Th« Weather
V.I. WmUv Bumi r«r«c«*l
THE PONTIAC PRESS
Horn*
EdifiOB

118th YEAR
ir ★
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1960—*4 PAGES
Their Prized Possession
SHE STAYS WITH FAMILY - Riduu^ Gnnbc tuigs his near-genius Ibater daughter Alice Marie hs Mrs. Combs watches outside their Old Bridge, N. J., home Tuesday. They had learned
AT Ph««*Ui
a short time before that the New Jersey Board of Child Welfare had given up elforta.|a transfer her tosA family with greater Intellmual and material attainments.
Fosfer Parents Will Keep Brilliant Child
OLD BRIDGET N.J. (AP)-and Mrs. Richard O
Mr.
went ahead today with plans to adopt their brilliant 4-yeaiMild footer child,. Alice Marie, following a furprise state decision clearing the'wayl
HAD SECRET MEETINO The state board held a secret
mroung in Trenton in which it,their own after Alice defended its original position ^t Marie came into their home. They ^ce should be pla^ tor adop-originally had signed an agreement that they would not attempt to adopt her. But they grew^ lo|«^ice and sought adoption.
for her foster |SMatB te ralae.
41^ liy
hlly for pbotocra- aim to a (Mi thaa la be foagU
scuR^red joyfully for pbotocra-Rhars around the trim homo—the / benter of attention although she didn’t know why.
Boxing Match Called Off as Fighter Hurts Knee
OAKLAND Tke heavyweight boxing mateh between Mike DeJohn and Zorn Folley, nehednled for tonight, was called off this morning. Promoter Larry Atkina said DeJohn had reinjnred his right knee.
Ike Chestnut of New York and Leroy Jeffrey of Detroit wUI meet iir'a la-round featherwelghi bout as a replacement.
The replacement fight will be nationally televised (Ch. 1 It p.m. E8T).
Combs credited "the press and opinion" with bringing about
the board's sudden decision on the gill with the^ near-genius IQ of
"God has Just taken a loved
"I don't know what- to say,” Mrs. Combs sobbed. "The good, the bad happened all at once.' Combs arid his wife had two
over by Ita parents In ibe eeart|, prAw and over the air waves. Wo have , therefore decided to allow Mr. aad Mrs. Ooabn to Adopt her if they wish."
The board’s one-page statement concluded; "it is our sincere hope that the Combs, the public and the press will allow the child to grow up in a normal home Mtr mosphere."
*’A11 we want now,’ Combs said, "is to get back to our normal, happy life.’
A MIXED-UP DAY It was a day mixed with, sadness and Joy for the 25-yearold, $120a-week sheet metal worker and hi wife. They heard about the board’ decision just as they left the fu^ * neral for Combs’ mother, who died the weekend.
Cily Bus Drivers Balking 2SCent Jilney Proposd
Striking blis drivers today H|dd off voicing any definite acceptance of the emergi^ 25-cent-a-ride Jitney operation authorized by the City Commission for the duration of the strike.
The special service is restricted to these rmites and schedules, followed by tjie bus company in the past with the approval of the city.
John Sytsma, president of Pontiac Local 1097 (AFL-CIO) - of, tlie busmen’s

ArmamentCuts
Would Reduce Forces to 1,700,000 Men Eoch in 18 Months
GENEVA (AP)-Th€ Soviet Un-llon today proposed that the Unit-led States, the U.S.S.R. and Red China cut their armed forces to ,700,000 men each within ,18
ike Endorses Nixon in Race for President
Also Warns Against
Violence in the South
Over Gvil Rights
WASHINOTONMW President Eisenhower publicly endorsed Vice President Richai'd M. Nixon today kS Jiis choice for the R e p U b l ie a n presidential nominatida,
Eisenhower mftde plain at a hews conference^hat he supports Nixon, who at, this point has no opposition for the nomination.
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He also commented that violence in any form will not advance the cause of civil rights for minoriUea in the South.
The Prerideat was aaked abwit
Salurday	he ladlreetly
ahstoe .la Aaaased him la the
alluding to thb annual dinner of, the Gridiron aub. Eisenhower spoke there but the club, rules specify that "reporters
Soviet Delegate Valerian A. Zorin made the proposal to the 10-nation disarmament conference at closed'seiaion during which the five Western allies formally submitted th4r three-stage plan to halt the arms race.
The Weatorn pUn was made publie Tuesday aad gat a chilly reception from the Soviets.
Hie Soviet plan—which hai not been formally put before the ference—is based on Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev’s proposal to the U. N. General Assembly last September that all natloni dis-arm completely within a four-year erlod.
Zorin aald the Soviet . calls for disarmament in three (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1)
Nevertheless, some newt writers who did not attend the dinner got word that Eiaenhower had In effect endorsed Nixon. They wrote dispatches saying so.
★ a A When asked about this, Eisenhower chuckled and said that he actually had been referrihg to geographical areas at the dinner table. Ibt whea be went on to say iBi If anyoae Is wondering whether he has any prefetenre as to a cbolco for tho OOP presidential aominalioa, the answer very deflaltely Is yes.
A little later he made it crystal clear that his preference is Nixol^.
That happened when a reporter asked whether he had Nixon in mind in talking about whethei^'be had any bias in the matter.
Music Man' Cast Tours Plant
State Officials, Justices Would Gain Next Year
Sonote OK tloceisory; $300 Million Sat Aside
After Furious Debate
LANSING t^In a sudden burst of energy, the House today Jammed through bills carrying 300 million dollars in appropriations and giving salary boosts to lawmakers, elected state officials and Supreme Ckmrt Justices.
All moved to the Senate. The action, with hardly a word of debate, came after two hours of inter-party • wrangling and name-calling capped by a shorWived, one-man filibuster.
★ ★ ★
The ttall that for a while tied the lawmaking machinery in knot! waa ataged bjr frethman Rep. George F. Montgomery, Democratic schoolteacher from Detroit
The battle ataried yMlarday.
raged uatU mldalgM-aad Maka
tons fHAY nor - fumfy Gnfield of the "Muric Man." now enjoying a packed house in Detroit, filays one of the show’s 76 trombones to the delight (and Raiidy% too) of two other members of the cast. Members of the show ate lunch
.p.	»■	J rnllme -r#n riwM
aiM took a tour at fhe ftontiac Motor. Division plant today. Seven-year-old Randy piays one of the lead parts aa Winthrop Paroo. His companions to this photo are MoUie Sterns (left), a dancer, and Sheila Forbes,, who plays Zanecta.
In reply,*sthe President fired a question of his own. It was: Was there any doubt to your mind?
Eisenhower’i reference to jgeo-' graphical areas at the dinner table reltoed to the stories drawing the inference he bad endorsed Nixon at the Gridiron dinner. The atoriet said be had suggested that those at the bead table move a couple of plaoet^Whicb would have put Nix-Eisenhower’a teat.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Democratic National Chairman Paul M Butler seemed likely today to survive a political boo-boo that have coat a less-agile performer his Job.
Butler nude what many in his party regard ai the political mistake of being caught at predicting that Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-will win the Democratic presidential nomination.
He,^ was identified by the New Ymlc^Post, which presumably had no representative there, as the highly placed Democrat who told a group of reporters at the National Press Club Monday that recent developments indicate a Kennedy victory.
Union, said the Union would hold a meeting to decide its course of action.
Under the measure, placed into Immediate effect by the Oty Commission last night, drivers would have 15 days to olitato dty licenses” to continue their tesy ride’’ iervices, tosUtuted when the long strike began last Dec. 5.
Sytsma aad aTsmaU graap ef drlvara left the OommiealiB
ifltb Sytsma privately exprees-, lag doubts abtait UbIob aoeept-aaoe of the piaa.
A Uttle later, tbouijh, the group returned to the (Commission chambers and Sytsma announced that a membership meeting probably would be calM.
"We have 15 days to compty, don’t we?" he asked '
"The 15^ grace period to to five you time to have your license applicatians processed,” an-swmd Commiarioner Floyd P.
• • i jUney
Sytsma made two publicly.
* * *
First, that the unkm had not bee ‘ consulted 'in drawtog up the Jda did, secondly, that the door ha (Cbottoued on Page 2, CbL S)
(Continued on Page 2, Col. T)
Judye.gay8; *Just a Waste of Time*
Civics Teacher Wins Her Case
A Waterford .Township Junior I It had broken down on the way hl^ school civics teacher had her to work, she said. A garage me-day in court today — and won chanic found later that it had a case.	blocked gas line.
Sisk said that he was "Just doing his job’’ in ticketing the car since it was parked in a Parking’’ zone.
the ear bad broken dewa. aa 1
in court by Keego Harbor Jnaticc of the Peace Jamee Southarl "Thto haa been a lot of foolish-nem from the begfnntog,*'ASouth-art aald to dismuwlng the case after hearing testimony.
"TUa to tolly. It’s bi
Mrs. Rosa, who teachei civics, social sludiea, htotoiy, Engltoh and art at the John D. Pleree Junior High School, said she was "very happy over the outcome ot the trial."
’I wanted to prove that J didn’t do anything wrong," she said.
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Mrs. Ross’ par sras ticketed tost Wednesday by Keego Harbor Police Chief James K. Stok. on Cass Lake Front, just south ct Cass Lake road
7
No evidence was presented at the trial that the car had bqpn placed to the "No Paridng” zone . by Mrs. Roes or that the car belonged to her.
★ A ♦
"We could adjourn the case for a couple days and wait for an official notice of ownership from the Secretary of State’s office,' 1, "but I’m not going
Free Ridos for Irish?
NEW YORK (UPI)-The Long bland Railroad will change its name tor one day this month. On Marai) 17th it will be known aa the Long Ireland Aailroad.
Tb* Tibs laa. O
■ D(Ml7, II A.M. ‘la
Battered by Hurricane Humphrey
Butler Too Gabby Again
In the course of what scema a charmed life in the chairmanship, he haa berated Southerners about ' rights to the extent that some Dixie party organiztkms won’t send funds to the national group ao long as he is chairman.
HE ALWAYS WINS He has squabbled with Gov. David L. Lawrence, the Pennsylvania national committeeman. He has a running feud going with Ool. Jacob M. Arvey, the Dltooia tional committeeman.
HUMPHREY 'SORRr Butler haa criticized the tactics ! Johnson and House Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas. He later made up with them but he hasn’t withdrawn hia statement that no Southerner
politieal protacto they aro not pormltled to side publicly t^tb eue caudMato agalast aaotber or eveu Boggeot that aay particular ladivtdaul to la tb« lead.
Some other* chairman might have feoed serious demands for his ouster from the temporarily united forces of Kennedy’s rivals for the nomination. But only Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey came forward to say that Butler had "out-livixl his usefulness" .by talking sides to the presidential contest. B. Johnson ot Texas, often a target for Butler criticism, declined
meaning Johnson—can win the presidential nomination.
Through all of these excursions nd alarms, Butler’s National Committee majority has stood firmly behind him. He has won eyery test vote by a substantial mar^n.
Just o Minutol Meg's Tony NOT Commoner
LONDON (AP)-Prtaceat Mari garet isn’t marrying a mere commoner after all.
Within the next few days she will receive a lineage chart show tog hiisband-to-bc Anthony Arm-stroRg-Janes to a direct descend ant of Edward I. king of England Southwesterner— from 1272 to 1307.
Humphrey, an active candidate for the nomination, said be was Sony that Butler "injected himself Into thto situation,"
He haa helped, neither bimaelf at our great party."
The fact remained, however, that enly Ibe Nattoual Oemmlftee
In Today's Press
ee39
Oomlcs ................... J7
Oouaty News	.......... 18
Editorials ..............   8
Lentou gerieo	...r«....... 28
Markets .......:.........  88
Obitaariro ..............   M
gports	....... 28-38
Theaters ...............   88
TV A Radio	Programa 88
Wilsan. Earl ............. 8S
Women’s Pages	IS-U
Beats Still Dig 'Cave Despite City's Catcalls
Despite strong opposition from the City Commission, plans to establish what city fathers have labeled “a beatnlK Joint” appeared to be moving ahead today.
“We’ve in vested $11,000 so far In our place, it’s too late foi us to back out now,” s^d Donald Jadobs, manager of the enterprise, already^ widely advertised under the name "Cave of the Ninth Cat.”
★	★ a
In no uncertain terms, four mtostoneri and Mayor Philip E-Rowston frankly told Jacobi and a backer of another proposed "coffee and poetry" establishment to stay out of Pontiac.
Amid noisy coituaion. Democrats seized temporary control of fhe lower chamber lato night at the end of an historic 14-hour day marked by the overthrow at a legislative standing committee for only the third time since 1900. TIME RUNNING OUT To stay alive, 124 House bills must be shifted to the Senate today under a legislative timetable leading to mid-April adjournmenl.
Without debate, a bill to raise the aalary of the 144 legislators from KOOO to $6,S00 a year cleared the House on a 68 to 34 vote. The expense allowance would stay at - flat 51,000 additional.
Tbe lacreaae, which wouldn’t tkc effect until the toart of tko next legitoative term la Janu-aiy, was approved la the Houu. last year but died In Ibe Senate. Prospects for its approval in the upper chamber were regarded ad improved.	.
* * ♦
Also okayed was a bill to raise the governor’s aalary from 122,500 530,000, pay of ^reme Courf justices from 518,500 to 525,500 and that of the attorney general, state ', auditor genaral am] secretaty of state from the present 512,500 to 517,500. The effectivd date wquid be duly INI.
FOR RESTRICTED USES Budget bills paased by the House allocate 5229.575,000 to varioui restricted uses, 524,443,000 to sen-era! government purposes, 59,976,V 000 for regulatory services, 510,-. 538,000,000 for conservation, recreation and agriculture program! and 526,228.000 to state police and public lafety and defense.
"Pm agaiast ysa. the people at my district are against you aad tbe people of Pontiac are against you," wsid Rowston at a confer-esMse rtopieotod by Jaeobo yesterday afternooa after he discovered that bto appUoatlon for a food II-
Other commissioneni who objected were Floyd P. Miles, Jobh A. Dugan. Wesley J. Wdod and Robert A. Landry. «
They argued ttot beatnik jotota would corrupt teen-age. morato, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4)
Spring to Arrive Sunday Under a Blanket qi Snow
When spring officially arrives in the Pontiac area at 9:43 a.m. Sunday, it will i>robably find Michtoan under a blanket of snow—"a ne." the weatherman says. Accumulation of two to four inches is forecast for the area today. Dimlniihing,snow flurries are- forecast for tonight and to-
More mow is predtcled lor Friday or Satnrday.
Ftw the next five days temperatures will average about 10 degrees belbw the normal high of 45’and noniml low of 28 degrees, with only mi It or day-to-day changes.
Nineteen was the lowest tempet-ature reading in downtown f^piUac preceding 8 a.m. The thermome ter regtotered 26 at 2 p.m.
News Flashes
OTTAWA, III. iPv-Tbree women mlotong on n winter outing at Starved Rock Slate Park were found tonin today. Sheriff Ray Eutaey of La Salle Couaiy said
been raped. He oaM the clothing of tbe women wu disarranged.
They were Identtllod as Mrs. Fraaoes Murphy, 47. wife of R. W. Murphy, vlco presMeat aad. general counsel for Borg-Waraer Corp.; Mrs. MlMrod Uadqutot,’ 88, wife of Robert Uadqatot. vtoa. president of tbe Harrto Trato A* SaviBgo Bank of Ckloago; aad Mn. Ulllaa Oettiag, 18, wife at Gforge H. Oettiag, general sn-pervtooc of totoraal aadlto for the lUlaoto Bell Telephsae On.
HOWELL W>-Uvtagtooa Ceaa-ty r ”	-
today den
led reports ttet
vowed to escape from Jail aad threatened tbe Hte of tbe Jaitor. "There’s aetblag aaaaaal aboat what goes oa la thto Jan." ba mid. "Pitoaneri’ gripni c(mmoa. bat wa’ia aat havtof
(

TWO
-X
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDXgSDAY,«SlARCJI 16. 1960
Neiie, Watson to Plead for Bail
judge Seh AAonday to Hear Attorneys Ask for Freedom on Bond
DETROIT uri — A bail-plM he«y She lor c<nnely Mrs. Nelle Lassiter wQ be held Monday to roincide with a similar hearing lor Gordon Wataon.
TV hearing lor, the 38-year-oM blonde iormer mooel, first set for today, was postpom^ yesterday because the transcript of her pretrial examination with Wataon, 44. will not be ready until late this week.
'Mrs. lassller and Wataon have born bound over for trial on llrat degree murder and ron-aplniry la rommll mnrder in the ala.>1ag laal April ol her kua hknd^ Parvla Laaalter, n anbnr-ban Royal Oak aalo dealer.
Wayne (Detroit) County Circuit Jidlge Chester P. OlHara empha-siaed he would take no action on tha bail pleas until he has studied thd transcript of examination testimony.
Usually, bond is not granted in a first de^M (premeditated) der case.
★ ★ ♦ ,
Hrs- Lassiter and Watson, her husband's Iormer business associate, are accused of arvanging for three men to kill Lassiter.
The three, all from Chattanooca. Te^., have pleaded guilty to second degree murder in the shooting They are awaiting sentence and also have been named cocon-spirators, but not defendanU, thf Mrs. Laasiter-Watson case.
teia Proposes Cuts in East-West Arms
!!^(Oontlnued From Page One) stacr*. Paralleling the troop cuts for the three biggest powers, be ptfipoaed that Britain and France reduce their armed lorces.'to 650,-OOO men each.
'The Uaited fItatM mtm has 1^ tVt mUliim men la lud-Mm. The U.S.8.R. says It has SjtS,Mt, but Khmshebev has an
GREAT FTN — Randy Cumbie, 6. tells,newsmen all about’ his two days oil a Nevada mountain slope. Despite subzero weather, he had a fine time. He wis marooned with his mother and grandparents when their light plane crashed. The undaunted family gave Randy a birthday party while they were there and he never received a more appropriate gift—a sweater.
0
Save Fainily Stuck Two Days on Mount
ELY, Nev. (A?)—Wind, snowiflylng along we suddenly were and ice smacked a light airplane weathered in — I mean, really onto the slope of a Nevada Mdun- weathered-;we roi|ldn’t see much tain, but all five aboard survived at alf," .Stodda'rd told newsmen.
and were rescued after more than two days of sub-zero weather.
A-helicopter from Hill Air Force _aaa In Utah brought the five-all members of the asme famDy —from the snowy nwuntalr. to the warmth of this community. It was dilficult task.
*
Wes- Stoddard, 90. a veteran bush pUol from Anchorage, Alaska, waa pilot of the downed me.
We had taken off Sunday In good weather, and as we were
1.I*
be de-
iiMlllaed wfiblB the oest yev ee se.
O.S. military officials estimate Rad China has 2,600,000 men In Its arfiiy and an air force large enough to man 2,000 jets.
CALU FOB CUT
The Western plan calls for the United States and Soviet Union to ho|a their forces to 2)k million man each in the first stage, and to- cut them to 2.100.000 In the second stage, with corresponding reductions in other countries. The plgn sets no timetable lor the stages.
2orta told d news conterea'-e
Sialet plaa, all stages ef dlaann-auMUt wsuM be saperrlsed by an
it previous disarmament negO:> tiatJons. however. Soviet and We<t-eri Ideas, of an ade<)uate optitrol iyutem have been far apart.
^ the second stag* of the So-viut plan, said Zorin, all armed foKeca would be disbanded and uB foaaign baaet would be Ikpiidated. TWs could be completed within t«)> years, he said.
Connor lo Seek Governorship
To Bid for Democratic Nomination; is Third to Join Race
DEHTIOIT (* — Detroit councO-lan Edward Connor announced today as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor.
(fonnor's entry assures a three-man race on the Democratic side. Two RepuUicans are in the race In the Aug. 2 primary.
Csmwr, 6t; a caBaellmaa sine* IMS, said he ,weaU reveal Ms campaign plana at a luncheon at the 4Nds Hotel in Unslng toinw-row.
In addition to his $12.000-a-year council job. Connor is secretary ol the Michigan Metropolitan Community Research Corp-, a job tflat also pays $12,000.
<3ov. C. Mennen Williams, Deihocrlit, recently announced he ■ not seek a seventh consecutive two-year term.
Secretary n( Stale James M. Hare and U. Oov. Jaha Swalnann quickly it!
llama. Paul D. BagweU, a Mlch-IMate UnlveraUy faculty member who was defeated by two years age Is ex-■ GOP
My windshield was iced and visibility was bad. My wife saw a few trees in front of us as we were moving along menu.
w w
“I pulled back on tfie stick and we cleared the mountain, but the next thing I knew, I was caught in a downdraft.
"I tried to pancake it into the ww.”
He did.
The small, twin-engine Piper Apache stayed upright as it sliced into the snow, but the sudden de-
Truck Weight '•" Lerws Take Effect inCounty Friday
With the thawing aeason rapidly approaching, I 'and the resulting damage to county roads, the Oakland Cfounty Road Cbmmiaaioii announced today that spring truck weight restriction! will go into ef-febt Friday noon. .
Vfolators of the frost law wlllin-.j. be Ata^ed. laM Tom KenM^
cllnation threw Stoddard against the windshield and knocked out ■omq of hU teeth.
BACK INJURIES	/
It hurt his back. too. ^^ytl-
imaster.
He listed the following new restrictions:
Blacktop and gravel road—single axle 11,700 gross poiitids; Undem axle 16,900 pounds.
Concrete or Class B roads-rsin-gle axle 13,900 pounds; tandem uxle 19.5QO pounds.
Special tandem CUas A roJtes— ■Ingle axle 13,300 pounds; tandem 2tMI00 pounds.
Pioneer Posies Mark
JODRELL BANK. England IB —The Jodrell Bank radio telescope today tracked the American space rocket Pioneer V as it moved 790.000 miles away from the earth. The algoal came in loud and clear.
Snow, Snow, Go Away
Midwest Takes Nine Count
State S^n. Carlton Morris of Kalamazoo, declared his candidacy last week. Morris is leader of conservative Republicans in the L«g-iiUture.
Primary winners will meet in the Nov. 8 general election.
Adlai Inferesti in Secretary State Position
Hc/was miked Tueaday night ahptit talk he might be named to job U a Democrat is elected president.
backbone suffered fracture near tbe/bdse of the
Him wife ,Helen. 49. suffered a break in the same region.
The doctor said there appeared to ^ no damage to the nerve the spinal cord which rons ti)c backbone, in either
He described their injuriea as serious but not critical.
The other three persona were less seriously hurt.
Randy Cumbie, 6, was quHc exriird about It all. He had a birthday party la the dlnabled plane atop the mountain Monday. HU present wna a sweater, which could not have been more nppro-prialo. Temperatures dropped lo U below sero.
Randy said he loved the heticop-ter ride, his first.
Randy's mother, Mrs. Horace Cumbie, 28, said “When the plane Mme down the door was sprung, so I got out and packed anow in all the cracks in an effort to keep the wind from roaring through.'
Mrs. Cumbie, wile of an Anchorage policemnn, is a daughter ol the Goddards. -
* * *
The five were on their way help celebrate the 80th birtliday of Stoddard's mother, Mrs. U B. Douglds, in Tucson, Arizona.
The fifth person in the plane was Mrs. Joseph V. Lee, 70, o‘ Heybum, Idaho. She is fitoddard'
John F. Kennedy, a leading candidate lor the Democratic nomination, haa named Chester Bowles, former governor of Connecticut^ as hii foreign affairs advisor.
MSUO, Rotpry Start Education Program
By The Associated Prera {dumped heavy snow from eufrni A blustery snowstorm landed	^hem Mlaqpuri as
another wintry blow today	----*-----
bread areu in the Midwest, already punchy from a month of ^vy anow and uns<
The new storm, powered by I eagterly winds 30 35 m.p.h.
The Weather
Van SI. WM«h«r Bama Basari AW VtCINITT-IUtTr wai ' ' 1at wara^ tar Ikl
it swept northeaitward.
* ★ %
The fresh snow fell atop a covering more than a foot high in many ptacea in .Kantas, northern Miasowt, southeast Nebraska and ■outhem Iowa.
Heavy snow warnings were issued from northern Missouri northward through Iowa and into aoutheast-Minnesota and eastward •cross Illinois and parts of In-
The severe late winter storm
ttiS (•Ske n. L«r* UBkht nTThan- Office and lactories also shut down «.! sarUz ri-Azjrtu fiwrm. W(h ^	wfctlons. Driving condl-
,	. TaSar ta .	. tioiu throughout the snow bell
u»p.r.t«r. p,r«au, I	hazartous and travel was
Difttun’'mit****	**	^“ ib*nily curtaUed.
StMU WaSatadar at IF pw.	*	*	*
M a‘J’ Mote than seven inches of _ Mesa rtaaa wadaaaday at 1017 p.a. MU in Kansas City Tuesday, adff-Deaatawa TaaaMralarM	|blg tO the half fbol fall On Moih
Jf ".....***’■ S “	.....:U day. Two Inches of snow piled atop
M i p.w; m the white blanket in Ottawa, Kan. iSwm.’. !:;'.’.'.'.’. ji *	h* * 45-mlnute period.
Electric Costs to Soar If Chicogo Gets Water*
8 li iffmtssr s n
I Raw Orteaai TO I Raw ro(k 4t t CMiaba «
> rhocBU «
Newspaper Ads Printed in Color Most Popular
NEW YORK US-Color newspaper advertising “is busting out of Its swaddling clothes fast.’’ Medi-i Records said Tuesday.
The advertUing statistic reported a survey of 40( papers showed ROP (run • color newspaper linage m .fanuary reached year-earlier firare of 6, 787,974 lines by 41 per wnt.
* 0 J
January retail co^ advertis ing jumped 46 per cbnt to 4,745, 708 lines from 3.2^,864 a year earlier. General admrtlsen placed 2,871,270 lines, up M per cent from 2,142,012 Unei. /
Automotive c^or advertising rose 51 per .cent to 773.588 lines from 513,767 lii
Indepadence Man Found Dead in Home
Township man .. fat the living room his Trite this morn-to sheritTa deputies.
NUGARA FALLS, N.Y. tft^ AnI engineering contractor nu^tgins itl An will cost electrid^- users' more was found < than two minion doUan a yMr ^'of Ms "
Chkage is permitted to take’fiitire| ing, ac water from Lake Midiigamr
•	0	Deputy Coroner Dr. Robert
Gfor|^ R. Rich, apperiring for Buehrig of aarkston sab) Kenneth the SUte power Authority, testi-iL. Coomba. 37, of 6761 Anderson-fled yesterday at a hearii* on the,ville Rd . dirt from a buUet Tround water diversion issue.
He '’echoed testim^ by olbet
available porrer it the St. Lawrence and Niagara jimikr Ixsjects.
A .22 caliber revolyitr' was found near his brty. Deputies said the ing of liake Mk^kn w^ culjw«nM w«» aelf-lnfllcted.
Tbs body is at Coats FunerM Home, Driijlan Plains.
The Day in Birmingham
School Program Waiting on Tax Increase Balloting
BmONGHAM - PasMge of the 4-mm operating tax. levy. Ip the ‘ il MardiVelectian wooMal-Sc BiriBuigham schools to co-oparal* with tha Natioiial Defense Educatkm Act, bqy new iwtruc-
Board revealed today.
The mlUage inescaae also wM provide aalaiy Mkea for teachers and other schoot Anployet. and TriU allow file hiring of SO new teachers, the Board minounced.
IR BM I
Ar nutMTat
(HIPS FALL — Frederick W. Ford, recently appMnted chair-* matw of the Frteral /iimmunicationa Commission, sawa a piece of lumber in Ms hofile at Alexandria, Va. The avid do-it-yourselfer la known In Alexandria as a inaster*restorer of homes. He takes over the FCC frtim John C. Doerfer, who resigned in a barrage of criticism. F6rd has a philosophy of strict regulation.
^oun Bidding for GOP State Senate Nomination
A no-holds-b«rred primary fight for Oakland County's seat in the State Senate became more of certainty today with Huntington Woods Mayor David R. Calhoun's bid lor the Republicen nomination over Incumbent Sen. L. Harvey Lodge.
Calhoun. 48. of 104.34 Talbot St. Said he ha.s decided to try to wrest the nomination away from Lodge in the Aug 2 primary.
Lodge, a two-term seaator from Waterford Tonnohip and former «nm|y prosecutor, Is expected to otm re-election.
Those elope to the county political scene say, Calhoun's entry in the
school giotriets to qualify for fed-
The main qualification matching funda to provide theae... .erricei had to be ralasd locMly--•omMMng Birmingham haa been,. waUe to do in the pari, the boud
M the 4-mlU levy It paaeed. fluids * will be available lo Improve the^ instructional program In mafiie-* matics, foreign language, and -science in both the elementary and . Secondary schooU. the Board, noted.
12th senatorial district race willi result in a hotly contested primary battle.
Lodge defeated his Dt^mocratic opponent in 1958 by a 4,000 vote.
Only one‘Other Arkansas gover-or, Jeff Davis, ever won as many „	, , j	Us three terms. Davis served in
He ple^rt hlm*W tojivMd	^,^y 1900s.
narrow, highly partisan stand.
“With a new governor there is going to be.room for cooperation between the. parties— there's going to have to be." Calhoun said.
Da\1d Ron Calhona, born and
Michigan State University Ohk-land and the Pontiac Rotary A^ub will launch a pioneer rtucationol adventure tomorrow.
History faculty member Dr. Gerald Htiwka’a addrosa to Ro-tarlans at their nooa Iqlicheoii in the Waldron Hotel wifi start the plan by MSUO. Hm school wUI
provide ‘ liberal rtnralion | grama lor ares aerylec clubs.
Dr. Straka will present a series of three lectures—tomorrow, April 21, and May IS—srith the film 'Histoiy. Democracy, and You” * * *
He will emphasize the rriatkm-shlp of history
and place particular atten-
Pontiac Doesn't Dig Beatnik Plans
(Continued From Page One) lead to public disturbances and introduce into Pontlqc what Landry mcrlbrt as ‘‘an atmosphere and phUoaophy that We don't want.”' Jacobs denied that he or his place was “beatnik.”
'E^reryfiilng about it sounds bcat-nik/to me." retorted Rowston.
Jarobs and three business partners have spent three urecka, he Said, redeeoratbig a large, flrat-floor arta la the Habbart BnUd-iag, 18 S. Perry St, at a eaat of |ll,M0 so tar. It sroald acoon-modaie SM peraem at cafowtylo tahko.
Jacobs said he planned to be open evenings until 3 a.m.,
Ing coffee, aandTriches and pixza pie and providing such entertainment aa^poetry readings, modern jazz, bongo drums, artists and Interpretative fiancee.
jlowston announced at last Hint's Commiesion meeting that nine Pontiac organizations and nu-' merous private citizens have written City Hall, objecting to "beatnik joints.” Commisrionera have received more than 100 telephone calls of larotests, he said, w w * Commisalooer MUton R. Henry sided against the rest of the Oom-
tion to the moral responsibilities of membership in a free society, said Dr. LoweU R. Eklund, M.SUO continuing education director.
The I e r t a r programs, ar-raagrt joiatly by university o(-floialt sad Dr. Dana P. WMt-mer, superintendeul of schools and club program chainnaa, has captured the latereat of the Center (or the Study of Liberri Education for adults. This h a Part FomMiattoa agewy ia Chicago.
"The Center is considering financial support lor the expansion of this program locally, and even ", based upon the Pon-' tlac Rotary pattern,'' Dr. Eklund said.
* ★ , ♦
Dr. Straka'i topics for the three lectures of the pilot program are history as the story of moral battles, history as a philosophy of death, and history and the need for a fiynamic democracy.
FaubustoSeek Fourth Term
Governor of Arkansas Pledges to Continue His States Rights Fight /
LITTLE rock; Ark. IP-Gov. Orval E. Faubus announced today he will seek an unprecedented fourth term.
WWW
Faubus pledged to continue fighting for a defense of states rights if the people give him another two-year term as governor.
Faubus, wba defied the frteral geverRmeat la little lUwk’t achori Integration crista of lM7. vowed to conttnuc Uc stand ■gainst “the usarpatlon ol the piwple's rights.”
So far, the 50-year-old Faubus Ijhas only one opponent in the July 26 Democratic gubernatorial primary—Atty. Gen. Bruce Bennett
self as a forward looking Republican — another expreooion
didacy today with a dedication to the long-range Intercoto of Oakland county and the stale.
Ralph W. Moxley noted that right of way vioIaUons contributed to 2S* of the 60 accidenta recorted iA.„ February.
-«Thta type el aeoUMt Is eaased by tbeiighfi***, «■-cemteoy or plahi car ill—wa •» the part of the drivar wka prtio tats traffle srifiMrt pnpar aan- ^ tfoa> Moxley ataled.
He has Instructed his otfieeri to watch for such drivers and ticket them.
Bighteen accidents were attributed to drivers following veMcIcs too closely, a -major cause of traffic Mishaps here in the pari.
■Citizens for MicMg^" It the topic of a talk to be given by ' Wilbur G. Durkee when the Senior ; Men’s Oub meets tomorrow at I the (immunity House.
The club’s discussion group will consider why "the best brains reject government jobo."
The Bloomfield Hills Camera Qub will meet at 8 p m, tomorrow at the Cranbrook Institute of Sci-
Tfie members will photograph modem dancing. Models will be furnished by the Kingswood School
Victory in Arkansas' Democratic j*nd directrt by instructor Mrs. primary means election.	Claire Levine.
W ★	*	'I	------------------
Like Faubus, Bennett is a sworn _	,	n II •
foe of any tederally ordered inte-|g|J5 DriYGrS BalkinQ
gration.
Faubus Wron a third term in 1938 by a landslide. At the time, he Tvas riding a wave of publicity which resulted from his battle against integration of Little flock public high ichools.
He was a councilman for years prior to that. His term as mayor expirrt at a time when he hopes he'll have a new job as senator — April 1961.
★ - ♦
He says he is k backer of Paul . Bagwell, 1958 GOP gubernatorial candidate.
The new candidate is a Detroit manufacturing representative (or automotive engineering and sales firm.
The candidate became a member of the Board of Supervlaors last April whea his city voted to remove former snperrlior Harriett Phillips, a meiMber of the Democratic Stale Ceatral
Ike Endorses Nixon as U.S. President
(Continued From Page One)
Calfioun favors as‘^"one of moat important things” n consti-tuUonal convention, and says the people should decide any increases in sales or income taxes.
He was president ol the MicM-gan Municipal League from l8S6 to 1958 and today la on a atate-wlde committee of Otizena for Michigan itudylng state aervieea
All Soviet Youths to Get Live Antipolio Vaccine
MOSCOW MSy the ead ol this year all Soviet cltisens be-tweea X moatbs aad >0 yean old wlU have received
Worker reported Tneeday.
A Taaa accourt of the artlele saM nsore ttiaa It million people already have reorived the vac-elne the past year.
by minorities to show Ihrir aspirations and desires for equality.
But the President said he docs' lot believe violence in any form advances the cause of those seeking,equality. Neither, he said, does he condone violence, against those In the minority.
* * * Eisenhower set forth hi the demonstrations as House civil rights quarterbacks wor decisive vote today on a related matter	— a voting	referee	provision in	a general civil rigkts	bill.
* * *
Eisenhower was asked tp comment on what a reporter called the
........like" demonstrations ol
Negroes who have aeatrt them-•Ives’-at lunch oountera in protest against segregation.
Eisenhower replied it is dilficult to give a sweeping judgment. He said some demonstrations are questionably pr^r. but others can be classified otherwise.
* ♦ *
The President went on to say he Iq deeply lympathetic with the efforts of anyone to enjoy the rights ol equality given to riiim under ths -Oonriltufion. As long as a person is exprening his aspira-tioh for these rights In a perfectly legal way, Eisenhower said, he is justified In doing so.
Home Bills to Rise 5-10 Cents
on Jitney Proposal
(Continued From Page One) been opened for men-bus drivers ’ to apply for jitney licenses.
"This could, pei-haps, lead to troubles.” he warned.
ft Tvas left up to Oty Manager Walter K. Wlllmali to deride which jitney drivers gel the more profitable, heavUy-travelrt routes and which the leas profitable.
“That is going to be a tough problem,’’ he observed.
It wag privately suggested to Sytsma that the bus drivers re- ' quest preferential treatment for ■ routes assigned on a seniority basts ^
This Is basis on which Pontiac City Lines, Inc. assigned routes and Sytsma said the practice was continued in the ‘‘courtesy ride” (Tvice.
Miles believed that the ultimate number of jitney drivem in business would depend on public demand.
Mayor Philip E. Rowsten doubted that many non-bus drivers or • non-Pontiac area residents would be interested in the jitney business.
“They would find that business doesn't pay very much,” remarked Sytsma.
The measure adopted rraa the same as proposed by the mayors special traneportalioa oommlttee, headed by Miles.
Miles said his 14-member cltl-»ns’ committee decided to look for a substitute for the buses after hopes for a settlement to'the loijg strike dimmed again over the wertend.
“The bus strike might continue indefinitely,” he said. "In the meantime, we need some sort of public transporiaUon, licensed and insured for the public protection.’’ Miles said that the regulatory standards for the new jitney operation are on the aama level as those already in effect for jitneys in Pontiac.
(]hle( regulations, be said, rail for police Inspeetioa of vehicles, liabUlty lasuranee In the amoRht of	maximum tor one pas-
Phone Rate Hike in Effect
LANSING IB — Mom Michigui householders will Jiave either five or 10 cents added ^ their montMy telephone billa under a,.aew schedule approved by the State Public Service Commission.
regulation,” said George E. Hifi,
“We can’t legally keep this op-
Tha remaindeF Trill be provided by 8840,543 from re-gnmping 18 exchanges into higher rate adnes. S40422 Inmi an increased charge
la a madasi lacreaae hi fecal rates art a allghtly larger one to toll ratSa.”
all pasemgers, a cbanffenr’a U-cease, and |M Ji—<i‘y Hcease flee. Miles emphasized that his committee considered the Jitney operation “merely a stopgap measure.” "The committoe haa pledged to ramaln. the transportation problem until a long-range solution ii reached,” he said.	a
eratlon out of town." he said, and average five cents nsore but
Rowston aarert with him	er tolt ealla within the state	' **.* ^ «	® ^ '*"*•
HUl estimated local rates tvouMi Advertising Agency be raised over-all eight-terths of|jn Sficond Building 1 per .cent and toll rates 2.4 per	^
Rowston agreed with him.
But other commissioners had already discussed privately the possibility of writing a new law — invoking their powers under the CSty Charter to protect public moiN da.
♦Tf they waat t« fight the bcw law, let them go to coart,’* aaM
MeanwMle, Jacobs said he may be ready to open as early as Tuesday. and would demand that the ed Michigan Bell Feb. L.. aty Sanitation Department ghe	. wnjJON
h>8 place a final inspection.	MILLION
will be a new 10<ent charge for
caaso effective at aae i
" I from extra charges for businexs '' listings.
Trro major groups of exchanges TriU he afteetfid by the dassiflea-fioB Into higher rate aooe*. ■
Fhdaaa
It was approved by the PSC yesterday to yield
The U.S. Army is in the market lor field laundry equipment requiring little M no iriiter, says the Natkmal Inventors CoundL
Under the local Increase, the basic drarge for all one-party residence and buatneu phones Trill go up 10 cenU a noontb.
Twe-Phriy, lanr-party and
Coin phones which muat guaran-« a specified volume of caila ,Trill •	■ "
MacMamis, John B Adams, Inc. has moved Into a second be■diqua^ ters building in the MJA Center at Woodward and Long Lake ixMd in Bloomfield HUU.
The new building houses the advertising agency’s media, resehreh, marketing, merefaandiaing and accounting defwrtmenU and 125 employes.
Formal opening ceremonies for the fcOilding are being planned.
Graham Audience Small
Under fix? formula, 81.670.694 ttM i - -------
c®me from increases In basic ex-l>*®« and Uvonto. dtange rates and local service. |<ooOD REGULATION’
'n think have arrived at
GHy atoiUlleaL.
The one-parly reaidenee c
win be Increased 60 cents raonth-f . ‘	,	^
ly in LanaiM DtoKRxtole. Holt f ™ charge for installation of a Mawn. Potter^le. Wayne. Ypai-!**	>i ^.lERUSALEM (AP) - BUly ;
—	tween 81-50 and 83.50, depemUngl Graham preAchrt to one Of the
on the type of service.	I amalleet audiences of Ms Afti-
The COM Ol ahmerihg and re- cui-MIddlt EaM tow TtieKtay -----------------■" op teon adgbt in tfak ancient dly of
dtotaaoe ealla wtthto tha Mato — Icoinprainiaa ivMcb reanlts in good 8U.S0 to 815 a 7<-^	,	.	'	'	.	/	;/l	^
• ChriM'a crudfiz^
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1«, 1960
THREE


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Tender young turkey, gravy, whipped potatoes, dressing, cranberry sauce, vegetable, roll and butter. Plus fresh pie; coffee, tea .or coke.
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/7
Bank Tiff Rages in Traverse City
Contend Commissioner Should Drop Qut of, Cou^ Cose
House Rebels Quick Vote
New Judicature Bill Buried in Pile
LANSING (» — The iheer of it appeared today to have killed chancel for lesialatlve approval of sweepiiiK reviakm o( the aute
LANSING urv-A court battle to decide whether two or three banks ahould aerve the Traverae Qty area raced on today alter conclu-alon of teatimony by State Banking !r Alonzo L. Wilaon.
★ ♦ *
Wilaon. asked to reiign hii SIO.-500 job last fall by Gov. Williami, has said he would quit after the case has been settled. -
City Mate Bank ‘eopie’s Bank ef
. The highly technical, 6«iMge bill wu consigned to the bottom of pile of measttrea awal ‘ sage yesterday.when some House members rebelled against a quick vote.
Today the deadline for , for it and more than 125 other House bUls.
>1 think weTI have to stoiy
mRSMyom...
Meat Loaf Luncheon
77
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A delicious treat! Fresh nectar-sweer strawberries over two big dips of rich ice cream •.. plus whipped topping!
DOWNTOWN PONTMUTa-NUnON CDITEI-DnAYTOH MAINS nOCHESTER-MMAOE MU| SHOPPiNe COITa
S. S. KRESGE COMPANY
Traverse City limits.
Attorneys for the Traverse City |banks contended yesterday Wilson should not be involved in the transapproval because be Interested party.
Sr -k
Wilson had acknowledged his wife owned 123,858 In shares in the Empire Bank, but she also had shares worth $80,000 In-the Traverse City Bank and $2,000 in the People's Bank.
He had also testtlled the ezlsl-lag banks dominated the area Bad said be thought a third bank was needed.
Julius H. Beers, president of the Traverse City Bank, disputed this.
'Another bank would mean splitting the business up three ways instead of two,” Beers said. “This could lead to unsound banking practices and a scramble for business I don’t believe would be desirable.”
Thomas O. Gies. gssoclate professor of finance at the University of Michigan, testified there is no compelling need lor additional bank facilities.
"This is not an area for presslve growth,” Gles said.
City Schools GrontedCongressAsked Bond Issue Rehearing for Sugar OK
The Michigan Municipal Financd Conuniision has grants the Pontiac School District a rehearing _ $500,000 bond issue that was turned down several weeks ago.
The new hearing is scheduled Tuesday according to Edward B. Mikrut, Commission secretary.
MIknit said the Poullac 'District Is seeking to establish that
800 Students to Gather for Choral Festival
More than 800 students from seven Pontiac area high schools will participate In a choral festival Friday at Waterford Township High School.
*	W ★
Sponsored by the Northern Sec-on of the Pontiac Area of District
IV of the Michigan School Vocal Assn., the competition will feature mixed chirirs of boys’ and girla’ glee clubs, according to Waterford Township High School choral music director Richard Meier.
RcImoIs Invited to pnrticipnte were Pontine Northern, Pontine Central, Bimiinglinm Groveo, Or-’cJinrd Lnke M. Mnry'o and Milford. One hundred nnd fUty five students from Wnlerford Township are entered la the competition.
Judging the contest will be Glen Klepinger, Cass Technical High School, Detroit: Dri Wilbur Petei^ son, Wayne State University; Loren Cady, Bay Qty Central High School and Otto Brown, Ferndale Lincoln High School.
*	it *
The ratings wiU be divided into
four categories: superior, excellent, good and fair.
The little European country of Andorra has been a sovereign state since 1278. It is between France and Spain.
sihle flaws, the new act would not take effect until Jan. 1,1962.
The measure is designed to modernize legal proceduree adopted nearly half a century ago and amended many tines since. Hie proposed code wu drafted by a 3S4natf committee of attorneys, julkcM nnd legisUtors after a 3V$ year study.
would cut the length of ctvtt court suit by 25 per cent, reducing the time, eftort and money spent by llUgants by a like amount.
To allow time for correcting pop
10 a.m. and continued, except for lunch and dinner breaks, till nearly
they hadn't read It er had ttase to stpdy M.
"ThoM who haven't read tt won’t read it by next>ear,” said Rep.
lu J. Whinery (R-Grand Rap-kh), the top Bponaor. "It’s not vary spicy reading.”
th a t , Ihe-House) meanwhile, raced the block to beat the midnight deadly for passing iu own bills. The _ logiam of measures i ' ii« action assured s repeat of ytP terday's seaaion, which opened at
The first o( the tower chamber’s Jx major iseim budget clear^ yfhtonlay and the were ready tor passage. The bill approved would mtocate |K|,642,048 for various welfare programa, about $1,370,000 abbve the figure recommended by Gov. Williams.
BepnbItean bndget makers enM
He said the issue wu a test case that eventually would wind up in the Supreme Court.
UMITEO BY CHARTER
der a ^stltattonal pravMoa that berrawing agatost a» taxes In exeess
lions .is limited by charter and school districts want to establish that they have he same status as dies, Mikrut uid.
School districts say the MIchl-gnn school code lo o charter set-
Senators Eyiiig State Patients
OK Bill 25-3 to Charge Relatives at Private Hospital Rates
LANSING (B — The Senate today approved 25-3 a bill that would charge rekponslble relatives of patients in state mental hospitals at private hospital rates.
Sen. aarence F. Graebner (R-Saglnaw) said the bill wpuld at tout triple cosU now assessed.
Backers of the bill uld the Intent wns to put the expense of cnriiig lor the mentally III on
Mikrut said the rehearing was a necessary second step required by law before the case can go {o the courts.
If school' districts are right, he Mid, counties and townships would also benefit because they would not have to ihare the 15 mlUi 'allow/?d by the ConitituUon with the achools.
Under the • meuure. Graebner said, (he costs qow set at about $4.90 a day would go to at Mot $15, assuming the patient had hospitalization insurance coverage.
‘‘Legaily, there would be nothing to keep charges from going v $30 or $35 a day,”' he said. '
Slate Talks Today inConsumers Strike
JACKSON (UPI) — Negotiations in the increasingly bitter Consumers Power Co. strike were scheduled to resume this afternoon amid charges of ubotage violence.
♦ ★ ★
. More than 5,000 members ef the Utility Workers of Ameitoa (UAW) union struck Feb. 29 against company facilities in 63 of Michigan’s 83 counties, including Oakland, when agreement on a new contract not reached.
State mediator Rex Cranson and federal mediator Paul Ricketts brought company and union representatives together last Thursday, but the meeting broke up with a report of no profess.
s sa each dollar of asaeased
Pontiac Man Sings tg Sell State a Song
A young man from Pontiac yea-terday aang to Michigan'a Houae of Representatives to plug adoption of “A Song to Michigan” as the state’s official tong.
Houae members listened critically to a recorded performance by the Western Michlg|in University Band, (hen a vocal version by WMU junior Kehneth Young. 20, of 400 Ukeside Dr.
Riqi. Homer Arnett (R-Kalama-soo> Mtd he wonM ajiowre a bUI nexC year lo niake the oompool-tim the otote’i oMdol ooitg.
It was written by Mrs. Ruby Sigler Kirkwood of Kalamazoo. Copies were passed out to each Housfr member and others have been sent to 100 high school bands across the state.
♦ ♦ ★
A graduate of Waterford Town-ship High School, Young took private singing lessons from George H. Putnam, supervisor of secondary music instruction In the" Pontiac Khools.
Now msjerhig Is mnsle at Weotere MIdilgaa University, Ysnng' WH aellve in operaltos.
Wauld Give President Rawer, If Needed, ta Cut Cuban-fianus
WASHINGTON (AP)- The administration today asked Congress to give President Eisenhower power to cut (Xiba's bonus-price sugar sales to the United States if he feels such action is necessary.
The authority is proposing legislation which, also would extend the present sugar control program tor four years. Tlie plan was to (tongress today.
Etower would be given the President to cut quotas for any foreign country other than the Phillp-
Is • aimed principally against Cuba, a one-crop countiy which Mils about half of its sugar production In the United States.
Republican leaders have emphasized that the request fo authority to cut Cuba's s u g a quota is not intended as punishment for Cuba.
Relations between the United States and Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro’s regime have been deteriorating steadily, and the proposal to authotlze sugar quota cuts is regarded as almost certain to bring new attacks on the United States by the Havana government.
Plan'Paddy Party' for Golden Agets
A St. Patrick’s Day party to! being planned tor Waterford Township's newly organized Golden Age Club at 6:30 pjn. Friday in the /immunity Center.
A surprise program Is planned for the "past 60” group by AsdB tant Recreation Director Robert
■St meet aatioipatod welfare essto. Densorats and a seattar-1^ plSepabUeus addad |».MI to fhe bUI to 'ftoanoe • eammis-
Each member has been asked ' to bring his atm table service aid a dish to pass.
Anyone interested in joining the group may do so by calling the Recreation Department.
A total of 830,000 people peririied in an earthquake In China in 155A , the largest death toll on record.
Russ Seek Palar Site
MOSCOW IB — A Soviet expedition left by air Tuesday in search of an arctic ice floe suitable lor use as another North Pole research station Tass reported. It will be called "North Pole 9.’
____to set up a state tax court
to replace the board of tax appeals collected a 66« vote, eight votes short of the two-thirds majority needed in both houses to create a new court.
The measure was one of two sec-tioos of Gov. Williams’ 29-polnt legislative program which met defeat yesterdly. The other, rejected for the second time in a week, would have established a state office to represent local governments.
♦ W ♦
Approved and steered into-the Senate >vu a bfll prohibiting tow enforcement men from "unduly detaining” persons arrested for motor vehicle code violations other than reckless driving, nipgligent homicide and drunk driving.
The measure also would require officers to tike the violator to a justice of the peace in the municipality in which the offense oe-curred if one Is available.
There Is He Setor, Here IHecHre
PAIN REUEVINa
Predect In All rtre WerM 'fhea
IMDRIN
Rheinatio-Arthrltic
MuKulor Point
W» rre»**—There ao lnur, »»t»T
Md mow •Mootlv# ootn reUtvlns
nroduct In oil tht world then nowly
fmpiovod IMDniN TobUU. IMDRIN
r*a»t from tho modoroU polpi 01 orthrllla. rhtumotUm. nourltU. Jumbooo ond muiculor ocnoo whon-eror (hoy occur. W)«oB luth polo occun la ouy pert ot you* body ict IMDRIN ot OBCO to help OOM ttoi polo awiniy ond brlns o more Moth-iDi eomlort lor hour* ot b Umo. Wo win not oUow ono bottle ol IMDRIN Tobicta to romoln pold tor II you or* not aotlatlod with tho rtUof you jet from your rery ttnt botUo. At
"SSSfilii
II N. Saginaw .. -Mato rieei
dnetkme at Waterford Township
He gave a recital last spring at Grace Lutheran Church.
He is a baas baritone and has a fine voice,” said Putnam of former pupil. “He sings with a lot of musicianship.”
Rap—» for THURSDAY-FNIDAY-SATURDAY
ipof by Dpmonil This LOW PRICE on
»iR Electric. Razor
Tito to Host AfghonIking
BELGRADE. Yugoslavia, IB -Mohammed Zahir Shah, king ofi Afghanistan. wlU torit Yugoslavia this year at the invitation of President Tito, Tanjug, the official agency reported Tuesday.

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Reg. 79c
39*
MoUt 24§ Clotkoophu
Chflisspil Bag
38^
In*. bccauIbU Irom botti aMta, a
All Sfttl
Ironiig Board
Adjuata fe 9 PMitioni
499
Reg.
$8.9p
Miracle PLASTIC
Food Wrappiag
SSraat
ttog. $1.49
4P
FOTO
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 16, I960
mm I
[to Meet Here
l Barb«r Shop Harmony
•	to Ring Out at Pythias
•	Hall in Wotorford'
^ The Society tor the Preservitlon ■! ud Enoouracement ct Barber !; Shop Quartet Stoginc in Amerte, Inc., Pontiac Chapter 17, will hold ^ a ipecial gueit night Friday. it *	*
Anyone intereated in preserving I ohMaahioned fourpart cloae hai^
•	mony can attend, at the Knighti
•	ot PytWM Hall. 948 Voorheli Rd., t . Waterford Township.
Accotdiag to Bawley Hallniaa,
•	chapter presideat. entertalament II he piwvtded by several area
*■ Knights aad ^ A highlight of the evening will V be a pantomime act by A1 Schneck,
*	a professional pantomimist for
! many yt^rs in the Detroit I -	*	*	♦
. Schneck is a member of the to-
*	cal chapter. Also featured will be ! a prominent women's quartet in
*	the Sweet Adeline division, and ; the chapter’s 2ft-voice barbershop
*	chorus.
' A lunch and refreshmenU will ! be served. The event is schedu^d ‘ to begin at 1:30.
WateTioid Twp.
: to Issue Calendar : of Social Events
I' The Waterford Township Recre-
•	ation Department hat offered resi> 1. dents a new service with the in-•- troduction of a Conununlty CSleo* I idar, according to Recreation Di-! rector Thdmas Belton.
* * *
I Information on 150 different
•	organizatkm has been compiled I in the 17-p^ brochure, available
at the Community Center free of
Texas Gets Most From Farm Props
f'
_ • I
Pollution of Red Cedar AAoy Cancel MSU Event ^ i
EAST LANSING (UPI) - MWk Student igaa State UiUversity
toM it
man OtAW VtUVVAasa^ viiaa fsm^	-
warned today pollution of the Rsdihand in The river. „ ^	^
iviuciv luun uie uiskcw aiaic uiic Cedar Rlver, which runs throi^ in 1950 from the federal govern- the campus, might cause canceila-j hundreds <<	w Ma^
menfs kitty of paymento tor varl- tion of the annual water carnival ble aw East Lan^ ai^^ ous agricultural programs to aid and canoeing activities.	mos wh^ are
farm income, according to the Ag-| Sanitotlon officials said the bac-'sewage disposal, officials saM. rlculfural Marketing Servicif.
♦ a *
Government payments to Texans last year totaled (82,862,000. They included 125,066.000 from the Agri-cttlturai Conservation l*rognun,
168,000. from Sugar Act payments,
115,056.0(10 uriBer the Wool Act.
$41,100,000 from the Son Bank, and $1,560,000 under the Great Plains Conservation Program.
North Dakota farmers got the second largest amount — $31,189,-OOP. Others among the 10 largest recipiehts of government aid were Minnesota, $31,018,000; Kansas,
$28,062,000; Missouri. $26.910.00lim $26,370,000; Golo-| rado, $24,906,000; Oklahoma, $24.-357.000; California. $23,712,000; and'
Iowa, $20,668,000.
SOLUNG TKANSPORTAHON CTtIMS — Eight members of the mayor’s special transportation committee pose after they voted yesterday tor an emergency Jitney operation for the duration of the bus strike. Standing (from >ft) are George Rlchman, president of the Downtown Merchanta Assn.; aiftord Orovogel, manfiger of Waite's Department Store; James Dickerson, general advertising manager of Tlie Pontiac Press; L. Oare Utley, presi-
dent of Cutting Tools A Supply Co.. InC.; and Bert Henson, financial secretary of Local 653, UAW.^ Seated (from left), are Qty Attor-ney William A. Ewart (not* a committee member);^ John W,_ Hiriinger, manager of the'Pontiac Area Chamber of (tommerce; aty CommTissloner Floyd P. Miles, committee chairman; and Donald Shaw, president the Miracle MUe Businessmen's Assn. There are six other members of the committee not in the picture.
\	HUY N	I
lAnMiiyjifimi
1	an MMd* f
Taken From Grandmother
Lanas Cheryl in Home
Says Nuisance Tax Costly to Road Plan
FUNT (UPI) - Highway Commissioner John MacUe said Monday night the nuisance tax passed by last year’s Legislature which put a tax on building materials used in state highways will cost the MiclUgan road program mon than $3,500,000 this year.
♦ ★ *
He called the tax a “subterfuge
I divert constitutionally earmarked highway use taxes from -----------------------------—
road purposes to the state's gen- court after she fatally stabbed her I mother’s boy friend, Johnny Stom-
iGambler Waiting ifor His Sentence
1 (iMiaad. btln IwbB ■ Tietimi Bad sol knew I I To ■« rid •( Pto-Wc
SANTA MONICA, Calif, (AP)-dieiyl Crane, Lana 'Turner’a 16-year-old daughter, is in a county-operated home for teen-age girls.
Superior Court Judge Allen T. Lynch disclosed Tuesday -that Cheryl had been romoved from grandmother's house last week andr taken to the El Retiro School for Girls in suburban Syl-
I - Municipal Court Judge Cecil B. panato, April 4, 1958. The court McCallum yesterday foimfl Stoney gave custody to her maternal m. Clasman, 28, of 240 W. Hop-grandmother, Mildred Turner. {kins St., guilty of aiding and abrt-*	*	*	{ting the operation and maintaining
probation officer said the of illege' gachlinf place, schdol is a place for girls “who
GSdZ___________________
tlwy Km ud araltlpty' Ttat'iw- ' ■cUywlMtJarM'BP-WubUud* , .. .udkwV’ilwwthqrdaa; |
g	auiahly ud Muay. »
I Dm-I tak* ekaaai •Hh «Mi \
(	I
f uSr^iVwiidiiiwIofcMIdwo 'k I aad idalto. P«f«tod by Dr. O. i f JayM*8aa.i>MWMilB«ww |
^for 1^
need a vacation from home, to get away from the wear and tear of home life.’
The letter “V ’ and the letter Cheryl was made a ward of the “U" were identical, until separated Into separate sounds in the sixteenth century.
Gasman is scheduled to be sen-'riday morning, free on a $500 bond continued by McCallum.
Gasman was one of 16 men arrested Feb. 14 In a raid on two gambling establishments by Pontiac Vice squad officers.
YOUR
SAVINGS
GROW
FASTER
With
Earnings at
4

CURRENT RATE COMPOUNDED SEMIANNUALLY
Ettoblished in 1890 ~ Nevtr misttd poyifig o dividand. 70 ytors of sound monogement — your ossuronce of Mcurity. Assets now over fifty-three million dollors.
PASSBOOK SAVINGS IN BY
THE lOfh EARN FROM THE FIRST OF THE MONTH!
Capitol Saviags & Loan Assoc.
Established 1890
75 W. Hiios SL. PnlUc FE 4-0551
CUSTOMER PARKING IN REAR OF SUILDING
Assistant recreation director,
>. Robert Baur, who is in charge of the project, has urged people ! heading organizations to return > questionnaires that have not been I' sent back.
;; The calendar will be published 1- twice a year and the next publi-
•	cation is scheduled for July 1.
: Union to Stay Out : of Dem Primary
;• DETROIT (UPI) — Leaders of . the state AFLCIO Committee on ' Political Education (COPE) met { here Monday and there was an in-dication the labor organization { would stay out of the Democratic > gubernatorial primary.
■ Those who attended the COPE meeting said there would be no
•	candidate endorsement in the prl-I diary campaign.
BUENOS AIRES (UPD-Adlal , Stevenson confers today with Presl-’ dent Arturo Frondizl and Foreign I Minister _ _
'' matters affecting inter-American ’ relations.
THE PONTIAC PRES^, WEPyESDAY. [MARCH 16, 1960
FIVE
Arizona’i ei^f national foce<ts cover IIH milUon acres. . I
South Sees Chance to SpUt Rightg Rankg
RCA Victor
Oock-Radio
RCA Victor's lowort priced clock-rsdlo. Wsks up to preselected music with special volume control. Dial window makes it simple to tune, easy to read the clock.
$1 Down—Week
THE
Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac'
House Pushing for Voting Referees
Operas Tenor Goes on Despite Heart Attack
WASHINGTON (AP) — HousefprisinR strength. It would have
civil rights quarterbacks worked for a decisive vote to^ in favor of a voting retei^ provision. Their problem was to keep Ibeir bipartisan ^eam members all headed in. the same direction.
The Eisenhower administration plan for
to help Negroes or other minority citizens exercise ^ their voting righu was temporarily jettisoned Tuesday.
A liberal Democratic move for a broader proposal picked up
substituted for the referees a system using enrolling offiem appointed by the President.
Southern opponents of any new dvU rights ie^slation swung into action, seeing e chance to split apart Democratic and Republican supporters of tighter voting laws.
The Southerners threw their weight first one way. then another.
tion plan, then was pitched out. When the players untangled themselves. the' Eisenhower plan, in slightly modified <l6rm, was again before the House and evtfrybody called tinna out untU today.
But the group behind the enrolling officer plan—headed by Rep, Robert W. Kastenmeier (D-WU). who proposed it-pr—" their bargaining advantage.
The substitute was xnted in as a replacement for the administra-
, closed-door meeting with Rep. Emanuel Celler (D-NY), flopr manager of the civil rights
Says Defense Secretary!
bill, and Deputy Atty. Gen Law-^ ping slowly in unison. But after the lence E. Walsh, the Kastenmeier]the final curtain, Bjoerling re-
Otonic
U S. Out Ahead oi Reds in Destructive N-Power
PM 41 YIAIS. O-JII-WA HAS •IIN MICHIAAN'S PAVOIITI SPRIN* TONIC. YOU CAN INJOY MTYU HIALTH IP YOU START YAKINO ^ O-JII-WA NOW. AT AU. IRUOmTS
WASHINGTON (AP)-Secretary of Defense Thomas S. Gates Jr testified today that this country surpasses the Soviet Union "several times" In total destructive power of Its nuclear weapons /and capacity lor delivering them.
Gates'flatly rejected suggestions of Democratic critics of the Eise{i-hower defense prograns that this country should match the Soviet missile for missile." He took the same stand on an immediate airborne alert to protect the Strategic Air Command jrom possible destruction on the ground by a surprise missile attack.
Space Committee and the Defense Preparedness subcommittee, both led by Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas.
* %' ♦
Even before he could read his strongly worded defense o er administration fenae policies and program, a Ulf developed about presenting it.
LONDON (AP) - Jussi Bjoe^ ling. 50. Swedish opera tenor who sang Tuesday night despite a light heart attack, told the Royal Opera House today he felt well and would make his appearance Friday.
Bjoerling heard that Queen Mother Elizabeth was in the audience and insisted he would not disappoint her or the capacity audience at Covent Garden, where he is appearing for the first time in 21 years.
The first .act was delayed 33 ..jinutes and the audience, not knowing the cause, started clap-
group offered not to precipitate another crisis by rr-submltting their bill if the administration would agree to what the Kastenmeier group called "strengthening amendments" to the referee proposal.
Grain Futures Weak to Strong
Generally speal^ing, the Wiscon-sing Democrat said, these would further shortcut the procedure for Negroes to get on the voting rolls in areas where courts had found pattern of discriminafion agairnl them.
Walsh gave no Jinal answer but both Celler and Republican leaders predicted agreement on a referee plan in time for a clear-cut vote today.
jGates testified st a combined, public bearing bj) the Joint Senate]
Johnson, in a bristling summary! of previous tesUmony criUcal of Wrife-ln Man Wins current defense programs, told the "If wc speed our defenses and they are not needed all we lose is the money. If we fail step up our defenses and they are«needed, we could lose our I country."
DOUGLAS ifi - Write-in candidate Fred K. Scott won election Monday as president of this Allegan County village. A vote of 120 to 100 ousted incumbent Lewis E.
CHICAGO If)—The grain futures Inarket started oft today in a mixed range which spread from weak to strong.
Oats and rye posted advspces running to ma.ior fractions whlii wheat and soybeans were under scattered selling pressure
Trade was light and in small volume with export buying wlieat the most active business. Poland and Pakistan were reported to have taken about 3'i million bushels of wheat overnight shipment by the end of April.
The Cliannel Islands in the English Channel were the only British aoM occupied by the Germans in world War If.
ford Motor Company announces the
DfilouT
Tomorrow, at Mercury-Comet dealer's, first compact car with fine-car styling -priced with or below other compacts.
You’re looking at the exciting new value-packed compact—Comet. • NOT! ITS SIAUTIFUL STYLING. No uwed-oir, cut-down look, here. The Comet is proportioned like a fipe car—long Bowing lines, outstanding good looks.
LOOK CLOSELY AT THE EXTRA FEATURES, You pay nothing more for dual headlights, front and rear arm rests, door-operated dome light, foam padded front scat. And the trunk holds enough for the whole family on a long trip. YOU'LL MARVEL AT THE ECONOMY. Comet's new simplified "six”
engine delivers up to 28 miles per gallon of regular gas.
YOU'LL REVEL IN THE RIDE. No choppy steering, no bumpy travelling in Comet. The longer wheelbase (114* instead of 107* in average compacts) gives 0>met a smoother ride, yet it turns on a dime.
NOW. CHECK THE PRICE. Comet IS priced with or below other compacts like Rambler, Corvair, Lark, Valiant and Falcon.
COMPARE ALL THE COMPACT CARS —and you’ll come away with a , Comet. It’s now at your Mercury-Comet dealer’s.
—- '--r’zrr-r-l
Fi'NEET COMPACT WAGONS ON THE’ MARKET. The new-Comel wsMni go far beyond what you might expect in a compact nation wagOR of this size. There is over 76 cubic feet for storage—st iquch rooqi as in tome wagons costing hundreds of dollars more; s retractable rear windo)* Ukes tho,plaoe Of tbs oidT-ftahioned lift-gate. And, there is ample rooin for six adults with plenty of space lefr over for baggage. AloAg with the Q>niet two- and four-door sodant, there are two- and four-door wagons as well.
UNCOLN-IttKCUIfY DIVISION v

WIN A NEW COMETI 50 COMETS GIVEN AWAY FREEI
ENTER THE COMET SWEEPSTAKES-MARCH 17 TRROMR SI. NOTHING TO 001 NOTHING TO WRITEI JMT SEE VGUR MBRCirRV-COMCT DEAUR,
GFT YOUR ENTRY CARD
LLOYD MOTORS
LINCOLN MERCURY—COM€T .
(Formerly Russ Dawson)
232 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET r
nMW
•	NOTIONS
•	COSMETICS
•	STATIONERY
3-WAY SALE
Moil or Phono Ordors Promptly Fillod (FE 4-2511)
USE A FLEXIBLE CCC CHARGE . . WAITE'S—STREET FLOOR
FINE NATURAL BRISTLE HAIR BRUSHES
5 Stylos!
’1.95
5 different styles in men's ond women's hair brushes ... ollvrith genuine Chungking hog bristles. yWIII not split the_hoir.
With giont lombswool puff.
BATH POWDER
Specie I Purcheie
97'
Large bo* of tragraot bath powder.
With FREE sompU lipstick ...
CO'TY FACE POWDER
Special
’1.35
( of Coty power and trial xizc lipUick.
Chromo plotod stool
GARMENT RACKS

’5.88
40 by 12 by 61" w.ith hat rack and »hot rail.
4 or 5 drowor
KRAFTBOARD CHESTS
’6.88
Reg.
9.98
Lightweight, sturdy, floral or modern prints.
Jumbo metol	Hond and body	Rochorfooblo pocket
FILE BOXES	Wrishy LOTION	FUSHLIj$HTS
JVi *2.88	iZ *1.00	*1.88
)umbo metal file bo* with dividers.	Full pint, contains lanolin and silicones.	Can be charged on eny electrl. cel outlet.
Ilectric vibroHng	V' ).Si.|. ST" hl|li	Full length sippor
Mossogt Pillows	IRONING CADDY	GARMENT BAGS
*1.97	*3.88	5- *1.88
Removable zippered corduroy cover. UL approved.	Hang clothes'up as you press them. Folds daf when not in use.	Assortment of 54'’ htev/ quilted garment Bags.
Chr.m.d . . . H«ld. \	Chromed . . . Holds 6	Sot of 6
BLOUSE RACK	SKIR'T RACK	Plastic Hongtrs
fs 88"	88"-	u’s 88"
Holds blouses neetly, saves closet space.	Holds skirts neatly and com. pactly. Saves closet space.	Clear or pastel heavy plastic dress pr blouse hangers.
Set of 7 vornishod	Sot of 4 Wooden	9 poir -
Wooden Hangers	SUIT HANGERS	SHOE RACKS
88"	88"	Ks ‘1.88
Heavy non-rust hock. In natural varnished hardwood.	Varnished hardwood with non* ruH fmks.	s \'a" chromed tubing. Low style,
Set of 6 ebromod	Roversiblo . • . Cord '	,12 Fair
PANT HANGERS	TABLE COVERS	SHOE RACKS
rs 88"	88"	IS ‘2,88
Holds pants neatly by the cuffs. 'Adiustable.	Quilled plastic. Fils all stan. dard card tables.	Chromed tubing. High style.
For outdoor portios	Leotherotte desk	Boxed notot ond
GUSS HOLDERS	ACCESSORIES	STATIONERY
V,*, 3f'88‘	.'Z. 88"	
Metal, twisted to form holder for glass tumbler.' Sticks in ground. _	Letter boxes, phoio books, ,jmemos, letter openers etc.	High count, fine quelily. White, pastels, trims. * ■ A
U)(ufe
Mokes inches teem to vonith! 8 Aizet!
TWIN ZIP "HIP-EZE" GIRDLES
$4,98

\■	zip Open
.Th^ BeNeni
8 sizes for 25 to 40 walif sizesi lust s Intb your hip-eze and you fnataotly epp ijfto sizef slimmer. By famous Lldl>.
Waite’s Netioas . . , Sfreef fleor
Show n 4.M1I	•

'V/.'
■ i
/y
. r ■
- .r.

