- 'V Th« Weoth«r . V-|l< ' Partly dwidy w-tq;i to the recent Moscow air show that displayed the latest in Soviet bombers and fighters. SAVES CORNERED FOUCf': — A confessed slayer (in sport shirt) bad the drop on two policemen at Miami International Airport before ex-Marine Guillermo Zamora tackled him from behind in a dramatic capture. Picture No. 1 shows O. C. Jaqkson, jvairted in the stoy^ al a DayKMi, Ohio couple, being questioned ty • police officer. In picture 2. Jackson a gun from his brief caee, cowering the dlD-■cers. Zamora grabs hkn in pictare 1 i TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 81, 1961 Aad the living Is Easy , Skepf/dsm Greets Red Plan LONDON — TIk SovM|ideAto oadintd in tbc CDaimuniat| wu exprated W Britain Gonununist pnity's ptxHnise,9f a|biu«prim (or a coming Utopia goidra age aliead for the peoplcjfor the Soviet's millions; the tovM IMoa evoked intxed|anuaed hy the rejectien gf war Ms g^ of a Oommunfst para- df the I ^ngi il West la«pti of atoepbeism and hepei Weetem Ein^ today. |this easy life there must be peace gnadisoelon earth. Storms Dump ^Rain on 2,000-Mile Front that Premier Khrushchev would not be pre^aredi to gamble away by rlskint war with West. BelgiaB SocialMs saw the pro-gram as partly a poiMcal The Soviet people were promised tree housing and public transportation in the 1970i. gradual shortening o( the workweek to six hours a day, and before complethm at the program hee educatton, tree medical care. and heating and ftae so hmg^laied that H mast be safe for Khnahehev to feel that It can haitOy be he who will have to answer U they PNm Oar !«#we Whet New Yerii today after a damaging weekend of severe squalls. iarhsi of rate on s stream valleys caoshw flood loss of disasler at UnadlUa. N Y. were Mocked by as moeh as S feet of water. A hundred families were evacuated at HiwN. Va. Homes were washed away. portioiis of Johnson, Elliott and Morgan coamlet of Kqntucky where some loss of, lifew Tornadic winds which accoro-paBied the storms Saturday night and Sunday did extensive dam-MW at Mocedon, N Y. At UnadU-la. a community of l.SOO in Ot-wwgo County, Mayor Wayne Ty- tl million. > state tor disaster re- At Kaysi, where Virginia S3, the town's main street, was under 5 feet of water, earth dkfea swept Berrien, Cass and Van Michigan's early this A Ihree-year-eU gM sleepiag . In hsr heaae was aSghMy Injmed k Hghtolac bsN kit the B ea the reef ef The child. Wands Murray, the ; dsughter of Mr. and Mrs. B 'Murray of rural Colama wto listed la good condition at Watervllet Mospitsl. She suf-: burns and shock. • Rain msasBrlng up to 34 Inches fell In some places la the area, todndtaig StevensviUe and in the area around St. Joeeph and Benton Harbor. Cabbie Dies in Crash DETROIT m - D^s M. Ko. *TecU, 60, a cab driver, died today when his car struck a pole tat Datndt. Police said Korecki apparently auffered a seizure Juat before Ms cab ran out of control. They sold an autopsy would be held to determine the cause of The 30-yeor plan made puMic '* over the weekend declared that by ISTO the Soviet Unkm would A roan at New Buffalo nparied dghtli« a funnei cloud but state prahictlOB and ty IMP I's conservative ^ Daily Telegraph, called the prognm '|de in the sky" and said: ‘ Is difficuU to believe that, having ' his reputation on a long- Tbe a.OOO-word manifesto—the first grand Soviet plan since Lenin’s in 1910—pledgH a policy of coexistence with the West in an apparmt slap at the Chinese Commfmlsts. WASmNO'TON « —Iha Be» atoh Demoesafto aid Bepablh caw leadera saM today tksy da catch ap with the Ualtad State* »w tS-year ecaaomle conspicuously missing from "^rm, Mr. document wqs any mention of ewrythlng Stalta, who never lasued such a widerenglng proclamation during his long reign. Bearing the imprint of Khniab- be presented to congrres in October. Its ratification is a certainty. The labortte Daily Herald chew himaeU, the draft plan will **** I*™***™ *yMem of . *____.. .a. M lhavino urweyM nAMlu in Irind ** the world the better. And if Mr. K feels strong enough to promise Utopia he cannot really believe that world war is just around the corner, too." The conservative Dally Sketch said; "Mr. Khrushchev's 'jam tomorrow' program sounds wonderful (but) in fact, Russia is as far from catching up with the productive capacity of the West as she ever was.” The Sketch went cm to say that Khrushchev "is even less likely to realize his ambitions while he cripples hiS economy with the bigi^t military establiahment in the world." The Communist Daily Worker said "Russia staggers the world.” ★ -k Troops Practice Berlin Defense lOYlirr NAVY DISPLAV-Three swift rocket-firing launches dart past larger Soviet ships riding at anchor in the Neva River Sunday. The ships are part of a Russian Mvy show staged ar Pb»M*i near Leningrad. The small boats are said to be able to put to sea In any weather and fire rockets , great distances. U.S., British and French Garrisons Hold Alert Again This Morning Canvass Confirms Con-Con Nominees It's Willman to Bowston as Night Baseball Debuts The offlcial canvass of but TVteaday's constitutkmal convention primary reaulu in Oaklaad Oou|ity ed no change in the nominees but some switches in the orders of finish. In the cdty's 2nd District Democratic contest, canvassers ranked Carl W. O'Brien over previous second place finisher George A. Goo-gaaian. They gave Googssian 13 votes for a total of 587. O'Brien received S96 as reported eariin'. Lewis R. Miller finished above Fred L. Mornlngstar and Sidney C. Jones finished above Dennis Clark in the reshuffling of the 1st District Republican votes, according to Mrs. Mabel M. Child, county election clerk. The canvass finished Saturday showed in the 4th District that Joseph S. Asherson finish^ last the field of nine Democrats instead of next to last. The Weather Fall UJ. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy through Tneeday with a few showers and thnnderstomia aaoetly la aftomoan and eTealng. Cooler tonight and Tuesday, low tonight 88, high Tuesday 78. Light variable winds. TaSar la Faaltea sun aau Mooday Sub rlaat Tuaadai ------ ...a p.m - Jtaday tIS M ila Tutaday at II M a m. I Monday at 10:11 p m. ta.Hl(b»it ............ tamparalur* Maan tamparaturv I WatUirr Sunny Oa# Star Afa la Paattea I 1010 I 1047 ‘?r:T Btaday•Ti Mm V loan tamparatura ......... ----- . ...iparaura Chart Alpana it OO Kantai C 01 I! S' *0 *1 Lot Anatltt 14 04 7f noufbton 71 51 Miami Ibacb 07 01 PellitoB 00 01 MUwaukaa II M Trav city 70 01 Ntw Orlaans M » Albuouirqua 01 04 Ha* Tort 11 77 „ ,, Omaha 01 7J II 00 Phoantl M 77 S2f4“*» SV. " “ “ 8 Marla “ " Atlanta BUmarck 71 H SaatUa Port Worth N 74 Tampa JartwanrUla 01 77 Waa&liittOB SI 71 A Michigan State Uidversity baseball star aill pitch to a Pontiac Central High School basketball star to officially open up Jaycee Park to nighttime hardball games City Manager Walter K. Wlll-lon, whose regular position was in the left field in his college days. Madison Heights Gets Hudson's Planning Budget Store Similar to Pontiac's for Opening in 1962 Madlaon Heights wrill get a J. L. Hudson budget store similar to the one to be constructed at the new Pontiac Shopping Mall in Water-lord Toemahlo. Joseph L. Hudson Jr., president of the firm, said the company would build a new 80,000 square foot, one story budget store in the shopping center being deveiopedi at the northwest corner of John ti and Twelve Mile Roaiis, It is expected to open in 1962, Hudran said. The company, incidentally, is remming its basement stores -•get" stores, a spokesman because a new generation understands the terminology bet- t Rob ert E. SturwoM, foimerly man-Bger of the Lincoln Park Immc-ment store, would supervise msnagemeot of the aew budget stores to Wsterferd Township, Madison Hetghtt and Lincoln will take to the mound during dedicatory cerenumies beginning at BERLIN (AP) — Benin’s U.S. British and French garrisons held qnotber early mon^ alert day, practicing the defense of the threatened city. At 4:30 a.m. loudspeaker trucks woke residents of the < where married troops live. Many members M the 11,000-man Allied garriaan in West Bejiin hqve their families with them; Behind the plate Mayor Philip E. Rowston will be ready to snag the opening pitch. Afterwards, the Joy Boy Jets wlU meet the UAW Local S94 team in a regular city league game. Ceremonies will open the first lighted kardbnll field in Pontine. The fights, erected by the city nt n cost of nronnd |M,SM, first WMSi on Inst week. Brief talks by Willman and Rowston will proceed the opening pitch. David R. Ewalt, director of pArks and recreation, will act as mi of ceremonies, introducing city commissioners and hodored guests from organizations that have donated funds for improvements at the field. Both soldiers and civilians attached to the Allied missions were ordered to their duty posts where they remained until they got the "all clear." Allied‘Officials called it a routine exercise of the kind takes place at irregular intervals POliCE EXEBCIfiB West Berlin police also held a nis^t training exercise, but bead-quarters insisted that this was not coordinated with the Allies. Jaycee Park is located next to the Malldm School playground at the southwest corner of J o si y n Avenue and Walton Boulevard in northeast Pontiac. About 2.000 refugees from Communist East (fermany poured into West Berlin in the 24-hour period ending at 8 o’clock Sunday night. Ihe number — 300 greater than the previous day— was a record for any one day since June 19S3, when anti-Com-munists revolted in East Germany. Hudson said the Madison Heights store will b8 comparable in size and operation to the recently announced Pontiac Shopping Mall unit, which Trill also open 1962. "The new budget store concept recognizes that many persons* desire to shop at smaller stores convenient to their neighbothood, as well as shopping in our fUll-Une department stores downtowm sad at NorihUnd and Eastland Shopping Centeri," Hud City Restaurant Owner Is Dead in Detroit at 62 Ap Pbntntni NATIONAL WEATHER — Warm weather is expected to con-' ^daue in the natkn tonight except for a doMtng trend in the North Atkuidic Stotes and in the Western Lakes area. Scattered ahowen will be geaeral from the Northern Plains eastward into the North-I as well as in parts of the Southern Plateau. The Madison Heights shopping center is being deveio|ied by John J. Bourne and John P. Fnuer Jr., who are aflUiated with Hubbard on a 26 acre site. CARL S. VOYDANOFF Carl S Voydanoff. long-time city restaurant owner, died Saturday at Woman's Hospital in Detroit after a brief illness. He was 62. Ormer of the Kitchenette, he made his home at 128 W. Huron St.' Aavivtog besides his widow Kai^ amfUa. are a daughter, Mrs. Dimitri Lszaroff of Pontiac, s son. Spec. 4 Samuel Voydanoff with the U.S. Army in Germany, three brothers, Avy, Steve and Eli Voydanoff. qll of Pontiac, and two grandchild|Tsn.' Following fua^ a^ce Thursday at 1:30 p.m. from Sparica-GrUfin Funeral Home, he will be buried in Pwiy Mt. Part Cem- Hike in Military Voted On Today House Expected to OK Authority for President to Call Up Reservists WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House agreed unanimously to vote today on President Kennedy's re- ERNBR L. ETHIEB Rites Scheduled for Ex-Manager of Sylvan Lake Ernest L. Ethier, former city manager of l^lvan Lak ager of the Pontiac Elks Tsmple and a long-time Pontiac dty employe, died eariy today in Pontige Osteopathic Hoq>ital after an ill-naas of two months. Mr. Ethier, 433T Forest Avenue, Waterford Towmship, was 63. He is survived by his wife. Pearl; a stepson Robert Goebel of Pontiac; stepdaughter Winifred S. Goebel of Flint; trro brothers and a sts- Tafcen Into custody feUowiag the eoUlitoa was the driver ol the car, Gary W. Potts, 17, of Detroit; Richard D. Er’ana, also 17. of Hlgblaad Park; aad three juveniles. The juveniles Tvere released la the curiody of tbelr parents. Potts and Evans are being beld today ■ ‘ Paik jaU. Tha car was stolen from a paridng lot in Highland Park at 6 p.m. Saturday. ter. fierrlce Trill be at 1:M p.m. Wedaeaday from Huntooa Funeral Home. Burial wrill be la Caaaaa Cenaetery, Washington Propet and Lamar Gilchrist spotted the car attempting to race another auto Iran a stop tight on V w«rd and 14 • Mile Rood at about 35 a.m. yesterday. The officers started off in pur-lit of the car whidi w«s traveling northbound on Woodwhud. Pon-lac police wrere notified of Mr. Ethier, wrho had been enP ployed by the City of Pontiac on and off for a total of 11 years since 1936, was an urban renewal aide at the time he went «i sick leave in late May. He Tvas city manager in Sylvan Lake from 1950-57. His job as Elks Temple manager, 1948-50, followed a twtvyear stint as area rent di-rectw for the Office of Rent Cbn-trol. 1946-48. Bom in Westboro, Mass., Mr. Either was first employed by the city in 1936 as a clerk in the engi-■ring department, le left city service in 1933 but returned u a tempoi:ary assistant and wras named to the urban renewal post on June 2, 1958. Ortonville Man, 59, Dies ol Injuries A S0-yeaiM)ld Ortonville man hit by a car while wmlking home Friday night died of his Injuries yes-at Pontiac Oakland Coonty Highway ToU in ’61 56 General Hospital. Eugene R. Holm of 4S6 M15 fered chest injuries and multiple fractures w h e struck by a car driven by Albert L. Schulz, 24, of Detroit on Ortonville Road. Schulz told sheriff's deputies he saw the victim directly in front of him but too late to stcq>. Schulz Conference at Nicocia NICXJSIA, Cyprus (AP)—A regional conference of U.S. ambassadors and representatives in the Middle East and North Africa got under way here today under the chairmanship of Undersecretary of State Chester A. Bowles. Thby were from 21 countries. The Pay in Birmingham Police Arrest 5 Youths Alter 100-M.P.H. Chase BIRMINGHAM — Police from David E. Goodwrla of 38102 Brant- BirmlniMn Famous brand jeans i n ounce weight. Reinforced blue denim with zip- per fly, first quality in s lizes 6 to 16. Boys' Washable SHIRTS 98c Value Regular SIM Values Entire stock of boxer style trunks in sizes 6 to 16. Sturdy clastic waist, inner support. Variety of colors and patterns. 49‘ Short sleeve sport shirts of watKsbIe cc^ons. Attractive designs in variety of colors. All sizes I, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. ooeeeoeeeeeeoooooooeooeeeooeeoooooooaeeeoeoo Boys' Boxer SWIM TRUNKS n Populor BOXER ond BRIEFS Men’s Swim Trunks Regular S2M Valua Plastic Wood FILLER m ST Choice 6f brief stylet in latex fabrics in solid colors , or stripes. Elastic boxers in colors and patterns.' Sizes small artd medium. r MEN’S ui YOUNG MEN’S Wash Pants BIRTHDAY BARGAIN POLT SPONGE Reg. $1.10 $4.95 Values —NOW 2 1st Quolity Wosh 'n' Wears 9-ounce polished cottons in choice of 3 colors — light blue included. Zipper ffy, deep pockets. Wash 'n' wear materials. Sizes 28 to 42. BIRTHDAY BARGAIN REMINGTON end WESTERN .22 L.R. SHELLS Box of 50s Regular 80c box of 50 cartridges. Limit .10 boxes per customer. Full 16x21 Inch Six* Bed Pilltiws 1 .Shredded urthane -foam filled, good quality pillows with print ticking, non-allergic. ^ BIRTHDAY BARGAIN 2-in-1 Combination Hnnting and Fishing Heavy duty Knitc. PHOTO DEPT. VALUES First Time Ever — Populor ZEISS Type 7x35 BINOCULARS $34.00 Seller m With LEATHER CASE Powerful 7x35 binoculars with individual focus, coated lens, prism type. Full price includes federal tax, with, leather case, binocular strap and case straps. $ I holds in layaway. eaeeaeeeeeMaaaeeeeaaeaaaaaaaaaeeaeaeeeeeeee BIRTHDAY BARGAIN DAI^ Air Rifle Cleoning Kit $1.99 Volue Fits Almost Any Binoewlor Sun Filler Lens 53.50 Valuo-Mew Enables you to see clearly on bright, sunny days—eliminates glare on binoculars. As shown. \n 98 N. SAGINAW —Sc fMfclMt Owhf Stupe Au# ' , -''' l! Fouiy THE PONTIAC PRESS- MONDAY/JULY 81. 1961 :iiMWMj««iMi|Bnfa/n Decides to Negofiofe hr . Place in Common Market SUVI8E Bifflelfiis, Letters, etc. FASTSEIVIOEI ; Ckieiw lilMBtet SiIm nkMi UMDbN m - Prtme [•emUlan ktfcnncd titt Houtr ol CommoM today tiiat Britoln hM decUM to negotiate for membership i& Europe’i common market. The aBnoHDOcmeat, tortehadaw-ad ainoe last Thursday, posed a 'iraridwide retiailfltng of economic IT PAYS TO HAVE a' GOOD CREDIT RECORD You con take odvontbge of soles, .without cosh—then pay loter, if you protect your credit by paying on time. N«v« You Kopt Your Credit Record f Credit to You? pomiiic^ CREDIT BIREAU INC \ 333 North Ptrry Strtof, Pontioc 1^, Michigon "Guard Your Credit os a Socred Trust" relaUonaiiip involvinc the rival European Free Trade Afeodatioa (EFTA) which is threatened wMi kMtng Ks leadii« member, and the system by which Britain grants Oommonwealth partners tariff preferences in its market.. ■RA la a eoaanaah|ae Ms edifr she ipemheea te foflew Denmark, one .of the EFTA members, announced at once that it will Join Britain In applying for tnembership. Foreign Minister J. O. Krag announced in Copenhagoi. Macmillan promised that Britain will not Join the six-nation common market tmleu arrangementf are made to protect its commonwealth But Prime Minitter Robert Men-zies of Australia declared in Can-t that "you cannot turn a preferential system upside down" Without wrecklnf Australia's wheat and other exports. * * A A member of Macmillan’s own Conservative party. Anthony Fell of Yarmouth, accused hia party kmder in commons of taking a "gamble with Britiah sovereignty' and denumd that Macmillan resign. tobMttea. teat Ihs aUeet af the aampedtlMi at Barapeaa-wMlKi traffle fre* trade, the goal W the Teen Shot in Hand While Loading Gun M. told BherUf' hp waa loading the 4S-caliber pistol to scare off prowlers when he shot himself in the left President Charles de GauUs of Fraaoe, a diiefunemher of the mariiet, hksly wwdd inset th Macmillan to disi Britain's move. ♦ It ♦ State Department officials Washington appeare;^ gratified but oomnwnted cautiouiiy. ‘niey denied publlahed reports that Washington has actually wgsd Britala to the step token today. Macmillan said Britain will make formal application for entry into The 18-yeaiM)ld youth of 131 Ball SL. OitonviUs, nay lose the oat (Of Us hand, doctors ssid. He was dsscrlbed as la satiafsetory condi-ttan today at Pontiac Gensral Hon- The accidental Uwotiog occumd at the home of Gleim Greenfield, 2600 M15 In Brandon Township. The gun, an Army-type aulMnatle, to GroenfleU, Itenatoes are the number on» truck crop in the United States. Value the tomato harvest la the comiMh market and the ultl- U60 was $250 mUlton, neariy dou- mate decision will depend upon tha ................ results of negotiations. TILE SALE REMIMIER—YOU BUY LOW AT BUY-LO INLAID TILE Sax- 12»12 *sr*sr_ $1Q,t8 Wu UMlaMR W«N Til* 14" HIgb, AN ACN r. Cetert. AN YS* rl. Yea Waal “T CEIUN6 TILE f-RVg* WsBTIs ^ PAINT BUY-LO ~ 102-104 S. Scjginaw (Next Dooi to May s) Free Potkmg in Rear OWN MONDAY oid FRIDAY TIL 9 P. M. ARMSTRONG Atpholf Tile |A4i •0 Pat. per oartea Jte JBb ARMSTRONG VINYL EXCELON smr NwSa Wuias TV** -J212S2:____bu.;. RBlbtr Utt 4" Uiflfui RU(S.. T Pleasant Ridges Tax Equalization Appeal Is Denied The State Tax Commission has found Pleasant Ridge's appeal of its 1961 Tax equalization factor "without foundation in fact" and has denied the appeal made by the city. WlUiam B. Grabendike, director of the county's equalization department, said the denial of the appeal made-in May means gov.-ernmental units which levy summer school taxes can now proceed. The appeal, wMie pendiag, had Pleasant Ridge Supervisor Arthur G. Elliott Jr. protested that the city’s $13.4* million base, up $1.5 million over its previous equallntion, waa "groszy inadequate and erroneous.” A sampling of 63 property sales In the city by the county equalization stafi showed the property was Bsaessed IS per cent higher than its Inie or market value, Elliott al-legad. Grabendike said the tax commission took a sampling of^ the property before arriving at the rejection of the appeal. 37 Drown Near Tokyo TOKYO (AP)-Thirty-seven per-ons were imported drowned and another 25 misaing Sunday as an estimated 1.2 mill ion people stormed the beaches near Tokyo to escape .the heat. Some 1.40C were treated for Injuries at first-aid stations. HiA HUMIDITY Causes... * DEHUMIDIFIER Wrings Excessive jMoisture Erom the Air Protictf your homo ond furnishings from domogo cautod by HUMID WEATHER! Oilwon Dehumidifier eliminates mots-ture damage . . . protects your home and ••pRunri voc’* belonginga . . . removes sticky, humid air for your personal comfort. Just i^ug it in and it starto pulKng moisture out of the air. 'P'OR ONLY Operates tor pennies a day. sir 95 INCLUaiNO rtvs-TKAa waaRAkTf CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY ^11 Want LinriNaie itiaet FE 3-7812 NOW OPEN! NEW FOOD TOlllfN SUPER BARKET IN UNION LAKE VILLAOE FRESH-LEAN GROUND BEEF 29 lb FRESH-HOME-GROWN CORN ON THE COB 29 doz. s \ U.S. CHOICE SIRLOIN STEAK 79 1b I" WIOHS I jOUR ■ IfAVORITE UQUID DETERGENT q„^ COPAL Con oy 7t CUT GREEN BEANS 10 SALES DAYS— Mon., July 31 Through Wpd., Aug. 2, mi BANQUET .. . Frozen POT PIES • Chicken • Turkey • Beef i WATER-; ■ ..»dha. i tow i WLON: ■ /4Q. If Acl 1 FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS THE PONT?AC PRESS, MONDAVI Iron Mountain Raked by High Winds, Hail ;IRON MOUNTAIN «v-The Iron Mountain area suffered heavy prop-arty damage by a vicious storm descimed as a tornado Saturday. ■; Dickinson County Sheriff Harry FIVE Julian said "There^s po doubt about U, it was a regidiu: cyckate.” No injuries were reported, but widespread property damage was caused in a residential area just KMith of Iron Mountain. High winds, hail and rain purtimeled the Arkansas paid more than $100 million in 1959 in premiums c prop«1y and casualty insurance. Kin of Acilai Dios WE$T SPRING LAKE Id^-John Borden, 78, retired financier and explorer and former father-inJaw of Adlai E. Stevenson, died Saturday after a long illness. He was the father of Ellen Borden Stevenson, divorced wife of the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and twice Democratic nominee for president. With Gulf -at no extra cost neumuiCE that pays family heating bills Eztn fanuly protection for every household that gets Gulf Solar Heat on Gulfs Insured Budget Plan. If the insured dies, all remaining payments aie canoelM. Solar Heat is mxppiM for the rmtH the aeaBoawitiuiut further charge. 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That is the way mailman John Hnytanski described his nearly fatal experience after the mailboat J. W. Westcott II collided with a freighter on the Detroit River Saturday. passed nnder the thrsaUag propeller, hurt. SoctfoB of the nader wa- the Westcett. After being struck, the 44-foot mailboat heeled over so far that it nearly overturned. Capt. Alfred Nicholson, 47, ol Port Huron yelled at Hnylanski, 40, of Detroit, to jump. BLAMES SUN "The sun on our windows was blinding. The freighter blew her whistle, but she was right on top of us,” said Hnylanski of the collision with the Norwegion vessel Ravnefjell of Oslo near Belle Isle. Nicholson took the Westcott back to shore under its own power while a pleasure boat rescued Hnylan-;ski. ! The Ravnefjell was allowed to .; proceed after the U.S. Coast Guard ,f Iquestioned its captain and pilot. A True Open End Mortgage We are proud to offer these triilv open end mortgages. This is what thev provide: • 'I'oii may pay up the mortgage at any lime without advance notice and without penalty. . • Your mortgage can l>e increased at any later date to the original amount borrowed for additional improvements or foi* any other satisfactory reason.<‘ • Yon may pay any additional amount at any time without notice or penalty. • Y'oii may pay interest and prinripal in ad^anre at your ronvenienee. • Terms on our conventional open end mortgage up to 2.1 lears. • Monthly payment includes Interest, Principal. Taxes and Insurance. have rash available today . . . for these attractive open end mortgages. Come in and talk with one . of our friendly, courteous representatives. WE SPECIALIZE IN HOME LOANS WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS CURRENT 3^2% RATE ON SAVINGS ,411 Saving .ti-rminli. IiiaiirrH lo tlO.OOO bv in\ffn.99 Rog. 12.99 $299 $399 $j^ $399 ^10” me price. Quitted. Woeboble, won't mot or will. 4 colen. Cubhion foom rubber. movents. Warmth, weeur, luxury! WOOL BLANKETS Rog. 14.99 510» Cuorontced moth proof, woehoble. 5 colers. CH8RCETMEM AT WAITE’S... FOURTH FLOOR Sculptured 100% cotton pile *‘be6ford” rugs 21 by 36V 24 by 42" Rog. 3.99 Rog. 4.99 $299 \ $g99 37 by 48", Reg. 5.99.......................4.99 lid Cever, Reg. 1.59.......................i.jg, _____Non-skid bock\ 8 beautiful colon White percole PILlAw PROTECTORs\ •9c Smoetti tetitte percele wilb zipper. 69« piMiEHign V- THE PONTIAC PRESS « WM Hons SbMt MorauT. JULY a. un Automation to Stoy, Says Newspaperman Writing in The Akron Beacon Journal, Bnr Maibknbuko writes on automation after he frankly' confesses he doesn’t know a thing about it. He sa]^ in part: “One of iny left-handed friends, name of Emmktt McManioal, who runs a linot^ machine in the Beacon Journal’s composing room, stopped roe the other morning and asked, ‘Why don’t you write a column on automation?’ “When it comes to the subject of autonatioii, a seedy hobo who never came cloeer to an automobile than trying to thumb a ride can tell you just bow to run General Motors. ★ ★ ★ Irrigation projects seldom need ez-planation. But to the mifllons of folks in UB. cities they have a pretty remote sound. Some recent calculations sug-gcot, however, that irrigation development'brings definite benefit to the urban centers. Government studies disclose that 1,000 acres of newly irrigated land mean 13 “fanning opportunities’’ supporting nearly 50 farm persona and producing an average of |140,000 in crops each year. With total investment in property, machinery, equipment and supplies coming to about $425,000, it is figured the 1,000 acres provide 66 new jobs supporting 162 people in city areas. “As I see it, the problem with discussing auUxnaticm is that no one wants to look the facta in the face. Everyone goes about hinting darkly that any time a machine is installed one or more indlvidrials lose their jobs. “Mr. Waltbb Rsuthkr is in negoti-aticms with the whole auto Industry. One thing which is bugging Mr. Reuthib is automation. He’s trying to wheedle out of the auto industry The Man About Town some sort of cash ransom for the per- .................. sons he claims have been displaced wwri by nuts and bolts and cogwheels. J[ ||^f W |lG3,t Voice of the People: *Skovld (viue I/.N. Support to Resolve CerUun Issues* B toiTlto». t withdnwsl in itoia o( all torelsn armed foroaa from Gennan tedltaey and their rqdacement by U.N. police, guaranteeing a hat aUtua lor all Beriln and Ita aeceaa routoa, the eetabllahment o< a UJf. authority over all (Eaat and Went) Berlin, and the guarantee of the Germany border linea, with Germany given the chance for reunification. ★ ★ Ihe United NaUoM ahoakf'le given the aapport to reaohw theae laanaa. ★ ★ ★ At the same time a similar denuclearised atatus tor Poland and Ccedualovakia, and of this area milkary neutralisation to a police level should be n^fotiated through the United Nations. *Castro Had Reason for Latest Outrage’ How Mexico, Brazil Affected by Cuba Castro, picked this moment lor The two countries that would be his latest outrage because he knew most affected economically by the evoryona ww thliddng about Ber- fall of toe Communist ragtane in lin.' When the BWlln deal is over, Cuba would ba Mexieo and Brazil, let’s give him a maiHtfsed dash It is to tbair aupnnw tatonst lb of his own medldne and we have keep toe creatnrea of toe Kremlin a naval base right there. and Peiping in power there until sKelief the United Statea aagar quotas come up for revision in June 1962. The Undertow ★ ★ ★ So U is quite easy to see the sound eeonomics of irrigation which most city folks know little if snything about. David Lawrence Says: U.N. Incompetent in Tunisia Move IN EUROPE—The world is wit- dent Bourguiba and not on ex-nessing in tbe Tunisian affair a plicit instructions from the Se-sad example of the incompetence curity Council. •*Ont at the snggesAioiM is for the reduction at the work week, with, of course, no cut in the weekly paycheck. Another in-volves the bnilding at an nntoms-tion fond. This calls for auto management to put dollars into a pool for the succor of some individual who may have been forced out of a job bennse of a machine. ★ ★ ★ "The whole business adds up to shaky eccmomics. Whether you cut the work week or contribute to an ‘automation fund’ you Increase the price of the auto. “I don’t care what you’re peddling, be it auto, or blue cheese, bus rides or whisky bottle corks there’s always a chance you can price yourself out of existence. ‘The whole answer to automation is customers. You got cus-t o m e r 8 and autmnstion means nothing. Yon lack customers and I don’t care whether you build balloons with machines or trained ants or sewing by hand and you can take the balloons and stuff them. “You can lose customers in many ways but the easiest is to up the price so far that the customer can’t afford the item. ★ ★ ★ “There were jobless In this country even when everything was made by hand — before they had machines more complicated than a breakfast table coffee mill. “Chrysler has a giant stamping plant at Twinsbnrg. It cost Chrysler around $130 million. The plant is completely automated. &me^ times the mscMnes run 8 hours a day, sometimes 16 hours a day. They could run 24 hours a day — three shifts. “Assuming everything to be just so, Chrysler could hire about 3,000 men per shift, or a total of NINE THOUSAND daily, instead of what is currently on the pay roll—a guess being about 3,000. ★ ★ ★ “But to have 9,000 men working, there’d have to be custmners for the output, and don’t think for one second that Chrysler wouldn’t just love to have those machines working 24 hours daily, Sunday and the Fourth of July and even New Year’s Day ★ ★ ★ “It all adds up, friends. No one in his right mind is going to suggest that we put our engineering brains in storage and quit inventing machines. What would the housewives do without the automatic can-opener? “So, we’re going to have machines, and we’re going to have jobs—if there are customers, and if the workman will put out work commensurate with his ^y. ★ ★ ★ “But in the absence of 8 hours’ work for 8 hours’ pay; and In the absence of customers, there’s going to be dislocation of labor. The thing bothering me Is the way that the automation argument turns, someone’s merely trying to get 8 hours’ pay for 6 hours’ work.’’ Even City Folks Benefit Through Irrigation In this country’s wide western spaces, the Bureau of Reclamation’s '61 Oakland County Crop Goes to Oxford Elevator Wtoe guy: Uaually s nun who prmrm by his talk that ho Isn’t The first wheat of this year’s crop in Oakland County waa delivered by J. M. LemeiWB of Lake Orion to the Oxford Cooperative Elevator. On a 58-pound test It showed a 13 per cent moisture. On a vlalt among tbe great wheat fields In the Vaasar-rrankeninuth area last week, I waa surprised to find that most of their wheat crop had been harvested, while combining In the Pontiac area is just getting \mder way. And we must admit that better weather and moisture condlUons, and (keep It quiet) better land Is bringing a higher yield per acre. One advantage of a low yield, as pointed out by a prominent Oakland County fanner, la that the wheat heads are not heavy enough to cause the grain to lodge In the field and make harvesting more difficult. Sorry to say, relatives of Detroit Tigers are aearee In Pontiac. This column haa not been able to lo-, cate any who are very close of Writing me from his home In San Diego, CaUf., my lifelong friend, (his life), Don Leonard one of Pontiac’s first Eagle Scouts, highly commends our Centennial issue. Don says he aold this paper bn the streets of Pontiac 38 year ago. The eight-week-old kitten of Mr. and Mrs. Emery Pierce of Clarkston has the wanderlust. Missing the other day, It was found by Mr. Pierce In his car Iq a Pontiac factory parking lot, as he was leaving for home after his day’s work, having gone to Pontiac with him that morning in a secluded manner. It also secretly accompanied them to church at Waterford, being apprehended as It tried to enter the church with them. Somewhat In conflict with his name is Claude Trim who's In charge of the whisker contest at Davlsburg’s 125th anniversary on Aug. 19-20—and has raised a good one himself. If you have a favorite drive In ' Oakland County, tell us about It, and we’ll try to pan the good news on to others. Tapping only two large trees during the maple syrup season of a few weeks ago, Raymond GeorgensOn of Pontiac Lake made six gallons of 08 per cent pure syrup, which he considers a record for two trees. He writes that the sap simmered on the lowest heat In boiling It down, “without even steaming up the windows.’’ disarray of the United Nations machinery for mediating in international disputes. When serious trouble breaks out. as did a few days ago in Tunisia, it is wrong for Dag Ham-marskjohf, the secretary general of the United Nations, to accept an invitation from] one side and then promptly setj forth, Iv letter to!__ Bide, LAI "This allowed the French to claim toat he was idsying the Tunisian side, though his intention Is to play tbe honest broker.’’ to Cairo to arrange with the United Arab Republic for “volunteers" to help fight the French forces. ^ChUdren and Dogrs Picked on Too Much’ Why are some people so full of Hate and think they own the WHid and everyone in it? They holler when your children play loud In their own yard and they gripe if all the nei^boihood kids want to play basdball in the road. Aren’t children supposed to play or have people forgotten they were children once? If yoor dog baiks like any normal dog, he’o toot with BB gnso evea though he’o tied ap. America is supposed to be a free country, but some people make it hard to keep believ^ in it. D. H. This does not augur well for a negotiation in good faith. Preii-' ■ _ » ^ ^ dent Nasser has just announced *Bc SUTe FlTC IS Out When champing’ armed forces. But wfll the United ~ ♦k.. ..ww...!....— «» .U-- getting Into the season Nations take cognizance of. this ...... ohvioiu interventinn hv miiiiBrn/ everyone must be careful As sugar prsdaeetw, Mexloo sad Bnudl toea eapeet to resolve peimaaeatbr toe Boa’s tosre of the quota that formerly bolouged to Cuba. The c Citoa’s people continue to suffer in a friendlesa hemisphere, sacrificed to greed and to fear of the Soviet Union. Outos Todd Cforal Gables, FIs. ^Weather Forecasts Are Sugar-Coated* Those weather forecasters give me s headache. I know the aewspspers don't compose fOneasts, bat why do ward. In the Tunisian United Natkms called fire,’’ and it was obeyed by both aides, though the French refused to withdraw to the naval Ian con!bM(my. t 1 called for a'“cea obvious Intervention by military means in the dispute? (Copyright, INI) THOUGHTS FOR TODAY For wloked ai propoHds that must Inevitably be mwed into the regarded by the latter as partisan. f® remise the attack. In a subsequent letter of ex|da- WWW ■“ But the Tunisian government im- mediately sent its foreign minister nation to the French foreign minister, Mr. Hanunarskjold declared that his attitude was “based solely on the interpretation of the duties of the secretary general and of the princiiHes of the charter adopted by the organization in the past, and also on the intentions, I venture to believe, of all the members of the council who voted for the interim resolutions.” w w w ’ But is it the function of the secretary general of the United Nations to interpret the “intentions'’ of the members of the United Na- . tions? A tool's heart is in his tongue; but a wise man’s tongue Is in his heart.—Frands (Juarles. matches in the woods and the country.' Fires are still a nightmare and horror and no one gains. *1,^ w Put ool xior to ble. I suggest they conclude their rqtorts with the simple statement: “Tomorraw will be tlnis and so, subject to change by an act of God.” ' B. K. should run this letter every day for the balance of the season. One Wha Saffered Dr. Harold Hyman Says: Tranquilizers Are Cause for Doctors* Concern ceasfsl la the history of dlpio-ntacy when nmlertaken with the coaRMit of both sides In a dispute and When the mediators oonfise themselves at first to fset-Ondliig. Then, after feeling out each of the parlies, proposals esa be submitted for the sdkwtmeut of ilw dispute. President de Gaulle was right in refusing at this time to lee Mr. Hanunarskjold in Paris. For the latter had unwittingly disqualified himself as a mediator by confer-riiy; with the Tunisian government without first having obtained an agreement to talk with the other party, in the controversy. SHOULO.HAVE ... What the United Nations secretariat should have been at work on during these past few days was an investigation of exactly what happened before and after President Bourguiba ordered a siege of the French base at Bizerte and his troops opened fire on French paratroopers reinforcing the base. The world should have been given the farts, and both sides should have been permitted to state the reasons for their respective actions before an at-Irmpt was made to launch proposals for a settlement. Every mediator in any important controversy finds it necessary, above all, to establish his position as one of complete impartiality. Aiii editorial In the Baltimore Sun, reprinted In Europe, says in part: “Mr. Hammarskjold’s personal intervention in the Bizerte affair displayed less than bis usual finesse. He flew to Tunisia in response to a diredt plea from Presl- The Country Parson The effectiveness of tranquilizers in the management of acute mental disturbances has been established beyond question. W W W • Granting that they pousets no curative capacities, they do make it poesiUe to control acute episodes of nervous excitement, agitatkin and even mania. WWW But the widespread tendency to rely on long-term use irf tranquilizers to ease simple anxiety, restlesness and/or sleqilessness is becoming a matter of grave concern to moet knoudedgeable physiciana. "When I continued to be depressed and unable to concentrate, I went to my pastor thinking that maybe his advice would help me over the hurdle. He’s been patient and tried hard with me but I still feel so defeated. And I'm so atoamed of having to depend on hrsl«M. D ._____ „ treaUMiit. ' --------by Dr. WUlIsm Brad] (ONTriSkt IM) The Almanac Today is Monday, July 31, the , 212th day the year with 153 to pAp|;|*0|fa follow. wauasKO The moon is approaching its last quarter. The morning stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. 'Ihe evening stars are Mars, Jtf-piter and Saturn. On this day in history: In 1792, the director of the mint installed the cornerstone of the first building of the United Stales government, the mint in Philadelphia. By SOHN C. METCALFE Thnv is nt>thii« in garden . . . That I would prefer to see ... To the charm and quiet sadness ... Of a weepirg willow tree . . . Long I love to sit and listen ... As it whispers In the night ... Of some ancient forest stories . . . That ths hearts of trees delight . . . And I never shall grow weary ... Of the songs that it will sing . . u j Au umi II wiu Bing . . . TYiicn In 19j0, mm mier banned the days of golden summer . . . practicing of Christian Science ^inds puffed up hy angels bring throughout Germany. _ ^^hen I gaze upon Its branches In 1948, President Harry Truman ... That create a cooling shade dedicated the New York Interna- ... i am sometimes led to dream-tional Airport at Idlewild Field. ing . . . They are garlands made In 1963, Senate Majority Leader of jade ... Oh, a weeping wU-Robert Taft of Ohio died. low tree ... Is a thing of beauty A thought tor today: American in tbe sod ... and I think per-writer Ralph Waldo Emerson said: haps It also ... Is toe favorite “Nothing can bring you peace but of (tod. yourseU." (Ospyright, INI) Case Records of a Psychologist: of toe relatiVM, triMds and basl-noM assoctotos of the traaqsll-ii«d. There is no present method for knowing or measuring Just what these drugs do to the human brain. It is all very well to call them psychotoerapeutic agents, ataractics (from ataraktos, meaning cool, calm afxl collected), calmatives, mood drugs and the like. WWW But word labels are unsatisfac-.tory substitutes for fact. And, if some 30 million Amoi-cans are being tranquillzed, we are entitled to know more about tranquilization than what's suggest^ by a label. £ Use Table Psychology on Children the opUtM, vMetowUI of M^srity itM, the traaqalltien pr»- Verbal Orchids to- Mrs. Flora Oakharst of Drayton Plains; 84th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Stallman of Waterford; 53rd wedding anniversary. Mrs. George Ostrum of Birmingham; 83rd birthday. Mr. and Mr*. Alan Brownson'’--' of Keego Harbor; 51st wedding anniver-•ary. of Auburn Heighto; 83 birthday. deferred paymeat We seem to be getting a big bargala. At least for . the momeat But when the time comes for settling in hard cash, we find ourselves burdened with total Costs plus, interest and service chsrges. By DR. GEOBOE W. CRANE CASE J-«6: Sally G., aged IH, is getting her Daddy alarmed. "Dr. Crane, she doesn't seem to like solid foods,” he protested, “but still wants to nurse at the bottle. ‘Tve helped my wife try to feed her other foods with a spool, but ■he just turns her head and spits out. the gruel or po-j tatoes, etc. '“Why, she will not taste meat, yet it is my greatest food delicacy. Why doesn’t she enjoy meat and other foods the way I do?" TASTES ARE LEARNED The delight in foods is chiefly a learned reaction. Newborn babies apparently have very little fondness for any food except sugar. That may be why their mother’s milk is so much sweeter than the milk of cows or other animals. Beefsteak, fried chicken, oyster ■tew, or say of i and Danny at college. We went to a restaurant with them. And you can probably guess what Danny ordered. Three de luxe hamburgers! The restaurant owner personal- ly Mtbig Into a bimoh of pleas-arable emotioas originally linked fastened to the hanrimrger. Is a symbol of fan. Some doting parents make too , , a . . ^ ^IIIC UVUSIK pcucilito IIIOIVC y waited on and asked Danw great a fuss over their youngster to repeat his order, tm he thought .t the high chair, so he refuses be had misunderstood. DR. CRANE "When I first took tranquilizers." «*»««>•«■ exart m diae at the restaurant, and he was n high schooler. The waitress would look at him in shocked surprise. But he’d rather have his five hamburgers than chicken or steak. TABLE STRATEGY So when you wish to initiate your baby to new foods, you must try to get him happy and smiling, for that generalized pleasure will ultimately beconye attached to the new food, whether it be spinach or egg or cod liver oil.' But don’t give him too much of the new food item at the start. And praise him liberally. Keep him happy. This h called “conditioning'’ la psychology. That word simply means that the general kappt-mtm of toe diM Iwbmms Htond “I quickly realized how much they helped me. I could do things I coultoi’t do before beenuN nt mrv-ousneas. Like traveling, speaking before church groups and helpiiig in our local hospital. Soon I came to realize that my pills ware acting like a crutch. I felt I was becoming addicted. I began to have crying spells and I was easily upset. * ★ * "My doctor said It was just the ’ehai^’ and gave me a pill com-btaathm With tranquilizer and a gland extract •cboolsrs, Mtu tkey hsVe baea tanght to like tbeee new feod itoOM. "Why do my children tnrn»up their noses at steak and ftied c^cken,’’ many parents of school children, have asked, “yet ahow great fondness for hamburgers and hot dogs?" Most of you parents have noted this same toing in your own youngsters. They’d rather have a hamburger than a T-bone ateak, and that is no exaggreation. On one occasion a few years ago, Mrs. CkSBc and I visited Jqdy By repetfikm, he ultimately thinks the food Itself later tastes good. That's why children are so fond of hot do^ or hamburger sandwiches. * * * W For they encountered them originally at picnics where the kids were elated and footloose and happy. That mood becomes linked with such foods. Wh« their Intor fhhto toe hun-iMfgre testae feed. ^ are md- to eat thereafter until they again go through their theatrical performance. Serve your child his food. Be casual. If he doesn’t eat, clear toe table and ignore the situation. He'll not starve himself long. But hell try to outbluft you doting parents aM make you table slaves if you aren’t careful. WWW Alwsr* write te Dr. OMrf* W. Cr«a* f-a itemoM. Mlf-*ddrMMd wmlop* «4 to SC IS atarte tmt mUPfrSSi oa> Tb* AMOStetH rrmt te MUtted •leliMivabr to tb* um (or rtpnbU-utloo ot all toeol newt printed In SSaCSSIC.