The Weather II V.S. WMther B«re>a Forautt Fair, Warm (OetalU r«i« Z) THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 121 NO. 117 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1903 —30 PAGE^ DNn®D?imifl™iiSSumoKAL For European Defense BONN Ut> - President Kennedy and German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer agreed tottey their best efforts’’ to bring into being a multinational nuclear force to strengthen the defenses of Western Europe. A communique announced they also agreed that every effort will be made to strengthen common defense planning and joint operation'of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization defense forces. Hie communique came near the end of Kennedy’s two-day visit to this West German capi- tai at the start of his swing around Western Europe. Shortly before the comniunique was issued, Kennedy reminded the NA'TO allies, through a news conference statement, that the United States has borne a major burden of European defense for Ilf years. And he said he'expects them to consider this in shaping their economic, trade and monetary policies. * A- * In affect Kennedy urged Allied governments to reject discriminatory trade policy that would hurt U.S. econornic interests. He appealed for cooperation in other fields also. Adenauer and K e n n e d y pledged itheniseives in their communique to carry out their undertakings withip "the free worid’s strategy of peace.” They said their talks here had ‘demonstrated the close and friendly relations which exist between ttie two couhtries,’’ the communique added. Kennedy avoided any direct criticism of President Charles de Gaulle of France at his news con- ference. But much that he said and much that went Into the communique was in conflict with de Gaulle’s aims. ‘ ' ASKS CLOSER COOPERATION The American President asked for closer cooperation among all the allied countries and strength in the alliance was to be obtained flirough actions by many countries working together rather than through two-country deals such the recent French-German treaty. But he said the United States had made no objection to the treaty. Trieste Dives to Subs Grave Hits IVi-Mile Depth in Search for Thresher ABOARD THE USS FORT SNELLING, at Sea (AP) - The Navy’s deep-diving bathyscaphe Trieste descended a mile and a half to the dark ocean floor of the North Atlantic today in search of the sunken submarine Thresher. The dive wag made after a Navy search official said there was evidence, at last, that search craft had found the spot where the ’Thresher sank April with 12> men. In the spherical gondola suspended beneath the orange and white search craft, when it sjtarted down, were Lt. Cmdr. Donald Reach, 33, a Somerville, Mass. Helicopfers Used in Rescue Flash Flood Strikes Nebraska By United Press International' A prairie cloudburst poured down rains measured unofficially pi more than a foot on eastern Nebraska today and farm families were rescued from flooded homes jy boat and helicopter. * * ★ The storm flooded homes waist-high. Rain gauges overflowed, PROFILES OF LEADERS - President c ______ Kennedy and West German Chancellor Konrad native,’and Kenneth McKenzie. 51,1 Adenauer stand at attention as the national a civilian attached to the Naval |___;________________________^_____________________ Electronics Laboratory, San Diego. Calif. The hour-long descent was begun at 9:35 a m., Eastern Standard Time. The ocean-bottom quest was expected to continue lor four hours. The ascent to the surface was also described as an hour-long operation. the descent today followed several hours of preparations which began after daybreak. The Trieste was loaded for the descent by the addition of a score of bags of buckshot placed on Jher deck. 'The dive was made in a moderate sea, with 4 to 6 foot waves. The wind was 15 kndts from the northwest. As preparations for tlie vital descent were completed, Capt. Frank A. Andrews, in charge of search operations, said iti a shipboard interview: ‘‘We have evidence to feel we are at the spot where Thresher sank, but you can never know about these things until you get down there and look around. That will be the job of ’Trieste.” DEBRIS AT BOTTOM The Navy and scientists were led to a small area of the Atlantic by what they described as a fairly heavy concentration of debris at the bottom and three separate magnetic contacts. The spot is 220 miles off Boston and only a few hundred yards from the last known position of Tlirtsher when she sank. A 10-foot wide yellow buoy, named Bagel II because it resembles a bagel, or dodghnut, marks the descent spot of Trieste. The buoy h'held’taut by a half-inch nylon line weighted with two old locomotive wheels of 7150 pounds each. AP PlwMax anthems are played after the President’s arrival yesterday at Wahn aijrport near Bonn. lightning bolts sparked fires, and I The rainfall at Bruno was normally peaceful streams bal- measured unofficially at up to 14 David City, Neb., police looned beyond their banks. At least two families p^ere rescued by boat in the Bruno, Neb., area and a helicopter aided in the rescue operation. Resepe crews were trying to bring other families to safety at midday. Weather to Be Nice (or Outdoor Cooking Put on the chef’s hat, dad. With the expected warm weather this week, evening barbecues would be ideal. Area temperatures will average three to five degrees above normal for the next five days, with only minor daily variations. The normal high range is from 77 to 83, the normal low from 54 to 62. Fair and rather warm is the prediction through tomorrow. A low of 62 is forecast for tonight, along with a high of 88 for to- Winds today are southeasterly at eight to 12 m.p.h. They will become southerly at 10 to 15 m.p.h. tomorrow. Today’s mercury, steadily rising from its early morning low of 57 in downtown Pontiac, measured 89 at 2 p.m. In Today's Press Papal Audience Diplomats hear pontiff’s policies — PAGip; 20. 1964 Election Party chairmen discuss Issues — PAGE 30. Congress Faces annual ritual of providing money for new fiscal year - PAGE 16. Agatha Christie ... - V 8 Obituaries M Area News .... 4 Sports ...17-19 Astrology 22' Theaters -29 Bridge .... .22' ’TV & Radio Programs 29 Comics 22 Wilson, Earl 29 Editorials ..... ... 6 Women’s Pages .. .13-15 Markets 23 Order Against Tax Collections Circuit Judge Arthur E. Moore today lifted an injunction the City of Southfield, clearing the way for the city to proceed with its collection of taxes. ★ ★ ★ But Judge Moore specified that tax money collected on assessment challenged In a Circuit Court suit be “set aside in a special bank, account” pending a decision in the case. City officials claimed they faced a financial crisis as a result of the temporary injunction signed June 13 by Circuit Judge William J. Beer, ★ * ★ The restraining order granted the Southfield Federation of Civic Associations, which filed the suit asking the court to rule that the city’s lowering of certain assessments was illegal. Judge Moore said his Vuling today enables the city to collect taxes in “the usual fashion” while insuring that if plaintiffs “are correct in their contention, the excessive taxes may be rebated accordingly.” w w ★ The suit charges that assessment cuts on more than 100 pieces of commercial land were aimed at benefiting large commercial land owners at the expense qjf residential property owners. ★ W 4 It claims that figures set by the city assessor were reduced by the board of review witliout suf-llolent justification. said the rain “came straight down .all night long. ★ w At Lincoln, Neb., crop officials said the rains were halting winter wheat harvesting in the state’s southwest and southeast. Fields hit by driving rains were sure to suffer grain losses, federal crop observer Ken Logan said. Storm puddles in the Platte River, community of Bellwood, Neb., were two to three feet deep. Rain there was measured at six to seven inches. In the midst of the storm, firemen ran out of water supplies another year “( ivLnix a ttcrhintn0«Rnsirkl>H' Kima 6ov moinc Kennedy told reporters that times an^ changing events yet bring about the unification of Germany and “I don’t think anyone should despair.” But he saw no immediate solution to the problem of a divided Germany. WWW Kennedy and Adenuer promised in the communique that the United States and West Germany would work together, for “genuine unity among the nations of Europe and ... an integrated European community in close partnership with the Y United States.” The communique said they had talked about “the problems of Berlin and German reunification, “but did not go into detail. They also “had an exchange of views on Western policy toward the Soviet Union and the countries of Western Eurdpe,” the communique reported. w w w The two leaders had met alone for two hours. White House Secretary Pierre Salinger said the two also had discussed the forthcoming U.S. - British -' l^viet negotiations in Moscow on -treaty to ban nuclear testing. TALK IN OFFICE Kennedy, who received a loud and enthusiastic welcome Sunday at the start of his European tour, went to Adenauer’s office in late morning. The "two 'merr talked with only interpreters present. In a separate meeting, other U.S. and .German officials went into problems of Berlin, condi-tions’in ChmmuhistElast Germany and the proposal for forming p multinational nuclear force. Salinger said that the multinational force project was talked out in greater detail by the ministers than by the government chiefs. While he would not make any of the details public, it was understood that the U.S, and German leaders were seeking Allied action on setting up the force. WWW Salinger denied that Kennedy was having any more back pain than usual. The President suffers with chronic back, trouble. Kennedy’s back seemed to be troubling him as he knelt at Mass Sunday. WWW He witnessed a ceremony setting up a West German Peace Corps and said he hoped its members would be join^ by people from dozens of other free countries. News Flash WASHINGTON (UPD-The Senate voted today to extend for while fighting a lightning-sparked blaze at Hallam, Neb. The storm sprang from a squall ling, which ranged over north central Texas and northern Mississippi. Tupelo, Miss., measured 140 inches of rain. WWW The storm followed a summer weekend of tornadoes in Texas, heavy rains in the Southland, record chills in the North, and 100-plus readings in the Southwest. temporary” war- lake Accident Takes Diver's Life A 30-year-old Dearborn woman died yesterday afternoon after a water accident in Stony Lake, Oxford Township. WWW Lois Atkin, reputedly a good swimmer, had been diving from a raft into water 35 feet deep. After one such dive she was floating face lip in the water, seemingly in no trouble, when she suddenly turned over and went under. A Mend, James P. Mularkey, of Detroit, brought her to the surface and helped her to shore. She was pronounced dead dr arrival at Pontiac General Hospital. w w ,w-No cause of death was given on the coroner’s report. However, It stated that no water was found in the woman’s lungs. time tax rates on corporations and certain consumer items to prevent the treasury from losing 84.2 billion a year in revenues. SPEAKS TO THRONG., - Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. speaks to an overflow crowd in Detroit’s Cobo Hall Arena last night after a freedom march. An estimated 120,000 AP Phatotax “walkers” paraded through downtown Detroit, gathered in the hall and overflowed outside to hear Dr. King speak on tlib rights of Negroes. 120,000 Race Demonsfrafors March Peacefully in Defroif DETROIT W’t-More than 120,-000 demonstrators, moving in a seemingly endless column, swept through downtown Detroit yesterday in.a peaceful protest against racial discrimination. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., a Southern integration leader, called the parade the largest and greatest demonstration for civil rights ever held in America. It was billed as “A Walk to Freedom.” “What has been done here today will serve as an inspiration for all freedomrloving people of this nation,” Dr. King told the marchers at parade’s end in Detroit’s convention center, Cobo Hall. The men, women and children marched nearly two miles down Woodward Avenue to the hall. ’They packed the center to its capacity of 22,000 and flooded the .streets outside. Bob Admits Rights Stand Is WASHINGTON (/Pt—Ally. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy says President Kennedy probably has lost some popularity of his espousal of civil rights legislation but will be re-elected in 1964 nonetheless. “Any time you get into a controversy and a deep and bitter controversy such as this is, and where there is a large percentage of people in a section . . . opposed to the action that is being taken by the .government, . . . the President is going |to^ lose popularity and administration will lose popular- The marchers, predominantly Negro, were led by Dr. King, Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanaghi former Etemocratic Gov. John B. Swainson, Michigan AFL - CIO President August Scholle, United Auto Workers Union President Walter Reuther, and Republican State Sen. Stanley Thayer of Ann Arbor, Gov. Ciwrge Romney’s representative. ANNIVERSARY OF RIOT The protest was held on the 20th anniversary of bloody fighting in Detroit’s 1943 race riot. In that bitter outburst, 34 persons died and some 7(X| were injured before federal troops quelled the riot. ity,” the attorney general said yesterday. He added in a radio and television interview that while the administration had made no attempt to measure the political effect of its civil rights measures 1 have heard of other soundings that ’.ave been taken which indicate that the President has lost a good deal of his popularity because of this effort.” Still, the attorney general said, his brother and others in the administration arc committed to the civil rights package sent to Capitol Hill last week “and we are going to do all that we can in the executive branch of the government to have it passed.” At the same time, the attorney general sought to discourage a massive march on Washington by pro-civil rights forces while the legislation is being considered. Kennedy said that while he has “great sympathy” for pickets, parades and demonstrations aimed at correcting grievances, “Congress should have the right to debate and discuss this legislation without this kind of pressure.” PLANS ADDITION Today, assistant Senate Democratic Leader Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota plans to add to the Kennedy program a bill to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) There was only o yesterday. A white man, ' iseph E. Laliberte, 39, of _)rkley, was arristed ItMUAb-structing a police officer. Laliberte had jumped in front of the oncoming crowd, saying he was out to stop it. One of the Negro organizers in the front rank shouted: “Let the police handle this.” From the crowd came a dozen voices: “That’s right, that’s right —let the police handle it.” 3IW5ECOND DELAY Two patrolmen wrestled the man to the ground, took him down a side street, and the parade continued. It had been held up only 30 seconds. Detroit Police Commissioner George Edwards said specta-, tors were inseparable from demonstrators as more than 120,000 moved down the broad, eight-lane avenue. Police used 1.600 officers in the city at the ■ peak of the parade. Vendors sold ice cream, cold drinks, popcorn, American flags and balloons. As Cavanagh joined the throng at the head of the march a Negro woman rushed up to him and grabbed his hand. “God bless you, God bless you, God bless you,” she said. “We’re so glad to see you. Jailed for Evers Death JACKSON, Miss. OPI - Byron de La Beckwith, a white man, was held in Jackson jail today charged with the muPder of Negro integration leader Medgar W. Evers. Still unaccounted for in the killing of the 37-ycar-old Evers were “others u n k n o w n,” charged along with Beckwith in a separate federal complaint made public after the FBI arrested Beckwith Saturday nlghL Beckwith, a 42-year-oid former tobacco salesman and more recently a chemical fertilizer sales agent, from Greenwood, Miss, talked with his attorneys, law partners Hardy Lott and Stanny Sanders of Greenwood, Sunday and was returned to his cell after about 30 minutes. He is being held without bond. ■ * w w Jackson chief of detectives M.B. Pierce said police questioned Beckwith, but did not elaborate. FINGERPRINT CLUE One of 15,000 telescopic sights and a fingerprint on it jod the FBI to Beckwith at Greenwood. They found five of the imported Japanese six-power Golden Hawk (Continued on Page 2,, Col. 5) SUSPECT COUNSELED - Attorney Hardy Lott confers with Byron de La Beckwith, 42, at a Jackson, Miss., jail after Beckwith was charged with murder in the ambush slaying of NAACP leader Medgar Evers. ' ' J ' General Shot; Critically Hurt OKLAHOMA CITY ((FI - Maj. en. Thomas J. Gent Jr., 52, a high-ranking Air Force officer preparing for reassignment, was critically wounded about midnight at his temporary quarters at Tinker Air Force Base. The Air Force said Gent was shot in the right temple and underwent emergency surgery. He was reported In a coma and still in critical condition this morning. Gen. Gent was preparing to transfer to Ft. Monroe, Va., when the shooting occurred. He was being reassigned from his posts as commander of the 13-state 32nd North American Air, Delense Command region (NORAD) and the 32nd air division near Tinker Air Force Base, on the southeast edge of Oklahoma City. * * , *■ Details of the shooting wore unexplained although military authorities said preliminary investigation indicatep it was accidental. i ' ' TWO British kandal Figure Hit by 8 New Charges THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JUNE 24, im fftm Onr Nevi Wlru LjONDON. - The Brlti^ govemmait levded eight new morals charges today, one of them involvii^ ahortion, against Dr. Stephen Ward. Meamihlle Oe iirittdi'geveni* of a CaeAoskvak dlfdoaiat aeoned of attemptiBg to obtain Hie Foreign Office said Pre-Hdan, a third secintary at tl^ Giedi Embassy, had been detected “trying to persuade a member of the public to obtain secret information.'’ There was no immediate wwd on friietber the “member of the public” was male w female, but authoritathre sources said there was no connection with the Pro* imo case. The 50-year-dld o^path. a key figure in the Profumo scandal, was again refused bail. He went back to jail to await a fiill hear* ig Friday. Nature of the new charges, on accusing Ward of nrocuring i identified al “Miss Xi’ emerged in legal fencing between defense and government lawyers. Ward;^was arrested June 8 on diarges of living off the earnings of prostitution. The {nnsecution announced at his first court appearance that it had more serious charges against Ward. State Cliiefs Plan to Hold Rights Talk LANSING UR - Gov. George Romney and the chairmen of both political parties will meet to* gether to discuss civil rights and how the issue may be dealt with on^a bipartisan basis. Tentatively, the meeting is set for Wednesday in the governor’s office but may be postponed becanse Zolton Ferency, Democratic state chairman, is on vacation this week. Arthur Elliott Jr., Republican state chairman, also will attend the meeting. Romney agreed to the meeting at FerencV’s request. The Democratic leader sent the governor a letter praising his recent states -—ments of suppwt for the Negro campaign for civil rights. “The most encoaraging aspect of yonr reaction is what tt suggests la terms of present poosibUlties for taking the issue M civil rights out of the area of partisanship,” said Fer-ency. • “Surely the further development of the bipartisan theme on this issue through all levels of government, particularly local levels, can press and fotimldqte Medgar Evers in the free exercise and enjoyment of rights and privileges secured to him by the Constitution,” the FBI Minors' Chief Trautman Dies COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-George M. Trautman. 73, president of minor league baseball since 1947, died today at his home here. The “Boss of the Bushes.” spent a lifetime in various phases of sports, had been Hi for some time with a heart ailment. WWW Trautman’s death Impiediately raised a question as to Whethq|r the minor league office would continue to operate as a separate tlty or would be merged with the majors under the jurisdiction of Commissioner Ford Frick, w w w Under Trautman’s guidance, minor league baseball hit its peak in 1949 when 59 leases in cities were in operation. Today only 18 leagues with 129 cities in action. Trautman was vice president and general manager of the Detroit Tigers in 1946. MOSCOW (AP) ’--: The United tales told the Soviet Union today that American Polaris submarines were in the Mediterranean to shield “the Acropolis and the (xrange groves of Italy” from Soviet threats. The statement Was otmtained in note to the Ifeviet Union replying to the Soviet proposal to wake the Mediterranean area a nuclear-free zone. *11)6 700-word note said the Soviet Union, in announcing repeatedly that it had batteries of rockets aimed at Mediterranean allies of the United States, was employing “nuclear blackmail under which the Soviet Unkm could have attempted to force the Mediter-countries to succumb to Sovtet dictation The Anterican note, delivered to the Foreign Ministry by messm-ger, said tbe Soviet pf- “me with I bodi. Other, to $4.9V. ■ Walnut Finish-15*' High CORNER TABLES $19.95 Valoo -2;ome with cor seat otioch- Jta ment. Only 4 left, All Motal-Ball Bearing CHILDREN'S WAOOIf $11.95 Voluo - Body tire ii 32'/3x J J 14 Inchet. Rubber wir All Motal-Two Sholf BOOK RACKS $2.50 Voluo -16 X 121/3 X 8 Inches. jOfi Wrought Iron ilnlih J ■■ rod. ■ W Daluxe ‘REDWOOD* Aluminum FumNuru 130.96 Choirs ...18.83 M9.MI Loungs........ 19.11 146.98 lsttso........1I.N Squor* Aluminum Tubing. aaiu-araTing our ora oirrnoay rn4i only way w« know how-cut low pricoe won lowor. . . th«o typical borgaine show you how much you con tovu. Small dopoelt hoMe any itom in froo layaway ... a small choroo must bo mado for doiivortot. Com* in and to* Larry and Bill for tho host dsMilt in town. 6P8N MON. and FRI. NITtI ^;(^,|’TII 9. Daily 10 A.M. to • PJN. pKowr 'BBOTMClU-tniall Deposit Holds Any tl^fORE LAYAWAY FRgt PAHKINO In Nsarby City Mstsr Lots I - ‘ ^ J _ *■ ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONbAY> JUNE 24> 1963 THBteB; Thatcher, Patterson ond Wernet INSURANCE CAMERA DISCOUNTS TIMITC and TUESDAY ANSCO^^ FILMS ' StJIfsN llluminatedL Model ’ Slide Sorter REVERE ZSSSm POWER ZOOM Smi MdvId Canera WMifkiWelwiMkiMw MoM 144 magazIfM toad movi* mol, wid»«ngl* ond U(•pholo Im—oil vrith pu(h-button con* Irol. Full roi^ of ASA roHngt and ee N. Soginow—AAoin Hoar LANSING W) ~ Gov. George Romney reviewed what be calls the accomplishments of Uie past six months in a taped program being carried as a public service of dozens of Michigan radio and TV stations. The program was first aired last night at several points. Romney said the attitude^ Michigan is. quite different today than it was six months “One year ago,” he said, Michipn was being referred to as the problem state of America. Here at home we had extrenie partisan bickering and a cold war between the executive and the legislature. Unemployment was high and the state’s financial deficit was almost $100 million. 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Free charcoal with cdupon. —SPORTS 2nd Floor • SIMMS RESERVES THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES 14 98 North Saginaw Streat FOITR — TH^OKTrAC HiES^rMOND^ JUNE 24, 196g BeFore Fall Wage Demands Hoff a Considers Tax Angles -Washington (opd - •nsam-n sters’ Pregideitt James R. Hoffa ' said today t)e would weigh tax angles carefully before presenting wage demands to trucking firms this fall because union drivers are moving into higher tax bradcets. Hc Pr«>t Photo Manningham, Bud Davies attempts to choke his wife, played by Barbara Crockett, but is interrupted by Bart Smith as Detective Inspector Rough. Crash Injuries Prove Fatal Birmingham Resident Dies in Hospital TflOY — Injuries suffered in a two-car crash here early Friday caused the death of a 48-year-old B i r m i n g ham man, Saturday. Clifford Law-son of 1839 Ship-man died in St. Jo.seph Mercy Hospital, P 0 n -tiac, of multiple fractures he received when his car collided with another Long Lake Road and Adams. Lawson was driving northbound On Adams when a car driven by - Ralph Campion, 18, of 2557 Wood- him. , Walled Lake, crashed into Troy police said Campion stated that he did not see the traffic light at the intersection. Lawson died at approximately 11:30 p. m. His body is at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home, Birmingham. He was owner of the property leased to Restrick Lumbar Co., 425 S. Eton, Birmingham. Surviving are his wife Mae; a son, Michael, and two daughters, Beverly and Michele, all at home; his mother, Mrs. John C. Lawson of Birmingham; and two , sisters. Mrs. William Wilson and Mary Lawson, both of Birmingham. Service will be 10 a. m. Wednesday at the Holy Name Catholic Church, Birmingham The Rosary will be recited at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow at the funeral home. \ Area*t;ouplo Planning Wedding on July 19 FARMINGTON - A July 19 wedding is being planned'by Norma Carol Ballagh and Ropald C. Ludy. The bride-elect Is the daughtei; of Rev. and Mrs. Walter C. Ballagh, 23935 Farmington Road. Her fiance’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd R. Ludy, 2299 N. Opdyke, Pontiac Township. University of Michigan researchers believe diabetics have ; their disorder from birth, though symptoms may not appear until middle age. Milford Theater Cast to Stage 'Angel Street' SHELBY TOWNSHIP-The exploding of firecrackers at Warsaw Park last night 1^ to a riot which involved some 50 per and five police departments before it was quelled. When the scramble was over, three men were arrested, all suffering head cuts, and special deputy Joseph WoSniak, on duty at the park, was missing $225. Charged with resisting arresi and being drunk and disorderly were Stanley Dapierola, 38, and Eugene SaboleWoski/^29, both of Detroit, and Chester Grzywinski, 42, of Warren. Sabolewski is in satisfactory condition today at St. Joseph Hos- MILFORD-Ye Olde Mill Players, Milford’s community theater _ r p u p, will present “Angel Street” Wednesday and Thursday At the Milford High School ttle theater. Under the title “Gas Light,” the play had a long and successful run on Broadway and was made into a movie starring Charles Boyer, Ingrid Bergman and Joseph Cotton. Davies, speech correction teacher in the Walled Lake school system. Davies, who played in the Vanguard Theater production of “See How They Run,” is coowner with his wife Alice of (he Lake Michigan Summer Theater in Grand Haven. They spend their summers there directing and performing in summer stock. Appearing in the lead role of Mr. Manningham will be Bud Centennial Marked by MD Women AVON TOWNSHIP - Some 50 members of the American Medical Women’is Association commemorated the 100th birthday anniversary of the late Dr. Bertha Van Hoosen by holding a tea at her niece's home here Saturday. Dr. Sarah Van Hoosen Jones, 1005 Romeo, welcomed the group and said the event was one of the “most outstanding” that had ever taken place on the family farm-estate. She was assisted by Miss Alice Serreil. Hostesses were members of the local chapter of Detroit, known as Branch 25 (Blackwell Society). The tea highlighted a three-day I association board meeting in Detroit. Barbara Crockett will portray Mrs. Manningham. She was Madam Arcade in "Blythe Spirit” at Milford last year. Bart Smith. Milford attorney, will appear as Detective Inspector Rough for his first endeavor in community theater. Other players are Mitzie Kraus as Elizabeth, Bonnie Childes as the maid and Frank Heatley and Morgan Collins as English bobbies. “Angel Street” is directed by Connie Collins, who received her bachelors and masters degrees from Michigan State University. Curtain time for the performances is 8:15 p.m. Tickets, which may ber purcha.sed from members of the theater group, also will be available at the door. Hog Raisers Are Warned to Vaccinate The association's national niag-eine, the Journal, will devote its July issue to a memorial to Dr. Van Hoosen, Rochester’s renowned “Petticoat Surgebrt,” which was the title of a book she wrote about her experiences in medicine. Dr. Bertha, as she was affectionately known, also will be memorialized wheh the proposed Suburban Unit of Crittenton General Hospital is built near Itoch-ester in the near future. According to present plans, a one-story auxiliary building will be named after the local physician who pioneered the field of licine for women. me(|ici Too many Michigan hog raisers arc playing with fire when tliey do not vaccinate against cholera,” Dr. Charles F. Reed, ichigan State University veterinarian warns. Michigan farmers vaccinate only 5 per cent of the hogs in the state. The U.S. average Is 45 per cent. Farmers should coivsider cholera vaccination just as they do fire insurance on their buildings, Reed believes. A fire can wipe out farmstead improvements and c h 01 e r a can quickly, destroy a lifetime build-up • of a swine breeding herd, the MSU veterinarian points out. Live virus vaccines can no longer be used in vaccinating Michigan swine except with ^ special permit from the Michigan Department of Agriculture. ROMED-The annual search for beauty is on. The local contest, to be staged, at 8 p.fib., is a forerunner to the :h Queen Contest early in August. At that time, Mi^s Romeo will compete against queens from other neighboring communities for the honor of reigning over the Fifty Involved in Riot at Park Shelby Twp. Calls On 5 Police Departments pital, Mt. Clemens. The other two men were treated at the hospital before being taken to Macomb County Jail. The riot started when Woz-nlak, Shelby Township police dispatcher, was grabbed and struck after demanding that the men stop shooting firecrackers, police said. Clyde Thrush, also a special deputy, ran to a phone and called for assistance when onlookers began to hamper the deputies. Police from the Warren, Shelby Township, Utica and Macomb County sheriff’s departments rived shortly, along with troopers from the Romeo State Police Post. The crowd was dispersed by police shortly before the park closed at 9 p.m. Romeo Seeks Beauty Entries Contest Is Scheduled July 2 at Youth Center Being sought are girls to compete for the coveted Miss Romeo crown, in a contest: set for July 2 at the Youth Center. To be eligible, candidates must be between 17 and 21, be single and reside in the Romeo Community School Dis-triit. Applications should be mailed to Mr$. Herbert A. Miller, Detroit and Northern Savings and Loan Association Agency, 201 N. Main. She said each entry also must bear an adult’s signature. 31st annual Peach Festival on Labor Day weekend. Miss Romeo’s first official appearance after her coronation will be on the Peach Festival publicity float in the Utica Lions Fourth of July parade. Riding with her will be her two maids of honor who also will be picked in the July 2 contest. The float also will be entered in merous other area parades throughout the summer. Mrs. Margaret A. Kgiser is chairman of the Miss Romeo contest; , Traffic Toll Hits 725 LANSING (UPI)-State police said today the 1963 traffic death toll has climbed to 725. This compares with 623 k i 11 e d^ on the state’s highways in a similar period last year. PoBlUc ProM Photo DISCUSS HOSPITAL - Approximately 25 area doctors met Saturday to study plans for the proposed Suburban Unit of Crittenton Gen-neral Hospital to , be built on Walton Boulevard west of Rochester: Looking over a scale model of the 150-bed facility are (from left) Dr. Edgar J. Geist Jr, Rochester physician; Dr. Alvin Lambert, chief of staff at Crittenton General Hospital; and A Riley Allen, administrator for the Detroit hospital. The group met at Club Rochester. Girl, 9, Listed as Fair After Car Hits Bike SOtrruFlELD — A 9-year-old girl who was struck by a car while riding her bicycle Saturday was listed in fair condition at William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak this morning. ^ Denise Tupis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theo F. Tupis, 28730 Marshall, 4a being treated for fractures of both legs and multiple cuts on her face. Southfield police said the girl was hit by a car driven by Peter Pohoreske, 59, of Detroit as she crossed Greenfield at San Roca, one block south of 12-Mile Road. No charges were filed in connection with the accident. Rites in Oxford Jean Tank Marries MRS. ROBERTS. BLOECKER BRANDON TOWNSHIP - Jean Sharron Tank became the bride of Robert Stanley Bloecker in a ceremony performed Saturday evening by Rev. Harlow HOyt in the Free Methodist Church of Ox* ford. Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tank. 271 Hurd. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Norbert Poll, 6558 Oakwood, and the late Mr. Stanley Bloecker. For her wedding the bride chose a floor-length gown of silk organza featuring a Sabrina neckline and chapel train. Her fingertip illusion veil was attached to a pillbox hat of Alen-con lace frosted with seed pearls. She carried a colonial bouquet of white roses centered with a corsage of white rosebuds. St. Benedict Ceremony Unites Union Lake Couple UNION LAKE ~ St. Benedict Church, Pontiac, was the setting for the Saturday morning nuptials of Virginia Gail Rohinson and Marine Pfc. Roger Philip Reynolds. Rev. Richard W. Thomas performed the ceremony. over satin was chosen By the bride for her wedding. Completing her ensemble was a tiny pearl crown which held a double-tiered veil. She carried a cascade of white carnations. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry C. Robinson, 431 Hospital, Mrs. A. Ray Schumaker of Pontiac was matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Janice and Joanne Bloecker, twin sisters of the bridegroom. Serving as best man was Gary Jackson of Tyre, cousin of the bridegroom. The guests were seated by A. Ray Schumaker and Norman Kuhn, both of Pontiac. Immediately following the wedding, a reception was held in the Eastern Star Hall in Oakwood. Upon returning from their honeymoon trip to Washington, D.C., Maryland and Delaware, the newlyweds will reside in Bloomfield Township. A floor-length gown of laceij,^^ j^^s. Gary Rob- itison of Pontiac to be her matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Connie Roehl of Drayton Plains and Margie Shagena of Independence Township. Attending as flower girl was Christine Shagena of Imlay City. Tommy Robinson, was ring bear- Son of MK and Mrs. Rex Reynolds, 84 S. Hospital, the bridegroom had Gary C. Robinson of Pontiac asjiisbest man. ” The guests were seated by Steve Coloon and Larry Robin- MRS. ROGER P. REYNOLDS A reception was held at the Knights of Pythias Hall No. 277 after the rites. The newlyweds will honeymoon and reside in Cherry Point, N.C. Elevator Service Cut Too Much for FBI DETROIT (*) ~ An abbreviated elevator service In Detroit’s Federal Building was too much for the higher-floor tenants, including the FBI. Management of (he building reduced the service after < p.m. and on holidays. Building guards, who man the elevators in the off-hours, laid they lacked the time for this In view of other duties. The reduced service lalted only a brief time.j^Among the objectors was the FBI, housed on the ninth floor. Climbing that many flights of stairs was a chore. Building management yielded revoking ita order. Newlyweds Honepooii in Northern Michigan - CLARKSTON — Honeymooning in northern Michigan after a Saturday wedding at the First Methodist Church are Mr. and Mrs. Richard Drury Spohn. , The bride, the former Rebecca Frances DeLong, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Randall H. De-Long, 8613 Northview. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Spohn, 62 N. Main, are parents of the bridegroom. Rose appliques trimmed the bride’s orgaiipy wedding dress, and her fingertip veil of silk illusion was secured by an ap-pliqued rose headpiece. “iHer white prayer book was topped with a spray of roses and Stephanotls center^ with an orchid. MATRON OF HONOR ' Mrs. J. Edwin Glennie of Clarkston was matron of honor, while Mrs. Jack McCall of Clarkston and Mrs. Lynn E. Howell of Detroit, the bridegroom’s sister, attended as bridesmaids. Christine and JoAnn YanTine of Goodrich, cousins of the bride, were Junior bridesmaid and flower girl respectively. J. Edwin Glennie was best man. Seating the gueste were Dayid DeLong of Scottsdale, Ariz., brother of the bride; Dr. Lynn E. Howell of Detroit, brother-in-law of the bridegroom: and Russell Widger of Royal Oak. A reception was held in the church parlors following the afternoon ceremony. MRS. RICHARD D. SPOHN ANN ARBOR (UPB-Negro, leaders planned to picket City Hall today for the fourth week in a row in protest of alleged discrim- Area Man Is Elected State Eagles Exec Duane Johnson, secretary-manager of the Waterford Township Eagles Lodge No. 2887, was elected vice pi*esident of the Michigan Eagles yesterday at the organization’s 58th annual conven-Johnson, of 888 Mallock, White Lake Township, has been an Eagle foir 28 years and is a past president of the Waterford Township Lodge. Daniel D. Dunlap of Adrian was elected president of the Michigan Eagles. He succeeds Joseph Doc of Cheboygan. More Pickets ’.-./.I in Ann Arbor La Mar Miller, chairman of the Ann Arbor Area Fair Housing Association, an affiliate of the National Congress of Racial Equality, said “This is the time for Ann Arbor to take the leadership in setting itself up as a model community.” Miller said his group would press for an ordinance providing penalties for discrimination in housing. “If the council were really interested in passing a good ordinance, they could Jhnve passed one long ago,” Miller said. Mayor Cecil 0. Creal said “Ann Arbor is a liberal town ... this should be the last city in the woHd where we should have picketing on civil rights.” • The 11-member council has been discussing a proposed ordinance aimed at preventing discrimination in housing since March 11. Miller said, “There ip po discrimination in university-owned housing. It’s time that everyone has the same rights.” mD Tlie Andrews 90 DAYS PME SERyiCE 1-YEAR GUARANTEE ALL PARTS • Rtal Storoo Sopaniilon • Atk About Color Oonvortiblo • All Hand Wirad 23" TV Chastis • n-Tubo AM-FM Radio SYLVAN STEREO & TV SALES ORIN MONDAY, FRIDAY dnd SATURDAY 't)l 9i00 2303 Orchard Lake Read (Sylvan Center) M2-b199 ( THE PONTIAC PBESS, MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1963 FIVE lit • l^year, period between 19504D, the number of agrlcul-. tural workers in the nation declined from 6.7 mfllion to 4 mU- Tense Nerves Block Bowels Yow celpn Im mtm that oootiol Nfnlaifty^WlMiiyouHwtMitewaerv* out. aonml bowel impulMt may ba bloeked->4uid you ^»eom oontti-pated. New Comna» tabieU relieve thlf atiHfy with a iw4 prindple-rft M^biSSatamli^ Mutant by aaaay docion. Reaolt} Colonaid pola yonroohm back to woric-<-fnitly fdMvaa eonilipMioa oeami^ You fool troatl Oot olittically-proved COMNAID today. lalMducteiy Obw 4JS 'Fight for Equality,' Denver Crowd W DENVER, COlo. (AP) - About 350'Negroes and a dozen white persons gathered at a city park Sunday to hear a speaker urge them ,fo “get into the fight for Hie Rev, Sylvester Odom, a Methodist minister, chided those Negroes who didn’t join in a 10-btock march begun earlier by about 150 persons. ' “.They were watering their lawns while Rome burned,” said the Rev.-Jfr. Odom, president of the Greater East Denver Action Committee. Roughriders Hold Reunion With 3 Present LAS VEGAS, N.M. »l - What may be the last reunion for Teddy Roosevelt’s Roughriders ended here Sunday. Only three members of the cavalry regiment were present for the 63rd reunion from among “ 18 survivors. r ■ ★ ★ ■ The first reunion was held here in 1899. In 1952 the members voted to hold all remaining meet^ ing in Las Vegas “to the last man.” PHILADELPHIA (A — A blind lan stood against a wall, clutching a pen knife. He listened. The “tap, tap, tap” of a cane od pavement theh Blind Men Argue; I Stabbed arid battery. His friend, Louis Pratner, 37, was in fair condition at a hospital. Suddenly, police said, he leaped out and stabbed the passing man In the neck and right arm. Detective Pat Gannon said the stabbing occurred after two blind friends got into a dispute over cigaret mone/ in a tavern. ........it- ■■ W-..it.. Arthur Hinson, 45, was held on $500 bail on charges of assault Thief Gets Trophies Without Any Strain HAMILTON, Ohio (AP>^Police are looking for a man who got his self^efense trophies Uie easy way over the weekend. ★ He broke into the Don San judo school and stole three trophies, valued at $45, from a display case. Soapy Tours Site of Dam ACCRA, Ghana (J) — Former Michigan Gov. G. MennOn Williams toured Ghana’s vast Volta Dam site yesterday accompanied by the African nation’s Foreign Minister Kojo Botsio. ★ it '■ it Williams, assistant U.S. secretary of 'state for African affairs, met with some of the 4,000 workers at the dam site. it it it ‘He was told technical details of the dam by American engi-' neers working on the project. EARLY BIRD FEATURES "SUPER- RIGHT" GROUND BEEF Prepared Fresh Many Times Every Day Clotwd $uiuiay os Utuol *SlfPIR.IUOHr QUALITY KEF «.INCH CUT I “SUFIR-IUOHT’’ YOUNG Rib Stealfs “ 79* turkeys 39* jj-nYCp LEGS THIGHS -55‘ TEXAS STAR P*fMr ,Develn«d and Cleaned Shrimp 4^9 -air 2^9 ORANGE OR CHERRY POPSICLES fl2”39‘ AGP PREMIUM QUALITY 104)Z. llAR Instunt (oHee JANE PARKER—MEDIUM SPICED Spanish Bar “‘”29- JANE PARKER 1-LB. BOX Wm Potato aips 59 HONEYDEW Melons 49* California Fresh PLUMS 29‘ lUNNYBROOK GRADE A MEDIUM FRESH ECGS WHY PAY MORE? MIRACLE WHIP 45* MEDIUM SIZE PEAS 15-OZ. CAN £ GREEN GIANT Id More Every-Day low Prices At A&P SAVE ON CEREALS HsAVE ON CANNED FRUITS MORE? khiooo’s—12-oz pko. Com Flakes 24* POSTS—14-OZ. PKO. GMit C Sugar Crisp 50 POSTS—PKO. ^ il C Post Toasties 54 KIUOOO'S Special K MIAKPAST OP CHAAtPIONS IFR C Wheoties '^‘ 28 TASTY OAT CIRIAL A umrn Cheerios '•^^27 suNNYnno—Asrt own GM ifl c Com Flakes 51 SULTANA PRUIT Cocktail. . ^ 19* DEI MONTI PRUIT GM a f Cocktail 31 MOnS BRAND ^ 1-lB. Q CC Apple Souce ^mrs 09 0011 CHUNKS AND TIDBITS ^ K C Pineapple 21 Pineapple 'tisil HAWAIIAN Punch e m pawpaw 4Mi1c Grope Drink c?h 21 save on soaps SOAP nUID—PKO. OF IB A wmr S.O.S. Pods 37 FLOOR WAX m AA Aero Wox JOHNSON’S FLOOR FOUSH 4%gk Glo-Cout I4B. Ajox e e e e CAN 21 10c OFF LABEL—3-LB. 6-OZ. Pi JI^C Giant Rinso 59 15c OFF LABEL—3-LB. 3-OZ. ■■ WWf Giant Surf . . 58 1-pt. «-oz. oeaRc Capri Liquid 33 7c OFF UBEL—1-LB. 4-OZ. 4R Jj f Large Surf . . 24 I SUPEBIOB—PKO. OF TOO OV JRf Paper Plates 79 7c OFF UBHr-TISSUB JT C Charoiin 4 :%‘i 20 3c OFF LABEL—TISSUE A Northern 4 30 WAXED PAPER eRMRC Cut-RHe 1^23 FACIAL TISSUI A q| g Scotties.. 21 ALUMINUM FOIL mi# Wonderfoil%^25 Save On Canned Meats & Fish I3-OZ. CAN 9 Ac Spam Hormel's ^7 24-OZ. CAN—BEEP STEW ' J| ■■# Dinty Moore 47 .27’ .27’ BREAST O' CHICKEN—BVi-OZ. Tuna ClHUNK^styiB g CHICKEN-OP-THE-SEA—Bh-OZ. Tuna CHUNK^^STYLI . EVERYDAY LOW PRICES morT?' YUKON CLUB CANNED Beverages BITTY CROCKER—B04>i. Pk«.—B2e 7* BITTY CROCKER—B04>i.Fka.—«3c K #K# Bisqaick . .£42 OILLini SUPER W Blue Blades blapes09 w/Ndc In Tnitinf# S«u<»—1-Lb. Cm K OK # Campbell's "»* 13 Mazole Oil. . 1*99 IHORTININO ^ LB. "WIMC Crisco .. 3“"/5 OAILON BLIACH Reman 55 An AAPIbicItilIvc-rOalton Blmch jm mm# Bri^lit Sail. .47 LIGHT, CHUNK STYLE—BV4-OZ. 4K im# A&P Tuna . . 25 SULTANA BRAND M Mt Mackerel 16 Giant Sail °nS 55 Sardines ' 13 SOPIR-RIOHT—n-oz. Corned Beef 39 9. OFF UBEL—3-lB. 714-OZ. JT M , Giant Fab. . .64 ABF's OWN—3-LB. 15-OZ. PKO. I POWDERED DETERGENT SAVE ON TEA & COCOA 10c OFF-SALADA Instant Tea 57* WHY PAY MORE? HERSHEY'S fTOI m|# Cocoa .. . 57 4c Off Label—Chocolate 1-Lb. Con G|b pi # Nestle's Qnik 35 TEA BAOS IP J%C Salada 48 59 Mpton 48 % 59 ISc OFF LABEL-.TEA BAOS JM Kif Lipton 100 87 ALL MEAT VARIETIES f| JT C Campbell's 16 All V«B. (Ixcfpi A«p., Mu*h- 6 Onion ffl JM # Campbell's 13 ANN PAOI-10H-OZ. || A | Tomato Soup lU ALL MEAT VARIBTIiS m M't Heinz 16* AN Vof. llncopt Mash. B Split ^| Heini SK 13' More? MORE NEW LOW PRICES! FLOUR iiJMC Gold Medal >ao 49 FLOUR m #111 Gold Medal s? 199 FLOUR ■ m jm# Pilisbury 5 49 FLOUR m A A Pilisbury 25^° p9 4c OFF LABEL—FLC'JR M J%# RobinhoodS^49 BEHY CROCKER LAYER Ji GMC Cake Mixes 33 BETTY CROCKER—14-OZ. GK BMI# Date Bar Mix 37 PIZZA MIX—12V4-OZ. PKO. ^ Appien Way 55 LAYER CAKE MIXES—REO. PKG. 4% £ Duncan Hines 55 ALL varieties CAKE iM JRf Jiffy Mixes 13 Loyor Cako Mixes Except Anpel Peed GM JMc Pilisbury 33 ANN PAOE, (Excce* Angel Feed) 4% fokeMixes 25 SELFJLISINO FLOUR M JK# Fame. . .5 49 PANCAKE MIX—2-LB. PKO. ^ AC Aunt Jemima 5" Frosting . . % 29 Duncan Hines Buttermilk—2-Lb. Fkg. qm JK# Pancake Mix 39 PIILSIURY MIX—13-OZ. PKO. ^ Frosting . 5dC ANN VAGI CAKE MIX GM JiRC Angel Food 39 tHi osiAT AnANTicA rAgnc ti4 toawNy. ti •... from the Pontiac State Bank! lt'’s the safe way to carry money! Convert your cosh into Travelers Checks before you leave on that trip! Travelers Checks con be re-converted into cosh ANYWHERE. Stop in the Pontiac State Bonk and pick-up your safe, convenient Travelers Checks. BETTER BE SAFE THAN SORRY PONTIAC STATE BANK MEMBER F. D. I. C . ' , t r i-‘ THE PaNTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron street Bmmw r. Tnuauiu n MONDAY, JUNE 24, 196S 0 4. FCnKUIIALD Bt Bad wifiSir Bontiac, Michigan John A. Riut 'Seeretar# and Adverttoinc Oirectoi . O. Uaihuu JomN It Seems to Me.... President’s European Journey Gomes at ‘Unfortunate’ Time President John F. Kennedy is the object of a storm of criticism over his current trip to Europe. A consensus says it’s ilhadvised. The timing’s bad. ★ ★ ★ When he visits Macmillan, the Labor party will charge him with trying to build up ah unpopular Prime Minister who’p facing the end of the trail; and unhappily his visit is right on the heels of the Profumo scandal, He’11 reach Italy with the Italian government at sixes and sevens. Further, the new Pope will be variously occupied with personal affairs and in no particular position to “en-tertain.” ★ ★ ★ ' i De Gaulle has shrugged off the United States, and JFK hasn’t been urged to stop. In Oerrhariy he will be visiting a leader >vho should be out of office shortly, so the accomplishments there are necessarily circumscribed. Further, there are pressing problems here at home that are crying for attention; Insiders Newsletter suggests the tax department should ask ytfti: “Is this trip necessary?” We have the unfortunate spectacle of a President scurrying around Europe like a busy bee right when the objects of his visits are occupied or who are rounding out their political tenures. Who’ll be First?_________ When Michigan newspapermen were having lunch with President Kennedy, I asked whether he knew JANEY Hart. “Well,” said he. “She wants to be the first girl in outer space. Are you considering her^” “Would you?” queried JFK. “No,” sez I. “Not with eight children.” “I’ll remember that answer,” said he. Millions Starvingf.... Recently I wrote of the appalling number of deaths from starvation. I didn’t mention a figure; the total was too staggering. But Newsweek carries an article baSed on the number. It’s 10,000. No American*can picture 10,000 human beings dying TO-pAY •— another 10,000 yesterday pind still another 10,000 tomorrow. ★ ★ ★ But that’s what’s happening! NEVER have so many perished from malnutrition and starvation. In India alone, 50-million children will die from this in the next ten years. More than HALF of the world’s total population is perpetually hungry. Who says we’re civilized! ilight to Know’.... One Interesting side light, stands out in this PaoruMO business. Originally, a British newspaper printed the fact that the official was palsy-walsy with a London redhead and she in turn maintained a steady relationship with a Russian diplomat, PaoruMO denied it. He was openly belligerent. ★ ★ ★ The newspaper stuck by its guns, and a court action was threatened — Then the house fell in. It goes back to the ancient democratic right -> freedom ff the press — and the individual ; citizen’s “right to know.” Chalk up another victory for newspapers that won’t lioiV before governments. You’re entitled to know what your public servants are doing —. and you will — in all free countries — but these only. How Absurd.... Long the home of weird and inexplicable happenings, Florida distin^ guishes herself again. And this is a dilly. Chalk one up for her Supreme Court. ★ ■■■ This profound and contempla- -tive body holds thgt under Florida law, death due to lung cancer can be pinned on a cigarette manufacturer. You might Just as. well h
