Th« W#oth«r THE PONTIAC PRESS ■ K Horn# Editfon llStb YEAR if it it it PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. SATURDAY. OCTOBER ae. I9' posture" than Nixon made in October 1952, during that year's presidential campaign. He quoted Nixon as saying at that ttmo that "This nation has lost Its military superiority and the people of world are I-l agaiaat na iasicad of being >1 1 ho soMWd h the iaereaamg iIm of his crowds a tremi ho thhdu wIB lend ta victaty N*v. E When a oommercial air hner. appmoehiny «fter a landing, tom- "They said that was the Kmi-nedy plane, but it couldn’t he, k’ too small." The Republican nominee »al that, as Preildeiit Elrnnhoww tn-dirated te a national telecaat W-day night, the most ini|iortai« issue te the campaign is i^thkr a man will be elected prestdod who can keep the peace withmt HOW COME? Raymond Koatecke of 160 Mar-ilene St. was the first to call the r'f-Mi • I I* • ! police. Kostecke, a civil engineer GUr LlaiinS Insult in|^.(,^ surveying at a church j ^ ^ Kennedy Demand for ^oo yards from • • L -r . L. police his son Larry. 13. heard, „ i Decision by Tonight shouts coming from the pond. Thf »K«ncy the U.S. State Department was "laying Rach% to the pond the bo.v Taaa also said In a New York aiipach today that it la a "laughable pretext” that U.S. .Marines would disembarh at (tuantanamo aaval base In Cuba j for a weekead of rest and rec- OONglDCRED HYMBOUU ITte Thas account issued Friday quoted Khrushchev as saying that; ’promised rocket aid to Cuba INDIANAPOLIS (APt - Three top offlciaU of the Carpen- ters Union were convicted Friday night of bribing an Indiana These would include a ceun-highway official in quick-profit right-of-way deals, climaxing »cior. assistant a highway scandal case that dated back nearly three yeara. i|.'J^j;*"/'hS?slS'*and"^^ ^ ^ iment. physical educatkm Instruc- Maurice A. Hutcheson, president of the 890.000-member |tor and a machinist, internattpnal union; O. William Blaier. vice president, and'jy^rteen persons would be added Frank M. Chapman, treasurer, displayed no emotloa^ Crlm-fi^ ........................... inal Court Judge M. Walter Bell read the verdict. WASHINGTON (APi - Republicans today broke off negotiations for a fifth TV-radlo debate tween Vice Presyent Hfrhard M. Nixon and Sen. John F. Kennedy. telegram to the Democratic presidential candidate’s representative, the Republicans accused Kennedy of issuing an ulti-charging Nixon nego- tiators with bad fatth "There can be no further negotiations unless Sen. Kennedy apologizes for the charge of bad-faith (Continued on Page 2. Col. 2) only the drifting, empty the police. Sheriff’s Deputy Medward Ti»fr f^lsW recovered both bodies in-39 Ciite feet of water about 15 minutes after arriving. excellent BOATER The bodies were taken to (he! Richa(Xison-Blrd Funeral Home inj Milford. Mrs. Belknap said her husband was an excellent swimmer and canoeist. 4^ the university’s clerical staff. The total equipment budget for 196142 would be $239,320. Of thia $110,000 would be earmarked for library equipment, and moat of the rest for a new science program. The proposed budget also provides for aa average lO per cent salary increaae. The $1,420,900 appropriation for }MSUO is included In the $37,506,732 ............. ithat the trustees wttl seek from The three were chained with giving Dbggetl a |15JK)0jtfw legislature. The monies are for The notes charged Cuba advance information about proposed routes lor Michigan SUte Univ^ty, MSUO, ™ r"".r ------ -I— *1,- then Mid Ip, smokescreen to cover up the preparation of aggressive actions against Cuba by sending notes to member of the Organization of American States with false charges against Bell ordered a presentence investigation and set Nov. 2i for sentencing. The conviction carries a 2-14-ycar prison sentence and a maximum fine of $1^666 each. The jury of seven men and five women deliberated less than, three hours before find ail three guilty of bribing and conspiracy to bride Harry A. Doggett of Oreensburg, former right-of-way purchasing director for the Indiana Highway Department ★ The Guantanamo announcement; land along the proposed routes t (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) It to the state, making $81,000 profit ' I program. Gets Labor's Handshake The ov er-all budget represmted an increase of over $8.11 million from the appropriation of $29,471,-835 granted by the legislature laat year. Urges Vote for Experfence e as was the case w Kennedy also said prepared for a rally at the Lawrence park shopping center in Ute Philadelphia suburbs that Nixon be eoaUmied campalgalug. As a c(rewd surged, seme people grabbed Kennedy’s right arm. For a moment It appenred he might be dragged from Ms ear. he reqMred. Ike Goes All Oul for Dick Cttii« Kewvody’s criticism «f| (Cantiased on Page 2. CW. PHILADELPHIA (API — A free-swinging assault by President Elsenhower on Democratic “Irresponsibility” raised Republican hopea today for homestretch vigor in the final 10 days of Qte presidential campaign. Elsenhower flew here Friday night for a nationally , televised speech in his drive te make his vice president, Richard M. NIxen, his successor. Nixon was reported “extremely exhilarated” by the President’s praise. ★ ★ ★ Elsenhower sparked bursts of applause as be hammered^ hard at Sen. j?S ■aa aanaiw aa nut«M» wt«s« FRENCHTOWN. Mont. (AP) Investigators aoui^ an egplana-today for the crash of a Northwest Airlines WORLD TRAVELER — This young man "thumbed" his way into Pontiac yesterday and was on his way to Northern hUchigan today. He la Werner Keel. 26, of Saint Gallen, Switzerland, who quit hia Job two years ago and began hitch- r»nuu rNH riMU hiking around the world. He has traveled more than 25,000 miles. Keel is shown here in his “traveling pose” on S. Saginaw Street. He plans to return here in a week to visit a friend in Utica. By DON FERMOYLE Werner Keel, a 26-year-old former accountant from Switzerland, hardly looks like the type who would march into his bou' office ina aimotfoce that | > see the world. But he did. And ever since he left his home in Saint Gallen, Switzerland, Keel has been doing his traveling the hard way — by hitchhiking. Now, some 25,000 miles and four pairs of shoes later. Keel says his decision to quit Ms Job and thumb his way around the world was the best one he ever made. Keel has been traveling now for over two years. He loft his family and friends in Saint Gallen July im his pocket. Since Weu tan has seen 27 different countries. He admits that be consin and down to Chicago before returning to this area next Talks on 5th Debate Broken Off by GOP (Continued From Page One> which has been made and withdrawn his ill-advised ultimatum." The telegram was sent by Fred C. Scribner Jr.. Nixon's representative in the long-stalemated debate negotiations, to J. Leonard Reinsch, Kennedy's negotiator. Reinsch was not available immediately tor comment. It * it Scribner's blast was aimed at a________________________ telegram Kennedy sent Nbcqn Fri-I)7~afigures to «i"d day caSihg oh the vice pmiden^ • ... to say by tonight whether ) would agree to the fifth debate. “If an agreement is not forthcoming by that time,” Kennedy said, '"The American people will know where to place the responsibility." _ « to take this tour and return by next Saturday when he a friend in Utica:, Remo Lucchi of 6930 Swallow St., with U.S. Marine Stop Causes Mighty Tirade in Cuba in plummeting U.S.-Cuban rela-■ ns.' Oastr»«ottln>Ued prem hi war-lype basBor Kims said (he aw Martaes already at Ouaa- A slightly built, studious-looking young man. Keel hardly looked like a world traveler yesterday as "he made a brief stopover Ih Pontiac on his way to Northern Michigan. * ♦ ★ However, he has withstood all sorts of physical hardships on his trip east from Switzerland to Japan and across the Pacific Ocean ;o the Americas. He was laid up for a month la New Delhi with yellow Jaundice, caught d.vsentery In Bombay and suce waited (or It hours to catch Cuban authorities at Santiago, near Guantanamo, were said to be concerned that the United States was preparing a fake attack against the big npval instal-as a pretext for armed aggression against (Mba. U.B. ASKS PROBE The U.S. State Department has asked a special six-nation com-of the Organization American ^ates to investigate its By United Press Internatienal With election day little more than a week away, Michigan's candidates of governor and senator ciiiargies that thousands of "tons ol are concentrating the campaign on He once was arrested in Managua. Nicaragua, where police thought he was an a^t for Fidel Castro. (He had a beard at the time.) He was released after explaining that he was merfly a tourist. The police chief even graphed the scrapbook he keeps with him. * ★ w Keel, who says he averages about 200 miles a day hitchhiking, plans to swing around through WIs- GM's '61 Motorama Starts Nov. 3 in N.Y. ^Wted Ttieclty S w.p.h tern Mta s*turS«T St 1:10 p.m. Boa rlSH BvBOsy st 1:01 s.m. l(s«n MU SOBdar st t:U s-B. Many New Yorkers missed this year's Natiof^ Automobile Show because it was held for the first time in Detroit. So, General Motors Corp. la staging its own show next week in Manhattan. GM’S 1961 Motorama will open to the public Thursday in the Waldorf-Astoria HoM. ;nmava — lurssMta — — 4 8 i»tsa1l « os n«» .onreiw It k 8“ At that time, Donner wUl dOs-iss The natkxi’s ecoiiuuik! outlook u it pertaint to the auto-* Longpre. J. P. Charies, d. Z. Pdbswnn, E. i. Cbapmaa, d. F. Malone L. W. Walker, O. D. Dennis aiM B. E. Starr. The gr^ from GMTC will Include R. L. Gantor, T. E. Wilson, R. C. Woodhouae, C. F. Dick, J, P. McBIanus. E. A. MaxweU, C. V. Crockett. S. F. UtUe and B. W. Oandell. ♦ ♦ * An invitational preview of the Blow will be held Wednesday afternoon for thousands of business, dvic and social leaden of New York and out-of-town visitors. Hie show will run Thunday throuifh Nov. 9. will be GM President Gordon and Alfred P. Sloan Jr. honorary chairman of the GM boaxd of directors. _ those attending win be Calvin J. Werner, GM vice jTter I tdent and general mXnaj^ of the ’ GMC Truck t (foach Division, and S. E. Knudsen, GM vice presMent and general manager of Pontiac Motor Division. ' , Otters frsm Pontlae Motor Dl-vlslsa win bs R- W. Emertek, F. V. Rlldg^ B. L. Nsnris, E. 4S M. Estes, d. F. Btemy, T. B. 8 Blss^ M. r. RumoML R. S, GM’S 1961 automobile modMs, an of the company's products, Including home appliances, wm be exhibited: in the hotel’s banroom and adjacent rooms and htUwtyi, A musical stage diow, Magic Man," especially created for the GM show by Cy Feuer and Enfest Martin, producers of “Clan Can,” will be presented six times d»uy. : whom Keel attended school from the first to fourth grades in his country. When he returns home, does Keel expect to return to his accountant’s desk? “No,- hr said. “I hope to go to work for a travel agency.” (Continued From Page One) (Continued From Page One) ers as he boarded the West Palm 1 ferry. The cheers came from long lines of Citoens waiting at’the embassF^for visas to leave for th|i United States. __ As a result of tensions over fear ot bloodshed and t»w regu-coraoai ex private property, about 45,000 Cubans have applications on file tor visas. These are being handled at a rate of 400 a day. training wjth realisUe combat exercises. A Marine has been and three have been ta-Jured by mines planted atong the perimeter of the base, teeae re- Williams Talking in Illinois Soviet bloc arms have been shtoped to Cuba along with Com-mtmist technicians to train Cubans in their use. The committee was set up last August to look into U.S.-CUban disputes. and raiuiltloiM from Iron Cnrtaln countries since Ang. 1. Kneefceddewa aircraft — either belioopters or Jet flghtors —were looded at out-ef-the-way perte. The United Nations announced that the full General Assembly would meet Monday to hear appeal by Chba for a quick hear-iiR on ita charges that the United States plans a grand-scale inva- The Cuben press ahnoet ignoeed w departure Friday nl|^ US- Ambassador PhiUp Bonsai, recalled to Washington for oon-for the third time Maec early in 191 The Jeers were from doefcwork- Moniing Fog Grounds planes at 3 Airports DCTRdrr (AP) (tag shrouded parts of Michigan today, groundbM eircraft and atow-ite eiqpreasway traffic to a crawl. The fog forced cancellation this monitng of all fights at Willow f Airpbrt and tee Detroit Metro polita^ and city airports. Wdl^onm 96th Member GENEVA (AP)-The Republic ' the Congo, the former Belgiatn Death by lethal gas Is.tee fofm colany, babame the 9etta member of capital punishment UMd in e^|ot the U. N. Worid Healtb Or Thursday. 12 Die as Plane Hits Mountain Northwest Craft Flops Over in Air and Plunges Into Montana Peak The Day in Birmingham To Bar Downtown Traffic for Goblin, Ghost Parade BIRMlNGHAM-^Oowntawn traffic will be blocked off in smral while plunging against ai______ * ★ 4r' Eight passengers, three crew members and a hitchhiking stewardess died Friday in the burning wreckage scattered over a quarter-mile. * t Hying low in the airliner bound ^or from Portland, Ore., was due to make an instrument landing leu than 20 seconds later in Misaoiila, in the mountains of westgm Mon-la, It started to roll over on its back," Sue Hough said after watching the crash. “It Ut with a tremendous noise and blaze. IT WINGED OVER* “As the plane headed toward [he mountain,” aaid another witness. Dave Anderson, over on its back and crashed upside down against'the mountain.” * ★ ♦ Like a roaring tank, the four-engine plane skidded through the timber. Two engines hurtled 100 yards down the hillside. A door was (lipped into a clump of trees a half-mile away. ★ it The bodies of all aboard the plane were burned or dismembered beyond recognition, said Coroner Ralph M. Simmons. It was Montana’s worst air tragedy since a Northwest Airiines crashed near Butte almost 10 years ago, killing 22. MiD^ Okayed for M5U0 Calm Holdup Man Pulls $20,000 Job UNIONVnXE (te-A calm. weU-dressied gunman walked into the Unionville State Bank Friday and handed the woman cashier a note which read: “Holdup. Put bags in sack. Touch no .alarms.” escaped with 120,251 in cash. ★ ★ W The b&ndit eluded state police roadbiocks which were set up immediately in the area. Mrs. Melda PhilUps, 40, was alone In the bank when the bandit walked in and handed her the note, It wu Mgned. “Bloody Fin- Fader of Caro and her three-year-Darold entered the bank. They were told to stand near the door aiid not move. State Candidates Hopping the populous tricounty Detroit area. Incumbent Democratic Sen. Patrick V. McNamara. Joined by his Rhode Island colleague Sen. John Pastore at a nationalities rally in Detroit Friday night, called for revamping of immigration laws, he said. McNamara will carry his campaign today to local Democratic clubs and dnion haUs around Detroit. Rep. Alvin hf, Bentley, the Be- ing^ student groups at three Upper Peninsula colleges, flew to Kalamazoo to address a (K)P rally. ♦ ★ ♦ "One of the .deadliest enemies which we confront today is the ■nothing philosophy,’ tee Oregon Republican said. He claimed the Democrats accepted this philosophy while the Repub-ItcatB rejected" it. Hatfield placed Vice President Richard M. Nixon’s name in nomination at the GOP National Convention in Chicago last summer. Bishops Clarify Stand With Second Letter Namara, Masted Ms opponent as a “spender” Fridny night st n GOP rally In Farmington. He described McNamara as “one of the senate’s freest spenders of tax money for programs which would unquestionably result in a wiki period of inflation.” 'If McNamara had his way,” Bentley (tearged, “tee nation would Ml a spending program teat would make Franklin Ruosevelt’f New Deal look like « parior penny ante game." Bentley will continue his campaign this weekend in the Wayne Oounty area. AT SHOPPING CENTERS Detroit, area shopping centers vill be today's target (or tt 'Working Women tor Bagwell. Dressed in orange and black — th colors of Paul D. Bagwell's campaign and of HaUoween — the women will diatribute leaflets promoting tee GOP gifbeniaforial can- wt for him today. Swainaon, campaigning to ceed (3ov. Gj, Mennen Williams. Is acting governor this weekend since WUhann is out of the state ean|-paignlng for the Democratic national ticket in Illinois. MichigaB Friday to campaign lor tee Republican ticket Oregon’s Gov. Mark HatfiAl, after addnss- al 7 pjn., according to Charles (Continued From Page One) per cent salary Increase wpuld be needed to ke^ and attract good faculty members. For the houily-pald workers, the increase waa asked to meet an expected Civil Service Commission recommendation of a raise for all state work- The East Lansing campus was scheduled to get the largest chunk of the budget, more than |29 million. ♦ ♦ * The unWereity’a agricuttoral experiment station accounted tor .77 million of the budget while nearly $3.29 million was to go for the cooperative extension program. 8HAVTNO EXPECTED Top MSU tifficiali admitted privately that thetr goal of an $8 mil-Uon budget increase was optimistic. Both candidates for governor have said they are sympathetic to education. make some drastic cuts in all appropriations requests. The board asked the legislature to make separate rather than lump sum appropriations, Recently, the * legislature has been giving the university a lump sum appropriation, leaving it up to budget planners to figure out the allocation of funds. ★ ★ “Each year," said the budget lessage," the need for separate appropriations becomes more evident. There is unhappiness on the part of the farm groups and the university is 'unfairly criticized for its allocation of funds.” Mrs. Phillips said, “I MAi hln^ At Its next session, the legUla-he was kidding, anef then he p«lled|Pir^ " fftd I knew be asked _______________ tof MSUO student fees to finance construction of a $1.5 million intramural building, and to permit Housing Agency tor up to $600,000 for expansion of the Oakland dent Center. ★ ★ ♦ Chancellor D. B. Varner said dining facilities of 400 would be inadequate for next year’s campus population. MSUO will also seek gifts and federal loans to begin construction four dormitory units, housing 48 students each. Total cost would be $600,000 for these self-liquidating units, Varner said. Socialist Hopeful Visits Factories in Pontiac Frank Lovell, Socialist Woiicers Party candidate for the U.S. Senate, visited factories in Pontiac yesterday distributing literature urging his election Nov. 8. ★ * * The candidate ran for governor in 1954 and 1958 on the same ticket. Lovell, 47, of Detroit, is a model maker for the General Motors TOchnical Center in Warren. ^ ^ r,, j The parade, led by the Seaholm. ^ UiaJi School mardikM band, wiB “g* of nl^ ptxKetd north on dwster at 7:30 n»e parade la only one of maiQr r^tben turn eaat on Mapla toSrSS ^ Woodward Avenuea^ ga local civic orianizatlona tor yoont- ^ ntnAk- ntents win be distributed. Gostame Judges wiQ award aome Dances will be hdd at the Sea-holm and Groves High Schbols and at the Barnum and Derby Junior High Schools. The dance at Seaholm will begin at 9 p.m.; at Groves, 7 p.m.; at B^um and at Deiby. 7:30^.in,..... The Wing Lake Fanha home smers association will sponsor • square dance Friday at 8:30 p.m. in Bloomfield Junior High SeboM, Quarton Road at Wing Lake Road.. The callers will be Xrt lAd Elsa Erwin. Coffee and doughnuts will be served. Tickets can be purchased at the door. HMmas Chester Service for Thomas Chester, 79, of 370 Townsend St., was to be held today at 11:30 a.m. at the Bell Chapel M the WiUiam R. Hamilton Co. with burial In Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Chester died yesterday in William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, after a long illness. At his retirement he was chief engineer for the American Blower Co. During World War II he served as a consultant for the British and United States war offices. He air-conditioned the salt mines In England for the purpose of storing ammunition. Born in England, Chester was once employed by the Sirocco Co., large Eiqtliah engineering firm. He was a life member of the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning He is survived by his wife Anna and two sisters, both of England. Milford Teacher and Son Drown (Continued From Page One) Hark, ig, toU Milford police Oey saw tee pair in tee canoe heading toward the vUlage. “When later tee canoe waa empty,” they aaid. The boys said they had a good view of the Mill Pond firem an upstairs Bedroom of the Howe home, 123 Marlene St. At* Belknap and his wife, who have . into the area only months ago ■ from Ohio. It was his first semes- . ter of teaching at the Milford Histe School. Belknap had no classes yesterday, since all area schools were closed to allow attendance at the State Teachers Institute in Detroit. Daylight Saving Time Done in Northeast ’ NEW YORK (AP) - Daylight Saving TTme bows out Sunday In the Northeast and a few scattered jlsewhere. The official chaiige takes place at 2 a.m., when clocks should be changed to 1 a.m. ♦ ♦ * Most other places having daylight saving ended it a month ago. Cherokee Indians involved in the Muscle Shoals “massacre" migrated to Askansas in 1794.______ Call 'Wrong' Vole in Puerto Rico a Sin SAN JUAN. P.R. W - Puerto Rico’s Roman Catholic bishops said in a second pastoral letter Friday that Gov. Luis Munoz Mar-ruling Popular Democratic party is anti-Christian and voting for it is a sin. * ♦ * America, an influential weekly pot out by the Jesuits York, challenged the interference o( tee bishops in the island’s pMi- tics. Munoz Marin is a Catholic hhn-self and favored to win-re-election ss governor of the eonimon-wealth, whose population is 90 per cent Catholic. ■a a a ' The second letter was issued, tee bishops said, toWrect “cer- tee first one, which had uontaindd the original order against voting for the Popular Democrats. .a a a >' Archbishop James P. Dkvis said 1 first teat wheteo- it obeyed was a matter between a Cateolic and Ms ~ Bishops James E. McManus and Luis Aponte Martinez contended would be a sin, ‘NOT PLAYING POUfiCS’ Friday in South Bend, Ind„ disregard for moral principles as such and Catholic tradition.’’ The archbishop continued, denwcracy in Puerto Rico had achieved the maturity of democracy in the United States, the letter would not have been neces-He denied teat ha and the other signers were playing poU-tks. The second letter said the real woe is “Whether, to a Catholic, It Is licit in conscience to vote against his own religious convic-lons,’’ not whether the bishops restrained or not the Tree expression of the voting right.’’ it It * threw Usbops aaid flatly. tl|at “H It. not licit (religiously permissible)' for Olteolics to ft-vbr wtte their votes tee estab-U^menj and apraad of a morality iteout God.’’ REASONS chief objectioof to Marin’s Popular Detno-chits are teat'they, did not re-'ppal a law authorizing the teadi-4^ of ibirth control, did not caqjntiy.’ recently another law providing for the sterilization of aome mental caaes, and allowed ^blic tolerance of common law ifiarriagea. Archbishop Davis told newsmen The Jesuit-edited America said first letter was issued be-“CateoUoi in the United States e he and the two other blah- cannot but wonder ahoiit the felt «e could no longer heap ore a aituathm which w« ' after “2D years ol coaatsntf persuade church leaders to < bark on a course of action so open to misinterpretation, not to say futility. Such a step as that taken by the Puerto Rican bishops can only be viewed as a profound disruption of normal political pro-^ The editorial went on: “It haa ‘ always seemed unnecessary, improper, even something of a pro-fanatian. for the auteority of the church to be extended, through tee pulpit, to the poJnt M a formal prohibiUon against 'voting for one particular party, or for one individual candidate.” ★ AW, In an eaillcr atatement Arcb-Ishop Egklio Vagnozzl, Pqpe John XXm'g apostolic delegate to the United States had said, “The Cateolic Usbops at tea UUted Stotea have never taken any (po-Utieal) position similar to that takim 'by tea Ushopt of Puerto Ri«. I am confident alao, that no j such action would ever be tal^ -by tee hierarchy in this Gov. Munoz Marin said the crwd|(he drew after the first Irtin- whre bigger than before. He dwed it'h boemerang. The Popular Deawerata .'are pitted against tHe Republicans, In-Christian Aetteo M wUdi tonns^ TCccntlF by CaflwUe lay- THE PQNTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29. i960 Hkl TH^REE. Complaints Reived Without Signatures NfcW YORK — I nuh«d down to W. lath 8t. in Greenwich Village to Intenrlew Anne Bancroft. I waa too late and ahe wa« In a hmrf to we talked in eloped phraaea (I clliqied them pc^eonally). "HaTe yon got a faeorlte beef?" I aaked. **My favorite beef la people who wfite eritlelsing lettera after IVe dene a Jack Raar show and don’t sign their nawiee I’d lore to answer them and tcU them they’re nuts. Beeanae they are!" Mlaa Bancroft spoke from a sitting position. Her legs were crossed and I noticed that IRed Bloc Arms Reinforce Cuba Island Anxiously Waits With Coastline Bristling for 'U.S.-Invasion' HAVANA (UPD^Mountlng shipments of arms from behind Iron Curtain have made Cuba of the moat' heavily armed nations of tis size in the world, it is re- WILSON sort of way. tank* and arfill**r>-—and probably -What could they possibly crlUclae?" I >f planea-from Riuwia, 100.00) iCzech rifles and "larRe nunntities' “nie way I talk." she said. “They say It’s too Bronx. Well. |«>l SSK-aliber machine suns. It's better than not talking at all. Or the way I wear my hair." i # a a ‘T Hke your hair," I said. "So do I," Anne Bancroft saM. "They’re Just nuts." "You’ve been In The Miracle Worker’ a year—are you happy In It?" I Inquired. "I pretend I’m happy In It," khe shrugged. ’Ihen I asked her a very daring question. I asked her If she wears padding. And jflte . give me a very daring answer. She said yes. We were talking about the padding she wears for the knock-down scenes with Patty Duke In the play. “My shoes are padded, ’ my knees and my shins are padded, and I’m also padded In a few other vulnerable places,” she smiled. “You’re the first girl I’ve met who brags that she's padded," I said. “By the way, wouldn’t you like to have your next play give you a chance to show you’re attractive?" "Sure,” she said, “but I wouldn’t do a play just to prove I'm-atteactlve. If the script Is great, I’d do Abraham Lincoln." “Uterally?" "Well, no, I can’t grow a beard.” ★ ★ ★ THE WEEKEND WINDUP . . . •WWT PRINT THAT!" Admiral Wl^^^ Rabom; chief of our very technical Polaris missile program, phoned his sister, organist Beth Rabom—to ask how to fix a pedal on his piano . . . Spencer Tracy gave half his $150,000 “Inherit the Wind” salary to the LA. Home for the Deaf . .. Court Basie got a sliver baton, marking his 25th anniversary as a maestro. He said, “'nils is great to stir martinis with.” EARL’S PEARLS: A pessimist, notei the Irish Digest, is merely a misfortune teller. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Taffy Tuttle went for her first golf lesson, and reports, “Golf players must be a sneaky bunch —the instructor kept telling me to keep my eye on the ball. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Nobody Is perfect — except, of course, ttie man your wife eould have married . . . That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, IMO) ANNE Thr roBiObie ofT’liar^ TOo Province, west of Havana, bristles with naval gun emplacements. The former Amerleao ralolog area at Moo Bay la Eoatera (kiba bos been eloaed to eIvlUana and apporratly b belag eoa-lerted Intd a major military base. The governmeftt has ordered i ll';ht military alert to support its charge that a "U.S.-sunoorted in-n" can be expected monmen-tarily. Precaution^: in force elude snoradic h'nckoufs of coastal highwaj’s around Havana. * * ♦ Premier Fidel ■ Caatro not appeared publicly here for nearly VO weeks, and his whereabouts re unknowm. WOW Castro'i brother Raul. Cuba’s armed forces minister, has been out of sight even longer than the premier. Reports rircolattng here said he has eotabllshed headquarters at Soa Lnis. near Moa Bay. where Russian and rserh "technicians’’ are schooling him in military strategy and tncllcs. While bracing themselves for '‘inva8ion,'’.Castro’s supporters are simultaneously fighting enemies within Cuba. Informed. sources said as many as 10.000 militiamen have been ordered into the Escam-bray Mountaina of Central (Tuba tj try to crush anti-Castro guerrilla activity. ‘Bi; Deal’ DISCODHTS i For TONITE until ^10^p.m; and MONDAY 9 a.m. to 10 p.m‘>l RHAKK, PODNER-Some political candidates kiss babies but Republican vice presidential candidate Henry Cabot Lodge had a handshake and cheery greeting for Ihi.s bab> elephant at Crystal Bea<'h Park. Vermilion, west of neveland, where he appeared Thursday Keeping a watchful eye on tXMlgc is the baby elephant's mother Expected to Be Up '61 Fruit Production WASHINGTON rt’PIi - Th< Agricultural Department says total 1961 fruit production probably will be somewhat la.Tier than this year when many crops were reduced by unfavorable weather. Ford Announces Prices of Compact Truck Line DEARBORN m - Ford Motor Co. Friday announced prices for its new line of compact trucks I Econoline I luul described them n charges or federal, .slate or lia-al taxes. be expected in botfi the INI derlduouM crop and In the INI-62 ellnis rrop, ; nssumlng average weather, the | department said In Its rubllca-llon, “The Fruit Kiluation.’’ The department said produclioni of tree nuts probably will not be as large as the near-rccord 19P0 crop, although above average. Consumer demand for fresh and processed fruit, supported by continued high income, was expected to e0|!tal that of 1960: ATTENTION: Customers of DR. HAROLD BUSSEY Due to the fire please refer any prescriptions, fittings or examinations or payment for the present time to DR. BARNKY SAROKIN, located at Enggass Jewelry Store, 25 N. Saginaw St., FE 4-6008. For any emergency call Dr. Bussey at VE 7-0644. Our records were saved! KRAZY KELLY SAYS: Hurry on Down for a Hot Deal on Appliances and jFnrnitnre DELUXE AUTOMAYIC WASHER • With Automatic Suds Return • 10 Lb. Lood Copocity • Porcelain Top • 2 Cycle • Lint Filter ♦T Yior free 5ei^i • Five Yeor Worronty on Transmission INCLUDES IMSTALLATION^-^EMYERY DELUXE DRYER • Huge 20 Lb. Drum • Dry with Hoot or Air INSTAUiO—OILIVMY AND FRII SIHVICi BOTH '298' LIMITED TIME OMIT MOHDAT. TUESDAY AMD WEDNESDAY 1981 ZERITB ?5^‘*149 MSTOKSAFT BABY MATTIESS 6-Yaer SiM W 2S" DILUXI CONSOLE TV Walnut Only *219 TIUMDLI BIDS tH-In. SMck * _ _ _ ^’in KELLfS Finitan Hi AppRam OPEN IVERY EVENING TIL 9 >. M. ■ . ' ' YANKEE STORE CLOSED DUE TO FIRE! BUT - YANKEE STORE IN DRAYTON PLAINS, 4516 DIXIE HWY. OPEN SUNDAY ID A. M. to 6 P. M. CLOSE-OUT ON ALL HALLOWEEN COSTUMES! ’”askS moAojiLL; HAUOVIEEH ■: COSTUMES 2l**'***cU*«. CSK W LA At* ' ■ Marx-A-Power Giont 5 BULIDOZER ^ «« . fc, „5,5 1 88 Dul ■■rin mZ*). A itkcr k*tl*ry IraeUr DRAYTON STORE t^oPErimy DNmSP.M. FREE TURKEYS Gtt Tick«ta at Any Countar SIMMS fh« No. I DISCOUNTER K Mill at it . . . cutting priCM, lavlno you folk* moff monay on anything you buy . .no (ancy'eradit of In-tartit chargai . . no addtd-to-coir Sunday opvninga . , , |u»t Good Coodi at Cheap Good* pricat. Right* i*. Mfvad to limit quantitia*. cioilii w i>*y sfWMvy GILLETTE : tuu Taatkpaila 'Blua ■ Blades' : 4'""!” V.Mfoikal : * tubn 20'"67‘ill8 79’ aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaeuaaaaauaaaaauaau riifhlilt BwHtfy Rag. 20c Canuma BUR- ; CESS leakproof • battery in itand- 5 ard call site ’ * OVER-THEDOOR ClolhH Haagtr ffagalar SIM Velua HALLOWEEN SPECIAL Slo Poke SUCKERS Bog ot 80 Holloway* Chocolate sucker*. Limit 2 bag* -c-.nar D*a«. 75' HALLOWEEN SPECIAL TRICK 01 TREATS Box of 80 75‘ Wo Sold Out Lott Timo Wa Gat Mora Briog Thi* ADV. for FREE FUSTIC PANT WMi Carily Diaptn Hrlhf'TKr* aTv''"wfffi'you an Hvwwfdtndh « Weat HoRMLStKet Pontiac, Midi. SATURDAY, OCTOBER », 1960 Jon* A. aiuT. TrfMiu»r ABd AdMrtlataa OlracUr ■m H. TiiuwnL, It Seems to Me . Nixon Has More Experience in World, Domestic Affairs MWth both presidential warriors thought would be elected President, galloping all-out toward the finish Your personal chcrice was unlmpor-line, voters must leave the ranks of tant. Each member named the man the "uncertain” and the "don’t he thought would win. know” groups and pick their man. The vote was 10-9, Nixok. That was The welfare of 180 million residents two weeks ago. Big-time gambling of the U.S. and even the stability of odds have roughly approximated this the world are at stake and I believe pattern. Richard Nixon will be a wiser and safer choice. ★ ★ ★ Primarily, Nixon is better ' trained. He has the advantage of eight years under Eisenhower and has studied world conditions first hand. He has traveled extensively as the official representative of the United States and has comported himself with distinction and honor. Insulted by Communist rabble in Central and South America, he conducted himself with admirable restraint and diplomacy. Later when Khrushchev tried to ride roughshod over him, our Vice President took the silk off the hammer and sailed into the officious and big-mouthed Russian; and he pinned his ears ^ back — but good. __Many^-maivy people think it would be unwise to face this chaotic and uncertain world with an inexperienced young man at the head of the greatest government in the world. And especially would this be true if he were surrounded by mealy- A Job Well Done . ^ . Pontiac Area United Fund workers and givers are receiving a tremendous round of applause and a standing ovation. They deserve it. They really went to town. ★ ★ ★ Never before in history have we raised so much money. Also, never before have we hit the official closing date with this percentage of overage. (Usually^ we have to extend the date for an additional week.) Many factors are accountable. ★ ★ ★ First, the community believes in the project and has responded rfeadUy ind geaeroualy. Secondly, it was well organized, well executed and a whole army of workers did a bang up job. ★ ★ ★ Pontiac believes in “one cam- Voice of the People Political Opinions Vary As EUdion Draws Near whether Kennedy b trytaig to oon-vinoe the Commiei that the UA. b ao vulnerabie that now b the time to take over, or if he b trying to make them believe the UJS. h not wordi taybg to grab. ebb we're a lecond rate power, he b downgrading hb own nation and that’a about as unpatriotic as you ( t can get. The young i l.fMcUy He reminds hm et a apslied Kemwdy when he says he wouldn’t get toto a acrape over Matsu and Quemoy. 'nut’s just basic c intends to hsve that, na a Hazel Park c oomraon tense. D. L. BRewerth A man who will degrade his country aitd its leaders certainly has not the mature judgment to guide us through the perilous years ahead. Walter Reuther endorses Kennedy 100 per cent and thai s enough for the working people anywhere. Vote (or Kennedy. One of Them With Vice President Nixon advocating we tight if neceeeary over those small islands and Sen. Kennedy advocating some kind of underhanded thing in Cuba, could we have more articles on the Socialist Labor Party and the Socialist Workers Party? Some of us are not ijuite ready for the Pearly Gates. Democrat leaders say Eisenhower isn't swinging very many votes to Nixon and it just goes to show the old magic b done gone. Richard, your goose b cooked. The Almanac I am fed up completely with the Democnb and Mr. Kennedy’s constant reference to our lagging steel production and high unemployment. Certainly it would appear our steel b behind with the auto industry selling compact cars. An imbecile would recognize the fact that it takes more material io build an orange crate than a cigar By Ualted press latemalbaal Today is Saturday, Oct. 39, the 303rd day of the year, with 63 more in 1960. The moon b approaching its full phase. The morning star b Mars. The evening stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. On this day in history: In ins. Sir Walter Raleigh was executed in London, chnrged box. The founders of the dominant religions have empowered men with faith, strengthening their lives, actions and works. Each offered a guiding principle, common to all, whiciv moved mankind forward; “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself’: Moses. “Hurt not others with that which pains yourself.” Buddha. "What you do not want done to yourself, do not do to others." Confucius. “Thou Shalt love thy God with all thy heart... and thy neighbor as thyself.” Christ. “^No one of you is a believer until he hjves for his brother what he loves for himself." Mohammed. paign. Let others beware. mouthed appeasers like Aolai Stev- 'Tr” And in Conclusion That would be tragic. Furthermore, even If the question : of global conflict were happily resolved through some inexplicable miracle, X feel Nixon would be fL much sounder, wlwr leader In our domestic problems. ★ ★ ★ Kennedy has been promising too many things to too many groups. Some of this can be written off as the impetuous >acts of Days of All Faiths; Few Know Why Halloween Exists As Mr. Kennedy b purported to advocate the truth, why doesn’t he release the facU? If as he says, we’re behind in the race (or space, but should the present adminbtra-tion be blamed? Labor Unions averaged one strike every 4 days at missile bases up until last June. All told, 95 strikes with a total less of man days of work 78,400 for the year. Does thb as Mr. Kennedy puts it, stand for advance and growth? This is a stagnation he refers to. TTie only difference b, he isn’t willing to put the salve in the right place. An oddity about thb report b that the hardest hit areas in our missile sites were the launching pads. Ken Parrington Romeo : In n trenson-nbb plot to oust King Jnmoo 1 from tho throne. In 1740, Qnglbh writer James Boswell was bom. In 1796, English poet John Keats In 1891. Fanny" Boradi, later famous as Fanny Brice, was bora. In 1923, ’Turkey became a republic ... the first president was Mustafa Kemal . . . known as Kemal Ataturk. In M29, prices virtually collapsed on the New York Stock Exchange. ’Thought for today: German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer said; "Every man takes the limib of his own field of vbion for the limib of the world.” By DR. HOWARD V. HARPER Silly Su|M-rstitlonA Korin Paxan Ritual Jottings from the well thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: A young minister concluded his Kiws'Ha‘ibwwn‘'hs only exhensUdh Tor large contrlbutlrais -fnrwirtiiw. as difficult as passible (or them to find their former 'homes. _, , , ^ . Will someone please ask Mr. This ct^om b not as medieval Kennedy to promise again and The big day this week is not Halloween, as most people suppose. It is All .Saints' Day, No^. 1. that There were always those who wanted to take advantage of the special information xpirits are supposed to have. as it sounds. There b a recorded instance of a group of Virginia girls, with fear and trembling but no conversation, having made such a cake at George Washington’ Mount Vernon. (Copyright 19M) Portraits again and again and again not to send our boys to fight on foreign ■oil? I Remember Sbmeone asked what the differ- blessed to give than to receive—and somehow the imporunt day Dr, Brady’g Mailbag mocratlcXarty. If you ask By JOHN C. METCALFE When late last night I reached >y home ... I knew not all was ell . . . But what It was disturb-ig me ... I simply could not 111 . . . The whole night through tinaed around found no way to sleep . . . The sheeb got Z. ‘»"8led up and tore ... The pil- besides, It’s deductible”........... ha* been ovemhadowed by Ra A WMk .go today we flew from Miami to Metropolitan Airport in two hours and 38 minutes. That’s really rapid a young man seeking votes. But .................In Bogota, I found that the entire Democratic philosoph; has been to spend, spend and spend — tax, tax and tax. The nation could look forward to greater debts, greater spending and another joy ride toward imtol-vency.^ ' ★ ★ ★ With the awesome wealth the Kknneoys possess, no amount of taxation can affect their living, but that isn’t true of the rest of us. John F. Kennedy has no fear of increased taxes. - But you have. And so have I. ★ ★ ■A' This Ls hardly the time for "noble and costly experiments.” These are parlous days that call for wisdom and experience. Richard Nixon has had. more practical and useful training in world affairs. He has had more actual experience with internal government. I think his basic instincts indicate a more practical approach to new problems and those half solved. I believe Kennedy is a sincere, con-scientious young man with tremen-‘ dous ambition and energy. But those > qualities don’t fit one for Presidency ; of the greatest nation in the world. I Nixon is equally sincere and cot- * scientiouE and his ambition and ; energy are guided by a greater un-; derstandtag of world and domestic ; problems. ★ 'A' * Ex-PresidcBt Harry S. Truman I summed the whole thing up pretty wdl last July when he sug^tmt- i ad Keimedy *Va«n’t ready yet” ; for the White llonse. ^ I think Tnunan’s right. * And Nixon is prepared. South and Central American publishers label the Castro regime “communistic” without modification ...... ___When I’m away from The Press, only first class mail is saved as I never open the* other anyway. Try this and you’ll be surprised how much time you save. If It isn’t important enough for while Halloween with all lb more or leitn taken over. It’s a pity, but that I* how people are. The KUperfletal appeals to us more than the profound; pagan fun b more al-tmetlve than Christian devotlen. Color-BUndness Is Usually Congenital to 1 in 30 Men thb: An independent, a liberal, Democrat, a iocialist and then a Communist. Lob of Democrats take pride in being the first (our at the same time, even though they have no truck at all with the last. Next question. O.O.D. All Saints’ Day is the day on which the Church remembers dll those who ought to be in the official Christian^ calendar but -are not there, simply because the men who decide who is a saint either did not know about them or were too blind to discern their goodnes.s. Nov. I minions of diristians will he in chui^ to honor these un-RndV.tr sirints. first class postage, Rut Oct. .tl far more millions it can’t be important enough to read .... Trusted scouts ad- By DR. WILLIAM BRADY What causes color-blindness? Army doctors tell our two sons they are both color-blind. No one jClse in the family color-blind so I far as we know. (F. M, C.) ns. •=* Cause [unknown. One in males Is color- Iblind. Only one in 300 females b color-blind. The condition is ^usually only par-DR. BRADY tial loss of perception of one or tivo of the fundamental colors red, green and blue. Color-blind- --••ddrttMd tiKtlopc U ____ Pontiac Preu. Pontiac. Mlcblfan. (Copyright, 19M) I. agree with Nixon that our national prestige b at an all time high and none of it was done by F.D.R. or the suit and cloak msm from Missouri. When Kennedy in- lows were too deep . . I stared at ceiling and the walls . . . And out the window pane ... I walked around the darkened room . . . But it was all in vain . . . And finally I lit the light . . . And sat awhile and read ... 1 smoked a bit and took a drink . . . And then went back to bed . . . Whep after many restless turns . . . The dawn broke through the blue . . . I found at last what troubled me ... I’d lost my heart to you. (Copyright IIM) Case Records of a Psychologist: — Risks Necessary Throughout Life MARY vise me Mary Lynne Sp(X)r is deserving of nomination as one of the area’s especially attractive gir Is. Nomination made. if if ★ Mrs. Harry Pearce phones to tell me when she was in New York she asked many taxi drivers for whom they would vote. Nixon was an overwhelming choice .............Miss America had dinner with the missus and me in New York and she really rates as the Miss Americas’ Miss America .............Columnist Robert Sylvester says he can solve two great problems: Make Casey Stengel President of the United States and ICe h h e d y manager of (he Yankees..............New York and Philadelphia automats grossed 85 million last year and baked beans was the most popular dish , by a wide margin........... Some of these new pro footolll teams pre taking a fearful financial beating. ★ ★ ★ Pay TV is due for a trial. And out playing prank.s honoring pagan superstitions of which thc.v are totally unaware. -Alt right. H that » how if-4s, ______ - let's look at the pagan sopersli- (present at birth) and some lions, if (or no other reason than dwrities believe it is hereditary Farents, don't grime unduly over cases like Fritz. For it’s better to die happy than live sad. And death is simply our -- ----------- final graduation ceremony ness Js most frequently coi^enital where Sarth’s alumni finally together up yonder: It is T6^ s ■ how complctdy silly they The rentral Idea on which everything else hang* Is Ihnt the Houl* of the dend are relea*ed on Halloween and are free to return to their earthly home*. You might think that anyone would be glad to weleome the *oal* of the departed whom he had loved, but it doea not work that way at all. The real reason tor creating of chaos thb night — moving gates, doors and all movable laadmarho, and geaerally messing up the sceaery — b to and traceable to the mother, though her sons are more likely to inherit it than her daughters. Many who are color-blind ai« unaware of it. Only after some disastrous railroad or marine accident is it discovered by scientific tests — which should be routine in the periodic examination of engineers, firemen, pilots, drivers. Acquired color-blindness is caused by too much smoking or drinking. necessary that we take risks aU throughout life and athletics; offer good health insurance. ^ taotball, lhey*d be riding around In eara. And more of them would then die each year In the resulting car'.smash-ups than are killed on the gridirons of all our high schools and colieges. Friend says if I can cook vegetables with a pressure cooker I lose most of the vitamins. boils vegetables for twenty minutes • g. (Mrs. W. C. A.). it’s a winner........... Godfrey isn’t my favorite TV character but he rang the bell when he said he was proud to pay taxes in the United States, but he’d be just as proud at half the price............Mahoa- RiTA Cordova wcurked 17 hours on a dance for "One Eyed Jacks” and it lasted four minutes on the film ..........Dept, of Cheers and Jeers ; the C’s^Pontlac United Fund workers and why shouldn’t it be? If the cost or givers; the J’s—Last Sun- Abs. — Cooklag la a steam preiMiire cMher b much less d«-stractlve to vitamlas thaa boil-lag. When our daughter was In grade school the school doctors sent notes on four occasions urging that tOBsIto aheukK -be -mnovBd. Followers of your column for many years, we dteregarded the gratuitous advice. Once our family physician said “The child’s thnat b normal — Dr. Brady b quite right.” Today she b 34, sii^s professionally, never has thToat trouble. . . (Mrs. E. J. L.) By DR. r.EOROE W. CRANE CASE G-412; Frite P., aged 17, was a popular high school senior. "But. oh. Dr. Crane,” hb mother sobbed, “now he is dead. "And I could kave prevented it, so I feel so guilty. "For hb high school requires a parent’s signature giving eadi~ child .permission to engage in athletics. ,’‘Fritz was crazy about foottiaU. Competitive sports teach a lot oi wholesome team play. In fact, it is unusual to find a juvenile delinquent among athletes. And athletics serve as superb insurance for long life and especially freedom from heart attacks. For an athlete devriopa a brg-er heart than the same sized man w^^does not participate in ath- Th«t "CJomplImetit Club’’ experiment had changed hb life, for he told me he had been a shy, "mousy” type of person prior to turning his attention outward via the need to analyze hb assoebtes (or their good points. Mareover, life b aot to be measured by mere time b years. Christ did more b S3 years than Methuselah In 9M. And Frits lived a full, useful life right up to hb flaal graduation Bat brger hearts also have larger coronary arteries to feed lhc«n, so the coronarieo o( an So we parento must not grieve if wp do that which is intended for the uHimate best interests of our children, even if death may whisk them away prematurely. fatolly by the small Mood dots , _______________ And you wiB find, mocover, that He bad hb 'heart Bw athletes thus resist better the ‘ set on maldnc the Kaning by tobacco, for It takes first team Jhis fv more thickening of an artery’s year, so he walb to plug it, if that artery has a brger diameter to start with. DR. CRANE for him, since . I Daddy was away pn a ‘ ' trip, "At hb coaxing, I OnaBy did so. In one of the early games, he suffered a brain bemorrhage and never regained conscioumeat. "Dr. Crane, 1 feel as if I murdered my son by signing that par- ...fil^-AOK fPT..:............... ' 1^ Fritz’s mdtfaer had destroyed hb vest lor’ school by refu^ bias pernibaloB to pby football, pbe would almost have killed hb mlt." Romember, death b just a graduation ceremony whore Earth’s alui^ finally get togettier up yondu-.. xiMrt writs to or. ontss W. ersas to esr* n ItM PasUM rttm, Pwttoe, In modern medidne we have an nVAloArt dvwl* Fa’ tKdl aMm SsLsa. «Mnt MM pMD* Re m^ have been alive, medi-(Mly, but dead in hb mmale. STERN ADVICE Having lost our oldest son in a room 15 by 32 by 10 (bedrooni) which b kept closed night and day, before the necessary air of the service are unsatisfactory, the dayjs Sullivan show which oxygen b exhausted? (E. h.) viewers can sit onS^teij’ pocketbooks, hit an all time bottom for Aas. — Fifty to a : Two wedu ago, the Board of Di- and if it works out,/we may take , the talented Ed and al- ____ ‘ i^torg Of The Aaweiated Press vot«l some huge strides forward—like they most anyone else) opened door (u the in ijWwmaOyas to which candidate they have in thgland. Supporters say —Harold A. iprrtogRALD ** How long can a person live b a jet plane crash, I cln add double mm 15 hv » hv 1A wci^t to my advicc to you othw parents. First, accidenb are bound unvoiced code to the effect that ,it b bettor for a person to die happy than to Hve.sad. Frits wss a leader In ' the ■Oiid, He was preaUeat el hb m V Ctah aski belewed by Ua (Copyright. UN) ; Nixon Is Ahead . happen, though they 4re very infrequent in sdMoi athletics. ■i WaUeri, ferraer great ceach at Northwestera had tha University of Calltorato, has peiatod a«l that If the leea-age beyf were lorhlddeB to play I had known liim for several '’years, for be had joined the "ebmplimcnt Clab’’, which zc-qidm the paying of honest praise to each,of 3 persons per 'day for a mining of 30 coDSMipve d^yt. Tb* AiMdttoS ] SUSfK.*- Jk.’snss-issrus .........ad, Utiab- Lapwr sad WmB-It U Ml.N s jttar; toasw CmbUm II IB thd naltod SUtoi m.M a Mjnrsrrwr’SS .tto diM rsto at Pmttsa, THE POXTlAC PRESS. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 20. I960 Mackie AHers Rules for Mobile Homes LANSING (UPD-Two major Ehancea In regulatkma covering transpGCtetkm of large mobile homea on Michigan hlghwaya have been amoonced by State Highway Oommlaaioner John C. Mackie. The new regulations permit manufacturers and dealers to obtain an annual permit lor ihe transportation, rather than a sin- Mnckie said officials of the oyoleni woMd oave the Industry hundr^ of thoMaads of doUars The second reguiaUon would allow vehicles hauUng mobile homes up to 55 feet long to travel a maximum of 40 miles an hour.. Present regulations provide maximum speed limits from 25 to 35 miles per hour for the oversized mobile homes, depending on their length Barrymore Weds in Odd Regalia-Bride? Charming ROME (AP)—John Barrymore Jr., 28, got married today in a red-trimmed toreador shirt with black buttons and a Mack, waist-length Jacket with a stand-up, ear-high collar. The actor’s bride, Italian movie starlet Gabriella (Gaby) PalazzoU 23, looked charming in a shmt white gown and white veil. She carried a small bouquet of orange They were nurried by a Roman Catholic priest in San Sebastiano church at the top of the Palatine, one of the seven hills on which Rome was founded 27 centuries ago. “Hiere were about 60 guests. The couple will honeymoon Spain. ‘ Dividend at Seamleu DETROIT (*-The Michigan Seamless Tube Co. has declared a 2Scent quarterly dividend. MIMEOGRAPHING SERVICE Bulletins, Letters, etc. FAST SERVICE! FlVg HALLOWEEN TRICK?-The great Navy port town of Honolulu has come up with this Ix^ey man to haunt the kiddies come “Trick-or-Treat” time. Debra Sue Anderson, 7, is property aston- uri Tti*ak*i* ished as she peeks inside this scientific jack-o'-lantern—Davy Jones style. The costumckl creature was a prop conjured up by the men of the Submarine ^se at Pearl Harbor. They*re Good Talkers, Poor Readers Campaign Trail Lacks Humor By ARTODR EOSON AP PolMosI Analyst Rarely has a campaign produced such a smidgen of specifics and such barrels of generalities. And surely one reason has been the speech habits of both candidates. In the past candidates turned out—or their writers turned for them—a sizable collection of speeches during the months leading up to the election. Chrutiaii Literatnre Sales i» Oakland _ PI 4.959I Few of these were ever classed as notable additions to this tion's literature, but it was sible as the campaign wore on to make up a list of specific legislation which the man was for or against. It's easier, when one is writing, to look up and include facts. During a Western tour Kennedy gave out a text of a speech he was to make in Eugene, Ore. Not only did Kennedy not refer to the speech he said he would give; he never once even referred to the subject. When a speech is prepared fbr Nixon, he usually tries to give the main points, but he’s apologetic about it. As he told a group of California ;>ubli8hers: “Those of you [now me know that while I ampaigning, one thing I very much dislike to do is to read a speech, even if I have written it" GOOD TALKERS Kennedy and Nixon are both good talkers but mediocre speech readers. As a result, relatively few speeches have been preparet by or for them. And those thai have been are almost ignored If the collected campaign words of John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon are ever brought to-together—heaven forbid—it be found that the same thoughts, often expressed in precisely the same words, will be repeated endlessly. has often played the role of Just plain folks. For example, he was attending morning meeting in the club of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. “I am delighted that you wouldl me out to breakfast," Nixon id, “that you would be in the beautiful Cocoanut Grove. Pat and you know, we never were in here in the years when we courting. “We sat outside in a little bar; d listened, but I [•emember IS very nice to hear the music j come out through here, and if’ nice to be in it. Very nice.’’ But campaign jokes, once a important part of any politician’ arsenal, have been barred as i they were illegal. grim out there ftn the campaign trail. Very grim. NO HUMOR And, finally, has there ever been a campaign as humorless as this one? Kennedy has said, “My wife is home—having a boy. ‘ Amf Mac's Kin Air Minister LONDON tm - Air Minister George Ward resigned Friday. His Job went to Julian Amery. son-in-law of Prime Minister Macmillan. Ward said he wanted to return to Tnisihess. Current Rate Paid on Every Pollar of Your Savings Insured Savings by an Agfeney of the U*S. Government Your savings here are insured to $10,000. Five offices to serve you plus a mail-saving plan that’s tops in convenience. Open your account with any amount. Earnings start the 1st of the month on-meney added by the 10th. Why Settle tor Less? Vims HOME OFFICE; 761 W. HURON STREET DOWNTOWN OFFICE ROCHESTER BRANCH 1« E. LAWRENCE '' ‘ 407 MAIN STREET 4416 DIXIE HIGHWAY, DRAtTON PLAINS V 1102 W. MAPLE RD., WALLED LAKE ^ ^ Sorry, no moil or phono ordort, no Mivoriot MONDAY ONLY SKOALS! SHOP MONDAY NIGHT TILL 9 Importod wool flannel.. .PROPORTIONID SLIM IVi SKIRTS R„. 6.9S *5 99 MONDAY ONLY $lim walker ityla wool flannel skirt* with kick pleats end leather belt. Sizes: demi 7-13, short 9-15, reguler 9>IS. Navy, black or gray. fporliwaar . . . Tfclrd Floer Men's fleece-lined SWEAT SHIRTS $|69 Mon. Only Whitt, grey, nevy, black or red shrinkage controlled shirts. S, M, L, XL, Mane' Went . . . Street floor -V Women's soft, worm RAYON CHALLIS 'GRANNY" GOWNS Ate. 3.99 T MON. ONLY Soft rayon challls gowns fn a ftny rosebud print or sotirf colore af pink and blut. Embroidery trim, stza* 34 to 42, , Liaforia . . . 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Foatib Floor Girls' hi-bulk Orion CARDIGAN SWEATERS $^99 Rc,. 2.29 MONDAY ONLY Here's a tiny value-packed price on smart Orion acrylic cardigans! Orion IS so easy to cart for and wtar. Choosa from a rainbow of colors, sizes 7 to 14. Girit' Waar . . , Second floor Reg. 1.99 single Flexible "gooseneck" ... metal DESK STUDY LAMPS 69 Reg. 3.98 double ,322 MONDAY ONLY Adjust these smart desk lamps to shine at any angle. Heavy » base, felt bottom. Black, red, | ivory or mocha. L ; Slatlonorr ■ . Sfraaf Floor Foam Bock ... Room Size TWEED BROADLOOM RUGS Reg. 65.00 0 3 color combinotiont MON • 9 by 12, 9 by 15, 12 by 12 and 12 by 15-ft. tiset Huge . . . Fiftb Floor Rugged "Monor House" 25-Inch LAWH SWEEPER Woila'f ... tawar lorel 45-Pc. Service for 8... Docorotod MELMAC DINNERWARE 29.95 ValiM 16" Thase sets ol fina plastic include MON. 23 dacoratad piwas. 