel ram i Spotf#r A#pholt 1 10O..C. 19‘ TILE Aworttd Golort 9x9 A* E. ■ A' WK ARK YOUR AUTHORIZID SANDRAN DEALER \SPECIAL SALE Floor Covering Vinyl Plastic First Quality UNGLAZED CERAMIC FLOOR TILE 2 Vo Sq. Ft Newest Patterns Sq. Yd. INSTALLATIONS HEAVY GAUGE INLAID LtasbaH TBs First QvaHty t Ea. DONE by EXPERTS — FREE ESTIMATES Pkratic Wall Tile 50% OFF PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. SEVENTEEN ANOTHER FIRST—Another century-old man-sion is owned by Mrs. Henry Garter. The front seems to melt into the earth.but the rear of . the house is cut stone and has a beautfiully land- g • P.ntUc frtu Photon scaped terrace. The property is edged by Park Lake on the east side, of Main Street. Clarkston Contentedly Lets Rest of the World Roll By Construction projects totaling more than 15 million in progress one mile southwest and the fact that a {5-million shopping center will open soon does not seem to ruffle the calm -of Clartcstonites. * * * '> In fact, townspeople rather like this advance toward a more convenient Way of life-sis long as it stays outside the village limits. They mean to keep it that way as long as possible. , Twenty new real estate developments have exploded Clarks-tea's Independence Township population from MN to more than li.uoo la the past It years, and the big Chrysler expressway soon will skirt the town. Bat with al this, Clarkstoa’s pspalstloa of IN has been Increased by only 100 residents during the decade. As one oldtimer said, “There just isn't anr room in town for more people, industry or business places, and that's all right with me." Clarkston's main street, with its ancient elm trees arching high over the ribbon of concrete (U.S. 15); presents an irresistible appeal from one end to the other. HAS COLONIAL LOOK Past the one-block business section, white., pillared mansions are set casually back from the roadway. Each reflects the owner’s pride in maintaining *»n over-all New England and Southern Colonial look in the town established more than a century ago. The town's forefathers, who came from New York State, apparently were not poor people, and they stressed architectural beauty In their homes, still well preserved. Several of the examples ef architecture are especially artistic, notably the cobblestone building occupied by the bank. Inside, bank president Robert Jones has bad several old prints ef the town enlarged and framed. road station two miles away. Sheep-raising was the main source of income years ago, and the only 'way to get the animals to the Detroit market was by train, i “I used to hear the sheep coming early in the morning and would Only, one major industry has?"ara,ble *** *** «° ?**P been Wrmitted to operate ln «*m from getting away. said. Clarkston. After the death of Henry j He added that many limes Ford, who beautified the old prill stray sheep would get np on bond and built a small hydro plant, j porches and into houses and Alien Hawke purchased the build-1 barns ns they were ing. For 10 years he and his sons reeled down the main Allen and £arl have been, supply-1 only firm, last feet « ing small parts to automotive in- up with them, dustry. They employ 145>dple. j The 4dwq”buzzed with activity * * * I during the Mrtv’90s and was one More than just a dammed-upjof Michigan's most popular resort body of water in the Clinton River, towns. Here, the late Henry Ford the old mill pond serves as a found peace and relaxation at the swimming, fishing and boating fold Deer. Lake Inn. The Caribou area for young and old, and in j Inn and the Vleit House were other the winter there is a lighted ice favorite spots. Ail three have since skating rink. been tom down. • A t *-»-« I Sks,- ... [freshing. Clarkston borders on four scenic j lakes. There are Deer. Park, Mill [Pond and Dollar Lakes. An automotive engineering school on Holcomb road has been sold to a real estate development com-‘ jpany. and people are swarming out to the Clarkston area — out--side town — because of the UN- ORIGINAL CLARKSTON DESCENDENT — Lee Clark, whose ancestors helped establish the town of Clarkston 125 years ago, has proved that "downright gumption” has been handed down to him from his forefathers. ‘Clark married his childhood sweetheart five weeks ago, on his 79th birthday. Both were widowers and now have many children and grandchildren. His special spot 4s a park bench back of his old home on the edge of the Mill PotaL \ \*-, FRIENDLY MONOPOLY — With only one barber shop in tovm.^Frank (Tink) Ronk encourages gab-fests, and hljKshop is a favorite meeting place for good conversation. Watching Tink, is druggist Keith Hallman, as funeral di-ricetor Lewis Wint gets “washed behind his ears.” EARLY AMERICAN—The Main Street home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stauter was one of the first structures to lie erected in the quiet Uttle town of ClarkstoiP Its shiny white paint is ac- cented by deep green shutters, and the backyard slopes down to the edge of Park Lake, just east of Main Sffeet. However, bark in the heart of Carkwton, all is serene. Highspeed activity seems to come to a complete standstill. Shoppers move about slowly, stopping to chat with friends or peer Into store windows. There are only one barber shop, one Dank, a couple of grocery stores and a dry goods, drug and hardware stores in the one-block business section. One stoplight slows down fast-moving traffic. Often a motorist passing through is startled by the beauty and quietness of the village. Acres of lush lawns blend together in front of the large homes. Backyards seem to melt right down to the water’s edge on both sides of Main Street, with the big Mill Popd to the west and back of the homes on Fences are unheard of tie village. ^ Outside town, huge bulldozers and earth-moving equipment are tearing down hills; loaded trui'.ss are rumbling over the highways and the noise of the cranes biting deep into the earth shatters .the stillness of the countryside. As in most small settlements, the residents here are. especially proud of their fire department, and almost every family is represented or related to a volunteer firemen. Fire Chief Donald Beach has held his position more than 20 years. Clarkston has stood the blows of three disastrous fires, one in the late ’60s, one in 1887 and one in 1927 when parts of the business section were wiped out. However, from. the ashes of the destroyed wooden structures arose attractive brick buildings which have made this section one of the most attractive in the state. ALMOST THE LAST SWIM — During the hottest summer months, this old Mill Pond area in the heart of Clarkston is buzzing with activity. Here, jmiy a few children brave thq, cool water before school starts. The late Henry Ford rebuilt the obi dam and spent a small fortune making the pond deep and beautiful. BUSINESS SECTION—There is only one block of the business section in the heart of Clarkston, and the moat attractive building li this Terrace House. Two «M homes were moved together years ago and recently painted a light-gray, with white trim and green ten. TYPICALLY CLARKSTON — The beautiful Grecian architecture. of the home of Mrs. Walter Thompson is but one of many mansions more than 100 years old that 'fine Clarkston’s Main Street. The home on the left belongs to Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Spohn. Few houses in the heart of town are painted anything but pure white. / / \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. 3 ,AUGUST 3 American Cagers Keep Rolling at Olympics Whip Hungary 107-63 to Gain Tourney Semis Two U.S. Women Seek Diving Honors Today; Swim Protest Still On Dead Danish Cyclist Drugged Before Race I COPENHAGEN (AP) president of the Danish Road Racing Federation confirmed today that Danish Olympic cyclists had been given a drug before the 100-kilometer (62.5 mile) team race which resulted in the death of one rider. But he insisted they ,had not been "doped.” ROME (AP) — Two California housewives, Mrs. Paul Jean Pope and Mrs. Juno Irvin, again trailed Germany's surprising Ingrid Kramer, but qualified today for the finals of the women’s Olympic platform diving competition. And the powerful U S. basket- pills. He said the drug was supposed to stimulate circulation of the blood and had been administered on a doctor's orders. * * W Madsen told The Associated Press: "The doctor who controlled the riders before leaving for Rome ordained the drug and no secret was made of it.” ' Meanwhile, Italian authorities launched an investigation into Jensen’s death. Ferdinando Co-cucci, Rome’s deputy attorney general, said authorities "did Rot exclude the possibility” that Jen-had taken stimulants. President Thorkild Madsen, who “ returned to Copenhagen with the e Danish team Sunday, conducted a n lengthy hearing after reports had h circulated • that Khut Enemark y Jensen and other riders had been * doped. Jensen collapsed during ► die race Friday and died a short time later. • Madsen confirmed that the; unman wain, jua oucjc, nau | ball team, led by All-Americas riders had. been given pills, btrtibeen informed of the drug and Oscar Robertson and Jerry Lucas insisted this in no way could be j made no objections, rolled into the semifinals with a termed doping. "Dodtom at the Rome hospital * * where Jensen was taken after his Previously, the team’s irainer[collapse also Were informed im-i- had told the newspaper Atkuelt [mediately and all agreed the stuff that he had given Jensen the [was harmless,” Madsen sajd. Madsen said the doctor on the [Danish team, Axel Boeje, had Tigers-Yanks Exchange Home Run Wins 107-63 victory over Hungary as the Rome Games started their fourth day amid continued controversy. W W .W U S. officials, turned down In preliminary protest, planned to carry their appeal over the finish of Saturday’s men’s 100-meter freestyle swimming event to the International Olympic Committee. In the women’s diving, the 17-year-old fraulein from Dresden, East Germany, followed up her upset victory In Saturday’s springboard competition with 56.30 points to lead a dozen qualifiers into Tuesday’s platform final. W. W ★ Mrs. Pope, from Santa Ana, Cain, favored in this event as she was in the springboard, was second among the qualifiers with 54.70. Mrs. Irvin, from Glendale, Calif., was sixth with 51.90. The now retired Put McCormick, Mrs. Irvin anti Mrs. Pope gave Uncle Sam a sweep in Mi event in 1956. The event, which the United States has won 1024, now permits only two entries from each nation. ★ W W Russia’s Ninel Krutova, the European champion, compiled 53.36 points in today’s qualifying to finish third, behind Mrs. Pope, who won the silver medal in Saturday’s springboard. In basketball, Robertson, the j star from Cincinnati, scored 22 points and Lucas, who led Ohio State to the national collegiate title, finished with 21 as the U.S. swept its three games. Asm probable aim at American Nitrogen Too Surprise Winner ol Silver Cup DETROIT (UPI)—The East upset the West Saturday In the 15th running of the Silver Skip powerboat race on the Detroit River. W ♦ ... if Nitfftgen Too, owned by Samuel Du Pont of Wilmington, Del., and driven by Ron Musson, streaked to victory by outdistancing Seattle’s Miss Thriftway in two of three 15-mile heats. And i second Du Pont craft, Nitrogen, forced Thriftway to share the runner-up spot by (In- Tiger Box Scores ▼trail : K aline PM Game NEW YOU abrbM ab 4 1*0 Rleh’aon Zb 3 3 2 3 0 fMcD'd Zb 1 4 o o o Lopes rf I 5 I 3 Z Carr U 1111 Mantle ef 4111 Skowroo 11 Z 6 4 S Howard e I Z t b 0 Borer Zb >404 bBlanch d 1 4 4 4 OeM'etrl 21 4 4 4 4 Xubek it 14 14 Orba p Coates p Nitrogen Too finished a quarter-mile ahead of the favored Thriftway in their opening heat with o speed of 102.273 mUes an hour. Joe Schoenith's Detroit boat. Gale V, second at 101.840 miles an hour. BeWjYsstt n drive to start a league for small men in basketball st future Olympic Games. The Philippines, which is pushing the proposal, claims that 20 nations support the move. The proposal would create a second cage It would be limited fo players 6-feet-2 or less. f Supporters of the move say they are tired of having giants make Jokes of their teams. Herb Elliott today withdrew from conus' the Olympic 800-meter run and nowlJJJJJJ, H: Mats «Z 4 4 4 Zbtete a—Fouled out (or Costs* ______ Struck out tor Most! In Mb; c—Walked tor Mae* la 7th; d—Popped out tar Borer to kth; «—struck out lor Duron to «U> (—Called out on itrike* tor Blchordrto Thriftway averaged only 98.137 miles an hour, but Bill Stead got the Detroit Memorial regatta and Seafair Trophy race winner moving better in the second heat and blazed along at 103.846 miles an hour. Nitrogen Too finished second at 99.778 miles an hour. Four boats were still in Contention at the start of the final heat. J They included Nitrogen Too and Thriftway, plus Nitrogen and Gale V, each a Winner of One heat and runner-up hi another. Nitrogen Tbo grabbed the lead _____at the start of the decisive final 5 SI It heat and averaged 103.707 miles l i 4 s an hour to cross the finish line a • Jj 100-yard victor over thriftway. Nt- £ 4 4 o jtrogen came in third to shkre ond place in the overall standings Thriftway. 4411 4 4 2 0 u j ijij with 1 nandea. Bolling atoS^jSskT LOB PetreS Bolling. Colot Ito. S-Rsitodl yOTMIMia ■ How Tort 11. ZB—Msswott. HR-fec. Vr*L W . » | tr ..........2 1-2 2 __ter* .........lif-'t Orbs (L, 44) .... 115 4 . . - lr 22-3 7 4 4 1 Z'How Tori 1 4 4 4 4 zlljSieB*r* will concentrate solely on the 1500|pord" r 1 z o o 1 iSi*T»t meters. Australia lost s sprinter DrummMT'<»Sif0HoSc»Sk.P^5Mlt and broad Jumper today due to trm1 0mm$ illness. DETROIT NEW TOBE abrbhl abrbkl UNITED STATES HUNGARY VtoSU » Mil Boyar 3b #ig}) (gg) ElltoO cf 4 1Z 4 Lopes U % a r r a r t cuh ik 4i*#fcAik *• Dischlnger 4 4-T 14 Banhegyt 144 h S. Robertson 4 44 *t Bohaty 144 Z “****““ ----- 10MZ1 Oebenyl^ 4 4-Z 4 * 7 3-4 it Oretnger 1 4-4 Z goUsrlto 4 0 Mantle el West Lone Bellamy 3 44 4 Zalroe' 4 3-5 ll|< I 3-4 4 Temesrarl 4 5-5 ______ 4 4-14 Judik Haldorton 11-11 Blmon Imboff 1 44 Z Beneae Smith 1 44 4 Pollk Aarnette 1 44 4 CJlots 311 0 Blanch'd ______^ >BUko lb Totato 45 17-ZZ 107 Totals 33 13-34 43 Halftime^ score; United States 46, Hun- ^ ^ S*rT *4. . Orounded cPoUes 1 4 4 4 Dltmar p „ ... , |Veal ts 4 4 14 sCerr ______________ 0 ala o Began p Z 0 1 0 Shams p 1044 Jo.j J Burnside p 4 4 4 4 1 44 1 KS" P ® ® • • 1 *"* * blfuko * lb* | 111 Totale 47 f M I Totals „ a—Singled (or Dltmar In 4th: b—called | AMERICAN LEAOUE .54 4* .444 14 [for their fifth consecutive tri-With Dallas the ioeal point ofiumph, in a pre-season test at Lit-the battle for the entertainment tic Rock, Ark: iMat between the senior Nation- In other NFL games, the Green al League and the fledgling [Bay Packers humbled Chicago’s American League, both \eams Bears 35-7, foe Los Angeles Rams have reached a stage of readiness for the opening of the regular season. The Cowboys, a new entry in the NFL stocked with slightly tarnished veterans of the other dubs jelled offensively or the first time 54 65 .472 15tt CMP 44 73 354 SUNDAY'S RESULTS 44. 3IOW York 34 _____ 54, (MM City 14 Bstttmoro 3, Chicago 1 ~—j—I X WMhtegtea 1 —ITUBDATn RESULTS How York 7-3. Cterttend 44 Iimii City 4, Baltimore 3 Chicago 4. Bo*ton g Wuhlngtou 4, Dotritt 1 Ninowski Still Hasn't Clinched Lion QB Job Head coach George Wilson la a completed 35 of 54 passes for 65 stubborn man when it comes to|P«r cent- TODAY'S GAMES doretoad (Orest 44) at r —------* U4), 7:05 p m. ■re 44) at Boitimoi K_ww (Lures 14) at B Only game* echeduled. TUESDAY'S GAMES Olympic Standings ROME — Unofficial team standings two days of competition in the 1960 Olympic Games (points awarded on basis of 10, five, four, three, tiro, one, respectively, for first six places): Country Points Germany................34 Italy ................30 United States ........17 Russia ...............14 Holland ..............14 Great Britain ........14 Australia ............12 Brazil .............. 5 Sweden .............. 2 Canada ............... 2 Hungary ...............2 Romania ............. 1 (Because only four places were awarded in the tandem bike that total points will tally 147 Instead of 150, after six final events.] Medal standings taro day of com petition in foe 1960 Olympic! Games. (Gold for first, silver for | second, bronze for third): Country G Italy .5..............3 Germany ..............1 Great Britain . . ....1 Australia ............1 United States.........0 Russia ...............0 Brazil ...............0 - Detroit at Bo*too Z p m. „ . Iium City at Hgw-YWk. 7 p.m. ££*“! Cterelond at Baltimore. 7:04 p.ra. , 5? Chicago at Washington. 7:04 p.m. ig. Long. PO-A—Detroit - Z7-11. DP—Bolling. _ Veal | NATIONAL LEAGUE tote Veal and BUko.| Wea Leal Pet, Pittsburgh “1 “ n„ __________...... -ork ____ Saline. HR—Virgil. Berberet. BUko. Long. I Milwaukee 44 53 .542 n. Berm. SB—Caah « • .... 63 54 .Ml ere rn H B ■BBB40 £,,i5Slire ...64 55 .544 7* 414 4 4 6 1 I|gan Franc taco . 61 40 .564 12Vi ; ! ! 2 ! Cincinnati ... 54 70 .444 20 { teKUto^:SJt JS 2 } J 4 2 4 3| SUNDAT’4 RESULTS charged to BurnaUa chutreo1*• * I%Ua(to^to 4| _ Ban Franelaeoi to Papartlla. T- ______ I Chicago 5. Philadelphia 4 —— gan Franc laco 2. MUwaukae 1 St. Loula 5, Pittsburgh 4, night Kansan Sanior Titlist w,r """tobaySgaiob St. Louta (Jaekaon 14-11) at MUwaukeo COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo, psu^? hn_ Feu*ter m, Defiance. Wtoy, Toledo; fa*. 3 64—Tommy" AhJjra’ StroK; Don ftrkitre, ttatratti Arthur 3:1*—CharlT" 4:41- » Prank Connolly. Detroit. SatHa Handball Titla DETROIT (UPD-Cym Da Muel-teeater and Dr. John Scopis of Detroit won the Michigan Open doubles handball title yesterday with a 214, 10-21, 21-20 decision over fellow Detroiters Jim Golden and Freak Palaszolo. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 20, m0 NINETEEN Bucs Keep Edge, Thanks to Giants Ike Associated Prase The Pittsburgh Pirates still bold their leading margin in the National League race today, but through no fault of their own. The Bucs dropped their third straight to the suddenly revitalized St. Louis Cardinals Sunday M but the Milwaukee Braves, with unusual solicitude, kept their 5%-g ame distance by getting themselves whomped by the San Francisco Giants, 15-2. , Where can I buy a USED CAR I can trust? At your FORD DEALER'S! His reputation and future sales depend on satisfied customers. The Bucs knocked out Card starter Curt Simmons in the seventh taming, but he got the victory, his fifth against three defeats. Harvey Haddix, who was kaytMd in, the fourth, was the kwer. Hie Cardinal outfielders practically had a day off: They Bob Buhl was the first to feel the fury. He left In the big Giant fourth, and was followed by George Brunet, who gave way to Juan Pbearro an inning later. Buhl waa the loser. Jack Sanford weid die distance for the Giants for" an 11-11 record. The Cincinnati Reds scored nine runs in the first inning and then subsided with the delicious exhaustion of a playful pup. But the nine runs were more than enough to take care of the bewildered Dodgers. ' The, Reds got six of their 13 hits in the first inning, with two Dodger errors helping in the nine-run orgy. Roy McMillan hit a three-run homer, Ed Bailey hit one with one man aboard, and Gordon Coleman connected with the bases empty in the big frame. Daigle and Purdo Indianwood Kings la other National League games Clndnnatl defeated LoaAngeles, | By BILL CORNWELL | Age evened the score with youth I Sunday afternoon at Indianwood I Country dub as two "old pros” | ended four years of frustration. I Lao Daigle, M year* “young,” I aad Andy Pardo, who wiU turn [ 47 In October, conquered a pair | of 22-year-old University of Mich-I igan graduates yesterday to win I the annual Indianwood Invite-| tional best ball golf champion- on the golf, course, put up a stiff] battle before yielding. The two teams were all even at the turn, but the Daigle-Purdo team won the first three holes on the back side and Schmalzriedt and White never could make up the deficit, although they whittled the difference to one after 15 hides. Daigle aad purdo won the 10th They halved the 13th, then Schmalzriedt and White rallied to take file next two holes. A par four was good enough to win the 14th when Daigle and Purdo missed the green and White’s birdie four won the 15th. Jim Schmalzriedt, an Indianwood member, and Lariy white‘from Grand Rapids were the victims of the same team they beat a y£ac ago in the finals of this same event. Daigle wedged within one foot of the cup on the 16th hole for a birdie three to regain a 2-up advantage and the match ended with a half ixi the 17th when Daigle exploded excellently from a bunker and sank a six-foot putt for a par three. And; Purdo, Indianwood, and Leo Daigle, Indianwood. def. Wally Smith. Sunny brook, and Chariot Flynn, Dearborn. 4-1; Ken Place, Bod Run, and Ran-dal! Ahern. Rod Run. def. Blaine Bynon, rorert Lake, aad Chariot Patookay, weat- "Sb Schmalsrledt, Indianwood. and Larry White, Oread Raoida, def. Oeorge Wilton, Rod Run, and Prad Henkel, Indian Wood. t up, It heleg; Owen Dpvl*. Indianwood, end Bob Srdeton. Indianwood, def. Stan Rabat. Indianwood. end Jim Young. Berkley, 1 up. J4 holes, ■today’* SemHInali Purdo end Daigle def. Ahern and Place 3-1; Bchraalarledt and White def. Daels aad grdtitn 1 up. • Swaday'a final. Purdo aad Daigle def. Bchmelarledt and White S-l/ T _ . ChaataleueMp Ceaeelaflen Dr Donald Reid, Plum Hollow, and Bill Healey, Sylvan Olen, del. Lou Marini, Southfield, and Dr. Harold Prom-hardt, Farmington. 1-1. « Daigle and Purdo, both Indian- ■ wood members, rifled six-under- ■ par golf to fashion a 2-1 triumph * over Schmalzriedt and White in 5 the finals of .the I960 tournament, g Altogether, Daigle and Purdo g were 23 strokes below par in their ■ four rounds of quitch play after ■ shooting a three-under-par 69 in ■ the qualifiers. I Daigle, sales manager for a ■ Dearborn conveyor firm, and Get your car a new Midas muffler GUARANTEED for ao long no you own your o Free installation tikes only 15 minutes at your Triumph for Detroiter BELOIT, Wis. (UPI)—Ray L 2 ,rolt plastic sad chemical com- j MV 2 Pa"y- moved op n stop each year 2 “"HI their partnership finally hit 1 HRwBA g (he Jackpot Sunday. 2 Three years ago they, reached 5 Uie quarter-finals. Two years ago j ©mioas. inc ■, they advanced to the semis. Last 1 glyear they moved into the finals " g before bowing to Schmalzriedt and ! rgt wiu gI white, then yesterday they went : r.M. ■ all the way by'df’feating the same Don Pox. Farmington, and Otrry Lar-•oa. Farmington, dot. Leonard Gtrosa. Birmingham, ana Lea Smith, Royal Oak, 1 up. THRO PLIGHT Bill Jackaon. indianwood. end Paul Tchlblaklan. C.C. of Detroit, def. Charles Dennison. Indianwood, aad T. L. Oeberg-er. Indianwood. d-5. Ceaeelattea Dick Aeery. Indianwood, aad Olen Whitney, Birmingham, def. John Hull, Sear born .and Dale Mooson. Bdgewood, This Labor Day join the pt getting up to ■Icouple. J Schmalzriedt and "Vfhite^-stausi-g | ness administration majors at th* m!U. dt M. and methodical players! DAILY and SAT. *U>I:N FE 2-1010 435 S- SAGINAW LET US CORRECT THESE CONDITIONS Turaplkd Softly New 200X contains a Sunoco-developed en- is the action that becomes most effective gine conditioner that protects the carburetor after just two tankfuls and can give your car ... keeps valves and cylinders free of power- up to 19 extra miles per tankful —13%' robbing gum... prevents spark plug fouling more power! All this at regular price. Road* and gas waste — just as premiums do! This test 200X this weekend! CAR SAFETY HEADQUARTERS (Formerly MacDonald Tire Co,) Mtra Mileage, Mtra Power, Engine Protection ALL FOR ONLY TERMS 'firestone CHAMPION FREE CAR SAFETY CHECK FIRESTONE MUFFLERS AUeiMMNT FRONT WHEELS ^ T fiat- ■■■ | !■ H umL ■MPI JTWENTY , *7- J W&gr > J=* THE POXTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST 20, 1060 TW United Staten has won 10 gold medals In Olympic eight-oared competition. • Short Game Pays Off for Long-Hitting Barnum I960 laabler American *1774 4p Wilson Ante Sales, lac. M-58 .1 MlK.rd Ed.. Highland mum mv Mm \Brede Boys Double Victors A steady breeze and some close competition combined for a big racing day for members of the Watkins Lake Yachting Association Sunday. Fred and Bruce Bred* were the big winners taking the morning had afternoon snipe events. They came from behind to edge Glenn Friea in the opener and won the other after ten boats were dis-qdalified^ ■ & Dan Zarmoth was thistle winner in both races ha was Jack Berlien in his lightning. \ Blythefield Pro State Open King for Third Time Rule Book Also Helps His One-Shot Victory; Bone Ties for 3rd FREE INSTALLATION—20,000 Miles or 1-Yr. Guarantee COMPLETE PRECISION INSTALLATION ALL W0BK DONE IN I HOUR! WHILE T0U WAIT! BU06IT TERMS We Hewer Secerky or , IntemeHewel Charge ^rtatet OMM DAILY S te 7 SATURDAY 8 tr« $095 KING INSTALLATION CENTER . 40 SOUTH TELEGRAPH RD. FE 3-7068 (Across from Tel-Huron Center) SEAT COVERS Cet Oar Price Before Yea Bay Seat Cover Mart 111 S.-Saginaw St. FC 8- No Monty Down — Long, Easy Terms B/UWAU/ick bowling (lg) DA| | or DMLLo b FREE Si till anil Expertly Htteil anil Bowling Hrillnl to ) our Hnml Bag with Each II liili• ) ou II nit Bowling Boll WKG, 108 N. Saginaw-FI 3-7114 Purchased “) our Hrunsu irh Itou linfi llall Store!" Burly John Barnum is known as one of Michigan’s longest hitters, but it was razor-sharp work around the greens in the stretch drive that earned him his third Michigan Open Golf Championship. 'The 48-year-old Grand Rapids professional also got an assist from the rule book. Detroit pro Eldon Briggs, while addressing his ball the green, barely nudged it out of position—and it was counted as a stroke against him. The scoreboard at the end of 75 boles showed Barnum at 577, Briggs tied with Tom Talklngton of Ypsllaatt at 578. The stroke against the 50-year-old Briggs came on the 12th hole of the morning round yesterday at Lakepointe Country Club, took a double-bogey five at the par-three hole and still had a two-under-par 68 on the round. A * * Briggs said he was not certain whether he had moved the ball out of its original position with his putter. He consuled John Dalrym-ple, the host pro with whom he Was playing, and Dalrymple told him ft moved. State PGA officials consulted the caddies, the golfers and people in the gallery, who confirmed that the ball had moved. Briggs had a 70 In the afternoon. Barnum was the leader after M holes by oae strike, lest It te Talklagton by taklag a 7t jta the morning against TsIUntoa’s e». Talklngton had a 507 score after M holes. He led Briggs and another Detroiter, Joe Zakariaa, by one stroke. Bantam and Bam Drake of Benton Harbor were a* 50*. Barnum, a 225-pounder who last week won the State Pro-Am event at Midland, began his comeback at the seventh hole where he holed a 40-foot putt from the fringe. He birdied the eighth hole with a 20-footer. lost a stroke at 11 when he three-putted, and got it back at the 16th with a live-footer. I Talkington slipped to 71, Zaka-jrian to 74 and Drake to 76 in the I sweltering heat of the afternoon I round. [ So Barnum slipped home with bin third Michigan Open title \and the 1750 first prize money. Briggs and Talkington won $460 each. Three• time winner Waller Burkemo, with fear straight ranads of par-76, aad stocky Gene Bene of Warwick mils Bed tor third place a SM aad each wen $851 Zakariaa and Max Evaaa wen at 585. Tom Grace, a student at Notre I Dame, was the low amateur. He tied with pro Reggis Myles Jr., of Lansing at 283. Myles won $225 and Grace was awarded $100 in merchandise. A total of 60 players, fnHiriing 25 amateurs, made the 36-bole mute at Lakepointe’s 6,515-yard layout fat Sunday’s finale. Barnum’s previous Open victories came in 1951 and 1956. State Open Scoreboard attention young men Your future is in etoctrenics . I. the fastest growing industry in tha world today! Plan for that future by taking the finest training available. Enroll now for our next "Electronic Engineering Training" program. Ekeirosiet Institele twi be Narth tf Fax Theetat *Tomy (trees ... Resile My let Jr. nsw/White •C. A. Smith ttl.. Stan Jawor ....... •art Old Jfc ,.... •Oene Woodard .. George Spencer---- •Ralph fellitrom ..To-n-w-M-nT . .71-47-0-71—27R . .70-70-83-70—373 . 88-11-71-78—388 .. 70-18-78-70—300 71-08-12-71—303 m-n-n-n-m 71-70-00-73—203 .70-08-75-88—383 . .69-71-71-73—384 71-118-70-74—285 .. 71-70-89-78—38S ..08-73-74-71-338 . 88-70-73-71—18* ,. .73-72-73-78—200 60-75-88-75—308 49-72-77-74—MR 68- 74-71-74—J*0 . 71-75-70-75—301 .. 71-48-72-78—Ml ..71-78-71-74—»1 I____| ............75-72-73-72—181 Bill Markham ...........74-70-72-78—281 •Jay La* ...............72-78-42-77—281 Charles Matlack ........74-74-74-71—282 •Roy CuUenblne .........71-78-71-78—382 Chick Xeana ........... 74-74-78-78—281 TOm Cosmo, _________ ....T4-71-17-73—384 •Oene Hunt John Car,ok Fred Cballen . Bhorry Weflon, . •Dave MMHarf . •Jim Functor Dick Bury f-ri-71 75-73-78-75—288 AT Pketefax WINS STATE OPEN — John Barnum approaches his ball at Lakepointe Counry Club where he won the Michigan Open Golf championship yesterday with a final round of 68 for a 72-hole total of 277. His victory was worth $750 to him. Umpire Erases Kill's Homer With Time-Out 71-77-80-78-204 73-78-83-78—104j ——. .................. '71-14-78-37—3881 •Lou Wcndrow . . . . . . .78-78-31-11—3071 •Rokort Wagner ..........11-77-83-78—307 •VW* Mite ...............78-73-77-03—308 ■TOM Rueaell .. .........71-18-78-82—308 •BUI Oeborne. 74-74—no eard; ‘John Whaley. 71-18—did not Mart; Or ml Baaapra. 