** Tb« Pontine Ptom te doUrmd br traao Ooontte* It U I1I.W • mr: •teevhtro In Idcbliinn and tB otbar pteeaa In tba Unkad eiatoa tISAI n nor. AU BAffl anbaartetteau parabla te Bdvnnaa. Poatasa baa baw aidd •t tba tad alaaa rate elreeBie, WalWdan, Maaabar at ASa Held in Fatal Shooting at Ypsilanti Auto Shop yraiL^ m-chuieu Much-ell. so, ot YpeUantJ, wm beld for InveMifatian In the fatal ahootfaiK of EM Moon. S2. of Mk» aald the two men ouar-ihled at a Ypallanti auto repair •hop Sunday over the purcbaae ot gwoUne and MltcheU produced MitcheU waa arrerted am afte^ ward at Inkater. Sleep Like Log lli|itlMa(h 9m I Tlane hatir aat, OrMwtarinrv. far Wwti (tm ■■Wa Jackie Suits Up for Skin Diving Boy* a Custom-Modo Rubber Jacket for Her Cape Cod Expbring HYANNIS FORT. Maaa. I» -Mri. Jaoiueline Kennedy, who did aome skin diving recently in the famoua Greek ialanda oft thr Aegean, haa purchaaed a akta diver’a rubber Jitchet lor line bare. The faat-growing apart of under- New Many Wear FALSE TEETH WIH More Comfort jWa/iwweer. botde Mm tmfOk «WM amdy.Ta Mt ^ talk in mon egtiort. )vM 9rtBklt • unie PAO- TBim e^ronr pUtjeT^|pimiBr, The Big Difference 4%' CURRENT DIVIDEND PAID Semi-Annually for 71 YEARS or 142 Consecutive Times CapitolSavings & Loan Assn. 75 W. Huron FE 4-0561 caught Amwlca'a Flrat Lady in it’s apell. It is reported, tbmigh, that she also has been using die jacket for another of her favortte qiorts, water-elding. Mrs. Kennedy's order fo custom-made Ja^et in the standard three-sixteenths of an inch thick, black neoprene rubber waa filled about a weak ago 1^ "Diver’s Den," a small ahop cializing in ridn diving gear. The First Lady, who observed her 33nd birthday I^lday, took a size 12 for her slender, 5-ftwt, 7-inch figure, and a etand-ln moilal, Bize 12, was quickly aoouted to provide tha measureroenU lop the bulky rubber jacket widi full length rubber sleeves, gaily decorated with a yelbw stripe at the neck and down the sleeves. The Kennedys have purchased ridn diving equipment at various times and their boat, the Marlin, reportedly carries It tor under- There are many reef areas in die Nantucket Sound and adjacent water areas where Cape Codders like to try skin diving. The Diver’s Den, one of whose owners learned the bualnesa as a navy skin diver in World War II, has all the needed equipment. It includes an “air station," where oocygen tanks can be refilled. The shop is decorated with some relics of ancient Greece that would probably fascinate Mrs. Kennedy if she did her purchasing in person. However, riie sent someone else to order and pick up her rubber Jacket. Hwiging from the ceiling of the small shop are huge, heavily oi-crusted am|4iora. the wine and oil Jugs used in ancient times in Asia Minor. * They were found by Robert Del-ashaw, the youthful ex-navy diver, from Quincy, Maas., who helped out on an expedition to the Aegm that expl(»«d Greek island areas for sunken ships. The jars have been dated by experts as having been in use about the first century, he said. Retail Sales Down DETROIT (* — Sales reported by Detroit area retaU storea in the first half of 1961 were lower than those for the same period of 1960. Sales of appliances and furniture dipped the furthest, 17 per cent, the Federal Reserve Bank said Saturday. OPEJV DAILY 9 to 9 PM. 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MONDAY, ;IULY 31, 19^1/ Wants $10 Billion for Future Outlays By F«ANK CORMIES jTtte rest «XMild be spread over WASHINGTW (AP) - Pred-Kvenil years. dent Kennedy, in his first six months In office, has i concrete proposals for increasing future federal spending by irell over $10 billion. Actually, the eventual spending NEAR fM BILLION In the tight of adminidration programs announced to date, servers expect the fiscal 1983 spending budget to approadi $90 billion. This would compare budgets in sight. Critics ccrtend that deficits are the nmre likely prospect. The strongest clue to the rising trend in federal spending comes from an analysis of this year’s requests to Congress for "new ob-Ugational authority" — ations, authority to sign „„.!W7,723.000.000 now officially fore- ^ -uthority for ap^es a.Ci borrowed from der the administration s new and ibe Treasury, expanded programs. However. ^ g will *besident Dwight $10,107,800,000 represents ' * b e „ ^go qoq onn administration offi Eisenhower last January asked fS* 2hic1?*KenS‘'\a!lts'^'* are’hopeful of balancing the bi obligatiiml^ buiget next year. Kennedy hies‘bority. Revisions a«l additiw Congress to pro\ude at this he »ni rnnimx* line by Kennedy have boosted, the to- Of the total amount. $6.51 billionCongress forj,' ^ ^ would be spent during the 1962 fiscal year which began July 1-!?^'^"..“ CASTONE AND AunmniM sdixc •• lew M $19900 HUE! 1M0 S&N 6r««a Stwii||s re 2.M2I 24 HOUR SERVICE 24S7 HnOi Orivt-PeetiK ' Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon said recently that I if the economy moves ahead as he expects, "our revenues for fiscal 1963 would be adequate to meet all of our national needs, with something left over." * * ♦ I That was before Kennedy's ^$3,454,600,000 proposal build-up for Berlin, but the administration argues thal. while tal to $91.4 billion Obligational authority requests! normally exceed spending climates for any single year because they cover prt^ams coming up in future years. If the Navy is to build' an aircraft carrier, for example, obligational authority might be provided in one chunk but the money would be spent over several years. Kennedy ccmtends that Eisenhower's request for obligational authority fell $96 million shy of ^ amount needed to finance existing programs. He has ed programs of his own calling] programing major spending in- for an extra $10.4 billion in ob-creases, it is pursuing a course of ligational authority, fiscal responsibility with haiunced ilractor Envoys I Return to Cuba 2 Members of Group Stay in U.S. as Crowd of 500 Says Farewell MIAMI. Fla. iOP) - Eight! tractor-prisoner envoys flew back I to Fidel Castro's Cuban jails to-j jday, declaring confidently lall return." More than 500 Cuban exiles] cheered them loudly at Miami In-j ternatjonal Airport. ♦ Two members of the delegation! 'that came to implement Castro’s 'pledge to swap 1,200 invasion prisoners for tractors remained { behind. Reinaldo Pico, 27. and Mirtoj Collaa), 26. claimed Castro on his offer. TO TALK TRADE With the eight aboard a regular airliner went a delegation of three from the Cuban Families Tractor Committee. They plan to confer with Castro regarding plans to ^exchange prisoners piecemeal as ransom tractors b^me avail- AMERICA’S H0.1 WRINGER WASHER TWO TEUS TO MT—NO DOWN rATMENT 90 DATS SAME AS CASH 121 N. Ssgisiw SL FE 5-6119 DOWNTOWN MUtK-SHOP “Kour Appliance Specialists" OptB Mob. «b4 Fri.‘til 9 P.M. CLOSED WEDNESDAY AFTERNOONS JULY and AUGUST SAVE-. EARN boBiUie 10th 1st A% Carraat B*ti ■ P»M ■ Sroil-AuuU Established in 1890 — Never missed paying a dividend— 71 years of sound management, your assurance of security. Assets over 56 million dollars. Capitol Savings & Loan Assn. Establbhed 1890 » 75 W. Hnion St.. Pontiac FE 4-0561 CUSTOMER PARKING IN REAR OF BUILDING The committee, composed relatives of prisoners, had been raising funds for the tractors. The exile crowd booed when a man they recognized as a Cuban police agent boarded the same plane as a passenger. The exiles yelled; "chlvato! "—informer. Ulises Carbo. spokesman the eight prisoneris, declared, is tough to go back. But I know that we shall return. We have a very good chance to $ee our fel-prisoners liberated.” OBJECT OF SEARCH Pico was the object of a five-hour search Sunday night alter his girl friend. Alicia Lugon reported he had been kidnaped from his downtown Miami hotel room. Pico reflimed later, however, and explained he had "gone out B walk" He wa.s questioned briefly by an FBI man and Miami detectives. Collazo was reported to have left his hiding place in a Miami suburb and gone to Tampa. He said he planned to io from there to Washington. The Miami Herald reported it learned the Central Intelligence Agency has quit paying some 1,300 Cuban exiles of the anti-Castro military corps who survived the April Invasion. The exile troops, according to Marshall Wise, director of the Cuban Refugee Emergency Center, bet*ome eligible for monthly welfare checks from his office, provided they apply. Other Cuban refugees receive the welfare payments. Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain fiSuTid a new healing substance In one hemorrhoid ease after another .“very striking improve-aaent” was reported and verified by a doctor’s observations. Pain was relieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place.' And most amazing of all -this improvement was maintained in cases where a doctor’s observations were continued over a period of many months! In fact, results were so thor-ei^h that Bofferers were able to asake sndi astonishing state- ments as"Piles have ceased to be a problem I” And amon^ these sufferers ware a very wide variety of hemorrhoid conditiorts, some of 10 to 20 yean’ standing. All this, without Die use u narcotics, anesthetics or astringents of any kind. The secret ia iling substance (Bio> __ _ . _______„ -iiured tissue on all parts of the body. This new healing substance is offered in nupponitory or oint-mrnt form called Preparation H*. Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation H Sup-lositories or Preparation H Wever Troop Members Preparing for Trip Eleven members of W e v e School Boy Scout Troop 29 camped over the weekend in the Wildwood Lakes region of Holly Area State Park, in preparation for a five-day cahiping trip Aug. >13 in the Grayling area Larry Gray, 1495 Carlisle Ave. a Tenderfoot, reported that the troop left Pontiac Saturday morning under the supervision of James C. Hayes, assistant scout-ter, returning Sunday afternoon. Donald Maher, scoutmaster, and other scooters will join the troop in its Grayling campout. Cockroaches Written Guarantee Fran Houses, Apartments. Greceriss. PocNories and Resicnirants. Rsmoia out only ons beur. He signs used. Box Ex Conpaay iei« rMUu St. Bk. BMt. n t-uM Congo Rivals Slat^ to Meet Kasavuba and Tshanvba Prepare for Talks on Opposite Banks of River / Sunday raised hopes the two lead-ders would reach an agreement that would bring Katai«eae dele-gat«) to the Congolese parUament. now meeting at Lovanlum University. ’Tshombe indicated to newsmen Sunday he might come here. But IHVvitHiidy he had insisted on a Congo summit meeting outside the country. LEOPOLDVILLE. The Ooi«o (UPD—Central Congolese President Joseph Kasavubu and Katanga President Moise TUiombe sat opposite baidcs of the muddy Cmigo River today laeparing talks that could solve the Congo dilemma. Kasarobu and Tsbombe were srheduled to meet sometime today, but no one knew whether the meeting would tnke plhee here In the central government cnpitnl or nrross the river In Brusnville,« where Tshombe Is waiting. Tshombe’s arrival in Brazzaville $ 1.7-Million Suit Filed in Walkout at McLouth DETROIT If) — McLouth Sted Oorp. filed a |1.7-million dai suit against Local 2659 of the United Steel Workers Union, charging breach of contract in a walk-which has kept McLouth plants idle since July 20. In addition the steelmaker asked I $150,000 a day for every dqy “the i strike or work stoppage" continues. The local union contends that it is not on strike and that its members quit in protest over safety conditiais at McLouth’s plants. Kennedy Hails Labor Helations at Missile Bases CAPE CANAVERAL »-President Kennedy today piaiied a new era of labor relations at the nation’s missile and space baae sites. Arthur J. Goldberg, secretary of labor, made Kennedy's message public at thia first stop on the secretary’s quick twoday inspection tour of the labor situation at major missUes-space installa- ons. Goldberg, accompanied by industry and labor union members at the MIsrile Sites Labor Commission, next will visit Strategic Air, Command headquarters at Omaha. I The party then will go to Vander-I berg Ba^ in California and finally, to Mountain Home Base, l^ptr Firm Avoids Strik* in Kalamazoo KALAMAZOO (UPD -- A contract settlement wais reached Friday between the Southerland Division of the KVP-Southeriand Paper Go. and Local 1010. United Pa- permakers and Pnperworkers Union ATL-CIO. - The new contract ends the threat of a strike that was tentatively set by union members for tonight, when the old contract expires. ^ MONDAY-TUESDAY Only! SALE! Conpleie Phileo Hoim Lamdry OuMW You G«t All This: a Now *01 PhHco Wringer Woehor 0 Motel, Ad|weteMo Ireiting Boerd 0 a Monihe Supply *f TIOI All SfiO for Only 710 Round Steaks Rib Steaks Sirloin Steaks T-Rone Steaks B/ue Ribbon Farms 75: 79 89 99 Center Cut Whole Slices Tender 7" Cuts All Choice Cuts Table Trimmed or Cube Steaks Table Trimmed All Choice Center Cuts Smoked Ham Slices 69i Peschke, Lean, Sugar Cured 55»> Sliced Bacon Pan Ready — Lake 19i Fresh Smelts Etna Coffee Reg. or Drip 2-lb. Can 99. Food Club Flour f Bag NacMMry Sulud Dressing I Z9* •=- Hills Bros.—with coupon below COFFEE Pillsbury—with coupon below FLOUR Mb. Can 5-lb. Bag 59* 39" Food Club Evoporotod Canned Milk Velvet Homogenized Peanut Butter 8 Toll TO Con* I Food Club—-Holve* or Sliced^-^ieovy Syrup, Cling Peaches 4^^1“ Goylord Unpeeled Whole—Heavy Syrup '*59' Apricots p's 4c-.r WmOLKYS SAVl WITH THIS COUPON j Hilh Bret. 1 jl wrn _ Coffee c- 59* I Limit One Per Customer -2- j axpiRtt tar., auo.'s —.l! Michigan Fresh Sweet CORN BUTTER Gaylord' Mb. Print jPrkti effective tbr« S§ttr4ty, fiNfeif 5. We mmt the rlgbt M Hmit fMWtltieL FlfMER GIFFi^ F/\STb"F< WIXM OGLO O R L L_ GT/\rviF^^ THE j^ONTlAC PRESS, MONDAY: JULY 31. 1961 NIXE TUISPAY ONLY $UHK SPKUtt BOILED HAM ★ 49^^ ★ tig Issues Before Congress Guuuta’s populatloa «u utt-lbar, ■ gain ol 3TO,0(XI ym PiWni-■tlS.02mimanlutDecero-lber.lsn. ImaM Gon- M(X BlSLL WASHINGTON (AP) -real cornea to gripe tM 1th aoroe of the malor laauea of Preddent Keniiedy’a legialattve aid program which carrlea the five-year authority Kennedy ■dnd for on an l8.84>illion program of economic devdopment In an air of upcotatnty abput the r^ta, the Senate will be^ ATTENTION YOUNG MEN Your futurn is in electronics ... the fastest growing industry in the 'world today! Plon for thot future by toking the finest training available. Enroll now for our next "Electronic Engineering Troining" program. The Houae takea up, with Veedy approval expected, a Sea-authorizfaig 'a foreign the President to hold fighting men and units on duty an extra year and to caUvup to 250,000 reserves to active duty to, counter the Soviet threat to atpieieze th^Weat out of Berlin. House expects to get around by midweek to passing another Senate bill authorizing a new 1958,570,000 outlay' for ing the ddivery of i 8 Die on Michigan Roads, 6 in Water on Weekend ships and plahes. It will sandwich in, probably Tuesday, approval of to oontimie federal airport aid. MONEY BILL Before the Senate can launch its foreign aid debate, it will have Dearborn Woman Ready to Wager Lottery Is Best to dispoee of two maj(^, money biUs. It hu agreed to be^ vot-: this afternoon on the Arab of aetlee cA 89,OB8,filiOOO UU to finance eper-atksie of die Natkmal Aeronvitks By The Asaeeiated Preaa Eight persons, two of thsro tetn-■ hi traffic acd- Baltimore, Md., wu killed Friday ' I car struck a tree along U.S. 25 a baU-mile north of Mount Eholnaies Isslilile sf Tsehaohgf WO 2-5660 JUNK CARS WANTED - HIGHEST PRICES PAID -WE PICKUP FE 2-0200 I PONTIAC WAarrx | Traffic vletimt: John U. SevOT Jr.. 25. el Grand Rapida wu Road in Grand Rapids. Oari M. Guige. IS, at Water fEMd TewiMMp, died Batudgy In a head-«n ooHMen on V.S. l* outskle Fsntlae. The ether drtv-Ma 0. WIBaim, », at Mra. Martha Whitfield. «, of Waterford Township, wu fatally injured Saturday in a two-car col-Usioa at an interaectian a mile west of Pontiac. Mark Fetters, 17, of Arm Atbdr, wu killed Son^ when the car in wMdi he wu riding left M22 and struck a tree a mile south of Northport in Leelanau County. Theodore M. Stanford, Zl, of Detroit, died Saturday in a collision on M37 about 9^ milei south of Traverse City. John M. ConeHy, 21, of Muske-an, wu Injured fatally Saturday bn a road near Muskegon. He died en route to a hoepital. Stop all 9 kinds of ITCH the May doctors do! r iwsiMe riUehsi« e&Bih _ CYCLE, CARCSASH Bryan K. Donnelly, 20, of Fraser, wu injured fatally Friday when his motorcycle and a car collided on U.S. 25 near Mount Clemens. William P. Richardson, 27, of hwediuti te soelho paks, upNi Sdenoe has devdoped a remait-aUe new formula that oombiDes 6 anti-itch ingredienU to relieve all 9 kinds of itch in seconds! Called CALAMATUM* Ointment, this new medicated cream actually stops itriiing and burning cm oen-taa—whenever they occur . . . soothes pain, aids healing. Eflbo-tive even on spreading itch like poison ivy, because h hdps dry ing. Prevenu risk of infection from icntching. too, beceuae CALAMATUM lunu into Ut t offl There’s nothing Eke eooHng, soothing CALAMATUM Ointment. Getittoi roRMS ns OWN hnk banda 019S9 Isodine Fharmacal Coipoiatioii, Dovep; DeL Hie drowniiig victims: E. Allen Fbgarast, 11, ol Uhkm-" - --------- while DETROIT tB—A grandmother Dearborn is convinced that she has come up with a sure-fire solution to Michigan's financial problems. Mrs. Helen Klovski, 47, is boosting a stateniperated lottery. “It might taka yean to accomplish,’’ aeys Mrs. KbvsU. “But it is one way to erase the Mate deficit and eliminate the poasiUltty ’^PariT'Snwud OakfauM Osnaty. William Cart Swanson, 14, Lansing, drowned Sunday in Horse-head Lake in Mecosta County. Robert Bordeau, U, of Conklin, drowned Sunday in Jlalf Moon Lake in Musk^on County swimming outing. William Joseph Lafond, M, of Vandercook Lake, drowned Sunday in Farwell Lake, about 15 miles south of Jackson. Joseph M. TbrreD, 42, of New Haven, drowned Sunday wboi be stepped into water over his head in MiU Credc aboift 20 miles north-of Port Hitran. Already, she says, more than 300 residents in the Detroit area have promiaed to suppeut her "Qt-izens for Michigan Sweepstakes' movement. “We hope to have 100,000 signatures to siiow the convention delegates how the peo{de feel about Michigan running its own lottery,' said Mrs. Klovski, wife of a factory worker. Reds to Lend Sudan Millions for Fanning Foundation Hits Competition of Social Agencies NEW YORK (AP)—Vduntary hesdth and welfare agencies often take part in nuteful competition among themselves, says a Rockefeller Foundation study group. In a report issued Sunday, the group said the agencies, while doing much good, also fall frequently to tell the truth about their {vograms and financing. . Those factors, said the committee, are causing many Americans to lose confidence in the private agencies. The report recommended a national commission to coordinate planning and development of uniform system of accounting and financial reporting among the agencies. ^ KHARTOUM, Sudan (UPI)-lhe Soviet Union wiU lend Sudan up to million to build up its agriculture, it was announced Sunday. The 12-year loan carries the ! interest rate ol 2% per cent. be used to buijd grain storage facilities, training 'centers and ah agricultural experimental station. Soviet technicians will supervise construction. Other terms of trade agreement signed in Moscow this month provide lor scholarships Soviet schools for Sudanese students. In Accra, Ghana, it was an-..ounced thRt a team of Soviet experts wiH arrhife next month to discuss Ghaihan constructian iNoj-ects to be completed with S^t OPEN TONIGHT TIL 9 When work on tl^ measure is “ take up a {5,161;380.000 appropriations bill for the Welfare and Labor depart- Mrs. KlovsU plaw to take the proportion to the iMiNLi—i ceaveal^n this fafl r te seek a Divorce Decrees mmmmmmim-cosrmmmmmm HOSPITAL-SURGICAL INSURANCE A $2.30 - raiLDBBN V U TEAM .. $ .SJ thWmi hlllftakE With the prospect ol a weric td debate ahead on the foreign 4id Senate Democratic Leader Mjke Mamfield of Mon-said the Senate may take out for paseege of a |47-biUion defense ^iproprlations bOL A subcommittee already has increased this measure |1 UlUon the extra 23.454,800,000 Kennedy asked for the military buildup to cope with the Berlin HOUSE TO CONCUR The House, which previously voted $42,711,000,000 in de is etqpiected to concur in most of the additions certain be jHuule by the Senate. Hennedy asked for $4,762,500,000 in ectmomic and military aid for underdevekqied countries in the fiscal year which lion. The House Foreign Affairs 'Committee approved $4,355,500,000 cut of $407 miUion. DeroUiir froEn Je|in Mklt. Kenneth I. from llsrj L. Bhider. Oeorto T. from Slorr ZanrlU. lUnnab O. from NopolooEt Turner. Sereho A. from Thomu P. Ronrr. TEimar J. from Kant R. Knler. Junoa from Thelma L. Unarda. Janat M. from Ruasott C. Aller. Sally A. from RaroM S. Morfan. Out S. from May J. Pooaoii. Tohnda V. from Imory i. ParoUl. Paarl A. from Albert W. Randoraon. Curtia from LUUan M. Nleholaoti. Kathlaen from Cbarlao J. i Beverly A. tram Frank L. 5avu. Wilma J. from Oeorfe B. Buaby Sr. Zvelyo 1. from Herman J.'Darta. Irene A. from James B. SUrUni. ^mary p. from John B. Krlsbal. Kllubetti from Kenneth D. Curfman. Joaecih D. from Joaaphlna J. Watroa. ”— *---------Paul Matson. -----Robert P. Ritchie. P. from Proda M. Bandnma. ” *------unei M. Houeir -— .. ..v» atovart. Amaa C. from Harry R. RuaaeU. Mary from Pranklo m'. ! ^50 fill payday for 70* take 2 weeks to pay waleoiMfo our monoy I Try our fsinous Payd^ Loan. Or you can get cash for any good puiposa in any amount $25 to $500 Our terms are fair, our peoplo an aooom* modsting, and wa can help you in a hurry. In short.,yo«*M wdomns to our moneyl Associates LOAN COMPANY On the $8.8-blIlion five-year program, about $7J billion would come froih treasury borrowing4 The remainder would come from repayment of postwar loons. Administration hopes for proval of the long-range loan fund were pinned on' a compromise Democratic 1 e a d « r a believed might undermine the case of opponents who have attacked kdoor spending'’ Treasury bmrowing. CMtics have contended that Congress would be giving up its responsibility for expenditures by a five-year grant of loaning authmlty to the Presk PONTUC: IN-in N. Baflaa* Bt., PX f-«U mahlfau Mlnela MUa, PS S-SMI DRATTON PlADfS; M7« Dllte Buy., OB S-IWI bterast sbariaa at 1% par sp Is we, par masUi k< sad par msslh hatwaan IM ai Tha Poopla of Ooklood County Who Never flaiehed HIGH SCHOOL 1 to write for FREE booklet TeUe hew yea caa 5- AMskh^aj. at U P.O. Baa Mil m ASas Psifc. MmaifH ,-a ^ ease ma yssr raXB le-Psfa Biffe Brhaal BaaUat ^ 5 ........................... .......................S m Addraas ................................... rhasa......... to AT HOME IN SPARE TIME aid. Up to 43,000 Yearly Hit by Parkinson's Disease WASHINGTON (UPI) - Between 25.060 and 43,000 new cases of Parkinson’s disease are occurring eadi year in ttie United States,' the Public Health Service rrtx>rted today. In a new pamphlet on the dis-| ease, which seldom kills but B leaves its victims with uncontrol-1 laUe shaking in one or more parts " APPLIANCE BUYERSiJILLIE FRETTER SAYS: IPS A SIMPLE MATTER . OF ARITHMETIC I I 2 a 2 Mill makae 4 wMi «i, sad by rtie tame tehee we beve te malgi • profit when we teN a bht I henoMly feel yee will PROFIT by ear tmall PROFIT merkaa, if you buy freia ma. Buy muM aew '61 eppliascat and TVs ia stock for aaly $10 over our eperstionel coM - ■ Weshon •AatamaMc Oryart • RaMtaratem • Proa sen • Raaflae • ' “ ' FROM OUR TRADE-IN DEPT. Fslly Recanditionad 1-Ya«r Guoniiitaa I/O ^....... TAKE YOUR PICK! 1# V si!! 2V2c juiPiAfticWAUTUc..... OFF TAKE YOUR PICK! JUIPlAfticWAUTUc....... OFF II FREE all iattalietiemi PlaMic aad Ceramic Tile and all typet of Floor - all uaceaditienally guaranteed. A NEW MAGIC FORMULA SUFER-VINYL-X Has- $7.95 LATEX PAINT Exterior ud lutartor. Ounrutaod GsL Bot te pMl w bUsUr. IdMl for nay ^ ^ typo traiio. 9x1,2 LINOLEUM RUDS IrtQMlIly, $395 /Larg« Saloction 9 PURE VINYL »"x9" Clam-4>«» Spattor Pattomar— Im gMHty 9* MITAUIC iNUID UNOLIUM TILB— 1st gusNty $**• ltoady*Mised, QuaNty CuattsHsd R4RS Ixtiffor-luMrier WHITi PAINT 6al."1"" aiM miM Bixod to your eyeelflmttoH.. 1 Vinyl PiMtic, 1st qnaHty FLOOR COVtRING Lsrgu mlocttou SPATTiR ASPHALT TRi ♦xfxli'' Eiu Je SPKIAL CERAMK WAU THE Lorga Calar SalactiM IM61AZED aRAMIC-irx24" Foot TUL mM* Mforu iNi^Df wiiiyi uwivm ciaimm iwwa l/9ori , .. LVAR PAinUNG Ntw m-Vs- ...... nEnmsHn t-giooved Altn 4x8-V4" If Yon Don't BUY frain US, ALL TILE AT CARLOAD PRICES FEB'Sin 13 mss tuesT huron sr pontirc W« BOTH Lom MONEY! " PONTIAC'S LARGEST ARMSTRONG DEALER! of the body, the service said at least 300,000 Americans now suffer from the little undostood sickness. I Refrigerators $1^95 Up CAN BE HNANCED Goes to Possible ■ Summit WitH Laotian Rivals SIDEWALK POITAILE IOA96 TELEVISIOII 09 1-Tm Ail Coftditioaw >09 SPECIALS! STEREO $JA95 POITAILE W DISH $14Q» WASHER iW WRINGER WASHER ^78 STEREO With AM-PM Sinwesst Radi# .‘119” 21-Inch CtnsolB TilBviiioii $,4995 HAMPER DOOR GAS DRYER $9995 VIENTIANE (UPI) — Pro-Western Preipier Prince Boun Oum of Laos 14ft here today for Cambodia and< a passible summit meeting of the three royal Loatian rivals. He headed for the capital city of Phnom Peuh with a copy of approved Sunday by the Rstloiial ’The assembly after four hours debate agreed on amendments to give King Savang Vatthana the power to form a new Laotian government and name a new premier without further legislative pro'val. “Neutralist" Prince Souvanna Phouma already was in Phnom Penh, where he awaited a response to his call for a Laotian "aununit" t^erence. Damage Suih Total $250,000 in Accident GRAND RAPIDS (PI - Two damage suits totalling $250,000 were filed in U.S. District Court Friday by an Illinois couple as a result of a 1960 automobile accident in Scipio Township of Hillsdale County. Defendants are Lawrence Nesbitt and hla wife, Lois, til Jones-ville. Mr. and bfes. Woodford Ferris of MarriiaU, m.. filed suits. Firm's Profits Down BRAND NEW 1961 WuHighoise “LAUNDROMAF WASHER With Exclusive Handy Weighing Water Saver— Door. . . Suds . . . 3 Full Rinses on All Cycles— Saves on Soap -ond Bleoch— Uses Holf as . Much l)AMP]Y£jSS NEW Westinghouse ■ LKCTItlC DEHUMIDIFIER • b4inm.mM.Ml 198 30 Days Exchonge If Not Fully Satisfied GENEROUS TRADE ALLOWANCE FAST 24-HOUR DELIVERY NO MONEY DOWN ON ANY PURCHASE Courteous, After the Sole Service Fratter's CerM Wsce—t Mabt tlw Mg PHfaranco-Fretfa It 9e Yeersall t EegerOest «f Mn" DEraOrr (AP) - The Detroit Steel Corp.’s profits were down neariy |4 milHm for the first six months of 1961 compared with last year’s flret half. Corporation figures announced Saturday showed net earnings of $299,91S from Jan. 1 to June 30 this year. For the e period last year, profits were $4,207,465. FRETTER APPLIANCE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE ROaD 2Open Doily 10 A.M. 'HI 9 P.M. - FE 3-7051 - Sundov 10 A M. 'til 7PM , - I . T-nr . I % TEX .. V' , ' I vV V \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 31, IMl -1—- fir Honors Shared by tongs, in molt ci tb» danei «t the Onk-Und Ooanty Stock and Saturday. The 6iree are the Stuart Hulch-ian of 10S2 E. Hamlin Road, Avon _ . ... WtW Pmf LM« )|«aM OuBptMi)- Towaahip, the G. Ouioa Longs efitnem iw3««»a hy w. r. or«y*ea. 39» Sleeth Road. Commerce Township: and the Keith Middle-! jhire-a«MW prawa «i o>x*rs t>vb tons of aflO Stoney Creek Road, * 600 Pefsong Expected Tors W saow—Two area youths, yrfao entered their Holsteias hi the Oaklmid Cbumy Black and White Show Saturday, eathed top awards with their animals. Shown receiving the trophy lor having the Judor champion ia Doug Long, 16. at Oonmerce Township widi his senior yearlh« MiOi. .BiU H ship poses proudly witl Empress, which was itchins, 18, d Avon Town-his 2-yearoM milking cow he gr^ champion. Tim >ade«hy Heih Miller of Pickering, IS. of Oakland Town- Doug Long’s list of sccompllsh-when he was picked for the boys’ division. He is 16. •Junior winner wu John Wilson of Okkland Township, who is 13. Mah rsrwi (thsasta bsO} ■bS TtalrO-Mantt Pliw*. n»n_Mnx calf non sou. esv amnd—Monte PI Camp Mating Begins ThursdqyNearRomeo Mr. and Bln. R. E. (yDoimeU of Forest CBy. bsra. announce the engagement of dieir daughter Winnifr^ to David Lee, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Lee of 26 Orion Road, Independence Township. A Sept. 2 weddii« is planned. s gmad rhsmpise ball af the BOOHolsteins Slated for Show Block and White Sol for Rural AcHvttiM Canter Near Ann Arbor Eastern Michigan Fair Opening This Evening niLAY enr - nw 6m i Eastern Michigan Fair gets way ofDciaily at 6 pLm. today with the opening of carnival shows and rides on the midways Three hundred or more steins are expected St the Statejl Black find Whke Show at the Rural Activities Center in Washtenaw County Friday. For the Holstein breeder, this is the big event of the yesr. others, an onxxtunity to see outstanding Uvestock show at no ies M 7:43 p.m., play of stunt driving will be presented on the moe track by Dapper Dan Fleenor’s HMl Drivers. Admiasiaa at the gate will be free tonight. nw baabess af the fair ae-taagy started at It a.m. tsday af «« Cteb aai s af Amerwa pre|- Paid Chaffee, entry dark at the tag to bring their animals in the day befcaw the show and that reg-iatration and health papers be aent akwg with the aairoaia. The Jadglag starts at t a- m. » sse Is the aged Howard WQIde, the State Black and White Show committee chairman, says also that 4-H and FFA yosmg people to this event In fact, this is an opportunity for every dairyman in Michigan to get a first-hand look at some of the best Holsteins in the state, be added. ir It it . The Rural Activities Center is half way betw^ Ann Arbor and SaUne on the Ann Arbor-Saline Road. This is approximately mlea west at Detroit. R is easily accesslMe from all directianB and identy of parking apace is provided. In case rata, the show will be held in a tent on the grounds. In addition, a lunch Mand will be aet up and free, cold milk will be furnished by the American Dairy Association of Michigan and the Michigan Holstein-Friesian Association. tay aty. ^ Jodgiiv in an Floral Hall de-jiartments wM begia at 10 a.m. tomorrow followed by the midway peoing at noon.' The fair’s big kwr-nlght harness raciag program abo is olated to tomorrow, opening at 8 p.m. the mmiiig of an event fbr ^yea^old fiUies. Fbur races are PA’TRICU ANlf HHa» Annnincement is made of the engagement of Patricia Ann Hines to Norman Leroy Gid-cumb by her parents Mr. and Mrs. Robeii E. Hines of 4161 Bunker Road, West Bipomfield Township. The prospective bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ovis Gidcumb of 6410 Upper Straits Blvd-.'^West Bloomfield Township. No date has been set for the wedding. Tim harae radSf evsMls are srbedMed to be beU tssasnsw Itaeai^b Fridey at • pwm. la The show was held at the Odk-land County fairgrounda on Perry Street and Walton boulevard. The Judging was done by Herb Miller of WllUamston. Following ia a list of the ^^ftSSSfaSSstet M wan* Last a2$iri ^jnnl-^OdMtei^4re|^ pweeteS bf awwo Loas B«tm ram TtorO-A^ Panw. State Gets Award for Pedestrian Care LANSING (UPI) Michigan’s fourth consecutive pedestrian pro-tection award will be accepted Ttieaday by Gov. John B. Swain- ML Michigan took first place among 11 states U comparable aim in the contest sponsored by the American AutomoUIe Asaodatkn (AAA). Grand awards were also won by Femdale and Detroit ftv cities in Panai. Jtwre Mwtte Fli>yVba BaoMa FSrSte; AT*_Tewa*lK^ k* of Uovl TMra- ba priseadei at I pun. Batnday. flw flaal day of the fair. Games and special events foi the youngsters will be bdd at 2 pnb.'Wedneaday and a pony race for diOdren wU] be staged an hour * Iter. Horse Joilging and competition in the Eastern Michigan Dairy Show begin at 10 a.m. Wednesday and the midway also will open at "lat hour. Judging of livestock is scheduled for 10 a.m, Thursday and the tractor hauling contest is slated for p.m. A parade of automobileB and fatm machinery will be held at 1:30 p.m. followed by children’s events at 2 pjn. and hone and pony racing for children at 3:30 p.m. A tug of war between Lapeer County fire department teams is slated tor 7:30 p.m. Friday. Highlighting the final day of the lair will be the presentation of Minnie Pearl and her variety stage show at 8:15 p.m. Saturday. The radio star’s appearance will be the entertainment feature of die fun-filled carnival. The stage show will be preceded by the finals in the tug of war contest at 7:30 p.m. The midway opens at 10 a.m. Saturday and a Uvestock parade will start at 1:30 p.m. Following today’s program, admission wUl be SO centa tor adults and 2S cents (or persons under 12 of age. Addison Given Emergency Unit by Two Groups ADDISON TOWNSHIP - An nmiency rescue unit for the Ad-dlaon Township Fire Deaprtment was presented to the town^ Saturday by the local poUce auxiliary and Ground Obaqrver Corps. The i960 vdiide, equip^ with roUaway cot, siren and running Ug^ was bought for $2,500. Ttanb' ship Clerk Robert McChllum said a radio and resuadtator also will be installed in the unit. The vekhtee was preoeated to TawaMdp Sapervtsar Fraak Webber Saturday by Fraade Wesf-pkal. eUef of the towashlp’s anx- There wlU be imeaching aerv-kes every day at 10:30 a.m, and 2 and 7 p.m. with BiUe classes and recreatian idanned for the youngsters. The camp has its fully equipped playground. On Sundays attendance at the Succumbs After Crash DETROIT (JH — Sam Fricano, 45, of Roseville, died today of injuries suffered last Friday when his car hit an abutmen Edsd Ford Expressway. The auxiliary department must raise $700 for the final payment on the unit. Fund raising events are planned to finance the balance M the purchase price. The Ground Observer Corps, wfaidi recently disbanded here, donated $190 for tbe vehicle. Mrs. Kenneth Green was chairman of the fund drive for the corps. ROMEO — The 97th annual Sion of the Simpson Park Camp Meeting, oldest interdenominrilon-al camp meeting in Michigan begins ’Thursday m mUes northwest of here. Close to‘600 persons from all over Michigan, Northern 0^ and other parts of the country are ex-pwtad to be living on the camp grotBMia during the lOday maetii«. They wu he heaeel hi eaWaa, oes- First Methidist Chareh, St. Ctalr Mlia^anaiy Day will be Aug. 8. The 10:30 a.m. service will feature Dr. Lela G. McCbmieU and the Mt. C;armel (Juartet. Dr. McOon-nell and the lingers are from Mt Camiel College, Bethany, Ky. Speaker at the 3 p m- eervioe rttl be Revj MenRaU Chvtt of the forid Ooepel MkiaioB. The Methods Mteaioaaiy Hour ia al«t«d for 7:30 p.m. “■ ’ ' we; and they iaelBde eattre fi The pnmdiiag eeesiana are hrid in a large woodm boOdhig, called the taberaade, in the oeoler TiC tbe paik. There is alfo a book slera when the campers’ ranks are augmented by eome 1,500 m«« per-sons who cone primarily tor the 2:30 p.m. services. ideat Bex M. DIxni sf Ooraam. Caretaktf this year is Alfred Gascho, retired Methodist minister IromCaro. He succeeds Burten He-wett, who recently retired after 10 years’ association with the park. The final day of the nearly century-old camp meeting is Ai«. 12. Preachers each day will include Rev. Eddie Horan and Rev. Cyras ~ Tutebmon. Th^ are both Methodist evangelists who graduates of Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, Ky. The thiid wiU be Dr. Robert E. Cjoleman, professor of evangelism at the Kentucky seminary. -FAIM TM nPAM- Bev. and Mra. Dee W. Osbb of Thobum Methodist Church. Detroit. Orgaaiot wfl be Daa Oieer, director of masie at tha CARTER TIRE 00. lit a sofiBsv, pmum n §■ ALUMINUM SIDING ond DICORATIVE STONil III SICp^ lAUGHIKG NOW. BUT-Andrea Lee, a pacer eatend in aeveral laoes at the Earten Michigan FMr iMs week in Znday Ctty. seems mighty 1 herself tw». Mar tralMr, Cecil H. pnm Pha«^ Watson of Detroit, hopes she will be Just as happy when the results of her races are posted. Harness radng wiB be featured nisMiy «t the leir beginning tot^MROw. Surest Way To Build a Savings Account... START WITH A IhOLLAR AND ANOTHER AND Another AND ANOTHER ANOTHER ITS jun THAT »MHE .... Mth U sivings much bitter to save u smsU tmomU regte^ Urly then merely hope to sttve u larger mount "SOME-DAY " Remember the Big Difference^ Security for Your Savings Make a Date to Attend the DETHOrr UONS INTRA SQUAD FOOTBALL SHOW SAT^ AUG, 5thf Wisner Stadium Tickete $1.00 . /. On Sah at AU Community ISational Bank Offieee National 1 Bank O V PONY I A C WEST HURON . . . NORTH PERRY . . . KEEGO HARBOR WALLED LAKE . . . UNION LAKE . . . MILFORD . . . WATERFORD ' LAKE ORION . . . ROMEO . . . BLOOMFIELD HILLS Member F.D.I.C. \ Ji2_ Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths THE PONTMl: MONDAY. JULV 81, 1961 ELEVEN MRS. •^UUCB «. WnirOELD Funml lervice will be Tuesday at 11 a.m. from All Saints rice W. (Martha A.) Whitfield at 9815 Sylvan Shores Dr. Mrs. Whitfield, 87, died Saturday at Ptxitlac General Ho«>ital following. an automobile accident. A member All Saints Episcopal Oairch, she behmsad to Guild 7 ot her church and the Round TaldoClub. Mrs. Whitfield’s survivars include her husband, a daughter, Mrs. Edith Oocker of Pontiac, a son Robert M. of Ortonville, a sistar, Mrs. Bertha Swanaon, three brothers, Carl, Arthur and Harry Schuberg, aU of Big Raidds, and one grandchild. Burial win be in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Funeral manta are by Funeral Home. CARL M. QAHdR Service for Carl M. Ganje, 19, of toil Oabibrook Lane, Waterford Township, win be at 10 a.m. tomorrow at Our Lady of the ClHDch in the towi)Bhip. Mr. Oanje died in an automobile accident Saturday. He was a 1981 graduate of Waterford Township High School. A rosary win be recited at S p.m. today at the church. Mr. Ganje’s body is at Dondson-Johns Funeral Home. Burial .will be in Lakeview Cemetery, dlufc-ston. He is survived by his lather. Cart A Ganje; gran^Mrents, Mr. and Mrs. Michael SchaU of Ri«by Ny D.; twin sisters, Jane and Jeanstta, and, a brother, Harold, aU at home. MRS, WILUAM JARVIg Following a long Ulnoas, Mrs. William (Anna L.) Jarvis, 78, died Sunday at her home at 149 Beach St. A member of St. Michart Chth-oUe Church and the Altar Sodety of the church, she is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Volney Petera of Utica, three brothers, Fergus J. Owens of Pontiac, Maillo Ow«is of Detroit, William F. Owens of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., and three grandchUdren. A rosary wiU be recited tonight at 1:30 with funeral service Tuesday at 9 a.m. from St. Michael CAthdlic Church. Following the funeral, she wUl be taken to the N. J. Christian Funeral Home in Cheboygan for burial. cufford p. manning Service for Clifford P. Manning, 63, owner of the former Manning' Market at Telegraph and Dixie Highway, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Donelaon-J o h n s Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. I Saving are his wife, Jenny; four daughters, Mrs. Marguerite Carver, Mrs. Cecil Irwin, Mrs. John C^idnohufslcy and Mrs. Loren Kay, all <4 Pontiac; five sons, John of Waterford Township, CUfford Jr. of Pomona, Calif., Daryl, Richard and James, all of Pon-tiae; 39 grandchildren; two great-sister and a Itelma Rice RoUieon, two daughters, Ellen Kay and Linda, and a son Randy, all at home; two sisters, Mrs. Earl (Dorothy) Marks of Pontiac, SMer M. Ann Charles Of Monroe, and one brother, Archie of Eacondido, Calif. << A rosary will be recited Tues-day at 8 p.m. at Pursley Funeral Home. The funeral wlU be Wednesday at ID a.m. from St. Benedicts Catholic Church with burial in Mt. Hope Ometery. Harry H. Smith, 7L died Saturday after a five-week lllneu. He had been making Ms home with his sister at 33 W. Longfellow St. Surviving besides hU sister, Mrs. Peter (Grayoe) Isaacs, are a daughter, Mrs. Noonan (Mary) Winslow of Drayton Plains, four d four grsat- Funeral service will be Tuaaday at LSO p.m. from Pursley Funeral Home .with burial in Drayton nalns Cemetery. {XWI8 A. CORNELL Service for Lewis A. Cornell, 3001 Lanadowne St., Waterford TownsMp will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Youagnum Funeral Home Lakeview, Montcalm County, west-central Michigan. Mr. OonM, a route-aalesmaa for MapU Leaf Dairy, died Sunday In Pontiac General Hoq^ after a two-day lUiMss. He was SL Suiviving are his wife Lanore, a son Roland of San Frandsoo; two dauid>fors. Gay uid EUan. both at home, his motiier, Mrs. Ralph GocnMl of Six Lakes, Montcalm county, and two sisters, bofti of Six Lakes. The body will remain at Donel-son-Johna Funeral Home until Mr. Manning M 1011 Oakland Ave. died Saturday at Pontiac General Hospital after an illneM of several weeks. JAMES L. MIIXHOLLAND James L. MiUhoUand, 64. a re-tirsd employe of Fisher Body Division, died suddody early this morning at his home, 19 Eliza-, beth Lake Ave. Surviving are his wife Lillian, a son James Jr. of Pontiac; three daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Townes of Pontiac, Mrs. Ellen wood Barron of Keego Harbor and Mrs. Eddie Richardson of Birmingham a seven grandchildren. Service wiU be at 3:30 p. Wednesday at DeWitt C. Davis Funeral Home. Burial will be in Fourtowns Cemetery in Commerce HAROLD R. ROLUSON Handd E. Rolliaon, 42, of 3805 Faber, Waterford TownsMp, was dead on arrival at St. ' Merey Ho(q>ital Saturday. A service trucker at Rubber Co., he was a member of • St. Benedict Catholic Church: and Grant; a i _ _________ Lynn; a stepdaughtw, Cheryl Jean. || all at home; his mother, Mrs. Beatrice Nelson of^ Lapeer; two brothers Douglas of Rochester and Arthur of Warren; and four Esters, Geraldine Ndson and Mrs. Isabelle Pringle, both of Lapeer, Mrs. Lois Muxlow of Imlay CMy and Mrs. Virginia Renberg of Garden City. WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP -Service tor Mrs Zimmerman (Vesta) Ross, 93, of 8025 30-Mile Road, will be M 3 p.m. tomorrow at I Roth’s Home tor Funerals.