T Th* Wwather THE PONTIAC PRESS Edition VOL. 120 NO. 117 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. SATURDAY. JUNE 28. 10621—80 PAGES /Ae Sfuns AH With Call for Defense Cutback Coalition Takes Office in Laos After Long Row Eisenhower Blasts Spending From Fear WASHINGTON (/ft — Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower stunned Republicans as well as Democrats Friday night with a call for substantial cuts in the nation's $51.6-billion defense budget. The former president’s unexpected assertion that current military spending reflects “unjustified fears, plus a reluctance in some quarters to relinquish outmoded concepts” c a u g h t| Republican ctmgressional VIENTIANE. Laos (AP) King 8avang Vathana of Laos today installed the 19-man coalition cabinet headed by neutralist Prince Souvanna Phouma. Premier Prince Boun Oum and the ininiateni of hi< anti-Commun-Vientiane regime submitted their resignations earlier in day and cleared the way for new government, which the United States hopes will take Laos out of the cold war. leaders short. Eisenhower did not elaborate. He did not say where he would cut the defense spending which has been regarded by both parties as sacrosanct and above the debate over balancing the budget He declined to go into details of his suggestion today at a breakfast with wives of Republican congressman. The breakfast party was hardly the niaoe tor ship, he said and aikkd that if he started talking about the Democrats “i would make a longer speech than I made last night.’' Tbr faimer president bhintly put It this way at a tiea-a-plate Rusk Confers With Italy Chief ROME » -a secrefat?’ of state Dean Rusk had his first meeting With lUlyT new president today and reviewed NATO and common market problems. "On the miliury side, we Republicans will continue to work acros.s the political aisle for strength unencumbered by waste, and strength riot loaded by hysteria. Rusk, who came to Rome from Bonn on the third leg of his lIMay European tour, conferred with President Antonio Segni at the presidential palate within hours after his arrival. "Here I must record persona] belief that substantial amounts in our current def< budget reDect unjustified fears, plus a reluctance in some quarters to relinquish outmoded concepts. ’SHOULD BE REDUCED’ "Accordingly, I personally lieve-with I am sure very little company in either party—that the defense budget should be substantially reduced." Democrats have contended In nimoot every inatnnee that Presl- Premler Amintore EanfanI aad KoreIgtt MlnlMer AlttUo Pioeloni joined Segni for the talks. Despite a full schedule. Rusk's 26-hour stopover here appeared almost a respite after his earlier talks on nuclear problems with President De Gaulle in Paris and on the Berlin crisis with Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, in Bonn. There are no such major problems in Italian-American relations. d largely at In an airport statement here. Rusk did not show any unusual wear after his tough round of talks in Bonn and Paris, and he hailed the Atlantic alliance as 'Arm, solid and strong." forces, was completely justtfled. Republlcana have not objected to the more than $t-bllHon Increase Kennedy nrade In that budget. Rep. Charles A. Halleck of Indiana, the House Republican leader, swallowed a bit and said he was not really too surprised by Eisenhower’s statement. "Gen. Eiaenhower remains the best authority in the country on the delense budget,” Halleck said. "If he thinks it should be cut, I believe we can find places to do it.” 6en. Hugh Scott. R-Pa., was somewhat taken aback by Elsenhower's snggeation. But he rose quickly lo respond. "I have always thought, " Scott said, "that any ageiKy ol government could take at least a 10 per cent cut in its budget. Perhaps the Defense Department would provide a tighter operation if it were cut by 10 per cent." HAD GOOD ITME Eisenhower and his wife, Mamie, had an autograpk-signing good time. Republicans shades of opinion lined up to get the signatures that were still regarded as valuable in GOP ranks. Wken the amenities Were over. Kennedy’s admiirislratlon on al-nsost every domestic issoe. Eisenhower said among other things that "our national cinnomy has become unei'riain, fearful, ill at ease. " lie said it was obvious lhal the Kennedy administration "w.as floundering, thrashing aimlessly and a bit desperately about—in the surging financial, fiscal and cionomic currents of our. time." The United States joined Soviet Unkm and other big nations Review NATO, Common Market Problems; Also Joined by Fanfan| Ex-Bruce Co. Official Owes $3 Million in Tax NEW YORK (AP)-The Internal Revenue Service says ruiuiway financier Edward M. Gilbert owes the government $3,341,742 in back income taxes. Gilbert, 39, fled lo extradilion-proof Brazil on June 12 .after admitting to directors of the E. L Bruce Co., flooring concern, that he cashed unauthorized checks totaling almost $2 million in company funds. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ .★ Flight Engineer Pickets Walking Rightist Chief Steps Down os Neutralist Prince Assumes Post Boun Oum stepped out after an 11-month term In office mnrfced by civil war and the gr^ng power of the pro-Commnnist in pressing the right-wing Vientiane government to step aside lor the coalition of conservatives, tralists and pr»Communists. Boun Oum, Souvanna and Prince of munist Pathet Lao agreed June 13 on the formation of the new cab-But bickering up until last minute threatened to shatter Await OK on Retraining today's ceremonlea. ' Prince Souphanouvong. leader of the pro-Communlal Pathet Lao, arrived here according to plan f rebel-held Plaine Des Jarres to take office later i day as a deputy premier, companying him were other Pathet Lao and nnitrahst coalition ministers. Prince Souvanna Phouma, neutralist premier-designate, announced FiWy that political lead-era had reached an agreement on the inauguration iBOC^re after haasle had threatened to torpedo arrangements. The dispute revolved around leftist obj^ions to any official role by the rightist dominated National Assembly in the induction of the new government. Souvanna made a mystery of how the latest settlement was reached, but said details would be disclosed when King Savang Vathana final-ly signs a royal decree installing the cabinet. Souvanna announced this sebed-le; arrival of Souphanouvong, a call on the king to "pay our respects," presentation (A royalist Premier Prince Boun Oum’s resignation and inauguration of the new government by the king, followed by a swearing-in ceremony. Jailed for Nazi Crimes BERLIN (UPI) - Albert Filbert, manager of a bank branch here until 1959, yesterday was sentenced to life in prison for commanding a Nazi extermination 1 on the eastern front during World War II. 'This Leaves Me Cold' Burglar Victim Upset by Loss of Good Liquor CENTER LINE, Mich. tAPt-| 'The burglar who raided John Rad-lick's home must have been judge of good liquor. Airline Strike Presumably On tAgainst I Lines Radliek mi.ssed $17 in cash, but was more upset over the disap-p*'uran<-e ol eight bottles whisky whii-li was five years old when he bought it—in 1919. Radliek said he had cherished the ease Since before Prohibition, and had opened the fourth bottle last .Sunday lor a Father's Day t,” he said. Coffins w from alt over the island. As they /ed al the City Hall they ’ Slacked on the first and se<--ond floors. Quick End Seen to Ford Strike Nogotiotors Agree on Settlement; Vote Set by Union Tomorrow I be it- of the joint announcement agreement was made by Manion M. (Mike) Cummins. Ford’s director of labor rrtatkmi. and Ken Bannon, chief of the union's Ford department. Both bargaining teams had been meeting with federal ipediators. PRODUmON DISPUTE The chief argument in IHoduction standards dispute volved how many quarter panels should be turned out. The union claimed that only 237 of the 16 pound panele-used on passenger automobiles—could in one hour, while the company insisted on 300. It Is believed Hut engineering pinna will be changed to permit a new qnola on panels. Apparently both sides compromised on "’The union’s negotiating team satisfied wilh the agreement concluded," Bannon said. "We to recommend it lo the Becautie of s- shortoge at parts turned out al Walton Hills—roofs, hoods and doors tor earn—Ford halted prodnetion at Its !• passenger car asnembly plants. Truck prodnetloa has continued. "If (he members ratify the agreement." Cummins said, 'Walton Hills workers will start back lo work nn the regular shift al midnight Sunday. The workers from other plants who were laid off will be called in during the week.” In Detroit, Ford said ratification will start' recall of 38,0011 workers Monday. The remniiiing .39.000 will be called back starting Tbpsday ynd continuing—until July 2. Settlement came after eight hours of discussion Friday. The company made its proposal at the night session. Union negotiators asked that it be put on paper and acceptance was announced less two hours later. Boy Cut-Up Claims Tonsillectomy Fun Residenis s;iid no airplane!* e\er passed over this'Oirea while approaching the’ airport, indicating, (hat the doonfed plane may have s>* been off course. They said theyu^,jj^n heard it circle twk» in the dark- *nr WS.S. I DETROIT (AP)-Slx of Dominic Sabatini's children find out Sunday if a tonsillectomy is much fun as their brother says. The brother. Leonard, 10, ragged for two years about the in he had losing his tonsils. He made il sound so good the dn('loi-s of SI. Mary's Hospital are '( to be up 10 Iheir s(-ulpcts in .Siibalini tonsils. Ihe volunieeis are Gerald. S; ; Diana. 8; Kenntih. 6; Robert, 5;j'; Richard. 4; and Dominic Jr., I!;' MorcKers Appoor at PanAm and Eostorn Terminals at 1 p.m. NEW YORK lift— Flight engineers began picketing at Idlewild Airport today, presumably marking the startof a strike against Pan American World Airways and Eastern Air Lines. Pickets appeared at both Pan American and Eastern terminals. A. flight engineer abo walked off a plane at Washington Na-tionni AIrpnrt, forelHc d tlon ot an Easton r * reing rauMeltaf-I tMgH: ATTORNEY IN COURT There was no immediate word had said it would strike at 1 p.m. against the two air lines. Meanwhile, an attorney for Pan 8T. LDUM (AP)-A tclMdaled pitato .strike of Otaik AlrHaes. scheduled Inr midnight Innt night, never ea«M> ell. An agree-men! between Orarfc aad IN pIMs represented by tbe Air line PHsts f nsunced early today. oral court, presumably to seek an injunction against the strike. Pan at-ikm would be taken. In Snn Praneleee. the Fll^ seen after II a.«. today at Fan Amerleuj Werld Airways arala- A Pan American spokesman declared the Une planned to continue all flights. The next scheduled flight to Hawaii ia scheduled at 6 p.m. (Pontiac time). Eastern employei 575 lligiit en-Ineera and ia the natkm's third largest carrier. Pan American has SOO flight engineers and is the largest American Imernational car- A Pan American oflicinl said Pan Am would continue to operate, but he didn’t say how. Hie union announced Friday if would strike unless new ooiitracto were feached. It rejected as "oompleiely unsatisfactory” the propoeed settlement worked out similar dispute between the ntgineers and Trans World Airlines. The tentative TWA agreement, reached with the aid of Secretary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg, Is subject lo approval by union members employed by the line. It would resolve a two-year dispute on manning ot jet cociq>its. ; In Today's Press Rail unions charge lines trying lo provoke walkout — PAGE 8. Compromise Extension grain controls otfer^ House — PAGE t$. Thinking Big U.S. pars to have more siie, power in 1963 — PAGE Tea for Two Mamie visits Jackie (and others) lo discuss culture — PAGE M. It Wiutr trrrler 0 Mil FK S-SM7.. I- TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JUNE 88; j9^2 tfew War of Terror ' i Threatens in Algeria ALGOBtS — A MW war of ter ror today threatened to wreck any hopee of paacelul coexistence between Alg^’t Mosl«nu and Euro- The West Algerian command of the Secret-Army Organization Friday night ofder^ iU terrorist com- mandos back into action (or a last ditch A*t 1:13 p.m. ia liMi SwiSsr St t:M t.in. ftatu wW Swsdsr St 13;M a m. Mosb rum SSBdsr at U:lt p m. Oas Tasr Stt la rmlU* Rlflint Wmpnalura ..... Levaat tamparstHn .......... Maas umparstura ............ Tbit Daw la M Taari tt IB ____ « la 1I7T _____« !i *5 R Vru. 'Sl .tl -................... ira.m.........73 1 s ■ PrMar 1a PratUa iManaba 73 33 PUat 33 33 ,____ 104. Rapidt 33 33 Lm AojtK 1 Rouabton 77 30 Ultmt Bm( .............1 Lasilna 33 31 Mllway' p.m.:.V - W irarjBWW ^ S Muiketon 73 S3 ------------ PdUton 71 43 PboenU 8. S. Marta 73 33 Portland Mt Trav. C)tT 33 Portlaad Ora Ypfllantl — " AtlaBts >cb n n s dPipM* to ii I PhOftdPlpM* «M Bt- Lottli m H uli u. citr ii 73 M Baa Aatooio |8 M i7 Ban Fran, m M WuhlBftoa tJ IB AF PkoialBi NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered ihowers, Isolated thuoderstorms are forecast for tonight for most of the nation. FWr weather is predicted tor the southern tier of ifat^ from California to the southern Plains, with cloudy weather in New E^«tond, the northern part of the middle Atlantic states and on the northe Padfie coast. It will be mild east of.......... except for New England. t accord had little legal or binding value since it consisted only of two broadcast announce-lents. One week before Algeria votes on its future, a new dangerous note has crept In. a a a Machinegun fire Friday seriously wounded tTVo Moslem officials in Algiers in a daring attack by men deecrlbed as Moslems. The attack was seen as an outgrowth of an internal struggle within the Moslem Front of National Uberation FLN. B P > European eettlers saw the incident as anoflier sign of future insecurity and turbulence under Moslem rule. Rebels Strike Near Havana, Kill Militiaman HAVANA W-Countenpevolutioii-aiy eianMnts strTick again late toat night only minutea from doini-town Havana, kUUng a militiaman The Incident took place uanabacoa, a suburb aa Havana Bay. The attackera opened fire on militiaman Manuel Aneiro front s car just before midnight. Aneiro, on sentry duty, managed to sniwer the tire briefly before t fell dead. Another militiaman who ran to Aneiro’s aid waa also gunned down. Uter. IxapiUI officials said he waa in grave condition. U.S. S«nf a Commanifit army dhiRhni Is estimated at' ie.00! to 1S.0N men. U.S. defense officials earlier this veek said they were disturbed by the concentration of large numbers of troops across from the two offshore islands. 'The U.S. report is correct, only the Chinese Communists themselves know what they arc p to,” Chen said. In order to prepare the offshore, islands (or possible Communist attack, Chen said, the defense on Quemoy and Matsu has been ’’considerably increased." TOKYO (UPI) - With the Ifrl-anniversary of the Korean war only two days away. Communist China today declared that American forces must be "kicked out" of the Republic of Korea. Officials newspapers of the Peiping regime said this was "a most urgent task," according to a New China News Agency broadcast monitored here. "Only by kicking wt the U.S aggressors can Korea be reunified ... and genuine peace and ity ensured,” declai^ lengthy editorials in the Peipthg Peo|de’s Daily and the Ta Kung Pao. made to CUff Carter, described by Atty. Oea. ber. Another assistant attorney general.. Richard Wells, also testifying the Carter calls, said one call was placed from Estes last March 28 to a "Mr. Carter" at Arlington, Va., telephone number JA 2-1960. AAA On March 28, Estes was staying at the Statler-Hilton Hotel at Dallas representatives of a dozen finance companies conferred with about mortgages totaling more than $20 million on fertilizer inks. It was the day before the FBI arrested Estes. The call w a placed at 8:02 p.m., (Pontiac time) and Wells said Estes talked six minutes to "Mr. Carter. Climber Exhausted After Rescue KATMANDU, Nepal (UPI) Woodrow Wilson Sayre, grandson of President Wilson, was flown here today by a rescue helicopter after he and three other members n American mountaineering team were found safe but hausted in the Himalayas where they had been missing more than a month. AAA am tired and exhausted," Sayre told newsmen after he was airlifted here from the Himatoyans foothills village of Namche Bazar. Sayre, a Tufts Unlvenity prs- mined to a hospital for a gen-erst checkup. Doctors said be was sU right but needed a rest. Sayre refused to be carried to the hospital from the helicopter. He limped a lltfle as he walked and trembled from exhaustion. AAA He said the three other members of the expedition were "perfectly all right" back at the vU-iage of Khun Jung. AF Shoots AnothoF Secret Satellite VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (UPI) — A secret satellite, possibly of the Discoverer series, was launched yesterday by the Air Force. In keeping with a policy of secrecy adopted two months ago, the Air TPorch "wfnsed'-to ssqr whether the satellite entered orbit or what its goal was. The announcement said only a "a satellite employing a lW-Agena booster combination was launched.’’ A ' A A This Is the type employed previously in dis^erer launches which were used lor a variety of purposes, including testing of re-ent^ vehicles and in sampling deadly radiation. 'We're Making Headway With Neutrals at Geneva' WASHINGTON (UPI) — Dls-' armament negotiator Arthur H. Dean said yesterday the United States had "made a groat deal or 1 headway in selling our viewpoint” the neutral nations at the Geneva disarmament talks. He also said, however, that 'until there is some basic deciion by the SovieU that they want to be more realistic about inspection, I don’t see how we are goin( get down to. drafting a treaty’ when the (Seneva talks resume Hart Explains Revision of Bill New Dunes Measure Would Provide Greater Local Participation TRAVERSE CITY » -Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., said to-dSy a proposed revision of a bill to authorize the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore Park in Michigan would provide a greater degree of local participation. The revised bill, he said in a speech prepared for the annual meeting of the MichigM United Conservation Qubs, wnf probably be introduced next week by him with Sen. Pat McNamara. D-Mlch. a cosponsor. home and eat-tsge owners earn be helped by the development at the park— aad as that the park caa be helped by the preaeaoe at attractive private properties." ■Unhappily." he said, "Congrm The Day in fiiiTningham' Nine Fiom A?ea Dis)>lay Works at Art Festival lOOth U.N. Veto Cast by Russians Thwart Move to Bring About Talks Between India and Pakistan mingham Society of Women standing painting by a woman (or ber pntotl^ “Arehaeologl-caL” Awards were presented by The Prep Shop, Inc., in Birmingham and Bloomfirid Country Day School lor Giris for tfie outstanding work of a teen-age boy and giri, respectively. The prizes were awarded to Jeffrey Hadden lor "A Sea-•cape" and Linda Talaba for ‘Familia.’’ A A A The exhibition will be on view through Sunday. Some will be displayed in downtown Birmingham stores during the four-day (estival. It will be returned to the Birmingham Art Center, South Cran-brook Road, Birminj^m, where the entire exhibition will be "open from 2 to .5 p.m, daily,, exo^ Monday, through July 14. The Cranbrook Alumni Association elected (our Birmingham men to serve as the Board of Directors at their annual meeting in Detroft. Arthar J. BraiMt Jr., etoas at IIM. of Ut KeMMsaw; Oofdsa Craig, claw of Ifot, of USS N. Olealmrst; David W. RaymaiM. rJaw at 1M4, af Ml Haasm; aad James C. Hotanes, chus of 1M7, of IIH to the board. Newly elected officers of the Association are president Sh^rwin M. Birnkrai^, of James K. Boulevard, has never been able to pass a bill president. Stepheii ol any kind that fully satisfied---------------!--------1--------L ^ be some people ^ Viet Cong Hold will be inconvenienced, no matter « j J TT what form the final bill takes. Thelj A2Cf22CfP©Cf problem is just to keep the num- ber as imall as possible ” MlSSlOnOrieS The proposed T7,(W0-acre - park SAIGON, 8. Viet Nam (UPT) would be located on the northwestern shore ol Lake Michigan in ary doctor who was kidnaped lower Michigan. by the Viet Cong May Hart conceded that an earlier bill ing forced to treat wounded he Introduced to authorize project "triggered a lot ol anxiety this community.” 'I am prepared,” he said, take my share of the blame lor Police Arrest Ex-Marine in Double Murder MORRIS PLACE. N.J. (UPI) -Police took a nervous and flushed 18-year-old ex-Marine into custody again today in connection with the tire-iron slaying of two teen-aged schotd cheerleaders in a lonely lover’s lane. AAA Morris County Prosecutor Frank Scerbo said the ex-Marine. James Vance, a slender, 5 foot 9 youth, was apprehended at his home when laboratory tests showed tire,iron similar to the type supplied on Vance's car was used to bludgeon to death Noreen Buckley, 17, and Margaret Ann Kennedy, 15. “It Is extremely likely formal charges will be made against Vance. The web Is tightening test around him,” Scerbo said. Vaiiro, wte was released from the Marines in September, 1961, after about six months of service, was picked up at his home not far from the lover’s lane where the girls’ beaten bodies were discovered Thursday. (See earlier story page 24.) their medics. It was teamed to- Dr. Eleanor Aidcl VIetty, of Houston, Tex., Is being held In of here along with Archie E. Daniel Gerber, KIdron, O. kidnaped at bayonet point from the monntaln town, of Ban Me Ibont, MO miles north of here. Captured Viet Cong prisoners and defectors tarnished the In-(ormstlon wMch American sonrees considered "highly reliable.” They said - all three However, they were said to have been>snbjroted to moving constantly with the Viet Cong through rugged Jungle conntiy, apparently to prevent their being rescued by Vietiiainese rangers 12-Town Drain Worker Hurt os Wires Snapped A crane worker on the 12-Town Drain today escaped with bunns of hands and feet when his machine snappy overhead electrical wires bh TdoTidge Road hbrth of 15-Tfflle Road. Treated and released at William Beaumont Hospital was James W. FleUhans, 28. of 1180 E; Guthrie Madison Heights. He was taken to the hospital by Troy police at 7:30 a.m. C Miller, class of 1M7. of 3SB0 Ltfiewood Court, Bloomfield Hills; secretary, Michael B. Redfield, class of 1950, of 4120 Rouge (3rcle, Birmingham; atid frtaturer. The alumni advisers to ttie Cranbrook School Board of Directort are P. Thomas Austin, data of 1834. of 3371 Upton Road, Birmingham, and Frederick R. Keydcl, of Grasse Potnte. UNITED NA'nONS, N.Y. (AP) —The Soviet Union cast its lODth Security (>mcil veto Friday nigHt, killing off a move to tolng India and Pakistan together for new talks on their 157eBr-old Kashmir dispute. The 11-nation council adjourned after U.S. Delegate Adlal E. Stevenson denounced the veto—which automatically defeated a resolution introduced by Ireland—as a wilful abuse of the United Nations. 'What of the futuret" Stevenson asked. “The council is a vital and purposeful organization ol the United Nations in spite ol the veto. It provides vital and purposeful direction and leadership. "As for the veto itself, we hope that long before the Soviet Union approaches its 2(XMh veto, it will realize that .its own interests lie nafioiia] obstruction but in international cooperation, not in wilful vetoes (or narrow ends but in Trilling asaenls «(br the broad and common good (or which the U.N. stands.’’ •HAS FOUL ODOR’ Platon D. Morozov, the Soviet delegate, assailed (he resohitioa ' 1 by Ireland as ‘ In- spired and prepared by the United States.” He said it had “a foul odor to it.” The Soviet Union and Romania cast the no votes, udiile Ghana and the United Arab Republic abstained. The other seven members voted yes, but the Soviet “no” constituted a big porser veto that doomed the resolution. TTiut the council, which started le current series of meetings at the request of Paktatan last Feb. Tvound up after nearly five offer the main parties in the mar-athm dispute. f resolution reminded both parties of principles contained in 1948 and 1949 decisions of the U.N. Commission (or India and Pakistan that called for. demilitarization of divided Khshmir and a ' piebisette on which country thould get the disputed state. It asked that Acting Secretary-General U Thant give India and Pakistan such services aa they might request. Some speakers had suggested he be a mediator in the dispute. Police Arrest Eight on Illegal Liquor Charges^ Police arrested eight persons at three locations in Pontiac early this ‘morning on illegal liquor charges. Charged with selling moonshine in bis residence at 474 Montana Ave. was Herbert Q. Wright, 43, who was picked up at 1:45 a.m. Minutes earlier, officers apprehended five persons for loitering and charged William A. Black, 62, of 129 Bagley St., with illegal selling of liquor at 343 Irwin Ave. Officers concluded the b us y morning at 5:15 a.m. by arrestiiv Tony Stoiloff. Tl. 491 Franklin Road, for maintaining and operating an illegal liquor establiahment at hia residence. He's Johnny-on-the-Spot CLEAN, N.Y. {JfhOoa Kenjp to geftfrif To Hie a one-man emw-gency squad. He .became a life saver when he hastened along just as a Tvoman (ell into Olean Creek. Then he was Johnny-on-the-spot with a fire extinguisher when a mattresTcaught fire in a neighbor’s house. Glenn Lake Clasa on Way Home Capital Impresses Stale Students DETROIT (J) — Glenn Lake High School's capital-visiting graduating class came home to Michigan today tired, happy and talking of fine times in Washington. The 33 boys and girls piled off the Baltimore and Ohio’s Ambassador at the New York Central depot a half hour late’from Washington. D.C., toward the end of trip financed by sympathizers of Date, cancer stricken Duane Richardson. nuamat 17, a tall, btond boy and earpenter’a son, saM h« iwa* hnpressed by the sdventare. Walking- slowly up the dapot ramp, Duane sp^e quietly of the three days and nights in Uie capital. But his (eaiures lit up and he grinned (or the first time Tvhen he asked what it felt like to shake hands with the Presidenl. President Kennedy had been host to (hb Glenn Lake aeniora At the White House. Yeah," Duane said, "that was lomething.’’ In the hustle and bustle of going through a moderate alae cnnvd la the depot Prlaclpal Har- old Sweeney kept the group together Tvllti repeated shoots of "Ut’s go. Let’s go.*) Sweeney said the trip’s expenses totaled about $1,800. He said it has yet to be determined how much money was received in donations. That remains to be detennined after an accounting at home. AAA Shortly after their arrival here, the students piled onto a school bus for the final leg of their trip. The gtKSlP exj^s to reach Gtoim Lake, aome 2uTniles west of Traverse City, about 6 p.m. THE PONTIAC PRV.SS. SATUKDAY. JUNE 23. 