Tht W«oth«r PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition 118th YEAR ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, JUNE'I960—60 PAGES vwTTKD nuBnnrnitMA'noMAL City Bus Service Resumes After 6-Month Lull The city’s new bus firm began operations at 5 a.m. today, ending the dty’a six-month transportation drought. Eleven buses were operattaf lis morning on tour estabUsbed RDNNINO AOAOf - For the first time since Dec. 5, Pontiac buses are rolling the streets again. First-day riders boarding a coach in the downtown area are Irene Fisher (left), 87 Water-ly St., and Rae Gibbons, 2S63 Woodbine Dr., Waterford Township. Reds Quickly Release Lost U.S. Glider Pilot Buses in Pontiac are running PoUce Chief Herbert W. Stra-lay came under fire from John W. HlrUager, manager e( the Poatlac Area Chamber a( Commerce, tor refusing to allow the Straley contended that the had not been licensed, according to IQriinger. (Licenses were obtained in Lansing yesterday afternoon.) 'I can't figure it out,” Hiriinger d. "New cars are allowed in parades without licenses—and these buses technically are the city’s. ’The company finally obtained one licensed bus from another sub- sidiary firm which \ downtown in the afternoon. P. J. Giacoma, company vice president, said drivers reported _ r traffic "iight” this morning. "Prospects are very encouraging, however.” he adcM.. "You have to thiah of the number of people who took a chaace on catchiag the bus on the first day.” "We’re optimistic-and keeping ■r fingers crossed,” he said. ★ h ♦ The number <4 bus riders won't be known until morning shift smric-ers turn in their coUectkms later the day. "If we’re doing M per eewt of IfO be • kmg, hard | awfaOe,” be said. Une did te December, we’d be doing wen at first,’! Oiacoma He admitted that since bus serv- Under a let wen the city and Amolcan ’Transit Carp., the city gives the firm a one-year franchise, and leases all the company's roiling equipment — which exempts T firm from costly, state Rocky Feud Delights Dents Nixon's Ready to Talk Back Promise Stu 12 Michigan Dem Delegates AFL-CIO Gives Warm Welcome to Symington at Convention GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-Sen. Stuart Symington, encouraged by a warm recep-tiem at the state AFLrCIO LUEBECK, Germany » —American glider pilot Rkbard E. Schre-der, who gM loat ou a duunpion-ship flight yesterday aad ' fa] East permany. glider today. - ’The 44-year«ld ffler, 're-ledo, Ohio, was met here at the border craaaing into West Germany by Us wife Angle. Oommun 1 aufinritles to accom- driv» acroaa the Iron Curtain border f few houfd bcfiHv to retrieve thrvailplane and iU pilot. Sohreder’a retani to Weal Oer News Flashes NEW YORK Wi-Wlde by selectod bine chips i ■4'ainraat upward niov ralla helped the stork r extead the week’s rally 1 deya* straight In active I lato today. A gain of al potato extended the leap • ladustriol s W palato tor the week. DETROIT (DPI) - qMvrolel ger ear of IM today to SH aa afl-ttme record for predueidk a !t waa produced M days abesul of the previous earliest date aokleved la IMS. BENNINGTON, Vt (») - Walter 0. (Spike) Briggs, feimer TIgars owner whe s^rfterad a day. NEW YORK in — Peter W. Askew, M. was acquitted today in the first airpiane bomb heme caae to go before m federal Jury ■iaee the federal governmeat opened its ('rive agatosl rark Sunny 76 Tomorrow to Follow Cool Night i and a high temperature of ia the predictiM for te Pontiac area Friday. TOtdgM will be clear and cool with a low of 90. According to te woaten sktoi wifi be sunny Saturday wMi Soutfaeaateriy winds this morning wm baoome nocteastaV 6-15 m.pA. Ff^ a low of 48 degreea at 5 | am. today, fho mercury bad climbed to 14 by 8 p m. In A town Pontiac. -4- Ootroit Barber Pact % Calk for $2 Haircuts DETROIT if) - Barbar Bmpkv-on Oulid No. 4 baa ratified a new eoMract with Barbers Local 9S8 wfakb wifi rate te price of bair-cdls 35 cento to S3 beglmdag Jidy 1. . aae of the fastest such exchaag-ea ea reosed. VsiiaRy It takes aeveral days for spart aad gMd- Schrader an German border nw Kluetz, not far from where an Air Force plane carrying nine peraono was loroad down by Soviet fighters just two That gruup had also been released, togeter with their plane, with unusual ease and speed. They were held only four days compared to similar groups bring deUdnad The East German Communists said that Schrsder’s "allegations’ were checked before he was re- ’This was not taninediately explained. Presumably the Comnsu-nists slmidy meant they checked convention here, has been told he will get some Michigan votes for the Demo- out the glider pilot's story of get- ting lost and landing by mtotabu. liie East Oormaa border cratlc prealdenUal jiomina- ^ I la-dstvo tola Gernuuiy and ^tok up Sohro- out injuiy to btmaelf or damage to his aU-metal glider. Schreder, a former Navy bat pilot who holds the Distin-guisbed Flying Cross and Navy Air Medal, won the Ameri- tioij. Three ^ the stikie’s 102 pemocrRtlc delegatea with the iiilssouri senator yesterday and UAd him he edn niiHnnai Soaring contest in 1958. He to the father of two boys and a girl and te foundemwner company that manufactures artists' supplies and drafting equipment at {danU In Toledo and Puerto Rico. Test YOUR Driving Skill Skillful Driving How to master 30 of the most . crucialBituatioiis of modem /v traffic It is very presumptuous to say that Kennedy has sewed up all 51 votes just because the governor has endorsed him,” said Dr. Fred Matthews of Dowagiac, a delegate, after meeting with Symington. Symington’s strength in Michigan likely will become apparent, Matthews said, when delegates assemble at East Lansing June 18 at a preconventicn meeting called by te governoraa delegation chairman. By MiJCWBU. N. HALSEY WHAT ARE THE ODDS? f!»oaataf tlia hsul •( twt ur ttiruk lanea MilerUit an intanuettaa dSK W u IntuiMittnr --------- -----------------j^ltBwmRoer nudte puefaM. Itei’t pick n toft tone wten the flnt Mr glMu teas that it nny try to tarn toft and ba bald np by atemning traffic. Another poor bat to n rl^t tana where the firtt ear aaggaats it awy try to tarn right nai ba datoyad by a utaady stiaam of padtolrtoaa. Asp tote with s anateeMme track to net a sanrt abaiaa. The laae with„tha oMat ean eaald ha year beat bat. toClip and SavoBtoto port ffom at least 12 Michigan delegates to the party’s national convention next month. Gov. G. Mcnnen WiUiams and other state Democratic leaders have endorsed Sen. John F. Kennedy for the nomination and hope to win all the 51-vote delegation to their cause. The Lte delegates to te untoa cMVeattoa, representing same TiMM AELdO naesnbert, gave Symington a roaring welcome aito he responded wltk a sharp attack on the Efa - Istrattoa and Vice P r a a I d a a t The union side-stepped endorsement of a presidential candidate, but iU president, August SchoUe, and other top officials have thrown their support to Kennedy. RAPS AOMDUHTBATION Symington acetued the Republican administration of gradually turning the Uhited States ’ second class natian.’^ Wayne County unite of the United whelmingly to establian a political action fund with a penny increase in the six-cent per capita dues levy. -eron-wheels to take Mrs. Goodwin to the school . Later she told, "I had given « ” hopes of ever seeing my nnl By stresring this particutor note, they were putting emphasis on te view that Rockefeller’s statement was a criticism oi Eisenhower ak well as Nixon. I will never forget te wondoful thoughtfulness of all those The tws Csagreas members me al te WMte Bsess far thskr regelar weekly meette «4Hi iiarakswer an tegtotottve net-tors. They sie party fleer lead- Polio Didn't Cripple Spirit -Ellaine Wins Scholarship Mrs. Goodwin, or Rita K knows her, stiU maintains she to the luckiest person in the world. six weeks ago. She drives school No. 13 for te Huron Valley School System. Ob her wSy to work May t, a Bedfaig ear^ mare leg sea By HARVBT ZUCKBBBERG Red-haired Ellaine Schweltaer turned a handicap Into an asset. She has had little use of her right leg and left arm since she had polio 14 years ago at the age of 6. As a result Ellaine has been strongly determined to do well, acedrding to counselors at Pontiac Northern illgh School Site has dons as well, in tact, that she has been awarded a two-fall utpeueea paid) to Eastern MkhlgaB College by te State VoceteMd Re- Nixon sat in on te searioo of the President and CX)P tenders, but INihaen and Haiteck professed not to recall anything Nixon had said. NEW YORK FOR NIXON In another show of odors, te bulk vi New York’s Republican Oongiess members endorsed Nixon for president. Rep. WUUam E. Milter (R-NY) lU te aettoe was taken teat New York RepebllraM gave tor redrtag Rep. Dean P. TsriHr (B-NY). ^ He sakt a motion ei Nixon was adopted by a voice Although there was no oppa to it some New Yorkers may abstained. Miller said. 1^. Jesrica M. Weis tR-^) Page 3. Col. 1 IT WORKS EVERY TIME! Small ada with bte pul poww naan RRSVlAl Tito ad. like moat oUters. foiiid' UTTB after the paper cans oat. Tiro THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JUNE 1960 Sf. Michael^ to Graduate |p Second Try 5i5 in Exercises Sunday The Pay in Birmingham Baccalaureate service will be •eld et 7:15 s.m. Sunday for the M graduates of St Michael Sc' lastic honors will be bestowed, will A breakfast for the students and diehr parents, durii« which echo* be held following a Maas. Com-8 p.m. the same day in die church.' Boy, , a Wins Spelling Crown Tennessee Lad Tops Girt 13, in 3rd Effort, With 'Eodaemonic' Six Bloomfield Tochers •I the seater dess Is Eathleea Hearetty. 4U Third St. Balatatorlaa ta DaaM The c s wiU be given Sunday evening by the Rev. Merwin Lenk of Ann Arbor. The Rev. Leon Kennedy, pastor of St Michael Chuit^, will pieaent John E. Kronenberg is going to try again to win the job as Oak-Iland County clerk and register of deeds on the Democratic ticket. Following is a list d the ! Michael School graduates: WASHINGTON tAP) - Henry Feldman. 13, Oak Ridge, Tenn.. won the 1960 National Spelling Bee championship today. He had tried twice before. Runnerup was Betty Jean Alt-schul, 12, Norfolk, Va. Henry clinched the title by the correct speUing of the word "eu-daemonic.” The word means pro-dudng happiness. Desrlot WUUam nanlipin Before that Henry had correctly spdled “vellelty.” Betty Jean missed that one by opsD _ “velelte." That word means the lowest degree of desit MlSgED WORD, PLUS ONE Under the rules of the spelling bee the winner must qiell correctly the word his misses and Oien spell < word correctly. The new champion finished 20th last y«ur. He was also in fte na. tionsl contest in 1968. His bobUea are electricity, playing the trumpet, and track. Nominate Indian tor South Dakota Seat in House PIERRE, S. D. (UPI) - Dr. en Reifel, a Skmx Indian who went from a log cabin on the South Dakota reservation to get doctorate at Harvard, has been un for Congress. Nixon Ready to Fire Back at Rockefeller (Continued From Page One) said she failed to vote on the motion. •‘As a member of ttie New York State Executive (fonunlttee I did not fed 1 could take that position Riefet, the first South Dakota lOHx ever to be nominated for the office, resigned after 23 years with the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs to make the rtfce on the RepuUcan ticket In the November election he will face Ray Fitxgerald, a farmer who was the secretary of agriculture the first Democratic adminis-Uon in South DakoU in a generation. Miller saM IT New York Re-pablleaas. hiclndtag Taylsr, at- The Troy Tiines-Record had said in a copyrighted story that 23 of the COP’S 24 House mimbers the stete hsd brokes with Rockefeller to make the Nbnn asked by a reporter whether be ■ ■ ■ ler st^Mieait thought the Rockefdler constituted an attack on the Eisenhower record. He said he did. DOESN’T FEAR BLITZ Asked then whether he thought a Republican who had made such an attack could be nominated for president, Morton replied: “No, frankly I do not.’’ Asked whether Rockefeller ml^t try te “bitts” the ee Hen like the late Weadefi Willkte did la uee, Morteu said he believed a Mlts of that type wUI not be praetieaMe la w^x' Morton said it would be all right with'him if Rockefeller and Nixon enfljged in a pre-convention debate. He also said Rockefeller as well as other governors might speak the convention. In reqxmse to other questions. Morton said he believes Rocke-JeUer’L name will, be put before the convention and that there will be a contest for the presidential nomination. But. he said, it will be hard overcome the big delegate lead now enjoyed by Nixon. MoHoa said Rockefeller had right to expreos hie optnloa, but the chalrnoan said he Is proud of the Elsenhower record and be believes most Republicans are. Morton also took exception to Rockefeller’s contention that Nixon has not discussed issues. Csrol Louse Kevin Bockn Pstrick CsmpboU Paul ChaDdeUlse Kronenberg Filjes for Clerk, Deeds Registrar on Dem Ticket BIRMINGHAM - Six taacbers tile BhwniCeld Hills School Distiict have been awarded scholarship aaMat them in their educatioas. wltii a cocMge at white i His party’s unsuccessful nominee two years ago, Kronenberg, 37, Royal Oak, yesterday paid the $100 filing fee in lieu of nom-lating petitions at the Courthouse. The grants were awarded by the selection committee of the Teachers Grant Committee, set up last year by fom* area doctors. Following the meeting, the guest I of honor was presented with gifts | and cards from members who in-1 vited her to sit at a "special” I birthday table. Thomu Pkrrell Joba Onntrdo irihra Krntt j> LOXtc Richard Hnvdu Jonph Rciitjnn ■tatne Rluock Pnd Lnuliiscr Thomu Louinser Kronenberg Is manager of the Royal Oak-|terkley branch of the Secretary of State’s Office. He says be Is an “ardent supporter’’ of his boss. Secretary of State James M. Hare, In his bid for governor. ‘Oakland County needs to modernize its county government,’’ Kitmenberg said in officially announcing his candidacy. ithcrtot^ Uo&nalek idith BehUsbt PsiU Pmnitc Dali isaebu Osrjp aonacaboTi John TrudeU PbU^ Wyigockl Kcaastb Blroa "Jurors serving in our county courts are selected from a list prepared by politicians with a large ' er of repeaters and profes-thus deoytng pTO|k er trial by jury,” he Said further. KrowMriMirg, of 7U N. Altadeaa St., loat to Incumbent clerii-reg-iMer Daniel T. Murphy Jr.. M-SS2 to •l.SM: In IMS. Born in Femdale. the candidate is a graduate of Henry Ford Trade School and attended Wayne State University for two years. He has resident of Royal Oak since 1945. Big AAoc Fete Friday ST. IGNACE Ifi-The 10th anniversary of the establishment of the Mackinac Bridgh Authority wili be commemorated here Friday with erection of Ixtxne plaques on the northern causeway. Gov. Williams naiiM la woik on tiw famed bridge are ex-| Briggs ■ to attend. “SiBoe thte was our first year. s. We hope te make them e swhotenHal la the years to e,” ,aald Dr. Mark Dale, Polio Didn't Cripple Ellaine's Spirit (Continued From Page Onei Her junior high 9 Ischool classmates carried her to T mond, Charles Lemke, Ltes Poskel, William Sqhaar and Ruth Shar-iand. PROJECT MERITS ’They were selected on the merits of projects for which the grant was intended. classes for two years’. Howevmv the most sc^rious|| obstacle, says Mrs. Davis, is the student, himself. "Although there are grants for research in industry and science, there are few grants for advanced teacher training. He is a member of the Royal Oak Masonic Lodge, F. A A.M. the Junior Chanfber of Commerce, American. Legion and the Royal Oak Safety CbuncU. He is the father of three children. Kronenberg has served as chair man, vice chairman and treasurer of tite Royal Oak Democratic Gub. Formerty a tool and die maker, Kronenberg was appointed by Hare bfanch manager in February of U55. He is a Navy veteran. Hospital Soys Briggs ContinuBs to Improve BEBfNINOTON, Vt. ttl — Heu- saM today Walter Briggs, 48, former preoMent of the Detroit Tigers baoeball team dis^iUty, of course, afi^ctsll the attitude and performance ef|i the^ afflicted. Some may oompen-1 sate by unaccepted aggressive be-1 havim. Others may-allow them- I selves to become too dependent ! and lethargic. “This Is eqteoially true la the case of high school aad etemea-tary teachers. “The grants are expected to attract the highest caliber of teachers to the odiool system,” he added. The Birmingham SmopUmist Gub will install new officers and induct new members at a dinner meeting tonight at Devon Gables New officers are Dr. Everett, president; Maxine L«s- CoUlas, second vice preoMoat; Soroptimist members from 19 other Michigan clubs will attend the installation, along with the ox-ecutlve secretary of the Soroptimist Federation of the Americas, Inc.. Martha Service. Miss Service has held her present position since the federation was created in 1936 with 66i clubs. Tlie organization has grown has aot tot hetsoU rely oa the sappert at etiMrs. "I used to think I couldn't do anytiiing,” says Ellaine. "Every-I being handed to me —I taken care of for me — and then I realized that I couldn’t make anything out of nty life if I didn’t tty.” SCHOLARffllP DECISIVE Ellaine said she had no inten-tkm of going on to college until Mrs. Davis tdd her she might be eligible for sponsorship by the Vocational Rehabilitation Department. “eftea, be- honr aad a haH) cause ef a traasportatioa prob-tom, we conUn’t get together te study, but their ' they helped me ptoMy.” Ellaine now says she wants to become a certified public account- Some 50 fellow students will wish her luck at a graduation party she is having next week. to 789 clubs in eight couiitTttp. Starts Research Cruise The Birmingham OES 230 last night honored Sister Llltie Miller, chairman of the Sick and Visiting Oranmlttee the last eight year Worthy Matron Phyllis Mari MOSCOW (APf - The Soviet Academy of Sciences research ship Mikhail LomoixMov has left t four-month cruise in the northwest Atlantic, the Soviet agency Tass reported today. Emmett J. Leib New President More Vet Benefits Judicial Assn. Lauds Pair LANSING (B^Disabled veterans eligible for a 12,000 homestead tax exemption are also eligible for an additional 12.000 exemption if tiiey the attorney general’s office has held. The Oakland County Judicial Assn, last night honored two of its senior members and elected officers for the coming year. final