- Romeo. I Burial will be in RonMo Cennetery. f Mrs. Ross died Saturday Martha T Berry Hospital after a long iUness. Surviving are two daugh Mrs. Bernice Inwood of Washington TownsMp and Mrs, Alleene Anderson of Detroit; a son Byard of Seattle, Wash.; nine grandchildren and nlng gr^-grandchildren. LORNE D. WEAVER ORION TOWNSHIP-Scrvice for Lome D. Weaver, 80, of 864 Orton Road, will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Voorhees-Stple Funeral Hcrnie, Pontiac. Burial wiU be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mr. Weaver died yesterday at I PonOae Gbnerd Hosplul after an "Ineas of three weeks. ' Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Ted Tope and Mrs. Leonard Cole, both of Pontiac, and Mrs. Mark Schott of Sarasou, Fla.; two sons. James of Pontiac and Lome W. of Lake Orkfo; a brother; nine grandchildren and two great JOHN R. OOVAN LAPEER TOWNSHIP - Service for John B. Govan, 88, of 1006 Roods Lake Road, will be at 3 p.m. tomorrow at Trinity Methodist Church. Burial will be in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Govan died Saturday after, a Mlef illness. His body will be at the Baird Funeral Home^until norm ffniTM Unequalled Yalues—^d of Monffa... mil llallj One of a Kind...Floor Samples, Etc. mm WKiCn AUTOaiATIC WASHER Fully Deluxe wkh "SUDS SAVER" and Only *198 with trade NO MONEY DOWN IiuUlled—-delivered and 1 year free service plus 5 yr. warranty. PRICED 3 Days Only NO MOl^ DOWN Free Delivery Free ^0 Dsy Seroke MRS. JOHN WATZ LUM — Service tor Mrs. John (Clara Mae) Wato, 63, of 5142 Lum Road, will be at 3 p.m. tomorrow at tha Lum Methodist Church. Burial will be In the Lum Cmefory. Mrs. Wats died Saturday at her home after an extended illness. Her body wiU be at her resl-mce until tomorrow at i p.m. at wMch time a prayer aervlce will be held. It waa moved from Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Imlay aty, to her home yesterday after-xm. Surviving besides her husband, are six sons. Jack Winfred, Basil, Jimmy and Dale, all of Lum, and Glenn of Kalamazoo; two brothers; a sister; 13 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. He was a member of Lkpcer Lodge No. 54, FAAM, for 50 years, and also belonged to the Knights of Pythias. « Surviving are his wife Pearl afid a brothert Daniel B. of Flint. EUGENE R. HOLM ORTONVILLE — Setvicc for Eugene R. Holm, 59, of 456 M15, will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home with burial In Ortouvilfo Cemetery. Mr. Holm died yesterday Pontiac General Hospital of juries suffered in an automobile accident two days beforb. Surviving are his wife Carrie: B(Hi Sidney of Tampa, Fla.; dsiughter, Sharon, at home; four brothera and four grandchildren. BODY A. MARTIN COMMERCE TOWNSHIP—Service for Eddy A. Martin, 62, of 1804 Luneta Court, will ba at 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Williams CathoUc Church, Walled Lake. Burial wlU ba in St Maiy'a Cemetery, Milford. Mr. Martin died yesterday at his home after a three-year illnass. He was an Army veteran of World War I. The Roeary will be recited at 8i p.m. t ' V ; TWELVE A , r- THfi PONTIAC PRESS. AIONDAY, JULY 8ljl961 Is Alpine Motif . -for Eighth County Fair An Alpine motif wu select* ed for St. Mary’i-ln-the-HiUs Eptocopal Church's eighth annual Country Fair Saturday. There was plenty of entertainment for the children at St. Mary s-in-the-Hills Episcopal Church eighth annual Cmtntry Fair Saturday, and antique car and pony rides were the biggest attractions. Thomas Hobby of Clarkston (left) and Bert Sellers, Bay Street, guided the trusty steeds of Laurice Garland, 7, Rich-wood Road, and Scott Wolfe, 2, Minton Road. Booths with game^. food and bargain itenpi were on the grounds and'in the church undercroft for the fair held in the rural setting of the former Scrippa Eatate. Special fair features included a bait-casting contest, silhouette booth, cake walk and Country Cupboard with homemade pickles, relishes. Jellies, cookies, pies and bread. Refreshments and a ham dinner were served. For the diUdren there were supervised pony and antique car rides in the "Kiddle Park.” Servii^ as committee chairmen were Don Shultz of Lake Angelus, door prizes; Arthur Dodge. Lake Angelus, and Edward Calkins, Birmingham, refreshments; Mrs. Dodge, Mrs. B. F. Zinn and Mrs. Donald Schutze. Lake Angelus, cake and ice cream booth; Gus Kos-topolis, pop corn wagon; George Kimber and Jay Isleg of Lakr Orton, cracker barrel; Mrs. C. B. Leach, Lake Angelus, and Mrs. Allen Mal-comaon, Birmingham, gilt Sayg Wiyllitt Battcile Phony Femininity Galling Girls Greatly NEW YORK-If there's anything that curls the lip of an intelligent woman, it is the sight of a helpless man being snared by another woman's phony femininity. There she is. Miss Caustic, the acme of cool calculation and hard efficiency at the literary dub — but now she is in the vicinity of a martini and a man, and she is gooey as hot fudge. All wonderment and delicacy is this wonum you happei to know is a tiger at the bridge table. Her dainty feet, which have trod over secretaries all day, are poised tippy-toe for dancing; her voice, as she tells a man she's heard so much about him, is cloying; her countenance, capable in daytime of freezing entire worn- ^ en’s committees, is serene and smiling. And does she fod this hapless male for one moment? You bet she does. At least, that is the age-old pattern of shrewd wopien In search of a man. And that is the age-old — thot«h rapidly changing — reaction of n»en in search of femaleness. And Weddings Reunion Planned mine is the age-dd nausea of ^t large segment of ladies who are either too honest, too' stupid or too introverted to play it fragile when we’ve never felt huskier, or to act naive when we know we can cany on an enlightened con- liance. American m«i are becoming leery of both, and once they get safely past the reasoning age of 25, statistics show they are" tar less likely to get married at all than their fathers were. October planned by Marilyn Ann Lesperance, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lesperance of East Hopkins Avenue, to Joseph Csizmadia, son of the Carl Csizmadias of East Tennyson Avenue. The trend toward "playing it dumb" is becoming more im>-nounced Bum ever, with all the currait talk of female (k»n-ination. Sociological studies show that American girts are openly frightened of beii« labeled "aggressive’’ and will go to' kny deceptive lengths to hide whatever intellect and assertiveness their educations have given them. ’This hc'lng so, one, would think that nKM« and more men would be innocently bartering their bachelonhnn for a bundle of acting talent wrapped around a hidden steel-trap The current "Good Housekeeping" carries opinions at certain famed thinUng males on the subject ot "How to get nowhere with a man." In ib are these three slaps at the girls who try to nab spouses through the deceitful route: Hal March — "Just as bad as a domineering woman is an overfeminine, wily one. You Peter Ustinov — "I think the biggest strain on first meeting a woman is to be treated as if you were more interesting than you seem to your- Mrs. Walter C. Zimmer'en-tertained at a luncheon and kitchen shower for bride-elect Marjorie Royce, who will marry John EQakey AUg. -12 in H(dy Name Oiurch. MARILYN ANN LESPERANCE ’The facts show, however ’ (and praises be), that this is not the case. Men are smartening up. ’They are avokUiy the openly aggressive type, of course, but they also are donning their armor and acquiring X-ray intuitions against the would-be femme fatales who are all-out to snatch them. There is no single simple explanation for why males have suddenly (at least It seems sudden) developed such a comparatively keen insight into the wiles of women, but it would seem logical to gather that all the emphasis on male-. vs.-female dominance has caused nien to study all kinds of womoi with more perception and apprrtiension. self." Patrick Dennis — "I can’t bear a woman who rips your shoes off, slaps a pair of slippers on you, flinga you into a chair and then says, ‘Tell me about your day!’ ’’ Men obviously are becoming so savvy that it’s going to take finer and finer womanly techniques to win them. If they continue to shy off from both brilliance and false naivete, American girls are going to have a tricky time of it. They may even be forced to practice the old-fashioned traits of honesty, loyalty and man-before-me in order to acquire a happy home. Dr. and Mrs. WUliam.Lloyd Kemp are entertaining' their four children and their offspring in their home on Yarmouth Road. Included are MaJ. and Mrs. Stanley Reinhart Jr. and their two young daughters who are en route from Ormany to Ft Leavenworth, Kan. Mrs. Reinhart is Jhe former Sally Kemp. Mary Kemp is here from Washi^on, D. C., where she is living and Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Kemp Jr. are coming from their home in West Pajm Beach. From the Southwest will come the Robert Risleys who will bring their five children from their home in Oklahoma Qty. Mrs. Rizley is the fmrmer Katherine Kemp. Oimmade miracle NO-BIND TOP, SEE WHAT A DIFFERENCE IT MAKES DaUXEMiaOfurw»siststitdi,r1nfercod HmI and to* $1.15 Neumode Hosiery Shop 8* Nortfc Saginiw Street ITB f.fjgn The result is that they are much more difficult to trap with the baits of either Pseudo-Six or excessive bril- Meantine, it’s consoling for the intelligent woman who is getting' nowhere with a man to ki^ that the lass with the delicate snare is getting nowhere too! Mrs. H. J. Stringham has returned from a ten day visit in Scarsdale. N. Y. ALL PERMANENTS 3 75 Cut and Set Why Pay More? Hollywood’s One Price Plan Includes: Easy to manage hair cut, permanent by an experi-enced operator and styled set. T Hollywood^ Hollywood T • No Appointmtnt ^ Necemry Beauty Shop ^ • Your Permanent Bairinaw A ■Street JS Completed in Two Honrs FE 84SW Orer.Basils Lindsay Vandeveer is off to Costa Rica to attend the wedding of a former Abbott Academy classmate. Molly Martin and Jay Miller have planned a supper party in the Martin home Aug. 5 for bride-elect Sally Auster-beny of Detroit who will be married Aug. 12 to Dennis Allen Dinan of Bloomfield Hills. He.ia the son of John T. Dinan and the late Mrs. Dinan. £>avld W. Lee Jr. is planning a dinner for Dennis and Sally Aug. 10. 4 Mr. and Mrs. Jeie B. Gillette and Mr. and Mrs. Scott Hayes, who have recently moved from Birmingham to Cleveland, are planning a fabulous trip to Alaska later in the season. They will go by Gill honored her at a luncheon and bridal shower Saturday in Devon Gables. Among the 32 guests were Mrs. George E. McGill of East Iroquois Road and Mrs. Leo Larr of Drayton Plains, mothers of Miss McGill and her fiance, Charies R. Lair. Places were also marind for Mrs. Charles LaLone of San Diego, Ckdit, Mrs. A. J. Sonnenberg of Sheffield, Ohio, Mrs. John Randaz- Name Attendants During Shower zo and. Mri. Thomgt McGill of] Detroit, Mrs. Kenneth HahneleM of Ochard Lake, Mrs. Up Tlmmal of Farmington, Mr^. Frank Ctozzi] Utloa, Mrz. Lyle Walker of I Irooton, Mrs. Vem DuRuzkU of Caro, Mrs. Gborge Wellock oft Bad Axe, Mrs. Stuart Famer of Flint, Mrs. Herman Fisher of] Birmingham and Mrs. Wesley Bachelor of Uvonia. Also present were Mrs. James I House of Bsy City, who wUl be her sister’s honor mstron at the Sept. 2 nuptials in St. Vincent de Paul Church, and Mrs. Robert Switzenberg of Metamora, who will be a bridesmaid at brother’s wedding. ? doing, and so accustomed tolit that dinner party for a month, hut'/Qj JjIucIq Burt can wait another week” rush, that we do not realize after all, we are free souls and that many of the things we feel we must do at a given time CAN wait until later on. GIVES EXAMPLE I myself have discovered this to be true. The flnt time I had a brush with pressure and what it can do to one was when I ran into my first huge response from readers. nw mail had been roUtag la, via mau trucks. We had been working hard to aaswot It JaM aa rapidly os possible wUh aocrotar-ieo working daring the day aad another shtM workiog tram oiz to midaight. Then ia one day the traok brought IMM totton, more than wo had bean able to handle In eeveral daya. That night I developed difficulty in breathing. I felt that I could not get enough air and kept taking very deep brreaths. The doctor, called at my hush's insistence, ordned me not to work for three days. He i do not adopt this attitude, we may break a spring and then life might not be able to wind us up again! If you would lika ,to have- my leaflet ’’Exercises to'Relaxing'’ send a stamped, aeU-addressed envelope with your request tor lest-let No. 24. Address Jqpephine Low-msn in care s( The 7001180 Press, Pontiac, Michigan. Pair Hosts Picnic for Church Circle Mr. and Mii. M Williams of Dover Road were picnic hosts to Maiy-Msrtha Otcle of Oakland Park Methodist Church Wednesday. Guests were. Mr. and Mrs. Ho'-man Kunze of Port Huron, Eori Foster, Mrs- (Sayton Gillies and Mrs. John Wethy and lamily. ‘’God’s Word and Our Words’ was the theme for devotions by Mrs. WUliams. The September meeting will be with Mrs. Vernon Gibbons of East Ksnnett Road. Linda Burl announced her attendants at a shower in her honor Saturday afternoon at Ted’s Restaurant. Cohostesses for the luncheon were Mrs. Maynard Holmes id Mrs. Edwin Manley. Attending Miss Burt, bride-elect of Richard Pifer, at her August 19 wedding will be matra of Mrs. Laurence Beemer, maid of honor Phyllis Burt and bridesmaids Mrs. Gerald Buck of Ypsilanti, Carolyn Piter and Judy Pifer. Ihe wedding party will also include Christie and Randy Holmes 4 Kathy Manley. .' , ★ ★ Sr- Guests present included Mrs. _uhl Burt, Mrs. Beemer, Mrs. A. C. Kirby, Mrs. 'Thad Taylor. Mrs. Stuart Davis, Mrs. Harold Adams, Mrs. Howard Sage, Jdrs. Bruce Refa and Mrs. David Taylor. Others were Mrs. Albert C!band-let. Mini. C. L. Reichert. Phyllis Burt, C!arolyn Davis, Carolyn Hfer and Judy Hfer. To remove dog and cat hair from clothes, moisten a rubber sponge qnd rub fabric lightly. Bloomfield Hills Couple Speak Vows Whit rose trees flanked _ massed arrangement of ferns In Bloomfield HUU Country Oub Saturday evening for the reception which followed vows of Ellen Virginia Flint to Marcus E. Cunningham Jr. in Christ Church, Cranbrook. Rev. Lester P. Dobyns performed the candlelight ceremony. ★ w * Album lilies and greens in silver epergnes centered the bride’s table and guests were served supper at small tables around the dance floor. The Robert H. Flints and the Marcus E. Cunningtons, all of Bloomfield HUls are parenU %f the bridal couple. W ★ * Pale ivory peau de sole enhanced by Alencon lace applique for the bride was styled with sheath skirt and chapel train. A lace pillbox held the bouffant veil of illusion. The bride carried Amazon lilies, ivy and lilies of the valley. Attendants wore nile green silk organza frocks with satin midriffs and draped bell skirts. Their Dior bow headpieces were veiled and carried white marguerite cago and John Ncumeief of Min- ported lace over a pink taffeta tunic. Pink Bountiful rosef topped her pink satin purse. Green cymbidium mt;hids wen pinned to Mrs. Flint’s purse o pale yellow silk and matchlnt shoes worn with a Balmain yel-low and green warped taffeta print. Her circle hat was of soft green feathers. For her son’s wedding, Mrs. Cunningham chose shell-{rink im- Leaving for a honeymoon at Colorado Springs, Colo., the bride donned a coral and beige silk print with beige woolen coat lined with print. Beige accessories and pecan velvet hat completed her Golden garnet roses were included in bouquets for Mrs. G. Bretnell Williams, matron of honor and Susan Elizabeth Flint, who ■as her sister’s honor maid.' Bridesmaids were Virginia Hall, Santa Clara, Calif., Marilyn Olson. San Francisco, LuAnne Aulepp and Mrs. John Follansbee, New York aty, Mrs. Robert'GiUow and Mrs. (Leighton W. Runnette. ★ ★ ★ Charles Cunningham served has his brother’s best man. Guests were seated by Ensign Willfam T. Gossett Jr., G. Bretnell Williams, Daniel Beresford and Stephen Saunders, all of Bloomfield Hills, Henry Garrity of Waterbury, Conn., Martin Burke III of Chi- WishfMuia PUYAPIANO} how these tools of the ‘Irade" concern YOU Did you know that your chances of being roblM of burglarized are tix timtt greater than your home catching fire? Robbery or burglary victimizes an tver-age of $3 persons each hour of the day and night. Before these tools cause y always wanted—the wave with the finest lotions—at half price. Haircut extra. 12 50 ‘BUDGET DEPT. Shompee and Sot $1.50—Haircut $1.50 FIsIb ShMfM BBS B*t St.** M BBtarSBTi •Sirllnt DcfBi-tacat Frieet Bllektlr Ulfker donnell HAIR STYLISTS MIIUCU MILE FE 8-9639 We Specialize in Corrective Hair Coloring had the chance to learn.” Don’t deprive your child of the priceless benefits learning to play a fine piano affords! And choose a Kimball... all the family will be proud of. owning the world’s leading piano. Remember, every Kimball piano is built to , sundards famous for over 100 years. Today, see, hear, try our beautiful new Kimballs. 2 FLOOR MOOR SPINET PIANOS-LARSE DISCOUNTS Long Easy Terms SMALL RABY GRAND PIANO GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. IS East Huron St. FE 4-0S6S Wo Sell Chord Organ Books lor Chord Organs Opra MtBBSar aaS rrUaj *U1 t F. N Beautiful Imported VITRIFIED CHINA At a Very Reasonable Price COMPLETE 98 PC. SERVICE OF 12 Standard shape differs slightly from coupe shape shown but has coupe shape cup and saucer. Delicate grey leaf design with platinum trim on all prices. SET INCLUDES 12 Dinner Plates 12 Fruit Dishes 12 Soup Bowls PLUS 6 Extra Cups for Breakage Insurance 1 Creamer 1 Covered Sugar Bowl 12 Cups and Saucers 12 Salad nates 12 Bread and Butters PLUS 1 Gravy Boat 2 Platters 2 Vegetable Bowls for Serving Take 10 months to pay or use our layaway. 15 other pottarnz to chooM from and none over $99.50 for complete service of twelve. DOWNTOWN Open Mml and Fit Nlghto MIRACLE MILE Open Every Night i: t la S—asfBlBtMtil NbI AIwbti Nm Hdena Rubinstein Once-a-Year Beauty Sale SAVE UP TO 50% Bouutlfwl Byot-and Lips Buy Color Lift* Hair Rinse, tho first color rinse to last through 5 shampoos! Won’t rub off and color suys true. Pre* Silk-Sheen Cream Shampoo srith special condi-tioDcr*. valutJM SALEIM •«y Maseara-Matie,* the first and finest nuto-matie mnscart, velvets Uahes with lasting color. Wt-terproofirefillable. Fro* Dew-Kisstd lipstick refill for 'ConvertiMo^ lip- Aosic Boouty Troatmont Famous Glamor Maka*Up valu*i.75 SALE 175 Just four of 21 exciting combinations. Limited time only. Prieee plus tax. • 148 N. Saginaw St. Near Soars in Downtown Pontiac • Corner Huron Street and Telegraph Road • 4895 Dixie Highway Next to NoUoncri Pood Store (SOD FACiuos Lioeog:i|roitS' City Wida Fim FfoocriprioN DaKvoty. Hovo Year Ooctor Col Vow Noorasr TH«IFTY fw FROMPT Ff FdrRTEKX THE PONTIAC FRESS, MO^DAyy JULY 31, 1901 T" Winn«r Not Too Happy With CiHs' Soloctioh PINEROLO. Italy (AP)-Marto today after a Juiy ol pretty girts ctaae Um Bratto im” in an anmul competition at the village of Luaerana San Giovanni. Bnitto means ugly and the contest chooses the ttam’s roan. Geadarin. 36, a caipentar, said ^ knew I wasn’t handsome, Intt I (h(hi’t Blink I was that Jobs May Jump in Detroit Area •ad Wamet INSURANCE imptmemefit in Ihisiness in the Motor City, area hi quarter of 1961. The quarter should be the best economically of the year, the board said in Us weekly puUica-|tion. the Detroiter. It said a rombinatton r lae aew tan and a atgaWeant hngiwveoBeat 1» nattanal eeauaroy woaid be' tahtad the rtae. The board said DetnUt inoduc-' on workers now average dO.7 hours of work a week, better than the national average of 60.1. Last Fetnruaiy the Detroit average was 39.0 hours. ■k k k t the Detroiter notes that un- Soord of Commerce Believes 4th Quarter Will Be Best of Year DETROIT (AP) — The DetroU Board of Commerce antichtattes aa in Detroit avenged 12.T per cent of the labor force, double what it Idsunnce statisticians say Oat of the 7,300 deaths from fires and other burns, in the United States each year, about 5,700 — or n&r-iy fouj>fifths — occtir in the home. Sight of Jazz Mess Brings Site Change Himwled with their girls on the Iroadaides. ‘It was sickening," Montagu There were riots last year, tod. "It has become inereasingiy ap-t^nt," said Montagu, -vihat is a large crowd of irre- BEAUUEU, En^nd (AP)-Lord Montagu of Beaulieu, the heppest noMe in the realm, sadly d today, be is abandoning his aimual Jazz festivals In the crumbling niim of the local He ta aftahl the village of Beau-Ueu, popidadioB 1,000, will end up in rains, too. left in the wake of this year’s de his decision aft-surveying the splintered windows and trampled flower beds About 4,000 Jazz-^ tional, modem and mainstream-jammed into thia quiet comer of Hampshire Saturday for the two-day Mow. About 5,000 gatecrash-j with no entrance moved into the town also and nearly wrecked the Joint. They trod on cottage gardens, smashed windows, clashed withll paying patrons, got drunk and than to cause trouble.’’ I’t the fault of the utne Jazz fans, 'he said. Montagu hired a special corps (d^ougb cops from the local con-stabidAy to keep aria. Boys from a local club and Ju-Jitsu exponoita from Cam-yniversity also guard to throw out gate crashers. Montagu said he wasn't giving up the idea ol holding a festival in some other plaw. But not in Beaulieu. He owns the place. "SUPER-RIGHT" FULLY COOKED HAMS WHOLE OR HALF LB. No Coiiftr Sikofl Romovod lOto 12-Lb. SiiM 59 ^UPER-RIGHr FAMOUS QUAUTY m a Porfc Tenderloins » 09< BEir RIB ROASTS I55c» ^'59(- ~ 65('- "SUPER-RIGHT' QUAUTY Cube Steaks "SUPER-RIGHT' Chip Steaks. "SUPER-RIGHT" Rib Steaks. LB. LB. LB. 89< 95> 69< AAP BKAND—WHOLE, UNPEELED Apricots 4 LADY 1E7TY Prune Juice DANDY BRAND—WHOLE, SWEET Pickles JANE PARKER—SAVE 20c Cherry Pie JANE PARKER—SAVE 10c Angel Food 89c 39< 39c 39c 39c TOM THUMB, PROZiNtBfEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY Ment Pies 6 1*®® MORTON’S FROZEN—MACARONI AND Cheese Dinner 35c DOZEN EARS ^ SMNNYBKOOK Medium Size Fresh Eggs 39* SILVERBROOK FINE QUALITY AN prkae In Hib eM affactiva thru TuaeAnTi Auf. 1 in aN ientam AAktiipem ABP Sup#' AAarkale W Vi# me gwAt-^ewic > wa ccwawt, me’. _ BUTTER...............^^65 MIRACLE MILE Month-End BIG SHOE BARGAINS Ladies’ Naturalizers High heels, mid heels, and Wedgies. Reg. to $14.99 »7 00 Ladies* American Girl Dress Shoes and Casuals Reg. to $10.99 *3 00 ; Reg. to $6.99 Ladies’ Busken Summer Sandals . . I Reg. to $9.95 Ladies’ Italian Flats............ •3“ 00 R^. to $12.95 Men’s I Oxfords and Loafers. •a” •5“ Famous Brand Children’s Shoes Reg. to $7.99 *3 00 Famous Brand Children’s Canvas Oxfords Reinforced toe. Blue or red. Rei^Iar $3.49 *1 88 SENSATIONAL SAVINGS All THRU THE STORE ENTIRE STOCK Ladies’, Men-’s, Girls’ and Boys’ Swim Suits NOW 40% off Boys’ “Billy the Kid’’ Boxer Jeans Regular $1.98 99- Reg. to $6.9 Ladies’ Blouses. 199 Reg. $7.98 Ladies’ Cotton Slacks. *3 99 Ladies’ Cotton Dresses Reg. $19.98 .$11.99 Reg. $17.98. .$10.99 Reg. $14.98. .$ 8.99 Reg. $12.98. .$ 7.99 Reg. $11.98 . .$ 7.99 Reg. $10.98. .$ 6.99 Pre-Teen Sportswear Regular $3.98 ... Regular $4.98 ... *249 *299 Regular IQ99 $6.98 ... O Reg. to $1.98 Girls’ Cotton Shorts.... Entire Stock Men’s Straw Hats 88' ¥2 Off Men’s Famous Name Short Sleeve Sport Shirts Reg. to $8.95 *2 99 Men’s Wash V Wear Suits R^. to $45 •29 Use a Lion Charge ' '' f AlONDAy, JULY.31. 1961 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. FIFTEEN Construction Really Soars in Waterford Waterford Township has suddeo^y taken on the aspects of a young giant. It is devouring, huge “meals” of construction investment, flexing its “muscles” of widespread diversified building and seems to be trying to burst out of any conventional definition of progress. In the construction field alone, permits issued by the building department in the first six months of this year were valued at $5,140,000. The sam^ period last year saw such valuations reach an impressive but lesser figure of $3,229,000. There are bowling alleys, a high school, stores, offices and a multitude of other commercial and public buildings under construction. In the first half of this year, their permit value alone reached $2.78 million. At the same time, 119 new homes, with a permit value of $1.82-million were started. The average value of these new dwellings was $15,300, based on the valuations on the permits. But the giant is not without its growing pains. A proposal to change Waterford into a charter township, with the hope of easing bond issue strains, ^ill appear on the Sept. 12 ballot. ★ ★ ★ Construction is the most obvious part of Waterford Township’s explosive growth. In the top row, left, steelworkers balance precariously on the new J. L. Hudson Co. budget store mall in a new shopping center on Telegraph Road at Elizabeth Lake Road. Besides Hudson’s, the Pontiac Mall will feature such stores as Kroger’s and Montgomery Ward’s, as well as several other retail outlets. Top row, right, the new Faith Baptist Church at 3411 Airport Road is one of 15 new churches dedicated during the last year in Waterford Township. Center row, right, Karl Bressler, left, engineer, and Bruce Kolak, right, construction superintendent for a new 50-unit motel at Dixie Highway and Telegraph Road, are shown studying plans. Center row, left, new facades will welcome Waterford bowlers this season. Among them is the building being constructed for Joseph Puertas on South Cass Lake Road. Bottom row, left, the Kettering High School gym looks like this on the inside. The $2 Vi-million senior high school is scheduled to open Sept. 7. Bottom row, center, project engineer Ted Udry and project superintendent Donald J. Baize look over plans for four railroad spurs to be installed for a new Dundee Cement Co. distribution center on Williams Lake Road between Airport Road and Dixie Highway. * Bottom row, right, another bowling alley is being built for Joe Bonfiglio, Dominic Mazza and Frank Benning. It is the first unit of a $3-million Airways Plaza shopping center on Highland Road near Crescent Lake Road.' PnlUc rmt PhatM ' ' * ' "t SIXTEEN t PRESS BOX The openinf of the 47th umwl Junior end Boys Tennis tourna-ment at Kalamazoo was delayed today beoauae of rain. eanMd n.lM. Gene Bone of Warwick HlDa was omM at the halt-way point alter llitaK a Ul. * * a Lt. Pete Dawkins of Royal Oak and Judi Wright at Oxon Hill, Md. were mairwd Saturday at West Pcant. THE PONTIAC PRESS, RtONDAY, JULY 81, 1961 Look for Deals to Cure Ailment Baseball Field Nication at 8 City Officials to Help Celebrate New Lights; Weekend Was Busy Mayor Phil Rowston and dty manager Walter K. waiman will be the faatterymatea hr the opening pitch and tpesdc akng w1 other dty ntWetaia toolgfat at at the dedfcathn of Ponflae'a first lighfed baseball paric at Joslyn u. ‘Ami»to«TiBi.h’ teams in a Claaa AH3 mafceop game. , aty basefaallers nearly wore out the local diamonds in 22 coo-tests Saturday and Stmday. Clay WUliams singled acra dinchw in the 8th as CIO squeezed past Talbott Lumber M while Oxford and Don's Used Out tied 5-5 in eight innings in ftssf A-B yestcfday. I w-n and bowed to West Uwaali S-S and Anbnn Boys OMh took Ox-fWi M In OnsB B Anserlenn. Ted Uverdnre hnd fonr Uta for Moone. now gnt Its U iwM CHICAGO *cff«»i »«■ Boetoo sa. Mcood fu Bammore 4? New York W1 Mmneeqta 4. Detiolt t Woohtnftflo 4. Kaniu Clly I Lo* Aiifelei a Oeetlood ( ronAY-S GAMES AIMtar Game at Boeton. TTESDArs aCHEOCLX No (amo> tcheduleO NATIONAL LEAGUE . . Waa Loel ret. Bel AP»elei . « » J» - CHICACX) (AP) — Tommy (Thunder) Bolt was in the Pro-fessional Golfers Association doghouse again today and trying to bark his way out. The 43-year-old stormy petrel of BoU's toomament circuit was In-deflnitriy aospended from PGA ooaponaared meeto on a diarge of using abusive language In the locker room of Olpmpia Fields Country Chib. It Juat waan’t Bolt's day. After storming around and declaring himself innocent of the charge, he went to get hia auto and found the police had towed it away. It had been parked In an officials' section without proper identifica-tton on the windiWeld. Bolt finally found It near the caddy shack. As for the suspension, Bolt fumed; ‘The PGA executive committee didn’t give me a chance to defend myself. A meeting was called and action taken without calling me It deprives me of making a living. "They told me an official of the: club had turned me in. But they Jerry Powell, 16 year old wouldn't tell me who It was. 1 Clarkston High School senior, led was deprived of facing my ac- the qualifying field for the annual "Suburban Open” at the Putt Putt Dixie Highway. "It all seems very unconstitutional to me. If I don’t get any satisfaction. I'll get a lawyer and take it to court—to thd Supreme Court U neceaaary." * ★ A Lou Strong, PGA president, acknowledged that an official of (Mympta Ftelda Country Club had a report on Bolt's strong language a^ that the PGA had ibstantiated it. “He has the right to appeal to the PGA appeals committee,” said Strong. "The committee may meet the day before the inaugural American Qaasic in Akron Aug. 24-27." It it It Bolt said he didn't want to wait that long—that be wanted to appeal riiJit away. Clarkston Putter leads Qualifiers the Jockey-sized Californian finished bog^-bogey and lost by a shot to Bob Roaburg. 4- ★ January, 6-feet and 165 pounds from Dallas, has won only three regular tour tournaments. He was 16tt In money winning with }17,-last year and his best previous finish in a major championship was fifth last year in the PGA at Akron's Firestone Qub. Barber, leading January uid Doug Sanders by two strokes after 36 holes, was considered too old and too short a hitter-to stand through the 36-bole climax dictated by ’ Friday’s washout. Young January seemed to be upholding the experts when he shot a morning 67 and moved into the lead, by two strokes, at 205 to 207, over Barber, who shot a one-over-par 71. January’s four rounds for the regulatkn distance were 7246-67-72 and Barter's 6947-71-70. Betides the title, at stake today was. 211,000 for the winner and 25.500| for the runner-up. Chtesto PhUidelph BATranATs eescltb 1 m________ :mo 7. ClDcbmttl I Bu FisneUen 4. PhUedetohle S, nlfbl _ SCNDAT-S BBmn Chicuo 1-4. ClncbintU Ml St. Louti S-2. MUsmSm Sa. iMoa SUM. 10 kmtDn Lo* Antelc* T, Ptttibursk S Bu rnncUco S, PhU»d*l-^- *co 9. FhllMlclUta S TODArs oyites Michigan Teams Denied Entry in Grid League MILWAUKEE » - Detroit and Battle Oeek, Mich., have been denied admission to the Tri-State Football League for the 1961 season, unless they can come up with a workable schedule by midweek. Four teams in the six-member semi-pro loop objected to the distance involved, estimating the trip to Detroit would require two days of travel and cost 21.000. Directors Voted 5-1 yesterday against membership unless Detroit and Battle Creek can produce a schedule meeting demands of the other teams by Wednesday. The d to accept the Michigan teams as members in 1962 but they did not indicate they would enter then. Powell, who is hitting around .450 for the Lake Orion team in the Pontiac Recreation baseball league, had 116 putts for 54 holes with rounds of 40-40-36. Next Sunday the 16 qualifiers will start match play in 18 holes and continue iwth 36 hdes in the following week. Winner at the Dbtie Course will meet the winner of the Northwestern coure. for the Suburban title. These were the Dixie qualifiers; I. Jtrry P«N*U, CUrkttoa.........Ill S. R*y RoMaaoa, PobUm ...........Ill J. 0*7 N*l*oo, PobUm ............Ill 4 .Cbrit Lot, DMrolt .............Ml I. Msrr Boll, PodUm ..............IE I. AaSy UvioB, Drartoo ...........JM T. Boh JodhIbso, Clorkitoa . S. L^ OkrSMr, Wolortord T. Doto Slot, Drsytoa It. Blobord «r“——-IS. Lorry Trol it. Tom II. Don ______^...................... ....... ..U4 SnUMrIOBd. PoaUM ... rotothoa, onytoB ....... lorry, MbUm ............ lord ....IM nUM^!!!!iP rtoB ....m rooUa Pitcher, Roland Sbridon, auffared a gtralndd musda below the right elbow and had to quit in the second Inning of the aecoDfl ■me. Barter 014). • lefty, etopped the Yanks in the opener with bits aa HanI homoni drove In three nnw. In the nightcap, Pappas (74) had three-hit shutout for seven innings but required HaU’s help in the tntt. The right-handed reliever came in with Baltimore leading 2-L the bases loaded and none out. He blazed a called third strike pari dete Boyer and got pinch hitter Hector Lopez to hit into a gameending double play. Yankee Manager Ralph Houk, ill fuming over the call Boyer, stormed out of the dugout and J^ed plate umrt* Qd Hiir-ley. It wiU ^ him a fine and poitebie a mf$pumioa. B Houk DTOlMM tte DUch six inches off the ground. Hurley said it was knee high. Daniels (64) pitched his first shutout for Washington in Idng the Athletics at Kansas dty with six hits. Gene Green's 14th homer in the second inning proved le winner. • The Angels outhomered Cleveland S4 but it was a rixtt inning sii^e by Lee Thomas that poked in the winning ran at Lot Ap-gelea. George Thomas and Leon ..........Bce and Ed Sadowald one for LA. Bubba PhilUpe, Woody Held, Bob Nie-man and nto Francona homered fiur tiie Indians. Lefty Frank Baumann (8-8) whipp^ his old Red Sox mates with a six-hitter and a run scoring double in the first game. In the second contest, fdneh hitter Joe Ginsberg’s 10th Inning twixiut single gave Boeton a split. Jones Key Man asV,S,Thinclads Defeat Poland WARSAW, Potaad (UPl) — Hayes Jonea of Paetlae was OUT OF TROURLE-nJerry Barber blasts out of a trap to the fourth green at Olynqiia Helds, m., in the National PGA tournamoit. .Barber staged a dramatic finish to tie Don January. They i^ayoft today. OklahMM Cit* IB-7S-n-7S-tai Cuptr Jr., tim Ami* V*U*y. CtUl. . I O^by. Site Cryitol aiTW^. ru. TS-TStS-TS-SM -------------- n-Ti-n-T4-s» By Tte Smeelatod Prem It’s a lucky teeak for the of tile National League that the Los Angeles Dodgers are required to stop like everyone else for the two-day All-Star Game break. For the Dodgers are ndling in high gear now like most everyone figured they would. They walloped the Pirates 7-3 at Pittsburgh Sunday for their eighth straight victory—all on the .Ts-Ts-n-te-m w.vi. .n-n-n-n-m .n-Ts-n-TS-w n-n-Ts-Ts-m METHOD by Arnold gdwer Los Angeles NL Leaders on 8th Straight Triumph Phils. Jade Sanford (64) went aU tiw way with a seveirttUier. Bill White clouted a pair of homers (10 and 11) for St. Louis to beat Burdette (12-7) and the Cards. Relief pitcher Lindy McDaniel (74) got the win. Spalin (10-12) finally recorded No. 298 on Hank Aaron's run-producing sin^e in the tenth inning. The old lefty yielded ten hits. third in a row over the fading defending champions. This put them a hall game in front of the Cincinnati Reds who split two with the Chicago CMbs. The Reds first lost 34 and then . 54! San Frtndsco's thlrd-iilace Giants stayed within eight games of the lead by powdering the Phillies 5-2. MU-waukee and St. Louis also divided . The Cards beat Lew Burdette 54 in the opener but succumbed to Warren Spahn 3-2 in the ten inning windup as Spahn gained his 298th major league triumph- Hie Dodgers started their treak with two wins over the Cards in St. Louis and then added flvee strairtt over the Phils at Howe's Top Playoff Victor in 16 Innings the Pirates at Pittsburgh. They averaged allghtly over six rans a game in the winning rtein— topped only in the National by tte Reds' ran tA nine earlier. Tte Dodgers clicked for nine hits, includliR Tommy Davis’ 15th homer and two singles, and Duke Snider’s two-ran double in the sixth off Joe Gibbon (84) and ptteter Terry Fox. Scheffing ia particulariy displeased with tte ineffectiveness of the relief pitdien in tte last few day Witt a Uaitod Statoa mm's tiaek and ileU team that teak four atralgkt vletariea la Enm- torlm at rala-saaked Waimw Hnal Ul-91 trtampb. ttelr tOEitt straight i gained n n-46 ieaMm. The V-i.ei 4mm splashed Us way to a 144-saeend win Is tte lU-metar hurdles to opm the second day of action. Traex took tte M,0N meter rna with a time at W mla- A crowd of tome 46.4W braved the downpour to watch the «—» Four one-run deciah>na-one of tiwm in 16 Innings—highlighted tte opening night of tte 1961 city softball playoffs last night Howe’s Lanes niimed Griffs Grill M in tte marathon affair with Ralph Long going all the way, allowing seven hits in Ctasg C. 300 Lounge edged Pontiac Police 6-7 In 'D" in eight innings, Fisher Body took Mets Qub 3-3 in Class B and First Presbyterian got Iqr dsss C rival (30 44 in nine iiuttigs. Elks came from beUad wUh an Its nus la the 1st frame to wUp Am Beatty l-l Is Olam A and Smith Silo evoreame a 64 deficit to whip O'Neil Realty 114 la tte otter gamm. Big Bear Coiwtructim tallied three times early and coasted to SlXm OU JOe UlOOOn •nai >, rnnmi—t tnTTrMt ^ °. am Dww. (64), with help from Ron Parra-nodU in tte ninth, nwfOed tte Boca with six hits. Ed Bouehee’s twojrun homer in tte aecond iimii« and BiUy WU- Dm Cudwril (6-7) to bis >2 edge over tha Reds in tte opeter. Ihe Reds wrig|^ to vict^ in tte second game on Jerry Latch’s two-run pinch single that climaxed a four4un; rally in tte Willie Mays elubbad his homer and a nmaoortag Unite in San Flnndsoo's win over tte ting tte kwara In tte Oontlmiital League lower hrackat playotti, ★ ★ ★ In tte long, tong game. Rod Treals batted In bott ram for tte victors with a merUlca fly in tte 1st and tte last of tiuea sinites In tte 16th off loaer Jerry fiantln. Tom Metsdorf singed across tte Griff’s run In the Stt after a hit and «Tor Earl MdCte had three slnglea, two of them key blows In nrs. a wild pitch and atolan base. Dick Adama temered and Dick Vivian got the win. plsher also clIaoiMd Its viotory wlttaat a hit m a walk and two errors as wtnaer Km Spean and Ger-aM Thomas matched two-Mtters. Down by one in the 2nd extra inning after Chet Woodmore doubled in a ran on his 4th straight bin^, First Presbyterian came back with two on four waller, a wild pitch and Chuck Young’s single. Dwl|ht Butler woo It. Len Grant batted in a pair with a double and Roger Noeek did tte same with a homer for pcs Hairy Avestan allowed JiM (»4 hit from tiien on but tte damage was Was Roberts accounted for two RBIs tor Atro with a *N»K)f and triple. Smith SUo qnd O'Nail -•—■ ‘nto tte eariy morning after Ring afUr. The Silo boya got alx in tte 4th and two more In the Stt to clinch It Four dlf-torent playerB got two satotiea and Monty Upton bad a twiHun inmier to lead tte way. Jim Wbeati^ banged two singles and was hit by a pitch to scare three times tor Big Bear. Tonight's playoff Ichedule; 0:14—^gr* n. CIO (0). s— U* *i. rutor (■) ---- I. ASoau TT I . Ihe big-four in the middle of the defensive line, die “Half Ton Quartet” are back and they will be ready to make things miserable for some of their own teammates Saturday night in the full drsai scrimmage at Wisner Stadium. “In the last four years, the defensive team wndd have waa three ol the gnmee by the aeor-lag eystom wn nee la the dram ne,“ said eeaoh The “Half Ton Quartet’’ which spearheads the Lions’ four-man ndudea BUI Glass, 255, and Darris McCord, 250, at the d^-aive ends; Ro|^ Brown, 325 and Alex Karras 255 at the defensive According to the scoring syw dew*. Two points for SB iateroepUon it would mean six points plus two more for making the Interceptioo. There wUI be no punts or kickoffs in the intra-squad game and plhy wUl go to the 20 yard lii» >ach time an offensive threat is The interception rule could be a big scoring rule for the defense. Should a defensive back go all the way for a TD with an interception Waterford All-Stars Split Doubleheader The AU-Stars split wKh the league leaders Sunc^ in a Waterford softball doubleheader. Arlo Flesher singled home the go ahead runs in the sixth Inning as Spencer Floor Covering topped the American League All-Stars. S3. The Natkmal Stars edged Hobby Painting 14-13 on Kurt Kuhne’s bases empty home run in the eighth. SnoBol split with Midland Monroe OU in a Saturday exhUUtion. Gene Shell drove In the winning run in the last of UiC 13th to give the Pontiac team a LO victory in the nightcap. Blidland took the opener, 3-1. Women Make Another Attempt to Finish Meet MINNEAPOLIS (AP)-The final rotmd of the American Women’s Open Golf Tournament, washed out Sunday, will be played this afternoon unless rain causes Rookie pro Judy Kimball, the tourney leader, was uncertain whether the delay would help or hurt her chances. “I had myself In a good frame of mind for the Sunday round,’ ". “I wasn’t excessively keyed up. How much this extra day’s wait will affect me is hard to tell, because I’ve never been in this situation before in a pro tour- Uto Usaa stortod twIee-daUy woriuMto today is preparaltoa tor Sahirday alghf s Mg acrim-mage and for the first «dilMtloB game which Is only IS days awsy Bgalast the Browns In Tiger Sts-dliHn, Friday night Jtly ufo. Back in camp yesterday after disappearing from Cranbrook on Tuesday is Ron Hartline, the Oklahoma back. Hartline, a 223 pounder who was the team’s 4th drq^t choice, took part in Sunday nrom-ing’s session. AAA. Yale Lary, ace defensive back and punter of the team, will be of workouts with an an ear infection, and Darris McCoid worked out lightly with a bad case ol blisters on his feet. Practice sessions are scheduled for 10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. at Cranbrook. Scrimmage game time Saturday is 8:00 p.m. with pre-game activities lor squad members to start at ■;30 imi. n IS H a 1 1.71 MB 4S n 9 t IBB M 174 M 4 Bunidiw, I MeBrid*. I IBB TB BiS I____ m 41 117 11 S 1.M IM 74 IBS B 4 SM US ftUB au 1.M Pontiac Skaters Win Team Title in Skate Meet Special To The PoaUac Prewi FfffiT WfHtTB, Tm. — A pair a( llrat placet Baaday gave the Peatiae RoUadtam the team foe Nartk la the JnveaBa D OMa Speed Scott Harrify had won the tonm af Farheraad Maiy ABca CloBse. Mary da Rfcaric waa second In Seafor Ladies Speed. Fair Wins AAid-Season Featura at Sandusky Pontiac’s Joy Fair won the mid-eeason championship at Sandusky Speedway yesterday and it was 9th win of the season as the —Ung driver of the Ohio track. He started out last and took the lead in die 8th lap, bidding it for 23 laps. AAA Friday night in an invitathmal race at Dixie Speedway, Fair will be one M13 super modified drivers girinf agRlnst 13 ^wlnt cars. CAF? SAFETY HEADQUARTERS CttlH IRE CO. 370 1 StfiMW SL R 54I3S '61 MODEL CLOSE-OUT! 150 CARS MUST GO AT BIG SAVINGS Before You Buy TRY HRMINBHRM MMBLER 6M S. WOODWARD • OnllalHir CtStdli • RIm Hichigu Hti Cowl • Ciul riNWwta Mwhy Bank WITH COOPERATION OF PONTIAC AREA Junior Chamber of Commerce Presents DETROIT LIONS INTRA-SQUAD FOOTBALL Sat, Aug. 5th WISNER STADIUM Preliminaries 7:30 P.M.-Gome 8 P.M. All Tickets MAO AU Proceeds to Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce Youth Activities TickHs on Sale at AU Offices of Community National Bank Also at The Good Housekeeping Shop .. . 0$mun*s Downtown and Tel-Huron . . . Griffs GrUl.. .Rogers Sporting Goods ... Clarkston Sporting Goods . . . Huron Street Triple X . . . Reeves Standard Service, Telegraph and Maple . . . HunCs Pet Shop and Grants at Miracle Mile Tort. nitpMnl.d Tun. SMimb..IUi^ S(.*if*MBSl»>. NOW YOU CAN PLAY 18 HOLES of GOLF25* DURING THE MONTH OP JULY AI PratUc City's OidT WiUtnt M Cmbm - apsr » PLAY GOLF I. OM., Comnr Pony OpM Daily II AJd. 'HI 12 P.M. Gnaranteed unit buy «"■* lHIII NOW TREADS Ml LATER 6.70x15 7.50x14 Prat Mounting ria. Tn« MS BMnMUM* r.il.1 Tnbo or rshofoos SladhroU Only___ GUARANTEED USED TIRES NEW TUBES Also Hova Largo SolocHon of Now Treads for All Foreign and Compact Cars "Wcknp ond Oolirory Sorvico ia Clfy“ MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER FE 3-7845 121 E. Montcalm St. PE 3-7.846 IYOUIS FtEE AT ANY EARL SCHEIB PAMT SNOT 1941 COUM OURTI MID-YEAR DITION OF THE UTEST, lEAUnFm. 1M1 COIOIS-TME MOST 6M-6E0US IN AUTOMOTIVE HISTORYI PICK ONE UP TODAY OR TOMORROW-FREE WNIU THEY LAST-AOSOUITUY NO OIUOATIONI AUIO HiiG VACAIION ^SPECIAL any car - ANY COLOR ANY CAR - ANY COLOR FBI LBS TNM M THE ma OF OK DEW Ctt MnDIT, ElHl SCNEIO UN CKE YOUR UR * NEW CAR lOOKI * Earl Scheib says, “This A _ includes exclusive^ _ TDIAMOND gloss paint withl GENERAL ELECTRIC* SIUCONES. NO WAXING-NO POLISHING for 8 vorts. GUARANTEED IN wMlNG FOB 8 YEARS against fadixw or peeUng—honored in over 100 citiss coast to coast. jChoice of over 2000 colors including maroons , and metaUics!' one day service IN BY 9 OUT 3rd tendc: • O^ErVoDO 000 SATIS* ft flED CUSTOMERS ■ OVER 5 rn, CARS PAINTED A MONTH-MAH AN APPOINTMENT N?'.v daily includ'nr ’■ BB suRB IT'S nani. aoHnin 147 South Sogiiww St. FEtoiul 4-9MS EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 81, IMl Legislatare Outto Coordinate Seekers olFIndustry for State DRIFT MARU) By Pr« LM. UtHU Twb Cockt nd PhU ErMjg nitar-i Italt: ThIi Ji nm iB m mttm nrttwlM Um Mm to MtoDti MetoMM. x5» nm Mb «itk Um Mm anUni mmSm lOB MeUEB LANSING (UPO - "We mm ptmiOe between 90.M0 end M6,MX> Jobe a year for the next aeveral Tlie state has a DeparUaeut ol SooBomtc Develo|anent eraeUi he peublani of findiiif new Jo Bwelnpeaiuen have crmlaeci a 'Mon Jobe lor MidiigA ftaMitt. tee” «nh a foal o( Ilj|p0 haa a mnnniwlnn diveraified if it ia to aorvlve ooo^ tition with other atatca." 'The tax atracture muat be re- e remarka and a The ways to provide theae n jobs, attract new indoatries, i n of exiatiiig b« have become a matter o! concern to local ud state govenanent agencies and members of both A legialative committee appointed during the 1981 seasian aet Its aim to determine what is being done in the state-on all levela— Claims Blimps Best for Job Could Rmcuo Capsulos Better Than Helicopters/ Says Retired Admiral WASHINGTON (AP) - An ex- they be ^ instead ooDunemorative events which are conducted in a segregated manner in oOier states. * ★ ★ The more than 200 members ol the Michigan dvi] War Centennial Observance Oomihission wei« fa»-xtanM^ to avoid such evmts In n amaud report read Saturday at a wmiorinp sesrim at Greenfield Vmage in Dearborn. ♦ ★ ★ "It is the pdky of this com-nrisfion not to take part in any affair fat which shy of Michktan's dttzens might be barred from having eqinl treatment if they (boose to attimdL'’ toe report stated. Abmt one^ifth of the Americatti adto Uvt in mobile homes ore U. S. aervice mm together a Non* Hurt in Quake PASO ROBLES, Qallf. (AP) — An earthquake rattled windows and crockery in the PaK> Robles-King aty area at 5:07 p.m. Sunday. No dpma«e----------- Pnveni Bilk Companies^ Force Rates Upward PONTIAc press. MQXliAY. JULY 31, nineteen Car Insurance Frauds Pick Your Pocket By niANK L. SPENCER CHICAGO (UPir-U was a la-miliar scene: An accident on the highway. PoMce cars, ambulances and wreckers. A priest giving last rites ‘0 one ol the victims. Because of that scene and others like it. :» persons were arrested at Jackson. Miss. The charge was not dangerous driving but insurance fraud. The accMenls were faked In aa attempt to mulct Inauranoe com-panies-. faked so akUfaUy that a elergymaa unkBowIngly prayed tor the soul of one “vlcUm.