Th* VY®afh«r U,l. WttIHtr kur«iu )> I'lraslint THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 12a NO. HO ★ ★ ★ ★ I’ON riAC . MK'IIKJAN, TULSDAV, MAY li. 2H LAOK.S GM Executive Picked to Lead Area UF Drive Firm Vice President Is Looking Forward to Successful Campaign “A vice prosidcnl of (Ion-oral Motors Corp. and j^on-oral manaj»or of (IMC 'Priiok ^ (’oacli l)ivi.si(iii, Calvin .1, Wer 1959 and was appointed chairman of the In-duNtrial Croup of the Pontiac Area United Fund three months later. lie has since li United Fund aiut • activities/ icen active in other Pontiac A progres.s report on plans for Ihe Michigan College of Osteopathic Medicine (M(X)M) was given yesterday by Dr. Alan Potts, chairman of the projected (■ollege’.s board of trustees, Dr Polls reported to Ihe Mouse of Delegates of Ihe Michigan Association of Osteopall\)c Physicians and .Sutfji'ons. "Hut on Ihe other hand, it's had news If this Increase is re stiicled to salary improvements only, for it in no way reduces our budget problem. $497,000 ASKF.I) "We asked for $4!»7,0(M). This 2:1 per cent increase in Budget Cuts Recommended » Senate Unit Wants Less for State Building , SAICON, Sou lb Vi(>l Nam (/n A ViH Uouj.; i t’jiimt'nl ()(Tupi(‘(l I b 0 provincial ccnlcr of Souj^ H was killed and six were Cooler Weather Is Forecast for Next Few Days The weatherman promises Pontiac area residents a cool tonight and pleasant tomorrow with sunny skies and warmer temperatures. * ★ * Tonight’s low is expected to drop to 44 to 52. The high will climb to 66 to 74 tomorrow. Partly cloudy and cool is the outlook for Thursday. Westerly morning winds at 10 miles per hour will become southwest at 5 to 15 m.p.h. tomorrow. Fifty was the low reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The mercury had climbed to 65 by 2 p.m. In Today's » Press { NATO Meeting I Wilson warns de Gaulle ^ . on military nationalism - ' - PAGE 2. I Draft Continuance backed- ' volunteer incentives cost- ’ ly -^PAGE 5. Fruit Crop IBad weather has cut deeply into expected har-vest - PAGE 13. Area News 4 ’ Astrology ......... 26 ; . Bridge ............ 26 I Crossword Puzzle .... 27 -I Comics 26 Editorials . . .. .. 6 Markets 19 : Obituaries ........ 20 I L Sports ..........*5-17.1. I Theaters ........... 8 I TV & Radio Programs 27 | t Wilson, Earl 27 ; Women’s Pages 10-12 | If the bill eventually becomes law, the MCOM would be the first osteopathic medical school in. the nation to receive such public aid. State Senate Majority Leader Raymond D. Dzendzel (D-De-troit) addressed the delegates Sunday evening and said he was oTitimistic that the Senate measure would pass. “’File governor recommended we receive $303,000, a 13 per cent increase. This leaves a $194,000 gap. Budget bills intriHluced by the I iiless we are allowed (.ommiili'e went slightly above' moneys to close tliis gap. we mmendations in wi I be forced to operate at a nienlal health and education, dehcil for Ihe coming year, hut cut nearly $8 million from ‘ 1 am .sending letters today building projects, to our state .senators and repre- .senlatives to point out the na- '*’*'‘‘5' ‘"‘’l«dcd a special $4.9 lure of our budget problem and seek help from them. ‘’“‘I"" salaries. "Understand, 1 am not pro- Sen. Garland Lane, D-h’lint, testing the allotment for fa<;ulty Ihe committee chairman, said, salary improvements. These in- however, that most of the build- crea.ses are desperately needed, ing ftioney would probably be wounded when a company of "But this additional $125,000 restored in a supplemental ap- ''’alhernecks shot their way into in no way helps (0 solve our propriation next spring. That f ‘.f, (ommumst-coii- deplorable budget problem." would push total spending in the ^'“Hed villages near the Da In April State Sen. Carl 52 million ang air base. O’Brien appealed to the chair- 9ie governor’s proposals. The Marine casualties w- man of the Michigan Senate Ap- * * * curred in the leathernecks propriations Committee for The bill package left the im- first sci-/,c-and-hold operation more funds to correct OU’s fis- P*’cssion that the state budget since they landed in Viet Nam cal handicaps. closely follow Romney’s two months ago. O’Brien represents Pontiac,except possibly in -pbey occupied the Le My vil-Waterford Township and six I” Primary and secondary lage complex, a trouble spot for aboard landed safely here toother Oakland County town- ^ the Marines and government jay after losing a wheel on ships. PREDICT FIGHT forces where another Marine The committee suggests the All signs point to a pitched Friday, balance of tbe $4,9 million be Senate-House fight over school * * ★ distributed as follows: aid with both sides seeking fig- The casualties raised the total Michigan Tech, $200,000; Cen- ures well above Romney’s pro- of U.S. combat dead in Viet ■al Mwvhinon M^m4U ______1., \Uv»v« 4/\ OnO Will General in Junta Quit? Mjiyor William II. Taylor Jr. i.s ('xpocU'd (0 announce lonifihl that the City Uommis.sion has decided not to appoint a citizens’ committee to study city finances. President to Accept Resignation if Offered 125 Land Safely in Crippled Jetliner SANTO DOMINGO, Domin- The i., slal- ed to meet at R p.m. at said today he will accept the Uify Hall. re.signation of Brigadier Gen. Commissioners considered the y Tessin, arcbfoe of the rebels, if it is offered. question of whelher lo form a Brig, Gen. Antonio Imbert EL PASO, Tex. (4V- An American Airlines Boeing 707 jet airliner with 125 persons takeoff and circling FII Paso International Airport for more than an hour, dumping fuel. Gambling Trial Will Be Moved Iral Michigan, $400,000; Northern Michigan, $152,000; lyestern Michigan, $5OO,O0O; Grand Valley, $80,000; Ferris, $202,000; Wayne, $1,200,000;' Michigan Stale $900,000; and Michigan $900,000. Nam to 372 since December HEAVY CASUALTIES The heaviest American casualties were sufferd in Song Be, a provincial capital near the Cambodian border. Flash The Steren Assembly Club, gambling trial, which had been scheduled to begin today in Oakland County Circuit Court, will be heard later this summer in another county. ANCHORAGE, Alaska (iP-A strong earthquake shook the Anchorage area about 7:38 a.m. today. There were no immediate reports of damage or injury. A change of venue, granted this morning by Judge Stanton G. Dondero, was requested by defense attorney Carlton Roeser two weeks ago because of “notorious and sensational publicity given the case by news media.” posals. Lane, who had said in January that- Romney’s budget was too high, said Monday night that he now thinks revenue may go beyond his earlier predictions. Lane said the capital outlay, or building, cuts should not significantly delay projects but will give the legislature extra months to study plans and watch revenues. The mental health bill proposes spending $101,509,31/ver- Communists groundfire hit Romney. The education bill pro- American propeller-driven (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) IContinucd on Page 2, Col. 7) Spokesmen for the airline said there was no damage to the plane in the emergency landing and no one was hurt. study group at an informal Barreras, president of the junta, meeting last night. said in an interview he knew * * * nothing of Wessin’.s resignation. Several ob.scrvers have sug- reported yesterday by the U.S. gested such a . group be En^bassy as a peace overture to formed, both before the vote on e"™b«s«y „ . . . ... . , said Wessin had reconsidered, a city income tax m March and ★ w * after the propo.sed tax was de- ... , . . As president of the country," icaiej. ^ ^ . Imbert .said, "I should know whether or not he has resigned. A .self-appointed Citizens Com- But if it i.s his wish. I’ll accept mitlee on 'Taxation had urged a d” study of city finances as late as ''^‘^^sin could not be reached. Government forces reoccupied the town under cover of a heavy air attack by U. S. '^Air Force jets, but the Communists dug in along a river n 0 r. t h e a s t of the town. A major battle appeared to be developing. The plane, American Flight 98, took off at 9:45 a.m. (M.ST) when the wheel, one of a cluster of four under the right wing, fell off. Al first it was believed that two wheels were missing. two weeks ago. FORMER DECISION Taylor had said the eommis-.sion would consider the -question at its informal meeting. The decision against a study would appear to confirm the “The question of Gen. Wes-sin’s resignation is a matter between Gen. Imbert and Gen. Wessin,” a U.S. Embassy official said in a statement. The United States has pressed for Wessin’s retirement a.s Airline spokesmen said the landing was attempted after the wheel was examined on the ground and it was decided that the landing could be attempted safely. opinion of some observers that peace gesture towa^rd t h e any study would have to result rebels, whose forces he fought in a recommendation to seek with planes and tanks before more revenue for city opera- the arrival of U.S. troops. HELD RESPONSIBLE The only means of obtaining Many Dominicans held him more tax millage for city op- responsible for the air bombard-eration is through a vole of the of Santo Domingo that took more than 1,000 lives. Col. 3 County Men Cited for Service to State It has not been determined where the trial will be held, but it. won’t be conducted in the tricounty Detroit area, according to Dondero. Dondero said he would contact Michigan Supreme Court administrator Meridith H. Doyle to see if there is a possibility of hold-ihg the trial in the Thumb area or in a county west of Genesee. people. Mo-st observers do not think a millage issue could pass at the polls. , ★ ★ ff ★ In the campaign lor and against the city income lax. Francisco Camaano Deno, proclaimed provisional president by the rebels, has been demanding that Wessin leave the country. The general commands the both sides generally agreed that San Isidro training base 2(1 wereTonS^JltS^s^’dis" T the 'ciirdirnee^more'^^ney! mlles'from Santo'Dom'iio.%n"e tinguished Michigan citizens ^“"'"ship were all presented the annual Michigan! Week igan Foundation. ★ * ★ \ <>f the country’s key military ■k it if Wolverine Fro'ntiersmen observance. Lynn A. Townsend of Bloom- ★ field Township, Mirtoru Yamasaki of Birmingham ahd Wal- ' The presentation was made at an Economic Club of De- The carved plaques were pre-.sented by Edwin 0. George, f 0 r "distinguished industrial achievement strengthening t h e * * " However, income tax oppo- Townsend. Ihe president ot nents leaned toward a hike in ^ 'B"'’.2™'’ the Chrysler Cdrp., was eiW the property tax. Pres,dept Juan ^sch m 196.1. “It’s a matter of finding an empty courtroom in a convenient location for all parties concerned,’’ said Dondero. In having the case transferred Dondero said it would be “extremely difficult’’ to find jurors in Oaklahd County that have no knowledge of the case. The case began Oct. 11, 1963, when State Police raided the Madison iHeights Club and arrested 49 persons. Of these, 21 are to stand trial. Dondero told Roeser he would give him at least two ^eeks notice as to when the trial is economy of Michigan. ARCHITECTURE Yamasaki, an architect, was honored for “distinguished leadership in the advancement of City Commissioners, unanimous on the income tax proposition, opposed jumping property taxes, stating that an income tax would give relief to .Senior citizens and others on fixed incomes. U.S. sources said Wessin sent a letter to U.S. Ambassador W. Tapley Bennett Jr. in which he expressed his willingness to resign from the army for the good of the country. FOLLOWING MEETING MINORU YAMASAKI LYNN A. TOWNSEND WALTER P. REUTHER Opponents of the tax, which beauty in the architecture of was solidly defeated at the,.polls, ® letter was written after America’’ thought that Pontiac’s tax base/,® with Bennett and-Lt. . would continue to increase, “giv- /»«ner, commander The award was given to i„g thb eity its much-needed U S- Marines and Reuther, president of the addej revenue. paratroopers m the Dominican United Auto Workers', for ★ * ★ Republic. “distinguished leadership programs for the betterment of his fellow man.’’ In addition to the three area Reliable sources said the US. men, Secretary of Defense Rob- * Embassy and representatives of ert McNamara and Dr. Emory Announcement of the City the Organization of American-^ Morris, president of the Kellogg Uommis-sion’s decision not to States were-trying, to arrange a ' Foundation, received similar a study committee would meeting between junta chief ^lonors. bethefirstrealbreakinthelmbertandrebelleaderCaam- :~ =sil^efc following defeat of the^ ano, but that Gaamano sn far Also, income tax foes contended that a state income tax would eventually be passed with a rebate provision! for cities. ■ There was no explanation for the general’s change of heart. ■it '' i.. j rwo ilson Warns De Gaulle as NATO Meeling Opens 1,()N1X)N (AIM Hrllishi I’rlnip Minister Harold Wilson opened the North AtlanlU' al lianre'8 annual spring meeling IfKiay with a warning to I’resi deni Cliailrs de (laiille that mil llary nMllonallam Is a dangerouii deliiNlon WIlNon avoided menlliming Ihe I'reneh leader hy name Itnl Ills largel was (lear In llie lor eign mlnlalera Irotn Ihe Ifi na’' Hons of Ihe Norih AlOmllc Trea ly Organi/.alliai 0111 common prohleins on lht‘ hasia of advenlures in mililary nationalism " Wilson, llie leader of a eoioi try will) nuclear |Kover, aSaerl ail tlial there are only two ma |nr nuclear nallons In Ihe world Ihe I lulled Slales aiuf Ihe Soviet Ihiion Willi Ihls he i|own graded llie ninlear jiowei ol Krance and ('omniiinisl China as well a*. Ili Ualn s The inline miiUsler said Ihe keynote of NA TO "must he in leide|M‘ndeiice” and addl'd "Indeed our willingness In HccepI Ihe impliealions ol Inler dependeiu e miisl grow, not dl mlnish, as we work In make Ihe alliance more elfeclive nod bring It into line with ehanging world requiremenls. * COMMON I'HOIlhKMS "There is no greater delusion than Ihe leeling we can solve "The sheer laels ol Iheiniomi eleai weaponiv," said Wilson, "In say nolliliig ol llie hard lessons of economics, means that oulside Ihe Iwo major mielear nations, ilie USA and Ihe II S S It , I here eannol lie a gen liinely independeiil nuclear pow er ea|>al)le of siislaiiiing Iher monuclear war or of providing a globally credible mielear deler- 'iSDAV. MAV II. IIMW enl "And Ihe (‘Heels of mialern niieleai warfare, no less than Ihe reali/.alion lhal isolaliomsni | Is impo.ssitde, even lor Ihe most | Itnweriul, mean Hud no naiion. linwever great, emi Hunk in terms ol going II alone, wilhoni allies and wilhoiil regard In woi ld opinion " WII.SON HACKKI) It e 1 g i a n Foreign Minisler Haul llent'i Spaak, president of Ihe NATO Council, and NATO Secretary (leneral Manlio Bros-io of Italy joined Wilson in calling for a new dedication to unify within Ihe alliance. lli;l)l>I.K ON POLI.IITION Ohio Cov. James A. HiKHles (right) listens |o a remark by Gov. /ieorge Homney of Michigan during a one-day eonferonce yesterday in Cleveland lo discuss wali'i |M)IIuIIoii in Ihe Great l.ak(‘s. Homney issued a eal| for a follow-iip eonfer-enee June 15 in Detroit, Educators Gov. Rhodes Vows Action Soviets Expel Birmingham Area News U.S. Diplonnat Commission Rejects Charge Interference With African Students Development Rezoning. MO.SGOW (AIM Tile Soviet Union hKlay (trderwl (he nupnl sInn of a U S, Negro dlplnmiil on charges lhal he engaged in mill-Soviet aclivKIes among Afrlean sludenis here The U S. Fnilms-sy said Ihe charge was iirompi ly denied Non is D tiiu iiell, a cuKural id I ache whose )ol> llTvolv«sl con-lacls with foreign .sliideids, was accused of activilies im.:ompal ihle with Ihe slaliis of n di|)lo mai " A Soviet Foreign Minis Iry (Ode told Ihe U S Kmhassy here ttial such iicllvllies iiinong American diplomals must ((tme lo a hall. BIRMINGHAM Plams for a luxury luiiialng developmenl on Ihe (Mder fringe of the down (own area were aliatlered laal night whpn the Clly Commls slon turned down a request lo re/.one the properly. The reclaHsIfieullon of the property fm Purdy had lumn sought by Norman I. Bcsilh, presidetil of Itrcaikvlew llonieM, Inc , Birmingham. siricled In four slories, e v e ij (hough (he claaslfleallon he had re(jue»led wc/iild allow an ad dllional floor. IhHilh had planned lo build 41 units on (he west side of the street, just south of Brown. As presently zoned, the projierty only allows the goiv sinntion of JO units, and ac cording lo Ihailh, Is not (Miough lo realize a profllahle relurn on the investment. Blacklist Oklahoma on Great Lakes Pollution WASHINGTON UT 'the Na tional Kdueation AssiK'ialion (NKA) blacklisted Ihe Stale of Oklahoma today, Sj/aak said receni develop ments in Viet Niun and tlu‘ Dominican Bepuhllc shpw(‘d Hu‘ world still had a long way lo go lo gain Inie pi'acefiil ciH'xis HAROLD I). WADK New Corporal Is Assigned to Flint Post Brosio siild the Soviet (xvlicy of "peaceful t;o<‘xislence" c.(>r-lainly is an improvementon Stalinism and added "We should not dismiss it t(s) lightly. But on Ihe oilier hand we should have no. illusions about It. II d(H'a nol necessarily mean good neighborly relations. In some cases, al least, it has proved lo be indislinguishahle from Ihe ‘cold war' struggle.” Trooper Harold D. Wade, a 16-year veterqn with the Michigan Stale Police, has been promoted lo corporal and will be transferred from the Pontiac Post to the Flint Post. Wade, 42, of 1109 Berkley, has ,spent the last 13 years at the Pontiac Post after .serving for a short time in Rockford. The new corporal was born here and was graduated from Pontiac Central High School. During World War II. he served in the Coast Guard (or Wade hhs Iwo citations for meritorious service, is married and has two daughters The transfer and promotion are effective Sunday. The United Stales, Britain and ; France cant'd for Ihe reunification of Germany on Ihe basis of peace and freedom and asked th.ir NATO allies to support this move. This decision was communicated to the foreign ministers by British Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart. II warned teachers from oul of stale nol lo accept leaching posdions in Oklahoma, and said 'it would es|al)lish reloc.’dion cenlers lo help Oklahoma teachers find jobs elsewhere. The NEA imposed national sanctions in protest against alleged “siib-minimar’ coiidi-(ions in almost every area of the Oklahoma school program. 'I’he Oklahoma Kdiicalion Association, a slate affiliale of NEA, has estimated that him dreds of Ihe stale's 22,(MW teachers will l(M)k for leaching positions outside the stale before school r(‘opens next fall. An NEA source said Ihe figure may run lo 10 per (;ent or higher. I CI,F,VKl,A]il) (AP> With the I ! groundwork laid, Gov. .lames A. Bhodes says he plans lo keep j i Ihe tiall rolling in efforts lo rid j the (heal I.akes of pollution. He j I says Ihe key i,s increased finleral ni(l, with progriini eonfrol at Ihe | slate level. ‘ The next meeling to discuss' the problem Is June l.'i in De J trod, then HIkhU'S plans to take his argnmeids lo Ihe governors . conference July '25,in Minneapolis and follow d up al Ihe Sept. , 20 meeting ol Midwestern gov-j ernors al Mackinac Island, I Mich, .Some olher comments fron some of Ihe nearly ■ 70 parlici pants at Hie meeling: THE .SANCTIONS: • Warn tgachers from out of state not to accept leaching positions in Oklahoma because such acceptance may be considered unethical conduct...... CLOSING GAP It represented some closing of the gap between the United States and France, diplomatic sources said. • Caution graduates of schtKils of education (in Oklahoma and els^,i hours at a meeting j called by Rhodes. I Romney issued a call for a follow-up conference in Detroit, to be held a.s part of a session called by the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. A report of a three-year study of pollution in Ihe Detroit River wiH be present ed. Romney "We ought lo lake a look at what we can do now, wilhoni wailing for further studies and finding out who's going to pay wind " Rockefeller “Wider pollntlon stands as a liiirrier lo full economic, sociid, recrwUional and community development in New York, in the Great l.akes area, in the nation as a whole." He (■idled the R'deral grant-in-iiid program inadequiite. "Al Ihe pr(‘senl lime we are losing ground in the figlil agHiinst pol- lutio GM, Ford Flit Milestones Earliest Ever "I deny Ihe ehHrg(',s," Garnell laid a reporler. The charges came aller nil meroiis complainls by Alriciiu .sindenis of diseriminallon had lieen piililislied aliroad and denied here A groii)) ol Kenyan sludenis weni home lasi monlh iind denminced Iheir licalmenl in Ihe Soviet Union. DENY CHARGE The U.S. Emhassy'deniiHi lhal Garnell had done anything In compatible with his status as a diplomat. But it spid he would leave al the end of this week. Garnett also was accused by tlie Foreign Ministry of “Inler-ferenee in internal affairs” of Ihe Soviet- Union. ' (.'ommi.ssioner William Roberts commended Brooks for his far slglded thinking in realizing Ihe area i.s undergoing a change l)u| added lhal the commission rnusl honor Ihe feelings ol res idents who have opposed I h e lirojecl. nillLDING CO.ST It has been e.slimiiled lhal Ihe developmenl would have cost about $750,000. In iinother nctlon, (he com mission iiecepted plmis for Ihn exterior Irealment oL Ihe pro |H».sed parking structure lo he huill In Ihe downlown business district. ALTERNATIVE PLAN The plan was an alRutiative to two drawings snbmIUed Iwo weeks ago by Ihe Birmingham architecliiral firm of O'Dell, Hewlell A; Liicknhach Associates, Inc, At that time, (hr commission delayed approval until it could be given a wider selec-Hon. The new proposal uses pre-east eoncrele In (he ennstriie lio(t- of Ihe decked strnchire, and combines an appearance of shleld(pi Valley ttmight with Occasional rain along the north Pacific Coast and parts of the cehtral Plains. Showers are likely *— “ Fwkfa^-'lLwdl-hje-eodter in the Northeast. PORT WASHINGTON, Pa. (AP) — Members of the Fort Washington volunteer fire company set fire to an unused b^fn Monday night in a practice exercise.- ■ ■ ’ ■ '. ; As they , were rolling up their hoses at the end of the drill they got a radio call for help from a nearby town.ship. On fire-an ;ed barn. Opposing the rezoning were residents of the area and Boys Club representative.s. A petition against the change in zoning was presented with over 300 signatures. BACKED REQUEST The City Planning Commission gave a favorable recom- mendation to-the request despite the petition. Tto^ver, if a protest petition signed''by20 pdr cent of the a b u 11 i ivg-'pcoperty dwners is filed with the (^ity^^missioh, it would take six to pass the rezoning., ' Other items on tonight’s agenda include a progress report on an' arterial water main project in the north end, a report of thei city engineer’s estimates for paving of several city, streets' and' several other rezoning re- During the fighting helicopters were unable to land reinforcements because Red fire in the landing zones wa.s too hot" INSIDE TOWN By daylight the guerrillas were well inside the town and engaged the defenders in house to house fighting. One group of guerrillas fought their way into the mess hall of the U. S. Army advisory detachment, but all were killed in hand-to-hand fighting. A .second group got into the hall and got away with a .supply of rations. Mrs. Averill, 83, of 669 Riven-oak, Birmingham, worked in various editorial capacities dur ing the 42 years her husband was editor and publisher of Ihe weekly newspaper. A graduate of Wellesley College, she had taught in the Detroit School System for many years. She was a member of the Bir-, mingham bjranches of the American Association of University Women and the^Wellesley Club. Mrs Averill was a founder of the Birmingham Rotpry Anns. Service will be 3 p.m. Thursday at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. The Communists seized the provincial administration building in Song Be and attacked a government post a half mile from town. The po.st held despite withering fire from Viet Cong cannon and mortars. Surviving besides her husband are two sons, George W. of Tarpon Springs, Fla,, and John M. oL Birmingham: a daughter, Mrs. Donald P. Bab.son of Wellesley Hills, Mass.; and a broth- ARMORED CARS The Viet Cong captured five armored cars from defenders of the administration building and threw them into an attack on the Song Be, airstrip a half mile away. Intense Communist fire prevented the landing of reinforcements at the airstrip and delayed efforts to retake the town. Communist shellfire badly damaged the airstrip. It was not known whether the Viet Cong, destroyed any plane? on the ground. WHAT A WAV TO HURT A GUY-Just when 5-month-old Bret Jackson of Columbus, Ohio, had a crop of hair a Beatle would be proud of, they took it awhy from him. The .son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronnay L. Jackson has a lough time keeping a stiff upper lip enduring Jiis-first haircut. The Viet Cong began to leave the town about 9 a m. and government troops began moving in. 'Red antiaircraft fire' continued and at noon troop-carrying helicopters were still unable to land In the area. NEW SERVICE HOURS Wednesday—10 A.M. to REMINGTON SERVICE SIMMS SERVICE — Remington (oetory reprajenlolive -will l>« In our »tet« every Wedneidoy ol every week. SIMMSif. Electric Shaven . Main Floor ^4 r TIh^ Iftigft rrt«Hli waiter Miiall, poinjuTd (tiUfjliiimii, Ih round only In Uio mIiiiIIown of pornni noiil froiili wnicr muralu^N. Till'', roN'riA( ruK.ss, TrK,si)A\., M/V\ n, imr> Dr. King Taunts Alabama Governor on Segregofion KNOB ,SK I. M A, Ala (Al‘) Marlin l.ullior King Jr. Incnand now altniillon on Alalnuna'a ru dal prohlctna l(Hlay aftor liinnl luK.Cov, Crnngo C, Wallace for IiIm [allyre to prcHurvc aeg regulion King told a cheering crowd of more than I ,(MKI Negrocfi | maaaed lilaide and on Ihe groumlN of a cluirdi at Demopo > lla Monday night, that "(iov. j Walliice haa pr<‘Hid(‘d ovin more integralion lluin any governor in the United Statea.” "Segregation is on its dealhlxHl,” Ihe Negro minister declared, "and Ihe only thing now la liow coally Wallace and Ihe other aegregallonlala will make the funeral." King's twoday tour of Ala-hama’s soil-rich hlack hell, where Ihe civil rights struggle has centered, liududed visits liMlay l(» Marlon and Uamden, two of the «-ltles where denion atratloiis liave hroughl |M)llce resistance. He wilj return The Negro hdegratlon leadn found large, eiilhicilaallc crowds waiting for him as he sought lo "keep the momeidiim alive" In Ihe hallle for racial equality at Come To SIMMS Tomorrow “Open 9 A.AA. Iq 6 P.M. and Park Free In Our Lot Selma for a mass meeting to-' f 'reen.sboro, Kutnw and Demo-night. I'polis, BUDMAN’S 4 BUS Tuesday • Wednesday DAYS Thursday :DI\X)N f Only a 160 tfapt to our front door ind all you do is hav« your tickot stamped with PjNb ST miiTw I Wtl I'AWKmt, (.OlJNl { JAIl. OUR LOWEST RRtOES UIIMMIIM SIDING A free estimate will prove ~ Budman Sale Prices and Fantastic Credit make beautifying your home easy! any purrlias« , in Simms. I 01 ^Jfull hour (r«t| lot opon ‘^dtiily9a.m.to j6 p.m. and -\jMon., Thuri., - ' Fri., Sol. .va-nings 'til 10 Why paint your houso? Now you con aftord the lasting beauty of aluminum tiding. A tree estimate from Budman't will prove it! Call 682 49)0 today! 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Order this door today. Special operators on duty! The complete Perma-Seal door includes 2 storms and 1 screen insert. Rugged 2VkyH" outer frame. Installation, delivery, grille extra. All sizes to a giant 36'.'x84". GAS HEAT SALE SAVE DOUBLE NOW! Act now for our lowest prices Furnaces, Boilers __ and Conversion Burtiers — plus — the biggest trode-allowances our year history for gordless of age or con- |GAS FURXSCE SSLt ti'T.,, i„,t,ll, it n..l 4, Approved forrfd Air Model *139 ALUMINUM AWNINGS Not Ready Made But Custom Made! Enjoy cool summer com-Jort with Perma-Seol awnings. Cover all windows up to 48 united inches, plus installation, 3 minimum. Order now and save! 1c down installs it! PATIO SALE SCREENra-IN PP arc lo Simms lo Sow on 1 h'omous U.S. Royal ‘Raynster’ ;Vinyl Raincoats In Your Choice of 4 Styles \ olacs lo ^ -Hal Yon rake 'Em !l illi Y(m For Only Over 500, genuine U.S, Royal 'Raynster' raincoats in chic styling for those rainy day . : . and so easy to curry vvith you Choice from trenchcont styles,-velvet collar styles, round collars, some with bells, side (lockets, and all guaranteed 100% wulei proof. Sizes small to extra largp for M'lady. _______ —Main Floor Your Choice of Laundry Needs Clothesline Props or Plastic Clothesline Your l*ivk Cibfhesline 'has strong w r —won't stretcli or sng find 3 easily With o damp dotli. -2nd Floor Nobody and We Mean Nobody t But Simms Can Do Tbis... V Heavy Polished Aluminum 6-Quart Dutch Ovens FOUR T1IF l‘ONTIA(; PHFSS, TUK.SDAV, MAV II. Iimrt School Board Puts $27-Million Bond Issue on June Ballot KOirm LYON A r/Vmll lion IkiiuI III mi’i'i lii'haiil liiiililliiK nmlft lor Ihr iirxl 12 In 1.^ ycm'N w«s iiI/icnI mi llii* .lime H Imllol hm- IiihI niglil Till* bond Ikkiii* would mid 7 or H millM Id Itip lux li*w ill Iho diMtrlct. m'rm(lin|> lo |ir(‘limi nm v (•ftllinidox, I would Iwivi* ;i!l Irm liilin hIiiIIous AmoM|j llm olhor lorlllllim would Ik* n CHlolorliim wllli ii nIh«c, Hom'd 111 nluuilloii ini'tii lirix \oti‘d uiliiiiliiioiiiilv to pul (hr qiirNlion lo dlx(r|r( proper ly ownerii. Hoiird ineiiiherK nil from Ihe pliinx provision for n Nwlnitniiig |Hiol, which curried H $500,000 price (u|;. Site lot llic school Is 0 .'U! ju re piircel on Ihe iiorlhwesl cornet of Nine Mile iind I’onliiic Tiiill Most ol Ihe money heiit|> .sou|.;lil $7;':>0,IKKI would lie Developinenl would Include a full alhlelic Held with two baseball diamonds, two softball dia monds, a foolball field and Area NEWS m.isAnii.K HUM-; II was noted last nl^ht lhal file board eannol sell bonds lo finance inslallalion of bleachers, used for consiruclion ol / sliidnil hif’h school. The new high schmd would' Ilf designed so lhal II could be expanded lo house I,-2IHI sliidenls. 'Resigned' Assessor to Remain in Office lly IIIU. KASTIIAM Assl. ( lly Kdllor .SiilMiiimii I.AKK I 111 ION Koberl Swnn, eontroveiHlat Village assesNor who reslg’liwl April 211, will remain In office, II was animuiiced sort ol al Iasi nighl's vllliiffe council meeling. Swem, elected Iasi fall by a slim, eight vole majorily, sub-mil led a leflei of resignalion lo the couni'il al its last meeling gain la,sf yer.r of $11511,1511 In slate erpiali/ed properly valjia Hon, which now lolals $2,7H7, 475, Within Ihe past two years, dis-Iricl properfy owtuMs defeated lour bonding propositions which would have financed consiruc lion of a new building for about $1 5 million. HKJhXrrKI) IMIOFOSALS They also turned down three coiTifiromise propo.sals to add rqiace to Ihe present high school. The school now proposed would be larger and cbuld accommodate 100 more students than those previously considered. 'I'tie addilion of 10 cIjismisiins ■ lo llic present higli school would mak(' llu' capjicily of lhal build ing 7.50, NIsW UK niMHIVII'lN TIuee new fjices In Ihe Commerce Township llniled I'^mnda lion drive are (Iroin lefi i Mrs. Iloherl Moll, mackmis.r, Mrs Ceorge l,ll/;ni, .ttOf) Chcnmi; jind Mrs. Ilichard I’owell, 1III7 Mid dh' Trail They and Ihe nine oilier area chidr-mcn are lining up llu* 211 volunleers who will serve as disiricl cluilrmen for Ihe 1005 Torcli Di ive in Ihe Commeice division, hearled by Mrs. Iloherl Cilmore, l(i.5l Wllke.shire. Hie letter h a s been re-liirued lo .Swem withoul uc-eeplanee, however, by Village l‘resldent C I a r e a c e (Hud) I Itossman. Itoshmaii told Ihe | eoiiuetl lust idghl that Swem I had changed his mind and | ami would remain in office. j The announccrncnl was made, against a huhhiih of noise from some 75 speclalors at Ihe meed ing in Hie junior high g.vm ' mrslum. { Al the same lime, the report said, the village recorded a loss ol some $411,INK! In personal properly. Village taxpayers are paying 2(15 mills in properly lax, which will bring In $57,14.1 for Ihe curreni budgel. Willi an enrollment of 5(12, il now liiis a 450-sludenl capaedy, OTIIKK KXPANSION Other Work at Ihe ninc-ycar-old building would include ex-paasion of the cafeteria, addition of a stage lo the gymnasium ;md enljirgcment of Ihe library. This project would be started immediately lo allow for rwcupancy by the middle of the 1965 (16 schord year. Township Round of Activities to Celebrate Michigan Week --'By 1974, the number of students in Ihe four high school grades is expecled lo jump from 5(12 (0 822. Also includerl in Ihe lumd is sue is .