1962 THREE GEORGE’S MONDAY MIRACLES G«t Big Bargains plus • FREE PARKING • FREE RED STAMPS • IS CHARGE IT Big Bargain Bag-Fiitar-Baiaiar CIGAREnfs Nephew Shuns Speaker's Aid Ed McCormack Asks Uncle to Keep Out of Contest With Ted BOSTON (AP)-Atty. Gen. Ed-'ard J. McCormack Jr., today asked his uncle, Speaker of the House John W. McCormack, to kw *>i» contest with Ed- ward M. Kennedy for the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate.. ♦ ♦ ★ • Kennedy) the brother of President Kennedy, won the Democrat-state convention for the Senate nomination June 9 in a tight ballot fight with McCormack. Speaker McCormack had announced almost Immediately after the convention that he would campaign for his nef^ew. The attorney general said he had two reasons for the request. « * * First. McCormack wrote. "The issue in this election is clear, it is a question of the qualification of the candidates, as between Ted Kennedy and what he presently US east SlMMltM Jr.HittM NsHSitt DRESSES 188 3' •$to Hgiavkin LaBitt'ta1.N LSwim Suits $1J8 99< l-nssattsu Play Sets >89° SWIM TRUNKS^ iJiPlay- * Shafts, Polos SPORT kSHIRTS 19* ; SHEETS ;$-|39 29c 14 N. Sakinaw St. represents, ^ni Ed McCormack and what he presently is." McCormack said his second reason lor asking his uncle to stand clear of the priihaiy battle involves the i"critical Importance of position as speaker -|tr ° VoSS’aSihS^^ The POWER of,FAITH ■y WOODI MHMAiL r “It Seems' to Me" and “And in {Conclusion" written by Pontiac Press Publisher Harold A. Prrz- Lgkhald will appear on Mondays, f Bureaucracy’s Growth Phenomena of Times Economics, though not an exact science, is broad in scope. It encompasses such long-established laws as Law of Diminishing Returns, Law of Supply and Demand and Law of Proportionality. Recently there has emerged another law, “Parkinson’s Law," a tongue-in-cheek but factual extension of economics to cover waste in government, promulgated by Professor C. NOiTHCOTE PARKINSON, Raffles Professor of History at the University of'Malaya. ★ • ★ ★' Wwk, he says, expands so as to fill the Unse available for its eompletioB. A lack of ecenpatioB is not necessarily revealed by manifest idlenesa. The thing to be done swaUs In importance and eomplexity with the time to be spent This has led to the as-snmption by iMUiy that a rising total la the number of civil aervants must reflect a growing vohime of work to be done. “Cynics in questioning this belief have imagined that the multiplication of officlala must have left aome of them idle or all of them able to woiir shorter hours." states the authority. But he coBtlnaei, the fact is that the noaber at the officials and the quantity of the work arc net relatad to each other at all. The rise in the total of those employed ie governed by Purklnoon’e Law and would be much the seme whether the volume ef the work ★ ★ ★ As a concrete case of the operation of his Law, we are referred to the Brlthfh Navy during the period 1914 to 191t. In 1914 its strength consisted of 148,000 offloers and men, 57.000 dockyard workers and 8,349 dockyard offldala and clerks. By 1928, when the Naval strength was a mere fraction of that of 1914, the number of officers and men had declined by 46,000; but dockyard workmen were up 5,500 and dockyard officers and clerks had increased by 1,300 . . . and during the 14-year interim when the navy’s capital dilps had declined from 60 to less then 20, the Admiralty officials had increased from 2,000 to 8,569! Sounds familiar, doesn’t it? But Prof. pAiuuMSON needn’t have written with tongue in cheek. available to all—in fact they are regularly dinned into our ears. But until more people make it their business to view this waste of life as the horrible thing it is and rid their minds of the complacent “it can’t happen to iper attitude, indications are that this accidental slaughter will not cease. Chimps Vs. Astronauts So now the slide-rule boys running the space program are considering putting an astronaut and a chimp aloft in the same capsule. ★ ★ ‘ ★ To do this, the question of who outranks whom will have to be settled. Some of the chimps have more orbits to their credit than the astronauts who have yet to solo. ★ ★ ★ Perhaps the chimp’s mate will sell her story rights to a magazine, and go into hiding until it’s all over. The Man About Town Pastor to Asia Auchards Are Leaving on Gift Tour of East By HOWARD V. HILDBNBRAND BON VOYAGE: Leaving Monday on a flve.week dream trip to the Near and Middle Bast, largely a gift from members and friends, arc The RevOTCBd Edward and Mra. Asebard of tha Orchard Lake Conununlty Church, Preabyterlan. A year In the planning, the tour will take In Rome, several days In Greece and some Ume In Egypt... thence to Lebanon, Damascus, Syria and Jordan, with Israel the terminating point. Voice of the People; * Ardor of Commumm Great Irony in History* Senator Kenneth Keating (N.Y.) saysi "One of the grmt Irottlee of history Is that the sueem of communism has corns througif intensity of purpose, unremitting toll and boundlets seal Theee characterized the creation of our own nation, which carved our fWe govam-ment out of the wUdemess. * “Our forefathers dedicated their lives, their saerad honor, to ennoble man. Oommunlsm dedicatee Itself with soercely leu ardor — to degrading, dehumanizing man.’’ NX •Wm the «5 Acres ‘And Wl^houMn’t Be Put to Good Usef JFK Be BIsmedr Now the objectors to our new Qty Commission in remoVing Mr. Rowston, Mr. Anable and Mrs. Hill will recognize the need. Had It not been .for Mr. Rowston and his friend the county taxpayers would not be saddled with 4^ acres of land for an airport which now will never come. Perhaps all of the $362,710 is not lost as this property could be used for recreaUooal or educational purposes. Let’s hope the Supervisors will recognize all the people lit their deliberations as to what to do with the 445 acres. ChariM J. Naastram In reply to who says try- ing to blame Kennedy for the stock market is like blaming him lor a ship wreck at sea, people who load the ship wrong are blamed for ship wrecks at see. my Force BiU Upon Taxpayers?* The King-Anderson BUI may be e good Idea, but wty doee K hew to be forced upon niT Why cen’t them who don;t want It iwt*pay, and those who want It pay? Have Needle for Romney The Almanac *' By UelM Piwa tetenaOeMl LANSING m — Democrats are Today Is Saturday. June 23, the getting set to needle George Rom- IMth day ef the year with l#i to ney about his boast that he col- follow. "Lord, take care ot me now.” Captain Joe Klttlnger Jr„ of the United States Air Force breathed theae words Into his tape recorder as he stepped from the gondola of fals balloon at a height of 102,800 feet. His faith In God, and In bis teammataa, his equipment and in himself had spurred him to test man's ability to live through a jump from the very edge 9f apace. Specifically, he was testing space survival equipment and a small parachute designed to prevent him from spinning violently and thus suffering serious injury or death. In four and a half minutes he fell 18 miles. Then at 18.000 feet his main parachute opened, and his tap recorder picked up the words— "Thank you, God, thank you. Thank you for protecting me during that long descent Thank you, God, thabk you." Days of All Faiths: Honor Two Protestant Birthdays lected a record 70,000 signatures on his nominating petitlona. If the Republican candidate for governor knowingly rounded up that many, be. broke a state elections law and committed a mlade- The law deelarm that a eaaill-dale for gownwr nwy net file iigiiaturee totaling more Ihaa 4 per cent a( the vote cart lor hia party’s eaadidate lor aecretary of Btate at the last elecUoa. For Romney, the maximum wai 58,168. For Gov. Swainaon, a Democrat, it waa 70,156. The former American Motors Corp. president filed only a little more than 35,000 signaturee, onee he fwd photostated for future mailing lisU. The rest were carted home by campaign aaamants. Democrats, thumbing through the lUtute books. The moon is approaching its last quarter. The morning stars are Mart, Jupiter and Saturn. The evening star is Venus. ★ * dr On this day In histoiy: In 1^, the U.S. ITwaury W45 AM Yealh Fellowdttp-6 FM >-11 AM EvmingSOT«lce7PM oulh 6 30 «A0IO40-attW Sun. 7:30 AM. Tone Ini ■ - • D«wm lovglteY, Awl. AmIc A J. Souglwy, Pauof Edward Blumeno was named fint vice preaident; Charies Eilen-Kcond vice preiident; Norman Blumeno, third vice pnak ^dent; Alvtar Jacobaon, financial aecretary; Ben Monson, treasurer; and Dr. Daniel Foxman, coite-sponing aecretary. Ralph Merkovllt wma ehoaen for a one-year temi as board nMmber, Bam Teby lor two yoaro, and gol Nowbonaa wtU oerve Ibree years. Retained on the board are Morris Bletstein, Lenn Sliiin, Meyer Monis Blumeno, Sam Merkovitz, Morris Kampner, David Utley, Joseph Jacobaon and Lazarus Heraiiovitz. OrSTALLB YOUTH Rabbi Israel Goodman, spiritual leader of the synagogue, biatalled new ofOcen of the Youth Group, at the annual dinner this week, arith Ken Archer, president of the group; Jack Bletstein. first vice president; Roe Surowitz, second vice president; Ranald Surowitz, regional board member; and Sherry Yagoda, recording secretary. ♦ k W Debbw Martowe was installed Jjicoba, treasurer; Sarah Serwin, parliamentarian; and Martin Fox-man, sergeant at arms. The Internationals, a new singing group, presented selections from “My Fair Lady” with solos by Roz Surowitz. / Central Methodist t ServtcM Tempoewfo ot p lioaeE.Crary Junior High School MHTON H BAN< ( . 501 MCoMUdald. PoUor i H. H.rJpimsoe. end J. H. HoH, Ameclote Pofort ^ MORNING WORSHIP 9:25 ond ia45 A M. r "CALLED BY GOD TO REVOLUTION" » Or. Bonk, preaching *' Broadcast Live on WPON 11:00 A M. Youth Fellowihips—5:00 ond 6i30 Church School 9:25 A.M. and 10:45 A:M. FIRST METHODIST Souk Soginew at Judiea lev Cert 6. Adoeit. Patter MORNING WORSHIP 8:30 and 11 A.M. "WE SERVE THE LIVING" Rev. Adams, Preoching CHURCH SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. Wad. 7 JO PM. Bfbla Study end Prayer Followthip ST. PAUL M ~ ISStSauoteUkald. Morning Wonhip lOiOO Chwdi School Menncdiate and Senior V Older Youtht, 63 AufU PoAing JAMO A McC ETHODIST « 2-8233-FE 2-2752-AM end 11:15 AM. 1 IftOOAM ouk Cioupi, 64X) PM 10 to 8>30 AM LUNG, Mhitetir SupwviMd Nonury Four Towns Methodist Church OOOcn lACf 10 Ot ICXXHAVEN St. W CedM* keut. PoOur Sundoy School 9 »AM Chutth .School . IIUOAM Covert MethodW Church 277S POW1AC LAW 10 •rv W E. Ceurtsr, Suttor rChurch Snrvire . . . 9 45 A M. Church S^ 1100 AM ELMWOOD METHODIST CHURCH Grant ot Autturn Jid Henry W Po»*ell, Potter Sunday School .... HM)0 A M MonteiaWorkte'. . . - IMSAM Stayer Wed. 7:36 PM ST. LUKE'S METHODIST CHURCH 2013 Pbniioc M. Wayne Irookihegr, Miniiter Church Sehaol . ^ 1600 AM Morning Worthy , lt t5 A.M Marks 37th Birthday Members of Nw Bethel Baptist hurch wilt observe its 37th Mrth-ay Sunday. Rev. Amos Johnaon, pastor, will preach on "Where . RoberMO, pastor of Com-ly Baptist Church, YpeUanti ' PONTIAC CHURCH OF CHRIST 1..UVII t» Ihr -tUnU 4>f Truth-loch Sgndoy - CUW - 11 A M, I ISO N. PERRY ST. f£ 7.6269 Write for FRtE Bible CorrejpondeBce Courie -Bible Srvdy-.-.. •.. . .. A M; CaiWtierAHAg#, Morning Worihip....10 SO A M. Evening Wbrihip.... 6 00 PM. Weditetdoy Night... 7.30 PM. ServicH to B« Rocordod Tlw memtaig wwaUp MFvice of the Owaoeat Hills Baptist Churtk wfll be recorded tor broadcast on file Chunk of the Week program on WPON at 10 a.m. Sunday with Sunday School following ht 11. BALDWIN ADDITION — Members of the Baldwin Evangelical United Brethren Church under the leadenhip of Rev. Myron R. Everett, pastor, will break ground at 3 p.m. Sunday for the addition to the present structure. The new educational cial unit will be In the shape of an L. Expwted cost will r 175.000. Lewis Boll is. clwirman of the building commit-1 Leslie Bell, chairman of the finance committee. An oil church picnic will follow at Marahbank Park. Transportation win be provhkd lor those who need It. The puUtc is Invited said Pastor Robert L. Adams. dtkfficli cal numbers by Lynn sad Annette Webb, Janet Cofflag, and a daet by Mr. and Mrs. Alfred jfacksoB. Daily Vacation Bible School for boya and girls ages 3 throui^ 12. will continue Monday through Friday. On Thursday evening the children will give a demonstration of the vacation program. Bible study and prayer will be held at 7 p.m. Wednesday. TRINITY. Waterford A formula for peace ip today’s lat pace living will be l Rev. Ronald HiompBon Sunday when he delivers his message on ‘Living Without Inner Tensions" at 10:30 a.m. in Trinity Methodist Church. Waterford Township. Jackson Byers will direct the vhurch of Nazarene las Guest Speaker r. E. G. Benson of ', Mo., assistant executive (jr- choir. Sunday School will meet at 9:30 am. and Methodist Youth Fellowship will get together at the parsonage from 7 (o 9 p.m. Tuesday. All, activities are currently held in the Schoolcraft School oiY Mace-day Drive. PROVIDENCE MISSIONARY The Senior Choir of Providence Missionaiy Baptist” Church will celebrate iti 13th anniversary at 3:30 p.m. Sunday. Coming from Detroit as guest speaker will be Rev. H. L Davis. Arrangements are by Richard Reese, choir president. k * k Rev. Roy Cummings with his choir and congregation will worship at Providence Church at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. The organ committee headed by John Cox will be in charge. Rev. Ctoade Goodwin said the public is iirpfted. The Vacation Bible School wU be in session Monday through Friday with classes starting at 9 a.m. and closing at noon. Van Love is general director. 81. STEPHEN'S EPISCOPAL Delivering the sermon ft the 10 a.m. service of morning prayer Sunday in St. Stephen’s EPtocopal Church will be Sirter Miriam, Order of Ail Saints* Sisters of the Poor, CatoosviUe, Md. Sister Miriam is coming to Michigan to conduct summer vacation schools in Lansing and Allen Park. Rev. Carl R. Sayeri conduct the Adult Choir. Foikming the service a coffoe hour will be held in the pariah house, 5500 N. Adams Road in jhonor of the guest. State Convention, will be guest speaker at 7:30,Sunday evening Ih Columbia Avenue Baptist Church. He will give a full report of the annual convention in San Francisco, Calf, this month. Rev. E. Gay Polk is pastor. AUBURN HEIGHTS U. P. During the 11:15 morning service tomorrow in the United Pret-byterian Church, Auburn Heights workers in the Vacation Bible School will be recognized. Included wiU be Mrs. Isabelle Bramack, general superintendent; Mrs. F. William Palmer, Mrs. Leonard Hebej, Mrs. Kenneth Evans and the Rev. F. William Palmer, pastor. Besides these divisional leaders more than 30 teachers and helpers wffl receive certlflcaies of appreciation. "Playing in the Sand” ■" be the pastor’s sermon During the second service class of new members will be received. Communion music will be offered by the Chancel Choir and an offertory ensemble comprised of Jeannette Ohanesian, Beverly Allen. Diane Beach, Barbara Harris, Nancy Obanesian, June Schlesser, Louise Everett, John Ward and Royce Everett. Deacons Mr. and Mrs. Robert be in charge ot the to the rhnrcJi dining room follow-big the second servlee. The Women’s Association will hear Barnett Shepherd,, student assistant, on "Christian Education in Our Church” at the luncbeon program Tuesday noon. k ★ k The Couples Qub has scheduled a picnic for Saturday. Hosts will CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY IS THE UNIVERSE, INCLUDING MAN, EVOLVED BY ATOMIC FORCE? Sunday Services ond Sunday School 11:00 AM Wednesdpy Evening Services 8 P.M. Reading Room 14 W. Huron St Open Daily 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. Friday to 9 P.M. First Church of Christ, Scientist Lawrence ond Williams Streets PONTIAC I 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY RADIO STATION CKLW 800 KC The churdi baseball team will | be Mr. and Mrs. Larry McDowell, play the Elmwood Methodist Churc-h on the Elmwood field at 6 p.m. Monday. FIRST PRESB1TERUN The sacrament of Holy Communion will be celebrated at both the 9 and 11 a.m. worship hours in First Presbyterian Church “ day. aty, retary for the d e p a r t m e nt vf chur^ schools of the Church of the Nazarene, will be the speaker at First Church of the Nazarene, 60 State St. at 7:30 tonight. Dr. Benson is editor of the 'Church School Builder.” a promotional magazine devoted to the interest of church schools iij the CImreb of the Nazarene. Dr. Benson will meet with leaS^ rs of the local church and day School in a conference desired to study and ascertain the best procedure in a program of expansion, which has been a sub-jert of study by the local church leaders for some months. Pastor J. E. Van Allen believes that the advice of Dr. Benson will help to unify the thinking of the people in some plan that will be adopted by the church as a whole. ‘Culture and Crabgrass” is the topic Rev. Harry W. Clark has chosen for his sermon at 10 a.m. Sunday in Pine Hill Congregational Church. Services are being held in Pine Lake Elementary School on West Long Lake Road. Mrs. Rudolph Radocy wiU be •oloigt. V At a special meeting, following the morning worArip the congregation will vote on apfnwing the architectural style on Unit A of the proposed new church building. Hie Board of Trustees also wants approval for the purchase of a parsonage. COLUMBIA AVE. Rev. Fred Hubhs, executive secretary of the Southern Baptist Armorial Members to Hear Special Music ‘The Transformation of the Saint of God” will be the theme of Rev. Gerald Rapelje’s morning sermon at Memorial Baptist Church. Mrs. William Meyers will Teach Me to Pray” and the choir will present "I Am Riding in the Shadow of the Rock.” The pastor’s ewning subject will be "Does the Bible Teach a Per-: 4 manent Restoration 4)f the. Jewish People?” The Disciples Quartette wifi be heard in "Lord Build Me Cabin” and “Never Will I Ceasr to Love Him” will be the choir hem. CELEBRATING OUR 7th ANNIVERSARY of the Faith Baptist Church 3411 AIRPORT ROAD REV AL KASTEN Sunday School 10 A.M. PIECE-A-PUZZLE Program 11 A U DR. TOM MALONE lIM./Vl. PREACHING ' Music by the Tempeloires 7 '^OPM bob KASTEN, /.JUr/Vl. PREACHING the Edward Rightmires and Mr. and Mrs. Victor L. Brown. Elders delegated to the Presbytery meeting in Plymouth Tuesday are - ITobate Ju<^ Donald E. Adams, commissioner, and Ted Koella, alternate. Vacation Bible School Starts at 9:30 Monday Mrs. Herman Irhke will be di-j rector of the Vacation Bible School at the Church of the Brethren all' next week. Gasses will begin at| 9:30 Monday morning and con- Inue to 11:30 a.m. ★ ★ k The theme of the school will be My Bible and I.” Philip DeVault will lead the singing and Paullette Ebey wfil be, in charge of music. The vactr^o^j school will be staffed by nine teachers. In the abaeace of the pastor. Rev. LeRoy Shafer who is attending the national church convention in Ocean Grove, N.Y., Rev. James DeVault will speak at the 11 a.m. service tomorrow. ★ * k Steven Bendes. director of the Sunday School, will be the evening speaker. I FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin FE 4-7631 Sondoy School... 10;00 A.M. Sunday Worship’.. 11:00 A.M. Sunday Evening . . 7:30 P.M. Wednesday Choir ^. 6:30 P.M. Wednesday Proyer 7:30 P.M.' Saturdoy Service .. 7:30 P.M. Rev. Tommy Guest, pastor ■ FE 24)384 BETHEL TABERNACLE r.r« Kvwoa Ct-ircli fl VSIOAMI WofUi'P II AM. EvOBQkltffic SarvK* Sub , Tum oAd Thvrg., 7 Oa P M. Rev orvd Mrs. E. Crouch 1348 Baldwh Av« FF 54254 WESLEYAN METHODIST 67 N. lYNN ST. SUNDAY SCHOOl......1600 AM WORSHIP........... 1100 AM W.Y.P S...... ..... 6 4S P.M. fVfNING StaviCE .... 7 30 PM. WEDNESDAY. PRAYER ond BI81E -- 7 30 P.M »tV J M CAVANAUGH, MiiviWf SELKOTS BTRIPTURR — Rev.-AI Kaslen. pastor of Faith Baptist Church at 3411 Airport Road. Waterford Townahip (lefU looks over Scriptire passages with his son, Robert, who will preach in Faith Church at 7:3d p.m. .Sunday. Robert is a student at Baptist Bible Seminary in Arlington, Tex. FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN 46 NOKTH SUNDAY SCHOOMO AM. MORNING WGHSHIJ» 11 AM Evening Service 7:00 P.M. Thorsdoy Proyer and Bible istody 7:30 P.M. Williams Lake Church of the Nazarene 2840 Airport Rood Paul Coleman Minister 10 A M. SUNDAY SCHOOL n AM. WORSHIP HOUR 7 PM. WORSHIP HOUR LUTHERAN CHURCHES MISSOURI SYNOD Cross of Christ Telegraph ot Squore loRe Rd. Bteomfield Townthtp iter. DrUynt H. Pceiws. P««rer Services ot WortHp ot 8 30 ond lliOO AM. Ctwrch School 9:4i AM. St. Stephen Soshobow 'at Kenipl Cay B. Smith, Pastor ^ Sunday School ....9 IS AM. Church ServictI 8.60 ond 10:30 A M. St. Trinity Auburn at leMte (Eod Stee) Ralph C. Claat, Pastor Sundoy School..... 945 AM Fim Service....... 8 30 A M Second Service...11.00 A.M, St. Paul Joslyn at Third (North Stet) Rev. Maarieo Shaekoll Eorly Sennee .,..tOO AM Sundoy School..... 9 05 A M Lott Service.......1645 A M Grace Corner Geneuee and Glendale (West Side) Rkhard C. Sitirhmeyer, Pastor Church ServKie..... 900 A M Sunday School.....9 00 A M. Church ServKe....II ;00 A M Sundoy School...1100 A M. "The Lutheran Hour" over WtMH 9 A M Every SUndoy HOGAN is Coming to PONTIAC WHEN: July 1st-July 20th WHERE: Franklin Rood at Hughes St CHURCH OF SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP BEMIS OLSON POST-570 OAKLAND AVE. SUNDAY SERVICE 7:30 P.M. , Rev. Arthur Ot Groot Wed. June 2¥—Sihiir TiS“ Sun. July 1 ~ Mathew Connall, Speaker CHURCH of CHRIST 210 HUGH6S ST. FE 5-U56 ReosoveU waits. EveaeoUst Sunday BMe Study for oil ogei, 9>45 o.m. Se^ndoy Worship Ptriodt 11 o.m. and 7 p.m. Tueafay Weakly Bible Study 8 p.m. tteCtenAita-SpMteaite UNITED GOSPEL SINGING CONVENTION SUNDAY, JUNE 24TH-2:30 to 4:30 P.M. FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin Ava. - FEATURING -. calvary MAN of FLINT OUARTETS DUETS SOLOS Ponfioc and Royal Ook aOSING CONVENnON Entos Houston. Pros. Until Sept. Abie CeMw, Sec’y THE PONTIAC PRESS, SjmJRIKtT. JUJfE 28, 1962 ^V. SBVXK^ Suminer Smorgasbord at Bethany Hm (bat of thnt nlng fat tofatbaa of Battany Bap> United Presbyterian Churches OAKLAND AVENUE Ooklond at Cadillac nUe*i» K. AtttUtK Patter Aitdrty Urnkumii, Ytmtk Dincur MoffilaoWonKlp IO,(iOAM. SundoyScfcool II 20AM. YoiiltiMMNn^.... S:4iPM. Cvwiino Wanhio. 7.00 PM. a.... 7MP.M. AUBURN HEIGHTS P.rtePatMr.foter IO.OOA.M-$widorScAeol IM5 AM-Atontias Wortltip 3456 Wmory Stroat DRAYTON Oroytoo Plahtt, Michigan KMiSdiaot........... f<45AM. Morakig WenlWa.....11.00 AM ViwitiOnMot........ 6 30 P.M fyaalag WenMo . 7 30 PM Wadaairiay Avyw ond StedyHaar........ 7 30 PM. A ■BorfMbard boHet wlU bt In FelhNniitP Hal] from 5:1V to 6:30 p.m. The musical pro* gram will be held in the tuaiy at 6:45. Ii a budet' supper and idfht of Dr. Emil Kontz, paator the congregation in the iitony of dedication. Sharon Wolfe, granddaughter of Mr. Wolfe, will be the first to use the instrument as she joins Eida Sutter, church organist, in the pre-■ de. It * * Daniel Addis of Waterford Township Music Department will lead the hymn sing. Miss Sutter will be at the organ and Mrs. B. H. CHURCH of GOD East Pike at Anderson L FAREWEUSERMON... *Tlio Day o( CosipleHon" Ife etrdimlfy bmAi» ym tm wtnkif wiib at. CawpOH Nartery aP.lamHa.MhiMw AaiplaPWkino FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH .EVANGaiCAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH 212 BoUwtn Atw, PMiHae Pkona FE 2-0728 WORSHIP-WK) and 11«) AM. Sanaea-by Rer. N. C llaiiisar ol Oelrea Ofoead Ireoldiie Ssntoal 3 PiyLfor EdscaHanol and Sodol Un» lUr. If. JL EPEAETT, Miatesp Morimont Baptist Church 68 W. Wobon FE 2-7239 SUNDAY SCHOa ............... 10:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP HOUR............11:00 AAJ. 'YJO CHOICE" Red. Robert Govette. Speoking EVWING SERVICE............i..... 7:30 P.M. -R0WIEMBER NOW THY CREATER"* PMieC0rdiaUylm>itU NORTH EAST COMMUNITY CHURCH Senaoai *SINS FQWBt-GOD^ GRACE" RUdAMOwPcbScbool IIMAM. VybrthIpHfeir L&SCHami.MhMw FE8-I7 The SALVATION ARMY-^ Jiiirifli 29 W.LowtM Street ; Sendoy School 9:45 o.m. Young People's Legion 6 p-m. ' Mombig Worship nom.E«aiigelieicMeelin9 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer and IVolse Meeting 7:00 p m. UEUT. and MRS. GARY B. OOWELL Coed Martp.Samfef-1Vns Mia* rard fnmekimg God Meets WRh Us-You, Too, Are Invited FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Lake Are. Zamoth, farmer arganist of Bethel Baptist Church in Detroit, will be Ifeiturtd at the piano. IKS. SANNOra TO PLAT Mrs. Zannolh will alao play medley of fandllar hymni ^ a company Mrs. Ihed Stimpert, lln. Geoi^ Zannoth and daughter Sherry hi sin|^ "the Old Fodw loned Meeting" and "There's Rainbow Shinlnf Somewhere.” tieoal "How Oram Thao Art,” and Oaif Matbeaey at Oakland A venae Vailed Pieabyfeilaa Choreb wIR be gaeat notaalat. The two subsequent Sundays planned to encourage good fellowship and atimulate worehip thiYHigh music will be on July 15 and Aug.. 16. WWW Rev. and Mra. Pwy Walley. former Bethany workers, will be guests*of Honor for the July get- Orchard Lake Makes Plans Committee to Stud/ Population Trends and Future Church Needs In anticipation of the centennial of the Orchard Lake Community Church, Preabyterian in 1S74, the Seasion has authorized the appointment of . a special committee on centennial go^. W 1 The committee will study population trends, church program, personnel needs, the ade^acy of the physical facilities of the church, and the ponibiUty of new church development in central Oakland County; HaraU L, Weleh eras efeetod ehairmaa af the graap; Mra. doho Oaffc. vlea ' ‘ Other membera will be John Ashby, Mrs. Don Brieden, Mrs. John Haviland, Mrs. T. K. Haven. Chrie HUl, LoweU GaO. Robert Newton, Charles Drake, Ralph Dailey, RWiam F. Reem and J. A. van Oocvering. w w w Rev. Edward D. Auchard, pea-ir, and Christian Koch, assistant in Chriatian education, will be, son- together" for the 56 young people of the pariah who have returned from colleges, universities and other schools will be the manse lawn Sunday eventaif. ' Airaagenasnts are by Aylcne Rev. Mr. Auchard wll _________ on "Our God la Marching On" at the morning services tomorrow. The pastor and Ua wife are leaving soon for the Middle East to study mindon work of the United Presbyterian Church and to tour the Holy Land. A closing program of Vacation Daily BiUe School is acheduled for Friday evening under the direction of Mrs. John Emmert Bishop Sondi Bishop Massage of Friendship KANSAS CITY. Mo. (l»-On becoming Roman Catholic hiahop of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo., recently, the Most Rev. Charles H. Helmsiitg teceived a note froth the Proteetant Episcopal Bishop of Wcet Missouri, the Rt. Rev. Edward R. ITeUee, taying in part: “Your cathedral and mine, both lilt in the lost century, art eep-arated by onb^ one city block. "During the 12 yeera of my episcopate some of the buildli^ be-e been torn down lo two cathedrals seem ckieer than they were. I pray that thii may be but an omen of the of us all . . CHURCH ADVENTURE - Rev. James R. Maddox, an assistant minister, discusses the Vacation Bible School at Christian Temple, with Lary Rogers of 216 Fembarry St. Winner of top honors in the Waterford Township Science Fair FwtiM rr*u ra«te for his rocket layout, Lary taught the older boys many things about rochets at the evening classes of the school this week. The group is attending the Chimp Space Show at Detroit Zoological Park today. Congregation Makes History Will Present Pageant The Liberty Baptist Church wlU presfnt^'The Holy Oty," a pageant in three parts at 7 p.m. Sunday in Bethune Elementary School. 154 Lake SI. Special guests will be featured during the intermission. Tickets may be purchased at the door. Rev. S. M. Edwards is pastor. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH G. W. Gibson, Miniultr FE 4J)2J9 347 N. Saginaw BibI* School ....... 9.4SA.M. Morning Worthip . . . M ,00 A.M. Yovth Sarvic*....6KX1PM. Evening Sarvic* .... 7,00 fM. Prayar Meating and Btbl* ■ Stvdy W*dn**dov ... 7,30 PM Colombia Arawm -. BAPTIST _ipCHURQ _ 64 West Columbia Ave. FE 5-9960 GUEST SPEAKER SUNDAY mo HUBBS. Etecvfiv* Secretary o< Bop*i* State ConreOon oi MIchlgoa Sufidoy School...........................9:45 AAA Momihg Worship... ............. 10:55 AAA Evening Servict.......... • • ...... 7:30 PAA REV. E. CLAY, Poilor CLARENCE A JACKSON. MinWar ol EAKoiien ilsd wkh Soedtam BopMil ConrenHoa First Congregational Church history will be made Sunday morning when membera meet in the sanctuary of the old churdi at 9:30 for a brief litany of Thanksgiving for MI it hat meant through the years. Then led by Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, minister, and choirs, the oongregation will walk in proces-rion into the new sanctuary to complete the service of worship. During the service Boy Scouts receiving God and County Awards wU tndude Don de Beauclair, of Ihnyton Plains, William E. Travis Jr. of so Cherokee * Road and 4 Congregations to Attend July Bible Sessions The four Pontiac congregations of Jehovah's Witnesses will attend a three-day convention at the Fairgrounds in Saginaw July 13-15. William Strong who heads the kx»l delegation of more than 450 persons, said more than 4,000 per- "The purpose of the conference is to provite additional Bible in-atroction tor membera. There will be mcming, afternoon and evening aesstona, he said. Leaders from Watchtower’i world headquarters in Brooklyn, N.Y. will be featured. Mrs. fames C. Covert Heads State U.P. Women Mrs. James C. Covert, former presidem of the Women's Association of First Presbyterian Owreh, was elected preside of the Michigan Synod ^iety this week when over 400 women from United Presbyterian churches from across the state met for the 43ni annual Synodical Society meeting at Alma College. A * * Mrs. Lyndon Salatbiel, wife of of 2370 Hillcrest Sandra Sckllnk, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Janies A. Sehliak and praaeh the sermon. The Music Board and Chancel Choir of Flist Congregational will ------* Martha Vamell, Enid African Cleric Aids Refugees Parents of Minister Wondered os Cattlemen on Ankole Plains Typical of the pastors who are now working among refugees in Africa, is the Rev. Yostya Kinuka whose parents were wandering cattlemen of the Adkoie Plains. Cured of yaws by the Ruanda Mission Hospital at Kabale, Kinuka, qualified os a full hospital nurse. Later he became an ordained minister of the Anglican Church of Ruanda-Uundi. He hat, ______ in evangelical campaigns, in eight African countries, been to Europe and visited India three Dubbe and David Wilaon in redtal at 7 p.m. tomorrow. Miss Varnell, clarinettist, is a pupil of Albert Luconi, prefesaor o< clarinet at the University ol Michigan. She received her bachelor oi lor University and will earn herj Masters this aumroer at U. of M. Mist Bubbe cello major at the U. of M., studying with Jerome Jriineke, a member of the Stanley String Quartet Pupil of Marian Owen and Eugene Bosaart at the University of Michigan, Mr.'WUaon is the son of Mr. and Mn. Cha^s A. WU-oU3niytan St. and organist at Central Christian Church in Pontiac. n hi partial VaraeT's university Tuesday. The program will 1 n c I u d a Brahms, Allegro appasslonsto, Andsnte un poco adagio, and Allegretto grarioso; Debussy, and Beethoven, Ailcgro, ooo brib. Adagio and AUepatto. A reception in the narthex wiU follow the program. -WetartbiJ Tawiulfe’. Aswrtew Srerita Cfcwefc- CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST Woriklp 10 AM lorga Parking tot CrsKont Loks Rood Naur Hotchary Rood II AM Sredoy School Nursacy Oaring AH Ssrvicat Despite an fejured knoe, be Is now ministartng to retagnes In Uganda. He Hvea wttb his wife _________IV 1030 AM SaVICES 2:30 and 7.30 PM-Diteifr 5 PM W*d.S*rvicu7O0PAi President and Pastor: Rev. Marshall mureh Womeu of Metroftalitan Detroit and preoideot of Detratt Presbyterial Society. A graduate of Eastern Michigan University and former public school teacher, she is the wife of superintended of Royal Oak schools and district governor of Rotary International. 