^ f/ii ivftqffier V.8. WMthtr S«r«s« r«Nwit Sbovidi^rs. warmei\ (OMtilt Th* *) THE PONTIAC PRESS M ml. Editloii yOL. 120 Jifo. 0$ POyXIAC, IlflCHlOAN TUESDAY, MAY 29, 1902 -22 PAGES wir,o""?^*s"SiSSSfTio»*t^ But Rally Creeps In Allocation Unit Uncertain on County Millage ' / Oakland Officials Up Air Over How Much Budget Must Be Cut By DICK HANSON Oakland County officials were left wondering today how much they will have to cut the budget for county government next year. They admitted that the Couti ty Tax Alliocation Board isn’t likely to give the county sufficient millage to finance the proposed $16,555,202 budget. To do 80 v'ouid require t.M mills of the total IS miito the allocatton board has to divvy up among school districts, townships, and county government. After hearing two of the officials explain the county’s financial picture for the coming year, the allocation board was unable to agree on any millage rate for the county, DKKEATtSD MOTION A 3-3 vote of the board barely defeated a motlpn to give the ty the same 5.25 mills it received last year. The motion was m^e by board member William Emerson, who also is county superintendent of schools. by board member John Austin, also chairman of the county board of auditors, to give the county 5.6 mills. The board defeated the motion with a 4-2 vole and adjourned until Thursday moralug. Earlier, in settfng preliminary rates, the allocution board favwed 5.4 mills for county government, 8.6 mills for schools, and 1 mill for townships. HITS FIRST PIGIJKK As a spokesman for counly gov-einment, Norman Barnard, county rorporntion counsel, told the allocation board that 5.4 mills would leave the county $1,633,090 short of meeting its proposed budget. He read a resolution passed by the County Board of Supervisors wa.Vs and means committee stating: “. . . The preliminary rale set liy the nllo<*atlon board. If it Is made final, will force the rmiiily to curtail essential serv-l<-cs und programs siippoiied by the county budget for the health and welfare of people of |he county . . The resolution asked the allocation board to reconsider "and increase the rate to a level which will produce sufficient tax monies to meet the requirements’’ of the proposed counly budget. Parents Can Celebrate, Too ’ NUMBER 10 TO GRADUATE — Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Humphreys, 261 Whittemore St., are shown helping their 18-year-old daughter, Mary Ann, adjust her cap Und gown as she gets in the spirit of graduation. In the background are the Humphrey's nine other children who graduated from St. Frederick’s High School. Rain? Well, We'llWait and See In view of the fact that it' morith since the weather bureau was right about a thunderstorm forecast, Pontiac area residents expected to swarm to park and recreation sites in large numbers Memorial Day, regardless of another such prediciton. Otherwise, the resolution, stated the county would have to‘consider an average 10 per cent cut In all operating budgets of ils departments and institutions, along with other possible reductions and eliminations of certain expenditures. While Barnard Good weather could also bring up to 10,000 to Pontiac Lake Recreation Area and another 12,000 to the Holly Rcercation Area. Holly already has rocorded a-owd of 14,500 on Sunday, May J. Park Manager Murray Tels-worth said however that camping traffic may not be as high as other holidays due to Memorial Day falling in the middle of the week. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) In Today's Press N’Tesfs tl.S. to set off 3 high-altitude bhuls In about 3 days - «'AGK 21. Ufges No Vote SchoilU to recommend AFL-aO rejection fof con-stitution - PAGE 21. In Running First Jn serlci on candidates for Koard of education posts — I’AGa 2. Aren Nows ...............11 Astrolagy ...............14 Bridge .................'14 Uomirs ..................14 Edllurisls ...............4 Markets .................16 OMInarles ............. .!« 8|M.rta ..............12-12 Thenlertf ...........• « TV aiid‘ ReH.o Programs 1 Wllsolh. I^rl ...........21 The forecast calls for thunderstorms late today and tonight, ending tomorrow with a predicted high of 84. The temperaturf at 2 p m. today 10th Humphreys Teener to Graduate at St. Fred's By JOE SINGLETON In a few Weeks Ifti-year-oW Mary Ann Humphreys .will graduate from St. fTiederleks High ScItooH. On the surface, this is not an unusual feat. But Mary Ann’s graduation Is unique!^ Mary Ann is the last of 10 children of Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Humphreys, 261 Whittemore St., to graduate from St. Fredericks Hlgh|— School. i 86. The temperature should be enough to fill parks to near capacity, accoixllng to estimates of park managers. . Car manager at Dodge PaFc No. 4, on Cass l.iake. predicts 10,000 to 12, will use the park tomorrow It the weather is clear. "We expect Iwtween RO to 150 campers lo iH^glii arriving tonight.’’ he said. Paul WIgg, Pontiac I-ake manager, reported a lifeguard will he on duty nt the beneh all day If the weather holds up. Parks may be packed throughout the county with "vacationers’’ making short jaunts on the short holiday. All city, »()Unly and federal of-ees will be closed. Area banks will close at their regular times today and open at the i-egular hour Thursday morning. TO PATBOL ROADS Mosf stores will also be closed. Police and sheriff's deputies will be out In full force, concentrating their efforts on major thoroughfares near the metroilolltan area. Most major thoroughfares In the county where construction or grading has been In progresa will be clear for holiday traffic, according to Sol D. l4omerson, vice chdlnman of tho county road 'The virorst spot in the county . Northwestern Highway from Elgh^ Mile to Telegraph' Roads where construction detours inay cause congestion,” he warned. Telegraph Road Just souih of Dixie Highway may also be eon-gesttxl due to constntcUon of w new lane, Other detours worth noting ai-e oq Giddings Road) north of Walton Boulevai-d and Baldwin Rortd near Brown Road due h freeway' nstruct nnd that .probably Included Saturdays. Oakland County’s Walter Reuther would never eross a tor nary a Jour-an hour of over- could take In half a hundred of these that you’d never seen before. This was the King’s home know the„place you go when night comes and you’re tired from sitdng on that hard throne all day and wearing a heavy crown. You could steal Into this little hideaway and lake off your shoes tp relax. It contains 8,009 paintings, Including many of the great masler-pleces of the woHd and 1,068 siat-i|(>s. After .vou mid the little woman have had an eleven course dinner;' you could wandar around and Jook at 50 or 60 new marble figures if statue night — but if you had a sudden y<>n for paintings, you S painter place even defies description from Jackie Kennedy. If the D. C. darling se^ont to do It on TV, she’d be out of dronla-tlon until Uarollne had grandchll- Our own crowd of 2.50 newspaper people from 33 countries, was joined by 600 top citizens of Paris ond we occupied about a third of the space. You could easily have seated 3,000land left room for an Indoor triiek meet. Rememlter, these arc just individual rooms In palac'c, nnd all around the walls arc these world famous paintings. We had dinner there. Imagine. There've been (wo hamiuels he-ire. One was for the (jueen of Great Britain and the other for Ihe Kennedys, which I understand was In the Hall of |Wlrrors. lids Is a spriielp room that's Jiist less than city block !<«>»{ •— and I rrtean that IUerHll.v—and is entirely lined with mirrnrs. The outside ganlens wer where the weary king and his. male wandered before sunscif' The tail ., i.y ■ Is Idit Just as SCI ralriy belter Ih I m Vellhwslane palace la now !j( i R will live 3.M Nlaga- sllghtl: Falls ennslderali^y belter Ihsn (lid Park,^ ^lll live 3,(MW yearo If Ibe . French remain al |)cace (hat long with lh« Ger- ber own baoh yard. These various Louies wanted place to worship, so they had a cha|Madlock that has sent the legislalure''‘inlo .six weeks of overtime already. Otherivise, legislative leaders predicted the session might go to mid-July. Under amendments adopted last week, the bills are aU tied together. If one dies, they all. die. Kennedy Marks 45th Birthday as Regular Day WASHINCTON (UPI) - President Kennedy was 45 years old today; a youth among venerable world statesmen, a scarred veteran of political crises at home. Beyond greetings from his ^wife nnd children this morning' and felicitations from his staff, a regular work day came ahead of any real birthday observance. A quiet family dinner party was set for tonight at Glen Ora, the Kennedjf country plaqe outside Middleburg, Va., where the President will spend Memorial Day be* lursday. Imprisons Cuban PWs, HAVANA 1*1 -*..FIdM Cantro bus reportedly moved more than 300 captives of Ihe Bay of Pigs i invasion to pf'nltentiarUis, appaiviltly to prod an- exUf rescue group to get up the ransotg!' for Ihe 00 ailing Elspners lie sdint.to tho tUnlfed ates4 “ r V gpytlAC TOKSDAt, MAY d, m3^ “■^,rr Vicfim in Jef C^asfi Faced Theft Charge ammVJLLB, Som 'OS set oft in a rear washroom of the airliner and ripped the plane's tail frmo the fuselage. ' Doty's initials match^ those on a brief case which was found late Sunday 12 miles from the crash .scene, pil agents appropriated the briefcase, which was empty and unlocked, and expressed great interest in it. But they would not reveal what significance they attached to it. A check of Doty’s recent sc-flvWes showed that he and Mrs. Geneva Fraley, S«, who also died in the Continental crash, PWt* nershlp with Doty daae h the Kansna CNy aooroea aaU. Doty had i>een scheduled to fade {Hove in ahead. They concede right and lefth h the 550 teachers, the Waterford Township school system is big business—the biggest business in the township. Great as is the significance of these facts, or greater significance i.s the fact that there will be an about 14,000 children schools next fall. • than I of Pontiac: a daughter, Mrs. Alice tor the children and for the parts they will play in the "As A homeowuer ahd father of rix young children. I hnve n natural and* perhaps, selfish interest in the schools. “More importaht, as a citizen, have a very great desire'to see ir schools efficiently administered, educating all 14,000 children to be good and useful citl- Several building needs exist. The Patterson Street central office building is in the urban renewal area, and will be replaced new location. DtrscUon: Southerly Sun itti Tueadsy at 8:( Sun rliei Wedneaday ai velocity I m.p.h. ”ow«f te'i Meen ten Weather >r At# In fenllae toweat tompei'sttM'o Monday'* Temperalui ....... Alpena 65 60 Fort Worth « .toeanaba, oa 5J Jackaonviiie 5. Od. Raplda 79 62 Kahaaa city 65 Houshton 65 46 l.o» Anpeleii 66 UnalnK Ti 61 Miami Beach il5 Marquette 53 'New Orelana #0 PellBlon /74 54 New VOrlt 06 51 Albuquerque 61 49 Omaha 65 5f ta 93 84 Phoenix 81 5! irck^ 66 68 PItUburKh 66 51 n 68 53 B. Lake. City 63 41 KO 67 63 S. Prandaco '57 5( rnatl 82 65 8, 8. Marie 68 54 Tt Vi J? « It ?8 . ■ l ' 'AS rSalafax NATIONAL WEATHER—Scattered showers and thundershowers wilt spresd tonight across the northern Plateau and Rlains to (ireat takss togion and will cover the entire area east of the Mississippi srithThs exoeptlqn of the Immediate Atlantic Coast and most of Florida. 'It be a Itttle warmer over northern two-thirds of the nation from the Plateaus to the Atlantic and somewhat cooler la portions ot the middle Atlantic Coast slates. “Increased enrollments Indicate a need soon lor a Junior high school to the north of town on the Baldwin Avenue site. These costs must be borne without Impairing the quality ol our educational system. ■’My po.sition is to work in co-opi'ration with citizens, teachers and administrators and lo encourage citizens to feel free to contact their board members with any suggestions (hey might have. DtTmolT (45 - Some 85 Detroit high school students were honored yesterday as winners of good citizenship awards sponsot'ed by the city police department and CSirys-ler Corp. U. of Colorado Gives Carpenter His B.S. Degree Lynn Townsend, president of Chrysler, Mayor Jerome Cavanagh and Police Commissioner George Edwards gave the awai'ds to the students, who represented 47 pub-lie and parochial schools BOULDER, Colo. IJI5 - Astronaut Malcolm Scott Carpenter received today the acronauticiU engineering college degree he foiled to get 13 years ago. President Quigg Newton of the University of Colorado, Carpenter’s alma mater, said the orbital flier missed u final examination in a course called heat transfer, "per-haps with his mind already on higher things.” He said Carpenter's subsequent training as an astronaut has "more made up for any doficiency in the subject of heai transfer.” He then presented the 37-year-old Carpenter with a buehelor of science degree, - . Boyf Take Asthma Pilll Oriie Dies* Other Sick ANN ARBOR (41 - pavid Cblvln, 6, remained in fair condition today from the effects of asthma drugs which took the life of his 4-year-old brother, Michael. Washtenaw County sht'riff's deputies said the two boys apparently got Into k medldne chest at the home of their parerirs ’ln Milan and, swallowed a quantity of pills Sum day. ' j "My primary interests thus are in the fields of financial man-Hgement of the school system and in the curriculum for the students. Because of my education, training and background of experience in commpnlty affairs, I feel that I can make a worthwhile contribution In these areas if elected to the schoolbourd.” Palice, Chrysler Honor 85 Detroit High Teens Kvitek of Birmingham; four grand-ispns; and a brother in Harrison. Due to the recent death of Mr. Wood's wife Verna, the family suggests any memorial tributes be to the building fund of Central Methodist Church. Moscow Frees 'Spies- MOSCOW (R - Mr. and Mrs. Adol* Werner of* West Germany, imprisoned last autumn on charges shrug of a French shoulder which is the national language of concession when all else falls. In effect'it says; "So what?” And Paris streets are so wide they have eight, ten and twelve traffic lanes running side by side. French _ ..................... we have a lot to learn from these old world countries where the people ceased being "in a hnrry" a thousand years ago. And no one blows an automobile horn in Parts — no one. It’s against the law. And I mean against the law, amd they aren’t the kind of laws that we have, You never hear a horn and yet there are more vehicles on the streets than In New York. A saving grace is the small site of the cars. The Pontiac I was fortunate enough to draw was a palatial, ocean going yacht In comparison with the average French bug that streaks around the highways. Champagne does not improve with age beyond 10 or 12 years and it is almost impossible to preserve, but bottle that bore the cuvee mark of 1911 —51 years ago. It was a big thrill —and super delicious. - -Iff ^ Now 1958 Is believed to be the greatest champagne year ol the current eentnry. You can get still wiiiOB ot that vintage already^ but yon ivon’t get any champagne for three or four Others to be rescinded in the future are Peabody Orchards, Brook-side Hills and the Devon Gables subdivision at Telegraph and Long Lake roads. went over an(d back on Pan American's magnificent super jets that are the last word in all phases of air travel. And Pan Am service is simply magnificent. They really look after you and come up with little "something extra. The French are n friendly iwo-pie. They’re Impetuous at times ible but good breeding tan frame of mind, 1 that aside from the missus, the best looking member ot th^ group was Shyama datn of Bombay, wife of the publisher of The Tiipcs, ot India. Gare Gimmings told me once that when you write about a trip you must make certain not to spell the facts he has already read in his eighth grade history. Gare, I’ve tried. letting pn^rty owner* know of the heai^ by first class mail rather than just an advertisement in a newspaper, according to Gerk Delores Little,' "but the fact that this wasn't required before doesn’t make the board's action legal.” She said It is a technicality that nIU be cleared up alter June JO when property owners living In the four special assess-.................again receive The hearings probably will be held the same night, she said. The board last night rescinded its early resolution that created the sanitary sewer special assessment district for the Williamsburg Sub- The board, i(ii aumthei- action, adopted the uidform water craft township lakes. The ordtounce, however, will affect only Square Lake since the rest of the township lakes are private; ^ Authorization to purchase the Newcombe property adjacent to the township hall fmr future expansion also was given to Township Attorney Thomas Dillon.' Voters approved the purchase of le 10-acre parcel in April. The property will cost the township J32.000. Charles Hummel, 2435 Devon Lane, has been elected chairman of the board of directors of Kings-wood Schopl Ganbrook, succeeding William B. Hartman, who has held the post for two years. Other officers are Robert Flint, vice chairman; Ben D. Mills, treasurer; and Mrs. John P. McLean Jr., secretary. Probably the most distinguished champagne in the world is Moet Chandon’s from Epernay. My wife and 1 were invited down for fonch and were conducted through the famous underground cellars. These are 16 miles long and currently store 20 million bottles Including their Dry Imperial, Rose, White Seal and faihous Dorn Perignon. Two week’s atiSincfe llrbm Pontiac is sufficient. I’d rather be here than anywhere else «n the wortd. I likr tnr peopte^^^ try, my associates and the wl:ole setup. West Huron Street’s the ad- You can’t beat It. lt'8 Memorial Day for Area ^Redhead* Vet Recalls a Jungle in Leyte... By JOE MULLEN Memorial Day would be a fitting day for The ^dhead to conjure up memories of The Philippines— of a particular air battle there and of his eventual rescue. But Edwin J. Beattie of Independence Township; would rather talk about the Navy Reserve and this weekend's training flight to Kansas. Just then one of the eight Japanese Oscars that had attacked his plane, came out of the clouds toward him. I the "That’S all ancient history," The Redhead protested interviewer persisted along conversationr,l trail back to World War H. Yes, he was the subject of a chapter “The Redhead” in the book "Leyte Calling'.' by Joseph St. John, former guerrilla leader in the jungles of Leyte. As he talked, the curtain of time faded. The office became the cockpit of a Wildcat fighter plane aerated by Japanese bullets and plunging earthward in flames. It was Ensign Beattie's 21st birthday, Oct. 20, 1944. I he floated downward, watched his plane hit the ground and c plode. pilot didn't have the heart to strafe me or whether he didn’t see me,” Beattie recalled, "hut Japanese. He was following a river he believed led to Leyte Gulf when -he heard a man’s voice. Standing before him was a native with a huge boio knife, its blade shimmering in the sunlight. Realizing the stranger was an American, the Filipino rushed over to shake hands. the other Jap fighter planes.' The Redhead, who was on active duty from October 1942runtil January 1946, was on his 30th airborne mission when he was gunned out of the sky 14,000 feet above the mountainous terrain of Leyte in the Philippines. When the ensign touched ground after bailing out, he suffered a minor leg injury, painful enough to cause a limp. Beattie began walking. He was {armed with a gun and a knife and —— 4 The young pilot balled out and was ready to use either as the area was known to be infested with IMPKE8SED BY HAIR’ "He seemed impressed with my red hair,” Beattie recalled, guess he thought 1 was someone very special, being an American plus havihg red hair.” When the two men resumed the journey, along the river, the native noticed Beattie’s limp and insisted that The Redhead rile piggy back. "I felt rather foolish but he kept loNlstlng so 1 hopped on and They eventually arrived i small guerrilla encampment where they ate and slept before moving trav^ng through the mouritaips and jungle they reached their destination, the camp run by St. John. The Redhead received a royal welcome at both camps, especially the one on 4he coast. Richard C. Van Dusen was elected to the board to fill the vacancy created by the retirement of William H. Baldtrtn. Re-elected ss directors, were Mrs. William T. Gossetl and iMrs. William B. Hargreaves. Willard E. Welsh Service tor Willard E. Welsh. 55, of 985 Timberlake, Bloomfield Hills, was held yester^ at William Vasu Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with bltrial In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, TYoy. Mr. Welsh, executive vice president and general manager of Shedd-Bartush Fewds, Inc,, died Friday at Northwest Grace Hos- Survivors include his wife Eleanor; a daughter, Mrs. Mary Doyle; a son, John W.; and on# grandchild. Mvoruoamaati •iMial SINUS CONGESTION aMiliiltiiiiigkqilWM' TRUMIC TABLETS mrt lilt lint E.C.IaMili in »M nun UnlttS Stain mdCtmdi Is tetaktn lirttriMltf ftt nM ll tkMt nn^tn. Hmit iraiii til ti|M tlmit nwUn It ntitrt Im knkttliliii. II na nMr (rtm wf tl flit iktvt cMiwnt anfl M*t Irltd ttMr flmimflMi-Tlililiw |tlN sUitn whi iMvi IriMi TrtniM infl tk- inditiitt. TnnnaK It ttlfl wlj. In 6n« Mtnt. Mmil N* SulMWnkM. UlUlUiJmBm M N. Saginaw St -«Maia Float Nallves, constantly pointing at his red hair. \/ouldn’t let him out of their sight for a mon (iowds hovered over him white he ate, making sura he had his fill. They even stood by while he slept, funning the ensign to make the hot, humid weather of the islands more tolerable. During the nevora! days the flyer was In St. John’s camp he took part In guerrilla stabs against enemy but eventually he was picked up by a 24th Division reconnaissance group. OFFICER IN RESERVE Beattie lives witt^ his wife, Mickle, and their three children at 6265 Show Apple Drive. He’s executive officer of Attack Squhdrdn •731 based on Grosse Be, with the rank of Lieutenant Commander, USNR. O'fill'E A difference Mrs. Edwin J, Beattie looks over a model of a Navy Jet made by her f twp sons and is br|ef^ by her husband oil tjie dUlcjrences ot tcjday’s aircraft gnd the planes utilized during World War 14. Navy talk Is an everyday occurrence In the Beattie household In Independnece Township. This weekend It will train .Saturday at Grosse lie “and Iheii fly lo Olathe, Kan. Then ijnother day of training. V But no one fs’shooting at him now. And redheads—mon, at least —aren’t stared at. LOWlEYOttM 11" III a fir only month Coma In and aaa ut— .Convince yburself today We Also lent PItiHM Witli Optieii M Owy ^ V’F«R ln«l««»4 WlMl farohMR at Anf Orv«N *0 PImo ^LLAQHER MUSIC CO. Open Non. end Ftl. 'Ill f EM, U II, art«t rtoiiM r-i:| : , • 'i'>! I ', U Tliant kxm most make op tds mind whether he wants to be rotary genend oi the UnlM Nations for a full term. Some Mends of the mild-spcdcen, Bifddtiist JUHtOW LIQUEURS CORP., DETROIT. MICH. M A 100 PROOF. DISTILLED FROM GRAIN Will Terin? By PHIL NEWSOM VFI Foreign News JUMlyM doubts that he wants the job beyond next April ID — the end of the late Dag HammaTskfold’s term to uhicb the GenenU Al-sembly appointed Mm last Ndv-ember. ,■ Some diplomats thought it was Tbanthi first diplomatic stumble, for the United Nations, by ac-roports on West New A from the Netherlands, previously had recognised Dutch sovereignty over it as a jionself* governing territory. ^ Despite the lamenluck nature of of his appointment, Thant’s six-month conduct in the office has looked like that of Stumble or not, it will likely be submerged in 'Thant’s reputation, for impartial Urbanity by the time treading carefully to avoid anything that could wrock his to a full term. He has been sharp, in a qiiiet diptomatic way, with East and 'Glacier Priest/ 73, Dies; Led Arctic Expeditions NEW r\ V/ Y /A L. r M u‘^/‘yc/.' SIGNET ZcMf ^e/u>pi. . IZSNsrliiSagiiiiwSl t’XFE24»l British Prime Minister Harold lacmillan, visiting here 1 a s lonth, was reported to have given Thant his government’s backing for a live-year term in his -own right. WA8H1NOTON CAREFUL Washington has been careful to steer clear of official endorsement lest it prove a cold war kiss of death that could bring Russia’ veto if only because he was supported by the Uni^ States. But last Sunday, U.8. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson, in a nationwide television interview. SANTA CLARA, Calif. (B-’The' Rev. Barnard Hubbard, 73, famed ‘Glacier Priest," died yesterday of a heart attadc at his home. Father Hubbard, associated with the University of Santa Clara, | gained his title because of the scientific expeditions he headed to the Arctic regions.. ‘‘The United Nations was fortunate, I think, to find such distinguished diplomat to fill this demanding post,’’ Stevenson "Mr. Thant is' universally admired. His ability and equanimity are universally recognized and he has served well in his first months of office,’’ The answer to whirther i acting’’ will be removed from Thant’s secretary general title probably will come late this s when he visits Moscow. • Bought Sny new furniture or appliances recently ? Made improvements on your home? Replacement COM! of homM and house-hold furnishings have doubled since im Make sure you have enough protection to cover the fa-rreesed value of your property. Let us show you how little it < ' “ ‘ - Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD phone FE 4-8284 The, Bussiwis are liot likely But the recepHOTi the slightly-built Burmese gets in the Soviet capital will signal (he Kreni- Thant is in the middle of the biggest diplomatic crisis oi .tenure right now. He is seeking with the help of former U.S. dip-It Ellsworth Bunker, to settle the dispute between the Netherlands and Indonesia concerning West New Guinea. Thero is; brush-ftrcHlighting m progress bet w e e n Indonesian paratroops and Dutch defenders which, as Stevenson said Sunday, could start a war which might spread quickly. The Dutch asked Thant to send U.N. observers to report oi situation, requested by both countries Idle ({uestlon of electing a secre-lterm comes before the General tary generaT for a»f^ Assemb^ tMa fall. ADVERTISEMEIIT for BIDS SdMsI District «f aw C «f aw aw « PmUm, PmUm, MleMCM,; *« fMMM .nvn. .... ... 'SSa MWilvilMi *t''Bail*r a*Sls«*Biwt' sai A^stte ."cwtiM won in*# P.*.. B.JT.. K.s*w, la IMS. at Iha affWa •( ais BsarS at MBoaHea, W PaltarsM Slraai, P^rtiaS;* WahWaaTit aaS plaaa aU kUa will ka pakltaW apaM aM'Vaai alaaS.''V'. AkSaptaS UMar will k« raSafraa Baas MS Lakar aa« Malarial Uao« la Id la Ilia aaiaant of lOdW at the caatraet. PIkat asd taeeinaailaaa Map ka aktalaed da aad alter Thandap, Map St" 5!w. af th" Irahllaat, Ekerle M. Smith Aaeaelataa. tea.. 18S Bait Elltabetti Street, DairMt 1, Mlchlsaa. PBQPOSAIB MUST BE StBMmED ON POBMS FPENISmBB^ BT THE AmCEWECT and suppiemeiited hy a certified cheek er bid bend la Ike aatanat ef f‘ ' ‘ ‘ .......... act OI piaae aaa speciiiooHOBs, -7--. --j akeeineMiaae are retaraed. A realal rt l*.«* per dap will be rtarfcd, eMtraeler wha releiaa piaae aad ipeeltleatlooe Water Ikaa afreed. The Beard el Edaeatlea reterree the rlaht, «a reieet aap ar all blda, la whole or In port, aad W waira aap iBformallllet therela. SCHOOL DISTRICT of the CITY of PONTIAC PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Riy. |. ALLiN PARKIR, D.O. cftTmucsGEr LOW COST H0$PITiU.PLM get low anrance. Ton a year-old non-profit Bocloty-tho Cattudlc of St. for, only tl. t wtdo pariotp of up to date 0 With boapltal there la a go tor any • !ss covered by tlOO or tlW a weelc are lie.. Catholics of advanced lUred at addlUonal cost. >u ore paid In addition 1 - ------------- — * FRIIt NO OBLIGATION------------- — CATHOLIC KNIGHTS OF ST. GEORCI 1106 Penobscot Building P. Detroit 26, Michigan, WO 2-9793 Please rush free facts on insurance plan for Catholics. Narps ...................... •. Address ....................... City .............County ,.. Phone . Occupstfon . QET A BARQAIN QET A BANK LOAN! Cruise the lake in that new boat Don't postpone your pleasure. We’ll show you how easy it is to get lower rates and easy terms when you get a bank loan. See us before you borrow and you’ll find that bank loans are a real bargain. NOW PAYING 4% SAVmO cSiFICATES for mjl money... it's BANK -i I Saginaw at Lawrence Auburn Heights Baldwin at Yale Drayton Plains Miracle Mile M-59 Plaza 9 to 6,4 E. Lawrence member F.D.I.C. 1 i' ,1, >■ fHE POJ^tlAC PRESS iiwiSBfifet AmIIi PomiM. Mich. TUieSi3AY.»AYa^lM2 Wrn mVMlW*. JOHN A. BtUT, 5!sar&«Hor 0._ Bofli PoHtical Parties Hi^fid of Electitms ifon year pay raiae (a Fednal employes. There are many ways to bala^co PoUttcal elections on a national ‘he budget without simply going to. level this fall are bound to bring the taxpayers for more money, about some changes. At this early stage both the Democrats and Republicans are making claims of im- Who e«r Literacy Bilj Demands heard Of a politician going around Thorough Discussion Guest Edlioiial singing the blues Just prior to election? Even if he expects defeat, he doesn’t broadcast it... The GOP is talking of picking up 25 House seats which would still not be enough to give it control. The Dems, on the other hand, will consider it a victory if they just hold what they have. (The Chicago Tribunes Some of the Southern'states employ literacy tests as a subterfuge to deprive N^oes of their votes. A bill is now before the Senate seeking to end this discrimination. The bill declares that the completion of the sixth grade in school is to be taken as conclusive evidence that the applicant for voter registration can read and write. if if if Southern senators are filibustering ., ,., ' ,,, against this measure. For our part, At this stage it looks more like vire favor thorou^ discussion of the each will have to give a little on its literacy bill, and we emphasize the predictions. Net result—no big gains word, thorough. We don’t think the sonstors who favor the bill should sit for either, rae Senate we eapect, flUbusterers gas Will stay pretty much the same. It away unhindered, does not appear now that there will ★ ★ ★ be too many big upsets. The Southern senators should be challenged to disprove, if they Voice of the People: V Concerned About ’ Asked by Public OffiM I write of the type of officials that the people elect to public office. If theie wha any doubt before the aty Gommission meetings of the past two werics, I bi^ to your attention the phUosophies of OM of your oonunhwloaer eialms ha was slUMind at pM . of ear white Mgk sebooi toaohers wtwa he, the eonmdasloner, Uaakedly asked Pm teacher. *‘l>e ysu meai to ten me that you have ireaeked the age et SB and have net had InUmato relaPmw with a Negro glrif’' Ihe tan|riioalioB ahenld be moet repuMve to any penoa legaidlem of sex or color. Y«t thte santo OffldaMiad the audacity to preadi about dennocracy, IWiug togoPlWr worklag together, etc."'", ' The scars wlH be long lasting. I am thily hopeful this man’s philosophies do not reflect the feelings of the majority of our Negro population, mmy of whom I>know personally as fine people. , You elected this individual and you are responsible. 2215 St. Joseph Victor 1*. Butt 431 Lynch 'Gee! Second Chance Nothing but Praise to Give Money Away' for City Hospital ‘Testing-1-9-6-4’ When Congress turned thumbs down on a bill to award the Philippines |73 million for war damages on- the grounds that the money would not help the poor but only the rich, the reaction was swift. Presidmt Macapagal canceled his intended risk to the U.S., called the legislation .d "slap in the face," and changed the Philippine independence day from July 4. David Lawrence Says: Plunge Echoes Global Uncertainty The headline races attraftlnf the most attention look MMnething like this from our vantage |N»int: . Nixon and Bbown in California could be close. Right now it appears that Nixon's slow start has hurt him. Gov. Pat BaowN is lunnlng hard and it’s a questton whkher Nixon can catch him. ★ ★ ★ In New York State it looks like a victory for RocKKfm.aa. He also is a top candidate for presidiential nomination in 1964. Apparently family life is not hurting. DiSaUe la Ohio agaihst Rhodes appears to havo lost maeh of his lustm*;-Word ifirom^^ O — that he amy be anseated. From B(^n the Txody Kknnkdt can, the record from Macon County, Abu, where even the most iUiterate whites have been registered as voters withoat question but professors at Tnskegee Institute, men and women with graduate degrees from great universities, have been sidietraeked for inability to read to the sattofac-tion 01 the local officials. The report of the United States Commission on Civil Rights lists many parallel instances. What defense can be made for these discriminations? ★ ★ ★ We can’t think of one attack on the literacy bill that would be persuasive if the filibusterers care to make it. They could say, with much truth, that 111 many sections of the South, WASHiNG'TON--. The stock ntar> The change to a new administra- “tax havens’’ abroad that should ket's operations are often regard- tion tn 1961 accentuated an al-ed as a harbinger of things to ready growing uncertainty. Since come and not as a reflection Of the last December, stock market val-past. It would be much more realistic, however, to appraise the recent decline in the value of stocks as the troubled man-( ilestation of the I have been a patient at Pontiac General lor . two weeks. The entire staff has shown nothing biit otm-cem. On numerous occaskms I have been to the emergency department with one of my five youngsters and I have always beet; treated well. Some poor souls cannot be satisfied with the best, because they do not recognize it when they have it. Present Patient at Pontlae General Hoqdtai I have been hospitalized in several different hospitals and have never recevied better treatment than at Pontiac General. Everyone always haa a pleasanf smile and a pleasant word. I have seen pa- the Philippines are doing compnratlveiy wbll. Now President Macapagal has tients who did not appreciate wy have been removed long ago, but decided to give us another chance, good treatment, has taken a broad swipe at Amerl- He says he' will honor us with a Walter 0. Eggers can business ahrbad and has al- visit if we decide to be good boys Walled Lake ues have decUned about J112 bil- most wrecked the planning of and give him his $73 miHion. Won, many business enterprises over- , i,',,,, ' „„„ ly, the stete ofj mind in the world i today. lAWRENCls The world has been trying recently to adjust to the economic ' At a time wi are groping ft equilibrium through natural factors, the national government under President Kennedy has started a number of disturbing moves. It has endorsed the fatal policies of the new deal on ”pump-priming” — a remedy that never whited. It has dls-otmraged businessmen. ». Tax reforms inside the United States have long been overdue, but are not being tackled comprehensively. The creation of more Jobs has been lost sight of as an objeettve, even as labor lenders clamor ' a SS-hour week-with the pay for the workmen 109 Ottawa Today’s Oterature Stephen Wyman Needs Supervision’ Mrs. Jacob Wenzel of the Grosiie Pointe Council spoke at a meeting "1 the need for adult supervision which the President has come to |rips. (Copyright 1961) with the “cold WI rather than naturaf faetors predominate. Billions of dollars of aid have been flowing annually from the United States to Europe and consequently many of the European A aixto grade edlipatlpn in a Negro have achieved an encour- school Is no proof of Uteracy. It could J hardly be otherwise in view of the But todav there-* » nai.*e - Dr., William Brady Says: - Does High Blood Pressure Worry You? Theu Reduce! ‘Will Mayor Handle Citizen’s Comnlaint?’ m««»fines. Magaztoes same ^ which are available on local news- a 40- At the Oty Commission nieeting *0 our young people were with May 22, a citizen made a com- dlspl^ed. not plaint that he had neason to be- 1716 statement on TV that this lieve that gambling was active in UtoiAture is “nothing but trash and Pontiac and that he had com- •®®® W *®® dirty to get into ——— plained to the police and was told malls’’ is all too true. that they were also aware pf the Mrs. D. Hackett fact. As a general rule the mayor Rochester refers complaints to the city man- —............ ager. However, to the best of my mi-_ knowledge, this was not done. Mr. 1116 AlltlSnAC Mayor made the statement that the commissioners were going to Ry United Pnws International hardly be olherwise in view of the But todav" there’s a Muse - as *"pp®»‘"« y®“ "®‘ uneqUAl distribution of school funds « everybody is trying to find what that case, try a , and McConiAACK me is a, honey, with between Negro and white schools direction to take. America, as the high blood w*«re. Jafo^ShenrvVLlS^ 0?^“ Iiiij-L that was quite general a few years leading economic force in the Obsesslra, says Webster, to anxious both sides throwing mud. Also, aeo and nerslsts even todav in manv world, is herself enveloped in im- unescapabie pixwccupation charges of "White House Interfer- ^tlons ^the South. r^i-fninfv with an idea or an emotion. for actiCn or will he have to go elsewhere? _____ -_________,, .Jay 29„ .... conH>toined depend on the mayor 149th day of the year with 216 to ence.’’ The old pros say this one will not be decided until the primary In In Washingrton: mid-September. ★ ★ ★ At home we have the Romnxy-Swainson fight, which Is getting topbilling across the countiy. You call it. Tax Bill Won’t Balance Our Federal Budget Sen. Paul Douglas, D411., speaks out and says that he is amazed that anyone who believes in a balanced Federal budget would oppose the Administration’s tax bili. Come now. Senator. Actually there are many people who oppose the bill for perfectly logical reasons. And not the least of these is that it would collect hundreds of million of dollars in taxes each year from people who don’t owe them. This would be done by deducting 20 per cent from interest and dividend payments. Those who don’t owe that much, or don’t owe anything, would have to pester Uncle Sam to get their mopey back. We realize full well that this would also catch a great number of people who today are not paying taxes on dividends and interest. Yet in fairness, we must understand it would work a hardship on some. We are not advoiratlag that anyone get by without paying hip just tax bill. At the same time ■ this plan that collects from thoee who owe right along with those who don’t does not seem exactly fair. ■ . ‘ ' The Senator who lament! so loudly about balancing the budget and how essentisd It is might take a look at his^ fellow spenders. If they so desired they could easily cut some of our Federal spending programs. Demand for Play By PETER EDSON WASHINGTON (NEA) — Secretary of Interior Stewart L. Udall was the big wheel of the two-day White House conference on conservation, held in the State Department. The big Idea was to whip up public support for the administration’s broad natural resources development programs. now stymied in Congress. ★ ★ ★ The late Gifford Plnchot ran one of these conferences for President Theodore Roosevelt back in 1908. The Uddll Job was supposed to top that, look farther ahead. ★ ★ ★ The one new item in the 1962 program that seems to have the best prospects in Congress Is recreation. Udall has just set up a new Bureau of Outdoor Recreation to coordinate all federal programs In this field, now scattered among 20 different agencies. Dr. Edward C. Crafts, former assistant chief In the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Forest Service haa recently been sworn In as bureau head. In essence, the Rockefeller commission found that while the population of the country will double by the year 2000, the need for recreation facilities will triple. The trouble is, the commission found,’ that most of the recreation areas are In the wrong places, too far away from the big centers of population. So an organized and orderly expansion of recreation facilities was recomhiended, with a Bureau of Outdoor Recreation to co-ordinate the effort. ★ ★ ★ Pending before Congress, therefore, is a bill which would authorize the BOR to allocate $50 million In matching grants to the states to liilab new recraation areas. National Park fiorvlce. Forest Service, Army Corps of Engineers, Bureau of Reclamation and other federal agencies whose publicly-owntd land! provldh rec-regtioh servlcei would than co-ordinate their new area planning through BOR. ★ ' ' 4r Acquisition of new recreation areas will be left to the state and federal agencies, with funds provided by Congress and the legislature. Bureau of Outdoor Recreation will thus be a small planning center- the certainty. There is some slight comfort in the fact that war tensions have eased in recent months and that economic troubles are prevalent, too, in the Soviet Union and the Communist-bloc countries. Altiumgh the European “com- with an idea or an emotion. I do not mean to imply that these poor souls are all nutty. They come by their morbid concern about blood pressure Innocently enough, just as others acquire mur- Disillusionihent now has set in as the complexity and true proportions of the whole problem are revealed. PERIOD or HESITATION For it is becoming apparent now that, when tariffs and quotas of the principal countriea of the world are revised, even slowly, there is inevitably a period of hesitation and readjustment in business planning. But even If the trade picture were not filled with uneerlainly, there an* other factors that cause sltH^k markets to look to the future with caution. One of these Is the value of the monetary unit. World history has shown that a government’s spending of more dollars than are taken In eveiy year results in a tendency to devalue the eurreney and to create more and more paper nion- vy. WWW America hasn't paid off any of her big war debt or shown the slightest tendency to do so. The talk is always about Increasing the public debt Itself. H<» now, as always happens when fiindamcntalH are neglmd- provokes you. Or any equivalent j.u Y» " i. j general exercise you can take im- Otl IRB JrflrClltS mediately while the spell or fit ^ is on. Our oducatlonal system can only For any adult who is overweight, j* h®®** ®r *■ »» we make regardless of blood pressure, I have “• ®*fi*ens with the right to . ... . a pamphlet, “How To Lose c^®®*®. *•>« blame must rest with murs, hy^reensltlve nervqs, low Weight,” avaUable free if you^ “■ “ ®"f •®>>ools are inadequate, basal metabolism vide stamped, self-addressM enve- We are always so liberal with our lope. Or if you want to know how of the way the School to reduce on four square meals a conducts our business, but day or how to make your everyday t^* time comes for us to diet corrective, protective and. If ^termine what can be done to necessary, reducing, send me 35 ■®*’®®**. can’t be cents and stamped, Mlf-add;jssedi ®®t"®red. envelope for Little Lesson No. 10, “Rules for Redudng." BRADY The United States cannot keep on |>onring ont her gold In “glve-always” t o the rest of the world and maintain a no IJ.8. VALUES DOWN Meuriwhile inside the United .States there is economic trouble. Two cost-saving areas that come to , ,,, , ® "Recreation Is a lot more significant nlnd arei #^Call a halt to eitlargiaff Fsdsral iMyroll. • Cot oot tha conventional dec- than just playing,’’ says Dr. Crafts.'"Oct-tlhg the right understanding of the use. of leisure time for constructive recroatlon ^ will benefit the American heople phys-' loally, cultuirail|^, jmprally. and the like — by accepting as a diagnosis such evafr sive observations when the doctor can’t .determine what is the matter. It would be better for medical I students, better for practicing physicians and better for patients if the gadget for measuring blood pressure were returned to the physiology laboratory. In Little Lesson No. 2, “CiVD’’ (about heart and artery troubles) —for a copy send me 35 cents and a stamped, self addressed envelope —1 devote two or three pages to high blood pressure and about all I say is never mind your blood pressure. or course. If you think you know iiiont than I do about such things you’ll go right on minding yours, Just as you do the wof-klng of your liver or the cholesterol In your diet. After all, the trick specialists and “clinic” racketeers have to llVe. Essential hypertension Is an eso-I teric type of high blood pressure *^ which occurs In persons who have nothing else the maiter, at least nothing the doctor cun discover. Since the doctor admits he or she can detect no heart, artery, kid-,ney, liver or other malady that might account lor the hypertension (high blood pressure), essential or Idiopathic hypertension makes duck soup for the nostrum manufacturers. GIVE PROMISE ^ Thm nostrums give promlM, cost enough to ai quick profit for the year or two doctors continue to prescribe them. Then they are succeeded by newer drugs that give even greatCB proniiss and cost even more, and tha doctors switch to the very latest wonder drug, leaving the druggist stuck with an unsaleable Iqt of yesterday’s favorite. A Pennsylvania physician, writing to the edlloir of a medical Journal, says: . .•“From a practical standpoint, In trenfing essential byptwicn-hloin, the best treatment to he recotmnended I* weight reduction . . .1 havo found that the blor F.MMr^n Mhy .7/. >%:' iJSsT'^PIHOCCMOr ffoll)^ood Using Oldfimers J in Its Swing Back fp Corfiedy CEUliEEGO ■FALO, N. Y. «» « Capt. » Tahii W. Wrls^ of tte BuOalo ® Department haa tw^ ams, "Junior Capt. Robert W. Wright . andJunkxrCaptain,JohnF.Wright, toth d.ik- h~v fE s-^50: GALA MOUDAY CELEBRATION iU>Nllfc ^ FIREWORKS PECK 'MITCHUmIbPEN HIT NO. 2 JOStPH E. LEVINE'presents the w w JiFlAir wmo & HIT NO. 3 FOR THE LAUGH OF A LIFETIME! --I— A Columbia Pictures Prauiilalion mmm- ------TO-MORROW --------- NEW HOtIDAY PROGRAM ACTUAWY rSUdED m SPACE! ★ ATOMIC ★ fuiL FIREWORKS DISPLAY COME EARLY - BRING THE KIDDIES FREE! PONTIAC’S FINEST PLAYGROUND ■r^^: y AF Bovie-Televtaloa Writer HOLLYWOOD - In its awl _ back to comedy, Hollywood is not •ending boys to do a man’s work. Four of the new releases have middleeged male stars idaykig what they were playing 25 years end doing it marveloualy league — and an acoompllahtd cast, especially veteran Grant. aMlMGlMto ISfl Cary Grant’s ne«r- "That Tbuch of' Miidc" harks back (q “The Awful Truth’’ (1937), “HoUday’ (1938) and a host other smooth! p e r f o r mances.! His style retainsj polish; thej material has been; ;ed to. keep] ig> wWi the times. "Mink” otters] a familiar theme: Will working girll Doris Day accept a post as tycoon' Grant’s mistress? Bet you can guess The producers s t alter the formula that has lade millions with. "Pillow Talk,” “Lover Cbme Back,” etc. It is all there: The stunning sets, gorgeous clothes, the glib talk. “That Touch of jMink” is also very funny. Thanks are largely due to some double.meaning tines—lifted right put of With “Road to HoAg Kong." }b Hope and Bing Citaby are badt on the same route that has taken them to Singapore (1940), Zawrfbar (1941), Morocco (1942), Utopia (1946), Rio (1947) and Bali (1953). It’s a pleasure to report that they’re still headed In the right dilution, r ' “Road pictures aren’t supposed to make any sense, and the latest well qualifies. Many of the misfitp en route, but there is enough merriment to make you glad the old pros are together again. Fred MscMurray’s credentials for screen comedy go back “The Gilded Lily” in 1935. His deft style remains t^diminished, evidenced, by the current " Voyage:’’ * This is Walt Disney’s moat adult film, and it is a visual and comedic delight. The storjf concerns an American family’s tour of fforope, and that provides aiApfo chance for scenery and to-rngntlc compilation. Another graduate of the comedies of the ’30s, James Stewart, is back at the old Stand after a sucoesskm of advmture stories, like MacMurray, Stewart goes on a family hoUd^ In "Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation.” Taken from the same vein as “Father of the BridcH” the film is an often hilarious telling of the familiar problem—the American male vs: his family and the world new Mlf^ACLE FALSE TEETH RELINER Storm Eyes Okinawa piMric, «ow» on and aea fa five mioutt Wear your platei and eat awthins ii mediately. Stops clickin|t. Eases aoi, eums. Pnvents food i^cUs from cet-don under your plate, lavsb. talk, aneei# without fear of cmiMirniBBmefit. DENTURITEatays firm yet pHane asts a year and more t Peek out easily p MANILA (AP)- Tropical storm < Iris headed for Okinawa today after dealing a .glancing blow to ' the northeast coastal areas of-Lu-zon, the Philippines’ island. Five Filipinos were reported to have perished in the storm. erAtyomdruirtSunt^^ denturite FAL.aKT8aTHRCI.INKR > IIOUIARDjONnfOrtS The white restaurant with the orange roof on U.S.-TO at Drayton Plains rieat Loon Lake is famous all over, this area for serving DEUCIOUS FOOD in our regular dinirt^ room or In the new, delightfully charming LAMPLI6HTER ROOM you will find a varic^ menu that offers not only tempting, delicious meals, but also the famous Howard Johnson's SENSIBLE PRICES Why don't you stop in real soon- for breakfast (from 7 A.M.), lunch, dinner or late evening snack at 3650 DIXIE HIGHWAY AT DRAYTON PLAINS Jounsoni SEE IT NOW! I II I / ^ r iKajb^RU i -notw I OutCh St>9ce!j “ISLANDS OF THE SEA’* I EiRMia|iriaaaewfaiaifatmi«ial STARTS TONIGHT THE SHOW OF SHOWS! Miracle Mile Drive-In 2103 S. Telegraph-FE 2-tOOO OPI^N i P.M, FREE! FREE! Rides for Kiddios Pontiac’s ^ Finest Kiddieland GOME EARLY SLUM UNIT-mUMr raOSMM COLOR 1 GIANT • ' KARTOON PARTY ; FIREWORKS nvut FIBST SH0WIII6 2 NEW HITS The Kings ol Klout playing themselves... with the luckiest kid ■ in the world! "It's a neiv tivist on the tw^ist!" 8in9'"g*Dancing andActlng in a Big New Role! [TECHNICOIOR- |‘i I HEY, MOM: I' S Bring th* kids lo our special I I "After School" Motinae< Sen I I a cofnplete' show anJ be | ' I home in titne for supper. g ' I.; I: J.ANG JEFFRIES; MARI BLANCHARD-GEDRGINE DARCY, T. i .Trite' 3P0yTIAC'mBS^lg!^TOEWY. . Provid^g Sttbgfattt^ for Coinrounism*$ Claims South Asians Impressed by Life in Moscoiv South\ Carolina’s irrigated land! The India a:^a has more than tripled within divided into om recent 10-year period. Ithey occupy f, ’ ;Y t*. (Sittor*$ Not§ TJw chief i an inelght into the appeal of AJf Qpiratfonii in the In- that the Rustian economy If^MtUieger eym pmUee I m^y ftape for many of the vtorlA’n poorer nations on a visit to Moscow.) Swprii fad Ueiaa Ufa M. Ill l-OdCt «-Qfaa NOW! BIG 4-UMIT SHOW! UNIT NO. 1 1%e greaiett liigh adventure ever filniedL UNIT NO. 2 AUDREY HEPBURN Hnnwofiiiieii Milifiiiioewse!!' UNIT NO. 3 • WALT DISNEY'S "MEN IN SPACE' UNIT NO. 4-TONieHT ONLY! I Early . . . Bring Your Coupon . ONE COMPLETE SHOWING! my HENBV S. BgArWHRB AfOSOOWie-Th a traveler com^ ing from the underdeveloped of south Asia, Moscow look The unpainted clapboard yc log-cabin-style farm houses tnay look to a westerner like something left city with visible proof that the Russians may have something when they talk about material ad- This is a sipiilHcant fact in the Sion. They are far bettpr than the * houses of India or the bamboo of East Pakistan, however. Even the run-down looking cold war struggle for the new*??®** “ ,!«»«» nations, hi their eyes it provides substance for the claims of It is a fact often overioNied by visitors coming here from the West. They compare Moscow and the Soviet Union generally with the Moscow have television antenna the roofs. South Asia cannot afford television yet and probably will not have it lor many years. it it It So Moscow looks to the traveler from south Asia—and also probably td the delegations brought here from Africa and other underdeveloped aiUas—like a thriving FALSE TEETH That Loeseg Ntsd Not Emborrost then RiSH drupped. tupptd or wnp-bled «t juet tbt wrong time Do not s!s,,rra.w.r!ir3;.K in Wisconsin eigibt main tribes 604,000 acres of ' are I Salt water bathes. Qiree and the peninstda of Brittany, DOUBLE HOLDEN TRADING STAMPS i i WEDNESDAY Thrifty PHARMACISTS Charge LESS for Filling ® I PRESCRIPTIONS f affluent sodeties of the West. In a comparison with the glittering goods in the shop windows of New Yortc or Fhuikifat, Houston w HehrinkL the Moscow shops come out poorly. In many other material Ways, visitors from the West feel that Russia makes a bad showing. Therefore, acoffiKHng to the Bonsai Resigns Post os Envoy to Morocco Roll Along With havlag the only ecoaonle system that weiks. To the visitor bom the impoverished nations of India and Pakistan, Nepal and Afghanistan, the impression here is one of surging development and a high standard of living. After years of living in the underdeveloped economy of so Asia, a traveler is impressed v certain material comforts of life in the Soviet Union. There may be less merchandise n display here than in Npw Delhi’s Connaught Place shopping center or on Karachi’s McL^ Road, but there is a more solid air of material well-being. Everyone Is well • Areai illdly even U siniple. TUs Is Women still sweep the streets in Moscow but there are a lot of mechanical street cleaners around too, something still many decades in India’s future. WASHINGTON »-The White House announced yesterday that Phillip W. Bonsai hips resigned as ambassadw to Morocco and will home for reassignment. Press Secretary Pierre falinger sald^lir^loar nof lmew what Bonsai’s next asjdgnbent wil be, nor who will succeed him. Bonsai has faen a bareer ambassador hin^ 1938. He has bi|eA in his present post for a little over year. He served earlier as ambassador to Colombia, Bolivia and Cuba. Only a BANK can give you all the advantages of BANK PROTECTION . , . Every dollar deposited is guarded day and night as itEuildr a^rongr^cure future . . . ALWAYS available when you want it .. . M I I! i h . V National 1 Bnnlr Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Mlfocl* Mil* C«nl*r NOLELVMBER arid when you buy the iifetime Scotts Zephyr together with Dawn and Haze Jockwn $1. REGILFEEDam uwNsumre BLOOMflEiO .. 2690 wo'oo" DRAYtQN PtAINS--4g^Dixit H' 6m highland 8D-, BARBEiPS UHN andPETSBPn 4W CLINTONVIU* RD <173-933 > 151 Oakland Av*. PONTIAC, FE 4-6234 nnutVFEEi tSBFPLY 3^56 Nortft fCfry ol Jt r BTOssi toa>AY. B6St fO Ask ^ Robert A. LanJiy; of Wigw Friends' ,-Later Time mf ttm matjr rm hMtitate ^ l iHfie yni eaa setOe an iame that came op recently whan my aiater inv^ a cour pie to toe evening at her house. HiiB couple is also Iriendi o( mine, altoom^ I haven’t seen them in a long tone. We live la a three-tomiiy house. 1 live on the second floor and my sister on the toltd. When ftos couple arrix’ed, I heard them outside my door and so I went out and greeted them. As they had never seen our apartment 1 asked them to come in. . 1 showed them around and we sat and talked for awhile, toen they left and went up to Our F;rst Lad/'f^ 7 on Her Staff 9y MAitQAKET BROWN Kiiidiy Mrs. Robert A. Landry, wife of Pmtiac’a mayor, is ^etly capable — both as the city’s new First Lady — and as the mother of seven Bvdy youngsters. Batoning with the eldest, 22-year-old Airman 2C. Donald, studying anesthesiology at Wurti^th Air Force Base, Oscoda, toe' Landrys'ste: PhilUppe, 30, empl(Qred with hia father who ia a acheduU^ deric at Uvwda’s Fisher Body Itoisioo; Dianne, 19. MacManus, John and Adams employe; Jeanne, 19; Fred (’’Please don’t caJEL me. Frederick”), 16; Maria, 12;,.,and David, 7— all A and B stu- dents at St Ftedetodc’a H|^ SdMol. JoUy and qulak^witted, as, are most large families, the Landry crew held a running repartee of family Jdiet and teasing banter during our Inter- rrcp ’em I bake pies and cakes.” quipped Fred! “When we tor homework, we’re aU over the place,” added Jeanne. Oiiding alfectlonately, their mother asked, “Did you ever Refreshingly modest at toe current interest in their way of life, the family at first was themselves or their ae- Sunday.” oemmented Fred. St. Vincent De Paul OathoUe Church, fi where Mra. Lan* dry iMKpa busy as a member of Daui^en of laab«^ the League of CatooUc Wonuai, St. Bartwra’a Guild and toe Altar Society. Mr. Lan^, incidentally, ia a member of the £lka Lodge and a Past Grand Knight for The next day my sister told me that I had no right to ask her guests into my apartment while toe sat and waited for them upstairs. She said that if I wanted them to see my apartment I should have invited them another time. Will you please tell me if I was wrong to do what I did? A: It was not very considerate of you to stop them and delay their arrival at your sister’s apartment. It would have been much better to have asked them to come in to .see your apartment after leaving your sister’s, or if that should be too late to come back some other day. ★ A ♦ Q: I am a widow and have been for a number of years but am now contemplating remarriage in the near future. I am the mother of a son and for this reason have continued, to wear my wedding ring on my left hand. Now that I am engaged to another man should I remove my wedding ring entirely or may I wear It until my remarriage? A: The generally accepted convention, for a woman contemplating a second marriage, is to wear her wedding ring on her right hand and discard it on the day of her marriage. Q: I would like to know the correct amount to tip a porter for carrying one’s bags to the train? A; ’The official rate for a porter to take luggage from the entrance of a railroad station to a train is 25 cents for each piece, and an additional tip is optional, but expected. ★ ★ ★ The new Emily Post Institute booklet entitled “Table Rules of liriporiahce” described how to eat spaghetti as well as other difficult foods. To obtain a to|y, send 10 cents in coin and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Emily Post Institute, care of The Pontiac Press. (wominent poiUion «t thu Uu-dry home on Center Street le • large gold plaque wwaanted to toe mayor tor outatanding ■ervlea to tot K. of a “Tho childran are quite diligent about homework,” said their mother, “and we all take turns with t h p hoostoold at Cdumbiu. In tasks.” Before her marriage, Lor-< mine worked in Pontiac at Ben Jerome Auto Sales and later tor tour years in the records department of the dty’s re- lief office on the corner of Rapid Street, News Items of Nearby , Locality By BUtH BAVNbiNtS mtUtlNGHAM ~ MTS. Wat demar A. P. John was hoeteea at toe annual meeting end eleetion of offioera ti St. Anne’s Guild of St. Janes Episcopal Church. ‘ Luncheon waa served In thlt lovely gardens around the John home in Tooting Lane with ^ members premiit (efficient “HUdy” had planned on »). St. Anne's is the guild toat^ made such a phenomenal success organizing Birmingham Town Hall Just a tew years ago and now publitoes Town Hail Of French extraction, Mrs. Landry — whose mein ia the epitome of calm —eald toe had her first taste of feeling like “()ueen tor a Day” during annual Mayor’s Bhtdiange Day last week when she and " . Landry were honored in **You would get that triple letter score,” 16-year•‘old Fred Landry appears to exclaim,as brother PhilUppe makes a > FE 64330 BARBARA HOBART SISTER M. PATRICE MICHAEL 4. BIALLAS DONNA NEEDLE Sister Mary Patrice, the former Sharon Elizabeth O'Connor, will receive her bachelor of science degree June 7 from Mercy College in Detroit. Daughter of the Robert E. O'Connors, she was graduated from the Dominican Academy in Oxford. Sister made her first profession in 1960 and entered the Dominican order in 1960. She also attended ,De Lima Junior Cdlege in Oxford. Completing the honors coarse in chemistry at the University of Notre Dame, Michael J. Biallas will receive a BS degree cum laude at graduation raremonies Sunday at Notre Dame, Ind. He will enter Northwestern University in September to work on his Ph; D. Donna Needle, daughter of Mrs. BVancls Needle of North Anderson Street and the late Dr. Needle will graduate from the College of St. Scholastics, DuUith, Minn., Sunday with a B.S. degree in nursing with a ni|nor in science. Donna will enter the Navy Nurse Corps after graduation. WHXIAM A. HERTEL William A. Hertel received his BA degree from Adrian College in Adrian Saturday. The son of Mr. and Mrs,. Hugo C. Hertel of North 'Perry Street, William plans to enter Garrett Biblical Institute in Evanston, 111., in September. Presently, he is the pastor of the Allen Methodist Church. Allen. Barbara Hobart, daughter of the Lawrence C. Hobarts of Suffieid Street, Birmingham, ;Will receive her B.A. Monday morning at'^Vellesley College’s $4th annual commencement in Wellesley. Mass. An art major, she contributed to the senior arts festival apd was a member of the production staff for junior show. Figure Club Sees Films oi Past Activities Fashion Your Figive Club; members and visitors enjoyed films of the club’s past activities and awarded Francis Hunt the trophy for most weight lost. Quite an amount of weight was lost during the week but one unnamed member gained seven and one-half pounds. Previous winner of the most-weight-lost trophy was Mrs. Thomas Lewis. Thursday the club will tour Oakland Cbunty Jail. At the ‘Jltne 7 business meeting pictures will be taken for the history book. Visitors and prospective members are welcome. The Leon Stickncys and daughter Cathy of North Francis Street attended a special honor and recognition tapping ceremony at Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilan-ti, for their daughter Linda who was elected to Adahl. Adahi recognizes women of superior academic achievement who have also been of, outstanding serv-j ice to the univer-] sity and their fellow-students. Noti mwe than 25 each I year may receive; this high honor. This year 15 were eiected to Ada Linda lives Jones Hall and i$| a music major. DINE OUT OFTEN ^Enjoy an old-fashioned ' COMPLETE DINNER ogorder AU-CARTE ’’ Serving Lunches, Dinners, Banquets Entertainment TiUMdity thru Saturday In the arUbnUh Room-« P.M. to 3 A.M. Fualutiug lima tadaifi Andy Mansfield, and many eUtort DORMAN’S Watorfortl, Mlch« CLOSED SUNDAYS OLD Mill TAVERN Katharine Kyes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger M. I^es, Bloom‘< field Hills, is among the 489 didates for the degree of bachelor of arts at Smith College, Northampton, Mass., Sunday commencement. “Hearing Aids” ALL IN IHE EAR or EIE GLASSES CLOSING OUT NEW 1961 MODELS coRiparabls to $flQ9S Don’t Miss This R $300 modal Graat Value! AIJDIOTONE of Pontlae 3U N. Perry St., Pontiac FB 6-76M - • to a PERMANENTS FE 6-MM LOUIS liar la WMt Httron->and Floor Ncit to Buokntr Flnaneo through FrI. Ni^ws of Area Students on Campus will be among 12 theological students, pastors and chaplains from throughout the United States to atj^nd the Summer School of Pastoral, Care At the University of Michban Medical Center, starting June 4. He Is a student at the Sea-bury-Western Theological Seminary, Evanston. LINOA She was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, national licholastio honorary society, was a first group scholar, and was on the deain’ list during her. four years s uated from the Indiana Academy, Cicero, Ind., on Sunday. Her parents, the Forrest A. Stockwells of Joslyn Road, attended the cere-inonles. Beverly is headed for Hinsdale, Dl., for nursing training at the Hinsdale Sanitarium. Charles and Richard Schlunt, sons of the Earl i^hlunts, Linda Court, Drayton Plains, will be graduated Sunday from the Em< manuel Missionary College, Berrien Springs. Richard is a mathematics majpr and Charles specialized in education. Their sister, the former Jean A brother. WlUlam Schlunt, 1956 graduate of La Sierra College, Arlington, Galifi, majored in theology and now has a pastorate at Saranac Lake, N. J. His young sons are David, Kevin and William Jr. Beverly J. Stockwell A 8 grad- Rebecca Margaret Obenauf, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Walter Obenauf, is a candidate for bachelor of arts degree in dance at Butler University’s 107th annual commencement exerdses to ' held June 10 at Indianapolis. Local youiut folks graduated at Addphian Academy Sunday. Sue J. Mason of South Johnsoif Avenue will leave July 1 for summer school where she will begfo nurses* training and aim for a bachelor of sbience degree at Emmanuel Missionary CoU^, Amlrews University, ^rrien Springs. Robert B. Marsa and Ann B. Marsa of Lake Orion will take pre-medical courses there, and Linda H. Perry will enroll in elementary education. Mary Sue Coleman, daughter of the Mallory Colemans of Menominee Road, is one of 16 Alma Col- a^visers for next year. They are selected on the basis of scholar-diip, health and matudty of outvie. Western Michigan University student Carolyn E. Mavis, daughter of -Mr. and Mrs. Elmer H. G, Mavis, Cass Lake, was among recently installed members of Alpha Lamina Delta, freshman women’s j Mr. and ^Arthur E. Price “ ‘^“1 of Barrington Road, Bloomfield, ^ » Township, attended the recent hon- ors conCtmaUon for the college of m arts and sciences. University of De- rrulT- nas been eiecten to Alpha Kappa troit. Their son William received awcI an academic award. He will plicate Jors for Attractive Hands If your home has more than one bathroom, be sure to keep a jar of l^nd cream In each so that you won’t forget to use it after you’ve washed^ your hands after a houaeiNdd of hw calorie FRENCH trITAUAN SALAD DRESSING Wlqr Go iw inakt this astonishing fret offer? The fattening part of a edlad dresslne is the oil and the only reason it’s used is to "Pi^y-back" the fiaoor, spread if around on the leaves. We use a no-calories substance that tastes and feels like oil, does the same thing, but lets the rich flavor come through more sharply! My TiUie Lewis dressings are wonderfully rich in flavor (uiey'Ve won gold medus for it) but .amazingly low in calories-as little as 1 a tablespoi^ Like Ae taste? We ki^ you ’ ■ ■ * e offerl wilL otherwise we wouldn’t dare mi^e this free o cwsw TWsr ^Paranounl Beaity School^ Enrollhianta AvaiJabla in Day or Evening Classes. Write, Phone or Phone Call In Parson for Free Pamphlet, ceive his bachelor of philosophy degree June 14. His major is history and his minor political science. Sigma. Membership in the AKS' honor society of the Association of Colleges and Seconda-y Schools of the Free Methodist Church, is. one j of the highest honors given bv any Free Methodist college ondarji school. She also served as vice-president of House of Representatives, the lagislati>'e branch of student ornment, and as a member of her i council for the past three yaara. Pontiac Junior Women Club Holds Election David H. Evans, Sylvan Lake, Pianists to Close Art Series The Junior Pontiac Women’s Club elected officers at the annual dinner meeting Monday at the Pontiac City Club in Hotel Waldron. Mrs. Frank A. Andenson pre- . (AdmUiemtnt) (Advtrtlaemcnt) BfUdigmg. Up Bab^ HINTS COaiCTEO lY MRS. DAN SERStR, MOTHER OS S ' Self-exprsiilon Mkei many forms in the toddler. I Imaginetion be-A gins to run rampant. Showing off becomes second nature. Oarodevil tactics dominate the daily scene. While wtf-assur-anea |r^ by leaps and bounds, there are still many, many times when your toddler will slip beck to the security of babyhood and need mother’s luidini hand to help Idffi over huidici. Now Nnicr Pood for lelf-fCedcrs. aerbor Meat Sticks make playing "pick up iiieki* a worth-white pleesure he-I eauiC they’re eo I nutritious. Mede frCim seleeted Armour Pork and ygeef for high qusTIty protelh. Nonfat dry milk Solids ire added for extra prOiein and other nutrients. Tasty? You bit. They’ri mildly seasoned--cxira tow in fat, Video views. Certainly TV can be a boon to a busy' mother as Well as an educaiibnal force for n toddler. But tV should not be n .aubitituta for real experiences and educational tralnini from By limitini t' ' rmake TV work to your ad.* ...end your child’l. go throu|h e itaie Of seylng “^o” to evarything. If It attraois attention at maaltime, saying “No” Cma. (Sofflttimas it’s evtn morn n than eatini.) It should be any othar play for important nutrients they provide. Gerber Cereals are rich in iron, also offer calcium, B-vitamins. Gerhet Baby Poods, J'remont. Michiian. Dual pianists Norman Gifford and Sally Dow will close the Michigan State University Oakland Community Arts Council series Monday evening 8:16 in foe Oakland Center Gold Room. • Miss Dow, a teacher at the Birmingham Conservatory has studied at Wayne Slate University, at the Paris Conservatory and attended Ecole de Norntale de Paris. She .also has studied in Vienna and t the Mozarteum in Salzburg. She has presented special certs of Argentine atonal music and made a study of. folk music to the Balearic Islands. Mr. Oiftord, a native of New York, Is n graduate of the Jull-Hard School of Music and of the University of Michigan. He has ory and composition In this c try and In England. He has had extensive orches-j tral and chamber music concert] piano, and has played harpsichoi with the Detroit Symphony Orches-I tra, He was n member of the Newark Symphony Orchestra and the Essex County Chamber Music Society, also of Newark. Mr. Gifford and Miss Dow gave their first duo piano concert in 1947. After hearing them play his I "Suite in D" the composer Arnell dedicated the work to them. , Tickets tor the concert may be, purchased at the door. There is no admission charge, for MSUO stu-denta or series ticket-holders. | sided as annual reports of outgoing offers were presented. Officers installed by Mrs, Charles' H. Crawford included Mrs. George H. Watters, president; Mrs. George F. Brinkman, first vice president; Mrs. Marjorie L. Morey, recording secretary; Mrs. Roy B. Wright, coiresponding secretary; Mrs. Carroll Porrltt, financial secretary; Mrs. Iva O’Dell, treasurer; Mrs. Crawford, parliamentarian; Mrs. Frank H. Williamson, auditor and Mrs. E. Milton Evans, historian. Ferris Institute students Gerald Kuedira of Oliver Street and David Flynn of Orchard Lake each received an intertraternlty council scholarship award at foe IFC spring banquet this month. Kucera received the senior award and Flynn the junior award for Delta Tau Epsiloii Fraternity. Kristine Puvogel, daughter of the John E. Puvogels, Orchard Lake, has been elected treasurer of sophomore class at Albion College. Miniature china hurricane lamps marked places for the members and associate member, Mrs. John Barrett, who Assisttni Wright. Boeial committee chairman, were Mrs. Russell C. Auten, Mrs. J. T. Engle, Mrs. Evans, Mrs, Russell French, Mrs. B. F. GHOin, Mrs. Edward Lauckner, lyiro. E- Vbme McCall. Mrs. George Morrow, Mrs. Vilas L. Nawcomb, Mrs. J. A. Rammes and Mrs, G. F. Roddewlg. REUPHOLSTERING . . . Styled to enhance the hidden beduty of your favorite furniture. Our quality workmanship odds yean of weor . • CUSTOM FURNITURE • CUSTOM reupholstery ONLY! WaH-to-Wall Carpeting CONTINUOUS IIVI All FILAMENT AI Lllil WITH RUBBER padding r few f ■ rT' ( r Jiat THE POMTiaC: PJtESS. TtJESDAYjMAY a. Ii>W . H'li ihi tfai^ mx0tm te fkm in» fin* ateun Wx«iotiv« tuilt in tihe Unitedi States, tiie *tiam Hinmb/’ was so smatl that gun bands were used for tubes bi Jie Placement Tests for Peace Corps Set hr June 9 of Citizens League A new round of Peace Corps placasnent tests will be given June »in iDetroit and Flint as part of a Teafling wiff begin at t:M a.ns. ttt Room «W of the Federal Build-lug in Detroit and Room til of Boulevard Drive, la FBnt. Appii-outs will be eonaMned tor piojecta in Africa, Aria and ladln A Rochester man has b^ riect-ed president of the Oakland Citl-sens League- * W. Laurance Shaffner, of glO Peach Tree Lane, was chosen by the league’s board of directors and will serve a one-yeab tenn. Other new otticera ore:.vifse pres-idwt - Wmiam H. MbGaog^y. 1» Guilford Road, GHtoottfield mils; vice president and bonorwy president - Henry S. Booth, 700 Cranbraok Road. BloomBeld HlUs; treasurM^FrederU* ,C Nadh, 130 Endicott, Road, moomfleld ISOs, and secretary -r- Nelson A.- Kibb. 131 Ebn Park Road,,. Plt^Ksant Ridge. Old age pensions were adopted by Germany in 1854. In order to qualifc^, applicants must be American citisens 18 years or older. Married couples without dependent children are eligible. •I\vo tests will be given, one for , teaching positions and the other for general service. Applicants who halve not submitted Peace Corps questwnatres wiU be tested if space is available at the examination center. Editor Produces Unliterary Gems Makes Wife's Jewelry in Back-Yard Workshop in Tallahassee TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPl) When Dorothy Johnson needs a new piece of jewelry, she calls up the editor of the local newspaper says “make it. Malcolm Johnson, her husband, then goes to his back-yard worieshop and fashions a ring, bracelet or pendant as required. AohnMn. exeenttv© editor of the Tallalumee Democrat, says It is the perfect hobby. It relaxes blip, and he does not have to Invent excuses at home to B it. He, stamps each piece with his first pame and Mrs. Johnson calls it her “Malcolm” jewelry. Though an avid collector of antique jew-elery, she always wears at least one “Malcolm” piece when she The Johnmns’'20-year-old daughter Donna dlso has a case of Dad’s originals. Her favorite is a bracelet hung with charms depicting the biig events in her life, including her*-first sip of champagne. rio future lump-sum payment worries when we finance your home. This tiny champagne goblet, about one-half inch high, was the hardest piece he ever did in terms time and patience, Johnson said. Johnson started as an amateur silversmith when his wife and daughter bought him some hand-jsome cuff links in Key West and jhe was unable to find shirt studs ito match. He made^ them. I “They were an awful mess.’ be said: But he was so intrigued Office Spoce Avqilobb in Our Building CapHol Savings & Loaa Assa. Emhtished mo 75 W. Huron St., Pontioc FE 4-0561 CUSTOMER PAIK1N6 111 M OF BUILDING that be signed up for a course in metals design nt nearby Florida State University. However, he said he really learned most of what he knows from, books and practice. Iliough his creations are lovely [enough to wear to an inaugural ball. Johnson says the hobby is I not expensive. He said |15 worth tools, some available at the I dime store, will put you in businMS and the materials are not costly. In addition to silver, Johnson also works in pewter. Mrs. Johnson’s prized possession is a set of pewter cocktail glasses he made for $2 each. He's now mi' ‘ ' sherry cups to maUth. Need a Room? Don’t Wait! BUY NOW AND SAVE ON LABOR AND MATERIALS BEFORE SUMMER! ONLY THE LOOK IS EXPENSIVE -I-' ea |j Add Living Space to Your Home for as little as 4 95 Wa.My No Oath Bowel 6YrOLloPay! • riMrburiif •riMEnimiM No Paymilt’III Aiptl Pricri It >*ln It WtiAh Trai WUIt CALL NOW FE 3-7833 actiHfKs Ooal dlNMt CONSTRUCTION CO. 92W.Huroii$L aft^ high school WHAT •NEXT? . marriage? ... a job? ... college? * business school? ^ ^ No matter what your final ambition in life startltag out with the right business training can bring you greater benefitg than ...... ____1..