Yfn Wtoflwr 114. ifMikw »mm THE PONTIAC PHESS Hom« ^ Editidn V0L. 120 'no. 100 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. MONDAY. JUNE 11, 1062PAGES nKirtD*'aSi^i!K?TioKAi. T City, Waterford Voting on School Boards To Meet glough After Yale Addresa JFK Asks Peace With Business t'nm Our Nftwa Wimi NEW HAVEN, COnn. - President Kennedy, In a Yale University commencement address, today urged peace between American business and Ms administration. • A short time later he arranged a late altemoon meeting in Washington with U. S. ^eel Board Chairman Roger Blough and members of a special tasir force of business leaders studying the gold outflow and balance of payments situations. Kennedy, ealltaig for a parl- erttics pouting eiicaes” instead of facing up real problems of the times. In the serene atmosphere of the Yale commencement, Kennedy declared his administration is not antibusiness and he made It clear that the government Intends to do Its part in trying to block recession and generate prosperify. After lunch with Yale officials "But it took place in a different world with different needs and tarics," the President said. THE TASKS OF THE ’Ms "It is our responsibility today to live in our one world -identify the needs and discharge the tasks of the 1900s." DEGREE FROM YALE - Presideht Keniwdy. wearing an academic robe after receiving Yale’s doctor of laws degree, calls for partnership with government to pump new life into the The’Chief Executive accused his sharpest critfoeafi He came to receive an honorary law degree, one of 14 honorariea presented at Yale’s 361st Laotian Princes Agtee on Coalition Cabinet KHANO KHAY, Laos l^>—The rival Laotian princes agreed today on the cabinet for a coalition government aimed at ending the civil war and adding Laos to the ranks of the world’s neutral nations. Neutralist Prince Souvanna Phouma, the premier-designate, announced the agreement, climaxing nego-^tiatkms instituted by the 14-nation conference on Results of Elections to Be Given Tonight RetuHs of Uie PmUsc sud win be svallaMe touIgM through telephoM lM|UiriPs to The Fouttac Laos at Geneva 13 months ago. Premier Prince Boun Oum the present royal Laotian government is stepping out of governmental affairs, hastily, he said. However, the strong man of his regime, Gen. Phoumi No« will sit in as deputy premier and miniiter of finance under Souvan- Incomplete results are pected to be avaltabte at S:St p.in„ the final r later-u soon as they are lated by sebooi officials. Another deputy premiership and the ieconomy p^fotio will go ta Prince Souphanouvong, chief of the proGommunist Pathet Lao and half brother of the premier-desig- In Today's Press Ends Segregation I Atlanta archbishop orders Catholic schools integrated— f PAGE S4. i Bank on 'Issues' GOP counting o.i Estes, stock slump to win House seaU - PAGE S. Need Help? Fill out :«ppl*»tion for scholarship 'carefully — PAGE U. Though domestic problems stffi Immediately after the annouce* ment, the three princes signed the Cabinet list. I^vanna, however, said the three will meet again Tuesday to sign a formal agreement on formation of the coalition. Souvanna said he hopes to take his ministers to Luang f*rabang, the royal capital, by next Monday to present them to King Sevang Vathana. The gnesUou of wrho would get the armed foroeo aad pofiM minisMeo had beeu oue of the toughest potato btoeUng an The reyaHst ^v- News Flash WASHINOTON l-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) The lletd of eaaMsteo Incumbent Eldon C. Rosegari, president of the school board ti/r past two years, is seekinR m second term. The other candidate Inter O. are Norman L. (3ieai, Elmer < Johnson and Ellis L. Nordbeefc.' Rosegart, 43, lives at 2383 Show-nse Lane, Drayton Plains, with i(fa wife and two children. He is an instructor of Instrumental mua|c in the Pontiac Sebooi D«tem. Oieal, 42, married and the fattier o( aik. UvM at 2T91 NorthlAka Drive, Waterford TownsUp. He heads the experimental department of the Pontiac Mpter DivWon engineering department. JohiHoii. 40, is part owner trf Elmer'/Afli'o Supp^ Iti Waterioed Township. He lives al 4084 Bay-brook Drive wMh his wits a^ two children. NonSieck. 40, his wife aad their four children live at 3110 Embar-cadara Street, Drayton Plaina* U* is a property awiMor tar tlMt Michigan State Tax Cbmmteaioii. Expiration of the teraw of Roae-gart and Edmund L. Wiadeler Uiia month accounts for the two vacant seats on the board. Windeler, a 12-yeor member of the school board, did not choose to seek re-election. Union Hall Dedicated 'Progress Sign' Mazey Hails Lacal 594 far Canstructian af New Headquarters United Auto Workers Loc^ 594’s new $200,000 hall in Pontiac was termed “a symbol of union progress here" by UAW Secretary-Treasurer Emil Mazey, principal speaker at dedication ceremonies teturday. Introduced by Local President Andy Wilson. Mazey commended members here on construction ot the modern, one-story brick building at 525 S. East Bivd. The bulldliiK has been serving more than 8,808 General Motors Truck A Coach Division employes since offices were moved March 17 from the former ball at 88 Ml. Clemens Street, Approximately 600 persons visited the new hall during an open house following, the dedication. Others officiating in the cere-nKMiles were Ernest Moran, assistant director of the UAW’s GM Department. Kenneth Morris, UAW regional director and Cart Hunter, local financial secretary. Wilson compared the new hnli’s MMfltorinm, having a 888-seatlng capacity, with the old Also, he noted that parking space for 156 cars is provided in a lot next to the new haU. Parking tor meetings at the former building always posed a problem, he recalled. Wilson said the new building was proving extremely efficient for union administration heiv'. MANY FACILITIES The new quarters also contain recreation room, open during rtbr-mal daytime hours, for reared union members. Television, shuffle-board and other game equipment is provided. PINAL TOUCH - United Auto Workers officials prepare to slip the cornerstone ' into place under the new $200,000 Local 594 union 'hall at 525 S. East Bivd. during dedication ceremonies Saturday. Wielding the trowel above is Emil, Mazey. UAW seeretaty treasurer. Others (from left) are Carl Humer, local financial secretary; Kenneth Morris. UAW tegional director; gnd Andy Wilson, local presideat. ^ 1 ' I Express Interest in Your School Board by Voting Today fe':'-' ^ THE POXTiAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUKE 11, 1962 Refuses to Hear Beck Appeal; Supramt Court Pecition fAakm FiiKil Conviction on Tax Chargoi WASHINGTON (AP) - Th« Su-p^aM Oburt retuwd today to re-vtOw the conviction of Dave Beck. Miner Teemiten Union preci-d^, OB charges <4 filing fate federal tax returns for the union M USB and 1963. nc high tribunal, in a May 14 decWoo on another appeal, af-firined conviction of on a charge of embezzlement of $1,900 from the sale of an automobile owned by the union. He was sentenced to IS years’ imprisonment on the embezzlement conviction. The sentence was pronounced in a Washington State court. Beck's conviction on the tax charge was in federal court in Tacoma. Waah., in 1^ He was senteneed there to five yesrs prieon and fined $30,000. "The US. Ofcuit CaurTln Ban Frandabo on Jan. 30, 1063, upheld Back's conviction of filing false tax ratums ftr his union. At the same time it set aside his conviction of evading m(»« than $3«,0e0 in Income taxes. The Or-cult Court called for a new trial on the evasion charges, on which Beck had been sentenced to five yrars and $40,000 fine. The Supreme Oourt’i order denying Beck a hearing in the tax case gave no reasons. It noted that Juatloe White took no pert in the nRST^BADVATlNd CLAM - Meihbert of the first graduating class at Our Lady of the Lakes High School, Waterford Township, are shown here inside the church where commencement exercises were held last night. The 39 At Our Lady of the Lakes Diplomas Awarded 29 Seniors The Justice Department brief oppoaed a Skpreme Court review for Beck on the federal tax Our Lady of the Lakes High School. Waterford Township, held its first commencement program night with 29 graduates awarded diplomas. ♦ ★ * Rev. Ara Walker, S. J.. president of Columbiere College in In- Tha department aaid though the Circuit Court decision ' “ " t way open for a retrial of would not seek to retry tfaoae charges in the event the sentence 1 (by retuaei of a preme Court review). Laotian Princes Join on Coalition Cabinet (Contiaued From Page One) Under today’s agreement Sou-Under today’s agraemea, "1 be premier, defense graduating seniors had Just handed lighted candles b members of the Junior class, in a ceremony preceding the commencement excretes. ★ ★ ★ Grads Advised to Have Faith ••Have faith in God’s providence in work! affairs,” «. Frederick High SdMxd’s graduating clasa was advised in commencement <- ctes yesterday. The message was delivered by Rev. HMMopaon L. Marcero, pastor of St. Vincent de Paul Church, where the ceremonies were h ‘ * dependence Township, delivered the commencement address to the departing aenlora. He pointed out that the main purpose of the education proceaa is to develop well-rounded personalities. A candlelight ceremony pre-it it -k Seniors Told 'Somebody Cares' $1fty-two graduating senion from St. Michael’i High School were told yesterday that ”s body cares” tor them. ■laay because o( The graduating MSmr nnmded Masa and received Holy Communion in a body before accepting dl-Thoae who graduated The coalition Cabinet comprises savan rspnasntatives from Sou-vanna’a naatraUsts, tour tram.the rdyaliat group In VIentlaiia. i the proCommunlst Pathet Rev. Paul C. Berg, protcMor Father Berg assured the students people would continue to care about them awL help them along. Cammaaeameal aeremonte were held in St. Miehael’a Chivch. Diplomas were awarded hy the church’s paste. Rev. James L. Hayes. At- a breakfast honoring graduates, three seniors spoke to gathering of parents, teachers and graduates. Jainea ■arrea gave the aa- The Weather PbU U j. Weather Barean Repart PONTIAC AND VICDimr - Partly elaady, Uttla chaaga ta tan^mtura thnath Toeaday with lew aftar-aaaa «ai avaalag thaaianterra. Law taalght, 66. High Taaaiay ft Wiaia aoaUiwcaterly S-tS miles beeomlag aeetlMaeterly Taeeday. Om Tmf Sf* la Paalla* NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are expected tonight in the noitfaeastem Plaint, the middle Mississippi VaUey. the Lakes region, the Ohio VaUey end New England, as well as»in the Mteuni GuU ana. It wiU be wanner in the Pacific northwest and warm weaUwr wiU continue on the east coast. It will be .ceoler in northern New. England, the northern Lakes and the etes during wWeh the graduates handled Hghled eaadlea ta mem-bera of the Jnaler etass at the Senator lals at MSU Rites Mantfield Says Foli^ Toword SouthMif Asia Muit te Ro-Examinod EAST LANSING (AP) Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., told a commencement day audience yet-terday at Michigan State University that it’s time for a re-examtn-atkm of this nation’s policy toward Southeast Asia. The Senate majority leader and the administration’s chief spokesman In that body said hit support of President Kennedy does not prsclude public discussloii of present approaches. he said, a the people of itloa aad r....... pie of Manafiehl^sald ha dooMed that UA. traffic security and other Interests Justify indefinite commlt-' to the unilateral defense of rea. Rather, he aaid, this aa-gation should investigate “every poeeibUity of mbriinlzlng the uni-latnal activity of the United States in Southeast Asia in every e.” asked that we “draw clearly Uw dtatlnction between what ie en-duringly basic and what is transitory and peripheral In our Interests with respect” to the area. The unitateral supply of man-ower and bUllons is at best maik-tlme course of imme worst, it’s a col-he said. the Hflit of learalag. Assistant pastor of Our Lady of the Lakes, Rev. John L. Phelan presented the senior class and pastor Fr. Frederick J. Delaney, presented the diplomas. ATTENDED MASS Seniors then racited an Act of Consecration and the exercises were conduded by Benediction of the Blessed Sacramenti The graduates attended 12:90' Mass in a body Sunday and later were luncheon guests of . Fr. Delaney in the rectory. Class-night ceremonies honoring the graduating seniors were held Thursday. The program began a junior-aenior banquet and concluded with a farewell dance presented by the Junion in honor of their departing upperdasamen. t, KltaelM Knmtr. bavtd The Day in Birmingham Starting Library Survey to Learn Needs of Area BIRMINGHAM - A library sur^ vey began today for the pwpoae of pravldiiig taformatlon oa the typos and locations of new fadU-Ucs that are needed to aeive the Bfatnlngham-Bloomfield area. The study Is belag apaauored by tiM Baidwhi FabUe LUinry ARTHUR J. LAW Locales Listed for School Vote Seeks 3rd Term in Legislature State Rep. Law Reveals Bid for 2-Year Post; to File Petitions state Rep. Arthur J. Law, Pontiac, says the next tew yeara in Michigan will be filled with interesting and challenging issues — and he wants to retain a pditical voice to deal with them. Law, 56. today announced his bid lor a third two-year term in the State House of R^resentatlves. He said be will file nominating petitions later this week for the Aug. primary election. Two key laanea — Supreme Oaurt’s ooaslderatlou ef Rm.s'sar' Oii». Ps»r|«ls SiSSSi/KiW Mscufs, Josnst Mssnrsk. Zosbos ScbulU. Mtrla Both Waterford Township and Waterford Tawiuhip School Dts-trld recently revted voting precincts due to heavy new registrations. The foUowing pditlcal pra-dnct-achool precind system is in effed: School precind No. 1 indudes political predndi No. 1, 2, 14 and 19. School prednd No. 2 embracea political prednds 5, 7 and 11. School precinct No. 3 Indudea political prednds 9,18 and 23 and a portion of Wew Bloomfield Town-ship. 4 predact No. 4 takes bi I preciurti S. U aad M part of ladepeadeaee Townriilp aai aebaol ptedact No. • laeludea psHtleal preciat U aad a poriioa of Wbito Lake Towa- daas prasldeiit Stuart Rlndfuu praslded over the breakfast cere- Graduates are: Polling Places Listed for Voting Polling pUces for today’s Pon-tiap Board of Education olectkm foUows: Pel. City Pel. A-Bagley* 2-3-34-28 8-31-41 6-9-10 W0€ll#T«r./»•!» idfui.' iUiBrt RolMkr^rUr nyaer. Lsvriaet. TmuU. Josbm sr__.................. Much of Nation to Slosh Through Showers Today By THE AMOCUTED PRESS Rain clouds hovered acrosi broad areas from the Rockies to the Alabama Gulf Coast today. Afternoon and were indicated in most areas in the eastern two-thirds. of the nation. duplicating Sunday’s weather activtty. Heavy rain, hail and Wrong winds hit sections in the central part of the country Sunday, In-dudlng Iowa, Wisconsin, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. Thunderstorms during the night pdted areaa in Wyoming, southern New York State and the Alabama Gulf test. . it was warm and humid in most of the Midwest and East, with temperatures in the 8040 degree range Sunday. Night readings were in the upper 60s and 70s in nwst of the southern and eastern aecUons except in Maine mountain areas. Colloge to Hike Tuition HOUGHTON (AP) - Tuition at Michigan Tech wUl be increased $10 per quarter lor Michigan residents this fall, making the price for a normal academic year $346 for a resident. Out-of-Wate Wudeiito rat« were rated $20 per quarter in April. , I C-Gentral Sr. High D-Ooac St. Station E—Lincoln Jr. F—Owen** G-LeBaron** H—Emerson I-Baldwln J—Longfellow K-Wllaon Lr,-McConneII M—Eastern Jr. N-Central 0-^wthome** P-Jefferaon (J-WUlis R-Waahington Jr. S-WWtfleld** *Includet all of 'Includes areas outside City of Pontiac. _____i areas outside the city limits and within the achool djs-trirt fall under the following general boundaries. Predact F Pontiac Township north of the city limits bounded on the eaW by the PonUac, Oxford and Northern Railroad. Vote at the Owen School. 12-13-14 13^-42 16-35-43 7-17 18-19-20-44 24- 33 27-28-29 25- 26 23 21-22 1-36-37 4-5^6^9-40 Law’s vtew of the lutare. “The next few years in the legislature will give some of ua the opportunity to hdp a lot in these and other issues,” he said. “I like No opposition — Republican or Democrat — has been announced for Law’s post. The COP lost an apparent challenger last month when Pontiac con-con delegate Ray KiiR was appointed prosecutor for Ogemaw County. Law, owner of a Pontiac supermarket, has been a dty resident ter 37 years. He came here from his native Oklahoma at ^ 19 and exactly 19 years later became layor. Law served six yean aa mayor and 12 yaan aa a dty commteion- School precind No. 6 embraces political prednds 4,15 and 21 and ^Iwel precind No. 7 conates lalMical precincts 6, 16 and School precind No. I indudea political prednds 9, 10 and .7. Polling places for the election re as foUows: Precind No. 1, Grayson Schod; Prednd No. 2, Donelson School; Precind No. 3. Waterford Center! School; Precind No. i Schoolcraft School; Precind No. 5. Pontiac Lake School; Prednd No. 6, Mon-telth School; Prednd No. 7, Leggett School; and Precind No. 8. Stringham School. Pontiac Teen Killed in Kentucky Crash INDEPENDENCE. Ky. (AP) -George Weatheihee, 16, 843 Mel-roae Ave., Pontiac, Mich, was kiUed and his cousin. James Hurst, 28, of nearby Covington was injured in an automobile ac- Investigators Seek iTrain Wreck's Cause mUes aouth\ of this northern Kentucky community, (dunged over a 10-foot embankment and hit a tree. Both occupants were thrown ■om the car. Weatherbee had been visiting relatives in Covington. Cbnducted by Frederick Wese-'man, who la on the laculty of the University of Minneaota’s School of Library Science, the survey Is a 'follow-up study made by the aOzeris Library Study Council. •k h It The council has recommended that the area be serviced by a distrid library system which would take in Bloomfield and Southfield townships, Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills. ■k k Wezeman will talk with dty and township officials, school and library board members and repre-sentalives ot business and otho’ conunui^ groups while making the survey. Wezeman has made similar surveys for Des Moines, Minneapolis-‘t. Paul and Tulsa, Okla. Birmingham Chapter 220, Order of the Eastern Star, will hold an initiation June 30 at the Birmingham Masonic Temple, 327 S. Woodward Ave. The ceremony will be conduded at 7:45 p.m. The Congregational Church of Birmin^iam announced today it will begin ita summer wurahlp schedule on June 17. Beginning at that time there will aervioe oidy, at 10 a.m. Church achool Undergirten claaaet and baby nuraery wtU be held during the summer, also at AD ( ■ --------- to • attend regular church aervioe in Surviving besidea .... are two daughters, Mrs. Donald B. Brownlee o< Bloondidd Township and Mrs. John K Malcolm ot ~*oii)tt; one sister, Mrs. E. R. Hagennan of Bloomfield Thwnshlp; and two grandchildren. Her wlU be at the Sparka-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac, until Wednesday morniiR. Clarenee E. Betatord Private service ter Clarence E. Botaford, 84, of 26081 Carol St., Franklin, will bf tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Bim ■ will be in the Franklin Cemetery. Mr. Botaford died yesterday following a abort Illness. He had been general manager of the Michigan Wire Cloth CO. of Detroit, retiring in 1961. He was a member of the First Church of Christ, Sdentist, Birw mlngham; a lite member of Birmingham Lodge 44, FAAM; and a former member of the Detroit Athletic Gub and the Cteebard Lake Country Club. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. John Scolaro of Bloomfield Hills and Mrs. Hariee MUIer of Lakea, NJ.; a soil, John S. of FVankUn; one brother and 13 grandriiUdren. Mra. Robert J. MarshaS Private aervioe te Mrs. Robert J. (Edytha) MarshalL $3, of 37460 Gidden Gate Drive, Uthnip Village, will be Tueedey at the BeU Chapel of the William R. HamUton Co. Oematlon will follow. Mra. Marshall died at home Saturday following a brief ineaa. with Soott-Shuptrine of Birmingham and was a member of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Servipe for Mrs. Floyd (Aurttlai _eardslec, 78, of 735 E. Square Lake Road. BhxxntMd Township, will be 2 P-m. Wedneeday at home. Burial wm be la Franklin Cemetery. Mrs. are a daughter, Mrs. Richard (Judith) Sumner of Warren; a aori, R. Stephen, at home; e eieter, Margaret L. Itaidlag M Roya Oak; and three brothers. She was s member ot the Cen-al Metbodiat Church ot Pontiec, the Better Homes and Garden C5ub and the Franklin Cemetery Ladies Auxiliary. ________________ Crowd Applauds Stubblefield 'Froodoni Rail/ Yialds Pledges of Backing for School Board Candidate „ Negro “freedom rally" In Bcaodette Pailc Saturday turned a pledged endorsement ot Poa-tlac achool board candidate Beauregard Stubblefield at the eieetkte PROM OUR NEWS WIRES MISSOULA, Mont. — Investigators sought today to determine whether brake failure or human error caused yesterday’s wreck of a Northern Pacific passenger train which killed one person and injured 243 others. An NP spokesman said one or the other caused the train to lurch off its tracks at more than twice the rec-onunended speed and scat- ter 15 oir its 18 cars along a steep embankment. The train, eastbound from Seattle, Wash., to Chicago was packed with tourists heading hopaeward from the Seattie Worid’s fair. their mother, Mrs. Ji An Allen Parit, Mich., youth, returning hiHne from Ore^ State University on the train, telephoned his family yesterday that he had escaped uninjured. < Dan Lebenta, 19, told his motb- Killed was Theresa Ann Dooms, 2H, of Ekalaka, Mont. Sixty-eight other _ _ to Missoula hospitals last night. The remaining injured were treated for minor injuries and released. The dead girl’s two stepsistax, Roberta and Jacqueline Yates, rescued by fellow They speed Is M m.p.h. The railroad spokesman, W. A MacKenzie. said the reasoa foi the ’’consideraMy exceaiive” speed could have been "brake failure or human failure.” Investigators from the railroad and Interatate Commerce Oom-miaalon (IOC) were at the scene to attempt to determine the exact cause of the accident. Four Negro students from Pontiac Central High School who apoke of alleged Incidenta of dteertmina-tion by teacbera and adminiatra-tors were commended for their '‘bravery” by the principal speaker, Rev. Albert B. Geage Jr. of Detroit. Mayor Robert Landry circulated through the crowd handing out pro- Candidate Stubblefield, mathematics teacher at Michigan State University Oakland, apoke Irrlefly rain chased the crowd to waiting cars. Pontiac Township north ot the dty limits bounded on the west and adjacent to Precinct F and on the east by the east section line of section 9 and on the north by Lake Angeluz Road. Vote at the LeBaron SdMX>I. Predact J ' East of the city limits and south I Featherstone Road. Vote at LongfeUow School. < Predact O Waterford ToWnship in the Dixie Highway AHnn. Vote at Hawthorne chool. Prednd P South of the city limits: bounded on the west by Wrenn Street. Vote at Jefferson School. Prednd q Pontiac Township east" of the city limits and north of the city Jilmts adjacent to Prednet G and including that portion Of Orion Township in the district. Ate bounded on the south by Feather stone Road. Vote at WlUia 3cho^. PreetedS Daniel Whitfield Schod area outside the Gty oj Pontiac. ONE DEAD, aiS HURT -> Fifteen cars of a 17-car Northern Pacific paasmger train are shown scattered beside a highway after the AP PSddkt train deraUed eai4y yesterday about 15 miles west of Missoula, M«mt. A child waa killed and 243 of the 350 paasengem were injured. Producer of Film Cleopatra' in iSalary Dispute ROME m — Walter Wahger, producer of the troubled movie “Qeo-patra,” said today he and 20th Century-Fox studios are in a dia-pute over his sdary and expenses. But he denied he had been fired and said; “I am not going to be pushed around. 1 remain in duuge of productioo here, and I will complete the movie.” Wanger was commenting on a report in the New York Post that he had been taken off salary because unoll to antra-iarga. Irragvlort of $l.29ioll.r.. ‘ Over 2000 — Big Style Selection in Men’s Kn'rt Skirts ValuM to $2.95 I 44 • Qaeche Styles • Boatneck Styles • Belters Styles ' • Knits-Terfys • Short Sleeves ______• All Washable AMERICAN . MADE - but priced lower [thon cheop imports. Mony, many styles and colors in gay patterns, solids and signs. All sixes small to large—soma extra large. Special Buy for *BIG MEN* at Simnu Men’s SLERE Dress Shirts Regular *2^8 Value • Famous Btua or Red Denim Uppers >i^rdoD0ck Sho6S Regular $5.95 Value—At Simms For booting, vocolioni, tra< yel and just plqin casual and sports wear. ) soles, sponge in-buih-in orch. 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Limit 4 gals.. 1 67 •IHKOTEIVHleadIMat One^teal HOUSE PAINT i $4.9SVdvo-OAUON I Ona-oMf paint- for ox-I tarier surfocas. Maol for ' homos and gorogas. Limit S 3« 0>*-Coat ENAMEL \ $4.fSVdw-OAUON 4 For walls, woodwork. Oil dboso anomol Is non-yoHow-^ing. Fully woshoblo. Limit 4 ^goliom. >000000000000000000004 3“ kMtmrniiMlim I Sy.fSVdoe-OAlLON n20inimrias. Choicaaf ■eihita and calafs. Uadi 4 golsas. 5$s; VOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO r HOUSEPJUNT ST.fSVelwo-eAllON eeeee»eeeeeoeeoeo#< ADDROG ttKYolmo •ooo^ Cem«nt j S«al«r Natural Seder Fen e Cement Blocks e Cinder Blocks o Asbostos Shinglos Stucco and Brick 1 • Poured Concrete Chaka of sdOs and agiort... oaqr ta OKily •• ' paita proMsas walsr'Iaakaga, (ADDROC FAINT In SOLS. CANS.SI3.SS) oaaoooooooooooooooooioooooooooooooooooooooo., Roody to Point Sot • 9x1(Mnch Shoots FaMPMaiiRilltr: SondpopGr M<®4Vaiao • ^eNuler S« Nr Sheet 2» il5lUF P-Inchpaintrolarandinatalhayfa * Fmom ...........it 2 sats par parsan. O fraat. I •eMeaeeeeeeeeooeooeeeooeeeeooeeeooeooeoeo Paint Roller Covers 33* RagularS0eValM-nifa*7. Inch rallart. Choica at wool or mohair cevars. Umit 3 Eosv tA HnnwAI# a ■! Inhf itaCii/ iw rnn*ww"*Lioni ALUMINUn j m FvImtiiiM LiAiMrt t ■dJBWBBVIW ■BwWwI • 16-FSST .«15“ , Vpm. 2I.F00T >2t" 14F0ST.......'23" Sturdy, rvggad aiuminum loddars oro vary Kghl—much aoiier to mova around ’ than ordinary laddari. Pricat whia quantity lo«tt< ELECTRICAL NEEDS Pulls in Most Distant StoHons—DELUXE r Television Antema 13-ElanMiit Unit 14 Pra-assamblad unit vrhich you con instol oosay yoursalf ... compiato with chimnoy mounts^ 5Q faat of lood-in-wiro. 13 olomonta to pul in most distant stations. Boittr IhOn shown. yoTO THE PONTIAC FHESiS. MONDAY, JUNE 11,1W» Friends Giving U.S. Statesmen < Trouble I inUiAM X. MTAlf It would ke underauuidaUc time dtord U Oi. Tlw way the aewe hae been iM^, the irtatesnwa oouU cm-Uy get the impreaiion that the oOiy eeafaUng newt conmftoai Moieear. The Soviet covenmoiit k up to Rp eaM fee neewmle tnnUe. X ha had to booet food pricee ■haiply and then make eniMUTaa-elog expianationa to to public. The Brltldi can't aecm to make up their minds whether to get Into the Common Market or sUy out of It. The United States, devoutly en- ing wordeome, as If infected by something that old Bolsheviks might well call creeping capitalism. The Rossians have trouble with their rambunctious Chinese allies and with little Albania. But what's happening else-wheret The United SUtes hu Hs own trouble with its fraetkas friends. President Charles De Gaulle's government, still in a mess with AtgBrta,^ias to own ideas about how the North Atlantic Alliance sboidd operate, and tends to be unruly. Tha West Germans are peeved whenever the United States seems to want to talk to the Russians about Berlin instead of threaten* Ing to loss lockete at them. I OornnHsi Market as|tdai- the wave of the future, finds the arrangement getting in to hdr, what with tariff retaliation whenever the Americans insist on protecting their own domestic Indus- The news from Southeast Asia k increasingly dolorous. In Indochina, Laos seems to be adthering on the vine, and the OommunkU won’t give South Viet Nam any k angry at the United States because of to military sUP* port of Pakktan, which k allied with Washington in the Central Treaty Organization. So India dickers with the Russkas for wp-Jet fighters. But atawe Red China k angry at India, it k making friendly gestures toward Pakistan, supporting the Pakktanl claim to Kashmir and offering— of all things — economic'help to|^ Pakktan. - »NEW KIND or SnUJXAGK - It's not the same oU shillelagh used in Irdand. but the U.S. Army's latest surface - to - surface guided missile. Shown here k an artist's concept of the new-type shillelagh unveiled today by the manufacturer. Ford Motor Co’s aeronutronic dhrkion.at Newport Beach. Calif. Details of the mlssUe, depicted here being tired tom a tank turret, are highly hush-hush; Shillelagh is a Gaelic word for a short, heavy club. for statesmen a of the fence. U'B their Iriende who are driving I rd the psychiatrici Syria k Ulklng all over again about fsderatlon wMh Egypt in the United Arab Republic. That baa the scent of trouble to it, because the Syrians usually don’t talk that way unless they're afraid of sme- golng places. RefUrms—tax, land, adminktrative ^ the like—eeem to languish or get loot in committees or Just remain in the talking stage. * ★ A Crkk or the threat at erkk oVers over a half-dozen Latin countriee, and painful embarus-ment for the UnKed States lurks around almost every eemcr. Maybe if the United Statea had only Ruaaia to deal with, and Russia had only the United States to deal with, things might he a bit Canada Determined | tol OTTAWA (AP) -Finance Minister Donald M. Fleming eaid Sunday night Canada wlB not cooaider * m the preeent Ce-exchange jrate of 93H cents to the U.S. dollar. ♦ ♦ ★ Fleming said in a statemetd; mve are determined to maintain [the KHkcent rate against pres-| sures of any aort.” * ♦ Agriculture Minister Alvin Hamilton was quoted by newsmen, Friday as saying that he Aipports a further devaluation of the dollar exchange rate to 90 cents. He ■aid the 92H-cent rate, eetab-Ikhed May 3, was In effect a compromke among Cabinet mem-beri and aiaerted the Sticent level ‘a natural peg which k dc-ible with our negative trade Put more sun in your sunDmer with a Lively One from Ford Lively new get-up-and-go car-the Galaxie 500/XL! Now's the time to put your foot down (on an XL’s acceleratorl) and live tha liveliest summer of your life. There’s Thunderbird V-8 "flo" —up to 406 hp worth. And the XL's PQwpr is jmurs to command with optional T-speeSIslicIt shffl or Cruise-O-Matic tranemission. Sporty elegance is this car's theme. You get bucket seats with a Thunderbird-style console in between ... all-new interior trim ... full-floor carpeting. Andi because It's a Galaxie. service stops are few and far between—just twice a year or every 6,000 miles. Make this a summer to remember. Pick up the key to your happy, snappy Galaxie 600/XL (or to any of 36 other lively Galaxiee, Falcons, Feirlanes or Thunderbirds) at your Ford Dealer’s-todayl Dont just watch lem go hy...go buy a Lively One from your Ford Dealer NfW rAbOON SPOim nmiRA-Uvely luxury ate kw, low prk»--ectueNy lees tton nw«y com- peck. Bucket seek with oooedle. well to-wail oerpet-kie.Thondett>ird-etyle roof (vinyl-covered if youwleh). NCW rAMLANI SOO SPORTS COUPE-Here's big-ew ; room, ride end performence-unda price that's under many I compacts. Bucket seats with consoia In between, optional ’ "280" Challanoar VA and Galaxk'e sarvteaaaving features. SEE "AN ADVENTURE IN SPACE"-FORD EXHIBIT AT SEATTLE WORLD'S FAIR DRIVE A LIVELY ONE AT YOUR FORD DEALERS TODAY WKC’s DISCOUNT TV-STEREO and APPLIANCE MOT! mriwuLELEdRic« SEWHK BIG 20" ELESTRIO FAN 2Sps««lt, BOYS' UGHTWBGHT SPEEOBIKES Yeur ligklwaiglit speedster cemet eamplehi wWi all-p«fpese leel beg kickstand^ ttoMeiiey 4-SPEED PORTABI EiaiN CORDLESS Elecfrenic^ CLOCK tiimefil ' »12“ HcMeeeySeae mi!3m FREE DELIVERY ON ALL .ZZ.- WELBILT^Mighty-Mite'* AIR CONDITIONER 30-GAL QAS NOT WATER HEATER M49 MAHAQ TOmATIC VASHIR ^•168 FAMOUS WASHER Net Allowed la •69 NO MONEY DOWN , OPEN TONIGHT 711 3 YEARS TO PAY 9 ... FREE PARKING! ^ wlr#%V 108 NORTH SAGINAW THE PONTIAC TBESS. MOSDAV, JUNE il, Iflca :____________ am. ‘ HertwllBU of tfit Reml—ncf rccMHmen^ mOnb maztfoldf for toothache end Ifly root jiiiee for snake Mte. Ends War Against Withholding Tqx WASHINGTCm (AP) — The were not enough votes in the com- the league decided it was better slon bill, the administration might million a' year, compared With United States, Savings . . League has btokcn off Its bettle agatngt s 'wdhhoiding tax on interest and dividends—a key pro^ vishgiHof Prestdant Kennedy's tax re&WM bill Tka gtoup had been one of the I e< the witb-Treasury mlttee to get the Ul|. as it stands now, reported favorably. And some of tbs sens against it because of letters from tax. What _ face? One Senate Informant said to support the present bill, even with the withholding provision, than to chance possibly a stiffer bill later. The league reportedly ' ‘ ' if the aaviivB and for detent ^ Kennedy's tax revt- TAX CUT As part of the bill, the admln-istratiOB or^dnally proponed^ that eventually be taxed about 1500 current payments (d about |9 million. But the tax was slashed in the House Ways and Means Cbmmit-tee to about $300 million a year. The aim of the withhoidl^ provision is to insure coHection of income taxes on dividends and The Treasury has estimated that it is losing about a billion doHarg a year in such un-repbrted income. ★ ★ ■ ★ The withholding tax is designed to offset a $1.2-blllipn loss in revenue that would be lost under the tax incentive to businessmen and ffrmers to buy new equipment machinery. Kennedy has called this tax incentive proposal one of the first big steps needed to put new life into the nation's economy. Free Toothbrush for Tots EDINBURGH, Scotland (AP)-Aft^ a wrangle over the coat, the city healtM committee voted M to spend 4M pounds 11.260 to provide a fi^ toothbrush "y for each child at age 2 in this Scot capital. Officials estimate the money will buy 10,000 brushes. The b i r d - v o-i c rdh tree frog whistles ULe a pileat^ w o o d-pecker.__________________^ MoreComforlWeerief FALSE TEETH ..T'jti'&sssrrAaa tasM «ir iMluur C^ Midi. OuM ^KMtt saw araaia". Oas Pi said Sunday „J written Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon that it was droppli^ its opporitkm. The tax bill haa been pasaed by the Houae and is now being studied by the Senate Finance Committee where it Is under sharp at-tac!:. * A The league was a principal source of thoysands of letters written to Congress members by savings and loan officials and de-ppaitors urging elimination of the withholdiiig provision REBUKED BY 3FK T%e campaign brought a rebuke from Kenimly at a news conference May 9. He said the mail raadilng the White House and the Capitol indicated a great number of peofde have beat badly--misin-formnl by advertiaements and circulars financed by savings and loan aaaociationa, banka and other groups. But whether the league's change in policy will give the tax revi-lion bill a boost was questionable. Last week it was reported to be ip deep trouble in the Senate Finance Committee. Its. diairman. Sen. Harry F. Byrd, opposes the withholding plan and the other key proviMon, tax credits for Unofficial counts indicated there fo , Folks, here’s I my pride andJoy JLWDANTlB 10 llMloMsty«swiMlisy...sxtrs ags-extrs quality... charcoal parfsctsd for mellowness! Try a bottia... you'll agreo: Friendships and J. W. DANT whiskies improva with age. jw-daNT BittieiiiiBoiil DANT WSHUBT C0,0W«T,KEimiCIW Shop MONPAY, THURSOAY, FRtOAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS Nil 9 deserves the very best BUY DAD'S SPORT SHIRT FROM WHAT WE BELIEVE TO BE THE LARGEST SELEaiON IN TOWNI A riot of patterns, styles, colorsl AAost are wash and wear! MEN’S SHORT SUEVE SPORT SHIRTS •UTTON-OOWN AND REG. COIXAR SHIRTS IN COAT OR POPOVER STYLES IN MANY HANDSOME STYLES AND PRINTS.......... 1 99 LARGE SELECTION OF MAN- , HATTAN SHIRTS AND OUR OWN kentfielD crystal-AIRE HIGHLIGHT THIS LARGE GROUPING . $399 button-downs, REGULAR COLURS, POPOVERS, ZIP FRONTS, POWER SHOULDER GOLF KNITS, MANY MORE IN HUNDRB)S OF STYLES FAMOUS BRANDS INCLUDE MANHAHAN; LANCER OF CALIFORNIA, GARY PUYER GOLF SHIRTS AND OTHER FINE QUALITY SHIRTS . . . You'll find his sport shirt gift ot Woiio's ... no moWer whot price you wont to pay for. o qwolHy sport shirti Tobias ond tobies of his favorite woven cut-ond-sawn shirts in cotton, Oocron potyaslar ond cotton, cotton29 • Clear REDWOOD and olumbivm tabla y baOt to loalat waathor and loet For yoora. a Polda flat for ataidga. a 5-rinkle them with silver ... As a token of my love . . . And when dawning is appraodiing ... In a gown of blue and gray ... I shall bring you scarlet sunbeams ... For the hours of the day . . . And before the day is ovtr . . . May I hope -ence ntolV" to aee . That your lovely eyes are smUing . . . With their genUenesa (Oop)rTlgM.lMI) to bring back more (BvMends Smiles I quite agree with the article about Michigan having a lottery. Once before this was mentioned and higher ups in Lansing said it was gambling. What do you do at the race track? The Almanac HriMito. The law apened ap on Inrtead of taxing toe people to the kill, why not try to gel as Dr Vnllea Pram Irtetarttaaal IToday Is Moaday, June 11, tfic 16?nd day of the year with 203 to ★ ★ ★ The recepUon these models got Is easUy anticipated. Very few commuters looked up from their newspapers, puszles, stock tables and bridge games. The few women aboard stood up to get a better look, but life went on as usual. The osaal delay occurred, thie time a dcrailmcat. We submit that six pachyderms prancing through the cars playing hopscotch wouldn’t penetrate the mental isolation of the typical NY cpmmuter. A pat on the back to Bab Koeh assisted by both of Pontiac Plre Department’s Station 4, for the fine job done recently in staging the MetropoUtan Club’s Matinee for children at Central High Auditorium. The show, sponsored by local businessmen and others Interested, featured Poopdeck Pall (of "Popeye” fame) and six other acts. The proceeds went to the Club's welfare fund, BweUed each year by Its familiar Chrtotmas Ooodfellow Newspaper Drive. They say they oppose any re-duetton in the higher brackets and wish to confine all the benefits to the lower income groups. SAME 4MJ> STORY It’s the same old story hereabouts — politics supercedes economics sU around. Shnilarly, there is already an antagonism in Congress among the Democrats to any reduction in the corporate tax rates, which now are at a 52 per Dr. Harold Hyman Says twiee a year? If some people do not beHeve. they can leave U alone, and the gain wonM kelp Thejnoon is approaching its ft Airplane Travel Safe for Pregnant Women Gambiiiv will always go on so why-not grt some benefit? We're tick of more aad more taxes. Country’s Gold R^rve Continues to Decline The Nation’s gold reserve stockpile at Fort Knox has steadily declined dnee 1949, when it stood at $24.5 billion. Today it is down to $16.5 billion. But on balance, after offsetting foreign claims against U.S. gold of $20.4 billions, we are actually nearly $4 bUUon in the red. ★ it ir Thif situation, though not yet downcight critical, is viewed most seriously by economists and Administration functionaries concerned with maintaining the sta-bUity of our dollar. it it it ’The reason tor the shrinkage in our monetary bulwark is that the annual deficit in our foreign operations has been running at a $1.5 billion rate, and must be met by the transfer of gold abroad. it it 'k Contributing to this deficit are; • The magnitude of our military and civUiBB direct aid pro-gnuns to foreigB cooutriee — economically a ooe-way streot. • Uadaiehiaff exceee of expfwts This, signed K.R.B.. speaks for itself: As a speeding car approached the Kingsley, a small kitten was pitched out. It struck the pave-ment, went end over end and screamed horribly In pain. In a few seconds another was heaved from the same car and It was hit • unavoidably by a following car. The second automobile took out. after the death trap driver and the last I saw, he had forced the kitten killer off the road and was delivering a thundering lecture. (I hope it ended up with more.) This second driver ahould report the whole affair to the 8.P.C.A. for prompt court action. I think the kitten killer was driving a. Ford station wagon. promise* a tax eWeetIve next January. The bill, however, may not be passed until March or April of 1963, or even later. It will take Congress that long to debate the highly complicated tax measure which will be forthcoming. Q — Our daughter is traveling in Africa with her buritand who is conducting an agricuttural survey. She has just become pregnant and was told by the doctor who examined ho* that she may have to have a Caesarean section. mended for "such conditioas at respiratory and circulatory diseases, club feet, mrttiple aderosis, sexual frigidity, cerebral palsy, tooth decay, grey hair, heart troubles, strokes and others.” ‘Dems Haven’t Kept Economy Promises’ The, morning stars are Mars, Jupitw and Saturn. The evening star le Venus. On this day in Mstaiy: In mo, the Printers' Artociatlon of Ameriea deckled to campaign agalMt the portrayal «l women’s ikirU on billboards. Ia ims, 8m. Wama Bardtog rt Ohto touMd ha wurtd be Uw BepUbUean pmty’* nsnstae» tor A taxpayers' revolt is brewing which will throw the Democratic machine out of control. Prondaes of economy havten't been kept. T4E. In 19S7, Charles Lindbergh was welcomed home in Washington. D.C., after his flight across the Atlantic Ooeau. If this is so, she wants to return to the states for the operation. But Ae also wants to be with bar bus-band as long as it is sale and For the law isn’t to be devoted just to rate changes. The gimmick now is to close "loopholes" and thus theoretically to increase tax revenues to offset the soealled relief to be giveit by the^drop of a few percentage pbinta in the rates in all income bradeets. How far along in a pregnancy is it safe for her to fly back? And how soon may she and her baby return to Africa? In Washington: U. S. Reds Make Good Cover Up A — Aeeardlog to the latest rating by the Aeroepece Medical Incensed I have a Secret Orlpe worse than any you’ve mentioned. I loathe the gal that lighted a cigarette on Waite’s comer and sauntered down Huitm with It dangling from her homely mouth . . . Amen, In- Already some of the senalom on the Democratic side have pointed out that a drop of one pereentage point in the upper brackets involves tens of thousands of dollBrs for an Indlvldaal, while a drop of a point to a maa of lew Inosme means only a few dollars la savings. Hence, it is argued that the whole saving should be given to the people In the lower brackets. NOT HELPING SYSTEM What'll wrong with this theory, of course, is that the individuals to whom the nation looks for funds leal criteria tar | any womnn In n [ ditlon shall be accepted from the begtnnlng of the first month on through to the cud of tho eighth month of gestatlou without ques-tfam. The Country Parson F. E. Grttschalk of 55 Thorpe 8t., set thinking by the MATS reference to long-ago automobiles, gives out the surprising Information that our present Pontiac is not the first by that name to. have been made locally. In 1906-07 ■hie Pontiac Auto Company located on Franklin Road, introduced and manufactured a few vehicles under the PONTIAC name plate. Any woman in the ninth or last month of her pregnancy shall be accepted who can furnish a certificate from an obstetrician dated within 72 hours of departim stating that be has examined her and found her to be physically fit for transportatkm. MUST ESTIMATE TIME The doctor must also record the estimated date of delivery. As to the baby, the committee has ruled that "beyond the age of seven days to two weeks, infants with normal cardiorespiratory systems (hesuit and lungs) should experience no trouble.” Q—On you tell me something about those food supplements so highly rcoommended by radio By PETEB EDSON WASHINGTON (NEA) '- Running down active CommuiAt, Communist . dominated. Communist - infiltrated, Communlrt front and (ellow-trai’eling affiliates in the United States today Is a frustrating business. Investigation raveals tM Om-munist organiza-tiona in tbe United States -definitely low on finances and members, h a r • assed by the government as well as by American public opinion and (he anti-Com-munist right wingers ~ are pursuing evasive, underground tactics that make them hard to catch. They oontfaue eperationa by Gen. Robert F. Kennedy recently confirmed this figure. The members are concentrated in the New York, Chicago-Detrolt and Pacific Coast areas. The party daims It’s In the World War H years when the UA. and U.S.S.R. were allied against the Axis powers, Communist party's late National Chairman William Z. Farter claimed 100,000 members. Actually it never got much over 80,000. The first Impresstoa drawn from this dedtae U that (be aati-Commaairt eraSBd.p In Amerlen is bcftaflig to ply OR. tag every triek rt their tradi. to thwart laws, regntattons aad the party under control or o atlzens Committee fpr Conatl-tutionai Liberties. Advance, an Organization for Progressive Youth. Progressive Youth Organizing Committee. New York School for Marxist Studies. The Fair Play for Cuba Committee. Gus Hall-Benjamin J. Davis Defense Committee. Some 40 other organUations have been cited in various ways by government agencies. Department of Justice has filed petitions with the Suhvarsive Aetivlttes Control Board, asking that hearings be held on 24 organizatfons. Twenty-one others — including four of the above 24 - have been the subject of hearings before the Committee. delays that tie up court cnaea So the battle to force Communist organizations to register and diadose their membership is by The attorney general’s Urt of orgnrtsnllons compiled under the Intnmnl seenrity Executive term exteadsd to Mfe. • The 10 Judges unaninsously I agreed the 1952 law has failed to • deter drag traffic. HmT ntodh-: tabled it had become a igfitn flf • injustice in some k ♦ ' Tliey said the law 'givers Jod^ no leeway...............