6 ★ * The Coverts of 2309-Scott Lake Road have two sons, Douglas, an industrial photographer, and Jack, an elementary schml principal in TYoy Township. There are three srea. Hto salary Is abaut $36 a month. Dr. Joe Church of the Church Misskmary Society in Uganda says of Kinuka: "He has never allowed debts, begging, asking for money or help to comd into his life. He has Uved a life of faith. ★ * * 'He has been criticized and tested and was nearly killed In a motorcycle accident. His wife is a deeply conaecraled woman of love and integrity. They have a family and a home where Christ is seen FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH CO*. OAKLANO AND SAGINAW STREETS Jlfv. Roburt K Shelton, Pastor 9,45 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL (Classes for All Ages) I0i45 AM. MORNING WORSHIP SERVICE (Mossogt Broadcast OvorCKXdP at 11M) 5:45 P.M. YOUTH F^LOWSHIP GROUPS 7:00 P.M. EVENING EVANGELISTIC SERVICE W^NESDAY, 7:30 P.M. MIDWEEK PRAYER SERVICE DAILY VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL JUNE 18-29 8:45 to 11:45 A.M. vice preeident, Mrs. Co-a member of the Board of Youth Service of Detroit ! Board of Protestant Cbm-Services. Mrs. Donald E. Zimmerman of LaGrange, 01.. national president Of United Presbyterian Women, was the featured speaker. 2 Former Pastors at Glorei Dei Church CHURCH Of JESUS CHRIST dUaKlterStote 19 Frw« SL. fW« ff S.7$« II AM-Montiog Setvk* 10 AA4.-SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 AM-Morning Worship Rav. MaaM Dowiingburg, XW Rtoor Preoehing 7 PM-EVENING WORSHIP Donald Howkkw, Speaking "God li Ovf Exompla" WED. 7:30 P.M PRAYER MEETING Two former pastors will preach at Gloret Dei Lutheran Church at the 9 and 11 a.m. services tomor->w. Rev. Cedi G, Johnson was pastor of the congregation from 1932 1941 and Rev. Milton H. Lun-dahl from 1942 to 1946, wher church was located on Hill and Cherry Court and known as the St. John’s Lutheran Church. Vacation Bible School will continue Monday through Friday with classes from 9 am. until noon. Rev. Charles Oolberg i» pastor. UNITY li AM—Morning Worship "The Voice of the Turtle" n A.M-.SundoY School First Presbyterian Church HURON AT WAYNf REV GALEN E HERSHEY BO , PASTOR WORSHIP SERVICES : . . . 9 30-11 00 CHURCH SCHOOL..'. . 9 30^1-1.00 FIRST NAZARENE, 60 STATE STREET Sunday Scltool........ 9:45 AM Morning Worship....11,00 AM Youth Service...... 6:00 >M Evening Service ■ ■ -. 7,00 PM HEAR DR. E. G. BENSON SATURDAY 7,30 PM SUNDAY lld)0 ond 7dX> PM BIBIE SCHOOL CONTINUES MONDAY THRU ftlOAY 9-1100 AM J t VAN AliEN DlraetorolMu»lc.X)HN BUKTON >*»K)R APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRIST 45t Ceniral Saturday Yeuag PNpl* . - -Sunday School end Wbnhip 7:60 PM lObOOAM 7,60 PM 7:60 PAi Church PhoM FE 5^361 -WtUIAMPAimT 632-0312 i BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH ' 3400 Teiegropli Rd. North of Wed Long lake Id. Sunday School 10 AM Ewning WonMp 6 PM Morning Worship HAM , PToyer htoeltog Wed. 7JO PM Rav. Harold W. Giasake, tartor Pfion* 447J443 MARTHA VABNRXL BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH W. Huron qt Mork St. Worship Sorvic* oT 10:00 A.M. Sermon: "THt GOSPEL far XIY" 9,00 AM. Church School, ClassM for AHAgw 6,43 PM Mutkei Progrom All Saints Episcopal Qiurch WUIkNiM St. at W. Plk« St. Ifw REV. C OIOROC WBDIimD Rarter The REV. WM. E. LYlE The REV. ALEXANDK T. STEWART 8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion 10 A.M.—Morning Prayer ond Church School Sermon by the Rector Thurs. June 28 -10 AAA. HaY COMMUNION Friday June 29—St. Peter Apostle . 7:00 AM-HOLY COMMUNION CHURCH of tha RESURRECTION 1W RW. AUXANOet T. SlfWMT. VlNi 9:30 Holy Communion and Sermon Emmanuel Baptist Church mnaA. 645 S. Telegraph Rd. DR. TOM MALONE 10 A.M. and 7 P.M. (Baptism) REV. V. L MARTIN 11A.M. Rodio Broodcost WPON 10:15 A M. Each Sundoy WH). MIDWEEK SERVICE , 7:30 PM Sunday School Attendanco Last Smaday 123S Dr. Toni Medonei, Paitor t K’ EIGHT THE /PONTIAC PRESS, SATSITllDAY. ttNE SA 106g Knadb m 6Imwm4 GLENWOOD PLAZA All furpoM POLISHING CLOTH On* Pound Bog 88 Of IN UNTIL 10 TONIGHT SUNDAY 12 TO 7 f.AA MONTGOMERY WARD CO. HEARING AID DEPT. If you can hear, but cannot understand, we con help you!! CALL US FOR A FREE HEARING TEST . . . In our office or at your home. 682-4940 Ext 233 BATTERIES, CORDS, REPAIRS ON ALL HEARING AIDS PONTIAC MALL British Parents Veddy Veddy Lenient on Teens LONDON (AP)-P«rental reins we slack for British teen-agers. VcGording to a survey ot 16,000 of 1. Most can smoke and drink and many can stay out all night. Seniors at SOO schools were polled by a student magazine. Three quarters ot the boys and girls said their parents let them smoke and drink. Almost half of the boys and a good third of the girls said they had no deadline on coming in at night after dates. About half of them had one chief complaint — their mothers nagged. . j Garfield Biography to Be Sent Jackie NEW ORLEANS. La. lAP) First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy I will get a rare, first edition bi-jography of President James A. [Garfield to add to:the White ! House library. X, 'Railroads Try to Spark Strike' Union OfficiaU Mak* Charge After Firm« Walk Out of Talks The biography of the 20th presi-Ident, "From Log Cabin to White I House,” was among about 3,000 I books given earlier this year I the New Orleans Symphony Book Fair. The book fair chairman, Albert Wachemheim Jr., decided to send the Garfield volume to Mrs. Kennedy, who is collecting presidential items tor the White House. Trained Amiatance at Self-Service Cleaners DRI-KLEEN State Man Crushed Under Hay Elevatar BIG RAPIDS »-Orln Nyman. 30. was fatally crushed yesterday a hay elevator which top- Opea DaUy • to • pled while he was helping move it at his father’s farm in Newaygo County northwest ot Big Rapids. He was dead on arrival at Big Rapids Community Hospital, bachelor, Nyman lived with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore ^ Nyman in Monroe Township ot Newaygo County *■“* nearby Paris. An-CONDITIOIIED Coaiort FLIGHT ATMOSPHERE! TASTY POODS—FRIENDLY SERVICE—MODEST PRICES! Delicious Dsep Fried Chicken—Summertime Cold Piste*— DCS Hsmburpers DISK SKYROOM o» PONTIAC'S MUNICIPAL AIRPORT Open Deily From 7:00 AM. to 10:00 P.M. Pef^k Vance, Mgr. Phene OR 3-2370 CHICAGO (AP) - Ai«ry unloa trainmen have accused operators! of the nation’s railroads oif tiytng' > provoke a nationwide rail rlke. [ ’The accusatio after management lives walked out of a notation meeting with union officials Friday. It was'the second time rail-, road operators had walked out of a bargaining session with the trainmen. The* last walkout occurred May 1’7. ’The break in bargaining arose over w-ork rules the carriers consider featherbedding—call unnecessary jobs. The maintain the rules are_____,_____ for safe and efficient trqnqnrta-tion. J. E. Wolfe,« chief industry spokesman, handed a sUtement to Leverett Edwards, chairman of the National Mediation Board, and to the union chiefs, saying: is obvious that no progress can be made by prolonging the present endeavors.” The unions retaliated, charging; ’The break is a deliberate, irresponsible. determined effort to force a transportation crisis.’ After the carriers walked away from the bargaining toble, Wolfe told a news conference that the railroads would put into effect all recommendations of the special commission as soon as they are legally free to do so. The unions havb threatened a strike if any recommendations are acted upon without an agreement. ’The presidential corhmisaion recommended last February that 40,000 firemen on diesel locomotives be eliminated over a period ■! years. It also called for a revision of the wage and hour system, suggesting pay increases for most of the men who man the trains. The carriers agreed to the commission report. The unions Wolfe said the industry would be agreeable to arbitration by the mediation board provided the issues were within the framework of the commission report. If arbitration is rejected by either party, Wolfe said, the next step would be tor the mediation board to inform President Kennedy that an Under the Railway Labor Act, a 30 1962 NI'Nl*- Wed at St. James Episcopal - Bwlyn May PHlon became the bride el WUUam M. Strabel bafdn a flower-bankad aUar thb aftarnoon In 8t. Jamea E^iaoopal Church, Binnlng-ham. Rev. David VanDuaeh perlarmed the ceremony which wu Mlowed by a church reception. Parenta of the newlyweds are the Mrivln S. PUIone, Blnninghaill and the John R. Strebele, Auburn Heights. The bride's gown of Imparted white Bilk organza, styled Alencen lace bodice, teatitred an OU aaah and luU^^chnpel sweep train. A crown ol scad pearls and orange bkaaoma held her chapel length veil ot silk lUuslon. White orchids rested on her adilte prayer book. V Carrying yellow camah^ yellow tavMa with their ; MRS. WJLLIAM M. STROBEL Final Meeting of Season Members o( Mizpah Temple No. 7 Pythian Sisters, met Thursday evening at Frilow-ship Lodge Hall lor the last meeting ot the season. The pneeting was presided over by Excellent Senior Mrs. Reino Perkio, in the absence ot Most Excellent Chiel Mrs. Charles Lennon. Mrs. Adelbert Ayres reported that 175 cancer pads had been made during the May and June meetings. Hostesses tor the evening were Mrs. H. Delos Nkholip, and Mrs. WHllam Cowie. Plans were formulated for an October card party. Members ot Mizpah Temple are invited to an All Knights ot Pythian Picnic to be held July 33 at Oakland County I^KUtmen's aub. The next meeting will be Sept. 6 at the Fellowship Lodge Hall. Country Club Plans Dance Bloomfield Hills Country Club members will dine and dance "Under the Stars" the evening ot June 30. ' Dancing will be to the music of a well-known area orchestra. '' Member beats and hoatesses lor the gala evening win be: Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Ynte-ma. Mr. and Mrs. Vaughan Green, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wardrop. MRS. JAMES L. SHEA Kathleen M. Fortin Weds James L. Shea A crescent ot white Amazon lilies complemented Kathleen Marie Fortin's dress ot em-broidered white nylon organdy worn for vows pledged to James L. Shea today in St. Benedict Church. Rev. Richard W. Thonus performed the nuptial rite. The gown featured a Sabrina neckline, basque waist and bouffant tiered skirt ending in a chapel sweep. Her veil of silk illusion was secured by a pearl crown. HosU at the breakfast and reception in the *800 BowT - Loui^, Waterford, were the bride’s parente, OW Henry F. Fortins of LaSalle Street, Waterford Township. The bride-, groom Is the eon ol the James W. Sheas ot Boston Street. AnKNDSSBTEB Attendtaig their sister were Mrs. William Terry, Drayton Plains, matron of honor, and Connie Festtaz who served as bridesmaid with Mrs. Ranald Fortin, Oarkston and Rae Gibbons. Th^ wore oiehid taffeta with matching organza overskirts and held miniature white carnations, shasta daisies and purple statlce. Flower girl and ring-bearer were the bride's niece and nephew Kimberly and Jeffrey Terry. Drayton Plains. William Terry. Drayton Plaina, . was beet man and ushers included Rohald Fortin, brother of the bride, William Fulkerson and James Sholte. Returning from a northern Michigan honeymoon, t h e couple will live in Flint. Beige cymbidium orchids accented Sirs. Fortin’s dress of coral twilled cotton. The mother of the bridegroom appeared in aqua-nuirine cotfon organza . and wore white raoes. The Charles Schmidts and Mrs. Charies Thompson came from Columbus,. Ohio lor the Mdrts, were Mrs. Thonuui M. Bader, her stater’s matron of honor and Barbtfa Ann Hunt, bridesmaid. Mary Jane Hunt, her cousin's Juniar attendant, wore white organdy over yellow tatteta. The two colon com-priaed her bouquet of carnations. ★ ★ , ★ Benjamin Forbueh of South-field performed the duties of best man. Guests were seated by Richard Young, Auburn Heights and Robert Uhan, Drayton Plains. The bride’s brother, David served as acolyte. ■ After a honeymoon in northern Michigan, the coUple wiU be at home in Waterford. * * ★ Pink and white carnations accented Mrs. Piltao e pink lace Jacket drem. The mother of the bridegroom wore a blue linen Jacket dress and corsage of pink carnations. OK to Ask Gentleman to Dine? By The Emily Post Inslllute Q; My husband died two years ago. About three months ago a widower near my own age was introduced to me. He is a very nice perton and has asked me out to dinner and the theater several times. I would Uke to recipocate by asking him to my apartment some evening for dinner. I have lived in this same apartment for many years and know most of the people who live here and I nW aay thkt my behavior has always been above reproach. Will you please tell me if it could possibly cause gossip if I invitod him to dine with me some evening? A: It shouldn't cause any gossip, but to be absolutely FATHER n HURT Q: My husbaod’a daughter's engagement waa recently an- ts also the daughter of Mr. Henry Smith of Silver brings, Florida.” SHOfWER FOB SND Q; I am to be the matron of honor at a triend's wedding. This win be her second marriage. I had planned to give a shower for her but was told that a shov^ for a bride who is marrying tor the second time is not prcqwr. WiU you please teU me it this is true? A: It a shower waa given for her at the time ot her first marriage to which all of her friends brought presents, it is not fair to expect them to bring presents to a second shower. If. on the other hand, she had no shower before, or she has had an entirely new circle of friends, thoe would be no objection to giving a shower for her at this time. Betty Louise Striekling, daughter of the George F. Stricklings, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and Richard M. Fitsgerald, Birmingham, son of the Harold A. Fitzgeralds, Oftawa Drive, were wed today in the Church of the Saviour, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. MRS. RICHARD M. FITZGERALD Church Reception Follows Betsy Louise Strickling Marries Richard Fitzgerald in Ohio Rite Dr. Howard J. Brown otflcl-ated at the marriage of Betsy Louise Strickling to Richard M. Fitzgerald this afternoon in the Church of The Saviour, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. A church reception followed the ceremony attended by some 300 gueste. The George F. Stricklings. Geveland Heights, are parenta ot the bride and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Fitzgerald of Ottawa Drive. A * • W Motifs of imported Alencon' lace, touched with bridal seed pearls, accented, .the- bride’s gown of white silk organza at the Jewel neckline and on the voluminous skirt styled w i t h -pout drape airi dtepel train. Her fingertip veU of French illuaion was fitted to a Juliet cap of Alencon lace. White raoes rested on her small white Mrs. Roger G. Kennedy. Maple Heights, Ohio, attended her sister os matron of honor. Brideamaids were Mrs. Charles McDonald, Geveland Heights; Mrs. Bryant Fillion. Huntington, Long laland, N.Y.; Mrs. Paul Connolly, the bridegroom's sister; Barbara Allen and Carriyn Switzer, aU of Birmingham. They wore Bianchi-designed ' gowns ol white silk organza over pale blue taffeta with Chantilly lace applique. ■k It A Sherri Kennedy, niece of the bride, was Dower girl and her brother Charles carried the rings. Howard H. Fitzgerald. Birmingham, was best man for Ms brother, also of Biiming-bom. The usher list inclwfod Richard f. Euler, . Syracuse, N.Y.; James W. Hnttentocher, Oarkston; Adolph Magnus, Bloomfield Hills; Lawrence D. Heilsch, John Touscany and David P. Huthwaite, Birmingham; and Richard H. Zimmerman. AAA The bride was graduated cum laude from Michigan ^tale University where she was affiliated with Pi Beta Phi Sorority. She has also attended the University of Madrid and Ohio State Uftiverfoty and • teaches music at Derby Junior High School. Birmingham. A graduate of Cranbrook School, Mr. Fitzgerald attended the University of Arizona where .he was affiliated with Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity and Delta Sigma Pi business honoriuy. AAA After two days in Chicago, the couple will leave for a two- ian Island!, returning later to a home in Birmingham. 1 ha is ter-if Mart ever this. We live in the nme city and my has-I and I are on i Women's Section Let's Dance, Says His but . the Boy Says: By AWOAn. VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; I am a 14-yei^d bey. My father is teaching me how to dance. He is supposed to be a real good dancer (at least that's what my mother says). WeU, maybe he was 'cons idered gO(^ in his day, but he dances 11 kA they used to way back in the early 40s and 1 can't get it. ^yway, even If I could I wouldn't care to dance that way because no one dances like that any more. How can I cut off his lessons without hurting his feelings? LEARNING TO DANCE DEAR LEARNING: Don’t be foolish. Let him teach you. It might come in handy when you have to dance with your girl friend's mother. In the . meantime, get someone in your generation to teach you how to dance 1382 style. AAA DEAR ABBY; My two-year-old son sucks his thumb. I habe dlscusaed It with his pediatrician who advised me to ignore It. My problem is this; Whenever I take the child market- Dad, Old Style ing, strangers will lay to him, "Does that thumb taste good?” Or, "BIG boys don't suck their thumbs! ” All this teasing and shaming have aggravated the habit. I have even had clerks pull his thumb out of his mouth while I paid for my purchases. What shiauld I do? MRS. J. DEAR MRS. J.; irou can't control the remarks of strangers. Ignore them too. AAA How's the world treating you? For a personal unpublished reply, rend a self-addressed, stamped envelope to ABBY. care of The Pontiac Press. Opens Gifts for Nursery Mrs. Charies A. Bradshaw . Jr. of East Beverlj) Avenue opened nursery gifts Wednesday evening in the home of Mrs. Michael F. Gever on Chamberlain Street. Mrs. Gerald Odling was cohoatm. Guests included Mrs. Lyle Venner, Sirs. (3ua1m Bradshaw, Mrs. Kenneth Barks, Mrs. David Darnell, Mrs. Joseph Tinton, Mrs. Charles Hen-‘ derson and Judy Lougheed. •Others' presehnt were Mrs. William Hoisington. Judy Dun. ham, Mrs. C^les Esr^ian, Mrs. Richard Parker, Mrs. William Cox, Mrs. James Reinert, Mrs. Charies Redick, Norma Klukos and Alycemae Stephens. Delfine Ma. Bowers, daughter of Mr. and^ Mrs. Raul . 5. Bowers, Birmirigham, and It. (j.g.) Albert Thorndike Jr. were married today in Christ Church, Crosse Pointe. His parents are the All^rt Thorndikes of Milton, Mass. MRS. ALBERT THORNDIKE JR. In Grosse Pointe Rites Couple Exchanges Vows Wearing her mother’s wedding gown of ivory silk with full train and veil ot Brussels applique, Delfine Marie Bowers became the bride of Lt. (J.g.) Albert Thorndike Jr. today in Christ Church, Groaae Pointe. AAA The couple plans u motor trip through the northern United States and Canada and will live in Sai: Francisco. AAA Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Bowers, Birmingham, and the Albert Thorndikes ol Milton. Mass. The Ferdinand Onellis of Groase Pointe, aunt and uncle of the bride, were bdits at a reception in their home foUowliig four o’dodc vows repealed to Rev. ErvUle B. Maynard. Virginia ThorndUre 0. Milton. Maaa., was maid of honor and Judith Austin, San Francisco, Mrs. Anthony Low of Boston, and Ellxabeth Semple of Grosse Pointe were bridesmaids. Francesca and Gio-conda GnelU were Junior [ Red sweetheart roses com- ! piement their pink linen dresses stylid along clasaic lines. On (he esquire side were Anthony Low, best man and ushers, Emory lUce, both of Boston; John and, Michael Ganson, Weston, Mass.; and ; Jonathan 'Bowers, Birmingham. I At St Benedict*g Church Tryon-Smith Vows Told A reception at Waltz Hall, followed the vows of Maryann Smith to Dennis M. Tiyon pledged Saturday before Father Richard W. Thorooa in St. Benedict’s Church. AAA Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Smith of South TU-den* Street, the bride wore white French lace ov«r satin with a pearl and diamond teardrop necklace, gift from the bridegroom. A miniature tiara held the short white veil in place. She carried white orchids with cariiation stream- wore lavender oiganZa over orchid. Hie hiUegrooip, son of the James B. lYyans of Inverness Street, Sylvan Lake, had Rldi- Knlght and Robert HbUoway. The ooule left tor a honeymoon in Northern Michigan. Upon returning, they will re-aide at Sylvan Lake. For her dai«ht«r‘s wedding, Mrs. Smith chM a navy silk dress with white accessories and pink cymbidium orchids. The mother of the bridegroom wore a beige i " d of honor Idorie Tippett green cyinbidhnn orchids. Wed today in the First Baptist Church were Alycemae Alta Stephens, daughter of „ Mr. and Mrs. Merrell T. Stephens, Oneida Road} and Frederick H. Townsendi son of the Wilbur H. = Townsends oj^ Hi-HiU Drive', Orion « Township. ‘ MRS. FREDERICK H. TOWNSEND , ~ ■Alycemae A. Stephens, F. H. Townsend Marry Enjoying the bon v0y(^e party in their honor on the Ittfvn of Orchard Lake Community Ckitrch, Presbyterian, Friday evening are Rev. and Mrs. Ijd-umrd D. Auchard and Yakko Yamamoti, an exchange student from Japan. The Auchards will leave soon for the Middle East to study mission work of the United Presbyterian Church and .tour the Holy Land. Miss Yamamoti, who has been living with the Auchards, will return to her home in Nishinomiya City. Shown (left to right) are Mrs. Auchard, Ray D. Baker of Warner Drive, Green Lake, Rev. Mr. Auchard, daughter Joanne an4 Yakko. White chrysanthemums, gladioli and potted palms formed a background for midafternoon vows of Alycemae Alta Stephens to Frederick H. Townsend today In the First Baptist Church. A church reception followed the candlelight ceremony performed by Rev. Kyle Wilson. AAA Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Merrdl T. Stephens ol Oneida Road, wore white Chantilly lace over peau de soie. A crown of pearls and rhinestones also caught her veil of silk illusion. She carried white roses, carnations and lilies of ■ the valley. MAID OF HONOR Attending their cousin were Martha A. Fauble, maid of honor, and Linda Phipps, Or-tonville, who served as bridesmaid with the bride's former college classmates Bette John; son. Detroit, and Joyce Plamp, OwHMiO. They wore aquamarine summer taffeta and held round bouquets ol white carnations. Oonde Fauble wtt her c in's flower girl. William 1 best man for his brother. They are oona of the Wilbur H.' Townsends, Ifl-Hiil Drive, Or-; ion Township. Phailp, Martin * and David Townsend ushereC with FliiUp' Bishop, Rochester’’ and David Tkyfor, Metamora* Hie bride, a Pontiac teachr er. was graduated from Eastern Michigan University and her husband from the Univer-■ity ot MfoUgau. FoUowing a hemeymoon at YeOpwatone National Part, the couirie will live on Soiimbaw Rood. A A A Mrs. Stephens chose pink cotton sheer with bodice of' Chantilly lace tor the wedding., The mother of the bridegroom -wore embroidered yellow cot-^ (on. Their white carnation cor-^ sages included rosebuds tO; '•match their dresaes. ^ AAA T . Grandparenis .el the couplet at the wedding were Mrs. E. D. Stephens, Walled Lpke, and the Fi^ H. Townsends of St. Petersburg, Fla. ■t^:n Glass Is Durable GUn luncheon lutd dimer MTVIdM are' manufactured by a prooeai which makes them sti^ and heat-resistant. They can be washed like china in hot soap or detorgent suds, followed by hot r ' THE PONTIAC FREgS, SATURDAY. 28, >^962 JaimiMry I9>ws or* planned by R. Carolyn Ddvis, daughter of the Stuart /. Datfises of Mohawk Road to Robert F. Kiteley, ton of the Frank Kiteleys, North Avery Road, Waterford fowuhip. ^ attend* BEVERLY Am FOSTER Otherwise, Goiter a Threat R. CAROLYN DAVIS Engagement Announced >At a recent tan . parb^, My. and Bits. Irvim Diem of Birmingham, former^ ly of Pontiac, aimounee Ih# engagement o< their daugMer Alta Esther to Dr. Richard A. Kahn, son of the Joel H. Kahns of Midland, The bride«lect is a graduate of University of MtcMfian and holds a bachelor at science degree in dental hygiene. ♦ ♦ ★ Her Hence is an, alumnus of U. of M. and Wayne Sute University college of medicine. He is affiliated with Zeta BeU Tau and Phi Delta Epsilon ALTA ESTHER DIEM A Summer Swish ' Most summer fabrics only need a swish through soap or detergent suds to remove sur- Daily Iodine Dose a Must It Is ama2ing how many differ It items (hr body required ^ order to stay well. Sometimes''only the ntinutest amount is needed, hut this small airwunt it essential. Tar ince, think of iodine :M; MONTGOMERY WARD - PONTIAC MALI SsTJs-Jt lEMOIIT Yiir IIAMOII till ChooM from hundreds of eadring new nountingi to fredibrMencelnMICgeld. wmS?