______,1.1., .. nor .Kn. JTMI thought possible. ’The training you receive at FBI is to the point. And mat i*.............. your social life any field. The counted as one SUMMER TERM BEGINS JUNE 11 Call, Write, or visit us today for complete Information abt PONTIAC BUSniNSTITUTE 18 W. Lawrence Street—FE 3-7028 FULLY AIR-CONDITIONED OtMmiM Indoor Comfort Bureau k'' P The Emblem of Quality and Satisfaction! Dedicated to Service for Homeowners! Guaranteed Heating Systems! CALL A MEMBER TODAY! HEIGHTS SUPPLY STANLEY GARWOOD HEATING WOLVERINE HEATING CO. B»ldwln Ave. BRYAN F. FRENCH SSl N. FaMMk M. ZINKA HEATING sm Mill Wall rehard Laka WM»* HAST HEATING AND COOLING ISS 8. Saciaaw ntlaa . FE K-M» SO light, so right, andoh,sorB/wshing! what Tije-biewing Beer flavor! Dver dir«ot firdi a lighter, a enioother, a filler beer flavor ♦.. and Stroh’s r« AmePica’a enly-.fir'a-brewad - P'rbrhfum quality, alwayi ,'.’.Voj>«jar prioeb evaryi(vher*al Jhi^ Stroh Bfowery Co., Detroit 26, Michigan j, BUY STROH’S BY THE CASE A the pontiag press A ■ •/'' Huron Volley Plans to Elect Officers Monday Awaits OK of Bylaws, Hopes to Attract New Business to Area MILFOIU) - Mmbera .of the Valley Area Industrial De* veiopmenr Corporation will meet June 4 to elect officers of the nonprofit organization. The 8 p.m. meeting, which is open to the public, will be held in the new quarters of the corporation above the D and C Store, 416 N. Main St. Tlw recently orgsiitzed corporation, formed after receiving siip^rt from the Milford cham-"tw, of Commerce, Is awaiting approval «t its . bylaws by the Securities Commission in The purpose of the organization is to. attract industry into the-100-square-mile area encompassed by the Huron Valley School District LIKE ROCHESTER The corporation is patterned after. the sucrassful Rochester Area DOyplopment Corporation, but lilw that organization, no slock witt^be issued. 3ibe new corporation will be stfipuned by membership fees and dues, neither of which ha\e been established. There already are 16 members of the corporation and another seven who , have committ|ed them-.s^lves, accordinjg to Clark Jeffers, spokesman of the group and’ acting Milford postmaster. While the board of directors of the corporation will probably be set at a maximum of 25 members, the organizaUon is open to participating membership, Jeffers explained. He said that two members of the corporation are from Pontiac. "This shows that the enthusiasm In the development of this area is high and If it continues there Is no reason why the program shouldn't be a success," added Jefferlt. * » "The corporation already has received several inquiries .from firms interested in relocating in the area.” ; The corporation is in the process of preparing a brochure for distribution to industrialists explaining the labor market and iltes available in the area. An 11-member steering committee did the groundwork in getting the corporation organized. The members include chairman Burt aark, manager of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland: Bert Fowler, realtor: Clay Stokes, insurance-real estate; William Knapp, president of the Redi-Mix Cement Co.; William McMachan, branch, manager of Detroit Edison Co.: and William Gharrity, publisher of the Milford Times. Others are Netter Thompson, manager of the D and C Store; Asa Smith, Highland businessman; O. M. Hanson, manufacturer; Ken Hayden, buildpr; and Jiffers. Explains Millage Request ROCHESTER — "Approval of school improvements in the past by Rochester voters, indicating they wanted .qdality ^peation, requitvs that they again make the choice between quality and bare minimum programs,” Hem^ Purdy, president of the Rochester Board of Education, said today. A 4.S mill increase in school taxes is on the ballqt in the June 11 election. Purdy made a mill-by-mill explanation of the need for increased income of the schools. On Roqhes-’ tax evaluation of $57,506,000, Lauds Merchants in Rochester lor Welcome Plan GAY NINETIES - Miss Prudence HopeweU, played by Nanci Rivard, averts her eyes as she meets the woman of the Paradise Cafe, played by Peggy Gamache (right) and Gloria Bruza, in a dress rehearsal for the Utica Community Players production about life in the Gay Nineties, "Love Rides the Rails, or Will the Mail Train Run Tonight?” The audience will be encouraged to hiss the villains and cheer the hero and heroine in the play, scheduled for 8:15 p.m. Friday and Saturday at the Utica High School auditorium. ROCHE.qTER - The Rochester Kiwanis Club gave recognition to local merchants who subscribe its welcome service at its regular dinner meeting last night. Acting as master of ceremonies in welcoming the group was Lloyd T. Christensen. A brief history of the service which has officially welcomed 2.600 newcomers to the area In Its nearly eight years of existence was given hy Herman Klix. Klix is chairman of the welcome service committee. Defend Doomed Trees nt Romeo Junior High Then Mrs. ports Sawyer told some of her experiences as welcome hostess. She stressed the feeling of friendship she and the subscribers try to impart to new residents of the Rochester community. She said she covers some 65 square miles, visiting both renters and homeowners giving gift certificates, presents and a copy of the village directory. By LEE WINBORN Area News Editor ROMEO — "School boprd, spare those trees! ” paraphrases the plea made by some 25 local residents at last night’s special board of education meeting here. that removal of the trees, some of them over 100 years old, would great loss to the village in appearance and charm.” Before the residents and board titioners and many others district, were asking board recolV sideration of a plan to remove some 13 beautiful trees” to make oom lor a circular drive in front of the junior high school. The petitioners said tpey felt the plan would devaluate their property and ruin the historic site of the One-tIme Romeo B r a n c h of the University of Michlgsth. ' (There is a boulder In front of the junior high bearing a tablet which commemorates the Romeo Academy, 1835-1843, the Rome Brahch of the University of Michigan, 1843-1851, and the Dickinson Institute, 1854-1867. It was erected by the Romeo Monday Club in "1) He said it was based on a survey by an engineering firm showing existing buildings and the proposed building connected by a ered passageway. EXTRA FEATURES When bids on the school district’s $650,000 building program were awarded April 26 after coming in $18,000 under the architect’s estimates, the entrance drive, walk and connecting canopy were included as extra features in the general contract. Additionally, the petition states Five-Story Motel Plann^ by Southtield Restauraiit two on vtllago land near the street, said the architect. There are some 46 trees, most of them hard maples or evergreens, in front i)f the school. Although sympathetic toward (he move to save the trees. Smith said other factors are "essential to the operation of the school.” SOUTHFIELD —Plans for a $700,000 five-story Howard Johnson Motor Lodge on Northwestern Highway were announced today. Construction g(„the. motel, adjacent to the H«?vrord Johnson res-taurant at 25050 Northwestern Highway is expected to i fall. Plans are also In preparation (or a cocktail lounge at the restaurant. A Class C liquor license for the restaurant was nppiswcd last night hy the City a>uncll. The motel will have 75 to 80 emits and a swimming pool. REtlECT REZONING In other action at lust night’s meeting. City Council turned down a request by Councilman Clarence A. Durbin (or rezoning of residential property on Evergitren Road between Saxton and Albany streets. Durbin said this morning that i will contest the decision in court. TRUDY A. Announcement is made of the engagement of Trudy Arlene llershlM'rger to Terry David Flier by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald R. Her^ibberger, of 2853 E. Ung Lake Road; Troy. The prospective' bridegroom Is (he sort of Mr. and Writ. Frederick N: Filer of Deartmrrt. Following their Juna 2J wedding (he couple will live in 'Midland. ' « , Representatives from several civic ussoclstlons protested any resoning of (he tilB-fool-wldc parcel at a public hearing on the Issue last night. Refusal of the request was recommended by the city's planning commission. Durbin asked that his property be rezoned to educatlonal-rosearch-! use to permit construction of a professional office building. Though the land is hounded on both sides by homes, Durbin maintained no further residential building would ever take place on Evergreen Ropd. Walled Lake Council to Air '62-63 Tax Rate WALLED LAKE - The City Council will meet al 8 p.m. -today to consider establishing the t rate for the-1962-63 fiscal year. A meeting had been schedulct] for the last night by City Man-Harold. Mlllspaugh but onti' coundimen. Mayor Louis James and Richard Watkins, attended. raith of Eberle M. Smith Asso-ateS, Inc., Detroit, elaborated I plans (or the drive. | idents wa.s the use of the junior high as a shuttle center tor bus transiMriation. They suggestet South School or the high school ak possible locations for the center because of additional space available at either place, Board member Raymond ,%!!-son, speaking personally, sidd he recognized that the trees/were over too years 0|d. But, h^ said, the board’s first responsibility Is to the children and their safety •—then to save the trees. Residcnl Paul W. Btuske, 345 Prospect St., asked that a solution be found to do justice to safety and to the basic bqkuty of the school property. Ho further requested that the interested citizens be given two or Ijiree weeks to come up with some alternatives. Construction of (he 30-f«ot-wtde blacktop drive would necessitate (he removal of nine or 10 trees compromise,” said board president Walter ISewell. He asked citizens to nam^ a committee to check the stakes' marking the path of the propose^ drive, the specifications, transportation problems and other faetprs. Norman Scheck, president of the Romeo Historical Society, was named chaintian, and June 21 was thfe ^ate for the citizens’ report to be made to the board. Tile site is relatively .small and the bus loading area a( the rear of the school is hazardous,” he pointed out. At present children get on and off buses on Chandler Street, a narrow public thoroughfare behind the school. Comftiencement Exercises Set Smith also Minted that putting In (he drive and creeling a canopy over (he doorway will make (he front entrance more umMI. added that the board wanted a drive of sufficient length to provide loading and unloading space for 20 buses. Also contested by petitioning its- Delay Decision on Dismissal of Drivedn^Suit ROCHESTER, - Circuit Court Judge Williaro J. Beer yesterday postponed until next Monday a decision on Village Atty. Arthur R. Cox’s motion to dismiss a suit agalifst construction of a Big Boy Drive-In restaucant in Rochester. Jddgc Beer’s temporary injunction of May 18 remains In eljeci until the decision is entered. The Injunction restrains the village from Issuing a bnUdlng pef-mit for die restaurant, planned iUreet across from HI. JPhIlip's Episcopal Church. SI, Bhlllp’s brought the suit against the village and the property owners, claiming the diivc-in would create a traffic hazard. Tlie church’d bill of complaint Iso charges that approval of the restaurant by the village biting board was improper and prejudiced. !, Auxiliary Bishop to Present Degrees at St. ( Mary's Saturday ORCHARD LAKE A .Solemn High l^ass will be offered at 7:30 a.m. iSalurduy in the Classics' Chapel of the Orchard Lake School.s to ojien the 73rd annual commencement exercises of St. Mary's College and High School. Rl. Rev. Msgr. Wallace J. Filipowicz, rector, will celebrate the liturgy.^ ^ Hie Most Rev. John A. Donovan, D.D., auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Detroit, will confer the bsoheior of ayts degrees and disfribnte (he preparatory diplomas at 2:60 p.m. In the campus Auditorium. The graduating classes include representatives from Michigan, Massachusetls, New York, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. The main address will be given by Rt. Rev. Msgr, Ladlslaus NowakowskI, pastor of St. Mai. Church In Middletown, Conn., and 1M2 "Fedelltas Medal” recipient. Rev. Anthony D. Iwuc of West Warwiok, B. L, will act ns chair-, man of the exercises. ^. The valedicloro will be deliv-entd by Charlej! E. Borowski. pres Ident of the cbllcge senior class, the oulutatory address will Iks given by AnUtony C. Halai. 1962 high school oratorical medalist. ■rho senior banquet will be held 5:30 p.m. Thursday in (he dining hall. ichool Board President mill brings in $51,570 based or a 90 per cent collection. Half-a-mili will pay for normal Increases In teacher salaries on the present salary schedule, he Districts surrounding Rochester have raised salaries this spring to pay teachers from $100 to $1,000 more than Rochester teachers are receiving at various salary le' One full mill would be required to meet competition in hiring teachers. Almpst two mills of extra taxation, $90,700 are needed to hire 14 new teachers, a principal and assistant principal to operate two junior high schools. West and Central, and expand the school proto care for increased rollment. Physical operation of two new buildings, the 14-room senior high annex and West Junior High School; will add $33,000 to costs of the district. Auxiliary services, including replacement of three school buses and addition of two more to ti*a are sot at $27,000, These two items wlU cost slightly more than one mill in additional taxes, Purdy said. An assortment of items from various categories of the school budget come to $22,250 and round out fraction millages, Purdy cited. These include $5,800 in salary increases tor eight principals, who do not receive automatic given to teachers, $5,000 increased allowance for substitute teachers, and $4,700 in exltra clerical allowance. The 4.5 mill levy would mean a $29.70 ^nnual tax increase home assessed at $3,000. A state equalization factor of 2.2 is applied to most property to the Rochester School district. VotersWillHear Board Hopefuls LAKE ORION — Three questions have been sent to candidates for the board of education in advance of a public "town hall” meeting to be held at 8 p.m. Thursday at the high school here. WILBER M. BRUOKEB Avondale Grads to Hear Former State Governor Commencement speaker at Avondale High School graduation ceremonies June 6 will be Wilber M. Brucker, former governor of Michi-Igan and secretary of the Army during the Ftoenhower Administration. Supt.. Leroy R. Walt announced today that Brucker will address the high school’s 105 graduates in ccro-monips at the school’s football stadium. Elected to (he goyernorshtp In 1931) at the age of' 36, Brucker eiHinsel tor the U.S. Department. of Defense before appointment in 1966 as secretary of the Army. Prior to his election as governor, he was the state’s attorney general after serving as prosecuting atto^ ney of Saginaw County R. Giant Graham, president of the Avondale Board of Education, will present diplomas to the graduates. School Post Candidates to Answer .3 Questions in Lake Orion The meeting, sponsored by the Lake Orion Parent-Teacher Association Council, is designed to give candidates an opportunity to present their platforms and voters a chance to meet the candidates. The three questions candidates will be prepared to answer are: 1. Why are you a candidate for the board of education? , 2. Are' there any changes In our school system tiint you feel should be made? .3. How do you feel about federal aid to education? Candidates also are expected to -discuss any other issues they decni important and a question and answer period will f( ' ntations. The four c 4-year terms 11 school elect Hugh Brady, s Middleton, Dale S . and William 1 Indionsble Drive. / Man Foun^ileacl in Car DETROIT to)--Mike Pokarski, 70, of Dettoit, was found dead in his car Monday night after it shot throdg'h tne rear wall Of his garage and Btrtick a neighbor's house. Polity said Pokarksl may have died/iif natural causes Jijist before (hamlshap. There are several ways that a man can pay the price of a new Cadillac car—-and find himself in poesession of an automobile of far less stature. Because there are many motorists currently considering the purchase of their next car, we would like to enumerate theae ways of going astray. 1. Assume that the purchase price of a new Cadillac car is higher than it actually is. (Thefe are eleven models of other makes that this year cost more than the lowest-priced Cadillac model.) 2. Pail to appreciate that the basic price of a new Cadillac itidudea many important things that are extra on other cars, (Including automatic transmission, power steering and power bmking.) 3. Neglect to find out from a Cadillac dealer what your present car is worth in tirade, (He is eapedaliy anxious this spring to welcome new owners.) *: And if you take one of these detoun, think of all the unique pleasures you could be missing. There is Cadillac’s stylipg—90 majestic that it attracts attention wherever it goes. Thieire is Cadillac’s comfoit-*'So wonderful that every journey becomeaui brief vacation. And there is Cadillac’s performanoe-rso great that it is without rival on the woridll highways. So we suggest that you play It oafs—-and get all the facts from your dealer sohn. ’ ■ You might be closer to s CtodillacH^an you think. VtSIT YOVR LOCAL AVTUORil^ED CADILLAC DEALER JEROME MOTOR SALES COMPANY ■' ' ' . ''a 276-280 S. SAGINAW STREET • PONTIAC,' MICHIGAN <• THR •■l|4tiRAt MOTtiHRS RXHIBIt At THf Itilia •iWtTLR wbfItD'B l•Am * APRIL HtoeOer. *1<| 1' all ' , (I ",! ,T tBB vatniKC wtE88. !^sdaV. May »• i 1 ^ CIO Squads City Winners Different Local Nines Bcuebali and Sofjball Victors t w«a a for CIO teams In city ball. Local 594 defeated Talbot Lumber fr-4 in baseball and local 653 took 300 Lounge by the same score National League aoftball. A eingle by FeBx Brm&s pat ............I tiiead to/stay alter a led the a twro8 Colavito .. Itoarka .... MaxvtU ... IS 3 3 .ato 0 3 maobwlte .. Bunaint ... R«tan nSSir*..;.:; Poytack ... i 8 If ! sS H Mosai Lary Jon«a ..... Caaala Oallafbtt . Totalf ... mhh DETROIT (B The Detroit Tigers are moving at a tremendous gait that has them right back in contention and niana^r Bob Schef-fing sums up the progress in pitching. "We’ve got pitching now and e’re winning," said Scheffing after Jim Buhning throttled the Baltimore Orioles 5-1 on three hits last light. "It’s that simple. “We’ve had four complete games In oiir last five nnd I can’t ask tor much more." The conquest of the Orides was the Tigers’ seventh victory in eight games. The surge has carried the Tigers to 2% games fi^m first place. And the Tigers have made Iheir clUhb without much hitting. Norm Cash’s slump has cut his average to .233 end the defending batting diampion has just two hits his last 23 at bat. Charlie Maxwell has yet to get a hit as Injured A1 Kallne’s replacemient. looKora BirrnsB -Cath lodted awful on our road said .Scheffing. “He was lunging and swinging at balls over his head. But he looked much better against the Orioles. “He was watching the ball better. That’s why be walked three times. If they ever start giving him pitches he can hlt^ he’ll start pulling his kverage up." Cash struck out in his only official bat while Maxwell went 0-for-4. ”1116 Tigers were restricted to six hlfs by four Baltimore pitchers. - only three of the hits were Rocky Colavito cracked a run- %Imperial. i f scoring double and a two-run homer and definitely seems to have licked his slump. Chic6 Fernandez drilled a two-run homer and already hto doublMl last year’s home run output with six. Colavito and Fernandes started Bunning to n S-0 lead off Milt Pappas by the fourth. And the Tiger right hander hadn’t even allowed a hit. Jerry Adair broke Bunning’s no-hit spell with two out in the fifth. Russ Snyder ruined his shutout with a leadoff homer in the ninth. A crowd of 24.KX) welcomed the Tigers home from their su< iccessful H roadtrip and watched Bumtin;^ ItCi i against his Baltimore belt- PRESS BOX After the game, manager Billy Hitchcock, who'd charged Bunning with cutting the baU with his buckle at Baitimme ’Thursday, said he noticed nothing wrong this lime. The talented Mils squad was te^ voted right from the beginning and coach Don Dennis’ par-miinded Barqna made the. experts look good. But victory didn’t come as easily as many MOphets antid- mCAVY FAVORKTES Championa by a whopping 16 strokes a year ago at Pontiac C.C. with a score oL4Q2, the Barons • expected to win by a similar margin this time while other observers figured they Would win by at least lO shots. Half a dozen shots would still be called comfortable, but Dennis was feeling a little uncomfortable after nine holes when he discovered his proteges wre nursing a shaky three-stroke edge. Seaholm, six-time Press chtm-pion, made an all-out bid to dethrone the HUIs and Northville. title contender, threatened for a spell to pull the greatest upset in tourney history. Northville, competing in the Press event for the second j was only three shots behind the Barons at the turn and Seaholm trailed the defending champs by seven. 'B-C KINOPINS-Northville proved to be the best of the Class B-C teams among the 20 in the tournament. In the back row (left to right) are coach A1 Jones, Bob Hallam, BUI Weidner and class medalist Tom Slattery, Dave Zielinski (left) and £d Beard are in front. The Mustangs were third behind the Barons and second place Seaholm in the overall standings. Qass A baseball league. The new team will start play next week. teseut Ponttec at tomorrow’s members of the "6M“ Fire Safety Brigade. Three memben are car In the pits. Emmanuel Temple downed Elmwood Methodist 12-1, and First Church of God tripped Pontiac RLD8 9-6 in Avondale Church Soft-ball League play yesterday. However, tiie Barons ^________ iadier over the long, haul and by one, each challenger faded in the stretch run. West captured medal honors for the meet as well as in the Class A divlsidh with his 37-37-74, which equaled par at P.C.C. Teammate Fred Ewald, medalist last year with a 78, was SS yesterday at the turn, but he soared to 4i on the back side and wound up with 78. Tom Fry carded 80, Steve Tsineff 82 and C^rl Becker 88 to round out the Bnron’a winning efterts. Seaholm, which totaled 404, was paced by Jim Cheney’s excellent 75. Fred Adams, Dan Mathewt and ’Tom Stevens each shot 81 tor the Maples and Jim Mensing posted 66. TWO MORE 78s Two other players In the 106-man field also fashlondd 75s to match Cheney. Ferndale, entry this year, received one 75 from Don Brooks and Royal Oak iKImball’s Pete McVittle 8Cored,thc [other. Although Bloomfield Hills walked away with a majority of the honors. Northville also had Its golfing day In the sun. Actually Hie real surprise of the tourney, Northvllle’s 488 lo- Prep Golfers Hear Bone at Awards Luncheon Plays 18 Holes, Dashes for Banquet Gene Bone was still a little out of breath, but he reached Pontiac Country Club in time to talk to the loo boys who played in ye 11th annual Pontiac Press Prep Invitational golf tournament. There was a mighty good rea-m for the Pontiac native being a mite winded. He had Just completed 18 holes In a pro-am best bull tourney at KnollWood and Was forced to race the clock to arrive at the Pontiac C. 0. dining room before The .trophy presentations were almost at an end when Gene appeared in the dining room doorway, then stroUeti to an empty ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ In Pro-Am Tournament at, Knollwood chair being reserved for him, at the head table. It was the first time in Press Invitational history that a pro had been sought to chat with Qakland County’s leading teen-age golfers and the 29-year-old Warwick Hills pro welcomed the opportunity. Himself a winner of an Oakland County prep tourney in his high school days at Pontiac Central before the Press meet was started. Bone praised the Press outing and lauded the many values of prep golf. Oilick, Bone Take Honors Warren Ortick, head pro at Tam victory in the Class I The Mustangs also claimed the B-C medal when Tom Slattery defeated St. Frederick’s Charlie Dean the firat extra hole of a sudden-death playoff after the two boys finished their regulation rounds with 76s. Slattery threc-puUed the green at No. 1 for a bogey six, but still the playoff when Dean sailed his second shot out of bounds, then took two blows to get out of the trap with a provisional It was the first playoff of any kind in this tournament since 1954 's Tim Baldwin beat > Bob Turher of Southfield i pal to win the Class A the Maples Were collecting the first of their lix Press triumphs. Five cither gtefers broke M, Phil 'Thlngstad of Pontiac Central shot 77, Waterford Township's Roger Tallman .carded 78, teammate Mike Secoy had 19 and so did Lapeer’s Bob Duckwall epd Bincc Rots of Dondero. . Limbsll Umb«il ... lm*r, wsinKt Uk* W*tt nioomn«M ina:, et. MIcDtrl \ bon aiiart4fWV.rk : ; i aisttotr, nner is notes, nui with Wttlles on the 19th “*• ‘“’"'and leth to pull even ^gain. O’Shanter, and Pontiac’s Gene Bone, who used to be his assist-won top honors plus a sizeable share of (he purse in Monday's State PGA-sponsored Pro-Am Best Ball goif tournament at Knollwood Country Club. Orllck Joined forces with 19-year-old Barry Solomon for a 81-S4-^, elx under par, to win at Wayne State University and head pro at Warwick HlHs, tired N-S8-7I to capture Individual Tam member, helped Orllck five different holes as they topped a giant field of 67 pros and 119 amateurs, nine more than competed at Plum Hollow two weeks ago. pre-law sophomore if ★ Invitational Coaches Stage Tense Tourney The faculty had a dramatic tournament of Its own Monday as special accompaniment to the 11th annual Pontiac Press Prep Invitational golf tournament at Pontiac Country Club. Twenty faculty members took part in the nine-hole event and lor first time since It was Inaugurated, tlte Preas awarded a prize to the ;low net winner at well as the low groaa victor. gt. MHohaal |Mf eoaeh West Was steady as the Rock of GIbraltojr, bagging 12 puni, ‘ bogies and three birdlea. He two dver par alter 14 holes, but NINE STRAIOHT PARS First place in the pro-am division netted Orllck S171.85 while Bone earned |11.25 as the No. pro. A total qf $1,653.50 was stake in the tourney. Bone paired nine consecutive holes on the back side, scrambling for a couple of them with good approaches and putts of and 15 feet. He double-bogied the 1st hole, but pulled even with par by bagging birdies at No. 7 and No. 9. Me scrambled beautifully to par the 35-yard 4th. Orllck, who carded 84 on the front nino boforo running out of gao coming hon|e to flnish with He cited the many vhrtnea to be glenaed from the game itself Most of his remarks centered around playing by the rules. "You’re only hurting yourself hen you don’t plky the game of golf according to the rules," Bone" said. "I found that out a long time ago and I hope you realize this too.” followed and Oene concludMl hla talk with a commercial by In-vlrtag everyone to attend the 8th annual Buick Open July 8-8 at his club on the Dixie Highway near Orpd Blanc. Bone didn’t know It until latey In the day. but he won a grind tdiai of $182.40 In the pro-am at KMitl-wood - $110.25 at the best nro with • par 71 and the remainder for a 3rd-place tie in the team dl- Tad Schmidt of Detroit Golf Club and partner Joe Tangney took 2nd place udth 66. Dick DeLano, assirtant pro at Stonyordft and a former Pontiac Northern golfer, teamed with Don Davis, a Pontiac Motor employe, tor a 67 to share 3rd position with four other Harding, veteran public links : star, won the playoff with « fottr on the 5lh hole oa Williton bogled. Wright was eliminated the 4ih hole and Powell bowed i on the 3rd. Using (he Calloway handicap system, Bloomfield Hills coach Don Dennis canted 32 to win tlhe division. Hording and Dennis e«oh received a gift certificate imm The Press. "You may not fully appreciate it ght now, but later on you will and you’ll sleep better u n.ight if now you played b> tesok," Bone commented. SHORT PUTTB Bloomfield Hills was disappointed over Its runnenip finish In the state Oats A meet Saturday at Saginaw C. C., but the Barane made up for lost time hr repeatbw “This tournament le the high-Hgnt of the gdlf aeason tor sold HlUa coach Don Dennii. “We alwhyi look forward to the PtMs 'Half AiImp'Golfer S«fs pin ,W«II Enough “t should play golf when I'lh .... riflng a bole-ln-onc in the early morning hours at Twin Ukes Golf Club. ShotwelU used a 6-lron to a« the leStylra 4th hole, it was Hit first hole-th-one and also the fitet this year ht Twin Lakes., lie ca«l-» «d4J.-':' witnesses were George and nold Landspurger an¥ Henitett Donalddon, all from Pontiac, 'I ' r TTO yOCTliO FBBSj MAY gl>, 10^ lanttgA, '/■ AUT0SPUN6S foclory Rebuilt MSmUBD FREE tSr-*14“ OrPiy Oiilr »10M , AMI iMiKn'» TMinwII HOLLEmUOK Aim PARTS 2T3 BtUwin Am.. PonHaa PHami 33S-40SI Strong Northville lived up to its rating as a title contender in the big Pontiac Paria A Recreation- Set to Stdrf ball T^mament teating star pitcher Jim Ray and Holly H in the seasm final yesterday. Patterson, « Wernot INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE mSURAllCE iSURANCE HtSURANCE 1I6URANCE INSURAHCE INSURANCE INSURANCE D9SURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE nSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE In the three^ay meet starting hern tomorrow afternoon, bowed In dMU last pre-tourney outings. Waterford blanked Kettering 4-0 to go ahead by 100 points race fbr Ible T^ss Ail-Sports Trophy. Bri,^ton nipped Bloomfield Hills 4-3 in 10 innings and Bir-Seaholm edged Roy Oak iiCimball 3-2 in an important Eastern Michigan League game. OPENS ON HOLIDAY All eight tournament entries will clash in the Memorial Day q^ning round. A pair of 1:30 p.m. oontests on ndjaeent field wiU open the nc-tlon, Pontiac Northern nnd South-fleld meet in one contest end Kettering vs. Northville In the other. At S:S0, Bloomfleld takes on Farmington Our Lndy of Sorrows. Pontiac Central plays Kimball at 7;30. Semifinals will be Thursday at 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. The Nfflrthville-Kettering and PCH-Kimball winners ^11. meet in the nightcap. '★ ★ ★ A game to decide 3rd place matching the semifinal losers is set for Friday at 5:30 p.m. The tiUe affair wUl follow at 7:30. All games will be played at Jaycee Park. Hie teams will be battling for n tenm trophy and Individual medals for all players on the championship squad. A most vaiunUe player nwird will also be presented at the end of piny. Northville is now 14-1, Kimball 10-4, Bloomfield 10-6 and Kettering 8-5. Sorrows finished 8-4, Central 7-6, Northern 6-6 and Southfield 54i. ★ ♦ j, ♦ NorthvUle took BloomMd Hills twice on the way to winning the Wayne<>akland' crown. PNH and ^thfield were Inter-Lakes foes as the only other teams to meet. The Huskies won 3-2 but the Jays gained revenge by 166. After trailing 60 and 4-2, North- Expect Fastest Indianapolis Race SALUTE TO GIRL SCOUTS! SMOKEY BEAR loves Girl Scouts! You will, too, if you think about their service to Conservatibn over the past half century. Yes, the Girl Scouts are celebrating their 50th Anoiversary and SMOKEY is proud to salute them for their continued help. So proud, in fact, that he has teamed up with . Susie Scout to make this year’s forest fire prevention campaign the most successful ever. Won’t you join Smokey and Susie Seoul? ^SMAM-^t-Only VOM cart MIBVBNT PORBST PIIIBSI Council and fbo N THE PONTIAC PRESS vUle pulled it out in the 6th yen- Tom Swiss were unearned. Dan(5th on two errors, a bunt single, terday. An eirer, hit batter. sao< Brown hurled three shutout innings a walk, two fielder’s choices and riflce, walk, wild jj^tch and two-run khigle by Joe Hay accounted ftw three runs. Hay had tuftted in one for the victory. Ray gave iqi a big douWe by Chuck Ahnan. four hits compared to seven for Each team had three hits. Victor Holly and fdnned 14. Bob Readier fanned nine as did earlier. Holly’s, runs pft starter Waterford got fts runs in the|chuck K«»>6q?son and Bob Bogert a 63 bitting advantage. A long home run in the 5th by winner Gee Schmidt proved to be the clincher for Seaholm. Kimball came back w,ith a pair in the same inning but left men on thereafter. Steve Wilson lost a four-httter. A bad-hop triple and dropped popup helped doom him. ★ ' A A Milford downed aarkston 3-2 as Ed Sparkman finished 5-1 by best-tog John Williams in a battle of sb^hitters. Clarkston tried to make it''close with two in the 6th. Duke Peterson had a double and single, Ron Hoggard .two singles for Milford. Gary Pearson had two singles and Mike Applegate a triple for the Wolves. WHEELS VP!—The front wheels jump off the clocked at 143 miles an hbur.’ Drag races will grottnd as Jim Fineran of Detroit pours Ihe fuel be held today and tomorrow on the Sibley Road to his dragster at the Detroit Dragway. He was strip east of Telegraph Road. NEWSPAPERS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID -WE PICK UPCHURCHES and SCHOOLS FE 2-0209 I POWWAC aCHAI MUmERS IRE 6UIMITEED FOR AS LONQ AS YOU OWN YOUR CAR Once a MIDAS Muffler is installed on your car, it Is the last muffler you will ever pay for as long as you own that car. That’s what the MIDAS guarantee means! If ever replacerndnt 1$ needed you will pay nothing for tlje muffler jtself, only a service charge. Only MIDAS offers this guarantee, good at all ' MIDAS shops wherever you drive from coast to (»ast... and at no extra cost! Call MIDAS and and your costly muffler problems once and for alt. 'til 6:30 Friday 'HI 7 Saturday 'HI 8 P.M. ____\ Miillkr* inililkd ifW you witdi /MUffLER] 435 s. $4«in«w St. 'shops; FE2ilOlO INDIANAPOUS (AP) the natiem’s family car i light bumper-to-bumper Memorial Day traffic, 33 skilled drivers blast off Wednesday in should be the fastest In(Uanapolii3 506mile auto race in history. A A A This 46th annual classic which will jam upwards of 250,000 into the sprawling Indianapo^ Motor Speedway includes the qualifier in the event’s histOQr, the fastest qualifying field ever, and four former champions. Death also may be crowded in the tiny cockpits of some luckless drivers, because 30 drivere have in this 200-lap grind to nowhere since Ray Harroun won the first Indianapolis 500 in 1911. WEAPIEB FACTOR The fabulous weather Wck of the 500 may prevail again, although it may be touch and go whether the race can beat predicted mid-afternoon summer storm. AAA ’The least sprinkle makes killer of the now completely asphalt strip, but only two races-4 in 1926 and 1956-were shbrtened by rain. The favorite is sophomore Par-nelli Jones, 28, of Torrance, Calif, who won the pole position with a qualifying record speed of 150.370 miles per hour In his 10-mile test dash. Jones, defending USAC sprint car champion, was first to break the one-minute Speedway barrier for the 2t4-milv loop. Jones will have to ride all the can muster to While rows which await the starting signal at 11 a.ih., (EST) includes defending champion A. J. Foyt of Houston, Tex., who last-year set the qurrent 500 record of 139.130 i.p.h. Foyt qualified with 149,074 m.p.h. Other champions in the 33-driver field which qualified at a rec(»d average pace of 147630, stave'^pff 1959 champion Rodger Ward /and another second-year starter, Bobby Marehman of Pottstown. Pa., who share the first row with him. Ward qualified at 149.371 and Hftprshman at 149.349. FOYT READY The second of the 11 three-car Hurren and Hustosky Stars of Mikes Fete The combined winning of.-athletic and scholastic awards by iors Jim Hurren and Dana Hustosky highlighted the annual St. Michael Sports and Academic banquet in the school hall last night. Hurren was named the outstanding boy, class saluatatorian. won awards in football, basketball and baseball and special medal for excellence in mathematics. After being honored for football and baseball, Hustosky was named valedictorian and also won a special academic medal. Shirley Robak was named outstanding girl. George Lavoie and John Hurren, sophomore athletes, and Ravena Rocheleau won National Latin Society awards. AH senior athletes were presented trophies and others letters and certificates. Tony VerdacI, whose Dearborn Divine Child grid team won Class C slate honors, and Duncan Sells, Dean of Students at MSUO, were the speakers. Former Michigan State ace am pro gridder Walt Kowalayk was among the guests. indude Jim Ralhmann of Melbourne, Fla., winner in I960, and Trey Ruttman of Dearborn, Mich., who won « a 22-year-old rookie in 1952. A A A The dean of the field is Paul Russo, 48, Indianapolis, who never finished better than fourth in 13 ^arts. Lineup for '50(y Race INDUNAPOIiIS (AP) — Tllf ttl________ SJ2P.il **”*‘'*’ **'• Port Jr.. HouaWn, ..... — H9.074; Clark (Shorty) fatnploman, S«at-“e. Porboa Special, f49.