72-78-71—dleeuiHfled: MU Ora-hate. 74-74-77—no card ; • Harold Brink J 71-73-78—vlthdraw. By The Associated Press A home run is a home run is a home run, as the late Gertrude Stein might have said, and the Chicago White Sox thoroughly agree with that opinion. If they are wrong, they are wrong at the top of their voice, noted Sunday when they protested so vehemently after Ted Kluszewski’s three-run pinch homer against toe Baltimore Orioles was declared null and void by Umpire Ed Hurley. Nellie Fox was booted from the game, and sparks were shooting from the ears of his Sox mates. * ★ jkW The Orioles were ruled winners of the game, 3-1 thus slicing the lead of the New York Yankees to two games. The Yankees split with the Detroit Tigers, dropping the opener 02 and taking the nightcap, 8-5. Cleveland whipped Washington 9-1 and. Boston took a pair from Kansas City, 2-1 and victories. Frank 'Sullivan, who had lost seven straight to the A’s over two seasons, pitched five-hit ball in breaking the jinx in the opener, ’ and Mike Fomieles was the-star in the nightcap. ★ ★ * Fofnieles, making his 55th mound appearance, allowed a single and a walk in {he tiro innings he woiked, and drove In the tiebreaking run with a crisp single past third in the eighth faming. Sunnybrook Is Still Unbeaten Miss Gunderson Wins Amateur for 2nd Time TULSA (AP)-^A girl who does everything else left-handed, but plays golf the right way is the two-time Women’s National Amateur champion. ★ ★ * Joanne Gunderson, a sunny-haired Arizona State University senior from Kirkland, Wash;, survived six days of solid competition and emerged as the victor over Jean Ashley, 21, of Chanute, Kan., in the scheduled 36-hole final. ★ * ★ J The scene of Saturday’s triumph was Hie 6,150-yard, par 35-36—71 Tulsa Country Club course. The score was 6 and 5 and was | comparable to Miss Gunderson’s 1957 title triumph over Mrs. Anne | Johnstone of Mason City, Iowa, j The lake then wap 8 and 6>. service StXCfat 95 ♦ 8 This sanies tnchidasi • Balance front vhaate i Repack front ohoal r cylinder Dayton FLYER Special tubs-type phi* tax aad rscappabte oxchaags TIME PAYMENT OR REGULAR 30 BAY CHARM smiiAi tow mas on au sins aha tvns OPEN EVERY NIGHT Hi! IP. M. Dayton fa Tire Co. ^Formerly MARKET TIRE CO.) I 77 West Huron Street FE 8-0424 Raiders Dropped in Opening Game FORT HURON (UPIt — The Sarnia Golden Bears downed the Port Huron-Detroit Raiders, 23-15, last night to open the Michigan Ontario Rugby football season. Chuck Stanley, voted Most Valuable Player in the league last' season, led Sarnia to the victory by scoring two touchdowns for the defending league champions before the crowd of 4,200 here. Chuck Howton smashed four yards for one raider- score and Frank Finney passed four yards to Joe Reeves for the other Raider touchdown. 5-4. ★ * Hurley erased Kluazewski's blow with the announcement he had called ‘‘no pitch’* before Milt Pappas threw the ball Big Klu made disappear. Hurley, umpiring at third base, said he called time to tell two White Sox players, Earl Torgeson and Floyd Robinson, they were not warming up in the proper area. Klu then filed to center for the final out * * * The Sox loaded tile bases with one out in the ninth, but Hoyt Wilhelm came in with his knuck-ler to close the gate. Pappas got his 12th victory—if' It was a victory, as the Sox are protesting the game—of the seg-The venerable Early Wynn suffered his ninth defeat he gave up only seven hits in seven innings; Cleveland stile Washington’s thunder, and best down the Senators with home runs. Jin) Pier-" . Tito Francona and Vic Pow-hit for the circuit as Barry Latman and Johnny Klippsteln pitched five-hit ball for the Indians. The victory broke a five-game losing streak and cut Wash-fourth-place margin to Defending champion Sunnybrook remained^ufabeaten fakthe Michi-I ... m« gan Publinx Gotf League'!. team competition yesterday with an 18-41 ^.jjjteMgs, rout of Bald Mountain. ■ ----------- GRAND OPENING SPECIAL ONE WEEK ONLY PONTIAC’S BIGGEST AUTO PAINTING VALUE! A 88 by Tom Stevens and Sam Lima's to paced Snmiybrook t Its 7th straight win in the Red Division. Bald Mountain's bee effort was a 78 by Ed Wasik. Ray Clemons shot a 71 to lead! Rochester to an 18-4 victory over Bob-O-Link and Ray Cane also had a 71 to feature Brae Burn’s 17-5;; trouncing of Morey's. Host Control MA 4-4521 EM 3-0203 • “KUHN'S CA1T00NS" 5 The scheduled match between ■ Sylvan Glen and Idyl Wyty, White*] Division co-leaders along w i t hj!_ Rochester, was postponed because JBR players from both teams were competing in the Michigan Open. Loch Alpine and Glenhurst drew ISter byes yesterday. - 1 Boston shoved Kansas City deeper into the cellar with two NEW RAMBLER WAGON I1798M BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER •Vkssssxsr ■ “I’m going to have to flgwre g 6 a system of getting ear* sat | ■ fast far people.like they T J do at KUHN AUTO WASH!’’ ^ ! KUHN AUTO: SERVICE |i lO W. Huron St FE 2-Utsi ■BHHHH^HHHHHBBBBB " 3 YEAR WRITTEN GHARAHTHitBKU. B.F.Goodrich; B. F. Goodrich Sihrertown Now Treads 2 fcf 52222 lKr595 Motor Mart Safety Center limits E. Montcalm FE 3-7845—FE 3-7146 We hend Mod your ear Is ft-i ruet sad oxidised paint, prime dost If needed, eare-fuliy mask to protect throne, Steel, rubber and nphatetecy. than apply tha Sahelb apecltl weather - reeleteot SILICONS FOBMULA Faint. vhMl In Raslly baked, te the fost’i teignt Infra-Red Oeen, te a hue, teat lasting flnlgh that WILL NSVKR NEED WAX- MONROE-MATIC SHOCKS *g75 *8" Don't Worry Abort You Cat This Fall FIX IT NOW With BBAND NAME PARTS DELCO BATTERIES-GOODYEAR BELTS IGNITION SYSTEMS BY . . Alto Life - Deico Remy - Holley - Moforcraft BODY-FENDER-COLLISION REPAIRS...low as SUB • No Money Down—Easy Budget Terms. • One Day Service—In before 9 Out by S • Jf You Can’t Come In, Phone For Appointment • Open Daily Including Saturday, 7:30 • 6.00. QUALITY CAR PAINTING SINCE 193 WEITTEN LimiNt GUARANTEE lass , INSTALLATION Distributor to Local Servicemen AUTO ELECTRIC 367 S. SAGINAW ft 2-9129 EaxIScheib Os Sure It's lari lebslb Often I 147 South Saginaw Strata* COAST TO COAST — I WORLD S LARGEST AUTO PAINTERS wee Duplicated I FI 4-9955 > A \ THB PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, I960 TWENTY-OXB Scientific Sniffer to Study Detroit Air Polution J LANSING (AP) — Wayne State University school o( medicine is going to start the scientific «ntf«ng •ot Detroit's truck and car him*w, the State Highway Department reported. Wayne .officials have asked the department for permission to build an overhead structure on Gratiot Avenue in Detroit. The frame would support air ducts to suck fumes from cars and trucks passing underneath. The fumes would be piped to the nearby medical center' laboratory and there analyzed as part of a study of ate * pollution. last Tumi Tonight "THE GREATEST SHOW-ON EARTH" Alto "PRISONER OF THE VOLGA" EAGLE 11 Starts TUESDAY J^K Hag New Partner Bud Abbott Plans Return With Tax Hassle Clear By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Finally dear with Uncle Sam, Bud Abbott has a new outlook and a new partner and he’s ready to work. ES3 KEEGO THOMAS Starts Wednesday recant Hollywood times. From Being a burlesque straight man, he| climbed to the heights as partner With the late Lou Costello in a'topstarring comedy tein. They earned a million year at their peak. Bud once owned a {250,000 estate. Today he rents a comfortable' but comparatively modest home a block from Ventura Boulevard in' Woodland Hills. “From now on, I’m not owning a bit of property,'' he vowed. "I’m going to hide my money so nobody can find it.” ★ -.1t W His bitterness is understandable. Four years ago he was smacked with an eight-year tax audit that irased his plans for a comfortable old age. He was forced to sell all his property and move from his estate to pay tax penalties. ‘Now I’m clear with the federal government,” be reported. “At least they’ve got a piece of property of mine, that’s worth {50,000 or mgre,’which should pay , what I still owe. fm Just about dour on the state income tax, «nd I’ve paid all my debts. I don’t Owe nothing to nobqdy. And that’s , the way I'm going to stay.” ‘ Si; ■ * #' ' Bud didn’t work during all his tax troubles "Why should 11*0(11 when they would take all the mom > ey and leave me with nothtag to pay tax on the saiaty I earned?” t Now he k) planning ,|p get back in the business he has known most of Ms lift- His new partner: Candy Cartdkf), multivoiced comic who long appeared with Jimmy Durante. “WaVe been rehearsing together and I think we work pretty good,” Bud remarked. “Candy is a good pertohner; he can hold an audience for an hour, so he’s got to be good. Tpke a lock at this.” ♦ '1t:- it He brought out some publicity photos of himself and Candido in comedy poses. “He almost looks like Loo, without the mustache,” 'So far, we’ve been doing the routines that Lou and I used to do. Later on we ll do some different thing*.” At 64,' Bud hopes to climb back to the big time again. "I think the public is ready for some good, rowdy comedy,” he . said. “The only ones who are doing it nowadays are the Three Stooges, who have made a phenomenal comeback. Why can’t I do the same?” Grosso Point* Firm Claims Reiving Record LANSING (IV—A Crosse Pointe construction firm has claimed a new national concrete paving record, the State Highway Department reported. MATTES OF MURDER — Killing is uppermost in the minds of Stanley Baker, left, and Hardy Kruger in the movie "Chance Meeting,” now playing in the area. The suspenseful love story also stars Frenchwoman Michelene Presto. FE 2-1000 "BabttttGootToW mmi jtcooft ctumr ■mMMI • ban —— HIM m 2nd MAJOR HIT! “FW the many and attack.. 6UUMTH0U1U WATERFORD Asg. 31 Sept. 1 “COUNTST MUSICS MVOSITS UNCLE GRADY MOSS PRESENTS ... . » AMERICA’S GREATEST NOW PS Short* at 7:00 pad 9:02 Feature* at 7:1$ akd 9:1$ Frl.-“The Apartment” BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN THEATER $ I SO Opdykc Rd. F| 2-1177 NOW SHOWING JAMES E0WM0 MAM lATUtO™ NlOMf CAUJI TOtTU SH OVta 100 BMND Ott OFRT OTARS , in it* Mate inmmowe* MIIACUIOUS OIAMT SCallM (AtTMAM COtO« • THE HAPPY WOW— AS MWMflN AS MW Mill OtAV ONCI m A UtSTMS CAN SO MANY MEAT STABS St MIN IN HMM UAin CSAAMf I 2nd Feature colob cjurrooNS liuMiiLncMMMrm DRIVE-IN THEATER THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN Cor. AIRPORT AND WILLIAMS LAKE ROADS "It’s like a Kinsey Report on the campus!” At—1 :l 5—4:10—7:15—10:00 ALSO Chartroose Caboose* At- w* MOLLY BEE 2:55-5:55 BEN COOPER 9:00 EDGAR BUCHANAN • WED. "MURDER I S. Talagroph at Squors Luka Rd. Wrm Box Office Open 6:30 Two Shows Nightly 8:30 P.M.-10:45 P.M. No On# — But No One — Will Be Admitted to tho Theater After the Start of Each •Performance of "PSYCHO." HITCHCOCK’S M £mc gewun roiunu & "High I m m twMfe mm Immsky ®io i .ftor th« amto« Mch Stoeitiy . | performance, TM*. of eooroe. fta*, IM I BBS Also — SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN THEATER 21S0 Opdfhc >d. FI 1-1*77 MR|M NDMIDI YVES in JERRY WALD'S rr 1ST® T] UNMlliIMM Tm not ashamed .../ love your s® Denton Construction Cb. placed 8,030 feet of two lane, nine-inch concrete pavement on the U.8.27 freeway north of Indian River duping a 12-hour work day. The same firm alio held the former record of 7,250 feet ef concrete pavement. MA 4-3135 Show Starts at 7:30 SsS? GEORGE CUKOR • NORMAN KRASNA • [commerce! South End Union Lk. Rd. EM 3-0661 NOW SHOWING! In C1NETQTAISCOFI end COLOR 1 HURRY — LAST 2 NIGHTS! AMI IMS TARZAN TM MAGNIFICENT Brr.lk-T.kln* COLOR A Ftnouai Ooloooo ★ ★ WEDNESDAY ★ ★ EXCLUSIVE! FIRST SHOWING! iTEVEKEEVE UStDak^Pompeii DIRISHNA KAUFFMAN • BARBARA CARROLL ANNEMARIEBAUMANNEMw-nmwum* sen aauw* * —1 —Am— BB * ARANDA MARIN €> Qf O Whether it be an appliance, sports equipment, a musical instrument, a bicycle, furniture, rugs, baby needs, lawn and garden tools, workshop equipment, or you name it, there is little point in keeping it if you don’t need it. No matter what it is, don’t let it gather dust. If you are not using it, sell it to someone who wants it. Unless you are an unusual individual who has no use for the money thus gained, the idea makes sense. It’s an easy thing to do. After deciding what to sell, you simply pick up your telephone and call FE 2-8181, The Pontiac Press Want Ad department. You will receive competent and friendly help in wordihg and placing your ad, and the cost is little for each day the ad appears. Make that call now, and convert your “don’t needs” to cash! THE PONTMC PRESS WANT ADS SELL THINGS FAST! v/ ■ FE2-8181 Y ..V ^ —............. ;; " - Sherman! _ . In September 19SS at the Bath Billingsley's Stork Club is seeking Half of all the automobilei in the _ . ^ Iron Works. Bath. Maine. SS million damages from Acton U.S. ar^fSoncentrated to just eight amilea F. Adams, Brat ship bum, A tecond ship of the clan, the Equity Association Jn a suit charg-jsUtes — California. New York, will be launched Sept tog the theatrical performers union Pennsylvania, Ohio, Texas, OU. from the keel up as a guided mis- luss Seller*,______________ silk destroyer, will be commit-i 9, at the Bath Iran Works. ' persuaded stage and screen celeb-'nois, Michigan and New Jersey. CURRENT RATE OF DIVIDEND 3%% ON SAVINGS Q. When a dog has whipworms la Us l*wer intestine, are they removed by operation or medicine? Mias D. M, D. of Canton, Ohio. A. Unfortunately, the whipwormj problem in dogs is far too com-! mon in the United States. Although I these troublesome invaders are j more prevalent in a part of the lower intestine called the "cecum,” {they do not live there exclusively. 11 K follows that removal of the cecum will not necessarily be gj ||!cure-all in severe cases. We have’ many fine drugs that remove whip- II | worms safely and efficiently. Ij fi (rectum, and one of the newest is ^ given intravenously. Im afraid any ■;1 method of treatment will be to] vain unless the owner cooperates if by removing ail danger of reinfes-| j tation. H The dogs yard must be thor-j oughly cleaned and all old waste §1 matter removed. Disinfect or re-| if place his bedding. Dryness, light, and heat will kill whipworm eggs, lf| | but shaded, damp areas of your III pet’s yard or run should be disin-p| ifected thoroughly to prevent the eggs from hatching and starting •^mf trouble anew. BACE-TO-SCHOOL BUYS FOR TONIGHT, TUESDAY & WED. OPEN NIGHTS TILL 9 - SUNDAY TIU I ML Pontiac Federal Savings ■ +' w Home Office: 761 W. Huron Street 16 E. Lawrence Street, Downtown Branch Rochester Branch, 407 Main Street 4416 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains 1102 W. Maple Road, Walled Lake inaWhit^rTOi.iae When It's \ Can Winter Be Far Behind? . \23* mA NOW NIWI WITH RT-9B Mobilheat FE from NEW MOBILHEAT BURNS # CLEAN - Delivered Cloanly! New Mobilheat furnace oil setuslly. cleans at it bums eliminating costly furnace reptirs end producing cieen, even warmth. CEE's competent, courteous drivers cleanly deliver New Mobil-, heat in new, modern GMC trucks, meter equipped for accuracy. 2 DEPENDABLE AUTOMATIC # DELIVERY! GES's automatic delivery assures you of always having plenty of New Mobilheat in your storage tank, repardless of the weather. Just one order NOW assures you of a Winter of warmth end comfort. glATTIK WHERE YOU LIVE to Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Clerkston, Orion, Auburn Heights, Bloomfield Hills, Keego Harbor me surrounding area, you, too can enjoy the warmth, comfort end economy of New Mobilheat cleanly delivered in GEE's neW modern GMC Trucks,’ meter equipped for accuracy. Dial FE 5-8181 today! n» I the L"? ,— Coal Users Attention! -—| SAVE PER TON Order your cool in load lots of two o# more tons and sort $1.50 par ton. Um o«* monthly, payment plan on bin fills — NO CARRYING CHARGE! _______________________ "IF YOU DON'T KNOW FUEL As sure as 2 + 2=4 Quality + Economy = Complete Satisfaction i KNOW YOUR FUEL DEALER' TWENtl , MONDAY, AUGUST 2V, 1960 ADAM AMES By Lou Ftoe HIb Pursuit of Happiness Ended Mighty Has Fallen-Star Bachelor Weds By ROBERT MUSIL ROMS —Michael Med win, president of the In-nstioMl Bachelors’ Club, an informal organization devoted to the pursuit of happiness—and the fair sex—looked guiltily around as a band fell on bis shoulder. A A A And well he might. For the handsome actor—lurking • in the shadows of a fashionable bar with a beautiful girl— is in Rome for the most unlikely reason in the world, considering his past vows and pronouncements. Be ls. la. fact, on his honeymoon. "So, Benedict Arnold, I find yen at last," quoth the man who had tapped the British television star on the shoulder. “Who’s Benedict Arnold?” w&Medwin. "Not another angry, member?” V"A traitor," intoned Siegl Sessler, who runs the famous Siegi’s Club in London. ★ A A Medwin clutched the hand of his lovely wife for support as be explained that he had never intended individual memberships to be permanent. "You see,” he said, “I felt the world needed a elub of happy bachelors who would resist marriage, not forever, but until they were absolutely sure they had the '" right firL Too many men, I felt, grabbed the first opportunity, so to speak. "I can’t understand why people feel I’ve let. them down.” he said nervously. '..''..Siegl assured Medwin that, as a former member, he! had nothing but sympathy for his plight. Ssv A A A "After all, he said, "I married Barbara—I'll show Every Soldier a Medic Is Aim of Modern Army By JOE BENHAM Iductory classes on such basic sub- SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (API—The Acts such as anatomy, physiology you pictures pf our son Simon in a moment—but then I wasn’t the founder and prerident No one eared if I got married or not, except Barbara.” Medwin choae well, when he finally did fall after numberless romances that enhanced his standing as a featured player in British films as well as the star of a television series. £S< This is the considered opinion of tho eavesdropper who pretended to sip mineral water at the bar while Siegl and he were having their heart to heart ehat. Mrs. Sunny Medwin Is a dazzling blonde. "Whet will be the reaction pf my friends when I bring her to London?’’, Medwin wondered. “With a face like hers* Slegi predicted, “it can only be envy.” THE GIRLS and psychology. Trainees went into the mesquMe-j covered hills of Camp Bullie, north of San Antonio, to learn how to ■American soldier wounded in the next war won’t have to yell .,“Medici” if a new Army training ^program succeeds. The man in ‘the next foxhole will be able to care for battlefield casualties, give Mm expert care. Army leaders believe lighting! men will have to double as medi-cal corpsmen if there is another : 'war because of the tremendous number of casualties modern weapons can inflict. WWW Full-time medics and doctors,! ‘. they reason, will have all they can do operating aid stations and! hospitals. To test the feasibility of making! * qualified medics of nonmedical j personnel, the Army brought non-* - commissioned officers from com-; regiments to ftoooke Army Medical Center for two weeks of intensive training. By flie time they left for home today, each was supposed to be * qualified to conduct more than 100 j hours of classes and on-the-job training for men In his home unit. WWW Men taking .part were from the 104th Regiment of file 104th Division, stationed in Portland, Ore.; the 330th Regiment of the 80th Division, based in Norfolk, Va., and the 400th Regiment of the 100th Divirion, assigned to Lexing-1 * ton, Ky. Instructors at Brooke, which the Army calls the largest medical training center in the world, split ' the reservists into committees for concentrated instruction. WWW They were briefed on cold and ~ beat injuries; strangulation and moutb-to-mouth artificial respiration; care before and after surgery, and rigging split for trad-tune. The instruction includes intro- Newspaper Hits 'Soft' Red Prisons MOSCOW UPI> - The news- ! paper “Soviet Russia said Saturday life in Soviet prisons was too soft and called for some "hard labor and discipline” for convicts. The newspaper did not men- I lion convict U2 pilot Francis | Gary Powers, but the dispatch | apparently was written in reac- 1 tion to critical observations of | Soviet prisons by the Western ; , Press. "Soviet Russia” said only the | guards and barbed wire fence indicate some camps are prisons | and added. "It is not a prison but | the prisoner’s own home." It said prisoners in one camp ] which showed motion pictures i twice weekly complained that the films were old. It also reported the barracks have curtains, neat ; beds, pillow cases and towels which are changed every 10 days . - plus radios, chess and domino , ” games, flower beds, guitars, lee- j tures and library. ... ------- ------ ■ -♦ DONALD DUCK THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29. IW> Leading Stocks Fail in Fractions NEW YORK at—The stock market assumed a slightly lower level in moderately active trading early this afternoon. Leading Indies fell from fractions to a point or so. An assortment of amall gains by pivotal issues gave some support to the popular market a vet sees. Steels and Big Three autos declined. Steel output atill lagged behind fanecaats of early and resurgence of production was now being pushed further along into ML Motors, in the midst of modal changeover, were subject to Stone hesitation by traders. The fallowing an tofl pi covering anlea of locnly grown produce brought to 'Die. Farmer’s Market by growers and sold by them in uholeenle package Iota. Quo tattoos we furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Friday. Detroit Produce ApplM. OUthlSi. fau. ..... ipu lab iMdNk to.............iff Applet, Otmihm b*. .......... 3.35 MARKETS I00™and Other Grains Steady Auto WoU Rrnrm. I SlsiSimie. u pu. Cidikw. ea. — CHICAGO UP) - Cora and oats lutuiua eased slightly but other grains aod aoybeana were mostly steady in slow early transactions today on the board of trade. * * * All prices were Within a half centtoFridsy'e finishes during the first several minutes with trade limited mainly'to scattered commercial buying. Dealer* Mid there appeared to be eerne dteiooi an export ec-count* la the wheat pH bat gttto or none elsewhere. Teacher Ctearedi^ of Obscenity Talk Association lot Businessmen Weioraidae, tm. .... ... TEGBTABLBS Be»n», Orem, Flit, bu .. . Baae*. Qma. (tome, bu. .... Baku, Kentucky Wonder. M. Bean*, wu, W. . ~ Afis I___a*, he. Cabbayt. Curly, In Cathafu, SOL on. _______. JapeeS. he. CiaUflowtr. do* ...... Celery do*. »UHi Catory, Patcal. j'* d< Cora, Bwaot. S Sot. . Rails, rubbers, aircrafts and nenferroua metals were mostly on thd downside. Oils, chemicals and electrical equipments were mixed. Losses of about a point were tak- cwumhur* n«u*.' en by U& Steel, Jones A Laugh* lln and Ford. Smaller declines Were posted for Bethlehem, Youngstown Sheet. Chrysler and General Motors; but Studebaker-Packard and American Motors bucked Ute downtrend hi the automotive grwp, making a fractional gain. DuTddl Eggplant,____ ....... Eggplant, long type, pk . Kohlrabi, do*, beta. .... Leeks, do*. belts. Okra, pk............. OokMM, Sry. M Iks . netsas, green, d Parsley, Curly, i ; 3j* The trade heard a report that) ■ **J;some soybean fields had begun to-j 1 3'm turn brown in Southern Illinois Jand that some of the new crop] S3 2j may become available for delivery) ; 3 9* on September contracts. IftoL ■ * * ‘ jo« Late test week, a trade advice. - j JJ said some new crop corn bed be* I 1 i n gun moving to'market from South'll eastern Missouri. ; ito . ....' ; 1m Chicago Grain ... *.5». ® • CHICAGO OS AIM *•« CHICAGO. Aug 2* (AVI—Open • *S®I Wheat— Oats— ::«& * ::SE :: ial^orn- >3aspT JOHN CARDINAL O’HARA Cardinal Dies in Philadelphia Judg« Calls Conviction by Justin of the Ptace Improper, Too Quick MANICTIQUE (It-A circuit judge has thrown out the conviction of a young schoolteacher on charges of giving obscene Uten-ture to his grade echool pupils. Circuit Judge George S. Baldwin also breed the teacher. Franklyn E. Olson, a, of a 90-day jail teace and a $100 fine. * * * -Baldwin said the conviction was improper, charged that Olson was |a victim of "quick justice” and held that the book in question was I not obscene. Obsess, in bio Bret teaching Jab, gave the hash ’ The stranger,” by the late French author Albert I damns, to live pepil* at a school la Tberapeoa Township, west of Oakland County Prosecutor George Taylor will address a noon luncheon of the National Small Businessmen's Assn. Wednesday at (he Waldron Hotel. Taylor will apeak on the problem of unscrupulous building contractors "bleeding” subcontractors tor materials. j * - * He is expected to dwell on the need for strengthening present laws or enacting new legislation to protect supply houses against bariouptcy. t The special meeting la expected to draw a gathering of about 90 area businessmen, according to MUt King, Michigan Director of the NSBA. Accidents Gaim Lives of two Dotroitor Killed When Cor Hit* Tree, and tot Dial After Mishap Oil Tanker Trains Collide and Explode TWENTY-FIVE K Will Visit Finland OTTAWA, Kan. - More than 100 cars were derailed an about 40 caught fire late Sunday night when two Santa Fe freight trains loaded with oil products and propane gaa collided and exploded Area accidents have claimed the, Bras of two poraoue and critically Injured a Pontiac men. A 39-year-old Detroit man kilted early today whan the car in wfajch he was a paamnger shuck a tree on Woodward Avenue Jus) in ’60| north 01 <***• ^ Read in Bloomfield Hills. Killed era* Joseph Golden of 1151 Fisher St. The driver of the car. George W. Jackson. 29. of 1M S. Park St. Critical condition in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. * * ★ Bloomfield Hills police said the car was traveling north on Woodward when it jumped the curb on the boulevardxand hit a tree. , HELSINKI Finland vtot Premier Nikita Khruthch»-\ will visit- Seisinki Srturday, whan Finland's president Urho Kekonei; celebrate* Ma 60th birthday. ' , Why Accept Less for Your Money NOT 3% r«*hnl;r Prolate 79 1 A* his trial in Justice Court last Cattionc Prolate, /.A.sprtag ***, he did » to Had Red Hat Less Than help the pupUs In their reading. Two Years ------” nrimanMnin -*“■ w npbnH a a. Jo*,* PHILADELPHIA (AP» - John Oloon was tried and convicted by!«f the trains was beaded ^ * c*r J Cardinal O’Hara. archbishop toj Justice to the Peace Howard Na-|theater west on the railroad sjwhen * j "* * e' — _> . She was the daughter of Mr. and |---* |Mrs. Howard Hate. 37 Seneca St. The yenagrier suffered revere UK Ryo— Okie, afc........................... 3.00'May New York Stocks ZS&fb. esra . p*a». Black***, be _ Pcpptra, Cayenat, pk. . Philadelphia and spiritual leader |KOon after a parent complained today, of 1.513,000 Roman Catholics, died)the school board. Sunday at the age of 72. j Judge Baldwin held that Justice m*S * * * Magoon, who has a filling station 74'»l The tall slendet prelate, who re-j business, overstepped his authority. i.i3<«[ceived the red hat symbolic of his Judge Baldwin also said he did } j}!’! office In December 1958 from Lot consider "The Stranger" ob-i.MHjpope John XXIII, succumbed at scene nor Mteericordia Hospital. He had He said he tweed his decision on undergone surgery for peritonitis a recent definition of obeoeutFhy last Tuesday. the U.S. Supreme Court. BondStr* . Borden . .. Bora Warn Brief* Mt| BrUt My .. Peppor*. Ptaunto. pk..... Pepper*. Red Sweet, bu. Pepper*. Sweet, bu ...... Potatoes, 50-lb bag...... Radishes. Red, do*, bcb*. Radishes, White, dot. bchi Squash. Acorn, bin....... Squash, Buttercup, bu. . Squash. Buttercup, bu. ... Squash, Dalle'ous. Vs bu. I 8quash, Hubbard. Vf bu. . V, i j Squssh, It*!.. >4 bu. . ■ » ;{Squash, Summer, to bu. ... , Tomatoes, 14-lb. bakt.... • ' Tomatoes, bu............. ' rJ., ? Turnips, dos. bchs. .. “•*1 Turnips, topped. bU. .... ' N3 GREENS __________.. 2*.11 Cabbage, bu. ........... 4 Loews Inc ... I7.I Celery, Cabbage, dm. ---- o' Lane S Cam.. 33.(1 Collard. bu............. m Lone 8 Oas . 43.11 Endive, bu. ............... • Ma Lorlllard . .. 41 Endive, blotched, bu. .... " Ml Lae * Haur^M.I »WWK ML -... : HI Mack Trt *>• •S •■•:§•!HR® *-■•■■■ LeMee*. Heed, „ _ _ Lettuce^ Head, wtt^ *! • Mpis » if Says Lumumba iiGetsRed Aid Allied Btre .... M4 R.uay Ray Allis Chat ---Jj.S Kennecott Atom Ltd......31.3 K reage, SB Alcoa ....... IS* Kroatr Am Alrlln .... ».( lop Olas* St Am M* m .. M r*th* Am Met Cl . 33 3 ‘ Long in Hospital After Election u , u. s* n | All out uaramai rauenen wnoj 'Ex-GoVgmOr Is WilUWl He Lett Longo Because >n Rome, are expected at the 0f Congressional Seat solemn pontifical Mass to be cele-| , . . ® , _. A His death reduced to five the number of cardinals in the United States. They are Francis Cardinal j Spellman of New York, Francis Cardinal McIntyre of Los Angeles, Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston, Albert Cardinal Meyer of Chicago and Aloysius Cardinal Doctor Claims'Muench of Fargo, N.D. All but Cardinal Muench Lapeer He Left of Fear for Family was believed s bet bex as ene of the freight rare en ene ef the trains canoed ft to derail In front of the ether freight. Of the 40 burning cars, which were still on fire early today, several were tank cars which rock fd the ares with several explosions. Macks of burning wreckage were piled in a creek bed. The sparrow hawk's hatne belies its nature. This handsome little bird rarely attacks sparrows toother birth but lives largely on insects. heed Injuries when she darted in treat ef a car driven by Clarence Heath. Tt, et IS Footer 8t- and was ML Witnesses laid Heath was travel-ing about 90 mites per hour. He was not held. Twining Has 30 Days WASHINGTON IT—Gen. Nathan F. Twtning's retirement as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff will become effective Sept. White House said today. 