< 9» diprind Bwe IS.M «s 5,000.00 Ihe Kood and Drug Iralion of the United States Government says that one-tenth of a milligram daily is sufficient for all ages and both senes. Lack of this is considered to be the rauae of goiter. MH'Km The anun-es of Iodine are and vegetables and grain are grown in toll which contains iodine. Milk is a aource of Smline if the row from which the came had foraged on graas which grew in iodine-rich soil. I was aarprtaed to laara H la aear the aea. New Ideas ii Usht... at Staadard Electric New, Modem Pulldown by VIRDEN - ^3420 REFLICTS LIGHT UP AS WELL AS DOWN For batttr viewing comfort. The dalkately pierced brsis sKieldino ring leperetes duel bress edged ceramic vvhife glass diffusers. Conical brass cone with walnut three-way COME IN NOW AND SELECT YOURS FROM THE CHOICEST ASSORTMENT OF LIGHTING FIXTURES IN THE PONTIAC AREA. iVoio on DUplay in Our Showroom h deae by a Hcaaaad sentraatae SEE OUR ELECTRIC HEAT DISPUY Public Welcome SHOWROOM HOURS: 17S S. SAGINAW-R 2-S2S1 FREE PARKING ADJACENT TO OUR SHOWROOM Howev’cr. the fish and plants living in the aea are splendid sources. Perhaps one rekson for the goiter belts, which are mostly inland, is that those who live In these areas do not eat aa much sea food, generally, as those who live near the sea and, therefore, are more susceptible to goiter. Or it may be matter of the distribution of iodine-bearing soil. If one's iodine intake is not'suf-ficient, it is believed that certain stressful situations may trigger boiter. Perhaps iodized salt is the surest and easiest way to be ce^ tain that we get this small but crucial amount of iodine each day. Remember, too, that many adults are sadly lacking in their calcium intake. While this is rather widely distributed in foods, the rich-e is milk. Adults should havte at least two gflastei wmried about cholesterol or overweight use powdered fat-free milk, or skim milk. WWW If you would like the leaflet, "Vitamins In Your Diet,” send a stamped, self-addressed emrdope with your request for leaflet No. 3k to Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press. and Mrs. Henry Knox was the setting for a luncheon following the marriage of their daughter Jerry Ann to Melvin V. Sellera in All Sainta Episcopal Church. WWW A bouquet of white orchids and miniature white roaes completed bride's ensemble of white Chantilly lace gown and silk illusion veil held by a tiara of seed pearls. Maxine Knox, her sister’s maid of honor, appeared in pink rilk organza over taffeta. She held pink carnhthMia centered with a punde orchid. Also in pink were Mdes-maids Dicki Kidd and Willa May who carried pink and white carnations. JUNIOR ATIENDANTB The bridegroom's aiater Shanm Sellers and Brenda Knox, cousin of the bride, junior attendanU, Miss Ruth Wilson, traveling Consultant, will be here Mon., Tue. and Wed. to help with ^ our Figure ProhIem.t ^10.98 Nu-Back All-in-Ones Give. - Finn Control SAVE f2-10 ft88 Charge It This lovely all-in-one is well boned for maximam control yet the airy mesh fabric keeps yon cool and comfortable. Exciosive sliding back leU yon move freely in comfort Convenient front sipper. Sixes C and D, 36 to 48. Shop Sears Monday nile nnlil 9 p.m.1 Save more at Sean! Vaar lavClir.l. Illtni bv Mr Hr prafnurfaaaUy ('.ortHry Itrp!., Sn-omI Finn « SatisfaUlion giurgntoed ^--''*** - or your money back*' Phone FE 54171 Six Unions of WCTU at Picnic Six unions of Women’s Christian Temperance Union were presented at the WCTU’a annual picnic at the Pontiac Lake home of Mrs. Joseph Green. Mrs. Frank Deavers, president of Anna Goidon Unit, conducted proceedings during the annual meeting and reports. DWrict Vice President Rev. Lola Marion gave the Invoca-tion and Mrs. E. C. McNair led devotions. Mrs. William Carls also participated in the program. ' Installation of officera will take place the evening of Oct. 4. Oakland Avenue Presbyterian Church will host the f^-ily night event. The next meeting of the Federation is set for Aug. 28 at Mrs. Green's lake home. Mrs. Nellie Munro closed the session with benediction. Selleis-Knox Nuptials Held in Pontiac Church The Ogemaw Road home of Mr. wore orchid organza and carried ordiid carnations combined with white. Amy Lanon was flower girl. Attending'the bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lambert Sellers of Bay Street were beat man Frederick Kaiaer, Dearborn, and Dennis Kaiser who ushered with Don-Walker and Roger Sheniian. Dean and Lambert Sellers Jr. were their brother’s junior ushers. Set-phen Knox carried the rings. For her daughter’s June 16 mony performed by Rev. W. R. Shutze, Mrs. Knox chose pink lace over taffeta and wore miniature roses. Mrs. Sellers clipped white miniature roses to her of smoke blue silk organza. in Gingellville Community Hall. The couple plan a Louisiana honey-later in the summer. Party Honors Miss Hurlburt, June 30 Bride Bride-elect Jo Ann Huriburt, was honored Wednesday evening at a Uiower in the home of Mrs. Ray Swaney on Middle Belt Road. Cohoatesses were Mrs. Albert Games and Mrs. Carl Weber. Mrs. WUliam Huriburt of Township, mother of the hon-oree, presided at the tea table with Mrs. Harold Carlin. Lake Orion, sister of the future bridegroom. Sr * W Other guests were Mrs. Donald Johns, Mrs. Mayme Neu-bauer, VMet Crawford, Mrs. FItqri Crawford, Mrs. Howard Crawford, Mrs. George' Rupert, Mrs. Percy Rose, Mri. Roy WUton, Mrs. Helen S. Teitgen. Mrs. Dora Dawson. Helen Turek, and Mrs. Mabel Huriburt. From Detroit were Mrs. Gilbert Brawn, Mra. Hazen Meyer, Mrs. Donald Kuhn and daughter Judy. Mrs. Ted Hubert and Mrs. Tad Hubert Jr. came from Watidns Lake and Mrs. Devine from Drayton Plains. The First Congregational Church has been reserved for Miss Hurlburt’a June 30 marriage to Elwyn D. Myers of Qeveland. son of Mr. and Mrs. Myron Mjvrs of Pentwater. Bride-to-Be Honored at Waterford Shower Catherine Elizabeth Kantar-ian was honored at a bridal shower given by Her fiance's mother. Mrs. Roy Hethering-ton of Anders Street, Waterford Township, Wednesday evening. Bridegroom-elect is Laine T. Hetherington. Hostesses were Mrs. Leonard Leach, Mrs. Gary Hethei^ ington, Mrs. Dean Hetherington, all of Waterfrad. and Bfra. Robert Thayer, Guests included the bride-elect's mother Mrs. Ludwig Kantarian. of Union Lake, Mrs. Thomas Mook and Mrs. Thomas Lahaney, both of Waterford; Mrs. Loren Bray, Drayton Plains; Harriet Van-Dusen, Birmingham. ★ * ♦ Others were Mrs. Carl Hetherington, Mrs. Donald Hetherington, Sandra Hetherington and Mrs. James Hall. Mommy I^CAIL ★ NEW WAY ★ Our Ru'jgs Need Cleaning! NewWayprMbmUaalelaE NEW WAY. RUG and CARPET CLEANERS 42 Wisner Street Poatiae Guild Holds Final Meeting St. Anthony's Guild of St. Benedict Churchy held their final meeting of the season at the home of Mrs. Gus Guenther, of Draper Street. A short business time plans of the guild were outlin^ until September, when regular monthly meetings will Twenty members and two guests, Mrs. William Brant ST. of DetroiL and Mrs. Marilyn Coagrove were present. The block Rosary-will continue to be held 'eadi Tuesday bert will visit the infirmary. Club Puts on Annual Picnic Members and guests of the Better Home and Garden Club met at the home of Mrs. William Sovey, of Henderson Street for their annual June The club voted to send Margaret Seyferth of Birmii^:ham, a teacher at Louisa M. Alcott School, as their delegate to the School in July. Committee planning this affair were Mrs. Dewey Alien, Mrs. John and Mrs. Irl The next meeting will be in July at the home of Mra. Ed-5 gar Csrvey. of aarkaton. Hosts Unit Maiy Martha Circle M the Oakland Park Methodist Church met at the home of Mra. Ray Cbmnbe on Chippewa Road, Wednesday. Guests present were Mrs. John Lament, Mrs. FVank Ledford, Mra. Nettie Carr, Mrs. Everett Robertson, and her gnuidaughter Joan Ostrander, and Mrs. Robinson' Btrs. Ray Ooombe and Mrs. Maud Scott gave the program and devotions. The July mreting will be a picnic at the Qriey Drive home of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Weddle. News Notes The birth of a son, Evan Arthur, June IS in WUUsni Beaumont Hospital, Oak, Is announced by Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Moore (Bfary Bhaw) of Birmingham. The baby’s grandparents are the Brewster H. Bhaws, Cass City, and Judge and BIrs. Arthur E. Moore. Royal Oak. ' it it it Carol Rasmus of Avondale Drive and Bfary Ann Jack* son of Clarkston are motoring to Seattle where they will visit the World’s Fair. it it it Former Pontiac residents, Mr. and Mrs. Niles LeMonde and atm Morton, have returned to their home In Loe Angeles after a three*week visit with ttelr daughter and son-in-law, the junior Olenn Reamers of Florawood Drive, Waterford Township. They also visited Mr. LeMonde’s listers, Mrs.. Virginia O. Hawkins of Mt. Clemens Street and Mrs. Bfarie Snltgen of EUabeth Lake Road. ★ ★ it ' Attending the 67th annual convention of the National Aseoclatlon of Chiropractors at Detroit next week wt!i be Drs. C. L. Baker, WUliam Dunkeld, Harry OodaeU, Walter OodseU, OUbert Pacene, P. C. Paderewski, J. O. Whltmer, Clarence vmi and Harold Alexander. ★ ★ ★ Bfrs. Robert Schmidt and aon Michael of Sacramento, Calif., are vlslUng her sisters, Mrs. Clyde Dearing of Ottawa Drive and Bfrs. George Boyd of Bloomfield HUls. it it it Bfrs. Andm Hammtlsf of Detroit attended the Satur-dAy wedding of her granddaughter Kaye Ann Orantham to Jimmy P. Slamas In Lakeland Preabytertail Church, Waterford. The bridegroom’s grandmother, Bfre. Lela Penn, came from Union City, Tenn., for the eerarony. it it it Robert Oustaveon, graduate student at Duke University, Is visiting his parents, the Ounnar Oustavaone of Mount Royal Avenue before leaving tor the wshama islands on an execuUve training program. He wUl return to the university In January and receive his master’s degree In forestry and business administration In June. Robert's gueei, WUheimlna Roaanberger of Wellesley mns, Bfaes., who also attends Duke University, has returned east for lumier studies at Hnrvard University. ★ ★ ★ BfarUyn Smith of Ift. Clemens Street was hostess to some SS fwmer claaanates of Pontiae Central Hlth Schojl foUowlng graduation last week. ★ "A ■A TVmner Podtiae residents, the Grant M. Campbells (Bfargaret Ann Wlndrlm) of Port Huron, announce the birth of a daughter. Dawn Susan, on June 16. Bfra George A. Wbdrlm of Chandler Avenue U the baby’s maternal grandmother and the Rufus M. Campbells are paternal grandparenta it it it Hdstesses at a Sunday open house honoring their ntoce, Gladys Joyce Henderson. In her home on North Bastway Drive were Bfra Donald Schnell, Bfra Jamm HoUoway and Bfra Ralph Van DeWaUe. Among some 40 guests were Margaret Sandale of Des Molnea Iowa Richard SehneU of Detroit and several members of the Pontiae Central High School graduating clasa ^ it it it ^ TThe next meeting of the Lucky 13 Birthday Club wUl be held in September, honoring Bfra Kill OreneU at the home of Bfra Steve Siyielak. A dinner to honw Bfra Margaret Daugherty was held recently at the home d Bfrs. Ralph Deem of Stirling Street. Games were played and gUU were presented to the bonoree. it it it Rev. and Mra Calvin R. Hendrick of West Strathmore Street have returned to their home after attending the national Quadrennial General Conference of the Pilgrim Holiness Church at Winona Lake, Ind. chu^'^ Mr. Hendrick is pastor of the denomlnatltm’s local t it it Mrs Uwls Wrenn of Niagara Street will honor her husband at a buffet dinner Saturday on the at his 70th birthday. Some SO guests hJe been tariU? it if it Among the 300 delegates representing 115 Michigan churches, will be Mrs. George Hollis and Bfrs. Phillip Waldle of the Baldwin Avenue E.U3. Church and Mrs L S Schelfele represenUng the North East Community Church' , -A The Gerald Frederiksens (Shirley Oeyef) of Monrovia Street. Drayton Plains, announce the birth of a aon Dale Edward on June IS. Grandparents are the Harry Geyers of Bennett Street and the Walter Frederiksens of Baldwin Avenue. Oslumbia Univepity. Ij^unded in 1754, first bore the hanie vt Waa'e .(foUege. ’That was changed to ,OohirabU CoU^ in 17M and aa- Dual Piano Recital Set to AidJPem Club A dual piano recital was given by Mrs. Dorothy Kemp WIVES Wont to livo in Colifomio? ALL MOVING AND TRAVEL EXPENSES PAID. If your husband is on engineer, see our od in classified. FMC CORPORATION San Jose, CoMfornia (An hour's drive from Son Francisco) Roosevelt and Mrs. Teniko Yamasaki, both of Birmingham, Friday eveniiM at Bfre. Roosevelt’s studio, Greenwood Street. WWW is the second year these muBicians have played for the Oakland County Democratic Women.^ Proceed! will go to wthe Governors television program. ★ ★ ★ ’The program included; Sheep May Safely Graze, by Bad); Fugue (Gigue) from Toccato in 'D. by Bach; Andante and Variations, by Schumann; Dan^ Macabre, by C. Salnte-Saens; Berceuse, by Pahngren; Fetes, by Debussy; aiid Jamaican Rumba, by Arthur Benjamin. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JUNE 88, 1062^ EtBVEK Mate Getting Older? Help Him -- Tactfully By Bvm siauErr Ii your Inuband one of thow men who refutes to admit .that he hat ivachad the age when he should ha taking Uli'a bit aaalerr TWt it a problem many wives face. Middls-i«ed men, gentrally, adopt a fata pride in their virility. They tudi in that abdominal ‘■tpare tire." expand their chests and tall into Jobs which put great stress on aging hearts. ^ ne tpMsttan 1st Ho that It Is stowing-down tline? The best thing a wife can do, perhaps, is to try to gradually change a husband’s pattern of after-work living, without showing her hand. She can usually manage to have to shorten evenings out so that a interested In the kind of *hobb1es and outdoor activities that aren’t too strenuous. Often she can get Uai bway for woekends, which means get-ting him 'eansptotely away tron his Job, by dreaming np oiMrt trips and selling Um on the Idea. Whan women gat to thr age where they ought to slow down, life usually arranges things they can. UOHTEB WORK Their children grow up and their work loads are lightened and they don't feel any need to prove they are still young by indulging more vioent physical extrclae than they should. Blit a man's wor automatically Uto middle ag^ la toot. It to often heavier. If his younger companions want Wedding Photos SIX 8x10s $18.00 100 INVITATIONS $6.60 FOR HOME SHOWING CALL FE 8-7402 6&CBLACRLAW photographers m If. dOHNSOlf, Paatlae or play 36 holes of golf in the broiling sun middle-aged man doesn’ lag.tehind. So he really needs to have his wile gently and tactfully lead ' into gradually slowing down that kills so many mei their middle years. Is hubby groutdiyf Read Ruth MUIett’s booklet ’’How to Have a ,jy Husband." Send 25 cents to Ruth Mlltott Reader Service, care of The Pontiac Press, P. O. Box m. Dept. A. Radio City Station,. New York 19, N. Y Rev. and Mrs.^ Eastman Honored Standing at the refreshment table. Rev. and Mrs. 0. P. Eastman (left) with David Wells of South Winding Drive look over the many friends and families gathered at the First United Missionary Church for the farewell reception in their honor Thursday evening. Rev. Mr. Eastman has served as pastor of the church and Mr. Wells is superintendent of the Sunday School. Vacationists in the Virgin Islands may purchase J200 worth of duty-free goods in contrast to the $100 limitation'effective in aU other free ports outside the continental United States. Experts to Participate at Group Relations Parley Newest By y y/r'UP/// See Them At CONNOLLY'S Shopping for o diesiesd? AvMtoMwin provs «diy so n bey tbsir dmsiond ot CsueobA We foeturs Detroit Police Ckjmmissioner George Edwards will join City Councilman and Dr. Mel Ranitz, a psychologist, two educators and an intergroup relations executive to addreu a five-day insUtute on intergroup relations to be held Aug. 6-10 at Michigan SUte University Oakland. Cosponsors of the sessions are MSUO's Division of Continuing Education and the Michigan Region Christians and Jews. The program la especially designed for parents and adulU serving with PTAs. social agencies, and religious and youth-serving groups. Each day’s program will have calling MSUO Division of Continuing Education. Co-directors of the Institute are Mrs. Valerie Pierce of MSUO and Mrs. Sara Colvin, director of education, Michigan region. National Conference of Christians and Jews. Commissioner Edwards will keynote one day’s sessions with a talk on attitudes and conduct of today’s youth. TO AIR SUBURBIA Dr. Ravitz, asaocaite professor of sociolagy. Wayne State University’. will discuss changing suburbia and its populations. Dr. Merria Weiss, eblef psychiatric conaultaiil. Oakland Child Galdanoe CHnlcs. wUI speak of peydNlogical needs of okUdiea Lutheran Unit Closes Year The United Lutheran Church Women concluded the year with a luncheon Wedne^ay at the Lutheran Church of the Mrs. Milton Freiri opened the event with a prayer. Devt>- reports were given by Mrs. Dale Platz. Detailed progreu by the various leaders. Mn. Harold Wood turned the remainder of the meeting over to Mrs.. Lewis Crew, pro-gram chairptan, who outltoed plans for the next year. These Included goals to achieve better methods of organization, more extensive missionary coverage, and service both at home and abroad. The executive board hosted the meeting and dossd It with prayer. A farewell open house Thursday evening was held for Rev. and Mrs. 0. P. Eastman of the United Missionary Churdi for their past six years service. After ths program in the church sanctukry, the reception i\as held in the Fbllow-sblp Room. Master Of ceremonies for the was David WMls. Ira Shark tod the group singing and the Invocation was led by George Granger. Gloria Sherman spoke of appreciation by the Women’s Missionary Society. Mrs. Vera Wells read a poem by Ward Hart entitled ‘ Six Years with the East-mans." Other participants In the program were Harold Hall. FPed Johnson, Nancy Kent, the Sunday School. Df. Theodors it Altobach, representing the Pontiac Pas- Ministers’ rsllowship will greatly miss Rsv. Eastman. He Is one of ths charter members ef sur ministers* fellow ship, and has contributed many vital Ideas for ths betterment of our fellowship and the people of Pontiac.’’ Rev. Eastman will take a United Missionary Church on Outer Drive in Detroit. Under his ministry, the membership of United Missionary doubled. This necessitated a new <*urch being built and the first ser- vtoe was held in the ngw building In UN. Church Group Holds Meeting Plymouth Group of the First. CongregstlonBl Church mst rs-: c^tly St ths borne ot Mrs. George Otoon, of Dover Rood. Gobostesa was Mias Margaret I. T. R,. Eggleston, Mrs. James Ooek date, me has.' Before and for simie time after McOonnack took over the second roost powerful post in ment, there was a good deal of nervousness in DemocraUc quarters about how he wiould get along with President Kennedy. e * * Hie 70-year-old speaker and the 45-yearold President have in common Boston nativity, Irish blood and Catholic faith. ★ ★ But these similarities are perhaps less important than this fui^ ther fact: Both are Dlynocratlc politicians from Massadiusetts, whose ambitions have collided in the past, and who currently are confronted with a situation in which the brother of one and the nephew of the other are battling for the Democratic Senate nomination in their home state. It there is a Kehnedy-Mr-Cormack political feud, as capital gosidp has proclaimed for many yean, It Is being waged by mutual consent hi Masnehosetta The association which contains all superintendents of all M ties voted in favor of the new constitution during its annual meeting which ended Thursday at Higgins Lake Conservation Camp, ac-9 Oakland County Schools Supt. William J. Emerson. Emerson, who was elected vice president of the associatkm, noted that the action lends support to similar approval voiced by the State Parent-Teacher At-■ociation and the League of Women’s Voters. Makes Guilty Plea to Indecency Charge 'A former Waterford Towiiship teacher pleaded guilty *niuraday to gross indecency in an incident lest November Involving i year-old boy. Donald E. Zielinski. 23. of 6g2i Williams Lake Road, entered his to the lesser charge as he awaited trial for Indecent liberties. Groas Indecency carries a marimnm penalty of five yenro In prison and indecent liberties Is punishable by up to It yrars. A former tpacher at Our Lady of the Lakes High School, Zielinski allegedly committed the offense after he picked lip the youth -who was hitchhiking. The teacher will be sentenced July 31 by CSrcuit Judge WUliam J. Beer. the only known metai which is liquid ordinaiy tsHiptn^ttOOi._________^ South End Union Lako Road S-S6S1>0pon1P.M. Come Early and Bring Your Coupon lAST MiBHT SOPHIA LOREN FEATURES « 3 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER iri Best Actress of the Year! “TWO WOMEN” ■ ALSO TROY DONAHUE-CONNIE STEVENS-POROTHY McGUIRE -LLOYD NOLAN Tray and Connia in Love Afain! AUDIE MURPHY in 3rd FEATURE^ “To Hell and Back" The strongest Kennedy supporters in the House acknowledge that McCormack’ has gone down the line for the administration’s legis-! lative program with unswerving loyalty. ■* ♦ * , Sitting in his ornate, high-ceil-inged office. Just off the House floor, McCormack tdd a recent visitor that his relationships with the President are "exceUent.” ★ * * •Have the two of you ever discussed the hot Senate race in Massachusetts between your nephew Edward and his brother Ted?” "It has never been remotely alluded to between us." the speaker replied. “We are both big-enough men not to let a thing like that affect our ability to work together for the good of the country." * w ★ McCormack is a tall, lean mad ith a long, bony face. He looks rather like a New England schoolmaster, and this impression it heightened by his white hair and rimless passes. He wears gray pinstriped suits, whose pockets in-| variably bulge with papers. His one concession to the papular image of an Irish politician is a predilection tor cigin, which he uses bote for smoking and for, waving in great, eloquent gestures. ' Starts SUMDAY • A MOIMSTER-STATUE ... TWEIVJTY STORIES TALL. M G M.,!.. RORY CALHOUN THE COIOSSUSOF RHODES ^ZZSKEEGO ENDS TUESDAY CHILD 25C-ADULT 75c lAiaHi-and Gunned ALLYOUNEED FOR FUN IS sMisjoit!>y □f OHt \ L0WREY0R6AN $1195 for only || a month Come in and sea us— Convirica yourself today Wa AIm Rant fiaim With Dgtiaa ta Ray rm LniMD ln*MD4 WHS Pnr«S*M tl A*r Oriu »r runn Bliy NOWI NO DOWN PATMKNT N» PAYMENT Til LABOa DAT GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. GCT YOUR "EARLY RIRD" ADMISSION TICKETS FROM YOUR GASOLINE SERVICE STATIOR P'-mjemeway; KEEGO ■ J - ■ ■ ' ■ ■ ■ . ■ . . ■ . • THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JUNEJ8J962_ —-yniRTEEN Bob Kennedy to AAake jRoutine Check in State DETROIT (UPI) — Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy will make a routine inspection Monday of the U.S. attorney'! ottioe here. It will be Kennedy^! flrat trip to Michigan since Teamsters Union President James R. Holla filed a $350,000 libel suit against him and Jack Paar for allied damaging remarks made on a televtaiDn show nearly three years ago. The suit cause of inactivity. NOWPUYlHei FEATURE STARTS 9:00 P.M. To Urge Action on Ordinances Waterford Citizens Unit to Appear at Meeting of Board A^nday WE SCREEN'S MIEHTIEST SPECTACLE!, A// TA« Sights And Sounds Of Ths Most Ssnsstionst Ago ths WorldHss Evsr Known! , A delegatlpn from the Greater Waterlor^ Community Council will appear at Monday’s Waterford Township Board meeting seeking action by the township on establishing food, health and nuisance ordinances. The GWeX! passed a motion at Its June 5 meeting eliing the need tor sueli ordinances. A copy of the motion and a letter requesting action In this direction was sent to the Township Board but no action has been Oakland County sanitarian Melvin Goldman was the speaker at the last meeting of the GWC(7 which was devoted mainly to sanitation. Goldman told the group that the health department is encouraging the establishment of food and nuisance ordinance on the local level where they can be enforced more effectively. ★ * * Other businesj sche*’uled Monday includes an 8 p.m. bid opening on workmen’s compensation and general liability insurance policies for township personnel. A public hearing on street light assessments in Lakewood Faijns subdivision will also be held. Neptune has two satellites, named Triton and Nereid. Miracle Mile Drive In 2103 S. Telegraph FE 2 1000 HOPEaNCROSIY *WTnEMUUr ABAM! its the most picture. you ever saw! EXCLUSIVE I FIRST SHOWINe owulio couNn I OPENS TPJM. at Rtgular BINQ CROSBY BOBhOpC . IOANCOUINsA PMSHS rHe ROADTO Honq kONq I DOROrMYIAMOVlR ROBERT MORLEY NORMANPANAIW&MElillN FRANK NORMANPANAMA MELVINFRANK Algo. HIDE YOUR WHISKEY AND YOUR WOMEN!! HERE THEY COME- SLASHING DRAMA OF THE HELLIONS WHO VIOLATED A TOWN! SKOIALUTESHOW Oonw as Lata as lliM aadtaaaCamplataSAaw According to Childrenr Shari S' the Greatest WAmon S«c«*h Dad u^m£ WHITE dGUD l»->Miss Shirley Hooker has served u deputy clerk Hooker has been appointed acting | the last U years. The ai.point> Newaygo County clerk by Circuit iment is effective until Jan. 1 Miss Honker’i fadwr, Hany, died two weeks age after 21 years aa-. Newaygo County cleric. WILAON By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — A friend of mine who knows Richard Burton, Judy Ghtfland, Marilyn Monroe, Elisabeth Taylor and Peter Lawford personally, has three children who couldn’t be more bored when he mentions those bigl names. I ’’But when they found out I really knew Shari Lewis, they couldn’t believe It," he says. “Their respect for their father Increased immeasurably.” 1 went calling on the eonsiderablj pregnant Mlaa Lewis, the wife of Jeremy Tarcber, who’s now in the publishing busi* ness, the other day. Lately Shari has been occupied with carrying on the fiction, on TV. that she’s a little girl who doesn't do things like haying babies. "They put me In a barrel of pellon and hung It from my shoulders and Are did a clown dance one week," Shari said, bustling around the new apartment. “They also put me in a long volumlnoiu Uttle Red Riding Hood cape that covered me up pretty well another week. "The fifth month I started sitting down behind a small table." “The sixth month I sat down behind a larger table, the seventh month behind a fenee . . . pretty soon yonTl Just see peepholes and my eyes." Shari’s the amazing king of young lady who gets a call from Jack Benny saying, “I. want you to come on my show. 1 don’t know what I want you to do. But next tltne you’re In California, come and meet with my producers and we’ll see." And Jack had her bring her puppet Lamb Chop and do the whole routine that the kids love so much Saturday mornings. ★ ★ ★ Her fan mall included a letter from one child who had learned that she was expecting a baby and said, "I hope you’re lucky enough to have another ‘Lamb Chop,’" Then there was this kind of letter: “Dear Shari: I want to wear my hair in a pony tall like yon. Please write to my mother It Is all right.” Which was fine—except H was signed "Billy." Diplomat Shari wrote back: "Dear Billy. Mother knows bast" While visiting Shari, I was treated to an exhibition of her talent as an (urigamist, which I’m sure you know refers to folding paper (although I didn’t). "When we made a trip to Japan,” Shari said, "we did a great deal of Japanese origamy . . . ★ ★ ★ "Coming home from the West qoast on the train, I saw a' little girl crying her heart out. After all, I know something ^ about children, so I took over. "One does get eanght np In one’s own spoeiatty. Her Uttle brother was playing with n paper glider he had made, so 1 took the paper she had and folded a Uttle bird that flaps Its wings. It’s very easy. "Well, her crying got louder. I flnaUy took the little girl back to her mother. "It seems the little girl had been to Hollywood and got two autographs, Roy Rogers and Shirley Temple. "Her brother had made a gUder out of Roy Rogers and ]uM made a flapping bird out of Shirley Temide.” ★ ★ ★ EARL’S PEARLS: A recent survey sHows that married men have fewer auto accidents than bachelors. Probably because they don’t get the car as often. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Comic Jackie Kannon reports that a local cafe serves a Stock Market cocktaU. It started out^ in March costing $2, and is now down to $1.1S. WISH I’D SAID THAT: “Have you ever felt so depressed," sighs model Pat Breckir, “that you have to walk upstairs to get to the subway?" | They’re reviving this old definition of a,secretary: “A girl you pay to learn to spell while she’s locdcing for a husbond."j . . . That’s earl, brother. (Copyright. 1M2) WATERFORD FEATWES I mm! ) ALL IN COLOR U IWI». RORY CALHOUN 1HE COLOSSUS ofRHODES m BLA2IMO COLOR Iheldover 1 A tonight ■ % EXCITING ■ V FEATURES PONTIAC DRlVf IN THFaTER . 1 - D.. H-. M > 4 COME EARLY ■ BRING THE KIDDIES ■ frk I HUGE PLAYGROUND ■ AU RIDES FREEI | 1 OPM T am. - OHILDREN UNDEII12 YIARI FIIK AOULH ONLY Me I Elvis HHs Hip Retad to Laughter and Hits a ■»wHlghin“ UPT EUnS PRPSLEV Fellew TfMt SofiRl Fellow That Swingl To That Lovo-ond-Lowgli Hit IWa Got Evotything DAUfiNTER EARLY BIRD SHOW SUNDAY Doon Op*n 11:45 A.M.—Firat Shew 12:00 J-W^EBN * ' ,\ • TIIK yOXTlAC PRESS. SATURDAY, irtJ^E 23, 1^62 ONE COLOR WEEK-END VACATION PONTIAC’S NEWEST MOTEL ■In . ithlrenn of Uulinrtinn T«l*oraph Rd. at DixiaHwy. Phona: 338-4061 HOOVER SWEEPER Authoriz«d D«aUr SPRING SPECIAL • |an« day tarviea • All RMktt • Wark guarantatd OPEN DAILY 7 AM. to S P.M. SELECT-UR-SERVICE JROFESSIONAL DRY CLEANING COSTS LESS THAN COIN OPERATED I o'Money ' • Mtn’t Suitt • LMHtt’ Coats or Plain Dretsot LaroltiiiomOir Ory oltoiita,' wr JO Tran in ih* Clrmimg Bmtimeu” 944 W. Huron St. FE 24)231 H Bkeli WMf at Tola«i«ali Roa4 JtulOpfOMitHuromTktalurmodA4ePStor» 9IWKB rvK9 mnu HURON Fr<^ Pick Up aiuf DfUoofy in , ttnkland Cimnly M-lt m.9i BARNES 0 HARGRAVE Hardware 742 W. HURON ST. PARK FREE MONTGOMERY WARD SPECIAL SALE- MONDAY ONLY! SUMMER DRESSES COOL COTTONS — Large assortment of patterns, styles and colors. Misses’ sizes 12 to 20, women's sizes M'/z to 24*/2. CHOICE 2J5 Pontiac Mall' OtSOtaO TohrwfcRAillliMNIIJtoaA **^"*^^ IMed lpeeiala.fer too.-MeB.»T«iet..Wed.-.Opea Smn. GROUND BEEF HEADLEHUCE 10' BANANAS 10'I. WESTOWN S 706 West Huron BEER e WINE e LIQUOR 3-DAY DISCOUNT SALE MONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY 100% NYLON CARPET WALL-TO-WALL i NO MONEY DOWN F»H SI.2,^ Per Week SB « I Priee liwMei Pad and Laker I CASS CARPET CO. CALL 363-7104 OPEN SUNDAY 12 Noon to 7 P.M. DAILY ,10 to iO -r“ ' maff li GLENWOOD PLAZA Paddock and N. Perry at Glenwood Famous "Table Queen" BREAD Largo 114-lb. Loaf ' (20 euncof) You Mo/ A/lix 'Em or /\Aatch 'Em 1 Loaf of Bread 1 Pkg. of Buns Both for Only 38 A :x£ SHOPPER STOPPERS BUY NOW and SAVE Outstanding Values for Early-in-the-Week Shoppers! SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER Now DiiPCNT INCITE WALL PAINT Reg. $7.45 e 22 Lovely Colors and White ^ a The Paint You've Seen on TV a No Limit — Price Good Until Saturday, June 30 Only! H U DSON’S DISCOUNT At the Intenection of Baldwin and Walton Bivd. Next to Atlas Market . Open Friday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. All Other Weekdays 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Sunday 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. FE 4-0242 SUPER KEM-TONE ;$099 Caiwetala ttlacH>iia et All Catara | At the Interaection of Baldwin cmd Walton Mvd. Noxt to Atlas Market Open Friday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. All Other Weekdays 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Sunday 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. FE 4-0242 I SPECrnS! GUNn UTD nun #.! NOW ^4- KONTONKWIXET INTERIOR PAINT *62 NOW *4“ BUT NOW and PMNTUTER! >m;andij'SS J1 Perry St. FE 4-2531 aaiaaiTiaaii]; .iimaiiiiii CLOSE-OUT! Tile VINYL $A20 ASBESTOS LINOLEUM TILE 7‘ Each INLAID LINOLEUM $|M ■ per y«*v >lcCANDLESS 11 N. Perry St. Shop in Your Car at Q ixiePalry 49 N. TELEGRAPH RO. STOCK UP rot THI SUMMOU SAVII POPSICLES and FUDGESICLES SPECIAL »OP and FI 24J» ___In Convaniont 24-Pock BuncHa MILK NofflOfenized OfiC Vitamin D Gallon* TRY OUR HOME-MADE ICE CREAII! VERY SPECIAL GULISTAN FUTURITY 9k12 cwmwovs NTUI FILAMENT rugs,&«>.'69’’ M(€A!VI)li'SS 11 N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 FREE SHOCKS WITH WHEEL ALIGNMENT i Toe-In..