meeting until fall. It was held at Rotunda Inn In West Bloomfield Towpship. The association's new president is Springfield Township Justice Emmett J. Leib. The S0-year-(M Justice opened a law office in Holly shortly before Wmid War II. He was named an assistant Oakland County prosecu-^ tor In 1949, a position from which Ite resigned in 1961 to devote full time to his law practice. Leib is a charter member of the county association. Other new •ffteers are Orton Township Justice Helmar Q-Stanabark, first vice president; West Bloomfield Township Justice Robert F. Scott, second vice tary; qad Novt-TowaoUp Jastloe Robert Anderson, treasurer. In one of his final duties as outgoing president, Farmington Township Justice James Lawson paid a tribute to Joe Terrlen, county Justice Court coordinator, for aid to justices and the a.saoeiation. But the newly Installed presl- I Albert C. Carr, secre- highlight of the evening occurred when aH ejres tuiwed to Judges Fred F. Stovms and John J. Stevens, Oxford Township justice of the peace, and Schulte. Farmington Muhicipamourtjudge; were presented plaques by their fellow members. The awards, never before presented to an association member, were in recognition of each man’s "long and dwoted service to the principles of justice.” Stevens, a native of Oxford, has been justice of the peace for 33 years. He has been a Mason (or 50 years snH 1b a .'a.ypar of the Knigbtx 'of Pythias. Judge Schulte has been Farm-in^on justice and Municipal Court judge in the city for 35 years. He is a charter member of Michigan Justice of the Pe Assn, and was named honorary [resident in 1958—an honor never before bestowed On a member. Judge Schidte, 75, has never missed an a.ssociatkm convention. He plans to retire from office when his present term expires in 1964. Between them the Jurists have 48 years of Judicial service In the couaty. Quake Jolts Tokyo Hosting the season's final meeting were West Bloomfield Township Justices Elmer C. Dieterie and Robert F. Scott. Guests at the dinner were Circuit Court judges Frederick C. Ziem and Stanton G. Dondero. TOKYO fAPI^TTjkyo-tesnr ioit-i by a moderate earthquake to-' day. It caused high buildings to' sway slightly. There were no damage reports. OKs City Schools Loon The Pentiae School Oiatrict has been authorized to borrow $2^,000 against anticipated state aid for the current fiscal year by Stale Department of Public Instruction. Servicemen Get Break WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate and House conferees have agreed to extend for two years present law permitting servicemen and civilian employes to bring back household goods tariff-free from overseas stations. The Weather Ml (J.S. WMtbcr Bwmv Baswt ronuc AND VICINITY—8««»» . SMJt «»-awr May aai FrMay. CItai aa« aaat Unlfkl. Rl(k .a«a« 14. Uw ■fSkt M. aifk rrtSay 1«. Narikaaatatl; wlai. laensstaf la t-IS aUlaa par kaar TaSar la Pa-Uat Lavnt temparatura preerdlni I a m M l a.n.: WtaS valoetty I n. p. h Dirtetlon—Baitarly. Sua aeu Tbunday at 1:01 p.a. Bua riua Friday at 4:U a.m. Maoa laU Thuraday at FIT P bl M:oa nan Friday at t.lT p.m. .« Paaratawa Taaiparslarat • «.«.......M It a.m...........T -T Mi.......54 11 a..........T I am........M I p.n............r ........ WaSaatSay ta Paatia> (A< rieardad dovstavol IDshaat temparatura .........tT4 tevtat temparatura ...........IM itaaa tamparatuik .............a Wntkar-aunny. Paa Tea.- Apa ta raattea lilSBaat temparatura ..........M LeiMat Umparatu: $ T* HaaB tamparaturt ..............M Waaltitr—a-iDPy. ant I Tka Del_____________ n ta Ml* ____ 4J ta MU aipwir BaUimo m « Omalmr' M g 3 3 JSSTri « il! n stLoou ^ S g ffw 8 t THEIB BIO NIGHT - HighHgM «f last night’s meeting at the Oakland County Judicial Assn, was the honoring of veteran bers, Farmington Municipal Court Judge John J. Schulte from left) add Oxfora Township Justice Frqd F. Stevens (oenteri. Congratulating them are Waterford Tmvnshiii JuMlce Donald E. Adams deft), a state Frederick C. Ztom (sea Juatice James Lawson, tion. Zi«n presented the ■\ Circuit Judge ujd Farmington Township (iresident at the ernocie- THIS IS IT! Now In Downtown Pontiac,SIMMS BlOSa Opens Another STORE! L s\mM. 25 SOUTH 2S S08TB SUMW ST. Hail to’l, t. Ttamyi With GUARANTEED 30% to STo SAVINGS Oh Alt New First Quality MERCHANDISE 910 Salespeople — It's Self-Serve — When YOU See The LOW PRICES & QUALITY, You Won't Have to Be Sold! • Here's A Personol Metsoge Flrom The SIMMS BOYS Telling Why They're Opening Another Store . . . We'ya batu ta Ponttoe at N N. eaytakv far «y^ drua Itora ta our wawnt dapartmaot atora-ilM ky COTTINO PRICaa an WairrEONO’ ?S^*by^ th.^^ 4U :: a«k uny old ttmar whui thay had to pay bafora MmiM taTewa — baeauM of thU policy — BITl'XR OOODB at DMCOUHT PBIcn — our antant BAHOAIN riLLED Mata Blora d^ not b^t M Imn^ bl; m — iMma that ara naadad In arary boma. 8ut sow, wa ara opanlnt aaothw at 15 aotrrailSjiNAW m or^ to yi^M County fotti thoao ‘Bis Itoma' at a tolt% BAVUW off RBiC/’) rwular rotall prloet . . . aad natlUnt but OUAIlAIfTXaD MX to MX ' ^ V SSSw-dtavaaS^Sm do •toekod SlHSAia » ao^ At proooot wo kayo y ALL NSW. mtar quautt fubnituri m •took tat a* « . r buyi - and It ukai tima to find 'am - wa wlU itock thtm alM ot gOOU *•’ J 15 BOirrH bacouM va faal that Pontiac and Oakland County folk! art ^ Stl^W tSaaa OUALtirrXXD MX to MX BAVlNOa on lar|0 lUmo -and lufm arV‘S*SMK"M8^ (ntata wujn^^twt.1. Mjd \) aalf-aanro. no •alaammi to pnaaaro you — OUR telW. FBj^ I V-' (/ thXIISXLVXB and ranumbor tba all naw itort baan, tMta S p.m. ta • p.M C Jv y dally — ao dad can drlra tba family down aftor lupptr — aad Mtir^ M 1 > y u.m to 5 p.m. Plenty of te city porklas aU-arpund tba itora. Como la and COME IN-HOimilG ALLOWED Here Are A Few Examples of MONEY-SAVERS Now In Store it SJ8 ChlM'i Chest of Drawm X M ft- 1M8 BaiprMS BenehM a 48 Piessboaid, gay decorations .. 1 Wrought Iron. Foam PUlow .. •t it Early American Chair X it Step Tabtoe AM $3898 Padded, ebony finish . . lU Limed Oak or Walnut . O Wn-N Lamp Tabtoe Q98 it 18.88 Coffee Tabtoe QN Limed Oak or Walnut . O Umed Oak or Walnut .... *7 it ChUd’e Stralglit Chair £88 -ft Webbed Lave 8esto Q88 81496 Valua-Satin ftnUh .... O 34.99-Alumlnum frame .. 9 it S8J8 ItaBc Tables -1 Ea. 1 >|W ^ Maple Step Table 1 QH Parquet, 14-In. High. Walnut 14 83998-Barly American . lip it l-Pe. Africaa Vtotot Plaater Bet g*f%t it Wlehlaf WeU Planter rbQe a Planters and sp^kle can .. 09 Wrought Iron—Ceramic pot .. 09 Hurry — plunty ef Seme Iteing — Few ef Others SPECIAL NOnCI: Remember These ITEMS at SIMMS 25 SOUTH Sog-inow Only! — Reason: blouse we don't have floor space ot Main Store for these big furniture buys. SIMMS 26 SOUTH STORE HOURS AAee. 1 yjR. te t ml Tete. S ml te f gju. W8W.3MLtef Ihers. 3 ml te 9 ml FrL 3 pju. te 9 ml Set. 19 OM. te 5 ml Plenty ef, 5c City Perking Lott Neer Store SIMMS£ THE PONtlAC PRESS, TIIITRSDAY. JUNE 9. I960 THREE 1 FlIDATfull of gifts for .your dad, notica tho nwiy cut>0ricas, not ana or two specials, but a page-full of BETTER GIFTS at LOWEST PRICES. Shop Friday and Saturday for proof-plenty of unadvartisad FATI^RS DAY GIFTS at same LOW PRICES Throughout the store. 2x4 FOOT PEG BOARD M North Baginarar 66* 1^3^ 7” Ww I ns4S ViM. aa« »ja ■ Work pants In grey < tan twills or dr«< pants In Cord 'Ivy' styk in blue, black, char^ or polished cottons in baig colors. Sanforized, road cuffed. 9S North $.aiMw Sr. ortJSSSlSiSllrt"* THrUSUAY. 1960 Conte Bond on Texas Thug County Awaiting Word on Fugitive Warrant From Illinois .Tax-Break Bill f Almost Ready Self • Employed Savers for Retirement Would Be Aided by AAeasure to for Templar Condove eir«ri^ T3»W*h-r«iildBflla«0B«i«hered Bmm kUI by K4tli« Weir bore today for fbc annual OMclavc awn penafon piana. of the Grand Chnmandei^, They «0uld not l«ve to pay in- ^ ******?«!:.. . ' - The delegates repreaent 55 Mich- of the fund itself. untQ Oie eaW * of Knights Templar d The bai was expected to stir up a light when It ranched the Sov ale floor, but sponsors to attend. They incioded Wilber M. Bnicker. ■ocretary of the Anuy, and Joaeph C. Durai, a New Torii attorney who wIB give the main addrass at Friday banquet. and trucks bi the Untied Suies are produced in Detroit. 5-Positioii Aluminuiii CHAISE LOUNGE • Wnvnn SarM fiaw minxiiif enmfnir • Folds for oosy corryinf • AdjosH lo 5 iMaiHom Waha'f ramifafa . . . Oowastairs TAKE IT EASY . . . Ride Hia Bus! % t. Fun In The Sun BIB 20 INCH 3 SPEED REVERSIBLE RsUabest FAN Reg. 39.95 $348a Adjusts 26 to 38-inch in height. Use it in any room in your home . . . os 0 portable window fan . . . Westinghouse motor hos o full 5-yeor worronfy. Woila'e 20" PORTABLE FAN Rgg. 24.95 $2i«| Walla's Hausawcias . . . Fillh floor NO MONEY DOWN... MONTHS TO PAY! Powerful Manor House RUGGED rotary! POWER MOWER $^|66 WITH LEAF MULCHER • 3 H. P. 4-Cycl« Briggs & Sfrotton Enginol • 14 Gougu StMl Dflck, Control on Hondlt • Stoggorod Roinforcod Whoolg • Full 22 Inch Cut; With Uof Mulchor • Full 22 Inch S«lfDAY. JI XE 9. I960 FIVE SHOP FRI. AND MON. NIGHTS TILL 9 O'CLOCK! liFUN^^SUN The Kids Have Fun In the Sun, Too With Fine Cotton Wash and Wear Playsuits 3.98 Wash and wear means easy care . . . with no ironing, ever. Regular styles with short legs ar>d ,olso the poRulor "short" type. Gay prints, neat checks, bright stripes and smart solid colors, sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14 . . . in pink, blue, red and white. Do come in toddy. ‘ Little Boys' Motching Shirt and Short Sets ’1.98 « Waif'i CbUdrM'f WoiU . Boys' Proportionod POLISHED COTTON CHINO SLACKS 2.99 Proportioned to fit ... In slim, regular end husky. The poliihed cotton fabric washes easily and drip-dries without a care. Siies 6 to IS ... in tan, blue, grey, green and black. Weile'a Mojpt' Shop . . . Second Float Have Fun In the Sihi.., and Save, Too! Washable Canvas Casual Shoes Perfect for sports, gardening, beach, loafing, fishing etc. Fine quoJity canvas with sturdy rubber soles. The cushioned heel and Insole for extro comfort. 2.99 You'll Love The Sun In Your New Pique Patio Sunback Dress Majestic Summer Co*ordinates o. Itolian Blouse . b. Rivicro Pants. c. Botik Print Blouse 5.98 d. Motching Skirts 10.98 Wo^ ond wear cottorts. Many patterns ond styles. Sizes 1 to.4 end 3 to 6x. Others 2.98. Pretty tulips cover the white background . . . accented with glittering rhinestones on the bodice. Take yours in cither green or brown on white. Sizes 10 to 16. Also a similar style in sizes 8 to 18. 10.98 You're the look of summer ... so fresh and crisp in the foshion fobrics that hove mo^ Mojestic famous. All in sizes 10 to 18. Come in tomorrow for your Mojestic coordinates. /aezpeaaivo Oreitee . . . Third Floor Wailo'M Sports ireor . . . Third Ftoor Contour Cut, Cotton Knit Lollipop Briefs In Women's Sizes 5 to 8 85* Your favorite cotton knit panty wtih nylon-'reinforced cuffs. The heat-resistant elastic waist keeps its snug fit through countless washings. Liagerie . . . Secead Floor 'Chin High Chokers" Ara PstkiaiM Nawett Friead «1.00*-^2.00 Strands and strands of pseudo pearls or colorful beads heap high at your throat. One of five strands . . ^ in white,' red, black and Vatty pastels. Waite's hwoltj , . . Street Floor ''Eversoft" Summer Handbags o hondful of luxury ot o tiny price ^3,00 Orbert, 5.00 and 7.91 Here's a cieemy, marshmallow soft kid-likt plastic that whips into the smoothest of softly shirred style* In white clean them with a dampi^ cloth! ... and the edsy two-way comfort of the convertible ARROW BI-WAY SHIRT with the collar you can wear open or closed 1.25 Summer living is easy in a lighlweight li-Way! Sleoves ore short cut for cool comfort, the fomous two’.woy colter fiH peifecriv, feels greot, teoks great worn either open or closed. Expertly tailored in oit. ^IHoned fabrics thot keep the heot out, let the breeze in. Choose yours from our fashion-fresh selections in ky white and frosted colors. Nea't Shop . . . Street Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS « Wcat Huron fltraet Pondnc, THUI^AY, JUNE 9, I960 Ownnd and PabUthed LoeoOy by Tha Pontiac Pratt Company "tjuSiasf' Can’t We Eliminate Some Loss of Life? Among the outstanding beauty spots in the Pontiac area are our lakes. Perhaps no other city of comparable size has so many near at hand. But in warm weather their beauty often has tragic consequences. ★ ★ ★ They ripple just as lovely and complacently immediately after they snuff out a life as they did before. Last year Oakland County had more drownings than».afiy ot|ior inland county in Michigan. Most of those 21 lives, largely yoimg people, could have been saved. Carelessness on the part of the victim usually was to blamd. ★ ★ ★ It makes no difference whether you’re a good swimmer or not, you never should enter the water alone. You never should enter a lake that hasn’t a sandy beach. We must admit that many of ' oar county’s 423 lakes have mack or quick-sand shores tint are extremely treacherous! ★ ★ ★ Several of our sandy beach lakes have murderous shelves that drop the swimmer into deep water. The safest plan is never to go swimming at a beach where a life guard is not on duty. ★ ★ ★ Be sure Jhat any life preserver- is in good condition, especially after a winter in storage. A small leak is suicidal It never is advisable to go swimming from a boat . Never get in apposition where a seizure of cramps can d^own you. ★ ★ ★ ' And if you must water ski, do not attempt it unless you’re an expert swimmer — and then only under the guidance of a competent instructor. A llttlfe'^^iligence can better our reebnt^Xast year, in company with our neighboring Wayne County, we had nearly one-fifth of the drownings in all of Michigan’s 83 counties. Let’s do our share to c h a n g e that record. one of the major difflculUes in treating the child and his parents. It seems that the parents figure much stronger in this never ending fight and conseqqenUy it is becoming increasingly more necessary to develop new and effective means of treating the parents. ★ ★ ★ This approach and connection with the parents seems confusing to most of us, but it is certainly enlightening to discover just how far reaching the whole problem of mental hea4th actually is. "Americans’ feet are gteadUy becoming larger,” says a shoe manufacturer. it’s fortunate this is true, as Americans need increasingly larger feet to keep the growing tax loads on their backs from driving them into the ground. Voice of the People There Must Be a Candidate Who Will Satisfy Our Needs - If! quite amusiqg to read about Kmwd/t and Soapy's art togetber. There's a comUnatiaii that riio«dd asl praetteaUj^^iB lbs vutas. Kennedy aCathoikandkniiWsofOaluBibos; Soapy a I'Mtostam and SSud degree Mason. But that i^t aU - they both are SodaUat Democrats. Poor Nixon might as well quit He’s Just a Uttte dd Quaker, who might get a few votes in Pennsylvania. F. D. B.’S alogaa was "No aoas o( Americaa aaodwra shaB Oghl oa teralga Then came along the necktie salesman with his Korean PoUoe State to boost our economy. ★ # ★ When are *ey golag to stop ail the aoasease and give as a caa-dUate wtM to tor tower taxes, less inaatioa, aad no forelga aldf Lat the loreigaers pay Uielr owa bUls. We aeed a eaadidate wha Is far leas latorference ia stole rights, less govenmeal hsndag, aad lesa srhool aldT Let the states ma qwlr owa schoota. We sraat a niaa wha wUl toU Mr. K ao soap. I Marne most of this on the press in this country. It let theaa haU baked politicians split the nation wide open on religion, color and labor. The pMpla look to the press to stop a lot of this. Hm c/ity lobWea we have are th^ windbag politicians. ‘This Country Needs Men Like Johnson’ “Have They Solved the Re-Entry Problem Yet?” adults. Is mis then how toew agers get to be sdaltoT If the obscene adveAisdhients of movies in the papers can’t be stopped and theaters will not put an age classlficaUon on movwt. then at least parents, should mifo David Lawrence Says: The Man About Town The Draft Horse Built Up This Area. Has It Now Been Eliminated? Rocky Rolls GOP the Wrong Way WASHINGTQN-Gov. RodeefeUer It now looks as if with the help of the Russians, the Democrats should win. Senator Lyndon Jnm-son with the position he has taken . use of or the side of the Ctovemment iqr what their children has risen above "cheap” politics and has placed the interest of the Government aUbve any political gains. Senator Johnson has proven himaelt a man of integrity and a true American. If Ameriu is to be strong we need men of good old American Umber. leRoy Deap Highland Find Parents ‘Addicted’ to Child’s Delinquency Normally we would call this passing the buck, which is about as common as breathing, yet linldng child delinquency to parents may make some sense. At least, that’s the finding of three eminent medical men from the University of Michigan. ★ ★ ★ According to a study of 400 juvenile delinquents in mental hospitals. Or. Donald J. Carek, Dr. William J. Hendrickson and Or. Donald J. Holmes told the American Psychiatric Association meeting in Atlantic City that tests showed . with regular frequency that parents unconsciously fostered the delinquent behavior in children. This is hard to believe. We are not doubting the word of the respected Michigan doctors from the University of Michigan Medical Center. But in cogitating their report, it is simply beyond all realm of belief to understand parents in this category. ★ ★ ★ The doctors explain that the parents show an addiction to the child’s delinquency that is much like drug addiction. They even suffer acute withdrawal symptoms wdien psychiatric treatment results to Die child’s abandoning his delinquent behavior. Then the parent Is likely, unconsciously, to find excuses to interrppt the treatment or place obstacles in the way of its progress^ Continuing, the report shows that this uncon-sdous Interference by the parents is - . 