3'/2% BUT 4% CURRENT RATE on ALL SAVINGS Capitol Savings & Loan Assoc. HUE PARKINC IN REAR OF BUILDING 75 W. Huron FE 4-0561 • •»}•»! A missionary doctor from Lapeer I?* who recently fled the strife-torn 2 po Congo said today that Congolese l.ttlpremler Patrice Lumumba is re-i s*jeeiving aid from Communists. of SS but Is Exhausted • tsr^k" K». Sim M Ch * B 1M SfiSSk ■*“* i u-i. isa i—ejiir^i * * * j NEW ORLEANS, La. (APt - The funeral service probably obeying his doctor’s orders for! will be held on Labor Day, Sept, j one* Earl Kemp Long today rest-j 5. an archdiocese spokesman ^ in a bed on the maternity floor said. The body will lie in state Lf a hospital following his victory at the cathedral from Thursday iin Saturday's Democratic primary Dr. Harry Zemmer of 1220 N ;until then. 'run-off 4 qa _ uisMo Midi. ^run-oir. . 1‘3 Saginaw St., Lapeer, said he left Death came quietly to Cardinal i The fiery old >ai$orie of Lou* ! ljI the Congo because of fears for his O'Hara. He was unconscious as teiana politics upset tradition in .-•£,! Mont Ward gTBvp-' -Si HH k CdnKe .... 24.2 £5^5. * rmltol Airl A !•» DAIrJ • CasoTrt^ .. l» ! {*•* . 37 4 spinach. I . 31 J {Turnips Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POll.TRV DETROIT, Alia. 31 lAPi—Prlcss paid par pound, delivered to DM““ I quality live poultry: Heavy type nans 20-13: ll« 11-13: neavy type roasters ___ _ 2«-3T; frver*. 3-4 Ibl . 30-32: heavy turkeys, toms M. Detroit anas DBTROIT. Aug. tt (AS)—Eggs | Mid per doaen ky first receiver* llverod to D«trait: loos* la tt < Livestock AUI It (API — USDA bulk MaltolMHjtt ■8RPU| atten. ... _ MlPem dominating; cowl in modsratt supply: } M wife and tour children, aged front his three sisters, and priests and the 8th District and defeated in- i w;one to 13 years old. sisters of Mercy, who operate the cumbent Harold B. McSween torj M tavp tkelr gpgar* {hospital, intoned prayers by his the Democratic nomination the doctor warned. jtwW* , . ‘Congress. * * *■ , ! Final tallies from the central The six-foqt. one-inch, 140-pound Louisiana district — the smallest cardinal had enjoyed good health, except for occasional trouble with arthritis, until recent years. He ^etottinued to carry a full schedule of work almost to his death. "The natives hav sharpened, ‘The turbulence and turmoil aeems to be Over who is going to be their leader.* He said Lumumba was elected by natives who neither knew no to read or how to cast ballots. halfara about stoady with la*» week'. -----alow, ateady. meat eholc* ___....____n>. Sown 2I.M-».S0: aoveral load* high eholc* I* prim* M.7S; load 1030 Ik. to SS; mUad good and choteo lien lb. and down 24-34.50: good to low chdloe steer* ».»; choice belfar* 23-3340; toad high ahotoa 24: good to low choice heifer* 3140-33; utility eowi It-IS: canner* and outtara lt-U. Hoga ISO; butcher* under SIS lb. open-„..In* 50c lower; over >70 lb T5c lower; >34 MW* under 360 lb. I.M tower: over 350 • > lb IO-75c tower: few amall tou ~ ■ l ttk-tto lb. t(-lt.tt Miaed — aad t ' “White mep Instructed them me cases,” he reported, other cases, as many as 15 ballot boxes were lined up in a row. mumba’s box was at the front of the line." Dr. Zemmer said Lumumba boasted of having received money and deposits from Oemmaaisti. “I knew missionaries who actually saw deposit slips from Communist Csechoslovakia which were made out to Lumumba," he said. ♦ ♦ ★ ^ Dr. Zemmer, who will reopen his practice in Lapeer Sept. 1, operated a hospital in a remote area of the Congo for five years. l^wlThree Killed in Crash; ^■IhhS “ "" Troy Boy Badly Hurt -tt few Unit Air Lln ^vtt Air* a* , J o Si 8 ' 5,1 US Hookar Ch ... 11 Upjohn* .... INWJtey • W« Van Raal ... ,nt. ''" !!, Walsmo .. inland St I ... «4 w**t Un Trt. Inaplr Cap J Walt* A Bk . Intcrlak tr .. tt.l waatg El ... Int Bua Meh. MM white Mot int Harv .... 43.3 wtlaao * Co let Kick ....MS Wool worth .. mt Papar ... M« Tala • Taw Int TilkTil « lanlth Rad *“* Irt Crk Orel ..« Brunawlck STOCK AVKRAGKS to ■ - — loduat. Rail* OU!. Stock* Hoon « £ UM m\ 333. Prav. day - Si-! }}M 12* iji A 72 ycaiMild grandmother driv- Senate OK's Medical Aid for the Aged WASHINGTON W-The Senate today sent Prraldent Elsenhower the mach-dtapnted bill Ineieaalng federal granta to the state* to help pay medical raato ef needy peraoaa ever M. The measure, which also makes some changes la the Social Security system, waa one of the major items that tenders declared must be disposed of before Congress quits. Final action marked a Mg step toward adjournment, probably some time later this week. * * A In the House. Speaker Sam Rayburn threw hla qualified support behind an urgent ndmlais- ehoie* 35-14: "hit* am. no, awougn in aariv auppivi m _ - , . RPto — aatabiith_«uot*tlon^ Paw aarly aair* ing home after visiting her son (radon ptea lor more foreign aid and family in Troy Sunday was] money. [one of three persons kilted in a| However, he noted there was | heed-on crash near* Pinconning, j *|rong opposition among some * * * i Influential House members. State police said Mrs. Josie Squire of Oscoda was returning homy with her grandson Joseph Squire, 18-year-old son of Mr. and Henry J. Squire Jr„ 604 Trombly, when she lost control of her car on U. 8. 23. i AMOrtated Pr***— slaughter tomb* around 60c lower Says Ike Plans People-to-People Work in January SAPPORO. Japan (UPI) — Max Bo liman. President Eisenhowers "people - to • people" ambassador, says the President "will devote his jlife to the peopte-to-people pro-i It g^g into a southbound lane gram" after he leaves office in L^j hit a car driven by Edwin 1(3 u>w : Jm ' its S»4 g7 8ft.:::;** ”‘: DOW JONES * PJS. AVEEAOES N tadi (**•** *-g 30 Hall* 136.M Mf 646 It UUla. *475 011? 37 (6 Stock* 30S.M °H Volume to 3 P »- 1,36#.0W. EKTUOrrSTOCKS ■sinSr mKL.Mtow to.* Uj 1} MnlMaiar MU. N- 0*. if ji * * January. He gave no details. Bortman’s statement, made when he arrived here Sand ay with a shipment to tour Iron lungs and 12 chest respirators for Japanese polio victims, was the first Indication there has been to Eisenhower's future plans. Guliekson Jr., 50, of Flint. Dominican Republic. But preopecta appeared dim tor congressional passage sow if any legislation to prevent the Caribbean geveramrat of Ratari Trujillo frem getting a "wind tall" in sugar sales to the United States. populated district in the state —» gave Long 38,800 votes to Mo Sween’s 34,302. The three-time governor to Louisiana apparently will be the fifth member of the Long dan to go to Washington. First t was Huey Pierce Lang, the Ktngfteh to Louisiana politics, Huey’s widow took his Senate seat after he waa. assassinated. Russell B. Long, Huey's only) JM1, is now the Junior senator from Louisiana, Dr. George Long; was the 8th District congressman Itil his death three years ago. Long was stricken election era —his 65th birthday—with exhaustion. ptomaine poisoning and a bronchial inflammation. He was taken to Baptist Hospital at Alexandria late Saturday night, after] McSween conceded ,^efeat. 3 From Royal Oak jlnjured in Collision | Three members of a Royal Oak {family were injured near Medina, Ohio, in a 2 -car collision which took the life of a 9-year-old boy. Injured were Mr. and Mrs. William N. Heider and their 5-year-old son Michael of 2213 Harwoqdj St. Royal Oak. Kilted in the crash. Saturday] night was James F, McKenna. 9, to Berea, Ohio. The McKenna boy's hither was the, driver to the] car-that collided with the Heider] auto. NEW WHITE CONSOLE With • 5-Speed Control • Saws Rsvsrst _ * • Automatic Pm- • Clog-Resistant • Sews fsrwurd • Round Bobbin FULLY GUARANTEED Frt« Horn* Demonstration WITHIN 25 MIU RADIUS FE 5-4049 ONLY *5750 ” m a* nan* Par Week TSADK-1N ACCEPTED Authorised White Doalor yrui 7-FOOT liraW Vacuum Cleaner I HOSES Braided doth, all rubber. I No p!k»«e or vinyl-» Y,",r YOU SAVE *2.55 SPECIAL-RECONDITIONED 1 Cert * AtoUBBt* ualat Oar Ova r*tt*“ COME IN OR PNONt FOR FREE NOME DIUVIRY—Ft 5 4049 For AN Makaa and Medela Camplat* hrti end Repair Sendee 1495 Fully Guaranteed Attachment* Included $1.25 Week Free Hama Demottstratiaa Ft 5-4049 Within 25 Milo Radiea Craniate Parta ant R(*alr 8*rvt«* M All t’l»a* IttNfilV' INTEBNATIO^A*^cltABGK ■i raryiit git Mock Pmti («r All MaLp* Dl»****l E»f*—H****—Br**k«»—Balia, *1*. CURT’S APPLIANCES 1077 W. HURON fectery Aafheriaed While Dealer Open Monday and Friday 'til • F.M. AFTER HOURS OR 3-9702 Guliekson and his wife were ____________________ Idlted in the collision along with Mrs. Squire. The youth wan ad* Boulder, Colo, owns a glacier mlttcd to Standteh Hospital in from which it gets its own water critical condition. . | supply. XSiTu StWSS? News in Brief Thtevra broke Into the Northrnd Drive-In restaurant, 1231 Baldwin Ave., sometime Saturday night and stole an undetermined amount to change from a cigarette machine, it waa reported to Pontiac police. * Willie Adkins of gf Marten St-told Pontiac police that someone had broken into Ms house during the night and stole <303. A breik-ln at l« Summit St., tout- in wWch *1 "«*• 00 WQC;-will be allowed to cast ballots on[ The lights are expected to go on the bond issue. this week. • j ^ ^ ^ ^ If approvl Is granted by voters today on the two proposals, new elementary classrooms could be constructed la Hme for the INI school year, I according to the Board of Educa- Drowns OH Dock in Detroit River Berkley boy The 30 residents of the home, on Walton Boulevard just west of Rochester, are looking forward to completion of the project. They enjoy sitting on benches ,l°"* land chairs facing the road and A 6 year old Berkley boy Add,tions are proposed tor the;will welcome spending their leisure drowned in the Detroit River yes-!?rooks and J°h™on schools, while^ours in such attractive surrbund-terday after falling from a dock!3 Wvervr<*T schools!taw. they say. at the Ford Yacht Club m Crosse ‘"“i :fl of the school district. adndtted^the Aug^lfTburglary of The victim was Tommy Bene- fh^c^!dlnf t0 * *‘“dy ,m®de byj Dairy Star, JS'SlSikrritai his arrest here yesterday by loci ip* Mi. and Mrs. JLames L. Bene-police. Death Notices diet of 2007 Dorothea St. The family had spent Saturday night on their 30-foot yacht which mi anchored near tho yacht club dock. Hawthorne and Schmiedeke in ,the 1 spring at least 30 new elementary! classrooms are needed to handle the increasing student population! when school starts a year from September. Lloyd D. Lee. 19. of N. Main St., told police that he broke into the dairy at 117 W. Lafayette St. and took about 850. , .... Romeo police said that Lee is' Tommys father, a consulting also suspected of a series of and a member of the break-ins in Lapeer County. Lee Berkley Board of Education, said is being held in the Macomb * noUcrd that the boy wnmiH- pt l t Afl.jllm -rSGH^ JIl in Mount Clemens andl'to^lKm' 10:30 a m yesterday |T10111160 lUl AQUII5 was to be arraigned here today ’Woodworking Class Troy Church Changing Service Hours Sunday feet of, v ing about 10:30 a.m. yesterday, i When it was realized that the j' •boy had gone ashore without V ROCHESTER - The first class! life jacket, a search was started jn a 7_week course in adult wood-1 “find his body was found in eight working wil) be he)d at 7 p.m. Sept.| 12 at Rochester Senior High School. Roy Wattelet is instructor for the TROY — Services at the Just freight Cars Derailed class, which will be limited to 13} Presbyterian Church will be held 3 students this year. The class will] at new hours starting Sunday. UTICA. N Y. tAPi — Fourteen!meet for seven 3-hour meetings; according to the Rev. W. Donald r-ars of a 107-car New York Cen-one night a week or 10 two-hour j Pendell. -pastor jtral freight train en route from;meetings. Sunday school classes are now Chicago to New York were de-| Instruction, will include proper —for 9:30 a.m.. with the railed today. Mocking the rail-!use of the wood lathe, hand saw.! regular worship slated for 11 k.m.iroad's four main-line train. (table saw and radii saw. *'* ; ' •' I' "V < ' 1 ' ' \ \ ' ' ! infant dtufhter of Howard and LaVtrna Hale; dear alatcr or Pern, Donna, Howard, Edward and Sturyll Hale: dear irand-danshtar of Richard E. Lundry. Florence J-— ...1 Lawrene*, Of-,_____ Flalaa: beloved Infant ton of Albert and Lctlh Eaell: dear (rand-jon of Mr. Md Mra. Clarence Eaell. Orarealdc aervlce wat held today at 11 a.m. in tit* Catholic aeetlaaof Lakevlew CcmcWrv with IW F J. DcLaner official tnf Arrantefrenti were by Coan FOmu — — a Halp Wwtud Mala ,6 H«lp Wmrtad Fantato 7 AUTOMATIC OPBRATOR BZPB-rienced in worhlaa oo canae aad acmes. Including set-up, wolverine Machines Product Oo . Betty Mtchliaa. _______ _ BOTE HR - - ■ , ■ 3 MEN WANTED For local posiuons to stU aad service our appliances. Car help-fni. Call employmsat manager between 10 andlp.m, PR Milt. IbdSdQBlCTED UPHOLSTERER. Cail OR M4IE.______ - ■ DRAW. PE t-NM FOR APPOINT. ____________ Farm hand to work on lariO estate. UvMa quarters furnUhed- Write, giving qualifications to Poo time Press. Box II. pour mRn OR WOMEN WITH can to nil vacancies, nt or part time Opportunity to can good Income. IM N. Perry. 1:39 0:20 am. >3—, , home improvement company needs salesman, good rate of pay. Como la for interview. 219 Joalyn. Sadly mtaaed by Ruth andchll-dren: Steve, Todd, and Jimmy, IN LOVING" MEMORY ' OP CAlU ton3 Utley who died August 29th. A^loaf^ln my book of memorlos, My thought, ai* of Joa. Carlton. You are never fir awiy. Your Methif. » LOVII Utley w While y._ .......r____________ Your memory wc will always keep Your Family. m LOYIHO MEMORY OF ' HUS-band 9 father Aubrey E. Smith who passed away August 19, 1969. . You arc not forgotten, loved one Nor will yon over bo ... Aa long as Ufa h memory last Wa will remember thee. Sadly missed by wife. Delate Smith and children. IH LdvtNO MEMORY ' OP KD-ward Thrasher who aaaaed awaw August 39 1942. I hove loot my____Htata A life linked with my And dhy to day I miss 1 COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS OR 2-7757 Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME __^ "Designed for Punsrali" SPARKS OR1PPIN CHAPEL Thoughtful Service PE 9-5941 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service FB 2-9379 Cemetery Lots S BOX RCTUEB At 10 a.m. Today there 1 were replies at The Pres* office in the following boxes: 4. 7, 8, 10. 14, 18, 40, 63. M, 67, 72, 78. 80, 08, | 00, 101, 111. j_____ Help Wanted Male 6 9 AMBITIOUS MEN WANTED AT once, willing to take orders and work hard. Near appearing, married men over 21 preferred. Opening nt Sani-Fac and Mechanic Department Apply .n person. 497 8. Saginaw. Wo phono oalla.__ AUTO MECHANIC. EXPERIENCED on Chevrolet. Prefer man with experience on automatic transmission. 179 a weak guarantee plus commission. Rathburn-Chev. Sales - 990 8. Mata Northvllle IT PART TIMS JOB If yon an Ires t to It p.m., neat appearing and have a car; you may be Chic to qualify tor a Job that- will enable you to earn *39 a week and Still retain your regular Job. For Information call Mr. Alloa OR 2-9929. ll noon to AUTO BODY PAINTErT ALSO, bumper strictly first class, no otharg need apply. Ml 4-4919 REACH CASH CUS-TOMERS through Classified Ads. Call FE 2-8181. HELPtll Wa need is good men who are willing to train 3 weeks at ee-pany. expense for o Job that will give you a lifetime security. For men who are Ired of roaming from Job to JoO this -It a real opportunity ■ for men who want steady employment and wlU not have a lay-off Our positions are limited. Full time only. Apply In person with your wife. 311 Oek-fand, Fitter Queen of West Mlch- i«ao, u-q _______ Insurance Salesman OAKLAND COUNTY AGES 27-45 Mutual M Omaha's Oolden Anlver-,ary can mean more cash to you dotal I 00 per _____ * Mutual of Oma- LOCALWATER SOPTENER man-ufacturer has opening tor tae-tory direct aaleaman. Highest commission rate In area. Some leads furnished, outstanding equipment and service. Call BIU Tarry. MAN FOR SHEET METAL installation and pipe fitting Must have some experience. 3101 Or-chard Lake Road. KXFER1ENC__ ___ fimUBB AND________________ COOKS. Apply in jpcndii 399 Lounga. 3939 Elisabeth Lake Rd ELDBN1Y WlB6w TOR Lk)RT housework.. No, children Of laundry. Stay auh. FE 9-7793 HXFEIUENCED, WAITRESS AND «rtriris wanted, apptrto son only, WhlU Swan Drive OEOROE'S T O Y*.~AB B back oatrlng to party hostess aud toy damonsirato a. Learn ^ow to SMI. Coll or ymT WOMAN AVAILABLE when needed la Fontlac office. Experience la handling month-jy Mnd ocmtraot thymaato noc-easary. Ba. DRILL COOK, ■ AFTERNOONS -Oeod wages Bl C Huron. DRILL COOK AND SOME COUNT-work. Minute Lunch, p E- OWL OR^ WOMAN TO J*? WITH 9 yoar aid girl, and light housework. In Drayton Plains, hours 11-4:39. Mon. thru Frl 00 2-1744 after_g p.m. HOU8EKFEPER FOR MOTHER-less home,' live A'' Call after .9 p.m. OR 3-9374. PONTIAC AREA Multl-mUUon dollar international organization offers outstanding position for 3 salesmen. No canvassing, no lead problem i unlimited leads!. No eomnetltlon. ssies by1 appointment only. If accepted you will be presented with one of tho flne-t .Ifetlme agreements In existence. Must be able ...40 stand n rigid lnvestlnttton jnd be bondable If over 37TreaTs of Mon. Tuea., and Wed. __ 8ALE8MAN WANTED. NO E2-peHence neeeasary. part or lull time. Roger's fnfta and Service, gta Auburn, call FE MW. STEAM PIREIHAN A-l — 990.49 TO ' 9109.30 weekly. To fill future vacancies. Must be over 39 yeers of age on or before September it Two yenn oxStrionco no o helper in commercial power or heating plant desirable. Obtain application for examination from Michigan Civil Sbrvlcc. Lansing 13. " . TWELVE MEN 19-39 to assu- manager la out-sid* order deportment. No tnloa- mc-. Cull FK 4-0903.____ WATEk soH-eneh SALESMAN. WE HAVE OFENINO FOR A PRO- Help Wanted Female 7 1 EXPERIENCED OPERATORS. In person 19 Wort Huron. AIDE. MEDICAL. FOR PHYSICIAN Pontiac Press Box B, _______ _____ AMATEUR MODELS FOB LOCAL glamour photographer.. No exp necessary, good pay. for details write Box 2394. Fontlac. Mich. ATTENTION TOY DEMOS. "Saada" .tas limited number of openings for the toy season. Complete tui« of. toys, gifts, and gadgets This counts to 99 per cent or we deliver and collect for you at 32 1-3 per cent. No bookini problem with free Polaroid comers for tho hostess. No experience or Inittat Investment. Call number nearest you OR 3-3939. TY-7-1269. Room. 9139 Grand Rive ATTENTION We will Interview, several to HU vacancies 'a our force. Sales experience n< . casary, but helpful. Willing attitude. neat appearance mature personality necessary. This is a full time position Our employees earn top money In this field. Interviews will be held Tuea. ft Wad. afternoon Call FE 9-0439 lor appedotment. BABTanTER.^y OR OVER. 93 A COUTER PERSON FOR 61¥ cleaning plant, full or part time. Experience preferred or will train. MA 9-7399. <979 Telegraph at Ms-Pl« CAR HOPS - DAY OR RIGHT shift. .99 cents per hour. Start at “—**** * "* ***• igMu,; CURB WAITRESS Tod's have Immediate openings for curb waitresses on night abut. Apply la person only. After ' TED'S WOODWARD AT 8Q. LAKE RD. DRUG CLERIC AT LEAST 1 YEAR drug store experience, general store and fountain. Union Lake Drugs. 999# Cooley Lb. Rond. EM 3-4134, dental Assistant, walled - Lake area with resume. Write Fontlac Press Box 99. DEPENDABLE BA#YgITTER* F6R week days. Own 'transportation. Andersonvllle Rd.. Wattnora OR 3-9983 call before 3 p.m. EXPERIENCED SHIRT FINISHER, on new unit Apply Village Cleaners. 134 Main. Rochester. EXPERIENCED YOUNG OS tteaged woman to help with housework and 3 small ektt-Dnyt only Ml 9-72M • B1TCHXN HELP. SALAD WOMAN! V, Also part time dishwasher. Evening work. Moray’s OdH and Country club. 33<9 Union Lake “ I On commerce Rd. LADIES. 19 AND OVER. TELE-phone survey work. Work Moo. thru Frl.. 4 hours o day, 21.04 per hour start.. Small qutce good . working conditions. For oppolnt-ment call FE 9-8013. MIDDLE AOED LADY TO HELP with housework and cart man who hod stroks. Must live to. 1312 CIvda Rd- Highland. ,, MIDDLE AOED OR OVER. UNIN-cumbered. For Ulht^ housework NURSE-MAID Black. FE 3-0101 NURSES A®! IXFERIENCED only, and housekeeper for nursing home Must h'fttad*“ — portatton C-" w' MA 9-3311 aged children. 19 hi lelp Wanted •PACE laboratory technicians. For Employ"*”* Af cles 9 Evelyn Edwards DR’S, RECEPTIONIBT . ...... 1300 Must hove offtoe experience. po/’SBctfnSinii • .w* Must ho ottracNyc vita pood personality. BMUaegtaf ox- REI^PTIONWT^ ^Yhl» ■ t» a glamour offlen iid needs a glamror glrl at tbeirantdesk w p.m. SborthADd It. Agfa 5ECRETART ..... avle official nccdk'VDAl Friday." Mmt .ho witaw. gwligtalt, vtth food oer-sonallty Typing and short- KXHLmtEFER ..... ■ ■ • »*• AtCd B to 20. Must hava experience In “Job Costing." behtaiB o> plumbing. Lite REcil^OingT • • -,- Ml Hospital lab Typt ifr w p m. Muit be neat and attractive. EVELYN FDWARDS COUN8E^N?09BARVICE ^ 4lSr* 4 CHINA FAINTING LESSONS FOR baglnnora EM Kill. — / MOTEL MANAOBMEHT - MEN, Women and Couplca to train ror MOTEL MANAGEMENT And Operation Only matured will oe National bBr&erTRAiMreo. INC.-Pontine Press Bex 14. Iton- FIANO LEMONS 6rvEH bone Beginners or advanced. Rubv M. Clark. FE 4-37M, WOULD LIKE T ~ " reliable men *u» ,w» -- train to lnatatt and service air conditioning. hcatlaiL^.and refrlg- JKntoWl»o^*“S FR^E Preparation Cook Ted’s has an Immediate opening for an experienced preparation cook. Ap^>ly in person only. 9 *TED’S WOODWARD AT 8Q. LABE RD. PARTY FLAN MANAGER_ HIGH PROFIT NO INVESTMENT Large fast-growing jewelry party plan baa an opening for manager. Prefer party plaa or direct selling experience. we bill direct. Good advancement opportunities open: Write Tara-rlnh Ave. 19 W. 39 8t . N*w York. We’re In a hurryf _____ REGISTERED NURSE FOR OOC-tor’s Office. Call between 19 and 13 only. FE 4-9999.____________ REOISTERED NURSE FOR E E. N.T. Physician. 39 hrs. per week. I to 2739. State age etc. Write Fontlac Press Box TO. REGISTERED NURSE FOR Doctor's office port Urn*, must have own transportation. Reply Pontiac yrturiiSTill. cosmetic preferred. Relerences required. The Pen Mac Frees, Box 90. SELL A PRODUCT UNCONDITION- riS.lR,WS?,*^!Yl‘,te.*d- ' AVON CALL1NO.” all women who want to earn. CaU today. PE 4-4209 Or write Drayton Plains. SALES HELP. PAR* TIME. MUTT be over 21 Apply Young Land a Children Shop. Miracle Mile Shop-olna Center. - ■ ■ TOY DEMONSTRATORS - OIT started now — Earn more* Oo uSR.» MI 4-6305 9f FE TOY DEMONSTRATOHB — THERE It ttm u«t to sign up. **n» to 32 per cent commission. Call the Toy Cheat. FE 5-4731. ___ WAITRESS WANTED AT 3117 Elisabeth Lake Rood. WANTED CHRISTIAN WOMAN with car to Uvt tn. care for alder-gr couple, cotaty and seaorai. WANTED EXP. aad Caro^of 3 onmzxw^. » ta 0 R2S. No washings. HI 2-1741-WOMAN-FOR OENERAL HOUSE-work and . Ironing. Taos,. Tbura. Lmdsh^own^tranaVo^attoa. 4^ar,ttf.T°l X/ffi baby aS 1 school act boy. Ill Wk. FE 3-3699 before 3. WOMAN TO CARE FOR CHIL-drea to home while mother works. Tel-Huron Vicinity. State experience and particulars. Write Pon-tlac Press. Box 69. WHITE EXPERIENCED WOMAN °p£ g.gogs After J or weekend. WAITRESS! FART TIME. STEADY^ lmnfy3491 Elisabeth* Lk‘ Rd WHITE LADY FOR BABY SIT-tlng Union Lake Area. EM 3-9116 nftor 3:30. ____ , _ . WAITRESS WANTED FOR FULL time employment. Morning shut. 6-4:39 Apply •* Frank’k Orill. 2379 Orchard Lake Rd., Xetto Harbor_______ WAITRESS. DjNINO BOOM. PART time. Also full Mats cocktail Commerce Rd. ______ WANTED BY LAWYER 8ECRE-tory with lefal experience, steady employment. Reply In writing to Box 106 Fontlac Prats WAITRESS CURB GIRLS . Apply at Elf Boy Drive Ian 2499 Dixit Hwy _______ EXCELLENT riri’URE IN CHILD training program. Applicants should b* married and must like music Write Pontiac Press Box Ho, dl • IF YOU CAN SELL FOR A BUILD ER - BROKER OR WANT TO LEARN — CALL Sect'y icreta rial p able to banc. ... 32-26,6 days, picas-igs. Salary 64M to 1 sfesr x Employment Agencies 9 COLLEGE GRAD Man bofwooa >ba ages of 33-96. with aorvtot obligations fttunnod, foe aagHlua ■ wttft i—— Itonal company to and sales MM to i Employment. 4M rmmi Book Bldg.' FE 6-M3T. l HEAR FROM _____8 information. Utilities Engineering Inst , Dept. 367C BOX 4664 Detroit 34. Mleh. Work WantedJVisk II 1ST CLAW CARPENTRY 1ST CLASS CARPENTER. NEW aad repair. FE 3 FINISHED CARFENTEIta.NICE work hyaoar or job. Fl 9-3396. A-1WALL WASHINO CARPET * Uphol. Mach, cleaned: FB 4-1017. A-' CARPENTER WORE. NEW and repair. FE 4-4319. _____ A-l CAIWBRS®, - W0CREA-tlon rooms ft additions. Also cell-Inx tile FE 9-3393. CARPENTER - HOME IMPROVE-menta of any kind. FE 5-3293. CARPENTER WORK CABINETS and additions. FE 2-3393. __ CARPENTER. SF ECIALTY IN formica. FE 5-3393. CARPENTER. NEW ANb RE-modeling. P*E 2A9I2. ____- CABINET MAKER AND CARPBN-ter. Kitchens a specialty. FE BABYSETTINQ AND LIOHT work.:' OR 3-1372 after 3:30. “ DAY WORK. IRONINOS DONE IN my homo, Baby sttltof. FE 64072 OEN. CLEANING BY DAY. PH FE 6-4393 or FE 5-3409 IRONINOS WANTED OR 3-9993 _ IRONINGS, PICKED UP AND~DK-Uverad. 3M Midway. FK 4-3799. MIMEOGRA>HINO. TYFINO. BMC-retarial aervlce. EM 3-2842. NEAT WALL WASHINO, LAUN-dry, other work. FE 94MS. WA3HINOS ft IRONINOS - FICK-up and delivery. OR 3-1406. WOMAN WANTS HOUSE WORK ta mother lace, home Em 2 school ode children. FE 4-0190. Building Service 13 FAEULON - WATKELOX . BRUCE ADDITIONS -RIMODEUNO Tom Loboy ft Son Finished carpenters Celling tils Roe. rooms CabhMto — Mlacellansoua - M OftBPgNTiY — Additions - Basements AttUa — Oarages - - on my tarnssT - __________*E 3-7204________ A ' CARPENTER ft CABINET pork, new ft repair work suer- —a-Jevd OR 3-9749_______■ ALL TYPES OF MODERNIZATION complete or partial Job* •* de-sired; Licensed builder. MY 3-3303 J_____________ A-l RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL and Industrial Mason and gen. contracting Also store front re-moriellng John W Caplcs. MY ALL KINDS CEMENT WORE. Drives, floors, -te. Jensen. FE 3-2340_____ A r BRICK BLOCK AND CEMENT work. Also fireplaces. OR 3-9492. ADDITIONS — MODERNIZATION Remodel anv room of your home. DcOroote Bros., builders. OL 1-SWd ■ ADDITIONS, OARAOES. AWNINOS Fontlac Home Service. FE 4-1991. BRICK, BLOCK AMD CEWENT work Also repair work. OR 3-2993. BULLDOZING . EXCAVATTNO TRENCHING - TRUCKINO Septtc Tank aad TUe Jim Memcbak EM 3-0991 COMPLETE REMODEUNO 8ERV-toe. Eaeements under present homee, additions alterations cabinets. brick and block. Licensed. PE 9-9377. CUSTOM DRY WALL. OUARAN-teed work. Pres estimates. PE 2-0731_______________ CEMENT AND' BLOCK WSKB Keith O, Siegwart, PE 247M CUSTOM CONCRETE WORK TO Hi your aaods. FE V9123. FE 9-4481. ______ CUSTOM 1UILDINO, RESIDEN-11*1 aad eommarclal Remodeling and designing, PE 44314. DRY WALL TAP1HO AND FiNISR-Idf- Free estimates. FE M7SI. KV5S^^c-^g9S£ EXPERT CUMinn. j pbl-. lions, remodeling, garages. Freni-. Stowgwart. >E 4-6WE EXCAVATING and trehchino tor septic tanks, drain fields, footings aad Ught dosing UL HOME. gARAOK, CABINS ADDI-Jlods. Licensed builder. PHA - SERVICE. LAV- FE 44440 ft REPAIR MODBRNIZATl REMODEL DfO imerela t THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY^ AUGUST fP, I960 TWENTY-SEVEIT Building; Service 13 gw f».*f**r*Ki of a&L MbM. iogx-. BLACK MIXED SPANIEL, “* *igj 55^1, Imii LOST: 3 Vft~ OLD OUANOS AND whttehmM Brittany, OB ■ ‘ Work guaranUedFrs, estimates. AEROTRED6 KNAPP SHOES i iitij o>>-mB Automatic and Wringer I washer repair and parts NOROE, HAMILTON. EENMORE WHIRLPOOI * FM 416QAKLAKD bl6omfieuY wall cleaners l«l W window*. Reasonable. pairing AM rewinding. 11 Km. Phone PE 4-38fl. FRUITS M«W crop pit cherries, pitted, blue-barrlea, dry pack In Mlk cam for Insnsc or eonBtag. Open SAM untl> I except Monday I. Choice meaty, etc. cuetom cut I your freeser at locker. . Boysl Oak Prosen Poods ARE YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTS? CONSOUDATW ALL YOUR BILLS AND LET Br«Vl TOD VOW PLACE TO PAT. BUDGET SERVICE 11 W. HURON_PE MISS OIRL OR WOMAN NEED- ftt-g Bta- __,_______ ._________3-8734, confidential- BACE TO SCHOOL SPECIAL. If wave 85.88 complete. Dor* PE »H44._________________ BIRTHDAY. WEDDING SHOWER cakes, etc. decorated with that personal touch. Order la advance. OR 3-1944. DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES SEPTIC TAKES IKS CLEAN! 4-434J____ saws Machine sharpened MANLET LEACH, 18.BAOLET ST Bookkeeping ft Tax— 16 BOOEKXEPINO ALL TAXES EMplre 3-3414 W«nted RgJ BBtete H ALL CASH „ OI AND PHA BCID1TIBB It yeu ore Moiioi »nii or mone^ call us (or Immi IMS W. LISTINGS WANTED Caah for your equity on bouaecs, vacant Mad. Load CorMboSs. 1 n 4-ms * is (-mi WM. A. KENNEDY '^fMMtor MSI Wf Huron St._ COLORED LISTINGS L. R. MIDDLETON ■ | -Beeirpn ^dWI LISTINGS WANTED tore. wo need UatMsa of Ml typaa ** — a*. —today CLARK REAL ESTATE *■* i^SL s re 4d»u W Huron. Open Eve. A Sun. “NEEDED” Lake Properties LOTS - COTTAGES — TB. BD. Buyers Galore TAYLOR, AGENCY Rent Apts. UHfunfrhiigl DAY SHIFT SLATER APTS. AND SUNDAYS, SEE I RMS. AND BATH. LOWER, J hedrmi, 70 Newberry near Webster Icbaol. Beat, garage lactud-ed. tBS.FB S-MEL X. I ROOMS. BATH. POLL BABB- M OAKLAND 1 end 4 room* newly decorated. MMM month. Mr*. Anderson, ftUr __________________ _ Hiring room.' Available Sept. 1.117 E Pike_St L CLEAN I LARGE BOOM. FIRST walking distance I COLORED' Call Louis Borst, Realtor. Dressmaking, TsHonny 17 DRESSMAKIHO. JA1LORINO..AL- Oarden Piowing 18 AL WARNER'S ROTO-TILUNO, sad gardenc. PE | „. DRAG AND DISKI ___. Winter. OB l-MSS._ PLOWING, ORADINO, DISCINQ A - Wedding Napkins TREE" —PLUS 100 INPORMAL8— With Evtry Order Of Wedding Invitations Backentose Book Store It EAST LAWRENCE PE 1-1411 THE OROBSE FT. NURSERY SCHOOL Wishes to announce Roura <7:39-6l Trained teachers Treat. 