/
THE PONTIAC PRESS
WEDNiSDAT. MARCH U. IM
OvnM end MUiAal LoeoOr by m Pontiac Compomr
Press Goes Along With N. Y. News Editorial
We recently came across an editorial In The New York News that will strike a sympathetic spot in the hearts of most Pontiac area people who are interested in our schools and the education of our young folks.
The News has the largest circulation of any newspaper in the United States. Under the heading, “Let’s Revamp the Schools,” the editorial said in piul;
“How well are we educating young people?
“ft seems to us that thMime has come to scrap Progressive Education all along the line.
★ ★ ★
*niic MtioB that childrcB can virtnally edocate themscives is a sweet thought, but if doesn’t work' out. Instead, most chUdrcn pick the easy courses and bypass the tough ones.
★	★	★
“Soviet Russia tried ♦Progressive Education, but dropped it long ago, and now is rigorously training innumerable young pe<Hile for scientific or engineering careers.
★	★	★
lonely — they have nothing to do. The snow which thpy arc supposed to stall before it reaches oiir roads is not in evidcnec.
\
★	★	★
There is enough of it on the ground to tie up traffic and stagnate business if the winds bl^ it around. But it stays where it fell.
This condition, also is ideal from the fanners’ standpoint. Their wheat, hay and forage crops have a^ last secured the winter coverage which means a fuller harvest next summer.
if~ ★	★
And when the spring breakup comes this snow will furnish a moisture that sinks into the ground right where it is needed, and not cause washouts, floors and gullies, as it would if the winds had piled it into high banks.
Our greatest weather hope for the late winter is a continued absence of high winds.
Voice of the People
^Depends Who Victim Is Whether Pinks Will Yell
Your psper reports Aeuther wired the Prerident “****^^*? ^ die Federal Government intervene in cnees ol rndnl vtoience in I South. TOs wpold be>Mhsble if it didn’t so ncciirmeiy rellert I pamiiar mentsUty of many so^CiBed “Ubenls.”
-	★	★ A
There’s se raoerd of Reuther ever onlUnK ls» Cutnisinim h
hy <ao Ihnss ^ gsee sennds. WMh	**„****. *
ensWIsn W sb)MAve JnetlM er lalnsUoe.' The ptM ntm In WW> I. gsMkw their hends ernched.	^
leftW, piHrcwiw w "•hmily grenpe, then the pMu yea Needy
★ ★ ★
But if violence is unleashed against an average aUsen trymg to exerciee hU right to work and make a'giving, in the warped thinking of the pinks, it is just the result of our present "Cuilure’’ and ebangug social order.	*
This Problem Is * Unknown to I^ds*
Second Group Asks Ban on Beatniks
The Outcome Should Be Interesting
I read all across the country our Student Officers Training Corps is finding ft herder and harder to exist. ITiat’s one trouble they don’t hive in Russia, for they Just say, ’’Get yourself in the army lor lour years,” and there’s no beck talk juid no dis^ cussion. Can we afford to let thoae stinkers get too far ahead of usT
World War D Vet
The Pontiae YWCA depkra the propoaed estabUehmesft ef the ai^ called Beetnik duba. TheyTl ofler noil^ oonstmctlve in the weor
activitiee for young people, from w^they undoubtedly plea to draw their patronage, end thdr potentiality for cvQ is reason for misgivings oh the part of eny parent. Reports of Beatnik dubs already in operation in nearby cities don’t make them aeem any more dl|irabli
The Man About Town
Council Jamboree
David Lawrence Says:
Soviet Is Seat of Anti-Semitism
This Group Also Does Much Good*
“We shouldn’t ape Russia, of course; but at least we ought to scrap the elective system and require widespread study of mathematics, physics and chemistry. Further, we should try In every posable way to encourage young people to go into scientific, engmeering and .other constructive work, as a means of maintaining and increasing American ingenuity and initiative.
★	★	-A
“One bright spot in this picture Is the fact that corporatiou gifts to educational institutions set a record last year of $136 million. More and more corporations are realizing that gifts to colleges and universities aie among the most profitable and patriotic donations they can make.
★	★	★
WASHINGTON-Sen. ’Thomax J, squads a Dodd. Democrat of Coonecticut, of death, haa made e itertliiig relation of the exjent to which the SovieU
In Scouting at Same Time	“’ce*mpi"u?‘rf
1 reed there’d been an editorial asking if other^)rganizations had done Buch good as the Scouting
program. In Pontiac we have what ____________________
substitute Instruments stepped-up cultural exchange pro- is called the Christian Service tivities for teen-agers. If we have grams, for state vislti by the Brigade and hs sister group,	more adult volunteers.
Since ITS usually easier to forestall such activities than to get rid of them after they’re entrenched, we hope the CMy' Cons-misiian will find aome way to keep the clubs from operating.
The YWCA does aft ft etti with limited staff and facilities to offer wholesome entertainment and ac-
as Golden National Event
IBCOBM toz tlqM: When a man diaewvtn that fa« reaUy Is bead •t iba Iwnaa.
Clinton Viriley Council of the Boy Scouts of i^nerlca, yrhlch oomprlau moat of the ar«B of Oakland and Macomb Counties, is Joining In the plan for a Council Jamboree at the same time as the 50th annlveraary NaUonal Jamboree at Colorado Spring, Colo.
The dates for the local event are July
“The crimes that have characterised Hmlet anti-8ciidtUm have net been pcrpetratMl hy hotheads or Javenile delimieentt. They here been perpetrated, er elee iMlIgaled. hy the Soviet state iteeU—first mder the cem-mand el Jeeeph Stella, aad then aader the eemmaad of the preseat prime mtelsteH NIkIte Khnwhehev. to my aptalan. thte fact makes theM crime* a tboa-
Soviet terrorlat-ln-chief.”
Pioneer Girls.
anid • Semitism.
As a former executive trial counsel at the Nuernberg war crimes trials,
Dodd has no illusions about Nazism* and the traces of its bigotry which may remain in .Mh West and lOst LAWBENOB Germany today.
But hla exhaustive aiialyate—
ompriaing more than 10,000 worda of protests and indignation, we 2S, as and 24, and the place Is to be the —juat presented to the U n 11 e d ,^tness demands for increaacd Old Ferry Seed Farm, comer of Auburn Slatea Senate points the finger of
and John R. Roads, Just south of Roches- blame for the recent ’’iwastlka ---------------------------------------:-----
epidemic" on the Soviet govern-
Namrd as chairman of the event Is
PIEU) DAY FOR RED«
Sen. Dodd Jays that, encouraged by the reaction of the free worid to the swastika incidents, “the Conununist propaganda apparatus had a field day.” He adds that ‘‘the ultimate goal of this propaganda” is to obtain control of the city of West Berlin.
I’d like te rccommead tM* toaay y«ng
other youth-serving agencies, we could, perhaps, combat the Beat-
eiri* hetweea 1 aad M. effectively, mte girl, betwera
balH aroaad Oed’a Word and
Portraits
I this?
“How does the free world react to the merciless peraecution of the 3,000.000 Jews in the Soviet Union? “It cloees its eyes to it. Instead
lalor ex-ptetaa that he eaaaot escape tee feettiw teat the evideaeewf fanrolvemeet to (he
Also included are the Dad’s program for boys and Pals lor girls. Hie Dads and Pate pray for and show their interest in the boy or girl assigned to them. Anyone interested may call FE 4-5467.
Mrs. Delbert Hardeabargh 1015 Durrant
“And now, if theie Mmd rom» panim woald get up (he^rve to aak that a lot of profeiaora stop undermining the Capitalist system which supports said professors, we think UjS/collcge educa-Ibn would tak^ a tom for the better.” /
... L	j ..-A ^	,	“Th« Kremlin." he says, "has
who will be aaristed by a list of Nveral conducted and is conducting to-commlttees. This Is an Innovation in ^iny m, anti-Semitic propaganda Scouting, and it Is proposed to make It strongly reminiscent of Goebels the biggest event of the year In that con- and Streicher.” « nectlon.	Dodd praises Chancellor Ade-
Each troop In the council will have Us nauer and the West German gov-own campaite, and there will be some- ernment for the progress it has
Dr. William Brady Says:
Doctors Know Almost Nothing About Colic
•Votere Will Be Reds* Best Help*
By JASiES J. METCALFE A bargain that is advertised ... Is not s bargain true . . . Unless it is an article . . . ‘Than can be used by you ... It should be something that you need ... Or want espedsUy ... A timely gift to please a friend ... Or for your funily ... But you should never ^rchaae it. . . Just lor the price /miltm Ini

quite low . . . Unless you have security . . . With lots td cash to blow ... No merchant good would have you buy ... His bargain Despite all the fuss and li*br wares today . .. If you were just possible war with Russia, acquiring ...Some things to
I’m willing to bet the U. S/ and U. S. ft. R. never battle ea<Vother. Neither country wants wa^ and I predict in another 20 years we’ll be on friendly terms ag^m.
As far as the threM of Communism goes. Russia /is really a
Was Time Well Spent In Picking Finch Jury?
J 1- .u J KT 1.1 ■	**	Infants,” Mrs. present in the stomach and small ________________
thing big doing every day, such as coun-	®	M. K. aska. "If one child has it in intestine, and in the large intes- iciaUstic' coimtry.
ty fair features, campfires and exhibits, ^rmany. and adds that the record infancy the pattern follow?’’ tine protein putrefaction la a con- h,a>w why .___________________1-1 _____________ TV.- —	0* tu® Adenauer goventmem on tm,„ »_•, anm«thlnar iMinff	ana nnrmal nnnirranra. ________________.
throw away ... money rbcklesily ... However low the cost . . ..Because your cash and merchandise . . . Will both at last be lost. <
(Copyright ISM)
including a special Explorer Field Day on Saturday.
anti	i. travonri ••nroarh

Far too much has already been said mneeming the horrid California murder case. The Chicago Trib~ yUne comes up with a point well
Finding a Texas town that’s out of the frigid dUtrlct,
Mr. and Mra. Bill Canrigan write from Alamo that the mercury standi at 76.
be done in Germany.
1 ft?"
★ ' 'A’	★
They ask was the time well-spent in ssl^inf a Jury? The question seems sensible in view«of the results.
A hasty review shows that the process for sclecting the jury for ths Finch-Trcfoff trial began on Dec. 10. It was not finished until Dec. 29.
So many crocus and other spring flowers are being found under the enow that they po longer are news, unleu like Mrs. Patriela Bellmaa of Drayton Plains, you find them in a variety ol colors that baffle the rainbow.
“We must make people under-
Now there’s sn idea might be parlayed Colic Aaaoc., with an annual Colic Week - or U ail the weeks are preempted by agen-cles already in the busineta, at leaxt a Colic Day.
^ftand.” declarcfl Sen. Dodd, “that ^ftfthntl-ChristiaBiam goes .with and.
Dr. Holt said nothing given by mouth has much effect, but "cen talidy food thonld not be given.”
Tax Tips
INTERNAL REVENUE SAYS: have been Income tax returna lor taidivid-
IM VMS* toot ptrUlBlni W _ b*»na *aS hjflm, not St*-SlaCBMte, *r trvkiBMi. wUl b*
■w«r*S hr br. WUlUa SraSj, tt • —. —
(OapyrigUUM)
voting the past few yean, it won’t uals must be filed by April ISth if be long before we will have voted penaltlet are to be avoided, in a Sodalistic ragime of our own Oorpontiona on a calendar year voUtion. ‘The only difference is that basis must file returns on or Sodslists wU be called Demo- before March ISth. Don’t wait.
Start now and file jlour return Left Be CiMlatanI early.
Juat between i ourselves, Mrs K., I regard I diagnosis of “col-*
Ic” or “acute in- BE. BEADY
’This week’s predicUon of the Old Fanner’s Almanac:
Cold attends till winter enda.-
★ ★ ★
Many doubt that Uiis 19 days was well spent. We are inclined to agree,' and, if reports are correct, the jury a strildng example of shameful uselessness.
In spite of the fact thnt It may be neeesaary to elltheFln on enow ahoes, aprlag is dne to offleially arrive Sunday ferenoon.
Semitlsm, u Godlessnett goes with totalitarianism.
“It is no accident, in my opinion, that the two great GodleM movements of our time, Nazism and infant as tacit admiuion that you communism, should both be vehe- don’t really know what is U)e mat-mrntly anti-Semitic."	ter.
IN CONCRESnONAL RECORD	^	^	.
Dr. Abraham Jacobi, lather of
Case Records of a Psychologist:
Child’s Love of Music Not Innate
DeUa’i MM t$ duplicated in milUotu of homes so study it very carefuUt. No chM Uku either music or spinach at the
Thst’e maiiaricy and probably tha rambUnga of an “old maid”
Winter Has Been Kind to Oakland County Area
In reaponse to aeveral requests, including that of
Fat RiiMmAB
of UUca, who says hs came "within a cat’s whisker” of winntBg lost year, our baseball contest will be announced on March 24.
Sen. Dodd praptrad his speech Amcri^ p^trira m	^^9 develops bp ths
lor deUvery, in the Senate but, be- ioUowing rm^Lu fiir colic in the	method of “condlfion-
cause of his illnen, the document	^
was placed in “The Congressional Record” by Sen. George A.
TVn Is na ianato “lova”
Ultimately, Della will become f»* \erabiy “conditioned” to the pteno, as an indirect aouroe of many sat* iSlactioos of her stomach aad ego, so she may finally "love” music in
_	_	Enema, purgatl^ medicines, abou^ chSd^n^^
SniathmT IteJnocrit of	music^and "art for vTssoke’’ Tbe only “natural” hunger a
who«ddth.tltwa.’’w.rig„incant	malarky.	rtlM «m. to have ls_ter_i^r
significant and timely that it should be brought to the attention of the American people.”
Hen. DMd uy* that la maay rwMtries, tacladteg the Ualtod State*, there I* a raridae af aad-
A pair of robins that spend each summer near the home of
Pesplte some grumbling, this has not been a bad winter.
That Fahrenileit stuff in diir thermometers has-been well behaved.
Until within the last few days, the snow has not bothered us much. ir it it
We’ve had less ngr roads and walks than in many previous winters.
The sun has generally been in evidence as it climbs toward the lenith.
of Cass Lake, have arrived from their southern migration. The BrownlcM know it is the some pair because the female hu but one foot.
Rapid changes in tl^e tempera-tire (Mdffle brcedcra) have not been Um regular rule.
_ ’Trying to drill a hole In a metal roof coping at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Willnere at Pontiac Lake, a pair of woodpeckers gave up the Job after a couple of days and ahlfted their operaUons a couple of inchM to the wooden roof, where there was easy going. But they go l^k and swing a few hills at the metal for a minute or two almost every hour.
they are ta tee Sevlet Vstm ledhy.
He declares:
“Between the brutality of Soviet anti-Semitism and the brutality of NoM anti-Semitism, then it litUe to choose. About oU that ia lacking ao far !■ the gas chombero. For this deficiency, the Communists have made up, at least in part, by employing Siberia and the firing
the adbomen, a^lication of dry heat. Admii^ration of hot an> matlc teas freshly prrpaied (fennel, anise, catnip, (>rman chamomile). A few dropa of esaenoe of peppermint in st teaspoon of hot water. 'Die injection into the rectum of a large quantity of oro-^ made teas at a tempNiture of HD degrees F. , r	/
By this time tee baby wUI/ke
(candy, ice cream cones, etc.)
By DB. r.rX)ROE W. CRANK CASE E-4M; DMla G., aged f, is s nervous typejof diikk “Dr. Crane,” hi quired, “I sim^y can|t get Delte to sit at the piano and practice her
edittea M Us Dtaeasea ^ la-taacy Mid tte.as4gte of M eelle Is eoHately the sSaaMMh— and ahaeaf la tee aaoM hNate ha
^ /	30 minutes.
deed, she ral
at 15 mtentes.
"Yet 1 want to be a oonoeit pi-i
eehe have theta mat to torijae. Ym pay* .year
to the IB-
The Country Parson
★ ir it
Itat during jthe lastlfew days, since the h^vy snow came, we have had a general absence of high winds which would cause It to drift.
{ there is little trouble with
•Verbal Orchids to-
Mr. and Mrs. Jes of Rochester; goldeq weddiifg.
The highway i
r f cnees Jook
Mrs- Ftoree Rrieknun of Keego HMbor; 83rd birthday.
Mr. and BIra AlBMf Hordingtoa of Aubom Heights; 51gt wedding anniversary.
Garfield Hanpw of Waterford; 81st birthday.
ly MUST do lwr|
/	modern psychologists recom-
Dr. Fischer suggested 15 drops to one-half teaspimful of paregur-	--
In order to motivate Della, therefore. ft.is smarter to tie-in her bareaame pteaa finger drills with a rewaid she really craves.
MUSIC nVCHOLOOV At the sfe of nine, a chMd can be motivated by immediate; visible rewarda to place an alarm clock on the pteito.
’Thei Uy thfee nickeU betide it. with the understanding that Della V gats one aidnl tor every five min-utea of piano practice.
Aai Sm’I tey to keU her to oay
STTr
'.Now
Dm*! try to gala taow via asakii« a stage
H Send tor my 200-point ’Tests for Good Parenta,’* endosliw a Btaroped return envelope, plus 20 cento (non-profit). Rate yoiinelves
Ic — that is camphorated tincture “HORSE SENSE” of opium. But he cautioned physi-
!d doses of peiegorie or permitting it to be ^administered
by peopte/M aware* of the dangers of ^ drug......
NexL
Heft. L Rmmrtl U*it. M.D.. Se.
, LL.D.,
But IS mfoutes in a lump sum U plenty for a child of her age.
Let her spend her own money We mge a return to good old- “	a goodly
nshioned ’’hone asnse.”	"VriF of idckeU on the piano.
■niat’s all psychology really Is,	★	★ A	^ ^	^ —----------^
anyway, sascept the “hotM asue” “But im’t that too mercenary?”
is often paraded in fWe-syUable aome poetical parents may protest phJ*u.	.
No, ItU Just plain "horse sense.””	fOsfyilgM MM)
Alvar*jrM ta Dr. Omtc* W. Ciwm
words to’gdd adfotifle ritz.
First if aE. M wlaNsI U fee ■g for isattonal atae year sId
attrattea by a weft raaagh te petfsna la a “Re-
,------------------- —■•M. iivi ■*■	•(	■ nwnai
terta% test "tee prenlter celle • task. One el the edHect ol s
ef Mtaaee la riesriy rsased b.v --------------»—
apsam sf the moMwtar waS of mv vteteolly the taleattoe, dee naesUy to the paytag a (MM far pteseare ot same i^lgested toed • tkf.
At this poiift may I be perfflit-to mention with due humilfty lhat undigested food ia normally
"Why, thai’f barbaric,” tfie ex-
cUlmed. “A child abouid team to _____________.
Fractioe the pildM Just from her rewarda .
Rieer love of ausie.”	they get resuitsl
tee aFeetaton wftl Ukewtae ser%e ad aa tata^ttte reward.
And you pamds can meanwhile^* rnise her, for your compHmeqts viU also help serve as psychic re-itards.	*
R makes '
cattaa ol *U total arvi pitaMI ta UiM m«**apn a* ven a* *n *P nrv* *i*pattlM«.
•> Vii* PoDUae Pr*a* I* SeUw** by
— _________ >n*a**. Urtac-
. Itaeemb. Lapaer *a4 WaS-~	■ It I* tU.St a r*ar:
trust
T-\ k
h.
THE t^ONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, ^lARCH 16, 1960
SEVEN
Army Aircraft Called Mted
leyeg/ass HfARINO AIDS^
Zenith CITATiON
55gaSrs^i±a
fN*Z«M«idl|TMt
FREE EtrrSSS:
r»My far the tei •( kMri^.
fomUac’t Omir Aelfcetiae^
ORWMITNEATIM SEmSE
FE t-2733
II W«t I
Sen. Chavez Witnesses Prtporedneti Test
Puerto Rico
RAMEY Am nmCE BASE,
wt (ORM) laid Tonday tbe Anajr k farad to nat outdated dliuaft to airiiS troopa fron lha Puerto Rico.
Oiavez, chaimaB of a Senate Defeme Appropriatiam »ub •e. came here to Me the start : of exercise Bi( SUm-Puerto Pine, desiimed to lee how quickly battle-ready troopa can be airtifted to lie sp^ The men arrived here in. Gtobemaater transports.
I Ksreaa War.
w« fly t the anon traspeta i U 1J.S. k
u A toW al Sit plaaM
HowTeHeM
FALSE TEETH*
More Finely h Piece
*T fed this type of operation y to our military
ir^«w.TI--------------

readiness but we need more of I,” Ounrez said. **However, I am disturbed about the outdated air-orafL Some were placed In production to IMS. twelve yean ago. they have already
*•* yAsrm----
♦ ★
Cold Weather Adds Ice to Great lakes
Wttil R UP o It's the new cram in Salis-bmy. South Rbodeato. tha hula hoop. So, don’t fed sorry for the inventor of the toy bedtuae the erase has died in tlm United States. Surveying the hip-awinging youngsten is American Law-
rence Hautz, left, who uMd to run agency In MUwaukee. He now owna a combined motel, citrus orchard and snake farm on 100 acres of land near Salisbury.
Sticker Candidate Wins
In case of war, he added, the natton needs a &%Ienae fora which can reapond "not to a nutter of daya or weeks but a matter of
SARANAC (f) - Sticker candidate Ned White was named Saranac village president Monday in a 112 to 105 ufiset of 2T-year Incumbent Joaeph Bmioger who ia va-
DETROIT (UPI) — The eo temperatures of the winter added to ice depths throughout the Gieat Lakee during the past week with the greatest noticeable accumulation on the lower lakes.
The U. S. Weather Bureau in Detroit said the past seven-day period was the coldest in the ataa da winter.
Ice4ocked areas in the i ihca showed relatively little dlect from the continued sub-freeiing weather, but southern Lake Michi-and Lake Huron, and Lake Erie had considerable freezing in waters which had previously been
Lesinski Eager to Fight for State's No. 2 Post
LANSING (UPI) - Rep. T. John Lesinski (D-Detroit) Monday informed his legislative coUeagtws waa "willing and eager n light" tor nomination as lieuten governor and asked tor thslr aup-port
He said running for the Job might ba a way of leaving p^ltica although he thought the main reason the idea of promotion.
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March 15, 16 and 17/
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dron In nny nnn fewRy wWNi*#-tOBVwpliMl SiNOLr ■t 4f< •nth for tko first pishor*. Ensk additlnnal sfcIM «nd«p fhr«/ S1.SO forfkotrof
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Opan Every Weekday— Monday Threafli Saturday
10KK) AM. la 9K)0 P.M.



THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. lytARCH 16, 1960
• ••
THIS IS REAL
...and it's cdl
OMN SUNDAY
9 a* ni. to 6 P>
124* lALOWlN	MS lA^ lOlULIVARD
t jMtva
Narionol'i Bstf it U.S. "Choies" corn fod ond Valut-Woy trim-mod to giro you lots wotto, mors moot for your monoy.
' G6y‘t Gradtd U. S. "Choiet"
Chuck Steak 69*
Steak .... -89*r*‘"*‘
U.S. "Ckoieo"
Swiss Steak . . .'^79
U.S. "Ciloico"	"
Sirloin Steak . . *^99*
6.S. "Cholct"	^
T-Bone Steak ‘‘ 99
IMO COOLIY LAKE RD. At L'atoe Lake SYLVAN UKE SHOrriNC CINTIR ?]:< Orchard Lake lUad al Mlddlcbalt
50 FREE SYAMPS
with SS.OO purchase or more and Coupon below
U.S. "Cbekt**
Beef Sides ik.S3* Beef Hinds s-63*
U.S. "Choice"	U.S. "Choice" 1*" Cot
Beef Fronts lb. 47* Beef Ribs • ib.69*
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Hoot t Serve lieeded	leeth'i leeeleee
Shrimp.Peud79c	Lakt Trout V‘ki:79c
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Shrimp. ,:S.$1.59	Smalt SI&'SM
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6^49'
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T .
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 16, I960
NINE
Pergonal Qttestioftg Easier to Answer
Taking Census by Mail Big Help
The major result of the l«h ic«inha census wiU be reappor-tionment of _^seat8 in the U. S.
DPTROIT1UPD—Taking^nsus by mail, an innovation tested in two Michigan counties ID years ago, will play a major part in this year's count of noses in the nation.
An advance census report form is being mailed to every household in the U. S.. within the next IS days. Residents are to complete this form before the official census taker, or “enumerator,” starts his calls April 1.
The cens^ bureau, apparently satiMied wtt its test in Mkdiigan and OMo, this yew will rdy heav-lly^«n its mail returns. As in 1960, persons who faO to return the fwTOs will be revisited by the enu-
The U. 8. Ceahus Bureau will slss Bse the malls this year ler a special household qOeotionalre. This form will be left at every fourth house visited by the enumerator, with instmottana that M be nulled to the local ecosas office wtthia three days.
Back in 1960, Edwin P. Slabaugh, who directed the count in Michigan and Ohio, predicted that the “count by mail" test in Livingston and Ingham counties might set the pattern for 1960.	*
The forms being mailed ouV to. every household will contain questions of a general nature. These
ship to head td thd household,------
nuiritial status and type qI livhig
left at every fourth house will give the cei^ bureau more specific information about Americans on the basis of the statistidaal “repruasntative sample” method.
idatkmi will get,a bigger share tt the Male'u wealth, and thbac where the population decBaaaed wfll get a imaller lUce of Midiigan’s tax Pie.
^ouae pf RepreaentativeC But in Michiffui, the antlcipatec 27 per cent IncreaJe In population, or nearly 1,720,000 perwms. since |tbe 1960 census wOl mean a revl-Won In the distrlbutkm formula of sUtecolNctcd, looally ahared rmA
Doctor Givos $200,000 to Hopo Collogo Fund
Okay School Bonds
MUSKEGON (UPI) — Nortop Township voters yesterday a^ proved a 92,500,000 bond issue for a MW high school In the Mow Shorting district. However, a pro-
Conninmhiee with expanded pop-
pacM for a $225,000 swimming pool In the sdiool was defeated.
HOLLAND iUPD—Hope Ootlege has received a gift ol securitiea and i«al esUte'Whied at man than 1200,000 from retired Dr. John HeneveM.
The gift went to the college ap-dowment fund.
vwuieui swM*
Henevetd. a 1«9 Hope graduate.
—*"-nt fd the
WH • former preeklent _ Muskegon Oowty Medical SoeWty. He iwtlied In 1963 and is preeenUy IMi« in eocil GaUes, Fla.
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Under Slabaugh's direction, dents in the two Michigan counties, along with one county in Ohio, received the aelf-enumeration form from census takers, filled it out and returned it by mail.
MORE ACCURATE Slabaugh said at the end of the 1950 test that the new method showed "real pouibilities’’ despite challenges fnm many who contended the method would provide a temption to give incorrect an-
:. It c
baugh mid, beeauaa a M at people who are afraid
the Bab's SPORTUTE
"Cheety" Joa Folcoro, who bogdn bowling at the ago 9, hat rolled meroYhon 1.000,000 gomti to daft. In hit co-roar, ha's bowled VX) -o perFect gam# — tome do timet. How't your Kara?
ParFact gomat happen fa meet of us onw in a lifttima->but parfoctiipt-ItFoclion with o botlc gray Flonnal suit con happen ony lima you itop in and atk ut to Fit yaul Wa hove the cream oF the crap oF theta mott-Fovarad tuitt. The Finatt imported or do-SMtlic Fobrict, tailoring oF tuparior caliber, fit-Hng lF>ot it truly export. And llta price it a most pleewrebFe tvrprital
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From
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"Ki
r
WEDNESDAY. AIARCH 1
Is Small: Hart
But He Soys His Stand Is So Well Known That It Discourages Letters
WASHINGTON tfl - MJchIfean residenU are ihowing little interest in the congressionBl civil rights fight. Judging from maii received by Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-Mich).
Of the 6S3 pieces of legislative mail he received during the March j?-12 period, only 44 concerned civil rights.
Twehe af the 44 letters sap-ported martmeat of a elvU rtghts bill and » were againsl. Fonr
One Wiie Gets Even With'Man Wed to Six
tyiNNIPEG. Canada (UPIl—Mr».| letter arrived addresoed to Um Christine ConneU^, the third wife
Hart told a news conference he as not convinced that the relatively small mail reaction means that Michiganders are not Interested in civil rights.
•'My hunch is that my views on civil rights are so well known (pot it would makt- as much sense to write Eastland as h would to writej| me," Hart said.
Sen. James 0. Eastland (D-Mlsst is a leader of the anti<rivil rights legislation forces.
•1 think a lot of peopto la Mirhlgan are hiteresled'' In dvU rights. Hart said. "1 believe they’ll be barsh In their Judgment of M U we fa
of af man who admitted being lied to six women at Monday it tookiier seven years to get even but it was worth tt..
The bigamist, Joseph Levear, 9, was idtnanded behind bars pending a probation report. He faced a maximum sentence of five years, w w ♦ .
The 48-year-old Mrs. Connelly said she knew nothing of ihe back-gtyund of Levear, alias Robert Connelly, when she married him St. Valentine’s Day in 1963. "Voo know," she said, “the day wo were marled be took away from the loeeplian and
held my hand and saM bo prayrd thatonrmarrPage wonid be happy. Ho was one-of a
Supporters of the For^nd Bill, a measure to provide , health insurance for social seepftty recipienu. wrote the nuMt letters diuirtg period. There prere 139 Htters and9‘~‘“*
I opened the letter. It was postmarked Birmingham, Ala., and was signed Elanor. It said *I have something for you.' I thoug' was his mother. He told me his parents lived in Birmingham (they Ih^ in Toronto). I phoned hv ai^ asked if she was his mother. She said she was Iris wife. '“That's, funny,< I said, ‘so am
Later, according to testimony, evoar married a girl in Vancouver, another in Toronto, and Orth from Kearney, Neb.
‘^*2 Announce Winners
Earlier, crown prosecutor John Scolltof told of how Levear begfn his marital career on the eve of World War II while serving with the Canadian army in Surrgy, tag-He married a Bitmy girl and look her back to Canada, but yearn later she returned to England. ‘
In 1949 Lmifar enlUted in the U. S. Army and married Elanor Horton of Birmingham, Aik. The Army caught up with him and sent him td the stockade lor a year false enlistment. In 1953 he deported to Canada and married Mrs: Connelly.
•The last
when be wi— — ,—-------------„
loeklag for a Jab/’ Mrs. Om-nrily said. "I didn’t know what
GIBRALTER (UPI)-Voters here riected a new village president irnd three new councilmen Monday. Charles W. Shumate had no oppo^ tion for the poslttlon as president. New councilmen were Hazen H. Monro, Cameron A. Polesid and Leroy Stettin.
She Helps University by Giving, Refusihg $$ Wingfield, Ohio <ii-^iisk Nettie K. Royer of Springfield has given time as w|U as money to Wittenberg University here, kr ★ k Her gifts to the institution total 945,000, and she was Wittenberg’s only secretary—without benefit of regular salary—from 1903 to 1920 while Dr. Charles G. Heckert, her brotherin-law, was president of the university.
SALE
GO-CARTS
SastI Save! Sava!
Open Dojly 8-8, iuii. 10-2
CUSTOM C(H.0R
Tke Home of ike FrieecUr Thieves’'
M Seelh Perry W 4-9514
SteccaCi
TImn.. PiL. S«t. Un., Tm. With This CHHf
head counter—Robert W. Burgess, above, is in charge of the 1960 census. He is director of the Bureau of the Census, located in Suitland, Md.
Ghana, the new republic on die Gold Coast of Africa, is about twice the size of Mississippi. Its popidation is estimated at five mil-
MIRACLE LIFTS WfAB lONOfS IHt SUCCtSSOS TO NYlON WIU NOT $ur 0« C»AC» A$^ <-,« TMfV IT TVAVI <CCM- HO suisriTuTfs	HALF SOLES ^ $169 |Pr. Att.
Ribhir Heels Per Mae, 71®.	Mae'*. Weaiaa'*, CWIdroa’c. Uathar or Caweailtloa.
	NEISNER'S IhoaRapoif 42 N. Sofiaew
WHILI YOU WAIT Ot SHOP SIRVICI	
EVERYTHING YOU 3UY IS COMPLETELY GUARANTEED
Drive
•	Merchont Poid
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Prices
•	Eosy to Pork
For Your Shore of. Savings DOWNTOWN PONTIAC
MvBioi
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
■	.. Downtown Pontioc Merchonts hove Big News in Store for you this weekend . . . Good Old Fashion
Dollar Day on Good n^-Foshion Merchondise! Plenty of Parking Spoce within pleosont steps to the Store of Your Selection!
SEE THE WHOLE PICTURE . . . Shop Downtown
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mi^sHpp
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Be Sure to Ask for Your Parking Stamp in These Stores!
ARTHUR'S
4S .N. SagliMw St.
BACKENSTOSi BOOK STORE
If L Uwnece ft.
BARNEHl aOTHES SHOP
150 N. Sayhiiw ft.
DR. B. R. BERMAN,
0. D. OPTOMETRIST
17 N. Saghwwft.
BOBEmSHOP
14 H. Saglaaw ft.
O OONAN DRUG CO.
72 N. SaehMw ft.
COMNOUY'S JEWELERS
U W. Ilwee ft.
THE OtCORSHOP
2< W. Heiee ft.
DKKmsoirs
MEN'S WEAR
DIEM'S SHOES
17 N. Saeiaaw ft.
FIRESTONE STORE
140 N. Seeieaw ft.
WAYNE 6ADERT
121 N. Sagfaiaw ft-
GALUGNETS MUSK SHOP
17 I. Hetee ft-
GENERAL PRINTING i OfFKE SUPPLY
17 W. LawrWK* ft.
GMReE5-NE#P0RT'S
74 N. Saghuw ft.
Him aOTHIERS
IS N. SeflMw ft.
JACOlSEirS .ROWERS
101 N.Saehww It.
LEWIS FURNmiRE CO.
•2 1 ftglMwft.
McCANDlESS CARPTS
11 N. Peiry ft.
. McNALLY MENT WEAR
IM N. Saglaaw ft.
OSMUN'S MEN'S WEAR
51 N. Saglaaw ft.
FRED N. PAUU JEWELERS
21 W. Harae ft.
PAUU SHOE CTORE
SS N. Saeiaaw ft.
PEGGY'S DRESS SHOP
IS N. Saeiaaw St.
PONTIAC ENGGASS* JEWELRY CO.
25 N. Saeiaaw S*'
PONTMC GLASS CO.
29 W. I
THE PONTUC PRESS
4SW.HerMili.
WYMAN FURNITURE
17 L Neree ft.
II W. Pike ft.

[teds Say! Specialize at Earlier Age
U.S. Education Gets Suggestions
THE POXTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, I960 j
ELEVEN
NEW YORK (UPI)~If a Runiu| ideotiit were given the Job helpiiy America overcome its reputed lag in the educational and scientific race with the Soviet Union, what woold he do?
No less an antboiity than the deputy minister of hi^r education of the Soviet Union offers
|higber' educatkm in Russia and head of a Soviet educaUonal dde-gation- whidi has departed for home after a 12-day tour of American instltutiofis ol learning.
A ★	♦
Unlike many commehtators today, Prokofiev does not think everything Uack In the U.S. edu-
—Teach i Ugh schools.
sdeaoo hi tta
the coilegos.
—Mix practical work with classroom study.
These are the ideas of MikhaU Prokofie\i', deputy minister of
UNITED
SHIRT
DISTRIBUTOItS
about the weaker side of American education," Prokofiev added. "I think that more mathematics, physics and chemistry should be taught In your secondary
"We think your training on the advanced level is very wdl ized," he said in an interview. "This is one of the best features of your system."
He said that more Americans
they are already well into college. And he fdt they 4o not get enough
lag and reeesMh chemistry, hie esm spec quite satisfactory here.
And he (eels American engineers lare getting sufficiently broad scientific education.
"But I would like to say s
Re also said AAerican students
Another recent Soviet visitor, Premier Dmitri Polyanski ol the Russian Republic, belittled American teaching with the blanket comment that we are training too many lawyers and not enough
RedyChangeTune, Lite Credit Cards
NEW YORK (URp-Rmsla apparently has decided that installment credit la a good way after all to raise a country’s standard of Uvii«.
* ★ ★
Despite oft-repeated critidsms of credit buying in the U.S., the Soviet Union has announced that the Russian consumer can now buy certain major Itenu^motor-
1991
19M
kan steel prodoctlon was dimbing dtody out at the recession doldrums in 1959 wh« the sted strike broke in the major companies. Half a
million tsochers were idled and nearly all production was stopped for over 100 days. Mills rapidly got back into high gear soon after the Tafl-Hartley »day injunction was invoked.

The trading floor of the New York Stock Exchs^e is one of the city's most popular spectator attractions. The omvention bureau estimates HO,000 persons will visit the exchange this year.
MSU Graduate to Run for State Legislature
KALAMAZOO (UPD-Robert S. Phillip, a 29-year-old June graduate of Michigan State University, has announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination ior
state representative zoo County’s " —
Kalama-
"District.
Philliyp was pieaident of ^e Young Democrats Club St Mldh Igan State and glso headed a young Democratic at Ferris Institute before transferring to Mich-
Hike Diplomotic Rank,
MANAGUA, . Nicaragua (UPl)-'Rie foreign office announced today that Nicaragua and West Germany
of thdr diidomatic missions hpro in Bonn from legations to cmbaa-
—without first saving the antire amount of rublea for the purchaae.
2 Towns Vote Ter Wt IHMO OF HEARING
Not in Glass, Say Othen
KALAMAZOO (UPD - Salt of J liquor by the glase was approved i yesterday by voters in two South-western Michigan oommunltiet. J Voters In Decatur and Conetan- j tine eivroved eelllng liquor faF the |
"Rmyoe CM rtmovt IMS Imp down Ml by 0W esw WAX-OUT intttwd. Seo^ oils IMlIy losiM wn Hid by ess of t *nple syrincsftoitMoirt.llralisvMprewira-itGb> li«-aed|imywrtwtsfrsib.ciissMI> h«. M WM-Otrr todn in Ibi ee«, sin-D I sqeens a *ep bcWe, M «le IH ilJR TNRIPTV DRUG STORB
But Myo other oommunitiee tai the area — UWtOB and Bangor — 1 against aak of liquor by tiw glass.
HURON
SHOPPING CENTER
MARCH/SPECIALS
mi Ill mill II \/w ■ r j	. 
(hr GOLDEN HA
SPE.CI
TROUSERS
59
Men*t or Dry Cleoned and Prened
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4 NIGHTS TIL 9 P.M.
Monday-Thursday Friday-Saturday'
MeMcies
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*TrimTabs?
INSPIRED

Top Frost FiSH Sale
•	Perch or Cod Fillefs
IS-Os. fkfl.
•	Fish Sticks
DELSEY TISSUE
10‘
In 4 RoH Pkgt.
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I Ddielsn TOMATO SOUP 10*
SPRING IS HERE AT SEW SAVE
Beautiful fabrica, mouth watering prints and solids. Dots, stripes have just arrived. Sew now for Easter, lovely Cotton Shantungs, guaranteed washable, permanent everglades*, Surahs, embroidered cotton satins,
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CvpioBi'^ BfMbarg Cottoa Dots $1.39 Ttid Ratob SuAks* ia Dots aad
Pfiits.......$1.39 tkii $1.99 a jui
Bayon Silks — Silk oi Oiganzas From........... 99c tkii $2.98 a yaid
TNf niM 100^
In slacks
SEW ’n SAVE ”
TFL-HURCN SHOPPING CLNTIR
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r
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Record Department L P. RECORDS
Reg. $3.98
NOW
Lf. Records
SKCIU BEQUESTS OBDERED
S. S. KRESGE COMPANY
Nairower waistband and neat tabs on both back pockets let the style. Tailored in .crease-holding, wrinkle-resistant fabrics, these slacks keep their good looka with the aoBotute minimum of care.
SENSIBLY PRICED AT

uam
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Roll-your-own sleeves, a soft McMullen collar, a skirtful of unpressed pleats! It's fhe classic shirtwaist that belongs in your wardrobe at big savings, ujtton checks, ornel/cotton solid colors: taupe, greerv pink, blue, block. Sizes 10-16.
TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER open to 9 D. m. mondov. thursdov. fridov, Saturday
TWELtE
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, I^IARCH 16, J960
SETTLE FOR LESS!
You con buy carpeting ond draperies where WnCn you ore sure of the following:
Quality - Security -
Confidence • • • and over 30 yean of experience and know-how. Heipino homi makert select the right color and quality carpet and draperies for their homes. Yes, we have the finest Installation specialist in our field. Many of our prices are at or below some tales or dose-out prices.
Coll FE 4-2531
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Our carpet consultant will bring samplM to your home to you cari choose the right carpet and color for your decorating schemes. No obligation. Free estimates and decorating counsel. Deferred payment plan to fit y>ur neech.
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School Name Study Thursday
Township Board Will Consider 500 Protests Against Alteration
The tuune<faans« of the Waterford TownaMp High School to the Waterfovd Ediaon High School erill be fHacuated at tomorrow night’s Waterford Toemahip Board meeting.
Althoogdi the Sdwot Board has oftIdaDy approved the change, it has received petitions with some 500 Bignatnrea. protesting the action. At last month'i .meeting the matter was tabled for conai^ra-tion.
Hoperialeiideiit a f School
I ta the Board ler |Sjaa,M la
lag possHoa o( a IS B
a apeeial eleotiaa la March 1M7. It approved, theae bonds probably wiU be Mid in May, Shundi
Bids for construction of a aeqpnd senior high school also will be
taken in May. The achiMl. Is in Septenoner.
scheduled to open Future dementary school sites will be.^discussed, and the Board
for the senior high achod to be known as Waterford-Kettering.
Tree Farming Concept SpretSds During 1959
System, accorgng to Aim Forest Products Industries,
WASHINGTON CB-The idea of growing trees'as a farm crop spread during 1959.
Some 2,M4 new tree farms were added to the Amarican Tree Farm
sponsor of the conservation program. The number of tree farms in the United States now stands at 16.749.
Tree farm acreage waa increased 2,906,686, bringing the total 51,335.137,
Don't Mind the Chickens, It's Them Dorn Bulletsl'
CASSIOWN, Ohio ll*-Cart Kirk’s trouble is tied indirectly to bis neighbor’s chidcens.
The chickens run loose through
Kirk told sheriffs deputies, but bo doesn’t much mind that It’a the bullet holes in his garage from other neUtfibors’ shooting at the wayward ghlckenl’.
Fii«« Riggs, an American mia-
______________________^
number of neighborhood yards, I Bulgarian in IFTl.
ar WInahaU WHO, MET — Jack Slaboski, above, who figures in Senate Rackets Committee t^timony in connection with Indiana pinball operations, is now supporting Seh. John F. Kennedy for president,-the Republican campaign publi-catkxi Battle Line says. “Pure desperation on the part of the Republicans,” scoffed Kennedy, who said he doesn’t know him. The publication printed a group picture Including Kennedy and SUbnski taken last month at a Kenncdy-for-prerident dinner.
The economy of the Belgian Congo Is based on immense de-| posits of such mineralil as copper, uranium, diamonds, cobalt, tin, zinc and gold.
SPRING HOME APPLIANCE SALE!
floor
sample
CLEARANCE Many Auto* niatic Wanhers and Dryers Drastically Reduced - A^ Brand New!
Silvertone table TV has a new look with matching base for modern mobility
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SEARS
154 North Saginaw St. Phoiie FE ^171
SEARS
A SEAKSSFKIWSALE
ENDS SATURDAY!
Harmony House Mtidern 7-Pieee FamUy-Size Dinette Set
SAVE *38 tftQ
regularly 127.95
ONLY $5 DOWN

Clearance
Bookcases
Ready-to-Finish
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rag. 1l.tS.....7JI
4lladi ImIicpm, rag.24.fS........14.U
As smart as it is Onerously proportioned! ' Dramatic table top looks like costly walnut wood-graining. Actually it's famous Melamine i^astic that shrugs off stains. Choice of gleaming bronze finish with toast top, or bUlfck with black top. 36 x 48-in. table has two 12-inch leaves. Hurry in today 1
6-ft. extension fable plus 6 foam cushioned chairs in rich bronze or black finish
SAVE 31.95
modern 6-pc. dining room
188
regularly 219.95
Table buffet and four side chairs. So quality constructed w 11 h beautifully grained walimt veneer, nble extends to ipacloua 38xM-ln. Cotton padded seat#.
Am Chair.........
China. Beg. $1M .
. flU#
Fualtwe Dept, Seeend nsec
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save 3.99 Colonial heirloom type spreads!
io»*
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14.98
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Exclusively Sears. You couldn’t buy the original for love "or money. Thig bedspread is a faithful reproduction of
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J	• IBIUUUI reproaucuon Ol
an 1821 handwoven museum piece. Now for 4 days only van ann K,™ ««« “nroductioD foF lust 10.99, Rich,
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154 North Saginaw St. Phone FE5U171

THE PONTIAC PRESS
PONTIAC, MICHIQAN. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 16. 1960
THIRTEEN
Spring Hats to Go on Parade in Easter Preview
Alpha Beta Chapter members of Delta Kappa Sorority check final arrangements for their annual scholarship fund raising party Wednesday evening at Pontiac federal Savings and Loan building. From
rMtta* Frtu rk*tM
left are Margaret Snyder of Ottawa drive, ticket chairman; Mrs. Lynn Rohrer of Wesllawn street, in charge of table arrangements; and Mrs. Cecil Myers of Chippewa road, who is handling decorations and prizes.
Garden Assn. Aggembles
Sets Scholarship Fund
Mrs. Robert S. Nelson opened her Ottawa drive ^me Monday to members of the Pontiac Branch of the Women’s Farm and Garden Assn.
Russell R. Galbraith, Mrs. Benjamin Jerome Jr., Mrs. John H. Patterson, Mrs. Walter K. Willman, Mrs. Arthur R. Young, Mrs. Bruce Annett and Mrs. William Hartman.
Proceeds from a series. of dessert bridges in members’ homes April 22 will benefit the group’s scholarship program. Ways and Means Committee Chairman Mrs. Robeft J. Alton announced.
Assisting Mrs. Alton will be Mrs. A. Floyd Blakeslee, Mrs.
Camp Fire Girls Get New Flag
Mrs. J. Standlsh Sibley introduced Alice Wessels Burlingame. consultant and lecturer. MrS; Burlingame gave the latest developments in ^ horticultural therapy in a .speech, ’’New Developments in the Plant Realm."
Mrs. James Nye, social chairman lor the afternoon, was assisted by Mrs. Robert J. Cooper, Mrs. Robert M. Glenn, Mrs. Alvin R. Larson, Mrs. Victor E. Nelson, Mrs. Ralph Norvell, Mrs. John H. Patterson. Mrs. Sibley, Mrs. Harlan Smith, Mrs. Harry S. Pearce and Mrs. C. George Widdifield.
A 50-star American Flag was presented to the Pontiac Council of Camp Fire Girls by Post 16’s Disabled American Veterans Auxiliary.
Presiding at the tea table were Mrs. C. R. Gatley and Mrs. E. M. Buckley.
The presentation was made by Americanism Chairman Mrs. Luther Keys and Auxiliary Commander Mrs. Ray Jewell at the local council’s board meeting this week.
Dem Women Meet Tuesday
Accepting on behalf of the Camp Fire Girls was Council
Pmident Theodore Wtersema. The' flag will be-displayed at
ritywide events and at the camp by the council, a United Fund agency.
The Waterford Township Dennocratic Women's Qub will meet Tuesday evening at 8 in the Eason street home of Mrs. Walter Brinkman. COhostesses will be Mrs. Stanley Irish and ’ Mrs. Howard Bomsta.
A demonstration of flower arrangements will be given by Mrs. Oliver Dunstan.
Mrs. Emil Bruestle of Dover road, left, refreshment chariman for the benefit confers tvith general chairman Mrs. David Hicks of Sunny Beach bouler vard. Bdth are pleased with the spring gaiety theme that is planned to prevail at the party,

Pine Lake Branch, Womans National Farm and^ Garden Assn. Inc., held the second in a series of invi-tational bridge' bsneheons Tuesday at the West Bloomfield township home of Mrss Harold E. Schneider^ horticukttre Airman, on Pine Ridge road. Showing a winsung hand to president, Mrs. Russell Koek,*is
. '■	.rj'’
vice president, Mrst Clarence W. Suhr,^left, both of Pine View drive.*Listening in, at right, are their partners, Mrs. Schneider and Mrs. Carl R. Ciese of Scotch Pine drive. Orchard Lake. Mrs. Giese is chairman of fsortieuUure therapy.	*
Supporting the need for quality teaching at the'college' level, the Dorofliy Selle Scholarship A^rd Fund‘will benefit from the proceeds of a millinery style show and card party March 23.
The attair. which is sponsored by Alpha Beu Chapter of Delta Kappa lamina Soror-Ify, teachers' honorary society, is set for 8 p.m. at the Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Building.
■ATS ON PARADE
In a pastel setting of spring flowers, members will model spring hats from Arthur’s Women’s Apparel Store.
Cochairmen of the benefit are Mrs. David Hicks and Mrs. Stanley Olczak. Committee chairmen assisting are Margot Snyder, tickets and publicity; Mrs. Emil Bruestle, refreshments; Mrs. Lynn Rohrer, tallies and table arrangements; Mm, Cecil MyCTS, decorations and prizes; Aldene French, tea tables; Mrs. Olive Lord, style show; Mrs. P. J. Kinsella, finances; and Mrs. Iva O’Dell, telephone committee.
Each year an outstanding high school graduate who plans to be a “teacher’s teacher" is awarded the scholarship by
this g
Don't T ry to Answer Rudeness
By E.M1LY POST
Dear Mrs. Pott: When a person asks a question point blank, which you do not wish to answer, what can one say without being nideT Answer; Pay no attention to the question and try to. change the subject by calling the questioner’s attention to sonnething else. Or to someone who is per^tent, Simply a A a w e r, "I'm sorry, but that is some* thing 1 would rather not answer."
pear Mrs. Post: Will you please tell me what to do in this very nnfortunate Utuation: I borrowed" an evening dress from a friend as I did not h«Ve one of sny own and dM not feel like going to the expense of buying one for this one special occasion. Before returning the dress to her I had it cleaned, and to my horror it shrunk. In fact it shrunk so badly that r don’t think she will be able to wear it again. Am I obliged to pay her tor Itr I’m sick over It.
Answer; I think the very first thing to do is to go to the clesuiers and tdl them that the dress shrunk and ask if it can be stretched — some materials can be stretched and let us hope this Is one of them. If it cannot be stretched and it is much too small for her, the otdy thing to do is to tell her the truth and offer to buy her a new dress. If she herself is well off, she will protoibly re-fuse to take 'Anything and accept her lou with grace.
-	★ W < ★
Dear Mrs. Post; My husband will be graduating from medical school shortly and the question' of graduation announcements has come up. We would like lo knew to whom it is
should they be sent?
An^rr; They are gent to, relatives and intimate friends who will be interested in hearing the news. They are sent ot^t immediately after graduation.
Re-Elected
President
Re-elected president of . St. Vincent Altar Society was Mrs. William Deqn.
Serving with her will be Mrs. -Margaret McGuire, vice president; Mrs. Carl Duren, secretary; Margaret O’Connor.'recording secretary; Mrs. Louis Humptoey, corresponding secretary; and Mrs. Ralph P«r-king, treasurer.
The slate accepted at a meeting last week, according to nominating dommitt'ee chairman Mrs. Jospph Spadafore.
Bridge Club Plays
FiAttot rmt rb«t«
Four Pages Today in Wolnen's Sedioi^
A perky spring bonnet is previewed by Mildred Hobhs of Murj^y street, right. Mrs. Elsie Welch of Cooley Lake road approves one of the many millinery confections to be modeled at the
8 p.m. affair. The millinery style show and card pary will benefit a scholar-shi^ fund for a student preparing to teach at the college level.
Women's Section
The FashianeUe Club crowned top weight-loser Mrs. David Cowanjof Henderson street *‘Mrs. Fashiahette of 196ff* Tuesday evening in the^Adak
Mrg. David Cowan Mi ---------- /
FralUe Pr»M Pb*U
Shelly Library. Adjusting the crown is runner-up Mrs. W. Cleg Bordeaux of Nichols drive, Auburn Heights.
T8. Fashionette
The Elks Temple was the lettii^. for Monday/evening’s meettog of the Pontiac Dupll- -cate Bri(%e Qub.
Winners from the ten tables in play were Mrs. C3iar1es Davies and Ernest Guy, Jo-■xseph Nouse and Al Wallace.
Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Thomo . son. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Richards, George Amistron.; and James Q. Martin and •lohn Kraus and Dr. T.. K. Ar-
Top Lospr Wins’in Fine Style
wan m I vaa /row of l^at
I Hen-
/
Mrs. David Cowan derson street was Mrs. Fasbionette of at the Tuesday evening piMting of the Fashkmette dub In the Adah ShMly Ubrqiy.
Recorded for Mrs. tSowan Is X weight loss /f 28H pounds in a aix-moim context. Her goal Is a lofts of 30 pounds.
>Jrs FreV''><^	1***
qUeen, ronmcled the ceremony and the/Press photographer manned/Mh,1 W. Cleg Bor-,d?aux, iW runner-up adjusting Mrs. (Wan’s crown.
A /special ppcm i written by
Mrs. Thomas Begt, honoring the queen, was read by the club president, Mrs. Virgil Lewis. Gifts were presented by members.
Rochester, who played guitars
L08EBII WIN OOMAflES Those who lost 20 or more pounds sinee Joining Fashion-ettes are Mrs. Earl Bowers,. Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Root, Mrs. Frank Reichert, Mrs. William Woodruff and Mrs. Oliver Kerb. They received ^corsages.
M^. Edward Cook, chairman of the evening, was assisted by Mrs. Harold Hopper, .Mrs. Wava Forker and Mrs. Root.
Greatest weight lots for the week was recorded for Mrs. Cowan. Mrs. Russell Johnson wgs last week's winner, and Mrs. Marion Madaszek, Feto ^ry winner?
Entertainment was 'provided by Paul Roberts, tap daucer. and Inez and Eivu Reeaer of

A. 'white elephant' puctlon' wlU highlight next week's

FOtfRTEEy
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDXESDAY. MARCH 16, 1960

fash
ion s n o D
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Test Your Readiness
Prepare for Elderly Years
after her children leave home than she coold once expect. Not only that but tbeae years can be so much more youthful and bealth-
. have suggeated many tlmea that the wke twoman prepares for this time before It arrivea or teU busy doing aomething about U when It doea. With this in mind I tiwagbt that It mi^ be fun, and belpbil, too, for roe to print a quertion-naire byjiliich you can chedc your-aeU. Hera it ii.
Presbyterian Units Study Psalm Book
^ MOEPHOnE LOWMAIV
1. De yea wear black neat M the timer Every womaa aeeda aonie Uaefc la her wardrobe be. eaaae It la amart aad alae pThe* deal. However, colors are cope-daily llattertag to the matare
2. Do you laugh more, or lets, uut you used to? Have you allowed the heavy responalbiUtles to give you a hectic, grim attitude toward life or are you becoming more tolerant and gayer as the
3. Do you spend more time thinking of past happineaaes and activities than looking forward to future exciting plana and interests?
i. Do *yoe still cUag to teenage haMes aad frilly cIoOms er have ysa tapped the extrem s flattery of olmple bat dii-' ganaeato, with color and Uae their mala-otayo?
5. Have you realized that there will be a vacuum in your life when your children leave home and are you preparing for It; or happened are you doing aomething about filling that vacuum witit activities and Interests you never had time for before?
You now have or soon will have more time and energy and thought
ual. That Is realty an exciting thought rather than a dreary one. Cherish this extra leisure. Make it sing for you.
6. Is your n»lnd flexible and open to new kftas or do you diMpprove of most things? Thb "go^ old days" hhd essentially the same problems as today and not nearly so many benefits.
Pwhsps this all wmads fine hot yM may wonder how to begin if yon have been taak la home da-
The April-lday Group of the First Presbytalan Clnirch met for a Friday luncheon with Mrs. Donald Boa of West Iroquois road. Mrs. R. C Callow, Bfn. Ralph Coin and
Mrs. Floyd Short gave the BihIp study and Bdrs. Quenton Sweet, tlw study book.
The group will serve the churdi school staff dinner tonight
Lundieon was served to 23 members of the June Group Friday at the Lenox street home of Mrs. Edith Tick. Assistant host were Mral Duncan McVean, Mrs.
One practical and rewarding tUp any woman can make is self-improvement and she can do it right at hX)me. If you are overweight, begin counting calories. If you want Josephine LownuuCs calorie chart, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for leaflet No. 36.
yean and have nagiectod year-
Well, one practical and rewarding step any woman can make is and she
It at bon^. If you are over-
Glve your sUn luMcation and care it may not have had regularly. Improve your posture, get new hairdo and go on from there. This will give you such a lift that the rest will come much more easily.
Conduct Meetings by Signs
Deal Homemakers Have Extension Group
LANSING Wl-There’s no noliy chatter or gossip when The SUent Women get together although they’re as sociable a group as you’d ever see.
"Tito Silent Women,” as they’ve nicknamed themielvei, are a Michigan State Univer-
more?




Pauli's Shoe Store
sity extension chapter of 17 Lansing area homemakers. All but three are deaf. ’The others, with normal hearing, either have deaf parents or deaf husbands.
The group gets together to learn the latest MSU informa-tlon on cooking, health, homemaking, safety and govero-
Meetings open with the reciting of the women’s home extension creed in sign language.,’They continue with roll call and reading of the minutes of the last meeting — all in the swift, silent talk of aigns made with the fingers.
Fooader el the group and oue of the teachera to Mrs. Kemeth R. Rogers of Mawm, ebainnaa, of tlw Ingham
Kay Is a student at tbe MIcb-Igaa School for the Deaf at FUnt.
Mrs. Harvey Allen of Mason, one of the deaf members and now chairman of tbe group, suggested the idea.
Vico Chatman is Mrs. Ge^ aid Lockwood, of Lanaii«. She
deaf parenta and a husband with a hearing loas;
Bone
COBBIES
Tke relaxed approack to autumn
Young-hearted Cobble that’s parfuody attmed to your ooQtamporaiy living... taformal. rakxad, widi budb, now fashtou toudws.
And, youll love the soft, light, oiiriiknad IselofltscaresiinfCol^Bt N
PAULI’S SHOE STORE
Serving Pontiac for 7S Yearg
35' N. ^Mw Street Open Fri. Eveninis ’tU 9
T
★ ★
Secretary-treasurer Is Mrs. William McKenney of Lansing, who has been deaf all her life and has a daughter. Debbie, enrolled In the Lutheran School for the Deaf at Flint.
“The Silent Women get a great deal out of it,” said Mrs. Rogers, ’’but ao do I. As tbe mother of a ‘lUent child* H’s an inspiration to sea bow well they are doing.”
Servlnc mushrooms with steak? Count OQ one-quarter pound per
7
Grand Opening at
1 I. Peny at E. Pika
Town and Country Churches AI so. on Discussion Agendo
Brown.
Study on the Book of Psalms as continued by Mis. Asa Drury. Mrs. Robert Heitsch reviewed '’Conversations on Town an Country.” Mrs. Phillip Heops was a guest.
Mrs. D. B. Eamet of Cherokee road was luncheon hostess Friday S3 members of the July-August Group. Cohostesses were" Mrs. Louis West, Mrs. Paul Rich and Mrs. Rawl^ G. Hallman. Mrs. Sam Baillo was a guest.
Devsttons by Mrs. B. 0. Camp-ell were followed by Mrs. Um BeOamp’s stady oa Towa aad Mrs. Osrron Malkey
Ths next meeting in April will be with Mrs. Robert Oliver.
The September-October Group met for a dessert-luncheon Friday at tbe church, with Lelah Thorpe, Mrs. Elaine Malone and Mrs. William Kreldow, hostesses.
Mrs. Malone gave the Bible stady. Members read their favorite verses from the Psalms. Mrs. H. R. Fraser told of tom aad country churches for the misstoa
Plans for helping with the Pres-byterial dinner and a May rummage sale were discussed.
The November Group of the First Presbyterian Church met Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. Leland Guest on Lorberta lane. Mrs. Gyde Herring was cohostess.
Mrs. Robert Pritchett conducted the Bible study and Mrs. Roger Gunn discussed the current chapter in ’’People, Land and Churchei.”
Twenty-five members of fhe Flora ^Uy Group were served Friday dinner at the church. Hostesses were Mrs. Olive K. Lord, Mrs. Joyce Jones, Mrs. Hazel Hubbard and Mrs. Preston Parks. Guests included Mrs. A. C. Harris, Bernice Berger and Norma Strickland.
Plans were made tor the Cbarch Night dtoner oa March I. with Mrs. Margaret Monroe and E. Grace Clarfc hoofeeoes. A fUm, “Mark of the Hawk,’* which deals with the straggle for froedom to Africa, will ba showa.'
Mrs. S. E. Minard gave the Bible study on the nature Psalms.
The next meeting will be at the church, on April 1 with the Wom-Aaan. Lillian Davidson, Mrs. Norman Alien and Jean Lukens will be hoeteases.
Places were set fdr 20 members of the Mary, Martha Group for luncheon with Mrs. Howard White on Avondale street. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Richard Wright and Mrs. Harry Wood. Guests were Mrs. Garence Sherbarth and Mrs. Howard White. ^
Mrs. Harry Pattison gave Bible study oh the psalter.
“UiidentaiHlhig Town
ed by Mn. dameo Battoa. ^
A gift waa presented to the chair-nan, Mri. Wood, who Ifaves toon to make her home In Califbrnla. Mn. WflUarn S. Hilderly was elected dukinnaB.
The Mathach Group and the November Groim are cosponsors for the April 7 fashion show at the
Garden Grrons: Perch a spring of mint atop that fruit cup of orange and grapefririt secUopa,
Beaiity Clinic
by Edythe McCulloch
Moke An Entrance.., » Into Spring
Poiat win go a long way . , . even ft you an wsarlag last springs nutflti
When entering a room an open door, watt through.
gh. paum for a I aad know exactly n baadlng baton <
If antei^ through a door: ego	ttto bM»d naaim
Iridnl Solon
door, bringing it elmid'fnhlnd you with the oppoelte' hand. Bnter facing the group at all
Practice this at homo and ai-skrt yourself of a gncatol entrance thia spring.
Pimm Edythe McCulloch *	■ “ ppo, FE 3-7«Il
0 fltato .Boatt
VELDA L. RLLEFBON
Mn. Clyde' Barnes of West Rundell street announces the engagement of her daughter, Velda Lee EUefson, fo Pfc. Paul H. Coker, son of Mr. and Mn. Charies Coker of Morgan road, Gingellville. Her fiance la stationed at the Nike base in Southfield Township. A May 14 wedding Is planned.'
LeBaionPTA Approves Slate at Nominated
LeBarron PTA approved the slate of officen for 1960, presented by Mn. Frank Holecheck, nominating committee chairman, at the March meeting.
Mn. Robert Tradiet was nominated president; Mn. James Adist, vice president; Basil Tucker, father vice president; Mn. Free-, man Shuart, teacher vice president; Mrs- Melvin Raymer, secretary; Mn. William Brown, treasurer: Mn. Robert Girdley, historian; Kenneth French, auditor.
The Lodge-NIchols bUI con-ceratog the housing of meatally retarded children wao approved. Mro. Fred Ro(. youth chairman, fntrodneed the youth lenders-Barbara Bergen's room won the parent’s attendanee award lor
Programed In the sttident talent show were Donna Matthews, and Judy Crlcko|i in tap dances; Jane Boisseau, Sandra Burder, Andrea Butler, Ronnie Coon, Robbi Kage and Victor Sherfleld in a skjt "Five Little Squirrels;” Brenda Shelton and Roberta Glostrick in Varsity Rag tap dance; Fred Gid-dings, Mike Longstaff and Robbie Girdley in a pantomine ’’Way Down Yonder.”
Joe Raezyinski played an accordion solo, Mexican Hat Dance; Erika Weidner played Spinning Song a piano number. There were vocal duets Me and My Shadow by Marsha Tebeau and Yvonne-Stokes. and There's A Hole In My Bucket with Mary Harroun and Leonda Tatu.
Picks Entourage for June Rites
Bride-elect Katoleen Rome of Edison avenue announced attendants for her June wedding at a shower given Thursday by Mrs. Kenneth Davidson of Newport avenue. Mrs. Margaret Jackson was cohosteu.	^
Judy Roush will be maid honor: Thersa Dobakl and Linda Rouse, bridesmaids; Diana Rouse will be Junior attendant.
Also present at the shower were Mrs. Floyd E. Rouse, mother of the bride-elect, Kathy Jackson, Mary Sue Dahlgren, Sharon Gark, Barbara Fair, Patricia Gark, Janet Wilson. Luana Mehiberg. Mrs. Buddy Ligon, Mrs. Richard Bashorr, Mrs. Edward Vanltarn. Mrs. Nclm Ryan, and daughter Srnija, Sandra Hutton, Mrs. John, Hufton. Karen Denham, Mrs, Donald Cole, Mrs. Hugh Paris and Patricia Guiboid.
Kenneth L. Rosche, fiance of Min Rouse, la the Bon of Mrs. Martin Roadie of Plymouth. Wis.
St Mary's Unit Elects Ofiicers, Picks Chairmen
St. Mary's Unit of the St. Bene- . diet Church elected officers re-! cently at the home of Mn. Thomas A. CUlton « Oaceola Drive, n Mn. Joaepli G. Bdaat will be pmidCBt; Mn. Herbert T. Hef-ferman. vk# pregkieiit; Mn. Ray-nMnd J. Zlmmarman, ndoeding Mcretary; Mn. WOliam Foni treasurer; and Mn. Aatoa Bego. corretpondlng aacretary.
Mn. Joaeph L. Albrecht la project chairman and Mn. Howard Grady, tdephone brtdga diairman.
A gi|t was praaanted to Mn. Fredrick Gottachalk, oatgobH pres-
’12"
Imt Tends
Geeiges-llewpeils
feweky ftopj^

5'-'. T
/
T^HE PONTIAC PRESS, WEPyESDAY. MARCH 16,1m
FIFTgEy
Dancing Teacher Has Word on Discipline
‘Parents Better Get Their Nerve Back’
By GAY PAl'LEY NEW YORK (UPD-Mrs. Henry Duncan Wood III makes no pretense of beiitg a professional authority on why children turn bad. What she has learned about childhood behavior is from watching society moppets and others in ballroom dancing classes.
But her observations have been sufficient to convince her that parents “had better get their nerve back and dare to discipline a child.
“And without argument,' said. “A six-year-old doesn't need an explanation of why daddy said
. Weed haa ran I iilMe INZ. XMi
XMal amoll-mtmt has ranged fram M to 1,1M Mcli winter In New Yack. Man-hnaaet and Bnntlagton, N.Y„ to Rmnsan, tiJ., and In the cMidng tan she wiU nprn n sehaoi la Canton City, N. d.
“I believe the yean of 4 to 10 are the most vital in a child's
'* she said, in an interview, “Why aren't there people working to prevent delinquency? Why wait until the damage is. done and then try tb fix the child up?”
She believes the early training is a three-way responsibility among the parents, the school and
B Jolly
the religious background sufficient,'' she said, “you' welt,heading for trouM<k“
Mrs. Wood, a very chic and veiy pre^ blwseyed bkoniille, insists strict disciptta in her classes.
Abby Advises Working Mother
Children a Problem? Let Sister Tell You
‘A eidid say *tkaak yea* after a danoB even If bath feet arr brsken.
“We teadi them how to introduce person, the girls how to curtsy., the boys bow to Sak the girl for a dance, and It a boy forgets his white gloves be is fined a nickeL’ NQ
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEIAR ABBY: I am a working mother. My husband is handicapped and -I have to support our two kids. I pay my sister to keep
she wished I would keep my own kids. She said my sister said they were too much for her.
I love my sister, Abby. and was very hurt to think she would tell this to a neighbor and not tq me. Should I talk to my sister about it or should I find my kids another place to stay? Or should I forget what her neighbor told n»e?
HURT SISTER DEIAR SISTEIR; Ask your sister how the present arrange-
Sundress or pinafore! It's easy to sew of crisp cotton — opens flat for qteedy ironing.
Ruffles and colorful embroidery, in running and single stitch, delight a litUe g|it Pattern 596: transfer of bands, pattern in sisei 2, 4, 6, 8 induded.
.Send 33 cents (coins) for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing. Send to The Ponthc Press. 124 Needlecraft Dept., P.a Box 164. Old Chelsea StaUon, New York 11. N.Y. Print plainly pattern number, address and zone.
New! New! New! Our 1960 lAtira Wheeler Needlecraft Book is ready NOW! Crammed with exciting, unusual, popular designs to crochet, knit, sew. ei ' quilt, weave—fashions, home fuP' nishings, toys, gifts, bazaar hits. In the book FREE-3 quUt terns. Hurry, send 25 cents for your copy. '
ment is working out. Give her every opportunity to tell you if “the children are too much for her." U she doesn’t tell you that she is dissatisfied with the present setup, forget about it.
.	★ W k
DEAR ABBY: I am ashamed and unhappy. Two years ago I met a man who seemed wonderful to ipe. He proposed to me and talked me into pleasing him, if you know what I mean. He promised to marry me and then I found out he was a married man.
He keeps asking me for more' time to get a divorce, and continues to visit me. I am a widow and want to get married before I am too old. Do you think he will ever marry me?
^ ASHAMED
DEAR ASHAMED: If you allow him to continue to “visit you’’—you are out of your mind. Of c6urse he won't marry you. Why should he? k k *
DEAR ABBY: Will you please help me before I end up on a couch with a psychiatrist? AH my life I had a figure everyone raved about and envied. Two years ago I had major surgery and I came out of it a walking skeleton. I know how I look, but my friends won't let me forget it.
One says, “Wear your hair
long and hide your thin neck.*! Another says, “(!ut your hair short so your face will look fatter.’’ Some’ say, “Wear a high neck dress and cover up the bones" and still others say, “Wear a low neck dress so your bust will look bigger." I could scream with all the advice I’m getting.
' The truth is I know I look terrible and nothfhgniSibks good on me and I don’t care to see anyone any more. I am GO years old and under a doctor’s care. I eat all the fatening foods I can and try to get plenty of rest. But how can I rest knowing I look so bad?
DISGUSTED
DSlAR DISGUSTED: You'll never gain an ounce, nor will you look attractive until you quit fretting about it. Let a hairdresser (who is impartial
a personal reply, write to Abby in care of ‘The Pontiac Ptess and cndose-« stamped, self-
Fbr Abby’s pamphlet, “What Every Teen-ager Wants to Know," send 25 cents and a large self-addressed, stamped envelope in care of The Pontiac Press.
Square Set Club Welcomes Dance Guests
The annual President’s Ball of the Square Set Dance Oub fea-ture4 a St. Patrick’s Day motif Satui^ay evening at the Herrington Hills School.
T don’t use a switch on their ankles like MY dancing teacher did,’’ fhe laughed. “My instructors and I are soft spoken with children. We try to teach by example. But that switch did help me pick' up my fe*t.**
Mrs. Wood, who is listed la the New YSrfc sorlal register, was gradoated la ItM from the
•	1. . o sv . ss .	vruiri ucuh:c i:iuu8 (luiiurru wciv
and weU-Inform^ tell you how ^he George Newtons of Do^-Do,
to wear your hair. Dress to suit yourself. And face your dd friends with a smile, k k k
DEAR ABBY: How do you get a little wart off your hands?
TRUDY
DEAR TRUDY: Dermatolo-gically speakini^-see a derma-
“Whal’s your problem?” For
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Day of Hill Hoppers, the Patrick Edwards of the Merry Mixers and Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Biakner of the Stetson Steppers.
Other guests were Mr. ami Mrs. Douglas Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Emery, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Rhaw, Mr. and Mrs. John Oakle.T and Mr. and Mrs.
Hospital Unit Prospects
Planning Guild
Plans for the formation of a hospital guild be outlined Monday at the Oakland County Medical Care Facility. G. W. Gibson, chaplain at the institution and pastor of (tentral Christian Church, will preside at the 1:30 p.m. meeting of representatives of organizations sponsoring religious services, visitation progranM or volunteer w6rk at the hospital, k k k
In addition to details concerning the guild, the group will discuss the need for volunteer help. The chAplain will show films of patients, the nuraing staff and hospitol activities.
k k k
Visitors will meet the hospital manager Thomas J. Leonard, superintendent of nurses
Alma Oakley. R N., and other members of the medical staff.
Anyone interested in doing volunteer work or in joining the guild Is invited to attend the meeting or to contact Evelyn Tillema, stqfl member at Uie facility.
Still others were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rowland, Mr. and Mis. Ort Munyan, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Ribich, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Krueger, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Janes and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Farr.
Welcomed as members were Sir. and Mrs. Walter Lakkarl. k -k k
Master of ceremonies was Sidney Olson. Callers were Frank Strubler, Jack Ralph, the Robert Spences, George Newton and Edward Farr.
-Decorations were by Mrs. Sidney Olson, with refreshments
Berean C\os\ Names Head
Fusty raeiabers of the Berean
SUSAN M. JOHNSON
Mr. and Mrs. Knute Arisen Johnson of Brooklyn avenue announce the engagement of dieir daughter Susan Marie to Ronald Leon Bunch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Markm Bunch ot Second avenue. The bride-elect is a sophonwre at Eastern Michigan University. Her fiance attends Western Michigan University.
United Pi^yteriaa Churdi met at die ShgWnaq court home ot Mr. and Mis.'lVyd Levdy FHday evening.
★.	★	A
Due t0 the reaignatiun of the president, vice president Lester Bell was elected'^to reidace him for the rest ot the term. Walter Hill was elected vice president, k	k	k
Devotions were	led	by	Orval
Robb	with	the	Levelys	in	charge
ot the refreshment period.
Sashay Club Holds Dance
Elwyn Hall was nwster of cermonies for Friday evening’s meeting of the Elks’ Sashay QuaMUe Square Daixte Qob.
, CaUers wwe John DePauw, Burnell McAUster, Oscar Denham, Bert Denham, Busadl Pope and William Schmiel.
Howard Bond led novelty dances.
(Chairman Norman Underwood, and his committee Michael Becker and Mr. Schmiel, presented a slate of officers tm election March 18, iwxt dance for the gorup.
Glris In New Yerk. Instead ef going on to college, she married
Her hu-sband, a partner in a Wall Street brokerage firm until the 1929 crash, now is with the National Broadcasting Co.
The couple has no c h i Ld r e n 'which,” she said, “Is probably why I’ve always been crazy about them, and worked with them." The dancing classes were an outgrowth ot a children's party and recreation program she once ran. k k ■ k"
The classes, held twice monthly, are devoted — in the case ot the smaller children—to the fox trot, rhumba (“six- and seven-ycar-dds do the rhumba beautifully"), polka, bunny hop and simple cotillion forms.
For older children there are lesooBs la the waits, eha eha, | samba, receiving line manners and the grand march tradlttonal ot debotante balls.	I
Her students have Included actor Conrad Nagel’s son, actress Barbara Britton’s two children; Ni^a-lie Trundy, the young socialite-1 actress; Pamela Lehman of thei New York investment banking family, and Karen Kriendler of "21" restaurant family.
•k k k
I find that professional people, busy as they are, seem to know more about what their cMIdren are up to than the society woman whose life is a series of lunch,' cocktail and dinner'parties," she said. “I would call socletyj parents, by. and large, neglectful,!.’
Zonta Elects '60 Officers
Officers for, 1990 were elected by members of Zonta International of Pontiac at Thursday evening's dinner meeting at Hotel Waldron.
They are Mrs. Howard Brooks, president; Mrs. Roy H. Riddle, first vice president; Mrs. Harold Soper, recording secretary; Mrs. H.'H. Smith, corresponding secretary; and Mrs. Katherine M. Baker, treasurer.
k k k
Ellected to the board of directors were Mrs. Irene Albright, Mrs. Neal Scott; and Mrs. Earl Floyd.
New members introduced were Frances Covert, Mrs. William C. McRath and Mrs. Charles S. Ren-wick.
YOU CAN BE SURE..
We are de(]icated to making you more beautiful • *.« ' Our staff
Cad	Eileett^
Golda ' Joanne Mary and Tony Call Vs for the Very LatosL Remember Thervi's no SnbeUtnto fer Professional Beanty Caro.
TONY’S
Main #loor . , 35 W. Huron
aUskUT lilskvr ter Teoj'i BoMteHMS Cerr
Shop
FE 3-7186
HAIR FASHIONS .. ,.for spring require a Professional Permanent
CALUE’S BEAUTY SHOP
m North Perry
PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL
llVi'S. J
Aorellaioats Aralloblo to Doy ot Cronloo Clojres Wtllo. phono 01 call to poison let ftoo Ponphtol
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IT'S THE FIT THAT MATTERS . . . FOR THE SHAPE THAT FLATTERS
Let Federal's expertly trained coreetieres fit you correctly and comfortably for the fashion figure you've dreamed about.
Pioneer Girls Sponsor Tea
'get acquainted tea” was held by the Colonist Group of the Pioneer Girls at Perry Park Baptist Church.
Taking part in a skit “Pioneers Yesterday and Today" were Norma King, Geraldine Kodp, Margaret Stuart, 'Jnda Armstrohg, Linda Llddy and Mrs. V.' 0. Shockiee, their guide.
Slides of Camp Cherlth were
town St the Tuesday evening meeting with narration by Mrs. Robert Dohner, fort captain.
Mrs. Carl Fifield presided at the tea service, assisted by Suzanne, IWaldbilUg and Judy Oi^on.
‘''Whkra $«rvU« and Qiiullty Art Suprtmt"
Open Friday 'til 9 P.M.
Beauty Salon
2ad Flotr, >tM»iM $N»t IMf.
FE 5-9257
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Evarlotting Mtmoriti
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•	BRJDAL GOWNS
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SIXTEEN
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1960
Saybrcx)k (3roup Meets for Lunch
Ttaii^ members and guests of tha Saybrook gnwp of First Congregational Church met Friday at the church for luncheon.
Hostesses were Mrs. Dora Daw-son. Mrs. James R- Ladd, Bdrs. Carl Leonard, and Mrs. Helen Teitgen.
The meeting was in thh Winifred Van Wagoner room of the chuidi. Mrs. Arthur Sweet, a guest, gave a book review.
Mrs. E. D. Moessner had charge of devotions, assisted by Mrs. William Vance.
Theme of this year’s program is ••What in the World's Going On? ”
Emerson PTA members are having fun planning their Circus Carnival Variety Show slated for 8 p.m. Friday. '~From4eft are L. I). McLauchlin, ivho will portray a “kewpie dollL. ff', Clancy, *'Pifrre the
Pizza Clown;" and Mrs. Donald Agar, a harem girl. Mrs. McLauchlin, at the piano, will play a "nuisance down.**	~
OES Has
Active
Meeting
Pontiac Chapter 228. OES, met Monday evening at the Masonic Temple on East Lawrence street.
Associate Patron Charles Moore presented a prafldency class consisting of Mrs. A- 4. Latozas, Mrs. Milton Walters, Mrs. Norvll Vincent. Mrs. Homer Smith and Mrs. Bittnell Drum.
' it	it it'
Named to the auditing committee by Worthy Matron Mrs. Mary Erickson were Past Patron Clyde Townsend, Post Matron Mrs. Kent Webb and Past Matron Mrs. Ira Campbell.
★ ★ ♦
Examining committee named was Past Patron Robert Calvaty, Past Matron Mrs. Kenneth Anthony and Past Matron Mrs. Cecil Diehl.
it * it
Attending friendship nights. will be Worthy Matron Mrs. Erickson at Oxford, Thursday; Sentinel Robert Puddy at Oak Park, March 24; and Associate Patron Mr. Moors at Farmington. March "29.
Warder ’ Milton Walters will a 11 e nd friendship night at Ortonville. April 6; Marshal Mrs. Duane Houghton at Milford's Whiting Chapter, Saturday: Worthy Patron Oarence Curry and Mrs. Charies Bonham, Ruth, at Areme Chapter Monday; -fmA Mrs. George Rugenstein, Esther at Hazel Park March 22.
★ ★
Reminder w made of tonight's Food Fashion Party at the Consumers Power Building by Associate Matron Mrs. Clarence Curry.
Named to the Ways and Means Committee by Clt^irman Mrs. Curry were Mrs! Paul Hagle, cochairman and Mrs. Floyd Levely, Mr. Calvary, Mrs. Vdma Baynes, Mrs. Joi^ seph Minton, Mr. Cutyy and Mrs. Erickson.
Charter, life and honorary members will be entertained by the chapter March 28.
Assisting chairman Mrs. Vincent, with refreshments were • Mrs. Russell Kneale. Mrs. Mabet Reynolds. Mrs. William Walters and Mrs. Rugenstein.
Baptist Women Okay Donations for Five Causes
The American Baptist Women's Missionary Society met in the Bethany Baptist Church for a luncheon ‘served by the Lydia Business and Professional Women's Group.
♦	it
Ctpitributlons were approve;^ tor five causes—the Spaniah-American Seminary in California; lor the America-forChrist home missions work; for Florence Latter, who works with the Spanish-speaking people of Michigan; for the International University of Japan, and for an incubator for a mission field in Africa.
Mrs. Orville Mans and Percy M. Walley, director of Christian education, presented devotions in
vocal dutt.
The Rev. Edward D. Auchard of the Orchard Lake Community Church spoke on Lent as a spiritual springtime. He said, the word comes from “lencten,” meaning the Seasonal lengthening of days. He also traced the formation of the New Testament.
The theme for Mrs. Auchard’i devotions was the pre-Easter trial of Christ before Pilate.
When choosing potatoes for baking, remember that flat ones bak^ through faster than round ones.
Named Chief of Dancers
Grand Square Dance Oub will iK headed by Kenneth Raymond for the 196(V61 season.
Other officers elected at Satuz; day evening's dance at Donelson Scixtol were WUliam Barrow, vice president; Mrs. Russell Beam, secretary; and Oem Cleveland, treasurer. Kenneth Hausauer and Leonard Cross were elected to the Board of Governors.
/ Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Carling, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Vasseliau. Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Bevan and Mrs. and Mrs. Phil HaddrOl.
Assisting the Ben Klinkhamers 1 the refreshment conunittee ere Mr. and Mrs. Emil Bruestle, Mr. and Mrs. Egon Walser and Mr and Mrs. Kenneth Raymond.
Post Auxiliary Dinner March 26
The Auxiliary of Chief Pontiac Post 377 of the American Legion met Saturday evening at the Lake Oakland post home.
Plans were made for the Birthday and Americanism dinner Mardi 26 at 6^ p.m.
Hoathkses fw the evening at which films were shown were Mrs. Marshall Charter stiff Mrs. Howard BILss.
PTA Elects Officers; Plans Supper
PhU Keils, father vhf^ president, presided at the Herrington School PTA meeting.
*
Elected to office at the Wednesday, evening meeting were Mrs. GMTge Beauchamp, president; Mrs. Ronald Black, mother vice president; Robert Jackson, father vice president; Mrs. Hazen Reynolds, teacher vice president; Mrs. Robert'Auer, recording aecretary: Mrs. Delbert Dunn, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Reginald Me-Niehbl, treasurer; and Mrs. Raymond King, member-at-Iarge.
Plaas were aanonneed for a Paacako Supper Marrh S3 from S:M to 7:M p.m. at the acbooL According to Charles Biegun, three pieces of playground equipment have been selected fbr spring purchase.
it it it-Arithmetic systems used in Pontiac schools were explained by Mrs. Mary Green and Mrs. Irma John->n.
Mrs. James Stevenson and Mrs. Patti Moore presided at the re-treridnent table. Refreshments were provided by Mrs. Moore'i first grade home, room mothers.
The attendance prize was awarded Mrs. Emma Oark's room.
A comical burlap horse promises to steal the show (U the -Emerson PTA's circus theme vari^y program Friday evening. Above ate teachers Howard Caldwell, left and Theodore Breher,
horse's head; and principal Lewis Sullivan, a clown, toppling from the frisky horse which has been "frightened" by the ferocious tiger at right, teacher Mrs. Gerald Livingston.
Strange Things to Happen
Gowns, fight-rope walkers, harem girl dancers—even lions and tigers—will roam the Emerson School Friday when PTA members present a Circus Carnival Variety Show at 8 p.m. it it it Parents and teachers will be main characters. Mrs. Lloyd Qsney is general chairman, assisted by Mrs. Warren Waldbillig who is in charge of scenery.
Acts will Ineinde a boys’ tumbling group from Lincoln Jniior High School, a “Tumbling Turn-
Conducdiig a rooking clast be Mr. Clancy, “PIcrre the PItsa Clown.”
Other acts will be a tight-rope performance by Mrs. Waldbillig; Irvin Jordan, strong man demon-itrations; and dancing harem girls, Mrs. Howard Haist, Mrs. Stevens, Mrs, Donald Smith. Mrs. Ferrel, Mrs. Lawrence Cuilis, Mrs. Keith Mortimore, Mrs. Donald Agar and
Choose Orchestra /or 'South Pacific
Orchestra personnel for the Pontiac Central High School production of "South Pacific” have been announced by George Putnam, supervisor of instrumental and secondary vocal music in the Pontiac ■chools.
Rehearsing with the cast for six performances March 25, 26. 28 and 30, and April 1 and 2 is a pit orchestra of Central students and Pofltiac Symphony InstrumentallBta.
★	★	★
VioIinUts are Robert M. Peterson, Carl Williams, Nancy Adams, Hona Hahn, Jiean Hut-tula. Mary Mitchell, Sylvia Rofe and Helen Thams.
The viola section consists of Arthur Goddard. Janet Reed and Mary Ellen Turton.
Michael Godwin and Barbel Sasso	will	play	cello,	with
William	Jurgenson	on	the
string bass.'
*	*	♦
Flutists Sheila Kinder and
Pamela Noren will join oboist Larry ReynneUs, and basaoon-1st Sara Wood in the Rogera and Hammerstein music.
Clarinetists are Vernon Schiller. Carl Shaw and Robert WoHers.
The cornet section conkists of Jac(c Coleman. Eldon Engle and Charles Laveque. William
Brown and Joseph Buono will play French horn.
Ompleting the braasea are Jantea Morris and William J. Young, trombones; and Brian Woolcock. bass.
Harry Jones, Frank Merwin, John Cummins and Michael Pierce are percusskihlstt for the catchy numbers.
the Emerson Circus Band with Lawrence Curtis. Delbert Burnett, Sam Dow, Ernest Thomdy-erafl, Raul Banebes, Mr. Clancy, Mr. WaldbUllg, Jack Ferrel and L. D. McLanchlln, conductor. Interrupting each act will be a ‘nuisance clown,” Mrs. McLauchlin. who wants to outdo every performer.
OTHER CLOWNS TOO Other clowns will be Principal Lewis Sullivan. Stephen Kives Jr., Robert Highfield and Charles Nash.
Several teachers will participate la activities dressed as animals. Mrs. Gerald Livingston, Mrs. Uly Walters and Mrs. Charles Brown will be Hons and Mrs. Harry Wallace a tiger.
A burlap horse named Calliope will be animated by teachers ThetK ' dore Breher and Howard Caldwell. J. Albert Henning will portray a "mad adentist.”
★ ★ ♦
Mrs. Albert Stevens and Delbert Burnett will assume roles of horse trainer and - lion tamer, respec-
Wilson PTA Elects Seven
Nominating committee Gle Husted, Mrs. Ethel Butler, Mrs. Melissa Brice, Mrs. Eva Jones hnd Mrs. Clarence Mack pfvsented a slate to PTA members Thursday afternoon at Wilson School.
Elected were seven persons— Mrs. James Hartsock, president; Mrs. Brijre, vice preoMeni: John Miner falber vice president, Mrs. Richard Davoiport, mother vice president; J e f e m e MIdtgard,
Mrs. Lawrence Amond. Mrs. Thomas McKeever will be the maharaja.
KEWPIE DOLLS TO DANCE Dancing Kewpie dolli will be| played by Mr. Gancy, Mr, Bur^ nett,' Mr. McLauchlin. Mr. Sanchez. Mr. Ferrel and Mr. Thorpdy-craft
Committee members are Mra. Robert Highfield, Mrs. Sam Dow, Mrs. Thomdycratt, tickets; Mrs. Kelcle Cooper, Mrs. Burnett, Mrs. Chester Weleh, Mrs. George Polasek and Mrs. WsMblllig,
Songs by second graders and a selection by cadet druiAmers were presented.
Health chairman Mrs. Garence Mack introduced speaker James L. Walker, assistant executive secretary of the Muscular Dystrophy Foundation. Mr. Walker illustrated his talk with a film.
Pr6ps a^ being handled by Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wightman. Mrs. McKeever is in charge of publicity and posters. Billboard pictures are being designed by fourth, fifth and sixth graders.
it it if
Concluding the list are Mrs. Thomas Johnson, programs, and Mrs. John Flanagan and Mrs. Stephen Kives Jr., music and sound effects.
lucky 13 Hanars Mrs. Sapelak
Mrs. Steve Sapelak wgi honored when the Lucky 13 Birthday Gub met Monday evening at the Selmar street home of Mrs. Alfred Burmeister.
Mrs. Saptflak, Mrs. Phfl Orenda and Mrs. John Bee were prizf winners. The group will meet in April at the home of Mrs. $ee.
Toi Dti't lUvB to Havt Gity Biir oi Daodnli Briif Back Hair Color ii 30 Dayi
Etob Bitor 30 Toari Groy
ACTUAL BEFORE A AFTER PICTURE NAME ON REQUEST WHEN APPEARANCES RAH SUPERB IS GREAT . Her* are ill# facli.*
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of T*I^HNroH Shoppinf Cnnter
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY.
COMPLETELY CLEANED, Gov't INSPECTED, TOP QUALITY
SEVENTEEN
SH FRYERS
WHOLE
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Halibut Steak
- 39c
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37«
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I
FhhStkksilPs 3'FtSs^;85c
Cranberry Sauce straineoVr ^ c^i 29c
Hodilockrillets*^»* » 39c Cleaned Smelt.	.	“•	23c
Rainbow Trout	.	.	«	59c
Africon Lobster Tails	“	1.49
CodFilleU . . .	.	.	“	23c
"SUPER.RIGHT”
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your
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29c . . “ 69c
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CORKED BEEF'T . 59^
FLAT CUT . . . lb. 69c	^
POINT CUT LB.
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^ 39^
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Libby's Pies
5 vs 99*
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dexo
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3	49c
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AQC	lorge Eggs	. . .
» QTrs 65c
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WITH PREMIUM IN PACKAGE Condensed all 75* . • vf»		Now Blua Cheer	ISc OH Ubal Liquid ^hiffon m	Far WathSay Ad Detergent 85c	6c OH lobal Lux Soap 2 it. 23c	On* Fra* With 4 Cokti Camay Soap ,5 S&. 41c '	PlaoMnily Scanitd , Lifebuoy Soap 2 is. 33c
7:
y.'r