*’ Such fraud rings may be unusual, but the problem is not. The insurance industry says cheating on automobile insurance is almost “a national moral sickness." It now costs the nation somewhere around J350 million a year ★ ★ ★ Have YOU complained lately I about high automobile insurance rates? Have YOU cheated your automobile insurance firm recently? The men whooe compoaiet pay for your bent fenders and broken ‘A tremendous ne^f industry has emerged fa>m our modem, motorized civilization." Coleman told an insurance meeting here. “This is the injury industry, a vast legal and financial jungle in which about billion is being expended each year. nespe te( t h4>py s HOW SHOWWC LAST 2 DAYS! MAKE WAV FOR STEVE THEWHITE Inclined to think yon’m — —rr/ with the rates. Aad strongly suspect not everybody Is being bone St with the claims department. These men say the questions are| related. They say insurance cheating means high rates. And from thereon and hereinafter this story j winds down a highway cluttered] with facts, opinions, allegations and threats involving doctors, lawyers, garagemen, racketeers and ordinary drivers just like you. PAVED WITH GOLD “The way of the transgressor is easy and his paths are paved with gold—your gold,” said Fletcher B. Coleman, vice president of the SUte Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. , 3 (a 6 dt. Ottrry, Psosol Cetenr. I W I dfS Cttcumbtri, ^kl* tli* . were mixed as the industry labor picttire remained uncertain. Gains were more numeroia among alr-igcunbin! STeen. craft-missile issues, but electronict, pk rails and oUs weakened a bit Ca»art hdlowert watched the DowjJj"!*’'- !!!?■ .5? Jones average of 30 induatiials^^ kT^'.'^. caretally, since Friday’s dose leftlp:^^ « W before the previous ctoaing J»pp«a re^id dt 7D5.96. iaoduiwa rod, soo. kciu. Chiysler, up nearly 2 pointo to xaSwwa' ^ a new 1961 high, paced the motoriS^lIjA ^ grotto in active trading. Ford alaoiSduotn. nmnoV. h bu was strong, but General Motors was still on the downside. Stmilar-ly, Bethlehem Steel lagged behindL,,. _ ita industry counterparts as U.S. S2y*i»bOiIst Steel and Republic forged free- touM^ bkwsaoa '!'" . It * Power otarred . . Lottuew Boot^ doo. ... gala m aroaad t psMa whOe sum. American Tetephone traded L^tw*; S!il about aadUMged alter waverlag Juio""iw.............. a bit earlier. N«w York Stocks S^kiS; w. Wheat, Rye Climb; Other Grains Weak CHICAGO UP-Wheat and rye fu-hires wm in good demand today on the Board of Trade and moved up major fractions to more than a cent a bushel. Other grains and soybeans were weak. Brokers said the support for wheat appeared to Include at least a moderate volume of investment buying and some short covering which nudged prices along rapidly in the absence of signifleant hedge tiling. More rainfall DITROIT, July 31. (APi - Csitta . l.fS'300: •laushttf umn and haUtrt acUy*. I.W:15-M)c hlfhct; eowt Maady ta Mbs hlsh-... Js er. mottly cboica ttS-I.lM lb. atacri 4.SSIMSI-S4.N: aaiaarsw min t3.M04.SI; IM coupit lou blsO ehotca and prtma t4.tt-I.M|m 31; good sad to« chelea a-S3: tUad-t.Tliard aad lov toad II.M-U; eheica t.M|(M lb. ballan SS-».Tt; t«ad aad : chalet tl-B; utility torn* 11-lt.M; nan and cutun tl.M-lt.M. .. .. Hosa tW: barrava and flKt SM Ib, *> >!|aad down ataady; walsbU avtr t3t • r9{Uc la«cr; cava ataady; numbat 1 and ! 1 IM-tlS lb butchara iS.n-lt.M; nom-k bar I, 1 and 3 ISO-SN Ib. barravt and * piu IS tS-lt tS; Bunber t and 1 334-> 3M Ib. 17.T4-1SJS; MO-MO W. ll.tS- ....... numbar 1. 1 aod 3 300-4M lb. I4.M-1S.TS; 400-dM Ibt. 1J.36-I4.M; IT 1. a aad 3 IM-IM Iba. IIM- ill .g a tisbtba Turalpt. ba. . a i: ••• a ' a Mat el .. 4XT tat Papar . 3I » 3St| . M.4 lat Tai * Tal IT.I __________ .. 341 Jobaa Maa . 44.7| Am H Oaa ... 10 5 Jonaa S' Amptx ....-------------- " Am TaUkTM Stocks of Area Interest ▼etojers m.jb; fooo mm •Ufidard SI-Si: call aod u rYiKoio.’ Autam Caal Aaea Carp Avnat B . 31.2 Kelaay Ray 134.7 KImb Clk . II Sraas*. aa . M.4 U3P Olaat _ . n.l Ub Me a L 13 4 .' ll’^ lifEs * bi^ua IMS ACP-Wrlflay Btarea. lac. *----Wp Carp. -----itaa Laalilai Montreae Cham. I Bath Steal . r£E“-; Burroufhf Admirtl ::;U.4 _________ LarUlard Bait a Ob ... >3,1 Lau * Naab .. 11.0 Ban * Bavan 17.4 Mack Trk ... 40.' “ ■■ . 44.3 Martin Cn. . . 34 . 53.1 Merck ......S41 . S3 .1 Mina M * M 71. . . dll Maaaaa Ch .. U.t . as Maat Ward .. W.3 M> Mat teiMMl . IIS Matarals .. . uj Murray Cp . 744 Halt carp . «,4 Hat sue .. . 11.4 Hat CBab I . 34 4 Hat Dalrr . 44.7 Hat Oypa . is.t HaU Lead 111 HT Caatral .. ... . 31 Harf dk Waat .IM.d 344 Her Am Aa . 415 Obie Oil .. . U.I 2.*“ all Oicck PM .. Mi Paa A W Air ii4 cZ 21 ”p*lCoU' ?on B (Mi M i p„„, Si ° Leonard RafM ^rt-Taad Cant Bak . Cant Caa . Poultry and Eggs OirrBOIT POULTBT DITIIOIT, July 31 lAPi — Prleaa pur ..jund deUaarad ta Detroit • quality Uae poultry Ufht ty^ Plfuraa attur decimal polnti are aighUu broUen'T* fryara^jU *lbOL whltn 14-17 BMAMr^-------------------------------- - - - " lad turkeyr; toma -II. Wltfbt C< a Broa. r^nr^:.: RockweU Standard • 15 1 3 Toledo EdUon Co...............31.1 3 OVCB TRI CODNTBI «TO)Cas _.w followint eaotattaaa da not m.. tcaaniy reprrMBt actual traaaacttoni but art Intended at a guide to I" auto tradint raast at thi .17 1 174 . NS II ; Drraorr xoos "M4 474 DITROrr. July 31 (API — Bff prices ! ill lOJ po*d ^ dotan by (Irut raealTeri da-si IS n^raon today to investigate the J’uly 10 col- DETROIT (UPI) — A total of 63 persons have fijed for election in the Sept. 12 prbn^ to mayoral and Common Council posts. Twelve hopefuls. Including in-(•umbent Mayor Look Miriani, have filed to Detroit’s top executive job. Nine incumbents W'cre lapse of the Douglas MacArthur numbered gmong the 51 persons' High Sciiool building under construction in Saginaw ToTvnship. One naan was killed and six other workers were injured in the Businessman Killed as Plane Crashes BARRYTON tUPI) - A South Haven businessman was killed today when the single-engine plane he was flying ci^Mhed into a hay-field in northeastern Mecosta Coun. ty. The flier was Identified from papers he carried as Harold L. Stone Jr., 39, a partner irlth hk father In stones' Meat packing Co. in South Haven. Airport officiaU at South Haven said Stone was apparently on Ms way back to South Haven after spending the weekend with hk family at a cottage near Gaylord in Utogo County. Swanson Sworn as Postal Chief of Chicago Region WASHINGTON (Jh-Donald Swanson, 40, of 24068 Pennsylvania Road, Southfield, today was sworn In as director of the Chicago Region (lUlnois-Michigan) of the Post Office Department. Tie, position pays 117,200 a ysar. Deputy Postmaster General H. W. Brawley officiated at^the ceremony. triiicb was attended by members of the Mlchigsn con-gresskmd delegation. Swanson is a former mayor of Souiifield. He was general manager of the kUdiigan State Fair for six years. Writing Broomfield, Mrs. Maier said, "We are completely disgusted. Our government advocates the public obtain shelters, then they are not trilling to help anyone that purchases a shelter triiich they recommend. I guess our famiGt must go unprotected." Rescue Two From Raft Adrift in Lake Superior. ROCK HARBOR (I) — Ttt Ferry Ranger III answered radio distress call and two men from a life r^ in Lake Superior Sunday after their 20-foot cruiser devrioped a lei' turned. Tie pair, Charies Ahlstrom of who have filed for seats on the Houghton and David Nelson of council. iMcCungie, Pa., wan on their way The mayor and nine cttoncilmen to spend a two-week campliig tr^ will be chosen in a Nov. 7 g«- on Isle Royale in Lake SttoerT " election. Iwhen they discovered the leak. Sends On Bill to Cut Duty-Free Purchases WASHINGTON (B - The House today sent to the White House a bUl to cut from 1500 to 2100 the value of articles UJS. tnvriers may bring home duty free. The measure was one of several requested by President Kennedy to hrip ease the balance of payments deficit. The cut would be temporary. A voice vote in the House completed congreastonal action on the w. It carrke a special proviiion permitting visitors to the Vir|^ lalendt to bring bade 2200 worth of artlcks. Gov. Swainson Fills 2 Vacant Judgeships LANSING IB—Gov. Swainson today announced appointments to two vacant judgships in Detroit. James Montaate, U. of Detroit, has been appolated to the Wayao Oouaty Ct^t Court, aad A^ thnr J. KoMdaaU, 46, to the Do-trolt Recorders Oourl. Montante, president of the State Bar Association, irill succeed the late Judge Frank Fitzgerald. Koe-cinski, wrho tvas elected to the Detroit Common Pleas Court April 3, Trill succeed the Iste Ju^e George Murphy. Koscinskl was to have taken office next Jan. 1. Charles S. Fanner of Detroit will be appointed to the Common Pleas Court post, Swain-said. mulling over the first major step In the 1961 negotiations, taken by American Motors Corp., fourth largest auto firm. AMC kst week olfered tka s The firm, horrever, demanded that the union give up its cost-of-Uving escalator and its annual Improvement factor that guarantees at least a six-cent hourly wage increase each year. AMC also demanded a clear-tmt non-intCD ventlon clause for management. The UAW took AMCi offer under study and promised an answer by Aug. 22. The current three-year contract qiqiires Sept. 7. News in Brief Three wratches valued at IIM were stolen in a burglary of Man-dalari’g Market, 402 Central St., it was reported to Pontiac poll Saturday. Aa undetermined a man at et change from ■ cigarette machine was stolen In a burglary of John McAuUffe Ford Inc., It wla re ed to Pontiac police Sunday. Theft of ISH Trerth al IkUng gear from a boathouse at lOT Lake Angelas Road, Pontiac TownsMp, wras reported to sher-ItTi deputies yesterday by Bill Brown. ■ ^ SrrATD OP MICHIOAR » TKE PRO- _ --------.m of th# ptuuoa eooeqra- iai Wqady aad MareaUa Waraiaa, mfiiori. Cxuat No. 11301 To Warmaa. par- Pttitlea barini beta fUod ia thli Court aUeflof that tlia proMat wboroabeaU of chuiSm *aro*d!t— public for tapport aad that tbould bt pUcod uadcr the a tun Court. T tha peopla ot tba Steta ara barabjr aotlflad that aid patltkn vlU ba bald — — -----------(^>UBtT Barrtca Caatar, 7ourt Bouaa Aaaax, IMOB Watt Bird., la tha City ot Poatlac la tald Couatr, j aa Iba lOW day of Aucuat. AH, IMl, at I I:M o-doab ia tSa rtUraooa. aad you . Uicblcaa, yi haarlaa M It btlat bnpractlcal to make peraenal .jrrlce hereof, thla aumaioaa aad aotlca •iiaU bo aaraod by pubUeatloa of a copy —ik proMoua to aald hoartaS la -------itlaa Praia, a aawapapar priatad aiM elreulatad te aaM Couaty. Tntaaaa, thaHoaarabla DofiaM B. Adamt. Judia ot aald Court. In tha City of Poatlac la aald County, this 35th day of July. A.D. INI. ta Ragtatcr. lie OlTitioo July SI ADVERTTaxuarr pod bids Tha Board of Education ot tho Bloom-tlaid BIDa SeSoel Dlatrlct Ho. 3 of —"oaaUlold BlUa. a oa tbo meuriairieber Ba far laadioapa aad alta nroaamaat work at tba Baatovar Bel AddftloiL Waatftqv Road. Bloeatl —• hltaa, unUl t:M o'eloek p.m., ----- .uaaday. Aaguat 33. IMl. at the office of the BMrd ot EdueaUoa. BIooib-tlold RUb School Dlatrlct Re. L AadOTar RUlTRaeW**^ Uka Boadt, Bloor----- l^epoM^forau of eoatraet doeuawnta, leludlnf riant aad apeclftcatlont, art .ji fUo at tha ettlea of Wlleea and Laird, S5S RanrlaUa Straat, Blnnlngham. Lodge Gilendor White Shrine Plcnle — Pol— Shrine No. 2^ WJBJ. Annual famlto phmlc. H. W. Reaves* home, aoassoott Lake Rd„ AuguM 2, 6:90 PM. Br^ oim table aervice and dUh to paas; alao foldl--*-*‘— and table, li available. McCurdy, Scribe. chairs i/R If yw hsvB 6 *‘>inkr hOm or mbm ia your hona, tbsa this iafonnatioB k ipr yw*. Right now k iht tkM to prtpaft to spackl plan for beyi aad girla. Do yon kaow that for oaly SI.40 par ytar Of your (UId k undrr 9) you can ehiaia t2JMM> lift iaiunncs. Ram art •lightly higher Fuiuftt SIS Bude ia the pmcac Pka for your.diUd'r HOW. CeU or write about Modern MOI>ERN WOODMEN Homs Office, Rock Iskni,!] M. E. DANIELS (Dkirici NmoffMi 563 W. Huron 2». 913-7111 Ntw 7-Foot Vocuum Cltontr Hoso BraiM CI0H1, All Rubbtr (ao plortic or vlayl) looslor S7i6 $^95 Coats In nr Prns DoUvnry Parts and RIPAIR SIRVICI ON ALL CLUNCRS Fully Attachmsnts Ineludtd $1.25 WMk Fim Boas OsMStratioi 01 4-1101 WHhin 25 Milt RodiiM CURT’S APPLIANCES raotary AalSarlace TThlto Dcalor NIW LOCATION 6411 NATCHIRY RD. OR 4-1101 ■ LOW-COST HOSPITAL-SURGICAL INSURANCE 1rom^3-a belnalae ....$1.75 OLD iQUITY LIFE INSURANCE CO. - te r. O. Bm mu Brtrait IS, Mm. Nomo James F. Nyo Hood of Dairy Council James F. Nye'td Nyc Dairy. S>8 sklsnd, was named president Of the Dairy Council of Detroit at Its recent annual meeting. Dairy council membera include Donald Keppel of Dikie Dairy and D. Richardaonof RkhardaoB Fame Dairy. Working Copifol Avoiloblo for Your ButinoM CaUFE 4-1522 SIMKIT INVISTMINT CO. CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY ZS WmT lawrtact St. FE 3-7812 Is Succtu, but Costly ADRIAN (H — A fin-flghune dwnoB^tnitlon staged by the Lenawee County Firemen’s Assoda-tk* was a success, but it cost them n,700. ♦ ♦ ★ Included among combusUbles •used In the demonstration wem valuable wooden dies cdlected as scrap wood from the Steams Mlg Oi., which sued for damages A Jury (tedded in favor of the company. A slmde device for holding lobster’s claws with rubber bands is said to be an improvement < Death Notices ________________________ ^ Unor. Co™^. b..ovjd tetb*r of Koluid. Od* Ann nnd nioi email; dear Wthar o( iff*- .Uwd Murrajr and lira. Carroll WalU; Mr. Cornell «U1 DWnalaooJohna ^ml Hoaat. Wadnoaday a.m. to taa Touneman runaral Home Lakwla*. ^ehlean (or on WMnoadar. Augnat I at I p.n. Ii^rmant la Rllleraat Cam-aUry. Ola Ukaa. Ulchlaia. Mr C^U will lit In atata at tha Dyalaon.Johna runaral Home. 1»4I H. Hammond Drlra sio^ ;iald Two., aia «, beluvad hui-band of Marla CAqulU; balorad aon of-Sobaatlan and Santa D'-AqoUa; dear lather of Micharl, Patricia. Anthony and John D'Anulla: alao. aurvived by ] w"l be* toof'^***” Rwary tha C^J.*OoI/£tVdVFuna'’riTHom? Kaago Harbor. Mr D'AquIla will ba taku to tha Lararta^Shaarlno nwaral Roma. New Britian. Conn, for aanrteaa and burial on Thurtday. Aosuat 1. Punaral ar- ^Kmt*V»arll %om^ Kttfi ETHgi^TWy 31. im. pufiB'r ^,5;:^wgi,rss! I. and Winifred S5ftjsa!.riss,vi',5 p.m. RttBtooo Funeral state at —— ■■ ■ w.J OanJai dear grand* eon ,p( Mr. and Mra. Michael •^U. Mutton of the Boaary win be tonight at S p.m from t^h a ponelaon-Johna Puneral Roma. Punaral aaryloa will be htld J^Maday. Auguet 1 at 10 a.ni. from Our Lady of the Lakea Intarmant to Lakavicw ry, Ciarkaton. Mr. Oanja '——- -* **-, Donaltoh- HOLM, myjO, IMl. I «S M-U. Ortonrille. __________ IpTad huaband of Cam# Holm; doar tethor of eidnoy and Sharon Holm; dear brother of Oaorge. qiarlea Ollvtr and Prad Hulm; alao oi^TOd by a gundchlldrcn. PMeraf aerylca will ba held Wadnaaday, Auguat 3 at 2 p.m. from the C. P. Sherman Horae. OimtrUU with Raw. Hubert Pat-lick offleUtlng. Interment In MJ^ylUa Camatary. Mr. Holm wtll Ho In aute at the C P Sherman Funeral Home. Orton- tUIo. _________________________ JARVIR JULY JO, 1901. ANNA L. r of Paraua J., Martin im P. Owtnt. RacIM-t Rotary win be Mon-» p.m. Ir< - ■ —, ni aday. 1 81 BIpla Punaral Roma. Punera. aaryloa wUI ba bald Tuaaday. Auguat 1 at 0 a m from " Mtebaela Catholic Church, roi-lowing the Funeral Maea Mra. boygan. Michigan. Intarmant In St. Franela Cematary. Cbcboy-««n. Michigan 4INO, JULY 1 P.. 1011 o . btloyad butl-------------, Manning; dear lather of Mra. Marguorite Canror. Mra. Caell Irwin, Mra. Jolu Cudnohuftky. Mrs. Loren Kay. (Rtftord F. Manning Jr., John. Daryl. Richard and Janua Manning: dtar brotMr of Mri. Albert Burgatt and Clyde ManiUnt: alao tunrlyad by 30 trandenlidran and two great-grandehlldrta. Funeral a a r y I c e will ba baM Tuaaday, Aug. 1. at l:M pjn. from Dontlaon-Johna ----------I Roma. Intarmant In ________ ______ 31, 1901, LaRoy. 10 Slliabeth Lake Rd., age M; balored husband of Ulllan MlUhoUand; dear father el Jamaa MlllhoHand Jr. Mra. Dorothy Townaa. Mra. Ellen- grandchlldran. ifuneral ....... wlU ba bald Wednaaday. August 3 at 3:30 ^m. from the DaWItt C. Dayla Funaral Borne. Interment In Fourtowna. Mr. Min-boUand wUL Ua in tUU at i Dawm C. DatrU Funeral Bom crine B.. 00 S. Mairlmae’bi.., -a« 73: bcloyed wtfo of John B. Procter; doar mother of Mra. Baall Curtia, Oryin, Bobort and Oscar Schantr; doar alaUr of Mra. Clara Judga; alao aurylyod by 10 irand-children and 14 great-grandchll-dran. Recitation of the Rosary will be Monday at * — -• ■■■■ Voorheea-SIple FuneraP Home Pii-naral aerylca will be held Tuesday, Auf. 1. at 10 a.m. from 81. Mlenaal Catholic Church. Interment in Otuwa Park. Hri. Proctor wtll Uo In atata at Voorhees-Slplje Puneral Rome. ROtXUOk. iOLT M, itel, HAROLD E., 3SM Faber. Waterford Twp, Mt 43; boloyed huaband TTialma T' “ ■ ' ‘ ‘ Iialma Rica Rolllaon; belaved son .1 Clara ReUlion: daar father of Elian Kay, Unda. and Randy BolUaon; daar brotlMT of Archla Rolllaon, Mra. BnrI iDorothyi Marfca, and SUtar M. Ann Cbarlaa. RaelUUan of the Roaary will ba Tuaaday at S p.m. from Puralay Funaral Roan. Funeral aerylca will be held Wednesday. August 3 at 10 a.n^ from St. Banadlat CathoUe Church. In-tarmant In Mt. Rope Cametery. Mr. RaUlaan will tu In state at the Furalay Funeral Home. iMlTH, JtlLT It. IHI. HARW HOMER. 33 Longfellow, age II; dear father of Mrs. Norman iMaryl Winslow; doar brother of Mrs. Fatar lOiaycal lasMCs; alio, turyfrid by t grandchildren and t grtaHpaodchlldrea. Funeral •arylaa wfll ba bald Tuaaday, Au-aust I at 1:S0 p.m., from Purs-ley Funeral Roma with Rey. Paul T. Hart offialaMiiB, Intarmant la fcl{b"win iS*In atow'at thii Firalsy Funaral Borne. iwtiAifoif.' mf Si. m cAfe ldvad^osban?'^’%ari^na' danoff; daar father of Mrs. Dl-mltH LoasroH and sm/tc Samuel Voydanoif: daar brother of Ary, Stay# and BU Vo/danoff; alao. ourvlyad by 3 graiadehlldran. BobSrt * kl.*^teli?t(lald .... Edith Crocker; dear dalar of CUll Aitbur and Rarry -----. Bertha Bwan- lee ba held ___1 at. II ajn. T?lH'!Kr«r«: w A N T R E S U L T S ? TRY W A N T A D S FE 2 8 1 8 1 COATS Donelson-Johns FDNMt^ HOME . "Daalgnad far Funarala" _ •RARBS-ORIPnN CHAi>lL fhoushtful Baryiy PE 3.iS4i V oorheesSiple '^ffa*Aag^**5y.. ta ___Cemetery Lots 5 S S>'A O T I F O L LOT. FERRY FnS. *FK asF' nOJS. COMPANION ery^u. saorlfloa for cash. OR BOX xiptnu t IS S.BL Todsr tkm wre rcDllM st Tho Praui orriet h Um toUnwtng [ boxes; 7. IS. 18. It, M, tt. n. 83, 88, 81, 80, 78, 78. 74, 78. 78, 77, 78, 78, 88. 88. Help Wanted Mate g **■ nrtiautsTED air*iy*!5i.?*. iL^y**?J**t*!!h**' OtOg FART-TIMK A PART TIME JOB Needed at once — 3 men. AblUly VJEi"* •“'* CuU Mr. Pruett OR 3-0M3. 4-g n m_________ ATTKNTIOH MlX^AlhCB - Mi are hiring 3 more man to our expanding _parU aalaa and sery-Ice for Tottawagan. Minimum wagaa tlOO plus commltaloa. other banaflto, modem shop. Apply <“ aav$ Tla- rage. 733 Baldwin Ayapua, Fan- ARE YOU THE MAN? ^rgeat organtfau ' “ 5;a‘iSsrfo?;i oent peat-odyanca- AUONMKNT AND BBAKK8. Must know Boon Mulpmont. Day-ton Tlra Co., n wnHuron. BDTCRKRS - MXAT CUTTBRS. Exparlsnccd In aM aerylca. Ap-Mr to ^raon. Food Town tub St I corner work. Andaraon Bakery, Blr-mtogham. CaU in M«a for Inter. area? If you do i terestad to a Job wl aMly Oommarclal i 10051 LIyemoli. inter DO YOU QUA________________ INTERNATIONAL OROANIZATION will hire and train young men “““ 1-10-30, age }—Neat bualneaa-llka’aDpctrance l-Knloy worklna with the public i^Absorb trataint Ouarantced aalary ON per weak Dlua .inaqaas. For pcracnsl Inter-Mr. Clamant, at FE wsbu VB. ininvi] ______ high achool graduate, married. »*30, with ambition, also, part time help. Reply Pontiac Preaa, RIAL ESTATE SALESMAN perlence but will train right man. Strictly commimlon work but^ g^ eamlngi^ ^auured^a Brown. L. H.' isrown. Realtor.' 509 Klliabath Lake Road._______ HEAL ESTATE SALESMAN AmblUous, willing to make money, expertonce prclarred but not ea-aential. R. R. Hagstrom, Realtor. ------ghland Road (M40I, 1. FE *-nu. bonuaea. Bamplaa frac. Consolidated Preao, 137 S. Wacker, Chl-eage 0.________. SALESMAN EXCLUSIVE FOR THE MAN WHO WANTS A BUSINESS OF HM OWN I Fotentlal aaratogs 0> -on oo to 0J.0M.W a mo^ tha Comm. Medical Oxygen unHa. Ni tlonaJly adaertUad. ^llfled laat — No inventory to carry. W will drop ship direct to yo« Dealers and cuatomcri. WHte (i YOUNG MAN 15-29 sable yonng man will ba acoaptad lor a training proorao to pro-motloa and aalea. Pontiac area. Fhona OR 3-N33. Mi. Taylor, 4 ■pm. — 0 p,m. ______________ HelpJW«nted Feiti^ 7 ARE YOU IN A ROT? SELLING Avon coametlca la profitable and exciting. Four mature woman needed at once. FhaM today, FE' 4-4IM or write Drayton natoa PO Box 01. ------Am3ss=Mti'--------- CURB 'WAITRESSES Ted’a has Immediate epetilnga for ^ an the nlpht TED’S. Woodward at Square Lake cSSi I aiRL, NlOBTS. BUTTER. >. tlM^kland. B N C E b WAinti i5^^WiRi~i5u ________Huron.______________ OAS STATION ATTENDATfF.'nT ?1040“ »*• OTOR 31. WALLED LAKE AREA, coulS’^a'anothM 0^ guarutcad lor pan Unia work, 4 evantogt MA**43iu““ PHARMACIs'i: MUsi it PBKMA. ■ P^T TIME REAL ESTATE Sbtleeman. TTiat are UcepaM and want to work. The office •><« u.i. We want you. R- ~ “ PART______ SELL BY APFOINTMENtS made for you by our ofBca. u you are a rasponalbla family man Interested In increasing your In-mrae through eventag and Batur-work apply Tuesday and Wednesday avenlngs between 5 and 0 p.m. No selling experience necessary as a complete training program Is glyn. ThU opportunHy jf worth ON par weak *^th no Ilmiutlooa. You win call on our present eustomtrs Apply JMTI James Couxaiu to Detroit, ba- Help Wanted ^ EXPERIENCED TELBFRONB' eanyasMr.^jgod^^. cau batwaan 4 and 0.________________ B^rienceo w a r¥ r b • s, mgfau. Apply 3103 West Huron St. BXFER0BNCEO MORNINb~ANb aftamoon cook (Or hoM Statog room. Apply 077 Auburn Asa. exfbrxknced oirT; uSeSr- tartal and bookkeeping baak-ground, age 30 to 30. MU 4-UM. experienced pizza cook #or ntoht mut. Phone N2.ao3 attar OIRL INSPECTION and pta. Competant for full houaoSESd duUes at 0 room lake beuM waat of PooUab. Expartanead srtth raf-erenoat, for care of aMarly lady, salary open. Call dayOmaa aoly. , PE 4-dOOO for appolntmant. HOUSEUexPER TO llVi iM; modem farm home near Otton-yllle; woman with chlldrgD ac-npted; write PontUc Praas'Box HOUSEKEEPER FOR WORKINO ntothar and ' — ran. Uye sothar and_______ LADY IS OR OVER------------- work In Oakland County, 0 hours a day, Monday tmnaportaUon '■ you, for 0-3011. LINEN DEagSWRATOMT SOW. thing eyeryoua needs — curtains, mgs. towels, beddings. ^ types of Itoena (or tha home. Spare or ......— - -ork. No dtllyery or 4-1070 Of OL 1-3736. SILK FINISHER, AM COSBf-^ plant. Blrmtognam CIsaa. If 4-4«30.____________________ rienca. Opportunity lor adyaiwe-ment. PaUTvacation, hoapltallsa-tlon and tosurance. M. C. MIG. CO. no Indlanwqod Rd, Lake Orton TOY CHEST THE FIRST AND OHS OP THB FINB|X TOY PARTY PLAN IN IKCH. Our I7tb Year TOP EARNINOS II per cent commission to y plus season bonuses abaolutly nothing to buy TOP DEMONSTRATION KIT lie tun to show Items (uralshcd free to doalars TOP DEMONSTRATION AIDS Excellent company tralnlni Free Mlor cataloxt THE TOY CHEST DeUyers — CoUacu — Servicat _______CALL PE 5-4731_____ TOY DEMONSTRATORS. KARN up to 00 par cant plus new bonus WOMAN TO CARE FOR CHIL-•*— * — - - week. Live In or - —-------------B. Stan ren 0 d-,. out. Must _____ _________ Sept. 1, Phone 33M700. WHITE LADY FOR LIOHT HOUSE and child care. 5 days a week. Own traniportotlon. OR 3-47W. ^H(rtp Waiited 8 CHECK OUT OIRLS AND STOCK boys needed (or super market la E. Pontiac area, write tnr en. MAN OR WOMAN WITH earn 03 to 03 and up par nour. NaUonaUy advartlaad Watktos Food route. Experience unnecessary. Old age DO handicap. Full or part time. FE 34053._______ REAL ESTATE SALES PEOPLE Needed at once. Modem dfflce Ton commission If you are willing to work, wa wlU train you Golden Real Estate RED RA8PB£^RY PkAcBrS. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Al Johnston, Northweat corner of Seymour Lake Road and' Saahabaw.____________________ SALESMEN OR WOMEN WANTED ^rt^ or full Umt. Fhoot FE WHITE ebuPLE TO OCCUPY apartmant adjacent to Veterans HospiUl. Must ba able to answer phone. Call batwaan a ej>ri ii a m. for toterv' Ml 4-7171, Employment Agenciw 9 EVELYN EDWARDS •vktN welcome, lot State BL 3 ;^M APARTTitikTr P1U?ni b^ and tatranaa. M M. Sag- iTiootes, NiiiET bEdoRAW. Second floor. 4140 eitatonyUlf Rd. >E 3-7400, BATH, Adults. FE 3-0303. i City Adjustment Service ’ FE 5-9281 I N O. FULLY I CRAF sbnry, ear^try~and^Ctcrior and exterior decorating. Too hlgb -paaa am by — ring FE M740. Bmineis Syvice__________15 BLOOMFIELD WALL CLBANB1II8 Wall and windows. Reasonable. _FE 3-1031. C * C ^HALT FA^tHoTFREE asUmttes. 330-3003. All work guar, ELECTOIC MOTOR SERVICE RE-pairing and rewindlng.,211 E. Pike Phono FE 4-3M1. HOTTOINT, WrilRLFoSI AN 6 Kanmore washer repair acrylee. Bookkeeping & Texet 16 BOOKKIEPINO. ALL TdllBB. EM 3-3410_________FE 0-3030 Dressmaking, Taiioring 17 DRESSMAKINO. TAILORINQ, AL-teratlons. Mrs. Bodall. FE_4-00^. T A I L O R I N O. ALTIHATTONS, draperlai. MY 3-3S34,____ Uyden Plowing _____18 LANDBCA- „ k dut!%“iS OR Milo Chamber of Commerce I, 08_ ___________________ rconomieally with newly raleaaed Dex-A-DIct Ubleto. 00 canto nominee. FE 5-7005. OWENS SCIENTIFIC SWEDISH SALON. Bydre therapy, electric therapy, foot technique, phyalo-therapy. Kay Bnllolng, Room 301, 3'b 8. Saginaw. FE 4-0001: SUMMER 8F1!<3al; SHAMPOO and set 01.50 and hale euU at so. Dorothy s. FK 3-1344. ROOM CLEAN UPPER. 141 E Howard. FE 34703. manta, averythtot fumtohad. prl-Canter aftai 3 ANI 3 .ROOMS. CLEAN, ROOMT^ FRl-3 ROOM Mona 018.00 WERCKLY* 3 r60M8, FRl-I TATK bath and entrance. utlUttas. wtd. Household aoods 29l-r4gg;„y^ *» Clalr St, In. 013-017. FK 4 I EXCEPTIONAL - ROOM FUR- Wanted Miscellaneous 301 after 7 p.m. Near but. i ! »i4e. Dorris ReaMy. OFFICE PURNirURB AND Business equipment Forbes Prtnttof ,, , and Office Supply. Ml 0-3010._ Hiifon .Apartment* WANTED TO BUY; USED BABY J-------- ' ‘ ---- “ hlgb chair and wrtegar-typa wath-tog machine. FE >4401. | 1 .Apai -----------i bath. --------- . unfurnished Newly dMoraU Low reasonable prtaaa. -~t nfio Newly decorated. Adalto.____ yua. Lake Orton. MT 3-4011. ; MODERN. 3 ROOkU AND BAl... --------- — ‘ “T turn. DL 3-3070 : 'emaI man. Write Pontiac Press, Box ■ _*9E______________________ ! GENTLEMAN XttoS. SHARE ROME I on lake After 4 003JI033. I WIDOW WOULD LIKE CHRISTIAN I lady between 5060 - ' — qulndre, Rochaater. Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. 35 ACTION On your land cootraet, lari tmtlL call Mr. HUUr. FK i Broker, 3000 Ella. Laka Rd. ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST Man on your land contract.__ buyera watUna. Call Realtor Far trtdga. FE 4-3001. 1000 W. Huron paymento too much for you? Let an expert eounaal with you. Call Tad kieCulIougb^ 003-1038. ARRO itEALTY RENT REDUCED, NEWLY I rated. 3 torr-------- ' $M month. ] ft-0401 Roit Aptt. Fsqa«lwa 37 eomfortabls Uylog anvtreaaaat. Reasonable rente with uUllUca Included. Pumltara optional. WE DEMAND Raspaatabla tonaoto of good char- Rent Apts. Unfumiihed 38 > 3 ROOMS.. hBAT AilD tfW water fum. 013 wk.. nyt. bath 3 ROOM aIPARTME!.. M8UO. FE 3-7005. FE 5-0440 3‘BOOklS, 1ST FLOOR.~340"W. Afl“"o ^E MOO* ” 3 ,ROpMi~wnR "TILED BATH. ROOM DUPLEX ______FE 46300 4 ROOMS. BATH. UTILITIES f6r nished. Call at 40 Mlriva OR __________mo. OB 4-1300___________ I ROOMS. BATH. LAKE PRIYl-Newly decorotad. MT i RCIOMS AND BATH. HEJ*T FUR-................... 5, FE 4-3001 I ROOM'^N^ iwiTH. OARAdie: |u bart^ Wblttamora Torraeat i“R<^ teMacI. hk lArt Rivard South. Near OMTC. *30 par week. Baldwln^Avt. Hollarback FE 0-1001. ritOOM. TILED BATH. HEa¥. hot water, ranoe, and laundry facilities. call earetakar, FE 4-0140 between I-O p.m. ___________________ nisbed. Chlldran permittsd. 013.54 per week. K. O. Hempstead. Realtor. 103 East Huron. FE a-1314 E 3-7430. t FIRST CLASS APARTMENT Lane-Hying room, full alied r ' room All big cloteu. Fine ceptloo hall. buUt-ln bath tub. floors, large dtoetta, also stxai kitchen. Oaa heated building, tomatic gas hot water. Tiled I ways. 444 E. Ihbe FE Q6i01 ARCADIA n Nicely locBtad 3 roomi apartmant. ChUdran __________ 040 par month, (nose to schools, churches and downtown. Warm In Rut Apts. Uufwmlihsdte Auburn, Corner ol Edith I rooms Bowly daooratod, ottUM afft as,"" ” Brick Flat—Heated irssstr^'^ya‘“iirbj}siia! . .jot •* rear prirata —*---- IS28a"8Si.‘s'------- required 071 FE 3-7101 or_________ (SIMn 4 kobiks nd ratrtgaralor. FE »14lf. ri'rato outraoiqi room, kitttisoio ^uirniT APARTMrfw*r. roonu, Mf ymrd, pstoMt bm§ Mm. COLORED at apt. private both sad amranea Heat and hat wuler fumlshad. Rawly pafatsd aud iot-oratad. Cloaa to doamtowa 0^ dran oka^r. WrtghL FE M4U, CLEAN 4 ROOMS, FIRST FLOOIL fas heat, rafrlg., stove. nUtlUai furntohad. 00 Park Ploea. COLORED. 0 ROOMS. BATk, Haatad. FE 3-7304 after 3 p.m. LOVElV 4 ROOM AFARimiiVI EUvererast SubdlvlsleB. 0» HEW. NEED AN AFARTM^m SLATER APTS. FURNISHED AND UNFDRRimD 03 N FARES ST. AFTER 5 AND Sundays, ibb CARETAEER MR. CARROtir 57 N. FARES STREHT ORCHARD COURT APARTMUfs 1 and 3 bedrms. Air cendlttooad. Adults. EE 0-*0U Manmaer, 10 Ssimer St.. Apt. 0. ROCHEOTSR 3 BEDROOM DU-Pl*x. gas haat. OUvt 46001. "RENTAL ROUSING ATAfLAttk. One to three bedrooms. Advantages to low-tncoms families. Rengc and refriferotor furnished. t 530 Branch Street.’ RRACE — -cth, aes I -FE 3-7006. FE 0-3U0 or apply TWO 4-ROOM apartments AND private antrancaa. UL VERY ATTRACTIVE BRM.. ground floor, every poaalbla can-vanienca for cdmfortabls ItyteE toclodtog new PTlgldalrt, Chnmb-ers range, aotomaUc goe heat. Spotless end to perfect eandMlen. Must be seen to be appreciated. 353 S MarahaU St.____________ Waat side. 3, 3. and I rm. afta.. heat. HW atova and rafrlg. fur-toabed. Near St. Banadlat and (cent Houbcb Furnlsbed 39 Ref. FE 3-d41l. 3 ROOia. BATH. OAS HEAT 015 week plus caa. 4300 Haiooary Rd. OB _____________________ 1 ROOMS FOR A COUPLE ON THE Uka wlUi boat. Cloaa In. FE MODERN 5 beach. 030 < OR 3-0130. Rent Houbcb Unfum, 40 3 HOUSES AND A d-ROOM COT- toga tor rant, OR 3-0304.________ 3 bedroom HOlOe, NEWLY decorated, to Drayton, taa heat, itoulto oniy. *75. OA l-MI attar 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX *'^7MLL*mi»biuY****"*"* $75 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 544 Eaat ElTd. W. 1- gimuns. I aa.H manure, black • FE 46ljg or 0........... CUSTOM PLOW. DRa6, DISC, gardon. yard, 0» • — A-l SOD, 154 YARD. YOU PICKUP, dcUyarles modt. 2401 Croola Road, DL 3-4643._________________ AOt TTREB SERVICE STUMP REMOVAL Tree removal, trimming. Oat obr bid 403-3010 or FE g6TM. CASH « hours (or your lond oontract • ---or home pqultiL WRIGHT [land AvO. -. .. . — Walt, 4140 Dlxlo Hwy. OR 3-llW._____________ LAND CONTRACTS TO BUT OR to atlL Earl OarrtU. EM 3-3511 ; Efl 3 ting and (ertlUxlng. Oft______ AL'S COMPLETE LANDSCAPING Seeding, suddtog, black dirt. Top soil, tree trimming and removal Cement work, patios and (enetog FE 4-4331 or OR 36105 COMPLETE LAWN WORK. QAR-dan plowing, flnlsbad grading and top aoll. ink 3-0003. . General Tree Service LEE AND LOUIE’S ding. oatdlBg, sbrubs. trass, a^motas. FE 4-3170, 130 MovlniC awl Trucking 22 l-A CAREFUL MOVINO, LOW ATTdbVtNO BERYtck. REASdN-able rates. Fe 0-3400, FE ^3000. lm?'MOv®Naf(x>*°^W*iJoo4 t RUBBIsh. m'pystL RYaoonabfa”*^ 46301.^'^ UORT AND REATT TRUCKWO. Rubbtoh. mi dirt, grading, and gravel and front and loading. Top fiifathig A Decoratlnt 23 1ST CLASS FAlNTtNO. ' PAPER removal. Reasonable. Free astl-mates. UL 3-3100_____________ clean ^D fast. INTERURk !6b and .exterior wall waabtog. Free as- interior and exterio Free ast., work gbar. »• ■ cant die. lor each. Lost and FouwJ FEMALE BEAOLK, BALD : wHrttk hikkr, female IMMEDIATE ACTION hi any good land contracts. New or seasoned. Your cash upon aal-Isfactory Inspection of property and title. Ask (or Ken Templeton. 0036000 2330 Orchard Lk Rd. WANTED LAND CONTRACTS Smalley Real Estate. UL 3-1700 Wanted Reai Estate 36 boat - TRUCK - AUTOMOBILK Sa“r.S¥5:“II't?£Vy“^ _______303 Auburn Ave. Boats Free GE Transistor Radio vmh EyatyLaraon Boat ___DO IT T0UR8ELF K1T8 WITH WOOD OR ALUM. DOCKS OFEN SUNDAY IIM Harrington Boat Works TOUR EVIHRUDB DEALER Ot B. Telegraph Rd. FE 36033 ALL CASH Ol OR FHA EQUITIES If you are leaving atata or ni money quickly call us lor Imi BUILDER needs 1 OR MORE Vacant Lott, City of Pontiac - -- Action by buyer. boN t LOBE TOUR HOME Cash for your bdma or e' ‘‘“ Buy, Sell.^ Tra^ od^I 4-4013 1 Going Gut of the Boat Business! One new Crestline 17-(t. Crulaar, steepa 3. windshield, (lying bridge. Cost new 01700. NOW ONLY 11400 One new 14-(t. Crestline cabin (Ibarglaas Cost 0000. NOW 0535 One 10-ft. Lone Star Flamingo. Cost 0911. NOW only 0050. One new Crertllne Mustang I4-ft Cost 0730. NOW ONLY 1635. Two fishing boats, 12'. $100—14-(t Oator TraUar goo lb. capacity 0130 LlUIe DUde Trailer 1000 lb. 0200 KELLY HARDWARE ____ 3004 Auburn Road OPEN SUNDAY 10-3 UL 3-3440 PINTER'S I. OI»DYKE RD. THOMPSON LAP8TRAKES DOR8ETT FIBEROLAS BOCK SAIL BOATS EKD aUEEN FTBEROLao JOHNSON MOTORS „ . OATC« TRAILERS Somplata stock of marine aeces-sorlaa. Paints and (Iberglts ms- LIST WITH US Wa have savaral buyers, for good homes and land contracts. A. JOHNSON ik SONS REALTORS FE 4-2533 1704 1. TKLEORAPH WE RENT s i BOATS, MOTORS, TRAILEIU PAUL A, YOUNG, INC. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 4030 DiXIt Bwy. - On Loon Lakt OR 4-0411 Building Modernization LIBTlNOS- COLORED L.R. Middleton FE S-3303 FHA TERMS OH OARAOES COncrota. Additions, No Money Dn. PAUL GRAVES CONTRACTINO FREE ESTIMATES OB 4-lOU specialized RBAtfjf SERVicE Louis Borst, Realtor. FE 0-3443 WANT TO BUY LAKE-FRONT LOT ABOUT 140 MILES NORTH OF PONTIAC. PREFER MIDDLE OF THE STATE. APPLY. PONTIAC PRESS BOX 13. Carpet CleanerB COUCH AND CHAIR, OO.M, UV-Ina room, hall and dining room. Oll.H. 4x13’. 04.00. ; plMs sectional. 00 00. 3 or 4 piace 10 00. Wa Unt furniture. (Men 34 hours. Camitoc Carpet (fleanlni, LI Rent Apts. Furnisiicd 37 1 ROOM. KITCHENETTE, BATH, FE 4-1463, 16 Florence. 1 AND 3 CLEAN ROOMB FOR couple or lady. PE S-3MS Cement Contractors 1 ROOM EFFICIENCY Alberta ApartaanU *** J*_ _?**“”* etta apartment. Newly decorated. heS. n 'o-Smtot fe *!S5(i.‘“ 1 ROOli KITCHENETTB BACHE- CEMENT WORK NT PKOY-BILT. Wa art axpartaneed, Ucansed, bonded. Oarage floort, drive-wayt and pattoa our iptclalty. OR 3-MlO. presBmBking, Tailoring sltkrathJro. all oarkknts, Ido., Knit Drattta. OR 1-7113. 3 R(Mte. all UifOTWrFUR-nlsbad. Frivata bath. FK 3-5330 3 r&^^and^batr. baW NTKL- *’li^ar»ael'i*]uilo*''*rt? *** mfmm 1 ROOkis AND iitiR. Ok’kORTCIN. 1 child walcoma. | 2 ROOMS ABb~BAtV.' uftLfTTE8 furnto^. UL 1-4037 , 2 ROOMI^p BAia. kkih and FB B«4N. 1S4 Mt. CMmoni. 'I A-l FLOOR BANDOKK-WITT THE FLOOR SANDBR-FB 0-3723 PABULON - WATERLOX • BRUCE A-l FLASTE3URO AND REPAIRS Rea^Fat Lae. FE 3-7»33. D. Mayers JCU 1^ R. 0 SNVdKR fLoOR LATINO, tandtog and finishing. Pb. FE i^LASTERlNO - WORK OUARAN-Itcd. 143 n. SaglttoW. FE TOOi. CARL L. AiLis 8k. rtX>OR sand-tog. FK 3-0700. Plumbing and Heatint Furniture Refiniahing FURNITURE RRFIHIBKUIO AND repairing. Frtt tstfmatot. Marritt A son. MU Dixit Bwy. 074-1170. LUCAS PLUMBINO AND HEAT-Ing. Parts and Sarvlea. Raw work and MUraitoos. UL 36410 4t OL 3-40*1. Free oatlmatas. Roofing Feit^g Pontiac Fence Company n Conttoantal chain link fanea. Complete Inataltotton. or Do-It-Tour-■cK. Easy terms. Free Bat. OR 3-6595 SNOW WRITB FLSanC SPRAT HOOF COATTNO. A must tor grarti roofs, and baanUftta any shlnxled roof. Exclutlve by Pady-■blU^wlth a *-yaar warranty. OR Saw and Mower Service AUBURN ROAD SALES AND SERVICE MOWERS SHARPENED AND REPAIRED 1411 W. Auburn Rd. UL 3-1*07 1 iBet, Crooks and Uvamolsl An?088 FROM AVONDALE mOH - ^ In»uraiice ^ Check this rate! $35.35 PER YEAR on the avarafe bouts Including 010.000 OWELLINO $1,000 OARAOE 14.900 HOUSEHOLD CKX)D8 0000 ADDITION Uylng oxpansa 010.000 FER80NAL UABlLlTT 0300 MEDICAL FATiaNTB Many Extras Included No Deduetlble PHONE FE 4-3535 (or a free coat and covaragt compariaOD (older on your bouse FRANK A. ANDERSON AOKNCT 1044 Joalyn FK 4-3*30 Evas. FE 06030 or FE 1-4303 Stencils BOAT numbers"^ ' *1.00 3 Inch — Pa- sat 10 placat MADE-IO-ORDER STENaLS Pontiac Stomp a Btaacli Co M 8. Cass PB 46131 Television, Radio and Hi.FI Servica MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICE DAT OR NIOBT. FB 0-llM Landscaping BAH LAWN BKRTICE. 010 BAST Bird. North. Pontiac. Cut waoda— Roto-Tlll. WlU deUvtr black dirt. FE 1-0013 . Tool Rental RENT TOOLa AND BaUIFMENT. Jackson Rantol. FB 4-4340 1 Lumiier Tree Trimming Service IXO FINE ROOF BOARDS 4o Un. ft. UU FDRRINO STRIPS M Un.ft. 3x4 Kiln Dry Ftr ... lo Un. ft. 1X46 Eeonomy Studs .... 30c aa. EXPERT TREE BERVItnC. FREE asUmatoi. FE 060*3 or OR 36000.; BOB’S Taint~anlmcE Trimming nnd remeval. m-om. 4x0' V-Orova Mahogany *4 H 4xtm Hardboard Sl-M aa. PONTIAC LUMBER CO. CASH AND CARRY S31 Oakland Ava. FB 4-1113 Truck Rental Trucks to Rent AND SaUIPMENT Dump Truoka—Samt-TroUaro Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. __ 73* 8. TTOODWARD FB 464*1 PE 4-1441 0^ Dally Ina'udh * Sunday 3X4 - r KOONOMT STUDS as lOe 1x13 wbita p^ baarda lie Un. ft. 3x4 No. 3 fir 10-14 ft. 04c Ua. ft. Its TD eaatog 07e Un. ft. 31s TD base 00c Un. ft m - 3 It. St. Msh 40% off Waterford Lumber Cash and Carry 1071 Airport Rd. OR 1-7763 Plywood 000,000 stock at au tlmoa ALL TRICKNEBBEB AND BPBCIES Oet our prtoaa baforo you buy I SRBIT OR CAR LOAD Plywtjod Distributor 375 N. Casa FE 1-0430 THOMAS UFROtamUNO il7 HOKTH FERRY *T. FE 5 8888 EAKLE'B CUSTOM UFBOLSTER-Ooolay Laha Road, KM PainterB A Decorators IBT CLASS FAIinWO AND DBC-orating. Paint BhtN UL 3-1608. Wrecldoig Sarvke OOMPLETB BOUSE AND CIMf: merclal wmckl^ aarvle*. MY *1701. A-l FAmilNO - WALL 'lriSrf-• tag. exp., rant, ref, FB l-IMa. CITY W*8T 81D* M»r Oen. hot-dttl. ) bMIrodmi ud dm or 4 brdrooB*. brcoktart nook. Ban-mtnt. |u heat, t ear taraar Total price pl.tM. IteaaoaaSle ____________ Bom MtWaV! OPEN DAILY |»^< WR^TRADE ry ! old and in A-1 t,____________ to / I «lorni4 Oai beat Fenced , ' I rear Yd. Priced at the low price of onlv M 7&A Will IftiA ; $100 Moves You In -------In the VUlaaa of Auburn par/ ll.soo’^wn. |M | Hetthu. Suitable for eubdlrlaloo plua •------------- — - — ' >-l7» LAEE PRIVILEOE8 Nice two-! bedroom bungalow with aluminum '■ •torma. carporta and large lot I I7.M0. PapmenU only $M • —Inaurancc — i --------------------- rw!m"*“pil* Mrnfi*'*ieapmiaSM^ party only 4 bedroi reatloai i____ _ ed y acrea, tlTt a EEBOOi SMALL ROUSE Harbw. Oaa bant ____ _____ prlrUetca at Caaa Lake. I4S PE j-rm________ WATERFORD - UJTUTlAEE E8-Utea. J bedroom, tri-terel Large ^Jl^roo- vacant. A WM T. ITOMI REAGAN REAL irrATB I 141 Auburn Are._OLJJS04 c $54 MONTH 1 - 1-8EDROOM' I BUN PORCH) ! nu« taaea to Ola on Ihli line I older home oh Cottage Street. ! »-nS4. PE MTU. .iSAT l-BEDROOM . I cedar ahake hooM i ‘.'S' SPOTLITE i ^ ! il.tm w wanu _ rw.i. »lc FE 4-0985 I LITTLE FARM U"P«WOOD REAL ESTATE t 1-lSM. It DO ana. PE S-TOM ______OR 3-S4I1__ NICIXY LOCATED Ret Lake Cottys 41 l-BSk>ROOM ROME. PIRBPL, Oakland Lake. Arallable du month of Auguu. By waeli _ month. Prefer to rent l« montfie at m manUi. PE s-ao«4 ITS MILES NORTH OR LAEE MI» aaakee MA t-TSIS.__________ A BEAUnniL EUZABETR LAEE front 1-bedroom Perfect beach SIM To September t or weekly. Elwood Realty. 4M-14IS_____ AT ORANO MARAU ON LAEE SaperloT. $M weekly. Call before i p.m OR Mill______________ AT BOUARE UEf: " MdbiBliN. aleepa 4. good beach. PE S-ITIS. LAKEPRONT COTTAGE AT TEE Lake Lewlaton. PE S-l» after 4 pm___________________ LAKE LIVINO. DAY. STEER OR month 1 mllei —- --------- Bedroom apart &K32;k?____________ playground, tr^ h4iS7 ^bar aktmg -■—^—1. ..w.— car garage, carpeting, ttn recreation room, north off land, cloee to Wliner School, low downpayment will bnndle. WATERFORD REALTY. OR I-4SH. "7ack ‘lovlland HOP caaa Lake Rd Ph ggS-Uf $66 PER MONTH T ROOMS! IMMEOIATE POBSBS8ION Plua Uita to Ola for thia larga ■■-■ to Ooneral Hnapit- NEW Beautiful 1 bedroom, olumlnui elding, Florida atyla raocb horn Mi44 with attached garage a canal la Anchor Bay to Lake a Rock front, large wooded lot •nos. worth thouaanda more. Phone SSl-ITtd Sacrificp — $900 Down ; OPEN, k STCBIY. 3 BED- llTlng apacf.. IS.4M with S1.4M down. Lower down payment If you own yoor lot. No mortfage HATDW. Realtor VETS $40 MOVES YOU IN tn PER MONTH TOTAL 8 Rooms Basement 1877 Sq. Ft. $11,990 Only m milea I ••va vi»r iiniiNi. Nice bungalow with two bedrooma and atafra to, attic ' where you can finlab two more. Pull baaamant. Sunroom. ! i Oil Ac furnace. Wall-to-wall car-‘ pctlng. Excallant condition. Orer , I two acrea with fruit, etc. Eaay . terma. Priced at only Slf.SM. COLONIAL HILLS - For thoac who want ■ choice location and all real roomy ck —- “ L P . ----- IWt ------- nice veranda Situated on large lot cloee to Bloomtlekl Hllla. Only •».SOO Eaay terma jSELL OR TRADE - Country living ' at It'a beat. Almoat new brick , I rancher with I carpeted bedrooma j - Large fireplace. IH hatha. All i ' b u 111 -1 o appUaneea. mcclleol i { workmanahlp and choice mate-1 riali. PuUy Ineulated. Attached j I large two ear garage. Plenf I cloeet and atorage apace I ACRBB of land. All for only a^ I 40S and will cooalder trade. |UST WITH US - *1 yeara of ------------------ BUY. -------- A MONTH 3 Large Bedrooms All Carpeting Included MANY OTHER DELUXE PEATUBES CHOICE LOCATIQNB IN ALL PARTS OF NORTH TONTIAC CITY MODEL AT 108 N. East Bid. 1 Block N ol Pike on Eaat Bird. Open, Daily, Sun. 12 - 9 Model Phone FE 5-3676 B.B.8 BUILDIHO CO. MULTIPLE LUTINO SERVICE STRAIGHT AS AN ARRO ELIZABETH LAKE FROIfT IN THE COUNTRY —" rapeh home, nice large lot , ——- — itg oak treea. I block from I Olgantic living room with ledge-lAlng take. Retl Urge 3- j rock tlrepUce. 1 apacioua b“* .rage. Many other dealrable rooma, with double cloeata, 3 ------ --- _... . I hatha, mammoth ktteheo ■ bullt-ln oven and 'range. * -rage. COME SEE!! COLONIAL — 3-bedroom b^ ^p- ______ 6nTy '.lt5S^. Sl.MO DOWN - compare tbi bedroom beauty with any b you hare aeen and I think ... will agree It li a tremendoua featuring 3Sx33' family room. .11... .... itteched t yeara 4-Unit Brick Apt. . ExceUent condition, good rental area allowing net return of II*'.. -- —‘ ‘ula 3 bedrme.. '• ___kitchen, u,------- ---------- 4 oar garage. Corner loeatloo, paved atreeU. (33.600, terma. I 75 Acres, 4 Bedrooms I Ideal for riding club in ac and heavily wooded area M i I utea north of Pontiac. "" “ 1 of riding trail " ‘ I hilltop home. SUBURBAN privlle^oa^ A t S laff*NU TRADE Woat at older 4 bodrr- In Up top cw-.---- ■----a, large M ft •-* well laaf ........... bedroom «• ontelde Bloomfield School: landaca^. ---- ranch. Lge. pan-. aultab'- *— — a » i.ruc bedrooma. kitchen, dining. living room. gUaaed-ln poren. 3-car garagt. O a r d a n apace. Only ITTOM SMALL FAMILY BUY 3 bedrooma, gat heal. •V4IWIS BUM BAopplng. Street be* tog ptved. 110.500. SCMUKTT REALTY 460 W. Hufon FE 8-(M58 Acroaa from Oeneral Hoapital Open t to i___Sunday 1 to » Builder Must Liquidate Trade-In at Only $79 NO OTHER MONEY NEEDED ATTENTION Ol'e 3-bed room rltb plenty large 13x14' kitchen. of cupbotrda. e 11 r _ _______ atorma and icreena. fenced rear yard, and automaUc waaher and dryer. (I.MM. TED McCULLOUOH REALTOR PHONE 682-2211 S143 Caas-Elliabetb Road OPEN »-«;M Sunday 10-4 William Miller ! Realtor FE 2-(S63 STS W. Huron Open S to » _ $9,500 will buUd J-bedreom rancb-atylr home on yoor lot. IhiU batemeni oak floora. tU# bath, blreh cno 0 (30.500. terma. WI WILL TRADE ANNKTT INC. Realtors ' 30 E. Huron St Open Evcningi and Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 SMITH Clarkston Mill Pond 3-bedroom home with lull I_ menl. aluminum aklln(. In excellent convenient --- - ’ - *" age lor awlmming and boating. Owner leavlnf atele; muat aacn- Webster .School Charming >h« large, beautiful. 