$9.9S 2 FRONT SHOCKS ^ ($2.00 Inatallatiea Each) tfwuM tactary OHf for Umtfd Tima Only. Imradudni Oia Marriitai DaaMa Acttaa Maavy-Datir'lfcadi ASuaHtar. aaoraMoad for 30,000 Mac or Ona Taar. FEMAM Avoid Woilin«T)NM Col for Aapemlmenf FEAMU MSTAIT CREMT-M MONEY BCWN AllMAJWCIEWTCAHIIIOIIOREBt OPfN fVENINGS TIL 9 P.M. Market Tire Co. 77 Wist HURON AT CASS AVI. MMsad Piim M Hik, Batdyta and Findtot Tkad 'MWWWWWIIMlWMWWfwWWWMIMMMMWgif \Y / L r .1 ' ■ * THE PONTIAC PRESS •»s'. SATURDAY. JUNE ^23. 1»62 ’ . ; : . —Y—- ■ ■ ■ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. kjjround for LIVIN Your Neighbor*8 House Blachura Home Features Recreation Room By JANET ODELL Pontiac Prm Home Editor Leon Blachura’g father was a cabinetmaker. When the younger Blachura got out of the aimy, he took up carpentry and has been building things ever since. He has experimented with various uses of plastics and has incorporated many of his ideas into homes he has built. What would be more logical than his building his own home? The Blachuras live on the east shore of Pleasant Lake. They used tfl live on the .east shars of Pleasant Lake before they moved; in fact, they moved from next door. That was a year and a half ago. The Blachura lot is 140 by 150 feel. The house with garage is 100 feet long with almost 3000 ■square feet on the upper level and 2000 square feet In the basement. There are tws fr«nl doars, '■ one going Into a vestlbale that also serves the garage and the other entering the living room. We used |he former entraaee. A minute powder room is at the right of the door. The rest of the long wall is covered with storage cloeeto. On the other side, the wall has scenic paper with a walnut Formica wall shelf in the center. Ihis hall leads to the family room. SODA BAH The family room will be the grass gondola wall decoration is striking. The soda bar Itself Is gold the floor than i now three years old, will entertain her teen-age friends in the short space of a decade. They'll love the soda bar in one comer. On the wall bddnd tMs sotta bar there is silver and white sailboat paper. A walnut and Stools are orange. Three lights shaped like bowling pins hang The floor is parquet. Walls are paneled in walnut. The west wall is nearly all windows. The ceiling is beamed. Floor length draperies are white with black' and orange figures. At one end of- the room-»s a golden split rock fireplace. The raised hearth is slate. Trophies on the stone shelves are for auto racing. Furniture Includes two white plastic chairs and a ^rellow Naugahyde sofa. In the center of the room Is an Ingenious table made of orange and while plastic. Four little round orange tables ran be pulM away from the center white table and used as cocktail tables. At one side of the family room is Blachura’a office with its own door opening onto the rear patio. He has a smaller fireplace made of cream bricks directly behind the one in the family room. The parquet floor is continued in here. Walls are cream. Besides the desk, there are two gold swivel chairs. Siding doors close the family room off from the kitchen which adjoins it. In the hallway cmuiecting the rooms is a little' pantry that has a floor-to-ceiling lazy susan shelf for storing canned goods. The stairs to the basement come next and have a half door in deference to Suzanne. er All in the spot near the hall entrance. ITtere are three-dimension pictures on the wall. These have a glasscloth background with gulls and real cattails. Frames are The kitchen is spacious with dining space at one end. All cabinets are' Formica in a wood finish. The floor has bronze and gold speckles on white. Counter tops are pink with gold fl^ks and the walls and appliances are pink. The brass hardware .is Jpter-p.sting. Each knob looks lie a Utile sunburst. In the dining area the For-mira dado ban a finish called “frosted walnut." Paper above has pink and white fruit on it. r«fe curtains are white. The oval table has a Irtp that matches the kitchen counters, (hairs have gold and sliver speckles on pink i/lastle. Another hallway leads off the kitchen to the living room at the front of the house and to the bedrooms. STRIKING The living room is a sophisticated combination of black and white. Carpeting is black and walls and draperies t^lte. One wall has white paper on it with a muted gold design that looks like hen tracks. The draperies have a black design near the top, hang on a brass pole. ash. Suzanne has a playroom across from her bedroom. Her parents put a dutch door here, thinking it might keep her it). Instead, she closes the top part, opens the lower section and has a "bridge," she says. A lodoi green carpel and gray green walls make it real-ful looking. The end wall has a nursery rhyme paper. There tiny TV set. Her bedroom has cream walls and yellow carpeting. The while curtains are embroidered in yellow butterflies. Furniture U gray except for a butterscotch Nhu-galiyde arm chair. The family bath is glamorous, to say the least. Walls curtains and fixtures are pink. The floor is biack tile on one side with a free form pink carpet in front of the vanity. The ahape el this vanity repeats the carves of the carpet. The top is black and pink FAMILY ROOM — An oak parquet floor is a feature of the family rown. The fireplace is golden split rock like the exterior of the house. The hearth is black slate. Orange is the accent color in this room, appearing on the soffit above the fireplace, on draperies and pole lamp and on the round portioiM of th« table In the center of the ,room. These little tables' pull away from the white section. The strfa is a clear bright yellow all the white Formica tables. Tws are the ahape of a bosm- The ao.>i itself is white. A two basins, one at each end, with a' black stool with pink cushions In Iront of each. There Is a built-in hair dryer and nKra-vloM ray l^p. Suzanne calls the guest room, "Grandma's room.*' In "here, wails and carpeting are bW. Curtains are white with a blw medallion desip. The bleached mahogany furniture has a pickled finish. In the master bedroom walls and carpeting are violet. The sheer white ruitalns have violet butterflies. Furniture is walnut. On the lake side of the house there are terraced flower beds. \ little bridge goes from the upper patio to the lower sue and t fountains play throughout the day here. Trees shade the grass and only a tew feet away is' the beach area. Japanese ash walls are used throughout the recreation room in the banement. The floor is green with beige tile inserts. Draperies are aqua and white. TWO SECTlDNg Low brick planters make sort of a dividing line bebyeen the bar and the rest of the room. In frot\t of the side planters there are brass pole lamps. Brass leaf trim decorates the outside of the white globes. There are white Formica sofas in this area and aqua and white basket chairs. Tbs bar itselt is enormons. seating M peSple. The top Is white with gold flecks. There are U pierced metal cone Hghts above; these are painted GLAMOR BATH — The pink marbleized vanity foilows the free form curve of the fluffy pink nig in the bathroom. A long mirror over the vanity reflects the rest of the pink itiom. AP PImMk Feminine readers will apprec*iate the built-in hair dryer at one end of the room. The twin wash basins are pink. The exterior of the Blachura home is goiden spiit rock. Painted trim on the overhang and front porch is stone. THBEE!M)ME — Mr. and Mrs. Leon Blachura and daughter. Suzanne, pose on the little bridge outside their new home at Pleasant Lake, There is a series of terraces going down to the hr U ViaSwwsrs lake kvcl from the upper patio. Two little fountains add a musical note. The exterior of the Blachura home is split golden brick. IT'H LARGE — The Blachuras never have the problem of not enough space when they entertain. Their basement recreation room has about 2,000 square feet in-it. Walls are Japanese ash.i The floor Is green and beige tile. Bar stools and chairs in the area from which the picture was taken are aqua and white. The long table next to the windows is white with an aqua edge. Stone pianlers' dh id* I he room into two areas. The dooit at the left opens onto a paMO'on the lake side of the house. COUNt PltTTURE — This Is a color .picture. The living room Is furnished in black and whlie. An exception is the co^ plant in the right foreground. Wqlls, sofa, laWes and draperies; are white. Sofa bolsters, carpeting and the design e are black. The lamp at the left has a twisted w a pleated lyhite shade. SIXTEEN ^ ■■ ■ 'V\' THE PQNTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY/JUNE 83. im ' 1- Bert Snlokler BVILDER rf Phone m 3^123 Homeowne/s Checkup Can Save Money Wanner weather tumi the| Wea Gatewood, a hofusing^day or two it generally takes to t’s ravages and per- thdughfs of a homeowner to the speeialist for AUied Chemicari outside appearance of his houae.1 Barrett Division, claims that the RgZaSSSSSaSBeSSS BSBSSSBS8SSM Need a Room? Don’t Wait! BUY NOW AND SAVE ON LABOR AND MATERIALS BEFORE FALL! MLY THE LOOK IS EXPENSIVE I / iAVl ^ I AMUvIagSpioe to Year Homo for as mill It $^95 WuMy: ,v » 5^1 No Oath DiwiI 0 Yn. to Pay! • Fim FUmiiag • Fiee Eitlnitos Mctd to Mike It Worth You While Ni Paymoali ’W Sipl. CALL NOW Act Now tf wMk. Year meney fee* ^ FE 3-7833 CONSTRUCTION CO. 92 W. Huron SL consideration, a wise homeowner might also consider application of asbestos cement tiding shingles that are virtually maintenance-free. 0. DOOR IHRAMES AND WINDOWS: Che^. window heads and lintels (the fMming above windows and doors) for deteriorating they become major projects," repair form sprinfi touch-up needs can be well worth the effort. "It msy be that some homes need majw repairs as a result of the hard winter most of the country experienced, but for the most part an annual spring check-up, turns up only minor Jobs that a caulking and replace It where re-hwne handyman can do before qulred. Check window panes for >1 cracked putty and replace It where necessary. t. WOODEN STAIRS: Outdoor wooden stairs and steps are often damaged during the winter. Warped boards can sometimes be corrected by turning them over and renalling in place. A coating of a wood preservative or heavy deck paint can generally assure longer life for wooden stairs and steps. «. HARDWARE: Check metd hardware such as chain link fences, fiagpoles, shutter clips or the metal bands that btUch a TV aerial to a chimney for rust and corrosion. Unless t^ are decayed to a point of requiring replacement, an application of aluminum protective cqating can bring back their spaiide and shine^ Y: OinTERS, OOWN8PROUT8: A Severe winter may have left gutters and downspouts loose or weakened. With more rain to follow this spring, it’s advisable to tighten up hangers, refastenlng them when necessary. This is so a good time to clean gutters of debris that collected in tht during the winter. Also check make certain downspouts are free from any obstruction. 8. RiOOFINO: Check for loose or curled shingles and renail them in place. Cover the nailheads with roofing cement. Replace badly damaged shingles. C^heck condition of mortar in the chimney. Ed. Note; Gatewood notes that while a homeowner can often make minor roofing repairs, it is always repaint siding, it is Urt»e to replace advisable to have decayed or retted boards. If paint-, roofing contractor make an annual ,lng the exterior of thtMaxise Is a, inspection of the roof’s condition.) and may bslp avHd the repair Jobs taeing about 10 million homeowners this year be- Gatewood suggests checking; 1, GROUND OlEOK; Check the ground around the foundation where washouts may have left boles. These holes will fill with water with almost every rain, and the puddles can leak through any mcks in the masonry. Holes should be fiUed with layers of sand or gravel, topped with sod at grade levri. Exposed roots or shrubs or trees should be re^xrver-ed. I. roUNDATION: What may have been hairline cracks last autumn may have become able openings by now. Cracks should be repaired with a pitch base waterproofing cement that can be applied with a pointing tool, putty knife or trowel. Check deteriorating mortar Joints. Scrape out loose material and moisten the area around the' joints. Apply cement and keep it moist for several days to be certain it will eWe without additional cracking. 3. SIDING: Look for cracks, splits or decay in wooden siding and repair or replace where practical. While it is still too early to; Home Improvements Can Be Deducted Improvements that increase the value of your home can reduce yoiir tax if you should sell. Let's assume that you remodeled a bathroom by covering walls, floor and counters with a durable, watei^ proof material such as ceramic tile, and that you bistalled new appliances and cabinets in your kitchen, and that the total cost of tliese improvements was H.500. The home originally coat $15,000 and you sell it for $19,000. Normally you wpuld report on your tax return a profit of $4,000. However, you can deduct the cost on improvements—in this case $1,500 —if you have kept records. This means you would be taxed oii a profit of only $2,500 Instead of $4,000. GRANDMOTHER WAIX — This wall features photographs of grandchildren arranged on map of Boston where they live. Appropriately, grandmother has hung them over her desk to that she can see them when she writes family letters. Granny's Treasure Map Dotted With Child Photos Whether grandmother has a retirement home bn the balmy Florida coast or spends winters in Wichita. one thing is certain: she likes to have her family close. Best of all, they may live geographically close. But then again, her grandchildren may be growing up miles away and can visit her OTly infrequently. In that case her most valuable treasures are the portrttit photo- Home Buying Fills a Book R0ad«r Hoi a Choice of Hardcover or Paper Edition on Housing A check list of 175 ttirnis tor the would-be homeowner is featured in A. M. Watkins’ new "Building or Buying the High-Qualhy House at the Lowest Cost.” This new guide brought out simultaneously hardcovers by Doubleday and as a paperback Dolphin Handbook on May 23. The hardcover edition illustrated with photograpie and linecuts; the Dolphin edition, with linecuts only. Mr. Watkins, who will be remembered for his p^Milar pamphlet, “How to Judge a House.” devotes sections of his new book to the process of shopping and negotiating for a house, the pros and cons of buying or building a home, choosing a home and neighborhood to suit your needs, structure and design, and the state of^ housing in America today. A separate chapter goes into the! five biggest causes of high up-| repairs — graphs they give her on Christmas and birthdays. The question of how to show off her family of fledglings Is easy to solve with a "grandmother’s srall" featnrlng a map dotted with portrait photographs. To create the "wall” is easy. City, state, regional, national and even world maps are available for a few dollars. Have the map. mounted and the photographs] framed. Then lay the map on the floor in front the wall to be decorated. FLAN nr Move the framed portrait . graphs around over it untU you get an arrangement that suits. Perhaps you will want to place the ph^ographa near the state or street where the child lives. You may even want to string a ribbon from the photograph to the spot indicating the child’s address. After the esmposltlan is esos-plete. trace around any phole-graphs to he hang on the map, this msUag a pattern for driving nails. Then hang year mas- SAVE PATIO STONES svhere yanr eye will fall on N fondly each day. To keep an up-to-dale photographic record of the children’s fleeting years of growing up, you might suggest tactfully that they be photographed at the "Seven Ages of Childhood.” six months, year, two, four, seven. 12 and Other years will be recorded with movies, color slides and the| usual class photographs. mystifying problems as the quality of brandname oonstruction products, what the FHA can do for you, how to shop tor the cheapest nx>rtgage, the most common flaws in old houses, who can chedc a house for the kind of "e^rt” to beware of, and closing costs. The author hlmsNf Uvea in a large, 6S-yeuvoId bouse in Pier-mont, New York, wttb hU wife, two children and a dog. A graduate engineer and writer with wide experience in the field of houitng, he Is the co-author of "Insulata and AlrGondition Your Home,” and has been a aales engineer in the building industry snd an asaedate editor of House and Home ar Improve Bath by Sectioning 'into Areas If adding a second bath to y< Ibome is bnpossiNe. it may 'practical to stretch use of the pi room through adding oomiMrt- ous areaa of the bath-Toom are aectiaaed oO, dUlerent parts can ba used standtancotnly with privacy. It’s almost like hav-ig two batha. n» lavatory, most heavily used fixture In any bathroom, can be screened off from the remainder by a permanent ceramic tile separation wall. This will free other and allow double use of the bathroom. Swipe Junior's Crayon To fin In and cover marics on Tou|^ Iran furniture, use a black crayon. You can amoeth the su^ lace of tb< mark with a cleansing however, make sure you have checked all the ponMitles for adding a aecond bath. Bpace under a stairway often Is wasted, and can imMde room for a lavatory and toilet. Or how about a dormer In the attic, or the space at the end of the center hallway in older homes? Both may supidy enough apace for a new, modern ceramic tUa bathroom. I ro^er a. anthior Pnti., M. ( . : '■/■.VOlU'ibU;.:, Mm I EM Tim tHERHIFF-IIODLIN CO. Art-alom soMuno idviniwn ■ SawllNn r JMk - » IMIillM M* M UO. “Uhfrp To Itor Them” EXCLUSIVI DISTRIBUTORS SHERRIFF-QOSLIN CO. MI. Boss Lake BA, PmHm ra t-Ult SEE THE GEM Moflel Home $9990 MaM FhaM FE 3-9404 319 JORDON nu *r va McrItM*. SBB OSI 3 BEDROOM $9,900 us BmM Dtvul Car*. FE 8-1943 or 488-6513 DIXIE GARAGES 20’i20’OARABE 983900 PONTIAC CODE NO MONEY DOWN ond 5 Ytort to Poyl Got 2 Eitimtoi Tkoi Cell. Beautifully Built to the Highen Standardt of Quality! ATTICS - UC. lOOMS-ADDinOIIS FOICSES^IREmWATS AWniOr-USULATIOII EXPERT CEMENT WORK DIXIE Oerem Coastrartioa. lac. 57A MfllilaMI M. (M-59) ■■■^4 BatVMa CrM««at Lak* aaS Alreart BOi. C«ii for Fium Estimates OR 4«371 ons SUITS Sim. s-TM. ■ ■ .'‘O" ■ ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS> SATURDAY. JUNE 28, 1962 SEVENTBEy Spills on Carpet Need First Aid Blot Up Excess Liquid, Sponge With Water to Prevent Discoloring The best guarantee agaiait aeri-oua ataina ia prompt attention. Alwaya uae a clean, white cloth or white cleaning tisauea to blot up Ihiidda before they aoak the carpet pile and apread through the backing. Otherwiae, a aim-pie apill may cauae auch prob-lema aa mildew, deterioration of the bacl^ materlala. and even a larger atain as the liquid worka Ita way back to the carprt aurface. a a a' "tMayed - action" stains are cauae^by a certain type of augar in fruH Juices, soft drinks and other beverages. You may blot up a spill and sigh with relief because you don't see any stain. But the sugar is still there, and the combined action of air and sunlight eventually turns it into a whether 'you see a atain or r>ot, at least sponge the area with clean, cool water, blot well and cover with a weighed pad to dry. It'a a good Idea . to keep a Ut of stoto-removing materials. Yoa eaa assemble your asm kll very easily. Be sure it includes clean, white, unstarched cloths, while cleaning tissues and paper towels, spatula, cellulose sponge, light-duty detergent, while vinegar, household ammonia, dry-cleaning fluid, measuring cup and spoons. You . may want to add rubber gloves, a medi, cine droller, and a brush to raise the carpet pile after it dries. Baseboard Heat Panels Take Up Little Space n more living space when they remodel their old heating system because modern systems take up less room, reports the National Better Heating-Oooh ing Council. * * * "tjur example, hydroffie (modern IK water heating) 'baseboard panels lit snugly against walls at anklf level. Baseboard heatlm to-wall^carpeting. furniture pia ment or drapery, notes I HOMES FOR AMERICANS Heated Pool Is Here's the Answer Most Desirable Gas or Electricity Provides Means of Lengthening Season What specific piece of swimming pool equipment is most avidly desired "by residential pool wners? Pool water beaters, according to a survey by the National Swimming Pool Institute. Evidently pool owners would like to swim even more than they do, and water heaters stretch their swimming season by several months in most areas of the nation. In conjunction with the new air Inflated or rigid frame pool enclofureo they can add from six to nine months to the usoal three-month swimming season north of the frost line. Most heaters are gas-fired, but everal electric models have come on the market (or areas with lower electric power rates. ■The N.S.P.I. recommends putting in a heater with every new !pool installation, or at least stubbing in service lines so a heater an be added later. The average heatpr costs about 10 per cent of the total pool coat, but may treble or quadruple the use period. qUESnoX: We have a table that has been In our family for maijy years. It bad a varnish fin-whlch was getting rather ’ looking and which I cov-with paint about three or four years ago. I have never I the paint Job and now am thinking about redoing the table, this time using lacquer. Can. you tell me how to go about this Job? ANSWER: The first thing you will have to do is to get down to the bare wood. This mdans using a paint-varnish remover, carefully following the instructions on the container label. Because it has both paint and varnish on it, the wood may have to be gone, over two or three times with the remover In order to get a satisfactory Jdb. Be especially careful about following the directions on how to clean the wood after you are finished with the remover. Mte clear lacquer with aa equal amount of lacquer thto-aer. Since lacquer dries very quickly, yon must do the lac-J^ rapMly and without nrs NARROW LOT — This fine ranch home has a special feature — it will fit a lot as narrow as SO feet and still give you four bedrooms, two baths and an attached garage. If you have a wider lot, you can turn the house so its long side faces front. There Is an alternate foyer and big windows will face-the street either way the house is placed. The home has 1,830 square feet and architect for plan HA234F is Alan Wood FYaser, Room 75, U7 W. «th St., NeW York 36, N Y. Remodeling Help Is Easy to Obtain Do you need design help f^_ remo(klmgju;„jneiW"8d(ltilion you -irantT This is available now through a nationwide network of Design-Service-Counsel lumber and building materials dealers designated by Masonite Corporation as one-stop home improvement ' Pre-MIxME" Plastering Do you have a plastering Job ahead of you7 If so, unless you’re an expert, the pre-mixed plasters are for you because they contain proper proportioas of ingredients. Pre-mixed compounds for plaster- ing will eittt a little more than the basic ingredients but expensive than having to do the Job over again in a short time. tera in their communities. Take your problem to the D. S. C. dealer, who will counsel with you and turn over your ideas to a national design service. In a few days, you'll have a rendering that permits you to visualire before you Norway exports half the world herring supply annually. a material list. D. S. C. . dealers can help you also with labor requirements and financing. For the name of your nearest dbaler, write the Masonite «ome Service Bureau. Ill W. Washington St., Chicago 2, III. grade of paper between each coat. Dust is the big bugaboo when using varnish. Toke every precaution to keep it off the wood before you start and off the varnish ditional storage space, allow at I least a 24-inch deep area, not|| counting door thickness. STACY BLDG. J3 RIKtR BLDG MAIN FLOOR Do not go over any area a second time. When the first coat has dried, sand it very, very lightly wi'U: a fine grade of sandpaper. Brush off all traces of grit and apply a second coat. Repeat the sanding process and apply a third coat, which should be sufficient. However, a fourth and fifth coat may be put on U desired. With lacquer, as wfth almost any finishing material, several light coats are better than one or two thick QUESTION: I am going to remove the old finish from some (unilture and_then-reflnish'1f'Wgh g^tMaPraritish. I have had considerable success in the past witt moving old finishes, but I then used paint tor the new coat.-1 understand that varnishing is a lot more difficult. Is there any advice you can give me? ANSWER: Yes, varnishing requires more care than painting. The trick is to get the varnish to flow smoothly across the surface of the wood. Dip the brush only a third of its bristle length, lower it to the stock gently and draw it $4189 Cosh Pric* or $43 0 Mfiith HTi OF OTNU nuu 01 oti root ows Conisci ut Of your locti roproionltliifo CAPr-HOMCS 1143 Dupont Avo. No Minnoopolit 11, Minn, i Oopt Tin _____..mrioto with Sirturot _ ------- ■ DEAN 0. HERMAN Ills Orarcli. niar. Midilflaa. fhaasi 23I-SS7I Raise the brush before you stop its movement. Ia dohig chaliw aad tablea, torn them upside dowa aad da the legs, stretchers, etc. Tara ThrM coats will give a good ro-anlt, sandlag with a very liae Tedy-Bflt Gaxage Co. BUILDERS OF FINE GARAGES 7722 Austtrt, Wottrford YOU CAN PAY MORE... BUT YOU CANNOT BUY BETTER Let u; come out and show yo^ our models, and give specifications ond prices on your garage plons. NO SUB-CONTRACTINGr DEAL DIRECT WITH THE BUILDER FOR GARAGE AND CEMENT WORK CUSTOM BUILT • ILOCK • IRICK • FRAME NO MONEY DOWN Op to 5 Tom to Pay ALL WORK IS 100^ GUARANTEED N34M9 COMPLI71 MOOIRNIZATION PROGRAM Summer fun on your own lake lot! For the first time offered to the public! . . . Beautiful wooded lots on picturesque Lake Victoria. Drive out today and inspect this vacation haven. Fishing ... swimming.... boating ... all the fun of summer, right at your doorstep. Near shopping and churches, Lake Victoria offers seclusion without isolation. Right now, while roads are being completed and sub-divisions staked, lots are available at pre-completion prices. Choose early, so you won’t be disappointed. Today, drive the family out to the opening of Lake Victoria. The office will be open from 9 ’til dark 7 days a week. A Short Drive from Pontiac! Drive out Saturday and Sunday. GRAND OPENING Take Route No. 10 to Flint. Drive West of Flint on Route No. 21, to Ovid. Turn South at blinker light. Drive to Jason Road and foUow signs to Lake Victoria. Jr Ctowlaiw \ ® IlMm 'll KTGTrrKKN THE POHTIAC press. SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 1962 Cwn thoaih modern tnteriorii “T" T” PAY OFF BILLS A^m and kitchen in 1,556 square WL-g-RM lEAtn 345 Oakland Avanue FE 4-3531 MODEL HOME-934 ARLENE ST. ONLY 3 Urr . . . Across from Northern High and Modisorv—Specious 3 Bedrooms—Full Poured Basement—-Gos Hoot—Extro Sharp Kitchen. CELT lllJM-4100 cm YOU »-m Wl TiUDE ON ANY HOMES ^AmeHean Dream” Axf* ItigHlMf A teeudful trUlovel homo with 3 or 4 bod-omm**B*i rooms, family room with firspisco, 2Vi __ baths, spacious kitchen, sunken patio, 2-car ^ oerage attachad. W# will... ^ • FMAIKE • OBWN ummLorntr • mud lo you* fum OPEN Sot. ond Sun. 1P.M.