¥
17
SglGHTERN
THE PONTIAC PRESS. ^VEPyESDAY, MARCH 16, 1960
;/
Pdri( Flooded by Gravel Pit
SHELBY TOWNSHIP — A giwel pit on top of a hill here overflo>^ its banks early this morning flooding a bowling alley, bar and other buildings in Green Glen Park.
mprojp^
four ta alx
tatcbes of water.
It did not reach the alleys troopers said.	/
At first, police inveat^tors throught the branch of the/Ointoii River nearby had overfed Its banks and th^ would hWe to warn Utica residents of ai/ impending flood.
2LAN CARD PARTY — Members of the Keego Harbor Businen and Professional Women's Club make last-minute arrangements for the group’s annual card party to be held at 8 p.m. Thuraday in the Roosevelt £l;?mentary School,
Keego Harbor. Seated from left are Wilma We^. club president, and Marjorie Billingsley. Standing from left are Lucille Dunaway and Eileen Van Horn.
3 Pickets Arrested
Contempt Action Set in Dynamic Strike
TROY — Omiit Judge darfcl The plant, which makes auto J. Adams has set a hearing ior parts, has been struck since Feb. 9 a.m. tomorrow on the request 15. The walkout was caused by a from Dynamic Manufacturers Inc. wage dispute.
to cite Electrical Workers Union.	---------------
Local 935, for contempt of a court . ,	r I
**' b.rrin, u"«AiKaiisas Ecliicatoi
strikebound plant.
The company also dainu that’ the picket line has been manned by more than the 30 strikers allowed by the temporary injunction Issued Feb. 36.
toSpeakatNCCC
Yesterday three pickets were' arrested by Troy pollee aa disorderly osndact charges. Aeeord-iag to Poltce Chief David Oral-
ad pounding their qlndows of cars
AVON TOWNSHIP Oakland County area educators, clergymen and civic rs wiil hear Geoi^e S. Benson, president of Harding College, Ark., speak at North ^Central Christian College Friday/evening.
The Arkan^ educator has chosen as his wic. "Freedom 1960-A Challenge/to America.
Robert Klingensmith. International representative of the union, said not more than one of the three hit a car window with his fists.
------— picked us Arkansan I
of the Year iii 1955, and recently C*rMXni^ was honored by the Freedom Fo-	ArC&il
rum Foundation of Valley Forge,
Pa.
Arrested were Billy L. Perryman, 31, of 439 S. Saginaw /^., Pontiac; Midtoel D. Gleesorf, 23. of 3973 Elwood St. Berkley; and Emery M. Childers, 20, of 1468 ,Ruby St.. Rochester.
In his speq^h, he will examine the dangers facing the government and individual freedom as presented by apathy, communism, social-ignorance and political dem-
The three stood mule yesterday whea they appeared before Troy Justtce of the Peaee Chartae H. Loaey. They were released oa flSS personal band each and Jury trial was set tor
Cuba Gets U.S. Protest
I SI.
Troy police report that all was quiet OB the picket line when workers entered
morning. Ten pickets were parading near the entrance, they said.
W. S. SWnXENBERO JR.
Newlyweds to Make Home in California
OXFORD-^Honeymooning in San Jose, Calif., are newlyweds Mr. and Mrs. William J. Switzenbeiig
The brtde is the Sormer Cuolyn Benraki, daughter of Mr and Mrs. C G. Berwald of Aberdeen, 8-D. The parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mr*. William J. Swttsen-berg Sr. of 101 N. Washington St.
The wedding took place in the First Lpthotm Church at Van Nuys. Calif.
Attending the bride was Joretta Kreiling. andT best tnan was the bride's cousin, Norman Dahme.
The newtyweda will reiM China Lake, CUlf., where bridegroom Is an engineer at the U J. Naval Ordiaanee That Owter.
PATRICTA ANN CROHBY
A June 25 wedding is planned by Patricia Ann Croaby and El-wyn C. Hillman. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. «nd Mrs. George Crosby of Davlsburg. Her fiance's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hillman, also of Davisburg.
At Walled Lake Council Meeting
JP Candidates ^Open Fire*
A lnch«s of Water Fbws into Bowling Alley on Ryan Road
About tour feet of water filled he valley below.
According to ROineo State pw Uce, the water entered the bowling alley and bar covering the
WALLED LAKE - The City Council meeting laat night ploded into a verbal free-for-all among three cancUdates for the Justice of the peace post over residence requirements for elective uiflee.
At the lime time the City Council accepted a four-page legal opinion on the question from attorney Ajbert Herzog.
Tho/' fireworks began when MarabaU Taylor, oeek fbo JP pool In
"Will Hear
Lathmp
Citizens
Instead they f^nd that one or two of the pit^between HamUn and 22-Mile twds had overflowed washing a SMoot gap in one and causing the/water to cascade into the vallej^
^ves
u4ter
/tpricUy
'estigating offlrers sold the iter receded Just aboat aa ^pdckly aa It had riaen and was gene about IS minutes after
Another fortunate thing was that the park owner, Edwin Reband, of 47140 Condor St., Utica,.had a sump pump at hand to use immediately.
There were six to eight indiea of water on the road leading to the park buildings at 49099 Ryan Rd. and the state poltce car became stuck, requiring a wrecker to pull
Power Failure Hits 700 Homes
Cable Blowout Affects
a city
resident for two yearn ns re-qnired la the city charter.
"The cards are stacked against me in bringing this up since I am running lor the JP post, but as a citizen and councilman I feel that the charter is being violated if Schndz is allowed to seek office," Taylor told the Council.
Herzog told Taylor that Wi
Lake was incorporated under the provision of the Home Rule Act of the state, which affirms that 'No provision of any city charter diall conflict with or contrtivene the provisions of any general la^ of uie state.’’
He said that ia his apbiton the
for eliglbUity to the office of JP in townshlpo to resMisnw in the
LATHRUP VILLAGE - Orcuit Judge H. Rusael Holland has aebed-uled a hearmg March 28 to decide whether a atizens’-.rgroup here will be allowed to intervene in a suit brought by the state seeking to compel the dty to build a separate storm water system.
At present Lathrup's storm and sanitary sewage js flowing together Into the Rouge River.
The hearing date was set whea the MioUgan Water Reaoarees Oommissiou asked drealt coart to order the cHy to toone hi bonds to build the separate system.
The state contends that without it. the city is violating a ^ou^-yea^

a the township » daya."
Rhee, His Vice President Win in Deadly Landslide
"The final determination can be made by the election board, and flien is subject to review in court,” Herzog aakl. ^
Even after Hettog ha^ read his opinion. Taylor said he felt that the diarter was being broken.
"It to dlaappomtlng to hear the amnion ^ I will continue to try to uphold the charter," Taylor udd.
At this point Schnels rose from iho aadtence.
"R hurts to sit here and listen to the utter disregard tor the law and the utter disregard for the Constitution.” Schnete said.
SEOUL. South Korea (AP) - -Syngman Rhee’s forces won the presidency and vice presidency of South Korea today in a landslide after a bloody election the opposition charged was rigged. The anti-Rhee Democratic party pipmlsed court contest.
Post-election violence flared anew. as demonstrators, disgruntled with the outcome of the voting, scuffled today with police In front of the Democrats’ Seoul headquarters.
At least 7 and perhaps up to ll persons were reported killed Tuesday in election violence. All but
old court order to stop pollution of,one died in q seven-hoiir battle
the river.
A bond issue of the same amount was rejected by voters here Feb.
16.
In its case against the city, the state contends, as a result of a suriiey, Lathmp Village must separate its storm and sanitary sewage to stop existing health haz-ards.t
The city argues, through its attorney, Everett Hayes, that the state cannot compel the dty to build a storm system as the decision rests with the fieople.
Central-Eastern Port of Pontiac
Electricity was cut off from moK than TOO homes in the central-eastern portion of Pontiac yesterday for 23 minutet.
Women's Editor of MSU Daily
A Birmingham junior at Michigan State University today was named women’s editor I school's daily newspaper, The iU be served at 7:30 Michigan State News.
is Connie Zekif, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Zeklt of 628 Bird St.
Sue Price, a junior from Ma-maroneck, N.Y., was named editor-in-chief.
TVo other girls, Pat McCarthy, a junior from Lansing, and Sharon Ooady, a sophomore from Cedar Springs, were appointed manag-harbor ing ^itor and dty editor re-'sp^ivcly.
Consumers Power Co. reported the cable failure at 1:40 p.m. Power was restored at 2:02 p.m.
E. 1^ Karkau, district manager. said tke toeaTaffiee of the utility company received IM calls from home owners during the brief emergency.
"Many more honMs were affected, of course,’’ aaid Karkau, "but by the time most people noticed, their power waa restoi^.’’
HAVANA « - The Cuban government has received a- formal U. S. protest against Prime Minister Fidel Castro's Implication that American ottldals were responsible for a munitions ship explosion in Havana March 4.
Karkau said the source of the trouble was a cable blowout on a IMoot pole on Irwin street near Sanford street. Normal deterioration was cited as the cause.
Home for Children Offers Open Houses
Activities Varied Tonight
4 Waterford PTAs Meet
Panel discuuions, study of voter
problems and a science show haVe been scheduled at tour Waterford Township Parent-Teacher associations tomorrow night.
Am open house will run 7:.'M) to 8 p.m. at Hudson Covert school, with pupil displays in all elementary sch^iolrooms.
A panel of the mibool dIsIrtcl’H traeherH will rxp|ala various aebool oervleeo offered pupils. Moderator will be Donald Smith. The panel includes Freldq Huggett. visiting teacher: Donald March, diagnoatklan; Mary Beth Wyes, speech correctionist; and BcmlCe Alien, school nurae.
DISPLAY SCIENCE WORK At Schoolcraft school, fhere will be a science display in jpH rooms from 7:30 to 8 p.m.
srience eduCaltoa for ebUdren.
Gueri tpebker wiU be D^. WU-llam Forbes, assistant profedwr of science education at Wayne State Unhrerrity. He will explain the importance to children of.understanding science. There will be an election of PTA officers.
There Au also be an election at the 8 p.m. meeting of Donrlson PTA
cies” at 7:30 p.m. at the Water-
ford Center PTA meeting.
WIIX ELECT OmnCERS Included on the panel are Waterford Township Police Juvenile Detective John Forbush. Township Fire Chief Elmer Fangimner, f?ivll Defense Director Mrs. William Amann and Sherifrs C*e. partment Water Patrol Director Donald Krett.
Mm. Oladys Rohrrr will be the moderator. There wUI alto be aa election of officer*.
Alter election of oficers i William Beaumont achoOl PTA' meeting at 7:30 p.m.,- a program titled "Where Is Your ChUd Dur-ing a School Emergency? be presented.
Chairman U Mrs. Joyce Thompson. The program will be followed by an open bouse and coffee hour.
Struck by Auto, Has Broken leg
After the Laura Itelt, t>Mgue of Women Vofrm, will speak ou the prao and rons uf,,
;:l"
Fred L. Riggs, 29. of 165 W. Rutgers St., was In satisfactory conditiono today at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital after being struck by a car last night.
Driver of the car that hit Riggs was JoAnne Folsom, 19, of 472 N. Saginaw St.
ROTAL OAK—It’s a really keen model of a racing car—and someone couldn’t resist stealing it.
But the thief gpt cold feet when he realized something of the value of his heist.
an avid sportsman, posted '< 11,000 "no questlans-asked" reward for the return of his model raced when It waa stolen last Thursday at Detroit i^^^tro-polUan Airport.
An unidentilied person left the stolen model at the airport reception desk yesterday, and walked out without claiming the reward.
Robbins said the racer had a
small gasoline engine ahd tonk>Narlh Hill PloZO Stofes
FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP Open house will be held two days week until November at the St Vincent and Sarah Fisher Home Children, It was announced yesterday.
Sister Rose Marie, administrator of the 60 acre* of schools, cottages and playgrounds on 12-Mile and Inkster roads, said tours wiU run Wednesdays from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. and Sundays from 3 tp 5 p.m.
"The primary purpose of tbs Home to to provide temporary residence, from three months to two' years, for children who for various reasons must live away from their homes," Sister Roae Marie said.
Haul's Too Big for Model Thief —That's Plane
between police. Democrats and students at Masan, 250 miles south of Seoul.
Rhee, whose Democratic party opponent died a month ago after stomach operation, won his fourth four-year term with a ord popular vote.
This time the 84-yeai>old president’s powerful Liberal party machine succeeded in electing National Assembly Speaker Lee Ki-poong to the vice presidency. Lee, 63. overwhelmingly defeated John M. Chang of the Democrats, who had best^ Lee in the 1956 vice presidential race by 200,000 votea.
LEE KI-POONO
Electtsd President
SAND LAKE (UPI)-Jam*i Her-In was elected presidmt of this Kent County village yesterday, along with four village trustees.
1 resent the attack on my mor-als and it to an attack," lie said.
When I decided to run for the office I told everyone involved that I did hot meet the city charter requirements, however I did know the state law," Schnelz said. .
Incumbent Justice of the Peace Herman Roth said he felt the City Charter could be upheld.
"There seems to be aanM conflict among attorneys on this
Herzog told the Council that the best thing to do would be to have the Election Commission set up a meeting and make a decision as soon as Schnelz filed his petition for candidacy.
Neither Taylor nor Roth have filed petitions for the office yet.
"U after the meetlag one of the eamUdates waats ta take It to eonrt. they wiD have several weeks before the elecUoa,” Her*
Tm too much of a gentleman take it to court," Taylor said. ‘The cdurts are not just for criminals,’' Herzog* said. "They
can decide an issue like this."
I feel like a criminal after to-^.ht," Taylor retorted. I wouldn’t be that small to make a court issue out of it."
Well, I may be just that small and take it to court," Roth said.
Jim Robbins, owner of a plas-
r anil
The vipe presidential race ;of major importance becaiwe ot I the pouibUlty the aged president might not live out his term. But Rhee is much more vigorous than Lee, who has difficulty speaking and walking and has rarely left his home in the past two years.
reportedly has a nerve disorder as well as rheumatism.
Returns from 178 of South Korea’s 187 counting districts gave Rhee 8.940,823 votes. Lee 7,797,940 arid Chang 1.800.965.
For re-electlori Rhee needed votes from only one-third of the nation's 11,194,490 voters. His total] was far above the 5,046,437 votes he polled In 1956, when he was oppoaed by another dead Democrat and the leader of a since-1 outlawed party.
AHENTION;
Thank You Good People--
Wn at Hoffman's ort lost for words to express our foolinf about the tremendous response we received et lost week's beef
five engineers "thousands hours" to builiL It was a model of the winning Indii car of last year.
Joining in Dollar Days
•'The key point here Is that the children of one family can placed together." she added.
passenger automobile uses about 75 pounds of rubber for its tires and about SO pounds or more for engine mountings and other
DORCAA KOEMTER ,
Mr. and Mrs. George Koester of 1021 Oakwood Rd.. OrtonvUle. announce the engagement ol thrir daughter Dorcas to Ahryn Dopp. Ha to the ion of Mr. and Mie. Wifour Dopp of Mount Qemens. A lata sunmier wedding Is planned.
iOHBasvUDSBU COOfOlU
She told Pontiac police shr had just dimmed heV headlights and didn't see Riggs' walk in front her. The acddept happened
A panel of Oakland Coimty olfl- on W. Kennett road near Baldwin ciak wOl diacuas "Get Acquainted avenue. Riggs auffeied a broken With Cotpmuojty Protective Ageo-lleg.	'
KING
lostallation Center
UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEE •
«0 1 Titogrepb M.~Opp- Tal.H«r«i
Orm Doily 9 fo <	Fridoy 9 to 9
THIS COUPON IS WORTH 100 Ttwofi Um Pucksso
$^00 Ttworf y of MHifl IM Bit
Cat
rm IS mrnm oistalution
GOOD AT OUR <0 1 TtLIGRAPlI LOCATION ONLY
' 955B55BSHBB5BBB55EHBIHHBI
ROCHESTER — North Hill Ptasa storea near here are joining ta tnuHttonal area-wide Dol-tar Days, Frank Easterbrook,
today.
Special aalea are being festered at the shopptag renter during the Frldsy-Saturday event.
PAYDAY
LOANS
$50 for 2 wks . . . only 70i\
Other loans to 1500 with 24 roos. to repay
CAW YOU	MTAT m	■WAT IN
•KUVt	a WHKS	4 Winn
tf».M	911.11	111.70
•RW	10.70	11.40
ASSOCIAnS
loan company
in DRAYTON PLAINS: 4494 Dixio Hwy. CALL: OR 3-1207
in PONTIAC:
125-117 N. Sofinow CALL: FS 2-0214
2255 S. Toleproph Mkh. Miracle Milo CALL: Ft 8-9641
-V
* NO MONEY DOWN
f We lie RtpMtiag Last Wook'i Fricei—So ETeiyono May Tako IdTiiUgo ol Tkofo SaTiagi!
Jifst Say "Charge It" ,12 EASY PAYMENTS!
LIGHTWEIGHT STEESS
Bor-H Stoll Fed
Full Sides
Avf. Wt. 225-lbt.
Bor-Vl Stnor
mND Quarters
Avg. Wt. 115-IIm.
Bor-H Stoll FmI Steers
FRONT Quarters
Avg. W»- 120-lbi.
45i
49t
42i
Thes* lar-H Steers am pressed e«t ef Mualler ceHle. Wa ceei-I yeur heri buyl White Pece—Tep Qeelityl Pulty
White Pece—Heavy Steer Heavy Sletr^ill Siies Avf. Wt.—250 Ue.	
White Pece—Tap Quality Hind Quarters Avg. Wt. 115 tot.	
White Pec*—Heavy Stoat Front Quarters	■*45’
All Bool Pit - WrappoA aai Skaip Fioioa Fioa
Au riEEni oiDns ruuT sguAimiD
**You.Must Be Happy’*
Speciol Attention GiTen to Porty Orden
Hoffman's Oaklond
PACKING HOUSE
716 Glenwbod Ava.	FE 2-P114
^-t
.1
''e
V X'-
THE PONTIAC PRESS, A\TEDNESDAY. MARCH 16, 1960
NINETEEN
Thurs.-Fri.-Sal
MARCH 17-18-19
Mort ond Mora Pcopit, Every Doy, Are Shopping ot Mirocio Mile Shopping Center

Newest Spring Styles and Merchandise for
r	'
the Easter Parade!
Here's o hiorty welcome to Spring in
every deportmeitt ot Mirocle Mile Shoppfng Center! A colorful blossoming of exciting	.	>
new merchondise . .. designed to | brighten your entire Spring wordrobe!
mimcle mile
shopping center
*• **w» mp <“""f «r	2;,^,	’’•I—
MIRACLE MILE....

ALL STORES OPEN BY 10 A.M. fo^PwM. DAILY



/r,

TWENTY
THE PONTIAC PRESS, ^VEDNESDAY, I^IARCH 1«. l660
Upgrading City Plumbing Code
r	_
Motherwell Convicted, Death Penalty Sought
-.n	ithat a Circuit Court could not in-
Community Pays ,ulre into the motives of a town's
Negro for House He Tried to Build
DOVWIEVILU:. Caijf. tAP-)-
a SlMck<tltaaistsa»
•	Watar-ltadstaat • Nae^M»t»srt«
• Swaea Sacand Htad
•	Malal IsHMian lead We Mnrica what wa i This'watch docs not hove to be sent to the factory to be senfkedl
FBEE ENOEAVING ON ANY PURCHASE
Miracle Mile ShoppipK Center Bsiasr Area
Engineer Tells Landry Technical Standards
Being Revised	jconvictcd of .one murder Tuesday
night, Larry Lord Motherwell to-City Engijjecr James Cariisle'day found himself the target of disclosed last night that he isl prosecution efforts to send him to
.	1. IHp phiimhd»r hv aIia nrnvinff
planning to upgrade some tern-
nicaj standards in the State Plumbing Code, which is under conside: ation for adoption in Pontiac.
MINOS WATCH
LOU-MOR
JEWELERS
Carlisle told City Commissioner Robert A. Landry that this is why the administrative staff had delayed placing the measure before the Commission for final approval.
He said the code may be ready lor action next Tuesday.
Landry
the gas chamber by also proving he murdered his second wile and defective child as well.
The 42-year-oId >4(ashington.
I.C., construction wc^er was convicted by a Sierra County iury murdering Pearl Putney, widow, in 195g after chaufteuring her across the country on a "last tour.
Shortly after the Jury of nine women and three men brought in
Ing that the
railed for .need ask-
be code be on ne city	Motherwell’s sentenCe-
ST. LOUIS. Mo. tfi-The suburban Creve Coeur Board of Alder-imcn has approved payment of [$31,000 to a Negro doctor who tried sisted he was innocent. No direct	>” ‘***
evidence was produced that he community, killed Mrs. Putney, or that any-j	♦	*
one today knows precisely how or! The payment to Dr. Howard P. where she died. Her bones w-erc Vehable is for his land and partial-found Aug. 15. 1959. scattered jly completed home. Work oir the
Board of Aldermen.
Mayor John T. Bieme said the house wiU be used as a clubroom and the land for a ptayground Creve Coeur i» • suburb of St. Louis, It has 2.1M0 residents. Including Sen. Stuart Symingtjn ID-Mo).
along a logging road 27 mDcs east:house was stopped in 1956 when of here in Turner’s Canyon. TTiei Creve Coeur sought to condemn identified through den-1 the land for a park.
16 Senators Tie Selves to St. Pat Tomorrow
WASHING’rON (AP) - Sixtwn senators will wear special ties Thuraday to mark^St. Patrick ! Day and their own greenness.
The sixteen are freshmen sens-
Dr. Venable filed a cros8-clRim;tors. The wife of one, Sen. hislcharg^ng racial dlacrimlnatiwi. E. Most (D-Utah). tas
His defense consisted m lusiciiarKins mviai -------------------------------------— -	■
claim that he did not know what The St. Louis Court of Appeals,green, continental-styled bow-ues happened to Mrs. Putney after | upheld Creve Coeur’s contention for all of them.
Aug. 15. 1958. when he left her' in Las Vegas, Nev.
bo^s ^April	I"* death or life impriwmmcnt-his
public hearing an the upcoming	announced they!
urban reHewnl project	'
LARRY MOTHERWELL
No Hoi^Left for Five
of their Qyd^ale Place
U
ADVERTISED IN GOOD HOUSEKEEPING
the most comfortable shoe available at
I would seek the death penalty by jyi,
Tt was because of the project showing that Motherwell mur-i that we revised our beating and dered his seixmd wHe. Sarah, and	^
building cedes. Now we Tnust^their mongoloid child. Heather.
clearly demonstrate we have	w ★	♦ ’	i*"	♦ w ♦
ivised OUT plumbing regulation*. X half-dozen witnesses would be	.
too, or the people in my district|brought from Frederick, Md„ said'
will be unwilling to approve the Dlst. Atty. Gordon I. Smith ^nd	Heather whose
urban renewal proj^," said Asst. State Atty. Gen. Lynn Comp-|®°“y fo^ in ar pet cemt-Landry.
The state <»de was brought Into the spotlight after the city's own code was subjected to strong criticism as ’’vague and Inadc-ijuate."
Mirocl* Mil* Sheppinf Canter
Fire Destroys Detroit Plant
tery near Frederick, Md., Nov. .19, 1958, during the search for TO PRESENT EVIDENCE - IMrs. Putney, Motherwell said the "The burden of proof no longer child had strangled to death June will be ufwn us. We merely pre- 24, 1954. ai^ that he had buried sent It (the evidence* to the Jury,her in a panic. A grand Jury rc-and let them decide, ” said Comp- fused to Indict him.
I The jury deliberated seven j
Container Factory on Strike; Suspect Arson. Call In Detectives
iners
13 Bodies Discovered and Search for Others Goes Grimly On
Mothcrweii'g^ chief defen.se attorney, Johrt T. RegCs of Washington. indicated an appeal would be automatic.
“We didn't Expect to win at this level." he told a reporter.
"It wasn't what I expected," said Motherwell ai he was led
hours—not counting three hours out for lunch, dinner and re-reading of evidence—after Judge Warren Steel charged them to return one of two verdicts; acquittal or first degree murder.
They were considering a mass
away to a suicide watch at the of purely clroimstantlal evidence county jail.	|in the month-long trial. Mother-
His second wife, Sarah, was i well admitted he had been a liar, found floating face up in the batli-'a con man and a Lothario but in-
DETROIT (UPI)-A five-alarm (ire destroyed the strikebound
8,852 to 10,800 Cars
,CleveIand Container Corp. here today, causing an estimated $750,000 in damage.
Arson iiquad detectives were called in Immediately to determine the. cause of the blaze which spread quickly through the paper carton manufacturing company.
’The factory has not been In operntlon slnre J»n. 4, when mrmbeps of United Auto Worker* local 174 went on strike In a nenlority dispute.
Normally the plant rmployecl
LOGAN. W. Va. «KUntil they found the first body, searchers held some hope that the 18 men trappel in Holden coal mine 22 might slip be alive.
By early today the bodies of 13 had been hauled out of the gas-filled passageways and the last wisp of hope for the others was gone.
But the search went on. Somewhere in the dank honeycomb of tunnels were the other members of the digging party imprisoned March 8 by a cave-in and fire nearly three mil^ from the mine opening.
Twa In the original groap of 39 scrambled to safety monoonto alter disoovery of the Ilro, op-paremtly touched oft when tolling slate snapped an electric trolley wire.
Rambler Falling Behind Falcon in March Sales '
DETROIT UP—Falcon continued to outsell Rambler during the first 10 days of March but fell behind the sales rate of the previoiif month for the first time since its introduction last October.
Falcon hod estimated sales of about IS.8M In the first 1» day*
about 65 persons, (wo-thlrds ofi of March, of which nine were them women.	“
Two UAW pirkel.s were Wall heated hut near the plant's entrance said Angelo Gentile, plant superintendent, w'ho said he left the plant about midnight.
Underground N-Test Set for New Mexico
.Sparks and flaming paper were blown by 15-mile-an4»our winds onto the loofs and porches o4 nine wooden houses across the street from the plant. Firemen sprayed streams of water on the houses “ keep the fire, from spreading.
In the last 10 years the volume
WASHINGTON UP-The Atomic Energy Commission today nounced plans to prepare for an underground nuclear lest In New Mexico next year.
The commission described the project at a step in a program
selling days, for a dally average of l.$K. In the oompamble period of February total sale* were about 1S.1M with a dally average of l,t».
Rambler sales -in the first 10 days of March were 8,852 compared with 8,220 in the first thh-d of February.
Dodge reported il.s best 10-day period since July 1957. with 9.931 sales. In the first 10 days of February the Dodge total was 9,771.
Rambler and Dodge also are nuining ahead of year-ago figures. Rambler solfl C72 more ears this year than last; Dodge sold 6.7C7 more.
’The auto Industry normally charts Us sales progress Jn 10-day segments with each succeeding 10 days of a month improving. Generally sales have been running 10 to 12 per cent ahead of 1959.
Jack Matheson of nearby Hoi-! den, W. Va., in the rescue team' which found the first 13 bodies, said death by asphyxiation came early for the men in the -Island, Creek Coal Co. mine eight miles from the Kentucky border.
It might have been caused by smoke from the fire or by poison ^ coal-gas permeating the abandoned mine section to which the victims had fled.
Passing up three carved-out room* In which they might have sealed themselves off from the deadly fume* until help came, they had dashrd lor an opening In the abandoned seetton. But there was no opening. It had been barred within recent weeks by the crumbling wall* and low ceiling In that part of the mine.
"There's no doubt." said Matheson, 34,' a former section boss of the digging, "that they've been dead since a lew hours after the lire."	I
Named Climax Head
CLIMAX (UPD-^Howard Dral-lette was elected Qimax village president Monday.	I
TUim<f0»IRIW
FINAL CLEARANCE
million dollais to 20 bm^ dollam peaceful purposes Including accortii^ to the Buslnesi Mail I	^ electric power. |
Foundation.	|	authorization I
to detonate the nuclear explosive—j
Reody Mode
DRAPERIES
Originally to Si2.95 Pr.
Aisoifed Dreit
FABRICS
Rrg. 59c ip $1.98 Yd.
100
4 ‘T
Wolhoble Toilo^td
BEDSPREADS
Originally	\ ^>*11
$14.98	^
■AC
Diiette Curtains		CAFE i	
Originally $4.69 Pr.		CURTAINS	
5|99h.		' Valaas la 14.69 Pr. 99*' 1’	
Whilt Th«y Lott		Wkila Thay Lad	
Y
RDSfICK
23

DRAPERY
SHOPS
packing the punch of 10,000 tona ofj |TNT—will beuptoPresldenti E^nhower.
But Sen. Qinton P. Anderson (D-NM), chairman of the Joint Senate: House Atomic Committee, said he understands the shot is planned for January 1961.
The
SPRINOAIEB
’The vtty mood and manner of Spring is reflected in this superb lightweight Air felt. Note the always iQtilierini leleicope crown.
too. the smertly contrasting woven band. And—the drape bow highlighted with a flight of swallows in antiqued Sliver. Your choica of Spring shades.
•is.to
HiitotMgr€h
I
B. Tsiwrypk st I Mr ^’^SsssrsisiSk M. I t r.M. Dsiir I
Off to a
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lOSnR IBOWN SHOES'
Buster Browns, naturally ... the best-fitting shoes a baby cpn wear. They’re shoes tlwt accomnradate every toe wiggle and move 6f a baby'a foot. Always fitted to your baby by experta well-veraedintheBuater Brown 6-Point Fitting Plan.
$2w f S5W
BUSTER BROWN
r«f *tsr fOK BAbrs rctr •

.CHILDREN'S SHOP
iBftaU' ssd ChlMrsa i Wtsr.-^hiS-TnBi Butter ansa BIwtt-Belte T*rt Ctntar S. Tatefrapli al SqeOte Lk. Rd. I Dims snd |. C PwMMf PI S.fSU >ally to	----
to AJR. to • P.M.



4
44
TIME TO SAVE!
at New Gaiter Elaetroaicsl
RCA Victor
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Th* Indnur. SisMrtily nrvtd eshiiMt Rust,
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brou Iriis. Dnie* la Hw Raail IradiHaa •! RCA Viclar aioiter^rafliaiaaibia. 3 ‘ ^ fiaisbm. Magtl 3I0-K.2S.
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S. S. KRESGE COMPANY

THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 16,1960
TWENTY-ONE^
Missile Sends Damage Report of Target Area
own IV transmitter In a capsule. As the missile plunged toward its target, the capsule was paractant-ed from tt.
WHITE SANDS, N.M. ^AP)-NATO troops fired Tuead|iy a mis^ equ4>ped with a vkse to let field commanders know instantly what	it has
A tdevised broadcast of damage done by the missile was transmitted to an Army ground control station 75 miles away.
The Redrtone. a ballistic missile with a aOO-mile range, is built by Chrysler Oorp. The portable TV transmitter was made by the The Redstone Missile carried hs'R«fio Corporation of America.
at Sibley’s Miracle iile
Death Notices
EDMUND DfHULN The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. 'Ibursday at the Huntoon Funeral H«ne lor Edmund Doran. 79. of 239 Rnssdl St Funeral service adO be held at 10 nt Friday at St l^ncent de Piul Catttolic Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery.
A former carpenter, be leaves wo sons, Harold of Toledo and Edward Merrlfeld of Pontiac, whom he raised; two sisters, Mrs. Frank (Margaret) Roberts of Inkster. and Ella Doran of Saginaw; (our brodwrs. Frank of Detroit Lawren of Owosso, Wismer of Omar and Miles of Saghiaw.
Doran died of pneumonia
City's Posts to Note Legion Anniversary
Monday after an illness of two
itality
SHOES
SHOES «
famous for fashion an4 fit
the thing about calf is..
Word hu been received of the death of Lillian J. Gorthy of 1585 Ford Court Grosse Pointe Woods.
A former Pontiac resident, she was a receptionist for the Grosse Pointe Board of Education many years and a member of the Methodist Church at St Clair Shores.
Surviving is a sister, Mrs. Thomas Adams of Grosse Pointe Woods.
Miss (Worthy died March 7 In Detroit Memorial Hosiptal after brief illness.
Stfvice was at the Verbeyden Funeral Home, Detroit, with burial in Roseland Park Ometery.
$14.95
Such t pfeisant-to-the-touch leather--here, cut in exciting new lines, presented in exciting spring colors. Its soft-glove smoothness is so gentle^n the foot, takes so beautifully to the special freshneu of today's fashion. Choose yours today. All styles .available in a wide range of sizes and widths.	$12J5 tO $14J5
Mkkigaa'i lirgMl florskalm Daalar
Miracle Mile Shopping Center S. Telegraph at Lk. Rd. Open Datty 19 AM. to 9 P.9L
The American Legion is celebrating tto 41st birthday this we^, and Pontiac posts are joining the nationwide obeervance.
Both Cook-Nelaon Post No. 20 snd Chief Pontiac Post No. 377 have scheduled events lor Saturday night.
ULUAN J. GOBTHY
MRS. TED WHITE
Orders Prisoner to Pay Cost of Transpqrtation
The Cook-Nelson Post, at 206 Alburn Ave., win hold a Mrthday dinner, and the Chief Pontiac Post, 4819 Edgewood St., Waterford Township, will stage a dance.
The eeoMwd
t. The pest wU bsM a birthday dteer tbs Isltowtag Saturday. March 8A
HlgMWnlng the ‘Gook-Ndson dinner wID be the appearance of Lewis C. Biicker of Coldwater, commander, Michigan Department of the American Legion.
Bricker wiU be the featured speaker.
The 54-year-old insurance man has been active lor many years in veterans’ organizations.
During World War II, he. son. two brothers and a sister sen^d in the armed forces. AUXILIARY IN CHARGE
The Ladies Auxiliary will have charge* of the dinner, and Mrs. R(^r Dean will be chairmaii and
Arts Academy Meeting to Be Held at U. of M.
Mrs. Ted (Elizabeth L.) White. 42, a former Pontiac resident, died this morning at her home, US6 S. Hickory Ridge Rd., MUlord, after long illness.
Mrs. White was a member of Emmanuel Baptist Church.
Surviving are her husband; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Allen; three daughters, Mrs. Robert Patenberg of., (^ver . Qty, Calif., Mrs, Larry Windes in Mate and Martha White in Califbmla. and two grandchildren.
Service will be held at 3 p.m. Friday at the Riqhardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford.
Serving eu the dlaner committee are Mrs. Homer BIsaey, Mrs. L. Gladys WUUsms, Mrs. Ray ieweQ and Mio. Russell Tbomp-
ANN ARBOR (UPD-Tbe 84th annual meeting of th&.Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters will be held at the University of Michigan March 24, 25 and 26.
The meeting is expected to attract about 1 000 persons and at least 265 individual papers will be presented by (iadefhy members.
Guests at the head table wOl include Mrs. Grace R. Johnson, Michigan Department auxUiary president; Mrs. Ralph Bogart, ISth district president! and WUUam Plummer, 18th district comman-
wnXlAM L. OWENS
IMLAY erry — Service for William L. Owens, 71. of 13^ Rule Rd., was to. be at 2 p.m. today at Muir Brothers Funeral Home with burial in Imlay Township Cemetery.
Mr, Owens died Sunday ia St. Josei^ HospitaL Sarnia, Ont., after a long illneu. He was a retired mason.
Surviving are his wife Mamie; three daughters, Mrs. Helen Whit-kopf and Mrs. Jane Young, both of Imlay City, and Mrs. Audrey Jenkins of Santa Rota, C^if.; eight grandchildren; a sister and a brotter.
Mrs. James McKee, Cook-Nd-son auxiliary president, will present the post a birthday cake and gift. Mrs. Robert Conant, commander, will give the response.
Wants to Get Carole Out of Jail on Bond
Deaths Elsewhere
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Dr. Bruce K. Wiseman, 63, professor and chairman of cihio State University’s Department of Medicine, died Tuesday. Dr. Wiseman, who suffered a stroke March 3. Joined the OSU faculty Itt 1831 and attained a full pr^eaanrihlp in 1938. He was bom in South Bend, Ind.
LEWIS C. BRICKER
CAMBRIDGE. Masp. (API-low an escaped prisoner, if esp-tutwd. can be charged the cost of brings him back behind l>ars.
Take the case of burglar Ronald Mules, who escaped Maasa-chusetts Reformatory in 1958. He was arrestrtk at Jefferson Qty, Mo.	^
Superior (^rt Judge Frank J. Donahue Tuesday ordered Mules to pay $591 in $50 monthly instalments the cost of xeturoing him to Massachusetts. Repayment begins after he comptetes a five-year tdm lor'burglary.
4 Tired Red Sailors Decline Frisco Tour
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Four Soviet sailors who drifted seven weeks on the Padfle Ocean were still too tired today to use the keys to the city psesented by Mayor (jeorge Christopher.
The quartet, picked up March by the USS Kearsarge after they had been blowis-.out to sea off Etoforu Islond in the Kuriles o Jan. 17, are resting in smote They declined (Kristopher's offer of a city car for sightseeing, saying they were too tired.
The Kearsarge put them ashon via helicopter 'Tuesday and they were greeted with embraces by Soviet Emb(	'	* “
Anstoli A. Ksrdasbev, '
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Carole Tregoff’s attorney’s will try to get her out of Jail Thursday.
The prosecution is determined > keep her behind bars.
(Krole’s three lawyers met with Superior (Kurt Judge John Barnet behind closed doors Tuesday to discuss the procedure for getting Carole released on ^1, dismissing charges against her or getting a separate trial for tbe pretty ex-model.
They will make formal motions Thursday—all of which Dist. Atty. William McKesson has said be will oppose.
Big passenger liners often hold more than a million gallons of fuel oil and take more than ' a day to fuel.
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:tymyTY-Two
the PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 16, 19C0
^ Britiah fatvortor Frederick Wal-jalso cune up with the name "lino-)on auccenhiUy made the flrat leum” aa the floor covering liMdeum In the eariy VtfOt. Helmoetiy oaddized Itmecd oiL

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DETROIT (UPD-Big Rapi^ will be the first city in Michigan to use a new all-numeral telephone calling system which is predicted
the country, ac(^rding gan Bell Telephone Co. officials.
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New All-Number Dial System' to Make State Bow There
The new system, using numbers instead of the standard two-letter, five-numeral combination, will be used in Big Rapids in June when that city converts from manual to dial smTice.
faster than the letter-number method noed In most dial s]nr~
Other communities in Michigan
scheduled to convert to dial service will be among the next to gel all-number calling," the spokcs-
There are no immediate plans »r changing the system in cities which currently have the standard letter-numeral combination, but telephone 6mpany officiala predict the new system will be in general use across the country some time in the future.
Hm LIFESIZE Roiiftfiltdtr—Viawfindtr ^nd fisHiws and toft •xpoaurt for you!
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They'll Write Music hr 12 High Schools

VP THE LADDER -w "I want some respect,
I want to be an^actress.” Those words set the stage for Marilyn Monroe's walkout on Hollywood in 1955 at mid-point in her first decade in films. . She’s shown, left, at New York’s Actors Studio where she ^rked hard to make her dream true. Result: a series of film hits, including the box
office sinash.^ "Some like It Hot,” in which the captivating Monroe smile, center, was a sensation. Marilyn, right, as she prepares to rriiearse her newest picture, “Let’s Make Love,” and to make the Monroe "doctrine" rule Hollywood for some time to come.
Carson City Rejacts School Tax 3rd Time
.4
1958 a special school operating^ levy.
The charter was approved, Mon-CARSON CITY (* — This South- bv « vot« of 200 to 110. Carson east Montcalm County community Qty voted Oct. 27. 1968, lor status
has approved a city charter ond!" ■M«^hUe.
. j	a..	ij . school board members said cur-
elected former village presldentL^^ ^jbacks soon would be Louis Hogan as-mayor, but reject-1 announced in view of a J16.000 oped for the third time since July! crating deficit.
Jjim
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LOSING (UPI)-Cireult Judge diaries L. Brown, Traverse City, has been named again by Gov. G. Meiuien Williams lo the Michigan Veterans Trust Fund Board of Trustees. The appointment term ends Feb. 25, ^1962 and does not re<iuire Senate confirmation.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16. i960
ONECflUMl
TWENTY-THREE
The Road hy Will Oiygler
Fail Is Just .Blind Belief
By WOL 0VB8LEB
We cannot (jeaUy go abend In anything before we are dtfpoeed to accept thia simple, fiAdameii-tal fact: we do not know everything.	j
We start on the road to BdOi by groping, by feeling oar way, unsure of what we are finding, unaware of all that is understandable. We have not advanced to the point where all answers are a«aU-able to us.
A eUM was sick, Witt a tumor
tho cMM’s Hfe. TWo wps a lovely little girt, one could wowler. ‘•Why her? Why bring into tte wbrid a lovely
We cannot play at being God Doottig all thina, 'sood and e^ nor does it make sense to tom from His strength in our failure. Wa can still seek to wrap our-aeiVes in His Imt, in the perfect of lUs inv
The parents prayed for their child, they asked,the help of clergymen, to augment tte work of tte physicians while day after day the child's condltian grew worse. And then in the darkest nKunent, the eight-year-old girl spoke from her bed of pain, “Don’t cry, Mcmunie. God will take care of me.’’
When she died, this littie eight-year-old child, these parents did not turn from God.
grueling, a struggle wlth'tte deepest emotions of which humans Capable.
★ ★ *
It is not easy for them to accept or discuss such a seeming defeat as tUs. Their little girt died despite their fervent prayers. WhyT
THE ANSWER?
We do not know the answer to this agonizing question of parents or loved ones of thousands of children, young women, young men.
The dead are strewn across the , battlefields of a thousand and we do not know why Mankind through ^ ages with the qUf^on: Why? Why?
Ohe group will say that it not God’s wiU that this child of eight should live. Another argues that it was His will, but that some how the healing power was not reached.
Otters will say that no suck divine power really works; whea the body k Infeeted too badly, nothing eaa be done. Anottw calls H tho workh«s ol Satan the Devil, evH lacaraate.'
. Beyond words is the simple truth of all religious faith: We are tnor tal; we are not God, and there are things we do not know and may not know for centuries or longer.
Eletriclty has been in the atmosphere from time immemorial. Radio and color television were possible a century post, or ten centuries; Jet planes and atom bombs and man-made satellitos were possible, bad we but known, dr a it
How far we have come in such a handful of centuries, such a brief secood in time, in our knowledge of the merely material things around 4is!	'
IloW much more, how vast, an area of ignorance have we still to overcome, still to unfold in terms of the spiritual universe?
True faith Is not la wpat we know, bat la what we do not kaow and yet believe.
Our trust is in the intuitive certainty that God's will for ns is good, that if we fail it is our failure, not His. It is in the awareness that we are not God and cannot hope to be God.
And yet we must at the same
BELIEVE AS A CHILD To do this we must be a child believes, without questioa reservation. We must believe with the full and overflowing force of love for God and His creatfoo. b.ttm yet an answe ir not knowing?
Lazarus was dead, and Jesus, his friend, wept before his tomb where Lazarus had lain dead four di^.
And Jesus told Mary to have them move away tte stone, and He lifted up His eyes and said, “Father, I thank thee that thou has heard me.
“And I knew that thod heorest me always; bat beeaoae ef Ike people that stand by I sold It. that they may believe ttat thou hast seirt sae.
"And when he thus had spokes he cried with a loud voice, laz-us, come forth.
"And 1w ttat was dead forth . . .”
#	* A
Some who read may even now doubt tte authenticity. They may call it only an ancient story out of an elden book.
But otters may recognize tte covenant, power that one day we may lean to use more fully, the spiritual force of perfect love and perfect faith; ani perfect cord, in invincible foroe ttat query even our implacable ani nist, death itself.
It is • promise far 'tMnoiTOW;
(To bo eeatiaaed)
Oh,my aching backi
strtve for certainty, for w> derstandtag. for victory, foe per-
R is striving toward this goal of perfection ttdt ie rtgnificant “Bo yo tterefogc pertect, even as your Father ^yhioh is in Heaven la pestect,” Jeaue tells us.
R fo at eooe a Mnaate goal
avalhMa to asqr of I laora to teoeh bo-
Europe Expects TourisfBoom
Amtrica's Just a G^pot Happy Hunting Ground —Almost Untoppad?
LOND(»t (UPI) — About 12 mU-Uon vacation-mioded Americana just don’t know what they're mlis-ing on tte other side of the herring
by ton the po-
According to a recent tte European Travel O (ETC), that'a tte alse of tential American nudket the European trkvel could develop. But up until now, aoost of ti^e 12 miffion have beer staying home.
If all gOM weH la the publicity deportniMt, tte BTC esttnates
That’s roughly twice the TOO.OOO
Why do they make tte •the Old Country" which 3,000 miles away?
The ETC reported an important noUve was “self-improvement" ~ ome vacationers came to get “cul-
Bat tte ETC saM aboot aa
e to Eunpe inj Personal income of Amerlcansllan a day last year for tl averaged more than a billion dol-|tiaM in his^.
Eunpe inj
to trip to is at least
The ETC interviewed 500 travelers who had made the trip more than once to see what their in-
TV commission found: 14 per cent of the 900 bad annual incomes less than 17,500, but 34 per cent had Incomes of $20,000 or more, 11 per cent had •incomes of $30,000 or more and 10 per cent had over $50,000 a year.
Flemington. N. J., was scone in 1935 of the trial of Bruno Richard Hauptmann for the kid-naping-murder of the Lindb _ baby. Today it is mostly known othei^vise as the location of an art
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MALAYA ROYALTY ~ Tbe King of Malaya, Sir Abdul Rah-man tte Yang Dipertuan Agong, and his Queen, the Raja Permaisuri Agong, are orchid .fanciers. They exsmine some of their potted specimens st Istana Negara, tte royal palace near Kuala Lumpur. They were elected as rulers when Mslsys got Its independence from England in 1967.
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It’s quitotrua that many pMpis Bay towsarasyourglsMii, can actually see better with You’ll bo sutpiM how oam k KIN-opdc Contact Lenses ttsa - is to stsrt a aew lifa^tk Ihm can with fianes.	KIN-oplie Contact Lenisa
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U N. SttBiiMw	k ..
_ _	•	*AUdra
Or. Spencer Ootoa	I
Jew-.
Over o Million Visit Mount Rushmore in '59
RAPID CTTY, S.O. IB-A total of 1,045,696 peraons visited Mount Rushmore National Memmial the South Dakoto Black Hills dur-.inS 1969.
There were 39 days during the year when more than 10,000 viai-tors viewed the Ukenetses of Presidents Wsahington. Lincoln, Jefferson and Theodore Roosevelt The highest total for a single day waa 15,278.
PONTIAC AREA
from R. H. Storm^ District Mgr.
Did you know that your tel^ phoiM company offers a w0 variety of stimulating I demonstrations for all t group activities? If y
_______________to a club or organizatioi
should bekware of the kind of programs wen Communications Skyways—About MiciyWaves Solar Battery—Electricity from tha Sjin -Fabulous Midget—The Transistor Magic. Behind Your Dial—How Tel^hone 6tlls are Handled
Tomorrow’s Telephone Magic—Planes of the Future
These are only a few of many, ^ere are others for women’s groups and all areyfeYfiUable without charge. Just call our Public Belations Department on FEderal 5-lJOO.
SMOKE SIGNAU ^ fast andfasg way for ladi-aas to talk aa end lafcos of h dwy hod ttMt kmotoiKm..
For oao thing, tho aoa Vp < saodiof tho sigoM oouldaV say aaythiag beyond a pra-anongod OMStOfc. Suppose, ior ejumple, o huotcr told his wife tha ^ puR of smoke would mean that he’d > he coouof Mm for diimor and two puf t masot that ha wouIdo’tba Aootc. If ha was Uia, or if h* Wantad to bring o frioad oloof^ thoro WM M'way ho could warn his wifcl Thasa amoks a||B^ aighi hava hosa our int iMg dfo.
taaoa caaaumkatiea, hot for speed aad cnovsoitBcs, nothiaf coo bom today's tolcphoae calL
<r « (f« « tt Q; ifo OTRi « « « «,	IQ, ^ ^
ON NASTY WEEKENDS in March, amateur ipideneri Hke to, •et together tp'discuss the Sprii^ plaoting. Whenever this happens, and whenever a problem comm up, thiy’re likdy to get out the haadi-ad shopping guide there is-the Yellow FagM. Adda from Bum-ben aod addnaem, there’s lots of spedaHaed infotinatioB ia tbe Ydkm ^sges, and It’s solved msay a queelioii for amateur gardener and gange mechanic alike. So If you west a product or service, look for the detailed information in the Yellow Pages. It’s put then by buaincmmai to help you.
PARTING SaOT: Wkgiuvar ttrwbW mm, ikaniB me #eed tkktg U have •f yeir aleefe; a fmmtbons.
FREE!
Beautiful hybrid tea rose bushes
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•	5 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM
•	2 YEAR OLD PLANTS
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Enjoy the beauty and fragrance of lovely roses around yOur home! Flan now for your garden, patio or lawn. Your order will hie shipped ' during the planting season from a Michigan ntirsery. Select your favorite color or order all five for a beautiful rose display. Hurry! Supply is limited.
You’ll enjoy the extra flavor of Red Rose tea. The secret? “King tise” tea bags, which contain Wre tea than other brands — just enough to nutte a cup of full flavored tea without ever becoming bitter from brewing too long. Red Rose is Canada’s
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MABCH 16, 1»60
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Naraka SHAVERS		
Schkk Mm'. POWER SHAVE ..	81A88 , , Jl*«ni/*<l 1 ^
Sunbaam 1960 LADIES’ RAZORS .	w,a 8^88 Trad* ^
1 SPORTING GOODS |	
TENNIS RACQUETS $259 Voluu to $7.50	GOLF CLUBS 5 IRONS 2 WOODS CofiipiMte with Bog
GOLF BALLS	MMdlecoil $C^ Arnienr J
LoakI ICE FISH RODS 0^, 39^	
riMIk G.H t.f CLUB TUBES .	4“’l
Falding Lifktwaigbt GOLF CART .	SIJ.I5 $088 Fein* Q
7" PAINT PAN end ROLLER
BOTH
ONLY
St
9 Ft. X 12 Ft.
PLASTIC DROP CLOTH
39*
Bail HaiiBU
Spout Typo
CAULKING
CARTRIDGES
PAINT PAILS
39*
4 87*
PAINT^ THINNER
19*
Metal Spout Type

Twin Brush
ShetlcRd Floor Polisher
INCREDIBLE!
. 0 . on olectric cOn optntr ot this low prico . • ,
Filly GmbibbIbbI iei (hie Teii

/•/
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, BIARCH 16, iwio
TWENTY-FIVE
1bk« On Bond Issue
FRUrrPORT (UPn-ReikkBti of thia Mudcepm dmnty villact yeaterday api^vved a S2T5,000 bond iasae for a municipal arat^
vat«m. At the ai^ tltM, » Lfuiden waa alected village c dent.
Expects Slep-Up
ROUMD -. ' gaga,. Steaks'^ 69		
PAN SAUSAGE	GKOUIID BEEF ii&T	SUCED BACON 3isT
Your Avenue Totcard
ADVANCEMEINT
Pontiac Business Institute
7 Jf.’ lawraaca Sinml rSdarol 1-3SSI
S«k Wa4, Mwch 14 fhni Sat.,
SHIMMERS
2 SafiMnr Ur. Pika by Straatl
MEATY
SPARE
RIBS
25
D>.
aUTT
PORK
ROAST
DETROIT un - The Michigan Employment Security Commiasion said Tuesday that “newly awarded contracts in road and highway construction, in addition to tracts already let for military ex-
building, activity for upper Mid gan during the warm months.”
The MESC’s Upper Peninsula labor review also said that *‘ap-isopriations for a new lock and inteniational bridge at Sault Ste. Marie should also bolster the area’s economy.” ,
Minimum Civil Rights Proposed by Dem Councilf
Road Controcts and Armed l^rices Program Indicate Boom
WASHINGTON UR-The Democratic Advisory Council has voted 3&S in favor of what it calls a minimum program of civil rights Congress should enact at this
and national committee put forward a four-point program.
The cooacU said the program, voted on by noaU. tplepliono and
expected to be small."
Most hiring over the next two months. MESC said. “WUl be pre-paratory to the annual recomy following the spring breakup."
MESC said Upper Peninsula unemployment stood at 11,000, or 11.8 per cento! the labor force in mid-January, but iwedicted i^ would drop to 10,100 or 10.8 per cent, within two months. A year ago Jan. 15, Upper Peninsula unemployment stood at 15,100, or 15.7 per cent.
To Get Gas Service
FENNVILLE W - A 30-year franchise for Michigan Consolidated Gas Co. to inaugurate gas service to this Allegan County village was approved Monday by a vote of 168 to nine. Voters also named Hieodore VanDussen village presi-
EXCLVSiVELY AT OSMUNDS
Vandor Veen Expected to Telf rtans Tkureday
Sens^ John F. Kennedy of Mas-sachuaetts, Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota and Stuart Symington all
their pair’s preridential nomination, aMo back the plan.
The council said Congress should:
”1. Demand conscientious enforcement of existing criminal laws use of congressionally granted civil powers.
HOPlE—Oilman L. F. McQdlum is cbalrman of the board of project HOPE. The privately operated project will send the SS Hope, a floating medical center, to Southeast Asia to bring advanced training to medical and health professions of underdeveloped countries.
tekfram, has the approval at tueh leaden ab fotmer PnaHedl ■any 8. Tramaa aad Adial
Stevcasaa (whe nMbd h re-
candidate for Congreslrtwo yam
GRAND RAPIDS (yPI) — Kent County Democratic leader Richard Vander Veen will meet with Secretary of State James Hare and Lt. Gov. Johh Swainaon — both Oanidcratic candidates for governor — before announcing whether he will be a Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor this year.
•Vander Veen Is a former chairman of the $th District Democratic
Joodwr Edges Mayor in Webbarville Vote
A supporter of Vander Veen’s sdld the Grand Rapidi AMdmy by
Flrancia liupp was a WaAfcig-correspondent whom Theodore R imlsaiQner of affairs tn 1903.
* SipSIRVILLE (UPD -oantast for mayor ended Howard Jofhes, WeberviUe s ' ^teddier, defoatlag incumbent WUt by h narrow eight votes Monj^^ day.	-4
Tntt was seeking his aevendC;* term as mayor and the esmpsigm-was a atrong one by both ddes^ The total count was 119-111 loC_^
Six southern members dissented in whole or in part from the state-
"S. Place the aatlMal legislative hraBch squarely sa record as apposed to raeial aegneattea hi pablie schools ea the ttam ■egregatiaa Is
«r vMattai el % i I aW laws el the 1
ttatea.
"3: Recognize the right of a person in federal or state custody to protection by federal authorities from piQrsical injury or death.
. Enact additional laws protect, throuid) simple- expeditious administrative machinety consistent with the recent rccom-mendathms of the Civil Rights Commisshm, rights of American ms to regiater and vote ^ of diaciimination baaed on race, color, rtfigion or national origip.'^
Action in these four areas, said the council, would do much to
race relations in the United States.
RAZLEV
JL-/ CASH MAttKV.T JL
78 K. SosIkow Sr.
DOLLAR
DAY
DARGAmS
7
RIB CUT
PORK
27
U.
TASTY-LEAN-ROLLED
BONELESS
HAMS
I. ccaAn noMCRO. oipTiNouisHgo star or motion ncTURts and tilevision
From Rome to Home ...all style roads lead to

Downtown Powtioc- Opon Pri., Men. 'til 9 P. M.
Tol-Hsren Center—Open Thura., Pri., Sst., f 'HI 9 P. M.
___[ IP YOU’M h who letds-not follows the dkutes of fashion; if you
pride yourself on your individuality and taste, you will welcome our new PETROCEULi suitt. Piooeer of the Italian Inftuence on Americet fashioo. petrocelli brings a freshneu ind vigor to Bsen’i clothiaf. Each suit it detigned and coMour<ui to make you vpfeK fcaacr and taOcr. In n ran RStcmhlRii of the world's loest worsteds, the ptTROCiLU isiL tailored'wilk It Ina Italian hapd. is um^ tmparatkkd.
4-

VOLUME ONE
ONLY
VOLUMES 2 TO 16
ONLY
99c.


COLUa YOUR SET WITH OUR lASY BOPK-A-WEEK PLAN
4:
/ l:
presents a sensational money-saving offer ^ -to help your child in school! a world of adventure in learning from aardvark to[^^2urich ...all in 16 exciting volumes!
FULLY ILLUSTRATED, IN LIVELY FULL COLOR
EVERY-CHILD’S PICTURE ENCYCLOPEDIA
OVER 1^ PAGES • OVER 500,000 WORDS • OVER 6,000 FUU COLOR ILLUSTRATIONS

I'
TWEKTY-SIX
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 16, 1960
^ixed Grill Can Be Fixed in Minutes
Uii* ctafa,	kwKkt m usiully welcome a limple apt
detaert at ftwen or caidied fruit “ depeedleg m whM alw la ^	^	oooWet to
M head - jfM teke off fim________________
isr cBcnur nowimomB AT NamtlaalarM Paai EMar ""Advice ta hrfclea: IM jour hua-lind aa aaaortment of tried and "twe dlshea. Once ia a can try aa unfamiliar food, but if you want a happy home don’t adventure at every meal.
Moi« counaal: concentrate on ;,abne main fare that you can cook rather quickly without fuia. You 'lie abaidutdy anre to find that ^aame houadiold chore or choppins Hkeatmore time than you planned. .You rush home at 5:«8 nith noth-.4at prepared ahead. So what's for dinner?
one ootatiM U a mixed |
there. The latent eenMaaOea we’ve tried b Ihb exeeUeat see of chepe. baeoa, fiwiM,.Fioadi-
la oae akiltet you may wWi to broil the chops, along with fresh or canned mushroom cidhns, Little p*k sausai^ Hpks 'and apple-rings may be gp-alongs the Freoch-fried potatoes.
If your husband has a sweet tooth we strongly advise keeping your cookie canister filled. Men
munch with It! Jf your man doesn' favor sweets, see that fresh fruit is at hand and that there are crackers and cheese to <^er with
Skillel Mixed AriU
■pmy fceeto
4^‘C&’u=Tda- .
laick) aad 1st asair rti
Cook bacon in an electric skillet feet at 37S degrees) or in a medium-sized heavy skillet over
I range. Remove I brown paper or
Empty fmaen Frcadi Med pe-
Ifakea 3 deliciotts aervinga.
RoO taUa of chops and skewer with toothpicks faroto short; or leave taib straight and stretch around chop as tar as they go, then Skewer. Picks may
and gMd eelor. PsMi petaloea to •ae side of paa.
Add chops and cook about 7 minutes; lean chops against edge of lUn^ or hold with fork to*brown slight layer of outer fat. Add toma-tots and turn chops, sprinkling with salt, pepper and roaematy. Continue to cook 7 to 10 minutes or as long as necessary to have chops pink through and tomatoes soft and hot. Stir potatoes occasionally during cooking.
Place bacon on chops; garnish parsley sprigs; serve at once.
Whipped Cream Festive
Anything with whipped cream tastes and looks like a party! So here's a simple fruit ctq> given festive, dessert airs with whipped cream. Combine chopped prunes, diced pineapple, cho|^ orange and cubed left-over pound cake if you have it. Just before serving add banana slices and slivered almonds and fold mixture into sweetened whipped cream.
Slaw Cooked on Top of Stove
Hot sbw b easy to make in a packet of quilted fofl, heated directly over the burner. TUs method seals in the juices, and makes one less pot to wash.^
eiid ol packet open, aead remaining two lidea by triple foUiiig 14-incfa.
I^oes together lightly, cabbage, apple and green peppor. Place in packet Add batt^, oombined water and tqy tauce, and a sprinkling of a^ and pei IViple fold to seu open end. Place to n^um heat on ele-bunwr for (5 minutes. Serves 3-3. /

HmIt UrndStd MkkM* SIcW. wumM. rad msMi di^ srara p*pMr
S£!ur‘s;x:'f.u
fot oft an U-inch length of 1' inU quilted broiling foil. Fok^ half, then again in half. Le^ing
Pork, Cabbage Dishi Has Oriental Flavor
I First
baking potatoes for 10 nmnutes. Remove from water. ^ strip of bacon around each ito. Bake until potato is tender 4uid bacon b crisp. When finished cooking remove bacon and serve hot. Notice the delicious flavor and
ich vtd. •wmO*	*22.’ tn«l
4 •cklUcBi («Uied with fram tow* 1 eup died m bjr «h<i«t_ > «h^ p^il kltoTcr roMt port (trlmnod of
a tthitipoooi rturtr » ubMipoou An»rle»n-typo rap isacp 1 tMipoop *uior
Heat oil in a 10-inch skillet; add cabbage and tom in bot ofl about a minute. Mix in scallions and pork. Cover and cook over low heat for a lew minutes to wilt cabbage a little.
Sprinkle with sherry, soy sauc* and sugar; mix well and cook un» til cabbage b softened slightly but still on the crisp side. Serve at once. Makes 4 smaU servings.
L/<?f Guaranteed Meats that fit
Gov't. Inspected Oven Ready, Plump, Young, Tender^
Turkeys
16-22.lb. Av|, Wf.
lb.
Turkey Breasts
Drumsticks or Wings /	39!^.
Ocean Spray/^ranberry Sauce
Turkey Thighs
^*Backs, Necks or Wing Tips
Thd PdrfKt Molt with Any Meot Ttrrific with Turkey

SIMIRjQPiBSHllOKUaill
^	3-Diomond, Solid Light Moot
^	No Added Oil	^
Tuna
SAVE
24t
Hygrade's or Gunsberg	AN Green, Southern, Fresh ]
Corned Beef	Cabbage 1
Cut from oM C Steer Baskets ^ 2-l.Lb. Pbsee ^0 LS,	Large firm h«pds 1 for the troditionel vw 1 St. Patrick dinner ^ |
Fresh Carrots	2',2^,25' Florida Grapefruitiili*4j2'*s,‘:.4fc,39*
Fresh Red Beets ST 2^!. 29“ Fresh Avacados £,“* 3„29’ Fresh Orange Juice'’(StiS: £ 3Sr
Asparagus#39£
Stock-Up During Our.
tSfiWR
^(3
SAVE 15*T	In 4-Roll Packs / Delsey Tissue^lO*’	SAVE 9*7
SAVE 19*?	Romeo Orchards, / Apple Sauce lO”	IfNl 9*
Campbell’s Delicious
Tomato iSloup -10'
Dutch Girl
Apple Butter '-10*
OUR FAVORITI
Cut Green Beans
OUR FAVORITI
Green Peas
FiUers Bakon Kri^ 1 Hygrade'sPotted/Meats Vevco Spaghetu CreamettesJun/prettes ‘S'. 10*
WHOtE KERNEL
Trellis Corn
BLUE RIBBON
Paper Napkins
'1210'
^^.10'
Jiffy Corn Muffin Mix Pk,. 1(T Chocolate Syrup isvTKon ICT Chicken Broth ,o5TL1CT Tost-D-Lite Beets ’	2^10'
LibBY'S RICH
Tomato Juice -10'
DOLE HAWAl’lAN
Pineopple Juice VJa 10'
Mushroom Sauce ^	10"
Kippered Snacks Z 10^ Wylers Soup Mix^ftlllXpkJO" Phillips Beons'S^^rr 2!?10"
DIAMOND CRYSTAL PLAIN, e
Iodized Salt
PACKED IN OIL
Maine Sardines
26-Oz. ■ Pkg.
10'
S::i0'
Red Kidney BeansHT Phillips Potatoes 'S’ Sf 10' Kobey Potatoes SZ 1210' S'10“
n

EVERY WEDNESDAY IS DOUBLE STAMP DAY

\
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. BIARCH 16, 1960,
TWENTY-SEVliN
Let a Salad Bring Spring to Your Table
Bf JANET ODELL
l«t’f put spring ion our tables even though it is scarcely visible •outtide. This year, spring, like laith "is the substance ol tWiy h<H)ed for, the evidence of thing« not seen."
Introducing a new salad to winter-weary menus may help a bit. Granted there is nbUiing like thei ... dependable tossed salad for most occasions, it‘s time we rang in ' a few changes.	L
the 1
U. Because it is I
cados and roacaroai. yoa ka you won’t need anything dae for a main course. Serve crisp keend sticks instead of rods for goad
nntl tendlT. Drain in
Taagy Otna Maeusal Salad I taklMpMB utt I sauto hWItat w«l«^
Need a hearty salad for a lunch- i ubiMpMa hwi^ eon that falls on a fast day? This Add 1 tablespoon salt to r Vuited macaroni salad should fill'boiling'water. Gradually add
Hto,” the salad contains a medley ^ vegetables molded in jdlied con-aomme. If you must have a dressing, use a highly aeasoned, tart
in calories is vccetahle salad. Based onj cold soup, “Gazpa-'
large bowl, mix plmientos, prepared vegetables, sliced oTives, garlic, oil and vinegar. Sprinkle generously with salt and pepper (or to taste) and toss to mix well. Stir in undiluted consomme and
I I
«•) CM sr iu staUMlM.
i 5

I sukate bds>> nsTarwl 1 eartlM* aansvane ittotia t cap* bolUat water I harS-csoktfl ass*. laartercO Cube drained pimientos. In a
pensive and different diah lor meatless days.
Sardine Salad Boy^
Thoroughly mix apple flavored
tare; pour Into oUed large mold qaari). Odll until Ann.
To serve, turn out on large plate; garnish with quartered hard-cooked eggs, pimiento pieoes and Mack olives. Makes S-10 servings.
An entirely different salad |s this stuffed tomato salad. It is an ine.\-
tops and dab each with a ten-
whoU itorway sardlao on eadi. oy|l aad serve. Yield: « gen'
I )K ou>c*> <
1	-___.	This last salad is the nim(dost
one all ani can be made in 30 mbiutes. Ftirthermore, it will contribute to your dally supply of ^ ;neeeded dairy foods. And it’» ao Wash and trim the celery stalks. I Dice. Wash the apples (do notl*^^'
v«1 on luge plate. Tap nxdd gently and lift off anfuUy.
Pat U peach sBeeo ead to e#d areuad the bottom of cheese ring.
Drain cottage cheese wel) in
peel), core and dice. Drain the (dive oil from the sardines, cut sardines in half (reserving six whole sardines foe garnish) and combine with diced apples, celery and msy-onnaise. Slice off and reserve the gjeve or strainen into l-fluart top of each tomato. Scoop out the ring mold* and ppck down firmly, pulp, dice and add to the sardine chUi at least 30 minutes. Drain mixture. Season mixture to taste and toss lightly.
Stuff eurh tonuto with the sar- running a knife or spatula around edge and center of mold and in-
Cuttuge Cheem Ring .
4 eopt (3 peondi) cdttef* ciMMr'
diue mixture. Replace the tomato
uerom the top und outride of flw cbeeae ring. Makes i-S aerviacs.
*If you do not have a ring mail), yon can make one by placing a greased jelly glass upside down in tft center of a round baking dish.
Braised Celery
Qean and cut celery stalks into three inch lengths. Cook in a nnaU amount of water for 5 minutes. Then braise celery in brown gravy or drippings from a beef roast until soft. Add tome marrow from a beef bone. Place in a moderatt oven for about 10 minutes. V
EFERYBudga!
Pork Loin


n
s
Cut From 10 to 12 Lb. Average Weight Loins
Full Rib Half Loin	.
/
Full Tenderloin Half	59^Lb
Whole Pork Loins	52"u,.
We toill gladly cut these Loins to your order I
Centex Cut Chops
69?
Lean Tender Rib Cuts
i
Fresh Ham
Roosts
Fresh Ham Roasts
Leih, Tender Butt Portion
Petehke Tender, Juicy
Skinless franks
u, orsc	Grade I
! Boo 89' German Style Sausage s
Lb.
S5*u
c.
^ _	H«f«Kle’i, M.ch Grade 1	^
39'u.	Polish Kielbaso	49W
Blue Ribbon Formf Beef — Naturally Tender — Toble Trimmed
Standiiig
Rus C81D laisiiiRiZ^niis Ru siwR
WRIGLEY
1
Budget Meat Buys
Plofe Cut! ef
Leon Boiling Beef
Famous Micktiberry—In Noturol Coang
Liver Sausage
Rib Roosts
King of all Roasts
69:
Leon, Tertoer
Beef Short Ribs
Meaty. Economical
Pork Neck Bones
Servo With Ortiont tor Socon
Sliced Pork Liver
Pork Kidneys
291.
391.
191.
29'^.
23V

Gaylord Pure .Creamery
Buttei
S9<
1-Lb. Print
SAVE
6c
ALL SWEET GOLDEN
Margarine
KI^FT GkATEO
Parmesan Cheese
gmos in Ffl'ozEN
Orange Juice
			
NEW, IMPROVED. AJAX Cleanser.	2.s:r4i‘	MILD CARE FOR LONGER WEAR LUX CJentle Flakes	t’.’ 34‘'
GENTLE, LONG-LASTING SOAP Cashmere Bouquet	-• 2-3V	DEODORIZES SO CONVENIENTLY Air-Wick Aerosol	c«, 89'
HOLLYWOOD FAVORITE IN WHITE Of PASTELS LUX Toilet Soap ’ 2 S-3V		IMPROVED, FRAGRANT—WHITE OR CORAL New lifebuoy Soap	2 ^::31‘
FINE FOR BABY'S THINGS C^ntie Ivory Flakes	r?9'	^TEAK KNIFE FREE WHEN YOU BUY THREE * ZEST Beauty Bath Bar	3 68'
IMPROVED ECOr^lCAL DETERGENT DUZ Blue Dot	Large f\ /Jc Pkg 00	i 10 VARIETIES Of ERESH BAKEO FAVORITES / FFV Queen's	'IS'39'
2t»49' •r5 79‘ 4^:89*
■/
SUNSHINE'S (3LD-FASHIONED COOKIE TREATS
I BAR FREE WITH 4
Mild Camay Soap 5	Scottie Shortbread
THE SOAR OF BEAUTIFUL WOMEN	HART'S CALIFORNIA
Mild Camay Pink Soap 2 ^ 3V f Bartlett Pears
SAVE ON WIRE WHITE SOAR	DONALD DUCK ZESTY
PUZ White Soap	tlT 79‘ Grapefruit Sections
9Si-Oi-
Pkg.
39‘
$100
^69'
Fresh Fish Dept,
Perch Fillets l*on Ready 491,
Haddock Fillets	59^Lb.
Smoked Fillets	491,.
Red Snapper Fillets 691,. Fancy Shrimp	69'^.
In Oiir Frozen Dept,
Top Frost Fross
•	Fish Sticks %*;	■
*	Perch or Cod Fillets 'pkV'
3 1®®
“ 2-89'
gf:|oo;
Your
Choict
Ham, Chicken or Salisbury Steak
Dtia FreiM JaicM
•	Pinaapple-Orange
•	Pineappla-Grapc-fruit
•	Pihcapple
Pricoi oHoctivo Wad. Mur. 14 tkroiieb Set. Mur. 19. Wo roiervo fho right to 1
rteuww..	ewamteo | J fi EXTIA IBl $TiU»S
SO IXTRA OOLD UU STAMPS
WiHi Purcliaaa af Ona 2-Lli. Pkf. ^ ^1
? Pesdike Sf ‘ ‘
coueon reUeemeUte oui* et WWgtoyl teturUoy. MerMi W. TMi coupeA •
Pexhke Skinless Franks |» | FLORIDA ORANGES
ST Je “
COBH valve. neeM» % t&mitr	cean veiee. n
Mefere the ehecfct'vMMr e««er.	C^'	heMere «ie <
WMi Prirchasa af Oim S-Lb. tag
kOR rwi’
WRIGLEYS

SI IXTU aOlD BRl STAMPS With Purchata af Ona 4l-Cf. Pkg.
MODESS REGULAR
oiil|^^ Wlrgtev't^hrovsh

» ixn* MIO 101STMUK il^ With Pwrchaia of One 12-Ct. Pkg. g
MODESS

2S EXTIA GOLD BEU STAMPS With Purchase of Ona 2-Lb. Loaf
Chef Delight Cheese
•MGHy
THE PONTIAC PBgSS, ^lyyPNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1960
7
STOCK YOUR FREEZER AT THIS LOW PRICE!
yrocier
•	MtsvHle TURKEYS
•	Oven^Ready DUCKS
4T08LI. AVERAGf -
EVISCERATED
oCenten ^^beiiqlih
FRES.SHORE FROZEN
YOUR
CHOICi
Ocean Perch
3 c •I®*
CiEANED PAN^EADY
PERCH FILLETS
A DELICIOUS LENTEN TREAT! SHRIMP AHOY BRAND
BREADED SHRIMP . . lij. 79'
TASTY ■ CLEANED ■ PANTtEADY
Chkkon Logs . . .
SUCCULENT ’N’ SWEET MEAT
Chicken Proasts
JUICY • TENDER OVEN-READY
Cornish Hens
SERVE 'N SAVE
-49* “59* ..“49*
SUCED BACON ................: 39*
SOMETHING NEW! TASTY CUBED   ^ lOHiiMS
VEAL STEAKS.	: 89*
^bont	^bouLie Pop \Jaiue ^tampi ^ver^ l^/eJnedJa^
EVAPORATED
KROGER MILK
c

^ bc» to frohcon b^ J|S»ivc Tonlcfoy w«|y ^

Rib Roast
UiSOVT
6HAMD CHOICE HHtWAY
Rib steak r “
$|09
UNIT 4 WITH THIS COUPOH OHLT
EVAPORATED
STO^S
•COUPON VALID AT KROGER STOICS IN PWTIAC AND EASTERN MICHIGAN THRU SAT., MARCH 19, 1960. LIMIT ONE COUPON
LIMIT 4 CANS WITH COUPON

10
TALL
CAN
.j*	inmf ‘vou don*t **• a
The tide af ths ^	. became
better than tl>»
Kroger packager oU meat
"SUMHYSlOi OOWM
**	.	•■SUNmSIM DOWN" •'
E..„ me,■*-*• "• Z
^ *	. KNMf mwt IW»"	^
Whto mokino ^	dliptey	^
U W -tret onv pockog.	hopw W	M
W	the -rvic.	»id, l-'t o» l«n end |
i-
BON AMI JET SPRAY . 14-oz. can 69c
Wosh your windowi quickly with thit |e< iproy.
TOMATO JUICE .	5 32-oz. cans $1.00
Fameui Hunt'i brand.
BON AMI CLEANSER . 14-oz. can 2/35c
RED ROSE TEA^BAGS . 48-cf. picg. 65c ---------------------------- . ^ - IT ^
A delightful end flovorful tot	^ ^	.J" — — —	enk. end tub. .perkling.
HERSHEY'S COCOA MIX I-lb; pkg. 49c
Delicioui iratont eoeeo mix.
CHUNK TUNA ... .3 S'/j^z. cans. 89c

zaim- - .’"•-Tssrn
Chickfn-ef-the-S«a brond, for your Mledt.	1/^1^ Af See-F^


SHRIMP I I
ni. *tamps I
THIS WEEK’S DAIRY SPECTACULAR!
IiJpiadbdshW I
li FRESH HOMOGENIZED
Borden's “*
t--	11	f
GRAPEFRUIT . .... .8
FLORIDA MARSH SEEDLESS
V^GAL.
GLASS
39
• • ^ • •
FRESH CUBAN - LARGE crati of f
Plus Dep.
FRESH GREEN SOLID	rnwn vwWP/%r<i - u/M.'ac fcOAiewr*
New Cnbbage . lOV Pineapple . T. . 3 »•
SWEET TEXAS	^
FRESH CARROTS ......
^ «EAMY IO»I»I S
! Cottage Cheese
St 19*
at 10*
- 39^
^ mild WISCONSIN
Cheddar Cheese
I CALIFORNIA ASPARAGUS
JUICY WASHINGTON STATE
- WINESAP APPLES .... 4	49'
49* P FRESH-CRISP
GOLDEN MELLOW
BANANAS
mtmoh
MAMARINI
2»29
4
Radishes or Green Onions 3 '" 25'
10*
RED L SEAFOOD
nOZIN SmiM. DINHIRI
FAMO FLOUR..................... ■. S-lb.pk?. 53c
S«lf-rl.ing ell purpoM bleached floiir.	^
ENTER P5PSODENT JINGLE CONTEST
FKA
SPRY ..	.... .^. 3-lb. can 69e
AN purpote vcgetoble ihortaning.
*25,000
WAX PAPER
Kitchen Chirm Brand keep. food, fredrer, longer.
DISHWASHER ALL .. ; 20-oz. can 4»e
Mode especially for your electric didiwaiher.