3tb-car garage. I Somerset. SacrlflcbM. j TERMS ARRANOED ON ALL RORABAUOR PE 3-50(3 I WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE I NORTHERN KIOH * ■ ■ 3 bedroom home. Ion, nicely located kitchen, oak floors. GILES West Side Low down payment on thii lovely 3-bedroom home to exceHent eondltlon. featuring bullt-to china cabinet, picture windows. Uving room and atalra. PARTRIDCiE & Assoc.. Realtors W W. Huron — PE 4-35B1 L. 3-car garage. All I 30 4-BEOROOM TRI-LEVEL Will build tela lovely 7-room complete rinlsbed home which you ---- will be proud to own. Paneled family room. Only (13.SM on your lot (13.(N on our lot. Low down payment. Call today. ATTENTION EXECUTITE Large 4 bedroom custom built new ranch. Bullt-tn HI-PI and Intercom. Family room. 3 hatha, bullt-to kitchen, carpeting, full baaement, attached 3-car garage. Located to beautiful neasant Lake Woods with lake prtvUegea. We also have large 7-room S-bate ------- -iwntog awlmming pool loors oak. Aluminum c MATION L FOR MORE INPC breexeway could be used aa tn extra bedroom. Attached *- -—-I fireplace ^^J^ooma^witl^oRrd 43 GENTLEMEN - CLEAN ROOMS. home style meala PE 3-S311. ROOM AND. OR BOARb. IMH Oakland Are, pg 4-IU4. ROOM AND BOARD IN PRIVATE home for retired c"-*-*--- PE 5-S5M I________________ reasonable board OPllCTiAL Itm Oakland PE 3-MIW VERY CLEAN. BBBT OP ___ PE 5-d377_________ Convalescent Hornet 44 graph Bropkf Building Co BY OWNER NO BROKER WEST ; aide, near shopping center. Alum- ; home Beaulllul kitchen with built' tshrr Large carpeted living I am and dining room. baths. ant gas beat, large faaallv rom ith awntoa type windows. 3!k r garage, large lot. price (t(,-woO consider terms or possible home call PE 3-6617 ,___________ ALL NEW INSIDE — 5 ROOMS IN CUntonvIlle ((.5M. Terma to Acres . ittener. : Close-tn west suburb ement. room for your family _____ (arage 3!k ml. dv aeaen-room home with POUR . ----... BIDR005I8. TIp-lop condl- sit of ^oqheater' . .... 1 Brewster Rd.. OL 3-4731 ■ parish I 1 id doublt garag« PRICED SMITH :WIDEMANi '.T iN i >1 a't*^ liardwo^ floors. ‘"filj A vacancy in a private home for bedridden or up and around paUent Experienced prac- HAVE ROOM FOR TWO AMBOLA-tory ladies to my home; close In. prlrate lacllltfes. PE 4-1338. Vacancy iian or w6ma)i: eiT- cellent 34 hr nursing care — place, separate dlnlni room, ga-r*k^ Call W W. Ross Homes at OR 3-gdl 1 for detaUi SWE U - 3-BEOROOM BRICK~ . \ rV* ®“' “'••■n'e 'll* , bath. lull baaement. gaa heat. Rent Office Space 47 t OFFICES FOR RENT. *540 DIE- to Hwy. OR 3-1355.____________ DENTAL SUITE USED BY DR. for 11 year*. 4540 Dixit Highway. Drayton Plaint. OR 3-13M. HALF A BLOCK PROM DOWN-Pontiac, (50 square ' ' ^--led w— For Rent Miscellaneous 48 QARAOE FOR 1 I RESPONSIBLE HAIR DIIE8-[•)«■ Be to your own bustoett. I booths lor rant. R •-E 4-314S. Wallpaper Steamer Floor tandcra, polishers, h a i Orchard Lake, Are. PE ( _ For Sale Houses 49 3 BEDROOM PIRKFLACS. MUtland. DrayUm i PA5ULY ON DOUBLE LOT. OA- nackaat Ui*. ttLSSS. lake prt^ O" — ! REALTY_________________________ K .. •''' Ri'-N’KDICT AREA r»nch, I37S down to fwoj pnrtjr 4 bedroomi take prlfllatea li* Ed Immediately No red tape dlntog rm lun room, full bate- love right in Call owner any 1 mfnt. aiumli me. PE M037 M Mcrkich j icreehe. fenc CLARKS'TON 1 BEDROOM. BABC------Y^aateref " -----*• I yard, i I I-H77 I r OWNER ^BEDROOM NATUR- and acreens, utUltmn lot fenced to alb________ Near MBUO PE 3-7M7. Can be financed under O.I 500. owner transferred Drayton Plaint. BY OWnIiR. zero DOWN. PER"- TR [-LEVEL I'bedroom, paneled family room, plastered walU. AUaebtd 3 car tartge Don McDonald West Side lor with lake LIST WITH Humphries ^ s little decor-t It's priced right I with only MOO day posaeatlan. Rav O'Neil. Realtor 3(3 8. I'elegrtph Rd. . Open (-0 FE 3-7103 _____________n 3-1(36 SCHRAM basement with oil _ . yard. Cloee to Lincoln Jr. ana Wtsner school*. (l.(50 will handle. $1,000 Down 3-bedroom bungalow with 33-ft. room up. Full baacmant. large lot. close te LeBaron School, total price (10.300 on FHA terms. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 •43 J08LYN COR MANSFIELD WILLIAMS REAL estate-insurance 14(3 Baldwin PE 4-054 Open ( a m. te ( p.m. TO SETTLE ESTATE . FAMILY BBICK DUPLEX . rooms each aide. (13.50S. (3.00S Paul M. Tones. Real Est. •33 WECT HURON ST TE 4-64M_______________PE (.137( Brick Bungalow Owner leaving Michigan offe lovely • room modem h __ garage, riclnlty Lake. Many ektras. (iT.awu. WILLIS M. BREWER JOSEPH P. REISZ, SALES MOR. PE 4-IUl (4-M E. HURON ST. After (:3S PE SHB33_____________ PTE 4-4736 bV owner, a good WELL-buUt. escellent eondlUoti. newly and tastefully decorated. 4 bed-------- ... dcr letttoi •II.OOO. Im________ rmi optional. I B 4-3T3. PE TRI-LEVEL STARTER Modtl Open Dally 16—4 p.m No money down, on your lot. your plane or ourt Ranch or TRANSFERRED: AND MUST tell wt once. Eight room S-year .old brick colonial — 4 largo bed- rooipe - 3t4 hatha ------------ w^ flre^li* ' b dithwather on ISO 1 ISS ft. lake lot, home (or growing family, d oontlder l-bodroom aaat of lac to trade. Phone MA (4117 paymenta y (enced lot, BY OWNER. 3-BEDROOM HOME. ___________PE S-d(dl____________ BY OWNEH-I BOBOOM jkttidl. I REALTY OH 4->4M Sd M4." > IriTkl^oii. "t 11^ J CONTEMPORARY. TEAR” kkefront home. S-bedroc heat, boat dock. Lakt ROUND ’“6rtS!l Irtog yea a. Small Center Street. Woodhull Lake. 3 BEDROOM HOMES Facehrick Front Paym’ts Less Than Rent $10 DN. ETARTB DEAL No Mortgage Costs Oaa beat-earpeted llring rooi DON'T WAlT-BUY HOW I Free! Your choice of $100 worth of furniture, h'irst 4 purchasers. 698 CORWIN block north 7>( Montcalm I (block east of Oakland! PE S-J7i3' WettowB Raalty GAYLORD EXCELLENT CONDITION Is this good borne with three bedrooma. full basement. oak floors, gas heat. Has a Ol mortgage on It which give* you Interest of only 4'/k%. AU newly dec-oroted. Total price (K.SM. 5 blocks from grade school. FE S-Sdll or PE •-•*#• Only (7.3M (or this three-bedroom home Monthly' payments of only (54 In-cludlnt taxes and Inaur-ance, low Interest rate; This priced to eell quick to. day™Wl'«*(-1^ or PE •-M(S NO DOWN PAYMENT required on thia 3-bedroom home In a good area, baaement. Call R »-Hn or FE t-(dg| lor further Information and aec for your sell. ^ newly decorated. Call ra (-(dU or Ft (-MSS Lawrence W, Oayiord I3( E Pike St. 13(3 W. Huron 81. I' h: 8-%93 or FF 8-9695 "BUD" Own These 5 Units Only a short walk from down-^wn. A money maker, clean and neat throughout separate bates each unit, oil ftred steam hoot, automaUc hot water. Offered at (K.SM. put your spare dollar* Here’s A Dandy I room brick and' frara* home with garage and paved drive, near Itoatem Jr. High, featuring generous living room, separate dining room, lull basement, auto-maUe gas neat and hot water, atorma and screen*. Priced at (I1.5S0. see (or yourself today I "Bud" Nicholie. Realtor 4S Mt. Clemens St. FE 5-1201 After <> p.ni. FE 5-80W HOYT NORTH CASS LAKE. Il3.((0. Low bul( In 1H4 3 bedrooms, full bate, lots of eloeet*. Electric washer and dryer, outdoor grIU plus bretseway—I car attached garage. 354 8. Telegraph PAYMBNT-gtO_______ BARGAIN 5-ROOM BUNOAtOW ~ PULL BATH - BASEMENT - OAS HEAT - 3 LAROB LOTS WITH FRUIT TREES — LOW DOWN PATTMENT — (55 A MONTH. WRIGHT 345 Oakland Ave. Open 'tU 1:1 _____ FE 5-9441 STOUTS Best Buys Today *BL-HURON shopping area. 1 from Washington Jr. High, ner lot, 3 bedrooms, finished recreation room. IMi car garage with attoched screened potlo. Extra value here, and only (1.4M down. DBBIONBD FOR A PAMILY. built gathertnta. Heat - •- •gxis dree IKsr Ult/t age. Just •U.MO MMMMM BOY! Like a thick eteak or a beautiful Monde, you'll Immediately be captivated by ihii 3 bedroom aluminum sided rancher, with privlleces on wrhite Warren Stont, Realtor 77 N. ihMtoaw at. ra i-ltu Open 'tU S P. M. Save $ by Building NEW 3-BEDROOM BRICK Bilevel with sliding glass doofa, cuatom-bullt kitchen, slate entrance. extra half bath, garage, recreation area. Many extras. Ilka Intercom system and ccramtc features throughout. Model avall- 3-BEDROOM ALUMINUM - SIDED home with m hatha, poured baaement. extra larse eloactr large kitchen with dining arm Compare — then buy (or (K.SI on your lot. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTA'R OR 3-13(5. If no ana. R S-703g _________OB 3-3411 WARD S ORCHARD! six-room. IMratory aluminum aiding home with lull base^-- Fireplace to living room. heat and hat water. One-car garage. Priced to tell: |I.3M!m. Located near Baldwin Avenue. Five rooms and bate down, three rooms and bath up. gat heat and bet water. Priced at< SS.IM.(S. BALDWIN-OAKLAND AREA: This tlx-room home to avallabl* on Ol mortgaga. Equipped ~“'' EJ^I^E L L E N T RETIREMENT Equipped with gas beat and hot water. City water and eewer. 4 roomt aod bath with full baae-m^. Good condttteo. S4.SM.(t lOHNK. IRWIN * SONS Reallora ' SInet U3S >13 West Huron BtriMt Pbdtia PE Sd441 EVE. ra I-4SM West Suburban S room home with hardtop floors, plastered walla. Dice site rooms, aluminum atorma and screana, water softener, IVk lota. Anchor fenced. Payment only SST Including ^ei and Inaur- GILES REALTY CO. i PE 5-6175 331 BALDWIN AVE ' Open • a.ni. • • p.m MULTIPLE LI8TINO 8CRVICE BATEMAN REALTY MULTIPLE LIS'HNO SERVICE LET'S TRADE HATE TOD SEEN layno Heights? models OPEN DAILY 4-S P.M. LET'S TRADE MENOMINEE Id Ottawa Hllla. 3-bedroom brick ranch with tul| basement and garage Choice area and Immediate poasessloD. This It tea one yoi have been waiting (or May M handled on FHA with as little at <=‘“*"8 coat. Only M(.^. Will you be te^ LET'S TRADE CRAWFORD >r will take In trade, ear, traUer. >r lot. on thU 3-badroom home rith large living room, fireplace. >ak floora full b“^---------* flnlahed. MOVE RIO tela 3-bedroom brick ranch, nicer than new. Many extras, full batament, kitchen bullt-lns. nearly new carpeting and drapes (all youra to enjoy). U's easy to buy Juat take over 4H per cent mortgage with low LETS TRADE DONELSON PARK Brick Cape Cod In most detlrabl* --- Cfoea to St. Benadlet’a. LETS TRADE ON THE WATER My (SMB with (Lids i¥uA‘ra **“ LET'S TRADE $600 DOWN 3 bedrooma, aluminum atorma and aercens Close to all new tchooU. Yacaal and tmme- iro,«7*iK& urrs TRADE realtor FE 4r0528 FE 8-7161 m S. TELEORAPH-OKH EVEB. on pavement. (13.MW. Let us eho« you this today. CALL NOW!! Crawford Agem R (-3306. 35S W. Walton o MY 3-1143. SIW.E. Pitot. Lakr NICHOLIE WHY PAY RBNT7 North aide or north .. Two-bedroom bungalow._____. and dining space. Kltehesi and utility room, oil HA htat. vacant. Newly decorated. Raaaon-able price and terms. Only (55 a month. CaU now. WATERFORD Three-bedroom bungalow, living and dtolng area, kitchen and utility room. Itk hatha, oil HA heat, vacant, newly decorated. Cloaing costs move you In. NEAR BALDWIN Two-bedroom bungalow, living room with dtolng ell. full baie-—• — HA heat. Vacant. living ^ dtotoSTare^kSehra and utility room, largo lot, oil HA boat, vaeant, ntwly decorated. fUdaOBabla terma. Call today. Evea. call FI 4-ISIg or R S-7373. NICHOLIE - HARGER im w. Hamm FE 5-8183 TRIPP ‘ ON THEBE PAOEBI New* at What Poopla Hava to SELL. RENT or WANT TO BUY. Order ywr Ad ati tho d Day. Uw OMt Pt«a . Oaneal Whoa RawMa Arf •“•toed . . . If* ttte Bomwmteid Way- Juat Dial PE MtSI. A Ft Sri> HoM«g 49 4 New Model Homes RED BARN For Sale Hopses 49 HAYDEN 0W> JOSLTir. Trim I BJI. 1 ttiaaiusr!a"-- lWSi5p«| y»KI. 0*iy »S Jjw down mantt. 'NViB«nt*7ii No Money Down Mwt Moitcac* Oeat) The Orion Star i BMreoai The House of Ease The Oxford Squire S Badnea Tri-Laaal Faea Brlak — Oaa H«at SalMt Oak Fleari The Expandable Alt Wait a( 1I-S4 ae TEKUW bahlad iUbM-a Oauatn Catua iatwaai laka Oftoa aM Oalard. DORRIS BXCLUSIVB PIONKKR SSn Sr dara,.. .. earpaUad. artr if.OSS : butlt-ai la - - laffS RANCH, iVtiOH oa loun-.. .--- ’‘•K.'S tujw Wlmr Icb^ dlainct, wall macutoU ------- near plua larda diaiaad In *•“* “ -Id raar parch. baaa aaUui a ward! iSe. ▼law. S flraplacaa. othtr appetataMnu yau will ad-aOra. or BMCIAt tlO.SOO. asi34 on fauadauoa, full bate-■aaat, all boat, oak noori. New Office 2536 DIXIE'^MWY. CHEROKEE HILLS 3 BEDROOMS 2 FULL BATHS yaw. • BWUBWB srviD QVWDWWD, laturlaa alumlDum aMind. 3 bed. wna.^rda Ur. room. I full alba, full bMement witb reera- aalaet oak floori .... lli.000 rwaekN.^^ MONTH. PULL PRKE, ti.SIA MODERN. 3 BEDROOMS, I LOTS. NEAR MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE. A^ NEW j-BEDROOM UN^-TSHED HOOSe WITH 1 ACRE r-AND. NEAR D R A T T O N AINS. ISM DOWN, I4I.M M lUfcltpr .... KAMPSEN REALTY let us build YOUR NEW HOME WHITTEMORE ST. CLARKSrbN GI Wltbla whlktod dUtaaca ta «ww i^room Uvtnff room. Opm Bvaalaaa ...^.Jl^comejhwp . I VAMtLT. OA8 RBAT Knmcn iml^brlcb awlaa a iai batb paol'i Templeton INCOME «r.4r,7.£-«iS Tenipleton, Realtor 0)1 OrchaM ^ 5 down. TennonU ’’ Ji™**- ®>0WB bjr • rm Ml« or P* For Sale Lake Property 51 Rauad Lake near Dni» >au>..i. eMh. Eaeb baia owa weU . ^ HAROLD RTR*fe i" ukrRd'"aa'i»««o“»<» II. IrrldatloB ayalcat. over Uk. .»,4 —^ frooUde, barrtei. uptm apples, pluaia large ' «mca am ■a patch, coernr chicken S?*™ Rd batwaaa _33 nnd 34 Mile Rd.. Romoo. CEDAR 18LANO LAKE'^ LAR51 Iwe frost in now bomt sros os E*ovMn. $1,000 down huntoon laS 1 a Ibu oft Air-"■* — Rowlay. Ideal tlful buUdInd M_____ lot. Wonderhil rlew beach. I13.SM. Terma. ROLPE H. am™. REALTOR. I large blgh ' and land CAm LAKE PRONTAOE. n PEET ceuent canal. Looatad In an ptaa of fine homes |1M down. WtY m yy.m****”’'' ” ”“*■ Hagstrom Bogie I „ - Lake Front 3-bedroora ranch, tall basement. ----a baths, mealy MONTH. A. C. Compton & Sons 4SSS W. HURON OR 3-7414 ABar B p.m, OR 3-4SM, PE 3-70M HIITER HURON GARDENS. 3 badraoms btiek, baaemant 3 ear garage, lli,6Mt Urms. SENECA ST. Taeant. move Hght In. I rooms. Alum, siding, W.-30R terms.. BAST SIDE. 3 bedrooms, basement, modern, will trade, only I7.U0. CaU PE 4-3>M. B C. Rllt-ar. Real EsUte, 3M0 EUiabeUi Lake Rd. OPEN SUNDAY. KENT -----------------I. and a -------- Ideal for owner plui rental apt. P^ bm’t and jeraay location^ LAKE FRONT — Located Ctorkatra _am^ on Bald Eagle * T?Sd*baS. booM that li priced rigitt. M ft. froittaga. 3t ft. Urlng rm., , atone nre^ea. Atuehad garage. All fnmlabed and In axeallant oondlUon. Now at tll,iM. Tama. SSM DOWN — Ideal homo tor eaupla. Naar Tal-Huron a^plng eantar. Alao would be good tn-▼Sftmattt for rental nau. ptleais,7M. NBAR WILLIAMS LABB - bath, pmr Iota. I Flqyd Kent Inc„Realtor mo OUle Hwy. at Telegraph FBS-«lia - Open Bvaa. ______Free Parking_________ CLARK K^. aavlnt for ____ . bodroMn 4 atory home. waU ------------—ng. brick flreplaee. tUa bath, partIUoned baeament. lot with Irolt and berries. OyiA DRATTON WOOpg.^y- andatuplnaffl azterior. 1V4 baths, a nraplaeat. baaammit with roe- Leonard l.ake Front a-bedroom part brick ranch, carport, full basement with fimshed 3-bedroom apartment. Nicely landscaped. tai.5M. H. R. HA08TRON. REALTOR 4000 HIGHLAND ROAD (MM) Pontiac OR 443H After a p m. PE 4-T0(» LAKE LOTS, 14 TO ACRE SITES. Clarketon. WaUrford. Pontiac, $30 mo. Pont. PE4-4IW and (» $-7711, Dale Brian Corn,_ LOT 43. ARUNOTON nUTB. PONt gL,“i.u”..a!*“ " LAKEFRONT ' SPECIALS down. $$.300. Year round HACEDAT LAKE. Tear round. Saa-rltlee. |i3.$00. TTILLIAMS LAKE. Year roand. 4-bedroom. 3 bath. Excellent batch. Easy ttrma. $17,500. COOLEY LAIDE. IV. acre astale. I A. TAYLOR. Realtor ItEAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 7731 HIORLAND- ROAD (HWI LOVELY LAKE HOME—SACRIFICE Laeatad at WUllam'a Lake. Cd-lanlal exterior. Fireplace, 3 bedroom. UtlUty roam, family room. Urlng room. • ft. celUng. AU rooms are paneled. All tlla bathroom, baaanMnt. Large lot. Watting dUtaaca to ahopplng canter. Ownar tearing state, L— -■— Eaay terms. Or 3-ttai. LAKE LOTS elnairc. some wooded. Buy new. build when you are ready. Ea» terms, call Oommeroa. EM 3-000$ lor Information. Lakesbore Da-ralmimant Corn., 7404 S. Hlg^ land Rd. (M-W). Dorothy >. Brokar. UNION LAKEFRONT I homo, attaebed garage, romni. den, famlte roar daooratad. imnaedwta or By ewnar. EM 3-301$. sO rw®r, ^voTVBsiwnii w Drayton and Poatlae. $t,IS$ hot water beat, ttrga iwitb shade trcea Pall bargain i |g,$a0. taima. Sale Resort PrqpBrty 52 COMMBBCB LAKB LOTBi gTSI. $ta «?*?“• *.*• J“- ■"•taoefc awlm! 2S «-?»!• Mtotrle and water, toad nm^. co^teu price gatM. on ^hw^ MBIdnaw. Mlcb. Pbopa HI-HILL VILLAGE ~ mmunlty you e I la. raatrl^ | nareali pared atraete. Excel J«U drainage and good water. Low ai tt^to with $11$ down. BALE OR TRADE $0 Aeraa moaUy 1 plua a $4xaa (umlahed wl6i eleetiietty and ' - bunting f LABE FRONT COTTAOB — Ottd-wln County. Ideal waakand -traat, with all fumlablnga eluded. Plowing weU, a nict I. -MILLER REALTY Sutarban Propeily 53 a-BEORO(Mf BANCR HOUSE. OA-r»sa. Vaere land. axeeUent lo-eatUm. Vaaant. Prlead lor aotlon. Oood tarma. LOORANCHEB. $ rooma. bath. lV4-ear garage, nlca cMble. 4 acrea land, bandy ta PonUac, $14.iW. Oood tarma. LAEB PRIYTLSOES. Bxealtent brk. ruieber, taaturtag famUy room, attaebad garttoTM water baat. many olhtr ftataraa, prlrllagea on a lakes. An axceUant bomt $37,TtO. Terma. IN obcPORD. T rooms plus anelaa^ poreb^ gu hast tega lot. bandy to acbooli, $ia,Mt. H. P. HOLMES. INC. For Sale Lots 54 T LOTS. 100' LAKE PRONTAOE. on Dawey Lake, approximately g mllae from PonlUc.gl.:-----■- ADAMS REALTY -------- PE a-Teta BY OWNER stiiae-. chaa^Nt ’ -\a Ar- — • "** COMMERCIAL LOT. Satbabaw a ----- oHer. OR 3 if * COMMERCE AREA. If MINUTES ________Pat. JO 4-5831 and U S-T711. Date Brian Cor _________ JR HILL LOn NBAR CRE8- LAKE LOTS AND SUBofVtstOH late, OR 3-$$S$. _____ ROCHESTER LOT W. #AINt Creek HUls. Beet attar. PonUac BACRIPICE HILLTOP LOTS Located la Waterford HUI Manor Plneet rlew In the ooustry. Overlooking beautiful Van Norman Lake. See lor miles. Lake privileges. Pine school dlatnete. Pina restrictions. Pine Homes. "— --------- Owner leaving OR 3-tgM. For Sale Acreage 55 3 ACRES. BSAUTIPUL HOMESITE comer parcel li Clarkaton. This______ ________ a steal at $3.tS0 with low down payment. Be firet to eee It. J. C. HATDEN. REALTOR S$ E. Walton____________PE i-$4il For Sale Farms 56 73 ACRES — LIVE STREAM, ACRES anTH MODERN 3-BED- gas heat, I13.SM, more land and bulldlaga avaUabte, I mUaa from Waterford Village. 10-ACRB BICLUDBD BBTATB - ----bl-teaci home with only level camplete, hnga rec-Ith tlreptece, bath, aming arm and picture windows. Nicely landscaped with lots of trees. gl$,S0O—subctantlal down. gg LEVEL ACRES BORDERING 3 pared roade with C-room bouse, near Lapeer, t4 of cropt go with sale, baaement. bam, newly painted. $U,5M. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE iR i.iaaa. u no ana. PB 5-7031 OB 3-3411 IN THE THUMB AREA AT CASl City, Mlcb. 130 acres of tractor land Older act of farm bnlld-tnsi. $ll.5$t with t5.$M down. ea. Very pretty rolling e< ry. iJlrcular drtra. through ti A 3-bedroom and bath farm b ___ garage. Small woixls and stream Uiron^property. This Is C a“^\VEBSTER, Realtor M516_ ------- VOU VE OOT TO SEE THIS 80-acra farra with modem house, barn, tool shed and other farm buildings. Stream on property -Many springs. Well fenced. mUe rood frontage. $M.$00. $1,400 C. PANGUS, Realtor ORTONVILLE --------- NA 7-34U Saje BMsinest Property 57 omn WIT, jmpwc rrwE» oo» i. 104$ DNtON LAKB RD- DE8IR-able bustnesi property In tbrtrUig Union Lake Village, eooslste of office and 4 room houaa or •— of lot, many g^blliUes BY 6wNiia~ilxflB"'W>6f~TO. anU|..jNgmmA. » flee, g-Toom honee In fair — dltlon. could eonrart to $-famll] First offartng — a atoal each. B. iTvaluet. Rea Oakland Are. PI 4-3531. amlly. $d.m BusifiCTS OpportBiiltieB 59 BALD EAOLE LAEE RBBOBT-Batbtng, flabing teenleklng bath bionaa, 3 apartmante. '---- —*--* —mlly sc while y In the climate of yt Bee thli manay mnl gs$.500 irltb siiMO t a trad' . CUl < Btka Bhop ^atantUl'oS!*^' ^^****^ ^fICH^GAN ^Gsiness SALES CORPORATION arty, flxtnres and nil. WILLIS M. BREWER HEN ADVERTISED IN THE Waad Ada Pete Ran Na Trowbto Ptndteg A Oood Homo Buriness OpportanHIeB 59 Partridge la the 'Mrd" ta aae. Motel, Party Store, and Home •Si" SSJSK fm?alMd*nMttal"‘unlu‘ .-tjsia ttora bids. — $t4.5$s down *** "Mtebigan Bual- PARTRIDGE solving. PE $-3767. SMALL GROCERY Baar and wine doing good bnl-nass. Located oo mata taimiway termi**** rootlae. $Io.tOO. Clarence C. Rj^geway PE $-7051 let W. WALTON BLVD. SUNOCO STATrONS STATIONS FOR LEASE OOOD POTENTIAL. Plaaae call between $ a.m. and 5 p m. $13-3344 ■AVBRN Of DURAND. Nice gross, $$.0M down.__ STATEWIDE B. a. CHARLES. REALTOR — * TELEGRAPH PE 4-0531 Sale Land Cenuacts 60 tAND CONTRACT 80U>~tt:$M. Balanea owsd $3,331 at 7 per cent Interest. Will diseoimt 10 per cent. C. Pangua, Realtor, OrtoorUle. NA 75tlg._________________ Money to Loan v 61 .^^ (Ueana^ Moyj^ l^n^^ Borrow with Confidence GET $25 TO $500 Household Finance Signature OAKLAND Loan Com] 33 PoKtlac state npany Bank BMi TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS $35 TO $5M AUTOS UVE8TOCE OL SS711 PL 3-351S PL 3-1510 ■FRIENDLY BEBTICE" BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE TOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 (MPPICES IN PonUac — Drayton Plains — Utica Walled Lk., Birmingham. Plymouth LOANS •8>ia«iWiS.- 34ff9S-EM 6A8H available To Improra your boma and pay up all of yonr dabte plua your morttaia or land contract. Tour boma muat ba oop-balf paid for MORTOAon ON TaSre , UP. With 150-foot frontago. No apprate-- —. B. D. Charlaa, BauTtable --------------------— Swept S-WHEEL TRAILEB. UM VAN-nett truck, 1 week old Oarman -srdi. tcU dr trade. Want projactar, outboard motor or Laro you. Pace Realty, OR K YmiUltKjwItit cWHUumm . If I 50 Binoculart Ka- I travel camera caati DRY CLEANING PLANT F OI sale or trade, for real estate OR 3-5015. WILL TRAbS ON !:SS. MONDAY, JULY 31, 1061 TIZZY TWENTY-THKEK By Kate Qunn Sale Household Qpodt 65 For Sale Miscellane^ 67 SURPLUS LUMBER & . 03t!5O 540.S0 Refrlgemtor ....... 5 place braakfaat let Table buffet and 4 chsUra ... 040.05 Triple dresser, chest and full si bookeoM bed, watnuL 011t.lt. THOMAS ECONOMY Rd. (M-OS) OR NEW 8PRINOPIELO CUSTOM Sporter. 30.00 new a us tarn itock, worth 1100, eloetrto Singer Krteble sewing mneblne. 111. eei^ean wringer type waaber, 030. Kenmora oil spaee beater, OU, ehtomt plated 33 nutomatle pletol, purchase per-** *---- oat, ball EM 3-37M. -------------------1. il5, Dtetributlng Co. Call PB ______ WATER SOFTENER. LIKE NEW. ---------*■ "--------Mk. Behick's. WALNUTDININO ROOM I water ioftenar. . laothar 0 y.‘Ta£f btide Hwy.' MA 5-^ OR 3-7134._____________________ OPPIC5 PURNTTURB AND MA- Oimr. Electric Washer .........030 00 Ouar. Electric Ratrlscralor ...030.*' Blic Oas Store *'* Kite"............... Utility Cablnat ...$ C v-K'vw Jedroom Suite......isa... 3-pleea Urlng Room Butte ...ilO.tt 16-lncb Oas Stove — — ydte-P^oogrn^b^C^ WHITE BIRCH YOUTH BED. “School does have its advantages. During vacation I have no excuse for not making my bed in the morning! ” Swaps THREE FOB TWO. TRADE. Va- S-BEOROOM HOM .tor bouatraUcr. 1 WILL TRADE 3 ACRES It'a wooded and with madam 3-bedroam borne. Paneed yard. Onlr U.500. Ttrma or taka ear, boat, house or ? oa part down. W. H. BASS. Realtor BPEXHAUZIlia IN TRADES Builder____]______PE 3-WlO 64 For Sale Clothing LADIES CLOTHINO. aiZBa IS TO 33V4. Oraasei, laekate aod or * Almost new, cheap. iS3-3375. Sale Household Goods 65 DAVENPORT AND CHAIR. 1 cocktail tebla and 3 end ubies. 1 daraaport. 1 bad. mattes and iDrtaki. 1 comer bookcase, t : swiral platform Ided laauier bar $W poi k. MA^ 1 GROUP CLEAN STOVES, apartment site, if' abd rei sixes, 514 to $i$$. 35 guarai rcfrlgeraters aod washers. 1 $lt. Ceblnet sink. $3$i Coo- ebalr, $30. ir TV $3$. Sofa bads, $10. Bedrooms. $40. Living rooms, $10. Odd beds, dressers, c^te. sprinn. and chairs. Er-errthlng la need furniture at bar-g^ prteaa. ALSO NEW Urlng neMs, rugs, frames haadboarda ------aattresaes.' . a^t Vb pnej^ term... 4 “•'D SPECIALS $130 to Kelrlnator DebumldUler * Norge 3 spaed, 3 tycla " SVfa M t-L-.u. rJi___ $311.00 Iroorlte Ironer . I ^ $100 wTyIie' Custom Dryer $IN '‘f«!“uViS;io2^Lo:W 1 PIECE_ CURVED SECTIONAL down°Sbles. 7mrarau*^ fee table. AU $1$. PE S5330. ROOMS. NEW FURNITURE W-cludlng good range and ratrlgar-ator. cheap. E-Z terms. Bargain House. 103 H. Cnee, Pe 3-4043. 3 ROOMS OP BRANb~RCirWR: nlture daraaport and chair, tables, lamps, bedroom lutte, mat- menu only $3.$$ a week. Pearson’s, 43 Orchard Lake Are. X 13 MAM BACEED~RUha; $1$.$S. also'tweeds and *—■- $X$ RUOS ............... $1.1$ ASPHALT TILE, Ea......... 04c PLASTIC TILE. Ea. •'BUYlo* tile, ■" 7 PIECE UVINO ROOM I (brand new). -Di-rW^iS cbalr. 3 step teblee. Matehini coffee table. 3 decorator lampe. AH for $H Only $1.10 sraeto. PEARSONS FURNITURE 31" Bmereon Tbtnllne . . . i to eets to chooee from We take tradee Open 0 to I ™ *-«w 51$ K. Walton, corner of Joalyn 673-$7i$.___________ INCH admiral 81______________ (uxc model Automaue controls. Like new OR 3-0ta$.____________ *7 PHILbO RKPRlOKRATOir automatic wether, both $45. 3at0 Walbridge, Rochetter PL l-l$l$. «' LADDER. S-PIECB OAK DUf: .... ... refrldorator bnd TV act. FE $-433$.__________________ APARTMENT SIZE REPRIOERA-tor, excellent candlttosi. MA 5-lio7. __________________Bird. A> - -.1 of the, way----- L'?..‘“r'.u's[sS!rN5s^m O', ttada. Coma oat Skgf OlUm MON.-SAT. • ^ g PRl. t TO $ ^$4 IWNTM rro PAT E.. M ^ubum Hal^ite on Auburn! MfO UL 3-3300. unclaimed LAT’-A-WAT AU--imsUc ktg-aag, eewbig maebino that makee brnton holea, taws on cy5“*cMi ^”*V3Mi.*^aStey AUTOMATIC dUl bONTRSCT-Bagger. caMnat Mittor sawlmi macUne. bUnd hemt, aakea bnf-................... Sale Household Goods 65 naymenta i UrUrerial C 7.10 per E4-gS8t. BETTER BUYS Innerapiinf n_____ ______ 3 pc. bedroom eulta ..... 3 pc. Urine room tinte .. Bedroom outpittino Berry Garage Door Factory Seconds AriUeble at alteabla dltconirt _330i Cole Blraat. Blrmlngtatm TC 34303 lb 4-lS BRAND HEW WROUGHT IRON bunk baA oomplete with tpiinga and mettreu, &.M. Alio mula bunk aod trundle beds at big w-counts. Pearmm’a Pnnuturt, 41 Orebard Lake *“ BENOtX DU^TIC WAShfeK and dryer, good eoDdlttoa. $4S. 34 Front St.. Pontiac. CROSL^T shXLTADOR REPRIO- CEIUNO TILE ..... 71k B«. Ft. ixa RUOS .......... $3.ii VINYL UN(3LEUM. Yd..... Ite "BUYLO" ■rtLE. ijg B. SAOINAW CASH FOR USED TVi, p6bN1- 0 PIECE YOUN08TOWN KITCH- PRIOIDAIRE DELUXE FREEZER, door itoroge. Ml pou^ cf toM atoraga. $llB.tg. Crump Electric, Inc. 34W Auburn Rd._______PE 4-3$73 valuee, |l4t.a$ while they test. No phone ordrs please Mlchlgen Fluorescent, Ml Orebard Lake FREEZERS—$148 Neme brand freeaert. All fast freest sbalrei, bandy door storage, sealed hi udt, baw In crates. LITTLE’S APPUANCE8 $317 Dlxla R^., Draytm Ptel~-It MUa N. WUUams Laki Rd. OAS STOVE $13. 3$ HENDERSON. HOOVER nPRIORT VACUUM cleaner, 30 days old, cost $00 wlUi attaehmenU. Tinll saertllca 040. Ravel Dlatrlbutlng CO. PR 4-4340. tftNMORE OAS STOVE 6oOD eondlUon. Raaaanabla. ^ 4-4070. LATE MODEL FRIO ID AIR] LIKE NEW - II CVOIC FOOT Ben* Hur Prccter. Original cost $7M. WlU saU for $3M. CeU PE LET US BUT IT OR SELL IT FOR TOO. OXFORD CXMIMUNITT TOIL ------ ADCnON, OA e-«i. itAPLE CRIB AND CKlPfkROM, kODEilN ARMLESS bAVENPORT - Rose end bteck. ExceUent con- dltlon. $45 PE 5-7851 _____ MODERN < PIECE DINETTE SET oak. Oral table 4 fh.ir. buffet. 578. EM 3-4$8l I ____AntlqueB 65A FARM WAOON ORNAMENTAL. A BASEMENT PULL OP Mtm A Pocket PuU of r*-- Whan You SeU Tour U of Money Tour Suruua h Want Ada SMALL RIDING WHEEL HORSE tractor, with roterr------- trade. UL 3-l$M. Hi-Fi. TV and Radio 66 31 INCH CONSOLE MODEL OoffiPtetely RecondtUonad freer Wemuity PRETTSR’S APPUANCE MIRA8LE MILE CENTER hCA TEST EQUIPMENT WR M Dot Bar geoarator and WR 11 .. Color bar generator. WUI sacrifice for best offer or uade. PE 34305.______________________________ For. Sale Misccilaneous 67 e Elgin c top ^t. ’ BY I’ OVERHEAD DOOR. COM-plele with hardware and track. Very reetonable PE 54100 after 53-UAL ELE6. HtATER. $73.15, JS-gal aute gac beater, $41.M. Cabinet tlnka and ftttlnsa, $54.M up. Laundry traye and stand and faucets. $H.IS. Caab and carry. _ S/.VE PLUMBING ip s Saginaw_________ ----- CENT AUTOMATIC WA- of our 34 yaars’ tkpoiience. $335. '—lading normal biatallatlon. O. Thompeon. . 7405 HBt West. ALUMINUM SIDING STORM SASH — AWNINOS No money down $S mo. and u] Deal direct with owner and ea Call JOE VALLELY Now ’ "The Old ReUabte Pioneer*’ ALL ALUMINUM II T I L I T Y bouecs. $01 Bernes nnd Hnr- grevee, 7« W. Huron._______ BATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL Aifh heeter. Hardware, elect, inppllee, crock and pipe and flttlnge. Lowe Brothers nint. Super Kemt—-nnd Rnetoleum. APPROXIMATELY 100" KCEET ^c^. poete, 3 getei. $30. OR TAPPAN STAINLESS condition. 3-year AKC BIRCm MODEL KITCHEN Dis- play. I - ____ .smplate ----top aod double ■ Royel oek Ritebens._______... Woodward, Royal Oak, Liberty 0-3044.____________________ BROKEN $LAT CONCRETE 35 00. OR 3-130S. CASH WAY STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS 4x0 Vh Masontte .......... $1.M 4x0 tk Pegboard............$3.“ 10x4$ 33-ft. Rock Lath $ . . 4x8 Plasterboard $1.15 NOTICE 0 for your power mo_..__ ’**-------r trector. $15 oo bolstered straight chairs, tables. Sand. Gravel and Dirt 76 Itorage fUes. safe, work bench! Por^ Printing A Office 8 furnaces. For the best buy caU Boy’s bicycles, PE 34IH.__________________ ’AINT WITH KOTON. busier and peel due t- •< Warxrlck Supply Co. bouse B^t. double money ‘^SA«£!a?Fp^^A?sfr fcnd cootroU. $35. QR‘ 3 JjASTIC _ KUrt?; ... hUlLOIHO. Sale Store EqElp$nat M . -- -Jl, beach Mnd. 1 teas OR 34330 or OB 3 ■*5..WV?.Sf s -I TOP BOIL. CRUSHED STONE, Attention, Truckers Elisabeth Lake Rd. El BEACH SAND. tS4S~3: ■rarel $7. 5 yds. del. CushloD s—■ • ~-“— PONTIAC LAKE BUILDKBS 8UP-Ply. Sand., gravel and «rt. Osteanl mi^r, trucking and Ulo. OE Rira DARK CLAT LOAM TOP ....................dtttVMM. ^^l^yarda tor $10 * SAND. OB black. OB 3-______________ SPECIAL-WASHED BEACH BAND Me yd. Poa Omrtl. $l Bond ■"---■ Me yd.—MA min* and Id SIMM, tt rd. PUI DM. SOx1$.''36xmT 75c par w|UMe oor a^t. mm be •— ness Bates, PE 4-US3. INO MAC^E - _______ fancy stitches, embrolderyf r**" out using attacbmaate. 0$.M 5-0407. "caStefl^iSSi r $a3.M. Wood, Coal End Fuel 77 SLAB WOOD OB PIBEPLACB wood. 1 eord, |M. dal. AMattn Lumbar MlUs. PE S4U1.__ Center, PB SINOER 8KWINO MACHINB — dressmaker model with ilg tag. Completely equipped In cabinet. Betenee tit or tsike on paymenta of M^er month. Unlrarial Co. t.\lbott lumber KS' 0 RENT A SIMOBB fACHl--- ________ Singer Sowing (tenter U8±D BOttER OAI BURNEK! reives * *---- — ........ ixc ilLACE POODLE, I YUR. ----- *• — 3-18M. Ale KioisTXRiD' A fiTihl I'k with controls, rent. OB ____ USED AUTOMA’nC WASHERS. Pey as lltUe as $1.3$ a weel GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 3$ S. Cass____________PE $41! WORK BENCbIS. 5611 WALDON -EC DACHSHUNDS $1$ DOWN STUDS JAHKIM’B BBO. PB 53535. BOSTON terrier PUPPY, 531. graph. TaMt Btedai rMla. 1 1-0651 after I p.m. ----¥HrsALVA’ndiriiSrr~ BEAOLE PUPS; OOOD KUNTINO 111 EAST LAWRENCE Erarytbtnt to meet your needs. Clothing, Pumlture. Appllaocas. COCKER PUPS BLOND, I W MBChIncry 6S DOZER, TERRATRACT O. ais t-us-B, BiAjifu. B waisisa Thoroughbreds, $15 eech. UL 3471$ between I a.m. and $:1S p.m. 307$ Melvin St., Roahaater. ' oAch^huni ^ ' illNIATURB BCRNAUZKR PUIVI Sale Musical Goods 71 SIT BUNOKRLANO DBUMB, $100. BM 14143. - FLOOR MODELS SPInIt POODLES - VERT cSSCE -Toys, also pate. PE 54371, Wakeets ouarantssd to talk. 04.N. walkar’a Bird Honsa, 3M Ut St., Boehaater, OL 14373. Rher’s.’ PB 4-MdO. A^qUB ORGAN with ittilROR —1 stool, good —-*•— - —-». PE t4M3. dltlon, one only. $47$. LEW BrrrKRLY MDBIC CO. MI 0-a003 OPPOSITK B’HAM THEATKR BUY NOW AND SATE -........ INSTHUkfENTS. BE READY TTHEN school starts, CHOOSE BALDWIN SPINET ORGAN. 8PB- 4x4 H PlysiM Burmeister OPPOSITK B’HAM THIATKR BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR ■ factorr expert. CALBI MUSIC CO. lit N BAOINAW______PE t-iH EXPERT piano TUNINO ~ Mester Crafuman NEW PRIOIDAlIi IMPERIAL deluxe, electric dryer. Never used. ORtendo 34530. OtL BURNINO pLoOR PURNACK. m. Pontlaa Moblte Roma Park. n 5-IK3. _____________ REFRIGF.RATORS NEW MODEL.S t-Taar Warranty illy Stia prom 5150 OOOD HOUSEKKIPINO SHOP of Pontiac HURON____________PE 4-1585 IkKPRlOKRA'fb^ $S!Ri tvT $lt.tt and M. Swatt'i Radio and * -------^ Huron. PE 4-1131. ----------------------------$3 par weak. Deluxe waaber $35. Wkter softener ttke new, bal. $1.75 pat mo Scblek’a, MY 3-3711. llBBUaT VACUU5IB. Ill.M UP (4> W. Huron, Bamcs S Hargraves USD DAVENPORT AND CHAIR. PE a-rna SnfOLB BED, BPRINO AND MAT-traaa. 515. Keamare nute. washer. 5M CaU Men, PE 547M.______ SBALY POSTURE-pEDIC M A T-condl- Fi W 1 N o machines. WHOLB-sale to aU. New, used and re-Orer “ eboote Iron. Prices stsrt Singer portablaa $lt.M. six sag equip-mant. Curt’s AppOancas, 5451 Hatchery Rd. OR - SBWUlO MACHINB- AUTOllAT-Ic Ilg Zag. Mutt seU store tew-Bway. Just dial to put on buttana. daalgai, bUnd bams. Tours for S» JS-“ap»:aS.“pi*Vfift ---------- Canter. LUMBER COMPANY 7540 CDOley Lake Rd. EM 1417 Open I a.m. to I p.m. dallw Sunday le a m. to 3 p.m.. White t_________ BATE PLUMBMO SUPPLY 173 S. Saginaw “ * “*’ FOR SALE SELL YOUR OPRIOHT OR SPIN--* pluo to paUa|he^M_uate_Co. or vending mocbliM Valued at 04M. real accepted. Phone PE 3-lNS. FORMICA. PLUMBINO, P"a I W *. TUNINO AND REiklRINO. 34-'■—I service all work guaranteed laetory trained man CALBI MUSIC CO. lit N. SAOINAW_________VE 54333 NO TUNINO - OSCAR mldt PE 3-5317._______ ROT WATER BEATER. 3S OAL. ------------ i. 51I.N n atectiic, oil ^ 'MtM^gasI neeiar. Mlcblfan FInoreaeent, 151 Orchard Lake - 15, lENNITE 1-16 LONd-LABTINO PR(3TBCTtON FOR ASPHALT PAVEMENTS. Stops Iracaa-lbaw'damage, aa w as softening effodte of gat end i Olves e smooth aatln black tlnli 5-Gallon Can $9.95 BLAYLOCK COAL A SUPPLY CO. II Orchard Lake Are. PE 3-7101 KITCHiN CABINET SINKS, ■cratebad 4T* model. 5M value. 044.M while tber laa$. VerrUla valuet oo 54” and 5T’----------- Mie^ptn Plnoreaceot, tr. Ugbte for bcdrtMma. kiteb-cDS, dlnlat rooma. halte, gardana. Priced not at dlaeouat W below wboiasalt. Hlebigaa Fluorascent, 353 Orchard Laka — 53._____ LATATORIBi~COM^LEfE. 514.M value. 514.M. Alto bathtubs, toilets, showck stalls. Irrcgtttert, tor-rifle valuee. Michigan Plnoree-—* 303 Orchard Lake , slightly marred. 03. - ..JiOttt U^tts. eUdIng ________________ Terrific buys. Mlchlgen Jfluarca- Wiooe PBdernl 3-aaH CONN IfINUBT ORGANS (Across from Tel-Huron) ; In welnut. 5S3-33H niter USED LOWRBY ORGAN WtS CHIMES. Oellagher s. PE 4-OOr USED UPRIOHT PIANOS Kgcellsnt for prectice,------— rccondlUMMd. $131 MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph PE 3-5M7 (Acrosa from Tel-Hnronl WB HATE SEVERAL OOOD USED ntoaoe. Kroeger uprlghL 5100: Lu'4300.__________________ mlng. OL Hay, Grain and Feed 82 lUed. will tumisb trucks, OA For Sale Livestock 83 RABBITS. II.OS EACa. MU MAR- rletta. OR 3-7747.______________ WHITE PONY, ABOUT 40 INCHES high OR 34700. 4145 CUnMuvIlla For SaleJ^ouHry 85 Sale Farm Produce 86 ILTIYATED BLUEBER- tween U noon and 3 pjn.. 5 p m ., rm S-1S5A__________ awn. Holto Orchard. John R I South of Auburn. UL 54l». Tbompaon't Sale Pami EquI^Hneid 87 RIDINO TRACTOil Sib I tquip- Owe aammiea. bar6ai1^s — ILL WALKir---------- iCTORR H lIFMEiT. CREDIT TEEMS AVAILAELB. TWEXTY-FOUli V / THE FOXTIAC JRESS. MONDAY, JULY m\ 1961 87 Sye Trdhn 89 B—to Arcwiriwt f7 , THE TIME IS NOW roB t» Tononiv AMD mu. BOLLT UAKniK * COACH SAI mw Hour «d. HOU.r — * ■ *ACA- SEA RAY BOATS oST KESSLER WHEELHORSE BOLENS TRACTORS _________ :f?t^oR j-im: U. U. I _________ —--=—=—=—-—otmjSm*wSa»k *Kx»AiraB Rent Trailer Space 90 m a am^*_f« Mm auction saub MOTIMT ^ . V» PJ. S^T FBIDAT 1 Ztort AATURDAT . t p a. door pmzEB armcRT auctiomi laiMii R«aoi Op«s Bren AacUM'.: iM DIXIE mOHWAT________^ o«D TO«a IE • iHteHaapKU p^ °°C*U iMh. Aate OtMoual-Ua. t«aU Naar a** Wot- lloral Una. Bate BM. at Mt. ■fefhaaaa alactrla taaatar wMli Ciw«« *t TAiiutt. Raaalr aaeaaa wRA at-IJSoE! ItjSiMta. OK rafiltaratBr. ^ .Euraka raOMai.'aaar aaw Maj- iaiaa. tat *a«hal. aaad a I»w tUaaa;; „ rw , DaoMa paitahia taba. WUiaB daap ‘j&sr:,tnasr.:2 «‘s ED WILLIAMS rS^r^raSr , «. .. BMla.> »« ».*>■« , -iTr-'iSS*- Aalo Senwe SEA EAT BOAT* AORNSOM motorb IM SuppU& Rapalr Sara. PINTER'S Adr be? tw5* BUUnc BOAT blSCQ^NT AT Toay'a Uarlaa. Balam^ aw LOW DOWN BATIlBirr EE Tfl^liB Mazurck Marine-Sales BAQINAW AT B. BLTD. Smart Dog! Foir Sak Cara ;_106 Fur Sak Cars IM ‘ REPOSSESSION IPU Buick FOoor. FuU price IMS, 1.3 E. EMlaaw.'IS MM CREW BEL AIR. CLEAN. Call MY J-8^, Me power Meeriag, power brakes. whItowaU ttrai. SLIM. Private owner. OR 347M. e^ after 1. Tfaii«portRt*ii Offered 100 d^rr■aarmj^r^..Wyr-iCKANESHAFT ORIwpiNO IN TOBj* Ln*Amia£*te^na»St^^ •fall kadtaM i ear. CpUndara rakotad. Bwk Dtata7»»W. HawalL MS.M aaUa. 4 aad draaaar. Balt A Hawaa| U Hood. Bhoao 1*. EaJTVork. lit Mlaart, M. Farry _ -------------- -’•1 ___________________ Bcratca lac. OB Sak Motor Scooters 94 Wante4 Used Cero 101 _____N KAOlil B ___ coBdniOB. FB l-OIM. _________ ^ akvI-M CDSRUAN EAOLB. LABOR d Rlda-A- aatlaa racaaOy lakatR. ” " elor, wtih -nila Raala «U1 |0. )| I traUw) Ml ATtIt_____________ [ a^^l f or ^*>**”y‘*** ^ ■ BALR OB THADR -4 M CC TRI-aapb BOtorcycla. A-1, t)fl. Raaa oU ear plaa eaali fat aaaar Bod-al na ft»l._____________________ ' S«k Home Trailers 89 ..-W»a r-N a^r. mrTRRTOORA. ItBM, DCLun • traUar oltk atr aandttlaaad aaB « aad tuialtara Utad I aaak. w.m. K) FAMOUS MAKES JO CHOOSE FROM t aOaa tfca Uteat iTiH alBa aad • wtha aaa ABC Oalata Modal .,»iik net wtosa i ‘ ---- _________ -"Bax or root paat aacatlM ttall- . iOxford Trailer Sales i 1 Mo a. of Lota OnoB Ml M-a«| : ______MT s-tm_________! ttXM NRW MOON. TARRi For Sole Bkyclee 96 t nm a DOLLAR, /DNR CARS _ tnnE FR t-Mti dayt, araatafi HELPl HELP! HELP! WR HRRD RXTRA CLRAH USRD CARS RIOHT NOW! ■TOF DOLLAR FAUF- Glenn’s Motor Sales W. Haroa Bt. FR AWTl DOLLAR EuD for jaat aad wrackar eara. Bara Aa^FB S-MT« or FB t-CBT. HIOR ooarantrrd obrd s«rs -rr sekwlaa Blkaa. “ ” arlag a Btta and i A oteD DRAL-JUNE8-WRRC9U- a to MM Can and troeka. F~ «4. BOTAL AUTO FABTB. JUNE CAbA WAHTlib Boats and Accessorks 97 4 ROOMS AND BATH. DTIUTIRS turnlUia^ Inoalra ^Bora^ — ir WOLVBRINB HUIX. » ------- Brinruda motor. tt« OarlMid: 11- aluminum boat, » MR^ earx Mark aolor, traUar, OB J-t4«L ________________ H CHEROKBB BUNABOWT. 3t H P. Johaion moter aad iraUar,. MM FI a-1414. I»r Dlkla HW] IP TH0MF80H b6aT wnHlWE REALLY A_____I rlhM-k th* r*i hardtop coopa. Rad vtUi rtaxi trUa. Or iraaa wttb aatek'— trlB. Moat Iw claaB and low ■ aia. CaU TO t-IDk. Datr^. WE NEED CAR§! Rapactallx lata modal PODtUcA Csdllbea. OidaaoMlaa, Bulcka. Cbarrolatt. For lop deUar oa Ulieta aodalt aad omara call as. M & M MOTOR SALES trailer. OR t-TW. mi ItEN NEW MOON. TAEEl ---- - ■ -I Tirar paxaenu Fontlae MobUalU- rtBRHOLAB, M HORSE POW-| . aomet Ibrk. SM E. Walton ' ar. wlndahleUi.' •larrtnt atbael.j MJM carli. FE I CbMk Uia AVERILL’S MM Dliia Hwx FR I-tSTI_________FR 4-dBM . all NBW in PONTIAC trailer --- ---------------- eORTA CAMPER CAMP TRAILBRIir OWRNs RUNABOUT, CON-, 1 „ I, P Marturx, Ha- 1 an.jma j pubUc till traUar, |l,tM. Fk Met-■ FB S-44MI iMora 08 AZW*. UOHTWITOHTlir INBOARD. N HORSEFOPrER. Bbice isn. Oaar-1 hall reflntakad New upkolatarx *** S*" Motor naada tome work. MM FE .--------------at Warner Trail-1 amis MS'^iRx SSi'a*'iJ!ui^;!»' ciuiaar^-.--. FONHAC WASTE. WANTED •61 POXTIACS AVERILL’S r^twiM PR 4AMi Used Auto Parts 102 frhe dollar t'ou save is Just as important as the pollar you earn. Sq be a SA’inner when you a tletroiter or Pontiac Cnief Mobile Home from Hut-cStpson’s. ‘ pTBR M tMPPBRBNl' ■ FLOOR FLAN8 TO CHOOBB FROM. SBB TRB ■A».I - NSW BPAN.O-WIDB . JUAT OFBNB UF TO M-. ^ WIDTH. ALSO, A LAROB BBLBCnOH OF 8* MD IF WIDE RBCON-DmONBD USED MOBILB BOMBS AB LOW AS l»l DOWN. STOP AT THE LOT : WITH the "SPIN NING TOP” ■M MARK M E . CONTROLS. OOOD condition. P4M. INLAND LAKE SALES FB t 18tl CBRia CRAFT CAVALIER -Rac. coodlUoo Urad oalx la ttmaa. Mart tacrlllca. cau F 1-tTta for Appt. raionalila FR UM4. Bob Hutchinson • Mobile Home Sales, Inc. Ml Dlxla Hlsbwax, Draxtao Ptalaa • •— Opaa T daxa---------- CHRIACRAFT. IT UnUTT. iRECONDITIONRO T R A N ■ M I - 1 dtt-atl after < • 1 o a a. (anaratorr. etarttn. a -------------------------- 'at pumpi. ate. lor all can. C 1-1147 1848 Dlido Hlfliwax. LDMINUM eanditkm. ALUM-CRAFT. SHELL______ OLAsa. Frctlaad. Poa-Taao boata, Aqna 8*M AlamUiam, sad CnUa-en Inc Cltakarkallt boaU. -WB SELL AND SERVICR Ertarada Motori and Lawn Mowara DART SPORTMBN CENTER a*^.w;‘R5iria?a Open Dallx A Sandan T A.m.e p.m. All New in Pontiac oradt ttritr lafbtrakr AQUA aWAN ALUMA LAP inn^onaE.TRNU8 cruiseri P«8T BiCND MOTORa FortaCampar Caaip TraUar Wood, Alum^ Flbartlu. I ft.-M ft. aexm' MofORB and aRRvicw --CRUISF-OOT BOAT BALES N*«k n R. Wanon FR 8-4481 P«»T ~ ~ ----- TRAILER RENTAL JOUTFARR bx NIMROD I 7IRW UW CHXE-t •drjOHIJTOH^M^RS ' BLBZn I Peopifl GASOW TCmA^T -«WR7B CRHTRB- ®*^*-^*' H7» Ct» Lake Rd. « Cliff Ureyers | eeeoo harbor, mk Holly Marine Sales .._ne Roll- Sak Used Trncica 103 doed coadtttOB. t**n 18M CHEYT tk -TON PARRLED MARMADUKE CHRTT. OrajnjBBHBLR. CRRTlO^ 1888, 4-OOOB 8RDAH, aMomatM tranamlaalon. Fawai itaartns,. baatar, radio. Clean interior New S ji. battarx. |MI. AUSTIN HEALY aPRITK 181t. FLUM rao F-LBATBBR MILRS. WUJ. SACIUFICB, 8I.8N. CORVAIR CONVERT. YBB. THU IS A R A R B ONE! 1888 MODEL, RADIO, RBATBR, l-BPBBD SHIFT. WRirBWALLS. 4.SS8-MILB CAR. ONLY II.IH. 1-Year Warranty Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 1958 CADILLAC iM- AU rad laterlor. FuU power aad complata Itea oF accaaaorlaa. A rtal abarplal Only IMM. WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward Ml V18M CADILLAC 18M M COUPE. LIORT SALMON PINK WITH WHITB TOP. PO W B R STBERDfO AND BRAKES. THIS ONB IB CLEAN AB A WRISTLB) A ?1195 1-Year Warranty Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 -U CADILLAC. IMMACULATE -7Vm aaertlka. |48t. FR SMI '88 CHEVROLET WAOON . 8* EROME BRIGHT SPOT Orchard Lake at Cats Aabara. ’56 Ford ^-Ton Pickup VriTH A SOLID RED FINI8HI LAKE ORION MEYER’S ‘‘El Camino Sales” ICRETROLET) wbfta tin I ah. tl.188. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 18W 8. WOOD-WARD. BIRMINOHAM, MI 4-lTO. H dmVROLET 8-bOOR. Y-l. ataadsrd itaut, eary elaan, radio aad baatar. 8MI. BOB dORST. INC., BlrmhiMate’a nav Llaeoln-Marcary-Comat dealer. MS Banter Bird.. 1 block aonth of 18 MUa Road, Ml A4838._____________ "'MYtdTxiiBoat Discounts iMOLLY lilCHlOAN BANE TERMS '■ V-tl 1 t (OPEN DAILY AMD SUNDAY) SHOP AT ■ “ " DUNHAM'S , Jacobson Trailer Sales ‘ and Rentals , AU MW modete to traxal triU-era, 1] ft. lor eompset can op. Raaarrk your traUar lor — catloaa. Sea ae tor hltcbei.*parta and aarxlce BdM WUUaau Lake Road,^DtaytM Ftelaa. J^I^ ‘Cree’s 10’ Truck Camper with Marina Stool. St^ Tank, Prauure Water Wp-ply. and 12 Volt SyiUm Throafhoutt • ON DISPLAY ALSO CSAP^lr t-kie of Cree Travrl-Coaches | T3Ji’ to I:)' Start at $995 Wayfara Camj^ by Nimrod APACHE Ca^r . . 8341 TRAVEL-AIRH Camper. Complete 1448 Holly Marine & Coach FISCHER BUICK usedIuicks 13 MONTHS WARRANTY 784 8. Woodward B'bam Better Used Trucks CMC LATE MODEL -Id OMC DUMF. food condUloh. actual mUeata M.880. (ood ttrai. FR MIM I to 4. Oakland Fael and Faint. '56 CHEVY’ BEL AIR A alee clean 4-door. VS, radio, heater, automatic, power ataarlns and whItawaUa. Looka 'food, drim (ood, |«od rubber. Priced Oght PEOPLES AUTO BALES Si Oakland__________PE 2-2311 Check this ratel -DILL AC CONSTRLLA-nCN. alumioum buU, fibcrites top. mercury 78 motor 2 yrt. old. Water akli. Ilia jacketa, Ugbta, sancra-tor. etc. FE 8-1877 or FB 44822 bLEARlNO OUT ALL - motora and trallcre. Rtal a!^*m.'‘&t 8Mr^8hop. 16218 BOAT INBURANCR 3ne of our apacteltlci Hanacn Inauranea Agency FE S-7883 Unt fUOt N tSOLLT, iOCE EAST TO DEAL THTR DAWSON'S SALES TIptIco Lake______MA F2178 ____________—jEfTap___________ tioaaUy clean la aad oat. New ftink^mid jMi^^CaU after l:4l ’ SHORT'S mobile'___________ . 14 ft to 23 ft. Oam traral trall- , era. WalTariM track---- , komt type mobile L__________ , plate H.ia of parte and bottle I saa. BIteliat toataUad and eara 3172 W. Huron JOHNSON SEA BOR8R I RF. MO- tor. |78. FE Mtol._______ ikW aluminum RUNABdbfS. $288 12- boaU, 840. Trallara. 188. Aluminum, 8118. Flbargtet $178. Wood ruaaboote. 