4' : Rare: What the pacta call Jane days, hat tooie of them ore raw. Word comes from our neighboring agricultural Lapeer County that G. W. Topham is its only farmer who still depends on horses. He says that the work of his neighixxn’ Uactors bring him no Ideas for making a change in .the cultivation of his ^ oma WaThasTiroli^wsr " " This causes me to wonder if our own Oakland County has any farmers who still use draft horses. TTieoe' aptniais were the greatest assistants to our pioneers In laying the foundation for our commonwealth. Any farmer who stUl sticks by Md Dobbin to do the heavy work right here In thto midst of the automottve making area of the world surely Is worthy of atten-%on. Nominations are In order. Current extra prise for a drive into the coantry: the blooming kteast trees. Winning first sward In the Jubilee essay contest at St. Mary’s High School at Orchard Lake, is James Johnson, who wrote upon "A Repository of Culture.” He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. WUliyd V. Johnson of 474 Shoreview Drive, Pontlab. If you’d like to have yanr Pontiac Proas follow you on yonr vacation, phone fE 2-Sltl, and ask for Circniation. On the recent exchange date, Mayor attock against the Eisenhower administration that has eome tnnn any Republican of prominence. Just how he thinks the Re-puMican Party can win the next election by a virtual repudiation of the Eisenhower leadership will puzzle any- Rockefeller evidenUy believes MRtles Jmt beesuae they do not Nixon is already die leader of the accept hto viewsr ’ why Not Make Use ‘Where’s the" Proof for Accusationsr Having attended the recent hearings regarding a Pontiac teacher, where is the actual pnxtf of these accusations? So far it’s ^ been children's tales and so and so said. etc. Why did s Botlee from the •efcool ot BOhedaled qpriag events lids, of eonrse. Is not the eon- Two things stand out clMriy. Rockefeller has forfeited sny wfeich poUtteal portles amiany like to champios. The impression given in some parts of the Rockefeller statement is that he considers Nixon already the nominee and that the New York one who really idvernor may want to disassociate understands the hfanself from the coming campaign, rudimentsof * w * A Tn v-T+c-ww------Eoft tf-Nixon docs express viewir..THOUOHTZ TOR TODAY LAWRENCE politics. contrary to those of RockefeUer For, as has been said so oftni and wins the nomination, the Nhw in the past, any candidate who York governor would have to eat y«pudiates his own party’s record his own words should he do any cannot hope,to win a national elec- campaigning for the party chance to be the Republican nominee for president or vice president this year. He may have even forfeited hh chance to be the presMential nominee in 1964 if Nixon is defeated this year. (Copyright IMS) Neariy half the moviegoers in this country are teen-agers and with summer vacations approaching, it will mean more time for movies. The rraMM for making OMre ‘adult movtoo’ to to attract more Ptotety ribntaate modtoa s( thto toaeher's elaas-trip to (Vaabrotk lostttuto of IclMioe? Why must our best teachers leave that school because tb^'re either fired or they wish to be Even as the sea of man came not to be served but to serve, aad to give hb life as a raosom for many. o. Matthew M:M. I. A party split wide open loses effectfveness before the nominee. its electorate. Bepublloans fight their own He did not come to conquer by force of armies and physical wea^‘ oni bm by love planted in the hearts of individuals. — W.' W. Mdton. * Rockefeller assails the adminis-tration't record on nattonal defense and other issues, and takes the ^ Dr. William Brady Says: edly expressed. 'This win Bot win delegates the New York governor at national conveatloa and, It he VVr w s 'W 1 a V siil'rrrsvr.m Was Jmt False Alarm he ronld net have ehsoea a better way to do the Job. "May I commend you on your in- For the CVD booklet send me He may have h^ disqualified formative and to-the-point article 35 cents and a stamped envelope •' a pai^ nominee ill which appeared March 24th? I • thoroughly enjoyed it Keep up the i'S’S: Dental Endorsement Hits ‘Defending Peace’ by l^eparing War The Iroiiic lunacy ol 'defending peace’ by preparing war that can end only in univeral annihilation is beii« repudiated armind the worid by peoples of former collaborating nattom. ★ ★ ★ These aatl-soclal ImperiaUsto In gsvemmente evsrywhero. bHaded by egottsm, risM or Mlf-latensl, mast ssdn ‘press the bnttoo’ er oppsrtanMy tor setlvsttag their paranoM delnsiens shal have paeeed them by. These humsa batags bestirriag themselves display saphaOe evidenre st rrtara Is malty epMomlsed la “SeN-preservatlaa la tta that tow at nature” aad “While there Is Hfe, there is hspe'' ★ ★ ★ Solution lies in unequivocal recognition of the paramount intermts ut humanity: brotherhood, peace, freedom, plenty, and bestirring our-selvee to organize the economic basis necessary for realization The timely program of the Socialist Labor Party deserves our most serious consideration. E. W. Portraits 1964 because the cleavage he will have made, if the RepuUicans are defeated this year, wiU be blarocd on the statement he issued yesterday. FROM N0NLNDER8TANDEBS? Gov. Rockefeller’s statement sounds as if it were pressed from him by advisers who really don’t " practical poHti<^. bearing your address. good work. i . DD.S.)" ot Melvindale swapped places with Mayor W. E. Rowdeo of Lapeer, and was presented with a check for Rowden’s salary for the day, $1.33. Writing me from his home In North Branch, G. A. Hood says that he sang in the Ctintral Methodist Choir In Pontiac from 1912 tq 1918. Advance tip otiHates to circle on your calendar: the Oakland Cwinty 4-H Pair will be held Aug. 9 to 13 — on its usual grounds. We’re In complete agreement with Mrs. Amew Lathers of Rochester, who says we don't have to "go outside the borders of our county to prove that Michigan 1s a great state. Oakland County’s champion lake buiWw;------------"---------' Jim CMe, tells me that he has furQier plans. Jim’s already created over 40 miles of new lake frontage In the PonUac area. Vivid reccdlections of that slx-lnch snowfall In Pontiac on May 10, 1987, are held by Willism N. Pipe of 2451 Voorhels Road, as It covered a new car he had bought the day before. Verbal Orchids to- . Mr. and Mn. HMtor L. Maar«e of 238 State Ave.; 58th winding anniversary. Mr. aad Mrs. Lfitcr L. Cooper •of Commerce; 54th wedding anniversary. 9fri. Mabel Frimodig . of Houghton; formerly of Holly; 80th birthday. Four years ago fonner Gov. Staaaea of Miaarsota started at the llth hour an attack of Vice The net effect of the Rockefeller pronouncement may be the same— it is a call for disunity and not harmony in the Republican Party. * * A Rockefeller says he has waited tor the vice president to express his views but, oddly enough, the New York governor formally withdrew from the presidential race several weeks ago and refused to go before the voters in the various sUte primaries, while Nbmn did participate in all the primary elecUons. TIm vice prestdeal, moreoveri made several speeclies ezplata- naeahower’s polictos. Nixon lias gone before the people to Tbe correspondent is not only a dentist, but his letterhead indicates that he limits his practice to orthodontics. Orthodontics the department of dentistry deaJingi with the preven-M tion and correc-P -tion of irregulari- -unties .of the teeth. Hooray! Here, at last, is an expression of approval from a dentist! I was thrilled as much as I’d be with a letter from a flour mill tycoon telling me to keep on teaching people good nutrition. * A * But, shucks, on consulting the files I found that the March 24th article said nothing about teeth. It dealt with angina pectoris. In the column in question I cited the belief of William Heber-den, a distinguished physician of the 18th century, that angina pec-foris was a cramp of the heart muscle _ this theory will appeal to anyone who has suffered muscle cramps in legs or arms,- occurring usually in the night or eariy morning, from tetany (insufficient daily -intake of calcium and vitamin D). SKned IMMrt. na( PM* or US eord* p*r*on*l bMUOi *M *»M. diasiMMU. *r wui M oiuwtrtd b* Dr. WtUlom Brady, U a •tempad MU-addreiMd enTalop* it mt «a Tti* PeoUac Pr*M, PeoUae, Mteblfaa. (Copyright INI) face . . . Tumbling in yow bad? Tell me. little baby ... As I beside my cheeks . . . Puffing up rock you there . . . What you’re with air? . . . Why do all the thinking ol . . . When you lia and babies ... 1 have ever known stare . . . While I sit and watch . . . Just look up at me . . . RHnlr yoa . . . Do my marveitng eyes tlwtr eyer end groan? . Tell . . . Seem to you Uke monsters me. little baby ... As I rock you . . Peering in the skies? ... Do there . . ; What you’re thinking I sc^ w baby ... With my of ... When you 11a and stare. great big head ... As it makes a Copyright. UN Case Records of a Psychologist: Dreams Often Symbolize Desires Should Nixon speak out on new poMetea baisM Aa.ia^ .tba pasty nominee and before the delegates have selected a committee to write ttie nationai RepuUican platform? The Country Farsbn Sure enou^. Hunter had a fatal attack in a fit of anger when he was 65 years old. . In the CVD booklet, about heart and artery troublao. I any that If 1 were subject to angina Pd make nitrtdjycerin tablets virtually a pari Of my dally diet AAA And even though I am not subject to angina, : tdl you now that I make caldum and vitamin D an essential part of mynveiyday diet. Plenty of vitamin 17 ia requisite for normal utilization of calciulm, and our everyday diet in America is fpnerally deficient fai caldum. An adequate daily intoke sf calcium Is nature’s own tranquilizer, which, unlike drugs, tranquilizes in a bovine fashion without aqy untoward side effects. Sex symbolism often causes us to have dreams that seem silly and bitarre. But when « they are properly interpreted, they often make sense. So scrapbook this case about the disguised ^sexual meanings of Lois’s dream, and send for the booklet below. . By DR. GEORGE W. (MANE CASE E-462; Lois L.. aged 16. is the high school coed with the supposedly weird dream about shipwreck and being pursued by savages on a South Seas island. "Dr. Crane,"” she added, "they chased me along the beach and hurled their spears at me. "But they all missed me exceptg Jtie xpaar M leader, who a handsome bronzed youiij man. -‘1 felt sure I would die, but it ne at ail— If he has a persistent desire for some special toy, he may then get it in his dream. Recurring dreams often emphasize fear or hostility, as of a "bearcat" boas or a guilty conscience. etc. Lets had bem oa a dale. Khe and her boy friend bod stopped at a bamborger stand for re- Even in waldng life, we avoid bitter ideas in a similar way, tor life insurance salesmen don’t talk about "death" or "dyl«” but describe it as “passing on” or “going west ’ or "Joining cur forebears." Even the American Indians talked about their "happy hunting grounds." AAA In modern advertising we avoid unpleasant feeling tone. Thus, we CRANE But he kissed I and she was left in a bubbly .'romantic ntood. , Her <^m would thus be interpreted as a'^mbolical romantic episode. Savages symbolize bask- sex cravings, devoid of moral and social taboos. A«ri the Siwar ir a standard sex aymbol of the male. Indeed,. Dr. Freod has wisely emphasised that polated ohjeeto have a maBrollBi aymhallsm la draoma, whereas female sym- 1 I V t that a silly dream? "Why, I never have been on a ship or oiit of the United States, so what made me have aoeh a strange dream?” % SEX SYMBOUSM Yesterday I told you that modwn psychology regards dreana as often indicating Thus, the toot Is a Freudian symbol of the male, while the shoe indicates the female. Water Is female. An umbrella or knife or spear is masculine. Sealed ob jects likewise may Indicate vfar^nity. Thus, a sealed letter is often a female symbol substitute “intestinal fortitude' for "guts” or "saliva” tor ’‘spit. Send tor my booklet tm "Hoi to Interpret Dreaina," enclo^ a stamped return envelope, 'nitt 20c (non-profit). tore. w. ctM atoe* ato!^ g3.iya5i«u5rjr,= (OagysIgM INI) A Ihindy Iravefrr In the Sahara win dreom ef water. A freestag pefMB jMy dream of fora, flrw aad rrool^ bhuiketa. A child with a great yen for a pet ouy receive a puppy or kit- twtngM of naoBrirai!! beeaaM •f the rameallage. The dreajner thus symbolizes taboo objects or sitwrtiQns to outwit his consefenre. ,, SSitP THE POXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 9, 1960 NominatiRg PeNtions Are Flowing to State LANSING (UPI) - TIm pmdt o( hopefuli, both incntabMit ud othenvlw, oonthniei to tiie Me-retary o( itate’i otfloe with m Inatiiig petitions for the Ang^ primaiy clsetlto * Among thaw' maktog iha ■ trhi was Rap. Gertod R. Ford Jr. (R-Mich) who filed tor a ntnm to his Fifth District seat hi Oqik Pitr Angeli AAoy Wed Actor Arena rssd, hswBvei, % aa aaptraat to aw ReiMbIleaa vtee presidai-.. . j ^ the OOP an- CMoago. State Sen. Charles T. Prescott (R-Prescott) filad for a return to hi^seat, R^. AmeU Engstrom (Rrh-averse pty) alsh filed. Others recently filii% hiduded John P. Hopkins, Traverw City Democrat fll^ lor the state Sen- ate; Ralph E. Ridmun, HoU mmuL SEVRy Democrat. seekii« a state Senate •eat; Oarlc F. Most. Alanaon Re-Pubwwn who wanU to become a Vi the State Houae tit and Howard J. - Republican, alaa aee^ a Houae aeat ROBdE tn—Italian goesi ^ say Italian actress Pier AageU will marry Italian actor Mauritio Arena when her divorce from American singer Vic Damone The two have be«i for a couple of months. Arena is a dBrfc.haired tough guy hero in Italian moyiSB. Arena was in the news on two occasions recently-ahen he was rejected for military training and when an Itafian staiiet who formally waa his companion was hospitalised tor taking too many Who but Stu if Jack Tires? Dark Horse Champs Bit ■grRvm WASHINt im NwrcooiinY IGTCm-Btorely a mo Btabfefid time off from his private < oT Stu coold c . _ home toretch to vMory? Donkey Party ptesidciitiBl entries stampede Lw Ampelea |or ohe . V.'-' ' 'V' * N ,-. . . 1 •m:s: aNG SIZE (' AP Pk»l>f>i UKK FATHKB. UKK !H)N - Gcn. MaxweU D. Taylor, left, ol the class of 1923, is ^irith his son- Thomas H. Taylor, who was graduated from the U. S. Military Academy at West Point, N. Y., Wednesday. Gen. Taylor is't former superintendent of the acad- Sylvan Council OKs Mrs. White for Job The Sylvan Lake Gty Council last Alight iqiproved appointment of Mrs. Geneva White as dty treasurer and d^aity derk. *■ it * ■ Mrs. White, of 358 Vooilieis'Rd. has been employed by the city m an office worker since a realignment of front office duties the first of this year. At that time, the posiUoM af city of dty naaaafer to make a pro^ rccards praeedare more effective. Gty Manager David E. Firestone recommended to the Council last night that Mik. White treasurer and deputy clerk. EASES ROUTINE LOAD She has been with the city about five months. wiB give her the powoa to sign maaager-derk of raotlM The Oouncit also adopted a resolution opposing the 1 per cent income tax proposed by the Gty of Detroit. ★ ★ W “The Coifncll is definitely opposed to the idea of Detroit taxing persons living outside its city PATIOS Fidtiy-to-ToB-hicM STONE FOR 10x12 PATIO FOR ONLY •42 I ftogfr I •ATIO A. Aithier •ATIO STONE CO. IOS70 WaMsod Road am Wmt tf rMttsr Alratrt close with the city In the black for the second straight year. ■‘It is difficult to estimate with accuracy bow much money we will have left over, but our present budget figures point to a balance in the neighborhood of |2,0(»."' Firestone said. ♦ it ★ ■The auditing firm of Janz & Knight of Birmingham was hired to do the annual audit of city Grows Bitter 5 Key U.S. Defense Installations Tied Up for Fourth Day SAN DIEGO. Calif. (AP)-An Increasingly bitter unioi) strike for higher pay tied, up five key United States defense installations for the fourth day in a row today. Oonvair. builder of the i»atlon'„ only warready long range missile, and the International Assn, of Machinists locked in massive struggle. ★ * ★ StlU working were Cbnvair’s big plane pnd minile planto here. The ui^ hR instead at bases where Oonvair Atlas missiles, capable of hauling nuclear warheads thousands of miles, play a prime ndc *1 the nation’s defense. The company countered with lawsuits, suspensions and cancellation of several imton-benefittliig dausea In the expired contract. A threat of neW walkouts in the troubled aviationAnissile industry k»ms. The lAM said it broke off talks Wednesday with the Lockheed Aircraft ^Qoip. missiles mid space division at Burbank, Calif. Union (rfficials expect a strike vote at a membership meeting Saturday. * * ★ And lAM members at Douglas Aircraft in Santa Monica, Calif., are considering a strike in mass meetings. The United Auto Workers has set a June 15 strike dead-"ne with Douglas in Long Beach. In all caaes fhe unions demand wage and fringe increases. 125 WEST HURON $20 Million Program ^ to Treble SKip Berths CAIRO (UPD—Saudi Arabia expects to treble the berthing capacity of Dammam, its only port on the Persian Golf, early next year. The current *30 million project will increase the berthing capacity fnmi two to six ships. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 9, 1960 3.99 men's cushion insole (ym shoes Cushion arch, cushion In. solo, boloncod k»f for trut fit. Dude uppars. 6-12. Just My, 'CHARGE IT' at FaJaral's POWNTOWN AND DRAYTON FUINS Ityi’ MttM play ri|i liM 2-1“ Bodford cord, soarsuckar, boby cord. Soxar wobt, zip fly. 3 colon. 4 to 12. Short Embossod cotton. Wash, drip-dry and waor. 6-lS. Woslj 'n In oisortad colon, prints. Sawn-in collar. stoys.S-M-1 Oh «W« m swrk daiier dept. OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 ■ ■ : v^' 2-4-6. Olds' popovar sats, 4-6-6x. Print^rip-dry cat. Soys' 1 A2-PC. craapars, Hoppy pants at happy 2-pc. toppan. girls' 2 6 3- sovingsl Tailored cotton pc. tapoars. Cot. S4M.-XL. siacks,padol pusltars.7.14. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PiAlNl THE POimAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 9. 1960 COME A-RUNNINC! Friday and Saturday! A sale packed with money-saving values for summer living, vacations and Father's Day gifts, BEGINS FRIDAY, 9:30 AM. ... AT FEDERAL'S Foldins alumiMn-wtb chaisa loMiica with adlustabla back lightweight tube aluminum with 5 plastk webt in i green, yellow. Bock odjutts | to 5 comfortable po«i> ■ Hont. Folek flot to *tore, ' carry. Buy now, lovei 'CHAME IF 9.88 Crlt|i, eoel eollw Aenes fir Mt ’■ glrlf, leg. 2JB 2»*5 2 ‘eHARQE IT* Drew your wee roitsei for summer in our adorable cotton postelsl Cool sleevele« styles in solids, plaids. Size 3-dx and 7-12. Big savingsl Bids’ rsg. 2JI 2-pisss playsiils at snay aaviags *5 fir' VNARII ir Cotton shorts or Jomoicas with matching or contrasting tops . . . perfect for o summer at heme or at compi Gay colorti Sixes 7 to . 