“Was the 14th Amendment thus legally and constitutional-pretty young , ly 3gggj (1,3 Constitution In lady you see ^ .X 1868? It Is exceedingly doubtful, here isn’t an “Neither a resolution of the area girl, but ' Ck)ngress nor a proclamation of a shi«’« K e r c t in ^ secretary of state can supersede f l I r * W h n JR ‘he Conriitution 11 s e 1 f If the , V, '1 Iw.... .M states of Arkansas, Florida, typed for me In < North Carolina, Alabama, South Stockholm and jn Carolina and Louisiana were ‘in who helped at |||||||^^ the union’in 1863, when their rat- «h» AP otnofinl KPRisTiisi ideations of the 13th Amendment the AP ^special KERSTIN bureau display............... fourths necessary to adoption. It One night at dinner 1 was quite ig impossible to understand how intrigu^ by a comely French lass ^ r ' with whom I chatted enthusiastic- cent operation, the wag ally in broken French and Eng- quoth: “No wonder they lish. However, when the meal was wore masks In the operat-, concluded, she IH a small cigar ing room.” ........................Eu- and left me speechless, flabber- ropean papers are giving gaated^ nonplused and frustrated. j.jn;e troubles tremen- . . .............Overheard; and coverage. “There’s .a new Keeler doll. You And the Russian pre,ss Is wind It up and It overthrows the screaking dally at the top government.” ^ ......... ★ ★ ★ Dept, of Cheers ftnd Jeers: Overheard: “The Russians have a thp C’s—my newest grand-gal that handles a craft In outer daughter, Janet Loumb; space, and my wife can’t even back the J’s -r Whoever killed out of the garage.”.......... When Medoar Bvers:^ Oroucho Marx got the bill for a re- —Harold A. Fitzgerald ' V they legally could have been read out of the union by the act of March 2,1867, put under military dictatorship, and ordered to ratify the 14^ Amendment under duress . .. ‘GRADUALISM’ Mr. Kilpatrick, In the last chapter of his book — entitled “The Southern Case for School Segregation,” published by Crowell-Collier Press—makes a plea for what has often been termM “gradualism.” He adds: “I believe the South will maintain, what I have termed essential separation of the races for years to come. “But my guess would be that In areas of higher education, in many fields of employment, in professional associations in such quasi-public fields as hotels, restaurants, and concert halls, doors that have been closed will open oiie by one. ★ ★ ★ “And a South that once would have regarded these Innovations with horror will view them at first with surprise, then with regret, for a time with distaste, and at last with indifference.” (Conrlifcl. 1M1. New York H«rald Trlbaa** lac.) Bob Considine Says: Italian Television Exposes V.S. Segregation Crises ROME — If you winced over the events of Birmingham, Tbs-caloosa and Jackson, you would surely have been much more shaken by the way Radiotele-visione Italiana portrayed them In a prime time doc umentary shown through Italy the other night. Stock newsreel shots of fang-dogs, c 101 h e s-| ripping, water streams, beat-[______ togs, bodies lying CONSIDINE in pools of blood, shots of segregated amusement parks with close-ups of longing Negro children looking In from the outside and other poignant footage was shown against a musical background of “Deep River,” “Let My People Go,” and other majestically mour^ul spirituals. The voice of the Italian commentator bristled with quiet indignation throughout the show. He was painting a word picture which reduced all of America to the status of Nazi beasts determined to exterminate a minority species. , If the Italians our friends, put together this compaint on of America’s racial crisis, think what our acknowledged enemies are doing. The world thinks of the college of cardinals as the most exclusive club in the world, as a close-knit group bound together irrevocably in the service of God and man. To a degree they are, of course. But it always comes as a shock to note that many of them don’t know one another. That’s natural. They seldom If ever get together In a body except at consistories, where new cardinals are consecrated, and conclaves, where a new Pope is elected. If they have a common language it is Latin, and not all of them are masters of it. Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston, for example, lef the Ecumenical Council after a few sroeks with the frank explanation that he couldn’t follow what was going on. It was all In Latin. The great Boston prelate was s6 exasperated. In fact, that he offered to Install at his own expense a multilingual interpreting system such as Is used in the i United Nations. He was turned down. They come from the ends of Christendom. The problems of, let’s say, Laurean Cardinal Ru-gambwa of Bukoba have little in common with the problems of Francis Cardinal Spellman, but they come up with the rules by which hundr^s of qiillions live, and find the man. ‘Keep Schools Open for Entire Year* With Oakland University running full time why can’t our high schools do the same and save the taxpayers that extra money? Tax Gouged ‘Got Traffic Control After School Closed’ During the first half of the school year, we tried to arrange for the children on the north side of Mt. Clemens and Bay Street to have a traffic light at the crossing. We were told our count of children was not high enough for a signal. Vie couldn’t even obtain a guard. „ * ♦ ★ Finally, I was told the police department might set up radar In order to slow down the traffic. Radar was put into effect-hut on June 14, one day after school had been dismissed. Why did officials wait until school was out? Still Wondering ‘Place Failure on Bkll Players’ How could any manager win ball games with the clowns that wear the once-proud Tiger uniform? Resigned ‘Cats Perform to Aid Mankind’ In Iselin, N.J., 30 cats are employed at the Santa Fe Game Farms to patrol the grounds and keep out rate, mice, opossums and other enemies. This farm is a home for 3,000 beautiful birds. St. Mary’s Hospital (psqrchiat-ric) has many, many cats which, have helped in psychiatric treatment. More recently, cate are being taught to be ears for the deaf. Meow Criticizes Attire of Dancing Girls Recently my husband and some friends stopp^ in a place in Waterford Township where they have drinking and dancing, and believe me, we were shock«4 out of our wits. ★ A * ■■ - Girls were dancing In skintight tights and tryiiqi to dt the twist. Proprietors sbouMnt allow tights, and pareats of flkese girls should see that they are dressed before going out. ■A A A Clothing worn at a beach is certainly hot the type to wear in a dance hall. No wonder meh^ disrespect girls today. ‘Missing Church Is IneKcusable* Pastor Claus of St. Trinity Lutheran Church writes: “It’s too hot to go to church’’: “It’s so nice. I’ll not worship”; “It’s raining, therefore I won’t go”; “My garden needs weeding, so I’ll take the Lord’s Day and make it mine.” “'These sound like good ideas, but never are Oiey Christian ideas. God has given summer to us as a blessing not as • temptation to turn away from worshiping Him. Just ti7 to explain to God how a day can be too nice to go to His house.” Kemwtli R. Parker Smiles Vacation is when the jplRing 1 a d s go from school binm to springboard. Just think of all the n that are talked about e« tin phone by teen-agers. A A It’s funny how little attention the thermometer often ppys to the weatherman’s pr^ictions. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Wigs The New York Times Local shops come {and go downtown, and nobody quite knows why. Itojail store;! are chancy, losing out to hideous enclaves on the edge of town with massive parking lots. AAA The professlonSIs, however, seem to increase and to be absorbed in the community. There are (from the looks of It) never enough beauticians or orthodontists. Branch brokerage houses thrive. So do party shops and Chinese take-outs. The newest store in town brings specialization to its limit: it sells wigs. Only. The windows are filled with redheads, brunettes, strawberry blondes; in casual cuts, windblown, shoulder lengths and evening models. Somewhere In the mountain fastnesses of Italy genuine human hair Is collected, fine strands for the American wig makers. Is it possible that milady in Westport or Scars-dale is topped by hair once word by a peasant who voted Communist in the last election? But here is the latest in the other window: wash - and - wear wigs, made of fiber. Fiber that is synthetic, made to look like a genuine simulated wig made to look like the hair of its owner. Caught! The Qrinnell (Iowa) Herald-Register Tlien there’s the friend who was complaining About the cares and worries of today's life and living—he noted that when ot|e does something wrong, th^ Government is there ready to fine him, and when one does something right, the Government is . there ready to tax him. Jesse James The Craig (Cdlo.) ' Empire-Courier A shrewd gunman suddenly appeared at the paymaster’s window of a large plant and demanded: “Never mind the pay-roll, bud. Just give me the welfare /fund, the group insurance premiums, the pension fund, and the withholding taxes.” Air Force ^ The Flint Journal President Kennedy’s visit to Colorado Springs for commencement exercises at the Air Force Academy drew attention anew to the school that has been dubbed the “holy land of the space age.” West Point cadets and An- Air cadets make a virtue of the academy’s newness by claiming that “West Point has 160 years of tradition unhampered by progress." Air cadets now number 2,900, including 7M Doolies (Plebes). For youngsters interested in the space age, science and military service, this Is Mecca. David Borotf, who toured all three.academies for a magazine article, isn’t sure that the air academy is all that It should be. He says: “Despite Its flamboyant newness, it is not radically different from West Point and Annapo- lis.” He continues: “It is my conviction that the air academy gets the same equivocal'*reeults as the other academies—good but not good enough.” Let’s kedtr the academtes, he says, but upgrade them academically and intellectaally, study, and a separate, less right program for the inteUectoaily elite. And we ought to remember the reply by ap Air Force Academy faculty member when other civilians criticized the academy’s curriculum: “The Air Force Academy is not intended to be a liberal-arts collegie; its mission is to produce the best possible com- About Omelets The Philadelphia BuUettn The standard explanation (by courtesy of Robespierre) for the peculiar shenanigans now to be observed in many of the new nations is that you caq’t make an omelet without breaking eggs. 'A A Ar ^ This is true. But the apprentice statesmen of the underdevefoped world are now demonstraUng that you also pan break all the eggs there are, without making anything remotely resembling an omelet. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1963 . (AdvcrtlfeataM ' Now Mony Wear ^ FALSE TEETH With More Comfort rAm't»n«, • pMMtnt aikaUne (nunuctd) powdai, tuMds teiic teetb more armly.Tu «at and talk tn mora comfort, fact cptlnkic a itttia PAS* TSBTH on vour platM No Rummy, gooey, paity taate ot taelln*. Oheeki ^lat* odor" (denture breatb). Get FASTEETH at any drug oountar. Singer^s Home Robbed HOLLYWOOD (AP) Three men posing as^ policemen forced their way into the home of enter* tainer'Sammy Davis Jr. Friday night, tied up a nurse and took a $15,000 diamond necklace and at least seven jeweled watches, po> lice said. Heartburn means differ^tlstomach and the heartburn things to different people, but ually returns. ■ refers to a burning sen- ARE THE LOWEST! Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: , GoodDietaryPracfices Help Foil H^rtburn Pike County, Kyi is named for | bears his name- Pike County also Gen. Zebulon Pike, Confederate l has a communl|Ey named Zebulon. general. Famed Pike’s Peak alsolThe county seat is Plkeville. PONTIAC'S LARGEST TILE CENTER Our Own installation work dona by experts ‘ OPfN MON., TMUNI, FRI. ’tH liN F.M. FREE FARKINO ill REAR 1075 W. Huron St. Phono 334*9957 If You Don’t Bujf From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! sation under the breastbone that comes on from a half hour to five hours after eat-, ing, and is intermittent in character. It is an irrita-| tion of the esophagus by t h e' regurgitation of BRANDSTADT acid stomach contents. Why the regurgitation occurs is -not well understood. In severe cases, sour or greasy material may come up, not only into the lower end of tiie esophagus but into the mouth. Spicy foods are • likely to be more irritating to the esophagus and stomach, and are thus more apt to cause heartburn than are bland foods. Greasy foods slow up the emi»-tying of the stonsach. This in it self is not harmful, but as sociated with the slow emptying there may be an increased ten-' dency to heartburn if you are tense or emotionally upset. In s^me persons, heartburn is favored by taking large amounts of clfnis fruits. This is another case where a little is better than a lot. With most persons, eating too fast and not chewing the food thoroughly is a contributory cause. Excessive smoking or d r i n k i n g will also aggravate heartburn. It is important for a person with heartburn to rule out gall bladder disease and other diseases of the digestive tract If your doctor finds that you do not have these serious veiopment of a supersonic airliner. it ii Sr ~' The Traveling White House announced that the money^wduld be used by the Federal Aviation Agency to finance a detailed design competition among interested aircraft manufacturers as well as certain administrative expenses. ■ Kennedy announced June 5 that the United States would try to develop by W76 a commercial air transport capable of reaching speeds up to 2,000 miles an hour. The proposed American Airliner woidd compete with a 1,500-mile-an-hour craft now being developed jointly by Britain and France. * ★ ★ In a June 14 letter to Congress, Kennedy said government ou^ys for the supersonic plane project would be limited to a maximum of 1705 milUon. In addition, he said, private aircraft manufacturers would be expected to contribute at least 1250 million to the billion-dollar project. If the plane is developed and put into conunercial use, the, government would try to recoup part of its contribution by charging a royalty to users of the airliner— the private airlines. The largest ski school in the world is at Sun Valley, Idaho. It averaged over 500 students a day during the season last year. V-- •/b9'$m»rt-took a»«rf Inspector Craddock Looks for a Killer cmRACE for FURS By AGATHA CHHKSTIE Installment XIX ■TORT BO FAR — Or»«». b«ButUbI icre«n and »taf« star, and bar huaband, Jaaon Rudd.,, brilliant dlraator. buy, Qbaalngton Hall and at ^ banadt Mvan tbarb Mra. B^oocic babble! on to her boitesa about having not mat bar yaara ago. (aiUng out pi a alak bed io Sat bar autograph. Marina ataraajiiMt bar, a (rsaen look «a&kTd??^5. aplUad and traoloualy Marina affers her own unteuehad glasa. Mra. ladoock dies from a lethal dose, Marina >s prostrated and tells her doctor: "It was meant (or mo.” Jason (eela aura the Intended viotim waa. hla -wife. Marina was wildly anxloua to have children and adopted threa. but it was not the aolutioR. She gave birth to a boy, an Imbeolle. and suffered a eomplete breakdown. The poison could have been put In her tlaaa while she —■ "“‘"g photographed. “Very well, Chief Inspector,’ Jason said. “I had come back towards the head of the stairs. My wife had turned towards the table and was just picking up her glass. There was a slight exclamation frqm Mrs. Badcock. * * f 'Somebody must have Jogged her arm and the glass had alipped opt of her fingers and was broken on the floor. Marina did the 'natural hostess’s act. 