1238. Big dla-couoty. Erlnrudt motori. Bueb- ^ TRAILER RENTALS ., Campara aad Bouaatrtllara > OOeWELL TRAILEB BALES ^ntO 8 Roehattar Rd. UL 2-41 UtTEBT NE7FE IB UBTED OH TERSE FAOESI Hava si Wbat Faopla Hara to BELL, RENT or WANT TO ' BUT. Order yoar Ad on toe • Oax. to* Coat Flan . . . * Caacal Wbea RtiiiUa Are fOMakssd . .. E'f to* 138.800 UABIUTY 81.0N medical HO DEATH BENEFIT —M Ualnaured Molortete COMPREHENSIVE (lire, Ibaft. ate) COLLISION (8180 dedoettUa). ROAD SERVICB STOP IN OR PHONI-: FE 4-3535 , far a tree coat aad coaaragt comparlaca folder oa yoar ear . ^SUPS AND PtMiliac Headquarters FOR Boat Repair Materials fiberolas PAINTS RAROWARB CONVERTIBLE TOPS BOAT pOVERi va toU you how to do M ^kURtlfE 1 Auto Insurance 104 WE WRITE CJNCELLED ADT^ IM TOLKBWAOHE. BON ROOF Stock NO. 3M3. $t^. NOim CHEVROLET CO. IMS E. WOODWARD, BlRMIHOltAM. Ml 4J738. BLACK 1882 CORVETTE TWra bard top and------- JULY SPECIALS I8M PONTIAC 8TARCHIEP Vdl po**r atearteg. power brakaa. — Marroklda trim. A 1-owaar. ItM PONTIAC BTARCRIEF Bport power ataa^g aM krtkat. All Mat »tlb bliM Morrgklda 1 FON-mC CATALINA I Haupt Ponriac Sales CLARECTON IMS CHRVRtn^ BEL AIR eoupa. V4. FawarsUda, i— baatar. w^waUi^ _MatalUe_ •M CHEVT, IMFALA. 2-0 OOR. hardtop. Mg a^oa. Btonaard tranamteiloa OLiM. FE 8-28U. 887 CHEVROLET 210 4 DOOR. V8, r BowergUde. radio, banter Band white walla. Royal ----- ------ HAM Ml 4-2728. a Balei, 880 Okatead ISM CHEVROLET, RBL AIR. V-0 With atlek orardrlTt, eoarcrtibte. beautiful blue and Ilka new. Buperter Aato itelaa ttp Oaktead lOM dREVROLirr 4 i)OOR, RADIO. HEATER, WHITEW'------------ AB80LUTELT NO _____________ DOWN. Aiaama paymente at 832.H per mo. CaU CredU Mgr., Mr. Parka at Ml 4-780Si Ba^ TUraar, Ford. ■M CHEVROLET 4-DOOR ateUpa wagoB. g eyUnder, dard ahlft raAo and baatar, cop-per and batea flnlah. 80N. NORTH CHElTROLEr CO. lOM B. WOOD-WARD, BIRMINOHAM. MI 44738. 18M. DELRAY mlaateo, radio __________ _____ alee. wUtawaU Urea. PuU ebromi wbaal coxara. MofMtou red ant. white ftateb that looktWke gteaa. No raat. Matchlag oil xteyl black Interior trim ttial loaka Uka " 11 price, credit OK'd by | ^ '1 Motora. W. »irc_ . b Lake Rd., FE 84882. fhilah.'81.IM. NORTH CHEVRO---------- . ISM 8. WOODWARD. _____8i.a LET CO.. ______ _______ SminWOHAM. MI 4-2738. MM CHEVROLET BI8I BI8CATRE. 1 Excautni am I860 CHEVROLET BOCATTHB 2-door. 2M bp. V-8, tUndard Radio, haator. vbtta wal'-atebt blot ftalab. 81M8. CBBTROLET CO., lOM 8. » WARD, BIRMIROIIAM. Ml . AIR F overgUde, door, g-cyllnder — power ataertog radio___________ whitewall Urea, aoUd white luuirii 81.3M. RORTR CHEVROLET^ CO. lOM 8, WOODWARD, BIRMINa- HAM, MI 4-2718. __________ MM CHETTROLET 2 DOOR. RADIO. HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRARSMiaSIOH, AB80LUTELY NO MONEY DOITN. Aaaum# pay-pianU of 817JI oar mo. CaU credit mgr., Mr. Parka at bn 4-T8M, Harold TUraar, Fard. WAGONS ________Traaimtealo __________ Heater. WbttawaUa. Bbarp Rlua and VnUla Plaiah, wl xery low mUaagal 838.13 PER MONTH Ca' ■M CHEYT E TOWEBOLTOE F VOLKSWAGENS! NEW AOTBORIZEO I7EAI.EN WARD-McELROY, INC. N DOWN 88dAl MONTH ORDER TOUR 1812 VW NOW! For Sak ^an IM SUPER BARGAINS! IFFt. Cnitaar with Head. OaUay aad TraUar - -----lUIIO AUBURN ROAD BALES a BERVICB ...8 E. Aubura Rd. UL F1M7 (Bctl Uxcmola w»d iCrooka Rd.) ACROM PROM AVONDALB BlfOH They Must Go! M Bulek, coDxertlbla aad 4 dooi 3 Plymouthi, -84 to 'M. fM7 to 8207 8 Cadlllaea. ’83 »bartfiw. and coavartlMaa 81M to II.WS. 4 eara, llS3'a .. , 838 IM (Hbtr food buya, wa ftbi^e ECONOMY CARS 22 AUBURN ■M CHBTROLBT klBCATNE FDR. 8 cyl. ataodard traaamlaa^ radio aad baatar. vrniMwaSr^ with a aputUiM Wat flateh. Atamma HOMER RIGHT Small Town Trades: MM ^ FdMr. Radla. boAli automatic traoimliatea, pow> Metitoi. aad brakto .... 831 MM Cbaxrolat Fdoor. f-eyl. Radio aad batter ...... |13M MM Nath Rabat. 840or. Fayl. Ra-'“ulmaeffi'toeasmls**""’ ** PLEASE NOTICE M Bulek. _ prtea, 8488. _____________J am^ maetb- paymaate of 827F4. Lu^ SPECIAL 1888 Dodge 4-door. Radio. baatej\ Chevrolet -Pontiac-Buick Dealer •'ll Mteulct from Fot^ac** ■ OXFORD. IOCE. - OA FMM ■" 1 / r Beauty TodaxI 823 10 PER MONTH LLOYD MOTOR SALES •UNOOLN-MBKNmT-COMBT. 312 B. BAOINAW STREET _____ FE 2-9I3I_______ SAVE DEMOS 1961 CHEVROLET CORVAIRS Pickups and Panels Matthevi^s- Hargreaves TRUCK DEPARTMENT 631 Oakland at Cass FE 5-4161 / ■ fkp Sak Cws 106 ttraa. atoek No. BY DOWN. , E. Meatealm. __________________ LOTELT NO MONET DOWN. AaaBm^l»yaaam^_M gS.l^^r ^in F7800, - ■ **5te^a*S2P R&R MOTORS 724 ftekliod Axa. FB 44118 Fiy-oo«b - FORD mi. 84>oor cunoi^B VI tBfiBa with atoadMd *■*— miaatem wbItawaU Urea, kttag tea ftateb with a Vary elaan. A woadatful 1 . •M KhU3 8 CYLINDER STTCk. with radio aad haater. Mtoa BMaa and la ready to nl 800. llwd CHRYSLER , WINDBOR, MOB FDOOR NARDT01<. ALL WHITE xnTH BLACK AND WRITE INTERIOR. ------ WITH FOWE.. AND POTTER 1-Y’ear Warranty Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 •M OaSOTO CORVBRTIBLB. FULL power, aeeaaaorlaa, alactrla wla-dewa. Raw anglaa. OR F30I0. KMOOE lOM FDOOR. AUTOMAT-le tranamtealaa, radio bad baatar, baaautnl Urea. alwrkUai Tu-toua tteteb tlwt aparttea Uka aaw, laterlor Beat aa a pin. ------- mte of tU 1955 FORD Falrtea# Fdoor radio oad-- r. oulomatle traaimtealoa, wblte-kll Urea, 8IM. John McAuliffe, Ford 8M OAKLAND___________FE F4K •88 DODOE FfaWR^^. . . .~Tg LUaalda Mi^a* FB F4« 312 W. Moatealm______ MM IXH30E CORNET 4 DOOR hardtop, Vl AutomaUe, power ataarlBi. power brakaa, radir heater and white walla. You'-Uka fxarytblng about UUa one. tm. NORTH CRBVItOLET COMM 8. WOODWARD, BIRMINO- HAM. MI F2738.________________ 18 FORD FAIRLAMB ••SMT' doov.Vf auto, traaamtealon. rbd and^atar TTbltewaUi. In a apa kllng blue and white flniib, alter Attuma paymaate 818.M per m Low eaab down or your old et Lloyd Motora, Uacoln-Mcrcury. Comet, 331 8. Bagiaow 8t. FE F8131______________________ 17 FORD WITH Y8 AUTO TRANF mlialoo, radio aad baatar, whtta-walla, la In a aparkllng green and white flakta. Bee tola OVOtEB CERTIFIED CAR today' “ Pur i I Cart 106 1957 FORD ~ bardlap. mteatair^ whBowtU Mroa. 88M. John McAuHffe, Ford eyUador with ataodard traaaaaia-aiop. Vary good economical ear. WbttewaU tiroa aUnoat Uko new. Chrome wheel ooxeri. Many ether eatraa. aparkBag graea and white. Interior U tharn aa^ a tack. Rani Ilk. if i«|| the factor* I FORD VI 8TANDAWD l^NF _________________,jur Md trade! 11.SM actual mtlea. ThU la a beauty la aad out! Aaaume pay-menu of 818.M por month. Lloyd Motora. Llneoia - Moreur--------- 827 » BogUteW at. FE 2 MERCURY MU HARDTOP, PARK-LANE FDOOR, POWER EUUIPFED. TldB IB TRB LUXURY LINE HAS PUSH-BUTTON DUAL RANOB TRAN SMiaOION AND LOADED WITH FOWRR. $1195 1-Year Warranty Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 jau wu«. — ealm rmriAC cATaima *'529*' •81 BONNfeVILUe^. RADIO. BUT-FE fiST 8toerlBt. MM PONTUC. ErAR£c«di^^ OOH- B. WOODWARD, 1 Ml 44728__________________ •84 PONTIAC H30OR. acJUMOER. HydramtUc, no mat. flM. Cua- “vtiY'SSJ^rJmSS!*TB^TlS: H. hltftaa, da^r -------- RAMBLER AMERICAN MM WAOON, 2 DOOR. AUTOMATIC, M-DIO. RRATn_ BBAOn-PUL BEY BLUk MIST. 1-OWNER BmMINOHAU TRADE. <»aT 8I.H8. 1-Year Warranty Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 OLDS CONDITION. •AKC HOVKH mSD. $2795 1-Year Warranty Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 LARK,'61, NEW ERE. AOCBEE. BT. WmiE WALLS. TOTAL OEUVBRT FRICB SLIM Mazurek Marine Sales g. BLYD. AT 7VOQDWARD MM rambler AMERICAN BTA- STUDEBAKBR '84 COUPE. ETAND-' wlto axerdrlxe. Need* s Uttlt k, 81I8.M. OB 2-llM.____ ■83 OLDB CONVERTIBLE. NEW 'M OLDB M, EXCELLENT SHAPE, will take trade, FE 8.1783. CONWAY'S AUTO MART 'll Olda. M. 34oor 111 •87 Rambler, aaakea Into bed 8488 •84 Chevy, 24r. atlek ......... 1 Chexy tk-ton plckHipc. 7818 Cooley Lk. RdT Fh. 213-7388 •M OLDB V8 ani^ BRAND NE# clutch, good enjlne. FE 847M. ------BU^po------- bee U8 B&(3R^OU DEAL HOUGHTEN & SON 138 N. Main, Bacbeatey OL 14781 BIG SAVINGS! •m"VoRD ....r. 8788 •88 FORD ..... 8481 •88 CHEVROLET . 8»9 •M OLDS ...... 8888 •88 OLOa ..... 8488 •UPONTUC ..... 8388 •84 OLDS ..... 8385 •H PLYMOUTH . 8388 ■81 MERCURT .. 8388 RUSS JOHNSON LAKE ORION MY 2-2371 MY 2-2381 STOP! BUY! SAVE! ...slim .....ITM ... .81.488 ....81,888 ....83,785 ....8388 .81.188 ni.M8 I1.M8 •ord EngUah n ___.‘ontlac^tar C 1880 Chexy Bel Air MSI Pontiac 1-door ‘PiSSac'^fiSluS ___Cbexy Bel Air , 1887 Chexy Bel Air . ■ ............81.1 MfT Ford 4 door 3.n-.v.-.v.%1 .........$2,888 SHELTON PONTIAC - BUICK Rochester OL 1-8133 Open 'tU 8 F. M. or Lat Cleeed Wed., FH., nod E*t. 8 : 1958 Renault t thowroom floor bargalm Bei r, itondard tranamliMoa. $745 1960 MG Roadster I960 Renault Dauphine 4 door aedaa.. gray, wlto hcate and atendard franamlaalon. $945 1958 Plymouth Belvedere , 4 door aedaa. automaue tranaml aloa, radio and beater, two toi white aad graea ftalab. $895 1960 Goliath Wagon Front whaei drixa, 4 avtfd traa mlaaloB. aU white. $1095 $1995 $2045 1959 Ford 1 door hardtop, galaiy, with radio and banter, autoaMtte traar mlaaloiiL 3 tone, real ahup, $1^5 OLIVER Motor Sales 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 $388.60 Balance Due '^7 Dodge Custom Royal 4-Door Hardtop, auto, transmission, power steering and Jwwer brakes, radio and heater, etc. No Cash NeedecJ 1^ Aoto. ialaa, IM C _______________ $201.50 Balance Due '55 Buick Super Hardtop with Dynaflow transmission, power steering and power brakes, radio and neater, etc. No Cash Needed raka axar paymaate of 81.M watk-ly. No erttot proUoau, ear can be ucn, driven aad ehaekad at Kina Ante. Salai, Ilf 8. Saflaaw St. In Penttae, tor moro totorma-Uon eaU CradR Maaagar at FB New Dodge Lancer $1781.65 'DRIVE A MILE SAVE A PILE 1 SMALL TOWN LOW OVERHEAD 38.8M MILE OUARANTEE RAMMLER-DALLAS OL 34111 ------TUPCM ACTION SALE Buy Detroit Cars In Pontiac At Detroit Reduced Prices ...$567 ......$545 ’57 Olds .., '57 Plymouth.......$247 mlUSw.'***' ^ ’56 Ford ........ .W95 - Fblrlta# VS Mghte. ’55 Buick .........$177 Moorhar^ OMSorr. E* timl '55 Dodge...........$99 UMt iSm traoMortatlim. 56 Ford ........<..$350 OMxartlMa, fan poxrar, ntw tap, ’54 Chiysler .........$167 Row fackar XMasa. raal alea. ■55 Ford .............$245 ’54 Chevrolet.SAVE SOUTHFIELD , MOTORS 25 More to Choose From ALL CARS REDUCED Take over smaU Myments or balaneie. A THE rONTIAC PRKSS, MONDAY, JUlV 31, 1961 TWENTY-ytVE ■■Today's Television Programs-- Frywi NiUtii hf ■teH— HKtd tm tm tuimam m hAi)mM to wUkato mOm •:M (3) Movto (oont) (4> Broken Amm (7) Newt, wwther (9) Popeye (56) Anthropology C:U (7) Newi «:M (4) Weather «:» (2) Newi (4) News m VUdngi (9) Tugboat Annie (») DeUgn Wgrkihqp •:49 (2) Newa Analyria ' (4) Sports •:46 (2) News (4) News 7:99 (2) Assla^ent: Underwater '(4) Golden Age (7) High Itoad to Danger • (9) Movie — ‘The Empoor's Candlesticks.” (1947) Ftdish Agent tries to deliver message to Russian car. William Powell, Lusie Rainer. (56) Shelter for Man 7:N (2) Grand Jury (4) Americans (7) CSieyenne (9) Movie (cont.) (56) Big Picture 9:99 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Americans (cont.) (7) Cheyenne (oont.) (9) Movie (Cent.) (56) Musicale 9:N (2) Bringing Up Buddy (4) Wells Fargo (7) Surlside 6 (9) Chse For The (hurt (56) Workshop For Ameri- (9) Case For Qwrt (Cont.) (56) Strategic Alaska 9:19 (2) Ann Sothem (4) (Cedor) (foncentration (7) Adventuros In Paradia (9) Caa For Court (Cont.) 19:99 (2) Glenn Miller Time (4) Barbara Stanwyck (7) Paradia (Cont.) 9:99 (2) Spike Jones (4) WhiqKring Smith (7) Suriside 6 (Coot) (9) 5 19tU (9) Wather lotto (9) Telescope UAW 19:19 (2) Brenner (4)'M Squad (7) Peter Gunn (9) Leon Errol 19:tf (9) Golf Tip 19:U (9) Sports 11:99 (2) News (4) News (7) Racket Squad (9) News U:U (2) Wather (4) Weather (9) Movie - “The Secret Place." (1957) SmajLtime gang of thieves plans and executa intrlate diamemd robbery. Belinda La. ll:to (2) Sports (4) Sports ll:M (2) Movie — "The Accused.’ (1948) When she murders student in alf-defena, psychology teacher tries to con-asl crime. Loretta Young, Robert Oimmings, Wendell Carey. 11: to (4) Jack Parr ll:to (4) (Color) Jack Paar (7) Movie — “That Certain Age." (1938) Daughter of rich newspaper puUisher prepares hoatile reception for 9:M (2) Meditations 9i99 (2) On the Farm Front 7199 (2) News (4) Today (7) Funewa (2) FeHx the Cat (4) Today on the Farm (2) B’Wana Don (7) Johnny Ginger. Silf (2) Captain Kanguroo. (7) Movie. (2) Mo\’ie. (4) Ed Allen. 9:99 (4) Consult Dr. Brothers 9: a (4) Gateway to Glamour. ~ (7) News. U:99 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Say When (7) Jack t.«T jwiMi 19: to (2) Video Village. (4) (O>lor). Play Your Hunch. (7) Jackie Cooper 19:49 (9) BUlboard 10:49 (9) Junior Roundup U:99 (2) Double Exposure (4) (Color). Price Is Right. (7) Gale Storm (9) Romper Room. U:99 (2) My Uttie Margie (4) Oincentratlon. (7) Love That Boh! war correspondent whd is [ to be bouse guest of 'Divorce Racket Busteis' Calling All Husbands BY EARL WILSON NEW YORK — The “Divorce Racket Busters” are after me —and I’m not even divorced. Tliey’re after every man that’s got a wife and want to warn him of the doom they claim is await- mi, Inghlm. They’re trying to free husbands from alimony slavery. Especially in California. Where, they claim, it’s scandalous. They’ve got headquarters in Citrus Heights, Calif., and Reuben p. Kidd writes that “We need to Impress upon all ‘happily married men’ that their freedotn is in jeopardy and Is entirely dependent upon the whims of their wives.” They’re circulating a cartoon en- WILSON titled "The Alimony Joy Ride” which shows the ex-wife, her lawyer and the Judge celebrating her divorce, with the poor husband pushing the GENE car in which all three are having their Joy ride. “Don’t be a pusher or pushover,” says the cartoon. They want to change the California laws, then the nation’: laws. Reautlful Gene ’rierney’i movie comeback has all of us cheering. She’ll play one of the leads (a Washington hostess) in “Advise and Ckmsent’ for Otto Preminger. He helped her to fame in “Laura." Oene and her rich Texas husband, Howard Lee, are celebrating at his ski lodge and hotel In Aspsn, Colo. ’They loet an expected baby last winter and since have been living In Fair-field, Conn., or Houston, where he has his money. Her last morie was "The Left Hand of Ood”—with Humphrey Bogart—made when all of you out there were kiddies. ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Joe DIMagglo and Marilyn Monroe were really iteamed about the phony “honeymoon” story. MM even Mnt ^er a note to the sweltering photogs denying it. . and Fran Allison are re-teaming (agalil) for fall TV. You can get anything In New York, I'lh always saying. Down in Johnson City, Tenn., a few weeks ago, Owen Teresakl, author of "Bridge to the Son,” which became a movie, said there weren’t any fireflies around. MOM’s 81 Beadier phoned Chateau Theatrical Animals, asked for Gloria, and bought a bottle of fireflies which had been snared In the Pennsylvania Poconos. Price $25. ★ ★ ★ EARL’S PEARLS: Suggested exterminator’s slogan: "The Mice Man Cometh.” TODAY’S BEST LAfJGH: “If you don’t Uke the weather where you live, you can move and not like the weather there, either.”—M.W. Larmour. . . . That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, 1961) her parents. Deanna Durbin, Melvyn Douglaa, Jackie (fooper. TVE80AF MJRNINO TUESDAY AFTERNOON More Training for Red Militia AF FhaMai MAY HEAD CTA — Fowler Hamilton, a Wall Street lawyer, was reported by Newsweek Magazine to be the replacement for Alien W. Dulles 'as director of the Central Intelligence' Agency. TV Features Paar-'Hamlet' Format Enters 360th Season East German Reserves Setting for Any Internal Resistant^ Problems Crowd Jams Windier BERLIN (UPD-More than 30.-000 East Germans have fled to the West this month despite Communist mobilisation of its press, radio, army and courts to keep them home. West German officials reported today. Not since the antl-Communist rebellion in East Germany on June 17, 1953, have so many sou^t refuge fr«n the Red regime. Latest tatoUlgeiice reports from East Germany said the Com- By FRED DANZIO NEW YORK (UPD-’The history b(x^ teU us that NBC-TV’s midnight mish-moah, "The Jack Paar ■ will begin its fifth year tonight. Don’t beUeve ^m. According to my diligent research staff, the Paar show has Juat gone into its 360th s seems that Paar’s format was spelled out in remarkable detail in a play called “Hamlet,’’ written by a Hiow-packager named Will Shakespeare and first published on July 26, 1602. The conneetlon between “Ham->t" and Paar explains why These units were said to be carrying out joint war games with the army, not only to repel any foreign invaders but to put down internal resistance if it boils up as it did eight years ago. M:(W (2) Love of Life (4) Truth or Consequences. (7) Camouflage (9) Mary Morgan U:l0 (9) News U:M (9) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color). It Could Be You. (7) Number Please (9) Susie U:4> (2) Guiding Light U:U (4) News. 1:90 (4) Journey (2) Ida Lupino (7) Seven Star Theater (9) Movie. l:S9 (7) News (2) As the World Turns :W (7) Ufe of Riley (4) Faye Elizabeth !:0e (4) (Ctolor). Jan Murray (2) Amos ’n’ Andy (7) Day in Court. !:S0 (2) House Party (4) Dretta Young (7) Seven Keys (9) New Party Convention 1:00 (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day 1:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours ' (4) From These Roots (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Movie. >:eo (2) Brighter Day. (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstand. 1:18 (2) Secret Storm. 1:30 (2) Edge of Night. (4) Here’s Hollywood (9) Adventure time. 1:00 (2) Movie. (4) George Pierrot (7) Johnny Ginger. (9) Looney Tunes and Jingles. (56) Discovery cse (7) Rocky and His Friends. (56) Retrospect 8:48 (56) News Magazine. 8:80 (9) News By United Pi AMiaucANS, 7:30 p.m. (4). (rerun). Jeff Canfield (Dick Davalos) believes he has caused death of his brother. Ben (Darryl Hickman). SPIKE JONES, 9 p.m. (2). Singer-pianist Buddy Greco and comedian (3uu-Ue Manna viait Spike and singer Helen Grayco. CONCENTRATION. 9:30 p.m. (4). Hugh Downs supervises memory-rebus game as Mrs. Joan Boarts of Montoursville, Pa., defends title. (Cblor). ADVENTURES IN PARADISE, 9:30 p.m. (7) (rerun). Inger Stevens portrays doctor whp encounters superstitions as she tries to inoculate island natives against a tropical disease. GLENN MILLER TIME, 10 p.m. (2). Ray McMnley aikf the “Miller sound.” with singer Patty Oark, Johnny Desmond and the Castle Sisters. BRENNER, 10:30 p.m. (2) (rerun). Rookie cop Ernie Brenner (James Broderick) kills man in line of duty and experience leaves him badly shaken. JACK PAAR. 11:30 p.m. (4). Jack’s guests: Hermione Gingold, John Scarne, Betty Johnson, Jim Jordan and Oiff Ai^uette. (Color). Refugees arriving in West Berlin have told of aoldiecs retting up checkpoints manned with machine guna on East German roads to Beriin to discourage the exodus. In its anti-Western propaganda, the East German press discloaed hints of widespread discontent among the 17 million people udder Red rule. The official party newspaper Neues Deutschland quoted East Berlin Mayor Friedrich Ebert telling a forum in Schwedt that 'some people here say a peace treaty should be signed only after free elections are held in all of Germany." He tried to. assure them this was not necessary, that "everything will take place peacefully.” Prohibition Party Planning Survey on Name Change LANSING (AT—Michigan’s Prohibition Party thinks a name change may help the party’s program. Name Two Key Men to GOP Committee WASraNGTON (AP)-Two key appointments wen announced to-di^ in a reorganfaatlcn of the headquarters stsff at the Repub-Ucaa National Committee. Others are expected. Chairman William E. Miller, New York congressman, named William S. Warner as executive director of the committee and Albert B. Hermann as director of appointment had been expected for aoRte time. Warner has been executive secretary of the (X)P Congressional Campaign Committee for 10 years after 15 years in other capacities the same group. He ie a native of Valparaiso, Ind. Hermann, who will be charge of all campaign and political organlzatian activities, an old hand at the national committee. He is a former jpampalgn director, his most recent title, and sei^ two terms as executive director, besides beading the nationalities division. Dr. D. D. Gibbons of Kalamazoo said the party’s name tends to label it as a one-plank group, which he says is not true. The State Central Committee met in Lansing Saturday and authorized a survey of opinion among party members to determine what they liked for a new name. Tbe OentrnI Committee will maka the final decision later. Gibbons ssid the party actually stands for a broad, comprehan-siv9 program of constitutional government “based on honesty, integrity and Christian rectltu^." EAST LANSING (OPl)-Some of the worid’s top jazz artists will become temporary college instructors at Michigan State University. - - Todo}'‘'s Raciio Programs - - WXXX eare’s format into Charges Officials of Blue Cross • Shield of 'Scare Campaign' Example: What is Pair's nightly procession of actors, comedians and glamor girls but the materialization of Hamlet’s prediction that, “He that plays the king shall be welcome (Alex King, of course) tbe humorous man shall end his pare in peace, the clown shall make those laugh . .. and the lady shall say her mind freely . SUGGESTS APPROACH In suggesting an approach to double-«ntendre, Shakespeare told Paar, “Good Hamlet, cast thy nighted color off.’’ "Usmlet" abo told Pssr the beat ttme lor s show of this sort, as the hero said, “Upon the platform, twixt 11 and it, rn vtott LANSING (ft - State OvU Service Ccxnmiasion Chairman George N, Higgins Sunday accused Blue Grass-Blue Shield officials of trying to scare the state’s 31,(no employes away from joining a state-sponsored private group hospitalization plan. Higgins said the “scare cam-_ i" was designed to herfd present Blue Ooss enrollment even though the state-sponsored program offers better benefits at lower rates.” A spokesman for Blue Cross-Blue Shield denied the charges. The Michigan Hospital Asood-stlon, Higgins said, “has passed a naoInthM Instigated by Bhie Cross questioning our nsmmp-tion that state employea In the Rate Westerns, Deodorant Ads Worst of TV NEW YORK (AP)-TV Weit-erns and deodorant conuntrelRls were given the lowest grades ef all television programing in poll conducted by the Nstional Audience Board. The board, reporting Sunday on a poll of more than 2,490 '’community opinion- leaders," said 61 per cent of the toaders had turned thumbs down on horse while 91 per oent' had turned noses up at deodorant commercials. The board judged most Ameri-in television mediocre, some notable exceptions: News and weathre ihowi rated good or excelient by cent, while public affaire got good or excellent marks from 81 per cent and sports from 72 T)op honors went to “CBS Reports,” “Chet Huntley Reporting' and “Twentieth Century.” Those the “most regularly ed” and “most outstanding’ of nationally televised public affairs programs chosen by community leaders. Later, Shakespeare was good enough to cue Paar in on the Nielsen ratings “for some must watch while some must sleep.” The need for frequent commer^ dais and sUtion identification brought forth this pout from are, “He hath not failed to pester us with a messi And Hamlet said, "I do beUeve you think what now you speak, but what do we determine oft we break?" 'Aamlet" even referred to thow of us who are by Paar’s electiranic revival of the Elsinore days. The summed up Die scene, "This army, of such mass and change, by a delicate and tender prince." would be adniHted to hospitals without advaneed paymoRt tor benefits guaranteed by the policy.” Higgins said it was inccmceiv-able to him ttiat hospital adminls-tratffl^ or their boaids would require advanced deposits by state employes when payment was guaranteed by the state plan. But he said the commlssloa and the hospitals would have to agree on the payment plan be- Higgins said Aetna Life Insurance Co. of Hartford. Ctonn., was low bidder on a plan to provide hospitalization for the state’ employes. Under the program, the state would pay half the cost of ploye hc^italizatlon insurance. State employes now pay the full Commerce Says Factory Sales Climbed in June GAS HEAT? L.P.*rNATUIAL> Hire’s Anures perfect home comfor^ cut! gut fuel coit vp to 40%. in qomporiton wHh blue flomo burneri. If you now hovo a good cool or oil furnace... we’ll instoll Ihli new burner in it; lovt you the emt of a new heating plant —and give you Iha^^ott effi< cient hooting money con buy. 165 Begin Training for Peace Corps Work FREEMAN-Burdstt RADI-HEAT SASNiniSAmSACIt Miehigu HsaUag Ooq lee. n 88 Ntwb«rry St. UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (UPI) —Approximately 165 men began traii^ today at Pennsylvania State University in the nati(Hi’s largest Peace Corps program. The volunteers, nearly all 50 states, will as teaching assistants in English and science in rural schools tai the Philippine Islands. ' Approximately 300 persons will receive instructions before the program is completed next May. SniRTV tniMNiAKr mnTHBM TWMNliriOnHI JOHNSON’S 1 IMto m8 IV I Fw Fnwpt QaaUtr Sorrico Coll FE 8-4569 4S law Waltou % Meek last of Baldwhi Mkli. TISA UceuM No. 1154 Asks Developmer\t Survey WASHINGTON (AP)-Flve Democratic senators have asked for an economic developmoit survey of the Great Lakes area to determine what aid can be provided under the Area Redevelopment Act. AIR CONDITIONER SWEET'S RADIO mti APPUANa Some Top Jazz Artists Will Instruct at MSU )' WASHINGTON (UPD-The Com-merce Department reported Sunday that factory sales rose nearly 1 per ceqt in June and new orders held steady. Hie $32.2 billion in new orders for factory goods in June was 3 per cent higher than in June. I960, and neariy 10 per cent above 1 the recession low of last January. oManufacturers’ sales advanced] J. per cent from May to June, adjusted seasonally, with cars and industrial machinery leading the gain. Steel sales declined following strong spriqg advances. Elsewhere in the manufacturing field, changes were small. WORRIED OVER DEBTS If vaa ara aaaMa «a an vaav faraMuti, 4 MICRIOAN CBBOR OOCNSBLOBS aaS am affard ragafSIaaa al fcaw aiaah at r- NO IKURITY OR INOORSIRS RIQUIRIO ' V ONI PUCI TO RAY Maakar Satriaaa AaaatUilau a( Oradll Oiaaailita -------------------------.jj OOBNSBLOBS MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS •aaUaa Stota BMk BM«. IK S-SMS WHILE THEY LAST! They are part of the faculty for Stan Kenton’s week-long national jazz clinic. More than 228 young jazzmen ltd women wUi study Ja*> tke-ry, amagiag and Improvlsa-ttou for such tastniments as the drums, saxophone, clarinet, trumpet, piano, guitar and even jazz for an accordian in a clinic. Tommy Gumina, coleader of the Buddy DeFranco-Tommy Gumina quartet, will instruct. Other well-known Inatnictoni hioaght In for the camp included Kenton, Buddy Morrow, Buddy DeFnuioo. Donald Byrd and Johnny Smith. Young jazz musicians, 14 years or older, have arranged band and mho rehearsals, workshops, evening jam sessions and copetrts. They are to perfwm publicly Thursday night at a jam seiaion and Friday night in a concert at Michigan State. The North Texas State Collage band and the NUei, lU., Notre Dame High School Band enrolled en masse. French Mother of 5 Arrested as Burglar WOKKSaa ALL Cloie-Out Bargoini on Remoining 1961 Television ond Stereo Sett . BURGESS, France (T» — The arrest Sunday of a mother of five has solved a two-year wave of burglaries, police said. Police said Denise Sernuguet, I, stole 20,000 francs—about $4,000—in 30 houM burglaries, ^e was released to take care of her five children while awaiting trial. 1st Payment in October If You Wish New 1962 TV's Arriving! OriN TIL 9 IVIRY IVINING ELECTRIC COMPANY 825 W. 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Him FE 4-09S1 DEAL WITN MICNieAN'S IAR8BT C0MPAIIV (IVk llecks Weel ef Telegreplii Montom Puias Chembes of Cetotostii 'x! ■" *> ,\ , r I ' ■■ v7^ f "7/ '.‘I I > TU"EXTY-SIX' \ '1 ■ir .1 V tHE PONTIAC PBESS, M( Police leave Maik -but All in Vain TOPQCA. Kan. (AP>—Id a move to detmnine bow partdnc meters. eu ba med moat efficka{}y, IVk paka trame ofOcers started marfc-ioK the tiiea o( parked cart. BUI their efforts went for naught. A few minutes later street-dean-fog macfainet spoutiiig water fol-lowed behind the officers, washing Plan Pano-lMs Building far Medical /Center NEW YORK (UPI) - Window washers — profeaskmal ones — cant be expected to like a 14-million bulldii« scheduled for coa- stnietion at Temple Uafvertitp Medical Oeater M Phliadelplrta * * * The nine-story building has been planned without windows to provide maximum floor and wall don’t let Sun dozG spoil your Fun doys! 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Murray, I historian, « going throu that be ran works of St "Street ca Iowa in 1871 as an attoi man in Berl "He was world alfaii ing a small tinued to do death in 19: Murray s proposed the wide organl newspaper. •*n» obje advocate th oi an inteiT be entitled the Worid," If thebai Nations is i to the publl favorably 0 Murray said "It is iroi in Berfcely, < United Natl Frandteo a tkms of todf Choose R ELMIRA, muddy ro vania line: carefully — next 20 mile PenneyIs Rriinlied Mool Mirfare treatment in bold plaid. Seal lined, kick pleat. Sizes 8 to 18. atched! "" '' T,' Penlon classics jn bold Magenta. Slipover or cardigan styles. 32-12. 498 SLIPOVER 595 CARDIGAN Wool flannel, hip stitched box pleat. 100% wool. Bold Magenta and othftr colors. 8-18. Shorty len 100% orlor Magenta colors. 34-^ PENNEY’S - DOWNTOWN w 1 W’k'" ’ ■iiei Op«n Every Monday and Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. All Othor Waokdays 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M^ sil I ' ... V, 1 It: ] ■ V I.".‘fi £X,, '*'X'' '’ S PONTIAC mm, MONDAY. JULY 81. 1961 ^ • v> ■t Tnnpte UirivwMltjr :Mct iB PUlMlelpiite. * * * Mtory building hu bcw irHInut windows to pro* jdmum floor and wall days! TERMS N, 0. D. REET 5 0 5:30 P.M. to 8:30 P.M. Says Publisher Founded O.N.' Public Ralations Man Cbimt Cyrot Straet Had Idea, in 1908 V albekt w, wmsB LOS ANGELES (UPl) time public relations man John Murray hu for the past two yiars ooodttctdd a one-man campaign without pay to have the name of Cytm H. Street go down in Mstory u the Originator of the United Naflons. Murray, S. alk> an amateur historian, said that it was while going through some early files that he ran acrou the name and works of Street. "Street came to Oalifomia from Iowa in 1876 and set up his office as an attorney and real estate man in Berkeley,'’ Murray said. "He was a great follower of world affairs and began publishing a small paper which he continued to do occasionally until his death in 1913." Murray sa|d that Street first proposed the formation of a worldwide f 1 MIC .10 .^IlOiO CLEVZLAITJ, 0:110 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. i MAKEOVER PA6E5 JULY 1961 MICRO PHOTO INC. CLEVELAND, OHIO The Weather H.t. Wnlk^r B«rr«a r*r*Mit Tartly Cloudy ( (OatalU P^c 3) VOL. 119 NO. 149 THE PONTIAC ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY. JULY 81. 1961—26 PAGES Tense Drama at Airport SAVES fX)RNERKD POUf:E - A confessed slayci' (in sport shirt) had the drop on two police-f, men. at Miami International Airport before ex-Marine Guillermo Zamora tackled him from behind in a dramatic\»pture. Picture No. 1 shows Free China VP inyCapital JFK, Nationalist Meet Berlin Crisis Just One of Khrushchev's Threats Junior Showman lEdUor > MoU: Survival I By RAV CROMUCY WASHINGTON (NEA) — Berlin is just the starter. State and Defense Department officials calculate that as Nikita Khrushchev’s nuclear muscle grows, his threats will get stronger and more frequent.' For years the U.S. will be treading on the brink of another McCloy Reports to JFK Tonight Brings Personal Note From Nikita Who Is Said to Be Upset WASHINGTON (AP)-John J.j McCloy will report to President j Kennedy tonight on his discus-j Isions last week with Soviet Pre-| mier Khrushchev on disarmament and the Berlin crisis. ♦ * ★ White House press secretary Pierre Salinger said McQoy, the President’s chief adviser on disarmament, would be accompani^ to the White House by Secretary of State Dean Rusk. McCloy completed an urgent fVgllt from Moscow to Washington Sunday night In response to a Nummons from Kennedy. He In advance of his meeting with Kennedy. McCloy was scheduled to give Rusk a detailed report on his conversations with Khrushchev. * o - * McCloy already has sent a long cable giving Kennedy a prelimi-| naiy report on his talks with Khrushchev. This report was forwarded to Kennedy over the weekend at his Hyannis Port, Mass., vacation home. NIKITA DISTURBED Salinger declined to give any hint of the tenor of Khrushchev’s talks with McCloy. But there have been widespread reports that Khrushchev was disturbed by the firm attitude taken by Kennedy last Tuesday night in his report to the nation on the Berlin crisis and his decision to shore up U.S. armf*d forces. McCloy went to Moncow two weeks ago to try to work oat arrangements with the Soviet government for a new East-West disarmament conference. He failed to reach agreement due, primarily, to Soviet insistence on talking atout the substance of disarmament issues instead of the procedures for organizing the. conference. that could lead to nuclear war. Civil defense is going to become an increasingly important part your life, these men predict. As Soviet ability to deliver missiles her you live or* die in strike would depend increasingly on you. Today, by relnAvely simple efforts, 9» out of IM Americans could live through the worst raids the Soviets could muster. Six years from now. 85 out of 100 Americans could live through the full force of an all-out Soviet attack, civil defense experts now j estimate, if people are willing to make the effort to protect themselves. COULD REBOUND Even after the worst possible Soviet raids in the dangerous middle or late 1960s, the civil defense specialists now believe, the U.S. economy could be pushed back up to half of prewar levels within 12 months and back to full prewar levels within five to 12 year providing the U.S. is prepared. ★ • ’The transfer of major civil de-j~ fense functions to Robert S. Mc-j Namara and the Department ofj Defense is an attempt in part toj strengthen President John F. Kennedy's hand in this continued | brinktmanship dud with Soviet | Russia’s Nikita Khrushchev. | The theory at State and Defense goes like this: renUM rrcu rinU EXPERT IIA.NDLER-Carolyn Middleton,-12, won first place in junior showmanship, girls’ division, at the Oakland County Black and White Show .Saturday. The event was held at the 4-H Fairgrounds on Perry Street and Walton Boulevard which also will he the setting for the annual Oakland County 4-H Fair Aug. 8-12. (See related story on Page 10. i Russia Shows West Mighty Naval Force Envoy Assured U.S. Is Against Reds in U.N. Americans Hoping to Win (poncessions on Debate Tactics WASHINGTON (HFl) — Nationalist China’s Vice President - Premier Chen Cheng opened talks with President Kennedy today, assured that the United States was opposed to ad> missiem of Red China to the United Nations. CheiT 'Was* greeted by Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson when he arrived at National Airport here for talks with Kennedy about the U.S. position on rec<^> nition and admission to the United Nations for Red China and Outer Mongolia. They drove directly to the White House. Johnson, speaking for Kennedy, -Old Chen that the United State* has a “firm determination, not only to stand by our declaratiwi* but to project them by action, coolly and with foresight.’’ American officials hoped that by giving the Nationalists strong reassurance on the U.8. anticommunist BlaiKl In Asia and the United Nations. Kennedy could win some concessionB on the tactics to be used In the China In the Untted AP PImMsx 'O. C. Jackson, wanted in the slaying of a Dayton. Ohio couple, being questioned by a police officer. In picture 2, Jackson draws a gun from his brief case, covering the officers. Zamora grabs him in picture 3. Cool Spell in Store After Hot Weather Following weekend temperaturesi According to the U.S. Weather that hit 90 degrees. Ponttac can Bureau, temperatures will aver-look ton^ to somewhat c^r ^ weather the next few days. How- "• _____ ever, showers thunderstorm^ Mgh at a and normal are also on the way. I tow of gs. TomoirowVi high Is ex- pected to be 78 with a tow tonight of M. The temperature at 8 a m, this tnoming was 70 degrees, rising to 82 at'l p.m. Wind from the north-northwest at 6 miles per hour. —If Nikita Khrushchev and Mao Tse-lung are to be stopped from nibbling away the \free. world in Berlin, in l.aos. In the Congo, and kept from starling World War III, the R«sls must be convinced that when the chips are down, the United States will be willing to risk all-out war If Khrushchev and Mao know that American civIHans and American industry are unprotected, they will be convinced that the U.S. Is blulfiag. They would not believe that the U.S. would risk aatlonal suicide — or the death of IM million to 146 million of Its people — to save say Berlin or Western Etarope. —The U.S. backdown in Laos, (Continued on Page 2, Q)l. 5) Fail to Agree on Laos GENEVA (API - The 14-nation Laotian conference failed to agree today on a legal formula for withdrawing foreign troops from Laos. LENINGRAD (UPI) — The Soviet Union’s impressive “Navy Day” show- proves the Kremlin is determined to make its fleet as strong and as modern as its rocket-powered air force, Western observers said today. Sunday’s naval show on the Neva River here was I the biggest in years [nearly three times largerj hi ri i [than last year’s display |\|0WS rldSlICS I * * t The Soviets showed off some of| j their most modern ships, , including j jeruisers, destroyers and torpedo boats described as rocket-firing. But the much-heralded atomic-powered submarlen — billed as being as fast and as powerful as the U.8. nuclear subs — was c«)nspl(wously missing. A Soviet television anhouncer said the new sub is part of the Red Navy’s arsenal but the Kremlin chose to keep it out of the show, which was attended by many (Continued on Page 2, Col. li MIAMI.. Fla. (AP) — Eight tractor-for-prisoner envoys flew back to Fidel Uaatru's jails today, declaring confidently. "We shall return." More than 500 Cuban exiles cheered them loudly at Miami International Airport. WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House passed by voice vote today and sent to the White House legislation that would rut to $100 a person the present $500 dutyfree allowance on foreign goods brought buck by American-tour- Kaline Replaces Injured Maris Tigers Dominate All-Star Line-Up From Our New* Wires BOSTON — Four Detroit Tigers, including pitcher Jim Bunning, were in a juggled starting line-up as the American League sought to end a three-game losing streak in 1961’s second All-Star game. Manager Paul Richards was trying to break the National League’s recent All-Star dominance despite the absence of Yankee slugger Roger Maris. Richards' revamped 11 n e-u p was tailored to fit the friendly left field wall at Fenway Park. His batting order listed Tigers In the top three spots. Fii^ basemen Norm Cash was in the unfamiliar leadoff spot. Fol-ng in the equally strange sec-position was left fielder Rocky Colavito. And behind him. at his regular No. 3 post, was Al Kaline. ★ « # Richards oHginally planned to follow Cash and Colavito with the Yankees’ one-two punch, Mickey Mantle and Maris. But Maris, who has hit 40 homers this s with a pulled muscle in his left thigh. Kaline was nominated for right field and Mantle dropped to fourth In Fenway Park and thus the nod over pitchers with n Danny Murtaugh, who managed the National League to a 5-4 10-inning victory in the year’s first All-Star game at windswept Candlestick Park in San Francisco July 11. said he would start either Bob Purkey or Art Mahalfey. both! righthandei-s. stick with right-handed pitchers as much as possible because the Boston Red Sox’ home park with its beckoning 315 feet left field wall, long has been a graveyard for left-handed pitchers. Yankee shortstop Tony Kubek also has been cam-eled out of today’s game by an lnjur>'. Kubek pulled up lame In a pregame workout at Yankee Stadium Sunday. IaiIm A|>aricto of the Cbi-Both managers were expected to! White Sox reiHacrd him. NATIONAL LEAGUK Maur;f Willi, Loi Angclei ...... Eddie Mathews. Mnwaukee . Willie Man. Ban Ersaclaco ...... Orlando Cepeda. Ban Framlaco Roberta Clemente, Pittsburgh Bill White. St. Louts........... Prank Bolling. Milwaukee Smoky Burgess. Pittsburgh Bob Purkey, Cincinnati or Art Mahaffey, Philadelphia AMEBICAN LEAGliie Mickey Mantle, New York John Romano. Cleveland Luis Aparlclo, Chicago Johnny Temple. Cleveland Brooks Robinson. Baltimore Jim Bunning. Oelrolt . Nsttona this fall. The officials expected Kennedy to warn Chen that a Nationalist veto of Outer Mongolia’s membership bid would antagonize Africa votes critically needed to keep Red . Chipa out of the world organiza- i tion. 'You will recall, Mr. Vice President, that on May 15 at Taipei your nation and mine reaffirmed our common purpose of maintaining the integrity of free Asia,’’ Johnson told CTien. "We rededicated ourselves to the principle that freedom must be preserved and extended” U.S. SINCERE Johnson; then told Chen that he would find "further evidence of the sincerity of our words” during his visit here. ('hen, who will spend threO days in Washington, was accompanied by Nationalist Chlaa Foreign Minister Shen Chang-huan. wives of both officials and aides. Administration officials said Kennedy hoped to get thv nationalists’ agreement to new tactics for the showdown U.N. debate this fall on Red China membership and the issue oi admitting Outer Mongolia and Mauritania. In To(iay's Press pitching with only a day’s rest. The shinny Detroit righthander, with an 11-8 record, usually Is parllcttlariy efiectivp Growth 15. ' Big Week Congress gets to heart of JFK’s program this week— PAGE 9. Tunisia Split " Afi-o-Asian bloc divided on special Tunisia session in U.N.—PAGE 4. $10 Billion Kennedy piles up future spending plan»-PAGE 8. Thieves Those who bilk insurance firms bilk you-PAGE 1$. Area News..............10 Comic* ............... 18 Editorials .............d Msrkels ...............88 Obituaries .............U Sport* .............. IW7 Theaters . „.........10, TV * Radto Pr^praBM . ft WUsam Ikri .. ..........m Women’a Page* .......n-U ROB PURKEY mmmwi A THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 81, 1061 And the Living 1» Eaay Skepticism Greets Red Plan LONDON (AP) — The ^viet|ide«ls outlined in the Chmmunist Communist party's promise of a blueprint for a I'omlng Utopia golden age ahead for the peoplelfor the Soviet's millions; of the Soviet Union evoked mixed aroused by the rejection of war feelings of skepticism and hopeiand the declaration that to realise ^la Western Europe today . |this easy life there must be peace Skeptkton at the gnmdiose^on earth. Russ Show Navy Might (Continued From Page One) Wtalem diplomats and military at-'impress the world with Soviet mill-taches. !tary might at a time when East- The show included a Jet flying West relations were tense over the boat and Jet bombers said to be Berlin crisis. . armed with air-to-ground missiles. w * a The Soviets already claim the| The Russian nav^y show was world's largest submarine fleet.!follow-up to the recent Moscow air Izvestia. the government new^ia-show ithat displayed the lat*“* per. repeated its claim that the Soviet bombers and lighters, fleet is supoior to the U.S. underseas fleet. Weatem aboervert who Joined Betief was eiqiiressed in Britain that Ihomier Khrushchev would not be prepared to gamble away goals of a Communist paradise by risking war with the West. Belgian Socialists saw the program as patHn a political maneu-Swedish , T, Svenska said the promii I are "so long-dated that it must safe lor Khrushchev to feel that it can hardly be he who have to answer if they are not redeemed." The Soviet people were prom-wd free' housing and public ansportation in the 19T0s. a gradual shortening of (be worfc-we«H( to six hours a day. and belore . completion of dte program free education, free medical care, free gas and heating and free The 20-year plan made public over the weekend declared that by 1070 'the Soviet Union would outdistance the United States in per capita production dnd by 19W would give the Soviet people the highest standard of living in the world — "everyone will live in easy circumstances.'