-6 P.M. ExeeUent Traded Piau FRERICK'S BROS. Heavy PORCH COLUMNS '■'T- Monufaclured By Concrete Step COa 6497HlgM«idtood(«*4f) TolaphoM 679-077S Add laamy «e Your Home WMi Concfole Stops end Ronnoi Open 'l|l 5,00 Saturday By JVUa LOB A covered arch portico, a flag-stone entry porch, and the ilhiakn of cnormoua frontage give thie modeet houee the sort of dignified grandeur eought by moet SOth century suburiMnites. .because of its L-diape, the side wall linear dimensiona viewed from the front walk total 80 feet In the twoours after 13t« primer has bam applied the surface is then recoated with an approved latex paint of any color. The end product Is a guaranteed waterproof, crystal-bard surface: THE NKW bonding primer works equally well on paint, ed or unpidnted surfaces. The primer bonds securely to the surface on which It U applied whether poured concrete, concrete block, brick or stone, stucco or plaster finishes. Only preparation required Is brushing loose material from the surface. No need to wet down walls or any other special requirements, as long as. surface of coating la fim. The new primer, used in conjunction with approved latex finishes, fuses permanently with the old surface. It eliminates inwasure seepage and leaks, won’t powder or oxidise, surface burdens sandy mortar joints. The bonding primer works equally well on concrete floors. ACCOBDING TO the man-ufietM|« the primer prevents the qualified flnUh coat of latex from being drawn in too deeply on extremely porous brick. It forms a blocking action Immediately under the sur. face.. This allows, perfect color uniformity of one finish coat even In pastel shades, and a much greater spreading rate for the finish cost. *1118 neW waterproofing finish works equally well above or below ground. For complete details in this permanent sointlon to wet basements, see Tentlao Rocfccotc Faint Store, t 3-7U8. raaging trsm a brilliuit Ugh gfaMM to a "ballt-bi" soft, rich glow that rivals a genaioe liaad-robbed look. Yonr polot, hardware or lumber dealer win help yoa aeleot the fight prodoet for tho Job. For authentic, reliable information on all phases of natural wood flniihlng, tend 50 cents to Pierce A Stevens Chemical Corp., Dept. AH, P.O. Box 408. Buffalo 5, N.Y. You’ll receive a copy of "A Short B in Natural Wood Flalah. . plus other helpful pampb-lets and manuals. Correct Installation The gutter on the roof a house should be installed so that the outer edge of the gutter ii below the line that would be formed by an extension of the roof skqie. This method of installation to derigned to protect the gutter from rain, ice and snow. stltuted for the double windows in the dlnliv room, if access from the tormal area of the house to the rear terrace to Important. For gen- J-27 Statistics A three bedroom ranch with two. lull' bathrooms, living room, dining room, family room and kitchen; full basement; with either single or double garage. „ House contains 1,5M square feet of living area. Single garage would add 345 square feet of overall area, or 490 square -feet for double garage. Overall dimensions are 49'4” deep by 47’ wide (single garage) or 58’ wide (double garagei,----- are preferable and the plan aa shown probably to more desirable. DIVIDB IT Another optional change a homeowner might consider would be to place a door in the main bathroom so both the tub and lavatory could be used at the same time. Though aomewhat less glamoroua. this would add to the bathroom’s use capacity. A final suggestion by York to to use prefiniahed plywood or hard-board on the foyer walls and family room to add interest an reduce maintenance. Wash Brush Twice After applying shellac, finish up by washing the brush — first with denatured alcohol, then with soap or detergent suds. Rinse and hang it to dry. Stone or. Brick Wall Dresses Up House An untidy „waH( that spoils the * entrance tO a trim little bouse I bb spruced up in a few houra, depending on tbe^wolk that would flatter the area. Flagstone and lame flat stepping stones arg . popular. w * A brick walk set in a herringbone or other pattern may take a while longer to do, but if it to the right look for you house, It will not only add to the appearance of your home, but will increase its value.. Gravel walks are neat'. One may put bito a Blx-inch deep bed a four-inch layer of 84 Inch crushed stone and spread it with stone dust and a% inch toyer of stone ; r pebbles on top. ★ ★ * Cut granite stones used In a varigated pattern may be set ip a concrete bed and bordered by bushes to flatter a house in a rustic setting. Granite stones may serve too on one side (d a walk as a curbing for natural stepping stones set in a bed of pebbles. square feet ot Hvlng area. The aiiigle garage would add R4H aqnara feet «f overall area, twice that for the doable garage plan. Depth is 4a’S”. The design includes three bedrooms, two bathrooms, Ii room, dining room, family room and kitchen. There is a full basement, with the stairs located the kitchen. FLAGSTONES The front porch flagstone extends right on inside to the foyer — a truly functional foyer, in that it provides direct access not only to the formal living room but to the family room as well. While the view from the toyer Into the family room la s pleaa-aat one, focusing on the fire-piaee, arehttect York has provided a door tor thooe momonto when the room deveMpo that llved-bi looh moot family rooms An this room will indeed be lived I. It opens onto the rear terrace, and is developed in an open [dan with the kitchen — the two most-used areas on any house, especially at this time of year. Herman York to an architect who payi ck»e attention to detafi, providim those little touches which set a house apart as a fine home rather than Just a run the mill dwelling. For example, the shuttered and diamond lighted windows, and tho window with the arched head and window box, give the Inside, note the eur>ed wall snr-rounding the planter In the livtof Modern techniques make this a simple matter to build, and it certainly relieves the severity of right anuJei and straight lines found in most bomeq. Such fin^ doesn’t at all indicate the practical matters of space and economy have been ignored, however. To illustrate, the bath-, room plumbing is back-to-back so both rooms can be served by the same lines; and the single chimney handles all the flues required for ftirnace, fireplace and outdoor barbecue grill. A bay window, viewed directly from the foyer, gives the l|v-lug room a good first Impres-ston. The living room —■ dining ell la IS’ long overall, large develop interesting Sliding glass doors could be sub- study Plan Order Coupon &iclosed is 50 cents in coin. Please send me a copy of the study plan of The House of the Week Design J-27. No stamps accepted. Please do not use sticky tape on coins. Send to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Mich. Name ....................... PrtDt) STREET ..................... CITY ....................... STATE ................... MAKE A DATE fo See the "ORLEANS" Blue Stor AH Gos Home (Bloomfialfl School District) 2555 Wantlovor, Bloomfiolti Twp. 2 btockt W. of Woodward, I htoch S. of Squars Lako Rd. **The Builder Thut Make$ a House n Home'* ROSS Homes FE 2-1145 OR 3-8021 SWIFT HOMES Ronch, Split Lovol, Wing, 2-Sloiy No Money Down 15 YEAR nNANOim Poymonti at Uw ot $42.83 For Month TOWNSEND SWIFT** 2819 LAPEER RD. (M-24) Loko Orion 5 Milss North u4 Pontiac at Crssashlsid id. Sat. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Sun. I P.M. to 9 P.M. FE 84636 6.M CONSTRUaiON CO. mmes "one stop Buusm sm/ct Licansad CUSTOM FEATURES Cowmercial Contractor DESIGNED FOR YOU ReauSImiol • ADDITIONS • CONCRETE WORK-MASONRY • ALUMINUM SIDING b RECREATION ROOMS • ATTIC CONVERSIONS • KITCHENS • AWNING WINDOWSAwnings • FAMILY ROOMS a PATIOS • DENS • GARAGES 0 tATHROOMS • BREEZEWAYS • Stotm and Sctmo Dooft ond Windows a CUSTOM DESIGNED 2nd STORY AOOITIONS -------- CONSTRUCTION CO. Building im Pomtime Sinte IHS—Opurator on Duty 24 /fours Daily 2256 Oixii Highway FE 2-1211 STORM WINDOWS—DOORS a Alum. Siding a Screen Patios a Awnings a Patios a Porch End. WINDOWS TRIPLE TILT ALUM. $1195 C. Wtodoa Ct.-1032 W. Haiaa 334-2597 NO MONEY DOWN! COMPLETE 3 BEDROOM HOME Lot Owriirt-8aiM How $| E-Z TERMS PER MONTH • We OhUAi Peralto ‘5990 NOT A SHELL • rrlat Pslal EilciWr • raraiiS Free PiMf • BelM Aaywkert V. to MODEL OPEN DAILY Thurt.. Prl. and Sat. to * Sunday 12 ta < E-CON-0 BUILT HOMES MPOEL TELB3RAPH*ri6AO S. of SQUAR€ LAKE RDJ Ft 5-9888 THE POl^TIAC PRESS, SATURDAV. JUNK 23, 1002 I TIME*^ ^Convert Garcige jto Granny Room OmiM, GIou JUm NfW A-IOO UTEX HOUSE PAIHT " .,. won't pmI" Wa CwTT KEiN^O m4 SIffEt KEM-TONE FtK CUSTOMER PARKING CORWIN LUMIB tMl COAL CO. 117 S. Cut FE 243S5 ^ fSsassaxaasi \ If grandma or grandpa comei to live with a aon or daughter, both the grandparent and the (am* Uy will Ideally, the elderly peraon ahould have a place of. hla own on the ground floor, preferably with hla 'own entrance. Thia may range in alze trom a bedroom to a apace large enough for cooking, sleeping and living — a small afSitment; comidete with a bathroom. One way to acquire a “granny house” at low coat is to convert an attached garage into .a small With basic walls, roof and floor already In place, the refarblsh-big win oanslRt of adding a apaoe salBting, taMtallation of a celling, providing proper llghtliig and Bottom of Ov«n Door Levels With Countertop Planning to build a homcT You can make U a dream house for the homemaker by having the wall and kitchen counters custom fitted for safety and convenience. The bottom of the oven door opening (not the bottom of the oven unit) sHdbId be level with the adjacent countertops. For the average woman, this would be 36 inches from the floor. And covering the ctkintera with ceramic tile insures a surface which can’ be burned or scratched and 1 waterproof. wall stud*. Cabinet* and other bum-lns nhould be provided. You can set the friendly tone of the “granny” house by installing factory-finished woodgrained hard-board, available in various shades of walnut or cherry. They go directly over studs and already are decorated. * * * A low-cost ceiling can be installed for a “song,” by putting lx3-ineh wood shoulders on the !Ts and then sliniing factory® j primed hardbqtird panels into place over them. No nailing is ~ quired. LADY’S DEUOHT — Fit (or a queen is this dressing room located in an alcove of ^ bedroom. Roomy closet takes up one wall and door to master bath is opposite. End wall,provides room for chiffonier and dressing table, backed with large mirror. Built-ins were tailored to fit space and designed in creamy west coast hemlock to match bedroom wall paneling. More Insulating Board Exterior frame work of about 40 per cent of all new home; is covered with insulation board of ^ y a u m board sheathing, say building authorities at All Chemical’s Barrett Division.. They For Better Resale A newly installed hydroiiic (hot water) heating system will increase a home’s market value. When the time comes to sell the home, mortgage lenders usually give a higher rating where per-heating modernization, have l^n made, says the National Better Heating-Cooling Council. phalt-impregnated sbcathliig board provide more rigid wpUa that combine btructural atrengtb with ease of application. RID RARN FOUR tm |Ml Wear of ■ ’M sisa p.iLAWhy I RUILMMt CO. oa EXPRESSLY EOR YOU! PLEASE CALL 338 3073 Attached Home Ideal Place tor Outdoor Patio I 0*N*ll t Ca. *ah dhact yea le 4he il pta*a t* RUY at RENT. For All Your »ur Pointing II ... Visit I J If you buy a row house, do ou bid outdoor living goodbye? No, says a*”^p a t i o t specialist. What's^ more.' he claims, outdoor living possibilities of® attached homes often compare favorably ith those of detached homes. According to Dana Richardson I Bridgeport Brass Company’s Flexalum division, front and side ^ards of many detached homes large enough or private enough STAIR SAFETY—If there are small children in a family, open banisters can be dangerous. What better way to solve this to transform handy bookcase, made of warm, autumn-toned and. thouse under 23. One Philadelphia project now mider way will eventually consist of 3,000 row ^ . Other iKw attached lioine construction is taking place in New York, Chicago, Detroit and San Francisco. The row house has several advantage* for *ome families, Richardson say*. Constniction costs per square foot of living spare is iower; it is easier and iesH expensive to maintain and makes less demand on (he home handyman’s time. “There’s less grass to mow, but enough room (or gardening ami outdoor entertaining." the design of the permits installation of window panels, the “outdoor will provide even greater and can be used in coh months. Richardson reports that leading builders across the country are putting up projects of row houses in city and Suburban areas to meet the needs of smaller families, j especially couples in their fifties' Each Type of Old Well Needs Particular Cover Abandoned wells, drilled or dug, Uipuld be..(lUedin_with .clean, sub* 8(^1 and topped with clay. ’The earth should be well tamped. ‘ Diilled weU should be sealed with a metal cover welded to the steel casing. Old wells lined with glazed tile Aould be capped with a concrete slab extending approximately three feet beyond the aides ofi well. I areas where there is line-: or sandstone, certain extra Spres must be taken. A well| or other authority should \ilted lor such individual NO DOWN PAYK4ENT!!! OUR INSTANT FINANCIN YOU DONT PAY FOR INSURANCE. All Amtrica is wild about lH«m ... Wo invito you to comporo ond prko. You owo it to yoursolf ood fomily. ALL YOU NEED IS A CLEAR AND FREE DEED 160 HOMES to Cliooso From or Iring in Your Own Plans THE GRANADA - The Uitimote in Comfort/Convenience, Croftsmonship AMERICA'S FINEST PRECISION PRE-CUT HOMES ARE BEST FOR YOU . . 66'0“ Imagine this beautiful 6RANDA 38x66, 1,484 sq. ft. of living space, with oversized double garage 26 ft. deep, covered entry porch, targe entry foyer with closet; three master-size bedrooms; two baths with two separate sinks, oversized living .room; bi-fold louver doors, all walk-in closets; sliding glass doors in dining area leading to a beautiful patio in rear; loads of closeta and fabulous kitchen cabinets; over-sized picture window; 16 ft. garegt door; 2x10 floor joists. All windows can be cleaned from the inside! ALL of this on your lot with monthly peyments less then rent. ONLY $51.22 PER MONTH ^8870 FACE SUPERVISION TO COMPLETE YOUR HOME CADDIE HONES, Inc. 9700 (US-10) Dixie Hwy., Springfield Twp. If PONTIAC ON WAY TO FI • eeit aide ef tiie' higliwey SATURDAY~9 a. M. to 6 P. M SUNDAY—12 Noon to 9 P.M. DAILY—9 A. M. to 9 P. M. PHONE 625 2611 , Meil Te: I CADOli HOHIS, lee. I 9700 Dixie Hwy. (US-iOl, Cbrfcttee. Mich. pp 6/iiT, 1"^..... im We have e let □ We new ewe a b Attention... Lot Owners Yes, you owe it to yourself and your family to get ALL the (acts from your Albee Man today. Ask him to show you how your family can own your choice of 144 architect-designed Albee Homes for as low as $100 down and payments less than $6<6 per month. Don’t be satisfied with just any stock-model development, or assembly-line pra-fab house! Take advantage of Albee’s exclusive “Customerizing" plan and use the FREE services of Albee architects to make any changes you desire in floor plan or exterior design of your Albee jtome. This free Albee “Customerizing' service is so personalized and flexible that Albee will actually design and pre-cut a home to your family's needs and tastes. AFTER YOU CHOOSE THE HOME YOU THOUGHT YOU COULDN’T AFFORD HERE'S HOW AUEE MAKES IT POSSIBLE FOR YOU TO OWN IT! mmmm DONT DEIAYI EVERY MINUTE YOU PUT OfF HEARING THE COMPliTE ALBEE STORY IS ANOTHER MINUTE AWAY FROIOHE HOME OF YOUR DREAMS! ALBEE CHIEF HOMES 104S3 South Saginaw "Irond Blonc, Mkhigon about ALBEE’S *’EaiY Homa Ownership Pian.” Name______ ■ ' ■ ■ -Zono______State. CHIEF HOMES 10483 S. SAGINAW Grand Blanc, Michigan □ We have a let. □ We now own e 1 UKATB 20 Mills NORTH OF PONTIAC ON US-10 WATCH FOR MO Alia SION ON RIGHT S»E OF OS-lt %iriY \ THE rpNTIAC PRESS. SAtURI^AY. JUNE 28, 1962 Aguiri:e Turns Lefty to Get Rare Hit in Ar n»M>i LEA VIS HOSPITAL-SUrllnK Mom. r-yeaMld Bhtish race driver, leavM the hospital at Wimbledon. England. Moss, who was Mriously injured in a race crash in April, said he hoped to be back driving on a road race track ne?(l month. Jones Equals Record but Loses AAU Title WALNUT, Calif. » — Hayes and barely edged ahead at the gaes equalled a meet record here finish line, last night, but lost the race and hii time championship in the National AAU Track and Field Championships. * * * The Pontiac star was nipped at the wire by .Oregon's Jerry Tarr in the 120-yard high hurdles. Jones was defending champion. In gslag down to his lint defeat ef the year, Jones was clocked la 1S.4 seconds. Terr was rauglrt ta the same ttme. This tied the meet record for the high hurdles set in 1956 by Jack Davis of the U. S. Navy. Jones had defeated Tarr in ail earlier meeting at Los Angeles. This time the^ NCAA champion caught Jones in the late st^es Andonian Meets Tough Foe (Special to The Pontiac Press) GRAND RAPIDS - Pontiac’s Mike Andonian faced a rugged opponent this morning af Lincoln Country Club in the 3rd round of match play in the Michigan Pub-Unx Golf Association's annual state Birmi^ham and Bill Curtis of Farmington. On the sidelines following yesterday’s two rounds were former state chanimon Roy Iceberg and Charlie BaAwr.' both from Pontiac, and Union Lake’s Gus Kra-nites. After conquering two rivals Friday, Andonian ran smack into Jim BriegeJ of Ann Arbor today u 16 at Michigan's finest public ttnks players resumed their bids for a state championship. Andsaiaa was am at three Oaklaad Oouty goilBn leuala-Ing in the champIsnsMp fHglit fren the original fMd at M and among the miaslag today is do. fendhw sUte chanptsn Dost Wllsoa of Ypatlantl. Wilson, hoping to duplicate An-donlan's teat of consecutive titles, shattered in the very first Nmd Ung In UH, Mf7 and iMt, went as hates in the monring to elml-noto Tan Btevewa of St. Oair Shares, then soared a M victory over Tamy #aters of Grand Sapida in the nflernon. Andonian and Stevens were bott three under par after 18 holes in their exciting match. After halving the first extra hole with pars, Andonian ended the duel by knocking a 10-iron shot within six inches of the cup and tapping It into the bole for a birdie three. Andonian stood even with par in his triumph over Waters. Aided by an eagle three at No. 6 where he hy WayM’s M Whited, twios a sank a six-foot putt, Andonian was lunnerap in the state touney. * * * Whited ousted Wilson In momliM, S-2, then became a cae-liaity himself in the afternoon by losliM to Detroit’s Oedl Priest on the l9th hole. . BEPEATED AT P.O.C Wilson won the crown two years ago at Loch Alpine amT repeated last year at Pontiac Country Chib. Rounding out the surviving Oakland County delegation w«s MPGA president. Don Nelson of decision to Hazel Paric’s Gordon Mcllvride in the opening round. Barker three-putted three greens on the front nine. Nelson w4 inches in the shot to displace the champion, Dallas Long. Long’s best was 63-H4. WAUnrr. C»l». (SPl^rinal iumm*-.J«t of Ult NtUoMl AAU Trick lod FMd aumptaublpc rridir night. - •, Dan Studney. Sinti Cliri !Mi, f tatehcii. 2. Nick Kovi- ___________Mirtnc corjx J4S-10. 3. Jrrry Dm, AMlciic. Tex.. 4. Paul Con- Icy. Prccno. M3. S. Dick Bocks. Sinti Clara VTV, Ml-4. High jimip—1. John Thomu. Boalon U. SdaaT M inohea. (Iap«r mlckac at lower heWhU). Z. Ocnc Johnion. California. 6-10. J. Brt A»mnt. So. Calif . Strlder.. 6-10 4. OardDM-. U.S. Marine Corpa. 6-10. S, T ......... from behind yesterday Jim Baske of Benton Harbor and 3 to win the MidAmerican juifior match play golf championship. has caused the Major Junior tennis "X _ __ ----Jerome. Enter 1.4. 1. Rodger Sayi Paul Drayton. VlUano . lyattr. U.S. Army, go ■“iSs-yard high htirdlea—1. Jerry Tarr. Tajr. S^^. "—’“ ----- laeord Ml hy Jack Da« Baktrtflald. June B. ' July IS to be trmnslerred from Louisville to St. Ixiois,. The local bowling traveling league continues tomorrow with Airway guest of Huron Bowl and West Side at Wonderland Lanes. West Side heads the loop wi' Airway and Huron sharing 2nd. Ltadtrsn. Salt Lake i Waahhi|too. Santa Cl< Brian buOthishonM. 1 lowMd Bnn Hannon of petroit. I np, and George Bokuniewtex of Bamtraraek, S-2. Southpaw Dave Sackman of Royal Oak, co-medalist with A1 Dlma-vicius of Grand Rapkls in Thursday’s 18-hole qualifiers, was a.2n^ round casualty as Briegel handed him a 3-2 setback. Diroavicius is still alive. ♦ ★ A Double rounds of match play ■re slated today and Sunday, all over an 18-hole route, with the title being decided tomorrow aft- CUAMPIOMBUIP PLIOn J WhIUd. Wnynu- < men, Detroit. -S; Roy Venn Toch, 1Toy. 1 Vernon. WhlM-! j-olt, ^ Jo* Spohsr. LuBol bnll. L— Boker, Royxl KoDldi. t urn I dec Lnrry Ksri J^ LAW, Koft dIm SiiekmgB. Boyjl Onk. ontUc. H;_.DIck del Moe Cholmxk-up. 1* bolee: Dick „-pldx. der Bog A^l. *-3: Bob Cloy. Detroit. ____Dot^J. 1 uo. II holoe. imott def.*^WhuU* f *8?!'* 13 hotoi: emno def. Bober. S-1; Lo*. def. Moot-comtnr. 4^: AH«b dsf. lUmm. briegel def Sockmon, M; j^unty hurdler, Rex Cawley ot Farmington. HOOKS INTO THDtO-Steve Boros of the Tigers hook slides into third away from New York's C2ete Boyer tXho is turning late to make the tag„ In the foreground is Yankee pitchor Bill Stafford who moved over to back up the play. The Bengals won, 7-5. Singles in Run Sparking Tigers to J-5 Victory Hank Is .074 Lifetime; Recovered Bruton, Cosh Help Doom Yonks DETROIT (UPI)-’ lt’s a surprising world isn’t it," Hank Aguirre exclaimed. "All of a sudden, there I was. Looking up at the first baseman like a scared rabbit.” Aguirre, who prides himself on betag poesibly the worst hitter o< all time, had just belten the New Yoit Yankees. 7-5, as the Detroit Tlgen successfully opened ■ flve- toated by Boh Whiting and Paul Anderson, 1 up- Mck Whiting and Andy Mras, Thnraday*s qnal-ifyliM ni4Maltoto, lost a 64 do-ristoa to noB HlbbBid sBd How- Another opening round upset was posted by Pontiac’s Walfy Smith and Ken Place when they conquered Tom Draper and Harry Nederlander. 1 up. A A Quarter-fineds were on the docket today with semfinals and the championship match set for Sunday. VnAkfPIONSBIP FLIGHT rint-B«u4 BmsIU ____Anderton-Bob Strhltlng dtf. ZtoD-John AttiMa, I up; Btso Lud BUI Adsmi dtf. Fiord BurdttW-J----- JtBDliisi. 1 up. IS hoitt: Firrr Bytrd-Bud Sttrent dtf. Bob Blmt-Bob Me-Moiurt. 3-1, Ktn PItet- WtUy amir-dtf. Tom Drtper- Horry Hidtrluidtr, "%o»trd Htmllton-Doa BIbbsrd dtf. Dlek WhniBf- Andy Mrst, %-*■, Ooortt UnkltUr-BtodnU AJwm dri. R e y Bur-SlD- Dick ZtUnct. t-t: Chuck Koctti-Ford Henkel dtf. Herb Btinnd-Otorrt WUton. 6-3; Homer Vna HoOeBbtek-Atert LtCroIx def. Otbo Vow-Mlkt i ToAoy-t Foirtan ____.-lon-WhtU^ rt. Londtoo-Adtmt. BysrCI-Stevint — - -—■■ lady Collegians Meet for Golf Honors ALBUQUERQUE. N. M. IB Last year's two top women’s cellmate golf tourney winners wer~ to meet today to settle the No. ■pot in the 18th women’s collegiate goU touinament. AAA Defending champion Judy Hoet-raer of the University of Washington faced Arizona State University’s Carol Sorenson in the 36-hole final. LITTLE LADY UmJC LEAOlER-'n»e droopy uniform aod oversize glove can’t keep Kristin Lea Williams from showing her pitching form in Mem^, Tenn. the tworjAar-oid hm-ler dis- cords her glove to fire a "fast" then dons it again to. wait for the umpire’s call. He yelled, "Slrike.’’ MANTLE BETUBNB-Mickey Mantle returned to the New York starting lineup last night for the first time since May 18 and put on quite a show in Tiger Stadium. (Upper left) he checks signals after reaching secqnd; (upper right) hides face in his glove when Tiger pitcher Hank Aguirre strode to the plate in the second inning; (lower left) fields Aguirre’s sixth inning single that drove in a run; and grounds into a force play. Mantle, Houk Satisfied With Mickey's Trial that Agnlrte baited lett-liaBded for the first ttme ta Ms career and got a Ut,. It was a pretty tai-bCcaBM as It u some Ife left ta fttom. Aguirre bagged the historic ■ingle in the sixth inning off Yan-itee reitefer Hal Renlff"to drive in Dick McAuUffe who had doubled. . One of the roost frenetic home crowds of the aeaaon — 43,273— gave "Hammerin’ Henry," as he calls himself, the razzberry on his first two trips to the plate. BoOi, times he struck out pitituliy, although on the second whiff he actually ticked one of the pitches foul—and the crowd cheered wildly. ' PLAN BACKFIRED Aguirre stroked the plate In the sixth with McAuliffe on third and Mike Roarke on first u a result of an intentional pass. With one away, Yankee skipper Ralph Houk didn’t want to take a chance on Roarke hitting a run-scoring fly-ball. The Tigers’ Bob Schel-lling concurred with Houk’s stroL egy. "After all," he said, wouldn’t you rather race a guy who strikes out 19 times out of 20?" by Htttag the ball oa the luwdle of Ms bat It weta tato right fMd lor a slngto and bedlam Mrske taose ta the stands. Some tans in left field Ut qwrk-lers to celebrate the occasion of Henry’s first hit since Aug. 28. DETROIT (AP)-Mickey Mantle's first test of baseball's most celebrated bum knee didn' the New York Yankees' tailspin —but it did cause rejoicing. A A A 'I was v«y much satisfied,’’ ■aid the sluggin switcher. "There was no pain. I was afraid I couldn’t run, but I did okay. ‘It felt much better than 1 thought it would." Mantle was in the Yankees’ startiRg lineup Friday night for the first tinned since May 18 when his right thigh and fell on his left knee. The thigh injury has healed but the knee -.ailment I a source of trouble STILL 8UD1NG The Yankees startqd a slide with the loss of Mantle and it ■top with his return. He reached tatse his first two times at bat and scored the Yankees’ first two runs in their 7-5 lo« to the Detroit. Tigers. It was the Yanks’ ninth defeat in 11 games and they fell four games behind first-place Cleveland. But a loss this time didn’t mat-r too much. Manager Ralph Houk was excited about having star back. AAA "That’a a relief off my mind," ■aid Houk. "Mickey paued hia first test with flying colors. 'He makes a big difference in our club when he’s playing. Everything is better when he’s there.” Mantle wanted to wait before deciding if/be’a back in tlie UAeup for good. Let’a wait before I lay if I can play every day now," Mantle •aid. "It mi^ stiffen up night and I’ll have .to miss both of today’s games. ’ ^ But I’ll {Hobably play at least one of them.” NEEDED REUEF Mantle r«n with ■ noticeable hobble and ended his first test after 6‘s innings. 'I can start just as quick as ?r did." he i|aid. "I just can In his two times on base, Man-e didn’t advance more thM one base at a time. Once he held up at third on a single to right that would have scored most runners from second. "The only time I worried about it was on the bases," said Mantle. "I don’t know what would have happened if I had to slide. "No, I didn’t ask to come out. Ralph decided that. He asked me how I felt and I said I was getting a little weary and he said ’better not take a chanew “ It’ ’’ s I c I alL I fell my knee got stronger during the game. Playing on It and running on .it might help It get strongeri I know I was Bing better taler ’ ' just that 1 rmi to." ts nm-gtpe. rUBd lengthy standing ovtto. Aguine, whose last mt came off Yankee Whitey Ford, doffed Ms OBp in B majestic gesture of appreciation and settled down to the business of running bases. "Man, I was really scared. It had been so long since I was on base, I almost forgot what to do.’* He was stranded, so it didn’t matter. AAA The hit raised Aguirre’s lifetime major league batting average .074 on seven hits in 94 times bet. "I’m just hitting my stride,’’ he joked. His pitching average is more re-■pectaUe 5-2 fcdlowing the victory. AHhongh not as sharp as he wee Ib Ms lari start. May 20, wiwn ho beat the Vaaks sb five Hte, Agalrre get Ihe rats vIwb hs Heeded them aattl Hm Math ■ called Billy Bniton returned to the Ttgers’ starting lineup and enjoyed a successful comeback. His double off Yank loser Bill Stafford in the first inniiig led to a 2-0 lead for Detroit. Norm cash walloped a double to drive in Steve Boros and Bruton, each of whom had singled, and make It 4-1 in the third. New York crept up on Aguirre In the fourth, his worst inning, for two runs to makb it 4-3, 'but that was as close as ttte Yankees could get. CMo> Fernandez drove in two of the Tiger runs with his ninth homer In the fourth off reliever Jim Cfoates and a seventh inning sacrifice fly. Anmitt 33. twi-oliht -----------------re 1-4. twi-nlsbl: ffrtt ■trot. 10 Innlntt Detroit 7. Hew York S. aisM '^■euo 1. Hunt Cttr 1. aigM rdtatf 4. WtiMnsMa L alibt TODATA OAMW ms Aatoltt (Orbt M) at Mkia4toU (Ktti 7-4). „ - - • ^Wanlioutf 44).sSl ae»ttatM|S‘St!rr( DO '4-4) ot Baltlmoro (Brown i i i t M- «-jrork(5^..7-,«MJurJgr^33^^^ i ! 11 W f MHord p 1 0 0 S Httob Bt p Hew Yorit''£ Anselee aeClty 3 110 Boroe 3b sots Bruton cf 6 13 1 OoldT rf 3 1l4Coltello If 1 0 0 0 Cl IllSM i^orlt U FBIDATW How York 3-3, --- 33. Houetaa At rtutet il.^n^lCujelico 67”eight lOBAY’S OAMBS itda (JoluiMa 37) it Now York (Hook 44). Louie (WHfaburn 4-3 ar Olbteo S4) iMcConnkk 331. ^Inaett (Jtr W4' (Dryadtle 114). i AMARILLO. Tex-Honrf --------- _ A^lllo. ttoppod Adolph PrulR. 136. St. TCrrowA. N.J—Mel Collint. IM. Trea-toi, N J.. wtptoitAd Herichet Jteobe. IM. _________Bfi^DBLE Rowtoa at Hew York (3) ■t. Louie at PhUtdehihta U) . - ■ at Flttabuiir (3) Oeorrit Ptse. 13Z. saoraroenlw OUAT FALU. Moat. - iHtU 6...... U3. Portliad, Ore., outpoliiled Oene (Ronexbcar) Bryaat, ISB ^ean. Arhu THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURPAY. JUNE 23, 1902 T#ENtY.ONE Major League Averages IMusidI TopS ReCOrd Set, by Cobb MAnONAL LEAGUE CLUB BATTIMO AB B B BBBBIPfl S4TI S7t M7 S Ml JM »U IN tn «7 177 JN UN lU *11 M IM .NT Nil IN W » m JH NM m 111 71 H4 .Nl NN N1 Ml H >77 .UI NUNI 171 71 Ml .>41 ' Nil m Ml M »> .>4> CLUt riELDWa Jir&.”irL. g « 5 2 HMldix. rtu. S S li S i w^-k, »«• j! S S s i MwUcr. L.A. n n « N t Jukfoa. N.T. IN S S ! ilsii Cnai. n.r. "}« g J 5n St SiSsS SSSSj Hunlltcn. m». g J* « “ J s a s«I BNecU. « L. «»»****** ggllllSt0n G0ins 1st >117 III 9M H )H w MM 170 M4 71 Ml So I ‘ V . I ■> isssi2in Tot0l B0ses . for 4th M0rk Young Met Pitcher' Fires One>Kit Shutout; LA, Giants Lose By BOB green AsMiciated Preos Sptrti Writer St. Louis, located on the banks of the Mississippi River, has beerf made famous by two old men. One is The River. The other is The Man. Both just keep roUin* along. ★ ★ ★ Stan (The Man) Musial. 