2-yr. war-rarity, 4 pattams. a . . . Lewes Leeel , SHOP MONDAY 9:30 A.M. TILL 9 P.M. USE A FLEXIBLE CCC CHASGE “SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY^ OCTOBER 29, 1960 tjnited Church Women Mark World Commimity Annual Affair at 1st Christian PACKING MEDICAL KITA - Preparing medical kits for home use in rural areas of Ethiopia, Nigeria, Chile and Burma are -v: Du ight 'St.. preiident oLPontiac Coont4i^ of United Church W6mw?h TfroW leftT; IVfrs. FVed Iv ifat:^ PREPARING CANISIERS FOR irwiCEF - Young people sponsored by various churdies make canisters for collating funds for the United NaUons International.Emergency Fund by covering milk cartons. Already at work are Karen Shirley of 64 Seminole Ave., BeUianyEaptist (from IcfU; Laurie Nosanchuk of 197 Cher- Trick Is to Treat All of World's Children Apical Kiti, Clothing, Yard Goods to Bo Sent to Africa, Indio The Pontiac Codncil of United Church Women h«ve b**en busy for weeks planning th' World Community Day program to be held at the* First Christian Church, 858 W. Huron St. Friday. ★ ★ * The day wiU bcfftn with Um rag> istration and a coffee hour at 9:15 a.m. PmIIm rn^ wipptog tropical disease. UNICEF" wiTl be shown and eachiChuiclUsaid. Trick or Treater will receive ihe A black and orange tag for identili- "How better could their pupils cation before going out into the and students leam about the wide corhmunity. [world around them, about human- PENNY BUYS MILK Each penny received can mean five glasses of milk for a needy child overseas, or the BCG vaccine protect him from tuberculosis. A nickers worth of UNICEF -' TMs organizatloii is charged with 'the giant task of helping 55 million ; distressed chlldreh and mothers in itnore than UO poimtriea around , the world. '' Hw diurdies ttiUs far cooperating In the effort are First Metho-: dlst, Tempte BeHi Jacob, Bahtwin ; Evangelic^ Uittted Brethren, Joslyn Avenutf l^ted Presbyterian, BaptdtitoUmd Park Meth- • ocHat, Bethany Baptist, United Miiii-; aknary, Messiah Baptist, and Cen-I tral Methodist. it It ir : Kay Cline, president ol tlif Ceo-; 4ral Methodist Youth Gto#, said • If other churches are intereaied in ' Joining the canvass, tiid -tyoutb shMiU ctHOt to Central Methodist 1 a( 2:39 p.ih'. Sunday with The filmstrip "A Trip With-Rev- Daniei J. Wallace of Centrallity's many faces, joys, jnd sor- aspirations and problem^ than by a direct participation in a crusade in behalf of other young people who need and gratefully accept their help?" Ministerial Fellowship Plans Reiormation Day The Pontiac Pastors Association ggye tmanimoua and enthusiastic endorsement to the new tradition. Tirtek or Treat tor UNICEF I gtviag as at the leceKing What will become a gift of heidtil and hope tor many ne^y The third annual Reformation Day Service, sponsored by the Waterford Ministerial Fellowship, will be hM at 7:39 p.m. Sunday at Christ Lutheran Church, Airpcnl and Williams Lake Road. ♦ w ★ Dr. F^rank P. Madsen, president of the Mtchkpm Synod of the Uidted Lutheran Church, will be guest Andrews of the Church of the Atonement, secretary-treasurer. The Rev. Mr. Anderson said the public is invited. speaker. A former pastor of a Pe> wm also mean the gUt otVbett^*’“ understahding of others, a feeling of worthwhile a^mpUshment, and an outlet for lUtural spontaneous selflessness for countless children. "The educational aspect of the program has ever increasing appeal for all adults who devote their lives and energies to the formation of our citizens of tomorrow, the in the Detroit Cduncti of Churchy Several members M the Mials-tarlal Felfowshlp will parildpate to the service. Soloist wilt iw Jane Lubben of tho Draytoa PlalM United Presbyterian Ghnreh. . Serving as officers of the fellowship are the Rev. Arvid E. Anderson of Christ Lutheran Church. and the Rev. Donald 1st Presbyterian Membership Class Scheduled Dr. William H. Marbach will teach a membership instruction class at 9:30 Sunday morning at First Presbyterian Oiurch. "What tWe Believe as Protestants and Christians" wiU be his subject. Tony Brown. Lee Ann Anderson, Jim Lampman, Shlriey Herron, Edward McLean and Helen Pritchett will 'be leaders at the Pioneer and Tuxis Youth Groups Sunday evening. Several women of First I^by-terian will attend the meeting Wednesday at the Jefferson Avenue Presbyterian Church. Detroit, for officers, department heads, secretaries and group leaders of the Women's Associations. A it i Mrs. Howard White will be In charge of the thank offering pro- Stringham Missionary Has Youth Rally Tonight The Rev. I. L.^Siak, former director of Youth for Christ in Day-fa:i)hfoTirtr8|ji«rw'-The spiri it Filled Life" at the Youth Rally at 7:30 toni^t at the Stringham United Missionary Church. 4060 Elizabeth Lake Road. At the evangelistic service at 11 a.m. Sunday he will preach on '"lihe Marks of Heart Religion" and at 7 p.m. his sermon^topic will be f'Why I'm Nol a Christian.' Baptist State Convention at Columbia Ave. Church 'The Columbia Avenue Baptist Church will be host to the annual Baptist State Convention of Michigan Tuesday and Wednesday with the Rev. Marion F. Boyd, pastor of the local church, presiding and state convention president, charge. Sessions are scheduled for 10 m., 1:30 and 7 p.m. on both days. A graduate of Fort Wayne Bible College, his work in the-island Includes general overseeing of missionary work and evangelistic tours. He has served aa vice chairman of the work and as president of the national church. He also conducted a Bible study respondence course. At the 7:30 service Sunday evening the Rev. Paul Ummel, a pio^ neer in mission work in Nigeria, will be speaker. The Rev. Mr. Umnnel who weal to Nigeria with Us brother Joseph In 1924 started his misaton-ary work with the Dakkarkari people, a primitive tribe in the Zuru area of Northern Nigeria. The pastor and his wfe^^reduced the language to writing, translated the Gospels, a hymnal and a read-r, and began a school. Now there Is a strong Christian congregation at Zuru which is! looked to as head of the church' conference for that region, the missionary said. Dakkarkari young men have become pastors and evangelists, and the government recognized school has nearly 200 pupils. * ♦ * During their most recent tour of service, the Ummels were in charge of the missionary rest home at Joa, Nigeria and houaeparents for the mlsalonaiy children’s home ver School of Missions , at Louisville. Ky. C T. Daniel of the Relief and Annuity Board of the South-era Baptist Oonventlen at Dallas It 10:U Tuesday morning. "This convention year should be the most inspiring ever ■aid the Rev. Mr. Boyd, "Among the nationally known persons on the program are Dick Baker, religious recording artist from Dallas, Tex.; and the Rev. "er, an evangelist from Dallas who has just returned Japan." A ■* A Others appearing at the services will be James L. Sullivan, executive secretary of the Sunday i School Board of Nashville, Tenn.ij Fred Moseley of Atlante, Ga. who will represent the Mission Board; | and Nathan C. Brooks of the Car-1 of Rtchmoiid, Va„ who will present the Foreign Mission Board report. ’The Baptist State Convention of Michigan, organized four years ago, has more than 100 cooperating congregations in the Upper and Lower Peninsulas. Pastor Lists Sermons ’The Rev. Gerald W. Gibson will preach on "Redemptive Reproduction” at 11 a.m. Simday in Central Christian Church. "The Symptoms of Death" will be his sermon theme at 7 p.m. , Southern Baptists Told to Use Their Oldsters NASHVILLE, Tenn. HI — Advice appearing in the Southern Baptist publication, Church Adminlatn tloo. on how to deal with the oldsters: * *1. • a » . - • senior members and gram at the local Womens Asno^thereby bring hamilniMt to ttietn dation session Friday. —^ ............. "Has the Reformation Run Out' Rev. Galen E Hershey's sermon at 9:30 a.m. Sun-day. Dr. Martiadi wUl preach on "Our Protestant Witness' 2I0N CHURCH <)f the NAZARENE E. Pike Street 10 sm.—Sunday Bctiool 11 am.—Morning Wmshlp 7 pm —Evening Service Rev. Harold L Hatrit FE 1-<216 and enrich the life of your church You too. will one day be a senior member.” CHURCH OF GOD Ee$f Pike at Anderton *"*^j.M***** Monuae Worship | Rev. Ettol D. Moore, Pastor TRINITY METHODIST Koego Harbor Robert H. Benedict. Hlolstor M:«e »-Stepe to Reaeea-“a Hefomietlae Betnea" M:1S Bunder School _ t:00 P.M. Youth PelloeiM^ Community Collection for UNfCEF— Followed by lellotrshlp end worship First Social Brethren Church 316 Baldwin. FE 3-0384 Set. Eve. Service ... 7:30P.M. Sunday School ....10:00 A.M. Sunday Morhinp 11:00 A:M. Sunday Evening Worship ......... 7:30 P.M. Tuts. Young People ._J :30 P.M. Thursday Prayer ... 7:30 P.M. REV. TOMMY GUEST, Pastor DONELSON BAPTIST CHURCH XllseboUi Lake Rd. at Tllden or i-TTM Sunday School 10 A.M. Morning Worship.........H AM „ , Junior and Begtnnere' Church Youth Service ..............................6:30 PM Evening Service "Deciplnhlp” ...............7;3o p>|’ Midweek Service.........................7:30 PJJ. Wed. Peetor—RXT. LEX LeLOKE S. a. Supt.—EUOENE THOUA8 LEACH ROAD COMMUNITY CHURCH 1 UUe Eael of Auburn Hetshte. 1 Block Worth el Anhern Ed. “^EiLATwordU^’SfV.S"*"^ “ * “• Taeadey Risht Bible Study T;M P.M. "// You Need Spiritual Encouragement . . . Come" ImCHRISTIM SCIENCEn SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY "EVERLASTING PUNISHMENT" Suitor Servicee and Reading 2 East LawrerKw Street Open DoUt 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. . Friday to 9 P.M. FIRST CHURCH of CHR+STp SGti*MT*IST^ 11:00 AJJ. Wednesday Evening Senricee 8 P.M. Lowtence and Williams Strejjets HOW CHRISTIAN SQENCE HEALS RADIO STATION CKLW—800 KC. SUNDAY, 9:45 A, M. TV Every Sutdey, Chennel 7, 9:J0 A.M. THJ^ POXXIAC’ PRKSS. SATl KUAV. (KTOBKH 2». United Presbyterian Churches OAmSD AVEITOE OBUand at CadUlao laeeawe m. AntbsO. >M(or Aaai«r LtakmdP Teaia tNnctor Morning Worahip Bibl* Sdiool . Youth FoUowihip Evfning Soryico 10:00 A.M. . 11:20 A.M. . 5:45 P.M. 7:00 P.M. Pronror Mooting 7:00 P.M. AUBURN HEIGHTS 1466 Primary Street ». W*. Polacri Pnter ooi . 10:00 A M. Attendance Goal 612 Morning Worthlp ...11:15 AM. Ood'e Hand On My Hood-Youth Groups 6:30 P.M. COMMUNITY UNITED Bible School ...... 9:45 A.M. Morning Worship .. 11:00 A.M. Youth Groups ...... 6:30 P.M. Evening Worship ... 7:30 P.M. JOSLYN AVE. Joslyn at Third Bdassa 1. WsUia^ rsstsr Bible School^!.......9:30 A.M. Morning Worship Youth Meeting ......6:30 P.M. Evening Worship .... 7:00P.M. Rtfonfiotion S«rvic« SchvdvM at ,St. Paul ( The Rev. George Mahder will, preach on "The Stranger at Our Gate" and the Adult Choir will sing at the regular worship service’ Sunday at the St. Paul Lutheran Church. At T:30 p.m. Monday the congregation and pastor will observe the| I annual Reformation Day sendee. Detroit Nor Tells V - of Worldwide Work First Congregational Church Mill, E Huron emd Mt. Clemons Malcolm K. furfon, Minisfor Mr. Howard Qegg, 7r. Morning 'Worship Servica 10;30 A.M. "See but Perceive Not " The Rov. Mr. Burton Church School 10 30 A M. First Christian Church Ditdploi dtiChflMt Sufidoy School 9:45 A. M. Church Service 11:00 A. M. 858 W. Huron BeV. D. D. MeCoU THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ADVENT When the ronaregation of Christ l.iithersn Chuirh gathered lor t siieclnl supper Friday night. Pastor P T (hihtn .fohnson of All ; Saints Liilhetan Church, (.last De-I troll, explained the wru-ldwlde work of the ehuixh. Me also spoke e Thomas Bertrand, Walter John-Monday, Meetinga will begin M Tuesday evening. The program Isison, Christian Koch and Charles 7 p m under the direction of WendelliKurzwell. The pastor " * Sttrait. John A.shby. Harold L. moderator Welch. VVallon Weiss and John Mil Miaalonary Day will h.^ ler. Br.mw, TABERVAri.e. obaei;x’ed tonwnvw at Newman * ^ ^ The Rev. Thomas R, Campbell AMK Church with the Rev. J. A Roman Catholic in the White "' Salem. Ore. will be the evang.--j.^“''" j""'*'’'P'^'Nog on House" will he discussed at the •'** »• Bethel Tabernacle, I.IW; i meeting of the Council of Men Baldwin Ave. for service-'—........... At 7.Jo p.m the ml.sslonary at 8 p.m. Wednesday Panelist will ex-ening through* Nov. ( Reutb RaglaMS Bt Judson ..............Paul T. HatL Pattor WBl P. Worth. Aaaoeiatt Paator At 7:: s every|i,.p knoxvn as "Kvening In While excep,|v^,jii begin at 7:30 p.m Pearl BHIinger. a misslonaiy I from India, will he quest speakei ;AIF missionaries are psked by thel I pastor to wear white and bring 1 small flashlights and candles. I Music will be fui-nished by the USenior Choir BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH Woat Huron ot Mtark Stra#t Dr. hioph Irvins Chapman, Patter Percy M. Walloy It., Mlnlitor of Education Two Worship Sarvicti - 8:40 and 11 00 AM Sarmon: "DON'T «T OVER IT!" 7 45 a m - Church School Cltttos for All 7 .00 p.m.-rrEikt Youth Croups - Adult Forum "Tho Church Looks at »ho lisuos" 8,00 pm -Vaspars "Lifo'i Intorruptlons!" Wadnaxdav 7 15 p m — A4idw##t Sorvico of Rrayor -and Study A n A mor/can Baplitt Con von lion Church" 1 MORNING WORSHIP 10 A.M. “FORWARD TO VICTORY” R«v. Piul Hsrt, Prtsching Church School 11:3Q A.M. Youth Fellowship 6:15 P.M. V Dr. Ernest W, WeiSs. head of I'Severance Hospital in Seoul. Ko-lirea. will he speaker at the 6:30 I dinner Wednesday evening in Cen-1 tral Methodist Church. ST. PAUL METHODIST I ISS K. B^uart Laki Rd. n S-SUl-n S-17S1 Morning Worship 10 A.M. and 11:18 A.M. "The Personal Nature of Oeclpleahlp' Church School 10 AJ6. teUrmadtata sod er. Youth t to S p. n.—Oldar Youth t:3d ta RIV^JAUUA kleCLUNO Minister ■0PCRVI8BO NURSERY-ALL SERVICES—AMPLE PARKINO EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH 212-Baldwin Avd. Phone FE 2-0728 Sunday School —0:46 AM. Worship—11 A.M. Sermon "The Protesunt Witness" The Youth Hour 5:46 P.M. Vesper—7:00 P.M. Sermon "The Privilege of Worship " Minister — Rev. M. R. Everett All Saints Episcapal Church Williams St. at W. Pikt 8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion 9:30 end 11:15 A,M.— „ Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rector. Church School. Tues. Nov. I—All Seinta Day. 7:00 A M. and 10 A M. Holy Communion ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 801 Commerce, Milford 8:CX) A.M.—Holy Communion 10:30 A M.—Morning Prayer and Sermon Church ^hdof ' 'TT- CLARKSTON MISSION will meet in Clarkston Elementary School, 6595 Weldon Rd. 9:15 A M. — Holy Communion and Sermon by the Rev. Plummer Whipple An experienced surgeon and minister of the Methodist Church. Dr. Weiss and his wife, a graduate nurse, have devoted their lives to the Orient. They were first assigned to a hospital In Western China, in 1939 where Dr. Weiss was chief surgeon and Mrs. Weiss trained nurses. I When the Japanese penetrated 'the area, they were out in a con-centration camp where their first child was born. Returning to the United States Dr. W’eiss then spent several years as a surgeon at Henry Ford Hospital. After the war they returned to China uAttl forced again Into a coacentniVon camp, this time by ltS4 Dr. ^ [l»ICn,AIT HOIJNWW ^----------- I Kvangelist Thomas Reed of Chi- Catherine Crozier of conducting revival n |i. ^11 . I meetings at the Beulah Holiness Rollins Collogo to Ployjchurch. 390 Osmun St. A repiv-Fir$t Concert in Series of Holiness churrhes!^ I in Cuba xxill preach at 'Ji.SO p.m ' •: Sunday. The Rev. J \V, Burgess,';-' Kirk-in-thc-llills will inaugurate pastor, said the public is invit-.l '• a special scries of five musical' y, serv ices with an organ recital by ‘ ' /•hrist Catherine Crozier at 4 p.m. Sun-( CHBiST , | day. A series of sermons will he pleached by Fi. R Harper, mln-i CHURCH of SPIRITUAL FELLaWSHiP MALTA HALL, 82 PERKfNS STREET Evening Service—Rev. Kay Cation of Detroit ..............No Servtca Nor. 3 Sunciay, Nov. 6—Guest Speoker OAKLAND PARK METHODIST CHURCH Montcalm and Glonwood Rav |. W Daog, Poitor Sunday Service 10:00 A. M. Sundoy School 11:15 A.M. j r>. , . < J ilsteijof Abilene. Tex. at the Sylvan' I Pnifcssm- of organ and organistchuixh of Christ. 1900 In-St. «t orchard Uk^J DR. KRNnST W. WKIS.S iRollins College. Winter Park, she has appeared- aa aoloiat at sev-/ era I conventions of the Amerli’an* Cuild (if organists and given re-| and • p.m. iluadi ,-(i4ats. throughout the Untted.StAies4 During J he week meetings .. Canada, England an# France. jhegin at 7:30 p m. "The (Jmrch' I ★ ★ ♦ iThat Cfrowa” will be the topic of! ' A featured artist on Kendall I*’'* morning sermon tomomw HI* , 1 Records. Miss Crosier was for- pming subject will he "Why li « ' merly head of the organ depart- IPtfttrh the Gospel of Christ." meni of the taistnian Rrhool of i "rrrnon themes In- ; ■lude "The Church That Je.xus FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchord Lako Avonua Rev. Harold Manhall. Paiter Harry Nichole, Preeldenl Sunday Evwning S*rvic*; Stanhy Guff, Spnakar Wed. Nov. 2 - - Rev. Marshall . I- .She is one of the first American organists to be reengaged for a recital in the Royal Festival Hall. London. Her program will include "Cha- ^ Korea la he»i the SeonI Ho. Oakland AVS. Currently he is trying to raise j Church to Greet funds to build a new medical com-, « • _ _ iplex which includes a much needed iV©W iVlemberS tuberculosis sanatorium, medical j college, nurses home, main hos-| New members will be welcomed|"Noel — Une Vierge Pueelle” oy pital and an amputee and polio! into the church and the sacrament jl-^Begue. "Noel Etranger” by Da-I project. jof Bapti.sm will be administered atlfluhi and "Fantasia and Fugue in ★ * * I the morning worship service $un-|G Minor " by Bach. Dr. Weiss was a classmate of j day in the Oakland Avenue United * ★ w -Dt. and Mrs. Milton Bank^^|Presbyterian Church. Built. " "The Church Thai lsaiahl| Saw." "Does Man Have a Choice? 'ji "Prayers That Changed 1 Courses of Man," and "Founda-1 tions of Life" I PROVIDE.VCK MUhlONARY ' The Organ Group of Providence conne in O Minor" by Couperin. Baldxl’in Wallace College. T h e Banks are in charge ot Central Methodist pastorate. iAttendance Contest Faces Final Session be "The HRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. H. H. Savage, D.D., Pastor ANNOUNCES Sunday School-9:45 a.m. Sunday School Contest (Treats This Sunday) Don't Miss the Sunday School Hour Attendance Last Sunday LI 31 Marning Warship-10:45 a.m. "When the Lamb Becomes A Lion" (A challenge for every member of the church) Evening Service-7:CX) )d. m. DR. H. H SAVAGE will speak on the subject "Why Did BAartin Luther Leave the Roman Catholic Church?" "What Was the Cause of the Protestant Reformation?" Don't Miss These autstonding Services Will be the topic of the Pioneer „ Tomorrow will be the final day-Youth Group when they meet al|^ of the .Sunday .School Attendance!3:43 p.m. Sunday. Contest at the United Presbyterian Church in Auburn Heights. The r Other number* will * * ! Burning Bush" by Berlinski, William Coffing will direct Iheitorale" by Jean Jules Roger —' Junior and Adult choirs in the;Ducaa.se, /"Toccata” by .Sowerby anthem, "Blessed Are They" by land Jean Langlais" "Dialogue Sur. Staley. Mixtures" and "Arabe.sque. * iSurica limes.'.', At the Throne of Grace" will! A ★ * be the theme of the BtiHders Youth! Th- -R.„ai«aw™ h. r.h» 1 performance* hy the Kirk (3»lr. jgueat soloists and iiMtrumentalMR. | The program* under the di-' At 7 p.m. the feorth Is the le- rection of Phillip SteinK-ius. oi-' ries af films an “The life af .ganist, choirmaster and cariiloo-i ChrWt" wUI be presented. ncur. i The picture coficerns the three! Handefs "Messiah'' nifl be ' temptations in the wilderness, the presented on .Vov. * at the same calling of the first dis<-iples on the hour. j monumental works of tlw^ Sr^PefeK. eompo«.rs were ortgidally’ of Petey s home. ^ performed amid the' * * * soaring splendor of Cmthlc archi-. The second in the scries of train--lecture, said Dr. Harold C De ing sessions for Pioneer Girl* Windt. minister. j guides will be held in Fellowship' ★ # Tbriw itIld'Hd^rs'"ti^' lees and officera elected. jA. U^Iade^ field representative, propriate setting in which to under-.Will be in cnATS^. 'tsk# such s DroflrrAm " The training session (or the Ev- ---------------------- -■■»** au^ajprogram. eiy Member Canvass xvill be held Missionary Baptist Church is sp. soring a Russian tea at 4 p.m. I •Sunday in the church hall. Dr. Jlenry Jenkins will be guest speaker Mrs. Bernice Hardy of D**ti -it will give a reading and Walter Mootnvill present a lolo. Central MetFiodist HURON ot PERRY MILTON H. BANK, P«tor D. I. WAUACE emd |. H. HALL Aasoc. Paator. Morning Worship 8:30-10:45 BROADCAST OVER WPON 11:00 A. M. "THE LIGHT THAT NEVER FAILS" E)r. Bank Preaching Church School 9 45 A M. Youth Fallowthip 6 00 and 8 00 PM, i KEEGO HARBOR BAPTIST CHURCH nil a. Coe* Lafc* Road SUNDAY 8CHO. M goal is set 1 The pastor's sermon. "God's Hand on My Head." will concern the doctrines of the Protestant Reformation at 11:13 Sunday morning. The fall e*sgregati«iial meeting will be held following the felloHshIp supper at 6:38 p.m. Wednesday. Action will be taken an suggested ebange* in the at 7:30 p.m. Hmrsday. The executive committee of the; Women's Asaoc^tion will meet at; 7:30 pjB. Monflay with Mrs. Or-| vin Weaver presidiiig. nOOMFIELO HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH Temporarily Maoting: Hickory Grove School LahMr. asnfh of Sqnara Lokt Kd SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.mT MORNING WORSHIP EVENING WORSHIP 6 P.M. PRAYER MEETING (Wadne«lay) 7:30 P.M. ■ Ifaelot: The Revl Wallace Arthur Alcorn FE 8-1992 FIRST (^IURCHt^'eNAZARENE 60 STATE STREET Sunday School 9 45 A.M. Morning Womhip ,11:00 A.M, REFORMATION DAY SERMON ATT 1:00 A.M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP—6:00 P.M. EVENING SERVICE—7:00 P.M. SERMON AT 7:00 "THE CERTAINTIES OF ST. PAUL" COMING SUNDAY NIGHT. NOyEMBER 6th THE AMBASSADOR "QUARTET 7:00 P.M. HAY CLmtDnfON. Vsuth fer Chrlil Olrrrter la Thi la Bl| Youia Rally StrylCT J. a. VAR AtXgN. Pa«tat PICK MOnTM. MlalaU CHURCH OF CHRIST •7 i.APAYrrrt ST. >nit Womblp t» tht Early Lord'i Day tvanlng WtSatidty Irtnlnf . t«:3« A.M. 1M P U. 7:M P M. 68 W. Walton FE 2-7239 Marimont Baptist Church Sundoy School ...... ..............iQ A.M. Morning Service ...................|) A.M. ‘The Supremity of Chrht" Youth Group...................... 6:30 P.M, Evening Service ..................7;30 P.M. *^Ungodly SUenee'^ y Rev. Somer.%, Preaching Marimont Baptist (3iurch Invites you to Hear Dr. fames Mercer Sunday, November 6th Through Nov. 13th NIGHTLY 7:30 P. M. Sunday Morning at 11:00 A.M. Emmanuel Baptist Church S. Telegraph Road 645 DR. K. DR. L. 10 A.M. FREDRICK, speaking n A.M. BUTCHER, speaking 7:30 P.M. REV. WM. FITZWATER Special Music Radio flfroodcost WPON 10:15 A.M. Eoch Sundoy Midweek / ’ Service. Wed. . 7:30 P M. Sunday School .ittendance Last Sunday 14M DR. TOM MALONI, PASTOK EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS.. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 29, 1960 Rational Lutheran Council Churches ASCENSION « WATERFORD am PoBUM uk» Rd. Wb. LaTouniofn, PoBtet CHURCH SERVICE 9.00 A M SUNDAY SCHOOL lODO KM. CHURCH SaVTCE 11.00 A M. CHRIST of the LAKES WHITE LAKE TWP. •581 BtebHh Uka M. Ivan C. Pass. Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:15. A M. CHURCH SERVICE 10 JO A M SYLVAN LAKE Plft, off Orchard Lake Poslot Clark UcPharl SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A M SERVICES .......IlOO A M CHRIST WATERFORD TWP Airport at Wllltama Uka Rd. Arvid £. Andarion, Pdafor WORSHIP 11 AM. SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 AM BEAUTIFUL SAVIOUR Donald G. Zill, Pastor 8:30 and II AM. Sunday School .... 9:30 A.M. ST. JOHN'S PONTIAC ST Hill 8t. at Cherry St. Clurlai A. Celban. Padar SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45'A M. CHURCH SERVICE II ;00 A.M. CALVARY CLARKSTON Clarkaton .Clemantary School ---Pastor Paul Kjohnn SERVICE .......9:30 AM. CHURCH SERVICE 11:00 A M. Reorganised churOi of IISUS CHWST of Latter Oey Salnta I . Seatlae « •■Taa* UNITY’ Ki t-iial •:as AM. Sli^y School " 10 A M Momlni Worahip out Paalm Tuerday 7;» PM "Plnding the ChrLit In Ourseivea' Thum. 7:45 P.M Leaaona In Truth Mafjorle Sutllfr, teacher UlaitUr 10 A.M. SUMDAY school 11 A.M. WORSHIP HOUR 7 P.M. WORSHIP HOUR Indiviclualism Periled' NEW YORK US ^ “ChrMtan in-IvldnlfaBit ia betec tbreotowd lo V nwaa aodety." aem Dr. Perry E. Greemm, preaident of Bethany OoUege, Bethany. W. Va. He told n dinner meetlnf here lat “bi an nge when conformity and concettviat tendencies obacutv the righu and dotiM at one person under Ood,'- the church must relnfarce the “Christlaa indtvM* ualism of the New TesUnnent.” Try God’s Way far Am wIA larrewiag "Him Cometh to Me I Will In No Wile Calf Out" ________________________JAiJlilI.. Sunday School 9:45 A. M. Morning Service 11 A. M. Evening Service 7 P. M. Sunday School 10 A.M. Worship Hour n A M. Piloriiti Youth ^15 P.M. img 7:00 P.M. Michigan Temperance Foundot ion'j Speo ke r: Rev. James Kovonagl Poy the Piper" 35 Minute Color Film PILGRIM HOLINESS CHURCH BALDWIN AND FAIRMOUNT FARRWRI.I. RKPEPTIOV - t.envlnr St. Vinrent de Paul Calhollc Church Inr the St. .loseph Puriih in Erie ix RMlxtant pax-tor, Ihe Rev. Jamex Shorhan. Alicndint; his farewell reception in the pariah hall this week were (fmm lefti Mrs. Lupe Paramo of 204 hVanklin Road, pn'sideni of the ladies of Guadalupe; David r*aUt« rr*M rkat* Gar/e of 279 Hairison St., president of the senior class of St. Frederick 5k'hool: Father .Sheehan: Dan Scully of 84 Alfred Q.; and .lohn R. Monte of 2987 Edgefield Drive, president of the Legion of .Mary. Fr. Sheehan works’with the Spanish speaking people. - 4 4th Discussion Set for Bethany Congo Rioters a Minority,i||'jnjfy Qhoif Missionary Declares , ^ir r to Offer Concert ALLIANCE CHURCH L B. W. UNFHIR. Am't Pottos Only a small minority of Afri-;"the Congolese have been kind to, r A u*ll B • *" *'^^'*** Congo have the mis.sionaries whom they regard | CrSSCSnt Hills Baptist gone on a rampage, the Rev. Don-las their friends an«l have pro-1 nrelinnnrmUl^ *'■ declared Ui»t weekitected many of them from ma- sjDservmg '^rainancBj^^ soldiers." Be- of Holy Baptism iLeopoldvlUe. They caught the last'cause they are mostly Belgians.' 'plane out before the airport wasjthe Roman Catholic missionaries! closed July 6, to begin their sched-;have h.ad a more difficult time! AArs. Roy Cummings Will B* Guest Soloist With Senior Group j ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH WELCOMES YOU 8 A.M.—Holy Communion 9:30 A.M.ojid 11:15 A.M. Morning Prayer and Church School OrsytoB PtelB*, lUchlfea Congressman William .S. Broomfield will be speaker at the Adult Forum at 7 p.m. Sunday in Bethany Baptist Church. This represents the fourth in the series of discussions on "The Church the Coming Election." uled year’s furlough as mission-i than Protestants from Europe and ^ Senior Choir of Trinity Bap-,tries of the Presbyterian Church the U.S. |l‘*t Church will present a concert " " I uuring the uprising In Leopold- '<>' *’ymns. anthems, classical and \1lle tn January 1M», he con- spiritual numbers at 8 p.m. Sun-J I tinued, the people b^ged the day. j I niiNNionaries not to leave. * * ♦ EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE Sunday School 10 a.m. Claasaa lor all ages! Praoching 11 a.m. A 7:30 p.m. Youth at 6:30 p.m. • Radio - CKLW 7:30 a.m., 800 kc in Detroit I The ordinance of Baptsim will be observed at the 11 o’clock w'or-I ship hour Sunday with Connie jLudwick. youth assistant. Harold Davies will assist at tlie 8:40 morning service. "In general," Mr. Bobb said,' Staff Members Linguistic Group However, tensions between the! Guest soloist will be Mrs. Roy: Balubas, who are better educated jcummlngs. wife of the pastor of| and more capable than their rivals, I Messiah Statist Church. | Luluas, have made it prudent! Foul Towni METHODIST CHURCH OOOLST LAin RD. St LOCKRAVSN Rev. w. CsSBiSB Prout. PsMor Sunday School .. 9:45 A.M. Church Service . IJjOp A,M. LUTHERAN CHURCHES St. ■ Mark Wn Oonaaeree Road (Wm* MeealMJ TewMMet Win. C. Grofe, Pastor Church Service .... 8:45A.M. Sunday School . .. 9.45A.M. Church Servica .... 11:15 A M. Cedar Crest Fhrasworth off .UBion U. R4. (Next te OubllB SelioBi Howard E. Claycombo. Paotai Swvices at 8:30 A.M and 11 A.M. Sunday Sdwol 9:45 A.M. Grace I O^er Ocnesee and Ofleniale I Richortf C. Stuckmoyor, Pe Church Sarvlca , .,. 9:00 A.M. | Sundoy Sdiool .... 0:00 A.M. | Church Servica____11:00 A.M. I Sunday School . . .11:00 AM. | St. Stephen Sashabaw at Kempf Guy B. SmiOi. Paotor St. Trinity Auburn at Jessie Ralph C. Clatit, Pastor | Sunday School ____9:45 A.M. I Firef ^rvloe ..... 8:30 A.M. C Second Service , ll:00A.M. 1 St. Paul Joelyn at Third Georg# Mahdor, Pastor Morning Servica ... 10:45 A.M. I Sunday Sdiool .... 0:00A.M.| Cross of Christ! Bloomfield Township Square Lake and Tale^ph | Rev. Dolayno Pauling | Church Servica_____9:45 A M. i Sunday ^ool _______11:00 A.M. | V for many missionaries to send Minister af music at her their wives and children to neigh-1 la aeaiMat diraetor b&rtnjTsamrtes, tsut moat of the! Apostolic Church of Christ 458 Central Young People Soturdoy — 7:30 P. M. Sundoy School ond Worship 10:00 P. M. Sunday Evening Service______ 7:30 P. M. Services Tuas. ond Thurs. 7:30 P. M. Church Phone FE 5-8361 UL 2-5142 i Bishop L A. Parsnt Psrtat. Paitor Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Quye will sing a “®« “> «h»dy m those countries. l elade a hvmn sing led bv Ralph !**'« Church World Service accounts I Mr. Babb added that It Is Bergemanu and a medHatlan an I who knows Dutch, French, Ger-1 kmma that a tmall group af “Ule’a Interruption*” bv Dr p'®"* Indoneaian and ItaHan. Six, Ruaalaa techaldana Is warfclug Chapman. Youth aariataut* will mem^rs speak four lan-i In lha eauulry. ha Jim Hall and Jean Dawson. ,«®™ *'“• ®* ‘®*“* The Rev. Theodore L. ’Tucker, ^ ^ ^ jl2 speak three. Letters to the National Connell In Hindu and either Mandarin direction of Levi Eubanks, who; iaiso serves as minister of music ^ said Mr. Bobb, at the Second Baptist Church of; Detroit and as director of the Oty-wide Choir Union. with the choir and congregationn singing "Lift Every Voice and Sing." "The Lord’s Prayer" wfll follow. if Ommtf. I WED,. 7:M P M PRATER OROUPS AND YOUTH CHOIR Wo cordially-invits you to worship with us FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 14* N. last BIsd. Pontikc. MIcbllAB Pulor, O. P Butmaa Otfk*: PS 4-III1 Pinenac*. (31 Brnaon RMidtBM; PS 5-«f— Announcement Is made by-department of radio and television of the American Baptist Convention in New York that the Bethany pastor will be the featured speaker on a nationwide broadcast of the Baptist Laymen’s Hour on Nov 20 and again on Nov. 27. Jestts Christ Is Lord" wilt he his first topic and "Thank You ,Very Much” will he the theme of the second groadeasl. hy two people la « Three can reply In Japaneoe (one of them adds Korean) and alx FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN 46 NORTH ROSELAWN aCTdarhetwof *7 RrY DrVtWt Pine Hill Church Names Sunday School Staff The three Scandinavian languages are represented by eight potential translators, while Estonian, Latvian and Finnish are claimed by one each. Communications from Poland, Yugoslavia and Hungary are directed to , one ^ more of five Staff members wl formeriy lived in those countries. The Romance languages, Ger-> , • ^ man and Dutch are spoken by some,PresbyteriOns ID CuDO executive secretary of the Africa Committee of the National Council’s Division of Foreign Missions, stated that, as of last week, reports of violence in Kimpese and other mission stations could not be confirmed but that the Committee was keeping in close touch the situation. The Sunday program will < FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 3411 AIRPORT ROAD Sunday School ...............lO.-OO/b.M. Worship Service..............11 00 AM. WedrMsday Prayer Service .... 7:30 P.M. Evangelistic Service ........ 7:30 P.M. Ample Parking — Supervised Nursery The choir will sing "Morning ” by Speaks. “Sundown" by Wllsofi and “Thanks Be to God” by NoNe :Cain. Numbers will also include “My God and I” by Sergei. "Go Not Far From Me, 0 Lord” by Mor-| gan and Farmer's "Great and^ Marvelous” from the Mass in B flat •Usten la tba Lambs” by Detl and **Ava Marla” by Finley * Blegger. Other numbers will be "Honor. .. brief report from Church Honor" by Johnson. "His Nan» World Servtee says that anotheriSo Sweet” by Johnson, and Shaw s shipload of .surplus foods for the “King of Kings” and "Set Down Congo is on its way to the port of |Servant." ^ ^ ^ Matadi, which has been closed j j. j The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. Lowionc* Street Sunday Sch'l 9:4S a.m. Young Peopla'i Legion 6 p.m Mom'g Worship II a.m. Evangelistic Mtg. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. CAPTAIN and MRS. I. WILLIAM HEAVER Good Muaic — Singing — Frua to tho Word Proaching God Meets With Us — You Too, Are Invited .during the disturbances but is i Ipected to reopen this week. The program will close with, ' |‘‘The Lfl«d Bless You and Keep! You” by Lutkin. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HURON AT WAYNf or all of 64 National Council On* nf Pnllfirc in the offices of the Division of ^®®P POlltiCS Chrlittan Workers klacUBg. 1___ Xssemtrs a«T,tiiT from Laiumf «*rt» a C No, 3rd throudh 13th—1 30 Nl»htly. REV. LEROT SHAFER. Piiti Christian Temple, SOS Auburn Ave. I Dr. Lola P. Marlon. Pastor I Rev. James Maddox, Assistant Rev John McKinney. Assistant' A Special Wa/coma Awaits You • 45 t* ll;3* A If .-Communhm and Wonhlp 8rnrlc* 11:45 to 13:15 A.3I—Sundar School Clones All Ages 1:30 P.5(.—Touat Pco0lc'i Scrvlc* 3:tt F.M.—ErangoUstle Borvlca Foreign Missions. Church World Richartr Hulbert will conduct thejService and others. Including the 1 a m. service at Pine Hill.Coin Service Center and Business Office, gregational Church. Services, are la addItloB. twa are at kama la held at Ihe Pine Lake Elemenlarv! Anrtrte ami two itt Turfclab. .School on West Lake Road. : milcl The increasing volume of mad west of Middle Belt Riiad ian<* literature to the National Coun-| NEW YORK liS—Presbyterians in Cuba are keeping on the nonpartisan sidelines in the country’s present poTltical ferment. The Rev. I)r: Kennelh:G. Neigh, head of M-tional missions for the United Congolese Do Well' "Watortord Township's Amaricon BaplitI Church" CRESCENT HiLLS BAPTIST Crascant Laka Road naar Hatchary Rood Worship 10 AM. 11 AM. Sunday School Laigt Parking Lot Nursery During AU Services R*v. Rakart L. Adaaa Pastor Dr. Alfred D. Grey, minister will preach on "The Cultivation of En-ithusiasm." The Soaday School atalt of the newly organised congregation under the direction of .Mrs. Don-nid Batty la composed of Mrs. Robert Wuaacbe, Mrs. C. J. Kirkwood, Mr*, (ieorge Pantuik and Satan Heavely. Others are Sandra Georgeff.l Heidi Hulbert. Susan Cgnwell andjQonateS tO Soviet Church Donald Batty. and literature to me ^allonal t-oun-ip^pshyterians. .said: cil from abroad occasion^ this; • Presbyterians in Cuba. 1 survey by the pereonnel ottice l .'“^'historic Protestant principles In-^ listed in the first NCC Translator Directory. the scriptures and ihe work and Several staff members are of the church, and the, merrefugres. a few have served ;p^byterian Church in Cuba is in the Far East and Latin Amencaihoidi the inherent Prot- M miasionj^es one was tore in L,t^^ separaUon of! rana of Greek parents and oneLhureh LlTate.’’ | Americtm once taught in a Polish ' university. ' FAYETTEVILLE. Ark. UR - A report to a Methodist mtMionsiy| .conference here said that "capaUe and dedicated ” Congolese Christian leaders, trained by American mis-' sienaries. are carrying Oil the church work there since disorders caused foreign missionaries to I leave the country. ; BETHEL TABERNACLE mrrt Ptnlwotl Church M Paotla* SB. 10 s.m. Worship 11 a Evangelistic Service 7:00 pm. Tues. and Thurs.. 7:00 pm. CHURCHES of CHRIST Members and families of the congregation will meet for a operative fellowship dinner at 6:.30 p.m. Friday at West Bloomfield Usten to tba “Herald of Truth" Each Sunday CKLW TV 8 dO A.M. WXYZ 8 K)0 P.M. SYLVAN LAKE •Me School 9.-45 A M Morning Wonidp l0:45 A M. Evening Sarvka • F.M. Wad Night Bible Ossses 7:30 P M PONTIAC lias N. PerTT et. W. W. Hall, ailalster PS 3-0389 Bibla Study 9:50 P.M Classes for All Ages Morning Worship 10:50 A.M. Evening Worship 6 P.M. Wed. Bible Study 7:30 P.M LAKE ORION W. A. Luckftt. lIlBUtcr \ 1080 H*"t"M^ey Rd. off Oarkston Rd. MM* Study $un. 9:45 A M. Tuas. 7:30 P.M. Weri^ 10:45 AM. 600 P.M. MOSCOW American pianist, Van Cliburn has made a contribu-' tion of 80.000 rubles to the Moscow Baptist church. The money was part of the receipts from his r3-| cent concert tour of the Soviet! Unkin. uoiumoia Avenue g i BAPTIST I rmiRCH }. Sunday School ...........................9:45 A. M. Momlnu Worship .........................10:55 A. M. ligiat Shall I Believe About SaWotion '. Trcdning Union ..........................6:30 P., M. Evening Service .........................7:30 P. M. ■ ' Sounding the Trumpet ” REV ISARION r BOYD JR .MlnliUr / CURXRCS a. JACKSON. tUnItur of XdaeatloB ' ‘“•“-“•a with eoutbam Baptlat Couvealloa Membership Orsr t.SM.Me Youth Rally Tonight First Free Methodist Church 501 Mt. Clemens St. ieoturing A1 and Welsh Vivian Singors Rev, IfMenh C. Black Vivian Welsh rvangohat OPENING REVIVAL SERVICES Oct. 29th thru Nov. 6th REV. JOSEPH C. BLACK, Evangelist AL and VIVIAN'WELSH^ Singers Sundoy Services—Sunday School tO A. M Worship Services 11 A. M. ond 7 P. M. Mofidoy thru Saturday—7:30 P. M. LVAL H. HOWLSON. Pastor Tamiliar Bible Texts" Roosevtit Wilts, Ministar CHURCH CALENDAR Brrmon sad Wonhlp.......11:SS A M. Eve. Werfhip and Bormod.. 7:S0 F.M. Bible Study TuMdsy ..... S:M F.M. "Trust In the Lord with an thlnt heart and lean nM unto thine own under, atandlng" Fro. 3'Jf. "TRlROe TO CON81D1R ABOVT Poooorolt WoUt eeniider toe latter pert Of this ---* "LEAH NOT CKTO------- part. "LB Bolomon i Laat peek thli game testvai uaed at OUT FAMtUAR »»Lt TBKT. at that tltee. bowerer. 1 dUeiuwd the flrtt part of thli T»r»e. tn thli itMy I ibnU sTor It ii Pi ilgntflcant t* th* ronntr _ _.VN UMDIRaTANDINO" (Fro. 3:8) aay* ----------------------rooirratloa knovlsf tSu t« M tM^prm eonrie to punne unfortunaloly. ^vtrer, nito haw not adberad te w admirable admonition ind hare pfimged Into tho deeenorat* inarae of aett-dioeptlon. Tho dovnfaU of man In aU too mav taataneat aan ha dlraetly ?.*sS tWheMJb^lg'SIP^lJSJiS^ SBLF-IUUANCB AMD a&F-BLiVATIOR AM KOADB TO RUIR. For vhenevtr man tonclndta that Ood la net th* aotbar and haatewar of good and that bo eon Ur* at good atthent Ood gt alth Him and that ho (man) _..j‘BjSftriBM" .... “ONE FAITH" (Bah. *:*)_ "ONB BOOT OR atDIICnB" ________________________________________ RMEuSoH JSjrSfr^iSSSo^ me MdnF M ....... Kfyttaiim, " |g|h. «;*, <^. l:Ml Many hadiot or ehurthet .om. 1:4) Bprlnklad n bapUtin ie:l*) Battera OMtT can ijf?HrL5K‘'s:t*^or^^ rhJii WN”o83tIU^WDtI^*Mnwra AR*'^fo8*‘*DOnl^•'^Sy ^ •ay with Faul. "For do I now periuade man. or Oedt or do I Mh to pltaM mn? ‘jtylM^et^leewd^n, I thoold aet he the aerraht of Chi1ft.‘'^Oal. CHURCH OF CHRIST For furthor informa^oo^call FE or writm to bolow. 210 Hughes St., Pontiof,|'Michigan THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 29. >l>60 jpg- YOU'LL ALWAYS SAVE AT THE TREMENDOUS SELECTION AND MONEY SAVING PRICES ON FAMOUS 932 WEST HURON Wall or Table Top Aufromatic ELECTBIC CAN OPENER I 10 Quolity Feotures Regular *24SS LIFE Bay N«w •I UyMiy FOR CHRISTMAS BE SURE TO SEE OUR COMPLETE SHAVER LINE INCLUDING ^ THE ^ NEW ELECTROMATIC Ttw flrtt and only ahavor with Rolltr Combs ^Remington Princess that adjust to ^ board and akin. ^Remington ^Remington Auto Home TRADE PRICED Loyowoys Furnace Filters With hKt«fia NfltHnt Htxi-tl»f»lnw 0 w • «t - C«niiM| 0«*»*SlO9 nharaln. 47- Combinotion Aluminum BASEMENT WINDOWS WITH SCREEN AND GLASS Pratfe Automatic $259 Sj99 HOT DOGGER Cooks G Franks in Only 60 Soconds Honkscroft VAPORIZER Automatic Shutoff Lady Soymor 9-POSITION IRONING BOARD iVSs Now Make Music in Minutes Without Lessons With the MAGNUS MADE IN U.S.A. Sss All ths Nsw MoAsIt Priesi frsn ...... 195 WHILE THSY LAST Odds and Ends KING SIZE TV TABLES PftwfllM «r MWal Man's or Ladies' WALLETS S^29 VahMt t« $2.9t Your Ckoko lOOKATTHESEI TOYLAND VALUES ‘6& YNII CHOKE Childrani' TOOL SET... 6& PAINT-BY- NUMBER SET JUMBO COLORING BOOKS 66° IP's Tha LoPetf miKIENLU TRADE*rAIR .^•'^ChaPoettrDoHs 12 Modaig tour flgmHnA CHOICE SC88 Ws Think TRADE FAIR’S SELECTION of Dolls Is Th« URGEST IN TOWN '■ h : ' . TEN THE PON*tlAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29. 1960 Says Jews Kept Out of Executive Jobs DAU-AS. TVx. (APi-Dttcriml-.Mtory htiiiic practices in Ameii-can corporatim ,have excluded numerous Jea-s from top executive positions, the head of the American Jewish Committee said Thursday. Jews conatlhite less than one half of one per c«it of the total American In^triAl companies." Dr. John Slawaon told committee during its second day of meetings here. * * ♦ Slawson said about eight per cent of the coilege4rained population in the country is Jewish and that managerial staffs are choaen largely from among college graduates. Only » per cent of the nation') paper is recovered after uwe. Strand — MOW PLAYIMG --- THEiE HAS NOT lEEN Jl WOTIOW PICTURE LUllf LAXr SHOW TONIGHT AT 11:00 f.M. ANNE FRANCIS LLOYD NOLAN KAY MEDFORD JOHN KERR snciu ACADiUT AWAU SHO»T "THE GOLDEN FISH" IntegralkfflRgMJSJw FIERY ORATOR—Burt Lancaster rams home r a point in the controversial movie, 'Elmer Gantry." now playing in the Pontjac area. The Sin- 'Elmei Gantry' Movie Center of Controversy Community Theaters SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT '' STARTING FRIDAY 6 PERFORMANCES COLI PORTIRS “CAI^-CAIV” One of the most c-onli-overslal! noN'cls in American literature has at last been made into a movie, 30 odd years after its first publication. The novel is "Elmer Gan-iry," the author is Sinclair Lewis, first American ever to win the Nobel Priie for literature, film adaptation is now playing in the area. ★ « * "Elmer Gantry." stars Burt Lao caster and Jean Simmons, stars Arthur Kennedy, Shirley Jones, Dean Jagger and Patti Page (making her debut in a dramatic role). * * W TTie screenplay of "Elmer Gantry" was written and directed by Richard Brooks, and produced by Bernard Smith. The pubticadon of "Elmer Gantry,” the story of a spell-’ binding evangelist, led to an Immediate storm of protest which has still not entirely abated; and to n lew—but Importantly placed —lusty cheers. H. L. Mencken, in this latter group, thought the novel even hotter than "Babbitt. ' Cart Van Doren, in appraising , the book, which he liked very much, also predicted the nature and extend of the controversy it would arouse. w n ★ "Thousands of tongues and ns." wrote the eminent critic, r not fists, will debate. . . tornado of applause, boos, hisses, may shortly be expected ..." •‘‘Elmer ■ Gantry”- started’otf—tn prophetic fashion. It was chosen as one of the first selections of the Book of the Month diib, and It tvas ciiosen as one of the fir I books to he banned in Boslc*i. In the next months. Lews and; , Hllli — SMSfiUr 8st "0 11.' Prtnk ainitr Df*n Mirttn. Ssmrar 0«vl» Or., «el«r i 8an -W«d : Let'« Mskr Lovt.’ Ml U, WII 1. 1 J . J , Irn Monrof. Yv»» Monl«n<1 nis publisher received thousands ofi Thur* -a«t to* iA>t v«ysc«." Robert letters of condemnation, vitupera- KS". **“ "on and threat. . . , . “••'T - ^ ' ! tat -aun Let'k Usk« Lovt ," MkrUya a h A ; Monroe, Yvet Montond .. I Pri -aet : Who Wee Thit UiyV These, it haixHy need he added,iTony curtu. Jenet^uigh did not hurt the sale of the novel, i a»t.: -But Not for*Me," CUrk Oable, Nor did they prcs’cnt the Nohelj5r,V/,“{,.^,';"' ‘ “> * PriEe committee from citing S''*"'' '■irin,.. < ,1. *““■ RoP*” Uy»n. color; "Coit o Ions Llmer Gantry as one of the ansdow. ' Audie Murphy reasons Whv it w»s "Oceon'e 11,' Frtnk Slnotro, Iianuns wny u was awaroingpesn Martin, Btmmy Oavla Jr., color this highest of all literary prizes to .. wiiord , . ' I Sat ; -Dlnoiaiirut." ward Ramiey, Color; "Jin* Money." Bowrry Boy» ! Sun.-Tue* ; Belli Are RlnstnE." Dean Martin, .ludy HolldaT color Sukarno Visits HOPE Tu«diy®weid."‘''’ " Says Nogroes Mutf Ba Roady to Suffer in war Against Segregation ATLANTA, G*. (Al»>-Iiitegr». tton leader Uartin Luther King Jr. •ays Negivee must “maater the art ol creative suffering" to push their fight against segregatton. "We must be prepared to suffer, sacrifice and /ven die.” he Thursday night after spending i eight days in jail in connectioirj with Atlanta sit-in demonstrations and a trafflf charge in nearby De-' Kalb County. a * ♦ "We niust continue to have thei courage to challenge the system; of aegyegation,'’ he deefared, j 'whether ft V in schools, public parks, Christian churches, lunch counters or public libraries.’’ King spoke to aout 800 (wraons attending a "thanksgiving prayer service” at the Ebenezer Baptist church shortly after bis release from the Georgia State Prison at Reidsville. I’RGBS TOUGWERS The exponent of nonviolence called on his followers not to rest until we have achieved the ideals Of our democracy.”' King's father, the Rev. Martin Luther King Sr., co-pastor of the church, announced during meeting that he was switching his vote and support to Sen. John F. Kennedy because of the Democratic presidential candidate’s interest in his son’s case. Lewis. " Bint Croiby. JAKARTA. Indonesi.1, dent Sukarno paid a one-hour visit. ci»rk. xuudny ’ otr OkUrS ‘Occkn’i 11.” rnnk Blni-•— Sammy_pay)i Jr. color Friday to the American flomiugj hospital center, HOPE, then lie I The first bridge across the Ar-vislted for an hour at the Soviet Kansas River—the Baring Cross Sputnik Industrial Exhibition Hall j Bridge at Little Rock-was com-ipleted in 1873. The pastor said he had opposed Kennedy because he is a Roman Catholic until Kennedy'telephoned daughter-in-law Tuesday to express sympathy about the jail sentence. "It took courage to call at a time like thi.s," the pastor said. 'Kennedy has the moral courage to stand up for what he knows is right.” Total eclipse of the sun occurs when the moon comes between sun and earth. NOW! thru MON. OWL SHOW ■ TONITE —» Starts 10:00 P.M. iHEFiEHy Sommitof Spectacle! ItaELAsrDjiYSorPDMPEn Aa KAUFFMAN ■ Barbara CARROLL - anne marie BAUMANN Pl[)S "BOT AND THE lAUGHING DOG ________WITH WALTER BRENNAN SPECIAL HALLOWEEN BONUS SHOW MONDAY NJTE OCTOBER 31ST S«e our entire regaior program , ond ot 11:00 P.M.... tOlUGE CONnDENTIAl" _____J___oil tor ono admUtion pricot lYOW SHOWIIVC FIRST TIME In OAKLAND COUNTY $. Tehgrapk it Si|«art Laka td. ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS No Extra Chorga ADDED EXTRA! DOROTHY MALONE in "FRONTIER DAYS" ---- EXTRA! TONIGHT!; ALL YOUR FAVORITE CARTOONS KAltTDOli PABTT -rFREE!-FREE!- CDEB^and DONUTS SUNDAY AND * MONDAY ONLY MMdncMIrRUWiCinU 2nd FEATURE THE 1>0NT1AC PRESS. SATURDAY^ OCTOBER 29. 19«0 ELEVEN Pontiac Theaters EAGLE • Tht Us|t Day» ,, Pom^fii, Steve Raeves; ••'The Bey And the Laughing Dog,” Walter TUe-Thu.; "CoUege Confidential.” Steve Allen. Mamie Van-Doren; "The Apartment,”. Jack Lemmon, Sh&tey MacLatate. ■USON SaUThu.: The Last Angiy Man,” Paul Muni, David Wayne; “Milter Roberts,” Henry iFonda, James Cagney. Color. STEAND Sat.: “Girl of the Night," Anne Francis. Lloyd Nolan. John Kerr. Und*rdeveloped Nations Advistfr Named by Jack BETHLEHEM Pa. W»-Demo-rratic presidential candidate John F. Kennedy has named Dr. Walter Adams of Michigan State University as a spMial adviser on. student exchanges and tiKhnical hssBtance to underdeveloped countries. Adams, a professor of economics, formerly was a consultant to the Senate Small Business (Committee while Kennedy was a member. UPI»—Louis "Satchmo" Arm strong came, saw and ('onquered this .unhappy city FYiday with-firing h note. It was crasy WELCOME HOME. NANCV-Miss America, Nancy Ann Fleming, waves to her old friends and neighbors Friday in Montague as she arrives h«ne from her triumphs. They planned a big homecoming parade and celebration lor their gal. Satchmo Visits Congo, Cries: Dig Them Cats LBX>P0LDV1LLE,* t h e Congoiloved the spectacle. Thc^nd.P£ STM D FBLCAm-SMlkflNrlvllAN[IN 1 ' TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 29, 1960 Benefit Perforaianccs Will Be Held Wednesday arid Thurtday Feverish Final Rehearsal for Those Nifty '60r Follies The pretty chorines for “Hi Fever Follies of Sixty" include high kickers (front left) Sue 'Rogers of Miami Road, Sydney Swindells of Taylor Street, Gretchen Gaenshauer of Illinois Avenue, Roz Surowitz of West Iroquois Road, MarilywCoffing of Poatiae Drive, rmi|M rrm Fkct** tr U vtsdtrwwf Carolyn Gaenshauer of Illinois Avenue, Andrea Allen of Navajo Drive, Joan Grahek of Wenonah Drive and Cindy Hiltz of Ottawa Drive. The annual benefit performance will be Wednesday and Thursday at 8:30 p.m. at Pontiac Northern High School. Husband Thinks Wife Was Rude By EMILY POST Dear Mrs. Post: A business acquaintance of my husband’s —a man I had never met— dropped in one evening to, see my husband, who ushered hhn inio the living room where I was seated and introduced him to me. As conversa.ion was mostly about business matters and people I did not know, after about fifteen minutes I excused myaetr. and said good night and went to my room to read. Afterward, my husband told me that I was vary rude to the - visiter In having left the naom. Was I really i-ude? Answer: If they were having a serious business talk, then you would have been quite right to leave. If they were merely talking casually, your leaving the room was certainly not very courteous. Dear Mrs. Post: My husband and 1 are both in our early forties. He has a brother la the early twenties who is going to be married soon and my be his best man. His bride-to-be has asked me to be a bridesmaid. I appreciate her asking but —Heet the age difference be-tween me and her other young friends who will be bridesmaids is too great and I certainly feel out of place. Could I possibly refuse to take part without hurting her feelings? Answer: I understand your feelings perfectly and it would not be wrong to explain to the bride-to-be that you appreciate her wanting you as one of her ' Jack Sampson of Pioneer Drive (at left) and Mrs. Kay Stephenson of Ar-gyle Avenue plunge into their comedy act with enthusiasm at final week of rehearsals for “Hi Fever Follies of Sixty." They are among the many in comedy routines highlighting the annual musical production. Womens Section Speak Up, Gals, for Your Equality By GAY PAIXEY NEW YOEK (UPI) - Speak up, ladies. It's the only way you’ll get that equality of the sexes ao many of you seek. Now, there may be some of you who don’t want equality with the men. But these are just beyond the understanding or compre^nsion of Judge Dorothy Kenyon, a woman caught up in more causes thiA Eleanor Roosevelt. Her greatest number of years of volunteer work has gone to the American civil liberties union, of which she is secretary and a director. She has worked since 1931 with the private organization devoted to carrying out the bill of rights. TRIES TO ‘T try to volunteer where my legal background will be helpful," she said. she keeps up with >oiiien’s progress worldwide especially in the fields of suffrage and employment practices. "All over the world, the wage level for women generally la lower than that for men doing the same job," she said. "This is something private enterprise will have to help on . . . legislation can’t do it all. Committee members' husbands have worked up a hilarious “here-l-am-alone-in-the-kitchen-without-you" act that is said to be a show-stealer. Spoofing their wives in the pots and pans routine are (from left) Ed tally of Waterford, Dr. Edwin Ojay of Fernbarry Drive and William C. Rogers of West Iroquois Road. It is to those others that this woman lawyer and "causer” is talking — to all of you who think women deserve equal pay for equal work; to those who believe women should h a y e equal job opportunities with men; and to those who want . Ritter roles in politics for wom- When I asked Miss Kenyon how she managed to find time for so many volunteer projects and still run a successful career at corporation law, she laughed and said, "I’m -the type so temperamentally equipped that if I’m offered a choice of two roads. I’ll try to take them both." "But our status certainly has improved in voting rlglits. In 1945, less than half the nations of the nrarld had given women suffrage. Today, It’s practically everywhere. Tea know the one long-time holdout ... a small nation with one of Europe’p oldest governments. . , Switzerland. I out of place with her young friends. Dear Mrs. S>st: My brother is ^ng to be married shortly. His bride-to-be is a twin and they are being married at a double wedding. My husband and 1 met the twin sister twice. I would IjJce to know if it is necessary to send a wedding Friendship Class Sees Trip Pictures Abby Says: Face Facts Members d the Friendship Class of the First Christian Church met at the Rosshire Court home of Mrs. A. T. Buckler Thursday evening. Answer: While not necessary, sending an inexpensive present to the twin sister will be a friendly thing to do. Pictures of their European trip were shown by Mr. and Mrs. William Tompkins. Your Daughter Best Gef Out of 'Nice' Married Man's Life A buffet supper was served with Mrs. Allan Hersee presiding. By ABIGAn. VAN BIHEN DEAR ABBY: My daughter, who is iS. has fallen in love with a married man almost as old as her father. He told me he would get a divorce I and marry her f as soon as he : could get the ^ money together. I offered to ! lend him the money to hurry • things along, but he said he couldn’t accept it, as it is tagqkttt his tH-inctples. He is very polite and .dresses nice. My hioband doesn’t know anytiiing about this and I’m aMd to tell him for fear he’ll break this man's neck. My daughter is a good girl and never ran around. Shotad I tell my husband and try to get this man tree? Our daugh- man's neck; maybe he’ll just wring it. ____ ABBY DEAR ABBY: Here is my story; 1 lost my mother and father in the same month. Then my married daughter came home with her two babies because her marriage broke up. It waa more than I could take so I did what any healthy, normal woman would do. I went haywire. I had to have shock treatments to get over my depression. I came out of it all right but since I had those shock treatments everyone says I am crazy. Tell me, if a person has had shock treatmoits, does that mein they are crai^ for life? I feel fine, FEELING FINE DEAR FEELING FINE: If you fed fine and your doctor says you are fine — then you ARE fine. Don’t pay any attention to what people say. I tried being the "wholesome t.vpe” (I went withemt makeup for a whole week) and I tried being the witty, lifeof-the-party type* I’ve tried being the quiet, polite type, but nothing has changed. 1 am desperate for friends. REFORMED DEAR REFORMED: If you have really reformed ... try "Women still sit back and let hubby do the talking,” said Misa Kenyon, a hyperactive woman of 72 years. "Until women get a little more gumption and the mat a Httle more sense, all the legislation in the world won’t provide full equal rights. What we have to do is change national habits and customs .*. . change our thinking. A LAWYER, PERIOD. "We have to start judging "The men just sit there on their Alpine peaks and defy the worid." Discuss Telling Stories Taxation Discussed . Costello Jr., ter says if she can't have him she’ll never look at another' man. - MRS. NO NAME DEAR MRS.: This "very pobte’' man whp "dresses ard is-too high princi- nice" 1 borTOw thoney is a Orchard Lake. bum, v-r to eet SMDRA LOU . WILSON tT' good bum! Tell her to get out of this married man’s life, and tell him to stay away from your daughter. And by all lagans, tell your husband. He probably won’t break the , i DEAR ABBY; A couple of years ago I fell in with the wrong crowd. They were very wild and had bad rMHitatkMis. After I realized what Idfid of girls I was involved with, I . stopped going widi them. Then I trie^ to make new friends and tom out nice girls didh’t want anything to do with me. ’That was over a year i and they itill won’t accept r What can I do to get my nai l*"llst Cloncys to Note . 50th Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Oancy will celebrate their golden, wedding anniversary Sunday at a family gathering hi their home on Mt. Clemens Street. The couple has three mar^ Tied sons, J. R. daney of Seneca StreeL J- P- Clancy of Ruth Street and Arpiy lA. Gol. J. L. Clancy of Hito^iian. Va. . There are IS grandchildren and one great grandchild in the family. by sex. T for one find the I ’woman lawyer’ distasteful. I’m a lawyer, period." • Lawyer Keto^-»fved » municipal jud^ under the late Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia of New 'Tork, was one of the founders of the American Labor party, and from 1946 through 1950 served as the first U. S. delegate to the United Nations on the status of wom- She Is the dauber of an attorney, her uncle waa a federal judge in Iowa, and brotb- Urbon Leaguers Attend Buffet yers. Dorothy Kenyon fa ju-graduate of Smith College and New York Unlverrity law ichooL It takes three pages, legal sbe and aingje-spaced, to IM the posts she has held or now hd^ from one with the united chapters of PhT Beta Kappa aodeties to one with * the New York County Democratic committee. Members of the Pontiac Story League met Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. ■ Theodore R* Fauble on Snell-brook Road. Mrs. W»,M. Twlch-el was cohostess. Roll call was answered with ■'a nile fSrgood storytelling."^ The study subject tor the year is "Improving the Telling and Writing of Stories.’; Mra. J. R. Shaffer led the discussion on making storytelling more effective. Stories selected tor October had touches of humor apd mystery. Mrs. Oscar Schmidt gave two poems, "Little Orphant Annie" by James Whitcomb Riley, and "The Delusion of Ghosts" by James W. Fdey. Mrs. Elmer Hutson told "Zoonier and the Silver Spoons’’ by Mary O’Nell. Richard Chase’s adaptation of "Wideed John and the Devn," i a folk tale, was given by Mrs. William Dawson. The original story was "Know the Meaniiig of the Word" hy Mrs. Joseph Swift. "Why Bother with Taxes" ; was the subject explored by i Waterford-CIarkston Business . and Professkmal Women’s Oub members at their October dinner meeting Thursday in the Old Min Tavern. The group heard subtopics, outlined by Mrs. Seymour -Karp, Mrs. Genevieve Van’tr Roer. Dorcas Wdf and Vivian . O’Roark. Mrs. Karp, chairman, made arrangementa fa* -the meeting. Members considered the suppot of the Heriong-Baker Bill, a proposal which would reduce national income tax as well as corporation income tax. Mrs. Chrfatl Pickens, guest speaker, discussed the formation of a safety coimcil. In order to increase their scholarship fund, members are selling candy tor the qurrerd season and candles for the holidays. Auxiliary Has Its Election ir ago It me. ott the "bad gW ltat? Some 83 members and guests' of the Urban League Guild of Pontiac attended the Annual cooperative buffet dinner Tkurt-day evening in Pbntiac Federal Savings snd Loan Building. Mrs. Wilbur Johnstone *nd Mrs. Grace Ctsrrothcrs were eochalrmen, ' The list includes past or present membership on committees for'integration of the New York public schools, city, county, state, natioial and 1^ temational bar association, op committees for commuirity cooperatives, juvenile delin-qocncy, tptemational relatioas, and relief and welfare 0T|ai|- Control Eyebrows ization. (NEJl)—Learning to frame eyes by ooitrolling the eyebrow* is important. Teen-agers. h»y use a tiny brush and pe-'-troleum JejBy to master eyebrows. Bnirii them in the dp|)o-Bite directioo jkom which ihey. grow,’ Then brush them up and smooth them down. For a dean line, keep stray hairs {ducked. The Women's Auxiliary to the Oakland County Optometric Society met at the Royal Oak hooM of Mra. Ralph Haisen Thursday evenUg. OfUcera elected were Mrs. Mra. John Kuzara, vice pred-dent; Mrs. Hafaen, secretary-treasurer: and Mrs. F. Milton Hathaway, press chairman. the National Safety Opuncil' with Its visual screeninK pro- f. J THE PONTIAC PRi;SS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER go. i960 ' Demonstrate Cooking for NeWcomers A cooking demonstration wai given for 31 members and ftree gdeeU of the Newcomers Qub THIRTEEN en Fewer Compeny Building. Mrt. Mary Lou Kruner, aaaist-ed by Mary Jadoon, both home economists for the company, explained the duties of the Home Service Department and prepared foods for a party dieal. fiordsai Berry, Mis. James dny-blel, Mrs. Pawl Thams and Mrs. Francis MacDoweO^ Mrs. Mcl Cemey. new member, was introduced. Guests were Mrs. Edward Mallonen, Mrs. Julian Greenlee and Mrs. Robrt L'Huil-li«r..........