$,162,000 for expansion of Ihe pre.senl high school. TAIUIET DATE The unit would be converted lo a junior high when Ihe new |iigh .school is completed. Target date for opening of the facil-ty is fall 1967. The proposition was placed on the ballot following a board work lession with architects from O’Dell, Hewlett and Luckenbach Associates of Birmingham. The firm had been asked to come up with some, cost estimates on the program proposed by trujstee Alfred B. Ueker. With completion of Hu* new high school, the iinil would house sixth, .seventh and eighth graders. The sixth grade slu denis would remain in (heir home rooms ;md nol roHilc he tween elas.ses Jis the junior high sHidenIs would. WE.ST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-1 .SHIP Bdsidenls here h a v c I spjiiTd liHle efforl in planning i Iheir first townsliip observance ' of Michigan Week. 1 A full sl.'ile of aelivilii's Ix'gin-ning .Sunday has h e e n an-; nouncj'd hy coehairmen Henry | ,1 Mosj's. 4751 Cove, and Mrs. [ William .1 Evans, 5720 Hlnnni ; field ('.lens. meeting of all the men’s si^rvice organizations in Ihe community. Budget Jump Is Approved in Rochester Also on (his (lay, al noon, llu West Bloomfield League o Women Voices will wclcotiu women of Ihe townshij) lo a "pro gr;m( al (he lilu/uy, ,5010 Or chard Lake. Plans formulated for the proposed high school are "completely different” from earlier ones, according to Board Secretary Mrs. Rita Chenoweth. ACADEMIC AREA To contain 111.000 square feef of academic area, the unit MEA Picks Area Man Host for Convention Also included In (he bond Issue is $51,000 for u|xlating of the eh'ctrical and healing systems at New Hud.son Elementary School and conversion from oil to gas heat at the high .school. OFFICTi !>PACE | . Some $25,000 would be set i aside for remodeling of the Lib-' erty annex lo create administrative offices. Sevpn rooms in ! the building now are being u.s(!d by kindergarten, third a n d | fourth grade classes. Site improvements would account for another $12,000 of the bond issue. Ineludcd in (his sum would be the installation of drains at the S o u t h F.yon Elementary School playground and hlaektopping of (hr Sayre School parking lot. The rest would he used for Contingencies. Widicr F. Carey, 6125, Middle Bell, is honorary chairman of the eelebralion. Me is (he immediate past president of (he llniled States Chamber of Commerce. The township’s more than 18,-000 residents are being urged lo attend their churches Sunday, ('hairman of Spiritual Foundations Day is Rev. A. Karl Bochmke of Shepherd King Lutheran Church. Mi( hm;an fii.m The event will include n short film oil Micbigjin's early days, Moses, chairman of Ihe township planning commltlee, will present and explain Ihe township's master plan. Industry, agriculture, resorts and inslilntions will be saluted May 19, Plans for Livelihood Day are being made by Dolloe Chausar, 4670 Middle Bell. HOCIIE.STER - The Village Connell last nigbl iidopled an .$845,!):t5 budgel for 1965 66 This is an incrca.sc of aboiil $175,0(1(1 over hi.s( Year's budgel Clerk Msixine Ross said Hie increase is due (o bond issues eomiiig up on urli.in r('iievv;d and eoiislruction ol a tiridge on Hie Mill Pond pr(i|it‘rly The (ax rale will mnjiiii al 18.5 mills. Miss Boss said this Is possible heeaiise of new property on Ihe lax rolls and increased assessmenis. Many liad come lo Hie meet ing jusl lo see who, )f iuiv-bisly, was going |o lie appoinli'd III replaei* Swem. Most weni away wilboul learning wlial Ifad bapiiened. ( ITES BA It HI Fit Swem, who describ(‘d bim.self as "iiti as.ses.sor with nothing to assess,'* said he had resigned to dramati'ze the fact that he had been deterr(Hl from taking office the second Mondiiy in March a.s required by the village charli'r. It has bei*M ciislomjiry in Ihe village, however, for the assessor to remain in office until .Inly I lo eomplele the assessment rolls for Ihe ciir-reul year. Las! iiiglil’.s meeling sHirled oH willi some lu'silation when lls legality wa,*i j'hallengi'd by Irvine .1 Dtiger, furmer village pn'sidenl. ( KOWDEI) IIALI. The last meeting uf Ihe conn cil was adjourned to the junior high gymnasium when it became evident (hat Ihe .specln-lor.s were going lo overflow Ihe village hall. The eoiincll planned last nighl's meeting for Ihe gym-naslimi, hut Unger olijeeled heeaiise there was no public aniioiiiieemeiil tliai il woiilii not be held In Ihe vllinge hall. "The next thing we know, you’ll meeling In a barn nut here somewhere," Unger luild. « The eouiicll solved the pi'oli-lem, al least temporarily, by passing a resolution lo hold last nighl’s meeling In the gym naslum. tAble ueqke.st I In other aelloii, Ihe council I tabled a iequesl for a $1(M» i raijic sulmiitted hy Treasurer |Ceraldiue Cariipliell, who now draws $'/()() Jiiiiiiially. The councllmen agreed (<> meet nl Paint Creek Wednes-' day evening to start a eleiin-iip campaign (in (he pn \fnn .W»H . 9 PM. 2363 Orchard Lalco Rood (Sylvon Canttr) Phona 682-OJ 9.9 I. I’UE rONTlAC l*HKSS. rUKSDAv". MAY 11M(A I' I ;fivk wimyou huytM$ FRIGIDAIRE JEFACnONWJISHER! 5 rou RECEIVE YEAR PROtiCTION PLAN AT NO EXTRA COST* Automatic Soak tycle— Jet Action features galore! Now Jot Away lint removal "JoU" lint, ■cum out of the tub. Jet apin savea drying time. Clothes come out loose and eaa^even apron strings seldom snarll Jet simple design for maximum dapendabllltyl Pri m Modal WDA-6S,4colocaorwtiltal *X' One yoor warranty for repair of any defect without charge, plus four-year Protection Plan for furnishing-replacetnent for any defective part in the transmission drive motor, or large capacity water pump. traf var **tchere qunlily Is priced right" CLAYTOM’S Mon. and FrI. 'til 9 Tuea., Wed. and Thura. 'til 6 - Sat. 'til 6:30 P.M. 2133 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD PHONE: 333-7052 'All-Volunteer Army Would Be Costly' Study Backs Continuing Draft WASHINr.TON (AP) - Pen-lagon experts estimate It would eost u|) to another $8 blllinri to ft) billion a year to raise mill tury pay and Incentives enmiKli lo atlracl an all vddunleor nllll-tary force, I Tilts <-alcnlittloii, Houmni said hHlay, has Imh?!) made by offi- cials studying the draft and oth- report will make a series of rec* er means of getting manpower I ommendations that are des-necessary to maintain tlie'lgned to stimulate enlistments, armed services at their re-'iillll/,e rtianpowei lesonrc'es now qillreil strengths. | imluppeil ttecnnse of higli rnen- Thls study, It Is understcsxl, »l«n(|ards and jx)sslhly sub-will show that the draft must idvlllans In some of the conllnikxl at least until Ill70. | Jobs now handled by men In utd-llowever, sources said the f"'"’ 30 specialists conducting the draft study suggest that the U.S. forces will remain at about Iho present level ‘17 million at least until III70. A hefly across-the IxMird pay Inenoise which might attract and hold a force of career serv-I icemiai apparently ranks fairly H down in I he list of propcmed recomm«‘ne people provides law, order, protection. Of, necessity. It must be restrictive in many ways. ★ ★ ★ Ihil urtIcSH (be people are eon-stanllv on the alert, (heir hired public officials tend to .expand (heir powers in ways that cause government little by little to en-eroaeb on individual freedom and opportunity. It is all done in the name of the people and paid for through ma.ssive taxation. T'he people vote for hobbles when they sanction a welfare state. High Court Curb Has Little Hope (EDITOR’S NOTE — James Marlow us on vacation. In his absence, bus column will he handled hy diflerent Msociated Press Writers.) By RAYMOND J. CROWLEY WASHINGTON UP —Talk has been abroad in the land of a conslilulional convention to curb the Supreme CoUrt. But here’s a prediction to jiaste in your hatbands': no such convention will be held. On June 15 last year, the Supreme Court. ruled that both houses of state legislatures must be based on population. Rural elements, fearful that their interests would be overridden If their dominant political power were shorn away, mounted a counterattack. They based this on a never-used clause in the Constitution. This says that, on application of the legislatures of two-thirds of the states. Congress “shall call a convention for proposing amendents.” Any amendment proposed by the convention would be submitted to the states, and would become fundamental law it three-fourths of them ratified. ★ ★ ★ Up for action before state legislatures has been an application for a convention. The aim; to get a constitutional amendlpent saying one house “of a state legislature may be based on factors other than population, provided the people agree in a referendum. The Council of State Governments, which favors an amendment, says that 20 states have voted the application. Several others have asked Congress to act, but have not called for a convention. But 20 is well short of the required ' two-thirds majority, which is 34. Even if all 50 states signed, Congress would not have to call a convention. To be sure the Constitution says “shall” but as one supporter of an amendment remarked ruefully: “Who can mandAmu* (coerce) Congress?” ★ ★ ★ For one thing, senators from states with huge oitit populations could filibuster a convention call to a fare-thee-we)l. Several amendments are pending in Congress. The chief one, by Sen. Everett M. Djrksen, R-Ill., states that one house of a legislature may be based on factors other than population if the people approve. There is wide support for this. Opponents say it is “n!p-and-tuck” w-hether they can prevent it from getting the required two-thirds vote in each house. a But then would come the real crunch. Could such an amendment possibly p^ss muster in three-fourths of the states? ★ ★ ^ Under the prodding of prodding of federal judges, the task of reapportionment is un-der*%ay. City folks are getting more and more control, and would be unlikely to surrender their new-found power. AMERICA^^^ TOP TEN BAHERS Wagner, Cleveland 19 72 19 26 .361 Davalillo, Cleveland 18 65 7 22 .338 Allison, Minnesota 21 78 9 26' .333 .Campaneris, Kan. City 21 87 6 28, .322. Cater* Chicago ^ ... 21 75 13 24 .320 Buford, Chicago ...... 20 62 11 19 %306 Green, Boston . ....... 20 82 19 25 ^305 McAuliffe, Detroit .. .. 22 79 18 24 .304 Kaline, Detroit ...... 22 79 15 24 .304 Mantilla, Boston ..... 21 79 8 24 .304 I ■ I, Voice of the People: ‘We Could Learn Lesson From Homan History’ According to Hubert in Washington P.C., a do'zcn more progressive bills will be enacted before this congressional session ends. For those who didn’t read the editorial on Thursdiiy, may I advise them to dig up an issue, let the mes.sage sink in, and then write tlieir congrOHsmon to stop thost^ socialistic measures. May we not forget the lesson In Honian history when every time the people accepted material prosperity in exchange for freedom and individual cliaraeler, they lost and became subjects of a dietatorsidp. The death of indlvltlual freedoms, deterioration of initiative and morality led to the full of Rome. 1 fear we have pot learned our lesson well, for what’s yet to come out of Congress will make our hair curl! NON COMPLACENT ‘Need Proleelioii From Drunk Drivers Why don’t some of our iwilice cars sit outside n few of the Hrounti town inNiomI of boini^ out on Womlward. It s fl known fad that drunk drivoi'H kill moro people on Mlioii. lu-r and talk widi Mr. Mrilo Voiiii or .Mr. Uiirknrr. wlio imvr hrni loaning iiioiiry lo Imndrrds of |i<-op|e in I’onliar during llic |miiU 10 year*. All borrow* rra will IcBlify lo rroriviiig fair, lioiirat. and roiirli-oiiH Irralitirnl, (Do not tiikr a rbancr dealing willi alrangers (tr fly-hy-niglit lendera.) SMAU. ' rAYMKN'»’’-★ CUFd>^ *' ^ l NO < ‘»M. •n yon deni lieie. you receive die full mil of your loiiii hi eaiili at once. No , rin.lo eign mild die loan i« rioaed. No ge for iiiaprelioii. appinixal or aiirvey. eliarge for ab«lri|iel. lille seiiicli or lillc H lo eoiiMdidule your deble. ie.*,-lo_ make liome repaira or or for any oilier good pur- SPECIAL Fr«« Parking on county lot corner N. Saginaw and W. Huron Sis. each time you bring to our office a full monthly payment. , Free Parking whenever you apply for an approved loan or renewal. Bring u< Vour parking ticket lo be stamped. \OSS and BUCKIWR 209 NATIONAL BUILDING - 1-E 4-4729 Driving an Olds 4-4-2 is mighty exciting ...so is winning one! Enter the Olds GolTO-Rama! You may win a 4-4-2—even if you dorihplay golf! This Qlds 4-4-2 is a real moving machine. 400-cubic-ihdi^ barrel carb. Twin pipes. Heavy-duty chassis components. Ani win a 4-4-2 when you enter Oldsmobile’s "Golf*0-Rama.” Fou 4-4-2 grand prizes in, aU—plus 442 transistor radios in scale-. Oldsmobiles. One of them could be yours! Visit yoiir Olds Dealer o participating golf professionfd and pick up your entry form...today! Id Florida, arrd is sufciect to Enter NATIONAL GOLF DAY... You may ’’Beat the Champ”! A golfing tint on NBC-TVend Radiol USGA ChamA> Ken Venturi versus PGA Champ ly Nichols i ‘Round ol the Cham- "RounO of the Champlon*- pions'on NationsIGoll NBC-TV end Radio. May 31st DaV. Monday, May 31. Play your own round ol goll al your local course in advance—see it you can'Baal the Champ.*. I' B 5 a LD S M a BIILE Look to Olds for the New! njiAcnoajifKtspouASTtss roa mamiicht.sTARRiit,KitAn.symmkmlamA« ijntiA*urstacwisnif-n-- JEROME MOTOR SALES CO., 1980 Wide Track Drive, West# Pontiac, Mich.^ .(YCKWilWW ! ------".'Ml ' M JM m ORCU V UR1YI CMCOCTON CM...CHfac TO I r.. TIIK PCpN'l’iAC l»HK8S. rUK.SDAV. IVIAY II, I5M15 , NINE Gene Adams sent us a coupon like this. Name Adilrt^ai <'ily »la(r □ I’leasc semi rtic inl'ormalion P I’Isase send me an application, /.ip (Ode . I Look where we sent him. Hcli/c. niilish Ilt>it(lufns. I'here me places like Heli/c in (lie dP nations wheie the Pence ( Orps wr. Others installed were Hazel Pott s, Marguerite Buttolph and Mrs. FI Milton Flvans. Mrs. Norman Smith introduced the guest speaker, Mrs. Amit Tagore who spoke on the “Customs of India.’’ PATRICIA G. GILLETT It was announced that a television set will be donated bo the Children’s Village. Mrs. Harry J. Rice will serve as chairman of reservations of the Pontiac Federation of Women’s Clubs “Golden Gavel Dinner” slated for Monday in the Kingsley Inn. Working with her will be Mrs. Clark J. Adams, Mrs. Crawford and Mrs. (.'ecil Mc-Callum. Mrs. McCallum was social chairman for the meeting. Her assistants included Mrs. Arthur Compton, Mrs. Claire Hinckley, Mrs. Mert Jennings, Mrs. Potts; Miss Smith, Mrs. Ronald Mountain, Rosamond Haeberle, Mrs. Willard Boardman and Miss Kinney. How Long Does It Take? By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK (UPI) - The men will scoff at this statistic, but it says here that the ai^er-age woman when in a rush can get dressed in a maximum of. 10 minutes. Not rushed, and if not dressing for a special occasion, she gets the job done in 27 minutes. Any husbands ttah-hahing these statistics had better think seconds before arguing. For the men come out ahead of the women in the time game. subject of a study by West-clox, manufacturers of products which tick the time away. The firm’s researchers combed through numerous stop-watch calculations of sci-enlists and industrial efficiency experts' for their findings. Mrs. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty (left), Washington newspaperwoman and-former Pontiac resident, visits with Colonel Emily C Gorman, director Women’s Army Corps. Mrs. Tufty is timember of the 45-women committee for (DACOWrrS) helping to interpret to the public the need for and role of women in the services i an^ to promote public acceptance of military a career field for women. The average man, for instance, can mix a martini in three and one-quarter, min-\ utes. The researchers into this ^matter didn’t time the men really Jn a rush for a breath oK vermouth with a slug of \ -k k . To Tgatch a train or dash to the car for the work day, the average man needs five and one-half niinutes to dress, presuming he has shaved the night; before I V If he hasn’t, ad^on four to six minutes time used if he uses a regular razor and lathers up. If he uses the electric means, count on on|y three to five more minutes. Poets, phHosphers, essayists all have through the centuries warned agaipst wasting time — it mustn’t be s p e n t idly, for it’s “The Stuff Life’s Made Of” Belasco wrote. Who’s to say whether U's frittered watching a robin stalk a worm, sunning and contemplating the miracle of spring, digging idly into the brown earth to see whether last year’s geraniums Will rejuvenate? TIME SPENT How time gets..spent on .the . simple tasks of the day is the To the more prosaic ways we spend our time: The timepiece makers found that on the average, it takes 12Vii seconds to make a phone call, timing time used from the, start of dialing to the start of the ring at the other end. SHOPPING the average woman spends 70 minutes in the supermarket on her major dajr of marketing,, if she l^as a list and adheres to it; 90 minutes, if she’s inclined to browse. - To set the table for fpur persons, assuming the meal .T'vli Consider Yourself a Thief, but Your Husband Is Miser By abi(;aii, van BDREN DEAR ABBY: I am just an average liim.sewlle My Iiiih build works sleady and we gel along about as well as any oilier miirried couple. Ing” Every wife should get an allowance, no mailer bow small' But you have no more rigbl lo pick your busband’s pock ets than he has lo pick your pur.se. TLE NELL” "Morality Is moral only when It Is volun- liou.se t:ONFII)ENTIAL Tt> “LIT •IVoubled'’ Write' lo ABBY. in care of The Pontiac Pre.ss. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self addressed envelope ABBY _ clnldrei and do not’'*' •>' have an out-' side job, have to depend‘J on my husband* for every dol lar I gel. He Is the slingiesi man in creallon. He thinks all Ihe kids and I need are clothes on our backs, shoes on our feet and |()(kI on the table. He never gives me an exlrfi penny. He is my husband and he is siip|)osed lo su|iport me. Right? .So where am I su|)-fxised to get money if not from him? Now for my prob-l(?m: F'or years I have been taking loose change or a dollar or two,out of his pants pocket while he’s sleeping. I think I am enlilled lo it.-so would you consider Ibis "stealing?” FEELING GUILTY Calendar of Ihvenls TUIOSDAY llaminoiid Organ Swiety, 7:30 p,m., Grinnell'.s (downtown). Guest organist program. Plans will be made for annual music festival on June (1 In London, Out. Oakland Coiiiily District Michigan Prnelleal Nurses Association, 7;:i0 p.iii., Oakland Center Hospllal, Royal Oak. Mrs. Irene Barker on "Recovery, Inc," WEDNESDAY Drayton Plains extension study group, 10 a m,, home of Mrs. ().scar Ream, Elba .Street. "A Happy Kitchen.” Ikeliann International, Detroit chapter, 12:30 p m,. Metropolitan Federal .Savings Building. Birmingham. Harry Whang on “Symbolism of Oriental Gardens.” Pontiac chapter, No. 7 American Association of Re-tlrctl Persons, 1;.30 p.m,. Community .Services Building on Franklin Boulevard. “Multiple Sclerosis.” Newcomers chih, 7 p m. Morey’s Golf and Country Club, closing dinner. Pontiac Aiidiihon .Society, 7:30 pm. All .Saint’s F’.pisco-pal Church, Film, "Flowers, Birds, and People.” DEAR FEELING: Whether you are "entitled” lo it or not, taking something without the owner’s permi.ssion is "steal- Honor Their 50 Years Bride Elect Gets Linens Connie Bailey was honored at a recent linen shower in Ihe Waterford home of Mrs. Denni,>| Breucr. Mrs. Arthur Ryan of F’arni-ington was cohostess. Mr. and Mrs. L, B. Miles of Walled Lake will celebrate their golden wedditig anniversary this week. Wednesday night their children will honor them witli a family dinner party at the Mayflower Hotel in Plymouth. Last week they flew to New York for four days and attended the World’s F'air. Mr. and Mrs. Miles were married May 12, 1915 in New Hudson. They have three children, L. Hobtmt, Richard S. and Mrs. William Mercer, all of Widled Lake. They also have five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Among the guests were the bride - elect’s mother, Mrs. /Jarence Bailey of Livonia, and the bridegroom’s mother, Mrs. Arthur Brquer of Pontiac. Miss Bailey will wed Terry Breuer on June 19, 'How to Buy' Subject of Talk Time Just TicKs Away “.Selecting Electrical Helpers for the Home” will be discussed by Mrs. Mary Hardy and Mrs. Karen Van Hine at the Woman’s World Series Wednesday. Th^ series takes place in the comm(Jt|ity room of the Pontiac Mail at 10 a.m. Pontiac Prost Pliotoi is ready to be served immediately, takes three to four and one-half minutes; to make a double bed, four and one-half. “As in the cases of executives or laborers, housevvives who are eternally busy are unusually inefficient ones,” said the timepiece study. And will that statement set off some arguments! Any rate, it points to the woman who makes 14 movements to put a dish in the cupboard . . . rUn over two floors to get utensils. Meal preparation, for i n-stance, according to one of its home economist-cook authorities, shouldn’t be so all time-consuming. Allow 15 minutes for a summer breakfast — i n c 1 u d-ing coffee, poaqhed eggs, cantaloupe with lemon sections, and toast. • New trends in large and small kitchen appliancts, laundry equipment and modern cleaning and polishing aids will be presented. A tour of appliance departments will follow. Mrs. John Geovjian, Birmingham, was honored Monday for her 2,000 hours of service at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. She is chairman of the gift shop. Other awards made were pins to the junior volunteers and certificates of life membership to some 25 auxiliary members who have, worked for 25 years or more.,^ MORE FOR WOMEN Tht womeh seemed to spend more time on daily tasks thap the men in the cases cited. But as usual, the woman ought to have a last word. “ Who ever said that-a man’s shirt could be ironed in one and a fraction of minutes? That’s the time averaged in television commercials. ^Any jv 0 a n who’s e^er , pressed one knows the ^‘average” of five minutes,is more realistic. That is, if the shirt doesn’t have French cuffs! ^ '-.TTft Sister Mary Xavier, administrator of St. -Joseph Mercy Hospital, presents award for volunteer work • to auxiliary members, Mrs. Henry Stack, Sweetbriar Road, West Bloomfield To-wnship (left), and 'riiK i»()NTIA(' piu<"ss, tuksdav. may ii. KT.EVKN Former Resident Is Engaged Mr. and Mi'h. (irdiRfl Ko(>-r«lk of Foil I,tiH(ier»*'ol of f li 0 1 r dmifthtiM’ Nancy Jean to Frank Wallor Siefcrl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Waller Siefcrl of Miami Bench and Greenwood I.ake, NY, The hiide elect is n senior al Barry ColICKe of Miami. Her fiance in a senior at the Utilverslly of Miami. SCISSORS HAIRCUTTING Spring Speciah, Permanent Waves Moii.-Tues.-Wed. Ro(), $22 ;>0 $18 R(!(). $17.50 $15 Refl. $15.00 $12.50 BEAUTY SHOP lk«r Bldg., 35 W. Huron FE 3-7186 Whole Family Needs to Examine Faults lly MllHIFI. I.AWKF.NGK | Dear Mr.s Lawrence: My sis ler'n hushand Is drlvlni; her Into a nervous breakdown over I heir nai around nH nlRhl wilh hl.s rowdy Irleml'i llelweeii her owti woiry ovei lhi> boy and her husband's na^; KbiK, she doesn'l know whal to everybmiy in (Ills fninlly — lather, tnolher and son need break downs. The boy look a job la,st ai mer which he kepi instead of going hack lo higi) school Then jlisl Irefore (!hrbslmas he gol fired. Ill.s fallier blames my slsler hccauHC he won't look lor an oilier job or relurn lo school He says she has s|Milled him so all he wauls |o do Is h a n g around the liouse all (lay anil do. Answer; Her husband's •'nagging'/" Ills flallery, you <}/>rn house was held Saiurdun tn honor of the golden loeildmg (inniversarg of Mr. and Mrs. ('lore.nee Jenkinson, reaeh Street. The ehddren mho hosted the erent mere Patnek, 'I'honias, Arthur and (lerald Jenkinson, all ol the Pont urn area; Mrs. Fred Wn.:goski and Mrs. Kenneth Carroll of Ponliae and Mrs. Charles Van DeCar of Mt. Clemens. The eoupic has 33 grandchildren and 24 graat-grandclnldren. McCarroll Pl'A Will Meet An Inslallaliou of oincers will be held at I he Wednes day 7 JO p m meellug ol Me Carroll I'TA Dr, l''rank Vouck.sicller of Wayne Stale University will, be the guest speaker. Also on the agenda is a science fair exhibit. WEDDING I ANNOUNrieMlONT.S INVITATIONS )lt 'fllK DISCUIMINAriN(; imim:-TO-i{h: \o. ku) for pi: Try Steam Bath to Brighten Up Exhausting Day Many Gun Deaths Call It four o'clock- fatigue or late afternoon (‘xhaustlon, it's the fi'eling that comes af ter a day wlien you h*fl oiit two of the yigredicnis in Hie cake you baked for the church becau.se your little girl crirsl until you went outside to see the Japanese beetle she had found on your prize winning rosebush, a day when your family's "adorable" new pup py discoven'd that the legs of youV aniiciue mahogany chest Were just right for chewing well, you know what it's like; it's the everydav feeling. \ ’% / Efifiioii.s for (Pur fiuo Ituffel \ y' lliTakfasI • laiiidi • Diiiiior y:;. V . 4!.. d'.:..,.. II.. ».■...• » I-•> And if you're looking f o r somc'place to hide, why not fry .stepping into a luxurious steam bath'.' International Management rc()orls from F.urope about a portable steam bath, j u s I right for home-u.se, available now. II consists of an electrically heated steamei' pot, a folding chair and a vinyl cubi cle. The unit re(|uircs only a couple of cu|>s of water and If) to 20 minutes lo develop It could he just the thing to brighten /im up in lime lor vour husband's homecoming (ighl. 11 vmi Tiij.\ .si’ii i; I'liii t\ iiii'iiit'i'Hi i\\iii\ii:iii:\T /Diane's Engoged to Wed in June » • Til l;riN(„s • itici rnoNs ^ ^ nnif Vrny d i.'t-hlhT ^ New Fabrics fo Dress Your Furniture! Only at Elliott's will you find ihfvselection of fabrics to give your furniture the exact look that you desire. Hundreds of the latest ntodern materials, nylons, frie/es, plastic, leathers, tweeds, nielallics, all in the comfilete color range of the rainbow. Mr. and Mrs. Jule M. Clarkson of Voorheis Hoad announce the engagement of their dauglilor, Diane Kay, lo Pvl.’Cicorge L. Woolsey, IKSA, stationed al Ft. Leanard Wood, Mo. He is the son of Mr.s. Ida Wool.sey of Birmingham and Georjie L. Woolsey of Grasse Pointe. June 26 vows are planned. Egg Shells Provide Lime for Plants “Fine Fiirniliire and (Joalily CarpcliiiK Since I'EC-J.” 5390-5400 DIXIE HWY. OR 3-1225 Enjoy ihr MofiniJ'irrni Spltoiflor.4 of I hr It EST! WESTERN TOURS Vt(i ^ 10 DAYS to 3 WEEKS Hail or Air PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE 702 West Huron — FE 8-9611 Pontioc-Moll — 682-1 220 Save egg shells and put them in water. Let stand for several hours, then pour liquid over the soil around your potted house plants. This provides the right amount of lime needed by the plants. Engagement Told June vows are planned for Patricia Margaret Merdiari and Peter Barrett Taylor. She is the daughter of the junior Raymond Merdians of Royal Oak and .Lake Orion. His father is Paul Taylor of F'arm-' ington. Peter attends the University of Detroit. HEARING AIDS Designed for NERVE DEAFNESS Behind the Ear or in Glasses! FOR people that HEAR but DO NOT UNDERSTAND Special Close-Oiit\f 19^4 Modfl Aids REGULAR ’369 atV/2 REDUCTION .Sale Ends Fridak May 14 *90-ddy exchange privilege * 5-year replaceimnt warranty *Audi«metic Test -A BETTER HEARING SERVICE ir 103 N. Saginaw St„ Pontiac \ FE 2-0292 Cmclc.ss use (d guns c.iusi's about 2,'2IKI accident al dcallis a y c a r, willi nearly I.IIK) oc curing in lutmcs, tin- National Safely Council reports. Oh yc«, llud'K what Ida accu snllonH rcprcNcnI. When otic parent tries lo saddle Ihc <»lher one with the whole Itlame for a child',s problem, his accu,sal ions are n confession '<»( fits own tnoral weakness and expifss his confidence In fhe olltcr's moral slrcuglh. Ills charge.s t>t lolal hlanu> In fact repiesenl Ihc ajtpcal ' Lit! all sense of responsiltilily from me for this prot)letn! ' My .selfconfidence Is so fee hie IliHl if can't survive Ihc kuttwit'dge that I liavc coiilrih uled lo this clilld's problem "As you arc .so uua h stronger Hum I am, you must carry Hie whole load of respotvsihillly for if and so .sfrengthen my de lusion Hull i am a fnultle.ss per son iiicapahlc of any lieglccl of this child, or of any training misl.akcs lhal might suggest I have lailcti in my pamilal ohii gallons" Anti what I mean by "hiciik ttowns" Is' dissccnl from their high lior,ses. Fir.sl, here’s a young.sler whose pride is so outraged by one jtih failure lhal he can't ’ face the wta Itl again either by ; reluriiiiig It) .school or by seek I ing another job ■ llere'.s a father whose pride In j faultlesMiies.s Is so olisesshig that he gtMvs Inlti paiilt' at Hie very Hmuglit tie mighf havt' conlrlb-Uled to the hoy’s poor allilude AutI liei e’s his wife, so gri'tsly for responsilitllly Hud slie ns Slimes If all as though she were the runner of Hie uiilver.se "'nicrt^ appears to be a con science which severely punishes persons wfiti do not somehow wrote G. G. Jung, the noted pay-chologlflt. iiiitl at some Hine confess them • thU family does selvt's fallible anti h ii m a n" I mil hmg delay their confaRBlnna. If your sister t coiifession of mo hiu' liusliatitl's a because her own ticalens her, She herstdf is : JTeAimode *Twioe-a-Year' SALE! Alter then recent nuirrmie anil reception m the Sunni/nale Chapel, the llawaril l.aniant lierirams (Cherj/I Ann Hill wan) lejl jar a honeymoon in the Smoky Mountains. Their parents, the Clare 1C Hillmans and the Howard C. Hertrams are of Islanfi Park Dnnc, A satin pillbor with illusum veil complemented the bride’s boujjont gown of white.silk organza appliqurd with Aleneon lace. With Mrs. Terry //. Walker, her sister',s honor matron.' were bridesmaids Mrs. James H. l^ointer, Sheryl Lehigh and Mrs. Jerry Patterson, Dane /,. Bertram was best man with ushers Jerry Patterson, JaxJc CarLsen, Mat-verne Hillman, Douglas F.roh and Paul Singer. Rev. V. L. Martin performed the evening ceremony. CAREER GIRL NYLONS Seninless or with slentlerizing leami. /4IRACLE NO-BIND TOPS 82 N. Saginow Sf. WALLPAPER Over 2500 Patterns in Stock CLOSE OUT SPECIALS BirRe Prepaifcd . ,39c and up Imperial Fabric .... 79c i. r. Varlar Stainproof . $1.59 i. r. Birfte Flocki ......$2.98 i. r. ACME PAINT 3 N. Sasinaw Cor. Piko FE 2-3308 Open Fri. 'til 9 State Top Performance On The Course ^ THE JACK NICKLAUS VVJather Flight Golf Jacket The remarkable ability and consistent success of Jbek -Nicklous have made him the biggest newsmaker;‘in the history, of. professionaj, golf. Robert Lewis Weather Wear has joined forces' ■with the champion to design one qf fhe finest golf jackets ever! Tailored of fine satiri ‘back twill, it features adjustable side tabs, bi-swing action back and plenty of pocke| room. We have it in'*'the season's srhartest sportswear shades. ' . Dinil Throw 11 yiivay , , REBUILD it: TODAY! Our taptrli will rpilorp n«w comfort, hlohof quality Into your proaont mat-Irpii or box iprlng . . . comparo boloro you buy! s (duo itnivvtl in ff i iliiiff 7 Ye 27“ 1 OXFORD lUTTRESS 00. 497 North Perry St., Pontiac FE 2-1711 j SERVING THE PONTIAC AREA OVER 41 YEARS | animl hear Ibis •al weakness iu cusaliuns, it Is self accusation I fascinated by her irrational notion Hial she’s entirely lo bliimc for this boy's behavior that she can’t rear back from his falher’.s acciisa-lion.s lo know them tor what they are. My personal view is lhal jiisl w(‘iirasmil(‘ :""i ;'ianlz(‘ii On beach or bounding main, lake Jnnl-zen's own.twill . , . it has fhe carefree (rispness of cotton, and the smooth tfixiure of line knit. Start with n broad striped pullover; ribbed nt the crew ne< k, sloshed at the veid sides, sleeved lo the Yd length. S M L. ^6 00 $goo Jantzen weighs anchor with the seaworthy separates! Stand watch in the "Ketch Shirt," ,a V-neck pullover striped all around in cotton twill. Run away to sea in the "Schooner" jarnoica, a narrow-waisfed short of knitted twill, cotton faced and rayon backed. The Phekef Shirt S-M-L ^5 Jamaicas 8-18 ^7 Imported Italian Sandal Stretching over all the sun-months . . . our thong, closed in bock, wide open Tn front for a great fashion view!- Soft , leather with cork-padded heel. Sizes 5 to )0 nar-rov2 CMid medfurn; * t' jy: rill', i‘().