41-year-old Cardinal great, established another in his long list of records Friday night, lashing a home run •»|and three singles in surpassing .. SiTy Cobb’s major league record of 2 '.m|S>863 career total bases. » .Ml] ‘‘For some reason, I never paid **' much attention to that record," Musial said. "But my friends tell It?] me it will eventually be the one sli^ will prize the most.” ' FOURTH RECORD 4L was the fourth inajor S ;m4 ■Isndm’d established by the per-2 jgisonable Cardinal outfielder this “ season. He previously topped the National League records held by the late Honus Wagner tor hM,s (3,430) and games 12,785) and by Mel Ott (or runs (1,859). ♦ ♦ ★ And Musial, whose batting stance somehow resembles a little boy peeking around a comer, gives no signs of slowing up. The four hits in, St. Louis’ sidit of a doubleheader with Philadelphia raised his batting average to .345, best in the league. His total base count now stands at 5,866. Babe Ruth is thinl on the aU time list with 5,7%. ★ *■ sial's second li his irigdilh of the seai a sb(-run inning that braUjdit the Cardinals a 7-3 victory in the opener, but the Phils came back for an 11-3 verdict in the nightcap. New York and Houston split a pair. Met lefty A1 Jackson throwing a one-hit 2-6 shutout in the opener and the Cbits romping 16-3 in the second, Cincinnati (ou^t off a Los Angeles ninth-inning rally and beat the Dodgers 63. Ihe Dodgers remained 2H games in front of San Francisco, however, which was the victim of a idnth-inning Milwaukee rally that brought the Braves an 11-9 decision. Pittsburgh, beat Chicago 7-5. LAST SECOND MusiaTs homer and a two-run single his second time up in the second innii^ helped Larry Jack-son (6-7) to the first game victory. Wildness by Ernie Broglio (2-3) aided Philadelphia in running up a 50 lead in the second inning of the second game, and they took it from there behind Jim Owens (2-2). Roy Sievers had a three-n^p homer, and Don Demeter had four hits and five runs batted in. BREAKS RECORD-Stan Musial broke Ty Cobb's total bases record with this hit in yesterday’s first game of a doubleheader at Phila- delphia. The Caidinals ' dropped the nightcap. Ar rkMafti the opener, but Castoffs Star in Different Uniforms Red Faces Are Fashionable in Ai By The Associated Preas Red (aces were in fashion in the American League today. Some ex-American Leaguers had them, too. It was the New York Yankees who waved Robin Roberts to the unemployment insurance li) where Baltimore found him. was the Washington Senators who traded off Dick Donovan to Qeve-land. And it was a couple of old Yankees, George Weiss and Casey Stengel of the Mets who peddled catcher Hobie Landrith off to Baltimore (or a first baseman with a leaky glove. Today they all wished they hadn’t done it. THIRD STRAIGHT Roberts was busy winning his third straight for the Orioles, a complete 4-3 job over the Boston Red Sox in the second game r. The emergency hospital doctor said medical science had no explanation why the heart suddenly starts beating fqpt, but added such attacks are not serious. Baseball Range Now Open* TICKETS FOR ANNUAL BUICK OPEN July 5-6-7 Oil Suit Hurt REGISTER YOUR CHILD tOrls-lors. 12 to 16 yrs.) PARKS sad RICRIATION 60ir SCHOOL —Family Summer Fun Spot— CARL'S DRIVING RANGE T976 S. Ttlugroph Rd. — Opposilt Mirada Mila COOL YOVR CAR... with on EATON Air Conditioner PIKE RADIATOR SERVICE a ’ RAR mtwrn ci Michigan's Product of the Year * THREE BIG Scout Weekend camping, touring, hunting or fishing, wo Iwvo an APACHE Camping Trailor that will fit your plans perfectly. From the luxurious Eagle to the economical Scout, APACHE trailors are deeigned to make your trip more comfortable, mors enjoyable. Each is compact, woU-conatructed and easy to aet up. And, ybull bo surprised at the room inside. Ftar the camping trip of your life, go APACHE. See ua for s a-a. entr. Oaon "Lapoor's Apoebe Campiag Ceator" BOATS—MOTORS—CANOES Ortr SIM.SM oUtk on SlssUr of aortoo sad oMlriaf •onlaaonl. Knrot, Aom r»Uo nod rMo-Boto firtion roHi. Gmaann end Atroernn tinort. SterernR, LoM-•Ur. Sm Ear. M.F.O., Boo aad ArrocraH kaala. WBXBC raiCK and QUAUTT (next BILIf COLLER 1 MILE EAST OF LAPEER ON M-21 . JACOBY ON BRIDGE ti?:„ tr« A«tt ■■■■ «!«• Maa MM 1* r«M Sir rim s* S« Vta> *♦ rm «A ra* By OSWALD iAOOBV VMwn doci a niaiir kid change into a powertal hand? SonwtinMB yar panrcr'i bklding does iMt promole one card hi your tend, but when, his bidding clearly Blows that you hold exactly the right cards to fit with his, your band becomes more valuable. South's 12 high card points and six card spade suit constituted a ' minimum opening bid and his part-aer’s two heart rewwnat! led to an automatic two spade rebid. When North went to three clubs on his second hid. BoH ptayefs would either rehid to three spades or try three no-trump, but John Mc-Gervay of Oevciand saw no rea-aon to Md anything but diree dia- hid was a Jump to four Ml how John revalued his iMuid upward. It was obvious that North held not more than one diamond. 0th-e, he would not have botb-to bid hearts and dubs before raising spades. Also. North to have a couple of aces. Again he had made thoae two other bids before giving the spade itae. John felt that his hand juMi-fied a Blarkwood call of four tramp and when South showed two aces John went to six spades. West opened a diamond John made ail the tricks. He took the ace, ruffed a diamond high, led a spade to his Jack, ruffed Ms last diamond, got back to his hand with a club and claimed the Michigan Great, Says Swainson Praises State Before Veterans of Foreign Wore Convention Dcwbla BadWM SO Tsu. Sndh. hoM; exjMii WAS ess eKQisi What do yon doT Thu beMBis same haad. Vdot BctlphEdw(H4s to Head Drive hr Cancer Society CH CAGO (UPI) - The American Cancer Society yesterday announced appointment of television pcrebnaitly Ralph Edwards as chalraaa «f iU ISO fond raWns SAULT 8TE. MARIE (API ■Wd hare « gre^t state," i Go*. esafnaoB ymMty. "Dont let tetyone teS you difforentiy." The gafvenwr, replytac to crit-he hat heard at Middgan’a was cited for dWincttislMd aerv-ioe fay the society la ISSt- e * * The aodely alao announoed it has prepared a ISBinule color picture entitled "Is Smok-ii« Worih n?” which will be Whfle we have there'! ' sight ol." he said.“This is Michigaa has a bright future. SwaiaaoB cited a need , for new> and better state parks facilities as part of a program to boost the tourist Industry. More than 180,000 campers were turned sway from state parks last year for lack of facilities, he said. ★ ★ * 'We must be watchful of the mounting pressures that would wiiittle away more and mote of natural resources.'’ he added, t want to eacourage growth. But surii growtt tfioUld he bene-ficisl. not 2 Channel Projects on lakes Awany TROnr tl»—TWO 'h^ncts ti { more than |10 nmlhm wei s in Great Lakes waterways. The U.S. Army Corps of Eligi-neers awarded a $5.74 million contract for Maumee Bay work at Toledo and another for i4,491,eJ6 for the Trenton Channel of the Detroit River. The Manm^ Bay contract was given Great^ Ijikee Dredge and Dock Co. of" aeveland. 'The Detroit River contract went jointly to Dunbar and 0>. and Mer KiewHl Sons’. Co., IS. _ ! ‘ T|IE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY^ JUXE 23, 1962 TWgy|Y THR^E ^ Red Gift fo W, Berlin: 2 Duty-Free Shops BERLIN (UPI) >. Weat Berliners have a customs-Jree shopping paradise in — e< all place»-East Beriih. The Oammumats ran taw dutyfree stores at the elevated railroad station at FHethriohotraaK. West Berliners can and do buy there,without having to eater East Berlin itself arfaich they are East Germany sells cheap American cigarMes, French cognac. Skotch whisky, fVencb perfume, lipstich. nylon stockings and even Ouhu canned pineapple in the two riMpa. Goods eaa ha bonght only ably West flesnsaa The elevated station is a stop for Wert Berliners who use the Oommunist-raa eievatod railway. Ihey go. to FMedridistraase to cha^ trains for another part of Wert Berlin. rial aenrice be held rt g pjB. SuBtlay ef the funeni home. He was a life member of F. and AJf. 54 of Upeer and the Bay City Mtol wfflbein »y. Mr. Dunn died Friday after a ng illness. The body wm he at the Roth’s lame fsr Funeralu to Romeo until Jdonduy raomtog. Mr. Duso wus former owi Dunn’s Market to Borneo aad had^j been a reridein of Orchard Lake for nine .veara. Surviving are hto non James J. Jr. of Orchard Lake, and four sisters: Mrs. Mae Hunt of De-Mrs. imae Dear ai Rorii-and Ita. Mto Ovtis aad k ef Uam ahl Vander Veeu of Grand Rapids, said the ^iprapriatiaB for fia-cal 19620 wfll not permit an to-crease ia ’’desperately ri»rt” nursing staffs nor addition of profea-tl workers for care and treat-t of the mentally 111 and re- GBOME A. LAPEER .. inhelder, 55. ndU be held at 19 am. Monday at toe Baird Ih-Home, with Genselery. He died Friday at Lapeer Gen-after a Cmia Witoon af Lapeer Louise (torrtwfhlager ef Hacher Beach. MRS. WALTER RITIAW GLARkSrON - Servioe tor Mrs. Walter (Rase M.) Rftlaw, 33, ol 7036 Tappon Road, wlB be 1:30 p.m. rt the Donekinn Tnhns Fu-j nerai Uaaw to Pontiac. OsteopatUe Hoapttol yesterday. brother Thonoa Burnham af a sister, Mrs. Jack Prior of Uvmha. , LANSING tit- The Stale Mental Health Osmmtoaian has acnoed toe legjBlature of "callous disregard of mental hertth The axnmiasioii. to a sharply the $78.5 million bndget Ihey art for aneatal health to the fiscal ar rtartihg July 1. Tho budget is KA mtOtou danmnded by toe people rt M Allocations for Lafayette Ctodc in Detroit, Hantosm Center to Kalamazoo, Ypsilanti, Traverse aty and Ftonttoc fall $1941415 rtnri of the anaount needed to eon' program rt toe preaeat level, the commission said. Lawnukers wIB return i The con d by Rich- Being aeiected as an outstanding ahunnus of the year is a great honor. When such awards d to a hu.sband and wife for their individual rontiibutions to Ciety. it to highly unusual, h * ♦ Carlton College announced that two of eight achievement awards granted this year will go to Rt. Rev. and Mrs. fvot L CUrtis af Los Angeles, Calif. Suffragan Bishop Curtis, a former rector of All Saints Fjdsoopal Oniivh of Pontiac, led the iocal cangregattan in orgaiiiztog drew’g Episcopal Church la Dray-tan Plains and St. Mary's-to-the-Hills Epiaoopal Church on Jos|ya Road. Both are now aeli support- From there Bishop Curtis on to earn his bachelor of divinity]i degree from Episcopal Seabury-Western TTwolagical Serahiaiy. Mrs. CurUs taught high school In Wisconsin until She and Birturp (Mrtis were married in 1936. Recently Mrs. (Mrtis earned her librarian’s degree and has been setviiy at the Los Angeles Pttolic Uhrary. Before his dectlon to Ms present position Bishop Cmlis served as rector of St. J a Church. Lob Angeles. Biahop and Mrs. (Mrtis were the only persons to religious Uie receive the awards from ooUege. RT. REV. IVOL L d-Rm . IVOL L d'RTn 5 Losing Sessions Put Mart Back at '58 Level Part<^ Light StoHon Sold tiiFTwo St^ Men CHICAGO (ft - Parts of the Port Austin rert light stattoa at Potote Aux Barques. Meh, have been sold tot the General 8 NEW YORK (AP)—Hit by five,trial»—atock considered the soundest iavmrtinrixs—suffered in the stock market lai«nished today ^ 1^ ,. , , „ , , , , were taken by many steel, cbemi- ils lowest level in nearly fouri . A sharp arttouk Friday capped An expected and the gh toe year’s low reached May 39 at the botlom of EMOTIONAL PACraRR verton emuinurd to be pla by the emattosMl fac^ars « ........... big phinge May 31. xirty over the business outlouk. Talk afaom the poatibiliiies of a •oeasian next year was also aaid hard hit. weathered the storm and parted gams lor the day * * k Wl^ seme Wall Street circles spoke of praiperls for a summer raUy, others guessed buying to purti slocks up mighl nut be found until the Dow Joneo indualnal av-descewds to around 53D-S.5. die higheal levels reached in 195r> ■ 1967. t Brace Krag. Cnaae Pointe Farms, paid $7,OU.9B tor LI acre of unimproved land. Narman J. Dahm, Detroit, paid 07,019 for an improved with a ttowotory Bq$ore the rate change In 1998 the three-cent rtainp was by tar the postal department’s best seilrr. Glenn Plannina a Camping Trip With His Family WASHINGTON (AP)-Astnmsul John H. Glenn Jr. to going to get way fixun it ah for a while. For toe first time We he I agD. he’s going on a camp-1 i^ trto with ish wife sod two| firrt time in three montho and a sleep (ail to automobile . kecouse of a ptrHce at a Ford Motor Ob. stamptog ptant. But wkese aad whim to a oecret "We would tort love to be for a uhile." aaid Mrs. The Kay to your Independent Seourity ; Is fha SECURED MVESTMENT PLAN — too aowort tooumwco/ invostmort program ovailablo: The Aamciated Preoo SArtock average Friday skidded 3.0 to 202J0. towert since Nov. 26. 1^. The Dow Janet avmage of 39 in-durtrials toil IIJO to 539.19. tow-Oct. 28, 1958. B be aW ra. Gwnn I take Ire-. said Mrs. Glenn. "John’s been a bit busy since then." The Oenn family wfil alas puli p stakes and Icnve their Arlington. Va.. home ia late Jufy ar early Amuot, for a new home in The scope of the decline in re- Houston, Thx.. the permanent site Lodge Calendar meeting of Pontine Chapter No. 228. OE8. Monday. June 25. at 8 184 E. LawTence Street. Edith M. Coons. cent months is shown by compari-aon with the AP avenge'a aH-time MIgh of 262.50 on Feb. 15 and the Dow Jones industrials’ peak af 734.91 Dec. 13, 1961. BLUE CHIPR SUFFIX Blue chips among th News in Brief for the National Aeronautics and eamtownyiX aftta nUfS Yam tocnl todapandani Soower MDBFl SECVRIT7 BalMtog toJ^ini^on Lester Truesdefi told County Sheriff s deputies yesterday. Nice efrthfng of aR Undo and appliances. ’212 E. Pike. —adv. JUNE and MARRUGES Jmm. ttt OoSdcu of Lev*. TUv moa vO* oOww OiU aoocb rv her wvddins to honertos Wt OoOSooi ol Low foot ai Um nnn to anetooS Oioaao SM. tan BjC. Jtoto kaa koon toe eliifct ol he veatotr durtof toe meoth tt Joae to ■(■ar- j. I to warm, oat hoc: too aaaa reOaeU (oO. niKMr ladlaMe: all too atn otohraea tt team: Oovert atom toad Oto (a ha tansUH: ehiaSt U tom>aa betosa are more tolerant, imtle eadlr. iBderitoodlac qulekljr floaU to toe top. Ama part at awr. betot; alltailaa W •* (barS. wUh Oaep eaaitoima vfkaaUac to" turn Witt too onlverM. (a too tomdt. to too apaaeb. aad to tot lava eaU or a ■wto. Tba laaiOar at Jmt taaebaa Urn baaft at VOORHEES.SIPLE FUNERAL HOME > PE »4g» It complained that the capital outlay budget does not provide for mom than^ a ffl9-bed building «ti Plymouth Slake Homital for boos I ing mentally retard^. The list of thW waiting (or admiosion to homes for the rrtardod sarpasiesj 1,600, it said. i Lutheran Leader I Plans to Stress | Missions Work | CLEVELAND » - Dr. Olirorj .. Harms of St. Loui«. newly-1 elected president of the Lutheran Church — Missouri Synod, says emphans in his three-year term will be on < sions work aad s establishing 135 new congregations Delegates to the 2I3 member tion elected Dr. Harms on fourth baMot to ouooeed TAyear^ Dr. John W. Behnken. prert-dent for 27 Otfiers ia the iwming were Drp. r. H. Grieger of Aon Arbor. Mich.; Theodore F. W. Nkkel of C J. ‘ of New Yoik. and R. P. Wiedtr-nendm of Osoma Ghiofi^ Tex. I elected 'vine presidents are to be elected. Sporks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME **ThoHghtful Servit^** Mroa H 2-5941 It is a Matter of Great Pride . . . The Donelson-Johns Funeral Home is spacious and conve^iient. In fact, it is one of the very nicest, used exclusively for funerals in Michigon. Every funeral con be cared for here with ease and grace.. All who would come con be seated in comfort. The splendid ond grocious furnishings orxJ the many modem conveniences help toward complete comfort. With softness and friendliness oglow, no matter how lorge or how small the funeral, there is peoce here for oil who enter. PLaae FCOCrtAL 4-4S1I bL - O)onelson-^kns ;T. PONTIAC m WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC iiAn:>iA\'s IMIS I r auago and lots of « a#n. $19,950 with $2000 daam plus clMing corta. LAKfFRONT: With tho boouHful viow. li-lo«ol, ei loodod with oxtraa. SickaoM harcoa solo. 1^09 tho ta $23,950 with $2400 down plwa cloatog coata. 4: Co* leke privilogee eart both peaachiaf awd pohlrt iiAn:>iA\'s IMIM TWENTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JUNE 2a, 1962 Auto Companies Think Big for *63 (iditofi note — Small cars act btggsr and trig , ears get fancier. That’s the trend for 196S along automotive row as the manufacturers turn to style and power to sell next year’s models.) B; BEN PHLEGAR AP Automotive Writer DETROIT - The 1963 model cum will he longer, lower, flashier and more powerful — which makes next year sound like the “good old dayi*' of the mid-50s. Advance reports strongly tndi cate the recent Detroit enthusiasm to "Think Small" Is a thing of the past. The auto companies apparently believe the compact honeymoon Is over, economy Is pa.sse and the .word for the coming year is “MORE." There will be more models, more luxury and more horses under the hood. Stltl to be decided are the price tags. They, too, might read "more." Every current indication is that 1963 will be a styUng year. Major' mechanical changes, outside of aome new engines, will be rare. The first of the l963 models-ihe Studebaker Avanli—already has| been introduced and it typifies the | snowballing trend to expensive,, personal luxury automobiles. AW* With registered timings in exce.ss ] of 170 miles an hour, the Avanli is the fastest production car ever offered. Supercharging is optional. Bucket seats, padded flxt^s. floor mounted gear shift are standard. None of the other companies is talking for publication yet about their coming offerings. Tlte following items are from various outside sources. CM ENTRT General Motors finally is ready with its nrional luxury cary Buick Riviera, already billed as the ultimate In such vehicles. Tlie Riviera will um the big tOl-cubic-inch Buick engine, currently rated at 323 horsepower, and will be sized between the present compact Buick Special (188 inchea over-all length) and the standard Buicks <214 inches). Ford Fairlane and Mercury Mc-tops booming, Pontiac may add teor. including convertibles next one to its one-model Grand Prix spring, two and foiir' door hard-aeries, tops, and performance CHANGES IDEAS the engine department. wii«UE8 IDEAS Long overdue convertibles for To Indicate juat how far the Falcon, Valiant and probably for pendulum has swung, one of the Comet and Lancer. With the soft- companies seeking the longer, low- I be aimed at tlM Both the Avanti and the Riviera shoidd prove peppier than the ThundcrUrd, unless Ford has some purpriae under-the-hood changes for the 'bird' to go with aome major exterior revisions. The Thunder-bird gets a new grille and the side panels will be rounded, giving it « man oval shape. * * * These other new models can be full line-up lor the Returns Home After Year in Soviet School NEWARK, NJ. (UPD-mteen-ycaroU Hnidah Oarfc came ‘ from Russia last night afti ceiving a year's achooling at Soviet Premier NiUU Khrushchev’s in- The Negro girl ate a chicken dinner with her parent!, Mr. and Mrs. William dark, si^ chatted quietly of things she bad seen and Her lather, an unemployed laborer, met Khrushchev in a crowd at the United Nations Building in ^ Near York Oty-a^yaar-ago and the Russian leader offered to pay lor Huldoh’a education. Clark laid he tent hia daughter Jim Grew achoola there. * * * The girl laid she wanted to go back to Russia “becauae there isn’t anything l don’t like about there." Plan freedom Rid«$' MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) -Memphii Otizens-Council said yesterday It is inaugurating "reverie freedom rides" here and will accept applications from Negroes wishing one-way bus tickets north. A VI8TOR, NOW—First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy poses with a former White House tenant. Mamie Eisenhower, on the north portico of the executive mansion. Mra. Eisenhower had just arrived to attend a tea with members of the National Cultural Center Advisory Committee. Discuss Cultural Center Jackie, Mamie at Tea WASHINGTON (UPI) - Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy and Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower traded ideas over tea yesterday on a proposed national cultural center. ★ * * The White Home meeting lasted 33 minutes, and Mrs. Eisenhower appeared to enjoy her role as a guest. The (wo women, and other members ol tbe advisory eem-mlttee fer tbe renter, gathered In fnmily qnarlers at tbe White House. A aurpriae visitor wa.s Presi-d«it Kennedy, who told Mrs. Eisenhower he was glad to see her there. ★ * ♦ Even 4-year-old Caroline Kennedy atop^ in. but she missed Mrs. Eisenhower, who had left earlier. Both the First Lady and the former first lady are honorary oochalrmen of the proposed cul-tural center. Mrs. Eisenhower told news- Keep Ex-Marine Under Guard Police Watch House of Youth Questioned in Murder of 2 Girls 2 Youths Admit Guilt in Holdup of Troy Market Two teen-age youths yesterday admitted the 1230 holdup of a Troy market last month. * * Richard Gladiator, 18. of Warren. and Gerald Dikin, 19. a Oe^ troit Marine, pleaded gtiilty in circuit court to a reduc^ charge of assault with intent to rob while armed. which rnrries a maximum life sentMice. The assault rharge alio carrieo a Ufr maximum but, unlike armed robbery, contains a provlslou (or probation. ^ Gladiator and Dikin were apprehended May 23 through an auto license number taken down by a witness to a robbery at the GAJ Market, 43003 Dequidre Road, Troy. Gladiator admitted taking part in eight holdups in Oakland and Macomb Counties. ^ according police. Dikin said he was involved in one of the others. The youths will be sentenced July 10 by Judge Frederick Ziem. CORRECTION PLASTIC Frozen Food CONTAIRERS PINT SIZE men she wanted to do everything she could to help make the idea a reality. er image is American Motors which first popularized the compact car. AMC is extending the wheelbase on the Rambler Classic and Ambassador series from 108 to 113 inches and lowering the over-all silhouette. The attempt is to get away from the boxy appearance o'! recent years. Major styling changes are in the works at Ameri-Motors for 1964 on all three lines, induing the American. Cadillac, Chevrolet and probably the Pontiac Tempest will have new engines. The Buick Riviera may include the turbocharging option now used by Oorvalr. The Cadillac V8 wiU be of about the same size as the present V8 but will use the new techniques of thin-wall casting — more efficiency from less weight. Chevrolet has a new small V8 which may show up in the Chevy II as an option as well as in the standard Chevrolets. Pontiac has a cast iron V8 of 36-cubic-inch displacement, apparently as a replacement for the aluminum V8 now offered in the Tempest. Tempest never has pushed the aluminum engine and it has accounted for less than 10 per cent of production. n ★ * * Optional equipment will give Falcon, Cornel, Fairlane and Meteor more potent six.' Studebaker apparently has postponed major styling changes for the Lark and Hawk, but Lark may show up with a clutchless shift, similar to the "E af 12 (Iff. $2.21). C««afU (Rtf. $4.14). QUART SIZE $1.44|t#ts *f 12 (Rtf. $3.00) . $1.70 $4.29|c«a af 34 (Raf. $9.00) . $5.29 County Man's Death I Is Listed os Suicide A 32-year-old Commerce To\m-s^ip man. Dale J. Lough, was found dead yesterday evening in his garage at 1787 Big Trail. Oakland Cbunty Sheriff’s deputies listed his death as a suicide. ,, The victim’s body was found in a car park^ in the garage by his wile Ann about'6:30 p.m. Dr. Richard E. Olsen. St. Joseph Mercy Hosiptal who performed the autopsy, said the death was caused by carbon monoxide. ruiatn Ernie. 4100 W. Wsitou MUTTON fUm ON 3-1N0 Km9« Hwde. N9. 1 i04l Oithsrd Uka Read REEGO NARtOR 402-2440 Toa's Hwdt. 90S Oicfiard Laka RONTUC n 5-2424 MSUO Prof to Head Program on Genetics Dr. Herman W. ^wis ol 77 Randolph Road. Rochiester, has been named program director in genetic biology with (he National lienee Foundation. Lewis, an associate professor of biology at Michigan State University Oakland, will take a two-year leave lor the post. HAOLX, Junt n, iiiii Auni-|U|U«. U« Oorli Rd.: «|t n. ^ntral Mnle* vUI b« jwld Tu««- Mloiiui''c«t8oUe (%urch.' Intfr^ m«nt In WlUt* .Cuptt CtmeMry. Mr>. HMlt wUlTl* to IMU at ciSlTrSiiflir will take on the ebarueteririica of tbe aquared-aff ThuMlertiird roof. Tnuika wUl be lengtbeiird and amaetbed out. Chrysler will adopt a single 122-inch wheelbase and will make i 11 e and rear-quarter panel changes. Imperial will be touched only slightly. At General Motors, the Buick-Oldsmobile-Pentiac compacts will grow a bit, moving clowr to intermediate size of Ford Fair-lane and Mercury Meteor. The larger GM cars wHl show less sculptured metal, smoother sides, and different arrangements for head and tall lights. * * * Ford styling changes are not major and Lincoln sticks with its new continuity promised two yean ago. Mercury will make further efforts look different than Ford although it continues to share body shells. All cars will use amber signals and all will be equipped with positive cnmkcaae ventilation, a method of recirculating vapors which escape from the cylinders. And for the second year all will be equipped with mountings lor front seat belts. City High Schools Low on Money fJHudgeoned bodks^iLe^ at a lover s lane near Mor- " Pontiac's two high schools counting the threads at the bottom of their purses intended to be filled with scholarship money. 'For many young, intelligent high school seniors who are financially unable to consider a university training, scholarships often mean the difference between attending college and being deprived of this education," comments Pontiac Northern Principal Philip J. Wargelin. At Pontiac Northern, a scholarship. foundation was established in 1959 with an initial grant from former Pontiac Central Principal John Thors Jr. At Pontiac Central, a foundation was established in 1937 in the memory of the late Sarah McCar-roll, a Pontiac educator and school administrator. PCH has granted $3,269.56 to 21 students since the first scholarship was awarded in 1941. PNH has made token grants and each year. Two Services Scheduled for the Late Sen. Cose WASHINGTON (UPI) - The first of two funeral services will be held here tomorrow for Sen. Francis Case, R-S.D., who died yesterday. The seebnd service will be held Tuesday in Rapid City, S.D., where Case will be buried. Death Notices coopsm roifi n. tssa. baby John tUnrtl. 40 Wnt PAlrmont; btlovMl iDttnt MD of Bcoillr and PiWcIs Coowr: dear brolh-«r of MIchaal Coopor. PunartI aerrioa will ba bold liondar. J«n» SI, at i:00 pm. at the Huatooa PuDaral Roma witb Death Notices OOPXK. JONI n' INI. BAST Donald KoIIt. 40 W«t Palrmont; balovad loiaat M41 of Bannlt Patricia Caopar; dtar brotbor of Mlebaal Coopor. t^aral urrloa «UI ba bauTMonday. Juna IS. ar ]:N p.m. at Um Runtoon Pu- :N p.m. a I Hraa 1 Salt offleli It Cobiatary. Baby Donald loved huaband of Orayco laaar- bouri per evanlnt. Bamlnii SM per week. Muat be neat . pearini and sood worker, aurt .immedletaly. Openint aleo (or full timo man. Por Inlormattoo call Mr. Oraan. OR 3-0922 5-9 P.M. BXPIRIBMCB MBCBaSAKY iRoaalool YaUc and Jack 1. Keller^ dear brother of Mra. Phoe- nenU are Mndlnc at the Purilcy PunerA Home Puneral tervloe w _________Hwitoon Pun«____________ PAX.BTIB JCkl 13, INI, HAL-...... (Vljl 1« South Bdlth St. beloved huiband of Mo Walter P •i: oeioveo nuioand 01 Palette: dear brother Prank and Mamie Kentrue. >ud Rote Oalkui. Mr. Paletle wae taken today to the Thornton Pu-neral Rome, Carrier MtIU. 1111-nolf,^ (or lervlcet and burial. Pu- BparktSormfn'Irun* raV Rome. **** Mary TOM Tappon, Clarketon; an 13; beloved wife of Walter mtlaw: beloved dauihter of Mrs. WUItem Burnham: dear mother of Randy. Diana, Donna, WalMr T., Michael and Marty RlUaw; dear eUter ol Mri. Jack Prior, and Thomae Burnham Puneral eervlce wUl be held Monday. June 35. at 1:10 p.m. at the Donr’— I Puneral Home. Mri. —BOX REPUES-Al 10 a.m. Today there were repliew at The Press ~ e« in the foDowing boxes: S, S, 4. 44. S4, U, 42, 7S, 74. 78, 84. 84. 02, 04, 144. 104. 104, 111, no. Computer Operator EXPERIKNCS: IN CARD-TAPI systems NECK8SARY. muit be manaitment potanttel, potrolt 'area firm, opportunity (or ad-nneemeot. Bend reeume etaUnf •alary re'quIramenU. Write Pon- Door-to-Door Salesman of a’pereon with diredt tales ptrlencc to establUb new 1 tomeri on their routes. Pull C(____ pane benefits, permanent poilUon - Call evenlnsa. Mr. " ------------ DIESEL POWER MAN WITH right qualUlcatloni. Oood roen-Ing, top pay for right man. Position requires overseas travel. Write to Mr. I. K. Lomson, Field Engineer. TMC Power Distribution. llg Oronoca St., Alexandria. Virginia.___________________________ , EXPERIENCED PARMHXND dalry^Urm. SNO Qrass Lake Rd , ! EXPERIAnCED SINGLE MAN lor general larmmg. PE S-3gJg. VHKE BENT IN RETURN TOR yardwork and handyman. Single, good character and health. Rt- pl) to Boi N.