39*
ALL DETERGENT.....24-oz. pkg. 39c
Low Midi detergent for dWte. ee foundry.
PALMOLIVE SOAP..............4 bars 36c
1c Safe on thoee frogront regular dze borr
VEL DETERGENT ...... 15-oz. pkg. 34c
X:
CASH FIRST PRIZI PLUS 80 ADDITIONAL CASH PRIZES WITH PEPSODENT
TOOTH PASTE: 31c, 53c, 69c, 83c 98c
TOOTH BRUSHES: 39c, 69e
COMI IN POR OnAILS AND |HTRY BUNK
PALMOLIVE SOAP^...............2 bars 28c
Sc off on the acartemlepi both kli# bars.
For whNwr, brighter wodtee with thi. ditergenl.
gt. size pkg. 79c
ALL DETERGENT .... .3-lb.pkg. 83c
For whiter, brighter wesheM
• reg. siiopkg. 34c
FAB DETBIGENT
Gets rid ef dirt guicMy.
TIDE DETERGENT ... r.gt. size pkg. 79c
PINX DREFT ..
Fpr deticote thing, or toby ctotheM
PRAISE SOAP............... 2bar«27e
CASHMERE BOUQUET..........3 bars 33c
Regulor .ixe pink bar. of toop
WAFFLES . ............r-2 5-oz. pkgs. 29c
Dewnyftoke ^nd.'Top 'em with ke creom . . . dcitciouv
BLUE CHEER................gt. size pkg. 79c
For 0 fredier, deper white.
PRAISE SOAP.......................2 bars 4Sc
Both dze rnirocle bora. ——	'
CASHMERE BOUPUET j,... 3 bars 45c FAMO PANCAKE MIX ... 5-lb. pkg. 53c
Bath ilM pbik teop berp	7^ J Try-Fomo brwtd for o breokfut troot.
IVORY LIQUID ................22-oz, can 67c
For dlfhe. or laundry.
KEYKO MARGARINE .:.. Mb. pkg. 2»«
To«y and tmoolh iprooding.

_______ *'• raerve ike right u limit gumtUiei. PrUet and dem ellectiet thrnSat^ March 19, I960 at Kroger in PaaUae end Smiten Michigan.

/'
.......- y
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDXEStoAY, MARCH 16. 1960
TWENTY«NINB
Fi
O !
54S. BAfl
DOMINO CANE SUGAR
WITH COUPON AND PURCHASE OF BRUCE'S Self-Polishing
FLOOR WAX 89*
BIG KROGER STORES TO SERVE YOU!
2N N. mEGMn NUd BizM Like bjri, hiUae
•	NITH PBMY Snin at telyi M, Portiae
•	IIUCIE IILE SflOmiG CEITBI -
•	4370 MXIE HEY. at Satkakaw laai, Draftai PliiK
•	4I6N Ml lYlIE at GEMinn, Hai
•	7-11 Bin NMCK at Eaikiittaa, OxM
BOTH
FpR
SAVE 55c ’ RE& $1.44 VALUE
VALUABLE COUPON i
WITH THIS COUPON ONLY
FREE! S LB. BAG DOMINO SUGAR
WITH rm COUPON and OT. can purchasi op NUCI SrJ^POLISHINO PLOOR WAX AT
BAR-B-QUED		FRESH BAKED
CHICKENS		PIES
Available at Kroger's		Avoilable at Kroger's
Miracle Mile Store and		North Perry Street
North Perry Street Store Only!		StorG Only!
RIOULAR PRICI C>ii»«n VaM al Kraiar In NaHac an4 laaNra MMiltaai Thiai 5 SataiSar, Maaali 1». IHO. UanR Om Cmemi.
Dollar DaseK
I&^er Bread is
DELICIOUS • REFRESHING Pine-Ora Fruit Drink .	
SWEET DWAN'S BRAND Freestone Peaches . . .	
BREAST-O-CHICKEN BRAND save it*	_ 1
Chunk Tuna . . .	4 »"*’11
SAVE lOc ON 4—AVpNDALE	M SU >
Purple Plums 			... 4 1
I »0 IXTRA*
SLICED ENRICHED BREAD
Send 'em warbling fioxn the nest eveiy morning!
220-OZ.	V <
LOAVES NDI D

;S.««i
boom	I
kOOM diodorizcr *
^	^^A STAum '
Feature:
HOT CROSS BUNS
6 “ 35‘
ot KROGER'S MIRACLE MILE STORE ONLY!
JUBIUE
NYLON
HOSIERY
SAVE 30e
2 PAIR
PKG. y y
so EXTRA STAMPS WITH COUPON AIOVI
CNoooun
I
I
FRESH FROZEN
Somerdale Vegetables""*^ 15'
FROZEN TREESWEET INDIAN RIVER CONCENTRATE
Orange Juice ... 4 «« 79'
OUlCK FROZEN IDAHO VALLEY
French Fries . • . . 2	39'
Kroger Layer Cake iac«59'
KR06ER FRESH SUCEO
Cracked Wheal Brecal
1-LI.
LOAF
17*“"
FRENCH DRESSING.............8<i. bll. 25c
Ona of Shadd'a fomoaia products.
STAR KISTTUNA ... .3 6'/2-oz. cans 95c
Chunk ttyla for aoloda or tondwlchat.
STAR KIST TUNA...................9i/voz. can 39c
Chunk atyla tuno In hondy foroily ilia,
SWIFT FRANKS...................I-lb. pkg. 45e
Alf enact tklnlati pramium fronkfurtort.
deviled HAM..................41/i-oz. can 39c
Undanaood mokat • toaty ipaaod.
CRANBERRYSAUCE22l'/2<2.c»ns 4Je
Oct&n Spaoy bFond It "gfoot with cMekan",
MR. CLEAN CLEANER .. 15.oz. bll. 39e
All purpoaa llqpld dalorpant.
ZEST SOAP................ 3 bars .47c
Ragulor alia daodoront bor. \
ZEST SOAP .................. .2 bars 45c
a.
gt. ill. pkg. 7fc
FRANKLIN PEANUTS .	can 39^
DallcieM for inodu or portioo.
NIBLETS MEXICORN . .2 l2.oz cant 4le
Kleenex Tissue
WHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS
49*
DASH DETERGENT
For lha whitast wothot avar.
Kleenex Towels
WHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS
Ic
2	4i1^
DOLE FROZEN JUICE .. 5 6-oz. cans 89c
Mandad'ptnaopplc - aronea luica.
PINEAPPLE JUICE......5 6 oz.cans 89c
troaer
HILLS BROS. COFFEE .. 6-oz. jar $1.04
Dolidoui Inalont coffaa.	......,4
COCONUT BARS............I2<z. pkg. 33e
Modo by Mapandant ortd Iha/ro ihur-(joodl
OCEAN SPRAY RaiSH lO'/j^z can '33e
Cronborry-Oronga rallth for,a toata tract.
ASPARAGUS............... I0l/^<z.can 25c	\ PINEAPPLE CHUNKS 2 13'/2-ot. Cans 49c
Groan Qant aalactt tandar cutt'ond flpa.	, ^x^Toaiy Dola chunki.
i^ABISCO CRACKERS .. I-lb. pkg. 29c
Dallcloui pramium loltina*.
KRISPY CRACKERS.........I-lb. pkg. 29c
Sunthino makat tham crlip and fraih.
ASPARAGUS SPEARS lai/2-oz. can 25c
Tandar apaort of aiporogua. Nibtati brond.,.
KRAFT CHEESE	lO-oz. pkg. 59c
btro aflorp Crockar ^rral chaaaa.
We reserve $he right to limit quaiUUies. Prices and items effeaive thru Sat., March 19, 1960 at all Kroger Store} in Pontiac and Eastern Michigan,
FLUFFY ALL .... 3-lb. pkg. 76c
7c off this oil purpoaa datorgant.
A- -'
'■i
■’.r \
•Y
THIRTY
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 16, 1960
What's the Word, Chiefs? East Lansing Is Calling You
Pontiac Central in Quarter-Filial Contestlonight
PCH Bidding for Semis Against Taylor Center at U. ofD.
Troy Needs Ace of PNH Tonight
By BILL CORNWELL Pontiac GentraTB ambitious basketball players were hearing imaginary telephone calls today when th^ hopped a bus for the Motor Gty a^ a hardwood engagement at the University of Detroit Memorial Building.
Dm phone calls buzzing through their heads came from East Lansing, of course, and the Chiefs hope they will be able 1 the message in person two di^ hence.
Oaoeh Art Van Rysta’s Saginaw Valley Ooafereoee chan-pioML embaiMhg on the back-beard battle of their lives, meet ,a rangy Taylor Center quintet tonight at S;M In the L. of D. FleMhonae la the qnarter-flaals Of the sUte Oass A high sehool
At Stake for the Chiefs will be * a 2nd consecutive trip to the Michigan State University campus for a Friday semifinal duel in Jcniaon Fiddhouse with a possiUe state championship at the end of the Une.
nan The Chiefs fought their way to East Lansing last year, then played their poorest basketbaU of the season and>ist to Hamtramck for a frustlating finish to an other-mae great year.
Now they have a cbanoe to go there again and the feeling is strong at PCH that they’ll give a much better account of themselves this time — if they can get past the tall Taylor Center cagers.
ton can play on an ailing ankle may well decide tonight if Troy will reach the state basketbali semifinals for the second^ time in five years. .
The Colts will take on a bigger Flint Bendle quintet in a 7:30 high school quarter-final tussle at the Pontiac Northern gym.
A trip to Lanslag along with three other Class B winners will go to the vIctSF.
Taytor Center lormo one half of a Oass A doobicheader this evening at the U. of D. Field-honse.
Austin Catholic and Highland Park clash in the 7 o’clock opener and the winners of tonight’s twin bill win face each other Friday on the Jenison floor as part of the semifinal program.
A ★	★
The Chiefs played on this san D-D court in the quarter-finals year ago and earned their trip to East Lansing by defeating Dearborn Fordaon. Except for bucket, they might be playing Fordson again tonight.
Taylor Center, which lost Fordaon a year ago in the regional final at Trenton, avenged that setback in last Saturday’s regional hrrapup at the same gymnasium *y edging the Tractors in overtime. 50-49.
The Rams, coached by Boh Mater, average C-loot-S on the front line with Fred Thomann, their t-t all-Blalc center, lend-tag the way. Russ Mrond, a 44 forward, and Spencer Hammons,' •-S forward, round ant the towering front Mae.
They also boast a 6-footer in the back court, guard Wayne ’Thweatt, and 54 guard Barney Korody is the only member of the starting lineup under six feet.
* s
Taylor Center defeated Dearborn Edsel Ford and Wyandotte tourney play prior to the conquest of Fordson. The ChleTs have registered tourney victories over Waterford. U. of D. High. Farm ington and Livonia Bentley.
The Rams, ctniiamps with Inkster Roosevelt in the Mid-Wayne League, enter the quarter-final hat-, tie with an over-idl 17-1 record. PCH is 17-2.
Hm Chiels, who haV Valley crown two straight years aad three of the last tour, try to combat the Taylor tejiler height with leaping (ieorge Fed aad big BUI ~
'The 6-3 Fed and the 64 Pritchett •will have their work cut outflor them thla evening against a skyscraper foe. Hot-ohooting Booker Hurner. with 100 points to credit in four tournament .fames, floor general Phil Rabaja and Vem EUls are expected to complete Central’s starting lineup.
ByCHl^CK ABAIR ivUion’s upper bracket along with How woU and how long Bud Ac- Willow Run and Detroit Holy Re-
deemer so the survivors of those two games will clash Friday at 7 at Sexton High School. ’The diampionahip will be decided in a 10:30 a.m. battle Saturday at Michigan State’s Jenison Field House.
Acton was unaware he was hurt after falling in Uw regional final against Clarkston last Friday at Pontiac CentraT He scored 35 in ^ that ganrte to give him U6 for Troy and Bendle are in the di-|ft)ur tourney outings.
The aaUe started giving him trouble later and be rolaaed Monday and Tuesday [fnictice seo-oloas although he got permission from his doctor to try It out la the game.
Bud has been the big scoring gun ind rebounder of the Colts all ■eoaon. Hls*game scoring average has been 23.
* A *
After Acton, coach Peyton Goodwin has go^ balance but lacks height and a steady shooter. Jerry GlideweU and Rick McKinnon have been key men all year. Pete
The game rates as a tossup If Acton can run aad Ju*"P *" the suing ankle. Troy has the better over-all record of U-3 to 144 and appears to have more beach strraifth, Flint has the edge on height with 44 center deny Drm» and 4-S star Paul Krause the klngplas.
Krause has been the big gun all year matching Acton's average. Drews came on strong in the late play especially as a board man.
Meilin Bellingei-, the top man in the win over Holly, freshman Bob Sorenson and Gary Wilbur complete the FBHS starters.
Troy was Oakland B champions while Bendle took Genesee County honors. The Colts have a six-game win atreak going.
Goodwin’s team of five years ago bowed out in the semifinals. Two years	ago	he	reached the
quarters” but fell before Flint Tech.
TSOr	aSNDLB
rtll	t-S	r	1-1	Krsus«
lOB	S-S	F	f-0	SOI
S-4 C l-»
inon	t-lS	O	S-IS	Btl _
•su*	5-11	O	5-1	Wllbui
HOPING TO PLAY-Troy star Bud Acton Is hoping to be able to play in top form tonight despite an injured ankle as the Colts ploy Flint Bendle in a quarterflw hoop game at the Pontiac Northern gym. He has scored 116 pMnts In four toUrney
Celts-Warriors
Lions Win, 54-42
'Basketball' Was Played at Northern Last Night
Shakespeare couldn’t have writ-leach had 10 for the Lions who ten the script for a four part now claim 11 victories in 12 games, comedy any better than the one (In basketball that is.) which took place last night at	....
The Detroit Lions, by profession R»ifhoi a football team, were in mid-sea-son form as they defeated a Pontiac faculty team, 54-42, before 1,200 ”lau^ happy” fans.
There were only 11 fouls called la a game urhich really had 111 committed, but which would have
McCore S 5-1 Srek'n 5 0-0
------- 0 0-0
5 0-0
Dafending NBA Champs Face Wilt in Bid for Finals
BOSTON (AP) - Defending champion Boston and Philadel-adelphia's Wiit Chamberlain and, Co. tonight npen a best-of-7 aeries for a spot in the finals of the National Basketball Assn- playoffs. The winner goes against the victor' In the Western Division St. Louis-Minneapolis series lor the NBA title still held by the speedy Celtics.
Boston, by virtue of its superior mson record, good^ health and the advantage of a home court tonight. rated as a favorite both for the opening game and the series.
Ihe biggest threat is in the person of Chamberlain, the 7-1 rookie, and the NBA’s most valuable player, who pulled the Warriors from an also-ran last season to a lop, contender this year. On the way to a second place finish, he estabiished eight , league maitcs, and added another one in leading the Warriors past Syracuse in playoff. •
they all been called.
Big Alex Karras, who also entertains Detroit fans as a ras.sler as 'well as on the football field, displayed some of his unique holds in basketball fashion.
The 2S0 pound tackle took 38 of the Lions 167 shots and mpde two. The Lions connected on 23 field goals for on 18 per cent shooting mark. In the first half they shot 9 per cent.
"We were way off.” said Joe Schmidt, pro football's great linebacker, ”we usually 4iit 60 or 70 points.”
Hie Lions had a definite weight advantage over the taeulty members who were led by Northern’s Joe Duby with It pohita and
Tottli 23 5-15 54 ToUU '.5 4-1 .	Btwrs kj qssrUn
tioni . .............1 15 SO-11-54
Fsculty .............11	5 «S 11—41
Lions Give Up3;T rode David
PCH Fans to Be Seated Behind Scorer's Table
Pontiac f>4itraj will be the ‘‘home” team In tonight’s quarter final game with Ta.vlor (Voter at the t U Fleldhouse and PCH fans «dll ail In the ars'llon behind tho omrtal scorer’s table, coach Van Rysla aimowaced this
The faculty made 19 of 98 shots for a 19 per cent shooting mark. The Pontiac team took a 13-7 first quarter lead and also led 22-20 at halfUme.
Some erroneous floor play in the third quarter caused the Pontiac team to lose the ball seven straight times as the play slowed up to hufflng-puffihg' stage.
Gary Lowe and Nick Pietrosante
NHL Standings
NUl STANDmOS *
W L T ru( kiwilrrsl ...... 15 IS	11	IS 1.
.......« IS	5	n 111	151
Chl^sis ......... IS IS	11	SI IIS	l74
Pelrofl ........ IS II	13	13 171	151
ho»ton	..... n «	7	SI 111	HI
York ...... IS IS	U	47 171	117
TrESDAYw aesvLTs Cbifsio 1. Detroll 2
WliONKSDArs srUSDlLC
The followers of Austin, wt plays Highland Park Ja opener at 7 pjn., will oil la
Oeatikl delegathMi. Centrai’f
Cage Results^
TsfUsr s <*H»st Oitkrlksll NIT ToraXAMENT OasHst-nssU Brsdtrr 71. DsyMs 14 at. Bonivsnlurt 111. M. JohiTi. N Y. 71 NATIONAL iC TOltaNAMENT Flrtl tMsO
Tyler. Tki. II. Fort. Mick. 71 RutrhmMn. S«i>. S3. Fueble. Cols. : Chlpols. Fli. N. WUoan. 01 71 Llndisy WIUoo. ly. 77. Fhosnu, Aril. 75 Ark. at., Betbs ik Bl| aprlBi. Tlx. 54 Camsrsa AON 77. VIrtkila. bus. " NIBL
Psartr 114, Akiss IN
NCAA and ABC Sign 2-Year IV Pact
NEW YORK (AP) - The na-lian't football-playing colleges can kx)k forward to a guaranteiNl record 634 million dollars from televlsioB revenue in the next two
But perhaps benefittlng even more from yestifrday’s rich contract between the National Collegiate Athletic Asan. and the Am-Prican Broadcasting Co. will be the Americn F«x»tbelf League.
C *' *	^
It was tl^fimt two-year eon-tract the NQM ever awarM to a teiqvtoioiy network, and nearly tripled tHe prevkxu high of t2,200,0b0 bid by NBC for the ■eaaon. Noi ogum were lovealed
by the NCAA or ABC. but Tlie Associated Press learned that the ABC bid outstripped the National Broadcasting Co.’s offer by nearly a minion dollars. NBC bid |5>0,-000, The AP learned.
A Columbia Broadcasting System spokesman said CBS did riot bid for the coUege garnet which will be teirvised on 13 dates udring each of the next two aeaions.
NBC had gained the rights to the college games each year during the last decade, except In 1954. ABC lost heavily on the NCAA-controlled program that time and the network had not even bothered to bid several times since. -★ ♦ ♦
The switch by the coUegea
leaves the current football TV lineup this way: CBS has the National Football Le«gue and ABC the college games. NBC has nothing to offer advertisers for the highly competitive weekend fill TV sports martwt.
That’s where the American Football League comes in. The AFL lug been leaning toward ABC In contract negotiations on the assumption that NBC money as in college footbail apd CK ish in the NFL.	^
Now the AFL suddenly becomes extremely desirable to NBC and liew pro football league plays its earth right, it may pull off a much fatter deal than was poBsible previouily.

5 0-5 I JohnMB 1 1-f
4 Ayling 4 Kelly 1 Cralt
PRESS BOX
Ihe pro tennis tour headed by Pancho (fonzales and Alex Qhnedo will make iU only Michigan appearance Saturday night at tha U. of D. Mem^al fleldhouse. Others in the matches are Ken Roaewall, Pancho Segura and Tony Trabert.
*	4	♦
Fanrral senlce will be held today la Esranaba lor Dr. Robert Watoon. former highland Park High fk-hool football c-oarh who died Saturday at Rochekler. Mlnnesoto. Watson played al U. of M. in 1M417.
★	*	*
The Detroit Tigers announced that former minor league player and manager Le Grant Scott of Birmingham, Ala., has been appointed to the Detroit system
heads the AH-Presideiit’s Confer-eaoe tepms picked by the leuguo
George Lee, former Highland Park High eager and later a star at the University of Micdiigan, led Denver’s defending champions to 114-104 victory over Akron in the filial NIBL game of the season. He scored 44 poiqts.
a ♦	♦
Larry Hughes, former Walled Lake High star and the outstanding player on the Pontiac Press AU-(Wty basketball team in 1956-57, was named to captain the University Of Detroit cage team for next season. Hughes is a Junior year.
UON BALL CARRIER - Big Alex Karras, 250-pound tackle ol the Detroit Lions turned ball car^r last pight in a basketbaU game on the Pontiac Northern court. Karras “whizzes” past
FxaJu FrtM FImIm Jack Fear for a layup, one ol his two baakets in 38 attempts. Nick Pietrosante (9) of the Lions it in the background. The Lions won, 54-42.
Kentucky Aide Sought by Detroit Club
_____9 (A) 1, Ntw York 0
FlUfhursk 17. Ktiuoi City U ' Bootoo I, Son Fraocliro 3 Cltrolud 7, Chlcs|r^ (N) $
WEDNEBBAYf OAMES tlmoro T4. XiDtot City si Wtd Pslm Bttcb
Chlctfo (A) ▼■. MUvsukrt St Brsdmloa Dot^ 71. PltUbursb st Foil k^ori WsxhhiitoB Ts. Ntv York st St. Pelero-
By BRUNO L. KEARNg Sports Editor, Pontiac Pmo The Detroit Lions lost a defensive back, but may have come iip with a defensive backfield coach aa activity buzzed in the Detroit pro football team offices yesterday.
Jimmy David, long time regarded as the Lions' “hatchet-man" was traded to the Los Angeles Rams for former Michigan State end Sammy WilUanu.
Three i>ther players, Charlie Ane, JIni Doran and Gene Cronin were awarded to DaUai, a new club In the NFL which to aUowed to draft three from each team from an unrestricted list of' players.
It was also learned by The Press that the Lions were bidding for the services of Kentucky grid assistant Don Shula at defensive backfield coach.
When the 1959 season ended coach Buster Ramsey resigned to accept the head coaching duty- with
Buffalo of the new American Football League, and Bob Dove quit Detroit to become Ramsey’s assistant.
8lnr« then, Les BIngaman was added as an assistant to George Wilson, but no replacement was made for the other vacancy.
The Lions reportedly offered the defensive backfield coachihg duties to David, however the little All-Pro heck turned down the Detroit offer and wanted the'iame potlUon with the Rams.
“The reaoo4i for this,” said a Lion spohesman. “wna that David saw more aecnrily with WaterfleM who was given a five year contract by the Rams re-cisitly, rather than slaying with Detroit which has only a 04ie year roatract with head conch Wilson.”
“The trade was not made Just tor the sake of traifing David," the spokesman continued, "it was Just the case of getting something in return for David, rather than Just
releasing him to take the Los Angeles coaching Job.”
With David's refusal, to accept the Detroit Job, the Lfons then I interview yesterday with Shula, a seven-year veteran of the NFL who Joined the staff at Kentucky in 1959 under Blanton Collier.
Shuto played for the deveUnd Browne starting In IMl when OoUier tfns boeklleM.eoach with the pro teem. He Ihe4i went to the Colts lor four oeneono end ended his pro career with the Redsklna la 1N7.
He played football at John Ca^ roll University In Cleveland- before going into pro ball, and he was an assistant at the University ol Vir-
NORTHERN’S ’COUSV’ — John Bachman, member of Ihe Pontiac Northern faculty, was Pontiac's answer to Bob Oausy last night in the hilarious basketball gamckwhich saw the Detroit Lions beat the faculty. 5442. Bachman passes off as he gefMome protection from Kelly May who triea fo atop 240-p(Mjnd Darris McCbid from converging i
lakeland, L&C 5's ia Class A Finals
Unbeaten. Lakeland Pharmacy nd once-beaten Lolell A ColegnA'e lash Thursday night at 7-.15 at Crary Junior High for the Waterford BasketbaU League's dass A playoff crown.
Jim’s Hardware sent Lakeland into the finals ye.stcrday by forfeiting for Ihe 2nd time in the plaiyotfs while LAC gained its spot| in the titled round by drubbing
gins before going to Kentucky. His home is in PainesvUle, Ohio.
David, who had a colorful and controversial career in the pro ranks, was with the Lions for eight seasons after graduating from Colorado AAM.
He was a member of the famed ‘Chris Crew,” the heralded defco-aive backfield during the Lions' championship yean which included Jack Christiansen, Yale Lary and Carl KarUivaez along with David.
Christiansen is now defensive backfield coach at San Francisco. KariUvaez was traded to the Giants and after one season he was released. He Joined the Rams late last leason but it supposed to be on the retired Itot this year.
WUliams, 29. haila from Danville, Michigan. He is more noted as a defensive end and a kicking specialist.
The 64, '225 pounder was hurt early last season with the Rami, and saw little action.
The three players giv« to Dallas were thoic who indicated re-
i; Ixn Frsaclico at Phonils
WsUitafMi Ti. ChlcAio (A) Ol aortXoto Chlctto (N> TI. ClfTTlond at Tucaon Delict va. at LouU at 8t Petn-iburs
NHL Semifinals Op in Canada
NEW YORK (AP)-The best of-7 Stanley Cup semifinal series in the National Hockey League will open next week in Montreal and Toronto, with the exact dates depending on the final standings. First-place Montreal will play in Mies “A” against the third-place nlsher while second-place Toronto will play series “B” against the No. 4 team.
The Chicago Black Hawks. Detroit Red Wings and Boston Bruins are scrambling for the two U. . w ; . L ilower-positions in the playoff. The . 9	N'w York Range™ already have
Ane an^unced after last reason!been eliminated.
The series will open in Toronto
he would retire. Doran aliw indicated it might be his last year.
. whHe (^nin asked the Lions to trade him to a West Coast team which would be closer' to his
Drayton Drug, 9643, behind Tom Derocher’t 27-point scoring spree. Marshall O'Shaughnessy talUed 22 tor Drayton.
In the finals of the 2nd division Gass A playoff. White Swan took a 71-37 rout of Speedway. Harry Dearborn fired I 22 points for Swan and Speedway's Dale Jacobs made 13. Both Tuesday games were played at
TVISBArS nOBTS PHILADCLmA - Cloraou (Tl|fr) Pl^d. 171H. Ntv Tara. autpolnM Tim Ctajr. ITS. PhaaMsaiA. 10. Lm SiAUlMVt. '17. nilodtIrtilAroiitaoaiOrt Ubmnl >0da>. US. AJnrio. U.
_aui>FALO. W.T.-J000 Towtt. mVf.
,109 ANo*Laa-aasio aasrowt. mo.
*M Toco*. NfT. tffliilloe Col ■oottaa.
home.
The Dallas Rangers were how-ftil aU Uiree would sign a c^ tract.
Wednesday. March 23. no matter which of the three clubs winds up in fourth place. The Montreal series will, get started Tuesday, March 22, |i Detroit or Boston finishes third and on Thursday. March 24, in case the spot goes to Chicago.
Writers Pick Chamberlain^
Wilt Receives MVP Award
Xmi — Aoat BoeoftiL
13410. iMnmMla. loMeaall out BaBrr |M MMk	CMltf . i
OAUaaW	lUS.
ar-d —■	--------
BOSTON (Ft-The all | eommlttee of the U5. Baaketball Writeri Assn, yesterday made official what most basketbaU fana decided long ago:
WUt Chamberlain la the MOat Valuable Flayer In the Natlbnal BasketbaU Assn.
PhUadelphia’s one-man gang wps namH to the second annual MVP award by 24 baaketball writ-ea, three In each league city.
_ Jrt»lT Horn..
10*	tuUad ai*^rt«t.^i37:’fiW*ncing Boeton’g ”'Bin TUissell
of the first MVP award last lea-
130. MtxIU. 10.
a(,koatv(-t •4. foaa. nrat or twAvr-T IMVaSBAT-f OCUIHIU
Chamberlain put together probably the greatest single season in the Jiistory Of^ thO pro basketbaU circuit.,
He lifted the Warriors from the daormals U the Eastern Division
a strong second-place flnUh. En route he set eight regular season records, including most points scored (2.707) and highest scoring average (37.6).
*	it	*
He poM 19 of 24 poasible first lUace ballots, and more than doubled RusaeU’s total in the balloting. Russell had 126 points, Pet-Ut U4 and Bob Cousy, Boston'i veteran backcourt ace, had 116.
Chamberlain got all but five of the first place votes, with Russell gaining three and Cfousy two.
*	*	*
Others in "the top 10 vote getters, with their points In piiren-thesia, are; Elgin Baylor. Mlnne-apoUs (95): Jack Twyman, Gn-dimati (661; Gene Shue, Detroit Dolph Schayes. Syracuse (42): Tops Heinaohn, Boston (22) ml Richifc Guerin, New York (20).

THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 196Q
^ THIRTY-ONE
Retread It Like a Tire
Rubber, All-Weather
Track Looms in Calif.
Hawks in Playoffs at Wings' Expense
^CRAliENTO, CUlf. (AP)>-developed by a private Urm and CalUomias t^pck men ot the fu-
Chicago Cinches
____may tlaah to new leoorde
over a rubberized, all-weattier nin> ning track that could be rmaded like -
*‘It haa great poaiibilitief,” laid Frank £. Duricee at the State Diviaion of Agriculture, indud-ing:
Little or ' no maintenance; tough, waterproof eurlace which would remain uniform throughout a meet, permitting better etndua-tion of each attUete'e perform* ance; greater acceleration runner*.
for approach fonei for aoch event* as the high-jump, broad-Jump and pole vault.
“The non-ekld iluaUtipa of the »w arfadng may aame day prompt the development of ape-cial shore lor track eyeids witfo (he emhwtHtic Dur-
kee said.
The state yesterday called for bids on the track, to be built at Humboldt State College on Cali* fomia’s rainy north coast. It*i expected to cost about |145,000;'1md is believed to be the first of its kisri.
The conventional dry cinder track gets too mushy in the winter and needs considerably costly maintenance, Durkee said.
The new quartej>mile track would be built of a rubberized, resilient asphalt mixture consisting of about equal parts of asphalt, rubber and sand.
Ddfkee said a similar substance,
Detroitets,3'2
Spikes wouldn't be a problem. haweVer, since they dop’t stick in eU-Maling substance. Durkee tests alsa have shown that the rubberized asphalt holds up wdl in hot weather.
The weekly chalking problem would vanish, he said, since semipermanent markings for lanes, starting and finishing points could be painted on.
Rubber for the track wUl come from discards of tire retreaders. Humbrrfdt State already haa art* lected some 150 tons of the ahav* ings and will supply them to the contractor.
"There’s a new use tor material they’ve been throwing away," Durkee said.
"Im no athlete, but it sounds like a pretty exciting innovation
DETROIT (AP) *- The Chicago Black Haw»p, beset by a woeful start and midseaapn tragedy, have strug^ into die Stanley Cup playoffs "and claim they can win the trophy syiqbolic of hockey supremacy.
With the Hawks in, they can sit back and watch the Detroit Red Wings and Boston Bruins fight it
out for the fourth and final plajf- fathers and ac^ ^ beautiful
to B
St. Bonavenlure, Bradley Score Victories in NIT
NEW YORK (AP)-The National Invitation Tournament takes a 24-bour breather today while tbe
Bonnies* 106-Ti nut of defending champkn St. John's. '
Ill nntry savors the play of little Sam Stith that has Bred
streaking St. Bonaventure into the semifinals along with top-seeded Bradley. Utah Stote apd Providence.
Sam’s savoring it. too.
"Oh. man. it was delicious,’’ he said last night after ^coring tournament high of 37 points in the
•	Acoustical Ceiling Tile
•	Plywood
Goals by Gordit Howo and Ullman Wipod Out in 3rd Period
'
Weather Forces
Tigers Indoors
man and the city of Lakeland come through in weather that hits Florida more often than the Chamber of Commerce likes to admit.
■Yesterday was the 75th anniversary of the founding of the city and of Florida Southern College. Plans ter the diamond Jubilee celebration included 3S marching bands, a miles-long parade, uniformed soldiers and policemen, leggy giiis decked out ih bathing suits, hand-shaking poUUeians, dty
off spot.
Ibe National Hockey League’s post-season action starts ’Tuesday in Montreal. And it looks as if the Hawks, 3-2 winners over Detroit in last night’s only game, will face Montreal-in the first round. Chicago now is three points ahead of Detroit in third plgce.
'Sure we can win the cup,*' Rudy Pilous in the
showed the affect of long hours of toil.
• Redwood and Cedar Paneling
FHA Terms Available
Frt« Cuttomor Forking
DONALDSON
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27 Ordlard Loke Are. FE 2-8381
Sam, a chunky 6-2 bundle speed, haa scored 64 poinU in Bonaventure’s two NTT victories so far. With his ball-hawking and floor generalship added in, he’s ovekdmdowing his more publictzed brother, Tom, the nation’s No. 2 scorer with a appoint average. This although Tom has scored 51 points in the two games and has rebounded well.
LKtla brother has his fun now and then," grinned Sam, who is actually the older of the twi Stiths. Hes referred to as ‘’little* because Toni is 6*5 and tbe higher scorer over a season. "Lets hope both! have a big one coming up for Bradley. ’They'll be tough and svon’t rattle as easy as St. John’s did.”
,______ Hawk locker room after
Ron Murphy’s siatllng shot clinched last night’s victory. “It’r a short series. And any time you come back like we did this season you deserve it."
The Hawks had only one victory and three ties after their first 15 games this season. It seemed as if they’d never get going-just as it did last night when they fell behind twice before rookie BUI Hay and Murphy brought victory.
"You bet we’re going to win the cup.’’ echoed Eddie Lltzenberger.
Lltz recently rejoined the Hawks after his Jan. 18 auto accident in which his wile, Doreen, was kiUed and he was severely Injured.
Dejected Sid Abel, coach of the slumping Wings, strived hard and found a silver Ijning. Detroit is four points ahead of Boston with two games left. The Bruins,
play the Rangers at New York V . have jUiree games left two oii the roiid.
Murphy applied the playoff clincher with Just 4:15 left, scoring on a blistering shot.
Twice* Detroit took a one-goal lead. Each time Hay knotted the game svhUe Detroit svas a man
The Bonnies, now 21-3 with an 18-game winning streak, get their semifinal test Thursday night against Bradley, the nations No. 4 team with a 25-2 record after spilling Dayton 7844 in the opener of last night’s doubleheader.
Providence (23*4) ahd Utah (23-4), who won their quarter-final game^ on Saturday, meet in the other semi with the two winners playing for the tournament championship Saturday afternoon.
"Our half courl press did it against St. John’s." said St. Bonaventure Coach Eddie Donovan. "But Bradleys a much more soned ciub. We’U use about the aam« kind of defense, with maybe a couple of adJuMmenta. John’s is young and we got a lot of steals off the press. You can’t I expect to do that against Bradley."
Joe Lapchick, St. John’s ooach, said much the same thing. ’ “
I ley’s a poised club,’’ he com-imented. "It can play k similar {defense and should know what to expect against this kind of
Bobby Hull assisted on Hay’ second taUy. The assist tied Hul (or the individual scoring lead a 79 points with Boston’s Bronco Horvath.
Gordie Howe sent Detroit ahead in the first period and he set . Nprm Ullman’s goal in the third period for a 2-1 lead that HOy and Miophy nullified.
Bradley, trailing 37-35 with about 17 minute* to play, went into its touted full court press on Dayton, rattled the FTycrs, end quickly pulled into a commanding lead.
OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'til 9 p.m.
P
LAKELAND, Fla.-Only the post- geles Dodgers had to be called off
because of the day-long rain, but this year—for the first time—the Tigers can hold indoor workouts.
It’s not Hke wofUng at Healey PleM, aatwrafiy. bat as Maaager Jfaniale Dykes pat It. "It sure
Tlie Tigers have taken an airplane hangar, poured 60 k of day around, set up nfounds, a batting net and an "iron Mike” pitching machine.
The pitchers can throw and run. infielders can pipy pepper and can get Ms licks with the
But tbe Detroit Tigers have found a way to beat t|w sveatber. Weli, they don’t really heat It— they sort of come out svith a tie.
Grapefruit League contest with the wortd champion Los An-
Mangrum's Hol«*in-One Comes on Wrong Day
LA QUINTA, OaBf. (ft - Progolfer Uoyd Maagrom
I practicliig at La Qnliita Oontiy Olab for a match coming up I* an all-otar aeiteo filmed for folevtaioa. Had
aixfh. cuao vrtth a 6-kroa oa the IM-yart tUrd hole. .
brought all this on," said Homel.
'But we’ve been fortunate. Everybody is getting well and it doesn’ look like we’ll have any serious bonseq'uencM .'
"The cold winds we had early
After the workout, many of the players got back downtosm in tinse to svatch most of the parade under the shelter of the hotel awning. Hundreds of scantily clad coeds who might have looked a T like Esther WiUiams when the festivities began, looked more like Ma Kettle by the time the rain-drendied pai^ wound past the
Just before the srorst of the sibrm hit. Dykes brought the players back to Henley Field and ordered them to run for 20 minutes. ‘Tbey’ll hate me for this a little Ut,” said pykes with a wink, "but they’ll thknk me in July and Au^—I hope."
DykM r e e e I v’e d w*rd from traiadr Jack Homel that a flack of Injnrieo tbooo Homel has called the worst fosk at ache* and pdins, he has seen la Us 16
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THIETY-TWO'
'' . - .■
THE PONTIAC TRESS, WEDNESDAY, INARCH 16. 1060
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Deiroil Keg Team in ABC Loses Title and Sponsor
TOLEDO, OWo (AP) *- The Detroit Pfeiffers, detendinK team champions in the American Bowl-Congress tournament, lost their title and their sponsor the same day.
It was learned last night that the sponsor who reportedly paid $65,000 a year In salaries and expenses for the team withdrew its sponsorship Monday. Monday
night the club that had set an{Totsky of Detroit, who posted 711 ABC record of 3,243 last year last week, rolled 2.930 for seirenth place in
the standings.	| Kwolek, 27, reportedly was.< the
Only one member of the team lowest paid on tte team.at $5,000
placed well in minor divisions. Bob i^wolek took over first place all-events yesterday* with a nine^fame total of 1889. His 663 put him in second place in that division, well back of Mike
a year. He quit his Job as a draftsman two years to draw a salary with the Pfeiffers. Snee Harolek holds no exhibhkm con-trlact with a bowling equi|»nent manujactorer, as do most of *'
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teammates, be could be hurt most by the loss of a team qtgnaor. A ★	♦
‘It looks like l may have to go out and get a Job as a draftsman again,” Kwolek said.
Highest paid member ‘of the team was Ed Lohanski, who got b reported $10,000 a year. Luban-ski last year set an all-time aH-'ievcBts record for the ABC with 2J16. He registered only 1.723 in all-events yesterday, and his singles total was only 556 compared the 764 with which he won the tournament last year.
The St. Louis Budweiaers, whose members have won every major ten pin tiUe but the ABC, last turned in their worst performance since the team was m-ganized in 19S4.
‘The Buds got off to a running start with a 996 game, but ran opt of steam for 945, 894 and 837 total. Since they Hniahed 29th wtth 2,896 in the 1966 ABC.
Budweiaers have not placed lower than sUth.
* * *
Western Transportation of Davenport. Iowa, an unheralded team, took second in the open division widi 2,964. The team fell five pins ' rt ^ the Bellevue Bank. Belle-', I^.. which-hta been the surprising leader of this showcase event since March 11.
Ex-South Lyon Coach Takes Ohio Prep'Job .
DEFIANCE, Ohio Ifi-Bdwanl T. Knecht. University of Idaho back-field coach, today was named head football coach at Defiance High School.
Knecht, 32. is a native of Toledo and played football at Toledo University.
Before Joining the Idaho coaching staff three years ago. he was head coach at Rossford and Dundee, Mich. He also was an assistant at Toledo Scott and South Lyon, Mich.
COACH, 00-CAFTAIN8 - Track acUvitles are moving at Pontiac Northern High, in anticipation of a good seaaon and initial competition with the lnter-I,^es league. Coach Dick Marsh, left, talks
over the highlights of a rugged schedule with Husky co-captains, sprinter. Jumper Bob Hocking (center), and vaulter Jan Lawrence.
Hits at Ban on Negro Athletes
SACRAMENTO. Calif. (AP) -Legislation to bar the University of California and 14 state colleges from athletic contests with schools which, ban Negro playem was introduced in the state assembly Tuesday.
Aasemblyman Edward. E. Elliott, (D-Los Angeles), assailed an agreenjient between Cal and Tu-lane as “very bad policy.*'
The two schools will play football at Berkeley but not at New Orleans because the southern school does not permit Negro athletes to play on its home grounds.
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shaking off the winter chill, and getting ready ^ their 2nd season of full-scale competition on track and field.
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PNH Thindads Heading for First League Season
Pontiac Northern's Huskies arelseason In 1959. They won one dual
Huskies had a pretty slow first
Police Defeat T&C in X' Tournament
Once-beaten Pontiac Police forced the championship round of the Class C City League basketball playoffs into a 2nd game hy defeating previously unbeafen Town A (Country, 54-46, last night at Pontiac Central.
♦ ' *
The Policemen gained a 25-22 halfljme lead and were nfver headed. Walt Patton led the winners with 15 points while Roger Reynolds of TAC took individual game scoring honors with 18.
‘The double-elimination toiirncy ends tonight on the PCH court at 7 o'clock With the PNlce and TAC colliding again to decide the city Class C tiUe.
Roiewall Beot$ Gonzale$
N.C. tM-Kep Rosewall, former Davis Cup ace from Australia, Tuesday night chopped down Pancho Gonzales for the serkmd time in a row in the current prolbasional tennis-tour.
Rosewali, whq took a three-set match from Gonzales in Olumbus. Ga., Monday night, easily handled the pro champ 6-1, 6-4 Tuesday night
meet, placed well up in other meets. This will be their lirst season in Inter-Lake League qpmpetition. They expect to be much stronger, better balanced this spring.
AAA
Among the outstanding performers from the 1959 squad, besides Lawrence and Hocking, upon whom Marsh will depend are Mike Fedynik, high Jumper and pole vaulter, Mike Merwin, and Jerry Mineweaser (440-220) ace miler Ed Murray, half-mileVs Dick Van Trease and Jim Heisler, weight man Steve Toth, hurdler Jeff Braunagel, and Dennis Vincent, 440-220, and the jumps.
Hocking is a 440-220 man, and works at the jumps. Lawrence is a vaulter.
Then there are some 20 new candidates, mostly Juniors a»d sophomores, and Inclndtag two seniors. Bob Ooboe (440) and Dan Peterson (880).
Huskies open their season Indoors. taking part in the Huron Relays at Yysilanti (EMU), on March 26. They wni oppose, among other squads the strong Pontiac Central team. They will also compete in the Central Michigan University Relays April 30. the Monroe Relays May 7, regional, state and all-county meets.
A A A ^
Northern’s full schedule lisu nine duals, and five big events.
Here’s the schedule:
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 16. 1060
THIRTY-THREE
the Oute(wt Tfaii
With H. GUY MOATS
(haioor Ediutr, Pontiac Press
State Conference to Hear Papers About Wildlife
Conservation Department men will present papers describing various game, studies and experiments of their divisions during the annual conference of the Michigan Academy of Sciencp. Arts and Letters, March 24-26, at the University of Michigan.
Studies dealing with deer, wildlife, tree cuttings, sea lami»«y, hatchery trout, winterkill and trout fishing, will be summarized by depatrment personnel in the Academy’s fisheries and wildlife section. Changes in Michigan forest resources and certain Lower Peninsula state forests will be viewed by department representatives in the forestry section.
The grants include $5,000 to each composer.
alUwances ind^feso to
and travel expenses, and each of the high school systems involved.
Trappers Get Set for Beaver, Otter
LANSING—Another season sport is Just around the comer lor beaver and otter trappers in Michigan and it shapes up as a good me, especially if the weatherman comes through with mild and constant temperatures. (April 1 in U.P., Mar. 20 in Lower. None in Oakland County).
Pictured in this promising forecast are fur bearer populations and liberal regulations which generally match those pi last year. Trappers took 15,646 bea6m and 136 otters during the 1956 seasons in spite of snow-blocked roads, and poor trapping condithnis in some parts of the state’! best fur bearer country.
Season lengths, opening| dates and bag limits are again geared to beaver and otter numbers and expected weather conditions from area to area.
Tennessee Hits Practice Horses Feet
By The Press Outdoor Editor Horse show fans, lovers of fine horseflesh, and most exhibitors of the handsome bluebloods would not countenance any means of prodding artificial, priae-win-ning gaits for that class of'^horse, if that means involved injury or *‘soreing” the anhnal’s hooves.
And that’s exactly what’s happened in Tennessee, recently. The show goers have been aroused over reported use of a corrosive salve on the front hooves of Tennessee Walking Horses. The practice is known as ’’soreing” and is done to make the horse dUplay a snappy gait MOST BREEDERS ABHOR THE PRACTICE
The walking horse is a popular bregd. Its class Is found In most shows, but It is fairly certain that breeders and exhibitors, generally would abhor such practices.
★ ★ ★
Walking horse owners in this area feel like J. Glean Turner, of Dallas, Tex., the national president of the Tm-nespee Walking Horse Breeders’ Assn, of America, does. Turner says show Judges are Informed to disqualify any entry where “soreing” Is suspected.
An alert, vrell trained hbrse should never require such artificial aids. It’s in tha same category as “doping” a racehorse, and shouki be handled in the same drastic manner. MARKED DECLINE IN WINTER VTSHINO PRESSURE
Conservation department people eye the'Implications in the recent aerial survey of Ice-flshlng on some of the most popular Lower Peninsula lakes, as something of a somber omen. They found a marked decline in the fishing pressure.
★	★	★
Tho survey showed the “shanty count” down It per cent on tho 18 lakes surveyed. The ImpUeatlon is that sagging fishing Ueense sales, ono Indleatlon of the fewer anglers, doesn’t look too good for 19M sales. License figies have sagged ilnoe 1996, the department says, and have already put	the	“pinch” on	many department	programs.
★	★	★
An	Interesting	sidelight	on	winter	fishing	is	the	report
concerning trout fishing through the ice, something that attracted an unusually large successful array of fishermen on area lakes. Where only a few hundred trout stamps had been turned in at this time ia year ago, so far this year money from 5,(XX) stamps has been reported.
Tbundar
Frldcy ........  w	, w
Beturdty .....U:M	4:M
Sunday ......11:11	l:M,
Monday .......M;tS	t:M
Tueaday ...... l it	7:40
Wedntaday .... 1:M	0:40
REBUILT MOTORS

Regular trout season opens the last Saturday In April (April 30).
CANADAS DOWN IN FLYWAY POPULATION
Fishing apparently Isn’t the only thing that is showing a decline. Of much concern to shotgunners, is the reported 24 per cent decline in Canada goose populations in the eentral flyway. Canadas are reported by state eonservatton men as being at their lowest level in six years.
★	dr	★
A new sport for the devotees of archery hunting will bo offered during thO June 27-29 National Field Archery Tournament at Grayling. The bow-and-arrow addicts are familiar with the techniques of seeking game, but this new activity will afford opportunity to see how good they are “calling’ varmints. All bowhunters, except the pros, are invited to take part in this unusual national “varmint calling chahiplonlhlp.’
★	★	★
Insurance	statistics slliow that	hunting	apparently	Is	not
necessarily a dangerous siJort. It	is	listed	17th	in	terms	of	ac-
cidents per 100,000 participants. The statistics name football, baseball, horseback riding. Ikllng, boating, skating, swimming and other popular sports ahead of hunting.
★	★	★
There’s at least one American animal that can go back from where it came, without turning around, as fast and as easily as it got there! The pocket gopher runs b*ck-ward Just as effectively as it ean move forward.
★	★	★
Upland game birds eat	buds	from shrubs and trees, but
the pheasant seldom does. It is essentially a seed-eater.
★	★	★
Those big, curved choppers decorating the faces of beavers arr rare topis. Mr. nattall can brhlttle down a 5-lnch thick willow tree in thrqp minutes.
★	★	★
And rodents (rats, mice et cetera) have tee^ that never stop growing.
Dog Show at Lapeer
German Shepherd Dog club of Flint aill conduct a specialty show Saturday, March 19 in the Lapeer County Center bulklkig in Lapeer.
A drill team from the Detroit German Shepherd Dog Obedience lYaining club will be an added attraction, along with a demonstration of the formal obedience class. The show begins at noon.
AIL OUTDOORS (UPI) - “Water is the key to your survival” aoeordii« to the National Wildlife Federation which has adopted this phrase as the theme of National WildUto Week, Mardi 30-26.
It it
Vobnar J. Miller of Paw Paw
For Power Boats in 15 States
msAM CONTROL - In them days of Intensive stream fishing, control of the waters and their banks is an important factor for the future productivity. A crew is shown in the picture creating an effective pennanent diversion dam. Proper, substantial work of this sort halts bank erosion, improves aeration of water, helps provide eddies where fish may feed.
Theme for Wildlife Week
Water Key to Survival
tnSkmfu headquarters la Wash-imgttm said • states aui the DMrtot ef Oetambia this yeer wiB featuru the theme ef water
James L. Rournau, executive dl-nectar of the Michigan United Con-servaSon dubs, said he was happy to set wat« problems being reviewed, eipecially in Michigan.
Rouman said that here “in thu heart of the Great Lakes basin . . . it Is often (Hfficnlt to bring to tho of the peoples of thla
state that Michigan does have a sty real water problem.”
The fighter for conservatkuh
Numbering Begins April I
before a U.S. Senate committee on
Nancy Rideout Skis on River
Frigid Trip tor Champ
Tbe big Greater Michigan Boat Show will gpt a sort of frigid, but somewhat spectacular kickoff Thursday.
Sponsors for one of the big outboard motor firm displays has arranged to have the world’s feminine water-akl champloa display her skill In a demonstration Thursday afternoon.
The demonstration will be a chilly one, howevey, for personable Nancy Rideout. Nancy will do her stuff on water skis, on the icy Detroit River at 4 p ju.
The show opens at noon Saturday, runs through Sunday, March 37. It opens at the same, time Sunday, but weekdays will nm from 2 p.m. to 11 p.m.
More than 450 boats will be displayed, along with all the gadgets, moton, parts, and associated boating equipment, plus myriad other materials comwetod with water sports and fishing.
Many special programs will be presented.
The show Is In tbe big Detroit ArtlUery Armory, on West 8-Mlle yoad, near Greenfield.
WASHINGTON (P - P e d e r a 1 numbering of powered boats of more than 10 horsepower will begin April 1 in the 15 states which dp net have their oam numbering Sterns. (Michigan has its own pm).
The Coast Guard aimouneed Monday that on that date it will begin receiving applications under the Federal Boating Act of 1958 through post offices in thesi Rates:
Alaska, Conneetteirt, Georgia, HawraU. Idaho, Mafaw, Maamohu-■ette, Iowa, Nevada, Now Hampshire, New Jeney, Peunaylvaala, Teonemee, Wyoming, Washington and the Distrlet of Orinmbio.
A $3 fee for a federal booting stamp must be paid at the time the owner fills out his applicotfon |«rhlch can be. obtained at any post 'oflice. The Coast Guard then wm o certificate arri a number tor the bbat. ’This certificate (will be good for thr« years from the data of the ownw’s birthday next occurring after issuance of the certifleate.
Whenever the boat is in use on any navigable waters, the number most be displayed on both !■ of the bow. It can be painted the boat or placed on o removable board or panel.
The regulaUoB applies to any boat having more than 10 horsepower regardless of whether It is an inboard or outboard engine. The aggregate power Js the determining factor.
Hhs if o bool wore powotod by one M-hone-power outboord.
If (wo Its were osed, tbe TCgtotrattM wooM bo reqolied. Pending issuance of the oafifi-Cateo and numbers, evidence o( payment of tbe stamp fee wUl be accepted u oompUa^ with tbe
'Good as Ever'
EAST LANSING-A panel dis-iiBsioo on trout management featured the recent meeting of Trout, Unlimited at Kellogg Center here. ★ ★
The panel conference was held in cooperation with the Fisheries and Wildlife Department of Michigan State University with the department head Ifr. Peter L Tack acting as moderator.
Declaratlona by panel nem-bor Dr. Gerald P. Oaoper, director of Michlgaa’s Institute
He's Good Angler Here, or Florida *
CHF.BOYGAN (UPI) — Fred Brandt, a Cheboygan Mato Park ranger. Is equally at home with 0 epear er hook, Hoe aud sinker. it it it
Brandt apeared a ISS-peund ainrgean la Mnllet Lake earlier tkle wintor. tite largest sturgeon taken during the eeaeon tft Michigan.
Then he departed tor p three-week vacatton In Fiilrida where he hooked n 14t-pouad Warean
treat fishing today la aa good as It nras ts yeera ago, and that.
agement for the trout fisherman, is Important, but that managentent OF the trout fisherman, as well as the trout, is equally important.
B.F.Goodrich

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COLORADO SPRINGS - David Jenkins of Colorado Springs won the 1957 and 1958 irarid figure skating titles.
Wintering Ducks on Par With last Year
The Mississippi Flyway’s wintering duck population is about par with last year despite sharp declines in several popular species, according to a recent ,U.S. Department of the Inteqior releaae.
A mid-nrtnter waterfowl su by the Flyway’s 14 cooperatlnft stftte agencies, including Michigan’s Department of Osnservatlon, shoired over-all population dropa of 23 per cent in mallards, 54 per cent In redheads, 46 per cent in canvas-per cent fn rliR-as cOm
last winter’s figureo.
Wetland Project Helps Wildlife
LANSING — WeUand investigations and planning, a project pin-pointed at preserving Michigan’i vretlande lor wildlife, was recently added to the Conservation Department’s game division program.
Area Shofgunners Honored at Banquet
One of the area’s biggest wintw shotgun leagues wound up Its activities during the weekend with its annual banquet, and awarded mom than 50 honors to class, team and individual marksmen. The affair was at the WiUiams Gun Club at Davtaop, and lifuiny Pontiac area shotgunners were among those honored. The affair included both skeet and trap.
Area honors went to the following:
Tmb>—Ore*ii(r»iMr(. nruw Xn cMUte: aui4bk(j|«r>, rruk Rom . ialB: Ooklond Woodin. HtrYoy drowf coptotn. sad OakWad Cot Haadlpadori. Psal etroPtl. eoptatn.
•aptoM: Chsmi
iraM vat Mlchtiaa ihotiua champloa la INI):	Blockbiutorc. Wayao Ucy
captala: OakUnd Cauaty Haadlaadcri,
Sob HaaUi M-------
Moct imp
eorfarmaacr— Pontiac, oBly
Area Field Trials
Late winter and early spritR field trlqls In this area are now un^r ,vrny. vrith the Michigan Weimaraner club running at Highland Recreation Area and the Genesee Sportsmen’s club at Lapeer Game Area, Saturday and Siniday of this week. The card Includes a National Orman Short-hair Assn, regional championship, at Highland.
The ichedule:
March M-n-Sctlaaw Tcllcy UrltMy Pub at Lapeer Area: Lake Muroa PiaM filaJ club, at Port Huron. _	,
S-J-Blut WaUr NcJd Trial cMT at Port Huron. Notional oermaa nbsrthalr rcdonal at Hishland Raeroa-
A^tf*VlP-Hadaway ahoottot laocie a'. LapMr Oam* Aroa: Uleh. Brittany club trial at Hllbland Rcc--intlaa Ana- Pl'ld trial, Mich. Oermaa borthair club, Hltlcad Bcercctloa. April 11-17—IrUh Setter club of Mlch-' 1—Rorthcra ShootUit
wu taking testimony In Detroit
hu iMt Biwsjrs been given its proper ptooe on the priority. Hat,” Romnsn aald. "Too often wn tkhib at onr wntor reaonroen on. an eeonNnIc staadnid ealy.
“Even no. if we must discustf imter in terms of dollars and cents,^ We should ckU your attention t^ the tact titat the second largest ~ r In this state Is our tourist
_____, which is. of course, based
on ms rscreatksud resources of Midilgsn.’’
tsid the tourist industry is a 650 million dollar a year business apd is ckisMy geared to water resources, which includes 3$,000 miles of river and streams, 11.000 inland lakes and 3,800 miles of Great Li
SPUING!
It Is b^ing headed by Hediert J. MUler, in charge of waterfowl management for the department's game division since 1944. Other department personnel will cooper ate in the Pittman-Robertson project. In line urith the’ department’s current austerity program, another position will be left vacant to allow for Miller’s post.
Miller is responsible for making field investigations of projects and proUems affecting aquatic wildlife and ltd habitat.
Recommendations based on In-veMigations will be made during the early planning of projects, such dredgings and fillings, to avert lossea or damages to wetlands where possible.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY^3IARCH 16, i960
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ThA PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1960
ONE COLOR
THIRTY-FIVE
fieed Research oh'Rough'Fish
Industry Could Catch Kind for Animal Food Until Trout Return
WASHINGTON	Alexan-
der WOey (R-Wls) said hxJay research is needed to make proper, use of large supplies of rough fish in the Great Lakes until they are restocked with lake trout and whitelish.
★ ’ * ^ A Over the years, Wiley said, the commerdial fishing industry Wisconsin and other Great Lakes states has depended upon the supply of choice fish.
But Waase the sea lamprey have killed eft most of the lake
SHE CASES — Care of pets is part of the Camp Hre Girls* program. The organization — devoted to the coirorvation of America's resources — celebrates the 49th anniversary of its founding March 17. This year's slogan is: "She Carw — Do You?'*
1,800,000 AWe 1959
February Jobs Shatter Record... 64.5
WASHINGTON tfi-Employment rose in February to 64.^,000, a record for the month. Unemployment took an unusual drop of 218,000.
Announcing the figures Tuesday, Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell said they indicate continued | improvement in the economic dtuation.
February emidoyment was up 500,000 from January and was about 1,800,000 above Februanr of last year.	'
Thb) February’s total employed
Unemployment, which usually In-mases in February, is 800,000 less than in February of last year.
The seasonally adjusted ratio of unemployment to the total work force moved down to 4.8 per cent in Februaiy from 5.2 per cent in January. It was the lowest such ratio since October 1957.
Seymour Wolfbein. deputy assistant secretary of labor, said he felt definitely t(iat the job picture; is steadily brightening and reflects continued improvement it economic situation generally.
Wolfbein predicted still more job
improvements In the next few months. He said this is due to happen on h seasonal basis, with the advent of warmer weather, and does not depend on further general economic gains.
The average factory workSveek dropped-by 12 minutes during February to 39.9 hours. Normally there is little change in Febnury.
Reduction In the amount of overtime worked in the months following the steel strike probably expisins this decline, Wolfbein said.
Weekly earnings of factory workers dropped by 11.32 during February to an average of $90.97, reflecting the shorter work week and reduced overtime earnings. Factory workers earnings still are averaging almost $3 a week higher lan a year ago.
Although predicting continued employment improvement over the next few months, Wolfbein lid the March figures may show some decline in employment and possibly an Increase in unemployment. If so. he said, this would be due chiefly to the generally severe March snowstorms which have hampered many work activities.
Industry Is facing serious difft-mltlcs, Wiley saM.
•'Currentlf,'’ he said, "an anti-a m p r e y campaign under way is making progress toward elimination of the lamprey eels. However, it will be years before the es are likely to be replenished :h stocks of choice fish.	,
WWW	>•
'Meanwhile, there is an alxln-dance of other kinds of fish—formerly 'food' or the prize species-in the lakes, including Lake Michigan, which can be utilized for such commercial uses as pet and animal foods and othef purposes." WWW
Wiley urged the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries to push research use of various rough fishes In the lakes which would not be used as human food.
PADDLER — Teacher Bobdan Pashkowsky, 39, relaxes at home awaiting word of his* future from Pittsburgh School Board after being suspended for paddling 30 eighth grade boy students who didn't know their lessons. Suspension cafne when parents complained Pashkowsky threatened girl students with: "you, too, have equal rights."
Asylum Rights Proposal G<^ to U.N. Assembly
GENEVA liB-The U. N. Human Rights Conlmission urged all governments Tuesday to extend asy-lum to any refugee whose life is endangered. The three Communist members of the commission abstained.
The declaration on the right of asylum, approved for submission to the U.N, General Assembly, said asylum should be denied to such refugees only "for werriding reasons of national seriirity or safeguarding of the popnlatlon."
Honesty Is Still the Best Policy
NEW YORK (Vn>-Sevea al Wm It people were boesst.
Their meaetary gain was Each had the lame eppertaatty te fled a wallet lylag sii the sidewalk at a busy Manhattan
Each wallet was picked up within seconds after H was dropped. One wallet was found by a young woman who thumbed through tt and dropped It back an the street Someone else found
third of American workers are employed iiuiinns that have fewer than 50 employes.
I The United States producesjada producing most of the re-| Women's BQreau of the U-S. De- .
about one-half of the copper in mainder. Russia produces	^	....	.........
'the world today with Chile and Can-lcopper.
the re-| Women's B) » llttte pamnent of L )..» J in 1920.
eontenis. la addition, the i
agent George Kirk who planted the It wallets to promote a movie, “A Touch of I.arreny," rewarded them with two free tickets to the Him.
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Sorry Tin Late ... Had a Little Accident... .
VERSAILLES. Mo. Wt - John Thomas White lay injured in wrecked car for more than nine hours, waiting for help. No one came.
Finally, despite three broken' ribs, a neck injury and faci.'4' cuts. White walked three miles to his home. He later was taken to a clinic.


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THIRTY-SIX

THE PPyriAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1960
Stewart’s AF Post Olum
Sorry, Jimmy-^It's Not Hollywood
WASHINGTON (AP)-A grade B nwvle on aa austerity oouM provide better prei Brig. Gen.''James ^temrt has tor laoridag his two weeks at active duty in the Pentagon Air Force headquarters. /
*•1* ★
Ihe temporary desk assigned to the tall, taciturn actor is pushed np against the desks at another brigadier general and a colonel.
It has no telephone. The pen doesn’t work.
There is a tray of paper dips, a desk blotter and a large pamphlet deK9ibing the administrative organization of the United Sutes Air Force.
A A *
The offices of the director of < pid>lic infbrmntian are on an in-
fide ring of the gigantic Pentagon buiidiag. Hie View ftom the window indudes a ooncrete wall and a row of windows acroas the Reserve officers have "ra zation assignments," the Job would be assigned in event of war. Stewart's assignment is de^ nty director of informatioa. He is getting on-the-job training.
, Supervising is MaJ. Gen, Amo H. Luehnun, USAF director of information. Stewart is the stand-in for Brig. Gen. £. B. LeBailly, the regular deputy director of lit-foruMtion.
A * A The Air Force apparently is grim in its determination to give the actor a cram course in die art of public rdatkms. There is a detailed schedule which looks like
a fUmahooting script—it carries Stewart through a score of fcrtef-' ings, meetings and conteronditk
m Offered in PO Slayings
Coth. for Information Loading to Capturo of Threo Mail Thioves
i
CHICAGp (AP) - The ifOoe Department has off $U,S(0 in rewards tar infotma-tkm leading to three mail thieves, who shot and killed two postal
FOR ADUL’n ONLY - Natalie Wood and husband Bob Wagner have toreaken the staid, “cute otwple*’ film rotee to take a shot Bfthe “adult," raw emotion type of movie. Tbey will be seen aooo in “All the Young Cannibals."
Theater Cancels Appearance of ErroTs Beverly
LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP)-Beveily Aadland, tha Ute Errol Flynn’s 17-year-old protege, won’t make a scheduled personal appearance in Long Beach.
She was to have appeared at theater to plug a movla produced by Flyrni, “Cuben Rebel Giiia," in which ebe had u Important part. But the theater 'canceled Miss Aadland's appearance 'ih the interest of her safety*’ after getting many protests. PTA and church groups said her appeagr ance would set a bad example Mr ' other teen-age glria.
Mias Aadland was with FJyim I when he died of a heart Mtudk In Vancouver, B.C., last year.
Australia la sometimes classed aa an Island. But H la ona of the seven continents with a mainland area of 2,9tt,3G6 square miles.
AAA Reward circulars were passed out Tuesday night on buses running near the southwest Loop in-tersecticn where investigatora McAuliffe Jr.. 36. and Benedetto Spizzirri, 42, were Monday night.
SHOT BY FMWHfERS PoUce lay one of the Negro gunmen escaped on a bus. The other two sp^ away In a car.
The Investigators, diiguiaed in work clothes, had stopped the trio’s ear and seized two pouches of stolen mail.
AAA A witneu aakt the investigators put their prisoners in the rear aeat of their car and were about to drivewoff when a volley of shots mg out
if A A Police laid the investigators apparently neglected to seardi their
and Spizzirri WoiU War n veterans. Both held tha Pmple Heart for combat wounds. McAullife had two children, Spizzirri five.
Ike Honors Marshall: Gives Name to Center
WASHINGTON (fl - President Elsenhower honored the late Gen. George C. Marshall Tuesday V I naroa to the space flight research and development mter at Huntsville, Ala.
AAA
In the presence of Marshall’s widow, the President signed an excedtive order designating the faciUtlea aa the George C Mar-wU Space Flight Center. Maiihall was Army chief of staff during World War II while Eisenhower was supreme allied commander In Europe. Mafshall served later as secretary of defense and as secretary of state.
Red Tape Tangleg Mine Safety Bill
Dem$ Give Up iq Lansing Ruckus
LANSING m — Amid rowdy con-fuakm.. Democrats seized temporary control ot the House last night but promptly were hogtied when deposed R^blicans tamed their tsctica agaimt them.
The political turnabout came at the end of an historic, IS-hour day. It was marked by the overthrow of a legiriative standing committee lor only the third time since 1900.
The nukaa, brekm 4fl Just be-teto midalght, brake mrt whew tf Demaeratsy aided by Aim Arbwr Bcp. Geerge W. Sailade, maverick RepuMleaB. voted iO te M te take a inhM safety bin away
YOUNG COMIC TEAM - Phil Ford and Miml Hines, one of the fastest rising huiband-and-wife comic teams, live by the precept that love is like old lace — so easily tom and ao bard to repair. They met and Joined
then married two yean later.
Sputnik III Ready to Burn Up Soon'
CAMBRIDGE, Maas. (AP)-The Soviet satellite Sputnik III is expected to spiral into the atmosphere and bum up In a couple of weeks, says, the Smithsonian Aitrophysical Observatory.
The cone-shaped satellite about 12 feet long and weighing IVi tetti, was fired into orbit May 15, 19S8. lU final stage rocket, itself in orbit for a time, plunged to destructian more than a year ago.
Sputnik III will be visible Jo early risen in many parts of the United States later thii week, sdentistB said. It wUl be orbiting before dawn in a aoudi-southwest to north-northeast direction to many parts of the nation.
Canada has. more fhan 5,000 hotels and they have 4 total of some 150,000 rooms.
Needs No Staff of Speech Writcre
Khrushchev Loves to Talk
wraca aatsrdajr nltht Ami ■
tow of um sovim Oaioe ti poraentl IdtIMUoo of aoclot m-mltr mktu a. Knuehw. who U BO* nportod U1 vlUi InnwBU. To th» ocoomoknyiB* d'Bxteh. ChrU-topbcr raportc hit IwproulOBc ol
SAN FRANCISCO (UPD-NUtIta Khrushchev Is capable of puzzling j obaerven who do not fully appraiaa hla exuberant penonaltty.
In one moment he may be stem, emphatic and loquaUous advocate ot hla cause. He does not need a staff ot speech writen to keep him occupied before a itwtrum for any number of boun, for nature has abundantly endowed him with this pfoweas.
FRANK GINA SINATRA-LOLLOBRIGIDA
reach out in a flash and find a proverb, an anecdote or even a
points better than any classical
NEVER SO FEW
HURON
STARTS FRIDAY
DAVID NIVIN III
''HAPPY
ANNIVERSARY"
For all his austerity in espousing i the cause of rommumsm, privately he is a man of homespun humor 'and unharnessed Joviality.
1 have beard him dramatise Ms cmtieaUoM wMb riger amd almssl hmattcsl seal, la the aezt
moment Ms arm is abeut your ahouMer. the Mg grin la an aiM yen bear Mm say, “now Hsteu, brallMr . .
Tha man who can be atom when the occaakm calls for It, sincerely grin znd tell the right story or approptlMa provqrb at the propitious moment will fare much better with Mr. Kbrusbebev than to the
of basic politics, and he loves to be around people.
AAA
He ia capable of being a practitioner of raw politics or high level atatesmanship, as the occasion demands. And his sense of ps; logical interpretation makes tiim a shrewd antj effective contender in any political endeavor.
formuUtiea of traditional protocol.
Ha panmuUy ignores protocol that win not permit him to be himself.
AAA Mr. Khrushchev would enjoy participating In our American system^ ol e1e<!Uoneerlng, tor ha likes meeting people In the street and discuaalng lanes of every kind.
Far * man M SS, ha appears rabuat, haatihy and extremely agila. aemettaMB, toa^ ha le nn-
bate was stymied by ■ ruling of Speaker Don R. Pears (R-Buchan-an).
Eflorti to unblock the biU, part of Gov. WUliams’ 29-potot program, overturned Pears’ ruling but led the House Into a Jungle of ted tape finally,broken off by an U:4T
the Senate by the end of business
naUy gave up.
AAA
Lawmakers mUled around on the floor and shouted from their seats as tiw parliamentary battle waxed hotter. At Ks peak, Pean ordered Sgt-at-Arma John KUngenberg to return nrembers to their seats and clear the aisles.
Democrats faced loei of the biB under a Joint legislative rule killing all Home Mlb not cBipatcbed to
Crerman on Way to Tokyo
Adenaufer and Ike Agree on Policy Toward Reds
WASHINGTON (AP) dent Eisenhower and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer wow reported In basic agreement today on the major policy lines which the West should follow in negotiating Ger-lan iawet with the Soviet Union. The negotiations are being prepared as part of the Big Four summit meeting in Paris next May.
Eisenhower scheduled a mo^
gave assurance that there would be no compromise on basic pro-tectlwi for the position of West Berlin as a Western city surround-y East Gennanyr-
ing news conference at which/lie waa certain to be questioned ^ioout his 1^-hour meeting with Adenauer Tueaday.
AAA The' chancellor mpk guest ot honor at a Natio^ Press Qub luncheon where he was due to jwak and res^ohd
Prior to tile Press Qub session Adenauer /arranged to meet with labor leAwrs and with Dean Ache-son, a^i^taiy of riale under former President Truman.
Qf AGBEEMBNT
ing the White House meeting said | ■ enhotwer and Adenauer, reasserted mir determination to try to achieve “the reunlflcation of Germany in peace and freedom.’’
Heinrich von Brentano, said following the discusskma. at the White House and «State Department; “J am leaving the State Depfertment convinced there are no ^fferences between Bonn and Washington as regards all decisive questions.’’
AAA
Adenauer, on his way to Tokyo, ime here to aeek assurance that the President wu dead set against nagotlating any summit agreement with the Soviet Union at the expense of the position ot the Western powers in West Berlin.
A * A
The 84-year-old chancellor Is known to feel that the present ai^ rangement whereby U.S., British and French forcea on the ac guarantee the independence West Berlin cannot be Improved ipoB by any negotiated agree-nent.
U. S. officials said the President
•atety MU aad t athera toeterad M tiw brisk aC ahUvtoa. Oaly aa lllh h
(Mid aava 0mm.
With the fuss near Its.height fbortly before midnight, Republi-can floor Waders taunted Democrats to formalise their effective control by offldally deposing Pears and installing a Denoocrat in his place.
“I don’t want to be qieaker. All I want ia tbe same treatment lor the mine safety bin aa any other bill cleared lor debate,” said Rep. Joaeirii J. Kowalski ot Detroit, Democratic floor leader.
“The Deihocrata are afraid to take over,” said Rep. Allison Green of Kingston, (X>P floor leader, alter he had offered them his vote to reorganize.
Bentley Prefers War to Berlin Sellout
DETROIT (UPI)-Rep. Alvin M. Bently (R-Mich) said Monday night the United States should go to war! 11 necessary on the Berlin question.
AAA I
He told a Grosse Potnte audience he did not feel the Berlin issue would lead to war “But 1 am firmly convinced that we must stand firm, even at the risk of
rar."
The41-year-oId avowed candidate for the U. S. Senate also said be felt there was "no triidency toward (jommunist ideology within the United Auto Workers Union.
OPEN
FRIDAY MAR. 18th
Kramiki he left Ms aaxloaa ehaaftear and wa svalked from eaa baUdlim to anetiMr la the mew while haadrete el atertled
*---______________ i_ _________a
Here his peraonality sho brightest as he enthusiastically stopped to shake hands, make a Impromptu speeches and take me by the arm, pBodaiming, “Here is the mayor of San Francisco. " There is no question but tiu Mr. Khrushchev loves the aren

-StART3-	^ PONTI/\C '
TMKHT	DRIVE iw: 1
The BEST In	
	Enterfoinment	: OPIN Si4S PJA. SNOW STARTS 7:00 P.M.S [ DIXII HWY. 1 ILOCX N. ef TAICRAFH ID. — SI S^SSOO^
-TWO-
PROVOCATIVE-SENSATIONAL-(FEATURES WITH I ; ADULT APPEAL i
Daini Queen
March 17, 18, 19
For limited tinMOulbrl Traut younelf to your fgTorito Dairr Queen SundM ut these spedsl prioeel Stop in eoonl
Buy one m ot regular ■ J price get 1^ onolher for I
IMIS M ni FMUIT FOI ATIUT...
DiMorver how yotff fitiforite lundge^ ttuhi, shikag and gpltti tauto better madi with Dairy Queen. That'e faecauM Dahy Qi^ ia aervMl frwh
from the fteeaer at tha very peak of flavor iwrfection!
VISIT YOUR LMAL NEISNBORHOOD STORE
. .NOW. .
AT roruLAS rmcBi Mot. 65c Evot. 90c CliHdrow 25c
Vast Spoctoclol Swooping Splendorl
A olaal moliea pklore drama eboBl a giaal eaoag «ea . . .
SIMON
EXTU DONALD DUCK COLOR CARTOON
SATURDAY
RICHARD RURTON RARRARA RUSH la
''THE BRAMRLE BUSIT'
Strand
NOW! OPEN 10:45
fto Bl((wt awry Oar At U • Ills • «tU - SiH - Si«
IFYDU
NfnsRAiioniBr
MOnONnCTUMIR
mnuEVNiiKrsB
IXTRAI... WAIT I
PesiBtm* — la omr
"NOAH'S ARK"
anri -saw thi msmjui-
Cmlai Sms to Ot OaiMlfcSUME
'*$M0M0ll h SMA"
"tUDteftY usT mmar 'WOMAN UU SATAir
"TotY TYiar
THE POXTIAC BRESS, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 16, 1960
Reporter Not Interested ... or Is He?
Ping-Pongly Speaking, U.S. Is Dead
By DICK WESl* WASHINGTCM4 (UPI)-If aorne-one had asked meio name the last place I. wanted to go, the first place I would have named would have been a ping-pong tournament.
I mean I have always felt about ping-pong tournaments the way 1 feel about mandolin recitals. It's okay if they want to do It as long as they don’t do it around me.
But there is this woman publicity agent I know who can make a ping-pong tournament sound like the World Series, the Kentucky Derby and the Army-Navy game all rolled up into one.
I woaMn’t want to leave the ImpressiMi that I am mark for pabUdty agents. Bat If 1 were forced to MentUy a
School Costs Deductible?
They Are If Purpose Is to Improve Skills tJt Present Job
WASHINGTON (UPI) - If vou want to take deductions on your income tax return for educational purposes, the Internal , Revenue Service has some new guidelines you Should follow.
The guidelines, issued last night, are based on expierences since 19M when the revenue service approved the deduction of educational expenses in certain circumstances.
Basically, the service said, tax deductions for educational expenses may be taken:
—It the taxpayer Itemises his
rertaia obeepish-looklBg reporter wko turned ap' at the It. 8. Open Nattonal Table Tewrfo Tounm-meat here, I would have to i
bore a otrfktag reoem-blaaee to your humble oorres-
of rlabnlng a standard !• per oesrt dednethm allowed everyone.
—If the education was nnder-taken primarily to Improve a peroon's Job, or to mesits for
or employment status.
The service emphasized 'that Judies pursued tb achieve minimum requirements for a Job vocation are not deductible. Nor are studies taken to fulfill a per-Kon'p general educational aspirations.
The service also said that if i taxpayer is questioned about i deduction, "It is not enough to assert or deny the purpose" the expense in general terms. The taxpayer must show his purpose by sp^fic facts.
An expense incurred primare|y for improvement' in present job or keeping the job will be allowed even if the education should result in a new job, degree, or a pay boost, the service said. The taxpayer's primary purpose is whi^t counts.
Caliiornia, Iowa, Texas Lead in Farm Mart Cash
WASHINGTON (UPI) - California, Iowa and Texas were the nation’s leading agricultural states in 1956 on the basis of total cash receipts from farm marketings. Each ran up a total of more than two billion dollars In cash marketings.
Others in the first 10, on the basis of total cash receipts, were Illinois, Minnesota, Nebrasl^a, Kansas, Missouri, Wisconsin and Indiana. These states each had total cash receipts of more than one billion dollars.
CaHfornls wa» easUy the number one farm state with total receipts of n.S77.MS.SN. This amount represented receipts of SI,8S3.3iw,S00 from and «UM.8SS,aM stock. These totals plaerd California first In crop production and third la Hve^ock production. Second-ranking in overall pro- j duction had total receipts of $2,388,232,000 Iowa ranked first In livestock receipts $1,961,196,000 and eighth In crop receipts with $427,036,000.
Texas had total receipU of $2,195,561,000 consisting of livestock receipts of $886,682,000 and , irrop receipts of $1,308,879,000.
Book's Title Better than Their Scheme
NEW HAVEN. Conn. » - Police say two 12-year-oli boys hollowed out a 400-page book with a razor blade and went on a shoplifting spree iii downtown stores.
'Diey stuffed small items into the | hollow book, which was entitled} “Crowded Hburs."	i
Attending a ping-pong tournament is something like being inside a kettledrum during a performance of the "1812 Overture.” Twelv^ tables big hbtel exhibition hall and the air was full of little white balls, clicking like castanets.
EYES AND EARS BUSY When my eyeballs quit oscillating and my ears became acciis-tomed to the din, I sought out Bob Gusikoff of New York, defending men’s singles champ^ and asked him to fill Ine in on the fine points.
More than ?00 players, ranging in age from 8 to 78. had assembled from 30 states to have a go at the 1960 championships. I thought this was a remarkable turnout and asked Gusikoff if the winners received anything besides glory-such as money.
"Naw.” he said. "Nobody knows we’re alive.’’
Ping-pongly speaking, the United States is a have-not nation. Japan, with 400,000 registered players, holds most of the international titles. But Red China is coming p fast.
Even though the game is not overwhelmingly popular here, could see that dedicated U. S. ping-pongists take it, and themselves. seriously. ThU year f were Raving a big flap over the use of sponge rubber rackej^.
Gusikoff, a singer and drum player by profession, was all in favor of this inovatlon. He raid the sponge racket permits belter ball controll and puts more spin on the ball.
s talk with MaHy
frum New Yarfc, wha said It was "destroying the game.” He said he had rrlnctaatly switched le sponge only three days before hi selt-deicnse. '
As It turned out. Gusikoff. and Reisman met in the finals later and Reisman won. I don’t know how they feel about spong rackets
Neither do 1 know how 1 feel about ping-pong noW, but of this I will continue to draw the line at attending mandolin recitals.
THE GIRLS
USO Wants Money to Improve Facilities
WASHINGTON (UPD-The USO, friend of millions of lonely servicemen. oened a $2,125,000 fund-raising drive Tuesday to collect money lot building and Improving club houses overseas.
Ihe first building fund campaign in the USO’s 19-year history is aimed at providing more off-post facilities in Alaska. Korea. Guam, Okinawa, the Philippines ^ Puerto Rico. The organization'' said the club houses were urgently needed.
The USO said its fund drive had the endorsement of Defense Secretary Thomas S. Gates Jn
ADAM AMES TtiSboafTTOeWBTHi^. BOVSBRCKATINiR/BICN ) AISAI-CHUCiaE-TOUSK J ttfiOURCCPU., PUMT- /
THIRTY-SEVEN
By Lon Fing
THIRTY-EIGHT
THE POMTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 16, 1960
GM's Training Hours Add Up to 10.5 Million
Stocks Continue markets Upward Swing
NEW YORK » - H* mRricet iwvcd ahead lor Uie fourth straight estkm with trading moderately ao ' live late this afternoon.
Steels continued active and hares of the top producers made iractional gains.
The ft^owtng are to covering sale* of loeall. prodqee brought to the fumir*a Market by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quoutkms ars furnished by tbs Detroit Bureau of MarkeU, as of Monday.
Electronics and other "Kleorc’ locks posted gains runoing to 3 oi
PROITS
appiti;	‘ ‘.V.V.V.V.
The maihet was Ugher in eariy tradliw. Mstera aad oils barked away from some of their early
Detroit Produce
Ckbbat*. HM. bn. Cnrrota. tOMnd, ba.
SOB. .
RorMrttfUb. at, ...
iionV Sit. SS-H irilij. RmL Sa
Some of- the leading chemicals improved their initial advances.
Mails were up slightly on balance. _
With the general business	iJib pm i .::
.'conomic background not changed, R^-^a	|
-iignificantly. brokers ascribed thejRhnbtiu hothMus! sm. rujtion to, a continuation of a tcrh-ig[;“'*'J;,*"^"»-Hical recovery	■iSSS^ bS'- ‘
Amphenol-Borg and Vendo.	^ ‘ "
helped by brokerage house comment. spurted about 2 apiece.
Wide-movii« Motorola added ibout 3. Polaroid picked up a couple of poinU.
I Kpsimaa

I'alna Carbide and Kodak responded to 1 demand with galm of abwH >
r gain.
Gi^ns of better than a point were
Livestock
Grain Prices
CmCAOO. MMCb 1(
jaj:
. S.tt% On. .
l.M'i Rrb-. ii«% Mar.