(W9. Third row-Jlm HoKlroath, -OX.; Prather Special, 149_______ ______ Oumey, Coata Meakr Califs Ihompaon Special, ]47.nH; Boxer JMcC^akey, %ic-aon. Am.. Special, U).7». rq«r--Bud ^leatia,_.I)ayjpn. matant Special, 147.793; Don Champaign, U.. Mld-Cmtetnent 147.312; Don Davla. Phoenix, ae Special, 147.7“ -rack Ohio. Branaon Special Ita. Trucking Special. 14B.W1: I, mdianapiolu. llorcroft Special gs“pMrssih 149,9(37; (%uek elw spcolal, 14.. nM sPSt^a. 93^^ Melbwme, Pla.. Mmo&e j^eiak 1«- NtaiGi row-jack Turner. Seattle. Bar* ^abl Special. 1M.49S; Bddle Sacha. ~ raburg, Pa., Dean Special. 149.431; oldamlth, st. Clair Worea. Mich., lan special; 1" Tenth row—J ..... row—Johnny Boyd. I kfotaKal Special. I47.ti47; J LenotA, CalK., Robblna ~-Troy Ruttman, — .......... special. 149.339; Jimmy Daywait, imdii apolla, Albany. N.Y., Speoua, 199.319. Special. 149.1 . Mich., Robl r-B« Cbmtie. on lleetiie S^Ndal, ^ combined. A traede meet remains between the schools, A walk, steal and Hoop stagto-by boriliig In mild after fho Banns went ahead S-0 in the 4th. Gary Garwood had a three-rnn triple, AYery’^Smooth; Whisky. Indeedi Every drop of whisky in Sir John is 10 years or niorerMJdmdedw^ ' ^the e^icest grain neutral spirits,. lUMtt Miiin. 80 mor. ooa ouis kutui snim ichduv oismuirGo. i.r. t TIRE PRICE MURDER! BRAND NEW TIRES 'or RTTRikDr. OPEN WEEK NIGHTS TIL 9:00 P.M. BJOxlSriiS $10.88 W.W. $12.88 NO RECAPPABLE TIRE NEEDED LIMIT 4 PER CUSTOMER No Moitov Down—20% to 75% Off first Urn 100 Uvsl Tim nkSIO’^ n.w.3l2ri Proporllonoioly lew Pricos on A/J Sites of; r . Firoitono - Goodrich - U. S. Rtryal - Fltk - Kelly . Corduroy - Empire • Dunlop « GHIotto • Ponnsylvwii».oto. open daily 8-O^LOSEP SUNDAY UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Avc. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Only (Buhl 3-2). Loula (Sadeokl ^^) at Plttaburgh (Me-"-»n ,9-l)» night nmea aeheduled WRDNBSDAV’S BCnEDUtB —... ,2, at (Tileago ‘ at MUwauke# (2) Wynn 3-HHs Indians dskAt* MONEV Clean uo left«over bills fasti Phone Beneficial tpdayl Left^er bills? Time-payment accounts? Heavy «x* penses? Clean them up with cash fnim Beneficial Then, make only one pajrment instead of several... have more cash left over each month... and probably save money, too! Remember, *Vou’re the bosi^. at BenefidaU Phone todayl loans 125 to $50 At 3:(B the doctor comes in, {daces his golf bag neixt to you, "Wen, weH,* into his inner office. A A - Tk At 3:30 he starts seeing Ids patients. One fay one they go in, spend a fast five minutes and blank in their paw. You fret more and more as toe times passes. The nuite exist. But finaUy, about 5:18 she calls your name. "Well, well,”, says the doctor when you imter. "What’s wrong with tw today?** 'Us had came In,’* you answer. "But us seem to have got well out there waiting. Now all us needs is/t bandage for our fingernails. Us has chewed them down to the knuckles.” / Knuckle-gnawing today is the JACOBY ON BRIDGE sigh of the medical tyro, toe impatient patient. It is an indiro-tion one hasn't learned to use constructively the tone spent waiting hi « doctor's office. Actually these long hours need not be empty or fruitless. One can spend thi^ plessant or rvoi profitably. / For examine: / * '* open a deck of cards. Start a pokm* gamevWith some of the. other patiento. You may win more than enouj^ to cover your visit to the doctor. Bring' atong. your hridesse. You can get more real) work done waiting tor the doctor than you could in your own noisy office. / Leani aometoing. A friend of mtoe while waiting to see his geography from February 1S02 through March 1886, which marked the latest issue of the National Geographic magazine stocked by Ms pli^cian. Catch up on your correspondence, There is no better time to write those long overdue letters to your congressman, your favorite old high schori teacher, pr your friendly neighborhood DON’T SmST The main thing is not to fret Or become annoyed. After all, a doctor realizes that tone and rest arc the greatest of sU medK dnes, and will in toemsdvea cure most ailments. The longer the doctor keeps you waiting the stronger and better you will feel — parilcu* lariy if you Just strbtcb out ^ao; parred Rock 30-31; ddckllnKs 30. NEW YORK m - Corporate bond prices declined at the opening today while the V. S. government list held firm. Over the counter dealers in Treasury securities quoted long issues up 2/32 and inter.iiediates mostly unchanged. There was little activity, one dealer said. Most investors were hesitant about buy- DETROrr, May 30 t 'juin'bo 33-37; extra II la-U. Browns—Orad* A larj ^KAOq May 30 (OPD-rroouoe: leady. 03 score 07; 03 s_______ ai; ni acore 54%; 01 score O^a. iSSRs: Uitsettlifd. WhltO laife extras 30; mixed large extras 30; mediums 31Va; standards 25'/a; dirties 33: checks 33. CHICAQO POULTRT CHICAOO. May 20 (API—Live poultry: Wholesale buying prices % lower to >/4 higher: roasters 20-22; special ted White Rock zryers IS'/b-lO; Plymouth - ers 10-20; White Rock fryers hens to. ABC 1 ACP I.._ Admiral CHICACO BUTTER AND EOOS cmCAQO. May 29 (APl-Ohlcago Met cantlle Exchange—Butter steady; whole aaie buying prices unchanged: 03 acor a7C7; 03 A 57; 00 B 54%; 00 C S3Va cars 00 B S5'/a; 10 C S4y«. Egos weak; wbbltsale buying prices Va to 1 lower: 70 per cent or better grade A whites 2514; mixed 25V»; medlumr atsndsrds 34'/i; dirties 33: checks 2 Livestock MACHINE 5—DAY !t head high choice il40 ______ _____; most choice steers 25-20: mixed loads high good and low choice ateera 24-25; good grade ateers 23.50-24; mixed loads standard" and good steers 31.75-22.26; standard steers 20.00-21,60; short load average choice 026 lb. helfera. 34.50; utility coWs 16-17; oanners and cutters 13.60-10. Note—This office and the Detroit livestock market Will be closed Wednesday. MftV 30. lioRS 350. Barrows, gilts and lows 35c lower; straight number 1 lots absent: number 1 and 2 100430 lb. 16-10.25; 3 and 3 100-330 lb. 15,5|-ie: 2 and 3 330-360 Ib., 14.75-15.50: number 3 260-300 lb. 14-14.60: number 1, 2 and 3 300-400 lb. sows 13.75-13.50; 2 and 3 400-000 lb. sows 13-12.60; boars-11.50-13. Vealers 100. Steady, prime 30-30: good lower; lew loads food and qht old crop lambS’^17.M-18; small :S2.±V‘’WS5«”“4;««: ly 35 lower; most decline on weighl i'SJi’S.S'W'/ 10-235 220 lb. ________ 10.36 and at jbbbv jh> nr»u »u.. around 210 lbs. 10.50; mixed 1-3^ — ... lbs. 15.50-ld.00; 320-i40 15 «0-15,60; 140-300 lbs. 14.6O-16.0O; 2-3 260-200 ibs. I4.m-|4.w: mixed 1-3 376-000 lb. sows Caitlie 7,'500; calves 100; slaughter steers grading average choice and belter active, strong to SO higher; steers low choice and MlDw fairly active. U> higher; heifers active, fully 25 higher; cows steady to 26 lower, decline on emt-and cutters: bulls fully steady; weak; several loads high choice y prime 1,200-1,300 Ib. slaughter steers xw.OO-30.20: nigh choice and . mixed choice and prime 1,100-1,376 lb. steer* 20.76-27.76: bulk choice 060-1.360 lbs. 25 00-26.76: good and low choice 33.50-26;25: few, Stlllty 4nd standard 10 00-22.00; several loads 1,000-1.060 lb. heifers high choice with s prime end 26.26; bulk choice heifers 24.76-35.76. few 26.00: moat good 22.00-24.25; load standard 1.000 lb. Holstefti heifers 22.00; utility and commercial cows 16.60-17.50: cannera and cutters 13.00*10.25; utility mertcal bulls 10.50-21.“ mertcal bulls lo.oo-2i.oo; is and good vealers 30.00-37.00. p 200; hardly enougti market gj^jj ilaughter Iambi "iT sUujthter C js K.-fia' ja» •laughter ewes 4.50-5.50. Market Crash Beats Monday's M.ajor securities and commodities exchangea will be closed- tomorrow in observance of the Me-mmrial Dar b^idajr. NEW YOMC (AP) ~ It looked like another *‘Black Tuesday" on the New Ywic Stock Exchange today as the stock market dived early this afternoon even more sharply than in yesterday’s decline, the worst since Oct. 28, 1929. Volume was heavier and losses were greater than at the similar period in yesterday’s huge sell-off. The ticker tape lagg^ 41 minutes behind transactions at mid-aesMOn when yesterday’s lag was "5 minutes. It was a parallel performance with the worst of the 1929 crash except that on a percentage basis it was much milder, since the ’29 decline started from a much lower point in the over-all average and die amount of listed stock was only about one-seventh what it is today. HISTORY MAKER Volume .for the first two hours Bonds Down at Opening ing anything in view of the continued slide of stock prices. ♦ ★ ★ Once again rails were the hardest hit section in corporate trading on the New York Stock Exchange. A handful of„ rail issues gave up a point or more at the start. Industrials and utilities also were decidedly lower. was a mighty 3.75 million shares compared with 1.89 million lor yesterday’s first two hours. At this rate the day’s volume would soar well over ten million nd be another historymaking session. Blue chips were clobbered to losses of 3 or 4. points at the start but began to meet support in the afternoon. "When will we reach bottom?’ was the big question. General Motors toppled 2% to 46 n a tremendous trade of 62,000 shares. Prices also toppled on the American Stock Exchange where volume for the first two hours soared to 2.&,million shares—close to yesterday’s total for the whole day, 2.98 million. Losses of 2 or 3 points were shown by Chromalloy, Hazel Bishop, Anken Chemical, Prentice-Hall, Syntex, Lafayette Radio and Aerojet-General. American Stock Exch. Igures after decimals are In eighths) cal El fw . Cohu Elec .. g?M*t ;; Dynam Am ,.■ *.* novo Indus Oen Devel 7,2 Psc Pet Lti imp Tb ca .. ».0, Page Her . 1S.I Mld-W Ab .... 4 Mohawk Alrl . 1S.3 Musk P Ring The New York Stock Exchange N4 •‘“r alfeg Liid 2 Alleg Pw 1.1 Allied Ch 1. ■ Alcoa 1____ Am Alrlln c 2,50 38 so 47'4 51 - ... 15 —IH 12 32% 32'A 32V4--1'' 41 40'4 39>4 39%+ v. 121 39 37% S»%- 14 - 12 50>4 55% 50‘4—r' Chal .50* so 15% 15% 15%— 88 17% 16% 16%- % ______________ 36 12% 12% 12%—1V« 1 Brk Sh 2.40# 22 4214 42 42% . .. ... . 1 Can 2 09 38% 38% 38%-I 1“ ; aJ?Sw‘ *S4 » T 1'’= ^ ^ I M&FW .90 *325 H% 20% 21'A + 1% {Di SS > Met Cl 1.40 86 27 26% 2814-2% S"; 1 Mot .00b 111 12% 11% 12 -1% 1 NOa* 1.20 63 34% 34'A 1 Optical 2b 5 51% 50% I Seating 1.60 10 29% 1 Smelt 2,40 ..... ^28 u% 50V4 »%-J% 276 32% 31% » 112 45% 45% 4S%— % 34 11% 10% 10'/»-l% n 18% 18 18 — t 11% 10% 10% + ^ prj^O 2.5 ___ Refln 2.40 itlas Cp 42 45% 44% 4S%—1 146 2% 2% 2%- S iS J,V R= )! high ca: hport C OOe 142 1% 1% 1%- % 32 12% 1^ 12%- I 106 26% 25% 25%-t2 17 34% 34 34 -2 276 34" 32% 33%-3 37 28% 26 -28 —2 16 ^6% J6% 36 22% 22 ■“ ■ —-L— 66 10% 10' t 05 13% 13'. .. . . 17 1614 I6V4 16'/4~ % yai mo 176 1% IVi l%— " nan l.SOe 59 25% 25 25%-^ Olass 2.40 33 46% 45% 45%-l , McNOO. sot 29 10% 10% 10%— % 09 0% 7% 7%-l Litton Ind 3.501 119 99 08% 99 -4< Loew’s Thea 57 26% 24}4 24%-2=. Lone S Cem 1 36 19% lt% lOTi-l'A ... 8 Gas 1 99 20% ‘ IS 811 .OOe 17 39 —M— Madison Pd 3.6fle 67 19% 19% 19%- % Magma Cop 2.071 2 50% 56% 50% Marin/ Mid lb 30 24% 23V4 23%- Marqur...... “ ............. MayD 29 14% 14% 14%~ % 90 04% 03 M. +3 30 22 21% 21%-1 8 46 44% 44V4-S% 32 32 32 32 —1% 100 31% 30% 30%-!% 00 32 22 “ 94 30% 20y4 .. 30 26% 25% 26%+ % .4 44U. 33 ... 20% I0%-I% »e‘r‘"M‘u. - 3 ChesftOh 4 25 46% 45% 4 ChlPneu T 1.20a 25 M 22% 2 Chrysler 1 125 42% 40% 4 •-7 ww oiiiv ilsa«4 Coht M 10 50 76 73'A 74 -4Va 20a 54 34% 32% 33%-l% 30 21% 20% 2I%—P' 70 9% 8% 9 -1. 60 32% 32 32 - ,10 126 22% 22% 22‘s-ll 56 16% 15% 15'/4- 1 15 41% 41% 41%-1 65 37% 35 35 -2’ 77 67 66'A 66'/ii— ’ 110 21% 21 21 - ■ 97 lO'A 9% 9%— ' Rl|h Low Loot Cbg. Gulf Oil 1.40 106 34% 34 34 . “ ■' ........ 19 29'A »% 37%-3 —H—— —......... 19 48% 45% 40%- % Hamm Pap 1.20 2 20% 29% 29%— % Haveg Ind .35g 32 16% 16% 16%-1% Hero Pdr .ISh 27 35 30'/a 35 ' Heyden Npt .80 18 13% 13 Holland ,Furn 17 7% 7‘, . .... •“ “• “% 48 Hooker Ch 1 Househ Fin I 30 Houst LAP 1.00 Cem .80 t 14 22% 2 C^’cSri Tk 1 , 25 38% 30% 3?%-*% 02 46% 44% 44V«-3% 10 36% 364ii 36%- " 132 60% 59% 59%-27 9% 9% 9%- - 125 27% 27% 2714— % Johns Man 2 I 1SV« 15V4:*^2»4 Kennecotl 2.50e 37 w% i6%- 17 44% 44 44%- . 12 37% 36% 37%+ 1% 12 72% 71 71'4-2% 36 25% 28 V4 25% + % 18 16'4 16 -16 - ■ SO 92% io 90 - 10 2% 2% 2’/#.. , -N— 21 35 34 35 - St 10% 10 10 — - _ 49 79% 78% 79%—3% Nat Dairy 2 IS 53% 82% Nat Distill 1 20 80 23 22V, - Oyps 2h 35 40% 40% .... Lead 1.30e 14 72 00<4 Nat Steel 1.60 SO 32% 32 „ . “ ' Eng El 1.12 70 19% 19% 19%-!% . . Central 90 12% 12% I2%-" NY ChASL 2 .17 29% 29 29 -1 NIn M Pw 1.00 S3 37V, 37 Norf I . — 4 88% 89''4-.,, Av 2 140 40'/a 48'4 OOV,—3% 42 42% 107 44 ey Bow .00 20 39% PlateO 2,20b 17 50 . ..jrold .20 xd 95 123. 117 ..... , luif’*8vHA*o’2.20 uJ 50% 49% 4ofc % “ •^•‘ok Ind .50f 14 _0% J% % 02 471% 46% 47 - % im Mti 2*'*' 25V4^li I^y%d .761 37i 18% 14< --*6«el 1,80 128 M% 25 lar* 0 la I6 29a 281 a «=! littY I il" I g i \ ■ ■■ ' ' ( (kda.> JUgh Law Last 1 —T—' ' ' / Prod .80 74 38% 3S'/a ;»% Bui 3Se 119 MV, 14 /M - -----ns 20e 92 71% 70% 70%—4'/s Tex PCAO 120 90 36 33% S5%—3 Tex PLTr .30e 4 14% MV* 14%— 1 Textron 1.25 80 23"i/ 22% 22»4— " Tldewat Oil 27 18% 18% 18%— 4 Tlmk R B 2.40 6 «V, 46 46 ... Tran W Air 2S /7% 7% 7%-l» Trl Cont 32e 50/36% ,14% 34V,—21 Twent Cen .751 rat »V, 22'/, 22'/a—l'.J Zu— 76 18% 15% 16'/,—IV, 43 38% 3i'vl*% 36 47 47 47 — % 46 28 27% 27%- % 38J 26% 24% 25'%-2% 49 40% 30Va 39Va- % 65 7% 7'/s 7'/a- •/, 60 21% 21 21 — % 40 32% 31Va 32 — V, 20 18% 18 IS . 6 S7'<. 26 26 -1% 24% 24'/a— '4 Underwd Un Carbide 5 68 -----!C 1.80/ ... CalTzb Un Pac 1 JOa UottAIrLth .sob Unit Altc 2 " Ited Cp .85e It Fruit .59 ... Ois Cp 1.60 Umt MAM 1 I 81% 80>4 270 50>>4 49'4 4 8%- Match .lOe 228 13% 13% 1.1*4-11', Upjohn .80 24^36' 35'/a 36' Van A1 StI ,1.40 7 24 22'4 22'/a—2 Vanad Cp .60 13 15'4 l5'/a 16'/a— • Vartan As 98 26V, 25% 26’/a—2 Va Caro Ch 4 33% 33* 33%~r ---- 1 40 30 49V, 48% 46'4+l —w— Walworth 24 5'/t 5''a 5'4— '. Warn B Pic .50 27 U ll'/a 11%~I% Wn Md .23e 12 16'4 16V, 16%-1% Wn Un Tel 1.40 118 27'4 27 27 -2' WestgA Bk 1.40 22 23'4 23% 23%-l' “■istg El 1.20 • 304 20 25 27 —2 llrl Cp 1.40 20 27% 27 27 , , llte Mot 2 34 39 36 37'4—1, ...IsonACo 1.60 9 40Va 40 40 —1<% Winn Dlx .04 49 24+« 23% " Woolworth 2.50 60 65 63 .. . Worthington 2.50 12 41% 40'/, 40%—2% YaleATow .50r 17 20Va 19% lad .80a 254 48% 46 46 —4V PlseNY Stox and Amex stox tootnotei Sales figures are unofficial. - of dividends In the f )regolni r extras, b- .lan'ial •. d—Declared or ,— '■ d. e-Deutsied f—Paveble In s—Sales In full, old Called. xd-Ex dividend distribution. xr-Ex rights, x............. warrants, ww-With warrants. wd-When distributed, wl—When........................ X " vj—In bankruptcy or receivership being reorganised under the Bankruptcy Act, or aecurltlea a------- *"■ —*•-------- Grain Prices Down in First Dealings CHICAGO Wl — Grain futures price.s moved sharply downward today in initial transactions on the board of trade with December and March corn slumping four cents a flosses .elsewhere well over a cent. Brokers said the pressure could have been linked with the steep slide in the securities market since there appeared to be a rather large accumulation of selling orders through commission houses. However, the peak of the flurry showed signs of having passed quickly. Prices leveled off within several mihutes and nearly all contracts recovered slightly from their early lows. Grain Prices CRICAOO ORAIN OHHJAao. May at (AY) — 'Tbi.t London Market, lakes Nosedive Suffers Steepest Fall Since Munich Crisis in September 1938 M Savings and Pensions Could Bolster Market By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Hovering over the stock market and the economy in general is a great power. This is the financial colossus which Americans have-built up as individuals and groups — the pension and other fundii and the bank holdings of individual savers. Both pension fund assets and the total savings at banks and savings and loan associations have tqken huge jumps in recent months. Tow much the recent stock market break may have chip^ away at the pension assets^ "how much it may have induced further savings, remains to be seen. ★ ★ ★ Record sums collectively held in the name of individuals are invested in American business. The individual savings accounts them- LONDON (AP) — The London Stock Exchange suffered its steepest fall today since the Munich crisis of September 1938. In the wake of Monday’s dramatic decline on Wall Street similar selloffs were recorded in Paris, Zurich and Frankfurt in Europe, and in Japan. ★ ★ ★ Everywhere the. story was the ime. Low-yield growth stocks and favorites of American investors took the heaviest hammering. The decline in Paris averaged 3 to 4 per cent, with some of the hardest hit shares going down as much as 7 or 8 per cent. In London a midday rally failed to last and the,decline continu^. Such international favorites/ as Unilever and Phillips Lamps were 10 shillings—$1.40-or so /lower. MILipNS WIPED OFF Dollar stocks were down 9^ points with Ford /at 14$. Labor troubles helped depress Ford and other automobile companies. Oils came qnder pressure. Gold shares^ which were strong last week, went down today alon|; with tin and copper issues. H^reds of millions of pounds stepng were wiped off (he value (^shares in London. Prices gyrated widly on the major exchanges of Switzerland and West GeTRiany. ★ ★ ★ The Zurich Slock Exchange had. its biggest drop since the 1929 crash but there was a substantial recovery at midday. Union Bank ot Switzerijind' dropped from 4,000 francs—51,019—per share to 2,900 francs—$672 — but recovered to 3,500-5811. At Frankfurt, Germany stock prices, which have had a steady decline since the start year, dropped sHarply. ★ ' Rr Volkswagen, which dropped Monday to anew low of 552 was bid between 505 and 510. Tokyo’s Stock Exchange closed with a moderate but broad decline after ap early selling rush. The Dow Jones average of 225 selected stocks fell 17.76 yen—4.9 certts— from Monday to 1,375.69 > yen-53.82. ■ “: ^ I- ' AP AVERAGE Of 60 stocks! :] ill m t 5 Ie m 7 r-r j— Lw 11 1 JL £ i £ H D s± fSlSi ADr.Misyl Juat mf U' may n PAItr ; 1 ' m Bosiness Notes A former Birmingham resident, Lloyd J. Dawson, has been appointed administrative coordinator at the Kansas City regional sales office of the Ford Motor Co. Tractor and Implement Operations (U.S.) * R ★ ' A used equipment sales repre- sentative prior to his new appointment, Dawson was a test engineer with Dearborn Motors when that organization merged with Ford in 195.3. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Dawson of 100 Oak Hill Ave. California Man Gains Control of Holland Firm HOLLAND «v-HoHand Furnace Co. has changed hands in a transaction which places Milton J. Stevens of Beverly Hills, Calif., in control. Stevens is chairman of the board of Republlc.«Transcon industries, Inc., which proclaims itself the world’s largest pro-diieer of hot water heaters and originator of glass-lined water heaters. It Is listed on the American Slock Exchange. Stevens named as Holland Furnace president William l.«nnon, who also is president of Republic Transcon. Lennon succeeds P. T. Cheff who had been associated with the furnace firm some 30 years. R, ★ R The transaction was completed yesterday At the furnace firm’ Holland heAdquarters. Stocks of Local Interest Figure* after deelmSl point* are eighth* I ..... Supermarket* ........ Arkanta* Loulalana Osa Co. “ ■ l.-Mont. Cheip. Co, Fid .Mogul-1 Hsrvejr Aluminum . Frophet Co .................15 II RoekwtH Standard ...........30 3( “dtodo Editon Co.........^..30.3 21 OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Hi* tolloving uuotstloua dq t ' ...... “—-"-nt Mtual trr- guide t If* of IHREOULAB Young SAW .35 INCRKASEO REOliLAR Olrard Tr ......00 Q MoDonn Aire ....25 « fetrolan* Sve ..12 « SS'S a: Vernor* Oinger Chemical mutual AP Phelofsx , ' MARKET TUMBLES - Shares on the New York Stock Exchange took their most severe tumble yesterday since Oct. 28, 1929. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks toppled 13.40 to 211.20, also the worst loss since Oct. 28, 1929. The industrials were off 17.50, rails 5.80 and Utilities 9.50, all to new lows for the year. • Wall Street Rushing but Not Too Excited By ARDEN CHAMBUSS , AP Business News Writer NEW YORK - If something portentous was happening to tin stock market today, you couldn’ tell it by looking around the Wall Street financial district. R R R In the streets outside the Now York Stock Exchange a news vendor said. “It looks like everyone’s taking it in stride, better than in 1929." In the exchange’s crowded visitors’ gallery, Mrs. Roberta Oabezza of Staten Island said, ^Tt happened before that the market went down, and the eountiy came out of It.” And on the sprawling floor below only the light^ sign telling of lag in the ticker tape and a certain urgency in the steps of the 2,300 people milling in the floor suggested anything unusual. News vendor Joseph Miskanic of Manhattan said the people doing business with him have not been gloomy or otherwise showing outward concern. NOT REALITY WORRIED Miskanic, who was working in the district during the crash of 1929, said the atmosphere is a lot different now. 'How you say, they have a little more confidence than In those days," he said. "If people wpre really worried, you’d notice it out here in the street.” Salesman Leonard Call expressed the feelinaof many of the people watching (pielly in the visitors’ gallery of the ornate ex-hange quarters as a bright ..m streamed through eastern windows rising nearly 50 feet. thick as brokers relayed between their telephone lines to the office along the fringes of the room and the various posts. R R R Before trading opened, 50-foot high “enunciator” boards, which flip hinged metal nqmhers to signal brokers on the floor that they have a call from the office, flapped with uncommon activity. . R ★ R When the exchange opened at 9 a. m., a mild rumble came up from the floor and the clrculAtion quickened. •’ what I “I just came (» really active fliHir In pan>d to normal,’’ Call said. 1 fe said he holds some slocks but isn’t particularly wrrlcd. On the floor, which looks like an outslzed basketball court broken up by a series of 18 horseshoeshaped trading posts, traffic was News in Brief Golf eqifipment valued at $90 was stolen from her car at the rear of her home, Frankie V. Coad of 38 Williams St. told Pontiac police yesterday afternoon. Five tires and wheels worth an estimated $146 were reported stolen yesterday afternoon from a new car at the John McAuliffe Ford Dealership, 630 Oakland Ave., according to police. selves make up a huge total from which loans to business are made. To the trustees of these pension funds, *and to those ot the huge charitable and scientific foundations, educational institutions and managers of mutual funds, the paring away of market value of common stocks is lar from an . academic question. t WHAT TO DO! A top man in a West Coast industrial empire said he had to take time off one day recently from his worrying about the future of his own firmHo sit in with other trustees of a big foundation. ★ ★ ★ 'The question: "What should we do? What stocks should we sell? Or should we' sit tight and wait for the mBrket to come back?’’ R R R The trustees saw the market value of some of their assets dropping and they couldn’t decide-^t least that day—-what was best to do. That perhaps could prove an exception to the widely held opinion that the professionals, such as these trustees were supposed to be, always sell before the market breaks and always buy before it spurts upward. THEY WONDER Many workers who own no stocks themselves may wonder how their pension funds are faring, especially those whose assets consist to considerable extent in common stock—in some instances, the shares of the company where the worker is employed. '* R ■ Securities and Exchange Commission figure show that at the end of 1961 corporate securities accounted for 85 per cent of all pension fund assets at book value. But of this amount, $15 billfon was in corporate bonds ai^ 512.4 billion in common an^ preferred stocks. R R'l R Total assets pf pension fpnds of U.S. corporations reached a high of 532.4 billion, a Jump trf $3.7 billion in the year. This increase "is itself a record, although the gain was anything but novel. Increases in the two previous years topped 53 billion, as the pension funds took an ever greater role in American fiscal affairs. SAl^OS HELP With some funds having only , bout a third of thein~«ssets in common stocks, the reca|^ljtoM breaks haven’t depleted fflRBffrraif any worrisome degree. But for (he trustees there is still the question; What to do now? Another great potential bolstering the economy as a whole— though not the stock market at the moment •+* is the steady^ 'increase in savings. The Federal Reserve Board reports that in the fir^t three months of this year savings at banks and savings and loan associations, increased by $8.3 billion, a record jump. R ' R R' The big incentive was the higher interest rates on savings and time deposits which most banks began paying this year. And some, stock brokers think that this increased yield on savings could be ofie reason that the public has been sell-irtg stocks—or at least hasn’t been putting new money into stocks. Tass Reports Stock Fall in NY as Catastrophic MOSCOW on — The Soviet news agency Tass said toda„ the stock c.'ash in New York had "assumed catastrophic proportions.” R ' R R ’President Kennedy and his advisers -would like to arrest the crash but they do not know bow to do this," said a Tass dispatch from New York. Ike's Kin on Exchange NEW WORK (UPI)-Dr. Milton E. Eisenhower, brother of the for-president yestcr(iay elected a public governor of the New York Stock Exchange. Foundation Awards 62 Scholarships (UP!) - Sbtty-two scholarships to 47 Michigan universities, colleges and junior colleges have been awarded by the Alvin M. Bentley foundation, it is announced. the KWarda at the nnlversity or college of their choice. ’The foundation was founded last August ‘.‘to receive and administer funds lor soience, education and charitable projects.’’ Principal donors are Mr. and Mrs. Alvin M. Behtley. The scholarships are the .first awarded by the foundation. They are for the 1962-1963 academic year. Business Generally Good in U.S/ stock Slump,. Figures Incompatible By United Prdss International The sharp descent of stock prices seems Incompatible with the general state of business. Figures Indicate a singular trend: Businesa Is generally good throughout the United States. Yesterday’s 528.5 billion paper loss and statislics rivalini; the crash of 1929 brought , partisan rumblings from Washington. flecM little confidence In the adminlalratlon. Dcmocrata counter-charged that the Kennedy ad- ; OMimie*l Puooi I CoinmomroKlth Block ;aemioai ....65 <8 ihonti lUTDAL PUNDS MD ASKinHU.) tU*Biiik 15Jfti recesAlon In Jannaiyt IMl. There were these flrin figures from Washington: Total employment In April rose » a record 67 million, Including 62 million nonfarm jobs. Unemployment declined during the jth by 436,000 to ^9 mliilon, itinfii inorpaimno Department store sales «»ntln* ued to rise, up 7 per‘Cent from the 1961 level for the week « May 19.’ ime was bp tS.IB billion .from March to April, 7 per cent above the, comparable period last year. The annual rate Is I438.7S billion. April industrial production was at 116, up one point from March, The 116 figure means 16 per cent above the 1957-59 base period. R R R' ' The consumer price index stood at 105.2 of the 1957-59 average, up .2 of 1 per eeqt from March. A similar increase is expected this month. The picture ciNpwheire around the country appeared bright, with the exception of the Fills-burgh area. The University of Pittsburgh Bu-eau of Business Researqlli repori-ed dijitrict steel production declined to a new ktsy. eight pointa to 85 per cent of the 19575$ base period. OUTPUT HIGH Automotive News Magazine said In Detroit last week’s autbmobUe outpbt of 1M,817 was the second highest of the year. Totisl production of 677,000 units tor the mofith of May was predicted fay the trade publication. It noted at the eame tiniM, beor- t record year of IHl ’The Chicago Assodaffon of Com- " merce and Industry said the eight-county Chicago! area Is "more sound economically than at any time In the past three yean.", ■ Rr,i 'Jr ' 'R'/;’ Unemployment Is down, houaing sermtta are up and industrial ptajlt during the past four tnonOMi. tha || assoclatbm saUL fMt%tmn J2 poicfUc i[»RB8a ytj&spAy. HAY nSm T Pontiac Ar^ Deaths SerMce tor Mtn. Junn H. (Judy Ann) BeU, $2. of 241 E. Wilson «fU 1>e Sunday Jn Gurdon. Ailc. Buriat wfll be there in the Pine Grave Cemetery. Her body is at the William F. Davis Funeral Home Mrs. Belt was a member of New Bethel Baptist Churdi. Surviving are her husband; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Sim* mons; six children, Veronica, Carolyn," Helen, Janice, Judith and Henry,- sdl of Pontiac; and tiiree i^ers, Mrs. Hazel Scott of Rock* ford. 111., Mrs. Maggie Lewis and Mrs. Elsie Robinson, both of Pontiac. Mrs. Bell was dead on arrival at Pontiac Gener^ Hospital Sunday. WnXIAM B. KORTHAllS The PaH$h Rosary wilj be recited for William B. Korthaus, 49, of 6625 Hatchery Road, Waterford Township at 8:15 p.m. Thursday at the Coats Funeral Home, Funeral service will be 10 a. Friday in Our Lady of the Lakes Oitholic Church with burial following in the Catholic Section of Lakeview Cemetery, OarkstOT. His body will be at the funeral home at noon Wednesday. Mr. Korthaus had been a member of Our Lady • of the Lakes Church and a test driver for General Motm* COrp. ' * -f* Survivors include his wife Mildred; his father Benjamin Kent-haus of South Bend, Ind.; ~ two gnadddUreti; ,and four isters. Mr. Kulhaus died yesterday in Pontioc (kneral Hospital after a long illness. d. C. SMITH Besides his wife and parents listed yesterday J. C. Smith, 43, of 285 Whittemore St. is survived by two brothers, Grady and Claud, both of Pemtiac., Service for former Pontiac resl-snt Jesse D. Teeter, 80, of 101 S.E. 8th St., Pompano Brach, Fla., will be at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the DonelacuKlohtis Fumaal Home. Burial will be in White (3»pel Cemetery. His body wil be at the funeral home at 3 p.m. Wednesday. Mr. Teeter died at his residence yesterday after an illness of three months. He was a retired tool and dye superintendent at American Forge Socket Co. and Oakland chine & Stamping Co. Surviving are his wife, Jour daughters, Mrs. Clarenra Hardenburg of Pontiac. Mrs. Richard Smith of Pomp Beach, Mrs. Joseph D. Sloan Englewood. Ohio, and Mrs. land CXiff of Jackson; 10 grandchildren; and a brother. MRS. CLYDE POLLARD OXFORD TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. C!lyde (Mildred K.) Pollard, 63, of 3793, Delano Road, will be 2 p.m, Thuraday at Bossardet Pontiac; a son, Holland at home; {awrcKi..5«3..; i^w of tt>o stole tool ■iMaU be placed under ttie °*In’Hhe°Mine of the people of the atttfi tit art bereby notl- JSr tut on said peUtlon ---. end you ere hereby ___ appear pertooally et 1? DEtPHA A.__________ Deputy frobaU! MgM Juvenile Divlali May ». M Juvenile D In 0>e n Ina Winiain Cauae No. IMM To Irma Ouil “^JiSilUon havl Court alletlnf »ar? 1 Taylor Jr., minor. ?he^li 1 Mlohll .....l?*8a'i S*uS32riS?i ___________' people of the the Tth 0 o'clock -.e hereby to appear perepneliy at day el June, . *- the aftemr nnmanded I lid hearlns., ahall be aerved by publication^of one week previous to ’'*• Tlia Pontiac Preaa. a and circulated In naid Wltneas, the Honorable Donald Adams, Jttdse of said Court. In the ^ Pontiac In said County, this Mth day *(8eal*° **OONALD *. AMM8 (A true copy! Judge of Probnl DBLPHA A BOUOINE Deputy Probate Register Juvenlla Division May ». ItU tte m'atter at ths petition eoneem-Ing Geraldine AnUlla. minor. Ceuao n Mefvta AnUUa, father of eald minor PetlUon baaint been filed In thU . .. --------S%.iiTiior’3Krc during a severe thunderstorm. Twisters and tornadlc winds also were reported In thp area pf Paris, Kan., Rock Springs; ^Trif., OttumwA. Iowa; and In rural sections of Wfl^st central apd noriherrt Albion Conferring Degree on Romney George Romney will receive his fourth honorary degree Monday In commencement ceremonies at Albion college. Romney, a Republican candidate for governor from Bloomfield Hills, will receive a doctor of laws degree, Albion graduates will hear him deliver an address entitled, ‘Aim High.” Romney holds previous honorary degrees from Wayne State University, Brigham Young University and the University of Utah, which he formerly attended. BINPHAMTON, N. Y. (UPI) -The salt poisoning deaths of six babies at Binghamton General Hospital ‘‘have been ruled accidental and there will be no prosecution, Broome County DIst. Atty. Steph-m .Smyk said last night. Smyk announced there would be ‘no criminal prosecution” shortly after he received word of a verdict of accidental death in each case County coroner. Bolh Smyk and Maddi said a joint investigation, along with an investigation by local police and hospital officials, had not produced sufficient evidence to warrant criminal action. The six babies died after salt mistakenly had been subslituled for sugar in the milk forniulus. Area to Mark Month of Fun Waterford Twp. Plans Recreation Programs During Observance Waterford Township's observance of National Recreation Month In June will feature a host of recreation programs and special events. Robert Lawyer, recreation director for the township, explained today that the activities to be offered during June and the remainder of the summer are designed to help people of all Ages develop broader recreation interests and to make good use of their Increasing leisure time. “New Horizons for -Your Free Dme” Is the theme (or National Recreation Month. The Waterford Township Recreation Department has stated the following activities tor the summer months: it it it A playground program at 13 locations, day camp, learn-to-swlm program at five lakes, men’s soft-ball league, boys’ junior baseball program, girls’ softball, instructional tennis, boys’ summer basketball, men’s blooperball, basketball clinic for fifth and sixth graders, fashion your figure club, golden age club and other siiecial events. I Most programs will begin the week of June 25. Detailed Information on the various activities will lie provided to both public and parochial schcKils prior to .'-chool closing. Lawyer said. Metal Belie(ved From Space Shot Found in Africa BARKLY EAST, South Africa (AP)—A piece of metal thought to have fallen from the rocket which boosted U.S. astronaut Malcolm Scott Carpenter into space last week has been discovered near this Cape Prot^ince town, the South African Press Association reported Monday. it it it The metal, which bears several serial numbers and resembles the top of a gasoline drum, is being exhibited at a local garage. The metal appears to have been subjected to Intense heat which burned holes through it. Last February a three-pound chunk of metal was discovered near the town, ot Naauwpoort, 100 miles from here, soon after astronaut John H. Glenn Jr.’s flight. Sent to Cape Canaveral, it was identified. as having fallen from Glenn’s booster rocket. Denies Buzzing Charges WASHINGTON (UPI) - The State Department yesterday said Soviet charges that U.S. planes have buzzed Russian ships carrying goods to Cuba were only propaganda. It said U.S. planes routinely Identify vessels near American shores. SPRING Half Price SALE at donnell’s beauty . . • one of our most popul waves at Vi price. Leaves your hair soft, silken, manageable- . $ ^00 $ y50 *109* $1000 PERM. ^15®® PERM. *»20®® PERM. Styling Dept. Prices Slightly Higher » COUPON FOR OL R REG. FOR OUR REG. for our REG. FREE HAIR UU1 I I MOIV., TUBS., WED., THURS. ONLY j |. With Shampoo and Set, Permanent . I Wave or Permanent Hair Coloring J ^"***^N^ BUDGET DEPr. PRICES AT MIRACLE MILE SALON ONLY MON. thru THURS. FRL SAT. ^ HAIRCUTS #1.20 HAIRCUTS #1.50 SHAMPOO and SET 1.55 SHAMPOO and SET #1.95 AT PONTIAC MALL IT’S . OUR CONTINENTAL SALON dOnniDll HAIR STYLISTS Career Girl Salon MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER PHONE 33t-S639 Honrs 9 to 9 Appointment Not Always Necessary MONTGOMBRY WARD CO. HEARING AID DEPT- If you con hear, but cannot understand, we dan help you!! CAUCUS FOR A FREE HEARING TEST . . . In our office or’ at ybur home.