'Her own skirt had been slightly touched with the liquid. “She Insisted no harm was done, used her own handkerchief to wipe Mrs. Badcock’s skirt and insisted on her having her own drink. “If I remember she said: Tve had far too much already.’ So that was. that. But I can assure you of this. ★ ★ ' * " "The fatal dose could not have been added after that, for Mrs. Badcock immediately began to drink from the glass. As you know, four or five minutes later she was dead. H ★ ★ “I wonder what the poisoner must have felt when he realized how badly his scheme had failed." ' All thiS) occurred to you at the time?’’ Of course not. At the time I concluded, naturally enough, that this woman had had some )cind of a seizure.' Perhaps heart, coronary thrombosis^ soniething of that sort. “It never occurred to me that poisoning was Involved. Would it occur to you — would it occur to anybody.” “Probably not,’’ said Eiermot. ‘Well, your account is clear enough and you seem sure*of your facts. You say you have no suspicion of any particular person. I can’t quite accept that, you know." ★ ★ -A ‘I assure you it’s the truth." ‘Let us approach it from another angle. Who is there who could wish hartii to your wife? It all sounds melodramatic if you put it this way, but what enemies has she got?" Jason Rudd made an expressive gesture. . “Enemies? Enemies? It’s so hard to define what one means by an enemy. There’s plenty of envy and jealousy in the world my wife and I occupy. Sr ★ ★ “There are always people who say malicious things, who’ll start a whispering campaign, who will do someone they are jealous of a bad turn if the opportunity occurs. But that doesn’t mean that any of those people is a murderer, or indede even a likely murderer. Don’t you agree?” “Yes I agree. There must be Hillsdale Industry Booming With No Empty Factories HILLSDALE ur> - Hillsdale has landed three new Industries in less than a year and doesn’t have , an empty factory building in town. But this Central Southern Michigan city of 7,629 has n 53-acre industrial park — complete with streets, water and power — ready and waiting for others. And Executive Secretary James B. Holes of the Hillsdale County Industrial Development Corp., reports 10 prospective tenants are on his currently active negotiations list. ★ ♦ ★ Hillsdale has acquired eight new industries since 1956. Most of them are small. Latest to arrive was Garwood Industries Inc., which has quarters in Wayne. It leased a modem factory with 66,000 square feet of floor space in February and its work force now is up to 05. Settling here immediately liead of Garwood was Hillsdale Veneer & Plywood Cq., which took over an idled plant of Monroe Auto Equipment Co. w ★ ★ The hOW firm moved in in January And now employs a work force of 50. Albioa MaUeable Iron Co. of Albion leased last Aug. 7 the Paramount Manufacturing Co. plant which had been MIe since 1955. Albion operations here employ 50 in the manufacture of mortar shells and other ordnance Items. The company said it had no additional iloor space available in Albipn and that the ordnance division’s orders had tripled. The company took a three-year lease and spent 630,OpO putting the factory back Into operation. Hr ★ ★ Other firms which have located here since 1956, with the number of employes in parenthesis, are: Of New Pianos ! ! Featuring OuttMnding Value* On the KIMBALL PIANOS Kimball - One of Amorioa’a best-loTod pianos for more than one hundred years, it comes in rfoh mahogany, walnut and cherry. Many styles to choose fhmt. Choose From ... ^RE NOW New Lester Ma. Console .. $1045.00 $645.00 New Cable Spinet, Wul... $ 695.00 $595.00 New Lester Italian Prov... $ 945.00 $650.00 New Cable Con., Cherry.. $ 895.00 $695.00 New Cable Con,, Walnut.. $ 695.00 $595.00 New Gallagher Con., Wal. $ 645.00 $595.00 New Gallagher Con., Ma... $ 595.00 $545.00 New EUmbal]! French Provincial, Fruitwood ... $ 795.00 $695.00 All sales ioclode free lessons. USED BARGAE^ GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. *Wherm UmrU la Onr BMuineu** la B. Banm Ope* Mo*., and PrI.. 'tO 9 PJI. PB 4-4 Essex Wire (250), Pam Ck). (60), Abrasive Materials (10), S. & T. Machine Shop (6) and Swiss Industries (3). something beyond petty dislikes or envies. Is there anyone whom yonr wife has injured, say, in the past?" Jason Rudd did not rebut this easily. Instead, he frowned. ‘mnestly, I don’t think so," he said at last, “and I may say I’ve given a lot of thought to that point." “Anything in the nature of a love afair, an association with some man?’’ ■ tr 4. , ‘It may be considered. I suppose, that Marina has occasionally treated some man badly. But there is nothing to cause any lasting ill-will. I’n^i sure of it." “What about women? Any woman who has had a lasting grudge against Miss Gregg?” “Well," said Jason Rndd, “you can never tell with women. I can’t think of any particular one offhand." “Who’cl benefit financially by your wife’s death?” “Her will benefits various people but not to any large extent. I suppose the people who’d benefit, as you put it, financially, would be myself as her husband and from another angle, possibly the star who might, replace her in this film. Though, of course, the film might be abandoned altogether. These things are very uncertain.” ★ -A A “Well, we need not go into all that now,’’ said Dermot. “And I have your as that Marina will not be told that she is in possible danger?" “We shall have to go Into that matter,’’ said Dermot. “I want to impress upon you that you are taking quite a considerable risk there. However, the matter will not arise for some days since your wife is still under medical care. “Now there is one more thing I would like you to do. “I would like you to write down for me as accurately as you can every single person who was on that recess at the top of the stairs, or who yon ■aw coming up the stairs at the time of the murder." “I’ll do my best, but I’m rather doubtful. You’d do far better to commit my secretary, Elia sky. She has a most accurate memory and also lists of the local people who wdi'S there. iVould yotJ like to see her now?" “i would like to talk to Miss Ella Zielinsky wery much," said Dermot. TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE Surveying Dermot Craddock unemotionally through herslarge horn-rimmed spectacles, 'Elia Zieiinsky seemed to him almost too good to be true. With quiet business-like alacrity she whipped out of a drawer a typewritten sheet and passed it across to him. “I think I can be-fairly sure that there are no omissions," she said. “But it is just possible that I may have included one or two names, local names they will be, who were not actually there. That is to say who niay have left earlier or who niay not have been found and brought up. Actually, I’m pretty sure that it is correct." “A verji efficient piece of work If I may say so,” said .Dermot. “Thank you.” “What exactly does your job comprise? Are you a kind of liaison officer, so to speaks between the studios and Gosslngton Hall?" AAA' “No. I’ve nothing to do with the studios, actually, though of course I naturally take messages from there on the telephone or send them. “My job is to Ibok after Miss Gregg’s social life, her public and private engagements, and to supervise in some degree the running of the house.” “You like the job?” “It’s extremely well paid and I find it reasonably interesting. I didn't, however, bargain for murder,” she added drily. "Did it seem very incrmllble to you?” "It might have been accident of some kind.” “And how would : such an accident could have occurred?” “More easily than you’d imagine, since you don’t know the setup. This house is simply full of drugs of all kinds. I don’t mean dope whan I say drugs. I mean properly . remedied, but like most of these things, they call, I understand, the leflial dose Is not very far removed from the therapeutic dose.” 4 A Dermot nodded. “These theatrical and picture people have the most curious lapses in their intelligence. Sometimes it seefns to me that the more of an Irtisitic genius you are, the less common sense you have in everyday life.” “That may well be.” AMIXUP? What with all the bottles, cachets, powders, capsules, and! little boxes that they carry about with them; what with popping in, a tranquilizer here and a tonic: mere and a pep pill somewhere else, don’t you think it would be! easy enough that the whole thing might get mixed up?” “I don’t see how it could apply in this case.’! “Well. I think it could. “Somebody, one of the guests, may have wanted a sedative, or a reviver, and whipped out his Uttle container that be carries around and possibly because he was talking to someone or possibly because he hadn’t remembered the dose because be hadn’t had one for some time, might have put too muclk in a glass. “Then his mind was distracted and he went off somewhere, and let’s say this Mrs. What’s-her-name comes along, thinks it’s her glass, picks it up and| drinks it. "That’s surely a more feasible idea than anything else? It happens often enough, you know, that you pick up the wrong glass and drink out of it.” A A “Then you don’t think that Heather Badcock was deliberately poisoned? You think that she drank out of somebody else’s glass?’ “I can’t imagine anything more likely to happen.” “In that case,” said Dermot, spedking carefully, “it would have had to be Marina Gregg’s glass. You realize that Marina handed her her own glass.” (C«P7rl(tat. INI, A(«U1* ChrUUc. LM. GROWING FAMILIES NEED MORE ROOM N enlXrge REPAIR ... MODERNIZE OW! We have a special PACKAGE HOME LOAN SERVICE To meet your needs NO DOWN PAYMENT Oakland County* Largest Mortgage Lending Institution NO LEGAL FEES 761 W HURON-PONTIAC 14 E. Lowrsne* St.-Pontioe 351 ^ Mdrir^Mlltewf 407 Main Straff - Roch«*»«r .... Pln> I lOa W Maplf Rd.-Wallfd Lit " Car M-lS-Clarlc»ton 471 W Broadway-Lak# Orion Look at This Low Price FOR A FULLY AUTOMATIC NORGE WASHER 2 Cycles Big Family Size Tub! SEE iT TODAY! 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! 2YEARS TO PAT! Lowstt liilsrsti Rates in Tem! 2 YEARS TO PAT 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! M 121 N. SAOiNAWr PE 5^189 YourAppUanoeSpecialisU OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY NIOHTS UNTIL 9 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUXE 24, 1968 ■ NINE Every cabinet member re’ino deaths, resignations or re^ tnained in office during the term niovals. His was the only cabinet of Franklin Pierce. There were | to achieve this distinction. • SPECIAL TH!S WEEK DELICIOUS BUTTERMILK FRIED CAKES 6 f« 3S* 29 N. S>lluw FE 8.6»77 __ Open Every Morning arTiilO . »8t. « 6 ... Mon. »nd Thur». «t 7 Cancer Kill$1E3ii|ator^ TUCSON, Ari*. (AP)-Pr. Robert L. Nugent, 61, vice president of the University of Arizona since 1947 died Satur^ of cancer. Dr. Nugent, an alumnua o^e^uni-veraity, returned to Atpift in 1982 as a professor of In 1955 apartment building represented A per cent of all new residential construction. This year it will be about 32 per cent. Shojf* |1 mOfraph 1 i 2255 ELIZABETH UKE BOAP* PIASTIC WALL TILE BtmUifitl Pattel Color$ ’/aC T GENUINE FORMICA SALE 29 ic so. FT. VINYL RUBBER TILE 9x9 ail colors !c TXT dll 13! SUPER VALUE CERAMIC T1U NiW CRYSTALLINE .)* SQUARE PATTERN* For Floort and WalU ITiTRUORLSaa |C 39 HOURS Mon., Thurt., Fri., Sat. 9-9 Tuts., Wad. 9-S AAEN FRfX! TILE OUTTERS UDIES' fBfX RAIN HATS CHUNG TILE 16x32 IrroQ. 6'/2 EXTRA SPECIAL VINYL ASBESTOS 7' 9x9 15.59 etn. 4 Oeiort LINOLEUM RUBS $395 8x12 Explosives' Carted Away From Wreak HORNELL, N.y. « - A tense night in this wastom New York city of 14,000 had. an "alls-weU” en^ yesterday JTben a ahip* ment of military explosivei was removed from a train wreck and carted to an ordnance depot. The explosives, consisting of 500 pounds of land mines and 2,-200 pounds of projectile pellets, were in one of direo baggage cars of a passenger train side* swiped by a frel^jt train Saturday night. Both trains were operated by the Erle-Lackawanna Railroad. The Army said there was 1 radioactive material in the ship- There was no damage was slight Fhur persons were injured, none seriously, in thewred. Fifteen faniilei evacqated from thefar homes Saturday night were allowed to return yesterday, after Army weapons experts tmched the ex|dosives to the Seneca ordnaace depot la Romulus. An Army spokesman in Ft. Dix, N.J., Said the anununition was bound for Madison, Ind., and Yuma, Arlz., from Plxatinny arsenal at Dover, N. J. Service on the rightof-way was renimed last night LOS ANGELES (AP)-The executive board of the California Young Republicans considered and rejected a resolution censuring Sen. Thomas N. KuChel, R-Calif., for 8 speech the board disliked. ★ ★ *. Instead, members Introduced a resolution commending the senator—and then voWpverhweimlng-agalnstit The result, they explained, was to put the group on "record as re-‘ ising to commend Kuchel. Kuchel last month attacked political extremists and what he called “fright peddlers.” One resolution asked Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona to accept the Republican nomination for Another endorsed the “liberty amendment,” which calls for repeal of the federal Income tax. The board also commended Rep. James Utt, RrCalif, for, among other things, demanding that the United States withdraw from the United Nations- Since the end of World War n. more than 21 million new housing units have been built. 28 Reds Executed, Baghdad Reports DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) An Iraqi firing squad has executed 28 Cmnmunists charged with stag-big a 1959 bloodbath in the northern oil city of Kirkuk that took more than 100 lives, Baghdad ra-di^ys. Earlier Iraqi President Abdel Salam itref denied in a letter to Soviet Premier Khrushchev, that three women had been sentenced to death for Communist activities. Khrushchev had appealed to Aref to commute the reported aen-snees. In pnother development Iraq claimed new victories against Kurdish rebels in the north YOUR NEWS QUIZ FART I - NATIONAL AND INTHNATIONAL Give yourwalf 10 pointa for eadi ooirwct 1 Tlw new 8i4>reme Coart ruling on pmyero aul Bible reedlngs In piXbllo sobools does not tfleot oae of the Bible for teaching purposes. True or FalMt a The most controversial part of Prealdent Ken-nedty*e olvU rights program Is bis request for laws to force raolal lat^retloo In.. apprlvately-owned businesses eervlng the pubUo b-prlvate as well as public schools o-aU oliurches • Votlqi for a new Romaa<3efoollo Ripe tea loogur a-nxxre candidates are allowed e Is allowed providing for... a-a direct U.S.-U.a8.R. oomnnmloatlona I b>Prenoh partlolpatlon In the talks 6 Crltlolsm arose about tbs tuning of Kennedy** European visit beoanse of . o..ClMaioellor Adsnsuer's absenoe FART II - WORDS IN TMI NlWf Take 4 polnti for eacli word that you < natch with Ita correct meaniiig. b-havtng two or n»re o-ooourrlng twloe a year i-equivocal FART III - NAMBS IN THB NBWS Take 6 potato for eorreoUy match with the otaea. a-Aiwt woman spaoe l-Lyodoo B. Johnson traveler b-repreiBented the 0.8. at Pope John's foneral (HSixpirenie Court die-8-Davld Beft-Ourlon *#BterW prayer rdtag iM. Irwin Miller t-valenttn* Tereshkova Prim# Mlnlstor •.40 head Preetdeot 6-mtter Stewart Kennedy'a oivU righto group vac tmi MmMms I. tomwiiN The Pontiac Press Jam. S4.194S f...women of 16 na- tions strive for Federation C\q> ]....Bolivia first to withdraw from tto CounoU HOW DOYOURATIf (Seen iHh SMe ef Qiilhi tsasitosM 91 to 100 ftolMi - TOF SCORE •1 to fopoln'** toeellenl. ' nie JH^aeinli-GeeA 41to TOpeinto-foto • *Uak»999-»r««ior turn : answers on RBVSRSI MOI of GOP Senator Senlori to hW Toflc by Abiont Claumate ADDISON. N.Y. (AP) - Jan Messinger will pot be at his high school graduation today, but his classmates still will hear his salutatory address. . a Messinger is scheduled to report today to the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo. His speech was tape recorded for commencement exercises at Addison Central High School. MCIALI aCMRARABE Cvmalf* With Ovwhvaj Oton d Cgtiom Cea«iruetioo end Cemplato Flalshlaa UP TO 20-TEAR PATMENTFLAN Qol Out FfM gilimele Newt Wo Spmiaiin In’- • • AUltlon* 0 e* aaltlof • BMcnml* VMw Ummi • Alamlnam SMIXf AlhBlllPil 7-YIAR MOblRNlZATtON 9U> GRAiES fiONTRAonin 00. Call Vi Anytime O R 4-15 T1 ^RHAMEHTAL IROH Beantify Toni Homa wilh Cuftom D«ii9B6d OnaiiifBtal Ironwoik Railing ■Colomm-CiiHi Sm Our 1-Pc. Reiatarcad OOJIORETE STEPS SaMyltoedlMiNMStoabi ! . Rwtilliwbi-W.l*wr«w*«.l - ■ CONCRETE STEP COMPANY i NEW TELEPHONE-PRODUCT OF MANY PEOPLE Here's a new telephone-^the automatic Card Dialer. With it you can make telephone calls without even touching the dial. You simply insert a plastic card prepunched with the number you want to call. Then lift the handset, press the “Start” bar—and the telephone dials itself.