14. Boys’ Ivy loagio stylo coHoo slacks roplarly 2.99 pr. 2»’5 ‘CNAR|E ir Wash 'n wear Sanforized 'Snazz/ polished cotton. Pbin front, cuff bottoms. Block, ton, brown, blue, olive. Reg., slim. Sizes 6 to 18. GIvs Dai a wagsa grill «iHi haai ’a ONtarizai s|il 19" 'CHARIE ir Adjustable chrome - plated grid, motorized spit, chopping block. BotHm shelf pulls out and attaches to grill os o handy work table. Wiaiaw hniry... rayn aalh|Ba salhi kaak Aapa 5.00' •eHARiE ir Rayon antique satin bock drapes, 48x90" size for only 5.00. Pinch-pleated, color fast, treated to stay frdUi. ---- - ......iJi Sava sa fsasas 22x44” aai 24x48” GANNON balhitwals *2 WARii ir Imaginel Volues to 1.79 If perfect! Cannon towels in rose, pink, grey, ^een, blue, aqua, white, and ossorted 3 !»' ^AMI Brighlaa ap wiaioes with liars, eafss, aai paaals 36" Dacron* polyester^ or nylon flo^ tienin Trulon, Dacron panels; | 36" print cofe curtain. Rag. 1A9-1.B9 play lags isr Hw saai M sal 2-*3 •eHARRE IT. Jeans, 2-6x. Sateen, cord snap cortstn ■ tabto federal dept, stores Bronzetone or green it frame, fiorol vinyl and back. Folds to cr 14i40’’M«iaf»ar ii|8s fifdliir I JO 2-*3 Ideol Udiity rug for eupry able. Smart fringed en^. aiM *Slarfc|iM’ arili 0 yr. tiza *25 Hardwood, aides. Full pi FadarariOvol.00 km 2 *3 White cotteri bras vifhh od-fustdble strops. Ghte firm ufdift. 32-40, A4-C Jii*t My 'CHARdE ir Maa’s rag. 2.91 kail ar fahric shad siaava SPORT SHIRTS 2^*5 ‘8NAR8E ir Short sleeve cotton plaids, checks, solids. Short sleeve knits in unusual styles. All washable. Sizes S-M-L. Long sleeve sport shirts in washable viscose rayon. Plaids, bold piintv summer colors. S-M-l in group. Buy now and savei Maa*i aottaa casual slacks, regular 8.09 2«-7 Ivy polished cotton with bock flop pockets; cord Continentals with side strop, buckle. Pre-cuffed, wash-weor. Sizes 29-42; leg 29-34. Hurryl Mcu*s5.09Caattaautal or pleat dress slacks 5.00 Rayon gab, sharkskin, Bed-foncl coM, flannel in block, brown, tan, charcoal, navy, air blue, olive, grey. Cuffed Sizes »-42; leg 29-34. Mbh’b ri|. 2.M CfRtiRtRtll BbtrtB No oleots, side strops. Polished cotton, Buford cord. Blk, blu^ brown, olive, f 2-‘5 Mbh’B BRlbMSBe 88t«8Rri'snc.2.8S Short sleeve with long or short legs.Washable, drip dry embossed 2-*‘5 Mbr’s fiRt FidBral tt’wMr rig. 3 go. $2 Knit T-diirfs, A^Trfs, briefs; S-M-L-Xl. Sanf. boxer & gripper shorts, 3p«150 Bays’ rag. IJO-IJO kraaddatii, glugbaai *0 kalt apart shirts 2-’3 ‘8HARCI ir Favorite styles In washable cottons- Permanent coHar stays. Sizes d18. Knit shirts In mesh or novelty weave. Collars. Sizes 6 te 16. TEX THE POXTrAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 9. 1060 Com Planting Michigan Farmnre Log 15 P«r Cant as Fields Remain Wet Such ag Punkeydoodleg Cottict LANSING (H — Wet fieUb coo-tiaw to held up ooni planting in mucfa o( Midtigaa and oi flO per cent el expected acreage has been Ranted. Tbe FWeral-State Crop Reporting Service nid UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. -{AP) —Once in a while aomeone't fanny bone it tickled and a ipot on the globe gets named Punkey-doodlee Comer, Ont., or Igo, Calil. Othere are moments ot sadness and such names are applied as WidowviUe, where many Civil War widows chose to live, in The figure Is 15 per cent less than usual at this date. Freqaeat lalas have made ealtivatlag dlfflcntt and weed grewth is beesmiag a proMem. However, many southern counties have iq> to 90 per cent ol the goofs. Such instances include Rio de Janette, named in the erroneous belief it was the mouth of a river, and Nome, Alaska, the result of misreading the pencilled inquiry “name?” on a « Per. SUGAR BEETS More than 80 per ceid el the ‘ expected arnage of sugar beets has been pinted. Blowing and , about oaaelxth of tbo crop. f la aeufy All this is reported in a study of place names by Mario Pei. professor of romance languages at Columbia University. Pei and Eloise Lambert collaborated on "The Book of Place Names,” and UNESCO Courier, the magazine of the U.N. Educational, Scien-Ufie and Cultural Organization, tfaia month puUishea an article drawn from the book. These are some of Pei’s find- tfeM si Me eapeeted aereage el ; Pasture and hay growth gen-' erally haa been vigorous. Alfalfa is in the bud to early faloora stage. . Some hay and grass silage has The condition of winter wheat varies from excellent in areas to fair in sections where yield prospects have been hurt by surpluB moisture, t The enp Is beadhig hi Oats are bdiind anal progress, mainly because of late pUinting, but proapecte are good on the better drained fMds. Winter Ixtt^ ley Is mostly beaded. It weather conditions are favor-aUe in the next several wcefca, atrawberry growera can look forward to a big crop. ■eavy pteUag Is expreted to In the sartr Prospects variable. Family Status Shown by Swimming Pool LOS ALTOS. Calif. (UPD-Swimming pools are repladng tlw second car aa the mark of family auoceas so rapidly that pool industry sales wiU top the n billion mark for the first time in 1960, according to Building Products It predicted that a record 80. 000 pools will be installed this year, and credited present-day easy installment financing as being the principal stimulant. Only about 3 per cent of the total salt produced In the United States reaches consumers m the dinner table. Some Place Names Funny Says Demand Ups Stock Price Others are Perm’s Chbaflbcoctie (hone and carriagb), Paraguay's Puerto Casado (married port), and Bolivia’s Toretoro (bull-bull). Sometimes the efaristener Just Confusion enters the picture with /Ge<»gia both in the United States and the Soviet Union and Tripoli {x^ptaig up in Syria, tttya There are many repetitions the same name but in different languageB in different lands. Tl-fiil (or Tbttsi) Jn the Soviet Union’s Georgia has Its counterpart in Hot Springs. Ark., and B.D. New York’s Stony Point it Venezuela’s Punto de Piedras. Mis-tissippi, Rio Grande and Guadalquivir aH mean Mg'river. NepMji and Piedmont are both at the M of the mountalM. Ae tHeh Survey. SurvBy Calls Funds and Privafw Owners Cause of Shortage in Issues NEW Y(»K (UPI) -- One of le atrongest reasons for expecting higher stock prices over the htto'-and longer tertns is ttel ever-increasing demand for common stocks by institutions, mutual FMch also points out that Indl-idual owners have grown 1 about 6 million in number to well On the other band, it says, new oftetkigs el common stocks have been Insufficient to meet this demand as opposed to an oversiqqily ‘ the bond market $34w BIG MD-SEASON POWER MOWER SALE ladpstPHcadWiaaidlt* 2-cyde2mLP.CUBloa' 4 AdteseOMadc a ttogCBiileai The word new appears in place names more frequently than any other. Examples include New Ensdand, New York and Nueva Armenia In Honduras. Repetitions In Mkce names are frequent. One of the most striking examples Is Britain's Torpen-bow HiU-which is really hill-hill-"ill-hUl in tour languages. Instances of accidental humor in naming places indude Upper, Nether and Middle Wallop and Great Snoring, all in Engli^. 2 Montanans Battle for Murray's Seat HELENA Mont., (UPD-Mon-tanans chow a congreasman and a former congressman to battle each other in November for the (J.S. Senate seat dramatically relinquished by veteran Democrat James E. Murray. The general election contenders are Democratic Rep. Lee Metcalf, 49, and former Republican Rep. Orvln B. Fjare, 42. before the M-year-ell veteran ef tS yean ia the Heaate wtth- flUiig dosed. Metcalf then proceeded to beat by a margin d about 7-S the man to whom Murray fhrew his support, form» Gov. John Vf. Bonner. Blond, 'handsome Fjare, who served in Congress btm 1954-56, built up a big margin in the Eastern congressional district he once served and coasted on to lead nearest opponent, rancher Sumner Gerard, by some votes. Same 13-JMoiith Guarantee • •. Same Tread Design, Depth, Width... As a New ALLSTATE Tire! Sears full retread economical SAFE-T-TREAD gives you 4 season engine protection m MONEY DOWN Thai’s right, you pay no money down whm yo^ trade-in old tire off your car. ALLSTATE TRIPLE GUARANTEE L IJfetIma Gnaraatw s^wotkauaihip pranted on tread wear. 2. Hme SarviM Caarantoa for qMdfie maaber eC ■maths prorated «■ waotht osed. S. Satlsfactlaa Gaaraatwd oryoariBOM7l>adc.Anadjnst-■Mots an based on the eairmt. prfoe witbMt trade-fai at tim efrotoro. 16.70x15 ' Tube-Type BladtwaU Each plus tax ^ AND OLD TIRE OFF YOUR CAR 7.10 X 15...........................10.88 plus tax* 7r60 X 15...........................11.88 plus lax* 8.00 X 15....................... ..'. ,12.88 plus tax* 14-inch Blackwall 7.50x14, ........................... 9.88 plus tax* 8.00 X 14............. ....... .....10.88 plus tax* *And Old Tire RegardlcM of Its Condition Less Work and a _ to WiU. uot a second a Car Wash Brush 399 Beg. 148 A . not a recap. NEW NYLON TIRE Cart, wlndo^ screensi This brush will save you both time and effort: Gentle horsehair bristles. Rub-ber eovered aluminum handle has water shut-off ▼alte. 38 Inch Handle. Savel three motor oils in one Adjusts automatically to meet all temperatures ... a light oil for cold starts, even at 40* below zero, a medium oil when engine is just^warm and a heavy oil in hot engine. You get all-weather engine wotection. too with super additives, double detergents . . . works ^ instantly in any weather to completely cleanse your engine and help prevent dirt, sludge, varnish and acid from harming vital engine parts. You ain’t buy better motor oil. For lohger engine regular 3.69 299 SAE 10 W, 20W, 30W life and, top performance change oil ““n miles. 10-Quart Can every 2,000 r 5-Square Feet of Genqiae OU-Tanned Chamois 499 ohwt* a Fine for drying car .. . nothing abewbe moisture like a chamois. Use for cleaning windows, polishing furniture, sihfer and chrome. Made in England. Allstate k the ALLSTATE blackwall It 88 6.70x15 Tube-Type Plus tax And Old Tire Off Your Car GUARANTEED l YEAR the ALLSTATE Tyrex 6.70x15 Tube-Type WhHewaU 13“ AND OLD TIRE OFF YQUR CAR Guaranteed >mwt-to-cout, in any Sears store, egalnet all typee of rend hneerde. *^Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 54171 TIW PONTIAC rRKSS. THURSDAY, JUNE 9. 1960 ELEVEy t«t It Bum, H« Said; I Will Sail it for Junk ROCKY 1Y2R1>. C«do. Ul-T. E Da\'«np(W( wt ealmljr by while Firetnen, lununoned by’ by, hurried to the Mene. jOpvni-ycrt Mnt them away, exptotoing he alaraya aeta fine to a car when he wanto to aeU H lor Junk. Expect Mothers to Gain Rights Civil Servico Debotos 1^^ Today; May Kill Advanco Vocations, Too LANSING (UPI) - Uberalized employment righU for women in joba who take maternity leaves were expected to be approved by toe Civil Sendee Com-4n^ todsy. The mother would have up to two years to apply for a return to her Job under the proposed rule. Final aetkn on tbe^nile. which would also apply to women who adopt babies, was not expected until the commIssion’B July meeting, a spokesman said. Joblessness Cut 13s000 in State During May DETROIT (UPI) — The number of persons looking for Jobs in Michigan dropped 13,000 during May, with more than half toe drop coming to toe Detroit a Michigan Employment Commission said Tuesday. ♦ * A The MESC said 205,000 pmons ere looking far Jobs in Michigan on May 3L The report said 1 searching ih the Detroil area, a drop of 7,000 from toe number unempfoyed ’in Detroit in mld-APrtl. w # * The number of unemployed represented 7.1 per cent of Michigan’s total work force of 3,S72,-900 while the number of Job seekers represented 7.7 per cent of the Motor CIty'a work force of 1,408,- No Color Lino More MOBILE, Ata. (UPI)-Segrega-tion apparently Doesn't operate outside the law in South Alabama. Police said they cracked a profitable holdup gang with the arrest of two white men, a whf and three Negro men. Stttl Pipo GoH Tind and Crocb After Tjnt LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) — i wonanoe test that; a steel pipe to crack ii is going one better than tenors who can shatter cry^ glass by pure sustained tone. A * A Researchers at Tuba Turns Division of Chemerton Cmi>-raiddly spinning weights to induce test lengths of pipe to vibrate sympathetically in a way that, in minutes, simulates years of indus-I trial stresses and strains, until| fatigue occurs and toe pipe c DR. JEROME S. KRAUJ FOOT SPECIALIST ANNOUNCES' THE OPENING OF HIS OFFICE FOR THE PRACTICE OF SURGICAL CHIROPODY » FOOT ORTHOPEDICS AT 43 WEST HURON STREET PONTIAC, MICHIGAN OFFICE HOURS •Y APPOINTMENT TELEPHONE FEDERAL 4-2221 pected to be adopted today. The rule Would reijulre an em-Idoye taking time off to be docked in his dieck instead of charging the absence to leave time not yet accrued. . A- A A Three' heads of state d^artments might come under civil service under another rule up for adoption by the commission. The director of the mental health departmmit, head of the aeronautics department and .the .Upper Peninsula State Fair secretary-manager would be affected. The. mentol health department has also asked that the position of deputy director be made civil service, tha commission said. "RnHatiM" Ptwh ICI CREDIT PARK JEWELERS 1 N. SAGINAW Jersey Delegates Unpledged, lor Nixon PRINCETON, N.J. Uh-New Jersey's 38 delegates to the Republican National Convention will go to Chicago unpledged next month but hopeful of nominating a Nixon-Rockefeller ticket. GOP State Chairman Carl Erd-man said after the delegates held their organizational meeting they “were unpledged but entirely united on the candidacy of Vice President Richard M. Nixon for president.’; AAA Erdman added there wa sentiment for anyone other than New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller for vice president. Bernard M. Shanley, national commltteemandesignate. said sentiment for Rockefeller had built up since he announced he would accept a draft lor the presidency. The aentiment, however, was for running the governor for vice president, Shanley added. When an employe laughs at his boss’ Jokes, it doesn’t mean the jokes are clever — It means the employe is . . . Early to bed and early to rise probably means the TV set is being repaired . . pedestrian is a driver who has found a parking space. —Earl Wilson. light a bright path with post and lantern 8*« Cbarta It SAVE $5.02 Rcr. Separate Prices . 13JI0 A handsome-styled post and lantern -at n-bttdfek prleel Lantern to black finished steel with solid brass trim. Frosted glass panels with simulated cut glass star design. Wtlh 2-lnch black steel post. A beautiful buy! sale! colonial po8t and lantern Reg. 21.90 a Q88 UL Listed J.O Charge It Post adjusts from 5 to 8 feet. Oet both the weatherproof black finished steel lantern plus black finished bonderlzed steel post . . . low price! Electrical Dept. WeatheF>proof Bulb Holder Bag. 1.11 laOT Charge 1* ** Satisfaction giufanteed^ ^^our money back’ Brase with Black Outdoor Wall Light Beg. 7 J8 5418 Tapand styled with caged effect. Black steel' top, base. Brass cage. Extends 7-ln. Steeple Designed . Outdow Lantem K« 8J8 4*88 Charge It Charming outdoor wall light In black enamalad metal with brass plated trim. Whtta glass. SEARS 154 N. Saginaw Ph . FE 5-4171 sale ends Saturday . . . save during Sears Summer Sale we’re Pontiac’s hardware headquarters save 13.95 Craftsman 20-inch rotary SS Dewn ’99 Regularly $112.95 Turn the handle, push down, you’re ready to mowl Makes a wide 20-ih. cut in any speed you call for from the handle control. Wheels adjust quickly to 7 heights.* 4-cycle engine. 3-HP engine. Blade clutch. save over 55 Craftsman hand mower Self-Propelled 2^5-lip Reel Mower lut- wjs 88®^ 15 down Craftsman 4-cycle oiglne. Nick- reaistont steel blades give ciito "sclmors” cut, II-m. cut. Sprinkler Covers Up to 40x60-ft. Reg. 13.98 11.99 Dial the pattern to fit your lawn for full area, center, right or left. Waters unl-foimly. 38 88 CRRFTIHRNj Doug Ford Golf Balls For More Long Shots 83 Down Regularly 33.95 16-ln. cut. Lightweight. . . easier to push. Cuts grass smoother because 5 nick-resistant steel blades come cloee (.002 In.) to bed but don’t touch It. Oeme In and see It today at SEARS! 3-1 99 Charge It Reg. 3 far SJS New tough, thin covers! Double electrically wound with finest gum rubber. Perfectly balanced round. Designed to give you those long stoalght ehoto wiUi a “click.- Save 2.32 Men’s Golf Bag Reg. 1448 12.66 Charge It 14-seetkm beg. Zip baU, side gMlyto. Nylon stitching. £2 SHding T-bevd PlMtie Hok 4-ee.tebe white glee Specially Chosen Hardware for Many l^rkshop Needs 47* EACH Yes, only 44c each for these practical hardware needs and hand tools. Buy Dad eeveral as "little extras" for Fathers Day. They’re sure to be useful, wanted additions to his home workshop. kaifo 3 kladM tool Mt J. C. Higgins scout style tent Mith full floor * Regularly 14J8 ' Front storm flaps A two-man tent for “overnights” «r backyard fun I Tough $.74 0*. tent drill treated for water repel-lency. Nylon screen front door. Weighs only 14 lbs. —easy to carry, folds compactly. Ropes, poles. Spertliig Oeada Ferry St. Baaeasent David Bradley runabout kart loads of fun for “young set” 67“ Regularly 89.95 2-cyclo engine Dacron* Filled Sleeping Bag SSxTt-tn. 21o88 Here’S ths ticket to a youngster’s happiness. Handsome gasoline engine khrt hu easy 1-lsver forward-neotral-stop contrOL auto type steeclngUl Just Uka dad's car. Sears has a complete line of hobby kartsi _ 119 Sports Car, 2>/4-HP., 4-cycle .... r . .T .7.$99 Tey DepU Ferry St. ” Satisfaction guaranteed or your money SEARS 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 54171 7. TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 0. 