^ 692-4940 liL'^ 233 BATTERIES, CORDS, REPAIRS ON ALL HEARING AIDS PONRiO MALL OUTSTANDING in Pontiac for SERVICE and FACILITIES • A dedicated, well trained staff. Available 24 hours a day. • Color pictures of gll flpral pieces. • Seating copocity for over 400. - t 70-car parking lot on our property/ • Ample facilities to serve six families • Music from the beautiful Hammond Ongan • Facilities to serve nation-wide. • Charges that ore reasonable. Extended payments available. DOCK STANDS' FAST, EASY INSTALLATION SELF-GRIPPING BOTTOM PLATES STURDY, ATTRACTIVE CONSTRUCTION iir PER SET ''Quik-Stol" takes the wdrk out of putting up docks. No post! to drive...No nalli to pound... timply oiiemble on the beach and place itend ot goch doqk intersection. Self-gripping bottom plates "hold fast" In almost all types of lake bottoms. Rust-resistant painted aluminum & galvanized construction Insures long lasting & neat appearances. No more battered or rotting wood posts. Completely odiuitablecross supports allow for oiiy changes In water levels. Merely loosen two end band nuts & raise or lower cross-support as raqult^ ed to raise or lower dock. SPEGIFICATflONjSi Leg supports 1 1/4" galvanized pipe; croN-iupporti two 2" x 1/3" angles weld^j base 14 go. 14" diameter beveled & Up) galvanized connectors & bolts; aluminum cops. For complete details and InFonnatlon see your ‘ "QUICK-STAL" dealer today. Contiicts SARxJAC STEEL SUPPLV, INC. 119 BRANCH STREET | PONTIAC, MICHiaAlj T Fideral N-O^tft '* \ ,i I A THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY,> MAY 29, 1962 > CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING^ i DEPARTMENT CLASSIFICATION INDEX ^Revistd Octob«r 18, 1961) NOTICES Cord of Thonks .. In Memoriom — Announcemonts ... Funeirol Diroctors . Cemotory Lots .... Personals . —. Lost and Found .. ... 1 ... 2 ....3 ... 4 .. .4-A EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Male ------ Help Wonted Female .. Help Wanted ......... Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A Employment Agencies ... 9 EfAployment Information 9-A Instroctions-Sehools .....10 Work Wanted Male........11 Work Wanted Female .. .12 SERVICES OFFERED Building Service-Supplies. 13 Veterinary .......... ...14 Business Service ........15 Bookkeeping & Taxes .. .16 Credit-Advisors .......16-A Dressmaking & Tailoring .17 Gardening........... .18 Londscaping ...........18-A Garden Plowing ........18-B Income Tax Service .... .19 Laundry Service.........20 Convalescent-Nursing .. .21 Moving and Trucking —22 Painting & Decorating ...23 Television-Radio Service .24 Upholstering ....... ..24-A Transportation . . .. — .25 WANTED Wonted Children to Board 28 Wanted Household Goods .29 Wanted Miscellaneous ...30 Wanted Money ............31 Wanted to Rent ........32 Share Living Quarters .. .33 Wanted Real Estate......36 RENTALS OFFERED Apartments-Furnished .... 37 Apartments-Unfurnished . 38 Rent Houses, Furnished . 39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 Rent Lake Cottages......41 Hunting Accomodations 41-A Rent Rooms...............42 Fiooms With Board —. 43* Rent Farm Property......44 Hotel-Motel Rooms.......45 Rent Stores..............46 Rent Office Space — . 47 Rent Business Property 47-A Rent Miscellaneous ......48 REAL ESTATE .49 .50 .51 ..51-A 52 53 54 56 57 58 Sale Houses ..... Income Property . Lake Property — Northern Property Resort Property .. Suburban Property Lots-Acreage — Sole Farms....... Sale Business Property Sale or Exchange FINANCIAL Business Opportunities 59 Sole Land Contracts 60 Wanted Contracts-Mtge. 60-A Money to Loan ...........61 Mortgage Loans...........62 MERCHANDISE Swaps ...,/......... Sale Clothing ....... Sale Household Goods . Antiques ............. Hi-Fi, TV & Radios ... Water Softeners....... Sale Miscellaneous ... Christmas Trees ...... Christmas Gifts ...... Hand Tools-Machinery Do It Yourself ...... Cameras - Service — Musical Goods....... Office Equipment .... Store Equipment — Sporting Goods ...... Fishing Supplies - Baits Sand-Gravel-Dirt — Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel . Pets-Hunting Dogs ... Auction Sales........ Florists-Nurseries ... Plants-Troes—Shrubs ..81-A Hobbies & Supplies.......82 ...63 ...64 .. -65 .65--A , 66 66-A .. .67 .67-A .67-B . .68 ...69 .. .70 ...71 ...72 ...73 ...74 ..75 ...76 ...77 ... 79 ...80 81 FARM MERCHANDISE Livestock ........ Hay-GraitYFood ... Poultry .......... Farm Produce — Farm Equipment .. AUTOMOTIVE Housetrailen .... Rent Trailer Space Commercial Trailers Auto Accessories ... Tires-Auto-Truck ... Aiito Service ........ Motor Scooters ------- Motorcycles ...............95 Bicycles ..................96 Boats-Accessories .........97 Airplanes ................ 99 Wanted. Cars-Trucks .101 Used Auto-Truck Ports. .102 NoW and Used Trucks .. 103 Auto Insurance............104 Foreign Cars .............105 New and. Used Cars —106 Death Notices SK. nenl tervlM irtH b* held Sun- TO; SIS: Merle Scott and Mrs. 'Thelma Sehooley: alio aurvlved by two fwachlldren. Parish Aotarv will be Thursday, May 31, at *;1S p.m. at. the Coats_Punerai Home, SHineral service will be heM Prlday, June 1, at 10 a.m: at Our Lady of the Lakes Rhuroh. Interment In the Cath-section of Lakerlew ceme-Clarkston. Mr. Korthaus ii« In .Into ot the Coats Drayton ------- .... „ and Mi_. James C. Smith; dear brother of Orady and Claud Smith. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 31, at 11 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Smith will He In state at the Donel-_son-Johns Funeral Home. STREETER, SIaY 27, 1M2, ANNA B., 3410 Alco Drive, Waterford Township; aoe 70; beloved wife of Herman Streeter; beloved dauahter of Mary Lenhart; dear mother of James Abney; dear sister of Mrs. Alfred (Flossie) Coleman. Mrs. Harold (Mildred) Krohe, and Orullle Lenhart: also survived by four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 31, at 1 p.m. at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains with Rev *■ —----- officiating. Interment In bray-ton PlAlns C*'—‘ Stroeter^wUl Mt Cemetery. tfr». Coats funeral Home, Drayton Plains after 7 p.m. today. TOTBR. MAY 2*^ i»fe, JESSE D., St. Pompano Beach, Fla., formerly of Pontiac; age gO; beloved husband of Mabel B. Teeter; dear father of Mrs. Clarence L. Har-denburg, Mrs. C. Richard Smith, Mrs. Joseph D. Sloan and Mrs. licland Cuff; dear brother of La-Verne Teeter; also survived by ten grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 31, at 1:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Teeter will lie In state at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home alter 3 p.m, Wednesday. May 30. THOMAS. MAY ... ________ -. 3300 Elisabeth Lake Road. Waterford Township; age 47; beloved son of Mrs. Pearl Fatrltlce; dear father of Ronald K. Thomas; death brother of Mr. Alton and Oayle Thomas, and Mrs. Eileen Carter: also survived by four grandchildren. Service will be heJd today at 3 p.m. at the C. J. Oodhardt Funeral Home, Kecgo Harbor with Rev. Lee Malone officiating. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. ............ t the WOOD. MAY 21. 1062. FRANIC C., Harrison. Mich., formerly of Pontiac: age 70; dear father of Charles Wood and Mrs. Dick (Alice) Kvitek; dear brother of Clinton Wood; also survived by four grand#>ns. Funeral service will be hel(l Thursday, May 31. at 11 am. atVhe Runloon Funeral Home with %r. Milton Bank officiating. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Wood will lie In state at the Huntoon Funeral Home. In lieu of flowers the family suggests contributions be made to the Building Fund of the Central Methodist Church. Card of Thonks _ , Jl WE WOULD LIKE TO EXPRESS our heartlelt thanks and appreciation during the recent loss of our wife and mother, Mrs, Grace Hargett (Parker). A special thanks to Pursley Funeral Home and the Salvation Army. Mr. Robert C. Hargett. Catherine Welch. Myra Kimball. Johnny and Raymond Parker. In Memoriam ^ WILLIAM BOOSE— In loylng memory of our h band, father and .grandfati Announcomonts ATTENTION ^CHURCH^ for**?eVlh?g WatkhiB'’Nattonally adyertlsed ya-nllla at regular retal prices, no Investment, for further detalli call FB 2-3053. ilonSE DRAVlfN hay RIDES. —upnolntment. FB 5-«343 LiJSB "weISht safely aIjB economically with newly released Dea-ADlet tablets. M cents at The FoDtiM Fren FOR WANT ADS DLAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. All errors should be reported Immediately.^^Th^e "■isn*to cencel*'^lhe'chargee lor thet portion of the firr.t insertion of the »-»2«l COAT3 DRATTOTp^LAlNil 3-7757 D. E. Pursley Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME '‘Designed lor Funerals'* HUNTGON .SPARKS-GRIFFIN "ThoughuS"^Aos'”°“^ a-Wl Voorhees-Siple 2 BEAUTIFUL LOTS IN WHITE Chapel, , $300. FE 2-7S07. BEAUTIFUL LorTraftteV Mount ^mk^^^otery. ( ANT aiRL OR WOMAN NBBDINO a frlendlk adviser, phone FE 3-5123 after 5 p.m. Or if no an-swer call FE 1-3734. ConfldoDtlal. DAINTY MAID Wf'PiSM, l3$ Menominee. FB 5-7005.____________ Oh AND AFTER THIS DATE MAY 20, 1002, I]Wlll not be responsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. Chester E. Welch, 0504 Dixie Hwy., Clark-Michigan. ON AND AFTER THIS DATE. MAY 20, 1063, 1 Will not be responsible for any debts contracted by amr other than myself. William E. Farner, 301 Central. Pontiac, THE OBLaWdO SPRAYINO SatlV-Ice Intends an aerial spray the south shore of Silver Lake for mosquito control 1 morhliig In the next 10 days. Our Piper Cub airplane will be flying low in this vicinity. Gene Werden. FE 2-4137. Half Wontad Mala A PART TIME JOB Needed at once - s men 5 p.m I. Call Mr. Oreen. OR 3-0922. A YOUNG MAN 3 men, 10-10 needed Immediately for full time employment. Character referencee and car necessary. For Information call Mr. _Taylor,_OR 3-OTOl, 5 p.m. 0 p.m. ARE YOU OUR MAN? Are you now employed as a truck driver, farmer, route man or factory worker! If so we know you AUTO MECHANIC WANTED MUS'T be experienced and furnish references. 0400 Ofehard Lake and Maple Roads, West Bloomfield. B'^dF'maN AND MECHANIC. ■- “ lUlilANDEB 'TO New Opportunity ^rca IBM DATA PROCESSING Experience hot necessary. We wll train. Excellent working cond Detroit, Personnel Dept. 1250 Wtshlnglon Blvd. Corner ol Grand River. Phone 222-4Q10. _______ cITbf; EXPERiiSclij only looted with references. Reply Clothing Salesmen icr evenings and Saturdays. -»• perlenced only 'need applV. Monarch Men's Wear. Miracle Mile route! *Colllns *Cleanori, SSO Woodward Street, Rochester, QL 2-7711. bo you"qualify forThis? I need Just 2 more dependable married men under 45 to handle an osUibltshed protected Mrrltory. Our 76 men averaged over »m weekly the last 4 weeks._ HJgh . and |rader operators. -ExramMRi^EsfiHfA’Dii, liii- PARTViMioi' AkD between 3- 0 p.m. Apartmeirtt-FvrniilMd l-BBDROOM EFFICtEHCT APART- AND 3 ROOiMt APARTMENTS. ____48 Sanderioit. ___ riSoiiteTPRSvAfiTiAW. BiS. trance, utlUtlei. FE 3-4456. TbOOM bachelor APARTMENT, private bath and entrance, ---- thing furnished. FB 5-76II5. PontIXe State Bank, FE 4-3S91. CEMENT CONTRACTOR tlos and city _ I Construction Co. _er_4_p7n^Sto* N-Isagfeaw. 3 boom87*upper, all Ol ties. $17 week. 30 Lorraine ~ FE 6-4583 or FE 5-1373. ROOMS AND BA¥h,'" ! COM-plecely fumlsned steam heat, lights private entrance, very clean. In Auburn Heights, FE clean 3 ROOM, , ...1 modern. No drinkers, thank you. 154 N. Perry. * ROOMS AND^BATri,; DrIVATD entrance, west side. FB 3-0661. after 6, 662-0180. _________ “rooms, 2 BEDROOM, UPPER, private, clean, no drinkers, no ;hlldren. 101 Whlttemore------- lL'S complete LANDSCAPINO. sodding, gradbig, planting, tree removal and trimming, disking. Black dirt, top soil and excavating 775 Scott Lake Road. FE 4-&2S or OR 3-0108._________ COMMUNITY LAWN SERVICE, plete lawn maintenance. and top sc FB 3-0053. Garden i^vving CUSTOM PLOWr DISK. DRAG AND ' tlU gardens and yards. Any- ...re, OR 3-5986. GARDEN FlCowiHo: RI^ASON- OR 3-3215._____________ incoma Tax Servlet ACCURATE experienced - W. R. TiOLIN Tax and Accounting __JINER ' PE 4 -1102 Moving nnd Trucking 22 A-l MOVING SERVICE, RE, able rates, FE 5-3460. FE , 1ST ckifEFtJi MoviNb. !T67W rates. UL 3-3000, fcO-3516. Painting & Dacornting 23 A-l PAINTING, INTERIOR AND exterior Free cet FE 4-6770. Ing. 20 years exp. Reas. Free tlmates^. Phone UL 2-1396. isT CLASS “pAiN’rTSb “anS~FT-per hanging. Tb-------- _____(TERlDR'DiCORA'lDH. , jpering. ft 6-0313. iNTERioiif iTND i5Pr®RI3S: fi;ee Tter ' _____ __ ___ PAINTING AND WALiTwaIhINS: _No Job too small, FE 8-8004, painting“and'dIoratino' Home Improvement loans at &ontlac**Vtate**BanX. I^E 4- 4 ENOINE AIRLINER. LOS AN- LkAVINO JUNE 3 Dk 4 FOR 6rE-gon. 1 or 3 to share expensea. FB 4-4022 before 8 p.m. **—■ FB 2-6696.___________ Wanted Houtahold Goadi 29 gein House FE 2-6042. ■ aiices. OR ---- „ --------- ----- cXSIi'fok furniture antTap- E.""""*: "ouseful auction. OA 6 IS COLORED DESIRES-3 BEDROOM house. Basement and gar Reas, tfbtlon to buy. FB 8-( FURNISHED HDUSfc OR AMf-nifnl by proffgHlonul couple, ^pieiicfp«71«2fi22, WANTED TO RENT WITH OP-tloh to buy — west side ' with garage. EM 3-4711. SiTnra Living auartan 33 WORKING OIRL TO Urge homf. referenceg 2«27g2 efter 9 SHARK Wonted Real Eitnta ALL CASH GI OR I'll A BUILDER NEEDS 1 OR MORE mt Lots City ol Poiitls arOa. Faat Action by b S 5-3078, 12 lUlLOlNCf C CASH 48 HOURS WRIGHT 302 Oakland Ave FB 8-94< CASH FOR YOOFlqOiTY now on a newer home in Pontiac, Birmingham. Detroit areas. C. BCHUBOT, REALOR, FE 2-7011. LlS'l’INGS—EAST SIDE OF CITY, MIDDLETON REALTY OO. ...... — 8-3203 “WE \i;Eir I.iikf IVopcrtics I.OTS-CO'ITAGBS YR, AROUND FOR dALE AND FOR RENT Jiiiyci's (iahiic J. A' TAYLOR Ihland ltd. (M-00) OR 4-0300 PRIVAT9I ENlBANeft. ROOMS NEAR B S STATION. ROOMS. BATH. OARAGE. WEST 16 WEEKLY. 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE bath, and entrance. Heat. ..... parking. Apply 806 St. 03 MECHANIC. 2___________________ nicely furnished, utilities,. adults. Bent reasonable. 334-1611. WELFARE 4 BED- ____ apartment. $60 a month. 4723 Laxevlew, Woodhul) Lake, Drayton Plains. No drinking. Avail. May 2 ATTRACTIVE 3 ROOMS. NO drinkers, prefer non emokers. Near Y.M.C.A.. 25k blocks from FURNISHED APARTMENI RTMENT8 FOR ,4_p.m. M9-0658. 'SEVJBN.TJIKH', Apni^ntf-Fwiiiiliad 37 A|mrtint«|»~Unfunililn< 31' CLEA^ 4 BOOMS AND BATH. ALL private, 3268 Auburn Aye.. Auburn Heights. UL 2-1320. ARCADIA n ' dlabmoe pf"domtowm eonneetlotis. Warm la winter, coot wd"S?rcbef**An*ci5^**sied'^wM decorated. Good neiiibbors.. tXilI. dren permitted. Vine laundry fa. elUUea. 664 per month. K. O. Hemj9^y,^alter,^MTO AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY —Bright, eteau 1-bedroom apt. Tile batb end shower. Steam heated. Easy walk-up on bus line and close to scbools and all sboi^g.' Can^be^eeo^nytlme. Calf for W680. 444 b! Flke." COUPLE, PRIVATE BATH AND entrance, 646 a month. FE 4-2647. LOVELY 3-room furnlahed apartment, private bath, close to downtown, beautiful grounds, laundry faelli-tles, utllltlos fumisbed, Ideal for professional or retired pewle. No children or pota. Phone SV 2-7067 for appointment. UNION LAKE PRIVILEGES Boat epece beautiful 3 room end batn apartment all electric kltch- built-in 'appllances?'*garbage‘^ disposal, baseboard hot water heat, automatic laundry vaclUttes, water softener, and storage locker, . heat and hot water furnished. Laklynn Apartments. 7800 Cooley Lake Rd. Phone SM 3-3475. VERY NICE 3^R00M. ADULTS. No drinkers, FE 3-5553. - COLORED 4 room modern apartment - NEWLY REDECORATED — CLOSE TO DOWNTOWN FON-'HAC — HEAT AND WATER WEEK — CALL FE 5-6266. " COLOliEO - 4 ROOMS AND PtU-VATE BATH — PRIVATE EN. TRANCE — CLOSE TO SEARS ROEBUCK. glS PER VnlJKK- ^ *^decorated. Sa?^mralsh?^**sern arated bedroom, laundry faclllttek. Children welcome;- school near. As low as 650 nnfumtshed. SLATER'S 53 N. PARKE ST. Days FE 4-3545 Nights FE 4-5137 Aportments—Unfnrnithsd 31 l ROOM EFFICTBNCY Alberta Apartments 290 N. Paddock FB 3 2099 1-BEDRGOM BEL AIR MANOR -Adults. $90. FE 4-1559. i-HeDroom apartment. S'TOVE and refrigerator and some iltlll-tles taicluded, 585 per month. MA 8-8587. 3 BEDROOM TERRACE. NEAR Pontiac Mall. Call PE 4-2422. 2-ROOM AND BATH EFFICIENCY apartment, refrigerator, stove, view. $50 per month. Russ' Country Store, PE 5-0226. Modern 5 Room ' APARTMExTi STOVE AND REFRIGERATOR FURNISHED. $65 PER MONTH. APPLY AT 103 BLOOMFIELD TERRACE, NEXT TO ST JO SEPH'S HOSPITAL. FE 5-3321, 3 ROOMS AND BATH. HEAT, HOT water, refrigerator and stove furnished, near Fisher Body, 560 per month. FE 3-7068. -3-ROOM, LOWER. STOVE AND, refrigerator, utilities, 116 per week. Phone 682-1224 after 4. NEW BRH3K DUPLEX IN HOCHES-ter. 1-bedrooro apartment, utility fuSshed."''»#5. ” eif*after 5 p.m! OL 1-8402. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. CLEAN, stove, refrigerator and gas. upper. 90 Union. Private entrance. 683-1042. nEwly redecorated 3-room apartment, private bath and entrance, ground Tloor. beautiful gi'ounds, close to downtown.' refrigerator, stove and utilities furnished. Ideal (or professional or retired people. No children or pets. Phone FE 2-7007 for appointment. 3 R(30MS. COLORED. REDECOR-ated 353 W. Wilson, FE 2-0792. 3 ROOMS and BATH. 1 CHILD welcome. Near Oxbow Lake. $10 a week. EM 3-3800 or EM 3-2544. 3 ROOMS. BATH, FIRST FLOOR, close In. FE 2-742S. 4 ROdiiS. RATH UPPER. CLEAN, stove, refrlg FE 2-6803. Orchard Court Apartments 1 bedroom _Alr conditioned MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL Adults FE j-eiig Manager, 10 Balmer M., Afrt. 6 AVAILABLE~'3uNE 1. LARGE 2-bedroom apartment. Stove, refrigerator. heat and hot water furnished. Palm Villa Apartments, 454 Auburn Ave..FE 2-0S5g. 4 ROOMS AliD~BATH. HEATED, bus line, private entrance, no drinkers adu'ts. 320 s. Marshall. FE 2-4332. ISO'/s orchard' LAkS! 4 rooms and bath, children permitted. 640 per month. K. O. Hempstead, Realtor. 102 East Huron. FE 4-8284 Or FE 2-7430 ANCHOR FENCES No Money Down. ys 5-7471 Architacturol Drawing Auto Rapnir REBUILT MOTORS FLOOR BANbmo 1 Work Guaranteed •— 23 Years Experience ■■■ Miller_____________FE 4-6937 n. o. skVoKR flooA LAVtad. -~-dlng and flntebins. Ph. FE KAB-LIFB BATTERY CO. STARTERS AND REGULATORS GENERATORS'$5.95 UP 303 Auburn__ FE 0-1014 Baautjf Shop EDNA’S BEAUTY SAIGN Permanente 64.60 Shampoo and Wave 11.76 70 Chamberlain, g-5. FE 4-1667 It you ___J dooks. BANK TERMS Open Friday Eve. SUNDAY 10-3 Harrington Boat Works -1 ADDITIONS. FALL-OUT BHBl, ters. House Raining. Garages, Con. PAUL GRAVES CoTStMCtInO Free Estimates_______OR 4-1511 basement” DIOOiNO. DRAGLINE “ ■ Mso bulldoring Price resa- PE 4---- ■excavations -- BULLDOZING Bcptlc Systems EM 3-0861 Ceinent work, porchei, sddl-tlons. Michigan basement, eldlog. bathrooms, kitchen, roofing, terme -- All work guaranteed. Guinn's Construction. FE 5-9122. Corptntry Carpat Cioanai% Cuitom Tniioring Detutivt Agtnciot Do it Yoursoif n CEMENT COLORB FOR atlon, porches. Walks, basements, leel clothes posts 65-50 ea. 3 Ih. sack blacktop patch ... 5L86 gal. blacktnp dressing 56.70 „ gal roof coating ..^^54.20 ^0"- 2Jc*h '! 8''-37o**n ;*I0''74q ft. 13"-4»0c ft.; 15" -51.41 ft.; 15"--5108 ft.; 20”-$2.54 ft.; 24"-53 40. BUMPS and GREASE TRAPS 10' 'tile 12-0". holes) . 60.80 ea. 16" tile (2-0” holeal ... 60.90 ea 24" tile (2-e" holeal . 619.30 ea. CAST IRON FLOOR DRAINS BLAYLOCK COAL 6t SUPPLY 61 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-7101 COrtRUOATED STEEL CULVERT Sewer pipe and drain tila All else drainage gralei Sump crock-~All elies BLAYLOCK COAL ft SUPPLY Orchard Late A* ~ """ GALVANIZED I , residential am Fast eervloe, FHA. FBNCai FLOOR SANDINO ____IMAN WITT FB 6-3721 FaBULON — WATERtOX - WAX . l: ^ILLB isR.; FLOOR ESTATE DIAMONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD Connolly’S Jewelers 16 W. Huron . ^ COMPIaWTB LANDSCAPING. Free oatimatoa available, jawn • ■ “ traoung. 40 cenU par yd. dellvarad Mlnlirum* order 150 yards MERION SOD FARMS, INC. - ■■ 73I-2T- LANDSCAPINO aN5 MijfCAVAT-ING. SEBOma. SODDING. Free estimates EM 3-2411 £awn------------------------- 2-lfi3. IBBDiiio. SODDING, ORADINO, delivery. Bhefwood. OB 3JW UcMNd BulMon 2X4 - 6' ECONOMY STUDS ea 300 1x12 Spruce boards 6tko lln. ft. 2x4 No. 2 fir i6-t6 ft. 080 lln. ft 3(k 7D oaslne .... 07o lln. ft. 31k TD base .......09o lln. ft. IVk — 2 It. et. lath .... 40% off Waterford Lumber Cash and Carry 1675 Ainwr* Bd, on s-tw ply^--------------- TALBOTT LUMBfeR mplate Building Bupnilei aKLAND AVE. FB ) .... OR 3A600 “ FlREtN,ACis et ue add a natural fireplaee „ iiur present heme. We aleo do II lypee of briok work. Free estl-)etei. Ph. OL 1-1749, Holly 634- DAVIS MOWER REPAIR I Airport Road FB 8-26 Nsw nnd itrad tV Pinna Tuning EXPERT PIANO TDNINO Wieirand Music Center OBDUf , ri .Ml Au fLABTwnwa Am»' Reai. Lee, fil •>11-,. F»E» PLASTEHINO. PAiNTiNO AND . DAVIS. «74-li20. Wallpaper Steamer Floor tandere. pollihers. hand eandari, fumade vacuum alsan-■rs. Oakland Fuel A Paint. 436 Orchard Lake Aea. FE 5-6166. FREE NICARAUOA LIST MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICE PAY OR nvis, FB 6.1296 Trtai and Shrabi Trra Trimming Surviet AOB TRUai BERTIOi STUMP RlillOVAl, ee removal, tnmmins. Oat 1. 862-2610 w >■ SAflg. General Tree Service THEE TTIIMMINO AND RBUOV- - 'osT prlcp:'Aoy 'Mnie.'~FB LidHT HAULING. f^SH An5 yard cleaning. OR 3 Trucks to Rent ’"■'“AS-mljSSii."*** _ AND BOUIPMBNT Dump Traokt—Som1-7ranorg Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. __ 526 s. wooowako FB 441451 FE 6.IM2 Open Dally iBcludJlil qumjay TTHOMAS_____________ »'( NORTH PERRY ST- FE 5-8888' aAKLB’S CUsToM dpR6l.BtitlU In|^8l74 Cooley Uko Road. EM BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls and windowt. Rtas. Satle-factlon guaranieod, FIB JM63I. ACME QUAUTY PAINTS INC. 3 I'^TO^nDOW CtJBAKlWa CO. BFACf YOUR It BERV FOR YOUR BU8INBU TUB PRESS, TUI^SpAY, MAY 29, 1962 m BATH, U * --loot badly room, naar DcqttMrt AuiWHi.araA, it^ a aioi^. Hu risBTEffisrfsranE. _______________J. "CAIX, after*ajn. «7-atl». "fT^6oEnioS0FpST rbtmAb ' AksA ARi"m' RENT $55 MQ,^ OB WtU. SEUi New 3 Bedrooms Carpeted Gas Heat Diaing Room All Areas Available Soon MODEL AT 864 Kettering EE M«7« after 12 REAL VALUE BY B. B. 8. BDILDERS raneb wltb recreation room and lake pMvtIegea. Sylvan VlUage. CaU owner, wa-ml________________. 3-BEDROOM iAHCHfiPtottT'Clilili peted, gat heat, community water, 4-car garage, will take smaller house to trade, owner. OB 3-SWg. ______________________’ BOULEVARD HEiaHTS ns Per Month Cutact Resident Manager 144 East Blvd. at Valencia FE 4-TI33 RED. 3 ROOMS. BASEMENT. heat. SWweekly, FE S-M«3. - DITMAR. ARTHUR, RAPID Streets. 3 bedrooms. Carpeted living room, gas heat, rent option, »S ■'month Available soon tB S-3S7A 13 to 9. REAL VALUE by S.B.8. Builders. ._______ FARM HOUSE AND LAWN. ELBC- tXBOOi S-ROOM MODERN. LAKE privileges, ret. FE S-9S11 after 5. JIBNOMINEE ROAD. FOR RENT or sale. 3 bedroom. I'/a baths, fireplace, sun room, gas beat, ea-rage. im mo. PE S-7905. MADISON-JOSLYN AREA. 3 BED-rooms, gas heat, carpeted. 953 month. Available soon. Rent option. REAL VALUE by S.B.S. BuOders. FE SM7A 12 to 9. ROCHESTER AREA. 3-BEDROOM ttal bMomant. .2tb-car garage, 3 BEDROOM-NORTHERN lOOR' Full dining rm., carpet, drapes. Recreation rm.. gas heat, ga-rmge, 7S> lot. fruit trees, fenced yard. PACE REAtTT 90x123, 913AS0. 0 FE OdMWS. ■ !}-BEOROOM, 2 , payinent.' ♦13.~oiMf^^»9639. LOW DOWN 4 ROOMS, g LOTS. HARRISBURO, $60 DOWN — AND ONLY $13 PER week and you can own this cute sc. ba^‘’”oll space*beM^’ nice large -lot. paved st. Ask for,Mr. BROWN — L. H. Brown. Realtor. Ph. FE 2-4810. Evenings. OA 989.99 DOWN. 3 BEDROOM FULL bs.sement with 1 acre on black top. Alum, and brick exterior. I will furnish Inside material to customer's satisfaction Finish Inside yourself. Lake Orion -------------- MY 2-3791. A AH Sales. edtote possesaton. bedrooms, kitchen, dining --------basement. Oil Aluminum siding,_______ ...Ettna 'lat., tkHOB-miiST'KWmi: to. 000. will accept lot or land con tor pah down payment. Building Co. OB 3b!m. MUST SELL 3 bedroom trt-level. Oxbow take nrivUegos. go out Ellnbeth I' El., to 9ST0. look tor eelo Mgn 30 BhotweU St. MODERN 2 BEDROOM. OARAOE. Cedar Is. Lake. Prlv. Near Unloa Lake Vlllnge. EM 3-«3ao. OFF JOSLTN. 9 ROOM BDNOA-low. 2 ■ ■ — 2-0703. r garage attached. FR PLEAls'LdbEt ' 221 Judson S' ----- ~ Nice clean 4 ROSS HOMES SYLVAN LAKE-3 LARGE ----- targe Uvinr-------- atone firepl full SAVE — DO IT YOURSELF. Nothing Down. 1 wHl build the sBell end ftirnish inside meteriel, 23 pliDs to choose from. On your lot or ours. MA 5-1501 - 2-3701, A A H Sniet SAM WARWiqK BAS built-lns, take encf boat privilege. *“9.000 cash. Rouse guaranteed r full year, (.'pen Set. and Sun. by a^^i^tment. Phone 6S2-1714 955 s month. Auburn Heights e' 3-bedroom brick, ta acre lot. 500. Newtogbem. Realtor. 2-3310. _________ 2601 ROXIE. BLOOMFIELD HILLS School dlstrlcw 4 bedroom ranch family room, dining room fire — ASSOCIATE BROKERS to Franklin Blvd. FE g-0063 AUBURN HEIORTS AREA 3-bedroom house to need Of conditioning^ P'*! anchor BAY, NEAR LAKE S. carpeted living i Elwood Realty $55 A MONTH 9 ROOMS AND BATH - att. garage, targe living roi aluminum siding with stone. ( water, gas. Large ) Spoeg BuiLl^llio 20x39 m SIDE, AIR — „i per noonth. &E -________ CHOICE LOCimoN ON TELE-graph Road. 450 square feel. He'i' and water furnished. Ample pari tog, 890 Mr month. RoUe I Bmllh. Realtor. FE 3-7046. ibiNo, c»mFlete- I JBDROOM, 1 teutaSa* tional fourth or den. Flreplact. enelosed porch, patio, aluminum folding awnings, 3-car garage. Oas heat. nr. schools, buses, com-muter. 1451 E. Maple. Ml 0-5703. CUSTOM BUILDING STARTER HOMES NO MONEY DOWN ON YOUR LOT FLATTLEY REALTY «-8229, I LAKI 1 bath. I EAST BOUEEVARD Near Whittemore. 5-room terrao pairs Only M.OOO. jPOXTIAC KIIALTV 737 Baldwin______FE S»327 $9300 EY DOWN. We • i kTr c' TWO-BEDROOM. ATACHED OA- rage. $7,500. UL 2-3312;______ JB.~ EXECUTIVE With large family woul living In Oils sclntmatlng s to hall and all 3 bedrooms^ Space saving kitchen with OE bullt-lns. 9^ Easy terms. 990.97 plus taxes and Insurance. H. R. RAO-8TROM. Realtor, 4900 W. R-~~ OR 4-0358, after 9, 892-0435. WA8HINOTON JR. HIGH AREA CeU OR 3^021 tor details WILL BUILD Barter home on ywr lot, plumbing, heat, wtr-Ing. No money down I OOODELL WHITE LAXE WATER FRONT Neet furnished cottage. 105 ft.'gi water. Only 17,500, $760 down. Stivdef I-rvender llghland Road (M50I west of Telegrepfa-Huron Eves. U2-II97.54I7 attached gartge. Excellent neighborhood near Elizabeth and Cass Lake Roads. This is a must to see! You will e^e It’s e good buy at $17,900. Substentlsl down payment. Pest possession — Own- Templeton I.AR(il': POOL bedrooms. 2 ceramic tile baths irge carpeted living and dlnlni ootn,y2-way fireplace, family rm. -car garage, gas heat, beaullfii wimmtng jmI. >r quick K. L. Teinnicton. Realtor TRIPP NOTHING DOWN NO CLOSING COST . YOUR CHOICE 3-BEDROOM ; BRICK FRONTS 3-BEDROOM WITH CARPORT OPTIONAL: , Basements 2 Baths Built-Jns Storms and Screens MODEL at 734 CORWIN r BLOCK WEST OF OAKLAND 1 BLOCK NORTH OP MONTCALM PE g-3783 or FE f-3702 ' 1 to 5:39 U 2-7317 or LI ^4S77 after 7 p.m. iAcRlFlCr. SHELL HOUSE. TO be movesl. 11,000. C PANGUS; Realtor OR7GNV1LLE “ - NA 7-2015 Neat 3 bedroom home on_______ 3 acre lot to Ortonvlllo ere *cTpANGUS, Realtor OR7TONVILLE ----- NA 7-1515 YOUR LOT OK teURS ------------ ...e with ' without baeement. Your lot w make the down payment. W furnlah materiel to finish. ARTHUR C. COMPTON ft 80h_ -------—IRON. DAYS OB 3-7414 3-8555 OB FE 2-T“*“ COLORED NO DOWN PAYMENT — We have several nice 2 or 3-bedroom homes dftt^ decorated ^end ^-1 — only. Take e look ~ you'll like WELL LOCATED; Bungalow to excellent condii -- Ideal for small family, retired couple — Living rOi TKfcZY* By Kate Qaann CLARK CLOSE TO ST. 5mdcg. 5-BEO-tell. Only Fi.459 wiUi taw down rw"n‘SifiV.x* DRATTON ARSA^ rancher vUh fun hasemeiv ffUMSsr-a 500 wito terms. PE 2-7005 Res. PE ■ CLARK REAL ESTATE lot W. Huron Omu • to • MULUPlJi USTINO tMEviCE ‘You know his name is Herbie Bender, why do you insist on calling him Henry the Eighth?” Sa|g Hohm|s COLORED .. Hlllsmont, 502 Nevada 533 Nevada "• 8. Blvd. W. 5150 i70 Wyoming '' 505 Wyoming PONTIAC KNOLLS Linda vista Drive Linda Vista Drive Linda Vista Drive Linda Vista Drive Gage Drive 80 down to Vets HERRINOTON HILLS Lynch Drive ^ 8275 In porch. Itb-car ga-well landscaped. Base-I big attic, Clean as peted. bath. gxl7 kitchen, basement, gas neat. 114-car garage. Corner lot Priced at. $10,500 - $2,500 down. SOUTH EDITH; Take a I family home. this ^loycY^ iaped. ®**|,**’^ bedrooms and all modern bedrooms. Take your choice fi brick or frame. All have a; beat. All are like new ins CaU today. Williams Lake i; A. TAYLOR. Rekiltor REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 7732 HIGHLAND ROAD tM59) Dally 0-8 Sun. 1 -5 OR 40306 John K. Irwin h Sons — Realtors 313 West.Huron --- Since 1925 Phone FE 5-9446 - Eve. FE 5-4846 Brick Ranch.. ball to spacious living room, ceramic tile bath. Yes, plastered walls, oak floors. DANDY BA8B-MEN'T, OAS HEAT, Big lot 80x 1». fenced rear yard. Blacktop street. SEE THIS BRICK FAMILY HOME TODAYI Lot 75x300 . . . Brick home on hatchery Road -■ OAS HEAT Oak floora.^^tered TERMS A“vAILA*Bffi*' ” Humphries ”Vi»nnjr-l)ih Homes' REALLY MEAN BETTER BUILT Russell Young__________FE ----- Pretty While I'lanie 110.900 - $1,000 ~ $85 month W Bloomfield, lovely 3 Jots on corner, nice neighborhood. 2 bedrooms, full bath, family room, oil furnace. I'a-car garage. Owner out of slate. mu.st sell. HAROLD R. FRANKS Realtor, 2583 Union Lake Rd.. EM 3-3208. EM 3-7181. CRESCENT LAKE 4908 FIDDLE New 3-bedroora rancher, full bas meni, automatic hen'., lake pri' lieges, extra large lot. F'ast im aesslon. Low down paymt. No; some finishing. By owner. F ONLY 858 PER MONTH Walton near Perry GOOD LOCATION ~ MOV RIOHT IN WRIGHT 362 Oftklmid Ave. FC 5-94 GILES ored bhth fixtures. Oil heat. Fenced yard end more. WE^T^ SU^UIRBAN ^4 ^ b^rem^^ ranch type home. dSnly $8M <|own. 4 UNIT INCOME on west side with nicely lendsceped yard. Well kept and good return on Investment. Total price 516,700. gu.es REAlW CO. FE 5-6175 331 Baldwin Avenue MULTIPLE LlgTINO SERVICE KOCH ESt Eftarea Ranch type 5-room aluminum elding. Near Msuo, Hot water heat. Attached garece.,. Carpeted. ■ lli-sulated. FE 2-loH or OL 1-0570. $250 d5wN NO COST I QUICK POSSESSION A?1 neighborhood, home brand new 1001, 127 foot deep lot. 3 ms, storms end screens, jse to shopping - ' POntlac COLOR I'il VETS $ig0 ONLY Kie heat.' low monUity tm Rtalli., Ofll FE HOYT "For that personal Interest" 1303 W. Huron 19.^ BRANDjNEW^^ BEDROOM :N**VeRBy”aCRE8, Near New 3 bedroom brick and I home Carpeted living large lot 113.700 terms H P HOLMES. INC. FENTON area Ranch 3 . bedroom. X acre cellent chnditlon. Naturi place, paneled den. Ful OROVELAND TOWNSHIP 3.7 acres, exceptionally Hi lly home In ga attractive of magnificent trees i scaping, lovely living room. uraV fireplace 4 bedrooms of erous proportions, family n library, den. bright, convei kitchen. 2-car attached gar oil furnace. 3" deep well, pi driveway and parking area. 3 basement barn and other • buildings on paved road. 2 n off Dixie School bus by c Only 57.000 down and |i00 month. ROLFE F MILLER ddla.'Vacani I* ba*tl!i William Miller Realtor I'lv 2-026.^ 070 W, Huron _____Open OPEN I /N DECORATION DAY I to 7 ARRO LAROE LO 3jb§{room »r ranch only 0 years old living room with brick ceraittio tile bath, herd-“ lea beet, 2-oar at- I. liovclv home to others to the same 1400 DOWN ~ 5-rooro bunealow located west of town, Total price only 54,800 wlUi monthly pay-menta 145 a month. 90x120 ft. lot. Immediate “—*‘— ‘sSaif SS'3'S ft. lot. 4-nEDROOM — Older home In lellent condition. If you (trei li Dg for something extra (or y lollera. then don’t miss sei hie one. Large living room. t.,. irate dining room. Remodeled Itohen. 2-cer garage. Btsemenf m iPjcmmvoH IUL1TPIJB ushno serviob I'UONE 682-2211 / NEAR THE MALE Iso waikug distance to Tcl-uroi,, bank and schools, "t roanplus full bath. Ivliig dining room newly irpcfed Oarage only 3 ult ai.>) flowers. Must be Sab Houm $8995 tWUl buU^ 3>bedroom ti TRADEX TRADES AND EXCHANGES this 2-bedroom ranch with a frill basement Is an Inexpensive home to own and metoteln. A nice cour try atmosphere, but with plenty < nice neighbors around too. Exchani your too large home on this toda; They want It. Priced at a low . lo gO.lM for aettoni FHA terms. Levv' Hileman n Realtor WILL TRADE NATURALLY! lOtt w. ...- FE 4-1570 ^ffember h HAYDEN M-59 AT TEGGERDINE ROAD OPEN DAILY 12 to 8 P.M. ECON-O-TRI 3-Bl’I)ROOM, TRI-Ll'A ]’:L ’ $9,995 Inclutles 8,’l' l,ot $1,495 D’jvvn OUR NEW LOCATION; West M-59 to Teggcrdlne Rd. J. C, HAYDEN •Realtor Phone: 363-6604 bath. Oil Out Dixie Highway Located close to Bridge Lake ■ Very attractive cement block bui galow. Fireplace In living root) 2 bedraoms. Bath. Large kltchei Marvelous working ------ ---- Mnels. Fenced lot, I cabinets. Oarage NORTH SHIRLEY .NI’.AR OPDYKE Approximately >4 acre with i I stony home, garage and extri outbuilding. Home offers oi forced air heal, 2 bedrooms ant enclosed porch. $7,950, small dn payment. CRAWl’ORD AGl’-NCY .58 W. Walton FE 5-92:t 09 E Flint________ MY 3 114 DO YOU ..... WANT A GOOD HO your children have room to pi if so. look this 3-bMraom ran< over. Reconditioned like new. basement, mirror like oak Ho aluminum storms, two large 1 only 4 blocks from lake. 10 $11,500. No mortgage costs. SELL OR TRADE - Owner 1 ....... ->u8t sell’quick I lovely studio ri ...igalow Perfect basement with I style brick bungalow It car, housetraller. vacant lam ;aper home or sell un ear Ills. Priced at only $14.50 K FOR MR. BROWN. EXTRA SPECIAL - Ideal lor 11 large family and vou can affoi It. Priced at only 58.950 and ea« terms. FOUR-BEDROOM model home In A-1 condition. Enclose Ihcar garage. Very clean. WANT TO MAKE MONEY? n here Is your answer I ■ problem. $200 per month li le plus 6 nice large rooir you. 4-ramlly In perfect coi L. H. BROWN, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lake tload Ph, FE 4 3554--------- Val-U-Way We’ll trade on any home SWAP OR $450 DOWN Cute, dose in bungelow near Wiener Stedlum. 4 large roomc end bath. alum, (torms, scrceifa end ewntnga. Otz furneoe, targe corner lot. $0,450 at 155 e month. 3-BEDROOM RANCHO Excellent bargain, sharp modern kitchen with buUt-lu oven and range. Alum, storms, screens and awnings. Large utility. Only 1600 required to move In. VACANT Sharp .7-bedroom conlemporary de. sign. Full’basqment. gas furjiace, exc. north side location. Owner will eeoHHce full equity for 51.600 down y> tVi per cent mortgegef R. f. (Dicki VALUKT realtor EE 4-3531 345 OAKUND AVE, BATEMAN Let’s Exchange Houses Lakefront Two-level brick 1 Approximately 1901 of living area. SI built andillloaded w lct?y custoi Intercom. and hot water heat.' Beautiful lake view and Just minutes from downtown and new Pontiac l'~" — Area of all new homes, you are looking for location English Provincial *Wntm and mellow wUh lo character and tradition. Choice west side area on well innd- beautlful condition, even carpeting and drapes Included. Formal dining room plus breakfast nook. Real family living and priced at LET'S TRADE No Down Payment In. Closa ^0 all schools, sliop- k iloors, fully Insulet-eat, 2 bedrooms, good e locatlqp. Total ment. gas heat, even wall-to-wall carpeting Included. FHA terms. 30-year mortgage and less than 5500 will handle, f real opportunity; don’t be late IF YOU Have a I’rohlcm House Trade or Exchange Trading Is pur Business KAMPSEN REALTOR-BUILDER Let’s Trade Houses Silver Lake Front Trade or Sell S4*.frontage. Luxurlouz quad level, beautiful Vemed G«lll|n(. 35’ living room" nature! fireplace, 32x17’ lamllv room at ground levei, lOx 1071 W. HURON ST. FE 4-Oi 5 MEMBl O'NEIL TRADING IS TERRIFIC 3 BEDROOM BUNOALOWf featuring country style kltch-: cn. 2-ctr garage, pertly enclosed for screened-ln patio.. Beautifully landscaped. OOx-T20-foof lot with Cyclone-fenced yard, phis many other lovely features. Only 5450 rage7''Nioely’'iendsbe^. &*: 000 down plus closing costs. odenSied kitchen It-ln oven and ir garage. 512.500 •a i&e in Kfxr 1y landscaped with outdoor barbecue. $3,500 down. G.L No Money Down 4 BEDROOH HOME, newly redecorated, full basement. I-car garage. Just 100 feet •from Casa Lake. Owner will PRY all costs. Full price. 57.-950. 3-BEDROOM RANCH HOME. 2 full baths, breeze-wav. plus I'/s-car garage ■ Dandy lot near Drayton Plains. Approximately $550 RAY O’NEIL. Realtor 12 S. Telegraph Office Open 9 . E 3-7103 OL 1-0575 Multiple Listing Service WA^nnsFQKO lovrMSBip fUto' -Balanoi PARTRIDGE * ASSOCIATES. 5WAWSS#’ JOHNSON 53 YEARS or SERVICE PIONEER mOHLANDS Lovely 3-bcdroom. throughout, H-” —‘tog.. Cloti It " ".sH Natural for a comtortabla h tacbe^^gtraga. A reel good buY After S ettt Sonea Johneon. OR 3-5405. . A. JOHNSON & SONS BEAL raTATE^tioBW*"'® FE 4-2533 SCHRAM LeBaron Sciiool 3 bedrooms, large living rMm, end bath down: 3 and or could be U8cd a»;.4 I, lull basement with '—‘ close to schools a potantlal 9130 IVAN VV. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 043 J«*IEY»r*t»R: MANSFIELD GAYLORD ir**2*353^ ho nished. lake prlvllegt.. . total price. Call MY 3-3031. Lawrence W. Gaylord 136 E. Pike St. IE 8-0003 Broadway end Flint IdY 3-3821 IRWIN NICHOLIE BRICK BUNGALOW Three bedrooms. Living and dining area. Kitchen. Full basement. Automatic heat. Hardwood floors. Newly decorated. Vacant. EASY TERMS. CALL TODAY. WEST SIDE Three bedroom, two-story home. Living and dining rooms. Large kitchen with plenty of CUPBOARDS. Basement. Oaa hot water heat. Two-car garage. Aluminum siding, storms and screens. TERMS. Newly decorated. Vacant. EASY TERMS. Eve. Cell Mr. ALTON. FE 4-5238. NICHOLIE-HAROER CO. S3Vi W. Huron St. PE 5-0103 $9,500 WILL BUILD ON YOUR LOT OR OURS YOUR PLAN OR OURS Have 3 bedroom, IV. bath, full basement model to show. Don McDonald LICENSED BUILDER OR 3 2837 4-0528 II 9-9i 8 NEW HOUSES $00 Doivn $75 Pei' month tociudei everything Visit 3 bedroouijimodels on Carv ' OPEN II" TO I 'DAILY , SPOTLITB BUILDING CO. V 0 DOWN, 2 bedrooms, BASE-mnnt, full dining room, auto-maUc gas h«»t, 2 car garage, on large lot well landscaped-In choice location- WJM. T. (TOM) REAGAN KENT CHRISTIAN HILLS - Near MSUO and Rochester, spaoloua brick ranch home. 3 bedrms., I Mi tllep hatha, 20 ft. living rm. with attractive fireplace, targe family CLARKSTON - Attractive _______ rancp home. 3 bedrms., carpeted living and dining rms., ivb ba“--gas neat, screened natlo, 2 Ijaroge, near schools" 116,080 WEST SUBURBAN-Over 1 a... of land surrounds this attractive room home. 31 ft. living rPi hegtatator flreplaot, tiled mtoa topped cupboards to cn. Extra deep lull bam’t. 1050 DOWN ~ See thli 5 rm. and , tiled bath. MIe* topped oounlers to "ncture Carr" klicn- en. OH heat. Nl— -----------*--^ Planter box. Lei 760,‘ total price. LAKE ANOELUB lake front resldene pTocInle e Tot ’ Exqulalte „ you ep-^v_ejy home, exoel- r8I "BUD" way,; wun anaenini- !sr#4«'aa"sas: Ins, full basement; reerentton space, dreplece. All for $10,-300. See (or yourooU today I OnI^$SOO I ! 61 (uni “Bud” NichoHe, Realtor 49 Mt. Clemena SI. FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M., FE 4-8773 STOUTS BEST BUYS TODAY ONLY $500 DOWN —bftvof ynu Into this cute end ejenn S-yenr-old 2-bedraom home. FeMuree yes heat, oak floors, tile bath, fenced beck yard, city water and sewer. Close to but lino. Total price only $7,050. ^eornted reedy (or oeeupancy. Features 3 flrepleces, (tolehed (etotly room, (uu basement, oil forced elr heat, ntteehed SMtnr ----- —petto. . 3 lots. Sylvan Lake. Cons ‘b public and pnro- ______ Priced at SU.OOO wub best of terms. AUBURN HBIOHTS-Eye appealing 3-bedroom hom^ Aluminum and wood siding, large living room, dining room, tllo bath, targe 50x250 lot, quiet reildentlel area. Low priced at 80,750 with easy terms. WILLIAMS LAKE-3 lovely tUkded lots Included with thla 3-bedroom ranch home, attached tarnge, ' awntogs, part base-oil bent. Newly paved Warren Stout, Realtor 77 N, Saginaw St. Ph. PE S-818S Open Eves. TIU 0 p.m. Trade Newly 'Decorated Brick Ranch Home A large family room, kHoUen ant living room. 2 bedroom, attached IMi-car garage, picket fence. ............... Ponttao on paved street with city conven-Icnccs. 88,150 terms or will trade for a larger older home to eub- Coinvert'Your Home Into Your Dream Home Bass & Whitcomb REALTORS FE 3-7210 3960 Auburn near Adams "BPECIALIZINO IN TRADE~ ' BY OWNER mn home. Good west — • l,«w down payment, monthly payments. COLORED 3 Bedroom Homes "O" DOWN NO COST.S NO NOTHING DON’T MISS OUT ON THIS CHANCE OF A LIFEriMB Over 30 loostlpns to choose from Model at too Alton (Between Franklin end Motor) Open weekdtyt end Sundays 1:304 FE 8-3703 or FE 8-3702 4677 or LI il-73a7 alter 7 WB8TOWN REALTY DORRIS ESTATES, Stntely Engllsl dor design describes this derfui 6-room brick fen..., home. Almost new carpettog, natural hreptaoe home to almost perfect oonditlon ■--■* DREAM HOME FOR THE WORKING MAN: 810,890 buys, this beautiful take front home on Watkins Lake, Over 200’ of •haded Water irontege, new ee-ment break well and a good solid bottom. 0-spaoloua rooms for family comfort. Natural atone (Ireplece end a large gtassed end screened porch fee-ing til* lake. DOLL HOUSE. The Ideal tat home e‘ retirement Umerjuaf 8 eka from Bi. Mikee. 5 very Mrert.hU r..M. tic up (or aoloui lam-lement with Itb-cnr ge:: targe expansion i future bedrooms, i Jly kitchen, itull hi rage. lH0.76b,*raA.' EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS, to 4 torat of take privileges In Crescent Lake. Clieck the features, 3 bedrooms, basement, ^t$xjjl kitchen. OPP^OR’rmjfl’TY, Would you c tredef cKe^fk tfita* 8-room* l!^ded’"l "111- ;3.'wai|’.''..r'S3e: MULTIPLE listing service NEW Custom Built HOMES I. Your lot or eurs. 1. Tops to quality. I. Satisfaction guaranteed. I, Architectural aetvlce nvallsbel. J. Liberal trade-in plan. 8. Ranchers - Colonials - Trt- KAMPSEN REALTY and BUILDING CO. FE 4 0921 GI-GOOD, CREDIT $300 CLOSING COSTS Will put you to this oozy 2-bedroom house to Ward’s Orchards. near school and shopping. WE LL BE GLAD TO SHOW IT TO YOU. NORTH PERftv' Just north of Walton. S-room noma with walk-to basement, large lots. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. Smith Wideman ANNETT North of City—1 Acres Nearly new 8>bedrm. ranch. Living rm. 15x18, Iga. kitchen with dining apace, combination utility and family rm. FA oil heat, 2-car garage. Low taxes. il3.900, terma! Brick Ranch Attractive hhme In a lovely west side wooded setting. 3 bedrms,, carpeted living rm. and dining rm.. unfinished 2nd fir. Finished recreation fm. in basement. Breeseway and attached garage. Donef-son and Bl. Bemxuot School dtatrict. Reduced for quick Near Miracle Mile 2 Acres—4 Bedrooms Custom built home only S moiiUis old and priced below heproduotlon cost, 3 full baths. 2 (Irepleoea, brick and n^^en^aurplue Proving Orounda. 18, paneled library, 4 ________ fly bedrms., plus mnid’e quarters, 5 baUis and tava- aoll heat. Owner eaot* 18 at $58,000. tarma. FE 8-0466 TTftAVtUM ftlAtHS" n^vS cols mi4< buy to be S . LADDS INC, BC^BD T'tals of trees ....... ,S- bedroom home ■ tlreptace —sgie best . dog kennel - 811.500. ,vour oonuaol «n Iha down, or what have you? ^ 'I, THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 29, jm SflhNovsn „ T^ISP and Th« »WMI corn «m b* ,*» ........ » «% •«« pftMeL OM rftlM Mjblii MM pftrc !»i;»S.%s3'8W; CANAL FECNrAGE iwainjto Dweb Uk*. FMjrom -iilffirt________ H, R. HAGSTROM _ RkALTOR HIITER LimB FARK - I twdnMnw. (uU buemenk r«ereatton ......... wim bar.. aluminum aidiOL baths, braaaaway and attached ga* ' ram, tow down payment on FRA tmm'frSrbedTooS. shed. Uvtne room with flraidaoe. »s30Meot lot, aluminum storms IlM TO tsm OOWM — 1 bedroom, with or without ment. CaU B. C. Hitter Real Bs- UA o?'ftS'*SSwo|*BventoSl; private. Rented. QB 4.oa3«. (.akiJProiMirly BBAOraniL LOT. ORCHARD cash, CaU owner* 6B24)S13.__________ DUCK LAKE FRONT - JPYBAR-old cinder block cottage, ll miles west of Pontiac. 3-bedroom, enclosed porch, tot S0X3M. Im-I occupancy. $11,600. Low S DECORATION DAY ' neaiitifnl hiilMlne elt ~L»SM, CAltoLliWlCK ■"“ om brick. Funu tlO.OOO. Terms LAKE PmVitLEOBD LOTS huge shade trees — sandy beach — ftreplaca — barbecue gio,-too, *3.600 down. HIOH 8CENIC LAKE PRIVI-LBOBD LOT — well restrlcted-Clarkston area — *3,360. UNDIpBWOOD REAL ESTATE Highland Twp. Eoultv down. ________ _____ y payment. 636. Et“ Pontiac. F* e-»iu». . rAsroostow boooht any • e In MIonignn. Bnrl 0»f^. ILleenaed Moa^ejr^Leitoeral^^ WIIKN YOU NEED S25 TO l-TO stmkTK'aMTS' 'HkTIsW' BUCKNER FINANClfCOMPANY ■ BORm£p“TO"$SOO Monty to loan-- 61 “plWIf AViUtABLE, CONSOLt-dM bnia. Bmnodel your home. Refinance your land contraet. Shm forectoauru. First and see- OIMTOBY tWANCB COMPANY OL, 1-no* Orton Rceh^r < LOANS Signature- AUTO or FURNITURE OAKLAND Loan Company B Btntw Bimk Bldg. Need $25 to $5C0? , ,'Sce • Seaboard Phone FE 3-7617 FE 4-1538-9 TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN 214 E. ST. GLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS ssIT* "FRIENDLY SERVlCil" $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE Security INIENT FAST. CONVB 34 mtmtba to Home & Auto Loan Co. Mortgogs Lmhi $600 to $2,000 n Onklagd County homes, mod- $750 TO $2,500 CASH LOANS eqtdtlea. ----- •quipmeni. 34 to I. Group All your koeount with debts into one one place to ___ Family Acceptance Corp. 311 National Bldg. 10 W. Huron, Pontiae A Mortgage Probleni? We make mortgage loans lo met. your requtremente. Any property, any amount. Prompt, dependable It Mortgage and Realty C PE 2^759 or 063M^ I pay off all your bllla, land ntract or mortgage, providing u get a home Improvement on ur house. Must have 80% equity more. Big Bear Construction ■tFE 3-7g33. Loan 8 FB 4-06 No ap-I, Eqult-1711 A. > OwiMrsblp ar It Mortgage Lost IS Fi 3-81' BEDROOM. LAKE PRIV1LEOB8. (1,600 iDQUiTY IN 3 BEDROOM home, landscaped, carpeting and large fenced yard, screened pa- garage. swi James“Boad. r northern cottage c ' bousetratler. WM. T. (TOM) REAGAN REAL ESTATE 66-OALl6n ORCHARD SPRAYER With 100 n. hose; will Swap for what have you of equal value or tsll for illM. 33a.9S04....' lectors Item, for umbrella t Sals Clothing ______64 NICE F0RMAL8. SIZE 12. cheap. FE 6-0011. Sals Hsusshoid Goods 65 1 KITCHEN CABINET BASE. *0.60, refrigerators, all iltee. 010 up; 2 piece living room sectional, $10: gas and electric stoves. *10 up; Simmons hlde-a-bed, *19.60; upr right vacuum cleaner, *0.60; kltch. en table, *4: wringer washers, 116 up; Westlnghouse electric dryer. *20: TVs. 014 up; bookcase, 16; oocaelonal chairs. *3; White sig sag sewing machine. like n«w,.610.60; 0x16 rug. $0.60: port-■ble Underwood typewriter, like new (36. BUY - SELL - TRADE PEARSON'S FURNITURE 42 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-7861 110 >lWpRE'TEL‘fWBIO*r636‘ Fireside chaire $16. Kitchen stools 11. Bargnlns in clean, guaranteed •toves, refrigerators and washers. f,'}.rto.‘lle'S?rc*‘n*.---- *16. (1,600 wool stric pop ( lte%lf Chsl Bedrooms I _..jlng set *31. . ..... . - Llvlni room *10. Odd beds, dress ers. chests and rugs. Everythin) In used nirniture at bargain price ALSO NEW LIVING ROOMS BEDROOMS. 1---------- mattresses. F layette, FE 3 in, and‘Fri. sinke, half pfii iSomSiW "'HiSk...I , OL 1-3W MONTHLY. SINO- ..... . jablnet atyle. Magic aetlon, Zlg Saggar, tor mittimholet. (^LOSINGOUf 'Ti^FLC^B ---- BBDR00I?^£^%N0 CO. 41*3 Dial# ^ IPitfCE HONDURAS MAHOOAffy bedroom eulte. 3mlecf - - ‘ Seafoqm suite. RaUa wiekly. *¥»ar^'e!* 42**^roSar( 7ALb ‘niiB, - « "BUYLO" TILE, 102 B. BAOl H%AW CARNIVAIis FAMOUS NECCHI DIAL jjlb-Zag in beautiful wood eOnaole. Makea buttonholoa, fancy de- wfShMit ’ attachmenlM! 40-INCH GAS STOVE. ', a yoara old. AUTOMATIC WATER SOFTTENER, re-condltloned. 80-gal. glaaa lined ^^jeetrle Water ...... ............iuSk» Crump'Electric Co. Auburn Bd.________FE 4-3513 Tappan gas rang ABOUT ANYTHING YOU WANT f88ND™A“T ? WSA^IS. “ «%*rLW.uM‘a;g anoee ot all kinds NSW AHD USED. Visit our trade dept, lor W%*S»%r trade. Com. out OPEn’^S^*-SA^. • TO g 34 MONTHS TO PAY 4 miles E. ot Ponllao or 1 mile E. jrf^^Auburn ^Ho^hts on Auburn, ALMOST NEW SINGER SLANT needle In console. Makea de"~~~ overcasts, blind hems, etc. BIRCH DESK. *36; SMALL OAK dresser, *10; 32-foot ex tension laaaer, gap, FE 4-1*63 BARGAINS GALORS ! ON NEW FURNITURE 6-PC. DINETTE SET . Berry Garage Dbor Factory Seconds Available at slieablo diaeonnt ^316^01. Stroot, Blrm^q.^ dHROME DINETTE I _.e youraelt — Save. Four ________ aUd table, «8*.9S value, *3**3. New 1*03 deetgne, formica tops; Mlchlgjui^ Fluorcaccnl, 393 Or- CLEAN FRIOID^AIRE REFkiO-erator, excellent condition. OR 3-1614 " - DAVENl ........... ................ condition, *38. FB 3-3002. DAVENWhT ANto CHAIR. ijTiL-Ity cabinet 18x36x3*. reaaoimble. ■FE 2-3640._______ lATiNPOR't, Ei-ECfRIC RAlfd®. — '...... ■ ‘‘Iroom ----........................mable OR 3-1118. FREEZER UPRIOHT $146.88 New In cratos make, iilT fact freem S-year warranty on unit. LLY'S APPLIANCE ^ 8317 Dixie Hwy., Drayton electbOOjx sWeBpI"^ rifle valuea, *ltt.06 whili last. Michigan Fluoreaeen Orchard Laxa. cent, Soap, augar, ---- butter, cake mix. cereal. ,soup, dog food, vegetablea, fruits, juices Kleeneg. Pet Milk, bsby freeeer. Call tor free oatalog and Infjymatlon^EM 3-3230 I to 0. OE double “ OVEN STOVE, deep well, french fryer. Call ba-fure 3:30. MI 6100, LEONAkO^ BEPligiBATOBTiTljl^ used only t month. -------- treeser hoidins lk-«o tbs. *i*0. 8116 ___________________■' hotPoIW ikiFfttawkAfjISi a8& electric etove, droploM dining tsble, 4 ----*■'“» *-*•'- ------------- I. brei ... ____ uohofa .—togany end tables, mattress and ook i apring and mattreai 4-tn6f evejilnga_________. iR-^NB-^iirp EjL^tf !», *'■ EIvino.....BobiJl" ■ aiiiT*E'.'''Sg4C'“fi Frlgidalre Air Ct________ 6000 BTU,. jpiarantead .. I Kolvinator Betriterktor, now family alio, troeaer ...... I -Maytag automhUe waMier InalaUed. gtSrantoad . Hoover Sweeper, all FORMICA, FLOMBINO. MINT, Odd sixes for emoll jobs. V tpeelal—3*0 eq. ft. and up. PONTIAC KITCHBN SPECIALTIBS 3000 W. Huron___________ FB 4-032* GOODYEAR . SERVICE STORE 10 B. Caaa Avoi FE 04133 HEAVY DUTY MOWER Eeltpae model. 4 h.p.. 33-ln. eut sulky. *800 new used one eeason, *260. MA e-l*8g. Hatchery Rd. OR 4-1101. SiWINO MACHINE. BIO-ZAO FUL- wwinu MAwnsns,, ly automatic, needs n gossss^. you f- guarki 4-4340. ir. water neater, on In perion, 100 Auburn. HOT WAlhBB HBATBB. SO^E BED TVs. 610.** AND UP. USEI) Frlgidalre refrigerator. $30.06 -Sweets Radio and AppL, 433 ------. Fe 4-r-- VACUUM CLEANER.S Brand new 10*1 tank-type with all attachments. Close-outs. 116. Hoses, 7> nylon, oxoh. *-*' 5 ’ BVY~«eU, ElAriB.' 1 lOld and mieo. 311* Aubll . WYMAN'S BARGAIN STORE Used lofa bed ........ |l.... ^p^grrrnV“‘V;;;;:;:; Twin bed, eomnlete .. P (3) *-po. Waterfall bedroom si complete with spring and i Ue* ..... .........*80.68 ANTIQUE SHOW PRBMIBRB-Mlohlgan Btata Pair Oroundi, June 1-3-3, 12 noon to 10 p.m. Admleeton *1 (Oroateit Show Bverl. anttouo ft irlee from < HIwSiBD SMART » Weet TIeken Rd., Bocheeter Hi-Fi, TV & Radios Johnson Radio & TV flood need TVs. Buy-Sell-Trade. _______________ 1, 682-2916. M6.000 GRAIN WATER BOFTBN-FK 6-1030. WHITE automatic 4x8 plyeoore ........... 4x6hi" standard masonite „ pigaterboard ...... *1.36 ____’• Tvoryboard ........ f3.26 4x6%" fir plywooo .....-- '.0. mahogany plywood 64.46 .1 .3* BURMEISTER LUMBER COMPANY 1640 Cooley Lake Rd. EM 3-4171 Open * a.m. to * p.m. MON. tbrouih FF- pump, 030: apartment l— . trie stove, 016; 63-gaL electric hot water heater, 636; slide proj- 3 ■ 84" ■ ■'. ^ ' 26c*’ft^ "|yWG^i&._103 b^&'Aaw 33 foot"”BXTBN8IOn”lADDEB. __l|kejlew_j_616. FE 6***-%“lnch piyeooreT "x 6. DRA^f§N pL^Wofe ton,' thru YEAI„» ------... to'"uV c^v”ant:wu™ KSmrimMiiFTisr ..............’ .. Make offer, *03-3010. “FORMICA at 0360 N. LIvernoli Rocheetef, i block 8. of Orion Rd. Done In beautiful decorator colors with comblnattone of vertioai and horlaontal alum, elding and brick. 2S?m"*J..V{Ste‘!t 'ir fn"T'color" Prelf*eetlmatea‘*Sm K-dUTTik 60" LENo‘li'H 30-gal. . *40.06; sump pump, *3«.>u, --i-... white or colored bath sets with trim, $10,*8. copper, steel, soli and plastic pipe and fittings at wholesale prices. Garbage dls- ‘"’**alA^‘PLUMBING CO. 113 B. Saginaw _______F” PLASTIC PIPE. %.n-— eents per foot. 1 Inch. Oc per 1% Inch. 13. cente per, toot, italL showers. comwJte wUh fauceu And eurtaine, *69,50 due. 034.80. Lavatories com-•le with faucets, lU.OOi tol-110.00. Michigan Fluores- Blatolese steel double sink, |m.0». Regular double elnk,. *10.06. Range hood and fan. *30.06. 14-2 Romcx with ground 3c. Too ^o. eniranee eeble* 36c; Water heater cable, lie. Q. A. TThompeon, 7006 MHO old wafrahty| FB 648*0 ■aNT WES. iMPOBMp AUK AnriWU«,o, Oriental Items; offlee typewriter. KsrMs Coirif to our whltG olo-t lulu. «»turd»y. June 3. 9 lOon only. Cranbrook Inst -tuts of Belenee. Lone Pine Ro«'Inick ED WILLIAMS snow, tow at S2.90. Motor Mart, and recaps. Regular o wcBus. good supply. ED WILLIAMS 481 B. Baglnaw at Raeburn ^Aprlngs fa r Aar $14 96 n Ppurealf r Scagtei^ ■■:]94 lUSBMAN EAOLE MOTOR ter. In iperteetxeondltton, FB doreon Bales A servleo. 1041 AERIAL, BUNS GOOD, LOTS ot^ ebrome. *136. 313 Going 1*63 HARLEY DAVIDSON, *316.. 14 FOOT FBATHERCRaITT ALU-mlnum sports runabout, *380. Evinrudo IS H,P. monual, *108. Blgn^ trailer, *4$.-Skis, *ia. OB 14 FOOT FiBEROLAs! BOAT'aND •• woLVkimi • -Amii r. can trailer and ms *1,060. 111*4 V._________________ jlMOti. IMOOT ' Oiv-SEORB 1962 MODELS ARE here; CHRYSLER mAriNE MOXOI BATON POWERNAUT AND Ml Alloy Trailers and Boat Hols Marino Aoeossorlts and Spoi ^°8b^18MUT boat Ij**'*®*^ Auburij Road Sales and Service Specials ... Flberglae bent. 30 ineh wlnd-shleld^ cMtroU. wlneh^ iHiiif"' 38 hF n .4 ft. Fibarglas Boat. 30 jneb Windshield. n^^conjrolK battat/_^d tainight, a-' trie) all n W. Auburn Bd. UL M0*1 aet, crooki and Uv.ernoto)i - AUTHORIZED DEALER OWEN CRUISERS, CENTURY SKHB EVINRUDE MOTORS tUpE Hoiro _____SELECTION NEW AND USED BOATS. • ^ WALT MAZUREK'S LAKE & SEA MARINA WSrotf T idAT' s........... at r:nV 5Siv..**i me VOiSflAC ril^^TCTSPAY. MAY W, 19m' ^ JOHNSON OUTBOAIJD MOTORS TS% HARINX INSURANCE JO inr buDdred; 010.M llabtl-.10.00 per year tor most Itt. Heneen Aoency. FE S-7003. 40 H>; r............. M98.05 ...iiP TERRIFtC DISCOUNT ON ALL BOATS AT * TONY’S MARINE EVINRUDE MOTORS inrf Amniiti. 200S Orchard Laki d Keeao. 000-3000. THE LIGHTEST 9.8 HP OUTBOARD Tea. Ifa tree. Mercunr now brlnoa yo« ttw Urtteit 0.0 fiddne molorl 070. Trade In your old (ran ootboard thla week only, on oury. Bony Marina IMIO Hally Bd. HoUy WANTED Inme&ata caabi Paul A. Young, Inc. 40JO DIkla Bwyu on Loon Lak OR 44)411 Open 7 daya a week WwM C«»-Tnnfc« 101 opunb"*SSS1?"J‘%Xtow»» A CALL GETS TOP »l FOR JUNK M&M MOTOR SALES aaamn mcawuiuj, u Oale UcAnnaily jufT N. or roimAc piuvb-in OB ”*OR 4J“" FE 0-ai44. AveriU's ----- J tsoao daya. eyeniooa. WANTED: *M-'01 CARS Ellsworth GLENN'S 053 tv*wt Wiiwmi Ilf yie 4-7371 $25 MORE For that blah arade uaed ear. aee ua. belore you aell. H. J.„Van Welt, 4040 Olale HIgbnay. Phone OB TlJW. Wisd Airt^Tiiitk Parts 102 I.W. 7 00-16 8UCIC8. FOR . Chrysler. Complele. FE 6*06M. Jlii^CADiLijAC? ENGINE. EXCKL-lent condition, other parte, best ’ oiler. ME i-OJOl. after 0pm Hubert H. Luchtman Parts and aerrlee on all Importa Superior Auto Sales TRIUUPH.HILMAN-SUNBEAM 550 OAKLAND AVE. 060 VAUXHALL, VERY CLEAI Priced at $025 for quick aal< Call alter 0 p'm. OB 3.4070, I Ha rOAdster-restoreo Ike new. New trim, new paint, lew motor. Priced at only $005. >h. Ur. Brown. FE 3.4010. lOO Sllaabeth Lake Road. LANCIA APPIA SEDAN with T« enolne. 4 apeed t mission, gun metal gray (i red leather trim! Normal , consumpttwi 30 MPO. and — mal 70-70 UPH. Bustested BOR Price 03.107. Our Price $2295 0200 Sown *t2,00 per m AUTOMOBILE IMPORT CO 'goo^iui^ttw, caula 4-4m alW Tool VoLksWaqon. VOLKSWAGENS! WARD-McELROY, Inc. HEW 44» W. Huron TRUCKS 3B 4.0400 FE 34)110 OR 3.3433 MEMORIAL DAY PRICE SLASH R 6t R Motors Imperial Chrysler Plymouth HASKINS Late Model TRADES 1057 CBETROLBT BEL AIR 4-Door Hardhm, with VO engine, powerglide tranamlealon, radio, beater. Like new condition, be— tiful black and wblto flnlshl lost CHEVROLET E L C A MIN O Pickup with Vt engine, standard transmission, radio, beater. Beautiful aapphlra and white flnlshl 1050 CHEVROLET Blscayne 4-Door gas saving 0-cyl. er-‘— glide transmission. B " green flnlsbl 1000 FORD 4-Door Wagon, with gas saving 6-cyl. engine atar~‘~~"‘ transmlsslonj radio. Uko neu a solid red flnlshl 1060 CHEVROLET Blscayne 3-Door Sedan, with VO engine, standard transmission, radio, and aoUd light blue flnlshl IK SUPER 4 DOOR SE-b radio, heater, VI, auto-—-mlaslon, 0100 down. ' montti. One Tear iv and 01. ________________ Warranty I LLOTO MOTORS. coin. Mercury, Comet, Mel__. English Ford, 333» S. taglnaw. THE Pleasure will be all yoqra whan you ti the family out for a p‘-- with antique Ivt., _ heater, Oynaflow. power ateertng. power brekes. whitewall tires (with treads knee-deep to a tall Indian). All this and It'a a 0-paa-enger. tool Full price .$2395 Remember, we encourage you to check our car.s with a mechanic y(?u know and trust. • FISCHER BUICK 784 S. Woodward, B'ham Ml 4-6222 ACROSS PROM OREENFIELD S mi BUICK BOADMA8TER 75, 3 19.56 BUICK 2'door hardtop, fine running coi dltion. Full price only 1195. .SUKI’I.US MmOR.S 1 S Ssginew __________FE S-463 1M7 BUICK~”2 DOOR, RADIO AND hculer, rxcellcnl condition, ' " price, 6467. No money King Auto Seles. US 8. w and IlMd Tram 103 a CHEVROLET SEDAN DELIV-ry> l-cylinder, standard shirt. Just --------- white finish- Only —■ CHEVROLET I mwiMWMnAW. eei .-.e.oa. fM Chevrolet i ton stake ytruck. I ft. hot. Eslra sharp. t wl^»f*CHBVR5LlT”cb. 1606 ;^4ffi^AVE.,BmMlNO. Better tUsed Trucks GMC Factory Branch gOfflETiTfbiT piaEuPn *lng and p< k finlRhs 1 LUXURY Is the only word to use whe describing Ihe QUALITY Of this magnificent 1651 Buick si per 4-(loor hardtop. Platinum mli with ultra plus black and white Interior. Radio, heater, Dynaflow, power steering, power brakes, whilewalu. All Oils at the Low Price Remember, we encourage you.to check our cars with a mechanic you know and traist. FISCHER BUICK 784 S, Woodward. B’ham Ml 4-6222 r ACROSS FROM orbenfield;s^ CADILLAC,'|S57“P0UPK DEViUjI clean, all power, 5 now t^re*. I ■.iC.w'.IISM' 'SSPOHTUe esUUM ...... ’SO FORD CountIT T-BIRD Hardtop ’5SPORO 4-Door Oalaglo ...S13SS 5SPONTUC Star Chief 5S CHEVROLET Brookwood.. 11445 ’55 PONTIAC CataUDf. ’SS PONTIAC 4-Door 8cdaD..n44S ’51 FORD Custom ”300”.ttOOB ’SO FORD Country Sedan ... .0 005 ’57 FORD Fatrlana “500” .. .0 705 ’00 FALCON 4-Ooor, Clean. ..$1105 GLENN'S MOTOR SAUES 653 llrest Vlilenn A. FE 4-7371 MSI CHEVROLET IMPALA I 01.505. Ea» terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE., BlRMl^OHAM, HI runs'* food, liibher, priced ... CHEW IMPALA 3-DOOR hardtop. Mast aell. FE 3.3150. MOO CHEVROLET CONVBRTIBLFS. 73 per I aatyl LL LLOTO’MWBfl*Llndi.te. -----ry. Meteor. Comet. English Ford, 333 S. Saginaw St. FE ___ - _______--vergUde. __ dio, heater. 'Turquota flidsh. Only fOM. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., MOO 8. WOOD*. WARD AVE. BrnMlNOBAM. HI By Andenon A Isdcniii^r This fence is going to be !l2 feet high, so he can’t j over it, and 12 feet deep, so he can’t dig under it. Haw tf ud IlMd Can 106 New aid UMd Can tatton, 1053 Chevy, 6S1 CHEVROLET. CONVERTIBLE TREAT THE FAMILY poweri^ld lul UjghX HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds Ipgs” $■1000 , excellent condition, h full 0607. No money down, tuto Sales. IIS 8. Saginaw. CARS WITH NO MONEY DOWN ' AD New Car Trade-lna Must liquidate reganUeta I Olds 44lMr"^ .**!*.■.. I ’10 Buick Moor ........... I ’50 Mercury hardtop ..... I ’53 Ford wagon. Uko new .. I " Ford VIetorla .......... I Dodge hardtop ......... I LUCKY AUTO SALES OLIVER BUICK — CADILLAC ’W Sedan ilS65 1661 BUICK Special Sedan .. $2665 1657 BUICK Super 4-dOor... $ 865 1662 CHEVROLET Monza Cp. 62265 1661 BUICK LeSabre 3.door . $2845 -------- ------------ $1895 $ 635 $1185 ________________________ . a 666 1657 BUICK Special Wagon $ 865 '“■* FORD Convert. Suhllner I 585 FALCON Deluxe Sedan $1245 6 PLYMOUTH S 1655 FORD Convi •— falcon Deluxe I - . BUICK WMon E»t..... _ 1696 BUICK Le^brc 2-door - 8U6S •— FALCON Deluxe Sedan 81265 CADILLAC ineetwood 81565 .... PONTIAC Ventura 4-door 12286 1658 BUICK Special 2-door .. $1668 — JEEP pickup, Red ... 11665 ___JEEP Pickup, Maroon . $ 665 1656 PONTIAC 2-door CaW. $1466 "■3 PLYMOUTH 4-door sed. 8 125 PONTIAC 44tT, iijF^mfRblJET^BEL AIR 4-DOOR. Economical 6-cyllnder engine, ttandai'd transmission, ra- ard*^' iSill^*’*radlo,* heater' whui-,iSnl"' $1 »5* Eas™ te*r1ne I^A^' Remember^ we encourage you to check our cars with a mechanic you know and trust. FISCHER BUICK 784 S. Woodward, B’ham MI 4-6222 ACROSS FROM OREENFIELD’S 1966 CHEVROLET BISGATNE - ~«T^er, etanda —_______ Easy ierma. PAT- ’TEftaON CHEVROLET CO.. 1666 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIRHINQ- good tt Riggins. I-DOOR. VERY FB 3-%543. H. ... CHEW IMPALA CONVERT-Ibie, red with red and white trim, full equipped. Including power steering and brakes, and auto, transmission. Extra sharpi Call - ------------ OL 1-8133 or PE and your old ment, or $1,560 4-3531 after 5:30. cash. Call FE 1961 Ford STARLINER with radio, heater. Beautiful tu-lon'e finish! White- ’“$1995 John McAuliffe, Ford 636 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 I960 CHEVROLET 14-TON PICKUP. 6-cyllnder. like new I $150 and assume, payir—*-per month.'OHti : -LLOYD MOTORS. MSS CHEW, 1 OWNER. S. CON- ergiiue, radio, heater, whltewaiw. All white with red' Interior. Only 51.565. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1060 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINOHAM- Ml 4-3735. 666 CHEVROLET , IMPALA CON-vertlble. excellent condition. OA 6-3690, 1954 CHEVY A real nice 2-door. rodlo, heater, .stick shill, excellent rubber, $185. PEOPLE’S AUTO SALES. 68 Oak- 1687 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR SPORT sedan, 8 cylinder, powerglide, radio. heater, whltewalla. Sea mist green and white finish. Only $785. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1600 8 WOODWARD AVE., BIR-MINOHAM. Ml 4-2735. DON’T BUY ANY NEW OR USED GAR until you get our deal I Completely reconditioned used cars at low prices I iiomilR nifiliT I MOTORS. INC. I Chevrolet—Pontiac—Buick OXFORD________________ OA E2525 PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO, 1066 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIR- MINOHAM. Ml 4 3738.______ 1656 CHEVROLrr~ BEL-AIR 4 Door with V8 engine, automatic beautiful condition, lias a brown owner'**csr! sSlARpYgSeS. * CLAKKSTON MOTORS 640 Orchard Lake FE 3-1400 M96 T-BmO. BEAUTIpiUL SOLID and new whUewali $1,795. One veer ■ block south of Birmingham, rarranty I ** One Bring, ' , like b white' with r^ ro^e't'^So.' whitewallT*' Ali PAirSksoii^ cHfEv; -— 8. woodward ., BlRSillNOIIAM. Ml 4-373 STARK HlCkEY, FORD Clawson Mile Rd.. Eaat of Crooks Rkdio, heater, powerglide misaion. Power steering and power brakes, beauUful black wlUi a black topi Full priee $1,682. One year warrsniyi BOB BORST, Lint Coln-Herei’ry, one block 8. of 1$-Mlle on ” ” •“ — Ml 6-453 iWTiSibsriBiffiF dONZA Cbl tr^ steeriiy^ pc Month End SPECIALS Must Be Liquidated on or Before June 1 MARVEL l/lOTORS upIl OOK' ^ J.. dan . 14 Chevy . 14 Buick 55 Chevy 15 Pontiac MARVEL MOTORS 11 OAKLAND AVE. crosa street from 1868 ChBVhOLET IMPALA . door hardtop, 6 cylinder, bower-glide. Adobe beige flntsb, with copper Interior. Only $1,395. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVRQ-MCT CO„ MOO S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINOHAM. Ml 4-3736. 5 for 3 Be Sure to SEE This Section WEDNESDAY MAY 30fh Matthews- Hargreaves >6Rb '“‘**he*??. •sa»Vii. »«r TRY ■i5l8'*'aNdtMt-' 'ioHS,.6-bbar. Bag radtp Iwatar. Can be youra-for only SfSS down and JSSST LSicoln^rrl Mfsir"’ "* •• i860 FORO .SUNUNER CONVER-tible, with Vt angtns. power steer- FQRU PAxiioN. 1661, DELUXil. 3 door, sedan, Fordomatio, 7,600 •>8. Ml 6-3314.______________; 1960 FORD GALAXIE 4Hloor ledan. power steering ant brakes. .V-6 engine. FordO-Matlc Only 11.565. Baay terms. FRANK SCHUCK FORD H-24 at Buckhom Lake ---Orion_________ MY $3611 1966 PORu CtrSTOMLniB g-DOOR VI Fordomatlc tmiMmlaslon, — chanlca special at only $74i .... nrleti Ono yoar watraniyl LLOYD MOTORS, Lincoln. Mercury, Comet. Meteor I^Uah Ford. 2** * SeglltaW 88. Flf $6131. I960 Falcon 4-door Station Wagon. Radio, heater, automatic transmission. ■“■“$1545 John McAuliffe, Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101_____ 1959 FORD 4-DOOR, Automatic transmis V-8 engine, whitewall tires si one-owner. Only ^ $ll^i5. JEROME 'BRIGHT l|tw lSMV(HH>F^t«|HS5N. IdKKHt MSS HLyMObW amMiVt door with radio, beater. automa>iv Iti^'Rdrm’ ^ iS^mteg-........................• a^ssri.’rairi!: _______'.te _______.'n”w”itW25ir»r’ 1660 LINCOLN PRBMtliR ^^R iteertns and Power brakws. A — ----------------c. LLOYD no. door mtu radio, —, ------------------- ■- *-------’oelon, power steering PuU pAoe $1,165. 80B Station Wagon. Very g dltion,'.! owner, all a except power ateer iWcoarrT555rp0LLPRfeB $1,611. BOB BORST, Uncoln-Her- 1961 MERCURY COUNTY |‘aRK 9-paesenger station wagon. Rr”' heater, automatic, power at tag and brakes- Lllrt ne^ down. Aesumo payments, $7$ per month. One year warranty I LLOYD -MOTORS. ------------- SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 3-DOOR. good condl- _________ .. $m. SHARP MoiTcORVAIR MONZA '---- transmission 15.000 private party. As- ---- ----,-j. 34 payments. $78 mo. Old ckr down. FE 2-0346. »66 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 3-door, whlti, Powerglide trana-— tlo. heater. FB 6-5263 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth ! g. Woodward______Ml 7-3211 17 DeSO'fp CONVERTIBLE, tlean,_8harpl $560. EM 3-2269. peSOTo! I 4-d6oR, POWER 1998 DODGE RADIO. HEATT-iv. Ai TRANSMISSION, ruvimn 8 T E E B 1 N O. WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of S.75 per* morfth. Call Credit Jold%ir.£;f^{^o,^ .... 10 T-IURDS TO CHOOSE FROM 1961 and 1962 JEROME-FERGUSON Roohaster Ford Dealer _______OL 19711 858 DODOE 'cONVklRTlhLE 1961 Ford ia ’ $1695 John McAuliffe. Ford 836 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 liHi Folib'l-bodit" ranch ' WAd- ester Ford Dealer. OL I-WIL__ .UB <3bupi~Hr. Eft. WHITEWALL LUTELY NO MON- .6»-n.-r srr «.»r.. ilr, Parks, at MI 4-7800, Harold Turner, Ford, m7“fobd ■ wir ooo'ErTSSTSI, tires, Rejuonable. $62-3732. llilFoilD OALA)0®"*fcONViRf; Ible With .radio, heater, power steering aM brakes, heaytltul White 'With a. whita |om iwt lulH this Wiel At only and assume payments po% m ‘ Warrtntyl neoln, Herat "rS 1659 FORD 3-DODR. RADIO, HEAT. ER. WHITEWALL TIRES. ECONOMY BNOINE. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume pay-ments of 837.88 per month. Call Credit Mgr., Mr. Parks, af ■" 4.7560, Haroid Turner, Ford, FORD. LOW-COST BANK LOAN for your new or need eSr. see L_POTtiao State Bank. FE 4-3i8l. 1690 FORD, CONVERTIBLE. 8660. i__________EM 3-2884 1958 FORD 4-DOOR WITH RADIO, and power ateerlngl Full price $795. One year warranty! BOB BORST, Ltncoln-Mercury, one block S. of IS Mile Rd.. on US Birmingham. Ml 6-4538. 1960 ford OALAXIE CONVERTI-ble, V8 engine, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls. Wfnite finish Vntb black and white Interior. Only f* PATTERSON CHEVROLE'T______ 1600 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIR-MINOHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1861 FORD 1-OWNBR, 2-DOOR 8, FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE 1868, 1858 FORD 3 DOdR, ’TAKE OVER car payments ms itanh in payments la noon ai L OR 3-3332 between TRANSMISSION, ■ WHffBWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of 824.75 per month. Call Credit Mgr., Mr. Parka, at MI 4-7600, Harold Turner, Ford, iiSTPORD CONVERTIBLE. $106. PE »-37$8 1961 FALCON BEATTIE AT THE STOPLIGHT Ml FORD FAIRLANE 3-DOOR SB-dan, V8 engine, automatic. Power steering. Power brakes, radio. BOB HART MOTORS 803 orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-6920 FALCON 4-DOOR STATION JEROME-FEROUSON, Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711. 967 FORD CONVEhTiBLHS' Bright red. radio and heater. Felrlane 500. Take over payments of $5.56 per week to pey oH balance due of 8497. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, King Auto Salea, 3275 W. Huron (M56) ““ • -------- 1962 Thunderblrd, full power, crulsomatic, radio, heater, ete. 2046 B. Maple Rd , Birmingham. LOOK! BUY! SAVE! .......... —vertlble. 1956 Chevy Bel Air 4-door. 1861 Buick LeSabro oonvertibla ioro Vall'ai^^^ aorloi 4- Slovic: “Double Wed- .ding." (1937) Beautiful^ efficient New York buaineaa-wdman Is trying to run her sister’s love affairs jOst as efficiently as she runs her business. WlUiam PoweU, Sfyma Loy, Floence Rice, John Beal, Edgar Kennedy. (56) Invitation to Art 0:00 (2) King of Diamonds (4) Laramie (Cont.) (7) Hachelor Father (9) Stovle (Copt.) (56) Parents and Dr. Spock 0:60 (2) DOble OUliS (4) Alfred Hitchcock (7) New Breeds (9) Movie (Cent.) (56) Troubled Uves 9:00 (2) Red Skelton (4) Dick Powell (7) New Breed (Cont.) (9) New York Confidential 9:60 (2) Ichabod and Me (4) Powell (Cont.) (7) Yours for a Song (9) Front Page Challenge 10:00 (2) Garry Moore (4) Cain’s Hundred (7) Jerry Lewis (Special) (9) News lOtU t9) Weather ifltM (9) Telescope UAW 10:60 (2) Garry Moore (Cont.) (4) Cain's Huitdi»d..(c»nL) (7) aotw-tjp ■ (9) Cheaters UiOO (2) News , (4) News (7) News (9) Movie: “Spltilte.^’ (1934) A yOung girt falls in Imte with an engineer. Kathet^ tune." (1940) After escaping d.atrioo( from a firing squad,...... adventurers turn up in a town In the Southwest. FTsd lltio (4) (Color) Tonight (7) Movie: “She Wouldn' Say Yes.’’ (1945) A young metts and falla in love lady SBNTg, 8:30 p. m. (4). Dick York stars as clerk who steals $565,000 from his firm when boss’ nephew is promoted over him. THE NEW BREED, 8:30 p. m. (7). Dina Merrill and Don Taylor star, and Ronny Howard plays their son in “So Dark the Night," drama of. misplaced guilt. BED SKELTON, 9 p. m. ,(2). Sebastian Cabot guests. GARRY MOORE, 10 p. m. (2). Robert Goulet appears, and Em-my-winner Moore sings solo, 'Show Me a Rose.” “THE WACKY WORLD OF JERRY LEWIS,” 10 p. m. (2). Live, one-hour special by comedian, combining material from his television, movie and nightclub highlighto. At last report, Lewis wqs planning to spoof politics, sports and music, among other things. O. S. LKOULATOa r r r r r r r r r r r ■j F r _K rr ' 1 18 illM mmm BT jr E □ w fr 2T m TC T ST ar hU K r —- □I ■E 3T W J gf vr r r r 1 iT 181 IT BT IT 1ST u 8T BT 8T r 58 W r 1 sr t 1 Ua. teglulttor. M a«cand son of -------M. DWkun Jioou *nd Leah It iuah forward 17 Take r ■ It Prasld. 31 Perafa>r 38 rr.'!- 4a Atm a*rie (56) French Through . Television 4:60 (7) American Newsstand PL'l^MOUTH (AP) ^ Two Plym-outh housewives died yestetday When their car was involved in a cradi In Plymouth Township. Police Identified the victims as Mrs. Ivah Pint, 58, and Mrs. Sophia Trucks, 95. Both wem dead on admittan^ to* a hospital. Officers/said a car driven by Mrs. Pii)t was hit broadside at by a car driven by Guy Bunyea, 23, of Plymouth. Bun-* his wife Patricia. 