* Where did this telephone come from? New telephone equipment, like the Cwd Dialer, results from the work of many people in the Bell System: Scientists at Bell Telephone Laboratories perform the technical research essential to the development of new communication ideas. Engineers and skilled production people at Western Electric Company manufacture the new telephone equipment on a high-quality, low-cost basis. The men and women of your local telephone company—Michigan Bell—install and maintain the equipment as part of their job in bringing you the best telephone service \ More than half a century of this close coordination with the Bell Telephone Laboratories and Western Electric Company is an important reason why Michigan Bell is able to bring you telephone service that is high in value, low in cost. *If morv Informution «b«ut th« C«rd Di»Uf, juit call our Buxiwtt 0««*. MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY iilixV ■ - ■■■■• r - .. ...4.\ '' - ' . ; ; : THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JUNE 24, 1963 Dominoes Tilt Temper laston. 27, was convjctjjd of as-sault for striking Thomas Preece, WOLVERHAMPTON, England (UPI)—Policeman Anthony Wol- the head during a game df dominoes. Tormenting Rectal Itch Stopped In Minutes Science Finds New Healing Substance That PrompUy St^s Itching and Pain of Piles New York, N. Y. (Special)-One of the most common afl|ic-tione is a condition known as /‘itching piles.” It is most embarrassing for the ▼ictim during the day^and especially aggravating at night. No matter what you've used without results — here’s good news. For the first time, science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to, promptly stop the burning itch and pain. It actually shrinks hemorrhoids— without surgery. Medical science has proved this substance produces a remarkably effective rate of healing. Its germ-killing properties also help prevent infection. In one hemorrhoid case after another“very'striking improve- ment” was reported and verified by a doctor’s observations. This improvement was maintained in cases whete a doctor’s observations were continued over a period of months 1 Among these sufferers were a wide variety of hemorrhoid conditions, some of 10 to 20 years’ duration. The secret is this hew healing substance (Bio-l)yne*) — discovery of a world-famous research institution. This substance is how obtainable in ointment or suppoaiUn^form known as Preparation H*. Ask for Preparation H Suppositories (convenient to carry if away He* 7-Foot Vaeuam Cloanor Hoia BraMed Cloth, All Rnhhor Free Home Demonstration DR 4-1101 WiMn2SMil€Radiut corps APPOANCES rtmuryAiahoHttd WUu Dooior NEW L00ATI0H8M1 HATCHERY ROAD OR 4-1111 Wert on M-59 f* Airport Rd., MoHh lo Hoteheiy Tuhi Wert 2 Block* on Hotchm M. Open Monday ond Fridoy‘til 8 P.M._ Man and Space 'Ain t We Got Fun?' at Canaveral Hoover dam is higher than the Washington monument. By ALVIN B. WEBB JR. CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI-The Russains are beating the United States in manned conquest of space—but it’s a safe bet they aren’t having half as much fun at it. Amerca’s No. 1 spaceport at Cape Canaveral is tension laced with tomfoolery — a strange place where strange things might be expected to happen. They do. Like the time a Mercury astronaut spiced up an otherwise boring “dry run” by suddenly clutching at a gantry elevator and yelling: “No! I don’t want to go!” The nation’s press was on hand for that one. Or the day someone tossed wi alligator into a motel swimming pool. The ’gator was small and rather harmless, but the little old lady who discovered it durT ing a quick dip the next morning didn’t wait around lon g enough to find out. ■k ★ ★ Or the evening the U.S. Navy Hmanaged4o lose a boatload of/ newsmen at sea for an hour when four officers were unable to find the port from five miles offshore. But none of It quite matched the recent evening when the Fenwick Aeronautics and Space Administration (FASA) came to town, recruited virtually everyone from U.S. astronaut L. Gordon Cooper Jr. on down, and laid claims to beating both Russia and America to t h e The slightly touched-up “documentary evidence” was a movie, “Mouse on the Moon,” which related the story of how the tiny, mythical Duchy of Grand Fenwick started out to seek U.S. financial aid for plumbing and ended up by landing the first astronauts on the moon. ANOTHER BOOK Grand Fenwick may also be remembered as the 24- square-mile country that, in an earlier book, decided that the best way to get U.S. foreign aid was to go to war. with and get beaten by America. ’The movie niay never win an Academy Award. But from ‘ Cooper on dowtf, those spaceport e rs whose lives are .wrapped in and around mis- Marriage licenres Nancy J. Jackson. Barkley ^ ^ pnoyd R. Bentley. Holly and Winifred Crlpe, Holly „ Albert R. Alvarado. B* Oladf Karen R. Wyatt, Ja#0 Marwood Leonard J. BUrke Jr., Clawson and an^ Betty Ll^riandf°31» Liberty Sandra K. Bolton, 2t Susan Earl A. Hewitt. 6260 Hatcljery and ®fel"k.“atil“/r7fford ‘tVeno?»fert''’'' USAP and JoAnn T. Sedi lerry L. Dowdy, Parmlnston and Ju-h R. Hager, Pormlr-*"" Jarry L. Blaokstone, rry L, Brake, 3310 Angelus John W. Dubrock, 0604 Buckingham and -Sora-tr-Martln, 0604 Bneklngham -Richard B. Whitney, Birmingham and arole R, Martf-—■ -------- Josef Fettlg, targle i~ -- Perry Norman. Okla. aarOie K, Maruneau, nvym wmos Josef kettlg, 20 E. LongfeUow an Margie C. Sparber, 2200 N. Telegraph Perry A. Lane, 767 Young and OlenC Norman H. Hines, IKtrolt and Judith . Gondek, Birmingham Dennis J. Murphy, Mllfpn 1. Kellogg, 38SY Haeelette Thomas O. Morescfitol. Marilyn B. Smlthpeters. [arliyn B. Bmiinpoiers. . _ . Robert J. Lally, 162 Beach and Carol J. CUrk, 1300 Eason Donald N. Catlett, Mary ‘ Ottav *’*Robert' C. Mills, Pal Kolene S. Bidder. Detrdt KSile^ A* 0«ig*m. 3660 wi efh“Ta?g‘HSidrd‘«n 1 h H. Butterfield, Birmingham William E, Boyd, Ann Arbor Vp^^'ll^.r r.‘g. mid Janet *Da*vrL^«'"«. ,8. paddock _ “?aW ca7’ ErTet^lt and Phyllis B. Chamberlain, Southfield Lee P. ^rjln. Ann Arbm-guerlte L. Patterson. 2016 N, Hammond ^ome°E".* Martin, 0470 Road and Oeraldlna J. Hart, 324 Mt. ^’Kenneth P. Christian •'r., Wpago, ill. and Lota A. McKinnon. Bl7n>ra0h»>“ . . Richard B. BOln, Detroit and Barbara ^'kSimSi ’ Oarwwd. Orchard Lake and Marilyn C. Johnson, 3316 Whitfield We’ll Help You to EHJOY Owning A HOME OF YOUR OWM We feel that it is our responsibility to you to arrange your Home Financing Us sound asd carefree as possible, tailored to your individual circunistunces and needs and issued at satisfactory rales on terms you can afford. If you are in doubt about home financing, call on our years of experience to aid ★ * * EatahlUhed 1890 CUSTOMER PARKCNC. IN REAH OF BimilEVf', sites, rockets and space travel found it a delightful spoof of Uieir daily headaches and heartaches. The “FASA” rocket, as -shown in the movie, was a leftr over Russian Vostok that the Fenwickians modified slightly by using shower nozzles as control jets and the remains of a wine crop failure as fuel. It was launched, silo-fashion, from a tall castle tower. ★ it ■ , k Gordo Ck)pper,got a kick from the part where the Grand Fen-w|ck astronauts invited the American and Russian teams in for dinner after they ail had landed on the moon. The U.S. and Soviet spacemen sipped on tubes of “space food’!->»udiite the Fen-wicUans rOlted out roast tur-. key. Nothing seemed to escape the satire that Canaveral dotes on. VIP CONGLOMERATE ’The duchess herself (British actress Margaret Rutherford) was a pleasant doddering old: timer who appeared a conglomerate of many of the “VIPs” who somehow wander down to Canaveral during theif Ameri-cgn tours. Anyway, it was all in fun— perhaps the type of fun Biat “outsiders” might find hard to comprehend, especially amid the scientific fame and fortune that is Cape Canaveral. But the Cape isn’t a place you would want to live just for fun. After the initial glamour wears off—and it invariably does—it takes a high degree of dedication to keep a top-grade scientist or technician or missile worker here to put men and machines into space. Dedication comes at a price — in long hours away from homes and families, in ulcers from trying to figure out which part in a 300,000-part missile went wrong, in the frustration of paying “bopm-town” prices such as 70 cents for five gallons of water, jdst to exist. C a p e Cainaveral is a tin, unique world that reeks with tension. Its inhabitants are human enough to welcome an eye- Some, like ^the occasions of the balky astronaut and the late “invasion” of the grand duchess of Fenwick and her space agency, were planned^-Others, like the Navy’s navigational miscues, were not. ★ k k But they all serve the same purpose—to break the tension, the monotony. One Canaveral worker sumtiled it up: “I gueira that, as long ak we can laugh at ourselves, we can’t be too bad off.” SAVE HOUSEWORK FUEL and MONEY Hain Yoar Fanam Cbaaei HOW M. A. BEHSOM CO. 45 Fartst St. FE 3-7171 With or without proscription in o wido choico of framo stylos and eolorsi OiooM ih* froiiM iryl« <0 iiA yowr ImtMduol ooai* and perfonollty frolH Nwnd>udo M oar rtudle L«wm or* ovollabl* M natural groy. groan or brown BUDGET TERMS AVAiUBLE KV/isioini I09 N SAGINAW ST E. STEINAAAN. 0.0 DoAr 9M AM. to SiSO PM. FiWoy «i30 AM to S40 PM F| 2-2895 WtfcHelnHal TKafs Why Gee Supplies You With The Finest Fuel Oil!. .. Our hooting onginoors oro ovor olort to soo that you havo tho utmost in quality in evory drop of fuol oil dolhrorad to your homo by our courtoous drivors. This ocsuras you of cloon, ovon warmth throughout tho hooting sooson ... so important to tho health of your children. When Belter Fuel Oil It To Be Had... Oee Wfll Have It. YOU CM DEPEm ON SEE . . . . Juot call FE 5-8181 and our hooting axpiit, John Gnigor, will gladly coll at your horn*, estlinat* the amount of fuel oil you will need during the colder winter mentho and arrange a contract which will oooure you of olwoyo having plenty of Gee's better quality Fuel 0(1 when you need it. You never hove to raeosuri your tank or place another order... we know hou much fuel oil you will use in any weather through our modem "Degree Day" method and before your supply of fuel oil runs low one of Gee's mocTem, GMC trucks, meter equipped for accuracy, will be at your home to replenish your supply. IIAUf IS the TIIIE TB IlUff SWITCH TO CEE! If you ore in ony way dissatisfied with your present fuel oil or your fuel oil distributor may we suggest thot you db as hundreds of Pontiac and Oakland County families hove done . . . "switch to Gee" . . . *rhe reputation Gee has made by serving Pontiac and Oakland County with bottor quality fuol throughout tho past 38 years Is your guido to COMPLETE HEATING SATISFACTION. HO tUTTER WHERE YCU LIVE ... In Pontioe, Drayton Plains, Wqtorford, Clarkston, Orion, Oxford, Rochoster, Auburn Heights, Bloomfiold Hills, Keego Harbor, Wolltad Loko or tho surrounding area, you, too, con onfoy COMPLETE HEATING SATISFAC-TION as ono of our Boot of trucks distributo fuel oil |n your nolghborhood. Coll FE 5-8181 ANSWERS TO TnnAY’S NEWS QUIZ PART I: 1-THid) 2*8| S*o| 4-II 5-b. PART III 1-o| 2-ei S-i» 44if Sm. PART nil 1-b| 2-«| l-di 4-8| R-«. SYMBOL QUm «4l b-8| 0-1j d-tf •-3| f-10| r>| h-4| i-S| J-l. HI RDiillto'D oMfit anil l•rI•sti,ooally ewnad and oparatad Naw Mobllhaat Oiatributorl "If Yen Don’t Know Fuel. •. Know Your Fuel Dealer^’ t cany e complste lin* of Motilar ateaM at coal. Mine GEE Pocahontas and "Little Joe" the all-purpoae stokeiT«>al 4‘. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUjfE 24, 1968 , ELEVEN Congress Trio Keeps'the House Laughing By RUm MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON — Congressmen have more Am than people! The rambuntiuous Hoi^ may lack a spicy Pwfoin case, but it h a the deiigta' comeifer act G r 0 a s, Rooney] and Bow to keep] it warm. I TUbmatvdousj t r i u mverale;' which manages to keep House members in HBTH sUtchesandtheMONTGOM^Y executive department in strai^t-jacket has just staged another of its stellar productitMs that could ou^draw dirhftine Keeler in Vegas, if the lads wwe togas. Cast in the hero’s swadibuck-ling role was Approriatlons subcommittee Chairman John J. Rooney* who more dosely resembles a Roman senetdr than a representative from Brooklyn. The second lead a^t to GOP Rep. H. R. Gross of Iowa, with Re- publican Rep. Frank T. Bow of Ohio playing straidit man. Suggested title for the act is “Money — Rdiat’s That?’* As die scene opehed, Romiey stalked to center stage and de- “Mr Speaker, 1 move that iOie house resolve itself infa the committee «f the- whole boose on the state of the onion for the consideratidn of Ibe biU.” The House miraculously resolved. An executive agency was hurled on stage, and the dialope went like this: Gross: I would like to ask a uesdon or two about this new U.S. travel service. Rooney (looking side at his stomadii: Please do not mention it. Gross: Do I understand they have bought an insignia . . to fly in connection with this thing? ★ it ★ Rooney: They did so many unusual things with which the com- mittee was completely cw-founded that we came to the coia-dusion nothing like this had ever happened in the history of the U.S. government. ' ^ # ■. W * Ti^y expended |14,773 of the taxpayers’ mmiey for designing this insignia which any high school class could have done better. If this is good Judgment of ttw way to spe^ American taxpayers’ money, then I do not know anything. I am not anti-, insignia, 1 am anti-(14,733 of an ?ir:;■ ft i UKESBHX Gross: I thoroughly agree with tile gentleman. Let me say that I think this is mie of the best bills he has ever brought out in my time in Congress. ★ . Rooney: I always have a good bill, fair to everybody. I naight say to the distinguished gentleman from Iowa that as a result of making an official trip to West Germaiqr last December, we have saved the taximyers |119,000 a And Away We Go .. This sceneTs repeateid many times daily by a number of people who are on their way to see the item they have just called about which w(bs advertised in The Pontiac Press Classified Ads., Every trip is a new experience and you'll find at times that you will even make new friends. What ever you might be looking for, a Washer, Dryer, Stove, Furniture, Baby Needs or a House to Buy or Rent, you can find your answers in The Pontiac Press Classified Ads. ^ TO PLACE A PONTIAC PRESS FAMILY CLASSIFIED AD ■ Dial 332-8181 . Now 2 Lines 6 Days 70^ do, Pontiac Press ' Classified Department , REP. JOHN J. ROON]^ year for operating a private train, for the American ambassador. , When we got - t b j r e we grabbed the log and teamed ... it was mostly used for trips to the Bavarian A1 ps where the skiing is nice. Bow: (In an Alfonse and Gaston gesture to the opposition) The discovery of this train was made by the disth^ished gentleman tho SteU Department was from New York, Mr. Rwney, and had he not been on that inspection trip, the train would prob-abltf still be operating. ,★ ★ ★ Rep. Basil Whitener of North arolina: I amazed to read about a carpet was purchased over in H^ Kong for the Tol^o travel office. Was there no caipeting available in this country? Rooney: (gallantly) It was the gentteman from Ohio, Mr. Bow, ubo disclosed the facts about this carpet costing $1? or $U a sgnare yard in dollars, when the purpose of opening the (^e was to help our own balance-of^yments sitnation. Whitmer: The head of the agency (Volt Gilmore of North Caroltoa) is one of my dearest friends, but even my f r t e n d s sometimes make mistakes. I will say that most of the decorating Many Oakland County government buildings are either inadequate, obsolete or in need of major repairs, according to the County Board of Supervisors’ money was spmit with New organizations. Rooney; Does that reflect well on this gentteman (Gilmore)/rom Nortii Carolina? .