— The_ clidi’s finance committee will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p. in the home of Mrs. Graybiel who has invited any memers interested in sewing or knitting to come for a social hour at 8 that ning. The next regular meeting will be Nov. 9 at the home Of Mrs. William Emerson. Members are requested to bring items for an auction. New Hair Style (UPI) — The newest Hair Fashion Council style starts with the bias-cut of the hair. The locks then are swirled to frame the face in smooth contour. The featured edges of brushed bangs are brushed smooth or scissored to.have strands for placement of greatest becomingness. The swirls arc shorter and freer, making the shape adaptable for day or evening wear. Hosts Happy Eight Mrs. Jasper Kuchon of Garland Avenue entertained members of the Happy Eight Club Wednesd.iy at her home. iih aaS |Pott«d$A99. I MUMS £ * ** Saltekto far titti, hM»IUIi, etc. i Vcrmfi GREENHOUSE ^ WUItoau Dr., U BIk. frm Theme Set for Dance on Nov. 5 The Trabajamas will present thilr annual .Sadie Hawkins Dance Nov. 9 at t p.m. at the Roosevell Temple. Sharon Burklow. general chairman, has appointed Jean Caraon In charge of decorations around a Mardl Gras theme. Heading other committees are Jeanette Whitlock, pro-grams; Georgia McSkultn, patrons; Mickl King, publicity; Ruth Benner, orchestra; Nancy Norberg. refreshments; Karen Christenson, door prise; and Jaiiet .Suckow, post dance. Tickets may be purchased from members snd st the door. Child Culture Club Hears Discussion Mra. Frank Gniaae waa hoaless to ao members of the Oitld C'UI-ture Club Thursday gt her home on .St. Jbseph Street. Mnf. Jorma Sarto spoke In thf Twig It Bent~Toward Religton and Ufe't TtMfawa.** TTm Nov, IJ mcc^ win be at h« honw M Mra. Oww Rindtoz. About one-half of the Preaidnita of the United Statee have been college graiduatee. Admiring the dress Barbara Berryman (left) of Fourth Avenue will wear to the Trabajamas' Sadie Hawkins Dance Nov. 5 in Roosevelt Temple are Sharon Burklow of East Strathmore Avenue, club vice president; Jean Carson of Henderson street, recording secretary, and Georgia MoSkulin of Euclid Avenue, treasurer. Ladies Aid Dines, Sews Mrs. Percy Blynn and Mrs. Edith Hillman were hosteaaea at deaaert hmchem when the Ladies Aid of the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church met Thursday in the church parlors. Cancer pads were made. Leading devotions was Mrs. C. W. Seamad. Mrs. Clarence Failing presided at the business session. The group will meet next on Dec. 8 at the South Tasmania Street home of Mrs. Ada Mwt-enson. Key to Real Beauty Is Your Inner Self N«w Woy Con Rotforo All of Tho Originoi Boouty To Your BRAIDED RUGS A long established firm. New way Rog Cleaners employ only the very latest and most modem « techniques and equipment in the cleaning of your rugs, carpets and upholstered furniture. Their expert workmen know the secret to bringing back the like new look that adds . so much to your Be»t of AlU It Coits So Little NEW NAY RUG ond CARPET CLEANERS By Bimi MILLETT The lady who has everything (except enough to do to keep her busy) can now swish into one of New York’s fancier beauty salons and have made — for a mere $125 a sculptured head on which the salon’s experts can try out different types of make-up. Then madame can come back and for each $10 “consultation’ learn which of lUO lipsticks are right for her and which of 90 eye shadow shades will most enhance her eyes. - Such hocus-pocus may be fun for the woman who needs such flattering attention snd who can afford to pay for It. But makeup, however expertly apfllM, can do only so much for a womaa's face. ’There has never been an eye shadow invented that can make a woman's eyes soft with compassion, or merry, reflecting a gaiety of spirit, or Ipight and interested, reflecting intelligent awareness. the harsh lines that dissatisfaction etches on a'woman's face or bring a real glow to the face of a woman who has no inner glow. So don’t epvy the women who have the time and the money to have beauty consultations before choosing a lipstick or an eye shad- and busy and No lipstick In existence make a woman’s mouth turn happily at the comers or prevent it from having a tight-lipp^ look of impatience or a drpopy look of boredom.. your face the kind of beauty and Never mind that your lipstick is applied on the run or that the only time you can fool around with eye shadow is when you are dressing (or a very special party. It’s whether your mouth turns up at the corners or the lines in yothr face, are laugh lines that really matters. Ask any man If you don’t believe me. Extension Club Gets Cotton-Dress Lesson Mrs. Levi Geasler gave a lesson an cotton dressing to members of Huron Gardens Extension Club following cooperative dinner Tuesday in the Marshall Street home of Mrs. Eugene Myers. The Nov. 30 meeting will be In the home of Mrs. Charles Sibra No make-up foundation can hide Jr. on Marshall Street SUNDAY ONLY 1640 S. Telegraph Store—OPEIV 12:00 to 5:00 P«M. Head-Huggers (UPI) — One of the most copied Paris fashions is the toboggan hat. The ribbed, knit pull-on which many of us remember from our own school days showed repeatedly as the elegant topper for suits at the house of Oiristian Dior during recent openings. Now, variations of it In the whok ran^ of bright shades and white populate hat bars from coast Denim in Tot RooXi room. Home economists at Michigan State University suggest tough cottons such as denim, corduroy, sailcloth or heavy linen for bedspreads. Checked gingham, printed percale, unbleached muslin or plain, striped or flowered sheets can be made into attractive curtains. (NEA) — The outsize tote bag is still a Paris favorite, done this fall in satin, velvet or lizard for either day or evening. MON.TUES.WED. Save Dollars! nifl freasure-trove! Delight your friends on CSuristmas with novelty. Jewelry of vivid FELT! Bright bits of felt make clever ‘conversation’’ jewelry for gift-giving. F>isy, fun and thrifty, too. Paftem 831; pattern pieces and di- 2 PANTS or SWEATERS or' SKIRTS, plain DRY CLEANING and FINISHED Cash and Carry SAVE CLEANERS DRIVE-IN 131 BALDWIN AVE. I Block from Pontiac Admiaiilrotioa InlMiag ................ Send 35 cents (coins) for thls| pAttem — add 10 cents for eaihj pattern for Ist-class mailing. Send' to The Pontiac Press, 124 Needle-! craft Dept., P 0. Box 164, Old Otelsea .Station, New York 11, N. Y, Print plainly pattern number, name, address and zone. Just off the press! Send now forj our exciting, new 1961 Needlecraft Catalor. Over 125 designs to crochet, knit, sew, embroider, quilt, weave fashions, home furnishings. toys, gifto, bazaar hits. Plus FREE —instructions lor six smart caps. Hurry, send 25 cents Most Beautiful Brides ... ore Alicia Brides U. N. Is Topic of Voters SOLID MAPLE BUNK BEDS Ineledes 2 INNIRSPRING MATTRRSSIS 2 Sariiiflt, I 0«mM RaM and LaddM COMPLITt WMi Othm «f $89.00 _wiiiu $■ jmi ^58®® - *4 SaM or Twin Sisa INNERSPRIN6 MATTRESS or BOX SPRING WhiU $l| il88 Th«y Wwt B«fid 9 Cap AaioaMife R*fl- COFFEE A4AKER T-BALL JOTTER PENS » 97' OKIISUIIDSYnAa.toSPJIL SUBURBAN STORE 1640 S. Tclegroph Rd. tHoMt to iloomitoM fasJiiea Skeppe. The League of Women Voters of Pontiac heard Mrs. Charles Shain of Birmingham diacuas the United Nations, its agencies and their role in maintaining world peace Tuesday. The meeting In the Young Women’s Christian Association center was In observance of the 15th anniversary of the United Nations. Seeing that the United Nattons is young, and that with experience and maturity it will be able to cope with world prgbleins, Mrs, Shain reported that the organization’s future in dealing with international crisis can be expected to be better in the future. The talk was preceded by a akil urging a “Yea on Proposal S'* by Mra. Claire J. Hinckley and Mrs. Fred Stelnbaugh. A film, "Your Vote is the Key,” showed the history of the league I and the problems with which iti deals. Laura Belz re^ the narrative accompanying the film. ! Mrs. John Borsvold and Eliza-; belh Halsey made coffee-hour arrangements. Helen Womelnian and Mary Hubert poured. Mrs. Mitchell Bacow, Mrs. Merle Humphries and Mrs Beatrice Schoenlin are new members. For Your WoMlag QUALITY At Prlees Taa Can Afford and Quantity O M n«(M la Iti Alksw a PrM Ctaatallaf 0 A «ts«ln( ta«tl (took • A lari* latf aiarriaS ttfa # A wlalaMra warrista aartUlaaia Aix rOBJUgT fjy C. R. HASKILL STUDIO 1 ML ClemeBS Bt FB 4-Mtt 100 Attend Initiation of Shrine . Some 100 members and guests! attended the initiation ceremony of Pontiac Shrine No. 22, Orderl of the White Shrine of Jerusalem.*' Wednesday evening in Roonevelt,-Temple. Mrs. H. Wayne Reaves, worthy' Igh priestess, and Samuel SmlBi. watchman of shepherds and district chairman of membership, enter-1 tained their coworkers from 20 nelgbboriiqf shrines at dinner. I • I Distinguished guests present were Mrs. Onleta Macdonald, presi-dmt at tile MichiganOntarlo Asao-datkm,'Windsor; Mrs. ,Lloyd Waft, district deputy; Melvin Raymo, siqireme V*---DAY IS TUESDAY, NOV. 8, 1960 (‘----“V-Day Is Voting Day) “V-Day” is your opportunity to help run Oakland County, the State of Michigan and the United States of America. On this “V-Day” you will do the following— ELECT OUR PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT ELECT OUR SENATOR ELECT OUR REPRESENTATIVE ELECT OUR GOVERNOR ELECT OUR OTHER STATE OFFICIALS VOTE ON AMENDMENTS TO THE STATE CONSTITUTION (Proposals 1, 2 andeS) ELECT OUR COUNTY OFFiaALS ELECT OUR SECOND PROBATE JUDGE Daaen, supreme supervisor, FUnt. BeeeIvttoK the degree at the ,KeMt to IloomitoM rasJiiea Skeppe. 1^^____, FE 5-5983_ . Sffll3niH0QESiHl: and Mrs. DaaW WoedfU. TTw eighth annual Christmas Fair will be D^. 3 in Roosevelt Temple. Earl Hoskins and Mrs. Am a Citizen^ you have two important johi; 1. BECOME ACQUAINTED WITH THE CANDTOATES AND PROPOSALS. 2. VOTE YOUR CONVICTIONS. Pontiac Area Oiamber of Commerce Oindle in charge of the diningk FOURTEEN »pstcm football team caught Ptmtiitc Central between »‘blg ones" here Friday night and the result was a 7-7 draw before 5,000 PCH Homecoming fana at Wisner Stadium. The Chiefs struck early, Southwestern retaliated late and both schools called It all even after 4(t minutes of fierce and spirited warfare. OMtral, la the opinion o( head Vikings Rip Farmington; Waterford Upset, 7-0 Bv BILL CORNWELL ; suit the VlUags and they soon U’alled Lake toyed with winless tallied again, timty Alderaoa la-Fatmington Friday afternoon on I tereepted Aadernoa'a paaa on the the Farmington giidiron for an Viking U and three plnya later ROl'tiH OOINO — It’s hard sledding lor Pontiac Central half-back Dick McCauley as he runs smack Into Dick Shupe ol (lint Southwestern In, the 4lh quarter of last night’s PCH Homecoming football game at Wisner Stadium. On the ground at lower right 1» Elkk.Shactei:.l82l ol the Chiefs. The two schools fought to a 7-7 tie. Jacobsen Scores as Maples Win, Four 31-12 Speedy Steve Jacobsen crossed the goal line four times to lead Birmingham to a 31-12 victory over East Detroit last night in an Eastern Michigan League game. Hazel Park moved into a first place tie with idle Femdale by defeating Ml. Clemens, 144) and Royal Oak Kimball blasted Poi Huron, 30-7 la the other contest. M good for pen beeauae the CMta admitledly played their Itn-Ml game of the season. The Chiefs threatened to run Southwestern off the field at the ■tart by marching to a touchdown from the opening kickoff. * * A But the PCH attack spuHered like a worn-out Jalopy the rest of the way and the Colts took to the'' air to square matters with only 1:37 remaining In the game. It may have been a combination of too much Flint Northern last week and a glance toward Bay aty where the Oilels go next Thursday evening for a Saginaw Valley battle with the unbeaten Wolves. Umo. too, tribate must be paid te the underdog Oolia, who fought hard from begtnniag to end and Od an exoeUent Job of cootaln-tag Oeatral’s offense. The Chiefs were thankful that the bruising struggle was a nonconference outing. Southwestern, one of three new Valley members, does not officially enter the league race until 1961, along with Midland and Bay City Handy. ........-it..* , ♦ Oentral’s defense did i job when the chips were down until the finish. The stoutest defense In the world can endure Just M long against a continual barrage and the C for a 34- MjHineton. which needs Oxford s yard gallop and was all alone with ^ent its slim title. In the fourth ipisrter two Flint gridders in^-hot pursuit.hy rolHn® over the yard run. (kl l,omerson got Into wh«» he riipped and feR down on \\,id«ats .'H-U Ortonulle did jiQt the, H’ci'Jre '"tl ~ play. seoring plunge and kleked the Ko"er Ixmierson. 4er—.• Na-'v Polot. and l*«ul “ Hr .in'' D-'T Ma-I hit paydirt fri)m the five. ] It was Roger I/>menion again Ben Gueterrez and a l.'vyarder to end Rich Young, highlighted the march with Larry Hawkins cracking into the end yard out. Hawkins’ dive climaxed 65-yard drive. •\ IS-6 score was too close to Rochester Scores Romeo Doesn't By HERB PETTERS Rochester used its ground game exclusively last night to rout L’An.se Crease 254) for a Tri-County League victory tljat ended the Falcons' two-game losihg streak and guajranteed them at le^t a third place flnCsTi. ^ ” | To win their fifth game and round out the league season at :-2 before a home crpwd, the Fal- ligt^ with lightning swift-1 Rochester ^ in the final minute ness at the beginning of each half of the first half. The loss dropped ...............L’Anse Creuse to 1-3 in the league. Morris led the Falcons to their 193 net ynnb — stt gained ground — with 92 yards in 14 car- the Chit 26. Bob Pomeroy's C9aser for a 12-yard gain to the 14 was more than offset hy a yard holding penalty and Bren- n the 36 for a six yai lOM ss the dock ran out. Central came within a whisker of scoring a 2nd TD early around right end and advanced lo juuhins 'g.raolni jrirdsie the Chiefs reached the Flint 16, Cmiser picked up nine yards to the seven, then McCauley swung wide the one-foot line where he ........ bumped out of bounds. mtereepud by But the Chiefs were offside on Rmbi#* ion .. the play and penalized five yards. T»rd» On the next play they suffered a Pontisc centm ........ 15-yard penalty, setting them back . to the 29, uid two inetunpiete passes halted the threat. Bill PritdMtt toar Flint scor- POimac CCNTBAL UNgt'r feNOa—Mostfointry, Pcd. Shorter. Me. Conner Hlllle TACXLS8—P r i RlcherdF. 1 C. bee. SteUy,. M»r-D. Rlrhardi QUARTERBACKS—Pdmeroy. Breium H*rd>nburi. BACK8-JltcC»uley ron^ n n * > h ColU tost W»ll C^ntPi. WtlHis- second perioil heaves to Jerrv five yards and one to Zink that covered 23 yards. Terry Fritz scored the only Mil-rcH sw lington touchdown in the third iM aoJ * 23-yard run. Kolaja ^ back into the passing end again. j-s the last prio^^itt 38-yard 3-M.i 3-n|to8s to Darwin Doty/Hauck How-- ard got the final TD on a yard sprint. Oxford scored in the third quarter on Ray Commerce’s 32-yard pass to Mike Harris. The WUdeats tallied In the fourth pe-. riod with Cork Sanders going thel final nine yards. Picking up extra points for Mil-] lington were Zink, Howard 2, Dave Cobb and Lockwood. Spirn, R. In the 2nd quarter .... v..,..- __ - ... k.11 ^ DTHi 1ft n-wr sotTHwastcRN uxeip nw-hall OB downs on the PCH 10 smds—Rhyndreu. MorrU. 8h--ond then on the Mven. McCanleyii'-^J^^, ] c k n t r. recovery of a foptbie stopped a 3nds»rlod bid on the POI 18 snd the CoRi onct again gave up the Mm downs OB the 30 in tlfe 4th I . ■ eeBtvorth. KswAlcyk. OoXROii^orTttt. I . 0«lth. IrvUi. .. -/tmry. SAUidcrt, Wftikir. -Brftcy. Innot'l, MayhW. AUbtii. PrMk- BA AT A OLANCE RTOAT’S RESt'LtS „ New T«rk 101 liA Ul, Lm Ans«i*t \m SATTBOAT’S OAMKS Um AngflM ot SyractiM Phlladcipliio at BoaWn Kt« TorkTat DatroB. antnaao-TV ------------- St. Uula The lint time they had the ball, the Falcons drove 4« yards in right plays with Dan IJckert cranblng over from the one-yard line to seore. Bob Morris opened the second half even more dramatically, taking the kidcott on the 15 and racing 85 yards for a touchdown. Lick-ert than ran the point for Rochester. * * ★ Three recovered fumbles were instrumental \n the other two scores. Tom Ludwig pounced on a L’Anse Crease fumble on the rival 37 to start the drive for the second pe- HIM HEAP ANGRY INDUN - Chief Pontiac goes into his war dance prior to the start of last night’s Ponfiac Central4rtint Southwestern footbail game* at Wisner Stadium. Oentral’s new Oaef Pontisc for the 196041 school year^ Jantca Baker, 217 Indian. Navajo, an appropriate address for an tied by Southwestern, 7-7. The Chiefs wfer lies. Roseville tied Lapeer for first place at 3-0 by walloping Romeo 294) and set up a campionship showdown on November 11 at la-peer. The defeat was Romeo' fourth straight and relegated the Bulldogs to lost place. Ron McCleese, the biggest srhoolhoy tailback in the st at six-taiir, 236-poaiid8. led f WUdeats with 14 potato and « a bear m defease. Morris and Dan Bird spearheaded a drive that carried to the toar yard Mae before a 16 yard penalty broaght a tetupor-as^ aethaek. Eari Vtmfitm inter-rapled the drive by taterceptlai -Bsa at the II. Morris sprinted to the three yard line and two (days later Baldwin sneaked over from the one to give the Falcons a 124) half-time lead, w W * L’Anse Creuse never got started after Morris’s long third period a fumble on the 37. Morris, Uck-ert, and Bird ripped off successive gains to the 12 yard line, and then sophomore back Tom Mitzcl-fdd went around rigdit e rent of the way |o score ed bis I upset of Walled Lake, the victory enabled the charges of Monte Charles to finish loop play with four straight triumphs after dropping their opener to Waterford. They lost their first three games of the season after being rated a strong contender but have certainly come along fast since. W A ★ the eight touchdowns against the Huskies were by boys who had not scored i single point this season. Hallback Dick Rankin led the way with a trio, end MUie Four-aler tailed a pair on passes from Phil Svalya and sub end Jim IMInson got one plus an extra point. Bulldozing tailback Fred Penness tallied the other two TDs. Rankin, a senior who had done little for SHS in the past partly due to injuries, carrieid the ball the first three plays Southfield ran and had 12 points for his efforts. He ran well all the way on wide plays while Penness was breaking through the line consistently. It started out like the close game everyone expected as the home team led 7-6' midway in the 1st quarter. Rankin had gone 54 yards the 1st Bluejay play from scrimmage and Penness ^ted his 1st of three conversions. Northern drove «4 yards from the ensuing Urkoff featuring the running of Dave MoesaraU and Chris Payne. Quarterback BrUre Norton sneaked, over from the 8. Rankin was stopped for a loss on 1st down after the kickoff. But he went 64 on the next try and the Jays were on the way. They made it 20-6 Just before the half when Svalya hit Fournier from the 7. ★ W A Rankin went 12 to paydirt starting the 3rd period and got another drive going with a 37-yard gallop. Svalya flipped to Penness for 16 to end It. The count zoomed to 394 {Then Penness went in from the 10 starting tha 4th round of a ’’king” ' 1. A pass interceptkm had set it up. A fhmbie started the next McOeese scored in the first . riod on a 10 yard run and then kicked the extra point. After Rose-xHlle stopped Romeo on the one-yard line, McCleese broke op the middle on a quick opener for a 99-yard touchdown run. Ray Ron-stadler kicked the extra point bx a 144) lead. Laity Frazho raced 10 yards for second period score and to third session, McOeeae made it'nmbie^Lmt 224) by tackUng the Romeo quai^ terback in the end zone for a safety. Tom Parrish scored the final TD in die fourdi on a four-yard dash and McCieeM capped his night’s activity by placeUcking the extra the 8 and Penness passed for the PAT. The Haskies made thdiJ’ 2nd and last offensive thrust shortly after going 59 yards to score paced by runs of 22 and 12 by Dave Shields. Bin Young went the last 2. South-field roared right back. Halfback Tom Sweet connected with Robinson on a ^-yard play. ...._................... The statistics clearly show tte story as the winners gobbled up 458 yards while allowing 133. Happy Charles said his team's showing was not as good as at Walled Lake. Acting PNH hekd man Arnold WUson summed up the affair perfectly with the comment; “We were overpowered.” The Red and White wound up In a tie for 2nd place with Waterford and Berkley close behind. Flrit Dovnt Rushing M Plr*t Downs Pitstng 4 First Downs PenalUti 0 Tout First Downs ll Ytrdt Oolnsd Rushing 32S Tsrds Oolnsd Passing 134 Total Net Yards Oglntd 4SS “----- Attempted 11 ------ Completed 10 Passes Intercepted by 1 Pimu and Arerage Yards 1-U I Fumbles Peitaltlaa, Yards PenaUied 4-M • SCORNO PLATS 8P—Rankin 44 run ipenneaa kleki ' PlV-Norton > run (kick tsUedl 8P—RaakUt (4 run iPtnaen kleki ^jBF-Vjournlor 1 pass from Sealra (Uak BF—Rankin U rtm Iklek Mockedl JHF—Pennett U past tram Bratra (Ftueaa kicki ar—Pennasa It rna (nm tatlad) ■F—Feurnlar • pass from Sealra Yar^ In tact, the Lancers never threal-||Si/I{uB»tS’ «hed during the entire game «« ii, netted only eight yaida until mak-^jSV “ ^ peaetratfon to the|SS& "Se^Sr: MorrU U kickoff return Jeraon. Flummer. Cttrrsy. ’ 'laass’““*• sranenca ^cna—Ml-“ TMuta. Rai Mentto. Non « dawM nubias It dvvat'paai^ the, beta )-^oeaataU, SbMda, , Fa»a». ■ares* WeSMeeel ’ W. .SI. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1960 ■ * FIFTEBII Sf. FreS - St Mike Clash Rams Favored Although Both Are Winless Mikes Hold All-Time Edge in Battle of Crosstown Rivals FRACTURED RUKNIR raOBABUC OrrENBIVE LINKlin ■T. rUD. ' *T. Mflu Y«M IM Sr. ■ KeMlIng 116 IbUler mfa.T Hurm 115 SBitchtor 140 So. Q Wlofuidt JOO IforrlMOjr IM it. C Looo lio Preoto 150 Sr. O Prlobo IM So - - — 115 T LlnMnmM ?“ ■- 171 So. I Wlocand I 300 Sr. as BoBDonborg 110 |o 111 it. n Martin iso jr 100 So. HB Browa 140 Sr UO Sr.IB BBUBW'tBor r----- Dobokl By OnJCK ABAIB St. Fred srill be the slight favorite when the whistle blows starting the 26th game between the Hams and St. Michael tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 at Wisner dium. The Red and Black eleven is rated a slim edge because of experienced backs Jim Kennedy and Norb Hofman plus shifty John Bierline. The city rivals are all even othemrise. W-0, Oakland-B Title Races Reach Showdown Stages 8t. Michael, the home team, has dropped rix straight, seorlag a high o( U In a game. St Fred has lost its five starts althongh ■ooring U and 1> In single ont- Both have lost key performers for the season due to injuries but will otherwise be in good shape physically for this annual classic. Orion Drubs Troy, 40-7 The offensive lines are about as even as you can get for size as the Ram forwards average 170.7 pounds to an even 170 for the Shamrocks. The visitors will have a big size advantage in the back- Unbeaten but once - tied Lake Orion put itself in prime positiem to win the Oakland B title by drubbing Troy, 40-7. St. Michael leads in the series 14-S featuring a string of eight snecessive triumphs from 19N through ’S7. St. Fred broke the spell In 19H hy romping M-IS but C4»ach Jim Niebaner's Shamrocks bounced bark for the most lopsided victory in history last tail, M-7. There have been three This eliminated Troy from the race and since Fitzgerald walloped Oak Park, 33-0, Lake Orion must now hope for an assist from Avondale in order to win the title outright. Most of the boys who powered the Blue and White last October have departed. The only point-getter back is Dave Baumgartner, who kicked six extra points in the rout. Hoffman scored the St. Fred Tlie combination of being starved for a victory, wanting to escape the Suburban Catholic cellar and. most of all, beat the city rival should have the two squads fired-up to a fever pitch. Ing In the last meetiBg. The players on both teams realize they can save some face in dreary season by beating the arch-rival. Orchard Lake M. Mary tries to stay In the running for a re-^lectabie finish In the 8CL standings by beatiiv Bt. James at Feradale. St. Qement and St. Rita wUl meet in an apparent title game and Royal Oak Sfc Mary vs. St. Benedict. Royal Oak Shrine goes to Holy Redeemer and Farmington OLS v.s. St. Agatha. ST.M S iSI in? Moore Is Choice Mt ci*m*nt L Abm emus S iioM«iU4 at, BoBMS i aouthfislii 51. foBtls* Nsrtiwni II MoonhrsJ ^mn } 14. Mlatl 7 KMrn«y 41, Neb WitlnsB 1] ASsnu iColo.l St 11, B N*» Ifstlso U CuUtr aioekloa at, Tsraio 14 Ssn Prsnelico Stsli 41. Csl AfilM S ■ In the 4th quarter Craven passed I Perry 20 yards, Tim Alban got another on a 20 yard dash and Williams went 20 yards on an interception. Alban ran for two extra , Craven for one and Perry for the other.--------- Orion and Fitzgerald are tied In the league with 4-0-1 record, the tie coming against each other. Next tveek Orion plays non-lesgue foe Lapeer, and appears a rlnch to win Its finale against Oak Park in taro tveeka. Howver, Fitzgerald will be at Avondale next Friday and this game should decide whether the league arill have an outright champion or a tie for the title. Roger Williams and Buefcy Cra-ven-did the passing for Orion and Dave Perry ptosltlH ToUl first de«Bi .. Ysndi fslosd rusbing Ysrdi ftined “—-• Total not rsi Yard! gained pai^.. Total not rsrdi tali Pauw attemptod . Ben Bondo' of Maple Lanes in -—................... Walled Lake has been named pSSbtaJTiirttt^; Panaltln and Holly ............. Milford ............ STATISTICS rnt ruahlng . president of the Bowling Proprie-Association M NiHthern Oakland County. New vice president is Lou iCo-p^ce of idotor Inn. Art Rosner Sylvan Lanes will serve as sec-'pint rotary and Ray Ludwig of Hilltop in Rochester, treasurer. iYard« Va'inod'nuhuif Selected for the board of direc-tou*n*t'yarS*lmin» tors to serve two years were .Toe Bonfiglio of Huron Bowl and Bob|Pauo< lottrc*?^ by ... Kukllnski of Lakewood Lanes. Les Howe of Howe’s Lanes, outgoing president, Stan Mayes of Montcalm Centre and Red Collier ot Oxford were picked to serve one-year di- ster started at quartarbaek In place ot toe Injured Jeff Pries. He iMwasiiNially switched to halfbaek with Paddy’s S4m, Mike, directing the attack. The coach made good use ol Newton’s speed by having him run rollouts from the QB slot. Newton carried the ball 20 times, either from QB or halfback, and gained 136 y^s. He also scored the final West Bloomfield touchdown on an 18-yard end sweep. On defense, the Lakers held Bloomfield Hills to 67 yards rushing, 18 in the first half. The Barons had better luck in the air, connecting on seven of 16 passes for 139 yards. One of the tosses scored Bloomfield Hills last touchdown • with 11 seconds to play In the 21 game. It was a picture play 342 with quarterback Art Tregenza 3171 lofting a long pass to halfback • Biff Jones down the mic .0 Jones had slipped past the omlary and when he took pasa on the .70, all he had to do was outrun the West Bloomfield By United The battle of I gtnnts. Wilt (The Stilt) Chamber-lain and big BUI Rusacll, resurntni tonight when the Phlladelphin Warriors and the Boston Oeittca] the only undefeated teams In thO National BaaketbaU Aaaodntkm. meet at Boston. Both Chamberlain and RuHell were Inatnimental In leading their clubs to victory Friday night. The triumphs tvere the nee^ ond in two starts (or the Easter* Division’s top two teams. Russell’s 22 points and 19 re-^ bounds, combined with the fine clutch play of backcourt stare Boh Sharman and Boh. Couiy^ . handed the New York Knlcker'-bockers a 110-101 defeat, tlietr fourth straight against one triumph. The 7-2 Chamberlain scored 29 polms in the Warriors’ 122-HQ success over the Los Angeles I-akers. It ;was F'd Conlln, recently acquired from St. Louis, who sunk the winning basket for Philadelphia. Elgin Baylor topped the Laker scorers with 28 points. Sdgim Idlest ^ Bay City Victim By The Associated Prero Quarterback Bob Crampton and a stingy defense are the solid combination that has Bay City Central headed for an unbeaten season and Michigan’s mythical high school (ootbali crown. The Wolves' defense and Crnmp-ton clicked again Friday night as Bay City whipped Saginaw 204. Crampton scored the first touch-dowij on a one-yard plunge and pass^ for two more. Bay City, ranked No. 1 in the Associated Press Cnass A poU, ripped oL its seventh straight triumph. ' After CYampton accounted tor Bay City’s marglh of victory, the defense went to work-and protected it. Saginaw wa.s stopped once at the Wolves’ 3 and another time at the 10 in the last quarter. ' Flint Central whipped Saginaw Arthur Hill. 27-6. ------- Thompson and Ortega in TV Fight Tonight NEW YORK tUPI) - Welter. L A 31-yani pass fmm iw.n,, Height challenger Fede^ to halfback Fred Stresen-Reuter world-title shot against a $6,000 purse tonight in a TV 10-roundcr 11 uui iiie uau uii iiwf id. i ... -- ^ I Three plays later Tregenza passed 'l2 yards to Stresen-Reuter on the one yard line. Tregenza carried —....... ....ock psH (5« ysrds): TrotUr PAT ■COBE BT 4)DABTBB8 0 0 7 0 0 0 0-0 Anchor Bay Wins Second Straight League Crown Should the tough and youngw Ortega upset Thompson, the South American slugger will be yanked out of his scheduled title fight with champion Benny Kid Paret at the Garden, Dec. 10, matchmaker Teddy Brenntir warned. Thompson, 32, is favored at li-5 because of his punch. But Ortega, 25. never has been stopped. Anchor Bay won its straight Soutoem Thumb Conference championship yesterday afternoon by oversehelmlng Dryden 37-«. It 7089 toe l6to straight Toifl tar the Tkra. , * it * They had to have Iwlp from Monptais soMch knocked Capac out of the running 21-12 to take over nd place. New Haven climbed into a tie Toith Capac for third by stayed in fourth place with a 394 Tvin over Almont. Aikbor Bay can lose its, final g^e next week against Armada and still not lose the crown. Memphis is the closest contender with a 44-1 record, but has only game to play. The 'pars pushed across 16 plaints to the ^tst quarter to qulddy squelch any hope Dryden had of^ an upset. Halfback Gerald Blake scored three touchdosons In Armada’s over Atawnt. BI a k opened the scoring to the fiiet period Toito a 15-yard toucbdoivn run. the next quarter he punched across from the two and in the toird period he tallied irith three-yard run. Fullback Jim Porty raced yards tor a first period touchdown and quarterback Mel A1 o u m a passed 18 yards to end Julitu Trout to the fourth quarter. Aln^ont’s lone tally came in the last ^tiartor on a 55-yard run by tek BUI Harris. It toe third toague irin for Armada over on a sneak. Center Bob Akeriy pounced on a Baron fumble on the third play after the opening kickoff to give West Bloomfield possession on the Hills 31-yard line. Newton and halfback Roger Hess ate up most of the yardage with Hess bucking off tackle the last two yards. Merv Kreig kicked the first of his four extra points. After an exchange of punts, the I.akers marched 44 yards for STATir their second touchdown. A 19- rint downi -y.|d run by Jim Ramtall on an ;; end-arouna wm the big play. P»Met................ Halfback Don Sweetman burst b, off tackle and covered toe final eight yards to the end tone. Viking Statistics ...S-IS 4-SJ With 1;U rematotog to toe aecond. quarter. Halfback Jeff Ryden sroi orMn"»Tt^%ci!uu<>^^ mont^ls Trinlew to aeven i West Bloomfield scored again Yard! pcosUMd........'40 M SOMMABY . ' , WsUwl Lsk. ........IS ■ 7 9-lS 4 , , snnlaftoa ...........,0 S 0 I WL: Butrm.r*r » nm (kick laoisd carried over frwn the 19 on a reverse to end a 65-yard drive. Newton started the inarch srtth a 20-yard sprint. The Barons kicked off to start the seccHid 'half and the Lak«s promptly gave tliem the ball on the West Bloomfield 46 by fumbling. It was the HUl’s first dent to Laker territory. But they fumbled the ban away only to get It back again on another Laker boobto. TMs time guiard iy Cool recov- agatoet tiro loewis and a tie. A1-; end on tbes46 again and the Bar- er lo nu (McMilUon kleki to labs imor ’ Bouctos, RABd. TIislrrB Wlk. KrcUehoikr, OcrUlM tacklbb: viasiektaB. Dssr. aaona Sehllef, More;. Carl. TSkUoa OUAROS: BorMr, Ainuu Csttrsll. Ab-dr.as. Burk, HetnBist ClNTXRa: Rourkc, roppnrattcr. Me- ^^ARTXRRACU: K. OrMB. McCaUna. BAOES: Blackjar. AldMaao. BBUth. luffmcy^ Balo. OaArMjB ___ ^ _____ roMKamm Gnmjr mo: InBiiTHtooek. ClBppax. Tsqas. ItchlBcoB. ThonM TACKLBB; StariM. 1 f. SIXTEEN THE POXTUC PRESS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1960 It's Time Again-4th Annual Press Bowlerama Starts Dec 4th Men's Singles Meet to Have Larger Purse Guaranteed Prizes Pius Share of Money for All Qualifiers No Sure Thing in Pro Leagues pletf revemaJ of Boston's 354) triumph at Los Angpics three weeks ago. Dick Kemp, injured \ the clubs met earlier, waj command. The Patriots tried quailerbacks Butch Songtn, Tommy Greene and Harvey White in turn before inter-mlsaioa. A pass interference call against the Chargers was the oinSy Boston penetration of Los Angeles territory before the half by which lime the visitors had a 284) lead The Associated Press The i-ecord books «-iU show there Is no such thing as a sure winner in the National Football Plans were completed today fcr League But if form holds true tor the laeo Pontiac Press Bowlerama , Sunday's six games, the New York toumajnent which win be hetdjGiants still will bie unbeaten at this year in December. |the top of the Eastern Conference The 4th annual singles handicap! and the Green Bay Packers and ♦vent sriil be for men only for! Chicago Bears will be tied for the the first time. The women's dK’i-'Westem Conference lead. Sion has been dropped due to a| w W * lack of Interest by the bowlerr The Giants (34)-l) still operating A prise list feataring live big without the passing arm of Charlie gnaraaleed cash awards has Conerly but with halfback Alex been arranged lopped by SMO Webster available for at least for the rkamplon. StM tor the limited duly, are favorSi to lake iwanenip. $1M lor 3rd place, IIU the St, Louis Cardinals (2-31 by 10 lor 4tb and SIM lor 3th. Every points at Yankee Stadium. Earlier version by Lairy Barnes, qualifier will win a share of the ,jn the season at St. Louis, the purse. : pjastern leaders thumped the ■The Invitational actual torrmey.'Cards 3>14. which was a big success Iasi! b,,. thlcago year when held in c-onjunction vHihj iH,th touchdown favor- the handicap finals, will be :v>ld| The Parkers will be at again with an increase in Ihe; Pittsburgh for a game with’the awards to be given. i evertougb Sleelers (t-l-1) and Four area bowling establish- ig, n,,rs complete a Went Coast ments will be taking part in Ihej trip at San Francisco ngainsi the , meet. Action gets started Pee, (j.j). 4 at the new Howe's Lanes onf „ j . .. Dixie Highway with the U: of; Balfimo^ s defending cham- three qualifying sessions. The other two wiU be held Dec 11 at .Svlvan "«'ern Conference race, after Lane* and Montcalm Centra. , "amps, urel Lakewood lone, will ho.1 the P®*"** ®ver the wln- Lnkewood Lane* will host Ihe Cowboys at Dallas. A crowd of about 10,000. sitting i lh(ough a drizzle at the Polo! Grounds, saw Al Dorow, hif bat-' tered ribs padded and his injured ankle swarthed in tape, direct the entire New York attack. He passed' for two touchdowns 1^ sending thef TUans ahead twice. ^ Ironically, it was a fumble by Dorosif drop in fhe less than a minute left in the game that stalled their last-ditch drive. So now. the Titons and Raiders The Raiders, coming from be-show identical 4-4 record*. The hind three times, pushed over two ^feat was a serious one for the touchdowns in the fourth pertod.| Titans because it just about fin-and won on the margin of a con-Ushed them as a threat for the Eastern Division title. 11th Frame ^ CHUCK ABAB That 702 rolled by Pontiac’s Shirley Pointer early this week certainly gives women around the area iiqmething to shoot at in the future. Such scores for women are rare. Some of the top names in the busteess have Tiever bit 700. Marge McDaniels of California won WIBC singles honors at Denver last seasBi with 049 which clearly shows the impressiveness of Shirley’s feat. Mrs. Pointer, now an instructor at Huron Bowl, has been about the most successful city lady kegler in recent years. She started winning^ SmRLEY POI.NTER One Down Out of 4, Lions Try for 2 actual luvitallonal coalcsl Dec. la The actual operation of the tournament will be the same it was in 1999. All sanctioned keglors living or bowling in Oakland County ara eligible to enter. The final average for 195aS0 will be u.«ied in determining handicap. Scoring fol lows the 70 per cent handicap, 200 scratch system. Oue of every seven qnallflent at each of the three ‘‘house.” wilt go on to the flnaK. Con-teotants will hare the opportunity to choose their qualll,ring loca- The Philadelphia Eagles d-'t, setrond in the Eastern Omference. arc idle. Thus the Cleveland Browns (3-l> can move into a tie for runner-up honors back of the Giants — or into first if the Giants lose by beating the' Redskins (1-1-2) at Washin^on. The Browns are 10 - point favorites although they lost to the Eaglet last Sunday. Conerly agnln will confine his playing to kicking as a sub for the Injured Don Chandler, leaving the Cilanis' pasRlng chores to George Miaw. ghaw threw (our ■fir Rams Haven't Won a Game in Last 13 Tries . Despite Record, Detroit Still Rated Underdog to Coast Team trophies in 1954 and has collected over 50 since. So her big night, was no fluke. I Most of her winning has been In the annual city tourney staged by the Ponlluc Women's Bowling As- j sociation. She has won all-events honors five of the last seven years, had the high game and series in 1996, 1959 and last year, took singles once and doubles with part-twice. State Bowling game with the (^ards, who’ll he without quarierbark George Ito and fullback Mai Hammark. Pittsburgh also finds itself hampered at quarterback with veteran Bobby Layne nursing a jammed right thumb. Rudy Bukich is his substitute. In the Packers, the Steeleni will be meeting a team well rounded attack speaiv headed by Lamar McHan's aerials. A popular,ipature added a year ago gives any bowler- who wm-petes the 1st week a'nd toils to make the grade a chance to return lor another try the 2nd week Entry blanks will soon be avail-able at all Oakland County keg estabilshmeents and at The Pivas -Sports Department. A copy of the blank will also be printed in tlw paper occasionally. It may bo clipped and used as an official entry form. jAMKRU AN FOOTBALL LEAGUE American Football League! u "‘kW. the Los Angeles Charg- d<’f«’«ted the Boston Patriots, f^ 6ol tor the actual champion j 43.16 Q^^land nipped Ihe New York Titans, 28-27. Paul Maguire led a rangy de-ifense whicb smothered the Pa. I (riots' attack until the game out* of reach, scoring oni’c on a i blocked kick and' taking a big Birmingham Groves took advan-^hand in another, tage of four intercepted passes to! ^ defeat Grosse Pointe University' PW »he School. 12-0, for its third straight j O'**®" • LOS ANGELES-Aftcr the Lions whacked the World Champion Baltimore Colts last week. It would seem Ihe oddsmakers would make th<» Detroit team . n favorite wtnless Los Angeles Rams. * * * Bui the odds today show that \ has been installed a si.\ | favorite despite the toet that thei Rams haven't won a gam'' ini their last 13 .starts. ‘ team '1 ship. Groves Makes It Three Straight Victories, 12-0 The Lions have built up some enthusiasm after Ihe .stunning up-i the CoUa and they arcl looking for a 2-gpmr"‘'Sweeo o: ' Const gantes against the Rr'.m'= 49ers. i a (lifini't thing for : the NFL < > . Th -aeeop'olishefl oaf' i 1 when Detroit be i» Mw Rai" ; and then the lOcrs 17-13. Ix)s .\ngeles has l>een a Ii‘|te liirkler for (he Lions. They b-«\e played 10 games in the City of Angels and have won six, hut In .'anelsrn (hey ha\e won only rao In 10 regular tries. The *02 wa* easily her best aeries ever but the 243 whleh led the way wa* not. She owns n «) C AtTAINS-Coach Tom Kennedy of ri€k'.y.^ta-tha oo-captnina Rudy Yapo 1 td Jim Kennedy together for some pre-game pla Ui in preparation (or Sunday's encoun- ter at WisneV Stadium against St. Mike. Yapo is an end while Kennedy ..la the team's^ quarterback. The game is rated a tossup between the two rivals. The .state match game bowling championships got under way at Huron Bowl this afternoon with defending champion Billy Gdent-biewski feading a 24-man field featuring some of the nation's top stars. Another round will be started to-I 387. night at 7 with the title to be , .. decided-in Sunday competition. Shirley is bnngmg^ong another tomorraw will be in ac- star m son Billy 12. The youngster at 3 and 7 p m. .8 avera^ng 1^ in his 2nd sea-| The event is also serving as elim-inations for the National All-Star event. Husband Walt also bowls. I EXTRA PINS Popular West Side TteCreation proprietor Sam Perna ailing again The triplicates arc starting to come in. Donna Lonteen matched ■erage by hitting 125 three times in the Huron Girls loop. Del-Fry did the same with a trio of 146s in the Auburn Ladl> Majors League. Margaret Lemon has 217. Mary Flood 512. A. Standard Servlee 803 tor other iop scores in latter rare. Tickets for the IMl ABC tournament at Cobo Hall are going on sale at keg establishments throoghont thin sector. Izical fans can save nmney and tawonven-lence by obtaining the dneats at an alley . . . DeadHne la tbio weekend (or Joining PonUac booster squad tor the tourney. Contact Izm Koprtnee at Motor hm. There were 94 200 games in the Farmington Classic this weekend suffered a broken collarbone. victory after three losses. In the second period Norm Go-frank took a ,33-yard , pass from Larry Huffman to score and in thei final stanza Huffman raced 27 i spectacular TS-yard i In Ihe second period amt was a constant IhrenC. He also broke loose on a 'M-yarir gallop to the Boston th<*' oddsmakers 12 in Ihe final period that led to * Conch Gfsn-.re Wilson who fighting to save hi' iob with .ne Lions, feels Ihe team can do it. but apparently he h.vsn't eonvine-'d yards for the final Groves TD. I * V’""* GPUS made its best penetration i to the Oiytves six y^ line in 'he! A marked difference in quarter-second half. 'backs also helped explain the com- Both Unbeaten Colls, Warriors Triumph He will start the same l>aekfield of Danny Lewis and Ken Webb along with Ilopalong Cassady and quarterbaek Jim Nlnow-skl. The team left Friday morning and worked out at Hollywood High School (or couple hours Friday leycniivg. f ★ * ■ The game will be telecast back to Detroit at 4JO p.m. Sunday. Junior Olympic ^'^ JUder Scores ^Major Victory topped by Jack Stokes at 265. Ron Charles totaled 761. Hank Gnie-weks leads the teams . . . Capable Barb Howe has'(®bpp«l (Hit as secretary-treasurer (or the Pontiac area proprietors after several years due to the press of busi-at her larger place . . . Flre-j balls had 627-1668 to take 1st in Women's Oakland County Employees' loop. I. Elkins rolled 188- See story elsewhere in sports section today concerning big doings I at Huron Bowl this weekend. U. of M. Tiff Spurs Sportsmanship Move ANN ARBOR (UPD-Two incidents at last week's Minnesota-Mlchlgan footbal/ game have led to formation of a "varsity dub” at Ann Arbew High School to "improve the citizenship" of its students. School Principal Nicholas Sebreiber revealed plan* for the cinb during a continuing inveoti-gation iato the theft ef oeveral footballs from the game and the beating of a Minnesota student Charles Olson was set upon by-four young toughs, some wearing Ann Arbor High School jackets. Twelve footballs, valued at $20 each, and several warm-up jackets were taken from Olson. Berkley Runner 1st EAST LANSING (UPD-Five Michigan State runners were among the first seven finishers yesterday In a three-school cross country meet here. Spartans Jerry Young of Berkley and Bill Reynas, team captain from Galt, Ont., finidied in a dead heat for first place. Brown Has Easy Time LOS ANGELES UD—Joe Brown lond only to Mexico City in Mexi-today holds the record for suoeess-fui lightweight title defenses — his ninth — after a fun-filled unanimous win over Cisco Andrade. Brown, who spent almost as much time laughing as punchhig last night, toyed witii Andrade to score a lopsided decision. Andrade, M, accused Brown of toaflng and running bnekwardo, but the S4-yenr-ohi champ com- c. 17. • OrwH, who parted his (trst aa Injary to ragalar Bob tzisky, h««ke the game opeB la the (IbbI stoasB wHh b 77 yard tooch-dowB paoB to Stove Stooebreaker. Detroit scored on a two yard plunge by Jim Post in the first period. In the second quarter Tom Shanahan raced 72 yards with a The Marines scored in the second quarter on a 1 yard plunge by Tom Marshall. Gross hit for his tvto TD aerials in the 4lh quarter to Sticinehreaker '\ - . . ^ and 5 yards to sophomore end John Lower. It was Detroit's 3(h straight victory after an opening game loss. Outplayed Miami's “ the paaaliig ann of Eddie dohm and ihe kteklag toe ef Al Daa-lel. The Eagles, two touchdown un derdogs, were leadtog 7-0 when Johns uncorked a 90-yard touchdown pass to Bill Miller to tie it the first pky of the laM quarter. A 33-yard field goal by Danid produced the decisive points in a igged duel. Until Boston College wilted in the SOdegree heat of the Orai«e Bowl, the Eagles had riddled Miami's porous aertol defense and even outgained the Hurricanes in ground play. Three of the key games on the college front today has Ohio State visiting Michigan State; Pitt at Syracuse and Iowa facing Kansas. Both /Ohio Stote and Mkhigqn State )»ve smart running quarterbacks and crusher type fullbacks. Michigan State has / the passer Hi Tommy WllSon. Ohio State, on the other hand, has fullbadc Bob Ferguson, whose rush, ing average Is better than 100 yar^ per game. KhMas. placed on probation by the NCAA for recruiting sins and prdiably plans to go all out agtonst Iowa by way of showing its contempt tor the ruling. Defendiiv national Syracuse, with 16 victories in a row, has a problem in Pitt. The Pantoers are 2-3-2, but nporto from their lair indkmte they coin wait to tear ^rracuae apart It won’t be flmt estsy, thou^. The Orange has its best backfMd all set for the first time this year. lapier p Lapoor 'Bianc-ked/ 14-0 Lapeer, currently sharing Isl place with, Roseville In the TYi-COunty Lpi^. lost a 144) deddon to Grand Blanc last ni^ in a non-conference football game at Lapeer. The Panthers never made a serious scoring threat as they went down to their 4th defeat in seven games. Gran4 Blanc scored toudi-dowiis in the 1st and 2nd quarters. HAIHE YOUR PRIZE TROPHIES MOVNTED Mot* th«m moontsd i|b o ,lii*-lilw iiiaiui*r that ihow* ih*m oU to host odTOpitaga. 12 yoors OKporiMie*. Ov motto "Hi;^*si quality work ot a roooaablo prle*." Haifa's Taxidenny Shop 3543 Mark Rd. Ft 8-44SS -f T SATURDAY. OCTOBER 29. 1960 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. ♦ seventeen for LIMN VINTAOEfTTTf - Perhaps one of the former < owners of this house can tell us when this sink wu put in. In light of the siiAs used today, it is way below standard- The )s'atls were dark and !h-> north window gave little light. This picture v.as taken in Februai-y. tiour Neighbor’s House Hard Work Pays Off for Newlyweds PtBlItc r.Ma Pk*u. NKW OPK.MNG — There Ls no actual door to the kitc!icn. You can enter on either side of the chimney trupboard. Just bc->ond the planter is a narrow breakfast bar. Oreen stools underneath. The range an 'nds is a pleasant story to tell — pleasant because it concerns two nice young people — and pleasant because it's about a house I've known ever since I came, to Pontiac over 18 years When I first visited the two-stoiy white frame house at 83 Thorpe, it was occupied by a family with four small children, three of them hoys. The house took the kind beating any house full of active boys does. Otter fiimIHei tnoved In aiSt out. Some had children; others were alone. Then the bouse stood empty for a time. They needed all three assets. Soon after they bought the house, the Press photographer and I waded through snow to get in the back door and photograph the kitchen "as it was." Then we sat back and ^valted. We saw Bill's mother occasionally and heard about progres^ When there was something to photograph, we went out to the bouse. Reserve camp for two weeks In June. He says he spent half the time chewing his nails in frustration. knowing how much work was undone. itMm is small, but the bright color enlarge.s it a bit. The third bedroom is not finished. They replaced the door of the hall linen closet with a set of louvered doors. cltair. Red candles in wall sconces repeat it once more. As .you might expect, the Job turned out to be much larger than anyone had anticipated. No one bothered to count the hours devoted to tearing off old paper, ' But the wedding took place and after their hone>-moon, the William Andersona came bark lo a rharmlng home. True, the outside hasn't been changed. That comes next year. But inside, the house is delight- Dowiwtairs tlrey fiaind they liad to replace ceilings too. After removing all the wallpaper, they painted the plaster a light beige. ful. ding dat« wu aet for July 13. In February they bought a bouM. Not a brand new little 13M houae, but the luMdle aged honw at S3 Tbotpe. llMy bad twe winiDg fathers to help Just cleaning up. The wedding was scheduled for seven in the evening. Bill set his alarm for 4:00 a na. on July 23 and spent until 3:00 that afternoon clearing out all the trash that had accumulated. It’s usually the bride who's the exhausted one after getting everything ready for the wedding. This time it was the groom. Oh, yes, I forgot to tell you that Bill had to go to Army i:PSTAIR.S STIDY They put new ceilings in all -4be-4Mdrooms;—Tile one at-the top of the stairs is used as a study. Walls aie paneled in a pale shade Philippine mahogany. The floor has tweed carpeting on It. Undra's father look ever the wall below the stairs. He put on a substance railed “Kwik Brik." It was applied like plaster, then marked off to reoein-ble brick. At a distance yon cu’l tell the difference. DEPREtWlNfi Unless you have seen both kitchens, it would be hard to visualire what the Andersons did. The sink. I'm sure, dated back lo the day llie house wa.s built.' Walls were grimy and one small north window’ did little to Mp. A door to the basement and another leading outside rut up wall space. The room was small lo stall with. VINT.XfiE IliCiO -- .‘tandra 1ms a m>w double sink set in plastic Ififipod birch cabinets. Tlu* window has lieen enlare.cd. Brown and green material makes the cafe curtains, tlw top ruffle and the shade. Wlute plastic around the sink and green paint on tlie walls lighten this area. over the sink. That was wedding present couple. Thin Coat of Varnish 'Sove the Press Dark oak bars on the staii;s railing. This gives a more open look to the room. Sandra says she's going to antique this rail- ttandra and BUI were going to take sut half the wall to the dining room and make a passthrough counter. Then they sprinkles, llardwai-e is brass found a chimney going up right There's a new dignity about the hou.se at 83 Thorpe, all bc- mg. In one comer Bill put a desk. He mounted shelves on two walls above. Next to the desk he has his stereo outfit. On the wall is a portrait of Sindni. Their bedroom has gold walls and carpeting. Ceiling, draperies and bedspread are white. The Off-white textured carpeting covers the old floors. In the kitchen the floor has beige linoleum. Draperies in dining room and living room match the waUs. The tamltiiro Is Provincial. Moot of It Is cherry with a ~ ih. The sofa baa "Wrhugli Bie oenler of Ibal w ill so had to change their plans. They left the chimney and built around it. On the kitchen side there Is a broom closet. The whole surface was "bricked." "Brick" planters tvere added at each side of the opening. j before you set a date for pauit-Many gourmets insist that the In-I'^K- ‘'“P'*'** side of a salad bowl should be un-!*^®^ Press for a week or so. They II finished in order that it can soak co^c In lumdy for covering the up the oil. -.iVinegar. garlic andr*®®'' furniture to protect SDiccB and in this way add to Rom paint spatters. had foresight arol persistence. As I said, it Is a pleasant story to ture salads. Bui sooner or later oil; tell In the stair comer there is an antique white chair with crimson velvet upholstery. On the low marble coffee table next to the chair a tall red bottle repeats the warm color of the Birch cabinets have been installed on the west and north walls. The outside door was closed up and the little window enlarged. Light green walla make the room cheerful and bright. Thereli a breakfast bar on the south wall. and garlic turn rancid and the bowl ^ix YoUf OwO does add something to the salad — something unplea.sant — and has' If you are not able lo find a to be discai'ded. I ready mixed copper colored paint ★ ♦ k !or enamel, mix it yourself this j To prevent this, apply a coat ofiway: To chrome yellow paint, add The U.S. is faccfl with a popu- quality varnish to the interior of'a small amount of bunii sienna .................the unfinished bowl before It is'color-ln-oll. .Stir vigorously and used for the first time. jyau're ready to paint. Both Ends Are Growing The woman who made Sandra’s draperies made a inaleh-the ruffle and cafe'curtains lation explosion at both ends of the life span, say housing authorities. By 1975 there will be 20 million Americans over 65 and presumably in search of the special kind of home that fits the ne^s of retired couples. For most, these needs include a small one-story home built of low cost maintenance materials such as fire-retardant materials such as gypsum wallboard, rock wool InsuIntiiHi and "Class A" asphalt shingles. . -aiMunmuh tBME** — Wheoevar Bffl Awier- what ttex *l*e*• REC. ROOMS • ALUMINUM STORM WINDOWS. DOORS • BREEZEWXYS^^ • ASBESTOS AND ALUMINUM SIDING FROTICT YOUR CAR AGAINST WINTER COMI IN TODAY aad la» aor FREE ESTIMATES OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 4 Opeiatoi OB Dity 24 Hobib a Day FE 2-1211 No Money Down 5 Yean to Pay Easy FHA Tenns KNOW YOUR BUILDER Dm'I Im dloeobnt gricat fool yen •— Inflotod pricoo con bo dixoniitod, but h«MnMto bulMora wUl quota you tbo right pricol Don't bo fodod, GOOD BUILDING IS NOT CHEAP! Our many yaoro of building oxporionco In tbo ................... ....._ _________^ G & M CONSTRUCTION 2260 DIXIE HIGIHWAY *'Noith cjf Telogroph*' There are many weeds to chooee frem. Some ef the moat easy to work from the ‘ region, In different grades. A her anppHer can be vary helpful in aiding In the aeleetton of the moat appropriate spades and grade lor a partkalar Job. ★ * o For example, a famUy might wish to create a recreation room in the basement. Its choice of lumber might be rough-sawn stock to give a rugged informal appearance. It might enclose the furnace, water heater and laundry equipment in doset-type units even though there might not be enough space to shut them off In a s^rate room. When enclosing a furnace, the home-owner should cheek on building codes or fire regulations to make sure that he will meet the requirements of the law. A ★ * Units of this sort can be built into a room and the rest of the wall brought out to meet them by building other cabinets and cupboards to house radio-phonogra)^ equipment, games, sports equipment or the paraphernalia of the family’s various hobbies. This, then, can provide etorage space at the same time as it hides unattractive equipment, and it can do so with virtually no sacrifices of floor space. ★ * ★ ns bathroom Is another Uksly spot for storage mrita of weoUra pine region Inmber. In old hoooeo According to the Southern Pine Association, the 2" x 4’’ is asnun-ing a more viersatile role In the conatniction field. ise is for studs — the vertical uprights that provide wall and roof support in conventional framing. A second and comparatively new use is for wood trussed nrfters — engineered components that clear span the width of the house and permit elirntnation of much intdiW pai-titioning. Formefly, special grades of 2 x s were required for trussed rafters. However, i-evisions in Southern Pine grade requirements given standard 2 x 4s the higher .stress values that trussed rafters If you havd forced hot water baiting, ene way t» get tom comfort In dUflctttt-fobeat bathrooms and dosed pordwa la radiant panels in fioors and a few minutes of fifth gi^ arithmetic will tell you how nwch paint yott’n need for aqy decora-ng Indoors or out. ★ # * „ To start with, multiply the length of each of thrwalls hy its height This wOl give you the number of square feet to be eovered. Add foe total area of all four walls together, and you’ll have the pumber of square foct to be painted. Do not deduct for windows that are leas than 100 square feet in sise. For ccilina « mdfiple the length by the width. The baek fohai af foe point eaa telle you hew many aqaaro feet wn be eevered by a gallea or other quantity yonH he hay-Uq. H Ihhi date hi not glvcu. nek pmr pafoi dealer. Dfride the toteT nattiieif ct sqaara fset yea are pteaalag to petat by foe aam-ber of eqnare feet a gallea wUl cover, ms will tril yen haw many galloaa or fractloae of gallM you’ll need. In genenO, a gallon of Interior paint will cover about $0$ eqnare feet. Bear In mind, however, that if you are painting a wall a color different from the other walla, ____1 have to calculate the requirements separately for each color, A ★ ★ These rules will be accurate for flat surfaces, but not all surfaces are flat. Here are rules for special objects; First, measure the front area and then multiply by the number shown: Lattice work Grills Cornices Cabinets Radiators Cilfulafoig foe amoont «f paint needed for the outside of foe baoat is done the same way. One complicating feature In exterior painting Is determining how much pebit is needed for gables. If yea’ll loqk gable, you’ll aee It is a triangle. Hie formula for the area of a trteni^e la to multlpte its width by half Ua taaight If there are two gables, multiply this result by two. As a rule of tbnmh, the arm of the sash and frame of a window Is taken as 35 square feet. To find the amount of enamel or trim and trrilia paint you’ll the number windowa by 35, foe key I OPEN ■ SUNDAY 1 to 5 5 sen IVIRIST AVL ■ M uim matMy Bmm. Amy rMM*. »***>***• - ■ 515* SASHABAW HOAD ' ■ AboUmt lorrMo voIm. t Mroo- ■3Cri.