23. were (4) h ‘Saint Takes Over” (4i (Color) George Pierrot (7) Action Theater (9) Popeye and Pals (56) What’s New? 6:60 (5$) Travfl 6:46 (56) NewO Tdagazine 6:66 (4) Kuld* and Ollie Indict Dallas Firm in Detroit Swindle DALUS, Tex. (UPD-Four op-crators o( a Dallas construction firm were indicted yesterday on charges of swindling a Detroit finance company out of $60,000. Named In the indictment Bob Johnson, Robert Fussell, BOb Lewellyn and Merle Furtl-’k Lewel-lyn, identified as operators of the Johnson • Underwood construction firm. The indictment clalpied the four sold first lien iMtes to the Pion-neer Finance Co„ Inc,, of Detroit .. houses that either did not exist or were not completed. -Today's Radio Programs-- wx»* CrtOi woaa <1 wFON wiMt (iim> OKLW, Jo* Oentllg. ^AB, N#w», ewrti WtoN, MgVg, TIno ll:g»-WJK MjifS* ssa.'tt.’’" VoiM. 0. MMi: JKjJ iwwww, 9tt«rra*n WPOW^ H«wi. Don McUod WJWR. »•••. *TW SiM-Wm. MgyA, Herr*! WWJ. "MjirMiM a m. ||W--W3II. N«WI. ehMniAN WWJ. W«wi. tynktr iKlKaX,— lil»~WWJ. Tlt«r BgMbAU ’jtensifiiar"' SilO-WJia. Mvwi. ihiMMM iStlSii**'**''*'*"' «r*“Mrws” WXYX, N«Wi. ItobMUgg gKLW. H*m$, M*Uf ' WMN’. M*7M, prgi ‘Vxr%na Files LibeT Suit Against Stahiin DETROIT (AP) Sen. John H. Stahiin, R-Bddhig, and three other were tiamed as defendants yesterday in a $l>mlllton Ubrt suit filed in Wayne County Orcuit 'Court by a Republican- leader; . Richard Durartt. The aidt, filed by Durant'e at-tomiqr, Larry 8. Davldow* DOWN—Loricing like a travtier vory glad to mtum to Its nafivt Mil, tiito EHtam Air Unea Supcrconsteilatlon rests on its nose after akidding to a safe landing on a toam-oovered runway at New York'a. Idlewlld Airport last night. All 35 pasiengeri and ap riMUfgs < i enaw memban aboard eaeaped impuT. The plane, flying in from Washington, D. C., had a jammed nose wheel. It circled Idle wild for 55 minutes while crash equipment was readied and Benny Goodman, Coimbo in Rusaia for S-Week Tour MOSCOW (UPI) - Benny Goodman, the “King of Swing,” and hisjata group open a aix-weeka (our of the Soviet Union tomorrow with a concert in Mtoacow. Plane Luggage Urged Inspected Goodman arrived by plane yee-terday ivith hie erehestra. Whea ax player Phil town the ramp from WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep. Jamea G. O’Hara, D-Mich., intro- member of the Meecow Jass Club “We know you here,” the unidentified Ruinian eaid to Woods. ‘You used to play with (j4ne Quill, '‘That’s right,” Woods answered with surprise. “1 thought would be a atrangie country, but I feel better already.” O’Hara, who Introduced similar legislation two years ago, said the Centerville, Iowa, jet crash dem-onstrated “the need for this legis- 2 PIpouth Women Die in Auto Crash ^unyea was released after mak-g a statement to police. O'Haro Introduces Bill to RoC|uire Airlinti to Chock Boggogo, Cargo quire alrilnea to inspect the luggage of. their passengers (or explosives. several companies already have perfeoted X-ray or flooroscope-type maehiaee whioli iMWld cheek a mowtiig line of inggage for sns- O'Hara said an inspector could Iftanmtiate between a clock or flaahllght and a bomb in i suitcase. The only intonvenience O’Hara could foresee 'MUld be the necessity for passengers to remove unexposed film (ronr suitcases because it would be ruined by the O’Hara’s bill would authorize suits by passengers or property owners at the crash site against airlines for any damages resulting from failure to inspect luggage. The bill would affect all oommer-ctol passenger flight luggage and ligh-Altitude N-Blasts (ill Be Set Off in 3 Days WASHINGTON (AP) - The ost spectacular shots of the U.S. dear In the Pacific will gin in 'pbont three days. These e the high-altitude bunts whose iliuuit iow win be seen for hundreds of inlles. The three or tour blasts with their high-Mi|rlng nudear fire- The qiow from the first test-hut not thO fireball—probably will be visible in Hawaii, aWwt milas from Johnston Island. The Island state very likely will be able to see the unearthly flra-balla of the aecond and thlixT temporarily diirupt aome radio coramunicatlons and radar observations. Militarily, the shots obviously are design^ to test the effects of high-altitude blasts on the nation's wartime communications gear-and on electronic monitors designed to detect oncoming mis* slles. The government announced Monday the series will be fired ver Johnston Island. The first shot, with an explosive force of something less than a million tons of TNT—a megaton-wlH be exploded at a height of "tens of ktlometers.” Educated guesses put this at about 30 to 40 w Ma-K8 UP? Two following blasts—one In the megaton range, the, other less than a megaton—will be triggered highcr-sq: to 500 miles, according to some sources. The Atomic Energy Commleslon would go no further than “hundreds of kilom-etert.” One hundred kilometers is 60 miles. Whether a fourth shot will be necessary depends on the results df the Initial three explosions. So far the United States has announced firing 14 nucHBf Ixplo-slons in the current series of atmospheric tests which began April 2S. All have been In the vicinity of aurlatmas Island, tlfo other test site in the Pacific range. Houstwifo'i Phono Coll Holpi Nob Wolkoway IONIA (XP)-d( housewife’s telephone call aided yesterday in the capture of a Michigan reformatory walkaway at Saranac, state l)oUce David E. Houston, 20, of Jackson night but fled a dormitory Sunday . hlf woi4t.garh was Spotted yetter-di^ by Mrs. William Brown who celled the Ionia post to report his Otfleen found him along « road rarby, Houston was senteiwf ‘ ftoiq. Jackson County in 1950 on carihsft on purple T^latlon, Parisians Faxinated by Sinatras Entourage By EARL WILSON PARIS — Frank Sinatra’s due here June 4 on his world tour of shows for children's charities — and Parisians are all agog (or is It all agrog?). He sings at the famous Lido nightclub — and the dinners will cost 60,000 old francs each — $100. But It la Frank’s travel plans that titillate the Parisians. He has an entourage of 18, including seven musicians, “one factotum in charge of the press." a cook and a valet, eound engineer, TV cameraman, secretary, director, an administrator, and “three fiiendo,” including Hollywood restaurateur Mike Romanoff and his wife. “The three friends have ho specified task on the tour,” so it Is announced, "except to chat with Sinatra when he has a free moment.” ★ ★......... ★ Latest Rome rumorl Us Taylor has been phoning Eddie FIMier— pooalbly hoping to entice him back to Italy—to make Richard Burton jealous. (If Dickie can go back to hts wife, she can go back to her husband, seeeeeeeee?) ★ ★ ★ . Triny Perkins is practically the Cary Grant of France, Cartoonlsto uae his name in captions to denote male glamour almost as they do BB and MM for gal glamour . . . Audrey Hepburn’s had four dresoes made by Givenchy Just to wear for Jumping Into the Seine in her picture with BUl Holden. “Together In Paris." Why four? She’s got to have a change for retakes. . ilr ' ★ GOP. Also named as defendants were (Smrles A. Ferry, Stahlin’s press secretary and former publicist for the Republican Committee of Oak* land (founty, and,two persons listed as John Doe and Richard Roe, Stahiin, who seeks the Repub-licatt nomination for lieutenant governor, earlier asked t h e Fair Cllampalgn Prac-emission to investigate his claim that "extremist , _ . . with Durant’s blessing, were planning the Wayne County GOP takeover. The aenator iold the "exire- THE MIDNIGHT EARUN NEW YORK ... Vince Edwards ("Ben Casey”) got a wire from Basil Grille of Crosby Productions saying re the Emmy Awards, "I thlhk we were scalped )>y the block voting of the N.Y, Indians; you Are still No. 1 wltli us”... Eva Gaber grabbed the dramatic lead In a Broadway show. Richard Rodgert’ll become a grandpa for the fifth time. . . . Sound of Music’’ celebrated Its 1,000th performance at a Four Seasons party. (Kurt Kasxnar’s the only oast member who hasn’t missed a show)... A dWk company’s releasing a "Ballad of Richard Burton”.,. Jackie Gleaeon and Louis Frima talked over 52nd St, days at Basin St. East—when Prlma earned $75 a week, and Gleason was a star at $100.. . . Teresa Brewer(s among the bidders for ArUe Shaw’s dastle-llke home on Spain's Costa Brava ... ★ ★ 'dr Today’s Best taught Marty AUen claims the agriculture secretary found a way to use up our vast food surplus-he’ll give it to the Keimedyi for a famUy picnic. With I’d said that: Hollywood seems to be the place where film etars are marrying more these days, and enjoying It less^— Albert Bishop. Quote. Bari’s Pearls: The average American doesn’t know much ut Laos — but he knows all about Lts. . . . That’s earli (Oepyright, 1912) Scholle to Recommend Rejecting Constitution 'Ii GOP Laodof Durant Names Solon, 3 Others in $1-Million Cose lls’s charges that "extremist traiiM” were trying to seise of the Wayne County: tImlUatlon. tion and threats of physical rio* lenra” In their plot. Durant’s bill of complaint states that he Is a member of the Jolm Birch Society, but denies Stsh-lin’s allegations that he also is associated with Rockwell’s Delegst«%, Inc., a group led by self-styled Rockwell and other far-right NASA Releases Pictures Scott Took on Flight CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (* — ki few of the spectacular sights astronaut Maloom Scott CarpeiUer saw "in upace are shown In pictures he took throughout his Up bital flight. Some of the scores of pictures he snapped were released last night by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. They were taken In color but were released initially in black and white to pe^ mlt swift news distribution. They showed the “snowflakes" Ckurpenter reported spying at each, sunrise and which he theorized were frost specks flaking off his capsule;, the sun setting beneath a blue. Haze layer around the earth’s horizon; the balloon he ejected and towed behind the spacecraft; cloud formations; the westerU coastline of Africa; and the Atlas booster rocket falling away after it separated from the Police Search for Mother of Abandoned Newborn midland IE — A »* or 4Aay-old baby girl remained in satisfactory oondltlm at a hoapital here today, while sheriff’s dietectives continued their search for the mother. Detectives said they have “a few lads but nothing sdM" In the In- The baby, wrapped in a towel and partially placed in a paper bag, was discovered- in a brusb-fUled ditch alongside old U. S. 10, tour miles southeast of here, Sunday night. DETROIT (Ji—President August (Gus) Scholle said today he will recommend that the Michigan AFL-CIO go on record at its convention next week against the proposed B constitution. Scholle expressed confidence the convention would follow his recommendations, saying, "I don’t think you could sell the delegates that kind of a bill of goods, no matter wlwt.” Scholle expressed parllcusr convention over ike leglslstlve nDpoirionmeiit which II approved. He insisted that both houses of the legialature be apportioned on a basis of population only, arguing lor the principle of "one-man. one? vote” and objecting to «roa being given any weight in apportionment q( Senate seats. BACKED DBMS Scholle and other AFL-CIO leaders Kenerally have mipported Democratic candidates tor state of- fice since the 1948 election of G. Mermen Williams as governor. That party's gubernatorial candidates have been successful since. George Romney, Republican can-Jdate for governor and a vice president of the constitution is improved In every section, compared with the cumnt 1908-drawn docu- NAVY COLOR GIRL - Mqp« Littleton, Cheverly. Md., a secretary at the Navy's Bureau of fhlps,. poses yesterday after h«-tng named the Nava) Academy's "OMor Olri” for the June week beginning Friday at Annapolis, Md. Bus Passenger Slain After Stabliing Three (MCAOO (AP)-rA pssssenger aboard a Greyhound bus; who police said went berserk and stabbed the driver and two other men, was fatally shot today by police, * t *. Police aald the knife wlelder. Identified as MUo Savo Brakieh. 27, of San Francisco, thrsatenad to Mil the 49 paasangera in the noiniiffy ueHciiwu inv cM7ueii-v «« “vastly improved" under a uniform appt^ionment feature giving 80 -------* --**ght to population to area. Ised auffering foom shock. A ★ W Policemen Arthur McCSsusIln and Ross Moran said thsy fired at Breklch 'When he refused to obey their orders to drop his knifo. The pollcemen had stopped thalr squad car when they saw the bus parked lit an emergency strip. - . # A . A Wilfred Doss, 41, of Addison, Hi., the .driver, told police he Stopped the bus to SMk police aid after Biekioh irted to start fight With another posiengar, T, of Nagi Uam Kokko 23, Mich, an Army private '"wit Romney, who resigned ss pres-Moitt of Ameriean Motors Corp. to run tor governor, said the Hovse Bpporttonment In the new constltullon Is shout as olosely are observed. Romney described the Senate as "I completely disagree with him (Romnoy) on the basic iuues," Scholls told a reportor. "1 thlnl they actually mutilated the consti tutlon, rather than improved It,’ Dotroit R«tail Butintu li 'ExcGllRnY Thif Yrot DETROIT (AP) - Retail bual-nesa in Detroit is excellent this year, reports the Chicago Federal Rosarve Bank compared to MU. In March and April, retaU sales of K and men’s and women’s clothing were up. Ap-pllaitOM showed the strongest gain cent horn In April 1962, sales cthing was 22 per cont bettor than tho same month of 1961, wbile appaiht Showed a 20 per « RENTAL• SOET WATER 0-.7 « m:! Solti—$199 Up LINDSAY sonr WATER CO. PI 8-«<2l II Nowboivy St. SONOTONE Houle ol Hearing ' Free HtmtlnR Tests FraePa»la|aiRearof "Opea fvet. hr AppelalOMar 148 Oakland Federal 2-1225 USED TEi 5UAMNTIW _______ .^TiiSef: ■^etfd l>RH lORMtOE'S mt AIR CONDITIi 110a 4M.V. asres vn Ap| A i ' I'. \!c;-.->-f TOg. PONTIAC l*BESS.- toESBAT/MAt fai^4ft60 ; M Sends Name IX)^ snved as FT boat ridmieni bt the Pacific during W«ld War H. of friend fo Senate , UTASMINGTON^ «l ------------- fg 3-0291 Kennedy sent to tt«e Senate yia-terday the'nomihatioh 9 WITH THIS Aii I In,his Detroit! ‘qwiT was freed, but the other']* WITH THIS two remained lit prisbn for other Four quently were convict^ as the | actual killers of Lipton. I Official Bta^ flower .of IiK|la is &7sy*wi he zinnia. '_______________'ftiPPPi LEE DRUGS 439Q Wsla HiPkwsy .. «a PIslas Oil 4*MA.v-r Israeli Tribunal Reject^ppeal by Eichmann Supreme Court Calls ^Cven Death Inadequate > in Confirming Sentence JERUSALEM (ilWIsraers Supreme Court today rejected Adolph Eichmann’s appeal from his death sentence, calling even that penMty inadequate when compared to the enormity of his crimes. "For who can have envisaged a criminal greater than Adolf Eich-mann?" (he high tribunal demanded in confirming the sentence imposed on the former Gestapos officer by a lower court last De- cember. The decIMon left Eichmann only the slender chance ol ex-eetltlye cletnency to escape the gallows for his part In the Nasi nussacre df. six million Euro- The 56-year-old former chief of the Gestapo’s Jewish affairs section betrayed emotion only by keeping his hands tightly clasped as Associate Justice Simon court's judgment, which affirmed the death sentence “without hesitation or reserve.” He stared fixedly at the judges. The judgment rejected Eichmann’s claim that he was a mere cog in the Nazi murder apparatus. saying; “The appellant was not an inferior official, but indeed a high-even an exalted — authority who held sway not- only in Germany, but far beyond its confines. ' “He overshadowed all his as-soclat(|s In Mf department, Including his chiefs, for there was no equal to the appellant In fa-natlal devotion to designeople will use the park tomorrow If the weather Is clear. Good weather could also bring up to 10,000 to Pontiac Lake Rec- itation Area and another 12.000 to the Holly Recreation Alta, Holly already has itcorded :rowd of 1-1.500 on Sunday, May _9. Park Manager Murray Tels-worlh said however that camping traffic may not be as high as holidays due to Membrial Day falling in the middle of the week. “We expect between 50 to 150 campers to In^gin arriving tonight." he said. Paul Wlgg, Pontine l.*ke manager, reported a lifeguard will be on duty at Hie beach all day If the weather Parks may be pweked through-11 the county with “va^atloneiis” making short jaunts on the short holiday. A ♦ *4 , All city, county and federal offices will be closed. Area banks will close at their regular times today and open at the regular hour 'Tlmrsday morning. O PATROL KOADH Most otores will also be closed. Police and isherlff’s deputies will be out In full foitc, ixmeentraling their efforts on major IhorouBh-ts near the mclropolllan a Mosl i, major thoroughfares grudlng has bi hail an eleven course dinner iwuld Winkler around and look in §0 or 60 new marble figures If II's slqiue night —- but If you liad a sml(len .veil for 'imlntthgs, ytm One of the IndrserilMiltle cell, lugs look n world tamoiis palnier M*ven years on his aching back. This plin-e even defies deserlp-Jackie Kenaikly. If »• i't • TV, /A imriiHn pfii uHt IV uv $i lihe'd lie onl of elreola-II uarollne had grandehll- I- own crowd of 23tl newspape piHiple fiian 33 ixumIHes was Joined by IkXI lop dlizcns of Paris and we oaMtiiled alimif a third of the space, Y(ai could easily have sealed 3,000 and left room tor an indoor track meet. Rem\*mbor', these aro just Individual rooms in one palaci;, and nil around the walls are tliese world famous paintings We liad dinner there. Imagim*.. There’vla Wen two lmm|uels before. One was for Hie Queen of Ureal Britain ntkl the ntlier tor the sprilely-tiMim that's Just less limn city lilook liaig -->-,nnd I mean that illeially—and. is entlrrly lined wllh mirrors. The oulMkle gardens were where the Weai*y king and his an* slightly smaller lharti Niagara Falls but Just as seente auti eonslderably lutfler than JMd Fallbful In Vellowslone Psfrk. ! II the Feeneh remain at I If Ito-iissla slays In s aiul If Russia slays In vwn baek yard. TIickc varln'us Louies wanted a place lo worship, so they hod a •hopel over In one comer. It’s hIniuI the size and situpe of All Saints Eplsropal Church here tn Pontine' ami If ,v<»u didn’t have n guide, you couldn’t find It. Veil eaii’l help luit ju* Impressed by the Mter manners lhal exlsl bi so many foreign A grand Jury In Franklin. Thk.. looking Into the death of Texas agriculture official Henry Marshall Bccopted'Monday a curtaUsd ................on Estes' deal- We’re fliilpoliiliHli We alwa.vs suffer. , Pve never siwn as many ears In heavy Iraffle aa Purls can pro« diiCe al any given hour hut politeness assists. The number of these mbigels seurrylng In evory dlreellun Is almost trighlwlng. They ■'"***0 Irom the right, Nett, tCOuiliiueil on Page 2, Oil. •) the FBI. tour grand Juries, the Internal Reveihie flervlee, Ihe Agrieullure D«|tarlment aiMi Iwo r In ixiUon Tito government filed n motion lo quasi) a I ■ olficinis provide the hill 17&|aige imprisons Cuban PWs HAVANA tW - 1>1ilel Cbstro has reportedly moved more than fSl captives of the Bay ol PigS In-vnslon to penllenUarhM, appurehtly to prod m esUe resitua group fo get up flw rsiwom lor the flO ailing prisottm heiismt to the Untwtl 'V-. Yl.. THE PONTIAC PRESS. Tt ESDAY, MAY 29, 1962 OtiOam! C«mty CorpomtJoo CooMNd Nonnw Baimrd today warneil th# twt AHocatton Board that Ow lioard'a iMiminary rata o{ M 19^ woidd meiw reduction of oouiity earvUiw and coMtrueUoo, hy fl,633,090 below the 1963 tana.' t|ya budfat of 916.965,309. The county had aiked for 6.U diia year. Barnard read a reooltrtion from Uta County Waya and Maani Committee urging the rata tnereaaa to meet the county 1963 budget. Vaatarday, tlie board ac-foaad at **iibderiniiiing Mw pub-lie aohaala" by teeomroending a iThe charge waa made by Mrs, John Harriaon, second vice piesl-dent of the Royal Oak PTA Coun-^ oU, a| the board prepared to set , final allocation rates of the 15-laiH.total far schools, townships and county government. - .She called upon representativea of 31 PTA councils and 260 local PTA8 in toe county iwesent at the 9 stand up in ' About n penona rose la toe Humphreys Family Adds 10th Diploma (Continued From Ihige One) St. Vincent Pariah for helping them through some difficult times. ■ "Our parents also gave us some help,” recalled Mr. Humphreys. There were many happy times of being part of a large family. Carojyn recalled. ‘‘There were so many of us we had to sign an ‘in' and ‘out’ pad ?in the front hallway whenever left wl returned from a date of school activity. We put down toe time we left and toe tone *e re- Cfrolyn admitted there times when they tried to hedge bn the tone, but Wouldn’t get away with It for "'Mbltralways knew when we hit the steps.’’ TNG BEACON UGHT “Tbefe was always a beacon U)tot on toe front of the house that stayed on every., nig|it until the last one was in," recalled Mary Ann. "The kids at school kidded us about it a lot becauaeTi it could be seen all the way Whittennore Street.” “And there was always a pair of boatag gtoves baagtog to the recroatton mom to help us resolve our differences.” IMcfc “AU the children!, tary pact to stay home at least two years after graduation, get jobs and help the younger-ones,” recalled Mrs. Humphrey. w w ' “The four older boys really pitched in and helped out in the ;^earlier years. Right now, Dick and Carolyn are.dbing more than thw share. AU the children have contributed more than their share in helping the whole family" Asked how she felt after successfully raising and educating ten children, Mrs. Humphreys summed it all up by stating, “Why. I never thought of it as being anything unusual.” 1 Laiayatto Mreeti Mrs. Harrison requested that the tax board allocate not lew than 9.7S of toe 15 anIUs to the puUlc The board previously had .set preliminary 3.6 mills for schotda tbih year, constituting a .llKmUl cut foom lost year’s allocation . ............ William am. county superintendent of schtMls said the cut would cost schools-approximately 3300,000 in tax revenues. He argued for-no mtf CRfriCIXGg OOVGRNMGVT Mrs. Harrison criticised county government for earmarking 1912,-000 of surplus funds for a proposed major airport and planned con-stnietion of an auditorium for county supervisors. “Yet you wish to deny the 175,136. public school children of Oakland County 1300.000 which they so desperately need,” she. Articles Give Statements ot School Post Aspirants "The county,” she said, “consistently acquired Itrge surplus funds, he it hy undcrostlmntlng receipts and overestimsttng disbursements or Just sheer good iHck-it is difficult to nscertain.” I She noted that If the school districts could realise a surplus it would go instead for ’’rooms to house the many children on halfdays and in overcrowded classrooms” and to discourage early drop outs through special programs such as remedial reading. •‘In the coming year every school district is facing a renewal of previously voted millag’e (above to the allocated mills) or must ask for new millage,” Mrs. Harrison added. ‘ ^ said the enrollment in public schools in the county next year is expected , to increase to 182,(XK) pupils. Dr. Walter L, CkKjsell, 3A. president of the Pontiac Board of Education, seeks his third term board member. A diiropratle physician, he is a product of Pontiac schoolf and his professional training from Lincoln Chiropratic College, Indianapolis, Ind. He also attended Wayne State and Bittler universities. “An Increase of 6,86. children and ,vpn are planning to tj^ve the “Yet you intend to spend over a half million dollars of our money to house the 85 county supervisors (to the proposed nuditorlum) and another 1862.000 to begin an airport wbieh already has met taxpayers of Oakiapd County. “This is in part ou»- money you re spending and request fulfill your responsibility to the schools . . .” Meanwhile ^the Oakland County ;ax Allocation Board is waiting to leahi from the State Equalization ■ in Lansing what ^he county’s equahzed valuation will be this year. Following is his formal statement regarding his candidacy: pervisorS and the Slat^ Ta#Com-mlssion are recommending an ' paualized valuatlgif here of 13,-- m,168.300. This would constitute a 317,725,000 increase over last year. The State, Equalization Board's final determination is expected by the \?nd of the month. Earlier the Stale Tax Commission was recommending rainng Oakland County’s equalized Val-uation to 32.149,908,2C0 this year. The County Boaid of Supervisors equalization committee objected, stating. tt\at the commission had failed to Jake dropping market values into consideration. Yesterday t h e commission agrc<‘d to the committee’s recommended county equalized valuation, thus reducing the tax base here by 337.5 million. The Weather k- Pull H. B. Weather Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY ~ Partly cloudy, windy and warmer with scattered thundershowers today and tonight, high today 64, low tonight 6S. Showers ending Wednesday and not much change in tempernturo, high 94. Increasing •outheaeterly winds becoming IS to 36 miles this afternoon and tonight and southwesterly wiiMs Wednesday. I Umpersturo prcctdlni • At I sm.: Wind vtluclty I Slrdctlon: Sauthsi'ly . , aun MU Tu«idsy tt 1:01 p m • Wtdnrtdur 0:0V • |{m!i fuM^«dl MnndiiyV ............^ ~ liJ yuiiMB'^i’lry 80 «! i iH«rgu.iu« 11 80 N«» Orfl»H» OO Pfll«K.n n 04 Hnw VorS M AlbUdlicrqui Oj 01 12 Loi'iJlno’" NATHINAly WKAtllMIMicalfored showers ami Ihundarshoweis Pill spread ton^t aoralie th# northern Plaloau gnd Plains to Ureiit iahMi nqflon oM will ttovor iho entire area oaid of the Mississippi ^^^1 wMA' toa otMMptton of the toimodtoie AtlanHc Const and nnUit df _____to. Tt will be a little warmer over ndrthm-n two-thlrela ot the'naiien from the Plaieaua to the Atlatoie and somewhnt cooler to portions of the, middle Altontk) Coast statM, Ex-Pontiac Man Dies in Hospital Frank C. Wood, formw owner and founder of the Fronk C Wood Raal Estate..Co. in Pontiac,'died ywlerday in a: Port Htnon hospital. the result of injuriea re-cMvedi in «n automobile aeeident lar Port Huron on Miayja. Service will be ll a.m. Thursday t the Huntoofi Funeral Home with burial following in White (Tiapel Memorial Cemetery. DR. W. L. GODSEUi NORMAN L. CHEAL Mr. Wood was born on a farm to Kent County Aug. 31, 1885 and educated in country schaols. 51iddleville High School and Grand-Rapids Business College. He was with the Pent Manfuette Railroad early in his business career in office positions at Detroit and Grand Rapids. In both the Pontiac Scliool DiM-ict and the Waterford Tqwn-ship School District, live candidates are seeking election June 11 to two board of education psts. , ’IJte Pontiac Press will present ^ biography of the candidates and their statements in a series of articles that begins today. Although the elections afe separate and distinct, the articles are combined in pairs tor the convenience of readers, ’ In 1916 he went with the Commercial Credit Co. and a months later came to Pontiac as the company's representative; The following year he bought out the company and conducted the business here, adding the lines of real estate and Insurance. In 1918 Mr. Wood formed a partnership with E. D. T,vler and in 1920 sold out to Mr. T^tor. .Dr. Oodsell of 307 W. Huron St. Is married and has. two; ifaughters attending Crofoot School. ' He ia president of the Oakland Coiinty Cniropratic Society, a member of the Firet Baptist Church, the Christian Elen’s Club and the University of Michigan Advisory Committee on the midwest program on There are many reasons wfiy a person would wish to serve on a board of education. Frequentlyt candidates run solely to foster some particular 4daa. or purely as a representfiBlijeiT# some particular group. Such should not be the case. The problems ot a school district are many and varied; a candidate should have the Interest of the entire school community ft heart. "With an annual budget of about 5 million dollars and more than 550 teachers, the Waterford Township school system is big busl-ness-tfhe biggest business in the township. Great as is the significance of these facts, or even greater significance is the (act that there will be an enrollment of about 14,(K» children in the schools next fall. “Past years have swn many instructional improvements to the point where we have a fine educational program here in Pontiac: however, there Is yet much to be-done. Curriculum development in certain fields is a definite continuing necessity. Extension of foreign language to lower grades s desirable. Science programs need additional steady improvements. "Several building .••.ceds exist. The Patterson Street central office building is in the urban renewal area, and will be replaced new location. “Iiit’renwxl enrollments Inili-«ul« a need soon for a Junior high school to the north of town on the Bnlifwin Avenue site. Th)-S4> eoNls must be'borne without ImiMiring the qiinllly of our eduvalinnnl system, "My position is to work in Co «p«*rHtion with citizens, teachers and administrators and to encourage citizens to (cel free to contact their board members with any suggestions they might have.” Two U.S. Advisers in Laos Missing VIENTIANE, Ulos Comnmnisl rebel patrols have pushed to within two miles of flouet Sat In northwest l-aos and two n„S. military advlsi-is ar< missing. Americiin military sourcci said trstay. NortShn L. Cheal Is one of the five candidates competing for the two four-year term seats on the Waterford Township Board of Ed; ucation in the June 11 school election. Married and the father of sis children. Chenl resides at 3751 .\oHbtoke Dr.. Waterford Town-alUp. He heads fhe experimental department of the ifontlac Motor iptvislon engineering dp-partmeqt. ^ ^ Cheal graduated from Lansing Eastern High, School in 1937 and from Michigan State College in 1941 with a B.S, in chemical engineering. "lb is for the children and for tlie parts they will play in the community and pur country that the school system exists. “Aa a homeowner and father of six ydung ohUdren, I have a nnlursi and. perhaps, selfish In- ., "More important, as a citizen, I have a very great desire to see our schools efficiently administered. educating all 14,000 children to be good and useful clti- "My primary interests thus arc in the fields of financial management of the school system and in -tlie curriculum tor the students. Because of my education, tniining and background oP experience in community affairs, I feel that I can make a worthwhile coptribuilon in these areas if elected to the schoolboard. Police, Chrysler Honor 85 Detrojt High Teens DETROIT — Some 85 Detroit high school students were honored yesterday ns winners of g(x>d citizenship awards s|)onsored by the city police department and Chrys-Coip, Frank C; Wood's Death Follows Auto Accident; Service Here Thursday After spending a year in the country), he became sales mhnagf er for Keller Andrews Co, ol Flint. In June 1923 he became sales man-W. B. Anderson, realtor, of Pontiac, and on Jan. 5. 1934 he entered the real estate business for himself, opening the firm which bore his name. former - member of Central Methodist Church, he was alib a member of Knights of Pythias, toe Rotary Club, Pontiac Chamber of Commerce and Wednesday Dancing Club, Mr. Wood was a past president of Pontiac Real Estate Board, h member of the Gridiron Club and Pine Lake Country Oub. After retiring from business in 1958 Mr. Wood and the late Mrs. Wood made their winter home in Port Charlotte, Fla., but lived' in Harrison during the summer. Mr. Wood leaves a son Charles of Pontiac: a daughter, Mrs. Alice KVitek of Birmingham; four grandsons; and a brother In Harriaon, Due to the recent death of Mr. Wood’s wife Verna, the family suggests any memorial tributes be made to the building fund of Cen- Moscow Frees 'Spies' MOSCOW Iff) — Mr. and Mrs. dol.' Werner of West Germany, imprisoned last autumn on charges of spying for the'United States, were handed over to - West Ger-many embassy,>4)pg|j||Nay., The Dajr in Birmingham Bloomiteld Twp^ Bo^d . Rescinds District $etrUp% BIMMINGHAM -L. The J61«>m-fieU Township Board last ni|dil resdnded an eariler action creating n apecial asseiaroent district fanned to finance ai^tary sewer TIm aethw) Is the Ihto •* tow shnltor novee that mast be taken becawe tlie method of notifying property owners of toe pub-No NeartaBe haa^Mto vnled.an- The state attorney general’s office announced recently that prop- owners to a Rreeial assess- * if distill must be iniornied of. public wearing by niall delivered Brat .class. * * * , ^oomfidd Township lias beep intting properly ownen know of toe iMiitoga by Bm elaas maB nitoer tow Juat an advertiaemeRt in a newapqw. aecoeAtog to Oark Qalores UtUe, "but toe fact tont toia waan't rawired baforn doesn't make the board’s action legal.” Versailles Tops In Pate (Continued From Page One) ahead and hftolnd; and crooked angled aldestreeto steadily con- (jhampagne does Iwi improve with age bey^ 10 or 13 years and it is almost impossible to preserve, but And yet, everyone gets through. The French aren't u Insistent upon having the laat vestige of "my |)e^ BonaJ rights” as we are. A French driver ia willing to Jet you move to ahead. They concede right and that bore toe cuvee mark ot J911 —51 years ago. It was a big thrill -and super delicious, ^ shrug of a French ahoulder which is the national language of concession when ail else fails. In effect It says; "So whatr* And Paris streets are so wide < they have eight, ten and twelve traffic lanes running side by side. In the United States, driven steam ahead in the most demanding manner possIMe. The Froneh are more courteons and »to have a tot to learn from throe We went over and back on Pan American's magnificent super Jets that arerihe last word in all phases of air trav«t And PatiAm service is, simniy magnificent. They really look after you and come up with that little "something extra.” ★ , ;* ♦ The Freaeh are a (rlandly |ieo-pie. They're Impetneus at Hmm a thousand years ago. And no one blows an automobile horn In Paris — no one. It's against the law. And I mean against the law, and they aren’t the kind of liws fhat we have. You never hear a horn and yet there are more vehicles on the fltreets than In New Y6rk. A sovtog grace Is the small size of the cars. The Pontiac I was fortunate enough to draw was a palatial, ocean going yacht In French bug that streaks around the hlghwa.ys. Probably the most distinguished champagne in the world, is Moet Chandon’s from Epernay. My wife and I were invited doVi;^ for Irnch and were conducted through the famous underground cellars. These are 16 miles long and currently store 20 million bottles Including their Dry Imperial, Rose, White Seal and temous Dom Perignon. The hearings probably wUl be held tor same night, aha said. The board last night reacindad its early resolution that created the district for the. WilUamsburg Sub- Now tin is bMieved to be the greatoet riiamp^ year ef toa eurrent eeatoiy. You can -get eHli winea «f tfeat vtatage already. but yon went get any champagne for tofeb' or tonr P ' * Others to be rescinded in the fu-tutf are mbody Orchards, Brook-side Hills and toe Devon Gatdes subdivision at Telegraph and Ldhg take rineo toe rest ot toe town-eMp iakea are private. ^ * Autboriratlon to purchase tb? Newcombe property adjacent to the township hall for future expansion airo was given to Township Attorney Thoma* PlUon. Voters approved the purchase of the iO-flcre parcel in April. The property will cost the township mm f do. We were a front every oenttoent aad Just to shew a worldly and oonuopon-tnn frame of mind, I set down that aside from the missus, the best looking member of the group was Shyama Jain of Bom-ba.v, wife of the | The Times, of India. Clare Cummings told me once that when you write about a trip you must make certain not to spel} out the facts ho has already read in his eighth grade history. Qare, I’ve tried. Two week’s absence from Pontiac is sufficient- Td rather be here than anywhere else in the world. I like the people, the ctun-try. my ..associates and the whole setup. West Huron Street's the ad» dress now. You can't beat it. It*8 Memorial Day for Area *Redhcad* Vet Recalls a Jungle in Leyte... By JOE MULLEN Memorial Day would be a fitting day for The Redhead to conjure up memories of The Phllipplne»7-o( a Particular air battle there and of his eventual rescue. But Edwin J. Beattie of Independence Township, would rather talk about the Nav^ Reserve an^ this weekend’s training flight to Kansas. as he floated downward, watched his plane hit the ground and explode. ^ JusI then one of the eight Japa-Bse Oscars that had attacked his plane, came out of the i ward him. “That's all ancient history.” The lUnlhcad protested as the Interviewer persisted along a cimversatlonal trail back to World War 11. Yes, he was the subject of a chapter "The Redhead” in the book ’’Leyte Calling” by Joseph St. John, former guerrilla leader in the jungles of Iwcyle. Lynn Townsend, president ot eTn-ysler, Mayor Ji-rntnc Capanogh and Police Commlssiom-r George Edwards gave the awards lo the students, who represented 47 public and patxM-hial schcKtls As he talked, the curtain of time faded. The office became (he cockpit of a Wildcat fighter plane aerated by Japanese bullets and plunging earthward Iti flames. It was Ensign Beattie’s 21st birthday, Oct. 20, 1944. The young pilot bailed out and lillot didn't have the heart to strafe me or whether he didn't see me.” Beattie recalled, “but was' known to be infested with Japanese. He was following a river he believed led to Leyte Gulf when he heard a man’s voice. Standing before him waa a native with a huge bolo knife, its blade shimmering in (he sunlight. Realizing the stranger was American, the Filipino rushed over to shake hands. 'IMPRESSED BY HAIR’ ‘He s the other Jap fighter planes.” The Redhead, who wai oti active duty from October 1942 until January 1946, was on hl« 30th airborne mission when he was gunned out ot the sky 14,000 feet above the mountainous terrain of Leyte in the Philippines. W W W When the ensign touched ground oYter bhlllng out, he suffered a minor leg injury, painful enough to cause a limp. red hair.” Beattie recalled. ‘‘1 guess he thought I was someone very special, being an Amei' plus having red hair.” When the two men resumed the Journey along the river, the native noticed Beattie’s limp and insisted that The Redhead rUe piggy back. T (ell rather foolish but he Beattie began walking. He was armed with a gun and a knife and ' ready to use either as the area I'll)- IntorninniN Niild the d<-. tense pt-rlnicler csIhIiIIsImhI iiImhiI tlin>e miles outside Hmiel Hal, on Hio JMskong River honb-r with ThnllMid, “Is giving way” In the faee ot i'alhel Iqio ntlaeks. 1'wo U.S. nillltury pdvlKcrs Inched to the Laotian' army Hoiicl Sal have been missing since Sunday, II ) Voti With Majority WA8IUNQTON m n Ailchtgan' Demucrnllr senators, Philip Hat and Patrick McNamara, voted wllli the majorlly Monday as the Senate passed President Kennedy’s compromise 31.5-blllton public ■ • bill. The vole was 44-32. Apply fbr FM Station WASHINGTON » The Fed-end rbmmunicailons Commission received yesterday an application from Harmon Stevens and John F, Wlsmer, Port Huron, Mtohi, for a pi’inll to const rtiei a new FM i-adlo station to operate on 99.9 mtf|acycles. fve went,” Beattie ssid. 'hiey eventually arrived at small guerrilla encampment where they ate and slept before moving on to the coast. After days of traveling through the mountains and Jungle they reached their destination, the camp run by St. John. The Redhead received a royal welcome at both campi ttUlTE A DIFFHRRNUE Heotti^ hwks over a model q( a made by her two sons and Is I of tod Mrs, Edwin J. fwiiM 9»«» wkA* Navy jet plniio the planes ullHxed during World ^sr 11. Navy briefed hy her talk Is an eveiVday oeourrenee In ihe Btnttie sy's alrcrufl and ' household In Indfpehdnoce Township. | the one on the coast. She said tt is a techalcaiity he cleared up after June 10 when property i their ftrst elass mail noticn. The bwrd. In another action, ndtptod the nnifonn watow oraft CJiarles Hummel, 2435 Devon Lane, has been elected chairman’ Of the board of directors of Kings-wood School Craubrook, suc<»ed-ing William B. Hartman, who haa held the post for two years. Other officers aire Robert Flint, vice chairman; Ben D. Mill*, treaa-urer; and Mra. John P, McLean Jr., aecretary. ★ ★ * Richard C-Vkn Dusen was elected to the board to fill the vacancy created by the retirement of William H. Baldwin. Re-elected aa directors were Mrs. William T. Gossett and Mrs. William B. Hargreaves. WIHard E. Welsh Service for Willard E. Welsh, 95, of 985 Timberlake, Bloomfield Hills, was held yesterday at William Vasu Funeral Home, Royal Oak. with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Welsh, executive vice president and general manager of Shedd-Bartush Foods, Ino., died Friday at Northwest Grace Hospital. Survivors include his wife Eleanor; a daughter. Mrs, Mary Doyle: stoi, John W.; and one grand- (ACvtniMrfifnti' BMUNi Rr 9891181181 nMN SINUS C0N6ESTI08 •MiilMlNllMitow TRUMICTABUTS tiialln|EG.