- - - • • in j > said “U's ; Judge W. McKay SkUlman said • "this law wu designed to get : ihe big fellow but we are r-*-getUng the little fellows and it ) law for narcotics sale is 5 to 10 ;; years. honored at a WorU'i Fair oere-oantnl of the Houm; there MW be a luu tavertlgathm of the Fred Scribner of Maine, committee's general counsel, said a national party survey inOcateu the people in general “urs ant nearly as happy aa they were with the way the country is being run." Individual committee mcrntfi reported a lift to Republican spirits, most of which was due to tion to Kennedy's steel price back turtles. Several mentioned Ihe rrveiations concerning Estes’ manipulations to grain storage and cotton acreage aHotments in Texas as betog likely to damage tion into complatots that racketeers have tieups with some night spots to Chicago, Philadelphia, - .. BaHimora, Miami. Tampa and South Dakota committeeman Car-Calumet City. III. " “ g BIG VICTORY typical report came ‘The antiadministratiOR feeling in our state Is so strong that I believe we are going to have a Mfiiffiiiiriiti victory there in November," Lockhart said. * * * San. Francis Case, R-S.D., is being opposed for re-rtection pe general election by George MoG^rn, who quit as head of the Food for Peace program to make the race. •KEP TO THE JAIL’ Emphasizing GOP interest in the Estes cUae, Miller followed the line of former President Dwight D. Elsenhower to noting that the Democrats have control ail of the legislative and executive Investigating machinery. To top this off, he said, Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, the President’s brother, "has the keys to the jail.” or of any other dal in this admlntotnUon," The GOP chairmaa JotaMd othsr RapobUeaw in attacha c«t brotlMr, who i* aeeMng the de ' nomination for the Bsildee wimli« oontral of base, Miner foreenst the Rspidi-jxuis win re-rtcct Gov. Nelson A. Rocketeller to New York end Gov. John A. Voipe to Maesachu- He predicted former Vfce President Rlcherd M. Nixon wfll defeat Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown ki California. Miller aiao foresaw the replacement of Dem-ocrau by RepidiUcan governors in ''the House will take Oommittec activity will be highlighted by contimiatlon of the V" He M Entou invertigetion by Government Operations subcommittee and by renewed wrestling with a general tax bill by the Senate Ftoance Committee. NIOHT SPOT PKOBR On Tueaday the Senate Invee- _______ „ the shady side ol night life. R wfll hear from ‘ To Conduct Study on Dairy Fats in Heart Disease MADISON (UPI) - The.BTlscon-Aesodation IbiS an-ns for research to find itionship of dalijr-fists''to y disease. Or. Raymond L. Bice, Milwau-the association's .incombig lent. aai(j he will nar _____itttee of farmers, vetei iam, agricultural scientists and other reeeerehers to examtoe past 0f the problem and make new studies of its own. The association authdrized Ihe project over the weekend, noting that the sUte's ali-importont dairy industry has been jeopardbxd by ttiat aatuntad fats in MmENIAPNINI KRVME Bullatlm, Lattan, etc. FAn snvioEi CkratkB Utonlart Sdtt 3* OsUaed PI «.fSf I POLY fUftf* COIN opiaam aaMUMMcm . 691 Orahasd Lake FI l-9l2g , rnmnt a tat BMr - H to • Ba- •uggsetfom duSy pndn liHtenI eontent ef the bleed and gM^y add to the heart dlseaae Yanks, Thais launch Joint Training Effort BANGKOK (UPD-Units of the U J. joint task force to Thailand and Thai border police today launched a jrtnt training program dee^pMd to bolaler Trailand’s detomes along Its vulnerable frontier with L A VA said the training wetod be cei dMted at platoea level “to C mUtartse Thai herder polk Nkb leeties and weapoas uasd I UJ. forees.” The program will tovolve t platoons of U.S. Maiaies who « trato with Thai police uniU m Udorn and Ubol, and two U Army platoons which will tn sar Chants burl and Oiiengmai AU four sites ere north of Bai kok and witbbi etrtkbig dlstanoe *1.25 PsrlsMss*1|w Csassli $29.50 FREE BKMOMmanoit OR 4-1 lOI sltor mtrnn am taaaa m* btoOf tin. so pariMM stf-tof aUMbBtato. Traea-taa •estotoO. W* raSsM sad ssrr- hM Horn DMMBfbfiliM 01 44101 Within 25 Mile Rodina CURTS* APPLIAIVCES rtstorr aatowM STSHt Btslcr NIW LOCATION «4lt. HATCHUY ROAD OR 4-1101 Wan <■ M-4S to ainsrt Ud.. Nsrto to nstoStr; Twa W«to t aissto w Bsltosrj Bd. --------4 Frida; 'Ul I r.M. MULTIPLEX RADIO 4 HIOH-nDILITY STEREO SPEAKERS sale saWasI af psawkw hardwood Miidi ood vonoor*... 4 Higb RdsMy Itoree ipeeken... 44peod eotowefie record ehoogor... aS" HeoddfoRed -TV wMt "PuthAdr'sontial, bvitoin entoono, end Spedito dW...Itoraocoo- *399 NO MONEY DOWN RCA Victor PORTABLE TV ^ If you vtont sfiorp pidurts et a sharp pdeo-huny la Hif^tland for this top Quality RCA VOOR Spertohout TV. Compoct. kiffl, HgMvraight with bwiIMn tolescoping optaniw. Mght, big I56^.4n. piduro oroo. Now Stay-sd volwmo canhoL NO MONEY DOWN WHILE LIMinO QUANTITY LASTS RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-SPEED FULLY AUTOMATIC WASHER First limo evor for o 2-ipMd 2-cydo RCA Whiripe^ at o low pries Uko HtW r. Soto for oil fobrict. Atodol UA3I. Spociolly lew priced *199’ Frse DaRwery, lasleHaltoair ORDER BY PHONE • NO MONEY DOWN HERE'S ONE OF THE 6 TOP NAMES IN THE NATIONI 13^ 2-DOOR NO-mOST REFRIGERATOR WITH TRUE SEPARATE FREEZER Youll approciat# tho many convaniont foaturoe in this lUg 2-in ona oppliancol ... A spocial purchas# bringr yon thoso at this unboliovablo low Highland pricti . . Now in cratau. 5-Yoor warranty. FREE $15 SCT OF 6 $TERE0 AUUMS WITH THIS CAPEHJUIT 6-SPEUER STEREO COMBINATION WITMFM-SM MUIO Genutoe heovy wood fumi-twfO cabinet. She storao spookors. 4-Spood automatic chaitMT. Packed with other deluxe feoturos. Factory fresh in cartens. *179 THE J^NTIAC PHES& MOlfDAX. .NJI&,. Con-Con Gives Schools NVwCoat of Paint (uuofs Note » ma u seventh th a nine-part series bff two veteran Assodatei Press netosmen on Michigan's proposed constitution.) A}«DA.r. MAHAN LANSING » •> Hot Mi heavy Ing debate m the atioo article ol t’a pi«> Sene thinfi were voted oat, thwi ^ed bi or meybe aotai' then out. But major earmarking Koviaions were kept tor hl|^wayi •oorcea to pay the aMenaee of ■tate govemmeat.” The new finance a article ie UghUgbted ae mudi by what it prohibits as what it pe^ It wouM proMbil a iraduated btcooM las hy the etale er aay Then it moves into requiring property tax assessments shail be unltorm, but not assessed after Jan. 1, IMS, at more than 90 per cent of Its true cash value — thus making mandatory what is now practiced by the State Board of Me «aienl 4 per ecwt level; ^ Mbit afise Jaa. 1. IMIi aaieaa-neat a( veal aM peraaaal prop- At times debate on various sac-tions of the article cut aharply acroas party fines, but • eoaUtloa of 35 Democratic cosponsors lost 43-100 a last-minute bid to rewrite this and a aeries of oOm verrtal articles on which the Republican majority among the constitutional convention’s IM date-gates had reached compcomise. Fair, honest and wortcaMe were words applied to the over-all ai^ tide by Republiean a They insisted the cossventl ly ^ the ground rules for a tax structure to be built by the leg* islature. asserted tai a statemant: "The tasatloB psowtalons of the provisiona and hi are noore restrictive and regres- “Over ear vigsraos sbjeelisaa reiased te laeiade of taxattea aoMrdtag to abUlly te pay . . . ■ d be eat, evm flMMb N wBl Hone of rtttaeas ..r The artlcla begins- wMi these the state during the preceding fls> lected, but not laUt than the end by law aolkeriae tee state to cal year," but whatever debt is Incurred must be repaid within the fiscal year the money is iha near Haft la *19 per cent oi of the people must approve in an The new constitntioa would provide thus: "Such debts shall be fepaid at the time the iundsdlcet- received by ed) revemacs so pledged ere col< of the same flacal year." This short-term money could be borroat.ed by the legislature tor general (g>erating puipoaes without a vote of the people, but tor the state to Issue bonds for Modfic puipoaes the leglslatiire first must give approval by a twothirdo vote of each house and then a majority election. WMle ho constitutkxvil amendment would be required, as at present, the requirements would be the same; a two4hirds leglala-tlve and a majority popular vote. Authority is oontlhuad for the state to lend money to or gs tee bonds of selioal districts. Turu mTUM. •II" conminov $22^ C. WmImi Ctv—1112 W. H«wk-334-2SIT : a coostltu- extothw il-mn goMsal pvspei^ taxes, boC pn esoM te«M as nneb as M a The higher BsiH, hswever,« be aobteel to voter vela. f. too. that the limiution "shall not apply to taxes Impoaed for the payment of principal and Interest on bends or other evidences of indebted- The general limiution would not be effective, either, in eMos, villages or townships where tax Urn-iU are fixed by charter. as to rate or base,” which means age of your income and frilow’s, reganfless of the Mm of K EEGO I 0UPON I OLUMN ■ GOOO ALL WEEK Iridi C«tpM WMi Ym rAWi DAT SriOAU Koupon $1.50 GILLETTE b Smer < DtedOs Limit 1 4^ 88^ Koupon $1.Sy ' YAEDLEY 89^ Koupon $3.95 MAX f ACTOK Tium TKND fir Limit I 42.11 Koupon $1.00 OLD SPICE Limit 1 Koupon $2.65 YARDLEY MIN'S 2-K. CIIT SgTS Limit 1 41J8 fAUSmUD After that comes the prohibition against a salaa tax or mors tiwa 4 per cent Some Dsmocratle dsle-' od wsuccessltdly to ex- to them as wen aa other items sold at ntafl. . a after that comes whnt ap-pMunad IMT A thne aigbt ba laalad > eannarichig of raw sf dte ■aka tax, providing that one eighth (Instoad afene haU-esnt) should go to dttoa, vUaget and townshipt on Tha eanvanUan dtaMad to liana dadteadsn ef tasl fgaaa- It also provided that onsAalf of tha total salet tax dwQ fS "andiK ■ Buppart at thto peymenM from this fund shall he made to fOU OH s scheduled basis, as providad by law." Tbs carrsnt constitiition. except that it deasn't require a scheduled system ef paymenU and thus per-miu tbs stats to bold back dlvi-and then, providca approximately the ssima on a four CASS LAKE PHARMACY I'lO ORCHARD LAKE ROAD INIRRIFF-fiOSUN CO. c«^cTot$ SMCI • MA. - IS mmSm MM « awS. "g’Afre To Huy Thom" iXCLUSiVE DISTRIPUTORS SHERRiFF-fiOSLIN CO. ^MASnslske M,toaNae rai-ini cents per dollar tax. It specifies tiiat " .jvhieh smouats to oossigibtb at four par esnt) shsU be retumed to local gownSMstB and that two oteds (fawtead ef onwhalf) shall be set aside for education. The earmarking for highway!, figured on current revenues, to 1200 minion; that for achoola to 130 ndlUon, and that tor dtiea, vlllagef and townships 8CHAP SCHOOL FUND Reversing iU field, after e markliig to three areas, tbs c vmUob then voted to ds sway a eat fund. Under the present consUhitlon snob as the toherltance fox, ' valorem taxes on railroads. oompaniea went into this fund, but 'the legislature had been required_ to supplement It annually to meet school needs to exoasa of ear marhad money. Deqiite aboUtion of the fond, the taxes would continue. They yield an estimated MO million a year. A $250,000 atralt jacket on state b«HTowlng powers is unstrapped by the prop^ new constitution. Sdeiice Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery ' Stops Itdi-Relieves Pain as?!; For the first tiiM ^...^ — found a new healing with the aatonishing abiliW to WIUI \am WWHWniUB morsoorn, ^ ■hrink hemorrhoids, «tw itch-faig, and reilave pain - witout STone hemorrhoid case after anotherT'vary striking improve. ■ asant” waa reported and vert-- ftod by a doetor’a obsorratioi^ Pain was relieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual vednetioa or - ro« toirtk actual veanenmi or -™« sracnon (shrinking) P>«*-And most amasing ef aU -tMa improvement was mai^ tianed in cases where a doitor’s obeervationi ware continued over a period of many montht! la fact, losulta www eo thor- n lueh aatontohlng etoto- menteaa“Pneahavoeeaaedtoba a problem!" And aasoag these sufferers were a w vrito va-•riety of hemorrhoid eonditfoiis, ■oma of 10 to 20 yeara’standing. AH this, without the use,of nare^et, anosthetiet or astrin- gonto of any kind. Tho eocrrt is a new bcalfn ______—Ing Bubitanee (Bto- tlon. Already, Blo-Dyna la in wide use for healmg laJu^ loao OB aO parts of tho body. This new heallnf aubotonce w healing sum nfxpposttoryoi s called Pr$pa> ______________ _J Preparatit H*. Aik for individuallyjwli eunvenient Preparation H Sup-posItorloB or Propnratlon H str.sjiSii.’ii'sai".; PENNEY'S CSCEX Use Your Penney CHARGE CARD for Pother's Doy TOWNCRAFF I..MTV nv Here they are ... every style from pleeket pulU overs to continental collars! Got a pattern prefer- Moubw^cket front, es oasily, ’retoina ence? Choose from solids, prints, novelty trims! lM%cott».Mach^ Fabrics! Cool cottons! Rayon acetate blends! te.wWtef’ilSSr Smooth rayons! 2 -95 n's sixes S-M-L-XL _J' SPORT SHDIT Solid color pimas! Short point collar! ^98 2.98 2.98 Z98 rARNTVAT.! PENNEY'S-DOWNTOWN Open Mendoy eiAl Fridoy 9:30 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. Othor WooUaye 9:30 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. PENNEY'S-MIRACLE MILE Open Mendoy Thru Soturduy 10:00 ; ---------------- A. M. te 9:00 F. M. I'i W' ' ; PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, -Jl^NE 11. 1962 Help Pay for Wage, Behefii Increages / Some Rails Rye Freight Rate Hike WASHINGTON (AP)-Some of Ihe Mtloa't roUroacU, putkmtariy •mm la ttw Kut. an comkle^ trelcbt ratM to help pay lor n*w waft and beaefit IncreaMa lor njl aoriwra. The carrleni have Joat aeeeptod pioposala of another White Houae board to feduce train cr---------* make other manpower • to end ao^led featberbeddinc ptacUcea, are hopeful of reallaiag eooDomiea. But the prospect la ua> 800,000 ott-traln workera a Mttle-ment recommended by a While' Houae emergency board and estimated to increase carrier labor coats by <105 mUlion. If unions representing about aOO.OOO on-traln rail employes win a similar wage settlement, the extra labor cost would mount to an estimated <1» millkm a year, according to the Association American Railroads. This total additional expense ^tould not be wholly applied railroad net income, which ran to the tow ftifnre of <382 mUlion in 1961. because carriers earning profits could ^lahn the new labor charges as tax deductible business expenses. But profits would tend to be lower. The raiboads, stilt in negotia-tkma with the on-train unions over Eastern railroada sustained an eatimatod loss of nearly <100 million last year while Southern and Western roads fared belter. The Eastsm roads may seek to absorb through fares repeal of the 10 per cent exdse ta\,. on train lickeU that Congress is expected to adopt effective next Jan. 1. Chairman W'ilbur K Mills, D-Ark., of the House Ways and Means Committee so indicated in House debate last Week, although he said he understands Southern and Western roads will let the tax repeal reduce their passenger fares. J. E. Wolfe, chairman of the Western Carriers Conference Committee, chief lab(»-. jtegotiator tor the industry, indicated some railroads may have to apply for freight rate ipereases and again may have to redxtce their work forces. Wolfe called the off-train worker labor settlement inflationary, but said Secretary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg advised, the carriers that they had no aMentativc but to accetd in the public Interest to avoid a strike. Goldberg said in a statement, iwever, that the labor settlensent seenwd to faJU within President Kennedy's economic guldeUnes for noninflationary wage behavior. qoldberg ssid the ttW increase could be figured-at 2 or 2.7 per cent depending on whether the 1Q.2 cents an hour raise was calculated over the whole contract period, or just part of it. He said the. settlement is within the nation’s productivity increase rate "and particularly that of. the railroad industry which has^n running at a rate of 4 per cent a year.” ' TO DfOraiAiB WAOB8 The raiae will increase average hourly wages ot the off-train workers tram an esttmated <2.48 to about <2JS8. Xtoldberg said It was clear that the White House board’s settle-pient recommendations, accepted by the carriers and unions, were not unreasonable. He said that just as the labor demands were reviewed by a competent public board, rail rate increase requeste will be given a similar review by the Interstate Commerce Commission or state regulatory bodies. ' There ttete ha *»-«aroM-sitol expert review by a public body of the facts relating to price ques-tiona which wiU obviously take account ail the relevant facts.’’ Goldberg said, He added that such factors win Include wage costs, productivity savings, prospective elimination of the passenger fare tax, and the Treasury’s forthcoming revision of depreciation schedules. JFK's Adviser Talks Deficits Dr. Heller See8Tdx Cut as Down Payment on Future Surpluses For DAD'S own day...,. (or oil proud GRADS... gifts of shaving comfort PRICED LOWER THAN YOU'D THINK! ROTARY lUKSHAVERSI • Above, New 'flipdep' Speedshaivor* world-famous for comfort. Strokes off whiskors with rotary blodM in on# continuous sweop-no pinch, no pull. Eosy 'flip-top' dooning. 110 vohs only (AC/DC). Deluxe travel cose. See your Norelco Dealer for this popular linel New ‘fleoting-heod' Speedshover WerM's finest shaving instrument. Twin heods swivel to hug face. Self-sharpening rotary biodes. Adjusts outomatkoHy to beard density. 110/220 volH (AC/OC). Adaptable to world-wide use. Deluxe cose. Now Sportsman. Oporatos o ios. 'Flip-lop’ tloonhig. Rolroctablo cord and mirror New Lady Nerelce, two-teno whifo-ond-orchid shovor with ologont goldon madollion. (AC/OO. With dolwxa cow. NOttM AMMKAN PMUM COMFANr, INC. too t, 42nd St, N.Y. 17, N.T. Nortks b kitowii « PMUSiwvo io Conodo and throughovl fh# rntof Hw fro* worlA -’■because we CUT PRICES so low ^ .we cannot advertise prices on famous ^oreU CO ELECTRIC SHAVERS ... but overy smart shopper knows that It always pays to COMPARE PRICES at SIMMS baforo you buy anywhertl _ ISIcMcM'i 98 N, SAGINAW St. .......•( Noeeuxs LVEas Alonyi Prices 1%M Vm KtyMt Father of S«vtn Wins Dogroo After 15 Yoon ROCHEsrtei, nTy. (^). Andrew Romano, 34, fathw of children, won his bachelor of science degree Sunday at the University of Rocheiter Rtter IS years of night school atu/^ Romano^ e Junior chemist at Ball’ A HoweU Ge., aehl his wife’s WASHINGTON m- Dr. Walter Heller, the administration's chief economic adviser, conapdes that President Kennedy’s recent proposal to trim income taxes next year might result in a budget deficit. But, he said, "If the tax cut were to cause a temporary budget deficit in the process of stimulating the economy, I would call that a down payment on future sur-luaes." Heller added, in a television interview yesterday, that the idea that a tax cut would involve, the largest peacetime deficit in history "is out of the ques^>n.” Presenting a geaeratly rosy pletare ot (he U.8. economy, Hel-' "lat while reosveiy from to not as fast The economist said the chances I the country’s Gross National Product reaching <570 billion in 1962, as he imdicted late last year, “have diminiahed somewhat” but that the goal is "not completely nt o( the question.'’ ★ W A , Arind if. the administration "When you tak about a shaip' rise, you conjure up e picture \>f ■peculation . . . unjustified . B. No. we would not like to eee | e sharp rise. Ot courae, we would not like to aec a ftuther tall either.” NO 'SEVENOB* As to the poaaiUlity that the recent drop in the stock market re-mi ted from deliberate moves by * 'lessmcn bent on getting "re-_e” on the Kennedy administration, HeUer said ’ such evidence." He said the rate of unemployment in the. United SUtes would not drop to Kennedy’s goal of 4 per cent this year, but iiotead would be nearer 5 per cent. He added be anticipetea further Improvement In 1963. The present rate is 5.4 per cent. him see It through. Hia six daugh-_ I one son range ’ from one to 10 years. Seatfie, Wash., waa named afigrl friendly Indian chief of the local I Alabama Belle I Named fiesortsi Miss Sun Fun | MYRTLE BEACH. S. C. (»-Virginia Ginger Pointevlnt, a HunteviUe, Ale., reigned today ae«, (he new Mies Sun iTn. U.SA,* w ★ ★ — • The Southern beauty, whOM measurements are 38-23-37, Was chosen Saturday night as s successor to Terry Lane Bowden of BreWer,/-Maine, oa queen of tha CteroUna ------ MOmUY TUESDAY Specials Aleu/FROM AJAX fL All Purposo ^ Liquid Cleaner M with AMMONIA ® 28-Os. fl$0 Coaentnted LOW SUDS ^ wow/ em More Washing Power Oionf79p „ tail 7 VARIETIES ^ TIolifeift AEROSOL AIR YH\ deodorant 79c S^Ttie Fun Bath ^ 69c ^ /Ib/PALMOU’ Beauty Cre&. wMiett Beauty Clean riNKOW OATH Ab/PALMOUVE Beauty Creams WOSB while it Beauty Cleans Rog. 3^3e ^VEL POWDER Specially Made for Doing Dishes 'KW^and Fine Laundry Gkiirt 68c /fBD'NEAVYDUTYfim/i CUAMCLMAIt nmoumi l|BTiunArABiMn Okint 69c ^fCASHMERE ^ BOUQUET ^In Gentle Rnk and Gentle White Rag. 4^Bc PINK i/gvitf VEL Perfect Detergent ^ for Dishes 12-0*. 35c with^ltS^/^ Chlorine Bleach ^ rm, 2-3SC VEL Beauty Bar Sudsy Baths BathtubRing 2-39C Biach's Brach’ir Iced Jelly Cones 29* * V. Tta PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JUNE 11, 1962 i t ) j ELEVIW ----^^^--------------------------------------------- ■' ■ ■■ ^ ^ ^ •idmitlid “tor obMivatton.’'Iter* |o G«t $710.0001**“ |eamuu*ed |T10.0Wr Two-OMm sI Amctaili tO«|. wu BO elabontion. ' ' throuch lU variou* acmclei In Und pndoow IS bW- cent «C m ■ ~ AMMAN (AP)-Tte United N«-ll983 developoieirt aid for JordM.ltood. Red Tape Entangles Marine Trying to Take Orphan 'Home' BUEKA f»AIUC. Cnltf. (AP) -Twelve days eio A Unitod ttatwi MaiiM ooBtet «Kmui. taattoily waved feedbya to a Japaneae or* steiv-Mi adaitod daiiildw aa Mia plana left aa airport in Japan te thia ooURtiy. Left behind wna Ift-yearoM TuMe IteUi Bater. anarlcd in red tape midiBr ate nor H. Stanley Baker couM uideiv " Baker, 31, who fought in World War. II battlei from Guadalcanal to Okinawa and in the Kotean War action at Inchon, burat iqto teara ai he talked to a reporter at hie home in thia Lm Ateeles aftburb. The child, «4io loot tier real tte day before he left withoot her day apent bicycling in the country and havii« a picnic. tbikd to expuun *T tried to explain It ____ Baker aaid. “But how can you Ml a Uttle girl about lawa you can’t iliake aeaae of yoantUr’ Angry and fruetrated, he aaye: “My wife and I k>ve our home here. We don't want to give it up. WWW “But if we have to, de'll move back to J^Mua ao we can Baker and I wife, Shizue, 3S, deddad laat year wten he waa wdered back to Japan for a limonth duty tour that they would adopt a Japaneae ddld. Mia. Baker stayed here to keep up the bouse and get it ready for a child. A ♦ The aergeant saw YuUe in an orphanage shortly before Christmas. “I knew right away that wu Dr. Updegraff Wins Sunnehanna Amateur JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP) - Firing a one«ader-par 89, Dr. Ed Updegraff of Tucson, Aiiz., won ^ Sunnehanna Amateur Golf ~inday by TUKK nmni BAKES the little giri I wanted to adopt,’’ he said. She wu Ustleu and interested, but ghe started „ brighten ifo after he showed her dctureo d their dog and cat, their home and Mrs. Baker. ‘80 HAPPY SHE CUED’ ‘One day I asked her, ‘How uld you like to coihe to America and live with usr She wu w happy she cried.’’ He adopted her in the Yamagn-chi Court of Domestic Affairs on Feb. 23, with his wife’s power UK mper ttem m’a eye — and finals of the Mlu Univerw contest wers to be held in Pfati-adelphia. ♦ ♦ ♦ Mrs. Lineman told her daughter. Penny. II. about it. Penny, a fafown-halrad, brown-«yed bank derful and said she'd love to enter. On Thursday Penny phoned officials of the beauty pageant and told them she would lOte to enter. She did and wu accepted. Sunday nMit ahe was chosen from among 15 finalists u Miss the Min U.S.A competition July 7 in Miami Beach Fla. Bird Feathers His Nest With Bit of Greenery CRANSTON, R.I. (AP),-«ome-where in this city is a bird who really knows how to leather bis nest. Thomu Siconio wu trimming a tree in his back yard when bird’s nest Ml to the ground. His wile spotted a bit of green woven into the nest. It wu a dollar bill. Night cruising on the Rhine is now ponlble because of new boat radar installations with a l,20llfoot range. Passenger vessels and other river craft can now iwoceed at any time of day or night. Stops Goostipation dKto“llgiBgColM'’ of yooi ootoD wdl alM Sfe. tow th -------*- --M srapets war- ntoi bwmi c wihcyl the ur«e w aorsa 0( aU tsa^ lasa- I iTpbtowwD ^ tonaa- ikm bwAwd wssw tot am psis^^s^;J» CouwAP itfunetstu cbioBWcoa-sUpatiM o«M Mifito: is so pMNie k was hospjM^pjowd*^ Senator in Hospital in Critical Condition WASHINGTON (P - Sen. Dennis Chavez, D-N.M., ailing for several months, ia in critical condltloa at Georgetown Univenpty Hoopital, a spokesman for the hoqiital said today. ~ ♦ ♦ ♦' Chavez, 74, wu admitted to the hospital Saturday. A statement I phyaician said he wu At Chavez’ home a' daughter, Mrs. Jorge IMstani, said ttet the wu sent to thf hospital for observatloo but ate added that he wu "doing quite well,’’ and probably would return home today r toraoiTow. ♦ There wu no confirmation of a he had suffered a aHght The Nile rivar flows 3,000 mllu DON’T Gamble WITH YOUR Drapes Avoid tho risk of Shrinking «nd Unovon Homs MAIN OFFERS: • Doeeratorfslde pfeclseip fostored • No WB0bi9, bulging linings • Accuratoly squared e YOUOCTi ethepwtoefweAmeiielilpofspeeiellsedequipment e Tho safely of pmvon methods o The shill of treined persemiel O The leng-tosting freshness of fibre deep sell lemevol YOUR DRAPtS ARE CLEANED AND RESIZED, PRESSED, DECORATOR FOLDED, REMOVED AND RE-HUNG BY EXPERTS AT... MAIN CLEANERS & SHIRT LAUNDRY 4480 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-3365 Give dad: COMFORTABLE SH0RT4LEEVE SFORT SNim Give Dad a ’'Comfort-Break” for Father’s Day. Nothing feds bettor than an eny-on-the-shoulders sport shirt from Omna’a. And nothing is' euier on the eyu; soft knits with smart qtrood ooDait and cool, crisp cottons with button-down or regular collars. Some are care-free wash & wear. All are bMUtiu ... in froety stripu, cheeb, plaids and solid shades. The perfect gift all men can UM. All sizes, both stores. * ^ JANTZEN, McGREGOR, DONEGAL, etc.: $3.95 to I12.K Um one of Onnun’a several charge jdaoi. No Mcvki duoft... teMrl Oat port afPUttae afore JpU SMUN’S ..SWiBFOOMni^^' MBIT TML^UMOS 8T0MS HOUR* OHM EVERT NIOHT *Tlt • F.N. FREE PARKING Owsiteim Wsit to ON CsutlliButs) Opu FW., MOW. Etoaisgs *81 having a 4 that scoots around acting iike twice its siza-^axeept at tha gas pump—Tampast offers many, many charms. For instance: AH kinds of room for shouiders, feat, heads and iuggaga. Neat, dean styiing. A beautifuiiy baiancad ride. And a price tag that makes other compacts downright expensive. Check one out/ Pontiac Tempest m re reii^ WNM mart M ns ■■■ runu SMWt rm. wis MIMS s. SEE YOUR LOCAL AuVhORIZED PONTIAC DEALER IN METROPOLITAN PONTIAC FOR NEW-ACTING USED CARS, TOO. PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE CINtiAL MOTORS OORFOIIATION «S MT. CUMINS, PONTIAC MICHICAN JACK W. HAUPT PONTIAC SALES end SERVICE N. MAIN STRarr, CURKSTON, MICH. . KEEGO SALES end SERVICE, INC. 3080 ORCHARD UKR RO. KI860 HAR80R. MICH. RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 89 8ROADWAY (M-24) UKI ORION, MICH. HOMER NIGHT MOTORS, INC. 180 8. WASHIN8T0N. OXPORO. MICH. SHELTON PONTIAC^UtCK, INC 221 MAIN'STRUT, ROCHISTtR, MICN^ | T^ELVi tHK PONTIAC PJtElSS. MONDAY, JUNE 11,1962 'AiblioniKil Disturbances'* LoM to U. S. N-Blast KHCYO (AP) - 111# Central Uttaaraieeical Agency Mid today ytM.................. Fomlly Goins .14 ?#nons Graham Team^Sees Hopeful Signs been cawed hy tte UJ.*aiklear Chriatinaa WASHINGTON The 1900 can-■ua ahowed that there are 3.68 per-aona in the avenge Ahtertcah lam* Uy, a gain of 14 peraon over the 1960 flgUK. Uand Sunday. The agency eatlnjated they wore cauaed a blaat of "aever^ al megatona” in the vidnlty of Chriatmaa laland. with an open Bihte in M> hauda. Will Chicago Remember Billy? WOMEN AGREE!! a 2-Speed Automatic Washer Is Desirable Heretofore They Cost Too Much BUT NOW WITH (iditofs Note — Bitty Ora-ham’$ Chicago crueade ha$ poitod the half way mark fn a city where revivalists have had rough going in recent years. The following evaluation of the crusade’s progress is written by a VFI reporter.) CHICAGO lUPI) - BUly Gra-uun's team saw hopeful slgna today that the results of his Chicago I crusade may leave a iasting impression on the city "that Billy Sunday couldn't shut down." The count for the crusade, now in its second weekend, was an audience of more than .100,000 the nightly services, and more than 7,000 "decisions tor Christ.” AT ONLY Slow AfiUtor Sp^ for Delicate Fabrics Normal Agitator Speed for Regular Fabrics RCA WHIRLPOOL Corrects the Cost A New Model Two*Speed IIQQM ^ TBADK INSTALLED ITIEE AN RCA WHlRlfOOL DGHUMnm WHX DRY OUT YOUR BASEMENT PREVENT BBLDEW-RUST-CORROSIOPMdUSTY ODORS-DRHTING PIPES ONLY ^^25 WEEKLY 20-INCH PORTABIE FAN $1988 HOUSEKEEPIN of PONTIAC 51 W. HURON OPEN MON. and FRI. TILL 9:00 Vries said, "or who found Christ verted through Sunday.” AWAU OF caimcniM Graham and membera of hia team are aware of the most common criticism of him and his mes-that the “decisions” are emotiona] and not permanent. 'We can have emotion at bail games qr at the theater, but if shed a tear or show a smjle in chdrch, someone screams ‘over-emotion’ " Graham, said In. one of his sermons. "In my rruMdes, we have done everything we can to keep cently and In nrder. I tenr-Jeiting stoflea.” he "WhQe I have never subiKribed to sensationalism, surface eiiiotion- ‘Chicago will be the same v Bffly leaves;” said the Rev. Hai> old De Vrica, pastor of the suburban Winnetka Bible Church and local counseling chairman, ‘tfh ‘t close down any bars and there will still be crime." "But come back live years from jw," the minister said. "Those persons who have made decisions are as helpless now as a baby leaving the hospital," he said. ‘‘There‘s Ble there — but It's immature.” WWW "Give them live years of feeding on the Bible, learning to pray and getting Involved with the local church — and you’ll see a difference.” wUeh began May SS and h scheduled to end June 17, fol-lew;i in a trail of great revivals — Dwight Moody hi the late IMh fieatary and BiUy Siniday shortly after World War I. Moody's ministry resulted in the etiabllshinent of the Moody Memorial Church, one of America’a largest congregations, on the North Side, and a Bible institute radio station bearing 1' f. jid there are people In churchM throughout Chicago who first found Christ during the Billy Sunday revival," the Rev. 1^. De •ays Mrs. Dan Burdo Of Clarw, MIotilgan U For two weeks I kept a record of our family’s telephone calls. I estimated the money or mileage we would have ^lent on errands and trips if We hadn’t been able to use the phone. (My husband and I are both on the go a lot, and we were amazed how much our telephone really does for us!) At the end of two weeks, I figured up the totfil and then subtracted the amount of our phone bill. We saved about fifteen dollara... or more than enough to pay for this lovely new hat! No price can measure the value of your telephone.’Today, as ever, it is one of the best bargains in your family budget. MICHIOAN BBLI. TBLBBHONB COMPANY Shop by Phone When You Can’t Lease Home slism or fleshly religious demonstrations, I believe there is a burning need lor a return to heartfdt faith in Jesus Christ.” Graham met the press on the day of his arrival. He has appeared on televiaion. Goasip columnists who generally write only of show busineas people and poli-ticiana mention him daily. WWW He has taken time out to speak at the Chicago House of Correction to inmatt-S qnd to fly by helicopter to the Great Lakes Naval Training Center, where he spoke to 6,000 sailors. The first Sunday of the crusade, when the audltori-was filled to overflowing with more than 50,000 persons, Graham went outside to speak to those who couldn't get In. Billy Graham has faith and It ia catching. There is a large empty area in front of the blue-drapod to Graham’a Invitation to make a eommltmeat to Chriri HU tha arpa and clog the many aislea letkllQg to it for several feet. Plants and animals that die in peat bogs, called muskegs lii North America, are preserved for posterity. TTiey retain their iT indefinitely. * _______ Dry-snow ayphuidMa are t dry-SDow variriies create a vac* - in their wake. CORNS NBBD A MOD ^ SUMMER TONIC f the fountain of youth was a myth , eseestod. try feieees OUll-WA ■ITTIM. OJH-WA H m ^ pewlrtet eti kerb Hel. »ket h« prevee HmN te vK aUlUess at peepto dsr«H tka pest 4* yejrs. TiV NATUBIS TONIC THIS SUMMil. IT MAS HilPIB THOUSANDS OP SUPPItIgS WHBBI OTHII MIDICINiS HAITI PAHAD. ’ *\ Plant tHem and earn 4% Savings, like seeds, when well planted and eared^ for, flourish and grow. When you plant your savings here, you can be sure that they’ll thrive and be safe, tf»o. INSURED SAFETY on accounto to $10,000 by an agency of the U.S. Government. Plus our own hi^ reserves and long standing record of reliability. HIGHER RATE. What makes 1st Federal ^v-ings of Oakland’s high rate of earnings possible? It’s a case of our being specialists in one section of the vast acres of finance. We don’t try to be all things to all men. We concentrate on just one thing;' being the most expert caretakers we can of the savings dollars entrusted to SERVICE. Our simple save-by-mail service makes iU'^sy for you to plant your savings with us ... stud reap the benefits at the current 4% rate of divid<^ paid quarterly. N Why not start today? ^Fhen sit back and watch our “Green Thumb” wom^^for yon . . . gather in a bumper crop of divldeiids on June 30, September 30 and December 31st Funds received by the 10th of the month earn from the 1st. Where you save does make a difference I 7*1 Wm H«rM S,rrrl-r»*t»«» f UStlwrrar-Mr-M-rkirtM 4*7 Mata Strm-aarhnlrr 441* INiir rWiM I Its V. as.-waiM <-•*• SSl X Ha* Sira«i..«a>nl THE PQjfTlAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1962 iTHIHikt Says Freeman Rues Remark Sen. Mundt Claim ^Farm Chief Regrets Estes Ciase Comment WASHINGTON (AP)-fcct«tary If Agriculture Orville L. Freeman now wiahe* he nevw lald ' Wnie Sol Est«a caw wl,__________^ ballooned out of all proportions, •ays Sen. Karl E. Mundt. R-S.D. Mundt. senior Republican on the Senate Investigations subcom-mlltee that starts public hearings lune 2T on Estes' operations said be discussed the case with Free-own recently tor an hour and “He indicated that the first statement that he made to the pi%ss--when, he said it w Mown out of all proportion—was one of those statements all of us sometimes nilake but we could retract, because the thing Is, a lot more serious than he though It tsras at the time," said Mundt. Fteeman made the remark at a news confeitence May 7. INDICTED m APRIL Estes, a West Texas promoter and financier, built a multimillion-dollar business on government grain storage, cotton and sales at fertilizer. He was indicted in April tor fraud and he has declaied himself banitrupl. The Senate subcommittee'and a House group are investigating his operations and whether he received favored treatment from federal officials. Mundt said he had. ★ ♦ ♦ • Interviewed by Sen. Kenneth B. Keating. R-N.Y., on a png taped for radio and television__ lions in New York, Mundt Contended the Agriculture Department showed favoritism to EStes by not requiring him to carry an adequate bond for storing ment grain. Estes’ bond wu set at $700,000 although he was storing grain valued up to $S0 million. Agriculture Department officers have testified before the House subcommittee that the bond was based on an inaccurate audit Estes submitted on his net worth. Kennedy Writes Article on Trade Says World Partnership AAust Be Developed at Home Despite injuries WASHINGTON W - President Kennedy said today the United States and Europe must throw oH "the false proteetton mark President and Mrs. Kennedy's visit to Mcxiee June SSJuly afternoon newspaper UHinus No-ticias will bei^ pt^ishing this week an U-part ee^ on the life of the UJ. FirM Lady. Then are M strings on an independent inturance agent. Since he own allegiance to no one company, he’s ^ to •elect the bnt policin for you from nuny companies. For sure iniurance protection, see an independent agent. FE 4-3535 Hanrard Grad Makes Teace Plea* Yusodpxion Gty JdWd by Quakes Damage Lightik Yale Honors 'Rival' Kennedy NEW HAVEN, Ooiin. (At>) Proldeiit Kennedy, a 1940 Harvard graduate, said he was particularly glad about the honoi^ degree awarded him today by Yale Unhrenity. He told graduating Elis at the Yale commencement in a prepared speech that a lot of his troubles hsd been caused by Yale 1 added; "Now that I am a Yale man too, it ii time for peace." Kennedy mentioned’ a recent 'minor ciisagreement" over sieci prices with U.S. Steel Preside.nt Roger M. Blough of the Yale Law School class of 1931. He said he had “had some complaints too from my friend Henry Ford, of the class of 194Q." "In Journalism. I seem to have difference with John Hay Whitney, of the class of 1926 — and aometimes l also displease Harry Luce of the class of 1920 The pending administration trade bill would kwreaae u ptoyment. Bush wrote, and worsen the deficit in international it he gIvM r auMiiiWy le negefiate mm- "But powera granted the Presi-dent must be much more limited he has requested, and Ctao-gress should Insist upon a veto ower over major agreements." Kennedy’s message noted that, r three decadee, U. S. trade policy has demoustrated concretely the American pun*oae of encouraging the draw^ together of free nathma into "a progressively more '|flohealve partnerahip.” 'Ta O* yea ahead k Is ear aha to aocelento "The formation of the Common Market in Europe, the first diversified mass maiket outside of our own, makes possible an entirely new dimension in free world cooperation. ★ w ♦ "Growing together, the two great maikcta astride the Adamic, containing as they will 90 per cent of the free world's taidustrial strength and half a billion customers, can generate the rtMurces ..........s to guarantee the economic progress of free pe everywhere. . .” Kennedy Is Told Father Improving in Hospital Visit NEW YORK (AP) - President Kennedy spent 43 minutes with Ms recuperating father late Sun-(kiy and was told that the elder Kennedy had just spent the best two weeks of his lengthy hoqti-talization for a stroke. The President was seen pushing bis father, Joseph P. Kennedy, in a wheelchair through a garden outside the bungalow he occupies on the grounds of the New Yoik Univenito Medical Oemer’s Institute of Physical Medicine and Re- Dr. Howard A. Rusk, medical director of the institute, told news-' men the elder Kennedy, 73, had been waildng with the aid of a and that hia apeedi had im- to meotton WiUto F. Buckley Jr. of the dais of 1980." Mayor Robert F. Wagner, dass of 1933: and Sen. Wfiliam Prox-mire. D-Wis., daas of 1936. *T even have trouble with some of my Yale adviaera," Keanedy id. "I -get along with them, but they don't always get along with each other: I have the warmest feelings tor Chester Bowles of the class of 1924 and for Dean Ache-son of tjte class of 1915 — but I am not 100 per cent sure that these two wise and experienced Whitney is editor-in-chief and puhlUwr of the New York Herald Tribune, recently cut off the list of newspapers thb White House subscribes to. Luce directs Time, Inc., and Buckley is editor of the conservative magazine, National Review. The PresWenl said his luck had been better in politics, but added that of late he had had "smalljYale men wholly agree with each arguments” with New York CityJother on every issue." by Quake; Damage Light |i BELGRADE, Yugodavla’ tll-An j earthquake Jolted Sarajevo today, >< sendkig.reaidenta crowding into the streets in panic. * 4 Tanjug, the Yugoaiav newa agency, said plaster fell in houses but there was little damage. The quake waa felt in Belgrade and al^ the Adriatic. t I Sleep Like Log MpMMeiNinMfMlir Ml em-M UMMl aMk Mi wMr M li Tm "raSiMi Imncli KM S* kwiiiM Tim SM SMI-U He K aiiHMU S«M ihW W SiN-m N V . Iw IiMkI bn wnM RENT SOFT WATER MPER 0 MONTH Vnlimited Amount \ All the Time WE SELL end SERVICE Brand AiitomoHc Weter Softener! > Monty Down—Lew Monthly Poymnnis re White H 0 u s e son is coming to aa end because of the Washington heat. Thete may be a couple of social doings in connection with state visits this summo-. By late September or October the White House will begin the House envelope which says something like “Thank you Now that she has the wheels rolling to acquire priceless antiques and great American paintings for tbe White House, the First Lady is going to try to enhance White House his- While the First Udy’s quest for antiques, furnishings and paintings has been universally hailed, her plan to fill White House bookshelves with rare books has aroused some crit-idsm. The critics contend that only tbe First Family will be able to enjoy the great dd books some visitors will be barred from picking them off the shelf and dinner guests will have no time to browse. The c r i 11 c B maintain that putting the rare books in the White House will remove them from the scholar and the pub- IWf antacts with the country of to visiting head of state also K»ive Invitations. Law to Host Dem Dance ★ ♦ There was a polite d^iial of recent item Iv • N** York ilumnist that the French em-issy had a big hand in draw-ig up tbe guest list for tbe •ench Minister of Culture An-e Malreux. There were in-ESitions that the implk»tion Slate Representative Arthur J. Law will act as official host during the Spring Dance of the Democratic Club of Pontiac Saturday at the Roosevelt Hotel, 9 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Over 300 tickets have been Sold according to general chairman Cbariotte Shearer. Tick- ets may be obtained at County HeadquarterSj Pontiac Democrats also plan an Ox Roast Picnic July 29. The picnic will be held at Hawthorne Park. Principal guest wUI be Michigan’s Attorney General Frank J. Kelley. Badd, and his conunittee hope to find donurs of books and money to purchase historic items for the library. At present the 1 i b r a r y boasts mostly modem volumes given to the White House periodcal-ly by publishers. Newswomen always make it a point to note the First Lady's costume when she is in public because of her f tremeixiouB I. Latfly reporters have been barred from covering even picture-taking events where the First Lady poses with her gunts before a rec^)tk» or a tea. give me your opfatom on tUa matter? A: Unless they have a reputation of being, let us say, very flighty, your young married friemB will be entirely suitable chaperons. it it it Q: Just what flowers am I (the bridegromn) supposed to pay for at my coniiive wedding? There seems to be a great difference of opinlOB on this score. A: The bridegroom always buys tbe boutonnieres tar his ushers as well as his own and that of the best man. In many conimunities he also buys the bride's bouquet as well as the corsage she wears away. It is incorrect, however, and very unfair, to expect him to buy the flowers carried by the bridesmaids. And, of course, he never pays for the decoration of the church. ★ ★ ♦ Q: When addressing a letter to man who is a junior, how. is his name written on the envelope? Should it be Mr. John Smith Jr. or John Smith Jr.? Someone told me that when in Christ Church Oanbrook,. Bloomfield HiUs, was the setting for (he Saturday nuptials of Sandra Estelle Capel to Edward W. Ely, followed by a reception in the church dining room. Rev. John Albrecht performed the evening ceremony. The bride la the daughter of Mrs, Clarence A. Grove of Forbush Avenue, West Bloomfield Township and George A. Smith, Lancaster Road, Bloomfield Township. The Winston T. Elys, Orchard Lake, are parents of the bridegroom. and a peacock blue silk ensemble for Mrs. Ely. After a honeymoon in the Upper Penlnusla the couple will reside in East Lansing i will complete studies in the radlo-televiBton field at MtoUgan State Uhiverrity where bis The Don S. Connors of Orchard and Herbert James, Cleveland, Lake and Santa Barbara, Chlif. ushered. They are the sons of Mr. were hosts at a garden reception and Mrs. Basil James-of James-Saturday evening following the town. James T. Plrid and Floyd nuptials of their daughter Susan Bunt M Bloomfield Hills, Herbert Jane to Norman J. James, Bir- N«ighton of Brighton, Eric Norton » ndngham at Kirk-in-the-Hills. Dr. Ji>. of Madison Heights and the Harold C. DeWindt performed the bride’s brother Thomas, M Santa doubling candlelight cerepiony. Barbara, Calif.> completed the ush-★ ★ ★ er list. Pearl - frosted Alencon lace Sr , ★ ★ formed the bodice of the bride's Pink sweetheart roses comple-, sheath gown of cantjlelight peau de mented Mrs. (tonnor’s tiered gown * sole designed with catoedral pouf of blue lace over tafteta. The moth-train. A pearl tiara secured her er of the bridegroom chose cham-butterOy veil of illusion and she pagne lace and wore green cym-held white Elegance carnations, Udium orchids, stephanods and white roses. Returning fran a three-week Eu-Hroer nmld. SevU Kefauikay. ef Ankara, Turkey, who lived wMh the bride's family while an J* • InsUtute, exehawe stadete. wore Amerl- New York ^My. White orchids complemented white silk chiffon and re-embroidered Alencon lace 11 n e d with peau de sole, for the bride. The skirt of unpressed pleats swept into a chapel train. Silk Illusion veiling felt from a circlet headpiece. HONOR MAID The bridegroom's sister. Judith Leigk Ely. Orchard Lake, who was maid of honor wore sleeveless yellow chiffon over taffeta. She carried miniature yellow roses. Michael B. Terry, Union Lake, served as best man, Oorge Kelsey, Walled Lake, ushered. Sandra Eoelle | Capel and « Edward I son af the iVinston T. Elys. I Orchard Lake., were wed ' Saturday in Christ Church " Cranbrook. .1 The bride's I parents are Mrs. Clarence | A. Crave, I West Bloomfield Township and George A. Smith, Bloomfield Township. ^ ton over satin lor Mr*. Groves MRS. EDWARD W. ELY Womens Section Can Before Visit or Not? Clergy Differs on Warning By ABIGAIL TAN BIBUEN DEAR ABBY: Should a clergyman phone in advance of visiting? No. There is too much tidying up and making coffee which -----------^ - turns s minister's can into a social affair when it come When the bootass has an opportunity to prepare herself. The informal, drop-in type vis- net Iwve finae to call everyone thsy vtalt. It poofis are ing, but it is anything but that. In any well-ordered busy household it’s an arrogant nuisanos. The unexpected vlatt went out with toe quilting bee. Very tiuly yours. what are they guMg to do whin PREACHm'S DAUGHTDl It a a DEAR ABBY: Do you h Wsahington, D.C for deeper than ao^ purposes. I’ve checked wHh three other ministers and three houskwives and they are sU in favor of the unannounrod can from the cHiy.^''* ^ Sincerely, Rev. Earl Roadman (Methodist Minister, Dike, Iowa) DEAR ABBY: U 1 had to watt untU I was Invltod, how many homes do you' think I would get into? Have you ever tried to phone a dozen people in one div. ^ k> get into their homee, that IsT Pastors should not be put in the same category wtth salesmen, campalgnnu, census-takers and strangers. I enjoy your column — moot of tbe time. PASTCHt DEAR ABBY: I think people have a ripht to advanos nottee when a visitor comes. DEAR ABBY; My Dnd k n Baptist preacher and I know for a tact that pnachers do • hBUseprnui-,1 People like to be received with kindness and in a becoming raianner, and surprise visits do not always permit this. Courtesy should be made easy (or a hostess instead of offering a sudden challenge to her ability to reoeiva guests grsdoualy. Yours sincerely, Ills Rt. Rsv. Monslg. J. F. Brady (St. Patricks' Cathedral, Eau dsirc, WU.) ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: A Clergyman, however well-motivated, pre-■uipes too much when he thinks his visit is always welcome under all and any dr- Alpha Delta Kappa Meets Ends Term With Picnic Members of Rho Chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa Sorority held their final meeting of the school year with a picnic at tbe Otter Drive booM M Mrs. E. Oeo Wiley. Mra. Bytard Lear and Mte. Evelyn Woodworth were oo-hoetesees tor the Tbureday eve-Mng affair. Mra. Morrell Jonea, grotto president, announced her committees for next year. Serving on the altruistic committee will be Mra. Walter SbeffieM and Mra. David Walls; on tbe program conunittee, Mrs. Alyce Mrs. Edward Uland, Mn. I. Joaeph Dnvia and Marguet Scott. kfre. Roae Tteuty is pledge chsiman: Mn. Ronald Cferr, puWeily chnirmsn; Mn: ^ Woodwortli, bond chairman; and Wliran Wsbb, psrlismen-^ The group plans to attend the reception for biterastional Grand President Nellie I. M«r-June HI St Devon Gables. WINIFRED ANN BORST the suffix Jr. is used, (he title Mr. is omitted. Is this true? '■'k A: Mr. John Smith Jr. is correct. The Jr. means that he is the son (or grandson) of ^ a man of the same name, and ^ does not replace the title Mr. Group Holds Birthday Party June Group of the First Presbyterian Church enjoyed a birthday luncheon Friday at the Pemberton Rond honw of Mn. Chariea E. Gafioway in Bloomfield Hills. Thirty members were served by hostesses Mra. Clifford Grovogel, Mra. Edith Tick. Mra. Bessie Brown, Mrs. Gor-don McDougall and Mrs. Galloway. Mrs. Asa L. Drury gave the Bible study from the Book of Romans, chapter seven. Guesta for the day were Mra. William Bretzius of Petaluma. Calif.; Mra. Milton Cooney o( Oarks-ton; and Mn. T. C. McFrt- le.l Flint Ji MARGARET ANN McQUEEH Mn. Leo Donaldson of Fern-daie Avenue will be hostess for tbs September meeting, f . y S^lXTl^Ky the rONTlAC PRESS. MONDAY, JXJNE Hi 1962 Nfpdme«M‘n4ndo»«»«d».’*lBtaddhW ihrinea stand >» Kat-|^||p|>||^ CrUCial tO Life kn aao Humki tenniaa aiidltiiaiidu alow. fJ.. nun , , U— =All Permanents= COMPLETE WITH CUT AND SET 95 •3 NONE HIGHER Expert licensed operators to give you ort eo$y-to-manoge hoir cut, long lasting permonent and becoming hairstyle. No oppointment necessary, permon|nt complete in two hours. HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SHOP 7« N. Sogiiraw Over Bexley Mkt. 333-9660 tired? It Can Ruin You By JOSEPHINE LOWNAN Have you ever stopped to thiidc about how feeling tired can affect a life? It may be having a drastic effect on yours right now. Chronic fatigue can ruin a marriage or a career. Often the brilliant student is bypassed by one who has an average mind but a plus in energy. Studies of the lives of great men reveal that they have dr had one characteristic in common-abundant energy which activated creative thinking and goaded them into action. exceptions Of course, there arc exceptions; men who ha(J iimiled energy or even poor health, but who reached the heights. However, it is interesting to note that Ihes^men were acutely aware of the value of en-trgy. They were careful to ntlllie what energy they had In con-Btruetlve wayn, and were coa- OES Otiicer Honored at Reception, Dinner special savings: during our Hst ANMVIKSAtY CmtAIION i 31 yaars of service to • the Oakland County • area with special 2 values on re- • upholstering and • custom-made • furniture! Call J today — we'll be • glad to bring fabric samplaa to your home. SOFA rmphoktered. t CHAIR renphbistered. fwws $39.50 pupwKifiin ^fesHesw Jmers out PpholalwM m Onhaii Laha • FE «4IH atantly trying to Improve their Btora of thU precloua aoiiunod-Ity. For Instance, Darwin attributed his success, in. part, fo the fact that he was quite frail. Because of this he had to learn to avoid any waste of his energy. , ' ★ ★ ★ Think for a moment what excess energy really means. It is revealed in optimism, in enthusiasm, in good humor, in acute'awareness of what is going on around one ir persomil. doily life and in the world as a whole. It is the ingredient which makes^^ it possible to invest in life wholeheartedly. No matier bow much you love people or how many gracloaa ImpulseN yon have, or what lasd-naHng Ideas dr amUtlom. you cannot make them live and stag If you are exhausted. If you are exhausted. Ule becomes a matter of sell-survival. You cannot .be, or it H macB more difficult to be, an understanding mother, a thoughtful friend, an Intriguing wife or an outst%nding success in your Job, 1| you always are tired. If you are tired moat of the time, why not investigate the aources of your weariness? You cannot afford to be tired If you wish to live vibrantly! W - * it If you would like to have my leaflet, "Pep," send a atamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for leaflet No. 56 to Josephine Logman ht care of The Pon- tiac P Mrs. Floyd Lovely, grand coun- ’’ selor of District 5 of the grand chapter of Michigan, Order of the Eastern Star, was honored during a reception and dinner given by Pontiac chapter 228. , The event was neld Saturday evening at the Maaonic Temple. Over 100 members and friends at-the event, headed by Mrs. Clarence Curry as general chair-an. Follawtng dinner "IHIs of the MRS. FLOYD LEVELY selecMons. Others takiag part In the program were Ann I.aloia, Mrs. John PohImnn and Mn. George KiUeo. y The of^cers from 1955-56 paid j, tribute to Mrs. Levely with an f, original poem. Mrs. Mary Erickson led the group. ^ Sylvan Clark i»eaented the gift from the chapter presentation by the nine matrons who worked with iMrs. Levely this year. Also working on the affair were Mrs. Roy Wilton. Mrs. Robert Brynes, Mrs. John Tieken, Mrs. Claud Coons and Mrs. Eidot Sweazey. Still others were Mrs. Robert Calvary. Mrs. PmnI Hagle, Mrs. Jeneph MMon, Mrs. A. J. La-toSB, Mrs. MaMe Reynolds, Mrs. Edward ZIem, Mrs. Iri Williams, Mrs. Leroy Heeox and Mrs. Gaoroaiood 5 Toara EASY BUDGET TERMS or M DAYS CASH IS wcDonc ncTuus 8x10 Album complota with 14 photographs as low at $55.00 511 W. Hami StfMt Mistress of ceremonies was Mrs. Earl Ross. Others assisting with the proceedings were Mrs. Charles Moore, Mrs. NorvU Vincent and Catherine McCHndle. Grand Esther of the grand chapter Mrs. Harold Voliink represented the grand family. Nine grand counselm and two grand commit- Griffin ^lub PIqns Picnic Members of the ’GrtfHn Pro-ficiemw Oub met Thuraday ever^ with- Mra. Afina Mac-intoah of Kennett Read. Mn. Mary Erickaon, chairman, conducted the meeting with some J2 mratibsra present. The group, planhink Bn animal picnic in August at the Bert Weddle home, will not meet again until September. Mn. Helen Ledford was a guest. The gathering closed with refreshments served by the hostess. WHEN YOU WAIIT TO BUY OR TO SELL REAL ESTATE... ,-s 'Ht'V Lter ,1,5 — W** WUNTADS DOTHEJOBII FE 2-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads *Hi-lnfidelity* Divorce No Help, Makes Problems By ABIGAIl. VAN BURBN (EdUor’s Note—A condensation of Abigail Van Bur^^ new book "Dear Abby on Marriage" is appearing dotty James Burke was a guest at the group. _____________ More than hoU of European trav-elen from the U.S. come from New York, California, Illinois and New Jersey. Hmnwxle 2 PAIRS, $135 FREE GIFT ” ARGYLE SOX ^Poputor f•V•r i t • s in j- handsnm* wanvos and colors WRAPPING SSe a PAIRS $1. Open Mon. and FrL *tU 9 PJH. ISeumode Hosiery Shop 12 North Saginavr St. . 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Ssflaaw St. at Orchard Lak« Avaeee „V' vi‘ /X THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1002 /s^yrfcEiitX- S5t.,r PERRY PHARMACY'S MEDICAL MIRROR Little Make-Up Ig Okay, However Stomach Cancer Families Hold That Paint, Powder, Say Teen Boys MiraelM Do Happoi O. tl Uawmh MMMP CMN taftoMr, if It imhmrUtdr A. Ctnocr, (tooiack or otbcrwbo. it not cooUfiout. Tht antww to tlM Mcond quettkm it, “pertiapt, iti'iomccatet.” The mott ftoMMU **ttomtch ctncer femily” WM that of .Ntpolcon Bonaparte. Hit grandfather died of tuipccled cancer of the itomaeh. HU father, Charles BontparU, died at age 39 of the same diteate. While the exact nature of Napoioon't illncat wat not determined, British medical officers Goncluded that the If t girl want! to wntr mako-up In addition to Upitlck, aho can count fHiemlly on the npproval of , aa long u ahe doesn’t overdo It, esp^gially in daylight boura. “Did you ever see a girl in the I n. alio suspected as I •r in death of thrae of h A. Now and theo doctors wm- -------------‘I who recover in v, -----------“i:.— one of his brothers. Other “ttom- tome miraculous and myiSKious way. A ph^cian recently related thU story. Shortly after going into practice the doctor wes consulted oy aynan in his 60’i. Trouble wm auapected end an exploratory Operation performed. Ine worst WM revealed — extensive, incur* able cancer. The patient took the bad news in stride. This wh in 1929. Jn 1961, 32 yean after the originBl diagnosis, the patient, now 92, WM struck by an automobile and passed away. An autopsy WM p^ormed and not n single remnant of cancer could he found! InctcdibU7 Yet. But true, nevertheless. ach caaocr famiUM" have been described in medical writings. This suggeitt, but does not prove, that at leMt in ceilain cases, stomach cancer (or,-----“ * ' tion for it) U in' ledical Mirror Is p.«. PUBIISHIO Al A 9UBIIC il«VICI BY PERRY PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS KOt ionai I'kOl'tRir PUltfO 689 EAST BLVD. at Berry 333-7152 1251 BALDWIN 333-7057 LOOK Bright new star in the SJ5W Serena Cold Wave $050 with Chic New Haircut Creemy Shampoo Fashion NEISNER’S Beauty Salon «S N. SAGINAW AIR CONDITIONED By BUGENE OIUBBBT PrMtdenl. OUbeH Youtit inomiv without itT" naked Lind* noma cnaea girla go ap« ovnr oon- ■ey Rye, 15. of RuMeBvUle, Ark. «p taOwd to, ho wan with Ihn It tl tto bays who tevnred to voted tor tt fT Our rttcarchei also confirmed motlcs.’ WHEN TO 8TABTT The boya were more Ubml than the girls, again, on ttw question of whether girls taid to use too much of the stuff. No, said 57 of the boys ns against 44 per cent of the girls. 'Notebook orv Campus Young men atill prefer blondes, d curly bkmdes at that. Young women reject long hair ir men, prefer crew cuts. by putting it on 4 feet thick," lamented Stephen Detor, 17, of Aus. tin, Minn. When shoeld a girl start uatag William H. Wing of Voorheia Road received a master of science degree from Rutgers, New Jersey’s State Univrsity ’Ihe most common' objection to makeHip» as voiced by Elaine Shultz, 17, of Revere, Mbh., was: giri’s appear- Sue Ann Latendresse, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lfi-tendresse of Nichols Drive, and Rebecca Runsen, daughter of the Robert Runsens, of Rochester, have pledged Alpha Omicron Pi Sorority at Michigan State University where both are amonnt of make-np a girl may ’’If she wants to 1 witch,’’ said Patoy Croker, 14, of ’Tolono, HI., "it’s her own business.” But Carol Busey, 16, of Sain,, thought 1 have a say becau on cosmetics. 81 per cent of tl think tt does Improve their looks. ‘No matter how beautiful s giri Is, a _ _ oplnkmed Kennsth E. Gray, 18, of Huntingtoa Park, Calif. CBmCBEB HAIRDO* Jumping from facedos to hair caustic V off most isvered by beth boys sad girls. "They start ktoklng adults then,’’ explained Don Facet- ti of Bartow, FU., from the viewpoint of IT years. Most young people frown on girls nightfall, ’Ihe girls warn against it almost unanimously, and the boys by 86 per cent. “It gives boys the wrong idea," said Tim Kell^, 17, of Montfcello, How about boys’ hair? ’The longJialr. D.A. style drew; a blast, with 79 per cent of the gills putting It down as ugly or worse, and 63 per cent of the boys ItoliHt it* The crew cut or fist top was a heads up favorite at 81 per cent. Picture Frames Made to Order by Photooropher 518 W. Huron Street Near General Hospital FE 4-3669 1 on stylei' that call tor but found that about 44 per cent of both boys and giria approve them nevertheless. I think' it makes girls look like frightened porcupines," said Patsy liAer of ’Tolono, W. ' “It makes them look like th^ have a tat bead," aaeortod Larry Patuaao, M, of DetreK. And Jean Bealrd. 17, of Sacra-^ mento, Calif., cautiontd that ruins the hair, spUta the enda, and is going out of style.” tlemen do indeed prefer blondes, especially 3C3a2tot:si3s:3>:tocsc gram involving atndiaa at Bona. Once-Riotous Jap Student Group Hpsbed It apearheaded the demonstre-ona that forced President Elaen-bawer to cancel a IMO vW Ibday the once united Zengak- den with diaaenaion. Ihe Od roar haa been redi^ to a whimpn. DWALD M. BETOY Biimingham Man Added to Staif ol Prosecutor riota that M to the downfall of the lOahi government In IMO. rm^atwin stadenU teak part M dm Mtwlag BMbMag el Jamaa jolaed the Oakland Oounty ixroae-ctttort ataff aa an aaaistant proae- Donald M. Reddy, 31, (d 1364 Southfirid Road, was ap^ted to ICO John N. O'Brien, who has tySrien, M, of 40n Baeen St.. Beridey, plaaa to go late private law praettoe In Beyal Oak. He cliMlOB ol a trend eaae IM tag. Reddy is a 1968 graduate of the Detroit CoUege of Law. Before his new assignment, he was a staff attorney for Michigan Consolidated Gas Co. in Detroit. A native of Muskegon, Reddy is married and has a 3-year-old son. Salary of tly new aaalstairt Stace then, the Zcngakuren lead* arahip has resumed Its squabbling Same tactions consider both the United States and Russia aggressive, oppressive nations. Others remala •olkUy pro-flev-vtat. SIIU others regard the VJAJt. as ssmethiag al a Itop Many of the estimated 300,000 students in Zengakuren oblact to the organixation’s activities. But memtwrtiilp is not an indMtaial ixed to oppoae ratUicatlon of a re* vtaad UA - J«ianeoe aacurlty treaty, grew out of atrong puUic neutralist aentiment which the ^ ind leftwtag r ' ‘ ' Fedaiatlan efiecUvs^ It was easy tor Zs _ steal the rtww withvhdaiU taetlea. Neutralist aentimsnt is still strong today, but the leftists lack a specific issue with which to fan ZMtgakttreh n to med- Ihe 1980 riots coincided with a period when Marxist extremisU were dominant. Opposition to the security treaty and the ‘ If a college student ksaociation )lns up. members of that aaaocia. in Zengakuren. I.SSS REDS INCLUDED The policy makers come Iran a hard core of dedicated radicals, card-carrying Communists are in Eengakuren. These da^, the Communist par-j ralifs moK for its student aup-iati on Mlnaeido, a youth group with an estimated 30,000 members, only a taw thousand thsm col- leetive 1st giw Mlasaldo and ether left- Widow Slays Her Son Mistaken for Thiel SARONNO, Italy W ~ Widow Domenica Zandriid took a rifle and hid behind the chicken pen last night to try to catch thievts she iuq>ected of stealing her poultry. A little after midni^t she was startled to see a figure appear before her in the darkness. She fired and killed her eldest son, Silvano, IS. ghlganobu imai. Is the IWoiO rtaveraity chapter Isgdsr of one .ueh leftiat studant mup. Ewga-kudo (Socialist Studa pendent of Oommuntst or loetal* 1st party afniatatiQW. reflscU the many contradictions of Noah Webster began work on his dictionary of the English language in 1807. His first edition contains 13,000 wprds and 40,000 definitions. _________eanat of^'ldselogloal wm*-l "Bsesne of our tiigher lOaro- patlv with the Socialist system.” tag," he says, “ws are In a better Above an, Dnal believes students positkm to Judge than mori what have the west! on groat qttaathms.'is right and wrong."____________________ As a graduate of A top unlvsnHy ho can took fsrwasd to a goex' tare in Japan’s axpandtag < omy. Yat hs opposes cspltoBam because he believes H enriches thf few at the expanse of the many. Is oourtosas and ptoasata If maniNr. yet he’s qutok to )sia He to<*..psrt In the 1919 note and has shouted himself hoarse in antinuclear demonstrations hefors He opposes Russians last as wall -but. he readily admlu, not as OVERWEIGHT ShovU 0t IMMEDIATELY iUmiiMfd If you WANT o SAo|w/y SymniHHcal figun S^fe^y forfhit NowMITAIOLISM look (We Hme NO NWkkte, Diet er AeftUef iheteSell Yee) wa awtosr how may Dtoto or aUmr nwaaurm youhsva triad this lastrucllvt IHTADOU8M •OOK will snsbls you to uador> stand year awe sass and may save you years of missry and fiabaRnasmant DM alana Is NOT, and never has hssn, the ana and ealy answar to tho problem of omam tat This Saak oontains tafonnatlon gsnsrally known only to spoetoL Ms. It oiqMsIns the physMogy of human MotaboUnn andtoa relatton batwatn glandular funo-tion and Ohsslty. It tMls why _____________r gain la wstaht You am toU svsrv^t oan 6a ooersetodand WHIR! to look for HELP nsar raur homo. A Book is aont aaly to thoss wtio want and aosd to roduot. Ths aditton Is bmitod. NotM nwy not appear again. Writo at ones today for your oopy. SEND 4 (Four CMt) Stamps (16c) to help oovar distribution cost You incur no obllgatton. We have no msdlctat or anything das to asU. You win never be asked to send us a penny of money. AODRggg 0. Cenway(RARIne.) Oep4^ LZ2 •ex IIILAIbuquorquAN. M. nneoRFOR (Wand ■, " lh»! FRESH ... CRISP HEAD LEnUfiE Upton TUB8GS 79° PEOPLE’S W FOOD TOWN fleN>4MnetMwB eNetejtwtrji. BeMirseneaMil emif«n.ii»M. .■ LIIiJhU SUPER MARKETS 02783326 ‘N TUB PONtiWc PRESS. MONDAY. JUNE 11. 1962 TWEm’Y-OinB What Is YOUR Pet Careless Way to Lose Money? PBYUJDl BATTIXUI NEW YORK - And how do YOU BO about loaing your hard-earned mon^, Mr. and Mm. AmericaT Do you leave your handbag Ip reit-mma? Do you pat your hip-pocket {dae-idly, to tip oft pick-pocketi to the wbareabouta of your wallet? Maybe you let the children play 1th your ISO and eat thfni for tuDcb? "GOLD UBEL” MiehigaB Fresh CREAMERY BUTTER print j FOOD FAIR MARKETS To eadi his own aystnn pf care-leanest. (I kind of like my pet petty-cash-Ioes technique ing a cab driver a |20, thinking it's all —it’s 8«1 of generous Idiocy.) However we do it, the latest survey shows, we Americans lose |7Q0 million in cash during a year. T*Kii: HRien Hie survey, taken by American Express and the Gallup group, asked Americans how they go about losing cadi, and how much, answem are lessons in themsdves. For hntance, sonw people leave their monies In placeo where they are eaten by mice; Is this not sa Inceative to build Gifts for Dad at CRAIG’S COMPLETE SELECTION GIFTS-CARDS NOVELTY GIFTS SEE OUR NEW EXECUTIVE LINE OF SOLID WALNUT YO-YOS CRAIG’S GIFTS MIRACLE MILE Love, schmove; “A girt Mend of mine toolk it out of my wallet.’’ Sketchiest: ’’Don’t bow much. My handbag just got out of sight.” Can’t trust your own children: $60. My daughter threw It out a shopping cart.” Or anybody else’s either: len in my home from my handbag — |1 $10, two days in suo-cession. A neighbor’s child took Here are some of the real swere, given by real people, to the question, "Exactly how or why’’ «lid you lose your money? . . . Most poignant: ”My pocket was picked jn the subway when I was on my way to the hospital to be operated on.” ★ * W Dirtiest tri^k: ’*|7W) was put in bathtub, dMy clothes were put on top of it — I went out to eat and when I returned it was gone!” A STATUS STORY A stetus story: “148. I was sitting'on a chair in ’better dresses.’ I never missed it until I came to tile firet floor.” Not to be sneezed at: ”I just pulled out a diaper to wipe the baby’s nose and evidently pulled money out which was loose in Casual carelessness: "I lost $20 twice out of my pocket. Once $^ out my pocket. I carry my money loose and I guess I Just lost it.” Keep America green: was walking down the street and felt a piece of paper in my hand so I threw it away. It was a IS.” Don’t keep your money tai a sock, you might get a hot foot; ”I lost $1,700 in a fire at the house.” It could happen Ip anybody, hey: -tttO. I Just couldn’t find it anywhere In the house.” Does God help those that help themselves? ”$19.75. At a church supper. I left the money in my purse while I waited on table. It was all gone when I picked up my urse.” * ♦ ’ * There are literally thousands of ways to lose-money, and Americans have investigated them all. We may be impoverished. But you've got to admit we’re also imaginative! Says U. S. Should Aid U.N., Needy Nations KALAMAZOO (UPI)-An America official of the United Nations said U. S. citizens should not begrudge their heavy aid to the world organization no? lo needy countries. Dr. Andrew W. Cordier, an undersecretary of the U. N., said the “torch bearers of civilization” have always had to carry their torches without looking back over their shoulders to see what others were doing.” He received an honorary doctor of laws degree at the commencement of Western Michigan UnWei^ sity Saturday where he addressed Bills in the Legislature By Hie Associated Press Here is the status of some of the key bills in the legislature; Income tax bills — killed in the Senate. . * ★ A "Nuisance” tax package — a $78 million package passed both houses and is being prepared lor signing by Gov. Swainson. * * It Reppportionment of congressional districts — two Republican-backed plans vetoed by governor. regulatlM system lor Inlaiid wa- < wrs — passed both houses. Raise state school aid-bill boosting state formula from $205 to $225 per pupil and deductible mil-lage from 314 to 3%, costing $13 million — passed both houses and being readied for governor’s signature. Repeal effe^ of Ford-Osntori Supreme Court dectsloa on mi- tB.P.O. EUfS ' 2MIMHL CUnTr Pontiac Lodge No. 810 Ski lift regulation — passed both hqiises; signed by governor. Curb strip annexations by cities — watered-down version vetoed by NOW TBROtGH JUNE 17th MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER ^ featuring the famous HAPPYLAND SHOIK d Pdtrieto B. BsUard. S Wsihd LskTlaiTiltnb SilirUr!'U4^! Haven. Walled Uk*. Joaeph R. HalBM, UlS Whl| ClArkttoD hnd Pttrlel* I. Bi Heath. CUrkfioa. slainei N. Dlilte, SOOtO Cn«vu«cmi nrmlastoB and, Patricia L. llaArt. WIM AlTcekar, Paraitncton. Jama A. MUehclI. I. Uanindd and Nann c. Walker. 4lt K Manefltld. Joaepto A Limiliamcr. U4I4 8. Porreit. an Arbor and Amanda n. Maltbawt. Ml —-—---------------mid mue. %| Romao. Draald K^Imeai. » R. MarahaU. Pontiac and A. Rlamy, INI Oka-tarry. Blrmincham. Clare W. Bradky. tilt Renrydak, Auburn Relfbk and Roea A. CoweU. 4i Onetds. Cylton r speed. IT Portatc and Paulina R. Rel^el. IT Portafc. ChMka L. Orem. Wl B. MaaaOcM and RUaabetta M. Croaaa. I Orcen. Billy D. Pattereon. MM Barrey and Catherlna B. Ratbka, ITl W. Auburn. Oone A. Vinaa. MtM Mars. Detroit »U lT CooWreo, S4M Horrlion, I Roeheotor OIN Marjorto V. BuUk. 14|4' the most solidly rural state tat 1940 with 80.2 per cent of its total population living under what are considered rural conditions. • 8 Newest Rides • 5 Outstanding Shows ONE FULL ACRE OF AMUSEMENTS FOR YOUNG AND OLD Special Children’s Matinee WiUNESDAY AND SATURDAY . AFTERNOOIVS All Rides io< DRIVE AWAY THE NEW 1962 PONTIAC now on display at MIRACLE NILE Ask Any Brother Elk for Betails Entire Proceeds for Elks Children's Charity Fund pay fund — passed both bom 'sent to govenwr. Hospital licensing system — Bssetf House; substitute ready for PRICED FOR FAMILY GIVING to dad- 071 His DaXf Junm 17th ... ’4?p LORD BUXTON BILLFOLDS.a • • • 93.9S up Frmm Engraving an All Jerenlry Pureluund MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER MALL AREA-FE 8-9S81 LOU-MOR Marriage Licenses MRiCoal SML8 SMOOTHLY THROUGH HEAT WAVESI Srtt Ns SN4 to duck the BHl MWt .. .Mr. Cool pm TOM snwoth ullin| .an stsswir tongl It’s a Msbnsn ws^bt of Oicran* polysitif btMdid tsith Hat tRxttti uitk isIWasi tf hnislbto "Vt mti* tbit itr-css«tlM ysuL Wi'n ibewiiii Mr. Ceella tbs ssasM’s Inwill ttrlu...ms mmi MW psttirm isd colsre. Sn Uimi aowi$4ID Hr. CmI Spirt eiil, IliJI tt. Cwi SIteki, $IiN •Mfwtim Men’s' and Boys* Wear Miracle Mile Shopping Center OPEN 10 A.M.-9 P.M. YOU COME, HAVE FUN! IELPOTHEISTOWU.K ... the 28th annual Elks ... foitival nowinprograisotthe Milo ... Hsip ths eripplod chll-dron'i program! (YOUR CHILDREN LIKE MIRACLE MILE TOO!) WtTW ns TSt OHUSU aiu MWf IT TSM BSSB ENJOY THE OPEN SMCEt-SUBURBAN SHOPPING (Rimsmbur, Your ChlUim Lika M^ls Mils Tsoi) S. T«ltgraph at Squar* Lake Rd. UP TO 27HXTRA SAVINGS ^America*! Fdverltt Brand in MEN'S UNDERWEAR A $■ 2^1 T-8HIR18: Sat knit cotton mm loiifor and Stt bottg.2-plyi»inlo»codcAY. JUKE 11, 1963 V ' Team-Mates’ for Leisure Doo^ wait any longarl Team op with theaa Gophers... that malUl a apadak •flaiaural They daatand almost no attantioa whan it cobmo to care. Ot pigskin, Scotchgard treated to ward off staina. A few swift atiokaa nith the daaaiiigpad 0|fe free ntUh oacb pair)... and year OeplMrs leak BOW again. Steal shaaka aad onaUoa crepe ■eiM tesB «p > •TottHgotop Goplm” GOPHERS MAKE AN IDEAL FATHER’S DAY GIFT GOPHERS ALSO AVAIUBLE FOR BOYS AND WOMEN »6” « *8” MNcMkh’s Largest Florsheim Dealer m Use Your Security Chargu MlracigMile Shopping-Centiar S. Tetegfoph at Sgeore Lake Rd. Opon Daily 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. lb 74-Year-Old Man HAMLET, Ind. Vl-WUUam 'L Oickenaao, 74, o4 Niles, Mieh. killed yesterday and seven persons injui^ in a twol>« clothing. pital in Detroit, died Friday night of bums suffered when he fell asleep while smoking in his private room. Police said Bede apparently was dozing in s chair when his of control and struck a tree ea a rarat road aear WilHanMoa. Herbert L. Short, 59. and his wife Carrie, 44, of Muskegon, wen killed Sunday morning in a two-car collision on M20 in rural Mus- Willlam Dreist, S3, of Saginaw, »s’kltett W A two-iar colliakm on Ml 15 between Bennxila and Frankfort at noon Sunday. | Hubert Sims, 57, of Detroit, wu kiUed Saturday when his bakery truck and a car ooUided in Wash-, ington Township, Macomb County. Mrs. Gertrude Shepard, 53, of Paw Paw, was injured fatally Saturday Ui an automobile coltis-J ion on the outskirts of Kalamazoo. Leon J. ItHy. fl, of Maakagaa, died In the hospital Batarday ■ight, two mars after be waa tanrohred la a kaad-oa eraak with another car on the oat-aldrts of Nashataa. Gregorio R. Juarez Jr., 23, of Marquette, died Friday ni|ht when whan the car in whidi he was riding overturned 13 mUes Owosso. NMWNINOS William Cagle, 14, drowned vriiile swimming in a flooded coostnic-tlon ditch north of Diamondale. He waa the son ot Mrs. Ddna Cagle of rural Charlotte. Dennis Finland, 9, drowned Sun- Fna* J. Goarin, n. al Bar-pbr Woods, died Batunlay la a laterior af a U-aait mitel la Taylor Tawamip ■ear DetniiL Araiaeley Niel, 56. died in a fire at his p^it residence Sunday. Firemen and three other peraons were injured. Firemen had •» ira- day when he tried to swim the mediate explanation for the Ma». House to Probe Theft of Grain Unit Will investigate Iowa Case 'Similar' to Estes Situation DBS MOINES. Iowa (AP) - The caae of -a Knoxville, Iowa grain elevator operator who waa sentenced last' week to a federal prison term for theft ot government grain left in storage with him, will be studied by a con-gresaionat committee, the De Moines Roister said today, dr * ★ Iq a copyright dispatch from Washington the newspaper quoted James Naughton, chief counsel for the House Government OperatJona subcommittee as saying he already has some information on the esse involving Alex Venel Barbour, Jr. ot Knoxville. “Naughton said the praMem of by the Barhoar caae lavalved lome of the Mine baalc proh lema uadcr atndy hi the hiveatl-gatloa of Indieled Texaa flaaeier Barbour owntd the Hawkeye _tUl at Knoxville. Last week he was sentenced in federal court here to a three-year term for theft of 198,785 bushels of government surplus com stored in his faculties. Barbour Hied volaatary baak- The govera-icnt flied a 8M8JU claim la le bankruptcy aeOon. The Iowa Commwxie Commission revoked Barbour's state warehouse license by Jibie. 1961 and the U.S. Department of Agriculture had taken Barbour off its approved list for htorage of federal grain, the Register said in a story puUlshed yesterday, dr * ★ 'However,'between June and December 1981, after the Agrkiilture Department had called for its grain from Barbour and was investigating him, Barbour stole at least an addlUonal 100.000 bushels of com,” the newspaper said. Ex-Minister Succumbs NEW YORK (AP) - The Rev. Walter E. BenUey, 97, a retired Episcopal minister who helped found the Actors Church Alliance more than a half century ago, died Saturday after a long illness. The Rev. Mr. Bentley, who was in England, came to the United States when he was 15. For Your Convenience at Connolly’s Nirade Mile YOUR PERSONAL ENVOY OF GOOD TASTE You'ra invitDd to stop hi and got our display of nsw I Ambossador cards. You’M . d sxactly ttw card you waM for ovary occasion and you’ll an|oy stopping in the pleasant atmoaptora of our stora. Wa’ra looking forward to your visit. Jfagfstemf JeawJcr* AmeFiean Gem Satiety ' 'tv"!fii*“ar53r HOUSE PAINT SALE Popular tirand! Quality performance! 99 u STOP! Doiri Buy Any. v WALLPAPER mLVOOSEEOURSELECHOI! • NOmTEMSW , STOW, AS LOW AS. • WaU^MTIBHSm om SP^ ORDER ROWS • SCMBSISLEWAliCOVERIHR WILLTa-SMTAS-VIlAR •muLsiiiisfiEncs \Jo/wsfo/7 PAINT A WALLPAPER WRMLE WLE PIRHE 332-7M1 OH TIME FOR FATHER’S DAY PHENOMENAL PURCHASE SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS ’2.99 Imogine-r-Dacron ond Cotton and fine combed-cottons. Button-down and spread collars. TV";'' y TrtE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1962 TWEXTY-THREB ^lled Iri^ds Giving U.S., Soviet Union pits ■jr WILUAM L. BTAN AP SpMilal Coffwp«wlHit It would be understandable these days U U. S. statesmen were in a inappilh mood, like men confronted by the incomprehensible. The way the news has been looking, the statesmen could easily get the'impression titat the only comforting news comes from Moscow. ONE LOOK through Iho **M«k1o Circlo** Viowflnder •••■ •▼•rythlngl Perfect TXBWINO... FbCUS... BlDPOSURE eutomatioallyl NEW 35min VOIGTLANDER BE88AMATIC eye-level reflex Jolt mateh «iw psiatar and tiw dids" of tiw cooplsd matat—visMo light ia Cm iadtrr-and yoa aatnaMtifally gal tha eonact sapoaiual gasp your aya,aa Oa I TopAllokwance Paid for Your Old Giwia"^ Miracle Mile Camera Shep flllS.1>letrapli FE449I2 A walking delight with wondrous flexibility and softly cushioned insoles, made for summer smartness . and deep-down comfort AAA^E Whits MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CCNTER Open Every Evening Until 9:00 P.M. rasslBg explaaibiee to Its pab- Ing wonism, as if InfOcted by imething that Md Bolsheviks light well cMI 'a^lng capital-im. The Russians have trouble with their rambunctious CSilnese allies and with little Albania. ★ A A But what’s happening elsewhere? The United States has its own trouble with Its fractious friends. President De Gaulle’s govern-lent, still In a mess with Algeria, has its own ideas about hov North Atlantic Alliance shoidd operate, and tends to be unruly. WEST OBBMANS PEEVED The West. Germans are peeved whenever the United States seems to want to talk to the Russians about Berlin instead of threatening to toss rocketa at' them. I The British can’t seem to make ,up their minds whether tof get into the Common Market or itay out of The news from Southeast Asia ia increasingly dohiroua. In Indochina, Laos seems to be withering on the vine, and the Communists won’t give South Viet Nam any rent. A A A India is angry at the United Statea because of its military sup-| port of Pakistan, which is allied with Washington in the Ontral' Treaty Organlation. So dickers with the Runlans for supersonic let fighters. But since Red China is angry at India, it is APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAYS; • , :■ f m- -■ Believe Me! i Really “Cbopped”.$oine Price Tags W« hevA o '^mpar crop* of cortoin medals and wo want to farm thoio out to you. In ofdor to do this, I lopoot, wo roally *choppad* tho pricos. Why not toko full odvontoga 2 of tho vory substantial savings on himdrods of now 1962 AIR CONDITIONERS, FREEZERS, i Oaa at «iM%m*s REFRIGERATORS, RANGES, TV and STEREO AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS. I FLOOR MODEL SAL r1lM.R.Rafrlganlar...ItlMl bay SpMryw.........I11UI Z pORKblOMlio ■ .WasiMr.............H2Mi ■ bwnoR 1<4MAheoiid....,.|IIUI 5 RM-Wliitlpaal BilwUifiar. > $ MJe I CMERSOR JMNnWmor. I 4Mll I REFRIGERATORS- Fiigidaifa-Wsstingheuss Kalvinator wid Admiral fnm ♦29*» JUITOlUTie WMNOn-IWMMImU taMraea Stares, AM/PM .. ..SI4MI RRANOO SMlia,AM/FM, • Tubes.......L SaiersM Claek Radia..., aireoMiRTW........ ...SIMS - -ffttiW li^aetCoininafit/ i eeware IV Tvwme __ M M feriMr «« a, mmmM V UM MMOruKi'* EaWw* , twwi Sia ikMn Ml a, lali-inMM, l»iM CMaiW IwUi Ti MMtfMewtanvMi u*. • 1I.M van n PMn t samMaM aaaarraaiaai a SaaSMYiwt pMlNr a '-w- LOW MONTHLY TERMS SUPPLY FRETTER DISCOUNT APPLIANCE MIRACLE^^MILJ^CEN S. TELEGRAPH AT SQ. LAKE RD. OPEN; Mon. thru Fri. 9;30 a.m.-IO p.m. FE 3-7051 Sat. 9-9-Sun. C[ose(l Pakistan, supporting the Pakistani claim W Kashmir and (Xfering — of all thingk — aoonomic help to SYMATO ATRAlDt Syria is UUdng aU over i _ about federation with Egypt In the United Arab Repubitc. That has aoentjof trouble 4o it, beeauM' the Syrians usually don't talk that, unless they’re afraid of some thing else. la Saatk America, the AlUaace M’t seem to ba israw — tax. • to laagaiBh ar get M ■Ittora or Jest renraki la ment for the United Statea 1 round almoat every corner. Maybe if the United Statea noo, only RusMa to deal with, and Rua-■ia had only the Uniled States to^ with, things might be a NT for statesmen on both of the fence. methnes it just seems as if it’s their friends who are driving them toward the psychiatric oouchks. Illinois Governor Hikes 19 Miles to Open Park Trail SPRINGFIELD, HI. (UPI) — Gov. Otto Keroer was trying to get the kinks out today after a 19-mile weekend hike formally opening the new Lincoln Trail from New Salem State Park to Springfield. The goveraor, bedecked la a boy acoat ualfom and kls oM army booto, itepped off the dlo-'aace with a group of irit that tt was made.” AAA Mayor Ivan Alim Jr., a Presbyterian, said he was “certain AUanta and north Georgia people would show the same courtesy and consideration that was shown in the integration of the AUanta pubUc schools last tall.” Four high schools admitted nine Negroes at t|uit time. One later returned to her old school at her request. The peaceful lowering of racial barriers was cited by the arch-s one reason church action pow—about three months after New Orleans' 153 archdiocesan schools, with about 75,000 pupils were ordered Archbishop Halllnan told a news conference that all eight-grade were given an option to enroll in the school of their choice during regvilar placement tests April 9. He said six Negroes chose white high schools and were accepted. He declined 'Jo name the pupils or the schools involved. Minister Retires Second Time at 91 in Taip«i Btet Accia*nt a a a Honorary Music Oogroe TAIPEI, nirmosa (API - fbur An estimated » bo^gnd glris. REbLANDS, Callt (APl-Oom-HHA (bodl^were recovered *«>• the"*tmwler Qileh’ ain •****■ Lo«*» day, rslsii^ to 21 the known num-d^ydey star) when tt ,capeM doctor of music de- bar of school children drowned I Sunday in the Yun River. Igree at Univmslty of Redlands IT’S AS EASY AS 1-2-3 TO AT THE BIG SHOP FOR DAI STORES DECATUR. Ga. (AP)-' I don't want to stay Ground here," the minister toW his board of stewards, "until you fellows look at me askance and say, 'Why doesn” that old rascal move on?' " Rev. Walter Scott Robinson then retired from active ministry lor the second time in 91 years. AAA He retired the first time in 1942 when he reached the mandatorj) retirement age of 72. He soon returned to the pulpit as a supply pastor as more and more young ministers were callel to the war. He served Decatur's First M«Ui-odlst church as associate pastor until bis reemt second retirement? He began his ministerial career as a cin^t rider 64 years ago. LAVDt GOLF ^ An enthusiastic golfer for many years, be still gets out on the course occaskmally, but han't played much lately "because the old legs have gone back on n After about sfa( boles I begin tire.” Robinson began playing gpU it 52 when his doctor advised him I give up tennis—"He told ‘nms was too strenuous.” Does he think any souls are saved on the golf course? AAA “I'm sure of it. Golf is a char acter-building game. It teaches a man sportsmanship which, In its finest sense, is the Golden Rule in action. A man gets to know himself under many sets of circumstances—even as he gets to knoiw the men he is playing with —more often than not comes face to face with realization that the Christian life is the best way of living.'’, How does he. feel about death? "Peo|de Hk. ma about it," tid, "and I>tell them I'm not orried. The undertaker knows how to prepare my body I've got a place beside my wife in the Monroe (Gai) cemetery. About 90 per cent of the world supply of mica is used by the electrical manufacturing industries for 5 SIFTS 5 siftT^ A 5 GIFTS ^ A FOR LESS FOR LESS^^ FOR LESS THAN ■ THAN Mi THAU Sale of 19-In. Portable TV’s MOTOROLA 19-INCH GENERAL ELECTRIC 19” SPECIAL-YOUR CHOICE GENERAL ELECTRIC - MOTOROLA - ZENITH RCA VICTOR - TRAV-LER - SYLVANU I handcrafted H HS'Slim Porlableiv RCA VICTOR If Super Powerful Gear, Sharp Picture SPECIAL ZENITH 19-INCH Plays Anywhere Just Plug In NOV ^449^^ Trav-ler 19” *128 Panasonic 19” *99' ^ sH^ Shop by Phone —FE 4-1555 a ^ oooD mw3m±. of PONTIAC 1 TUyO SI W. HURON STREET ^ 'tu hm / CUSTOMER SATISFACTIOH GUARAHTEED AT VARKEE ferry at mimaur • si s. sminaw THE PONTIAC PRESS, MQNDA^, JUNE 1|, 1962 TWBKTY-FIVB Spat Worsened by Dean Martin Won^t Appear in Film WirtKMit A^rilyn, CHti Efftct on Coroor HOLLTWOC^ (UPi) -Martin widanad the breach in the tamHy ipat betwten Marilyn Mon-tof imd 3001 Century Tm atudloa yeaterday when he refuaed to ap-paar in the film “Somethlng'i Got to Give” becanae the atudio fired ,.“I agreed to do this moVie be-i Marilyn Monroe waa i iiiiuita. "Nov that ahe kn't going . WA it, the picture doean't look t^ good to me." rmia ahlla fired Marilyn and alapped her with a tiaajaa breach of oentraet antt FiMay > heoanae of abaanleetnn. Blonde Lee Remlck waa named to taplaee the famed glamour glrL t Afhed if he would conaider atar-ling oigwaite another actieaa, Martin aaid "abaolutely not.’* ' ♦ ♦ ♦ - i'l have the greateat, reapect for 'IBiULee Remick and her talent ant'tor att the other actreaaea but I signed to do the idcture with Marilyn Monroe and I wOl do it with no one elae,” aaid Martin. "It to nto bceanae I led aorry ahe la right or wrong.** the atag-er aetar added. *Tm Jnat think-li« aboat my eareer.** •The atudio has not announced whether tt plana to go ahead with the picture atarring Miaa Remick, but a apokeaman aaid the picture ♦ ★ Deiaya primarily cauded by Bfiaa Monroe’a abaencea have coat the atudio an eatimnted <2 Rroduoer Henry WeinaU . ahapended production J u n e 4. Mamed U March Fizzes AgainskPolaiis Based in Scotland 'DUNOON, Scotland (UPI) - A dtdown demonatratiao by ban-the- ‘Wepkend when only SOD . 'ahawed ap to protest die pieaence of the Potorto ardanarine " ‘ riibp U Protcua. M the diqr belsta. i al lhaoa arrealed da rgMatOtolrai The IS were aireated for die-tuiMim the peace. On Saturday night, a amaU band at 30 tirsd and hoarae marchera kept an all-night vigil around the baae, ainging ' In the cold. 2 Get Death Sentence hi Tiy to Flee Soviet IfOSOOW to death for trying to hijack a amaB plane and ^ out of the Soviet Unton. ya Pmvdir nlpactad the sen-teaeeo yeaterday and saM they "fltoal and caanat be ap-“pralra " ‘IV plot waa foiled when pilot Edik Bakahinyan deUberately crashed the plane in a firid. A third plotter waa kflled in the cnaah. the paper aaU. ★ ★ dr Those aentenced to death were identified aa Serge Toumam«n and Heinrich Sekoyan, both from Yerevan, the capital of aoviet Armenia. The dead man was identified as Garegin Movsesyan, also from Yerevan. The two were charged with attempted high treason and attempted murder of the pilot. Bills Heavenly Repairs LONDW (AP) — A dturch of England parish maga-gjne puUished an itemized bill from an unidentified artist for r«Nvatihg a church rriigious printii«. Among the items; ^'C3ean^ St. David’s ears — twt ‘AilUngs 28 cents; renewing Heaven, adjuatti« stars and deaning up the moon—seven shillings 84 MONTGOMERY WARD CO. HEARING AID DEPT. If you con hear, but cannot understand, we can help you!! CALL US FOR A FREE HEARING TEST . . In our office or at your home. lt^4S40 ExL 233 BATTERIES, CORDS, REPAIRS ON ALL HEARING AIDS PONTUOMJUi FRESH RED RIPE STRAWBERRIES Kiogor hcM avorylhing from Korr Jars •nd lids to frootor popor and contain, ors. W whan you buy your borrios at Krofor bo su ond froosor d I oz. ». . 17c to* JBIY MAKMO 4^7____ CERTO uQuio........BTi. 33c For Preserves and IcIliM PAROWAX............ri(a.25C toa FMSnViS and JMV. M/y or . SUREJEU... “ 3 FULL QUARTS 89* MON. tk TUES. ONLY.-OIANUUTEO PIONEER PURE SUGAR 10»98* FULL 7-RIB END ROAST . PORK LOINS Don't aottio for poor owsdity I ibgond this yoor, fa tho crop is to liful. Ivory borry o prko aoauti svBor-Bwoof, ripaiflod to Krofor*a hi flinty solocHon. luy now at I mSN 9-PtCN PORK LOIN ROAST 39< i%RK CHOPS_______ 39* SpSiRERIBS.......3!P ’n Save Bacon. ^49* FRYER PARTS! CHICKEN LEGS WfTM BACR\ M PC CHICKEN BREASTS " 55*. ROASTING CHICKEN 4TOBU. SAVI 6<-KROGiR FRESH SUCEO '^LB. 29 Pork Chops center cut. HYGRADE'S ORIGINAL FUUY COOKED, SEMLBONELESS, DEFATTED , ' West Virginia Hobh -OS U.S. GOVRNMENT GRADED CHOICE BONELESS BOSTON Rolled Roast .79' Cracked Wheat bread 7' SAVE 20C-KROGER BAKED URGE Angel Food Cake... .,0.39 KROGER FRESH--SMALL SIZE Grade "A" Eggs 3*^69* SAVE 20C-CREAMY KROGER Peanut Butter... VALUABLE COUPON BORDEN'S SHERBET OR COUNTRY OUB ICE cream; 1/a GAUON CARTON SAVE 10< tMTH THIS COUPON a GIANT TIDE 69‘^ FRESH-LIKE Sweet Peas 6 14 ox. S400 Cons I Coupon Valid at Kroger in Pontiac Malt, Pontiac Parry St., Orpyton Plaint, Miracia Mito. Union Lake and Oxford ttwu Tues^un^2^962^tmi^On^Coupon Par Family. RSPO FUVORFUL SPOTLIGHT | INSTANT (OtnE! « I SAVE 30« 1&OL JAR WITH THIS COUPON I Coupon Valid at Krogar in Pontiac Mall, Pontiac Parry St., Drayton Plains,* Mirada Mile. _ E Union Lake and Oxford thru Tue^^n^^^^^^mih-Ojo Coupon Par family. VALUABLE COUPON ^ 50 EXTRA TOP VALUE ----- STAMPS I WITH THIS COUPON AM) PURCHASE OF KROGER I VAC PAC COFFEE i UB. CAN REGULAR, DRIP | OR FINI GRIND ■ oS VALUABLE COUPON SAVE 7(-0ll MONTI SWEET PEAS_______________ SAVf ((-Oft MONTE CUT GREEN BEANS ..4.^89* SAW 1 FOR DAD OR GRADS! BRAND NEW ELECTRIC SCHICK RAZOR f 3 WAY • 1 ADJUSTABLE HEAD uerve tho right to limit quantities. Prices and items effectiva at Kroger In Pontiac k Pontiac Party St., Drayton Plains, Miracle Mile. Union Lake and Oxford thru Tues.. june 12, 1962. None soM to dealers. SAVI I0(-0A MONTI CliAM STYtl OR KiRNil SWEET CORN ... 5 <^89« KROGER—FRESH SLICED SANDWICH or Weiner Buns 2 39( SOMEROAUI MAND FROZEN VEGETABLES PEAS M com MIXtD VfGITAMiS IIAF SPINACH CNOPPfO HOCCOU PROZm UMT S IMMAM ON LEMONADE_________ 150 Extra VAlUi'« > WITH THK COUPON AND fURCHASf OF < > lORDfN'S 30-OUNCI CARTON I'Stamps: NO FURCHASf ( Id CARTON Cottage Cheese 5 ut. uM oiiwa amwoi, .Jeav-tii isss. VALUABLE COUPON ; 25 Extra Stamps : I WITH THIS COUPON APW PURCHASi OF I ^ 13-OZ. CM4 UQUIO s Kandu Detergent V»M M PmUm r ** “ ■ “ 5 SL, Orsrtm Ptalu. F TWENTY-SIX ' I, ' ■ ' » THE*PONyiAC Tress. MONDAY. JUNE 11, im WALLED LAKE AMUSEMENT PARK $1.00 - At An Ti«Ms! Auto Insurance /s Out, So Ifs Back to Bicycle WOLVEStHAMPTON (UPt)-Wtt-Uam WilMii, 12. wu tvAaed auto iBaurance becaoae of Ida age so he took up bicycling again. Wilson, eight timaa a grandfor ->The sign on the Arenring room suite read “The One.” so you knew it had to belong to Jackie Gleason. Inside, you were greeted by members ot the Gleasoa staff and ushered Into the man himself. He was sitting in a corner, his barrel shape wrapped ini a white < ‘ cloth robe, was drinking —I coffee. “Never drink | booze on the Job. he explained.' "But afterward — watch out!” Gleason was at Paramount tor “Papa’s Delicate Condition.’ first Hollywood film ip a dopen yeairs. circumstances ■ somewhat different this time. “That last one was called ‘Desert Hawk,' and it wa^ a he recounted. “Tell you ; the job. ■aid, ‘See If there are any Arabs with blue eyes.* The answer came back that thara may be tiro or three Arabs aomewhere with blue eyes. So he told me could have the job. “I never got ckwe enough to the camera lor anyone to see my eyes. Most of the time I was peeking around Rock Hndaon." Such was Gleason’s *— — THOMAS career. He did six films in the ;4tk, including “Orchestra WIvea" and Navy Blues." “Most of the time I was pitying with scene-stealen like Jack Oakie, Martha Raye. Peter Lorre and Edward Everett Horton,” be recklled. "I never had a chance." second Slme around another matter. He got an Oscar )n for ‘“The Hustler.” Hli “Gigot” and “Requiem for a Heavyweight*’ an highly touted. And now “Papa’s Delicate Con-dltkm.” One of Papa’s delicate condi-ona in the film la that ha nlpa, and Gleason admitted the cast^ was apt. He gave his [AUoaophy on the grape; ”I a e the he was having a pedicure, I want to know. He was saying, •Watch out. Mildred, bow you cut the big toe,” while 1 was trying to tell him what a great Arab I would make. “ Finally be aald. ’Can ride?’ I said l could ride like the wind—I had never been o horse in my life. He said, *Can you duel?’ I said I waa a whls at fencing—I didn’t know the first thing about it. “Then he Said, “You can't have the job.’ I said ‘Why not?' and ho said, ‘Because you got blue eyes, and Arabs don't have blue eyes.’ “I said, ‘Then you’re in trouble, Bud, because your leading man is Richard Greene, and he has two of the bluest eyes I’ve ever HI! "The guy was really worried and he called,up research and "If you don’t know why youHre drinktng, you're In trouble. I’ve always drunk for one re only; to get smashed. ’As I told Arthur Godfrey i drinking can remove warts, wrinkles, pimfries and < biemiahes. Not on yourself—on other people.” WONDERING what makes the daily newspaper the top advertising buy? It’s the number and quality of the people the daily newspaper reaches, and their friendly reaction to newspaper advertising. When an advertiser invests in any medium, he’s buying an audience for his sales message. The newspaper audi ence is large. Almost 100,000,000 people read a daily newspaper every day in the U.S.* And that audience ranains very constant. There’s no “summer slump” in newspapers, no peak listening or viewing hours, no special mcmient when you must nail down an audience or miss out completely. The daily newspaper sells around the clock. Readers can study it at their Ieisure...enjoy it...relax with it...clip it...buy from it Ag^they do. •Spure$: AtiiU$ and Smrvtjfi Co. Study for Bureau of Advertising, ANPA EVERY Djnr...AlJNOST All YOUR CUSTOMERS READ A DAILY NEWSPAPER In the Pontiac Area, They Read The Pontiac Presg A? , ■ ‘ ICOMMERCEI EM SOMI-OpM 7 P.NL CoMEtfly ud liilf You Show suite it DmiIiI PUTT-PUTT GOLF Fill $75,000 in CmIi Alto Tiif lo Hawaii Fill Out CaopM lalow and Civa to Manager /^ZaKEEGO Opon 1 FJi. WWiomt Lk. ot Airport IM.