*SL5ar..... C. SCHUETT too W. Hana St n i-om Clear Up Confusion About Fuel Oils For those confused by the dlf-glven to foel oils. here’s a breakdown, furnished by the National Fuel Oil Council. Fuel oil No. 2 leads the list both in | production and consumption and Is the main home heating oil used in the major types of hwne heating equipment, in hit water heat-and for similar domestic uses. widely known product, which has no number, is ordinarily used for heatings in space-ty^ heaters. In codidng stoves and lamps. Fuel oil No. 1 Is a similar type of distillate oil, consumed In pot-type burners, space heaters and In some special furnaces. ★ W W Fuel oU No. 4 is a heavier type of oil used in large heating units, but which does not require pre-hr'ating before vaporizing In a burner. Fuel oils 5 and 6 are even heavier residual types of oH, are used in large heaters and require preheating. Fuel No. 3 is no longer “ROCHESTER MEADOWS” **an address you*d he proud of* • 3 Btdroom Hom«t • Full Bustments • All Bride • City Wotfr, StwGrt * Povad Strttts *13,750 fHA Availoble Locotod at 424 Roweid Dr. in Rechottar SUMMIT BUILDIRO GO. Modal Ph. OL 6-9491 Offka LI 1-7517 Austin Building Co.’s Fashion Sixty-One Display Home] Open Daily and Sun. 2-8 P.M. in CHEROKEE HILLS tory aeoUoa from the rest ef ihe bathroom by buOdlag a storage oabliiet that rma from floor to These ue simply a tew ot the rooms where luinter c Stonge space and m a hiding Job as well. Virtually any room In the house can benefit from file kind of decorative contrlbutko flut built-ins make, since well-designed tmits and the handsome qualities of Am A ten minute sttower will us about 30 gallons ot hot water. Thte is about twice file amount used a full day (M washing dishes. I UPPER LONG UKE Cood lets, BegRag ood FhMag ISO I 201 .. .11200 120x213.titMS6tOO nSz2S0,tiBM$6200 ...- .............. SO now hooMt here now, doeo to echeeli and choritm. Hrawma - SpilikT THE PONTIAC PRKSS. SATURDAY. (K TOBER : NINEtEEN Banging Shutters Found Only in Mystery Story Shutters don't bong in the wind Mymore, except in myrtery ttor-i«B. Nor does anyone rush to close tHem when a storm howls outside. .Storm windows have proved efficient, leas troublesome and shutters today are afanpiyxieg ^ redwood, cypress or exterior orative. ------—' -But their lack of functionalism ifii't likely to make them extinct. OOZY. INDEED *rhere's nothing cozy looking about storm windows. But the most useless shutters give a house the appearance of warmth. — If your home appears bamlike. shutters may be Just what It needs. They’ll break up bare “Cultured Living” TZfiP-l* faaniifsf —*Hiv^ity Hills ffaoT M.S.U.O. Campus Aron Rd. East at Crooks Rd. Model Phone OL l-lSU Blue Ribbon Homes by WEINBERGER • Ploatsnr Lsko Woods • Twin Lskos Istatss FE 5-9497 FE 8-3073 Since they’ll be Weather-beaten. grade plywood. Qioose rust-proof hardware too, such as brass screws, aluminum nails and waterproof glue for mitered joints. —- GO WILD Shutters can be as simple or as elaborate as you like. You can let Seur imagination run wild. . _ Size will be determined by your window opening — make each shutter as high as the opening and halt as wide. Of course. It you never done them, no one will kaow If width anyway. A couple of boards held together with cross pieces at top and bottom makes an effective shutter, the cross pieces show if you Power Mower Needs Care Before Winter SOMfrrmNO IttW — it k»ks like a conven- a "sky room" tor family use and Informnl en- tional riA* from the outside, but thU story tcrtaining. There are three bedrooms downstairs, design has an unconventional second floor with______ • _____ want Horizontal lines, hide them behind the upright Iraards for a jstrohS vertical line.— ----- PATTERNS A solid piece of ^4-inch plywood can be used for shutter. A pattern [— circle, diamond, square or al-t most anything — can be cut out in jadvance with a Jig saw or coping 'saw. The colors of shutters and house should be a strong contrast !for the cutout design to show. ★ ♦ ★ Or cut the pattern from a second piece of wood and glue and nail it to the shutter. Paint the back of the extra piece before fastening it . Strips of wood can be used the same way. Fasten them vertically, horizontally or diagonally. i Tongue and groove boards or drop siding can be used for unusual effects. Fasten in back with strips of wood or strap iron. PAINT FIRST Paint shutters before mounting. Simplest method of mounting is to nail them to the wall. For brick walls use special nails or screws and anchors. If you decide to mount them with Aa A ■ I hinges plan for a pair o^Wnch SlOlfRT SfifVICfi 'Butt hih^s for each panel. HoTd-wawiivi wvi w iww installed even on the decorative ones, must be on those that are hinged. A holdback is a decorative metal piece that pivots on a screw, mounted on the wall at the base of the shingle to hold it open. HKYROOM — This arpa on the second floor guest bedroom and a bathroom. This floor need contains a large “.skyroom ” for entertaining with not be finished when the house is built, an adjoining sun deck. There is also room for a If you have a power mower, you HI be InterMted in keeping it in good eondition over the winter numths. The following suggestions are offered; * ♦ ♦ 1. lIoM , the mower off tho^ oughly, removing oil streaks, grass stains and any clippings stuck to the housing and undeiv side. 2. Allow engine to run a few minutes and let the mower stand mrtdoors until thoroughly dry. 3. Drain fuel tank by removing the fuel line from the carburetor connection and opening the fuel shut-dff vaKoe. Clear remalaing fuel from luel Une and carbureter by ig Ike engine ran nnlll H —. totepa. OempleSe removal of fuel ' from tank, fuel Hpe and rarbnr-elor is Imporlanl. Otherwiae, fuel evaporation will raase gum to form on carburetor parts when Ike engine Is Idle ter a long period ff lime. 5. Thoroughly check the air; cleaner. Remove the snap ring.! acreens and filter element. Rinse thos parts in gasoline. When dry, replace on engine. blanket or heavy paper, or place It In a plastic garment bag. Store the mower In a dry place where the temperature remains moder- rURNACIS VACUUM CLIANID Om HmHm Ux.Alr»-^lbr Suprtm*—IxcrII MOERrS Be Safe! Be Sure! WITH A COMFLETI JANKA QUARANTII FURNACE TUNE-UP SpMiol Low Foil Prico Good Throupk Soturdoy Nov. 19 JANKA T 177 Edison Sfrtof AIR conditioning FE 4-3811 24 HOURS SIRVICI ON ALL blAKU OP PURNACIS AUTOMATIC IRON FIREMAN SALES and SERVICE 195 West Menicalsi FE 4-4681 6. Detach the blade and Inspect - 4t:-4f- the- Hade -la slightly bent, tt t'an be straightened. Small nicks can be removed-With a few strokes file. If damage is excesalve. replace the blade. Always discxin nect the spark plug wire before removing the blade. 1. With cylinder In vrrticnl poaltlon, remove the spark plug and pour about n tablespoon ot A single arch of glued laminated ■ Southern Pine may contain enough ser to frame two werage {homes. These huge timbers are designed to support and decorate big I buildings. BUY OF THE YEAR! 1,000 Sq. Ft. Full BaiaiMiit 1 ImcIi $290 Dn. LOCATED AT WILLIAMS LAKE A AIRPORT RD8. WATERFORD TWP. OPEN DAILY 1 TO 9 PJL Slavik Rtahy, Ik^ 10450 W. 9 Mila IM. JO 6-9134 Recreation Room Goes Upstairs in This House Heat your home with Oil it's CLEAN You can bt tur* of Shall Haating Oil for dapandobla homo hooting. Shall pratnium-quality hooting oil is ipaciolty rafinad so if burns cloon ond cemplata. Oil has mony othar odvontagas, particularly with our “Cartifiad Comfort" Hooting Plon. Your fual supply Is right on your own prop-arty and you gal fraa prolacUon 9er your lank... outomotic rafifi racaipis. Our "Ctrtff/td Comfort" Moating Oil Plan ^ fnos you from hooting worrios. Call today for dofails. MAIN FLOOR PLAN — Foyer insures good dining rooms is especially pleasing. Master Ix-d-circulation pattern and relationship of living and ixx>m has private one-half bath. By DAVID L. BROWN In a middle-sized home Tod small I contain a recreation room on the ground floor, the setting for teen-age record rumbles and informal adult entertainment is us-ally in a basement playroom. This works out fine, IF the site permits a perfectly dry basement, IF the foundation permits adequate light and ventilation, and IF your esthetic sensibilities are not offended by entertaining in the A basement playroom is not the only solution to the problem of where to find the extra space, how-There'a another way — cheaper than building a wider house although not as inexpensive as sprucing up the basement. Architect Herman H. York suggests this different solution is moving the informal adult entertainment is usu-second floor. He advances the coneept In B-M lir the House of the Week series of distinguished architect-designed homes. A wide shed dormer in the back makes room In this house for a large nth by *5Vi foot “sky room,” com-plele with raised hearth fireplace, beamed ceiling, and sliding glass doors leading to an open-air sun deck. Off the’^sky room there's a bath and a guest room. The plan is conceived so that this area need dyli< ltd. Ponlloe FE 4-43t0 jCdtchall Gives Garage Storage 'An overmie-car 'itorage "eatcb-jall" In yoilr garage-can yield over 1100 cubic feet of readily aocaaUbU jspace for stonn windows, acreeni, folding chain, gardening equip* ment, extra Urea and you-name-it. Situated front and center in the garage, the two-part "catchall,” shaped like an inverted L, is sus-liended safely from the raften by means of cable or wire rope, so I that it hangs over the automobile I hood and extends part way over 'the auto top. In the square-shaped four by four-foot box overhanging .the auto hood, you'll find lots of space for I storing metal lawn chairs, sports gear, garden tools and equipment. are Masonite 14” Tempered Presd-wood, the non-splintering, smooth-surfaMd hardbrard which wears indefinitely and makes it easy to slide out equipment. See This Amazing Softener Today at H. H. STANTON 103 Stale the floor of the box but hung on the Masonite Peg-Board which lines It. Jellied to the aquare-skaped bos over the hood la a storage tunnel seven feet long, four feet wide and two feet Ugh. This part, estending over the oar top, b windows, screens and other long objects. It Is faced with Peg-Bonn! so that tools, eolled garden booe and even a steplaiider handy but oat of the way. Bottoms of both storage sections A free plan gives complete information on the construction and hanging of the "catchall.” together with data on Increasing the size, if desired, providing there it additional headroom. To obtain a copy, wflfd' for plan AE-361,^ad-dresslng a postal to the Home Service Bureau, Suite 3037, U1 West Washington St., Chicago 2, 111. Aluminum Easy to Paint Aluminum Is the easiest of all metals used in home construction to paint, s|r^ there is no mill scale to complicate surface prej^ aration. In addition, the gray oxide that forms on aluminum and dulls its brightness does not have to be removed as does iron corrosion, or rust. In fact this oxide is an excellent base for paint. Alnrast any point suitable for the service conditions will work on aluminum. Three Things to Consider About Home When you're thlitJclng of a new home, you'll be using your head if you look ahead. In looking ahead, there are three things to keep uppermost in your mind. 1. flood neighborhood. Select a neighborhood that is on the upswing; one that is developing rath- er than standing still or golngi down. This will, of course, affect' your resale value. g. Oeed bouse, rbsese s dealga that ats la aai eahHeea Ike esmmaaUy; aloe one that sUads the beat ehaaoe el boliw la style sad demsad U sr more years from aow wbea yea may woat lo sell It. 3. Good materials. It is important to equip your home at the out-Bdt with materials that will stand the test of time and will not re-1 quire large sums for remodeling in the future. 1920 SQUARE FEET!! If A«r S m I ISSODil Stevih laalty, lac,. 1MM W. 9 MHa M. JO MIJ4 UNMATCHED FRAME - BLOCK BRICK Urrs BE TIDY — The little giraffe clothes tree pictured here with NBCs tiny actress Christie Paul can easily be built in a couple of evenings by any inexperienced amateur. There's nothing to it when you use the full size pattern. All you need do is trace the pattern on wood (scraps are all you need). Next you saw out the parts and then put them together. Painting is easy too because you paint right over the tracings you have made on the wood. You will notice that we have used a whisk broom for the tail. The pattern lists the required materials along with easy to understand dirqcto>ns. To obtain the full size giraffe clothes tree pattern No. 113 send 50 cents in coin to Steve Ellingson, The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept., Van Nuys, Calif. Regardltst of your choice. GREAT LAKES' ironclad Cuaraniea of your complete uliifaction covert every qaraoe we build. YEAR-AFTER.YEAR! OVER SO MODELS. SIZES, STYLES Gsll for TREE EilisMlstl NO PAYMENTS UNTIL JANUARY A attics—PORCHES ^RECREATION ROOMS NO MONEY DOWN, 5 YEARS TO PAY! Phont: FE 4-0994 FE 4-0995 3162 W. Hsros Si. miallUukUkUnlMO oad Sunday 9-7 p.ai. nia—0 TMte le Par II THE PbNTlAC PhESS. SATURDAY. PCtOBEB 1960 - — GARACES DIAL DIMCT SAVE *60 to *100 DIXIE SARA8E BUILDERS 5744 Highlond Rd. (M.59I s Coll for Froo EsHmofo ORIondo 4-0371 ■ Oow OAltY SUN. No Monty Down-—5 Yoort to Roy Soo Our ModoU Now on Oitploy EXPERT CEMENT WORK All Typot ALL OUI 6ABAGES AIE 100% GUAIANTEEO Abo P« iMNrtIM NMtmixatiM W*rk““ • ATTICS • lEC. looms • ADDITIONS MICHES tllEEZEWATS \ UNIT STEP ALSO 1 CUSTOM RAILING i For a Step in Beauty S OKCK TNISE FEATURES: • OwPteco CwMlrtctlMi • RIA SpadficirtlM • StrMf UMmtiU Cntfaif • AnM Mmy hHtoIhrtlM S fm bllMMM-Wt Mnr Anywhtnl ;i.,*, UP TO 42 SQ. FT. OF PORCH SPACE GONCRETE STEP COMPANY S 64^ Highlond Rd. (M-59) OR 3.77^$^ ® PHONE TODAY SUNDAY 10 nOTuT Estimators to Your House Within the Hour! UP TO I FutI Blllt, Coiivtrt Today! '1 WHY WAIT? Buy Gas Heat, Ahiminuni Windows, Doors or Awnings at Prices Only a Factoiy Can Offer! EiityH i WO OASH I WEEDED pen MYsTHIIKYil SmiK 4 BIG DAYS! C«M h n PbH JE |.gi00... Wi Mm t< rnr ktml OPEI MILT I )• I TER EORES OF FREE FARKME OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 10-0 M irR ImI Unii, CmvitI I*wI L0WBTPIUKS»ER4RrlRt*Rr GAS HEAT SALE iMlilTkm-WwK. Onhr iSRr Oiriic ht Priet-OMUig Sah aiO {il... A'i $ C for your old OIL OURNER, 4'a 239 VOORHEIS RD., PONTIAC, MICHIGAN :ri THE PQXTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29. 1960 TWENTY-THREE Family Room Needs a Sink Ptainning a tamtTy room (or a' new house? ^ I , Fine. But don't forget to provide for plumbing in connection with this important room. The convenience and utility of the family room for all members A the family will be greatly danced if provision is made for a itok cloae to the bar and the char-mi broiler. Also It Is a good Idea to kavo a powder roo'm adjoining tiw family room or close to It. If there Is direct access to the yard so that the powder room can douUe as a “mitd room," so much the better. In this case it is advisable to have a shower included in the plans for the powder room, ' tfc Plumbing - Heating - Cooling Information Bufeau points out. * * ♦ Some builders have worked outj plans for combining a powder room with a utility room and a' sink adjoining the family room. Maay alder houses are being modernised by adding on a fam-4ly room. In this case the plumbing roots win be reduced It room ran be found for the pow^r room and sink ncdr an existing plumbing Installation as, for In Householders who are planning the additibn* of a family r a should talk their plans over with an experienced plumbing and heating contractor who will be able to offer many helpful suggestions. Split Block Makes Barbecue Wall Thorough! i When you repaint your homoM^ {spoil the whole effect If they are unsightly. Most garbage conlainorg are made of galvanised metal. Unpredictable weather can plny;hy enlarging existing window!P*^™ tine Gas you're really living! The best in modern fuels deserves the best in modern equipmenb Play safe. Be sure. ACCm NOTHING BUT Jiudtroi HEATING EQUIPMENT IMirt MOfNIfM niMI burTi Otto A. Trzos 3101 OrdMrd like M. KEEGO HARBOR FE 2-0278 ives. aad SON. CALL MA <-«247 IN (XINOORD GREEN — This is one of the models now open in Concord Green subdivision, south of Square Lake Road and east of Opdyke. It is a 4-bodroom model with SH baths. There is a separate dining room, a large kitchen with pantry and eating area and a good sized family room. The models are for sale from J32.300 to J33,800j complete with landscaped lot. Other models to be built start at $24,950. Max Brock is handling sales. William J. Pultc is the builder. simple, and the floor and wall areas designed for easy maintenance. The location — away from living room and bedrooms — helps insulate the sounds which tccom-pany most successful parties. Y'tiung people especlslly like a place where they can relax without disturbing the rest of the fam-lly. For a focal point, you might want to have a barbecue wall like the one shown. Split block, a new type- ot--^c- The subdivision has blacktop 'Unitary sewers--and underground utilities. There are I gas street lamps .throughout. All II homes will have colonial elev.i-lions. . The 30 lots are about half an acre in size. Many of the large <) - We’re thinking of buying ajUws on the property are being big, old house for our expanding saved. [tamlly. We've found one that’s a Most of the homes wttl be good buy and seems stnicturallyl two-Mory. Buyom have their sound, but the roof looks pretty e( S, 4 or f bedrooms, old and worn. How can I teU If There are aepamte dlalag It’s still sound? , . „ reomo and family roemi. Each A - A fairly good nile of thumb hasemesit and to follow Is that Ha r^t looks ^ In, bad shape, it probably Is. A * ^ practical way to find out is to William J. Pirite is the builder wait for a rainy day and go into Max Brock is handling sales. Lots • the attic with a flashlight. Ison for $4,950 up. with house and; which contrasts with other wall ; Look for tell-tale damp spotsik>t starting at $24,930. The models! treatments in the room. Tele-(darker areas) on rafters and oniare open daily. , j phone is wall-hung and directoo^ the underside of the roof deck. If Drive, out Square Lake Road,^ re,sides in a special holder he-you find these, or see any pirq»inta]past Opdyke until you come to ai !<>'v to keep tiny counter un-I of light, it's probable that the . red brick entrance with a qoidi cluttered, roof leaks and a new one is in'federal eagle mounted on anej order. This doesn't mean you brick wall. Turn right and follow'HoW tO Paint Q DoOr should give up the house if it's;the signs. , i a good buy otherwise. ----------------- _ I Planning to palnj or ^._v^ TIP THE BIN FORWARD and you have easy access to contents. It may be a deep bln for laundry or a shallow pair for potatoes and onions. Pal-tem 43.3, which gives material list and actual-size guides also illustrated slops (or making I these counter top bins, is 3.30. Painting a hfill is fun, l)Ociiu.se| ll also is one of (our tullsize ;color can be used with more aban- patterns in the Kitchen Plan- jdon here than in any other room.' ner Packet. No, 51—all for SI. jThe reason (or this Is that a halU The Poniiae Press Pattern IIS a transient area. I Dept. Bedford Hills. New York. THE WINNER! Thqrg's nothing thot con beat Summer's heot and Winter's cold like low-cost insulotion from ROTH LUMBER. No matter what type insulation you choose , . wool botts, reflective, or vermiculite . . . you'll hove more year 'round comfort in your home . . . sove up to on fuel bills, too. It's a real knock-out! Come in NOW for the type and omount of insulotion you need. Qism QialHy BlaaksI IimUIIss ^395 LUMBER SALE PRICE ROTH 2f Tsars of Sarrie* to Tbit Araa 3360 W. Huron FE 5-6910 Open Doily 8 to 5—Soturdey 8 te 4 COZY CORNER — With imaginative design, the telephone corner can become a highly decorative element. This corner was made distinctive with handsome western red cedar wall paneling. Add New Cham and Beontr te tow Home Comw completc-Msy to la-stall—Do it yoursMf. Large sclcctioa available--hi Coatempora^. Modcra and Traditional Desigas. Visit owr Shomroomt. Sand tor CoSolog. See Oar Cemplete Line af FiitpUcB Efiipatit Scream, Taah, ifc. INLAND LAKES SALES 3127 West Hvron St. n 4-7t31 Opaa DaHy 'M S frt. 'HI | A-new roof of asphalt.,,8hingley. can be applied directly over the I old roofing material, and probably will cost a lot less than you think. You’ll also have the advantage of years of protection from The term "all copper pTumb- door? Here's the recommended ing” used to mean copper hot and cold water lines, according to Anaconda plumbing spedalists. Today. its tnie meaning is the use of vertical stiles. Do the edges at the copper tube for waste, vent and I very last. If you can take the door weather, a fresh new look for the'soil pipes as well as for wat«r{of( the hinges and lay it flat, it is house, and greater resale value.!iines. ^ [easier to paint. procedure. Coat the panels first, then the center rail, The top and' bottom rails come next, then thd" FREE ESTIMATES Oscar Ferrell All Work Guaranteed 24^HOUR SERVICE Sales-Service Repair 1129 OPDYKE OSCAR FERRELL "Licensed Master flunAer" t-2IM tmk S-T-R-ETC-H Your Dollar Why take Less when you get so Much More with a ROSS BUILT HOME AND NOW IS THE TIME to Select the Lot You Want for Your Home in BEAUTIFUL WATKINS HILLS! 'THE JEFFERSON" One of our models open for your inspection this weekend. A completely Modern Home, with Early American Charm. **The Biulder That Makee a House a Home** % W. ROSS HOMES 1.6 miles post Telegraph Rood on Dixit Hwy., turn l#ft On Wotkint Lokt Rd. . ... TWENTYFOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 29, 19^ President Colbert Tells Joke to Preaidcnt Ike Bicycles Compete With Small Cars DETROIT W — Mutm of cere* Chryolcr Prnklwt L L. (Tex) Cbibert ww no exoepUoa at the recent auto Industry formal dinner at the National Automobile Show, even though the main speaker was to be President Eisenhower. Cbibert said he thot^ht the time was ripe to disclose one of the industry's best kept secrets the , real reason for the introduction of' claim that the modem automobile owes a lot to the bicycles. In the high flown wotds of the bicycle pe^ "the most sumptuous vehicles on the road continue to utilize mechanical contrivances originally conceived and manufactured for use on two-ivhcclers." Some bicycle developments which were absorbed into the auto-mobUe. as compiled by the Institute, include: rough , roads of those days. Free wheeling made its appearance on two-wheelers in 1870. ABSORBED B%' CARS dweed by Stertteg Elliott, a M-cyele maanfactorer, la 1187, He worked out the aagleo at wbtob wheels mast tura la relatloa te' each ottier to avoid oktodtag. a OMpite OsBwft'a Jake, Ucyela aiai their pead-papular today ' late ft la the Drawn steel tubing was first j___1-^_1 u mamdactured In 1885 at the re- liS ^ of bike bui^r. who wanted something to make their machines It of these r'wii'-seta,^ Colbert related, “them wen 18 I tbie coaatry Sirs. Now there are aeaM 88 mUllea Meyclee. That's why we brought out our ■nailer rmrs. After 80 year* we're otfll trying la get people TTw story drew the desired laugh from the auto industry executives and President Eisenixwer seemed to think It was pretty funny, too. Now along comes the Bicycle Institute of America, which represents eight major American manufacturers of bicycles, with the lighter. And modem auto brakes are direct descendents of the bicycle coaster brake. And they estimate 4.5 million studenU depend on bikn (or all or part of their transportation to and from classes up through college. There are about 58 million passenger cars in uae in this country and 81.5 million drivers. The businesa atacka up respectably with the auto busbieu in total volume. A good aales year (or autos is one in which six million or more new Cars are aold. The bike manufacturers estimate their an-1 By Ixw Fine THE BERBYB John B. Dunlop in 1888 when he wrapped the wheel of his son's bi-jcycle in a piece of hosing to provide, an easier ride. The cotton Icord tire (olkgv^ed in 1892. Wire wheels, such as those usedi Uiey‘*‘wei^retiLB^”*to*'woodml TTie Weydf Instilule alHabout 35^ mKHon| wheels and aolid discs hut'lbl* surprise. It points out most | ln<^l*alhig Imports—a word mighty ; ^ im wteT^bat mt^^ of the pio^m of tlTauto Industry familiar to the alrto people. received their early mechanical A ★ * training In bike shops and it cites, | Imports are even more of a fac-among others, Henry Ford, the | tor In bicycles than in cars. In Apperson brothers, George N |l959, (or the first time, imported Pierce, Alexander WInton and I cars accounted (or-more than 10 Charles E. Duryea. . jper cent of all auto sales in this The Henry Ford Museum and|country. Imports accounted for 28 adtooent Greenfield Village in I per cent of all bike sales. Dearborn have many of the bikes! Even the top exporting countries built by these men along with:sound familiar. In cars the leaders those of the Wright brothers whoiare West Germany and England, moved from bicycles to (lying ma-|In bicycles they are England and and roller bearings. The le aaya uae at theoe by the Mfce maaufaetarera Mprd hasten the devetopoieat at hardened ■teei, so vital In nnto bnlldlBg. The differential axle. Invented by James Starkey in 1878 for use on tricycles. Knee action, which cushions the ride for motorists, was invented in the 1870s to help cyclists over the chines. IWcst Germany. DIXIE DUGAN Halloween Once Knew Weird Pagan Rituals WASHINfJTON - Halloween la celebrated throughout the Christian worid both as a chUdrai'a night of tricks or treats and M • solemn religious observance. But In the tangled histoiy of the holiday, it was not always so, the National Geographic Society says. Aa ysungaten In ranMinerade Black cats were long thought to embody evil witches. Even in Ihe Middle Ages in Europe, such cats were burned alive on Halloween. Belief in witches can be trac 'd to the ancient Egyptians, witches are mentioned in the Old Testament. In Christianity’s battle to wipe out wHchcralt. many executions took place, stirvlving c the witch killings of Puritan New England in the late leOOs. Long before Christendom Europe set aside Nov. 1 as hallows, or All Saint's Day. and the night before as s hallowed eve. superstitious psopln designated a day corresponding to Halloween (or .ceremonies to placate the spirits of the dead. To them, it was the end of the year and the beginning of winter. On that night Samhain, Lord otj"! the Dead, gathered all the souis ” of those who had been confined toi the bodies of animals upon death.! and sent them on to their final] resting place. I M^ks have been asstxiiated wSh man's dealings with the spirits. both friendly and malevolent, since ancient times. The pumpkin Jack-o’-lantem has a double meaning. It makes a weird and shadow-ra.sting spook, but also it is carv« la maeahre rituals, la strange straw cages built in the shape «( glaats or anlinals, erimlaals at the trtoe were eonfined. These were set afire, aod the \1rt Although the Roman conquerorsj outlawed human sacrifices. Druid beliefs persisted in other form.s.i /gOTD(^ J-DROPlNf V again// Giles High Cuba Propaganda Billr CIA Director Claims! Fidel Spends os Much os U.S. to Woo Latins Sn othbr NNORDS, . N0ANDC5O.' By Leslie Turner AMABMIMlUlMr MVI ITUMueON 7HI . 08 A CKMUNAi. . - euwiPDWOMy HANP8 R0NTM8 A8011 LAIO A TRAP TO NAf NANCY WHAT'S GOING ON OUT THERE ? 0 By Ernie Bushmilier MORTY MEEKLE OUT OUR WAY WASHINGTON "'*« m«hrine at a tster of energy momres. onlereA ilTtda.v In its fivhl to get rid of 2f> per cent dls<'Oun1. and we get a the lieeqse of the Jessup Plumb- ^-or-mnder Ineffei-tii-e-a ^ t^ ^^kart for^I "'‘“'‘‘‘'v * magazine tng. Heating A flheet Metal Work dog boarvt of monitors me projeci lor • iCo. suspended on grounds a He asserted that the ma>ir pur- heating code was twice violated Ih AARP Is to ' promote conversion of the healing plnnl at, month the U, S .CmnI should hove M members fired from a rifle or a pistol. Oilman Hunt Mailed Anti-Catholic Talk Newsinfirief Cl.vde’t Wheel and Frame »erv ice, 169 Orchard Lake Ave., was burglarized, but nothin!; was taken. I In a 2-1 dec ^ ^ _ _________________ ______________ ____ I of Appeals left the Ismrd chair- ia order to got o ehartor. Right benefits for senior citizens the Metropolitan Jitore to gas. manless and toothless nmr ww hnvo a^t » talerestod |p aid retired per ! o * « The decision ruled out former »«nb«wW|>> FlUgernld. .. FBI uent Terence F. McHhane I About the only requirements for Fitzgerald pi,,M(rt, Tuesday srternboh Tri I as chairman „of the board and |membenihip ore that a man or regular meetings about once every!women and two men died , gave the I'nlon a veto. If H has ‘woman must be N1 or older and two months when the Iwsl chapter!,^ nearly 1«) other persons were reasonable grounds, on anyone pay a $2 annual membei'ship lee jets under way. injured \'(VTHF nAMw'' "*A**h- *** "*** ' Members may tie employed or' * * * blstln'Janies P Davirof an ‘ f ibek- UnPUPloyrd. but the organuatlon xhe AARP la about two yearsj “ bishop Janies P ,Da\is f San^^--------Letts, *Ihi has Ihe Team-i'* pailtcularK for thoiei^d, has about 470,000 members na-] ;a?ha JUT, qiroady reUrt«d w arojiirmally aiidnf growing in mem-| Juan P.R.. w as’one of the sign- Letts, m Ihi has Ihe Team-j ers of a recent pailorarielTer Kilzgcnild. AARP I ruiltirr jtrtntbv ahoy Ihe orga»-[ l/ation cun be obimned by oinlafl-. I (lending a formal niluiR Ing Fitzgerald at hla honuv DALLAS. Tex. (API-Wealthy Dallas oilman H. L. Hunt saididay. Thursday he mailed copies of anj anti-Catholic sermon prior to the; Democratic National Convention Puerto “^^Rican f^tho- -Sepi. 2*; over »iiiections|P*""”'*UI retlivmennh thFHMr;^,T,|i(p lies to vote for Ihe Popular Dem- |»f M.Shaiic servedW^*' ocratic piyrty. Ho was at Notre *’”*>’ " f*""’ •v'tore the Ap-j Dame University in South Bend, jpellafo Coiirt- stayed the ap.siinl-it was reported to Pontiac police ! •>’<1 • Friday to take part in a 1 procession at the University, A rannlster rontaining contribu i vii,erc a new Puilo Rican bishop lions for the Muscular Dystrophy; whs consecTHted Association was stolen from Pete's _______ Lunch. 52 S. Saginaw Si., it wasj • i n J«' r-pmrf lo Po«Uk ,»to y«.r.i|) Zj J ■r .( vIVwlllllvlU I vllJi I'nlon had a reasonable basts T"" youths aie stieiidmg Lewis Dorher.v, Uiib UregblT8r.,j for obJreMiig to McHhane oo^ tla>s m »he Oakla Waterford Township, reported to f ^ ( *1 I*___________ chairman. f*’*' obltiinlng money unde rnwmih AppellHte Jiid;{i's Oi-irles Fahy and Henry W Kdceilon iinheld the Union. Chief .liidu'c Wilbur'K Miller was on the other side. False Newsboys (;u|,g|, p|gne Scuflle ‘ for Collecting in an effort to win the nomination for Texas Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson. Pontiac police yesterday three shotiDins were stolen from his car| in a Fisher Body, plant parking! lot. Hunt said he has not taken part In the presidential campaign between &n. John F. Kennedy, Roman CalhoHc, and Vice President Richard M. Nixon, a Quaker. Johnson, who sought the presidential nomination, is Kennedy's running mate. MRS. JOHN H. DAWSON MILFORD — Service for John H. Dawson, 79. of 808 Atlantic will be at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Richardson • Bird Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oakgrove Cemetery. Owner of apple orchards in the Milford area, Mr. Dawson died unexpectedly of a heart attack yesterday. He was a life member of Masonic Lodge 165, F8(AM Surviving are his wife Edna, daughter Mrs. Gilbert Wolf and two grandchildren. MRS. WILLIAM McROBBlE | ,he sermon Dr. Criswell op-| HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP — Serv-j posed the election of Kennedy Ije-ice for Mrs. William (Alberta M.)|cause of his religion. McRobbie, 82, of 4170 Lone Treei---------------------- Road, was held at 3 pm. today! Fall sale. Largs hand picked apples, all varieties. Fresh sweet cider, Isree selection of pumpkins. Indian corn, sour"' ana bittersweet; squash 11.39 . bushel, cooking onions 10 lbs. for 49c, SO lb. bag 91A5. Groceries, —•-— wine, ■ - meats, beer, An official of a Senate investigating committee last week said he had evidence that Hunt paid for the printing and mailing of KK.OOO copies 'Of a sermon delivered by Dr. W. A. Criswell, pastor of the First Baptist church in Dallas. It is the largest white Baptist church in the nation. lof Contributions, Isc of its officials, including false (Hvlcrtsc! Tony liaiTis. 18. a((d (iciHld Purser, 20. admitte,! they -had posed as «'olleetors i _____ 13 p^. 7 days a week. RITTERS FARM MARKET. 8335 W. Huron St. FE 1 Beef Dinner, 8vn, Oet. One of 8 Candidates in;president James R. Hoffa. And route In Bloomfield Town-State tO Report; Say$i^*P^“’* jshlp when arraigned Fiidny Ix-foie u w/NrtZ 1^- I Justice of the Peace Elmer C. HeGotS1,700tOr Drive members of the Union. iDielnlr In West Bloomfield TtnMi I * ★ * ^ , . . „ . Kahy and Edgerton said II would' »"eumben Ujngrossman William^ chairman* A customer on Ihe nNile be- , ^ ‘he necessary caliber «'•"»' suspicious when the of eight M ch gan candidates f«ing i ^ objections. approached her and said , reports of their cainpa gn contribu-1 j I ^ tlons yesteiday with the clerk ol;,„^ objections to anyone who! the House of Representalives. 13 75c, under 5 free. KFt WENT, Us. F - A mllltarv guani was shot dead and Ihrrf persons were wounded aboard a Cuban government plane today lieforr It struggled to a landing at Key West. The plane, en route from Ha's ana to Hie Isle of IMnea, was diverted to Key West after the plbil was shot In Ihe right arm and the copilot m-elied a superficial wound In Ihe head. I her carrier The Aerovlaa Q twin-engine plane carried 84 pussengera and the crew. Including pllol C^aa-ilelarto Delgado and Copllol Gabriel Carrasco. The military might be mentioned for the job. | ‘••y before. guard was Identified only as a I * * * Mrs. IlHrold J -Schenck of 6190 man named "Caalro." He reported cunUibuilont oOL-i Currently. Liwrenre T. Smith 014 orchard Road telephoned, * * * 710 in his rampaign to retain his of New York represents dissident Township police wim K re|M,rtre eligible for parole under;'®. _ • the U.S. Army, Herbert J. aod niinois law. His attorney was giv-1youngsters. Sidney, both of New Orleans. La., jq {yp ^ motion for^ . , „ _ and Earl. Alvina, Leon and Cur- g (rial. \T rxnrtl r^ciorsnnihe 1*"** *^®® Highland Park scheduled service tis, all of Pontiac. A Massac County Circuit jury| lorganization. ‘Lines July 5. Also surviving are three sisters, of 10 men and two women dellb- ................... ■ erated two houni and 40 minutes! OfWJUiy«l open only toj^pre 8500 from thf GOP National jand San Francisco skill Game Farm, concerned be- tCongressional Committee, $1,300; The 720, newest and fhstest tn cause uneasy conditions in Africa ifrom Wayne County GOP groups. !the Bqejng jet family, went into could cut off the sufjply fof some' United Ah-|Wild animals. Is setting up a 530-,' acre breeding station i Mrs. Norma LaMott of Pontiac, Mrs. Alease, LaSagine and Mrs. Stella M. Le’wLs, both of New Orleans. Mrs. Reed died Thursday at he.r reach the verdict Friday. Goodpaster. who lost his composure only once in the 11-day trial, remained Impassive as ’The body is at the William F. and secretary broke Davis Funeral Home. ; State's Atty. Chrl Sneed de- MR8. WADE SHERWOOD jmanded tte death penaUy. Good-HOLLV-Service for Mrs. Wiuie^J" f®^ IGoldte) Sherwood of 6130 Tucker Road, wiU be held 2 p.m. Tuesday ctrimt at the Dryer Funerd Home in - victim. Margaret Strunk. Holly. at Texas Meeting *No Basis for Election Squabble’ London Paper Derides Prestige Issue Two Pontiac Area doctors were ima rtad. His w«e. ** - A'nerican Osteopafiiic Surgeons annual convention in Dallas, Tex. Stepping down after a year as presidmt of the American Osteo- , ,,rmv • t.n. ... , . ^ • pathic Academy of Orthopedics LONDON (UPI) - Whether ' ’- d enjoyed that posi- Amenca as a blundering but basic- ----- - g^American prestige abroad is high;tlon herself?" {ally well-meaning giant, as against r 'If""" was Dr. Robert 0. Fagen of Commew Road, West Bloomfield®’’.'®’^ *'P«>P>e now complain that !32, mother of 12 children, was Mra Sherwood died early today S* Inn., iiinnoe cko u,a« Hian shc Itved With, BeiTiard Do-Wlowtag « long illness. She was 33. when the shooting Township. 78. Burial will be to Lakeside tery IB Holly, A lifetime resident of Oakland County, she was born in Giweland Town^p. Surviving is a foster ion. Bob Brooks of Holly. There will be an Elastern Star Memorial Service at 8 p.m. Monday at the funeral home. Mrs. Sherwood was a lifetime member of the Order of the Eastern Star, Qecta Chapter 160, in Holly. Cartervllle home. Dabraski testified Goodpaster became emziged because ho rocks at the optometrist’s watch dog, then pursued them and shot Mrs. Strunk with a rifle and Do-braski in the head with a pistol. Staff Member Writes Albion College History ALBION (UPI) lege aiwounced today that the first book-length history o< the school will be published next February. The book, written by tocul'y member Robert Gildart, will be called. "Albioa College. 1835-1960. a hi^rtory." Fashion Show Set by Oakland NAACP fall and midwinter fashion show, qxinsored by the Oakland County Chapter of the National All Principle Stock Exchanges will open at 10:00 a.m. and closed at 3:30 p m. Our Office Hours will remain 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. C. J. NEPHLER CO. SIS Community National Bank Bldg. which to fight an election at!America does not provide them home,” the Daily Telegraph said {with enough to complain about,” today. I the Daily Telegraph said. "Normally it is obviously un-1 ♦ desirable for foreigners to inter- The paper said more dynamic ’'tt’hich is the most prestigious! vene In other peoples’ elections." |leadership would not necessarily’image?"-the Telegraph asked, the conservative paper said editor-j make the United States more pop-1 The prertige issue, it concluded, Sir. Nikita Khrushchev s succcss-j ful promotion of the .Soviet Union | a basically ill-meaning and non-^ blundering giant j Friday. "Bnt store on this *(‘eaaton H appears that one of the deler-mliuag factors is foreign opinion, ular abroad. Jolm Foster Dulles, the late secretary of state, "had plenty of dynamism • . -.bnt however much be may have Influenced people be won lew friends,” It "President Eisenhower has sue-image ol _ Aaooclatiod lor the Advancement Atofon CoT-^oit' — ^ JAGEN dr. wood criticism of the United r**L*** roore.,cq8sfuUy created fcparUMt orthopediro at Pon-ov„ sins of omission Uuui ol com-|tiae (Mcopathic Hoapital. .n^sion. Where there used to be Dr. John P. Wood of Bloomfieldhostility to Washington’s throwing HUIs was one of four surgeons toit* weight around, now there is be made a fellw f the Ameriennanxiety that Washir«ton has not Cllege of Osteopathic Surgeons, enough wei^t to throw or enough Dr. Wood, of 664 Rudgate Road,will (q throw «” is tantamount to giving foreigners ,the right to ctwose the nixt American president. While this is flattering to us. it cannot be said to! reflect very well on the political maturity or good .sense of the Am^can candidates who have found this new way of making the electors (view) more confused than it was already." tomorrow al| Bethune Elementary school, 154 Mdte St. Bridal by the'________ ilate afternoon and evening taah-Itons by the After Five Shop. senior attending aurgeon at the^® BASIS FOB VOTE Detroit OstH;>athic Hospital. "In a sense, this kind of criti- b * A cism might be taken as high! 'Fh^ citation is made tor his dis-p rats e," the Telegraph said.! tingnished service to the organiza-' What other great power has been i tion and his /contributiona to sur-besought to take the center fiiel ^ical practice. stage by the very power which 'houghtful Service** Phone PE 2-5841 24-Hoor Ambalaiwe Service VOTE, NOVEMBER 8TH We sre attending a Board of Dlreetor's meeting of the greatest Nation on earth. We are sitting around a table. The Chairman riaes. "This meeting wllHiow come to order." he says. "We. you and I are pilots on the Ship of State, a flag ship of the Free World. We shall choose an officer to guide this ship into a| safe harbor ' ‘ ' " "Two men i gest' men want the power............ _ .. _________________ man best suited, best equipped, with' the meet experience to Sulde us to peace and pras|>eri-ty. WeVe heard their CQntentlona. Jlataned-to mlUlons of words. We’ve investigated their eligibility. We’ve watched them at work; Mr of greater glory.” applying for this job: gest we cast aside all tdentifylM labels. Both that position for the honor, for it wlcads; our job is to hire the their records s done — fulfill his promises, achieve his goalv The future happiness, wealth, strength, fiber-ty for not only us but the free world is de- _______________TttTisr JK ms vote* drop.- "Oentlemen. mark your ballot." He sat down. ----.— ^1. — copsekHU YOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 888 North Perry Street PboM PB 8*8878 I ^ TWEXTY^SIX THE POXTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. OCTOBKR I960 ' \ Mahufadunng Ofe Backlogs Rise, Spur Hope WASHINGTON (Jt — An incrpasn, reported Friday by Ihe Commerce Zacdcn at the manufactMiing level omi*t Mid the iiipures "Give us the last month and backlogs irkreased lor the first time since last winter. These bullish developments were Till BRANDON TOWNSHIP SOKINO .1 • M P,- .» TN* indOfTtv'-ti loraied < The report «a* not the briailt side, however. MaSn-fartnren roollmied to rot Inventories and sales were down, thonah the sales drop was smaller than In other recent months. ........... - New orders placed with roapii-; wt r ^^ » w * factur**!^ imTeas**d by $400 mil- BRA.MOON TOWNSHtf gftrr K^asonal adju»tirw*nt. to| «wmo BOARD -----^------PQR BALS ‘ down $100 DeaHi Notices !S35 ssrsi MrrlM siU be held Bwdsr. Oct U. SI I D M. Irooi tbs RIchsrdMO-atrd Puasrsl Rsaif. Jtlllord, «Ub Rev Robert Ves-Oeren olflcItUnf Pbllovlos ierr-Ice berc Mr. Belkn» stU be Ukei W^*d Famal* Osr siMfre. . interetew CsU ( _______________ Retereitcee. 'Pbr %t'ber' taternw- aesr OrsrtM rislM. 0% Call ; ______________U.be Uben White HOUM. Ohie. for terTtce eo Mosdsy. Oct 31. St t p si Inter- i meni in Snsn Creek Cemeterr. White Melitc. Ohio. Mr Belkbss trill lie In eute St aicherp—--Bird jruBertl H***- Mlllerd. BEUCNAP. OCT A MSI Duck caa Is. PrlTSte susrtert^ m Bdau. ■OOSBWdiRX. 1 OAT, -~— teneed. sbIMr. aute expdflciwe sod mI-nrr espedted. Rerir Is own bsnd-wrlUnf Is PsnUse Preee Bos 71. -ne ... . ee^e^t^*^^ f S.^Srfi..‘S: .if hA desr iruifet I McCreery sad Mr snd Mre Wsl- KKV. JOSKPil r. BIJUK St the Otkisnd ........ - -- liSI We»l aouleesrd. Pool ssn Bid blsnlit ras» sl«« *t tbSt twist lor Ilflnt wltn me tend (Jeiinty Bo.rd ot Avdttori. Pur » InvcntoriPit of manuTaKUfers ■ ^ ; *’lta4."8ujf' wpic reduced by S?00 million toi 'Phe Rev. Joseph Black of, Srrl 3 billion. A commerce ei-ono- Indianapolis ^ will speak at the y in.iwoeo-miid i>aid this probably would be youth rally a*t 7:30 lonicht air Ftmf /’.“iJht- *''' '• develop. Free Methodist Chuirh, .'lOl .Ml j omened men!. Omens .St | Pen use, Mlcblun The nitisl opllmlslic observers * * * ^ of the spoflv business picture Sinuina at the rally will lie Al hste been forecsstlna an early «"'• Vivian Welsh of Belleville, end lo the Intcniory adliisimeni I IwanRettst Black and Mr. and which has Itccn In proKren. all jWrs. Wtd.sTi will fake part in the| year. Howetcr, continued Itqiil- jnHirninK and eveninu services to j datlon of Insentortes would jnioiTow and services hold each! strengthen the position of those ;eveninK at 7; 30 next week. j economists who foresee a rec The increase in orders largely reflected the recent pickup in defease conliacting. Much of the! new business was booked by the aircraft and electronics industries. In other industries, new orders held at about Ihe .same rale as in August. • I TV Features build Khell I I Partin, i lur perklBi o. p...... p. Mclei. lor periods of less t •IM» deslir-"-coDdUlon 0 By I nited Press International Saturday ~ BONANZA, 7:30 p.m. (4i. Pretty .despread dcotlnes in other ma- iJ''""*'"'' ir industries. The biceest din was in sales of textiles. While most major Indu-slries continued to cut inventories, moderate __________ . , On The sates side; inrrPgS?dt ; hereiBifter foswed. shipments of electrical machinery: "umiuuon of uoe and autos almost oftset small but t Ttw porkln. sr“ •*>•>> •>* • 9 conaectlOB with i I Such porkln. i Landon > iColor) I.EAVK IT TO BEAVER, ‘ Imcreases weie reported by motor '‘J "Irecklp^’ is a nick « vehicle, tobacco and lumber and '’I""'’ '^'*'■'’^1 A furniture companies. [Malhcrsi self-con.scious enough to •*‘v romovmi; them. ! FAMII.Y n.ASSIttS, 7:30 p m | I'.’i Part II, "The .Siarlcl Piraper-' a of romance and in- “Red Military Officers ' R E S U L T S ? be hold Sunday. _ pm. ItM tht aiehsrdsM-lIrd Punerol Homo. Milford, with Res. Hobeet VonOoyen •ffleSsUs.. Pol-lowln. koreltc horo Barton will bo i uken lo Iho SchmMt Piuiilwl , Home Whit. Houoe Ohio, for lervire on Monday, dot. 31, at J Interment In_Bwsn Cr»k WhiM Room. OMo. fko eipcrioace not resuirsd. Auto a soceMlly. Tut further Infor-mstlon phoM PB f.pMP. sok far Mr^Dubsts. _ ___ Ztr. IICXP. WELOCR POR FULL TOn _.»k Aleo^ E»p. .man fe- ——i Barton ........ ... , JIlfhsolMn-BIrd Funeral M MDOUMOED WOMAH TO UVE IN. Utht noueowork. Care of eliU-drsn Mast bays reftrsaooo. OR 3-M3>.___________________________ WOMAN FOR FLAIR BIWIRO. MT home, your houri. _ WOMAN TO CARE roll CMn.-drea • days a week, for worktag couple. Oonorsl Hoaotwork Inehii^ ad. Mum bo tntoUlaost. ssd baoo good reforoncoi. Ml t-TMT. ______ _____ WOMAN M TO M FOR CARE OF AND 1 boyt. i snd II. Also Ilfbt bouso ____ ___________ -slory kocplnf. Mtut bo dop^oblt sad eemmissloa FE J-«#a. Ask lies In. $»■ a wook. CL l-«s«s .rseol I oct: m. , _______________ >Mlnsw. WArnttaS wartio. afflt EXPERIENCED BODY MAH Wlfh WootsMe RoertsUoo. IN Orchard tools. SUPERIOR AUTO BALES. Uke Afur 1 ________ _ P OAELAND WANTED EXPERIENCED MAID. ___ _________________ EU3RRLT MAN USED . LOkOKU Must cook - I® Lake Township: beioeed son of '»»rA. M« E Bird North _ Oood ws.es 3 artults. Writ. Fmi- Csslmlsr »nd Clisrlotts Jackson: FOUR MEH OR WOMEN “•* ''•*' ■** " .iU»r brother at ■ ...... - ■ Debrc |-' ~ iCerwUii. __ ________ snd Mrs Loo CscrwinskI i Milford.______ : CZERWINBEI iCSRWmi. INO. Osniol, M7« Thomas. VltsUUSo MkhttI, r a *"0 Cxeroinski ‘ Mrs Doi Raymond Rickie ii I Mr a 1 Coals PuncroVlIefl I Bob Draj^tot 1 o?*’ o“ird‘*?jF £■ NEEDED J TOUNO AOORESBIVE j u.. ' men oorttlme to seH sdeertli. t oart lime, OanortunKy to esm; food Utcomc. N. Fcrty. I M to ll:M a m PULL OR fart TTME ItEAL B8^ • tsto poreonnol naoded at one. to handle custom model homes snd i >onuj[o. Contact Mr. I e-lT« ------ YOCNG^TOI.\N^ . Chspls, MU t ) between 1 s (randchlfdi •Is arset-art^-......... ' jr* at IP *'*'*' **“ lardet-Reld Funeral H »rd, with Rev. Fred _ _ sletini Interment In Leke-’ Cemetery. > will Me iwtait. end Itmlly stetus. i OPK.MXG FOR 3 M EN i wAirnronttPERiiRCii) NURaBs e factory branch b I and Isundreii. Must have ■■ r. Coll belweea Bosaardet- PEARSON. OCT* 7P. IPd0.~ALMEDA, i ?I» IM Auausts. ate 51; beloved wife I I of Rollsnd Pearson: dear sister of John. Tom, Nelse and Henry Hantftn nmwPKm hant... JBerma Needed - hold • memorial service at I p.m. ulbf work Call Mr. Otfc. Baturdy at the Huntoon Funeral i -LFTM. MolSd*.v'“ oe'r* d"*'.*. PARt~Tli«n:A*ir"7rrS~H i Sttnui’ri F*«‘«e'r.’lVom. • Welter Teeuwls- r and BIrmlnaham a fonary electrical units, ror opiiaiiitment call FE 4-4141 between 1 and_4. 7 end P,___ OUR BU8INBBS B3CFANDBO. WB , . , _ . - - - openina for one .ood I F»r . Inte ... -laBcral repairs i (-3B34. morntnas ,BaldwlB.______I *... - Part-Time 3 men tor eve-1 BLOOD DONOR NBOID. IS AND Help Wanted --. ____,j pefson, A A. McCV'^ CIRCULAT1C-........... THE PONTIAC PRESS REAL EBTATE BALEiMAR, FULL sCu*^*’' TTON D1 f £Sr^“S^ixpecte(fin Timisia Irigue during th«- Frppch R.pvnlii, perpendicular lion. With Michael Bennie, Mau I ret'n O lfara «nd Zachary .Scott, j TUNIS, Tunisia iAPi-Source.t: UHKt KMATK. 8 .30 p.m. (2l The; ...... close lo Ihe leadership of Ihe Al-stmy "f a flirtatiou.s heiress whol JIbitciK'''''an rebellion said today that tiies to convince authorities she! wt or public alley between such;Communist military officers niav knows the whereitliouls of a would-*-l 'Zone end a Commercial 1 Zone -I. AppUcetlon for P-l District ell be made to the Township Zon ..rs k. submIUlnk e layout of .... misssiv • o 111 Entrance and Exit. : A* Rabat, a diplopia! who 'Ir- ,, . ‘ p. ,P TuetVd^‘".nd'*msl!l?iinM ^ idcnlHiod said that;,' in tccorusnce with The foMowtni liaSd^: Communist Vietnvinh general. Vo,| *'^f*lu"*ipaceT/*s{ull* be lild out In |he' ** Co dimension of nine by twenty .psJO'| munisl instructors had already ( itemSi'**'"**'** ** *”* '®“‘‘*'"*:riv»>d in Tunis as (he vanguard of ' All spscei shell provide edeaueteja larger group expected next! 5«k”n/^dim?t?y* Sn TS"'.“'e'im* 'Ihlli;Th^ Mme source said fhalj, _ , . „ , . s storv' •?,:S r::::.:::!r,s7 “S" lot shill show 1 total dimension ecros. _________ _____ IAmerican Jootball League: Dallas, ♦ A -A la> Denver. ' aisle .meneuverin. lane, of .t 1,.., IJONS KOOTBAIJ., 1:30 p.m.: or*^*”T*^EMstrict‘'uM arrive in Tunisia early next week, he slayer. Anna Maria Alhcrghetli| ■r k._ , .. guest star, ’irklni Layout Eniranci I . r^f »rM »«1 ...i .1 \rin(V..inl. ; trying lo exjiose a bootleg opera-i I' lion for his newspaper. Dorothy; ^,' Piwine coslai-s, P1.AY OF THK WFKk. 11 p.m.| NT). This weo1t*.s offering is "Btifn-r P i7l tfree PttterB-.aiity y traffic moveme M deiree pattern—Firty-flvc li tor two 111 tiers ot spaces a 11 aisle imineuvertni Isnei. w nmimum aisle belnp fllteen i P width. This minimum aisle wit permit one-way traltlc mo«me . 43 detree pattern—fltty itti t a i7l tiers of spaces and one tmaneuverlrit lane.i with I . The provisionaf rebtJ govern-!,.,, tangles with the Los! ;ment would neither confirm or;A„g^,„ „„ ,he West Coa.st. h ________i CKI.FBRITY her of lAid ininor orsl XcaMPIjRp T p.m. (4). ________-.............. .___________________r«tiTi\'nTti?.‘t* ‘he Pauper." d A 4S d»gr«t H#rrtBibon« b# bUtcod under the jurUdtcUonlMark Twain's adventure story o7rtlCT7*end*on^*Vl^^Vu/e**m«l*^V^^^"^^^^^^ of the people of the SUtejabout two boys who look alike r,V*im‘rn%MTThls*m\nlmlrm*>?h^^^^^^^ etile width thnU permit oae-wey tretw!*^ Oeklend County Service Center.;British history. iColon fit movement ICourt House Anne*. 1260B West Blvd \t4f*rDi^ 7.®>Ara*va tT\ Ddban Iv Ie«i4 entrnnee' mkI ■ Rnd'^^ CUy. ot^eooilnf. iU-Jint4_Cuuatl:i.i:i 7*30 P.m. |7). p6ftU. “ ‘ ^ iRoRpr Moorel hurrys to St. J07 I commanded lo ippes^'per- seph, Mo!. to find the only witness, beiJi make oertonsfa daiKe hall gifl, who can clear! Ihl^smi block with lures, or wherein no, residenllsl lures nsve been yet erected then him of a hiuixier charge. Th'e DKNNTS THK 3IKNAUK, 7:30; ■wper printed-Shd p ,jj,y f,nds in'^'ihe'^ci* " *^1 a ‘’•'■*1 decorate his, iis 37th de\ hir'd house. The "decoration" hap MOORE P*'"’* ‘a’ a slock' certificate, ^robste DANNY KAYK, 8 pm. (2i. Mu-. lUemvWon sic. comcdy and dance special! . Oct 33. 1330,starring Danny Kaye, with Louis; : BTA'fE OF MICHIGAN In the Probate Armstrong. (Color) ! Court lor the County of Oakland. Juve-' mie Division. U four 14> feet In hel«hi 1< desitneted ts a reMdentitl dieirlrt Whenever such wall is required all lend hetwfwn seld well end bounderlvs of the F-1 Dtslrlct shall be kept free from refuu knH u«k-.. ____ In a healthy, prow and orderly In eppesrtnet. Burlice of Parkin* Ares. The entire parkin* errs Inc parkin* specei end maneuverlni required under this Bectlon shall akptiAltlc ar cftosme suriecin* 1 rordence with specifications provh TAB HINTKR. 8:30 pm. i4).' i'no*r'csuse"Nn“"«ViV Walker, Jackip Coogan and! fiiher ot said minor Doodlcs Weaver are featured in a| ■en filed In this Court >P'^'UP " maiTiagP proposal. «iT'irtnor'‘?h'rd*’'’^fJ HAI.LOWKFN SHOW. 9 p.m. (4».; »i.k..v.o sou isio child has vuMaied »,Jay North, Angela Cartwright and , »hould* be%l»c?d* under \hV lurlJdl^Oon'’^^^ Rooney star in a .salute (0, Court , .. . Halloween and the election'cam-; In tnf n*mf of in# peopl# of th# 8t«t# . x-. a ! of Michigan, you s«-h«rtbv ttotif4#d-t*»t^pm8Ht 4G9tol4----- i i^%liroi^?lld’‘My‘'l.^*« cenur'’ BKNNV. 9:30 p.m. (2l., Court House Annex 13MB West Blvd, MiUon Berle is jRck's Straight: cverureani^n City of Pontiac In tatd Couniv,: ; n Orna- November A D 1960.! man, ^ I candid camkr.a. m p.m. (2).I * pitnted •®?*"’ ®‘ •*'<’ i^dB* Phil Silvers masquerades as a bar-| Arthur Godfrey is hoet. With! Ion, neat -n-‘-?^TrrXus’'t?“ *ld*hrt"rln* *n T^ ColUhs. Allen Funt. ! Pontikc Press, o newspaper printed ah.1' THIS IS YOl'R IJFK. 40:30 p.m.( ludinpi^WUneslh“‘‘'Hono?*b^ Arthur E i2i. Ralph Edwards tells the Cliff! h.'^ StXnor^S ?i.d“cou^?y““thls“ inn Arquette story. ; ARTHUR E^ MOORE \7Vm o m''?n‘No«iber 4 I»M. •! IsCABBEMfO “ ! IM* Ford TDR.’sorlol No. «4FA3RMru' ELSIE J Probois Rcglsu shall be drained so os to dispose o surface wstor accumulated in the t tiphtitt*; Any Uphtla* used lo lllumlnote ..., ______ F-t Dtstiict off-straet parkin* arcs shalVCoutt li Rot ncood twenty • an aUey whlcb U a means of Increst and epreea to a parkin* art*. It shall be permltolbla Ae end the waU not more than tea (Iti feet from sDcb alley line la order to permit a —-------- at lacets lo tho porkln* s Br fb-addltloa-w tlxT n rntau. racb porkln* arco with such farther rcqnlremeqti dt^s M may be prescribed the ^ertdellS**dUtrtet*^»IW^t^*’wh!;^■’,‘^^ by pubiicatron’of parcel or parcela In which the parkin* 2?* .T®**»?'^*’'*®“‘ ‘® hearta* m i.ne . area to to be located ^ * Foatlac Press, s, newtpeper printed and *■ ® IJto Ordinance shall Uke effeo V?rsi^k“"lL a ,k , - ’»«!*■*»» »h®^ “7 ®^" MjS'V”rudf. Of s"ld“c;Sn u",h"»'cifv -Zmo-tt. 7 DR Berlal NO Tw'fW^'dp B*ard>o« the 34th day ot!,Saali ARTBim E MOORE :l.>3Ui37l, will h#^ sold at pobHr sale -----nmvww I'* *'“• *®w -'“*»• “f Frobau at 3330* Woodward Avenue. Ihet address 7- VAacaaeSRRO. jbeu* where the vehicle to stored eiid; >raeh^ C^k Probata Replsur, Juvenile Division may be Inspected. ' and OreenflaM. Oak Park. I bcla* where the vehitle It may be Inspected. DdMI30. win be sold at public ' 33300 Woodward Avenue. bein* where ir---' ■' PUBLIC SALE TRY W A N T A D S FE 2 8 1 8 1 r Mr* Peur fMtrlooi ne «nd " ii--...••«vurr oi Mr* lllstbeth flobUh. Mr*. Edna Kuck. Emu and Michael Plcha; aUo survived by nine randchll-dren and five fre«t-trandehn- dren. Funeral service will be ---------------------------- held Monday, Oct 31 at 1 p.m. t from Coats Funeral Home. 3141 1 CAT CC 5uh*R*v. RSbe,PX"n". : OALLb I'J?® .'■« th^ otu*. „„,ui . ,million dollar company recognized national^ as sijeodef in ; Industry Tias an outstanding opportunity available. Our program requires a top notch e.xpcrienced sale.sman, who wants to reach above average earning level. Due to our F Davis 'run'eTal "Home I Steady gl OWtll. JKlSsibil- — itics of advancement into 1 supervisory and maiiage-TO T H A N E OUR !positiops are e.xcel- -...- Nei*hboM A Reiaiivrs' Iciit for men- wlio iirove suns of"^ sym'^p^h”/^ A*"m»n"'’«^^^ ability. We provide durinV"oTr"\ecVnt"be’r»*i?ment! draw against Commission ^ M? S^^rlel ifo'r Mrifetty f^ *- Mr A Mrs orover For-! job tratntng program. Age . 3;13 p.m OPENING Branch office In the Miracle Milt ShopplBf Center We need 3 tales people expenenced In real estate safes or who are wllllns to loaro the techniques of real esUte tales. Call tor appotnt- JOHN J. VERMBTT REAL ESTATE B*(ine ^ sn day, Oct *: Macedonia Raymond and Curtis For- ---a UMott. Alease La- d Stella Mat Uwls. rvler will be held Mon-)!. at 3 p.m. from the Baptist Church Inter-dount Hope Cemetery, REAL ESTATE CLASS Now startln*. Railiter today. Earn while you arc leamln* this —'* payln* profcaalon. If you arc M and live within 30 mile Pontiac, phMC FE 3-Tlll lor I view with Mr. Bruce Card of l'hank< WE WISH Wm4 WMted FwTMk tt TdevUloii ScttM ^^{6# Irmrt ADSfnONS REMODEUNO Tom LAhn A SOB e PUitobsd Carpontare CiuIbw TiU Eoc. rooms CabUets — MtoccUaaeoue PE »-JSf3 A BONtkSD * Lie! CONTRACT 6e Beau. - block - brick - eoocrou Jobs Onaraalcod GABE ROTH __________FE 3BMI________ - A-1 JCARFfl^T - ^^tUcs* - ObrmdWi - GET MY BID FtMT - __________FE 3-71B4________ ALL EINDf OF CEkiEMT WORE Drlvos, floors, eta. Jeosen. FE ________ _________ ALL TTPEB OF OONORETB WOES UphElrtEriaf a lASLIE CUETOM UFBOUnER-^In^^im Cooley Lake Ed. EM TiroHM*UPW9im lt7 NORTE FERRY ST. EE 5-8888. JjMA End FoMnd Z(t BEITTART SPANIEL. ORANGE A wbita. Peaule. leal batwees Wit-was A Ron. 00 Pontiac TraU. 13. Howard. WA 8-«dB7. ELACK AND miy hart ' s'oean, a policy^ PARBEBET. LOET OCT. 31. LOET - LAEds 'TkUOW AEO erhita eat. VIcladta of NortA Eblr-lay and Lola, n FTMd. L43ST; MALE BIAOLb. I TItfl! OtD. Pourth and Joalyn. PB 3-dE*|. Notices end Personals 27 W. Commlsa. OL l- 1595 Additions, porcbet. Mtchl*an bate-meats. Cement work. Ouinn't Coo. FE 3-0133. FE 3-44W _ BULLDOZINO - EXCATATTNO - TRENCRIRO - TROCEIRO getalc Tank and Tile Jim Nleachak ___ EM 3-OUI CEMENT WORK. NOTHINO TOO -------commercial. Remodelln* and desi*nln*. FE 4-Ud4.______ COMPLETE REMODELING lERV-Bastments under present , adC-— ---- briol FE 3-0^.