8051 Bridge La^c Rd. SMALL FARM, AROUND M—, Immediate occupancy, re PE or OR exchange. Rent Apts. Fnrnlahed 37 1 RM. KITCHENETTE, UTIL. i-ROOM APARTMENT SUITABLE 2 CLEAN ROOMB. PR IV utilities^ near OMC. VT“ ITS S. With. PE 3-*834 1 LARGE ROOMS. PVT. BATH and ant., utilities. Clean. Mealy furnished, child welcome. Glngel- entrance, utilities turn. PE t-1814. ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE, utilities. clean. 111 weakly. 1-------------- PRIVATE EN- By Frank Adams t-f For Bale Heodis ' 49 ■ For Sele Hobbub _ 4^ For Heneee | RELIABLE FAMILY Cl COLORED ?|M3 Loaded with many modern feature* ONLY $K) DOWN Model at J(S a. Blvd. Open Dally and Bud. !:M to 7 p m. WEBTOWN REALTY \ LI J-1317 after 7 p.m. MODEL — PE 8-3783 COMMERCfc-HILLER RD AREA Attractive 3-bedroom ranch home, full • basement Mtt-car larage. i details eon Mas L. i I 1-8183. . ... , , SYLVAN LAKE I Just nereis the street from this neat, lust like new, a bedroom I modern home. Only 88.350. And heat at all, you name the down I ’‘Jack loveland 11188 Cass Lake Rd. PE 1-4878 Snow White Bungalow | . Near Private. Beach 1 DORRIS- OPP WOODWARD t 'M o »*ely P CALTuE POR BAM TAVlwfiB. e«M eoMortObM. Ukt Of ton I 0 WEST fPONTIAC | CIVILIANS I $190 DOWN Built MM. 1 bedrooms, fu ’ ssemrnt oil hr" jj— 'aesnt Immediate ipen. Walk In and______ f interested call owner. MAT eMANAOEMENT DAYS WO 3*3350 M EVES , BAT.. BUN. TO 8-8851 CLARK8TON AREA. 3 BED RMS.. | plastered i - - Kitchen. 1 --- screens. ____ — tt.ooo doWa pad MEl_I. ^Harold (Red) Franks 1513 union Lk Rd. EM 3 3308 Odea. Jta I a ai. ' t This NfcMtHoine T Awslts your inspection. 3 bedrooms. terse living roapL modern | kiteben. plenty of cupboards, and • closet space. Tiled bath. fullbaa*-meqt forced air oil heal. On ldt-c with 183 ft frontage. WIT Call This*,, Paradise ^ When I rough this 3 bed- family home. ~'y cape cod • Exceptional oversloo proudly , friends. down, two exceptloaal ■ large bedroom* np, full Ul* bath, and two powder rms., paneled reernttea 1 a o m with fireplace, and paneled card room with bar. braes* aai $ap lot. ' well ;landscaped. that la typical of . this fin* nalgheonood. Priced to ten 8tifflf. LONG LOW AND RAM-BLINO 813.500 Term* A beautiful 7 room ranch home with large 1 car at-tached garage, bom* In Vary nice condition, carpeting, lovely beds and kitchen, n beautifully paneled family tor** ranch fenced TOUR BEDROOM ROMS 88,850 Terms, between / CLEAR 3 BEDROOM. LOWER, pvt. entrance, ISO. Children welcome. Bald Mountain Rd. PE "It says you’re good riatured, ambitious, energetic, and dangerously overloaded ...*' FOR COLORED — 4 ROOMS A bath. Includes heat, hot water, ■love and rMrtgerator. Roy A* nett, Inc., Realtors, 38 E. Huron St. PE *0488. ORADE LEVEL .. with lake t Of lot >t.50p d ssjaL.**,___________________ out of this wdrld. 3 car garage ' nice berbeque pit. yard com-1 pletclv fenced, lake privileges Full price $11,766. Terms. CRAWFORD AGENCY Walton EE 8-3300! ’>258 . Wat ^ (INDEPENDENCE Rent Houset Unfurn, 40 For Sale Houses 3 BEDROOM. PULL BASEMENT, nag heat. 870 a mo , 1M N. Johnson, at State. PE 3-73M. 4 BOOMS A BATH. 780 BIOHAM. 4 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS. 3 FIRE-placet, dishwasher and disposal Rent with option to buy. FE 4-4404, M p.m 4 ROOMS AND RATH' 780 BIO- LAKE ORION. 4 ROOMS blocks from town, near lax*. Boat and lights furnished. adults. MV 3-4381 or MY 3-4401. ______________________ ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS * R°PM.„„BATH OARAOE. 1 "Modern In Evory Detail" ^ ““ * ADULTS ONLY PE 8-8118 ehord Lk. OR 4-3837.________ MOD BLDO., LOB ATT.. 8TOVB * *•**. and refrtj. Am month. PE NEW LUXUI CIVILIANS jgusresKl $190 DOWN rice, laroi liv: ! . ;_ __ — 3 BEDROOM ROME. and take ever payn_ I BEDROOM BRICE. LAROI LIV- Ml— — 3 bedrooms. Corner lot. Utility port.'Vacant, Open Walk tn and -* It. If Interested, Cal) MAY MANAGEMENT _ ______ carpeting, fireplace. Full basement, | egg garage. Large fenced yard. Convenient to shopping center. PR 5-841*- , 09Dtr 3 BDRM. 3 STORY HOME IN M_________...______ good cond. On Vest side. A real ! DAYS WO 3 3350 bargain Call PI 3-5430 or PS 1 EVES. SAT SUN. TO 1-8851 3-7885 between 8-5. Dawson A |________ Butterfield. ___________________ DISCOUNT. 3 BEDROOM HOME. 3 BEDROOM RANCH TYPE, CAR- Crescent Lake. PS 3-1752 KllTm. *?**' -?9 3 bedroom modern. Living room j ft replace Dining room Kitchen f and utility room. School bus at door Price $4800. 8500 down. Term*. Dorotliv Snyder Lavender I Realt&r Eat. 3t Ytars 7001 Highland Rd. IMSSl ! MU 4-8417 Eve Terms, car or trailer i down payment 34 s u bungalow, plus glassed In porch, fail basement, forced ' air heat, hard wood floors, l'% car 'yara«e. tot 85 x 385. pear Airport. 1051 Showman drive. Renters Ih property do not disturb. Phono PE 4-1557 . LAKE FRONT BEDROOM HOME - •TUMP REMOVAL Tree removal, trimming, get our! bid. PE 3-7U8 or PBjgt7». ibLLDOziNO. lands cA P I n <1. . gftd wart, and bench metalling. Give You 1 Place to Pay Is- EXPERT ‘TREE SERVICE. FREE f-ase X OUT Mina ------------------------—I WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY LANDSCAPINO.BLIOHT HAULINOI MICHIGAN CREDIT LA^Wd.- MD^-drVND { COUNSELLORS seeding. TOP soil delivery. 011.50 RM. 702 PONTIAC STATE BANK flrstload. PE 3-5483 1 ............... TRIE SERVICE Free estimates PE 5-35 TREE TIUMMINO AND REMOVAL “ i Assoc. Credit Coun . Credit Counsetorg j-. — Ressonebler____________ Moving and Trucking 22 WE PAY ALL YOUR BILLS I APT NEAR CITY HOSPITAL, r couple. Hi ROOM AND BATH. service Include! rice, bookkeeping, < , photocopies at DICK’S LIQHT HAULING | Prompt courteous service i Reas, prices ■ PE 4-SltII Top Soil . Light and heavy trucking. Rub- It desired, blab, (til dirt, grading, mm), S»t< ---- tml loading. PE) HOME^ SERVICES ----------- v. nT, ...I.M n, National Bank BMg., Rochester 1-A Reduced Rates l Phone di. l-eioe and*6L i-ei*5 Local or long dlataoeo moving , SPECIALIST W PROBLEM PlO-SMITH moving OO. PE 44584) ures girdles, bra* also mastectomy kitchen. _________ furnished, plus garage. •mall child ran, plaaa*. OR AduitaonjyT’M Y~ i-iiU. I ROOMS and BATH. PRIVATE I — — — j ‘ Adams "streer'oif 'south J*S«le l entrance. _Inwlght._— | Kent Houses Furnished 39 rooms, beth. basement garegr “‘ --------------------------------| SMALL 3 BEDRM.. FORCED / BEDROOM. COSY CLEAN. gaa furnace, 1-------------------*-----| your prtao. Any tlaie. PE 8 f WAS IT YOU FRITZ ASKING TOR SALE7 PLEASE DO C'** r couple, nr U I PVT. BATH AND ntT.. furn. between McCon-_ Eastern Jr. High, pme teachers, 3 working girls. No drlnktng. Iaqulrc O'DELL CARTAGE child care, licensed home; Local and lone distance moving! Saahobow and Maybe* Rood area. Phone FE 5-8808 | OR 3,8437. m i ,------------r=b ■ 7“ I Loviwo CAEfciB a dMUSnSU Trucks to Rent! • TRACTORS tb-Ton Pickups TRUCKS ■- —------- AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks Semi Trailer Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. OI S. WOODWARD 1ST CLASS PAINTINO AND DEC-orating. Caah or term*. FE 4-6680 lit class an. aWd ext. paint- Ing. Reas. Don Beck. Qt 1-3141. 1ST CLASS On. AND BET. PAINT-|— —' wall papering. PE 4-MM. d*\ntic of enargu. UNWANTED kRTICLES PICKED ______ answer. PB 4-7108. i-7 room op rgitxrma and. appliance* needed. 77lU pay more caah. Pleaae phono PR 2-8843. CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP-pllancea. Old plecas or boustfull 4 7M?* court*ou* —VIC. PE " . ATTENTlSn 3 ROOMB. PVT. BATH AMD ENT. turn. Mir 5-4000.____________ 4-ROOM PUNN ACROSS . Tel-Huron Shopping Center, u UtU.. $00. Call PARTRIDOE ft Associates. 10SS W. Huron St. PE 3-BEDROOM. ALL MODERN. Electric haaL watorford Township - Or sou. PE 4-3330. • i i Ur 3 TEACHERS. 5 ROOM house on lake. Automatic oil hoot, attractively furnished. Close _______ _ ______ ____ja. * bdrms. 70 Newberry near Webster School. HeaL ^arage inelud- “70 MOHAWK room*. Block bus and Tel-iron Pm* neighborhood. 485. 1 utilities. Screened porch. FE 3 and 3 room furnished apartments. Utilities furnished. Gas hoot, adult* only. 113 and SIS par week Inquire, K. O. Ham* stand, 10S East Huron Strata. Phono PE 4-0484. After S p.m. ADULTS. S RM. ------ - neat, garage. Phone PE AT SQUARE I LAKE—CLEAN PVT. APARTMENT. PURE- , estimates, PI 3-0387. _ ^r von "o^xS.,011 n | ATTRACTIVE 3 ROOMS. STRICTLY Ior J0U._OA 8-28iI__________| DrlvKtt ^ block from Tel-Huron Waahmgton Jr. Hlsh. 880 1UOD FURNITURE BOUGHT AND _____ _ _______ _______ hauled. PB 8-3387. | Glendale________________ Guaranteed. Free est. PE 4A206 ) ii._.CLEAN. SMALL PKONT, FIRST iTutDY INTERIOR DECORATOR.I Wtd. MiscellElIfOUS 30, floor Oas heat Utlllttos furn Papering PE 1-0343. ----- ‘ "------------- | j3 park Place. FE 8-6788.___ Sa PAINTTNO-ft DECORaTHiQ. 1 BA"Nf R?SPf J? CLIAN 8 ROOM APARTMINT 17 Pantr removtd. PE 4-8S1I. paint, Ernest g Paine. FE 5-3081. Hovey between _ Cottage and 'fv-i. ni.r.Ap i erun ' HAVE TOU A TYPEWRITER, ^ Osmun. FE 5-0841. ___________ o. ,^J. .XMrUnce^«s«abS I m*chm* or plec* of offli ----------- *• 7*^,! furniture or equipment r- j will buy ”— Couple. PE 2-4855. 1 BEDRM DLX. PANELED CAB’ in. pvt. drive and cat. Pr—— for bachelors or ctudaota, MSUO. 512 — — ‘ On Cooley Lake Rd. Sill. Prlv. PE 5-8808. SMALL 2 BEDRM . FORCED AIR I - goo |------ isn’t, now 885. ) SMALL HOUSE. CLOSE TO BEE Lino bus. PE 4-4741.________ WALLED LAKE LOVELY HOME --------$1* MArk ’ r!S“ Rent Lake Cottages 41 A euUe! West tuburbad. A*3-b«d-room bom* with a carpeting._ IVi- Phon*"e RUSSELL YOUNG REAL ESTATE ft BUILDINO 1511 MELTON. BIRMINGHAM * '.Full bast ; gSW^fuilprfc*. ! GREEN LAKE FRONT property located op exclusive Oreen Lake. Owner la leaving i state and lx anxloua to sell Ex-I cellent besch and well landscaped lot. Peaturas 3 bedrooms, > garages. Hot water heat, large I fireplace and many other extras r Priced to sell Immediately. s $7,200 — 21.000 down 003 d only 88.500. r Pf 4-3300. DREAM HOME. Auburn Heights -*area. 2 bedrooms, large 20 It. Uv. ft*-room with dinint are*. Picture Window, modern kitchen, lge. utility reqm with tea hast and OI SPECIAL — This Is for the Vetaran who urban Uvms.'On* at bedrooms, oaseboari heat. Pun price 80.9 good Hortl Ice it 67,36. -month. Laac lor each. \VH%hi Miller ireMiub-1 Realtor FE 2-0263 Huron Street ^ROOtO. NEAT. S. JESSIE LAKEFRONT COTTAGE recrectlon r Church, ifl.’c — Immed*at< . fenced yard. 2-! ;e posse lRTH. F Realty & Building Co. FE 4-0921 HOUSE FOR SALE. 6127 CARROLL | ... 8411 ELIZABETH LAKE BOAD SCHRAM $18,250. FE 4-0203 NEWLY FURNISHED LAKE June. EM 3-4008 AvoUohle Sept, to basement. In Herrlaitao Sub. Call FE 5-7837. carpeted. Fenced m yarn, s sis. from pvt. beach. Near schoo^ children we]eom*^75 aw. 31(0 fHcher Rd. cfl Pork Rd. For bent lge. home OREEN LAKE. YEAR AROUND home, lake front, eicellent schools (ISO mo Evanlnfi attar 1:10 p.m. EM 3-0283_______ LAKE FRONT NEW BRICK 3 bedroom terrace, g — • OTBi........... For Rent Rooms 42 HUB STOPPINQ AT DOOR. LOB. (root attractive rr “ * CLEAN ROOM FOR MAN PVT Bat, and shower. $7 77k. PE IN S. Woodward BUtalngham i Loko Rd. woo. UA AMR MI 4-/0/0 | INDIAN VILLAOX, LOVELY HOME ------------- ^-------- j with large rooms. 3 bodroomr 2 bedrooms, 3 lota, goraga. nice •hade, only 8780 down. CUCKLER REALTY 330 M. Saginaw______PI 4-4091 $9,250 Beccboard radiation LAKE ORION I BEDRM HOUBE CLEAN ROOM FOR A privileges or — Washington School o ’ Baptist. FT 1 * . ROOM. N__________ ______ ____L excellent rextauraot. bouse , privileges, ctngl* woman. MI I ^6-1242.__________ 1 GIRLS. NICE HOME OP TOUR own, rm. rates. 547 W. Huron. , MEN TEACHERS — OOOD PARK Ing. TV. private phone. lull kitchen privileges private •■•■••■tna pool,_253 W Ypsllsntl ROOM FOR RENT. 510 3-bedroom aluminum ii.__.__ style, includes full basement, oak h up, by owner. PE LEA VINO STATE WILL 8ACRI- I bedroom. Near St. Benedicts. LARGE HOME $9,500 «iSmh«l1^raUrH** 170. Reisoniblt down pifmcDt. Priced >14,M0 Fh. PC i-7113.. LIQUIDATING PROPERTY BAROA1NS OALORE JEROME BUlLDlNO CO m 1 » port. '• Templeton | w > storks* room, gas hot FE 4-8521_____ LAKE PRIVILEGES, Fiu* ______________________ 2-1388.1 __ IXF PAINTINO EXTERIOR AND I OR 3-8787. laUrler. Proa estimates, all work---------- guaranteed. PB 6-8381 or OR PAINTmO INTERIOR ft WaLL- ----_ -T.—,— -— tar Mas. 7T paper cleaning. Boat Clark. PB 4-3780. _________ PAINTINO, INT. ft EXT. PAPER WBnt■ _______ Lost and Pound POUND: O X R MAN IH O R T gfgffT-g'S.’S^lg RoWird- rm 5-307. t^MY*li,-Ti»l "or MT 3-3iVl. ijafrirairoTiZHTwas^ VIC crescani Lake are*. sUck a»6 WHI'IEJT mnu Terrier downtown Mon TuSk Mltar* 3 yra. aid Howard MIT S-MOS. \ .. LOST: BLACK AND tan HOUND-2 pups. Vicinity of Oreanflald. i r^f ^l^MWWW CA*. M wy cross-eyed, Name "Tuptlm^ last soan Tel-Huron are*. BM IMr - iABoh brown ft white j^MnayJ^OftM. male, riwurd- LANDLORDS ( RENTAL SERVICE Call us for tenant*. We have customers tor homes and opart- unfurnished apartment I . quiet. near Tel-Huron. Must have stove and refrigerator, 3 rooms and bath, priv * contract from PH. owner low dt* ____OB 3-437* after 8 p.m. CASH POft LANb CONTRACTS HTj. Van Welt. 4548 Dtale Kwy. OR 3-1355 IMMEDIATE ACTIOIH On any food land contracts Now Or seasoned. Tour cosh upon satisfactory inspection ol property and title. Ask for Ken Templeton. K. L. Templeton, Realtor MM Orchard Lake ,Rd. FE ***** . fti^Os Efficiency Apartments Living room, kitchen, bathreoa St 3. flftfcek. **“ LOVELY f ROOM FURNISHED apt. Carpeted. Sun pores. Moor General Hospital. Call altar 4, FE *33S7~ LAROE LOVELY 3 AND BATH, near Airport, adult* only. OR UNION LAKE. LAROI 3 ROOMS aj2 bath, modem opt. building, -ythtng pvt. Adult*, im Paddock. FS Rent Apts. UnfBraiBhed 38 1ST FLOOR. 3 AND BATH. UTIL-tties, couple School Street, PE 3-Ttit. 1-BEDROOM. LOWER. FENCED niched. Private entrance. Avail-able Bepi, I. PB >8887._____ 3 BEDROOM UPPER NEAR LIR-coln Jr. Hlfh, Hove, re frig., boat turn. |8t month. Call PE <-3117. 3-134*. ROOMS AND bed. ah uUHtl—. _______________ irtgerator furnished. Dol-IUu apt* 2*1 Oaklant. _ RM PWT. ENTRANCE. NATH Stove. Rat. A utilities, gig per __mo. Adults PE 2-7338 after 5:30. 3 ROOMS ft BATH. SIS. AIWLTS only Avail Sept. JtaAIio 2 rm. ft bath! 830 OuHrili St- UL M72S. 4 ROOMB AND BATH. UPPER. 184 ~St NICE ROCittS ft BA7TH. C1 EAN carpeUd. stova ft all wthlttes fur-nlsned. AvalUble sept 1 tokutra at 734 W. Bunn. 70 “i Auburn ; i Lakefront home. FE 4-4113. MODERN 5 ROOM. 878 WOLVER-tn* Dr.. Wolverine Lake. MIDDLE RkARI LAKEFRONT. 2 bedrm. modem, 888 per mo. BMWUBO, BM 34117.____________ ROCHESTER 3-Bodroom, 1* baths, gaa hoot. Excellent location, Imm. occ* ponoy. Bata or root. OL 1-1831. SMALL HOME. MODKfcN. UTIL- WifLXD LAKE. 3 ROOM c6t-tage^ turn., hasted, adults. MA e would like a nice gentleman claun homo. PB 8-8377. ROOM ft BOARD WITH OR WITH-out. 135Vk Oakland Ave. FE 4-1664. ROOMS.’ $5 AND >7. BOARD Opt. 141% Oakland. PE 3-8188. Convalescent Homes 44 WANT 3 LADY CONVALESCENTS. ta^chrUttan hont^^ good earn and RUSS MCNAB ART MEYIR A8 A OROUP OF BUILDIR8 WE offer low prices. throuch volume j>UTj Builders Exchange |E 3-7218 or UL 2-3483 - ASSOCIATE BROKERS — hr. Co. IM PE MM3 443 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE BY OWNER - SACRIFICE ' 3 bedrm brtek ranch, full baa* ment large kitchen and dining room, built In oven and range, fully carpeted. Anchor fence, nicely landceaped. sidewalk, blacktop at., community water, school and, shopping center L^^gtatarfMyhommdmHM Only 1400 down, Includ- MODERN 3 BEDRM HOUSE IN |21$J Royal Oak A lovely email home On paved j street, carpeted living room, 3 bedrooms, tile hath, nicely or-1 ranged kitchen and dining area OU furnace: tta cor tarsia. A beautiful fenced-in backyard. Immediate possession. Reasonable down payment. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 3338 Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 4-4i«3 ■ After 8 p.m. PE 3-8502 4-BEDROOM DRAYTON WOODS Juft the home you mothers have ' been looking for. lovely brick bring room wl fireplace. __________ living r * _ ... excellent kitchen, nice landscaped lot. Only 8888 down. LAKEFRONT 4 room modem cottage on beautiful wooded lot, boat dock, excellent fishing, full price only 8S.7M. IVAN W, SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 JOSLYN. OOR. MANSFIELD d public schools. ( a,?oU.i,tMt,ih££>r3hood 224,4-BEDROOM I MILFORD. 3 YRS. OLD 3 BDRM ! Bscement, Oas heat. S--------- sc reens-! 618 00 MU *8836. HOME, GAS HEAT. 2-CAR hardwood "■ “ landscaped lot. Owner. with dtalsneu — 4-WM.___________________I lot 80 x 220 a arse lo r. Low family, features include &L"x-taftita PE MUST SELL TO SETTLE ESTATE .‘sa: ■•rage, c. EM 3-8 high schools. A bargsli MUST SACRIFICE. NEED 8786 By owner, garage bouse. 4 room. ; utility and bath. 3 bedrooms. $750 down. $40 a month. Pull price. ***“ PE »*“* down payment. OR NEW 2 BEDRM FULL B8MT . J. A. TAYLOR REAL ESTATE ft INSURANCE . Open Dally *8 Sunday 12-6 OR 4-8308 OPEN EVENINOU ft SUNDAY MULTIPLE LI8TINO SERVICE BATEMAN REALTY i MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE I WOULD YOU LIKT... One of the finest homes on Pon-I tlac'a West Bide. Located on 1 lots. All brick and only 4 years old. A recreation room that you would dream about with ad-Joining '* bath. If you have a business WHY SETTLE POR LESS! LAKE PRIVILEGES... with pork, sand bathing beach and elubhouaa. 3 bedroom brick ranch with garage. Blacktopped streets in excellent area. Close to Pontiac. Vacant and immediate possession — For quick mortgage and no mortgage WATERFRONT ■ 2-3152 46 I BY OWNER. 8 ROOMS. LOB. LIV- | 1 Ing, dining room, carpeted, base- ________________ ULTRA NEWJTOREB, WEST BEDE | g“h‘’ gk^cSjfc "oib^rt | °“>’ °^fLTL0 be moved. Will accept reasonable J PE 2-2144 with 2 car garage. All redecorat- j -1. FE 4-48(8. — u_____________ i i_a___ m Central Business District. ( room Rent Houses Unfurn- 40 terrace, suitable for office, chop, ................... —----------- atom. IMS, ELgln 8-381S. i 2ND FLOOR, 8 ROOMS OP OF- i (let apace tU or part. Id heart ■’ ’—‘— ~—i. Corner loca- 8-8838.____________________ Rent Office Space 47 by owner, < rm. housb. le. I ofier caii lo t-mt'atti________ ~ " ..........Mi ” ONLY $12 DOWN 288 WEST TALE A STEAL __ Near Elizabeth Lake. 3 bedrooms, ! ffiorDON’T MISS. ATTRACT IVE Mp LJJ0H and different In EUsabeUi Lake I old' with "sewer” wa Estates This home has 3 bed- Approximately 82.0C L nice kitchen mn • in n» u Carpeted living and dinii i possibilities, 134 BROWNELL. BIRMINGHAM Attention, Renters 3S0 W. Yolo, off Baldwin w»i Onto 3 left. Rent with ■ buy Rent money apply* to coat. How 3 bedroom L ranch, full basement, large ----^ -* W1U take jomr r— EVE. TO 5-4713 WILL DBCORATB $75 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 MS EAST BLVD. N. *"*l 1ST FLOdll. 3 ft YATH ft BSMT ____Lawrence and Perry Streets. Pontiac community Finance company, call John Lta^ PB 8-0421. 1208 SQUARE FEET OP OFFICE •pace OBd storage room, vicinity ol Saginaw ana Orchard Lake __________dn. paymt. f% BARGAIN I 288 WEST YALE I ElWoODREALTY ' FE L5283 I Hot "at 113.950 6185 ii all that it requires .-down Oets you started towards owning I-------------->----------1 ■ for this 3 bedfodm home, large ! a new 3 bedroom brick ranch, full \ _nra_NT . lot, newly decorated. Call after l basement, targe lot. paved street air fiV. a 4 I ERA. or VA Exclusive Sallee | JJ* * I walls, ^arjie^ Uvlng MORTOAOE COSTS. Woods sub. Approx. 877 i BEAUTIFUL 3-BEDROOM BRICK. I FE JEROME BUILDINO CO. uin • we : Rd. ( nt_i-n DBBIRABLB OFFICE SPACE 1.000 aq. ft., 3nd floor Huron Theatre. Pro* parkins *pa*«. Phone FI NEW OFFICES - WEST SIDE PE 3-2144 OFFICE ON STORE BUILDING for rent at 4713 Dixie Highway. --P , W fully landscaped™! totally) backyard, yard lights, storms and screens, carpeting throughout drapes. 4t» per cent mortgage. 615.850. MA 5-1583. BARGAINS, rge lot near ____ol. A real ,875. Low monthly pay- WE 3-4200 WATKINS HILLS I Almost new , bedroom brick | sod full basemeot. Beautiful •rea. Winding pared streets ot new homes. All deluxe features. 81.5&*ldown.’ For Salt Houses 49 2 BDRM. HOME. 3 CAR OARAOE. broosewav furniture, good shade, shrubs, will take hopsetraltar or dwa. part. 1338 Loekhoven. Pon-PE 6----------- Waterford High 878. Be* those PHA loan, j Indian VILLAGE — —_______________________Bee this attractlvi OWNER’S SACRIFICE Must aell. Only 1815 for equity In modern * - ‘ S—- In Oxbc- ____WWilBPWi »idrop» --- '5,bwi OEirnru _____IM MW_________ PLANNING TO BUILD 7 We will build a complete 3 bed- j $000 DOWN Next to Donelson Park and close Benedicts. B 3 bed- j ymi b ■M basement, oak I bedroom brick ! GIROUX GENERAL REAL ESTATE Real Estate ft Insurance | NORTHERN KIOH ’ j 3 BEDROOM. NEWLY DR- I REAL VALUE. WEST PONTIAC. $18,808 — *73 per month ti taxes and insurance with hpiww lmately $808 down and no mor gage cost.. I NEW MODEL j TRI-LEVEL i "Loaded -with charm and lira btllty." 4 bedrooms, sunken lit ing room dream kitchen. . —FRIGIDA1RF EQUIPPED— 3-ROOM BOUSE I loqutoo >3 My re Avo. I 3 BKPROOii loUgE ON EKTrEN-tag. Near Noethom. Madison, and Umoraon Bchpol* »BM887. 3 BEDROOM IN DRAYTON Palno. lift car attached garage Large tat, (too PR 3-6483. 3 BEDROOM. WATERFRONT ON Otter Lk 7 rooms, I our garage, far (arden. alto, laugh t old. largo lot___ h^.SSffJTfhL Any reasonable offer will ba eon- sidered. Call OR 3-3798._ ROOM, OKAY BRICK. PINE-place, taka privileged corner lot. 180 X 135 foot. 1 basement bedrooms largo attic. M.«0ti cash 8761 Carroll Lake Rood. Com------ OB 3-8835, 3 "tU 9 ».r 1 it VA duced to 915.288 NEAR WISNCR cerYainly the finest BY-OWNER | 3 bedrm. lit baths, completely redecorated. Located on north aide In good neighborhood Lots M > extra* in this home. Must HEAT. EXCELLENT LOCATION IMM. OCCUPANCY. BALE OR RENT. OL 1-1831. immediate possession. For I SYLVAN VILLAGE- 3 -r information call PE 4-2178. basement, g—— WILLIAMS Model Open WEEKDAYS 5 TO 7 SATURDAY 4 TO 7 TWENTY-EIGHT THEPONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1960 For Sale Hooks 49 i Ftrirft Hejwee 49 Per Sale He—w 49 HAYDEN BROWN «BEDROOM HOME. In Hoelwttw. » T A E Canal Front t IMiTM Mr this * w-rwwoi home. ran tawnt. oil beat OMaMd In bock 1 story with alum, siding. Base-ment. Oil furnace »10,«00. Terms mediate possession, bath. 1 lots. Mao! wpLnue . „ j at bungalow .—■■I Township. Lorca lot. This homo is only 4 jrrs. oM oad on newly decorated "All you need to fggRSgCSS mm (Main Office) »g±jr\ —I m LADD'S, gg^£|jg i Kov An nett. Inc.. Kealtori £ Open ^g,H^nS‘.y 1-4 i*~FE8A466 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 2B, i960 TWENTY-NINE Sate HwwIwU Goods 65 CARPET TWttD, nm Ff Sate JWIrdluMM < rare n mu, ra DA^^AND CHAUtH De-Humidifier Weetlngtoue Mn mod flnEjjK mi. r.j M Dm H 11.2* per week Goodyear lenlce Store, 30 s. II .31 per week. _____________jee Mir Pontine, W MM _________________ don’t " wabtb' Momrr having that eld TV fixed. We hare ear lead deal *» »— man < Console. Alt DIED SO.000 BTU'a OB, FORCED forced air funnel ud con-$m. t saw Luxaire oil ass-tartt/ra-i used gn# conversion burner and controls, MS. Ace Hsattng * Cool-tec Co.. ITS* N. WUllams Labe m. at too, os mt TDOOBr **,*•# ' furnace and $169 nert joil IMC » fy.jijs luted tmm "Tt........... mo.ii SAVE PLUMBINO SUPPLY . OT a. Sattnaw_________fe moo 31 IN. TV, BOAT AND MOTOR. 3 chests, child's desk, gossip bench, fiinpe. PE 4-SCS. ■■ ._______ » PT. AUCB TRAILKlt ON 1 ^-------r *“11mm, Mich. Not Ddoused — New la Crates Includes Warranty — Serrtee DeUvery AND I're sot 'eat ta stock fir Immediate delivery No Mann Down — 11.IS per w* little's FURNITURE h APPL ™%T and Uprights Mew models slightly scratched or crate starred. Models at bit discount prices. Two year* to pay *• days same a, ce WAYNE QABERT 131 N. BAOINAW _J 4-MI.________________________ kwwdhtwwe _ rrwwrriMT wawrnna name brands, scratched. Terrific values fits .A while they last. GOOD CONDI- Ilreplace mti wM set, sate, sleet, hotter, 10-cal. auto, (as heater. $M.M. Cab. sinks aae fittings. ttt.os up. Laundry trays anC stand and faucets tills Can and carry. SAVE PLUMBINO T2 s, Saginaw PE moo 100 FUEL OIL tame! * WATER 05,000 BTU TIMKEN COUNTER- and 37* cal.____■ ■■ ■ Ironer, til. 1100 N. Cass Ik. 1*54 PONTIAC (ids. DEEP WELL Fluorescent, 303 Orchard Lmkej OE PUSH BUTTON RANGE. jr. like news t s IS sage green rus. Crib * mattress, playpen, teeter a AS RANOE. rULL SIZE. LIKE new, OR >4*W. GENERAL BJETE1C DRYER. IX-cellent condition, MO. PE 1-djlt. Hl-FX, 4 tt. PLATINUM WALNUT. 30 watt AM h FM. IS la. speaker. Oarrard chanter. FE Mil. iRONRrrk ironer. ' Deluxe model. IMS. 3 years to p*7' WAYNE OABERT 111 N. SAOINAW FE MU* IRONRSeTRONER. PStOVE TO I yourself that ironing **" be cut In half with comfort. Rent an ti—--- --, - -ay- n Mm crtnbpj I AUTO. WASHER. BUD pump and tank. 140. < **8 FE 3-llSI. ALCOA ALUMINUM Combination DOORS GUARANTEED 1 FULL INCH THICK aluminum comb, doors. Regultrly priced 130.M: you pay only Sales Tax Included $23.95 Far Sato Miscellaneous 67 OAS AMD OIL PUEjUam SUM fat. Consumers ■ AUNDRT TRAtk PTBSROLAB. tiros. 11 gal. heaters, electric. Cash and oarnr. is mr slats lined. *73J0. O. A. Ttawniaa. MSS tt ijwueC LAVATORIES. COMPLETE. *34 50 value $ie.e*r use bathtubs toilets. snwWer stalls, tmiulars. Terrific trlJUtfr Mlehtfaa tauorcs- . A KE FUMF. DELIVERS MMIJW ~ - - - - - Toy bAsl*West, ir minute at M lbs. p; /ERATINO Wit.STACK ratrolawith 110 sal. tank. OB PLASTIC ifi& raw i water tested, o. 7006 MM. West, FIFE REDUCED ■ cents a foot: foot. TS In. 4W*L......... ... $3.00 hi. 4 Jt 4 ....... 14.44 PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO. - " — PK2-3»43 PRIVATE RUMMAOE, SALE AND as girts dresses, stse All. FE MMt. PAINT WITH KOTON - AVOID blister and peel due to ssetmure. Now at tl savings i WARWICK'S. 3471 Ol per fallen. IRCHARD I RIDINO WHEEL HORAE TRAC- RUMMAOK BALE HOUSEHOLD srilclet, A clothing for children and adults. Monday 3-S, Tuesday all day. 4M Berwyn, Birmingham. North of Seaholm High RANOE HOOD AND PAN COPPBR-tone. *34.60. Romex wire at 3c per ft. Beater cable lie. O. A. Thompson. T004 MM West. RECONDITIONED TYPEWRITERS — 60 and up. New portables. up. New 6 drawer I “P- 1 >. chairs Laundry Equipnrt.! We need .room tor net rtc dryers must be cleared, mci .educed up to *074. Horry n phono orders. Consumers Power Co. 28 W. Lawrence LIVING RM. SUITE “Mitt FEDERAL Modernization 3836 DIXIE HWY. I AM. TO S P.M. EVERT DAY SATA. 0-6. SUNS. 1A4 FE 3-7033 Plenty of Free Parking On Our Lot sale, large 3 door Tinting and Off'— ... i Frank At. ; mIngham. MI 6-tClO around c lachinea. Next to Pontiac SUto Bank] APARTMENT SIZE OAS RANGES 3 humor. 66S.0S value 140.08. scratched. Several full else range) in electric and gas at terrlfU ROOF LEAKS? Call ydhr Advisor for a Ires estimate. gave % on the test. FE I controls, fully TALL SHOWERS COMPLETE With faucets and curtain SOS,SO value 034.60. Lavatories compete with faucets 114.06, toilets 111.60. Michigan Fluorescent, Ml Orchard Lk. Ave. — if. [an Fluorescent. 1 Rd° — LARGE CRIB AND MATTRESS! AMERICAN STANDARD OIL ________________________ braid new. SIS M. Pearson’s Fur- fired boiler. Slightly need. LI 4x8 panel*. .... T Orchard Lake Ave. 8-76*2 *-------- «j Special Paneling Offer * 4x1 panelx *4" mahocanv _ V-groove. D grade 44.00 each 4x* cabinet style eewlns This one does every think attachements. Just dial the stitch. ~—i payments of Si. per I - -l.-' — “ Capitol. . ALUMINUM SID in O Installed or In stock Awnings Storms. Stone S money Sewn Sehttr ‘ - total 407 so raUaSST. JOE OL Mitt For highest quality guaranteed Insured work at rock bottom modernisation SALE ON and used furniture and appl*1 DOUO'S FURNITURE 1210 Baldwin „ _ »-«»» Wo buy. sell and trade ovuro, COMPLETE furniture. FE Mill. N\^th free1”MO^volt^Kdricfn hook- BATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL ........r*”Ar?r^! V^rVster. ANCHOR FENCES BEDROOM SUITE OR 3-3388 •groove, d trade . panels. Vs" mahos—j •groove prcllnlshed *7.00 Oak Flooring No. 3 Shorts ...... * 06 M BENSON LUMBER CO. Pontleo_________ FE 4-3521 Sale Musical Goods 71 CARNIVAL ADDING MACHINES. PROM *H CASH REGISTERS PROM 846 PONTIAC CASH REOI8TER m S, SAOINAW FB MS01 aMt.lMEEi*TUiE>afriiki and adding machksee. Rebuilt and guaranteed. 1 Corona pOfSkbie, $17.60, 1 ftasstafton Standard, (ITJO. 3 L c. smiths. tSMO sa. 3 Roysh. 13100 sn. 1 Remington noisiesa 133.00 shs 40 man to pick from. CaULI 0-3*44 or come to MM Torba Linda Dr. 1 block north NEW NATIONAL CASE RBO liters from (14S up- Hew Notional adding machines from ISP up. The only factory authorised branch offlcee In Oakland and Macomb county when you can buy new or factory rebuilt cash resistors. The National CUR Bag-inter Co.. Ml W. Huron. Pontiac, PS 1-03*6. 31 8. Gratiot, Mt. Clement, Howard 3-4HB. New a used office machines Typewriters. 114.H up: adding machines. *62.60 up: comptom-eters. *74.46 up: dedicators, *80.60 up: photocopy machines, I.'tMji to: dictating machines. *168.66 up. oeneral Printing A Office Supply. II W*m Lawrence St., Pontiac. FE MIM. SECRETARIAL STEEL DESK, matching upholstered chair*, plus —.—- chair*, tf- only two M BUSINESS DESKS - I File cabineta, SIS. Bargain House 103 N. By Mdk Turner Boats A AccessoHee 97j WEMtini Ussd Cy» 1W [ , Pf SeIe Cepe1 106 A FT. CHRI8CRAFT. UTIL ITT , WE BUY AND TRADE OOOD FISCHFR ' type speedboat. 12 years old 01 CLEAN CARS AND TRUCES ri-7V.nr.lt nr perfect cond. $1000. 19911Economy Cars_____33 Auburn j rum Clubvlew Dr.. Square Lk. FE I CASH BUICK ->PL—_____________________I To« wo* css MS S. WOODWARD AYE. . 1 FT. THOMPSON. CABIN CRU1S- I ,, JOVK BIRMINGHAM #r. M EJP Johnson, motor, trail- PoutlflQ AutO Brokers MI 4-0100 - • JO ASMS mSTLSm?