^l8llHi6Mra i43^ M4.«iwta ft to latimNy to nM ft ii8« MtoitoK Hitti Mn in dlR diM MtotoU •ay R to itow iiiilai SSSSTA tM N. Saginaw W. Natives, constantly pointing at his rt’d hair, wouldn’t Id him out of their sight for a moment.. Crowds hovered over him while he ate, making sure he had his fill. They even stood by while he elent, fanning the ensign lo make lb« hot, humid weather of the Islnnda more tol< AiHDlei JC roni^on, C Applet! Nortbem Spy. C.A. Applet, HbrWero -ar* ’ ehne early today as . investra^ throughout the country ' unloaded holdings following the worst market avalanche dnee 1929. Losses of key stocks ran from fractions to about 4 pdnts as huge blocks of stock were traded In the flrst few minutes. The. NEW YORK «» -- Corporate bond prices declined at the opening today while the U. S. government. list held firm. Over the counter dealers in §§t hit section in corporate trading Treasury secuHties quoted lori|on the New York Stock Exchange. live poultry: Heevy type liens IS-IS; litht type hene •; heevy WP* roMters over i lbs. 22-nv,; brolWVs and fryers l-« lbs. Whites lS-»: Barred Rook 20-31. issues up 2/32 and intermediates mostly unchanged. There was little activity, one dealer said- Most investors were hesitant about buy- DETROIT, May 2S ( I (API—Bsc I ________________t Detroit by flrsi cetvers (Ineludlng UU.1: —^ — -----, A j umbo ,__JI IS-ISH. Browns—Orade A large 21-30tb; m dium 31-22: smeU 12; ^cki 10-23. White CHICAOO. May 20 HUPD—Pt^uce; Live poultry: Plymouth Rock fryt l0>4i: roisters 30-»: snsclal ted Wb Rock fryers.. lS14-lt. Butter: atesdy. S3 icon STi 02 eci -------,re 04%: SI lecre S3V«. Jneettled^ Wl^ 1^1^^ extras 30; ksee: STm------ ------------------- mixed terse extras 28; mediums 3U stsndsrds %V»; dirties 33: cimeks 23. CHICAGO POVLTBtX CHICAOO. May 20 I API—Live poultry., Wbolessle buyins prices , % lower to Vs hlsher; roasters 20-22; speelsl fed White Rock fryers 18%-19; PlymouUi Ro---------- ere 19-20; White Rock fryers 18; hens 10. AlUed Sirs 3 r with CHICAOO, M»y »24 (API—(USDA)— Poteto arrivals 46; on track 101: total U.S. shipments 501; old—suplples llsht; demand moderate; market steady sllshtly llrm undertone; earlet tales; Idaho Russeta 3.70-4.00; Mix North Dakota Red River Valley rede-2.00; new- ------- -------- mand moderate; sllshtly weaker. --- ----- ---- steady; earlot track aalee: California Ions whlUt 4.15-4.30; Alabama round rede 3.70, OiilCAOO BUTTER AND EOOS CH1CAO& May 30 (API—Chlcaso Mercantile Excnane^—Butter steady: whole- A 57; 02 oubt«r witwic* .. -. . 2«%-SV« 111 12Va UVa, 12 —IVt I «uas i,» 03 34% 34% 34%- I optical 2b 5 51% 50% 50Va-2 I SmeU 2.40 28 51% 50Va SOVa-1' i Std .80 247 13 13 13 -11 1 Tob 1.50 276 32% 31% 32 -1 I Vlioose 2 112 40% 45% 45'/t— 1 Zinc ,30b 34 11% 10%,10%-I% P Inc .35 26 18%/ 18 1*. * ipex Cp 3^ 11 Va 10% 10'.., . iph Bors .80 W‘ 17% 17% 17%-2% im Sll 3 28 51% 50% 50%+ 1' hat Ck 1.60a 13 80 60 60 - 1 d Dry O 2.50 10 01 81 51 -2 Cst Line 2 15 36 35% 36 .... Refln 2.^/ 42 45% 44% 45%-l u Cp 146 2% 2% 24b- ■ ,.„k»n cant .60b 26 14ti 14 14%J-% Avco Corp .70 437 17% 17V« UVa*- % lil%; mixed 35%: ix 34%: dlrtlea tif cl Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT. May 35 (API—(08DA1-Cattle 3.000. Bulk early supply slautk ter steers and heifers, good end cholc sredes predomlnatlns; cows In ema supply: seed and choice slaushter steel and helfere steady: cows steady to M higher, full advance on utility; 27 hea high choice, with an end of prime 111 utility ( ■ 13-12. ; a and 3 120-330 lb 10 lb 14.35-14.75: Not. I. 14.50-15.50; 1. 3 and 3 : 13.70: 3 and 3 400-800 It Sheep 1,000. Spring lambs steady to weak; old crop Iambs 3.00 lower; alaugh-ter ewes steady; choice and prime old crop Iambs 10-30.30; good and c*"'— •horn old crops 10-12. load choice prime spring Ismbs 33; cull to c shorn swss 3-7.20, mostly 4.00 up CHICAQO LIVESTOCK .......ik to mostly 35 it . . - to 35 lowsr; Noe. 1-2 100-320 II 11 25-16.50; mixed Nos. 1-3 I 15.75-10.25; mixed Nos. 1-3 ! sows 13.00-14.00. some 75 up; steers good and below strong to SO higher; helfera moatly 50 higher; cows stsady to 20 lower; bulla steady; vealera weak; load prime 1230 lb ateeri 36.00: high choice and mixed chalet and prime 1100-1400 lb 30.00-37.76: bulk choice 000-1360 lb 34.76-30.80; few loads high choice and mixed oholcs and prime heifers 35.70-30.35; most good and choice . — ... vealers Treisury Position Deboslts ,flsc< July iK, Deposits n July 1 . WithdrawB 07,311,667. . ^ 65.174.767.366.66 ’ 30l.IU.53l.663.il M... . 300,687,447..„.„ !.« ........... 17,403,122.667.64 Mlud«6 6434.231.226.40 . debt not t U olaiutory Umlt. 'ii 111 i ll HIM. ita !!K|!8 liill' Major securities and commodities exchanges will h^ closed tomorrow in obsiervance of the Mer roorial Day holiday. NEW YORK W *- Stock maiket few signs of resbtaDce. “Where will we reach bottom?’ was the question in Wall Street and no one had a firm answer. ★ ♦ W Some technicians said that the Dow Jones industrial average, which plummeted 34.95 to 576.93 yesterday, was likely to find resistance fo lurther decline at around 566.05—where the “Kennedy bull market” began on Oct. 25,1960. Meanwhile, it looked Hke an-, other frantic dpy on Wall Street as the ticker tape lagged Sve Bonds Down at Opening ing anything in view of the continued slide of stock prices. Once again rails were the hard- A handful of rail issues gave up a point or more at the start. Industrials and utilities also were decidedly lower. in a iiRlf hour of the s A number of the Inggest blue chips were delayed in opening because they were gwampM with orders that had to be matched by exchange officials. •k it It Prices continued to sink on the Amm^n Stock Exchange following yesterday’s selloff which was on the biggest volume of the year for this exchange. it '* it Colonial Sand & St<^ lost more than a point while fractional were shown by Aeronca, Arkansas-Louisiana. Gas, Ogden Corp., Na-Bellas Hess and Creole Petroleum. k' ‘ k ■ k Corporate bonds were narrowly mixed with a number of issues unchanged. American Stock Exch. (Figures after decimals are In elghtl Stock Prices Decline Atroard Switzerland Reports Cal 1......... Cohu Elec ... Cong Mng .. Creole Pet ... Dynam Am . . Oen Devel Imp Tb Ca . Ins N Am Kaiser Indus Lakey Fd .... 0.0 Novo Indus 7.3 Pac Pet Lt< Hie New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (APl^FoMowIpg li n fc^P A— M)'^46 "55 ’u' 28 58% 53% av 46 12% 12 12 6 36 SO 47% 51 51 15% 15 15 .. 12 32% 32V« 32%-l% 41 40Ve 39% 39%+ % I 121 39 37% 38%- % 12 56%. 55% 56>%-l% .SOe 56 15% 155% 1S%- % 45 52 51 51 —I 1 68 17% 18% 184i- 36 12% 12% 12%—1V« It 2.40 g ^ 1.00 131 36% I—%i>tllarv 2.40 Xayser Roth .40s Kenneoott 2.50e Kern C Ld 2.40 Kerr McOee .00 Koppers .2 Bell&How 40 24 34 33 33 -1% 261 32% 32% 32% -% 26 21 20% 20'/4-1% 250 36?i 35% 35 . , 77 37% 3V/, 37 - % .. .a 30% 30%-!% 19 22% 23% tS%- 72 22% 21 21 ■ 5 20 30 30 - 25 46% 45% 46 90 W V 54 34Va. 3 Cont Mot Corn Pd 1-Coaden Pei Crana Co 126 22% 22% 22%-lJ 56 16V, 16Va 15'A-1 15 41% 41% 41%-1 I 1.42 Cudahy Pk 23 ii%-ivil 43% 48% f % Crown Kell l.80b 30 - Criro^BU^jOO 60 I8% 19^ 66 18% 15 ' 15 *- •_D— Dayco ^ JJ 10% 10% 10% + Deoca Ree 1.30 *3 43 d5*"*A Hud 60e 1915 I8 19 - Dei>t_S«l> la 4 JJ'*;. ’ 44 »% ^ i J'. Sli Ut-I |.12t 93 30% M 20 m 29 34% t4V4~-i yj 'list ‘Sit ‘St:' 30 M% 11% 12%- —F— 00 0% 2*44 W'*'" 3? SS T r' n "I 2 % Rsr S!'l^ sE.feS;.« (bds.) nigh Low Last Chg. 106 34V, 34 34 . ■'»■«% 37% 27%-3 —H- Tex PCAO 1 20 Tex PLTr 30e la Npt .00 13 13% 13 13 — % Ik 1.60a 31 40% 48 46 -IV Ch 1 23 30% 30 30 + ' I Fin 1 30 23 42% 42% 42%+ LAP 1.60 29 94'/, 83 93 -2 Snd 1.121 59^ 11% 11% 11%- % 22 i- % Trl Cont .32e Twent Cen .7515 ... ... 7%-l% 50 36% 34V, S4V,—2% 51 22% 22% 22Var-l% -U— 14 22% I 31 34% 3 25 60 So , 25 36% 36% 3 '62 46V. 44V, 4 19 36Va 36% 3 132 60V, S»% ! 27 9-% 9% At Frankfurt, Germany, stock prices, which have had a steady decline since the start of the year, dropped sharply. Volkswagen, which dropped yes^ 27,, 27^ ^iterday to a new low of 552 was bid OniiAtrUn Isob M 2«% 24% 2^2%]beiween 505 and 510. Ited ^ .351 —11 ^ult .50 Dn Oas Cp 1. Umt MAM 1 US Borax .00 49 40V, 39% Ml. .. 65 7% 7% Y%- V, 60 21% 21 21 — ■ 40 32% 31V, 32 — 36 18% 18 18 .. 6 27% 36 26 -1% -------- .... 5 25% 24% 24%,:% usoypsum 2.60a 30 OlV, 80% SO 16% 15% l5V,-2% 115 44% 43% 43'%--2% 23 24V, 23% 23>%—IV, -K— 15 26 25% 25%- % 54 14% 14V, I4V,—1% 29 69% 67% 68%-lV 31 63 61% 62 +14 106 26% 25V, 2S%—2 17 34% 34 34 -2 276 34 32% 33'%-3 . . plywd I” US Rub 2120 US SmeU .25p Van A1 s Vanad C( SS.8H .25g 16 16% 18% 16%-% elder 10 12 12 U -IV, ger 1.10 36 22% 22 224k ' —L—", r .40 66 10% 10% lOV.- Igh CAN ,2Sr 65 13% 13% 13'/r- 4k Port Cl 17 16% ............... ■ Val Ind 17f IV, man l.SSe 99 25% _ „ . . e Glass 2 40 33 46V, 45% 45%-l% McNAL .sot 29 10% 10% 10%- % lel 89 8% 7% 7V+-I on Ind 3.5M 119 99 98V, 99_ -A' w's Thea 57 28V, 34% 34V+-3% 99 20% 18% 20%- 17 39 39 39 -M— 67 19% 19V, 19'/,- 2 9^k 56% 56% . 39 24% 23% 33V,- 37 foV, 10% 10%- . 17 44% 44 44%- % 12 37% 36% 37%+ 1% 12 72% .J1 71Va-24k 1.06 36 25% 28% ..... * - JS St;: s Md 2Se 12 16(4 16'/, 16V,-1% ... Un Tel 1.40 110 27V, 27 27 —24k WesIgA Bk 1.40 22 23% 23% 23%-!' 'Veatg El 1.20 304 28 29 27 —2 mirl Cp 1.40 20 27% 27 27 ./hlte kfot 2 34 39 36 37%-l WllsonACo 1.60 9 40% 40 40 —1' Winn Dix .64 49 24% 23%*' 24 - ' Woolworth 2.50 00 65 63 64 —3 Worthington 2.50 12 41% 40% 40>/,-2' Y— YaleATow 50r 17 20'/, 19% 20'/.+ ' ——z— Rad SOa 254 48% 46 46 -4% PlseNY Stox and Amex Stax * Ilea figures are unofficial, ales ot dividends In , the e are annual dlsbureeinents ...................... extra dlvldenda IncludeJI! - ..ISO extra or extras. b~ l-m'ial i plus stock dividend, d—Declared or i In 1961 plus slock dividend, e-or paid so far thli year, f-f stock during 1961. estimated e on ex-dividend ov ox-dlstrlbu |piSk“ii|p • 1 load 67 34 33% f* a 80 31% 31% * If 3 . 11 66% 93 03 -3% »r .60t 36 “ . r £ Mia ,N 8 “faJ A ^ S% S%i% '51 III -vT— TviNl Prod .10^ 76 16% |6% } :|P k^^l f^k Uw Lmt Cb^. 92 Vivl 70% 70V^% 90 36 33% S5%-3 6 14% 14% 14%- ( 60 23% 22% 22%- ' 27 18% 16% 16%— ’ 6 46'/, 46 46 . ' 25-/ 74k By »AM DAWSON AP Bnsifiess Newg Aiiilyst NEW YORK - Hovering over the stock mqrket and the economy in general-is a great potential power. This'te the .financial colos-—- which Anhericans have built up „ individ,tifls and -groups — the pension and other funds and tlje Both pension fund a^ts And foe ^ted .... Biggest Drop Sincebaqkboifofigsoiindividu^savfela. 1^29 Crash ; " - - - - LONDON WU-A^orm of selling hit the stock exchanges of Europe | * and Japan today in sympathy with ^ price declines on Wall Street! Hundreds of millions of pounds S sterling were wiped off the value London. Prices-gyrated wildly on the major exchanges of Switzerland and West Germany. / The Fiiianciifl 'nmea Index of British indowtrlal common shares plummeted 13.4 potaits In two - Jumrs to 265.0, pmpared with the 12% 13%-'% _ 27% 27 27 —1% 270 50V, 69% 69%— % 83 9 9% 9%- % t 228 13% 13% 13%-!% 26 36 35% 36 —V— 7 24 22'/, 22%-2 13 IS'/, 19'% 15'%- % 98 26% 25% 26'%—2 6 33V, 33 33V,-1% Tokyo’s stock exchange closed with a moderate but broad decline after an early selling riish. The Dow Jones average of 225 selected stocky foil 17.76 yen (4.9 cents) from Monday to 1,375.69 yen ($3.82). Grain Prices Down in First Dealings CHICAGO Ml - Grain futures prices moved sharply downward today in initial transactionii on the board of trade with December and 5torch corn slumping four cents a bushel. Losses elsewhere rah to well over a cent. Brokers said the pressure could have been linked with the steep slide in the securities market since there appeared to be a rather large accumulation of selling orders through commission houses. However, the peak of the flurry showed signs of having passed quickly. Prices leveled off withfo several minutes and nearly ail contracts recovered slightly from their early lows. Grain Prices llvldandt UvMand « I arrfar*. i»-Pa itticd. dalerrtd ( dividend inealliia. - •— fUiA CBICAOO ORAIN CHICAOO. May 30 (API -train: nmm aucceeds P. T. Cheff who had lieeq assodaled with the furnace firm some 30 years. The IransacUon was compleiwi yesterday at foe fun Holland headquarters. Cuba Sewi Dark U. S. vlded banner headlines today (or Cuban newspapers, ’They pre- Wayland Grantod Loan WA.^l|NG’IT)N lift — An Interest-free 1 loan of $7,50O^ l(i help Way* land! Mich., plan a* sewer sjmli esllmaied to cost |486,000''wi(g i today liy the OoinmutiHy AdititiitsIrailAn. iHHmcqd Us racillljes A Business Notes A former Birmingham resident, Lloyd J. Dawson, has been appointed administrative coordinator at (he Kansas City regional sales office of the Ford Motor Co. Tractor and Implement Operations (U.S.) A used equipment sales /epre-•ntalive prior to his new ap|x>bil-ment, Dawson was a lest engineer with Dearborn Motors when that organizatlOjH merged with Ford in 1953. He is foe son of' Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Dawson ot 100 Oak Hill Ave. first time he had really been disturbed by the market’s protracted downtrend. Asked what he thought would stop the bear maricet, he said: "Well, we wondered for a long time what would stop the buU market. Something did, but we don’t know what.’’ IT’LL COME BACK’ “This will, run its cot continued./'’Someday—maybe tomorrow or next week or next month—it’ll come back'up again." Another broker, who, like Pqs-sr, was in business when the big crash came in 1929, was as slow Posner to show any outward signs of distress. A A A Eldon (jrimm of Walston Co. didn’t even wait for the layed tape quotations to reach an end before heading for his home in Connecticut. ‘I&XPLAIN8 CAUSE’ He saw the selling as forced by loan calls, lenders requiring mqpe money to cover collateral when ^stock priebs fell. This brought forced selling, he said, to get money to meet the calls, u^h drove prices lower and generated more loan calls, “It gets to be a chain reaction thing,” he said, “like when you knock down a line of dominoes.” AAA He termed the market over-sold, lid there were some bargain hunters and institutions buying and tl}at a lot of the psychological effect of this was lost because the ticker tape lagged and buyers couldn’t tell Ahaf was going x accounted for 85 per cent of alt pension fund assets at book value. But of this atnount, $15 billion was in corporate bonds and $12.4 bil-^mmon and preferred stocks. os A ' A A" Total assets df pensibn funds of U.S. corporations reached a high of $32.4 billion, a jump of $3.7 billion in the year. This increase is itself a record, although tfie gain was anything but novel. Increases in the two previous years topped $3 billion, as the penrion funds took an ever greater role in Amer-. lean fiscal affairs. SAVING8 Hl^ With setne funds having only about a third' of their assets In common stocks, the recent price breaks haven't depleted assets to any worrisome degree. But for the trustees there is still the question: What to do now? Another great potential bolster ing the economy Ss a whole— though not the stocli market at the moment — is the steady increase in savings. The Federal Reserve Board reports that in the first three months at this year savings at banks and savings and loan associations increased by $8.2 billion, a record jump. ! • A A A. The big incentive was the higher interest rates on savings and time deposits which mMt banks began< paying this year. And some stock brokers tldbk that this increased yield on savings could be one reason that the public has been rell-ing stocks-or at least hasn’t been putting new money into stocks. News in Brief Tass Reports Stock Fall in NY os Catastrophic MOS(X)W m - The Soviet new agency Tass said today the Slock crash in New York had “assumed catastrophic proportions.” “President Kennedy and his advisers would like to arw crash but they do not know how fo do this,” said a Tass dispatch from New York. ige-9tol. Baldwin and' Indianwood-Roads. J ^ equipment yifrwd at 990 was stolen from her car at* the / rear of her home, Frankie V. Goad “ of 38 Williams St. told Pontiac police yesterday afternoon. Five tire* and wheels worth an estimated $146 were reported stolen yesterday afternoon from a new car at the John McAuliffe Ford Dealership, 630 Oakland Ave., according to‘police. Ike's Kin on Exchange NEW WORK (UPfl-Dr. Milton E. Elsenhower, brother of the former president yesterday was elected a public governor of the New York Stock Exchange. Business Generally Good in U.S. stock Slump, Figures Incompatible By UnltiHi Preiia International The Sharp descent of sleek prices seems inrompnilble with the general state of fctislness. Figures indicate a singular trend: Business Is gehcrany good throughout the United States, Yesterday’s $28.5 billion paper firm’s loss and statistics rivaling the rash of 1930 brought partisan rumblings from Washington, KepublleanS Slid (he sinmp rn-neetrri MlUe confiSenen In the ndininlalnitlon. Demoernf# conn-t«r-ohnrg«d font foe Kennedy ad- ministration Inherited n !3T" There were these firm figures from WasMngtoni Totnl elDploymcnl In April 1 a iVconl 67 million, including 62 milHun nopfarm jobs. Unem-ployineni declined during the month by 4!10,000 to 3.9 million. -flALKR’ INUREAMNG JOepprtrAcnt stot^ sales txmtln- ued lo rise, Up 7 |ier cent from the 1961 level for the week ended May 19. PeriMmal Income was up $$.75 billion from March In April, 7 per cent above foe oomparable period Inst .year. The annual rate Is I43H.75 billion. April Induslrliil production was at 116. up one point from March. 'The ltd figure means 16 per cent nimve the J957-59 baso period-A . A A The consumer prtoe Index stood at 105.2 of the 1957-^ average, up .2 of 1 per cent from Mairh. A similar Ipprease is expected foil month. The pictnre elsewhere around the (MHinhry. appeared bright. burgh area.. The Unlverslly of Pittsburgh Bu- cllned (o a new low, bight points under the previous week’s llsUng, to 85 per cent of (he 1957-59 base period. OUTPUT HIGH Automotive (Nows Magaslne said in Detroit last week's automobllq output of 154,817 was the second highest of the year. Total production of 677,000 units for the month of May was predicted fry the trade publication. It noted St the same time, hew- rtasord yens of 196I, TtM Chicago Association of Oom-merce and Industry iaid the eight-county Chicago areh la “mor* sound economically than at any time In ihe past three yeani:** . , A , A , A Udemptoj^ment Is doWh, bousing permits are up apd Industrial plant Investment ha* risen 400 per eent during the past four rnonihH, (he ' -Tim PoW'HAC s Television Programs-- I m MJeeM «• oku«« nrlNmrt mOm Movte (0»t) (4) Wyttt Earp (D AcUob T^ter - ») F«|«ye (Oont) (S6) Gen^ Chemistry mm it) Weather « (4) Weather •til (2) News. <4) News (7) News (9) Quick Draw M^nw •:49 (2) SptHts (4) Sports «:4K(2)News (4) News (7) News. Weather, Sports (39) Industry on Parade 7;aa (2) Phil SUvers (4) Weekend (7) Gtiestward Ho (9) Man and the Chal!enge (56) French Through Televi-\ tItU (9) Weather 19iM (9) TVdescmne UAW UkM (2) Garry Moore (Cent.) (4) Gain’s Hundred (cont.) (7) Clooe-Up Cheaters U!ao(2)News (4) (7) h (9) hfovie; "Spitfire." (1934) a *y<«ing-girf ding.” (1937) Beautiful, efficient New York business-' woman is trying to run her Aster’s love affairs just as efficiently as she runs her business. William Powell, . Myrna Loy, FToence Rice, John Beal, Edgar Kennedy. (56) Lovitation to Art S:W (2) King of Diamonds (4) Laramie (Cont.) (7) Bachelor Father (9) Movie (Omt.) (56) Parents and Dr. Spock S:» (!2) Dobie Gillis (4) Alfred Hitchcock (7) New Breed « (9) Movie (Omt.) (56) Troubled Lives •:W (2) Red Skelton (4) Dick Howell (7) New Breed (Cbnt.) (9) New York Confidential •:» (2) Icdiabod and Me -#f (4j P*owefi (Qmt.) (7) Yours for a Song (9) Front Page Challenge 1«:M (2) Garry l^oace (4) Cain’s Huntfr^ (71 Jerry Lewis (Special) (9) News WEDNESDAY MOHMINO S:M (4) (Color) Continental girt falls in love with an engineer. Katherine Hepburn. llilS (7) News, Sports U:1S (2) Sports (4) Weather U:M (2) Weather (4) S^wrts Hitt (2)^ Movie: "Rangers of Fortune." (1940) After taping from a firing squad, a trio M adventurers turn i _ town in the Southwert. Fred MacMurrfg|r,i (7) Weather. 11:30 (4) (Color) Tonight (7) Movie: "She Wouldn’t Say Yes. ” (1945) A young man meets and falls in love with ' a lady psychiatrist. Rosalind Russell, Lee Bow- Features mm (2) On the Ihrm FNmt •i» (2) CoUege of Jie Air Biology 1(4) (Color) Continenhil 7:M (2) B’wana Don (4) Today (7) Funews 7:19 (7) Johnny Ginger ... (2) (56) German for Teachers 8:31 (7) Jack LaLanne . 9:88 (2) Movie: "Play Girt" (4) Living (7) Movie: "Paris Calling.’ Part I. 9:89 (9) BiUboard 19:99 (4) (Color) Say When (9) Natimal School Show 19:39 (7) Tips n’ Tricks (7) News 19:39 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play You; Hunch (7) Life of Riley (9) Chez Helenne I9:4S‘ (9) Nursery Sc..ool Time 11:99 (2) Deceih^r Bride (4) (ColoD^ce Is Right (7) Ernie Ford (9) Romper Room U:S9 (2) (Tear Horizon (4) Concenfiation (7) Yours lor A Song (9) Movie: "On the Old Spanish Trail" (M) Lost Continent WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON By United Prew International MCHELOR FATHER, 8 p. m. (7). Bentley spends week at home and plays havoc with household routine. . ^~iEED HENMICOCK PRE-OCNTS. 8:30 p. m. (4). Dick Yprtc stars as clertc who steals 1565,000 from his firm when boss’ nephew is THE NEW BREED, 8:30 p. m. (7). Dina Merrill and Don Taylor star, apd Ronny Howard plays their son in "So Dark the Night,’’ drama of misplaced guilt. RED SKELTON, 9 p. m., (2). Sebastian Cabot guests. GARRY MOORE, 10 p. m. (2). Robert Goulet appears, and Em-my-wtauier Moore sings solo, "Show Me a Rose.’’. "THE WACKY WORLD OF JERRY USWI8,’’ 10 p. m. (2). Live, oneliour special by comedian, combining ihaterial from his television, movie and nightcluh highlights. At last report, Lewis was planning to spoof pcditics, spents and music, among other things. V, S. UCHBLATOB r r r r r P r nr j IT rr 17“ II (2) Love of Ufe (4) (Ciolor) Your First . Impression (7) Camouflage lt;39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth (7) Window Mwpping 13:45 (2) Guiding Light 13:59 (9) News 13:85 (4) News 1:99 (2) Star Performance (4) Best of Groucho (7) Day in Court (9) Movie: "A day at the Races.” Part 1. 1:38 (7 News 1:39 (2) As the World Turns (4) People Are Funny (7) HoW to Marry a Millioname . 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth 3:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Jan Murray (7) Jane Wyman 35 (4) News 3:39 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven^Keys 3: 99 (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Mdlone (7) Queen for . Day (9) Movie: "Guilt Is My Shadow." 1:39 (2) Verdict Is Yours (4) Our Five Daughters (7) Who Do You Trust? 1:55 (2) News 4:99 >12) Brighter Day ’ "(4) Make 'Roum-for Dad(^ (7) American Bandstand 1:15 (2) Secret Storm 1:39 (9) Telescope UAW 4:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (9) Razzle Jazzle (56) French Through Television (7) America!) Newsstand 4:55 (4) News 5:00 (2) Movie: "Saint Takes Over” (4» (Color) George Pierrot (7) Action. Theater K PRAISES CARPENTER - Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev praises American astronaut Malcolm Scott Carpenter as he holds a toast in AP Ph^lkx n Moscow^ yes- . opening an Italian industrial fair in Moscow' yesterday. The Russian leader said the Soviet Union is not alone in the cosmos. Son of Jennifer Jones, Robert Walker Slender and Uue-eyed, Walker has inherited the shy, self-effacing qualities of both his parents. He is an exceedingly handsome fellow with a deadly serious approach to acting. HE’S BEEN BITTEN - ^ , "There wta a time when I said 'd never breome an actor,” he continued. "But I feel tha(t artistic traits are Inherited, and I’ve been High-Altitude N-Blasts Will Be Set Ott in 3 Days [36) What’s New? 5:39 (56) Travel 5:45 (56) NeWs Tiagazine 8:55 (4) Kukla and Ollle Indict Dallas Firm in Detroit Swindle DALLAS, Tex. (UPD-Four operators of a Dallas construction flnn were indicted yesterday charges of swindling a Detroit finance company out of 360,000. Named in the indictment Bob Johnson, Robert Fusscll, Bob l.«wellyn and Meric Fur1,l *k l.,ewcl-lyn, identified as operators of the Johnson - Underwo^ construction firm. The indictment claimed the four sold first liep notes to the Plon-neer Finance Co., Inc., of Detroit on houses that either did not exist 'ere not completed. -Today's Ra(dio Programs-- WOAB (lISS) WrON (I4SS) WIBK '(SoKfiXJ* •frj'wnjsr* kwtesB rssM wsii' H,.ns*M ■%i|rMsa Young Actor Like Parents By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-An echo of the past reverberated across MGM studios this week in the person of Robert Walker, 22-year-olJ son of Jennifer Jones and the late film star Robert Walker. Self-conscious and nervous in his first movie, young Walker sat I to a luncheon interview uneasily. “I don’t want to discuss my family,” he jwld quickly. 'T’d like to keep my personal life to myself. I hope you’ll under- bitten by the acting bug.” Until he bebame an actor was something of a gypsy, "a professional transient" by his own definitibn. He attended a dt and high schools in the United States and Euitqie. Since his parents’ divorce Walker has not married now and have a daughter of my own,” he said. 'And I want to settle down and have a place to call home.” is unusually mature compared to ihany young hopefuls attempting to follow It the footsteps of famous parents. He was asked if he hoped to attain the heights of his mother and father. I don’t preoccupy niyself with things like that,” he answered. 'It doesn’t enter my mind, tintll last summer I wanted to be a playwright and joined a summer theater in New York to find out as much as I could about the needs of performers. So I became an apprentice and worked manager, set builder and lighting technician among other things. I even did some acting. "(t didn’t take me long to realize that I wanted very muoh to become a good actor." Bdb had never been encouraged 0 become an actor by his ' mother, nor by his stepfather, producer David O. Selznick. But he believes acting affords him the opportunity to express himself. Walker, who was tOo yqung' to see his parents’ movies the first WASHINGTON (AP» - The most spectacular shots of the U.l nuclear tests in the Pacific will begin in about three days. These the high-altitude bursts whose brilliant glpw will be seen for hundreds of miles. The three or fotir blasts with their high-soaring nuclear fireballs and glittering aurorae may temporarily disrupt some radio communications and radar observations. Militarily, the shots obviously fe designed to lest (he effects of high-altltudc blasts on the nation’ wartime communications gear— and on electronic monitors de signed to delect oncoming missile The government announced Monday the series will bo fired over Johnston Island. The first shot, will) an explosive force of something less than a million tons of 'TNT—a megaton— will be exploded at a height of kilometers” hklueated guesses put this at about 30 to 40 miles. 890 MiLEg UP? Two following blasts—one in the megaton range, the other less megaton—will be triggered hlghei"—up to 500 miles, according ne sountes. The Atomic En-Commission would go eters.” One hundred kilometers is 60 miles. Whether a fourth shot will be nec'cssary dejamds on tlic r<'sults of the initial three explosions. So (nr the Unller site in the PacifiSi rang<>. HouMwif*'! PhoDH Call Htlpi Nab Walkaway IONIA (AP)—A housewife's leie-phone ca|[l aided yesterday in the capture of a Mtchigaif refoimatory walkaway at l^ranac, state police David E: Houston, 20, pCJacksdn Bed a dorinltqry .Sunday nighi bill his work gnrh was spoiled yesterday by Mrs. William Drawn who called the lunin post lo report hli pasttoge near her home, Offloeto found him along Nurby. Houston was shnlenced from Jacitlton County in theft'charge nml reiurneil later paraU on paralOi violation. The glow from the first test-hut not the fireball—probably will be visible in Hawaii^ about 700 miles from Johnston Island. The island slate very likely will be able to see the unearthly fireballs of the second and third ex- time-around, watches their performances on television reruns. "1 was shocked when I first saw [hf*^i«ah|s of thto movie (The Hook), piei'ir-'-were many little similarities to be seen in my acting and that of mother and father. I just picked them up without realizing ft. By EARL WILSON PARIS Frank Sinatra’g due here June ,4 onlila world tour of shows for children’s charities — and Parialana are-all agog (or Is It all agrog?), He sings at the famous LldO nightclub •— and the dinners will 50,000 old tranes each —‘ $100. But It Is Frank’s travel jdans that titillate, the Parisians. He has an entourage, of 18, Including seven musiciatu, 'one factotum in charge of the press,” a cook ^ and a valet, sound engineeri TV cameraman, secretary, director, an administrator, and I '^Huree friends," including Hollywood restau* ] rateur Mike Romanoff and his wife. "The three friends have no specified talk on the tour," so It is announced, “except to J chat with Sinatra when he has a free mo- I ment.” • ... Latest Rome rumor! Liz Tbylor has been phnwtng Eddie fisher — possibly hoping to entice him back to Italy—to makw Richard Burton jeafous. (If Dickie can go back to his wife, she can go back to her husband, seeeeeeeee?) ★ Tony Perkins Is practicaUy the Cary Grant of France. Cartoonists use his name in captions to denote male glamt^ (Mmost as they do BB and MM for gal glamour . . Audrey. Hepburnjkhad four dresses made by Givenchy just td wear for Jumpto^ into the Seine In her picture with Bill Holden. “Together In Paris.” Why .four? She’s got to have a change for retakes. ★ ★ ★ ' THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN NEW YORK ... Vlnee Edwards (“Ben Casey”) got a wire from Basil Gi^o of Crosby Productions saying re the Emmy Awards. "I think we were scalped by the block voting of (he N.Y. Didians; yow are still No. 1 with us” ... Eva Gabor grubbed the'dramatlc lead In a Broadway show. Richard Rodgers’ll become a grandpa for the fifth time. Sound of Music" celebrated its 1,000th performance at a Pour Seusons party. (Kurt Kasznar’s the only cast member who hasn’t missed a show) ... A disk company’s releasing a "Ballad of Richard Burton"— Jackie Gleason‘and Louis Prima talked over 52nd ?|t. days at Basin St, East—when Prima e^ed $75 a week, and Gleason was a star at. $100. . . . Teresa Brewer’s among the bidders for Artie Shaw’s castle-Uke home on Spain’s Costa Brava ... ★' , ★ Today’s Best Laugh: Marty Allen claims the agriculture secrettiry found a Way to use up our vast food surplus—heTl give It to the Kennedys for a fa^ly picnic. Wish I’Asaid that: Hollywot^lreems to be the.place where f^in stars are marrying more these days, and enjoying it less.— Albert Bishop. Quote. > . - Earl’s Pearls: The average American doesn’t know much about Laos — but he knows all about Liz. . . . That’s earl, brother. (Copyrighti 1962) “But I don’t think of future accomplishments in terms of approaching their woi;k. I'm individual and will have to 4o the best job 1 can and let other people judge me.” parts: Starret Shqron Hugueny and video actor Van Williams will costar in “The Cftte^ takers” for United Artists with Robert Stack . . . Patricia Neal leaves location shooting of "Hud ’’ in Texas to fly to London visit with her husband, British .^writer Raoul Dahl . . . Director'Delmar Daves has completed the screenplay of “Spencer’s Mountain" and will spend a Jackson Hole, Wyo., searching for location sites ... Circle Thieater Has Wealth of Material By CYNTHU LOWRY AP Televiston-Radio Writer NEW YORK-“Clrcle Theater,” one of television’s hardiest perch-nials, has been renewed for an eighth season starting next fall. One reason for its continued existence is an inexhaustible source of material — from life Itself. Orqle’s. speciality is entertain-lent called "dramatized documentaries,” which means that the situations are real (and sometimes the names of the char|)ctera are also) but the writers'have dramatic license to telescope time, add fictitious characters, and, sometimes, dream up a windup to a situation that, in actuality, wanders along to an Inconclusive end. Scholle to Recommend Rejecting Constitution DETROIT (41—President August (GusI Scholle said lodav he will recommend that the Michigan AFL-CIO go on tecord a( its convenlion next we<‘k against the pro|H>scd slate consIKullon, Scliolle cxprcssiHl (•onfldcncc the invention would follow his rec-ommeiidallons, saying, "1 don’t think you could sell the delegates thot kind of a bill of goods, mutter what.” M-ntly In the past seven years, produc-i er Robert Costello and hla staff have turned out bi-weekly programs on C!BS that have ranged from stories of crime and detection on one hand to a story about the successful treatment of cancer on the other. ^ Sometimes, the drama has been built around a fictional situation that is a composite of many real storire. When, for instance, the progrieuh concerned Communist espionage in the United States, the plot was pure fiction, but the narrator broke> in from time to time to tie up each episode with ■g-T^al case and a real spy. 'Sometimes wc create one or ) characters and use them tif* , reflect the attitude of a whole community,” Costello explained. "Other limes we stick dose to the facts. And on still other occasions. create a ftcUtfbus story that is typical of many.” / runvimllnii over the legislative apportloiimeiil which it approved. He inslslcd that boil) hous(R o the legislature be appm'Moned on a basis dt iiopulutlon only, arguing for the principle, of "one-lpan, one-vote” and obtecilng to area being given any weight In apportionment of Senate seals. BACKED DEM8 Scholle and other AFL-CIO i ers' generally h ^ v e supported Demncrallc candidates for state of- Bus Passenger Slain After Stabbing Three i^pni flee since the 1948 election of G. Mennen Williams as governor. That party’s gubernatorial candidates hgve been successful since. George Romney, Republican candidate for governor and a vice president of the constitution is Improved in every section, compared '' the current 1908-drawn document. American Motors (florp. to ran tor governor, onid (he Hous4' apiNtrltonment In (ho new eanstlliillon Is ahoul as elosely based on population CHICAGO (AF)—Aipnsssenger alioard a Greyhound bus, who police said went bt*rserk and slabbed tile driver and two other men, was tatally sh<« today by police. 4r ★ # ' ■ lice idid the knife wlelder, Idenlifled ns MIlo'Kavo Breklch, 27, ^ San Franclwto, threatened to kill the # pasaeng«rii In the bus, 1>o "persotiN were hrepital-IzMl suffering fretn shook. NAVY IH)M)R HIHl - Ho(k» Littleton, dieverly, Md.. a see-retafy at the Navy's Bu'ijenu of Shlpg, jaises ycsiei’day after be* Ing miined the Naval Academy's "G»lor Olrl” for the Jtine week exenilses lieginntng Friday al AimaiKills, M(i. ) Policemen Aalhur McCauilin and Roil Moran said they fired at ilch when he refused to obey * orders to drop his kiUfe. le policemen hod stopped their . id csr when they saw the bi parked In an emergency strip. Wilfred )ss.\4l, of Addison, ver, told police he slopped tlic tnlB Id seek police aid >r B)s)klch 3rlWi lo start s [lit with aiK)lhci\passengih', WH-itii Kokko 23, Nnf Negnunea Mil'll, an Army private , Romney described Ihc Senate aa "vastly Improved” under a uniform npporllonmeni feature giving 80 per cent weight lo (Miiiulaltnn 20 per cent lo iireo, •RENTAL* SOFT WATER Sol«s $3 Month -$199 Up "t completely dlsagi'Ce with him Scholle told a they actually mutilated the consti-n, rather than Improved It.” LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. $i Nawbeny St. N 8-«(m SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Hestlni; Testo FrM Parking at Rear ef Belldlng "Op*n gves. hy Appointment" 143 Oakland FBderal 2-1225 pBfroll Ritaii Busioou Is Txcellenjl^ This Y«ar -DETROIT (AP) - Retail bust-in IMroit is excellent year, reports the C3iicago Federal Reaerva Bank compared to 1961. In March and ^11. retail salM of appuianees, furniture, and and women’s clothing were Ip. Ap- |i 19 per In the Iwo-month cent from 1961. In April 1062. sales (^lotMng was 22 per than the same month of iMl, while women's apparel showed a M par ...... Tfslad »RiM WMm Trs*s in atsA hii*an fanrHa I1W2 AIS CONDrripMISS $167.95 snitrSMIsAiH. «M W. ahwMt / tn I \ ‘Vi'” ■ ”' ' 'ViKy: ^ ::'i^.\i:J.\ .,>. *. ■ - r-fx^ t,i<.. I A.. ..^jj....-1 itmmk. A .a^^Sia , «. \ rXlAC. MICHIGAN* MAKEOVER PAGtES