\'riAC' riiKss, ti ksdav, may ii, Getting Husband to Buy More Clothes Hy MAIIY I’I'IKI.KY ('oiiKiiltHiit In Moiiry MiinugHimit Dciir Mins I'VrU'y: Oik- of my blfjjResI problems is Ibiil 1 feel my husband should spend more on elolhes. lie (uirns abouf as a imiversily professor, Our moil Ha«e .paymenlj Is $75 a monfb, taxes $.55(1 a yiuir, We have a Iwo year old emually ae lepled liieory tbaf ll’s the elolhes mad wife who keeps the poor husband in tallers, I’ve come lo believe that a lof of wives loiiK lo see Ibeir bus-bands belter dressed than they II M 1 la loar, my bus I a n d was a .liKliml and our llns})it(il <'////)/0//e .s lih'c Mrs i'niiik hroini. I'nirircr Street ih'lti. mil he liniinirii at the (iinnial h'lni eiiee NKjlitiiKjale tea Tliursda'j/ I 1 p III. at I’niitiae (leiieral Hospital. Hostesses are iiieinbers of the voiiien's aimliarii. Here Mrs. Franl: I lake my stand wllb Ibe women who li'el men are en tilled lo Ibink of Iheir Own elolbinn needs as top priorily. In fact, I Ibink the men literally have an obli|,;aliou lo do so. More often (ban not, they are the ones whose personal a|ipearanee eonnts most, he eause they are the (rout line of defense or attaek, if you prefer a more suitable word Itlirretl, ()i chard Lake n if/lil) sees hiiie the iieie elei'tiic beds ijirrii the haspitid hji the aii.rdiarj/ leork. In the renter is Mrs. II. M. Wiiiklen. Seniniole Aoenite. an Anieneaii Red He had o n 1 y LKULKY 7 for making a living ill Ibis nil and jacki’t last competitive world .ear, two imirs of pants Ibe Anolher point is that II icn’s war befon clollilng, pci Item, ollcn : co.si.s The rest ot bis waidi robe 1 more Ilian women 'a. A small laics bfick lo before our i nar gal can tuck a .511 < •(“III sea rl In lagc In nil ill! Ihc n(‘ckline ot an old suit and Ineliuling upkeep. At this IKiInt, Irp to Ntreteh It to $70 a month iinMI your hnshund can bring his worn-out wardrobe up to a reasonable level. If you allow $1:25 a month for bouslng (which includes your yearly taxes); $50 Idr household operating ex|)enses; and $05 for food you can piobably do II. The food allowaiu'c, I admit, n'lusl be flguissl right down (o the last polalo . chi|). You're prohably accuNtopied lo spend lug $5 or $0 more each week for. grocerii's Hut remember lhal I'vi^ idlowed $50 a nionib tor houseludd clcaiiing .‘lupplies under lhal cali'gory And maybe you've lus'ii llgiirlng lho.se llem.s uiider lh(‘ heading ol "lood”. A.s for lhal Iasi plea In your leller ludping lo persuadt' him he has a rigid lo consider his own wardrobi' im|)orlanl I guess all we can do is Just let him read what you and I say lo etK;li other. (Kor MOi y Keeley's new book- , iel, "Make Kvery DOIIar count," Hiuid $1 to Dollar Hook In cnro' of The I'oidiac ITess.) nspital rolnnteer. (^iijilily Training: by I>0|H'/. School Wiilton nivd. Ill IHxle llwy. Drayton IMain.s OR a-0222 lie feels we can't afford lo .spend more .for his elolhes. Ciin you help me persuade him lie IS enidled lo spend some I lung out of his iiu'ome for his own iH'isonal nei’ds'.' Ii S , fioehesler. N 5' Deiir H, S. 5dur Idler brings up a sub jeci I've been intending lo sound off aboul for (|uile awhile. I look |)osilively avani garde. Or she can ehauge her hairdo and look up lo-lh(‘-minule, l.efs try lo sell our men on Ibe idea i llial we eaie how lliey dri'ss, ' how I hey look and lhal ! Ihev're eiililled lo some per sonal benefits from Ihi'ir own earnings. hHill S IIAIH STY 1-1 STS —STVU.S'I’S—n * Mniilvii Dr. * Uaii.ly W e » t.eorpe W »• Call OH2 9}{(>}t ;t;<00 Oielnn.l I.U ltd (;»liliiir ivr ltd. Krom liifrh S.-liool Those ol us wlio musi con slanlly light Ihe bailie ol Ibe bulge .sometimes forget lhal many women long for curves. They might even settle for a very small bulge! They do not like pi|)eslem h‘gs and a flat chest and no hips any better Ilian we do a roll over Ibe girdle. Actually 1 do write lo my underweight readers |ieri(Mlically. "Dear Mrs, l.owman "You always write about did and exercise for Ihe overweight woman. No om* ever seems lo think aboul Ihe un-derweighls. There are as many of us as Ibere are fal women." “enrollment availjibic Learn a Profemional Service TllWWill(l”B6M^ I ^ 1 I I duu't know aboul lhal' I do hear much more olleii from overweights. Anyway, 1 do not mean to neglect my underweight readers. The letter continues. Faculty & (lulructors: OltA RANDAI-I, ★ ZOTA JAY Nfl.S (iKACK (XYLMNS ★ MARY ANN I.KATHi:KHKltHV 11'/2 s. SAGINAW — ITIONK; FK l-2.'{r)2 "Summertime is just around the corner and we are already dreading it. We need some advice alKiiit exercise and a diet wbieb will add a few pounds lo our skinny legs, aims and hips. Plea.se help us. We want to look pretty loo " (;ain all ovlk 1 have recently given exercises to increase lh(> size of the legs, bust and hip measurements. There is no special food which will put the poundif,^ on any special measurement. When you gain you gain all over. However you can build up the chest muscles to make ^our bust more prominent and ^ou can increase the size of IFve muscles in your legs and arms to make them fuller. So far as diet is concerned, it is very important that you have one which is nutritionally .sound. That is the first re-(luirement! Then you can add some of the high-caloric goodies which overweights cannot afford. Vitamin supplements' have Raise your arms sideward, shoulder height, with your Aii.v wile yonsciously, or siib-con.sciously, wants her husband lo look )ik(' Ibe man slu' vol iinlarily cho.se out of a whole group of filie-looking men! So he isn’t doing her any favor by neglecting his aiipearance. The idea he tbusl accept is that she’d far rather admire him than feel .sorry for him. As far as the budget Is coiieerned, you should iior-lually be able to allow $511 a month for family elothing. Rubber Sink Mat Protects Cupboard The Larrxj Kldo Weavers (Klnine Mane Rerrj/) left far a Florida honeyrnoon ajter their vows and reception. Sat urday, in the Troy Assembty nj God Church. The dauyhter of the Donald K. Berrys of Norton Street appeared in chapellenylh white Rochelle lace over taffeta. She held her f/randinother's while Bible topped with gardenias for the vows pledged _before Rev. Louis Calaway. Her twin, Aleen, attended along with Barbara McClure, Ratricia Oprean and Debbie Berry. Judy Mean and Michael liar- A rubber sink mat lacked inside your cupbo.ird door will do away with clatter made by utensils hanging there. It. is easily .saves Ihe door fri ■leanc'd and Leaving for Niagara Falls after chapel vows and reeep tion, Saturday, in the Central Methodist Church were Mr. and Mrs. Michael Jason iliehs I Antoinette FAaine Neirai. Their parents an' the Joe Neiras of West Hopkins Street and Mr. and Mrs. John 0 Hicks of Fast Boulevard North. With her .street-length goicn of white lace, the bride wore 'a lace circfel with face veil. Red roses centered her boui/uet of white carnations. Mrs. Richard Johnson was her attendant at the rile per formed by Dr. Milton Bank. James Lee Immell was best man. Steve Toth tpid William Mihalek were ushers. GOOD NEWS! Now—when you feed your lawn, take care of brown spots (fungus) automaticallyl .lust spread .Scolls new nuu' lu 11 Ml K ei.iis I. II goes Mj.hi K. woi k glowing ,.i, cnci •.Im'dici glass al the s.uiic I’.nic II gels rid of lungus disease and moss. Keeps youi lawn in tlic good healih il must have to slay giccn and vibianl. Only Scolls is liioiihnl. (iiows deeper roots in any soil. Keeps grass greener longer. America's favorite lawn fertiliser plus fHii}>iis control 3.95 2,.500 sq ft aothori/ed dealer REGAL m;i;d iimi I,AW N .sdimma co. I’oMlii.r l^OOO W.hmIm.h.I Ax.-. I L .".-.{ItOi n>..iie OK .(-2 I I I I’ll......M V .•;-27l."> Moffs SPECIAL PURCHASE Qualily Carpetx And Draperies Since 1941 OPEN FRIDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P.M. Many Other Mattresses to Choose From Sale Priced From $26.00 LTji - Convenient Temui OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 5:30 Moodnjr and Friday I’UIS 144 OAKLAND AVENUE li \ ‘ ^ 'I'MK, l‘()N'riA(’ rilKS^S, 'I'IIK.SI>A\, MAY ll. Tlip riittJoiKy of ilontliH from lii>>eroiiloNifl n m o |i g whltn, mnlf! Amoi Icnnji o c <. u r iii ngrw 35 M. Weather Has Raised Havoc With Nation's Fruit Crop CMICAOO (Af) Wlhu»i'« cold Mild H|>rtng'«i vlolnnco dollv- cates, , Heavy damage horn California lo New Knginnd wan reported. Only the Southeant encaped major lonnen. miOMAl STOCK SERIES,,. a mutual fuUd with Mcuri-tlM BclacUd for rolal iv«ly Sood Inromo and roaiion-abl« oapilal apnrpciation |M)«Blbillii«* williin (hp limit ot mnrkpt rink. Spp mnrkpt rink. Spp your invPKimpnt donlpr lor Frkb rroH|H'rl.ua and literal lire or aend lo Preliminary esllmalen plaml fruit crop lonsen at more Ilian |I0 million, coimervalion and .Htate ofticialn naid Hardest hit was the lush apple and peach couniry ol the North west Where suh/ero Ih'cemhei cold aiHl spring Irost all bill wiped out the |>nMliicllon of many orchards. IIAKD-IIIT FltlUT The wealher's victims Incliid ed fieaches, apricots, cherries, apiiles, (lears and strawlierries. Washington state officials said pear and cherry crops had been heavily damaged and the apricot and jieach crops ruined. The strawberry crop In tlie western half of the stale was expel led to he 5(1 per cent below Iasi year's yield. iCnglaiHl also rejauletl heavy strawtierry damage, and l,.oiilsl' ana said Its priMliiction had dropped sharply. In the Midwcsl, tornadoes and flnod.s have raged since March, hut crop' experts hlametl Ihe long winter for mosi damage Home Illinois areas re|Mirled up to V5 per cent of (he peach buds damaged by cold. Most Mltiweslern |)olnts said Ihei.lale spring had slowed planling and lell Ihe ground Wel MIclilgan officials also .said fruit hud develo|)ment was aboul 1(1 days laler Hutu cus lomary. CHOP OF,LAYS sands of acres of arable land i freak warm s|)cll had leased Freakish wcalher also severe under wuler, would nol hurl Ihe | |teach buds oul 'and laler cold ly nil lulo Ihe Maryland I tela fruK cro|>s, generally planted on weather had nipped Jhetn, cul ware peac h crop along Ihe Fast higher grounds. t, lllng heavily lulo Ihe expected ern .Shore ptuiinsula. Thai vll * * * I crop. I lain was a .lanuary free/e, Much more puni.shing. Agro- ONE COLOR rmin i;k,.n The ^ h a I e iindernealh I h e i fi.sh, long ^xllnct, also bgvi! been Cleveland, Ohio, area, has yield j found In the' ('levslsnict shale, ed whole .sharks four and five .Some of these fossils hhVe been feel long |)ieaerved for thou Ncnt th the Mritish Museum and sands ol years Fossils of other Ihe .Smithsonian In.stltutlnn. nnmy Prof .lames Mawry of j Houtiiern IIIIhoIs University | said, were Ihe lornadoes that i lore Up jhousands of IruH trees. MasMachiwcIlH officials said a 'llie effects of Ihe crop dclay.s, agriculture experts said, would i he deb'imined hy wt'alher pal ! terns in Ihe nexi lew monih.s One crop experl .said Ihe | spring flcMHls, which left Ihou i Complatn Repair Service Mimeograph and Duplicating Machines CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. Fr4-B59l It's Worth Your While To Drive That Extra Mile and Save a Pile! BILL SPENCE BILL SPENCE, Inc. CHRYSLIR PlYMOUTH RAMBLlI? - JEf P 6673 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston 625-2635 Doc.S HEARING LOSS rol) you of TogpfIkmnc.s.s wiOi I'fiiiiily and Erieiul.s? now hr,II ilriulv wilh lhl^ tuiiu/mx tirw III iliiixi.ini nlimc Sre liou iixtiiially llic rill '.li|is III Miictriiil il^ cii<eat heck out of the bottom ones, we'll do it,'*’ he saht So far. Swift’s formula has worked only since tlie weekend when Baltimore and Detroit halved four games, two of them going into extra innings. STIMi (;iV|N(! SKJNAES - Ca.sey Stengel, manager of tlie New York Mels who will have to wear a cast on his broken wrist for eiglit weeks, still manages to give signals with his left hand. 'I’he 74 year-old manager fell at the II S, Military Academy where the Mets were playing an exhibition game yesterday. Even Wrist Fracture Can't Stop Stengel Detroit won Saturday's game and lost a pair Sunday before Mickey Lolich, 4-2, struggled bravely ttirough eight innings Monday night, holding Baltimore still while his teammates scrambled for the winning run. Crozier Gains Rookie Honors MONTItKAl, (Ill’ll Detroit lied Wing Coach Sul Abel, who was roundly crilin/ed Iasi year fftlT' Idling veleiiin nelinindei Teriy Sawchuk go lo llie Toion Maple Cro/.ler play<‘d In morn games than any goalie In the NHL this past season -- all Inil iihoiit to minutes of the 70 game sehediile. I (he <'alder trophy day was enjoyii.g (he last laugh ' ,,, gy ol rookie Iloger (ro/ler. ^ |„ Abel permitted Toronto to ji|| hm two „f n„. flo possibln grab Sawchuk lor (lie $'20,(100 |a,||||,,j |„ ||„. „ ..........“ tigb his ! lolid of 155, goalie, tlie '2:i I , bad only 15 games I' in the National Hock But (|ro/ier rewarded Abel for ,his lailb in him throughout the .season and Monday (ulfilled Abel’s prophecy liy winning the (’alder lropb\. dnbleinalii’ ol the lop rookier in lh<‘ Nlll.. “If I didn’t think Cro/.ier j was goml enough lo handle the job, I wouldn’t have let Ter- ] ry go on waivers,’’ explained Abel alter the transaction last ' June. '.t.’l goal .scorer Bon Kills was a distant runnerup wllli 107 points while Chicago (loidie Di'iiis Dejordy attracted onl\ '.!0 points. Olympia Plans Big Expansion Seating Capacity Will Exceed 16,000 KIBiST BLACK SMILKS - Minne.sola Twins’ pitcher Jim Kaat (rightl and catcher Jerry Zimmerman (left) congratulate relief ‘(;(K)D STUFF’ Baltimore hit Loloch hard, collecting II hits including a leadoff homer by Jack Brandt in the fourth inning that pid the Orioles on lop 4-J for a while. Swift .said his pitcher “had al gowl stuff, but wtis putting pitcher Mel Nelson after defeating the White Sox, 4-.'l lo move into first place in the American l.eague Zimmerman had J-for-.l and Nelson slopped a Chicago rally in the ' NKW YORK (UI’I) - There \yas a crack In Casey Stengel’s “Oil, yes, lying my tie in the lining,’’ he added, suddenly! ist but none at all in his remembering the dordor had told him his wrist would have to remain in a cast for six to eight weeks. it where they could hit It,’’ This was only an hour or so after he had fractured a bone in his right wrist at West Point and although the pain was bothering him he spoke right up so as to get a few things clear. “It’s nothing,’’ he said fir.st off. “I autograph with my left hand and I don’t have to hit to. the infield, so what’s the problem'.’ “No trouble there, either. I’ll gel myself some of those just clip 01} and don’t have to tie.” Rec Softball Back on Scene Opening Games Set In Township In a way, a wrong guess Ca.sey’s part had a lot to do with the accident which oc- curred shortly before the Mets took on Army’s baseball team in their annual exhibition game Monday. “I had two pairs of shoes brought up here,” explained the 74-year-oId Met manager, WRONt; CHOICE “One had spikes and the other didn’t. I puiled out the pair that had the spikes on. If 1 wore the other pair, it wouldn’t have happened.” Lolich confcs.scd that an errant pre-game throw by Kaline had hit him in the pilchinj^ elbow causing it to stiffen. “I didn’t feel right until the fifth,” Lolich said. By that time Detroit had lied the score. The go-ahead run followed in the sixth when Don Demctef singled and Oriole right fielder j Brandt fumbled Bill Freehan’i double down the line. TIRED PITCHER Lolich gave way to Terry Fox in the ninth. Afterward, he said he was tired. “I musta thrown a million pitches.” Al Kaline started the scoring for Detroit in the first when he cracked a three-run homer over the center field fence. The homer was Kaline’s third in three days. Coach Big Help to Iwins' Staff tndeed, Cro/ier bandied Hie job so well lliai he became one (if tile tew rookier players evi-r lo be selected to the league's DETROIT (AP) Final plans first All-Star learn, and missed in a $1,5 million expansion pro-by two goals winning the Ve/ gram designed to give Olympia ina Trophy - the cup annual- Stadium the .second largest list-Iv awardi'd lo the goalie playing^'’*! I’apacily in the National the inosl games with the learn Hockey League were announced allowing Hie fewesi goals. Monday. Ironically, Cro/ier lost out in ‘ <'""'i"'uclion ■p of From Our News VVIres The once maligned Minnesota pitching staff is rapidly gaining respectability and the Twins finger new pitching coach Johnny Sain as the man most responsible for the improvement. Sain is the highest priced coach ($25,000) that Twihs’ President Calvin (Iriffith has ever hired and already he has worked magic with a pitching c'orps that ranked a shaky fifth last season. Nelson was obtained from Denver just before the season started upon Sain's recommendation. His prize pupils include the Minnesota aces, Jim Kaat and Camilo Pascual, who were holdouts this spring and had to be whipped into shape rapidly, and veteran Dick Stigman and rookie reliever Jerry Fosnow. Adult recreation softball action returns to the area sports scene tonight at Drayton Plains when the IVaterford Township Men’s League opens its season With a twinbill. The first two tilts of the league’s 180-game slate have Midget Bar meeting Huron Bowl at 7 p.m. and Bob ^and Larry’s Bar opposing Keg and Anchor Bar at 8:30 p.m. Ten teams have entered the league. The regular schedule will run through the last week of July. A three-division postseason playjoff is planned. The circuit’Adop three teams will meet for ^ spot in the .state Class B tournament. The fourth-sixth place finishers will play for the Class C berth; and the la.st four will battle for the ‘ D” playoffs spot. League coordinator Bill Wood has announced three more double-headers this week at the Drayton Plains Softball Park. All 10 teams will have seen action by Thursday night, weather permitting. The other games: Stengel had just left the gymnasium where he and the Mets had dressed and was walking to a special bus which was to transport the team to the playing field, only a few hundred yards away, when he tripped on a small incline and fell heavily on his right wrist. “I couldn’t have been treat-C(' better if it happened in my own house,” said Casey. “The service was 100 per cent. I can’t kick one. bit. They did everything for me they could. It wasn’t anybody's fault. Just happened, that’s all.”. Freehan c Wert 3b 1 3 R.J'hson 1 1 0 Bowens r( 1 0 Powell If A lot of these players had devefoped some bad pitching habits last year,” Sain explained, “and just weren't thinking on infield plays.” Kaat won his third game Monday night and pitched the Twins into first place iti the American League with a 4.3 victory over Chicagd. The tri- Pascual and .Ilm Ciiant each have three complete game vic-torie.s and Kaat has gone the route twice. Combined, the three hurlers have won 10 and lost two. .lerry Zimmerman led the Minnesota offense with three hits. Rich Rollins doubled home one run and plated another with an infield out and Harmon Kil-lebrew singled home the other tally. Bo.ston sent New York down to its fifth lo.ss in six games with a .3-2 triumph. Carl Yastrzemski, who believes a few more hits to left field will make him a challenger for the Amcrcian League batting championship he won two years ago, hit two home runs umph was preserved bj^ another of Sain’s “finds,Mel AMERICAN LEAGUE and a sacrifice fly Monday nigtit for Hie Red Sox The 25-year-old Boston star knocked ^^in a first-inning run with a liner to left fielder Mickey Mantle and homered into the left field screen In the fourth before driving deep into the right field stands irt the eighth to snap a 2-2 deadlock and help ropkie right-hander Jim Lon-borg post his first major league victory. Lonborg needed a nintb-inning assist from relief ace Dick Radatz. Mickey Mantle drove in both New York runs with his fifth, homer and a single but the Yankees plummeted to ninth place despite pitcher Bill Stafford’s fir.st complete game since 1962 his hid for a clean post-season honors to the man he replaced .Sawcliuk wound up Hie winner Hiougli he played barely more than half as much as Crozier. The Leafs allowed only 173 goals while Detroit gave up 175. PAY DAY Crozier still wound up with $7,000 in official NHL bonu.s money, plu.s whatever portion of that the Red Wings agreed to match. He received a total of $500 for leading the Calder voting on each of the two ballots and another $1,000 for winning it outright. He and the rest of the Red Wings received $2,250 for finishing first in the regular season; he got another $500 as runner-up in the Veziha race; still another $1,000 for his losers share of the playoffs. program, first major expansion in the building’s 3B-year history, will enlarge the capacity by 2,312 lo I6..375, including standing room. Bruce A, Norris, president of Olympia and the Detroit Hockey Club, Inc., said the enlargement will be concentrated in the rear of the building, an area now bordered by a parking lot. One of the highlights of the expansion program, Norris .said, will be the installation of an escalator running from the main floor of the new addition to the balcony. Another is the installation of an automatic temperature-humidity control. James B. Lyttle, vice president of the Corbetta Construction Co. of New York, said that while it is hoped all of the new .seats would be available for the start of the NHL season, the completion deadline for the addition is December 1. Nelson. SET DOWN SIDE Chicago Los Angalas Ciaveland I D 0 j NeKson, a 29-year-old journey-1 BalUmort E-Blair. E Detroit 5, Baltimore 8. 21,-Adair, Freehan, Aparlcio. HR ....... ■ idt (3). sb-Bowens, ^ man who has kicked around the minors for eight years and j had brief trials with St. Louis and the Los Angeles Angels, relieved in the ninth inning and set down three White Sox in a J row with a run already in jgid the lying and leading runs on 1 ba.se. limit Due Tonight Monday's Rosults Boston 3, ......... ^ Detroit 5. Baltimore 4 ...........Chicago 3 (ly games scheduled. Today's .Gamas IS Angeles (Chance. 3 0) a (Stigman 0-0), Detroit (Wlckersharr ton (Kreutzer 0-2), ni( Cleveland (Terry Minnesota I Washing- j Baltimore New 2-2) a Only games scheduled. Wednesday's Gamas Kansas City at Chicago, 2, twi-night Ldia Angeles at Minnesota, night Detroit at Washington, night Cleveland at Baltimore, night New York at Boston, night Trade Deadline Has Yanks Scrambling Los Angeles Cincinnati Houston Philadelphia - Day's Sanitary Service v . Richardson Dairy-. 1. Dixie Tool) ^VS..^Oh . I p.m. — Keg and Anchor vs. Huron wl; p.m. — Lakeland Pharmacy Howe's Lanes. Spring Grid Drills End MARQUETTE (AP> - Northern Michigan .spring football practice. ends Saturday night, with’ the traditional Green-White game at Memorial Field. BOSTON (AP) - The Yankees usually have to scramble at this time of the year, but usually it’s a scramble to pare tbeir power down to the 25-man player limit by the deadline — due tonight at midnight. But this time thie scramble is a frantic, desperate search fdr help in their attempts to stay close that has New York General Manager Ralph Houk glued to the telephone. \ Houk’s latest acquisition, Ray Barker, who has yet to get his first major league base hit, will start at fjrst.base for the struggling Bombers" tonight. Joe Pep-itone gogs to the outfield, j Barker, a left-handed hitter who doubles at first base and the outfi6ldy-xame to the Yanks in a straight player swap with Cleveland Monday. The Yanks sent utility infielder Pedro Gonzalez to the Indians. BENCH HELP “There was a necessity for more left-hand hitting in our line-up,” Manager Johnny Keane said, “and this deal will spread out our bench a little more — for the time being at The deal left the Yankees — stHl struggling along in the depi;hs of the seoDirid division — with 24 players, one under the limit. There was every indied-tioft that vacancy would be filled as soon as possible --probablj^ through another tradg. The first Yankee deal after a rash of injuries cut d(mn-.-tbe^ heart of their power — Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris and Elston Howard -— sent Roland Sheldon and John Blanchard to Kansas City for catcher Doc Edwards. Duke Carmel was farmed out at the same time. Mantle returned to the Yankee line-up last night, but was limping badly on his ailing legs. Maris is at hi& home in Missouri and Howard! is on the injured Barker ' batted .278 in 156 games dt Portland of the Pacific Coast League ■ last season, with 23 home runs and 81 runs battik in. He was hitless in six times at bat thik season. Gonzalez hit .277 in 80 ggmes with the Yankees last year and was 2-for-5 this season. Mondiy'i Rciulti Philadelphia 4, St. Loolj 2, 10 Innings Cincinnati at Pittsbul'gh, postponed, Los Angeles 3, .Houston 2, 10 Innings Only games scheduled. Today's Games St; Louis (Gibson 5-0) at New York (Spahn 2-2), night Houston (GiustI 5-0) at Los Angeles (Osteen 3-2), night Cincinnati (Tsitourls 2-2) at Philadelphia |Short 4-2), night- (Marichal 5 .. Milwaukee (SadowskI 2-t) a (Cardweli>l), night Pittsburgh St. Louie at New York Chicago at San Franclsca-Cincinriati at Philadelphia, night MllwauXee’at Pittsburgh, night Houston at Los Angelas, night MICH COLLEGE ,,SCOREBOARD Sprinji Arbor 12. Hillsdale 2 Michigan State 3, Notre Dame 0 i OatroK' 11, Bawling Green (Ohiol i National Association, of Intarcollagiata Athletics District Meets. Track Central Michigan 102, Hillsdale S8. Ferris State 21, Northern Michigan 24, Spring Arbor ». DAWiV DOiWmS 804 Pontiac, Michigan PERKY Phone 334-9041 VARIETY FRIED CAKES 1 hi$ \f Added'Feuture: FRIED PIES ^ • Chorry"* Pineapple • Lemon, etc. Deliciously J)ifferent Flavor-Filled Taste Trent OPEN SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY FRIDAYS and SATURDAYS 5 A,M.'Til n P.M. 5 A.M. to 12 P.M. On The Way .To Work dr Home Ft|om A Party, You'll Enjoy Dawn's Fambus* Flavor Brewed Coffee DaWH DONUTS SIXTKEl^ HornungRole With Packers Still Clouded Acquisition (jf Kicker Has Green Bay Star Pondering Future L0U1SVIU,K: (UI’I) I’iml lloriiuiif! IN ljikin(^ ii "wail and N(*f" Mtliliidc In repaid In IiIn mlc willi till' (Jrmi Hay l*ack < i>. 4M‘xl yrai slmr llic Icain has acqiiliC(l kii kri l>on ('hand Ici lloi'niint: Ntoillly (Icnicd lhal M'vnal cnu'ial kirks hr iniNsrd Iasi season rosl the Parkers Ihr Wrsiri n ('(mfrrrnre lillr "The Parkers had a lol ol oilier chanees they missed,’’ Horming said. ' However, Mornunt! si ill must I have nightmares a h o ii t the hools that misseel the mark in hvo crillral games with the' Maltimore (’oils. I In the first |(ame, llonning missed an extra point that en- | nbled (he ('nits to eke out a 21-20 win over the Paekers. In the second Colts game, with the Packers still very much | in the running lor the division ^ Idle, llornijiig missed five Held goal alieinpls, the last one . from only 12 yards out. j Hornung admilled lhal his kicking wasn’t what it should have been, and added, ’’that year’s layolf may have h u r I some.” j StlSPKNDKn PLAYHIIS Hornung and Alex Karras of the Detroit Lions were sus|xmd ed for one year by NFL Corn missioner Pete Hozelle for belling on games. > * * * The Packers, siMin after the season ended, acquired (’handler from the New ^'ork (lianls, and there has been speculation lhal he would handle most of the field goal and extra-point chores for the Packers. H o r n II n g said if (’handler does take over these duties it will enable him to concentrate more on running. TFIE I>ONTIA(’ I'llESS, TrKSDAV. MAY Tl, lOO.-J OOLF J aclK------------- S’,, • 'T/y/r /^/a//s// • WAV I OK ^^^hOINN|-^K6' 'lO Prvu.op C-C'C'P hOKM, ANP tMl-ANt-t le» 'in Cr-Fi -r T 'IHPPF iw A 3AU,- 'iHfAA ANP CPNCg^MlPAlfc ^-DeiC-fCV ONI 'THI? tHPppPW-■il,IPOti6o (, dillTM HOCP TUP C-hUP PAr fiACA n'A/ifn fH. r d>OOt> iH^(j»Hnur lAMC r, 1 11 AC nc^cnON, r cx?i -\NOKK, WcKbl I r fe»Hlp-|' -UMIM0, PnyTH A\, 11 i p AMP A.I If3ui R R. ACTION-- Alp c:OM nei^u 11^ •lO 'iKl I INK-H. ir- you cNp THP ^WlNC-^ OPC' HALAMC/t' you CAN ffiT ^uep you MAPP AM ISRPOS? alonjo TH& WAy, Court or Gridiron? That Is Question Boys club Skaters Drop 8-5 Decision The Pontiac Boys Club dropped an B-5 decision to Royal Oak’s Black Hawks last night in a Post-Season League hockey match at Gordie Howe Hockey-land. Larry Johnson (2), Wally and Bud Williams and Ron Prince each netted markers for the losers who are 2-4-1 now and tied for third place. » Set Baseball Tryouts Talbott Lumber’s Class A city baseball league entry \yill have tryouts from 5 p.m. until dark today and Thursday. Manager Art Hearn listed the workouts for Jaycee Park’s No. 1 diamond today and Aaron Perry Park’s north diamond Thursday. When Looking for a Pontiac or Buick PINK BIJIFF, Ark I API Harold Blevins is in a dilemma and he wouldn't trade places with anyone Here's his problem; The New York Kniekerhock ers want him lo pl;i\' professional basketball. The Dallas Cowboys want him Id play professional f(Mil-ball. * * * A fi-f(K)l-l, IBfI-pounder, Hlev ins starred in baskelb/d) al Ar kansas AM &N, a Negro school, playing in the .Southwestern Attilctie (.’onferetiee. . | I But Blevins was a standout 1 ] footballer as an end in high I school al Tuscaloosa, Ala., and j Ibo Cowboys want lo try him al j flanker back or split end. SIGNS PACT I I They’ve got bis name on a I contract for a tryout at the Cow-] boys training camp at Thousand I Oaks, Calif., July IS. I The National Football League 1 team became understandably concerned last Thursday when the Knicks of the National Basketball A.ssociation drafted Blevins in the s(Jcond round. Why not play for both .’ Because football and basketball seasons overlap, more so than baseball and football, or * basketball and ba.scball. !,'*** “Dallas called to remind me of my contract with them,” Blevins said. "I think my I chances are belter in basketball I because I have not played football since high school. But I’m not going to make a definite de-j cision yet. 1 have a real good contract with Dallas.” SECOND CHANCE A second-round NBA draft and a professional football con- ' tract for a fellow who hasn’t played the gridiron since high school indicate that Hl<‘vins has •soiru' r('siM>clid)le moves And his car(‘cr totals hear il oul: 2,241 points in four collegiate sca.sOMS, with a 2:i.Tpoiiil average his senior year. The Knicks have (sinlacliHl him alaiiil coniraci terms and Ihev'll work oul a proposal with him Ibis week Meanwhile, lh(‘| ('owl)oy.s arc keeping Ihcir eye on the goings on And Hlcvin.s’ He's jusl wailing for |hc bidding lo slop. Home Course Fine for Win Boh McGillcn, a.s.sistant pro al Weslerfi Golf and Country Club, cnjoy('d the confines of his home course yesterday in winning the weekly pro-am tournament with partner G(^orgc Sidley, * They teamed up for a J.'i-.’tl -fifi best hal], score. One stroke behind was Franklin Hills assistant Larrv Bianco and partner Mike Kukes, 33-34-67, Dick Bury led all the pros in scoring with 72 while McGillcn has 74 on his own ball. There were six teams tied at 69 including Warren Orlick of Tam O’Shantcr and partner Hugh Mendenhall, and Gene Bone of Lancaster Hills and Jack Barnes. I McGlllen-Georgf SIdIfy ry Blanco-MIkf KuK« k Clark-Hugh ihall ]2-36 'Jim Rlchardl... _ Boh McGlllen-Pra Gary Whilaner-r yyhltlng Dick Bury-Harold Sella Bob DushanerJohn Czarn Jim Richardson-Woody A< INSURANCE BY Pattersjtui menus pro-" tection against burglary. If cat burglar; shauld' ftrike your jewelry, dies, ■ furs as I'l as other items would be re- lhe“ ho.use would -be e paired. ■ THATGHiR - PA1TERS0N. INC. ‘ "S/nce i8^9 Tailored Policies, Total Protection” 711 Community National Bank Building, Pontiac, Michipan nPalAMhI 4.II90J k>a«a. i ..._ L'egal Beagle Still Follows Title Match Promoters Begin Talk of Suit While County Plans Investigation BOSTON (API 'Htc legal beagles continue to upslage llie eombalanis in the saga of the po.sl|)oned, maligned mid now Iraiisplanlisl world licavyweigbl Idle IlgliL As a refresher, that’s (be one that pits champion ('ussius Clay and Sonny List In Lewiston, Maine, May 26. Il .started Us rocky road lo iejillly nine months, one henila o|>eialion and a court liallle over a ' banned in Boston” Injunction ngc. But hack to the legalilh's. .Suffolk Counly DisI, Ally. Garrell Byrne_ who .sought Ilie inlunclion (o block the flglil sciicduled at Bo.slon Garden May 2.') prior lo lasi Friday, in diciiles his investlgalion isn'l over. He say.s he may presiml evidence lo a grand jury and Is interested in alleged ‘ pressure ” applied lo get the fight in Mas-sachnsells. Meanwhile, a source close lo InlerConlinenlal I’romolion.s, Inc, who does not wish his name used, says lhal group and Sporf.svision, lh(“ closed-circuit television outfit, hpvc lawyers Invesligaliiig the po.ssibility of .suing D.A. Byrne for $5 million. ONE WOltI) The sonree said (he figld was taken oUl of Boston amid conrl action which "left llic hackers hanging in Ihc balance as gnilly (if some lerrihlc Ihing ” He added the proof of .something sinister has never been forlhcoming. The word "harassment” is gelling a workoiil. "We got so led Up wilh the nonsense and harasHTuent we couldn’t wail any longer and chance a posiponemeni,” Inler-Conlinenlal’s Harold Conrad said of Ihe pulling out of Boston done before Ihe injunction request was actually passed (qxin Friday. Gov, John H. Hc(>d of Maine, who l('d a general slalc-widc embracing of the transferred fight and called if “one of the biggest thing!) that’s ever happened in %lne,” said Monday the.backers "wc'cc not running away from Ihc law but running from what was almost haras-ment by the law” The promoters say boxing is a “cripple Ihc politicians pick on” and the sport “has taken a bum rap here,” Byrne says his mail is ”running 12-1 in favor of me” adding 1 Ihc correspondence is Ihc heav-! icsl in years. COIJNTI^H MOVE ! Byrne says he doesn’t feel ! Intcr-Confincntal pulled out of Bostqn to put him on the spot ' hu| rather "they knew they would have lost and didn’t want an injunction issued against ! them.” Byrne says he has a letter [ from Chairman Herman Green-j berg of the Mas.sachusetts Boxing Commission to M. L. Mo Kenzie of Toronto, head of the : World Boxing Commi.ssion, written last September, mentioning "‘‘pressure” applied in originally bringing the fight lo Massachusetts. Greenberg said he nu'anl by political pressure that he has. friends in political life, some of whom were interested in seeing Ihc bout staged in the stale. WE WILL OVERHAUL YOUR Phillie Rookie^Homers Big Hit May Spare Him Travel Hy The Axamdated IVckx When Johnny Briggs wakes up Wednesday, he'll .sill! be a I’liihulelphla llilllie Thai’s nol his idea, hid with his luck he can’t ovoid 11, AAA Briggs, a 21 yiuir-old oiilflcld-er, had hoptxl lo Inm Into an Arkansas Traveler al tonight’s hewll(;hlng hour of mldiilgld Then l\(‘ was .s(‘iil lo hal a.s a |ilnch hlll(‘i III Ihe ninlli Inning (il Moiidav iiighl's giiiiic wilh SI l.oiils. Twenty minutes laler, Ihe I’hillies had a 4 2 vicloiy and Briggs owned a .spot on the team's 26 man roster. The young lelly. In his second season wilh the f’hlllles, don tiled and scored the tying run In Ihe ninth, llien .slammed a two run homer in Ihd lOlh, Briggs’, name has been lossi'd aidiind as one of three player.s who must he pared from Ihe ro.sler by midniglil tonight, Ihe iiuijoi'.s’ nildown deadline. NO INTENTION And while Mmiiiger Gene Mmicti said after Ihe SI. Louis game he never has had any intention of delivering Briggs lo Ihe minor.s, Briggs aelually would welcome a li ip lo Lillie Bock. Detroit Boxer Is Hospitalized I’HILADELI’IIIA Mi A De i Iroil boxer, l.ucian Sonny Hanks, j was taken iincon.scioiis In Pre.s-i hylerian Hospllal today allor he j .suffiTcd a .severe eerehral con-eiission in a liglil. Hanks was knoeki'd oul in Ihe ninth round of a featured hold Monday night by Philadelphian Lent is Marlin. Dr. Alfred Ayello, physician for the Slate Alhlelic Commission, said Ihe fighter suffered a “severe cerebral concussion.” * A ★ The fighter regaini'd consciousness, said Dr. Ayello, "hid we .sent him to the hospital where he will remain overnight and possibly another day for observation.” Dr. Ayello said Banks also hit his bead on the fliKir of Ihc ring when he fell. llnlll Monday night, Briggs had played In nine of the team's 22 games, posting only three hils In 13 limes at hal wilh no runs balled in. Last season, pro (ecled on llm rosier as ii fliHt-year player, he lialBxt only 66 limes in 61 games for a .256 average lli.s Iwo hils agaln.sl Ihe (!ardi nal.s rocketed his average 102 points (o .333, Ttu‘ homer e(|naled his (‘Ulire 1964 oidpul fti Ihe only other Nidlonal Lt'ague game, l.os Angeles (Higed Houston 3-'2 In 10 inningii. Rain halted Cincinnati and Pillsburgh in Ihe third inning. SLOW (illO(JNI)EK The Cardinals moved In front 2 1 In the elghlh Inning ns Mike Shannon heat Dick Stuart's throw lo the plate on Dick Groat’s slow grounder. The l)(Klgers won their game wilh two dul In (he HHh, too. I.OU Johnson, replacing the Injured Totmny Davis, heal oul an infield single wilh Iwo out. then stole secemd and (jontlmied to third when catcher John. Baleman fired Ihe ball wildly, AAA AlliT Hal W oil Hie course or greens except in lia/ards. The 7,132 yard 'rrinily Kiver layoiii has ahsorlied sornewliere In Ihe vlclnily of four Inches of rain since Sunday morning, and |ilii\lng comlillons are aiiyllilng hill favorahle Major League Boxes U. of D. Joins 9 to Discuss Sports League Skippers Down Kettering in Irack I B«nnHI of ;i 0 1 Mould SA 3 0 I DeniA of 2 1, 1 McGuffy ph 0 0 Brighton tempi E TON CHICACO (AIM . fleprc; .senlalives of nine universities j will meet in Chicago Tuesday lo discuss formation of a new con fcrcnce lo compete in basket I ball, baseball, tennis, golf, and (rack. I Allilclic (lircclors of Daylon, i I)clroil, Marciucllc, DcPaiil, I j Xavier of Ohio, l.oyola of New ;; Orleans, Memphis Stale, Canisi-us and Oklahoma City will attend the meeting. * * * A De Paul .siiokesmaii .said Notre Dame and Ihe Air Force Academy had asked lo be informed of developments al Ihe m(>eling, and Villanova and LaSalle had expres.sed interest in joining a new conference in IhO past, but were not expected to have representatives in Chicago 'I'hc nine schools alicnding presently compete as independ-I ents, and most alrc'ady play olher teams in the group in basket-I ball. ■ ' The DePaiil spokesman said the tentative goal is establishment of the conference during I the 1966-57 season. I-L Golf Title Is Captured by Wolled Lake Walled Lake won Ihe Inter-Lakes Conference golf ohampiorlship yesterday at Farmington County Club bv scoring its fourth league quadrangular title. The league staged four quad-r a n g u I a r s at thg respective home courses of each school and the Vikings finished with a 12-fl record against loop foes. Yesterday Walled Lake shad 205 storkes, followed by Waterford with 225, Northern 228 and Farmington 246. In the league tolals Waterford finished 6-6, Northern 4-8 and Farmington 2-10. Russ Herron led the scorers with a 39, followed teammates Bud Bowman with 40. Jim Giroux with 41 and Russ Streeter with 42. Pontiac Duo Wins Masters Bowling Pontiac's Mike Samard/ija, Jr., and Don Martell both finished in the money of the sec-j ond annual Greater Detroit Bowling Association’s Masters Tournament that ended Sunday at .300 Bowl. Samardzija was .seventh and won $210. Martell finished 11th , for $60. He averaged 205 in the i double - elimination, four-game ! match, head-to-head finals com-I petition that ran Friday through ! S u n d a y. Samrdzija averaged 214. Detroit’s Bill Fite won bv beating Jack Theloar, Detroit, in the final match 858-816. Dale Seavoy of Bloomfield Hills, was third and had the highest aver-: age, 216. Fite averaged 214. The championship was worth I $890, a trophy, a green jacket i and a ,paid entry in next y national Masters. Tom Hoke won Hiree evenis yesterday lo lead Waterford Township lo a 67-42 Irack vie lory over Kellering, ' Avondale's D a n Mc(!oskey had an 18 point day a.s the Yei low Jackets rolled past Lake Orion, 80-29. Bloomfield Hills crushed Millord, 81 28. Walerford took nine first places. Two of Ihe four Keller ing firsts were captured by Jim Haviland in Ihe pole vault and I low hurdles. The Captains 880 relay learn won when Waterford ! was disqualified and Tim Me-Gralli look (he high sticks. Hoke is One of those unsual athletes who is able to combine speed with the weight event in track. He won the 100 I and 220 and the shot put | against Kettering. Haviland cleared 12 feet in Hie pole vault and look Ihe low sticks in 21 seconds, MoC'oskey dominaled the field events for Avondale, winning the long jump, higli jump and pole vault. He then showed his versatility by taking second in the low hurdles. The victory upped Avondale's Oakland A record to 4 1. SCHOOL MARKS ^ Pontiac Northern’s track team set Iwo school records in the ' Monroe Relays last weekend. Although failing to win a first place, the Huskies scored nine points. . The Iwo mile relay team of Bruce Gibspn, Dave Pruetle, Nick Ochoa and Dave Kay was. third in a .school mark of 8:17.2. Mel f'ole was clocked in 15.4 in the high hurdles, another PNH mark. Jerry Strebel placed fifth in the high jump and Boh Harris fourth in the long jump. Bloomfield Hills became the team to beat in the Wayne-Oak-land Conference with its easy n over Milford. .loliii Tliornlnigli and F r e d i Lorenizen were doniile winiieis for Bloomfield Hills. Tom Kearney won Ihe 880 in 1:56,9. 320 1hornbur()h (BH), 1 (A), Brophy (LO), Andrrwn (BH), 23.2 ) I M((f Rf)«y B(oom((f(d SAN FRANOSCO 122, Rpddlng, Cfllll , )72';, ChltdQO, jPy r ’JEAT BETTER FOR LESS li[£iper week Includes 723 Pounds of Quality Frozen Foods IruMt, v*g«t(blM, |ulc«. INCLUDES A FAMILY SIZE ir: ;;r.’ FREEZER LEASED TO YOU - - ' TOWN & COUNTRY FOOD CO. FE 8-043R K IP ■ 'jM- ■ ■■ Complalt-LIni Othir RtbuiH Units in Slocic icL ABLE Transfliisision T}vrrjlhiii^\s (,ohif^ Up Bui OUR l*rires! THEY'RE DOWN THIS WEEK. Our New Sales & Service Buildings Now Under Construction Our New Showroom, Service Department and Used Car Lot Are Being Built Right Now. That's why we must move all new and used cars out right away to moke room for ,, ..-------^ ■■■ ■ . the construction men to work in. We have no choice; Our new buildings must be completed os soon os possible. The builders can't work with q showroom, o service department and a used cor lot. oil full of cars. We've got to get rid of them right nowf and we rnedn that. So here's a lifetime chance to drive in and drive out o reoJ bargain buy in o Rambler American, Classic, Ambossqdor or Marlin, os well os in one of o wide selection of Certified used cars. They'll go fast at prices we'll take for them while we're going through our "Growing Poins." Excep-* tionol sovings on ovoiloble demonstrators. Sb come on in and look things over. . VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward, Birmingham MI 6-3900 KKiHTKKN riiK, roN'i'iAc riiKss. 'I'ih"| ll« Hct'vwl (I jilx numth JhII I W«N Hull Im IwkI Kollfii involved j nidlon when IiIh whole Inin In lll.'M on 10 elnuKeH of with the Nazi nmveineni in <'er POHTIAC MAU. OPTICAL CENTIR Anolto'i Alle l,l)NIM)N (AIM nhakeiip won imihT wo\ In Hill .(^enci nln’H seeinily M'lvlces lo;e ol (he stial(eii(i In (leortje WI«k, who ex|iosed Ihe l‘rofiiino Hcaiidal In IIHI.'l WlKK holds Ihe sinecure po.sl of pnyina.slei , (,;enei al In f'rlnie Minisler Harold Wilson's Cahlnel; In Whilehall Ihey call him '.spyinasler (•eneral " Ills lirsi Hcik, inlornied sources repoiied, has lieen |o .slreiifJlhen Ihe s\:;lem ol ,s( |■eenin^! povei nmeni emiiloyes wirti was small liy Inlelll I s|iv since (leorpe llTake, anolhei I pionarie ol 4'/ years. Is lien Mile Hiissiii il as Ihe iloiihlV ar;riil How serMiif^ Ihe j si^( rillcs o| Hrilaln's seem Ily erel Inforniallon when his whole I lerni In 10.14 on 10 chaiKer (laiiKeroiis Hi lllsh horn I leimd Hilllsli senlenir lor es !s\slem were iiskln« how Him I hislorv ralsisl daiiKer sIKnals, I check Irnud. I'arl of his defeime iiiany and II cosi him his Joh I IHiUiJJ The lem has heei hashed repeatedly ol spy scandals live Hill I hi* wake Ihe pasi ftP.V i Kraiik Hossard, an obvious se ciirlly risk hy usual slandards, I was able lo r»perale iindelecled lor nearly four years in Ihe Hrilish Ifefense Mmisiry, I'HISON TKitM I Hossard, .'lil, was senlenccd lo 21 years m (irison al ('Id Hailey Central Criminal Com I Monday after pleadinn «uilly lo lour chanjes of selling secrets In Ihe Hii.s.sians and one of recording .secret dcK umenIs In a .second and unconnected trial Monday, an army .ser (^eanl, Percy Sidney Allen, 3!l, was jailed (or 10 years on three charges of .sellinr; mililary in formation jo Arab stales. Public Service Session Is Set The first in a .series of meet InRs In inform the public of services offered by existing health and welfare aitencies will be held tomorrow at I .10 p m al Ihe L a k e s i d e Community BuildinR, .'i.3.') Branch. The meeting.s are heini.: sponsored by the h e a 11 h-welfare committee of the Pontiac Urban 1/CaL'ue. Speakers at this meeting will be Donald G. Bachman, social work consultant of the Oakland County Department of tv e I f a r e, and Winifred Quarton, training consultant of the Bureau of Social Aid. They will discuss the programs of their re.spective agencies. A nursery will be provided for mothers bringing their children. Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as re-i-orded at the Oakland County Clerk s Office (by name of fatheri: PONTIAC G«ry M. Miller, 150» Oprtvk» (ird D. Di-n Keesllng, m Kuhn . WIscombe. 137 W. Y*l* Adams. 334 Oakland 9120 Buckingham Charles A. Gordor Gary N. Robertson, 348 Robert P. Frye, S7 Kimball Arthur L. Tatro, 3705 Coleport Gary AA. Halser, 42 Victory William E. Eastham, 34 Ha HIGHLAND Robert R. Allen, 2840 Cloyerd. Gary E. Huff, 146 E. Highland. Richard C. AAoore, 3217 Beaumont. David G. Ludwig, 4371 Hunters. Paul N. Shublfowski, 463 King. Donald G. Jones, 352 N. Center. John A. Obllnsky, 3165 Beaumont. George R. Purvis, 1087 White Lake. Theodore W. Racher, 2419 Waterbury St-r NEW YORK’S WORLDS FAIR and enjoy all the other sights of the city . . . transportation to the Fair . . . close to Times Square, Empire Slate Bldg., Theatres, boat lours, etc. . . . 1,000 rooms, restaurants,, iounges, swimming pdol, ample parking, reasonable rates, family^ and group plans ... singles from $N doubles from $12 353 West 57th Street NEW YORK It), N.Y ] Tele: 312-265 6100 I TWX: 212-640 5674 -rVe THEM ALL! S PROOF GENERAL ELEC. SUNBEAM UHFCHANNEL 4-TRANSISTOR HAIRDRYER ALARNflCLOCK CONVERTER TAPE RECORDER $099 $|88 $099 $y99 QEN. ELEC. VAC. CLEANER $2499 SAVE ON TOP BRAND AIR CONDITIONERS ^ 1 ALUMINUM LAWN CHAISE $A99 PHILCO UHF-VHF PORTABLE TV WELBILT PLUG IN WESTINGHOUSE WELBILT 14,700 BTU'S Cool fomlort onH plus opofotion* PowoiKil .^,000 RIU lor (omforfnMo ( ool your wnliro with ) 4 700 Iniffill il youriftll ini»an»ly with otipririv, jMi. Applet, N, Spy, C.A., h«. Applet, Sleele Re-lb. In Pertnipa, Vi bu, Peranipi, eello pek. Poultry and Eggs DBTROIT POULTRY DilROir (AP) Prlcet peld per pi lor No. I live poultry: lieevy lyire I 12 ill light type hens A ll ronslert ov« lbs. 25 J8( broilers and Iryors wbllet 10 jOi old dueVs “ ‘ - A4arf Shows Slight Weakening ' Finance Veteran Auto Seller Retires NlfiW YOIIK (Al*) A ndxed sliK'k market weakened a little in active trading early this aft-emoon, Allbougb airlines held a string of tiUHlerate gains, ^ tbeir best rise was trimmed. Meanwhile losses in a couple of auto stocks deepened. The list was mixed from the start as analysts saw the market entering il,s tliird straiglit session of a consolidation movement following the climb to hl,s-lorlc peaks which, ended late last week. 'rile general eeonomii; aivd bimlnesH background contained no fresh, stimulating developments and the foreign situation continued to he of some concern. Most stock groupings were thoroughly scrambhHi. The market was groping for direction in leaderiess fashion. Eastern Air l,ines was up 1% al its best hut It sliced this to a small fraction. United Air Lines (ex dividend) held a gain of nearly a point whilb slight gains were isisted for some other airlines. Pric'es were generally higher ill active trading on llie An\eri-can Slock Exctiange. Coiiduc Iron "A" rose more tlian 2 Ahead more than a isilnt weie Uolllns Inc., Oak Electro netlcs, Michigan Chemical iiikI Abhey Kents. National Video "A”, a big gainer recently, sli|)ped nearly .'I on prolit taking ■ Cor|M)iale and U. S. Oovern ment Isinds were mostly on changed. Trading was liglit. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK ( 21 2: r lyp« t: DETROIT iOOS DETROIT (AP) Ego prkeb pflld per doren by Ural receivers (Including U-5 ): 2» mtdium 2/ 28; 23j Drowns «rnde A Inrgs 28Vj-29j medium 24-26'/3. CHICAOO BUTTER, BOOS ,CHICAGO (AP) - Chicflgo Mfircflnlllo ixch«ngo-Butt«r tlofldvi wholetuilo buy---'honoed; V3 score AA 58'/ji ) B UV,i 8V C 56'/4) cars CHICAOO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) (USDA) Llv« poullry; Wbolosala buying prices undutogod) i‘oasl 1274 4 Mackey Air 9 McCrory, wt 4 Mead John .48 18 , MIchSugar .lOg 8 Molybden 6 - Scurry Rain 9 2074 2074 2074 — '/4 Sbd W Air 115 107/4 lOVj lO’/j - Signal OIIAIa 13 27V4 27W 27^ 4 Sperry R wt 34 574 574 57k Syntex Cp .30e 38 91W 90'/4 90/j -- Technlcol .75 68 2274 2274 22 A 4 Un Control .20 8 5'/4 5 5'/4 4 Stocks of Local Interest Figures alter decimal iJoints are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations Irbm the NASD are representative Inter-dealer prices ol approximately 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices do not Include retail markup, markdown or commission. AMT Corp. 8.1 8.4 Associated Truck .......... 17.4 18 Braun Engineering ........ 21.4 22.4 Cltliens Utilities Class A . 30.4 31 / Diamond Crystal . . . 14.5 15 Ethyl Corp. 43.2 43.6 Mohawk Rubber Co. . 22.4 22.7 |jllchlgan Seamless Tube Co. 26.2 27,^ Satrap Prinfing* 164 16.7 Vernor'ii Ginger Ale ...... 8.5 8.7 Wehr Cprp. ............... l«-3 J6.7 Wolverine Shoe ' ...... 32.4 33.2 Wyandotte Chemical 34 34.4 f Quotations coifiplled by the NASD at •pproximately 1,1 a.m. Bids are representative Inter-dealer prices and Tlo nol Include retail markdown or commission. Asked prices have been adjusted upward to Include approximate markup. Winkelman's 16-2 15.2 Vesely Co. 10-6 11.6 MUTUAjr Attlliated Fund .......... 9.34 10.10 Chemical Fund ............15.32 16.75 Commonwealth Stock . 9.82 10.73 Keystone Incpitie K-1 . 10.04 10.98 Keystone Growth K-2 .... 6.40 6.99 Mass. Investors Growth . 9.92 10.84 Mass. Investors Trust .17.89 19:55 Putnam Growth- .......... 10.74 11.74 Television Electronics .... 8.95 9.75 Wellington Fund ......... 15.54 16.93 Windsor Fund ..... 17.331 18.84 'Nominal Quotations — Alleg Cp .; Allegh bud I 29H 29',') 4 '/) r:c';n‘^‘’T5u’ Camp Sp .90 Can Dry 1 CdnPac 1.50 a CaroP Lt 1.16 Carrier 1.30 Cartr Pd .40a Case Jl Cater Trac 1 Celanese 1.80 Cenco Ins .30 Cent SW 1.38 NerroCp 1.60 Cert-teed .70 I 3574 35Ve 357s 4 I 60 5977 597/4 H 39 337/4 3274 3371 4 274 + 'A Cont Can ’ 5 778 52'/4 51'/s 52 57 35'A 3474 35'/s 31 M 7974 80 6 40t/j 40Va 40’/Yaar Sales Career Ends for Pontiac Man A vdIimtui auldtnoliliD niiIcs-miin, I'lmi L. Mclliigli ot lii Oiipida, ri'limt Salurday A A * Mcliugli. ns aiiHl,slant Nalr.s manager al I’onllac Ktdail Store, liegan Heliing eaiH year,s ago As Place for Valuables Box Use Is Vaulting' MelllJ(;ii land I’oiillae in and moved lo the I 12'/ ll'" SlngerCo SmIlhK Lehman 1,64g LOFGIs 2.B0a LibbMcN 29t Llggell8,M 5 LHIonln^^T?! LIvIngsO .761 LockhdAIre 2 Loews Theat LoneS Com 1 LoneSGa 1,12 - Magnavox 1 Marathn 2.20 larauar .25g lartInMar, 1 MayDStr 1.50 McCall .40b McDonAIr .60 McKess 1.70 xIO 83'/i 8274 83 ' 35Vs 35'/a 35'/j - ' —M— 46 2V/e 38Y4 38% 10 7m 20Vx, 20^/a 27 2% 2Mi 7^ 12 52»/4 51% 52'/4 91 44Va 434^ 43^ 11 57 S6Mi 56^/9 6 34Va 74% 34% X37 67% 6 5 22% 2 93 41V4 4 9 40% 4 21 57% 57% 57% — % MerrChap .80 12 IS'/* Mo Kan Tex 14 7% 7% 7% Mo Pac Imwtg 1 82% 82% 82% » ' Mohasco .70 32 19% 19% 19'/4 Monsan 1 40b x20 92% 91% 91% - » 50 37% 37% 37% 11 28% 28Ve 28% - ~N— at BIsc 1.80 aitan .40b Nat Fuel 1.40 Nat GenI .16 NatGyps 2b N^Ei^EI 1.20 NYCent 1.30a NIagM Pw 2 NiagMPw wl Norfolk W 6a NA Avia 2.80 NorNatGas ,2 NorPac 2.4(ta I 1.10a Occidentp .60 OhIoEdis 2.12 Ohio Edis wl OlinMATH ? Vs' OtlsElev 1.90 Outb Mar .60 Owenslll 2.70 Owens III wl OxfdPap t Pac G El 1 15 A0'/» 60 60Vs .. 7 17'/2 1774 177S — '< 68 5774 5774 5774 -t 10 5974 597/4 59V. . 8 30'/4 30 30'/4 . 9 129'/4 128'/3 12B'/j - 34 52 , 51 Vx 52 -+ 12 43'/s 63 63'/x 16 50'/4 4974 49'/2 - 5 37TS 37'/x 37'/4 -t 20 24V. 247S 247s - 62 829.4 86'/s B7'/j -I- 2 49 49 49 - 5 4578 45 457S .-1 1 477/4 4774 4774 - i 51',4 : 5874 507. - —P— 12 39'8 3 66 11'A). 1 Panh EP( 2.60 Panh EPL wl ParamPict 2 ParkeOav ,1a Peah Coal 1 ~ Dixie 1 SoPRSug 80g SouCair 1,20 SoulhnCo 1.80 SouNatG 2.20 SouPac 1.40 South Ry 7.80 Sperry Rand, Spiegel 1.50 * SquareD 1,60 Staley 1.35 SI6 NJ I 50g |tdOIIOh 1.80 SlanVVar* L20 SlauOCh 1,40 SterlDrug .75 Stevens ” „50b Studebaker l 19% 18% 19 I 42% 42% 42''3 53% 53''3 Transitron TrI Cont .37g Twent C .60b 32 16% 16 16Vb 13 36% 36% 36 *'4 - 7 92% 92% 92% - 4 46% 46% 46% -f 38 53% 53'4 53'/a 22 44 43"3 44 37 6% 6*^3 6% 15 50% 50% 50% 85 29% 29'/a 29% 4 —U— : 1.88 Ik 1,80 767. 76’/. -1- 7. Uni! F?ult“® UGasCp 1.70 UnllMAM 1a US Smell 3 US Steel 2 " Whelan UnMalch .: UnIvOPd 1 Upjohn 1.21 Walworth Co WarnPtcl .50 WarnLam .90 5 237. 23'/j 23'/j - i 20 50'/s 50 50 -f. ' ~w— 2 8'/j 87. 81. - ', 39 169/4 167. l«i/i -I- ) 14 377/4 377. 37V» -I- I 34 33’/. 33 Vx 33'/4 - ' 37 367/4 36'/j 36'/j - ', 40 Sv ~ S.U 4 18 49vl 49'/x 4974 ^ V4 WinnDix 1.20 x6 4074 407. 403/4 -I- 7. Woolworth 1 63 30 2974 29'/. — 'A Worthing 1.50 13 68 %67'/j 67'/j - '/j —X—Y—Z— ?Wi,is ,i5s?4rT5rr4 I'l: Zenith 1,40 22 827. 81'/x 817. - 7. Sales figures are unotticlal. Unless otherwise noteii, rates of dividends In the foregoing table are annual disbursements based on the last querterlv or seml-dnnual declaration. Special or extra dividgnds or payments , not designated as regular are Identified In the following footnotes. ■ *■— - or extras, b—Annual tividend. c-' ....—_. —,-„v.ared or pa piffs stock dividend. e-Pald t—Payable In stock during 1965, estimated cash value on ex-dIvIdend or ex-dlstrlbu-flon date. g^Declared or paid so tar this year. h-Declared or paid after stock dividend, or split up. k—Declared or paid this gn accumulative issue with divl-' ----- In arrears. p-Pald this year, dividend omitted, deterred or no action taken at last dividend meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1964 plus slock dividend, t—Paid In stock - during 1964, estimated cash value on ex:divldend or ex-dlstribution cld-Called. x-Ex dividend. y-Ex Divl-lend ar;$l sales In full, x-dls—Ex dlstrlbu-lon.i xr—Ex rights, xw—V.......... Malu'i ChovniU'l (Icjilcrslili) m l!);t2. In .limunry lil.'H lie went lo (.'liovrolct MoIoih In Ilic Cciicnil Motors Huildlng in Detroit, when! he remfuned until the war .stopped all retail ear sales. lie came hack to I’oiiliae witli Oliver Supply (!o., staying wltli lliem during llie war. PONTIAC NATIVI'] A native of Ponilae, lie attended I’ontiae (Vniral High Seliool. A A * The McHughs have two daughters, one married and one in liigh school. Their snmmer Home in I’elos-key will be ii.sed morejiy them when their daughter graduates, and Mrs. McHugh, a health teaelier in the I’ontiae schools, joins lier husliand in retirement. Gol(J Stocks Staying Stable (EimVIi'S NOTE - Sam Dawson is ill. Ills column is being written today by Richard ll. Graces ) lly lilCIIAItl) L. tillAVICN Al' ItiiiiliiDNN News Writer N K W Y 0 ll K A iTi|>ldly growing torm of iiroleetion for ilie individual eoiisumer is Hie safe ileposlt Im)x Once housed only in Hie vaiiKs of hig lianks, safe deposit lioxes were repositories hir Hie vain allies ot Hie well lo do. Hut in recent years the avail alillily of safe deposit boxes and the (i e m a n d for tliem liave grown Tliere is .scarcely a Imiik or lirani'li Hint now tails to liave a safe deposit vatill. An executive ot a sale manii-faelurlng e o m p a n y estimated there is an average of aril) safe depo.sit boxes for every liank and firaneh liank in Hie nation. 15 MILLION Hiimtierl I' ahlii'o, president o( Hie New York Safe Deposit Hox A.s.so('lalion, eslimated Hint Hie niimher of safe deposit lioxes ip Hie United Slates now Is more Ilian l.'i million. 'I'lie growing usage of safe deposit service is pegged lo a eomhinalion ot Hie im|)roveil ecoimmie slatus of Hu' eill/.eii and Hie growing complexity of j the society that produces more and more documents that need special proleetlon. I ' A A A j Tliese would he items nol or-, dinarlly covered by regular in-I surance, or irreplacahle items. Al Hie top ot Hie list would lie important pajiers, stocks and bonds. j A partial list of important j papers common lo great numbers of people would inelude I) i r t h eerlifieales, passports, j papers of separation from Hie armed forces, ear titles, insnr-aiu’c policies, deeds lo proiierty, certain kinds of health records, citizenship papers, wills and f)tjier legal papers. I'ROTKCTION It is particularly important that bonds have special protection. Most bondsUraded in the United Stales arc so-called bearer bonds. Iliat means the persofi who has physical possession can sell them or cash the coupons. If destroyed, they jirc irreplaeable. The bpnd exemptions arc U.S. Savings Bonds or certain corporate securities that are registered in the owner's nafne Even so, Hiere is a cerluln aniouiit of cost In lime and oonvenienee in getting replacements for mirh seenrlHen, Tlie eontents of an Indlvldiiarii safe de|H)slt liox are private. The liank Is Itigally liarred from access, except wlien authorized or direeled liy a legal aiilliority lo eiiler. it (Hnse(|ueutly, a hank tins no way ot knowing what is in a safe deposit hox. That raised Hie qiiesllon re-eenlly of llaliilily In Hie event a sate deposit vault is rohlu'd, ns luippened recently in Canada, 'I'lie answer is lhat wliere negll g »i 11 (• e ot Hie liank Can lie proved, it is liable for the viiliie of the eonlents of a safe deposit hox. Hut Hie liox renter would % S % ^ *9 probnlily have to be able to convince a jury of what was In the box. IIANKH Vlrlually all hanks carry Insurance covering sueli llabllliy. Law enforcement aiithorlUes report rohliery of a safe tleposlt vault is exeepHonally rare. The cost of renting a safe deposit hox vary widely, depending on location and hox size. AAA Kor Individuals who Iteiiiizn tlieir income taxes, safe de|Hisil hox rental is a legal deduetlon. It falls into Hie ealegory of deduct llile expenditures for pro-teclion of income. COSTS Hiuikei s are liopehil Hud costs of safe deposit box rentals will hf freed of a 10 per cent U. S. excise lax presently Imposed. Successfuhinvestinq ^ % S H v» ^ H: »r w iT ^ I WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of the Treasury Henry N. F'owler has indicated that the U S. monetary gold stock remained stable during the past few days. Fowler told a questioner at a news conference Monday that as of May 3, the United States had sold $975 million in gold this year. The outflow represents no change from Federal Reserve Board reports over the past two weeks. U.S. gold stock declined by only $125 million in all of 1964. GOLD STOCKS Fowler said U.S. gold stocks now stand at about $14.4 billion. Much of this year’s drain, he said, has been caused by PYance’s conversion of U.S. dollars for gold. AAA The year’s large outflow also reflects, in part, the record $1.5-billion d()ficit in the U.S. balance qf payments during the final quarter of 1964. Administration officials have reported the deficit for the first two months of 1965 at $600 million. There was a surplus in March, however, and officials say antither surplus is expected when the final figures for April are computed. By lUMJFR K. SPEAK Q. “I own Nhiires of diiPont which I Inherited in 195.1. Since 1956, it has piild $1.50 per share tpiarterly until March, 1965, when the dividend was reilueed to $1.25. Should Wuell?” M.I). A. The .sole reason for llie reduction in (luPonl’s dividend was Hiat on January 4, 19(i5, Hie company eompleletl distribution to sliareliolders of its big holdings in General Motors. T'h e Supreme Court’s ruling forcing this distribution was a blow to (luPonl’s earnings, and it may i lake a little lime for Hie company to adjust to it. However, duPonl is pur larg-;st and, in many respects, our best chemical company, willi n fine record of growtli. ll luis magnificent management and I strongly advise retention, unless the current 2,10 per cent yield is too small for your needs. And remember, too, that sale miglit involve a big capital gains lax chip stock. I am iiileresteii In Gulf Oil and American Motors. What is your opinion of. these and should I buy (or growth or liieome?” J.Z. A. You .seem in goixl shape fiuiuieially. I believe Hint if you ean afford Hic lower yields always provided, you should buy growth rather than Income stocks. You arp still a relatively young man and over a period of years, your capital may lie considerably enhanced in holding some strong rising-earnings slluatlons. I like Gulf Oil, but on their past records I prefer Jersey Standard or Texaco. I advise you lo avoid American Motors. F.arnings were off sharply in the fisf iil year ended Septcmbei: 1.30, 1964, and witli this .stock on i a 7.5 lier cent basis, the market j seems lo be saying that the div-! idend is nol entirely secure. I (Copyright, 1965) Q. “I i I 54 years t I and Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-Tf of tlie Treasury compap spending dele a year ago: M«y A, 1945 May 6, 1964 6,927,766 58 Wmidrawj., _________ ,. 185,822,001,546.46 105,495 X—Total Debt— 316,806,389,277.84 309,29: Gold Assets— 11,997,953.36 15,463,098,336.04 Rain I ll change -F.l n Tues. 83.4 ' 4.'. Day 83.3 _______ .... Week Ago 83.3 102.1 88.7 Month Ago 83..6 102.0 88.6 Year Ago, 81.2 101,0 87.3 1965 High 83.7 1(»U 88.9 1965 Low 82.2 101.0 88.3 1964 High 82.9 103.5 88.6 ‘ being reorganized u______ ............. Act. or securities essumed by such con 1. fn—Foreign Issue sublect to li ponies terest Year Ago . 1965 High . 1965 Low . 1964 High Ind. Rells Ulll. Stocks .. -l.I -.3 -F.3 —.5 . 500.0 170.6 177.0 342.2 . 501.1 170.9 176.7 342.7 ,. 500.6 171.5 177.0 342.8 .,7 489.2 175.5 176.7 339.2 .. 439.0 169.1 153.1 307.8 . 504.4 177.8, 177.5 344.7 . 462.8 169.3 16T,2 322.8 . 475.8- 189.6 167.2 332.6 . 406.6 150.7 148.9 286.7 Bank Opens Temporary Branch Office BIRMINGHAM - Bloomfield Bank has opened a temporary branch office in Wixom directly opposite from the tnain entrance of the Ford Motor Co. Continen-tal-Thunderbird assembly plant on Wixom Road near 1-96. AAA If A permanent office, which will include drive-in windows, night depository,' safety deposit vault, and full banking services for Wixom, is expected to open by July 15, according to Thom- j as H. W’agner, chairman and president of the board. Richard Turel, former branch manager of the Michigan Bank and assistant cashier of the Warren Bank, has been appointed manager of the Wixom office. National Tea Reports Gain National Tea Co. of Chicago, parent company of N^ional Food Stores, Inc., has announced that earnings for the 12 weeks ended March 27, ll65, advanced 20.2 per cent on a sales increase of 4.5 per cent. Sales for the period were $259,594,447, an increase of $11,171,037. Earnings were $2,-375,955, an increase of $398,836 over the conjparable 1964 period. Earnings were 28 cents per share, compared with 23 cents last year. 210.85-0.9, 161.54-F0.3 ,. 321.01-0.6 Tutsdiy Ut dividends DECLARED P*- Stk. ofPey-Rate rled Rtcord tbit OMITTED Anken Chem8-proval lo Ibe plal of Ibe Lake Angelifs I.akeview Kslales sub-! division near Ibe .J^ijyno Adam.' Klemenlary School. New Post Viewed as Opportunity Deaths in Pontiac Area .lOIIN !<:. AltNOl.l) Service for .lolm hi Arnold, 77, of 2!H)1 Davis, Waterford Township, will be 11 a m. Thursday In the Muntoon Funeral Home witli burial in f'erry JVIounI Park Cemetery. Mr. Ariudd, a former employe til Pontiac State ihrspllal, died Sunday, Surviving are Ihree step daughters, Mrs. I‘earl (irugel of Ponllac, Mis Coiii.^e Harber of Waterford Township and Mrs, Hiirgle Wclkle of l''arminglon. Also surviving ai<> tbrtM* step sons, Lee, Francis and .lesse While, tdl of Walerford Town ship Water WASIIINCTON (AP) I'limklln D Hoo.scvcil ,lr. says A 21 year old Detndl man de | ,,csignalod the !*'' «l>|H'i-dmenl to manded examination yeslerday I „,fi. i''<1";' Kmitloy ............ ..... for the township’sl y C„mmiHai«„ ' as a wonderful o|fporlunlly, a great clmllenge and a promotion” over bis present job as under secretary of commerce. Asked in an interview if be ■garded the appolniment by resident John.son jis a stepiiing at hi.s arraignment ford ’Township justice court on an armed robbery cliarge stem mlng from a dispute over a car repair hill. Held in the Oakhmd County .lail on $i>,IM)tl bond pending a May Zl examiindion liefore Waterford .Justice .John I'L McCriilh Is Eddie Holland. Ilollatid is eliurged with taking his car at guii|Miiii| from Morris Standard Service, 3419 Eli/abclh laike, after refusing to pay the $275 repair bill. iai historian library. MILS. SILO HAI.I. •Service for Mrs, Silo (Ttuby M ) Hall. 1)1, o| 4;il S. Hospilai. Walcrlord ’Township, will lie li'om Hie Courtney Funeral Home in Calalla, HI , tomorrow with burial there in the Knob Prairie (lemetery. Her biKly was taken lo Calalla by Ihe rkmel son .Johns Funeral Home. Mr.s Hall (lied yeslerday after an lllne.ss of .several days. Surviving .are a son. HuTlon Summers ol Walerford Town ship; four grandchildren; fivi great granilchildren; a brother; and Ihree sisters. , clilldren; four rflsters. Mrs Anna Kelnke of Auburn Heights, Mrs. Cerirude Stanton of Flint, Mrs: .loseplilne Craig and Mrs, Alnieda Spmanak, both of Ihm-tiae; and t-W^hrolhers. ItANIEI, C. ANltteoN AVON ’TOWNSHH* ' ITnyei NCrvIce for Daniel Conrad An dtjr.Hon, 2=m()iilli>old Non of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer .J, AnderNon, ’2IKIII Midvide, was I p,m. bxlay at St. Michael’s Catholic (3iurcb, Hurlal was In Ml Hope Cemetery. The baby died suddenly Mon day. Arrangements were handled by Voorhees Slple F u n e r a 1 Home. Surviving besides his parents are Ihree sisters, Lode i.ynn, Lesa M and Leann K , all at home, grandparents, Mrs. itila Hurlison of Pontiac and "Mr. and Mrs A. M(MKly of I'ontlac; and a great grandmother, Mrs. I,eo Eads of Hot Springs, Ark, Three Convicls Get Case ol'Itchy Feel' Three Iru.slles heard the call of the o|)cn road Sunday night and walked away from the Oakland ('ounty .Jail. (luy L. Pittman, 2H, of De stone lo a possible political comeback, be said "The election for Ibe governorship of New York is slill a year and a half away. It's much loo early lo make aby decision about that.” Itoo.sevelt, son of the late He was arrested later by |>o-1 tn)lt, Claude L. Key, 20, of 22.'i i president, has not run for elw-lice after a de.seriplion of the s. Vike and Benjamin Har-j live office since be w;is defeated car was broadcast. graves, 30, of 8li0 Scott Lake j in a statewide race for New Police said tluU Holland pro- j were all car washers in the ga-' York altorney general in lO.M viously had paid a bill h.r m^r ^ rage. ! posSIIlLE HlJNNIjll 0,„„t ,1,., Key »l.o, ^ „ . ....................1'ThS1k':;.s ...... I third term bid in New York next I year. Me noted that ns commis-13 Hurt as Teens Mob t ti<’ expected to do a goiKl deal of speech-making in work on his car al the same | service .station. Short Escape for 2 Youths KENNETH M. HCK.ST .Hi. Mass of the Angels was tiave been offered lor Kcnnelh M, Hurst .Jr.,,^infiml .son of Mr and Mrs. Kenneth M. Hurst of 4420 Springer, Hoyal Oak, former Pontiac residents, at St. Michael Catholic Church this morning. Burial was to follow in Mt. Ho|)e Ometery t)y ttie Voorhees-Siple l•'unera| Home. 'The btiby died Sund.’iy, om; day after birth. •Surviving are Ihe parents; grandparents, Mr.s. Maxine Smith and Charles Hurst, both of I’onlinc, and Mrs. William Ulardner of Birmingham; and ^ great-grandparents, Mr. and 'Mrs. I.uther Kice of Whitney, ! 'Tex. state, Police at the Pontiac Post last night apprehended two escapees from Camp Brighton Prison Farm drivipg a stolen car on 1-75. The pair, Darwin Casslday, 19, of Gladwin and Richard wing, 18, of Marion, walked away from the prison farm at 10:40 last night. They were picked up by troopers Clayton Babcock and Charles Moyres at 11:12 p.m. at the intersection of 1-75 and US 23 in Shiawassee County. Show of Japanese Idol both North and South. I ’’One of the KAGOSHIMA, Japan (IIPI) A policeman died of a heart attack and 13 i>er.sons were injured last night when 12.IXK) teen-agers mobbed the box office trying to get seats for a show by Japanese rock ’n roll idol Teruhiko Saigo. The show was canceled after patrolman »Shizumi Maemichi, 49, collapsed and died. The irate teen-agers then smashed windows of the auditorium. It took two hours to bring the situation under control. -Junior Editors Quiz on- ARABIAN HORSES QUES'TION: How is the Arabian different from other horses? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: Horses were domesticated and bred in various ancient civilizations of Asia Minor and in India, Persia and Arabia, but it was in the last-named country that horse-breeding reached the highest point. The Arab loved his horse almost more than his life and treated it with the greatest care. Mythology credits the birth of the Arabian horse to the west wind. commission s main functions will be advocacy of elimination of di.scrimination in employment.” be said. The White House announced late Monday that Roosevelt would head the five-member commission, which will administer the portions of the 1964 Civil Rights Act which ban racial discrimination in employment. Roo.sevelt noted that in addition to banning bias against merpbers ()f minority groups, the act marks the first federal legislation to outlaw discrimination on the basis of .sex. Roo.sevelt, appointed to a term on the commission which expires July 1, 1967, said he asked for a two-year term because ‘T just don’t like peing tied down for too long,” CHARLES J. MORRIS Prayers for ('harles J. Morris, 65, of 1.33 N. Merrimac were to have been offered this afternoon at Vcx)rhees - Siple Chapel. His body was then to be taken to the GreeT-Croy & Fitch Funeral Home in Poplar Bluff, Mo., for .service and burial in the Bay Spring Ceme-tery. Mr. Morris died Saturday after a long illness. PRESTON PAGE Service for former Pontiac resident Preston Page, 56, of Detroit will be 1 p.m. Thursday in New Providence Baptist Church, Detroit, His body is at the Swanson Funeral Home, 806 E. Grand River, Detroit. Mr. Page, an employe of Pontiac Motor division, died Sunday after a long illness. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. James Dove and Mrs. Bryant Grant Jr., both of Pontiac; two sons, Charles and Thurman, both of Detroit; and 10 grandchildren. Also surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Lee Madison of Pontiac O r'rz-M.r,, r- ! Mrs. Mattie McGlautin of 2 Groups to Cosponsor Marshall. Tex.; and three OU Psycholoav Dav brothers, Edmund, Jimmy and ' ^ ! George, all of Pontiac. The Oakland Psychological j As.sociation and Oakland University will cosponsor a psycho-1 logy Day on Saturday at 1 p.m.! in the Science Building. I Designed for high school jun-} iors and seniors, the program; will include a series of guest speakers who will discuss training and careers in psychology. EDWIN II. MOimoW MILFORD .Service for for met resident Edwin R Morrow, 411, of Sara.sota, Tla., will be 1 |).m. 'Tbur.sday at 'Toah> Brothers Funeral Home, Sara.sola, with burial following in a cemetery there. An electrical re|)airman, Mr. Morrow died yesterday after a long lllne.ss I Surviving are liis wife. Myrtle; two •sonrf’, Edwin R. Jr. and Jeffrey, and daughter Linda, all al home; a broHier, Donald of Pontiac; and a sister. MESC Chief Resigns Post DETROIT (AP) - Thomas Roumell, director of the Michigan Employment Security Commission, today resignetl from the commission effective June 1. Roumell, who had served as head of the ME.SC since Septem-ber, 1IMI3, said he had rieelded lo ridurn to his former position as regional director of tlie Seventh Region of Ihe National Labor Relations Board. 'The region encompasses Ibe laiwer Peninsula. Roumell had been on leave of al)sence from that |M)sitlon since he look over his present job. 'The leave expires June 1. Del Rio Wins 24fh District Special Race EDWAItl) NORDMAN ROMEO Requiem Mass for Edward Nordman, 70, of 227 Clumdler will be 10 a m. 'Tbiirs-day at .St, Clement (,’tilholic Church. Burial will follow in Mount Olivet Cemetery, Detroit. Owner of Nordman Real Es-, l.'ile, Mr. Nordman died yesterday after a long illness. Rosary will be recited at 8:30 p;m. tomorrow iit itoth’s Home for Funerals. Mr. Nordman was a member of the Holy Name Society of St. (.'lement Church, and the St. Vincent de I’aid Society. .Surviving are his wife, Marie; a daughter, Mrs. Bernard Desmond of Romeo; two stepdaughters, Mrs. Kathleen Dunlap of Ann Arbor and Nancy Wilson of Chicago, III.; a stepson, Don Wilson in the U S. Navy in Spain; two sisters; two brothers; and eight grandchildren. DETROIT (AP) Democrat. James De| Rio, 41 yearold former real estate dealer now studying for the law, was elected Morulay to the state rejire-sentative post earlier denied to Democrat Daniel West, admitted masquerader. De Rio, victor in a three-man race, was named in a s|M*clal election to Ibe Michigan lloU.se from the 24lh legislative district. Thi)i was the seat denied by the Hou.se to twice-elected former Tlep, West after his admission to stale investigators that he used the reputation of another man. West is under federal and state indictment for alleged income tax fraud and voter registration irregularities. Del Ido defeated Republican Robert L. Jordan, 58, a church pastor, and Jackie WlLson, .34, candidate of the Freedom Now party, in a light vote in Hie traditionally Democratic district. Unofficial results from 35 of the district’s 37 precincts gave Del Rio 1,361 votes to Jordan’s! 994 and Wilson’s 75. Election of- [ ficials said the turnout was about 2,400 from the district's 22,803 registered voters. Tornado Victim Dies TIFFIN, Ohio (AP) - Donald R. Egbert, 45, of 'Tiffin died today of injuries suffered in the I April 11 tornado, pushing Ohio’s death toll to 58. | County Increase Tops Back Valuation Hike 2 Retiring City Aides to Be Honored Friday City and county officials will One ean understand this myth, for the depth of chest, large girth and unusually large winflpipe gives this ho^e remarkable speed and endurance. MoQfs, from Africa brought the Arab breed to Spain, and later, Spaniards took these horses with them to the New’ World. In England, development of horse racing led to the importation of Arabian stallions to be bred with English mares, this mixture creating the Thoroughbred breed, from which came the Morgan, Hambletonian and others. The Arabian is the oldest breed and its blood flows in most of the “light horse’” breeds of today. An Arabian’s head is wedge-shaped. The large, intelligent eyes are set low with a bulge above (1). The profile is concave <2) the muzzle small and delicate (3). A purebred Arabian has. one less vertebra than others, tending to make the back short. rt>|l YOU TO DO.: Save some photos of horses and see if yon can pick out the Arabian ones or those with Arabian -Moed^ them. „ ________ gather at Pontiac City Hall Friday afternoon to honor two retiring city officials, City Attorney William A. Ewart and City! Assessor Edward C. Bloe. Nearly 300 persons are expected to attend the open house from 3 to 6 p.m. ! MRS. CHARLES H. SMITH Service for Mrs. Charles H. (Martha J.) Smith, 76, of 517 E. Pike will be 11 a.m. tomorrow in All Saints Episcopal Church vvith burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, by tlje Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mrs. Smith, an employe of Commurtity National Bank, died yesterday after a four-mpnlh illness. She was a member of All Saints Church. Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Gertrude Sipe, Mrs. Lillian McIntyre, Mrs. Alice Hubbuck and Mrs. Lena Campbell, all of Pontiac, and four sons, Melvin of.Clarkston and Harold, Arnold ana Richard, all of Pontiac. Also surviving are 25 grandchildren; 25 great-g rand- Thc State Tax Commission yesterday recommended a $7.33 million ihcrcase in the state’s total equalized property valuations. Oakland County, with a valuation increa.se of $138.7 million to $2.44 billion, led all counties. The proposed boost, which is subject to approval of the State Board of Equalization, would raise the state equalized total from $26..35 billion last year to $27.08 billion this year. Wayne was the only major county to ‘show a decrease as the valuation recommended would drop $1.38 million to $9.82 billion. Counties besides Oakland showing major valuation increases were Genesee, up more than $95 million to $1.49 billion; Kent, up nearly $.30 million to $1.22 billion; and Macomb, up $115 million to $1.62 billion. 2ND HIGHEST Robert Purnell of Mount Clemens, chairman of the State Tax Commission, said the proposed valuation boost of $733 million is the second highest in the state’s history. In 1960, an increase of $2.4 billion was recorded. Last year’s increase was $544 million. Purnell attributed this year’s substantial increase to continuing industrial growth in the state. A ruling on the tax commission’s recommended valuation is expected following ^ hearing by the State Board of Equalization Mhy 24 in Lansing. 1^ BAN Reg. 1.49 NOWT’ BUFFERIN , Reg. 2.49 N0W2“» EXCEDRIN Reg. 2.59 W N0W '2"T VITALIS Reg. 1.49“ NOW T** B PERRY PHARMACY q PRESCRIPTIONS — pbofessionauy perfect D PROPERLY PRiaO l2St.Baldwin I $89 East Blvd. near Colunrbia at Perry FE 3-7057 FE 3-7152 Pontiac | Pontiac 3477 Eliz.Lk. Rd. at M-59 FE 8-9248 SERVICES IN BUSINESS • Listed and Unlisted Stocks • Corporate and Municipal Bonds • Mutual Funds • Confidential Portfolio Reviews • Complete Financial Library For Customer Use • Privote'Conference Room • Standard Commission Rotes • Stock Transfer Service for Individuals, Estates & Trusts • Sofekeiejaing Facilities For Our Clients • World Wide. News Ticker Service • Immediate Payment on Soles INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS FE 2-9117 818 CO/yiMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG. IMMEDIATE QUOTATION SERVICE Our Facilities Extended From Coast to .Coast ADLER '3-lnct> Corrioga TYPEWRITERS OXFORD OFFICI . 26 South Washington oxford, MicHiattN pj a SUPPLIES a FURNITURE a DUSINESS MACHINES Free Delivery E SUPPLY tone 628-3880 Book Err&r Dead Issue WASHING'IX)N (AP) Two Princeton University political scientists who reported t h e ‘‘death" of Sen, Carl Hayden, I) Ariz., have npologlzwl. ‘‘Our o V e r a I g |i I has roluriiod to liauiil us," they lold him. Hayden, 87, iHiInted out to Walter F. Mijirphy and M«r-ver if. Bernstein lust week tliat a footnote In their texL book said lie died in 1062. 'null, llie seiiator said, "Is not In iKTOrd wlHi tlie latent edition of the congreHMlonal directory." The authors replied by letter I hat tliey liad deleted tlie Imblile from siilisequenl printings of tlie IXHik, liiit "we liavh liad n pidl over our lives knowing that we were unsuccessful In liurylug llio error." Correction! Prices on Fresh Pork Liver and Tender Pork Cutlets in the People's Super Markets and Ihe Food Town Super Markets page advertisement Monday, May 10, 1965 were transposed. These prices should have read: Fresh PORK LIVER ... Tender PORK NTIETS. 29 59 lb. lb. Tile I’onliilc IVesB DOES YOUR RUTO INSURANCE PAT . . . . . . For loss o( any Porson.d Proporty STOLEN FROM your car whether your car is stolen or not . , . ? (Under Comprehensive Coverage I This is just one ol Many Special Benefits for Non-Drinlsers, IF YOU DON'T DRINK— FIND OUT ABOUT NON-DRINKERS INSURANCE Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE Coll FE 4-8284 185 E|jxobe.th Lake Rood Corntr Murphy St., « Blocki B. of Pontiac M( NEW/ REDUCE ^^^EAIcmdLOSE UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easier to take and mote effective than the powdered and liq- uid food supplement, and costs less inejuding Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M D No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DIET —JUS! EATT As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP If OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 Id Wayno Countlos — Ono In MIncIo M Sincere, Thoughtful Service for 36 Years Outstanding in Pontiac fof Service and Facilities 46 Williams St: FE 8-9288 I 1’. ■ a a- . ■.. ' ' ____ , .. TUI', |•()NT|A(. I'HUSS TIIKSDAV. IVIAY II. Illiw . TWKNTV-ONK, Hm sciikiifMIll Ls”J'llfSpSSs lOIT (AP) Polioo Com m Hay (Hi nidln' aald f cilmo III Detroit from BH! roBchod B~\2 yoBr 111^1) of «!i million ,H.imdH IbhI yoar, ar cording to llu- Pipe and Tolmc CO Council. Death Notices liis mmKm Af'PLIANCt SAIISMAN m"'';'!','/»«To lr?’'tHlwno"!or l"ml" « inu U»r. M„.t l» lh«n,uuh _ KIANI) IJNIVIHSIIY mi''Nci , wilwim'd OAKIANI) UNIVfRSITY iNMAiica. txcrai W».l, I M.iri. > p.m. COOKS DISHWASHERS ""how A ’ TAllOR WANTEn, AGE NO UAH E I N ii 1 A L i R RT WITH Hu’ K'iVlHf il-HH iro ,S:2 ... The Pontiac Press rc .r Assistant Manager for . Shipping and Receiving M ?n?l.rg«. budgM ....... ....nUy “ " STOCK BOYS . v,„.NftH MAN WITII . .isJli s:ar33“r 644 3S05 ' (.nuNiPw^^aiNi ^ noil's^ ‘ Counter Girl iSrs'Srs );;».ri;,dr:mV.r,!:ia,;r^. ((ION I PH WOMAN, EAlO VAC,A- cr£=v!H~’“ CURB GIRLS WAITRESSES RECEIVING PERSONNEL S"S l;:„”.. DAY Mfcll* I^OH COUDie. SMAU SEARS ROEBUCK CO. S Woo(l«(«„l. Ml . mu , ............ RADIAI DRIIl were replies at The ,5. 8, 18. 61, 6.T, 65. 76. 79, 87, 108. COATS p^YJON PL^NS^^^ D. E. Pursley 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. Montgomery Ward pipi? GROOM, EXPERIENCED V. GROO^ orpARM HAND TO TAKE TURRET LATME gR, msilr^ SALESLADY Real Estate Salesmen ■ , ,E ,- .dr'c:ii''i;)ir^rnyr‘‘ Wall tile installer for SALESPEOPLE FOR NEW HOMES MODELS TO SELL FROA FULL FLOOR TIME-TRADE-IN PROGRAM! Taylor Agency OR 4-0306 kS' SECRETARY Sol.i Help, MohT.i.d:. 8 « iSsE#‘i L«k« Avenud, Pontiac. laaAACmATCI V MCmCD RETAIL MILK ^R^pUTE DRIVER RECEIVING si4:; iKHi “HUNTCON ’“TlibTHElhM •njl* 4» “=' j PERSONNEL 3R WORK IN laundry ;|f| MACHINE REPAIR SEARS ROEBUejeO. 'SKKoTilfr $4,500 $5,300 rs IS tODELS TO SELL FROM! FULL FLOOR TIME-TRADE-IN PROGRAM! Taylor Agency OR 4-0306 “WE NEED fXiRS Jllh Mme knowl WAITRESS.^ A faSr- Sin SALESMEN ilp WAITRESSES #iE : DO YOU WANT A FUTURE? IciUnt ’into"n Pluftibinq and I Montgomery Ward • -__P°.NT.IAC MALL_ SALES MANAGER SffiSl' m-m mir LIBRARIAN i IHBH MM CLtAN-UP m ,V„A,-p*. J' /“• ^ VAN VAN JMlVKt mi DEliVEftY I. D«c«r«tiH| 23 srvV, •ot.r^r'L.r ,;;:r,! ' :i«,“:r-'^«’%•;:;•■ ... - WANTEr)! 1 o» 4RBDROOM ■;r,■t.rT..s;‘' “rirz'i,7,,,£"iv' i TO sn '■‘i? rirr r„r'.iir",;.’ i '”E££sH'si:H .;-grAai.-rr:it^’.««•". 32 '"i; PRESS WANT ADS HAVE THE LAST RESULTS! ........ i:£“, '',/tr”s;«’zrorfr TIIH r<)NTIA(l PIIKSS. 'niKHDAY. MAY II. IIKIS Noiini »^yiono Tuning '“ ■'"crr'.'mf*' ■ (OMINO SOON to m»Y OR TO SBII SROOM HOUSE, HATH, UTILITY, THIS HOME SAYS i?ln£iEiT:£ "COME IN^' C." SCHUETr" FE 3-7088 Crooks Road Near Aubui ?.rr'rr 2^;"!;^. H. C. NEWINGHAM RPAI lOR 01 2 3 Do You Havo $300 SfHl££=-': liuRON IdVER FRONTAGE js:^::,:ri„'"i;::; ':,v.:*i.rSu“‘" CASS AND ELIZABETH LAKE AREA C. SCHUETT, Realtor^ KAMPSEN ’'“wWKV'.r- Low Cost Lake Front lohii K. Irwin ,,, „ NICHOLIE ;:E iS,". S i:S KENT ” o'l.^N 9 To'9 CLARK TMK- r()NTlA(^ rriK.SMAV, MAY II, ilMl5 _ LAZENBY mm:' ... HOY lAZINBY, Rotilfot "" .. GILES a ... GILES REALTY CO. BATEMAN GUARANTEED TRADE IN PLAN Mixed Area isssfSH; r=rr.i:,’jra£; Val-U-Wdy HANDYMAN SCHRAM Sick of Iho City? Il§2' ?.S S4 CAIINIVAI, iv^V'schLo, SMIlll WIDEMAN REAITY ..A-1 BUYS WEST SUBURBAN R, J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4 3531 O'NEIL mSM. flARKSlON ARIA COLIN FRY I rSV'E£ ARKSION ARIA I IN FRY HOMFSILLS | s.r» asaKKU'-^ SlfSS ‘?;:^sr.a\.;a.”svyir- »wV8S....... mm iors i";ir“rrl"i,"", 1 BARGAIN IIOIISI niNcCM luM u^AiH. lu. /ac ^........... ...... KsSE‘H,r“VL .... '’crJl-.. »"'*’ I 5^' M X,. r,«AV woo. RUG, ,S0 „0 A^MOmM B.m,3^«OOMS OP ' ll.hl“J'V''"n.'ll'uil Uhl« 1',*' 'i \luL /W. .M .„,P. .,A,0, ' ""IniMMONr. HU). A MPO, AOUA ZONED COMMERCIAL CANAL lOTS JACK lOVElA Dixie L NO mortgage COSTS Hiway-ZonocI C l i t, ir i ,„mLTw , LmnM,. Zrr ,*„n....... ....... ri/\ r,ui'ii.'«r." 3 room outfits ^ rr JCPmoorn .»„> ,m.,h '^nn^ Y'r V ' I omLn^:! Z’*'] M^n mm Ar^^'” $2.50 Wookly , jmM. wiM, V vvMly r;,:;™........... rry;s:,v"--" •■■' 5^ ' ■ ....... ....... . ■ ; . ,™~,.............. lltetl $-1 Weekly .S...?l.»... I'- ^ ........ • ,y c„uw«l I ^'Z? hX‘'YH>m ; WYMAN ....... ........^.5“v'‘£ iTh IWs’rtoHn’"'^ LADD'S ''BATEMAN S'iSi.” -iSrS- :."r.y.™y;Tr.,ir barnesiake- “;rr .............................................................."'"3=. :=S; ssliii H/£i;30S’ rrH^:, |Sr: n.BKsioN ....A CIARENCE C, RIDGEWAY ' s~..,.11 w.» a »»,.... ' rLO"*"''!.™..!". t W«"'cB C«nlro(li.Mli At T.,i, Vin,’V«» im. i kAsy t.««. " ... ™'£i3;3=., £ ”• m'S'/w ' Sale Land 59 1 10 50 ;SY£E“t1'“s r' iL?E'r;ri ................. i'rTnSi W\RR:N STOI'T, l>-'I|ot ACTION ■- ••5 %yrwt»‘ wvman's LirC^^SP^a... Burmeister's WILLI3 m. DRCWtK I nmouni o( moni-y or 'idenl'*Io'r''n lo«.n Drive ! K'„”'S!.d“';».S "“'""i srs sH:=,2 ecwood'W’alty I Anneft Inc. Realtors I ^ ii ..^15^ ...... ... ..YVslopooAOoy™^^^ ONE WEEK ONLY • rn':^^;o'prr rnEh"' 7,™ 1" ev .oneor, . "r’ C PAN'^US, REALTOR FINANCIAL ... worries? '^r:^ do,'r°si?:;'r5!.rLei..let us Help youi JZ£.i ~ To'.rfr"or I 1, BORROW^ UP TO ^51,000 now WHITF INC I vou ve oo \n" "wvailoble Ray O'Neil Realtor veAe arouno ^ woodoe boceround rr.yoo. tor., rar c pan'^us, realtor op^o, WE BUILD -WE TRADE S.eU down'.'"' '' ' ""'caii collect na rjur/'"'"'""' Frushour Struble, s'CKSJ ‘“ill SS,1I£T5 '‘TiSrt LOANS^ PHONE 682-2211 DORRIS , $500 DOWN KAIKASKA AREA S.ACRE CAMP i UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE Jli? Rs"k^ H=! okS ...............fr-s?,.o| S.SE FE-'S. _ ..SI STOUTS Best Buys basenren,, ho. water hea. wi.b ^^ ' ”?£,'Aif»,vs's'k.j,“j.y;' Ea£«H£kH. ............... .ew''a"T.-^'’‘'a ™uT Neat And Clean TotsScreogT^' 54 •'«=! .s .......APR RE»..,..7:LiP”v3:^=s rS'H;?:'"-R, May,a,^E^Uls^'^ A^HirpiX; ivpi HtVii:' I ‘...’”*foANs’-'"'' - ■arT """'inTsK loans^to YSa.“£TCE™"i Z ".|.° ..„„a™ * ’faS -^"3s"aS ‘ NO COMPETITION OAKLAND LOAN CO. I $1,000 iiii ^^^^COUNT-DOWN SALE^^ | "HAiSSSA'Wsk sSoLe'e!??CoT' ""£Sn/e'Jf 1^ vr.'l^e a- -------4* "-*« V"f: and 2nd MORTGAGES I SXmirhide"^'’bed,^ elc Tes ™lsSNff¥rJS'^S Phone 332-8181 SS. .--1 . TWKNTV rOMIl Floor Sample Used Piano Sale SAVt $200 $399 inn l*ONTIA( PHKSS. TllKnSDAY. MAY II, III /V iiv KaU <1 |D«gi \ 79 N.»rc i»ar' $395 UPRIGHT PIANOS GMC AlfTO INSUHANd IE 4 aS'^TS/joriyn Ave SAVE 'h:?£P“ 'Z'-;’!“,v l j/iiiilr ;L? ......"''''‘"'"'■'ill. ,„, AK, N p,. I.,..-1.1.1. MINI ... „,i „. I ,„i M';i , ,, ;’;"r.X'‘'‘’";M.» ' * ......... ^A^MPIN^ 1WAII feH NhNIAl 1 Kwiidov 1/ lo » AK( MAIC hNUIIMI hfWINdtM in......... $49 'Ar'l’HIMuITnlA nXiM Guo BOOTH CAMPER ^loSllu^ MI0P.^^MAM5TERS, ss fompoi-i Tioilers kGi e^ANO camPBEi I PIANO/Al l PEU, i-mi ano 5UPPI IPS WIMNEHAUO Tirei-Aufo-Trurk V2 ,„X n..vV, iMMuailtiY. ........ I •""“''9n»“,''' Kino Aulo Kinrj Aulo ""‘ '*' w Mmm. (M, II 8 408B I960 CHEVY smms. qUARYERr I RRUMMETf'AGrNCY For.Inn Con 105 ,,,,, , ,,,hu a< ''i ownIm , ooon I "Sl'T^SrS/ „JhS Et"1 : FSstone ’sioRi . ''•«» I“" v«y R ...r.iA,.".';:; “Ss”.»-' '’"'"tE’? iHnillir"" «,e. cawping sites .A„1. S.n,|n 9J FREE PARKING „„ \T'\iXLZl nnZ''''Jln"Bi .. naFK»k;e;;to i ... Richwoy I B21 OAKIAND ROYAi oaK BS A NORTON DUCATI I We'nEe’b'cARSI : t.,"™,,r,,,'IlirAuirSnl«s ......................... , CHEVROLETS Siring boss AT ONLY $599.95 THIS MONTH ONLY! jack Hagan Music Center ,rHNAU7BR MINIATURE PUPS CAMPERS . HONDA TRIUMPH-NORTON akc.uiUio.PC 6R3..I9 ^3,::::/x;Gr7x;nu "r;. i64r'^'^’’?z?«p.P" z:Jz\'nn Gi:; MAico'^^T^cvaE £J{ w Gp?pl"LNi7^,^l^^rp?.E^74 ^iMYiXii'^XlRstHZ YAMAHAS 5a"vJso‘n^1' .IGsr”'"’"’« ’... quality 1 W. Trailers ^A.^ uVd B,KES IkVT'hOr'sEPOWEr'GtGs. nrR„r "phB''Drrrn SM9 Dixie i»V"TL''-P£J!J!Z^ ! CENTURY -TRAVELMASTER “ ’ ‘"'W' ™" ...''“LY9T0 9 GARWAY-SAGE Boati-AccessorSei 97,pG1Vm"r iGoot islander, .SiLJ^pitL S£,3:.a-« 'tZ^:r- n™..4u..4c.„ :G' £n^S™»r -=sss;‘”' sss“ SHriSS'S SUV'S” i ” |I '•;>s„„.^ _________ I M FOOT ZIMAAFR rilNIfFD nrST. rsm^nn nki/s nrr^Ain Oood molor, fflCjl I KEEGO PONTIAC " HALL'S AUCTION SALES 1 ^ 3 centuries ."nlr'K, ^GGI.TnGXe-T “ ... i'™ "' “ “ r,“^3£7.n£3.,.0,.. »o«x», »»— sr~::i —vsm— RrNT-ANosAVE SAIL BOATS NEW ! YHisF *Arct; - Rentals- ' .Ilnisv ......... issfe-a msm'z Holly Travel Coach, Inc. ^ L5i^tl0l.lV..Rd, _ Holly me 4-6771 Scamper For '65 , : , 3,, ''LpfiSf,... ... ■“«> 103 ”lL^i;reG4:30^'pT'’' ’”773^rvri'e^^r $1097 855 Uu. -GynirGrrcG, Ave , Spartan Dodcje ■m ;:: K'vji!". S3; Sir"' Holly Travel Coach "“"oSNssr For 1965 is Here! JoAP GRAVELT-fp^Smu (CorTTplete hooseKeepIng units) TRUE ECONOMY .en '""! ' , travel LIGHT '“"Tz'Kibr'...... "■.“lUSS,'" ”• SMS?'i.s'vs.*"A ....“S! BILL SPENCE QiS.l ri£PS”....................... Your'^BesrBuJs Arr B-42M ' GLASSTRON-MFG-LONE'SI ERGLAS^BOAf - ESTATE STORAGE $1097 . AdditSubdation 855 Oakland Ave. <3US. 7°E;irno?l’B“Tc»’ss Ave., Spartan Dodge ESTATE STORAGE ,09 S. East B 'T;.fS i:?F LOOK SuSSBi 1965 FORD Volkswagen Center “S~S%£ WILSON'S, WEEKLY SPECIAL PONTIAC 1963 BONNEVILLE ^ $395 DOWN : OPEN THURSDAY 'TIL V , WILSON "‘Autobahn Motors, Inc. in:;;; :,i..;kpQ,i .:,k\-,. S'i,.! ‘SWtmV^.'Sr, nanoiws g2SSs:ie 1962 CORVAIR Tun lot rorci VAN CAMP CHI VY BOB BORST I.UCKY AUTO 'I'llK ^•<•NTI^V(■ l>KK„SS. TCKSDAV, MAY II, IIM« IMMAItMAMtlKIt *-r Sr,g5S«::= $1987 WE HNANi.E KiiKj Aiilo ivr"' I loni(M I li< jlil . smm ..... .»r«« ,f««. i ■ .... 'ILrUriiir^ .......... "i Tur rini I brd R-.S ookiomi Ave. . , , . I , zi J.r\ ^:,i. Kiiui Auio ; rTrrx«^.r.:r,, i963 ramrur 44o ly^XTrl^qe "' ........—'*' R«|)Oi*J,A(Oh I ..hMl’itliiiliAl^^iw ^ 106'N«W ami Ui«d Con 106 Tui'lini Tord rinn'rtrM/tZ'^nnrir '’r,100^1!,!wl, ..’"~ 'Y''* 333 7863 iHr;iH,rSS' ..;lHSfriTi3TZ ...ROSE Capitol Auto 312 W, MONTCAIM Kr::;ui.i;:R's 'z,;:;7j,;;;; JOHNSON ;= r„<„I ............................... ........ , «.i.om«.o.. '~r“;.'.r,u...i c«r 3,rip ■- T~i(R-cp« ».oo„, 1250 Oaklon”” 3337863["sIHs ™p AS LOW AS $79 DOWN 19«. ’AYMFNTS OF 11595 PER WEEK V8 Turner Ford ,RMINO^U"'’°'’^''^'’mI4 75„0 p''^” Rochester ^ i962 PONTIAC 'TowTrTjHno Xon"’"mr ^7:'r}’'V::ZZ ' W«oon 11,991 «■£—' RUSS ~i«'JOHNSON 'c-:,.‘S,:z.:':!!i ...-“"S- "lU' Oadillacs CADILLAC 1963 $3295 CADILLAC 1962 rCA .r=ia:H-E£'^iGE ’” ‘ Spartan Dodae 75B PONTIAC V « ENOINE, AUTO ; r- " t,'.' i vacation spsoais i BUY NOW! =3 :“^£ B5BY(3pf“gs-;™ Qj^.g ................ ........BOB BORST I 3400 Ellz,bP,bU.keRa,d - ' “'T iFtbl iAMD , , H ' SMALL AD-BIG LOT : Vk(,P *1,895 ,95, FORd'^ROU^'fiRST 175, ^ | , 570 BlPm^^^.m ^r^irLm S' .non V, rr,MwcoT, = I IN INVENTORY n. n,AArm„F, : ^ „60ri s^rs»j;rk5: - Super Sport, Auto., (tou ,961 Ch 1958 F raFcTTf^' 020^'^ I ' eVwTdetreck ' *' *” SS/Yi, OLIVER BUICK "$1797 ’’with* co"rM'" in,prior: Hydremetic, c;:oSer.r?.f^(^; LLOYD'S 2r:a,£r.::*;iT.v S:~ hilltop Bsmmsmmm IF YOU ARE HAVING TROUBLE GETTING YOUR CREDIT REESTABLISHED NOW YOU CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE iKiimmm mmmEEdi ALL YOU NEED IS A STEADY JOB. $5.00 DOWN PAYMENT AND A DESIRE TO HELP YOURSELF. CALL MR. WHITE: FE 8-4088 EEM ME/m smss 677 S. LAPEER MY 2-2041 962 OAKLAND FE 8-9291 ,«,,'er?“ln5^MedI o^!Ided"'lebeled - ' 3 0A0 IIKirniM 1958 OLD ” STORAGE CADILLAC 1964 $595 DOWN WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC csoutbo, t6MI,e^_,9^^ ■w OLIVER BUICK ^ d '.. lEROME OLDS-CADILLAC DUE TO THE - DEATH = OF MRS. ROBERT C. (Morgaret) BEATTIE ' WE r WILL BE CLOSED WEDNEgbAY H (Mdy 12, 1965) » BEATTIE YOUR. FORD DEALER SINCE 1930 On tjixie. Highway in Waterford OR 3-1291 -STOP- -HERE- WeWe Got the Car for You! /#) REPOSSESSIONS AUTO NO APPLICATION 19M Cji^evy T597' 1955 Pontiac ''yi97°'’ 1959 Buick “s477 1961 Ford AUTOMATIC $697 I960 Falcon — 1959 Pontiac ■ T3Y7™ . 1959 Chevy T39T 1960 Olds , "$897"'^ ; I CHOOSE FRO I BY PHONE £0. MONEY DOWN ' : TO I CREDIT OK'D I SALES FE 2-9214 AT WIDE TRACK MAY SPECIALS mmmm mws VAL-U-RATED ____ USED CARS_ 100?E Written Guarantee $1695 1963 OLDS F-85 4-Door, V-8, Automa 1962 OLDS ^StSire To!pe, Ulh power 1962 Om?'?8''°2-door hardtop, full power, sharp Birmingham trade .....................$1995 1960 CHEVY Impala 4-door hardtop. 6-cylinder. Only:.............. ..........$ 895 1963 PONTIAC Sports Coupe, power steering, brakes, sharp Birmingham trade .............$1895 1963 OLDS “98" Luxury Sedan, . with full power .......................... $2395 1963 PONTIAC Catalina 6-Passenger Wagon, Power Steering, Brakes, a Real Buy of Only $1995 1964 OLDS “88" Hardtop, Power Steering, Brakes, JO-Day Unconditional Guarantee $2595 1964 CHEVY Impala Convertible, V-8, Stick Shift, Fire.Erigine Red, White Top ...... $2195 1964 OLDS Storfire Coupe, Full Unconditional 1964 OLDS F-85 Coupe, 6-cyl. engine, stick. 30- $1995 2-yiAii mmir 635 “SL Woodward Ave. Birmingham ., 647-5111 '• i -I; TWKNTV-STX IF. VOXTIAC law Requiring Firing of Striker Vicious' lute. tlTFSOAV. MaV'U J__ mON CAHIOY --- ----r you MISS cooK.PiR&r you sunor on ynuK ^ MOUIK ABOUT My MAVtNf. I IINnivldf lor ninnaKcmnit lold Irulslnlorfi Monday Uial a alatc law rcquir | If Ind dismiNHal of any public cm-1 '"K the rdalc tmpidftory I ImpaffNC iiclicd on wage imd work •ondillons isHiics alfcclin(4 ploye who goes on strike is both public emirloyrv vicious and useless. Most (tid not ob)i>cl in Al t o| IIMV I'i "loo lii/.am‘ lor I deni o| llic Mliddgan AKl.CIO, rcoll.slir ('idoiccmcnl." said said II you ncgalc llic right to llobci'l Tigbc, prc'iidcnl ol ibc slrikc, you need lo provide ma Dehoil I' lrellgblers Associalion j ebinery Ibal disposes linally of •orge Coonibe .Ir, of liie Hicir grlc II strikes by employes ol slale I '*'"t •‘’e nirmingbam Hoard of Kdiicn-Mnre iban 20 persons Icslifiedj lion said Ihe punishment section liie, six hour hearing of the ; 'makes no sense at all," He said and local governmeni Hally r.nch employes ns isilice-nien and firemen They disagreisl sliarpl\,' anti .sirike law IIm' lliilclilnsoii •lalcj bills tlNISlIMKNT SIKTIUN The pnnislimeiil secllon ol llic in|unclion would o II g b iirolc^lloti Jaebby on Bridge Charles Meyer of Ihe Michigan Municipal League contended, though, lhal if compulsory arbilrafioii were reiniireal, bofli sides would "coilliniie lo take againsi strikes * Itn'b problems to Iblrd parlies ^en Sander Levin IMlerkley.i'"'' 'Did wouldn't chairman of Hie Senate i,,,bor | »«'hleve un(ler,sliindlng " Coiiiniillce, said 'All elements I ’*”**’* l'AHf\ ol Ibe community Iwive reall/ed ’t'l'e league also obieefed lhal Ibal Ibe negallve and punlllve I''oinpulNory arbllralion would public olticiid'i abdicale Ibeir TIIK miltUYS llv CiU'l (irultPiT / i\i' liiitiling lilt' |i lio.'.lti H Alii': one ol IH. lo m l \soiilil till- Ieiiiiig lead—♦ A By JACOBY AND SON Jim starts today’s discussion of Ihe Vamlerbill Cup play with an embarrassing queslion Jim: "Whal (loid)le, (he second one windd puss if he also expected lo lake a delensite trick and double Willi no defensive Irhks ill all. Hence when Ira liiili-d lo ibnilile he was niarkeil with a ilelensixe trick against Sonih's con NOW whar^'n {EOHetoA^ IS u«M« .atMt. Your OETERMIN aaaMai you to finith what GENERAL %Nt^NClts: CycW thuNt high far LIBRA. Special woi. .. TAURUtt Share epetlight. Don't arouse tSwriiyiSlI^wiaral Faeturat Carp.) slam. 1 sat West and the bidding partner doe# not hold an acc requires considerable explana-1 and yon aren’t intereiited in a lion," •‘*“- Jim: "Ira’s heart bid was | QUESTION the weak two showing a good Instead of bidding four hoarte . . .. J U _J 1..... ' your partner goes to three six-card suit and a hand ju. j ^pg^es over your three hearts, below opening strength in ! yvhat do you do now? high cards. Right?” Tomorrow Oswald: "Yes. South's three dub call was a dcliberale un- | derbid. He wanted to buy the hand. My jump to four hearts was mainly an effort to keep our opponents from finding a spade fit although it turned out that we would have made four hearts- North’s double, just showed cards and South's jump to six clubs was a gamble he had planned yrhen he made his first bid.” Jim; “You opened the ace of diamonds. Was that so terrible?” Oswald: “Ira and 1 were playing a peculiar convention. It required that when our opponents bid a slam against By SYDNEY OMARR "Th wise man controls his destiny . Astrology points the way,' For WeantMiy ARIES (March 21-Aprll W): Time display sense ot Don't FORCE Issues. You gain by THINKING. Consider legal or parlner-shlp proposals. Be alert! TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20); Be willing to rebuild. Ydu gain if attitude Is right; Consider detaits and facts. Don't bif discouraged by delays. Work WITH associates. GEMINI (May 21-txpress true leelings. No tion-talk. Frank approach Sales ability at peak. Give yuur an, a you'll protltl CANCER (June 21-July 22); Empha; now on home, family, security and ' Bity. Those In authority may lest Be on the balll Give your BEST. V< leer. Extra work could tur ‘ ' LEO (July 22-Aug. 22): limitations . . . buMIso recognize y potential. Don't heed Vho: " ‘ ''trip" you. Be cautious . before mailing letters In a . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22); Get t ness affairs In order. Speak ' sible person about helpful i Plan budget. Use best iudgment. Move,, With ASSURANCE. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. '22): Cycle high I Personal appearance of special impor- , lance. You could be called upon to ; speak. Stress dynamic approach. CONTACTS, proposals. Be active. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Obtain valid hint from today's LIBRA message Use your POTENTIAL. Make eftori»to look behind the scenes. Be perceptive and outgoing. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Put hopes, wishes' "on the line." Analyze * them. Try to KNOW * want. If necessary, m tions, and be REALISTIC. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.......... career matters In spotlight. .Be versatile. Time to try various methods. Welcome mors responsibility, and EARN through SINCERITY of effort and pi pose. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 16): lunar aspect Indicated valuable progt Letters and new contacts Time ' PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) basic business^ Learn facts counts, policies. Assodste with enoa should be consulted. Don't . KNOW what^ou're doing. p()N’riAO I’ltKHS. I'l KsbAV, Niav u.' mmU 'I’WKN'ry^KVKN -Television Programs- AntOKN ANI> ’HUN(iS Programt furni»h«d by tlationt li*t«d In ibii column or* lubioct lo cbanga without nolle*, .•it,'i WJBK TV, 4 WWJ-TV, 7 WXVl tV, 9 CkLW TV. 50 WKBP TV, 56 WiVS TUKSDAY KVKNINt; 6:110 (2) (4) Ne W N, Weather, ■Sport H (/) Movie; ((!olor) "TTiuiiiler Over llawnll'* (In 1'rogrena) (II) Wo(Hly WotKipecker (Ml) (lotnedy Time (Ofl) (Special) Men ol Our Times 6:20 (2) (4) Network News (7) (Oolor) News, S|MitTs (0) Hut Maslerson (!>0) (!u|)liiln Detroit 6:45 (V) Network News 7:(H) (2) Leave It lo Heaver (4) (t;olor) Weekend Visit to Detroit police station (7) Htfleman (0) Detectives (Ml) Little Unseals (SO) Spectrum 7:20 (2) TV 2 Ue|M)rts Program examines Project Hope, (4) Mr. Novak (7) ('ombal (Ml) To He Announced I,Mi) Creative Person 6:(HI I','.) .loey HIshop Ml) Outlaws (Mi) Kxperiences in Will Ini’ «:;t(l t2i Ued Skellon (4) ((' o I 0 n llnllahaloo (S«'(‘ TV I-’caturesi (7) Mcliale’s Navy Mel laic’s men arc re-[)orlc{| lo.sl at sea after Hie captain forces them lo huy insurance policies. (fiO) Holler Derl)y (.Ml) llerita(t<‘ 9:00 (7) Tycoon (!)) Musical Showcase 9::t0 (2) Petticoat Junction Dog catcher locks up Hradley mutt (4) Cloak of Mystery (Sec TV Features) (71 Peyton Place F(durc looks hrifiht for Klliol, Constance and Alii- TV Features Tin Pan Alley Tour Ity United l*ress Inlernalloiiul IIUl.LAItALOO, 0:30 p in. (4) Detroit's own Suprei Itarhara McNair, Peter and Cordon, Joanic Somers, tim Sliam and llic Pliaraohs licad kkcsI list. CLOAK OF MYSTKUY, 0 .lO p in ‘c Marvin a(ai In o|M*ner of dra Thi. •'Tliat Was Thc''Weck That Was" (4) Slinoim Sifinoiel. iia reruns, replacin(^ TKI.FPIIONK IIOUIl, 10:00 p rn, (4) Hoagy Carmichael I Nickname for Lincoln 4 lleni y L(Hlge II ' Harhoi, Maim. 12 Actor, (!luiney t.'l Feminine appellation 14 Hra/.lllan macaw It)' Make lace edging Hi Maslei' (corruption) 17 Droop III A lipl(H’ 20 Mound for I ,ema 21 Frencli verti 22 Uetrograde 24 .Spinner’s filament 20 Kiect 27 Hop’s kiln 2ll Male swan :i() Hiller velcli :il Uncle Tom’s friend ,T2 '/oo anitnal :i:i Hank apimrlenance :il) Sea flyi’r :iH Knin e 40 Itevokes ji legacy 42 DisluiT) 42 Pronoun 4,'i Let it stand r- 4 r~ i 10 It \i 13 14 ir — re 17 ,— — 21T" , 22 n 30 3T % 36 3) r —- — r- 4F - 44 4F 49 BO 51” !)'/ 53 P" 55 11 Is host of musical lour of Tin Pan Alley wliicli .oncludes 1 with salute lo Irving Herlln, whose '/7lli hliThday falls on lids day. Other performers Include (tarol Lawrence, (ior-don Macltae, Peter Nero, Leslie IJggams, Bill Hayes. NFWSMACAZINF., 10 (lO p n of Viet (tong. (fl) Films show activities 47 (tiiliic meter I 4!) Musical syllal)le ! Ml Mules 51 Position of Jeopardy r>2 Hen product ^ 52 Art (l,atliD ^ 54 Cortii’red (slang) *55 F.nglish slrCam DOWN fhinald Sinden. /(4i (Color) Jolmny (!l) Front Page (’hallenge 10:00 (2) Doctors/Nur.ses Li/, and Steffen are suspicious of doctor’s re()uisi-Honing of morphine. (4) (Color) Telephone Hour (See TV Features) (7) Fugitive (9) Newsmagazine (See 'I'V Features) (50) Stock Car Pacing 10:20 9) Other Voices Interview of C.erman film maker Includes clips of Berlin Olympics, growth of Hitler’s army, Nazi party meetings. ILOO (2) (4) (7) (! Weather, Sports (50) Horse Racing 11:15 (7) Nightlife 11:20(2) Movie; “Mogambo’ (1952) Clark Cable, Ava Cardner, (’.race Kelly, News, 9) Movie: “Paris F.x- (1952) (’laude I pre Itai M a Torai Marius Coring. 1:(H) (4) Lawman (7) After Honrs (9) Pierre Rerton L:10 (2) (4) (7) News, Weathe WKDNKSDAY MORNINtJ 6:10 (2) On the Farm Front 6:iS (2) News 6:20 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:20 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:.50 (2) News 7:0(1 (2) Happy land (4) Today (7) Johnny (linger 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:20 (7) Movie: “1,0,st Horizon” (1927) Ronald Col man, Jane Wyatt, Sam Jatee 8:45 (5fi) Fnglish VI 8:55 (9) Morgan's Merry Co-Round 9:00 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Living (9) Romper Ro()m 9:10 (.56) All Aboard for Read- ing 9:20 (5(i) Numbers and Numerals 9:55 (4) News (56) Children’s Hour 10:00 (4) (Color) Truth or Consequences (9) Friendly Ciant 10:10 (56) Your Health 10:15 (9) Chez Helene 10:.20 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) What’s This Song’' (9i Butternut Square 10:35 (56) French Les.son 10:50 (9) News COUNTDOWN SALE CLOSE-OUT ON ONE-OF-A-KINOS I Washers • Refrigerators • Ranges o • Dryers • TV’s • Stereos Countdown Sale, Price Goes Down a Dollar a Day Until Sold HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. 825 W. Huron St. FE 4-2525 4678 Dixie Hwy. 673-5825 (5(1) Spanish Les.son I0:!*S (4) News 11:00 (2) Andy CriKilh (4) (,’oncenlralion (7) CIrl Talk (9) Canada Schools 11:05 (56) Inlerinde 11:20 (56) For Doclors Oidy 11:20 (2) McCoy.s (4) (.Special) Spelling Ree (7) Price Is Right (9) Acro.ss Canada j 11:50 (56) Math for Parents AFTIOIINOON I 12:00 (2) Love of l,lfe 1 (4) (Color) Call My Hlnff (7) Donna Reed (9) Bingo 12;’25 12) News 12:20 (2) Search for ’I'omoirow (4) ((k)lor) 1 11 Hel , (7) Father Knows Best | 12:.25 (.56) Spanish lesson 12:45 (2) Cuiding Ught ^ 12:50 ( 56) He,-'ding 1:00 (2) .lack Benny (41 News ' (7) Uebns (9) Movie: “Bugles in Ihe A f ( e r n 00 n" (19.52) Hay Milland, Helena Car for, Hugh Marlowe 1:10 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (.56) French Les.son 1;15 (4) Topics for Todav 1:25 (56) World Hist or v ‘ 1:20 (2) As Ihe World 'i'urns (4) (Color) Let's Make a Deal (7l One Step Bevond 1:55 (4l News (.561 Adv(‘nUires in Science 2:00 (21 Fhi.ssword (4) Moment of Trulh (7) Flame in the Wind (56) Memq, to Teachers 2:25 (.56) Numbers 2:.20 (2) Hou.se Party (4T Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:50 (5(ii Interlude 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Trnib (4) Another World (7) C.oneral Ho.spilal 2:15 (9) News 3;2fl (56) Memo to Teachers 3:30 (2) Edge of Night I I Sacrificial block I 2 SIraw hat (F,ng ) 4 Kcccnirii' wheel 5 Winged 6 Cold Wind 7 Beginning (I Bri-w 9 .'.ewfi loosely III Biblical inonniain 11 Sloi med 19 Tranquil 21 Expungings '22 lleidei ;',5 AiUlered 2!) .Sold I Egypt) :i() Kgy|)l (ah I :i:i Less luislllv .11 Foreigners .'t(i Helicnialcd 27 Rise into view :ui Agreeable Iragrinn 29 (’omponnd’ellier 40 lllgli homi’ 41 Tile lliealei 44 Al llllh place 4/ .Seap.al lid) ) 411 Old age (dial ) Answer (a Previous Puz/le Lauds First 'Impression' of Country's First Lady WILSON By KARL WII..SON NEW YORK Sybil Hurton, who doesn't sing or wiggle lail just sort of says “Hello," eompeied willi Edie Adams and Earllia Kill for a greal cnslomer explosion around Hie llooze Beal Hie other night and I'm nol nazy enough lo say whicli girl won Blonde, skin-HghI, wpt-lippeij Edic Adams, opening at the reopened Latin Quarler, undertook what 1 believe was Ihe first cafe “impnvs sion" of Ihe First Lady. Mrs. LR.I. “Ah made nudi hiishand what he is today—rich,’’ Edie has the First Lady .saying. Edie also hrmight mil that when I.ady Bird and Ihe daughter are in the While llmise ptMil, it’s nol so much a pool as a Bird Rath. “I’ve been spending qnile a lot of time in Washington sinee Mr. Johnson and I beeame President,’’ Edie says In another yon-all type id speeeh. “It's with some Irepidalion,’’ Edie admillcd, “Hial I am doing J.ady Bird." She has an impression of Zsa Zsa CalKM' which could cause fireworks especially if Z.sa Zsa ever la'ars (he inlrodiicHiai. ★ ★ ★ Sybil Billion, wlio is gelling more publicity in New York Ilian Richard, opened her discotheque, “Arllnir,’’ with such Rig Name (iistomers that Rock Hudson and Ross linnicr coiildn’l find seals and sort of melted away. ° Rudolph the Russian Nureyev,, the current fascination of all the gals, appealed so strongly to Monique Van Vooren, the Bulging Belgian, that she intriMliiced herself to him and asked him to dance. (Thai’s what happens nowadays, chumsi. » “He was so WONDEHFUI.!" Moniqqc exclaimed al me kder. “He told me 1 was Ihe most beautiful girl in the place ; . . I have a. dale with hjm next week!’’ They Frugged. Chief Quits NY School Board Ends Controversial 18 Months 05 i Leader NEW YOHK I.MM James H. %0 A Donovan, ‘)9, who hci amc mici nalioiiiilly promincii il lor Itis prisoner cxcliangc 1 icgolialions with the .Soviet llnloi 1 and ('uha. ¥ I ■|s resigning allcr a coni rover siill \\\ months iis prc'sidnil ol tie cily's inlegralion loaril of Edncalion Donovan’s comments ^lalion emliroiled him willi civil voivcd THE MIDNIGHT EARL 4) (Color) You Don't Say p”"] (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take ,20 ing board matters. 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) (Color) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle (50) Movie 4:25 (4) News Martha Raye’s being .sent to entertain (he troops . . Princess Grace visited the 5th Av. apt. hou.se she ,, , . , when she was making movies , . , Frank Sinatra plowed ""I’ *^*'”*^ '.some of his “Von Ryan’s PJxpress’’ loot into a company makin; ........ I stereo tape machines for autos , . . A famed film producer swears I he’ll keep an actor—who walked out on a contract- from work-I ing for two years. \ ! The Burton’s “Sandpiper "''-will premiere in Carmel, Calif,, for the Monterey Symphony . . . Busty Barbara Nichols got a ''friehd,ship’’ bauble from actor Linden (!hiles. . . Art Carncy’ll be featured al the Music Hall in “Yellow Rolls Royce, ” and VO) Ikil i.r' f zi icaiujru -ji^95 Willi rill J • ALUMINUM SIDING ► AWNINGS .AIM... ... • PATIOS • DOORS » SLIDING DOORWALLS • PRIME WINDOWS • STORM WINDOWS ANO DOORS • PATIOS ENCLOSED ALL AWNING 919 Orchard Lake Ave. DAY FE 3 7809 NIGHT 64-4 4313 All Insurance Work Qlati and Scratn Rapair Our Specially PICK UP ANO DELIVERY SPECIAL 1 CALL FINANCE PLAN FE 4-4138 Moilgoge ond bank 1 Open Daily and Sun. 1 CALL DAY OR NIGHT ' CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen $9CQ( COMPLETE £09 COMPLETE £119 7-Ff. Kitchen $OAAC COMPLETE £99 INCLUDES Uppof ant Lowsr Cabinefi, Counte Tops, Sink with Faucoti ^ ADDITIONS ★ FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING —SIDING WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS NO CHARGE 6 Month* Befor* Fir»t Payment ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING Donovan, who was hospitalized last June willi a heart | condition, said his decision lo leave the board had no connection with his heallli or with the reported opposition. He addl'd that tlie pressure of tiis private law practice and family obligations influenced his action, FREE ESTIMATES 4tSM^pimo^99 Lionel H. Eastty of 135 -Long- eral chairman states that the scouts are ”goin|^ all out” to make this the most interesting scoutarama ever held. "\mong The-iriost features will be a wildlife exhibit by Hartley Thornton, naturalist nf Proud Lake Recre-' ation Area; fi-ee'pony rides for ; I youngsters.; special Cub Scout j displays; , hhd^ t o u r .s of the i grounds in pony-drawn vehicles 1 or fire engine. Any Size up to 8x16 COMPLHE ALUMINUM _ % SIDING ^ CO per too sq.ft. ^ Your Compl.t. Hou.. ‘ V MODERNIZATION ^ ■;;i’:fc. \^389 / y Rpum* . Kitchen* 8.WEEB0N COMPANY In ronliacSinrr I 9.2f 1 032 West Huron Street FE 4-259T rnGHTTA SUNDAYS^PHONEt-682-0648 MA4-T091 613-2842 EM 3-238S MY 3-1319 Trading boats is easy with a Pontiac Press Classified Ad. Just phone 3.32-8)81. V-" TWK.NTV KKiin IMF. IM)N'I’IA( I'UKSS. rilKSDAN, MAY II, l»U.-| ■ / NOW, from our Accident Division you get: $1,000 cash a month even for the rest of your life while hospitalized from any accidental injury. No, this is not a misprint. If you qualify, you get an iron-clad guarantee which pays you at the rate of $1,000.00 CASH a month beginning thb first day you are in a hospital (other than a sanitarium, rest home or government hospital) from any accident. Even if you're so confined only one day, you still get $33.33. There are no gimmicks. Your policy will have No Exceptions, No Exclusions, No Limitations, no waiting periods, no ifs, ands or buts. 1. And what's more ------ This plan is NON-CANCELLABLE and GUARANTEED RENEWABLE for Life. Use your policy as often as you need to—you own it, it can never be taken away as long as you pay your premium on time. Your premium can never be raised; your benefits can never be reduced. You are paid the full amount even though you have other insurance or compensation. You get CASH . . . use it for any purpose: pay bills, buy groceries, pay rent, etc. When you are hospitalized your everyday living expenses still go on. Help meet them with the TAX FREE cash this policy provides. 3. THIS PLAN PAYS CASH WHILE YOU ARE HOSPITALIZED FOR ANY ACCIDENT', ANYTIME, ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD. Every kind of accident is covered—at Home, at Work, at Play—24 hours a day. You get a full month’s coverage for 250.., This doesn't even cover our post, but we'll gamble that you will continue at the regular rate of only $5.'P0 a month------just as thousands of others have done. Send no money. When you receive your policy, read it carefully. Only after you agree it does everything we claim, send in your quarter. Remember for each day you are in the hospital, you get $33.33. \ How can this policy be offered at such a low cost? The answer is simple. You are buying directly from the company through the mail and the \ savings are passed on to you,. No agent or salesman will call or bother you. \ Compare this with others. We welcome comparison because this policy pays from the ..first day, we can't pay any sooner; it pays forever,, we can't pay any longer. Remember, the cost is only $5.00 each month, or, if paid in advance, $55.00 a year and the benefits are $1,000.00 a month. Policy issued ages 1 through 80 if you qualify. Don't wait until it»~§.t'cnr-iratBFill it today. There are no strings attached; you are under no obligation. Since SEND NO MONEY-NO AGENT WILL CALL Mail thexoupon now. Your policy will be sent immediately. Special payment envelope for sending in 25c for your hst month coverage will accompany the policy. No agent or salesman will call. FILL OUT AND MAIL THIS COUPON NOW-. National Health I “I I- AND GIVE THIS COUPON TO A FRIEND OR RELATIVEI "1 r & Life COMPAHY 411 North Tenth Street, Dept. PP-'j'jA St. Louis, Missouri 63101 $iooo a month cash A , O NATIONAL HEALT>rAND LIFE INSUNANCE.CO.. 1M2 Niim* in full (Pleata Print) Flrat Initial Last (Street Number or R.F.O .) Cltw State Occuoatlon Airth njit* ■ ' Heiaht _^Weighl S»i (Month) (Day) (Year) Are you now tree Irom mental and physical lllnesi to Ih# best of your knowledge and belial? Yat No It nnt nl.a>* exnlain > 1 und'aretand that this application is eubieclto receipt A acceptance at tha CompanyVHome OfFIca. } 19 . .Writ# nan Date / •. V " a Check her,e H yoe went additional appllcatloni for friende c ir ralatlvea. . Form No. 11S3 National Health &T INSURANCE JLIFE COMPANY 'r:iJ1.000 A MONTH CASH Nam« In full (Plaasa Print) First Initial Last (Street Number or R.F.I CItv state OccuniitiDn Blrtb^Date Height W«4af|t Sex (Month) (Day) (Year) Are you now tree from mental and physical lllneet to tha beet ol your knowledge and belief? Yea No If net oi«ai^ ftxoiain . 1 und.rtfand that thit ippllcatlon li lubitct to r.c.lpt & acceptance at tha Compan'y't Homa Oinee □ Chack Kara H you want additional appllcatlona tor Irlandijyr raltllvaa. ' Th& Weatfmr THE PO?^TIAC PRH^ OVffl PAGES ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ IM)M IA( , MICmCAN. 'I'l'KSDAN , MAY II, IIMl.v jh I‘ACKS I INIbHNAUi Pick Chairman for Fund Drive Five Yanks Killed by Cong A vi(<> |)n\si(lcnl ()l (it'iuM’al MoIoin (‘orp. ami p,cii dill iiiana;,;cr of (iMC Tnu k & (.'oach Divl.sion, Calvin .1 Wellin' wa.s loday appoiiili'd general chan iiiaii I e ^ T • I Will Be Moved Study Will Be Dropped "Hill on llie oilier hand. H's had iiews il Ibis increase is re-slricled lo salary im|)rovemenls only lor il in no way reduces our hudi^et prohhnn. $t!l7,0(IO A.SKLD We asked for .$497,0(10. 'I'his Innds lo accomiiiodalc our 27 pel cent increase in .Seplemher eiirollmenl. Senate Unit Wants Less tor State Building IlKMOVL WOIINDLD M A It I N K - A wounded Marine is carried on a lillcr hy ciapsiiicn allcr he was iiijiircil Imlay hy a hooliy trap dnrinp, Ihc Marine lakeiiver of oiiiiiinnisi coiilrolled village of fa- My. illajfe loiij; has liceii a Irouhle spot he-il's only eijjhl miles from Ihe im|)orfaid ise of Da Nimjt "f h e K o X e Thi- Sferen Assembly C 1 u b jjamblinK trial, which iiad lieen scheduled to begin today in OakT land County Circuit Court, will be heard later this summer in anolher county. A efiange of venue, granfi-d this morning hy, .fudge Stanlon (1. Dondero, was requested by defense attorney Carlton Roeser two weeks ago because of "notorious and sensational publicity given Ihe ca.se by news media." It has not, been determined where the trial will be held, but it won’t be conducted in Ihe tricounty Detroit area, according to Dondero. Dondero said he would contact Michigan Supreme Court administrator Mcridith H. Doyle to see if there is a possibility of holding the trial in the Thumb area or in a county west of Genesee. "It’s a matter of finding an empty courtroom in a convenient location for all parties concerned,” said Dondero. In having the ca.se transferred Dondero said it would be "extremely difficult" to find jurors in Oakland County lhat have no knowledge of the case. The case began Oct. 11, 196.'1, When State Police raided the Madison Heights Club and arrested 49 persons. Of these, 21 are to stand trial. Dbridero told Roeser l\e would give him at least two weeks notice as to when the trial is to start. Mayor William II. Taylor .Ir. is expected lo announce tonight lltaf tlic City Commission has d('ci(lc(i no! lo appoint ;i citizens’ committee to study city fi- The ' commission is slated lo meet aL 8 p.m. at Cily Hall, (^oinmissioners considered the question of whether to form a study group at an jn-formal meeting last mght. Several observers have suggested such a group be formed, both before Ihe vote on a cily income lax in Marcli and after Ihc proposed tax was defeated. A self-appointed Citizens Committee on Taxation bad urged a study .of city finances as late as two weeks ago. FORMFOR DECISION Taylor had said the commission would consider the que.s-tion at its informal meeting. Tile decision against a study would appear to confirm the opirion of some observers that any study would have to resiilT in a recommendation to seek more revenue for city operations. memled we receive $:!0:i,0()0, a i:; per eeiil increase. This leaves a $I94.IHI0 gap. "Huless we are allowed moneys lo close this gap, we will be forced to operate at a detieil lor tlu- eoiiiing year. "I am .sending letters today lo our stale senators and repre-•senlatives lo point out llu- iia-liire of our budget jiroblem and seek help from them. "llndeistaiid, 1 am not iiro-tesling Ihe allotment tor laeully salary improvements. These increases are desperately needed. "But this additional $125,000 in no way helps to solve our deplorable budget problem." In April Slate Sen. Carl O'Brien appealed to the ehair-riian of the Michigan Appropriations Committee for more funds to correct OC's fiscal handicaps. O'Brien represents Ronliac, Waterford Township and six other Oakland County townships. The committee suggests the balance of the $4.9 million be distributed as follow.-;: Michigan Tech, $200^000; Cen-'ral Michigan, $400,000; Northern Michigan, $1.52,000; Western Michigan, $500,000; Grand Valley, $80,000.: Ferris, $202,000; Wayne, $1,200,000; Michigan State $900,000; and Michigan yoo.ooo. . LANSING (AIM The Senate Appropri/dions Commilli-e ree einmended Iasi ii i g h I Ih.'il sl.ile spending in lluri- major areas be $.5 5 million below Gov. G e 0 r g e Romney's ptoposed 19(15 (ill budgel Budgi'l bills itdroduced by tlu-commillee went slightly above Romney reeommeiidalions In nu-nlal healih and eduealion, bid nil nearly $8 million from stale Iniilding projeels, I'hey ineliided a speeiHl $4.9 million boost for higher edii-eatioii fueiiUy suluries. Dominicbn General Won't Resign os Wessin Peace Bid .SAlUON, Soiilli Vi(‘l. N;mi l/l’> 'Hk' Vk-I Conji ()C(’U|)i(*(l a town of 15,000 IHTsoii.s 52 milo.s north of Saij^on for .seven lionrs today, killiiift 5 American military advisers and woimdinj,' 11 others in OIK- of the heaviest onslaughts of the Vietnamese war. In another operation, a tJ.S. Marine wa.s killed and six were wounded when a company of leatlierneeks stiot their way into a eomplex of Communist-corl-I rolled village.s near the Da Nang air bn.se. The Murine casualtieR occurred in the IcaUiernecks’ finit M(-i/e-und-hold operation since they landed in Vlct Nam two months ago. They o(-eu|)ied the Lc My village complex, a trouble spot for Ihe Murinc.s and government torees where another Marine was killed last Friday. SANTO DOMINGO, Doinin of Ihe e(iiinlry’s key military'Stales were trying to arrange ieaii Itepiihlie (AIM Brig, posts, and was a leader of the meeting between junta chief * * * Gen Elias Wessin y Wessin mililaiy revolt (hat overthrew linbert and rebel leader Guam- The ea.sualtics raised the total changed his mind last night I’resident .loan Bosch in 19(i:t,, ano, but lhat Caamano so far «f U -5. combat dead in Viet about resigning as a pc-aci- over * * * had refu.scd. •*' 1172 since December U S, sources said Wessin sent with the papal l««> leller lo U.S. Ambassador ;l;''manucle Clari- Hl-IAVV CASUAI.TIES nlly hoped (he loyalist junta vv. Tapley nennelt ,lr. in which Ike nunci* —- Sen. Garland Lane, D-Flinl, lh(- (-ommillee chairman, said, however, Ihaf most of Ihc building money would probably be n-stbred in a supplciiicnfal ap-jiioprialion next spring. That would push total spending in the Ihn-c areas about $2 million above 1h(- governor’s proposals. [o the Dominican rebels. U S. government appar lopcd (he loyalist junta yv. Tapley nc....v,i,, iK-acl, Brig. G(-n. Antonio Imbcrt ju- cxprc.sscd bis willingness to P«Pe Raul VI Barreras, would talk liim into resign from the army for the D"'ii*'’'can Republic, reportedly resigning. j,o,k1 of the country. carried a message from the jun- / la. Re,sults of the meeting were FOLLOWING MEI<:TNVIG di.sclo.sed. The letter was written after U S. forces reinfor-ced their lie met with Bcnnictt and Lt. encirclement of the rebel-held Gen. Bruce Palmer, commander area of Santo Domingo with of the 21,000^U.S. Marines and 105mm howitzers, six smaller, "W(- did understand from offi- paratroopers in the Dominican cannon and an additional 15 M48 al .sources that Gen. Wessin Republic. tanks. A U.S. military spoke.s- The heaviest American ca.su-alties were sufferd in Song Be, a provincial capital near tha Cambodian border. ‘•The question of Gen. Wes-sin’s resignation is a inatler between Gen. Imbert and Gen. Wessin,” a U.S. Embassy of-fieial said in a statement. The bill package left the im-pn-ssion that the state budget will el()S(-ly follow Romney’s .suggestions except possibly in aid to primary and secondary eduealion. PREDICT FIGHT All signs point lo a pitched Senate-House fight over school aid with both sides seeking figures well above Romney’s proposals. Latie, who had said in Janu-aty that Romney’s budget was too. high, said Monday night that he now thinks revenue may go beyond his earlier predictions. Lane said (he capital outlay, or building, cuts should not significantly delay projects but will give thet legislature extra ' (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5l going to resign at 4 p. Monday. We now understand that he is reconsidering his decision,” Ihe slatemeni .said. There was no explanation for the general’s change of heart. Government forces reoc-eupied the town under cover of a heavy air attack by U. S, Air Force jets, but the Communists dug in along a river n 0 r t h c a s t of the town- -A-major battle appeared to be. developing. Communists groundfire hit Tlie said the artillery “tuned on rebel targets.” A pair of mortar shells, ap- one American propeller-driven parently fired from the rebel fighter-bomber in the engine, Reliable .sources said the U.S. sector, landed harmlessly about forcing it to land. An Army heli- L- United Slates has nrcssed representatives of 100 yards from Palmer’s head- copter picked up the pilot un- Ihe Organization of American quarters. ’ • for. Wessin's retirement p c, a c e gesture toward t h e rebels, whose forces he fought will) planes and tanks before the arrival of U.S. troops. HELD RESPONSIBLE Many Dominicans held him responsible for the air bombardments of Santo Domingo that took more than 1,000 lives. Col. Francisco Camaano Deno, proclaimed provisional president by the rebels, has hurt 15 minutes later. Osteopaths Given Report on Pontiac-Based College ] In Today's Press The only means of obtaining more tax millage for city operation is through a vote of the people. Most observers do not think a millage issue could .pass at the polls. ^ progress report on plans for the Michigan Col-been demanding that Wessin of Osteopathic Medicine (MCOM) was given yes-leave the country. Icrday by Dr. Alan Potts, ehairman of the projected The general commands the college’s board of trustees. San Isidro training b a s e 20 pj. reported to the House of Delegates of the Michigan Association of “We’re really pouring the air on them. We’re giving them everything we can lay our hands on,” a U.S. military spokesman in Saigon said. VIET DEFENDERS The Vietnamese defenders were believed to have suffered heavy casualties in the attack, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) miles from Santo Domingo, one 3 County Men Cited for Service to State GM, Ford Hit Milestones Earliest Ever NATO Meeting Wilson warns de Gaulle on military nationalism — PAGE 2. Draft Continuance backed: volunteer incentives costly — PAGE 5. Fruit Crop Bad weather has cut In the campaign lor and against the city income tax, both sides generally agreed that the city did need more money. However., income tax opponents leaned toward a hike in the property tax: City Commissioners, unanimous on the income tax proposition, ' opposed jumping « property taxes, stating that an inootne tax tvould give relief to senior 'citizens and others on fixed iucomes. , Three Oakland County men were honored yesterday as distinguished Michigan citizens. Lynn A. Townsend of Bloomfield Township, Minoru Yamasaki of Birmingham and Wal- ler P. Reuther of Oakland Township were all presented W 0 Iverine Frontiersmen Awards. The presentation was made at an Economic Club of De- , deeply into expected har- vest — PAGE 13. 1 Area News 4 !, Astrology . .. 26 Bridge 26 * 5 Crossword Puzzle ., • 27 Comics 26 Editorials . 6 Markets ......., 19 Obituaries . . . \ 20 V Sports* 15-17 4 ^ Theaters . 8 ; 1 TV & Radio Programs 27 g , Wilson, Earl 27 ; ■| Women’s Pages 10-12 ) Opponents of the tax, which was solidly defeated at the polls, thought that Pontiac’s tax base would continue to increase, giving the city its much-needed added revenue. Also, income fax foes contended that a state income tax would eventually be passed with a rebate provision for cities,, Announcement of tbg City Commission’s decision" not -To have a study committee would be the first real break in the silence following’ defeat of the income tax.- “trr- i ■/il/;, V Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons. The Royal Oak physician spoke at tbe final session of the DETROIT (AP)—The two mil-two-day meeting of the House lionth General Motors car of the of Delegates ii1 Grand Rapids. 1965 modeL run rolled off an as-troil-luncheon as a prelude lo president of the Greater Mich- The full state association sembly lin^ today, just a day the annual Miehigam Week jgan F’oundation. opened its annual convention ahead of Ford’s one millionth observance. * * ★ yesterday. car. ’ * * * Townsend the nresirient of . medical school, glatectTp, gotj, figures were new rec- The carved plaqueswerepre- , ke located on a 164-acre site Q^ds. GM’s previous mark for The carved plaques were pre- Chrysler Corp., was cited on Pontiac’s east side, is to ad- hitting the two million figure sented by Edwin 0. George, for “distinguished industrial mit its first students in the fall was May 28 of last year. Ford’s achievement strengthening t h e of 1970, according to Dr. Potts. oj^ million mark was the economy of Michigan.” Construction is to begin in June 8 date set in 1955 and June 1967. matched last year. The four U.S. auto firms set their sights on an 847,000 output for May, which would be a new record for the month. The old mark of 726,007 was set in May 1964. Auto production rolled along state aid to the proposed medi- at about 39,500 a day, with the cal school. , auto companies hopeful ,of * * ★ . stepping tjiat pace up a bit be- lt the bill eventually becomes fore the^^Memorial Day holiday law, the MCOM would be the weeTcend cuts into production, first osteopathic medical school , * ★ ★ ....................... in the nation to receive such Final checks of April produc- men, Secretary of Defense Rob- public aid. tion showed 862,416 cars were, ert McNamara and Dr. Emory State Senate Majority Leader built, the third highest month’ in Morris, president of the Kellogg D. Dzendzel (D-De- U. S., automotive history. It Foundation, received similar addressed the delegates was topped onfy by the record honors. Sunday evening and said he was 963,101 pf, last March and the optimistic that the Senate mea-^ 866,632 jjars built in December, sure would pass. _ 196|4; ; architecture Yamasaki, an architect, was Osteopaths are currently prehonored for “distinguished lead- for the school and ' . ,, , , lining up financing for the in- ership in the advancement of gtate and federal beauty in the architecture of funds will be sought. In fact, the State Senate now has in committee a bill to give America.” The award was given to Reuther, president p£ the United Auto Workers, for “distinguished leadership in programs for the, betterment ,of his fellow man.’’ In addition to the three area 16630380 n i:si)AN. MA^ as NATO Meeting Opens LONDON (AD I ItnliHli Prime Mmiisler Harold Wilson oiHined Hie Notlli Alianlii al liNlice'K niinuid aprlliK mec llny lodny with a wamlii|^ lo Pmil limit Chiirlmi ile Oimllc lliid mil llnry mitiomiliHiii I'l a ilaiiMermiH delualon. VVlIriOn avoidrd itimilloninH Ihc l''r(■n(■h ll•^l(l»■l liy namf Hul lilfi lai tjel wii!i (lein lo Ihe lot nun mlnlf.lns (lom Hie Hi on lloiiM ol Hie Noilli Allaiille Tiea h ()i>;mii/alloii our common piohlei basis of advenlures 1 iiuiioiialism." Wilson, the Innier ol a conn try wllli nucleai |iower, iiHnerl ml Hull Hiere are onlv two nui lot unclear iiallotis In Hie world Hie I lulled Stales an/ Hie So Mel Hiiloii Wllll Ibis he dnWli graded Hie nuclear |ioW'ci ol I'lance and ('onimuiilsl Cbliui ini well as llrilaln'n The |irlme minialer said Hie jieynole of NATO ’'musl be In lei'de|iendcnce" and added "Indeed our wlllint;nesH lo ai'cepl Hie iinpllcalions ol Inicr (lependi'iice iiiiimI r;row, nol dl rninmb, aa we work lo make Hie alliance more effective and l>rin(t it into line wilb chanMiiif! world reriuirements COMMON ntOKLKMS "There la no' Ki'ealei deliisioii Iliad Ibe leeliii)^ we < an solvi' "The .sheer laelii ol lliernmnu clear wea|)onry," said Wilson, "lo say iioHilnn ol Hie bard lessons o| economics, means Hud oulside Ibe Iwo major niideai iiallolis, Ibe I' H A and Ibe II S S H , liierc ( iiiliiol be a r;cii uiiicly Indi'pciidcnl nui Icar |iow cr capable ol Mislaluiii^ llier monuelear war or ol providing a (globally credible iiui'lear deler- Soviets Expel Birmingham Area News U. S. Diplomat Commission Rejects Charge Interference With Alriccin Students Development Rezoning IVKiSCOW lAI’i The Sovlel j Union biday ordered Ibe expiil I slon III II II S, Nepro diplomal on ebarpes ||ial be eiiHiiped in anil Sovlel iicllvllimi anioTi|.; Alricaa •iliidciil i liei c Till' 11 S Kiiibai; •A said Ibe ebarpe was pnmipl ml Clll "And Hie ellccla ol model II iiiielcar wai laic, no less Hum Hie reali/aliiin Ibal l.'Kilaliiailsin Is impossible, even lor Ibe mosi ; powei'tnl. mean Ibal no inilion. Iiowever preal, eaii lliliik in terms oi poinp II alone, wlllioni allies mid wiHioiil repm'd lo world opinion iiumn,i‘: ON poLurnoN obio Oov, .lames A. Kbodes (ripbli lislens lo a remark by Uov (ieorpe Komiiey id Mlebipan diirinp a one (lay eooferenee yesterday In (develand lo di.sensH waler pollnlion In Ibe (Irmd Lakes. Homii(‘y IS,sued a call for a lollow-iip eonfei -mice ..biilc If) In Deli oil Norris 1>, (iariiell, a cidinral allaebe whose iob involved con lads wllll loicii n sindenis, was aeensmi ol aclivitios iiicoiiipal ib|e Wllll Ibe slaliis ol a dipio mat " A .Sovlel l•'orelpn Minis Il y liole llild llie I' S I'.liilioss,V here Hial sneli aeUvIlles anioiip Aniei'lean diplom.ils nin.sl come lo a bull. milMlNUllAM Plaiib Im a bnuif'y bonnlnp (levelopmenl on Ibe nnler Irliipe of Ibe down lown area were Hballerml laal iilplil when Hie City CoinmlM-slim Inriieil down a rm|uesl lo re/oiie Ibe properly The riM'lansillealioM ol Ibe properly on Purdy bad been siinpbl by Norman L Itonlb president ol Itrookvlew llnmes, liK , IllrnUiipbam ItiioHi llild |ibiiuiml |o liiiild .fl iiiiils on Hie west side ol Hie Nireel, jiisl soiiHi ol Itrovvn. As p r e h e n I I y /oned. (be properly only ollows Hie cim slrndlim (d :il nulls, and ae eordiiip lo Koolb, Is mil eiimipb III realize )i profitable reliirn mi Ibe investmeiiL sli Icled lo loin bloi'iea, eyed Hloiipb Ibe elanblfleal loti be ||nd ie(|iief)lm| wnnld albiw «i aft dllinnal Hour, In aiinlber aellon, (lie eoili niisslmi aeeepled plams foi' Hie exlmioi' Irmilnieiil of Ibe pro posed parkiiip slnidnie lo be bnlll In Ibe dnwnlown Inmlneks disirid ALTLIINA I IVI': PLAN 'file plan was ao allerii/ilive lo Iwo ilniwinps stibinilled two' weeks apo by Ibe Hirminpbam arebiledio id lirm of O’Dell, llewb'll /it Lilekenbaek AsamH ales, liie Al find time, Hie eoiiimiR-siiiii delayed a|i|irovul until H could be piven a wider ncIco Educators Gov. Rhodes Vows Action Wit .SON HA( ki;d II e 1 p 1 a n l''oreipn Minisler Linil ilenrl .Spiiak, picsideni ol Ibe NATO ('omiell, and NATO SmTelary-Oeneral Manlio Hros 10 ol Italy Joined Wilson in ('all- J inp Inr a new di'diealioii lo nnily wilblii Ibe alllaiiic Blacklist Oklahoma W'A.SIIINUTON i/I’i The Na lional Kdnealion Associalim I NLA I blacklisted Ibe .Stale o (Ikl.’iliom.i loilas' on Great Lakes Pollution "I deny Ibe ebaipiss," (lamell llild ii ri'porler The ebarpes came aller on mei'oiis eoniplainis by Ali'Ican sindenis of dl.serlminnilon bad been pnlillsbed abroad and dc Hied here A prmip ol Kenyan sindenis weni borne Iasi monlb and deiionneed Ibeir liealmenl III Hie Soviet Union, ('oliilili.s.sioiiei' William Hob erls eoninimided llrook.s lor -bis lar .sipbled Hiinkinp in reallztnp Hie area Is nnderpolnp a clianpe hill added Ibal Hie euminl.s.slmi musl lionor the leelinps ol res ideiils will) have opposed (lie pi'ojeel lion. 'file new |iidpo.sal uses pee ea.sl coiierele In Hie eoii.slrnc lion ol Ibe deckl'd slrncliire, and I'omblneN an ap|iearanc(> of sbleldml levels with more open space lo allow heller venllla-lion. Spfiiik said reeeiil develop , menis in Viel Nam and Hie Do ! miniean Hepnblic showed Ibe | world slill bad a loop wav lo po II ' led leaeber dill. pe 'Cltll IIAHOLD D. WADK New Corporal Is Assigned to Flint Post Trooper Harold D. Wade, a 16-ycar veteran with Ibe Mieb-ipan State Police, has been promoted to corporal and will be transferred from the Pontiac Post to the Flint Post, Wade, 42, of 1109 Berkley, has spent the jast l.'l years at the Pontiac Post after serving for a short time in Roekfordr The new corporal was born here and was graduated from Pontiac Central High School. During World War II, he served in the Coast Guard for .19 months. Wade has two citations for meritorious service, is married and has two daughters. The transfer and promotion are effective Sunday. Mmsio said Hie .Soviet policy ol "peaeelnl eoexislenee" cer l.iinly IS an improvemenl on Slalinlsm and added "We should nol di.sniiss il loo lightly. But on Hie oilier hand we should li.'ive no illusions [ibiMil il II does nol necessarily mean pood neighborly relalions ' In some eases, al b'asi, il lias proved lo be indislinpnisbable I the 'cold war’ si nipple. ” III .slale nol lo aceepi leaelniip po.silioiis III Oklahoma, and .'>aid . Il uonid e.slablisli relocallon centers lo help Oklahoma le.iclieis laid jobs elsewhere. ; fhe NKA imposed inilioniil j siiiietioas in protest iipaliisl j allepi'il "siilt-ininimar' ('omtl i (ions ill almost every area of . the Oklahoma school program. 'I'be Oklahoma Isdncalion A: Td.KVLLAND (AP) Willi Hie prouiidwoi'k laid. Gov. .lames A Rhodes Mays lie plans lo keep Hie ball rolling in elforls lo rid Ibe Great Lakes ol pollulion. Ile says Ibe key is Inerea.sed lodei al aid, wllll propram eonlrol al Ibe stale level. 'file nexi nn'eling lo discuss Ibe problem is .biiu' l.'i in De li'oil, Iben HIkkU's plans lo lake Ills .ii’pomenls lo Ibe poveniors confei’enee .Inly 2f) in Minneapolis and follow il up al Ibe ,Sepl. 20 meelinp ol Midwesleni pov enior.k al Mackinac Island, Mich, slate ol The United Stales, Brilain and France called for the reunifiea-lion ol Germany on Ibe basis of peace and freedom and asked th:ir NATO allies lo support this move. This deefsion was communicated to the foreign ministers by RritislixForcipn Secretary Michael Slevv^rL CLOSING (JAP ^ It repfesented .some closing of fhe gap between the Dnitcd States and France, diplomatic sources said. NKA, b;is eslimaled Ibal bnii-(Iri'ds ol Ibe .stale's '22.000 leaeb- 1 ('IS will look for leaching positions (uilsi(l(' Hie slab' before j scIkkkI i'('opens next lull. An NKA souiee said Ibe ligure may run to 10 per cent or bigber. THK SANCTIONS: • W.’irn leaebers from out of sl.'ile nol lo aec'cpl leaching imsilions in Oklahoma beean.se such aeecplanee may be considered unethical yondud. • ("aul.ion graduates of schools of cduealion (in Oklahoma and ckscwticrcI against coniracling to leach in the slate, An NKA source says this does not imi)ly any possible penalties. The French agreed Ibal the solution of the (.Jerman problem was larger fban a purely Kuro-pcan issue and eoncerned the vital interests of the United ■Srafe.'^'i The Weather •'furii Ibe siiollighi of puh-lieily on Ibe silu.'ition through jii'ess releases and reports lo business and industrial organizations and their leaders, agencies of governmeni, and the general public in Oklahoma. 'file action is a follow-up lo an NKA commis.sion study last win-ler which produced a reporl criticizing Oklahoma school op-('I'ations across the board, from tcaetier pay lo facilities and textbooks. itliodes md Monday wilb gov-('rnors Nelson A. Roekeleller ol New York and Miehigan’s George Homney fiiid liilkcd inoslly aboni Lake Krie's pi'ob lems 'file Irio, in addition lo re|)r<’senlalives of five other Greal l.akes slati's plus congressmen and heallti officials, md for 4'4 hours at a meeting ealb'd by IHiodes Homney issued a call lor a follow-up conference in Detroit lo be held as part ol a session called by the U.S. Department of lleallh, Kdnealion and Welfare. A lepoi'l of a Ihree-year study of pollulion in iTie Detroit Hiver will be presented. •CI.KAN AUTHORITY’ RIkkU's .said be envisions a "dean Greal Lakes Aulbority'' lo supervise a giganlic iiurifying eflbrl. Kinandng for such a program must come from Wash-inglon, be said. "The world's greatest and most valuable fresh Wider resource is im|)er-iiled," IHiodes said. "We must I dean ii up—now."- ■ - ^ Sonic oilier (dmini'iil'i Irom some ol Ibe nciirly VII |iarlicl p.'inis ill IIk' iiieeliiig Homney ' Wc ougbl to Hike ;i look ill wbnf w(‘ eaii do now, willniul wiiilinp for furllicr sliid les iind fiiidiiip oijl wlio's going III piiy wbiil." Hockdeller "Wider pollulion sliinds ns ii biirrier lo lull eco notiiK'. soi'iiil, r('ir('iilionid and commiinily (levelopmenl in New York. Ill Ibe Grciil Liikes arcii, in Ibe iiiilion iis ii wliolc" lie (idled Ibe ledei'id pranl-in-iiid program iniid('(|iiiile. "Al Ibe pri'.seiif lime we iii'c losing proniid In Ibe figlil iigiiiiisl pol lulion. " DKNY ( IIAHGK 'The U S Kinliii.si.y denied Ibal Giiiticll llild done iinylblng in comp.ililile Wllll bi.s slidiis as ii diploniiil Hill il said be would Iciive al Ibe end (d Ibis week Giirneli iilso was aeeusi'd by 11k,; Koi(ipn Minisiry ol "iider lerence in inH'rrial iiffiiii’s" of Hie .Soviet Union, HUII,DliN(. COSf Seven nrea men luive been II liiis been eslmiiiled Ibal Ibe eleded In .serve on Ibe board devi'lopmeid would have e o s I ol diredors of Ibe Birminghaim iilioid $'/l)0,000 Hloomfb'ld ('bambei of (!om 'file .Soviet ii(d(' was given I Hie elidiassy'.s poldiciil eoiiii.se lor, Miileolin 'fonii lie deiiie Hie ebilrges on the spot, iin err biissy slidi'iiienl said. 'fooii received Hie nole Iror V. I Oberemko, de))iily ( bief i Ibe Koreigii Minisiry AiiK'iicii Itroiiks, in inakinp Ids pb n for Hie re/.(ining, fold Hie eom-niissldo (hal Hie develop-meiif, a eondomiiilinn (iwai'it joinlly liy Hie le.iianfs, would liiiVe proiliieed an aiiiMiiil lax reliirn of $2H,000 as eoaipared lo the $2..'I00 now received from the eigbf parcels in i|ii('s-lioii. 'I'lirei' (d Ibe diieelors were decH'd ill liil’p('. lie al,'.o lold IIk' eoinmissi Ibid Hie linildings would be Solons Recommend lold Budget Trimming (Continued Krom Page One) moidhs to study pliins iind (JIVKS ASSURANCK 'flic ('inl)iissy siiid Oberemko be wiis well ac (liriiiided Wllll Giirneli iind could iissiin- Oberemko Ibid Giirneli llild uol id iiny linu' bebiived iii a Wily incompidible wilb bis slidus iis iiii iiecredlH'd dililo 5 Americans Die in Attack by Viet Cong 'fli(*y are Francis (Frank) Fisher of Maiiufaetiirers Na-Honnl Itniik, who will serve three years; Wilbur R. Mason of .liieohson's Iwo y<‘«rs; and Homer W. Case. IHoomrield fowiisliip supervisor, one year. Divsioiiiil represenlalive.s who will serve for Jbree years are Gliarles W. Wiggins of the Kln-sel-Wiggins Agency, insurance; ,)iiek L. Bedell of Bedell's Res-liiui'iiid, botels, molds and res-lauraids; iind William I). Shep pill’d of B r e e e li Knlerprises, genei iil service. (Conlinued Krom Page One) M, M. Hosenberger of Kuhl niiiii Kddrie Gorp wiis eledi'd lo il Iwo yciir lerm lo reprc.scnt Ibe miuiufiiduring division. wliieb w ol il pro' lie lirsi Hed s lid ciipilal sim Wiildi revi'iiues. 'I'be meidiil bealtli 1)111 pi'o po.ses spending $101,509,111 versus $100,.')10,54.') suggested by Homney. The eduealion bill proposes $1(15,924,1101 versus $184,-()59,875, KKMODKUNG Appropriations for remodeling, iiddilions, new eon.siruelion iind advance planning would total $59,598,210 versus Romney's $()7,T22,450. 'foon .said GiuncH's .job "involved consideriible conlad with Ami'i'ican sindenis in Ibe .Soviet Union and it Wiis only nalui'iil Ibal be iikso met slu-denis of other nalionidilies," the embassy sfalemerU said. •Song Be lirsi eiime under heavy mortar attack at 1:55 a. m. Ex-Publisher's Wife Succumbs ^ Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Partly cloudy and cool PMay clearing by late afternoon, high 62 to 70. Fair and cool tonight, low 44 to 52. Sunny and slightly warmer Wednesday, high 66 to 74. West winds 10 lo 20 miles today and tonight becoming southwest 5 to 15 miles Wednesday, fluirsday outlook partly cloudy and cool. Commission to Air Dispute on Rezoning Lowest temperature preceding 8 a At 8 a.m.: Wind velocity 10 m,i «n Tuesday- at 7; 43 I Wednesday at 5: Is Wednesday at ies Tuesday at 3: GWCCWillAif Seniors'Trips City Commissioners will be handed a disputed rezoning case al their regular weekly meel-in,g tonight. The rezoning is.sue involves a parcel of land adjacent to Hie Columbia Ayneue extension of the Pontiac Boys’ Club. Compared with Romney’s,^ budget, the committee plans include these additional appropriations; .$4.9 million for college and university faculty salarie'.s beyond Homney's recommendcfl increases. $1.2 million conlinggncy lot; exira college and university enrollment. $1.1 million for additional mental health altendanls. $100,000 extra for psychia-tri.sfs. .$250,000 for the first year of the University of Michigan’s expanded P’linl campus program. Lane said the committee discussed pos'sible ■ I'cslrictive language on the U-M Flint item but IK) formal vote on its inclusion was taken. ".Such action is cerlainly in ;iccordance with diplomatic accords, and lie could only assume il is-also pc'rmissible under Soviet regulations," Toon told Ob-, ('remko, Oberemko said Garnell should leave in ''a reaonsable sliorl lime, " Hie embassy said, The (!ommunisls f o 11 o w (- d. np al ,2:'10 u in. with an ini'aniry as.sauli in regimental .sirengiii Husband Rqn Weekly on the town where about 10 U.S., advisers were slalioned'wilb a Birmingham Paper force ol some 1,000 Vietnamese, NOT WELCOME The Soviet note officially de-cl.’ired Garnell persona non gra- /elcoi Garnell works lor Ihc UniU'tl Stales Information Agenc\. Ile came lo Moscow Oct. 22 on a two-year assignment. , During Hie fighling helicop-lers were unable to land reinforcements because Red fire in the landing zones was too hoi. INSIDE TOWN By daylight Ibe guerrilla.s were well inside „lbe town aiuT engaged the defenders in bouse to house fighting. One group of guerrillas foiiglil their way info the mess hall of the U. S. Army advisory detachment, but all were killed in haild-to-hand lighting. Mrs. George R. (S. l,ouise) Averill, wife of a former publisher of Ibe Birmingham Eccentric, died yesterday after a monlb-long illness. Born in Newton, Kan., Gar-'U moved in 1951 to Los Angeles, where his parents now A .second grou|) got into the hall and got away with a supply of rations. live. He began work for USIA in 1980. While stationed in Helsinki, Garnett twice was a guide with American exhibitions in the Soviet Union. Downtown Tomporoturt! I Alpens , ' Escanaba\ Monday in Pontiac j Muskegon ! Pension ^nday's Temperature C Jacksonvi Kansas Ci Los Angeles \63 4 ni Beach se CIty 6 67 4 Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather — Mostly 5 3 42 Omaha z r4lSu%h ! The recent decision of the Wa-forford Township Board of Education to abolish senior class trips will be discussed at to-I night’s meeting of the Greater ! Waterford Community Council * (GWeC). School board members Mrs.. Dorothy Barningham' and Eldon I ITosegart wall comment on the boafii’s action. Commissioners will receive a report from the City Planning Commission on rezoning for an apartment project on the land on West Columbia between the club and West Columbia Baptist Church. City planners last week voted lo recomrnend that the multiple housing rezoning be granted. d Lowest Temperature! Also slated for the 8 p.m. meeting at Pierce Junior High School is the presentation of cec-til'icates of appreciation by the Council to organizations that participated in a month-long township cleanup campaign. Byron Zink, GWCC vice president, and Mrs. Dorothy Olson, township treasurer, will make the presentatiems. Opposing the rezoning were residents of Ihc area and Boys Club representatives. A petition against the change in zoning was presented with over 100 signatures. BACKED request The City Planning Commission gave a favorable •recom-' mendation to the request despite the,petition. Practice Rates Encore for Volunteer Firemen NATIONAL, WEATHER - Showers and thundershowers are forecast from the southern Plains to the lower Mississippi VaUey toni^t with occasional rain along the- north* Pa---ci&c Coast apd parits of the central Plains. Showers are likely ■ ip sou|hen) Fk>Fid|a. lLM|ill be cooler in the Northeast. FORT WASHINGTON, P4, tAP) — Members of the Fort Washington volunteer .fire company set lire to an unused barn Monday night in a practice exercise. As they were rolling up their hoses at the end of the drill they got a ra^o call for help from a neapby township. On fire—an' mwd ■ barn. However, if a protest petition i Signed by 20 per cent of the t abutting property owners is ' filed with the City Commission, it would take six yes votes to pass the rezoning. , Other items on toniglit’s agen-' da include a progress report on^ an arterial water main project ! in the north end, a report of: the city engineer’s estimates i for paving of several city streets.! and several other rezoning re-; quests. I is The Communist.s seized the provincial admihislralion building in Song Be and attacked a government post .a half mile from town. The post held despite withering fire from Viet Cong cannon and mortars. ARMORED CARS The Viet Cong captured live armored cars from defenders of the administration building' and tlirew them into an attack on the Song Be airstrip a half mile Mrs. Averill, 81, of 889 Riven-oak, Birmingham, worked in various editorial capacities during the 42 years her husband was editor and publisher of the weekly new.spapcr. A graduate of Wellesley College. she had taught in the Detroit .School System for many years. Site was a member of the Birmingham branches of the American Association of University Women and the Wellesley Cjub. Mrs. Averill was a founder of Ihc Birmingham Rotary Anns. Service will be 3 p.m. Thursday at Bell Chapel of the Wil-lianr li.~HaTnilton Co.. Birmingham. Burial will follow in Whitfe Cliapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Intense Communist fire pro-venled the landing of reinforcements at the airstrip and delayed efforts to retake the town. Surviving besides her husband arc two sons, George W. of Tarpon Springs' Fla., and John M. of Birmingham: a daughter, Mrs. Donajd P. Babson of Wellesley Hills, Mass.; and a broth- Commumst shellfire badly damaged the airstrip. It was not known whether the Viet Cong destroyed any planes oh the ground. The Viet Cong began to leave the town about 9 a.m. and government troops began moving in. Red antiaircraft fire continued and at noon troop-carrying helicopters were still unable to land in the area. " WHAT A WAY TO HURT A GUY-Just when 5-month-old Bret Jackson of Columbus, Ohio, had a crop of hair a Beatle would be proud of, they took it aWay from him. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronnay L. Jackson has a tough time keeping a stiff, upper lip enduring his fir,sf Ijaircut. Belated reports spelled out damaging defeat for government forces in a battle Sunday only 25 miles west of Saigon. Spokesmen said 116 Vietnamese soldiers were killed and 78 wounded in a six-hour clash on the border between Hau Nghia and Binh Duong provinces. The death of two U.S. Army men and 20 Vietnamese in this engagement had been announced previously. ' . NEW SERVICE HOURS Wednesday—10 A.M. to REMINGTON SERVICE SIMMS SERVICE — Remington to(rtory' representative will be in our ’ Wednesday ot every wee),. SIMMSJS. EleeMefSiulvers -Mninriaor ALlLaiLii A (, u., il'j' _f\ i- i'. k-L‘lT,.‘ I IIK TON riA( I’HKSS. ’l'|!i:ShAV. MAY/ll, lOUft i-» Indonesians Protest U.S. Seizure of Ship .lAKAHTA, IniloimHin (AD All (ill workdnt union dointind-ud tiKliiy Hint IndoneHiii <‘X|)ro priulu Arnurieun oil coinpunlcM in retaliuliim for Ihu aej/ure of ail Indniioiiian nieroliani sliip in Loa AiitJoloa, t^alif Tlip (Viiliiil oil WoikpiH Unllod Acllmi Oinnnlznlion wh« lino of Novoi'iil KioiipH, Inoind In^ llio liilior wiiin of llio Coin iniiiil!tl piirly, prolooliii){ llio Nol/iit'o j'’ri(|)iv of llio vormol .loliiiiiiioi l.jiliilmi'lniri iiiilloiiwldo onnipol({ii lo (jlorlty JoHOpli Stniln, Tlio ciinipalK" colnrldon witli llic 20l|i unnlvcrmiry of lllllur'H defeat. Cliliiono lirimiloanlH nald wook |oii|i fonllviala of_ Movlol fHinS, "Indy ilopIclinK" llio llio of llio Kovlot wai'llino loiidor, are lioliifj hold llii'oiitjlioiil llio nil lowonl vlolOry on a major laaiio i A dofoat would have I'aqiiliod hIiu-« ha Uuik offloe tml Goto- Wllaon to roalgn and eali now her. 1 elections. PRIVATE DETECTIVES HAROLD L SMITH IHVESTIQATIOHS Tho voHHol Willi iioi/od hv loil oral iiiiinilmlii In ooiiipliaiioo wllli 0 Ntill hy a lloiiohihi ruin pony winch clainm liuloiioala I conll.Mi'iilod ll:i |ii(loiio.sniii prop l,ONI)()N (Al*) Tho llouHO oi Coiiiiiioini volod 21111 2IMI Mon (lay iilghi lo approve In prliici plo Iho l.ahor Hovorniiionrii iia lloiml Imdgol II wan I'lliiio Mliilutor Harold Wil'ioii's liai 1302 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 5-4222^24 Hour Number OFFICES IN PONTIAC — SAGINAW iii:iii Throe Ainorjoaii piinioh opondioy ho SI.Miiviic nod I wore ph iiioid fiiipoiyifiloii Io.mI Miircli ■oni dloo hero Cnilox 1^1 Aiiioilcmi On oir iindor rpivorii I'OSTMIl I'AHI'INTS TO ll.'l Mr Mrs, I'nd I'.ion irir:i'li ol (lid I on ( Hod rooonlly hy llio ('iilholio Social Sor jii lo.slor child care Ml!. ,'i "iil and corllllcalo Irnin .lohii W Hay, coohalriiiaii o| Iho Coiniiiilloo for Ko!dor Chll ii:i Mi; Iho past ci|dd year:-;, Iho Hlorls have hared Ihoir homo Wllh T1 foslor chll ! The II 0 w ,s p a p 0 r Harlan llakjal, 0 f 11 0 I a I Coniimini,>d organ, .laid nol/iiro of Iho ,‘diip h a H III a d o Iho lake over of Ainorican onlorpriaoa "Irrovia' ahl(' " State Court Backs Human Price lag' I.ANSINd (AIM- A jtidno or jury can place a d(dlar valiio on hniiian life, Iho Michigan .Sii-proino Courl has rnlod Tho conri Mimday uphold Iho glaiiling of cash awanl.s lo par Olds whoso "adiill ohlldron" wore killed in miloinohilo aooi-dciits. In neilhor oaso wore the awards inlonded lo oaso finan-oial hardship. PONTIAC'S POPULAR THEATER W«ik n«yo Coni. II o.m. lo I? p.m. Sundoyi Coni. II t.m. lo 1} p.m. EAGLE PRESENTING it A Glittering Galaxle of CIrous Performert Gathered from the Four Corners of the Earth it Clowns, Aeriaiists, Trapeze Artists, Jugglers, Acrobats, Contortionists it Spirited Liberty Horses, Camels, Llamas, Ponies it Aerial Ballets, a Pageant Speotaole. Plus Many More CIrous Favorites. I HOW SHOWING! LOCATION: Crooki Rd. and Avburn Ava. (M-59) 2 milei Wait of Rochatter Rd. imnsTHE ns ORE! The splendor and Savagery of the world's wickedest empire! M-G-Mb (ion Hud Ilic value of a life 1h MiK li Ilia! Ihcre can he re eovery lor Iniieral expense.'; amj nolliing more," .mild .liislice: I'aiil Adnm.s in Hie eonlidlling opinion. 'I’lie fi-.'l riiling.s upheld awards In Sagin.iw Coiinly Circnil .ludge Jame.s O’Neil and Herrien ('oniily Cireiiil Judge K.irl Ziek (OKD’S DKATH The parenls td l.iiula Kay Hopkins, a 21-year-old Miehi-! gaii Stale Univer.sity coed, killed J ill a Saginaw Coiiiily aidomo-hile aeeideni, July '20, lOlid, were awarded $:)2,771t ' $2(),r)(l(l for Hie lo.ss of lier eompaiiionslni). John Kei.sig was awarded .$10,-000 in a Berrien l.’ounly 'jury trial for the loss of liis son, Donovan, 23, killed in a 1930 auto-mohile neeident, in addilion lo $1,27(1 for funeral expenses. flarry Kelly dls.senle(l, arguing (hill "judieial experience slrenglliens Hie liellel Hial Hie 'old rule' Is preleliilile." In Hie liile I0!)0s, awiirding of dam-iig,es heg.’iii lo swing ilW'iiy Irom jiisl liingihle costs or losses sii(,'li IIS Hie loss of income of Hie hreadwiniier of a family. In a separate, 311-piige opinion, .Iiisliee Kiigene Black argued: "The .sliirkly stripped (|ueslion is whether Hie eourf is going lo amend Hie simply wriHen, iini-versidly underslood iind unanimously applied phrasing” of Hie stale’s 117-year-()l(l "wrongful dealli iu'l," and its 1039 counler-parl. I.ONDON (AP) Dial Aliliey 'I2li2 ill l.oiidoii and you gel (lamhlers Aiimiyuiou;:, who.se memtiers help people kick Hie gaiiihliiig liahil * Dial Kniglilsliridge '1282 and' yon gel a .seliool lor novice gam hlcr.'i, wliicll opened Moiidii; nighi In Wolle Bednieili’s Kni glilshrldge .Spoiling ('liih IPs one of l.ondon’s iiuiny le;',iili/ed gaining lioirses, ^ "Tills eliisli (d iilioiie riiimhers Is mo.st nnlorliinale, a million to one elianee, I sii|ipo;;e," said Hie Hev. (iordon Moody, .secretary of Hie elnireli eouncil on gam hling. "Moody has gol his odds wrong," said Bediiiish. "The odds against such an oceurreiiee are 0,991) lo I” SPONSOR: Avondale Fire Dept. i Metropolitan Club Spirit 83. Not (fnly did the lower court do right in making its eoiisola-lion award, Adams said, lint it should have taken into eonsidcr-ation more than just future loss of companionship. Adams was joined by Chief Justice Thomas Kavanagh arid Justices 'I'heodore Souris and Otis Smith in both opinions. Justice Michael O’Hara agreed in the outcome in separate opinions. VOTES AtiAINST Justices Jolin Dethmers and If Hie court interprets the law as grinding diiniages for loss of companionsliip, lie argued, lower courts will run ittio "un-.solvable prolilems" regarding Hie distrihiilioii of such benefits. The Hopkins ease was I'c-ferred back lo Snginijw Couiily (kiiirt lor liirllier action on .sev-er'iil oilier poinis. MOSf.’OW (AP) Sovlel moviegoers Inirsl into appliiii.se Monday night when ii World War il (l(icumenl;uy showed film seiiuences of Sfaiin. 11 was lielieved lo lie Siiiliii's first np-pearanee on a Soviet screen since Nikita S. Klirushehev denounced him in 19.3(i. It was the tliird lime in the ^ 20Hi aiiniversiiry eelebralion of Hie Nii'/.i downlall Hial Stalin has been lioiiored. i HONt; KONG (AP) muni.st Cliiriii Iras liuu Coi 1,000 to *5,000 U» or 2*4 home I mortgage ('ash It'llen nvedodl Ulllm l.lil/Bli.Mi. MC I.ml ndk will. Mr. . ..I Ml. hill kiii r. will. Iiinr l.rrii l’mili.ir diimiif llir IMI.I KlyriMO. Ml hiMTorv-cr. will ll■•^lifv III ri'i'i'i»iii|! fiiir. lioiH'i.1. iilid di-uliiiy willi hlliiiiMi l . Ill Hi li\ lii|;lu Ii'IhIi'I., 1 W lin drill liri I ★ ( Ui DH i “ ' ,^S» , VI NO • iiHdiiliilr vinir ili'lilp. iiiiikr liiimr l■l•|llli|■^ or Free Parking on county lo! corner N. Sag- Free Parking whenever you apply for an inaw and W. Fturon Sti. each time yoU bring approved loan or renewal. to our office q full monthly payment. Bring ui your parking ticket to be stamped. \OSS and BUCKIWR 2(H> INA I lONAI, lU irOINC - I I, 1-1729 'brighly'.Filming Location Changed R TECHIsircaLOR' j|l AND-2nd HIT! DAH; M.t 14. IMS TIME: Mitiu. 4 ,.m. Eve. Parformonco 8:( E^KEEGO James Stewart DEAR BRIGITTE BOY TEN FEET TALL Starts WEDNESDAY Production of "Briglity,” starring Joseph Gotten, moves to Hie bottom of the Grand Canyon i today after three weeks of exterior and interior photography in Hie Kanab, Ulah^ area. The company will travel by . mule and helicopter to and from ! locations inside the canyon.’ Others in the east are Pat Conway, Dandy Curran and Dick Koran. ■■GLENN PHHENI^ FvrdBndg rHi^ouNDeiiS I Norman F’oster is directing from his own script, and | Stephen F. Booth of Bloomfield I Hills is producer. .. PANAVISION‘.n„METROCOlOB_ Peace Corps Wofker ^rowH COLOR Topkpi I fwAero ffie Jew to Give OLU.§cture the Jewels trejl RICHARD PETER BURTON • OTOOLE BECKET EXTRA: '"‘Dream of W ild Horses" RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY E ci.liirinK Our I umoai Kosher Corned Beef SPECIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY Br.aMa>l - Dinn. 58!> Ooklo -Out S.rv Sue Farrington, Peace Corps I representative, will speak at a { I public lecture tomorrow at 1 I p.m. in Room 195 of the Oak-1 land University Science Build-: ing. i A graduate of Alma College, Miss Farrington spent a year as ' a volunteer in Colombia, helping women in a small farm j community develop a cottage in-1 dustry, and another year at the j Universidad del Atlantico teach- ^ ing English. Driving an Olds 4-4-2 is mighty exciting ...so IS winning one! Enter the Olds Golf-O-Rama! You may win a 4-4-2—even if you don’t play, golf! This Olds 4-4-2 is a real moving machine. 400-cubic-inch V-8. Four-barrel carb. Twin pipes. Heavy-duty chassis components. And you can win a 4-4-2 when yoti enter Oldsmobile’s "Golf-O-Rama.” Four Olds ‘ 4-4-2 grand prizes in all—p/us 442 transistor radios in scale-model Oldsmobiles. One of them could be yours! Visit your Olds Dealer or participating golf professional and pick up your, entry'form...texfay.' Enter NATIONAL GOLF DAY... You may "Beat the Champ”! Agolfing first onNBC-TVand Radiol USGA Champ Ken Venluri versus PGA Champ Bobby Nichols in the •Round of the Cham- "Rpund of pions’on National Golf ^BC-TV and Radio. May 31at Day. Monday. May 31, Play your own round of golf at your local course in advanfcii—see if you can'Beat the Champ.' ' e B o iLo,e'M o e i iue- Look to Olds for the New! ^ WHCRCVCR YOU LNt... SEE YOUR OIOS DEALER ... FOR NINETY EtGHT. STARFIRC. KITA II. VniAMIC H. JfTSTAR L JFTSTAR M. VISTA CRWSU. F IS — JEROME MOTOR SALES CO., 1900 Wide Truck Drive, West, Ptiilitiac, M'ml Muii h'n rt, eharnnan of tin' din ('ml (\ IIlie speahn n] the ere hxin Sell rum, W'ldh miliiunpi jnesidenl IIl,(ik<‘ Uiiad, d the elnh Mrs, \'e, lledersilorl, Wiininile Street, Gigantic Cake Is Attraction at Annual Dinner A l.irllulay cjikr hvr I.h (all and five led m (lianiHc proclaliiK'd llic Idl) aim versary of (amcral Moloi Cirls’ Club Monday ovoninK. CalliiTin Mrs, I In Af (lu> annual Hossi's' dinnor in (bo Kingsley Inn, Dr Carl (k Dyers, noled eduealor, hii niori.sf and aulhoi' was speak Some 1)00 |)er,soiis allended It Does Not Take Place of Note Kappa Deltas Will Install Double Slate Ity (hi 0 I, o die ash Ir; ' with white riblio Doth idlernoon and evenine, groups of Kap|.a Della South Oakland Alumnae Assoeialioii will install new officers to night in the Soulhfield home of Mrs. Williiirn K, Siehert rd Cohoste.sses will h(> Thomas Wear and Mrs ris Johnson. Mrs. Those from (he evniing group to be installed are Mrs. Archie E. Armstretng, president; Mrs. Neil Leavens, vice president; Mrs. Richard Button, secretary; and Mrs. Rex D. Closson, treasurer. AFTERNOON From the afternoon grotip are Mrs. James A. Kilgore, chairman; Mrs. Morris John son, vice chairman: Mrs. Ar thur KarstaedI, secretary; and Mrs. Siebert, trwsurcr.. Mrs. Stuart M. Totty has been elected delegate of. Kaj.-pa Delta South Oakland Alumnae Association to allend the national convention in Chicago, July 1-5. he sufficient. Group to Hear Abel The Ladies Day Out series 'of the YWCIA will meet at noon Wednesday in the "V ” to hear Lyle Abel on "Care of Residential Lawn and Landscape.” ;• Mrs. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty '(left), Washington newspaperwofnan and former Pontiac resident, visits with Colonel Emily C. Gorman, director Women’s Army Corps. Mrs. Tufty , is a merhber of the 45t-women commiite e for (DACbWITS) helping to interpret to the public the need for and role of women in the services and to promote public acceptance of military service as alcareer field for women.] , ' .Mr I MeBrido and Mrs Bartholomew tllleer.'i lor tlle < re announced. McBride will lake tin* ■oming y .\roii 'I'nwiiship, lights a nniillc on tir high hirthdiiji ciikw honoring the Hitli aniiiiw soni i>l (li'iicral Motors Girls' Club Monday cih nin'g. With her is Mrs. Her bar I Mrllnd, l.iiki'point Street, ineonitng president of th orgniii lit ion loot olllce of ■esidnit. \'iee presidents Iroin the three Ccneral Motors plants are l< a t li e r I n e Ser ilmer, liMTC. Arlene Neweomh, I'ontiae Motor Division: and Mrs .loseph Cliaml.erlain, Fisher Body. .limior W( I *r(‘si(l(Mil, tinoii llisltlllthl ■aiiilv 1‘osl Institute ,ast week I was a guest ii'|;e wedding i'cceplion. Ii guest’s place at lahle III ash tray with the Mrs Keniu'th Campliell is cording seendary and Mr 'inon Redersdor Mrs. Charles II, Crawford I list a 1 led Mrs. Ceorge F. Brinkman as president of tin' •liinior I’ontiae Women's Cluli, •ial Monday evening in the Bonne Country Club. This is not the first lime I have seen something hk(‘ lliis. Is this a iK'w li'e.iid and can it he considered proper'’ I tell as It I was given a reeei|)t lor mv wedding present A: It llie thank-you e.nds were inleiuh'd as. acknowl edgernent for wedding presents, they were very delmili'ly n,ot proper, and if this is a new (rend, it should be nijiped in the hud. Q: Two friends and I were invited to spend last weekend at the house of a couple we met whili’ on a erui.si'. We had a very enjinahle lime, I would like to know il it is lu'ccssary for each one of us to write a hread-and-hnili'r letter to our hosle.ss, or may w(' elect one to write and express thanks tor all three'.’ A: You sfiould each write d separate bread-and-butter letter to your hostess. If. instead of being friends, \(iu were all memlrers of the saiiu' tamily, one note would Others taking office were Mrs. Clarence A. Budney, first vice president; Mrs. Margaret M. Ilutehmson. second vice president; Helen Kinney, Ma i.el Smith and Mrs. Ro.ss Bor rill, secretaries Mrs. Francis I) Larkin assumed duties as treasurer Others installed were llakel Bolls, Marguerite Bullolph and Mrs. M. Milton Evans, Mrs. Norman Smith introduced the guest s|)eaker, Mrs. Amit Tagore who spoke on tlic "Customs of India" It was announced that a tel (‘vision set will be donated bo the Children’s Village. Mrs. 11 a r r y- J. Rice will .serve as chairman of re.scrvji-tions of the Bontiac Federation of Women’s Clubs ‘‘C«old-en Gavel Dinner” slated for Monday in the Kingsley Inn. Working with her will be Mrs. Clark J. Adams, Mrs. Crawford iind Mrs. (’ecil Mc-T'allum.. Mrs. Mc(’allum was social chairman for the meeting. Her assistants included Mrs. Arthur Compton, Mrs. Claire PATRICIA a. GILLETT The Emily Bust Institute booklet entitled "Formal Wedding Brocedure,” includes details on the w(‘dding procession, the receiving line and other helpful information. ■ To obtain a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Kmil> Bust Institute, in c;ire ol The Bontiac Bn'.ss. How Long Does If Take? By GAY PAULEY UBI Women’s Editor NEW YORK (UPI) - The men will scoff at-this statistic, but it says,,here that the average woman when in a rush can get dressed in a maximum of 10 minutes. ■ Not rushed, and'-if not dressing for a special occasion, she gets the job done in 27 minutes. Any husbands hah-hahing these statistics had better think seconds before arguing. For the men come out ahead of the women in the time subject of a study by West-clox, manufac'urcrs of products which tick the time away. The firm’s researchers combed through numerous stop-watch calculations of sci-e n t i s t s and industrial efficiency experts for their findings. The average man, for instance, can mix a martini in three and one-quarter minutes. The researchers into this matter didn’t time the men really in a rush for a breath of, vermouth with a slug of Poets, philosphers, essayists all have through the centuries warned against wasting time — it mu^n’t be spent idly, for it’s “The Stuff Life’s Made Of” Belasco wrote-. Who’s to say whether it’s frittered watching a robin stalk a worm, sunning and. contemplating the miracle of spring, digging idly into the brown earth to see whether last year’s geraniums will rejuvenate? DFAII ABBV I iiiii luhl iiii iiVfiiigc hoic.fwtlc My Imi. hiiii.l wnikf. iilciiily iiMil wc |.;cl iiliiri).; iilioul ic, well le, uiiy i.lhiT niiUTlcd couple is ready to be served immediately, takes three to four and one-half minutes; to make a double bed, four and one-half. gm. To catch a train or dash to the car for the work day, the average man needs five and one-half minutes to dress, pre-’ ”s,uming he has shaved the night before. If he hasn’t, add on four to six minutes time used if he uses a regular razor and lathers up. If he u s e s^ the • electric means, count on only three to five more minutes. To the more prosaic ways we spend our time: The timepiece makers found that on the average, it takes 12*^ seconds to make a phone call, timing time used from the start of dialing to the-start of the ring at the other ■ end. MORE FOR WOMEN m liiivc im mot.' mi:IiI yiiiir liii:ilmuil':i pock I be lio.s to pi. k your o.il.l.'.l' Writ.' to ABBY, ;iiv ol Till' Bontiac BI'chii .1 pcisoiial reply, enclose ainiicil, self aildrciiiicd Hi ONFIDI'IN'I lAI. It) lop, (TllBiRl-ill Ol bVBllls ■ slingic.sl man in crciilion He ihink.s all the kids and I need are clothes on our liack.s, sho(‘s on our feel and IoihI on the table He never gives me an extra p.'iiny, III- Is my liusliand and lie Is ,siippo.'t(‘d to support me Riglit’’ .So wlicrc am I su|i po.sed to gel money if not li'om him'’ Now for my proh 'UlESDAY llamiiiiiiiil Organ Society, '/ till pm , llrinncll'M (down town) (iiiest organist program Blairs will be made tor annual music festival on .lime (I in London, Out Oakland Cmialy District Mlehigaa Braetical Nurses As-soeiathui, '/ ;i(l pin, Oakland Center Hospital, Itoyal Oak. Mrs. In.... Barker on "Recovery, Inc" For years I have lieeii lak iiig loose cliange or a dollar or two out of his pants pock el while tic's sleeping I think 1 am enlllh'd to it, so would you consider this "stealing’'’ FEELING GUILTY WEDNESDAY IDraytoii Plains extension study group, 10 a ih , home of Mrs. Oscaf Ream, Ellia Street "A Happy Kitchen" Ikebaiui liiteruational, Detroit eliapler, 12 JO p m , Mel ropolltan Federal Savings Building, Birmingham. ' Horry Whang on "Symtiolism of Oriental Gardens" Pontiac chapter, No. 7 American Association of Retired I’ersons. i :i0 pm , Commiiiiily Services Building on Franklin Boulevard "Multiple Sclerose. " Newcomers cluli, 7 V m Mon') s Golf and Country Chih, closing dinner. Bontiac AudulMio Society, V JO p in , All Sami’s Episcopal Church Film, ' (''lowers. Birds, and Bcopic" DEAR FEELING: Whether you are "entitled” to il or not, taking .something wil.liout Ihe owner's permi.ssioii is "sleai Honor Their 50 Years Bride Elect Gets Linens Connie Bailey was honored at a recent linen shower in Itie Waterford home of Mrs, Dennis Breuer. Mrs, Arthur Ryan of Farmington was cohoste.ss. Mr. and Mrs L B. Mijes of Walled Lake will celebrate their golden wedding, anniversary this week Wednesday night their children will honor them with a family dinner parly at Ihe Mayflower Hotel in Blymoiilh. ek they flew to New Last V York for four days iind iittend-ed Ihe World’s Fair. Mr. and Mrs. -Miles were marrieil May 12, lltir, in New Hudson They liave three children. L. Robert, Richard S. and Mrs, William Mercer, all of Walled Lak(‘. 'I’liey also have five grandchildren and two great grandchildren. Among the guests •were the bride - elect’s mother, Mrs. Clarence Bailey of Livonia, and the bridegroom’s mother, Mrs, Arthur Breuer of Bontiac, Miss Bailey will wed Terry Breuer on June 19, Hinckley, Mrs, Mcrl Jennings, Mrs. Potts, wfiss Smith, Mrs. Ronald Mountain, Rosamond Haeberle, Mrs. Willard Boardmah and Miss Kinney. 'How to Buy' . Subject of Talk Time Just Ticks Away "sSelecting Electrical Help-' ers for the Home” will be discussed by Mrs. Mary Hardy and Mrs. Karen Van Hine at the Woman’s World Series Wednesday. The .series takes place in the community room of the Pontiac Mall at 10 a.m. Pontiac Press Photos “As in the cases of executives or laborers, housewives who are eternally busy are unusually inefficient ones,” said the timepiece study. And will that statement set o f f some arguments! Any rate, it points to the worpan who makes 14 movements to puf a dish in the cupboard . . run over two floors to get utensils. Meal preparation, for i n-stance, according to one of its home economist-cook authorities, shouldn’t be so all time-consuming. Allow 15 minutes for a summer breakfast — . i n c 1 u d-ing coffee, poached eggs, cantaloupe with lemon sections, and toast.' New trends in large and s m a 11 kitchen appliances, laundry equipment and modern cleaning and polishing aids will be presented. A toiir of appliance departments will follow. , Mrs. John Geovjian,'Birmingham, was honored Monday for her 2,000 hours of service at St. Jos'eph Mercy. Hospital. She is chairman of the gift shop. Other awards made were pins to the junior volunteers and certificates of life membership to some 25 auxiliary^members who have worked for 25 years or more. The women seemed to spend .................... more time oh daily tasks that the men in the cases cited. But as usual, the woman ought to have a last word. ’ SHOPPING ' The average woman spends TIME SPENT lH6w time gets'.spent on the ;simple tasks of the day is the I minutes; imthe supermarket on her major day of marketing, if she has a list and adheres to it; 90 minutes, if. she’s inclined to browse. To set the table for four persons; assuming -the meal ■ 'Mm : Mil-■■■ Y,' ^ Who ever said that a man’s shirt could ^e ironed in one and a fraction of minutes? That’s the time averaged in television commercials; , Any wdman who’i ever pressed one knows the “averr age” of five minutes is more realistic. That is, if the Shirt doesn’t havel^;rencKcuffs! Sister Mary Xavier, administra-, tor of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, presents award for bolunteer work to auxiliary members, Mrs. Henry Stack, S.weetbriar Road, West ^ BlodmfieM Township........ffeftlrimd ' Mrs. Robert Werling, Birminghqm. Awards for 12,000 hours were made Monday at the second annual awards luncheon in the auditorium the nurses’ home. ' ' ' i- ■ \ 1." ^ 1, ,' * 'I'lIK l^*|y^NTlA( l'HKS.S, riflOSnAV. MA^ II. Iim ONE COtilR ,i 'T THIH’I’.KKN , Tli»! mujorlly of (IonIIih from liiborailoHlH u lYi (»II n WliUr, iiinln AmmicHiiH oo e ii r In iiUOH .H.MI4. I# BRINKER PLUMBING and HEATING Weather Has Raised Havoc With Nation's Fruit Crop CniCACiO (AIM Wliitpia colli uiid spi lii(t’ii violence dellv eroil » mulltmlillun-ilullttr one-two punch to much of the na-(Ion’s fruit crops this year, an Associated Press survey Indicates Heavy dniiiaRe from (,'nllfor-nio to New p;ii|{lniid was re|Hirt ed, Only the .Southeiisl escaiaid major loHMeM, ICiigiaiMl also ro|Mirleil heavy strawberry damage, and l.oulsi* ana said its priKluctloii had dropp«Hl sharply. P MAmii/Al STOCK SERIES. a mulUKi fund with securl-Ups BclPdod for rolallvoly good Incomo and ressoii-ablo Piipilal npprocintlon nimnibililii’N wllhin Ibo liinil of iimrkcl rink. Sen your invcnlmcnl doalcr lor Krkr ProBppcIos nnd lilcralurc or hoiuI lo , ■to «w «« ma MM MM w« RMs asTiONAi sicusmis I SESUSCH CORPORAriON Prelliiiliiory csllmales placed fruit crop losses ii| more Ilian till million, consiu vallon and slate officials said llardesl hit was the lush ap|>le and peach country ol the North \vest where siibr.eio Decemhei cold uikI spring frost all hut wiped out the production ot many orchards IIAItl)HIT I'lttflT The wealher's vicllms liu lud ed peaches, apiicols, cherries, apples, jiears and struwlierrles. Washington state officials said pear and cherry crops had been heavily damaged and the apricot and |>each crops ruined The si in wherry crop In the western half of Ihe slate was expected to be fdl per cei)t below lo.sl year's yield, In (he Midwest, tornadoes and floiafs liave raged since Mureuch liuds out and Inlet cold ly cul Inlo the Maryland Dels wealher had nipped them, cul ware pem h crop along Ihe Kusl ling heavily inlo Ihe expected (>rn Shore peninsula That vll crop. lain was u January frce/.e Ttia X h a 1 a underneath (li 01 (ish, lungAfAlliu l, nUu llgvo tMtefl Cleveland, Ohio, area, hag vlald immd in (he oievilBml ahala, ed whole sharks fmu and five Koma of these tossiii have been fiHil long preserved Ipr tJioii sent to the lirlllsh Muietim and sands ol years |•'osHlls of otlltu I Ihe ^nilthaonlaii limtltutipn Complato Rapair Service Mimeograph and Duphcallng Machines CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 6S Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 It's Worth Your While To Drive * > That Extra Mile and Save a Pile! BILL SPENCE BILL SPENCE, Inc. CHRYSl-tk I'lYMOUTM RAMULLR - Jl ll» / 6673 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston 625-2635 -, III iliid luil lUrn^ilv »i tiiii|'plii| ) I oiiIh, no will-',, NO pla.Hllc lubc^ il may liclp yuii iiay lu iively happy in family, iiiiiniiv lilf Wiiie loday (oi demripliv* I III I .ippri Aililiri-. Oepi li-M Itfllnne I Ifi I Ol W Viiloiia Ave , ( hkano 40, llliiioin. A, 0 SMUdwiV, N.w Vofk S, t \m i 3 Hjanxiley-Brjaujujx [ 3 I WATER WONDER 3 Automatic Gas 0 Water Heater Oregon re|H>rled extcn.'ilve damage to strawlrcrric.s and cherrie.s In Ihe IIimhI Hiver, Ihe Dalles, Freewttler and (irandc areas. DIali, where one counly has suffered an estimated total of $4 million In fruit lo.s.s, has asked Pn'sident John.son to declare five counlie.s disaster areas. Most of the damage to peach, ajirlcot, ( herry, apple and |muu’ crops came during a cold snap last week. IIKAVIK.ST TOl.l, The extended winter look Its | heaviest crop loll across Ihe country in strawberries. California reported its valuable crop seriously damaged, with losses in lx)s Angeles County estimated at $4 million. New CONSJIMERS POWER CO. 28....W, Lawrence Appli.net S.IAs . Downtown Store Open Frld.y Ex-OwossoOfiicer Granted New Trial In a unanimous opinion, the eourt ruled that the Shiawassee Counly jtrial of Tunnacliff con-1 tained a reversible error. There’s A BIG Difference! CURRENT RATE Savings In By The 1 0th of Each Month Eorn Established In 1B90 And Never Missed Paying A Dividend A 75 *Camol\ ★ ★ Establiihed 1890 FE 4^1 West Huron ^oqpqcin nh^ CUSTOMER PARKINS IN OFBUILSINQ REAH Member Federal Home Loan Bank System l.ANSINd (UPI)'- The State Supreme Court yesterday jtrant-cd an appeal for a new trial lo Clifford 'lYmnacliff, a former Owosso policeman who was convicted of breaking and entering in the nighttime. He was convicted chiefly on the testimony of Roy Smith, the court noted. Smith testified that William Mahar had told him that he (Mahar) broke inlo the Owosso E^agles Club ancT took $800 from a safe. Smith also said Mahar told him that Tunnacliff had provided the information on how to enter the club. ! / harmful contaminants (before they choke your fuel line!) What does the American FINAL/FILTER* really do? Automotive engineers know-they asked for it and American Oil Research developed it to stand between you and trouble. You see, all gasolines pick up tiny impurities in transit and in storage. These impurities, should they get in your gasoline tank, could clog up the fuel line filter and stop you cold. The American FINAL/FILTER bars contaminants right at the pump nozzle. If you use your car on the job (and even If you don’t) you stay out of trouble when you "fill ’er up filtered” with American^ Regular or American® Super-Premium. You expect more from Standard and you get it!" y *F.(*n( ApplM.fer. STANOXAD OtL PIVISION AMERICAN OIL COMPANY 01969, THE AMERICAN Oil COMPANY, CHICAGO, , ■mw'' V rouit' . ' t ' ' ' ,,| ' rni*'i J*nN'nA(. I'UKiSS, 'I'I!K,si)a\'. ma\ n. iimi.i ' r'' ' LUCKY SALE WE'RE LUCKY-JUST LAST WEEK, THROUGH A SPECIAL DEAL AAADE BY THE WHOLESALE DIVISI<5n, WE WERE ABLE TO BUY 3 FULL TRUCK-LOADS OF LIVING ROOM FURNITURE FROM A MANUFAQURER WHO RECENTLY WENT OUT OF BUSINESS. THIS IS ALL Ut LINE) TOP QUALITY FURNITURE THAT WE WERE ABLE TO BUY AT 50% OFF ITS REGUUR PRICE . . . VnirDC I IIPIIV WE'RE PASSING THE ENTIRE SAVINGS ON TO YOU . .. BUY AT I UU HE. LUIlllI. . ,Vi PRICE TO HELP CELEBRATE OUR GRAND OPENING!!! Visit Our New Store Register to WIN a Westinghouse DISHWASHER . NoHiifig to buy and you need not ,be present to win.. TcnAAC TO SUIT YOUR TcRAAS BUDGET PARK FREE At Our Front Door OPEN tVERY NIGHT 'TIL 9 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAYS OUR WHOLESALE BUYiNG POWER SAVES YOU MONEY HOMr^FURNISHIueS 1 LOB W. HURON ST. (Next to Felice Quality Market) FE 2-^9204 T" rSTJi TUB l^ONTJACUmi^B/TUKSDAV, MAY II, ll>»5 Tli <=ovtirlng stilus of locrwlly grown producu by groworn mid Hold by UiotM 111 wboloHiito piK-kngo loin. Quolntloim mo fiirnlHhod by tbo Dolroll Itiinmu of MorkelH «h of Wodncmloy. Produce c'V, u«, ..... Onions, ciry, SO lb. b«o Onions, ofOen, <0 bchs. Onions, sols, 3Mb. bog Poultry and Eggs 19 yo. Commant: M"fl<«l SlanOy ol liyers o ' ■ ^nd llii 2o"llV2V.’*3d'he^^21.15; 190-235 lb 20 50-20.751 1 d. 2 300 400 lb sows 16.75- '^Vealers 150; one dollar higher; choice lo prime 29 34; good 25 29. Sheep 1000; slaughter lambs and ewes lolly steady; chocle and prime shorn lambs 26.25-27.25i good and choice shorn lb butchers 20.75-21.00; 1 16.50-17.25; load 325 1"' 16.25-16.75. C.iltle 5,000 calves Strong lo 50 higher; 1325 lbs ^*00;'high cholce'^and^ prime )3 28.00-20.75; Sheep 400; moderately active, slaughter lambs and shorn slaughter ewes steady; double deck mostly good 101 b shorn slaughter lambs with No 3 pells M.50; ......1?. --n arena h snr no ambs American Stocks NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP) - Follow list of selected slort transaction American Slock Exchange wl Stock Mart Continues Irregular NKW YOHK (Al*)-Thc Hlmk niiirkol (‘oiitlniii'd lo wduvc mi irnigiilnr pfiUtirn mirly |nse lo demand following the 'neqiiisltlon offer made public Monday. (iermrrtl Aniline & Film, which made a weak debut on the big board Monday, was up at 30yH on an opener of 2,500 sharos. Itcadershlp was lacking com- pletely as price movements seemed random. IBM shucked off a couple of points. U.8. Smelling added 1. Oi‘lCN|NG BM)C'K8 Opening bl(K'k, ! 34% 34% 347/4 x7 8376 83',4 8374 -F % 10 i0'/7 60 52 51V4 52» ^ V4 i 44Vj 44H 44Vj -f V4 ) 56^/8 56^/1 56'/t - W I 34Vj 34H 34Va IS 4OV4 40^ 40^/4 + 7 40*/^ 40H 40H ~ 5 '4Va 44Vj 44Va 9 57/4 7 4 22% 22% 22% - 7 24% 23'/. 23% - 21 41% 41% 41'% . Hl||h Lw Seeburg °*6o' |heM*OII I 70 X3I 74'/) 74'/) 74% I 1 5?% Socony 2.80 . .. SoPRSug .BOg 4 37> SouCalf 1.20 19 41'. ... .. . SoulhnCo 1 80 6 69'4 69 69'4 F '/> SouNaIG 3.20 3 711/4 7I'/, 71'4 - '4 SouPac 1.40 19 31 37’% 37’% — " Sparry Rand 49 13'4 I3'4 I3''4 Spiegel 1.50 3 33% 33% 33% SquareD 1.60 9 71 70'4 71 Staley 1.35 I 38'4 38'/. , 38’.4 7 SIBrandt 3.40 x3 79". 79'% 79% - Sid KolUman 30 19% I8'% |9 - SIGH Cal 3.30 19 69'/; 695k SlOIIInd 1.50a 33 43'/» 43''; 43'% S10 NJ 1.50g 31 78% 78". 7I’% StdOllOh 1,80 I 53'/i 53'% 53’% St Packaging 17 11% 11% ll<% F StaullCh 1.40 10'46'/4 46'/. 46’4 SlerlDrup .75 9 34% 34". 34'/. - Slovens 1.50b 5 52'/. 53'% 53',.. Studebaker 13 5% 5% 5% .. Sun Oil 1b 4 63 63 63 Sunray 1.40 10 31% 31% 31% Swift Co 3 ■ 54'/) 54'4 54'/. ,- _T_ Tampa El .53 3 38% 38% 385s Tenn Gas 1b 34 34% 34% 34% TexEasIT .90 13 30% 30% 30% TexGSul .40 18 64'/. 64 64 Texasinstm I 4 109'% 109% 109% — Textron 1,80 3 63'% 63'% 63'% - Thiokol .571 8 16% l6'% 16'% . TImkRD 3.60 3 92% 93% 93% + TImk RB wl 1 46% 46% 46% 7- , Trans W Air 5 535k 53'/> 53'/i I'M Coni .37 g 's 50% 50% 50% Tweni C .60b 31 39% 29% 39% 7 % —u— n Carbide 4 18 137% 137 137'% + '/ UnCarblde wl 4 69'% 69 , 69'% -F '/. ’ 3®''^ 3®'^ 3«''S - ’/■ Un Oil Cal 1 9 38% 38’% 31% 7 V Un Pac 1.80 5 4I'% 41'% 41'% 7 V Un Tank 1,80 3 54% 54% 54% Un AIrL 1.50 x13 76'% 76% 76’% 7 % Unit AIrctI 2 . 5 79 78% 78'% - - Unit Fruit II 31% 31% 21% ., UGasCp 1.70 63 35% 35 35'% . UnltMiM la 2 39'% 39'/. 39'/. ....... USGypsm 3a 3 83'/. 83'/. 83'/. US Indust 9 14'/) 14'/) I4'% 7 <% US Lines 2b 3 39 38'% 39 7 '/. USPlywd 1.30 1 44V. 44'/. 44'/. - <% US Rub 3.20 13 68% 68% 68% ‘ •' US Smelt 3 3 118 117'% 111 US Steel 3 114 53'% 51 "s 51'% Unit Whelan 3 5% 5% 5% UnMatch .50 36 17'/) 17% 17'% UnlvORd 1.20 6 48% 48% 48% Uplohn 1.30 a 67'/. 67 67'/. —V— 2 38’/. 38'% 38'% VanAIISt t.i Vanad Cp .< Varlan As s d is is VaEIPw 1.13 12 50'% 50 50’% 7 , —w— WarnPIct .50 9 16'/) 16% 16'% .n. on 4 .-M,. 3,^ 3,;^ _ 33'% 33'% WnAIrLIn , 31 47% 47 I 36% 51’% WestgEI Whirpool ,v .jv. CD -r Whlrl^Ol wl 1 43'% 43'/; 43’% ^ WhIteM 1.40 15 34% 34'% 34’% 7 W Ison Co 2 11 49’% 49% 49'% - WInnOIx 1.2tf\ x1 40% 40% 40% 7 Worthing 1.5o\^^ 68 s . Cp_.» 13 137^37% 137% — Sales figures Unless other dends In the disbursements .............. or semi-annual declaration. Special extra dividends or payments not dasig- loltc »»'• a-Also extra or extras............. rate plus stock dividend. c-LIquIdatIng d vidend. d-Declered or paid In 1965 plus stock dividend, o-Pald last year, t—Payable In stock during 1965, estimated cash value on ex-dIvIdend or ex-dlstrlbu-tiomdate. g—Declared or paid so far this year. h-Declared or paid alter stock dlvl-dond or split up. k-Dsclared or paid this year, an accumulative Issue with dividends In arrears, p—Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last dividend meeting, r—Declared paid In 1964 plus stock dividend, t—P< In stock during 1964, estimated cl... .1— — —^ ex-dlstrlbuflon ■—Ex rights, xw—Without 'W—With warrants, wd—Whe wl-When Issued. nd-Ncxt day ... bankruptcy or - receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed F ' —— f’anles. fn—Foreign Issue s ereet equalization *- Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-The cash p< Of the Treasury compared with sporidlng date .a year ago; May 6, 1*65 May 6, 1*64 Balance— $ *,746,053,676.63 $ 7,516,*27,766.58 Deposits Fiscal Year July t- 100;160,530,65l.1* *7,128,730,140.4* Withdrawals FlKat Year-X-TotarK'"*"* I05,4**,*77,*21.07 316,806,38*,277.04 30*,2*5,148,34*.3* Gold Assetsr- 14,411,**7,*53.36 15,463,0*8,336.04 (X) - Ihcludee. $284,035,064.26 debt * sublect to statutory limit. 5 High 71.0 176.* 343. •" ■ 176.8 343.. .... 176.6 341.0 75.5 176.5 338.1 67.7 152.4 306J As Place for Valuables Box Use Is Vaulting Seller Retires 35-Year Sales Career Ends for Pontiac Man A VBlBrnn nutonioblle huIch-lun, Etirl L. McHugh of Ilf Oncidn, retired Snturday. A A ★ McHugh, II.S UHiSlHtaut nalcR manager at Pontiac Uetall Store, hegan Helling can yoarH ago He Htarled In a pgrlncrHhlp in 1020, HClIIng Wlllya Knight cars. Then came the stfHrk market craHh and lie wen broke. Mr, McHugh Joined HtKlgcs Oakland - Pontiac In 1031 and McHUGII moved to the Barney Hnbel Chevrolet dealership In 1932. In January 1034 he went to Chevrolet Motors In the General Motdrs Building In Detroit, where he remained until the war stopped all retail car sales. AAA He came back lo f’ontlac with Oliver Supply Co., staying with them during the war. PONTIAC NATIVE A native of ponliac, he attended Pontiac Central High School. AAA The McHughs have two daughters, one married and one In high school. Their summer home In Petos-key will be used more by them when their daughter graduates, and Mrs. McHugh, a health teacher in the Pontiac schools, joins her husband in retirement. Gold Stocks Staying Stable WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of the Treasury Henry N. Fowler has indicated that the U.S. monetary gpW stock remained stable during the past few days. Fowler told a questioner at a news conference Monday that as of May 3, the United States had sold $975 million in gold this year. A A A- The outflow represents no change from Federal Reserve Board reports over the past two weeks. U.S. gold stock declined by only $125 million in all of 1964. GOLD STOCKS Fowler said U.S. grtd stocks now stand at about $14.4 billion. Much of this year’s drain, he said, has been caused by France’s conversion of U.S. dollars for gold. A A ★ The year’s large outflow also reflects, in part, the record $1.5-billion deficit in the U.S. balance of payments during the final quarter of 1964. Administration officials have reported the deficit for the first two months of 1965 at $600 million. There was a surplus in March, however, and officials say another surplus is expected when the final figures for April are computed. (EDITOR’S NOTE - Sam Dawson is ill. His column is t)elHy written today by Richard L. Graves.) By RICIIAIID L. GKAVKS AP Business News Writer NEWYOHK-A rapidly growing form of protecllpn for the Individual consumer Is the safe deposit box. Once housed only In the vaults of big banks, safe deixisll Itoxes were re|X)HlU)ijeH for the vain-ahUm of llie well to do. AAA But In recent years the avail-obillly of safe deposit Itoxes and the d e ni a n d for them Itave grown. 'Hiere Is scarcely a batik or branch that now fall.s lo liave a safe dc|K>slt vault. An executive of a safe manufacturing company estimated there Is an average of 250 safe deposit Iwixes for every bonk and branch liank in the nation. IS MILUON Humlierl Fahbro, pre.sldeul of the New York .Safe Deposit Box AsHtx’lutlon, eHtlniiiled that the nuinbtir of safe deposit hoxe.s In the United States now is more than 15 million. The growing usage of safe deposit service Is pegged to n combination (if the im|>roved economic status of the citizen and the growing complexity of j the society that produces more and more documents that need special protection. AAA These would be Items not ordinarily covered by regular insurance, or irrcplacnblc Items. At the top of the list would be lmp<)rtant papers, stocks and bonds. A partial list of important papers common to great numbers of people would include birth certificates, passports, papers of separation from the armed forces, car titles. Insurance policies, deeds to property, certain kinds of health records, citizenship papers, wills and other legal papers. PROTECTION It is particularly important that bonds have special protection. Most bonds traded in the United States are. so-called bearer bonds. ’That means the person who has physical possession can sell them or cash the coupons. If destroyed, they are irreplacable. The bond exemptions are U.S. Savings Bonds or certain corporate securities that are regls-teretl III the owner's name. Eveii so, there Is a certain amount of cost In time and convenience in getting replacements for such securities. AAA Tlic contents of an Indivtdunrii safe deposit box are private. The hank is legally barred fiom access, except when authorized or diiecUxI by a legal aiithorlly to enter It. Conse(|uenlly, a hank has no way of kiuiwing What Is In n safe de|X)sit box. That raised the question re-(/ently of llalilllty in the event a safe de|NiHll vault is rolihed, as happened recently In Caniula. The answer Is that where ncgll-g e n c c of the bank can be proved, It Is liable for the value of the contents of n safe deposit box. But the Ik*x renter would probably have to be able lo coii-vince a jury of what was in the box. BANKS covered Virtually all hanks carry in surance covering such liability. Law enforceirvant authorities report robbery of a safe deposit vault Is exceptionally rare. The cOsl of renting a safe deposit box vary widely, depending on location and box size. A A , A In the miburbnn New York area, the sniullcsl boxes generally cost $5 a year. ’They are big enough to hold the important p ape I'M ii'ienlloned previously. Owners of stocks and IkiiuIm usually have a bigger box For individuals who itemize their income taxes, .safe deposit box rental is n legal deduction. It falls Into the eutegory of de duclihle expenditures for protection of income. COSTS FHEED? Bunkers are ho|>cfuI that costs of safe deposit box rentals will be freed of a 10 per cent U, S. excise tax presently imposed? Ttie lax is one of a number «if excise levies President .lolmson has pr(i|H)Hed he eliminated this venr. The legislation to eliminate llie lax is before Congress. iliiiiii ^Successfuhlnvestinq Fast Action Readied on Compensation Bill LANSING 4AP) - The stage was set today for rapid action on a compromise workmen’s bill. Gov. George Romney visited the House Republican caucus Monday night to win support for the fcompromise, worked out between his offico and legislativ leaders—the Democratic majority in particular—in long hours of intensive bafgaining last week. Crash Kills Physician^ BATTLE CREEK (AP) -Dr. Jacob Heinrich, 61, of Battle Creek, died Monday injuria which police raid he suffered in a car which ran through a stop sign and collided with another auto. Bank Opens Temporary Branch Office BIRMINGHAM - Bloomfield Bank has opened a temporary branch office in Wixom directly opposite from the main entrance of the Ford Motor Co. Continen-tal-Thunderbird assembly plant on Wixom Road near 1-96. AAA A permanent office, which will include driye-in windows, night depository, safety deposit vault, and full banking services for Wixom, is expected to open by’July 15, accorting to Thomas H. Wagner, chairman and president of the jtoard. Richard Turel, former branch manager of the Michigan Bank and assistant cashier of the Warren Bank, has been appointed manager of the Wixom office. National Tea Reports Gain National Tea Co. of Chicago, parent company of National Food Stores, Inc., has nounced that earnings for the 12 weeks ended March 27, 1965, advanced 20.2 per cent on a sales increase of 4.5 per cent. Sales for the period were $259,594,447, an increas^ of $11,171,037. Earnings were $2,-375,955, an increase of $398,836 over the comparable 1964 period. Earnings were 28 cents per share, compared with 23 cents last year. DOW-JONES NOON AVERAOES STOCKS 30 Irwiue ...................733.57-H.05 20 Ralls ................. 212.58-0.01 ....... , 161.4870.22 . 322.47-0.03 . *0.14-0.05 . 04.6*-O.17 *2.*5-0.04 . 80.76 *4.1870.02 By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “I own shares of duPont which I Inherited In 1953. Since 1956, it has paid $1.50 per share quarterly until March, 1965, when the dividend was reduced to $1.25. Should I sell?" M.D. A. The sole reason for the reduction in duPont's dividend was that on January 4, 1965, the company completed distribution to shareholders of its big holdings in General Motors. The Supreme Court’s ruling forcing this distribution was a blow to duPont’s earnings, and it may take a little time for the company to adjust to It. However, duPont Is our largest and, In many respects, our best chemical company, with a fine record of growth. It has magnificent management and I Business Notes Robert Bach, 416 Kuhn, has been promoted to manager of advertising and sales promotion of the N. At Woodworth Co., Ferndale. Formerly standard product sales manager, Bach has been with the Woodworth firm for 13 years. C. H. MacMahon Jr., director of the Michigan Society of Architects and president of Tara-pata-MacMahon Associates architects of Bloomfield Hills, will participate in a seminar of the Detroit C h a p t e r of the American Institute of Architects and the Michigan Society of Architects Friday and Saturday at the Michigan Union in Ann Arbor. Walter J. Williams, 3644 Darcy, Bloomfield Township, has been elected corporate secretary of American Motors Corp. He will also serve as house counsel. Williams joined the company in 1956 as house counsel and has served WILLIAMS as assistant corporate secretary since 1957. Gordon F. Jeynes, 3518 Franklin, Bloomfield Township, has been appointed business manager for the Detroit Institute of Technology (DIT) according to an announcement by Dewey F. Barich, president. Formerly treasurer-controller, assistant secretary and office manager of the Spitzley Corp. Jeynes has had more than 25 years experience in fiscal capacities in business and industry. A. Keith Dressell of Detroit has been named manager of the Birmingham office of First of Michigan Corp. succeeding Alexander J. Riker, who has been promote to assistant vice presi- 15 utils 65 Stocks . 10 Hl^r grade rails . Monday's 1st DIvMende Declared REGULAR ’ Pn- Stk. of Pi Colq FuelAIr pfA .625 Cold FlMUIr pfB .6875 Con I Elec Indust ■ .25 •.•K. strongly advise retention, unless the current 2.10 per cent yield is too small for your needs. And remember, loo, that sale might involve a big eapitui gains lax. Q. “I am 54 years old and retired, duC; to a disability. My monthly Income pension Is $400, plus $123 from Social Security. I have $10,000 in savings and SO shares of a blue chip stock. I am interested in Gulf Oil and American Motors. What is your opinion of these and should I buy for growth or income?” J.Z. A. You seem In good shape financially. I believe that if you can afford the lower yields always provided, you should buy growth rather than income stocks. You are still a relatively yoyng man and over a period of years, your capital may be considerably enhanced in holding some strong rising-earnings situations. I like Gulf Oil, but on their past records I prefer Jersey Standard or Texaco. I advise you to avoid American Motors. Earnings were off sharply in the fiscal year ended September 30, 1964, and with this stock on a 7.5 per cent basis, the market, seems to be saying that the dividend is not entirely secure. (Copyright, 1965) Bert Anselm, operator of the Rolladium, 4475 Highland, Waterford Township, has recently returned from the Roller Skating Rink Operators Association annual convention in Chicago. The three-day meeting-was at-tended^ by more than 400 of the nation’s leading roller rink operators. School Teams Enter Contest in Mechanics Pontiac’s two high schools. Central and Northern, will both enter a team in the Midland Plymouth troubleshooting contest to be held Saturday at Midland Senior High School. The winning team will receive 1 all-expense trip to Detroit as guests of Chrysler-Plymouth Division of" Chrysler Motors Corp. to compete in the 1965 National Finals June 21 through 23. ★ ★ ★ Local winners will match their skill against outstanding young auto mechanics in the nation for prizes which include $16,700 in scholarships. Both schools’ entries will be sponsored by Oakland Cltfysler-Plymouth, Inc. ' News in Brief The F. s! Ward Co., 7575 Maceday Lake, Waterford Township, yesterday reported damage by vandals to equipment and machinery estimate at $375, according to township police. Pontiac Police are investigating the theft last night of three coats from a rack at the Waldron Hotel, 36 E. Pike. James McMiilian, 65 Lull, yesterday reposed the theft of $300 from his home, according to Pontiac Police. .Rummage Sale: May 14 and IS, 2024 Pontiac Rd,, 10-4. —adv. Rummage Sale: St. Andrew’s CSiurch, Hatctiery Rd. May 13, 9 to 12. , .. -8dv. MOM’S Rummage: Thursday, 9 to .12. Indianwood and Baldwin. —adv.