- JVOCALYPSE vj, mm SMMiKSoli DESER.T PATROL PONTIAC OPEN 7:15 FOR THE FIRST TIME 'the PRIVATE LIFE OF... HITLER ‘SHOCKING scandil D I Ms tioufi Riiei K CONPLETE DINNERS From II A. M. tin ruTini PRIME RIBS of BEEF MYS ■■■■■■ .i.«i I ITTolofraph at Squoro Lako Rd. AT REGULAR ADMISSION PRICE AomtiemyAwmrd WInnmri f Bmmt Actorl f i "~“l eluimomit «cAa«r I aHRMIpii* 9cr—nplmft AMirMtaa 1- Swrim RHlMttr teMWR# IMilMdIJillMg MBMUMBI lamtH _______..^{seEND BKatKSAV Nfil ■ ELVIS PRESLEY *«ILUE HAWAII" ! “ADVENTURES OF HUCKLERERRY FINN" TUES.-WED.-TNURS. STORVl NMtOADWAVS JOVOU8 KNUSICAL I.OVM DANCING to the JOE ZABELSKI tRIO W«d., Thurs., FrI. ond Sat. EVENINGS iSKSll UURENCE JANE ARNE UMAIIA WALK ON THE WILD SIDE a tide Of life you never expoefed tosee onthe screen! STARTSFMPAY... •wmrtnmmur i; V 'V' THE, PONTIAC PRESS, jitpypAY. JUNE 11, 1062 TWENTY^SEVEN Injury-Riddled Tigers Call on Purnal Goldy FmU>« Prm Pbato BACK ON TOE THRONE - Big Tom Draper (left) and -Perry Byard regained their lofty perch in Pine Lake Country Clt|b’a 13th annual invitational golf tournament Sunday, capturing the title with a 2-up win over Drs. Robert Lurie and Phil Nollih bf Saginaw. Draper and Byard, veteran Red, Run golfers, were Pine Lake kings in 1955. Tigers Lose Two More to'Mi . ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ NEW YORK (UPI) - Faced ith a mounting casualty list, the desperate Detroit Tigers called up outfielder Purnal Goldy from their Denver farm club last night in an effort to bcdster their inju(y-rid-dled outfield. Goldy, 24. was a sensation of the Tigers spring training camp In Florida but was assigned to Denver at the" start of the season. He ■ was hitting .302 at Denver with 21 RBI, four home rtw, three triples and five doubles.' Ilie key personnel losses are beginning to take their toll on more evident than over the weekend when they dropped four straight games to the lowly Washington Senators. Now comes a two-game series with the New York Yankees starting Tuesday night. Billy Bruton joined A1 Kaline and Frank Lary on the Hat of iaJured mainstays Sunday when he suffered a tom tendon - in his left thigh. Ihe fleet-footed centerfield-er will be lost to the club for a week to 10 days,, possil>ly even longer, ALMOST OCT Bruton, the second leading hitter on the Tigers behind Kaline, Was injured in. the first inning of the second game while rounding third base during an inning-ending double play. Ironically^ he had been picked off second base on the prece^ play, but Washington shortstop Ken Hamlin failed to make the tag. Bruton’s Injury could prove the moM disastrous yet for the Tigers. Kaline, out wtth a broken collarbone. Is the only other ont-flelder on the roster- who can play centerfleM with any degree of flaesse. Byard, Draper Regain Title By BILL COBNWBlLL Perry Byard and Tom Draper have restored their position of eminence in the Pine Lake Invitational golf tournament. The veteran Red Run team now owns a comUned total of seven Pine Lake championships following Sunday's rain-spattered 2-up win over Drs. Robert Lurie and Phil Nolish of Saginaw in the noatch piny final of the l%h annual sdec-Uve drive-alternate shot event. It was Byard's Ith FIm Uke their 2nd as partners. They won the title as a te*in in lass. Byard. 51, also triumpher with Dick Whiting in 1960 and Ralph Ellstrom in ^7. The 45-year-^ Draper and ' Bob Whiting were champs in 1953. Intermittent showers plagued the champfonship match. Raln fell hall a dozen different times during the first nine holes. The downpour reached its height Ml the 8th green as the two teams everyone scurrying tor cover. To everybody’s relief, the heavy "Cal-Ulomla dew” held off while they were touring the back nine. TOUGH BATTLK Dr. Lurie, who won the Pine Lake crown last year with Chicago’s John Morrell, and Dr. Nolish, a six-handicap player, gave Draper and Byard all they could hande yesteiday. match from the beginning with the score changing hands twice and being tM on four other occasions. They were all evea at the I Piiie Lake Scoreboard Druelt 0«lf Clnk. dt( K«r Wnt. 0«k-tond RUte-Ctwiek Wul. OukUad HUU. * ■ “ y Srkrd. a*d Run-Toni Jir»i>- J-r. Ptrry Srkrd. R*d Run-Toni Dr»i>- Itowl* NellMD. rtiw Lkk»-Rklph 111-atrwn. DMrbora. dtt. Tour Skever. 'SIMdowbreok-0«orti Lkkotlkh. Mckdaw-krsM. J-J: Or. Robrrt Lurie. Or. mu RoSUi. akStokw.,. del. Jim Rruai. mw Ukk-BkU Kukbter. Heria DTkMr SS*V»rd del. SAMth kud Coanr. I up. Ik^ln: Luiie kud RoUib det, SftUkOB knd llteuom. t-1. • * »U RetUteiw. Red-OyreiT Ltok'**"-R*d Run.........— LudwB. Red Run. 1 up. rissT ruoar Smith. OdWknle-Dr. wmikmjr^l. del. Bin Krell. Idfeuood-JIm MU Adume. Red Rim-IUrrr • Oskluid Hill*, drf. John MurUfh. Pine Lake-Jlm CalUhen. Elriin C.C.. 1-1. BiralnilMm. 1 HOkAKE, England (AP) -Michael Bonallack, British Walker Cup star, began the defense of his British Amateur golf title here today against a field of 250 chal-lei^rs, including 30 Americans. The championship is being decided for }he 13th time over Royal Liverpool Club’s links at Hoylake, where the first tournament was held in 1885. Llk^kekMt^ unetUehed. 1-4. tmn Hkre.*?toe**Lkke-Robtrt M- TZ!H£’%RSr--«.ren«». wunum Dumont. «“*, *jk1d*®*f rew. Hne Luke. del. John Bull. Ftoe Lsko-Roliert Powoik. Lochutoor. 1 up. It bolkt. Bob ICukko'rrWno'lXo-lf. IIM. uukttkchod. dot. A1 P^mlnfton-Jlm SIXTH rLIOHT LsnU Mnekor. Pina Lnke-JulU Behon-.k*: PlumHollo*. dol. Jim Sprncer, muk LAkt-lmlt Boeutn. Lkkepolnto. 3 up. LJK.‘*5?“jrkKs!irFr-ii pen Motor. Plot Ukt-Rurold Btfler- ____ Uk*. dol. P. H. Pope. Pine Lnke-B. C. I^ktt. Orchard Uke, J-t. EIOliTH rUORT Harry Slaten. Pine Lake-Al Puhr- BOX The Detroit Carpathian Kickers defeated New Brunswick, N. J., 4-0, yesterday to become Defeoit’a champion in 40 years. Hamtramck won Its 13th Claas A state tennis championship in-14 years Saturday. Kalamazoo University High won Class B honors aiM Galesburg-Augusta copped the C-b Utle. Tom IxHig of defeated la the fhials of the Class B state tenals tournament by defeadiag champisa Phil Camp-bcU of Cadillac, 04. 6-2. Action In city league baseball and softball yesterday was called sfl because of rain. ^Ted^ JHopkJne, ^Ptok ^U^-l^ 1 up. Luke Uttie. Pine ~Uke- ___1 Lake. 1 ur NINTB FLIOST Lake-R. Robert Mark^Flae Lake-Jack Foley, uaatuched. def. Oord Vom. Fir~ ------------ Lako. J-t. 30 Americans Seek British Golf Title If Bonallack wins, he will be laying a 26-yearold hoodoo rest. No man has carried off the title two yeSra running since American Lawson Little did it in The 6,932 yards course, par 36-36—72, has been scorched by the FAVORITES Seeded elong with Bonallack are three-times winner Joe CBn*. of Ireland, Ronnie Shade and Alec Shepperson of Scotland, Mike J^k.-STid^r.'l.ukU^h.r^^^^ Of England, and John P«« tor a bogey rolled liast the Hayes, champion of South Africa. Hayes bolds the course record 1 67. Of the American competitiHS, Henry Umbrodt of Beverley Hills, Calif., has the best past n the tournament. He reached the quarter-finals two years ago. aadtt wasMf h dlBehed the vletory. Neither team played up to its capabilities. Draper and Byar' were six over par on Pine Lake Country (Hub’s par 36-36—72 course and carded only three birdies, two on the back side. Byard and Draper had to struggle hard to win their morning semifinals, coming from behind with Lou Conroy and Bob Detroit (folf aub. Lurie and Nolish foimd the semis only sUghtly easier, posting a 2-triumph over Howie Neilaoij c Pine Lake and Ellstrom of Dear- BOUNCE BACK A par four on the 13th hole put Draper and Byard ahead, but the SagWw physidans bounced right back to square the match on the 516-yard 16th as Nolish canned « 20-foot putt tor a birdie four. The victors went in front to stsy on the 180-yard 17th hols when Draper sank an 18-footer for a birdie deuce. Hke hashen. Draper aiM Byard fear to get Byard shanked their 2nd shot D the trop and Draper exploded bi^ In third place. Uie ball to the green. Byard putted within oiie foot of the cup, then Lurie and Nolish conceded the For the first time in Pine Lake InviUtfonal history, trophies were awarded to winners and “I knew we were hurt when I saw Bniton pull up. The same thing happened to Kaline,” manager Bob Scheffing said. “We can’t lose those kind of ball players without feeling it. I think a week or 10 days is giving Bruton the benefit of the doubt. His kind of tear can keep a man out from three to four weeks.” The Tigers now have four out-fielfcrs on the active roster — Rocky Colavlto, Charley Maxwell, Bubby Morton and Goldy. Bow 2-1,5-4 Continuing Skid on Eastern Trip N«w York Noxt Stop; Bruton Out of Action With Injury WASHINGTON II) — An old story Is being retidd — the Detroit Tigers can handle the Mg ’ boys but not the little fellows. The Tigers, a full 4 games off , the pace, suffered their worst indignity of the season yesterday, , losing a double-header to the last-place Washington Senaton ind ll)e J series, four games to one. • Idle today, they had hoped to invade New York for • two-game series starting tomorrow night with some chance of fooking good in the east but it’s ruined now. The 2-1 and M li aovenlh Isaaes M the tost Mao gMiies for toe skkMtag Tigers. STEALS HOME — Jake Wood of the Tigers slides across the plate on the front .end of a double steal against Washington in the first inning of yesterday’s second game. Billy AP PtolMu Bruton atarted the twin theft by atealing aecond and drawing a throw from catdier Ken Retier. Charlie Maxwell (41, who atnickout oit the play, watches Wood score. lowed a daiiSag wlaaiag streak. , As If two defeats from Washing- j ton weren't enough, Detroit alro ^ suffered the loss of outfielder Billy | Bruton by injury. ‘ Belmont Victor Nudged to Win Crimson Satan Bumps Jaipur in Closi Duel Near Finish NEW YORK (AP) - Crimson Satan, the 1961 two-year-old champ, hasn’t won a major race this year but he still could be a big factor in unscrambling the puzzle which Jaipur made of the 3-year-old title picture by winning the 1153,300 Belmont Stakes. George Potter must find what causes the CWmton King Farm’s ace to lug in which be hooks up with other horses in a stretch battle such as developed in the final eighth of a mile last Saturday at Belmont Park. With an eighth of a mile of the 1'4-mUe test remaining, Manuel Ycaza drove Oimaon Satan to almost even terms with Jaipur and Admiral's Voyage. Admiral’s Voyage, who had set nearty all the ear^ pace, was on the rail, CMm-Satan on the outside. Twins Near AL 1st as Yanks Drop Pair By The Aisoetotod Press There is some question regarding Rich Rollins’ roolde sUtus but no one questions the right of the sensafional Minnesota third T rated among American League’s most valuable players in his first full seaao the majors. The 24-yearold bonus prize red hot again Sunday as First of an, however. trainerlTwlns conquered ‘ White Sox twice, 84 and 11-T to climb into a virtual first place tie with New York. Rollins rapped five hits, drove in three runs and FINAL SURGE Then suddenedly Satan lugged in and bumped Jaipur. Like a shot, Jaipur took off Main but Admiral’s Voyage answered the challenge with one of his own. As they reached the fiidsb Ifaie, Willie Shoemaker dropped Jaipur’s head in front to take the winner’s share of $109,560 and give owner George D. Wldener his first Belmont Stakes winner after 10 failures. Crimson Satan was 114 lengths Ycaza, who received' mendation from the stewards for trying to keep (Himson Satan straight, said he would have won the race had liof Ms mount bumped Jaipur. Brede Sailors in First A total of 128 gMfera cor in nine flights in the four-day tour- Frod and Bruce Brede took Sunday honors in the Watkins Lake with Glen and Jo ney. Fries taking second. Dave and Jo Green took third place. NATIONAL UAODE Wts Lm4 PcL ___ AnfUn ... U M AS4 San Pi«ietN« .. 4* n .SM CteetaaMt .....3l li .S74 ! I „ *" 'am ItH Chicase Haw Tarit Santa Clara Toumey Favorite Michigan Opens NCAA Play Today OMAHA (UPI) — Santa Clara, sportiM a 334 record and a pitcher the pros would love to talk out of completing his college career, ranked as the favorite today as tiie NCAA baseball tournament opened here. The Broncos from California, named No. 1 In the natkm in a poll of coaches, put their reputn-tloR on the line against Florida State to the windup of today’s four-game first-round program. 25 with the collegfote champion of Japan. IN UMEUGHT Of all the players in the eight-team field here, Joe Garibaldi, Santa Gara’s six-five sophomore pitching star, has been hogging the advance publicity. He was expected to Mart for the Broncos tonight as they make their debut in the eeMde to open toalght's twin MU. Holy Cross met Colorads played Texas la the afterapoa. The entire four-game second round will be staged tomorrow and the double-elimination meet, if It gets cooperation from the weather-will wind up Friday or Saturday with a successor for Southern Gilifornia as champ. The winner qualifies for a best-i^GirM match at Hawaii June 22- Winners will iheet winners and losers will go against losers in Tuesday’s second-round gamra. Lund. BOW la Ms feSirUi oeas rtha aophomore Msibry major with boBBo often fUa seasoa as he oompHed aa 8-1 neord aad re-oorded a 144 earasd rna average. He strack oM IM la M la-Blags aad threw tme ao-MHer. Coach Don Lund’s team compiled the best diamond mark in a championship - studded Michigan history with 27 victories and 12 losses. ’This surpassed t|ie old hlgji water mark tor victories — 24 — set by the 1941 dub! It takes two defeats to oust a loae In the opener. B aec- pKching, however, will be the key to Michigan’s chances. No less an expert than Lund, himself, observed, "In a tourney like this, you have to get good pitching to go all the way. One defeat and you’re backed up against the wall. Two Michigan pitchers — John Kerr is 84 while Susher 44 mark. Righthander Dave Roebuck has an 8-2 mark. All three moundsmen arc under 310 in earn run average. TTie Yankees, beaten twice by Baltimore, 5-1 and 7-2, still hold mathematical edge over ’Twins. They have a 31-21 record for a Ji96 percentage compared to Minnesota’s 34-24 and -006. The Los Angeles Angels swept past Detroit Into fourth place ^ beating Kansas Gty 144 and 64 ndiile the ’Tlgeni were losing two to Washington 2-1 and 54- Geve-land rfowned Boston 93 after the Red Sox had won the opener 4-3 in 11 iimings. DPS LEAGUE Rollins raised his league leading batting average to .356. opposition knocked out in quarterfinal action. Brazir reached its best form in the current competition Sunday when it gained the semifinals with a 3-1 victory over England. In other quarter^nal matches. Giile upset Russia 3-1, Yugoslavia de-teated powerful West Germany ^ and CeechoalovakiB sl'“*— Hungary 14. Semifinal games Wednesday ill pair &cudl against Chile at Santiagp and Yugoslavia against CzedMxdovalda at Vina Del Mar. 'The BraziUan team, whidi won the last world championsMp by defeating Sweden In Stockholm four yean ago, is expected to be at full strength. ..a 33 .411 17 IS ->3tt 31 ■M 33Vfc ..lUburto 3> ^pSSaSr a 81a Prsnciteo 4 R««U» — Anselw M, RoiuImi 3-7 St. Lotii* S-13. S*n Pruclae* M PIttsburgli IM. MUvtukw S-3 PhUsdelphiA 7-t, ClnckiMOl VS New York 3-4, Chlci|* l-3> scoood » (CaiS- -------S-ll St at. LouU !• 4-3). Dlfhl. ■ ■ « «) St It RotMton (Psi- TCESOAT-S SCRBDVUE *tttsl»rtli St Chicsto — *—at HUvtukts. night «. LouU, nlsfat Angelei —>dsl^ls____________ Isa PrancUco M Clacluiistl. alsht Itw York St Houitoa. nl NSW York . Utanssola ClsTslaad ,. LSAOnE I LssI Pi Itlmors aoss CItr .. r.S S M4 Isa ... U 3S 8ATDBDAT-8 aBSCLTS NSW York 7. BslUnsrt 3 _. ...—. J ^ Xilcaso a UfemsNts t ^ Los Aassls<^I^Xuim^^2^^ Mtnassota ail, Cbkiss a7 ‘ cgwiandas^Utak- 44. ClorSSd'al.^ TOOAYC OAk._ BaUlmers (Robert* ai) at New Ysik (Daisy as), uUbl. RRSu^frs.rr’.'sg’.* .ar- ts M LSI Aaisissralsbt. reached base six straight times before relief pitcher Ed Fisher struck him out in the sixth iiuiing of the nigirtcap. He cracked two liniJcs, walked and hit 1 Soccer Pick Brazil Gains Semifinals SANTIAXX), CUI^ (AP)-Brazil is solidly favored to win Ite second straight World Soccer duunpion-" after turning In its most im- Leniiy Greni, Don Mirmher and Zorro Versalles were the other Minnesota homer hitters as pheb-m Jim Katt and Qunilo Paacual victories, respectively. HOMES BARRAGE Pan Am Tennis Champ IoSjSAS CTTY (AP) - Pan American College of Edinburg, Tex., turned the iinal rounda into a conteat of Us own squad members Saturday as it sailed to its second straight National Asaocia- homer, in the ----------— — singled and’ drove in two runs with a triple In the nightcM-Hie stocky infielder Joined the ’Twins from Charlotte in mki-of 1961 and made only 17 plate appearances last year. Normally, this would qualify Im as a rookie I ' . he cune to bat fewer 90 times. However, he was wnh the dub more than 45 days, the limit for rookie status the foljawlng I simple ' enough. The Tigers failed to hit ! bdtlnd Phil Regan aad Ron KUne > In the first game'whitit WasMng-ton won on tour Mts. Jm Bunn- • Ing’s home run waa woridng tai * the nightcap, two of Waafatngtoa’s nine hits werebonsn. Two pUebera obtained by WSMb-ingtm in an early aeam trade wtth develaiid. Ooa Radolpli and ■ raM a( I Hamilton, 4kot4 former pro basketball player, oamc In to with the basM full and OM out the righth and etopped the Tigers cold. When Hamilton came to work the eeurt wu tied 44 and the Senaton acond the wiiiidng run for Mm Ib thrir half of Ilia aighth aVJMBiy Pleraall’s single, theft of aecond and Ken Rctaer’s single. Orioles to their double victoiy at Yankee Stadium. WMt^ Hemg and Russ Snyder connected In the ae In Npport of Milt sixth victory. Brooks RoMnson and Jadde Brandt were agger men In the second game to smoofii the way lor Skinny Brown's fidrd triumph. Second baseman Billy Moran drove In ibc runs, three with his sixth homer, to spark the Angels to their first game triumph. Leon Wagner's sixth inning single broke 54 tie in the second game. After rookie catcher Bob Tillman's 11th inning homer had won the first game for the Red Sox, Geveland gained a sMit on the „ slugging oi Jerry Kindall and Al Luplow. Kindall slammed a three-homer, two singles and scored Luplow Intercollegiate AtMeUcs F^e in runs with a triple and tennis championship. |sacriflce fly, doubled, singled and ------ SStSSelwlTb Ik CoUtIIo Ik 4 111 KirMU ct uert hmi si|in«Mr * a GOT IT . . . KHOOPR!* — Baltimore centerfielder Russ Snyder (9) reachra over shortstop Ron Hansen's glove in an attempt to grab a pop fly by the Yankees John Blanchard in yesterday's first game. The bail gets away from both players and Blanchard made it to second base. Snyder was charged Mforliw seasm gave up Ms dgbth and ninth homers to Gnick Hinton In the first inning and to Date Long In third, tho latter a two-run After the two gamea at New York, the Tigers go back home for a 13-garoe stand in Tlgn: Stadium. Ihey open In Detroit lYIday night against the Boston III •J ‘.^s'&s m--aatO{. PfrA-4iMrait S44. Wi a Z7-7. OP-4UfiB bud Wsedt S. r i BllS^ (W. 1-1) .t I D.-BIM, .--------- ------- “ lilt • (•{awaUWk p ISIS Bunnins (L. 44) . I 4 4 4 ----- 714 4 4 4 erowwo iw.«-sil44 1 4 0 u * RBP-Bt Dwilelt . U-PHwnOt. . 1B4IIMIO. Sew. aiM. T-^:41. a"7.4N. ' Tiger Averages Wnu ... toUiM ... liortoB .. Brulo& .. aa a ■avx.bbbbi ■ tt 4 1 444 4 J .12 i 11 Till m i| UeAHUttb . Weed KSSie".' CetaTUo ■.. »ib .. .. isis ^ lere* Mexmll . • i-; S H Vx S \ ‘i •Reerke .. Z-TeteU U S It .ItJ 1 i - ..1114 341 444 .3M 71 Mi « PtTCSINO * w 1 m R aa SO Po?**. !!*. Aielrre , Kotal . . # 4 ito 4 J 1 * i 2 ES 7*! . S 11 S BubbIhs usaa ... 1 I j]| g ; 8 g § 'eiUto . . piBt ... } IJ8r8 1S Teteu to M 441 47.7 4SS 174 3SI 1TWy,KiY-KIGlfT THE PONTIAC PRESS, MQNDAY> JOTE Ih IM2 BRAKE and FRONT END SPECIAL * ChKk tfit Iriktt • R*pKk lr#'tt *h»»l Btjrintt ' CtiKk. lll|n 1'onl ««d ’ Adjutt iti*rin{ ‘ Bilinci fr«nt ahttli YOUR CHOICE BOdDYIAif _ . EXfIA SERVICE ^ MIFHEI n25 weekly PATASYOUIIIDI CiOODj^EAR SERVICE STORE 30 S. Cats FE 5-6123 V Mai ef MMU. But more threatening than the faictj^ be iilwexe i> the dayi, wai that ligna ot getting back on his par n. The news be had for them at the my Inins," Pal- me a lot o( trouble, had a teal good round but the putts wcrtn’t dropping. But a couple of days of rest and I should be all ^ 'Iu4' NICHOUE Colling— J DmCt Gamble with the Future! % GET ALL THE FACTS AlOUT OUR S NEW REDUCED RATES 9 ON ROAT MSURANOE 9 ComploFt FrotocHon Agoimf J| Fir«, Theft, Damoge, iJl /tio____«"<* Aeeldont 1-^ Arnold Palmer Si Man to OAKMWr, Pa. (UPD-TWrty-four of them finished ahead of the big man when they were running at the biggest money Jackpot of the goU year but they, kreren’t selling Urn short today coming up to the U. S. Open. ★ De^lite the S2S.OOO first prise which Gene Uttler picked up' in the SlOO.om Classic GoU Open, that was snother tournament in another state on soother day. Come Thursday thera's still one man to beat right now that Pve shaken a cold with his second place finish in the Classic, should be top contenders at Oakroont. see it tl It of the other proa didn't GnsdoQsly,. Palmer said that both Uttler, the defending ppen champion, and Jack NicUaus, the bomber who picked up HO^IOO Mg George Bayor, aim a« the ★ A A Uttler Earns $25,000, Awaits Open Defense CUFTGW, NJ. (AP)-Not Mnoe of ataidnm for Mm stand up when Ben Hogan did it in baa U.8. Open Champion reposted, but Gena Uttler, the aweet-aadng-er from San Dii«o, CaliL, made it dear today that he la a real threat for his second straight this week at-Oakmont, Pa. Uttler said, after he cot-iectad the $25,000 first pete, top payoff of the year, in the |U0,000 GoU CUsMc Sunday, ‘Tm playing as well as I am copoMe of |iiay- ._g„ "I won't be the favorite, though. Tboae are stroug words for Uttler, an even-tempered quiet man who finally made the predictions TO for 277, and Wes Ellis and Dow rbislcnrald aidit third with 380. had a final 71, Finslerwald 73. Uttler'a victory shot him into (oond spot among the pro money wtomert with IS3.TMU, behind Arnold Palmer , who has $80,331. Palmer had o poor tou Bavar contemUna. and w wHh a 71 for 290 and mo. Ife ‘BUD’ NICHOUE ^ coMPim mvBMCi raorscnoir R 49 Ml. CkiiMns St., Fontidc FE S-7858 ^ naw foU dub grips, tryinc to straighten out his game. Uttler, 31, never bai Oakmatt, the samMpedn In fact ha never has sP m SEKTICB _ was in the Navy in 1963, the last time they played the Open there," be said, "and I couldn’t get away. "But I feel I got a good lift here toward a successful defense, not so much because I won but because 1 played so well." * * A Uttler broke brawny Niddaus' heart esurly in the final round, with a string of evenly spaced birdies, on holes 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9. He turned in 31 and coasted home. He htt Ms drivel straight, al-Kmgh often so yards behind Niddaus, who was in the same NOW \ -I |NEW! NEW! so dose his putts were fairly easy. Niddaus, who pocketed his biggest check as a pro, $10,000, for second plaoe, made a final run at when he banged two wood shots to within 17 feet of the pin. while Uttler hit a trap with his drive, pitdied out and trapped hit third. ~ ' Niddaus missed his eagle and Uttler blasted within eight feet and got down for a par. AUTO PAINTING TECHNIQUES PLUS NEW fiJIUKiNG GlMSAl (KCTHIC SlLICONfS’ THIS SENSATIONAL OFFER! 29 95 ANY CAR ANY COLOR NO UPS NOUIRAS 'NO WAXIN6 ANO N0P0USNIN8 ' fNiVEMS DON'T TRUST YOUR CAR to just any auto painter ONI DAY SIRVICI-IASY CRIDIT TIKMS FRil BODY A FINDIR RIFAIR ISTIMAHS another FARL SCHhiB FIRST! $a/USc/tei6^ 147 South Soginow Street FEderol 4-9955 be took the open last year at Oak- He banged out a Smiderpar 67 Sunday, to come from a atrake hock of Jack Niddaus and finish with 275. a fourday total ef 13 under the per on the 7,tB6yard Upper Montclair Country aub few who can oat-dob the Pena-sytvaala goMro boy. "and tbea there’s tfw rcet M as." There are, he added, a lot of reasons why the pros look at Pd-mer today just, aa they uaed ki look at Ben Hogan when ho vna ruling the moot. He can stand the pace and be ia a charger," said big Geoife. has terrific strength and the abU-Ity to come back. Why, that guy's capable of coming ba^ from anything, and, on top of it all, he’s a ‘He can tear into thoae par fives,’’ Bayer analyzed. "When he club back, it he’s going to tear k right out of the ground.” Now George can “tear If,” laa. "There’s a dltfereace,” Bayer esBfeaaed. "With me Ifa maMy a eaae of |«ttli«. Bat Pahner not only has the strength to gd oat there where yon 6m *t need to hM Umt Iroaa to the greens but he can putt wMh aa aageTs taach. ton. Laok at haw be toBed la a 15-tostar an the laat green to win at Las Vegas. Uko It was notlili«. "Beat him,” grunted George, ‘and you’U probably win it aU." If there’s one ^er they all give a big chance in addition to Palmer, it’s Nicklaua. The two- time amateur champion is a long hitter and his second |dace finish in the Classic should bolster his confidence tremendously. But when they start the big scramble on Thursday they'll all have one eye cocked on how the Idnglsdpii^ Despite that tie lor 3Mh (toce the last time out, they know fills is one king who’s far WDGA Tourney Begins Tuesday AArs. Hume Is Favorite in 54-Hole Medal Test at Red Run The Women’s District Golf As-Mctatfon Via conduct Us asmai SMiole medal play champioiHhip Tueaday through Thursday at Rad Run Golf Club. It’s the finrt of three major events on the WDGA’s 1962 calen-lar. The abneaee of defeMtag ohnmpton Mn. Tad Werner, nee Soviet Athlete Broad Jumps to World Mark MOSCOW (AP) - Igor TOr-l' Ovanesyan, a tall, 24-year
Gillette • PceeiylvM' OPEN DAILY 8 9--CLOSED SUNDAY UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Avc. 3 MINUTfS fROM DOWNTOWN fONllAC THE P6XTIAC PBESkS. MOyl)AY. JUX& 11. 1902 TWEXTY.^fnng They Lose Twin Bill to Cardinals Napolm Reyn, former liifieUfr Witt liw New Yoik GtaM. aeeuh 'June Swoon Continues for Giants By Ike Aeeeeleted rme Aa certain aa death and taxes... t'l a San Francisco ClanU' swoon in June. In each of their .fiiit few sea-aons hi San Francisco, the Giants had stormed into June in or very done to first ptoce in the National League standings only to tall Bat on their faces in the month of honeymoons and traditional bliss. This year, their fifth on the West Coast, has no exception. They absorbed two i teaU at the hands of the St. Louis Cardinals Sunday. 6-5 and 13-3, eidending their losing streak to one out in the ninth to account) field drove in nine runs between for the tying and winniiw runs, in them in Pittsburgh's first game the opeaer. MusiaTs came with virtory over Milwaukee. Mawro- ' * aeetieew ^1.1 1m Mssa ■ei4tW ft«ars\ in a aix-nn fourth inning of the nightcap. Don DrysdaJe pitched a six-hitter for hk Kith victory aid first baseman Hon Fabty (hove in four runs with a triple, double and two slagies in the Do(]geni' first game trinmph over Moustoo. Catcher Norm Sheny batted in tour runs in the nigMcap, three with a home run in a six-nm abetb iieihig. BUI Mazeroaki and Dick Scho- aki batted in five with two home runs. Don Hoak's four-bagger proved to he the difference in the nightcap The Piratee had (topped three doubleheaders in eeven days prtor to Sunday's double success. Andre Rodgers' run-scoring double off relief pltrher Ken McKen-rle In the 16th after pinch hitter Kmie Banks' game-tying three-run homer in the'nHith. gave the Cuba a ........... . Trapped off Bret base in t I of the first game yesterday Ron Santo (lOi of i |g fagywl 0||t ^ ^ N^W YotIC M The double defeat, coupled with Los Angeles’ double triumph over Houston by scores of M and »-7, dropped the Giaids 2^ games behind the league leading Dodgers. Only a week ago the Giants led Dodgers by two games. Kyes 2 More Records Musial Nears Hit Lead ST. LOUIS (AP)-The St. LouU .Cardinals an on the move again Ohe ManI Musial, 41 y young, is leading the surge with a IHame hittiiig streak that has largest at Busqh Stadium in 10 years, watched the Cards sweep the Giant series. first place in the race for the The surge has carried the Cards to fourth plsce. Just S half game from third-place ancinnali and games from the runner-up sismmed a three-nm game, liftiiig-his average to .341, the San Francisco Giants Sunday, 6-5 and 13-3, and made It seven In a row. The Giants have losi six straight. Stan The Mim Is batting .455 during his streak, 30 tor 44, with 11 mas batted in. He started It batting an even 300. Df 41H FLACK Musial's two runs gave him 1,-883, putting him fourth on the all-time list behind Ty Cobb (2,244), Babe Ruth (2,174) and Loo Gehrig (i,m). Musial also Is closing in on two more highly-prtad rsoands. He U just 11 total bases from Cobb’s major league record of 5J63. And he 1s only 19 nins batted in short of Mel Ott's National League record of 1300. Musial has seven homers and 30 RBI in 44 games to go with .347 average, one point behind the Gianto' Felipe Alou. Unpredictable Huron Upsets West Side Up4md-down Huron Bowl handed West Side iU 1st setback in traveling league play romping 27-8 yesterday. Almay Lam held 2nd place by beating ceilar-dweiling Wonderland Lanes 165. Mike Samardzija Bparfce(I Huron by scoring 10 p(tota akne topped by games of 246-246. Joe Foster had a 256 on the way to seven points. Bob Lowry and Dick Carmichael had 230s and five potato. Paul George completed the ii« in a 2451-U30 romp. Monroe Moore garnered - six West Side ptanto with 214-236. Bob Richardt bad the other two with a 224. Amie Reah paced Airway with tour potato Including a 236. Jerry by 217. Arnie Data scored with 200. Jack Ashton had four Won- Tbe Giants’ June collapse is one of those believe-K-or-nols. Take a look: 1966-The Giants were in fint place on June 1, enjoying a one-game lead over Milwaukee. They lost 14 pf their next 30 to drop into third ploee- 1980-Tlw Giants were in second place, a game In back of Milwaukee on June 1. They lost 9 of their next 16 to faU two gomes behind. 1900-The Giants were in first place on May 30, leading Pittsburgh by one game. They tost 17 of their next 22 to skid Into third place 6H games behind. 1961— The Gianto were In first place on May 29, leading Los Angeles by a game and a half. They lost 8 (^ their next 10 to fall into third place. 1962— The Gianto were in first place on June 5, leading the Dodgers by two games. They lost their next six. Plttohurgh took two games from Milwaukee 12-8 and 3-2. CinclimaU split with Philadelphia, winning the second game 9-2 after the Phillist bad won the opener 7-6. Chicago, after losing the first game 2-1, came from behind with in the 10th to win the M game 54 from New York. LABOE turnout A turnaway crowd of 33,679, largest at Busch Stadium in 10 years, saw the Cardtataa stretch games, which began alter eight straight loaaes. Home rune by Curt Flood and Stan Musial highlighted the double triumph. GOLD CREST WAun MAKis, Mvmns, shocks ai» SPIM6 SIIVICB-OPBI I AJN. TO 9 PJA. MUFFLERS SQ95 ANY - ^ nn I Monii - m SHOCKS Genuine HvrvttivH SHOCK ABSORBERS # ANY s ! ' Opea iH 9 P.M^^. I A.HL ft ft P.HL OtwO SwBhye If You Don’t Buy From Us. We Both Lose Money' TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! GOLD CREST MUFFLERS iJFAKES 1075 W Huron St Phonw 334-9957 Matthtws-Hgrgreaves "CHEVY-LAND' SPARTAN iwseoum ori BlG ONE WEEK ONLY SALE STARIS TODAY FREE! ’25°° Gift Certificate with Every New or Used Cor Sold This Week!! LOCATION—SPARTAN DISCOUNT STORE DIXIE HIGHWAY CORNER TELEGRAPH i MATTHEWS HAR6REAVES r , “CHEVY-LAJVir MICHIGAN'S LARGEST CHEVROLET DEALER tiukW "THlO^CMfAC PRE^iyiOXDA^ JUNE 11. 1962 That*8 Why Tax Cut Urged The followliig «re top pricoi coverins ul«a ol locally grown produce by powen and aold by them In whotee^ package lota. Quotatlona are tumiabed by tbe Detroit Bureau ol Idarketa, aa of Wday. Mondays Market Pretty Dra Product 31( 5U _____ .ookthok CA. Appin. Melntoih. CUL AppI**. Motnlwh, C.A. AppiM, MprUMn aer . Applu. Mnl* R«e ... atnvhtntti, ert. ... tsre. CaWwc*. ka..... c*ttitno«*r. at. .. CUtm. doc. ........ SSlX-PA kii, LMki. dw. bch*. CdIoiu. grpcn ... PAritcjr. eurljr. Mi Parilty. root M. AM NEW YORK UP) -• The slock market moved moderately lower early this afternoon in aluggiah trading. A good many stocks were changed and many showed thin losses but some declines of pivotal issues went to more than a point. Here and there a stock rose from fraction to around a point It was the fourth straight Monday decline. The market was two weeks away from "Blue Monday." May 28, when the list took its sharpest dive since 1929. Last Monday's break was barely half that (rf May 28 and today's loss by lunch time was not evei sixth of the June 4th decline. Most market commentators still saw slocks in a period of consolidation which could iast a considerable time before a decisive movement is made one way or another. The weekend news contained little to prompt a sharp step either up or down. Losses of more than a point by American Telephone. Eastman Kodak, DuPont hel|^ drag IBond Prices Open Steady Tom Man. Hothouit, S-lk. Turnips, 4w. kcht.......... OBBKNB Cukfcasu, ka.......................U.W CBlIuid, ku............. KndWt, ba. ................ Kteurdt, bu................ .Kule. b«.................. LMtucu, hikk ............. LeUuc*. Bouton, ku. ______ Luttuen bead ............. Luttocf lent, bu.......... MUKtond. bu. ...... RomAtaw. bu........................... Sououb, ttoUbo. 14 bu.............. 3.M Sorrtl, bu................ apiosoh, ba............... thiratp, bu. ............. NEW YORK tit - Bond prices were steady at the opening of the week's trading. trading on the New York Slock Exchange. Industrials and utilities were mi;(ed. Over the counter dealers reported no changes in either intermediates or long issues from Friday's dose in extremely slow dealings. JO ‘ Rails dipped in early corporate the market averages. Among other key stocks. Standard Oil (New Jersey), U. S. Steel, Kennecott, Consolidated Edison, and Allied Chemical dipped fractions. ' International Business MacHlnes slid off half a dozen points in a routine movement. Volatile Polaroid was off about 4, again nothing unusual. Ford, off. about a point, was tbe worst of the autos. General Motors eased, Chrysler dropped a fraction, American Motors held steady and Studebaker - Packard was about unchaived. * *■ A Prices were irregular ip slow trading oh The American Stock Exchange. Losses of about a point were taken by Speed-O-Print and Bohack. Fractionally lower were Waltham Precision, Syntex, Canadian Javelin. Atlantic Research and Murray Ohio Manufacturing. Graham to End licago Talks A number of changes amounted to a full point or more. These included Surface Transportation 6s up 1)4 at 96, Chicago k North Western Railroad 3s off 2 at SO and Detroit Edison 3%s up 1 at 89. CHICAGO (UPI) - Evangelist Billy Graham has decided against extending his Chicago Crusade-one of the most successful be has ever conducted —. because suitable facilities will not be avail- The crusade, whidi has attracted 400,000 persons to its first 12 )ns, went into iu fit today. It will be conclu American Stock Exch. Pifurei After decImeU »re In elthtbi) Creolf Pet . 34.4 Mohewk Alrl . Dyn»m Am .. W.4 Mu»k P RIni ulit t A I N J Sine .. . It I Imp Chem i!; at P»c Pet Ud .. 1I.S Ini N Am ... SI.1 P»«» .Her ... IJ.J Kelwr Indui (.( Tcchnleo .........11.1 Yesterday a crowd of 37,000 beard the evangelist warn the United States that as a free nation 'we may be finished.'' He said the days are "already for the people of the Poultry and Eggs The New York Stock Exchange United States, who have more than anybody in the world. The hour glass la already turned over." DSTBOrr POC1.TBT Drntorr. jum ii 4-i. R«yn Met .M < M - sm SSH- 734H- HIRey Tob l.N 4* 44 43tk 43>- lSH-4.iRheem Ml 4 11 IM* M4-+ MMe-H RIcbfttId OO l.K 4 STtg S7t4 ormorr. Jun# ii iapi - igt sold per doeeu At DetroU by PAcelyere (Including OB.i IJ» Jl 44’4 44«i 44V«-1S UHVJMtV rvvBtMmu CmCAOa June 11 (APi-Llee pout- siite^PAp \.4ib 4 ^ .. Sen D InPAT U If tH SH Stp- 4e ..................... ISAi Ittb Liwslock 4MT. AdTAacA on tmuir; mrw .1134 Sr..aiis5 Bis.............. JJSJSfcis 3 m IS44 ....... _______ g 33H 3Stk S3Mi- •' 4 sr'b S7 S7 - t' goceny ta 37 4m 4SH 4g^l SouthMii Oo 1.91 14 4T 46% | »«* ^ iSi iL. " ,TS5S5ii5t:J 7 4I>4 4AV« 44V* .. 7t ilH SI SI - ' 1 liv, tl»» S1H+ ‘ 11 14H 14Vk 144k... 4 B4« SSVk SSVh4- I !m 3SV. 3SH- 1. eiA. AM. g44»-l . Ik*’. 4- 4. I lead high good Mid low e^ 1 S4.Si-t4.7l; mj^ iwrf b***” ----- iw loA(|e tngh cholM il choloe hetlen S4-S4.n: Id end low eholoc betfera S btuere 3I-S3.M; uUMty ItJS. 1 ABd 1 IM- isa-ibA. M.»o-w-^ w—.. ^1:3 Sfir«. dt unAi: Sg‘-i.r^3|!l3T^ 3-3 Mi-sot I ;ii-*iarU‘ve'f‘»m: etAUghte, '• Ateady to 30 tower, kindi gredlng dtSceend below end welghU under MB hAAt! hetfere lelr- I end neww ^ “r”,;' balding up boet; bellere falr- ”to to itoang; yeelete week; eeverel SS%S-«.iWhlfh« wad eholM end prime I.100-1.3M ^^^bulk chotoe 34.00-10.M: rteS^rggly ».00-J4JOl come rd ■oleteint OO.M-31.M: dgh ehotoe end mtted ehirtee end %ltere 10.M-10.M: buto rtolee M. maa Anri law eholcA 31.70- ISJO: JO: good and tow eaoice ji.je-UUty aad cominArdAl «»«>• »*: Mnen Ai^euttore JJ'JJ'II-K: ^ad eemmeretel buna ItOO-IJ^. Bdard end good yoetors 301 I.IOO; lAlrly etUTe. r lembe etrong to M WghM. d'eholoa 33.0C-33.M; r*'* moeUy ehotoe 100 lb ehora r lembe with No. I P«n» }!**: lotly good around SO Ibt. ITW. IDoi ihom^Mhtor Awei 4.00-Ik ATcrage IM Ibe. 4.M. cks of Local Interest 1 alter deeUaAl polnte ere etghtbi IA-MODS. vnem. in Btoret ^ ^ ^ Sr^MofoPilowir Bearln«i JJ J JJ .0 ANitibiiaim .......90.4 3v. WtoiSt '‘MEn'raSa^oinV^ ien8% ca A gutoe to “>• tredtof renge ol Um Corp. ^..y illlJ 14 T 33*4 d:i ^Jergeme. .......... »« J* . i AtMl Co...........*97.9 99.4 I MmlMi Tub# Co. W.4 «4 Plnineo .... ......}* i»J Sunemlll^Ai pipe Line 33 1 » 3 Oto Chemical' ' •• •* MITTUAL rcKoa iu m3« : >1:8 IS . - . 3gia M4b_ 4k I 114k Itdb ia*k .. It 314k 3g4b 344k- 4k 1 10 •* and families. Your money cannot be first. Your TV cannot be first. Your choice must be first," be Graham said h is the com people who follow Jesus, always identified himself with the suffering, the alone, the bereaved.’ He laid Jesus never said it waa wrong to be rich . .. “It la yotar attitude Uiat makes the dilfcr- Court Piotects Veto Beneiits in Savings Assn. U »’k------------- >f 85 84k 84k=ti i jgv. - ... 4 SS4k 81»k SIV.-9 3*'k Sfe. 30*k-4 r*k 374k 374k .. 4 439 5Rt“‘' I 144k- V. 494k- 4k 394k- 4k WoolwoTlh 3.M - ... ... ... . Worthlngtia 3.M 3^ 43V. 434k 434k-V. TaleaTow TSr . 1 3!‘k Sl^k 81' 3 144. Sfa. S4V.+ eiitra dtvtdapde arc not Inel___ A—Aleo extra or eitrte. b—Annual rate plua stock dltrldend. d—Deelarod or paid In 1911 plua Slock dMdend. o-Declarad or ^ so far UUe year. I—PayaMt tn slack during 1141. estimated eaah value on ex-dteldaod or ei-dletrlbuuon — g—PaM last year. b-Oeclarud or _________ -liter eloek dikidend or splU up. k—De-dared or paid this year, an accumulative —-te with dlvldende tn arreart. p—Paid I ^ year, dlvMend amittod, doferred or .. Jetton , token el iMt dlyMand meettag. r—Declared or ptM tn ItgX plus stock dividend, t—Peveble In slock during 1143. estimated cea'" —' ' “ - idlsUlbutlon -. _ --------- - receWcrahlp or be^_i«aB asMciatkigis may not be attadwd by creditors. Justice Clark delivered court’s opinian which turned ea the question of whether such depoeiU were legally "permanen roenta." Justice Douglas srrote an opinion differing in some particulars from dark. Chief Justice Warren and Justice Frsnklurter took no part. Clark’s opinion pointed out that since 1873 it had been the policy of Congress to exmpt veterans’ bene- He said a 1935 amendment by Congress provided that the exemp-did not apply when benefi) Grains Weakened by Moderate Selling CHICAGO (AP)-Moderate telling weakened grain futures prices generally again today on tbe board May wheat alid more than tivo cents a bushel during the first several minutes, but other con-s eased within fractional Brokers said some of the pressure undoubtedly was outright liquidation, but that a few speculators apparently were offering wlwat and com to estaUish short pc^thms. At least pari of the activity, too, was toward evening up positions against the possibility of surprises in the government's June crop report to be issued alter the close of trading today. Grain Prices . 1.1014 S«p. .1.13V* Dec. .1.1344 Mar. « All 7-U Q All A1 Q A31 r-u Treasury Position WASHINOTON (AFI-Tht 0 Deposits liacai year I M.S71.1I3.04I.17 9I0«.(93.473.3t4.S9 •9399.IM.M9.449.04 ...a, jTi, f^Ssul'' 1.M" 17 MJi 2J4 . FniaeTra 1J9 >^**^4 3114 334*.. ____ _____ 139.9 339.9 117.4 194.4 UI4 nillSalaaoe . USA tAA* iij.g 311.11 Deposits II ----- J5ly .1 , ' mi m’ t B^tSttlttB^ :i sl » new I.M 1 US m fflS ffi' You Are Big in Economy pected to bold i^o whatever you save from tbe {Nx^oeed Ipdtral income tax cuts, when and U put into effect. You are expected to sprod it—In the stores, at the auto dealers, the housing development, or for the countless services that mean mi^ in your life all the time. Or, if you’re In top inoome brackets, you’re expected to put your tax savings Into I direct and Indirect investment in That’s because you arentt ex- is important, eapedaliy now that ia hesitant. WOfPT BE CEBTAIN But consumer epending can iJve a big boost, too. The President hasn’t spelled out bow big a cut in Individual income taxes he svants. In any case the cuts won’t be a certainty unUl Con-greu takes final action. This recognition of tbe big role the individual can play and does play, if be has the wherewithal, is an essential part of Kennedy’B tax reform proposals, promised later this aummer. Earlier plans, now before Con-reis or in the works in the Internal Revenue Service, trate almost exciuaiv . incentives for business expansion through revamping depreciation allowances for tax purposes. This Because the economy has dawdled there has been a good deal of wishful thinking recently that uld be cut this year. Also behind t^di thinking was the realization that tax bills originate in the lower house of Oongreee, end this is a congressional election y^. WON’T CHANGE AMOUNT This hope fra* an early windfall for the Individual taxpayer seems dashed by the President’s stots* ment that he wants the next Congress, not this one, to cut The cuts would affect in- Moslem Police Shoot at Europeans; 3 Dead come earned after Jan. 1, but wouldn’t change the amount deducted from your pay this year, or the amount you’ll 1^ liable for next April 1. Whatever the taxpayers in the tower income brackets may save 1^ such a cut is expected to flow opened fire vrithout provocation on Europeans passing by. Franco Arrests Political Foes Secret Army Organization commandos stnnik in a Sahara oil field Sunday in their •’scorched-earth" warfare but a Moslem nationalist leader said tbe terrorist fire power is fading. Terrorist saboteurs blasted a well being drilled in the Sahara, about 60 miles south of the big Hassi Mesrooud oU field, and set oft a spectacular gas fire. French officials expressed fears that the secret army, whose hard core now is believed to be largely French army deserters, would attempt to blow up dams, railroads and oil installatkms in their campaign to ^ve the country in ruins for the future Moslem rulers. 5 Leading AAonorchish Nobbed on Return From Meeting 4n Germany Chawld Mostefai. a spokesman for t)ie Moslem National Uberd-km Front (FLN), told nrwi Algeria’s Europeana were turning 'It would not be rash a halt in the present rventa," -he said. Premier Youssef Ben Khedda of the Algerian provisional govern- Five leading monarchists were caught in the dragnet as thej’ returned from a meeting of Spanish oppositionists in Munich, Germany. Three of them refused an offer of exile and were flown today to forced residence in the Canary Islands. Two' went Into exile in Paris. nOWN TO ISLANDS Those flown to Fuerte Ventura, econd largest oi the Osnaries, were Joaquin de ,3atrustegui, an exiroutive the Spanish affiliate of the American-owned Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Oo.; Fernando Alvarez de Miranda, 40. nephew of the Marquis of Valdivia and a Madrid city employe, and Jaime Miralles, member of a prominent old family. ★ * ★ Families of the three men said ley urere not alknved to visit them or speak to them after they were arrested during the week-end. Under a new decree they can he kept in forced residence lor two years. The monarchist leaders who chose exile were Jom, Maria Gil Roblet and Jesut Prados Arrarte, 'aoienm declaration" directed at he million European aettlers on their role tn the new Algeria. TO SATISFY ALL’ "We believe that this dedsra-tion will satisfy everyone," said ...........deoUaed to go iato Hie European aettlers were flie Bckbonf of tbe secret army an attempt to block Algerian In-ndence but there have been increasing signs they now realize the fight ia hopeless. Pontiac Shrine No. 22. W.SJ. stated meeting. Wednesday, June 13, 8:00 p.m. Mary A. McCurdy, scribe. a noted econranist and profea at Madrid University. Won't Review Ruling Clipping Freeman's Wings WASHINGTON (AP) - ITie Supreme Court let stand today a lower court decision that Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman lacks authority to require that a label "imitation ham" be placed on smoked ham to which water has been added. The decision against the secretary was by the VA Court of Appeals here which called the secretary’s order "capricious and arbitrary." Freeman appealed to the highest court. The Supreme Court order noting that it would not review the court decision said Chief Justice Warren and Justice Black favored heaing the case. Justice Fankfurter took no part, making the court's vote 6-2. Tv^o Gunmen Escape in $3,400 Detroit Holdup DETROIT (B A bandit armed svith a submachine gun and his re-volver-ouTying companion held up the larma’i outlet and escaped with S3,«0 Sunday. The gunmen took $2,200 in cash and change from a safe and another $1,000 from mh registers; When they took a five-gallon ice cream container to carry their loot In, they picked up a bonus.^ Owner Paul Yonosko, 56, said he had hidden $200 in the container. BOW-IONia t r.M. AVEBAOES II tads 999.M off i ll IS BaUi 133.4B off Lit vUuno to 3 p.m. 1J40.9M. automatically into channels of trade. The individual sums will be small; the total will be large, because the Treasury gets the lion share of its revenues from those in the lower brackets. In the middle brackets, some of the tax relief could be put into various forms erf saving and some into direct investment in busi-But a laige amount probably would go into goods and services—things wanted now, but Just out of reach of disposable income after taxes. Asks New Look Lodge Calendar News in Brief head and took $100 from Ms wallet at Baldwin avenue and Howard street, Patrick M. Galloway. 