‘GOTTAKEN* Whitener: No, it would indicate that the sharpies took the country Ix^s again. Gross: With respect |o U*** North Carolinian who was so free with the taxpayers’ money, the serious question is, is he still on the federal payroll? Rooney: I believe he is still director of the U.S. Travel Service. Gross: ’This is one individual that ought to be removed, or certainly ou^t to have his knucklOs rapp^; R 0 b n e y: This same gcatle-man from Nortii Carolina bongth 200 sets of cufflinks and 24 bracelets at a cost of $2114 . . . and distributed some of tiiem nbroad as gifts. There was no anthorlty for fliis imder tiwlaw Gross: Do not tell me any more. You already have me convinced. I understand there was some kind of a beauty contest at the state department. I did not Y(»k antixnrized. ] If this makes tense then I do not know anythihg-.Gross: I think we could well save $^,000 in bdtalf of the taxpayers on the $973,000 booze fund for the State Department. R 0 0 n e y: 11 r u a t my distinguished friend, the gentleman from Iowa ralizes that fids would make a veritable desert of the State Department. To be te”ou^< these are the tools of the trade. The bill then was passed in full, proving once again that it takes more than a Profumo to bring our government down. PO Windows to Close at 5 V Window services, at the niato Pontiac Post Office vrill close one-half hour earlier beginning July 1, it was announced today. ★ ' ★ • ★ Under the new schedule the window services (stamps, parcel post) will he provided only until 5 p.m., said Ralph Dean, superintendent of window services. ★ ★ ★ “The business, we handle between 5 and 5:30 p.m. doesn’t warrant our staying open that additional time,’’ Dean said. Burial Insnraiee Sold ly Mail . You mby be qualUted tor M,-life ins(5^ce ... so you ^ not burden your loved tog of the Court Tower northwest parking lot, to be completed this year. <• Demolition of the old courthouse to downtown Pontiac. ♦ ★ w. • Sanitary sewers, steam and water tinea at the County Service Center to final stages of comple-llbn. ‘ • Additional parking space at the Child Guidance Clinic. • Construction started on the auditorium parking lot and on Court Tower Boulevard. • The Royal Oak Market roof strengthened and general lighting Improved. kkk The report also noted that the committee “is'continuing its efforts to dispose of excess properties at 52 Franklin Blvd., 1 Lafayette, and the old courthouse site at the corner of Sagtoaw and Fits Need Eggs-actiy LONDON (UPD-A. G. Walters has won the $2,800 egg marketing board prize of the Royal Agricultural Skxsiety of England for his Invention-r a dry cleaner for eggs. In Person ... DON McLEOD Dean ofthkD. J*b BROADCASTING 9 A.M. to 12 Noon Direct From ^ FELICE FOODUND 1116W. HuroaSt. OnWHFiS4.TOnYottr FMDlBl Just Charge It at Penney's PENNEY’S AUWAY* FIRST QUAl-ITY NEW! - BIG! -16"x2l" LOUNGE-A-ROUNDER DECORATIVE PILLOWS CORDOROY COVERED FOAM FILLED COLORS GALORE 2 for • SOFT • LIGHT For Decorator Use For Watching TV • COOL For Pdtio Use For Reading in Bed A great buy in this all purpose decorator pillow! 100% cotton corduroy cover, and filled with shredded urethane foam. A wide array of color to choose from. PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE Store Hours 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. TWELVE THE PONTIAC PREjSg, MONDAY. JUNE 24, 1968, NEW NICARAGVAN SCHOOL — U.S. Ambassador Aaron S. Brown (right), a native of Pontiac, and the village priest dedicate a new Alianza school in San Pablo, Nicargua. The four-room school, built partly with donated labor and materials from the rural community, is one step in an Alliance for Pro-press drive tffcdnstruc^ in Nicaragua by mid* 1966. Ex-Industrialist Says We Dodge Answers In an interview on conditions today, retired industriaiist Frank W. Steere, Watkins Lake, says: “A recent survey shows 78 per cent of the people quizzed on important topics had no answer other than a shrug and the remark: ‘Why should I stick my neck out? ‘ There is nothing I. can do about it’. “We can beat around the bush or face it. We are not going to clean up the front pages of our newspapers until we know by personal experience the meaning of intellectual honesty and integrity and put it into daily use. This goes for everyone from the Presi-»dent to the most humble John t)okes. ♦ * ★ “Our cultural level Is determined by the quality of the individuals. We are approaching the time when wqrwill elect a President and several memhers of Congress. If it follows the pattern of previous political brawls our cultural level will be affected accordingly. The politicians are the targets but the individual citizens elect the office holders. We are the real culprits if the administration goes sour. We are spending billions trying to buy friends we will never have until we clean up the front pages of our nevra-papers. The newspapers are rubbing our noses in the filth we create. If every man kept his own nest clean the newspapers would have room for some of the very fine things that are being done. * it * “When any man in responsible office puts personal gain above probity or does a dishonest, mean or underhanded thing he fouls the efforts of decent citizens to build a culture of which all can be proud. This is our strongest national defense. A society made up of courageous, loyal, determined and devoted people is invincible in almost any situatioh. Such a society challenged the Great British Empire in 1775 on the basis of human rights. We were out numbered, out-armed and out-everythinged except a sense of right and the courage to defend, w ★ ★ ‘ Read the Battle of Bunker Hill. Tiiere is nothing that better illustrates Uie power that emanates from a devotion to liberty and the inherent rights of man. On every coin we stamp the slogan ‘In Gqd We Trust.’ “We are saying that we put our trust in human decency, a consideration for tile rights of others, liuman kindness, integrity and absolute intellectual honesty, w w * “We have reached the point where we must learn to live together or internecine war Is Inevitable. Every time you say or do anything that tends to denigrate one of your fellow men you weaken his faith in our code of fair play and decency. Frustration, indifference and the effort to get even Mows. Morale is shot. Conversely, when you play fair, lend a helping hand recognizing a fine piece of work or performance, you are making a definite con; tribution to the hard core of loyalty, resourcefulness and determination which was a characteristic of our forebears. it it it ‘‘Human kindness is the most powerful force in the world. When we grasp and utilize the advantages and put them into practical use daily, we will never again have to use the taxpayers’ dollars .to buy friends for the United States.” UAW Members to Attend School on Problems Some 40 UAW union members from the Pontiac area will attend a union-sponsored summer school starting today at the FDR AFL-CIO Labor Center in Port Huron. •k it it With UAW staff experts and university professors serving as instructors, the week-long session will concentrate on developing the greater skills needed by local to meet particular problems they face in their community. Among the “bread and butter” subjects to be discussed are collective bargaining, union administration, union counselling, time study and citizenship. Problems of national concern to be covered include 1964 bar-automation, and the need for full employment, w, w Delegates will also discuss implementation of programs in their local unions and committees. Leaning Pisa Tower Tips Toward Prophecy PISA, Italy (UPI) - The leaning tower of Pisa has tipped another .(X)46 inch in the past six months, the semiannual measurement shows. Pisa Engineering School Prof. Letterio Itonato warned earlier that if the tipping continues, the tower will collapse within a few decades. Justin Morrill was the Vermont representative who proposed the land grant college bill and shepherded It through Ckjngress. Some Breok! Good, BadJ PITTSBURGH (AP) Robin West, 9, got two P breaks. He peeked into an envelope at his report card and found he pa.ssed in school. That was the first break, y He leaped into the air and yelled: “Yippee. I passed.” I He landed at the bottom of a flight of stairs and got I the second break—a broken ankle. L I ; Wff THOUSANDS B OF LOW low PRICES wm ixfra Oold With Tkh CMfws end |l.0« Mm« ruwsMsa« Except Bear, Wine, Tobooeo LhnK One rer PemHy. ■xplret Tueidajr, June II. VALUABLE WRIGLEY coupon Mlroclo Whip — — W«h TW. Qt- Coupon Jar end 5.00 Purchota klintt One Per Pemllv. Ixpinn JuN 29 SAVE 10‘ ON KRAFT IRACLE WHIP vith 3» DELSEY TISSUE SAVE 14c on 4 Rolls <10* Hl-C DRINKS 5c OFF LABEL SPRY ^59^ 3^89* VALUABLE WRIGLEY coupon lS2" Spry —. ^ With TWi Coupon » Sy and S.OO ^ ^ Purchose LlmU one Par Pamlly. Ixpirei JVM 29 TO ROYAL GEIATIN 6^49* COLUMBIANO COFFEE SAVI V*., 69* mmBll ^ save IQc-Get Free Dish Brush WmiEY COUPON ■! _ _ _ _ _ tum Liquid Mtle , with Thie Coupon and 5.00 Purchoee Limit One Per Pamlly. Expires June 29 TO LUX LIQUID BANQUET CREAM PIES Chicken Of The Sea Chunk 29* COTTAGE CHEESE Stfv* Country 1-IL. 98 Kitobon Ctw, | jlr , VALUABLE WRIGLEY coupon Cfcleken ef the See Chuuk Tuna . With This Coupon end 5.00 Limit Two Cam Per Pamlly. txfku J«M 29 _SSi NEW CALIFORNIA Long White Potatoes 10-49* BIG "G” CEREAL SALE . BIG “0” TRIX S? .GOUNTRY CORN FLAKES D. .FROSTY O’t . SUGAR COATED TWINKLES Sava On •a BLUE RIBBON GRADE "A" LARGE EGGS In CtHa ’ilPeqPUM WITH THIS COUPON ■ J AND PUaCHASa OP Any 2 Haoda KMjlfM LITTUCI , caunan axelraa June If Limit OnaCauimn WITH THIS COUPON ■Jpy A 1 AND puacHAsa op caupan axelrai Jiina SV Limit One Caupan WITH THIS COUPON ■ ^ AND PUaCHASI OP . Holf Gol. Any Flovor ^M^^RXj^NTap Pmat ar Sea hart Caupan axplraa June St Limit One Caupan yggg^ ’TMOMOHMIh WITH THIS COUPON ' AND PURCHASU OP Any 4 loaves or Pkfla; MBM Mtl-0*CruBf wXffinTfm Brtad or Bunt l!|Sui£2yIS caupan axplrea Jena It Umlt one Caupan \ GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS THE POXTiA/; PRESS. MONDAY. JUNE 2i, im THIRTEEy , Mrs. Kale Harroun, Aub,urn Heights (left rear), celebrated her 80th birthday Saturday with family members of five generations. Mrs. Harroun holds Nichor lytm Marie Beardslee, Union Lake. Mrs. OrUe Avery, Middleton, is seated next to her mother. Mrs. Marvin Beardslee, Union Lake (left front), and Mrs. Fred Knisley, Sherwell, Nicholynns mother arid grandmother, were also present at the family reunion. Mrs. Knisley hosted the affair. Mother's Upset Son Fails; Whose Fault? By ABIGAIL VANBUREN DEAR ABBY: The school jast called to tell me that they were going to k’^.‘4 >*, MRS. L. L. MATTINGLY Unique Dressing For an unusual taste in salad dressing, mash one banana into a cup of mayonnaise. Needs Transfusion Country Lacks Vitality MRS. J. //. RAGSDALE Enfield-Ragsdale Jeanette Christine Enfield exchanged vows with James Hilliard Ragsdale of Norton before Rev. C. George Wid-difield Saturday in All Saints Episcopal Church. After a dinner in the Coral Reef Room, Airway Lounge, the couple departed for New Orleans and. the southern states. * . . k .... ★ .. . Their parents are the William N. Enlields, Bow-Lane, and the Roy Fawcetts, L-mar. Ark. ★ ★ ★ A Swedish tiara securing her illusion veil complemented the bride’s gown of white silk organza appliqiied with sequined Chantilly lace. She held a semicascade of Stephanotis and English ivy. ★ it it Wearing carnation pink ori ganza were honor matron Mrs. Erriest G. Brocher, Mel-Vindale, arid bridesmaids Mrs.. RoberHbumbard, Tfpsi— lanti, and tl^ bride’s si#*’ Sine. Pink carnatibnsTfnd sb ivy compri.sed their bouquets. On the esquire side were best man Jared Hart, Marine City, with ushers Philip Kar-noogian and Jack Papazian. By GEORGE W. CRANE CASE P-454: When Col. Glenn participated in his triumphal automobile parade in Washington, D. C., the waving of flag.s and the cheering impressed him. ★ * ★ Later, when addressing both houses of Congress, Col. Glenn added: “I am glad to see that pride in our country and its accomplishments is not a thing of the past.’’ Dr. Max Levin, a leading psychiatrist, suggests that there has been a deciine in moral values and national character, or such a healthy display of patriotic feeling would not attract special attention. Dr. Levin Sidded that there is a direct correlation between love of country and devotion to one’s family. GOAL IN UFE “A man or woman,” says Dr. Levin, “whose paramount goal in life is self-indulgence cannot be a good husband or wife, or even a good parent and citizen.” Dr. Levin concludes with this striking piece of psychiatric hdvice: k k k “We need more John Glenns, not b e c a u s e they know how to fly into outer space, but because they can give the American people an emotional transfusion — a transfusion to correct the anemia of egocentrlclty and poverty of sentiment.” - w. w What Dr. Levin really means is that we need to cul-tivafg morrunselfishness and the Golden Rule. For the Golden Rule turns our selfish introvertive attention outward upon other human beings. Then we not only become more seifless and generous. but we grow more in tune with deity. An introvertive mother bird is usually terrified by a cat. But when her fledgling is fluttering on the ground, with a cat stalking it, that mother bird turns her attention entirely outward. PECKS AT CAT She is then 100 per cent extroverted by the danger to her child. That mother robin will actually fly toward the cat and peck at the cat’s face; What changed that timid, fearful mother robin into a bold, selfless creature? kkk Just the focusing of her attention on the needs of an outside creature. Cowardice thus correlates with introversion of attention. Bravery means we are focus- PAMELA JO LOIACANO Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lola-cano, Birmingham, announce the engagement of their daughter Pamela Jo to Michael Edward Hub-bell, son of the Harold Hubbells of Mann Road. ing on outside objects or persons. And true love, whether of family or country, means we are selfless. Anybody who has thus experienced TRUE love, even for only a moment, has thus had a brief glimpse into eternity! Much so-called love is simply selfish desire for sexual indulgence. It may also involve the male zest for conquest with a lot of sexual magnetism. But TRUE love is selfless, like that of Sidney Carton in ^ Dickens’ immortal “Tale of Two Cities.” (Ctpyritkt b; Thu llvpkiiit N;adic>t«. lie.) Coed Wins Unit Award Suzanne Woodman received the Dorothy S e 11 e Future Teacher Award at Thursday’s meeting of Alpha Beta chapter, Delta kappa Gamma. She will be a sophomore at Central Michigan University this fall. The chapter’s final meeting of the season was marked by a picnic at the Chippewa home of Mrs. George Yansen where Mrs. Samuel Miller, Mrs. Gordon Earhart and Mrs. Kathryn Tick were honored. Arrangements were handled by Mrs. Harvey Bldstrup, Mrs. Irene Albright, Mrs. Emil Bruestle, Mrs. Charles Martin and Mrs. Harold Northon. ________________ Meet for Picnic Lotus Lake Friendly Neighbors Extension Club met Thursday for luncheon at the home of Mrs. Herbert Atkinson of Lotus Drive.