* **-**n I 13S0 N. PERRY AT MADISON '67 EttlCf CWWS# ’OWVKIk'ft FE 4-9100 I. Wfr n.rr” 1 CAN’T * fi Tivate PE VISIT. I LOADED. SLEEPS —— , I LISTS S4.M7 NOW. HU* WILL mam; - MAZUREK MOTORS & MARINE SALES ! | FRANCHISED OWENS DEALER { 1 Saginaw at South Blvd. [ IT INBOARD. NEEDS BOTTOM. Oryy Mario# eotine, cheap. MY ! •17 tl kdfcSXPOWnftk ELGIN 1111 HI HMl^ ! Bargain Clearance I SCOTT MOTORS AND SERVICE CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES S3 E. Walton, Open. M, FE S-44Q3 BOAT INSURANCE. ONLY II 00 per i 1101. Ruson Ins. Agency. Ft HELP IT! I NERD CLEAN USED CARS QUALITY MOTORS NO ORCHARD LAKE FE 3-7* OR -JOHN LIBERTINE 1064 BUICK SPECIAL, sedan, good condition. Harris, FR 5-3766. ’95 BUICK. 4-DOOR. HT., POLL equipment. EM 3-dttl. Canway. i-iMi i itnatMXjWn to1 f6br 6m. ~ trr , FS. and P B P.AH, Onglnel ‘ owner. Oood I EL 6-1468. r, Drayton Plall SASHABAW TOP DOLLAR I for '66 to ‘66 models — tow mile-] age core wanted for out stole 1 4*h" J. VAN WELT 4640 Dixie Hwy. F>. OH 3-13S6 I ' H’.OH | FOR LATE MODEL _ Elsworth A BsotHs MA 1-1440 I — FORD DEALER -» \ A-i used car MMpptaf canter '57 BUICK 2 DOOR HARDTOP $?95 'Gy' Owens 430 OAKLAND AVKNUE ' ' Cm H W rtV/M- Calei 1_________ BOAT. Tl neMara. uaam.itRM “You young people are taking over every place these days—Turkey, Korea, Japan, and now in my den! ” For Sale Pets Sale House Trailers Sale Store Equipment 73 skluro our m canaries. ALL! Oxford Trailer Sales - ff _ . „ .-^r! WHERE QUALITY COMES FIRST Tlpilco Lake__■>>«>. 51 oenr ^iTor BTau™" ^KtSeU “bS^to." SSSuor^ u^”aUt*sisiS00l 24-HR. PROP. REPAIR T^,^!M•^rimm1SBntU^^,^& | -U* *jf Uk. Orton an MM. | Frra Check Uo JEROME "Bright Spot" Sals Sporting Poods 74 COMPLETS SKIN DIVIHO outfit. *Shl __________________________ OUNS - BUT. SELL, TRAOC Mantov’Loach. IS Rnflay. OUN RIPAIR AND SCOPE MOUNT-lng. Shot guns and rifles SIS up. Burr-Shell. 375 8. Telegraph. FE 1-47M.________________________ ____________ _________trailer. iHlhMtt....... WANTED T& BUY: OLD OUNS. Hunting Accom'tions 74A Tallwagger Kennels, training, trimming. B----- _ Poodle stud sorvtoo. OL 1-OOS4. Hunting Dogs 81 BRITTANIES. AKC. . After t, FE S-03S1 _____ I____________sixes. mile S. of Lake Orton an M24 ____ ______ MY MUI. \_______ __________ _ Newkirk's Boat a Prop Service WHERE QUALITY POMES FIRST I 21M Cacs Like Roed KsegO FOR RENT. 16 FT. VACATION | haRTLAND BOAT STORAOE. 11134 traitor. OR 3-4747 ^ __. j CTyde Rd EM 3-3075 Used Auto Parts 102 ondltlon Solid turquoise finish. Crissman ROCHESTER OPEN EVES. 'TIL 0 OL 1-S721 1. AND FORDO- : 1*55 CHEVROLET SEDAN. HEiTBR Mtr. and Dyne- ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Hay, Grain and Food 82 all TYPES OF 1ST a JND cut-ting Hay. W1U deliver. OA *-217* CORN COT BEEF FOR SALE OA s-ans- ______________________I HAT AND STRAW. 1 BALE OR | AND MOTORS 1 SIZES BOATS For Sale Livestock 83 Bait, Mhmovrs. Etc. 78 CRICKETS, 3* FOR 16c; CRAWL-! I OOOD YOUNO PONIES ^ foa?*fspotted "mares/i'and S yr. la foal, braka to driv*. 1 black geldings, broke end gentle. One * — Id registered swd. Sorrell, ane and toll. Larlgo breod-I priced for quick sale. Bar 10406 Pontiac Lake Rd. llgjit t MM ai_?RJJ»»l_ Sand, Gravel and Dirt 76' _ BLACK TENNESSEE WALK I N G j y SERVICE CLEARANCE S“5s-"sS“., &"■ n:»»»“», 31»c'wdaHuro?OSed 8UDdFE'4-#743 *LL TYPES ASSIZES SAVE $1,000 !» “ jt-JCiLLJ I BEDROOM ... 14,706 PULL PRICE 66*5 DOWN J AT THIS PRICE STOCK NOT 033. 034 THIS WEEK ONLY!! Bob Hutchinson Mobile Homes Sales 430i Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains 4 mi. n: of Pontiac OR 3-1303 Open i Days a Week_ VACATION TRAILERS Pixie Trailer Sale* and Rental, 1046 North Lapeer Rd.. Oxford, ms s-jiti. '14 CHEVROLET STATION WAO-I ON * CTL. AUTO. TRANS . : NEW CONDITION. ONLY For Sale Trucks 103' L Pontiac Trail'. HARRINGTON BOATS YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER J EASY PAYMENT8 AVAILABLE | l»0t S TELEORAFH FE 3-S033 LOOK! vs Fley-A-Pnn Wax 11098 NO# *1425 Sun-A-Pon Was |706 NOW $600 I Bel-AIre Cabin Craft 1 Wss $1705 NOW 11360 cheap. Will deliver. Thor ( trading Co.. Inc. MA 5-9693. 1-A FIAT MOSS. DELIVER $1 ___1 Hampshire______ Brook Form*, 3030 Pontlsc 1 Call Wes Wendorf, PS 8- 16«i_ “ ! REGISTERED AMERICAN SAD- VACATION TRAILERS j ''15 new Traller-BIacer, Apache Campers. Sato or rent. Car top carriers. Make reservations now. F. K. Howland, OR 3-1466. Rent Trailer Space 20% OFF ON BOATS, MOTORS, TRAILERS. SPQRTINO GOODS. MOST | SUMMER ITEMS. MX ^ ; svvssi s.—■ ------ ^ SPORTSMEN’S ! k^J512Rf^JU*IP8HI,lB RAM' I BRAND NEW SPACES. PONTIAC ' „TI 1 ISO. FB 8-4004---------I Mobut Home Park. FE 6-0003. j 0 “S74 .week “mV* 2-4611 OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR I p LAKE ORION FT. LONE STAR MALIBU A-l PSAT HUMUS. 8TAT1T1STED SOW8 AND 1 WK. OLD KOS *1.76 yd. for 7 yd. toM 11.50 yd SflR. *!“•”' 1JU C ,d I uiuse woo iw -o. u.».. , for 14 yd. load. BUI View Perm, Highland.--------------------__ loU. Ii'x4(r cement patios 3*0 Baldwin Rd.. MT 2-3471 or SMALL SPOTTED MARE. 10 YR8. one mile east ol Oxford on MY 3-1143. -----------— m - i ----------------------------- STHWER AND DRAIN SUPPLIES A.t SHREDDED FEAT HUMUS . SEWER PIPE and black dirt. Loaded and de-1 • plain pip* ■ ....... t .M ft. j Uvered 1 days a week. Also fill j * sIlpeCM pipe : ....* .48 ft. sand, top soli. SOS Lochaven. FE , '. sllpseal pip* I >70 ft. I s-lttl. sllpscal pig mjnnt h children. Colt a vUle road. OA 6-30i OVER 50 USED TV SETb FROM! ,lec*^supplUi M4 *6 « ^tntomton M O*. ! Mttm*. Tow: WALTON TV Faint. Super Kemtone Brother LARGER SIZES 1 ----let# stock o_ DRAIN TILE thru 24" to to|| Die CSC It etcam I Complete stock of fittings A-l TOP BOIL CRUSHED STONEV ] ! Sand, gravel, ful Lyle Conklin. FE mil or FE 3-6673. | i AL'S BLACK DIRT TOP SOIL. | | ftH .snd manure Also complete : i - >. « ^ tree removal apd Sale Farm Produce 86 GOLD CUP CORN I' (OOOD FOR FREEZING) Tomatoes I Oood for canning) | $1.25 PER BUSHEL | For Sale Tires 1875, I A-t USED TIRES $3 60 UP. WE| strake surf rider. 8 ft buy. sell. Also whitewalls. i - - I STATE TIRE SALES 603 S. Saginaw St. tf 4-4667 j LOOK1 750x14 BLACK TIRES. ALL | e with shocks and j RECORD CABINETS | BULMAN HARDWARE BEAUTIFUL \ 13646 ELIZABETH_ LK ™ MAHOGANY FINISH Regulsflv EMM NOW $12.90 — SIMM S 3* 8. SAOINAW Dally 3 to *; Sot. IS to * FE M»3» S1NOHR PORTABLE and rsverse stitch. *38.50. Curts \ApoL FE M04S. SCHU-LBR UrtBOHT F1AI4.0 Oood condition. Perfect tont. *4(). MYl-lW, _____________J-. sinolE fcEi>.‘ coil simiNOs and mattress, to.7* *-1733 aft. 6 30 sfNOER SEWING MACHINE. ZIO-r.agger E “s-* *uJ nltque. *98.46 OPEN DAILY TIL i: SDN- M BARGAINS 4i|t« in. V-grooved mab.. (4 1x12 sheeting 1*6 per m. Panrlyte counter taming 45* *< 34 cal. hot water neater. $47 Free*eet*TBUta lit.M with tt* Open sun. 10-3 I blond dgop leaf i ,bo peOd <0 per ___________.al Co. FE 4-OiO*. SPECIAL 0x13 RUOS. IM.ta. Me- — SELLING OUT - ENTIRB STOCK OF MERCHANDISE WUX BE SOLD BELOW COST _ 8YES'S FAINT * LINOLEUM 141 W, HURON________ra 4-301 -- . Bbl6n>— Wheethorse Tractors and TUlcrs Power snd ace very iow__»t; rM10_ mowers. Jacobsen. Yardman and Toro, s models of riding mowers. Selection of used equipment v*e sorvtoo what w* sou. Evans equipment *607 Dixie Hwy. MApIo *-TS7* Exterior She*thing, txl' .. $3.35 ea. * AND PORK - HALF AND triers Opdyk* Mkt, FE 6-7N1. Blacktop Drivevriy~ sd repairs? save %_*o taa it. Call your Advltor. FE MtM CASH WAY STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS Sc 4x6x)4 Pegboard ..... *3 9* d.L TILE AND LINOLEUM . J* WHOLESALE ft plnrr inside-or outhde I3.M 1ST OAL -le IND OAL. Vinyl,9,12ft. ....59c yd. mril’ttoalewe ^Rags ... V (Lta fifiS Pegboard Plastic Wall TUe ..... I* 2? Plasterboard . Ea vest rough and Gutter t ft. nc Asphalt TUt *3.5*crtn Linoleum WoU Tile _. "SUYLO" OUTLET | TILE OUTLET 1M g SAOINA W_______FE S-14M TAFPAN OAS RANOE FOR BAUB. *3*. OR 3-OT73.__________ TPLaDR OAS RANOE FOR ELEC- wTrata"R B M-------"—**• Co., ISM W. Huron. ____ READY MADE. aU slsei. Sato ah block, door sdl*. chimney capo Pontiac Fre-Osst St«^> CO.. 44 W. Sheffield. FE Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY 7*46 Cooley Lake Rd. KM Ml Open * n.m. to I p m. dally ! Kndav IS a.m. to 1 p m. HAMM TOk '4S TO *H MO . Royal Auto Paris. 1130 1 Used Trade-In Dept. Buffet ............ *H-» Chinn ..........•••• «}* Os? Range ........ H j? Davenport fe Choir . JJ" Vanity chest S Bod JgJJ RCA TV Consols, 11” Mahog. 113* 60 THOMAS ECONOMY m s stshmw n mu USED REPRIOKRATOR. 176 ANI sutomstlc wsshor. SIS. FE *• 033 East WSiton,______ USKD~TVS III.** AND UF. COL-ored 3V.'RCA, *375. ** dlo and Appl., 411 W. Huron. FE 4-ini. _________ WYMAN’S used tb adein tmrr OAS Wim HEATER......" REBUILT WASHER .....Mitt 1 PC. UPH. SUITE ...S1* *S METAL MBPS ...... MUSIC CABINET SS»T^5»n»Bs n V,a PIKE ONI WHIRLPOOL AUTO. WASHER ttClfo ra. ~ HiFt> TV and Radios 66 Royal Ante Paris, tens. Pontiac. as *OV H 671 A M... decorating problem 7 Hundreds of colors to choose from. Interior or exterior. Boo _eur “wall paper and matching fabric selection. Betty Bro*. Jelled MogW tofrtP ^OAKLAND FUEL * PAINT M Orchsrd Lake Ave. FE MU* DOUBLE SINK. COMPLETE 130.90. ---- *?ap A ffadr — “"* im supply. I Price* only factory COStlV*. Michigan Fluorescent. IP} Orchard Si.“star...............».». »-in. hard copper _ _ 20-ln. lengths ........Me ft. lii? I* Su ............to. a ■ mM Factory lnd» - Irregulars SAVE PLUMBING 8UPPLY m a snHtanw Water Softonsrs 66A USED WATEB SOFTENER BAR- gab). CtH FE MIN. _____ water Softener rental. Sals* a Service. RJB. Munro Kleo trie Co., INS W. Huron, rn 6-0431 Fur Salt Ij •/♦ BAO CEMENT -JunUBt. FE MW tand. 71c yd. tail dirt, 30c yd. I. tty 11*0 yd American Stone I s. 4339 Si .. Clarks- 15" with 2 holes ... 44.60 eo. I IS" with 2 holes . .. (*.W ea. x C.l. manhole covers and grates. BLAYLOCK Coal A Building SupplyCo. ! ---------- II Orchard Lake Ave. f* 3-7101 --------- SINGE It ^SBWINO MACHINE VDK BW« D»T OR FEAT. - Standard model, still under . pr?gSL '“iiil'Lj11 Jb**44____ warranty. Fay oil f payments of BLACK DIRT, BROKEN CONCRETE 68to mt monte or Of, f cash. UnV------ Milford, Mich, tl miles West of Pontiac. Hours * i s. to 6 p.m. everydoy "si yii. 'ieach ! pears AND TOMATOES. *601 t'.»VT?f peclil 116.30 plus las and exchange. State Tire Sales, 603 8. Saginaw.. _ PR «-4667 nr FE 4-460S. _ STANDARD BRAND NEW TIRES. 1 1500 p with d capactl miversal Co. FE <-0006. AT OAKLAND] Up to 66 per cent Off, S ■s always. Also | whliewsllt. SPECIALS! 1. FS 4-3371. CHOICE FARM TOP SOIL. — oil wnds 614 yard*. MS, de-llvsred, FE 4-4641 also, loading. . GRAVEL. SAi^D. FILL DIRT AND Many Other Bargali And Used Building FREE ESTIMATES , FHA TERMS SURPLUS LUMBER & MATERIAL SALES' CO. 1348 Highland Rd. (M-tal OR 3-7f*l , GRAVEL, SAND & TOP SOIL, EACH Processed rock. FE 4-3817. STEEL ORAVEL SAND. STONE. FILL ■ wp_ soil. peat. New EM 3-31*4. EM 3 CRUSHED STONE. SAND. ORAV-1 3. Earl Reward, EM 3-0631. LOADINQ DAILY FILL DIRT 30c a yard and fill sand 40c a yard. Beardsle* Sand Fit, Square Lake Rd. Will deliver. ULS-3MS. UL THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE Everything to moot your needs. Clothing Furniture Appliance# 118 WEST LAWRENCE TABOTT 3UM BER Water proofing for basements. B P S. paint, tut** Installed, wood sash <5 aU sites, full tine of lumber. Reasonable price*. 1016 Oakland Arc, PE 64606. TAKE A LOOK AT THEBE PRICES! time. Cheek 1 PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-— nd, gravel ndkto —du|J trucking S ,____ GRADING; __ ____ TUI - gravel, etc. FE 6-3661. Wood, Coal and Fuel 77 early apples. Stoat Commerce Rd. QnO BlJle east of Milford. tomatoes: PICK THE CREAM of the crop for early cMHltns. p II.50 bushel. Bring baskets. 3640 j Olddlnss Rd. FI HM4 _____ FLUMsT 3H MILES NORTH OF i Clarkston. At roadside, ff-15. | Sale Farni Equipment 87' A REAL OOOD SELECTION OF iirdra tr»ctor». Roto Tlllort ud lawn mow or s. ! HOUGHTEN & SON s IS N. Main, Rochester, OL I-S7S1 j FREE LUBE CLEARANCE SALE i equipment. I USED EQUIPMENT Small riding —" ‘ ED WILLIAMS 481 8. Ssglnaw at Raeburn OOOD USED TIRES ' KUHN AUTO SERVICE Rink Motors 4455 Highland Road 1394 down BIRMINOH.— WOODWARD. J____ TONY’S MARINE For Evlnrude motors. 24 yea repair experience 7**5 Ore ha Lake Rd- FE g-0113. SAVE $$$$ Big discounts on quality Boats—Motors—Traitors All klsds — All *!*«« Easy budget terms Oakland Marine Exch. "Outboard Specialists" HEAVY DUTY TRUCKS i 7 New '60 Ford t F750s and F800s PRICE? I They Have j To Go, MAKE US xAN OFER x^FW AND USED TRUCKS IN STOCK Ask for Truck Dept. FE 5-4101 130 Oskltnd Avenue - Pontlse | Close-Out Sale DEMOS AND CO, CARS from h $1695 Harold Turner, Inc. 464 S. Woodward | MI 4-7500 JO 4-6266 67 CHEVY 4 OR. POTTER GLIDE. 8 cyl. Block. FE 6-0641 ’57 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR $895 'Cy' Owens 430 OAKLAND AVENUE ______8 1-3419. IMP ALA, HARDTOP, BLACK] 136 H P . 4 spoodbog. tri-power, 156 ryar end. radio end heater. ’56 CHEVROLET NEW CONDITION PICKUP I foot hot. side carrier mounti Crissman ___j. Power steering snd'bi Extra clesa. Stock No. 14*3 wmy 61*46. NORTH CHEVROLET CO - WOODWARD. BIRMING- S tractors A”4®!!111' PRICED TO SELL OUBDIT TERMS . FE 4-0734 FE 4-U13 KING BROS. Pontiac rd. at opdtke hew " AND' REBUILT GRAIN drills and corn pickers, Davto Mchy. Ph. NA 7-3303 OrtonvlBe. Auction Sihi AT AUCTION. THURS.. SEPT. -* ' 61 Elmwood Al — Leonard. The remoin- i furnishings of Nettto Village o tag M Mortross Estate. Mostly * Items, Some antiques. Into resit but not a large utaA4 S3 50 . any ai * label automatic transmls- Brako adjustment ......... Carburetor cleaned and OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES 394 Orchard Lake Av*. FE 3-4030______ THE ONE AND ONLY 100% Boat Repairs NEWKIRK'S BOaV SRP*0F SERV. r. OA 0-2100. J. i transmission ji This offer goad only Aug. 26 Sept. 8, 19W. OR 4-0301 for appointment CRANKSHAFT ORINDINO IN T cor. Cylinders rebored Zuck 1 chine Shop. 13 Hood. Phone X JS-2563. Auto Service 1C^y / n o | -*^1— TRnr-r UART NO CASH TRUCK MART j » TON MACK 13 TARD DUMP IN EiEsL/ILU box. KM 3-4*71 — ___ _ H l____________________ Arnold aselotlng OA S-1314. 4{"i4'ii' A-D Stop : 6 sits ! ■"wood, j'owd. >17 Del. FE 6-6131. i no AUCTIONS FOR SMITH MOV- »LwS' WORK BENCHES AND PICNIC . A D,8 auction Mailing tneK) Brakes rclined. , ------------------------- 10th st lylers -------- and huriap, 2»32_Sleeth road. | Community bales, Lake go harbor ___________ ~ ‘ Orion.\ | iranmhaft-camshaft obind- WEST BEND MOTORS ! Clearance Sale; I Big Discount ON ALL • •taHj Boats- 6c Motors SCHRAM TRUCKS AND EQUIPMENT 363* Diglo Hwy. OB 3-130* 1*50 DODGE PICK Up 4k TON,' 4-speed transmission. SITS. V. Harris. FB Mitt. BEFORE YOU BUY A NEW OT. used truck get our price. Ack for i —" 1ept. FE 6-4101, Cv Owens. I ."PICK-UP.' 1135 FS ! FOR SALE r53 OMC PICKUF } CASH NEEDED, '40 C ’58 CHEVROLET STATION WAOON $1095 PICKUPS. STAKES AND P BOWMAN !| 'Cy' Owens *30 OAKLAND AVENUE ____ . — bathtubs, $3*. O. . Thoaunon. 7004 Ml* wort. BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR. BY factory expert. CAUUjfUaiC OO. L* N. SAOINAW_____P 6-0333 FLOOR FURNACE WITH CON- trois, EM 2-3764._________ _ FOE SALE ELM AND OAK DECK-lng for low-boy ~ material cut to tsg* GARAGE DOORS Fadtonr saoouds. all stow sixes to stock from .13* end.--Electric door efratcfs. toldim berry door sales <2p*»\frM I to * Cameras ft Equipment 70 Model IS A. Practically brand Fercuselan 6**5 Conn Rhapcody 1* note foot padal *1.600. Koehler S Campbell *41*. Marris Music, 2* a. Telegraph Rd.. across from Tel Huron, FE >-0447. ALTO SAX, Baldwin oroansonic oroan nch. Luxurious blond fln-bsrgsln at 414*4. Plano Tuning - Organ Repair egand Music Cent! AR AREA MIRACLE M PHONE FEdsral 3-40*4 3 USED GRAND PIANOS Spinet organ la walnut, 2 menu tt pedal board*. Practice ptaao MS- Just arrive 4— “t‘“* Hms Factory. 11 Hag fine pianos. Mahogany spinet tor 64** 1* yqj guarantee, terms. OALLAOHER MUSIC CO. Wliom read. Dally I 4-0635._____________ ! Rd. and -6. Mutual 5 AKC DACHSHUNDS AT STUD. Puppies Jamor**, FE S-S62S, AKC^BSOISTKRSD COCKER SPAN- Bun. Furniture, i I SUN7 ' lng. Wohlfetl Dee. 3374 Telegraph , n 3-4147._____________________ >Usatos I . Sale Motor Scooters 94 i 1-7. SELECTION OF USED MOT AND USED BOATS j(EC WEIMARANXR. REASONABLB FE 4-2041 Of FR 4-7302. AKC ENOLUR' SPIUNOER 8PAN- _ CUSHMAN EAOLE. OOOD CON- j dltlon. OR 3-0063, call evenings. 195* CUSHMAN EAGLE, *390. OR j WATCH FOR OUR AD THRUSDAY Open Dally 0-4 tor Rotatt i Purchasing R & B AUCTION 90*0 DIXIE HIOHWAY .................... Across from | oond. Many access. EL #-6735 DRAYTON EHOFFIMO CENTER , ;j< MOTOR SCOOTER, For Sale House Trailers 89 i - - ^----- I 3-7334. ___________________ | 1995' CUSHMAN SCOOTER OOOD. BEAGLES 3 male beagles, 1-314 yrs.. 2-114 yrs. old. AU sired by Int. Fd. Ch. Wlllclllf Bannister. Oood Field Trial prospects. AK.C. jtel OR 3-0151. Trial given. BOSTON STUD, CH. STOCK* CURT-iss, oa tests. _______■ DACHSHUND, MALE. APPROX * Isos. old. Hack and f— shots. No papers bdog. I HAS MAD 6t OF BOS I3FFER SONOO 'druiu ___ ■ ■ JERINO ALL SHAPES AND SIZES AT TML MENDOU8 REDUCTIONS. 9. RAH. KM 3-8081, S. Cenwsy AVERILL'S Need sharp late model* for Calif, market. TOP DOLLAR 3030 Dixie Hwy. *E 2-007*___FE 4-6*9* ''DEMOS'' Travel Trailer Since 1*13. Guaranteed tor Ufa. Bee teem and get1 --------ratten at Warner Trailer . I W. Hurra. (Flan to > of Wally Byitm's exelt- 13 TT. HOuSBSrAILKRB—»7H Goodell Trailer Sales Jacobson’s Trailer, Sales and Rentals Ya-Ka-Shun-Etta, smallest self sratelned ttavtl trailer on tea market. Tretwoed. MarKlaq, new "Frank" and Teur-A-Home.Jera: ■■■■a service, httebra and overloads to-tatatod OmnjrteM book-up. Don’* trailers, eur specialty. Paris t LET US BELL YOUR TRAVEL trailer er Mobile tome tor yea. We have gsmeral buyers waiting far everytelng from IS ft, la IS ft. HOLLY flUWS a COACH' BALES. 11310 Holly Rd.. Roily. i TRUCK OOJHO NORTH PART M TRIUMPH MOTORCYCLES, lead either way, FE 6-6006 . » ‘W" ‘ •«*2-03021 Wanted Used Cws 101 ATTENTION | WE RE PAYING TOP $$$ DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS | Glenn’s Motor Sales 062 W, Hurra St. / FE 4-7371 DEPENDABLE USED CARS HARDENBURO MOTOR SALES Caa> bt PUe FE *-730*' AB MUCH AS W FOR jTUIOI AND Harley Pandora SAlae A Berries ! WANTED: 21* dc. 2 CTLK USED motorcycle engloe. OR 2-2213. For Sale Bicycles 96 USED BICYCLES. 46 A UP. NEW "'* i, 624.06 A up. Over 10* to to mm. Scarlett's Etta and IT Shop, IS E. Lawrence, BttU ind Accessories 97 7V4 H ELGIN. VERY FEW HOURS tlOO till Maybee Rd . PonUsc 13 TT. WINDSHIELD, STEERING and controls with IS b.p. Johnson Traitor end sktls Included 130*. FeTMHO afteTT p.m_________ 14 Tf. mnaLAM BPBKD-Quedn. fully equipped. 25 R.P. Electric starter, trailer. FE 4-3131 i4 ri. boat rM .k V'wm. Coatrws. Oood e— "**•"* . FI 3-2446 daya i TOP PON' BUCK-JUNK CAR. TRUCK. >NTIAC WA8TK RUNABOUT BOAT *44. MAR-tin engine, ttt. FE S-W43. | IS' CRUISER. NEW LAST SPRING, with tr whbeut 4* HP Mercury 14’ runskeut, IM*. 34 H P. Oliver, 4*18 OR 3-4374 between 4 44 end 221 i ARE YOU OETTINO THE MOST FOR YOUR CART — WE BUY — — TRADE DOWN — — TRADE UP — don't Take ant deal UNTIL YOU'VE BEEN TO LLOYD MOTOR SALES, 6440 cherry hill road | 1960 Pontiac Bonneville SiSF^wivs I CONVKRTIBLg, Fewer steering rad HU 3*4779 Call Collect wo 3-3474 | an295. ---- —meets of *U month. THR EfONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 2R, I960 Dodge Dart _____________$47.43 PER MONTH MArkot *-3r* urn J DELIVERED UN ALL STANDARD PR Equipment plus FEDERAL TAX. SALES Just Make Payments *M CHEV.. 3-DR.. HN Pay only lit mo. Due Oct I Rite Auto. Mr Bell. PE MtM ill East Blvd. at Auburn , iisTcHEVROuer wagon, radio - HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO wr lr“ *------------- 'f RB p iume pay ^JlCrtdlt M Dill repossession IMS Chevrolet 2 door, beautiful green and whit* finish. Full price MM. only *27 month No cash needed. First payment due October 8th. Ring Mr Bing. FE s-1001. Lucky Auto Sales. 113 S Saginaw. _ ALL STANDARD FACTORY £-------- AlU8 HEATER _______ _ SALES TAX. LICENSE. TITLE AND CREDIT 1 LunTmoRAKCR- ' . . | John I. Smith DODGE, INC. 211 8 SAGINAW FT 1-708* j 1953 DODGE. RADIO, i HEATER, excellent condition, full price IBS. . Assume payments of IS month. | Call Credit Mgr., Mr. White. PE i 8-0402 King Auto Salts, IIS 8, Saginaw. t 54DODOE PICKUP TRUCK. 'M ! j Cher. 2 door. '56 Pontiac hardtop. 1. OR , -■'■■■■'_ . I ! '60 DART D-500 STICK, SPECIAL I trana and rear end. Call after I 5:30. FE 8-1430._ '52 FORD WITH '*1 CHEV. EN- '59 FORD COUNTRY 8 ED AN ' $1995 'Cy' Owens 831 OAKLAND AVENUE PE 5-4111 __ *57 FORD PAIR LANS Ml. 4 "DR. HARDTOP. FACTORY 2 ^Tooe eertng! SALES. TIZZY 4-door, Savoy. ' 1225. REPOSSESSION 1951 Ford hardtop Fairlaao 580. no rust. ITuU price *1,8*8. Take --- small monthly payments. C A1312 a „ WAGON. CLEAN AUTO ___owner. Ml 1-1023. "ford, fairlane club coupe, bargstn. EM 3-0011. S. Conway. - , 1956 FORD WAGON. MA 5-1859 luma j un. n a __________Rebuilt ’*7 T Bird engine Tri-Power. EM SAMS, ’51 FORD OALAXIE H.T.. »1M8. Call after 4:30, 64M Waldon Rd.. Clarkston. ■5* CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 DR., «T J /-\T TfN '« «»D st. fe van. (Alreas From Huron Theater'_ MOTOR SALES •'i~CS®VIE. S PASSENGER 8TA- 232 8 SAOINAW _. XE J'*Ul Non wagon take alder car fwljjgg CHEVROLET BEL AIR V-, ,»,»«. .aw. I .«K55 »acuity. PL 2-I1SL_____I door sedan. V-t. engine. Power-1 _ MA HIM ___ i* 1«r*4aCOttntrjr *““«•rBmvROt^ I’M FORD. STAfSif WAGON. CON- *?VtreHrr froo s^wHardR0^in^ ! 11” FE 4-J08. WAGON _.O.M. CLEARANCE "PRICES SLASHED" 59 Slmca station wagon. HAM. MI 4-2735: tut CHEVROLET. HEATER. AB-,_ ____■___! TOLOTILY NO MONEY DOWN igjg cheVY IMPALA CONVERTI-LmMM|MMMuUnal *“' *-** A-l throughout *’* u.i.wi. paymsnts of HIM per) „„ I. Can Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks; r( Ml 4-7m. Harold TurnerI-------- i Heights ’57 CHEVY 2-DR. $595 __l MY 2-1117. 59 CHEVROLET PARKWOOD STATION WAOON A spacious 1 passenger, luxuriously appointed wagon with Y8 en- sldcr trade. EM 3-0081. 8. Conway, j Was $118? FOR SALE: I860 FORD FALCON I '55 Old's super 88, * -'- deluxe. Call FE 4-2138. I Was I8M —— " ‘54 Cadillac coupe. Was 1895 Fold. 1958 Country Sedan Mr. j 2} Mercury, 4 I7M By Kite Omuui For SbU Cor* 106 Just Make Payments ’ll Foottae, hft ■ 3* East Med, nl Anbwrn 'ij-PONTIAC BOMNiVILLB CON-vorLKsd and wMU beauty, jew ■sltokea. FE 5-8315 after, j. SALES 111 k.|MBSt^.^ guaranteed 1 OWNER CARS ____ 1854 CadUteC HTfUllpwr |M5 1854 Lincoln CMUt. ttkonew 9595 1M7 PlymouthV-8, RAH .... MSS Pontiac HT, Sharp!! .... 1855 Ford • pass, win....-M 1884 Pontiac 4 dr. station wgn. 821 cHoici or » mobecars Superior Auto Sales 55Q OAKLAND „ PONTIAC < vertlble. Fowl. „ brakes. Corrotto floor „. ^ 81885. FE 4-2554 3m jE E 4-2554 or OR - -. sutomstlc transmission, radio j Was M45 and heater. Surf Blue. A sharp | 54 PonUxc Starehlef. 4 door. Birmingham trade. $1905 ‘ * “ N() CASH NEEDED j ONLY *31 PER MONTH , Rite Auto. Mr. Rell FE M»3» > \ ito E. Blvd. at Auburn j dow. 'iM^ioild* turquoise finish ] set off by gleaming, white-wall. tires. Like new condition Inside , 1 and out. The best texture is the wagon. Power steering and brakes. Chrom luggage carrier. Stock No. 1*7* Only *11*6 NORTH CHEVROLET CO M00 . S. WOODWARD. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-2735. *r‘M ‘ ‘ $20^5 ' Crissman , ■ SHEP'S ROCHESTER j OPEN EVES. ‘TIL * OL 2-1721 MOTOR SALES 1880 CHEV! IMPALA 2-DR HT- j 258 h.p. engine, power steering. \ r. standard transmission $2.3*5.00 or Ml PONTIAC B vllle Convert. 123*5 ’51 FORD F-Lane 3-Dr.' 500 810*4! •57 CHEVY Wagon 4-door ....*1884' '5* OLDS 4-door Super 1* ....* 7*4 <68 FORD F-Lane 4-door —S 544 '55 FORD 2-door .. *1*4 •M PONTIAC 4-Dr. 8eden ... 8 584 take over payments at 184.48 mo. -for 38 moa. Call Dick. FE 2-8*38. I ' EXTRA CLEAN '58 CHEVROLET 1 1153 CHRYSLER. RADIO A HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY TJ CHEVY B-Alr T-top 8 5*4 '55 FONTIAC S-Chlef H-T ...» 8*4 54 CHEVY B-Alr 4-Door ....*484 '54 PONTIAC 4-door sedan *1*4 '53 CHEVY B-Alr 4-door ... .» *84 '53 FORD 2-door * 114 DOWN. Assume payments of 18.85 -per mo. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. ! Parks st Ml 4-7500, Harold Turn- i or Ford. ■53 CHRYSLER NET* YORKER, i *185 FE 8-885*. ! 1 Shep’s Motor Sales 5 EAST BLVD. FE 8-4307 uBTchevrolet STATION WAO-; on VI. Powerglide, power brakes, very elaaa. 578 Shoreview off W. Huron. WHITE 1**8 CORVAIR 4-DOOR ! sports sedan with lass than 4.808 , miles. O.M. executive has beenij assigned a company courtesy l car. no need for present automobile. Automatic transmission. This car Is like brand new. tl.850 OR WHARF 1 OWNER IN* CHEVRO-. lei 218, 4 Dr.. Powerglide. RAH. new white wall ttrea. FE 5-4243 1-5811 daytime, or Mutual 4-5821 ' or can he seen 2*85 Wlxom Rd . | near Milford. Transportation! ■OPEN Specials >OR DO-IT-YOURSELF tonight! MECHANICS : 1950 Volks wagon 9 75 mi OWsmoblla S 95 - UNTIL 1 iS54 Oldsmobtle ". 1280 ! 1857 Flymoutn t 88 j 1863 Ford Station Wagon . . *115 • 10 P.M. : Houghten j 210 Orchard Lake Ave. | & Son RENAULT Your Friendly Qldsmoblle Dealer! 528 N Main, Rochester OL M7811 ;'M DE »OTO FIREFLfTE 4-DR ! | ; Dauphine 1 titans one oVner. $795 ‘DEMOS BRAID ONLY^\ . FE^-0186 $99 Dowtl 1*58 DESOTO FI REFUTE. 14*88 now. Full power. Vety very clean.> ' Full price 11.3*8, BIRMINGHAM- ' RAMBLER. 68* S. WOODWARD. 1 MI 63*88 with 36 Months rCHEVS CAR FATMXNT8 TOO BURDEN-i somef Come In and see us and , let us Help you adjust to a lets ■ expensive ear.. nn. DON’S USED CAES 677 MM Lake Orion MY 7-2841 ’$6 2-Door 6 $595 nCTANDARD SHIFT, economy ope-Meplal with tow mileage. i '60 FALCON Bel Air 4-Dr. ...$1845 -"pREfigOUa owners mb* upon AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION 1 RADIO ft HEATER T | DELUXE TRIM. WINDSHIELD WASHERS. TURN INDICATORS ^9-Coupe $ 95 "*YRftHaPORTATI01t Ot lowest pos-"nttblo price. $1850 LARRY I _____engine. FB 2-8097. _____ 1968 FORD, HEATER ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume psy-ments of *11.88 per mo. Cell Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500. Harold Turner ford. 1841 FORD. 2-DOOR IN GOOD condition. Just had recent paint job. $15. MU 4-5821 or can be > seen at 26M Wisom Rd. | •57 FORD CUSTOM 8 2 DOOR. Like new Inside A nut. New WW tires. New brakes. Auto, trnas. RAH, 8718. Pvt. FE 8-2110.________ '53 FORD HT. WW. EEC. COND. OB 3-8881 ------- ' full HARDENBURG MOTOR 8ALE8 Corner Cass and Pike FE 5-7388 1 Open Eves, 'til 8 ! '53 HUDSON, HORNET. CL. CPE. ' very good. KM 3-0081, Conway. *55 HUDSON HORNET HARDTOP, full power, air conditioning. 31.-000 original miles. $895 No money down. BIRMINOHAM-R AMBLER, -------WOODWARD. —------------- “Remember ’way back when the boys used to chase us and we’didn’t like it?” /, LINCOLN 1858 PREMIERE 2-DR herd top A beautiful low mileage one owner Birmingham trade. Full power. You must see this one, Up to thirty months to pay. 11218 futt price. '54 FORD WAOON. OVERDRIVE end power brakes. 888 W. Huron. 1854 FORD VICTORIA 2 DR HARD-top. Radio, heater, excellent condition. No money down, full prli 8181. Assume j»ym(~‘ sf * month. Call Credit RHPRH White, FE 1-0402. King Auto Sales 115 8. Saginaw BOB FROST, INC. LINCOLN-MERCURY MI 6-2200 $425. 1883 Watkins Laka Rd. OR MERCURY. 1158 2-DR. AUTO- matic Transmission, power steering end brakee. Radio and heater. A beautiful light green. One owner. Hurry at IU88. DEMOS AND CO. CARS "V FROM $1695 | Harold Turner, Inc\J 464 S. Woodward MI 4-7500 JO 4-6266 ’53 FORD. VI. 2-DOOR. RdtH. bargain, EM 2-0881, Conway. 1150 FORD 2 DOOR, RAH. FIRST 835 takes It. OR 3-1402. FORD. 1157 2-DOOR. RADIO AND heater, automatic transmission. I months warranty. Thirty months ^ to pay. Hurry at 1885. ’55 MERCURY 2 DOOR HARDTOP Radio A Heater, Automation transmission. $5 DOWN — IS PERsWEEK LLOYD 1958 MERCURY MONTEREY. RA-dlo, heater, excellent condition. No money down, full price 8385. Assume payments of >17 month. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. White. FE 1-0402. King Auto 8ales. IIS 8. Saginaw. •58 OLD8MOBILE SUPER "88” 4 DR. HARDTOP POWER STEERINO A BRAKES BLUE A. WHITE FINISH $788 '"n. VanCamp Chevrolet, Inc. MILFORD MU 4-5228 YlSS OLDS SUPER St SEDAN, ----- Bargain. FB offsr. FE 4-4171. 1954 OLDS. 88. RADIO * HEATER. ABSOLUTELY MO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of $10.08 per mo. Call Credit Mgr., Mr Parks st MI 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford._________________ NICE '58 OLDS. 2 DOOR HARD-top, 11.350. FE 8-8838.________ REPOSSESSION 1158 Plymouth. 4 door. Fun price 1485. Only 827 month. No cosh needed. First payment due Octo-8th. Ring " ___ _______ payments month. Call Credit M... Ml White. PE 8-0482. King Auto and white in color. 888 down4 $27.50 per 1,825. MA 4-3858 NEW PONTIACB AT TREMEN-dous discount. Do not foil to sea us before you buy — Keego- Sales & Service Keego Harbor_________ I East Blvd. _ Pontiacf. .. (I '56 Ford 4-Dr. Wagon J Packard^*'»l£’55.-54 ’56-'51 Volkswagen '58 DoSlo push button '58 Chevy Imps la ■58 Ford-O-Matic '57 Mercury HT •S3 Cadillac HT Manv others. No reasonable pffe refused. Finance no problem ECONOMY CARS. 22 AUBURN 54 FORD. S-DOOR, FAIRLANE. clean and good condition, stand-ard shift, $775. FE 4-9268. 121 | MOOO discount I I960 Statrchief 1858 PLYMOUTH. RADIO. HEAT-er. excellent condition. No money down, full price 1381. Assume payments of 111 month. Call Credit Mgr., Mr. White, PE 1-0402. King Auto sales. 115 A. Saginaw. 1957 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 4 door hardtop. Excellent Mack and white flMslL-Stock No. 13M. Only *795. NORTlFCHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD. BIRMINGHAM MI 4-2735_______________ 1956 PLYMOUTH, HARDTOP. RAD-IO A HEATER. AUTOMATIC. V-8, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of $21.05 per mo. Can Credit Mir. Mr. Parke at MI 4-7580. Harold Turner Ford.