27. 483 Tallahassee Ave. told piriice Saturday afternoon. Galloway said the theft occurred early Saturday The Oddfellows are havlag a festival and rumm^ sale. We., June 13, 5:00-9:00 p.m. Malta Hi^. 82 Perkins St. Hand made rugs and fancy work. Free coffee. —adv. Rummage Sale: Wed., Fri.. Sat., June 13,15,16. St. Theresa’s Guild. Parish Hall, ^dbolt and Bebee St., Lake Orion, 9 to 4. - ’ alN.Y.Suii High Court Dirwets Apportionment Ruling Be Reconsidered WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court directed today that a tower court reoonaider a suit by a group of New Yorkers challenging constitutionality of apportionment of the New York Leglg-lature. A three-judge federal couf in New York on Jan. 11 dismissed in which the charge was made that tbe Senate and Aaaem-My were deliberately apportioned in a manner discriminatory (0 dtissBS of metropolitan areas. A fiiree-judge federal court in U. S. Constitution’s 14Ui Amend-not restrict a state from discriminating against geographical areas svith respect to voting. s March 26 deciaion in a Tennessee case, the Supreme Court decided federal courti had the power and duty to consider omitutionality of such apportionments, and that some could be so unfair as to violate the amendment's guarantee of equal protection of the laws. After tbe Supreme Court decision, an appeal was filed asking reversal of the three-judge ruling and an order directing the lower ' inal to reconsider the New York complaint. The appeal was filed by New York radio station WMCA and its president, R. Peter Straus; and Joaepb De Maio, Edward Lind, S. Thoi^ Delaney, Edward C. Brown and James J. McCafferly. The litigation was begun by WMCA before the three-judge court on May 1, 1961. While WMCA’s appeal was pending, tbe Supreme Court on April 23 held in a Michigan case that malapportionment is a matter for review before state courts as well as federal courts. To Extend Danger Area lor Firing Biggest Bomb HONOLULU (AP) - Extension of the United Stotes high altitude danger area around Johnston Is-laid was seen today aa a preliminary to the firing of the biggest nuclear blast of the Pacific teat There was no official comment from Joint Task Force 8 on the precise altitude and size of the detonation but uiKrffldal sources said it will be from 50 to 500 times powerftil aa the bomb that de-stnnned Hiroshima. ★ ★ ★ There have been reports it will be of several megatons in force. A megaton blast is the equivalent of the explosion of a million tons of TNT. The big Mast will be set off about 200 miles high, .the sources said. It will be the highest and biggest nuclear shot in U.S. Ms-tory and will be seen In Hawaii, 750 miles northeast of Johnston. TO EXTEND DANGER AREA The Atomic Energy Ckimmiaskn and the Defense Department an-Saturday that tte nuclear routed S Island wiU be extended 60 mUes by Tuesday to a raifius of 530 nautical miles at sea level. It wiU be bicreaaed 290 nautical miles at 30,000 feet, to a radius of 990 miles. The zonfe will be extended 10.-000 feet in altitude to a height of 40,000 feet, ivhere the radius will be 1,050 miles. At 30,000 feet the Yone will cover the entire Hawaiian Island chain. Ilie zone is bring extended to mark the "eye bum" area in which there could be a hazard from looking directly at the blast through binoculars, periscopes or other optical instruments. The spokesman said it could lead to permanent eye damage or possible blindness. He said there will be no hazard to Hawaii midents who view the fireball with the naked eye from surface levris. The'extension announcement indicated the shot will not come before Thursday, in the hours, of dartmess. because of the four-day warning that Is given air lines. A Joint Task Force 8 spriiesman indicated a possible firing during next weekend. THE 3PQNTIAC PRESS, kONDAY, JUNE 11, 1062 THIRTY-OMfE- Neat Application Helps Go After Scholarship! in the Ri\ ■r LE8UB 9. NASON. ED. 0. ProteMMT «f EdMatiM. IJahwnffsr «t SoadMtn CUUanri In the flnt high school derby for scholarshipB wu your child "out of the mooeyr* "Why,” you ask, "were the Jones boys offered seven scholar- mine was not fered cveh onefl It is the kys-j tem — not the A game among high school iork is to see will be granted! the most schotar-! ships. They make DR. NASON dosens of applications. Scbod officials sometimes are at fault too. I have heard high school principals boast at oommenoement of the number of scholarships offered their front-running seniors. ★ A Sr As a result of this sort of thing, unlversitleB ' " been forced charges for processing appilca-dam for entatuce and scbolar-ships. Obviously, the Jones boys ouniot enter seven colleges. They just hpve the dubioos honor of becoming dogs in several mangers at the same time! A A' A . Awarding scholarships to the right bm and girls is not a simide task. Emy Se^ember finds some scholandiips unawarded and some deserving stiidents without neces-saiy help. WHAT TO DO I As the parent of a stpdent who wants and needs a scholarship, you can still see to it that he takes effective action. He should make new imiuiries not only with his school counselor, ' the college he plans to at- tion think carefully about the not produce results. The following items are of vital importance in swaying the persons controlling the granting of schol-rships: 1. The apidicatien Uank must be completely and neatly filled out. If a Uank space is not applicable, to indicate that it 3. Any statement of. tobiography, of aims and goals, in answer to questions such as "Why do you wish to attend this col-legeT” shoul^ be carefully composed. The controlling committee wlU try to determine from this short ejcorcise whether the student has the ability to communicate his thoughts in writing in a manner which presages success in college. It is one of the major keys. JACOBY ON BRIDGE By OSWALD AAOOBT Here is another hand from the Silodor-TTemey boolL Once again the East and West hands are not shown because they are illustrating the proper play with nine trumps, missing the queen. The correct play la to lead either the ace or first. This takes rare of a singdeton queen " is one. Then you should play to the other high card and try to drop the queen rather than a finesse. The actual percentages are: drop play, 58 per cent; finesse play, S6.3 per cent. So if you have gathered any Intonnation from the probability of you should try the finesse. Thus, if your opponente have not bid. you as South will find yourself in a comfortable four heart contract sdncc even 11 you the queen of hearts, you wil your ten tricks. t. T»ki It M*rl _ __ (Apr. so to Mtr Mt; One roa to nuh to toUf Bind hU ava biatneu. Ds] a (lisaU to mrelMd . . Utoto sad psttoDsl dcsttns* AUr tl to JVM til; euT' u>Mi« iAould to takoB with 1 of isM. Thero s« «ould do 0 Uttio tl to Am. til; Brtcht ■ rtsrm^oo £.-ssssi«, LPonfiac, Nearby Area Deaths r!.A psrish rotary will bi to Mrs. Janwt (Agnea Elizabeth) Burnt. tS. o( S33T Aloo Drive, Wa-teriOrt TtwntWp, t'p.ni- TUetday at Ooata Funeral Honoe. Service will be held 10 a.m. WeAneaday at jj». Vincent De Paul GathoUc Church with Inrial In 1ft. Hope Cemetery. ^ Mitb Burnt died Saturday at St. -Joaeph Mercy Hoepital M)owii« ai of St Vtont De Paul Church. Survivan Include one aon, Alex at Pontiac; one daughter, Mrt. .Charles Barnet ot Pontiac, three brothers, Frank Soldutky o( Pon-MUac, Alex and Albert SoMusky, both of Ludington; and two titters, Mis. Louis Mowery of Union Lake and Mrs. Theodore Allen of . Detroit. Four grandchildren and six great-grandchildren also aur- EMERSON R. LESUE Emrraon R. Leslie. 52. of Royal Oak. formerly of S3 S. Francis St. died last ni^t en route to William Beaumont Hospit||. foilowing a brief illnets. Arrangements are by Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mr. Leslie was empk^red with the Great Lakes Transit Co. In ’ Birmingham. Survivors include his wife, Eleanor, two daughters, Mrt. Robert ' Emery erf Pontiac, and Mrs. Joseph Isabelle of Grand Prairie, ; Thx., two brothers, William of Port -Huron and Percy of Grand Ledge, two sisters. Mrs. Frank Tanton ot Palms, and Mrs. Otis Moore ot Dexter; and three grandchildren. MRS. JOSEPH MANNINO Service for Mrt. Joseph H. (Dorothy M.) Manning, », of 127 Ogemaw Road, will be 10 a.m. Wednes--.iay at All SainU Episcopal Church with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Troy. Her body will be at Sparia-Griftin Funeral . Mrs. Manning died Saturday at Pontiac General Hoepital following a brief iUness. 9ie Was a member of AH Saints Episcopal Church. ■ Survivors include her husband, a aon. Roger of Pontiac, one . _ tfaugWer. Mrs. Chailet May ofp.m. Wednesday in the First Taylor, one brother and one sister and three grandchildten. MRS. ANTONIO MOROANELU Mrs. Antonio (Angela) Morgan-eUi, 63. of 349 Marion " *' * this morning of a cancer illness at Pontiac General Hospital. She bad month.'AiTCIMnAei' are by Huntoon Funeral Home. Mrs. Morganelll was a member of St. Benedict’s Catholic Church. Survivors include two sons, Joseph of Pontiac, and Angelo of California, and a daughter, Mrs. Nicolina Johnson ot Pontiac. Three brothers, Joseph and Paul Palace, both ofipontlac, and Samuel Palace of Waterford Township also survive. MRS. THOMAS J. O’CONNELL Service for Mrs. Thomas J. (Carrie Geneva) O'ConnellfTVof Flint, formerly of Pontiac, will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at C^ts Funeral Home Drayton Plains with burial in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mrs. O'Connell died yesterday at Hurley Hospital in Flint following a lengthy illness. Survivors include her husband, ro sons, Floyd Hook of Ionia and Clifford Hook of Draytoi) Plains; two daughters. Mrs. Bertha Vance of Pontiac and Mrs. Enima Taylor of MiU Scholes, lU. Two sisters, 15 grandchildren. 31 great-grandchildren, and two great-great-grandchildren also survive. MRS. CHARLES OXLEY Service for Mrs. Charles (Fanny) Oxley, n, formerly of 92 Elm — ......3() p.m. Wednesday at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Troy. Mrs. Oxley, a member of the First Methodist Church, died this morning at Sunset Convalescent Home following a long illness. three sons, Herbert of Deaibom, Charles of Berkley, and Arthur of Rochester. One brother and two sisters also sur-Ive. MRS. JAMBS A. 8PRES Service for Mrs. James A. (Sarah Jane) Spires, », of 2940 ------- Rood will be held at 2 Churdi (rf, God with burial at I land Park Cemetery. Her body will bb at the Huntoon Funeral Home until Wednesday noon. Mrs. Spires died Saturday of a coronary illness at Pontiac General Hoepital. She had been for a long time. Mrs. Sp^ w i indnber of the First Church Cfod. Survivors Include one -son, Joseph S. ot Pontiac, four daughters, Mrs. Elberta Bean of BUnois, Mrs. Juanita Dolin ot Pontiac, Mrs. Ada Barton ot Waterford Township, Mrs. Pauline McAnally of Pontiac. Two sisters, 24 grandchildren and 32 great-grrtidchildren also sur-ive. ROSS A. FRANTZ ORTOHVILLE-Service lor Rosa A. Frantz, 78, ot 135 Myron be 2 p. m. tomorrow at C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, with burial to follow at Ortonville Ceme- It it a Pertonai Service . . . The perMHiel attention of the owners of the Donelson-Johns Faneral Home at the time of bereavement provides complete assurance that every requirement will be fulfilled with tact, dignity and good taste. (PLu FEoiral iPa/tIuHq 4-4511 tery. Mr. Frants, a retired railroad employe, died of a heart attack Satun^ at McLaren Hoapltal, Flint. Surviving are a son Ross Ls of Rochester; a daughter, Mrs. Ellen Anderson of Detroit; two stepsons, Gerald Guile and Morris Guile, both of Ortonville; two stepdaughters, Mrs. Frances. Wills of Orton-ville and Mrs. Audrey Cahoon of Florida: 13 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. OTTO W. KLANK ROCHESTER — Service Otto W. Klank. 80. ot 933 Rose-lawn St., will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at William R. Potere Funeral Home. Burial will be In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Klank died of injuries 3^ hours after being hurt in a traffic accident yesterday in Avon Township. He was a Jehovah’s Witness. His sole survivor is a aister. MRS. ALFRED E. LANE PONTIAC TOWNSHIP — Service tor Mrs. Alfred E. (Ethel M.) >. 78, of 2114 Knollwood St., be 2:30 p. m. Wednesday at Moore Chapel of the Sparics-Giif-fin Funefal Home, Auburn Heighta. fdlow at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Lane, a member of Birmingham Methodist Oiuich, died yesterday at bee home after an illneas of aeveral years. Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Donald Slonaker of Pontiac and Mrs. Jerry Keego Harbor: a Igranddaughter; a sister, Mrs. Samuel Chafey of Waterford; auid a brother. PERRY J. LESTER KEEGO HARBOR — Service for Perry J. Lester, monthoM aon of Mr. and Mrs. Tabnadge J. E. Lester. of 2910 StemeR Si., waa to be 3:30 p. m. today at Donelaon-Johna Funeral Home. Pontiac, with bur-to follow at Oak Hill Ometery, f HURON ST. FONTIAC Jaycees to Install OUicers Tonight in Waterioid Eugene Pheiffer of Saginaw, former state president of the Michigan Junior (3iamber of Commerce, will be the featured speaker when the Waterford Townhlp Jaycees install new officers to-night.^ 4r A * The installation program, one of the highlights of the year, will begin with a dinner at the Eagles Lodge on MS9 in Waterford Township. Dean A. Salley wUI be Installed aa proaldeal. Other new The infant died Saturday at St. JoB^ Mercy Hoepital, Pontiac, after being U1 since Mrth. Surviving besides the parents re a brother, Terry W. and two sisters, Pamalae E. and Debra S., all at home; and grandparents Mrs. Martha Simmons and Mr. and Mrs. Casey Holeman, all of Waterford Township. THtNRAS R. ROGERS AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Thomas R. Rogers, 59, ot School Road, will be 2 p.m. morrow at the Pixley FUnermI Home. Burial will be In White Chapel Memorial Ometery, Troy. Mr. Rogers died Friday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, LOOK how mucli " you save by prepaying Great-West premiums You am actnsffly earn 4V4 % Interest ^ you deport yow Onat-Wem Life ineunmoe preminms ia advanoe. £ooA (tf (Me sntfbig enmiFfo «/wrtif you «sn mala 10 pinHuiM of $S()0 each, paid aaaually $5^ 10 prepaid peamiuins of $590 each, diecouiittdat4M% 4,005 Savinfi with prepaid premiams $ 995 Weft prepaid on your inva family. tms wav... Hire ct a guaranteed return .. . piut adequate proWctxm tor your Thie is worth eoiag into carefully. Just call or ‘ooUifatkm. Curtis E. Fatton 314 S. Tilden Ava FE 4-3739 Graat-West Life Ora He had been with the Fisher Body Division of General Motors (or 22 years, employed in the dectrical maintenance department. Surviving are his wife Mery £.; a daughter, Rebecca, fifld a smi. lAilUam P.. both at home. A million homes in the United States are centrally air-conditioned. ... _________________her 3.10. til proi ntj e«B*rt trt hertby BotlfleO that • proptrty. rictat or oUwrwiM. ihBll I Hin or wira u ot July ut bi ntho troWiM HBM BOt wood (TOO wh< la>p«cl«d thtll b* cut by the city uodi eoatnet tad cbaritt blDad or auotoi to tht owBtrt. BiBthtBI, Mil 1 bldt for I jBBlor Rl(b School on Pourtoon Milo Road Ctet ot LahMr Road, BcvcHr BlUt. Mlcbltta. uatll 3:00 p.ai.. I.S.T.. Moo-dty. JuBO 30. 1003, at tbe oMIco of tho Board of Bdueatloa. Cheitcr and Martin Rood*. Mrmlnghtm. MIehItan, at whieh time tad place til bldt wDl at publicly J!mt& to”th» office «f the Arehltoct elyUI be ^j^***<< .!>?> thta 13:00 publicly _________________________mulled !%' .................. ‘ ■ ^ on —____________ Propoetli wUI be reeetyed Propoetl A—aite Wt._ Work under PropaiM A IneladM SH cletrlas tad siubMt. reugb and flnltlt gradint. etarm eewtr work. ossTopat-iurftclag lor parklBf areas and drfrot 'inclag, topeoUlag and eesdins work M II Inddeatal lUaie partaia&B be m bore autor dlrUloa. ..... Prapotols mutt bt oa torsM furalilM by tiM Arohlltct tad bt teeoauHtaM by t Md bond or otrUfltd check In the tmouat of »» of the propotti euhmUM. PloBi tad ipocmcstloBi may, ha tft- low^tt” t“^o«lc? of**m?' ArSltoct! T&'«'Srr?*A'v‘s....^s;id iia&: *****cfiSck la tho tmouat of 010,00 muot lubmltted ti t depoolt for each Mt ilani and ipeclflcaUont, ttme to be Bded upon return of Plaot and ____Iflcetione In toad coodllioa wlthla un (101 doye of the opening, of hide, ‘tcepted bidder will be required to ileb uUefectory Performance Bond Ubor tad MoUrlal Bond, oheh in .. . omouat of lOOci of tho MOtrMt. total cost of which tboU.bo paM by tho ^‘A^^trowtii' lohmlttad ebaU roMta firm (Srt period ot thirty iMl dayi -peoino of hhii. jsBo II. IS. ua M Little Give onMdicareBill Adminiitration Trying to Find CompromiM to Provent Defeat WASHINGTON (UPI) - The sd-mlBistrotioa aeuefaed todBy^far e.. fac»BBvtng boihpromiae to head off almost certain defeat for President Kennedy's program of medical xart tor tho elderly. # A W Afl the House Ways and Means Committee began a aeriei closed door meetings on the issuer MOURN FOR LIDICE — This is part of a long line of 80,000 mourners visiting the site of Lidice, Czechoslovakia, yesterday on the 20th anniversary of slaughter of every adult male and (he ra^!^ of the village by the Nazis. AP PhoMat Most of the women and children died In concentration camps. Those who survived built a new village a few hundred yards from the Area Traffic Aaidenfs Hospifalize 1 on Weekend vice presideal; Jeek Oeapee, in- Seven persons were hospitalized today in PonUac as the result of area traffic accidents which occurred over the weekend. A A A All are reported in satiafactory condition except Ronald L. Smith, 27, 36 Florence St. His condition ' ' as fair today at St. Jo- seph Mercy Hospital. 8mUh told Ponttae pelke a ear driven by Jana D. WMtteaberg. la front e( Me an Aubnni Avenne lock, aeerctary nnd Fmnk Lnr-Phplffer.'^a Marine Oorp. veteran at the University of Illinois, was named president of the Saginaw Savii^ and Loan Aaociation a year ago. AAA In addition to hii Jaycee activities, Pheiffer has maintained an active part in numerous other civic functions. He is a former American Legion post commander and served a term as lieutenant governor of the 12th Division of Kiwanis. A Lake Orton girl who, according to Oakland County SheriH't OOP'S Stahlio Files for It. Gov. on Ticket LANSING (R- Sen. John H. Stahlin, R-Bdding, filed today for the Republican nomination for lieutenant governor. StahllB, 4t, who haa aerved two terms hi the SoMte, filed peM-ttoes whieh he aeld oentalned the nemrs of more than veterrf in all of MiohlgaB's 88 eeutfes. He said the 9,000 ~ signatures above the . required 14,542 were a 'buffer against inaccuracies and meai-Old Man Dies oi Injuries Alter Auto Crash An 80-year-old Rochester man died last night in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital from injuries suffered in a two-car, head-on collision on Walton Boulevard in Avon Township. Dead is Otto W. Klank of 933 Rose-lawn St. In satisfactory conditioD at tbe 9Q hosifital today is Robert aegg, 37. 368 Nesbit Lane, Avon Township. Clegg was a pas- Tlie Belding manufacturer wid In a ataitement that he would pbt on the "most vigorous fieulenant governor’a campaign Michigan has ever seen.” Arson Suspected in $4^00 Fire at Pontiac Home Arson is suspected as the cause of a fire which did an estimated $4,500 damage yesterday evening to a one-story frame home at 490 S. Edith St. A A -A ' The occupants, Mrs. Louise Stro-man and her two children, were not at home when the fire started. seeing a iMviiM the'treat door of the heme Just aa the Mass br^ oat. FIra Marahal Charlee Mets said it has net hem determtoed hew the lire waa steited. Flames gutted the living room md a front bedroom. There was extensive, smoke damage through-he bouse, firemen said. Fire-estimated damages at $3,500 to the building and $1,000 to the The blaze was extinguished about an hour after firemen anjved at 'the scene shortly after 6 p.m. Police were iovestigating the case today. deputies, wu driving with her riffot leg in a cast kiitt control of her car and'it struck another auto on Baldwin Road near Wakton Road early yesterday morning Orkn Townihip. EUos Ryles, 24, 271 Branch St., is in Pontiac Oneral with injuries suffered Saturday afternoon when her car collided with ar South Boulevard and FraakUn Road. The other driver was not hurt. AAA Ouistine Lloyd. 4, 460 Menominee Ave., nffeied a fractured leg when she was struck by an auto driven by Harry Chapman, 75, 4T0 Oneida Road, Saturday afternoon. She is in St. Joseph HospHaL (3iap-man told police the girl ran in front of his car on Johnson Street. senger in a car driven by Joseph T. Ferry. 40.182 Nesbit Une. Ferry told Oakland Coasty SherlfTe depattea he waa driviug on VValtan Boalevard about 4:SS p.m. yeelerday when Klaak’s car Underwritors Oppose King-Anderson Bill The Pontiac Association of Ufe Underwriters has adopted a resolution oppMing tbe King-Anderson Ferry said Klank made no attempt to stop his <»r or pull back his own lane. Klank died 3H hewrs after t|ie accident. Ferry was treated and released at the hospital. A A A Klank’s body is at the William R. Potere Funeral Home, Roches- Hart Tells Graduates 'You Owe Something’ HOUGHTON (IB>I) - U. S. S«f. Ptmip A. Hart, DJilidi., told Micb-igan Tedi graduates today "after graduatign you begin to owe sotne- He said, "You don’t owe it to your profesBor, you don’t owe it to engineering or sdenoe; you owe it to people.” A A A He told the 554 graduates they should judge tbeir work by one question: Who wiU it benefit besides me?" A A Hart receiviEd an bohorary doctor of laws degree and Howard E. a Michigan Tedi alumnus and rhanaging director n package, but that he voted for it because “it was a matter of nuisance taxes or nothing.” in a speech Saturday to a po> Utical rally. StaMte I , r tax burden i lower and middle income groups who cm least affotd It.” County Republicans Endorse Constitution Oakland County RepobHcuis endorsed the pro- The party's county executive mmittee voted 100 per cent approval of a reaolution to support The reeohitioo states: AAA "The Oakland (bounty Republican Committee congratulates the constltntfonal emventfon delegates on their untiring efforts in having iwoduced m outstanding document for the State of Michigan. We whoiebeartedly recommend acceptance by the electorate and we urge Republican Committees throughout the stole to work for its adi^ition."' A A A Oakland County was represented at con-con by six Republicans and one Democrat. ar PkaWaa ASTRONAUT HONORED — Dartmouth (^ege at Hanover. N.H., awarded an honorary degree to astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr., naming him "the American (3iristopher ColumbOs of space exploration.” Shepard was given the honorary master of arts degree during oommenceoient ceremonies at the coBege yesterday afternoon. Death Notices Sr jar-a —"1 S. &eolia: d-. I. I. RT Hatmiai wr OI an. a. iT Hatonau; alM IjuTlTod br too trandoiUUroa. Mioral MnUt vtU bo h9d naak offlolattBt. fotorawat la Franklla Ctmtlorr. Mn. Boanlc lot wUl Uo la (tolt otlto ipark*-qrlttln raami ■saia aaUI Wodaoieay aoralm.___________ Bfftufi. ieki awUMr of am Bam aad Hro. ........ • rlS5!i?i anrltod by . Ola sroat-KltaUsa of tho ________ JO bo raaodar latteajr, Jaao II, at 10 a.m. BtTvUMoat Cbnreh. latar-It In lit Bopo CqnotorrrMn--1 vUl Uq la itato at Uw I Paaorai Mont. Drajrtoa nKsans __________Aadrar Coboea and Mn. >nnaot WUIa: bIm iiirrlTod by U irudchlldna aait thnq ■raat - tnadehUdna. Fnaoral ^^MujtH y, 1— --------------; I p. a. at tho_DoBo_liBB; la WWW Cbapal Otr------ ------- «tu Mo>i 0 -Jehai----- t M otalo at PuBoral Homo INS. »ni^' itanMt ■'SiSi LANB.'jfmB II. NdS. vnocL lilt KaMlwood: ut 11: boloyod drodi aaowda: dwr alMr dt Bvtratt Lyna and Mn. Banael Chafoy: alao aor^yod by qao ■raaddanihtor. Pnaaral ttrvlu viu bt hold Wadatqday. J^ to at S:lt p.m. at tha Noort Cbapal of too Bporki-Orlffla Faa^ Heat. Aabnra Ileldtato. ihto Itor. p. WtlHam Palmar oftieIttliHi. ifonfiST iOiill ». INI. B.. Dtira B. and Torn W.^tor; 9f« . niatTal I -----boM u— -* * “ at tha I SeTSaaT* mSwiikl jpwb a Pom- jsi^-fSFx'iS-to luw at^ •mWortffia P--aaral Hoao aatll tlno of atri ?S!!!r=ciirk' ViSSm JUaa vlU ba baM -Ta;^ ftaVnl V-- JhS It: baloMd vtf# M ThemeaJ. Kd m5i BalBa MUm:..alao aaj-waat-inadcaiMna._am two Caaatw. »ln-OriN win Ua la auta at tba BaaMaa Pa-aaral Bom.____________ j BM. % JaanlU BoUa. Mn. Ads Birtee. Jattpb 8. Bpirti Si Paullaa MaAnally; Ks:r“.,,*Trprarrss?t Chmtb at Ood ;rtth RayTldwiwd D Johatoa ottlcUttaf. Inlar-maot la ftouland Park ^anwry. M?f aplm ITS%._.la„.tota at ARE DEBTS - WORRYING YOU? Oat eat at dabt aa a plu yea rSfissar,.,. -Ro charif for bndsit bnall^,^ mHrANVREKr-* COUNSELLORS waaaM atnooaiiy oqTimaoo to- Sil nfMCdl FUR STORA^ii br*1bt elaaalad will rtatoro Bw —IdUai laatar to year fart. MORTOOymT WABD pay Off Your Bills City Adjustment Service lit A. Haiaa________PB SNSt WBrist 14; Pontiac Mall Flowers Oar froth flowor Btop apaetoltua la PaaaraT Oowan by aiport da-alfBtn at aiNtrato ptioat. | dt-Ityartoa dan?. CHAROB RiTl — Plowart Tor All Oacaaloot — Opta l;lt to t - dtPSm THIRTY-FOUR aTHR FONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY; JUNE 11. 1962 ONDAV, •MM. Hrcftefr* kOTWlihri ihad* _____»d, MU »»«• i-rg^ HIITER WiUXXD LAU 1-kfdiMB brisk. bM wbtoi btal. lake priTUisw, «>.Nb. i7*» be«B or O* pmiVAia owirxR paeMutoB, M.OM, low Oawa pay-aeant- OAKLAND LAKE FRONT. ) beO. ---- ----, for «th badroom up. L .sttb. Ureplaoe. «■ alooi. elormi —^ ecrreni. nice eaadr beach B. C RMter. Real Eetale. .... Elle Uke Rd. FE «-«IT( or FE e-mo, Eie.-MAH7(B. s;&. PO A LITTLE SAVE A LOT! ■n town — older home - 'STadStlrL b,4ef.-Sre tmOBRWOOO REAL ESTATE W-IHS MABle HTW MAple HS4I .CALL ON THW TODAY BRICK BUNGALOW Thre bedroonu. Uelae and din-Ina area. Kitchen, hardwood noort Full baiemenl. oU HA heal. New Ir decorated Raajr tenna. LARGE SPACIOUS Tinaie hOBe oa oulel tree I1l._ etreet. CIsae to tbepplag. 3 or « bedlrooena. lull baaement. iiormo. eaneUan blindt 3 roomu wall-' wall earpeted. 3 Uvint roomi. . oar (arage, large lot. Wonderful •— —‘-‘-g lamilr rated Vacant ABOUT UM ea »oii In CALL TODAY. Bvea Call FE 4-»3d or FE t-7T73 NICHOLIB HAROKR CO , 33tj W Huron Bt. FE Vtll3 ^b. Eaceptlooallf clean. day 10 to IKDROOMBt NBEi>S----------- Here it lal FuU baaement. Itb batba. Im aallng arer - - . ONLY m* DOWN W W. ROM HOMES CaU OR 3diai foi Paint Brush Special M.3N-nM Down-MS a naontn S-bedrooB hoBe. lake prlellegea. a toU, full baUt. economlcoL low taiea. naeda palaUng and ----- Ing up. acbool bua. good aL...,..-. HAROLD R. FRANK!. REALTORS am Unloa Lake Rd. EM 3-3aM. «M 3-Tiai Pleasant lake woods. a-asD-rooB ranch, attached a-esr garage. ISA belli, full baoaaant. eoBBiintty waU waUc. lake piiei-lagai. Flf ♦AMS r furnace, alu-minuB norma, owningi. Scrern ' Borcb. Flaetarcd geie«e. ghn pry gU.TM PONTIAC REAI.TY •m Baldwin_________FE Maw IN CLARKgTON. OWNER TRANB-frrrad. 3-bedmoB. l>u bathe, an eaeelleBt aelghbarhoad ^ will BMiea TOO la. CnU today. Water-ford Realty. OR a-4sat. -----ak do^^ Mgrrir------------- (lael. lauea and laauraaeel t blocbto EHaabath Laba. Cute $9,500 «n buiM a b«Ba WB PM Snodra, I Ida. OR : MeNAB y&UR LOT OK OURS BeaMtalcbad. aay eMa wlU> “ wttl^ baieaaBt. Tour lot •n work BeecaoltoUe umto. gate WIlllsBi ----------------- —■ wadiri. NEV/ HOUSES $00 Down $75 OFEN 11 TO I DAILT BFOTLITE BOTLDINa CO. ___________FE AdiWI iitvi :::: oo rr toorsel. . Nathlag Down. I will build the alMlI and luml* Inelde laalerlel as plane te cb^e CroB. On y<^ R aSe!^. i-»8M or ur t-rm. A A H Balea.__________ FEATHBRBTONB ROAD. rlBgtoB Hllta. 1100 down. 0100 ----*1. FHA. FE o-oooa. COLORED 3 Bedroom ' Homes "O" DOWN NO COSTS NONOl'HING DONT inSB O0T _ ON THIS CHANCE OF 4 LIFETIME St. JUDE COURT 3144 Lovelv Javno Heights Laite-Tlpw cxeeuttet'e noSh hoc IlB Itaturee: <41 bedrooir .walk-lB daacte. a ceramic I flrepl ------------ aiu-ccr beautiful below w W'^ATER i>R E A LT Y PHONE OR 3-4525 • $8995 Wffl buOd Abcdrccm irt^Tel ( reoeb bcoc da your M. ra te bmM. bbdb aakOaata. IBa M “BOarH BUILDERS NICHOLIE T AIDE ree-Mroct ; rocmi. Largi Three-bedroom bungalow Lit and dining tree Kitchen. utL... room and carport Newlr decorated OU HA heat. EASY TERMS Over 3 acres LAEB FRONT. Truly baautirul— Ubtural woaday aetting. orerleoC log alaoal private take with E ft. IV Clark Lake. A raabUi ranch home a( ulna rboai ni and two full balhi. FIV_ BEpRQOMSt Toe., aU-aP wpw-flaoH^aaldn Ilia llkai llTtng reoa with cut-atcaa flraplaca, there la a ISkaa family room with a taBarkabla rltw! CWn-blnatlon dbl. garage and a hobby ahop. Lavaly setting with aatura trees, shrubs evergreens and a watering syslea from the lake Ip keep the lawne emerald green. By the way. tbU Is a real flsb-Uig lake I Out D»le Hl^way la Rawaliaa Otrdens area. PRICS33 TO SELL AT |4«.aOQ. TERI^ Convenience! Walking dlstthce to Tel-Huron. Fontls. Mill. Donelaon or St. Benedict Schools. Living room. 30130 famUy room, dining room, sitchen and one bedroom on main floor! 3 aedroor-s on second floor. OAb heat full basement. NEW OARAOE An older borne — condition. Solid construe- WILL BUILD Hftve 3 bedroom. tetb. full bMtmtnt model to ehow. Don McDonald -ST”" HOYT ‘TEACB OF MIND-TRADES' WBT SUBURBAN 3-bodroom. long, low ranch, cloao lo Waterford Bchool. Paved •treet. fenced yard, oaeb to ex-laUag mortgage. 4W per cent. FuU price IS.4M. 13Sa W. Huron « a-WM FB a-M4 MULTIPLE Lianwo BERVICB 'TRADEX' TRADES AND BXCHANOES 174 B. Shirley , tlM lot. A .good la _^..s for Iba larga I Prlead kt r fS* •• FHA terma. U Trada—Nalurb Itirman Mil W. Huiun ■LL OR TRADE — Jaat Ilka atW ateitinm brick ranataar wllb hffl haaamaal. Oaa baal. AkioUnuib atarnu. Lavaly lawn. EacapUanal-ly waU maintabiad hama. aaund eonalructlon. Win amuiy W bwaaatrallai eMai!f''M'"Aak'for Mr.*^ Wm-BBDBOOM MOOBRN - For only tllS Mwa I ^off-KTa. %te aarab. Farad atraal. Only S?.m. tamedlua paataaabm. SPECIAL - iaal — ,----- Ateroan ranebar oaOi * ym aU. Mirrar-llba oak floara. ftU baaamant. OU AC lurnaet ^ Atel-BVi alanna. Tws Ma. Laka — Utgaa. Only b mllaa fram _ M par eanl down. Mo nartt^ eaatt. You eaataea many daHart bara. Only SU-MI. . mtt"bJtafinwlrffi ■Ml aTmeurity. ly^asu.*""' BSh?**!l Fi%ed rlt LAEB FHONT — OM a( Iba eary tet. KSmbI nalghbortiood. 7J-- - brick rencher wtUi Ivgt A cucebad gcraga. Bctariy i. Two full betha. tllad Dow flraplcca BnlU-la ovau cod la. A kite patteg. Nica baacb. Pricad at only ia4.m LIST WITH I Irada. 33 yi M:aS. MuUlpi L. H. BROWN. Rpaltor KAMPSEN REALTOR-BUILDER Let’s Trade Houses Vary Ubarcl tai Ranch Home' hreSeway Ic tw»car ga-j up. Four toU wiUi fruit treea. Full prica M.aM - II.ON dawn. Immcdlata poaaaaatoa. Elizalieth Lake Estates Trade or Sell EoloA your leisure momeaU bei Lske privileges on becutttui El tbetb Lake. Uke new iwo-bi^ room baagelow. new wall-tc-wcll corpeting. bcseinent, oil *>..• MILLER north side i rooms cad bct_. a nice bedrooms, hardwood Ilo^. 7 month covers MS ' Don’V miM out- on this. r< bargain. ( rooms and both _ eluding large family room. 3 tats, garage and hreeaewoy. r" ?Abi?2rr-*n..te^"' William Miller Realfor -—vFE 2-0263 Huroa_______OpoB I te SCHRAM East Side AbedrooB bungalow, separate dlnlo| room, knotty |- en. niU baaoment '- --- Lear garage, all tor only M.-M* with fl.SM down aad only ggg per month. Bedrooms Urge carpeted living end dining rooms, m baths, full basement with ell FA heat. Itb-car garage on a fenced comer lot. Only M.gM. Nothing down to veteraos — CktslaS eaets only. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 Ipta ytbSLTNl COR. manbIield OPEN EVENINOS AND SUNDAYS MULTirLB UBTIHO BERVICB '4f OOMMUNITT HA'nOHAL f9T Hama Owaarste L 'Now Tarma Ft a-i hardwood floors, plasteri Dtn't a e this I ealup — phonti Humphries FE 2-9236 13 N TELEORAFH ROAD U no answer call FE ASiaa DLUitXH BuiLDERd Lakt Roods. This Is a muat to seal You wUl agrea It's a good buy at an.MO. MbstamlAl down paymanl. Fast peastssloa — Own-er wUl fir-— BATEMAN Yoiir Neighbor Traded So Can You Country Living; On approx, a acres north el Pontiac. Plenty at gardtn space and room to roam. Latga brick ranch built 'M. a bedrma . wttb extra lavatory off maetcr badroom. ledgestoaa flreplice, tango and oven. Yea a full busement also, real ealue at Ill.tM with only ILTSO down plui cocla on new J9 yr. mortg. MAT 7Vl SHOW YOU! Enjoy the eouMry. Value Galore; Almoet low •«. ft. Of living area In this AbedrooB bungalow, full busement, gu beat and garage. $7.PM with |7M down er BIO DISCOUNT for cash to new mortg Bmart buyert should eheak an thU. No Down Payment Just closing eosts moves . Excellaat laeallao lust off Joslyn cloaa to all schools. Just frata- ly decorated, bseement, ----- num storms, screens sad garage a —y tie.m au. .. It's vacaat, wt h Ask About Our Trade In Plan PIONEER HI-IANDS abedroom brioe SEMI-BUNGALOW ---Hed living room ..with pi window. CersBIc Ule bat gSM hoot, wiring phaoc Jacks and kitchen ftcllttles---- --------- log unit for upetatrs badroom. RecraaUao room, baeament. »>.i. ly Ulad. -------------------- ly ImprovtB-------- I. lAsai-laai garage. Paved Ire. BeautlAlly landscaped, aded, fenced lot. PRICED A'T i.a«o. CITY NORTH - MIKE'S 11-room. T-bedroom home In-good coBdlUoa. Large living room, family sliad dining yoom. Ooo s. 3UJ31 CEDAR ISLANb LkiST^ Lnrsa laa Irant, to JMW h nraa on Raovean. 34,783. Tei wardi Foto^ BaauSrul buU otte an torso htoh lo4. Vtow hcaah imaxealte SU.3SS. Tm MKT OAKLAND »2mUoq vtib lak* prlTl- .3 H LAKE FltbilT . Lovely 3-bedroom modern.. Madia Ilvtos ream. 1 Mgarack niteMes Nice lawn, shade, shrubs. BenuU-tnl white sand beach. On on* r* Onklnod Co.'s lartast tote Fttei to sail. Attraattva tcrau. Lavender Dorothy Snyder 1 7001 Highland Road _____ 3766. 616 down. 316 mo. Swim, fish, tet. U 6-1711. OR 3-1366. Dale Brian Carp- Take advantage at s year rennd vacatlou on this nIca sandy tech tor a wha.a summer of swimming and boating. Also a tovaly maf ernisad rusile homo ertlh 3 bedrooms. The large Uvlng room has n beamed ceUlng and fireplace. Only 311366 terms or trade. ON LOTUS LAKE with excellent beneh tor. iwtm-ming and sunning, patio tor en-tWTtntetor - TTito toeWy bangnlow features an 11x17 ft. ftving room. trade. You Qioose the Home We’ll .\rrange the Trade • Bass & Whitcomb REALTORS FE 3-7210 OVER M6-POOT FRONTAGE^ ON weU ehsSM by large oa WILLUMS LAkS iPTtONT. B feet sandy banch, earpetad Itv-tog room, and dtntog room, brick flraplaee, hnUt-ln range, 1 iric-tore windows ovartooktof laa, 616,366. MA 5-1466 or 673-g636. WEBSTER with flreptoet. < ___________________OU turnaca. OA 6-1515_________________MT 4-«»» 51-A River la Gladwin Coroty. fishing and hunting- TE 3-1475. batwean a by estate. 63.M6. CoU Carl Irtto Wixota. MA 4-1444._ COTTAGE - LAROE WOODU lot. North reiort area. mUtelng sute forest Rimttog. nshtog^. swimming 51165. 1166 down 335 mo. Jerry Morrow. oii^-“ iBbeetoi. Mich.____________ PONTIAC. WATERFORD, Ctorkxtoo srea. Lakt Uvlng late. 31.466, 113 down. 313 ma. Neat Cbryslar Rwy. Paved roads. U B-7711. OR 3-1363. Dale Brtoa SSL--------------------- 36x46'.---------------------- - — structad strIcUy to buUdlng coda, toxpaclad aad approved. Muat xacrU^ S7f66. Reply Po ttaa Prase Bex 16. LAKE ORION “STEAL” S.^EOM>(te^l^BB^I^ SATE I floors ADd wnUa overytotag else to. Boa Ibis tre-mendouxlMrgato. only 16.666. low down, easy terms. CbU (eoUect) LI 1-1637, eeentogs._____ lets—Aerw|6 % TO 10 ACRES A large selecUaa of choice bull lag sites in many locnttoos. Bon located high on hlUs — son on pave'! roads. l*w as 8m with low down payments. LADDS. INC. 1SP3 Upeer Rd. (Perry 104! >E 3-SWl or OP 3-1331 After 7:36 lots: 30X3M. SCOTT LAKE privileges half block, percolated. M50. OR 3*133 otter 5:36. 10 ACRU IN HIGHLAND TOWN- ship. Terms. 167-4316._____ 3 BEAUTIFDL LOTS ON WALTON .............of Blue Sky Tbee- 1, Eves. FE 6*S33. 565 It, frontage. ... Good buOdlag site or can divide. TOU SHOULD SEE NEW BUILDING IN Cherokee Hills! OantroUed to pretact bettor bomea. It's 166 ft. waodad. roll-taf sites oflcr country tacln-slon srlth close-in eoneanlenea. Drive out EUMbaOi Lake Rd. 1 mUa W o' Poattoc MaU ‘ Scott Utka Rd. — Turn r 3 blocks to Lacota. CARL W. BIRB. Realtor BI-LARD REAL E8TATB. ADJOININO LOTS, EACH ItOx 115, 11.660 aaeb. terms. VIetalty of Orchard Laa Rd. and Northwestern. Alfred Faedle. 3731 B. Commerce, Mllterd._______ MANISTEE RIVER AREA. Houac, barn, hennery, trout atraam. 16 aeru. 31.666. L. Col-fln. 1116 parnum. Royal Oa. 46 AdUU VACANT, .tk WOODED with alraain tbreua srooda, " ' vrark grouad. 1 mU* tram ebangt UJ. 31. SM6 per 16 ACRES. 3 bednn. moda S6x34 btoa B hama. snrnf* s»d bldg., laadteaped .. 613.333.36. 31.6N PARM AND 3 AND .--- —----------J Jd hog uo.too.w! 46 ACREI 4 bedim, ownr. i pic sbade. lane bouaa. near MU 63*06.66 da. Hl-LANO REAL ESTATE 313 Center. Highland 664-4017 AVOlt — ROCHESTER AREA ^ acre. Judean Park SubdlvMon. S3.736. UL 3-JISt. m ACRES - LAEOE IWllE AND tmM. #-ACRI BSTATK — W#w T-wem 18 ACRES - BuUdtsSa'- straBi - charryi UNimWOOD RE/U. lETATE,^, 3134313 MA 3-1773 M 3-1341 Illness Forces Sale Souaira 40 neraa. Modara 3-badroom. larta ban with basamaaL ' garafa wttb srorksbop, toU-agltor, near 460 bearing jintt. barrtaa, eomplata r bna. 36 neraa af Umbtr. trout stream, bunting. Ilk mUot from lobool. I miles from New- iefms. “Vl6.606‘“*^B5*ouat '[tor - ^ --------------- ------- road at 6666 par an. Uwar U- Templeton MR. INVESTOR 136 ACRES - exeaUtnt ■house, urge hip roof burn near U.B. 33 « Haitland. Now being iwM for rtlslng beef cattle, mast W------------ ■ SeIi Iwiiww PrftfBrty $7 |0X3>6 poor COKMERICAL LOT, 3-roum modern homr loeated B. Broadway. Laa Onon. 3>*>-I. tarma. Clarence Ridgeway Broker rg 3-1631 _ 336_BL_ir^ ISO-POOT Hohtaoe oh b1^ srla Ava. Oaad spot. MT 3-lUS M-73. Startte. Mlohlgan. h of Bay dm Lane ' 4M 8. AVAILABLE AT^ C t FOB lease, modern service statton by blghway. CaU FE 4-1311. DRIYB-tlf RE8TAURANT. MOD-era. laslde aad outoMt lervlce. large paved let on mala road With 338 ft. trenUge. Combined with this bustllaas new Ig hole mtolaUire ■ 'crests C---- Westweed Dr.. Tel. Mala 3-7151. r. Bnrgant. man. Mich Fenton. 1 33 PENNY !_____ ________ ara aa asg REST HOME _lsad Onatty — U pattooU and watting UsL —...... eaTteorm a S- — mTchigan bu*si!5^ SALES CORPORATION Toun l^nD AND RuiriNEBB. I BsUU. FE 3*m or FE 7. BL003IFIKLO BUST UQUGR BAR — A very attraeUee brick buUdlng. 36xiS. wttb loU of assy parking. WeU furntsliad and best tixturae. Owned many years by a partaerttalp making money. One owner retiring, tberefare priced to sell wttb Just tis.663 down for the vshwhie real aetata and aU. Mae probably wont It quick! AU TRAIL lake-front resort. 1 beautUul log cottages, plus nlcs home. Beet at eoMlIloo. An oui-atandlng buy at 333.3M aa terms. PARTRIDGE b ASBOCIATBE REALTORS -------------nnfcigjB E 4-3M1 S p m. MATERNItr' CLOTHES. PRAC-Ucally pew, «Ho 10- OR 3.J4a4. MER'a OOOD SUITS. COAT BIZI t-a-PIECE LIVIMO ROOM BXiC-tloDol ifoam cuthlons) Mi.N. refriterator, ell sleee. tl* up, lounye chain It. WriPter waab-ere til up. beokcaee. ilaee door M. mirror 3txN. heavy platy glaei. bevel edge tM.M, gaa aad electric etovee 111 up, electric dryer tW. TV’t 111 up. upright vacuum cleapen II.M. l-ploet dinette II4.M, ebeat of dtmwora •newt 114.11 op. love arntt HI. ------------- —1 chalra HI. ’enport BUY- 1 CEDAR wardrobe. 111. BAR. ealna la cleaa guaranteed re-f^retora ttovea and woabert. aU ^a. Ill up. Home freeler. Hi. M Tf HI. CEBU Ihtfferobe HI. cElaa cabinet. HI, Flrealde chalra. 114. Large metal ward-robea. 1 piece dinette. It. I piece living room autt. IM Living ro— HABtudlo coueb. lU. OM b dreaaera, chain and ruga. Everything In uaed nirulturo at bargain u^a ALSO NEW LIVIN-O Rooms. BEDROOMS, DlnetUa. ruga and matlreaaea. Factory a.ee. Ais:*'*- •■*Tit*sii 4-PIECE SECTIONAL IN GOOD c^lon. MS. Xm Cbemnghom. Sylvan Lake, I to I p m. 4 bar stoou. wrought nWN -“^-u aet. I WMtllein!? I and carpetlag. Ml 4-MW. gJ-CUBIC-FOOT OPRIOHT FR»» er. unit almoet now. FE l-3itl. SiIb NmmImM $m4i ~aosiNG^om' ,LL PLOOE BAMPLEB m 1^. bos ipriaga aad mat-. Uvfig room Mta. eh<^ RUGS M» Foam Back .....:.. Hl.n up Sal Bralda ........I.M op •al‘>Bralda .......Mill M up Bn^^ . _........!*! !! “ tAREMB I. FE M417. altar ASPHALT TOE. Each ...... FUSTIC TBo. Eaib ....... -- ■BUYLO TUe. lt» 8. Baglnaw ........;;Si III *‘e”wZtaa.”ow5r admiral r eFbIo¥rTto b (rceaer deluae. balance 13 week, model. Bcbick'a MY 3-3111. "world famous automatic Necohl Dial Zlg Zai In beau- --- --- lonaole tlakea • ncy dor-— -iroidory ohU. O 111 prica ; 4-illl. tenbolea. fancy doalgaa. gnma. ambroidory. etc. wltb- -....—*■-----Only M W per rice IN N. CaU aale to au. Hew, need and re- _______ —_______4-IIH. i^LLER, WABHINO MA^itME recking hortc, pink rndlo. trainer bike. H ea. FlaDo. $11. Blonde eonaole lewlng-machine, ggg. Antlnne elaek. IM. MM MIU Uke, pff Baldwin.___________ BINOER SEWINO'MACHINE, ZIO Eng enulppcd lor embroidery, decomtlng. monoframlng. buUon-holee beming, etc. Ouarantced, Bnlaoec due cniy IJI.gl or gt.3l per week. Cell Eltolrc Hygiene, FE 3-7*" ,_______________gg3S3ie . AUTOMAtlC 8W I H O e lie cag with all built-in ivaiuree for making button taolea, aewing on buttona, making all typea of fancy dealgni. Ouaran-teed. Wll aeli for |1.W monthly or glt.lg total cash prict. conltoi aewing Center, FE I-MS1. ' tabLe m6del tv. Mb FE 4-7H1 21 INCH CONSOLE TELEVISION. AUTOMATIC WATER SOFTENER. lsIfa'I“g*laM*1ined* aleetrla beater, 3 yeare old. TWEED 3-PIECE SECTIONAL,EX-tllent condition. |H. 4BM May- _ reat, OH 3-2103.____________ TWIN BIZE BED AND MATTRESS. -— Crump Electric Co. ER Aa.laH..*»at WW. 1.U i Of ttM war kut ft M ««•- WM-rwad-a-diMrvw USED TVs. HI M AND UP VACUUM CLEANERS Brand new^WSi tank-typa with all attaehmeflta C'o«e-ouU. I" Roaes, V nylon, each, ends Motor Clean r.e.... Comnlru tune-ao bag. eer ■■■rVVU CENTER FE vva-w WYMAN’S BARGAIN SrORF. 4E apartment range llbM •1" gae range Mi ll . pc. waurtall bedrm. eultc . M tl Rebum washer, guar....I4I.M - - -It Mayug. guar .MJ.Jl B apt. elee. etoye .. I3I.H CHROME OB COPPrarONE. MN JUST RECEIVED COLLECTION Of Oodey prints and old books. goM leaf framas. all alaes. art •allerFe-' collaetlaB. Y - Enot AoUques. 10341 Oak Hill Road. K mUc cast of U8-W. Open Bundaya. E-Z TERMS 17 E. Hurop________PE 4^1 MAROdAbY suite; ■wlchl miscellaneous items and alaaa. will taka Md eohn hr trade. PE HMS. ___________________ BUNK BED. BAROAIN IMAPLBI. Hl-fl, TV 4 MIm 44 Johnson Radio & TV dood need TTa. BuyBell-Trede. Parte and tervlce - ah makn. 41 E. wr WATER SOFTENER FOR BALE -----St Tiki ____I aeeount of M pay- T $34 cash. Unlreraal Cn. Salt MitctHufw 67 POWCR ROTART MOWRR. 9 hand lawnmowera. I 34’ aiUn-alon ladder | storm aaahaa. FE 4d433. _________ AUTOMATid VaTER BOPiEN-er. 31 square yards of carnethig. 3 hoys’ M" Meyclas. 1 glifa’ 14” bicycle. 3141 w e r r e a Drive. Drayton Pletoe. _____________ 3-WHKBL T R A IL E R. HEAVY duty, eaeollent tiros, lights. Call PE i-<3U after I p.- DUMCAN PRYPB MAROOAbi ELECTRIC RANOB AMD tUEPRia---------------------------- Ulevlelon. NS Oae etoye, Ref^eralor |3I. Y. BorrU, 1 ftmt ftrftlMf. aerswuea. «er> fiSb^^AMAOBD AND FLOOR l-Mecc chrome dinette I3I.S1. Feoreon’i Furniture. 41 Orchard Factory Reconditioned REFRIGERATORS^ Admiral. Fbllco. Norte and Oentral Electric YOUR CHOICE Mi l WKC__________IM M. Batinaw FLOOR MODELS V —1 ONLY— Maytag dryer, IS Ib.....HIT Cftsy ftutomftilc, a-ipeed IlM OE aaionftttc. tudi iftvtr 1159 s:,Vt GOOD H008EEEEPIN0 SHOP FREEZERS ......$146.88 Ftmous make, new In cr^s 1 ft. parU and aerWee fraa I year warranty on unit MLLY’S AFFLIARCB 1117 Dlitc Hwy. Drayton Plains "Plr« ^mc -’*Fr3 HOME D1 IEUVCRY •crilacd bra deg food. vcgctaMcc. tmiU tulMa Elccoca, Pet Milk, baby goods. Hot neeeacory to own • freeaor. Call for free catalog ai InlormaUon. EM 3-1134 I to I. OOOD KBLVINATOR REFRIOIB-■ - $10. OR 4-0171. j5ib"6^ IWft sEiilhtcE ANB we will deliver sirloin, portar-bouae and T-Booa ataaka, eu. Ur McTHbr and-any of-------------- braod grocerios at wholi Pbooe ggl-M4g 10 a m 1 P.m. sale Price . unUI S party to take over last 7 pay-meati of M 7i Mt mP A OBNUIRE BRICK ROinn low we tan eonveit aay type . bouea to BaaakM brick, the llimM elding an thb market today, at low, low coat wHh Beauty Brick. ’Thta la individual -— faca, brick H” U InaulaUoD board, i,----- blown-ln Inaulaltaa. Four brick colors. Tlmt lestad, U years by Ion tbouasud louens. wltbout lallurcs. * cn-Avan.------- ““ ' "I*.! Vacuum d HI N 8S . »3 H onii cuvrrj .. I4.M POKTIAC ItLTWOOD 00. ___Baldwin Av n PLAillC FIFE. 4t mtSr^ FUSTIC riLE, Ba^ WALL TILB. M" ..... 1X13 RU08 ’BUYLO" TILE, pEayper CRIB.J STEEL BUILDINO, ITlN, TO BE ir^ved beat offer. HArYlt 4-lUI STALL iROWERB. COMPUf* with (auecU aod curtains. MI.N value. «4.». Uvaloriea. “ STALL 8ROWRR. SM.lir tub. tl7 M. B Oradc lolk. Stainless steel double alidt, Retular double Mnk. IIO.M. eebla. Me; Water beater cable, lie. O. A. ~ FUEL OIL TANKS. M EACH. BURMEISTER LUMBER COMPANY 7S40 Cooley Lake Rd. EM M171 Open I a m. to I p.m. MON. and FRI TUBS tbroufh THURB. t a m. to I p.m. __Sunday 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. FATMBNT8 OF U.M wtLL take over late model Stager eahl-aat’model eewtng moehlne. Fancy cUtehcc, button bolce, etc. with Big Zag gll M cash accepted dHInqacnt aeecunt enu enn Sewing Center FE t-MOl.__________ lO-POOT U PRIOR T frecte. ITI B. Jceslc. ___ n - UORT COLOMUL PICTURE — - ■--- ' " Uallv’ IV tlO. OL l-lllt after l:N. . VlEARB KXlhCRIBNCE^ oalal. Brtag your paint to tu. Unlimited colors pAlnu aod wallpaMra. KmI tt Palm. tlTorcha PE S-4IM_____________ 4-INCH MIL PIPE U.M, ---------- tl U. • coK wr-'iiJ "tp galvanised pwc. m!n per leDgln. loader. Needs soma work. 11.000 tosh. MY 1-lIir_______________ a OALLOiT"ELECTRIC REA’TER. 310 gal.............. 30 METAL SASH WINDOWS. AP-proaimate alee ttatl. Perteet rneloalng^poreh.^ ’ dow. $3 Miami. A g-MONTR-OLD DIAL CONTROL alg-cog eewlng machine In I tltul wood console. Ifokea tonbllea. blind hema. de< tlva sewing, etc. ... wit ottachmenta. 16 per montta or cash pries HIM ~ Walta’a, PE 4-3111._____ APPROXIMATELY 300 FEET OP Anchor fencing, posu aad 1 galea tlS3 ReltiU-Ciaer. tlM. 01 3-1134.___________ AUTOMATIC ZIO ZAO —cuttomailC ........ ..........hm!' Charles Akera, PE »-fMg. BEEF AND FORE -quarters. Opdyke Mkt. FE i-7141. BEAUTIFUL SINOER SEWINO ------’a cabinet, ________________.TbOTt; tonholee. bUud beme etc. FuU price 131.40 or M per month. Phone Waitt’i. PE 4-1613. BATHROOM PIETTIRES. 6a AHli got tumooee. Hot water and Moam boiler. Auiomauc water beater. Hardware, elect, sumilea, crock and pigi and flltlny ^wa 8a",«'.*!VrS'SSlia John’s Party Store Baldwin PE I-13M siokWAt^ f<5h BREAl walla dellvarad. FE SMU. DRY CLEANTNO MACHlRBriV’ for sale. Pantex Proas. Rolfmaa Topper. Olover WtPdwblp, Adr Fox deftnerft, lit 'Xluc. $39.! illehlitn . chard Lake _________ HOUSE. 