------ _ „ FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1963 (mm OPENING Saif Sarviea, Cain Oparatad OpaR 24 HoHra, 7 Daya a Waak Da aN jmir waah at anea. •. WARRINGTON'S 369 OAKLAND AVE. AT WISNIR ST. ^pDn'&^ ^ceiN>OnRATID LAUNDkY PONTIAC'S LARGEST and FINEST • 49—10-lb. Speed Queen Washers • 8—20-lb. Woshert • 4—25-lb. Extractors • 22 Dryers MEET to EAT HIKER FOUNTAIN . in the lobby of the Jliker Building 35 W. Huron St. Sonnenberg-Gould Rit^s Conducted, in Birmingham Pledging vows before Dr. Glen W. Harris'Saturday in the First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham, were Karen Mary Gould and Gary Harold Sonnenberg. Parents of the newlyweds We the Donald GoQlds, Biim-inghain, and the Harold Son-nenbergs. Royal Oak. Hand-embroidered Alencon lace detailed the briW’s prin-cessrlike gown of . white silk organza wifli chapel train worn with silk illusion veil: She held white Cymbidium orchids and lilies of the valley. , Donna Jean Gould, her sister’s honor attendant,, and bridesmaids Sally Sonnenberg, Mary Kay Griffith and Linda Mitchell wore yellow, blue orchid and'pink organza respectively and carried matching Cymbidium orchids. Sus¥if HuddleiAorte was flower girl. 1 D'u ane Steiner, Phoenix, Anz., was best man Philip ■ H a t m a k e r, Femdale, A1 Whiting, Larry Simmons and Donald Frnncis, alt nf Royal Oak, and Wayne Moore, Berkley, ushered. ^ i ‘ Following the church re- I " ception, the couple left for northern Michigan and will be at home in Warren Woods later in the summer. SOmKNEERG Mothers Can Stay Home, Earn Money By MARY FEELEY Consultant in Money Management Dear Miss Feeley: I’d like to work but have a 3-month-old baby and do not want to get a job outside the home. Before being married 1 worked in an office. If you have any information that might be helpful, please advise me. Mrs. J. W., New Haven, Ind. Dear Mrs. W.: You might find it worth while to write to The Small Business Ad-ministratipn, Washington 25,> D. C., for background material. This office has combined in one publication these subjects: '/Handicrafts and Home Products for Profit” arid “H&me Business.” ,k copy may be had free of charge. You might also contact busi-»ss and civic leaders in your community, stating the type of office work you - forinerly did. Perhaps some phase of it may be useful in obtaining part time work you could handle at home. Typing, telephone contactingt bookkeeping, are possibilities. answering service from her hotne for people who are out of their offices most of the time or away from home wheh they’re expecting calls. Others earn a modest income by baby-sitting in their own homes for mothers who bring and pick up their children. I hope some idea mentioned here will spark orie that pays off for you. , _ know of at least one homemaker who operates a'telephone- Women’s Boots Get a Big Boost By GAY PAULEY UPT Women’s Editor NEW YORK (UPI) - Fall footwear for women is on a boot kick, and Beth and Herbert Levine figuratively are kicking up their heels because of the trend. boots for women as early as eight years ago,’’ said Mrs. Levine, the designer half of the husband-wife team. ‘‘Then Balenciaga (the Paris couturier) en.: dorsed them for his clothes collection last year, and boots were off and running.” Mr. and Mrs. Levine believe one reason boots are going at record pace lies with the new ihaterials for m a k i n g them. L'e a t h e r is available in lightweight, crushable kid and suede. As much as 10 feet of leather will go into one pair of knee-highs,” said Levine,“yet feel al-^st light as a regular pump“ FUR MESH The Levines make boots for day in furs, real or fake, including lamb, calfskin printed to look Levine (pronounced Luh-veen’) said his firm sold 4,000 pairs of boots last year compared with 400 in 1961. “We sold them in Florida. We sold them in Texas where temperatures run 100 grees,” he said. He jfigures 1963 as an eyeri bigger season for all boot makers because it has been a rafe pacesetting designer on Seventh Avenue, heart of the multibillion-dol-lar garment center, who hasn’t shown for fall models tramping around in boots jyith everything Troin citified tweeds to jeweled formals. Many of those boots shown with the fall collections were Levine products. The shoe industry expects the biggest boot year in history. It does not, however, estimate how much of a volume boots will Share in the estimated 598 million pairs of leather shoes sold each year. Women buy 47 per cent of that over-all total. SCHOOL OIRL PERMANENT SUMMER .SPECIAL l Olf WOMEN Our Quality 6^50 $15 PERMANENT l.imilPil Time Jt)nlr! WILKINSON’S Beauty Salon 325S W. Huron SI. ' I'K 4-3149 It Kli/.Hbeth Lake Interseetion Tuas.. Wad.. Thuti., Sal.. 9:30 lo S:30 — Mon.. Fri., 9:30 to 9 like either zebra or leopard; in mesh ftpp only), arid for late ’ and evenings, velvets, plain, or brocades jewelled over-all. New Member Receives Pin Mizpah Temple, Pythian Sisters present^ new member Mrs. Elton Losey with her Pythian Sister pin at Thursday's meeting in Fellowship Lodge Hall. The new boots come in three heights — the knee highs, which leave a slight gap betvveen skjrt hem and boot top; the mid-calf. arid^ThTanHeTe^thrAlmo all are pulled on without need of fastener. A few have zippered sides for sirioother fit to the legs. Heel heights vary from 2‘/» to 2% (inches) to the flat. Herbert Levine worked on northern New York newspapers and at Women’s Wear Daily, New York, the trade publication of the women’s apparel field, before he became a shoemaker. His wife, the former Beth Katz, was a combination secretary and shoe model for a New York firm before she turned designer. She wears a size four shoe. Announcement was also made of the all Pythian and Pythian Sister picnic July 21 at the Oakland County Sportsmen’s Club. Hostesses for the "'evening were Mrs. Clarence Mahaffey, Mrs. Kenneth Coding and Mrs. Lester McFarland. Jk_____ GWENDOLYN A. WIISON Our Special Price ZOTOS "Alive and Lovely^ Reg. $20 Inolvdetflhempeo, S«l« llelreei Prescription Permanent Neiiner's Beauty, Salon No matter if your hair is limp or fine, strong or coarse, bleached or tinted this new permanent wave will give your hair long lusting lovelinessl Try it today. 2nd Flooi August vows are planned by Gwendolyn Ann Wilson, daughter of the Raymond Wilsons of Edison, and Paul Norbert PruenK, son of Mrs. Francis Pruente, Gingell Court, and the late Mr. Pruente. The couple opened business in 1948 and not only run a wholesale operation, but each year shoe the cast of four or fivp Broadway shows. Customers (buying through re-tpi] outlets) have included Natalie Wood, Jane Fonda, Joanne Woodward, Janis Paige and Son-ja Henie, they said. Marlene Dietrich bought their stocking shoe, an innovation like leotards with sole and heel. The couple claims to have pioneered the thin heel, the backless slipper pump, and now are promot-ng the medium height heel,in walnut or teak wood. I asked them to forecast shoe fashions in the years ahead. don’t know, we may even go back to the ankle strap,” said Levine. “Women complain about their feet hurting . . . about what the pointed toe has done,” said Mrs. Levine. “But not one of them ever would be fitted blindfolded^ which is the ideal way. Woman Guest at Meeting Mrs. Bertha Spence, of the Rebekah Assembly of Michigan from the Pride of Hartland Rebekah Lodge 520 of Detroit, was a guest at the Pontiac Rebekah Lodge 450 meeting Friday evening in the Dames of Malta Hall. The July meeting will complete Shampoo and Set $p5 Touch of the unusual — tiny gathers soften a face-framing collar. So flattering to short, fuller figures, you’ll love this style for day or evening. Printed Pattern 4970: Half Sizes 14%, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%, 24%. Size 16% requires 3% yards 45-inch fabric. Fifty cents in coins for this pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York 11, N.\y. Print plainly Name, Address wim Size and Style Number. ) Just opt! 304 design ides coupon for FREE pattern one you choose in new f Summer Pattern Catalog. S cents now. Cool Slipcovers • To make summer “slipcovers,” tuck and pin attractive bath towels over sdfas and chairs. These are, cool to sit on and easy to launder.' Prunes in Sugar ALL Permanents Complete Ith Ct With Cut and Set 395 Expert licensed operators to give you a flattering hair cut, loni^ lasting permanent, end becoming hair style. All for $3.95. HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SHOP Oprn Mofiiiiia* «i 8 A.M. 78 N. Safinqw Over Ilazlcy Mkl. 333-9660 Store brown sugar in a jar with prunes. The prunes absorb sweetness from the sugar and the sugar takes some of the moisture from the prunes. The bulbous onion and its numerous relaUvriS—lncluding garlic, leek and chive — belong to the lily family. . WCTU Unit Gathers at Home Dear Miss Feeley : A group of us were discussing barter and exchange, and thtt qriestion capie up: If a person had a home and wanted to exchange it for stock, would either party have to pay income tax? Mrs. E. G. B., Chicago Dear Mr?. B.: An exchange is the same as a sale as far as Uncle §am is concerned. So capital gains or losses would be involved in such transacUan.. Some 33 members of Anna Gordon Unit, Women’s Christian Temperance Union, gathered Thursday for picnic dinner at the Pontiac Lake "home of Mrs. Joseph Green, State publicity director. Rev. A. J. Baughey gave the invocatioA and Mrs. Peter Nieirii led devotions. 'The hostess conducted a white elephant sale and a box of articles made by the group was sent to the U. S. Veterans’ Hospital, Derirborn.. EUGIBLE FOR AWARI^ The president, Mrs. Frank A. Denver, announced that the Anna Gordon unit, with a 10 per cent membership gain this year, and Mrs. A. J. Baughey, who s e c u r e d 11 members, are eligible for state awards. Guests included Mrs. L. G. Rowley, state president, Mrs. Violet Hills and Mrs. Ludwik Palka, Hazel Park, and members of area uriions. Rev. Lola P. Marion of James K Boulevard will be hostess at the Anna (jordon and Frances Willard unions’ picnic on July 17. WANTS TO SAVE , Dear Miss Feeley :-I am 16 years old and a junior in high school. TTiis is my problem: I have a part time job and earn about $35 a month. What would be a reasonable amount for me to save for future The pilot fish, found in most tropical seas, accoiripanies sharks and eats pieces of food which the shark scatters in the water. Dear F.W.: As custodian of your grandson’s savings, you do not have to, declare the interest that money earns on your income tax return. Since the^nccount is in the child^s name, it is his money, not yours. ^ ? (Mary Feeley will welcome | your questions. Write her^ in * care of The Printiac Press,) iVs I live at home and have no living expenses and my parents buy most of my clothes. I’d like to spend half of it for clothes (more) and accessories. My parents did give me an allowance of $10 a month but, now that I work, they don’t think they should continue. It was for incidentals, cosmetics, lunches, etc. A.D.M., Mason City, Iowa Dear A.D.M.: Since your future education is about the most important thing you can invest in right now, a good slice of your income should be put aside for that purpose. I gather you won’t have to be entirely responsible for your education financially. But let $10 a month be a minimum to contribute. After itlloting $10 to replrice the allowance you used to get, you will have $15 for clothes. If you’re a smart girl and buy washables, you can always have a fresh outfit hanging in your closet, ready to wear. Dear Miss Feeley: I am in custody of my grandson’s savings. He is a minor. What would I have to do about the interest his money draws, although it is very little at this point? F.W., Passaic, N.J. DRY CLEANING FLUID 0, I recently tried one ef the new coin-operated dry eleeniag machinet, U the deening fluid need In tufh ^iueehine* poiiimoutf A. Varidu* solvents are used in tuch machines and it would be difficult to give a pat answer to your question without knowing the name of the solvent involved. Many dry cleaning establishments use tetrachlorethylene. This chemical, one of several used in coin-operated machines, is moderately toxic. The vapors are easily absorbed through the lungs, and inhalation of the vapor may cause head- ache, lightheadedness and extreme drowsiness. Coin-operated establishments should be IU1I1CI9 «IIU wviKvtit tavuB Qver-expgsuto to cleaning fluids. However, no poiwnous from dry clothing c Our label is a ballntarb of quality—like “Slerlinf” ou , silver ... “Tiffany” on Jewelry. It is your gnaranlee that the preseribed medicine packaged under it meets fully the bichest standards , of professions! priclice. PERRY PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS 1251 689 ' Isst Blvd. I' Isldwin St Perry I it Coinmbis FE 3-7152 ' FE 3-7057 Photographer 518 V^. Huron Street Hear General Hospital FE 4-3669 MRS. JERROLD NYE Mrs. Jerrold (Marcia L.) Nye, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred E, Shepherd, bachr Summit, received her lor of science degree in medical technology from Michigan, State University. She has accepted a position with Edward Sparrow Hospital in Lansing. 'The graduate is affiliated with Phi Kappa Phi, nation scholastic honorary so-ciety. ' Renwdeling! huteIims Building ! m money down • KitCHENS • BATHROOMS • BASEMENTS • ATTICS • ADD A ROOM • GARAGES. All Work Perforniad by Skilled Craftsman Dedgn. IdioYm BARHARD CONSTRUCTION Pontiac FE 8-8733 ^ reduce EAT ONid LOSE TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! EASIER TO TAKE AND MORE EFFECTIVE THAN THE POWDERED AND LIQUID FOOD SUPPLEMENT, AND COSTS LESS INCLUDING CAPSULES SUITED TO YOU INDIVID-UALLY BY Lie. PHYSICIAN, M. D. NO GASTRITIS OR IRREGULARITY WITH MEDIC-WAY CAPS, DON'T DIET — lUST EAT! AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE, YOU CAN LOSE 5. 50 OR 100 LBS, AND KEEP IT OFF! MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 7 OFFICES IN OAKLAND AND WAYNE COUNTIES—ONE IN MIRACLE MILE LADY Pampering days Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday Every day we pamper our patrons, of couirse, but Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays we are able to offer that little “extra” because our pace is more leisurely on these days. Start the week right then — come in and get PERMANENT $095 wave and shampoo, set and styled hair- 0 cut combined for only TEEN* and SUB-TEEN PAMPERING PLUS DAYS Mon. and 'Tues. by appt. only —t only .... $po $350 1 119 HOUKH: » a.m. to 9 p.m. nonncll S A|nM.lntmontNotAlviiyi. N«c«»«iry. I’oiitiac Mull Hho|>pliig Oontw HAIR STYLIST Phone 682-0420 : .1:. „ ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOtoAY, ^UNE 24. 1963 FIFTEEN Must Share Disappointment^ at Setback By MRS. MURIEL I^WRENCE Deai^ Mrs. Lawrence: Our 17. year-old boy has set his heart on attending an putof.state college, Which has accepM him. It has raised its tuition and dikmitory costs far beyond adiat wi can afford.’ We arc going to have to teO him he has to register at cor local college and Ihre at hone, -ami-mLoreaflfaidtogoR. He has been lookiigf forward so to college life away from home that we are afraid he may be so disappointed,.. ANSWER: You and Ms father are also disanx>inted. You’d bet-‘ter know this. Yean need your own sadness over ttls devetoinnent if yen are gstag to give sympathy to your boy’s disappointment. If you don’t feel itjf you’ll be tricked into ddending yourselves instead of sympathh^ with the t^eumode auda heel 82 N. Saginaw St. sadness back of his possible re-proadies. You havoi’t made it imfmsible fcnr Mm to attend hi$ choMn coK iege. The board of trustees has made it impossible. aU ’that loves to take If we haven’t the money to sup' pml a youngster in an outof-town we somehow feel we should have it. we can do fpr our laqr There’s a kind of egotism in uslbeoomes nothing compared with what we feel we should be able to do for him. As a result of this secret dissatisfaction with ourselves, he feels disapproval of us, toe. may tarn upon ns with re- Serve Leftover Roost -in Sweet Sour Sauce If you had a roast of beef dr pork over the weekend, you might like a new recipe for a “planned-oyer” dish. This comes from Mrs. James Crlsenbcry of Conv merce, a homemaker with'j whom we have had amne ' tekfihone conversations, SWEET SpUR BEEP OR PORK iBy Mrs. JaaMS CriSeabery 2 cups cubed cold roast be^ to pork 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 2 tablespoons flour Vt cup (firmly packed) brown sugar 1 teaspoon dry nuistai'd cup vinegar cupa water 1 package onion soup mix Brown meat carefuBy In heavy skillet or electric fry* pan. Sprinkle with