______________' ___ . _ H____Will trade. Webb' Auto Sales. FE 8-3883.________ '58 PONTIAC, 1 OWNER' 8 PAB senger station wagon. Exc. cone 8775. FE 4-1459. 1 4 PONTIAC, RADIO A MATER. NO CASH NEEDED 132 month. First payment < Oct. Ith. Ring Mr. Bing, 4-1008, Lucky Auto Bales, B. Saginaw. 1957 PONTIAC, 4 DOOR. J iSziL. MY DADDY SAYS: "It's A Deal With STEELE NO DOWN PAYMENT '55 FORD 2-DOOR HARDTOP Radio and Heater. W/WaUt. All .Vlail Interior. ’58 PLYMOUTH 2 DOOR Fire engine red and grey economy I standard transmission. Radio and hosier. $899 Full price. For 8 North Ferry.,: ■ ; MI 4-1508. WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC CLEAN Birmingham Trades 1350 N. Woodward Blue and V condition. ’56 FORD COUNTRY 8IDAN STATION WAOON 4 Door • Black and White. W Walls. Excellent condition Inside and out. $899 full price. ’57 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN STATION WAOOTf Power steering and brakes. Original factory ebony black finish. Red and white vinyl Interior. ’54 MERCURY 2-DOOR HARDTOP Real sharp black, radio and heater. I3M full price. ’55 NASH 2-DOOR HARDTOP Pull Power. 83M full price. Buy this one today! MY DADDY SAYS: "It’s A Deal With STEELE Eddie Steele — FORD — 2705 Orchard Lake Road —KEEGO HARBOR- 3275 West Huron \ AT ELIZABETH LK. RD. FE 2-2529 FE 5-3177 WHY PAY , FOR OVERHEAD? Our low overhead means you pay less at Shelton’s Rochester. Well make it worth your while to Vdrive those few extra mites. No reasonable offer will be refused. Come and see for yourself., Lake Estates. 1 BIRMINGHAM 'DEMOS." I960 Ambassador VS NO CASH NEEDED 195S Plymouth. door sedan. V8 online Ford-O-Mstic. stock No. IWI. Only MM. NORTH CHEVROLKT CO. i 1080 B. WOODWARD. BIRMINGHAM MI 4-2735 _____ . 1 BRAND NEW. 2^1oor sedan, loaded. ■ YE •3* FORD FOR SALE e tioo. Special ^ 1959 Chevrolet BELAIRE 3-dOOr. $1.5*5. Russ Johnson ________ -.rat pey* October Ith. Ring Mr. ^4-^OOALucky *•“ Sales. 183 i. Saginaw. FORDS JEROME n-j— ROCHESTER FORD DEALER--FOR MORE THAN 35 YEARS -A GOOD PLACE TO BUY- 166 Main St.. Rochester U 1-9711 OPEN EVF.S I Dodge Dart| Motor Sales $1975 1958 PLYMTH 2-DR. . $695 NO CASH NEEDED ONLY 838 PER MONTH lUte Auto. Mr. Boll. FE 8-453* 188 E. Bird, st Auburn LAKE ORION I'Vit.*1/ ! INCLUDES FREE RADIO ! And all standard factory equipment Sales tax and license extre. ] KAMMLER-DALLAS ,1001 N. MAIN ROCHESTER OL 2-8111_ •5* 9$_______ 4-'53 Pontiai SI095 M’ S! Chryi They Must ( ;’54 2-Door ...........$445 , ^A NICE CAR wtltuig lor a proud i'BUICKS 52 Plymouth ft Olds 53 Dodge .............. 44 Cadillac completely OH 54—‘53—'52 Ramblera ECONOMY CARS. 22 AUBURN VALIANT CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES Main 8t.. Clarkston MA 5-5141 LABOR DAY SPECIALS 108. East Bird, at Auburn .~T~7 , I 57 PLYMOUTH. 2 Do6r. SEDAN. M\ 2-2871 MY 2-2381 oieamin* blue ftolsb. now white waits, vkn be bandied with no . money down. TOM BOHR. INC. 120 8 Main, Milford. MU 4-1111 185d' PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP, sparkling red and white finish. Automatic transmission, radio and _______... — Radio and heater. heater, whites. Special! 1 $586 full Hydramattc, W-waJls, A red and | price. No money down. 823E8 per . .t ------------------ | mo. BIRMINGHAM - RAMBLER. I. WOODWARD. MI 8-3800 SPECIALS' I *57 Fontiae Station Wagon - ;. Low down payment. •53 Ford 2-door ...... 53 Chevrolet 218 2-dr i '52 Olds convertible . ‘53 Bulck sport coup< | ‘54 Pontiac 2-door •53 Olds sport coupe : '55 Rambler 2-door .. . ______Radio i_____ j walls. Beautiful t ! payment. ! '67 Fontiae. '4-door beater, whitewall' i I gem l Your ’53, ’I down payment. . Low c 1960 CATALINA Convertible CANDY APPLE RED. POWER 8TEERINO AND BRAKE8 RED INTERIOR. PE 3-2318. •*55 2-Dr. Sedan . ONE OWNER, title i NO CASH NEEDED | 1957 Plymouth, beautiful red j finish. 8485 fuli price. Psy only 1 $27 per month. First payment | October Ith. Ring Mr. Bing, l FE 4-1006.. Lucky Auto Bales; 1 183 B Baglaaw.__ ' LARKS TERRIFIC DEALS NOW Many More To Choose From NORTH CHEVROLET 100* 8. Woodward Are. ’58 Pontiac 2-door Hardtop. Hydra-1' matic, radio heater, whitewall tiros. 2-tons paint. A little Jewel. 1 , HAUPT • PONTIAC |: CLARKSTON ! M15 one mile north of i Open Eves Until I MAplo 5-55*8 HASKINS USED CAR SPECIALS $800. 4115 Elisabeth 5-7157.' __________ ■60 PONTIAC CATA. 4-1 ‘57 Bulck Special 4-Dr. Power ............. ‘53 Chevrolet 4-Dr. ..... . — HARDENBURG MOTOR SALES Corner Cass ft Fixe FE 5-73M Open Eves Til 8 ______ , »11$5 - WE WANT rYOUR DEAL No Reasonable Offer ** Refused f OLIVER 5 Motor Sales P i ■* Orchard Late Are. MB MW Open Eves BUICKi „ i JBKAIJLT OPEL JEEP OUT ■ THEY GO! j AT DEALER COST VALIANT PLYMOUTH ,I)E SOTO ANY CAR IN OUR STOCK AT ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE PLUS 150 PREPARATION AND DELIVERY CHAROE. | Liberal Trade Allowance BANK RATES SCHUTZ MOTORS, IRC. *13 S. Woodward. B n.m Midwest 6-5300 1161 Chevrolet Bel radio, heater. lSJc nei Beautiful sapphire and NEW j 1960 Larks i 3 LEFT Must Go! | Convertible $2312 (2) Deluxe 2*Doors $1798 ; Suburban ! HASKINS | > OLDSLARK • CHEVROLET 5/J2 S, Woodward. I’ h; ni1 «isi outs Rwy. at m is clarkston j MI 4-4485 | MAplo 5-5171 Open attoo ’til * I 1154 Chevrolet 2 Dr. a«dan...$ ITS 1858 Bulck convertible. Good cond. PuU power ...................8*45 1154 Chevrolet 2 dr. sedan...* 15$ 1955 Packard 2 dr. hardtop. .* Ml 1M4 Pontiac 4 dr. Starehlef I 34* 185* Chevrolet 4 dr. station wagon VI. Automatic ...............814* 1M( Bulck 2 dr. hardtop.......*20*5 1857 Ford 2 dr. sodan ——11*5 1857 Chevrolet station wagon. 4 dr. beater. Sharp rad a 1956 Chevrolet 21* .HHH wagon. Oas satin * cylinder engine, standard transr‘ ‘ “ dlo. heater. Turquoise finish. 1865 Chevrolet Bel Air 3-door sedan 8 cylinder engine. Power-glide, radio, beater. Like new condition. Must bo seen to appreciate. 1*51 Studobaker Lark 4 Dr...Ill** 1858 Plymouth 4 Dr. Sedan. 118* Fontiae 4 Dr. Hardtop. Etc. Coad.... .. * 7*5 HOMER HIGHT MOTORS , "1* Minutes Prom Pontla*- _ Oxford. Mich. \ \ OA $-5521 Matthews-Hargreaves Barrage of BARGAINS 'It's Our Biggest Sale Of The Year' EVERY GAR ON OUR LOT DRASTICALLY REDUCED Everything Must Go!! *60 CHEVROLET IMPALA CONVERTIBLE V-» — Power glide, radio, heater and whltewallf. Solid India ivory. $2499 SUPER 4-DOOR • Automatic transmission, ri heater and whitewalls. I India Ivory. $1495 '59 CHEVROLET IMPALA CONVERTIBLE V-S Powerglide. radio, heater and whitewalls. Solid rod paint. $1995 '58 BUICK SPECIAL SPORT COUPE . Dvnaflow. power steering and brakes. Two-tone ivory and ’60 COMET 4-DOOR Standard transmission, rtdlr heater and whitewalls. Soil royal blue. $1799 ’59 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 2-DOOR S Powerglide. radio, beater an whitewalls. Ivory and Inc silver. $1495 ’59 FORD OALAXIE CONVERTIBLE -- power radlOL Solid ’60 FORD OALAXIE SPORT SEDAN V-8 — Ford-O-Matic. power steering, radio. ^AMiaa “ $2249 ’59 CHEVROLET STATION WAOON Brook wood 2-Door g — Standard $1795 i Roman rod- Ford-O-Matic. brakes, radio. ’58 CHEVROLET CORVETTE Powerglide. whitewalls and solid top. Jot black with red Interior. $1995 $1495 ’58 FORD RANCH WAOON Custom V-8 — Ford-O-Mstic. r dlo, heater and — $1195 walls. Two-tons $895 $845 ’57 CHEVROLET STATION WAOON IIP' 4-Door V-* — Powerglide. idio and heater. Tui- ““""$1295 . ’55 FORD heater. Harbor t $2395 ■58 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 8PORT COUPE V-l — Powerglide. power steer- in,,„rau» silver blue" $1295 ’56 OLDSMOBILE “IS" SPORT COUPE Radio, hoatar. Rydramatlc and whitewalls. Two-tone paint. $795 $495 '54 BUICK CENTURY SPORT COUPE Radio, boator and pynaflow. Two-tone ivory and black with custom Interior. $495 MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES OAKLAND COUNTY’S LARGEST CHEVROLET DEALER ** 631 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 4-4547___________; 1960 B’VILLE ... .$3295 4-Door hsrdtop with power otoor-lng. radio, boater, whitewall tires. Decor gfoup and other acceeso- 1960 COMET .....$1995 2-Door sedan. Automatic transmission. radio, heater.wbite Walls. Solid white with rod trim. Like new from bumper to bumper. It's a little doll. ..$2495 1959 BUICK ..........$2695 4-Door station wagon. Power steering and brakes. Dynaflow, radio, heater and whitewalls. Beautiful copper finish. Better hurry. c|n Ilka this arc hard to 1959 VAUXHALL $1395 Guaranteed only 6,000 actual miles. Light cream finish. Spare never used. 28 miles per gallon .$1395 1957 CHEVY ....,$1495 4-Door wagon. Power steering, V-8 engine. Powerglide, radio, heater and good tiros. 33.801 actual miles. I boater. A one-owner 1960 PONTIAC .. .$2995 Ventura 4-door hardtop. Power steering and brakee. Hydramattc, radio. Mater, whitewalls. 1959 PONTIAC ...$1995 Cataliaa 2-door sedan with radio, heater and standard transmission. Low miles and llkt now througb- 1959 BUICK ..........$2695 Electra 4-door hardtop, pull power Beautiful black finish. Radio, heater and whitewall tires. 1958 BUICK ,.$1795 Special 3-door hardtop. __________ steering and brakee. Dynaflow. radio, heater, whitewalls solid white 1959 OPEL ............$1395 2-Ooor sedan. Beautiful blue fin-ton.-If you want oeonomy. this to 1956 BUICK ...........$1095 Special 2-door hardtop. Dynaflow, radio, boater and whitewalls. 28,-088 actual mUoi,* 1959 PONTIAC ...$2395 Catalina 4-door hardtop. Power steering and brakee. Rydramatlc. radio, heater and whltowalto. Still 1959 FORD ..................$2095 Oalasle 2-door hardtop. Power steering and brakes. Ford-O-Matic — V-l engine and whitewall tyws. 1959 OLDS . '$2895 “88” 4-door hardtop. Ivory finish, radio, neater, power steering and brakes, air conditioning, white-walls. Llkt now. 1957 BUICK ..... .$1395 ConrorttMe with power steering ’ and brakes. Dynaflow.' radio, boater and whitewall lira* Fire-gold and Ivory. 1957 FORD ..................$995 Customllne 2-door sedan. Lots of special accessories and low miles. A beauty that will surely please 1957 MERCURY . .$1095 2-Dr. sedan with Mere-O-Mattc. radio, beater and 2-tone green one-owner and eitra nice 1957 BUICK ............$1395 Special 4-door hardtop. Power steering, power brakes, Dynaflow, radio, heater. Light blue finish. One owner and taal sharp. 1957 PONTIAC ...$1495 Star Chief - Safari wagon. Power steering and brakes. Rydramatlc, radio apd Mater. On* of Use Mat. 1958 CHEVY .....$1895 Impels Convertible. Light Muo finish. Radio, beater. Powerglide and Whfiawall tires. 17,088 aflat. Like whitewalls. You will really Mrs ..$325 average. Bums i SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK Rochester OL 1-8133 ACROSS PROM NEW CAR SALES Open 'til 9 p.m.' or Later Closed Wed. ft Sat. at 8 p.m. THIRTY-POT •Today's Television Programs- nedy look a a <1,000 a luncheon to 14) Truth or Consequences. (?) Restless Gan. O) Follow Me UtlS (9) Hen Comer My Pet 13:M (2) Search for Tomorrow. <4) (color) It Could Be You. (7) Love That feott, \J9) Terry Togo Tine l*:4t (2) Guiding Light. W: 50 (9) Newt l:M (9) Oar Uu Brooks. " . (4) Bold JonAsy. ' (7) About Faces.' (9) Movie. 1:30 (2) As the World Turns. N (7) Life of Riley. 1:10 (2) Medic. (4) Queen lor a Day. (7) Day In Court. 2:99 (2) Bouse Party. (4) Loretta Young. (7) Gale Storm. 4ilS (2) Secret Storm. George Meader, Republican; Thomas P. Payne, Democrat. ★ ★ ★ 3rd Congressional District — August E. Johansen, Republican; Samuel L Clark, Democrat. 4th Congressional District — Clare E. Hoffman, Republican; Edward Bums, Democrat 5th Congressional District — Gerald R. Ford Jr., Republican; William RenmoR Democrat. 6th Congressional District — Charles E. Chamberlain, Republican; Jerome F. O’Rourke, Democrat. 7th Congressional District—Robert J. McIntosh, Republican; James G. O’Hara, Democrat. 8th Congressional District — James Harvey, Republican; Mary M. Harden, Democrat. ★ * * Congressional District — Robert P. Griffin, Republican; Donald Jennings, Democrat. Robert J. Robbins, Republican; John D. DlngeU, Democrat. 18th Congresrtoaal District — Leo H. Clark, Republican; John Leslnskt, Democrat 10th Congressional District — Elford A. Cederberg, Republican; Daniel E, Reed, Democrat. llth Coagrawioaal District— Victor A. Knox, 'Republican) Prentiss M. Browns Jr., Democrat. 12th Congressional District — John B. Bennett, Republican; Robert C. McCarthy, Democrat. 13th Congressional District Robert B. Blackwell, Republican; Charles C. Diggs Jr., Democrat, a ★ ★ . 14th Congressional District—Lois V. Nalr, Republican; Louis C. Ra-jby the Republican convention); baut, Democrat. Theodore Souris (nominated by the 15th Congressional District —IDemocratic convention), A drive was under way in Oak Park today to provide classrooms next week for 24 Royal Oak Township ninth graders who have school to attend this fall. ★ J A citizens’ committee has asked the Oak Park Board of Education let the children without a school attend Oak Park junior high school j classes on a tuition basis. The board has agreed to eir the request at its Thursday meeting. The committee Is circulating petitions mad l.ooo open letters to Oak Park residents, hoping to enlist public support, said Allen Zemmol, cechairmaa. “We have two alms,” Zemmol said. First, to insure that these children have a school to attend this fall, and, second, a long-range solution to the township's problem through the Legislature.” A * * The children were the first victims of a decision not to accept new township enrollees in the already crowded secondary school system in Detroit. Royal Oak Township’s fractional school district has only an elementary school. Junior and senior high school pupils have been attending Detroit schools on a tuition basis. ■topped oft tat Bostsu long enough Kennedy was traveling in his private plane. t ★ ♦ He was met at Logan International Airport by Middlesex County Sheriff Howard W. Fitzpatrick, one of the luncheon organizers. Fltspatrlek said Ksanedy will return to Boston Friday far a breakfast Instead. Kennedy la coming back to New England ItanOny for n campaign swing through New Hampshire and Maine. In Washington, Vice President Richard M. Nixon said he believes he will carry some states in the traditionally Democratic South in the presidential race but feels it la too early to predict which ones. The GOP White House nominee’s press secretary, Herbert G. Klein, said Nixon was “encouraged" by Ms first two campaign forays into Dixie and was planning at least two more stumping tripe to file South. Mississippi GOP Chairman Wirt Yerger Jr. announced Sunday that Nixon would make a speech In Jackstef, Miss., Sept. 7. 17th Congressional District — Richard E. Morell, Republican; Martha W. Griffiths, Democrat. 18th Congressional District — William S. Broomfield, Republican; James KeHis. Democrat. Michigan Supreme Court Justice (nonpartisan, but candidates nicked by party convention) — James R. Breakey Jr., (nominated 4 Apprehended in Break-Ins Juvenile Implicates Others After Rash Entries in Milford been reading i Plan to Tear Up Dem Platform Plank by Plank WASHINGTON IF - A band of House Republicans opened fire today on file Democratic platform, charging it is stubbed with "amazing untruths” end “glaring inaccuracies.” Launching what they called “Op-peratkm Veracity," the GOP legislators announced plans to point out statements in the Democratic platform “which we believe to be untrue.’* if ' * ♦ ' Rep. John J. Rhodes (R-Ariz.), who is quarterbacking file operation, told a news conference the group plans to take the House floor today and Tuesday ' out what he termed 14 to 15 major ’untruthe.’* At the same time, Rhodes chair enged Rep. Chester Bowies (D-Conn), chairman of the platform-writing committee at last month’s Democratic National Convention, to be on the floor to answer the Republican attack. Hollywood Stars Don't Have TimC tor Siestas By EARL WILSON MADRID — Over the years, we’ve had “Hollywood-on-the-Thames,” “Hollywood-on-the-Tlber,” and “Hollywood-on-the-Seine,” but now in Spain we have “Hollywood-on-the-Man-zanares.” Three movies are being made here now—end the Hollywood actors complain that they are the hardest workers in town. They alone don’t have siestas. The noon nap la still the privilege of everybody else—for some merchants It’s an all afternoon nap. The Hollywood Directors—Nick Ray, for instance—keep their casts going from morning to night—and everybody’s on' good be-WILSON havlor. Jeffrey Hunter, who plsys Christ In “King of. Kings,” has been careful, for example, not to be seen drinking or smoking. In fact, this picture, produced on a Cecil B. DeMllle scale by Samuel Bronston of Hollywood, has turned some of the Hollywoodians Into Blble-roaders. When I went to the studio toting my New Testament, opened to 8t. Mark, and said to Nick Ray, "I brought along a copy of the original script,” he said a lot of his cast have up on It. ★ ★ ★ “What are you going to de about showing the head of John the Baptist on a silver platter?” I asked. “It will be shown, but very quickly,” he said. “I’m not going to Invite any wise cracks by people saying Man, dig that crazy dessert.’ ” THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN N.Y. Lucille Ball’s at Polyclinic Hospital for minor surgery on her leg (Injured while mcrvle-maklng with Bob Hope) ... Theodore Bikel planned a curtain speech about Oscar Hammersteln n after ‘Sound of Music,” but “I was afraid Mary Martin would break down” The honeymooning Peter Viertela Kerr) will get a new wardrobe from the airline that lost all their lug-gage ... Merlyn Jenkins will appear In “Angel Baby” with George Hamilton. Singer Polly Bergen'll write a monthly column of beauty bints for a magazine ... The Jim Farley Jrs. welcomed their third, a son .. KARL’S PEARLS: Today’s pitiful case is the fellow who wants to live In the country. He’s moved out of town three times—and each time the city overtook him. TODAY’S BE8T LAUGH: Comic Bob McPadden, back from a tour, says he was such s hit to on# Latin American country they named a firing squad after him. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Some people’s Idea of roughing It Is to spend a week In a town where they can get only two Icftannela on the TV set... That’s earl, brother. Waterford Twp. Decision Due on Grinnell St. A derision on whether to vacate portion of Griimell Street Waterford Township, will be made at tonight’s township board meeting, according to Township Clerk Jamei E. Seeterlin. * ★ ★ The Board also will be asked to approve plat 4 of the Watkins Hills subdivision development, and a request to approve rood, drainage, topography and layout of the Jayno Heights subdivision 3, will be considered. * * * Seeterlin will request that the board authorize the purchase of a 3-inch pump for the water department. The pump costs <380. Sheriffs deputies today believed a series of recent entries in end around Milford was solved Saturday night with the apprehension of four Juveniles. John Altsman, 15, of Martindale Drive, was caught by private policeman Ron Farrow when the youth allegedly was attempting to break Into the Giroux Market, 1535 Union Lake Rd., in Commerce Township, Farrow said he nabbed the bey as he was eltmblag through a . rear window after smaahlag It Questioned by sheriff a deputies about other area break-ins, Altsman Implicated Patrick Medaris, 16, of Dean Road and James McFarland, 15, of 910 Panorama Road. '4K ★ ★ When apprehended at a drive-in restaurant near Milford, the pair admitted staging several entries in the Milford area, officers said and said a fourth youth, Douglas Donovan, 18, of 835 Squire Lane, was Hits Telephone Pole jn Commerce Twp. A Highland Park man is in fair condition today at Pontiac General Hospital after his car smashed into a telephone pole in Commerce Township early Sunday. it it it Wilbert A. Salvo, 46, suffered several fractured ribs and possible head injuries when he apparently fell asleep at the wheel, police said, and smashed into a pole in front of 2825 W. Maple Road. He told sheriffs deputies he didn't remember a thing. Officers said he was driving too fast and had been drinking. (Cepyrtght, 1999) Sunday Blaze Causes Damage at Franklin Plant Fire broke out Sunday afternoon at the Franklin Plating Co., 144 Franklin Rd., causing an estimated <800 damage to the cement block building and contents. Firemen fought the blaze for an hour, containing it to the boiler room. A passerby turned in the alarm. Company owner Vaughan McManus estimated the damage at <800. He said most of the damage was done to the boilers’ electrical system and the room bousing the equipment ALUM. SIDING > w • Storms v/ joe vallely Ol 1-6623 RCA COLOR TV Sweet's Radio TV RCA Color TV SAUS m* SERVICE Bey Veer TV PrM A Teetaletea CONDON'S TV 36 S. Telegraph nt l-m Aereei free. 1 udlvox HEARING AIDS AUDIVOX HEARING AID CENTER 11*S realise State Seek BU(. Member ef Eleetrenle* i FK 4-1515 C »V ELECTRO MART lit tables* L The People off Oakland County 1 £1 Who Never Finished ^ HIGH SCHOOL are invited to write for FREE booklet. Telb how yen eaa earn year dsssrleen School Diploma. • __ - AT JjOMMN _>PARr T1MI_ shkmcan school rrt-n r. o. Be* tees SPECIAL FEATURES TUBE-TYPE BLACKWALLS j TUBELESS BLACKWALLS SIZE | L"ggH qgy 1 SIZE 6.70x15 22.10 1, 11.05 j 6.70x15 ! 7.50x14; 24.60 12.30 7.10x15 24.50 ^ ■ 12,25 ] 7.10x15 8.00x14 27.00 1 13.50 13.47 THIS WEEK ; yiimT¥-Two THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST ED, 1960 Grim State Statistics: 11 Are Killed in Traffic, 5 Drown Over Weekend Stopping Riots —French Have or Way hr It { PARIS (AP)-The French government has published an official Journal on the approved methods for dealing with unruly. demonstrations. Law officers can legally warn a crowd to disperse by using trumpets, drams, loudspeakers, a flashing red light or a red rocket shot in the air. , In case the use of aims should E rr^rri.'tlBandH Encounters officer in charge must thoutl ' " **** ’"Troopers; Gets Shot Andrew Jackson carved his name I IONIA (UPI) — George Myers, in is cave on Lookout Mountain 21, was seriously wounded early in 1133. P (today when he tried to shoot R troopers after ajMyers be«e the bandit u out with state grocery stole burglary at nearby Clarksville. Myers was shot in the back and chest by’ trooper Richard Brant-ner as he tried to flee along M50. A second trooper, Roderick La More, was wounded in the leg by hy two shots from Rrantner’s service revolver. Salt has been Mined on the shores of Austria's HaJIstattersea lor 4,000 years, according to the National Geographic Society. Michael Adams, 8, ofc Muskegon,] drowned Sunday while swimming in Lake Michigan - Just off Pere Marquette Park in Muskegon. His body was not receovered atety. Tommy Benedict, «, of Berkley, drowned Sunday when he toppled from a dock into the Detroit River at the Ford Yaeht Cieb la Groose Be. The body was recovered. By Tie Associated Press Traffic on Michigan’s highways hilled 11 persons over the weekend — a grim forerunner of file Slaughter expected during the kmg labor Day weekend coming up. J One head-on auto collision killed three persons Sunday. Five firowped — four of them young children. The Associated Press count started at 8 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight Sunday. TKAimr- I Michael V. Alighire, 5, son of I iwaecK . ■ : . Mr. add Mrs. Joseph Alighire of . Mrs. Josie Squire, 7^, of ! Grand Rapids, drowned Surtday in and Mr. and Mrs^ Edwin Guilek-u.ntltTin Spencer Township J son, about 60, of Flint, were *Mled p^jj^ ^ boy tried to follow Sunday in a head-on two-car col-, o]der sister to a raft in deep lisionon U.S. 23. four miles south jwat^r Of Standish. A fourth person, Jo* ' _______________ .. . seph^Squire, 18, of Troy, was to* ^ eyes ^ about go per cent| ^Albert Frits, 71. of Marne, died M all human activities. Sunday from a two-car crash two miles south of Newaygo. * Roy Gendron, IS, of Grand Haven, was killed Sunday when he fell beneath the wheels of n tree- I tor driven by his brother James, j Bobbie Lee Scott, 52, of Sodus, was killed Saturday night whenj fun over by a car as she and companions were pushing it from j A ditch on a county road six miles | southeast of Benton Harbor. Cbnnie Beth Dyer, 20, of Lan-j sing, was killed Saturday night in a collision involving four cars on! M99 just south of Lansing. Two servicemen -1- James Pen-! ton, 27, of Dallas, Tex,, and George | Schreiber, 28, of Bloomingdale — | Were killed Saturday night when their car left a rural road near j Grand Rapids and hit a treet. • Donald McClure, 47, of Linden, | was killed Saturday when his car hit a tree. * Grant M. Born, 21. Of Muskegon, j suffered fatal injuries Friday night when his car ran off the Heights-} Ravenna Road and overturned, j BROWNINGS: ' Warren MacDonald, 19, of Brook-] iyn, a ministry student, drowned frtday night while bathing in Timber Lake in Lenawee County during a Baptist fellowship meeting. Linda Marling, 8, daughter of! Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hariing of Chicago, drowned Sunday when she apparently waded over a drop-off! at Paw Paw Lake near Coloma. First Impressions COUNT Depend on Geney’s for Quality BACK TO SCHOOL CLEANING! 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Sunday., (Continued on Page 2, CM. 4) ■ In returning in 19G9 as premier of Jordan — he had held the post briefly in 1866 — Majali announced the Arab kingdom would steer dear of military pacts' with the East or West. Md cooler. No rsia lo la sight. The high will bo R At 10 a.m. the wind velocity was t to 10 miles per hour, blowing soiithtsouthwesterly. Winds will increase to 15-20 m.p.h. tonight and ■ One of his predecessors, Pre-1 mier Ibrahim Hashem, war unseated in 1968 by rioting in Amman against his attempts to take Jordan’ into the antiCnmmuniat Baghdad Pact. Majali's .policy of nonalliance was not enough to hold off criticism from the United Arab Republic of* President Carnal Abdel Nasser. Nasser called him a stooge tor the British. ffmwrgency Police Halt Gangs; Negroes Cad Off Sit-In* at Counters ' JACKSONVILLE, FI*. (UPI)—-Racial tempera in this strife-fern city ex- Transplanted Canadian Wows 'Em at Rome Li'l Wolverine ' Majali served as minister of df-riculture In 1951 and as court min- ploded into new violence assuming the premiership. attention on Mount Olympus! she’s 3*24-34. Right after this over- ber of the NAACP wan beaten minutes filter he and 92 other* were sentenced in connection rwith riots and vandalism of the past weekend. Oakland County’s huge 140-member delegation wee among the first to leant that Bagwell had become a political five-star general. challenged by a babble of global] tongues, but the little transplanted] Wolverine is something special. I Her vital statistics would com-1 Boats Crash in Fog, II Go to Hospital now is beginning to1 move more into the shadow, causing a temperature change th*t some feared might affect the cellophane-thin balloon. But a NASA spokesman said Sunday the shadow hasn't meant a thing to Echo’s orbit. Local Rep&Ucans went to the convention Friday becking Huntington Woods Mayor Qevld R. Calhoun for the auditor general’s pom- leal education major at MtoM-faa gtate University and the two of them reside la East Lan-fiog — Jo** ■ good Olympic broad jump from the Oakland I NEW YORK (B —A large cargo II vessel and a ferryboat carrying hundreds of Passengers collided to-, day In a Hudson River fog off Lower Manhattan. ij 11 At least H person* were taken JACKSONVILLE, Flau (AP)^-After two days of racial violence, emergcifcy police powers, were in effect in Jacksonville today. Negro leader* called off sit-in demonstrations .al downtown lunch Echo’s schedule tonight for Pontiac area viewers; 8:03 p.m., high north, northeast; 10:09 p.m., high north, southeast; 12:15 a^n., high south, —* “— — It doesn't take a sharp-eyed senior in.physical education to spot! little Ernestine. You can see her a mile away whether youjre an ' engineer. a medic or partially blind. Ste went to State on a scholarship and met John Carter, varatty^kM’ baseman. John didn't know a giant swing from a parallel bar, but they were married in| December. He's now In State's athletic department RESPECTS SOVIET SALLIES Ernestine spent several weeks this, summer working out all atone in the dismal vastness of John Hannah's hugs and deserted field house. She thinkst Russian women are the world's greatest gymnast* and she ought to know, for this petite Canadian was the only feminine contestant among 8* athletes Invited to a special r*mpetition in . southeast; 2rt5 a.m.. Jowj period seriously injured, south, southeast. j n* vessels were the Seatrsin — [Georgia and the ferryboat .Chat’ | II PI I [ham, crossing the river from Ho- NpWC HaChOC 'bokrn. N.J. to Manhattan. Passengers said there was aq, panic aboard although some per-, sons rushed for life preservers. "edit ^'var Capture* Flnt -pratt-iGold Medal fot_UL5^___________ ROME IB—Gary Tobiaa of Glendale, t’sllf., woe the first U. 8. gold medal of (he 17th Oiympte Gainee by eaptariag (he men's s-me ter springboard div- Inr tmlu v Calhoun .agreed to run far state Iwote although Ha had preferred the other dot. “The important thing-ia (hat I’m on -fite ticket," jfdg Calhoun. Hollywood — M«vte glamor glH Marilyn Monroe entered n hospital today, overcome with exhanatlen, her doctor said. | To March at Chrysler . DETROIT (UPI) — Members of (United , Auto Workers Local T planned to march at 3 p.m. today to protest ."inhuman working con-MRfotw" at the Chrysler Corp Jef-1 Ernestine h^g been named Canadian Amateur Woman of /the. Vear six times. J m THE PONTIAC PBR8CftopiAI,AjUGVW *>, misters W Condemn Red Cuban Foothold Fidel's Delegate Walks Out After 19-1 Vote Slaps Castro Regime San jose. coat* Rk» (apx- mb meting of foreign ministers. Ihm Organization of American Stites drew to • dose today after r|B(iHrfi>f the campaign of die ' Sonet and Chinese Communist* to oM Cuba as a willing spring-bBSnd into the • Americas. m ' *.......