; 'sa
Ihe world’s Isrfest business Corporation is distinguishing itself In vocationa] education.
Figures disclosed thday that General Motors has provided 10.SOO.000 hours of qiecializsd in-Arttction for its pcnrsonsiri since the opening of iu fiist traialng center in 1963.

. I.ISH Lard utrbwit—
•&?; ;
mOOOOK'd on SewerJob
summer , to attend classes iSealing with Istesf techniques. TWey return to their classrooms with up-tondate Information to include in their lesson plans.
The Oakland County Science Teachers Assn, was among the many teaching groups to glean material and information from GM lor instruction purpooes in their respective schools in thu
lag. b
managemest training and other actlvttioa.
The corporation operates 30 training centers in cities througb-the nation. They are by full-time tostnictors who use tM latest equipment io training
City Renews Ice CrearOr Peddler War
Personnel from servfce dealerships attend session* also. They return to their own dealerriilps and letch others what they Estimate for Repair of'learned in repair techniques at the
Atojor Trunklina Grti
Commission Approval
Gty commissioners last night accepted $30,000 as the estimat^ cost of the first of two big temn projects contemplated this
roca . <APl-C*U»-
holtori ulUUy	____
low lOU 'feoS tlNri n.wm-mm.wm. ■ '.toi lb. saod alMn SSJO: chMc* Around UM lb ullllty co«A I1.SS-II.M;
ISIS'
nw»i* I
ml;
This Involves extensive repairs to a 40-year-old. 100-foot section of big trunkline serving as a combined sewer for a Urge portion of PontUc. including the Pontiac Motor Division plant.
Dealer service managers meet at the centers to discuss technical and mansgemeDt problems.
' In addition, the training centers provide instruction for Servicing GM’s non-automotive products, such as household appUances. marine engines and "off the road” diesel-powered equipment.
made by Pfizer. MetroGoldwyn-.VUyer, Air Reduction and Reynolds Metals.	*
U.S. Steel, Bethlehem. Republic .SUel and Jones * Uughlin retained fraetkm gains. Fold backed away from a small early riK and .showed a fractkinal net loss. American Meters continued to trade a bit below yesterday's close while General Motors was steady.
bulchori: mfiod l#u US. Nt. 1 and I IIS-MS lb. bttlehcr* It.»-I4M; mluS - and 1 IW-IIS lb Id M-II.M; Iwa
No I. IN-SlS lb. IS.M a !•»; No. 3 and 3 340-304 lb. 14.3S-I>! mlaad gradri aowt 300-SOS Ib. 13.7t-U.
DBTaorr pookrar DETROIT March M lAPI-PrteM nor pound daUNrad lor Mo. 1 f ‘—
Within most major groups demand was selective. Anaconda ‘advanced more than a point while Kennecott eased and Phelps Dodge was steady at best.
Royal Dutch was up s fairly good fraction as Texaco lost a ‘'
Illinois central rose close to a point and New York Central a fraction. Sonte other leading carriers wnre easy.
Vtalcra-Stlabic
touch to Mt up ouoteUon). SbM»-«biabio 4M. Not aSouih • liw lol^r ootbbUik MbSo.
Poultry and Eggs
James Carlisle, city cwgtaeer. The section to be repaired U south of North Perry street, between Gtge and Paddock streeU.
in typo btiu M-M; Usht t ft-ll: baary typo roaiiart, «
_	j.. M-IS, liMyy typa bralMn ..
tryari. 3-4 Iba., vhlU« n-33, barred rMki a-13: ducklinci M-3i.
MTEOrr BOOS DiraoiT. MAKh I
Kid I trad
UnjCludlas ua.
....I* irad# a Jumbo 43	. ------
lartt 30-44. larct 3b-43; mtdlum 30-cradt A ritra Urft 3IH-44; larft ...MS: mtdlum 30-31; cradt B larct 33Vb-34; chKkt 3C-3T.
Nevf York Stocks
tLatt Mornlna Q pifurtt alUr dtcimal pi
pointt art tlchlht
NewsinBriei
High school and vocational school teachers are tnvHed each
»lf we don’t da the repairs this year. I’m afral-1 the old •eorer will collapse and the city
The other big trunkline undertaking under consMeration would provide sewer service to the northern portion of the aoverlawa, Meadowlaovn, CherryUwn area. .
City Commission Opposes New Assessing Plan
At the request of Oakland Ooun-ty Assn, of Assessing Offfeers, the aty Commission last night went on record oppooing a new assessing procedui lUte Senate.
Reverses Ruling in Traffic Case
The Gty Commission ggve notice last night it intends to do battle wMi ice cream peddlers again.
An ordinance was introduced to outlaw Ice cream trucks containing mechanical equipment that manufactures ice cream products on the spot.
The measure_js only aimed at peddlers who, liastead of slocking packaged lee cream/ sell It ia cups lined from a tap at th£ side of the track.
A final vote of approval is expected in two weeks.
LESS AMBinOlJS This latest measure is not as as many earlier—but
successful—attempts in Pontiac to curb street peddling, especially of
Circuit Judga Says Drayton Plaint Man Not Guilty of Crimo
A lower court traffic violation conviction against a plant protection otfleer has been dismissed in Oakland County Circuit Court.
He wag char^ with making an Improper left turn, resulting in an accident with a deputy sheriff.
Judge Clark J. Adams reversed Waterford Towwddp JnaMoe Patrick K. Daly aaytng, "That la my judgment It was not a crime."
The reversal favored Cyril J. Kampaen, 36, of 3018 Denby St..
The city has been trying various means to curb peddling the past 15 yean.
The latest attempt, though lodest, will probably be succes*' il, said City Atty. WUliam A. Ewirt.
"A state law of last year specifically allows cities to ban this type of piling," he said.
Drayton Plains, who faced a fine, $10 costs or five oay* in jail.
Admiral .... 30 3 lot TrI b Tal 33 Air Reduc ... 13.1 l»l Crk CMl 30 AlHod Cb .... 33 JahM Mao ... 31
Allied Sir.. 37 3 Jonte a L .. S3
AUli Chat .... 34 Ktlloii .. 31
Alum Ltd ... 3S.3 Kennetolt .. 73
Alcoa ..... 17 Kimb Clk ... M
AmA^rllb	Krcm. 8S .. 30
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AmNOai ....173 Larlllard ..
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Anacooda .... 33.4 uj,. M a M 174 Armco BU .... M I
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£"‘S n	M
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arid My .... 413	-"*_i •• «>
Bruo BalSa
Icvra yrairrday broke into Felice’s Market at 331 Rockwell St., and stoic $86 from the cash regis-it was reported to Pontiac police.
Mlacellaneoao Items valued at about $5 were taken by thieves te Into the AAW Root Beer Stand. 218 S. Saginaw St., yesterday, according to police.
_____________Je. fiteveas Hall,
Thurs. 10 to 12. Exchange Strert —	Adv.
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Calum * ■ .. tt J tJS ? w Campb Boos .. 47	A W Al.
•- iM R?i*.%4’::
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If adopted, the association satd, schools, cities and qountlcs would have to revise budgetary planning drastically.
Under the new plan, it explained property tax collections would come later In the year, with the result that local taxing units would have to revise fiscal operations.
The Senate bill, mainly, would set new methods for establishing stete equalized valuations.
Kentaeky Veterana MeeUag. IM E. Kennott, 663 Locsl Union Hall. Information FB 3-73M after 3:00 pm. FE 8-3607.	- ■
Vrw No. 1666 aaslUary ram-Huge sale. 371 E. Pike. 3 o'clock Rlday and Saturday.
Notional School Clinic Draws Leaders to Flint
FLINT (UPn-CIvic leaders and educators from 19 states were gathered here today for the second
Kampaen, an employe of Pontiac Motor Division, appealed the conviction.
He also sued for $50,000 damages in Greuit Court against Deputy Donald Kratt whose sheriff's car struck Kampsen’s on March 7 Kampsen was turning off I^xie highway near Silver Lake lioad Into a gas station. He's suing for injuries rating from the col-
The suit is still pending.
Two years ago, CIrenIt Court tobied out a complicated bcheiiM deiigned'to make ice cream peddling uaprofllable by reqalriag the preaeuce of a helper te protect children fram traffic.
Death Notice
C003(BS. 34ARCR IS. Illl. KBN-Dcth LATonu. 4741 A^orkOorUlo
as.. Wuterl^. bft 3t: bMorod hubssd «t Bbinor OooNbti bt-i^ Ma of Boy B. (Ad MtW CobbMc SMr tetlMr bt B». Bab-•rt, Zaao (sd Jantot Coomb*; SMT broltwr of Mn Bay iMur-Jbrtt) KnI, Mn. CdOBlM (Vlotetl
i)diu^ UiiRci 14. iM. ItbMuWfi; I3t aiuMlI: as* 7S; dMr Utiwr •t I^IS Denm ^ BdvarS Mw^eld: dour brbtSu of Mn.
Jss.;*WKi.'iBrur«
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t p.m. _ V-VBMM Bbbi*. FubOfbl
MnlM wUl b* held mSby. Mbrcb IS. at It • m. fraa St. THownt d* Md^Cbureh. t***''"	“ ‘
RR0U80N MABCB 1
joun,	j
. 33 Pkrkhont; •(« 30: dr»r motixr of Mn. BoU* MMnboUM, Mn. aihd Dtir**. Mri. PMrl Mlllir. Udi*. Ban. CarooB.
(m; S(w (iiltr^ Mn. aad Mn. Bwa firoM; *IT*S by 33 mndehUSn
_ (TMdehUSr ■mt-gr(DdcDlldnn.
--------- hold Frtday. March
la at 1 pje. troa Pamcr-aaortr PuDcral Hbrnc vlUl IUt. Rab«rt North efflcl(tln(. Intormaat In Whit* Chapel Cemetery. Mre. FerfUMO will In eute at tb* Farmer-Sneirir nmtral Home. iiAXWBLt. MARCH 13. 13d0. Charle* J . 3W UaoeladUre. Waterford Townihlp: ate 37; beloved * Mn. Ltetar Oaudreau; Iher of Kr'— "	~—
doar brother of KeUay V., Don-
-------------- ----------- Miller
abS Mn. Robert (Katiito*a) Little. Funeral a e r v I c e wUl be held Tbunday. March 17. at 1 pm. from Bparke-Orlflln Chapel. Will-
tary
:lup*^ Cematery.__
IITBT^ISARCH 14,
Chai

beth L. IIU B. lUckory Rldt* RS . Milford: at* U: balovad wile of Ted White; balmred dauahter of Mr. and Mr*. Cbaater Alleo. dMr mot bar al Mr*. Robert Fateabarf, Mlaa Manbs WhIU and Mrs. Larry Wlndai: abo aur-elvad by two irandCIUldran. Fu-aaral MrviM will ba bald Frtday. bisreb 14, at 3 a.m. from tha Rlehardaaa-aird Fbaaral Nome. Milford, wltb Rav. O. W. Olbaon efflttatiai Mn. WhIU wUI lie In aUU at Um Rlehardaoa-Blrd Fu-neral Home. Milford_____________
Card of Thanks
WE WISH TO TBANk OUR MANY irtand*. nalrbbort a ralaUvas lor th# florpl^trlbt^^e^ aaprauloni
Duant D Maaro U Iha Rav. Fi k The SUlftr. I

Whft watchatb Uisa aad u*. Sadly mlaaad by wilt, oao
IN LOTINO MBM6rV OF OEk-trud* M. aay’on, who paued away March 14. IIM.
You bM uc not farewell.
You cald toodbyc to none.
Tour lovlni heart had ceaied
Taxi Operators ^ From 12 Cities in State Organize
LANSING m - Taxicab opera-ton from a dozen Michigan cities organized yesterday with Alfred Diaz, president of Checker Cab Co. Detroit, as president.
Carl Buchanan, lobbyisi for local bus lirms, was named manager of the new group.
He said 14 cab companies weie present or represented by proxy, including companies in Kalamazoo, Jackson, Ann Arbor, Grand Rapids and Lansing.
The group will be known as the Taxicab Operators of Michigan.
500 Arrested in Crackdown Against Sit-In Demonstrators
students and arrested 350 of them. All Tvere charged with breach of ! and released under $10 bond each.
By Tke Aseoctoted Press More than 500 Negroes have been arrested In the largesf
crackdowm since demon-^tkmi against segregated at-ing facilities in the South began a month and a half ago.
The blanket arresta Tuesday led one state official of the Na-Assn, for the Advancement
^________________ of Colored People io charge	^
u 41 National Community School Clinic, i police were engacing in	.-rms
=**;	WWW	!*m7. fAscist-like taettes.
.S. Mott, noted civic leader j	★	★	*
and linandal backer of the com- Police at Orangeburg, S.C., used munity school idea, was to address tear gas and fire hoses to quell the closing session of the clinic, sn estimated 1,000 demonstrating
refusal to leave premises when asked to do so—provtsions of an act approved at the recent ses-sesion of the Georgia Legislature.
In addition 18 of them irere charged under a law originally drRTni to hale Ku KIux Klan tivlties and an old unlawful assembly act.
: *7^ T»i O. Sul
....33.S Tvatron
... ‘a*El':, 73'.3
1ES*. :'’8I
-aybnaM .... 31.1 Van Raal .. Uf .......3S.4	Wnt Ua Tal
13
wnuu Mot ... .... , inboB a o 33.1 1 Woolworth ... S3.3 4 Yalt a Tow . 33.7 7 Tny'«t ShAT 113.4
, ...w
•”3*.’«
134.7 N3 1
»:? I
Frav. Day
Waak A3b ................ .
Mtetb Ac*	311.1	m.7	...	...
Tur Acs	3M.1	141.3	131.7	334	.
iJSi!	*“-•	««A	133 4	S3li
tfg "Iffc	313.3	4N.I	M.7	314.3
MIS Law	334.7	Ml	73J	IM.
nwa IH.N up IM
II Utlla 37.73 *■ 3.44 MJ^ks IMitf ap K Voluma to I p.m. I.I7I
T STOCKS IV. J. ncpblet Co.I Flruraa afur dacbaal patnu ar
dy^5^C#*V Mb ntaoB f
13.f
id.t
Atlanta, in segregation-minded Georgia,' 77 Negroes and two white youths were jailed in connection with sit-ins at 10 downtown cafeterias.
were released later on $300 bond!	^^e arrests Georgia’s Gov.
The wrhlte youths were given	Vandiver i.«sued a state-
ment saying that if for any rea-locBt law enforcement faHs, the state will provide any forces necessary to protect "the people,
Frees State; Program
Southfield Council OKs Proposed Xway Route
.4RREST KING’S BROTHER Among those arrested was Rev. A. D. William King, a brother of the Rev. MAlin Luther King.
Negro integration leader and exponent of passive resistance.
Arrests also oecurred other South Carolina cltlei St. Augustine, Fla. The Oi^Tjom-misaion at Tallahasira, Fla.,
Gimaxing a two-year struggle with Southfield over alignment of w east - west expressway raut^ the State Highway Department is now free ^tp cpmplete its Five-Year Metiopolitan Expressway program east of Grand River.
Announcement wbm made yesterday by State Highway Commission-1 John C. Mackle’s executive assistant Irving J. Rubin, following the Southfield Council’s approval of a proposed leg of Ite route night before last.
The reason for this Is that the April census is expected to put Southfield well over the 30.0p0 population line for the first t^. Gties with populations under 80,-000 are exempt from paytac toward state highway conatructioo.
The fray was eased far the aty OoaneU when the highway
It si the
The Council could not okaying the department’s proposal before knowing where the expressway from Inkster road to Greenfieid road would cut ttiroi«h once it passed Lnhaer road.
They received fjnal word on urt in time tor the Council meeting, anj) approve nou^e even though the iaapi not on the regular agenda.
Their arltoa came ta
to nave the city decMsa had beea reached by April 1 tbe clty wMrid have had le pay that aum toward the dollar expreeaway
The expressway, to be known as Interstate 686, will cut across Southfield along 10%-MUe road. nOs relatively smaU aeoter ti the over-aU reate Is expeetod to eoet apprexlinately gtS mlllloa, Rubin aald.
their property and to preserve or-
scene of a
warned "it wUr not t
_____ strlkl 143P73IM. Fubllc
ba heM March 13. ItM at 13:M a.m.. 333 S. saalaaw St., Pontiac. MIchKan.
The Orangeburg arrests rame after police tried to break up protest march by about 1,000 students fFom South Carolina A. A T. and Gaflin Colleges. The students refused to disperse. Fire hbses were turned on about 300 of them and two tear gas canisters were exploded.
Those an-ested—wbout one-third of them women—were herded into a yard near the courthouse.
The Rev. H. P. Sharper, a Florence Baptist minister and president of the South Carolina NAACP
at 31737 MuAr-Mleh.,	Wly
A M.. Marah 34. 1333. br
Stleblsbb'VallraM ’ Baakr"FUat.''MlehY-Manh II. II, -M
_______OF OROU4ANCB
Oa March S. 13M. th* aty Oouacil iM M Citr at SrlTaa Laka aaactaU OMU-•oM Mu aa
Thli OrSlaaBM It
csUtlaa Ordtntac*	- v
Bfltctlv* data et Ordlnaaco N*. M AprU ------
DAVID B FOIBBTONB
Ob March 3. 13M. th* City C
Conterance, said that because of |Sl.?‘;o'i7*''’'‘"
"Btronrann, fhsdst-like tactks’’^h};	u oaa u amend aa
of peace officera "we conclude gritai-- - -i ------------------- «
that appeal to federal Mgenq^ is our last retort."
1 Ordlnaaca Na. S7
The Atlanta
When completed, Interatale 696
were described as the largest simultaneous sit-ins yet staged in the South. The protests were held at cafeterias In the state Capitol.
will connect with the Earmingtoo-Brighton eiqNressway war Hager-ty road and with the Edsel Ford expressway in Macomb Coilhty.
By June 1963, the Highway partaent expects to have all-ex-preasivay routes connecting JDe-trait with lJuising, Grand Rajddt,'
Flint, Saginaw, Bay City, the Mack- _________
inac Bridge and Sault Ste. Marie, charged with,
Gty Hall, the Courthouse, in two aVITn irI7
where there are a ber of federal agencies, at two railiMd stations, two bus stations and a variety store, num cxHXBOEs Many of those taking part came from the city’s aix Negro col-
TOWNBHm OF WATERFORD
-BMIc* ot hMrtac oa MalM Ar paclal aiaawmaat roU.
NoUm to harvby aim that 8*_________
.ImaaMtoal Ball Mo. 33. la tb* amount of S7JH.34, far tb* lmsram>ent of Mctot ‘ -IO* from Soahabav Road Baat to tlw of MMta ATaaao, haa baca tltod la l°”'ir?ni{nalSn	i'*'
..jitoa to fufthar slm timl ttoi Taira-•Up 6^ bill btoot la th* Ttorn^p RaC.-4lil W. Hnroa Otraat iM-H) aa th* Slat day of March. 1333, 3t 7;30 p.m. Baalor* Standard TUm. t* raytorr laM apaetol nuoMmaat roO aad U hoar nay obtootiaaa tbarote This Bottc* plfta by Towpship Baard.
Oatad; Ftaraary S3, nn _____
wa torfwd*
Marah S and l3. II*
And the hUls vera bard to cUmb So be clotad your «tary eyas And whisperad p*M* be Ihiaf. Badly mliaad by huaband, ahO-
RtmambraiM* kaepa h
BOX REn.lE8 At 10 a m. TiHlay Ihera I were repHc* at Tie Prwta offlie la the following bozeir:
Funeral Directors
COATS
_ IJI*mUL >OHS
Donelson-Johns
PUNBBAL home Desl|^ for Fi^ertl. SPARKS oriffIm CHAPitr" ThouahUul ~	— -------
Voorhees-Siple
FUNERAL HOME
Cwnetery Lots
^awcltanlci briper OR 3-1331._
BARBBR AVAILABLB ' ‘FI 1-6387
cods - HOUSEKEEPER- CARE-
I i _ heated 1
trlelly. laundry 1

OU.. Must loop health
r for
Must have car. both drWt (aaso-lln* furnished I REPERENCX: NO DRINKINO; PERMANENT.
CaU Mrs. Eelly. JO 4-4M7._
DtX hENCn HANDS. MACHINE haada. Data or alfhU. Orarttm* and benalKs Mid hUtot Taol k _Mfi_<to^3^ Ttiairapb ita Blij^T SINoC^AI'
1^. I
1% 4-'	_______________
FINNISH.'IRISH'OR'CUBAN. EX-—■ —	-	■«, aanaral bouse-
small family. MI


FAST HARO WORXINO MAN WTTH uaed car lot tipartoao*. Salary opia. MU 4-7M4 Orbit Salaa. laa.. 3S33 M-H. Baat mshland.
Ba* Ruaa Reader.___ __
6aS OtaTION ATTENDaHt WAItT-ad^^FhU	Umi. No pbone.
31 AND M
MAN. __________
years of a|t. ------------
ba i^;irt*&'
oUier beoMts. Apply Mr. Brorra, __1M N. SailBav, FoaUac. Mtob.
mechanic fabT toie for
aorric# sUUon. mast b# oaport-tacad Eraalnia an* vaok Bonaott Taiaco Tblatraph al Voerhals.
SaNAOER and AaslBTART MAN-aper. Urat rohuaa raUU food.
M.^N
to aerrle* coalooMra oa 1 Itohed mat*. Muat bay* c
kaortledi* *f Pootlae and 1
______: 3-lt44	-___
MTLL'RANDS.'BENCH HANISS. Blf teraal grinder. Muat have tool ^o^e^rtoace_and tOola. BU^e
Wmyror^'’'cMMy!*^” Baat Him lllto Road. Ybradala. Mlcht-
lHE ANSW ER TO YOUR PROBLEM: Want Ads! To sell, rent, hire, it’s FE 2^18t.
Help Wntad Male 6
MECHANIC
Plyraoulb. INI N. tiaia. Rs^-
ik far Mr. StaUck, Sarrieo
Mill Operator
1 carp. 71S W. »4
• OFFICE MANAGER
r om of Fontlae’a nawaat laadlat **-toBoblto dealerablp'a. Fra-^a aut* aipartaaca Mn-abit bat act aamaaary. Lib-
maafttoTS^y to U.r.lSn.
Outside Order Dept.
.... batlataa-Uk* appMi-SBC* yrUI b* Interrleyred. mlan (tan. SS3 biekly Call Mr. Oorrane*. FE S-SIS3
*$95 WEEK^ SALARY
. Ualoo Lakt Rd.. otf Con
Rd. EM 3-3133_____ ___________
FART TIME, WORE iVtonNOB d
» I. Earn tlW to »133 waakly.
TIME EIRB1 111 Chuck .
Ill Bsaale ............. 3343 41
If, you think yoa cab qualify for thU Job that cxpccta hard nrork la aichaaaa for Ms P3^
happy to help yoa get at BlDoe all of. thorn trork li factory durlai the day. call 3 p.m can tauldhtlOS t< p.m! OR 3-3P33 or PE 1-334
PART TIME
_________to drmonatrat* item.
eyaMaia and Saturdaya. FE 4-3334 ilTtUCTURAL AND - OR MUCSL-Isineous Iron drafUmtn. call Mr. Corriveau, Radford Iron Work. OR 3-M31.
We y
SALESMAN
amcB are eamltac la 13.300 p3r yaar. Only raen. Ray Waat. aalea
SALESMAN
OAKLAND COUNTY AGES 27-45
HERE'S THE JOB 73E OFFER: III 43.000 llrat yaar bonua.
Ill commlislons nlua bonua, abould -------------1 -------
aiceed 110.030 (31 LIfatIma ~ iermlnallon.
Md aa^nMa paid yrbUt aHoadinf (31 No'ih^iaa. N* ala^k poitoda.
viu!d ^tr* *^*’**'1]’*' jambs' a.'%imom
MUTUAL OF OMAHA ^ OL 1-3331
and appllaaca* (or high
iWSfaYo'.............
rafartaoai. Bxmrloaeod pmftrred. Call FB 4-3373 for appolBtaaant. TXLElrilONX CANTASSEM AMD aaloamaa lor buUding mdoralaa-
tlon aalea. FE 3-mT___________
wool FRBaeXR, AFFLT MAIB Claaaeri. 4430 Ellaabath ' " —
rm u-uduu, uf Vrit* IHayl
(aa Flalai FQ. Boa 31._______
BAlTSfffiht. 13 TO II. LIGHT houeeyrork. Uee la. DL_3:1477. •ABTSITTBR wanted D A yT,
BEAUTY OPERATOR
Klfheat v a I * a. - ---“ilOB. Fob-

______________ -CARX-
uaer coUDle; Salary $303 Dio., blua apod food; comfortablo amali lumtohk haalod apt. yrlth telo-
ifeijr w
Muat b* axparlencad. trhlU good bMth. no children (full time (or botti), 11^ bare ear. boUi diira (gaaotlna fttralabtd). REFERENCES-.. No drinking; PERMA-NENT. call Mra. Rally. JO 4-gd47. CURB OIRL FOR DAT SHIFT-wanted. Apply at Bis Slay Drlye-
IB. 3130 Dial* Hwy._________
COUNTER omL BxFCkflrilbtb
CURB WAITRSaa. 11 OR ofBT Super Chief Orlye-ta. Ttolofraph
CURB
WAITRESSES
DINING
ROOM
HOSTESS
mlnaham. MI
TBlBraoNB'ciniVAaaBRB
. FOR OENERaL. 4 pATg. .,Stay 3 Btgbu. Refefamea. et teee tvu tramportaUflii.
your/ert^
ISti. ._________________
ICAL ESTATE
________ BEAL Et
Office Boot 3< tOclUUce a tum*n«r^^’'rw«>^. C^Saf lalerrto^Mr. Fartrldso
Mlltof, n 4-3331___ .-
TBLBFEOHB 6W»W
---- ----------J opeolnaa
"I waltraaaaa on night ahlft. - •“ ir orar. Apply la per-
Woodward and Square Lake Rd. . duhwashbr. ftjll'ttme BTB-Biag wtrk. 1171 Dlxl* Hwy. Dray* ton Flalaa. Ag^y la poraaa oah-
Te<ra hart oaonlngi lor part lima and full Um* dlnmg room hoat-eeae*. I1-3S yra. al age Wahreia Exp ntcaaaary. Apply la poraaa.
TED’S
woodward at square le rd. ESfXRIRNCED SALBatrOMXH FOR quality cblldrah'i ihop la Blr-
<Si‘1ra*'rM7^ t*K
|olntmi
RXPBHIBNCKl'wbM AN~PO R rrlll work, nighu. age 34 to M Aoply In peraon onlr. Harrlaon'a Orfll Room. 1330 N Perry Bt.
- .. FART THCE, 3im Boara. work (rma
-----oMleo. BBMri-
w* wlUtoala
__________required. __
OtaL OR WOMAN TO DO LlOWr np^work and can al 3 year old ebUd. lire In FE 3-D13 H^EKXmR FOR FAMILY OF
SbUKTlrrrBr'woniTAT~mdnji making appt*. (or oar dept
£aOT lt-4g TSThTBAtETAEIUrr
^JT3.drS[??rT
_kei^l^ 14 I^Saglmw. MIDDLE-AOXD aOCSEEEElriaC
ToBiy'i OrfTO-Ia. I7H A
------:d.. iftioA.
Woman for RXSTANRAirt whftk
and moul cleaalng. To llye-ln.
Wilt AAMnt ar.KfiAl ftgt chUd OF
I M3I1 after
LLPm
WHITE, kIDOLEAOXD WOMAN to babyaU with 1 year old..furn. own traaa. I day wk., 7;3g I* 4:30, call aftax 3 B.m. ar oa waeiiaad. OL 1-3117. Boebeatar. WAITRESS WANTED. 3417 XU^A-
_ beth Lake Road.	____
WANTBD: SWnxjHBOARD OPBR~ ator and typtot. Lumber or building supply oxporlaace detlnble. Call for interview. FB 4-3333._ , WAITRESS. BtfraRIBNCBO. DATSi no Sundnyi. Apply In perioa, lUmlltoD'a Omi.^Orptard Uke. WOMAN TOR OBNBRAL OR UOHT ^uMwwk. Uto la. Ref. requlrid.
Hdp WiEtod
BSTABUSHBD WATBINB ROUTE l it ta 11:33 k.m._____
rffto 11-34 AW. PIANO flayer 7
wtd. at old
■rale Craig.	____
WANTED - MANOBTIVOMAN FOR Jenltorel work In country club.
...... —. —
dnliht to S A.lf. Oood pop. lat hare good relerencea. Reply otlar Pme^Box^ 111.______
\V(X3L SPOTTER
r Dry Cleapli Mr Pruett. I
EmfUoynicnt Agenlcies 9
DOCTOR
ASST.
EVELYN EDWARDS
VCXIATIONAL COUNSEI.INO SERVICE om east HURON SUITE 4 PE 4-34S4 — FE 4-1434
Instructions ^ 10
CohsBRVATORT ORADUATB leeching brlvately pUao, organ, voice aad band laatrumeaU. FB
Work Wanted Mate 11
A-l CARPENTER WORE. NEW
and repair. FB 4-41l3,__
A-l ALDMVnUM SiDIHO, MT SFB" clalty. work and material guartn.
teed FB 4-3333. __________
A-l PAIM-fiNO' and wall PA-
3-4731.
CLEATi cut man 31 DESIRES work haa chauffeurs llcentl, high 0. wUl trarci. FE
teaeooabla
p.m. FE 4p43S._____
iXFfiiXNCKD H A R D tTaTb. paint, buUder* auppUtt, aportlng
groda man daalres ateady wo**-ood raferencea. FI 3-7441.
HlOH SCHOOL ORADUATB. SOME . collegt. Olad to work lor low .wage* with chaae* for advaaca-_m*at. Call UL 3-34M.
__*ny_klad. FE 3 ... .
MAN AOB 13. NBBDB WORi BA~D-ly^^^Bx^rJenced ^ ^gw^^atatloa
QlHEf ^TOCHO“"FAMn,T— MAN wlihaa to (lad cmploymeat with food mechanic to (urthar exp. In achoel mechanic* k aMUoa at-
tendant. FE 3-CI43.________
M. NBED8~ANT _klad of work, badly. MT 3-7431.
Work Wanted Female 12
COLORED OntLDBSIRBi'WORX ot any kind. P“ * ■"*
C*U after 4. i ^eeie_bring hmgen
nw'*moe~43'oi~A' su
Vbushil, 114 s:
FrONINGS PICKED UP AND DE-
lircrerf px 4-J7tl4.

WASRiNOS^AND IRONNOA. PICK up and delivery^Phone PB 4-l75t.
^oman^^wantb bast anriHo.
work Abere average In typewrit, lag and aUao. Exp. m Eagltoh-Oe^BB cerreapondenct. Call FB
Boildlnf Service li
CEMENT
_wx Atoo fireplace*. OR 3rM33. *	REcmooMi:
*	cabinet
work, wlater ratei, work laaran-Ued. OR 1-0743	snamn-
- OB^W'B^pliMT - .
FB 3-7364
41 “*«>»
A-l RnnxNtuiT cSiBanE^ \ laduatrUI Maaonsedeea. *
mtrnetlng. Abo ator* front
and gea. ’
"??»“*■ * '•'***• *"

work guaranteed.
WA1BRP3
carpentet and plastbrino
Good wbrkaaamhfp al right prioo. J. Frlek. BM >-4341,
CABUtm AND COUNTili TOPf ...... order- Phone PI I
fcEMENT 18 OUR U>ECIALTT.
CBMBNT large OI
irge or amaU CemmtrclaL n

Dam ButhNne Co. _ n 3-73(lg
ija¥ Vt*tx T*niio~ANp PtRisiL Tn, eaUmaloa. FE SSTgl.
..p FORMICA
kjiTCtoaajor, V*M^. Walti __ Podgo Floor Oorarlrt
F* _________________3-3731
FBEX EBTlIdA'rE ON WIRINO
toto Co. laib w. am*.
I
THE POXTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10. I960
THIRTY-NINE
IMMiaK Scrvk*
Lost md Fomim!
OARAOB.
Oout. UeMawl kiiUdn. >HA
T»m» fK 40MT_______________
BOOSE M^lr IBO. rOLLT «SHpp»d. FE 40US. L, A, Tauai.
LOST: LAOrS RED WALLET lAt. Emp aoiMT, pl*u« f«> Sof p^ri Md k, V E. nkt. ArtW Mttr>
EITCHEMS COOKTER TOPS AKD MU-hu Ptm WABSlni nrrtc*. R. B Mooro	Co. IMS
W Bona. Phan* PE MUl.
IfONET FOR REMQDEUNO,
New caottructeo.'Repplri Stc SEABOARD PIRANCE CO. tUt W. Perry. PE SOSSl.
FLOOR LATINO.
FLASTERINd * REPAIR-RBAS. P«t U«, FE S-Tin. ________
R FINNIMO
a	MT
BwiMint Supplies
MEED CASH FOR REPAIRS.
DAINTT MAID SOFFUES — fl* ManomlaM Mri. WaUac*. FB
Budness Sorytee 15
IN FT. STRINQ PENNANTS. U N. _qimleA_OAlor*._FE _MI41^ A-1 ALUMINUM SmiNO. MT SPI~-ciAlty. work And mAtertAl suArAs*
BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. WaU and wlndowt RcaioDAklt.
FE LIMI._________________
ALL ifAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS rcpAlna br fnetorj IrAlnad mr-At our oHiee OanarAI PrloUnf Oniet	LA'
ELEknRIC~MOnrbR~SERVICE~RB pairlnt and rrwindini. Ill E.
______
^ PAT'S APPLIANCE PAR'TS
M OAELAND AVE._____FE IMJI
FURNACE—OAS, OIL INSTALL^ M tar urv. C L. Malun PE
heating! service
mWsbsBwww vlVAOOTIr sVpSASVili Bli
work. OATOAtroukh.
14 Hr._________ ./ FE 1-M
RLPOOL a’ ex
LAWN MOWERS SHARPENED ' Pick-up and dtllrory. PE 1-1311 PLAiTXRIMO—MEW OR REPAIR Work OuamnUod. FB S-dlM
Dressmaking, Tailoring 17
DRESSMAEINO. TAILORINO, AL'' Ura^ Mr$ RodoU. FE iSNl. SUITS. TOAT8. DRBBW O AL-loroMoP* n 4-7074. Ill B. Hurm TAILORINO. REMODELINo'aND '	— Ini. AltoraUani lor Wen
ion Edna Wamar. FE
r; BBAOLB. IT Lako. Roi
Reward. OR 1-HN.
Notices ft Personals 27
KNAPP SHOES
rod Borman____
ARE TOU arORRIE^OTXR
DEBTS?
“BUrJcET Srvice
------	W. Biuoa m
JtwcHro
IF TOU NEED H« _ j^efc oO.. IIH N. Fornr. p*
IN DEBT? IF SO LET US
Rent Apts, Furnished^
lor Baotaelor«. »E MS1S. rROOkiS AND BATH. » CLARE --------AppQ apt! Mo. •
2 rooms, private bath, clean. Close to Sears. FE 4-2579 or FE 2^15.
1 ROOM KITCHENBTTB WITH prIraU bath, flrtt floor front. Parfclni taelUUc*. CaU PE 1-1111 freinll to «. IM W. Plkt.
1 r6oms. WrtihtM a ba^ mijl woloowo. 411 M. Iprrr. FE
1 ROOMe MV BATB. FEW ATE aatraaeo. ChUd woloowa ill ,por waak. Inqiilro at 171 Baldwin Ara.
Ph. FES-INI. ______________
Ilk ROOMS AMD BATH. NEWLT doNratad. Adulu only. PE 1-34N
or W 1-1714._____________
SVS ROOM NSW APT . PVT. JUtH a ant.. OlnktllTlUa. FE1-1N7.
1 ROOMS AMD BAiy. only. 147 W. Howard. PE 1-14(1
W^ l-Mdl. ......... .......
1 RMS. AND BATH. DTIUTIE8. 1 walk-ln cloaau. Pat. ant., waah-tnj	”*
i~R O O M *^*y“j**]';,”**^ lU* w5ak“ra^M7«“r ItTmImi;
1 CLEAN RMS . PVT'BATH. ENT.. utU. lum. Parlact tor worklop
coupla. tl Ruth St.________
1 RM. a BATH UPPER. OR 4 RM. a bath lower, utllltlaa turn., ta-ragt aTallablo. ^ults. PE 1-1114. 1 AIRT ROOMS OVERLOOEINO ^rk. ^r Tal-Huron. adulta only.
Give You 1 Place to Pay	R^iisi adults', clou
Ease Your Mind WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSEI.LORS

Anrrlean Aiaoe. Credit (hMinaellori Mlehlaan Aiaec. Credit OounaaUora NERVES TWITCH? CAN'T ""
atm?------------—
_Only
w Sleep-Wel Capaulea.
Sima Dnik Store. _ .JHOOL SUPPLi— lU-Party Faeora -„.:ddino needs -Oreetlna Cardi-Stationery-BO(»S. OIL PAINTS BACEENSTOSE
II Eart Lawrence______FE 1-I4I4
TRIPLE H TRld^rbR DANCES.
■	■	-----OR 1-S414.
Wtd. Children to Board 28
DAT OR
14 Hr. csie. PE 1-Mll.
Wtd. Household Ocyds 29
ANTIOUES BOUGHT a MLO.
DUhei lampi. eU. MT l-llll. BARGAIN HOUSE NEEDS NOW. Died (urn. TVa a applUMea. Top pricei. Pleaie ph. FE *
CASH FOR FURNITURE A j^^cec. Odd plMM or h
4-7|K!*
WILL LHaUIDATE TOUR HOUSE-bold aoodt either by prlTate a^e or public auction. Appralaala. L. E. Smart Sale Farm. Roobeatar. Mlehlfan OL '
carefully prepared. Ounn'a Book-kM^loE and Tax Service. OB
14 W. HUROM ST . DATS. MS
Wtd. Miscellaneous 30
HATE TOO A TTPEWRITTO. addina machine or piece of office fumltiire or eoulpment not In ttie? We wm buy Ibeio lUma.
_OR_M7jr__________
UNWANTTOnnTc~7SnaM picked up free of charge. EM
J-17M. _ ____________
WANTED USED BURLAP POTATO
•u. DL 1-lMO._____
MoneyJYsf^ 31
remodellna. II yra. exp. Free e timeua. MA S-llll.
Office O^n Eyenlnga a Saturdaya Homa Calla by appointment
BOLIN TAX SERVICE
41 E. Ptta FE 4-lltt_or jn nm
ALL WORKING PEO-PI^’S TAX SERVICE.
OR 3-2943.
BdoanEPfNO all taw.
___EMpIre l-MM____________
TWT WODta, TAX CCOlTAHt.	|^,	*o..X
.»aa ?'ss! a -y	“
Uinidry Service 20;
------------------ , Share Living Quarters 33
FAMILY LAUNDRY	----------------
Bhlrt service. FonM«lgg^„ qH ^^IT 4 ROOM HOUSE
LB^Bcaplwg A4 ACE TREE SERVICE. RE-
BrFE*>7ui'OT'»^MW. Moving ft Truckifig 22
O’DELL CARTAGE
oeal an^tey^dletaw moving
Trucks ito Rent
TRUCES. TRACTORS AND equipment •4-Ton FIckupa
Wtd. ContrscU. Mtgi. 3?
ABILITY
To aell your land contract ot loweal poealblo diacount U a airvica Tad
MeCullwim hoe S*»e“ *«r
ARRO REALTT________
MODEST MAIDENS
By Jay Alu
Colonials roch-
•a. SmIthA a UUy.
_________jIn Bt. OL 14141.__
6m down iAOBDRN^IOBTS). 1 btdraonu. medam. aa 1 lata. faaoad. MT 1-1711
gtliiir'EARl'T AMERICAN CUS-
• A.A---- .Tnn..il
flraplaca garaga black t^^ drive, woat auburban, oooalbit 4tb. bo-iroom. app'<utment only. FE 4-SMl. Nolaon Bulldtng Oompony.
AS a'orouf'of'buiuiers TTE ortor low pricea through Jolu»e
ooearo mortgagt. No obllgaUoo.
Builders Exchange
FE l-lli# or______OL 1-1411
MX'MObatN l^ROOM^Om w
ir~dWNER~LABOB I'STORT hoeu. I rmo., I botha. and fuU hnaaidhBt. Will .aceapt am. dowi Ijym^ f—	_ru».
I AlbarU. FE
• “Oh, you noticed! As a matter ol fad, I do have a new swimming suit!'*
ilToWNER AT OAELAND LAEE.
iaar*Auburn Halsbta. UlTi41?.
" BIRMINGHAM
BaarUlea Ilk atory 1
fralurea. Aaaumt il.4S#. 4lk per
Mit^m^aga^^ Mi^i-w"
^ OWNER ^
I room earpotod bunialow. Una taneod. Inndacapad J'.®' iP; ^Intmant caU FE i-l«7I aftar
FE t-lial. except Tbura.. Friday _* Bat. frcmi 11 a.i^to i p.m.
1 ROOMS. STEAM HEAT. NO _dnnklB|. 401 Jl. Faddock^
1 Rli. A iATH AND UTU.. HIRN.
In Bechaater araa. HL 1-M71.
1 RMS. A BAHC clean. PVT. Bvarything furn. Perfact 'or Forking couple only. PE 1-1171. I ROOM APT. VntT clean.
Everything turn. PS ^1171. ____
1 ROOMS, PRIVATI BATB. 7 Prell, corner Weat Huron, adulta.
—yt".   .T-	------------
1 RM. APT. BVBRTtHINO PDRN.
NIeo. claan 7U Whittomore.
1 RCXIMS. PBlVA'iE BA7T4 AND
I ROOMS AND BATH. LAROX and claan. Couple only^FE MOM. 1 ROOM APARTMENT PRIVA'IE entrance and bath. utUltlea. 101 —"	1-—
EXTRA LARGE KOOMB A BATH. In Oiford. 1 block to etorn. IN
mo. OB Hm.__________________
4 VERT NICE ROOMS UTIU-
011.N weekly/PhlVATE BATit A entrance, heat A utUlUaa. Apply ON Bt. CUIr St.-eet AVAILABLE. 1 ROOMS, BATH, heat and laundry factUtlee. M _B. Andereen. Call MI 4-ljM. BACHELOR APARTMENT. aTl new furniture, wall-to-wall corpot. private entrenee. Over Dr. Cur-Bon'a Foot Clinic. 117 W, Huron Btreot.__________________
Rent Apts. Unfurnished 381 Rent Hpusss
I ROOM APA|!tMBNT FOR RENT. ! COLORED. 1 BEDROOM. ON PER
ON mooth FE l-OM.______ I month.JJR 1-71M.
ROOM AFT.. PVT. bUPLEZ. 0 ROOMS AND BATH.
gorage. fun baaomtaL Clota la.
_l75. FI 1-llTg._________
MODBRN'i BORM. BRICK. OAS 'boat, bamt.. 1 ctaUd waleomo. Inquire gi K. Bird. N. after 1.
_weekdnya. aU day Bat. A Bun.
TtdiMEY FOR MOVING A
Rtfurnlablng - Get up to flM
--- RENTAL OFPOBtU-
_____ UtUltlea fum.. pOull.
_101 Proap^ St^yi 0-0070 CHli.OREN WELCOME, t ROOM apt. Btova and ibfrlg. turn.. IN. monUi. Apply ISi Bloomfield Ter-raoe. next to Bt. Joaepb Hoep. OAS HEA'T AND LIGHTS FURNV M WlUlama Street. FE 44411. MONEY rok MOVING A Rrfuihlahlng — Get up te UM. SEABOARD FINANCE CO.. Tui N. Ferry. FSLI-NOl.__________________
ORCHARD COURT
APARTMENTS "Kent orestiy Reduced"
—AIR CORDITIONED-■ ■ ■ "I Onfurnlahcd 9ROOM-Bvery Detxll
FE 8-6918
MOR., 10 BALMER BT., APT. I Open Deny A Sun. •" — ■ - -
N 4 ROOMS. NO CHILOREI
Labe. IM weekly.
mple, o dim I
PURNUHXD APARTMENT:
Weat aide location, four root and bath Excallcnt cobdltlob. 1 ebUdroD ploaao.
John K. Irwin & Sons
Rciltora Smr.' lilt
111 Weal Huron Street Phone PE S-1447 EVE FE 1-4174, FURNISHED 1 ROOM APARTMENT
SMALL AFT. PVT. BA7W A ENT.
410 N. Paddock nr. Ferry. THREE ROOMS. PLUS EfTCliiN and bath. AU have one aeporated bedroom. At low aa MA
SLATER APTS.
U N. FARKE BT.
FB 0-104S
AFTER I AND SUNDAYS. BEE CARETAKER MR. CARROLL. A-
1 ARCADIA CT.___________
UPPER 4 ROO.M APARTMENT, adulu only, ,110 Eaat Pelrmount, WAT'SiTORD. 41M LXSSINO BT. Nice 4 rma. upetalre. Pvt. eaL and batb. gaa baat. 010 par wk.
OR IJHIO or OR 3-1414.	_
WARM AND PLEASANT, FOR 1 or 1 people, lake IronL no drink-
_era. W MIA______________
WX8¥~BI0B - 1, 1 a 4 RM. AFTB, bath, heat, H-W, etove A refrlg. fum. Near St.	vv—-
Heat CareUker. AdulU. C
ely yard!. Ref. OL O-OIM.__________
SAM WARWICK HAS IN'stLTAN Lake J badrm. brick. CarporL lake prlvllegea, Hit. Leaee. FB 4-MSO and W! >1100___________________A
k*bStha^*(l
WEST BLOOMFIELD TWF AT OR-chard Lake and Mlddlcbelt Road. 14M Walee. 4 bedroor Fk car garage. IVk " Refereneea. Leaat. U
cupanc^. UN 1-41M. ______________
WOULD rent' or LEASE MY 1 bedroom homo In Clarkaloo. Ta-cant AprU lat: MA O-mi
For Rent Rooms 42
front; W Bute St. FE_1 CLiAN HbOSBEBEPINO ROOM ' “ Chrutlan Indy. FE_4;11»
Rent Houses Furnished 39
1 BORM. BALD BAOIE LK. MOD-_	ern NAtlonel 7-1770.
'foT”pe‘nIloned"~lI3y."BTM'onebie 1 BBOROOM. MOLERN. OAS HEAT.
■ —• - right party. PE 4-7714. reoaonebit. MY 3-lOig. ________
1 ROOM HOUSE. 040.
_________10 B. M»rlmac.__
1 ROOM HOUSE. ADULTS OHL'Y
Tv furnlahed. Maple 0-0000. _ NEAR FISHER BODY. LIVINO room, kitchen, bnth. UtlUtlce.
• II M weekly. OB 1-71N._________
SYLVAN LAKE PRIVlLEblB, AT-
tractlvely decorated. * ----------
living -----
7171
orland. FE 4
UPPER 4 NOOMS AND BATH. ALL Utmtiei except IlghU, adulU on-
Iv. FE 4-4011______________________
tOE.'IT ' Siol! NEAR WEBSTER School. 1 rma. A boU. extra Ige living rm.. all new furniture, e^
Rent Apts. Unfurnished^
Stakea
__________ ________iLTraUera
• InSfalTSSorO).
_____^tacludln^Su^ay Uctery J".«P~f'‘»„«Veg.pTu
i-A Keduced Kates | K. U. Templeton, R^Kor i
sM"??ft' M^vIfSS ^'“""fe"”^	......
A-l MOVTnO SERVICE Rcaaaoable ratea _ FE 0-141S UOHT AND HEAV VTRUCEINO.
Rubblab. fill dirt, grading. aanjL ----	---end loading. FE
LAND CONTRACTS JO ^Y OB i " Earl Oarrela. EM 1-Hll
1 BEDRM. APT. ELdCT . RANGE and refrig Middle SlralU Uke ^vU^n^ Clean and economical.
i~room. »*«IO*RhTOjl k
eUve. Adulu only FE 1-MlO. i tebMinniTcE.TERiucirCT beat, tile bath, fenced yard, fuU
bemt , garage. FE 1-4 IgO^_
riXDROOM. NEWLY DECOKATED. ground noor. prlvaU entrance.
100 month. 1*1 _l-lSlg._
y'RKbPMf , PVT ENT 0^0»jp floor 1401 O^ke rear Walton.
t.'>0 a Mo FE 4-0031	__
1 AND 3.ROOMS. UTILITIES FUK-nlalird 114 E. Howard
HOLLYWOOD APTS.
ara. FEJ-1110^	________
Lake orion. i Bfiim nob-
efn. 100 Hilghu Hd. MT 1-1M4. MODERN t S'ToRY HOUSE. 1 brdrooma furnlahed. EM l-MI after O. till Commerce Bd. MODERN 4 ROOMS AND OARAOI
at ^?l_PontUc_Lake Roed,^__
NICE CLEAN 1 ,R60MS~iui& bath at Creacent Lake. Partly Fum Very reaaouable rent to u*u!t 11 rx *1^ ^^relerenoe. No
Rent Houses Unfum.
UUL DECORATE
$75 PER MONTH FE 4-78-33
M4 EAST BLYD. H. AT YALBNUU
1 BEDRSQM HOUSE I'fLOCE
Ray Ajnett. inc. Rceltdra, 70 B'. Huiou. FB 0-0404
1 BEOR^M ^LAKB^ PROin. YBA^
B. NICE ROUE OP YOUR d._a^room reUa. 047.W. Huron. CaROE CLEAM'ROOM FOR OEN-Uemnn. privnto —*—
r. MS k. Paddock. Fi
SLSKPINO ROOM FRIVATll homa. Hoar Fontlao planta. FE
Rooms with Board 43
tocni A BOARD WITH OR out. llMk Oakland Ave. FE "iTie Vlllato 9ouao'
A realdont houl type boarding homa tor elderly lediaa In Highland <10 min from Pontiac on M-10 A Milford Rdal Addreai rkeervotlon Inqulrlea to:	Thi
Village House. P.O. Box 111. Bllb-Und, Michigan.
Convaiescei^Homes^jM
VACANCY XLDENLY MEN OR
______Rent Stores _	46
IMS FT. 10707 HIOHLAND RD. . MM Vpbaso wiring. EM l-tOU -
EM 1-74U	_____________
dLTRA-NEW^r^BS^ WEST SIDE
^ Rent Office Space
7ND FLOOR.^^0 ^OOtU - -owatown oiex Comer toca-Lawrence and Ferry Btreatt.
■ - ---------“-jance Com-
FE S0Q7I.
„„ ^iriCKn-WEiT"
MI44.
FonUae Oommunitv Ftoance Company Call Jonn too. FE S0Q7I. nlb'^ficbb-Wbst side. FE
49

Pmnting^ft^ecora^g 23
1ST CLASS FAINTING AND EEC-orating. Cash or Urma. UL
^7M4.____________________
IST'CLASr'lNT A EXT FMirr-Ing. Roaa^Don Boek, OL 1-1141. 1ST CLASS DECORATINOjl‘Am'r.
ln|^ and waU papering. FE 4-OlM. iST CLASS PiklNTINb. WALLPA-
* "L'"
A-l FAINTINO IN'IERIOR EX-urlor 10 Mr cant disc, for cash. Ouaranterd. Free oat. FE 4-0104. AAA FAINTINO A DXCORA7TNO. M yeera expertencr Reeaonabla. Fr4 MUmeUa^ Phone Ui^UlM A'lady INTERIOR DECORATOR l^perlng FE M141._
A-l PAINTING A DEOJNATINO.
Paper removed. FE ^U.	_
INTERIOR PAlirriNO A WALL washing, reoa, OR 1-ttlS.__
Tmterior Aim -----------
pamting. wnll washing. Free aaU-
metaa. F*_S-STT$.___ _
FAIRTiNO, FAP«RINO, REMOY^-nl. Bnablng. FE t-EUl.
. FAiNnifo. noT. a eet.'pafto
53sr---------------------
TelQiviBieit Service 24
CRESTS TV. 1-HOUR SERVICE.
^ or night H 0-41?t________
day or NidHT TV SERVICE. X S-nSS or FE lAJM
M. F. STRi^__________
walker a GARY RADIO A TV. FB^fl	U$ N dotooon
UpholEtering »
toj^tllo Cooioy Lake M. EM -----^at/s''ulMiol3fERiRO
____	FE 4-S7S7	______
^THOMAS UFHOLBfTtRlIlO M7 RORTH FERRY ST.
FE 5-8888
Wanted Real E*tBte
all cash
OI A FHA EQUITIM mo — —u	quickly, «ill
anneW
NKF.DS
LISTINGS,
heat AND 7 BEDROOM HOUSE MODERN. Uiht. furn. ON mo. FE 0-1007. ; Oa. heat. FuU b.aement. MY
Adulta only. _	________j-asoj,
“rMB—LOWER FVT. B"T * 1
■	^C\§H
For your e<iulty or Loud Contract. No (ibUgotlon.
J. C. HAYDEN. Realtor
M E. Walton°***“	FE^-S441
"ElST WITH CLARK CLARK REAL ESTATE
LET Vi SHOW YOU HOW to OET
OWNERS
Wo need Uatlnga on bmuea, fnrme acreage. Have client will paj caeb lor 0 of 0 room Weet eld< Bovt buyers lor lam
balh.'Tnc'.'utlL atova A relrlg. | _
Adulu. FE_M73g._________ „ «
7 BEDROOif LOWER. BASEMENT full batb. aeparato entrance. OH per month toclutM hebt-.
C. PANGIJS. Realtor
. _____only. Bhirh.
I Huron. Soo coro-
____	■_ 4-4414.____
I'RMB. A BATfiTFVT ENTRANCE,
1 ROOMS AND ■A'HI, PRIYATT eotrauce. Inquire at 1170 Sasha-
baw Roq|l ____ _______
- RMS AND BATH. UFTER. heat. furn. JM BaldwIn^FB 0-llTL 'a'CROSS'FROM ELKS TEMPLE, brand new gas furnace. MO mo.
to atoady couple^ FE ^OT1._
rRM8~A BATH, UFFIR. BTOVl A ralrtg., utllltlct lure. Adulta only, n 7-W07.__________
dpn. FI: M474._	. „
rRM. AFT. IN SILVER CHESf Sub. Pvt ent. and gar. 070 mo.
OR 3-SI14 ^ 7:10._____
4 R O O M's, BATH. UFFEH, _adnltx 8. MorabaU. FE_7-a001. I RM. and' BATH-FUU, BABB-mrnt. Oaa heat. FI 7-0741.
1 ROOM AFARTidEHT. NEWLIT decorated. ehiMie" aUowrd. Ml _beal^»E_4^^ M Judeqi._________
Lost and Found
BB1TTAN7 « »«*•	I2rn
Id Tlolnlty at Ferry Park, Nenkk JJ," am High Soheol. Reward. Ft
. PONTIAC REALTY
717 Baldwia	FE bS?7l
WANTED
_ LAEB UBTIHOe -
“Buyers Galore"
na i&B	MS*'KWt
Rent Apts. FuntisheJ "97
1 BEDRM. MOO, RICE. »ACHE-l*a or aew married couple. FB
4-IOM er FE 1-0740____
rT^E7'Ci3SfR RM. ETTClfiR — , eoovealaet to town. Mil. turn. 26 _»41 tMO. FE Ugo or MA t-llM. 1 BEAUl99U,t FURk. ROOMS. Private ..bxtk.^^aT^^^ptoa.«M
f CMCAia rooms for 1 OR 1

LOSr^ DARE BROWR WALLET. | at Fur"— ~ w.ta.hu li..
ImSik dSSTuiwiti.
A .i ipskodii I CHILD waodsO: l^!SLf*b&y
«. on BSIS4. n«-tisi is s. Psrkt. -	. Ippn ^ asI. ^
i'and'bath each.
^loae ln FI 7-741.). )OM DUPLEX -'Brick WHO lull basement, gaa beat - The batb. Urdwood flaart WIU deowatc for re-epeoalblo UniM. OM por
Nicholie & Harger Co.
U% JOKBT HURON_______FE Min
I BEDIPDOM DUPLEX, OAS belt Pull bairmcat. IM N. lotaa-_aon, FEJ-7700. _	_
1 BEDRM. HOME. MU NOR'TR-vlew Dr ,L'iark>lon._MA 4-1404. J BEDROOM RANCH. 7 CAR OA-rage, larie gardeii apace. 700 tuo-cuin. AuHrii HrIgbU. UL 3-7074. i BEDRCXIm'BRICK RANCH. U4 mo ChUdreb accepUd. MArket _4-l«l.
4 BSOROOM DUPLEX. 770 STATE
8t:j^nC 7-7700.____________
nftMS. S BATH. dAS HEAT. HI Toorhela. CaU after 0 p.m._
I ROOM^ HOm OIQUtRB'AT HI
rilk' 'HOUM.'~'HBWLY'~Mdo:
rated. CiU FE 4^tt._________
7 RMS. 0 BATH. COAL HEAT.
071 Ellsabeto Lk. Bd.___
fU BlOHAM -'modern 1 BEO-rus. pert baeowient. Forced^tr heat Attached sarage.
Fcr Sah^Houses^
Down pine coau to aayoc thU nlco 1 bodroom homo. iTvtog room, dining room, kttchon. full baaoment. Immc— occupancy 11II FuU Price IIO.MO -M4.I0 BO. pine Uxta. Look It over at tl N. East Blvd. and caU W. W. ROSS HOMES. IRC. at OR 1^1 for appointment.
1 BEORM.. AqtO OIL HT. WATER aottoner, oboded. fenced let. Raved walks B drive, atorma Jk Kreena, lake priv. WitkUta Laks. Holly. MX 7-4ek4
i«EDRM. ?EW It, CAR OARAOE. aluminum tTORM.Y K BCRBKisS. f-AVED DRIVE ALTO 0-8 heat CilY CONVIH.INCE. PVT OWNER yE 1-0354.
1 BCdROOM. COMPLETELY RE-decorotod. 4 extra Itrgt rma, Mx340. fenced, lOrege. vacant. IMI Oeknoll efl >Opdykc Rd Smell down payment. Owner MI -
1 BEDROdlil, HdUBB. IH CAR OA-rege. block ood half from Flaber -------„ .
For Sole Housob 49
DON'T L*T LACE OF CASH ^
C.'K,'3rA.S>rB"if&?S
1144 N. Parry. FE O-OMl._
EXBCUTIVB'S HOUSE ON BBAUTt--• Waurford Hill, carpeting, oa. hullt-lns. 1 botba. bosa-1. OwBor .iranatorrod.
IS tp Clorkston. t
Elizabeth Lake Estates
1 bedroome. aethes dryer. Aluminum awnings. IW cor garage. Laks prIvUegee. Only MM dewa. IHA terms.
Leslie R. Tripp. Realtor
74.West Hureo Street
_____FI e-tlOl^or FE S-0141
lame 4'BXDROdM farm I^E end outbuildings with 10 acres for sole or trode for bom* In Auburn HelgtaU or RoeboaUr oraa.
UL 1-1M0._	___ _________.
LAKKFRONT. MOL LAKE. 0 BM. "mgalow. 1 bodrm.. earpeud. imt. tUod. 3 oar garage. ^ S X 104. Penoed tli.M^ M.OM
NO MONEY DOWN
< living space. IH
RUSSELL YOUNG
- freiMl!*'tU.~IOO'. MA l-lToi._
MODERN HOUSE. APWROXlMAtE-ly two aeret. Canal to Huron Rlvar. Terms or trad#
HOYT
ELIEABBTH LAKE EOTATIlB
Very aUracUvt

For iSak Houics

Wnt. ctftrk 1
BATEMAN
&KAMPSEN
MULTIPLE UETINO SERVICE
YOUNG EXECUTIVE
Your Btxt atop might ho Ihit brick ranch wlOl the ''big' house feel at toe tmaU house price Excellent South Bloout-fleld Hlghlandt location. Beautify large^ Uvtog r^m^foi^.iio-
Vecant aad qtock "poaaptatan. Lendteaping and all the extras Included. Priced under Mt.OM.
NEW SCHOOLS
end a new 1 bedroom brick lust u mlnutot Irorn Fontloe. A penoct Plata to mist the tamlly. 1 bodroomt. m baths. 1 Ilreplacoa. FuU baaomont aad 1 oar garaga. BuUt-ln oven and
I^U,'** •Btl*FlS^&
NEWLV DECORATED
and fresh aa a Sprlagtlma flower. I yeera old. Lake prIvUegee end Close-In Watt tide area. Aluminum atorma and tereent and plectrle ranga Included. Vacant and immediate poeeeetloo with ONLY 07M down.
TAKE ADVANTAGE...
it^ thll i^ueat and
Just the one tor you. Has largo Irneed lot, Ueet and ahruht. Aluminum storms and nearly now carpoUni. Lake prlvllogea on Wottlna Laka. Frietd ifft-iw with tormt,
REALTORS FE 4-0528
777 g. TELBORAFH OPEN EVES.
WEBSTER
OXFORD - LAKE ORION
tXKE ORION AREA. I room homo with 1 ktdreomt, kitchen with dinette tpoet, ell furnace.
ftlumUtum atorma aad tereent, 'need yard. Lake prIvUeget. M.7M. tl.iMt dowa.
EAC Nortkweat area 4>i and 1 piece bath. Oil wall >. atorma and Krtent. M -400. OMO dowa. or will accept ■ay roaaoMblo trade la.
OXFORD, d rooms. — living room, dinlai room. -. 1 bedihemt and bato. full mtaL M.OOO easy tormt.
?TMk M'^p'bord.' Realtor; ___
NEW TRl-IBVBL, 1 BBDRM. *
bath, BylvT-
Suburban Brk.
Clooo la JuM wait of Fontloe. a this cuetomT built ranch homa. It'i all on It floor with uUUty | room end f_cor garage. Large eomer let. This homo ft brand now and »(hplttolp> ready to move In. HT.OM with land eon-troct trrmaj Immtdlata oloatng and poeaeseta. Let ne ahow you.
Jack Loveland
HM Casa LWke Bd. , fK J-Jlf7l TO BU»_^OR RELu
Clarkston
REAL ESTATE, INC
For Sale Howsef 49
You'll LO^Ge e.
THB LOCATIOR j,)- BolloO BOlSlI-
lota to Ottor HUIe. txaStonTyaar. 'round fUhtog and ^yon will ba ready for the summer fun wltB your boot in Bylvan and Ottor UkMl ^^ICK	SOME
halt bath, aieo a paneird family room. Udterook flreptoeo to tha 3U1] llv.ng .room. OAS HBAT, garage. BeeuUlul lOMipS 'Ttala weat tide location la l_PTlced to coU —
GI'S
Nothing Down
AHK you PATINO high rent* Then you should certainly make aa ellort to tee tola large 4 room home near Dravfon Plaint It'a located to a bice area on IM x 703
^e.ttMch’^.S
xeiT aad toauraocc. Aad.
R.\Y O'NEIL, Realtor
107 S. Teltgraph Rd. OP*,",!! FE 1-noi	P* 4-dMI

ureo want, piemy ot cloacta and storage apace. Oat heat, lew upkeep. Ideal lor reUrtd.
D3NELSON PARK I17.0M - 1 bedroom. Hk story Capo Cod style. Separate dining
room. lomUy kitchen____altocHcd
breeiewey end garage. Tul
SYLVAN VILLAGE
IRWIN
____Hllla,'___________________ ..
this spacious family homo, largo living room with ladgtrock tire-plact, booutUul picture window, ultra modern kitchen and full •lied dining room, thro# eitro largo bodroomt with wardrobe clottto two earamlo ■—**-
cantor hall arrangei-------	—
floors, plastered walla, marble yllle, double glaied wlndowt, <uU baaomont, gaa boat, two and a half car garago. attached. Largo lot. Immadlota poaaoaslon. Priced ot: 171.000. tilTor trade.
SMITH
WIDEMAN
)RTH BIDI-PI8HW TODY 1 room bunialow. Pull price, M.bM. MM down OM mo. , MTTBR TH/N RENT.
Proms reach. I bedroom*, built lOM. IVk ear attachi4 garage PertoMtor, forood air fieat.	- -
Cooley aad Lang
rg^’ix.v
INDIAN VILLAGE
II.OM Down)
Very oomfortakle hams to Web« star School district. Largs rooaa —IS X 11 Uvtog room and 11 a 11 dtotog room, both earpotod, Attractive kitchen. Oil heat and recreation epaeo to .the tuB base* mcot. Double garage. BEE ni
L^ST WITH
Humphries
_MUL'ITPL1 LMTINO 81ByiCK__
KUEABBTH LAKE EBTATiB. S bedroom. fuU boaemoat iVT car garaga and 1 loU. Rome can ba purrEaoed on PHA terma. LaOgo kitchen with table epaoe and wall to wall carpeting to Urtog
KENNEDY
RIVLTOR
___IJOl W HURON_
SCHRAM
RENT BEATEN Only $M dawn a BONNEVILLE
au.,,, JVM., get oaai,
moael open deUy from 11 te r cowr Kenaett Road and Ma^ltoto. 1 btocka WMt M
8TCTAN MANOR
Btaullful 1 bedroom brick
e'kt, eerpetod. ExceUoot kitchen. 1 car garege. Many more leeturra. Can be bought on FHA. Terms. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 1 bedroom bungok^ ~ " floors, platlered w romic toe both, h mr.tt Paved atrr<
IVAN W, SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471
MULTIPLE USTINO SERVICE
beet, full both, g^ kitchen. HOME IN nCILLENT repair.
SEE o’uR MANY OTHER
PHOTO LISTINGS
SMITH-WIDEMAN
REAI.TY
NOTART-IHSURANCB _
.1 70. RUROM UPBM BVtS
FE 4-4526
I ipecA. Large bedi
bic kllctarn — -9ecA. -------
Rrt ■
reatton reooi, uet nan. a.iij sewer aad waur. But service.
7VATKINB HILLS
Lbedroom modern brick ranch.
rge living room, family kitchen, It* ceramic Ulo aotbs. platlered valla, oak floors. Pull botemeni, 114.000 with eicaUeni tormt.
FE 1
0	TOOM8 BjfATP. WEBT 8)
Oat boot, FE 4-IMS	____
1	LARGE AIRT ROOMS OVjS-looklni park noar Tal-Huron.
_Adnlta ^y. PI 1-0874. ___
I ROOMS ARd'BA'TR'ON WEST Side. PE 1-4M0 Of PE l^MM. __
0 RM. UPPER ^T. ACROSS trw^Tflo-Huren. »7» por mo. FB;
fTMILE' AND MIDDLEBEL'J'^4 rooms, ttove. felrlgarotor. llfbtt ■ad hot water rundabed. 171 a mentb. MA 0M«	.
N OAKLARD
1 reams, both. (nesn. Hoot 1 furnlahed. MO month. Sm
carctoktr___________________
£?0N AFARTMB.urs. 4 NOOMS and bath. New’s decorated
frtgorator and at -------
Carpeted , Uvtog i Mke BL
017 B.
....nr,-
lOlJ'k NORCOTT . _
belh Oil atovo heat. OM REVERSE CHARGES Ml 0-7M0 WE^l;^ WE J-WM
'COLORED
porch LMOteO
I. Uvlng Id IrM
lacttlon. Moot ' bsvo 11
prtveto ontraneo. Excopttonally neat and cleaa. Located on r— Itrect. By month or week, tooi Chorlet Tucker. Mir Brok^a. Inv Co Iu«. FE
$-im MUr t_______
WELCOME. EiCTRA, torn Mnite on lake and ~—‘yc.i070 month, A. oAr._fe 4-^. OB. ^ baoiiAw
Brick Flat —Heated
AttraoMTc four family bnU^ . MU Anbntn Ava., Aubitra RU. Front ft reor^ prfyoto entrmneoo
--------- • *^odreom. kttebanotM
garM. rgforoMoo ar ghaw FB ftSMS
large I----- ----- -
elete to Penttac^70 JOH^N. BRORR.
DRAYTON FLADOB. 0- -Trail, 4 room duplex.
Ill |4 per wk. Hot wa
, OR 1-4404.______I	_
farm HDVSS S LAROB RTOMB asd 1 batha. I kitchens HMae Ann be divided for 1 femUlex
lOMment. ,ell boat. Bloolrlc water bseior. Oarden epaec. Shady yard. Dae df ban opu^l. AereM t^ read from ■Ipmentary 'efhaol.
1 FAMILY HOME. oM MaDIBON Ave , Rocheater. 4 roomt tad bath down. 4 roomt aad bath up. Separate entrances.->1 car laraie. Nicely Isndtcaped let. Smith ft Lilly Inc.. SM Mato BL Eochoe-
_ter,^L. I-H4L___________
3 BEDRIISm HOME NEAR CREB-—t .Lake. Baaement. Oaraxc. go lot. MM down FI 1-M7I.
J BR BRICK RANCH
WEST BUBN — ClOtt in. achoole. shopping tie built lOeg got bent, car pou. large Ic4.
will I HI M
E 1-giii :
(f’atre
fuU*Vi
HilU Reel Ea-
.rOiii r "	-----
FE 4-1044.___________________
'BEDROOM BRICK. RANCH -- laka prIv., oU beat, etorme ..eens. gaalnator toft water, kaeeosent. lUMM dowa. OR
1-H70_________ _	__
f 'BiDROOiU AND BATH. TILED baaement. recreation room. Vb ■ere lot^Terma. OR l-MM.
ABX7TH coiyt-
baUmenLVrMd'dowir''n^^ rbxotoom'home laks frivi-
1	ilMr fnr-r
^tonvilie"R^.'Mly OM *a month. Fheae owner OA ritll.
153 S. MARSHALL
I bedroom. I bdrm. ft both on lat
Paul M. tones. Real Est.
til W. Huron
FE 4-SlM	' FB 0-U7I
$800 DOWN 3 Bedroom Brick
Near Lady of the Uket Bchool. Modern I year aid hams with I'k c-ramie Mtha. Carport ft paved drive. Large lei Fenced Located on a paved itreel. dote to ech«oU ft atorca. Oll.OM.
LADirS. fftNC.
.	_______OR 3-im
'BUD'
Near St. Benedict’s
and Doaolaan Behoole, I bedroom bungalow with IVk cor gorofo, qutek pooeoc-alon. Featuroo Uvtog room with dtotog aroa, full bath with shower, attractive
Ivor, look todoyl
3-He(lrooni Brick
and feeturing corpet-Ireplace. lull kaat ment, natlc beat and hot , garage, front porch —	— --idftrretna.
.“Bud” Nicholie, Realtor
41 Mt ciomcn* St.
FE 5-1201
After 6 p.m. FE 2-3370
GAYLORD
couple. This home le neea end Cleon with lull boee-menl. 117 mr gorage, out-’ door arlU. the eitra lot Is Ideal for 0 vegetable garden
lavorlle flowed. Kui prloa n.4M. FB g-fdll.
Roar Watorfor^ High
John K. Irwin &
' REALTORS Since 1*11 111 West Huron Street Fhont FE 4-1447 EVE. FE 4-4774
'multifle libti'no service
ARRO
HANDY MAN
I bedroom home, la ItvabI* needs some flnlabtog. Small down pormtnt.
bedroem“bom*''*juU*b*'th base mentl^rvk blocks to ao^l. $7*M down.
NORTH SUBURBAN 1 bedrooms, full boaemenl. gaa
* ‘•i(4VKblf '“
1 bedroom Urroct. full baaomont,
'***^'N0«7w‘groE I bedrooms, oil furnace, t<k car garage M7 per monlb toefudtog taaae ft Insu’-anee.
------TTON fane
1 to wall carpeUng.
------- gaa baat. 7 ear ga-
rags, paved drive ft street.
ARRO REALTY TED MeCULLOUOH. REALTOR 4147 Ceee-XUssbeth Rd.
FE 5-1284 FE 4-3844
Open t B.m toliNpa ALL DAT SUNDAY
NICHOLIE
& HARGER CO.
NORTH BIDE
1 bedrMm bungalow Hardwood fleore. gas HA heat. Rullt-ln rang* ft even Uill-r.y room. Only 4MI1 down— Balonct ilka rent.
WE’T SUBURBAN
1 bedroom hrlcY bu-'irloe.
Fu I be*rm-iil, oil HA li-ec. wiier sof'.ener. Larie landscaped lot. Close lo uhoola. * Rraaonablv priced at 111.-IM - Terma.
WEST SIDE
) badreom. 7-atorv heme.
Full bamt.. gas HA heat. Vacant. Only MM down -
BROWN
MULTIFLB USTINO SERVICE
IRWIN
lake frivueoes
X
Sii:
on loalyn
living r kltchan i. Tiled h
$9,500
Uvlng room, dinette ond both bedroomx Hai a plaaaaat kitchen with dining area. Recreatloa room In the baaement with built In hook ahelvea Located on o corner lot with o two <Jr forog* aad a alee town. A houa* with sU th* featuras te rotko a heme. Full prlc*
On Lake Orion, located on beat port of laka. 7 large bedrooms ft both up. Dln-Ini Uvtog room ft kitchea with 'i bath down. Two big porchas ovarloeking lake.
I aacriflat. Most
LAWRENCE W.
GAYLORD
I bedroom bungalow.
erol raposaoasad. good, modern
— IVi per cent Int. -..........•-•Ing coeu.
rioua locatlena. I
474M F trade Ij^elew
Located aeer Nerlh-
good coodlUon. Easy terpii.
NEAR. LAKE OAKLAND - Lovriv ft. bUngolcw With oil AC I Atom, atorma. Eaay to heat, floor*. Urge HxlIO ft. let. A I value at only lll,7N. Torme.
COMMERCIAL -
Right on Dixie
....— Urge ------- ----- _
lau baaement Lerat INxlM let. Ideal far Ooetor Uwyer. a-.. Fnced at only IM.MI end the tond Is elmoel Worth Itaa asking price.
LAKl. front — Modern bunqalew with wilk-out basement. Oil Ac Furn Carpeting Tile batb La-ye tot w)tn 74 IL ol Uka frooUgc.
List WITH US - For laat ft ef tlclent service WE BUY eELI. ft TRADE — N yra serving FonUae ft Vicinity. Open 4-1.
L. H. BROWN. Realtor
. 4M Efiaebetb LMie 1^
'^uL^LirusTwo
m/iU
a'
edge ff city.
nlahed end _ - .	_
and lUceto^ tondaea^._ A atoady
ktcp’FrUad
NORTH END 7 bedroom with flolahed attle. full basemant. water eoftenera —■ Urge dining aree. Ealraa Inciuoe: Favrd drive fenced rear yard and garage CaU today to *** tola
ANNETT
High, all spaetoua rooms. Full batamani, gas hast. I
JHld.‘'tfMVftTS*."»\t.
siutog, ommg rm- ■lunan, bum to ovon ft raugt, DUh-matUr. too ft Mrch euw> . boords, eoramto tUo baoL Full 'haaamaot oU boat, laundry room inehide. wash, er ft drya
Spacious living room ft dining L. lircpiact, 4 picturo windows^ to’’**] * bed*”' **" carpeting and drapes Included. Heeled breeaeway. lU car alUehtd garage. Oaa heat Fries reduced I34.IM, terms.
GILES
West Suburban
A very bice 4 ream rabeh-or wlUi attached 1 ear garage. 3 large well landscaped tots. This home has
4-Bcdrot)tn Brick
I ■’rated weel suburban. Lergf ljijix7l IL IMut rwni
altractlve (eeturta Large.
i-.e.f -.*0 lot e-T h lake prlvdeaes on e nire beech Cell.lor appolnlmenl.
Urge glsaaed^lD perch, also
nice, Nice tot paved atreet r- garagf. Easv tyrma cao bt trraagtd
STOUTS
Best Buys Today
DBLUXX LIVINO
In Ihit lovely coat tida homa that hat three bed-roomt. full beatment. Braetewbv and attached garage. There Is a gat furnace, get hot water heater and tWma asd tereent. 411.7M.
OIF BALDWIN Hire two bedrot carpeted Uvlng
maaeien w n ice, xoioniei large apreadlng elmt Specious living room, flreplact, TV room dining room, ppw-der ^o^^^^modern kltchou
apac# far ""
Tnd. Bati Oereie ft IM.1M. It
not ANNETT, INC. NEALTORB 31 E Huron SI.
FE8-i)l6
DORRls"
auuiHi noniv ••
■7 block from oily uet oft BaldqrUi. an -are larger thaa avat->tw aarpettog. eace^ y large and we I d kitchen, *»<>•?<“> lan basement lor chll-play on bod weather, acred well-	“•
I. 41I.140.
I bedroom, hiving .-.jieted Uvtog room, ook floors, lorga eating tpoc* to kitchen ond atorma and ■ereant. This sharpie has gas lurnace and hot wat-r Wur. Only H.MO with amaU down payment.
REST OF CITY We are offering this cute little two bedroom home havlbg lull baaoment. This home It bendy to groda achool end has nice yard. I7.4M total price with easy terma.
fered the aherpeat
Hat carpeted J^ng room, teremic tlled./Utha, lovely kitchen eith beeutiful cup-boardt epd btillt-to oven
Warnen Stout, Realtor
77 N. Boglnow	FB MIM
Tin l:M p.aa.
tppolntmi VllUanit I
i'lf
M%i aluminum
O ALOW 0 beautiful
window. I with doub both, step M.4M. ton
,ke’ M . on 1 SIDjt^^BUN;
et today. I wooded le
lUi paairi iiieuva. j wii*.,* and rhecr.’ul bedrooma, baaement asphalt tiled, e wnnderlul atop a a v I a g kitchen.
DORRIS ft BON REALTORS WE TRADE
757 W. Huron Phone FE 4-1541 _ MULTIPLE LIBTINO SERVICE
buy sfi.l trade
MILLER
Village with lake privll tlfully carpeted living ft bedroom, easy to cle pertly planned kitchen, tile bath Set ft forget it eiao wetor coftener. Ail decorated to soft paaUI This Is the tall* at the 111.70(1 with gllM down.
Included. 314,341
I ear at dock Truly a
DRAYTON PLAINS ■ neat I bod.
----'------sltuatad on a lan,a
In a good nelghbcr-baakmeat with c'l neat ot extra bedroom, a new 3 -car garage. Priced wlthto res-mn. only M.m. Terma avaU-
MR OI. Take a look at this mo money down), family homa conalatlng bl * room* ft bath, aak floor*, itoaUr - ----

William Miller ’ Realtor	F£ 2-0263
_____ . rs w. Huf—
Opt* t to s ^
■ML I Is S


THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. ^fARCH 16. 1960
/Pf Srie H<
rV£ur!Lr.is?
■is^
Suburban Living At Its Best
(c3on^tiblIe*24) W. W. ROSS HOMES OR 3^1
St. Benedict’s
M------
East Blvd.
*Ml IMrtS d A*di« A*c^U»^ BMd«rB bunt*)
West Side
Mm brick
Wabctar ____
Jl lilt bblh Mch
]tTih«!r? bT*bP*
• ^ILUS M. BREWER r. mu. ssUM non
'SMITH"
■odwBy^
hSi)en
uklM r«a< Oak noon. I
■A*m u. u oMy S kod^
“iori.
•^us.vj2ss-r5fj"i«2;
— ‘ncomy oaO IH cor, r‘ ■oroft. tnSM. Torau.
both. Buitt-lB naio. ABd orta. Lmc M Tctau
J. C. HAYDEN. Realtor
OM B*tc. - ava. I to « P.M W rwoltoa	tsaP« «-b««l
•XT DOWN TO GI
rc ntrc I a I bodroom older once wMh Uko prlollccn. MorV-0|c eoiU noTC 'jrod in.
. Cboteo t bedrns., ouui. got hcot ondl Poaood kord. OMcrcd'
John I. Vermett
tSS3 Oonneri^M” *U SasSS
J lorn bedroomc. Both room. PuU bocoment «Uh Ooi hcot. hot wotcr. oc cnM. Ah aacUcdt rol
Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor
INCOME
I rooma up. I dom. eoch. I bolhe. Wclk-
F.C.WoodCo.

no bone j'cujn^beco «olUa« lo
Judah Lake Estates ALL ALUMINUM
ROSEDALE

BARGAIN
1 SBDBOOM RAPCH
5*Tio^LAaoi^^-
WRIGHT, Realtor
load .	“ ....
Opca
ICDD^ tiS/'V *reem
toched forMc. Aa ci cole bcoch. OalT aaad
SEE
IT
TODAY!
For Sale Heues Ready to Retire?
.. _JV_____________
Mroon. alec kltcbc^ Im Ht-
S.'Ts^r'isy'Kr'.^nSi
Acreage
Bawl’ll. *Tblc^ra1
Building Spot
ni aeroc. Blfk a4	*>M
cTX\rF(rRDAGENCY
ir Airport
Colored
3 BEDROOM HOME
No Mortgage Costs
Ooly U homcc U be buUt. Don't muc out I ^
French Regency Styling 1049 .SQ. FT. PLUS / Attached Garage for/ $11,850	/
Nmn awpasao much fob
QLOBjJt

BOTAL OAIt-aHBllIl PABtBjf. 1 bedroam brick herac with « »». carpeted llr^a roam aad. dintel all. Caramk UM bath oad kltah-
PAMILT W(
prirala both ---- ---------
brln«a la |tl per >aak. toui price, lU.MN with 11^ dowa. _fnqulra at ni BoldwIa. n S-iOM. OUPLBX LOT r.ZAL CHiiaP. ST
t tarni. dwaar. Call
:?a"-
cVcklIrTrealty
Baoutllul ----------- ------
Sth‘‘•.arr'-^l.r-daa:r;^3
baaaoMDt. Raeraatiaa roam. Tor. BOdo ahtIUr. Priced rl(ht with
WILLIAMS
ROCHESTER AREA
Templeton
Indian Village
Loaalr home la Ibla daatrabla lecallaa fully corpatad. 1 bedroomc. Iircc IWliif room with tlicplacc den nice kitchen, full beermcni. oil heal oM J ear
BBAL BaTATB B DfaVIlMCB HSl BALDWIW_____n a-w
HAGSTROM
VEBT NSAT. UTABLB HCIME 1 btdroom, 1 etory tnaw. t bath, aaw ell I- ----
Val-U-Way
rOB OOOD BUTS AHD TBADB8
S1.M d
a, claaa to atoraa aad icboola.
WATB — S badroem Trane road attafbad t cor laraga. IS bow
----	•—» to erorti oad acboc
I wtu> HM dawn, <
ir whAt bare you u down pay-
WlJP
or WhAt bo
Hagstrom
Bl
poiyri!\1:'
BBALTOR
■ ^.d. IM-WI
OK 4-0358
KENT
BaUbllahod lo UK
MM Down — tmmadlat# pooeoe alOB lo IbU 1 bodrm.. luU bam't, M hoot Locotad oa aatt oMa of PoaUoc. aoaoo tem price or —
COLOBBD WCOMl - Two I Saly |I.4n dowa.
LAMPBOIfT — I
Carita loL^lpuil ,
ImmcdlaU poaacetloa.
R. J. (Dicky VALUET
ItlALTOR ..
,« OakUnd^n^^J^^Si.
COLORED
2-BEDR0d>M
* 6 p.m. Bi model to itBrt doAl
WESTOWN REALTY
Call Baac. U MSTf
COLORED
of lU par mo on tbU aUrai
larairVeTMS WL. .
ctrartc. Larya Rvlng oad dlalBf roome Pull bacamant. auM. oa
_____ Natural woodwork. Pul
bacamoM, auto. laa beat. Water aoBaaar V laiaiadlaU poaMoalaa.
AS.SOCIXTE BROKERS
>. Co. UK- AU OBCBABO LAKE t MSM EraTAnar t. PB S-IWS
Income iVoperty SO
mcoiA Aix 1
ath aads_^in
MARMADqKE
. By Anderwm A Lccming
Mmity to Lorn 61
^jUermaM Me^
Sidnature
'v«rrei-'5sr
OAKLAND
Loan Company
_m Pontiac Bute Bonk Bldi.
LOANS
9x12 Felt Base Rugs $3.95
Oaaranlood, Houaa »»»»»•., O**- &{•
'Vinyl Linoleum, Yard,/9c
B«Mor Uoo Jjjial ■
Mk\ II. Ha® TUo_ Ba. pt
"Can't you find another dog to play with? i T"
Plan Now
POR aPBIBO BOtLOIBO IN
CHEROKEE HILLS!
Too aboaM yao Ibaao obalM wooded, roUlnt IM ft. alUa lor better homea—Compart th# Hr*
Busineu Oppojiml^s 59
BAROWARI rrORB FOR 8ALB. ooly one la ^ town, doinf good
d“:s.ch^.S‘ut‘",irSp,
UOB. Dnro odi BUiabolh Loko Rd. lo Scott Loaa Rd. Tara rigbl 1 blooka lo UooU.
Carl W. Bird, Realtor
B^mmdtyBaug^^B^B|g.
Waterford Hills Estate
IW^.'onS dSafaagol idSHw Herbert C Davis, RItr.
For Saks Acreage 55
2^4 ACRES
of OlagrlleUio. tllMT^nty * Kail waltoo
f Unlve

...“*Ky-a biuid Bprloal Tama.
PONTIAC REALTY
W Baldarln________PB AW
Tacru' of LANb 9rrrif lacing oa croaks Bd Ci . altar t p m. OL S-IWI,_
20 ACRE ESTATE
Ooad load, wooded. smaU. atrial-ly prlTOta lake, apring-tad. 31 aUlaa Kortbwaat of Detroit city hall g mllaa North af MBOO Collaga. BItuatad ‘	---'
Partridge
IS TBX "BtaD" TO SCI
COMMERCE APT.
halt opartaiaBt near Commare 1 aero lot. Jual law yaora^ o aad walking dUtanca to aehoi Toil can tiro here aM pay lor out of rtal. IM.M0.
Partridge,
Sale Lake Pfopirty 51
BT OWNBR. nX3M ON LOWER
■IralU LUa. EM S-JMl._________
CUT! MODERN INBDLATED BMAtX eotuga, portlal baeamaat. Lot -------taroutk Uka .prlTllogaa.