1960 tfeils in Pontiac and Nearby AreasRfj'S:"^ ANDEBSON W- AVERETT Andmon V. Averett, eo, o! 2623 GlenroK Rd.. died yesterday at St. ^oaeph Mercy Hospital after an illness of seven weeks. An employe of General Motors T^uck & Coach Division for 30 years, he was a member of the Brotherhood Masonic Lodge 561, FAAM. Surviving are his wife, Rinda; a son. Glen of Pontiac: three daughters, Mrs. Edwin David-Qidcz of Madison Heists. Mrs. Norman Bladcbum of Troutdale, Ore. and Mrs. O. E. Hicks of New Orleans, La.: nine grandchildren; one great-grandchild, and a aWer. Mr. Averett’s body will be at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home until Friday morning-when it will be taken to the First Social Breth-rfti Church for aervice at 11 a.m. His body will then be taken to the Thm S. Ellis Funeral Home in Leltchfidd, Ky. fear service at 2 p^m. Sunday with burial in the Layman Cemetery. EDWIN PERRETT Edwin Perrett, of 38 Oose St., died early this morning at Bloom-8Md Hospital after a long illness. He was 91. A adf emidoyed house p^ter, he leaves a daughter, Vir^ R. Petrett of Pontiac. Mr. Perrett's body is at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. REUBEN 1. RAYNARD Reuben J. Raynard, 46, of 4925 Pontiac Lake Rd., Waterford Township, died unexpectedly yesterday at jFontiac General Hospital. He was a maintenance painter tor Baldwin Rubber Co. Mr. Raynard leaves his wife, Frances; his father, James of Sault Ste. Marie; three soiw, James of Pontiac, Floyd of Carbon-dale, HI. and Mark of San Diego, Chdif.; two daughters, Mrs. Walter McCullough of Pontiac, and Mrs. Clifford T^lor of Rochester, N.Y., two grand^dren; two sisters and a brother. Service will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Coats Funeral Home witfi burial in the Crescent Hills Cemeteiy. FRANK V. HARMON SOUTH LY(Mf - Service lor Frank V. Hannon, 64, of 118 Woodland Dr., wdll be at 2 p.m. tomorrow iir the Phillips Faneral Home. Burial will be in South Lyon Cemetery. Mr. Harmon died unexpectedly Of a heart attack at his home Tuesday. He was emi^ed at the Midiigem Seamless Tube Co. at the time of his death. Surviving are three daughters. JIrs. Virs^tia Stoll of Drayton Plains. Mrs. Louise Benlan of NorthvUle and Mrs. Ann M. Cooper of Ann ^Irbor; a son, William A. of Pontiac; five grandchildren and one great-grandchildren. Three brotiiers, AUoi of Web-berviUe. Thomas of Winchester. Ky. and Hunter of Milford, and four sisters, Mrs. Bess Puckett, Mrs. Mayme Puckett and Mrs. Lorene Adams, all of Pontiac, and Mrs. Eva tiickett of Drayton Plains, also survive. THEODORE MERSINO OXFORD TOWNSHIP-Service for Theodore Mersino. 78, of 915 Lake Dr., will be at Saturday in St. Joseph Catholic Church. Lake Orion. Burial will be in Oxford Cemetery. Mr. Mersino died today in Goodrich Hospital, Goodrich, after a lengthy illness. He was a retired farmer. The Rosary will be said at m. Friday In the Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Surviving are three Msters and three brothers, Mrs. Elizabeth Longton, Miss Anna Meraino, both of Detroit. Mrs. Margaret Morris of Pontiac, Paul of Detroit, and C2iristion and Mathew, both of Ox-toid. MRg. ELLSWORTH RASMUSSEN WALLED LAKE — Service for fra. EUswtxth (Lottie) Rasmussen. 50. of 2916 Bensteln St., will be held at Riduudson-Bird Ftmer-al Home here at 1 p.m. Saturday with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. Mrs. Rasmussen died Tuesday! in Harper Hospital, Detroit, after' a brief illness. She was the proprietor of Lottie’s Restaurant here. Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Mrs. Alvin Parsons of Walled Lake; two sons, Roland Arndt and Allen Arndt, boih of Royal Oak; seven brothers, seven Wers and nine grandchildren. AVdN^ TOWNSHIP -Castor, '‘a plucky six • year • old twngiter stricken with leukMnla m years' ago, yesterday lost his fight against the diAd disease. He died in St. Joseph Mercy Ifo*-pltal, Pontiac. A A ♦ When friends and neighbors _J' ] conducted a pcnchlight espipaign to help pay his medical elpenses. Canisters also were placed in rea stores so that others not contacted at home could add their {support. Parents of Johnny’s elass- Leidiigtoa Park. Md.; and a fefother, Ronald, in the U.S. Navy, ■tattoned hi Norfolk. Va. it - It Savke will be at 2 p.ra. tomorrow at Moore Chapel d Spatks-Griffin' Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Burial will be in White Chaj^ Idemorial Cemetery, Troy. rallied to the eaose, and a benefit play was given In his behalf. Johnny, whose proper name wai John Wesley Castor, leaves his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Castor of 2965 Hartline St.; Mrs. James Morgan Santa Ft. VM.. was 16RL R was pro-Unk» MSU's 'AAr. Broodwo/ Dies of Heart Attack EAST LANSING ID - Donald 0. Budl,. Michigan State Unhrerdty speech professor known to a wide central Michigan audience Broadway,” was fatally stricken with a heart attack at his home last night. He was 53. Since 1938, Buell had concluded weekly radio show on the theater over MSU's station WKAR. His weekly show "Curtain GMng Up" .was a fixture on tele^ion station WMSB, also university operated. \aM War. W was 01 tha|fay the Confederates. » caidtiradl Hie nuae ot FlotMa is tn |the Spanish ’feast Of flowers.*' BRAKES RELINED Orchord Loke Rd. (Cor. roioeroph ld„ Poaiia& Hex! lo Park^na iMlgaraat NO CASH NttOED lOW TERMS FEderal 3-7936 open s to 7 daily-s roe Saturday GOLD CREST BRAKE SHOPS Nasser Forced to Bow to Lesser of Two Evils One of the chief greeters wss Wen Van Nai«. ambassador of Nattwiallst China and dean of po in Athens. The UAR st lint objected to does not recognise NoHonoHst eWns. It finolly occepted him because the next senior diplomat la the 8«\1el ambassador—and the Greeks objected to hkn. The U.S. auto industry uses 75 per cent at the total U.S. plate glass output. THE MOST EXCIMBTHUe THAT EYE£ HAPPENED TO A HEARING AID I FftalM EVERY ANQL£... SUMMER, TRIMMER.. TMB NhW ZhNITM ■VROLASS HBARINO AID* . Nttursl. oomforuble At lo your head oomour • Prcciiion Anstr-tip volume control • On-oir iwitch • 4-tnmi»ior power drenitrv • No deaglini cord OBWANT HEABnC SEBVICE 11 W.LowmkMSL PE 8-2733 "pDaiidc's Oaff Aalkorii*V XaniR Hamimt Aid Panfor" Sears welcomes the American Transit Corp. to Pontiac ... complete bus service available to downtown Pontiac now! washes denims, sheers! Kenmore automatic washer Shorter Wash, Rinse and Spin Time for Dainty Fabrics ’188 only $5 down ' Top SaTingat Specially Priced for This Event at Sears Tomorrow ^ 3 water levels let you pre-set water level to fit any load. Hot, warm and cold wash water temperatures for every fabric. Porcelain finished counter-top, lid and tub resist rust, stain. WmIim Any Fabric Separate automatic •ettinn on dial to wash Anims, aheert. Kenmore cuts a big 14-inch swath of floor brilliance Only 49“ Only $5 down Get gleaming floors quickly with an extra wide 14-inch sweep. Twin 7-in. brushes cover 17% more area than ordinary 12-in. polishers. save *20 on Kenmore 36-inch gas range with SEE-IN door Regular $149 129 88 $5 DOWN Balance on Sears Easy Payment Plan Visi-Bake window in oven door \ lets you see in without loss of heat; big 16-in. oven. Burners, oven, smokeless broiler all ignite automatkally; 2 large storage compartments; clock, timar. Buy now! 12 cu. ft. G>ldspot refrigerator 5-year unit guarantee Dial defrost control 17» 188 15 DOWN End food spoilage and waste! Replace your old refrigerator with this 1960 Coldspot at Sears sale price. Has 4 door shelves, spHce for cartons. Silvertone TV in Fiberglas* Cabinet Rag. IS9JBS 139S8 slim, low modem styling in new "Silvertone TV console Now it costs so little for new factory-fresh Kenmore Cleaners! Kenmore gets the deep-down grit most other cleaners can’t reach and fluffs your rugs to like-new beauty in just minutes. Cleans furniture, too! Sears 1960 Price! 28 88 Regular 199.95 Dual speakers 178 :88 16 cu. ft. G)ldspot freezer stores 573 lbs. of food $5 DOWN Only $5 down Vaiuum D*pL llain Phot 21-in. (overall diagonal) screen; 261 sq. in. viewable area. Fine picture and sound with tint^, removable safety glass; dual hi-fi speakers. Mahogany finished hardboard cabinet. Bkmd 189.88. Shop S^rs today and save! TV 'nd Radio Dapl.. Main float Our Best Transister Pocket Model I^dio Bag. 34SS 28^8 Cbari* n U«M penili^t or Mercuiy bot-tortez. 5 ye«r guarantee on fix translaton. Fokl-away handle. Black, silver color trim. R43guUr 289.95 Lock and keys 259 $10 DOWN 88 Porcelain en^pieled interior. Magnetic gasket seals in cold. Grille-type shelves for free circulation of air; swing-out basket; juiee dtn rack; interior light. "AU’s-weir light shows food is zero safe. AppSoace Dept., Mofo ioseaieal. "Satisfaction guarantee or your money back” SEARS 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 9, 1960 THIRTEEN Ex-Shen¥s Trial Sd June 21 This Time whOt invMtigatiag 'a gn-llrlag ioeidHit at her home. BIUBCEGON « •. Fotrner Mi» kcsn Sheritf Arthur Davie, who •pent « houre io jail before appeaUm his May U aaaault and batteiy.oaavtction and »May sen> tence, lets a new trial June SL ★ ★ w vmat Oreult Judge Ardde McDonald of Hastings has been named to preside at die aessioiis which are expected to continue vp to thrsa days. ★ * Davis is tree on HOO bond to wait the new trial. He was convicted by a Mutkegon Municipal Court Jiity on the charge lodged by a Whitehall Asks for Moro Safety, Lets Charm on Planes who elniiaed he i Alchemist Hit Secret oi China 2S0 Years Ago WASHINGTON (AP) - AMiael stewardesses are given OMre trainihig In charm than in safety, a Senate suboomittee hu been toU. Rmrland K. Quinn Jr., prestmt of the Air JJde Stewards and Stewardesses Assn., urged that basic training and testing reqiiire- FRANKFURT, Germany (UPI) —Just 2$0 years ago this week s chemist crsched one of die bestJRpt secrets of dw mystic East—how to make Chfa A pressure suit worn by'pUots St aldtude taiBates sutomsde-sl^ when pressure inside the ^sne is lost. August hoped to'keep the aecret of aUna-maUng in the pUte Saxony and thus corner die'world market and bolster the state’s sag- TV secret eventually leaked out, but to this day Saxony, and the cssde at Melaren, remain a center of the Chlna-tnaUiv industry. Johann Friedridi Boettger, self- Bt)ied “alchemist and ' ‘ ~ bam working problsm for years. He ai on June 6, ITlO-huT tl did him no I proogHly locked the Flint Lowyor to Hood Genosoo County Bor FLINT (UPD-Robert T. Stewart,' a native of Flint, was elected president of the Geneaee County Bar Assn, at the group’s annual Louis B. TraycOc was elected vice president of the county ai atlon. No Money Donn no payment until October 1st on Sears modernization credit plan! Save *35! pre-8ea8on heating sale . . . lowest prices of the year SAVE NOW! on a whole new WARM AIR SYSTEM or a new OIL BASEMENT FURNACE UFE-CXAD Heating Exchanger Guaranteed 15 Years Guarantee Your Heating Comfort .with a Complete New Warm Air HOMART System InstaUed Now Your old heating plant will be removed. We replace it with brand new, efficient, modem HOMART equipment designed to really heat your home comfortably. Every step is handled by capable trained experts, in whom you can have complete confidence. AU work is done from blueprints and specifications. Frequent inspection assures the finest workmanship. Ail plans and estimates are free, so you could install it yourself. But we feel the best way is to have the materials and labor and financing all in one contract and let Sears take full responsibility for the job. Now, Save 10% to 15% on the Entire Job OIL FURNACE Monthly Paymenta as low as *17 per month Our Best HOMART Basement Model a0,000 BTU. Regidariy $259 During this Sale, Scars will include an Indoor-Outdoor Control System with your installation at no extra cost. SAVE $85 *229 • New Fiberfrax ehemker Umt ende eMt fernmUaii e Ovenbe Newer and OMter far air eoadlttMing e Automtle FOtor-Mlader eigaali a dirty fIMer • iHgii piieeuri. Ugh-effleieaBy burner aavea fuel e iuertated Jaekat balds the heat. Vh Hated. Onr Best Gas Basement Fumaes 120,000 BTU. Regular 299.00 .... $269 NO MONEY DOWN and IVo Payment ’III October 1st ON ALL HOJUART HOME HEATING ... just ask about Sears Modernising Oeclit Plan, up to 36 months to pay. 1st choice HOMART Heating rt built to be best! LET SEARS GET YOUR GAS PERMIT! AVAILABLE NOW 1 Come In or call for a free heating estimate! Sears will arrange for your gas permit! Ask any salesman about it. ONE EASY CONTRACT CAN COVER THE ENTIRE JOB ONE YEAR FREE SERVICE ON SEARS INSTALLATIONS LET SEARS ARRANGE YOUR COMPLETE INSTALLATION Sears takes full responsibility for every detail: estimates, blueprints, plans, all materials, labor and the financing. All work guaranteed. You must be satisfied. Your heating, automatic control^ adl insUdlation materials and labor can be included in just one Modernizing Credit Plan Contract. Ask about this convenient one-stop, shopping for home heating. We guarantee your heating comfort, in writing, with every installation. We service ail HOMART Heating and in season, we maintain 24-hour-a-day service 7 days a week. Sears servicemen are Sears employees! PHONE RIGHT NOW FOR AN APPOINTMENT . . . Ask a Sears Heating Department expert to call at your home. lie will estimate your heating needs and give you a FREE indoor-outdoor thermometer. FEderal 54171 Complete Pipe Insnlntiiig Kit Oootrols ■WMtInt: bast lOM. N-ft. at S-ta. vHiyt ma sad nber^ msIcrisL _________Molded White ToOet Seat 309 3hMs»iq Bmirti chippins, wiU not Rtg. 3.99 Honor-hilt Gas Water Heater Glass-Lined Tank 59’® 30-gaI. Glass-lined tank guaran-ieed ten years, ^ieient gas burner. Adjustable thermostat controls the temperature. Insulated jacket holds heat A.G. A. aK>roved. Low price. Others op to .. . .99.95. guaranteed or your moiyy back” SEARS 154 N. Saginaw St. Ph. FE 54171 on purchase of any installed siding! Alnminnm Siding protects, beautifies as low as No Money Down 50 f rat MONTH Fire-resistant, withstands yean of wear. Saves you money by cutting down on paint bUla—saves you work, too! Let Sears arrange for installation . . . labor and materials guaranteed for 10 years. Make your home one of the outstanding ones in the neighborhood. BuUdiiv lUterUb, Penr Sk BaMment Worth *35! Clip this coupon it's worth $35 on the purchase of any installed siding job. OFFER EXPIRES JUNE 18, 1960! HOMART Awning Windows for Better Ventilation As Low As.... HOMART 264irtt. Galvanised Box-Type Guttering 209 10-ft. Rainpipc, 10-ft. . . . .2.34 Replace that worn out guttering with rugged HOMART galvanized guttering! Gives custom appearance to home! Needs no soMering I H Round, U-ft.........L» Charxe Homart ‘Tilt-Action’ Aluminum Windows Aluminum windows open up together with the turn of a handle. No window overlapping, gives you better ventilation. Aluminum screen attadiw eazUy 1 Weatherstripped. 1488 Homart Aluminum Combination Door Beg. SSJt 31.^^ ' from inside. 220-lb. Pure Asphalt 34n-l Shingles 289 Long-Ufe HOMART Steel Garage Door •xf-ft HOMART Folding Attic Stairs Bears will tauUU and zuaran-tw your new roof. No Money Down and up to W months to pay on Sears MOP. S9« Add Safety With Adjustable RailingB 5»» Includes dlaidiragm.type presnor, motor, lightweight Workmaster Finest Nylon Brush 444 Sturdy Wood Exteiftion Ladder “iU. 10“ Sears best Snowhite 1-coat self-cleaning house paint 533 galloa CHARGE IT • Regular 639 gaL • Miklew-resistant outwean ordinary b.---------- S tunes! BrtsUes an locked In rubber. Chisel tq>. Save! r gnMle lumber. Paint Dept. Sean I Covers even black in just one coat. Seasonal rains cause amazing “chalking” action that actually wifkf paint Inrighter than before. 1-coat house paint is also available in colors. **Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS 1S4 N. Snlnaw Si. Phone FE S-S171 X FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 9. 1960 Amtrlean Stofing Co. S«h Hospital Lino «ikl the fun new line will be shown Am 29 at the American Hospttal Assn, convention at San fVaacisco. ■ GRAND RAPIDS Oh-Ameiicaii Seating Co. of Grand Rapids, leading manufacturer of institutional furniture, disclosed it starting a new division to produce hospital room furniture. James M. VerMeulen, jrealdent American Seating sold hearly 40 million dollars worth of institutional equipment last„year. For 75 years it has engaged in pro-(hiction of fixed and portable scaU for theaters, schools, churches, baseball parks, buses, subways and for armed foroea. Kelvinotor Inks Pact With Japanose Firm iETRC^T (UPIi-Kolvinator International Cforp. reported Wednesday that a licensing agreement between it and Matsushita Electric Industrial Go., Ltd., ol Japan, has been offlcially validated by the Japanese govero- Under the Matsu- shita will build Keivinator-desiffied compresaor asMoibUes for incorporation in iU own brand of refrigerators and will also build complete. Leonard and KeMnator brand houaehoU refrigerators for diatributioa in Asian markets. Kelvlnator, asubsidlaryof American Motors Oorp., will provide dlatrfoutlon^MdlitieB towSooth-east Asia. . U. of M. Is Prosenting' Six Honorary DogrMS ANN ARBOR « - The Univer shy of Michigan will award six honorary degrees at commen(» ment exercises Saturday in Mldi-Igan Stadium. U. of M. Presideiit Harian Hatcher will present degrees to Sir Geoftrey Crowther, the commencement speaker, chairman of the Central Advlaory Council on Education in London; Gravel, retised executive director of the American Council of Leaned Societiea; James J. Sweeney, director of the Sokxnon R. Guggenheim Museum; Willard L Tborp, economist, Antherst College; U. Gen. Arthur G. Trudrou, Army research and development chief; and James A. Van Allen, physiciat, Iowa State Univeisity. Ucoiuo Plotos Logoi but Noodod Explaining AUSTIN, Tex. (liPI) - ante highway patrolmen thought motorists had found a new way to cheat the state when they noticed some cars bearing licenae plates with Qty a radical change in design. The State Department of Public neing Safety had to put out a harry-t« tidal totin'* an' unexpected increaae le sales had forced ttie atnif for 1961 plates. new bank vault In'KeW Tort wei^ 985 torn. It is a» id to bedrock to keep it ttoi& ; washed away In cane of | wave. ' Phone fEdttal 3-7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW AT WKC's EVERYDAY LOW miCES YOU LKE TO PAY NO DOWN PAYMENT-Many Months to Pay Admiral i960 AUTOMATIC DEFROST 2-IN-1 Refrigerator and Freezer This new 2-door Admirol Cus-torn Duol-Ternp Refrigerator-Freezer Combination hos a 13 cu. ft. capacity. Giont subzero freezer holds 78-pounds. Automatic defrost. ‘369 ISew 1960 SPEED QUEEN AUTOMATIC WASHEB iid MATCHDIO DRYER The mcchanksl design and coratruction of this washer and dr^r are identlcatly the same as the highest priced Speed Queen units. You will be making no sacrifice by taking advantage .gf this low prict offer. BOTH WASHER and DRYER $ 398 No Money Down — Mony Months to Pay BIG UYCLE POWER MOWER ffitk FRKEI-YIP NITIOIS A Big Deluxe RfCOIl STARTER AND IHROT TIE ON HANDLE Model iO Super-Rowered , Clinton 4-Cycle ' Engine • Recoil Starter with Finger Tip Control • No Mixing Oil and Got • Adjusts to Any Cutting Hoight • Performonco Inturod for 1 Full _y«or $4^88 NO MONEY DOWN M.OO Weekly! 