> .. * " The conference by a 1M. vote Sarttey toght aim rejected a CUban resolution calling on the Ipted States to refrain from aggressive acts against Fidel Cfcs-tro^s regime. .When the ministers also turned down a Venezuelan proposal to water down the anticommunist “declaration of Su Jooe,” Foreign Minister Raid Roa and the red of the Cuban delegation wtfped out of the conference and R was the second walkout the two-week conference. The rtitogntlnn from the Dominican Republic quit the meeting Aug. 90 Rafael Trujillo' regime guilty of plotting to as-sassinate Venezuelan President Nbando Betancourt and potydcal and econoo a|ainst the Dominican Republic. * * * -Two dictators gone—ooe from the left, one from the right" one gem ‘ ‘ “ir the CU- 10 Beaten Troops ‘Lucky to Be Alive* ban walkout INFECT UNKNOWN But he and others- wondered about the effects oh the 70-year-old inter-American system. Some felt die ministers' tough action wuufcl restore public faith in the sjhftem# Others feared it aat an unhealthy precedent for the Aroer-ican family of republics. * * * With the United States pressing far a firm line against the Oam-nkodst threat to the hemisphere, the ministers compromised only to at extent of omitting specific mention of Cuba Mm their dec-iA«Hw» of San Jooe. But their op-position to Chstto’s friendship tor the Soviet sad the Chinese and to WiAAN reject of the OAS dear. # ★ • * The ministers in their declaration sold they "energetically con- LEOPOLDVDLLE. the Congo (AP)—Dr. Ralph J. Bunche said today oily the intervention of United Nations Ethiopian troops saved eight American airmen and two Canadians brutally aMcked by Congolese at Stanleyville airport Saturday. The 10 men “had the hell beaten out of them and are lucky to be alive,’’ s^itf Bunche, the ILN. undersecretary, who has protested the attack strongly to Premier Patrice Lumumba’s government. of intervention ... by on extjpa-copffitente) power in the affairs of t So-continent or Mb ocoaptyce by TWa referred to Sovist Premier rockets to defend Cuba if she were attacked by the United States and thgjOMtro regime’s acceptance of ‘ «« k A Si another obvious atop at Cuba, the mhdaten said they “raJact the aim of Sino-Soviet powers to utStee the economic,* political and aodal situation of any American ■fete to break continental unity and endanger the peace and security of the hemisphere." Reuther Warns Jack WASHINGTON (UPI) — United Me Walkers President Walter P. Reuther has told Democratic presidential nominee John F. Kennedy that unemployment to “growing dangerously higher." Heuther’s statement was leased Sunday night in a “fact sheet” published by the AFL-CIO industrial union department, dr A ★ ► T)ie publication said Reuther pointed out to Kennedy “disturbing*' facts and treads in the cur The Weather f«a 04. WMthar Onu —jm ■ omffitac OAp wBow — rutty dW Ml MrihMi nm »4 hnrii At Omn mb UUr Ikb afUrMM. 5* ue.T M wit! • tow toaifki-« r Tw4>> will to «towSj MS »«»tor wl -r ’ Tatar to haUu La peat tompmtun pricedlnf $ a.1 Ss IJLt Wind Telocity 1-11 a i: (tooth U Manda; et T:U p.m. t*o Tuesday at t:»5 a m. ■at* Monday at 11:30 p.m. rlaaa Tnaaday at S:M p ax. IS:.........2 u B......... foSB.........»_____ >—lay to faallae ,(aa mwM tmbwil Otokoat uoiparature ... Liowaat Uftpmtur* ........ .... Oat Tear A*» to Paatlae A teaiperetorr ....... I (anporatura ........ urSas................r jwOy*i TwMifliw q t PI Ifliitl & Bagwell Entrench# as State GOP Chief (OaotinCMd From Page One) live board of tbo American M»> nicipal Asm. Both Calhoun and Clements were unopposed at the conventisu. A A A Tha two other races for the state tickets produced contests, but those with Bagwell's blessing were over whelmingly nominated.' * They were Wendell A. Miles of Holland for attorney general and former Wyandotte Mayor William! E. Kroger ter secretory of state. The huge convention anus A Cabo Hall was Jammed 8aterday STRETCHER CAME — An unidentified crew member of a U.S. Globemaster transport plane is removed by atraleher on arriving at the airport in Leopoldville, the Cbngn, Sunday night. He and aeven other American crew members and two Canadians had been attacked at the ■ StanleyvUte Mrport by CdtoMtore. ■ - - __ Only U.N. Saved in Congo ‘These men had a brutal beat-a terrific beating," Bunche d. “They live today only me of the Intervention ok the Ethiopian U.N. troops. They are ■till under shock and need great wo.** Meanwhile threat of fighting along tee Katanga border grew today.* Congolese forces tejnfTta Lumumba were reported within 20 of the rick secessionist province. * READY TO BEPEL rebel Jfeihier gfqjge ------------ fly to the front himself to riUy his men against invasion. “My troops want to see me and want , to see them to show them am still in charge in Katanga.’ declared Tshombe, who has proclaimed his province Independent of Lumumba's central govern-lent , Tshombe * military command- icrs said their forces had blown tgy rail bridges and mined few reads leading' south from Kasai province into Katanga. ’ A Katanga army spokesman placed Congolese troops In Luputa, an agricultural center about 30 miles from ted frontier, but mid patrols were probably probing border defenses. Bunche made his statement to a group of photographers who asked permission to take pictures of his visit to the wounded men to the modernistic hospital at Louvalnium University, about 15 miles outside Leopoldville. Bundle spent half an hour talking with dl the wounded men. him were Andrew Cordter, _____tire assistant to Secretary- General Dag Htonmarakjdd who ‘ to Leopoldville Sunday, and Swedhh Maj. Gen. Cari von Horn, commander of U.N. forces to the Congo. UJS. Air Force officer told The Associated Praia tha condition of all tha injured men is good i medically, and that “there is DO riuiger of loss of Ufe.“ American officers at the hospital declined to give detailed physical reports oft individual casualties, explaining they could Dot do so until the medical staff as completed examination id) man. One U.S. officer said among the American casualties there were two pomjble skull fractures and ons possible fractured spine, but He lashed Republican Nominee Paul Bagwell ao “so architect of doom who has maoagad oriy to |blreckon Mlrtdgao'o r from; coast to coart." He said that. contrary to Bagwell’s statements new industry was moving into Michigan and the state wao to a period of ImpnMfte ac* Shapley Little Ernestine Sets Rome Afire Again fContinued From Page One) kapo yea vhasWse mm of ample beam, Mg muscles and a huge tag off through the Au Sable underbrush. But oar little Erees-ttoe couldn’t lift a lC-pound shot Vaa Snltsa Is primed Jer (he battle of her life. 8he hoe what ft takes. Go get ’em, Chris. A A A' Donna Do Varans is the midget and the darling of the U.S. team. Site's probably the youngest Olympic competitor in any sport Don- And since this seems to be Ladies Day at the Olympics for, your . . - peripatetic reporter, let’s glance na's 13 and she made the relay at three of the moat remarkable tea™- Give her another tew year* competitors in all this worldwide and .she’ll spot her Olympic dp-athletic strife, the fantastic mem-1 portents an outboard motor and a ben of the Santa Gam (Calif.) I head start. Swim dub. These American mer-l - — —----, maids are 17,16 and 15 years old. I * a a a Cuban Catholics Objtct Chris Von Saltza tried out fori the Olympic swim team four years , ago in thTfOO meter event when ~r. ,, ____ , .. jof communism on Fidel Castro s tenths of a second. The three ** JBR and bigger girts who finished aheadr^^h^^ ot this Mttte child spent the reft *”y m . _o__o ._ .. . •_ers or interests. none of these was to a dangerous condition. 13 -#A_______ U1 Ambassador Gain Tim-berlake delivered a strong protest against *toe attack. The- ambassador said Foreign Mtoiater Justin Bomboko apologized. Swainson Grabs, . Dem Parly Reins (Continued From #age One) ' ty la to a nrerofciag mood sad not even tho dismal thicket of O-'Otay.............oar In platform matters the convention adopted file following planks: Aging — pledged to continue efforts to achieve good, comprehensive health care for tha nation's senior dtiaena. Education — went on record ter minimum teachers salary, expanded adult education, federal support of education and academic freedom. CXvM rights - endorsed the civil right* pleat adopted by the etdeota such as Ike preecnt ease where aa American Indian veteran was denied burial next to ton wife In a cemetery Bsonare of Mo raw. Economic growth — took recognition of the fact , that Michigan’s economic health ia closely related to economic well-being of the nation, and gave its support to economic goals spelled out to the national platform. Freedom of information — affirmed the belief that public government is* the public’s business and declared party policy jo be that the public shaft hare access wherever public affaire are officially transacted, unless it Infringes on national security or the preservation of individual rights. Latest Population Dope NEW YORK W-Tba world’s population la increasing by 48. mil lion A year and now stands at 2,900,000,000 tin United ‘Nations Demographic Yarn Book eatimataa. Comntonist China, with MS m ' lion, haa tha largest population. confidently ahead to victory In Keynoting the seaaion, Bagwell urged his party to “cut $ft to stone" it’s ehpport ft fife constitutional convention proposal OS the November ballot. *> A l i Ripping Into Ml Democratic op-VV+'f, Jnhn ^%ff7Ul%l;^ail,w|* •aid: u - ■More than a year ^o Join Swainson toOK a stand ip favor of a constitutional coHyimtioil it • matter of principle. ‘Then he add out .principle and declared against con-con In favor of GuU Scholia’s support at the pods to the Democratic primary. “Ho was hot what a price!' Bagwell also pledged the party to produce the' 100,000 new jobs p year that we not only need but must have ter our peapte.w ★ ' * : * •It la up to. us to change the national image of Michigan — an image baaed orethe black picture of a state gone broke, deeply to debt, beset by constant tax problem% uncertain of the future, feadpg and feuding and arguing to a stalemate while progress, b^-" ^ <■ M Congressman Alvin M. Bentley also GOP nominee fori/. S. senator, ripped the Democrats “fob their policies toward industry tin Michigan.’* ' '[ of the ftoast to the state," |to charged. “He brought aome .of them to their knees and drove others com-' pleteiy out of the state," be added. Noting the “strong possibility" Williams being appointed r of Health, Education and _______to event of A Kennedy victory, Bentley declared: MHDT CARDINAL O’HARA Cardinal Dies in Philadelphia Catholic Prelate, 72, Had Red Hat Less Than two Years PHILADELPHIA (AP) - John Cantina! O’Hara, Philadelphia and spiritual lander of 1,88400 Roman Catholics, died Sunday at the age of 71 A A A The tall slender prelate, who received the rod hat symbolic of his office in December 1900 from Pope John XSH, succumbed at Misericordia Hospital. Jh bad undergone surgery ter peritonitis last ‘ “Williams socaeedod, to baqk-rupting Michigan In 12/ yews. We money it can "This would not be true in Washington because whto deficits occur there they do not bang to be admitted. An the Democrats hare ever done before f{infe is print more money.. years to break ✓ flak 'ktas IS MlsktolU, I can the tome totag Fean ot opposition to the Bag-well platform were proved ground- less. State Sen. Lynn O. Francis et Midland, pleading for party unity, took the speaker's rostrum to ask conservatives not to split the party. "I in i conservative — and proud to be a conservative,*' he •aid. A i A 'Are we going to «1| quietly b? and destroy ourselves to a dispute over 5 per cent or 10 per cent of the whole when we are in agreement ou the other 96 per.cant? "This is po time for ns to sulk to our tents.’’ . i Although GOP Moatore undoubtedly ware dlspltawd over Bagwell's support of cw» sea, they raised no objection* to the party** platform plaak on tho hMM. The GOP platform alaoeoUod tor a Michigan OvB Rights Commission, a four-cant salsa tax, a state labor relation* bopid, establishment of a state crime commission, tor mentally retarded youngste to tote Institutions. The only rhubarb of the ocoye tion came hi the nomination et candidate tor Mate Supreme Court The Diy in Birmingham Schedule for Schools Announced by Board BIRMINGHAM A B*W SC Ida tor the daily opsfgng and dosing times lor Birmingham schools baa bom adapted by tbo beard of i new |iapB~'lR expected to enm test, but act otimtoste on-tlrely, inconvenience to studmta, school 8upt,a0i Mi Dickey. TIIIllA Pierce, Omrtm and Terry ele- The lunch hour, from 11:86 a.m. to 18:80 p.m. remains uDcbtototoi- His death reduced to five the number of -cardinals to the UnMad States. They are Francis Cardinal Spellman ot New Ytefc Francis Cardinal McIntyre of Lto Angeles, fUchard Cardinal Cusito« of Boo-Albert Cardinal Mayor of Chicago and Akyrius Cardinal Muench of'Fargo. N.D. All but- Cardinal Muench who ia to Romo, aw expected at (ha solemn pontifical Mass to bo celebrated at the Cathedral et Peter and PsuL A A A,, - The funeral service probably will bo held ou Labor Doy, Sopt. 5, “ mom said. Tbie body will Ho to atefa at tin cathedral from Thursday until than. Death came quietly to Cardinal EHara. He was unconscious i (hree sisters, and priests and 'HtoterTof. Mercy, who operate tho ihoapitali intoned ‘ prayers by Ms bedside. The six-foot, one-inch, lffi-pOund cardinal^had enjoyed good health, exoept»ter oceaylonal tmubte tottMtia, until recent years. Ho a otorltor (tore of MM oand J time ef Sttt pan. Dickey has proposed (hat parents bo hired at 8^6 an hour far schools iRtobj iRitoM) tato- The revisions to achtotaftog wore made after tin school atoRptafeo-ttan nqpnMid concern over teacher monte to aupantetog children durtag 1ho Alim boar. To Mra eiddltiopel reprevteory help would mean about |T,000 yearly, but Dtehey eaffibo considered M reasonable to Il^t of all the Greanfteld. Franklin, Harlan, Valtey Woods and WStout Labe achooia wiQ also start at 8:96 a.m. but wti! doae at 3:86 pan. to pnrmtt chfldren to be bun# to ren-xtsblqtime. The »&me length of school day win "bo maintained by gdhedlMilf a 40-mlnute lunch ^period in shifts bagtontog at 11:30 son. Parents of pn achoolere are to-vttad toebete Sept 6 on the family calender as the day registration opens for the first of (he 1MKL series of per-echoot story hours at Bauwto Public Library. Mrs. Am Bank of Me beys’ Pontiac Air Routes Announced by CAB (Ooottouad From Page One) almost all the ether recommendation* mode by. examiner Barron Frederick a year ago. The new short-haul rente* to Pontiac had-asked for a route to Gevelaftd, Akron, Canton, Youngstown and Pittsburgh.,These fire cities were linked on a new route swarded to Lake Central, with its northern termtoous in Detroit Pontiac and other cities across Central Michigan had asked for a route tb Chicago, also. This wsa 'The service that has been awarded to Pontiac b the first step towards providing the badly * air transportation '* | Pontiac and Oakland County so richly deserve,” Broomfield said. Berth Central Airlines officials have Indicated that It may be several in antes teem new before the Pontine sendee to to-' The company is pfenning dally lights out of Pontiac Municipal Airport, but first must receive official notice from tho CAB and then wait during a period in which any final objections can be heard b WaMtfegton. CORRECTION: THIS IS THI WAY OU« AD SHOULD MAYS APPIAMD SATURDAY. AUDUST 27»h. Her tw# erodes from Santa Clara ore Lynn Barke and Asm Warner. Aon’* 15 while Lynn la an “old timer" of TJ.' Am won the 200-meter breaststroke fit Detroit and Lynn eet a world’* record la (he backstroke. Chris .is nop a veteran of 16 and she has won 16 national titles and set 23 American records at distances from 1(H yards to 900 meters. She broke the world’s record in the 400. Two Australians are ganging up to “take her” and well they may. She’ll meet them at two distances. These Aussies are special feminine swimmers scheduled to oe unveiled for world inspection the Olympics and Chris faces the challenge of her life. JJ £ Chris beet Use Konrads in semi n j final* 100 meter freestyle but Dawn S ftjFaaser had taster time than citf*-5 flier. Finals is! the 100-meter free-ioo Uletyte come tonight, jj jj! Maybe she eoa beat. them. 8 w/Mayb* tee real. Ike world hoe H" "Leaver, aem tee equivalent eS three aquatic More IT ^ 4 under. Aajrway, our grand Mia* by Junior High wM opea Ot • a.m. and atom at kit p.m. Grave# High School fti Bor-amn Junior High will togfe at l:M SOB. nod Mamba at StM 6* Along with the new schedule, route from Paris of the four-engine French airliner with 63 persons aboard which cradled Into tee mu off Africa today. mete teal all • to 6-year-olds wham ftuiiMm Uve to Btnotog- . Registration* may ba made4' either to person or by phqjte. The maximum number — ttr ' gya and girls — .11 expected to be reached quickly, according to lbs. Burch, store the popular programs will be held to the colorful Storyland Alcove to fee aewly com-' ptotad whig et the library. The story houre begin Dept ]3 at 16 son. and will continue every Tuesday rooming through Oot. 18- Vandals Run Wild in Jacksonville, Fla. v (Continued From Pag! OHM Asst. PoUre Chief W, A. Milter ■aid gangs of Negfe. Juvenile* were nsporeibte for moat of the “IMs violence M the Muff they’d Hka to do all (he time," MUWr mid, “The present attnation has merely afforded team tha op- Mayor Haydon Buna invoked nellre powers at Jfl pan. Sunday. He banned. any street gathering of more than lour persons and unnocareary auto traffic. ‘ A Negro mass meeting Sunday on led tor a federal tovmtiga-tkw of the racial vlilrere. An estimated L«0 at tha meek teg shouted approval of t feaotu- and tha Departnfent of Justice to inveatigate. The group votfed to continue picketing “unto we have acoompitehed our objectives." USE YOUR CREDIT BUT tSE IT WISELY VORTHAT BACK-TO-SCHOOL BUYING! A good credit standing is a real convenience. It enables you ta buy and use the things you need at once, pay for them the -following month... or on deferred payment purchases, over a longer period. But a good credit standing also involves an obligation, tg pay your bills promptly on the due date. Use your credit but use it wisely this fall when securing fall fashions for back to school wardrobes. Buy , only what you know you can pay lor and pay all bills when due. In thisjntaner you protect yoipr good* credit recrad. To Maintain a Good Crnilif Buy Wisely, Pay Promptly PONTIAC CREDIT BUREAU, Inc. The Credit Bur cay of Pontiac Organised duly 12, 1923 333 North Parry Street Pontiac 16, Mleh. ProtectfMf Croiketi It fill Protect You! . ^fa&wWl¥W¥1111111 11,111 llL^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1960 - 7 v'rt tiproga - *-A . y -nr—- m -■ - - —-—: 1 r— ; j '— ■ > FACTORY AUTHORIZED LOWREY ORGAN Studio Replacement SALK! studios with tnalvOMT LOWREY I ORGANS. All lamm ORGANS | that have tM used for “demos', teaching -and practicing must be toms, Only during this mis can you buy A LOWREY ORGAN at less than the nationally advertised price. Burry in today, only om of a kind available. TERMS:''$25 Down, Balance 36 Month* W LARGE STOCK . W • Organ Books — Chord Organ Books We Teach: Plano Accordion! foSeek Delays for Integration Orloam School Board Wants Ono»Yoar Wait Aftor Court Ordor Survey Keyto Pay Scales for Millions Census Under Way to Determine New Cost _ NEW ORLEANS. U. (AP) The Orleans Parish School Board, under federal court tetters to in-tegrate public schools ben and week, today made plane to seek up to one year's delay to the der. Board President Lloyd Rittiner and three other members said they would ask a conference with UJ. Diet. Judge J. Skdly Wright 1m week to request the delay. f The fifth member, Emile Wag* ner Jr., opposed the idea. He said M would ask Gov. Jimmie Davis to close the public schools ranker than accept integration Sept. T. Judge Wright last May ordered the heard to Integrate the schools, starting wife first grades. Two weeks ago, Gov, Davit took coatmf «f the schools to prevent integration.. CHICAGO (UPI)—Another census Is under way scram ny. This one may beer ap important influence on the pay scales of mfl-" economic policy T|f aew survey is being conducted by tbs Bureau of Labor whose castnf-Uvfaf index is the key to pay Atm in many industries. _ “u | The abject at the twe-year study to to find aut hew aseeh the ssentiyV tvtag and spend-jan hahtts have thbriCM stoee the tost such survey In UOO and to adjust the esri-ri-fivtag iudex ARTHRITR SIFFERERS A syndicated column by a well-known doctor, recently printed an article fm the benefits of sea brine for human const] m p t i o n. He said, MM aoy.Qf our foods either lack completely or an seriously reduced In certain minerals that are found in sea water. But .now, you can get these mhierals in sea brine. Natural sea brine contains all 44 Of the water-soluble chemicals found i on earth!” The article also told the case history of a 98 year old man who was dying 15 months ago, after being bedfast, disoriented and unable to feed -w ■ - — himself for months. Now he hobbles around, oomes to the table, and can cross fcjsirthritic right leg ov^r his left to take off his shoe and sock!1 He hadn’t been'able to do that;for 15 years! THE ONLY CHANGE IN BIS INPUT HAS BEEN A LITTLE SEA j WATER! This natural sea Water is now available in concentrated form (from. the sea around Florida) condensed 10 to 1. Please mail |2.00 to Dept SOB, P.O! Box 2882, Lakeland, Florida and receive one bottle, of Sea Brine postpaid. / Last Friday, ^ three-Judge federal court heart! arguments on two suits, one by Negro loaders and the other by. 31 white parents, seeking to keep the state from Interfering with the integration order. Stole A tty. ‘Gen. Jack GrwnUUon wtt cited for contempt when ho stalked out of the hearing, contending procedure! approved by the judges violated Us constitutional righto. Saturday the Judges issued their ■weeping decision. The ruling, in effect, was that the schools must be integrated without stite Interference. r They win gather tacts over n Mu week period on family characteristics, income*, expa housing facilities, rehto or taxes paid and other information about Interviewee -Jest week began calling on selected, households to 13 major dtfes. The study la a first step to a major survey which, to the next two years, wfil cover IS dries aad towns to the United States to bring the consumer price Index np to date. “We frankly de sat kaew haw . much the kin will be changed ky the survey,” Adolph o. Barger, regional director to Chicago, told United Frees International. „J*We doknow that there have been big changes since 1960. however," he said. “Income has gone up faster than consumer prices. As income rises, people tend to buy mow luxury items bad spend leisure time to peml must bb definite Berger sajd tbe index has become so important ns a of the nation’s standard of Uvtog that we can’t have any doubt or controversy attached to it” Millions of Americana have their wages and salaries geared to ^tadricrbfr said. It la also an Important consMsration to made tor federal and local govwm-professionals, businessmen and labor groups. Berger said there are many commodities which have beepme more important to family living today than in i960. Other items are now item important and will be dropped from the index, be said. Henri F. price analyst, meriliaid food aa oae major Hem which may ha less weighted to the new Index. “In 1950, almost 30 per cent of tQ expenditures went tor food,' he said. “Now people apend more nritoy, for soch luxury items boats, a second car, a hi-fi, or an extra television or rndta.". SECOND PHASE OF PROGRAM Following the initial household survey, the Bureau will begin a second aad much mote comprehensive phase to the two-year pro-, gram. Beginning in January 190, interviewers will visit a smaller number of families. They will aeek detailed information about the kinds and amounts of goods and services that, consumers buy, the prices they pay, how often they nr food and ‘other related facta. S' Berger emphasised that all fe-fonnatkm obtained through the can-will he kept to strict cob- Save! Savef Sovc/ M0IMU6. M-WED, AW. 31, UM OUB SENSATIONAL SMASH VALUE!!! Believes He Has Parts of the First Great Lak^s Ship CHEBOYGAN (UPI) — An Indianapolis man — Norman Mc-Cready — has returned from an expedition to Manitoulin. Island with a 20-foot plank and a piece of Blip's rib which he believes to be feoiii the wreckage of the first ship to sail , the Great Lakes. McCready, a summer resident at NMet fcakd, baa been conducting a search far the Grlftfe. n schasnsr built tor tee French axpferw11 LaSalle aad believed tori Is Nerteeta lake Huron dur-Ipg a storm to l«7»- . The wood wasT&ought up from .more than 300 feet of water fay divers working from McCready’s cruiser Penmanta which last year loegted the wreck: of the lake freighter Bradley.! FRAYER'S 17th ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS fork at Our Door Opon Evos; 'til 9:00 Sot. 'til 6:00 THESE If RICES EFFECTIVE ALL ■CA Viator Adrir. “V#H- k jdBNfk JtibCl— •'Onv-Svf’finvtunlBoStwto |mk 4 SnMur.' 210-WF. With Tiado Wo Have Iht Fiioit Soloction of RCA VICTOR COLOR TV IN THE ENTIRE ARIA SALE Priced TO SILL REAL PAST! NO CASH DOWN ON ANY StT IN EITHER STORE TERMS TO SUIT MITT LOOK AT TIAT OLD' SET AKOTHEI MI MUTE Boy Now! AM Mmy Man Bxctptkml Wsri ^JjK onibt Entire I960 Television Line! HEJ* . 1 ac4 vseraa anr. ooar.a* rca Victor . . . the most trusted name in television! bmyeri I , FURNITURE aad APPLIANCES 509 Orchard Lake Am. PONTIAC ? FI 4-0526 • rr7,< »n — M 4410 Disk Hwy. DRAYTON • OR 4-041S DOMINO SUGAR 5^391 * CMp This Vslusbla Ceupew and lavs run Cans ~ DOMINO SUGAR DEEP BLUE, Solid Pack TUNA 1C C on Light Meat SHRIMP AHOY BREADED SHRIMP PETER'S ASSORTED luncheon HYGRADE'S POLISH FRESH OR 8MOKED LIVER SAUSAGE MEATS SAUSAGE U. S* Choice Tender, Juicy CUBE STEAK \ raw Paw CIDER VINEGAR Oil. J»t 49' MICHIGAN . HOME-GROWN HONEY ROCKS 5«, M00 Large Six* fell Sealtest or Borden's COTTAGE CHEESE M.B. CTN. 19“ PEOPLE’S Mr FOOD TOWN FOOD MARKETS 263 AUBURN ■ m c. m st, | 1 700 AUBURN ST. 1 nfVNMHHHHI ' ■ oem* AM.MttM, I "" < mm i mr ' " 1 jMtt.7 RAYt A WMX 1 (lOWNMHIi Oe»VM«inja»T*w*| *i ill 1 SUPER MARKETS KJBHHJJjBIEH ffTWJTOJfffljl KkBDI BHSEXED MTT3M ALL FOOD TOWN MARKETS-OPEN SUNDAY 9 AM. to 6 PM THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, I960 ; -WJafflimtmsi *1 ■Business and Finance iisiii Market Uneven J Trade Moderate The following are tbp price* locally frown i produce brought to the Fanner’* Market by grower! and eoid by them In wholesale oackage lota. NEW YORK *- The «tockjQuotation* are furniahed by the market' moved unevenly in moder- Detroit Bureau of Markets, aa of ate early trading today. A slight Wednesday, tendency to the downside was! apparent. Detroit Product MARKETS |Cwn and Oats Ease; Other Grains Steady CHICAGO (API — Corn and rate futures eaeed slightly hut other grains and aaybeano were mostly steady in slow early transactions today on the board of trade. * * * All prices were within Price changes of leading stocks; tnum were mostly small, some going to ». £“*••** Prach**, Alberta, bu . ..... Peaches. Hate Haven, bu plrtuxM »ww. bu. .... Plum*. Buraank, % bu. .... Watermelon, bu. ......... VEGETABLES Beam. Green. Fl»l, • bu. . The Bst still tod apparently having exhausted the hnytng drive generated by last week's snaa—revnrnf of a drop bs the haste lending rate of lead* lug banks. Small gains were made by utilk! ties and some chemigals. Steels, SmWl oreen.’ Bound" , rails and airlines drifted otf. f”F*ggl*ki„WoBd*r- bV Autos, aircrafts, oilsand-etoctrical|fikni. inwlw. ....■’ ... equipments were mixed. SSw^ «S*!%cas. ""'"i./.!: *,r.-A 1 Boots, topped. bu. .J.«i. A number of selected issues re-iX£b*g«, b? ccived special attention. temeter resumed its bunt of last c»bb««o. sorout*. bu.’ —wuete-ifotog 2% to 22 on successive 6‘wrou. g or noae elsewhere. r.rr.’.:-M#| The trade-heard a report that ®“® some soybean fields"had begun to turn brown lit ^Southern Illinois land that some of the newvcrop; may become available for delivery! ■ jo® on September contracts. , — .* *■ * it-: *g| Late last week, a trade advice .‘-f-Mo said some new crop com had be*1 ■ J JJjgun moving to market from South* . . . . i is'eastern Missouri, . to . j;» , iM :MM . 3.44 Wheat— . l.TSISep. ..... . ojiiSsc. .. (SO Mar. . 2.75 May : l|p%ra-.- . IB M...... • .......... Chicago Grain CAO< Stirs Up Furor Remark Called In Bad Tcnle by Bagwell; Hit by State Denu From Oar Wire ■swto^s A top Republican ftmd raissr was in hot water today because of a chance remark on raliglpe in pot (tics mads to Jest at the atate Com vention in Detrop Saturday. .* t * * • Dost E. Ahrens of Bloomfield Hills, chairman of the GOP Finance Committee, introduced are-port on tba party' with the Jibe: “You know 1 (Porty) slogan: Mall Mary, yon an.** A - There was only a little laughtec among the 4,000 persons attondip the party couvehtion. ♦ # I Ahrens quickly apologised, but not before getting a tap on wrist from GOP governor nominee Paul D. Bagwell and some caustic remarks from the Democratic camp. stoat fircr A •ised that aa offoaoo was late ed. “If you think It sftosds a HELSINKI Ffofonfi (A^> - & et Premier Nikita > Khrushchov wi|l visit Selsinki Saturday, wfaed Finland’s president Urho’Kekonen. celebrates Ids, 60th birthday. Potatoes. 