"ig.Mo'oa XStM.
bedrooms. I botha. keeping room faaturaa tlraploaa and borbacuo. Eltchaa bullt-lBS Incloda fabu. lou Tippao «ta Bangoat raaaa. LaM prMhdoa. ggg.MO^R S-om
POR CASH BUT OH LAXB. rooma and bath * apartmaht bath. Call_PE S-MM aftar_^i. . PAHULOU8 OpFobTUHITT. POII asle. cash M ft. froalaga. Pin* ^ka. Owntr jnuit aelj. gl.S0g —’
large badrms.. tiled bath, Urini rm plaa family rm. ^rge ham
Rrgta*'aa^^llu ’at
floors, roomy kitebca. II R. Urine rm wHh brick firaplaca. Altocbad
Full Basement With Garage & Gas Heat
S. EDITH & WILSON Will rent with option to buy also.
nraBDIATE OCCUPANCT TOTAL PBICI M IM PATMtNTS IM MONTHLY. RENTAL SLIGHTLY HIUHKR
'small down PATMBNT. After I p.m. Ipr App't.
WE.STOWN REALTY
HAMMOND lake prlrllHOa. -Nsarly aaw brtek raneb home. 3 Bsdma Ilk Iliad kalhs. flrsplaca la unad rm and faaUly rm. Wall-to-wall aarpotlng. tPletarw win-dowa. S ear garage. OOrarad paUo. AUraatMaty laadaaa«ad. ihor- --
MULTIPLE LUTBfO BIRVICI
O'NEIL
room aluminum sided home flaorlng. wall to wall, i
petlng, ' plenty of cleaeta and llBUhed recreation room In the baacment. There la 0 m car otUchrd garage and all Ihia It alU-
y 3-»771
LAKI dBlRWOOD ViTLaOI.
Alow ebolea lakctroatImai^lta
I atm aratUbla
LOVELY
L.ike
a BEDROOM year ime laaturtnr *— eiUace, erraa
............. ,..inl aiid attached
garage Pull pr Call J A. rn
bath Pull..
____________________________bortaa
and I amaller bulldlaga, good
wall odjaeaat. School -------------
aau. Ideal loeotlon
boma. oa Ihla propar., --------- _
------- --------
with 13.— ______ ____ _____
doye MY I-llll. Irei MY I-Mll.
glt.N MO. PAYM'TB
S!r;aJ5U?isVpSa*r-''^-*-’^-?’-
ot tbit price. Hurry I
LAKE ORION REALTY
Ml i. LApaar Booif MY H31I A BiA&IVUt I ACRB PLAT MStUO, |30,MS. The Pan Praaa, Bon gg.
For Safe Farms 56
f04 Acres on Lake
Prime Inreatmant. I mod. bomai 3 car gar., tmall eltbla. All bldgi ^ood^ repair MO^ft. ^ntaga^ o
AUHOaOMAT IH ^AST IROW-lag community. Ideal eparatlaa fo? man an* wife. Jtt ihowe aat ' l7.Mt par year. lU.Nl. M.SM
Super Market
in Arbor Boad. iparkBng - “lUirti offarad way aat. Tai------
TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN
214 E. ST.CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO
U»AN.M^MM LivnrocE ROU8BHOLD OGOOB
oL swm	01 ...
PL I-35II	• ,___PL 3-3il#
___ ' priehdlt iiRTicr'
QUICE lit TO MM LOANS
Seaboard Finance Co.
nil K PERRY BTRXEl'.
Easy Parking — Phone PE t-IMI
WHE\’ YOU NEED $25 TO $500 STATE VlN.^NCL^CO.
in PoaUae BUU Bank Bldg.
FF 4-1574_____
Credit Advisors 61A
Financial Advisors. Inc.
m a. SAOIHAW	PI l-TSM
Mortgage Loana^
SaleJ1oiu|M
"“WIS”! IKS?.
sss.’aatrsass^
Tu Rlffts, WdOL Face^m^^ BararalblT . »W M. ,„1«pm2^.
^"'•aram.P.mn-r.ra
-^“11.5!“

JSiH
Sogw! n» llaart In eablnau.
u<i CU. PT I.H. CHEBT DE» fraaM. Leonard rcfrlgarat" -la A-1 coaBItloa. OL l-<37g.	_
31 aH. colored 'TV. MABOO-nay, >3M. OR m«T.
11" OAB RAMOE. MS. or PE g-lMS.
41 5T EEHl
SaleHotiaelMtM06^ « For Sate MtacaHaBeem 67
5sr ’
PAINT .......97c GAL.
trar-u
TILE...........4c EACH
*g2[2SS2?wr«2sajs
a gAOlHAW	PEJ
PPAPP SEWntO MACinHM;JUp »i^iUMMd. MlM tartaa. Carta

rUNE XHO
r^wDiHO TatLEta~7u IS
EH BTAWI lUa bwl I n hard aai
’ai.ft. I—

VU>'E**aSS**oap^ ^
. SUN SALES. MA I-IMI__
8ACBIPICE-1 wtum ty Ublaa IlM. alM Umpa. I foot couch mM lehalra. Ido., Bang.
~ Full line of building and plumbing materials
Va taka &ada4aa
WOLVERINE LUMBER
Ml a, Paddaek. PE | -^
iteed hew j
____pumpa loM. In
paired Va Cp. i OUH TYPE ^ 1
ct;,-.____________
ibPA Btb. BOUO uAmba^ desk and coffea table. 0«ad '-**■-
parfaat eond.. I twin bookcaaa bade with ebaat. Lika aaw. OMtr f It. Coldtpot rafrlftrator Ui good running eood^.^Wtatlngmiiat^^-artlclaa. 7M gkeum, Auburn Hclghtw UL MiSa.
IPEXD QUEEN IRONEH. L«E new. IIP. *at Menomlnaa______
loss HOT POINT dryer. tllM*. Price liirludct normal wiring M Dotrolt IMlaoo Una. MM wk. R B. Munro Electric, ISM W. Huron, iito IMP1»1AL DI8HMASTER. Ma.pt lojullcd. R. B Munro
Electric Co. 10W_W Huron_____
1PM IIEOLEB. OIL gPACB REAT-ara. At pra-iaaaoo ipaclal prteaa. A. J^mpeoo. lo6i W. Huraa. A BIAUTIPUL tlHOXR ZIO XAO tawing machine In wood eoneola. Bewt on buttons, detigoa, button-holes, all without atuchmanta. Taka ortr payments of M II pei month or pay totel amount ow-fnj^TlII. Capitol AppUaaM. FI
fRADE OAS RAHOE *uSl* W Huron. TRADE ELEC. RANl'
TRADE-IN DEPT.
Wood Dinetia BaU, comp. $31M Vanity A cheat, wood .Mt.M
below eoet. Vary pronubla rohima. Da not eoafuia this wtdi aid faahltn earaar
^bUbT doii*"payBaBl *rl»
Hot Spdt
24-Houf Coin Laundry
Did you tear make moaey While tlaapMiT Wall, why not? Almoft brand new and prltM for real bargain. laTaittgaU.
MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION
Voss & Buckner. Inc.
IP HaUaaal Bldg. PE «-4Tlg
homal Let ua pay off your -
BIO BEAR COBaTRtfCriOH CO.
91 W. Huron_________Pi MTSSr
^R MORTOAOX LOAH (Ml WA-'erd. Drayton Plaint or Clark.
___1 rtal aatata. Cali—
Brokar________ OB 3-ltH
i%"*'TA,VaT{!r“A"?5S
FARE It Wit PBOHT POOR
M-M prontaob Owner taartflelng tr- “
___Ill and IM teat
r tail M.4M. urmt. Orar .Jrtiiof atcal tor building purpaaas jBcludad. Bear acUra
IS! S'W’aMi “& -
iSrvfeo-Biii-
How tnU. with waltlat lartl. wall located, fli agulp. Plenty at room tor atpan-ISm. litflj Boi II. Pootlaa
diuOH CABS AND LUNCH fiob^ld will iaertlleo. •“ —" Blayloek. It
I Broadway. phOM MlU
Partridge
tome woods. II mtnutaa
Harold Franks
__________ 100(1 dolry
»»igi. bout. ouibuUdloft. •moll lakt.amoU woodtd loi. B»Ione« of load U very pro*
tDr* HOLMES, INC.
131 8 Lapoor Rd, . ^fE MM:
Sale Businesi Pro^rty 57
IM PT PBONTAOE. 4 LO™ AT Ml Baldwin Aeo . eloM to Montcalm 8t Zoned commercial. ' lor most any kM of ba
i‘.iidia
.....—•*•<••• I*'
r^o^
While PrIcM
or pert. OaU BUla PE
U THE ••B»D'. TO BEE
HOTEL-LIQUOR STEAK HOUSE
• rooms — downtown mala atraat In busy boomlni area. We con-aMar thla at alTUma bargain at M7.Ng wltb in,too r— clock. You InettUiala agree for aura.
. MOTEL AND LIQUOR BAR
lattUy traealsd 4 lane U S.
apt. '*37.l« da.
Band for Mrtrldga'a « "Miehlgaa Btfiinstt Ouli
Partridge.
inch TV. Mt.
_____________ . .. Rofrlaer-*"
131. P y 11 rug aad pad.
Oaa ators IM: Iroartta maaila MS; studio conch, new III: Oaraaport and chair, good eoa-dltlonTw. PB »j:nM^_ apar'Tmeht sifB OAS B*i*oS
I7I.PI ealua. Mill. Stigbtli scratched. Alta tevaral full aim raagea In alaetrle and laa At fitraordlnary ealuaa. MIshlgaa Pluoraacant, Ml Orchard Lake
Swaps
63
WHEEL TRAILER POR ENO-llah Satlar, alM. IrearlU Iroaar A lump pump for lala, OR 3-14M. • cemetery LOTI IH WHITE ChapaT BaU or trsM lor lata modal ear. UL I-IM7.
•II TOHTIAC AHD^ii HARLEY X.
swap or acll. PB 1^471.^_
IMI FORD I TOTh pickup. Trade 'for >k '
___________lotor. OR 3-7131. MU
■immona Oiire.
MO DOlbN. Ill 3 BDRM. BBlOf
----------------heat.
Me. kU, wawrford. ™ -----------.
what bare you. W. O. Whitcomb,
Roaltor. UL 1-3130.
uu PORO c^j jTradi V6i
Ford truck. PB —
M POlimAC FOB land traot^ — -1... u— .»>
MX.
bell or trade POR I^p IM'
3 wheal trailer- ragirtartd BniUah
■attar, 1 yr. oW.JPlJ-oiM._
TRAOB LAROE HOME WITH IH-
CaU altar l:M p-w- PE 4-6431. TRAWf OR BtlX I ilDRM.^HOW off Baldwin for Uta ——
ir ^tNTTmHo _YOu^ J"'*S2
HOME CAM BE >UNU AT L A S BALES.
UtUa out of the way but i
* **o/a5' ■ —™
_______ around. I aeroa o
rklng. Phone PB l-»l4f. OnH HOn. BAT. I TO I FBI.. I TO t
S. of^Uae or 1 m urn Ralghta an Aubt
imlb
E. of
ditlon. MAytatr g-|413.________
UMONB YOUTH BED A OTHER
turnitura. PE 1-3131.
BERRY DOOR SALES
Opap from • to i
Moon oa •aturdayo ..
171 ■. Paddock	PE MW3
hot WATM RBATliS^~6AU gas. Haw. emuB^t f omtj ap.
tfr^jwal
DEUVERY — TBRMB
™*^alna*'Toya-Sehi^ IE ■carltU't ■“‘►“"'••is M E. Uwranc*. PaaUM. PE I-7M1 4114 Dttic. Drayton OR 3A811 - fT C H 1H	CABWET BINU,
slightly aeratehad «" modal mI.m »alua, M4J4 whUa ttoy last. Alao terrific raluM on m'* -
Take Over Payments
flit... .
raaty. I1.M par weak.
OS AUTOMATIC ORYSB. used waaks. Front kad. lint flHt-ilaw warranty. IIM pat weak.
NOROB OAB DRYER. Mg family itat Fully aulomatk. Ufa guarantaa agalnat rual. Only IlM. IIJO par wMk.
OOODYXAR *riRXS: Blia 7 MlM. good eaadltka, aaw •uaranUa. M.M each.
guaraatoa.
GOODYEAR BERVlCf SJ(3>«„ 1 South Caaa. Pontiac PB l-«113
BBRDiX DUOMATIO WASHER A dryer combination, good running
BRAm NEW WROUOOT IRON
_ irnlturc. 41 'qrchard' Lake A BED PRAMI. NIW M: OREXN' chair. |4:^lecWc heater -
Used Trade-In Dept.
Many aliei of	ig*^d.
B^jaia. limad'oak ...J{» ■*
Chair	g;
3 pc. aactlonal ...■•■--- JJJ-
Pull sue bad, ebaat, mattraaa IM.
“IdpA-bad .............
B auto, ranga ...... I16I.M
THOMAS ECONOMY
311 B. Baglhaw	PE 3A1I1
maauit. SM. PB l-UN afur 1:1
BOOKCASE BXO WITH OOUBLB
__dreaaar A Urge mirror. IH I-3MI.
BLOND HIDE-A^TABLIL GOOD eond. PE MI34. After g p.g
r. Bedroom OutlltUng Ca. 4743 (le Hwjr. ntbl|too PtolM. Open
\ A P Market.'
CAAH POR SMALL RADIOS working or net. PE M7M.
CARPETINO IN OOOD CONDITION — ll'I’xll'lP" plus 11 foot of hallway. .Large -------------—
funU^ boat'll m( naM. gardaa trail
WATXR SOTPENBRS TO Rf^ — -.......... -lonlh. OB 3U1M.
I traater.’PB 4-SM7
WILL "ntADB NSW PUKNhTIBi
pay. Large platform rc oUjwaia^^nrtobk radk.
bLai FOR Used tts.. purni-
turo A Mlac. PE 1-S3i7.
DININO ROOM BBT, MAHOGANY,
PLUMBING
AND HBATWG BUSINUS - In thriring town noar PoatUo. Shew-lag cacalkat grata, Battk Oat franchiM and con^t for take and initallatloB of acTcral typo furaaeat. Rant laeludM 1 bedroom Urtag quartan. Thli oietl-
ST"ir«rtr«- »"'«
---try. An laeludad la total
of 1M.MI with M,NS down. - tor full —-
ro«. »• P.-1I. OrtonTlIk. Mlobl-
gaa. Call NA 7-14M.	_____
WB BUY-BSLL-fRAbB LAWKMOWIHB-OUI«_ VACUUM BWBBPBRS-SICYCLBS - -JtNEB A HARGRAVS w. HUROM PI wm
Fsr Ssic Clothing 64
BRIDAL GOWN AND VEIL. WORN onca. Bait qHar, PE MSTO, gOY'S SIZE 34. OIRI/B SUB-
^STATEWIDE
Real BtUle Serylea at Ponllaa
fAYLOR. Rapliar
Fontiac Lakcfronl Lot
il ft. an waur Wall A taptlc tank la. Large thada treat. On PonUac Lake Rd. HIM oath.
Pliul M. lonc.s. Real Est.
n g-ii7i
WOLVERINE LAKE'
Lakafrent ranch hook with U3 fact at froalaga. Baautttul Uad-legplng. fruit traaa, wall to wall carpeting. I nroplacat, baths. 3 car garage., mUo
PRICE RtDUCBD ter qMck aak. Attractive 1 bedroom with tttaebad brnaewsy and garage. Large baautl-fuUy laadteapad tot. 'rids heme la la aa aieaUaat Watt Suburban raaldpatkl
I'lVf^
FIRST T A keely
A 3 bedrooms, 1 Uelu room ly sts^ kitcb-
I*reom°bMB ’w” '*Y 5d* rooms and largo carpetod living rogm. 'ftiara It a braoaewsy aad 1 c" — rags. M.Ug wtlh I
lI'Aff
MAtiv MORE TO CBOOSB PR___
n I-7M	BBS P* 4-M13
CLAI^ REAl^ ESTATE
IMS	Bn.
MuNiA Uatlag Barelaa
‘ earaer kt
laamont. This oa tbs North’
RAY 0’NEIL,^enItor
IS tiS*^'***
.... beach and club prlrl-BItuatad k Zlisabatb Laka Bitates. PS S-0M3
/^jc Resort Property 52
LOANS TO ItflO for down paymMt wrehaso id eottagas or laka lota. gBA------I^INAHCE. IIH N. Parry.

Suburbsii Property 53
METAMORA-OXFORD
N a«rt. 4 btdroom romodalad torm bouse. New ban 30 - “ Pkidi fenced. Sufficient s| and atreama to make Ig lake Excellent fer delry hone operation. 134.108 I
las toot Dixie trontaga, toned commaralal. North of Holly Road. 131 par
D. CHASLBg. RBALTOR . 1717 S. Telegraph	Pt 4-0II
st.\ndar^51)il
Hat l-stall sktiont for kata I the Pontiac area.
Disk and Hattkid
itlL_____
BXPBNBIVB-------------- - -
atola. stia P-10, cheap. PR 4-7141. OBNUIMB MOUTON COA'T. ALSO
GIROUX
OBNBNAL RSAL BSTATS „ . 4311 Dlxla Bwy.	OR J-ril
Opan Til l:M pjS;___
DDDZ HWT., M8- CORNER. BAR-jak^Only M.SM.M. Aseat. OR
T4
DIXIE FRONTAGE
Madera glatt trona bulMlat '
1 tkrot. ioUl area HoO aqi fact. baaamcDi. larage M frooUge. ^anty A parking Total prtca only I37.IN
Warren Stout. Realtor
17 N Saginaw It. Ph. PE l4ll ___open E»ei TUI 1 pm____
F.lizabeth Lake Rd.

Paul M. Jones. Real Est.
PB 4-ilM ^	PE S-U7g
BuBlneBE Opportmilttes 59
iamrr^at atfar. Ml g4t». barbSK~shop, half i»rrER3¥.
Oxtew Lake hr^ta. PE I-7MI.
Financial aSalstance avsilabk and fraa^lrakm|^ Call M_1 4 1311 dayi
BERVICB tTATIONS POR LEASE, goad poknual. Plaasa eaU between g and I . PE 3-8101. Aliar I p.m. PE H4tt. Puro 00 Co.
- • STORt OARAOX OAS StA-
i. Owner. MA l-MM.
THRIVING GROCERY

_______________Excellent
opportuBitv for ambUkUf couple.
iTj. (Dick) VALUET
REALTOR
3M OMUn^e.^^l&t
WELL l^rTAB^inTO RSSTAUR^
Rd. In'Pon'uae“ixc llxturoe and equipment, adequ^ parking, long 1^ avaU I3.008 da. or will trade ter aauiti la a good home. Pkato calf at el-
Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor
Sals Land Contracts 60
or horse opei
SNYDER KINNEY & BENNETT
OA t-1113	«
I ACRB LOT. SUMNYDALB OAR-
psr
LI 3-ta37. _____^________
fHOMB sms r- tt.lM
trtcity. I Mo to same area with sank lasproremeats. tl.lM. Ctori Reel Bstale. PB l-THg, Res. PS
^________W. Huron.________
is X 111' oiTboRHEIS BOAD
acrott tram St. BenedteU,'Oon-
4-g37i.
HI-HILL VILLAGE
ROMBSITRS OP DIBTIRCTION A baautttul rolling community wltb winding paved itreets. A.
*-"T prote^----■	----
r future —
your ruturo hmatmanU. IlIxIM ft. pnrcolf. IMP nt IIBM with
SPSciALS-p(»rnAO arba jg pm cent discouht. tii.iii bnlanco Seasoned 3 years. 1111 per mantb. Curreatly paying 1 per ecBt Interest. Secured by ill.Mg 4 bedrm. home. MY 18111
THE OTHER FELLOW'S LOSS can *- your gain. .Preeeat owntr hero
t““isi"drtto!i”'^^* .‘sjk;
ALSO. VaTIHH groeslng Ml.OM fo only |M,S0e wltb l».S0g dowi Burry to this ontll
Petierson Real Estate MY 3-1681 HAGSTROM”
>AIRY DEUORT DfUTB-IN — OpenU T mantba from AprU to Octobor. buUdlag M 1 M. port tasement. totgt tot, plenty of parking. Includes niee 4 room home with garage. Ill.OM down.
JOHT MPO. MIN eq. ft) room bom*
....__________tntersectlon M-IL
Ideal kcatko fer sMttag gawds ir or automsUc ear watb. price IN.MI aa t^rau.
Hagstrom
POnTia£“*"^rTo358 t
Money, to Loan 61
(Ucansed Money Diadaro) ^ .
Borrow with Confidence GET $25 TO $500 Household Finance
■Aim^^imtSiONB
Lawranee it. PI 4-l>
BUCKNER
FINANCE COMPANY
WRBRl YOU CAN
BORROW UP TO $500
Poatke — Draytaa Pkins —
■ Utica
rmwiiti
HOME & AUTO LOAN CO.
DON'T WAIT TO BEPURHIIH -
BLECTRIO m OAS RANOBS AT
......Jt prMs. MApk g-MlL
Samuel's 3:p{.»anBas. ^
POR SALi BABY TBMOA. 17. H
POR SALE 4 APT. BIZR. P alro relrlgcrators, aU I
coad. FI tim______________
FSl SALE - DUNCAN drop leaf toble with 4 el
tad table, coffee table, i table OL 1-1111.__________
exe.
nun u-uisi.
____ ______ lltl ML CkmaQs.
PE 18871.____ _	_________
MSn'b TOPCOATS AND SUITS.
Oood eond. Reas. Ml Z. Mansfield. ___________ ________
WEODUfO DOWN. SIZZ 11 TO PREEZERS-NOROE FREEZERS 14._otMr_dresses. IM l:»487.____ —•*
Sale Household Uootis 65
XT. e»» w- USED ra-
.. 148. Sweet'_ Radio A Appl. W. Huron. PE 4-1133._
UoEs°	Irm^U*
'{^RiNNrL’r
.1 S. SAOlNAir____• PE 3-71-
VAcS6MsWis#hR. Farts,abd
scrvlci. all makts. tret pick— and delivery. Open t a nl. ti
S.m. Tbyk Electric, corner ohnson and Howard. PE 481M. WHIRLPOOL AOTOMA'nC WASIL
Like new Miscellaneous. PB
_ ■■_otter 3.38.	________
WHIRLPOOL WRINGER WABHER. ... _	_ Munr# Eleetrte Co.
■TO0NO8TOWN BUILT-IN
rakr jttt i: « ^ B. h ' WurpB
HI-FI, TV sml Radios 66
For Sale MisceHaneous
GARAGE DOORS
Pactery taeeads, all ttondard sliot In stock from IM and up. Electric door operaMi. folding
proved. MI M value g3i at and IM.M. These are sUghUy Mrrad. Ako alaetrle. oil and boltlM gaa beaters at tarriHe valum. Mlcni-
bkase.
Orehai
■chard Laka A
Knotty Pine Paneling
1 PATTBRHB WP3. WPI sad WC14S
CHURCH’S. INC.
rieh'lgan Pluorascaat, 313 Or--hard Uke Ava
LUX-aIrE PUltNAfck"AiL hfxM.
HIW PORTABLE “L_______________
Priced from M4.N keludlog e.-eke tai. Oood selection of robulll
li^Me*PrtntlBg B^ftcoVwl^ 4188 Dixie Mlgnway, next to Pon-
NOnCB. RBb PLASH BXOIUR furnace. Oood eobdlUoa. Call PR
MTL__________ ^
i(EW 1ST QUAUTT^BATHTDRS,
|4s 18. Free standkg toilets glt.ll O. A. Thompson. IMS MM West PROPANE TORCHES AND KITS. •' on. Ti^?. roflU^ miA*"**'
V« oil. \H W.
PLYWOOD
■IRCH ............. I8.M
V8> MAROONAY ....., S 4 M
POKTl^ PLYWOOD bo.
____SaldWir Avt.____PE I-IMI
rLUMBDiO PIXTURBS. FACTORY Irrogulars. lavatorks complete, I14.il. TolUU. si " ^—...."-
QUALITY COAL I. Briquets, ekan-buralag
Radiant Ky. Lump A ■ BLAYLOCK COAL * SUr^. ~-. 31 Orchard Uke Ave. >E 3-7101
. RUSTY WATER? "IRON OUT”
CLEAN WATER SOFTENER ^gSj^nAt,
SflOTlfENg HEO. CYCLE INCREASE LIFE OP SWnMER ■TBRILIZES If--
HAU ■ ■ llM*'BIOHLAm
3371 ORCHARD LAE BARBER VEEDfl .
------lUtN^RD. I
Ml'north FRRRT PE 38IH
1-A ALUM SIDINO. STORMS.
Awnlnis. VALLELT CO. OL 18833 r OUARANTBBD used OAS PUR-naee. M3. We alao have almost abyjypo and slao new or used oU
_________JK
K'^°%R.^6»L
from PbodtewB.	_____
FUEL OIL TANKS. 6o6D CON-
BTOKBR POR SALI, 11
Oarage Siding ........... llt M
Oenulne Schol Desk, only I 3.H Ckar Hr. IN R.
6fe~ eet vim 'a~ cas Bl*ch Temp. Peiboan. 34x41	88e
OU 1 Om Eiattoi Otk Floor Shpru, 100 It......I 7.77
M At M-IIl Mmi Mahogaoy Pk, txl .............. 1481
k aeroas	LUMBER
PE t-tlM.
-	Wes' soilTPIPE, I in. ‘aa^e'plCimbino supply’**
- *;^Sag^«__________y*. !;».**
4-IN. soil PiSb H» nLBNOTH, 13.11: 3-Id foir pipe, per length, U.38. O. A. Themptoa. TNI HM
AUBURN HEIOHTS
___________PE I8M3_____________
SEARS STOKBR WITH COWTrMa ---------------- motor, electrle
t-lllA
>p eutbeard mob Iter, power lawn m treadW sewlag m
d eoBdlMea. PE I-:__
SMITR8H)R0NA PORTABLE
JPasl. _Ci8eB_EvM._
*tifui"i!-'-- ~	f*i?-
set.	oiigt— ..............
IM N. 3 only I piece breaklAsI
seu.	I38 N each.
RaUywoed headboard,
a.n.
r (iarg-t,^<uS.**’
ip oo.
f--.—-_______:<» Hg«
I bROOiP HEW B3n>RMS.. MAT-

cemfort chairs
&s*».n ■t!?'U—
If up: chairs.
____wasntrs, {38:
334: washers. Ill: Kveryining m used fub^t ^
Ssin prices. EZ terms. THE BAR-AIN ROUSE. IH R. Cats at LafayeUe. PE 38841.
PIECE KRCnmLXR MODJL
ba_r._coej^eolor. |M. ea^lJL
3 PUDCB UYINO SUITE. MAKE!

3-ROOM OUTFIT
Uvlag ream, bedroom sad dl-aelte, ISH. M weekly Pearsene I^rnitura. 41 Orchard Lake
T?ro *years to **waVnk'~
'"‘"Je I
name brands, tcratehod. Tarrlflc values IIH.M wbUe they last. Nb phone orders please. Michigan PluortseiM, Igl Orchard Lake
• CABlNg. 10X14' SUITABLE POR buntlnx cabins to be moved from premises, make offer. Ml 8-lMI. le-YR. 11-0 aL. ELEC, water besMr M7.M casb A carry. O A. Thompsoa. 1881 MM West. Opan
Eves.____________________
13^'aL elec HEATER IMN: lO-ial ante, la' beater, {MH; Cap. sinks and tutkgs II4.II up. Uimdra trays and sund b fau-dels. IIMS Casn A Carry. BAVi! KUMBINO
ITl^S Saftaaw______PEI-31M
" INCH COMMBRCTAL ftn »n mower 4 hp. |40. Prank-
e sale, MA 38811.
“Going, Going, Going”
MAYTAG TTRINOER WASHER
Rebuilt, Ouaranteed. Delivered
OOOD HOUBEKEEPINO SHOP
H WEST HURON	PE 4-llM
6Z n-BCTRIC STOVE. U ". 138.
PB g-MlI._________________
OOOD UBBD HAMILITON ZLBC-
.... ekthss dryer M8. PZ 4-MII. 5iUkO& RAbtoil. Ill 31 AND uf. ^ R B. Munro Ekelrle Co. |8N W. Ml
BIDE-A-BBD. LIKE HEW. COLOR.
Call OB 38187 after 3._
BOLLfW()dO Biro AND MAT-
^s^ J^e^-ibaped vAnlty. PB „ _i_Vtot_ __ AUTOMATIC modtL N or
trade._P1 4-8841. _____________
^>i3Sno!!S:,CK
• PIECE SILVER OBAT
sssx,
3 vanity lampa.
. jy anly II wtek-
___________Pnnttan. M Or-
chard Laka Ava. ____________'
pncB bbctionaL junior Duncan Phyft dining mom tnbit. bunol to mateh. Paa^Amtrleaa
outfit, —....
1 PC. CURVED SBCfTONAL UT-Inf rm. suite. Cekr: gold di beige. Must seU. CoM. fair. I4M Christian HUla Or.TTRocteator.
7 PT. KfiCHEN~DlSPLXf~ MUST ba aoM before. bulMeri skew. R. B Munro Ekctrls Co. IIH W.
1 PIECE UVIRO ROOM SUITE. Brand new dnvoaport and chair,
*cMRf*ato'*7 tttoT'iSS
irrCHEN STOVES. OOAL, wood
end tkclrlo c
b PAINir BALE RAL# “■ Baldwie A—
LAROB CRIB AND MATTRM brand BOW. gtl.M. Pennoii'a PUr-nBnra. 43 Oiwhnrd Lake Ave.
youfTciio^e'Si
LITTlB'a PURNITURB * APPL. **•? Plxk. Draytoa OR 3-tWI MATCmNO aOP'A AND CHAIRT
wteCAs in MIPIM	^W WMCO s
swivel rocker, lit: cedar IM
ik^rnM^ ***	*" ---- —
MATTM'~WaIhER 'and DRyER.
late model. Repossessed. Balaact _g3jor_>eok. scMek's Mt_|;3T11. RBW S3 OktlXON REVERE OAB ***”!^im	— **
« Ktoetrle OP . IPM W.
Nrach. Several
$rsr —	—
ill
. , 'and whul r6^
A equipment Yardman-and porter cable riding Y ardArpn cars ^Mme
{‘SIS
BENSON LUMBER CO.
Pontiac_____________PE 88131
SIEOLER OIL heater sale. ■pocki prices 00 M boaurs yt- ■ malnlDf In stock. Othua Slogier 38.8N BTUs vM fan bkviM on the floor. 1148.31. O. A. Tbomp-— ------ MM West.
ir equipment. We IS ei power eqt_, I. Large sto gates belts.
Mr pans A gates belt, EVANS EQUIPMENT 8407 Dint Hwy MAple 1-7171_or_OR 3-7134
ANCHOR FENCES
PREE^l&TlffATM?* 1^** M47I
fekik^ANITT HAND RASIN; toOT. Rett ir^e. |1I M.
'll kOTOR. ItW^NSON bbU-
hi. h.^ h„h---1,^^.
a diamttor;
iEBP ARD PORk - HALF AND _qnarUra._Opdykt_MM. PE A8M1 BATHROOM FIXTURES. OnT'AND gas firaaees. Rr, water A steam
boUers. AutMaaUe water br-----
Hardware, eke. supplies, cre__
pipe and tlttlus. Lews Brothers Paint. Super Kemtoie and “
^HEIOHTS SUPPLY
--Lapeer RD.______m 4-M3I
BUT TOUR ALUMINUM SIDINO.


Cash and Carry Specials
He Vn.nl.,1.— ,e . I V
33.M
Pimrtaf inoulaitow ig ’kag,’". ....
lumber’
dribs I^M~_ ______________
frames. 117 tafayetto. Apt. 4. DO YOU HAVE A PAIN¥~0R decoraang prublemf Rundrods of eators h eb«OM from. IMerlor or exterior lee our sraO paper and matching fabric seleotiM.
Bros. Jtikd MagM aa dT~ [i^LAND^ PTJEL A
434 Ortbard Lk. ;
typewriter with ttondard key-
■----- -"•* type. Oaly I m-
1131. can al
Special Paneling Offer
tl panels. Vs'* mahogany V-groovt. D grade . M.M each tl panels, >,'• mahogany ■groove. C grade 11.38 each
._“»h8gani________
V^rooira.' preflnUhaJ^I.M tacb
Oak Flooring
.THE FIRE’S OUT
'BUT WE RE 8TILL IN BUSINESI ~ have material from 'ked buildings.
—V LUMBER 1MXDBR1CK
piPi“SftM__________
rm BSTIMATBB PRA TBRMB
SURPLUS LUMBER
A MATERIAL SAUB CO.
1348 Highland Bd. (M8S> OH 3-7M1 “AKE ADVANTAOB 8f flla Bar-
TALBOTT LUMBER “
Lumber, plumblag. palnl, bard-
--- *■ fketrloer iu—* *“
_	Aka, a 486M,
TIIE BALVAtlON ARITY RED SHIELD STORE
_ I eten,jrarwkk''t,^ _ m%kO SqWIPPZD. BINOBR SEW-tagVmachlM In htautUul wood —-V..	buttoahoka. lancy
Bd hams, etc. Wm tell
_ Mocliteery 68
n X M R BW ,RATBH PLANER _________ PE |S.|fH______
Do It Yowssif 69
FOR RENT
paluBii Mad taaders tamoce

PRggS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16. 1960 „
Do It Yowetf &9
CAI^ HUBW IM>C«glt_yAltn«.
I. H.M tut. n W. WtiMB.
Sak Moflcal Goods 71

____
"Gallagher Music Co.
A B V oaSi?miia
nlTaM piMM to k A.I tiutpi.
'sfu
BO-------
Ptrry. F» >
fyiert. OA «-irW.________
SkfrmD PALOMUb. atoo. ii
-ipatto^ Aiy |AM4 m»n. I n*.
im pcmo MS DOMP. 4 tako
b^tow BitoMi. A-l «4»dUtoii. tl.iws. BgpnbUc isisi.
PARM MACK5ri;RT~:ril*W AMD
1 PnetlM ptosof.
IfUphtly —■	"
1 Emutitul — a ptonoi
1 ^*aAi<fwiit
1 PtoMr Bimnd I
lOi rtttuTMd from rtnt.
Lswrtr 4rtAB, «mS la our itito
Ms nrlBfA
Gallagher Music Co.
11 B. Baroa_________PI «•».„
AbboRolOM SAUC: ALL BOBS.
fm 4on7' —	4-nu
KING BROS.
AceoRUoa b»nM'(^ to bMto-iwn with iMiolu. Pi M4H _
Buna~coMPtini tIiap m,
»m. UA 4-IH4.
r BXXC. ORGAN A B1 —k tokti UA AJU
FREE
fry btler* you buvl Only 111 per mo. plu* corUst. Pull mdlt oUowoB It purobOMd
GRINNELLS
n s. SAitiiAw____n 3-nu
BaaiM OrpoB «Uh kf PI A MacA. UAboiony.
^AS M40	NOW tm
For Sole Ltvootocic
Sole Form Eqaipment 87
NEW AND USED McCulloch Chain Saws
ALL saxs — ALL PRICED TO
Newark read Ui4b IVi mllei Eei Uieo V« mUe South to SUI loi men rood, eo Friday. Marck IP _ beflnoloc al U:30 p.m. 14 pood Hoiiteto and Ouemaey eont. Some farm Implementa, produce aad dairy •eoutpmeni. Oraol PrMeb
Grand Opening
1 P.M.
Saturday. March tl. Twelre MUe
Wiseand Music Center
?AEAAR ARKA. MIRACLE UILX PE jax
PORTABLE ElACTRONIC PIANO. Eaally carried A etored. Ukei ur rery UlUe epace. Bare oo thu allphUy. uaed piano. Morrii Mule 34^jj^Tilegri^^^Rd^ ACrwe from
MAMOTljiHNa^AirB^^^
_________jnwii
oaMko, rurn. BMgc^ ' li-Pl Mbia model. |7t. Rebcor 01-n tape recorder. $1M. PB 14101
before 1 p.m.___________
SET OP DRUMS. SLINOBRLAND make. Very good condition. *'*■ CaU after 7. PE 4-1111.	.
DBBD HAMMOND BPlNET ohOAN
1 block weal of Teletrapb. Buy-BeU-Trada. Wboleeale aad RaUII. Coulgnmenta and dealere welcome. Wayne Irwin owur. Phou
PE 041W._____________________
BDBINna AUCTION. WED. MARCH 11. 10:10 a.m. Donully'r Variety Store. PIxturee A merchandlee. For deuili wriu or phone. Per-klne Balea Berrtee. Auctloneeri. Ph. ME i-WM._Bwarto Creek. BAiyRDAY. MARCH 'llTH. AT
Sara plenty on tbto ___________
Mule. 14 8. Teleiraph Rd. Acroae from Tel-Huron. n 14441. _____
6bed lowrie oroan. berk-

^le Store jEnulpment 73
Walnut La Hdreford ei
t to 4140 head U
___________
100 bene, ’ll Ford tractor, E Perauion tractor, eerertl 1-pelat [mplementa aad otbore, 1 aaat BUfty.^ product, ate. Terme: ROf ular. bryden B^, Clark. Mr. A Mrt. Ctoyton WUkluon, Ft -Richard Brodlt. AuettODOer. moot 8W. Mill.
lATCB FOR OUR AD^ttuKabAY
S^rJieV*^ B& B AUCTION
MM DIXIE HIOnWAT
DRATTON SHOPFINO CEWTIR
For Sale HouBetrailert 89
Side Motor Scooters 94
Simplet A Tnok Rabbtu Karta.
m mko Mima 9^ 1 ■Hii
For Sole Motorcyclee 9«
_ PE 1-BlM.^_____^
iiB^RARLXT. OR i-dSH. Mlf WIntoo after 4.

Boots A Acceeforiee
T. C* ler. 11 »n«.
By Dick Tarver
FORTT-ONE
CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES
Met. 01., Ctorketon MA 14141 ouWhm the ^Htead to_ ide,
Macurek Motor & Marine Sales
-** B. Blyd.. Eaet	>■ 4-MB1
klAt'WroRAMCS, OliLT MM
BOAT - MOTOR — CONTWts, MU: Bkatoa. Toboonne reduced. SoM motore A ae^ce.
CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES
a W. Waltan Qplly 10-B. PE B-4401 B^UAOTI _
b7«KS.
tortne Bnelneer
OUTBoAiDS
Complete Bootlni Acoeeaorlei
INLAND LAI&;S SALES
nil W. ROBOIf	PB ^-nil
COMING
SOON!
AT MIRACLE MILE
7TH ANNUAL PONTIAC BOAT SHOW
Bigger and Belter Than Ever!
WATCH FOR DATE
Wood. Alum., nberitoe boute. Aocoee.
"Hard to find, but eaiy to deol with"
Tlulc.lS£r^*“gln 1.111, JOHNSON MOTORS MFG BOATS
BOARDMAN’S'
ri nfhtoad^M at WOL Laka Bd.
JOHNSON MOTORS
Slarcraft banta. Ootor tratton
LARS
Sale Sporting Poods 74
. i^'|l.lbcT'NA f-Mlir ji COLT poucB SPECIAL. CLoamo^
TOWN
STERUira^^ PAUCO
MM OLOBUABfitR TRAOW.. BX- I	llAFSiiMPAINTB
_caUent_condlUon^m_l41M._ I
HARRINGTON BOATS
lyeroy eaawe. eue m
-----. undlUoB. Also iDcluda
'^'Pomao" preelalon whatto, and toe elope. Reaeonable, PE 1-14M. OUNB - BUY, SELL. TRADE, Manley Leach. M Beglr-OUNB, MODERN AND* —.
Buy, eeU trade end repair.
Bbrll, HI B. Teleiraph. PE
°-INNOWip
DOZ.
RO'i
itock of hew nnd uod UeUere.
New Bchut- -* -------- - ■* “
lon(. Croe
TOUR BVlWROBK DBALKR im 9. Teletmpb Rd. PE l-MM ■ 1 PT. PLYWOOD RUN-WUidehleld. Bteerlni
_______Apube, 11.1 ___ „
Lirte itock of ued trellert redued pricea. HOLLY MARINE AND COACH BALES. lUll HoQy
Rd,, HoUy. MSareie 4-4711. _
riRBTREAM UOHTwBoHT Trarel Trailer Since MU. Ouer------- .... .1.—
Trailer
NOW ON DlEPLAT. OWENS PIBER-
• if Wom Byam’i
?"d“.:"l.‘r™SSi ^^llS•t ffeer»r»,dE^?bUR VACATION Itonchl^ et_Oreeimhl«ld .Rd.
WE LOAN MONEY lor botu, motor*, ond other tp^ ine leodi. Bee SEABOARD h-NANCic. liM N. Perry. PE 44M1.
Send, Gravel and Dirt 76
______! EM 14411.
fONTIM LAKE BDILbBR 8 EDP~ ply. wuh eand and iravel, fill dirt. Cement, mortor and truck-ln|. OR 1-1114.
Wood, Coal & Fuel 77
parto and aceeaaorlia. Wt rent traltori.	. ^
MY 14111. 1 mile aouth of Uko
_Orlon_on _M-34^____________
PONTIAC CHIEP k DETROITERS New b. Ueed
Wo Uko bouehold funlturo In
PIREPLAOE. FURNACE AND klndllnc wood. Oood price on 1 cord tele. Ill Scott Lake Rd. PE 4-4HI or OR 14141._____
Fireplace c a m n e l ooaL
BOB HUTCHINSON’S
4»1 Dlkle Hwy.
Draytoi^Plalu	“
PLATT. Mil 14 1
Speedway Pul OH.	____
5oOD slab wood. 1 CORDS lit.
Dellycred. PE 44MI orJV 5-1041.
SHOP loam, cut wood
OR 14011_______
^REPLACE WOOA~b E 14344. “
kIndllM, PE 1
cord. 111 E
Plants, Trees, Shrubs 78
Statewide Tree Service
Now to 4ho time td trim, plan and rtmoTt larft IrtM. M 1-WT.
For Sale Pets 79
4 arc'DACH8HUNM AT STUD.
rtairratlou ______ —
modal. Plxlo Traitor--------- _ ^
rental. 104o North Lapeer Rd. Oalord. OA S-11I1.
Oxford Trailer Sales
New 10-wldai In Oeneral. Va|a-bond, Oraat Lakea. Zimmer and Oardntr. Ttayellnj; trallera In
*”*'*PARKHURST TRAILER (pURT &
Ollord on M-M. Ntw^ Moou. OWMM. Venioura IMS U|— Rd.. l4ka Orion. MY l-4111. SHORT’S mobile HOME BALE8 fc 8ERTICB Pontunnf aU un Bpoiton
k*T«ltto fU^^tcba^tutallS^k
care wlrr' —-----------------
trailer f<
wired. Wt'U aaU you uad
.... W. Huron •	PE 44141
‘TRAVEL TRAanks 6 RENTALS. Tour-o-Boma k Trotwoad. Mar-RIttu k Huron Hornet. .........
..«E
Lake Rd. OR 3-SMl.
Wae 1820 BOW SIN.
ew Lone Star 14 ft.______________
runabout, wlndahtold, ataer-*—-oltUrad laata	—■
II BP motor.
e IM to leOM-1-H *4 vs. eat M
Sale Ueed Crte,
VALIANT
IMPORT SALE
SSI?to.’
1 door joditar SprlU
^•^•"douO
Houghten & Son
rp. Mi i-IWO. INI CHEI
^ __________ BBL AIR 1-
door. S eyUnder. outomotle. New
s-rA wif*
4M5. M payoMnU. IldM. •—
MINOH^ . RAMRLE^'m
WOODWARD. MI 4-1M4.
‘I think ifs a him’ the way he fights when you give him a bath!"
Ill '54 Cheyyt ..•••• Ill Pontlace, 'll. II. > ‘U Plymouth. Bood runnl ■M Ford Sod. kU. W|S. lit 'M Ford HardtoM ' 'M Chryator eonyort. Pi
iVi yidcL.^Yl’and •«
'M and 'M Ponttoci ... 'll Pruer .............
Sale Uaed Cars
While They Last
__ CREVROIET DBL-RAT
aoupa. I cylinder. lUodard tmna-R*a. A runl aharp aM •— -iroau boaufy. rmaat^ Mt.l1.
Only tim. N payex
WOODWARD. MI I-1M4.
INI CHEVROtkT BOOOR BEOAN.
Vti2ed"*^S^'t5l-

North Chov.
HwUrBM. M
Eddie Steele
— FORD —
WEST HURON ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD
FE S.3I17 FE M861
BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER
666 S. WOODWARD _____MI M9W____
nirmVY 4 DR. V4 Mil
FRANK SCHUCK FORD
Wanted Uked Cere 101
li Auto Par e 102
Sale Used Tmclu 103
IMS PQRD RANCRERO TRUCR. V4, l^rdomatlc. radio. htaUr, W-Wallc. bukup Ufbto. BxeoUani eondiuon. Phono tV 4-1111.
___________PR HIM
■it fllfRtrt. LATE MODBE itMl box Md 4 ton 'M Ford S too pickup-'
104
Autojnswence
P L.. P D. fc MED.
POR MOST CARS MM DN.
I MO. PA1TMTB. or M.IIJUI . PE 4-1414	’ Ryee. PR 14iM
Foreign it Sports Cars 105
RENAULT DAUPRINB, IIM. < root, black. U.M4 iliiioe. R ai
53S “ ............
euN-
Sale Used Cars 106
^kup—'41 Chery SedaiTDe^yt!? Reaeonabto. BooDOfny Ckra. 12
'M FORD PICRUP. BEtT OPm.
NEW I960 CHEVROLET
to TON PICRUP
$1688
IIN BUICK SPSaAU 1 .DOp*». niTclra, check thla, Blata ton. rhito iop. nutomaUe, radio k
---- ------------ —e. 1
‘Matthews-Hargr eaves
5. to M hp. Muurck Marina 1. Itt South 3oi——" -
TBNRIPIC 'bteCOUNTB
Bvinrude BiQtori. IIM
.......... "■ ”••. r-'
g'l
Only I Holden______
----. trailer or u— ---------
peyt repair aerrlce backed b
Schram’s TrOck & Equipment
ISW Dlxle Hwy,_____OR 3-13M
CHEVY.
yaan experience. Toay't Hartne, IWI Orchard lake Road. PS
3 t6u ovrs It to youriolf. Chock our fdul befora you buy. Boata of wood,
Kija. alum. SCOTT motors to hp. New Bkl Boata complete with motor and traUer only INI. Other new complete outfite —
l.'raaS^'
U"i
S SXCH^NOS
TrmsportRt’n Offered 100
CANS TO NgW YORK
Baonle'i Drlreaway.'____FE 2
'niuck odiNO north part
load. Either way. PE 5-4M4.____
c ENOINE AIRLINER. LOB AN-praneleco. Ban Dleio
felat. Ban
ferkSTS
i-m
i. OR
Wanted Used Cars 101
ATTENTION
arc DACHBHUN08 FOR 8ALB OR
trake. alto larf' ------ ■■■■
I OR 34111
Rgr^bOATTroR bale, mapic
ENOriEflTR HUNT DOO. BEST offer. 11 4. Johnton. TE 1-1
WANTED: USED TRAILERS, a IN. Let u Uit It lor you lot It pot curt on ear lot. HOLLY MARIHE AND COACH BALES. IMII HoUy Rd.. Holly. MElroto 4-dlll._____________________
WERE PATNO
TOP $$$ DOLLAR
POR CLEAN USED CAR8
Glenn'.s Motor Salerf
m W. HURON______ PE V11U
PEMALE'^AN ARIES. ALL PET ibop. II Wllllami. n ( PEMALE OBRMAN ER hat 1 Ultor of pupa, bi and Otrman Bhepnayd
Rent Trailer jS|^ 90
_ iii.j
111 N. Opdyke	PR t-lMI
^SW?sK?«5.“»w
...... ."jSinriJS
It tOU-Vft BEER Ttaf-RST: hO#
iv,k"“pr»4a"
Auto Accessories
44PEED ’WRYETTE TRANSMIS-- alon.-trl-corbd lor Ml Chkyrotot. After I P.m. OR 14611.__________________
17 Ml. Mor Creeto. MU l-ltM STD. WHITE POObU.~1lAtd POP.
_ AKC^ EM 1-1131._,_____^
TRORbUOBBRED MALI BBAOU.
houtebroken. 411. OL 1-0061.
TOP POOOLlS. BZdBLLBkT
40% OFF
NEW TAKEOFF TIRES
AUo Used Truck Tires • » k s ss>a;r.?» *
uuallty. ARC rastotorod. mala, wutt, I mo., pmaunt 1 leiutot. t wke,. yery
tiny.
lanty
FIRESTONE STORES
.W W. HURON_____FR S4MI
A-l;. USED TIRES II M_ U Mao whUowoIte. t TM SALEI
AVERILL'S
1010 Dixie Hwy.
HAROENBURO MOTOR BALES
CASH
• FOR YOUR CAR
ELSWORTH k BEATTIB AUTO BALES 0111 Dixie Hwy. ^	Clarhatou
QS~8i 'lower ~TdbB pat^
___.t * xtya yon trnn_,-
lOE^S CAR LOT
nto	**
"QUALITY MOTOR
Pontiac’s Truck Center
GMC
Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS
_______TON PICKUP,
trant. MA S4100____________
■licrav.^^^ TON PICKUP, lin.
NEW
W Dodge Pickup $1695
Include* all atandard factory
k federal UX. I
RAMMLER-DALLAS
1001 N. miAn	s------
OL s-nii
TRUCKS
VANS
1. I.N rabbor-«tti ertr.
TRACTORS
F-OOO. vacuum, aharp unit.
Special Units
I. automatic, power tleerlnf^
e. Very b T4 with cuitom
BOB BUTLER
'58 BUICK
4 doOr special. Auto. TiUkt. Radio fc Hootor.
$1495
JEROME
"BRIGHT SPOT"
T2 AT CASS OPEN EVES.
5*w*raW^lU“?J:-^5i'
mohto I44.IS. Lew__________
old trade. BIRMINOHAU-RAM-BLER. tM S. HOOOWAIiD. Ml
M-14 AT BUCKMORN t K.
LAKE ORION_________.J<T_I4S11
1M1 CHBVROLET 4 DOOR WAO-
---->. heater. PewerfMa.
ilo. tlM. our low prto*
■51 P
Uncolh, ■4S Chevy 'nottlln't'
r.-iS
n'iuEOBuS
otheri „ —
ECONOMY CARE
1955 BUiCO-DR.
Thto to a oho^Hhor. axeoptlaoally clean. All hlnek wito R k^ nutor Nevar bad a fupt •,•*•,**^',‘,*** It's the eleanott.car In ^tlac.
PEOPLE'! AOTO Sty“_„
I Owlr<»pd	PE_3'S1S1
SB. "won. PIR-14111.
... __________111.'0 CTUN-
der. atandard abift. 11154. PB
' iho.
ffi'JES.:
North Chev.
Hunter Bird, tl I. Woodward Av*. Blrmlnsham	4Q 4-S115
Blrmlnshani
1 cRkViiSLBT. powiioLimBT
445	114 Otpr “	------
MArktt 4-1715
1151 CHEVROLET. 110.
and irhlta. Anolhar Blrmlw iflS. Our lew prtoo IIM1.
ilN. Our tow prtoo I1M1.
North Chev.
L at B. Woodward A*.
REte^E^ToN
fjf
MtL AWOLUTSLT nsj mummM
DOWN. Aatume paymtnU , of |U.N per mo. Call Credit Mn. Cr. Pukt at Ml 4-7IM. Harold
REPOSSESSION
l-^r. _Ho_^M5«J
rnwtmf*
IH4 BUICK HARDTOP. RfcH. -Oood Uret. SIm- momr. tlM. MArket 4-1141.'
HArxet 4-nax..'
$5 d6wn
flow, Radio k Heater.
- $495 -
Eddie Steele
^ FORD —
WEST HURON
ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD
FE 5-3177 FE 5-0661
FACTORY BRANCH ’55 BUICK
I DOOR HARDTOP Radio k Hatter. Btralfbl
$895
Pontiac Retail Store
1956 CHfeVROLET
STATION WAOON. I DOOR Ushl Oream
^1095^
FACTORY BRANCH -57 CHEVROLET *adlo"k*??iSSlr*A.%U...
$1695
SRlkUp^JCTE
Side UsedCnrE 106
$5 DOWN
snfsvTUsrrfK’.
ms5^***' *'*‘**'
19.S7 IMPERIAL SK^WarJ^'eSSSS
JOHN ^MITH DODGE
ISU DBBOrO. RADIO A
ummjav.	Aim S—
«r. oxetlioM oondltl^FuU Silt. Ataume	‘.L*?:"
repossession
Vm aoly *lir'm?Sth.VDur^Tjn NO MONEY DOWN
IH1 Oodte 4-door, hardtop. *
--- —■■ nanthly payr-
.ucky Auto
'Cy' Owens
-141 B. BAOINAW t_______
n 54141
■SB ^OM!i PAIRLAini. WHITE iCl-
K3i.Tir»:
$5 DOWN
ssr.'£3:,.vs
'•”TL«65-
Eddie Steele
— FORD —
WEST HURON ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD
FE 5-3177 FE 56661
1 tniail ■ monthly paymantt.
liu OODOB 1-DOOR. I CYiflfota
■tandtrd IrMimlition vltii ov9T> drtoe lfew motor. No ruit Ml l, MN. BW
BIRMINGHAM
RAMBLER
666 S. WOODWARD
Ml 6-3904
Rita Auto. Mr. Stoll. FE l-MM.
Pontiac Retail Store
FE 3-7117
behind'^nMySSr^oSyicK
"S5? I'Si
At the ttogtoht in Wa^ford_ ii54 p6ilib’cu^Mi:biMrwpio
’58 CHEVROLET
I DOOR
$1395
JOHN SMITH DODGE
111 1. Basinaw______rtyitU
WE HATE ur ALL
AND TRLi.;«a. av «
NANCK NO ihtOBUat. EOONOMT CARE Ml AURDlUt
'Cy' Owens
$5 DOWN
■M CHRVROLKT BrAlr 1 Door Rama k Htaur. W-Walli. I11.N Pel
_ $349 -
Eddie Steele
,	— FORD —
WEST HURON
ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD
FE 5-3177 FE 5-0861
"LOOK!"
I960 CORVAIR
DELUXE dlBMO SEDAN OPTIONS AND ACCESSORIES AVAILABLE. YOURS POR ONLY
$75. DOWN $69:59 PER MONTH
Crissman
ROaiESTER
OPEN KVP. 'TIL I OL 14111 1M4 cHEVT I bit
. FE 3-7117
41 MT CLEMENS S' BEHIND THE POST OS
’53 CADILLAC
4 boon SEDAN Power «teerto| k Powtr -kraket. W-wtUa,
$395
JEROME
HAROLD TURNER S TRUCK CENTER
*«4 8 Woodward	MI 4-15M
BIRMITOHAM______MICMIOAN\
Toil
"BRIGHT SPOT’’
ORCHARD LAKE AT CAU
PE HM»_J______OPEN JIVES
‘in CADILLAC SI HARDTOP. NICE
“““ |l.lw”*PE	*“*■
PogE Trained. Boarded 80
RRITTART FUPE. MeNART'E Tallwaiiof RennaU. koardlN. tralntna trImmiDi.' Brittaay and Poodle ttod eervleo. OL l-MM ..........
KTATl
**L.itosMw_

NEEDS ALL MODEL CLEAN CARS TODAY
44$ ORCHARD LAKE PR MMl ■hiP SbCK-JUNK aairiHDCK. POMTIAO WAim	fl MMS
See M & M Moto.- Sales
Par tu doltor on totar modal aart.
mrnhu Hwy.___________OR 1-1401
TOP M fOR ANT MAKB'OR'MO-
LOOKI 1MX14 BLACK nREJS. ALL namt branda Off ntw cart. |l5.M_phu tox	axehaoft.
fc***.’!"
HiAitinf PogE 81
“5WSI!HSS?”«rBi
Hay, Grain A Feed 82
9 horse and COW UytrodTHr-----
hay, la dat--__
ifRAW^R'~8ALB^ l|y*r. MM Hoanoi PbMi* OA t-tm.
STANDARD BRAND «W TIRES, trada In an Ooncral Saitto Tire*, wtltowafis'^ cant ofT Black or
'eD WILLIAMS
Ml B. Bndtonw M Raabum .
“ i:M. I:“ -
llBi
"r i4im. n» B<^ Lk.Jd. ClirTBAlB~7XLP*LPA A bcoxM hay. atoo aomo taccad
Uni. OA WSSK______
TiliBAUMnfAY. BTIU^^
Ante Syyto
r oru^o in thr
------... 81 Hood.
»-1541._____■
CRAin^HAn^Rlinioolir trb
needOi finAnC£-

FIXER? Order Classified Ads to sell, rent, find a
job. : FE 2-8181 > the Want Ad number I
NUiVUlUiU* 9
TAl^F
ADVANTAGE
uaod"eart!*Wa**Nrf^y
!Xkjrai‘*a iS3.^.*“"
JEROME
"Bright Spot"
Orehord Lako at Caaa _
TOP DOLLAR mItoaM Si?|^waatSftor an|^-tl|ia3 ‘'Tl J. Y^WELT
4MS Dlxto gwy. Sit. OB 1-USI
TRUCKS
MATTER
WHAT YOU NEED
Try Us
TIRST"
1958 FORD
COUNTRY SEDAN. T4. WhRO tal color. Pordomatle Power
wo toreSshJet “llMI *
IP We HAVEN'T OOT IT
"We'll Get It"
EDDIE
STEELE
- •— FORD —
W. Huron
ELIZABETH LAKE. ROAD
Station
Wagons
1959 PONTIAC
ctoeiiu a bcakoo. Like new

1958 CHEVROLET
DOOR ctoHon wifoa. A let black boauty. T4 with wwerilldt — dio k beater. WbItowaU I ♦ISM.
1957 PONTIAC
I PAUENOER tUtlcn waion I
.........
Clean. I—
1957 FORD
COUNTRY SEDAN. T4. Pordo---
Radio k hfoter. WbttcwoU Urea. 1 tona ircan, loUrtor to r—*-
FE 5^3177 • FE 5-0861 iniMiNORAM
WILSON
PONTIAC - CADILLAC
, 1350N. Woodiward
1M4 CHEVT I OR
REPOSSESSION
III price. No
a*Ur".%.l”'
lb i fcirl S. a<
IM CHEVROLET BEL AIR, ,• door, herdtop. RkH. immacuioU. V-l, etlek trcntmlteloa. po^— ateertni ond broket. Executli --- ■“--------Indio rtd fc Ivorj,
matchlni interior. -. .....
oiler. Cto to 31 months on bol-aoo4 BIRMOfOBAM-RAMBLER. JM B. WOODWARD. Ml I-1M4.
14 CHEVROLET, 4 DOOR. RADIO, heater, ‘now Uret, treio with whiu top. Ctoan Intld*. Oood cSiditloa. Only MN. Can PE 4-61N. attar 1:1k p m. wookdaya, onyUmo tk ' uturdoy.
LARK
TRADE-INS
BIG ACTION SALE ALL THIS WEEK
I DOOR, SHARP I
'M TOLESWAOEN . ■M PORD ^tTA. WON. ■H PONTUC 1 DOOR U OLDS 1 DR I ■II CHEVROLET
1 DOOR 4 suck. 8HARPI rHAwif VERY clean; *
■M PONT.'4 DR. 8HARPI . . . I 4 M CHEVT RBCONOI......... I 2
1 DOOR LlkE NEW, ’ll WILLYB SEDAN .. •II PONT. 1 DR S .. M DoboE 4 DOOR .
RINK
141 S. BAOINAW STREET
~t Mil____________
>ALA.~4-DOOR RaIiD-
"srS?v!?r:Krb!S;
RkH. Rear apoakcr WhIU waUe.
Like new. OL 1-0014. Ere*.___
1044' cSiV. IMPALA OOkVERT. -------fc heater. White walto. Pow-
io?OTr?IBIlfl|
. Call PB 0-M11.
„r. _____________________RADIO
and heater, excellent ecodltlon. PuU price 41N. Aaaumc paymenli of OllSl pot mo. Baa eredtt manamr, lb. Whiu. at Etni Auto IMh. Ill a. Baflnhw. pi
1960 FORD
DEMO SALE
Priced to cen IhU Meath
BEATTIE
REPOSSESSION
tlM full price. No caih hiHad. Pay only 111 per mo. 0»* Apra Mlh. Rite Auto.. Mr. BeB. IB
RIU Auto.. Mr. mwxe. IM E Rlvd, B,
1155 FORD. V4.-
REPOSSESSION
Harold Torwr
priot. Ro eaak nooSod.
“harotoi
5NB5USSIO . ABBOLO . NN. Alcumi pof mo C Krka at rwr Ford.
1I||4^ ^ PCTip

REPOSSESSION
CAR PATk.—-------------------
comof CoDM la and too at aad tot uc help *oa adfuci to a Icm expeattye car.	„
DON’S OBiP CAM ill a Upcer Rd.
______MY P104I
gto^wV III . ww.
’57 FORD
hirlanc ‘’500” S-4oor S eylUiMr bcouty. Radio. hcaOcr, 10,100. ktUci. RtvcB ^k aad vbito.
5ay.*Vi»*i'
’59 FORD
I DOOR HARDTOP
$2195
'Cy' Owens
141 8. BAOINAW STREET.
iW' Wi^ curroM V-l. Rft^
tranamlttloD, RkH. pa4^ dath. ImmccttlaU red and white, nc rutt. M45 No money down. Buj ■ rc-Pay
IMI CHEVROLET BEL AIR I
Rochettor Road, 1-4100. Be-

’58 CHEVROLF.T
DEL RAY, 4 DOOR StOAN
$995
JEROME
IMS PORD TOWN BID^. TAN
• BRIGHT SPOT"
^O^^ARDLAKE^AT^CAg^
KEPOSSESSIOS
1054 Chevrotol. 4 door Bel Air. VI, Dice oar. No momy down. Taka over paymanU of |S5 Ma. Rlni Mr. BUix. Lucky AUte Balet, PE VIOOI. FE 44114 ISl 8. Bar
-I^CRrBLBl BARATOOA HT. Pun power, rwr tl
^V?^j will
ruTtar^'
PRICED TO FIT EVERY POCKETBOOK
Ohccked
Folding Money Siiecials
H OLD8 4 dr Rel pt k b |1555 ;M HaMBLBR Won. tuper 4 <7*.
mil
’54 CHEV. wagon I, pg. pekb ’5g PORD wagon I. auto., pa al ’50 CKKV. B/4 4 dr . auto. ..OK. '11 CHKV. B 'A 4 dr., bt. auto. }I105 17 CHSV 111 4 dr., ni ’
■51 PLY54. Bel. 4 dr . a '54 PORD Cuatmo 1 dr.
’55 CHKV. wagoa 4 dr..
‘N CHBV. 4 dr. 0, ----
l\
:id:J
____________________
•M PONT Wagon, I jpaai. pc. I 4N ’ll CADDY Cpc. OcVtUc. atoo lavo
Nothing Down Specials
$395
YOUR tmOICK
’M CHKV B/A 4 dr., pg. dutk grey, 'M CHBV 111 4 dr, pf.. Ivory-green. ’44 CHBV HI 1 dr , ^..Ivory-grceo.
■M CHBV Yu'4 drVpS. .,ory.ra: ‘II CHBV HI I dr., ltd. Ivory-blue, 'll PONT Cat I dr. ht leather trim, 'll TORD -.........................
1 dr. I cuitom
Workingman’s Specials
$295
YOUR CHOICB
■II CHEV I..,. _____________
,11 CHKV 314 t dr. pg. II '$1 PONT 4 dr. hyd.-tu-tol 'M PORD to too plaup -
Walkingmah’s Socials
$195
YOUR bHOICB
SPORD cuitom 1 dr. I auto. blue. - — -- ---
„ CHKV . _. ....___________
’51 PONT 4 dr. I. automatic. Blue. ’43 BUICK 4 dr. ltd. lit* blue.
'll BUICK cuptr t dr. bt. whiu-yel. ’ll PORD Vie. I dr. ht itd. browa 'll OLD# N 4 dr. auto. Ivory-blua. -M CHEV B/A S dr. ht. ltd. Ivory.
. $95
Loose Change Specials
TOUR CHOICB
'M BUICK 4 dr. ltd. lit# gret....
’ll BUICK 4 dr. wagon, tan flnlih. '51 BUICK 4 dr. auto. toUd grten.
1 dr. ltd. dark I
MOIIdRS-GARAGE
“ “	Oil 4"03|1
Mml ^
Dixie Ok'd Cars
BIRMINGHAM
RAMBLER
666 S. WOODWARD
_____M1 (h3904
’56 FOR D
Palrlane, 4 door hardtoo. dowi itetring and kraket.
tioningT black 'real' iharp. HIM
Larj-y lerome
mtotlon. padderi daah. white ttoea. radu and henter. HIM. 11 puy-mtnta 4M.lt. Low ooib down or old trad*.
BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER
666 S. WOODWARD Ml 6-390t
OPEN
WEDNESDAY EVENING
AT
GLENN'S
PRICES
REDUCED
•M PORO ..	 lJU-
1 DOOR LIKB NBW1 IIN MiLBB
’ll VAUXHAIL ...........HIM
4 DOOR VICTOR.
-----
LARK 1 DOOR.
lANB IM
JuT^l
to 3 DOC
.. . -ID ...
PAIRLANB MO. I
'•’I'a-'iSSSlN; ,
. ----------AUTO. TRAN
■II PORD ...... .......lie
PAIRLANB MO. 4 DOOR.
18 rONTIAC ......^^..40»04*
I DOOR. HARDTOP.
■M CRKVROLBT
S DOOR. 8BARPI
WE HAVE
EXTRA
CLEAN
GARS
Many More
TO CHOOSE FROM
Ask About Oiir
14 DAT___
M-N OUARANTXX
GLENN'S
MOTOR SALES 952 WEST HURO,N FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797
BEATTIE
At the Btopllght to WaUfteito
Btopllght to IM PORO CUSTOM 1 IX>OR 0 cylinder. PordomnUe, Ytcac, in equipment, ihnrp, HIM. PE
We're Loaded With Bargains
Terrific Trade-Ins
lOH Chryeler. New Torkcr. Hord-top. Auto, trona. Powir aUcrinc. Powar krakai. RkH. Wbitowalli.
IM7 Pird-Palrlaac IM. 4 dr. POM. tUerlng. Itodio k biaUr. A black
lO^'ckd
coupe. 1 rbltc 1^. I
1044' Pontiac BUKblef 4 dr Hydra-malic Radio. Htaur. WhIUwalli. Your '51 or '41 wUl maka down payment.
J045 Pnntlae Btorcblaf 1 dr. Hardtop HydrimaUc. Radio. Heater. WhIUwalli. All laalbtr trial.
irsSSjisis'iiis
HAUPT
PONTIAC
OlARKSTON ^	^
BE IN THE
KNOW
SHOP THE BIG
'O'
W BOICK	OMBO
ELBCTRA Ml Htrdtop. 4 DR. Radio fc ReiUr Powtr iletring k powtr brukti. O.PIaw. W.Wolli. Coppar Otow.
". ’sia *3.,,™.
HeiUr. DPlow. l^er BUertng k Pawer —— “ —-
■41 BUICK.............. IMM
KSJr" A-P^", "pJii.r’fe.S
k Powtr krakia, W.WaUi. Oaracl Rtd ever Obral Oet away from
....... ...... IU05
SKt'!
I DOOR sedan. Radio k Htal-tr, Auu. Trant. V4, Rad k Whiu. Black TUii.
M CHEVROLET .
,	.................HIM
, DOOR SEDAN. RadU k RcaUi. AuU. Trant. Black k TcUew. Very clean Intld*. Rail alee nm-
SUPER 1 DOOR. Hardtop DTlo Rldto k HcaUr. Pwr SUertoS k Pawer Brtkai. w.WaUt.
■45 PONTUC 2 DOOR SEDA AUU. lYaai.
fiirvgrs
■54 CHEVROLET ..... IMS
I DOOR SEDAN. Rldto k EcMar. Auu. Trant. Twa '4M WhIU *
ni^ 'bUMP TOdi*;'' ••
'M WlLLYk ........... Ik
PICKUP 4 Wbeil DtlTC.
SEE HANE OR <lLiH
OLIVER:"
Motor Sales