___________________ CEMENT AND BLOCK WORK! Keith O. 8to*wart. FE 3-07(2. DRY WALL APPLIED. TAFim AND finished. Free —■" " ELECTRICAL SBaV-FREE BBT. iStaS*’ ELECTRIC heat INSULATION' and wlrln*. Railln Electric. Ud 3-U34 or MU 4^. In*, lice HOUSE MOVING. FULLY oqulpped^FE *4460. L. A. Yoon*. LAVALL18 BUILDINO AND PAINT PLABTERINO REPAIRS A clalty. Rou*b walls made si FE 3-*a«3.___________ ^reUc^ tato-t^^ o^rator i ime with^o children. Writs F tiae Proii Box (1._________ Employment Agencies 9 executive' Sect'y r. .V ...... vM .n occasional ckend. Ability te compose echos helpful Oood typin* j shorthand. Very ---------— ROOF REPAIRS EAVEaTROUOHIWO FE 4-0444 WATERPROOFING Work autranteed. Fret asUmates. ___ FE 44777_______ WET BASEMENT? PHONE META- mora 08 t-3381.______ R. O. SNYDER FLOOR LAYING, atndin* and llnishin*. Fhont FE Business Service 15 | tdly advlior, | altar I P.m., u >a _ _n_3-on4^0oBflde^l. IM 8 Sacluw. Pontiac. UDUNATB BKDI MUUitBRin miCK UEB '8&RUE and MBJ-ICATED*'- MONEY BACK OUAR-ANTEE FE 4-0337^_________ ATTENTION RotUry for whole family, all ■uarantead 1-13 months or ee-placed free. Etron*. beautiful nylons able to withstand punlshmant or sharp Instrument scraped on them without runnln*. UnbcUevabtof Write David Davis, t Park Place. Pontiac. ___ __________ ABRQTIUmE KNAPP SHOES valtacb. FE dN*'ANb"ATOR~'riMirbAfl. oc- tober 37. IN*. I will not be re-tor any debts contract- Enoi' AT**Lackey! Ml*" sTidwin Rd , Pontiac. Mich. ______ IN DEBT? IF SO LET US Give You I Place to Pay Ease Your Mind WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS RM 703 FONTUC STATE BANK BLDO.. FI 1-043* Mombor American Assoc. Crodlt Counaalore Mlchl*an Assoc. Credit Countelors TWIN CESSNA T!^~CLUB BBINO ortanlaed. Fresh license. Full Eaneled. 100 lycomln* enclnes. imiud to 7 membert 1100. Ftl-vau or better. CaU MA 0-3830. WILL THE OWNER OF A SMALL black poodle which Wts out In the vie. of Walton Blvd.. between Joslyn and Baldwin Bun.. Oct 73 please contact Mrs. Alloc Tharp FE 1-4111 Ex. 2U After 3:30 call FE 4-3407. VERY IMPORTANT! __ ____________ LOBE omaHT BAFB~Ltr~ANb economically with newly releaced Dex-A-Dlet Ubiets. N cents at K hr-Memoriuni- I 27 to 40. car necessary. rv Intaraallna ' MAKES OF FOUNTAIN P1N8 Itn ..o.Iiani .aiarv* ! repaired by factory trained men nUivmmt m Itawtiir I' at our offlcc. OeBertl Frlntln* A { BLOOMyTELD *WALL'CLEANEM* EVELYN I wtndowa. Reasonable. IN LOVING MEMORY OF CHRIS A. Hrrrln*ton who passed away suddenly October 3(! 13((. , Ten lonely years have pasted a—-Since our treat torrow fell shock ihkt we received that ■*"’------------nber well The MR. DARRELL TAYLOR. AUBURN HOTEL. PI 3-0130. 1 P." TO 0 P.M. MOM., OCT. 31BT: A.M. TO 0 P.M. TUE8.. NOV- It.. 0 A.M. TO 13 NOON WED . NOV. LEDWARDSi 1 serviced. C. L. Nelton. : , We llttl( ' home You wou That TOt sleep im would 8-1431. e washer repair a . FE ...___ ____ office ... 8A?iwbfl^m-FO^^ i «' tlTulhon.*^^^ ■ °%nd«“4® Cleaners'Ltac Orion^ **‘^*' * , ExSctAlVE sfiiCRETARl «4M , Irompt Mrvlice, . Fibers Lake I Public relations e*e If — ......... ' .E8MEN AND TELEPHONE' oortatlon necessary 'nvataert wanted tor modern!- grBNO .. -- ... Bookkeeper thru trial aatlop lalea. Top eommUsloo paid. , L No OR 44404. I. Trans-I DANIELS MEG. CORP. *380 MTf Orchard Uke Rd._« 4-OMl - balance. I A BETTER WAY TO Pay Your Bills DOMEX SERVICES 108 National Bank Bid*.. Rochester OUve 1-0104 and OLIve I-OIOI Stocker who i 10. 1040. The years may wipe out many thin*s. But this they wIm out never. The memory of tboeo happy days; When wer were all tocetMr. — '-iln* wife and liaidren. children and arandcli Funera' Directors“' Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME __ "Desuned tor Funerals" _. **'*?•?« OHIFFIN chapel Thou*htful Service_FE 3-8841 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Eervlee FE 3-0371 Cemetery tots 5 8 ORAVE LOT FOR BALE. WHITE Chapel C^etejy. UL 2-1007. OAKLAND' KILL8 MEMORIAL PARK_— 3 action#. 4 Oraves S.\LESMEN will teach the real eitata bual-nest to 1 men experienced In other sales work Life time career. Itomilntt unlimited. Active office. R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 340 OAKLAND AVENUE Open 0 to 0_____ Bun. 114 **^* *** prewtly eallint on « for FotoUao area: Walled Lake - Part Time 3 men needed Immedlatelv. For Inlormatlon call MA 4-14II, 4 _to 0 p.m. daily _ _ YOUNG MEN 18 TO 28 Larae Interaattonal or*anliailon to be*la tralnln* "for publicity and promotional department. No I experience necessary but you . 0 40 j ■ MANLEY LEACH. 10 BAOLEY BT ARE YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTSr ONBOLIDATI ALL YOUR IILLI AND LET us OIVI TOU ONE place to pat. RUDGI'.T- SERVICE 3 W. HURON___FI 3-000 FEIMONALIZEO Christmas Cards "LESS 10%" Offer Oood Until Oct. 3* Bookkeeping ft Taxes 16 EVELYN EDWARDS VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE 34^ EAST HURON BUITB 4 PfeEsmEkint, Tai|oriBg 17 DRB88MAKINO. TAILORIMO. AL- Finish High School Bo clnssrs. Study at homo spare lime. Diploma awarded. II you sre 17 or over and left school ertte tor tree caUIo|. WAYNE TAILORINO - ALTI Droea Making — Fui EDNa WARNEh_______ RATRIDE PARTOBS, FE 4431S -770 BOOM Uke Road.__________ Wtd. Children to Board 28 RBUAaLB D A Wtd. HouEChold Goods 29 1 PC. OR A ROUSE FULL WTD Quick cash tor furniture. TV's. —------------I, Barsata House. FE Garden Plowing 18 Laundry Service TO 300 DoLaRB SPOT CASH for used TV. fumUnrs and ap-^llancrs Olobe Furniture. FE 4-1 WALL WA8R1NO. CARPET A Uphol Mach, cirsned. FE 4-1077. l-r'CARFENTHY.~LARbE-AND A SPAN ^UNDRETTI PI« jmin Jobs. FE_4-«I0^ _ i “P..®?!* d«Uv*r» aetvlct. C-" "w AND RK- 3-0381 sork^FE 8-7740. _ CLAJi|'CARFENTRY Landicaping 211 I ACE TREE SSRVICS businesslike and m- i ' Mir' 1 a secure future. Tou , ~^r., will start at OM a week with I *® fIrs?'Vetr." This**™ derinttely^'a I CARPEWTER WOTET~CABIHETB ______________ lifetime opportunity. Only en- i and additlows. FE | Tr** removal, trlmmin*. Oet o eryettc men need apply. Car flARFENTER.^ SPECIALTY IN i bid. FE 3-7100 or FE 1-0733. lurnUhcd. For laterrlew tppoint- formica. FE 3-3333._ ' aa-I MERION BLUB SOO DE- 4^03 Selore 3**' ” i ' ill®7**•* ‘^^®®‘* “' Wanted Miscellaneous 30 Help Wanted Female 7 BOX Rerun At 10 a.m. Today tbsir were replies at The Press office In the following boxes: ________________________ llvory .... KHchent a specialty. FE UL 3-t._______________________ _ _ ____________BULLOOZINa, LAIfbB C A P I N O. CARPENTER WORK OP ANT I Road work and beach iBBtallln*. kind. Reasonable. Call aRer * I EM 3-1413. _________________ ___________ILANB8CAF1N0. LA70N MAINTX- JOURNEYMAN CARPENTER 1 nance, tree trimmln*. general ------work tany typn FE 3-7*10. ----- ' . Than. B. Porter a ARE YOU INTERESTED IN A: wants work tany typn FE 3-7010. clennup, ^ secure future with plenatnt work- family MAR WANTS STBADT _5®“^£*-*'*•??•-®**.***"^' - . In* coodlllOM uM llber*l,em-; work ot any kind. FI 3-7417. j ROYAL TRIE EIRVICK. TRIM-ploya beneftta. Downtown olfica , u-w nw:isTie-a wnnw rsa* sisv i mlnj. removal, apray. Oot out dealraj neat and conyertal type WL free set. iM 1-7M4 aUer 5 *lrl. Typin* and ahort&and ability . _____________'--------------------------- - --- - - person to Mr. ! MIODLEAOED REUABLE MAN 1 deslrea_ part time work. Phono thru Friday. CA^AKJW^OOuiu Full time lor both. Mrmanent, References. For Uiformattas Call Mrs. Kelly. JOrdaR 4-0a7. FAINTINO. INTEKOR AND KXTBR-lor. ByJob o^hour. FE 3-0401 FART RETIRED AND WOULD LIKE bit, trap set. Moving and Trucking 22 Top Soil OFFICE FURNITURE S EQUIP-ment. Forbes Frintta* S Office Supply. MI 0-3M0. da>s. I Wanted 32 !l EDHM. ROUSE UNFURNISHED. I;________........... LANDLORDS I Take advanla*# of our rental I service. Tenants waltin* tor houses nnd apartments in or out ot town. Oood refereocts. No chnr*e If we ds not rent your property. R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 143 OAKLAND AVENUE ppen 0 to 0 _____Sun. 11-4 —.......dirt. *rndUif. sand. *rtv ____ ________ el fro— *—* •" 3 ye'ara experience, ft 3-8*107'" | *-WW- QUALITT CABINETS AND FURHt- ! — bum ----------------"• ■ 000 ran*#. FE 0-0003. Help Wanted Male 6 n who are preeeat-— can work 3-4 Am 31 to 30 ^looST BABYSITTER TO LIVE IM. (MUST drive ear. OR 3-004S. ______ BABY8ITTINO AND RUlfUgilih-er to Uve In. J ehUdron. 1 mBmI a*e. Call EM 1-MM AFTER 600 P.M. 41ata opontoiB for a preecntly ;IS.'SS1?."r*?G‘P5£» r. 3. pjn. to a p.a. ATTENTION. Sp^al typo rout* work for fled married man. 33 " r customers route. -8111 (uaranteed to «r*. 'e" OR' 3-WdO CHAUFPIUR ANtr houee-boy. call OR 3-1 lor Ou*aa who will ip pointments tor Interviews i CAE DRiyraa^FULL OR‘"Y>Alif j time. 410 Orchard Lk. lo yre. or : Older. _____________ I I COLORED TECRNtCUN WANTED i - F’emlllM with Lqreal to tako i .. .. -----IfUt 1*L ■ - RUla. I dara. Rol. raswlrod. WtSo ----- .jiploymcat atotance M eradkora. _ ____________ m eaiitd Uaoa: Inel. truck driv- TOTNO MAR DUnia WORK. Machanlcal abUlty. OR l-HTS. Work Wanted Femak 12 FE 8-0104. After 0 p.m.__ 1 WOMKR WANT WALL WARN- lUnBLT OOLORBD LAClxr to wt ?a« and ------------------ brt^Ittlnj^vM M. and board and aam-betora 3, FI 3-7301. OIRL TO DO ROmdlWORK. white preferred. Live ta, owir room. bath. TV. aUier bc^ cm-I^^.Refereimes EL(tni(4J04 igoSHmir W time real ee: nijLoooT^__________ UlMEdORAFRIWO TTPINO SEC-'. tSSSJi* Sto‘k A?*5£‘®L®Hltet_*4j^ I MOVnO EKRVICE ____________________,_________________ 1-A Reduced Rates ___' ' ' . . Ii-38io.*'“"'- --------.‘-.‘.-“oy.® MJPPtJAOED,! ^ M ODR-^TWtkHdWbCT « m* m i 521^ ’ bnatoeei. Window aad waU wash- —___________________la*, palntln*. yard worb. odd BABYsrmNO AND LIGHT JoSe. U*ht hAulla*. This la Idoort---laekeepln*, Uvt la. IM 1-J041 Milton. FE 4-33to, FE 0401b. -----:_;___iWHITE. 30 YRS. OLD. IlfTER- «I Share Living ^yteri 33 ! BUaRLT LADY WARTS LADY TO share Ilrln(_ouartera and bt 1 tompanlop. >1 4-0007. ‘ MlbbLBAOTO WOMEN WTf if widow bcautUul lart* bbma. (33 a wteb. EM 3-4077.___________ — Contracts. MtgE 35 Anytlma._____________ —Ino AND RUBBian. HAia 3W»ir ^lea. As* Umo. >B I OWL O DELL CARTAGE Local and loasdistaaeo movtat. ________FhosOK O-dOW Fating ft PoK^ratta 25 in cum pairthoo and oac- w-c^.^i^^PAINT-las aad waU paporlss. n 441M. A-1 PA'nrnRO. nmBidn. — terlor. lo------ A-l tROMIRO. PICE UF AMD OK- Urer. OR 34371.____________ OmNOABLE PRACTICAL RDMaE. Will Uve In OR iqUO. UiM EKBirTYFIiT. DICTAPmufi: lookkeonib*, Tate*. payrwU. Re- ei?-y°**9AC Freai. Boa 10. " Fanertn*" FS 0^43*' —INOa_IN.MY HOME. 03 80 A „,"*p*iTIRO EXT«IOR*A«) lalcrior Fret ettlmates AU work auarantMd FB (-030) or OR • 7310. A-I FAINTINO * DICORA-nRO: Paper removad. FI 4-t(l(. AAA PADmNO At DSCORATiMO'. 10 ytsra MperiMoe. Roaaoaable. ---------nates. FKwa DL l-llW. ABILITY To sell your land ooatraet at ■er^ ftS* MMhaiaSm^has tqulty aad*'m^asM^ *m"a?li mortaniaa avatUklo. cash bnyars ____|14] Oaaa-EItoaboth Road ABaOLOtBLY THE FAStiMr £& tton on yonr land Coatract. Cash _ ..________________I ; 'OT SSm.*^idJ:^ FilEE TOYS — FUN waeriro ANo"mmnNM''rick n^NtiRd—^f/‘ ' — ^ Hava a TOY CHEST TOT party i»^^doBTfr_of J4#3EJ"* mu 'S! **' FAiirrii mas. can fm §4711. i work. Bxc. referanut. OR 3-3131. • paper ____ . IMMEDIATE ACTION" JI-hpT nrreHICg WCORATOR. On any *^ ^ eoatracta New SrtJs.AwC?^;S5Si' K. L. Templeton, Realtor 3030 Mebkrd Lake Rd. 'Ft 4-4M0 LAND CCTrritACTS'fb^SUT'a* •iTofss^ho'isr^ ge tar IJ.OOO. Postlae P^ IJM3. .. -..'iTTwl. aval. UL M3I((. V. 361 Rent ApUFarnblKdJ7 Rent Apto. Funihhtd 37 "g 9gi HS?ig I ’J£^ V THE f»OyTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. OCTOBER ;iO. llHto %0«Sol8i RjKLtt"*^* : • «C*LY ‘ i _?¥ri S®?* J* »->i« CALL OR 4-0461 _POOUM.J|13 on I-«NI.__ _ *»D KiTCBENcrn:: rlv«t» ratruie*. All UMl- By Kate Omnn I'or Sale Houses Lor Sale Houses TWKXTY-SEVEN For S Mica aooMB iuro urntnao. « uwrtir ra 4-«Si. _ I AHO S 'no6H~SJ>XKTMBHa. CioM (e Mon* aaS Khosb. on «-Sia._________________ in dAKLAiib Avwmi~«ta amo e)r*% 1 rtMOM ab4 pilvaU bAlh All TOIttln turnUM PI l-SIll iiirasLOR 1% co«#tJ~%ifowaii tnd UtcluiMtM. on W. Huraii _OtU. Purn. Ft S-IW. _____ aACRELOk AkO 1-IU^ MPT Union jAdulU._^ pnnrATa MMJ t74J < Siilmrlutn l.ivinu .M It-. Hps.t MUbTiFta usTmo a _ **L*!«_»T* 4-S31I ALL CASH ■■ - — at Aim MA BOtllTtaA UMWtr. «••••.•«%.«. nu IS»SI» _ . _ U pm nr* iMTiiit M ntftf «.y®*"**’ Anb«rn, OOUFia AkO BABY .. mu ■* for ImmodUM —UL »-»IO ■_______________| both ond ratiAoco fn ,-jm. Stposlt _____ _ i fS ROOMS. ALL PRiVaTB. WORa-|CUEAN 3 ROOM APAkTUakf; ”• *'“■! sTi.?sn,SK.*sii.‘ - " "NEEDED';" ; Lake Properties __________ icorrAoisT all ofiurna: XJrtB - COTTAOCS - YR. RD. I > ROOM APT tl« Pik WK OTIL I Wooklp »U SS- Tni RuMo Cob-Rnv^rc ' (urnllbod. It Clork. loi 4M S. Broodvty. Lske • J A f^Ylik^ AmScy ! > RObifs' iw BATlTArD-lNT ' —_______ rrw'wiOKLAW^2h»n*oi?'ijnii« kUch«n«Uk. dot* to'M8UO And DE L tjX E t ROOMS FOR *. bUM> n SAMS i choice Wett tide lockUon Lokr BEASOI/ABLY PRKiED LOT VI-------- -.......................—- ------- ------ clhltT of Akbum S E Bled PE IRWIN 3 ; WEST BtXIOMpfBLO tOWkillli 1 - -e« bienfAlev. MU talt- I toreod sir hoot. I Mr , lit per wk , 453 Orcherd I IMU Boret. RfAltor. PE ' I Adul^ Ft ■l-TMl WE kE|p IKlUBia TO BELL OB >RIVATE BATHrSlM^^ I Rent Apth Rurnishefl 37 Ir fumuhed Baby •elco^« K«denl5?^ ' ^ ° ; _8_Ande£t0B________^____ i ^ CLEAN, I 3 RTOM APARTMiirr _PRiVA'ni, j R>»lb OR 3-U43 1 ROOM-Ok PIRS-T FLOOR FOR _»®'l P* J-43M. ___________ 340DERN 4 ROOIM AND BATH. W Huron. y home block from ir woman. Pt } LAROE RbOMS. NEAP. TOWN-, town. Also 1 room upper near Pontiac Motor, all pvt. Inquire 21 - fumlihed. < lion, ISt whltt NICE LOE 1 _______. hou*e *Tey'or* OR 4*o3«L Rent Houscs Unfum. 40 - ' “?^6*w"v^^n^Dr*.”wbNvcni!e *L^ SMALLkOMB ON OAKLAND LAKE 3 ROOMS NEAR firTV HOSPITAL:! ------, ---- . ------11 tdulu en- "---- “•—' for mon, li_weelL PE 8-S33» | rt (.1S24. I R^M KirCHENETTE. ADULTS ---- only. MO N. Paddock. FE 2-WM. ............. ......... L.ANO a BEDROOM. PARTLY I JUire it Dwight ^ _____'ROOM OR APARTilENT' furn. Lkkelront apU. OR 3-H08 ] ROOM APARTMENT AT M7i ‘ " ........ I ROOM AND KITCHEN. PRIVATE State Street. Heat. Ilfhte and | entrance. 1 ilr], 410. PE 2-04« ' _|»* Child welcome. ___ j 1 A 3 RM. APTS CLOSE In. PRIV 3 R0O3SS AND BATH. SMALL'| bath A ent. PI 3-0201. OB 4-0234 b«by welcome. 4M per wk. com- UNION LAKt T4M HARTW^. j r“RbdM8,--|>VT-ENt —util:: ! ?lri‘VrM~inou.« inVld" i S EM 3-Mil ' MODERN 1 BEDROOM LAKEPRONT riVcHU cloan 01* weekly. Employed cou- "J, " »->®»‘ home Automatic gk-i heal. wa.h- : furni'h,.. ............ pie. PE t-OOll I .JT!":----, _________ ______JWALIED LAKE. 3 RTOM8 AND „ Purnliihed or unfurn- 3-714* r^BnoM“LeX)N~f**« "apart > *"0 3 ROOM APT EVERV^lJ^^h .Schn^ldetj^ MArket I-1M2 i.hed 41S North Shore Drive, I _ ------. * “** APART-, thine fumlbied clesn .oodlocs-! Rent AptS. UntUm. 38 ! Leke Orion. MY 2-0431.____________ ; BAJd^WARWlCE HAS ^ ^ ' MODERN 4 RMS A- PORCH PON- room In attic*ciVport. lake ■IST. FLOOR. 3 ROOMS BATH. !. ‘lac Lake, OR_3-0lM _ _____ . .......... '---- *'.... " * Aibirn-.-......... ........ THREE ROOMS. PLUS-KiTCHENI 2-742^ I 0”?’®,..’-*“ 'iS? r'AND-iTncE-ciBAH-RobMB: M' «•” .-'P*"**® ,sT-r Private entrance, wasbln* ...» -----------... „ ST CLAIR. 4.IM4 IaTTRaBiVe " CLiEAN bbwin6w"4 ROOlinkW I'^brnTw^e*^* tahed FE J-1214 _______' EM 3-0134^ hlRNIBHED h-AT 2 iEOROOtlS | iiuUYliniL''tBA'R ROUND WHITE PURNISHim complete mirnrrn. uil nrei. nm wauc. 140 a month MY 2-4022 * PE LAKE ORION, COZY T BEDROOM j IM Height.- Road. MY 3-1214 N^ WVE- ! d7tch*coloTirb'l k L*k° "What frarftires me Is she lK>rrowed my pink shoes sml he's sleppinu Rllmer them: ' Nlghle, OFR- T»nr - : MAple i-sill XI-ARKSTON tkCOUB BY OWNER ont^A AND RATH ^RflTJTlTvr. starter ----- ^ h«r r’I: -NO «««■» down ,„rt many other'deelrable ,.1. Build a home lo he orourf of Baceltent mala atreet •llh IP iM IrMia^e C(>M M I'Rt i: I -K AK I', \ ........... ■ SrS.AN lvSrATl':ij __________miu suklUviaim PUitley. Builder EM l-04a3 , I.IXIATSD rUsrOM BUILT -aullfiil CLARKSTON VILtAOB - ----4 bertrm —~ rl-irvrl 'r*:^ ^ relrlgerator ¥* ’•*! BATH. 1 1121 Beverlv i PLACE A "LOST” AD. Call FE 2-8181 for an ad to recover a loss. Dial FE 2-8181 fof an ad writer. 03 N PARKE ST. CARETAKER A-1 ARCADIA cr_____ I BOOM FURNISHED APf . FrI-• FE a-j— FLR ATTRACTIVE 4 RMS , ai l?d”'Lo7.- i Pontiac. adulU only OL l-JOTO^ i AND rBEDRM.. PARTLY PURN. lakelront apta. OR 3-0105 OOMJ_ A^BATH WITH OAS ] ROOMS. NICELY PURNISHED: Quick Reference BUSINESS AND SERVICE DIRECTORY Rent Houses Unfurn. 40 h°aV*FB smm*" SMALL Home: oil hia¥' AND I'or Sale Houses BEDROOM RANCH ALMOST ne«. nlir location,----'--- P->r quirk tale (lOO l^r mo R W Matheion. nroarr PF 4-1154 BEDROOM HOME. BASEMENT. L;.v,h’ar4 ,*;:rroidii''4-V.s: BEDROOM HOMES NEW Piom *75 per month FE 3-0112, Dlurah Building Co tino DOWN vil unny family n .. 2t»,-b I year old O erl 6l 1-1233 ' SACRIFICE .0 gaa best and h lorma and tcreeni Su II ti acre lot everloaklnf ind Owner traneferred crlflce for 0M.M0. Terme W Dartmooi. baih>, air iondltlone< COLORED rtra|M»s tfiO Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor 344 s Telegraph Road ....... _ MAJJSli WAMl < • LAKE WHY VA\ Hl'NT? (Uf hrst MA 4 BBUROOMfl 2 I Il».ft00 MApIo OPEN l-A-l RENTALS 2-HF.DROO.\l DLTI.F.X Automatic Heat — Pull Basement home, full ' ■ i LAROE ROOMS. NEWLY DBCOR-I Utmttei (ur&. ClOM in. Ph FE 8>a4oa _____ 3 LAROE r6cAU thiLL BASE- i - Private. 330 E. Pike FE $75 PER MONTH FE 4-7m 544 EAST BLTD N AT VALENCIA I Wett etde^! 3 ROOMS AND BATH. GROUND ; floor Pvt. ent. Nekr Okbow Lake, EM 3-2544 or EM 3-3100. ROOMS AND BATH HEAT. HOT *uVm' NeaV'^p1!hM*BodV*‘'iei>‘*mo' FI 3 7005. _ _ _ 3 ROOMS AND BATH. NICE LO---------- Keeto Harbor and Wal- requlred FE 3-5023 " moon" FI *-7731 3 bedroom - 1-. CAR OkilAai REE BEDROOM BUNGALOW i ^ Carpel end Harrington Hllli Full baie-j Ode heat water eoflener meiit Automatic heat Vacant ' Win trade 124 Third ' BEDROOM, BRICK RA?iCH AT ...... .-------- family room Carpeted llv- Draytnn Plaint FE 5-BEDROOM MODERN HOME NICHOLIE - HARDER 53Vk W HURON FE 5-1143 ' BATH WEST'side. 6 ROOMS. 2 BATHS iBg replace. 3 7*03 .1 dleditiL modern fealuiei «’‘*'oR- ONLY $10 DOWN " WEST NO MORTOAOB COSTS owner' | Open Delljr^ an^ Sun^ to 7 p m LI F733T after 7 pm MODEL - FE 127(3 - (OI.ORED- .\o Money Down MODEL CRVBTAl, LAKE DRIVE WALLED LAKE AREA - 3 BED Heal *7 000 |40n down MA 4*20*1 WI S'I Sl'Kl KMAN! FIret altering on Ullt unuiUAI 3 -bedroom l‘> etory bungalowMI I PRICE lnclude» POUR big lot- I I with lake ptIvllegeeiM Hat tvaty- ! [ UtitiflM RtrreftUon room with j bar laundry room, worluhon ’ I firvpiart. ancloaad porcli that U i ftninhad and hdaUd. dining room i laraga, floa landacaplng. SUN. 1 to 5 w,\ti:ri-ord hill . Npacloua « badronm. 2tb caramta bathe More Ulan ample eloeet epeit 20 a 3* lltlng room. Pally carpeted Large dinuig room li I .Name tlii- Prur a thawing All reaaunah conelderad 3300 equart I na. area all on one flo< Ida ul eatrae Aiuched 2 ■aUd garage, large lot P ilmenl. PR 3-2305 Fireplace rat and Inc--------- _ ... I with haatad werkaltap * Moet baauttfnl aetttng towering plnei Eieeptlonal ‘S'lfc ^r‘t^ ImmedlaW It Diait Hwy. lo Walerfard left on Waterford MIU Ur-rlght to (351 Balmoral (lot-IPEN f------ r OPEN ilgnei. 3 RMS. 4 -nhthyd. weet aide, clean. FE I 4-4411. OR 3-3312___________ I 4 ROOMS AND BATH. IN DIMY- ___r Writ kide Ic_ , month, call FE 4-1550 BEDROOM OARAOE OR 3-4535 Huron.' Pontiac 3 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH i room. **'lfighland' '^Eita'ieV'**My , equIlT to 513.000 PHA OR 3-7003 3 BRUROOM BASEMENT (IN 1 - • ' cumtiin area s»cn-r Hllli. nr TrI-Huroi ,oS*00 Ca’^^Pa’rwidgi > 1050 W Huron RUSSl'LL YOrNC. REAL ESTATE A BUILDERS I I ' . 4 ,12U) WHITE BROS. I*. 500 ROOMS AND BATH, CLEAN rarpettd Stove and all utllUlee liim. InquIrt at 734 W. Huron. 4 ROOMS AND BATH. OAS HEAT SERVICES—SUPPLIES—EQUIPMENT 3 BEDRM RANCH TYPE, AUTO. oil beat 375 EM 3-3914 3 BEDROOM HOUSE BY MACE day Lake Lcki " WEST SIDE BRICK. 4 ROOMS, gee heat, garage,^ bimt Near Oeneral Hoepiul. FE 4-5707 WALLED LAKE* - 3 BEDROOM modern, decorated PE S1I57. . BEDROOM RANCH BY 0\ Lake privllegea. OR 3-3300 BEDRM HOME. FULL B Lotut I 8L 7 Waierl Aluminum Home Building 4 RMS AND BATH UP CLEAN. j_warm, dote In, PE 3-1414._ 4 ROOM HOUSE, gOO* A MONTH L' ♦PhoneJ'Mr. sTg^'pEde'ral'l- ,^.„cy. Mfr.Virip 4 BMS AND BATH UPPER APPLY 3 BEDROOM ___ _ _ ND SAVE Sylvan Village, 2148 Pontiac Dr. m, wnre.t pterheton ar BIO MONEY THIS WINTER Albert M ‘ Sittrll. Bldr ELgIn 1----------------------------------------: Complete house. $400 and up *-1535 5 . ^^T IN A - STORMS - AND - AWNINOS ----------------- ■*Ta 1 ALOMtStm SIDINO with Celotea Iniulatlon INSTALL NOW A 3 small" ROOMS MODERN, utility and thower. ^ 2-1385 3-BEDROOM RANCH. ATTACHED garage Large lot. 105 per month 4711 tndepiradance Dr, Drayton Plntiis CaU PR 2-04*2. ■ HOME WALLED yard, c___ . and schools AKE NEAT 5 ROOM partly furnished, fenced - •- yhopplng center eke prlvllegei. TO HEAT 1 bedroom: lot PE 2-Wll 1*35 Petrolla POUR BEDIIOOM Itb bathe. Uvtas >pplB| Center aM . .. High — |t5,55S — Shown by appointment. Will Rent No Deal ADBUHN * neignis. nuio. gas neat Private , money down $5 mo. and ,up. LandsCapmg 1 ' riiriar'ge IC . 5115 a PE ____ - »B« JOE VALLELY "Tht Old ReUable Pioneer' OL 1-tm PE 5 ^Automobll^ Repaid I'TOMOBII ay down, at Lloyd 1 SHRUBS AND EVEROREENB i overgrown? Prune for longer; *' ^rimiiiiraiiiMfii.M.ihr*"rr ' I R(X)M UPPER FOR CHRISTIAN ! family. References required. Ph : FE t-$017. _________________j WITH OPTION TO £ 2.174 SHAW 3 bedrooms with tRUlty heat For particulars ca. Slavik Ucaltv I 10450 W 0 Mile Rd OH 3-0001 ____ or _ I down MY 1-3733 ROOMS. RlXaiBSTER. NEEDS some repeir, 2 1-1331 R(X3M HollSE, hfui gurftge Attchor u npuhborhood C»H FE »:500 " iTsOO "DOWN ' "PONTIAC 47001 FE BBMT older home, near City Hall, full : basement, vacant 1500 dnwn Ownei PE 4-0534 Evei FE < 1-4125 FOR SALE BY OWN Eh 4 ROOMS leauflluTiV* "at^rt Tile phalli |i30o'd'ow"*PRI<-F.D* TO WMITTEMORE ■'TRCCT; Lovely family homa In atealleut candlll(m Large living rm. and ERPORD AREA dining rm Carpeted, kjtcheo with apailmgiitc and store build- eating ipaea. 3 bedrmt. and bath Will pay lor Itself from on 2nd Aoor Full bemt.. oil haat. .'iELL Five will u call Varai 1* 500. Csll UL 3-3*'J« No FOR SALE BY OWNER, rtmm bun**|ow “ ---- ---- full basemtnii ®”*" 530 per month FE 2 05*5 shedey landscaped lot FI 4-04** HANDY MAN SPECIAL THREF: 5 YEAR OLD 3 BEDROOM DIN | bedroom moih Ing room Large kitthen Full! (“C \l( IIOI.II. IIAKl.l'.K 13'. W HURON I'l'. .5-818.1 Briek duplek, # rmi i each tide f'uII bsmt down payment. Let u . 107 Wail St. Rent Lake Cottages 41 A icreeni Oarage I mt 113.5*5 *1500 I .Airport OR 3-2375 ■ ' FE «-4«i3 Mr W’ll.l. Bl'll-D Joliii K. Irwin & Sons REALTORS since 1015 313 Weat Huron ttreei Phone FE 5-0447 AOTOMOBILB REPAIHa, NO MON- .....— . ............. -—a. a* UtUa aa (i 25 weakly 2X4—a FT ECONOMY 15c FACH i-oooMr"AND"BATH*~^^ d Molora. Ml B. iaglnaw, IHock WooU Insuiatlon 80c bag j NewlTdaeoratod. I child welcome; j- jL «i31. Llncoln-Mercury-Comet Oenulr.e Imported Mahog. V Oroovf ' mq. ra i-oio*. --------------;—r ROOM8"AND*BATH:"LOWER, 3 ■-"rm. furn. or unfurn. Heat and -----------170 Newberry, ra Caaa Lake. 100 mo. year around : R Adults on^ TR 5-8377 afteg-.Q. | 4 ROOldS MODERN UTIU'TY ! . lew?,* to Utactirt "itk" V." : '"u"""’- f*FE't‘5M3®" SEE SEABOARD I?i/aNM lake orion imo d^wn 3 ai —A oven. WIU—build on vour lot or mine Your plane or misr DON McDonald LICENSED BUILDER OB M837 Johnson Beauty Shops ^ COLD WAVE SPECIAL. $5 50 COM- PONTIAC LU^^BER C(Y ^te. Dorothy's. ^500 N. Perry. ^ CASH and CARRY_ Boat and Motors Repair and Service Separate JUST arrived YOU ARH INVITED TO ------ •$I JET STREAM EVINBUDE , „ „ kCotora — A.1 Modelt on Dloplay 18 E Huron LARSON AND CUTTER BOATS ] —— Harrington Boat Works j „ BDRM . OAS HT , NR. SCHOOLS. > FURNISHED BEDROOM. PVT ROOM HOUSE. OAS HEAT, IM- bath and entrance. Near ahopplng madlate occupancy. Phone Mr. center. Adults^nly. OB 3j^2543 5 n6o^ ^D BATH^PUtrSASE: j ^yrlrffify^. r"jl^?733^^ COMPORT^LI BO(5m: 88 R(l.”^kwo<)drN ________________ PE 3-2242 12 ACRES Nearly modern 2 bedroom home < ----completion. Good toll ' jad frontage. Several! other good building spots 'This ! property Is real infeilment ____________ _ Priced at only $8,050. Small down I garage, payment, Termi ----- D e. ce—X, DaniaU I PAIotlng, waU Washing. Fret eaU-Boat Storage « matea. FE 5-8375, eves.. iw C---ii-—1 ORCHARD COURT INSIDE i tt sn0p8«ouppltea l "Rent Now Oreatly Reduced" WINTER STORAGE ; tropical fish ! - * Mro^2*HBD^oiS— BOATS A MO'TORS BLACK MOLLIES 3 100 v*““ PICKUP A DELIVERY PLATIE® ............ 1 100 “ ” PAULA. YOUMr angle F11,I_______________^ 3 13* PE 8-6918 4030 DIXIE HWY. ^ ^ OB 4JK11' HUNT’.S PP:T SHOP ' *" lOB LoonJ^kel----- MIRACLE MILE FE $-1112 ■■rrb^fcw .vmTD TMlfci^ARn OR OUT- “rr * -_— .------ COLORED — 5 ROOIIO. boArd with us Your boat will be Plastering SlErvIce I tbh porch' gas heat. FI properly cared for and ready mr - - - CLEAN 8 R(»M MODERN ;AF^^ Phone Mr. I center. Adults^nly. OB 3j^2543 ! IS,”®*_ ius" STOPPING AT DOOR. '^E rz t iijy 5 ROOM HOUSE WITH GARDEN. _ ^ O^d R.1. (Mkwopd. MI^l "BOOMS r BOOM. *2"BEDR6blTTfeM^^^ i "Sv.'.”**' ------ Edith ntar Auburn. coAl or gaa ™>XM"TMaTOKn“"»rSK^ vfJi V,Vai ri^^, heat, respontlblt partlee only, no CLEAN SLRPINO ROOM. CLOSE _________EM 3-3303 Days________ 4^371*°**““^* ” i HbU8BKEBPiNd"RObMr1$" Vt'WK. $200 DOW N ROOMS ON DIXIE. NEAR M-ll. *** Nelson | ,.,,,1 j-all ow?er. Haf?y Olarkstoo. Inquire 22 Auburn, | _rE_4-4373 -------------—^ 7-3100 ------------------------------------------------------------- - - -3^ AVENUE"*...... >ms and bath with new sld- ------- ...» Needs painting "■■(■in. ...h ______ _____ refrigerate' --------------------------------— «- month.'ni 6-2307 1 11 .....!”■ .......... e32iu PLEASANT. NEWLY DECORAirED Immediate poseessl good Keego , Harb Prldham St.—tmall ment. (8.250. Maas . bunyslow Basement and $arai ROOMS ANDBATH AUBljllN I NICE B(3o'M. 1$ "rljhta. Cloae to ate— “ ' '‘-7«™ r ROOM"T^ACT7bN 7l ~BLfp: | . Bultable WEEK. FE : -■ PRIVATE ”ENTRANCE.~*KrrCHIN j 18050 Maddy Lane—4 roomef an ----e, 88,500 Stennelt , 81 - ..J, 10,(io Andre Bt-2 be( lom (arage. 87,000. J.ACK LOVELAND SUN. 1 to 7 23 TEARB OF iERVIC* ' LAKEPRONT (OOO DOWN . • -----------— _______bmTTftlf^ \l $'****® *■> porch s to court house Hurry •75 ■rluoking lake ■ I court house Hurry Won't toll. Only $1. 1.500. Uke Rd LOW DOWN PAYMENT ( on Baldwin with 2-bedroo 1-2013_________ MUST BELL 3 BEDROOM HOUSE attached garage, unfinished rooms, 17.500 cash. PE 1-1430 j becua pit. Built-In bar IS baths. I Hot water heat. HI-PI and Inter-i com system Attached 1 cat plas-I tered garage iDul EUaabeth Lake, Rd to Pleasant Lake Wood'i to OPEN sign .I250 J BEDROOM BRICE No down payment, just, 4230 cloe-: Ing coats for this lovtly ranch I home Large rooms, automgttc I oil heal, freahly decorated Uke new Located on a large eomer I.., -.—. Drylon Plalni. Jttit 1/ lek, d WILLIAMS :v, REAL ESTATE A INSURANCE prKig. ( repnlr from a tune-up u 5 ROOMS* AND BATH. PULL BA8B-^p.m. jnent. gaa furnace. PI J-4838 bath: ■ I----*......... ra 3-1014 . AND BATH. comb. Ctorkaton. 34A.5to24L. I HOL. Mere's the .?ear"LL FE 4 1254 echanic will - .___ — anything . ------- .0 complete ov«- ,_____ .arnlshlng, Re-flnlshlng, Ft- . berglat repair I n ' * “ •* i*rinting t ROOM MODERN. OAS HEAT Vest aide PE 5-0023 • ROOM MODERN HOME .$4(Kl .MOVIvS VOL IN Mi’.S I' HF. .SOl.D KO( IIFSTKK 3 bedroom Pall basement Oas I4*J Baldwin heat 70x128 foot lot Screened a.'l"u*p".U“"»8“75o‘" \VFST .SIDF SMALL DOWN PAYMENT Beautiful 3 B F hrtt:^i'Ta*r g'?f COLORED SURPRISE Only 1400 down for thia terga family homa In axcellant eondl-tion tbiwighout Large remodeled lamlly kitchen, glr-—■ *■—*• porch, full basOm K;.t,..t. car^ara location (Only 410.000 I rail Mr Warden, PE 0-1004, AND BATH. STOVE, ALL SINGLE OR DOUBLE 'FRONT 4100 Ells Lk Rd PE 4-1310 BLEEPINO ROOM PRIVATE EN- Open I BEDROOM BRICK A.jOiiN.SON & SONS 1704 .S, U'lfgraph I I': 4-25J3 « e J r- J D________I. SLADE S PRIN’flMO CO Body and Feiuier K^pair 1503 Baldwin aye. , - - — 4-8257 PE 4-15*2: KELLY'S BUMP SHOP Pr«_,P!ek-up “d dellyFry_■ i'^mWSSfyV^F.kd.rMnl Sand. Qrsvel Slid Dirt Bmali Dentfl to Total Wrecks , Radiator A Heater Troubles ! BULLDOZING — PII.L DIRT AND Corrected. LIkhle Rebelred | top soil OR 3-7080 PE i-0750 *lB»UTance EetTmatei on^*ell ! and Mowcr ScrvicC _____Makee of Automobllee Bowling Alleys ---— ^ ^ MU 5-2001 3072 S Milford Rd. LAKEWOOD I.ANES i Spoiiing Goods Efficiency .Apartments Living room kitchen, hkthroom. »0 N. Paddokk ra 2-2000. POUR ROOM MAIN FLOOR, Automatic heat, oarage Very rea-sonable at 100 a month. Call PE 8-0113 NICHOLIE k HARO- ER RE^L E8TWE ________ MODERN ~S R'OOM APAR'IEfEN'r. • 'rlgerator fumlehed. Anne PE 5-3321 utilities turn. PE 5-<75* • ROOM HQUSB; PULL BASEMENT Oas heat, garage. 5(0 per month. __________00_N. Peddock_____ S-03ra - _ 7 ROOMa AND BAl^ ' OARAOEe WARM ROOMIn PRIV dost to Boldwin ond 8t Uir^ - - . —------- $9,500 u"l_2^5«4''® ' 1 NORTH- Val-U-Way FOR OOOO BOVS AND TRADES IllF W Huron ihoee. Modern enack bar Own bcwUa|»tkda/a 'tlj 0:M: ML WE TRADE NEW' & USED GUNS ARCH7ERT EQUIPMENT ‘ Building Modernization BuBding SuppHes-Sve. D. Itoyara • Cypet Cleiiers..... R^i/OTi ISSf ■ *^."^r*5?k?rar^4-gy::: Cerami^ _______ UURK CBKAMICa FOR FUN OR . DTOftt. L-*• Ers. FkMM- Sanding Furnace Dealera rURNACSS. ALL KINDS. BEST buyi AAlIf Satoa. MA 5-1501. AND ___ ___ ____ ALL EQUIPMENT KELLY HARDWARE ^ 3004 AUBURN ROAD ---- —- -- FK MOIl from 0 to J3 ind 7J5»® P-___ MODERN 3 BEDRM TERRACE 1100 mo Including etove k refrIg 34» Jamee K Hlvd FE 4-^ NEAR OENERAL HOePI'TAL. 3 rooms and both. Stove and relrig. _lUl^ClMin. well heated. C»Il FE NEWLY DECORATED - LARGE living room, full liied bedroom, all big cloaets Fine rtrceptloo haU. Built-In bathtub. Tile floore. Large dinette Aleo iliesble ktteb- Steam Cleaning Reetaurant Fan Filter Cleaning Portable Service K h T STEAM CLEANINO Television, Radio and Hi-Fi Service Dump Tnicka—Seml-Trallert Pontiac Farm and Industria! Tractor Co. ________ting It for leaa. (HO furnace ad Ductwork M Codverstons ----- r Reattno (33 S WOODWARD downtown I --------n Inqut ard, FE_2-007O___________________ f ROONia NEAR DOWNTOWN 1 IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR A car tMafe. newly decorated. In- „i„ clean place, call FE 8-0377 -------------- ! lovely HOMi* FOR l"~ELDERLY tJo b.droo'S‘d?pl.x Full ba.e- | pLEaIaN^^^^ !li?llca'SSn!r*bel"nr‘ Uk”'“?or i ‘‘ m'Sfrn ho‘'m.*«a"MlU,S? at S«5 per monih ern elyU cooking. Mutual 5-3337 Will build 3 bedroom ranch style • ' home on your lot. Full batement. oak floora, tile bath, bireh eup-boertl. OR 3-707* RUaa MCHAB nichoub-harobr- 53 L, V 0 iafter *; Pontiac, Michigan haatad Call Ft dRYDEN. IS ACRES* 3 BEDROOM " farm TiotnE Hoiteni kitchen wntL ROOM k BOARD WITH OR WITH-but ll^jOakW Ave.«i-1«L,, WIDOW WAfItB L*ADY R005IER NEAR OMT. 3 ROOM room lotrer. Stove, and hot water _FE. ^1M4.J___________' . SEVERAL APTS. POR RBI«T -West tide toeatlons. 3 bedroom lower. PE 4-3S31 or Uppiai 5 ROOMS and ura. Rent Houscs Furnished 39 1 BEDROOM. COZY, CLBi^ JdfAT- OR — ABSOCIA-TB BROKE,IB* nvestnient Co. Inc, ”~ Orchard Lak< trlcl Low down peyment Paul .\I. loiifv. Real K: . •32 WESy HURON STREET PE 4-«550 FE 3 1275 Xrtv K.-mdi lv|ir Home B^acloue 3 bedroom Walk,'- -KENNEDY 11^500 Dt^N^^- ^t^MMEROAL of froritaga on* the great Dtala Highway Ealra large 2 car garage Home has oak floors, plastered walla, brick fireplace, full NO DOWN^ PAYMENT I WO H040 UN 4-0300 < _ TON PLAINS. 3 BEDROOM [ LOVELY HOME POR 1 ELDERLY ih. OH month. OR 3-70H.____i __people, egcellent care PE 5-00*1 Rent Stores 46 I U L T R A NEW STORES. WEST OR 3-Bide. PE 2-2144.--------------------- i Rent Office Space 47 i 3 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH In beautiful Lake Oakland Heights, Beach privileges, low "---------------- By owner Call NO .MON'KY DOWN Lovely 3-Bedrm, with brick Iron - ■ AIT newly dec 5 V« per cent Inl end only fU.500 PE 2-3(84 SOUTH LAKE ORION — 3 II a Nect 3 bedroom h , 2 OPPIGta pdH RKHT. 4540 DIXIE Lincoln Jr. B STpfn‘?5*i. 0X3O--P________________________________ ~.fd “^4 i or^ln&ed^^^Pefi ■ubdlvUion MBr Huotooa Lake. FE ___ Alumlmim fiormt, water gofUner NEW O^ICEB Wlfif 8IDE Adjoining lot avtUable. OR FE. 2'-- --------- $.350 MOVES YOU IN "bedrid*' * IW-car oarage**Oniy"4'o.5«).’'*rE I SHARP 4-3200 JUDAH LAKE 2 brick. Hot waur no •tU REputllc 3-70M r«*n6 HARBOR, 2* lat. optlw t( 600 8Q. PT OF MODERN AIR conditioned office space lo Capitol Savtnga k L«an Bldg 75 w Huron 8t CaU FE «-SHl. THREE FAMILY IKCOI This desirable property is located on a comer lot with extra lot available. Haa ( peach trees a^ ^larga^^ga^rdj|n space. Building ment oh first flw a^*^ a^rt--......- with 3 rooma and b«th RU.S.Sl'-f.I. 'lOUNfi REAL ESTATE A BUILDER ---------- ________________FE 4-1200__________ . ; pleasant lake area. 3 bedrm 1 bl<^ south of Pike Et : basement large lot 110,Sno 41000 BY OWNER. 1 BEDROOM BABE-. _dn IM per mo Owner ULJ-llO'i; nice gardtn. space. |l3.500 terms ('. ,\ WKHSTLK, Rp-ihor OA 1-3122_______^ MY 2-2281 R [. ( Dick) V.\LUET Realtor FE 4-3531 345 OAKLAND AVENUE! Op.*" » tb » Etm. ll-» I. Private e *3740. ROCHESTER Office Space OPEN DAILY ' Huilders Sacrifice MUST BE BOLD THIS MONTH TERMS' TERM8I TERMS! WILL TRADE Lftrt* 4 bedroom trl>levrl f»c brtclc end ftlumlnum »ldlni thermo-ptne windows and nereen 2>'8 bathf. geptrstr dmlni roon driuxe kitchen with bultt-1 ft. fftmlljr room with ledi fireplace. 2 c»r ireriffe ft. lota Rek-* -------- Open House V Sun. 2 to 5 391 Dover brick. 1 bedrooms doerii, Houn FOR RENT. TEAR ROUND. | 507 Main St____ LakT^ LA“?t£b **** 1 For Rent Miscellaneous 48 BKOROOM ROUE | BIRMINORAM. OWNER. , tell 1 bedrm. brick rm—. ____ j family rm. eomblnatloa. m bathe MUST I. kit.. ------------- bathe, garage. Attractive buy MI J^bto Iw^nt eg lease. Clark. | LEXINQ- iiODBRR 4lR3MANDRASEMKirt:,* For Sale Houses 49 _Pont»%e Lnk^OR S-flSt _ _ ^ “ mam. i^Y 2 BEDROOM 'MODCRF HOME A wa. W.W. wetewme. 870 • *-—* — --- - A STEM.—$8,500 Carpeted Jlvtu room and reeep- I _____ iftreplace. Cheerful DWECTTONa kitchen a room ready Road. Auburn Halehte 701 Der^ ; fRotan (-0144 I 1^33N BEDROOM HODgr' M^MO 31(0 1 EEORfMM^* m;S^U^Ur*Y3. MyVi£Io' OL l-0((0.______i ROCraylTBR r bestor third and ----lal baie- Excellent con- iot.* Oa A'^'st^abefh Have Your Business or Service LIsied Here. FE 2-8181 3'BEDRU' LAKiwioNt'. $ MI U of Pont. Every eoneenlence. Very clean. Neat echool, church, ebop- ________________________ _ pto( sem -juiia. 175 U 7-51« ' small CTKAR mt i BEOROIM HMtE HOT WA-IER, | e OlM-4 carpeting. gara(t ^bedroomiL Partial ditton throuthont Uke pnv existing morigage oi -M4 „ , per cent taUreat. M5 — . ----- „ Pontiac' : eluding taxes and Insurance. MJ5( (3SS down 555 per mopth ’ Elwood Realty PI 4-| ' A .STEAL! paint coloi WILLIS M. BREWER. 08EPH F REm, SALCa MORi-to*piTbiic*;ito* «7«htoi •**“ * 'win ' yg ' ru S4IK ^ NEW HOMES ^ina^'w^Ajj^feyhoiSo ^'Y NEW HOME^ STEELE REALTY (M.iin Office) * •S }‘i I34g North Milford Road Between •*'- Highland and MlUord , EM 3 2(37 _ or MD 49(to 1. OPEN SUNDAY 1-7 ; Bargains — Colored 3 amROOMS - BA8E- U.*cr^<5:Afe-"i?gM8- BARGAIN able toe »1 parawg or couple. I chUdren. FR^I-IMl alMr 4 ■/ 1 ■ I _ _ _ ®-J®“ ,3 BKOROOM ROME. OOOD LOCA-' tion. city block from new kHUoL ‘ «r®^ni^ra|ie/.®n*l^5MS^ FurnUhtd 2 bedroom rtrttt to Total prtc« SEE THIS ONE-I ROOMS MKN'f-J?MraiXKNT*CON-DmON - PRICED right READY FOR OCCUPANCY : 3 bedroom bomet. Etoetoto om. IktM with vm dawu. No mart,., gege cotte Nortti tida a( BaMirtl. UNDER CONSTRUCTION 1 hMh robm homee with baaameM. AMm. tiding brick front. FRA lam. THE KYLINXR - 53 N Alum etding Wlek trant. I on yauT M^a arraaga " ! cku ta mixed* neAhboriM^' ---- ..rice (5.IS4. 11.850 down. | - -----^ - i ; vwu vu* « war eiu>*»«w w " 1 Executive I 3 bedroom ranch with , riar tk'iv r/-1 i'l- r-i w v you those fine new Immaa CUCKLER REALTY l| ?iW.,'’V*.?r‘:5aAi^,'*.K%*: C. HAYDEN. Realtor 1 n Satmaer FE 4-4M1 1 40$ down. Bheparf. OL l-fdlL IfV (Sfu“ * ' Fft $|»» *• *' *•>»«•' ®f®“ T\ITSXTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 29. 1960 For Sda Hmmm For Sale HoiiMt tt^vt Bateman! ^ REALTY ; «r J For Solo Homom For Sok Hooom won ocaniMN oamch m I acm Iw* iMi-v * jf^»r«0*rm aania. a lull batha. ap- aru>.mauir a IM r---- • of llvini araa l-c TaiM anlr^Mlb Tbl OPEN ■ «ara«» HowtrrF-Tr-Kr»liivj a07 MAFN iT . ROCHr’ oL i-ai» lair Near Parlrb Lincol RCK'HF:STFR HKI< iHTS! Mccarr.ii BTOR^ OOUWl^ Ua .RICE RANCH ] Itedroomi I'b batM, car-pated Uvidi and. dlnlnt rjni. Baiement Timken aae heat. ^----------------l4cart^ DORRIS DON’T MIBB - Baalat.’ _____-Ibta aaa Tbrea bednabi*raacb van laa. anchor fenced back yard, a narad dnya and a ear O a ban t*rate and maay otbera. A baaie anyone nouM ba praod to can their own A^ore Tor your ■aaey brick hOBUTv Mieally tulUd tor a ratlrlnt couple. IU.IM. For Sok Houbob 49 Good Looking Good Living «e oner tor yaur InepacUoa lovely'4 bedroom home averl------ lac Rnatoao Lake. Peaturci lane carpeted llrlnt room with Hre-place. 1 car attached tarate and Immatota ^eaea Taylor. Realtor. i Income Property 50 IT OWNIR. INOOMB PROP.. » rmi. A tuaporch dowoittlra, 1 rmi. prlv. bath M ant. up ( aiitcrhury f‘ bedroom ranch ’'vacant ai i Lake Front | Modern hl-levcl 1 bedrm ‘ I home. Mehoitny paneled ; llvint rm. with firaplact A I > specious picture windows I ! overlooklna lake, complele ; Preway tlalnlast steel equipment In family s’— — Doubit car attached earaft. Has a firaplaeet and an cs-ctpllonal famlly-llvini area. .*00 “Ph'.r..‘^V"*hu» "Alright! We ll take it up at the next meeting! — But we’d : rather call it the four-day work week ... not the three day play week: ” , kUeben is a eery chacrful laric cDouth “— and yat small < tt.bM Terms kefront Idta from 41.4M >WD. 414 Bionai. Pared .stl il ^ N^. blahtfay. LI 4 THIS WELL BUILT Home U fully Insulated. Oil beat, modern kitchen. 4 bedrooms. dlnlhf room and newly carpeted Uvln« room with 2t« acres. T/b mors acres available. day. . CaU u Highway For Sak Houses 49 STOUTS Best Buys Today For Sale Houses 49 glassed In porch, and Dieesf hifmes .... ..... ... at this price of only 14,444. TRIPP OPEN WE TRi___ DORRIS A BON REALTORS 143 W. Huron PHONE PE - Shkplha. charchrs. schools' within 1 ilocks. Lake privileaes 41.444. 414 .’n., 416 mo PE 4-4404. LI I-TIll _ _ _____ ib’f ON NORTH SIDE CASS LB. one of the j _44 ft. frontage. PI 4-2404.__ LAKE ORION LAKE FRONTS Two loU. two houses. 1 year iade I pX"*'40.W”*,irff ol'^U*- Peterson Real E.state I.AKE ORION MY 3-1681 oil furnace, large rooms. Immediate possession. Only ' 41*.*- I PHA I ■Sunday 3-5 4.122 F'owler Drayton Plains R.J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 344 OAKLAND AVENUE Open 9 to I Sun. 11-4 For Sale Farms 56 40 ACRB FARM. MODERN HOUSE, barn, silo and other buildings. In Lapeer County. 414.000 with _ terms. UL 2-4442 after 4 p.m. mT ACRB CHICKIn FARM. LAROB laying house, t— -------------- ------ ring house, bam. garage, i n house. 3409 Law Rd.. N Rent Farm Property 56A LAKE SHERWOOD BcauUful Irl-levfl model now for Inspection. Build on youi Sale Business Property 57 3 STORB8 LEASED. PARKING LOT. ILL OR TRADE - !r*lhe''Jwi* c;v,"i Water I rrlrlg iB T H CHAPIN OAKWpOD manor ~•jJjJ'* on"leundatlon. Includes basement with rec. room, work shop, hot water heat 2 eitra large bedrooms. maids quarters. 1'4 baths, walk In closets, spacious living room with ledgsrock fireplace, dining room. Jalousie enclosed porch outdoor grill, loads of other features. Including 2tv car plastered garage. For the Bi-Lcvel Waterfront A lot of house for your i_ and ntarly new. Finished Iving. SEE tl contains 2 bedrooms. Ilv with fireplace, large. ' 2 carpeted ONfHARD LAKE ROAD TO BERWICK TO CANTERBURY. LEFT TO PROP- OPEN ’"*An*buSf'in Se'atiireB IS baths Ltrgs Rrenlace. Two piaaurs la Tenn Slane TEN ACRES of good Ihod Only 16'• miJes from city School bus si door. WILL TRADE for ebssper hMbb or good income SUNDAY 2-5 OPEN SUNDAT KM 3.H0 \\ CSt WaltOll L. H. BROWN. Realtor | R"*rkler like . diem. M4 Eltiabeth Lake Road ''Sllf? ‘ Ph PE 4-34d4 or PE 2-4ii« !!* , MULTIPLE LirriNO SERVICE J i Open Sunday 2-5 RM. ^__________________________ i s.viv™..j.;h! j Partridge _____ _____ bright partially completed irolly room, ------------ O'NEIL OPEN SUN. .1-6 P.M. (^PFTvT e-cono-tri V y 1 I , 1 M 2440 VOOHHBI8 ROAD J—IJ. V YOU ARE CORDIALLY In- Ranch model home Available tor Immediate purchase Robert H. Uhapin. Realtor Em 3-0085 MU 4-P'^' hrpetad, ________ 4th ceramic bath (total of mahoiany kitchen with stal less steel sink and built stove Anderson Windows. 2 gor.^ LAKE OAKLAND 2 bedroom year around homo. Fireplace. IS car gang*. Breesc. way. 46 ft. sandy beach. Landscaped 414.400. 42,040 down. WHITE BROS. REALTORS MO Dlale Hwy. OR 3-121 It no answer MAple 6-1942 lot OR J-IOM.___________________ 44 FEET X m 443 ORCHARD Lake Road. Phone evenings, PS Rent, L’se Bus. Prop. 57A Id DOOR LOADING DOCK AND office. Modem bulldmg. Franklin Rd. Eleo TU 3-0110^_________ GROUND LEVEL SUB-BASXMBiT. 20 X 00. fireproof For storage or small business. PI 2-3431. Bves. _ra 2^8f*- Inspectlon. Build i . 45X40. GOOD irlvs In truck entrance. J 2—20x00 stores facing Perry t. call Bob's Coney Island, rri^ Shopping Center. PI 3-0020 Attractive home Carpeted dining aret. tIU u..,. . compact kitchen. Basement completely finished with ranch home. Located ; 18 THE "BIRD" TO BEE OPEN .Rimday 3 to 5 6001 Rowley Dr. Plains | Brick Lakefront 3 bedroom rancher, w ed living room and 1 'b baths. Attachet Very nice decor. Ply a-<343 tor details — North from j Pootlac on Dixie Hwy.. left on Williams Lake Rd . left on Air- I port Road, watch tor signs. features solid Lauinger ACRE or LAND? DTXIE HtOHWAY TO SIIc K E ROAD TO iT TON LEFT TO PROF- OPEN I Open Sunday 2-5 P. M. SUN. 12-4 13344 Highland Rd iM-SH 3 E. of new U S.-23 Express! Leslie R. Tripp. Realtor! 75 West Huron Street Office Phone FB 4-1141 a counter tops anC . picture window. B f construction, select o ---- plastered ---------- Ranch model home. , USED^CAR^LOT WITH OFFICE, Arallable for Immediate purchase. ’ 140 ft. on Baldwin. Located at 444 A-Cole-laslIck Comm. , “-— --------- Robert H. Uhapin, Realtor EM 3-0085 MU 4-8825 UNUSUALLY 'WELL acquainted With lake properties In Qaklend county Have special values In all types — atsite your wants In lakefront home, f------ th. h... urn. to hu, hi, vS‘ c!‘sCH1^T1\‘fe‘'8-0458 Waterfront j Purnlthsd 3 bedroom year around home overlooking Maeeday Lake. Fireplace. Lot approximately 4S >lla'^ sill MO RrasnnxhU terms xlis'^^ 110.400. Rrisonablc t Immediate possession. Lake Orion Baldyin. mooe PE>lMt.____ Business Opportunity 59 Partridge IS THE ’’BIRD" TO SEE Higgin.s Lake Honey! The sweetest buslntaa you’ll Rnd! Restaurant, gat statioo. grocery, boats. 3 bedroom home, plul extra $9p week rental cabin. Lola of land for motel site. Over 40r of ^hway and^rlver pontage. 112.-bakery Included. fot. 11 600 down Its per month SUN 12 TO 6 P.M. THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN DkIH-KmII Park -----------...------ m. tots cftped property Th#re‘»! of relosatlon m you Indian Village ' t bedrm -bek-. ] h full cernmlc tl bath s _____I floor. 2 bedrms. _ 2nd floor Lee living rm.. natural fireplace, separate dining rm. lull basement, gas haat. 2 car brick n-rags. Convenient to Tel-Hur- 411.40 -. Jterm._.27 . Mo^wk, Open Sunday 2-5 P.M. TRADE. TRADE: Owner will Uks OPEN THIS LOVBLT 4 BBDROOM home features a grand lire living room, country style kitchen with cupboard space nished. Fireplace. mecrlc'' bcit water heator.**?' new" " '*f.eliX.*"?o,”l}3infi’i|' ________room, lull basement . City location, paved street, city water h aewsr. Comptoely fenced yard and only one-half - hloeh to-alty bus—Mica little — for your retired mother The iloprt .ales Joy th# fltldsU-.. ... firepiset, 424.740. On gaay terms. DRAYTON DREAM ................. with large recreauon i 1,'K; ORION AREA terlor, 2-car garage, beautiful landscaped lot with paved streeu, sidewalks. Country atmosphere with city convenience. Excellent ’tleges. Put It _totS?"‘wSdi^'‘‘'im' "V“r*Cf "4'ie.i5o‘”ar pUee. BeauUfuI kitchen with built-in range and oven. Nice dining ..ataa...»Uh Jraach danra. Attojehad ■.. I'b car garage and many other' d^ie^ Items. DIXIE RIORWAT TO MATBEB ROAD. TURN R I O H T to HUMMINOBIBD _.LANE and left to OPEN C RAW I'ORD AliHNCY 3511 W Walton PE 4-3304 i 404 I. Flint MY 3^143 i ; Sale Resort Property 52 f $4,0(X) for Tavern And "tskeout’' licenses, together slab if?re I lestroyed bldg i North- .‘'agiiiaw Valley I-iqiior 34g W. WALTON eery long, so you'll have to act fast, especially since the price has been reduced because owner Is leavfng atate. Imvelr. oU hrlck, i. --------- ------ carpeted bedroom UVlng r INDUSTRIAL SPORTSMAN'S I_______ dise. 40 acres private lodge witii private lake. Guest house, bruu-...Dfally furnished ^rquglwL. con- j . •caretakers quarters,' hjadreits of for our FREE "Mlchlitn iss Guide l!’ Partridge mcthln* eatra nice. Beau-U1 nrw carpeting and oth-extras Only 110.740. :$54 PER MONTH . . . with 11.000 down Cost 3 bedroom home on the North ___. kitchen with____________ fast rm . separate maid’s quarters Basement rec. rm finished In antique brick k log burning fireplace k bar Oil heat. 3 car att. garage k boat house. Vacant. 440.-000, terms DIrecllons: Turn off Telegraph Rd on James trees and charming c summer house witu •emo porches and attached m i garage Remerkeble beauty, c structlon and location — lor o 113.740. On terms. Partridge AND ASSOCIATES 1040 W. HURON ROS T H ch.\?:n I Roy Annctt. Jnc.. Realtor^ 30 E. Huron St. Open Evenings k Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 OPEN :Sun. 2 to 5 P.M. n bungalow and 1' srage located In Wa-I ‘Twp. Access on 3 tkei. Make an offer dowi Israkc Privilcge.s Iftrgc n X M ft. UTlnt room, all carpeted. Glassed la front porch. Basement, auto-mauo gat heat. Large well shaded and landscaped lot. friu'r;t-rM':ftSn - Tncomp 4750 down 2 lemlly Income located on the west side In Auburn Heights beautiful setting surrounded by lovely lawns and stately shade trees. Has carpeted living room. 2 real big bedrooms, lied bath, well arranged kitchen and dining room. UttUty room, breeae-way and garage. 414.140. Terms. State Street ily income. Always a de-locatlon for Ineomt prop-’ s 7 big rooms and Uled owner plus 2 completely --------1 apartmsn'* ci.. u„, large loarFricb bii slrable ti sale. Our I,ady of Refuge *"'* the right home and toca- k^LIFErnSlT BMUtlful Sick ’GAYLORD land contract < IMMBDIATI POS8B8- near Northern HI. 11 ft. living room, eeparate dining room, handy kitchen. Ceramic bath, 3 bedrooms all on one floor. Full baiement. gaa rear yard. only 44740. »eS~,T: 16 X 30 HUNTING CABIN acre wooded lot. 2 ml. from i. MM. Od your loi anywhere. • mY M031, Builder. Suburbon Proporty 53 13 Residential I-ots FHA approved and committed. 75 X140. paved streets with curb, ----sewer, , community —— AND ASSOCIATES TO SliX E-Z KAMPER trailers. . .Oooilcll Trailer Sales 3200 8^ Rochestei^Rd. UL<'3-4490 DRT cleaning BU8INB88 FOR sale. 107 1. Huron, 4 a MOTEL SITE Sf Auburn near Adama 5*’- “SH* siatlon site. Or good lor any bualnesa. Frleed right for Investment. Paul M. Jones, Real Est. WMT HURON STREET ■FE 4-4440-... .. - -PB: -4-1274 ■ - GROW MONEY Small store building and a ii home ^ ^combined for only 44 cleaners, barber' shop or si retail buelneea. Bee Ihle new. e alaays wanted e roof of expo.se wair carpet SELL OR TRADE Immediate pos- r. home. North suburban. Full basement. 6ll — Dftc* T^rnit or o*ncr wUl trade smaller home Lakefront ■ CLARK I .fELL Ml TRADE. Neat 4 room' bnagatow. 3 hadroosai. nice ftaaedi la laa. lake prlvUeges. on WUUaaisl Loka 1 bloek away. per cent! r PoDtlac—41.100 downl! itt aMOtUv p^rPK ^ tMM fe hsMiraaoa. totoragT CM’t so ' SACRIFICt PRICE. SO 3 bedroom home with expaaslon attic with 3rd bedroom finished except for finishing floor. Recreation room In the tlM basement Water soRencr. Oil fur-nece Oarage Large lot 00 a 100 J. c. It E. Wl • ell Isrpoce. fprpsi .. |toe W a US fi. t ..NPHSC M - " front Dtmhle ^Ich rx^‘ns* only , 432.400 Elizabeth Lk. I Malor. SSJM. | GOOD BUT. WS bcUHN Reaaon-I aWe pMPthly paymenis pi ml pot etnl lotaroM on Ung Con-i Ut^ 2 hMromaa. to NailhtrP Mtsh SeBoprdb^rtcL ' Bpaclopa BRICK HOMX. ap txc tional attractive scttlni. W bl to lake. Natural fireplace la 13 X IS Ilyina room. Large s room. Two bcttrooPis ahd sti WATERFORD AREA NOTHING DOWN. 3 BEDROOM RANCHER. JUST NEWLY DECORATED Kailhtra TOIR 594 W. HUROI V MU 4-4424' LIST WITH Humphries ADVANCE LOW MON’H H. R. HACiSTROM REALTOR 4400 Highland Road (M-tfi FE 4-7004 AFTER 0 By All Means See AUSTIN BLDG. CO.’s “Fashion Sixty-One” It's a Furnished (^ustom-Qufility Home! -Jit^ niFiROKEE HILLS 'BUD" ! Open Daily and Sunday Handy to School and Bus 3 Bedroom family home within walking distance to Eoetern Jr. High, block to bus. ~ aluminum aMlag citcrlor. full basement, auto-gas neat and hot water, dining room. Venetian. bllnda, garage screened patio porch. Priced at 40.100. why not lee It today! Forest I^ke Estates Brick and frame Tri-level bedrooms, ftmlly ------ fireplace, wall I carpeting, full separate room, most delightful with biUIt-tna. large ullll large carport. (Hfcred It 437,'fOO. by appointment only. “BUD’* Nicholie, Realtor U Ml. Clemens { FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M., FE 2-3370 NEAR AIRPORT R© . ---------s. tile bath. lovely country home Quality built A -sacrtflce at 411.400 - 41.400 dawa. MULTIFLB LUnWG BERVICB 33 MtCHIGAN AVENUE rooms. 44.300 . IdOO down, f than rent. 2 to_8 P.M. irive out BUsabsth Laks fSoad “ •<0“ Uke Road, turn Hght Carl W. Bird, Realtor B 4-4311 Bves. FB 4-134 MIUER VACANT - Mors In at ance tor lesa than 4206 5- 3 snd 3 bed-rM homes Ali'newly decorated end In Up tap condttloo. A loca- SMALL FARM - “ !>_■ I gCaot. down payment. HOME fc OFFICE - Zoned cam-•‘ory brick with 4 Mroorne. m b^. Up top condition tbroughouL Good loexUoB. IdeftUy nr——^s •— i??****?; Idealto arranged for tl- WATER FRONT FARADIBE - custom built 3 bedroom on a spacious In nn area of eacluslvc waterfront homes Large carpeted Nvlag room with ttreplacc.-bum In rVnse 'i oven. 3 full bnUie wlUi ehowers 2-Cnr inrnge. Mtny. extras foi TOUr fsnllv^l f-Amlnr* w. Deahto dec-Itlng for you. we are sure we have a houaa of your choice tor nothing down. And you do not have to he a veteran to buy. Won’t ybu FRONB Ua NOWIII RAY O’NEIL, Realtor 242 8. ‘ Templeton Houseman-Spitzlev wo 3-4414__________PI 2-751 HI-KH-L VILLAGE CHOICE BUILDINO SITES To fit any type home Ranch - Cape Cod - 3 story TrI-lsvc' or exposed basement. All on pared strecte GIROUX 1140 starte you oft LADD’S. INC. Coraer of Lapeer Road k Sllverbell 3 ml. north of Pontiac FE 1-4241 HAGSTROM CHOICE COUHERaAL LOTS I HAGSTROM \VALUE LAKE FRONT Mfvrwt s .yy n. 13 kitchenette eot-■pletely furnished. 4 »rurm. living quarters, nlee sandy beach. MOTEL I every i tagee Excellent groei |5i,W‘down*!^ i UNION LAKE FRIV 1 3 Acres, Nr. Milford „„„ Large older type brick home. 4 ment .. bedroomt. full basement, oil heat. i R.o«».b)e down poy- ■ ^ HAGSTROM APARTMENT MOTEL on cxprcsc-°;«r eirport 4 units plus »SSmity**f r ratlrtd 3334 Orchard Lk. SCHRAM auburn HEIOI1T8 3 bedroom^bungak REALTOR 4140 HIGHLAND ROAD IMII) PON’nAC ____OR 4-0340 FE 4-7000 AFTER 0 LOT, 40X140. IN PONTIAC. CALL a^ 4:20 p.m. FB g.—*-- OXFORD—TAN LK. FRIVILEOES Vs acre. 440 down. Bmon pay- mento. iCT 2-2741. ___________ BBVBRAL Fnn BtnLDINO LOTS to Lakewood VlUatc. Attractively hungalow y1U> partial *■“* large lot 104 of fruit trecc. .100 wlUi low Hardwood floors ttuoughout. suburban living' at He beat Approx-................... frulV and IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 *”nnPy'T”’_ MANSFIELD WgJ^VENINOS k SUNDAT multiple LISTIND SERVICE your famlly^s comfort Can seen at anytime CaU i In^matlon. TIM WRIGHT. Realtor I reasonabla terms. ________________, William Miller to buy or rsnt , | R„],or FE 2L0263 rC. SCHt’ETT, FE 8-04581 N^OTHING DbWN SUBURBAN 2 bed foam *•»'» decorated. Dorothy Snyder Lavender 7001 Highland Rd. IMlOl MU 4-0417 Bves. KM 3-2303 Days Waterford Hills Estate A few choice Iota left. Average couple. C_, _______ H. R. HAtiSTROM REALTOR HIGHLAND ROAD rM5l) .■PONTIAC Oft 44300 FE 4-7004 AFTER 0 MODERN 3 BAY SERVICE STA^ uon main highway, doUig good hu.fn... ... opportunity. OR _3^4»y_____________ MOBIL OIL CO. HAS 4 _ ? eervlee etatloti for Icaio Rofltahlo lo-eatioo^pii^lol aaeUtanco avaU- s-siaii servMo staUon. 40 ft. •howroom and office. Baltoblo for AlUod producu. Can PE Herbert C, Davis, Rltr. For Sale Acrcsif 55 TO 4 ACRES ____JAL OFFBRINO — T Pai ranging from 1.7 Ac. to 4.0 Rut no! a 1% p 5 ACRES VACANT CLARKA’^ area — HIGH, sightly rarctl. Oood resIdenttaL po^borMod. ^I^roved Hwy. Flovd Kent Inc., Realtor Froo Faralhs Fontlac. Modern ■“* 3 bath eqnl • Oroeetng c tjT“ni *r- " “wH *i Tyler ReaHy. 4! Detroit I. Mtcf PR 4-4200 Evoi. sontb. Ttrma to thur^jl eT “LET’S TALK BUSINESS" Donuts 1 By mllHoos. Royal Oak too l«ttloii 44.100 win^Iod” Oood profits. Easy to leariL MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES 'CORPORATION THE POXTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 20. 19H» TWEXTY-NIXE Basiss jDppor^ 59 FOR uujn URvm mncm •t Wo«««*rd and Bquar* L«k« Mth it^ooaft pounl^ Ftauii ctel fitlp avalUdU. TS Mitt, tfur rOR J-pa»« F6r UdiaB - For Sak dothbig, 64 « ARD TOORO MXN'S WIR. t RAY MbaiLl ^tOTtaUnent Small Town Tavern Nr Pontiac, mkin atrcat loc Saar *tna and (aka-out Brtck klda. ..... 41. oa. haat. M R bar. kit. . apt I1.sk dn will _wal for eoupla Bmaft operator abould net tU OSO yr HAROLD (RED) FRANU SSU Unloo Uka Road. EM I-3MI 35 Per Cent Discount U NO off the M.141 balaaca. Ortc-inally sold tor sit.OOO. Faya |ls par month. Only |S.3dd to handle J. (Dick) V.XLUET Realtor FI<: 4-3531 I4B OAKLAND AVENUE IS aiceUant ooadiuon, MAN'S OVERCOAT. surisTi^Bmi MEN'S st;r«- REASON ARLE: ______ y t RICE RESALE SROP. IN BET-tar wad clothinf. books and household Items open dally and Sunday I am. to t p.m 41M Elizabeth Lake Road at Cooley Lake Road______________ "S DRESSES Sale Household Goods 65 Vk,. PW« - RUICTS. BRAU-Uful llvtDj room suites, $1.11 wk. House, Ids N. Casa. PS ~ OO $ 1 IS. O) THROW bad. upholsured chairs. Irervare. metal window, i lus rummaye. FB $-ISS1 i Sale Honseliold Goods 65 Deluxe 3-Room Outfit ^ lRSu*'*^23I Ills par $3890$ JOSEPH Furniture .Company siuth Shfinanr Sale Household Goods 651 * MARMADUKE WANT TO SELL Mt* CUBIC FOOT j ' ’ ratrltarftor-fraaaar KtlOoator alaclrM^staee Kenmore ironer S ' pteca eacttonal OwSsloeial rhtiri. ate ih Weet lllmmtleld PS ’ $-0141, WILL sfLL; STORElInE RABT bUfijl m. $ toaita bawhai " By Andemon & I,eemlnit j r«ale MusIctI Goods \ Plants, Trees, Shmlss 78} Aisction I aklrU. alM IBIS. 1$ mm rd kill*. wardr6bi.~ arntiuo LNBcbho player, rafrldaratar. nxtfaro^ bad. aampltta SI la. TV Fd «-S3$l_ ___ WASHER $S$ I^ECTNIC STOVE. $4$ SI" TV. $44. Oat etore. $U ___________________________, Cabinet tink with dishwasher and DININO ROOM OUTFIT HUTOI! S,V'*\U '‘ib?^ied’\l?* Dlwue cahinH. 4 chain, eaftea table. | •*. $IS Dlrwtte wrInger washer None to pound capacity, ues waeka like new. Sava M$ aa Mua deluie machiBC Far only $I 1$ per week. Ooodyaar aervlea Stan. So 8 Cass. Footlac Fi $HHn^~ WYMANS USED TRADE-IN DEFT 4. (8P^iyr^n«i?(UMPBil, ! FUND TUNINO njJjAlt' SCHMIDT | CHRTSANnitMU$M._ Sl'PKS OOITAR AND CASi; I^ROE ! ” Clibsan ampliller. S IS — 11-4 tnutcUaacout r DINETTE SET Ooulp beaA. __ . _ . _ DININO Rooii s*r wmi china j cabinet Mahaiaay: Ml 1-llSS \ DRYERS RCA WHIRLFOOL New in Cratei ?!110 I. Warehouse deal. FE O-OStO, Retirement 4 61 TEAGUE FIN’AJiCE Ca 202 S. MAIN -— 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS »9 TO $900 AUTOS UyiOTOCK OL.-.1??^°“"~SJ,-.1.1 ^ yRIENDLY SERVICE ^ ^ Need $25 to $500? Sec Seaboard Phone FE 3-7017 --- I ajii uuuB nw¥ . uieaTTtm ee OlYn I^JiSf^ $I?'aid ““ emAF ROSE LIVINQ i I ^ uV rS ea. o’wMhen. oft’-ea* Otter ™?" *006 cmMlttaa. ISO > ilture at like saetnft. 3 pc _____________________! ouar dec rat .... — --T Ubles. FRIOIDAIRE RBTRIC--------------- ‘ - $139. llke ncw, FE S-l $U Bedroomt. $lV ficnty v u,v. clean rettt.. stoves and waahere, a l at bargain crlccs. Alto new hunk bed* *r611-a*$yi. mattretles. factory aeconda. about >0' price. EX Uinu- Iha. BArMb) Houae. 103 N. Caaa at LaTayeitc. FE cond. FE S-U^ call after i _ ’B'TORM bOoRB.lo’ LIQUlblZiR, $19 Mixinasler. $19. OB toaet-R-Oven, never uaed. tK. - FI RIOERATOR. $-1304. ________ — UFRiairr FAMOtia name brande, ecratched. Terrific valuee_$l4$_$$ while tlN|f^^|ML FURNITURE. DRAPES. DISHES. TV Some antlquci Ho deelers 1$1 Dorla Rd Auburn Helghu jlclnlty^__________________ FURNirbRE AND ^FLIAHCES .BFRABSER EWVTOHK cURINET Almfian'e *ilil iTlH I TUNINO AND KSFAIBINO. 34 ....... thomAkins OAR^ST LAND. 4100 B Mld^bland M 'M 60' li!..wlles W S Pontior ^ OR SALS ISBAUttFUL RVKR-treens Nuraery growl under Ir- , ..................................................................................... PontiM I AUCTION . SALE ii"Uoiuc"' CO I0SS1 TRADITIONAL LOWERY JFjNFT Sf“Pomia?''Lak« Roitt*att»i ♦ USED OBOANS, LUNN ARTW1 -Mahnganrr. iMuft «1 Mot* 31 Moir pedalboairt ••** plenty on this one KMbler and Campbell Single man. , hallway .rang, — Hellr"' J-*" , pK, J>A y".™™ . .7 P.M. ' I or SbI* Pets 79 SATURDAY............7 P.M. 3 URC RSNIISTRRSD TOV TER- i^^UNDAl ........2 P.M. rier pups a weeks old UL 3.4403 --- 1 ARC DACH^IINDS at STlio FURNITURR m swwt laasrume .Pups $31 up 3amor s FE $-soM ruRNiTUBB • ArruAwcw AKC HtOtfTBRSD DACHSHUND ; DOOR P puppies, rr M044 AXC FEKINOEAE F U F F I E k'; trrvE^W'•'« ARC OFRMAN SHEPHERD BEAL lie, $ Wk. old Reas MA 4-S$M AR< BEAOI.EA, FLO CM STOCK .AnUtws.*.. WALNUT CHEST $40; PINE blaokel cheat, INI Open hutch c upbMrd $lf Wm ; c raffle^ _$» r Sale Office litiuipmenl 72 AIKHNU MACHINES FROM |1» CASH REOISTEBS PROM $«» FONTIAC cash NEOISIEK ,311 s SAOINAW re •••o' NATIONAI. CASH imH» iliu es'' *1 * ' 7iak’artd“^ and -w lai tofy inbuilt M*!!, legjsieis The NalUmal Cash Beg' liter Co Ml W Huron. Ponifs, m l-03$Y-,Xt^i^ l^tioL. Ml i BAHSrrT MOUND PBMALE RBI I , oji. rt 13«»i ________ ; BAANkTT HOUND PRMALi. l9o wm, papers or swap Ol. 1-0003 BOSTON 'rSHHIIH PUPS PURE 1 Oood h COLLIR, arc: I Mbs^LD^^RRY j coiTIirpUf^ J Silden heaoiles. OH l Ollt. 4000 ' lllore.l “ ooob MOMi/^ARTI II * S4 momtmb to fat OFBf 1 DATS S-S PON RBTAIL BUVIHO B & B AUCTION Slnurs iftlauet. Wedneadty. d II am n Oiaa-Vtllaie af OaSerd. nu ol.ls moms. flaM- ........