6 TRANSISTOR POCKET RADIO Hos 2" dynamic spreoker, unbreakable cose, is fully guaranteed! Complete with leather cose, earphones, battery, extro ontenna. FREE wu PM with TMT*! SByply el wui for pvchiM el SHETLAND Hmi Palishci Automatically scrubs floors—waxes and liihas—even sham- 29“ 50e Weekly PURITBON FORTiLIU PURIFIER THAT CLEARS STALE All ELECTROMICAUT Mikes Air iMltkier iM ClMiiig '38 50c Weekly Installation, lust plug It in, that's;, all. it ln< hales stale eir, dust; recirculates clean air. Fill CipicitT MAYTAG Wringer Washer Here's your chance to own 0 genuine Maytag washer at a f a n 10 stkally low price. Has all the quality features that hove sold over 9,-000,000 Moytags. Delireredr S^WV/'/^ iHiwn ADMIRAL ir PerlaUe See, Hear, Own, Enjoy this thrilling Big-Screen TV nOwl New Flatter IL4* Picture Tube, ends distortion. Rolleway Starsd extra. *169 New I960 WEUILT Gas Ranges by Makers of DETROIT JEWEL DsHverif A letlaDed MO MOliEV DOWN One glance speaks volumes for fhe gtorfiorous new styling of these exciting Welbilt Gas Ranges. Every new luxury feature for faster, easier, gourmet cooking. Guaranteed by WKC manufacturer. Your Choree el 30-iaek ei 3S-iack Pwpikr Sin Mtitli /' 1 ■, ... j ± nJCd 1 n'AiJi.oo - 1 s*-—^— —^ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. ~ FIFTEEN Civil War Spirit Reborn in County RIFLE RANGE, CIVIL WAR ffms — The 8th Michigan Cavalry of the Union v^rmy hM been revived by a group of area men as the Civil War Centennial ap-'' proaches. Everything about the “new" Unit la ai authentic as poasiUe, including Itreanns. Shown here in a l^gular practice session under the guiding cavalry sabre Toledo toTiy Malls Again ^his Year TOLEDO ID - Iiiitanation of temporaiy pedestrian malls in a second trial lop downtown Toledo wSs approved Wednesday by a majority of Oty Council. ' A 5.2 vote by Oayncil’s commit- of 2nd OofporM Donald E. Pickens (d FintfEcr an (from left) Privates Michael Schortch, of East Detroit, Stewart R. Johnstone of Madison Heights. Terry Roadt ami his son Terry Jr., both of Birmingham. They an about to blast a minie ball from their 1863 modd .S8 caUber Springfield naisle-loading muskets. will be given another trial. Last summer, a four-block ana of the downtown section was used to Aiet an For a time it appeared tl the esperimeat weald ael Toleds Assodatea, a merrhaats’ ----However,-*DTA approved a revised mad proposal last week and the pilstter was sgbnitted to aty Ostmcil. In last year’s trial, the city - blocked H^flc In the four-block mall ana. Some objections resuH-ed because of traffic congestion. .,* ♦ * The new proposal, which would cost an estimated $20,000, proyides a aeries of nudls on Adams street. Malls wouhi be buUt in each si three blocks, but croei would be left open. Construction is expected to start after July 1. Narrow Coverage of Wage Measure WjjiSHINGTON (APl-The ! at«'''Labor Committee has voted to eliminate from minimum wage coverage 461JIIU laundry workers, hotel and resjattrant employ and motion pfctun empioyM. They were originally covered in the bill'the committee is drafting. Prevloualy the comittee voted to elhnlnaw from ooverage 3,601,00^' employe^of imah retail and service estabtidunents. •r Just about 100 yean _ was talk of something that peoplg' called a “war between A man named Lincoln was a dark horse for nomination to the presidency on the ticM of the new Republican Party. Confederate money was a rumor in the South and some LU7 men, the majority from (bounty area, were soon to become part of a famous unit of a then nonexistent army—the 8th Mic.ii-gan Cavalry of the Union Army. The flavor of these events sad the memory of thooe covalrymen hi currently being revived by IS asen m Oakland County. A “new” 8th Michigan Cavalry has been formed wider the capable command of Sgt. Frank A. UmP-ert, who in everyday life is Quaiv termaster l.C. Frank A. Limpert, Navy, recruiter at the Pontiac Navy Reciting Station. They have garnered much ofTfie authentic uniforms, firearms, equipment and customs of their predmssors. Holding weekly drills snd rifle 1 practice, tke unit to ready lor eombnt ss the ~ Greenfield Village and then travel east for a national sldrmiah, probably at Gettysburg. They have been invited to a re-iwctment of the first Battle of Bufl Run—or Manassas, depending on whether you’re blue or gray-on July 21, 1961. TTiis ia the first and battle planned by the (^il War Centennial O>mmission in Washington, D.C. Umpert’s brother Donald Limpert is a private in the unit as is Donald Urapert’a son Bruce who acts as drummer boy. All are from Troy. Ray RaSsefl of Rochester, a His great-grandfather and greal-grandaacle were members of the Other members of the unit are Pvts. Warm G. Osman and Glenn Simpaon of Waterford Township, Terrence Roach and his son Tmiy Jr. of Birmin^uun, Stewart Joim-stone of Madison Heights, Bamy Pelletier of Warren and Ifichael Schonch’'of East Detroit. * * * The unit uses U.S. Army regida-tiona of 1863 as its final authority, right down to the manual of arms. Their firearms consist mainly of 1863 noodel .» caliber Springfield muzzle-loading muskets— and the new’’ cavalrymen know how to uidle the gun. It shoots minie balls (lead bullets invented Iqr a Frenchman named Minie). ★ ★ ★ But even the authenticity is dwarfed by the color and spirit and determination of these men to represent Oakland County when the Civil War Centennial gets under way. to lake part la CMI War Orii- FULL MIE88 DfSPECTION — “Get that rifle up straight,” says Sgt. Frank A. Umpert (right), commander of the 8th Michigan Cavalry. The cavalrymen of 1960 are plenty aerious about looUng as inappy aa the famed cavalrymen of the 1860’s were. In their fidl-drcss Union Army uniforms, lined up for insp^tion/ are Corporal Donald E. Pickens and Pvt. Stewart Johnstone, Wtjw even spoils an “authentic" mustache. \ Michigan Consolidotwd Union R«j«cts Offer f)ETROIT im — Seekinc pay Increases more equitable to workers in the lower pay brackets. Michigan Consolidate Gas Go. employes, members of AFL-CIO Local 22171, last night rejected a ■ettWment worked out with the company in negotiations. 17* employes voted down the tWo-]^r package deal 1,104 to 190. It have given them pay raises ranging from 5M to 12H cents an hour the first year, followed by a straight 3H per ceirt increaae the second year. jFidel Saps^ U. S. Again — Nastily HAVANA (AP) - FkM Qatm declared today the United States poses a greater threat to Cuba than earthquakes did to Chile. The Cuban prime minister target in a post-midnight dockside speech sending ott a boatload of relief supplies (o Chile’s quake victims. Castro led pff by terming the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki “assassination’’ and •cold blooded aggresalop against (he civilian population.” ’Then he said Cuba faced worse evils than the CMlean earthquake — “great intematianal Interests, who. in their egoism and blindness, didn’t vacillate in hurling those atomic ■* over two cities, asaassinat-hundreds and hundreds of now^ wticBR ■nth MOKUney of Clevaland WM elected second dun of ti* A««7icw -ptanventioB at Rgctastier, N- TU-flhe in the wife of the Rev»^, Wade H. MdCliiney, paafir o|; Antioch Raflliai CjMivh to dev* latoL 9* aiao k tito<0rat lliWin ever etoifled an official of the conventioii. Like the original 8th Cavalry, the unit was mustered into service in May in Mount Clemens with its colon being presented by the Daughters of Union Veterans, Tent No. 9. of PonUac. , MANY DATES SET On May 14 and IS the unit participated in the 21st National Skirmish at Fort Lee. Va., and this Saturday it will travel to Tiffin, Ohio, to take part in a skirmish sponsored by the 111th Ohio Volunteers Infant^ Unit. ^ They will drive to the skirmish, knowing that their jobs snd fsm-Uics await them back home Monday morning. It wasn’t so for the ortgtaal 8tk Cavalry that left Oaktaml 97 years aga aa horaeback wttli orders to pursue the rebel raider Brig. Gen. John Morgan. They, too, left -jobs and loved ones behind, but for many there was no "Monday morning" The'^original ^IT never had a blemish on its record. The pursuit of Morgan continued through Indiana, Ohio and Kafltucky. After several forced marches df 48 hours, the 8th overtook Morgan and forced his surrender. MUSTERED OUT ’The unit fought in many battles in Kentucky, Tennessee and the entire western theater of the CMI War, and distinguiabed the regiment many times with their valisnt fighting spirit and determination. On 3m. 28, 1865, the 8to Mk^ gan Caihdry was mustered out of active service and, after being “litddoff,lhe^-* Today’s version\ia small spirited. Umpert. working with his 1st Corporal Jon Phlllipa of Royal Oak and 2nd Corporal Donald Pickens 7« Fraser, has molded a unit with “bookings” more than « year in advance. Tbey ManUtee and Camp Perry, Olile, next month, as well as a ^emonNtraltnn-ln riawaon on July «. ---- In September they skirmish at Boris, a 600-pound Siberian tiger the Detroit Zoo. has developed neurosis. H* I* under tranquilizer treatment and appears to be afraid of his shadoA. Before the tranquilizer was resorted to, all kinds of tricks were tried In the effort to snap Boris out of H. ' ' Zoo Tiger Turns Chicken - Come On, Boris, Snarl However, Frank G. Meinnis, boss (rf the zoo, expressed confidence today that alt eventually would be well with Boris. Hopefully, MeInnis said "He should be out there enjoying the sunshine again soon." Boris, under a sedative, is in and neither did a flooding of the «t. 'Siberian tigers are excellent swimmers," Meinnis pointed out. Finally, the suu’s traaqaiUier gua was bruvght into phiy. The gun fires darts coated with a sedative. Boris was shot in the He went to sleep. Keepers put him on a stretcher and returned him to his cage. “These things happen,” Meinnis sighed. job to get him bade there. Recently Itorts balked at ad wanned. For days he wonitoi’t State Liquor Sales Up LANSING (to-Qu* s^ of liquor to I^totaled^^^l^ more than the figure lor the same month to 1959—the Michigan Liquor Control Commiasion reported. Increased sales were chalked up for whisky, gin, rum, branAy. vodka, specialties, prepared cocktails and wine. “Then we left him alone, hoping he’d go out by himself,’’ MeIntos lid. Suddenly Boris leaped* tlit jumped into an exhibit moat, and ran to a corner of the moat where he cowered by himself for a week. GOOD. trril’T SHOT Meinnis said talk did no good Crossfield Uninjured as XIS Blows Apart EDWARDS AIR FORO! BASE. Calil. (AP)-An X15 rocket plane exploded Wednesday night as its piM made a ground test of the powerful engine expected to take the research craft to speed i altitude records. W * * Test pilot Scott Crossfield, the controls, was unhurt. ‘The ptaiw was extensively amagad. lu builder, north American Aviation, said the explosion will delay the X15 program “two mr three montha." ♦ * * The blast 11;^ the forward section, lncluding^QroS8field•8 cockpit. 20 feet .icross IKvconCreto apron. HEADS ECUADOR — Jose Maria Velasco Ibarra won his fourth term of office as President of Ecuador in nationwide balloting Monday. His Velas-quiamo Party won a working majority in ^h houses of Congress. The hurricane of Ecuadorean politics beat the nearest of his competitors two to one. Castro said future history would deal most severel)v with those who had no justificatioa for the bombings because no military installa-fiOna were involved. Castro said it was Socialists Victors in Saskatchewan maj^'it bad to the ^ Ugialalure but witli a tower IgMtotIftte. of the popifihr vole. KKEF8 THE BEAT — It!s p tot easier to keep ia step with a tfanmmer beattog out te cadenoe. Theao lAembera of toe "new” EiiMh Bfichigan Chvttory ot the Union Arftay get the dnunmer aquared away beiora drilling. They are (from left) Sgt. Frank JL Limpert, group commander; Bruce Umpert, j>i* nephew, and fiw drununer boy; 1ft COrpoml Jon Phtllips Royal (tok; and Bamy PkBrtler o( Warroi. Tlw UmperU five to‘IVoy.. V MSUO-Adult Education Make Education Your Viwatioh! NINE COURSES - NON ^REDIT . NO PREll^QUISlTES *—O'- Helen Kovach j Landscape Drawing anA Fainting — Renee Radell Jto W vrite (iBri* eWBpMitloM tad letten. Th« >(i>- ) mod»t»d. Include! crMtUc or. r»pre!cnU!Uon»l Inlcr- *•>' to tolM to undenuod better the RutilOo ) preiMIcn oecordUif to Uir stao, of dcrrlopment of the poet^. their culture m thetr custouie. There ertll j puUeuler etadrnt. 1.4 P.M^ndeyt—S u^e-br|ln-to l^nelec trelnins W ceoeerMtloo end In ncUre ^ Bins June 11. Pee: IMM. uncUcel Tocebnlarr. Thic cleu will be held Tnnedb* ^ eeepinte iroa 1 to • p ni. udeuru June *1. Ppe; Ml Life Drawing and Life Fainting— Rnssian (H)—Dr. Heten Kovach -beptnnlns June I*. Pee: UJ.M. Effective John Cunhna, PhD Carmen Elena Galvagno, MA, Native <' ET*2^**. !L .'Argeatlnena - - -- - PrlniBrilf fnr ctadenU who tank apnnleh dnrlnt the -nr^ qaaiier. bnt lor bet>a doubt could be found in thia dectidh year. Nationaliat ferver ia running high lor reduc- Reeeatly Soviet Deputy ftemier Alexei N. Koeygln atop^ off Oommuniat-iiifeated Redle, Brazil’a northeant aector, on hia way home to Moacow from Argentine iadependenoe celebrationa in Buenoe Airea. Koeygin and hie party got an official wdooma from the Per-nainbiico etate governor, Cld Sam-paio, and a ride Into the dty. He aald the Soviet Union 1 that a good etep waa Jakn when BradI and fte Soviet fiHng the deal a convenience, providee an exchange of 100 million doUara worfii of gooda on both aidea over the next fiuee yeara. tt ia minor compared with the buaineaa Braxil carriee on w ' United Statef and other Weetem West Berlin Attorney Dies in Soviet Prison BERLIN (AP) - Dr. Walter Linae, a Berlin attorney kidnaped in an open atreet by Oommunieb eight yeara ago, has died in jail in the Soviet Union, the West German Red Ooea reported' today. A ★ * The Soviet Union denied all knoadedge of Linae, but the Soviet Red Ooaa finally informed the Weit German Red Ooss diod Dec. 1% 1003, at the age of «. ★ ★ A Linae was a leading official the anti-CommuniBt League Free Juristo, dedicated to exposure of poeecution of political opponents by the Communist dicta- snatched by German CJommunlat agesits in the atreet outside hia house in the American sector ' Berlin on July S, 1952. Troopers TransfwrBd ~ EAOT LANSING (l» - "^te , Police have announced the transfers of ate troopers effective July 1 inriudinr. William R. Dregec, Battle Greek to Bay Qty; Horace W. Hosmer, White Pigeon to Newberry; Harry R. Houseman, Neww berry to White Pigbon; Allan R. Hoxie, ^ (3ty to Paw Paw; Darwin E. Nyatrom, Paw Paw to Traverse aty; and Jack G. San-dinky, New BufUo to Waytoad. ^ of coB^ fly torough fitocoamoa, but most ire too faint to be seen from the earth, reporta the Nattonel Geographic Society. WK€, lOU N.SAGI.\AW...FI<: :t-7ll 1 ZlhSOFABED DELUXE GROUP FREE! 22-Pitc« Muticol Tm or Coffoo Entomblo WiHi This Sofa M PurchoM LOOK WHAT YOU GET! • UW, DEEP, OOMFORTABLE SOFA THAT OPEHS TO A DOUBLEBEDI oURBE,MATQHINB LOIHIE BHAIR • POERN BLORD OOOKTAIL TABLE o 2 MODERH BLOHD STEP-EHD TABLES • 2 BIB CHIHA • BASE TABU LAMPS a 22 PO. MUSICAL TEA SH PLASTIC aud TWEED PLATFORM ROCKER ALL X aervatlona of comets as early a« 2NI B.c y WKC, IOHN..^AIiJI\AW...FE ,1-71 If THE PONTIAC PRESS. tHURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1960 seventeen Early Census Figures Show Suburbs' Spurt 6 Times Cities‘ This Fanner Wanted /U. S. Consideration WASHINGTON (AP) - PitdbnJ-mey flgiBvs fgr S o( tlM Mtka’g IffSer populatloo centers tinWr^ millions, tiie New York a lumjuo to 14H millkn and the ceat^-tnm mm to 370.610. 4k times as last as cities' in ttie Iiast 10 years. While the record ol the 27 may not prove absolutely tyidcal, it pointed up a well.estabUabed migration to Suburbia that wUl he measured exactly alter final 1900 oteisus figures are available. * A * ♦ An Asaociated Press canvass today covered population centm which were among the first tor which both city and metropolitan atea statistics were available. Scahered through all sectk>n8 ol the country, they showed this 10-year record: The 27 cities had a popuiation gain ol 6.6 per cent-up 1,243,294 to 20:026,946. During the same PhiladripUa area from 3,671,000 to 414 mniinw Cities among the 37 which diowed major popuiation gains included Afianta, Charlotte, N.C., Coiumbm^ Ohio, Des Moines, dlanapoUs. Milwaukee, NorlOtk. Va.. Seattle, Tampa, Fb. and Wkfaita. Kan. dues had an increase of 41.4 per cent-up 4,787,479 to 16,328,177. 11 LOSE Of the 27 ciUes, 11 lost population between 1950 and I960 as fes-idenU moved from old. crowded secUons into the outlying areas. All the metropolitan areas showed aliible ^pulation gains. Shrinking ciUes ol the Ust'r Baltimore, Detroit, Jackaom fTa., Jersey Oty and Newark, N,J.. New York City, Phlladei-phla, Proyidence, R.I., Ridimond, Va., Rochester. N.Y., and WorceS- Philadelphia, lor example, dropped below the twomiUion —while Detroit showed an even mark —from 2jm.605 to 1354,686 sharper lose — from 1,848,568 to 1,678,613. ^ The count in New York Qty is eantinuing but census officials tiisre expect a final total of about 7,770,000 compared with the 1960 level of 7391,957. AREAS INCREASE Even in these major cities, the metropolitan areas showed si^ili-eant increases.' The Detroit increased from 3 million to 344 tAdrsitluwtDl) For Ariilm's Fool Um Ksrotolytic Action Kiupaa M (I . Thtm vsti CORNS T. VikdOy WHrr« Mi U'Scholls hno pdds year gain ol more than 100 pa: By contrast, Jaefcaonvtile, Fla., k»t 5300 people and dropped toj, 199,264. However, like most other dUea, the Jackaonvilie metropolitan area showed a big increase, from 301029 to 4S0.S84. DES MOINES tfr-A censu er reasoned there must be re was a farm with-two late cars in the yard and even a private swimming pod. * ♦ Yet the fanner bad written on the census form that he didn’t cold nraning water in 1 WWW 'i^eave it the way l filled it out,’* the farmer told ti taka:. *Tm not going to have the nt thinking the farmer ia well olf.” . The enumerator changed form to make it corred. It was the Duke of Wellington who said, “TTie Lnrd’s Prayer contains the sum total o4 religion and Granddaughter of Bryan to Run Again in West LOS ANGELES (AP) - 1 William J ( Bryan will try again tp.im-the Republican incumbent to CUfomia’ DieUlct. Mrs. Rudd Brown. 