1W3 FORD. MlSdCLLAN-eout furntture. vemant* elothci. jlM II. OR 4-1073. M34 Ins machine. Center 33M .AKEVILLE - ------------ ----- for your gaa furnace, eeoveraloB unit, or wetcr beater. Cell MAple UMl, A*H Salea_______________ CABiNBTS. LABOR _______ allgbUy marred. ‘U M. Large iHeeUea el eatat-lUla wMb ur wltbout IlghU, alid-ing ewrtUrt.°*aSd^ mo^ chines comptomatera, dupUeotors. — ——blnaa aad dletot-Otntral Frintlns COMPLETE PIXTVBB8 FOB atoro. O.0M. S4,SM r“- i-taL________ ommy A I. OA B-; IhFOOT ALUMA CBaW BOAT, A-l TOP SOa. CBUSRliD STONE, sand, graval and ftU. Lylo Conklin. FE 14171. II wf sai/Fiii. Rgitb aiiAV- el, send. OR 3-lMS. gravel, etoae. OR------- I TOP KHL. ilUCK DIR'T Altb peel. Beeiooable. OB 4-lMg. I TOPSOIL. fE t-rai. P. J. gravel H yard, till dirt % yariL fli< sapd Me yard. M^ H.64. American SteiM Freducta, _t33l Saehabaw Bdad. MA t-llgt. EXCAVATIONS - """ FREE! FREE! FREE! M.IM yard! fill dlH, Im-medUtely available. Ferry and CMenwaod Fentlae. In stack Mia. clay-gravel mli-ture. load yavraett, Duane, FE 34SS1. LOADIN(i I^EAT Also black soil at Foa Bw suh liELTTWcKIKrS' and sand, FE a-ltl7. fEAT Buifus. shredded, 4- yd. ImuL til: top aoU mlatd wlUi poat bumua. IM, EL CmI7. ilirD. OBAtEL ARib fiLL dirt. TOP SOIL FOR SALE 1 toy FOX. 1 POODLE LirTBRS. ^art. RA 7-1131. ARC 8PRINOXR PUFS. UNBD BY Frejax Byng of Oak Lane, eham-plona on both aides, HI. M3-I1M. - 1 PROFESSIONAL POODLE aod terrier groemlng. Satisfaction guaraulMd, Free pickup and delivery. IIa 4-3HI. .-1 fOODLE STYLINO CLIF-plng. Puppies. Studs. UL 3-lHI AKC DACHSHUND FOM^ HO down, stud doit. n I-3I3I. DACHSHUND FUPFtBS. m. M Very gontla. able. CHiHUAHUAB. REASONABLE. FE I-M33. _____________St.. Fentlae McHARY’S TAttWAOOEB EBN-ncla. boarding, —— ‘-‘~ mtng. OL l-glM. ELKEOUND. POODLES, I YIAR. AND OLDBR. cheap. Call FI l->Mj" POMERANIAN PUFPIeK VIRY awaet. Call FI l-IMI. FIOEONS. FREE AND UF TO M, .... * - - P" FAkAicfc^’T3?ABAlHT^ —g4N. Walkar'a Bird House 1st St, Boeheator, OL I-g373. WEIMABANER, BEAUTnjlH molt. 3 montiu. P£!!m. jwdlgrr-abeto, reaaanabla. MY 34171. AECtiBESElM • auction bvbby satubday night. Wa want to buy *—*•— tools aad a^iaaaoa. OR MBImat 74IM. BoUy. II ^Itotolymaatawalmgto^^ 11-A CBBYSANTBraiMI PLANTS POTTED EARLY BYBRIO t6mA-to planto Sic each, alao otoer I 7-VBAB-OLD MABB. OBSTTLI. Can FB 4-SM3._____ a&ru.TSSE'.Ki iAoiRkV i»6Rit Bni*"’W 3441S. OAKLAND COUNTY MARE^ 33M Fontlae Uke Bead, n 3-MII. Raw aa summer ached-ule; Tuca. aod lot., 7:M a.m. to l:M p.m.: Tbnra. 1:M to *'** p.m. Nnritry stock, planto, flowers, potolesa, appln- CUALITY STRAWBBRRIBS BY case or quart. Royec tong. Ford R/MUferd. SM-ITa. SEED AND BATIRO POTATOES. Fonttoe rads. Irish eobbtors. 8o-bajati, aboap: baby etaleks. ducks, sad turkoya, stads, aod Planto. BUI’S Faad Storoa. **** BBBO POTATOES, 3 ETBAWBBRRIIS, tl ttR! quart, pick them yourself Crumb Bd.. Welled Lake. •7 FRAZER ROTO TILLER SALES aad Service I Avia Sarvtoe IMI Opdvke Bd. Tmi^n ford Tractor and equipment. 136-3174. NEW-USED- FARM-IROUSTRIAL KING BROS. FE 4-0734 FE 4-1112 PONTIAC ROAD AT OPDYKE SEE OUR LAROB~AiB5RntiN? daVis machinery CO. OitomIBe. NAtlonUI 7-SM3. Your Joha-Deere. New Idea; Oebl with ottoehmento OR t-lMt. IT • FOOT vacation TRAILER. fiAy equipped. IlM 1371 Lorraine Drive. STciwIeT ' • A MESSAuF RUEd US TO YOU Vibleb we feel trill be of greet Intoretl aod imporunee. Row tor tbs first Ume It’a poeafble to move Into a completely furnlabcd toot our OMnee pton la ~ equalled Ij toe wMe field of _ etollmem bntot, tovestlgate today I Over ------------•— to solect from, Also many execl-lent need mobile homea at re- ‘WpS Boo Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales, Inc. till oteta Hwy. OB 3-iiM open t days a week Trav’sl tTHlariT '£rfootor'ua”iow aa HJM. U foot aa low aa H.-3H. Otoar largor alsoa avaUable. ttwrta MqMla Bomss, SHea and ^^a 3173 Woat Huron. FE .Sales and Rentals Yaeotiqo trullora 13. II, 17 ft. WolvariM n I e b n p oomptra l^B BES^ATim$s"HOW 3141 DIxIa Hwy._________OB 3-1464 1X30 oiCNBRAL. BXCELLEltT.^SSi- ...... f»oe oatlmi-------- ------ porta and sMoaaortoa. Bob Rutrb-faam MoMIo Homo Balts., Inc. 4NI Dtoia Bwy.. Drayton Flaloa. OB 3-HW alloy ■ TRAILKff^A’y^WTg MAIURB AND gPORTINQ AUTHORIZE!: DEALER OWEN CBUIiERS. anTTOBY 3ACOB8BN TRAILER BaLbS and RENTALS Bae-Llne. Trotwood. Holly, Oar-way. Lty^ M Huron travel trallera. Traos-Wlod campor and truck camper. Make your resor-vtlleoa now. MM Wllllemi Lakt Rd. OR 3-4MI OATOR TRAILERS. BVINRUDK M0T0RS_ LAROE SELECTION OF NEW and DSHD BOATS. WALT MAZUREK’S LAKE & ,‘?EA MARINA Parkhurst Trailer Sales -FINEST IN MOBILE UYINO— Feoluring New Moon—Owoseo-Venture - Buddy Queltty Mobllt Hornet. Localtd half-way betwegi Orion and Oxford on M3t MY l-Mll. siidftTS MOBILE iiOMti Oood used bomt typo tralltra, II PER CERT ootvif. Cara wired aad bttebet Inatalled. Coi— tine of parts and Pottle^i World’s Fair Specials Tellowatone and Oam TMvelara. Bast eeieetloo la toe stole. 34 wide — It wide wide 61 I ■ • quaUty i Loeg terma - Fair pritea -Bans ratal We rent t'lvel trailers. Onoa selection of used unite. For A ResUr Oood Buy See Ut Today! Oaford Traitor Salas M' buretors, HIM. OB 44431 joSNioNiiM ■ L B cFbTc^ horsepower. Uke .new, t»R, « foot fibergloe. 31 boreopover aloctrie. trailer all new Augast. IMl. Perfect tl.HI. IMJ !»«•«• Lane, Eeege Itarbor, $11-1137. W«t‘!SSi! forta-camfer_^ilbrs We Wcleome Traie-Ine Marine Aeeaeeortoa and ServIM KESSLER’S MARINA ISW, Waifalitotoii. OA l-ys OMort IF YOU A«i w wihfl) 5T a need wtaidebtald. eaU ue._eeer ,lM In itoek. new and uaed. FB h3M7 TifB^ABtt-TnKli______n STANDARD BRAND NEW TntM. Trade la an Oanoral Satoty Twot. lave m to to rd MM.'f Uat price. Black or whlMwalB. ED WILLIAMS - *vto oi««- -- ____ vfiin7~""M»ULAR-MtlD-t, low at SLM Motor Mart. ED' WILLIAMS 461 g. Baatodw at Bnabutn SBnrtCB 1 ^ mANKSHAPT aRWom nt m toqi xoaraau twi PM W-N «7yB.ffigg^vl*-*"R.'W» FABjy ARP PINTERS Marine sales H «« lowto df^Sky'HMtor OOiKABT^::TUTHliDuri5i&AL STORES, IM tT Huron.______ MUSTANO, EX-aftor S. tkB. 47M to ELOIN. LtXB HEW. It LIN-ertf SI. 4 FOOT AlUMINi- —---------- _M h.p. Evtotude motor, OR 3-IM7. 14 P730¥"FiBBIldLAS BOAT, ter and IrHIer. FB 4-4777. olectric. ekle. avallabto t< onatratlon. r" EM 34tlt. 14-FOOT B5QSB PLYWOOD " ’ -1th M h.p. JelUMon olr—- 1962 MODELS ARE here; Wlintr. wbItolM- riatalns Run-AI 0'D» AllboaU, I CHIIT8LER MAR] EATON FOWERNAL. --- CRUISER OUTBOARD I----- SeoU and Wait Bond Motort Alloy Traitors and Boat Hoitu Marino Aoaotaortot laS Sportlas “cwSiSEdlUT BOAT „ 11 E. WaHoa ^ Pallr M____________SOb l-A tad tratlor. M h.p. UMtbr. toadedt HM. RaUr Marine. Uno Hellr M , Ret^ jlE 44771. . 17-FOOT nhwANTTFraifr. im, Uke new. 131 b.p. Interceptor mo- tor. FEJH140. ■ ........... HORSEPOWiB EVnntUDK It FOOT^rtAL FlBiaRd- ioAT and i borso dobnsoo motor, like new HIv.Tm Exmoor Road FE IMI la-FOOT ABRO-“”« Paul A, Young, Inc. MM DIglo bwy, OB Lm LaU oThSm OMR 7 dnyi a wa OUT^________ Extra Top Dollar FOB LATB MODBLS M&M MOTOR SALES Marvla MoAnoally. owMr inflAT' ImAlfli M\/a/Bald WtfM Averill's Ellsworth "TOP DOLLAfe PAlt)’ FOR "CLBAN” UBBD CARa GLENN'S $25 MORE grade aeed oar, aao ---- " •n^TiM Amt IM A«ti»-tr«ck Parta lS duty tagloo with Duntofl cam-eb^, 3.0M milea. HM. n ±mL 66SS~uiyb~PARTS Fbii' im3 FMtlae_OB_l;|IM, aftar I p.m. »N FOiimC PBONf^END AND lOM (»dt motor. 333-IIM. Nms md thadl Tracks flQ _____hoator, after 4 p.m. Ji 8*lM'E4ty_' ATB . "fifUffiiOHAMr'Ml UU OMC I f Ato__________________ new hydraulic tilt. Rew battery and cluteta. FuU price IM. FB CANCELED AND REFUSED tmiVBSU - SATE MORBT' wta now cate drivtas grembma mjpaim rm 44m hiBlf Cm US . Renault OLIVER BUICK and JEEP iOM SFRITB. MUST skLL. REST Offer. After 1 pm. MA 4-U34^ ~expert^ervice“ - On All Imports MECHANIC. . _ Hubert H. Luchtman Farto aas larrtae an all MpmU 550^KLANd”aVE. ------rsiXHBTilir— LANCIA APPIA SEDAN wnb V4 engine, t Meed Mm mlectoa. gua metal gray Itoteh, red laatticr trim! Normal g a o s?rr"*sniS. prict taur AUTOMOBILE IMPORT CO. _ BALBB-BnYlCB-,FA2Ti^ 1 S, iastoaw FB ^71^ VOLKSWAGENSl WAR] J^OY, Inc.~ . TRY hardtop. wMh radio, boatoh srmar ' ^4r. uribb. MSr. Am^ paymenta of il.M par week. CaU Credit Man- — ¥;.- t I. Ilg g. taglnaw. f $99.00 DOWN, Will Buy a New 1962 PONTIAC or a 1962 RAMBLER WEEKEND SPECIALS 1962 Grand Prix Detno‘\ Tarriflc Diceount. This Is tnc Boat' Owa Oar. I9i^ Rambler Custom 2-Door Demo Automatto Tranamtaatoo—Bow Car TOarranty — Torrilla DtoOouatl Wagon Sale YOUR CHOICE $295 NH FONTIAC sodaa ... $ IM ItM PLYMOUTH Sedaa 1 gt Itn FA^ARD Sodau . . 3 Ml UM FORD 44oor Sadaa ... 3.3^, YOUR CHOICE $395 UM PONTIA^“?Uer BmUn S fi UM PONTIAC 34oer hardtop • ST UM FORD 34toor Sedaa . f M is?K?s«S?-..2r,:'sa IM7 RAIdBLER Sto. TTasOR » 3H USED CAR SPECIALS UM FORo’JTaliS^44o0r h2 ' UM FORtlAC Catatoia 44eor HSM IMl Rambler Ambaatidor . .glM IMT FONTIAC Sdoer sedan .. I SSI' IMS CADILLAC 34aot. ^ , hardtop ...............3 tie ’ Alta a eholee M is care prteod' TOIBTY>StX IM cLn 1^ Nmr Md UtMl Cm .IM $5.00 DOWN ^ iBHonn^ jS*" 1 «i*itaMwta^ mk. ra B-iiM. nraan aad 'whlto flnia.' raS ntt. PATTERaOM CHEVROLgT CD,. IMS 8. WOODWARD AVS.. »&-^^MHOHAM. mow BIB Bllwbelb La* HB. INB CADILLAC COMVERTIBLX. wUh autemnttc. heater. whltewalU and tuU powsr. A beautHaPwlUte ftaU. Baa a UMk - ud white leatlMT tatenarl Muit be tea to be appreciated! On* year warranty I LLOn> MOTORS, Llnaoto Maroura. Oamet. H*te*r, Enaiia Poid, m a. Bafiaaw at. PE Aim. 1951 CHRYSLER exeeUent whitewall Ura. llila on* owner luxury ear 1* equlp^ with power ateerhM. power brakea olMtn* wladow*. rache and haat-ar. UMral trad* ta aUowam:* wtth taw prtce, 11418. THE POXTllAC PRESS. MONbAY, JUNE H, 1962 iNt ^AiuLtAc ootfUb osmuD. r«^ •!>•»; IW7 Ck«Tx t-door hardtop, Uka paw, tow mllaaca. IHT CADILLAC UOAII DBTILLK. Balpa with niMshtol hiMrtor. PuU powar pha P-wap taat aad laadtd wjjh^aaaartoa. A rwal lap «a- $1495 WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward Birminjii^am MI 4-1930 iiF«5M5e~SF~c^iSriiN dramatIcTFWar tiaaiint. hrakn and wlMtoWP. BaUd wljfia (Ulllh with black and white Intarlor. Bahw clean. PATTKR80N CHKV-n^T CO.. IMP S. WOODWARD AVB , BntMIWOHAM, in «-t73S. 1961 CHEVY Impala aoneaHIMa. a a e-ewner. xpotleu eondlUan. all while with pcwer ateerinp. power brakea, BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth lU B. Woodward Ml 7-MU INI CORVAU IfOmU. H)6dr. IVwartUdo. radio, haiiar, white-wall*. Waok wtUi rad Intarlor. Onl; fl.WI. Kaar tarai. PAT-TEtlSON CHEVROUrr CO.. ION 8. WOCMDWARD AVB.. BIMnNO-RAM, m «-8TO. IM CRXVROLRT IMPALA CON-Tarttbla Vt analn*. PawerlHd*. whit* with tnrwuol** letertor. Only U.M. Baar' tarma. PATnCMON cHxvRmSr .— Aim. ^^m^BTinSnaw’ BL^lS ■"ToOllVAIlii TN PDOOR."^ haatar. whllawaU.. 15f"StU ilAM. I I. PATTikSOK CHBVROU1 .. . ION 8. WOODWARD ATC. BIRMIWQHAM. Ml 4-I7M. . - - " - icL^An «- tfaST ________ IN. Biap tana*. PATRIUOK lETWOI^ Cq^ ION B. WOODARD A?*., BOiMWCRUM. Ml rp.r'^fij; MLNa^ra -i—tNd auiv'itgLir:—“ _________m B. Jaaale. Ml CRKWT PAMCWOOD Wa60H, radio, haatar. whttawalla, aato-aatle tranaalasloo. Mil powar. jacallant condition. PB 08110. Nbw Mi UbmI Cm Ml poto cPBTMnjui. po ni- 1955 FORD BUok. T-B. radio, haatar, mat flia Poll prloa BMi SURPLUS MOTORS n B. Baalaaw PR----- 1959 T-'BirR. V-B. 8TARD-ard traaealatlon. Exeellaat con-dlUan. PR l-HM._______________ BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth HI 8. Waodward__Ml 7-Mll MARMADUKE By Andcraon A Leeming I cooked breakfast for you, but he ate it all up! New RHd Um4 Can 1M7 OLDS H. RADIO. HEATER. HYDRAMATIC ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Auume pay-menU ol nSN per month. Call Crodll Manafcr Mr. Park* «t Ml ♦-7BW. Harold Turner. Port. 1961 Ford Convertible with radio, healer, automat tranaaUslon. pcwer etoertnt, pai ded d*N and wblMwallal $2295 John McAtilifle, Ford BH Oakland Av*. FE 5-4HM 1958 FORD m FORli CrsiOMUNB 4-DOOR VB fbrdanatle Iranamlaatoo. |— akaolee enpcial al only 8748 t... wttool Ou* jraar warraniyi LLOYD —CtoAW 81. r» 1M31.__________ Mt FORD. NEW TIRES, STICK S. Copway, Dtaler. 3S3-^3sa._ IMS FOIW CONVERTIBLE. VS EN FERODBON. Raebeetor Ford Deal- or. OL 1-OTI.________________ MI FADILANE M. AtnrUNDER. Automatic. 7.*N mUaa. prlyau -----TR MT87. ID OALAXn auflne. auto ii%hSf ni_ ■■■ ^Mrior. Onif B1.7N. CHEVROLET ____________>WARD •“ MIHOHAM, Ml 4-87M. $895 BEATTIE lulamatle lraa«nli*loo.' ra-uw. nOalar. Pot -* ’ * brao*. a low m M l* mooUilr wIB Your old ear down or W'. LUmj MOTORS. Lincoln. Mercury. Ooaet. Meteor. PI 8. Baslaaw 81. FE Mill. INI FALCON 4 DOOR WAOON. • Mb al.ea perf. condtt Fordomatie ib. anf., r* er. M.8N MA B-^. STARK HICKEY, FORD Clawson 14 MU* Rd., Eaat ol Crook* JU 8-6010 ilM ^ FOfcP^ WITE^j*“*°y*~ powdtr Mu*'and whlM matchlna Intartorl |M. CLAREBTON MOTOR BAl__ BM OrebATd lak* FE I-14W tm FORD BTARLIHER. HARP- IBN FORD COUFB. B4W. ECONOMY CHAMPS IT 'W Faleao*. food coodttlon. 1961 Ford Convertible haatar, aUah, VB - $2195 John McAuIiffe, Ford . BM Oaklaod At*. FE 5-4101 M Nib,"a'ALAXIE, « IM^, am whtt*. with bluoTnlartur. * raal ahdip anr. By pwMr. FI $5.00 DOWN LAMCm. 77B, 4-DOOR BEDAN. blaah wHh iwd tatortor, whit* w^ radio, haatar. tl.IBB. DL in MERCTiRT ootnrrr par! b- CaSr**M ------ ----- ---- >W *M J Sorb MoloaiTL One Year Warranty ON AMd nwcn rAAA BOB JR<---- On* block a iM* CREVROUBT I^NOBWdf!^ paaaaosar itdtton wtfon, Powar-BUd*. powap itaortas, rtdto, bant-or, wUtairalla. TUrBOoUa and tohit* ttalah. Only 8LM. Ea*y iara*. PATTERBON CHETRO-urr CO . IBM B. WOODWAR" ATE., Rtralnskna. Ml 1-1711 M* CiSfROLBT. ObOQ COH-iltlon MY I-lMt. iSSTi BHartor PATTB mt B. dan. PwwariM*, : wbltawnll*. UtSM Bp*^ naw'. Only Bl-M-TERBCm (niETROLET W. Ml CHEViOLEf• ~lggA«flF B^^ahlfl. B nyUndar. I1.4M. IM CHEVROLET BBOAN. BCTU DtOER, RADIO, HRATER. AB-•OLUTELY HO MONEY DOWN. a pnynaial* *( BU.M par . Calf (Nadtt Manasw Mr. at Ml MIBB. RaroU Timer. Mobaaicalto hi like new. an ent ear fat tran*portotton • baT* came (an with R. I* prtcad M nnheUeyeabl* law ter only fMf. IB down and tS IB par wook ai MARVEL MO-RjRBTMl OAELAND AYE. Porto At h ;• 1960 Chevy flUpU e«nT*i1iH*, Hack wllh ■ $1,995 .Suburban Oldsmobile BH B. W(X>OWARO MI 4-4485 mI chItt d-twoR TB. Atrrb-mall* IranamMatoo. Radio, healar. IBw mtlaac*. top eandRUo. tm. mmt y*r i:M *dan, BtanOard *11111. radio, bcaUri tr^waUk. BoUd rad flnl»h. Onto Bl.lM. E**y tarm*. PATTERBON Iifiprie* 1 mant* of $5.00 1X)WN "emSSS; nrTw.-l iBnBRcBSrnSooinEAmo; heater. mbrc-o-matic -WHITEWALL Tnuu. ABBO-LUTXLT NO MONEY DOWN. A*-*um* paymenu ol IM.a -- MB FORD CONVBRTDBLB with a tot blaa flnia. you i„... aa* tel* on* tadayl VB ansln*. m- dtn. haatar. Mat aaaum* pay-- N $X.n per week! Estate Storage Co. M S. Baal Bed. at Aw^ _ I J-7W1___________PE 1-71 $5.00 DOWN II Mercury Montorty *- cellapt eonditlon. full pi__ Ju*t aasume paymenl* of N.M per week. KfaiB Auto Bale*, m W. HurtuL aemer EUmbath Lto* Road. PE B-4BH. 1C. ABBOLOTHLY — -- SSS'par^^.'^gS^ MatiBkar Mr. Parka at MI «-7M. Harold Tumar, Ford. fSH FOko' PlinLANB 4-DOOR aodaa, T-t aaBlae. aatomatlr • — dio. haatar. Emerald si-xt lab. Only ll-M. Eaay t*i PATTEl^N CHEVROUn IBM B. WOODWAHD ATE., MINOHAM. MI MTM- &?TR’Si!^' V^D ATE.. ibb’toro. Retractable with radio, haatar. powar aUarlnf and brakai. raal (haep. On* awnarl $am down, and aaaum* paymaiit* of IM.IO par maath! On* year warranty! LLOTD MOTORB, Lln-c<£i, Mcrcary, Comet. Meteor, p,-~t T» a awainaw At re MUl. IBM RABH^DOOR hardtop. car run* excellent, a taU pile* al BBI.M. ltr*t com*, lint --------- — "-RTBL MOTORB. . BRIW BDNDAT BUT MONDAT LUCKY AUTO SALES USB. BACtnaw FE4B14 tomaUc traiwmlialon anxlna, (uU prto* lit! *umc toymant* of „— ,-week. Klnf Auto Bale*. 3171 W. Burco Bt.. come- ‘ -‘•- B^TEBAM*. INS FLYMOOTH, 4-DOOR TB. AD tomatir- tranimt**lon, radio, heat cr, 1*U than 3.0M mile*. Mu*t *ell thli we«k. "Help Me." Cal' FE B-4011 Aik lot Boat. Special Payment Plan •M CHETT wnrerubte . M;M wk: 'HDeSOTO hardtop ..14.11 wk. ■u CHRYSLER conVert. M 71 wk. — Immodtato DeUrary — 185 Oakland Avenue (at RR Croaalngl WE RE LOOKIN'!. FOR I'e:ople who want HONE.ST VALUES! CHECE THEBE ItU Chryaler New Yorker 4-door aodan. aato. power ateerinf. |- er brake*, radio, heator. Ilk* $1595 lowth Fury mp, power ttoerlnf. pawn or“»*. radio, heater, puto. V-B. Thl* It a beauty to loa to and driT*. $1295 IBM Plymouth 4-door V-B auto, radio, heater, power ateerloB. K you drlre ll.^^^wlU buy It. at H new car trade-in* to chooe* Dam. Bee u* before you wy. yo* to a deal. R&R MOTORS iperial Cbryiler PlymouUi Valiant 7M OAELAND Ai». FE 4-MM Vacation Specials Go Worry Free In One of Our Quality Trade-Ins •61 CHEVROLET $1995 s.:* rer. factory air SEE and COMPARE 'B* Ford like new, 1 owner $1,111 •" Falcon. - ---- ' Rena^ 'M Chery....... 'HPard TB. auto. ,— 'M Opal, wnfon. l ewnar, MM >H BtudabakarWdlop, A-l MM ■M Hillman 4-door aadao. 1381 'M CadUtna, s-donr hardtop. I u •ftuaii *RMd*tar, BM. Superior Auto Sales 550 Oakland Ave, IBM FORD BDOOB CUSTOM “IN ’ — —too. Standord drlr*. B4am 1 Daalar. OL BUY YOUR NEW OLDSMOBILE $5.00 DOWN IT Ford Ptirlane MB Bdoor hard- aaaum* paymanu of B4.M per wea. ElOf Auto Sato*. M7B W. Huron, comar EUiabath Lto* ItM FditD RANCH WAOON. Vd. FORD CONVERTIBEE tuTnaly-tepl'^o.T^JK'^i LhS"gSakiSs: F.^*;‘ Ml FORD FAIRLANE l-DOpR. wUh Acyl. antomaUc traoamualon. radio, heater, a one-ownar and. extra clew tknaihouti Beautiful mint preen ftnlah. On* year war-raatyr LLOYD MOTORB. Uncotn. IBareury, Metaar, Comat. and -“Ilia .Ford. Ill B. BoBlnow Bt. Mill WARD AVE.. BOUfmOHAM. MI $5.00 DOWN W FM Adaor. BanrUndar. pxea tent aonditica liu prto* Bin. Mat taraw* paymant* of BI.M war w*a. Klni Auto Bal**, Ml ? ? ? ? WHAT'S Brewin' BETWEEN "Chevy-Land" AND "Spartan" , SEE'OUR „ DISPLAY AD ON PAGE 29 ? ? ? ? •60 CHEVROLET $1695 BEL AIR 4-OOOR with automAtlG traoamlaaloo B-cyllodar anflnc, radio, haatar and ready to so. ■ - '60 OLDSMOBILE $2495 M MOUDAT BEDAN. Factory coodlUoner. full power, rw haator and a ooo awnar. '59 OLDSMOBILE $1595 U 4-DOOR with automatle r- mlulon. radio, haatar. araro whitewall Ura*. SPECIAL PRICE THIS WEEE. •59 CADILLAC ... $2695 BI COUPE. Radio, heater, automatic. full power, whitowau Uraa. Thl* waek colyl '59 CHEVROLET $1195 MXX>R with radio, haator. •t-“‘ ard itlek I. Sharp. Reduead week ooly. '59^ CHEVROLET $1595 IMPALA CONVERTIBLE. Automatic tranamlaaloo, radio and '59 FORD .......$ 895 ADOOR with radio, beater, white finlah with matcblnf mterlor. Special thl* week I '58 BUICK ,.....$1095 '57 CHEVROLET $ 795 Its ADOOR with automatic Iran*-■liMloQ, pover fUertflf sod krftktt. '57 CADILLAC .. $1595 BPARKLINO «] BEDAN With radio. heotor, whitewall Uraa, *x-capUcoally elaao Interior, like new point. I YR. GW WARRANTY JEROME 'BRIGHT SPOT" Orchird Lake at Cass FE8-CM88 Nbw atei Usod Cars IM am. Only n.iii. R. I, WICKERSHAM 71M W. Maple MAytair BdM LUTBLY NO MONEY DOWN. Aa- 1PM BONNBTILLE. 4 - DOOR htratof. power windowe, broket, ““■* tteenne, - nev tl iiiT^ PI "homer hight 7 Cheeiet, 'ftJ to *fl .$75 up IIM Packard .................$H Plenty ot other borralne. geopotny .Cara n AUbura IHI PONTIAC. CKXID CAR. PE A7I4I. H, Blfglns. Dealer. with HydmmatiC tranamlaiton,' power atacrint and bra**. wbltawoUa ood I* o one-owner and ^yi^ may boro M months “hAUPT PONTIAC .larkatoo MA AdMB one Mil* Norlh M n.8._lB_on MU OR AM13 after 8. IIM PONTUC nATION WAOON. — -- ‘tr. iMwer •tecrinf, )*^hrdmmntlc. By ________ 'fe AB114 nft*r_rp.nT M7 PONTIAC 4 DCiOR HARIA top. Btomhtol^xc eor-“— “ iTjohnaon. in 4-41W. NawMiUMiCwi IN »hm. BLdM. UL ADOOR. > FLOOR ~ Special - " 1959 PONTIAC Btor Chief, Adooi Hdan. It ha* tmn*ml«slan, . wljltowtU tfr**, r.*'rJ2r^ ™* PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St, FE 3-7954 1^ RAMBLERS Dams* Damos Any kind you want Wb disaaunt on Mr oondlUimad Amhnaasdor (tatlon wafon. R and G RAMBLER SUPER WAREBT EM A4UI 1141 Commarea Road 1959 FORD WAGON ADOOR, VI aafln*. ttondard *111(1, radio, heator. Only ll.NB mUe*. Only ll.BH. Ea«y term*. FRANK SCHUGK FORD MM at duokhom Lake Lake Orton MY l-MIl birminoram RAMBLER 8M 8, WOODWARD I Mtn from Pontiac SHARP CARS GLENN'S ‘BP PONTIAC Hardtop . IIM 'MPOMTIAC Adoor aharp .. IISM 'Bl FALCON Adoor. llkt new tlNB '87 MERCURT Adoor hardtop I 7W ■91 FORD Moor automatle ..IIM ■HPORO Adoor OaUxlo ■H CHETT Bol Air Adoor .. HIM ■u Rambler Bupor watoa iitii 'H PLYMOUTH Adoor Wafon 1141 ■M PORD Ciutom "loe'* . 'H CHETT BROOEWOOD Ntw—illiaiCwi 1959 Rambler American Acyilnder. Maodarr ' ^78$' Van Camp Chevrolet, Inc. IKktlitJik AatiRiyiniw? tloo WASCO. With B eyl. ra^ heater, a r*M mil* maarl BM down nhd naaumo pnymtnl* at ■ BI3.4B par aioothl Om yaar —-rantyl LLOYD MOTOM. Lie Mercury. Cornet^ IfMior, Ee Ford, liB a. Baflnaw Bt ABUi._________________. UM METROPOLTrAN. OOOp condlUoh. SMS. CaU SB4-7BB1 In Milford. im RAMBLER AD06K SPECIAL 1961 Volkswagen I door, radio heoter, whltewolli, llBht iraea (Intoh. 7.BB0 oetuoi mllaa, 1 ownar, $1,495 Suburban Oldsmobile M 8. WOODWARD Ml 4-4485 NEED TRANSPORTATION? Repossessions Bankruptcies Storage Cars —Assume Payments- ■u FORD POoor Bttok IIM I1.U Weakly ^ 'M PONTUC WttM M97 Bl W Bl Weakly ■17 PLYMOUTH.ADoor. SharpI . HIM . tllH ■H CHEVROLET WtBon .... I ‘H PONTUC Adoor waioo ( 'H IMPALA Hardtop V8 .... I GLENN'S MOTOR SALES M Waat Buroo Bt. , ^ FE ATTl ______PE A17W HASKINS OLDS SALE h power and cpulpmant non flntohi mtcI r>—amie ••M" Adoor I. with hydramatle power ateerlDf sThlue-SL.^ HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds WE ARE SHCX)TING FOR THE IN JUNE MOON FREE CEDAR PICNIC TABLE Bam* a* Dead In 8Ute Park* With laa Car Sold Over 50 1962 Ramblers Now in Stock 9 Out of 10 Can Buy With No Money Down 1961 Impala Adoor hordtop with V-B tntlne. KwersUd* traiumUalan. rMUo. beater and whltewMUl Freat white with n rad lntcrloi;l Real aarp' in and out! $2395 1959 Ford Galaxie l-door hardtop with VY aulA maUe tmiumlulon, raiUo. heater aad whitewall*. Beautiful hfu* with a whit* top. $1399 1958 Chevrolet Bel Air 4-door with V-i enxlae. outemaA to tranamlaaloo, power ateerinf and brake*, and many other $1195 1957 Mercury Wagon Commuter •'pesiencer, vith a beautiful red tod vhiU ftnlah. Double power and U fully equipped. EieepUoonlly nice. $795 1959 Rambler American with radio, heater, whitewall*. recUnInt aeat*. aparkllna tu-tene Unia. A on* owner and I* very nice Ibrooxbout! $895 1960 Ford Galaxie Adoor foda with T4. outomoA Ic trmaamlaalon, radio, heater, whitewall* and slanmiuf two-Ion* blu* (tnlih. $1595__________ 1960 Rambler Classic Super 4-door with radio, boater, whitewall*, r e c 11 n I n r aeat*. S^kllnf blue with Ivory top! $1295 1961 Falcon 2-Dbor CuMom Inteiier, tinted window*, radio, heater and vauewalla, 7,100 aetuM mil** on thl* obony bluk boauty. $1695 $1177 aea'u, oteer extra! Seminole red hnia, wia a whit* topi $1995 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air Adoor with V-B. Powerflld* tranamlaaloo. radio aad haator. Clean car throufbouti $395 1960 Rambler Super cnaulc atatlon wasen with A cylinder enilaa, atandard traa-mlulon, radio and heater. OnA owner, new ear trad Ala I BoUd whit*. $1570 1961 Rambler American Adoor aedan eria a Acyllndcr analn*. atandard traumlMlon a^ beater. 8,080 actual mile* I A one-owner, new ear trade-in ud luat like naw I Payment* u low a* 040 per month. $1575 1957 Chevrolet Panel tk-ton In excellent condition throuBhoutl Hlxh rubbor, aolld body aad a beautiful black flnia with white to^ Huy more mlto* left In thl* work horael $675 1951 PbiltTac Catalina Convertible with auMmtllc tranamlaaloo. radio, heater, power ateerlnt and brakes. Beautiful maroon flnia with WHITE TOP! $2795 1960 Rambler Super Claale BtaUon Wafon with A cylinder atlne, atandard trana-mtaaion. radio, heater end Ba nata blu* tiniahl On* owner I $1585 —TO SERVE YOU- -GENE SPENCE -DON GRAHAM —BILL SPENCER -CHUCK VANCE -LOU GREER BILL SPENCE RAMBLER-JEEP Sales - Service •• 32 S. Main Street CLARKSTON MA 5-5861 'BB'PONTIAC ADoor. Shot ■Tm 150 S. Saginaw St. FE 8-0471 UqumATION LOT NtwaMlMCm ABUl. B MHTRO COB-radio, heater, whlte-I low mlteBf* ODA TM* ear la In ‘Bl ohi On* year war-3 HOTORi Unepln. 1*1, Hateor, Enfoa ■Riii-ws.*ssa TOUmAORN IMS. lUR ROOF, OLIVER'S DEMO Turnover Sale! Top Trade In Allowance on These Cars '62 SKYLARK with a l-ap**d tranamlattoo, radio, heater, lolt ray'Unted b1*m, poeltracUeo axle, whltewiUa, euatom lop and bucket aatal Was $3143 NOW $2988 '62 BUICK Special Convertible rwiT"n!aH!ffto"'S|.'^M'‘tJa “ Was $3152 NOW $2999 '61 BUICK Special Wagon BeauUfuI deluxe, erlUi automatle tranamlHioo. radio, heator, power ateertnx. power .brake*., power tallfato. top rack ud an ^ whtt* flaia with rad Interior I ■'Huy oxtrut ” * Was $3665 NOW $3379 '62 BUICK LeSabre 2-Door Sedan. wlUi an Ml whit* flnia, blue tatortor. automaUe tnnamlA aloo. radio, boater, power atoertas and whitewall* I Was $3328 NOW $2999 '62 BUICK LeSabre 4-Door with radio, heater. automaUe tranamlaMon. power ateertai and brakai. wtatewMIi. cadet blue flnia wim euttem tateriorl Deluk* Uram* window moldtnfal Was $3719 NOW $3459 '62 BUICK LeSabre 4-Door Hardtop, and w* hnv* tiro to chooa* from, ono with a teal mill (Inia ^ tti* nUiar, a bariundv flnia I AutomaUe tranapiluton, radio, haater, power iteeri^ and brUM, wbttewMla, dalux* wbaal cover* and toft ray tinted flau. Was $3864 NOW $3577 OUVERBUICK - 32 YEARS - 210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9101 Come to Rochester and see what they said COULDN'T BE DONE! 1960 Bi!ick 1959 Pontiac 1959 Buick LeSnbr* Adoor hardtop. Power 1955 Ford 1961 Corvair 4-door aedan. AutomaUe tmoA 1960 Pontiac Bcanevlll* watoo. Power atotr-tas. power hrakei. HydramaUc, radio, heater and wbttewMI*. Solid white. Brolhor. you'U reaUy so flrti cinu ta thl* one. I960 Falcon Adoor aodu. AwlomaUe trani-mliclon. radio, heater, whlte-waU Urea. A aoUd white beauty. A moat cooDomicM compact 1960 Pontiac trim to match. 1959 CHEVROLET Bidoor wafon with power atecr-taf, power braka, V-B anttae, PewerfUdA radio, baiter and whitewalla. Ouaranteed only I7.BM actuM mUa. Solid white and aharp. 1960 Pqntiac • 1956 Oldsmobile “IT* Adar hardtop. Man, M la 1960 Valiant d driva Uk* a dram. 1959 Chev>' BeautUM blu* ftatoh with Here Are Some of pur Typical Low Prices! 1961 Monza 1959 Ford. d* AdMr aedan. Stond- T8 MA 1956 Studebaker "1956 Plymouth Moor • • d 0 ftgtoaiAUe radio and heator. Too ean't 1961 Pontiac CoDverUbl* with pown atertat, power hrUa, Hydramatle, radio, behter, whltewaOi. BeanU-(ul sold ftaUh with Ivory lop. 1959 Pontiac Blar Chief aedan. Power itear-tax. powar braka, HydramaUc, radio, heater, whitewall*. Blu* with matehtax leather - trim. OMy M.SN acluM mUei. Burry See or Call One of Our Courteous Salesmen: PAT JARVIS JOHN DONLEY CY PERLMAN RON SHELTON GUS GORSLINE )W car trada-la. 1960 Corvair 1959 Rambler 1960 Buick (door hardtop. Puwar atoe Dyaaflew, radio, boater, i wan Ura. BaaoUlul rad a Ttata'a nothtax Uk* that I 1959 Bonneville 1959 Buick Power BteeitaB Adoor aodaa. DruMlow. radio, hater, wbltewalli. A rod and white Wuty. Ranlly w oyafUL 1957 PLYMOUTH Balvadar* Adoor hardtop. Power ateeiinx and hraea, aute-aaUe tranamluton, V4 anxta*. 1960 Pontiic wall Urea. Ttat en* It Uk* naw taild* nnd out Thl* hup la extra uIca 1961 Galaxie And If* n Adoor, tool Power brake*. nutomaUc. radio, heaA or, tpauw tiro nerer naod. A wild black beauty wtth rad and ivory trim. Wow! Better bnrryl 1961 Pontiac SteUon eraxon. Power etartaf, power brakea. Hydraauitte. radio. heater. whItowaUa. That popular rad flnia with rad trim. If* a baaty. 1959^ PONTIAC BoamevlU* 4-door hardtop. Pow-*r ttetrlnx and braku. Hydra-maUe, radio, heator. whitewaU Ura. 8oUd white with bauU-(ul leather trim. Left xo drat clou today I 1960 BelAif Adoor aedan. Poi(frxUde, radio, heater, whltewaU*. On* owner and a new ear trad*-ta. 1957 Buick Eatate waxon. Black aad white Baia. Power iteerlnx. power SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICk SALES and SERVICE '223 MAIN ST. OLIVE 1-8133 . ' ROCHESTER Open Mon., Tues., Thurs. 8:30 to 9, Wed., Fri., Sat. 8:30 to 6 ! TriE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUyR 11, 1962 j. THlRl^V SEVEy t vToday's Television Programs-- kr rtitloM Med la iWs e • Mbjael M chaage aHbaai aMea Ctoeert «-.W( Vhue*l1~Wt«a.T1| CfoeaM a-4IW.ir.tT CaeMWl m-*K» MOfmAV I^VKTWO l;W (2) Movtp. (coot.) (OJd.SqiHul (T) Actiea Tbaatar (oont.) (S6) American Memoir l:tt (2) Weather <4> (2) ^ (4) Naan (7) Nean You AM Tk n (56) Self Encounter 1:41 Nean, Sporto UiU (2) Sporta (4) Weather U:M (2) Weather (4) Sporta UiM(2)Movie: “Paria in Spring.” (1S35) After man threatena to Jump off. EUtel Tower becauae hia aanet- (7) (9) Motle: "Tire Laat Ride.’ (1944) A police detective aeU out to uncover racketaera la-■ponalbla Aar aellli« of faulty tirea which have canaed number of fatal acddenu. Rlcb-ard Travii, Charlea tang, Eleanor Parlter. „ (56) Laat Continent (d6) Way of Life 1:46 (2) Pete and Gladya (4) National Velvet (7) Cheyenne (Cont.) (9) Movie (Cbat.) (56) Science and Government 4:14 (2) Father Iteowa Beat (4) (Color) Price la Bight (7) (9) 4:44 (2) Danny Thomaa (4) STth Precinct (7) Suriaide 6 (9) Feativel (Qnt.) (56) Gueat Traveler 9:14 (2) Andy GrlfSth (4) STth Precinct (emit.) (7) Surtilde 6 (eont.) (9) Feathnl (Oont.) 14:41 (2) Julie and Carol (i^iecial) (4) Thriller (Ti BenOiaey (9) Newa 14:16 (9) Weather 14:14 (9) Telescoph UAW lliN (2) Julie and Carol (COiA.) (4) Thriller (eont.) (7) Ben Chway (Coot.) (9) Don Meaner 11:41 (2) Newa (4) h Jump oft. Mary Ellla, TuOio Cannlnatl, Ida Lupino. (T) Weather lltW (4) Tonight a) Movie: "My Uttle Chickadee.” (1940) A mi ' (7) (9) Movie: havea.” (1941) Attemptta« to get daughter happily mar- TV Features and carriea off not only gold but glamoroua female pan-aenger aa well. Mae Waat, W. C. Fieldi, Joeeph Callda, Dick Foran, I\niy KBi|^, Margaret Hamilton, RteS Donnelly, Gene Anatin, Anne Nagel TUESDAY MOSOONa 6:14 (2) Meditatkaia 6:16 (2) On the Farm Front 6:14 (2) Spectrum '62 Tt64 (2) BWana Don (4) Today (7) Funewa 7:14 -^IT) Johnny Ginger 6:64 (2) Captain Kangaroo 6:16 (7) Jack LaLannc (2) Movie: "Seven Keyi to By United Pnm Intf-nuttaul TO TELL ms nVTB, 7:! p. m. (2). Panel game. Bud CoUyer hoeti. THE RIFUSMAN, 8:90 p. m. (7). 'Two Ouncea at Tin." Sammy Da-vla Jr. atara aa a gunman aeeldng avenge hla father’i death. Rp- “JVUB AND CABOL AT CAE-EOqs HALL,” 10 p. m. (2). A taped, one-hour mualcal-coinedy apedal atarring Julie Andrewa of 'My Fair Lady" fame and Carol himett of ' trievlaion’i (tarry take-off on the "Nauiiev Dancera," 'The Pratty Family, Swiaa Adk aingera. and "Big D,” a Weatem roino. KN CASEY. 10 p. m. (7). "The Inadent Heart.” Oaaey’t former U:U (56) German Leaaon il:W (2) tleir liortiDir (4) Concentration (7) Yourt for a Song (9) Movie: "Eacape in the Sun." (56) BuckaMnBob TUESDAY AITEBNOON 11:66 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Your Flrrt lu- may prove fatal Repeat. TEBIUJEB, 10 p. m. (4). "The Ratum at Andrew Bentley." A couple inherit an unde’i eatate with a ptovlao that they check the burial vault daily. Repeat. TONIGHT. 11:15 p. m. (4). Ilort ahl it the gueat boat. Gueate include Inger Stevena, Henry Morgan. Otto Preminger, alnger Nancy Wflaon and Hi«h Hettier, puB-r at Playboy Magaiine. (Color). r r r r r r r IT 12 IS u IS IS ir II Is 21 r I sr tr m ST 2T u J k D r tt TT IT IT IT IT U V Bd Si D \ SS sr BS 5S H n Mott aa SSSS^ M ntKr (L*Ub) naou n>« (7) Movie: "Chftetmai Hobday.” Part 2. (56) MathemaGca for Yo*i Pill (56) Safety 16:66 (4) Say Wtim (56) Our Scientifle World 16:16 (7) Tlpi and Tricka 16:14 (7) Newt (9) Billboard M:I6 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Life of Riley (9) Chez Helene (56) EngUah VI I4:tr. (9) Nuraery Sdiool Time 11:64 (2) Decent Brida (4) (Odor)' Price la Right (7) Ernie Ford (9) Romper Room DETROIT » George Ronuwy urged Michigan abandon what he termed Dynasty Issue Raised by GOP Spaniah, Indiana tUte trooper Michael Raaheta hiu a difficult time ex^atnlng to Felix Ocana of Paato, Colombia that the minimum apeed limit on the Indiana toll road la 40 miTetrper^ hour. (X'.ana'a Model T just won't go that faat ao he will have to take a differem road on iiia trip to Ottawa. Ont. from Ecuador. He ataricd hla Journey in - May «H960;-- boston IB — Maaaachusetta RepubUcana threw the dynaaty la-tue at the DemocraU today over their 4»nyention piaolce of young Edward M. Ketaiedyr-the Pi'ceUnJuatlca in thit atate became I dent’s brother, for the U.S. Senate. The GOP. with a dynaaty problem of tta own. movea Into Wbreea-?r tor its convention Saturday. Says Military (56) S TORK (AP) — Tlte Defense Department is er man-in-ipace program to prevent military control of van* by the Soviet Union, the New Yock Ttanee said to^. (7)( (56) What’s New 11:14 (2) Search tor Taanorrow (4) T (7) 11:44 (56) Spanidi Leaacn 1|:46 (2) Guiding Light (« Newa 11:46 (4) Newa (56) German Lesson 1:44 (2) Star Performance (4) Groucho (7) Day in Court (9) Movie: “DeviTa Island.' 1:11 (56) French Lewon l:H (7) News 1:44 (2) As the World Turns (4) "People Are Funny’’ (7) How to Many a MUIioo- The nation's apace program, until now largely a civilian program, is set to acquire a military tinge, a Waahington diapatch to the Times said. After yeara of retuctauce and oppoattkm, the Detonae Department has finally accepted the need tor a military apace program aimed at control of space well as its exploration. As a reiult, the department has decided that the Air Force should develop the technology manned satellite capable of In-Hweting and destroying a hostile vehicle in apace. (56) World History 1:11 (4) Faye Elizabeth t:44 (2) Password (4) Jan Murny (Color) (7) Jane Wyman (56) French Laason t:« (4) News l:N (2) House Party (4) Lorette Young (7) Seven Keys 1:44 (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) ()ueen tor s Day (9) Movie: “Itot Captain to a Lady.” 9:14 (2) Verdict to Youri (4) Our Five Daughters (7) Who Do You Trustt (2) Newt 4:44 (2) Brighter Day (4) Hake Room tor Da(Hy (7) American Bandstand 4iU (2) Secret Storm 4:» (9) Telescope UAW 4:M (2) Edge of Night (4)lfei«'a Hottywood (9) Razzle Dazzle (7) American Newsstand Beyond this decision, the partment—at the urging of White House and the National Aeronauttea and Space Administration—)ws undertaken a six-month study to draft an enlarged military apace program. As explained by defense officiate. the Air Force will not be given a go-ahead immediately to devetop a large-scale, operational system of manned aatellites but wUl develop the techrxilagy, com-ponente and subaystems requtoed The expectation to that fUUds tor this purpose will be included in the mUitary budget to be pre-aented In Jannaiy tor the 1964 (4) h 6:N (2) Movie: ‘Those Were the (4) (OqIot) ‘Gtoorge Pierrot (7) Action Theater (9) Popeye and Pals (56) What’s New? 6:M (56) British Calendar 6:46 (56). News Magazine 6:66 (4) Kukla and OOto --Today's Raidio Proc^rams- wxTS ora: wvaa ti WWJ. N(«i WXTZ. aciMittaa CXLW. Newi WJBE. Robert a, tM WCAA, A. Oatptr Wlrt>N. Mvm. asMU BsriMM WWJ. WiMnew S««t WXVZ. Al«i Dretor CKLW Bud Davtat WCAR, A CooMf_ WPON. N*«*. D. nao tiSS-WJn. OoMt RbOW WWJ. PIMM OpIM wxvk ga Mortw cxlW. r Iitvu irk tbt Stibor wcAK. u.'StavnM WPON. M«VI. Tta* 7:i»-Wjn Choral •WRU, nana Opiata StSa-WPR. Caneait CKLW. B. Stataa WPON. Nava. TIm a:J»-WWJ. Pare Cltiabet a;la-WJR. TonlaM al t WPON. Neva. Tina t;l»-WJR, llantaraW laiaa-WZR. Yoar R< WCAR NaWi. teOTta WPON. Nava. 1^ fl;IS—WJR. a. Hamolda K’A'ST WCAR. Nava, eharidaa CRLW. Sat Onaar. DmM WJBR. Nava, Aran WCAR. Naara l-WdR NayiL IluaW wa. Nrva. Rnbam CKI W. Navi, ^otr OaalU WJDK. Neva, Aaarj WCaR, Nr— WPOn; Nava. Doa MeLaod a;aa-WJR, Hava B Ouaat WWJ, Navt.‘BohaMa WJPK, Hava Aaary WPON. Naarar Daa MeLaad WlYZ. Paal Harvar. WaU CXLW. Hava, OaaM WJBX. Nava. Aftrr ■WJR, Saak Narrit W. Man .M^aa ia:aa..WiR Earl Ra-ia WWj, Nava. Maitaaa WXTB,------- cRir. Hiaa-ORLW. Raaaadr CalUat uia»~wjR. WWJ, Nava, L] WXTZ. Wl^r OX1.W, Tiaa M v«. WJBK. Nava. RaM WCAR Nava, MaKya TiicsoAV ArrsaNouN vvl^R Hava. I 1'KL.ilv, aoa Vaa WJBR Nava, Raid WXYZ. Wtatar. Rava CRLW. Rava. too 1 WJM Nava. RaM WPON, Hava Otoaa WWa. Nava, ItaavaU WXYk, mAt Nava CRtW, Hava, too vaa WJBR. Nava. Laa a.-as-WJR laava, paevaaaa WWJ. Hava. MasvaU WXYZ. SafeuUaR Nava CKJ.W. OSTMa _ WJUK, Nava. Rakart u WCAR Havt) ShaildaB WPON. Mawa, Bab Oraai ipai^kW WxVz SMaaUan CRLW Nava Darta WJBR Nawa Ua WCAR Rava Bhariaas WPOR. Rtwa Bab Ora 4M-WJR MvaM Man WWJ. Bmobaa'a Svaisa ciaw. Bad uartaa (,aa-WJR Nava. Muale Nall WWJ. Nava Bunper Club WJBR. Hava. Laa S;aa-WJR Maato Nall WWJ, Nava BUMpat C WCAR. Bpvna Big Snake Is Victim Has Space Plan of Too Much Pull Defenie Dept. Wtints to Prevent Control by Redf, It Report PASADENA, (tolif. m- CoUege studott Mike Krieger wanted to help a friend's snake work up an ap^te, SO he put the 7-foot anaconda in a bathtub M warm water in hto apartmant yesterday. grabbed its tail and started puU-Ing. to tee now perhaps with an appetite but ceiialnly with little stomach for further such adventures. Kriagar said. the humane society took custody. wsttr in the tub hdped the ■ a eoitehlooded tropical sbIbmI al _ _ to aa BBder- gradsala, happened to leek Into bead had appeared la hto ptamb-tog. Still unaware of dual Interest, Mch man bent to the tate of saving the snake. Mflce and two triento — not wanting neighbors to know of their pet ->■ tugged at the tafl. Bob enlisted two fire department units, several policemen and a humane society w^er in i tiy to coax the snake out. It took an hoar sad a halt — whUe the snake WRlIed wearily they were at odds over f The men then broke the plumbing and retrieved the snake, by I fad mors Intersated to tat- Fire Wrecks Building at Summer Resort SOUTH HAVEN (D - Fire ye» terday destroyed the 80-room building of the Silver Beach Resort hen. An aulffliary ho^ng unit also was lost. South Haven firemen {ought the blaze for an hour and a half. The building, built before turn of the century .and torn . known as the Newcombe Resort, was one of the finest lesorts in the area dui-ing the early Louis Jaconson, owner of the resort tor the last 15 years, tefuaed to estimate how much the de- ____^ _ property was worth, but staled that $15,000 worth of equipment had been destroyed. lo Vote on Tax to Aid FLINT (6» — A oontrovcrstol tax profNMsl to raise $670,000 a year for qiedal education tor handS-can>ed children went before Genesee (tounty School District voters today. HIW YOR» -humor — luekUy. He’s going to need one. Bomt of the anvil chorus to trylnf to acalp him. except that baldneae aealped him long ago. over hto auMe, "AdvUa and Oonaent" It portraya one UJ. Senator — briefly effeminate, and another aa a dei levy, was advocated by tee Ocna-ty Eeari «f Edneatem bat op-poeai tee ntot Board of Eda- Pre-electton dispute has diaip. (toe school official's home was picketed hy parent and children demmstrators. The county board tried unsuccessfully to get a court injunction against the Flint board in a wrant^e over statemenU hy the latter. The county board says the program to necesury. The Flint board tods otharwtoe. The two groups disputed over ultimate control of the proposed program. Survey WXv5r^.,R^. Commou Market WASHINGTON tUPI) - Senate Democratic whfo Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Miim., urged the admin-totration today to conduct a nationwide labor-management survey at industry’s competitive position in relation to the Eungtean Corn-Market Nattonal AaaodatloB of DIreet t tee sarv ceadaeted by tee Preddeat’a Humphrey said the committee’s findings could be the base tor a second White House Conference on National Economic Issucr /‘)Ve need new action and new poAdM hy both government and private industry to boost export pf our products overseas — and leed them now,” be declared. Otto'll Need His Humor Against Senate Friends By lARL WILSON Drop Segregated Votinci, " Romney Urges of Negroes the weekend to ‘segregated voting pattern" ter ‘The OOP gubamatorlal candi- date said in a speeoh..to the trade . union leadership council, a prt-domtnateiy Negro labor orgaaitt-tion. “the Democratic piirty today validly accepis and talM for granted the overwhelming linaJorNy support of Negroes.” then addsd: "tlM sagragalad votteg pat> tank of tea Negte tojsto as is-leRtiRg at tee abns and gaais ‘•The Negro today knows that he should not be taken for granted in the industrial and commercial field. However, he to overiooking , something just as important when Party in McflSacnUMttS he adheres rigidly to one political ■ - party. Eventually he to taken for granted, and, others of whom the party is not so sure receive greater Hit! Dams' Backing Prasidanfi Brother ’(X>1JU> DO MOBT *‘I believe I coidd do more tl others to correct the problem of racial discrimination and human Georgs Cabot LadgR aan R thiiric it must .be based Upon co-operation and practical solutions. "I thinkit to time to stop usli« dtoeiirainatkm as a poUtkal football. 7 will fis^it for fuU traedom. equal opportunity, equal rseogni-tlon, and Justice for alL" dor sad tea 1666 OOP RssMRea for viM prsiMaRt, aai UB. Rap. iRBieRM OBrOa, eonptoteig Ms Lodge's father once held until John F^tamwly defeated Mm to 1». righto bMora, during and after th» aUette.'’ addlne that orMter The younger Lodge told a group of coovantion ddegates at hto fa-thar'a home to Bevtily yaaterday: slaetton,'' addli« that "no greater ba randerad any '1 have been lumped .wifii the dynasty by my opponent. The dy-aaaqr iaaua to a good tonw and one that I can paittoidarly pms ‘1 hava no brother to the W^ to HMaker of the House, nor have I had a ctoae relative to high elec-office ter 10 yaara.” «ha Is spaakMT at tee Ha«a was to tea BM« Edward at OpriagllaM . OeR Ed- wwd J. MeOemaek Jr. He to a ■ephew al apeaker John W. Me-OscMMk si Mnisrhaiklts. Ontto. who wm be 69 to September, hammered away on the Issue of “tounaturtty.” It Ted Kennedy hu been Curda • group than to distribute political baato other than teat of top • available tor public aerviee. !*1 will anwtat people on the basis of competency and ahffity, Wonan Tortsnd lqrli|iNiizii%ITCH WaasrtyiaMtetewte . _________ _____told a campaigB meetiiE, “it to dear that the Re-................... of Its dktote who OMi fight hard OB tea issue at immaturtty.” Though the tired DemocraU were home from Sprii«fidd. their bat-tlhw was far from over. In Maasa- since candidates who fail to whi Bans Iraq Door Hunting I a warm aensa of BAGHDAD (AP)-The Agriculture Minisuy has outlawed the hunting o( deer throughout Iraq for three years. Officials said iiqr cars to run down and stay • RENTAL • SOFT WATER ^3 CLte SALIS-w$i99 Ug UNDSAY SOFT WATER Ca ft Mewham Ik N Mill 1M2 AIR CONDinONIRS $167.00 S9VHrSI(NltRAp». T don’t mind what they aay — I hnvo never made a picture everybody liked," he says, with a smile, a shrug and an Austrian accent. ‘Why don’t you eometline?" I asked him. ★ ★ ★ He laualied aoftty. A nice picture everybody liked — no controversy — It vrould dlel I saw the filiB previewed. Pranehat Tmm. whe played a dyiag Preddeat, was there aai ohvlendy wae healthy — ha went out tar a drink. Burgess Meredith bad a great loene as a payehopathle wttnesR After at a sapper party 1 said: “You were a very bellevaUe mental caae." He bowed ... and repeated the facial twitch he used. "Have you heard from Sam Ooldwyn about the plcturt?' I asked Preminger. ‘How can I when we’re not speaking?” he said — refarrlng to an old feud. Preminger has a Diego Rivera painting of three lemons on the waU of hto 5th Av. offloe. It’s called *Three Lemone.’’ ‘TTiree lemons’ Utle does not refer to my last three pictures,” hs tells csllefR "As It WH dons In W4A—before »y lut three plctttrea.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Marilyn Monro# didn’t show up three days straight at ’’Something’s Got to Olve” — as they put It, "She’s 72 hours Beaatiful Jean Bannatt'a escort: good-looking Jimmy Joe DlMagglo writes from Europe hell visit East Berlin Henry Fonda’s date at the "Advise and Consent’’ premiere was ex-wlfe Susan ... NataUa Waad’a wearing a new chignon hairdo suggested by Lto Taylor. Sydney Chaplin and Oroon Bean arc adllbblng lines In Uways,” aa a gag, throwing the rest of tbs cast off . Alan King, who has a*routlna kidding medlcR teas given a lunch by the AMA In Chicago . . . Conida PranMs twisted In blue Jeans at the RoundtaUe. KARL’S PEARLS — Yon seldom see office workers wasting! time around the water eoolet ahy more — they’re all tmt hav-l tog coffee. { TODATTI BEST UCGH: "Personally.” says a local hus-j band, ’’I’m grateful to Lto Taylor — putting all us married mem back In style agalnl” WISH I’D SAID THAT: This Is the time of year when thei guy who worked so hard to graduate starts wondering what the hurry was. One of the quickest ways to meet people to to sit on the wrong blanket at the beach. That’s cari, brether. | CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS Become Debt Free the Sensible Way. Arrange for a Schedule of Payments to Fit Your Income. • NO LIMIT TO AMOUNT • Requirements: Your Sincere Desire to Get Out of Debt. Phone FE 8-0456 or SEE Micbigai Credit Counsellors 702 Pontiec State Bonk Bldg. Nambor—Amwicoa Asaocialioa Credit Coaaiallots —Mickiqaa Auocialfon ot Cradit Cauatallon labs M. Haasaa, DIracfar StMa laqalatad LacaUr Ownad sad OSaratad Utaaaad-laadad SUPER DISCOUNTS COLOR TV, BUCK and WHITE TV RADIOS, STEREOS Bafora You 6uy . . . Chack Our Low. Low Pricat.. . Guaraniaad to Sava You Monayl RCA BEST SERVICE > BEST VALUES ZENITH f Yaort IxRoriaaca to Celar Tf TRY US! Oaafl « to S Monday end Friday CONDON’S RADIO I TV 730 Wort Huron St. - 4rm%* tmm Xnw foN■Oflfi*'. — 4.6736 THlRTYEIGtiT A-. TgE PONTIAC PRESS. MO>ft)AY, Jiryfe jl, 1t)62 MW "T Vattrinorians Spend $6,000 on Drugs Yearly nm y«lK (OPI) -.ITip typJ: ^ >Ve.eflMriaii buyi spllwd-ouitcl^ ^OQO in drusi earn ye«r. ‘IIm Mtlmate; from tlU New York Stftte As«ocl«tk>n of PuUic Health I Veterinarians, Is coupled with a report that each of the 19. r . vets nationwide is responsible, on the average, fdr the health ^ 3t5 horses, T,785 cattle, 23T7 sheep, 4,98S ' hogs, 31,063 poultry, 3,083 dogs, and 1,106 caU. Campers Take 'Homes' Along on Yacafion ------— r- ^ ; I ■ Resiefents of Martinique, ftfl About 400 locamotives are or-Caribbean island, ran cars on ddered each year by American rail-blend of rum add gasoline during road companies. All are diesels Woidd War IL land turMne-electric tmlta: By BEN nnUEOAR (B Astansattve Writer DETROIT — When families to the open.rosd tor their HOFFMAN’S MKT. 526 N. Perry St. Open 9 to 6 Daily 9 to 9 Friday MONDAY-TUESDAY-WEDIIESDAY SPECIALS! I this summer, duuices are better than ever they’ll be taking their vacation homes with them. The postwar boom in tents and tracers already has pushed the camping business to unprecedented peaks. And now the newest phase la the vehicle which includes keeping and eating accomodations. For years, handy do-lt-youraelfen have been improvising becLi and camping facilities ^around their trusty station wagons. Hotfmon'i Own "BUTCHER BOY" STEAKS 59i Doliciotu-SlicBd PORK LIVER 2 for OQ( lbs. aO f ^average n VALUABiE COUPON Mae.