* The 45.000-word manifesto—the rst grand Soviet plan since Lenin's in 1910-pledged a policy of coexistence with the West in apparent slap at the Chinew Communiri*. Cbnspicuoualy missing from the document was any mentkm Stalin. w*ho never ismed such a conaervative Daily called the program in-the rity" and said; is difficult to believe that, having staked his reputation on a I term program of social and eco-I, Mr. Khrushchev would want to thiw everything tp the winds ^ a gamble over Beriin.” , ' long reign. Bearing the imprint of Khrushchev himself, the drafyplan will presented to the find party congress in October. Its ratification is a certainty. The laborite Daily Herald caUed the program "a system of paying wages partly in ki The Herald added: "The more proapmoui peoples there are in the world the better. And if ■ K feels strong enough to promise Utopia he cannot really believe world war is just around the comer, too." Beet, except for They also sai^ that as far as can determined I'.S. nuclear subs appear superior in striking power to the mysterious Soviet MlSSILE-FIRLNr. SHIPS The Soviets also showed for the first time rocket-armed cutters and three missile - firing destroyers each armed with two missile launchers. Moscow television identified the missile-equipped ships as "small cruisers," but western naval experts w-ould rate them as destroyers ' newsmea the show wms to have been larger, bat some abipo were wItbdrawB at tbe last mianle. The show appeared designed t The conservative Daily Sketch kid: "Mr. Khrushchev's 'jam mwrrow' program sounds wonderful (but) in fact, Russia is as far from catching up with the productive capacity of the West as she ever was." The Sketch went on to say that Khrushchev "is even less likely to realize his ambitions while he cripples his economy witij the biggest military establishment in the world." The Communist Daily Worker said "Russia staggers the world." Rebels Increase Algerian Violence Troops Practice Berlin Defense U.S., British and French Garrisons Hold Alert Again This Morning Weekend Rains Cause Floods in NY., Kentucky SOVIET NAVY DISPLAY-Three swift rocketfiring launches dart past larger Soviet ships riding at anchor in the Neva River Sunday. The ships are part of a Russian navy show staged SP PbvtolKX near Leningrad. The '.mall boats are said to be able to put to sea in any weather and fire rockets great disthnees. BERLIN (AP) - Berlin's U.S. British and French garrisons held another early morning alert today. practicing the defense of the threatened city. At 4:30 a.m. loudspeaker trucks woke residents of tti ■where married troops live. Many members of the ll,000-man Allied garrison in West Berlin have *their families with them. By Hw Assoeialed Press Showers dampened wide areas fnmi the Southwest desert region into th|e Ohio Valley today after heavy rains over the weekend caused flash floods in parts of Kentucky and New York State 4)ie floods in parts of Johnson and Morgan counties in southeast Kentucky forced at least ISO milies to leave their homes. One m«B drowned. More than 3H inches of rain hit the area. Npw York, nearly 7 inches ot rain dreoched Otaego County in a three-hour period, causing many streams to overflow. Hundreds of homes were damaged. Maimr Wayne Tyson of Unadilla, who asked the state to designate the iown of 1.S00 a disaster area, said damage estimates ranged from $500,000 to $1 mUlkm. Tor-nadic winds hammered Macedon in Wayne County. Canvass Confirms Con-Con Nominees The official canvass of last Tuesday's constitutional convention primary results in Oakland County showed no change in the nominees but some switches in the orders of finish. 37 Drown Near Tokyo TOKYO (AP)—Thirty-seven per-stjgs were reported drowned and aiiither 25 missing Sunday as an eatifhated 1.2 million pem>le st^bned the beaches near Tokyo to escape the iwpt. Some 1.400 nr'in' GM s Auto Contract Nearing Expiration DETROIT tf^-The auto negotia-jUAW is to continue automatieany tions spotlight shifted to General'beyond Aug. 31, its normal expirup the city's 2nd District Democratic contest, canvassers ranked Carl W. O'Brien over previous second place finisher George A. Goo-gasian. They gave Googasian 13 less votes for a total of 587. O'Brie received ^ as reported earlier. Motors Corp. today as the termination toint of GM’s contract with the United Auto Workers union drew near. Unless GM's contract with the Lewis R. Miller finished above Fred L, Morningstar and Sidney Jones finished above Dennis Clark in the reshuffling of the 1st District Republican votes, according to Mrs. Mabel M. Child, county election clerk. Madison Heights Gets Hudson's The canvass finished Saturday showed in the 4th District that Joseph S. Asheraon finished last in the field of nine Democrate instead of next to last. • The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report , PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloundy through Tuesday with a few showers and thunderstorms mostly in afternoon and Evening. Cooler tonight and Tuesday, low tonight 64, high Tuesday 78. Light variable winds. Madison Heights will get a J. L. Hudson budget store similar to the one to be constructed at the new Pontiac Shopping Mali. in Waterford Township. JoseiA L. Hudson Jr., president of the firm, said the company Would butld a new 80,000 square fp^, one story budget store in' the shopping center being developed at the northwest corner of John R and Twelve Mile Roads. direction S-NW.' Wlnd.nlocltj I m p h. Obc Tmr At* la P*alU n iHIthnt irmperatur* ....... Lownt Umprrtturc . . Ufxn Irmpcrtturr U Moodtr >t 7:30 p Hlihnt and Lawnt Tcaiptralwn Thli DaU la 8S Taari • Traip* ) Kaaaaa Rlftteit Umpcraiui 76 Or. Rapida 00 07 Loi AiurlM M 04 '• Hoathton 71 tl Miami fcacli 17 03 I PalUton 00 03 Mllvauka* " “ Tra* City 79 01 Naar Orleana Alboouarque 03 04 New York Atlanta II 70 Omaha llamarck HI 00 Phoenik “I 72 PlUaburth J 00 at. Loufa I. atl 00 74 salt Lk. City 14 04 10 s: AP Phalafax NATIONAL WEATHER — Warm weather is expected to continue in the nation toni^t except for a cooling trend in the North Atlantic States and in the Western Lakes area. Scattered showers will be general from the Northern Plains eastward into the Northern Appalachians as well as in parts of the Southern INateau. tion date, one party or the other must give 30 days written notice today or tomorrow. After tomorrow, say termlna- Planning Budget Store Similar to Pontiac's for Opening in 1962 In 1958, when the current three-year contract was writttn, GM served termination notice, and for the first time in its history the UAW continued to work without contract. Before that, contracts had been extended on a day-to-day busts during bargaining on new ones. It is expected to open in 1 Hudson said. The company, incidentally, renaming its basement stores "budget" stores, a spokesman said, because a new generation understands the terminology better. Hudson announced that Robert E. SturwoM, fonnerly manager of the Llneoln Park basement store, would supervise numagement of the new budget stores In Waterford Township. Madison Heights nnd Lincoln Pnrk. Hudson said the Madison Heights store will be comparable in size and operation to the recently announced Pontiac Shopping Mall unit, which will also open in 1962. While attention was on GM, largest of the auto makers, the UAW was mulling over the first major step in the 1961 negotiations, taken by American Motors Corp., fourth largest auto firm. AMC last week offered the union n profit-sharing deni nnd n seven-oent hourly wage Increase each year lor the next three years. The firm, however, demanded that the union give up its cost-of-living escalator and its annual improvement factor that guarantees at least a six-cent hourly wage increase each year. AMC also demanded a dear-cut non-intervention clause for management. The UAW took AMCs offer un-?r study and promised an answer by Aug. 22. The current three-year contract expires Sept. 7. "The new budget store concept recognizes that many persons desire to shop at smaller stores con-ent to their neighborhood, as well as shopping in our full-line department stores downtown and at Northland and Eastland Shopping Centers," Hudson stated. "While ove have found that Hudson customers will drive considerable dhtaaeeo to shop our complete and broad merchandise asaortmeats, they have afaw ahowB a desire to have stores avallahle to them.' The Madison Heights ahoppii^ center la being developed by John J. Bourne and John P. Fraser Jr., who are affiliated with Hubbard Associates, and will be constructed on a 20 acre site. Both soldiers and civilians attached to the Allied missions were ordered to flieir duty posts where they remained until they got the "all clear." Allied officials called it a routine exercise of the kind that takes place at Irregular intervals POUCE FAERCUE West Berlin police also held night training exercise, but headquarters insisted that this wi coordinated with the Allies. 30 days before It became effec- tive. About 2.000 P^fiij8es from Com-lunist East Germany poured into West Berlin in the 24-hour period ending at 8 o'clock Sunday night. The number — 200 greater than the previous day— was a record for hny one day since June 1953, when anti-Com-munists revolted in East Germany. Berlin Just One of Red Maneuvers Old Note Points Finger at Stanton in Lincolns Death GETTYSBURG. Pa. (AP) research chemist by chance has * upon a cryptic allegorical statement scribbled in an old journal which points an accusing finger at Edwin M. Stanton, President Abraham Lincoln’s secretary of war, a.H having helped Lincoln's assassination. The accusation was scrawled by Brig. Gen. Lafayette C. Baker who died under mysterious ciri cumstances three yean after Lincoln’s death. But whether the coded message will cast a new light sassination 96 yean ago appears |to depend on Baker's flamboyant character. Handwriting experts have thenticated .Baker's Similar accusations have bee directed at Stanton previously. The (fld, E>igll^ military . nal was found by Ray A. Neff, a Gibbaboro, N.J., rm cbemlat who investigated document is detail (or a year in conjunction with QvU War Times, published 10 times a year Gettysburg, Pa. i The Pay in BinnioghBin Police Arrest 5 Youths After 100-M.P.H. Chase BIRMINGHAM - Police from Birmingham and Pontiac arrested five youths yeaterday in a stolen car following a wild chase of speeds up to 100 miles per hour which started here. The fleeing car. which ran red ghts and narrowly missed hlRing •veral other automobiles, was halted after it struck a parked car and crashed into a line of parkbig meters In Pontiac. AT nwUltx _ — Mri. Ima Jean Poynter, 2^ a bride of only 14 hours, drownm at Indianapolis early SundayWhen a small cruiser carrying \iradd^ brants capsized on (he White River. The grexxn and'eight others were rescued. The juveniles were released in the custody of their parents. Potts and Evans are being held today at the Highland Park jail. The car was stolen from a pi^ng lot in Highland Park at 6 p.m. Saturday. Birmingham Patrolmen Norman Propst and Lamar Gilchrist spotted the car attempting to race another ALGIERS (UPI) — A weekend out-burst of rebel violence raised fears today that the Algerian Nationalists are resuming a full-scale offensive sgainst the French. Three persons — including two Eunqjeans — were killed and 90 wounded in an outbreak of farmburning and grenade attacks around this tense and war-torn North African territory. During the past 10 days French-rebel peace talks in Lu-grin, France, Moslem terrorism fell off sharply. But the rebel delegates abruptly broke off the talks Thursday because of France’s refusal to recognize their claim over the Sahara Desert region and a sharp increase in violence in Algeria immediately Mowed. 63 File to Run in Detroit for Mayor, Council DETROIT (UPI) — A total of 63 persons have filed for election in the Sept. 12 primary for mayoral and Common Couhcil posts. Twelve hopefuls, including incumbent Mayor Louis Miriani, have filed for Detroit’s top executive job. Nine incumbents were numbered among the 51 persons who have filed for seats on the council. The mayor and nine councilmen will be chosen in a Nov. 7 general election. Take* Into casti the eoUlaloa oras the driver ot the oar, Gary W. Potts, 17 of Detroit: Richard D. Evans, nlso 17, of UlgUnnd Park; and three 10-week-old aon of Mr. and Mra. David E. Goodwin of 28102 Brent-., waa to be held today at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home followed by burial in Roseland Park Cemetery, Royal Oak. The child died unexpectedly Saturday at William Beaumont Hospital. Royal Oak. Surviving besides his parents are two brothers, Kevin aiid Dennis, both at home; and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Goodwin .. and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lender, all of Birmingham. Fire-Safe Homes Are Increasing Having watched more than $1.5 billion in pn^rty damage go up in smoke last year, U.S. home buyers should be interested in the suggestions of fire contred authorities as they visit model homes. :2S a.m. yesterday. The officers started off in pursuit of the car which was traveling northbound on Woodward. Pon-iac police were notified of the chase. The Blimlngham patrolmen said Potto reached speeds be-^ tween 80 and lOO miles per hour and went through red Ughs at Long Lake Road and South Boulevard as the chase led up Woodward through Birmingham and Bloomfl^ Hills and onto South Saginnw Street In PonMne. A Pontiac-patrol car at Saginaw and Rapid streets was neariy hit by the stolen auto as it weaved in and out of traffic. Pontiac Patrolmen David L. Schroeder and Charles L. Chancey then joined in the chase. Schroeder fired a shot at the car, hitting it in the left-rear quarter panel. Noting that last year's fire losses exceeded tlKwe of each of the three previous yeqp. engineers at Allied Chemical’a Barrett Building Materials Division recommend that home buyers insist on flie use ot fire-safe materials. "About 90 per cent of all fires result primarily from careless-says Qarence Hausmann, a building authority for Barrett. "That's a human (ailing, but builders can help reduce the dangers of fire by using materials that will retard a flame or not burn at all. With police from two departments ^ving chase, the fleeing auto went down Parke Street at about 80 miles an hour, hit another car, T^eered and struck the parking meters. house for Its c4Nit and with so many fire-snfe materUls with which he enn work these days, perhaps the awful toll of dunnage can be sharply reduced. "Many archflects specify fire-safe materials whenever possible— and practical—and many builders use them, even when they aren’t specified," he adds. Police said the juveniles in the car had no knowledge that it was stolen until Potts attempted to eacape pursuing Binningham policemen. Trouble in Saigon SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) -Viet Omg (jommunists staged a preannounced hand grenade incident in Saigon Sunday night to denoonstrate their ability to cause trouble in the stronghold of Presi-' dent Ngo Dinh Diem. D’AqUHA Service ibr Carl lYAquila. of 1946 N. Hammond Drive, Bloomfield Towq|bill*JIKiUJif^ Md Thursday at the tararia^earino Funeral Home, New Britian, Conn. Mr. D’Aquila died of a heart attack yesterday at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. He was One sddier was killed and two others injured when the grenade was thrown at a military patrol truck in front of a theater. Third Japanese Sub TOKYO (AP) - Japan’ got its third submarine today with the launching of the 750-ton Hayashio at Kobe, 350 miles southwest of Tokyo. (Omtinued From Page One) after strong talk, apparently belgbtMcd the Khnisbcliev-M«o oMvictkm that the U.S. wooM —TUs Khninhfdiev-Mao disbelief la U.S. determination will Bssnredly Increase the danger of aaclear war by Communist mls-calcnlstion. The Pentagon planners are cer lain that Khrushchev and Mao have In mind a series of small wars to obtain their objectives. THEY CAN GROW But small wars can grow in big wars. U.S. military men are convinced that there is less chance of a big nuclear war If the Reds know that for the U.S. a big war won’t mean the death of most Americans. Most important of all: since the U.S. and the Soviet are going to be flirting on this brink for years ahead, the U.S. must be prepared for a mishap — and total war. The new admlnlstration-De-fease Deparimeat plans as of today, however, contain two Im-portimt amissions. They don’t have a program for blast shehers for civilians. They ike no plans lor the strategic, prewar evacuation of cities. Police today were seeking a bandit who allegedly terrorized a Bloomfield Township woman al gunpoint and robbed her of $43 after forcing his way into her home last night. The numey was taken from the home of, frank Hospod Franklin ,R^d whose wife Sophie was threatened by the thief at about lO p.m. The Hospods, both in their late 50s, live alone at the Franklin Road address. One reason is expense. But the planners have another reason. They are afraid that plans for blast shelters or tor the massive evacuation of large clUes would provoke Khrushchev. Hiis U what they say in their private memoran- avii d r wasa. Id wart: It wUI help keep I Itanitod. It« ^ Maa pai It now takes more than troops, planes and misailes to keep war away from our shores. It takes you ... and you ... a civil po|>-ulatkm wUUng to protect Itoelf. (Next: What jnm shaaM da aaq member of the Holy Name Society, fathers’ Club and Men’s Qub of Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church. Surviving besides his wife Marie are three sons, Anthony, Michael and John; a daughter, Patricia, all at home; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sebastian D’Aquila of New Britain. Conn.;' and two brothers. The Rosary will be recited at p.m. today at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Keith A. Goodwin Service for Keith A. <]loodwin, Bandit Gets $43 in Area Home “It’s a builder’s responsibility Amcmg the fire-safe materials widely used by modem builders are asphalt shingles, mineral wool insolation, and gypsum wallboard (that will withstand a flame of 1700 degrees Fahrenheit for as long as an hour before permitting the fire penetrate as much as an inch), metal door and window frames and metal gutters. They can help prevent a home m becoming a holocaust,” adds Hausmann, "and when you figure that more than 11,000 people lost their lives in fires a year ago — 5,600 ot them in residential blazes — everything possible should be done to reduce the M." Ortonville Man, 59, Dies of Injuries A 59-year-old Ortonville man hit by a car while walking home Friday night died ol his injuries yes-at Pontiac Oakland County Highway Toll in ’61 56 Loot YMr General Hospital. Eugene R. Holm of 456 M15 suffered chest Injuries and multiple fractures w h e n struck by a car driven by Albert L. Schulz. 24, of Detroit on Ortonville Road. Schulz told sheriff’s deputies he^ saw the victim directly in front, of him but too late to stop. Schulz> was not held. Conference at Nicocio yelling tor the police when she r into the neightor'e home. Police arrived and Mrs. Hospod’s husband who had sleet through the incident. ilie thief was described as heavy set man, about 5’8" t with dark complexion and dark hair. Mrs. Hospod said he spoke an accept and was wearing a light plaid shirt and dark trousers. Hoepod oras sleeping when tbe bandit picked a lock on a side, door, crept Into his Tsrtfe’s room and told her to give him moiie.y. Mrs. Hospod said she was half asleep when she heard rattling It was not known how the man escaped, but police said residents in the neighborhood heard a car with loud mufflers in the vicinity about the time the Hospods’ home were robbed. the door which leads side porch. She thought her husband was checking the door until she saw a man standing over her bed. Mrs. Hospod quoted the bandit as saying; "Lady, keep quiet if you value your life. D Superior on Both Color and Black-White • Do-It-Yourself Easy EVERYTHING included . . . pre-wired and pre-assembled ... 70 feet of wire, mast mounting-brackets and standoffs ... 12 position eloc- comrois ar sei. ELECTRICAL —2nd Floor AMERICAN Mode 'Jeweir 10-Traii$istor RADIO With BAHERIES-CASE and EARPHONE Cotnpof to $40.00 SoHori ExocHy os picturad — Poworful 10-trofwUtor radio with station dial, vol-umo control and built-in spookor. Comploto with bottarios, oorphoho ond cpso. And only $1 holds in fro# 22 87 UAIM «SJJ.“WAT0HES WATCHES Our Pricts Are So Low Wa CanH Mention The Famous BRAND NAMES . . . Compare Our E V ER Y D A Y PRICES. WATCHES - WATCHES Reg. $75.00 MQrg < WATCHU — now Rao. $19.50 fidhAA WATCHES — now -Ne«Mt BMdeb of Amartea'i nnMt brand vatchca. DeuMa OnARAMTEKO by mmken and trw laraway!A‘u price* ptaf WATCH Dapt. -Main Floor ' ■»' 'tt i.a.«Mb.*inmiiaYiii.8- gas b M»EI TflMTE 'III IS tM: IfHHIMi Since 1934--5IMMS Hu Been a DISCOUNT STOBE Ijemi GREATEST MONEY SAVING Sverit! Ideal (or top of stove cooking-modem rObrxied bottom for easy stirring and mixing. Polished finish, eaiiy grip cover knob and side handles. rom THE PONtlAC PRESS MONDAY. JULY 81, 1061 SERVIK Bull0tlns, Utters, etc. FAST SEIVIOEI Afro-Asian Bloc Split on U»N. Tunis Session Kr A. L QOUDUM ,U.N. GawiI AiawnMy to tikt UNITED NATIONS. N.T. (AP)fup tiw Firench-Tanisian impam —Tlife 4S Aaitii-AIHcan members over (be Biurte navel baac. of the IMled Nattom appeared * * * dlvUed today over wtaetbir to A number of countries tram for a special isesirm of tbe Asia and Africa were lepoited - to lupport Liberia’s call IT PAYS TO HAVE A GOOD CREDIT RECORD You con toke odvontoge of soles, without cosh—then poy lotef, if you protect your credit by paying on time. H«v« You Kept Your Credit Record o Credit to You? PONTIAC CREDIT BUREAU INC. 333 North Ptrry Stroot, Pontioc 16, Michigon "Guqrd Your Credit os a Sacred Trust" lar a «ect|l Aagost group called a ckweddoor meet-ling this, aftenwon. TlMre was considerable doubt the 10 new African nations who briong to the Frmch Oonununlty Hw goal of those seeldiw a serial asserably Is to' brand France an aggreasor against 'ninisia and to force th|^ French out of tb^ Meditmanean naval and air base St Blserte. SOhlE DUBIOUS Turkey, Japan, the Philii^inca and aaveral other Aaian members of the bloc were reported dubious of the advantage of a special aasembly unlen new violence ■upts in Tunisia. If the bloc unenimouily supports tbe proposal, a spe^ assembly is virtual|)i certain. It ceguirea SO member signatorei to conveno Om tPnation body and the B-natlon Soviet bloc Is expected to support the move. So ire Yugoslavia and.Culm. Assembly President Frederick I. Boland reportedly received word in Dublin to be ready to ■n to Now York at once if the nMmbers decide to place the Tunisian crisis before the as-■rinbly. a . a a Liberian President Nathan Barnes announced he would seek suppmt for specisl assembly de-ibste on Tunisia alter the Security Council tailed Saturday to take any action on Tunlaia's Western foothold in Africa, was especially diaappoiBted at the middle gnwod attitude Uk United Slatae took, UM^ to etimd France during tbe Berlin crisis, the Uhited States Hvorsd neitb«-side but called ter asgotiatkme. ------------------------- - Sofut> Thing for Book I to Lock It in Soft OXMARD, Calif. (AP) .- Jot Hamlin haa written a book which he’d better lock in a safe. The topicT How to open sales of 96 Ameticin saferoakers. Hamlin. 65, a iKksmlth, doesn't expect to publish his <9 yean ' tricks of his trwie. though. Too much chance of it getting into the wn^ hands. The council issued a cease-Hre call July 23 to stop the fighting between French and Tunisian troops around Blserte base and in the Sahara south of T\mls. The council also called on all troops to return to positions they held before fighting flared July 19. DEMANDS OUABANTBBS Tunisia has accused franco of continuing aggression and of re-fusi(« to pull back her troops in Bizerte. France is demanding guarantees that her ccmmunica-tlou lines with the base and between its units will be safeguarded. SecretaiyCkneral Dag Ham-marskjold who vlrited Tunisia last week at President HaMb Bourguiba's request, ttdd the council he had evidence France had violated the cease-fire and mumed functioni on Tunisian soil "normally reserved to a sovereign state."' Bourguibe's government, bitter over council failure to adopt resolutions calling for complete compliance with tbe cease-fire end negotiations to deal with Bizerte's future, was reported ready tc turn to toe Communists.. ♦ ♦ ♦ 'Hie Tunisian government, which had been looked on as a High HUMIDITY Causes. .. Bus Me looms at Midnight Tonight DETRC^ tffi - Some 200 bus drivers utd maintenance am-idoyes Intertown Suburban Lines Ooip. say they will strike at A strike would cut off sorvlee to noiae 30,600 commuten la Wait-«n Wtove Cbtmty- dMM^UnT'^’bw Bhwt^ and Bas Operators IMoa. saU Is tsewiiaatlag Mulroy said management had made' a final offer that would result in^a 60-cent hourly cut in the drivers’ and mechanics' fringe benefits. Company officials were unavailable for comment. It would require about M years tor sound to span the distance separating the sun and the earth. 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NEW FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKET IN UNION LAKE VILUGE FRESH-LIAN GROUND BEEF 29 lb FRISH-HOMI.OROWN CORN ON THE COB 29 doz. SIRLOIN STEAK U.S. CHOICI I HUT DOBS ■ V I ■ rrSSfr—I Pilfsbury or .Ballard BISCUITS A3, y e 79 1b tubs BANQUET POT PIES t Chicken • Turkey • Beef ^ " A5.1) 49 I Ripe! I S WATER-• I LARGE i MELON | EGGS I I \ FOOD MARKETS 263 AUBURN ONNtMnaWMK I~ 46$ L PWE ST. I ; ONNVAJLMtPJL ■ 46$ L PWE ST. ■ 700 AUBURN ST. WVNVAJXMtPa. ■ OPINFIMnAWmK ♦ Ait. WN 10 PJMa AMERICA’S N0.1 WRIHGER WASHER TWO YEARS TO PAY—NO DOWN PAYMENT 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH 121 N. Saginaw St. FE 5-6189 DOWNTOWN PARK-SHOP “Your Appliance Specialisls” 0pe» Hon. and Fii. 'HI 9 P.H. Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain ^ew York, N. Y. (Spwial) -For the first time science has found a new healing ^ubstanca with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids, stop itching, and relieve pain - without surgery. In one hemorrhoid case after another,‘Very striking improvement” was reported and verified by a doctor’s observations. Pain was relieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of ail — this improvement was maintained in cases .where a doctor’s observations ware continued over a period of many ntonthsi In fact', rpsulte were so thorough that 8Uff«i;er8 were able to make such astonishing state- ments as "Piles have ceased to be a problem!” And among these sufferers vTtere a very wide variety of hemorrhoid conditions, some of 10 to 20 years’ standing. All this, without the use of narcotics, anesthetics or astringents of any kind. The secret is a new healing substance (Bio-Dyne*)-the discovery of a world-famous research institution. Already, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured ■■ ■ ' - body. _________healing sub is offered ip mppotitory or ointment form called Preparation H*. Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation H Suppositories or Preparation H Ointment with special appli- programs announced to date, ob expect the fiscal spending budget to approach $9C billion. This would compare wit $87,723,(X)0,000 now -officially fore cast for the current fiscal year Although the currcnttyear budg t deficit will ‘ total at leas $5,290,000,000, administration offi cials are hopeful of balancing the burget next year. Kennedy ha warned he will ask Congress a tax increase, if nec^sary, to achieve a budget "strictly balance." Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon said recently tha if the economy moves ahead as he expects, "our revenues for fis cal 1963 would be adequate to meet all of our national needs with something left over.*’ That was before Kenredy' $3,454,600,000 proposal for tlip build-up for Berlin, but the ad ministration argues that, programing major spending in creases, it is pursuing a course o fiscal responsibility with iialuncer budgets in sight. Critics certend that deficits are the more likelv prospect. The strongest clue to the rising treml in federal spending comes from an analysis of thi.s year’ requests to Congress for "new ob-ligational authority’’ — appropn ations, authority to sign con tracts, and authority for agencies to spend money borrowed from the Treasury. Former President Dwight D Eisenhower last January askei for $80.9 billion in obligational au thority. Revisions and additions Kennedy have boosted the to tai to $91.4 billion. • ★ ★ # I Obligational authority requests ; normally exebed spending esti I mates for any single year bo-I cause they cover programs com ling up in future years. If the Navy is to build an aircraft rjer. for example, obligational authority might be provided in one chunk but '‘thb money would be spent over several years. Kennedy contends that Eiseri-hower’s request for ' obligationa authority feH $86 million shy of the amount needed to finance isting programs. He has now s ed programs, of his own calling for an extra $t0.4 billion in ob-iigational authority. CLOSED WEDNESDAY AFTERNOONS JULY and AUGUST SAVE-10th i 1% EARN--1st n V rorreot Bat, 1 Srml-Anna.llf Established in 1890 — Never missed piying '' 71 a. a dividend— ,, »f ycfiia wi atjunu rrianayemenr, yuur »S5Urar>ce OT SeCUniy Assets over 56 million dollars. Capitol Savings & Loan Assn. Established 1890 75 W. Hnion St., Pontiac FE 4-0561 CUSTOMER PARKING IN REAR OF BUILDING C61dWaiHas^ Comic Note: Mouse Is Louse BKRU.N (ITPI) — Mickey Mousie was denounced by th*' East tierman CommunKt news-papiT Kreiheit Sunday as an American agent helping East (iermans flee to tbo West. The newspa|ter reported a talk by a Communist fum-tionary named, Heyde to children In the East tierman city of Halle. He warned them not to read Mickey Monsie eonile books or join the Mickey Mouse Clubs formed by the publishers in West tiermany. ’’How can a child be., so dumb as to be taken in by Mickey Mouse?" Heyde asked. “These books have the purpose of getting the addresses of your parents. You cut a coupon out of the book, send it along with your address, and you bet^ome a member of the Mickey Mouse Club. "Then they have an important address to give the bead hunters.” “Head hunters" Is the Communist term for the Western agents they say are causing the record exodus of refugees. Study Shows Hike in Calves, Chickens LANSING (UPn- Mir’year figures compiled by the Federal-Stale Crop Reporting Service show that Michigan farmers are raising mbre calves and chickens than last year, but raising fewer lambs and shearing less wool. While the calf crtip is estimated at only 1 per cent above last year, this is the first year-to-year increase noted jn six^ars, the service said. Calves born and expected on Michigan farms this year total about 710,000 head, the scrvic-e said. The 1961 lamb crop, however, estimated at 246.000 bead, down 6 per cent from last year. Tribal Warfare in New Guinea Two Killed, Hundreds Injured as Police Are Caught in Middle RABAUL, New Guinea (UPD— A romantic pinch was the spark that touched off two days of tribal- Hold Psychiotry Course warfare in whi^ two persons were I “ rsytiiiuiry v.uur»e killed and hundreds injured. eye-|TOr Fomil/ DoctOrS witnesses reported today ' R^hniii n,in™ » , , KAl-AMAZOO (fft—The Michigan Rabaul police were forced to of Neurology and Psychi- T- ot the Beplk; ti4be who Rabat un the island of I tain, )^l<-h Is part of ritury of New Oulnea. ITiousands of Tola! natives marched on Rabaul Sunday. The Sepik tribe moved out to meet their enemies, and poUce were caught in between. Police were forced to open fire I save their lives when the war-painted natives, armed with axes, knives, bows and arrows, thieat-to overwhelm them. Burglafs Get $11,300 Striko in Kalamazoo in Loot From Store Composer Fox pies CHAWjOTTESVILLE, Va.riAP) —OscqrfJ.' Fox, 81, widely known composer and arranger, died Saturday. He was best known for his composition "The Hills of Home” and other Western and folksongs. He was horn in Burnet County. Tex. Cockroadies Written Guarantee Box Ex Company 1*14 CmKIm 84. Bk. BM(. FE S-4AM open fire on thousands of rioting natives Sunday after they were caught between two feuding tribes. ’Two natives were' killed. Eight policemen and six natives were hospitalized. ’The trouble started Haturday when a Sepik native pinched a Tolai woman. Hundreds Total natives clashed with members atry announced plans for a postgraduate course in psychiatry for general practicioners in the ^uth-western Michigan area. The nine-month course starts at Kalmazoo College Sept. 13 and is designed to leach the family doctor to cpfje with his patients’ psychiatric problems. One .session a huiu-tyhiuwi i month will be held until next May.lpleled by 1858, GRAND RAPIDS W - Burglars got away with $11,300 in cash, diamonds and other loot Saturday night in the second robbery in four months at a suburban wholesale store. Donald vHAnan, owner of the Don-Hat Wholesale Outlet. Inc., discovered the robbery Sunday. -Burglars broke through a boarded up back window and opened the store’s safe with torch, police said. They said all the loot—including watches, and cameras — apparently taken out in luggage from the' store. Police said the torch set off a tear-gas bomb but the burglars fan to blow off the fumes. KALAMAZeX) (UPI) A i tract settlement was reached day between the Southerland vision of the KVP-Southerland per Co. and Local 1010, United permakerg and f^perWorkersKUm ion AFLrClO. ^ * * * , * The new contract ends tW threat of a strike that was tentatively set by union m9mbers lo£ tonight, when the old contract ex* pires. Blue Ribbon Farms 11 Round Steaks Rib Steaks Sirloin Steaks T-Rone Steaks All Choice Center Cuts Smoked Ham Slices Peschke, Lean, Sugar Cured Sliced Bacon Pan Ready — Lake Fresh Smells 69\ 55i 19'. Etna Coffee Reg. or Drip 2-lb. Can oo* N«c«$»ory Food Club Flour 5-ib. '^Ac Neccuory I Salad Dressing . f 29 Hills Bros.—with coupon below COFFEE Piilsbury—with coupon below FLOUIt Mb. Can 5-lb. Bag 59- 39- IC Coupon Noeoiiory Food Club Evoporoted Canned Milk Velvet Homogenized Peanut Butter Food Club—Halves or Sliced—-Heavy Syrup Cling Peaches 4ct]“ 8 Tall I Cons I (joylord Unpeeled Whole—Heavy Syrup 159' Apricots Z: 4cir 0. " V - WRIGLKYS ; $AVI WITH THIS COUPON Hills Bros. Ilk Coffee 59' Limit One Per Customer -2-BXPIRtS $AT„ AU6. S 1 1=::^ WRIGLEYS SAVI WITH THIS COUPON Piilsbury Flour Limit One Per Customer' -J-■XPIRIS SAT., AU6. S 39‘ Michigan Fresh Sweet CORN RUTTER WRIGLIYS : Gaylord Mb. Print Prkts tHeefnt ftira Satorlar, Aofatf S. Ws rtsonrt tks rifkt fa limit foaarifiti. 2S EXTRA GOLD BEU STAMPS WlHi Parchoie of Any Pkf. Smoktd Ham Slicas -ir- axPiRis SAT., Aua. f WRIGLKYS 50 EXTRA Gold Bell Stamps 23SSS oxpiaos SAT, Aua. s ''gJ are by OondaotoJohna Funeral Moms. aoMn s. 90VAN LAPEER TOWNSHIP ^ Service tar John B. Oovan, H|, of KW Roods Lake Roed, will be at 3 p.ra. tomorrow at Trinity Methodist Church. Burial will be in Grand Lawn Cametery, DatroM. Mr. Govun died Saturday after a brief lUnaas, Hh body wiU be at JAMn L. MLLMOULAND Jamas L MlUbonand, SI. a ra-tirud employe of Fiaher Body Dt- both Into Avt. Surviving are hie wife LUllan, a eon Jemae Jr. of Pontiac; thm daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Towntt of Pontlae, Mrs. EUonwood Barron of Koogo Harbor and Mrs. Eddie Richardson of Birmingham " Ha was a member of Lapeer Ledgo No. SI, FAAM, for SO ytkh. end alao belongod to the Knights of Pythiaa. Survlvlat are hit wile Pearl and a brother, Daniel B. of Flint. EUGENE B. BOLM ORTCWVILLE - Service tor ki«w R. Holm, SO, of «S MU. wffl be at S pju. Wodiwiday at the C. F. Sharman Funeral Home with burial in OrtonviUe Cemetery. Service wiU be at 3:30 pm. Wedneeday at DeWItt C. Davie Funeral Honw. Burial wUl be in Commerce ■ABOLO E. BOLLUON Harold E. RoUiaon, 13, of 3S05 Ip. Mr. Ethier, who had been em-ployed by the City of Poqtiac on and off for a total of 11 . since 1826, was an urban renewal Bide at the time he went on eick leave in late May. * * He was city manager in Lake from 1960-57. His Job aa Elka Temple manege’, 1918.60, followed a two-year eUnt as area rent lU-rector for the Office of Rent Control, 1916-18. Born in Weatboro, Mess., Mr. Either was first employed by the city in 1926 ai a cleric in the engineering department. He left dty service in 1933 but returned as a temporary assistant asaesaor and was named to the urban renewal post on June 2, 1958. on arrival Mmvy HotoiUI Saturday. A aervicc trucker at Baldwin Rubber Go., he wee a member of St. Benedict CathoUe Church. hie widow, Thelma Rice RoUiaon, two daughters, EUen Kay and Linda, and a eon Randy, all at home; two slaters, Mn. Eari (Dorothy) Marks of Pontiac, Sister M. Ann Charles of Monroe, tad one brother, Archie of Otiif A rosary ,wfil be recited Tuesday at t p.m. at Purtley Funeral Home. The funeral will be Wed-, at 10 A.m. from St. Bcne-dtete Catholic Church with burial in Mt. Hope Cemeteiy. HARRY B. SMITH Harry H. Smith. 71. diad Saturday after a five-week iUnaee. He had been making his home with sister It 33 W. Longfellow St. urviving besides his aister, Mi Peter (Gnyce) Isaacs, ere daughter, Mn. Ndnhan (Mary) Window of Dreytcin Plains, four grandchildren and four grandchildren. Fhncral service will^be Tuesday at 1.30 p.m. from Pui^y l\meral Home with burial in Drayton Plains Cemetery. CARL S. VOYOANOFF Carl S- Voydanoff, long-time city |Art)uir of Warren; and four sis-restourant owner, died Saturday tere, Geraldine Neleon and Mn. at Woman's Hospital in Detroit Isabelle Pringk. both of Upror, SetatJ . Meu-| day at U e.m. from All Eptocopal Church for Mrs. rice W. (Martha A) Whitfield of 9615 Sylvan Sharae Or. Mra. fMd. sr. died Saturday at Poitiac Hospital following A member of AU Salnto Epiaeo-pal Church, abe belonged to GuUd 7 of bar church and the Round Ttola Ottb. Mra. Whltflaid'a Mrs. Edith Ooeksr of Pontiac, a SM Robert M. of OrtonviUe, a brothan. Curl, Arthar and Harry " of Big Rapids, and W MfS* Uijeqiui^ed Value8«»«End of Month... One of a Kind...Floor Samples, Etc. after a brief Ulneu. He wu 63. Owner of the Kitchenette, he made hto home at 128 W. Huron St. Surviving beaidea his wkkm Kar-amfila, are a daughter, Mn. Dimitri Laxaroff of Pontiac, Spec. 4 Samuel Voydanoff with the U.S. Army in Germany, three brothen, Avy, Steve and ^ danofti all of Pontiac, and two grandchildren. FoUowing funeral service Thurs-|R day at 1:30 p.m. from Sparks-1 Griffin Funeral Home, he w 1111 be buried in Perry Mt. Park Cem-1 etery. MRS. MAURICE W. WHITFIELD | F\ineral service wUl be Tues-1 Mrs. Lois Muxlow of Imlay City and Mrs. Virginia Renberg of Garden City. ... tot every service that la re(]ulred. We mean this sincerely. The faciUtles of the Donel-aon-Johns Funeral Hesne plannM to see that your personal dul^ as well as our services, are csompletely properly and In good jtaste. ^ Our staff stand ready to render every assistance. Place your con-fidenee In our organlutlon In your hour of sorrow. You wUl be pleased with our every service. FEDERAL 4-4S11 m Eiiimiii;-, AUTOMATIC WASHER Fully Deluxe with ''SUDS SAVER” and Only *198 with trade NO MONEY DOWN Installed—delivered and 1 year free service plus 5 yr. warranty. ^ DAYS SAME as CASH Cholee of 30" or 36" GAS RANGE INSTALUD *98 Speed Queen DRYER 1 o>i« 178 Surviving are hk wife Osrric; a » Sidney of Tamps, FIs.; dsugfatar, Sharon, at home; tour ■nn---------TT Deluxe 30” KELVINATOR ELECTRIC RANGE With thermostatic burner, automatic timer, full width oven, one only —l|ike new. 148 3 Days Only NO MONEY UOim Free Delivery Ftee 90 Day Service *210‘ EDDY A MARTIN COMMERCE T0WNSHIP-6crv-ke tor Eddy A Martin, 83. of 1804 Luneta. Court, will be at 10 s.ra. Wsdnaaday at St. WllUsms' Cathoik Church. WsUed Lake. Burial will be in St. Mary’s Cemetery, Milford. Mr. Martin died yesterday at h me after a thrie-year il wu an Army veteran of World War 1. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Riebardaon-Bird Funeral Home, WaUad Lake. are his wife, Marie; Richard of Berkley, I Donald of Pontiac, Robert at home I and' Ronald of Brighton; three I daughters, Mrs. Ivan Reynblds of San Diego, CSlil., Mrs. Richard Beagle of WaUed Lake and Mra. Roy Smith of Pontiac; two aiatera and fifteen grandchildren. HOWARD J. PARKS LAPEER — Service (or Howard . Pirks, 37, of 9474 Metamora «sd, will be at 3 p.m. tomorrow t Hunter’s (>iek Community Church. Burial will be In Novasta Cemetery, Cass Qty. Mr Parks diad yesterday at his repdenoe following a heart attack. Hla body ia st the Muir Brottera Funeral' Home. Surviviiig besides his wife Mar j^rle are two eou, Howard Jr. and Grant; a daughter, Chaima Lyon; a atepdiughter, Chnyl Jean, all at home; hit mother, Mra. Beatrice Nelson of Lapeer; tWd! brothers Douglu of Rochester and FlUGIDAIRE LATE MODEL REFRIGERATOR *138 With top freexer, automatic deffost, slide out shelves, one only, like new. ”8” Transistor DORMEYER^ RADIO With Case and Earphones *2195 Pop Up S1Q98 Toaster -L STEREO and FM/AM RADIO Automatic 4 Speed Record Player and Only *128 □ HOUSEKEEPING of PONTIAC FE 4-1555 SP Gat CompiRtR Htofinf Sotitfoction Plus RED HOLDEN TRADING STAMPS Keep Him Safe, Comfortable ... Order New Mobilhedt Fuel Oil from GEE Today! There is no sofer fuel then oil ond no finer oil then is delivered lOj ypu in GEE'a new, modern, meter equipped, GMC trucks . . . Right now when LOW SUMMER PRICES ere in effect is the time to piece your order for this better quelity, c teener burning fuel oil. A full tank of fuel oil during the hot summer weather eliminetea ruat end corrosion in your fuel tanks end with GEE't DEPENDABLE AUTOMATIC SERVICE you ere ossured of always having plenty of New Mebiiheet when you noed It os our "Degree Doy" system is automatic so that your oil is replenished oven before your present supply is used. GEE'S Convenient Budget Plon eliminates costly fuel bills during the coldest weother ... Get complete Hooting sotiifoction next Winter . . . Order your fuel oil today . . Dial FE 5-B181. NOfUTTER WHERE YOU LIVE . . . Gee's New, modcm.^GMC trucks, meter equipped for accuracy, distributes New Mebiiheet fuel Oil in Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Waterford, Clerkston, Orion, Auburn Heights, Bldomfield Hills, Keege Harbor ond the surrounding oreo ... So, no mottor where* you live, you toe, con enjoy complete hooting sotisfoction next Winter. "IF YOU DONT KNOW FUEL ... KNOW YOUR FUEL DEALER!" Pontiec's Largest, Independent Home Ox^ned Mobilheat Distributor O0 0» t» VVEST MOW PINEROLO, Italy (AP)-Mario Gendaritt waa none too pleased today alter a Jury of pretty girls chose him "Mr. Brutto 1961" in an annual- competition at the vii-lage of Luserana San Giovanni. Brutto means ugiy and the contest chooses the town's ugliest man. Gendaiin, 36, a carpenter, said "I knew I wasn't handsome, but 1 didn't think I waa that ugly.’ TIIK PONTIAC PRKSS. MONDAY. JULY 31, 1901 N JoroMafjump in Detroit Area Thotcktr, Pattaraon and Wernct INSURANCE Board of ^NMMWorce Believes 4lh Quarter Will Be Best of Year DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Board of Commerce anticipates improvement in business in Motor City area in the fouHh quarter of 1961. I The quarter should be the best economically of the year, U board said in its weekly public [tion, the Detroiter. ' It said a eombinkttun conMim er plans to parchase new car* and a slgnillcant Improvement in national et-onomy Would be behind the rise. The board said ^troit production workers now average 40.7 hour* of work a week, better than the national average of 40:i.