______________ experienced BROWN AND' WITH SmCERE appreciation Corv- id. R«t. Btrabty tor bu eooifortlnt irdrdt. Huntooo Fuofr«l Homt. a^'aS*oiL ______________________ ro6uw fw theh NauUful^ (loi^ w^^wirn' TO EXTEND OObI ■■—■* “ —- - appreciation Poaltom Yoienna of Wnrt FoM l»s and nu HORSE DRAWN RAT RIDES MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS ns PeeUa|^ateU^Bniik Bldg. SPECIAL - COLO WAVE. NN. Dorothy's. 4N N. Porry. PE 3-13N. Opon-------- Pay Off Your Bills — wMhoal n Iona — PaymtnU low as SU wk. PnHcdt yonr fob and cyedtt Romo or Office Appointments City Adjustment .Service 114 W. Huron_________PE S4N1 TUPPBRWABE HOME PARTIES. FUNERAL FLOWERS $5.00 and UP Pontiac Mall Flowers DeUTStles Dally—Charge ttl Open g:30-t _____m^l30l Engineers Live in Son Jose, .California Enjoy living in America’s finest climate in the Safi-ta Clara Valley, an hour’s drive from San Francisco. ALL MOVING AND TRAVELING EX PENSES PAID. MECHANICAL DESIGN ENGINEERS Eiperlenced graduate 1 and dcsigneri arc ncedec. .. ^t^rnent 0^ atructures, | ihm sy^mm, bydrauU(c''and't«no sysleros. dynamlca and stress, etc. Experienced Proposal Enginoert, capable of preparins sound de-•Ign concepu to meet military re-carry - — analysis of Naip WnHd Mala $ Halp WaiitaG Famak . ' 7 x^BNimir T«B woRtaaivE mnh to uMl OsmpboU's _Soups. esUI eh Tutall sromn. Pontfue >ro4L Csr nocosury. BoUry, sx-poh4u nnd »r aflownnet. Llb-trbl hosplUl losurUBM, Ufu In-tunneu, and psnslon prosram at DO cost to omployoc. Bxool-lent opportunity with asUbUshad food company. Writ# for inUr-■ viow. giving eomptaU Information, tncluiTlng education, busl-naas expsrisnea. to PonUac Prvss Box 14 parlanc^ In drutstore. frlnsa braeflU. No fountain. Apply m nerton. Bun Druse, 4343 N. Woodward. Boybl Ot*. COBB WAmtESB. 11 OR OvlR. Orira In. Tbiasmph Ing anfAUtienra. Uva In..Good wiges. Mulriiava refertnste. U 4A04C before S p m OWNER operators WITH Iti- OR 3-TON LATE MODEL. DUAL WHEEL TRUCIES OR ABLE TO PURCHASE SAME. LONO term .LEASE TO PULL MOBILE HOiIeS. IMMEDIATE OPENIN08. YEAB AROUND WORK. AOES 35 TO 55. FOR PERSONAL INTERVIEW REPORT TO: MORGAN DRIVE AWAY. INC. ISOS North Maple Road Ann Arbor. Mich. Phone SS3-S3I5 DEPENDABLE. MATURE WOM^ (or babraliuns evaolnfi. Call PE 5.1334, Wora 3. EXPERIENCED CRECKINO AND aaeambllns tlrl. Apply Mala Cleanert. 44N KllMbelh Laka Rd. EXPERIENCED WAITRBBS, 13 OR Ortva-tol* ll5r**Dikle’*^wy*“^ lENCE B W ITREf (or nart Uma work. Scrib e, 130 8 'MecraDb. EXPBRlUfCBD WOMAN WANT-ed tni light bouaawork And baby-altttaig wnila motbar worka. Muat have own Iraaaportalloo. CaU OR 4-103S. Tilt S. Bhaker Dr.. Poo-tlaj ' EVERYTHINGS NEW Toya, sMt*,^ prleaa and hoataat prtmiuma. Plua gunraataad aetls-factlon. Oaorga's Toys hirlos mothsrs lo ttU nama brand toys, no Importa. Call coUact. OA 3-4II3 or EE S-30N. Oaorst'a Toys, for lotcnisw. OWNER-OPERATOR, 5 TO 50 yenre ol age, who own or can purebnaa a late model IVii-ton truck to iraneport bouaatrallere nauonwidc. Mutt be physically nL and able to peee an ICC phyilcal 4xamlnatl«n. Rate of pay -^percentage baele. Perional Interview, contact NaUonal TrnUer Omvoy. Inc.. Terminal at 6033 EXPERIENCED BEAUT ICIAN with (ollowins. CaU PE 4-3108 u PE M5I4 WllUame Lake Rd., Drayton PIniae. Mich., or Marietta. Mich. Terminal. 4H miles south on M-53. or Flint, Mich. Terminal. 3303 UppIncoU. EXPERIENCEO WStlTRKSS. Xp-|Ny In peraoD, 2345 Dixit flishway. Five Spot. FOUNTAIN OIRL OR WOMAN, aftcrooont. Reliable. MA 5-5371. RETIREE. AOE NO BARRIER. ' Dignified pleasant public reln-tlonc work. Apply 7300 Cooley Lake Road (or Interview. GENERAL HOUSEWORK. NO loundry. Uve In. ‘Sunday aiM Monday off. $35 a week. Ml 7-1557. SALESMAN-MANAOER (or contact work. Credit organl-sntlon needs local man to tail on business and professional men. 50 mile radius. If you have sold Specialties. Pood Plans. Books. bfemorlBls. or Intangibles, this Is •n unusual opportunity. Permanent and muat have car. High Commlsilon — Bonus arrange- tunity. $135 weekly draw *m!all-fled man. Wrile nntlnc Press, Box 30 OIRL OR W051AN POR UOH'f housework. Morey's Oolf end Country Club. 33S0 Union Lake Rd.. aihYino and pa- hanging. Thompson. PE A~LADY tNTERIOli bk06RAT0R: Psparlog'. ra i-S>tI. CHARLiS NILBON^ INTtRIOR. CONCREfi^RITB. PATIO. CALI alUr 8 PE 5^7. _______ Seal with BuiLORii - oa-raxaa. aMlUani. rcoraatloo rooou. VanSlckTrBuilding Cs. SaSdltl. -rA. SSaL1S%J»°™‘ PAINT SPECIAL lu Pont LuctU . 56 N Oal. AlRt’ORT LUMBER PLABTERINO^ NE¥ AND RE pair. Vam kcllcr. UL 3-1740 ir onioa. Oanaral lytntlng A ~ tppj|^Co.. IT W. Lawrence i?B> EBTnpiTiB^ AtfcANttL Iht. will Piwoea. Il> 1. Munro Eractiic Ob-. PE 5^431.___ Geptic tank cleaned, jorn-b SanlUrt Berries, phone B35-337C Clarkiton. Bookimpiiil ft Tmi 1a BOOKKEEPINO. ALL TAKES PfMHWUHt iRHtriH 1/ ALTERATIONB AND FRENCH waaTlpg. 3 B. Ttsmaou after I. SRBMMAlliftf; VAIL6R1NO.'Al. Urallont. Mra. BodcU. PE 44B53. Urallont. rork. Edna Wai 1M landscapiho. Ortmii n««rtEf IM CUBTOM Plow. DBC. DRAQ AND rpto till gardana, yards, sny* whars. OR 3-5tli._______________ MBvii^i' Riirf TnicklHg H 1 MOTINO BERVKa. REASON-able rates PE 5-M^ PE 3-350S T.OAgy^i^lNO. LO^ By Dick Torntr 3-BEO|tOOM. O A R A O E AND hasamsnt. WsUHord-D r a y t\> n Plains ares. Dr. Black. 4471 Dim. OR 3-tni. ~T NEED 3-BEOROOM. IaSBMENT, garagt, no chlldrin. profetslonal couple. Waterford. ClarksUn aroa. PR f-i003.______. VAL-U-WAY RENTAL SERVICE Reliable Mnants walling. Past, et-llclanl aetlon. Call: R. J. cDick) VALUET Realtor. EE 4-3531 ^r« lMi|J^rtin 33 ELDERLY LADY WBiitBd HsBUstts 36 listihob-eabt bide or citt MIDDLETON FEALTY CO FE 4-1115__________PE 5.33(0 "WE NEI'.D” Lake Fioperties LOTB-COTTAOES^VR AROUND FOR ^LE AND FOR RENT Buyers Galore J A TAYLOR 7733 Highland Rd ikTsSi OR 4-0305 Apai^Rtt--FBniiiht6_____tJ l-BEDROOM EFFICIENCY APART-menM PiiUy fumlabed. Parking. North-Northaasl ildt. PE EUgl or MOBILE CLEANING SERVICE Wo clann lloora, windows, walls, esrpets and lurniturt. Also pnhil-Ing and daoorafbj. Tht oempleto honM or offtee. One call dose It aU. ipacial piieaa an packa|t jobs - CJldey er BMht g4Aa443. ^ teUm?Wi**^ir*o!dcumb! '■ i BEDROOM. LAROE KITCHEN. — “ • — —• ■ prlrate bath, cleee.ln. PE 3-7435. "With Freddie's beard he can only use a razor blade once. By the time he shaves again it's rusted!” TrRRfpBrtatiM 25 5 RIDER TO SOUTRKAST UI8- e 33. PE MHO. ENOME AIRLINER: LOd AN-gelet. San Prancisco. 373 50. Ha-well. 555 axtra. New York, 53v. AUCTION SALE EVERY 8ATUR-day at Blue Bird Auction. We ll buy furniture, tools, and appll-ancee. OR B5S47 or MEIroee 7-5155 CASH POR PURNrrURE AND UUIltlee. 550 OB 4-0334. Ap«i^ 31 , , _____________________ CLEAN. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. PRIVATE dose to town, stove tUd refrlg entrnnee. PE 3-3057. __ | furnished. PE 1-4003.______ 3 AND 1 ROOM APARTMENT,' COLORED. CLEAN. COUPLE OB private emrence end bath 73 ,inde. Call PI 0-1303,____ R^HouMt, UnfBriiislitd 40 PONTIAC NORTHERN HIOH AREA week. PE 3-0170 UPPER 3-R005J AND BATH, weler funiltLed*’M0 mcnUi. Palm 3 ROOMS AND BATH. FURNISHED ^ or unfumisbsd. Pbons 330-1635. . ----------------- 3 B00M8. ' nM)»T, 1ST ploobJ . ^.WEST SIDE ^ee’re^MSd ”‘™’^modern C^N ♦ "OOMB, pbi- *"i^^^O'^5d^c^*welMm° ^^BT~MDE. 3 AND~E*BobM TY. fCMOd r»jJ; spsrtments. heal, hot water, stove also wUl cere for ehlM If mother ^ relrloeralor fumlshed. Near VAriCR. lOl South Phddock. as Aosel r\e.Ma1ann AoKewbU RbrI Liks CttiBB 41 3-BEDROOM PURNIBHXD COT-tage, 05 Beech Drive, log cabin subdivision. Hraabarny. XAke. 3. miles out of RochaaUr.______ 3-BEDROOM. Itb BATHS. CEN-tfsl best. Pins Lake. Middlebelt Rd Summtr or by yobr. TO 7100. DetroU.__________;______ floor, ne«r Soars.' Cloan and| oF FE 1-IWS. quiot. Apply 150 or 164 N. Perry --------------- * t?2?cf .TCu*' F?''3*”9 *M «•"* Hoomi. FHrwWltd COMMUNITY R. B. Mira THURMAR^ RTSSIS PaRULON --WATEBLOK - WAX CARL L. BILLS SR.. FLOOR n 1-5715 R MUIar* VKV^jSTor^ 1^114. *. a. sNTblTpLo6B'aiYii>S aandbig apd finishing. Ph. PK AUTO iOPPLY KAR-LIPR BSTTmtY 00. STARTERS AND RBOOLATOM GENERATORS |5.95 UP 30 Auburn______PE 3-1314 KDNA-8 BXAUTT SALON Perwunenu 14.15 _ Shampoo and WavsSI.TS 78 Chambarlala. 5-5. PK 0-lM^ BANK TERMS ^ _ Open Prtdny Eve. ^SUNDAY 10-3 Harrington Boat Works Your Ertnrude Dealer IMP S. Telegraph “ 4-1 ADDITIONS, FALLOUT OREL-Ure, Route Raising, Oaregei. Con-erete Work. Nothing Down.,.., PAUL ORATES COHTRACTWO Free EeUmatee__________OR 4-tSH BASKlOeNt Dtoonfo. roAOUNE work. Also bulldosing. Prtce onnble PK 4A605. SPEaAL LOW SPBDVQ mOOf. Cement work, porches, addl- SSgTKil^ — AU work guaimlaed. 0< Constnietloo. PE 5-0131_______ UP TO '30 WARS TO FAIL OOM-nleu inodenusatloo .senika for bmat owners. One oaU wUI brtag C^PBNTO^ WORK OP ANY BA Mlracla Mlo^ SEWER PIPB-DWIN TILE. Driveway culratU sump tU BLAYLOCK COAL-eCPPIJ TO. 01 Orchard Laks Ava. PE 3-7101 DrttSRMidiiiv TRlltriBf^ A CALL NOW WILL OUAIUNTXB Tour Real to 70 Oaarew at 10 Below Zero. In Wrltlag FURNACBS-TONTBRStmB FLOOR SAI .. WALL PAI -------1* M3 JOSLTB 1 Jewelert 10 W. Huron BLUE BOD. DELHI en»s mil’s, or you pick | - “ Crooks a<. PL S-40O. MERION SOD PA1._ CaU 731-S670 _______ landscapino and BXCAVAT- »0. SEKDOVO, BODDINO. Free estimates EMJ-SIII LAWN SERVICE, tln^ U— TUNE-UP AND BRARPENINO. Onaraoteed work. Pick-up and --•*---Sherwood. OR 34R30. Ivery. Bherw UctMB4 NEIDRICK BUILOIIia SERVICE Romo. Oarage, CablntU, AddlUooe. PRA TERM______________PR 44505 3X4 — r ECONOMT STUDS ea 3Se 1x11 Spmea boardt tHa lln. ft. 1x4 No. 3 fir tO-IO n. OSo Un. ft IW TD caMnt .... 07o Ha. ft. St4 to hate ....OSe lla. ft. lA - 3 It. at. taab 40« oO WBtrrford Lumber ^ADpo^llir fr’oBBTS Nirw'AHD USED LUMBER PtrMMi SbpvIcb Personal Arrangements Service System U your needs he iegal. Induatrm ar eemmerolal - whether H b. buying or aetimg — reproeenle-llon or praparatloD . Pereonel ---------1 terriee effere you ilonel help jreet per-rice. Call Agent lodey J38-9408 EXPERT PUMO TUNINO Br Maeter Cralumaa IMMSOUTB BBMVICB VViegand Music Center Phaaa PBdaral S4S30 TUNINO AND RBPAIKINO PilBlBltaf SilWfCB -. PLASTBRINO ARP BKPAIRS Keas. Pal Lee. PE 3-IS3I. __ id-AsiBRlNO FREE ESTIMATES D Meyers_____________EM 3<103 3 ROOMS AND BATH. LOWER., 00 Cotuge. PE 4-g013________ ' 3-ROOM APARTMENT. PRIVATE; baUi. on bus Une to Pontiac Mall , or walking dislancs to downt<- W Huron corner of Prsll. A 'booms suttabli for WORK- LAROE ROOMS AND BATH, rerytblng fumtehod. Couple. VI-Inity of 5UUO and Auburn iffghis: ThOTarc “■ NICE MODERN Cedar Island Lake f or year around. lU phone OR I *'*• 0-ROOM ON MtOOM. PRIVATE ENTRANCE aad bath. 107H N. Bagtaiaw. Ap-p|y Apt. 3 Above the Pantry. 0 ROOMS and bath ON TON-tlae Lake. Tear around. Call Sunday OR 3-0710 living roc------------------------- lull basement, oil beat, large lot. Nice shrubi and shade treat Large screened porch. Ctty ____Only _ _ downtown Ctty but eervlce «M .. .—...--------•-•iratlao »wsy. 'Spoclal contldei _|*!L COTTAOE ON LAKE ORION BT week or teetoo. Roach, boat, dock Lot, of room for children. PE 4-0100 days. MY 3-1400 evet. purnisred cottaob at uwon MODERN : ~ iat and aaody beaoh I week. MY 3-4003. NORTHERN LAKEFEONT MY 3-3711. I r'OL i-M41.______________________________________ LOG LODGE Once In a UlcUma you wUl find a spot like this. 1-room lodge with flreplaee li oh aa laland you can drive to. also a g-room ledge lake front, fU rent furuliM for the teeson. CRAWFORD MENCY PE 0-0333, MY 3-llU.____ LAKE norii cottaoes at d weleeme. 453 era^^jyipUanees. 505 weekly. VACATION SPBCUL. MODERN 3- OROUND FLOOR. ROOFS: NEW. REPAIR. COLORED 4-ROOM litt BAROWARB lOERS - POLlSHEll >APER STEAMERS DRUIR. POWER SAW! MICKEY STRAKAr TV SERVICE PAY OR KVBS- Ft 5-13M . Trst triRiRilRi SarvicB ACE TREE SERVICE STUMP REMOVAL Tree removal, tnmmlnj^ Oat oui General Tree Service WATERFORD TREE SERVICE, trimmlog and r a m o v a 1. OR 3-5735. TnKMii|^ }RT HAUUNQ AND YARD leanup. PE 5-7«g. PE 5-7107. RAUUND AND RUBBISH. Prom^ eervlce. PE 441354 Krftvel a a-0i03. Track tcRtal Trucks to Rent ’^""rfu'IS5?-TR'A'^rW“- AND EQUIPMENT Damp Trucks—Seml-Trellera Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. PE OJlSf • 4.443 Open Dally laelndlng Sunday TROMAh OPHOLaiERlHO fi'i N'i'n PCRBv ar ACME QUAUTT PAINTS INC. Hundred, of petteme In sleek 1 N. Saginaw flf ______PE 3-3305 SLOOMPIBLD WALL CLEANERS. Pontiac Press Want Ads Where Buyer and SelleP Meet FE 2-olSl fUfAST xiaiiiii' t. w- *00>* house for couftuc. entraoee. PE ^ jjguUe^ 308 VoerheU Rd. IW^M BRICK RA^, |lM. „ ______ It ► A R-T- for nica Chilitlan couple. wu after 1 p.m. PE 3-5S45. KPFICIBNCT APARTIdKNT. PON-___________________________________ Uac Lake. 530 weekly. Including 5-ROOM NEAR ORTONYILLB. 530 utiUtlec. 073-1040. ---*- — * 0473 Cremlaoe Drive. OOM BRICK. OA.. ------- 000 month. PE 04144. LIGHT ROU8BKBBPINO ROOM. 1-0013. . LOVELY 3-room ftimUbed apartment, tul this for profeeelonaL buslnoee < retired woman, eloee downtowi beautIftU grounde. clean, raasoi able. UttUUes fumiebed, no ehl NICE 4ROOM, BATH AND OA-ragt. wwt tlie. PE 5-0030 or PE 4-4100. are frlendlyT Cool In summer time, warm In winter time. These 3 room and bath apartments rent for too per month. Adults only In this buildlnt. K O. Hempstrsd. Realtor. 103 B Huron PE 4-0304, Jir,PE UML............... ROOMi AND BATB - COME TO OUR ¥oU8E — IT’S clean, quiet, cool. PE 0-7333. LAROE CLEAN ROOM >OR OEN-- ten. privet# oninnee. 343 Nel- ___PE 44173. MODERN ROOM POR OBNTLE- 317 ROPEINB AT STANLEY, LIKE new 3-bedroem brick. RENT inTH OPTION TO BUT. 100 PER MONTH. Children welcome, move ■ ■ FE 5-4353, WTE 3-4305. II bseement. 550 per mo. VAIley kpRrtRWBti-UwfBriiiih^ 3i l-ROOM EFFICIENCY Alberta ApsrtmeoU 300 N Paddock______FE 3-3000 3-BEDROOM AfARTMENT NEAR Dra|tco shopping ceoler. OR ROOklS AND BATH NEAR LAROE ROOMS. NEWLT DBC-AraUd %lr c«Kf“' " * " * ruH. ROOMS AND BATH. STOVE AND retngeralor, betwMn “ ' * Id Pont*-- 3 ROOMS. PRIVATl. 1ST FLOOR. ROOMS, unumE pur- nlehed. $13.50 week. 144 '*' Columbia. ROOM AND BATH, LAKE Plthr- week7 BrtUcti.‘^MT'3-371L_____ ROOMS. Umi^ AlfD BATH. ___is AND ___________ _________ Irtgtrator. haat. 3000 Opiyko. “CLBAI. ROOMS. MAIN PLTOR. Kang Cli^. * ' 4ROOM. BATH AND OARAOE. heat lurnlehed. PE 0^307 after 4 EITCHEN AND BATH-FRESHLY sratea, heat fumlabed, d bedroom laundry fad drei’ welcome, school low ae 500 unfumithed. SLATER'S Modern 5 Room APARTMFN'i STOVE AND REPRIOERATOR FURNISHED. 000 PER MONTE APPLY AT 101 BLOOMPIBLI TEHRACE,. NEXT TO ST^JC SEPH a HbSPITAL PE 5-1)31 Orchard Court Apartments I bedroom modbr^''in”by^y^detail oil W. HURON NEAR TEL-HU-ron. 4bedroom, no children of wtlklni $Mt, 000 a 010010. call • Trades" PE 41570._ THESE HOMBa ARB POR RENT ...355.MO. OR wriLL BELL New 3 Bedrooms Carpetea Gas Heat Dining Room All Areas AvtlUhlq 80OQ MODEL AT 864 Kettering PE 5-3070 aRer U REAL VALUE BY . B. B B. BDILDBRS BOULEVARD REIQHTB — 1 Bedroom Unit — 071 Per Month Conlaet Resident Manager ^3678, IS to i RBAL^VALUE by a.B 8. SutMoro. $5S A MONTH ItENT WITH OPTION TO BDT. READY SOON 700 Corwin, 1 block east of Oakland. I block north of Montcalm. Weatown Rsslty. Near Auburn a --------- Oai Edith or cll^ 4^'"' MADIBOH.J06LYN AREA. 1 BE ----. gas heat, camded. I AvaUable eoon. Rent < REAL VALUE “ ____ ,_UE by -- I. PE 1^.13 tef NICK BRICK RANCH ON 8PA 1 bedrooms. Uvlni ru^ocy; gOO jrranaparsBt. $100 jr*0-5?3^. ______,-0 month. Car- — option to buy ......... -on. FE 43070. U to I. REAL VALUE BT S.B.S. Built;. luuia, e*’*ev. weekly. PL 43110 al Sflh Nbmm prtfUer* SaciiyTce. OH 3-3t 3 ROOMS AND RATH. NEXD8 3.BSDROOM HOME FOR SALK. 1800 down on land controct OT 3 BEDROOM BRICK coot mortfagr of iis. ofr«r Ofi equity 7U Labe Rd. n---------- JOHN R AUBURR ARIA. 3 Rlt^ room aluminum, full haeamant, nnfinishad upeUlra. ^ 3 aw ja- t WILLIAMS LAKB 3013 LANOBDOWNB ^ 4 badroom brick raneb — J hTO. Baseboard aoned hot water fieit, -lull basement. 3>4 oar garage, 4BEDR00M. BRICK FRONT, It* baths. Iindicsped. large lot with outdoor grill. Low down payment and take over low ipohthly pay- COLONIAL HAM- 4 ROOia. BATH OARAOE. AND basement 000" ■*—" 4BEDR00M sldlni. laaemem. BEDROOMS. 3 LOTS IN AU-bum HeltbU A hobbleal epaelel. 27x04 ft gsrsiif MOO down, by owner. UL iltu?_________=-0.- -ROOM. IS-STORY WITH TILED recreaUon room end oil beet, north ehd. to. dowD_pnyment. 404 E Msn.fifld, Ph. rt 4-^ I ACRW^ NORTH OPPONTIAC. lust east of M-2t 2 badrMs. lull Usemant. as. heat. wpS «»; Lots of fruit and berries. M^ me an offer for mv eaultlas. PE 3-1037.___________ 7-ROOM HOUSE ON 1 land, utility room, 1— car garage school h to sfl ichooli, osar mall. 303 HillclUf Elisabeth Lake Rd. 1.000 DOWN. EUXABETR LAKE - -— 3-bedroam, alumlnuln PE 43030. OR 4»10. $9,990 $40 DOWN—FHA 0 DOWN-VETS HIGHLAND CONSTRUCTION CO. FE 34004 BLOOMFIELD HIl-LS FOR DBTj[lL?CALL- WALSH apdlAMBERT ________Ml 40000______ HOUSEKEEPING CABINS i 111 per week, tala beach, you; M* wr car. **MDFaoiy***RaeorL 1140 M-18. OrtonvUle. NA 7-3173 eve- eled family rm.. 1 ceramic baths, oven, range aad hood, attached garage. $11,000 on your lo«. MLOhLTOiHOW .. J LUNLAP___^ BY OWmER. HOUSE AT waLIAMS L^ke. reasonable down payment. HOUSE. A B I N AT GRAND MARAIS, egstee on beech, 030. OR 3-1621 LEAN, KITCHKNKtTB MOTELS on Pontiac Lake. 040 --" 040 per a rn-iow. TWO. BATH AND SROWRR OON-neettng for seat geBtiameB Oarage 130 So Johnaco. IdEN ONLY^^REATONABLE. 141H Tasti RsRt OffiM Span OFFICW FOR Rl^. 4540 DIX- la Hwy. OR l-llS. ________ BUILDINO 50k30 WEST SIDE. AIR --fttloned. addlUonal apaca avail-_ I W» PW moolh. PE 5.W43 CHOICE OFFICP SPACE AVAIL-abia la the Hub 00 Pootlac buel-oese dtvirict Prime for specialty or ofllree Mala stMct entrance, excellent parking Available Au-gust phone PE 1-0100. Rbwi BUILDINO POR RENT, SUIT->ble tor profeulooal service, leeuty shop, real estate office, tc. 301 Park 8t., Birmingham. Itch. Acrosa from city parking at. EM 3-4433, Ml 44030. STILL REMODEL TO SUIT _____________________________ With full baw^nt. Esc., condition and loeallOB. Stcaaa hee< sveu lumi 000 mo. PE 47351. SrIb Hrasss______________W 2-BEOROOH HOME. LAROE LOT. mCAR OARAOE. lot 112X100. 00.000. 10 n. OR 3.7300. 3-PAMILY, I DOWN. 7 UP. POLL boMment, 3 gas furnaces, close to ascellent ecboole. poet office. shopping center. Huron Btreet. Dawson ft Butterfield. ItlcBUfiob* Btreet. PB 1-0430 or >1 3-7000 0 to 5 Monday - s-BEORTOii ranch! laToe patio with alum, awning. ------ back yard. 1-ear garage. ----------------- bedrooms, tile bath. NAT ural stone fireplace, low down peymeni 3X15 Alhcni. OR 3-31D 3-FainiIy .\|)arlmcm reee I block, arade and Ir. bixh. I )-BEDR06M| DUPLEX. Apt. « 3* amm UaerEM 3-2744. ' side. 01.000. OSMlli. 1 IV OSTNRR. ALMOBT Riw I bedraani raacB. attaehad 3 ear K3Seall*T*e'^^Degee.’ 0% !Se "oJTw'SLrias' sas: BARGAIN e^JWsSK.y'^e, _... PINE LAKE MANOR Lake prIvUates ea rtmo Lake. Brick raneb l-badroom. 1 Ula bathe, earpelad Uytag room, natural fireplace, Scar attached garage. haeamant. Largt landaea^ M aa canal. Built In IMO. iKios. Termi can ha arranged. HOUSEMAN-SPITZLEY Salaamaa at Madol. inddlcheH and Bgaart Lake Road FE 41331 NATIONAL BANK 0«mr^3^W raxa. palla. alaaly landtcapW M. laMOOriuUI In MSI. W^lng dlatanw la high aahact. Only 5U.-300. tarms. Dorothjr^^S^ydcr Lavender ORAL.—--------------------- tun bacamsat. gac heat. Acer garagt. eatra larga lot. — down ^^mcat. 3117 ___________4BEDROOM CO- kmlal. Ub balb. Urge Using room, 3 fireplaces, m 3-0730. PRANELIN BOULEVARD REOROOkU. EXECUTIVE TYPE home many leyely fssturei Comer 150x580 let. Oarage. Oaly _________________MORT- gage of approximately 55.500 on 3-bedroom coey ranch POR SALS BY OWNER 3-BKD- tlle bath OE bullt-l floors. lUss sliding ooor 10 polio. Urge shady corner lot. Will sacrlllcc at 013.500. 03.000 down, 501 per month. Including lasps and insurance. Cell OR POR SALE. LAKE ORION WOTO- 01 SPECIAL - ZERO DOWN LAROE PAUaV HOME — 3 bed-roome. I floor, dlntaix room, well-lo-waU c e r p e 11 a g. yssUbulc entrance and clostt. full baaement, carafe, alee shady lot. 011.100. vacant. Mr. Clark. Raaltar. PE 3-7000 Has. FR 4-4015. Clark Real EaUte. GOOD MODERN 1 ROOMS AND bath largt lot fruit trees, ae-rege May he seen at UN Mt. CUmeni 17.508. 5500 down. Lest for cash 1340033, HoUy.___ HORSE'LOVERS 4 appealbif acres, lorely remodeled tvm J””*. *r* ta**full ‘hcMmOTl. country kitchen, plenty of eupboents 3 urge bedrooms sad full ceramic bath up. Full bath down Scraaned end glassed reel porch, Itb oar garage. HAROLD R. Itb baths. Urge Uvint fireplace, dining end room Aiiacbtd 3-car ga- LOTS OF PRIVACY BI-LEVEL home and guest house g hilly landscaped loU. Urge petlo. flrr-pUee. end lake prlylleges 10 mile, writ of Pontiac, off M4I Owner 303-3300 ____ ROCHESfiir Altached ROOM NEAR scaped. Large k.—.....- - urpeted IfyUg and dUIng rSx CijruLHOW.________________ LARGE SPACIOU.'^ VtUage heme eo eulet tree lined street Close W ebopplng. * — ' bedrooms tul: basement, ---- Venetian blinds 3 rooms wsU-to-wall carpeted. 3 Uvtng ear garagb. Urge Ut. lor raising family. C. Pangrus, Realtor Prl and Bat., 10 a m. N PERRY SIAOO dowi PE 3-0003 arid baUi down Bepara Hear 81 Vmcenta C300 In homes dSftie/ Maceday (Lake r ■ with 100* f ■ Oakland carpeted living room aad dl^g room. baauUful flr4 pUct, 3 badrooms, 3 ear . atUchsd garagt. lovely landscaping. A real good buy at only 310.500. Im. msdlste possession. J. A. Taylor, Realtor Real Estate and Insurance ' •nol HIGHLAND ROAD iMili Dally 40 Bun. |-g OR 4MQ0 araic^ ^nlng room, knotty pine I kitchen. fe« heat. esrrUfe bam:' lar.ie MA 411M________________| MAKE or PER - 1-BEDROOM. 3 MIXED -n¥iohborrood. HER-rtngton HlUs. ^3-bedroom ^ttek decorated. ctrpeUnf throuiheut drapes throughout itorms and Bcreeni. water softener, fenced, beautifully landscaped. 313.455. 4t|^cr cent OI mortiUf* ftS Cedar Is.^ Lake. Prly. Near Union Lake Village. EM 3-0350| ___ NICE 4 - BEDROSM, family joilyn at PlUtrldgi . NEW VkoOM AND BATH. PRAC-tUally flnlshad. lake prlvUegew Waltara Lake on Eaten Rd. 5190 down. OR 5-0104___________________ ” TOWN. NEW 3 BID- ylei.''^‘ 3 OU NER WEST HURON STREET 3-lamllT brick. 3-ear garage ae TePHunm. movtag, .rouel be e^ ___A. 2 bedroom* up. boiemeot. forofe. *r buildlnt*. de*l ^Udinf payment. Bel. 140 i owner will be there Ire 0 eyenlngs or phone Mrs PalrIcU Clemen MUST SELL MOVING WEST IN 1 weak! 1 bedroom -biiek ranch, basement, garage, natural gas. storms and screens, water ealten-er 0U.00S. CaR EM 3^47. PRIVATE OWNER - 0 R005U and bath. Urge lot, ear aad half kdetamm : ^bedroom brick ‘‘"sa. Oaragt, natU, Idtal lata- il 000 mov.s you ta. „ W.W ROBS HOMES ». RAOBTROIT^rIcA^ToR. J W. Huron. OR 40W. ftl-« after 0 WEST SUBURBAN I 1-1 acres. Ranch. 1 bedrooms. IVb bath^ bsaled garage, dining rof.m, aluminum elding, fireplace. Total prict Otl.OOO. W. W ROMS HOMES _____Call 5E H145 for deUlli____ WANTED 4BEDR00M ROME. EX-ebango tor 3-btdroom brick. 114 ft^Ut. P^ baeanMOt. 3-ear^y- Auelus. Call for appointment. Peterson Real Estste L 0*'..d'S 7TH1TE LAKE TOWNSHIP. BIO year round home for Urge family. full baecmeat. 3 car garage. 1 UU. must bs sesn. 114.700. terms er dUcount for cash. EM UNUSUAL OFFFKING YSwn atiSehed garagt. ce tod edy n.- JACK LOVELAND Hit Case Lata Road Ph. 3141353 YOUR LOT OK OURS Seml-finlshtd. any alta w’«> «• without basement. Vour i eier”s" ’’VnUh'^ ‘"toU^ton’ \ SONS ARTHUR C EVEB* py 44Slo"w* PE 47B WILL BUILD ®"toI°r”Pl1!?'o8*o8S?' Don McDonald UCENBTO^ByiLOEB HAVE YOU BEEN THE "BETSY ROSS" ? >ry colonial with attacbi ’ $11,990 DIorab Bklir Co. TRIPP Realtor C FRONT - WILLIAMS LAKH _____ overlosktBg _________________3 up and 1 diwti. m hatha. Full baeemenL 2-car ga- SUMMER FUN full basement, garage, new gas fu nue. esira lot goM with Ihle on OUy 13.000 down. ■aar-gW- y wSr CRAWFORD AGENCY BO W. Walton FE 50330 ' Wt E FUnt MY 3-tlM OPEN -SUNDAY 2 to 5 LOON LAKE SECTION SOUTH OP WALTON BLV0 -----SHAWNEE 1-CAR attached OARAOE. WaUrford Realty 3433 Anders Drire Phong OR 3-4031 MENT - LOW MONTRLT PAYMENTS - LOCATED CLOa TO PONTIAC MOTOR - At^ HAVE 3 TO I ACRE LOTS ... BEAUTIFUL ROLUNO WOODED LAND — ONLY 03S DOWN TO START-TOUE TIBAL. ' WRIGHT MILLER ORATTOH PLAINS 0 I bath, caragt and hraaaaway. 1 Uca Mrooms. Urge family roam, 1 lots, tha M haunt aa a dead tod -—* —— dran, to ti SU.3N, r Wiltiam Miller Realtor FE 2-02M SIB W. auren Oil 0 U S GI RESALE—NORTH tax reom wtU dtatan area. Bx-^SBl kNcbaa sarhats disposal. CtrasaU 5Ua hath wih M width mlrrta. AmpU eUatt apace. Ota heal, fully automa-Ut water caftaaer. raartalUa room with bar. BItetrtc garagt dea eoaner lu toxSIdoa g»-rage. Storage spaca In garage wtUi MdUg etaSn. ALL TBS AND MORE TOO. POR OIAMO. - ACRES-CITY 8y, ACRE BUCK BOm ssra Ltg UXTO Watkins Lakelands S ROOM RANCH kitchm PuU bath phm "-- 'led bretrrway lo IMrcar giuuxr tat beauUfully landecapad. EOx 35 ft LAKE PRIVILXiaEB: SmitK Wideman 411 WEST HURON BT. OPEN EVES . FE 4-4526 CLARK LARK FRONT SPECIAL. IMMEDI- w 11 h lovely brick flrepUag breeicwty and ganga LaeaUd ar Round Lake north o( PentUc. am CASS LAKE PRIVILBOBS. ONn-foruble 1-btdroom bonw wMh Uce living ro'm. fireplace, like new wkU to well carpeting. Encloetd heated frou porch —dee ancloacd rear CITY LIYINO. 3-badreom home with fuB basement, eeparste dining room. 3-cer garage. Only II.-050 with Uw down payment.'cioat Val-U-Way OPEN OUNOAT U TO 4 INCOME 7 rooms 5 dm: 1 up. UptlalTe ranud for tU par weak. CsuM be converted Into single famSy hooM If dttlrrd. SapiuuU at-trances and bslha. hasamsnt, gs-mgs. Close-In UesUon (My 0*o down. 575 per month. i.ARt;i': K.wcH 14loel livins room. 3 large b» roams. IW baths. g4(oot Uke-prM-letad lot Verv clean Quick p^ sidn. 551 per motiUi inrludM UaSs and Insui tnce ReaxonabU dawn Daymen. NR. PONTIAC MOTORS l-bedroom, 3-stery home hi eicel-lenl condition Caraae. baKmenL sax heat. wtU-tn-wall carpeUny. Owner wUI xscrlfire 51.3M eoultv for 5I.5N cash PaymanU af 575 ' per moiuti tnclnduig laxat tad in- R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-J531 545 OAKLAND ATX. Opes M T^VKNTY-SIX Ml HiHi 49 '■ • ■ . • ^ ' ■■ riACi PRESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 23. 1962 Williams Lake of OokloiMl tounly i fln- A real bortAin lll.N*— torn*. J. A. TAYLOR/Kfahor REAL B8TATB AND INSURANCE tm BIO^AND ROAD iMMi DtOlf M aim. i-C OR i-0306 OPEN Sunday 2 to 5 I'.M. OPEN— 2945 W. Drahnor Kd. boMhwnt. iiiu lor both public and ^rochtal mIiooU. dot kcniirli. IruH tnrs, room lor lidlnt hor»«». }-car laragc. tractor, •l•.aoo. torm«. To tiupoci drlvt ■north on 5875 kowicy St. IMf. cuatoni •Sv LAKE FROMl badrooiTi brick ranco ooinr win 1-car. Ml^ad tarafc. riroplacc • rcailon room, ouidoor grill, dock To inapcl drive weal on M-Sf iW Huron) u- Airport Rd . right to Rowley (Hunldoo Lake) lighl to • open. ■ “Bud" N’icliolie. Realtor EE 5-1*201 4-87y ANNETT Uniun Lake Village ITS ft. frootan on Coole.. U. Rth KW^.^mp^Kllcji arr of property. Meal drlv. In, ga» vutlou. with built-. Let. M. hia. S-car garage. Let. taccUen' sand baacb. M. lerma. OPEN SUN. 2-5 P.M. Franklin Knolls Swimming Pool to N. Brtarcllfl. follow opi algiia If mt Oaniwan t OPEN SUN. 2-5 P.M. Pine l-ake Brick recUeBt: From Loog Lake Rd.. wool of MMdlcbelt. him at atoBO plUara (toterlaken) FE 8-0466 $57 A MONTH ■uya thia modem north elde homo, after low doara paymoat, tako over fH per ceot mortgage, with no mortgefa coat. Owner. GLES RSAR TRB MAIX. «M DOWN. S roome and boaeniaot. loU ai cu|>-boorde. bdllt-bi oetn and — * AlumtBUm nnd etooa a School naar property. ranch home north of city with oeer M rood tronlaee. i r»~~ OB 1 floor with attoebad g and laka mlvllatae co Oi Uha. Only r.MS. SUBURBAN 4-PEDROOM. >ar Kettering High and Ple’M Jr. High, trocUee • —--- it, paved dr”. Only M.M down! Fa o dandy, cal now! ‘Bud’’ Nicholie. Realtor 4* Ml. Clemena St. EH 5-1201 liter 6 P.M., FE 2-3370 OPEN SUNOAT 1 TO I IM LORBBRTA LANE LORRAINE MANOR SUB. Long, low brlclr r»^ with sttnebod garage. carpetad living room and dtaiing and churchea Mott bo e< Ellaabeth Lake Road to Ferabarry to Lorh-ita Lane, turn left to proparty Mm. Hoyt In ebnrgo. FRAHKEL LANE BtoemKw*eraw* JhSlro|m““l!»g! ftreploee In family mom. Kw i of ahada trees. Vacant HOYT iroCnFLE UBTUfa snvicB Sdk Mswti NICHOLIE ^CBT SUBURBAN 'nir««‘bedrom‘"'rlili "i OFF J08LTN . Three-bedroom bungalow. Lint end dining area. Kitchen Irar wood floen. UTILITY room. Ne, ly dtcoraled. Vacant. E A 8 TERMS. Eve and 8un.^ call FE 4-SM6 i NIClioUE HAROER CO EOK TH.AT SECURE lake ttalf your LIFETIME hoc $12,4.10 FHA TERMS AVAILABLE IN COUNTRY EXTRA SPECIAL - Newly paint l-bedroOT on I Nicely landacaped 1 block fro U S. W - Cheap laiaa - 17.* IN CITY y 8t. - H.tM. DORRIS OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 PRICE REDUCED TO tll SM Watkins lakefront Over SSS' of ahaded lake Irontage and all food eolM beach wllh ttau 4-room family home. ThM S-atory frame home Is deelaned for tomUy^llytaf Irtth“’ nlturel, “IGio"^ nremece! eounlry atyle kitchen, large glasaadto front porch, new gai Ir*jir'Dfiaa?SNs‘«^ ^APH RD. TO PONTIAC LAKE ROAD TWO AND ONE half »LES TO EATO^ TORN RIOHT AND FOLLOW OPEN SIONS. PONTIAC WATEIN8 ESTATE FA to ILY HOME: 4 bedroomt. niM J fuU balba. f" “>• utmoat i” SfTcl^td'fr vniE COVERED COTTAOE: ta wbnt tola Lroom bungatow no Edlacn St., ramloda you of with nil lU abade and aebruba. Large family klteben plua aepMate lug roOBIe 1 Mwlroamc down u^fSS ^ aaee and a 1SS. FHA DRAYTON PLAINS Located thIa attractive brick bungato-on a tot Wills 1 bedrooml carpeted living room, bai- and back ya"* •»-' feocad. Sll.tlt. MALL FARM - CLARRWT AREA: ».-ocra with thia 4 bedroom home and a l