-TiMi.-Wad. Oeiyl This Caepaii EntMas Basrar ta ONE LB. COUNTRY-FRESH REMUS BBTTER... 39 WITH ANY IS MIAT PURCHASEI , One of the first of thes? Volkswagen Microbus with Its double side doors, rear engine and a roof high enough to allow an man to stand up. Chevrolet land Ford cante Inlo'rear benches which convert iMo a this market a year ago with the Corvair Grpenbriar and the line bus, now marketed as a |hl-con chib wagon. ★ All three of these units oome originally with bench seaU, carrying eight or nine people. But the seats can be removed and the in-jvlth tables, beds, m a toUet and running water.- se that the fittings esa he fai-ottiNed tar year vaoatim trip. children's bed, paneling for’ the left wall, floor covering. It also has bed boards for a double b^. dining table, door shelf, cushions, curtains, screens, two-burner camp stove, ice box, watqr tank with spigot and. a chem|ew proposed airport immediately north of the Pontioc City Limits; ond WHEREAS, the United States Supreme Court hos recently held that the outhorities maintaining such on airport ore liable for oil donidge, nuisance ond on-noyoTKe from jet aircraft. - NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that this Commission does hereby register objection to the expenditure of County tox funds for this unrealistic and visionary project which, if completed, will bring injury and domoge to the home owners of the City of Pontiac whose property is in the flight pottetn of aircraft usinig this field and to that end this Commission instructs its representotivw on the Ooklond County Board of Supervisors of this project os being on unnecessary, wasteful and unjustified expenditure of tax funds needed for more worthwhile proj'ects. PuWishcri m JulL Service, ond in grateful appreciation to Moyor Londry, Commissioners Ledford, Bottom ond Kirby, by the OAKUND COUNTY HOMEOWNERS Mi TAXPAYERS’ ASSOCIATION SiMMer ediee im hate tekee liy: CHy ef Sytvee lekt. City ef BwMey, VIHeia ef Lek# Oriee, TewMkty ef Orieii, Tewii-skip if Heity, Teweikty ef lyee, Teweiklp ef Peetiec, Tewe-tkiy ef OeUeed, Ttwinkiy ef Rest. This hsue it vitol to every texpeyer in Ooklond County.. If you ore interested in how your tex money it hendled, attend the eext general meeting at Pontiac Nortii.rn High School Jane 20, 8:00 P. M. The Weather I'.H. Writhrr r»r»a>t I'urlly rluudy, ahoMcra (Utuih r>if :i THE PONTIAC PRE VOL. 120 NO. 100 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. MONDAY. .TUNE 11, 1002—88 PAGES DNrnro*?«^*^ilTiiRNATio*AL Filling Posts on School Boards Today Union Hall Dedicated City, Waterford See Big Turnout FINAL T01’1:H — United Auto Workers of-(iriult prepare lo slip the romersione into pla<'e under Ihe new LiOO.OOO Local .‘ilM union hall at 525 S. East Blvd. during dedication ceremonies Sunday. Wielding the tiowel above is j:mil Ma/e>. LAW sisrelary treasurei. Others ilrom lefli are Carl Hunler, local financial secretary; Kenneth Mprris. L’AW regional director; and Andy Wilson, local president. UAW Facility 'Progress Sign' A heavy turnout of 6,0001 out of 42,000 eligible voters 1 IS expected in today’s Pontiac Board of Education election, despite possible thundershowers. Only a prolonged rain isj expected to keep voters home, Vernon Schiller, school board treasurer, reports. Polling stations opened at 7 a.m. and will close at 8 p.m. The' city and sutTOundlng areas continued in the Pontiac Sr'hool District are lo determine which of five candidates will fill two seats on the board. The terms are lor lour years. Competing lor the vacancies are: Or. WaHer I.. (iodsell, liM-unv Early reports indicate that the voter turnout ^or the Waterford ToWnship Board of Education election today is about normal. Polls opened at 7 i and will remain open until 8 p.m. Four candidates are seeking two four - year - term seats oh the board of education. The names of five candidates apiicar on the official ballot. Darwin E. Catitn. however, has withdrawn from Ihe race. 5Irs. Elsie (William) Mihalek, Mrs. I ails Slater Nassironi. Merle H. Smith. Ur. Bi-auregard Stubblefield. The field of candidates In-rludes one incumbent and three first-time candidates. Incumbcflt Eldon C. Rosi'gart. president of the school board lor the past two years, is seeking second term. The other candidates are Norman L. Cheal, Elmer 0. Johnson and Ellis L. Nordbeck. Dr. Godsell, 34, of 307 W. Hurort St., a chiropractic physician and presently president of the board of education, is seeking his third Rosegart, 43, lives at 2983 Shawnee Lane, Drayton Plains, with his wife and two children. He is an instructor of instrumental music in Ihe Pontiac School system. term. Mrs. Mihalek, 40, of 1392 Vine-wood Ave., is president-elect of Northern High School PTSA, has held presidencies of the Pontiac PTA Council, Madison Junior High PTSA and Malkim PTA. She seeks a second term. Mrs. Nasstrom, 30. of 502 E. Mansfield Ave., is a registered X-ray technician tind active community fund drives, Ihe League ol Women Voters and the board of directors ol the County Home-owners and Taxpayers' Association. She seeks a first term. Investigators Seek Train Wreck's Cause Mazey Hails Local 594 for Construction of Merle H. Smith. .36. of 2574 Ivanhoe Ave., is an English teacher at Highland Park Junior College and has been a leacher 15 years. He is vice president of the Sylvan Manor subdivision and member of the Oakland Community Advisory Council. He seeks a first term. FROM OUR NEWS WIRES MISSOULA, Mont. — Investigators sought today to New Headquarters determine whether brake failure or human error cau.sed yesterday’s wreck of a Northern Pacific passenger train “"<■ l*r«>" >■><1 inJurM 243 others. UTmed '*a symbol of union proK- SpOkCSmfln said 0116 OF th6 OthOF caUS6d tnc Kss here•' by UAW sx)ms, 2H. of Ekalaka. Mont. Sixty-eight othpr passengers were confined ant director of Ihe UAW's t)e-partment, Kenneth Morri% UAW' regional director and Carl Huiker, local financial secretary. Wilson compared the new hall’s aoditartum, hav|g|^a SW-seating capacity, with the oM quartern wiiere only '20| persnns could gather at a time. Also, he noted that parking space tor 156 cars is provided in nexi lo Ihe new hall. Parking for meetings at Ihe former building always posed a problem, he recalled. Wilson said the new building wai proving e.xiremely efficieni for un ion administration here. .MANY FAnUTIES The new quarters also contain a recieaiipn room, open during normal daytime hours, for relir^ union members. Television, shuffle-board and other game equipment is provided. The new building is fully alr-coiMlillon<-d. The audltoriuiii, la the center of tlu> building. Is f I a a k'r d by offlees, a fully c<|uipped kitchen and Ihe rei-rea- linn n Sound from the auditorium can be piped into eUl of the other rooms via a public address s.vstem to accommodate larger crowds. The building costs are being paid out of a building fund collected through a per capita tax oh union local members. Wilson said. to Be Given Tonight It derailed at a spasd of more' than 75 miles an hoar -after rounding a curve and starting down a canyon grade on Kvaro Hill l( miles north of here. Results of the Pontiac and Waterford Schoid Board elections will be avalinble tonight through leleplHHie Inquiies to The Pontiac Incomplete results are expected to be available beginning at 8:50 p.m., the final results latei^s soon aa they are tabu- Picture on Page 2 j state Traffic Toll at ^46 The tomaihipg injured were treated for minor injuries and released. The dead girl’s two stepsisters, Roberta and Jacqueline Yates, w-ere rescued by fellow passengers. They were hospitalized, as was their mother, Mrs. James B. Yates. STATE YOUTH UNHURT An Allen Pw*. Mich., youth, returning' home from Oergon State Univemity on the train, tele^ioried his family yesterday that he had escaped uninjiffed. Dan Lebeq|«. 19. told his mother he was "a little shaken up." An ofltclal eatimate gave the train's speed at "more than 70 miles an hour" In an area where the recommended speed Is 30 ni.p.h. The railroad spokesman, W, A. MacKehzie, said the reason for the "i-onsiderably excessive" ipeed could have been "brake failure or human failure.” Investigators from thq railroad and Interstate Commerce Commission (IOC) were at the scene to attempt to determine the exact cause of the accident. Til?' derailment occurred Just EAST LANSING UP - Traffic accidents have claimed 546 in Michigan so far this year, provisional figures compiled at police showed today. The toll the same date a year ago was ( Requests Joining of Hands With Government Htrewn In slg-sag t the steep slope. Stubblefield, 38, of 1136 Eckman St., holds his doctorate in mathematics and teaches at Michigan State University Oakland. Former iConlinued on Page 2,-Col. 8) dtral, 42. married and Ihe father of six. lives at 2751 Norlhlake Drive. Waterford Township. Hr heads Ihe experimental depan-ment of the PoniTac Motor Division engineering department. Johnson, 40, is pari owner of Elmer’s Auto Supply in Waterford Township. He lives at 4064 .Bay-brook Drive with his wife and two childivn. Laotian Princes Agree on Coalition Cabinei Nordbeck. 40. his wife and ihelr four children live at 3780 Embar-cadero Street, Drayton Plains. He is a property appraiser for Ihe Michigan Slate Tax Commission. Expiration of the terms of Roae-garl and Edmund L. Windeler this month accounts for the twio vacant seals on Ihe board. Wlpdeler. a 12-year member of Ihe school baord, did not "choose eek re-election. . No. 13 for President NEW. HAVEN. Conn. (AP) -The-superstitious were given pause today at Yale’s commencement exercises — chair number 13 was assigned to President Kennedy. Go to Polls in 26 Districts School Elections Today Eleven school districts seek aoiproval of operating tax levies while only one asks voters to okay a bond issue in today’s elections In 26 area school districts. The largest bond issue In the school district’s history, $1.29 million. Is on the ballot In AvondsTle. If approved. It will finance additions to all schools In the district, plus construction of a new elementary school. Voters in the Utica Community School District are being asked to approve $400 annual salaries for school board members. Board of education candidates are running unopposed in eight districts. In three districts—Dryden, Metamora and North Oxford—board members *will be elected at 8 p.m. meetings today. Districts with operating tax increases or renewals on their ballots are Avondale, Clarenceville, Dryden, Huron Valley, Lapeer, Lyon Township, Oak Park, Oxford, Rochester, Walled Lake and West Bloomfield. Well Didn't It Rain! HIGH WATER — Riding a bicj'tle rouldn’l keep Dan Lovse, 13. ol 142 C’adillar. from getting wet feel Saturday as rains flooded sections ol Pontiac. Between 10 a.m. Saturday and 10 a m. today, 1.9 inches of rain fell In Ihe Pontiac area. Dan is attempting to coast his way through the accuraulaied'-water at Montcalm Street and Oakland AVehue. Ugh, It's Sticky's Tomorrow fSo KHANO KJIAY. Laos 1-15—The. rival Uotian princes agreed today on the cabinet loi' a coalition government aimed at ending the civil war and adding Laos to the ranks of the world’s neutral nations. Neutralist P r i n e e Souvanna Phouma, the premier-designate, annojimced the agreement, climaxing negotiations instituted by the^^ 14 - nation conference on Laos at Geneva 18 months ago. Premier Prim:e Boun OurtI of fhe present royal Laotian govern-meni is stepping out of governmental affairs, happily, he said. However, the strong man of his regime, Gen. Phoumi Nosavan, will sil in as deputy premier and minister of finance under Souvan- Senator Talks at MSU Rites Another deputy premiership and the economy portfolio will go to Prince Souphanouvong. chief of the pro-Communist Pathet Lao and half brother of the premier-designate. Though donieslir problems still abound, the three princ<-s and their aides emerged happily from a meeting that wound up conferences begun in this relu-l slrongbold last week. Immediately after the annouce-ment, Ihe three princes signed the Cabinet list. Souvanna, however said fhe three will meet again Tuesday to sign a formal agreement on formation of the coali- EAST LANSING tAP) - St Mike Mansfield, D-Monl., lold commencement day audience yew lerday al Michigan State University that it’s time for a rc-examin-ulion of this nation’s polk-y toward Southeast Asia. The Senate majorily ieiuier and Ihe adminisiralioh’s chief spokesman In that body said his support ■ President Kennedy does pieclude public disciLssion of | ent approaches. tion. OK TOUGII»24T POINTS .Souvanna said he hopes to lake his ministers to Luang Prabang, the royal eapital. by next Monday to present them to King Sa-vatig Vathana. The question of who would get the amu-d Ittrecs and police minisIrleK had been one of the toughesl p o f n t s blocking an agreement. The ro,vallst government had expressed fear that turning these posts over to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 11 Help Economy, JFK Urges Critics NEW HAVEN. Conn. (AP)-Presidenl Kennedy urged tojjay that critics, business and ptriilical, discard "womout slogans" and join hands with the government lo pump new strength and confidence into Ihe nation’s econoAiy. Kennedy vowed his clash with the (deel tndnslry did not mean his adminintratlon Is hostile toward business. Bui in a speech prepared for Yale University’s commencemenj, he said the government is oblig^ to exercise "watchful concern for our economic health’’ while business and labor must live up tc their public responsibilities. Kennedy said economic problems bearing down on a free economy cannot separating myth from reality— and he said it is mythical u> contend that govemmeni is big and solved without ways create inflation. REPUE8 TO CHARGE8 He responded by implicati charges by Republicans, including former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, and some spokesmen for that his policies touched off recent stock market gyrations. Among false iasues whk-h In-said are, frustrating efforts lo push the economy forward, Kennedy declared "Is the asaertitm tkal an.v and all nnlavorable tarns of fhe speculative wheel— however temporary and however plainly speculaHve In character 'This, I must tell you, while comforting, is not wholly true. Worse, it oKscrucs the reality— which is also simple. The solid ground of mutual confidence is Related Stcry, Page 13 the necessary partnership of government with aR Ihe sectors of soc-iety in Ihe steady quest for economic progress," Kennedy said. "This administralion is not going to give way lo general hostility to business merely because there has been a single lemporiii:y disagreement with an industry, nor will the future belong lo those who Ignore Ihe realilics of our ec-onomte life in a wniroiic sc (or unending reassuram-e.’’ '(k)rporate plans are not based a political confidence in party leaders." Kennedy said, but on Cj-onomic confidence in Ihe nation’s ability to invest, product and consume. Business has confidence in Republican administrations of 1929. 18.54, 1958 and 1960. said, "bul Ibis was not enough to prevent ret-ession when business lacked full confidence in ihe economy." What really matters. Kennedy said, is the capacity of the nation whole to deal with problems and opportuhilies alike. Humid. Thal’k what tomorrow wQI be in Ihe Pontiac area as well U the rest of lower Michigan. Following thtindertlormi iMa aft-mom and evening, lonight'a low wUl be 65. Man$field Say$ Policy Toward Southeast Asia Must Be Re-Examined ' Mgk of 71 dngfwra. Temperatures during the next five days will average near or a little below a normal high Of 78 and a normal low of 58. Cooler weather Tueaday and Wedneaday wiH be followed by only minor day-to-day changes in temperature thereafter. home IJ laches of rahHall wan recorded between the boars of It a.m. Katarday aad tbe same Them- apiN-oaches, be said, will yield lillle lo the people of this nallon and little to the p«-o-ph- of KoulheasI Asia. Mansfield said he ooublcd that U.S. traffic sccurily and other interests justify indefinile eommil-ment to the unilateral defense of Ihe ares. Rather, he said, this gallon should invesitgale "every possibility of minimizing the unilateral activily of the United .States in .Southeast Asia in every sphere.” He ask(-d that we "draw clearly he distinction between what is en-duringly basic and what is Iransi-lory and pcriphei-nl in our inler-sts with respect ” to llw area. .The unilateral supply of manpower and billions is at best mark-lime course of immen.se costs’’ and "at worst, it’s a lision course," he said. called for an “attempt to alter or modil.v" the Sls integralt-d— ‘ PAGE 54. ^ Bank on 'Issues' | GOP Counting on Estes, « stock slump to win House | seals — PAGE 8. Need Help? Kill out :tppl<-ation for g scholarship carefully — ” i PAGE 31. f Area News ...............IS ;i Astrology ..............31 Bridge ................ 31 t'onikqi ................M I Kdllortals ............. « f Markets .................36 | Obituaries ............. 35 Aports ...............27n on Tax Charges WASHINGTON (AP) - The Su> preiae Court refuard today to re-view the conviction of Dave Beck, former Teemslers Union president, on chargn of filing false federal tax returns for the union lor 1950 and 1952. The high tribunal, in a May 14 decision on- another appeal, affirmed conviction of Beck on chaife of embeszlement of Sl.i from the saie of an automobiie owned by the union. He was sentenced to-15 years' imprisoninent on the embezzlement conviction. The sentence was pronounced Washington State court. Beck's conviction on the tax charge was in federal court in Tacoma. Wash., in 1938 He was sentenced there to five years in prison and fined $20,000. The U.S. Circuit Court in San Francisco on Jan. 20. 19S2. upheld Beck's conviction of filing false tax returns lor his union. At the same time it set aside his conviction ol evading more than $249,000 in income taxes. The Or-cult Court called for a new trial on the evasion charges, on which Beck had been sentenced to live years and $40,000 fine The Supreme Court's order denying Beck a bearing in the tax case gave no reasons. It noted that Justice White took no part in the Diplomas Awarded 29 Seniors Beck’s cMaael hat asked the Sapreme Court to reeoaslder tta May 14 dectsfan la the embessle-■Mul ease. The high court took ■0 aettoa ou this request today. The Justice Department In a briel opposed a Supreme Court review lor Beck on the lederal tax charges. The department said that though the Circuit Court decision left the way open for a retrial of the evasion counts, the government would not seek to retry those charges in the event the under the false tax returns charges became final (by refusel ol preme Court review i. Laotian Princes Join on Coalition Cabinet (Cbntinued From Page One) Under today's agreement Sou-Under today's agreemen. vanoB udU be premier, defettoe minister and veterans and social aUairs minister. The interior minirtry. police, went to one- ol Souvanna's dose Biaociat^ Pheng Phongaavan. who wilr also be social wellare Osn. Pbsunii Notavaa, strsug ma* M liM VIentiaae royaltot The coalition Cabinet comprises seven representatives from Sou-vaima's neutralists, lour from the royalist group in Vientiane, four from the proGommunist Pathet Lao and four from the so-called Viemiane neutralist group. HRKT GBADt’ATING rLAS8 — Members of the first graduating class at Our Lady of the Lakes High School, Waterford Township, are shown here Inside the church where commencement exercises were held last night. The 29 At Our Lady of the Lakes ronlisc rrri« rsoi* graduating seniors had just handed lighted candlft to niembets of the junior class in a ceremony pit'ct'ding the commencement exer-cises. Race Is Close for Peru Leader ■ % Partial Returns Put 3 Presidential Hopefuls in Tight Battle LU4a (API—Ihree leading candidates in Peru's presidential race were closely bunched today partial, unuflicial returns. Early indications were that the new Congress might have to elect the nation's chief executive from the leading trio of contenders. None appeared headed for the required 34 per cent of Ihe valid votee. ♦ ♦ A An early trend favoring former dictator Manuel A. Odrla teemed checked in pocl-midnlght tabula-thme by newepapers and radio and television stations. Official returns are not expected before June 18, after the national electoral ju^ complete* a Bcrutiny of the ballots. Since there are hardly any tion-pariiaan factione in the country, the election picture in its early stages was one of confusion. The newest trend bunched Odria ith Fernando Belaunde Terry of le -leftist Popular Action party and Victor Raul Haya de la Torre of the left-center APRA party. The four other presidential candidates were clearly out of the run- Our Lady of the Lakes School. Waterford Township, held first commencement program last night with 29 graduate awarded diplomas. Township. deliver(>d address to the departing seniors. He pointed out that the main purpose of the education process is to develop well-rounded personalities. A candleliKht ceremony pro- Graduates Told: Face Challenges St. Frederick High Clau Urged to AAake U$e of Opportunities Fare up to today's challenge* and make u«e of the opportunitie* pre«ented" St. Frederick High School's graduating eto*s of 59 students were advtoed at i-om-mencement exercise* yesterday. * ♦ * The address was given by Ihe Rev. Father Thompson Marrero, pastor of St. Vincent de Paul Church. U U ♦ The sludenis attended .Mass in body before receiving their diplomas in the ftaarch- Graduate* were: Seniors Told 'Somebody Cares' ^fty-lhree graduating seniois from St. Michael's High School were told yesterday that "somebody cares " for them. Rev. Paul C, Berg, profeoMir •( pMloMphy ★ JoiM rntrlem MIehMl Irfodr W * CyntblA Paorr PAirtcIa ickmta WllUftm CArpenur •horon PraakUa PktrtcU Or««B Dlan Orumbloit ?SSSA?1Sf«a Rot«r Undry ThODlAl LIyI Mary Jana HeMtr Mary Ann Huniphroyt Corel Jonckorrk Dcnnl* Lulkui MIchAYl Moorr John UorrtwT Lynn eo»t Uellanlo Xolloy Chrliitnr LaLondc Joanno Landry Janlrr LoYcrlnf JABiM SchAclwrn John SehiU -IniAtVy SenUy JuTiJranr piane^utrynovikl Anthony SorrA jAmoi apAdtlorc Donald fMImoth Suiinnt Polmoar Loretta Prinu Bandra Rochon Urol a!^“ LaurAlnt Boyo Dlaat South Mary Ssmmrr UAriAKl CAalTY Oneodolyo Colluu Jrtn Stackvoll Mary Vwburk in St. Michael's Church. Diplomas Were awarded by tha ■b's pastor, Rev. James L. Hayes. a breakfast honoring the graduates, three seniors spoke to gathering of parents, teachers and graduates. James Hurren gave The Weather Osrdnrr. F»ul Full U.8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy, little change In temperature through Tuesday with few afternoon and OToning thunderstorm. Low tonight, S5. High Tuesday 79. Winds southwesterly 9*15 miles becoming northeasterly Tuesday. It S sxi.; Wind vtlocUt. IS m p.h Oni- Vfir Afs In rnnlUe Hlthfit Umpnrslurc Lowwt ttmpentur* ................ Mnn ttmpersiun WtsUltr: Mutlsr luony. iho««n.« Ri(Snl nnS tnwwt TmsrrnUrri TSU Onte In *• Vnri *7 In ISM 44 In SsnSny't Ttnitcrnlni Alnrai M 5S Dulut . . SS Port Worts SO 7J nnd Snndir In Pnni Blfhot Mmarmturt Lovcit Icmsntsti/re Mesa tcaipsnturc ......... Wssthsr. Snturdn.v. p sbovtrt; Sanday. partly d 7J 4S OriDd lUpUtt 71 dS Jtckio; Vlllf I lOKlOl SO 50 KnnMuCItr S5 7S 77 14 LodAnsfln 01 SS dS 45 MItnilliwch S5 7t 72 51 Nrw York AP PknIWnd NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are expected tonight in the northeastern Plains, the middle Mississippi Valley, the Lakes region, the Ohio Valley and New England as well as in the eostem Gtdf area. It will be warmer in the Pacific northwest ■Bd WMin weather will oontipue on the east coast. It will be cooler In northern New England, the northern Lake^ and the northern and cenU^al Plateau. I pxer- elnes during whleh Ihe graduates handled lighted candles to members of the Junior elass at the sehool. The candles reprcuent Ihe light of learning. Assistant pastor of Our Lady of the Lakes, Rev. John L. Phelan presented the senior class and pastor Fr. Frederick J. Delaney, pi-escnted ihe diplomas. ATTENDED MAIW Seniors I hen recited an Act of Consecration and the exercises were concluded by Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. The graduates attended 12:30 Mass in a body Sunday and later were luncheon guests of Fr. Delaney in the rectory. aass-night ceri'inonie* honoring the graduating seniors were held Thursday. The program began with a junior-senior banquet and roncluded with a farewell dance presented by the juniors in honor ol their departing upperclassmen. Arnu. Pktriclk I, Mkrisrtt Macus*. Father Berg assured the students people would continue to care about them and help them along. iUiSmi. PtStlM to$M iuul JotuiMin. 5l*rilyo Polling Places Listed for Voting Class president Stuart Rindfusz presided over the breakfast ceremonies. Graduates arc: Polling places lor tdday's I lac Board of Education election are as follows; fW-bool Pet. A-Baglcy* B-Webster C—Central Sr. High D-Oose St. Station F:—Lincoln Jr. «y Coowr, 1 OoUiam. KkUilern Hopt. DUne Klliiknamer. JoAD Laniiihrrr. ZudlUt MAnrl<)ur«. Much of Nation to Slosh Through Showers Today By THE AS.SOC1ATED PRFXS Rain clouds hovered across broad areas from the Rockies to the Alabama 'Gulf Coast today. Afternoon and evening showers were indicated in most areas in the eastern two-thirds of Ihe nation. duplicating Sunday's weather activity. Heavy rain, hail and strong inds hit sections in the central pari of the country Sunday, eluding Iowa. Wisconsin. Kansas. Oklahoma and Texas. Thunder-dunng Ihe night pelted areas in Wyoming, southern New York Stale and the Alabama Gull Coast. It was warm and humid in most of the Midwest and East, with temperatures in the 80-90 degree range Sunday. Night readings were in the upper 60s and 70s in most of the southern and eastern sections except in Maine and in mountain areas. College to Hike Tuition HOUGHTON (API - Tuition at Michigan Tech will be increased $10 per quarter for Michigan residents this fall, making the price for a normal academic year $246 for a resident. Out-of-stale students rales were raised $20 per quarter in April. The newspaper La which gave some backing to Haya la Torre, reported a change in an early trend favoring Odria. It reported results from 1.617 of the nation's more than 10,000 voting districts yielded 74,429 vote* lor Haya, 68,666 lor Odria .and 67.910 for Belaunde. The total was roughly 12 per cent of an anticipated total vote of about 1.' million, Locales Listed for School Vote I. L»»l*y MAturak. JoAont McMAmu. Donald ------ Carolr ticliArd Dirld Wol^evlci. Carol City Pet. 2-3-34-28 Ml-41 6- 9-10 J1 12-13-14 15- 32-42 16- 35-13 7- 17 18-19-20-44 24- 33 27-28-29 25- 26 21-22 1-36-37 4-5-30-39-40 F—Owen' G—LeBaron** H—Emei-son 1-Baldwin Longfellow K—Wilson L—McConnell M—Eastern Jr. N^entral O—Hawthorne” P—Jefferson Q-WtUl* R—Washington Jr. S-Whitfield” 'Includes all of •Includes areas outside City ol Pontiac. Precinct areas outside the city limits and within the school district fall under the follow-ing eral boundaries. Precinct F Pontiac Township north of the city limits bounded on the east by the Pontiac, Oxford and Northern Railroad. Vote at the Owen School. Preetnet G Pontiac Township north of the city limits bounded on the west and adjacent to Precinct F and on the east by the east section line of section 9 and on the north by Lake Angelus Road. Vote at the LeBanm School. I Seeks 3rd Term in Legislature State Rep. Law Reveali Bid for 2-Year Post; to File Petitions state Rep. Arthur J. Law, Pontiac, says the next tew years In Michigan will be filled with in- and he wants to retain a voice to deal with them. Law, 56, today announced hi* bid for a third two-year term in the State House of Representatives. He said he will file nominating peti-tkms later this week for the Aug. primary election. Both Waterford Township and Waterford Township School District recently revised voting pre-cincts due to heavy new registrations. The following political precinct-school precinct system is now in effect: ♦ ♦ ★ School precinct No. 1 includes political precincts No. 1. 2, 14 and 19. School precinct No. 2 embraces political precincts 5, 7 and 11. School precinct No. 3 includes political precincts 9. and 23 and a portion of West Bloomfield Town-ship. Srhooi precinct .No. 4 takes in political precincts I. It and t» and a part of Iwtopendenee Township and school precinct No. S inchntes political preriat U and % portion ol Whtte Uke Town-ihip. School precinct No. 6 embraces political precincts 4, 15 and 21 and school precinct No. 7 consists of political precincts 6, 16 and 22. School precinct No. 8 includes poUttcal precincts 8, 10 and Precinct No. 1, Grayson School; Precinct No. 2, Donelson School; Precinct No. 3. Waterford Center Schotd; Precinct No. 4. Schoolcraft School; Precinct No. 5. Pontiac Lake School; Precinct No. 8, Mon-telth School; Precinct No. 7. Leggett School; and Precinflt No. 8, Stringham School. Fog Causes Traffic Jam of Ships at Soo Locks SAULT STE. MARIE IB-Heavy fog caused a traffic jam at the Soo locks yesterday. A total of 29 ships dropped anchor and one vessel, the Canadian steamer Prindock, ran aground at the International ferry dock in the St. Marys River. Starting Library Survey to Learn Needs of Area iNRMINGHAM - A Hbrary survey began today for the purpoee of providing Inbrmatipn on the typea and locations of hew fbcUl-tlee that arc needed to serw Birmlngham-Bloomfield am. Hie stndy to betng by the BaMwbi Pabfie Uhraiy Two key tosoee -en the aew renstttatiM and the Supreme Court’s ooasiderattos of Low’s view of the future. "The next few years in the legislature will give some of us the opportunity to help a lot in tl and other issues," he said. "I it (the leglalature) and hope I can No oppoeition — Republican or Oenxwrat — has been announced for Law's post. The GOP lost an The Day in Birmingj^am Swtving hestdes her husband are two daulhters, Mrs. Donald S. Brownies of Bloomfield Township and Mrs. John 8. Malcolm ol Grodse Points; one sister, Mrs. E. R. Hagerman of Bloomfield Tpwnshlp; and two grandchildren. Her b^y will be at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac, un- Conducted by Frederick Weze-man, who is on the faculty of the University of Minnesota’s School of Library Scienee, tbs survey is a follow-up study made by the atlzens Library Study CouncO. * * A Hie council has recommended that the am be serviced by a district library system which would take in Bloomfield and Southfield townships, Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills. w * ♦ Weseman will talk with dty and township officials, school and library board members and representatives of bnsIncH and other veys for Des Moines, Minneapolis-St. Paul and Tulsa, Okla. Birmingham Chapter 330, Order of t initiation June 30 at‘ the Birmint-hara Masonic Temple, 337 8. Woodward Ave. The ceremony will be conducted at 7:49 pm. The Congregational Church of Bivningham announced today it will begin ita summer schedule bn June IT. at that time there will be service only, at 10 a.m'. Church school kindergarten classes and baby nursery wttl be held during the summer, also at 10 a.m. All other ctalhteen will attend regular church service in die sanctuary. Service for 5lrs. Floyd (Aurillai apparent challenger last month Beardslee, 76, of 735' E. Square when Pontiac con-con delegate R^ Lake Road, Bloomfield ’Townriilp, King was appointed prosecutor for Ogonaw County. Law, owner of a Pontiac supermarket, has been a dty resident for 37 years. He came here his native Oklahoma at age 19 and exactly 19 years later became layor. Law served six years as mayor and 12 years as a dty commisskm- wil] be 3 p.m. Wednesday at home. Burial will be in Franklin Olme-tery. Mrs. Beardslee died yesterday at her home following several month* illness. She was a member of the Central MethodUt Church of the Better Home* and Garden'Chib and the Franklin Cemetery Ladies Auxiliary To Extend Danger Area for Firing Biggest Bomb HONOLULU (AP) - Extension of the United States high altitude danger area around Johnston Island was seen today as a preliminary to Ihe firing at the biggest nucirar blast of the Pacific test fries. There was no official comment -om Joint Task Force 8 on the .recise altitude and size of the detonation but unofficial sources said it will be from 50 to 500 times as powerful as the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima. ♦ * * There have been report* it will be of several megatons in force. A megaton blast is the equh’aleni of the explosion of a million tons of TNT. The big blast will be set off about 200 miles high, the sources said. It will be the highest and biggest nuclear shot in U.S. history and will be seen In Hawaii, 750 miles northeast of Johnston. TO EXTEND DANGER AREA The Atomic Energy Commission and the Defense Department announced Saturday that the nuclear danger area surrounding Johnston Island will be extended 60 miles Clarenee E. BotofenI Private service for (fiarence E. Botsford. 94. of 38061 Carol St.. Franklin, will be tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be In the Fruklln Cemetery. Mr. Botsford died yecterday fol-lowii« a ehort Ulnect. He hed been general manager of the Michigan Wire Cloth Co. of Detroit, retiring in 1961. He was e member td the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Birmingham; a life member of Birmingham Lodge 44, FliAM; end a former member of the Detroit Athletic Oub end the Orchard Uke Country Oub. Botvlving are two daughters. 5fre. John Scolaro of Bloomfield Hills and Sirs. Hariee Miller ol Idountain Lakes, N.J.; a son, John S. of Franklin; one brother and 13 jgrandcfaildrcn. Mre. Robert i. Merihan Private eervlce ter Mri. Robert J. (Edytha) MarsheU, 53. of 37469 Golden Gate Dftee. Lethnip Village. will be Tuesday at the Bell Cha^ of the William R. KamUton Co. Cremation will follow, kfra. Marshall died at home Sat-rday following a brief ineas. She wu en Interior decoratof wMi Seott-Shuptrine of Birmingham and was a member of the First Church of Christ, Scientist. 8urvtvli« besides her husband daitfiter, Mrs. Richard (Jju-Sumner of Warren; a son, R. Stephen, at home; a sister, IBim L. HenUng of Roya Oak; and three brothers. by Tuesday to e radius of 530 nautical miles at sea level. It will be increased 290 nautical miles at 30.000 feet, to a radius of 990 miles. The zone will be extended 10.- 000 feet in altitude to a heiidit 01 40,000 feel, sliere the radiuc be 1,050 milei. At 30.000 feet the zone will cover the entire Hawaiian Island chain. The zdne is being extended to mark the "eye burn" area in which there could be a hazard from looking directly at the blast through binoculars, periscopes or other optical instruments. The spokesman said it could lead to permanent eye damage or possible blindness. He said there will be no hazard (o Hawaii residents who view the fireball with the naked eye from surface levels. The extension annotmeement indicated the shot will not come before Thursday, in the hours of darkness, because of the four-day warning that Is given air lines. A Joint Task Force 8 spokesman indicated a possible firing during next weekend. ! Says Wanger ^ IFir^asHead ! j of 'Cleopatra' NEW YORK (API - Walter Wanger. producer of ’’(Icopa-tra,” has been token off eal^ because of delays in finishing the picture, eohunnist Earl Wilson wrote today in tb# New York Wilson said he had talked with Wanger to Rome and quoted him: ••It’s untrue . . . they're just trying to embarrass me." Expenes of the picture, starring Elisabeth Taylor ttnd RKto-ard Burton, han skyro^ted to beyond S20 million, studio sources say, while Burton and Miaa Taylor have been romancing off the set as well as on. During the filming, the actress split with her husband, Eddie Fisher. Wilson, who said his information came from an unnamed 20th Century - Fox spokesman, ■aid; "Studio executtves used Crowd Applauds Stubblefield 'Freedom Rally' Yields Pledget of Backing for School Board Candidate .. Negro "freedom rally" In Beaudette Park Saturday turned into a pledged endorsement of Pontiac school board candidate Beauregard Stubblefield at the election polls today. East of the city limits and south of Featherstone Road. Vote at Longfellow School. Waterford Township in the Dixie Highway Area. Vote at Hawthorne School. Precinct P South of the city limits bounded on the west by Wrenn Street. Vote at Jefferson School. Preetnet Q Pontiac Township east of the city limits and north of the city lilmts adjacent to frecihet G and including that portion of Orion Township in the district. Also bounded on the south by Feathe^ stone Road. Vote at Willis School. Preetnet 8 Daniel Whitfield School area outside the Oly of Pontiac. ONE DEAD, Ml HURT -> Fifteen cars of a 17-car Northern Pacific passenger train are shown scattered beside a highway after the AW PImMai train derailed early yeaterday about 15 miles west of Missoula. Mont. A child was Wiled and 243 of the 350 passengers were injured. the Natiqnal AssMtotton for the '^Advaaeciiient of Colered People In PaMlne, to get ant the Negro vote for Stabblefleld. , Four Negro •student* from Pontiac Central High Schod who spoke of alleged incidents of discrimination by teachers nnd administrators were commendbd for their •bravery" by the principal speaker. Rev. Albert B. (Heage Jr. of Detroit. * * « Mayor Robert Landry circulated through the crowd handing out pro-StubUefield literature. Candidate Stubblefield, mathematics teacher at Michigan State University Oakland, spoke briefly until rain chased the crowd to waiting cars. Pontiac School Board Election Is Today (Continued From Page, One) head (d the math department at the University ol Liberia, he is an officer to real estate firms and bdongs to the Herrington Hills PTA, the Homeowners' Association and the Pontiac NAACP. He seeks a first term. . * * * I As in pest years, the highest percentage oi voters is expected in the Bagiey and Jefferson Jr. High precincts. Tlii!:. J*UM1Al: 1-Khaa. MOImjAi, Ends War Against Withholding Tax WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States Savings ft Loan Leagne has broken o(t Its battle against a withholding lax on interest and dividends—a key provision of President Kennedy’s tax relohn MU. The group had been one of the strongest opponents of the with-ho)|ling plan, but a Treasury spokasnum said Sunday the league had written Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon that it was dropping its opposition. 'llie tax MU has been passed by the House and Is now being stud^ led by the Senate Finance Committee where it is under sharp attack. 'The league was a source of thousands of letters written to Congress members by savings and loan officials and d^ poHitors urging elimination of the withholding provision. KKBl KF.d‘ by JFK The campaign brought a rebuke from Kennedy at a news conference May 9. He said the mail I'eacMng the White House and the Capitol indicated a great nu of people have been badly i formed by advertisements circulars financed by savings and loan associations, banks and other groups. But whether the league’.s change in policy wUI give the tax revision bill a boost was questionabje. Last week it was reported to be in deep trouble in the Senate Finance Committee. Its chairman, Sen. Harry F. Byrd, opposes the withholding plan and the other key provision, lax credits for plant and equipment modernization. Unofficial counts indicated there were not enough votes in the mittes to get the bill, as it stands now, reported favorably. And some of the senators are against it because of letters from home opposing the withholding tax. What caused the league’s about face? One Senate informant to support the present *biU, even propose much higher taxes On sav-with the withholding provision. Inga and loan associations and than to chance possibly a stiller mutual fund banks, bill later. TAX OUT The league reportedly was con- As part of the bill, the admin-cerned that if the savings and istration originally proposed that loan industry was held responsible savings and loan associations for defeat of Kennedy's tax revi-leventually be taxed about J500 million a year, compared with current payments of about |9 million. But the tax was slashed in the House Ways ahd Means Committee to about $200 million a year.^ The aim of the withholding provision is to insure collection of income taxes on dividends and t: inlerost. 'hie Troasury l»as eatl-muled I that i is losing'. about a billion dollars a year in such un-repoiled Income. ^ * * The withholding lax is designed to offsi-t a $1.2-billion loss in rev, enue Hial would he lost under the lax incentive to businessmen and larmers to Iwy new et|uipmenl and machinery. Kennedy has ea4lcy-night committees for this or against that are organized without members for the sole purpose of propaipindizing some Communist cause of the moment. As soon as these groups and thetr purposea are shown up, they fold. W * ♦ WTien the (Jommunist party of the United States held iu last convention in New York, Dec. 10-13, 1959. General Secretary Gus Hall ]Hdd it had 10,000 members. Ally. the party under control or obllt-ernto II. So the battle to force (i»mmu-nist organizations to register and disclose their membership is by Director J. Edgar Hoover has told a congressional committee that Federal Bureau of Investigation now has under surveillance approximately 200 known and sus-p^ed Communist - controlled or Cbromunist-infiltrated groups. For policy reasons he cannot gtvo out the taU loL To do so would break eovw oa some or-gatataHoos that da aot oow know atizens Committee tor Constitutional Ubertiet. Advance, an Organization for Progressive Youth. Prognasive Youth Organizing Committee. New Yortt School for Marxist The Fair Play for Cuba Committee. Gui Hall-Benjamin J. Davis Defense (Jommittee. Some 40 other organizations haW been cited in various ways by government agencies. Department of Justice has filed petitions with the Subversive ActMties Control Board, asking that bearings be held on 24 organizations. Twenty-one others — including four ol the above 24 — have been the subject of bearings before the Committee. The sttoniey general’s Itol of orgaaliaHoiM under Hie Internal security ExeeuHve Order lS4la eontalus the acmes of U groupo acHve today, moot of them duplleated ou fhe other lists. Identity of these organizations and the work of the government agencies investigating them will be revle^ved in succeeding col- (NVXT: The O u I d e to Subversive Orgmntaaltoiis and Pnbllca- There are official records on over 1,0(» United States organizations connected with the Communist movement since 1917. Most of them are now disbanded or no longer active. But it to possible to identify some of the newer organisations that have comC out in the open and disclosed themselves as Communist. In the list are: St Uu lad 0(sss rsts « PsbMsc, Mtchicu. Msabtr s( ABO. i V ' THE PON'j UAC PRESS, MONDAY. JUNE ly, l06y> Says Freeman Rues Remark Sen. Mundt Claims Farm Chief Regrets , Estes Case Comment WASHINGTON (AP)-Iuly 1, the afternoon newspaper Ultimas No-ticias will begin publishing this week an U^tart series on the life of the U.S. First Udy. Then are M strings on an independent insunnee agent. Since he owes allegiance to no one company, he's free to Klect the best policies for you from many companies. For sure insurance protection, see an independent agent. FE 4-3535 Harvard Grad Makes Teace Plea* Yale Honors 'Rival' Kennedy FUBU8HE8 NY TRIBUNE Whitney is editor-in-chief publisher of the New York Herald Tribune, recently cut off the list of newspapers the White House subscribes to. Luce directs Time, Inc., and Buckley is editor of the conservative magazine, NA-tlonal Review. The President said his luck had been better In politics, but added that of late he had had "small arguments" with New York Qty WASHINGTON (» - President Kennedy said today the United States and Europe must throw off tlie false protection of trade baiv riers" to develop a lasting and prospering free world partnership. In a foreword written for a special issue bf The Forum, a quarterly magazine published by General Electric Cb., Kennedy said "broad horizons" must be developed at home, regardless of the adjustments needed when tariffs are reduced or eliminated. * * * The magazihe alao contained a dissent written by Sen. Prescott Bush of Connecticut, ranking Republican on the Innate-House Economic Committee. The pending administration trade bill would increase unemployment. Bush wrote, and will worsen the deficit fat international paymenU. Tbe PresMest mast be gtves ew asibsrity to aegotteto ms- aetoes and la oar frM wsifd ah Has.” He added! "But poweri granted the President must be much more Umltad than he has requested, and Congress should insist upon a veto power over major agreeraefita.” Kennedy’s measage noted that, for three decades, U. S. trade policy has demonstrated concretely tbe American purpose of encouraging (he drawing together of free , nattona into "a progressively more ‘To 0 9 Monday through Saturday .. now you con got a Ploytox magic cling bro worth 2.50 whon you buy a Ploytox magic cling strop-loss for glamour, stroploss comfort Reach, bend, stretch . . . wear bore-ihouldered sun fashions and ploy ds you like — this bro stays in plocel Exclusive clinging bock holds h, and you beautifully. Sizes from 32A to 38C. 595 Limited time onlyl let Federol's* expertly trained eorsetieres fit you correctly for comfort ond figure flattery. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS Our researches also confirmed that: Young men still prefer and curly blondes at that. Young women reject long hair for men, prefer crew cuts. ★ ★ A The most common objection to lake-up. as voiced by Elaine Shultz, 17, of Revere, Mass:, was; 'It cheapens a girl's appearance." Only M per rent of the beys, against It per cent 0} the girls, thought (that seheols shoold not have the right to restrict the amount of make-up a girt may wear. "If she wants to look like a witch,” said Patsy Croker, 14, of Tolono, ni., "It's her own business." But Qunl Busey, 16, of Sa-dorus, III., thought the schools should have a say because we Ulked to, he was with the 79 per cent of the boys who favored WUEN TO STARTf The boys were more liberal than the girls, again, on the question of whether girls tend to use too much of the stuff. No, said 57 of the boys as against 44 per cent of the girjs. ‘The better girls don't show off by putting 4t on 4 feet thick,” commented Stephen Detor, 17, of Austin, Minn. When should a giri stnH nolag ooometlctT Fonrteea wu tho age most favored by both beys and girls. "They start looking more like adults then,” explained Don Pacet-ti of Bartow, ITs.. from the viewpoint of 17 cent oi tl e tbeit/ lo on coaroetics, 81 par cent ■ ak tt does Improve “ 'No matter how beautiful a gIri if, a little make-up never hurts,” opinkmad Kenneth E. Qlray, 18, ol Huntington Psrk, Calif. oirncnaB bairdor Jumping from face-doe to hairdos, we collected some caustic conunents on styles that call for "teasing," but found that about 44 per ce^t of both boys and girls approve them nevertheless. 