« rocker BM J-4013. _i pad^on. M^6-I1M K ROSE UVbfO ROOM Kelvinator refrigerator. chairs 1 TV n in. Ptotloi_____________ _____ I inghouse electric store IM 3-orir ; 3“ PIECE PLAS'nC LEATHER 8EC-I tional.. combination 10-lri. TV. corner and coffee table. txlS I jltron thao rug electric bell RIOIDAIRE REFRlbERATOR Ejic Cond FE 9-0131__ FLO()R MODf'l.S" ^ONLY — :o^^ 13: cop^.rjFor Sale Miscellaneous 67 For Sale Miscellaneous 67 nrmeiui? iiowi ___ ...... ......... . ____•* IDOUBLB SINK. COMPLKTB 030 90 I SMALL PUNCH PRisa COMF1 KIR Sale Store I .qiiipment 74 *?,“Voiii" HIFI, TV and Radios 66] Mowcaim’supply tu w liom suer cabinet model sew^ ‘ "|;""‘‘*wri''!^"**’^^''r'**si 0?2? eLECTRicl I,VV"‘’n!'‘t''wi''.lr w':-1.1*k' iiLECTRIC HOT WATER HEATER ; To'^’V'Sale Sporting (ioOtls ’^Mm^>K|Iy.EN^TOY^^ (^^^year old .4 gal 019 MV ; oAVlc ^ 1 ^ RVJtNS OIL HIA'TER. 99 000 BTUs I 'ng Phone Mr Moore . |{,||| action \ Cl V };i)Im1 piano, coal wtove. rhairt Brs,s beds -HlTttWni rtrrthHit bttmf*. w»»e plfltirfB. gU»A. Priced" iVr quick aale. Ei ] 'gRIXNKI.L’S I 31 8 Saginaw______FE 3-1140 RCA n INCH RIMOT* CONTROL TV. $95 OH_3-0395^__ .SILVERTONE STEREO HI -FT. ] ! SMALL HUNTINO TRAILER V OimlltU WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 c4a 'Tr ^1 •*/V A“vr'V"rA i ^ Rooms of PORNfruRi: b1 AiE i‘lN.AN(_L CO. 9-lt4« after 4 901 Pontiac state Bank Bldg. 14-BURNER' OA8 RANQE: " obob FE 4-1574 i »•*:_»«« ____ ------ ----------- —,9 ROOMS or rURNlTURI FOR I 91 BUCKNER} ^ ____TC SILVER OREY BEDRCXIM I FINANCE COMPANY } oiuflt Double dreaaer--- uruenw vnn CAN I --- FREEZER Weat- -O E TV ' * MAYTAG WASHER OIBSON t4 It refrig mahoganif $14 09 1 FRIOIDAIRE Waaher TAPPAN Oas Range SPEED QUEEN Wringer I ^EED^UEEN Oas Dryer ■PORTABLM *LeCTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES i SINfil E BED sjfthif WlNDotAs ‘ TT^:t27t;----------- . can I Doug Hr 3k4 $ 4lo each Cash yoo RAVAUI: LEVER ACT 4 FIKIDI E PUPS rr 91110 00 MINIATURE BCMNAUZBR J J Breoka.' agent. Bud U. aucilonmr OA 1-3190 I bv J A Arnold OA House also for saM WUI rn by agent _ ORION AUCTION OPBM POR COM-algnment dally; MY 3-1$^ REO algnment dally: RiEBTAURANT BU8IHI dachshund arc REOIB Iropi champion stork 101 Pontiac — Drayton Plalni — Utica! piece DINETTE SET. GOOD r.l X't I Furniture. 43 ( Walled Lk . Birmingham. Plymouth condition "FE 3-9913 ■Borrow^vith Confidence ’ Bfa'iui’n«T.v.SS?t‘ GET $25 TO $500 I r'l^d.^7 .M?,., «• 1 IJ T'* cofftc tgblf. • d^corhl Household rinance | au (or w. <^17 Corporation of Pontiac ” S's 8. Saginaw 8t._ FB 4-06 LOAN'S $23 TO $500 On your aignature or other a curlty, 34 montha to repav. Ouri aervlce la fast, friendly and help- „,j fill Visit our office or phone romm ..... FI $-0131. I Tweed rugs 13$ 09 Rug pads. IRONRITE HOME & AUTO $9.$!L Pearson-, Furniture "nnr m„. LOAN CO, 1 N. Perry 8t. Corner E. T A 1\T^ ri9“bALL()N. NEARLY~NEW, OIL r HURON r; FREEZER^ $13.6,1 rom Laatsch I and Service late HIgL- -..... jIA 9-9311 •t 1 TOU CAN ALWAYS FIND A LAROE 1 FLINT t» lelectlon of late model, suaran- i and ..... Ued uaed teleylalons ^ windows and I OHFl. TV FINE STOKER. . 3930 ElUabeth like Bd FK 4-4949 ----------- U Water Softeners 66A Kftmpiei. Prlcft only factorv ran ' live Mtchttfftn Pluoreiirent. 313 0 . \f WALLING JET PUMP GOOD HOUSEKEEPING^ SHOP ____________________________ _ ....... ........ ’ ■ mil BTANDIKO TOILETS 1430 WATER -SOFTENER. SACRI- } i hgfgj copper flcejof »1»0. PE 4-5MS | WHERE YOU CAN j A^-,o*'5Jgso*‘‘only T^’^weSFy 1 LI-TTLXE FOT^tmB** APPL BORROW UB TO $500 P.ar.i.'aFurnlSFi’! 43 orchard D1X« "‘OHWAY.raAVTON : ^ DFFtcRs IN Lake Ave I FREEZERS - NOROR Itreezers For Sale Miscelwneous 67 eIrJ_viVr®J.._. Fva.-mt-—\ UpU|h^ Sir'S""!? Traclor> ]«in winchehteh wiMi IkOO CAL CUSTOM RIFI E Ah pooni «?PUPP I’ARAKEETS Restaurant, located It PAIIAKKEIS. OUARANTEED To 1 'wrd*Malcha"rv. «£ | 14904 South Duib Hwy. ntar corner of Orange Nall Rii Hnlly, Mich midway betweth Flint and Fomiar nn US 10 lUitaur* ' Viettr Morly lt»T 4' 4»-ln h 49c ( FVANS EQUIPMENT I blosed Sal Oct l»tt ! THREE 30 400 OA^ SURFACE (I oUne Unkft ConUet Robert Mo iim u»en 1 » **-•' firg'i Ht Ruclietler “bellrJy 111 I I A IH )\\ A IH*. p<,m|raNIAN anp KI.IAARKTH f»re;N DAll.V r$k. . COLT W'Or>f>SMAM_^ n.OBi 4«4J3 121 N SAOINAW_________PE S-S1S9 , OAS RANGE. W. 4 BURNER ; oven with ttermoatat. clean, food ! condition. 339 FE 9-0114. Sunday j or evenings______ __ HEYWOOD WAKEFIELD CHAM- 9Z« REVERSIBLE RUmr 41A»«: JSIISmon^gOa^'s'JlIIL*''"*"^ ‘ .ONRTTE IBflfflM. FULL SIZE Floor models, demonstrators. glM. - - irs to pay 11.39 weekly WAYNE QABERT auarante. Sacrlllce 13 weekly ..... PearX FB 4-1001. . iroNRIT^ I RON E R, DELUXE 1 WHEEL TRAILBR FOR BALE ________ FB 0-0143 t FULL IN. THICK Aluminum combination door Now only $33 $9 Cash b Carry Initalltd Frlce 13109 I'cderal Modernizatiini 3$1$ Dixie Hwy. FK 3-1033 1 14 X14 THERMOPANE. O-OLABB with screen.,, metal frame Phone PE $-0139 between 1 and 10 p m 1 BOOTH UNIT AND MIRROR. 1 shampoo howl, 1 hydrf"— (lUNS. OUNS ....................... OM09i J-’Wl . . . ' Barnes A li.rir.v, While or colored TYFEWFlTER .139 M I M E O- DEEH HUNTElUt Factory 3ndt -- Ireaular, grapli, $3j- FE 9 4490 ..Wn lor rent SAVB FLUMBINO SUPPLY 1 ~ V A i Ur CiyC I I '" 990 wrrk FE 9 113 8 B9gln9W FI $-3100' I.'VI.BOfI 1.1 iM FOR SALE 3 LARGE BRAND NEW i Now Is the time to get ready sheets of counter top charcoal i for winter Basement waterproof-formica, call FE 4-0430 ing. glass InslaUed also wMd sash, | for" sale - USED BATHTUBS on"‘n . $10, OJL Thompion. 1009 M9$ , T am till a » Bun O to " "'M _____ , Oakland Avc FK 4-4949 OAS FURNACE-SLIOHTLY UMD. USED WATER BOPTENERR FE 2 -1194 I I'ht-d Tradf-lirDcpt. ■0900 Buffet $14 99 : GOLD UPHOLSTERED CHAIR, 33 ; Carnet samples 19 a 31 Ins . • ■ • • • ltd 22 call- I Many to w^laet from Each I9c Wlllla iiriit'siFHrD TOY y^x terrier ! SHAKESPEARE puppies, also stud service OB; r-Bnws 90', off ; I.3MI , i , 143 W Huron ' monkeys 919 99 ronlH.I S. $10 DOWN FE 9 3111 HUNTS EASY 1-ERMS | A^IND^PAKAKEETS AND SUP- | WKIMAIIANER PUPS A K C RED a.•good, pop cooler, npletc 3 Ubles podeet . Formica. $ chairs t last show. 3 back ba pall, tlivtrwart. FtlRNIPHEir . 319 I • rifle riyr^J^'own'^gun- I Roartlctl 80 .... NY PUPB. McNABYS 4-3101 b $50 TO $900 - $39 TO $500 COMMUNITY LOAN CO 30 I LAWRENCE FE 9-04 LOANS $25 TO $900 BAXTER * LIVINOS-TONE Signature Up to 24 Months to Repay PH. FE 2-0206 OAKLAND drawers. S0 9S; living room IF YOU*"NHD 1500 (of any emergancy, D*PI^ANCE CO . Evctytblttg lor I SEE SEABOARD 11$9 N Perry 8t ra J- ! IRONRITE "ironer PROVl ;' yourxetf that Ironing time be cut In half wl.h ease i, H.> ELECTRIC MOTOR. $9 FE 4-1041 4 ,NCH SOIL PIPE. $ *FT $3 $1 Bump Pumps..........$2$ 05 SAVE PLUMBINO SUPPLY 113 s: Saginaw PE 9-3100 4 SPEED PORTABLe'HI-FI REC- berflr!**‘Mos8berg'^ 1050 ...... Belvedere 3-dr 6 cvl stri 3 Plrcr b ttans. LI 9-9400. ' , . 98 STOVE WATER SOFTENER' --E 0-1045. 130 90 , ---- ------ •J9Mi(,u^ REPAIR 9 V ‘kU . »lu)'l>' :LI. TRADE salad bowla. steak, sandwich had sertlonal plates, bread baskats. salt arid peppera. 13 counter stools, chrome, good. Klichen equipment -- Orlll. Hot. point. Model H04. electric, nearly new. Deep Pryer. Holpoint Model MK3. electric, nearly navr Hot-point rIer range. Coffee Burner. Cory. J unit exhaust fan. deep freeae. United 34' upright. Res-Uurint sink, triple tub. double faucet Mlsceltaneous — --OulUr, Electric K with amplifier and - - ;ord player. OB model wed, ^aa ^9POco hoaur. speed, I Chef 0 sign, « X..*’?iT. T.c.up'h Te ‘ nro M,\s Etr fNttMY-' «- IliintiiiK l>f>xs K| AKC MALE RABBIT OUN D04I ' . UR 1 3009 ______ ! PLOT MOUNDS, I VH OLD ' >uod Inyentory and nany other Home, rsonal ^operty la d player 9 End t and ; German THE SALVATION ARMY RKD shield store Molhi'ng "Lrnllure A'piilianres. Laki n 9 to I FE 9-4003 40RE nAs' RANGE 1. 115. Chrome break- e Ins. 43 Orchar Electric. KENMORE WRINGER T Y PE deluae model, etc cond Tavlo^Mlch^___ LOUNGE CHA^. LA modellnt. IH'RRY DOOR SM.ES 3 ENGAGEMENT RING. ' Paddock I^E 2 030 S ROLLER skates' SIZE 4 VERY SI’ECIAI. Knotty pine paneling 1,110 919 '303 Thalia, near North mil Plara Rnchclrr ^OL l-IOH SRORT.sM.WS llI„\DOl'AR 1 I'.R^ OUNS 4l ARc'ilFRV EQU1PMK.NI BEAOLES * WEHOTTWAWr t stwk Musi sell IB 2-0019 ; , Bassett" Hound, reoisterkd ! with AKC MAle-Teelei bred a‘“ m *i4V,rweVl*'4*19r5 ' EXCELLENT TRAINED REO WEI kuis Sales aeryfee. Auctlonaero^-- snd clerks. SwarU Creok-U3U Miller Rd Phone 111 $-8304,_ Sale House Trailers 89 I. 40. 8E1.P CON- 911 Hilltop Drfye. EM 1-333A .- .......- .. . r traveler"FERFECf? MY 3-1311 OR 3-09*0 ___ .F, AKC 3 VR |9*$ ROYCRAFT 34 FT, 1 BEIV > 13 a coals BOOM DOO-THKR94. SPACE . 43 YARDS OF OREY TONE ON •-“c carpeting. New. Can ',c seen et 9;30 p.m , 1014 Argyir. SO.9.6 Coat_$13 »6. -- ---------------- . ................. ...... liunr.ET votm iil'-ltis............... -» CON80LIDAT1 BILLJ^O LOAN8 _ _ „ to M* ou"»»*^'«'»L*9et I nirure.''^’drchaVd'UkV' I'-inanrial .\dviscrs. Inc. | Se“^*i® ”e!!'nU?nt. .^coinY | s t a -t e, bcllino S'i 8. SAGINAW _ FI 3:^1053 (Originally sold for 9300 i ,FB I bargains. MI 11333 MortgaKe^ Loans 62 ^looP"“ ; 1 MI8C ‘ HOUSBafOLb rURNitURE aood condition. fE 4-0191. Retirement Avsuryr $600 TO $2,000 vitir guaranteed. $133........ On Oakland County homea. Mod- JJlW,D«aers _at.$U.$.. PearaOn' -APARTMENT REFRIC.BRATOR 34 OK COLUMBIA HI FIDELITY - j DIAMOND NEEDLE - 4 SPEAK- ' ER8 BLOND FIN18H TABLE MODEL 390 1$31 FRIOIDAIRE ELECTRIC RANGE ~ 40 INCH 4 burners - Deep well — Uke new — must! be seen to be appreeuted. $190. l.lJ-2266 _ 93 OAL ELEC. HBATKR. each OR 3-MI3 H AF; FTlTNACt^ 1 American Standard tOO 000 bt< fas forced air furnace and cor rols, $104 1 International 100,00 btu gaa farced air furnace ana controls reg. price, $33$. Sell price $313 30 year guarantee 1 Bryant, la0.*M btu gaa forced air furnace l and oontrolt. $t$9 —Atr--Hebttng and Cooling. 1139 N Wllllomi Lk Rd ot M9$ OR 3-4694 HANDLEY ’ BROWN. OAS CO'n- i yerainn unit. 300.000 RTU, Input complete with controls, excellent condition OR 3-340$ HOT WATER HEATERS 10 OAI, aas. onsumers^ipnro^f "buy - SELL ■ TRADE 14 AT DOUBLE^STOPLIOHT 4 1 DAYS WHMAIIANER l'UI*.W 1 R 8 T 6 1313 ORION A WEEK sa, ewM, atktUSR : WK ATM - SND CUT-OA 0-iK?»— Cf)RN Fk'.l) BE$;F FOR SALE, im^an^^|»9 w Huron (Plan to WailF Bjsa'a exclUng E »A*4S! j i KIT COMPANION ”drllveT' May, (iraiii and Feed 82 Of lst ...---a-^u*— BUYERS WAltiNO WE N1---- --------- HTRAW -AND -Eiua. “** ' HAV AND B'lRAW, 1 B_AI.E_qR _9^ P.'^* WE NEED TRAILERS WB CAN --- -----------JJ R ANT BIZB HOIXT IIA- qp-'* Voss & Buckner. Tnc. 30$ National Bldg. ___ Get Out of, the Rut! Consolidate your debta. Let ui nay off your existing mortgagi ■ ■ ----. personal p^rnlt^re?'43 Orchard Lake Ave. ‘ MAHOTANY ABOUT~ANTTHWG’'yOU" WANT ,,o''?;o;hl FOB^^TM , HOM/ ^ ^CAH BE j h^ter^ 29 abd ^ modernli equity^ your home. Swaps 63 l bedroom HOME, FULL BME- , CAB OARAGE I POUND AT L A B 8 NEW'REb STRATOLOUNOHm, $39. PA. system.J|l9 OB_4-0234 OIL "HEATERS. USED B FLOOR samples. Easy terms. Schicka. - : Also electric. ,111 •m, , , $$ . 3$3 Orchard Lk Ave - I* Cab’*Mnka“ and^Tttln,7.•■$$4 ^9■up; ; Laundry traya and stand and i “JPJlt e« faucets 31$$9, Cash and carry.’ aooa SAVE PLUMBINO F?®"’ 113 8. Sasmaw ___ PB $-3100 HAVE YOUR PARTY! WEDD] $0 PUCKS OP ANTIQUE DISHES i U«6 kettles and churn all kinds, -•'I*'-"/i of clothttg and typewriter. PE Call 10.000 BTU OIL FURNACE. $14.9$ up. TV antannae. $$.$$. WALTON TV $19 K. Walton ..... — $-3291 AUTOM ATlC_WMHEB_JI3i amana" 3-220$ DE-HCMIDIFIEB SPEED washer wringer type. Bing- ,®i •• BAL would like to apply as Mrt down AUTOMATIC KENMOftE WASHER jayment on a nice home. FE . ,jpctrlc dryer Oood condition, ••">9 9130 lor both MA 9-3250 SPRINOFIEI-D SPORT^ BUSINE68 Used relrlgeralofs., apt. aUes an(i B MUNRO ELICTRIC CO «0 W. HURON FE 5-9431 --------------- Sewing -:de and OUT 1 gallon 2nd GALLON BOTH FOR ONLY BUYLO" UNCLAIMED 111.11 103 S SAOINAW _ FE J-3494 BEPObSESSED sofa was $34910 balatfre due $4190 H d* 14 05 Box springs ftnd Ir _F1 3-M43. eves MY 3-3!»7 HEAVY OAUGE STEEL CLOTHES i posts. $4 90 each or 3 lor 14 04 I Call FE 3-M19. } IF TOD NBEb'lodO I lor any amergency. . BEE 8IMBOARD '^N^CE CO. I 1^ N PerryjBt.^___ FK_3-10I1 NO money down FHA ahn'royed i * INSULATION FREE B^IMATto”* F^'^ 9-1411 I * V^'u Uv'v; O \' «J® BEEP AND PORK — HALF AND M. A. BENSON * _quartera. Opdyke Mkt. Ft 9-144^ 1 _ _ _ Pontiac. FE 4-3931 BALANCE OP GIFT SHOP STOCK. I LET US BUY IT OR SELL IT FOR I ANaiOILJ!'EXCJ4i5 YEAR-END CLEARANCE .Metal l'■..ldl^« n-.M't Doom ,Vx8’ - 5'x8: f.'x8' $10 roUR PICK-Uf Berry Door Sales .VI y." BADITOCK •jTiTiMf: F'lllt — modern' cottaoe for rent r on 3 0149 Ffc Bait, Minnows, Ktc. 75 MINNOWS. ALL SIZES 29c TO Sand, (jravel and Dirt 76 sty YD« BLACK DIRT OR PEAT Prompt delivery OR 3-06|l4 A l PEAT HUMUS, STATE TEST-iMl in5 ptr y»rd (or 7 y»rd loAd. II 50 per ysrd lor 15 yunl ‘Brd,S"'R.’S.*M^Y'V.34';r7, 2-1U2 i.A RPECTAt: 10«A XP Betcb i*nd, 75c yd r*'‘ ^5335 Bii»h MA 5-2161............ TOP'SOIL. FILI. nd grsveJ AUo bulWormg I 'PfodocU I A'l BLAC-K O Ik*ml and g 5 4758 , alM c . OA I Christmas Trees 67A a-i aHRinnrn pkat 3 Dixie. I ford" dump, oodb box a | totor. 5!85 BM 3-35l6_ ' REMINOtON ' r ftlurntnum b JnWer»»l Co. “AUtOMAttc;'brand WROUGHT IRON ...J _ *‘*”**1^--------—IT, bunk and trundle beds at big dlr- •63 OLDSMOBILK. 93 FORD 531 connts. Pearson'a furniture. 43 Hudson Jet. 9 horse oul'w»f1' Orchard Lake Ave. ________ darroport, Trad. ___iCA8H~rOR ANY HOUSEHOLD —5 J^Wce.X'rgmn^Hou^^^ COME IN AND SEE THE LATEST In Phileo lor 1441 14 Inch portable .and 33 ‘neh CSi!*o>l T*!?: visions, Stereo W-Fl, Ree«rd players, washers, dryers, refrigerators ------------ ”---- 49.00 on ar paymenu. BUILDERS ®^S_r5lac“ff9-33i3.Y^_______ CABS LAKB CHANNBL LOT WHH gaa. water and aewer. swap :ot 19 or 33 It. houaetniler. OR .... 434.50 Bedroom Outfitting Co.. 4 Drayton Plains__ ROSE WILTON" RUG " 4x13. 3 Pr drapes. $39 UL 2-134T SINGER. PORTABLE. ZIO ZAO BIMMONB HlbE-table, lamp. BED. CHAIR. 3ch.j'.”"'“" „.... Panelyte counter topping. Pree set Toilet $1$.$9 with l.>u>. Open Sun 10-3 out II.— .... ........... buva. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 i WOLVERINE LUMBER ' -........ ; 130 B. PaddMk _PB 3-91S4 " ’ BATHROOM PIXTUREB. OIL A gas furnaces, fr“ —■- —' Hartland 3911 DOUGLAS, .FIR BAIJtAM LOW BOY WILLIAMS FURNACE ' Spruce and Scotch Pine 8h( 9 4489” *'*' *--■*•"*'ll!!.-- MEDICTNE CABINETS LOE 30' ’>.** *'• mirror aUghtly marred. $3 99. Lge selection of cabinets with or with- n M44 Phnn AL'S "'"^Alsl^confpiit'i trimming^ BLACK DIRT" ^ GRAVE! Tor Sale Livestock K.) 3 YEAR OU) NANNY GOAT, $ Mallftrdg. FE 4 7.5dl 3 HKI) POLL FEEDER BTEERft 8rl! or li«d» fui (tmily cow! OL 1-0307. BAY ItElimNO HUNTER l«l «.043«' ARAB COLTS. KBCi OREY WEAN- i ling. $400. bay 3 yr, , sacrifice, i Bitfro H» NA 1-3ML-BAY OKLDIHO WESTERN, 1<4 i years old Shown In 4 H Fair MA 9 9049 PUlH^FOR BALE IPPHIRI 9- nil SELL OR TRADE HAMPSHIRE ram, reg. Also mallard duck's, "j V •“ : “**e german shepherd pup, FE -1 CATION. COME IN AND UtARN ! Aaoirr our fall anciAv I roNTiAc Moatu: roub fare. ^_Wiilu>nRd. Eau o< Raid win' • FARSBURST LASB . • TRAtLlCR COURT | • c^n awmlrr »'*b| m 71 nertt. 1»M 4-OOOR. r O W I R sss'"«Hi;vnTD $40.C ' "Top Dollar' FOR giAi • 0RCHA FOR EXTRA CLEAN BRARF CAM LITY MOTOR lARD LE rX 1-7M1 Suburban OLDS ’ Auto Accessories rOMFLETE ' tor -M or I . For Sale Tires 92 j OA-K US MTAL. t,PLT NEARLY $$$ WE NEED CLEAN •57 AM) '58 LARS I AS FOSSIBLE 5V2 S. Woodward. H'hani. Ml 4-4485 V-A a barrel Carpel, radio. 4 ; •praktri Heater, wind, waiber while wall*, eae coad. SlIU Ft _a-4«4i^ _________________ : NICE rtORIS' AUTO SALIB . IIM Clterrolat. H76 Can be aecn ; at IK Oakland Are . Ft 4-IMI IM4 CHEVROLET: iodOK. GOOD t rea and body Eirellent tranapor-tation IN Fh OR 1-44S1 '56CHEVIL. CONVEKl -; ibic. V-8. Straight ntick. ; (iood coiid. L’L 2-1620. ! 'Nd'CASM NEEDlb IIM Chevri only m I Rina _ LU«1 pa^me. L*** V-S I r—^ coupe. Wblie f. , maue tranai ln« radM J»S IT S, IM Ji.JSaflnaw, JEROME BRIOHT SFOI CAM AT ORCHARD LE FE t-Mtl (EP TIRES, IIM OF WE WE BOY AND TRADE OOOD Mi: Alao arhltewalla. CLEAN CARS AND TRUCKS STATE TIRE SALES Economy Cai» M Aobui ale< Ml S Saslnaa FF. 4-4M: t FE V4MI _ W TREAD TIHEE ri a IJ. 44 NEED CARS That You l oo W ould Mr I'rmid to Drivr USTOMFHS WAITINO FOR YOUR CLEAN CARS trieiin' Motor Sales MW Huron 8t FE 4-7371 ■ jirNK" Cane 417 is monthly Call ... , Mr Murphy. FI l-lMt. Eddie Sleeir, Ford _ Jiist Make Pavinrnts _ M BUICE 8FECIAL I4U Fay only 417 Ma Dua Npy, Uth Rita Auto Ur Bell FE E4Ui __IM Ea«t Blvd at Auburn _ M BUICK bFECTAL ~I»5 MUST •ell Very --- ---- ■ ---- el MY 1- P).58 1*44 CHEVROLET 1 DOOR POWBR-fllie. 4 new tlree, low mlteaae clean Inilde and out MM. OR )-»l* BUICK rONVCRTIBl r OR 3 •tardard braro new TIREB -A Trfttf# In on Ocn^riH fiftlrty Ttrf» . Vp t0 0 P9r €«nt off Buck or ,. WDlUWAioI. KD W ILLIAMS HI B Bailnaw at Raeburn Auto Service WANTTD GOOD CUFAN _4to7S **" ,S5 OR ish n Used Aulo F^arU 102 FOR SALE PLOW FOR 4- WHEEL drive .1^ Oiy * Sanite virr 2360 Dixie Hlkheev ry Ser- Fewer oleer)^ and I $1295 rail Mr AUen. Credit__ ^ --- Ft ».SMI. Sddle B|eele. I re». Own. Ford. CHEVROLIT INDOOR ECTL: I indey attok radio, heater, white i tire* rear tpenitrr. Horlaop blue!. NORtH*THEI*oJJM *IM » WOODWARD AVE . BIRMINO-HAM MI 4-2711 _ ___ 59 LHKVROLPT BeTAir^ 4 T ryllOirtr''ABUF-' tf Whitewall Urea. 1 ownar. rrl Clark ston Motor SaI(•^ CHRY8LER-PI.YMOUTH DEAI ER Main St. Clarlutah_ ME^t-1141 CHtVROI.tT y EM 1-OMd COMPLETE MOTOR OVEKHAUI .....«>..leyey raamr *$***$4424 ;Pu."i . 1*44 Orchard Lak CR ANE8HAFT ORINDINO IN T Warhoops TRY Warhoops Cyimdera rebored Zuek M Shop, a Hood. Phono rm. I ^PD Lawl Tnu’k Par ;ow"» J.tJdO-C \R N AKH ^21; Speriallrlnj In Lite Wrorki • 7S75 II’. MILS Rd. Nr Van 1 __ _ _________ _ _ Utira, Mich RB 1 - Sale Motor Scooters 94 wRr«iNo^^^_F O R^^ pa^ ■S: CUSHMAN i HP NIW TIRIS. . wlndalueW, IM 3-0M1, Conway c I 11 J m- L •For --4t*l. 1 •I ' ■*• PLTMCWTH aUBOEBAN n. . 4-Door deluxe. V*. PaworfUle n. I; trananlaaton. radio. IM j' M*» Down — “ - BRAID ALWAYS ICAR PAYMENTE TOO BURDEN-aontoi Come M and lat ua and ! eapilalyJ'ear** VALlANT-FLYMOUTH-lkaOTO i5oN'S USED CARS ic^^piEE ar-------------------FtjL-?.*? 1M7 MERCURY 2-OOOR SPORT White with red ti price *1**. Aieumc parmeata of *4 2* per month. CALL MR. WHITE CREDIT MAHAOER. FE *-4442, I14S4 I Elns Auto Sniei 111 8. Snglnnw Stock No I7M. Only I14S4 ?°Wpo.D^%^Vp BIRMUa j ,*ne?°Bca^ ^?r^*uY 1 ■» MERCUWY'i DR COMPLETE- ; _ ly eouloDcd FE 1^11 . ____ PE Mill,_____ •UOtObMOBILE _ _ »? W LooflcUow__ * OLOB. OYNAMia 14, Bpoita lodon, P B ' " dr" I ; i3 PONTIAC aTARCBIEF COU-yerttblc. Muat loc to opproclkto. RAH *144. Will orruifo flnand-tof EM 1-1471 alter t. 1411 44 DELUXE HOLIDAY SEDAN BEAUTIFUL. BUT CONSERVATIVB. SILVER MBTALUC FINISH WITH WHITE TOP. 4-WAT POWER IMMACULATE OOKDI-TION $2195 Just J^ake f*ayments ”‘^°”^*1iue'*Noy. ISth. Suburban- OLDS . Woodward. B'bain. MI 4-W85 ^^Ue A'uir'Mr'BeU""FE'MiSr IM EAit Blyd at Aubura INS PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DR . Vlata. Pull power. Radio, heawr. Hydra . whIU walla, other acceei. _Low mllea»e^y owner_OR 3-442* -NEfc FdSIlAcT'AT TREMEN-doua.Mlicount. Do tot tall to aoo u before you buy — Kcego Sales & Service ___ Eeego Harbor _ _ IN* PONTIAC CATALINA, 4 DOOR . 1*14 •Oh. 1 rrali/p you’i that horn anywhere I" r interior. lUndard For Sale Cars twerillde. heiter a I DODO*.. l-DOOR HARDTOP, > Lk .VIallie\v,-.-l largreavp-OAKLAND county 8 Largett Cheyrolel Dealer 411 OAKLAND AVENUE Aieume jaym nonth call aiR. IREDIT manager. Stleg_111 SSkflnaw of I 1N4 FORD 1651 FORD i FK 2-6640 ' 1 2 DOOR, RADIO ft 1 FORDOMATlC. AB80- ' plus of 2-23*4 al ' »44' OLDS, SUPER U. 4-DOOR. and wlndoni BEAUTIFUL OREEN WHITE FINISH $10'»5 11 CHI 4221. %v.. WITH V-« engine I. Ill EN- triumph sales * »”vicpm. Ms E pike _TE 2-*J44 ’ ROY 8 MOTORCYCT.E SALES • 241 W MONTCALM a TON OMC PICKUP • Suburban OLDS ’1961 Dodge Dart $1930 : LUTELY NO MONEY DOWN aume naymenit of 410.41 per mo. Call Credit Mgr Mr Parka at Ml 4-7144 Harold Turner Ford N1 FORD STATION WAObN ( cylinder.-, atandard ehlR. light ..... .. .. . .. . .... „orth Cheyv pick-up. new paint *32 W Huron. FE 4-4114.____________ ■ 13 PONtlAC CATALINA” WITH '44 Bonneville engine end trana. dean. MU»t aee. SS4_l_BryejljL’ SPECIAL 1N4 Pontiac 4 door hardtop Pow-e.' ateerma A brakes. Whitewalls. 4IM1. Pull price. Ring Mr. Bing. FE 4-iON, tUCEY’B. 141 8. 8a|- N used ears wlnterlaed and rtn^ u OLIVER .MOTOR S.ALKS 214 OrchsM Lake Avc. FES 2-4141 Open E ---------------- 4-DOOR. FAIR condition, runa food. OL 2-1144 weok diyia alter 4 ’*4 RAMBLER STATION WAGON. V-* Power ateerinc. power brnkea. Auto, trana.. radio A better. Only J!d’e*?m----------------- Ft 2-*M7 TOP DOLLAR FOR CLEAN-TOP CONOtTION USED CARS SCHUTZ MOTORS. INC. 112 8. WOODWARD. B'HAU 414 RAMBLER RADIO A HEATER. WHITE l^LLS. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aiaume payments of *24 71 per mo. Call Credit Ur Mr , P^arki at MI 4-714* HAroid Ttli-ner Ford payment. *41.1* t w 'W Ramblers '"iV&’T RAMBLKK Super .Market COMMERCE RD TWHi FON'tlAC. CAT. HYDRA, i power. 42 244. FE 2-3M2.___ 17 PONTIAC. HARDTOP, 4 DOt WA^l Only ____CO ______ _____ AVE BIRMINGHAM MI SHARP BIRMINGHAM ONE-OWNER USED CARS noli 1-KO.ST. I.\C. 244 Hunter Blvd _ MI-A2244 STATION WAOON, OLOis, •17 PONTIAC. BLACK AND BEAU- i tllui inside and out. 2 door. Chief- { tain hardtop. 4 new nylon white i ............Immediate de- livery. *144 full price. low down payment. Call Credit Mgr., Mr. Murphy. FE 2-212*. Eddla Steele. 17 RAMBLER, SEDAN. I OWNER. bargain. EM 1-44*1. Conway._ 1*11 ' STUDEBAKER. STATION cleaning For Sale Bicycle* 96 See Us ,V*2 .S. WtMKJwarii. U'haui. .Ml 4-4485 1 CASH NEEDED ‘ I CHEVROLET BEL-AII alne 12 310 FE 2-341* _ 1*1* CHEVROLET IMPALA SPORT coupe. ( cylinders, atandard shift, radio, healer. whUeWalls. Fawn JNCLDDES standard FACTORY ?-HE^]J^LE?%.ViK ,"S immediate DE- WARD AVE. BIRMINOHAM. MI ; istJ N I I»*4->ORD-roHVErTIBLE; ‘•c* « Bay. .I-2**!. BSED'BICYCLE. »» * Hobby Shop Ft 3-7*41 J Boats & Accessories 97 FOR YOUR Truck Needs .Sales & Servifc 1*14 CHEVY OOOD COHD. RB- ' illl DODOE 2 DOOR, RADIO * cently overhauled, *131. CR ! HEATER AUTOMATIC, TRANS 3-n*i _ _ MISSION. ABSOLUTELY NC 14 OR •1«”CHEVY. RAtH BTllK • MONEY ^ DOWN. Assume pay 1700 Hamilton Dr. PI *-035*. ; ments of 114.74 — — Cr^ll Adyllir^Pl l‘-044i; Eddm I StMl^Pord. _______I f"''' rtm iJd healer'^Jhlte lid ! walls Phone UL 2-2402 after 4 17 Ford wagon, nmd. 147.44 per I p m. UoyTmr’^’- I -io^PACKARD-^ | dS i A KIJ ^ .! A-I condition. 25rr OFF' ' BOATS MOTOBa. TRAILERB : \\ i.vti-:r .ONTlXc CATALINA.” ^ ard shirt i. FE 4-8471. . . for' bale! 1953 PONTIAC WITH ”■ *57 Btrato-Fllghi trans- 14 In. Wheels Price at • Jerry. Pontiac Reiall 4 Chev; U.'SI-'IO 54- .53- 12-'iM ■S7 V*. Store. ^92 S. W'otKiward. li'liai Ml 4-^85 >9 PONTIAC, DOOR 'sedan Low mileage. li.700. Ford Truck INVENTORY SALE! BRAKES WILL BE SOLD Suburban Only. grttglr-NORTH-CHEVROLga-; CO 1004 8 WOODWARD AVE BIRMINOHAM MI 4-27Ji). IMO'CHEVROLET 8TAT10n”waO- Shift* mV*6-4WJ ^ »t«naBrd 1956 ' CHEVROLIT ’ 2-DOOR $5 1959 OALAX1E. 2DOOR HARDTOP. POWER STEER-INO. V-6. AUTOMATIC. ONLY DESCRIPTION REALLY LOVELY $16*LS t Msr.. Mr Mur- phy. FE 2-2129. Eddie Steele. Pori .>9 CHEVROLET STATION WAO-I on 4 cylinders, powerglide, ■ - ‘ Suburban OLDS Credit MgrT Mr.' kfurphy. "PE ‘ H F. LOS SI”..''.SION 2-2129. Eddie Steele. Ford 1957 Plymouth, 4 door. *191 Pull I 1911 FORD V-*,'2 DOOR. RADIO ft Pn.r!lSS^r ath'* ' HEATER ABSOLUTELY NO i S! s iStl iricwvll? MONEY DOWN Assume pay- M! ® ments of 122 0* per mo. Call > - 8, Saginaw _____ Credit Mgr Mr Parks at MI i ll PLYMOUTH STATION WAOON, 4-7144._Harol(l Turner Ford A-1 condition. J^A 1-0914. __ M-'it'iO PORDeWIHEVS "O- DN. I 1911 PLYMOUTH SEDAN ICON-[ Lloyd Mtrs^232 8 . 8eg. i FE 2-9131 ' omy 4. Drives and looks, real | CLEAN 13 FORD 4 dr VS RA- in?v'’'g:Si’‘'f„il‘ d'JiS' Sm* Ut mSchanli'aJ cond'PE*3 7m7 ^dlt AdyfsolJ FI l-OSdJ; mecnanicaljcond FE 3-7313_____ g,„„ 1411 FORD 2 DOOR. RADIO ft - > ' at , n " ----------- ii E A T E R. ABSOLUTELY NO Jiist Make I .Tymoiits MONEY DOWN. As.sume pay ;sg PLY . 2 DR 1441 m^riili of 434 28 per mo Call Pay only |34 mo. Due Nov 15th Credit Mgr Mr. Parly at MI Rii* Auto, Mr. BeB. PE 1-4539 3:M44 _ 954' PONTIAC CHliOTAIN 4-DR . radio, heater, hydramatic. white 3 Packarda. SO-’ll-'ll. 3 Pickups, ty-a, and I ton. 4 Cadillacs. '17-'14-'ll-'i3. , Sla Wagons, ’le Ford. '54 Btude. A- i Financing arranged 144 other •ry ; late modela and trans. specials. 3ft ; economy CARS _______22 AUBURN POR THAT "beautiful USED CAR paint. Will . see Pfi'ced iS’k'u Oiroux igol'or Bales! i SHELTON PoiUiac-Buick 4650 Dixie Hwy , Drayton Plains Koclieiter, Midi. 1455 PONTIAC CLUB COUPE RA p>r so,,, DIO ft HEATER. HYDRAMATIC 'Ut. 1-KlOJ ABSOLUTELY NO M O f ' ” --- - ---- ; Parks MI 4-7544 I Mgr SALE - Special 1959 rONTI.M Theaw-*»a all wlntci ready to go. Below a rxamples of asking pi don't need any money can finance the full e oiue iiniMi. oMjca no. laoj Onfy | .. ... , , i iisii NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1 W DOGward. H liam. 1004 S WOODWARD AVE.. BIR-< Ml t tio- MINOHAM Ml *-riM. _______ • -'ll 4-4480 : CHEVY ill RftH. NO RUST” [ 17 FORD OONVER-t:. ALL POW- ' ‘ walls. 14 31 hp Jehaaoh super '54 3i hp Evlnruda Lark '54 14 hp Evtnrude PEOPLE S AUTO SALES Oakland____________?A_2-_2j '55 CadiUac Convert. BeauDIur wmtr I ____ ____ _ 4 FORD 4-DOOR No Money Dn. 1951 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR CLEAN. ' Mtrs, 222 Bat. FB 2-9131 ' — rust. Needs mechanical work 1 14 FORD CONVERTIBLE. ORIO- yavd. UL 2-4757_____ ‘ Inal owner. Everything on It. Per- 1917 CHEVROLET 210, BTAflON | _ lect condition MI 4-4013. p Evlnrude Lark Ftounclnt avaltablr •; USED TRUCKS I Hickory Ridge Road l mode Road Left and lollow sliM. to DAWBONB SALES at TIP-SIOO LAEE Phont MAID 4-2174 | Opwh 4 d ................. TOM BOHR. INC _8. Mam. Mtllord _MU CADILLAC '9-DR Crissman t selection o( pickups, ilakei closf:out 21 Mr cent discount on i motors and trailers. L--- . DRETERS OUN ft SPORTS; (ENTER. 11214 HOLLY HOLLY. ME 4-4771 _________ lTLE CHEAP. HEW 1* FOOT, 11 cheap FE 4-112*. 1980 CADILLAC COUPE white! sharp, 1.204 miles, executives ear. power windows and power vents. 43875 FE 2-4407 _________ i McAuliffe Gadillacs CHEVROLET COMPANY ROCHESTER OPEN EVES^ OL 1-4721 17 CHIVY HARDTOP. ‘STICK shift with Corvette engine. 11 H, CHEVROLET IP tOU NOD MOO SO SEABOARD CO nil N peny Bt PB 4-74 IN8IDI WINTER .STOR.ACE BOATS AND MOTORS PICKUP AND DELIVERY iLU L A. VOl’NC 4030 DIXIE HWY OR 4 04 ON LOON LAKE 434 OAKLAND AVE ‘CHEVROLET 'aa 'j -TON PICKUP, i 4-ply tires, UL 2-4608 ” .....PICK-UP .FAIR CCN LI 3-3030 i(|fx) Cadillac is your best all around buy. ---JIATIC ' TRANSMISSION. RADIO TfNU HEATER." IIM PORD OUSTOMUNE, RADIO mission, beadtttul maroon finish. DO money down, full price *121. aatume payments of 11,21 per month. CALL MB. WHITE CREDIT MANAGER PE *-0402. King Auto Sales 111 8. Saginaw 1444 QALAXIE 4 DOOR. BIO U2 angine. Uses regular gas. Overdrive transmission, radio, hiater. extras. Low mileage. Bultana tur- quolee. OR 1-7441. ________ 1414 FORD. STICK SHIFT. RADIO and heaW.JM71._lM_3-4JM,_____ 1913 FORD, V-l, HARDTOP. VERY nice. PE 1-7142. H. Rlggln*___ FALCON. *0 2DR. 1.4*7 miles. Ra- ___ _FE 4-4223 _______ M FORD CONVERTIBLE. A-1 condition. UL 2-4444. #51' FORD 2' DOOR. WHITE walls, radio and healer (175. FE^ 1-0*79 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE YOUR OLD CAR C _FB 4-2972. _ Just Make Payments •M FORD. HT. 9491 Pay only 122 mo. Ooeo^Nov. lltb Rite Auto. Mr. Bell. FE t-4131 109 East Blvd. at Auburn DO, YOU NEfS A 00< pendable car? 1919 Ford ...... dr. Radio Healer. Winterised. 17.-400 ml. New car cond No money needed at present. Take over pay-mentt beginning In Nov. CaU alter 1 p.m., FE 4-4444.____ ^17 PLtMbu'tH, iHo DOt.... over payments. FE 4-2101 __ 1914 PLYMOUTH stATTONWAObN: radio and heater power steering. oood'The^ t-«» KJf• BELVBDERIB, V-*, 'ord > cvl 2 HT . RftH. auto., sharp, aacri-------n— 9779. FE 1-4114. LAR-K 8HIFT, RADIO AND HEATER. WHITEWALLS. $1995 3-1395 a V- Beat otter taaea..cCaU. MY. ! 1955 MODEL DODOE TRUCK I rail a "NOW" ON HLsPCVV 4-2303 SCirU.\M TUn K.>^ AND I'.OCirMl'NT 2539 Dixie Hwj:’' QR 3-1209 1950 DODOE. >4 TON STAKE 42.5(1' WILSON PONT! \C-( .\niM,.‘\C 1350 N. ' Woodward Suburban OLDS . 1457 Ford. 2-door *14 I Pay only *32 month, ment due December 'i Ring Mr. Bing. FE ............. LUCKY 8^ 1*3 8^ Saginaw. 1957 FORD 2-DRT. 3 TONE B'Eto’E Till price. I - rt'h“fiK,i5 Suburban OLDS- 1917 PLYMOUTH 3-DOOR SEDAN, g cylinder, automatic transmia-. Sion, radio, heater. Beautiful maroon Ilnish. Stock No. 1747. Only *191. NORTH CHEVROLET CO.. 1004 8. WOODWARD AVE.. BIR- MINOHAM. Ml 4-2731 PLYMOUTH. OOOD TRANB-portatton. Ideal for extra car to drive to work or for student. Call alter 4 p.m FE 1-3102._______ 1151 PLYMOUTH 2 DOOR. RADIO ft HEA7TER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aasume payment ot 111.76 per mo. CaU (Tredit Mgr Mr. Parks at MI 4-7100. __Harold Turner Ford._______ TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS” er hydramatic, power brakes uji cHEV and Steerina 1453 PLY 2 DR .................... =?22<)5 ‘}J« PONTIAC 1914 FORD. I Pontiac Kutai Store ms ford. 2 dr i MT CL^liENS FE 3-79M J'“ ggNTUC I DOOR CATALINA, | 1917 FORD _M/^ M71t._____________ M.\kl' AN OFPKK 1914 Pontiac Btarchlef. 4 >< hardtop; Ivory and Bandtewo RITE .. radio, solid body, originai ' 1414 PONTIAC Sf ABCMIEP. RIAL '____ good transportation. Absolutely . no rust 1129 lull price Call Credit Mgr., Mr Murphy, FE _2-21*9, Eddie Steale. Ford. TRANSPORTATION SPtClALB [11 Pontiac, 2-dr. atlek . » M j ^:to .nm.i:.'; 9 E. BLVD AT AUBURN FK 8-4539 Johnson '53 ChevT. led) a. CQWWAY '"Im 3 .4191 592 S. Woodward. B'iiani. MI 4-4485 ; FORDS . CIUJV - PLY - OTHERS 1 - No Money Down • Terms - \'an Camt> Chevrolet" Inc. MILFORD Lake Orion OFFERS 0 PONTIAC, s c. VIsU. Pwr. 4 NORTH CHEVROLET CO 1004 4-2731 _ 8AL18 _____ 1914 LINCOLN, 2-DOOR COUPE! ..... private Trr~lB(!dH. 21 n Owen.s Sea -ss - rrulwr D Mazurck Marine NaTeit 4-'“- . FRANCHISE OWENS DEALER ^ SAOINAW at SOUTH BLVD Uepattment FE 5-4I0I Transportftt'n Offered lOO ooTiaxiand FE •-0369:_ ■ _ BIRMINGHAM__ MI 4-1434 141 FORO DUMP GOOD "box 53 CAD'i'U.AC HARGIOft SHARP’ snd mninr X . 1 i 1 'sUPEHIOr’ AUTO l ES _550 OAKLAND t HKVRm.l'T" " Wtiodward. M’liaui. Ml 4-4485 I, AUTOMAT- ■ OR , TRUCK GOING NORTH PART 1454 OMC ' PICK-UP Harris. 1. 12-25. ; 1954 sfUDIBAKIR. 1 lOl'.'.'^ ( .Mt! l.OT FE 3-7931 ____ _ CHEVROLET BUSCAVNE, dr 4 rvHnder standard sbll OB , wanted - DUMP TRUCK ^ V 91341 NORTH CHEV- _ I woodward BIRMINGHAM Ml 4 2735 REPOBBESSED 1954 CHEVY 3-DR le, beauuluj. xgtm » 8-4877 1954 CHEVROLET BEL top. Ho money down. Drive .. Iwme today. 4141 lull price. CIII. p„ Mr. Murphy, Credit Mgr, PE 1 2-2539, Eddie Steele. Ford___ ma' CHEVROLET RADIO ft HEATER. POWERGLIDE. ABSC LUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Assume payments of *28 75 per mo Cal’ Credit Mgr Mr Parks at MI 4-7500 Harold Turner Ford 19.59 CHEVR'oLE?”convertible” V-8 engine Powerltlte. power ' • Timed glai .. .. _____ . POOR OLDS. LOW owner, MOO mileage, FE 1-4382 alter 4.___ price MA 1132 FORD 2 DOOR SEDAN EX! H MERC H. _________________ _________ crilent testofM motor Body ’ _*m_ Sixty Auto Bales. PE 4-'.!i**’‘*T' REPOBBEBBEb’’ . --------------------- ------ ,s. s>-----g.p„5 wggon. -Blanchard, nt 2- r 9325: 51 FORD. VI. I DOOR. tUO. CALL ■-[-.■2Z" -----------------i Lloyd HARD- JuNt Make Payments —— "■‘r* ■» FORD. 2-DR. *291 1961 Do(dge Lancer $1795 Bargains for l-do-it-yourseJi. Mechanics MU,4-.«l .......5 5Qt -S7 PONTIAC Conyert. . •55 NWreurv.....Chevrolet convert. •V Old' 88. 2-dr. .. .S15()i '« pontiac. Hardt. .'3 I'ontiac .... 51 Olds. 2-door . 9149* . *13*1 I >«r ; F’ord '53 Olds $145 i 'll PONTIAC. Hartllnp $249; Russ Johnson $179; ■» FORD, 2-DR. I_____ isdty *17 mo. Due Nov. L5th ’ t Auto. Mr. Bell. FE 4-413* 10* East B’— ...... U U+;vr Motor Sales Hougnten r,.5KK orion (Sc Son ; M V 2-287F . _ M V^2^181 oldsmobTlf, 1118 FORD FAIRLANE "100' 3-door hardtop. Fordomatlc. VS en-radio heater, whitewalls floish with black and white l^hfte AIR-CONDITIONED. PLUS POWER STEERING AND BRAKES STEAL THIS 1001 N. MAIN ROCHESTER I ' OL 3»flll * . ThU c 8 bad U Stock No 17M Only Wanted Used Cars 101 , Mr Blanchard inW NORTH CHEVROLET-COn , 1000 8 WOODWARD AVE. BIR- I ___ ____ MINQHAM Ml 4-r?35. ; kiv titat vnnTH®rwi?v ^ FORD TAKE OVER PAY* ! ...w. --eJiy tllfd NORTH CHEV- m^nti* P»I1 EU ROLET CO 1009 S WOODWARD | AVE_ BIRMINOHAM MI 4-2735 I J»S,r°5S i CHEV. It 4 PASS. KINOSWOOD. Economy * ““ Suburban TAYLOR'S . ALWAYS TOP DOLLAR . For hlaft «radc uaed eata. K J. VAH WELT 4541 Dtole Hwy_Ph^OR yi ARK YOU OETTINO' THE MOST * FOR YOUR CAR? 3-4311 FE 4-4447 a 1911 C Auto Insurance CLEAN RECORD P L , P D AND MED FOR MOST CARS •29 FOR 6 MONTHS HEATER. ABSOLUTELY, NO MONEY DOWN Assttflie pay-t. SALKS,. 17 _S._______________ ments of 922 9* per month. Call) 17 MERCURY MON'TCLAIR BARD- OLDS 592 S. Woodward. B'ham. ^ Mi 4-4485 OK usf:d cars”^—^ CHEVROLBT-OLDSMOBlLE lAraet 4^ ^""‘Xled Lake j ’ S^I8«5 — WE BUY — -^RADE DOWN -'—TRADE UP — Foreign and Spt. Cars 105 EAR-MANN OHIA. EXC UNTIL YOU'VE BEEN TO LLOYD I 61u30 2-6636 •fter_6.____ _ •34 FORD. TON STAKEL'oOOD |t4ui Mc.Xiiliife. Lord ‘ 636 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 3*4161 A3 chevy" 2 D'R No Money Un' Uoyd Mir.' 232 Sag. _ FI 2-tlJl a\lake Payments . Radio, heater. ________ fair cond UL 2,-434* _____ ; bl SOTO HARDTOP. You Want Bargains HASKINS WINTERIZED CARS Prices Slashecd! and healer. i $1195 ! Suburban • i OLDS lift!! oodwardv BTiam. MI 4-4485 PLYMOUTH DOOR V-6. AUl TRANSMISSION I AND HEATER. '1* Pontiac itatlon wagon, i , senavr. Hydramatic. Radt J heater .................... I '57 Ford V-t Country aedan. and heater . ■4 Pontiac 4 M MOCR AS **« POR JU KE -i“- —1. PE 2-*" —- - ■ coodltlon FE 1-4632 alter t p.m. | _ina e-ast ■ivo. at Augurn , •li^RifRfE-T-SretDr-LIEE ! .IJ, l-DR. REAWN-^ nea OL 1-1141 alter 5 _ ------------^ ' • MO, *2. TO CLABBld NEW TOP |'»* ll and tires. Eic cond. Best offer. ; FOREIGN CARS AUBTIH HEALY SPRITE AVERILL'S Houghten .& Son msrfctt TOP DOLLAR ***• Olxte Hwy eP* ______________"irFF See M & iirAlotor Salt- »2?^Stoto Hwy. _ _ OR l-l**3 Main, Rochester, Ajl 1-9761 bftb coupeT/chopped and channeled Oldt powered. tSN - Don Bknoelt OL 1-llto_ For Sale Cars 106 jGet Them 7 WHILE They Last PLYMOUTH I 71 BAYOR 2 DOOR VA. AUTOMATIC. CLEAN IRSIOE OUT n«PENDABl.E UMb CARi | Pay (My 122 Mo Dug Nov. Iltl AROENBDRO MOTOR SAOM Rite AU^I Mr ell PE 1-4*3 s4 bl Pika FE *^ 1*4 E^si Blvd at Aulwm iVE.. BIRMINOHAM MI 4-2731 IF TOU 'need (MO ___________ --------------- ... . -------- FE 3 7411 , ------------------------- -----------------------.atioii |1U5 R Perry St. PE l^IOl? ----- GOOD '53 CHIVY AND '13 BUlfcK' 37 Chevy A 1 runn rt ,2-4242 , . • 13 Pontiac HT, Nl< 1M4 OTEVROLCT BEL air HAH& . ton A real '!« j"-- ^ - ^ - ■« 2 dr RftH .S; , H. « • Tr^r- \ IV cl ^ ChevConvert. Red *3*5 AVE MLE G.-\Kb choice of m more cars, no ' ----- OFFER REFUSED. NO; and heater. Kxc. i t 21# *. Stick; f M Ford V-* J t '*0 Pontlbe CsUKna aUUoo HydramAtte. Radio, Hasto ar brskea, 4,0*0 ailaa ... . aed , radio, batter. Hardtop. Powar Your Oibice of 4 New 1960 Fords SpectacuJar Bargains (3) FAIRLAXES (1) Dftymenu Cre Movie. "A Woman Rebels." An English girl rebels against her father's Victorian beliefs during the latter part Of the last century, katharine __Hepbum, Herbert Marshall “(4) Movie. "Udies In Re tirement." (19411. In a lone ly country estate. Ellen Creed’s motivating desire In life Is to care for her two feeble - minded sisters. Ida Lupino, Louis Hayward. MONDAY MORNING ) (4) Continental Classroom ) (7) Funews. i (2) Meditations ) (2) On the Farm Front 1 (2) TV College ) (4) Today -Today's Radio Programs wcaa (ins> wxvs n WISE (UMt WFON (listl S:SS-W.R. N«»i •:SS—WJR, Thre« 80M WWJ. Monitor SSt: 1:SS-WJR, Tootk WCAR, Conrad t:SS-WJR, Town Mcettof WWC Monitor WPOK. Jorry Obon l:SS—WJR. aymphony l:SS-WWi. Monitor WPON. Jorry Olwo w w,. Hoioaioo WJBE. BaUboy ll:tS-WPON, Marie WWJ, Monitor. News SUNDAT MOISNINO «;00-WJR. Form Review WWJ Muilc CK1.W A)Wm T«ne WJBK. Brnttiprtiood Bf WJBK, Snored Note CKLW. March ot Fnitn -WJBK, -CroeJIled -Hour WCAR. Newt. Woodlint WPON, Sunday Berensda 1;SO-WJR, Farm Forum WWJ. Morlner*! Church WXTB. Ouoot Star LKLW BBushey lab WJBK. Protestant Hour S.OO-WJB. News. Maodj WWJ P..... WXYZ, CKLW WIBK nvmn» We Uivo WFON. Echoes at Calvai WJBK. Are Marta •tSO-WJIt. Nova. BaMwln W'V.l ci-n««rnade Church WXTX. Radio BlMo CKLW Bethcada 1 ample WJBK. Hewi, St Franele WCAR. Newt. Patriek »=»^,WJR. Albota. Ratdlon WWJ •»—- wxr WWJ. WWJ Radio Pulpit WXtZ, ReaUne WInta CKLW. Radio Bible WJBK. Newe. Splacbpol WPON. ChrtaWpher ISiSO-WJWL^^jiol Hour CKLW. Heb Chrlatton WJBK. World Tomorrow WPON. Piret BepUot CKLW. Orel Roberta WJBK. Town Hall WPON. Emmanuel Baptlel Lta—WJR, Layman's Hour WWJ. at Faul'i Calh. WXTZ, Israel Meetaf* CKLW Pnntier Reptlal WJBK. News, ’man WPON central Methodist l:SO-WJR. Bun. Choir WXYZ, Chrletlen Action CKLW, News. Antllean WJBK. Det. BpeOa SUNDAY AFTERNOON IliSn—WJR. Newt. Kendall WXYZ. Sunday Bert CKLW. Labor Newi WCAR News. Woodlint WJBK. Ntwi, Bun. Bound WPON, Wortow Concorto Ik,SO—WJR. Bun. Supplement --WFON. Youth Forum YiSS-WJR. WorM ot Muato WJBK. ------------ WFON. WJBK, SiSS-WFOM, SI. Prod F qiindy soundi L •Kday Monds mwmi rreet CKLW. Radio Church .WCAR, Nows. Thomas wwnw Cnnvertattnn PteoO WXTX, Sunday Beet WFON. Convereatlon I:Sa-WJR. Spectrum CKLW. Word of Life WXTZ. Sunday Best WCAR. Newt. Thomea WFON, Fonttee Rrporta CKLW Revival WJBK. Newi. atereo WCAR. Newr Thoi WFON. Church of W< S:M-WJR, Runforlon Rev. CKLW News Knowiet WJBK Sun Bnundi WXYZ. Sunday Beit blINDAT BVENINO •:M-WXTZ. Sunday Beit WJBK, Suhday Bounds Wl'AR News Lofnn WFON. Dick Ferry CKLW, Ron Knowleo <;Sb—CKLW, Chrt'dI’phnt. WWJ. Catholic B CKLW, Xlihi; Life Hr. 11:00-WJR, Near Hporir CKLW, WJBK - ______ - VXYZ. CoUefe Contaronco MONDAY MORNINO •■••—WJR. News, Af'clt. WWJ. News. Roberts WXYZ. Fred Wolf CKLW, Farm Htwi WJBK News. Farm WCAR. Newe. Bherldao WFON. Bob Lark craw. Ntwa Toby David WJBK. ' .awe WFON. Hewn Casey MTliJe H»U CKLW. News. David WJBK. News, atern •!•b-■WJR, Hon. Murray WJ^NMrt. Marlene SKT?' Wolf CKLW. Newe. Toby DavtS WJBK Nowi, Reid Wl^. Nowa. caeev WCAR. NeWe, Martyo tiib-WjR. Jack llirrls CKLW. Mary Mortan Ikikd-WJR. Karl Rail WWI Hews Martens WXYZ. Breakfaet CTub CKLW. Joe Van WJBK, Newi, Clerk Reid WCAR. Newe MONDAY AFTERNOON likb-WJR. Newe. Farm V JW. News. Lynker WXTZ. Newe, WcNeeley CKL*. Joe Van WPON. Chuck Le«li WCAR. Newt. Muals -WJBK,. Reid wwv, Haawej WJBK, Lee (KLW. Joe Van WPON. Bah Urk hlO—CKLW. Nows. Shift Bk Hall •ilS-WJR, I___ CKLW Eye Openr. WJBK Dolly Bible WPON. Boyly Bird 1:M-WJK Ntwi. M 1:is-wxn. Newe, Wolf CKLW Bporti. Oevid WJBK Newi. Traffla WCAK Newi. Sheridan (7) Breakfast Thne. (2) Felix the Cat (7) Johnny Gingsr (2) CHptBlB KwigBroa (7) Stage 3 (?) Male (4) I Manied Josn. (4) Exerriaes. (7) Cxcrdat. (4) Faye Elisabeth. (4) Dough Re Ml. (7) News. (7) Your Skin Is You. (7) Movie. (9) Bllllioanl. (4) (rolori Pl«y Your Hunch. (9) Ding Dong School. (7) Divorce Hearing. (2) I Love Lucy. (4> (Color) Price Is Right. (7) Morning Court. (8) Romper Room. I (4) Concentrstlon (2) Clear Horitan. (7) Love That Bob. MONDAY AFTERNOON ItiOO (2) l/)ve of Life. (4) Truth or Consequences. (7) Texan (56) Heritage (91 Chez Helene, . lt:l» (9» Nursery School. U:W (2) Search (or Tomorrow. (4» (color) It Could Be You. (7) Queen (or a Day (9) Mary Morgan llidS (56) La ITouce France lt:4S <21 r.uidy 1»« ' !de«troyer»-«n>in the NorwcgiMi enthuiiaatk; leckw Approves Naval Plan and The/ll Dent the Cpr ANN AlRBOft (f>>-The WMh»«i- OSLO. NoJ^ey (APil^The gov-' B“'» P*"" **’* . * * * cmm(*nt iipprov«^ Friday a *numbl^ 'm'**building program will be 0-|naw County Democratic Commit- naval plan which will give Norway jq cent, cut the num- nanced half by the United States tee wamis contributions to defray |a atrongcr and more modem navy ber of ship daases in half, and and half by Norway. S4M in campaign expenses it says .were "totally unexpected." That'stKenpedy's s:». eight brand-oew cars used by Seu. John F.. Kennedy and his party when th^ visited Aim Arbor Oet. The bed of a creek near Forest City Ark., has a deposit of nearly 7.000,000 cubic yards of oyster The dealer who loaned them said ahells. _____________ _________________ \ AP flioiofoi POT-BKIXIEO HPOOK—Barbara Linvillp. 2'w. peers cautious-l(y into an old pot-belUed stove that has been converted tnto a ♦itch in preparation lor Halloween visitors Mrs r.eon:e Manin. ^•ho designed the spook and placed it on her front porch in Leawood. Kan., a suburb of Kansas Clt.v. plans to keep the firepot well supplied with tirats for "trick or.lreal * callers Halloween Kennedy Is Endorsed! by Pittsburgh Paper Pittsburgh uTii-The Pitts-; burgh Post-Gazette and Sun-Telj-| f^ graph Friday endorsed Sen. John| F. Kennedy fncy. i the newspaper, in an editorial., uid Its decision "is to break witn| a long precedent." It had Buppm t ed President Eisenhower in 19.i2 and 1966. ' "Before making our choke, v e a.a an independent newspaper, havej waited to see the candidates ini rt'T-VT"'--------------------------Jf, aetkarin iWr district ; t rail has sUpped In recent yean. Be feel that the bold leadenhip of 9- What are the Nvmptoms and Sea. Kennedy weald help to I ■ «*®lf disease called laalataia ear” margla aver the "hard p^?" — E. Volk, ('oopen tofun, V. A. Thr simple sounding name of "If. as we believe. Mr. Nivon|,hii, disease can lull dog owners has not measured up to the chal-linio a false sense of securilv. lenge of the times. Sen. Kenned.v- some people think it is no moie, much less well known when ih.’ j^rious Ih.in a callous on the hu-campaign beganH>as clearly madejnatLfaol^ hut -iw one of the^ most a tremendous impression on the fatal infections a dog ran have. American people.”________________! ^^_________a___________^ Fruehauf Profits Down From Record '59 Year In the United States, the disease' is consWered to be a fonn of distemper, The symptoms include ton-silitus. possible diarrhea, and a temperature hovering mound 103 DETROIT le—I'ruehauf Trailer,degi'ees. Sometimes the disease It Co. Friday reported net earnings, not recognized tinlil a laier stage of $8,376,106. equal to $1.21 a share,jwhen the pads of the paws harden, for the first nine months of 1960. * w * This compared with $9,679,698. 01 i i m afraid this stage is usually $1.0 a share, in the similar pFi-jfoUowed by encephalitis (brain lod of 1939. Last year's figures f^veri. extreme nervous disorders, were a company record. The cur-and eventual demh. rent year is secorat best, the'C6in-| * ★ s p«ny said. Chances of survival lean heavily: Kales tor the nine months totaled.on how eariy the disease is recog-$130,658,845 compared with $186.- nized and treated, but in any case, 09U29 a year ago. 'result of the treatment is variable I AdTcrtlMmiDt I iPollttcsl AdvertliinuBt Elect... a Dedicated American JAMES KELLIS to CONGRESS it 24 YEARS GOVERNMENT SERVICE it OUTSTANDING AND COURAGEOUS WAR RECORD it OPERATIONS CHIEF OF THE aNTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY it RECEIVED THE PREFERRED RATING FROM THE OAKLAND COUNTY CITIZENS LEAGUE HE GETS THINGS DONE! KEILIS for CONGRESS COMSAT VETERAN it DEMOCRAT OAKLAND COUNTY FAIO PM IT TNI KlUII PM CON«MSS COMMITTU men 8 TheFnKil4ii^tt underwear Reg. 137 S1.98 MONDAY ONLY! Charge It Knitter] in air pockets act as insulatora. Smooth, fiat .seams, tioubie knit cuffs. \Va.shabie, retains shape. Men's FurniiJiifgs, Main Floor flannel slacks Reg. .58.98 Charge It Soliri flannel.s of nyion and ra.von can be w a s and- dried -in machine.s. Pleated model. Favorite shades, in sizes 30 to 42. Save Monday at Sears! Men's Clolbing DopU. Main Floor crisp organdy in darks and pastels 49c Hard to believe you can have beautiful permanent finish or-gandv for such a pr'ce! 36-ln. vide. Many usea! Yard Goods. Moia Floor 100% collon gown and duHler set Special Charge It Ojwii and du.stcr set In assorted prints. In sizes 32 to 40. Similar to picture. Hurry In Monday and save at Sears! 1.98 women's J44 drive glove „ MONDAY ONLY! liageria Main I Smart Looking All-Vinyl Window Shaded MONDAY ONLY! Reg. $1.89 -g 37 6-ft.x37'/4” ■ Charge It Big Double Dresser Is Fun to Finish 9 big drawers tor roomy storage! Strong kiln dried knotty pine, fullv assembled. 40x13 5-16x3312*111. Buy Monday at our exciting low price! Solid 6 gauge plastic with embossed finish; your choice of soft-spoken col- ' ors. With rollers. A quick once-over with a damp cloth keeps them cleanl new looking! Bleached Cotton Sheet Blanket Softly Napped Regularly Priced at 2.98 Shade Dept- Main Floor eEcm MONDAY ONLY! Bleached white cotton sheet blankets will last and last! 2-piy thread, overcast hems resists fraying. Size, 80x108. Hurry in and save Monday at Seqrs! Deeor-eze Spray EnaineL Your Choice Faint Remover. Drop Cloth Choose Decor-eze Spray Enamel fop those jobs that are difficult to iwiint. qt. of paint W up jobs, or 9?^12 drop cloth for i)rotection. Paint Dept.. Main lasemeal waste basket assortment MONDAY ONLY! 88’ Made of 100% Pure Polyethelene Huge 26 quart capacity. Smooth, unseamed plastic can’t harm floors. Choose yellow, pink, or turquoise. Monday only! Hurry, for this bargain won’t wait. 1.98 FUslic Basket . . .l.$3 slim modern style reel fixtures Monday Only 6 88 Charge It 16-in. black hood and white frosted glass bottom shade. 2-Iights. Reels 18-48-in. Brass trim. See them Mon- day! silent switches Charge It 44' MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! vented gas heater circulates warm air thru-out room • ReXttUrly $128.95 • Modern Cabinet 99 188 boys’ importjsd knit pajamas .... save 71* 16 cu. ft. Coldspot freezer stores 573 lbs. of food I.,eM Blower $5 Down Regularly at $1.98 In Sizes 6 to 16 1^7 Refular $289.95 Lock and Keys *248 Continuously circulates heat to every corner of room. Multiple combustion chamber and heat exchangers give you maxinrnm heat and fuel economy. Attractive cabinet has chareoal “leatherette” effect enamel. Charge It Applianco Dopl.. Main tanamoni Cozy warm knit pajamas in solid and check two tone tops with solid bottoms. He’ll love the roominess, and you’ll love the easy care. In sizes 6 to 16. Hurry in Monday and get his! $1.98 Sport Shirts.........1.27 no Down FIRST PAYMENT FEBRUARY 1st Porcelain enameled interior. Magnetic gasket seals in cold. Grille-type shelves for free circulation of air ; swing-out basket, juice can rack, interior light. Ajtpiimca DapL. Mpim laaoMal **Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back** SEARS 154 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 54171 fa .fS The Weather VM. WwUMr awMt rarMut \^8th YEA^ THE PONTI AC IPRHHB OVER PAGES ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ POXTIAC. MICHIGAN, SATURDAY. OC'TOBKR 20. ItMW—02 PAGES “^‘”^wocuriro Land at Guantanamo Reign Over Homecoming Wall Tumbles on Building Mild Weather Will Remain Through Monday Mild temp<>raturct wHU contlniB through Mt^ay. (he tmeathenntn :v will be 48. Mortly cloudy and a high of 58^ la the (orecaat'Yor^9unda)'. Light; i-aripble morning n-inda will be-! itoma mostly southeasterly at 6 to! |13 miles per hour tonight and Sun-!day. 1 iRussia Hedges on Her Promise of Rocket Aid U. S. Contingent Only Resting, U. S. Claims —. Asks Probe by OAS By The AMMclated Preas The arrival of a contin- 'Tuesday-And Wednesday will be somewhat cooler when rains meas- ! luihg about three tenths of an inch gent of U.S. Marines at I are expwted. lOuantanamo nhval base to- ' Forty-four was the lowest record- . . .. ing in downtown Pontiac preced-|®*y weekend is ex- ing 8 a m. At 1 p.m*. the reading pected to launch Prime was 38.^^_____________ Minister Fidel Castro into a new round of charges r Milford Teacher and Son Drown —Gafloo-Tww-Ovof^oa grooming an invasion force. Cuban officials showed I great interest in the announcement from Wash- (HIKf AND PIlINtmH — This attractive couple reigned over Pontiac Central s home- ,, ,, - Ington that 1,450 Marines! Allen Belknap, Boy, 5, on maneuvers in the Carib.^ Return From Hunting bean will land at the U.8. naval ba#e atr-the east end~^ Kven a 7-7 lie with a stultlioi n Klim Soiilhwcsictn fiKttball team faUert to dim the enthusiasm m the more than 5.000 spectatui s who lurncil out for free# PMta the homccomlitK game, the largest Central crowd In three ycai*s. The Princess is Donna Douglass 317 NavaJtj St, Both arc wnlors. tFor details of this game and others In lltc area, see sports tM'ctlon, t of Cuba for a few days of rest and recreation. ^ A milfoid High Scltool English i teacher ami hi.s 5-.vcar-old son fdrowwfi yes'endn'- in the Mlltotxl jMill Pond wlien tlieir canoe upset Castro will make a naliotiwidc Rhile the' uTie television spcch todn.\ the lime| rc'urntng from a of which is indefinite, himtinc ti1p. T I, - .. 1(in.. Meanwhile In Moaeow, the of-c unis agency Taas were Alien Belk- has Issued Its own rendoh of nap, r.6, of 4021! w1iat Premier Khrushrhev told N. Duck Lake| Cuban newspapermen about the Road. High land! "“PP-rt Townslip, and h s •*••"** *"> usswu-ion. Barton.] Some American sources here Okays MSUO Budget of $1,7 Million for APTERMAIH m.rOLE — OemoliUon crews '., yesterday were b^erlng down four-story brick walls of the fire-gutted Oakland Theater on S. Saginaw Street when tons of brick tumUed through the roof of the adjacent Yankee Clothing Store warehouse. The south watt was being hammered with a huge, crane swung weight when thf lower half buckled outwards as shown here. An estimate of damage to the warehouse and stock inside ha.sn’t been determined yet. Hie Capitol Wrecking Co. of Grand Rapids had been contracted by \V. S. Butterfield Theaters Incv. mvne»i of the Gaklaad Theater, to tear clown the ruins. fwi, otuiim. AiTiirru.aii Rourc€s nf*n* The accident occurtrd)shortly be-|were tempted to interpret the Tass fore noon, and just ^fore' the pairiversion as a slight pnU at the rug teas to meet Belknap’s wile 7ean-juhder Cuban Prime Minister Fide) Michigan State Cniverslty Irus-iOokland lor the 1961-63 academic tees yesterday approved a tenta-K'^“’^- u 1 . ,4-The budgcl, $G90.1«0 more than live operating budget of 1.768,^y^r.-nt $1,077,720 budget, 200 for Michiga|i Stale University'based on an estimated enrollment ette. 30. at a predetermined spot along tbe pond’s shore. Castro who has been using the rocket promise in his , with the United States. Mr*. Belknap, who is expecting aaoMier ehIM, told 'mWoH CO.NMDEKED 8YMBOLIC’ Police tWef ft. ■*'®P||>' , Tire Tass accout* Issued Friday that «he had driven her bustand Khrushchev as Saying that and son to (he Proud Lake Rec-rratlon Area at »:M a -^* ........ aiba 0/ 1,400 at MSUO next yeer. Present enrdllment at the institution Is 908. Indiana Union Officials The trustees asked the legls-latnre for an appropriation of H.48MW (or MhI'O, up from (he M78,7tO In appropriated funds a( Convict 3 in Hoad Deals Ike Cheers, Jock Jeers, Nixon Gears Break Off Talks . I ion Fifth Debate I included in the budget approved veslerday i.s 1181,995 (or new poei-^Xions at the Oakland County cam-Ipiis — 36 faculty members, four ___ [librarians, and seven additional . Three top officials of the Carpen-i»t«ff members, l:;houM lie considered symbolic.”jters Union were convicted Friday night of bribing an Indiana! These would Ineliaie a coun-***** '‘"**>*"** liad arid again that he would like his )^igi,way Official In qulck-proflt right-of-way deals, climaxing Iselor, assistant registrar. pUrchas- plmmed to hunj W a s1k>,i time “> a highway scandal case that dated back nearly three years. !*"8 aEcn», planning eniPneer di- Iand then canoe back by (he Huron in case of armed aggression| » ' x .s, x ifeitor of housing and Job place- River to a spot where the Mill against Uiat country really bei w w w Iment. physit*al education Instruc- INDIANAPOLIS (APt Raymond Kostecke of IGQ Mai--lene St. was tbe first to call the; , I . 'police. Kostecke. a civil engineer Insult in^^ w-as survejlng at a church WITH NIXON IN ILU-NOIS Un ~ Vice President Richard M. Nixon rolled his presidential campaign into Chicago’s suburbs today with a glowing endorsement from President Eisenhower. The Republican presidential nominee n»de-4t clear lieves the send-off the President gave him in a nationally televised appearance in Philadelphia Friday night put his campaign in PHILADELPHIA tjPt—; Sen. Jfrfin F. Kennedy. | accused by Vice President Rlchai’d M. Nixon of naive and dangerous talks about a relative decline in U.S. pr^lge Md mintary ^ perlorlty, toned the charge, GOP Claims Kennody Demand fori^* ^ yards _ . . ' , _ . , .police his son Larrv-. 13. heard Decision by Tonight . ' Tass also Mid in a dispatch today that “laaghabla Brefext” (bat t'.H. Marines would disembark at Ouautanamo natal base in .tkiba (or a weekead of rest and res*- WASHINGTON lAPi Republicans today broke off negotiations idt a fifth ’TV-radk) debate between Vice President Richard M. ishouts coming from the pond. Racing to the pond (he boy mw only Iho drlMiig, empty eaaoe. The elder Kostecke called I right back today. I time. FOROET LABELS Nixon’s supporters also were parficulnrly pleased that the President had urged his ristoners not to pay too much attention to party labels. ’The vice president has been sounding this note ip areas such as the shopping center circuit on which he was billed for appear- He said that “no more unwarranted attack has ever been made prestige and military posture” than Nixon made in October 1952,during that year's presidential camf^gn. He quoted Ntson M oaylag at that tline that ‘'HiIs uatlou has lost its military superiority and the people of the world are 8-1 agalast ns Instead of being 9-1 Kennedy also said in remarks prepared for a rally at tha Law- Philadelphia suburbs that Nixtxi e Quad City Airport near Rock Island, HI. Several thousand persons turned out at the airport to Nixon as he headed by plane to the Chicago area. Nixon taid the cromi out was gslMg ta cheer lew days. Ho oald he seased la the Increasing slae of Ms crowda a trend he thialu wU lead ta vietorjr Nav. A UTien a commercial air liner. Nixon cracked: .—’’They said that was the Kennedy pJane, but it tnidn't be. it’s loo 8 -The Republican nominee said that, as President Eis^ower indicated in a natiomi telecast,Friday ni^t, the most important .istue in the campaign is whether a fnan will be elected presiflent who can keep the peace without turrenc^r. " ' HOW COME? Citing Kennedy'.^ criticism of > 2, CW. 1) tc~presidentiai candidate's sentative, the Republicans cosed Kennedy of issuing an ultimatum and charging Nixon negotiators with bad faith. "There can be no further negotiations unless Sen. Kennedy apologises for the chai-ge of bad-faith Continued on Page 2. Col. 2) Urges Vote for Experience e when CHESTER. Pa. tM-«ea. Kea-nedy was hurt today by he oontlaaed campaigabig. As a crowd sarged, s a m » people grabbed Kmaedy’s right arm. For a moment it appeared he might be dragged tram his ear. His tace eoatoried la pala. But he soon smiled again, waving with his left arm. It was aat known If hospital treatment will and the Republican pafty^are uo- the real facts about where with lespect to prestige abroad, defense and space and the Tite ihoptiing center was the first op in the Democratic al nominee’s motoroade leroutskiru of Phnadetpbia after a tumultuow 18-hour day mid night (CpnUnued on Page 2, Ool. 2) Sheriff’s Deputy .Medward Tes-sier recovered both bodies in 30 water about 13 minutes after arriving. jitaCCEIXENT BO.\TER The bodies were taken to the Richardson-Blrd Funeral Hume Militird. Mrs. Belknap said her husband was an excellent swimmer and ca- The agency said the U.S. State Department was ”la.ving a smoke-to cover up the preparation of aggressive actions against Cuba by sending notes i of the Organization of American States with false charges against Cuba.” Die notes chaiged Cuba sen Importing large quantities of arms from Communist countries. The Guantammo announcement (Continued on Page 2. Col. 4) Ike Goes All Out lor Dick PHILADELPHIA (AP» — A free-swinging tasulb by Pree-Went Eiienhower on Democratic "Irreeponslblllty” raised RepuUbcan hopes today for homestretch vigor in the final 10-days of the residential campaign. Elsephowcr ftew here Friday night far a nationally televised speech In his drive to make his vice president, Richard M. NIxen, his sneccasor, Nixon was reported “extremely exhilarated” by the President’s praisq. WWW Elsenhower sparked bursta- of applause as he hammered hurd at Sen. John P. Kennedy’s charges that Republicar tndendilp had damaged American prestige abroad aiid steered the eouijtry into ^economic doldruma. WWW The President drew cheers with this shaft at the Dem- willing to entrust the people wRhocratic nominee: ”My friends, anyone Who seeks to grasp the reins pf world leadership should not spentl all hti tiiRF wringing his hands." Declaring Nixon “hy long odds” the best gnnlifled man I be president, Eisenhewer 'stmck'ihe lamlUar Repnb-mn theme that Kennedy |s Inunatare and brash. Thoogh he never mentioned Kennedy by name, Blsen-btHser atUi: .“I that University of Michigan, slip-|IIarly. has asked a $7 million increase. , A jump in enrollments at MSU was given as the main reason fv i-equcstlng the additional $8.11 mil-'**“*'• . ' » Last '.year. Ihq board said, t^ [legislature' appropriated money to itake care of an estimated 20,98 istudenis. Actual fall CnroUmeBt [was 23,465. an inctease of 1,533 I more'than the legislature figured. year. ' ' The boaid explained that the lb " (Continued on Page 2. ObI. D PUT 'FA THERE — U. Gov. John B. SWainson (at right) qpent a busy day shaking hands with factory workers and union officials -US he campaigned toe ' (Sovenior yestwday In Pontiac. Here he gets ready to hands with Jerald Kehoe, president of UAW Local 596 for-General Motors Flslwr Body Division. Earlier in the , rcaua* mw nwu day Swamson accused his Republican op- ponents of dealing in “pure fanta^” when they I. causing imustiV to i charged Demoerats with, the state, Miohjgan last yeer ranked third in the natjbn in industrial gro^h. he told fellow I Democrats at a campaign luncheon in Waterford ; Township. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. PC TOBE^ 29, I960 Two in County Die in Accidents Ex-Dem Aide Hits Rap at Cost of Farm Plan White Lake Tot Killed in Driveway; Royal Ook A^n in Ontario A 3'4>yeu'-