50-lb bM ......... Radish**. Rad. nos. beba. .. Radish**. White, dos. behs. PWurw otter decimal point or* ; heavy typo roaster* over t 2S.11: broilers and fryer* »-4 m 2 whites 19-11. :lf * * » - ‘ Hi The government release said [the spies informed the ministry ! about their connections with American officers and installations to j West Berlin and West Germany! £ and turned to documeto| and espionage equipment and other ma-“ terlal. Wheeler received treatment exposure, but' was later released. Integrated Picnic Causes Chicago Tiff CHICAGO (API — Two Negroes «re Injured and a whlte youtol was arrested when the Chicago chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People staged a racially Integrated outing at a Lake Michigan beach on the South Side Area of present day Virginia is 40,815 square miles, ^but in Colonial times it Included allot what is now Virginia. Weal Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio. Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin and part of Minnesota. I As to whether he thought he was injecting religion into the campaign, Ahrens replied: ’I am a Catholic myself: That Was supposed to- be funny- I think that anyone who puts religion to is crasy.'' # ★ Bagwell thought the remark 'was to poor taste and bad. judg-nent.” But he said he eras certain Ahrens only had meant to make a humorous remark. In Grand Rapids, Gov. Williams saw the Joke as “an uncivilized violation of every American’* right to worship to dignity.” Why Accept Less lor Your Money NOT 3% NOT 3’/2% BUT 4% CURRENT RATE on ALL SAVINGS Capitol Savings & Loan Assoc. Established 1990 FREE PARKING IN REAR OF BUILDING 75 W. Huron FE 4-0561 Thirty'Negroes and seven white persons went to the beach in what Dempsey Travis, president of the chapter, said was a protest of past minor beach incidents.” Sixty uniformed policemen. I____ ______ MBB 'triple the number ware on shore. At Norwalk H o s p i t a 1 tUity. The NAACP party was stoned ____________ and Jeered by about 50 white! Dragonflies feed on large quan-jtoithera, witnesses said, before the titles of mosquitoes, gnats, andliflfegrited .group was escortod flies. „j> Ifrom the beach. sSThte5.1 «* CtMtetf* . Ml 3' coat Sal .JL* g* ”. . . Cm teas .j;... is e»a*i con Coat Cob *• j 1# gPPT *• Coat Mot .J.| Pbolpo D SS?*,& fiSTei_______________1 Cora PO^.. Ill graet A.O .-..t«.9 g* Cartto rub ... M OH ...fiA SM Doom ....— 4M 80* -»_S I Drt Bdb ..... 44.4 JflMbttc 8U DETROIT EGGS DETROIT. Aug. M »AP»—E«g price* pgld,ptr -teoa by fmk TSiilwtS do-hvoraS to D*trolt. loooo la M doom —coaiumcr* groSo (taeludo U.S.i: 4411 »m*il M-n: grid* a largo ----'“rado A large 41-44; medlui MMtLtoseas .! a-.* »ik- ... .. h i ■« fine ., ..MM 5*1* tJH ..Hi fo To* • . ISM falow— livestock Health, Adverse Trends Cited Insiders Say Norstad to Quit Soon toteW!'!'.! Si MM ...S3 MOlOk L By WILLIAM 4. FOX :w ‘j __DSTBorr livestock Friends close ft Gen. Lauri* ! 54 cJ2SS^i*MA^^ood^o’^Vi^ expect him ft resign as 2!NATO commander to Europe by doesn't mean that Garcia is»tun tog against the United States. It' Just a political marflage of necessity. ! 44.4 otoady to itfMg: aroaad tea loads tel . 31.1 chotoo aad high Mtete la priiao ft ; U I9SS lb. voojrlte (ten hIT •- , w ate on tas ... 3i.4, ,19.1 m OU HI ... It 44 1 51 041 OB ... 17.4 . Ml Stovta* n ... *1.1 1 Ora Mills Ora Hotel . O Tel * B . Ooebol Br .. Ooodr^h .... Oroh Paige Gulf O ---------------it aid- ™ .—„ ___________ ateor* UN n>. down 14-H. Ute trade M.S9 Sad down; laid good aad OMM (ten I4-S4.M; * toads tow abate 1100-1174 lb. ion down to 14; Mod to tow eholc* -*or* SS-M: standard stem X9.M-B.S9; eg utility steer* 17J9-l*Jd: aroaad I toad* - 1“*k *k*‘“ belter* 143-004 lb. holten , Vco 44 ’>»*“ thole* > Oa* . li t\**» rarte: » ieo ....... go 5j»** lb. bold the end of this year or early 1981. despite recent denials tram his headquarters to P»fk. _______ Both health reasons and discouraging trends within NATO are held responsible for his planned resignation. although the general apparently does not want to upset the worktop of the Atlantic alliance fay premature disclosure of his retirement. a. Thomas White, head of V. 8. Air Force, Is being 4 to Paris aa Noratad’s — : Mr.1' i- Pop . 30 .1 US Steel . U8 Tab . Upjohn ___________14.54; eoniwr* *nc______ 4 13-14. few thin Ucht cannrrs down 44.4ito IS; utility bulls 1M9-H; cutter bull* 55 4 ] 17.50-10.50. “ lit 4 Vralers compared last week steady to 27| strong most orlme teeter* 34-14, law up . 33 34 40; good and choice 34-44; utility. 9} claasra and feeder lamb* steady; most - - - - --- - —-- 154 4 choice and prime spring Iambi 31-33; gj.l good and choice Iambi (4-31: utility t* 24 t food 14-19. cull to choles shorn awe* i early ti ochanged ilaugh-sr* 40: Hooker Ch UdaM Ray _____ ___ SSU0! SJ 5S V"„;5!4"SwLm, lot Ba* Mch 549 4 White Mot . 44 7 tlons; unchanted.. Int ton — 43.3 Wllsoo A Co 40 I Hag* 1S9; limited islae butchers and IM Nick .44.3 Weolworth ... ce l *>»* »e tower bat oot enough In* Paper ... *1.4 Tele a Tow .. 247 up quotation* tat Shoe .31 Toons a A W 33 L Compared tost week borrow* sad gilt* lot Mite .... 41 Youngit ShAT Mil®® tower sow* 40-75c lower. bit Tel A Tel 42 Sealtb Rad .134.1 : - -.... Crk Coal ... II Broaewtok . 44 | m ; • !?t°hSaving From Ot. lik*. OU A Chm. Co.* ’ * 1 ' Howell Etoc. Motor Co -PenlasaUr MtI Pd Co -The Prophet Co.* .... Body Maaufacturlag Co.* Toledo Hdtea Op. ..... I •Ho eate; bid and aakod. ii* tGienade DOW-JOKES IS HOOK AVERAGES 34 Ind*. 434 S4 ttt 1.13 . 3# Rails 13S.U off 4 74 14 Uto*. 374 off 9.44 II&MSS43M off 944 Voluai* t* 13 {tea U30.000 'MN (Compiled t Aug. 391. . lafit. litiletiSl. Stock Hot change . ♦.! -| —.1 Rosa Monday . 3301 nil IM I Ml. Prev day 3M 7 111 ! 1013 » Weak O0* .....SM 114 3 IMS 331 ..31*3 llf.S 104.1 314 *444 1441 M.4 331 . .344.4 1343 14* 4'333 . 300.1 mi MJ 307 4 ..4UJ 141.9 IMS 13*4 . 444.1 ISM 43.4 SUJ tt« Rtek IMS LOW IMS High WM LOW dtes.At'SW^rna.iM. S Pnafeard CUraOr 4-Dr. Step. Mrii Michigan vehicle 1 >0 may bs Inspected . Ass- to and 30. lie ufftTEr; ItH sm. #ept< Pwtwe DUU Hank tfttfirw. lucvu M tad M. ISM mP ORLEANSVlLLE. Alger la (UPT)—Cpl, Raymond Rogno of the French army would have re- | reived his ^ honorable discharge next weeky except for a tmurtst, a hahd grenade, and a little boy. Rongo was standing ‘ near (he terrace of a local .cafe when a grenade thrown by an Algerian Moslem rebel rolled past him'to the feet of Patrick Gaud, the small son of the cafe owner. With a sweep, of Iris arm, R*t*o sent the hoy tying back Inside the rale entrance tote the arms el bis mother. Then he scooped up the grenade aad tried to get rid sf M. 1 It exploded to Ms hands, killing the soldier Instantly and wounding a Moslem bystander. Rogno wasjone of five persons llrilled by' terrorists im, different areas of Algeria ov er 'the Weekend • In Bone, a grenade' Was thrown into the midst of a holiday crowd but» Erenefa soldier managed ft kick it into a gutter where It expIdded-Jiarmlesely. American lor the job, even though there has been speculation that President Charles de Gaulle might hokhuur^ torTTrwchmsir * dr dr The chance of the totter possi-bility coming about is considered near ^ero, but De Gaulle is expected to 'press for more and higher NATO posts for French generals—and he may get them. POLITICAL BEDFELLOWS Political insiders in Manila say that Philippines President Carlos P. Garda may Join farces in next year’s general elections with maverick Sen. Clara Recto, the most outspoken foe of the United States in the island republic. However, these sources say this I LBR1CHT OUSTER Sentiment is growing in the top ranks of the East German Communist party against Party Secretary Walter Ulbrkhi. O t h e r leaders complain of' his highhanded actions and the "personality cult" he has fostered. Reports reaching the West say Ulbricht could be . deposed if the Soviet Union ever withdraws its support of him. dutch cabKieh The visit of the Dutch aircraft carrier lfai^~TJboiirman to Yoko-hama In September is going ft become a big istoie between Japan and Indonesia before it’s over. Some well - Informed Western diplomatic sources who bate Just reached Tokyo tram Jakarta nay the ladoaeofoa government to prepared to esastder drastic action against Japan-But there is indecision on just how drastic it should be. These sources say the Indonesian cabinet seriously discussed the possibility of breaking relations with Japan— but this was voted down. BONN MOVE The Bonn government is expected to start denationalizing another major enterprise by October at the latest. This time it will be tiie United Tank Depot and, Trans- NEW WHITE CONSOLI With l ~ • 5-Spssd Control • Sam Savina • Cftf-Sesiitaat 9 • Sows Forward • trend Bobbin FULLY GUARANTEED Fffifi Horn# Dtmonstrotion WITHIN 25 MIL! BAPIUS FI 5-4049 9 ONLY >575° port Company (VTG), considered be Europe’s largest "tank car1 firm. * Recently, the state-owned -Volkswagen plants were sold to private | Udders. The VTG denationaliza-j tion is another step by the West! German government to transform! as much public property as possible into private hands. Look for Malaya to get a new king—or paramount ruler regard-teas of whether ailing King Hlsa-I muddin Atom Shah, 62, recovers |or not from his present serious l Ulness. Best bet for the job is the 3L year-old Raja of Perils, who pres-1 ently is deputy king of Malaya and ts performing the duties of the] paramount niler. Insiders say there’s a chancel the ailing King Hisamuddin will step down before he ts installed officially, a ceremony set for Sept. 1 but which has been postponed indefinitely because of Ms health. The king of Malaya Is .eleetedl by the rulers of Malays’*.nine! royal states and the youthful Rajaj of Perth is a favorite of many. Linoleum RUGS a UP TO 9 x l2 REWv£L°SL HOSES Braided cloth, all rubber. *News. (56) Industry Parade. |:N (3) San Francisco Beat; (4) Sweet Success. (9) Movta. Lynn Bari. "Tspi-plco,” (’44). -(56) Hs Picture. 7:99 (2) Charlie Farrell Show. (41 Riverboat. (t) Cheyenne, (3) Movie (began at 7 p.m.). (56) Guest Lecture. t:M (3) Texan. (4) Rivqrboat (cont.). (7) Cheyenne (cant). (1) Movie (began at Y p m.). S:M (3) Father Knows Beet (4) Wells Fargo. (T) Bourbon Street Beat. (9) Swing Gently. »:M (2) Talent Scout*. (4) Peter Gunn. (7) Bourbon Street (cont). (9) Swing (cent). • Pill (3) Spike Jones. (4) Theater. (7) Adventure in Paradise. (9) Messer’s Jubilee. 1S:M (3) Comedy Showcase. (4) Lite hi the Thirties. . (Y)Paradiae (cont). (9)News. io: K (9) Weatherwear. I»:80 (9) Telescope. 10:90 .(2) June ADyson. (4) Thirties (cont.). I (7) Ted Mack. (9) News. 10:46 (9) Hazel Park Race Results. 19:16 (9) Movie. Shelley Winters. "Behave Yourself.” ilC-a JF............_ 11:69 (3) (4) News, Sports, _ ....:\Waattssy ..... _ (7) Mr. and Mrs. North. 11:99 (3) Summer Olympics. 44) Jack Paar. (7) Patrol Car. 19:91 (3) Movie. Olivia de Havil-land, “Government Ort," (’43). TUESDAY MORNING 6:99 (DFunew* 9:69 (3) Meditations. (2) On the Farm Front 7:69 (4) Today. O) TV College. (7) Breakfast Tims 7:99 (3) FsUx tho Cat 9:00 (7) Johnny Ginger. 9:is (2) Cspt Kangaroo. 9:69 (Y) Stage S 9:09 (2) Movie (4) I Married Joan. 9:99 (4) Exercise i (7) Exercise 9:66 (4) Faye Elizabeth. 10:99 (4) Dough Re ML O) Now* 19:10 (9) Heartthrob Theater 19:91 (9) Billtxwrd. 10:99 (9) Ding Dong School (4) Floy Your Hunch. (7) House of Fashions 11:99 (3) 1 Love Lucy. (4) Price Is Right. (7) Divorce Hearing (9) Romper Room 11:90 (2) Osar Horizon (4) G) Topper. ..... TUESDAY AFTERNOON VMS (S) Love of Life. (7) Restless Gun. (D Follow Me 19:16 (S) Here Comer My FW 13:96 0) Search for Tomoemw. (4) (color) tt Gould Ba You. (T> Love That Bob. (9) Tarry Toon -Time 19:46 0) Guiding Light 18:89 (9) News. l:f» (2) Our Miss Brooks. (4) Bold Journey. (7) About racaa. ___J (91 Movie. I:Sl (2) As the World Turns. (7) Ufa of Rife. 8:00 (2) Medic. (4) Queen for a Day. (7) Day in Court 9:19 0) House Party. (4) Loretta Young. 0) Gale Storm. 0) Mei . (4) Young Dr. Melons. (7) Beat the Clock. (9) Movie. 1:99 (4) From These Roots. 0) Verdict Is Than. (7) Who Do Too Trust? 06) Touristen.Deutsch. 4:oe (3) Brighter Day. " (4) Thin Man. . (56) Big Pietoee. (7) Pandit end. ItU 0) Secret Storm. 4:90 0) Edge of Night (4) BuckJui. (9) Robin Hood. (56) Resources and Security 6:69 (2) Movie. ~14) gotiur) Gauge PLvrot (51) French Through Television. (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Looney Tunes. 6:99 (7) Rocky and His Friends. (56) Friendly Giant 6:46 (56) Compass Rose. 5:50 (9) Newt. S-P Expecting Sporty Hawk io Be Classic, Pick Up in By JACK VAXPEHBHBO DPI Automotive Editor DETROIT — Studebaker-Pack-ard’s lack of funds In the past nd years may turn into a boom for the compaay. Because it jnm short of ready ish, the company dNIded against TV News and Reviews CBS Olympic Coverage Sketchy, Flabby So Far By FRED DANZIG NEW YORK (UPI) — TVs best coverage of the Olympic Gaines at Rome is on CBS-TV. It’s best by default: We've got to settle fgr what we’re getting because no other network la pitching the Olympics at us. On the ba* ef tbe tint three days, 1 think CBS-TV baa be- lts exclusive coverage. The exciting, Imaginative, In-depth coverage this same network gave ns daring the Winter Olympian is absent this time around. And this u— around they have mere to deal with. I suspect that some of the dip-page is due to time and distance. It's a big order to get all the events covered by TV cameras and tape edited for highlights and sped back to New York all in a matter of hours. Tbe task asms too big. (Maybe we’U Just have to wait ter those communication. satellites to start operating.) Cramming the available tape into a so-called "big picture’’ of the Olympic Games so that a meaningful presentation emerges' also seems impn—thU to dbhieve in the halt-hour and 15-minute segments CBS-TV has set aside. That Mg ptetaro breaks ap into Mis aad pieces aad resembles aa mnrnde jig-saw pessle under the streamstaaces. This becomes apparent by comparing Friday night's opening program —- a fell hour — with what followed on Saturday and Sunday night. The Friday special featured the parade of athletes and it triumphantly conveyed tbe meaning and the drama of the moment The parade took place in a stadium. No problem with cameras. w .that the athletes are competing all over Rome, the TV cameras are out of position and the tapes turn out to be inadequate. sip n r r r r r r r W IT fT IS 14 ir 14 If- IT cl i IT r ■ ■" IT 50 IT sr B" M W W «6 IT -SST 40 nsi up 43 Writing tfjmUMS 2 fir1 sporty Hawk. Now, Hawk is becoming s classic production car and sales may ae-ituaSy pick up next year bees the car has not been restyled. Last year S-P asM only about 4 te# lawks, bwt a new (oar d Ms Fart of the trouble during the past year has been atari. S-P used al ef the atari it could get during the steel strike to btttid its popular-selling Lark, rather than in construction of the Hawk, which lira more limited makfcst. P«.) Anchor man Jim McKay, stationed in New York, provides a resume of events on each Olympic program and his summary tells us how much we didn’t get to see on TV, The sports page stories of the games also tell us bow much controversy. tension and excitement is being overlooked. The network aren’t helping matters, either. They identify the athletes In good fashion, but Instead of outlining the fine points aad the rales — 'an was dbne test winter — they tell ns to be osr own Judges. Where do we begin? I hope that as the. games progress sod the trade end events make coverage easier, the presentations will be more professional and fulfilling. Until then, gold medal for the CBS-TV Olympic team. Speaking of TV coverage of amateur sports, ABC-TV presented the first network handling of the Little League championship games Saturday. Ifs a big step for the Little League movement and IT |ri otiiers. decide whether it’s for better .pr worse. The TV coverage from Williamsport, Pa., was well deae. Baddy Blattaer’s play-by-play announcing of the Mg game between Levtttowaj Pa., and Fort Worth, Tax., waa well-constructed and unexpectedly restrained. He wasn't condescending. He didn't try to see major league potential'fat each kid. He avoided comparisons. He did his best to make it all sem like another base-tail game instead of an important world series final. Superlatives were at a minimum and moot of than were aimed, deservedly, at the Levittown pitcher, Jpe Mormel-lo. The kids were generally poised and nicely coordinated but, despite the uniforms and the coaching they get, it was. somehow reassuring see that they still are, after pU, Just kids. , They play the way 11 and 12-year-olds always play: swing for the fences, strike out a lot, have trouble ot> high pops and grounders, and catchers still have trouble holding on to tho pitches. Only nowadays, they do all this as part of a big organization. Soupy Sales, a young vaudeville-type comedian wife a large kiddy following sa TV, delivered tab asa«y harden commercials dsrtng the soft-sell occasion. Incidentally^ Soupy's own show Started another season on ABC-TV Saturday and be had Dizzy Gil-lespie walk on.'J’m still trying to explain to my boy who Dizzy is. So far, he only digs Soupy. THE CHANNEL SWIM: A one-hour all-star special in honor. Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and her cancer research center is scheduled ter Friday, Oct. 3. Bob Hope will . b9 the host of the NBC-TV IBe Hawk was in production only atx months during the 1960 model year, because of a* iksMai BACK FROM DEAD’ — Three-year-rid Frankie White of Mesquite, a Dallas suburb, looks calm and serene In his hospital bed Sunday with a stuffed monkey, but he had been virtually brought back from tbe grave 34 hours earlier. Frankie grabbed an electrical wire and was almost electricuted, which caused Ms breathing to stop. It took an off-duty fireman who lives in the neighborhood five minutes with mouth-to-mouth artificial respiration to restore Frankie's breathing. _ Hose, who wrote last year's diamond bailee salute Mrs. Roosevelt, also Is writing this '- Today's Radio Programs - - wwjiiss) wxrs isns> wcaboimi wrox tmiuHi S-Sfr-WJfe MW l CXLW, Tsa Sana wj'«a. n*«« - WCAR, Krai »N N BMW feMta •iSS—Wilt Dinner Dale DAT®4™ liter ’ »|0S—WJB. SI WXTZ. Tna ’JVK. Starve rsvN. MuMe UtSa-WJB, Muale wwj, Must* tu Sawn weak. Wooduns CXI W jlSUISS wcaa. ire* <:ts—wjr, Vatas »r Asrta mm .f anesMrmsa • SI BE1- Stto-wm. SIMM life58- parts ItafeSi. wow mUFKn, faey wcaa. Wans jTj WPOM. Raws Oaaar ^ 1!SS—WXYX, Mss, Wolf Mec*. wotf fWfW, «nn-t, norm WAV Trmfflo-CopUr Siso—win Dm. n. O'lM mw.jsr.ar Hi; WTO. Wows. IsrtsMr Mtoffe Now, Manor WWJ. Maw. Martoaa WZYZ. n-vakfaat Club CXLW. Nava, David WJBK. Maws Kir wroS: & MS-Wilt, Jack Harrla CXLW Marf Morass la.to—WJR. Karl Baas WWJ, nrw Mualv WiBK. Mown Reid ll:*S—Wfll. H«alth win It. Maws. XaM weal, Mawv. 'Main wpuit chuck Lawn iiSi-WiW. nma Mr ktuvi TVXSDAV A PI UN DOM itiss-wjn. pawn raral/ araaL. chi w jaa -Van, wcar. News, rafts WrOM. Mow. Lvvrta : tkto-Win ^Time Out Mualv CXLW. no Tun l:to—wjn. _________ WWJ, Nvw, MaiwU CXLW. Nvw. Durlvs ;».%kun t:ss—cxLw s' “(break - on ’ w. Duma WiBK. Lua WOAfV Moor. Bvnnvtt wpon BtB Lark SJt-CXLW.Bol’ Darios ires—win. nun WWi, Haw, MsswaU WXTZ. Winter . WiBK, Lao W»i B«k Bennett WPOM. Osmose Trade 4;SS—WJB. Mutle HAS CXLW Had Derive iidSr-wjn. Sveebea WWJ. Mew. Lpoker WXfk Winter CMtW. SW.ru Oovtee ■iftto life, b* 71 Underwater Dew Line in the Works LQS ANGELES (AP)— The Navy is spending a million dollars on plans for an underwater listening post network to guard against submarines carrying missiles, Navy researcher says. The plan calls for a sort of tin-, derwater dew fine, Rear Adm. J. A. Jaap said in an interview Friday. The cable-connected listening posts would do the same detection Job under the sea as the DEW (defense early warning 1 radar system across Canada does for aircraft, Adm. Jaap said. The admiral is director of development programs in the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations. He said the Soviets have Polaris type ballistic missiles which can be launched from submarines. Ho said that a few listening posts have already been placed on tbe ocean floor off the East Coast Dies After Snake Bite to Prove His Faith SPARKS, Ga. (AP) — A man who handled a rattlesnake at a church service, died proving his Officers said Uoyd B. Oil, 41. died 8unday, several hours after he waa bitten by a snake at a Saturday night service of the Nehr River Holiness Church. HC was the father of four daughters. Police said he apparently did not seek medical aid. Dr. J. P. Oliphant, Cook County medical examiner, said Hill died from Negro Found Dead Shot by 3 Weapons WINCHESTER, Trim., (AP)—A Negro whose body was found in a lake near here had been shot with three weapons, the state medial examiner reported. The body, tentatively identified as that of William Nance, 26, a trucker, Decherd, Trim., wu discovered Saturday, weighted down by a rock attached with bailing wire. Dr. W. J. Core said the man had been shot hr the heart'with a shot-gun, between tbe shoulder blades with a .45-caliber pistol, anil in the stomaqh with either a .32 or ,36-caliber weapon. TV Features Studebaker-Packard also plans to intrdduce a 'luxury compact’ car this year. The new luxury compact will be built on a 113-inch wheelbase, the ■til the South Bend, bid: company now uses tor the Lark station wagon and taxi cab. * •*......» It is designed to broaden Studs-baker-packard’s product line compete In the field where Ford's Cbmet already has made its bow and which the Oldsmotdle F85. the Buick Special, the Pontiac Tempest and fee Dodge Lancer will enter Inter this fall. ENGINES STACKED Anyone can walk down a side street bordering one of the Studebaker-Packard plants in South Hend and see fakir-cylinder engines stacked against fee windows of fee riant. ' # * +. So far, there has been no report on what the four-cylinder engines wifi be used for. * ♦ ♦ Two other companies are known to be working wife four-cylinder engines. like Studebaker-Packard, Pontine has a four-cyUnder engine In production. Pontiac plena to ase the engine, wMeh will be slanted Bke half ef X V-S eagfee, la Its new Tempest. Ford Motor Go. also is working on a tour-cylinder engine Mit does tt in production yet. according to industry sources./ ★ * * l Ford plans to use the small engine In a minlcar whlwould compete wife such European Imports as the Volkswagen and the Renault. # 4 # Although Industry sources said they did not know what plans Studebaker-Packard bad for Its four-cylinder engine, they said the best bet is feat the company will attempt to get a steal on the test of the Industry by bringing out a minicar of the type planned by Ford. Hollywood Stars Don't Have Time tor Siestas By United Press International FATHER KNOWS BEST, 6:30 ,m. (33. (Reruri). Bud (Billy Grxy) decides to wear a pair of ill-fitting shoes aa a matter of pride. TALENT SCOUTS, 9 p.m. (2). Sam Lsvtnson, boat; Carol Chan-ning, Myma Loy and Guy Lombardo introduce new talent. SPIKE JONES SHOW, 9:30 p.m. (2) . Spike, as Leonard Burnside, discusses fee violin; Bin Dank appears as Jose Jimenez. Wife Joyce Jameson aixTLen Wrinrib. Adventures la Paradise. 9:30 .m. (7). (Rerun). Limbefe Scott .stars ae k yacht raring champion who Is determined to dov rery man fee meets. NEW COMEDY SHOWCASE, 10 pm. (2). Margaret O'Brien stare as X 16-year-old whose imagination creates an uproar in her commuh Wtth Fay Baker and Leoa Ames. PBOJHCZ sir (Rerun). 10 p.m. (7). Goveto fee New Deal, repeal, swing music, fee isorid's Ur. OLYMPIC GAMES, 11:30 p.pn. (3) . A 30-minute taped jprocjram featurinx hitiffite of fee swim. boxing sad cycling events at Rome; JACK PAAR SHOW, 11:30 p.m. i»llixli- PuagM ■ week. Paar ii By EARL WILSON MADRID — Over the yean, we’ve had "Hollywood-on-the-Thames," "Hollywood-on-the-Tlber,” and “Hollywood-on-the-but now in Spain we have "Hollywood-on-the-Man-xanares.” Three movies are being made hen now and the Hollywood acton complain that they are the hardest workers in town. They alone don’t have siestas. The noon nap lx still the privilege of everybody else—for some merchants it’s an all afternoon nap. TJie Hollywood Directors—Nick Ray, for instance—keep their casts going from moraine night—and everybody's on good b* wilson havtor. Jeffrey Hunter, who plays Christ In "King of Kings,” has been sarefal fee example, not to be seen drinking or swinkiag. ' In fact, this picture, produced on a Cedi B. DeMille scale by Samuel Bronston of Hollywood, has turned some of the Hollywoodlane Into Bible-readers. _ When I went to the studio toting my New Testament, opened to 8L Mark, and laid to Nick Ray, “1 brought along a copy of the original script,’’ he said a lot of his cast have been reading up on It. * ★ ★ “What an you going to do about ■bowing tho head of John the Baptist on a silver platter?” I asked. 'It will be shown, but Yery quickly,", he said. *Tm not going to Invite any' wise jcracks by people- laying ‘Man, dig;, that crazy dessert.’" THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN N.Y. Lucille Ball’s at Polyclinic Hoepltal for minor surgery on her leg (injured while movie-making with Bob Hope) ... Theodore Bikel planned a curtain speech about Oeear Hammer*teln n after "Sound of Music," bat “I was afraid Mary Martin would break down” . The honeymooning Peter Vlertels (Deborah Herr) will get a new wardrobe from the airline that lost all their lug-»... Meriyn Jenkins will appear In "Angel Baby” with George Hamilton. Singer felly Bergen’ll write a monthly column of beauty hints for a magazine .., The Jim Farley Jrs. welcomed their third, a eon ..» merlyn EARL’S PEARLS: Today’s pitiful case Is the fellow who wants to live In the country. Re’s moved out of town three times—gnd each time the city overtook him. TODAY*! bbst LAUGH: Comic Bob Mcftdden, back from A tour, says he waa such a hit In. one Latin American country they named a Bring squad after him. WISH FD SAID THAT: Some people’s Idea of rdughing It la to spend a week In a town where they can get only two ^ Hfeitfe uari, bratker. (Copyrigkt, 19M) Powers, Mrs. Powers and Cury arrived here late Sunday afternoon. It was a quiet homecoming crowds, no noise, few well- wifeers.___1_______ Powers wax greeted by reporters wife news that a Soviet maga- PLAY8 FOOTSIE — One thing about actress Vikki Dougan — she’s different. Her fiance —actor Jim Sweeney displays the engagement and friendship rings she wean on a toe. She makes one oqncession to tradition though — she wears the rings on the left toot. Powers Parents Back Home Again POUND, Va. (AP)—The parents of U2 pilot Francis Gary Powers began ricking up the threads of their once tranquil lives today after a mission to Moscow that brought controversy and tears; For ruddy-cheeked Oliver M. Powers, 55, and his frail Wife, Ida, the first effort at normal living was the shoemaker’s return today to his little shop in nearby Norton. Here, Powers said, lie hoped to start .recouping part of the life savings he spent in fee long trip to the Soviet Union, where he saw his son draw a 10-year sentence to deprivation of liberty as a con-] victed American spy. 1 Though a magazine paid transportation H^sts for Powers and his wife to travel to Moscow, the cobbler said he spent $1,700 of his own fund* on the trip "and feat’s] all I’ve got.’" He said he ami his friend, Sri Cury, who accompanied file Powers family to Moscow, would add up total expenses today—aad “I’ll probably be $200 to $300 in the zine, Ogonyok, had claimed that his pilot son was money-mad and that the Powers clain had exploited the pilot’s troubles to make money. ’* '* ★" It made him good and mad. It’s- propaganda,” he said. ‘They tat Russia are as much for fee American dollar, or more so, than here. They want to ridicule tbe United Stales. Soviets will do all in the world to throw dura." As for his son, Powers said, "money is the least of his worries. All he wants to to come home." ALUM. SIDING /• $forms • Awnings tor v&ii.r JOE VALLELY OL 1-6623 „ Ol 1 -9191 Claims Any 1943 Copper Is a Fake WASHINGTON (AP)—You think [you have a 1943 copper penny? And It may be worth $16,000. The federal mbit says tt isn’t so. Leland Howard, assistant director of the mint, said Sunday no copper pennies were made in 1943. That was the year fee mint began turning out the Wartime zinc-coated steel pennies because of a lack of copper. ♦ ★ ★ Howard said there are two common ways of faking 1943 coppers: (1) by copper-plating one of the steel pennies of that year and (2)1 by changing the date on a genuine i copper of another year. The first method can be easily detected by picking up the steel penny wife a magnejt. A genuinel copper is nonmagnetic. Tne sec-1 mid method usually can be detected by a strong magnifying glass. In spite of. the mint’s denial, there, have been many recent reports of .1943 coppers. TTie story goes feat only 17 of *th«*m were i made. A San Francisco bank teller claimed he was offered $10,0001 for-one. RCA Color TV SALES m4 SERVICE s*r Tw tv rnn a tnIiMu CONDON'STV 96 6. re 4-tras Airau Ami T«i-II»i AUDIVOX HEARING AID CENTER FI 4-1515 C fr V ILECTRO MART IS* Ctklmnd TV RENTAL * BY DAY OB WEEK ____________________________________________________________| SO AMERICAN SCHOOL ff t-t* - ^ m r. o. in iw* M ^ Altai rntk. Mlrklf.A 3 tat u jr.tr nil M ta* IU|h IfkMl ImAM H The Paople of Ookland County Who Never Finished HIGH SCHOOL are Invited to write ter FREE booklet. Tells how you ran earn your American School Diploma. ^ AT HOMI^ IN SPAR! TIMI___ AMERICAN SCHOOL „* PP «- •» P. O. Bn 1m Alta. far*. UkhlEsa s*M *m yow rasa s» r»*« a ...i;.....:........... . Mil.--------'_g