39. a tail race ‘Dieeday — wttfa plenty of votes to qtare. She won the 1968 primary, too, taw lost the general clectton to Rep. Edgar W, Uestand. Ueslaiid was unopposed in the G(^.primary Tnnday. WWW Her famed grandfather three If you order yakitori in a rea-taurant in Japan, you get the Orl-pretty brunette, won the Demo- entaJ version of barbecued chick-craUc primary in a three-wuy cn. FLY TO CALIFORNIA ^80 Hawaii $99.10 Extra Fonr Stirict. lac. 6129 MlpMssd Rd. (Oppesile Prafioe Airport) 4HI 9.1254 large part to the annexation of new territory. Atlanta showed a 10-year population gain of 156,682 to 486,996. Offidato attribute .about of the increases to enlargement of the dty’s boundaries. Other cities benefited from new industries through the expansion of defense facilities. Norfdk, Va.. a defense' center, grew by more than 64,000 during the decade to 277,000. Aiwther 60,000 may be added later when the dty is credited with Navy men and merchant berth^ to that busy port on April 1—the census date. WWW Norfdk's population growth, coupled with a drop in Richmond's total from 230.310 to 218.028, has made Norfolk the biggest dty in Virginia. Although Atlanta ^md Norfolk outpacied {nost dries in adding their population, few have matdb^ the growth of suburban areas. A notable exception is Tampa, Fla., which record a 10- AP PbsMss SLAIN — Carson Hammond, principal of the Blaine Elementary School in a Minneapolis su^rb, was found dead on the floor in front of his clesk Wadnes-day from two shotgun blasts. Police said Lester A. Betts, former PTA president, has Signed a statement admitting the killing because he thought Hammond and Mrs. Betts were "too compatible.’’ urmr film n ENfifius rowi There's gifts galara s» bit foverlto storp — Ebmsss Leather Wallets ...... ,»3»s V1 Transistor Radio .. fiirthstone Rings Cigarette Lighters ... Cuff Link Sets • »2M .P 1 Ronton Electric Shoo Shining Kit For fha Man Who Has Evtrything ^arker Pen and Pencil Set.. ,.»8.95l Ronson CFL Electric Shaver . $10.88 Speidel Watch Band .... $7.95 «ip 1 MIN'S RbUfiH Old T0U6H $- WATCH * RmSIt-ImSSmI e nm-humMo Visit Oar Caaiplele Optical Daparlmaal Dr. IAim*|Aliin.- t$lMi9lris :25 NORTH SAGINAW STREET: HIRE IT COIIIES! PENNEY’S BIG SUMMER NEWS IN STYLINGS, FABRICS, COLORS Shirts to pleose Pop on Fothor's Day . Penney’s has short sleeved sport shirts to satisfy every taste. Come see airy mesh weaves, continental tones and trims, conversational prints, maddertones. See smart embroideries, famous Dan River plaids, new-look imported fabrics . . . all doAiestically tailored by a fine American hand. See handsome cotton knits with the latest surface interests, the newest fashion looks. Find permanent collar stays, new collar treatments. Find them all at Penney low prices! All sure to make a hit wth Dad! \ to kttp evory ition cool, comfortoblo ond cortfrctNill summer long! '98 J49 2^9 2 \ Embossed Cottons . Beautiful Desigrna . . Prints ... No Ironing*. Easy Care. . . . Combed Cottons . . . Sheds Wrinkles... Sharp Prints ... Checks .. . \ ... 100% Rayons ... Dac-" ron Polyesters . . . and Combed Cottons... Washable! Beautiful colors. Aim to please I2jI3with gifts from Penney’s! Father’s Day, iunelD" MIRACLE mIlE PENNEY'S STORE HOURS: . Open Daily Mondoy riiroegk Sdhirday UhOO AM. to 9:00 F.M. DOWNTOWN PENNEY'S STORE HOURS: Open Mondoy and Frifloy 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 PIM. All Otbor Wookdoyt 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 F.M. tiGHTEEX THE PONTIAC tKRSS, THURSDAY. JUXE 9, 1»80 MK. ■AUUNAN FOUBS — Fomwr New York Gov. AvenB Harriman pom tea for Mn. Manrine Neifoerier, widow of the late aeoafor from Orecoii. at Hairiman'a New Yofk home Wednea-day. Mn. Neuberser ptoeiitly ia campaignii« for her huahand'a How Private Is a Purse? CHARLOTTE. N. C. (UPI) How much privacy if a woma purae entitled toT That'a the queatfon Mra. Maiy E. Heaaley ralaed thia week when ahe refuaed to pnmit officiala at the Sportswear Manutacturing Co where ahe worked to inspect her disagrees with Shick. He said, woman's pocketbook is inviolable against search w^bout a warrant” af AageTs Spartawear, saU that Mra. ■enaiiiy waa Bred whea aha refused to aMaw the eompaay to span I af a rai passed a rule I at the ptaat work day. He said thf rule was made to curb ”aame p^ thieve^ we've had around hm.” Mrs. Heaaley’s husband Charles Large Resort Owner Dies in South Haven SOUTH HAVEN Uh — Morris nddman. W. who founded one of South Haven's larga and helped organi» munity's first Hebrew tioo. died Tuesday at South Haven Hospital after a brfof iUneas. A native of Russia and a former profeasiaoal vloUnist. he to resort operation hi ^7 on Ms Optimist International to AAeet in Grands Rapids GRAND RAPIDS UP-Optimist International, with more IJOO clubs and 70.000 men in the United States, Canada and Overaeas, has selected Grand Rapids for its 42nd annual convention, June aO-34. The event eapecU to attract about 2,000 dcjegates. 1' Your Choice of Colors I ASPHALT |fu 9x9 Inloid 9 Linoleiin Tile f Ce _ B Spociol Eo. ^ Quality V g M Armstroof Corloa 1 Solid Visyl Tilt I 12® g Quolity Unglasod Randena S Potttm Caromic ^ FLOOR TILE | 2M S.. FI. $149 V Par Shoot | Qj g Vinyl Plastic 1 Floor CoveriDg 1 fi9® y Quality VV Yd. rbiteWall 1 TILE i WE ARE YOUR I AUTHORIZED iSMDRAII 1 DEALER Insido—Outsidt ^ WHITE PAINtI $^59 ca 1 1 MICA CoBiiter Tops Vsotf rrwrme COUtON U Boginnart' B p MOSAIC KIT B g aw- tie* H j - tor Aik Ttar CmM*W B S 69c 1 i 1 caeM IMS 'ui e-as--ee p TILE OUTLET If Y'OV Don*t Buy Your Tile From VSf We BOTH Lose Mq/iey 1055 W. HURON FE 8-3717 Planty of Forking Heeif: Mee., Thart., frl. 'Hi t — Teee., Wsd.. 1st. 'tH 0 Pesifae's teryeef Awfreap Dealer Archie soys; turprise him- ^ —a . w - , _ WITH A MAN'S GIFT FROM BARNETT'S Father's Day Is Sunday, June 19 ARCHIE lARNETT Surprise Him With One of These WASH V WEAR DACRON BLEND SUMMER SUITS For Cool Conffort This SamiiMr, You Can't Boot TImm TfoekolsI That's th« Sait H« WantsI Tht Soma Wonderful Fobrics You\o . Admirod in $45 ond $50 Suiti! On Sale Tomorrow at He'll Love These Breezy Lightweight ARROW SHIRTS. pupuw »™il m, And certainly one of tbs coolatt with the weave that invitat every relraihing breeze. Oreu ihim with button-down or regular col-lert, lortg and short flaave. Both In white end coiort. Short tieeve iport ihirtf, loo. mnCTSirTroi CBAMjmnoou XELC IUEVC|^ KNIT SHIBTS [ snn Tin s-i-v-m OpmFrUayand Monday Nights'til9 PM. Barnetts 150 North Soginow St. - Next to Soon fare i I ^FREI 1 TwiSr' i 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUXE 9. 1960 NINETEEN BqKirtet Swinw Into the Story OOTWHOIETHCCOiMniYCMI TEMATmCKTOPffCES- Chevy middieweiglits work done in a day! Where they toed to ddioer 2,300 gallotu of l^uefied petroUtm §u in other truckt, PetroUne Got Service of Long Beach, Calif omia, can now deHoer 3,500 goBons a dayl That't 7 dayt a week ueuaUy, over back trails and up into higfr rock country with maximum GVW loads. Ayd with Chevy's TorHon-Spring Ride paving every foot of the way/ “You don't get assy more !ting on wadtboard roads than jolting ( you do in a passenger car, or any Sidesway on curves,“ says driver Bemis Stone. “1 used to take some rough roads at from 5 to 8 miles an hour. Now I can go X) over them." Petrolane has over 200 Chevrolets hauling for them. If you think we’re excited about Chevy’i independent front tuspen-•ion, you ou^t to talk to Um truck owners who are profitiag by it 'Fhey’U tell you Chef’s torsion-spring design is the hottest thing to hit the industry since trw^ began. Drive one-that’s the proof, short and sweet PHTH MORE BECAUSE THEY WORK MORE! CHEVROinSniRDI BIilTRUCKS See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer Senators Secretly Order Pool NEW YORK (AP)-The New Yorir Herald Tribune said today has learned that senators have secretly ordered a aO-by-20'loot swimming pool tor the basement of the old Senate office building on Capitol HiU bi Washington. A Washington di^wtch to the newspaper added that plans lor the white tile pool—"in which the senators can gambol between rdl-call votes"—are already on the drawlnii boards of the Capltd architect. MAnHENS-HARGREAVES, IRC. 631 OAKLAND AVENUE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN FE 5-4161 ol availaUe records failed to turn up any report, hearing or kgia-latkxi mentioning the pool. Its senatorial sponsors apparently hoped to build die project without anybody (mowing it The Senate Office Building Omv lission, of which Sen. Denilia Chavex (D-NM) is chairman, gave the pool the green light at a cdoM meeting 10 days ago. Plans were immediately drawn up by the of- Tbe story also said in part: Constructkm, expected, to start soon, la to be paid for out ol $100,000 remaining in an appropriation voted in 19SB to rem^l rusty piumbiiq;" in the office building. The pool is to be constructed in the private senatorial "health suite" out of public view under stairway on the ground floor of tte building. The "health suite" already contains an 8-by-12 foot pool and private dressing rooms "worthy of the baths of ancient Rome.” CHICAGO (AP) - The last of "The ’Pertible" Twihy brothers Is REALLY HIDDEN The 'new pool would be hidden Found Dead in Car on Milford Road The body of an Ann Arbor man was found In his car by Oakland County Road Commission t the blame for a lot of things I did. He even got my nickname. 'The Terrible.’ pinned on He didn’t deserve it. He was Just a bootlegger." Before his death. Tommy reportedly trfd a friend: "I’m going to get wt of this bed someday, get a gun and kill the rata who murdered Rog.” WASHINGTON (AP)-A bUl authorizing a five-million-dollar start on a program of attracting foreign touriirts to this country has unanimous Senate approval. The measure would create an Office of International Travel in Commerce Department. With New SPRING-O-MATIC Starter! No more tugging at ropes and cables! NEW SHOCK - FREE windup starter provides easy and trouble-free starting! REPEAT OF A SELL-OUT! SAVE >10.25! Regular >52.88^ 2Vz H.P. 22” Rotary Mower HON-SKID Tunefure-proof | eoey-rdl titea; • SAFE, Eoty Spring-O-Motic Stoittr • ADJUSTABLE Gross Cutting Hoights • POWERFUL 2Vi H.P. 4J95 Also Avuiloblo in . . . GirdU.................$8.95 Avirogf Fonfio ,9.95 Long L^ Fontio.......$12.50 11 HOUR SALE rii^r}:30-l:300dr LUCKY VALUE I $1.99 Lodios' Summer SKIRTS ’1 Ladies' Swim S«1H.$1.11 ■lllIJiVAWWll $1.99 Lodios' Summsr 69 29c Ladies' raatiae............I4e nsssxsssii $5 Lodios' Summer DRESSES •2 $10 Ladies' Roin-Shine COATS *5 PAIUI COATS .$10 ■0531ZSS1I 99c Boys' ond Girls' PLAY SHORTS 59 e Sayc'-CMt' Swim Salta . $1.99 IQSSraSUB Quolity 1-6 Training PANTS 19 .II.S9 i LUCKY VALUE Come, Sove! Botee YARD GOODS ■P »d. 69c SaHi Taweic .Ita iisnasi^i Belter Royon, Docrun NlHiUllS aa GEORGE'S ■I .'I- S TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 9. 1960 -- __fOiamf if} C»v3 War . Now Only 43 ■a. (UPD ~ «lln. Ftneet Huston Audin giewK 1^. tf C. she is one o< Vnk» in the Civil War. Mts. Allan’s fattMV, darles A. Huston, was Tl when me He was kflled fay i JJ];^Only a Partial po$h. EVERGREEN, Ala. (UPII ~ County otOcials searebed in vain fall for a piOte fa tknan thoo^ had craHwd, fadt wo only Ae i from an Air FVuce transport. OUR LOWEST PRICES EVER! NEW 1960 PRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER AVTOMATIC DCnOST S-DB. Refrigerator- Fl*eezer IMO t> OH. n. With automatic defrost M-lb. True Zero Preeasr. Twin porcelain hydratora, plenty door SKMofae. 11 CU. FT. Refrigerator-Freezer iridi ladytired ikeer loiA! Look what you set: slant ll<-gele* nominating convention July 11 fur the fimt three ballots while Kennedy made his do-WHite effort. * * a ‘2. If Kennedy’s aU^t driw fails he is to throw whatever forces he can behind Stevenson tor the presidential nomination. ”1 Kennedy would accept the vice presidential nomination if Stevensog gets the top spot for the third time." tSat, "there was I Kennedy) of our course ofjl action either before or during the convention.” W * Mayor Richard Daley,, who will lead the Illinois convention delegation, said be had not heard of such a deal. The Tribune said the reported County to Furnish 64 for Induction in Month of July Oakland County draft boards will furnish 64 men for induction into the Army in July, according to State Selective Service. Oakland Bonrds « and «7 In Pontiac have had their quotas ■et at tour and tt men, reapec-tively. Board 66 in Royal Oak wiH call 40 tor induction. The state will furnish a total ne«4 Committee Will Check «r itailor prod^ «re|uiA tin. [YMdM'thavet* be rich to enjoy RICHBOURBON Livonia Mayor Thinks Aged Need Tax Relief nuwn IMtlH eilMT • U NtM • Me IMOIIISTIIUM (0, lUtllKIHII, m LIVWIA (UPI)-Senkr citi! are rallying behind Livonia Mayor WiUiam W. Braabear^ who has proposed tax relief for uderly persons on fixed incomes. Brashear eald more Baia $50 letters have Uvoiria CHy Hail backing Ma stand, and a state legtstatlve eemmttteo kas promised to In-vestl^te the tax bardea on Vr aged thU summer. The mayor said he considers it unjust that persons 65 and over who live on social security and small pensions should be forced to pay today’s high school taxes. He said 62 . per cent of the property tax in Livonia goes for schools, and he pointed out that the elderly residents of the community alredldy have paid for educating their children. Brashear believes that persons Sen. Raynwnd D. DtendseL a Democrat who represents Uvonia and Northeast Detroit in the State Senate, introduced a resolution in the Senate last March 15 to set up a committee to study problems ‘ the aged and to recommend appropriate legislation. Gary Cooptr 0t Home After Colon Surgery HOLLYWOOT) (AP) - A recuperating Gary Cooper goes home from the hospital today—almost week earUer thap expected. The 91-year-old .^ctor was expected to be hoapitalised for at least two wedts after an operation May 31 in whit* a pcxtion of his cdon was removed. 100% NYLON BROADLOOM MILL imperfects of ^6.95, *7.95, *8.95 Qualities! Although some of these corpet rolls ore not irregulors, some ore imperfects! Due to substantial reductions in price, the monufocturer hos grouped first quolity and irregulors in the sooie offering! Beceute ef our centinueus, dose wprkiiif reletiens with vorioui Milli, we were able to get this retnerkeble group et rolls plus the choice of lively, desirable, newest colors! Wo ere euthoriged Pontloc Dpelers for disposl ng of excops liiventory, direct from sevorol carpet shilb. We liquidate distributers' stocks—curreut end discontinued cerpetlng. - •' ---^-1---------^-------^^---------- Nobody is disappointed I Advertised corpet alweys in stock! The importont thing is the lorge choice of carpeting that is always on our floor for your personol inspection! guaranteed taekless carpet installation! OPEN 9 TO 9 MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 2000 Sq. Yds. NYlONTWdlD <«10Qa.vj NYLON TWIST. a. vj 100% Nylon - Brown tono« - 5 yaar Td. HmI Sat - Thick pila - JSandalwood and ▼ am 59* *d. euaratnaa - Rag. $6.95 Mm Turquolaa.' Rag. $8 95 If parfact. a# Saiga - Slight ml,- $599Se.Yd. ARTl^ NYLONTWTO ^ S^99So Td. waavas. Rag. $7.95 If parfact. Ai, Balga-Martinl carnation. 5 yaar ^ guarantaa. Rag. $7.95. tM NYLON TWOD ' C«%QQ c. YJ 100% - Salt & Pappar - Hl-Lo. ^ Sr. Td.■ TOtTURI €"%<»0 e yj Rag. $6.95. mb. 100% NyW - Bona Baiga'lrragolar - Td. Exna durabla. Reg. $7.95. ■ uM TIXTURID TWIST ----------------- Haat Sat - Sandalwood - Heavy waar- ^ Sq. Td. ^ ^ If ^ ».io - ffc*. $399 s» u BARKtmaTWIlD CP^OQc VJ *»0 F7.95. “ - —★ . B^n-Belga Tweed. * Salt & Pepper ▼ ^ Sq. To. Tweed. Rag. S6 95. Mm NYLON BROADLOOM C«%QOa.wj Foam Pad attached .- 5 year guarantee ▼ iM Sq. Td. PLUSH LOOP NYLON TWEBD < * wj duality. Rag. $7.95. tM Black-White-Owrcoal - 9 ft. wida. Reg. ^ y Sq. To. $7.95 . parf/Kt quality. Mm NYLON TIXTURIO BROdOLOOM. «j Salt and Pepper - Heavyweight. TO. NO MONEY DOWN Reg $7 95. D UP TO 56 MONTHS TO PAY 100% NYLON THIS IS ONLY A PARTIAL U8T. 3 - D Loop - Good clfice of colon. ^ hi TTTr 5q. Td. MANY MORI ROLU TO n SlINt Reg. $6.95. ^ »,tt m 11 $ A 99 fj. I,,, \ cas.’sstsiBr*.' •J.na «|ll 1 isKiriESse.-.sr*..............t-»»s |w i ES.'STirss.'sra."” •4.M3. -rweed-1^*' 4 m».*>iaje ., m ^ *7 f 1 HTum TwsBo-t4» hrtsw m* •mmm - smobn- p ■••fW & C- ^4 m»nwu« vMb ^1060 AlfUANCE BUYERS! smp MHMII Ml tO»MIE...IIT... SET lY PMCE lEFOK YN HY!! Don Litrie says; You can buy any floor model*: or warehouse appliance or TV for only; WASHERS DRYERS FREEZERS REFRIGERATORS ELECTRIC RANGES GAS RANGES TELEVISIONS BUILT-INS EARLY AMERICAN COLONIAL SALE Living Room Suites Dining Room Suites BEDROOM SUITES TABLES, ETC. 307. OOFF OPEN NIGHTLY 'til 9 P.M. ,5217 DIXIE HWY. NEXT TO DIXIE FLORAL OR 3-6555 DRAYTON PUINS Vb MILE N. Of WILLIAMS LK. RD. ui^MeiR%Meii^M STOP IN AND SEE ME . . . HENRY GEORGIA lor m iMottiiows-Norfroovts '%HEVY-LAND" SPECIAL AOqvnTED or SULVINO-Floyd B. I out of Lake Comty Jail ki PataiecviUe, Ohio, Wednesday after ft jury of 11 men and one woman found him hmooent of » murder ciiarge. He was accused of the Christmas Eve sniper slaying of his mistress’ husband. Shown with him here are his mother tin. Effie Walker ct Toledo and his attorney Louis A. Ta^l Jr. Gas Rate Hike Request Estimated at $13,400,000 LANSING If) - One calcuUtion today put a minimum price ^ tag (d S13.400,(X)0 on the natural gas rate inmase sought by Consumers IHnm Oo. In fiUng its bid yesterday wHh the State Public Service Cotnmls-the utility mention^ no broehuTM grmpUeally. supporting in LanMng, citing Re average additional cost to. spaee heating naen at a^t IS to IS cento a day. aadf to eoaktog and water- S to « a day. Don McGowan, utility public latioiH director, declin^ to transfigures into traditional terma, saying only that accurate estimates could not be made be-cauae of uncertainties as to bulk gas prices in the future — depending on decisians of regulatory^ agencies in Washington. At the IhibUe Service Oonunls-slon. a spokesman said Consumers in iu detailed rate application figured return on all pU^ in gas service at 5.93 per cent]' tor 1959 but estimated it would drop to 4.5S per cent for 1960. When the 1952 rate increase was grsnted the Public Selvlce Oonw mission authorixed a return on investment of 6.5 per cent, Helicoptet Plants Telephone Poles and Strings Wire The company a«:ves SU Mners in 300 communitiei in 30 counties the Lower F Of the customers, 305,000 use gas to heat their houses. IMPALA HARDTOP DELIVERED WITH THE FOLLOWING EQUIPMENT: Wiiiwlnln, awl«r ^m4 SWmIw, I taMn* T^rw «wS UfW ObMmI aMulTMliM, O. II. raSla, tear f—------- “------ wOm •arylW '----—-• 631 Ooklond ot Cobs HENRY GEORGIA FEdtral 5-4161 la IMtt when the company had nnal rate Incrrasc sf M,StS.Me was granted by the eihamlidsn. Twe years later k gcoernl rate etderad after prices el baft anp- Aa electric rate increase of J8,-EOO.000 a year was granted Consumers Power in May 1959. Conaumeps gets the bulk of its supply from Psnhandle Eastern Pipeline Co. Only last month it started, accepfing deliveries from! a new source, Trunkline Pipeline Co., a Panhandle subsidiary. PIFEUNE BUILT In order to transmit the trunkline gas from the Indiana border near White Pigeon to the Detroit area. Consumers had to construct a 120-mile {dpeline. MoOewnn said IMW otglee ef ■toe 8H by li-lMh, «H«B« hoek-M Jeslifyiag the new rato prw Steep increases in capital investment and in costs due to wages, taxes and matorials weTt stressed. 