^	Cmn
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, Mi^CH 16, I960
liCI

North Chev.
Sate Uaed Cart
106
REPOSSESSION
UM rort Mim wmjon^ « I»j.
cS'sHjnr »
n 4-ai« w t. a«iui>w._
Credit statements taken
on the plume. Lucky Auto Sales, FE 4-1006.
«-rai| FE 4-2214. 193 S. Sagi-naw.
;'> a o. AOTO
1 roRB 1 OOOB. I crmroiBt. ■ *nin A niTBL ABaOUm-r DOWN. AMUm*
MONCT DOWN. AuuBt o( tM.ri per IM. Cell Cre^i
_________________ „ „ l!»r*ltr Krt. et MI 4-nai.
pepiBMiU of	m». Cell HeroM Tunier r»ft.__________
\ Credit M»r. Mr. Perki et Ml il«~«oSn CONVBIITIBLI. KA-\ 4-THt. BeroM Turner Nerd. ©10 % HEiCTBl. fSSoLUTNLT NO MOMIY DOWN. AMume
X A FEW CHOICE MORSELS
I. FrMn HIM IRU^lMi CNITNOLm -
Crissman
ROCHEStER
OPEN ETEt JTIL I_OL
il4l POND bed AN. OL M7U OR UL 1-4M3.
pm RANCH WAOON .....«« Oreer

lohnson
Lake Orion
offers
'U Baick NT FT. I owner . M RemMrr Wen Auto A-1 ’U Merc. Perklend Power ‘M Rembler Am Mn Aul R 17 Mere I dr Plnk-whlU ■M Ponuec NT Iherp 1 own<
i Mcr Mr.
MATIC TRAN8MUI8ION PADIO
_______v:,.
Kereld Turner _Pord.______
“NO MONEY DOWN ’
•17 Fold, t dwer red end whiu beeuty. «7M MU prlee. Wn* Mr. Bl-u. LuokT Auto eele« PB 4-IOM — PE	t. teilnew.
UU lOIICDRT MOMTIUT. ccUent enndltum. Pull price . AMumo pnymenu of UU per month. See credit mene«cr. Mr. WhIU nt Ktnt Auto aelee. Ill B. -------- PE l-““
*55 MERCURY
4 DOOR
$595
'Cy' Owens
Sale CM Can 106 j TIZZY
IMC BUBinWAN. va HTO en. Like new, PE MIM..
■M MBRCURT MONTURET ttaar. Pull? edUtpped. MM.
IPU OU3R n CUIB BEDAN. POW- : or. euMmeUc l«w mlloe. LoaU and rune Utrlfic. tUI. Mo kltmoy Down. Buy hore—Pey hern.
BIRMINGHAM
RAMBLER
666 S. WOObWARD MI ^3904
IMJ OLOBMOp^^ BE Ri^l6 A dowa!*
t Mnanin. Autn auci.
'"mOLDEM
REPOSSESSION
iBI full prict. no cash aaod IT only	Duo ^lljj
lu Auto. Mr. Bell. PE B-41 a 1 Bled, t. nt AdMera.
*.57 OLDSMOBTLE
4 DOOM PULI. POWER.
$1395
JEROME
kj^^^LTMOUTH 4 0OOR BEDaF. Orldlnei 7-tooe «rey paint. Economy minded people would fell In .—	.w. I syiioder —
owner antomoblie. In top condl-
147 B. BAOINAW STREET
______-	_______ North Chev.
NO MONEY DOWN	^	-
IM^imcDRY. 4 DOOR. FULL birminfbem .mn'i Ur
’conier'tib!!' _ ______
power_ ilmlnj^ nad_ brnkot.
line. LuckT Auto Sole.. PE ' 1»M'T'*';XU0'7?’ 4-llM^ PXJM7I4. HI 8 Badneje.	*	' ‘
195'9 O'LDSMOBILE
VIBTA HARDTOP. 4 DOOR PuU Power. Redia A< Hreter THU U UEE NEW
$2995
Ml 4-17» CTUMDER
'U Word NT. V-l. Sharp ‘M Ply. bed Auto Vd
■b Ponllec NT. Auio Clean_________
- -U Pantlec Bed Btrchf. Cleee l<d«
\ JOHN SMITH \ DODGE
w vinyl top.
3e.eM ectuel____________
new white well Urea. It -----
welt, bnrryl MBS. Pull Wbrrnntv. 14 paymtaU, IM.M. Lew ceth down or old trade. HIRMIMO-
ham-namblbn. on a. wood-
------Ml I-1M4 __________
ward. I
U Plymouth, good
Russ lohnson Motor Sales
Lake Orion
VALIANT
MY 2-2871 MY 2-2381
HASKINS
SPECIALS
•M Bol Air 4 dr sedan. T-l ea-tlne. beater, beautllul )ede ireen A Ivory ttnub. Radio, powerflldo.
II ChevroM 111, t I >lth poworflMo. redic keutltttl U|ht ireen
. heater. Beautiful

HASKINS
Nev!\
Rambler^ Over 100 ^ Models
__________IME lubrication
3-	PKEE IBM UCENBE
4-	MORE SERTICE-J LOCA-
TIONS
l-LOWER PRICE B-TOP TRADE
Get the Big 6't 666
'#0
We'Wont Be Beat On Any Deal
BRINO TOUR TITLE AND PRICE OVER II SHARP -|7-'M.-r* USED RAMBLERS TO CMOOBH PROM
Wagons, Sedans Metrouolit-ins
TOUR CBEUIT Amovi IT PHONE
BIRMINGHAM
CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES
. Clerkatoo MA 1-1141
: where the overhead la 1
Get Your CAR
At
R&R
tiling At
Wh^sale
Price^or
ACT!'
CHEVROLET-OLDS S7II DUrle Hwy. Clarktlon Open Night! Uattl f MA S.U71	RAMBLER 666 S. WOODWARD
36	MI 6-3904
	STOP! LOOK! .SAVE!
FAIR DEALING YEARS' 2r..srg!r*p£k" MO. ;5g,PLYMOUTB "-TMOUTH BAVOT 7 DR 1 HU M DN g4t.7k PER MO. HUM DM. HS 7f PER MO.	UU PONTIAC . . 	 UfU ■onneville Moor hardtop. Power itterlni. power brakei. radio, beater. Hydramatlc. Spare Mvtr been used. Juat lUe new. UU BUICK 		 : UU Super ^-door hardtop. Power iteer-Ing, power braket, Dynaflow. radio, haatar and whltawalla. A wonderful handUng ear. Buy It aa UU p8nt4a'c ■'	L »)M S-doar hardtop with Hydramatlc, radio, hoaltr, roar raat (paaker and new whlttWaU Urei. it i a raal hon»r. UU CIIBTT 	 |1)U Impala Idaar hardtop. Power eteerhik. ptHer brakei. Power-■Ude.^-S eiStta Here'e one )ual IImIu1*CH 				_fUM Speelal 4-daor hardtop. Power ■toortof, power brakei. Dynatlow. radio. hoaUr aod.whluwa(U. PIrt-
I7B.U n.N 14171 PER MO.	U^UICK ’*7'	 glut SpotlU^ J-door^eda^ D^nal^w.
SPECIAL 7 DOOR S1U.M DN 14171 PER MO. •»7 080TO Fire Dome 4 DR H.T IIU M^DN g4i 7» PER MO	Ut7 CHEVY ||)U BMUon watan with beautllul red ' 1 and While %l«h. Only M.Mf ac-
1059 WINDSOR
CONVfRTIBIB NEW CAN WAR RAMTY NIVIR TITLED, "w NEW.
$2695
19.56 CADH.I.AC
M SPECIAL. VENV 8HARPI
$1695
1058 lVVerial
1 DOOR HARDTOP. FULL POWER
$2295
matic. radio a hraiwr u.
SOB Mas CAR UKH NEW
$1295
'A girl meets a boy like Jo>lo only once in r lifetime. Nobody in her right mind would go out with hii^twice!”
SHleUEBdCarf 106 ' RE^s's^ION
MSI PuU Prlaa. No Caah Neaded. Only BBS aw. Duo kUy let Auto, Mr. BaU R B-4BM IM g. atvd. a at Aabwra
Spring Clean Up
;ii PONTIAC can CPI. rarr bm
Sale Uiad Can 1061
DOOR ' POimAC. truTA. Id by clolEyaMut. la pyfect
sMartai sad brakw. Wl waUaTkltM caah. TO I il PONTIAC." 1 04 Oakland.
a, ataarlnd. hydra.
I PONTIAC VIBTA. <
■U PONTIAC B»H .........- ,
■8 BUICK 8PECIAU NICE ... $71 ’ ■tt POND CONVim. .. Ml M PLEMODTH CLE. CPE DRIVE
OVER PATHBltB. I'M a>>.ri»i, aw l.avia ^
1 RUNNING . ^*1*1
1 BUICK 1 DR BT .!.! Ilf
NO MONEY DOWN
MOET RAVE R60M - MQR CARS TO CROOig I TO U kfODETB r--PER RIPUSBU.
■ PROMIt UP
Superior Auto Sales
___111 Msatcalm at Oakland
-M PONTIAC "bTATION'WAOOIL
IBN PONTIAC HARDTOP COUPH. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. R*D10 * BEATER. ABSOLUTB-LT NO MONET DONTN. AaanaM paymoata of U4.U per me. CaU Credit Mir Mr. Parka at m _4^MI. RaraM JTurMr Perl.
HU PONTIAC 1 DR. VERT RICH
car-PH y-TB41. H. Rlwlnt.___
TWO ItlS PONTIACE. IN VBHT
rVU artaa. IM Aatume payi II.U per week. See Credit
sSei. Us's^^Smilnaw.
^I^sed CRrs_106
HM MODEL A. ] WINDOW COUPE
Wbita, EIm Auto Balse. I Bailoaw. PE M4M
Sale Used Cars 1061
WILL ACCEPT
B. I
I 1B5» PL
lUI Oldv Club coupe Hydra HAH.
PowerfUde. HIM HM Parr 4 dr. vaiop. RAH lIJN Poatmc^tatlon waion.
rr*ak»
HOMER HIGHT MTRS.
•Tl Mlantaa from Poatlsd” _ Oifard. Mteb.______OA B-mi
PONTIAC AUTO BROKERS
Vnlktwaioa Ew .. PvnUao Convert T7 Ford t door . .. •M Dodie Bojrai 4 *• Plak-np M
U Dndfc Plak-ni
II PobUM B dr.............-—
M Chev Pnilt W(li. k tan ... |M1 'M Btudebaker Wafoo	IlM
HU Perry bt Madlaon PE 4-IIM H'7 PLYMOUTH SEDAN," AUTOMATIC THANBMIIBION. RADIO A HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO
MONBT DOWN. Aaaume pa)-------
of 1)171 per mo. Call M|r Mr. Krka at Harold Turner Ford.
I Credit
’59 PLYMOUTH
I PAI8ENOER, BUB.
$2395
lACK
COLE
IS» PLYMOUTH SEDAN. AUTO-MATfC, RADIO S HEATER. AH-SOLUmT NO MONET DOWN.
^meau ol IM.Sl per Oedit 1^. Mr. Parke Harold Turner
H PLTMbUtfl. NEW MOtORT eie, eoBd. BM )-Ult. _	_
H PLYMOUTH." ' BELYTOEkle
automatic, RAM white waUc. look
tnU tYtr.
Clarkston Motor Sales
CRRYALER-PLTMOUTH DEALER Mala R,. CTarketoa. MA M14I IPU PLYMOUTH BTATiON WAO-
OB. im, Jrt_7^ll» ______
■SB ^LTlidUTN 1 ddon VI. AUTO matic traaimlaalop. radio A heater. U down -T U per week. •Credit No Problem.'^ LLOYD MQTORa. in B. Bailaav. PE
B-dlll.	_______
■Bl PLYMOUTH BBLVEDBRI
a H.
paymeata ol
credit ---
Kina A PEI-1
•M PLYM^TH
REPOSSESSION
t.ui	He each neat.
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i
-Eu

THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16. 1960
FORTY-THREE
- -Today's Television Programs- •
•iM (2T Movie (began at 9 pjtf.) (4) Jim Bowie.
> (7) Curtain Tirae.
(9) Popeye. '
(56) Great Flayi (began at 5:30 p.m.)
9xU (2) Weather. fcM (2) (4) Newa, Sports.
(7) CurtaU (coot. )
(9) Supannan.
(56) News Magarine.
6:46 (2) News Analyst (7) Sports.
6:tt (2) (4) (7) News.
7:96 (2) Five Star Feature. Drama:	Wanda Hendrix,
•'Song of Surrender,” (‘49). (4) BcHtler Patrol.
(7) Bold Venture.
(9) Man Without a Gun.
(56) Search tor America. 7:99 (2) Film (began at 7 p.m.) (4) Wagon Train.
(7) Araaona Gun.
(9) MBUea Dollar Movie. Dramat Koaemarie Bowie, ‘llw Golden Mistraas,” C94) (56) Now Americans.
9:99 (2) FUm (began at 7 p.m.) (4).Jfagon Train (eont.)
(7) Charlie Weaver.
(9) Movie (began at 7:90 p.m.)
(56) Showcase.
9:19 (2) Men Into Space.
(4) (color) Price Is Right (7) Oxsine and Harriet.
(9) Movie (began at 7:X p.m.)
(56) TIUe Hunt.
9:99 (2) The Millionaire.
(4) (color) Perry Como Show.
(7) Hawaiian Eye.
(9) Star and the Story.
(56) Briefing Session.
9:99 (2) I've-Got a Secret.
(4) Perry Como (oont.)
(7) Hawaiian (cont.)
(9) Waterfront.
19:M (2) Cirde Theater.
(4) This Is Your Ufe.
(7) Wednesday Night Fightp. 19:99 (2) Circle Theater (cont.)
(4) WichiU Town.
(7) nghta (coot.)
(9) Mr. D.A.
19:M (7) Dead^ News.
11:99 (2) (4) (f) (9) News, Weather, Sports.
11:99 (9) Telescope.	'
Uttf (2) Nightwatch Theater. Q)medy: Jack Benny "Buck Benny Rides Again," (’40). 11:99 (4) Jack Paar.
(7) After Hours Qub.
(9) S t a r I i g h t Theater. Drama: Barbara Stanwyck, "The Other Love,” (’47).
THVBSDAT MORNING
7199 (4)Thday.
(2) TV Collage.
(7) >\Biews.
W Felix the Cat.
(7) Breakfast Time.
9:99 (2) News.	e
9:U, (2) Oipt Kangaroo.
9199 (7) Johnny Ginger.
(2) For Better or Wo (4) NBC (56)
9:99 (2) Movie.
(7) SUge 1 9:66 (4) Faye Elizabeth.
19:99 (4) Dough Re ML
(56) Our Scientific World. 19:96 (9) BlUboard.
19:M (9) Ding Dong SdiooL (4) Play Your Hunch.
(56) Tonaorrow’a Horn: makers.
I9:M (7) News.
U:9i iS) I Love Lacy.
(4) (eolor) Pike Is Right (7) Lady of Charm.
(9) Abbott A CostcUo.
(5^ Bon Jour.
U:99 (21 Decembv Brida.
(4) OanoantratioB.
(9) Oaeo KkL Util (7) Detroit Today.
By Vetted Frees IntatnaMsnal WAGON TRAIN, 7:90 p.m. (4).
Guest star Peter Lnrre portrtys an
archeologiat in search of 9:91 (3) Hoom Pirty. treaaure whe irtdnnpn Flint Me- (4) Lorer "— (^lUough (Bob Horton).	(7) Gnk
MEN WTO iPACBC, 9:30 .
(2). Col. McCauley'a (BUI LandL gan'a) sen is injnrsd and tha colonel Is forosd to tnahs a chotoa
TV
Features
ttom (2) Lovt of Ufa.
(4) Truth or (7) ResUeu Gun.
(9) This Uvins World.
U:ia (4) (color) It Cbold Be You. (2) Search for Tomonow. (7) Love That Bob. ,
(9) Passing Parade.
19:tt (2) Guiding Light U:aa (9) Newa Daa (4) Bold Journey.
(2) Our Mlsi Broohi.
(7) About FMca (56) Poeta and Poatiy.
(9) Movla 1:90 O) Aa World Tima a) Topper.
(56) World MitorT. till (7) Day la Court (» Madtoa.
(d) ^naan tor a Day.
(56) Consumer vs. the Ma^ kct.
vtowpafaR of the mUitnry aun.
OXZIE AND HAR6UBT, 8:30 p.m. (7). A set of dishes handed down to Harriet Nelaon "hy her grand-straiige things to , a weekend visit to a mountain cabin.
OOMOn
Como and Bing Crosby partidpate in a aongfest, with Gen* evieve and Peter Oiuiaro (color). I’VE GOT A SECRET, 9:30 p.m i). Olivia deHavUand is the uest.
ARMSTRONG CIRCLE THEATER, 10 p.m. (2). The story of how and why a man plans to com-lit suicide.
TiTEDNESDAX NIGHT FIGHTS, 10 p.m. (7). Zorn Foiley and Mike deJohn In a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout from the Qeve-land Arena.
IS YOVR UFE, 10 p.m. (4). An entertainer la Ralph Edwards’ surprise star.
JACK PAAR SHOW. 11:30 p.m. (4). Louise O'Brien, Jack Douglas and Alex King are on the show, with Hugh Downs and Joee Mella.
(9) Keimody’s Oonec.
(56)------
(9) I O)
(4) Young Dr. Malone, a) Bent the dock.
(3)	Verdict Is Yours.
(4)	From Thaoo Roots.
(7) WhoDoYouTniatr
4149 (2) Brighter Day.
(4) Thin Ian.
(7) Amariean Bimdstaiid 4:U (2) Seeret Storm.
4:99 (2) Edgo of Night (9) RobtoHood.
(4) Yancy Derringer.
6:09 (9) Movie.
(4) (color) Goorgo Pierrot Preeents.
(9) Looney Tunee,
6:99 (7) Rocky and Hls lYtaads. 9:69 (9) Jae LeGoU.
Dag Will Poll U.N. on French A-Test$
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPI) -.Secretary General Dag Ham-marakjold began polliiig the 92 members of the United Nations TBeoday on a re<iuest by Afro-Aaian countries lor a General As-semtUy debate on the French nu-
2 Cheboygan Ex-Mayors Must 6et Off Council
CHEBOYGAN (UPD-Two former Cheboygan mayors wil forced to ’’petlre” from the city council next month because will have completed the maximum of three consecutive terms permitted by the dty charter.
9	*	★
John Werner and William Marin cannot run for re-electioo in the AprU 4 dty dection.
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GOP'sUnity Shows Cracks
Nixon Efforts Sputter os' Party Conservatives Outline Goals
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ New cracks showed up today in the structure df RepuMican unity Vice Pneldent Richard M. Nixon has been laboriiig so hard to build.
W 9	*
Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz) outlined in a Senate speech Tuesday a GOP conservative’s idea of what the foreign policy program , should be. It differed sharply with poll^ pi	■ ■ ■
oahower.
OOMPARING NOTES — Leaders of the workslMip conference sponsored hy the Vocations Guidance OommifUe of the Pontiac Urban League compare notes before last aoMion. From left are Mrs. Ruth Spurlock, represeUtiiig social worit; Harold Ward of Detrsft, arohlted; Mra. Harry Rigga of Btoomfleld Township,
Urban League Aidt Minority Groups
nurriiR; Doris Gillespie. 79 Elisabeth St., busineBS ndminittration; Mra. Gifford GoiL 169 E. Wltoon, education ami teaching; and Aim^ W. Dornui, 410 Linda Vista Dr., Vocational Servtoee lec-rtliry of tho Ultna League.	\
Sets Up Vocational Guidance lor Youth
By JOE SWOLETON The Ponttoo Urban League ha# < dtgnisai 9 program to help ml-
norlOr group youngsters dl------
opportunities in education.
« * *
R worin throu|h a committee of w toegui’a vocational guldaaee depaitaMnt interosted in boyf and gl^ in general and ihembcrs of minority necs In particular.
Beaded by AiwaM W. Dareaa, veeatlaaal servteea aecietaryi (he eonunittee has surveyed reoorde
That Must Have Been Quite a Sturdy Insult
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK — The news from WelrdsvUle, UJBA., is weirder than josunl this welrd day ... We heard of Jerry Lewli, for example, obJeeUng ao much to a blaat from a TV critic here that he sent him a $2500 gift certificate to Mennlnger’s CUnlc.
Jamee Thurbey waa teUlng me betwixt talk about "A Tburher Carnival” being the season’s surprise smash hit, how he felt about Jack Pnar. ’’Ill go back en Jack Panr’s shew again If he aski me—because I Uke people who spoak ont. 1 apeak ont It’a
Twenty-two of the 29 Afro-Aetan countries asked fbr the Oners) Amembly session. If Hammarsk-JolH finda that a simple majority of the U.N. membership >— 42 nations — favors the move, the assembly win meet by April 29 to bold the debate.
picked np. They acted that neither Baet ner Weet le Intereeted In
The Afro-Asian nations have campaigned against the French tesUiR program in the 9hhara D^ ert ever since the first plans were announced. The African countriee around the test area are the leaders. They fear the harmful sffaett of fallout from the testing.
Attacks White Teacher at Detroit High School
DETOOrr (UPI) — Police < t)w north side preaaed their hu today for a "taby face” Negro who raped a white teacher during lunch period yesterday Northern High Sriwol.
9	9	9
It was a Blackboard Jungle type of attack,’’ a honUdde detective said. "He held a switchblade knife to her throat and dragged her into an anteroom there it happened.”
T 9	9	9
The teacher, a 47-year-eld sto-
ol $S by the attadier who was deacribed as having a "si baby facd.”
- - Today's Radio Proc^oms - -
WVON (t«e»> WJ9E (1SW»
WJBK. J*rk BMW WC*H..H«vi
'wMR^WoJSnT
WVM. SMWUiMW
CKI W. RanvoaS	B>aa.wjn. Mant nan OSLW. maa Db«M . WJBK. Han, Oaaasa
IlM-WJR. Mena WWJ. MatU wean. WaadSae mmanav MonRno	Sisa-wjn. nava Mniray WWA HaM, Ifttle wxrk BnaUbW CMh WJBC Haaa RaM WCAH. Raaa Martra WPUN. H(«a LarV Siaa-wjn. ja«a Raina
•M—WJR. ScfleaRata npl WWJ Ravi, BaWirU wstl rrad Wan ou.w Baamar Club •laa-wjn MaWt WJBE. Mbva. Oaarti CELW. Bra OanT	wiao-wjn, itawa WWJ,_Raat Ifwrta wxrz. Mm, Sbarnan «RLW. JOf ran WJBK, Mm. a BaM WOAR. Mm ll(a»-WJR. Cbwal ia-'gSr
iiaa-win, nan, Mant „WVJ. Ham. ntoani warn, 'jtowi, 'wau ontw. Ra««. roar OarM WJBK. naura. oaana wean, naws _	SOTPiii SoBS
wruM na«a Caaty ’ftji’wnjf* CBLW marta. DirM sav & %;s..	
araa-wjR. am. a. oacai WWJ. Nava. Sabarb	WCAR. Miaa Puna WPON Mm Lavia
• avx. Nawa WaH	ItUW-WJB, Maria wean, Ham. MaiWa Dan-wm toewww ^
	. a ^
ww^ atvx Bterr 00.9. Jw Vea
WCAa Ntvt,
wpov ca^ uviii
SM-wsa. OMepMMe WXTI, Wtaitw
wesa. Him. a«Br-“
questtommlTM Into categorlee ef business adminlstratton, education and teaching, social worii, medical and related fields, architecture and engineering, nurdNg and law.
littea e«i-a to Ram
His Aching Back! Injury Faker's Off to fail Again
DETROIT (UPD—Jadge Jehu Heea aedaiwA M ss-eamriet back to petawi toiBy tor 99 man 4aya aa trsatmauf Isr Ua aete toMk.” Alfred W. Huiuar, 99. el Detroit, ptoedad gulHy yaslartay to ■Mridag a frdaa npairt ta an to-~la wito
was not repfeaented by a woitoritop weaker.
A amsmary af Ike aaaMM ud tofcrmallea aa eekilerehtpa to ■ehednied fer the next weiksfcep. Dorcas said students would be advleed of local and nattonal edml-arships available.
WILL REACH LOWER GRADES I "This program wiU not itop at (he high sdMol level,” Spuriock said. "It will reach into the Junior high and elementary achoola of Pontiac.”
Spurlock eald a aeriea ef par. eat gukUnce eeaferenoM le bo-tag plenned
Everybody out there who’s reported engaged to Kim Novnk^And there are lots of you—RttentlonI While In Rio for "Cnml- WILSON vnl." she was ardently wooed day arid night by Brazillonalre Jorgo Oulnle ... He’s so rich that many people In Rio think Oulnle Is the word for money. Back to Jerry Lewis—Jerry's coming to NY and put on spectacular shows all over the 8Uk Stocklnft District If hls chum Joey Adams decides to run for Congress there. Friends of Joey, who know he wants to be Mayor, and maybe even something bigger, are calling him ‘Joey Quincy Adams.”
Carol Heiss will get her engagement ring from fellow skater Hayes Jenkins on ice — maybe while they’re skating — at the Olympics Ball March 21. (This is a secret^ so don’t mention It around) . . . David O. Selsnlk has been escorting Tina Onaseie about. Hls wife, Jennifer Jones, is ill . . . Hey, nnl-mal lovers. Fannie HnrstV doge won’t ent. uiiliM they’re on nrheek. And snbwayt srent do. She feeds them In taxis or limonelaee. (Dinner a to cart?)
They said I couldn’t take pictures, but when 1 turned my Rollel on Cathy Crosby, Bob’s lovely dtr., I showed ’em.
The vocational guidance department committee includes Norman H. Kuijala, principal of Lincoln Junior High School; John F. Per principal of Bagley School; Conklin Bray, principal of Jefferson Junior High School; and Mra Malissa M. Brice, a teacher at Wilson School.
Also Included an the Rev. J. Allen Parker, a member of the Board of Education; Mrs. Pearllaa
CATHY
Turned dramatic actress now, she has a tragto air and' a Lattaf looking loveliness Could be even a greater agtor than her cousin Gary.
Comedian Jack Waldron was telling tbs lambs dull "I fought with Gon. Porshiag and I fongbt with OSB. Mas-Artbnr—1 conidn’t get along with anybody” . . • Maillya Monroe was rehearsing n sexy dance number with her ooneh. Jack Cole. Arthur Miller, watching from the sidci lines, demonstrated what a good husband should be; be excinlmed to k friend, ”Wnlt tIU the finisb—then she really gets hot!”
TODArS BEST LAUGH: One^of the quickest ways to meet people Is to pick up the wrong ball on a golf course . Tbat’e earl, brother.
(CMtyright, 1960)
Wants to Judge Paintings From Transparent Photos
mudi as $100,(XX) in
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Omoran Art Gallery is setting out to make art world history with big painting competition ich the Judgn won’t aee mhitinga. R may stir up some-dng beside frerii hiriory.
In t)w museum’s biennial exhib-ion of contemporary ppintingB, the artists 9iU submit photographic color transparencies of their
The Corcoran boldly takes the poritlon this is a wonderful idea lor all concerned. The artisU will save artywhere from $25 to $125 per picture in the cost of crating and shipping paintings—with the
I 2,000-entry
The gallery’s maintenance staff in save ab^ two months’ labor in unpacking and repacking the
.............. *
ore
is on sound ground becai triqisparencies now are ao gc values of ootor, ahadlng and texture eail bc fepiXMluced, •■^	9	9	9
The news is so fresh there are _-3t many returns in from the isriists but first murmurs don’ add up to harmony.
Samuel Bookatz, Washington artist, said ”1 don’t think it will show the artist. You’ll Iqae the texture.
owe nil eavtags hailag to a9|tht feeling «( • canvas.” /'
propnitag foe higher leveia of
I purwed by President El9
Goldwater. who heads the Re-^abllcan Senatorial Campaign Oomnfdttee, had what he called ‘hard oounatT for both fisenhow-er and Nixdb. In some quarters-Idast was interpreted ns fai-dlcntlng coniervatlves will demand n strong votoe in writing the party plntfonn foreign ntfnin
GMdwnter idvoented hronking oft rolntlona and negotlnttont with the Soviet UBtan. He propoeed staging a "taat of willa”—which he
Soviets under eonditkms and in n locattoa picked by the United Statea. He urged "risks on our terms. Instead of on Communist
Says Farmers Need Congressional Action
L Judge Rtcca gave r at days as “soro
There are also plans to form a tachntelana and adencaa of tomorrow club, an alfiUata of the Urban
Fraiildin School; William Lacy, principal of Washington Junior High School; and Donald McMillan, guidance director at Pontiac Central High School.
First Part oi Hope Roast Disappoints by Tameness
By FRED DANZIO NEW YORK (UPI)-Part one el Arthur Murray’s sll-stsr pie-throwing at Bob Hope was a tame affair.
Ike Again Queried on Cultural Center
WASHINGTON l»-Prerident Ei-enhewar again baa been urged to eek fedeiw funds tor a propoeed East-Weat .cultural center in Ha-ail, j
Sen. Oren K. Long (D-Hawaii) mewed a raquest for admlnistn-tion htlp in a letter to the President TUeeday. Long said $8,300,000 needed end that quirk action neeeaaary in view of the rs-ceM Soviet announcement that a
The Hope Roast, or featured a number of personalities —such as Jayne Mansfield, Jane Dorothy Lamour, Alan King, dlff Arquette and Rocky Graziano.
Hope Is daaatiag Ms fiaSAN fCe for the two-part party to an
la Moscow with tree scbeiaiMSps
----idents from Asia, Africa, aaf
America.
Dixie Governors to Talk Turkey at Secret Hideout
COLUMBIA, S. C. (UF!)-aov. Ernest F. Hollings said the purpose of a top-secret this weekend am eriiors wiO be to "find out we ^ agree on” regarding (Mi year9 presidential election.
9	9	9.
Hollings told his news conference that a meeting at the Augusta Na-tlonal Golf Gub this past weekend with Georgia Gov. Ernest Van. diver was "really sociable.”
When asked if any Agreement on strategy tor the campaign was reached Hollings replied ”We wiU find out more about that this weekend.”
Hollings and Vandiver are ached-uied to meet with at least three other southern chief executives at a secret hideout on the Georgia coast tor a weekend of discussions.
Retirad Baech-Nut Exec Diei of Heart Attack
NEW YORK (UPI) - James J. Moon, 66, retired vtoe praddenl ef Beech-Nut Life Savers, died Sunday at his home of a heart attack.
Moore had Joined the find,' then the Beech-Nut Packing Co., in 1911
akS aaMaa.1 laa. uaaa~
WASHINGTON (B ' atonal action to Improve the farmer’s lot Is ’’desperately needed and needed srithout delay,” Gov. G. Mennen Williams of Michigan de-clsrcd.Tuesday.
A decline in prices and a rise in coats are "driving farmers to desperation,” the Sovernor told the House Agriculture Committee. He spoke in behalf of Midwest governors supporting passage of the Poage Family Farm Incoma Vet.
SpeclOeally, the Dronocratla governor backed a provtsloa to set -ap standards
DoBsn't Havt to Worry About Subscription Rate
McALESTER, Okie. IB-A letter from a farm magazine to Jerry Daniel invited him to take advantage of pKsent subscription rates, because they would soon rise.
Daniel isn’t worried. His sub-scription doesn’t expire until Feb-Tusiy, 1969.
Williams also supported proposed transfer of the surplus disposal program from the Agriculture Department to the Department of Hsalth, Education and Welfare.
*'l am sure that other governors 9TO is dissatisfied as I am over the manner in which the Secretary of Agriculture (Ezra Benson) has administered this program.” he said.
TV News and Reviews
Another way the show serves humanity is in causing sdme changes to be made in the usual format sf the Arthur Murray Show.
9	9	9
What I mean is i(> is helping to kiip Kathryn olf-camera. It's nost-ll« Hope $100,000 but think of the good hs's doing.
A show that sets Mt ta rooat SSSMttto shMld emtalo staoijr Mis sf knvereocy sad itimnUt-tag, (hSUgh hamleas, stoats.
THIRD: Gwries Lhaghtoo. Ha eaa’t stag warR a ha’peoay, bto he daMvan wHh ftaesse. And jto Bern liiksi 9eater.
Hsmss Pin’s choreography in ths only two production numbers showsd a lot of the old zip-ah-doe-' ' (if I may drop a winning title into this).
» show could have used more of Pan's work, or some "Hit Pa-taettos, to help itself off a static and generally unimaginative
JokN wars uaa^ up last night, sf Rem eauld have been aimed at They weren'
He told ha iait "Uko toi. Ib». nedy at a Nbna nUy,” and, In eneral, iinloadad ■ fina strssm ef ugh lines wlR hls sxototlooal dll.
If the rest of the gang had ttopt’9 approach, the roast would hsvo been a rar« comedy treat H turned out to be too mush I "This Is Your Life,” without the
’’Stsrtlme” continued to pick its way aloig Ha.Pan Alley last r . ' this time with a dozen Academy Award-winning tunes for guidance.
9	9	9
There were a number of surprises in the NBC-TV hour.
fjWT: The perfomiers — Nat Ktag Cale, Tex Ritter, The Fear Aoee, Otoufea Laighton, Kay BUrr—didn’t sasm wtth pn-
THE CHANNEL STiriM: Some mort schedule-switching for ABC-TV: On Thursday, April 7. NBC-TVs old "Steve Canyon” series to ’’The Gale Storm Show” 'Colt .45” replaces “Philip Mnriosire” starting Tuesday, April 5. "Brokan Arrow" will move toto ’(tolt .4S's” old Sunday slot April 3.
A CBS-TV western, "The Texan.” has been acquired by ABC-TV for its fall daytime schedule! . . . Also moving to ABC-TV next fall will be the Saturday college footbail games previously covered by NBC-TV.
Arlene Francis will run "Tho Jack Paar Show” next week while Pnar tapes five shows in London tor vtowing the week of-March 2S.
School Bonds Okayed
PORTAGE (UPI) - Portago Wmahtp Voters approved n 92.NO|000 bond issue Mon^ lor sch0(A construction. The vote was 919-lM to favor of the issue.
SONOTONE
House of Hearing Free Hearing Test<.
|k)RTY>»t)Plt
THE PONTIAC. PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, I960
MflWIIII
Tomorrow’s Pontiac Press BRINBS DOLURS OF SAVINBS!
You never saw your CX)LLAR look so BIG, talk so LOUD, go so FAR, and buy so MUCH, as right here, right now, during this spectacular DOLLAR DAYS event. Get ready right now. . . gas up the car . . get that baby-sitter... oil up your scissors... and be ready to clip your BONUS BUCKS for'DOLLAR DAYS, Friday and Saturday, March 18 and 19. You'll find it REALLY PAYS to READ THURSDAY'S PONTIAC PRESS.
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
lt:« .n,	::.
it's easy. Just clip the BONUS BUCKS you will lind in tocnorrow's Pontiac Press. Use them just like cosh ... Spend them like real Dollars. They're worth exoctly their foce value on Friday and Saturday, March 18 and 19.	^
On the reverse side is described the items to which these Bonus Bucks apply. Every one is an outstanding value offer! Every one will SAVE YOU REAL MONEY! Don't miss a single volue during Pontioc ’ Dollar Days.
THE PONTIAC PRESS
Tl^ Weather
"liik.''W«slktr Bwwi r*rtMtt ,
(DtUil* P«|t 1>
THE PONTIAC PRE
118th YEAR
★ ik it ft ★
PONTIAC, 3IICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1960—44 PAGES
OmBNATlOMAL
Their Prized Possession
iiHE 8TAV8 eXTH F^ILV — Rldwrd Combs hugs his near-genius^ter daughter Alice Marin as Mrs. Combs watAes outside their Old Bridge. N. J.. home Tuesday. Tiiey had learned
a shorf Ume before that the New Jeraey, Board of Child Welfare had given up efforts to transfer her to a family with greater intellectual and material attainments.
Who Else, He Asks?
Ike Declares for Nixon
Ali Hope Gone forHndingAny
Wealin' o' the Green
Miners Alive
13 Bodies Hauled Up From Fatal, Gos-Filled West Virginia Pit j
Foster Parents Will Keep Brilliant Child
LCXIAN. W. Va. f^UntU thicy found the first body,! searchers held stxne hopej that the 18 men trapped in Holden coal mine 22 might, still be alive.	|
By early today the bodies of 13 had been hauled out! of the gas-filled passage-' ways and the last wisp of hop^ for the others was gone.
But the search «wt on.
Sosnewhere in the dank honey-
OLD BRIDGE. N.J. <AP)—| Mr. and Mrs. Combs to ado|d her [ori^Uy h^ «g^ Mr. and Mrs.
loomb of tunnels were the other members of the digging party Im-
rave-fall
Richard Conibs| »	”	JS”ad^*hS!*' ^T'uieT’oi^^	^
ent ahead today with plans to{ The board's one-page statement.,^ ^	adootion. 1“*^ opening.	|
adopt their brilliant 4-yeorold concluded:
M A—_	4Iva
I.	hn^i*ove Alice and sought adoption,
it is our sincere hope^	replied that il
foster child. Alice Marie, ibllow-that the COjnbs the public andl^,^j^	^ inteiested in'
1__-_________»- - ..a.Oak aJAOkiaiaiM	iVlA ni*AM taHII wllfiav IFIP pKlld Id	.a	___.a
ing a surprise state decision clcar-^ing the way.
"I'm BO romplelrly happy," Combs said after the New Jersey Board Of Child Welfare Teeoday
girl was to#
Dark-haired, bright-eyed Alice scampered wfully for photographers around the trim home—thf renter of attention although didn’t know why.

the press w’ill allow grow up in a
mosphere."	^
we want now.’ Combs said, "is to get back to ^our nor-maL happy life.’
A MDCED-LT DAY
a day mixed with sadnesi and jqy for the 25-yeai^d, $l20-a-week sheet metal worker and Us wife. They heard about the board’s decision just as they left the funeral for Osasbs' mother, who died wer the weekend.
Combs credited "the prese and public opinion" with bringing about the board's sudden decision on the "but he girl with the near-genius IQ of
“Gad bat Jast takes a loved ooe away from no,” Combo said, > at another te
13S.
HAD SECRET MEETING The state board held a secret meeting in Trenton in, which defended its original position that Alice should be placed for adoiv tion with a family of superior, in-tellK-tual and financial resources.
The the board added: "We fed that tew things are moce damaging to a rhlld than to he fought over by Its parents In the courts, press and over the air waves. We have tberdere decided te allow
T don’t know aliat to say," Mrs. Combs sobbed. "The good, the bad happened all at once.’’ Combs and bis wife had two daughters of their own after Alice Marie came into their home. They
Free Rides for Irish?
NEW YORK (LTD-The Long Island Railroad will change its name for one day this month. On March 17th it will be known as the Long Ireland Railroad.
Cily Bus Drivers Balking 25-Cent Jilney Proposal
Pontiac Man Sings to Sell State a Song
A young man trooi Pontine ynn-l terday sang to Michignn’s How o({'
Warns Against Violent Civil
President Was Pressed for Clarification' About Endorsement Report
WASHINaTON(f>— President Eisenhower publicly endorsed Vice President Richard M. Nixon today as his choice lor the Republican presidential nmiination.
Eisenhower made plain at a news conference that ’he supports Nixon, who at this point has no ppposi-U(Hi for the nomination.
He also commented that vtolenct in any form will not advance thu cause of dvil rights tor minorities in the South.
an electifr trdley
Jack Matheson of nearby en. W. Va., fai the rescue* which found the first 13 bodies, said death by hsphyxialion came in the ~ ' Creek Cool Oo. mine eight miles from the Kentucky border.
It migbl bawe been caused by from the fire or by poison
Battered by Hurricane Humphrey
leroay sang to raicnig«i >	thm ■turn.
Repreaenutives to plug ndopikm eC
"A Song to Michigan’’ as	**	““ “f
state’s otOrial song.	*
ly to a recorded peidormi Michigu U«
the Western Band, then a vocal version by WMU junior Keimrth Young, X. of 400 Lakeside Dr.
It was written by Mrs. Ruby $ig-
rcMag In that part of the ••There’s no doubt." said Mnthe-34. a fonner section boas of
ter Kirkwood of Kalamamo. CopSes the diggaig. "that they’ve been were passed out to each Hoiae demI mce a few hours alter the member and others have been scntjfiK.'' school bands «
KiXLV GREEN FOR KENNEDY — Sen. John . Kennedy (O-ass) tips his kelly green hat at a pre-SDt. Patrick’s ay congressional party Tuesday night. While Kennedy's hat was green.
Af rk*uu<
Democratic National Chairman Paul Butter's face was red. He had been identified as the highly placed Democrat quoted in stories as favoring Kennedy for the presidential nomination.
The reporter was alluding to tho annu^ dinner of the Gridiron Oub, an ^anlzation of newsmen. Eisenhower spoke there but the dub rule* sVctly that "reporters arc
Saturday night tapped the vice prealdeut as Ms rboire te ouccwl htan In the White Houee.
Nevertheless, soma news writers who did not attend the dinner got word that Elsenhower had in effect endorsed Nixon. They wrote dispatches saying so.
Butler Too Gabby Again
WASHINGTON (API — Demo-ino reiweaentatlvt there, as thejB. Johnson of Texas, often a ta^ cratic National Chairman Paul'highly ^ced Demoa-at who told	Butler criticism, declined
M. Butler aeemed	^ja group of rtportero at the Na-
■iirviv* • imHtipal hoo-bon that* •* r
tlonal Press Club Monday that recent developments indicate a Ken-^ nedy victory.	*
National ebalrmen are tradl-
survive a political boo-boo that might have cost a te»-agfae performer his job.
Butler made wfaat tnany in Us party regard as the politica] min-
take of being caught at predicting Moeally suppoted to be neutral
the state.
HE’S WTHS GRAD
A graduate of Waterford Town-hip High School. Young took pti-ate singing lesaons from .George I. Putnam,
dary music instruction in the P«o-tiac schools.
Now majaring
any comment.
HUMPHREY ‘MOKRV Humphrey, an active candidate for the nomination, said he was sorry that Butler "injected himself into this situation," adding!, "He has helped neither himself nor our great party.”
The fart renialaed, however, that oaly ibe National Committee could fire Butler and It has stood ataunchly behind him In his fre-mlcht f"'** excursions Into hot watnr Some other chairman might ,. rirmrnt. m. have fuc^ serious demands for	®f W" l*rty.
his ouster from the temporarily In the course of what seems a united forces of Kenedy's rivalsi charmed life in the chairmanship, -r,.	MM, . t,	1	a-ss *he nomination. But only Sen. he has berated Southerners about
When spring oWcteUy^^rei In the Pontiac are* at Hubert H. Humphrey came for-civil rights to the extent that some
ward to say that Butler bad lived his usefulness" by taking sides In the prrsidentihl contest.
Senate Majority Leader Lyndon
that Sen. John K. Kfohedy (D-Mass) will win the Democratic presidential nomination.
He was identified by the New York Post, which presumably had
pre-eouveotlon oonlests. I'ader polllieal protocol they are oot permitted to side publicly with oae randidate against another or even ouggeot that any particular Indlvtdaul la in the lead.
Spring t6 Need Snowplow
Striking bus drivers today held off voicing any definite acceptance of the emergency 25-cent-a-ride Jitney operation authorized by the City Commission for the
duration of the strike.	_ _________
The special service is restricted to the^ routes and;Grace Lutii«TM*ainrh. schedules followed by the bus company in the past with' “He is a bass bamone and haaj ♦U*	'	a fine voice." said Putnam of Us!
the approval of the city.	former pupU "He Sing8,.with a kt\
John Sytsma, president Of Pontiac Local 1097 (AFL-iof musidanahip."	I M«t
CIO) of the busmen’s
ajn. Sunday. It will probably find Michigan under A blanket of snow—"a deep one," the weatherman says.
4k 4k tk
Accumulation of two to four Inches Is forecast for the are* today. Diminishing snow flurries are forecast for to<-nlght and tomorrow.
Mure MMW is predicted fer Friday ar Saturday.
For the next five days temperatures will average about 10 degree* below the normal high of 45 and normal low of ***^ **l “	vdth only minor day to day changes.
said Putnam of Ui' Nineteen was the lowest temperature reading in down-1 .-------------------"“auac prece^ng t *jn. Hie thermometer registered
He has squabbled with Gov. David L. Lawrence, the Pennsyl-vahia national committeeman. He has a running feud going with COl. Jacob M. Arvey, the Illinois national committeeman.
Butler has criticized the tactics F Johnstm and House .Speaker Waterford Twonship school S«ni Rayburn of Texas. He later teacher Mrs. Klara Ross. 29. won “P with them but he hasn’t
Teacher Wins on Technicality— Case Dismissed
a moral victory in Keego Harbor today.
Union, said the Union would, hold a meeting to decide its course of action.
Under the meawre, placed info Immediate effect by the Qty eJmmiasion last night, driven wduld have 15 days to obtain cHy licenses to continue their Vcour-tesy ride" services, instituted when the long strike began last Dee. 5.
Sjlsma and a snull group oj drlveroTeft the Omunliaiau meeting In ■ hurry last Bight.
A little later, thou^ the group returned to the Commission chaar^ hers and Sytsma announced that a membership meeting probably would be called.
"We have 15 days to comply, don't yf4V* he askad the Conunis-
•The iMay grace period Is to give you time to have your 11-
swered Commissioner Floyd P. Mites, who propaied the jitney measure.-
Sytfma made two complafets publicly.
ithdrawn his statement btat no Southerner or Southwestei-ner— meaning Johnson—can win the presidential nomination.
Through all of these excursions and alarms; Butlers National nicality. Affirmation of ownership Committee majority has stood of the car wasn’t obtained from!firmly behind him. He has won the Secretary of State's Ofitice Injevery test vote by -a substantial | ant of Edward I, kiilg of England time for the trial.	jrtftrglm	|fiom 1272 to ' "
A $1 parking ticket against her was dismissed by Justice of tfie Peace James Southart on a tech-
Fiiwt, that the union had not been consunc* I9 dnrking up die. plan and..secondly, that the door has (Continued on Page ?, *Col. 5)
the mayor's special transportation committee pOii after they vetod yesterday f^r an energency jiteey operatfoo for the duratteu of the bus strike. Standii« (from left) m George Rkkmaa. president of the Downtown Merchants Assn.; Chfferd GiovtlgeL
manager of Waltr's Department Store; James Dicfcersca. general advertlsi^ manager of The Pontiac Press: L.' Oarc Utley, preri-
dent of Qittiag Toob 4 Sap^ Oa., Inc.; arid Bert Henaon, ftnancial aeactaiy of Local C3, UAW. Seated'(Irom left), an Oty Attorney WOBam A. Ewart (net a committee member); John W. HMiager. manager of ^ PoaUk Area Oiaiifber of Opnamaree; Gtjr OwiiiHisrinner Floyd P. Mites, oonunitbM chairman; and Donald Shaw, presideM of the tllracte Mile Businessmen's At$n. There are six Other members of the comtniftee nof in the picture.
When the matter of these published reports wu brouifht up today, ^isimhower ctancUed and said that he actually had been referring to geographical areas at the dinner table.
His suggestion was that he had not actually endorsed Nixon there.
But when be went on to say that if anyone Is wondering whether be has any preferenra or bias as to a choke tor the GOP presidential aomlaalion, tbo answer very deftoMely is yes.
A little later he made It crystal clear that hla preference is Nixon.
That happened when a reporter asked whether he bad Nixon in in talking about whether h« had any bias in the matter.
rights to the extent that some Dixie party organiztions won’t send funds to' the national group' so l^ng as he is chairman.
HE ALWAY8 WINK
In reply, the President fired a question of his own! It was: Was there any doubt in your mind?
Eisenhower's reference to geo* graphical areas at the dinner tabla • related to the stories drawing the inference he had endorsed Nixon at the Gridiron dinner. The stories said he had suggested that those at the head table move a couple ot places—wMch would have put Nixon in Elsenhower's seat.
Ms aews con-fereace be believes there are certain proper and constltnlioiial (Continued bn Page 2, Cbl. 7)
Just o Minute! Meg's Tony NOT Commoner
LONDON (API-Hrincess Margaret isn’t marrying a mere edtn-moher’ after all.
Within thi^ next' few days she will receive a lineage chart show--ing hukband-to-be Anthony Arm-strong-Jones is a direct descend-
Mrs. Ross had taken the ticket Is eeurt tor "the prteelple of
Her car wSi ticketed last Wednesday alter U had broken down on Cass Lake Front road, she ,said.
Keego Harbor Polii^ Chjef James K. Sisk had Issued ttie ticket.
In dismissing the case, Southart
Opposition to *Cave*. Grows
City Doesn't Dig Beats
Despite strong opposition from the City Commission, j plans to establish what city, fathers have labeled “a This whole thing is silly. It's beatnik Joint” appeared to be moving ahead today.
“We’ve invest^ $11,000 os far in our place, it’s too lal« for us to back out now,” said Donald Jacobs, manager of the enterprise; already^
waste of time ewrybedy involved. The issue just out of hand.
In Today's Press
widely advertised uncler the name “Cave of the Ninth Cat.”
. S7
Coaaty New# ..
Edltoriafs ...... a
'i"	.....--JM:
......,........tt
OMtaaries ...............   Sl
Sports .................... m-U
Itealers .................z as
TV a Radio Programs .. dS
Wilson. Esrt .............  4S
Womea's Ps»es ........... 18-W
In no uncertain ierms, four commissioners and Mayor Philip E-Rowston frankly told Jacobs and a backer of another proposed "coffee and poetry" rotabiishment to stay out of Poiitiac.
“I’m agmiast you, the pe^ of my (Uotriet are against y<iu and
enee requeotod by -lacobt yesterday afternoon sfter^ discovered that hlo apptkaltoii for a food license hnd been tempomrily pigeonholed at (ily Hall on or-ders ol.CItY Manager Walter K.
Othef'coinriissioners who object* ed weie Fk»xl P. Mites. John A. (Contiiiiie<i on Page 2, CoL 4)
the peopto oyontlac am against ^ ^
von." tnid Rowston nt'n confer-	ut.	v*
,1
4'


aJitU MN
THE EONTIAC PRfcSS, WED^%SDAY, MARCH 16, 1960
Nelle, Watson to Plead for Bail
Judg« Sets Monday to Hear Attorneys Ask for Freedom on Bond
DETROIT iJh -.A bail-plea bear IilK for ootncly Mrs. Nelle Lassiter wiM be held Monday to coincide with « similar bearing for Gordon Wataon.
♦ ♦ ♦
Hie hearing lor the 3S-year-old a blonde former modd, first aet for today, was postponed yesterday because the transcript of her pretrial e.'camination «ith WatsonH4. uiH not be ready until late this week.
Mr*. LaaMtw and Wataon baso r been bonad ever far Mai oa flr»t degree merder end con-opirary te eammit murder la the •la.iing last April ml her he*-hand, Parvhi Lasniter. a subur-Mn Rayal Oak auto dealer. Uayne (Detroit) County Circuit .Tu^e Chester.?. O'Hara empha-siSbd be would take no action on thd bail pleas until he has studied thd transcript of examination tes-tirdony.,
visually, bond is not granted in a irst degree (premeditated) deg case.
* ♦ ♦ lirs. Lassiter and Watson, her husband’s former business asso-cidte. are accu.sed of arranging for thrw men to kill Lassiter.
The three, all fiom Chattanooga, Tmn.. have pleaded guilty to sec-i>n| degree murder In the shooting. They are awaiting sentence and also have been named rocon-.spirators. but not defendants, the Mrs. Lassiter-Watson case.
AP Pk*l*l»i
GREAT FUN -> Randy Cumble. 6, tells newsmen all about his two days on a Nevada mountain slope. Despite subzero weather, he had a fine time. He was marooned with his mother and grandparents when theirjight plane crashed. The undaunted family gaVe Randy a birtli<W fxuly while they Were there and he never received a more appropriate gift—a sweater.
Save Family Stuck Two Days on Mount
Connor to Seek Governorship
To Bid for Democratic Nomination; Is Third to Join Race
DETROIT » - DetrMt council; man Edward Connor announced today as a candidate for the Demo-cratkf nomination tor governor. Connor’s entry assures a three-ran race on the Democratic side. Two Republicans are in the race Id the Aug. 2 primary.
Conuor, SL« eouncUmaa slace IMS, mM be would reveal Ms rampulgn plam at a luneJieoa at the Oido Hotel la Laaolag tomorrow.
In addition to bis $12,000-a-year council job, Connor is secretary of the Michigair Metropolitan Oxnmu-nity Research Corp., a Job that also pays SU.OOO.
Gov. G. Mennen Democrat, rmntly announced he would not seek a seventh consecutive two-year term.
Kerfetaiy of (Hate Ji Hare and Lt Gov. Joha quickly Ic caa<
Hams. Paul D. Bagwell, a Mich-Igua (Mato UalvenMy faeulty member who was defeated by two years ago Is ex-■	‘ COP
Newspaper Ads Printed in Color Most Popular
NEW YORK (Pt-Color newspa per advertising *’ls busting out of its swaddling clothes fast,” Media Records said Tuesday.
The advertising statistics firm reported a sun-ey of 400 newspaper* showed ROP (run of pres*) color newspaper linage in January, reached year-earlier figure of 6. \LqWS Take LiteCt 78T,974 lines by 41 per cent. I _	_ t* • *
A * * lin County Friday
January retail color adverlls-
ing Jumped 46 per cent to 4,745.-1 Wl(h the thawing season rapidly
ELY. Nev. (AP)-Wind, allow and ice smacked a light airplane onto the slope of a Nevada Mountain. but all five aboard survived and were rescued after more than two days of sub-zero weather.
A helicopter from Hill Air Force Base in Utah brought the five-members of the same family -from the sndwy mountain to the warmth of this community. It was a difficult task.	\
A *	*	'
Wes Stoddard, 50, a veter bush pilot from Anchorage, i was pilot of the downed
plane.
"We had taken off Sunday In good weather, and as we were
flying along we suddenly were weathered in — I mean, really weathered—we couldn’t see much at all,” Stoddard told newsmen.
My windshield was iced and visibility was bad. My wife a few trees in front of us as we were moving along on instruments.
T pulled back on the stick and we cleared the mountain, but the next thing I knew, 1 was caught in a downdraft
It into
yTruck Weight	injuries
It hurt his back. too. A physician at the Ely Hospital said his backbone suffered a compression fracture near the base
7« lto^'h«m"3;2«.8(B4 a year appiwhing. and* the	Tn^h^^
eariier. General advertisers olaced d«">age to c^nty ^ds. the Oak-ibr^k ii^ he ^lon 0 land Ctounty Road .Commission an-l nounced today that spring truck
He did.
The small, twin-engine Piper Apache stayed upright as it sliced into the snow, but the sudden declination threw Goddard against the windshield and knocked out some of his teeth.
2.871,270 lines, up 34 per cent from 2,142.012 lines.
Automotive color advertising rose 51 per cent to 773,508 lines from 513,767 lines.
The doctor said there appeared to be no damage to the nerve
X^“ghrreI,trWloJirWri{rint7e^^^	T*
feet Friday noon.	^“e backbone, in either
Violators of
Independence Man Found Dead in Home
An Independence Township man was fouhd dead in the living room of his home by his wife this morning, according to sheriff's deputies.
* A *
Deputy Coroner Dr. Robert Buehrig of Garkston said Kenneth
L. Coombs. 37. of 6761 Anderson- L.	Unrl
viUe Rd„ died from a bullet woundj*^'®''®®'^ FOSSeS NtOTK of the chest
frost law will be prosecuted, said Tom Kennedy. Commission welghmaster.
He listed the loUowing new restrictions:
Blacktop and gravel road—single axle 11.700 gross pounds; tandem axle 16,^ pcMudlf;
Concrete or Gass B roads—single axle 13,500 pounds; tandem axle 19,500 pounds.
Special tandem Gass A routes— single axle 13,500 pounds; tunjdcm 24,000 pound*.
A .22 caliber rexolvcr was found near his body. Deputies said the wound was self-inflicted.
The body Is at Coats Funeral Home. Drayton Plains.
JODRELL BANK. England —The Jodrell Bank radio telescope today tracked the American space rocket Pionwr V as It moved 750.000 miles away from the earth. The signal came in loud and clear.
Snow^ Snow, Go Away
Midwest Takes Nine Counli
lease.
He described their .injuries as serioua_but not critical.
The other three persons wera ess seriously hurt.
Raaity Onnl>le. 4, wa* quite excited about It all. He had a birthday party In the disabled plane atop the mountain Monday. HI* prenenl was n iweater, which could not have beea more appropriate. Temperainret dropped to U below sero.
Randy said lie' loved the hellcop ter ride, his first.,
Randy’s mother, Mrs. Horace Cumbie, 28, said "When the plane caipe down the door was sprung, so I got out and packed sm all the cracks in an eflort to keep the wind from roaring through.'
Mrs. Cumbie, wife of an Anchorage pollcemnn, is a daughter of the Stoddards.
W A *
The five were on their way to help celebrate the 80th birthday of Stoddard’s mother. Mrs. L ~ Douglas, in Tucson, Arizona.
The fifth person bi the p ,waa Mrs. Jbsepiwy. Lee. 70. of Tieyburn, Idaho. She is Stoddard’i aunt.
__ _________ _____ (dumped heas-y snow from	T©nOf
blustery snowstorm landed Kansas and northeilt Missouri asi —_
B.v Ihe A**orlated Pres*
|Goes on Despite
another wihlry blow today at	northeastward,
briad areas in the Midwest, al-	♦	♦	♦
rewy	punchy	from	a month ol	The	fresh snow fell atop a fjQQYt	AttOCk
hraivy	tpow	and	unseasonable	ering	more than a foot high inj
coM.	many	places In Kansas. nortl|em! j^lNDON	(AP) - Jussi	Bjoer
The new storm, powered by|Missourt. southeast Nebcaska-and 50 Swedish opera tenor who eamcrly winds of 20 35 m.p.h., ioothern Iowa.	|,„ng Tuesday night drspite.a light
I Heavy snow warnings were iksued I hpart attack told the Royal Op-
7^
e Weafher
Tail C.S WMIkrr rONTIAC AND VirmlTT—Dt< and kaurSaaa ArlTln* waralng altoraaaa aa* laalfkl ( laaAt w kaftaala* tala Ikla m
! through Iowa and into s 'era Minnesota and eastward across Illinois and part* of In-" TJI diana.
"I
would make his appearance Friday.
Bjoerljng heard" that (Jueen Mother Elizabeth was in the audience and insisted he would pot disappoint her or the capacity au-
irrtn UnUki Npw 'Hie sevet^ late winter storm
“ * T, -V/ •‘‘‘P* «hools closed in many areas.'dl'n"'”, cwetit'Garden.' ^re
......."V Office and factories al.so shut down hp appearing for the first time
in some sections. Driving condl-iy, 21 years.
^ tions throughout the snow belt] -phe find act was delayed & were hazardous and travel was mij:5{,tes and the audience, not DiJti'sn-u.t'*”'* ” ■ M » P h sharply .curtaUed.	'knowing the cause, started clap-
fcn i»u w»dn<>»a«y^»i 6 3» pm.	I	♦	★ A	ping slowly In unison. But after the
Soin'lISi raiitoM it i II • itT'* ' Moif than seven inches of snow ,he final curtain, Bjoerling re-l^oo« run w*dn««J«r kt io.it p* fell in Kansas Gty Tuesday, add- ceived an ovation.
ing to th> half foot fall on Mon-1
State Sen. Carlton Morris of Kalamazoo, declared his candidacy last week. Morris is leader of conservative Republicans in the Legislature.
Primary winners will meet in the Nov. 8 general election.
Adlai Interested in Secretary of State Position
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina UB-dlal E. Stevenson says : iaterestttd in becoming U. S.
secretary al state-.........
re right.
He was asked Tuesday about talk he might be. named .to this job if a Democrat is elected president.
Steveasea was twice defeated for the presidency bat has said he does not seek a third aomlaa-tton.
John F. Kennedy, a leading candidate for the Democratic nomination, has named Chester Bowles, former governor of Connecticut, as his foreign affairs advisor.
The Day in Birmingham
School Program Waiting on Tax Increase Balloting
BDUONtiHAM Passage of the 4-nifn operafing tax levy in the ■pedal March 28 electk» would allow the Birmtaigham adiools to cooperate with the Natkmal Defense Educatka Act. buy new Instruc-
•cbool Ubraiy books, the School Board revealed today.
The millage increase also provide sajary hikes for teachers
AT IWsMss
CHIPS FALL — Freiderick W. Ford, recently appointed dialr-man of the Federal Commuidcatkins Ckanmisaion, saws a piece of lumber in his home at Alexandria. Va. The avid do-it-yourselfer is known in Alexandria as a master restorer (A homes. He taken over the, F(X: from John C Docrler. who resigned in a barrage of critidsm. Ford has a philosophy of strict regulation.
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. tfMJov. Orval E. Faubus announced today will seek an unprecedmted fourth term.	|
AAA
Faubus pledged to continue fighting for a defense of states rights if the people give him another two-year term as governgr.
Faabw. wbe defied the federal geveraaieal to Uttle Rock’s school iategratloa ertoto of 1N7, vowed to coaUaae Ms stand against “the fiarpattoa of Ihe people’s righto.”
.	So far, the Sfl-year-old Faubus
A no-hokb-batred primary fight|12Ui senatorial ’district race	gn0 opponent In the July
Calhoun Bidding for GOP State Senate Nomination
aervlqa had to be raised locally— ymipwiii^ Birmingham has been unable to do U the pest, the board
If the 4-milI levy is passed, funds will be available to improve the instructional program in malhe-matics, foreign language, and science In both the elementary and secondary schools, the Board
hi oertaia Itolds
Faubus to Seek Fourth Term
Governor of Arkansas Pledges to Continue His States Rights Fight
Ralph W. Moxley noted that right of way violations contributed to 25 of the 60 accidents recorded In February.
•Tills type of accideal eansed by tbengbUewnciM, di*-
for Oakland County’i seat In the result in a hotfy contested primary State Senate became more of a i battle.
certainty today with Huntington I Lodge defeated his Democratic
ear_«•_________rw____tJ n	--------* 1.. eAS.O l*.> * J MM
Woods Mayor David R. Calhoun’s bid for the Republican nomination over incumbent Sen. L Harv'ey Lodge.
Calhoun. 48. of 10434 Talbot St., said he has decided to try to wrest the nomination away from Lodge in the Aug. 2 primary.
Lodge, a two-term leaator from Waterford Township and former connty proof entor. b ex-
opponent in by a 4,000 vote.
Those clone to the county political scene say Calhoun’s entry In the
dUaey bday witb a dedlcatton to the loag-raage tatereoto mt OakbMl Comity mod the state.
He pledged himwlf to-avoid "a narrow, highly partisan stand.” "With a new' governor there to going to be room for cooperation between the parties — thm’s going to have to be,” Calhoun said.
MSUO, Rotary Start Education Program
Michigan State University Oakland and the Pontiac Rotary Gub will launch a pi.oneer educational adventure ‘
History faculty member Dr. Gerald Straka’s oddreoo to Bo-larian* at their aooa laacheoa b the Waldron HolH wDI atari the plan by M)8UO. Umi *cIiooI wIU
;ranM for area tervlee rtab*.
Dr. Straka will preoent a series of three lectures tomorrow, April 21. and May 19-With the theme 'History, Democracy, and You.''
A A A
He will emphasize the relationship of history to modem proband place particular atten-
Pontiac Doesn't Dig Beatnik Plans
(Continued From Page One)
tion to the iiioral responsibilities ol membership in a free society, said Dr. Lowell R. Ekiund. MSUO continuing education director.
The leetare programs, arranged Jotatly by BBlversUy of-ftrblo and Dr. Dana F. W1iH-mer, oupertotewdeat of trbool*
self ao a fprward boUag Re-
myor of Haaliagtoa Woods aiaoe
Mder the NatbMl Defease Eda-
the pari ef the driver whe pull* tato truffle wrltboat proper caa-itaa,” Mexley stated.
He has instructed his officers to watch (or such drivers and ticket
uted to drivers following vehicles too cloaely, a maj^r cause of traL fie mishaps here m the past.
'Gtizens for Michigan” is the topic of a talk to be given by Wilbur G. Durkee when the ’Senior Men’s Gub meets tomorrow at the Community House.
The club’s discussion group will consider why "the best brains reject government jobs.”
The Bloomfield Hills Camera Gub will meet at 8 p m. tomoi+ow at the Cranbrook Institute ol Sci-
nce.
The members will photocraph modern dancing. Models will be
26 Democratic gubernatorial pri------ -------„
mary—Atty. Gen. Bruce Bennett, {furnished by'the Kingswood School Victory in Arkansas’ Democratic|and directed by instructor Mrs. primary means election.	Claire Levine. ,
AAA	I ----------------------
Like Faubus, Bennett is a sworn _	_ ,	n li •
ratil“"	Drivers Balking
Only one*other*ArkLas gover- Qn JitPeV PrODOSal nor, Jeff Davis, ever won as manyr"	• 1 wpwjui
as three terms. Davis served in	»
the early 1900s.	((Jontinued From Page One)
AAA	been opened for mcn-bus diivera
Faubus won a third term in 1958 to apply for jitney licenses, by a landslide. At the time, he| ‘”This could, perhaps, lead to was riding a wave of publicity; troubles,” he warned, which resulted from his batUe	w, „p m City Manager
Waller K. Wlllmaa to decide which Jitney drivers get the more profitable, heavily-traveled
He was a councilman tor two yean prior to that. His term as mayor expires at a time when be hopes he’ll have a new job ' enator — April 1961.
AAA
He sa)^ be is' a backer ot Paul D. BagweU, 1958 GOP gubernatorial candidate.
The new candidate is a Detroit manufacturing representative for automotive engineering and sales firm.
The caaiBdato became a member of the Board of gapervtoora laot April when Ms voted
Harririt PhUllps, a member al
1 e-m......... n	IJ	m.. ....
tOm...........21	1	p.B. .
* am...........M
10 t.m..........W
TaMiar hi fWatUc . )Ai rtaardad dovotowni
iniptralor* ........
Lowfii ttmpfratiiri ..........
Mfan Umperatoi* ..............
Wtalbn—Sunaj.
Oat TAtr 'as* la fWaUst
day. Two Inches of snovy. piled atop j
white blanket in Ottawa. Kan., ^	-
1 4>minute period.	jn Second Building
They arguod that beatnik joints would corrupt teen-age morals, lead to public disturbances and introduce Inti) Pontiac what Landry described as ”an atmosphere and philosophy , that we don’t want. Jacobs denied that he or his place was ’‘beatnik.”
'Everything about it sounds beatnik to me,” retorted Rowston.
Jacobs and three bustocM partners have spent three weeks, be said, redecorating a large, first-floor area In the Habbard Bunding. U B. Perry St, at a east ol lll.tea so tar. It woald aeoom-modato 964 persom at cafe-stylo tablea.
Jacobs said he planned to be open evenings until 3 a.m., serving coffee, sandwiches and pizza pie and prmiding such entertainment as poetry rmdings, modem jazz, boi^ drama, artists and Interpretative dances.
Rowston announced night’s (tommiaskm meeting that I nine Pontiac organizations and nu-' mepous private citizens have written Gty HaU, objecting to "heat-;nik joints.” Commissioners have received more than 100 telephone calls of protests, he said.
ors as “one of the most important things’
ntion, and says the people should decide isny increases ' I sales or income taxes.
He was president of the Michigan Municipal League from 1956 to 1958 and today is on a stat»
eaptared the Interest at the 0«-tor for the 8tady of Uberal Eda-cattoa for adults. This h a Ford Fouadattoa ageney la CU-
"The Onter to considering fi- All Soviet Youths to Get Itonelal support for the wanslonj^i^^ Alltipolio Voccine
Ike Endorses Nixon as U.S. President
(Continued From Page One)
by miaorittos to show Ikeir a
But the President said he does' not believe violence in any form advances the cause of those seeking equality. Neither, he said, does he condone violencA against those in the minprity.
A 1
Eisenhower aet forth his views on the demonstrations as House civil rights quarterbacks worked tor a decisive vote today on a related matter — a voting referee provision in a general civil rights bill.
AAA
Eisenhower was asked to com-
"That .to going to be a tough problem,’’ he observed.
It was prfvately suggested to Sytsma that the bus drivers request preferential treatment tor routes assigned on a seniority basis.
This lx basis on which Pontiac Gty Lines, Inc. assigned routes and Sytsma said the practice was continued in the ’’courtesy ride” service.
Miles believed that the ultimate number of jitney drivers In busi-ness would depend on public de-
Mayor Philip E. Rowsten doubted that many non-bus drhers or non-Pontiac area residents would be interested in the jitney business.
"They would find'^hat business dolesn’t pay very much,” remarked Sytsma.
»^><>vsssswsx;i W4t8 HIMVU (U CUin-| '
ment on what a reporter called the| The measure adopted wa* the "Gandhi-like” demonstratio'ns of same as proposed bv the mayor*
_______________,___________ Negroes who have seated them-
wide committee of Gtizens tor	counters in protest
Michigan studying state services
program locally, and even nationally, based upon the Pontiac Rotuy pattern,” Dr. Ekluad
Dr. Straka’s topics for the three lectures of the pilot program are history as the story cd aiorai'bat-history as a philosophy of death, and history and the tor a dynamic democracy.
H 'Electric Costs to Soar
Wtitbir—narrIM.
B.Xon
ir’( TraifSrata
M 1* Snii M I iSnt
MacManus. John k Actnms. Inc.l Commissioner Milton R. Henry I has moved Into a second headquar- sided against the rest of the Oom-If Chicago Gets WateV hulWing in the MJA Cente^
^	'Woodward and Long Lake road in'
NIAGARA FALLS, KY. (Jt- Ani Bloomfield Hills.	j "We can’t legMiy keep this OR-
engineering contractor maintains it' The new building houses the ad-eration out of town.” he said, and will cost electricity users more {vertising agencymedia. researdh. Rowxton agreed with him. than twn milUnn dollars a year if'marketing, merchandising and ac-1 -But other comniissloners had al-Chlcago is permitted to take more I	departments and 125 em- ready discussed privately the pos-
water from Lake Michigan.- 'ployes.	(sibllity of writing a new law -
j Formal opening ceremonies for InVok^ their powers under the
luctt* ’ U 11
MtteaukM SS MlaaKipollt il
George R. Rich, appearing for buUding are being planned, the State Power Authority, testi-
M yesterday at a hearing on the Grahort) Audionce Small water diversion issue.
! JERUSALEM (AP) - Billy He • echoed testimony by other! Graham preaclied to one of the
J to Orltw 14 8 n o'**ha*'^ to
voti Worth M 11 st^ umS< to to state witnesses that further lower-! smallest audiences of his Afrt-SoushSS*. to 8 S	of Lalto Michiganuwould cut; «n-Mlddle .ftost tour Tuesday
g- *l »|available power at the St. Law- night in this ancient dty of 40 g| .and fftagara potKier projects. I Chrtot's criidfixion.
> ■	■ ./	•'	a ,
Gty (Starter to protect public mor-
“If they want to light the aew law, let tbem ge'
M0800V U^-By the e«d •( this year aB Smrtef rittona between 9 maiHha aad 14 yeara eU
already have received the »ac-ctee the piwt year.
■gainst segregatioh.
Eisenhower replied il Is difficult to give a sweeping judgment. He said some demonstrations are questionabiy proper, but others can be classified otherwise.
A A A The President went on to say he to deeply sympathetic with the efforts of anyone to enjoy the righto of equality given to Mm under the (institution. As long as a person is expressing his aspiration for these rights in a perfectly legal way, Eisenhower said, he is justified in doing so.
Home Bills to Rise 5-10 Cents
Phone Rate Hike in Effect
•peria) transportation rommittre, liended by .Miles.
Miles said his 14-member citizens’ committee decided to look tor a substitute for the buses after hopes for a settlement to the long strike dimmed again ore the weekend.
"The bus strike might contimie indefinitely.” he said. ”In the meantime, we need some sort of public transportation, licensed and ■ sured tor the public protection.” A A A
Miles said that the rrgulaloiy standards tor the new jitney operation are on the some level as those ^ady in effect for jitq^ys in Pon-
Chtef reguUHoa*. be said, rail ter poltoe faiBpeclion of vehlrle*. ItablUty Insaranee la the amount ef 496.040 n
LANSLNG ID - MooT Michigan houaehoidera
dr 10 cents added to tfabir nonth^ bills under a new uie approted bgr the State Public Seryira (tommission.
A A
In addition, aftort toll calls will average five cents more but longer toll calls within the state actually w^Lhe cheaper. There atoo will he's new 10-oent charge lot eoUect calls.
The nto
caBs «■ pcwvMMMSiWI.'
The renudnder wil by ioa.50 from re-groupfaiB If
S40J22 bom an increased charge lor ROQfding and answering aei> vice, $430422 from higher service gODBection charges' and |36,6T3
Meanwhile, Jacobs said he may
IttOi place a final inspecUoo.
regoUtkn.” said George E. Hill BOmmisalOO fbnirmnn,
•Then le a asaieet IncreaM la leeM ratoa and a eUghUy latfer'tew In toB ntea.”
HBl CBtimated local rates would be raised over-all eigbt-tentiis of 1 ^ cant and toll rates 2.4 per
Two major groups ot exchanges wif be afiected by foe dassifica-

mUsaei phene He Cneh,
a chantfrar’* ||. cene. and |M Jitney llcease fees. Miles emphasized that his com-mlttn considered the jitney opera-tkm "merely a stopgap measure.” The committee has pledged to retn^ with the transportatloh problem until a long-range solution il reached.” he said.
basic charge residence and I go ite 10 cents a month.
Gambler Waiting for His Sentence
TWo-party, t
■If one-party I
Municipal (tourt Judge Cecil B iMcCidlum yesterday found Stoney |M. Gasman. 28. of 240 W. Hon: be la- St., guilty of aiding and abet-ting the operation and maintaining Coin phones which must guaran-’!®^ Olegal gambfing place, tee a specified volume of callsj _	*	A	a
The nne^nertv r».LUiL/_	^	** increased 30 cAts a Clasman is scheduled to be sen-
<*»^|iiKiolh.	Friday moraing
wiD be increased 10 cento month- _	^	. He to free «i ■ t-Jvi i_______j
ly in Lmving. 'DimoodMr: Hoh.'	«>"-
Mason, Pottervflle. Wawie. Ypsi-	be-|	'
jtween $1.50 and $2.50, depending!	A	a	a
Ion ^ type d aervice.	j Gasman was one of 16 men ar
I The coat of aitowering and re- rasted Feb. 14 in a raid c '
City aad Uttoa.
It ■'C-as appro\-ed by thg PSC yesterday to yield a four piillkm dollar annual rate increase granted MicUgah BeD F>b. IL:
BASIC GAIN Q4 MILLION
,	Under the formula. $1,670,091 win {Mason. Pottervflle, Wayne, Ypsi-j
be ready to open as early aa “““ increases In baric ex- Untl and Livonia.
day, and woqld demand that the|™*"*'	service. 1*gOOD REGULATION'	________
Sai^Ufton Department givci lacrease* In i«U call* — i*ng- j "I think we 1iave arrived at a cordtog service. wUl go up from'gambling -<esteblishments'^bv p,»® j distaaee calto vtihin Ibe state — jeompromiae which results io'tood^^.SO to ipj a inooth.	- Itjac vice squad officers. ^
'I
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEPyESDAY, .^fARCH 16. 1060
TUs ¥Mteiii‘ lajtf
"190(9 r FOUNTAM SPEOAIS
Savory meat loaf, potatoes, Wcgetable. fresh roll and butter. Plus freshly-baked pie—and coffee, tei-or coke!
mPAyomy...
Tuna Fish\Casserole
A treat from the deep seal . Tuna ba with noodles. Served with cole sla^ gelatin <fe.ssctt, jj:oflee, tea or coke.
sATumyOi
Roast Turkey
Tender young turkey, gravy, whipped potatoes, dressmg, cranberry sauce, vegetable, -roll and butter. Plus fresh pie; toffee, tea or coke.
THUR-FRI-SAT...
Strawberry Syndae
A delicious treat! Fresh nectar-sweer strawberries oyer two big dips of rich ice cream ... plus whipped topping!
Bank Tiff Rages in Traverse City.
House Rebels at Quick Vote
New Judicature Bill Buried in Pile
Plan 'Paddy Party' for Golden Agers
Contend Commissioner Should Drop Out Court Cose
4ANSi.NG-4fv^A court battle to decide whether two or three banks should serve the Traverse City area raxed on today after conclusion of testimony by State inking Commissioner ^onzo L. Wilson.
LANSING Uft — The sheer bulk !of it appeared today to have kilted of chances tor legislative approval of sweeping revision of the state judicature act.
The highly, technical, ^9-page bill was consigned to the bottorp of pile of mca.surcs awaiting pas-
sage yesterday when some HouseJ33.nian committee of attorneys, members rebelled against a quick:judges and legislators after a 3V4 \-ote.	year study.
Wilson. a*ed to resign his $10,-I'.'VOO job last fall by Gov. Williams, has .said he would.quit after the case has been settled.
The Tiwverse (ity SUle Bank and the Ursl people’s Bank of I Traverse City are seeking to re-I strain the Umpire State Bank || from Iranslerring Us main office from Kmpire to just ontskfe lh» Traverse City limits.
Attorneys for the Traverse City banks contended yesterday Wils«jn i should not be involved in the trans-jfer approval because he was an I interested party.
Today the deadline for passage for it and more than IS other House bills.
mi/Rmy oRiy... Meat ioaf Luncheon
77
DOWNTOWN PONTIAC-TEL-HURON CENTER-DRAYTON RUINS ROCHESTER-MIRACLE MKE SH0RPIN6 CENTER
S. S. KRESGE COMPANY
Wilson had acknowledged his wife owned $23,858 In shai-es in ’thf pmpii-e Bank,'hut she also had shares worth $80,000 in the Trav-City Bank and $2,000 in the People's Bank.
He had also testified the existing banks dominated the ar>*n nnd said he thought a third bank
Kingston). House Republican
siUe flaws, the new act would no^lO take effect until Jan. 1,1962.
The measure is designed to modernize legal procedures adopted nearly half a century ago and amended mjiny times since. The proposed code was drafted by
Judicial authorities estimated it would cut the length of an average civil court suit by 25 per cent, reducing the time, effort and money spent by litigants by a like amount
other year before we can vote on It,” said Hep. Allison Green <B-
To allow time for correcting pos-
.Many tawmakers complained they hadn’t rend It or had time to study It.
"Thoac who haven’t read It won't read it by next year,” said Rep. Thomas J. Whinery (R-Grand Rapids), the top sponsor. "It’s not very spicy reading.”
★ W -The House, meanwhile, raced the block to beat the midnight deadline fof passing its own bills. The big logjam of measures still waiting action assured a repeat of yesterday's session, which opened ^t
and continued, except for lunch and dinner breaks, till nearly midnight.
FOR WELFARE
The first Of the lower chamber's ^ six major 1960-61 budget bills gauer. cleared yesterday and the rest were ready for passage. The bill approved would allocate $70,642,048 for various welfare programs, about $1,370,000 above the figure recommended by Gov. Williams.
Republlesn budget makers saM the goveraor’t proposal would
Julius H, Beers, president of the Traverse Gty Bank, disputed this.
"Amothcr bank would mean,splitting the business up thm< w;ays instead.pf two,” Beers said. "This could lead to unsound banking practices and a licramble for busi-Iness 1 don’t believe would be do-isirafile.”
Thomas G. Gies, assa iate professor of finance at the University of Michigan, testified there is no icompelling need for additional bank facilities.
‘‘This is not an area for impressive growth,” Gies said.
A St. Patffck’i Dtv I*rty being planned ior WaterlAd Township’! newly organized Golden Agd Club at 6:30 p.m. Frldw in the
Community Center. (	___
A surprise program is jdaimed for the "past 60” group by tant Recreation Director Robert
Elach member has been asked to bring his own tobte aervice and a dish to pass.
Anyone interested in jo^ he g^p msy do so by calling the Recreation Department.
a scatter-lag of Republleana added tW.OM to the bill to Rnuce a eomniU-sloa M the aglM which won House approval laot mouth.
A bill to set up a state tax court to replace the brard of tax appeals collected a 66-36 vote, eight votes short of the two-thirds majority needed in both houses to create a
A total of 830i000 peo|de io an earthquake to ChlBB talaSo, the largest death toll on i*carO.
Approved and steered into thej Senate was a bill prohibiting law-enforcement men from "unduly detaining” persons arrested for motor vehicle code violations other than reckless driving, negligent homicide ahd drunk driving.
; The measure also would require officers to take the violator to a' justice of. the peace in the munici-' pallty in which the offense* occurred If one is avalTable.
800 Students to Gather for Choral Festival
More than 800 students Trom seven Pontiac area high schools will participate in a choral festival Friday at Watei^pid Township High School.
MOON NOT SO RI GGED AETER ALL -Spacemen landing on the moon may find the surface not as* jagged as had been supposed, a new 'study by Air Force scientists, aided, by British. French and American civilian scientists, lias discl6.sed. This is an enlargement of a photo made at France's Pic-Du-Midl Observatory show-
AP Ph»t*l»
ing crater of Autolycus (left) and Aristillus (lower area). White area in the center of lower crater is the sun shining on top of the mountaiij inside crater. Study is based on detailed examination of shadows in numerous photograplis made under varying light conditions. Ai-istUlus is about 40 miles in diameter.
Sponsored by the Northern Section of the Pontiac Area of District IV of the Michigan School Vocal Assn., the competition will feature mixed choirs of boys' and girls’ glee clubs, according to .Waterford Township High School choral music ! director Richard Meier.
Schools Inriled to parth'lpate were Pontiac Northern, Pontiac f'entral, Birmingham Groves, Or-’(•hard l.ake 81. Mary's and Milford. One hundred and fifty five students from Waterford Township are entered in the compell-
Wants Congress to Double U.S. Immigration Quotas
Tito to Host Afghan King
BELGRADE. Yugoslavia (* Mohammed Zahir Shah, king of I Afghanistan, will visit Yugoslavia j this year at the invitation of President Tito, Tanjug, the official agency reported Tuesday.
WASHINGTON ‘UH - President
the new proposal would be 1960.
Judging the contest will be Glen Klepinger, Cass Technical High School, Detroit; Dr. Wilbur Peterson. Wayne State University; Loren Cady, Bay City Central High School and Otto Brown, Ferndale Lincoln High School.
The ratings will be divided Into four categories: superior, excellent, good -and fair.
The little European countiy of Andorra has been a sovereign state since 1278, It is between France and Spain.
Eisenhower plans to ask Congress to double, approximately, the number of immigrant^ allowed to enter the United States each year.
The quota now is about 134,000 annually.
Eisenhow cr has been urging Congress to revise the quota system since, 1953, but CongresAjp e • i p-i__ c;*« hasn’t acted upon the major pnTlKUSS 5e6k KOlOf :>lTe posals.
PlaiiH for the new request were disclosed by Republican ('ongressioiinl leaders after their regular weekly mreling with the President Tuesday. The Senate fJOP leader. Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illlnoins, conceded in response Io questions that ‘‘Immigration bills are never easy” | to gel through C'ofigress.
Disksen said the intention is to keep the national orgins concept, for allowing aliens to enter the United States on'-a country-by-j country i^asis. Present laws allow | the most liberal quotas to nations^ with the higest number ol Amerl-| can sons and daughters.
The present formula is based] on the 1920 population make-up. | Advopekes of quota revisions say j >Uie_^ional -tsxin complexion cl, the /comjtry haV changed drasti-l callymiir'y^^ They say use j of 1920 as a base ye%r gives ex-j cessively large quotas to the na-| tions^of northern Europe.
Dirksen said the base year for
Unused quota numbers from the various countries could be thrown into a pool and be reassigned, he
Thti* It N* Sstor. Mor*
PAIN REUEVINB
Product In All thu World Than
IMDRIN
Rheimatic-Arthritie
MuscuIor Point
• r»p««t-Th»r» ti
womtii itt wflcome. morr . comlor-Ubl* rrlTrl trom tho Moderati point of trUtfltlt, rhoumnlltm. nrurttli, lumboio tnd mutculor ochtt whtn-fYor tn«r occur. .Whon luch poin occur* in any part of your body »t IMDRIN at onea to help raw thU
.runlM* ivaryotwre.
•I N. Saginaw .. —Main Floor
Just when Eisenhower will send hid request to Congress was not disclosed.
MOSCOW (P — A Soviet expedi-; tiomleft by air Tuesday In search of an arctic ice floe suitable for use as another North Pole research station Ta.ss reported. It will be caUed ’"North Pole 9,'	I