*Lasl February the Detroit average was 39.0 hours. * * ★ But the Detroiter notes that employment remains a problem in t r o i t. During the first six months of this year unemployment in Detroit averaged 12.7 per cent of the labor force, double what it was in the first six months of I960. Insurance statisticians say thatl of ^he 7..300 deaths from fires andl other bums, in the United States each year, aboiit 5,700 — or near-lly four-fifths — occur in the home.! Sight of Jazz Mess Brings Site Change BEAULIEU, England lAPi — Lord Montagu of Beaulieu, the heppest noble in the realm, hadly enounced today he is abandoning his annual jazz festivals in the crumbling ruins of the local abbey. He is afraid the village of Beaulieu. population 1,000, will end up in ruins, too. Montagu made his decision after surveying the splintered win-'dows and trampled flower beds festival. tlie wake of this year’s ~r , isprawled with their girls on the roadsides. | I "It was sickjpning,” jMontagu declared. * I There were riots last year. too. I “It has become increasingly ap- ?jv iparent." said Montagu, “tha't * 'thd’re is a large crowd of irre-' sponsible persons who come to Beaulieu with no other intention „ than to cause trouble." It wasn't the fault of the genuine jazz fans, he said. Montagu hired a special corps of tough cops from the local About 4,000 jazz-lovers—traditional, modem and mainstream— ‘““S'* cup* num me mvai wh-jammed into this quiet comer of »‘“bulary to help keep order. Hampshire Saturday for the two- a local boxing club day blow. About 5,000 gatecrash- and ju-jitsu exponents from Gamers with no entrance money bridge University also stood moved into the town also and pard to throw out gate crashers, nearly wrecked the joint. Montagu said he wasn't giving They trod on cottage gardens, up the idea of holding a festival smashed windows, dashed with|in some other place. But not in paying patrons, got drunk and Beaulieu. He owns the place. "SUPER-RIGHT" FULLY COOKED HAMS WHOLE OR HALF LB. No Center Slices Removed 10 to 12-Lb. Sizes 59 "SUPER-RIGHT" FAMOUS QUALITY m ^ Pork Tenderloins 07< BEEF RIB ROASTS l55«- "-59c«. "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY | Cube Steaks "SUPER-RIGHT" Chip Steaks. LB. LB. 89< 95« "SUPER-RIGHT" Rib Steaks. — 69c AAP BRAND—WHOLE, UNPEELED Apricots 4 LADY BETTY ’ Prune Juice DANDY BRAND—WHOLE, SWEET Pickles JANE PARKER—SAVE 20c Cherry Pie JANE PARKER—SAVE 10c Angel Food TOM THUMB, FROZEN BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY Meat Pies 6' MORTON’S FROZE..'-MACARONI AND Cheese Dimer' 89( 39< 39< 39c 39< f |.00 35c DOZEN EARS SUNNYBROOK Medium Size Fresh E^gs ”'39* SILVERBROOK FINE QUALITY BUTTER 1-LB. PRINT 65' II pricas in this ad effective thru Tuesday, Aug. 1 in oil Eastern Michigon A&P Supe> Markets tat CMAt AuAwtic t fACinc Tt* cOMeANT. ihc. llett STORE MIRACLE MILE Month-End BIG SHOE BARGAINS Ladies' Ladies’ iNaluralizers American High heeU, mid heels, Girl Dress Shoes and and Wedgies. Reg. lo $'14.99 syoo Casuals Reg. to $10.99 $^00 I ■ Reg. lo $6.99 Ladies’ Rusken 1 Summer Sandals .... $^00 1 Reg. to $9.9.') Ladies’ 1 Italian Flats $^00 Reg. to $12.93 .Men’s $^00 jl Oxfords and Loafers.. Famous Brand Famous Brand Children’s Children's Canvas Shoe’s Oxfords Reinforced toe. Blue Keg. to $7.99 or red. ^ Regular $3.49 . SJOO All THRU THE STORE ENTIRE STOCK Ladies’, Men’s, (Jirls’ and Boys’ Swim Suits NOW 40> off Boys’ “BHIy the Kid ” Boxer Jeans Regular $1.98 99^ Keg. lo $3.‘)S ladies* Blouses. Reg. .$7.98 l.adieK* (Motion Slacks... S^99 l,adies' (Cotton I)r(\ss«‘s Reg. $19.98. .-$11.99 Reg. $17.98. $10.99 Reg. $14.98. $ 8.99 Reg. $12.98 $ 7.99 Reg. $11.98. $ 7.99 Reg. $10.98 .$ 6.99 I’re-Teen Sportswear Regular $049 $;{.98 ... ^ Regular $099 „$4.98 . . ^ Regular $^^99 $6.98 ... O Reg. lo $1.98 (Jirls’ (Rollon SlutrtH. Reg. $4.98 Men’s Vi asli flacks.. 88‘ $2^9 Men’s Famous Name Men’s Short Sleeve Wash ’n’ Wear Sport Shirts Suits Reg. (o $8.95 Reg. to $45 $2^9 *29 Use a iLion Charge iSn I.£ T^B PONyiA^C PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 31, 1961 Market &iges Up Cautiously Ite faOowtaK m eovcring ntai of locally frown prodoot bar gw>wm «d mU by NEW YORK (A-llw a ket ataxled out the new week on- Ufber in nnodernte caily tndInK. ever, and there wu Uttie initial recemblance to the rapidly «*------------------------ vanctaf market o( the latter of last week. Weekend neas provi(M little impetut for^ MARKETS Wheat, Rye Climb; lOther Grains Weak o younssten wm reported to fair condition today at Pontiac boa-pMale with tojuriee Buffered in V|>-arate tralOc accidents over th Detroit Product CHICAGO )to>Wheat and lye fu-tree were in good demand today on the Board of Trade and moved up major fractionB to m a cent • buahel. Other graine and aoybeana were weak. Brokers said the sup wheat appeared to include ht least a moderate volume of investment Gordon Hermaneon, 7-yeuvold ■on of Rev. and Mrs. Robert P. Hermaneon, 1405 Adame Rond, in Avon Thwiwhip, ame hit by a c«r Saturday In front of his home. He was taken to Pontiac Genanl Hoe> pital with comiwund fractures of the lett'arm. a fresh advance, although, on the other hand, there aleo farther diiturbtng fordgn news to steels, sircrall-miasiles. Motors were moedy higher Ford and Chryrier added to recent gains, but General Motora eased a bit. Utilities, metals. chemicalB. oils and rails were mixed. ■inatin UgM ft Fewer, up aieaad t poMe, wra we ef the feW lanee ehangtag by a p4M ar moreL Anaartean Telephwa Bethlehem Sted also ww about unchanged, but U. S. Sted steady and' Jones ft Laughlin ftwc-tionally high«-. The defenee-rdat-ed aircraft-missile group moved vigor apparently pretty wdl exhausted. Gains in airlines stoo were mostly in fractions, but tfaeae wise, since most are low-priced American. Eastern and United Air Lines all were up. SanU Fe, BftO and Illinois Otoi-tral were up among rails « tbdr gains were matched by alight losses for the Pennsy, CftO and Soothern Padfic. Americui Stock Exchange pcicea were irreguUr^ Sherwto-WUliama fdl more thim a point, while An-ken Cbemknl, CataUn and Loral alio were lower. Higher were General Plywood, Cenoo. Edo. New England Telephone and Pdorad Electranica. which nudged prices along rapidly in the absence of significant hedge selling. More rainfall over the weekend was understood to have prolonged the delayed harvest east of the Mississippi River. But it was a little bearish in the cm and soybean trade. 2 Cubans Quit Castro's Team Refuse to Go Back With Eight Others on Tractor Team MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - A major turnout of Miami's C\iban colony was expected today when eight the 10 prisoner-negotiators board a Pan American plane return to Fidel Castro's prisons. Two members of the tractor-prisomr team sent to this country by Castro decided not to return. DOW-MNSS It M. » iBdf 1M.M M •. M Ualli IMJt off O.N If UUU. I1I.N ap O.M New York Stocks Stocks of Area Interest Am CtM . M 7 iBt ropor ^ to tor MA lot Shat now. .as lot Slim Am Many M 4 nt T»l a ‘ Am Met a . M.I Jotuu Map i:pi““: 51 iSSyU Am Tturrti iM.t w— f-T*......H. a. gsrswr Ss k M.1 Uk M< a L u.s y ai . MX Uekb Aire . . . «e.1 ACF-Wrlfley Storei. tnc. . ,,--------‘‘22m..Oa.C S1 Curtlu-Wrlcht Carp. .. Irma Brae. l*LGla*C Barroaclu Aaaar^ W Maat Ward .. MJ M.S Mat WhMl ... 14 . SI.S Matarola .....M.< It.) Mum; Cp ... M.I t* , —») ... j,, . »t.4 NM Mm . Mlchltan Seamliu Tube Co... PItacer Ptnaoce .. ..... Sbanerprool Olau Carp........ Taylor Plbrt................. Itex Dms . M l B«y Met .17 4 Kap Tab U S Ro;al Dot . 7t Safavay S. .. U.7 SMrt Roab .. M.7 IN Shall OU S saiclalr .. 4S.1 Soeany 41.4 aauUi Pac M 4 SOU Ry nparry Rd ... M.) Std Brand ... dlX 8U OU Cal MS OU lad Btd OU NJ > TeiaTal .. U ' Oarbar Prod’47' Maatna, JP . Mad-Pack .. Salft a Co .. Tan doe ... Taxaco .... Tex O Sal . Goodrich .... Oaodytar '___ Qrata Pain . Ot A a“ .. Ot He Ry .. Hx Tbomp nW'.'! j.l Tranaasier ... 52 Twaoty Caa. .. tTnMamwfh«bai~ Bowe iBd S5.4 toe ts.s mut Air u M UUt Aire 4t.S Unit Pralt » Uo Oaacp Bax Meb ... IbI Barr ... II .5 Van Raal lat Hick .. .MX Walfrm .. - M a u us Rak ...... US Steel .... Upiotan . Kiev . U|b Si m -JS 114.4 MX m.1 ml tux JU-I mx mi im'^ tux lU.t lllj 1U.4 M4X mx 1U.7 M MX MX MX MX Name Jamel F. Nye Head of Dairy Gjuncil Junes r. Nye of Nye Dairy, S8S Jsbiend, ww named president of dM Dairy Council of Detroit at ks recent amniai meeting. Dairy council members Include Donald Keppel of Dixie Dairy and D. Richardson of Richardson Farms Daily. Ocean Oly. lid., becomes Uie tooond largest dty to Matytanl toting the euinmer. The poputor ' Atlantic resort’s permanent pop-ftathsi of M5 stPdb to 125,000 on imeJuly Businessman Killed as Plane Crashes BARRYTON rUPU - A South Haven businessman was killed today Tvhen the single-engine plane he was flying crashed into a hay-fle^d in northeastern Mecosta Coun. ty. The flier was identified f papers he carried as Harold L. Stone Jr., 39, a partner with his father in stones' Meat Packing Co. in South Haven. Airport officials at South Haven said Stone was apparently way back to South Haven after spending the weekend with his fnmlly at a cottage near Gaylord in Otsego County. Gov. kainson Fills 2 Vacant Judgeships LANSING (to-Gov. STvainson today announced appointments to two vacant Judgships in Detroit. Jamea Meatatoe, gg, of Detroit, Onuty CtrcRtt OMut, aai Ar-ttnr J. KfMctaMkl. to. to too Detroit Recorders Court Montuite, preddent of the State Bar Association, arill succeed the late Judge Frank Fitigerald. Kot-cinsld, who was elected to the Detroit Common Pleas Court April 3. will succeed the late Ju^ George Murphy. Koscindd was to have taken office next Jan. 1. Chartea S. Farmer of Detroit wiU be appointed to the Opmmon pleas Coim poet. Swaia- Ealdmoa live in ------ only while on the tralL Onitoarily they live in homes of Youngsters Hurt in Separate ' Auto Accidents ifenee family fallout ahel-kU wet ac far as a . Avon Township mother of two is . Mto Mrs. toMk B. I paaeeuger la hie lallMr*e oar Now that President Kennedy has put the nadonal spotlight on them, " I. Wlhlam Maler, 3030 Wood-craat St. says hen makes a be a shelter. Adame |toad totenectfea to Avmi The boy suffered contusions %f the right kidney, and is at Joaeph Mercy Hoeptial. The driver ot the other car, belt G. Kozlowrid, AS. of Warren and HiU, 30, both tolf sherlfTa deputies that the other had run through a red light. Neither driver svas ticketed. The Heimanaon boy was atrudi by a car driven by William L. Mol-45, of 1495 Dorchester Road, Birmingham. Mullen told deputies he swerved in an effort to avoid the boy when he stepped intoithe street but was In written oomplsints to Pres-dent Kennedy and Congressman William S. Broomfield, R-Oakland County, Mra. Maier says her coin rugated metal shelter was chased for H.300 and installed underground last faU, only to start leaktog at the seams with the spring thaw in February. eris aboto g feet deep the abcifor womU be BM ia event of a eIvU defei Mfder says. Wlgit gripes Mrs. Maier ia that the Office of Civil and Defense Mobiliution (OCDM) in Battle Oeek tdd her that the design of the shelter met federal standards. unsuccessful. I s not held. Britain to Seek Drop in Tariffs "We bought the shelter frith confidence in the federal government's assurances,, then discovered later that there was no provision for federal inspection of our particular shelter or help in getting it to work right,’’ she said. Planning to Espouse Common Market Plan on Certain Conditions LONDON (AP)-Prirne Minfs-ter Harold Macmillan apnounced today Britain trill apply for membership in the European Common Market. ners in the British Oommon- wealth. "Tb enter these negotiations, is necessary to, make formal application to join—although the ultimate decisioti must depend on Other Cuban exiles, fearing prisala trould be taken against J-^jthe nearly 1.200 prisoners Castro ixt captured during the April 17 In-i:m vasion, volunteered to take the I# places of Reinaldo Pico, 27, and Mirto Collaxo. 26. 'Their offers were refused. OBJECT OF SEARCH u . u .u u . Pico was the object of a five- . Pico returned later, however, and explained he had ‘‘gone out for a walk.” He was questioned briefly by an FBI man and Miami detectives. Collazo was (eported to have left his hiding place in a Miami suburb and gone to Tampa. He said he planned to go from there to Washington. The Miami Herald retorted it learned the Central IntelUgence Agency has quit paying some 1,300 Cuban exiles of the anti-Oastro military corps who sur-viVe^ the April Invasion. ‘The exile troops, according to Marshall Wise, director of the' Cuban Refugee Emergency Center, become eligible for monthly “No agreement wiU be entered ^ded they apply. Other Cuban it has been approved refugees receive the welfare pay- ,he house after full consulta-Ition with other commonwealth * * * countries,’’ he said. Wise said each man would be given $100 to carry him August and ' that checks will come from the Department Health, Education and Welfare. The prisoner negotiating team returning to Cuba today had arrived in Florida at almost the same time the ‘Tractors-for-Free-dom committee announced In Detroit it was disbanding. ‘The prisoner team then formed a tractors committee headed by a group of wealthy Cuban exiles and announced efforts would continue out of their office in Ml^^ IT STILL LEAKS Mrs. Maier said that the local firm that installed the shelter tried to stop the leaks on three different occasions, tbq... last time in April.^ But the water stijlromes in. Broomfield saklK^ office and Kennedy’s have turned over Mrs. Maier’s problem to OCDM headquarters and added that he has called for an Im^estigatioh afnjd a report this week. * The case indicates there may be need for some type of inspection in the fallout shelter program, he said. Writing Broomfield. Mrs. Maier said, "We are completely disgusted. Our government advocates the public obtain shelters, then they are not willing to help anyone that purchases a shelter which they recommend. l guess our family must go unprotected." explained. ‘These negotiations must evitably be of' a detailed and technical charader. ‘They may therefore be protracted and there can of course be no guarantee of Macmillan added that when the negotiations have been concluded it wfll be the duty of the government to recommend to the house what course we shall pursue. ‘The Common Marfce,t, founded by the ‘Treaty of Rome in 1957, as its goal the erection of a common tariff wall against outside imports which threatens British trade with a parge part of the Continent. It reduces tariffs among members. I raise funds for tractors. Congo Rivals Slated to Meet Kasavuba and Tshombe Prepare for Talks on Opposite Banks of River MRS. ZIMMERMAN ROSS WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP Service for Mrs Zimmerman (Vesta) Ross, 92. of 8025 30-Mile Road, will be at ^ p.m. tomorrow at Roth’s Home for Funerals. Burial will be In Romeo Cemetery. Mrs. Ross died Saturday Martha T, Berry Hospital after a long illness. Surviving are two daughters, Mirs. Bernice Inwood of Washington Township and Mrs. Aileene Anderson of Detroit; a son Byard ot Seattle, Wash.; nine grandchildren and nlng great-grandchildren. LEOPOLDVILLE, The Cbngo (UPD—Central Congolese President Joaeph Kasavubu and Katanga President Moise Tshombe sat on opporite banks of the muddy Congo River today preparing talks that could solve the Congo dilem- bere la the eeatial goveraneat capital or acrow the river la Brassaville, trhere TsbeiBbe is Tkhombe’t arrival in Sunday raised hopes the two lead-ders would reach an agret that would bring Katangeae gates to the Congolese pariiament, now meeting at Lov^um University. Tshombe indicated to newsmen Sunday be might come here. But previously - he had insisted in a Congo summit meeting outside the Tomatoes are the number one truck crop .in the United States. Value of the tomato harvest in 1960 was S250 million, nearly double that of the second-place crop, lettuce. Death Notices MR8. JOHN WATZ LUM — Service for Mrs. John (Gara Mae) Watz. 62, of 5142 Lum Road, will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Lum Methodist Church. Burial will be in the Lum Cemetery. Mrs. Watz died Saturday at her home after an extended illness. Her body will be at her residence until tomorrow at 1 p.m. at Brothers Funeral Home, Imlay Gty, to her hohie yesterday afternoon. Surviving beeidea her husband are six sons. Jack Winfred, Basil, Jimmy and Dal4 sU of Lum, and Glenn of Kalamazoo; two brothers; a sister; 13 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Fallout Shelter Produces Blast Avon Tovirnship Mothor WritM to Konnody About Loaky Building D7.AMMMVXJ < Jaycee Park is located next to rleasant ttiage S the Malklm school playground at Tax Equalization Appeal Is Denied It's Willman to Rovirston* as Night Baseball Debuts A Michigan State TlniversRy laebaD star will pitch to a Pontiac Central High School basketblil to officially open, up Jaycee Park to nighttime hardbell garnet Trill meet the ,UAW Local S04 team regular city league game, Will- aty {Manager Walter K. urn. whose regular poeitkxi wax in the left firid In his college days, Trill take to the mound during dedicatory certnwnies beginning at the field at 8 p.m. Behind the pUte Mayor PhUlp E. Rowston Trill be rea^ to the- opening pitch. Afterwards, the Joy Boy Jets lighted hardball field la Pontlao. The ligbbi, erected by the city at a cori of around fM.MO, lint Brief talks by Willman and Row-Btdn will preceed the opening pitch. David R. Ewalt, director ot parks and recreation, ^11 act as master of ceremonies, intro^dng city commiisioners and honored guests from organizations that have donated funds for, improvements at the field. the southwest comer of Joslyn Avenue and Walton Boulevard northeast Pontiac. The l^ate Tax Commission has found Pleasant Ridge’s appeal of its 1961 Tax equalization factor 'Trithout foundation in fact" and has denied the appeal made by the city. William B. Grabendike, director o^ the county’,s equalization de-pulment, said the denial of the appeal made in May uneans gov- mer schod taxes can now proceed. The appeal, while pending, had prevented this, he said. Pleasant Ridge Supervisor Ar- News in Brief Three watches valued fit IIM were stolen in a burglary of Man-dalari’s Market. 402 Central St., it was reported to Pontiac police Saturday. An undetermined a m change from a cigarette machine emmental tmits which levy sum- was stolen in a burglary of John McAuliffe Ford Inc., U was reported to Pontiac pdice Sunday. Theft of tm worth of fishing gear from a boathouse at 1071 thur G. EUiott Jr. protested that'Lake Angelus Road. Pontiac the city’s $13.4 million base, up'Township, was reported to sher-S1.5 million over its previous' ill’s deputies yesterday by Bill equalization, was "grossly inade-i Brown. . quate and erroneous.” i _________________ A sampling of 53 property sales I , ^ i j In the dty by the county equallza- Lodge Calendar tion staff showed the property was Mses^lS^r White Shrine Picnic - Pontiac assessed 15 per cent higher than its 22 .^^ gj Annual trvie or market value, Elhott al-i family picnic, H. W. Reaves’hwne. leged. 30ae teott Lake Rd., August 3. 6:30 Grabendike said the tax com-|F-M. Bring own Uble service xnd property before arriving at the McCurdy, Scribe, rej^ion of the appeal. ------- If you have s "Jiuiior" miss qr mister ia your home, then this information it for yen. Right now it the time to prepare for hit education .... hit future -----with Modem Woodmeo's special plaa for boys and girls. Do you know that for twly •8.40 per year (if your child it under 9) you can obtain |3AK> life intunace. Rstce art slightly higher at older ages. Polio benefiii art iadudtd at no extra cost. Fuiutct are mede in the ptetent. Plan for your ddlire NOV. Cell or write about Modem Woodmen Junior Insurance—it could well be one of the sKct important things you've ever done! MODERN WOODMEN op AHIMCA Hone Office, RockfoUnd. lU. M. E. DANIELS fDisirici Manoper) 563 W. Huron $2. M 3-7111 Rescue Two From Raft Adrift in Lake Superior Kennedy Hails Labor Relations at Missile Bases ROCK HARBOR im - The Ferry Ranger III answered a radio distress call and rescued two men from a life raft in Lake Superior Sunday after their 20-foot cruiser develop^ a leak and overturned. - The pair. Charles Ahlstrom of i Houghton and David Nelson McChngie, Pa. to spend on Royale irt Lake Superior when they discovered the/leak. CAPE CANAVERAL (ft-President Kennedy today praised a new era of labor relations at the natioh’s missile and space base sites. Arthur J. fkildberg. secretary of labor, made Kennedy's mes-_ public at this first stop on the secretary’s quick two-day inspection tour of the labor situation at major missiles-space installa- STATS or UlCHIOAN IN .THE PRO-i -lie Court for the Count; of Ouklund. t Jumllt OlTldoB. I In tli« matter of the petition concern-i If Wend; and Marcella W a r m a n, (nora. Caute Ho. 11203. To Kenneth and Helen Warman, par-ite of eald minor children. retlUou haring been tiled In this Court Hefint that the present whereabouts of le panota of aatd minor children are aknown and said children are depend- Goldberg, accompanied by industry and labor union members of the Missile Sites Labor (fommis^ skm, next will visit Strategic Air Cbmmand headquarters at Omaha. The party then will go to Vander-berg Base in Chlifornia and finally, to Mountain Home Base, New Hotel in NYC Opening Its Doors Pa., were on their way two-weeje camping trip le State jurUdlctlon ot this Court. In the name of tlie people of .... . r MIchlean. ;ou aile hereb; notUled le hearine on laid pefnion will be ncid I the Oakland County Sendee Center, ourt Houm Annex. 13S0B West Bird.. I the City ot Pontiac In said Count;, s the 10th ------- * »' — da; M Au^st re hereb; coumended t mail; at eald hearlnp It betas Impractical A.D IMl. I appear per- pertonal b; publication of a cop; - •, ujd heerlng In newspaper printed e Donald E. In the Clt; me 2ttb da; jtirir A A-A-'A New 7-Foot Vocuum Cleoner Hoto Braidtoi Cloth, All Rubber (so pJaslic or viujrl) Fully Guorontftftd Attachments L Included $1.25 Week Fiee Rome Demoiubitioii OR 4-1101 Within 25 Mile Radius CUR-rS APPLIANCES FacUr; AiUierlaed TThlle Dealer NSW LOCATION 6481 HATCHIRY RD. OR 4-1101 TTeel ea M-M to Airport Sd., North to Hatoker; Tara Weal t Btoeki ea UatokerT Rd. ____________Opea Meada; and Frida; -Ml S>.M.______________ Jul; 21. 15611 NEW YORK (AP)-Thc Summit Hotel, first major hotel built in New York in 30 years, opens its doors today. The* 825-million, 800-room, 21-story structure on Lexington Ave. and 51st St. la oTvned by .Loew’s Hotels, Inc., and Is described as the hotel of the future. Room service trill be in operation 24 hours a day. Guests will be registered in advance to avoid delays in room assignments. Rooms also will have small refrigerators. A 250-car garage is under the hotel. After parking their cars there, patrons Trill be whisked into the lobby in elevators. Rates range from $183 a day for the four-room presidential suite to AOVERTUBMENT FOR The Boerd of Education of_____ ield Hllli School Dletrlct No. 2 of tnc Clt; of Bloomfield RIUs.. Mtchlfan. will receive bide on the materlaU, labor and related Iteme for landscape —•* provement work at the Bat____ ______ Addition, Weetriew Road. Bloomfield "llle, Mlchltan, unUl S:00 o'clock p.m - 8.T.. Tueeda;, August 22. IMl. at tit office of the Board of Education, field RllU School Dtetrict No. 2; Anoovrr at Wait Lons Lake Roade, Bloomfield Hllli. Michigan. -----lorn Laird. SS5 HenrieUa Btreet, Birmingham. Mlchl^,^ and^ ma;_ be^obtotned^ The Board of Education of the Bloomfield Rills school Dletrlct No. 2, Bloom-”■"* Michigan, rrMrres the right u; or aU bids and to waive Wever Troop Members Preparing for Trip LORNE D. WEAVER ORION TOWNSHIP-Service for Lome D. Weaver. 80, of 864 Orion Road, Trill be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Voorheea-Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Perry Mount Parte Cemetery, Pontiac. ' Mr. Weaver died yesterday at Pontiac General Hospital after an illness of three Tveeks. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Tad Topa and Mrs. Leonard Cole, both of Pontiac, iM Mrs. Mark Schott ot Salvaota. Fla.; two sons, James of Pontiac and Lome W. of Lake Orton; a brother; nine grandchildren and two gre grandchildren. Eleven members of Wever School Boy Scout Troop 29 camped over the weekend in the Wildvrood Lakes region of Holly Area State Park, in preparation for a five-day camping trip Aug. 9-13 in the Qrayling area Larry Gray, 1495 Carlisle Ave. a Tenderfoot, reported that the troop left Pontiac Saturday mom-under the aupervtsion James |C. Hayes, sssistsnt se mssteri I returaing Sunday afternoon. Donald Maher, scoutmaster, and other soouters Trill Join the troop in its G^ityting campout. 1 forms of contruet documente. RUG ClIUNER RND FLOOR CONDnONER complete with all these valuable accessories • 2 Rug ClMmlng-folishing of thllt; (20) do;s subnoduen ening of the bids without the .f the Board of Education, Bluo Rule School DUtrlct No. 2. Clt; Clt; of Bloomflild Hllle. Michigan. recelvt bide on the raatoriale. labor and related Iteme for landecape —-provement work at the Pine Addition. 3323 W Route 2. Orchard_______________,—. ------- S:00 o'clock p.m.. S.8.T.. Tueeda;, August 22. IMI. -• ------- •*— Lake School .xmg Lake Road, ^ Michigan, until _____^.T.. Tueeda;, Au- . ... ..... — tba office of the Board .. Edueatlon. Bloomfield Hllli School Dletrlct No. 1 Andover at West Long Lake Roade, noomfleld RUU. Michigan. “'rapoaod forme of contract documents, ludtng plans and ipeciricatloni, are file at tba office ot Wltoox and Laird, HenrieUa Btraet. Blrmlaghan. Mlcht-I, and ba; be obtained b; depoiltlng ___doDtore (310.001 with the ottlee of Wilooi and Laird tor each sot of documents to obtain^. The Board of Hueatlon ot the Bloen-UeU RIUi Beheel Ototriet No. 1, S ftoU HlUe, Mtahtoah. roeorvee the to rolect an; er^all bids and U au InfonnaUtlee In Mddtng. No blda than ba withdrawn ------ of thirt; 1201 da;e —^ — ------- rlthnirtiM oon- ard ot Bducatten. Btoom-lol DUtrlct He. ). Clt; ot Working Copitol Awoilobit for Your Butinott ' (MFE4.1S22 SIMKFT INVCSTMENT CO. illVoiiFloorsIliilonuUI) CLEAR, BRIGHT, BEAUTIFUL! AU-NEI aadTTl^ CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY 128 Wtsf Lowiwncc Sf. FE 3-7812 A For Home* 49 4 New Model Homes RED BARN ■DBoinSION No Money Down (Jiift uoftm* COM) The Orion Star The»House of Ease } BMroomt — Fm* Brick ...... - Free Cupctlag SclMt 0«k rioon Tha Expandable 4 BMlnomi — Fan BMMint ou Heat — Blreb Cablncti Urn Wolk-ln Oowti Ju«t Wut of M-S4 on TXBLIN behind Albnn‘0 Country Cousin bstwsen Uko Orion nnd Oslord. DORRIS BXCLUBIVB FIONtIB HIOHLANOe. Bouutltul buH brick mnoh boms with ] bedrooms, both nnd extrs ment, 1 enr turuis, new esrpsUng, over Sf.fM In bullt-lns In kitchen. Consider offer. 3 BEDROOM RANCH, tl(.tM. S4Vbstf\b on feuo' dstlon. fuU bnsement, built 1»U. both nnd n bnlf, wonderful kitchen with built-onk floors, plastered s, block top street, prlv-- “ beautiful Utus l“.*ils.'?i nr.' BDNOALOW BBAtnU'Oti Ill.tOO FHA. uncoin ana Winer school district, well LAKBPROMT SU.Sn. 133 feet on Uke, good beach, living room 17x34 with besm ceilings and glass towards lake. Panoramic . fireplaces. • other OI SPECIAL $10,400. 30x14. on foundation, full basement. oil bent, oak floors, Joslyn*®*^’ ‘®**‘*'* New Office 2536 DIXIE HVVY. DORRIS AND SON REALTORS 8410 Dixie Hwy._______OR 4-0334 CHEROKEE HILLS 3 BEDROOMS 2 FULL BATHS THIS NEW ROME IS LOCATED IN on exclusive west side neighborhood. 4 minutes from downtown, —■------■•iratnum siding, 3 bed- (entu'rlng slum bTt£!«.s__________ ntlon room, gas hot select oak floors — beat, 114.000 . ____________phone week-ends PE 44744 Must sacrifice. SEMI-FINISHED WE HAVE 4 NEW ROMES THAT TOD CAN FINISH AND SATE MONET. WE WILL TORNI8H MATERIALS IF TOD LIEE WE HAVE SOME flHISRED HOMES READT TO MOVE IN. WE WILL BDILD ON TODR LOT WITH NO MONET DOWN, A. C. Compton & Sons 4000 W. HURON OR 3-7414 After 4 p.m OR 3-444$. PE 3-7044 $100 DOWN LEASE OPTION. $40 MONTH. PULL PRICE. $S.040. MODERN. 3 BEDROOMS.^ LOTS. NEAR MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE. ALSO NEW 3-BEDROOM UNFINISHED bouse with 1 ACRE LAND. NEAR D R A T T O N PLAINS. $340 DOWN, 4W.M MONTH. c A. C. Compton & Sons 4000 W. HURON. OR 3-7414 After 4 p.m. OR 3-4440, PE 3-7040 HIITER SENECA ST. Vacant, move right In, I roomt. Alum, siding, $0,-300, terms. ment, modem, will trade, only 47,440. Coll PE 4-3004. B. C. Hitter. Real Estate, 3000 Ellssbeth Uke Rd. OPEN BDNDAT- KENT this 7 rm.,bomi fumsMs Nice n safe beWh. 3 i WEST SIDE INCOME#- Oooil li vestment. 10 rms. and 3 bath Ideal tor owner plus renUl sp Full bsm't and eorafV locetloi Call for appointment to tee tb at $0,040. Terme. LAKE PRONT — Located 1_ CUrkston area on Bald Eagle Uke. Immediate possession to - — ">me. Tniod bath, oil ! neighborhood and * --- garage. Uts Di sneoe vrn>. urtp lot. $14,940. Terms. BIO LAKE—Here Is a Uke front home that Is priced right. 00 ft. frontage. 33 ft. living rm., stone nrepUce. Attached garage. All furnished and In excellent condition. Now at 013,100. Terms. 0040 DOWN — Ideal home for couple. Near Ttl-Huron shopping center. Alto would be good Investmentfor rental unit. Total price $4,7Sl. NEAR RTILLIAMB LAD — Pine building location plus summer cottage. All furnished and part bath. Four lote. Lake prlvlMei, nice treei. Every thing for 04,7M. Floyd Kent Inc.,Realtor 3310 DUle xwy. at T*'----- FB3-0133 — O^. Free Parking CLARK O. I. 8PBCIAL; No moMy down fl^hlt^O room fw^h hom^ fln- num Biding, very large Und-•eaped Ut, rmuwaUoil roots, IVk cor garage, carpeting and auto-mottc otlheat. All for Just 111,000. OU.300. CRERODX BILLS Price M reduced, owner Mavlng tor PlorMa. Deolrahle 1 bedrohm while frame Ub story home, wall to wall carpeting, brlA fireplace. tU hath, poitllleaed hoaement, I. DIUTTON WOODS. De- ond oUmlnam astertor. IVb ha 1 nrepUeea, baaaOaeht wlU mtloa saaoa. loadaeoped lot i pltaty if nioe ohoSa Uaei. For Sals Houacs 49 .HAYDEN. C»r MSLTN. Trttn 3 BJ4. Hdme. A-t eondttUa. Carpet tn L.R. and hoU. LondMcped yard. Caiy liw! — —- mortgage eost to qual- KAMPSEN REALTY f LET US BUILD YOUR NEW HOME WHITTEMORE ST. Well cored for six room bungalow oonslstlng of IS' living room with itone (Iro-place, enclosed front sitting porch, gas heat, 3to cor garage. Ufs look now. CLARKSTON GI within walking dUtance to all^jwhoole.^three bedroom fuU*toSemrot. IS/^eaT^i acre lot — offered at gll.-040.00. Nothing ttowA to 3411 1 h Uke Rd. PB 4-0031 Income Fi ojicrty 3 PAMILT, OAS HEA^ ZONI commercial. 334 Mt. gemens, TO SETTLE ESTATE 3 family brick dupUx, 6 and be “fh side. 413.400. Easy tern N- JONES, real EST. •-U7S 033 WEST HURON ST. Templeton INCOME “i** completely mshed. Plus owner's 4-room Apartmpnt. 4 full baths. Inoome 4300 per month. 3 loU, plaatonl city. Reaeonobla down K. L. Templeton, Realtor 3330 Oreherd Lake Road 003-0004 “J-®' "?!*• Tennants win •‘•r-.afjffj 1« per cent eross. 43As beat, 3 car garage. Owner For Sale Lake Property 51 3 OpTTAOES-FURNISRED Round Lake near Union Bhopplnk Good beach, 3 bcdrm oSdTbwl: room each. Each hoe owu well and septic. Dandy buy. $11,000, mo- HAROLD R. . PRANI^ Realtor. 3403 Union flshl^ rrics. m -•-pice, Urge hem end strewberrles and rasp ----Igns^ga^chTT^Sri ind chtckei »rge Dsm and chicken coop. Beautiful ImstlOD. $34,000. gU.O&O down 71100 Ussier Rd. between 33 and 34 MUc Rd.. Romeo. 3 COTTAOES - EXTRA LOT, OA-rage. AU ImprovemenU Also a **'5f'S._®®*4A|?- •'or InformaUoD call OR 3-4343 WoodhuU Lake. CEDAR ISLAND LAKE — LAR '--e front In new home area numerous hardwood trees. beach. 413.500. Terms ROLPE H. SMITH, realtor nc 3-7040 Eves. MA 4-0431 CASS LAKE PRONTAOE, 70 FEET of It, and 140 feet on or cellent canal. Located la on of .fine homes. $740 down. ren Stout Rtsllor, PE MISS. Open Hagstrom Bogie Lake Frpnt 3-bedroom ranch, JuU .hoscmcnl. recreation mom. f bat|p?Tnlcely landscaped. 417.540. ; ~ ^ Leonard I^ke Front 3-bedroom pert brick ranch, carport. full basement .with finished i-bedroom spsrtment. Nicely lood-ecaped. 431.400. H R. HA08TRON. REALTOR 4000 HIOHLAND ROAD (MU) •ontUe OR 4-03U After 0 p.m. PE 4-7005 t SITES, Milford 430 mo. Pont. FB 4-4500 and 3-1204 or Det JO 4-M31 or 0-7711, Dale Brian Corp.______ LOT 43. ARLINGTON DRIVB. PON- ....... •’ LAKEFRONT SPECIALS MACEDAY LAEE. Year round rifice. $13,400, WILLIAMS lake. Year round, 4-bedroom. 1 bath. Excellent beach. Easy ttrms. |17,4W. COOLEY LAKE. I»4 acre estate. Brick year round. Terms. $10,440. See our album of Lake Properties J. A. TAYLOR, Realtor lEAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 7733, HIGHLAND ROAD IMH) DhUy' l-l Sunday ll _______OR 4-03W__________ LOVELY LAKE HOME—SACRIFICE Located at WiUlam's Uke. ( lonlol exterior. Fireplace, 3 b room. Utuity room, family rm Urge kitchen, dining rm., 13 ------ .. dim. LAKE LOTS .N k SOS’ on the water. cluelve. couf Vobded. Buy____ build when you are ras^. Easy terms, coU Ooramerec, At 3-OOU UNION LAKEFRONT RANCH home, attached garage. 3 bedrooms. den, family room. Newly decorated. louncdUte---------- By owner. EM 3-30t0. 3-BBDROOM ITBAR AROUND home — paneled living room ~“'~ pleture window overtooklng boec hot water beat, Urg. _______ . with shade trees. PoU borgatti at UNDERTTOOD RSAL ESTATE OR 3-13SI. If ae ana. PB 4-703 OR 14411 Sale Rfwit Piwparty 8Z THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 81, 1961 ■«)|ra. $10 mo. Boatdoek, swim, fish ^ shop. Pont. R 4-4$$$ OBd OR 3-13$) or Det. JO 4-ltll and U $-7711, Pau BrUn Corn 7 JoU. completely fur- *$5k$*^ nlshed. electric oad M Dewey Lake, approximately $ nllee from Ponltoc. jl,3$g each. ADAMB REALR PB $4$$3 PE 3-7$$3 1$4‘ LOT NEAR ROCHEItBR. M' M^oltor* Lake. ReMonable. PE BY 'oWND $0X130'^ SMALL RXTAa DRY CLBANIRO store. UL 3-t«» Well d< „rt OP pontuc. 4 s(:ATrBakD loU. Sewer, water, peved, cheap, terms, owner. VB 4-710$. HI-HILL VILLAGE t community you eon bu proud to live In. restricted lor your protection. Urge eetoto cited htttton perccU with paved streets. Excellent djoinage and goed water. Uw ae |1,M$ with IIH down. LADD'S INC. looking beautiful You Norman Lake. See for miles. Uke prlvl-leiet. Pine school districts. Pine restrictions. Pine Homes. Bee these today. Owner leaving state. OR 4-$$$$. ____________________ STATIONS FOR LEASE Please call be-4 p.m. 404-3344 ft TRADE « Acres motUy *wito**electriclty'a------ 4 fUhlng plumbing down payment or house trailer. eluded. Flowtng well, 3 nice lots. ^ Suburban Property S3 3-BEOROOM RANCH BOUSE OA-rsge, 4k acre Und, exeeUent to-cMlon. Vacant. Priced lor aetton. Oood terms. LOO RANCHER. 4 roomt. bath. lU-car tarase. nice stable. 4 acres land, handy to PontUc. I14.4$0. Oood terms. UKE PRIVILBOES. Excellent hrk. rancher, featuring family room, attoebsd garage, hot water heat, many other features, privlUges on 3 lakes. An cxeelltnt bbme at 437.7M. Terms. IN OXFORD. 7 roomt plus enclosed ViS.‘$$i"‘* H. P. HOLMES. INC. PE 4-U43 For Sate Lots 54 For Sale Acreage 55 3 ACRES. BEAUTIFUL HOMESITE In good neighborhood ------ CUrkston. This cornet pi- - s steal at 43.4M with low down payment. Be first to tee It. • HATOKN. REALTOR For Sale Farms 56 4 ACRES WITH MODERN 3-BED-> room home. fuU bsseme— *—■ gas heat. 411.4$$. more It buildings available, 3 mill Waterford VHUgc. lO-ACRE 8BCLUDEB ESTATE — new bl-level home “ lower level complete, restlon room with fire _ fireplace, bath, ________________pleture windows. Nicely landscaped -"*• . tl$,4$$—eubeUntUl < basement, bam, newly Upeer, Vb ot uic. basement, painted. 4l$.4$$. UNDERWOibD REAL ESTATE ............no ens. FE 4-7U2I 3-3411 OR 1-1345. If I IN THE , THUMB "are A AT CASS City, iklch. 130 acres of tiwctor Iti^ Older set of Isrm buUd-Ingt.' 418.4001 with 4S.$0$ down. NA 7-9303.__________c_______ LAKE ORION-OXFORD 4$ acres. Very pretty rolling country. ClrcuUr drive through trees to 3-b4^room and hath larm home and garage. Small woods and C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor OA 43414____________MY 3-3301 YOU'VE GOT TO SEE THIS $0-dcre farm with modem house, bsm, tool shed and other form buildings. Stream on property -Many springs. Well fenced. mile road frontage. 43$.$$$. 4$.$$0 ‘‘c“'PANGUS. Realtor ORTONTILLE $4 Bouth Street_____NA 7-3814 Sale Business Property 57 1441 UNION LAKE RD. DESIR-able business property In thriving Union Lake Village, consists of office and 4 room bobse on rear of lot, many pocslbllltles here, come out and look It over. EM BY OTTNER. 110X134 FOOT _ im. OAKLAND AVENUE 41x300 feet loned commercial, near Michigan Employment Office. g-room house In fslr condition. could convert to 3-famlly. First offering — a gteol — oa.500 cuh. B. J. ValueW Realtor. 344 Oakland Ave. FE 4-3431. BusincEE OpportunitieB 59 BALD EAOLB UU RESORT— Bathing,- flsblng. picnicking with 300 ft. on the lake. Restouroat. hath house, 3 upartmenU. ow--- home, perfect tumtly setup, Joy the summers while you and spend the winter ) In the cllmoto Of your .. . Bee this money uuker today. 000.400 wtth SallOO down, or would eonslder a trade that Is free and clear. OoU Ottanyllle, Balsa and rwouT^rge volume. Subetontlal dn. payment. MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION WILLIS M. BREWER rOSEPB P. REISZ. BALES MOR. ra 44U1 04-00 E. RURON ST. After 1:30 WDN AOTTBRTIBBD IN THE Wont Ads Pete Save JIa TreaMs Plndbis A OM Home Just Dial PB 3SUl BbsIbsss OpportjBiiIttes 59 Partridge Motel, Party Store, and Home ons of ti -■ PARTRIDGE Realtors ---rhruout MICh r. Huron — PE 4-31 iowjr-ssfxeixw. ---stton far 30 years. Illgb gross. 00,100 down. PoitenUp dissolving. PE 0-3707. SMALL GROCERY Beer and wine doing good bttsl-neu. Located on main highway h vlUtge near Pontiac. 110.400, terms. Clarence C. Ridgeway BROKER - ^ FE 4-7041 300 W. WALTON BLVD. SUNOCO STATIONS Proaehtses are available la Pontiac. Rochester area# offerttig tbcu op-portunlUss: 1—PUD TRAININO PROGRAM 3-YOUR OWN BOSS 3- MODEST INTB8T3 OB $7401 BW SPRINOPTBLD CUSTOM Sportcr, 36.00 new custom stock, worth $100, electric Mncet K ruble sewing machine, 134, >ced-Queen wringer type wssber, 430. Kenmore oil epoec heater, 434. chrome plated 33 automatic pistol, purchase permit required, 425. CeU EM 3-3753.______ NOTICE 440 for your power mower on any riding mower or tractor. 414 oc any power mower or tiller. Lcl Us five you a good dool. Pres tickets to drive in. Evans Equipment. 0807 Dixie Hwy. MA $1171, OR $7634. TO USED TRADE-IN DEPT. Ouar. Electric Waibe'’ ,. $34.09 Ouar. Electric Refrigerator ...$3t.64 ^t. Slse Oil Stove |1$.$6 Kitchen Utility Cabinet $ g.tO 4-picce Bedroom Suiter $$$.64 3-plece Living Room Suite ...414 64 34-ln^ Gas Stove $36.46 Radlb-Phonogroph Console . .434.45 14 W Pike R $1113 EZ Terms multllUh offset press, typewriters! adding machines, check protectors. OR $0767 and MI $3610. Forbes Printing 4r Office Supply. IHEW AND USED OA8 AND OIL fumsees. For the beet buy call MA 5-1401. Bojr's^^bteycles. 36 In., $4 etch. WHITE BIRCH YOUTH BED. Oood ccBidlUon. 416. OR $3444. PAINT WITH KOTON, AVOID ^t« nn^peal Me to moisture. Antiques _____________, OP ROOM n Pocket PuU of Money When You SeU Your Surplus Items Through Wont A^ Dial FE 34161 Now I Hi-Fi, TV and Radio 66 21 INCH CONSOLE MODEL Completely Reconditioned 1 Tear Werronty FRETTER'8 APPLIANCE MIRACLE (MILE CENTER RCA TEST EQUIPMENT WR 36 Dot Bar generator and WR 01 .. ..... Im ;; l Color bar generator. WlU sacrl- SpY uv^-Wm sStto . ..: wiM '1S*J®' '**“ ®“" ®' ™ BEDROOM OUTPimNO CO. ■ 4703 Dixie Drayton OR 34734 Open 0 tUl 8?30 Mon, t For Sale Miscellaneous 67 Berry Garage Door Factory Seconds AvsUsble St stseablo dtseount 3386 Cole Street. Birmingham E $0303 . 4ll $10 BRAND NEW WROUORT IRON bunk beds complete with and.msttreis, 436 " bunk and trundle 0 mapfc big dls- Pumtture, 43 •Icotrle hhusoHold furolihlngs. raa# loa bor and point. Cbogp. otfuiTl. NEW SHIPMENT USED ____________ lag doors. AubwisRsI 410^41.00 3341 BULMAN HARDWARE choirs, t , work I: Siste St(Bjy IS Sate Sporthig deeds 74 ------ Burr-Shell,’ 374 k Tflo^ graph, PE 3-4161. MEN'S BLACK CHXCAOO ROLL^ Sand, Gravel and Dirt 76 S^mD, MABEL, bock ntsrsnteirafahut pooUnt. * OAKLAND PUEI-«A»T 434 Orchard Lake Avc. PE $41 RUDY OIL FURNACE. ' BLOWER and controls, $34. OR 3-4431 MALL RIOINO wheel HOI tractor with rotary mower,' Post form formica top, ^TONTIAC PLYWOOD * CD 14S0 BALDWIN AVE. - PE 34843 " 444.46. Tollcte!417.96. Pan bo^s, 430.46. O.A. Thompson, 7005 MU West, PLASTIC PIPE. H INCH. t. .. per hundred; t Inch, 44.41 per hundred; IVs Inch. 4U:47 per hundred. IH Inch. iU.34 per hundred: 1 Inch, 437.47 per hundred. 'M)r'$tou*aftu 4 STEEL QUONSiET BUILOINO, foot door space. Must be moved wittiln 30 days. Mtehltan Bust: ness Seles, FE $1883. ahiWlNa MACHINE 3 OAS FORCED AIR FURNACES. Installed everete 0 hot air runs, 4440. Ace Hestlng fe Cooling Co. OR 3-4844.___________________ 4" SOIL PIPE. M l*- H" COPPER pipe 14c. Toilets tli.45. G. A. ftiompson, 7004 M46 West. $INCH SOIL PIPE, 6' $lnch SOU Pipe ----PUBy sump ^mps .............. $30.1 SATE PLUMBINO SUPPLY 173 S. SAGINAW — ' — GROUP CLEAN STOVES, apartment slse, 30" and regular slue. tl4 to Oioo. 34 e.....— refrlgorotors and wash os 414. Cabinet sink, Crete laundry tubs, 4U. ucsx ana chair, 430. 31" TV 434 Sofa beds, 410. Bedrooms. 446 Uving rooms. 414. Odd beds, dressers, chests, springs, and chairs. Everything In used furniture st bargain pricca. ALSO NEW living •“•»•> SPECIALS 4134.44 Kelvtnator Dehumldlllcr 4 74 5314.44 Ircnrltc Ironcr .... ilto 4304.66 Maytag Custom Dryer 41M WAYhE OABERT Saginaw . FE 4-Olgt H PRICE - REJECTS, BBAUTI-Uving rtMm suites. Low as g7t. ------ ------- .. .. jgj k. Bargain H S 3.040. N. Cass, ___________________ 3 ROOMS OP BRAND NEW PUR-nlture. davenport and choir, tables, lamps. bMroom suite, ma$ ‘4T.c“Sinl?2"*il ments only 43.44 a week. Pear-. son's, 43 Orchard Lake Avc. X 13 FOAM BACKED RUOi; 414.44, also tweeds and Axmln-sters. Rug pads 46.44, Pearson's Purnlture, 43 Orchard Lake Ave. YEAR CRIBS, BRAND NEW, 413.65 up. Pearson's Furniture, 43 Orchard Lake Avc.______________ OAP nous .............. Si vs ASPHALT 'flLE..Ea....... 04c PLASTIC TILE, Ea........ 01c "BUYLO" TILE, 103 8. SAOINAW 7 PIECE UVINQ ROOM SUITE coffee table. 3 decorator lamps. *PE^TON'y*V^RNlTUW?' " Admiral ........ $ u.oa - PhUco ............... 1 31" Blond Emerson ...... i 21" Emerson ThlnUne ____ 34" Emerson, new tube .... I WALTON TV PB 3-3367 _______(niton, cerner ot Joslyn RCA TELEVISION, EXCE17-... —...... condition PE 3-0430. 6" NORGE DELUXSTeLECTRIC range used 6 months. 4140, call nj-nii. ___________ ) new. OR 3-0483. REPRIOKRA-roR; -V— W..J, gg, jggg UL 3-1445. —. -lUECK OAK DIN^ ! lei.. refriscrator and TV set. 3-4330.________________■ APARTMENT SIZE REPRIOERA-tor, excellent condlUon. MA 4-1437. AIR CONDITIONER. 1 RORSE-power used 1 summer. 643 Valen- cls oK East Bird. N__________ ABOUT ANTTHINO~YOU WANT rOR THE HOME CAN BE FOUND AT L a 8 SALES. A little out of the way but a lot less to nay. Pundtare end appliances a oil kinds. NEW AND USED. Visit our trade dept. Ion real barfolns. We buy. eell or trade. Come out and look around, 3 seres of tree FBI. 4 TO 4 34 MONTHS TO PAY 4 miles E. ot Pontiac or 1 mUe M4,°*^*’l^**»‘***"°*“^“”*’ AN unclaimed LAY-A-WAY Automatic slf-sag, sewing machine that makes button holes, sews on buttons, toDcy designs, overcast, etc., without attachments. Accept peymant of 44 mo or full prl--441.30. CoU PE $3411. Waite AUTOMATIC DIAL CONTR6l, ZlG-ssgger. ooMnat Singer, sawing madilnc. blind hems, makes bu$ ton boles, overcast, etc. Only ATTENTION Ee carry a large saleetlon of rc-huUt rodlot aoS TVs, AU Ere $'«™Btoegrtte|^ training, trlm- HSiy, OriAii and Feed 82 USTOM I CHOICE BEI^ ^ARTER. HALF. MUST SACRIFICE 1000 LOWRET ' gsn with Leslie t walnut. 083-3304 SELL YOUR UPRIGHT OR SPIN-et piano to Gallagher Music Co. We pay cash. Call FE 4-0666. rrvlca $11 work guaiopteed tor/ trained men ^ :albi music CO no N. SAOINAW TUN_______ ______ _________PE 2-4317.___________ SMALL LUSTRE GRAND PIANO, ---------OeUggher'sr FE $0666. Sate Farm Produce BEAUTIFUL RED RASPBERRIES ----1 UPRIGHT PIANOS Excellent for practice, new ivories -nd all reconditioned. 41" uned to 440 and dellvercl. MORRIS MUSIC 34 8. Telegraph PE 1-0! '---------Tel-Huron) MONTMORENCY CHERRIES, pound. Pick your own. 447$ h diebelt Rd.__________ match. GRINNELL’S 37 a. BaHnaw ' n $714$ Sale Ohlce Equipment 72 TALLEY BUSINESa MACHINES — *- PE $3'" PRE) 74 Auburn COMPLETE ________ iwlnttat cqmpmem with 34 draw-era w type. large Sto ft. hv ft. Stone. Cutter, and 1$ x 14 handler Price Rond Peed Press. chines, Typewritore. ------- — tort from 111$ 19 . •1 W. Rurei^ •— 3-SS^ For Sale Livestock 83 For Sale Poultiy 85 BOLENS RIDINO TRACTOU SH ^$‘ltl.".... bargains "T*RS£^VE*NT0’!SPgr§SS I4MALL WALEIRO AND >roWg HE PONTIAC PRESS 1?WTIAQ, MICHIGAN. MAKEOVE8 JULY 1961 MICRO PHOTO INC. CLEVELAND, OHIO