e young Royal Oak motorist was killed on a fog-shrouded road when his car rammed into a herd oL horses, according to Ontario Provincial Police. His cyir killed a colt and in foal. Dick Likes Backing Ike Is Giving Him (Continued From Page One I of campaigning Friday in nprlh-eastern Pennsylvania. TENT FINISH Kennedy ac^ly finished Friday's campaigning early today witK a speech to a S25-a-plate diimer under a tent on a muddy, rain-drenched golf course. Kennedy hit hard on unemployment, the problem of economically depressed areas, and the plight of the Iron Curtain countries. (Continued From Page One) .Eisenhower’s actions and policies, Nfiton said "I don't ;iroe bow a president could have made many mistakes as my opponent s4ys he has and still have done It was nearly 2 a m. then, Kennedy noted he had started at -eight o'clock Friday morning .Aides said Nixon hoped to stir u|lJii the suburbs the kind of Republican and independent iun>ort he needs to offset an expected large Democratic majority Chicago. "I am doing this because I believe it is an important election," he said. Mxon told a cheering partisan audience of about 4,000 persons who jammed the rafters of the Davenport, Iowa^ Masonic Temple Friday „night he is convinced the tide is running his way in the presidential contest He scribed his whistle-stopping tour across Illinois as "one ol the most exiting day^ ot campaigning" he Heavy Rains Almost Drown CentralTexas By The Asieelated Pi Thunderstorms dumped torren-tiji i^ns op central Texas during thf'iiight. flooding homes, strand-iiw motorists and disrupting utili-tyS service. jto estimated seven inches of Nixon's 'Dangerous,' Kennedy Retorts Swiss in Pontiac on Home Stretch He's Hitchhiking 'Round World Talks on 5th Debate Broken Off by GOP (Continued From Ppge One) which has been made and withdrawn his lll-advLsed ultimatum.' The telegram was sent by Fred C. Scribner Jr., Nixon's representative in the long-stalemated bate negotiations, to J. Leonard Scribner’s blast was aimed at a telegram Kennedy sent Nixon Friday calling, on the vice president -to say —by^~ would agree to the fifth debate, "If an agreement is not forthcoming by that time," Kennedy said. “The American p^ple will know where to place the responsi-bility-" 33 Alarm Clocks Late; Eager Beavers Sleep LEXINGTON. Ky. (AP) - The beU rwg for first-period classes at the University of Kentucky, but the 33 students who live at the Delta Tau Delta fraternity hoAse didn’t show up. During the night, the power had failed and all the fraternity’s electric alarm Clocks, set for 7 m.. went off at 8:35. deluged Austin In as many lulu’s forcing about 200 persons tflJTfl** jhbir homes. One youth wh repwied to haug drowned. pfaidings. about 50 toiles east of Awtln. received six inches of rA, four in about 35 minutes. Tw nearby communities of Lex-intton and Dime Box were with-oif power after lightning severed a amain utility line. btermittent showers fell along tiw East CPast, along a line from Southwest Wisconsin into Kansas to Colorado and New Mexico. Showers also hit Idaho and wfstern Montana with snow- in CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) tha higher elevations. defective fluorescent light was Jlarly morning temperatures blamed for felling 11 students at w^ much the same as Friday | an elemntary school Friday, with most of the country report->were treated at city hospital to ii^ readings in the 40s and 50s headaches, dizziness and abdom-wHh 30s in the higher elevations, jinal camp.s tl^ Great Lakes and New Eng-j.---------- - ------------------ laud. Inferiw California and the| S^bern tier of states had read-j ires in the 60s and 70s. Find Headache Cause FRENCHTOWN, Mont. (AP) Inveatigaton sought an cxplana-today for the crash of • Norttiweit Airlines passenger platte which overturned fo afo, pinagiiig against a mountainside. members and a hitchhiking Stewardess died Friday in the burning wreckage scattered over a quarter-mile. Flying low in cloudy weather, the airliner bound for Minneapolis from Portland, Ore., was due to make an instrument landing less than 20 seconds later in Missoula, in the mountains of western Mon- It started to roU over on its back," Sue Hough said after watching the crash. “It hit wl( tremendous noise zuid blaze." ‘IT WINGED OVER’ "As the plane headed toward the mountain,’’ said another witness, Dave Anderson, "it winged over on its back and crashed upside down against WORLD TRAVELER This. young man "thumbed” his way into Pontiac yesterday and was on his way to Northern Michigan today. He is Werner Keel; 26. of Saint Gkllen, Switzerland, who quit his job two years agp and began hitch- hiking around the world. He has traveled more than 25,000 miles. Keel is shown here in his "traveling pose” on S. Saginaw Street. He plans, to return here in a week to visit a friend in Utica. ( By DON FERMOYLE Werner Keel, a 26-year-old for-siuntaiit from Swltzeflatld. conain and down to Oiicago before returning to this area next hardly looks like the type who would march into, his boss' office and announce that be was leaving I see the world. But he did. And ever since he left his home in Saint Gallen, Switzerland, Keel has been doing his traveling the hard way — by hitchhiking. Now, some M.IMle milM and foar pairs of shoes later. Keel ■airs his decision to quit his Jdb-aad thumb hia.-way around the world wns the best one he ever mnde. Keel has been traveling now foi^J He hopes to take this tour and return by next Saturday when he will visit a friend in Utica, Remo Lucchi of 6930 Swallow St., U.S. Marine Stop Causes Mighty Tirade in Cuba (Continued From Page One) coincided with other developments j^ummeting U.S.-tluban rela- ind friends in Saint Gallen July 9, 1»8'. with $1,000 in hU pocket. Since then he has seen 27 dif-ernit countries. He admits that he is a little tired and figures to wind up his tour in time to be home for A slightly built, atudidus-looking young mqn, Keel hardly looked like a world traveler yesterday as he made a brief stopover in Pontiac on his way to NorthiSm Michigan. Howewr, he has withstood all sorts of physical hardships (Hi his trip east from Switzerland to Japan and across the Pacific Ocean to the Americas. He was laid up for a imalli ia New Delhi with yellow jaandlce. caught dysentery In Bombay and once waited for It hoars to catch a ride oi He once was arrested in Managua. Nicaragua, where police thought he was an agent for Fidel Castro. (He had a beard at the time.) He was released after plaining that he was merely a tour-The poUce chief even autographed the scrapbook he keeps with him. Cuban authcoities at Santiago, near Guantanamo, were said-to concerned that the United States was preparing a fake attack against the big naval installation as a pretext for armed aggression against Ckiba. U-S. .ASKS PROBE The ir.S. State Department has asked a special six-nation c mittee of the Organization American States to investigate its charges that thousands of tons of Soviet bloc arms have been shipped'to CXiba along with Communist technicians to train Cubans in their tiae. Hie committee was set up last August to look in-U.S.-Cuban disputes. Keel, who says he averages about 200 miles a day hitchhiking, plans to swing around through Wto The Weather U 0.8. WMikrr Uarats Ucpsrt ----AND VICINITT—S“ TarUUc rlaadlnttl NmtiT ■•I Mch' WMScrilsn rbante lad SsaSar. Law tanltbt W ■■d>T M. I4fb» variable windi I BnUy aaalhaaatariT «-lZ r WBlfbl asd Swdar. GM's '61 Motorama hsStorts Nov. 3 in N.Y. • pncediDC I a at I a m.- Wind Telocity i i mtectton—Northraat aun aetii Saturday at S.IO p m riaei Sunday at 'I;*J a.m SooB acta Sunday at : Moon rlaes Saturday a Many New Yorkers missed this year's National Automobile Show because it was held for the first time in Detroit. So. General Motors Corp. is staging its own next week in Manhattan. GM’s 1961 Motorama will open to the public Thursday in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Actiritles will Monday, hoWrver, when GM’s chief executive officer. Chairmaa Frederic G^ The group from GMTC will include R. L. Ganter, T. E. Wilson, R. C. Woodhouse, C. F. Dick, J. P. McManqs, D. A. Maxwell, C. V. Crockett, S. F. iJtUe qnd B. W. Crandell. I hmchcoB. lats at At that time, Donner will dis- An invitational preview -of the ihi7W Will be held Wednesday afternoon for thousands of business, cuss the nation's economic oyt-look as it pertains to the automotive industry. Other speakers will be GM President John F. Gordon and Alfred P. Sloan Jr. honorary chairman of the GM board o( directors. Among those attending will be Calvin J. Werner, GM Vice p«a= ideiiii and general msaager'’o( the GMerruck A Coach Division, and S. E.” Knudaen, pM vice president and general n&nager of Pontiac MotCHT Dtvisioo. jfc KrUd be R. >W. Bmertek. r. V, M. Wee* A. S si Bl«»- M. be R. >W. Emerlcfc, Ige. R ’LL Norris, ^ A. F. Bhunr, T. R . F. Ratninri. R. A- P. Cheriet, A. Z. . A. Chapmen, A. F. Mahmo. U W. Walker, O. D. dvic and social leaders of New Yqrk and out-of-town visitors. The show will run Thursday throu^ Nov. 9. Besides GM’s 1961 automobile models, all of the Company’s products. including ttotiM appliaacesi will be exhibited to the hotel’s ballroom and adjacent rooms and haSways. A musical stage :show, "The Magic Man," especially created for lKe GM show by Cy Feuer and Ernest Martin, producers of "Can Cbn." will be presented six tlines Death by lethal gas is the form ot capiUI punishment used in eight whotn.Ji^l attended school from the first to fourth grades in his country. When he returns home, does Keel expMt to return to his account.ant’s desk? he said, "I hope to go to work for a travel agency. (Continued From Page One) ' he boarded the West Palm Beach ferry. The cheers came frofti lthe former Bdg^ colony, became the 96th of the U. N. World Health 0^ ganisation Thuraday! 12 Die as Plane Hits Mountain Northwest Craft Flops Over in Air ond Plunges Into Montana Peak Like a roaring tank, the fpur-engine plane skidded through the timber. Two engines hurtled 100 yards down the hillside. A door was flipped into a clunip ot trees a half-mile away. . ■ w w A. The bodies of all atxiard the plane .were burned or dismembered beyond' recognition, said Coroner Ralph M. Simmons. It was Montana’s worst atotrag-edy since a Northwest Airlines crashed „near Butte almost years ay>, kiiling 22.___________ The East Lansing campus was scheduled to get the largest chunk of the budget, more than $29 mil- lion. The university’s agricultural experiment station accounted for $3.77 million of the budget while nearly $3.29 million was to go for the cooperative extension program. Calm Holdup Man Pulls $20,000 Job UNIONVILLE (D-A calm, well-dressed gunman walked into the Unionville State Bank Friday and handed the woman cashier a note whi(^ read: "Holdup. Put bags in sack. Touch no alarms.” He escaped with $20,251 in cash. ’The bandit eluded state police roadblocks which were set up immediately in the area. Mrs. Melda Phillips, 40, was alone in the bank wl^ the bandit walked in and handed her the note. It was signed, “Bloody Fingers.” Mrs. PhUlips said, "I told hlpi he was kidding, and then he pulled pistol. n’t.” During the robbery, Mrs. Marion Fader of Caro and her three-year-old son Darold entered the bank. They were told to stand near the door and not move. State Candidates Hopping Ing atiidAnt grniipa at three Upper .. Peninsula colleges, flew to Kala- ' mazoo to address a GOP raUy, "One of the deaidliest enemies which we confront today is the something-for-nothing philasophy," the Oregon Republican said. Hh claimed the Democrats accepted this philosophy while the Republicans rejected it. Hatfield placed Vice President Richard M. Nixon’s name in nomination at the GOP National (invention in CTucago last summer. Rep. AIvtn M. Bentley, the Re-poUlcan running to unseat McNamara, blasted his opponent as a ‘‘spender" Friday night at a GOP rally In Farmington. He described McNamara as “one of the senate’s fremt spenders of tax money for programs which 3AN JUAN, P.R. (A) — Puerto would unquestionably result in a wiki period of inflation.” 'If McNamara had his way.’ Bentley charged, "the nation would embaric on a spending program that would make Fraiildin f Roosevelt’s New Deal look like parlor penny ante game.”* Bentley will continue his campaign this weekend in the Wayne (iumy area. AT SHWPING CENTERS Detroit area shopping centers will be today’s targd for the "Working Women for j^gwell.” Dressed in orange and black — the colors of Paul D. Bagwell’s campaign and of Halloween — the 100 women will diftribute leaflets pro-mhting the GOP gubernatorial can-(^date. oat for him today. Swainson, campaigning to.^ succeed Gov. G. Mennen WiUioma, is acting goveteor this weekemi ^loe Williams is out of the state campaigning for the Pemocratic iuh tkxial ticket in Michigan Fridsy to campaign for the RepubHcan tidtet. Oregon’s Gov. Mark Hatfield, after hddrem- The Day in Biimingham To Bar Downtown Traffic for Goblin, Ghost Parade BIiaUNGHAM-Downtdwn traffic will be blocked off in several ____Monday eventog while ghosts and goblins parade on flieir night ot nights. The parade is only one of many Halloween progranu planaed by local civic orgnnlzatkjia tor sters and teen-agers of the com- Several are expected to take part ia the parade which 400 prizes for most original outfits. at 7 p.m., according to Charlee $1.7 Million Budget Okayed lor MSUO 1716 dance at Seahofan will begin at 9 p.m.; at Groves, 7 p.m.r at Barnum and at 6erby, 7:30 p.m. (Continued From Page Om) per cent salary Increase would be needed to keep and attract good faculty members. For the hourly-paid workera, the increase was aSked to meet an expected Civil k raise for all state w(h4c- BHAVING EXPECTED Top MSU officials admitted privately that their goal of an $8 million budget increasd was optimistic. Both candidates for governor have said they are sympathetic to education. The Wing Lake Farms home owners association will sponsor a square dance Friday at 8:30 p.m. in Bloomfield Junior High Schocri, Quarton Road at Wing Lake Road. The callers wiU be Art and Elsa Erwin. Coffee and doughnuts will be served. ITckets can be purchased at the door. »» * Thomas Chester Service for Thomas Chester, 79, ot 370 Jownsend St., was to be held today at 11:30 a.m. at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. with burial in Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. blester died yesterday In William Beaumont Hospital, Royal -Oak, after a long illness. At his retirement he was chief engineer for the American Blower Co. During Worid War II he served as a cohsultant for the British , and United State* war offices. He * alr-condltloped the salt mines in England Iw the purpose of storing ammunition. Bom in England, CTiester was once employed by the Sirocco Oo.. make seme drastic cuts in i appropriations reqaesfo. The board asked the legislature to make separate rather than lump sum appropriations. Recently, the legislature has been giving the university a lump sum appropriation, leaving it up to budget planners to figure out the allocation of funds. "Each year.i” said the budget ...essage,” the need for separate appropriations Ibecomes more evident. There is unhappiness on the part of the farm groups and the university is unfairly criticized for its allocation of funds." At its next session, the legislature will be asked to authorize use and I knew hA MSUO student fees to finance construction of a $15 million intramural building, and to permit MSUO to apply to the Federal Housing Agency for up to $600,000 for expansion of the Oakland Student Center. (Tiancellor D. B. Varner said dining facilities of 400 would be inadequate for next year’s campus population. MSUO will also- seek gifts and federal lo^ to begin construction of four dormitory units, housing 48 students each. Total cost would be $600,000 for these self-liquidating units, Vamer said. S^iafist Hopeful Visits Factories in Pontiac Frank Lovell, Socialist Workers Party candidate for the U.S. Senate,, visited factories in Pontiac yesterday distributing literature urging Ms election Nov. 8. The candidate ran for governor in 1954 and 1968 on the same ticket Lovell, 47. ol Detroit, is a model maker for the General Motors Technical Center in Warren. Msrtwwaa af Oh Chamber at CemnMMrM. The parade, led by the SeahoLn High School marching band, wUl . proceed north on Cheater iti 7:30 p.m., then turn eaat < ao Maple Rood to Woodward Avemie and go south for a block where retreah-ments will be diatributed. , Dances will be held at the Sea-holm and Groves High Schools and at the Bamum .and Derby Junior High S ’ a large English engineering firm. He was a life member of the American Society tof Heating, Re-frlgera|lng aidj. Air Conditioning Engineers. He is survived by his wife Anna and two sisters, both of England. Milford Teacher and Son Drown (Continued From Page ttie) Hark, 18, told Milford police they aaw the pair ia the canoe heading toward the village. “When we looked again several mlniitea later the canoe was empty,” they 'Ihe Ixnrs said they had jrgooiF . view (d llie MiH Pond from an upstairs bedroom of the Howe home, 123 Marlene St. Belknap and his wife, who have two younger daughters, had moved, into the area only months ago from Ohio.-4t was his first semester of teaching at the Milford High School. Belknap had no classes yesterday, since all area schools were closed to allow attendance at the State Teachers Institute in Detroit. Daylight Saving Time Done in Northeast NEW YORK (AP) - Daylight Saving Time bows out Sunday iii the Northeast and a feW scattered places elsewhere. The ^official change takes place at 2 a.m., when clocks should be changed to 1 a.m. Most other places having daylight saving ended it a month ago. (Tierokee Indians involved the Muscle Shoals "massacr migrated to Askansas in 1794. Bishops Clarify Stand With Second Letter Call 'Wrong' Vote in Puerto Rico a Sin Rico’s Roman Catholic bishops said in a second pastoral letter Friday that Gov. Li^ Munoz Marin’s ruling Popular Democratic party is anti-Christian and voting for it ia a sin. An^erica, an influential weekly put out by the Jesuits in New York, challenge^ the interference of the bishops in the island’s p<4i-tics. Munoz Marin is a Catholic himself and favored to win re-election as governor of the commonwealth, whose population is per cent CatiKdic. The second letter was issued, the bishops said, to correct "ce^ tain inexact 4nterpretaflons" the first one, which had cemtained the original’ order against VotiiR ton the Popular Democrats. Archbl obeyed was a matter between « Catiiolic and Us cona^nce, while Bishoils James E. McManus and Luis Aponte ' Martinez contended diMbedience would be A sin. ‘NOT PLAYDfO FOUTICS’ Friday in South Bend, Jnd., Arohbiaiwp Davis ttdd newsmen An outatate goveriiu’ came )RO the first letter whs issued he-*T:aOk>Bba Tp the UrOted States he and the two other Ush-ops "felt we couM no longer keep after "20 years of conathnt disregard for moral principles as such and Catholic tradition.’ Rie archbishop continued, democracy in Puerto Rico had achieved the maturity of democracy in the United States, the letter would not have been necessary." He denied that he and the other signers were playing politics. - The second letter said the real issue is "whether, to a Catholic, it is licit in conscience to vote against Us own religious convictions,’’ not whether the hishegw 'restrained or not the free ex- presslcm of the voting, right." All tMee bishops said flatly that "it la’ not licit (religiously permissible) for Catholics to favor with their vePes the estab-Ushmept ajid spread of a morality without Gpd." THREE REASONS The bishop’s ebtef objections to crats are that they did not repeal a law autlKHlzing the teaching ot Urth control, did not repeal until recently anbther law providing for the sterilization of some mental caaas, apd allowed pdblic tolerance of common law marriagfo. , The Je«iA-edtied America said duinot but wonder about the na-ure of a situation wUch would persuade church leaders to en>- bark on a course of action so open to misinterpretation, not to say futility. Such ff Mc{) as that’ taken by the Puerto Ri tain an annual permit for the transportation, rather than a sin-gle-use permit now required. Mackie said officials of the Michigan MoUlc Home Assorla-thm Md him the new penidt system would save the hidnstry hnndreda of thousands of dollars The second regulation would ai-law vehicles hauling mobile homes up to 55 feet long to travel a maximum of 40 miles an hour. Present iTgulations provide maxi mum itpeed limits from 25 to 35 nules per hour for the oversized mobi'e homes, depending on their length. Banymore Weds in Odd Regalia-Bride? Charming ROME (AP)—John Bairymore Jr., 28, got malTied today in red-trimmed toreador shirt w black buttons and a black, waist; length jacket with a stand-up,, ear-high collar. ♦ * A The actor's bride, Italian movie starlet Gabriella (Gaby) Palazzdi 23, looked charming in a short white gown and white veil. She curried a small bouquet of orange blossoms. They were married by a Roman Catholic priest in San Sebastiano church at the top of the Palatine, one of the sev^n hills on which Rome was founded 27 eentiirips ago. There were about 6 HAIJXiWKE.N TRICKf-The great Navy port tovn of Honolulu has come up with, this hqgey man to haunt the kiddies come "Trick-or-Treat" time. Debra Sue Anderson, 7, is properly aston- ished as she peeks Inside this scientific jack-o'-lantem—Davy Jones style. The costumed creature was a prop conjured up by the men of the Submarine &ise at Pearl Harbor, They’re Good Talkers, Poor Readers Campaign trail Lacks Humor By ARTHl'K KDSON AP Polltiral Analyst Rarely has a, campaign produced such a smidgen of specifics oi and such barrels of generalities. the speech habits of both candi- Dividend at Seamless DETROIT le-The Michigan Seamless Tube Co. has declared a 25-cent quarterly MIMEOGRAPHING SERVICE Bulletins, Letters, etc, FAST SERVICE I Christian Literature Sales 39 OakiMd Pt 4.9591 In the past candidates turned out—or their writers turned out for them—a sizable collection of speeches during the months ing up to the election. ★ ★ ★ Few of these were ever classed as notabje additions to this nation’s literature, but it was pos-is the campaiu wore on to make up a list of legisla- tion which the man was for or against. It's easier, when one is writing, to look up and include facts. good TAIJif^S Kennedy arid Nixon are bqfh good talkers but mediocre speech readers. As^ a result, relatively few speeches have been prepared by or for them. And those that have been are almost ignored by the candidates. During a Western tour Kennedy I gave out a text of a speech he was to make in Eugene, Ore. Not mly did Kennedy not refer to the speech he said he would give; he never once even referred to the subject. When a speech is prepared for Nixon, he usually tries to give the points, but he’s apologetic about it. ■ As he told a group of Califennia publishers; "Those of you who know me know that while I am campaigning, one thing l very much dislike to do is to read,a speech, even if I have written it." , ’ * ♦ ★ If the collected campaign word* of John F. Kenney and Richard Nixon are ever , brought to-together—heaven forbid—it will be found that the same thoughts, ofteif expi-essed in precisely the same words, will be repeated endlessly. NO HII.MOR —'.^hd, finallyv^a^^^tt* rver beer a campaign as humoriefs as this one? Kennedy has said. "My wife is home—having a boy.” And Nixon has often played the role o( just plain folks. For example, he was attepding a morning meeting in the night club of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. "T HnT'TiprrgliTea' (hat yOU would come out to breakfast," Nixon said, "that you would in the beautiful Cocoanut Grove. Pat and you know, we never we here in the years when we werej courting. 'We sal outside In a little bar and listened, but I remember was very nice to hear the music come out through here, and IT" nice to be in it. Very nice." ■ampaign jokes, once a important part of any politician' arsenal, have been barred as 1 they were illegal. ■ grim out there on the campaign trail. Very grim. Mac's Kin Air Minister LONDON - Air Ministc George Ward resighed Friday, liisi job went to Julian Amery. son-* law of Prime Minister Macmillan Ward said he wanted to return privatq busim'ss. Current Rate Paid on j Every Dollar of Your Insured Savings by an Agency of the U^. GovernmeKt Your savings here are insured to $10,000. Five offices to serve you plus a mail-saving plan that’s tops in convenience. Open yOur account with any amount. EaAiings start the 1st of the month on money added V the 10th. Why Settle for Less? VINGS HOME OFFICE: m iTs HUROIV STREET------------- DOWNTOWN OFFICE ^ ^ ROCHESTER ^BRANCH 16 E. LAWRENCE 407 MAIN STREET 4416 OKIE rtiGHWAy, DRAYTON PLAINS ^ ’ 1102 W. MAPLE RD., WALLED LAKE ....... ........ 4-................ . ( • . . Sorry, no moil or phono ordort, no dolivorios iMDnMLY aCIMLS! 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Day Since the early war years when a world community was only a dream, women af ^h-tn^ohe-a-throughout Ute c^tiy have gathered on the first Friday in November for study, action and worship to give expression to their continuing concern. The 1960 observance of tVortd Community Day wUll be dedicated to helping, church wctien proclaim their faith that lastinj peace can be estabiiahed. Mrs. D. D. McColl. wife of the pastor of First Christian Church, and Mrs. Barbour William.s. working through the 31 affiliated churches id the Pontiac Council, are .seektng donations of home medical kits which will be distributed in overseas areas lacking medical services. They are also asking for donations of clothing for small children, and yard gcods for refu^ws in tforth Africa. Northern India and the Far East, Wj^rgdw^^ are also sorely PAflilhia MEDICAL KITS — Preparing medical kits for home use in rural areas of Ethiopia, Nigeria, Chile and Burma arc Mrs. J. Harry Baker of 93 Dwight St., president of Pontiac Coumil of United Church Women (from left); Mrs. Fred L. Haushalter of needed In dtiihanages, sanitariums. r«ntui 2185 Scott Lake Rd.. diairman of world relations of the group: and hospitals and schools.' Many of the .Vlrs. William S. Wolfjam of 7323 Old Mill Rd., Birmingham. The collected garments will be dis-kit.s will be given to each person who completes a first aid course tributed among the world’s ref-to provide help for trainees as they serve their villages. ugees. OFFERING to TRAIN OTHERS The World‘^' Community Day offering will be used to fielp train TRYING ON FOR SIZE — When Mrs. Jack woZ in nmriZ. chUdTeitam Hudson St! ‘tri^ daughter Christie or social work, either in their hemes or in other countries. Women from Ethiopia. Nigeria in^-West Africa, and Burma will be recruited for training to provide a more effective service. Speaker for the day will be Paul Wrrthington of Lansing. From 1957 until 1959 he was in Viet Nam working with the Ihtemational Voluntary Service. Assistant to the director of the Assistant to the director of the group sent to Viet Nam, Mrs. Worthington served with agri-d public health Ann's coat on her, she found it far too small. So she decided to give it to the Pontiac Council of United Church Women to send to a refugee camP in North India or the Far East. The Koyl family Missionaries PREPARING rA.\ISTKRSH'’t)R UNItTCF — Young people sponsored by various churches make canisters for collecting funds for the United Nations International Emergency Fund by covering milk cartons. Already at work are Karen Shirley of 64 Seminole Ave , Bethany Baptist (from lefti; Laurie Nosanchuk of 197 Cher- okee Rd . Temple Beth Jacob: and .Mary Jane Hoisington of 1397 Giddings Rd., Joslyn Avenue United Presbyterian Church. Backed by the Pontiac Pastors Association, children will make the rounds from 2:.30 to 5 p. m. Sunday'.. Currentiy engaged in construction work, he served with refugee groups in the work similar to an agricultural extension program. Mr. Worthington will speak and show pictures cf life developing in an experimental station: also pictures of people in villages with their quaint dress and customs. Participating In the program will be Mrs, Stanley KIpo. Mrs. Fred L. Haushalter. Mrs. Howard Re.vnolds and Mrs. James ............... Acting as ushers will be Mrs. William Wolfram. Mrs; Albert Lovse, "Mrs. W. T. BilUngs, JUrs. Warren Fowler, Mrs. Allen Hersee and Mrs. Cecll,Choate. Mrs. Pafil Colton will be organist and Mrs. Lowell Mount will lead the choir composed of si from participating churches. ■ Others taking part in the program are Mrs. J. Allen Parker. Mrs. J. Harry Baker is (fresident of the Pontiac Council. Coming to the United .Missionary Church. 149 East Blvd. to speak at the 11 a.m. worship hour Sunday is the Rev. Jake Hostetler, missionary to the Dominican Ro-public. A graduate ol Fort Wayne Bible College, his work in the island u eludes general overseeing of missionary w o r k and. evangelistic tours. He has served as vice chairman of the work and as pres- ictent of.th^ national ^*hurch. lie alsd conducted a Bible study correspondence course. AMhe 7:30 service Sunday evening the Rev. Paul Ummel. a pioneer in miision work in Nigeria, will be speaker. 1st Presbyterian Membership Trick Is to Treat All of World's Children Pontiac young people will he helping needy children across Iw peas this Halloween by canvassin;? the city tomorrow between 2;:iC and 5 p.m. The filnvstrip A Trip With UNICEF” will be shown and e Trick or Treater will receive ih<^ alack and orange tag for identdi ■ation before going out into tile .:omaiunity, PE.\N V BUYS MILK Each penny received can mean five glasses of milk for a needy child bversea.s, or the BCG vaccn«’i‘ Rev Daniel / Wallace of Ccntnir[ity’s many faces, joys^ and sor-I Church said. "How better could their pupils and students learn about the wide world around them, about human- rows, aspirations and problems than by a direct participation in a crusade in behalf of other young ptH>ple who meed and gratefully accept their help?” Ministerial Fellowship The is to treat aR^^^t^ f ‘World's children" to food, milk, medicine, clothing and shelter. Tc do this great task they need nick- ^ FMds^^xi by the young peo- RofonTistion Dq}^ pie win be donated to the I nited ^ NatlMis Intemstlonal Christian .tippling tropical disease. Lmeigeiiey Fund. ♦ * ♦ The third annual Reformation •n. n . ' r."-* * Day Service, sponsofcd by the Wa- The Pontiac Pastors Associainm; . . ... ... . , t-■■ i,i„ ,„iii gave unanimous and enthasiasii^ Andrews of the Church of Class Scheduled Dr. WUliam H. Marbach will teach a membership Ifistruction class at 9:30 Sunday morning at First Presbyterian (iurch. "What We Believe as Protestants and Christians" will be his subject. Tony Brown, Lee Ann Anderson, Jim Lampman. Shirley Herron, Mward McLean and Helen Pritchett will be leaders at the Pioneer and Taxis Youth Groups Sundaj' evening. Several women of First Pre^y-terian will attend the meeting Wednesday at the Jefferson Avenue Presbyterian Church, Detroit, far officers, department heads, secretaries and group leaders of the than 100 countries around 'the world. .' The churches thus far caoperat Hig in the effort are First Metho-Templle Beth Jact^, Baldwin Evangelical UHiled Brethren. Jos-^ Avenue . Umted Pfesbyterun, First Baptist, Oakland Park Mcth-odtot, Bethany Baptist. United Mis-ctdnsuy, Messiah Bapdst; and Cen-It^liMhodnl. ;' , ' w ; . Kay Cline, president of tbe Ceiv .Aral Methodist Youth Group, saH otbOr church^ are interested in •jetning the ;canvi|aB, the youth should come to Cdnttal Methodist <)ntich at 3:31k p.m. Sunday 4 coonaeior and bring milk o^ cot-tkga cheese containers. Trick or Treat for UNjCEF works, both ways, and its beneficent effects a^ felt as much at the, giving as at the recehuig What will become r gift. .. health,and hope for many needy youngsters in far away countries will also mean the gilt of a (letter understanding of others, a feeling of worthwhile, accomplishment, and ap outlet, tor natural spontaneous selflessness (or countless children. j. "The educational aspect of the program has ever increasing ap-pi^ (or all adults deyme Iheur' Bwet and energies to the formation of our citizens 6f tomorrow. ihe Woman’s Asaodations. ; Christ Lutheran Church, Airport and Williams Lake Road; ' / ' * * * '' Dr. Frank P. Madsen, president of the Michigan Synod of the United Lutheran Church, will be guest speaker. A former pastm* of a De^ troit congregation, he is a leader jn the Detroit Comxa of Churches. 'TSeveral members of the Ministerial Felkiwsliip will partlcipute In tke service. Solols^ Will be June Lnbbeu of tte Drayton -Plnhis United Pr^yierlan AtOnemOTt, secretaor-treasurer. I Mrs. Howard White will be The Rev. Mr. Andei^ said Ihei*^!*®*^® of Jhe thank o«brlng^pro-pam at the local Women’s Asao-. ^Uc is invited. dation session Friday. "Has the Reformation Run Out' will be the Rev. Galen E. Hershey’a sermon at 9:30 a.m. Sunday. Dr. Marbach will preach on •'Our Protestant Wltnett" at 11 Scrying as olficera of the fellowship are ttie Rev. Arvid E. Ander-laon of Ghrist Lutheran Church. Stringhom .Missionary Hos Youth Rally Tonight The Rev. I. L.. Sisk, former director of Youth tor Christ in Day-ton, Ohio, will snealLan "The Snltr it Filled 'Ufe” at the Youth Rally at 7:30 tonkUrt'at the Stringham Unitfd Missionary Church, 4060 Elizabeth Lake Road. At the evangelistic service at U a,m. Sunday he will preach <«i "The Marks of Heart' Religion’* and at 7 p.m. his uermOn topic Baptist State Convention at Columbia Ave. Church Workers in Dominican The Columbia Avenue Baptist ver School of Missions at Louis-Church will be host to the ennuativille, Ky. ^ ‘ Baptist State Convention of Michi-[ t. Danipl of the Relief Republic, North Nigeria .gan Tuesday and-Wednesday-withj and AimaHy IluarU uf the jkiuth-CnAnlrmn Xiinetnu Marion F. Boyd, pastor em Baptist. Convention at Dallas OpeaKing ounaay church, presiding andi will speak, as will Eugene Hill state convention president, inj of Richmond, Va-., who will pre-charge. I Sent the Foreign Mission Board ★ ★ ★ I report. i- Sessions are scheduled .tor lOl The Bantist State Convention of a.m., 1;30 and 7 p.m. on both days. ’ 1 Michigan, organized four years ago, has more than lOO cooperat-Ylayor Philip E. Rowston will iing congregations in the Upper and welcome messenger* to Pontiac i Lower Peninsulas, at 10; IJ Tuesday morning. 1 x^e pastor said the public is in-“This convention year should bejvited to all sessions. the most inspiring ever had,”' ---------------- said the Rev. Mr. Boyd Pdstor ListS Scrmons Among the nationally k n 0 w n: persons on the program are Dicki 'Th'* Gerald W, Gjbson will , 7^‘WgTdus TiScdi^g‘~iriTSr^ from Dallas Tex.; and the Rev.ltion " at lliun. Sunday in Central Bob Baker. ’ an evangelist fronilChri.stlan Church -The Symptoms Dallas who has just returned from Death" will Iw his sermon theme Japan." ^ P ^. The Rev. Mr. Ummel who went to Nigeria with bis brother Joseph in 1934 started his missionary work with the Dakkarkari p(^le, a primitive tribe In the Ziini area of Northern Nigeria. The pastor and h« coHucpH the language to writing, translated the Gospels, a hymnal and a read-r, and. began a school. Now "thara ta^ strong Christian congregation IO -station CKLW-MOO KC SUNDAY, 9:45 A. M. TV Every Supday, • Chartnel 7, 9;3a A M. ’ ■J 18781372 ./■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 29, 1900 I FIFTEEN St. Fred^ -St. Mike Clash for 26th Time Rains Favored Although Both Are Winless Mikes Hold All-Time Edge in Bottle of Crosstowfh Rivals nuHUBu omNarai Loorort. IT. na '***' ST. inKB Tm ^Ut Ir. I KMittnt U» Cr. KeiuitdT too Sr. Sg SoDiunbori t B««ri in Jr. ra Mkitm 1 Blerlint 100 So HB Brown I_________ ■ofmnn 100 Sr. Bnuns taor 14S Sr. By CHVCX ABA« St. ¥)ctd wiU be the slight favorite when the whistle blows starting the 26th game between the Rams and St. Michael tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 at Wlsner Stadium. The Red and Black eleven is rated a slim edge because of experienced backs Jim Kennedy and Norb Hohnan plus shifty John Bierline. The city rivals are all even otherwise. St. Michael, the heme team, has dropped six straight, soorlag a high of IS la a game. St. Fred has lost Its five starts althoagh scoring U and M la single outings. Both have lost key performers for tbe“season due to injuries but will otherwise be ine good shape physically for this annual classic. even as you can get for size as the Ram forwards average 170.T pounds to an even 170 for the Shamrocks. The visitors will have a big size advantage in the back-field. St. Michael leads In the series H-> featuring a string of eight through *S7. St. Fred broke the spell in INS by romping St-12 but coach Jim Niebauer’s Shamrocks bounced back lor the most lopsided victory In history last fall, M-7. There have been three ties. Most of the boys who powered the Blue and White last October have departed. The only point-getter back is Dave Baumgartner, who kicked six extra points in the rout. Hoffman scored the St. Fred Hie combination of being starved for a victory, wanting to escape the Suburban Catholic cellar ahd, most of all, beat the city rival should hav^ the two squads fired-up to a fever pitch. Coach Tom Kennedy’s Rams have the added incentive of revenge for the humiliating beating in the last meeting. The players on both teams realize they can save some face in a dreary season by beating the arch-rivaL spectable flnish In the 8C1. stand. ....' . . i-ta Benedict. Royal Oak Shrine goes to Holy R^eemer and Farrningttm OLS vs. St. Agatha. FRACTURED RUNNER W-0, Oakland-B Title Races Reach Showdown Stages Orion Drubs Troy, 40-7 Unbeaten but once - tied Lake Orion put itself in prime position _ „ . ..._ _ to win the Oaklaml B ae pHensW^^^ .about- as Wng fyoy* de-7....- This eliminated Troy from race and since Fitzgerald walloped Oak Park, 330, Lake Orion must now hope for an assist from Avondale-in order to win the title outright. Orion and FltegeraM are tied in the league with 4-tl-l record, the tie coming against each Other. Next week Orion plays non-league foe Lapeer, and appears a cinch to win Its finale against Oak Park in two weeks., Howver, Fitzgerald wHl be at Avondale next Friday and this game should decide whether the league wUl have an outright cham-ion or a tie for the title. ' a- ★ ★ Rogw WiUkkms and Bucky Cra-en did the passing for Orion ahd Dave Perry did roost of the catch- Williams hit Perry for M yards In Oie first period and tten Gary Hunter returned a Troy pant M yards to make it lS-0. Dion Caza plunged four j^rds and converted lor Troy to make it 13-7, but in the final seconds of tlie Keego-Hills nut d Tsrdi Jl i? PaI,acsdsm, ChsmSor- P s d d r. 13 -------Kent, R*u. Boirn. Bwoctmui, Ptrsuion. Wottins. Rydtn BLOOMFIILD RTOLS LIMTOP BUM: Calhoun, IttIdo, Lovett, Button, WtekaJey'nei ^ TAOdiB; AMi«d.-Corn^^ Kurai, Sion. I Cher, Tounn ' OOAROS: Bromley. CuVeU. Cool. 0«r-Mek. Volade ............ Plnney half QraVen passed to Perry 6b yards and made it 20-7. -..-... * t * Hr tt»4th quarter Crtfmipiuaied to Perry 20 yards, Tim Alban got another on a 20 yard dash and Wiillams went 20 yards on an inter-ceptioB. Alban ran for two extra points, Craven for one and Perry for the other. Big gun for Flttger^ld wm Ron touchdowns In the rout of Oak Park. Madison played a non-league game and defeated Garden City, 26-13. Dennis Hepp scored three touchdowns and Bob Woods the other for Madison. The, o^r league game between Clawson and Avondale was played Thursday night and Clawson scored 13-7 upset over the Jackets. Paaltoc PrMi Pk*U END OF THE UNE - Halfback Biff Jones Rushing up to assUt Hciw .is Bob Kent (701. West of Bloomfield Hills is about to be tackled by West Bloomfield clinched at least a share of the I’s Roger Hess after a short gain. Wayne-Oakland crown by winning, 28-14. league setback, is the lone chal-Jenger. It was the IMh straight wla. Clarkston Rushes to Defeat Holly Stays ^ In Contention Holly kept its Wayne-Oakland League title hopes alive by edging last place Milfmxl 28-19 last night. Northville won a close game om Clarkston 7-0 and Brighton topp^ aarenceviUe 26-14 in other league action. Although out of the title chase, defending champion Northville now has a strong hold on .thtod place. Milford threw a scare Into the Bronoos who have a big game at West Bloomfleld next Friday. Holly can tie the Lakers tor the championship fay winaiag. Gary Anderson stunned the partisan Holly crowd by racing 45 yards on the third play of the game. Larry Chapel’s conversion put Milford in front 7-0. . ★ __________________________ Holly then marched ^ yards to tie the score. Bob Ennis crossed the goal line from the six and ran the first of his four exfra points. with Ennis passing to Don McKenzie on a 65-yard play. But the margin was not held for long as Chapel raced 60 yards for a Milford score Just before the half. Milford made It 21-M la the third quarter on a five-yard run by Mike RusseU. Holly finally clinched the victory on Ennis’ one-ysrd tonchdown plunge in the last period. " aarkifdh *dld everything but push Northville all the way home and score. The latter deficiency proved to be the most important. HciljLioQk u-JL3-T lea4 in the-sec- *core was tallied in the ond quarter on a 13-yard run by Roger HaU. Tl» Broncos pushed across other touchdown before the half Garkstem moved up and < the field, reaching the Northvile five-yard line in the third quarter. But every time it looked like the home team would go in to a score, penalties or a stiffened Northville defense would, halt the drives. Garkston had 110 yards in penalties. Ga^ston gained 232 yards rushing to only 46 for Northville. The the game’s lesding rusher with 1«2 yards. Randy Marx had a hand in all four Brighton touchdowns. He also played all three positions in the backfield. ★ ★ ♦ Brighton raced to a l2-6 lead with two second quarter touchdowns. Marx capp^ a 30-yard drive with a six-yard Jaunt into the -enri tone, A short Garenceville punt setup the score. Dave Hill got the second touchdown on a 40-yard pata from Marx. GarenceviUe made it 12-7 early in the third period with a 45-yard Keg Proprietors Name Bondo New President scoring pass from Ron Blobet to Tony Giacobazzi. But Marx quickly got that one back by racing 10 yards with the kickoff. ‘ Garenceville scored early in the fourth quarter with the help of a pass Interference penalty against Brighton. Ron RIdlIng capped the drive by plunging over from the six to make the score 12-14. Marx took care of the Brighton victory by sprinting 40 yards as heavy fog began to roll over the ^ Brighton field. Marx picked up one Brighton PAT and Schelfer the other. Ridling got both of Gar- Rrit dowDf raihing _____ rit doviu psulog rint dosvB* pvnsitlu . ToUl flrit d0WBj_.. Tsrds fSlnad rOiHInt .. Ytr(U gslMd BSM*d TbtST nrt. yvrrfk PSHC* stUmpMj . . . . , ------compivtcd........ ------lottrcepted by PunU sod ivust* ysrdi Hsily I Ari Paddy's Lakara. period on a pass play of SO yards from-Juday to Jim Petrock. Trotter tallied the extra point. Willie Knox of Garkston was Moore Is Choice ROME, Italy l»-Ageless Moore is almost a unanimous diotee to beat Italian li|^t heavy-weiiJit ghamplon Ghilio Rinaldi in their lO-round non-title fight tonight, Italian sports writers said th« , 44-uear-old or Is It 47? worid champion has too much ring guile and too much experience for the ging 25-year-old .Italian. A^e’s title was lifted by die Natkmal Boxing Assaciation of the United Stoes this w«d( ' ' ~ to defend Us crown within a aped-fied dme. But he still is the diara* plon in the eyes of the New Yorii Athletic Oommisslon and other Staten where the NBA is not ifeOQg- Utica DemcHocIcs Fraser U^ let a 134 halftime lead allp away as the Chieftains and Fraser battled to a 20^0 tie FrUb^ night in a Bi-Counly League football game at Utka. Utica’s record liow stands 3-3-1. Gedrge I Thurston tossed touchdown passes to Utica, a 33r yard strike to Barit Kraft aM a JS-yard^r to Dpug Ebert. Ebert raced n yards eti a spectacular play to Utica’s otner touchdown. Ben Bondo of Maple Lanes Walled Lake hag been nameij^mbSi uxt i president of the Bowling. 3.3 tor’s Association of Northern Oak-L scoii mr auASTsms land County. SiifJrd ; . i 6-ii New vice president is Lou" prince of Motor Inn. Art Rosner ci«m N>uit of Sylvan Lanes will serve as sec-ipl"t SSZSl mmiS* reiary ana Ray Ludw^T^ HnUopjjy^i^ "It was Just about what you would expect from boys," said Paddy after the gome, "l^y let down a little after building thal 21-0 lead." The eoaeb praised the play of Jaoli Newton. The senior speedster started at quarterback In place of the Injured Jeff Pries. He occnslonaliy switched to hnlfbock with Paddy’s son, Mike, directing the attack. The coach made good use of 'Newton’s dpeed by having him run rollouts from the QB slot. Newton carried the ball 20 times, cither from QB or halfback, and gained 136 yards. He also scored the final West Bloomfield touchdown on an 18-yard end sweep. ' On defense, the Lakers held Bloomftekt Hilts to 67 yards rushing, 18 in the first half. The Barons had better luck in the air, connecting on seven of 16 passes for 139 yards. One of the towses scored' Bloomfield Hills last touchdown ujilh 11 seconds to play In the I^JDUne. was a plctnre play 343 with quarterback Art Tregensa jgi lottlHK * Riff Jones down the middle. J, Jones had slipped past Hie secondary and when he took the pass on the 30, all he had to do was outrun the West Bloomfleld PsMci lotsrnpud by ^nu and STtras* ysrdi in Rochester, treasurer. lYsrdi'tstosyyiilhint 1 •Selected for the board of direc-;Tou‘*st"y»rS*Jsin«d Bonfiglior of Huron Bowl and Bob Kuklinski of Lakewood Lanes. Les Howe of Howe’s Lanes, outgoing president, Stan Mayes of Montcalm Centre and Red Collier of Oxford were picked to serve one-year director terms. 333 ■1? Tsrdi pcnsllMd SCOI____ ^ Jf3v(lM Anchor Bay Wins Second Straight League Crown Anchor, Bay won ita recondls^^ any hope Dryden had of' Ttkiaht an nnflat straight Southern ‘Thumb Confer-ehampionihip yesterday afternoon by overwhelming Dryden 37-6. It was the l6th straight for the Tars. ♦ * ★ They had to have help froth Memphis which knocked Capac out the running 21-12 to take over an upset. Halfback Gerald Blake scored three touchdowns In Armada’s easy win over Almont. B1 a k opened the scoring in the first period with a 15-yard tobchdown run. In the next quarter he punched aefoss from the two and in the thirij period he tallied jdtfr ^ yanL sprinL FOILED AGAIN — Wut BldbrnfleW’s Chuck Christensen {ft) loon on thla.ibid to intorcept a Bloomfield Hills pass. As he grabbed Rie ball, ^ Christensen was lyit by the intended receiver. Bill Calhoun (48), and his own teammate, Roger Hess' (744. The bumping caused him to lose possession. The Uk«s’ Jim WMklna CB) aad , Hills’ Art Tregenza (23) watch the action. e with Capac for fiilrrt by bentiiM winleas Bt'^ City 16-14. Armada stayed in I,ourth place 3^th . a win over Almont. Anchor Bay can lone its f game next week against Armada and still not lose the Cri>wn. Memphis Is the‘ closest contender .with a record, but has only one game to play. three-yard run. f^lbarlk. Jim Forty raced yards to a first period touchdown and quarterback Mel Aloum'a passed 18 yards th end Julius ’Trout I the^ fourth quarter. Abnonfa lone tally came in the last quarter on a 55-yard run by quarterback the third league win for Armada against two loss^ and a tie. Al-Tha Tara pushed asross lE^points imtill is amileas la seven fames in the first quarter to quiddy A 31-yard pass from Tregenza to halfback Fred Stresen-R^ter setup the Barons’ third quarter score, ft put the balT on the 16. j Three plays later ’Tregenza passed 12 yards lo Stresen-Reuter on the one yard line. Tregenza carried over on a sneak. Center Bob Akerly pounced on Baron fumble on the third play after the opening kickoff to give West Bloomfield possession on the "Ills 31-yard line. Newton and halfback Roger Hess ate up-most of the yardage with Hess bucking off toeW® the last two yards. Merv krsig kicked the first ^ Ms four extra points. After an exchange of punts, the Lakers marched 44 yards tor their second tonchdewn. A 12-ysrd ran by Jim Bandnll on an end-sround was the Mg play. V Almoot • OrotM 13, OrMM MaW 0. S SMlMlffl 11, Sait DttraM 13 mndr 14 Mtmphu 31, Capac 13 Mimniton M. Osfard II Madloon N. Oardta CKr IT Madloon HalihU Lamphara 34. D«lro4t Country Day t Now naoon It. Srown City 14 Nnrtholllo I. Clarkotaa 4 ronllac Contra! 7. nihl S'woit. t Ilia) jnraoum Ottralt Tharilta 4 ^ kn*%hi0M L'Abm Crouw f Royal Oak glmball 10. Part Raroa 7 noyal Oak Dondoro 34, Wouuiatia a Ronotlll* 34, namoo 4 "^tlr- “ winodLaiiVsii'Iar Warron r--------* rnink_______________ Now Mo^eo 41. Donttr 4 ------tPia.i 14. act - - pniDArrcoi - Mo^eo 41, I >1 iPlA ! It. aMtaa lit St, Ouantleo T orohoU iMlaa i 14, Mnol >mcy 41, Nth. Wttlayaa i: am( iColo ) St. 31, 0 Now l»tr eiaoktoa as, Tarkle L » Pranebeo itau '* ______________la 41, CaJ AfslM 4 Rakar 34. Mthaar iRaa i 1 Rwabeldt lQUl(.f SUM 20. RtNaU U Wilt Russell Battle Tonight; Starred Friday By UnHed Press International The battle of basketbeH’s two giants. Wilt (The Stilt) Chomber-and big BUI Russell, resumes tonight when the Philadelphia Warriors and the Boston Oltict, the only undefeated teams in the National Basketball ABaocjtatlon, meet at Roston. Both Chflnibtrl>fn md RttMtt were Instrumental in leading their clubs to victory Friday night.The triumphs were the second in two starts for the Easters Division's top two teams. Russell's 22 points and 19 rebounds, combined with the fine clutch play of backcourt stars .Bob Sharntsn and Bob Cousy, handed the New York Knickerbockers a 110-101 defeat, their fourth straight against one tri- • umph. The 7-2 Chamberlain scored 29 points In the Warriors’ 122-120 success over the Los Angeles Lakers. It was Ed OmlUi, ircently winning basket for PhUadet- phia. Elgin Baylor topped the Laker scorers with 28 points. Lakers Clinch Title Share With Victory W^st Bloomfield Rolls Over Barons With Ease by 28-14 Score By DON VOOEI, West Bloomfleld quit playing second fiddle In the Wayne-Oakland League Friday afternoon. In past seasons the Lakers always found themselves looking up at champion Northville wheh the esmpai^ ended. They took ckre of this sttusttoh by whipping Bloomfleld HIU*. 28-14. Now the Lakers are looking down on the other seven schools. The win clinched at least a tie for the championship. The Keego Harbor school can claim the title outright by beating Holly next Friday. Holly, with only one acquired from St. Louis,-syte s>mk Saginaw Latest Bay City Victim By The Associated Press Quarterback Bob Crampton and a stingy defense are the solid com? bination that has Bay Gty Central headed to an unbeaten season and Michigan's mythical high school football crown. The Wolves’ defense and Qtinip-ton clicked again Friday night m Bay Gty whipped Saginaw 266. Crampton sroied the first touchdown oh a one-yard i^tmge and passed for two more, Bay ranked No. 1 in the Associated Press Class A-polL ripped^^ Its seventh straight triumph. After Crampton accounted for Bay Gty’s margin of victory, the defense went to work and protected it. Saginaw was stopped once at the Wolves' 3 and another time at the 10 in the last quarter. .Flint Central whipped. Saginaw ArthULltUL 27-6. : ' Thompson and Ortega in TV Fight Tonight NEW YORK (UPI) - Weltow eight challenger Federico Thompson of Argentina gambles world-title shot against a 86,000 purse tonight in a TV 10-rounder with Mexican Caspar Ortega at Madison Square Garden. Should the tough and younger Ortega upset Thompson, the South American slugger will be yanked out of his scheduled title~flght with champion Benny Kid Paret at the Garden, Dec. 10, matefa-tnaker Teddy Brenner warned. Thompson, 32, is favored at 1445 because of his punch. But Ortega, 25, n^er has been stopped. Viking Statistics •i-Ji i 5-344 Tight yards to the end lone. Wgst Bloomfield scored again wlth'lrll remaining in the second quarter. Halfback Jeff Rydeo: carrieo^over from tfae 19 on a reverie to end k 65-yard drive. Newton started the mgrch with R 20- Tkrdi p»n»lU»d........ ... _ - SOMKART WsIM LUt ...........14 4 7 8-34 ‘uAlntton .. .... 4 f 4 S- S WL: Butfmmr 13 run (kick tolM 7VL: UcBUlUoI 34 ftold toAl (pUctkkk) WL: amn 33 7)111 (McMlUlan kteki F: Rkwklni 1 ran (kick (nUcdi WL: Smith 43 run (kick tailed) WL: BuffmcTtr 14 run iMcklUllM kl4kl ' WAIUD LAKE LDmiB ~ CnrUr, Rodatim, Rand, riMIrrr. The Barofip kfeked -off to start i the second half and the Lakers « promptly gave theip the boll on the West Bloomfield 46 by fumbling. It was the Hill’s first dent * in Laker territory. But they fumbled the baJl away only to get it another Laker^^ booWf. a ,. This time guard IV Cool recov- ^ erad on the 46 again an(l the Bar- | OM Wire « themuw’ fit|t toi^idown. Wlk. Rretachma’r. O^tUid* lore;, Mrl, Wntaos SI 3wi!i TftE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. OCTORKR 29. I960 Its Time Again-4th Annual Press Bowlerama Starts Dec. 4th MensSingles - MeeiioHave No Sure Thing in Pro Leagues Larger Purse Fiv* Guaranteed Prizes Plus Share of AAoney for Ail Qualifiers By TV The I'ecord book* will ihow there is no such thing as a winner in the National Football Plans were completed today frrjLeagiie. But 1( toam holds true for the 1960 Pontiac Press Bowleraniii: Sunday’s six Kantes, the New York tournament which will bp held | Giants still will be unbeaten at this year in December ; the top 6( the Eastern Conlerence The tth annual singles handicapiand the Green Bay .Packers and event will be for men only forlChicaio Bears will V tied for the the flm tithe. The women s Htyi Western Conlerence lead skm has been dropped due to a ♦ * * lack of interest by tV bowlers The Giants iWMi still operating A pHse Bst feahirins live hi* without the passing arm of Charlie; gaarasteed cash awards has Conerly hut “^with halfback Aic.s been arraaged lopped .hy SMt Webster avuiluble for tar the rbamptoa, tSSS for the limited duty. plete reversal of Boston s triumph at Los Angeles three weeks Dkk, Kemp, injured when the clubs met earlier, was In command. The Patriot.s tried quarterback.s Botch Songin, Tommy Greene and Harvey White in turn before intermission. A pass interference cull against the Chargers was the only A crowd of about 10.000. sitting thiough u drizzle at the Poio| Grounds. saw^At Damw, his bat-| tered ribs padded and his injured | ankle swarthed in tape, direct the! entire New York attack. He p:iss«-df for two louchdcmns in semlin;' Ih-: Titans ahead twice, Ironiculty. it was a fumble hy Dorow di-ep in the Titans' Boston penetration of Los AnKcle.Sj.territory with less than a mimilei territory before the half by which deft in the game that stalled their, lime the visitors had a 28-0 lead, last-ditch drive. * ♦ * ' So now the Titans and ftaalers ecords, ' The! Eastern Division title. 'I'he ftaldeis, eommg riom ue- show. Identical least I hind three times, pushed over two defeat was a serious%ne foi' ilic favored to takeiiut>ch; points at Yankei' Stadium. Eariler version by Urry Baines. 4piallfler wW wda a share of the in the season at St. Louis, thel purae. Eastern leaders thumiied the! The invitational actual tounwy. Card.s 3T>-14 i which was a big sucri^ last tir^ea Bay (3 0 sod Ctiirago year when held in conjuntdion-vilh! (3.1.1 > ar, both loarhdown favor-the handicap finals, will be :teW| The Packers will V at again with an increase m thel nttoburgh lor a game wllh iV awards to be given. I eveHough Sfoeters (t t l) and Four area bowling establish-' |b<. Bears eomplele a West Coast menu will be taking part in Ihc trip at 8aa Franrlsco against the meet. Action grts started Det: | (3-3). 4 at the new Howe‘s Lanes onj 11th Frame iy ORUCK ABAm SIIUd.KT' POl.NTFJt One Down Out of 4, lions fry for 2 That 702 retied by Pontiac’s Shirley Pointer early this week certainly gives women around the area something to shoot at in the future. Sv^ch scores for women are rare. Some of thfe top names in jthe business have never hit 700. Marge McDaniels of California won WIBC singles honors at Den-Iver last season with 649 which clearly showjs the impres-'siv'ehess of Shirley’s'feat. - Mrs. Pointer, now an instructor at Huron Bowl, has been about the most successful city lady‘lcegler in recent j years. She started winning^^ -itrophies in 1954 .and has!. I collected over 50 since. So * i her big night, was no flute. • Most of her winning has been inj, s' _ ’State Bowling the annual city tourney staged by the Pontiac Women's BoTvUng Association. Slip has won all-events honors tivc of the lust seven ye.ari. had Ihc high game and series in 19S6. ISSa-amPtest yeuiv Took sin- with part- Finals Started The state match game bowlinj' championships got under way at rBdwi TOs afternoon with Dixie Highway with tV 1st of| three (iuaiifylnK*n«ilon..'ff;eoiher|P‘'>«'.-. K®* sesstoa and (be nrtual bivttattwal conleal Dec. | The actual operation of tournament will be the sami it was In 1939. the - Rams Haven't iWonaGamein The Philadelphia Eagles 1.4-ri.i ]Ml3Iries„ jthe Western Conference race, ilosing two of their five games, nrel I favored by 14 points over jless Cowboys at Dallas. idle. Thus the Cleveland: *j Browns <3-11 can move into a tie ifor runner-up honors buck of the| All sanctioned keglers living orjjjjgnfg _ K Giants! bowling In Oakland County are;,o^ _bi^_beating the Redskins| eligible to enter. The Anal aver-j( 14.2, ,, Washington. The Browns age tor 196M0 will V used In de- g^p 10 . point favorites although termining handicap. Scoring follows the 70 per cent handicap. 2( Despite Record, Detroit Still Rated Underdog to Coast Team scratch system. One af every seven qualiflerM at each ol the three “houses'* will go on to the flaals. Con-, testaats will have the opportunitv to choose their qaalKyini; lora- A popular feature added u yenr ago gives any bowler who competes the 1st week and fails to make the grade a chance to return tor another try the '2nd week. Entry blanks will soon be avail- i.u. , . , I . o LOS, ANGELES—Aflcr H»e Lions M^y lost to the Eagles last I timore Colts Iasi iveek. it wouldl ('oneriy again will confine hK the oddsniakerTS would make! playing to kicking as a niiH for jthe Detroit team a'favorite over! the Intored Don Chnndter. lenv- sinless l.os Angeles Rams, ing the (iiaiits* passing chores to ! c,' flip Const games against lli.- K mii i,ii; diip. s . _...................^ Steelers will be meeting a team blank Will also be printed in the'*'*11' * '*’^•1 rounded attack spear-paper occasionally It may Eyheaded by Lamar McHan's aerials, clipped and used as an official «>n-' . * * * ] try form. 