'I think It makes girls look frightened porctqilnes," said Patay iikAer 9I Tolono, HI. Hear General Hospital FE 4-3669 ____ - ■lul kara’a tha narfpcf aiMlt and here’s the perfect spot to spend your honeymoon. Most young people frown on glrla ruins the hair, splita the enda, and wearing heavy make - up before nightfall. The girls were against it almost unanimously, and the boyk by 86 per cent. AAA "It gives boys the wrong idea,” said Tim Kelley, 17, of Monticello, III. While half the young people feel that girls generally ipend too much ia going out of style.” It also appears that young gen-' tiemen do indeed prefer blondes, especially curly blondes. Even more of the girls Hke curly hair. Thirty per cent voted for Uondea, 39 por cent tor Hack hair, 19 for brnaette, 7 per cent lor red and 9 for strawberry Of Birmingham! By RUTH SAUNDERS BIRMINGHAM - Delfine Marie Bowers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Bowers of Buckingham Road, will be married June LI. Albert Thorndike Jr. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Tbom-dlke of- Milton, Mass. IV wedding will t^ke place In Qirist (Church, Grosse Pointe, and reception will be given by Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand CinelU, uncle and aunt of the bride-elect, at their home on Voltaire Place. Mra. Martin Archangel! gaxw a recent luncheon utd ahower for Miss Bowers at her home on Midland Avenue. Mrs. Alfred M. Davock and Mrs. Dean Robinson will entertain for Delfine next week, aa will Mrs. Robert VaderKloot and her daughter Karen. Mr. and Mrs. Thorndike will give the rehearsal dinner Friday at the UtUe aub. AAA Dr. and Mrs. Earl Weston ore nong St. Duniton’i members entertain before or aft-the Guild's performances. They invited the cast of "Look Homeward Angel" to a picnic and swimming party Sunday. AAA Hostesses at a cocktail dance Saturday at Bloomfield Hills Coun-! try aub were Mrs. Gordon F. Hess^ andMrs. Edwin A. TxHSIlnson. AAA Patricia Kelley and Mary Love RuaaeD, who will be graduated today, and Mary love from Bennett Junior C!ollege will soon be off for summer in Europe. Maureen McGinnis, daughter of| who will be married June 23 to John Joseph Cook Jr. will be honored at several parties in the next fortnight. June; 13 Mrs. John G. Wood and pr daughter Mrs. George T. Trumbull Jr. will be hostesses at a limcheon and shower at Bloomfield Hills Country Oub and the Joseph Flahertys with their aon-in-law and daughter, the Jamea McNemya, will give a dinner June 21 in their Pon Valley Road home. The bridegroom-elect's mother, Mrs. John J. Cooke of Foreat Hills, N. Y.. will give the leharsal dinner at Fox and Hounds Inn. Needlework Guild Eyes Fund Projects Queen Mary Section of the Needlework Guild met thii month with Mrs. Charles Shearer at her home on West Longfellow Avenue. AAA,-,# The IS members present discussed plant for fund-raising proJecU. Mrs. Frank Snover has invited lh.e group to her home for a luncheon meeting June 21. Ponhellenic Group Meets for Dinner A cooperative dinnei# preceded Pontiac aty Panhel-lenic’s meeting at the home of Mrs. Charles F. Kului of North Lake Angelus Road. Cohostessea tor the evening were Mrs. William Freyerrauth Ex-Officers Honored by Chapter Retiring officers were honored and new officers installed for Beta Chapter, Beto Theta Phi Sorority, Thursday in the Northlake Drive home of Mrs. Donald Kaiser, outgoing president. The affair followed a dinner at Hawaiian Gardens. AAA Gifts were preeented to the retiring preiicient and to Mrs. Ralph Bergemann who ia moving to Ann Arbor soon. After revelation of secret pals and a gift exchange, out-of-town guests w«te Introduced. They were Mn. Jack Sinclair of'Ann Arbor, honorary member, and Mrs. Robert Tedcastle, Lantana, Fla. New committees appointed inriuded: Mrs. William Hutch-Insun and Mrs. W. C. Worster, ways and nwans; Mrs. Norman Haldane and Mrs. Kenneth Madsen, houM and calling; and Mrs. Walter E. Terry, publicity. A A ’A Others are Mrs. Donald S. White and Mrs. Duane G. Hamilton. charity; Mrs. Joseph Burgdorf, devotions; Mrs. Norman Mack, program; Mrs. Ida Mae HilU, cards and flowers; Mrs. John Allen, budget; and Mrs. Donald Kaiser, annual banquet. and Mrs. Frank McGinnu.l and Mrs. Richard D. Kuhn. U.S. BoldieiB first wore campaign dress during the Mexican War. Their uniforms were similar to those of today’s West I Point cadets. SPECIAL PURCHASE famous name two and three-piece SUAAMER SUITS It lakes only seconds lo open a charge account at Arthur’s. Rogulariy $29.98 One of the best buys of your life! Be the first one here to choose from these famous maker summer suits. Perfect for traveling. Misses' sizes 8-18. Open Mon., Thurs. ond Fri. 'til 9 Suit Salon—Second Floor ^ NOW IN PROGRESS ARTHUR'S GREAT 1/2 PRICE EVENT spring coat sale *io none sold for less than $39.98 many as high as $55 Coat Salon—Second Floor I ^ I . ""r'' ' TWENTY-SIX •urso It's \Back to Bicycle P O P $1 00 I WOLVERHAMPTCW (UPD-WiU **^\|l*—, *, 1^™ Wll*m, W, waj refuaed auto Af All riniMl Binmirance because fit hli age ao he took up bicycling again. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOND.\Y, JrNE 11. Wilaotn, eight Umet a gnndla-Aftei*Wa|^S-^ Watch Out! ler, eatimates he now cycles i® '' ....." ■ miles a day. 19(52 “I find it very tiring pedalling up hills these days,” he said. “Otherwise it's Jolly good exercise and I recommend it to anybody (or keeping healthy Gleason Sticks to Coffee on Job At cross Cwyon in northeast i The southern ^ Arliona ex!cavators have dkwov-Nepal U a steaniy.n^i^al Jungle wedlndlan villages that exlstad which abounds witt Ug«* g«d , Irhinos. > ' BE COOL TONIGHT With a GENER AL ELECTRIC AIR CONDITIONER 295 “ Weekly or 90 Days Same as Cash! GOOD HOUSEKEEPING^ Payments Only 51 W. HURON of PONTIAC OPEN TONITE and FRIDAY TILL 9:(K HOLLYWOOD—The sign on the >m suite read “The One,” so you knew it had to belong to Jackie Gleason. Iqside you were greeted by 'members of the Gleason staff and ushered Into the presence of I man himself, was sitting in comer, his barrel shape wrapped in a white terry-] cloth robe, was drinking coffee. "Never drink | booze on the job, he explained.' "But afterward — THOMAS watch out!" Gleason was at Paramount tor "Papa’s Delicate Condition, first Hollywood film in a doaen years. TTie circumsiances a somewhat different this time. 1 "That last one was calM 'Desert Hawk,’ and it was a he recounted. “Tell you how 1 got the job. "I went to see the producer and I he was having a pedicure, 1 you to know. He was saying, I‘Watch out. Mildred, how you cut the big toe,” while I was trying' ito tell him what a great Arab I {would make. I I ‘“Finally He said, ’Can you ride?' I said I could ride like the wind—I bad never been on a I horse in my life. He said. ‘Can you duel?’ I said I was a whiz at fencing—I didn’t know the first thing about it. "Then he said, "You {the job.’ I said ‘Why not?’ and he isaid, ‘Because you got blue eyes, and Arabs don't have blue eyes.' I "I said, 'Then you’re in trouble, jBud, because your leading man (is Richard Greene, and he ' two of the bluest eyes I’ve ever seen! I "The guy was really worried and he cidled up research and ‘See If there are any Arabs with blue eyes’ The answer came back that there may be two or three Arabs somewhere with blue eyes. So he told me I could have the job. "1 never got close enough to the camera for anyone to see my eyes. Most of the time I was peeking around Rock Hudson. Such was Gleason’s first career. He did six films in the Including "Orchestra Wives" and "Navy Blues." "Most of the time I was playing with scene-stealers like Jack Oakie, Martha Raye, Peter Ixirre and Edward Everett Horton," he recalled. "I never had a chance. second lime around i another matter. He got an Oscar nomination for "‘The Hustler." His "Gigot" and "Requiem tor a Heavyweight" are highly touted. And now "Papa's Delicate Condition." One of Papa’s delicate conditions' in the film is that he nips, and Gleason admitted the casting was apt. He gave his philosophy WONDERING what makes the daily newspaper the top advertising buy? If s the number andTjuality of the people the daily newspaper reaches, and their friendly reaction to newspaper advertising. When an advertiser invests in any medium, he’s buying an audience for his sales message. The newspaper audience is large. Almost 100,000,000 people read a daily newspaper every day in the U.S.* And that audience remains very constant. There’s no “summer slump” in newspapers, no peak listening or viewing hours, no special moment when you must nail down an audience or miss out completely. The daily newspaper sells around the clock. Readers can study it at their leisure...enjoy it...relax with it...clip it...buy from it. And they do. *Soure$:AudittandSurvefiC».Sttid}f/orBt$rtauo/Adv«rtuinff.ANPA (VERY DAY...ALMOST ALL YOUR CUSTOMERS READ A DAILY NEWSPAPER # In the Pontiac Area, They R^d The Pontiac Press W" r I THE PONTIAC PR1<^SS. MONDAY. TWEXTY-FIVE Spat Worsened by Dean Martin Won't Appear in Film-Without Marilyn, Cites Effect on Career HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Dean Martin wid^hed the breach in the famliy aW between Marilyn Mon-ioth Century Fox atudios y when be refused to ap-the film ••Something’s Got * because the studio fired { shapely blonde. 0 do this movie be-/ cause Marilyn Monroe was going to cootar and it would have been great for my career, ” explained Martin. “Now that -she isn't going to do it. the picture doesn’t look too good to me” The studio fired Marilyn and slapped her with a WOO,00(1 | breach of contract suit Friday i beeauae of absenteelNni. Blonde Lee Remick wax named j to replace the tamed glamour girl. Asked if he would consider star-1 ring opposite another actross. Mar- i till said "absolutely not” ' “I have the greatest respect for Miss Lee Remick and her talent and for all the other actresses who were considered lor the role, but I signed to do the picture with Marilyn Monroe and I will do it I with no one else," said Martin. “It Is not because I f(M>l sorry I lor Marilyn or because 1 think | ahe Is right or wrong," the sing- : cr-actor added. "I’m Just tl ‘ lag about my career." The studio has not announced whether it plans to go ahead with the picture starring Miss Remick, but a spokesman said the picture would not resume shooting today. * * * Delays primarily caused by Miss Monroe’s absences have coal the studio an estimated $2 million. Producer Henry Weinstein, who suspended production June 4. blamed the suspension on Miss Monroe. March Fizzles Against Polaris Based in Scotland DUNOON, Scotland (UPD - A sildown demonstration by ban-the-bomb folkmwri fizzled over the weekend when only 500 persons showed up to protest the presence of liie Polaria submarine depot ship USS. Proteus. .. AuthaiWes snM «• demawitra M the day helore. AH but three The 9J were arrested for disturbing the peace. On Saturday night, a small band of 20 tired and hoarse marchers kept an all-night vigil around the base, singing their anti-Polaris songs as they walked in the cold. 2 Get Death Sentence in Try to Flee Soviet MOSCOW (UPD-Two 25-year-old Armeniaiu have been sentenced to death for trying to hijack a small plane and fly out of the Soviet Union. The plot was toiled when pilot Edik Bakshinyan deliberately crashed the plane in a field. A third plotter was killed in lhe{ crash, the paper said. ♦ * * Those sentenced to death were| identified as Serge Toumanyan and | Heinrich Sekoyan. both from Yere-I van. the capital of soviet Armenia. | The dead man was identified as| Garegin Movsesyan. also f r o m j Yerevan. i The two were charged with at-| Icmpfed high treason and hl-| tempted murder of the pilot. I Bills Heavenly Repairs LONDON (API - A suburban; Church of England parish maga j line published an itemized hill from an unidentified artist for ^renovating a church religious painting. Among the items: "Cleaning St. David’s ears — two slrillings 28 cents; renewing Heaven, abating stars and cleaning up the moon—seven shillings 81 cents.’’* MONTGOMERY WARD CO. HEARING AID DEPT. If you con hear, but connot understand, we con help you!! CALL US FOR A FREE HEARING TEST . . . In our office or at your home. 682-4940 Ext 233 BATTERIES, CORDS, REPAIRS ON ALL HEARING^AIDS PONTIAC MALL FRESH RED RIPE STRAWBERRIES 16 QUART CRATE 59 4 NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. Kroger has everything from Kerr Jars and Lids to freezer paper and containers. Sa when you buy your borrios of Kroger be sure to check our canning and freozor doportmont. FOK JEUr MAKING . nr CERTO UOUID........Ml. 33c For Preserves and lellies PAROWAX............FKo 25C K>K PRESEKVES AND JELIY a.i ) nr _ SURE JELL..........,PKG_ 17c MONDAY AND TUES. ONLY! FIESH R-INCH PORK LOIN ROAST nESHENOCUT PORK CHOPS . . . . 39^ 39' SPARE RIBS......... 39' Sem ’n Save Bacon . fkU9' COUNTRY Smi FRYER PARTS! CHICKEN LEGS WITH RACK M PC 401. CHICKEN BREASTS WITH im P PC ‘-CH.0 ^ ROASTING CHICKEN 4 TO t U 9 Ac 3 FULL QUARTS 89< MON. & TUES. ONLY—GRANULATED PIONEER PURE SUGAR 10-98* FULL 7-RIB END ROAST PORK LOINS 29 Pork Chops HYGRADE'S ORIGINAL FULLY COOKED, SEMI-BONELESS, DEFATTED West Virginia Ham Dan'l settle for poor auality berries this year, os the crop is Mg and beautiful. Every berry a price beatify— sugar-sweet, ripened to Kroger's high qualify soloction. Buy now at this spectacular low prico. LB. CENTER CUT U.S. GOVERNMENT GRADED CHOICE BONELESS BOSTON Rolled Roast -79' SAVE 6<-KROGER FRESH SLICED Cracked Wheat BREAD 7 SAVE 20C—KROGER BAKED LARGE Angel Food Cake... »ch39 KROGER FRESH —SMALL SIZE Grade "A" Eggs 3 "69' SAVE 20C-CREAMY KROGER ^ Peanut Butter. . . 2 ;;.5j VALUABLE COUPON BORDEN'S SHERBET OR COUNTRY CLUB " ICE cream! 49 VANIUA CHOCOIATE STRAWKRRV CHOCOUTI STtAWMRtV-VANlUA 1/2 GAUON CARTON C I SAVE 1QC I WITH THIS COUPON I GIANT FRESH-LIKE TIDE Sweet Peas 69‘.„ O I40Z. $4 00 ■ 1 Cons 1 St Kroger in Pontiac Mall. Pontiac Perry St.. Drayton Plains, Miracle Mile, Union Lake and Oxford thru Tues , |une 12, 1962. Limit—Orse Coupon Per Family. VALUABLE COUPON FLAVORFUL SPOTLIGHT INSTANT coffee: 99 VALUABLE COUPON TOP VALUE SAVE 3QC with this j lo-oz. jAii COUPON ■ Coupo^'Valid at Kroger in Pontiac Mall. Pontiac Perry St., Drayton Plains, Miracle Mile, I Union Lake and Oxford thru Tues., June 12, 1962. Limit—One Coupon Per Family, STAMPS 1 WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF KROGER | VAC PAC coffee! ,t ------- I Bll! 50 EXTRA 1-LB. CAN 59 REGULAR, DRIP OR FINE GRIND 4c’i^’N^79' 4cZ89' FOR DAD OR GRADS! BRAND NEW ELECTRIC SCHICK RAZOR 999 $22.50 REG. PRICE 3 WAY ADJUSTABLE HEAD WITH TRAVEL CASE SAVE 7«-DCl MONTE SWEET PEAS. SAVE Rc-Oei MONTI CUT GREEN BEANS SAVf n«-PINIAmi-ORAfEFROIT DEL MONTE DRINK a 3 CANS 89' SAVE 10‘—OB MONTE CREAM STYLE OR KERNEL SWEET CORN . . . 5cZ89' KROGER—FRESH SLICED SANDWICH or Weiner Buns 2 39* SOMERDALE BRAND FROZEN VEGETABLES PEAS OR CORN MIXIO VECiTAUES LEAF SPINACH CHOPPED MOCCOll so Extra VALUE Stamps < ^ Cottage Cheese ^ S^c«a«i VMM li Fw»u« H.II. rtttj g 84.. Draytoe Plxla*. Mlrwle inie, tlxlw AC Lake aad OxIoiA Ura 8al„ iaae It, Ittt. BSc VALUABLE COUPON S 25 Extra V4^ Stamps s ^ WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF ^ ^ U-Or CAN UOUIO SKandu Detergent g Caayaa VaH4 ia Pasllac Mall, Paallar Parr* 84., Draylaa rialaa. Miracle Mile, Ualaa [ News (7* News, Weather. Sports (56) Industry on Parade 7:00 (2) Danger Man (41 (Color) George Pierrot (7) Tightrope (91 Political 7:30 (2) To TeU the Truth (4) Pierrot (cont.) (71 Cheyenne (9) Movie: "The Last Ride.' (1944) A police detective sets out to uncover racketeers responsible for selling of faulty tires which have caused number of fatal accidents. Ridi-ard Travis, Charles Lang, Eleanor Parker. (56) Last Continent (j6) Way of Life 6:00 (2) Pete and Giadys (4) Nationai Velvet (7) Cheyenne (Cont.) (9) Movie .Cont.) (56) Science and Government 8:30 (2) Father Knows Beat (4) (Color) Price U Right (7) Rifleman (9) Festival 0:00' (2) Danny Thomas (4) 87th Precinct (7) Surfside 6 (9) Festival (Cont.) (56) Guest Traveler 8:10 (2) Andy Griffith (4) 87th Precinct (com.) (7) Surfside 6 (cont.) (9) Festival (Cont.) 10:00 (2) Julie and Carol (Special) (4) ThriUer (7) Ben C^y (9) News 10:18 (9) Weather 10:80 (9) Telescope UAW 10:10 (2) Julie and Carol (Cont.) (4) ThriUer (cont.) (7) BenCasey ((3ont.) (9) Don Messer 11:00 (2) News (4) News (7) h Jump oft. Mary Ellia. Tullio Carmlnati, Ida Lupinb. (7) Weather 11:30 (4) Tonight (7) Movie: "My UtUe Chickadee." (1940) A mask^ bandit holds up stagecoach and carries off not only gold but glamorous female passenger as well. Mae West, W. C. Fields. Joseph Callela, Dick Foran. Fuuy Knight, Margaret Hamilton. Ruth DonneUy, C?ne Austin., Anne Npgel. TOESDAY MOBMNU 6:70 (2( Meditations 6:75 ('.') On the Farm Front 6:3(1 CM Spei tium '62 7:00 (2) B'Wana Don (4) Today (7) Funews (9) Movie: "Julia 'Misbe- haves." (19tt) Attempting to get daughter happily married. English music-hall actress becomes involved in escapades. Greer Gar^. Waller Pidgeon, Peter Law-ford, Elizabeth Taylor. 11:18 (7) News. Sports 11(18 (2) Sports (4) Weather 11:18 (2i Weather I (4) Sports ;ll:*8 (2) Movie ; "Paris in Spring." (1935) After manl threatens to jump off Eiffel L,j„ Tower because his sweet- g.o, ,3, captain Kangaroo heart doesnt love him his.,.,, (7) Jack LaLann. sweetheart otters to drivey.po ,3, Movie: ' .Seven Keys to Baldpate." (4) Living (7) Movie: "Chrislmas Holiday. " Part 2. (56) Mathematics for You t:M (56) Safe'y 10:00 (4( Say W'hen (56) Our Scientific World 10:70 (7) Tips and Tricks 10:75 (7) News (9) Billboard By I’nlled Press International llO:.^ (2> I Love Luev TO TELL THE TRUTH, 7:30| (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch; p. m. (2). Panel game. Bud Collyer (7i Life of Riley him tl e can sec him DrolHAi Romney Urges of Negroes Dirmorr m — RepubUcan|date said in a speech to the tmdt Geoixe Romney urged Michigan [union leadership council, a ppe- Negroes during the wcekciid to ibandon wluii he termed (heir (segregated \otlng iwitern" for Democratic candidates. *• * * The GOP gubernatorial cundi- TV Features HAH HPKKII TROIHLE - tenable to speak .Spanish. Indiana stale trooper Michael Rashela has a difficult time explaining to Felix Ocana of Paslo, Colombia that tiie minimum speed limit on the Indiana toll road is 40 miles per ar rkotsisi hour. Ocana^K Model T just won't go that fast so he will have to lake a different iwid on his trip to Ottawa. Ont. from Ecuador. He stalled his journey in May of 1960. Dynasty Issue Raised by GOP dominstely Negro labor organiza- ‘ tion, "the Demdcratfr party today validly accepts and tai« for granted the overwhelming majority supiiort of Negroes.'' then added; "Tile segregated vstiag pah leni sf the Negro to Just as ds-festlng of the atois aad geato of Negroeo as any ether tom si 'Mtergalloa, I "Tlie Negro today knows that he , Ishonld not be taken for granted in ' ithe industrial and commercial field. However, he is overlooking something just as impbrtant when he adheres rigidly to one political ' party. Eventually he is taken for granted, qnd others of wimm Ihf parly is not so sure roccivc greater altenUon . . . BaSTON ih - Mas.sachusctls|‘U«tW» I»« MORE’ Republicans threw the dymisty is-| "I believe I cttuld do more than sue at the Democrats toilay ovcf|Olhers to correct the problem of their convention choice of young'racial discrimination and human hklward M. Kcnnisly, the IMcsi-iinjustice in thla state because I ; Party in Massachusetts Hits Dems' Backing President's Brother Says Military hosts. THE RIFLEMAN, 8:30 p. m. (7). "Two Ounces of Tin.” Sammy Dais Jr. stars as a gunman seeking to avenge his father's death. Rett. ‘JULIE AND CAROL AT CAR-NEOIE HALL," 10 p. m. (2). A tai^, one-hour musical-comedy spwial Starring Julie Andrews of 'My Fair Lady” fame and Carol Burnett of television's Garry Moore show. Highlights include a take-off on the "Nausiev Dancers," satirizing Russian dance groups; "The Pratty Family," spooling Swiss folk singers, and "Big D,'~ Western romp. BEN CASEY, M p. m. (7). "The Insolent Heart.” Casey's former teacher faces heart surgery which may prove fatal. Repeat. TmiLLEB, 10 p. m. (4). "The Return of Andrew Bentley.'’ A couple inherit an uncle’s estate with proviso that they check the burial vault daily. Repeat TONKHIT. 11:15 p. m. <4). Mort Sahl is the guest host. Guests include Inger Stevens, Henry Morgan. Otto Preminger, singer Nan^ cy WUson and Hugh Heffner, publisher of Playboy Magazine. (Color), (9) CTicz Helene (56) English VI 10; f (9) Nursery S<'hool Time 11:00 C2) December Bride (4> (Color) Price is Right (7) Ernie Ford (9) Romper Room (56) Spanish Lesson 11:15 (56) German Lesson 11:30 (2) Qear Horizon (4) Concentration (7) Yours for a Song Has Space Plan of Too Much Pull Defense Dept. Wonts to Prevent Control by Reds, Is Report NEW YORK (AP) - The Defense Depart mcnl is embarking (upon a man-in-space program lo (9> Movie: "Escape in thcjpppypn, military control of Sun '* I... AU- __ .u_ rAMILT ArrAlEA r" r r“ r 11 12 18 u 18 >8 17 18 2i 28 24 28 E 2T 32 id r 3b 37 41 42 43 45 46 47 46 8o Si 82 83 54 88 8s 11 31 Without fFr.) M OrulBf pUco 31 Blue ribbon 4$ Cor oeneMory 3 8t0U 3 French fotbn i ICunlUoni 35 TontlM H Hoimot. (01 Initonet 31 Bellow 31 Sifter ii a‘.sf 36 Varied 30 8o?ift MO J. K Pronoun! 7 Roovtr rr Bouldir I Roacli (or • Prepo---- to AwtraUaa Oftrteh SI Prolt drink! SS Employ 61 Caremony 64 Plntst 66 Oermtn nrtlclo epoiltlon ----jick o( neck Is Cn^ 20 Church part S3 TV uncle 3} Strlnied TUESDAY AFTFJINOON 17:00 (2) Love of Ufe (4) (Color) ^Your First Impression (7) Camouflage (56) What’s New 17:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Window Shopping 17:40 (56) Spanish Lesson 18:45 (2) Guiding Light 17:50 (9) News 17:55 (4) News (56) German Lesson (2) Star Perlorinance (4) Groucho (7) Day in Court (9) Movie: "Devil's Istand. 1:10 (56) French Lesson 1:75 (7) News 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) "People Arc Funny" (7) How 10 Marry a MiUton-aire (56) World History I;S5 (4) Faye Elizabeth 7(00 (2) Password (4) Jan Murray (Color) (7) Jane Wynun (56) French Lessem 7:75 (4) News 7:80 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keys 3:00 (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen lor a Day (9> Movie: “The Captain Is a Lady . " 3:30 12) Verdict is Yours (4) Our Five Daughters (7) Who Do You Trust? 3:55 (2) News 1:00 (2) Brighter Day (4) Make Room lor Daddy (7) American Bandstand 4:15 i!2) Secret Storm 4:70 (9) Telescope UAW 4:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:80 (7) American Newsstand 4:85 (4) News 8:00 (2) Movie: ‘Those Were the Days.” (4) (Color) (George Pierrot (7) Action Theater (9) Popeye and Pals (56) What's New? 8:88 (56) British Calendar 8:48 (56) News Magazine 8:88 (4) Kukia and Ollie by the Soviet Union, the New York Timeo said today. * * * The nation's space program, until now largely a civilian program. 6Pt to acquire a military tinge, Washington dispatch to the Times said. After years of reluctance and the Defense Depart-has Anally accepted the military space program aimed at control of space as jwell as its exploration. ♦ ★ * As a result, the department has dot ided that the Air Force should develop the technology lor manned satellite capable of specting and destroying a hostile vehicle in space. * * * Beyond this decision, partment—at the urging of the White ' House and the National Aeronautics and Space Admlnia-tration—htu undertaken study to draft an enlarged military space program. As explained by defense officials, the Air Force will not be given a go-ahead immediately to develop a large-scale, operational system of manned satellites but will develop the technology, components and subsystems required in an eventual system, a * * TTie expectation is that funds for this purpose will bb included in the military budget lo be pre-' sented in January for the 1964 fiscal year. —Today's Radio Pragrams— WCAE (list) WrON (I4SSI MONUAT EVEHINO t:tS-WJR. NlWk WXY7, "s’lwsU WXYZ. Ain Draltr CKLW. Bud DATtM WCAR. A, Comr WPON, N'ewi, O. Tlno WZtZ. Ed Uloisaa CKLW, F. Uwls WjeH, Jsrk llw Edlber WCAR. O. BMTflU cenent CKLW. B. SUtoB WPON. N«V!. Tlno S:1S-WWJ. Pk>« E3Ukbctti 6-WJR. Tenlrtt at S —I. (itwi, Tln« WPON, I WWJ Toil sod UwL wxvz, A Dtolor WPON. Hte*. TIBO U:SS-WJR. Resnoit WW3. World NOW! WXYZ Lm AUoa WCAR New!. two MlWlI »:•#—WJR. Voice i>( Agrie. WWJ Newi, HoborU wxva Prod WeU CKLW. Ptnn, Eye Opeooi WJBR, Newi, Aeeri WCA^ Newi. Slirndon WPON. Nowi, Alt*. WooMs f;S»-WZR. kiMirte noli CKLW, Eyo Opener. Dsrld WJBK. News. AVonr WCAR. Newi WPON. Sport* t:SS-WJR. Niwi, llaslo WWJ. Kew!. R^aru WZTZ. NtWi, WoU CKLW. News ■e-‘-WJ8K, Newi, , WCAR. Newt WPOH. Nowo. Don MoLood y:*»_WXTE. Newi. Well CKLW. Nowi. 0*»UI WJBE,. Roww Aeorp wwe, wewi. noovn* WJBK. NOW!. Aeorp WCAR poerldon WPOR. NOW!. Don kIcLOOd WJBK. Rewi. Aeorp 6:**—WJR Mews, klurrop towj. Nowi, Ukrtcni WZVZ, Paul Rweep. WoU CKLW, Newi, Dneld WJBK. Howe. Aeorp WCAR, HeW!. Mlrtpn WZTR Breskfsat Club Ciur^. Joe Via WJBK, Hen. Retd irrOH Nows. Jtnp Otieo lOilS-CKLW. Kennedp Catllnt l:00-WJR. Newt. Realtb WWJ, NOW!, Lpnkor mXIZ, Wlator CUW. Time to Chat WJBK. NAws. IMd WCAR Hews, Martpa WPQIf Hews. Olson Show l:*S-Wm. Time (or tiusle WXVZ. Wtaur. Howi CKLW, Joe Vaa T0E8OAT APTBRHOOR ItitO—WJR Htws. Ptm ‘WWJ, Hows. Lpnksr WXYB, Hows, Wtatsr CKLW. Hows. Omt WJBK News, Rotd WCAR. news. Parse WPON. Newt. Jotrp Otoen l:ta-WJR. Hows, WWJ, News, Nelchbor WXYZ. WtaUr CKLW. Nows, Joe Taa WJBK Hews. Retd WPOH, Haws, OUoB Show S;SS-WJR. Hows. Bhoweooe WWJ, Hows, MaxwsU WXYZ. Wlaior Niwi CKLW, Nsws. Joe Vsa WJBK. News. Los WPON. News, Bob Ororn S;0*—WJR. newo. Bhowcaoo WWJ. News. llsswcU WXVZ. SabastUa. Htws CKLW, Dselea WJBK. Htws. Robert Lao WCAR, News, snerldin WPON Nova, Bob Oroaa f:*S-WJR. Music RlO CKLW. Kaonodp CalUas 4;Mt-WJR. Haws. Clark WWJ, Bmphasia. Bwaptr ____ News.- Bunper C WJBK. Hews. LOs WPON Nsws. Bob Ore WXYZ. BebaoUaa Big Snake Is Victim deni's brolheV, for the U.Si .Senate The GOP. with a dynasty problem of its own, moves into Worces-t?r for its convention Saturday. The rhief RepubUean rival* fur the U.H. Heaale nomliuitlon are Ueorge Uabot izHlge. a»B «( the think It must be ba.sed upon cooperation and practical solutions. "I think it is time to stop using disriiminatlon as a political football. I will fight for full ftwdom, eqiMl opportunity, equal recognition, and justice for all." PASADENA. Calif. Ui- College student Mike Kiieger wanted lo help a friend’s snake work up an appetite, so he put the 7-toot ana-i-onda in a bathtub of warm water in his apartment yesterday. R w * frequently liappens when someone is in the tub, the phone rang. Krieger, 20. returned to find the anaconda — which crushes its prey like the boa constrictor — dlsap-peahng down the toilet. He grabbed its tail and started pull- ns- In the next apartment, Rob Titswortta, a graduate utudenl at CuHtornla Inatitute of Technology where Krieger la an ander-graduate, happened lo look Into hlH bathroom, unaware of the dranu next door. The siwke'N head had appeared In hbi plnnib-Nt- Still unaware of dual interest, tach man bent lo the task of saving the snake. Mike and two friends — not wanting neighbors to know of their pel — tugged at the tall. Bob enlisted two fire department units, sev’eral policemen a humane society worker in a try to coax the snake out. It look an hour and a half — while Hie snake wjiHed wearily —for the two fartfoas to learn they were at odds over the enda-The m^ then broke the plumb-ng and retrieved the snake, by now perhaps with an appetite but certainly with little stomach lor further such adventures. R ♦ * "And I can't say I blame him, Krieger said. The humane society took custody. R R R Krieger explained that the warm water in the tub helped the snake — a cold-blooded tropical animat — raise its-body temperalure and thus (eel more inteixsted in eat-ins- Fire Wrecks Building at Summer Resort and the IM» OOP vice president, and U-S. Hep. Hs. ronipleUng hIs iMh year In Congress. At slake is the S«>nate seal Lodge's father once held until John F. Kennedy defeated him in 1962. The younger Lodge told a group of i-anventiun delegates at his fa-' ther’B home in Beveriy yesterday; R R R . have been lumped with the (i.vnasty by my opponent. The dynasty issue is a goiid issue and one that I can particularly press against the Democrats. R R R 'I have no brother in the While House, nor do I have an uncle wiio is speaker of (he House, nor have I had a close relative in high elective office for 10 years." The line about having an uitcle who I* *pe«dwr of Hie House was SOUTH HAVEN (ft - Fire .ves-lerday destro.ved the 80-room main building of the Silver Beach Re-heir. An auxiliary ho also was lost. R R * South Haven riremen fought the blaze for an hour and a half. The building, built before the turn o( the century and formerly known as the Newcombo Resort, was one of the finest resorts in the rea during the early 1900s. R R R Louis Jaronson, owner of the re-Botl for, the last 15 years, refused lo estimate how much the de-stiryed property w’«s worth, but staled that $15,000 worth of equipment had been destroyed. To Vote on Tax to Aid Handicapped Pupils FLINT (ft — A controversial tax proposal to raise $670,000 a year for special education for handicapped children went before Gen-;see County School District voters ioday. The proposal, for a halt-mill levy, was advocated by the County Board of EducaHon but op poaed by the Flint Bonrd of Edu- Pre-election dispute has been sharp. One school official's home was picketed by parent and chil. dren demonstrators. The county board tried unsuccessfully to get a court injunction against the Flint board in a wrangle over statenieni.-by the latter. R R R TTie county board says the program is necessary. The Flint board feels otherwise. The two groups also have disputed over ultimate control of the proposed piugram. ''iSJUr Industry Survey Asked in Light of Common Market WASHINGTON (UPI) - Senate (emocratic whip Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., urged the administration today' to conduct a na-tiemwide labor-management survey of Industry’s competitive position in relation to the European Common Market. Selling Companies, Hum|)hrey suggested that Hie sun«y be eondacled by the President's La-bor-Managenient Advisory Committee. Humphrey said the committee's findings could be the ba.se for a second White House Cohference on National Economic Issues. ‘We need new action and new policlei by both government and private industry lo bodst export of our products overseas — and need them now.” he declared. Ottoll Need His Humor Against Senate Friends By EARL WTILSON NEW YORK — Otto Preminger has a warm sense of humor — luckily. He’s going to need one. Some of the anvil chorus Is trying to scalp him, except that baldness -scalped him long ago, over his movie, “Advise and Consent.” It portrays one U.S. Senator briefly effeminate, and another as a demagogic blackmailer. "I don’t mind what they say — I have never made a picture everybody liked,he says, with a smile, a shrug and an Austrian accent. "Why don’t you sometime?” I asked him. ★ ★ ★ WILSON He laughed softly. A nice picture everybody liked — no controversy — It would die! I saw the film previewed. Franchot Tone, who played a dying President, was there and obviouely wae healthy — be went out for a drink. Burgess Meredith had a great scene as a psychopathie witness. After at a supper party 1 said: "You were a very believable mental case.” He bowed . . . and repeated the facial twitch he used. "Have you heard from Sam Ooldwyn about the picture?” I asked Preminger. ‘‘H9W can I when we’re not speaking?” he said — referring to an old feud. Preminger has a Diego Rivera'painting of three lemons on the wall of his 5th Av. office. It’s called "Three Umons.” ‘The 'Three Lemons’ title does not refer to my last three pictures,” he tells callers. “As it was done In 1946 — before my last three pictures.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Marilyn ^onroe didn’t show up three days straight at 'Something’s Got to Give” — as they put it, "She’s 72 hours late” . .. Beautiful Joan Bennett’s escort: good-looking Jimmy Amster . . . Joe DiMaggio writes from Europe he'll visit East Berlin Henry Fonda’s date at the "Advlso and Consent" premiere was ex-wife Susan ... Natalie Weed’s wearing a new chignon hairdo suggested by Lis Taylor. Sydney Chaplin and Orson Bean are adllbblng lines In ’Subways,” as a gag, throwing the rest of the cast off Alan King, who has a routine kidding medics, was given a lunch by the AMA In Chicago . . . Connie Francto twisted In blue jeans at the Rcnindtable. EARL’S PEARLS — You seldom see office workers wasting time around the water cooler any more — they’re all out'having coffee. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: 'Personally," says a local husband, “I’m grateful to Liz Taylor — putting all us mturled men back in style again!” WISH I’D SAID THAT: ITUs Is the time of year when the guy who worked so bard to graduate starts wondering what the hurry was. One of the quickest ways to meet people is to sit on the wrong blanket at the beach. Thai’s earL brother. Kfwiiedy (Mealed at SprliiRfleid lor Hh: roBventlon eMkrameHi —MaasaclMiaett* Ally. (ien. F,d-ward J. MK;ortnsrk Jr. He Is a nephew M speaker John W. Mc-t^ormnek of .Maaanehiiaens. Curtis, who will be 69 in September, hammered away on the issue of "Immaturily.’’ ‘Now that Ted Kennedy has been .jdorsod,’’ Curtis told a campaign meeting, “it is dear that the Republican party wUl lose one of its biggest issues unless it has a can-j didate who can fight hard " of immaturity." forces (smid not change the so- and that "any change wID havo to eome from the declaloR af rank and file .Negro cHiseos.’’ He promised to observe "equal right* before, during and after the election.’' adding that “no greater disservice can be rendered any single racial, ethnic or religious group than to distribute pcriitical honors and opportunities on any basis other tiian that of top skill available for public sendee. R R R appoint people on the basis of competency and ability, and .there are competent Negroes.” Woman fortnred byiliionizinglTCH -ImimlfMtdHJmak - P.fUmuiyrfLA.CMl^.A Hm-I nlM Inaifl Mnart! o( wttdi Intllas, Don't mSwIUm LANACANE at dnaahik Though the tired Denutcrals were! home from Springfield, their bat-| fling was far from over. In Maasa-chusetU, conventions settle little since candidates who (ail to win{ endorsed candidate in S^ember.j Bans Iraq Deer Hunting BAGHDAD (AP)-The Agricul-lure Ministry lias outlawed ihel hunting of deer throughout Iraq for three years. Officials said nitmerouB hunters have been us-| ing cars to run down and slayi • RENTAL • SOFT WATER •-r $3 SALES-?-$199 Up LINDSAY SOFT WATiR CO. •I Newfcmvy It. Pi Mill 1962 AIR CONDITIONERS $167.00 SWEETS Radis &App. COMSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS Become Debt Free the Sensible Way. Arrange for o Schedule of Payments to Fit Your Income. • NO LIMIT TO AMOUNT • Requirements: Your Sincere Desire to Get Out of Debt. Phone FE 8-0456 or SEE Michigan Credit Counsellors 702 Pontiac State Bonk Bldg. Mambar—Amaricon Aixocioiion Cradil CounsRllors —Miehigaa Association of Crodit Coan*«Uor* john M. Hsnsaa, Diractor tost* Ramlatad LicsfisM-nandsd SUPER DISCOUNTS COLOR TV, BLACK and WHITE TV RADIOS, STEREOS Bafor* You Buy . . . Ch*ek Our Low, Low PricRS ... Guarant(6«d to Sov* You Monay! ' RCA MSI sisyici -sisi VALUES ZBIfni I raofs gapatiMOR ia Coloi Tf TRY U$l Op an 8 to 9 Monday and fridoy . SALES and SERVICE CONDON’S RADIO & TV 730 Wast Huron St - trnMi ji-um Po.( Offirr - « 4-9736 Rty-ClGttT ■ V THE PONTIAC ERESS; MONDAY. JCNE 11. um» V^ferinorians Spend ' $6i000 on Drugs Yearly NEW YORIf (UPIl - The lypl-cal ve erlnaiian buys approximately S6.000 in drugs each year. The ^imate, from the New Yorl^ State Association of Public | .Health Veterinarians, is coupled with a report that each of the 19,-( vets nationwide is responsible, on the average, for thb health of 375 horses, 7,785 cattle, 2,577 shtH'p, 4.SS3 hogs, 31,063 poultry. 2,083 ; and 1,166 cats. Campers Take 'Homes' Along on Vacation summer, chances are bettor Chevrolet and Ford came into DirTROIT — When titmihes take to the open road for their vacation> HOFFMAN’S MKT. 526 N. Perry St. Open 9 to 6 Daily—9 to 9 Friday Wa rasarva right to limit quantities thati ever they'll l)c taking their vacation homes with them. The postwar boom in tents and trailers already has pushed the camping business to unprecedented peaks. And now lh<> newest lihase Is the vehicle which'includes sleeping ami eating accomodations. For years, handy do-it-yourselfers i ave b«'en impro\'ising bedj and camping .lacilitics around _^thejr trusty station wagons. MONDflY-TUESPaY-WEDNESDAY SPECIALS! I Hoffman'sOwn ''BUTCHER BOY" STEAKS 59 c lb. Delicious—Sliced PORK LIVER 2 £ 29' VALUABLE COUPON ^ Mon.-Tuei.-Wed. Only! This Coupon Intitlei Bearer to ONE LB. COUNTRY-FRESH REMUS BUHER... 39 WITH ANY $5 MEAT PURCHASE! L with the Intrudueiion into Ihl ronnlry ol small liiis-t.v|M' vehicles which lerd themselves readily lo eonversiun as eaiii|)ing One 6/ the iir.st of dies > was the pVolkswagen Microbus with its (double side dooft, rear' engine and a roof high enough Ip Idlow an average man lo .stand up. this mafket a year ago with the Cbrvair Greenbriar and the Econo-line bus, now marketed as a FaJ-. Xi club wagon. A A ♦ All tliree of these units rome originally with bench seats, carrying eight or nine people. But the seats can be removed and the interiors fitted with tables, beds, stoveji and even a toilet and run-ling water; Dealen in all three lines now have available conversion kits, so that 1h<‘ fittings can be In-slulled for .voiir \aeation trip, then removed when the \ehtele returns In niH-iiial servlr-e. Ka«'-tnry instullalions also are avall- Mlssll.i; IX.SI'KCTOKS - Looking over the Navy's TALOS missile on di.splay at the Pontiac Mall until noon Winlne.sd.'iy are (from left( .Mrs. .Jean Knowles of 126 Upland Ave. and Chief H. t, Scott, in charge of the local Navy recruiting oificc. The supersonic surfacc-to-.surfaee missile is dcsigniKi to provide long-range defense against air attack. • ’ rear benches which convert into a children's bed, paneling for the left wall, floor covering. If also has bed boards for a double lied, dining table, door shell, eight cushions, eurtalns,' screens, Iwo-burner camp stove, ice box, water lank with spigot and a ■hemigal toilet. KI NS *700 The price for this runs about 3700 plus original installation. Once installed, it can be «emoved In less than an hour by th^owner. A siirv-plifi^ kit ('an be installed- in 20 minutes, the manufacturer claims. Now well Into their second year I on Ihe market, the (irtu'nbriar I Ilia! Ford bus sold some .34,000 ^ ill l!M>l and Volkswagen pushed * *'■ i the total well over 50,000. Oth.'.' varieties in much more the following Items. A ynnity with customized versions also mirror, medicine cabinet, front and.,,.^ One. by Mereedes- iBenz of Germany, runs in the I neighborluKid of $10,000. I A second-type of self-contained camping unit utili/.es a pickup truck, or at least the truck cha.ssis. Dodge, which doesn't have a 3it-tje bus lo match Foixi and ClieviH)-lei, offers the Custom .Sportster, which is a house unit mounted directly on a truck chassis. This gives it added stability as well as making it eligible for passenger car legistration. ★ ★ The Custom Sportster offers a flush toilet and shower, hot and cold ruiinin.g waier. kitchen facilities and room for five to sl«‘ep. by Captive Audience [ TUC.SON, Ariz. - Artist Davis' Sorokin has found an ideal place to display his paintings. i The Pil'd Cross haa';s them on; the ceiling above the tables on which blood donons lie, , lolives me or-Ameriean rail-_ All are diesels turbine-clectric units. Vaeation...anii Fun Beams professioBAcsi You Can Be Confident You'll Look Your Very Best! •Vacation time need not be expensive. Your prpfes-sional dry cleaner can save you time and money by having your present wardrobe restored to like-nevv freshness. Even your delicate new fabrics that require special care will;retain all their miracle; qualities, particularly your wash ’n' wear apparel. Slocks,, jackets, sport shirts, cottons and Bermudas are expertly finished to assure cool, clean and comfortable' wear. "Why take chances with unsound methods?" ... freshen your Vacation Impression with Professional Drydeaning! Prompt Pickyp and Delivery Service Leave the worrying to us ... your valuable time- needed for vacation preparation need not be interrupted when just a phone call will bring a bonded messenger to your door for fast, convenient pickup and delivery. with c§r^ci@sining • • Don't forget those costly furs and woofen's and eliminate expensive replacement costs. Your professional drycleoner is equipped v/ith-scientific etoroge vaults that Include every modern facility necessary .for protection against moths, fire and theft and also leaving you more closet space. Storogie costs so little ... cq|l one of the following dry cleaners for details todoyl. WARDROBE CLEANERS 1038 Baldwin Avenue FE 2-9289 OGG CLEANERS MAIN OFFICE; 379 L Pike FE 4-9593 Nib mnmbert rncniv* •xelutive I tnchnicol information on oil tho I arts of profottionol dry cloon-1 ing. Thoy support vital clothing ■ car* reioarch. PONTIAC LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS MITCHELL CLEANERS & SHIRT LAUNDRY 540 South Telegraph FE 2-8101 FOX CLEANERS 719 West Huron FE 4-1536 2267 Orchard Loke Rd„ W. Bloomfield Twp. FE 8-9571 GRESHAM CLEANERS & SHIRT LAUNDRY 605 Oakland Avenue f E 4-2579 SYLVAN CLEANERS 869 Orchard Lake Avenue FE 4-9881 FATHER & SON CLEANERS 941 Jotlyn Avenue FE 2-6424 Call Any of ihe Above Professional Cleaners With Your Fabric and Clothing Care Problems •THIS AD SPONSORED BY THE ABOVE PONTIAC AREA PROFESSIONAL DRY CLEANERS; ^ LET OUR CAPTAIN DO THE DRIVING Q GlS^la^CfysE •AMERICA’S GREAT INLAND SEAS ’ 7 DAY Cniises only ^177 plus tu. m*nt> Shorter cruises avail FOR YOU! _ will sail YOU over 2200 miles of scenic waterways. The Chef will cook delicious meals for YOU. The waitresses. Sailings from DETROIT, Michigan S.S. NORTH AMERICAN . . . each Monday and Wedne-.day during ■ St to Georgian Bay;....... --------Jay Ju-.- lust to Mackinac I —.kt, MinSising, Houghl________ Buffalo, Clavtland and return. 8.S. NORTH AMERICAN . NEW- ---NIC CRUISES leave Mondays 2,9,16.23.30 te Uke Superior ___Port Arthur, Ont. Ret. via Ule Royale. Kaweenaw Waterway. St. ---y's River, Soo Locks. Mai„.„._w Island, Green Bey. Chicago. Atk about oau-war Saaurar Cru/f Ont.: Mackinac' Island':' Chi Cleveland: BuKalo and return. SPECIAL SEAWAY CRUISES . . . Sailing June 19 anctSept. 5 through the Seaway to Montreal and return. Ask for special folder. 2-OAY and 5-OAY CRUISES also eveilabla Irom Detroit. •> butnua Ciicago aad Moot TosEV/'errMT GEORGIAN BAY LINE TRAVEL AGENT ^oo, woodwani Detroit ?h. Midi WO 3-6760 Taxpayers Say Thanks! RESOLUTION WHEREAS, the County of Oakland is now toking steps to construct o large Ofrport near the northern limits of the City of Pontiac on the theory thot there will be a need for such on airport in the Oakland County oreo, notwithstanding the very eloborote, extensive and complete oirport in the County of Woyne which is, toddy, within one hour's driving distance from ony port of Ooklond, Macomb ond Washtenaw County; ond WHEREAS, there hove been no cost estimates submitted OS to this vast and extensive project olthough 5365,000.00 dollars hos been expended to purchase the land in the area where the airport is to be locoted; ond WHEREAS, there hos been no request by any federol ogency or any other responsible authority that this airport is necessary at the present time; and, WHEREAS, the cost of financing this oirpxirt will be token from the county budget ond due to conservative estimotes, this cost is prohibitive unless financing con be obtoined by the issuonce .of County revenue bonds, which ore sub|ect to referendum;'ond, whereas, comparoble airports to wit, Wayne Metropolitan and O'Hare at Chicogo hove exceeded $150,-000,000 00 costs ond the expense of a county oirport, becouse of the extensive groding, the uneven terrain ond navigation eosements will be upwards of $200,-OOO,O0b.OO, in the opinion of persons qualified to moke such estimates; and WHEREAS, to raise funds for costly projects, County officials ore compelled to moke unrealistic budgets which contain unnecessory oppropriations to build up surplus funds all of which curtails the operations of our schools and other units of government who share milloge with the County of Oakland, ond WHEREAS, the present doy totol tax burtlens, when added together, are becoming confiscatory which demands that unnecessory ond wasteful projects be eliminoted, ond WHEREAS, this Commission is well aware of the resultont damage to Pontioc property owners from noise and vibrotion of aircraft coming in over the City to land at this new proposed airport immediately north of the Pontioc City Limits; and WHEREAS, the United States Supreme Court has recently held thot the authorities maintoining such on airport ore lioble for oil damage, nuisance and on-noyonce from jet oircroft. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that this Commission does hereby register objection to the expenditure of County tax funds for this unrealistic ond visionory project which, if cofnpleted, will bring injury and damage to the home owners of the City of Pontioc whose property is in the flight pattern of oircroft using this field and to that end this Commission instructs its representatives on the Ooklond . County Board of Supervisors of this project os being on unnecessary, wasteful ond unjustified expenditure of tax funds needed for more worthwhile projects. Published in full as a Public Service, and in grateful appreciation to Mayor Landry, Commissioners Ledford, Bottom and Kirby, by ,the OAKLAND COUNTY HOMEOWNERS and TAXPAYERS’ ASSOCIATION SiRiilw actisR has betR taksR by: City of Sylvan Lake, City of Berkley, Villege bf Lokf Oriea, Tewnihip of Orion, Township of Holly, Township of Lyon, Township of Pontiac, Township of Ooklaod, Township of Rose. This issue is vital to every toxpoyer in Ooklond County, if you ore interested in how your tax money •s hondled, ottend the next yenerot meeting ot Pontiac Northern High School June 20, 8:00 P. M.