DON'T MISS THE WATERFORD JAYCEE'S
SPORTS » BUILDERS SHOW
MARCH 18th	MARCH 19th	MARCH 20th
6 to 11 P.M.	1 to 11 P.M.	1 to 11 P.M.
At .		
Community Activities Center - Willioms Loke Rood
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Our Sickneu A Accident Plan gives you income to help offset your loss Of earnings if you're disabled and can't work. In addition, it prptects your family these Three ways: (I) cn-•Vbles you to meet most hospital bills and major medical expenses, (2) pays benefits to
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Rep«ot by Demond — Thit LOW PRICE on
■ ■OKU BAOTto	■	■ IK
sam Electric Razor


See the lote^ in Sports, and Building field. Big exhibits displayed inside and outside the CAI Build-ir\g.
Plenty of Free Parking

SINUS
Sufferers
HynTi awn Iw vm) Uthnnt i •■bSrS-Wt' ITPIA-Cl
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The measure wm one of two see-1 tlons of Gov. Williams* 29-polnt leg-1 islative program which met defeat | yeiterday. The other, rejected for the second time in a week, would have established ■ slate office to| repreaent local governments.
24-fncb ffaadlo
5" RUBBER FORCE CUP
Sink Draii Plunders
Kogtuar eve
24'
drslni. nsUr tIotaU,
ns.b.r.^'zLn'r*'
for Tab ond Wotb WoebtoM
PraiiiBg Hosai
Reg. 79c
39*
f/olds 24D Cfeibeaptos
ClolhnplR Bag
Reg.
59c
Art Stool
Ironing Board
Adjuitt to 9 Fesitieiig
199
Reg.
$8.95
Miracle PipriC
Food Wrapping ssrk
Long-Lasting CELLULOSE
O’Celle Sponges
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M M. Saginaw —lad Floar

THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16. 1960
Ariaam*! eight national foretti,| cover UVfc million acres.
RCA Victor
Oock-Radio
RCA Victor's lowest priced doek-radlo. Wake up to pre* ■elected music with special toI*-ume control. Dial window makes it simple to tune, eaair to read the clock.
$1 Down^l Week
THE
Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac
n W. Haren	n 4^iSU
S;a,c
Ml at TIAIS. O-JII-WA HAS, MIN MtCHIAANt lAVOlITI^ MIIN* TONIC. YOU CAN IN-JOT irmi HIALTH It YOU ST A IT TAIINO ^ O^II-WA NOW.
iHouse Group OKs Sdnol Bill
Gives Building Funds but Allots Nothing for Teachers' Salaries
WASHINGTON (UPD - Th House Education Committee today approved a stripped-down, thr^-year aid-to-education hill that would provide 1975,000,000 to help build schools but would put up no federal funds for improving teachers' salaries.
. W A ■ ♦
The measure, approved 19-11, iwas a substitute for both an $1.-! 800.000.000 sdMOl aid bill passed I earlier this year by the Senate land a $4,400,000,000 measur okayed by the House committee last year. Those bills contained federal funds for teachers’ pay, as well as for classroom construction.
President Elsenhower has strongfjl opposed any move to heve Uie federal govemnienl sapplemenl ealariet paid lo tearhers by the statea.
Even without the .salary provision, however, the'compromise bill drew opposition from the House committee’s Republican members. Democrats g a v heavy support.
* A A ,
Much of the GOP opposition apparently stemmed from the way the $^,000,000 in construction funds would be alloted. Part of the funds wwld be parceled quT as direct federal grants, a method which Eisenhower had opposed. The bill now goes to the House
THE MAJOR KILLERS -1958
THE KILLERS Graphed above by numbers of deaths and by rate per hundred thousand are the nation's major killers, as detennined by final data for the year 1958. Added starter to |he "big
four" — heart disease, cancer, strokes and accidents — for '58 was influenza-pneumonia, because of '57-’58 epidemic. Data from Public Health Service's national office of vital siuiUstics.
Rules Committee, which will decide when it will reach the floor and under what rules it will be debated. The rules group has had th^ Education Committee's more sweeping bill of last year bottled up kince last May.
Elected President
SAND LAKE (UPD-James Her-in was elected president of this Kent County village yesterday, along w'ith four village triutees.
Says Nuisance Tax Costly to Road Plan
FLINT (UPI) - Highway Cbm-missioner JOha Mackie said Monday night the nuisance tax passed by last year's Legislature which put a tak on building materials used in state highways will cost the Michigan road program morel than $3,500,000 this year.
He called the tax a "subterlugei
to diWrt constitutionally marked highway use taxes from road purposes to the state's general fund.”
Write-In Man Wins
DOUGLAS un - Write-in candidate Fred K. Scott won election Monday as president of this Allegan County village. A vote of 120 to 100 ousted incumbent Lewis £.
Ford Motor Company announces the
IDsloufX of Tl-ta.
CDmef
Tomorrow, at Mercury-Comet dealer’s, first compact car with finecar styling -priced with or below other compacts.
You're looking at the exciting new vslue-packed compact—Comet. NOTE ITS BEAUTIFUL STYLING. No sawed-off, cut-down look, here. The Comet is proportioned like a 6ne car—long flowing lines, outstanding good looks.
LOOK CLOSELY AT THE EXTRA FEATURES. You pay nothing more for dual headlight8„^front and rear arm rests, door-operated dome light, foam padded front seat. And __the trunk holds enough for the whole family on a long trip. YOU'kL MARVEL AT THE ECONOMY. Comet's new simplified "six'’
engine delivers up to 28 miles per gallon of regular gas.
YOU'LL REVEL IN THE RIOE. No choppy steering, no bumpy travelling in Comet. The longer wheelbase (114* instead of 107' in average compacts) gives Comet a smoother ride, yet it turns on a dime.
NOW, CHECK THE PRICE. Comet is priced trith or below othpr compacts like Rambler, Corvair, Lark, Valiant and Falcon.
COMPARE ALL THE COMPACT CARS —and you'll come away with a Comet. It’s now at your Mefcury-Comet dealer's.

FINEST COMPACT WAGONS ON THE MARKET. The new Comet wsgons go fsr beyond what you mighi expect in a compact station wagon of this size. There is over 76 cubic feet for storage-as much room as in some wagons costing hundreds of dollars more; a relractahle resr window takes the place of the old-fashioned lift-gate. And. there is ample room for six ■dulls with plenty of space left over for baggage. Along with the Comet two- and four-door sedans, there are tyo- and four-door wagons as well.
UMCOLN-kKKCUKY DIVISION
WIN A NEW COMETI 50 COMETS GIVEN AWAY FREEI
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GET YOUR ENTRY CARD AT
LLOYD MOTORS
LINCOLN MERCURY—COMET ^
(Formerly Russ Dawson)
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FE 2-9131
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FINE NATURAL BRISTLE HAIR BRUSHES /Vv SPECIAL >1 QC purchase I 5 different styles In men's and women's heir brushes ... all with genuine Chungking hog bristles.' ^j|| pQj jpljj hoir.			
With giont lombswoof puff..; BATH POWDER spwioi ’ 0*7* Purchase § Large box of fragrant bath powder.		Chromu ploftd stufl GARMENT RACKS *5.88 40 by 12 by 61" with hat reck end shoe rail.	
W;th FREE MinpU lipstick... COTY FACE POWDER - 1.35 Box of Coty power and trial size lipstick.		4 or 5 drowtr KRAFTBOARD CHESTS 5* *6.88 Lightweight, sturdy, floral or modem prints.	
Jumbo matal FILE BOXES ra >2.88 Jumbo metal 'file box with dividers.	Hond and body Wrisley LOTION nioo '' Full pint, contains lanolin and siliconas.		Rechorgtoblo pocket FLASHLIGHTS n.88 Can be charged on any clKtri-cal outlet.
Electric vibrating Massoge Pillows is >1.97 Removable zippered corduroy cover. UL approved.	1" tubing, 57" high IRONING CADDY *3.88 Hang clothes up as you press -them. Folds flat when rtot in use.		Full length sipper GARMENT BAGS *1.88 Assortment of 54" heavy quilted garment begs.
Chromed \ , . Holds 6 BLOUSE RACK fs 88* Holds blouses neatly, saves closet space.	Chromed . . . Holdi 6 SKIRT RACK 88* Holds skirts neatly and compactly. Saves closet space.		Set of 6 Plastic Hangers 88* Clear or pastel heavy plastic drau or blouse hangers.
Sat of 7 vorniihad Wooden Mongers u’t 88* Heavy non-rust hook, in natural .varnished hardwood. "	Set of 4 Wooden SUIT HANGERS 88* Varnished hardwood with nonrust hooks.		9 pair SHOE RACKS »• >1.88 chromed tubing. Low style.
Sat of 6 chromed PANT HANGERS rs 88* Holds pants neatly by tha cuffs. Adjustable.	Reversible . . . Cord TABLE COVERS ■ f?9 88* Quilted plastic. Fits all standard card tables.		12 P,i, SHOE RACKS Ks >2.88 Chromed *,i'' tubing. High style.
For outdoor portias GLASS HOLDERS is 3'" 88* Metal, \^Isted to forrn holder for glass tumbler. Sticks in ground.	Leotherotte desk ACCESSORIES vltoes 88^ Letter boxes, photo books, memos, letter openers etc.		Boxed notes end STATIONERY 2/f!oo 3 *“''88* High count, fine quality. White, pastels, trims.

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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAt. MARCH 16. 1960

Park Flooded by Gravel Pit
SHELBY TOWNSHIP — A grtwel pit on top of a hill here overflowed its banks early this morning flood-
At Walled Lake Cpuncil Meeting
JP Candidates ^Open Fire^
4 Feef of Water Fbws Into Bowling Alley on Ryan Road
y uua uiiMiuiiK Aiww-
Ing a bowling alley, bar and other buildings in Glen Park
About four feet of water filled the valley below.
According to Roneo State police, the water entered bowling aUey and bar ooveriag the
Inches of water.
r to Biz
WALLED LAKE — The City Council igneetlng last night ex-plod^ into a verbal free-for-all among three candidates for the justice of the peace post over residence requirements for the elective office.
At the same time the City Ooun-vfl accepted a lour-page legal opinion on the questioo from attorney Albert Herzog.
The fireworks began when M Marriull Taylor, seek the dP post hi
the April 4 elecfiea, acked that the petItloB of another dP candidate, Ociie SchnelB, be denied beraiise be has not been a dty
qalred In the dty charter.
•The cards are stacked against n>e in bringing this up since I am running for the JP post, but as a citizen and councilman I feel that the charter is being violated f Schnelz is allowed to seek oflict." Taylor told the Council.
Herzog told Taylor that Walled
Lake was Incorporated tinder the provWon of the Home Rule Act of the state, whldi affirms that "No provision of any dty charter riian conflict with or oontravene the provisions of any general Uw of the state."
★	★ A
made fay the elecUan board, and-fiien Is subject to review in court,**
“oaly residence -------------------
for eligibility to the office of dP In townships In leoldeaee to Iho State of Michigan tac six months and In the tswwship » days.**
R did not reach the alleys proper, trooped said.
At first, police Investigators through! the branch of the Clinton. River nearby had overflowed its banks and they would have to warn Utica residents of an Impending flood.
Instead they found that one or two of the pits between Hamlin and 22-Mlle roads had overflowed washing a 30-foot gap in one and causing the water to cascade Into valley.

No estimate of damage Is yet available.
PLAN CARD PARTY - Members of the Keego Harbor Busineu and Professional Women's
r»BU«c rnu rk*to
Keego Harbor. Sealed from left are Wilma
Keego Harbor Busineu and Professional Womens	Keego M^r. aeawo	*
aub make last-minute arrangemenU for the	Webb clu^sident. and
^p’s annual canl party to be held it 8 n™. Sundlng from left are LudUe Dunaway and
group » WlniUU vmu FWty w a#» sss,s>* — ^ r..........
Thursday in the Roosevelt Elementary School.
Standing from left i Eileen Van Horn.
quirkiv as H had Hsea and was gone about 10 minutes aftsr
3 Pickets Arrested
--------- . IBarely Escapes
Contempt Action Setgj|^Q,^j
in Dynamic Strike
- Another fortunate thing was that the park owner, Edwin Reband. of 47140 Condor St., Utica, had a sump^ pump at hand to use immediately. There were six to eight Inches of
water on the n»d leading tojte park buildings rfl 4
TROY — Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams has set a hearing for /9 a.m. tonjorrow on the request from Dynamic Manufacturers Inc. to cite Electrical Workers Union, Local 935, for contempt of a court order barring violence at the strikebound plant.
The company also claipu that the picket line has been manned by more than the 20 strikers si-lowed by the temporary InjunctloD Issued Feb. 26.
VcNterday three pickets were arrested by Troy police os ^ orderly conduct charges. According to Police Chief David Oral-top they were Wocktag the driveway and pounding their fists on the windows of esrs entering the plant.
Robert Klingcnsmith. interoa tional representative of the union, said not more than one of the thiTC hit a car window with his fists.
The plant, which makes auto parts, has been, struck since Feb, 15. The walkout was caused by a dispute.
pant DU11UU1KH Jt 49099 Ryan Rd., and the state police car became stuck, requiring a wrecker to pull
Arrested were Billy L. Perry' man. 31, of 439 S. Saginaw St. Pontiac: Michael D. Gleeson, 22, of 3972 Elwood St. Berkley; and Emery M. Childers. 20, of 1468 Ruby St., Rochester.
The threw stood mute yesterday when they appeared before Troy Jnstice of the Peace Charles H. Loaey. TTiey were re-leased on $100 personal bond each and Jury triiu was March SI.
ARMADA TOWNSHIP - A 87-year-old Armada Township man barely escaped being crushed yeslenfay when his muddy shoes apparently caused him to fall Into the belt and pulley assembly ol s stone crusher.
DORCAS KOKSTEft
Mr. and Mrs. George Koester of 1021 Oakwood Rd., OrtonvUle, announce the engagement of their daughter Dorpas to Alwyn Dopp. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Dopp of Mount aemens. A late summer wedding is planned.
the Ccliiinunity Hospital with a Irsclurr-d pelvis Is Frank Uesner, 87, ol mi Romeo Plank
The accident occurred al a Ma-Comb fkmnty gravel pH, two miles north of Romeo.
Romeo State police said Dean-er was on the catwalk of the machine which Is approximately eight feel off the ground when he slipped. His overalls caught In the belt and he was carried the lull length ol the assembly before being thrown oil.
Haul's Too Big for Model Thief -That's Plane
Will Hear
Lathrup
Citizens
Even after Henof had read hi* optadoii. Th^ hM ha teh that the charter was being broken.
**B b disappo^ting to hear tha ipbikn and I will continue to try o nphold the charter,’* Taylor
this petal Sdmeb inae frane
’It hurts to lit here and listen to the utter dliregard tor the law and the utter disregard for the Constitution," Schnelz said.
A A
LATHRUP VILLAGE - Orcuit Judge H. Ruieel Holland has scheduled a heartog March 28 to decide whether a citizens’ group here wiD be allowed to Intervene in a suit brought by the etate seeking to compel the city to build a “ storm water aystem.
•I resent the attack on my morw ab and It Is an attack,” he eald.
"When I decided to run tor tht oewf I told everyone involved that I did not meet the dty charter re-» quirenwnts, however I did know the state law." Schnelz said.
Incumbent Justice of the Peace Herman Roth said he felt the City Oiarter could be upheld.
At present Latbrup's storm and sanitary sewage b flowing together into the Rouge River.
The hearii^ data was se4 when
met
( attoneys an thb
Hamg told the Council that tha best thing to do would be to have tbi Election Oommiasion set up a
te order lha efty to baae 87M,0Ot In beads to baUd the eapamto
soon as Schnelz filed hb peUtion lor candidacy.
The state contends that withont It. the city to vlobtlng s fo^^-yes^ old court order to stop pollution el the river.
A bond issue of the sshm amoont was rejected by voters here Fab
ROYAL OAK-Ifs a really keen model of a racing car-and eome-one couldn’t resist stealing H. • But the thief got cold feet when he realized something of the value of. his heist.
Boys Are T^s at Talent Show
He Is IImUmI in satlHfactory c dltion today.	_____
Arkansas Educator to Speak at NCCC
T of a plas-
Jlin mHWlIItof wvaaoa or- m g——
tics nianalacturing firm here and an avid sportsmaa. posted a 81,000 "no qaeotlons-asked” re-ward for the retnm odds model raeed whea H was stolcn last Thursday at Detroit Metre-pothan Airport.
An unidentified person left the stolcn model at the airport reception desk yesterday, and walked out without claiming the reward.
Robbins said the racer had a small gasoline engine and took five engineers "thousands o hours” to build. It was a model of the winning Indianapolto "500" car of last year.
AVON TOWNSHIP - Some 25o'	Wolverine
Oakland County area businessmen. Re-tlected dT WOlVermw
and Mackinaw City
Troy police report that all was quiet on the picket line when workers ' eifftred the plant this morning. Ten pickets were parading near'the entrance, they said.
You Can't Beat British Girls for Taking Dictation
____ . _ _ umy mya,
educators, clergymen and civic leaders will hear George S. Ben.son, president of Harding College, Ark., speak at North Central Chriitian College Friday evening,
The Arkansas educator has chosen as his topic, “Freedom 1960—A Challenge to America,”
dRS. W. J. 8WRZENBERO JR-
I^DNDON (UPI)-^Th emanager vf a Loadoa employment agency nald today he had relumed from a trip to the United Stales with orders to send bark 500 English aeeretarles lor American businessmen who ernve “stalus tym-
The manager, David Benson, .aid be had found that “to a Yank hnslnem chap, an English ar<-ent in the chair means more than a carpel on the floor.*’-“They say our girts are more reliable, work harder and are more atable In eoropariaqn with their own secretaries," Benson said. “Our girls spcII, too — that’s a tremendous advantage.”
TOPS IN TALENT — Thlrteen-yeataold Cary KUncr was the ................................ ^ the eighth annual Talent
...................i-yea»ld
first-place winner in the junior division of tht .............
Show last night at Romeo Community High School. The young pianist U the son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Kilner, 277 W. St. Qalr ^ A "Pop Concert” by the high school band preceded the show.
Neither Taylor nor Rofh bhv* Iliad petitions tor the office yet.'
fte eandMalea wanto to taka tt la eanrt, toep wli hava aevaral
In Us case against tht dty, — state contends, as a resttU of a survey, Lathrup VUbgc must arate lU storm and lanltnry age to stop exbting health ha>-
•Tm too muA of a gentleman to taka tt to court.^* Thylor aakl.
"Tha aourts are not just tor crtmlnalA** Herzog said. "They
A A
The cUy argues, through' tts l
torney, Everett Hayes, state cannot compel tiw city to build a storm system as the ded-sion lesta with the people.
•1 feel Bke a criminal after to. night.” Taylor retorted. I wouldn’t be that small to makt a court issue out ol It."
’’WeU, I may be just that small and take It to court." Roth said.
ftTTENTION:
Tell Winners et Romeo Thank You Good People-
ROMEO—A 13-year-old pianist Tones," a girls* vocal trio from	...	..	,-----j.
. . .	__i_\	_oil	rv\nnnA«Ml Af SSUflaf)
and a high school brass sextet, all boys, were first place winners in the junior and senior divisions respectively In last night's Talent Show at Romeo Community High School.
Gary Kiiner. soa of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Klines of Z77 W. St Clair St., played "The Twelfth Street Rag” to win lop prise la the Junler division. Eleven acts competed lor lha rash awards.
Richmond, composed of Suaan Carkuff. Jerry Tucker and Carol Hartway.
A skit from "Peter Pan” featuring Ruth Smith as Wendy. Peggy Dora as Peter and Virginia Smith as the narrator won third prize.
Rolland DeRemer was giver, honorable mention
Benson was picked as Arkansan pred Mackensen was eieciea irus-ol the Year in 1955. arid recentlyjtee at Wolverine for hb 29th year
was honored by the Freedom Fo-j	---------——
rum Foundation of Valley Forge,
CHEBOYGAN (UPI) — Village presidents were k:^lected yesterday at Mackinaw^ty and Wolverine.
R. C. Welch was re-elected at Mackinaw Oty and Andrew Har-teker was re-elected at Wolverine. Fred Mackensen was elected tnls-
Louis Bumey and Buzz Smiles were featured members of an instrumental combo which placed second in this division.
Third wae another 15-year-old boy, Bruce L. Young of Richmo^, playing a trumpet solo. Honorabb mention was awarded to Howard W. FalKer, another pianist.
Pa.
IHomeforChildreit
b(,	Qp0p Houses
in 1119	isx# wvwM
the dangers facing the government and individual freedom as presented by apathy, communism, socialism, ignorance and poLtical demagoguery.	,	. -
Dinner will be served at 7;30 p.m.
FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP -0^ iKMwe will be held two days week until November at the
North Hill Plaza Stores Joining in Dollar Days
ROCHESTER — North .......
Ptaia otorcK near here are JoUi-Ing In traditional area-wide Dd-br Days. Frank Fbsterbrook, chairman of the Plaza Merchanto Assn., announced today.
Transportation
Special sales are being tea-furl'd at the Hhopping eehler during,^ the Friday-Saturday event.
Newlyweds to Make Home in California
OXFORD—Honeymooning in San Jose, Calif., are newlyweds Mr. and Mrs. William J. Swttzefiberg
■hie bride is the former Carolyn lerwald, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. • G. Bcrwald of Aberdeen, S.D. be parents of the bridegroom are Ir. and Mrs. William J. Switzen-lerg Sr. of 101 N. Washington St
The wedding took place; in the First Lutheran Church at Van Nuya, CaUf.
AnenuuiK
Krelllng. and best man was bride's cousin. Norman Dahme.
The newlyweds will reside at China Lake. Calif., where J|e bridegroom i« an engineer rt the U S. Naval Ordinance Test Center.
Ike Sends 10-Year Plan to Improve Air, Rail Road Routes Washington (UPii—President
Elsenhower sent to Congress Monday a proposed 10-year program designed to improve the nation's rail, air, highway and water transportation systems.
The 78-polnt proposal called for less government regubtion of rates and routes and "Increasing reliance on private enterprise."
■ It recommended repeal 10 per cent federal tax oh interstate bus. train and plane tickets. But it said this should not be done until the g^ernment could stand the revenue loss and until general tax reforms were studied.
■The object, the study said, was help divert commuters from
kurreasta 4a	4t*ontefwhrfntinn I
W# •» HeffnMn'8 «r« lost for words to tit-
•HM w«	lost wMk s
The Talent Show followed 1 concert by the high nchooi ■ Bghlfe
Members of the high school brass sextet that placed first in the senior division were Ronald
al Bcbolanblp eoneerts.
On the program was Dixieland music and some from South, of the Border, also "March of the Majorettes." during .which the high school baton twirlere formed.
Talent Show Judges were new Romeo Village Presklent Wayne Black. Junior High School Band Director M. R. Keranen, Mel Bleich. and Lee Wlnbora of The Pontiac Prea.
Wt hn Repeating Last Week's Prices—5o Efetfenk May Take Advantage ef Tkese Savings!
Waschull, John Hewett, Tom Vos. Marc Kost. BiU Strait and Dave
l^ond place went to the "School
a week until November at the St.	erf nr
Vincent and Sarah Fisher HomeiinSriUii raSlUl
“—otHoliy Church
AAA
Sister Rose Marie, administrator . HOLLY -An installation ol the 60 acr^s ol seboob, cottages has been held lor the Rev. G Phil-and playgroi^ on l^MUe and |p Nofslnger. pastcy of the First Inkster roads, said tours will run Baptist Church here. , ^ . Wednesdays from 9:30 to ll:30j The Installation was conducted a.m, and Sundays from 3 to 5 p.m. ^ Arthur F Farrell, execu-
’•’The primary purpose of Home Is to provide temporary residence, from three months to years, for children who for
by Dr. Arthur E. Farrell, execu-
PAYDAY
LOANS
tlve seoTtary of the MIAlgan Baptist Convention, and included a re-Mfirmatlon of the minister's vows. The Rev. Mr. Nofslnger. a native
two years. lor cniioren wno lor -rne itev. wir. noiamgrr,« n=i.vc various reasons must live awaylof Detroit, b a graduate of Wayne from their homes," Sister Rose'state University and Northern Bap-Marie said.	tist Theological Seminary.
"The key point here is t children of one family i placed together,"
, For the past three years he has t the served as associate pastor of the 1 be Foster Park Baptist Church of Chi-' eafto.
S50 for 2 wks ...only 70i\
Other loaito »® 1500 %ith 24 mot. to rtpoy
PATRICIA ANN CROSBY
A June 25 wedding Is planned by Patricia Ann Crosby and El-wyn C. Hillman. The bride-elect b the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
to help divert commuters from i» me	^
highways to public transportation! George Crosby of Davlsburg. to relWe rurfi-hour traffic jams
and to help finance better uitan and Mrs. Charles Hiilipan, also transportation.	I of Davisburg.
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716 Glonwood Ayo.	FI 2-91141



THE PONTIAC PRESS, VVEPyESDAY. MARCH 16, 1960
NfitionaUy Famoui
WATCHES
W« Mnrkt whot w« mIIT This watfh docs net hove to be sent to the factory to be serrkedl
MINOK WATCH
HEfAn DONE WULB TOC WAIT
FREE ENGRAVING ON ANY PURCHASE
LOU-NOR
Miracle Mile Shopping Center
ADVERTISED IN GOOD HOUSEKEEPING
fhe most comfortable shoe available at any price,
CorpationTax Among 6 Axed
State's Senators Also Vote Doy^n Increased Fishing License Levy
LANSING th—Senators waded In. to a big bin-passing spree today after a dec^-clearing process that killed a fishing license increase and a co/poration tax law gimmick. /
It wai/he last session of 1960 lor getting ^nate proposals safely into the Hotise ahead of another of the deadlines leading to an. expected April 15 windup.
♦ ♦ ♦
Six bills formaliy were Junked yesterday and the Greene annexation bill, although left technically alive, clung to life by the slen-(terest thread.
/ The corporation tax proposal /touched oft a lively floor fight. Sra. "Philip Rahoi iMron Moon-tain) said It "amqpnts to an attempted 10 million dollar steal.” Seas. Lyna O. Francis of Midland and rharlea R. Feenstra oA Grand Rapids. RepUbHrans, said It was only an attempt to straighten oat a conflict in regn* latlon polldeo between two state agencies.
i- Involved was the corporation I franchise tax, expected In 196M1 I to pump 70 million dollan into the state treasury. Francis asked a ; change in the rule for computing the tax as applied to public utU-lUes.	/
★	* A
Under the changed definltk^ of r'surplus,” Detroit Edison Co.,
I would have saved about gjbO.OOO i a year and other utilities about I one million dollars more./
I Rahoi contended that if the benefits granted utilities were passed along to other corporations, might have to be done in the interests of constitutionality, the state would lose 10 pnilllons annually*
t. Nm wAtsssd siA wwpe* t Uni ts In Inn bmk S. Wnd hsal wsSts 4. Asps MtsiBisi Ms sod kssi S. CstkIsrhflIiMi wsi#t
Mirocio Milo Shopping Center
"T~
Van Buren Court to Test Legality of Justice Fees
Community Pays Negro for House He Tried to Build
ST LOUIS, Mo. lAl-The suburban Creve Ooeur Board of Aider-men has approwed pay|ment of $31,000 to a Negro doctor who tried	^
16 Senator. Tie Selves
that a Circuit Court could not Inquire into the motives of a town’s Board of Aldermen.
Mayor John T. Biertie said the house wiU be used as a clubroom and the land tor a playground.
Creve Coeur Is a sulwrb of St. Louis.. It has 2,0« wSitfents. including Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo).
The payment to Dr. Howard P.
Venable is for his land and partially completed home. Work on the house was stopped in 1956 when Creve Coeur sought to condemn the land for a park.
Dr. Venable filed a cross-claim charging racial discrimination.
The St. Louis Court of Appeals _ upheld Creve Coeur’s contention for all of them.
to St. Pot Tomorrow
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sixteen senators wlU wear special ties Thursday to mark St. Patrick's Day and their own greenness.
The sixteen are freshmen senators. The wife of one. Sen. Frank E. Moss (D-l/tah), has prepared green, continental-styled bow-ties
TRICKS OF THE TRADE — A three-year-old bull, still wearing the matador’s cape over its faoh, tosses apprentice bullfighter Cuno Montes into the air during a practice session in a Madrid
ring recently. After throwing Montes, the bull turned and charged the apprentice again. Montes was gored in both thighs.
Motherwell Convicted, Death Penalty Sought
DOWNIEVILLE, Calif. fAP)-Copvicted of one murder Tuesday night, Larry Lord Motherwell today found himself the target of prosecution efforts to send him to the gas chamber by also proving he murdered his second wife and defective child as well.
The 42-year-old Washington, DC., construction worker was convicted by a Sierra County Jury murdering Pearl Putney, widow, in 1958 after chauffeuring her across the country on a "last fling ” tour.
Shortly after the Jury of nine women and three men brought in the verdict and had been tpld to PAW PAW «i-The legality ofiretum Monday at 10 a.n
Michigan's system of fee payments to justices of fhe peace faces a test in Van Buren County Circuit Court.
k W A
Allegan Attorney Dwight Chee-vcT Tue.sday said -he plans to appeal Justice ftlenn B. Huey's denial of a motion to dismiss a speeding charge against Francis T. Rowe o( Allegan.
Oieever conlrnda In his motion that Rowe ramot receive n lair trial under n eourt ayatem In which the Judge la peld on a tee
termine Motherwell’s sentence-death or life imprisonment—his co-prosecutors announced they
dered his second wife, Sarah, and mongoloid child. Heather.
A half-dozen witnesses would be brought from Frederick, Md., said]:
Justice Huey denied the motion Monday at Paw Paw on grounds that Justices are paid oply for their service and therefore could not be prejudiced, j	♦	k	♦
I Van Buren Prosecutor Meyer ; Warshawsky, who argued the case I for the people, declared he also be-I lives Justices should receive ! salary rather than feet lor every ' arraignment.
FINAL CLEARANCE
aisted he was innocent. No direct evidence was produced that he killed Mrs. Putney, or that anyone today knows precisely how or where she died. Her bones were found Aug. IS, 1959, scattered along a log^ng road 27 miles east of here in ’Turner’s Canyon. ’The skull was identified through dental work.
His defense consisted of his claim that he did not know what happened to Mrs. Putney after Aug. 15, 1958, when he 'left her in Las Vegas, Nev.
LAKRY .MOTHERWELL
body we found in a pet cemetery near Frederick, Md., Nov. 19, 1958, during the search for Mrs. Putney. Motherwell said the child had strangled to death June 24, 1954, and that he’ had buried
Dlst. Atty, Gordon I. Smith and j" ® A grand jury re-Asst, State Atty. Gen. Lynn Comp-	indict him.
’The Jury deliberated houi-s—not counting three hours oat for lunch, dinner and re-reading of evidence—after Judge Warren Steel charged them to return one of two' verdicts; acquittal or first degree murder,
*	♦ A
They were considering S mass of purely circumstantial evidence in the month-long trial. Mother-well admitted he had been a liar, a con man and a Lothario but in-
TO.PRE8ENT EVIDENCE "The burden of proof no longer will be upon us. We merely ppe-sent it (the evidence) to the Jury and let then^ decide,” said Compton.
Motherwell’s chief defense attorney, John T. Reges of Washington, Indicated an appeal would be automatic.
’We didn't expect to win at this levfl,” he told a reporter.	'
•‘It wasn’t what I expected,’ said Motherwell as he was IH away to a suicide watch at the county Jail.
I
Legislature Says Thank You to Its Blind Storekeeper
I^SING IF-The Legislature! paid tribute yesterday to the man] who has run its "general store”! the past 20 years.	J
Bill Chase of Evart, who sell#| candy, cigarettes, newspapers nnd| other items from a counter on thej second floor of the Gapitol, also/ marked his 72nd birthday, | Bill, who is blind, couldn’t hold back the tears as he w’as escorted into the House chamber to a standing ovation and given a braille' wrist watch and a copy of a reso^j lution commending his long and friendly service.
Gerrymander is the term usedj in rearranging election districts i to give unfair advantage to political parties already in power. |
Ready Mod*
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FABRICS
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His second wile, Sarah, was found floating lace up in the batli-ol their aydesdale Place apartment In Washington on Nov. 8, 1953. The death was ruled accidental.
A *' A
Motherwell was left with their mongoloid child. Heather, whose
SPRINOAIBE
Tha very mood and manner of Spring b reflected in thb superb lightweight ftir felt. Note the always flattering telescope crow&-_ Note, too, the smartly contrasting woven band. And—the drve bow highlighted with a flight of swallows in antiqued silver. Your choke of Spring shades.
•13.60
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 16. I960
GM's Training Hours " Add Up to 10.5 Million
Stock Mart Up for Fourth Day
Hm fonowtac u« tep prtoes oovcrinr atim it locally grown to the Fanner’il
NEW YORIf (»- The itoCk market was higher for the fourth straight aeaaion in moderately active trading early today.
Steels, motors and oils wer tive but only slightly higher.
★ ★ ★
Gains of fractions to a point or so outbalanced losers In the same range.
MMm^5*nick*)yAuto,
Has Broken leg'
Market by growers and sold by (hem ip wholesale package lotii. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markeu, as «t Monday.
Detroit Produce
ranrs
tn. ..........JJ OJ
spiSS Mbsumb. w. ...........
Anntrc. Mrlntn»h. bu....... Jt*
SoplM. Northcn Bpj. b«...
advances ruanisg to 2 « poiatn.
A steady to higher tone . vailed among drugs, tobaccos, airlines, rails, utilities and aircrafts. Rubtors and nonferreus metals were irregular.
^Fractional gains were posted for the top four steelmakers and the big three auto manufacturers. American Motors eased.
Among chemicals. Union Carbide, Eastman Kodak and DuPont were all up about a point.
Motorola paced the “gUmor" stocks with a S point Jump while Polaroid and Texas Instruments added 2 points or so. Amphenol Borg rose more than a point In active
tsasW:.;;:-.;:'.-.:-..;;;-.-.-.;.'
Csbbsss. a*d. bn...................
CsrraU. loppsd. bo................
csiwT. rassTesa ..................
ROrMTSlIttll. |A. .......
Ubks. des. behs. ................
OBloBS. drr. M-lb. bsi ...........
Pirstoy. Root, dot. bchi. ........
POMKlDO	PsS. dos. .........
Porinlpt, .*4 bu..................
.roUtoo. 4#-lb. bos ........-.....\I
Rsduhna. Blitk, Vb btt. . ..^...1.
Rhubarb bo RHUbojVb. I Bqusth. Bubbara, nu. Turnipt. toppod, bu. .
DETROIT LIVESTOCK
DETROIT, Msrch IS (aP»-Cstllo—... _. —„--
b.“*r‘. riuir«!d«lye*te«»ay. •«onllng t« ponce. ^ ---- -'.Uvo .itesdr
modorotelrl
ocUvt, tuUy itosdy: iitimy and lUndordfiaui mlted onaribgi ll.MXM.M; loud svtrsst|Ent.
The snarfcet was higher from the start with the ticker tape late briefly as opening blocks was traded. Then trading simmered down.
The business news bsckground remained so-so and Wall Street analysts saw the market as undergoing a consolidation phase alter the recent drop.
★	★ w
Up fractionally were Texaco, New York Central, United Air Lines. American Tobacco, Merck, Anaconda, American Telephone and PhUco Pfizer gained more than a point.
«Goodrich fell about a point. Small losers Included Kennecott, American Smelting, Southern Railway and U.S. Gypsum.
Opening blocks included: Bruns-wick-Balke up % at 55% on 4,100 shares; Standard Oil (New Jersey), up % at 45 on 4,000; and U.S. Steel, up % on 84 on 3,"
Reverses Ruling
“hos« —Miibu^**#: buUhdfi itrons.lE. Kennetl, M8 Union HaH.jp »	«»■	^
“ in Traffic Case
NO. 1 I 14.TI: IBUIX U.7B-1I.7S'.
New York Stocks
ripurts b Admirti .
m AlrUn m Cun .. ID Ciun m Mard]
. 30.1 III Crk Coul . 73.3 Jo- ■—
. 03 Jo . 17.3 K<
. 34 Kl_______
. 30.1 Klmb
Fred L. Riggs, 29. of 165 W. Rutgers St, was in satisfactory ccodition today at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital after being struck by a car last night.
The world’s largest business coriMration is distinguishing Itself in v^tionai education.
Figures disclosed today show that General Motors has provided 10,500,000 hours of specialised hi-struction for its personnel since the opening (tf its first trtkiiog center In 1953.
Mare thaa 20.NI fsmployes re-rflwd iBstractloB last year at tim Detroit Ceater In sales train-lag. aerviee mechaairal training, management tmihiag and other
summer to attend classes dealing with latest technkiues. They return to their classrooms with up-to-date information to include in their lesson plans.
The Oakland County Science Teachers Assn, wad among the many teaching groups to glean material and information from GM for instruction purposes in their respective schools in this ares.
Driver of the car that hit Riggs was JoAnne FOlsom, 19, of 472 N. Saginaw St.
A * A
She told Pontiac police she Just dimmed her headlights and didn’t see Riggs walk in front of her. The accident happened on W. Kennett road near Baldwin avenue. Riggs suffered a broken
leg.	"
News in Brief
Thieves yesterday broke Into Fe-ce’s Maiket at 331 Rockwell St., and stole $86 from the cash register, it w* reported to Pontiac
Livestock
about $5 were taken by thieves who broke into the A&W Root Beer Stand. 218 S. Saginaw
activitleB.
’The corporation operates 30 training centers in cities throughout the nation. They are manned by full-time instructors who ^ the latest equipment in training aids.
Personnel from service dealerships attend sessions also, ’They return to their own dealerships teach others what they learned in repair techniques at tlw training centers.
♦ A A
Dealer service, managers meet at the centers to discuss technical and management problem^.'
In addition, the training centers provide instruction for servicing GM’s non-automotive prodnots, such as household appliances, marine engines and "off the road" diesel-powered equipment.
A A
____ school and vocational
school teachers are invited each
EBmmafe Sale. Stevens
-	•»nd^ISArd|Th0t8. 10 to 12. Exchange 8tmt|
Adv. I
Kentaekv Veterans Meetlag. «N
______, VFW No. \m anxIUary
iwt sstMOQ »»•-',	371 E pike. 9 oolock
I. MMtiy itbbdy Friday and SAttirday.
Oiganlte nnamace sale. T««ih Cotter. Uke Orion. Prt. A Sat.
r-*dV.
Ttbltri 3t.MK3t.N. utility m4 itMidkra lt.t»-3t.M; down to 14.00.
Staoop—bblAblo 3.000; tlsastater Tory aMIto: noitly ^ lnsb«
]rmb?%ff3%J.u‘*N..“l! f nlld
Match Called Off
0 loldt Chotei Atid	®	1 I .	1^
on «ieA.eAiA.	CtabnU^M LJaawA* ITmaa
Power Failure Hits 700 Homes
Cable Blowout Affects Central-Eastern Part of Pontiac
Electricity was cut off from more than 700 homes in the central-eastern portion of Pontiac yesterday for 22 minutes. ''Consumers Power Co. reported the cable failure at 1:40 p.m, Power was restored at 2:02 p.m.
E. L. Karkaa. district maa-ager. said the local office of the aUUty company received 18* caUs from home owners dmriag
"Many more borhes were affected, of course," said KarVau, "but by the time most people noticed, their power was reston^."
Karkau said the source of the trouble was a cable blowout on 10-foot pole on Irwin street near Sartford street. Normal deterioration was cited as the cause.
Poultry and Eggs
DETROIT eODLTRT Uv« pouiwy.
as Fighter Murts Knee
CLEVELAND »-The hoRvy-«rolght boxlRg match betwMB Mike Dedohn and Zora Falley. ■cheduled far tonight, wna onBed
Hrory type ti(
_________3S-M; J*sht typy ^4
la- heavy type reaetere. .ever I IM.. 34-31: heiTy type brollere er trre|:*. *•* Ibt.. whltee 32-33: Barred Roeki 32-31.
DETROIT ROCS
DETROIT, klarch 15 (AT)—tts Prt»*
Raid per doien by flret recelveri de-to Detroit In oaeee Ineluded.
** *“rade”****rncludlns
43-44; txtra
White grade A Jumbo 43-44: txtre irge sa-*4: lerie 34-43: medium 37-I: email 37-34: nade B large 37-44: rowne Jumbo 43-44; iredt A extra large
feil’iChrYsler Divisions
. 44.4 1
ickh AIre
;l|.{Shift Ad Agencies
(D— Two car divi-
. 31.7 Lone 8 C-..
’	? Lorlllerd	___
: 43 4	«r ;; Js Sislons or oirysler Corp. said today
IMS	U lel'lfhey arc changing advertising
• ** ♦ Monian ci> .. 44.51 agencies effective with the 1961 : S i M»»‘	model year.
Larry AIUbb said DedohR had rolBjored his right knee.
Ike ChestiNit of New York and Leroy Jeffrey of Detroit wUI meet la a lAroond featherweight boot as a replaoiteeiit.
The replacement Bght will be nationally televised (C^ 7 It p.m. E8T).
Cuba Gets U.S. Protest
HAVANA (D - The Cuban government has received a formal U. S. protest against Prime Minister Fidel Castro's implication that American officials were responsible for a munitions ship explosion in Havana harbor March 4.
Circuit Judge Says! Drayton Plains Man Not Guilty of Crime
A lower court traffic violation conviction against a plant protection officer has been dismissed in Oakland County Circuit Court.
He was charged with making an improper left turn, resnlting in an accident with a deputy sheriff.
Jndge Clark d. Adams reversed Waterferd Township dastleo Pat-rick K. Daly ■aylRg. "That la my
The reveraal favored Cb^nl J. Kampsen, 36, of 2018 Denby St., Drayton Plains, who faced a $15 fine, $10 costs or five days in jail. Kampsen, an employe of Pontiac Motor Division, appealed the conviction.
- 13! i
'	• Mueutr or 4..
I ••••	2??	oyp*	•
-	n NT Ctaitil .
audS Cb......*1.7 ^ n a El .n
Burroushf	wAlr ls
Calum OR ..	31J	*!,
■	MS	M 3
Caoltal Alri .. 14.3	Da_ ... ^37.4
h
capital Alrl ..
Clark Buulp .. S3 Kf.'l’*. ®
cS5f;li; M ■ Jhlll r,t
He also sued for $50,000 damages in Circuit Court against Deputy Donald Kratt whose sheriff's car struck Kampsen’s on March 7 i Kampsen was turning off Dine highway near Silver Lake road into a gas station. He’s suing for injuries resulting from th^ collision.	/
I The suit is still p4nding^
Death Notice
coouaa. isarch is. iis4. ken-naib LaTtra*. 4741 Andtrioorlll* Kd., WaUrtard: aga 51: Mlorvd
Coombk. dear fathar of Ray. Robert. Jane and Janice Cooj^t: dear brother of 5lri. Ray (Marjorie) Keel. Mra. Cenalee (Violet) CeaU and Vincent Coembk. Fu-ntral nrraafementk art pendtnt
I by the CoaU FuaezaJ Home. Dray-teo rutnk._________________________
DORAN. MARCR 14. ISS4. KDMUm. 31S RUkaeU; afe 74: dm father of MeroM Derail ^ biarrUleld: dew brothtr of Mri. Frank (Margaret) RojMrte. Frank. Lawren. Wlimer. MUet and Ella Doran. Recitation of tbe Roeary Wiu be T^reday et g p m_at the Hantoon Funeral Heme. Funeral aerTlea wtll be held Friday. March IE at 14 a m. from St. Vincent do Fdul Church.* Interment In Oak Sill cemetery. Mr. Doran «lll lie In ktata at Iht Huntoon Funeral
fnaxsaoti.uAMcn i4rit«TWc7 torla. 33 barkhuret; age 44: dear mothar et Mre. Belie Moerehouee, kiri. Kthal Detra*. Mra Paari Miller, Leelfr. Earl. Caraon. Charlea. Alfred and Oeorga Fergu-aon; dear alater of Mra. Ida Parr and Mra. KUen Bamaa; she aur-Tired by 33 grendchildren and 33 grtat-srandonlldren. Funeral aervlce will bt held Friday. March 14. at 1 p.m. tram Farmpr-Shorer Funeral Heme with Her Robert Neftbr otflclattad. Interment In White Chnpel Cemetery. Mra. Farguaoi “* - ..................•'*
M AX WELL. MARCH IS. 1W., Charlea J.. 3744 Llncdlnahlre. Wa-tarlord Townahlp: egt 37: baloved ton et Mra. Leatcr Ooudreeu: dter brother of Kalaay V.. Don-old. Richard and Robert Igexeell. Mra. William (Francet) Miller and Mrs. Robert (KaUileenj^LIttl^
TTiuradey, March 17, et 3 pm. from Bparka-Orlftla Cbepyl Military sraToalde tervlea at Whlu
Chapel Cemetegr.__________________
WHITE. MAftCB 14. 1444. EUZA-both L., 1144 R. Hickory Ridge Rd . MMIard; dge 41: beioTed wile of Tad White: baloTod daughter of Mr. and Mrt. Cheater Allen: dear mother of Mrt. Robart Petenberg. Mlu Martha White end Mra. Larry Wlndtt; alto aur-—Tad by two grandchildren. ISi-iral lerTlcc wUl he held Friday.
Tired by neral t—
March
Muiord‘'Vith“iUv.'d'.'w
..... Mra. WhlU wUl lie In
Blchnrdaan-Blrd Fu-
nertl Ro
neral Home. MUford
___CRTd Of Thuks I
WE WISH TO THANK OUR MANY
Taxi Operators From 12 Cities in State Organize
LANSmiJ W — Taxicab operators from h dozen Michigan cities organized yesterday with Alfred Diaz, president of C^ker Cab Co. Detroit, as presldeKt,
A y A
Ckrl Bachanan/lobbyist for local bus firms, was named manager of the new group.
He said 14 tab companies were present or represented by proxy, Including companies in Kalamazoo, Jackson, Ann Arbor, Grand Rap ids and Lansing.
Tbe groi$ will be known as the Taxicab Oj^ratori of Michigan.
National School Clinic Draws Leaders to Flint
/ FLINT (l’PI)-Civic leaders and educators from -19 states were gathered here today for the second National Community School Clinic.
C. S. Mott, noted civic leader and financial backer of the community school idea, wap to address the closing session of the clinic.
Dodge.Division will move both its car and truck accounts “ Batten, Bartdn, Duratine 4c bom (BBDO). The DeSoto and DeSoto-Vallant Division wiU move to N. W. Ayer k Son. which alteady handled Pljimouth.
500 Arrested in Crackdown Against Sit-l/i Demonstrators
pirr” 14! 1 Republic I
:;:r
... M4
4S.4 iMfeVarst';; 31 8 Fub ... 14	81. Reg Pap . 44 4
fcdi. «:♦	"r** •’
. 13.1 Rayn Mat . 14.4 Ray Tab ... ■“ Royal Dut .

i j Sou Ry*^
The Dodge car account, estl-mated at about 17 million' dollars — annually, has abeen handled-since 31J11952 by Grant Advertising. The ’ Dodge truck account, with about four million dollars in billings annually. has been handled by Ross Roy since 1940.
Harry Chesebrough, general manager of Pljmouth-DeSoto-Valiant, said the move to a single agency "is being made to give greater effectiveness to the division’s advertising and promotional efforts."
EotW Miu ... Bou ny .... oi.o
i* IB-I
Pri.lfS I K3 8i !■" :■!” „	. -n
S' SS SI S S’lFrees State'PrOEram
Fort Mot .... 74 atCTona JP ... 34 4	I
Preop Sul . .. 23.7 stud Pack .	-	*
PruoB Tra .. 37.3 gun Oil -
UardMr Don . 44.4 gwlfl A Co .
S”	O** -
g" Pi*"*™ ■ H * Tkkaco oin Fda .	! ^ M 4 Tex O. Sul .
Oan Mlila . . 3S;7 TaXlroo .
O T»l a El .. 73.5 Timk R Bear 54 3 Orn Tlmo ca.. .lll.l Traniam«r .
Oan Tiro ..fd.l Underwood
Oeneioo	34.3 un Carbide ..i*.
S&W*.:::: S:!	....
SSlfa. :::: B,
Indurt Ray ... If.3 Wcat4 SI
■ SiJ vni‘mn“*‘c(»' Ml
ail! Woolworth ... f|.3 *Jg * Tale R Tow . 31.7 * I Tnfal ShAT 114.4 I Zenith Rad..-----
Wotk Ato Month *^A<4 Year Ago 1454-40 Rlfh 145«-44 Low 1454 Klfh 1454 Lon
101 4 334 4
43.4	347 4 41.7 3143
73.4	114.4
A.M. AVSRAOra
ROW.JONEB II 34 tnda 415.M up . ..
34 ralla 144 34 up 4 34 15 nuto 47 54 np 4 33 41 aloeka 344.11 up 4.41 vohua# u 11 a m. 444.444
,	KTROrr STOCK!
,	IC. J. Nephler Co.)
PItnfta attar doelmal polnti 1 Blob:
Allan BMe. * KqnlP. Co.* Baldwin Rubbar Co*..
Rota Otar C*.*.........
o. V on R chom. Co...* Bowtn KIm. Mtr. CO •	.
PentnauUr H. Prod. Co.*
The Pro^iMt Co.*.......
Hudy Hfr^ Cd.*^........
Toledo Bdlaon Co..
>ro etthtc Low Ndon
3?" A
S4A 374 1.3	1.4
13	13.4
if 73 14,1 it*
d aakp:
SouMeld Council OKs Proposed Xway Route
By Hm Asaodated Preta 1 students an^arrested 350 of them. More than 500 Negroes have Ml been arrested in the largest mass	rfituti under $10
police craekdown since demon- bond
The blanket	I connection with sit-ins at 10 downed ^ state	town cafeterias. The Negroes
of Colored People to ®'^'^‘^^J^“*|each. The white youths irere given police were engaging in s‘rong-L_ arm. fascist-like tactics.	^
* w	ARRFJiT KING’S BBOTHER
Police at Orangeburg, S.C.. used Among those arrested was the
Ar g"s aS fiS hies to quell R*v- A. a WUltam KWjl a brmh-
an estimated 1.000 demonstrating of I*** Rfv. Mart n Luther Kin^ Jr.. Negro integratiivi leader and exponent of passive resistance.
Arrests also occurred in other South Carolina cities and at t. Augustine, Fla. The City Commission at Tallahassee. Fla., scene of a • recent near riot, warned "It will not tolerate gang Action or mob rule by Negroes while persons."
Climaxing a two-year struggle
to save m cHy 9ZM.0M. U an
decUian had be«« rnacbed by April 1 the eHy wmiM have had to pa.v that sum toward the multibillion ddlaF expreaeway project.
and refusal to leave premises when asked to do so—provisions of an act approved at the recent ses-sesion of the Georgia Legislature.
In addition 18^ of them were charged under a law originally drawn to halt Ku Klux Klan activities and an old unlawful assembly act.
♦ A A
After the arrests Georgia's Gov. Ernest Vandiver Issued a statement saying that if for any reason local law enforcement fails, the state will provide any forces necessary to protect "the peopli their property and to preserve 01 der.”
... . .. -,.U. ON
___	4 1S4S Marcury Club
CouM. Banal Bumbor MWA17443M will
ba (Mid 4t upbUe a»l4 »t 3..... *-
thuf, W»rr4B. Mleh.. thbt a wbart lha fahlela la atorod ----^	Mm 14. to 14
PUBLIC SALS -
_______ _ ____________ PONTIAC. -
Dow. Banal 154P73SM. PubUe aalt to b* bald Martb 34. 1440 ot	• <".
405 S. Soflnaw at.. F^tUe^ Mlchli|M.
sis
Morob 15, If. *44..
IBLIC BALE OF 144 (hiel* No. VCITFIOOfSl
ith Southfield bver alignment of an east - west expressway route, the State Highway Department is now tree to complete its Five-Year Metropolitan Expressway program east of Grand River.
Announcement was made yester-April census is expected to put day by State Highway CommiiikMi- Southfield well over the 30J100 pop-John C. Mackie's executive j ulation line tor Ahe ‘first time, assistant In^ng J. Rubin, fol-1 Cities with populations under 30.-lowing the Southfield Council's ap-'OOO are exempt from paying to-proval of a proposed leg of the ward state Wghway construction, route night before last.	AAA
The expressway, to be known
March 14,' If. '44.
The Orangeburg arreits camei (,otice of after police tried to break up	„
protest march by about l,000|™f,r“iaiiVhfTr(Sat sa*#^^ Hoiiy.”Miehi"
T. and Claflin Colleges. Tbe stu- Usn.
dents refused to disperse. Fire'___________
hoses were turned on about 300 of|	of^van
them and two tear gas canisters' od lurch f. loso. tb« citr council tor were exploded.	IjSiM {I'd h.*’'”"
WWW	Thia Ordln'anea U om to rtnumber 4r
_.	_______.... I *u„. «k. Those arrested—about one-thlrdbifVac*i»rutf'oi Ordinsoco No. od 1
.-.««« if .rrl-tli m Hi®' ‘hpm women-were herded in-	david e ™toni
to a yard near the courthouse. |	MorS lo^^llio
The Rev. H. P. Sharper, a Flor-|
ence Baptist irfinister and presi-| __	____
dent of the South'Carolina NAAGP i ^onjiarch’OoM; ‘*1*
The way was eased for tbe City CSHRcU when the filctmay dapartmeat came np with coni-pl^ proposed allgnmeRt of tbe expressway throngh ftonthfleld. The CbilncU could not agree on okaying tbe department’s pnb posal before knowing where the expressway from Inkster road to Greenfield road would cut through see It pasasd Lobser road.
They received final word on just in time for the Council meeting, and approi route even tbqugh the issue was not on the regular agenda.
Their' aettoa came ia
that appeal to federal agencies is as Interstate 696. will cut across our last resort.’"
Southfield along 10%-MUc road. | >n,e Atlanta nia relalively smaU sector st	described
the over-all ront^ls expected to cost approslBBRtoly $22 milltsa.
conference, .aid that because ofi‘V„,S‘y,.“'47*'"'“
fascUt-like tactics" T""	*• »"•
peace officers "we conclude
When complete. Interstate rill connect with the F^rmingtot-Brighton expressway near Hager-ty road and with the Edael Ford ex^esmvay in Macomb County.
By June 1962, the Highway Department expects to have all-ex-
largest
simultaneous sit-ins yet staged in tbe South. The protests were held at cafeterias in the sute Capitol, City Hall, the Courthouse, .in two ■ are a num-'
her of federal agencies, at ^ railroad atatiohs, two bus stations and a variety store.
FROM OOIXEGES
,_______. routes connectii* De-j Many of those taking part came
tratt vrith Lan^. Grand Rapids, from the dty's six Negro col-Flint, Saginaw, Bi^City, the Mack-ileges. All the Negroes werf iaae Bridge and Sault'Ste, Marie.icharged with' dibiMderly conduct
, li
______COUNTT, MICRIOAN
Notlaa «t baairng on Maisa Afanua apaclal •aaaaamant roll.
Notlot U harabr flxan thst SpteUI Aaaaaamast R41I No. H. In tha amount of f7.14A44. lor tha Improvrmont ol Mtlga Atanu* troB) Saahabaw Rons Baat to tha ons M HR,a.A^«^^£?J.n^^.ln
HaS. %5'
tha 3l(t iK
m that tl Is tto ; Str4«t (I
(0 axpericncad, «hi< - -hlldren. (full tl
a for b
SPuaV
lino rurnianeo(. ni.rm.nmrn,mi NO DRINKINO: PERMANENT.
Call Mra. E*lly._JO_V5447._
die iENCH HANDS. MACHINE haada. Daxo or alghu. Orortlsit and bonettu. Mid Votoa Tool * -•"* CPjJ13444S Talasraph Rd. ELDERLT SiNfiLB klAN FOR 06b l)Mt, -Moro tor bona than wafoa. n 4-423S. Call BMrnUisf._ ^NiSR.'lRUB'OR CUBAN, EX-parloncod onlj ganaral house-—........- in. astaii fasilly. Ml
work, llva
H44S.______________________
Front I'Ind Alignment
Exparltncod on CbrTiler preduett. RnmniUr-DaUna, dirralor-Dodst-Ftrmeuth. 1041 N. Ilatn, RoA-oator. Aak ter Mr. Frallck, Sorrlca
^KWe
0^. "mo"4.745?*^ orbit "iSaa', Ini.. 3S3S M-44. Eaat Rlfhland. Im Ruaa Reader.
Help Wanted
' MECHANIC
Rxperlencad on Chrvaler produeta Raramler-Dallaa. cfiryak-Plymouth.
ryal»r-Dod«»-
ny lUlf IS444 • awwn	M®ID. Rothf
eaUr Aak lor Mr. FraUck. SmtIco
ot lympathf osUndad .. .
In. our recant baraaxomtnl. In tha lota at our aon R fattier. Duane D. Monro*. Bpoelal Thank» to the Rax. Fxaneta L. Myera n Tha aingtr. Mra. Clara Deere A ehlldran of Dwant D. Monroe
In Memorlam 2
he care of Him, a and me.
«lfa, Geneva
ik UIViNO'MEMORVTdpnijER; trndt M. Cla)(ton, «ho pkaatd away March 14, 1464.
You bid ua net lartwall.
You aald soodbxt to none.
Your lexlDf imart bad caaaad
Baloro «t knvw you vara lona.
dren,_and irj^ehlldrta._____
IN MXM(6rT of our dear wifa. mothar and grandmother. Mary B. Thompaon. who paaatd away March 14. IfOk.
Nothing aan oxer take away.
The loxo a heart holda dear. Fond mamorlai llnttr every day. Remembrance kotpa her near. Sadly mltaad by huaband Ltonard K^^^’TOompaon, ebUdrta and irand-
BOX REPLIES At 19 R.m. Today there i fvere repitos at Ihs Preaa I otfiew ia
Funeral Directorg 4
COATS
____ TONBIUL ROiqL
Draylpa Plaina	OR >11W
Donelson-Iohns
TlMushtlul aarxiea ____
Voorhees-Siple
FUNERAL HOME
dHbulnaea Sarvterjnm *r Usior
' ____________________*
4 CEMETERY LOTB IN WHITE Chapal. aall or tradt lor lata m(ael car. PL 3-1447___
Help Wanted Male 6
ATIATIOM CORPORATION HAS oponlDS for ahaat metal man, A R P raochaolo and cleaner and
moebanlco he^er. OR 3-1314__
BARREN AVAILABLE '
FE 4-4467.
cook — HOUiiEEEPER - CaAe-taker couple. Balarv 5340 mo plua good food; eomlortabic email lurnlihed heated apt. with lelev)-alon. kitchen, bath, telephone, elic-
HAVE EBTABLISHBD CUBTOMERS. nwd aeloan>«» 5 hours dally 1134 vpakly guaranteed Muat be
----i--* under 40, Mr'- "*—'
del car. phone
___ time OR 3-451_______
iFaN. iETWEEN 35 AND 45 xtara of Mt, Tor eaieo and terr-ice Doaltlon Coxerlng Oakland with traniportatlon (umlihed. plua other benepta. Apply Mr. Brown. 148 N. Saginaw. Pontiac. Mich. MECKANIC FART ' TIME ' FOR
enead. Bxonlofo and waak onda. BeondU Taiaco Talairapb at
ifAltoaER^NDliiaWrA^NT 5IAN-aoer. Large xnlume retaU food. Needed Immediately. Reply Fao-
1 Praia Box 67
MAN
to oorxlco ouitomira ( llahod rouU. Muat haxi
areaa. Fpr Intarxlaw
m Standard Time, to roxlt tl ai&aammt roll and to baai aayi Llona thereto
I notice fixtn by order of the' ahip Board.	i
"*^'*“'“7A&i*?.ErriRLm
W.ter^rd^Tow^lj) de^l
llahod ra knovlaidf roundlni
eall^^ ______________________
IflLL HANDB. BENClI'flANDe. External grinder. Muat have tool •hop expoxionco and toola, Btoady employmoAt with eitabllahed firm. Apply In person. N. A Woottvorth. Company, ISdO Bait Nina MUa lUad. ^rndal*. jllchl-
Ttte "Answer to
YOUR. PROBLfeM: Want Ads! To sell, jcnt, hi*,,i.t’5 FE 2-8181.-
Mill Operator
HcIpJWBirted Fiemak^
PART-TIME
Nead i*xoml women I* «empl*4s preaant ataff in aalaa ofiloa 4 boura dally. Per appointment call FE 4-S440.
PIANO PLATER '	^	^ .
Horey'i Ooll and Country Club.
VX>4^ T .tom BH	FVkmmsiPCA
*CY*.‘.Td
Id corp-
OFFICE
MANAGER
Needed at once for on* of PonUac’a neweat leadiniau-tomobile deHefahlp a Pie-rieui auto experience dealre-able but not neceiaary. Liberal componaaUon company
benellU. APRlLi®}** -V. ^2’
LUOTD m6»R8.	331 8.
Bajlnaw. FE_5AU1:__
Outside "Order Dept,
Cair MrOorranii. PE 4A143 bo-
country Club, VaxS Mt Rd . 0« Commerce
Rd EM 3-4136_________________
PARTrTI5if rWORK	, *
tn 4 Earn 4144 to 4134 weexiy. Lead! furnlahed. FI 3-5437. ___ PIANO
■	part-time
A call now may enable ynii earn pax checki like thaae FART TIME ItlRET Ifl" OW ".TL
!i; jr*
IS! ir !	.........
111 2Si i~<;
(OT 'iwi ''OT'iiir* t*<-^ Vi?
work Id eichwitf lor Wf hipp/'to'^help^y-Ju T*t aUrled Since all ol t)»m work In to*
p m. OR 3-0433 or FE 5-3343___
" PART TIME
........0 dralum^; caH Mr.
Corrlveiii. Redlortt Ikon Wotk,
- OR^-4531.__-__ 1________
SA1-K.SMAN
We win hire on# ngtreaalve experienced automobile aaleainan to remplete our lalea forcr Preaeot-ix our laleamen nee aar-‘— “
"wilIoh fontuc-cadillac 1354 N Woodward	JMrmlngham
SALESMAN
OAKIAND COUNTY AGES 27 - 45
HERE'S THE JOB WE OFFER' (li 43 MO (Ital year bonua 131 CommiMlona plua bonua, should exceed 510.000 flrat year.
(3i Lifetime opportunity. No afe tarmlnatlon.
(4) Thorouih training at National Balai Training School Salary and capanaaa paid while attoodlng this ichaol.
14) No ahortaias No sisck partoda.
MUTUAL OF OMAHA
have ear, and be able to provide Tolorenooi. Bxpcrltnood preferred. _Call FK 4-«73 tor appolnts^nt TELEPHONE CANTASSERB AND aalesmea lor building modernlaa-tl^jalOi. PE M344._
W^L rpRESSER. apply MAIN _j;ieaneri,^44f4 Illiabeth Lake Rd WANTED BALESMEN. ALSO TXLE^ phone canvasiors for modernlxa-tlon laloi OR 4j^347.
X-RAY AND“6r LABORAfmiY ....------
fouikr MAN «) workTn "auto parts Store. Must havt drivers Hcanaa. W 5-1061	__________
^ Hf^p Ranted Female 7
ATOH OFFERS EARNINOB 'FOR proasut Boada and U.a. inxlnn BoiUls for lamllx aocurlty. Be-coma an Axon Reprr«entatlve gnd aam tUs pleasant way. Phone today, ra 1-4604. or write Dray-ton Flalbi P O. Box_41_ BABYSITTBR. If'TO 14, LIOH-T -• bouaework. Live In. UL 3-1477. BARTBltTBR WANTED “ D A Y s'. caU mornlnii 14 to 12 Ft 4-4441
BEAUTY OPEKA I'OK.
Experltpeod. HIgheat w a f a a. ■taadx. Aadra Baautv Baluu. Fuo-
tlae Stale Bank Bldg___
COOK - liOUSEEEEPER - CARE-takar couple. Salary 1300 mo.
Rui (rood tbod; comlortabli ralohod boated apt.
Vloloo, klUben. <baUi. eloclrletty; laundry Must bs fxparltnced. i

bath). Must havt ear. both drive (gasoline lurmaliedl. REFER: ENCB8 No drinking: PERMANENT CalIJMrJ Kelly JO 4.4857 CURB OlHL . FOR ‘ DAY BHirr wanted. Apply at Big Boy Orlvt-In 3444 Dixie Hwy	_
bOlTNTBB OIBL 'KX^EBiENCED lor dry cleaners, eteady. MI S-473J
414 E. Haple. Birmingham.________
CURB WAITRE8B “14 OR"OVER: Super Chief Drtva-ln, Toiagraph near Walk. ______________________
CURB
WAITRESSES
Ted's have ImmedlaU oponlnas for tur<i wallrasaes on night shift. Muai be 14 or over. Apply In per-
Woodward and Square Lake Rd.
blSRWAiSXiR:- FULL TiidH Evz"-mnf work 5171 Dixie Hwy. Dray-ton FlaiBi. Awly In porion only.
ROOM
HOSTESS
I tun
S|^nlni^s I
“ -^ri ol"a ry. AppI
WaJtres
.^xp neesisaif.
TED'S
WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK RD EXPERIENCED SALtSWOMEN FOR qualUy rlilldren'a shop In Bir-mlnahim Ml 7.3344 or UN _3-4460
EXPTXLBPHoKB'CANVAimERa Bvenini work ogly t to » pm. Omiary plui commlTilon For op.
rlnlnient Call PE 4-0571. 4 to p m dally _
EXPERIENCSn WOMAN F O R aclll work, nlghta oxe 35 to-44 Apply, In person only Hairlaon > Orlll	. Perry Bt.
EXPiRrENCBi WAITRESfi FOR
Apply	_	___
OIR'L for OENEriAL 4 DAYH. 435. Itay 3 nights. References.
MA’VlMr
OIRL8 U fO 31, PART TIMI:, cbookf your'own bourn, work from
...............-"-•wllfTa'f;
---- ---------J area Trana-
giortatlm required FE 4-fm. OIRl'oR WOMAN 'TO DO LIONT houiswork and carV ol 3 year _pld child, live In FE 5-3314 BOUSEKEEFER foR FAMILY OF _^adulU, tn_P(mliac _Ma 4-3U4. BOUsEWiVis, rtOrk at~h6me maklni appU. lor dur dept alora,. shopping partlos. .Oxer JCj^ phono. SALARY. CaU Tt
LAbY"liT4«1fiTH 8At.EB~ABTuTY to loam receptlonlit work In photo studio. Salary At - coAlm. Kendales. 14 a^Bagtnahr._ _ _ MIDOLE-AOED '' fiouSEKEEFER" Full ehargt. Working''parents I *-T) 9rlvalo room. 425 week.
r '
REAL ESTATE tacUlUoa And la-
uud	. r^ulred. Call’Tor
Intarxlew. Mr. PartridgO or Mr. ...
lECRETARY Office Baal tereatlng
TELBPHONB BURm work from our olfloo, hou rate plus eemmisalou. FE f-t betwaan lO a m asd 13 no
^ telefhone' wore
<nr Wmtiae 15 ml|«^radlUS. O
_	_ talijhrtow.
tilephonk Dxrr. imo oto
ganlted Need compaUnt lady to and 3 i- - — •----------------
JB*.*!®®?*_______________
WAITRESS. I4IOHT8. CALL Ol
Krson. Tony's DrIxa-lB, 3744 Au-rn Rd , Utica
I MApla 5-4341 altar
WHira,'%fTDDLEAbEb to baby^ wUh^year aM.^toi^
5 34., caU' after 4 o m at am weakand. OL 1-0I47. Rochaitar.
WANTED BWITCBBOARD OHBt-ator and typist. Lumber or bulM- -Inf aupplT expertODe* dealrobl*. Call lor Interview FE 5-n03. WAiTTHaa. EXPERIINCIO. DAli", n* Bundays Apply In pertoa. Hamilton's _arlll._Orchard Laka.
Wanted 8
M^LUHXD WATKBI9 ROUTI available Full or part time. Ax-sragt 43.4tt Par hr. Iff N. Ferry-
4:34 to H:3da.m.__ ■
PIANO PLAYBR WTD. AT OLD Dutch Mill 4 nlghti a watk.'CsU
Ernie Crnlf FE 3-7344. _J
WANTED - MAN OR WOMAN ianitoral work In country club. Mldol|ht to 4 A M Oood pax. Mutt hava good aaltraneta. R*W Poatlac Frtaa Box 111._
WOOL SPOTTER
i;"M?'VrSr»
_JW.. Fontlae.
Empteymciit AfMiciM 9
...DOCTOR
ASST.
llusi hava a niae appoaraaea and pleaaaol perapnallty, typlbi, an-iwerlnt pbaaa. amb maklbg Ap-pointmrnu. Mlilvatt Smplbymant - 404 Pontiac StaU Bank Bldf FE 6-4237._____________
Work Wanted Male 11
A-l CARFENTXa WORK. RBW Hid rapatr. ra 4-4314.
A-l ALUMINUM SilBHO. MV bPI-cuity, work and material luaraa-Jeed FE 5-3343	________
A-l PAnmifo and' Wau. TaI paring, ra 1-4731. cabinet MAKXR ANb cUlV^ ter. Kitchen a apdelAUp. n
4-5044.______________
CLEAN CUT MAN 33' OdsIRM work, hao ehauflouro llceatt, high tchooW gradukta. wtU Uaxot. n 4-3304._
kind. Reaaoubh
p.m. FK B-44M,______________
IXPliilXNCKD MARDWAikX. pilnt, butldSra tuppllts. sportlnf aoodt man dealroo ataady .work. Good roferancea. n 3-7444.
HKSh school GRADUATE, SOin college. Ohtd to work for low wagts with ohaace for adxtaco-
meat Call OL 3-3433 ______
MAN WAMTb' wall WASIUNO 6ll Odd Jobe of any kind, ra 3A3I7. MAN "aOE 32. NXBD9 WORK BAO^ ly Bxperlanced la gat atatlaa
work Married. FE 4-1467,__
QUIET YOUNG FA'bllLV MAN wuhea to find amploxmtat with mMhanle to furlhar txp. la
YOU NO MAN "23. NEBbs ANY kind of work, badly MY 3*7101
^orlc Wanted Fen^^2
IRONlNOa IN my" HOknrnrZOO bushel Call after 5 FI 4-434S Pleaiie brjni hangerv
1RWINCIB^^43 to^A BUSRXLr"H
”"'n!dan'®*’ ** *	>»Te
uF andTSe:
iilWKtORAFHMQ^m^ retarlal jer^eo EM 3-nS.__
NEAT “wall WABHIIIO. OTISr work. FE_M344_sftor 5 p m^^
WABHINOe AND IRONNOB.""pi« up tnd deUxory. Phono F* 4-4714.
W^AN^^WANTB 'BABY~8rri%Nd
young" 8ecretab"y~wa"nt'b
work Aboxo axeraft In lypowrll-Inf and otono. Exp. la EmUMi-Wiia*" '®"®»P®®«»*4- Caff «
^ Buildinjc ^rvice 1
A-l BRICK. BLOCK AND CKMIN •	Also flreplaeoo^OR 3-44P
A-l carfenterb. rec room
-»at,rfrr.“'?a.ra[.r;^
A I CARPENTTR AND dABIN^T
AdditjMa J- ^lomtaTa - oiT ^ BiDrSm-
A rMA80NR^""BRlcjrA"BU)6
A i"MaiDKNtiAC^MMtil<Si and Industrial Maton aadgi «®"‘'»rtlng. AIM) ttora fraal t "?lJ4	**'*•••
BRiaL l'LOCS. BTONt. ctiSi flreplaoti. Commercial or prixi
-----Oogtractlng FE L4743
■^■pklrriiT ANiSrpCABTiiiiS; Good workmanship at right prl J. Frlek. KM OrtMl______
CABiffmi AND coiiNiiar TO
cement '
JOR 3.617I	*
Tiirti
MfBl. Alamfi acMDskR d
rkfia. Cau BOW for fraa' mata. Alio patonf-' ——— that axtra apace.
Para Building Co.
DRVw^ ‘tAFlI----------
Mg. Free oaUmatao.
dermert'tor
FORMICA
BIT Cbuater, TaalUeik WaUt free X8TIMA"TX on WlRUb -