'aMERIC A.N FOOTBALL LEAGUE,^ Jojs Myers, a 15-year-old so“Ik>-- jn the American Football'League' 41 .. : more at St. Michael High, tookij^j night, the Los Angeles Charg-Up.,„, 1 men's honors in 1^. Bob Gormongipr, defeated the Boston Patriots.j,,, , „ ftr^ 651 tor the acjual champion 45.16 Oakland nipped the New'^ ,,^ O f-oi ,Y,OTk Titans, 28-27. Paul Maguire-led a rangy de-l fense which smothered the Pa-f Angck-p. ha* Im-cti a liir*-Itriots' attack until the game was; '"cklcr for the Uons. They hi>-> lout of reach, scoring once on a I pia'cd III gsmes in tli* (Tty «t I blocked kick and taking a big »"*' 'i*- 'l'*’- Birmingham Groves took advan-jhand in another. I •" Erand-tco they have non tage of four intercepted passes toj „ ^ ^ <«'• I" •• regular Irk-s. DM..,. Halfback Paul Lowe, the ex- 1 ^1 ?5T1„e ?,hirST2ht! t'mich (lcor.v^ Wilson whn is; -^ nm In -tte bis job wittr ;nr| Go-! V^rM and wa. a con- [l-io" - 1' lb': Ic^Li. c.'n ,|n Jd ^rttnza HuMman raced 27! * yards for the final Groves TD. * field goal by Ben Agn- sanie b tckfi. Id, GPUS made its best penetration iof Danny Lewis iiral Ken WL'i)bj to the Groves six. ygrd line in fhe. A marked difference in quarter-1 along w1 h Hopalong Cas.sady and] second half. . backs also helped explain the com-'q>|i"'tcrbad{ TihV Ninowski. The 703 was casll.% , her b«‘sl seriea ever but the 213 which led the way was not. She owns a ! Sjiirlcy is Inlnging along another [star in son Billy , 12. The youngote ' - . I is averaging 1.3.5 in his 2nd sca-■son. Husband Walt also bcwl.s. defending champion Billy Golem-, biewski leading a 24-man field featuring some of the nation's top. stars. Another round will be .started tonight at 7 with the titld' to be decided in Sunday competition. Squads tomorrow will be in action at 3 and 7 p m. The event is also servingas eliminations for the National All-Star event. I proprietor Sam Pgriia ailing agiin U. of M. Tiff Spurs The Iriplicittcs are starting to L come in. Donna Lonteen match'd;- L' hi her average by hitting 123 ibree \nnr|rmancl:|in MQUa limes in the Huron Girls loop Del i^Kvl IJlliailJmji I lUTC phinc Fry did the same wi'h a| _ tZof l^s in the Auburn ladles! ANN ARBOR iUPD-TM-o mei- Majoi's League. Margaret-Lemon I dent* at «;eck s Mmnesot^ har^li. Marv Flood 312, A. C. | ■'«‘‘h*Kan footb.a!l game have IM - ~ ' --- - 'to formation of a varsity club at Ann Arbor High School to “im-pi-ove the citizenship" of its stu-| i dents. Standard .Seivicc 803 for other iopj scores in latter race. Tickets for the 1961 ABC namriit at Cobo HsH >re going on sale at- keg establishments throughout this sector. I/>cal fans ran save money and inconvenience by obtaining the ducats «t an alley . . • Deadline Is this weekenj for joining I’onI'ae hooster squad for the tourney. Contact 1-ou Koprinee at Motor lun7'~' ..... ---y________________ There were 94 200 games in thejAnn Arbor High Schooi jackets. School Principal Nicholas Schreiber revealed plans for the : rlub during a continuing Investi-I gation into the theft "of several ! footballs from the game and the I beating of a Minnesota student ' manager. Charles Olson was set Upon hy R V.M t )-f '.’'■'.'.I .H—Conch Tom Kenm-dy of S". E-cdgnck ':r the co-ciSptatns Rudy Yapa (left I and Jnii Kennedy together for .some pre-giintc pains in preparation for Sunday's encoun- ter at Wisner Stadium against St. Mike. Vapo is an end while .Kennedy is the team's quarterback. The game is rated a tossup between the tv.o rivals. Farmington Classic I h i 5 weefc and suffered a broken collarbone, topped by Jack Stokes at 26.5. Ron'Twelve footballs, valued at S20 Charles totaled 761. Hank Gnie-'each, and several warm-up jackets Kvek8"TeaaSTno”Team»=^^^^^ OtsoH. I able Barb Howe has dropned out: ------^----------- secretaiy-trensurer for the Pom Runner Ist nmnTnzk#Ar« nftdhi' Sf»VPrfl’i ^ Groves Malces It Three Straight Victories, 12-0 Both Unbeaten I The team left Friday morning, •ami woiliod ont at Hollywood Hig'n Si'bool for iMuple Tmurs Fridayi Colls, Warriors Triumph proprietors aftei- severa'i years due to the nress of busi-j east LANSING (UPD-Fiv c ness at hor larger place . , , Fire-'Michigan State runners w ere balls Ind e’Tf-ieeS to take l.st in!among the first seven finishers Women’s Oak'and Cr'in(\' Em-1yesterday, in a three-school cros.s niovees’ loop. I. Elkins rolled 188-1country meet here. 195 ‘ .Spartans Jerry Young of Berklq.v See story ei.row'hero in sports,and Bill Reynolds, team captain |aao(ion tod")' oo*'ooroiw'» hi<" dr’ngsifmm Galt. Ont.. finished in a dead 1 at Huron Bowl this wwkerd. Iheat for first place. Blown Has Easy Time I.OS ANGELES tffi—Joe Brown'ond only to Mexico City in^cxi-itcd.iv holds the record for success-lean population. BuUhe.boos didn't jful lightweight title defenses —-iboUier Biwwn. jhis ninth ^ after a fun-fiUed unan- bou» out there, jimous win over Cisco Andrade. , ,j ‘there's dough out Brown, who spent almost as; (here,*’ he said, much time ‘ Brown, sidestepping and conned- last nigh . toy^ ‘"jing with good lefts whenever he scoro a lopsided decision. Andrade, 30, accused Brown of igo more like a training camp spar-_ uniig and running bnckwmrda, ring session, but the 34-year-old elininp com- I ..j (|,p |eft hand. Junior Olympic By THE ASSOCLATED PRESS ipertod si-oring spree as the Celt- SCOIQS (GUPU: SHAMRCKKS—.St. Mike tackles Jim Hurren and Paul Palace (leftUo right i will be in the starting lineup agaiast city arch-rival St. Fi-ederick, Sunday afternoon at Wisner Stadium. Hurren is a junior and Palace a senior. Both teams wdl be seeking their first victory of the. .sl-asoh. Game time is 2:30 p.m. defending championsjics broke it wide open by taking; and the Philadelphia Warriotiij» and handed The! ^jcfOfy are kwuig no Ume «lw«toK^*V;Knicks their fourth setback u., au» are the class of the,p^.p sharman. who scored! \v.\sniNGTON (APt — George [eight points in the Celts’ surge.[Morris, junior member of the U.S. Basketball Aasociation. lended up with 20 points, two less Olympic team. Friday night, * * * I than teammate Bill Russell. Wil- scored his second major victory in The Celtics, who beat. Philadel-jlie Naulls was high for New York two days at the Washingtm In-phia by 10 games last season, andjwith 24. temational Horse Show as he rode the Warriors each have won two! * * * High Noon to a bhie ribbon after games without a defeat. No. 2 for| Key Games Today 11 tried for q knockout, but I Tm an old man.-That’s why j couldn't get just the right shot at I was trying to rest in the middle him, ” smiled Brown. 'rounds. I playing around. Andrade said the left jabs wrere I But he didn't open up the way flicks, not punches, and added; I expected him to. ” ; "How in the hell arc you going Most of the crowd of 8,500 was to hit someone who's running from for Andrade. Los Angeles is scc-tyou?" 's field goal the catica was a 110-Ml decls^.j,^^^^ ^3^,, ,he Warriors. their|P^«‘o‘s i jump-off with two foreign com- U-D Beals Marines, 28-7; Miami Wins • the New York Knicks Fri- Ivlotory. It was a 30-toot set by the! day night while the Warriors|J•’ %^“came' Monis, 22-year-old. from New the Lo. Anpte V.k,-r.' 0».. »•' 1« _ * * * . , !heriain, Paul Artzin an«l - Tom|“' t BUI Sharman sparked a lastig^a ,he Philadelphia ^ By THE AiWOCIATED PRES.S Sophomore Jerry Gross launched a one-man air assault that struck down the Quantico Marines and gave the University of Detroit a 28-7 victory Friday night. atUttK*N rOOTULL LEAGt'E -.k. o» JO, , , ilackw on Bibyboy. and a Mexican ith 29. and 21 points.l,..^ ^ respectively. Elgin Baylor w«*lTragualeguas. the Lakers’ chief point-getter withl ^ ^ Bm1« Lw Antrim : 4 z • .sn hi §gr : mtuj3i KBsui-ra ' The victory gave Morris ii two-• o r T point lead for individual honors'iii 7 ” international jumping, with 13 * * ’ points to Frank ChapoCs 11- * i, s P»pot also is a representative oi J J jjltbe Vnited SUtes. Their closest The former high school stab fi-om Bay City accounted tor 294 yards passing and two touchdown aerials. In another Friday night game. Boston College gave Miami a scare bqjore bowing in the Orange'Bowl, i »^rWai to Lt. Palaviosv who has 4CV, -broke the game open in • ^ *100 jjoints. i» a ml fa'a c vilian open jumping class, 1 « S SlllwiWailx.. Holly, a young ridw from 'Alexandim. Va.. rode' both find anti second-place winners. J U BovfI Group Looking HOUSTtW fAPi - Ari^tansas lid Mississippi are' among the teams Being considered for The 44 «:*( second tjnnual Bluebonnet Bowlj Gross- hit (or his n n S S^ISigame Dec. 17. ' ^ in the 4th quarter to ‘ '• * fl iind 3 yards to sophomore cndjCHiio State, on the other hand, has John Lower. (ullbaek Bob Ferguson, whose rush.' It was Detroit's 5th straight vic-H"8 average is better than 100, yards per game. j Kansas, placed on probation by' tory after an opening game Outplayed tor three periods, llaml’s Horricaiies rallied on le passing' arm of Eddie dohm 10-7. The Eagles, two touchdown underdogs, were leading 7-0 when Johns uncorked a 50-yard touchdown pass to Bill Miller to tie it on thg, first play of the last quarter. A 33-yard field goal by Daniel produced the decisive points in a Gross, who started Ms first game (or the Titans after being service because of an injury to regular Bob Lwsky, the SO^degree' heat of the Orsptge Bowl, the Eagles had riddled Mi- Detroft heored on a 4w^ ytudfeven outgoined the-Huiricanes ini va.. roue noin me by Jim Post in the first---------- period. In the second quarter Tom Shanahan raced 72 y^s The Marines 8cqred.in, thg. sec-om| quarter on a 1 yard pluit^ by Tom Marshall, 'TDaarials idnebr^aker ^nel the NCAA for recruiting sins and' probably p|,aiiis to go alj exit against kick.,, s,D«. “"I ground play. Three, of the key games on the college front today has Ohio State viaitli« Michigan State, Pitt at Syracuse and fowa facing Kansas. Both Ohio State and Michigan State have smart running quarterbacks and crusher type fullbacks. Michigan State has the sharper passer in Tommy Wilson. Defending national champion Syracuse, with 16 victories in a d problem in Pitt. The Panthdrs ^ 2-2-2. but reports from their Inir indicate they can’t wait to tear Syracuae apart. It won't be that easy, though. The Oange has its best backflfid all the fii-st time this year. iopOT ‘Bbne*k®d,- T4-0 Lapeer, currently sharing place with Roseville in the 'IVi-County League, tost a 14-6 decision to Grand BIsne last night in a nonconference football game at Lapeer. The Panthers never made % sgrious scoring thrpat as Ihey went down to their 4th defeat in sevdn gamds. Grand Blanc scored touch-' downs in 4he 1st and 2nd quarters. PRKE UKOPHIES MOUNTED Here* tham mounted ir. a Ute-lilm rnasmor ihot shows diom oil to host adTcmtoU*- IK yon axporianco. Our moMo "Hluhast quolitr work at a raosoaedate prica." Hnffiiiaii's TaxideimY Shop 35«3Mork JU. FE 8-445S THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. (K TOBKR Death Notice AJJJCK K. BELKNAP ^ BABTaN BELKNAP HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - Service lor Alim K. Belknap and Bve-yearold aon Barton A. of KCl Duck Lake Road, Highland Town-rtip. will be held at 8 p.ra. Sunday at the Rlchardaon-Bird Funeral Home. Milford. Their bodies will be taken to the Schmid Funer^ Home in White House, Ohio for a prayer service at 2 p.m. Mond’iy. Burial will loiiow in the Swan Creek Cemetery. Mr. Belknap. 36, was a high school teacher jo4he Huron Valley School System. He was a mei of the National and Michigan Education Asaociationa. Surviving are his wife. Jeanetti , his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Waller Belknap of Cheshire, Conn.; two daughters. Barbara and Beverly, both at home; a sister and a brother. Mr. Balknap and his Jon drowned yesterday in the Milford MiU Pond. DANIEL CZERWINSKI WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP Graveside service will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday in the Catholic Section of Lakeview Cpmetery, Clarkston for Daniel Czerwihsid, 2^-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Casimer Czerwinski, of 94 7 4 niames Road. The body is at Coats .Funeral Home. Drayton Plains. Surviving are the parents; and brothers and sisters, Michael, Dwa.ie, Virginia and Debra; and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Cterwin.skl, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Rickie, and Mr. and Mrs. David Meldrum, all of Bay CSty. Daniel died yesterday from injuries received when he was run over by a car. MRS. JOHN H. DAWSON MILFORD — Service for John H. Dawson, T9, of 808 Atlantic St., .will be at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Richardson - Bird Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oakgrove Ceme- eryr Owner of apple orchard.s in- the Milford area. Mr. Dawson died unexpectedly of a heart attack yesterday. He was a life member of Masonic Lodge 165. F*AM, Surviving are his wife Edna, daughter Mrs. Gilbert Wolf and two grandchildren. UNDERCOVER INSPECTION - Cambodia's Queen Kossamak. sheltered by a,king-size parasol. inspects a French-made helicopter which en Phato landed aj the Royal Palace grounds in Phnom Penh. ITie copier was the first purohased from TfsuiwTOT use by fambodin's alrcdfpi: TeainstersWin fle«red Versons Chapter Monitor Victory I Being Organized in City Ifof Windsor Blast ^ Work is under way to establish /• I M chapter of the Ameri- Court RuIbS 2-1 That can Association of Retired Persons. Board Chairman Pick * ^ ^ru vnairman pick ,, organisation '! Friday in Its fight to get rid of Fitzgerald, Mid many senior citliens have WINDSOR, Ont fUPli—The 'l« show-n interest In AARP beneflta icenae of a Windaor plumbing firm • Members over U are ritgtble suspended aa an ou»- for a IU»e fow eosi medical la- Igrowth of Tueaday’i department suraaee piaa that wo«M ether- | store pxpioakm whi^~ daimed 10 wtae be amvallable le meet af Uvea In downtown Windaor. iM ar too expeaaive dae la aar ! * * * age." be saM. | Robert Macaulay, Ontartn min. retired GMC Truck 1 "We abo crni buy. mrtiicine at a later of energy reaoutres. ordered inert^ive^ watch * * riogt^otZn^l^ 1 working on the project for .monthly bulletin and a nrngazine ---------------- .nv»i«w fevery--two fflonlha;" r.. He aaaerted that the makrr pur- In a 2-1 decision, the u, s. Court| “Wa ahauM bave-«a mrsnaers aarp of Appeals left (hr hiwrd chnir-j in arder ta g«| a oharter. Right " manleiu and toothless ! naw we have about M Inlerealed * j , ^ i I. nwmh.,.ain » ..M “''d legislation to aid retired per- The derldan .ruled n.il former Hfogerald. FBI agent Tereme I'. MrSbane I About the only requirements forj Fitzgerald said hr hopes to have aa rbainnan of the board and | membership are that a man or regular meetings about once every gave the rnlon a seto. If It has i woman muat be 55 or older and I two months when the loi-al chapter reaaonable grounds, on an,vonr pay a $2 annual membership fee. gets under else rboaen to fill the Job, * -* * i . The AARP Is about two vears Federal Disti-ict JudRe F Dick-i‘ "'"V employed or|old. has about 470,600 Inson Letts, who has the Team-'and Is .growing in stem case under H.s iving. named -by iO.OOp a month MeShnne Sept. 26 over objecllonsl'^^ T <«elalls about the organ- Of the Union .MeShnnr only a few days hi-fore the Ap- ql his home. the Ucenae of the Jesaup Plumbing. Heating A .Sheet Metal Wwk •Co; suapefided oo grounds a healing rode waa twice violated in ■prornotejcoifverslon of the heaTmg plant at the Metropolitan Store to gas. pellate Court stayed ihe apnoint- Quits Post With Mackie Over Policy Negro Plane Pilot Wants a Job LANSING (^v-^The man wants'tol tireen was wronif unteaS the fly. That's the only way he can make a living for his pretty wife children, ranging from to seven, the pilot says. But Marlon D. Green, 31. Negro s-Air Force captain with 3,077 hours flying time in the service how logging more than 4,700 hours, just quit a flying job. aeorelary recently got a raise. The pay for commercial airline pilots, Green said, ranges from $5,000 to $30,000 a year, depending on seniority and experience. ile—resigned from hia- .MR8. WILLUM MeROBBIE HIGHLAND TOWNSHlp - Service for Mrs. William (Alberta M.) McRobbie, 82, of 4170 Lone Tree Road, was held at 3 p.m. ftxlay at Rjchafdson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford, with burial in West Highland Cemetery. Mrs. McRobbie died Thursday after a 2H-year illness. , Surviving are a *son, Walter of Detroit; two dau^ters, Mrs. Colon Mns. Paul . Charlick of Paris, Mo., five grandchildren and seven^'Sreat-grandchil-dren. Highway Department pilot's job in a dispute over which planes they should use. "You know,” he said, “in that department, I was making less than Mr. Mackie's secretary.’ Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie). Civil Servirr records show Green was listed (or 87,704 a year and the secretary for 87',S70. Green is not bitter. Bui he is hopeful. He has inserted ads in the classified sections of the Detroit News. Detroit Free Press and Lansing State Journal. They read: 'At your service, multlcnglnc pilot, age 31, commercial and Instrument ratings. 4.700 hours, 11 years. Available inunediately." Said Green as he paced the floor, figuring out his money problem; figure jny .severance pay, annual leave and everything wil) carry us for about 30 days. 'Tisen I got to connect. Somebody good pilot, not an o'd pilot or a bold pilot but a good Prizes Will Be Distributed pilot who happens to be black.' HAS LlbT»» CX),%!PLAINT Green, a husky six-footer who EariySird Ghosts^tc^Wiir looks like a football fullback, has filed 22 applications tor jobs with various airlines. He has listed more than a dozen complaints with the state Fair Employment Practices Commission and similar agencies in various states in an attempt to get a pilot’s job. He hopes to be th» J»i-hli» Kobiniton among airlines pilots. Kobbison, of course, was the first Negro baseball pla.ver to break Into the major leagues. His latest legal battle Ls in. Colorado, where his fight to be hired by the Continental Airlines went up to the State Supreme Court now is referred back to district court. His complaiht against the Highway Department is that they turned down a chance to rent one plane on a full-time basi.s. Meanwhile, he said, he, has flown 11 different planes, of seven tyf)es. |ii) (he pa.st .year. “The pilot would have a chance to ftfmiliarlze ” RliSiseir Fahy and Edgerton said It would be possible to obtain as chairman someone of the necessary caliber who is free of such objections. But the Union was expected to raisr^: objections to -anyonr“who might be mentioned for the job. .>IRS. EARL J. MYERS O.'CFORD — Service for Mrs. Earl J. (Mabel G.l Myers. 83. of 19 Hu^wn St., will be held at 10 a.m. Monday at the Bossardet-Reid Funeral Home. Her body will be taken to Quincy (or burial in the Lakeview Cemetery. She was a member of the Oxford Methodist Church and the Woman’s Society of Christian Service of her church. ^ Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Florence Travjs. of Oxford; sons, Ronald of Hollywood, Calif, and Royce of Bts^nk; Calif.; six grandchildren: -and six greatgrandchildren. Mrs. Myers died yesterday Pontiac General Hospital after an illness of several months. Cooperating with the parks & recreation department in its annual Halloween ground rules, Jay-cees once again are sponsoring their Mystery Treat bontest. Twenty thousand Pontiac school children arc registered to Official's Kin Gets 199 Years qualify for prises ranging from ’The Pontiac Area Junior Chamber-of CpmmmrgJias some Mcrets bicycles to ^ver dollara. in store for youngsters at home” good time Halloween night. Elementary school children home by 9 p.m. Mwiday night are eligible to win a bicycle^ (first prize), a radio (second) or five silver dollars (third). All they have to do is answer the telephone with Jaycees call. Junior Wgh pupils can win a wrist watch, a pen and pencil set or five silver dollars if they are home by 10:30 p.m. schooL pupils are el- s the I home by 11 p.m. Walter Goodpaster Is Sentenced for Shooting Ionian After Tiff HDi'i V a ' METROPOLIS. III. m anti-Catholic. sermon prior to the DeiUbcratic National Convention In an effort to win the nomlna-..^tion for Texas Sen. Lyndon B. Hunt said he has not taken part In. the presidential campaign between Sen. John F. Kennedy, a Roman Catholic, and Vice Presl-' dent Richard Nt. Nixon, a Quaker. Johnson, who sought the presi-defitial nomination, is Kennedy's ninn^ mate. An oilSl' of i $enate_^fo^ gating committee last7"wwk said he had evidence that Hunt paid for the printing -and matting of 102,000 copies of a sermon delivered by Dr. W. A. Criswell, pastor of the First Baptist church in Dallas. It la the largest wMte Baptist church in the nation. b the aermon Dr. Criswell op-.posed the election of Kepi^ be-, <*ause (If his retigtonf l-year sentence for murder in the rifle slaying last Christmas day of a woman walking from a round of taverns. Herrin, 111. optometrist, brother of a White House aide, serve 66 years before he wilt be eligible for parole under' Illinois law. His attorney was given 30 days to file a motion for a new trial. treat” hours be 6-7 p.m,,TWlth' porch lights the signal that young-' fsters atw welcome. Parties sponsored by the city with the cooperation of PTA’s and other groups are scheduled for seven schools and 4}^ Lakeside Community Center. Elementary grade parties are 7 to 8;3D p.m., and junior high 8^to 10 p.m. They are open only to neighborhood youngsters. A Massac County Circuit jury o( 10 men and two women delilv crated two hours and 40 (nimitet to reach the verdict Friday. Goodpaster, who lost his com-posure.U)nly once in the 11-day trial,, remained impassive as the verdietk-was read. His wife, sc and secretary broke into tears. State’s Atty.. Carl Sneed d( manded the death penalty. Ckwd-paster broke into tears during the summation by defense attorney Fletcher Lewis. The victihi, Margaret Strunk, 1, mother of 12 ^ildrcn, was making-her way home with the man she lived with, Bernard Do-braski Jr., 33, when the shooting occurred near Goodpaster’s rural (Zartoville homf- Dabriiski testified Goodpaster became enrag^ because he threw rocks at the optometrist’s watch dog, then pursued them and shot Mrs. Strunk with a rifle and Dq-braski in the head with a platol. Goodpaster denied the shootings but admitted scuffling with' D^ braski. (kiodpaster is the brother of Brig. Gen. Andrew J. Good-paster, White House staff secretary. Can't Stop the U. S. CAIRD, N. Y. (AP)-The Cat-skill Game Farm, eoDceniMlrbe' cauke uneasy conditions in Africa could cut (^ the supply of some wild animals, is setting up a 560-acre breedtog station. The city and the ,^i^-cecs are anxious that youngNtero be Home in good time Halloween, to pce-VChf tragedies." “Marlon is an excellent pilot. Whenever I wadted to go someplace, I knew he could take me there and back.’’ said MaCWe. "He could duck under weather. We hated to see him go and we gave him the best of recommendations." City ground rules this year e the saine qs always. Local Osteopaths Take Spotlight -ith the plane if they jast got the Green said. "It’s .a safety question tojrome extent. The state could do a lot more flying for less money." “We tried very hard to discourage him from reNigiiing,” aald Howard E. Hill, managing director of the Highway Department. “He was InslNting that we rent or lease onn- ship tor his exclusive use. When we didn’t do it, he resigned.” Green has traveled td Caiifoinia, DTh V e r. Chicago, Washington, Buffalo. Seattle and wherever there were pilot jobs open. It’s recommended that the “trick report described him as Appellate Judges Charles Fahy and Henry \V. Edgerton upheld the Union. Chief Judge Wilbur K. Miller waa on the other side. Fahy n^ tktgerlon agreed the Uaion had a reasonable basis tor objeeling to Me.Hhane as A* an FB! agent, he was active I investigating the Union and some of Its officiate, including president James R. Iloffa. And MeShane served briefly on the the nominee of dissident members of the Union. .^(^iirrently. Lawrence T. Smith of New York represents dissident teamsters on the board. The Union la represented by William E. Bufalino of Detroit, a Teamsters official and a close friend of Hoffa. The board ran art oaly by majority vole. This gives the chairman the bninnee of power In moves to elenn up (he Union. Fahy and Edgerton held the court order under which the mon-itorahip was created in January provides that the chairman be jointly nominated by the op-sldfs. They jsaid-iheiord^. Fitzgerald, an AARP member, Alliance Church to Hear King The store was roeked by An ex-ploskm Tuesday afternoon In w hich eight women and two men die*l and nearly 100 other persons were Injured. Former Missionary to India, Preacher at T\^ Services Die Rev. Lwis L. King, foreign secretary of IheThrisfian and iMis-sionary Alliiince, New York, will be guest minister al Ihe 11 a m. and 7 p.m. services of Ihe Alllunce (2hurrh Sundays A fui-mer missionai-y in India the Rev. Mr. King served i; Ahmedabad. Ihe fifth largest city MlndLa, AT NOTRE DAME - Archbishop James P. Duvii of San Juan, P.R., was one of Ihe signers of a recent pastoral letter forbidding Puerto Rican Catholics to vote'for Ihe Popular Dem-.ocralic party. He was at Notre Dame University in South Bend, Ind., Friday to take part in a proceaston at 4he university where a new Purto Rican bishop was consecrated. At the invMallnn. of Ihe city’s mlnl.sterini association, he ducted three Union Bible classes each week and at regular Intervals preached in evangelistic campaigns. He also taught at the Gii-jaret Bible Training Institute. The Rev. Mr. King traveled extensively throughout India did hot give Letts the power to I name a chairman to whom some! of the parties objected on reason-i able grounds. i News in Brief Miller disagreed. He said the failure of the parties to agree should not prevent Letts from mdking an appointment. Nonstop United Jets to link Detroit, N. Y. (lyde's Whei'l and Frame Service, 169 Orchard Lake Ave., was burglarized, but nothing was taken, it was reported to Pontiac police. A, cannister ronlalning eontribu-tions (or the Muscular Dystrophy Association was stolen from Pete’s Lunch, 52 S. Saginaw ,St., it was reported to Pontiac police yesterday. While on furlough in 1954. he elected to serve as area secretai y for-the Far East and India. General Council of the Christian and Missionary Alliance elected him foreign secretary to head the entire foreign work in May 1956, Thr'dcnomlnation" has"nvPT"3; jOO H missionaries and national work' 22 mission fields. Membe/s in the United States contributed over $3.6 million to world missions last year. Your Money NOT 3% NOT 3’/2% BUT 4% CURRENT RATE on ALL SAVINGS Capitol Savings & Loan Assoc. rulabliifird 1190 FREE PARKING IN REAR OF BUILDING 75 W. Huron FE 4-0561 Ia>wis Dockery, ilM Oregon At., United Air LTnes" will introduce its first nonstop jet service to both|‘[! , ^ ^ ,fnLn fmrtf his E. D. Cox, United’r Detroit - NOTICE— Life Insurance and Accident and Sicknea»i Study ClaHaea will beifin about November .22, 1960. writing Btotlng Imporunt (acts to Pontiac Press. Box' ■r' fwnm Wil-low Run to Idlewild International Airport In New York would take 80 minutes and the Detroit to Chicago O’Hare International Airport flight would take SO minutes. gyyU — Ltowe—___________ _ hand picked applet all varieties. Jtresh sweet cider, large selection 'Boft-gpoken. wettmannered very sincere." "The letter would read fine.” he explained. “They wanted me. But if I sent a picture or shower! up, then I was given the merry old runaround” He has filed so many complaints he can’t keep track of them all aUegiBg-discrtminatlon herauja he|wiil then continue Is a Negro. _________ ’t that way in the Air Force," he said. “They didn’t care for the color of your face if you could fly that plane. 50 lb. bag 8195. Groceries, eats, beer.' wine, an“ “------- take out. Hours 8 a.m. 7 ' and Mquor ________________...m. to 12 p.m 7 days I weekT imTERS FARM MARKET. 3225 W. Huron Bt. FE The 100-passenger Boeing 7!» jet is scheduled to depart Willow Hun!j*ijr, ,-hound for New York daily at 10:35 i.m., and will arrive at 11;56 a.m. | Roast Beef Dinner, Sun., Oct. at 4:10 p.m. for anival at 4 p.m. (u 75c, under 5 free. —Adv (CST) every day. ! i ^ * AncUon at Smith Moving Co.. __ * * * Dixie Hwy. at Scott Lk. Rd. 7 p.m The Detroit to Chicago jet flight:Saturday. —Adr To bis sure to hove your personalized greeting cords ready in plenty 6? time for early addressing ond rftoiling, order NOW from our wide ond wonderful selection' on' Ik PONTIAC STATIONERS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC — NEXT TO SHINNER'S 4 N. SAGINAW ST- FE 2-4242 toDenver nd San Francisco. The 720, newest and fastest in^ the Boeing Jet family, wept Into scheduled service on United Air Lines July 5. PlillK at Texas Meeting ?No Basis for Election Squabble^ London Paper Prestige Issue Two Pontiac Area doctors were' in the limelight at the American; College of Osteopathic Surgeons annual convention in Dallas. Tex. Stepping down after a year as president of the American Osteopathic Academy of Orthopedics was Dr- Robert O, Fagen of 6430 Commerce Road, West Bloomfield Township. EFFECTIVE MON., OCT. 31! SII Princij^e^Slods Exchanjfes will open at 10:00 a.m. and closed at 3:30 p.m. ■Ouf Office Hours will remain 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. DB. FAOEN DR. WOOD Dr. Fagen is chairman of the department of orOx^ics at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. Dr. John P. Wood qf Bkwmfieid be made a feOw ( the Ainericaa CUege of Osteopathic Surgeons. Dr, Wood, ofj64 Rudgate Road, u offices in Buminghanq and is mfor attending surgeon'at Detroit Osteopathic Hospital. The citation Ik made for his dls-nguished service to the organization and his contributions tq gical pnetkw. LONDON (UPI) Whether American prestige abroad is high or ‘ low "is an absorb issue on which to fight an election at home," the Daily Telegraph said today. ■Normally it is obviously undesirably for foreigners to intervene in other peoples’ elections,” the conservative paper said editor-Friday. ’But since an tUs occaston H t one of the determining factors Is foreign opinton. It nflght, be helptai if a few British Views were ptoeed on usiy luid enjoyed lhat position herself? ” ! now complain that America does not provide them with enough to complain about, ” the Daily Telegraph said. The paper said^ more dynamic leadership would not necessarily make the United States more pop-, abroad. British criticism of the United States, the paper said, “is more over sins of omission than et com-missidp. Where there uaed to be hostility to Washington’s throwing its wei^^Htouad, now there is anxiety that Washington has^ not will to throw it” NO BA8I8 FOR VOTE flite kind of criti- dim might - be taken praise.” the Telegraph said,. What other great power has been to take the center of the stage by the wery power America as a blundering but basic-, ally well-meaning giant, as against! Mr. Nikita Khru-shchev’s succcss-l ful promotion of the Soviet Union' a basically ill-meaning and noh-blundering giant. Joha FzMier Dulles, the late secretory s( state, “had plenty sf dynamtom . . . bst however much be may have iaOnenced people'he won few friends,” it 'President Eisenhower has successfully created'-wtt image of C. J. INEPHLER CO. 818 Community National Bank Bldg. F£ 2-9117 “Which is the most prestigious image?” tte Tdegraph asked. The prestige issue, it concluded, “is tantamount to giving foreigners the right to choose the next American president. While this is flattering to us, it cannot be said to reflect very well- oit the political matv^ty or good sense. of the American candidatea who have found this new way of making the electors (view) m(»w confused than it was already.” Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME **Th4fughtfal~ Service** 4« Williama St Phan* IV S VOTE, ?J0VEMBER 8TH rises. ___________^_______________________ . he says. “We, you and I are pilots on the Ship of State, a flag ship of the Free World. We shall choose an officer to guide this ship into a safe harbor of greater glory. ” "Two men are applying for this job; I sug- gtit we (tost aside all identifying labels. Both men want that potion for the honor, for the power it wlekts; our job is to hire the man best suited, best equipped, with the most experience to guide us to peace and prosperity. We’ve heard their contentions, listened to millions of words. We’ve Investlgatad^elr eligibility. We've watched thm _Ahelr recants ^Th* mAn __________r;ssf before Theg^ar^JMc^ ^Ttoe man we choose win do------------— dime — fnlfUl his promises, achieve his loaU.' •The future happiness, wealth, strength, Bber-ty for not only us but the free world Is de- , ’T3entlemen, mark your ballot." Be sat. di Votol Nevember 8th. as /your <------ dicUtes. VOORHJIES'SIPLE FUNERAL HOME an Dtorth Parry Street maae PR >-«n 1 'nVEXTV-SIX Manufacturing Orders, Backlogs Rise, Spur Hope T I I' - • THK rOXTIAC PRESS. SATI RDAV. OCTOBER 29. 1960 f WASHINGTON CP — An increnw* n-poelrd Fridny by ♦h*' rommprrf! In drfennr coolrarting boosted Tiew| Department One department eeon-i o^rs at the mamdartunne level omlst said the figures "Give the! last month and backloKS Increased tor the ftrat time sirtce last winter These bullish developments were _________ fer c«inin»re»»l purpowj Mtovlat psretl of Th« |>r»erm t» toesurt ti »4« Osr- lua mrwi. ■»w aH}* 0*«rtpU»B-TIN, H»B ^ n.um aoNOio The report was not entirety on the bright side, however. Mami | faelaren raotliwed to ent Inven- i 1 I New orders placed with manufacturers increased by $400 mil-1 lion, after seasonal adjustment. to| $31 biUkm, Sales were down $100 mUKun to $30.9 billion, ' POn 8AUI KKV. JOSKIMI (. Blw\( K ._____ achosi Bu» 1 Inventories of • manutactmers f reduci>d by $200 million loj The Rev;, .losoph f Blade of' AIBft ^ Ksilti/vn A 'Assmev\e*s*e>a% nesnvwe. i lewelirsrs'i ($54,3 billion.. A crimmerce econo-'Iraliannpolis will speak ‘*52ff:!»‘garded as ^n4~TiounlT «' rtir-: ^he nuMt optimintir obotervers TAL«Y nl Ihr spotl.V busines* pkture poiBi lor ____ _«unlr >«■' cHaslai Omslon PoBttUS. Evangeli.st Black and Mr Pud lo the Inventory adjiwiment i Pwt.r.1 i-4«i progress alt (Mrs. WCTsh will take part i t Bloonttrld Township Zonmi oc. Ji. » iiMr However, eonllmied ll<|ui morning and evening services to- OUDWAnct BO M ; ilation of iBvenlorles wmiW ontmsnce smrndmi »,r,„^hen the position of those evening at 7;.30 ne.xl week. -----. _ ------- , econonilsts who foresee • I ■ ■ i T ........ hlcalsr psrktni spur* ' Til* Towashlpjrf The imrease in orders largely , reflected the recent pickup In defense ointractjng. Much ol the. , new business was iMoked by the ; aircraft and electCohics industries. 4n other industries, new orders; ’ held at about the same rate as in August SrctlM VI ini Zoott. Prrsmbl*: The P-1 ' parking ah . malntainad ______ _____na/t«r p. LtmttaUon ol Uia 1 Tha pMklag i log, prottaalo' IttlWingi or I for perloda o( >«• tl TV Features By t'nited Press International * On the sales side, inerea.'icd | Saturday - shgiments of electrical machinery! BONANZA. 7:30 pm. (4), Pretty! and autos tdmost offset Bus.4elli| widej^read deques in other ^ ^4,^' r „77 Joe Cartwright CMichael! ..77 . iLandon.i (Color) 1 Hhiic most major imhwtrtes con-1 lyemoiics, niodcraiet .» »i .. . , reported by motoriP;"’- ** « aigna daaignatlhg aatrucei roDdltlOD ol uae. ■" OB au«h parking ■ furniture i-ompanics. I altendanta ahall I rxceed flltcen ry of a flirtatious hf>ires.s who] gerian ' rehiellion said today that h ies to amvince authorities sheJ Communist military officers maylhnows the whereahouts of a would-' »k.!be sli (Red Milifary Officers;^ Expected in Tunisia s and gxK iHclualve arrive in TunisiA early next week.!be slayer. Anna Maria Alberghetti! i the I , Pat 1 Backing dtractly on ba pronlbiUd Adaguatc Ingreaa a parking lot by means KOARINti fOs, 10 p.m. tl (Garrison iDotmId Mayi goes onj _ _ , ,, ithc trail of a blackmail plot while. Common St Vietminh 8«'neral VoL • ^ Nquyen t.iap or a group of Com-|,i-„ newsr.sner nnmthv munist instructors had already rived in Tunis as the vanguaid of! a larger group expected. next el "halil'VTck. The .saipe source said that j another group of Communist mili-}imi'fd|hTy otficial.s was exiieiti'd in ided lorjMorocco within a week to makc| parking I contact with Algerian ivbelj leaders. a A to deal feet of twa 111 ilg atalo (Mantuvortng minimum alalt being I In width Thm --------- Pattom—SUty one 111 alale 1 mtntuverlilg lanei. the minimum alale being fifteen .. (eot in width. Tliia minimum alale wid ahall permit one-way traffic movemei .... -----pattern—flf.ly iMi fr tion lor his newspaper. Dorothy Provine eostars. IM.AV OK THE WEEK, 11 p m' jiTi Thia week's offerihg is '"Bum-; ing Bright." John Steinbeck's story; I of love and the circus. I - Sunday PRO KtMlTBAU,, 3:;i0 p.m. «7i. American Football League: Dallas at Denver. I : LIONS KOOTBAI,!., 4;S) p.m i The provisional rebel. guvem-L^i Detroit tangles with the Losj ment would neither confiim or|Angeles Rams on the West Coast.!’ „1'’7 ”‘**’‘^* . _ ' CEI.KBRITY (iOLF, 5 p.m. (41 . STATE OP MICMIOAK-In ihe ProbaiejSam Snettd meets Dean Martin in X"ol?r»i« O-O'*"'* •"*''«- « nine-hold game "A'-T DISNEY. 6:30 p.m. (7i -iijr j.ycip Qf Zurro siories, Guy ........ “‘'‘ Williams stars as the maskixl Prtition havtnj bem (tied In jhia ^rt avenger of early Califomla days. recent wherraboiits width Thia minimum alale wl^_____ ________ '**5'^* 4S^nrn *H^lng^e'^’tUrn-- ^ ahoui§* placed' (arty-tbrea lUi feet for two |gi lot line opposite I or vacant residential lot Pront Yards—Where the P-l Dia la contlguoua.to 0 realdeatlaUy nmrd block with resJdfntlyl ai Witness, the Honorable Moorr. Judge of said Court of Pontiac In said County, tl ARTHUR E wherein no reeldentlal a ir latd resldentijl dis 6TATE Of’ MJCH16AW—In int, I MAVERICK, 7:30 p.m. (7l, Beau! !(Roger Moorol hurrys to St. Jo per" arph, Mo,, to find the only witness,' personalrt^^nvc hall girl, who enn clear Id notice .him of a murder charge gfnThJj DENNIS THE .MENACE, 7::!0| ited andjp f^ ,21. Dcnnis (Jay North) finds Ihur E.ju picture of a bird to detxirate his; j‘7th day!bird house. The "decoration" hap ooRE |p™s to be a stock certificate. j Probate! DANNY KAYE, 8 p.m. (2). Mu-| ... lie, ctimedy and dance special; ” '*“1 starring Danny .^Kaye, with Louis! Probate | Ai mstrong. 1 Color) Tcgulred wall shall be loeated minimum setback llnr Screening end Landscepir iioUk , T^B m‘NTE^^ P nr ■ TTr.; (Nancy Walker, Jackie Coogan and :Doodles Weaver fire featured in a mix-up over a marriage pmtiosHl. HAI.I.OWEEN SHOW. 9 pm. (Ii ird eijav North, Angela Cartwright and CRlld |Tj ■ * *' l--a . he City 0 « hereof. I |*,‘,1||!Teddy Raoney star in a salute h Halloween and Ihe election ihai.paign. (Color) ___________ ______ BENNY, 9:.3() p.m. "jcouVt'H'J!L^7nire«"‘‘jWB‘wVsi''Bivd: Milton Bcrle is Jack's straight' . . ‘vergreeni'" "•* ...... ■• •• material and ornamental Orna- * 'Jgl foo^”nt*rv«L;"*Blk'*lir"f?et 'from!' • 111. The ground eree shall be plemed;' end kept In town All such landscep-:. Ing . eng plentlbg shatl be maini.ir.eal' lb 1 hulthy. gcowlfig condilK and ordfrjy la appearance Surface of Parking Area circuiatti in The entire parking area. Including; witnm l parking apacea and maneuvering lanea.l Moore Judge of required under thto Section, ahall have of Pontiac In sal. _ asphaltic or concrete surfacing In ac- of October AD JggO cordance with s^lftcatlons provided by rSeali ARTHUR E MOORE Ihe Towmshlp Engineer Such foclietes'7ocf:'»; liviRISHCBO RADIO AND TV saleeasaa •salad A real egfar* tunlty for aiM with aiiaagertal abOdy. Slate aipcrtencc aad aal* ary expaetad. Raply In awn band* wrtttef fo Pontiac Praaa Boa Yg. „ ; EXCinibNAL or POBTONITT "■ Tf'iL‘S5f<7i......... dMr grandsM of 'Mr. ‘sat KeCreery and Mr and Mrs. Waller Bclknw Punerbl eervtet win 1 l^day. __________ , pm from the Rlchardeoa-Blrd Puneral Home. Milford, with Rev. Robert VonOey«n otfictatlag. Pol-lowlng service here Bartoa wlU be < taken to the Schmidt Puaeral Home, WhIM Houae. Ohio, (or service on Monday. Oet. II. at 7 p.m. Interment in Swan Creek Cemetery. White House Ohio. CZERW»#KI (CERWIN), OCT. Ji. BUMP an. Ouaraoued aatory UBlaafoa. PS J-4StS. Ask Smith. IJg g. SagtMw. ____ _______________SALES, UO OAELANO. TfeThtoi. 'i-47? T5r.’ri,.rw,si; Lake Township: beloved ton of' *i_**Y?- *•«(*)'-_ _ Caalmler and Charlotta Jaebaoa; ! POOR MBI -OB WOliBN WTI« dear brothar of Virginia, lIlehaaL can to (Ul vaaaacfoa. Pul) or «r-g‘r.Vd.^j'“j“ r,a . Leo Cacrwtogkt. Wr. ihd [ to 11 :M a.at. _______ „ **. .. . OR'PABT Tfiil! MTaL iraoantl aaadad bt ones to d RIckla and Ur.'i Mrs David Meldrum. Punerali ^angementa pending at HBip Wanted FtmdB 7 PM* Tord. HATB A aaonoE'E to Pmato ^b^n. Ml^d4SU. BdtMBiroexr l DAT. «cw- toacad. rafortaaaa. Ml g-gM. LAOOB: ou. cSaSrtM n yaar atlghbarhoad. Chaaaa yaur own baan. Phoat bafort g:M - yijgd,^,^yg.4to«g. I daya. Own traaapoTtoUaa. J WOMAN TO CARE POR CMIL- ---* days a weak, for worklag ''-acral Mouaawork tncluf WOMAK JI TO 4g rt>R CARE OP i. gjg a waek. UL J-UM. WAlTRiBS WAHTBD. APPLY Weatalda Rccraatlon. IH Orchard Lake Altar I.________________ WANTED EXPERIENCEO MAID. Mail cook — go home nlgbU. Good wages. I aduUa. Wrtto Pon-Press Baa dJ. YOUNG WOMAN Coats Puneral Home. ] —SabyJDonle]_ _ MYEM. OCT Ii, IMO. MABEL oT. a IS Hudson St.. Oxford: age gj; - -- mother of ^re. Plorenbc hSlwnr'v *: I ehdeo toTotfootuo'r'Cantoet Mr. i "j ^»1IL._10I.......bttTMB l-> ■ with figures to >w.» „• downtown office. 40 hra. per week. Bapcrienee la desirable but not naetuary. ___D J YOUNO AOORE88IVE m. partUmc to cell advertls-I ipcclallUes. Call PE 0-4603. u L T S- „ i OPENING FOR 3 MEN I tM I d O'* laatory bfaheh has opened 0 me «■“'» aa^d* 1 who are Clark mecbaatcaUy Inclined to InstaU --------- interment In Uke- "'w rerototloBary ' view Cemetery. Quincy. Mre. Far appointment Myera will lie In state at yh. batwegn 1 and 4 Bosaardet-R'Id Puneral Home. .OUR BUgilMj leral service will tn >ct 31. at 10 a m ire Inssardet-field ^nei^ I PEARSON. OCT. Ji. llgO. ALMEDA. 104 Augusta, aga Oi: beloved wife . , of Rollsnd Pearaea: dear stater of John. Tom. Nelae and Henry Hansen and Mrs ChaLl wUh'’Rev ‘waKef’Teeuwis' sen officiating. Interment In White Chapel. Mrs. Pearson will lie in *■ Muntoon PuntrpF PICHA. OCTT^.., ________ ______ ‘ Patrick. gJJJO Waterfront Dr . I Waterford, age i7: -beloved hui-I band of Sarah Plcha. dear atep-I father of Mre. Peter 1 Marlon 1 Inibrunonnc and Edward and --------1 Kuder: dear brother of TTucI ---- —J Michael Plcha; aU(x eurvlved by nine grandchll-great-grandchll- haVb opening — — mechanic (or general repairs. Andjr~Ctokl. TO Baldwin. _ Orion Area —^ Part-Time Needed at once — J men for eve--nl^vork. Call Mr. Oage, MY log. Write to PonUac 1>ress, Box NO. g. giving namt, address, age. experience and family atatua. Work Wanted Femsde 12 ¥o555~llroHAii obsirbs op- llea work of ahy klag. wUUng to BMBoHHf Service A-l RMPERTIAL. COMMERCIAL aato ladaaIrtaL Maaoa osad gan. Television Service 24 OAT OR NIORT _____________ M 1. BTRAKA. PI toUM. iwm8 TT (iRRt noon and avantog. Chn PR i-m. Upkelsterhif 25 ' imMAS UPBOtSinillO 1*7 NORTE PRRRTetr FE 5-8888 Lost and Fomd i^V RRICK BLpCR ARD OBJAENT | BRITTANT SPANIEL. ORANOB S ---" Alag toaptooaa. OR 3 IMI. i wbito. Pamala. foat bwlwten Wlx- S Novi, on PoBUee TraU. a. Reward WA OMtT. Owner may have aama LORT OCt. II. Jobs Oaaianteed GABE ROITI CARPENTRT u - Basemaata PI 0-MM. ___ LOST - UROE TELLOW AND •hlU CBL yictoi^ rt North Shir- J YTUn^ PRI-gju. - OET MT BID FTRar -■ PE F7JS4 ■ ' ■_ ALL BINDS OF CEMENT WORE Ortvaa, ftera. afo. Jeoaon. FE J-J34g._______________________ ALL TTiriB OP CONCRETE WORK Vic. Fourth and Joalyn; m BARGAIN Car Vi garage Oompl'to *lto cement work Addttinna. porcbee. Michigan basr-menls. Cement work. Oulnn't Con. PE O-OIJI —------ time. 1-1. 1-0. and 0-0. Olon. Prt. Dally tttoohone Inquirei our office. Short training p Salary. Por ■ tntervlaw, cal 1-3014, mornlnge_only^_ Hehp Wanted 8 BLOOD O6NOR NEBDBO. 00 AND PART TIMB CAB WASHERS ter and Btrmtnghan Must be over 31. late model car. i available t c¥RCUli^Ol/''DIPABTMENT THE PONTIAC,PRESS REAL ESTATE SALESMAN, PULL BXPERIINCED jewelry 8ALB8-men - salesladies, office cqshicr. bookkeeper and watch maker (or new store In Pontiac area. Write Box II, The PonUac Praia. OPENING Branch office In the Miracle Mile Shopping Center. We need J —people experienced In ! .wUlIni Call REAL ESTATE Btshabaw Rd., Drayton Plalna with Rev. Robert WInne officiating. Interment In the Ottawa Park Cemetery, Mr Plcha will lie In ttata ai the Coato Punefa) TRY loved daughter of Herbert Joseph i Portler. dear mother of Uon I Portler Jr., dear sister of Herbert I .1, Sidney, Earl. Raoul. Alvin, ! Leon, Raymond and Curtis Por-Uer. Norma LaMott, Aleaae La-Saglne and Stella Mae Lewis. Puneral «rvlce w Mrs Reed will lit....... William P Davis Puneral Rome Saturday evening REAI* ESTATE.CLASS Now starting. Register today. Earn while you are Tearnlag this good paying profeaelon. If you are over 20 and live within IP miles of Pontiac, phone PE J-7tU for Inter, view with Mr. Bruce. w A SALES A imilti - million dollar company recognized nationally as a leoder in the industry has an outstand- —_------------------ 1iig opportunity available. . Tele-type operator ^ . To relieve 1 day week. Mi Our program requires a ■ -....... t o p notch experienced salesman, who wants to reach above average earning level. Due to our I steady growth, jKJSsibil- ----I ities of advancement into I j supervisory and manage-ment positions are cxcel---- lent for men Who prove and designing. PE 4-gJg4.___ COMPLETE REMOOlXINd BERV-Basemenu under prceent bomec. addlUoht, alterattons. cab- _________block. Uconaod. PE O-gJTl. ____________ CEOfENT AND BLOCK WOIUL 0._81agwart n _ DRV WAiX APniBD. tIlPKD AND IlDlshed. Frae estlmatci. PE ELECTRICAL SERV-FRER; E8T. PAHTNEY Electric. PE 0-043V CXCAVATINO AND JjRENCHINQ for aepUc tonka dwin. fields. and wiring. RagUn El 3-gJl4 or MU 4-gJJ3. HOUSE RAISINO. HOUSE MOV-tttg, licensed, fully equipped. Free esUmatea. Rutwril Marlon. PE J-7Jgg. HOME, OARAOE, CABINS. ADDI* tiona. Licensed builder. PRA - Terms. FE 4-P»Jg. __________ FULLY _-UBE MOVING. equipped. FE 4-0400. L. A LAVALLia BUILOINO ANI ..rvic. N. loo '00 bit, FE 3-4074. . MODERNIZATION. PLASTER AND —pontry work. Repairs and new -k. Price reasonable. Call EM WE WISH TO T H „ „ _ Friends. Neighbors A Relativ ability. VVe p^vide during o-ir rec’^SUrtoitmSjdra^' afeamst-COmiTlissipn.. ,uh exeeltont ..lar,: Bell. *;'Sr A Mrs Orover Por- ' job training program. Age —--------------------- —----------— 27 to 40, car necessary. In Memoriuir 2 nights. Salary I pereinced tele-type operai (erred. Age 30 to 40. Prefe one with no children. WrI Preee Box 01. Employment Agencies 9 EXECUTIVE Secty Notices and Personato 2? ANT OIRL C iaiwir^n' ADViCE ON ALL PBOilLEMS OP Ilf. fE F0403. Mre Brohey. JM H. Saginaw. PonUac: BLTmiNATB win BLBMlSHp -TCK_..UB.^i;|CRUBj4nd_,&- ATTENTION Hosiery (or whole family, guaranteed 1-10 monthi ~ — ..auttful nylans wlthsland punlxhmsnt Or tostrument scraped on them -.....nning. Unbelievable? David — Write David Davis, f Park P KNAPP SHOES PRID HERMAN OR 3-1003 DAINTT MAID flUPPLlilB —’ 73* Menomlnet. Mrs. Waltoc'.. PE ONTIND AFTER THW^bAfEToc: tober 37. I*g0. I will not be responsible (or any debts contract-ad by any other than myselj* Ipiox A. Mackey. 3(10 Bgidwin Bd.. Pontiac. Mich. ■ ^ IN DEBT? IF SO ’ LET US Give You I Place to Pay Ease ^’our Mind WE ARK J's’OT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT - CTUKSKLTURS I PONTIAC BLDO . n STATE BANK American Assoc. Credit Counselor! Michigan ^•soc. Credlt Coimaelorx TWIN CEUNA T-3( CLUB BEING organlsad. Praeh llcente. Pull ------,.j *,-» lyeomlng engines. WILL THE OWNER OP A SMALL black poodle which was out In th> vie o( Walton Blvd., between and Baldwin Sun ~ ' ROOF REPAIRS EAVEBTROUOHINO____PE_4- waTerproofinc. ! Work tuarantoed. J^et estimates. ____PE, tdf’i'L. "JT__I WET basement? phone META- ' more OS 0-3300._________| R. 6. SNYDteB FLOOR LATINO, | sanding and Hnlahlng. Phone FE I o-oow.___________._____,1 Joslyn and Baldwin Sun.. _____ 33 please contact Mrs Allca Tharp FE 0-41U Ei log After 0:30 call FE 4-34M VERY IMPOR- TAI^I ______^ ^ LOU WElOHf BAF'BLT AND -----sicslly with newly released -Diet tobleU. 01 eeqgs at Free to travel, on an occasional wtekend. Ability-, to compote speeches helpful. Good typing shorthand. Very interesting ■— —---rliBBt salary. POR INTERVIEW PLEA8B C N T . IN LOVING memory OP CHRIS A Herrington who passed away suddenly October 3g. 1(00 [ ; Ten lonely years have passed away.' ' " ?hMk°"tharwV t”-™-* ( A M. TO 13 NOON WED . NOV 3Rb^(^ I Vou^ would^ n day. I SINGLE MlbDLEAOED MAN POR , , i odd Jobs more for home than I _*•**• T® __________________ I BALBSikUUt-bRIVER POR E8TAB-1 would Apply ■* Walker's Cleaners. Lake Orion._____ I SALESMEN AND TELEPHONE Mar It. I onvasseri wanted (or modem!-latlor sales. Top commission pa|)l. OR 4-04g4. Still sadly missed b SALESMEN ness to* meifexperlencMf hi other sties work Life time cartor. Earnings urfUmlted. Active office. R.J. (Dick) VALUfT EVELYN EDWARDS Business Service 15 A BETTER WAY -TO , Pay Your Bills AU^ OIAKBS OP FOUNTAIN PRN8 repaired by factory trained men at our office. Oeneral-PrintiBg dk - OUica Jiiipply- Co., W. rtnc^Bt.. Phone PE 3-0130.___ BLOOMPIELD WALL CLEANERS. HEATINO. FURNACES CLEANED and serviced. C- L. Nelson. FE 0-nag.___________________________ HOTiroiNT. WHIRLPiSOL k KIW--------wa^er repair service. PE 0-0431. A D «ppy «ethi Funera* Directors. DUlAYTON PLAINS |Open’V_5^_____________ I and IWAOON MAN OR LIVE WIRE :___ j salesm^n.^ presently calling^ on a Economy Spark Plug , ’ tractive commission, wr ‘ icrvlew CrwR Tool 1073 Rd _Caj^ Mlch^ __________ __ Walled Lake - Part Time I 3-7707 ; 2 men needed Immediately. Por j Information call MA 4-1411. 4 i office fkllit OIRL FRIDAY , 0330 Olamour job (or top-fllght girl. Typing'SO w.p^^m DlcUjdume. EXECUTIVE SECRETARY $400 Public relbllons. age 30-40. Trane-portatton necessary 8TENO 0300 Bookkeeper thru trial • balance. Transportation LAB TRAINEE RECPT sat only NURSES aide sii>; , 4-13 shift Experienced Tranipor- | Bookkeeping & Tsxes 16 OPEN •nME ON 00 BLANCHARD grinder 43”. Retsonablt rates. Prompt servlet. DANIELS MKG. CORP. 3g7^0rehard Uke Rd. PE 4-tSOl 8AWS MACHINE SHARPENED MANLEY LEACH. 10 BAOLEV 8T SBPtiC TANKS CLEANED __________PE 4-4343 \ _____ DOMEX SERVICES 10 National Bank Bld( . Rochester OUvt 1-0104 and OUve 1-1100 ARK YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTS? CONBOLIDATI ALL. TOUR BILLS Aim LET US OIVB TOU ONE PLACE TO PAY. BUDGET SERVICE Christmas Cards "LESS 10%" ' Oder Good UnUI Oct. 30 EVELY*\' EDWARDS VOCATIONAL COUNSBLINO SERVICE 34lw EAST HURON SUT' PE 4-0004 — PE 4-0600 I Dressmaking, Tailoring 17 IiMtructkMiB s ^ T“\ I r 1 ' Information call Donelson-Johns —^vr^:-vr FUNERAL HOME ’‘^’7'''' ; __ “Designed for Funcrale" 1 „ SPARKS ORIFFIN CHAPEL Thoughtful Service_PE 3-0141 Einisb High School No Claeses. Study at home spare time. Diploma awarded If you ire IT or over and left school write (or free etUIog. WAYNE SCHOOL. Dept. 30TC Box 4gg4. 34. Michigan.________ Wprk Wanted Male II ^ITE 4 pkOFESSIONAL WORK DONE ON any type garment. New or remodel of • out style garments Phone OR 3-7ta3. _ _ _ TAILORINQ — ALTTOATIONS preee Majitoj - Fur 101 Backenstosr Book Store It EAST LAWRENCE FE 3-I4I4 HAYRIDE PAR'TIBS! >E 4*«3t -f 770 Scott Uke Road ____ Wtd. (Children to Boar^ 28 Wtd. Household Goods 29 EDNa wahner S 0-303g Olbhe Furniture. PE I Voorhees-Siplei Cemetery Lots FE 2 0 ORAVE LOT FOR SALE. WHITE i Chapel Cemetery . _UL 3-1007. ^ i OAKLAND' HILLS MEMORIAC; I PARK — 2 Sctlons. 4 Graves ' each Call PE 4-1040 PERRY MT PARK CEMETERY * -............. '-I. Will divide Beautiful 0 FE 4-0003. At 10 a.m. Today IKere were replies at The Press oflire in Ihe following boxes; MEN. 18 TO 28 i1l1**lnt?rvtow‘‘'.h“'p "SSi“m“ I ^UpSd.^M.^^^bd.^^E’TToTf! to begin training for puhUelty A-l CARPENTRY. LAROE AND and promotional department. No email Jobe. PE_^4-4210. experience necesear, but you a-I CARPENTBR. NEW AND RE-muit he builneiallke and m- I. ^i, work. FE 0-7340, IT sTarl" a*t *So"'*a ^eV ^?h i 'W CLASS CARPENTRY ’ opportunity to earn 110,000 ( first year This Is definitely Ilfettme opportunity. Only to- - _- ergetlc men need apply. Car , CARPENTER^ ». _ furnithed. Por Interview appoint- ' formiet. PE 0-32(3. Wiepert. FI , CABINET MAKER AND CARPEN-_ i Ur. Ktichena a «peolalty. PE Help Wanted Female 7 center' work -op any kind. Reasonable Call alter 0 caITf’e n't"El Garden Plowing 18 all~a Laundry Service.. 20 SPIC k SPAN LAUNDRBTTB. PICK up and delivery lervlee. Call OR .^'0-J35l. ............... I PC OR A HOUSE PULL V Quick cash (or furniture, ipj^nccs. Bargain House r TQ—MO—WlARS^'sPO^^ (or usfd TV furniturr —' pilanr-- ••— rpOOi _ ALL APPLIANCE8. TVe AND PUR7 niture. Hiehest dollar. Immodlatt aervicf. PE 4-230I. ___ APPLIANCES, FURNITURE * TVs by the piteo or hoiueful. Imme-dlato lervlco. DoUf'e^PE 6-7100. LET US BUT IT OR BELL IT FOR TOU. OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION. OA O-JkU;__________ Wanted Aiiscellaneous 30 Landscaping 21 I CARPENTER WORK. CABINETS ----- FE 0-32f3 _ SPEOAL'TY IN A-I ACE TREE SERVICE STUMP RBMOVBL Tree removal, trimming. Oet our > bid. PE 3-71li or PE 1-0735. AA-1 MBRION BLUE SOD DE-llvery or pickup. 2(01 Crooks Rd. UL 3-4043 _ BULLDOZINO. LANDS C A P I N O! ' Road work and beach Inetalllng. Wanted to Rent 32 IN pleasant ....... ...J liberal employe beneftts Downtown office desires neat and congenial type girl. Typing and shortband ability -......Apply In person to Mr. 203 NaOi—' — Baker. 303 National Bldg. Monday 1 Friday. journevmaI ______ _ “ 3-7gli. FAMILY MAM WANTS STEADY ^An^ lighting tl-auwol parking e Approval and Modifl 1. The Board of Appe .lion by the property o tng.erea. may modify i re^lremcntt where. In xny STATE OP MICRIOAN-In the Prolixte Inspected I shalliCwutt-(or the County ol Oakland. Juve-II nlle Division .. In the matter ol . .. d Lo- »»“»>• :o an alley which to e - Oct S le petlUon concei PUBLIO SALE t address being « Oct Jg. : iboutd b PUBLIC SALE of this Court. of Mich . fn od«mion,M the above requtre-ttente. such panting area that! cootply w^ each further rbqulremealj or con-dHtoiis as may- bo prescribed by the ttobfd of Appeals lor tiM protection of 4Ml roetdanu dlgtrtet abutting each pe«wel wr pnrccto to.wwcl| tlw parking am to to be Mealed. ^ r-, gia Ordinance ehall UU effeat Virtr iWl' days after the eame ihM M pakltohe^ as rcqaJred by taw., made and paewMl by Uie B^fiaid t^naBto yaid^M the Mth tty gf ! : j. . ROBERT " , p Oci. IMP ; Ihls^urt |,he vehicle - ______________ ?Wld ."rel'P*'*''* unknown apd said child has violated a j ______ law of the suit and that said child ■ placed under the jurisdiction i m q pg a — ...siiri'iit '' said petition will be held and Oreenftald. Oak PKk. that ______J County Service Center, being where the vehicto lx elor ir» Hduxe_ Annex, l3gOB West Blvd . mdy, be teepected the Ctfy oT Tdnltac In ibid Couftty. jj Oet OS. the 9th day of November AD 1000.;—-------------• - Otoe o'clock In the forenoon, and you] ' PUBLIC SALE hereby commanded to appear .per-f At g 00 a m. on November 4. ally at said hearldg. ,1'ggg Rambler—0—4.^DH. Beden beliM Impractical to make personxt Ro DOttlM. *111 be sold at ‘ ........iliummott aito notice alTlSOOO Woodward Avent •fi..?* addreas bqtng where 1^ vrMeie to i earing oi e Oaklai r vehicto lx itored. and < aerved by publication m k prcvloux to eald hearing _ . Prexa. x newipaper printed a and may 6e inspected Moore. Judge of said Court, in the CIt; rt Pontlae to laid Cptt|y. thii 37tb da: «r October a.D. IggO. ' (Stall Airtinnt s. moorb. ....ue copy I Judge at Probab Prob.t.'%’,V.r,"j±T&. I Avenue, that 8 1 8 Help Wanted Male 4 Men Pari Tlitie. Ilvlilon ol Int'l. opening li ly emploi .._ ........ ......... hours per erenlng. Age 33 to 3b. - Responsible man only. By ap* pointment. Phono PE 4-lto2._______ I -VETER 6 GO P.MT * ; immqdiato opohlng for a proientty emptoyod man Mo needs a part I CaU Mr. Rounds. OR 3-0033. 3 p.m. to $ p.m. attextionI typo route w«k for quait* J? •* ^ »“*' cstabllx?M * IS I as. 2t, itsoi ...I PUBUC SALE ' tOOO' Plyi LlJuiin, Plymouth 3 QR. Serial 1 - »r‘ OR 3-0000 I _ ■ CHAUPPEUR~*'ANb EXPERlBNljlD house-boy. .rail OH 3-1513. ask -ror- Dugan who will, make ap* c66K:HOU8BkEEPER~ CARETAKER-COUPLE Pull time for both, permc. References. Par Information Mrs Kelly. JOrdsn 4-gg07.______ CAR HOSfksS. U'OR OVER. OOOD White ttoc L BAST BITTER. MmDLEAOKD, housework. Call ' befort I p.m UL 3-30M. .__________ BXBniTTINO A ND jLlOHT housekeeping, lire in. iM 3-3(41 or, OR 3-0041 ________________ BABYSITriER TO UVE INTldWr . drive ear OR 3 0040. BABYSITTiNO AtTo ^'ilBEKEEP- . J chlldrea, 1 age. Can EM 1-0000. ___ CI^K^^RELIABLI * Pontiac Prete betore_ ______^ OIRL TO DO liOUBEWOliK -ireferred. Live In, own other help may bc^mopected. WHO Will a nwi ________inU for,taurvllw8^ COLORED TECH^CIAN BTANTBO - Familiar With Loreal to Uke ow following at DoLaroe' too.. ---- haul! . ............. ptay^.References. BLgln t4M*. rnh OR PAiot TIME BEAirn: "FREK TOYS —FUN M'lbbLEAQXD RELIABLE MAN desirct part time work. Phono jfter g, PE l-33gg____________ PAIItTINO. INTBROR AND EXTBR-lor By job orhour. ^ 2-M03. PART RETIRBO AND WOULD LIKE custodian or maintenance work. 3 yqart experience. PE 3-ggJt. QUAUTT CABINEfa AND PURNI-tura built at a rtaeonahlc cost. Pbaturtng dlsntay and boekeasot. Mbits, bum-ins. paneling, and THU U OUR JOB. Wl KNOW OOH s'. Window and wall wash- Mllton.*PE 4-33Qg, PE gdlll . Jg TRS. OLD. INTEN-ested la employment due to in-elstOnee of creditert. Experienced Pontiac Press Box 7 YOUNO MAN C_______ any kind PE M304. YdUNO MAN OBSIR Mechanical ability, OR 3- l-i^ Wjwk Wmt^Femate 3 WOUN WANT Wl^L WASH-, Ing and boUsecleanll^rK 3-TM( IRONINO PICK VP jEnO DB- _er OR J-gl7g^_______ bBPENbAMB'PRACfiCAL NUNBE. wm live in OH ,J-_13M. Moving and Trucking 22 Top Soil Lli^t^and_ ^vy^Jrucklnt^ ^ub- Teke advantage of our rental service' Tenants waiting for houses and apartments in or out of towo,.,Oood references. No charge If we do not rent your property. R. J. (Dick) VAI.UET Realtor FE 4-3531 340 OAKLAND AVENUE-- Open_0 to^ g_____ttd tI-4 WANTED TO BUY OR LEAgE~-4 bedroom house. 114.000 to 017.- t, grading, sand, gravel wno irunt* end loading. 2-Qg03. ____________ 1 -A Reduced Rates Share Living Queers 33 ELDERLY LADY WANTS LADY TO BM^‘ Moi^‘‘oy°** nTo-iiigoI h^'Kw'vrT'ii -----A-I MOVINO BERVICl------I MIPPLEAOkD. W O M E N W I T H Rcaaonabl^ralet._____ni i-J40t ( wid(