'SCRANTON, Ps. (AP) - The Bril Triephone 0». of PanQd-vsnla has planted 40-foot utility poles and stretched wire from the air by helicopter. The successful experiment was performed in an Inaccessible mountain area in the state's northeastern section, near Lpdm Como and bordering oli New Yoclc. | .The Job was to-set 33 poles along a two-mile stretch. All the poles will ^ in and wired later today. Hie work started WedneMay. Holes were dug In' men on flic ground. Then a twin-rotcr helicopter, aided by strong winds, droppH In the poles at the rate Wire dropped out of the aircraft and was attached by linemen igpunted on the poles. About 97 per cent of the railroad freight movements in the United Rates are handled by 28,374 diesri-electric kKomotlve units. 108 NORTH SAGINAW NoMoiey Dowb 11.00 Weekly 3 3 for 1 Low Price you Get AU Thu: • Rssilsglos Ptrlabh Typswrilsr World-fomous Remington quality with big-machine features not found on other moke lightweight portables. • 8 Veism Ssl ef Eseytlopffla Deluxe "New Americon" encyclopedia — eight beoutifully bound volumes. ^ ,10-PIECE KEYSTONE COLOR MOVIE OUTFIT lODERN SLEEP SHOP \CRACKS THE BARRIER )T N MTS MT W MVS lOT.n MTS 6 MONTHS THE SAME AS CASH IR PURCHASES OP SI00.00 OR MORI A I f new-improved _ rtdALi! POWERFUL eUrekavacuum CLEANER ISIS Peper Dust I Ligiw Vinyl I Glide Rug Nesxle ^ ■^WlHi the j Purcbese ef ' Any Livinf | Ream Suite or Sectienel OIQ 4 PC. SECTIOHAL . .. SOFA AND ONA SQAO C"**— AIW »lfi 100% Poem Cushions Vacemn Cltint- zip,.,.. c>,«. mra RsUsway Bsfs wilk FsMIsg MaHrsM......! OrSi MsHrsto 6 Yur She, CaiT Wet Covit...... f 6** | MeM Bsf Franti wHh Oaslon.............f Step Trim, Bleif or Wslssl ........... » »»» FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL! Famouf—Notionolly AdvertiMd CHAR-KOLER by BIG BOY j-qq Urf« 24''Size ▼ HMvy Duty Grill Spif~Mofor ’ . with the HoBd^WhMls p«r3»,Me# any recliner choir / _______ Smort—Modem ” RECLINER SJAEO ii WMi tMt chi COLONIAL WING RACK RECLINER THE ULTIMATE IH COMPORT TILT.RACK RECLINER TV RECLINER ly Keninor Top Grade .. ^ , CoYors $5.00 • Wkh thk chMr MAPLE BUNK BEDS SMOOTH TOr TUFTLI5S MATTRESS 10, YfAK OUAHANTII $2^5® Daol-PurpoM STUDIO LOUNGE COMVIRTB EASILY TO A COMfORTABU BIO BOX 9RING IAMB tew pRici *•52" SERTA-PERFECTi SLEEPER MATTRESS, GRENADIER FOAM QUILT MATTRESS AT OUR LOW,, LOW DISCOUNT PRICE FE 8-9551 FURNITURE ond BEDDING FE 8-9551 t1iii!ytBtoMhfti DucowU City of Fine Fumi^re ggien^EMB** MBACU nu S80PPIM onrrn Bjuuuui Aiu(N«rtii B^^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JUNE 9. I960 mm 1 TAVEXTY-THREE BlitorsonTwo Sides of Fence Husband Goat for Ike, Wifo Favoring Adloi in Sama Fapor ' GARDEN cmr, ,N.Y. (AP)-Hiny F. GugganiwinL ud coomm o( the Lih_ independent daily newspaper Nenvday, announced Wednesday suppOTt ot Richard M. Nixon for After IS yean of research „ B Harvard men, a Harvard scientist. Or. Carl C. Seltzer of Peabody Mueeian, haaroome Ke declared for the- RepuMican ^dce president in a signed column TMMaice die paper’s edUorial His wile, Alicia Patterson, coowner, pubUdier and editor, came out recently in a signed ecHtorial , for Adlai E. Stevenson for the . if you smoke, you nuy be aUghtly "weaker" in the "mascu-component." The more you smoke, the more likelihood of less in the space age is die first, eon-cem of aft humanity." He urged voters to pick "a lead-' er most able to preserve this country and our allies from de-from war, either hot or He said of the candidates (hat "none has the experience and strength of Nixon." In her editorial. Miss Patterson had caOed Stevenson the one most abiB todaaf with the Soviet TAilon. la a gsparate editorial Wednee- ing the campaign. "They wiU not always agree with those of this editorial col- Tbe paper supported Stevenson In 19M and President Eisenhower in 19S3. Enough to Shrivel Your Tattoo Seems Smoking Not Masculine Congressmen Eye School Bill By BAY CSOMLEY WASHlNGTCBf (NEA) ~ S moke, yon may not like this. If you don’t smoke, yon win like * A * Dr. Seltzdr alio is trying to find St whether smoking causes pso-I pie to be If yen are a man and dant antoke at all. yea are almoat eer- cer and coronary heart disease. He thinks there is a possibility that smoking doen’t do the dam' age. Thm is a'chance that people ^ So then, what are >w likely to be like. If you’rt a heavy emoker and "weaker"—according to the professor, that is? You may tend to have an aver sion to strenuous exerdees and You are more frequently shy, rif-eonsrious, inhibited. Ym may lead te be more crea- there’s a diance you will be tower in physical fitness tor hard muscular work. You tend to talk well—but pos-dbly aren't eo strong in mathr matlcs aa the noornnokers. You may tend toward arts, letters or philosophy. Yon probably are aenalttve. You may land to have a r This reeegrch aim explains, ot course, why the tobacco industry Research (Bmmlttee is anppnrtlaf Dr. Sellzer^ wosk. Dr. Seltzer developed s of interesting statistics from die long study: n people who don’t. It nuy be that the typ Nonsmokers tend to go into die Navy, heavy smokers Into the Army. Heavier smokers apparently sigh breathe more rapidly and swallow more frequently. 'Ihey lend drink more alcohol and coffee. Ford Developing Land Vehicles Gf500Af.P.H. I to he more stable. thought-oat aims sad poipooeo. The nonsmokers tend to lead Would Establish Study of Dry-Land Problem SAN GABRIEL, Calit (UPI) -Dr. Joseph Koplim, chairman of the International GeopiW4pal Year, urges creation of an tetewf' Uonal water year. The UCLA physics professor saM purpoae Cf the study would be to consider problems common to the arid regim of the world. In alinost all of the alphabeU in the worti the letters "m" and “n” are in cloae conjunction with each otter. "quiet, progresrive lives." Th^ usually are hard workers. The heavy smokeiw aeem to be “sericing for danger, be reatkaa. WASHINGTCH4 (APi-^y Ihian-ifflous coswent, the Senate today ^ sent a Mend aid to education N bill to a Senat^House committee |f to iron out differences. ” k speeds of IN to iW osilea Alex L. Bayes told the Anner-kmn Seeiety ef MeehaalcM Ea- travel ca rails, be gftod a free-ttsn ef aa laeh off the raUs hy a stream of air, aod he pro-pehed hy aa aliplaae-lype cn- flajraed, ia a paper delivered at the aosoelatlea’’* sendaeBaal meehag here, oaid such a vehicle woold he designed ter me la hstennedtote diatandte. Bavid 1. Jay. aloe of Ford, co-aothoted another paper, WlUtom H. T. HOdeo, a Paoodcaa,'’Calif.. Eoropeaa stadles ef siogle-rBlI have beea v1rtoaO|r : _ m . mm §u 1 I Panel N Senofa - House Works to Smooth Out The Senate previouriy asaed a two-year $1,800,000,000 wasure carrying grants for school construction and teadiers salaries. The House passed a four-year SL300,000,000 program antboiizing the use of federal funds only for 'There's a Satisfied f^eral Nodemizatioii Customer Near Ton" REPEAT SALE WITH A GIGANTIC lONUS! Sabs Tax liebM ia All Prbto! GuarontBtd 1 Full Inch Thick ALUMINUM STORM DOOR V iiHHiMt Iril c» SAVE There was Informal agreement in advance that the joint conunit-tee would drop the controversial teacher salary proviston, accept the House money formula, acutUe an amendment aponsored by Rep. Adam aayton Powell (D-NY) to prevent federal paymenu to segregated achools, and adopt a Senate formula for funds di^bution which would give more money to needy states. ^77.67 Southerners nuule it plain they would filibuster any attempt to enact the bill with the Poweil pro-n in it. Edgar Allan Poe became sergeant major in the Army, but he refused to follow the discipline of West Point to become a missioned officer. NOW READ THIOl Want to make your next party really click? Then ipake sure your guests are treated to the beer that makes the Big Difference in Fun - Big D - Drewrys Beer — all the refreshment and Fun any party needs. ^ BigD is far more than “just anothv beer.’’Rn exclusive Drewryi process keeps all the flavor in - brews sweetness out. That’s how Efrawiys nmkes anre you will enjoy full flavor in glass after refreshing glass, with no full foelbig after. Try it! You’ll know why the Big Different in F^ is 1^ D - Drewrys - the Finer Quality Beer with the One Big Difference... and it’i always sold at a popular price. DREWRYS BEERT $31.95 At Lost! A Wtadow with Evsrflhbg! - Dtlom TripIt Track Triple Tilt Ictira Uimiiim STORM WINDOWS Woven File WeeMier Stripped Storm Windows. Clean wlHient lemeviaf R*9. $24.95 r«r Window FHATsrm FrM Mtamring Strvicc Within 30 Milnt When You Modernize CUL FE 3-7033 FOR FREf HOME ESTIMATE V(iit Our Showroom Optn Doily 9 Ae M. to 8 KM. Sundoy 10 to 4 Wtnty of forking in Our Lot Some beers are too heavy 3);... Soiyie beers are too light • BI9 D is always ^juet right! MOItB PLAVOIts LESS FH.LINO •IfSn Drtwrys Itssibd UAA Iw-t Mad, ItidlMO . \ L? THE PONTIAC 1»11ESS, THURSDAY. JUNE 9. 1960 louse Passes [Tax, Debt Bills ? Would Keep War-Bom Lovios, Sot National “ Deficit for a Year J WASHINGTON (#»-The Home •voted Wednesday to continue Jliatch war-bom taxes and to • set the national dept limit at 233 1 billion doUan lor the year besin- 2 qing June 30. • Both actkms were urged by the 1 Treasury, which now will try to •persuade the Senate to follow suit. Bombay Giil -to Be Honored at U.N.Fete Yankee’s New LOWER I’alee* OeagreiM acts, rev-a ««uri will dr*p an estimated f lour bUUoB dolUn a year i « dMIara. wU| be lowered at the ; end ol this moath Is tU hUlloa f doUars. 0 ' This debt top would be low • enough to cramp the government’s p financial style during the lean 1 Qionths whch it is waiting tor tax 2 collections. Administration hopes «for budget .surpluses would get a 2 body blow. ment candidate Victor Paz Es-tensaoro, 52. sometimes accused of being a Nbzi and Oommun^t but still a friend of America, was returned Monday as Boltv-ian president. He 1^ been a familiar figure on the poor na-'ilical, scene for 30 years. Hta election margin was' 306,419 to n,0S7 votes for his nearest opponent. • -The principal taxes involved • are thoM on corporate income, *dlooholic beverages, antoi^ilea, < parts and «c(^pssories. telephone • service and passei^r' (ares. •Without congressional action, the «rates would drop with acdompany- 1st Plane Hoax Case Go^ to Jury Today revenue losses—fQ.SOO.OOO.OOO, NEW YCMUC (AP) - A federal court Jury in Brooklyn today receives' the nation’s first plane hoax case to go to trial. , ^United Nations was ortanlari| She will appear on % 1>latform|p^j| [here, has been eelected thane girf with hutner President Harry S. |of the U.N. 15th aanlvessary ob-KTruman when he delivera the] I main, address jgn June 36. A native of Bombay, Ranee is the daughter of the Indian consul] SAN FRANCISOO Olb (D-Afk) of the Ways aad Means The defenae called for acquittal and contended that .Askew had intendod oidy a gag. Askew had testlflod that be was only joking and had no idea that any one would take it seriously. Wives 2 and 4 Giving;. Trouble to Rooney eOart to repeal the lax ea phone LOW j6«GELEs Mickey Tloaney, whose wMe No. 5 is ac-fi^ie Barbara Tiwmaaon, l»s aigradd k> pay $600 monthly ih| fdlUd dwporfto wife No. 2. Betty Jan* Rase Baker. He said he couldn’t lee where that industry was under any gr^iter hardship than other iodus-tri7*ro^rail»iHofcM«t*licrcl« Pmit amd Sorrlc* 19 Un UWftOiCI ST. ' PHONI FI 2-7221 mi FAMCINe AT RIAR Boniarc Safe as Soap,y Says Base Commander MCGUIRE .Am FORCE BASE. N J. (AP)—The commander ol 99 nation't flrrt Bomarc mtaile baae ■aya the dHukea of his weapou "Theae Bomarcs are more fool-proof than soap," Brig. Gen. Gfl* bert Ik prltdiaitl told l hews con-ferenoe WOdnepday night h it h Prichard, commander of the New York Air Defense Sector, the meeting the Air FmTe assumed responaibUity for Tuesday’s radiation scare and the subsequent liaison breakdown between the sovtee and state defense officials. He said the safety device In a Bomarc’s nuclear warhead msde of a fire’a causing antiaircraft missile sites here and in Suflalk, county. N.Y. Sr A A A needle^nosed Bomarc caught fire Tuesday at ite launching site 12 miles east of here in a ly populated wooded area. STARTED SCARE Pritchard said an Air Force sergeant phoned State Police to ask them to block off roads leading into the area. I am sure the sciveant either implied or sUted there had been nuclear Explosion." Pritchard Nonetheteas, he added, “special . recautians,^' which he wo old not describe, were now being taken at the nation's two Bqmarc STOP IN AND 5EE ME . . . BOB GBEEN for 0 Molthows-Horgroovos "CHEVY-LAND" SPECIAL IMPALA HARDTOP *2459' DELIVERED WITH THE FOLLOWING EQUIPMENT: -- InawNMl*^ (as SstrMtm, S taMn* Tw MtS Una, , ... .WSUj njny W’JSH u aU t«s«nl tas aaS aaw IMS Swa«« S»*»*w Baldwin of the Air Force Police, ‘doesn't remember what he t(dd State Ptrilce. A Pritchard said the fire was ignited by an explosion somewhere within the missile, closed in its concrete launefaing pen. A second He said the sergeant, Oarence Rockeieller to Be Queried on TV Sunday esptoaien caused an evacuation of the immediate area. Pritchard then accompanied firemen into the termkwK} nothing nuclear hud detonated. MISSILE DESTROYED one had been injured, but the Bomarc, which costa between miliion doUars and $1,300,000, Name Legion, Auxiliary Chiefs R. E. McKerricher 1$ Post Head; Womon Ud by Mrs. D. H. WorrUow Ccxdc-Nelsbn American Legion Post 20 has elected Robert E. McKerricher commander and Mrs. David H. Warrilow auxiliary president. McKerricher lives at 1M9 Groton d., Bloomfield Townriiip. and Mrs. Warrilow, at 251 pick St., Waterford Township. Other aesriy elected past at-eers Inclnde games E. McKee, dcs; Burion was destroyed. A w w . Pritchard said an eight-man board representing foe Atomie Energy Commission, foe Boeing Airplane Co., which makes the his own staH, the Air Re- Msw vftpif rAPi-Gotf Nel-***^ Devriopment Com- NEW YORK (AP)-Gov;. Nei-|^^ ^ ^ inspector general of the Air Force would Investi- son A. RodceleUer wiU sppsnr Sunday night on the WNTj^TV [oogram “Open E2id’’—the [show that presented Vice Pi;esl-dent Richard M. «ixon tor four hours last month. The governor .will be interviewed by David Susskind, who alao appeared with Nixon on the May 15 program. AAA The program starts at 10 p, r Eastern Daylight Time aixl hu np fixed termination time. Among other things, a WNTA spokesman said. Rockefeller will be asked to explain his statement gate foe fire. The State Police station at Ft. ►ix on Tuesday sent* a teletype ^tHdletih to Its troop headquarters at Princeton saying ‘‘atomic warhead explosion/' This led to the radiation scare and foe closing off of RU roads in the area. L. c. Hadden, adjutant: aiM Lee Ayers Miller is the new chaNaln, 8«rgeant-at-arms is Torvel Brandt, and Eldon Showen was elected his-lian. Auxiliary officers elected Indude Mrs. Cari Shindorf. first vice pres-Mrs. Leo James, second vice president: Mrs. James McKee, secretary: Mrs. Lynn Allen, treasurer: Mrs. Clayton McCoy, chaplaini Mrs. Donald Wilcox. sergeant-at-arms: and Mrs. Roger Dean, historian. Installation ceremonies will be held in August. iW lFOR GHADUA'nON -HWEHEMI FATHER’S DAY - «r_ NEW 1960 ---- 7 Transislor POCKET RADIO $1 Dn«n$l Week Operates on 4 inexpensive penllte bat-Lertes for over 100 hoars iNaylng! Plays where otners fail. True, clear sound. DUUncUve Jewel The Good Housekeeping Shop 51 W. HURON DRESSES Regularly 5M Dan River Woven Plaids Wash'n Wear with Attached CrinoGnes Sies 7 to is IMi3e They Last! mrs WHV mas are •| low At lOUlf MALI • WaMIfarcaiiiMilyl 1 OagM tVgAT WtaMT till • a.M. J • HpRwptHwMl 200 N. SAGINAW STREET Free Porkinep in the Rear TWENTY-SIX THE PONTIAC I>RESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1960 stm Papfy — Tm m yeum «idj ttid 1 tot • tooQiacfae.’' Hik* Forty MHm^ UncHORAGE, AlMka (UPD—jwas at least 91 but couldn't verity Aa Eskimo nativa tram Lima VI- that ha was lU. Alaska, recenOy hobbled « -------- lilies oa crutdies to an Air Fone 'Qmtsct points ot aircraft liidlng strip for a trip ta get Us magnetos are made of a valuable fieii fixed. alloy which has 90 per cent iiWhen he arrived at the hospHUpUtiiian and 10 per cent 1| Anchorage, after a 100 mile ruthenium, a hanf ~ 9ght, he toM attendants, "rm’insoluUe in adds. Curious Clocks inside Humans Bother Night Swing Workers WANTFn IIHnilLUcuSTOMERS to becoma acquainted with Diem's Super Footwear values for the whole family. Finer quality dress and cosuol shoes for children, men arxl women ot exciting low money saving prices plus guaranteed fit. IN THE w vy ' f FOOTWEAR SPECIALS for women ... SparkHsg Nt« “SUN-STEPS” in 0 grand orroy of colors and styles. ^ JM Q5 All sizes ...... for men • . . ‘TRED-LITE by Ganbridgt COLD SPRING HARBOR, N. Y. (API—The night workers’ iot is often not a happy one. e * A . It is even worse for those on Men's light Summer fabric two-tone oxfords, slip-on or tie styles. All sizes. DIEM'S PONTIAC'S POPULAR SHOE STORE 87 North Saginaw Street RIDE THE BUS or PARK FREE! We pey the parkins fee wMi pnrckaM of $2.00 or ninra. days and some nights in the skme eek. One reason for difficulty, aciei^ lists are finding, is that night and swing hours can upset curious docks that keep time in our bodies and regulate important rhythms of living. Better knowledge of the clocks may aid night workers. AAA TIME DAILY CYCLES These strange biologioal docks re being discussed at s lOday international conference of lOO sd-entists at the Long Island Biological Laboratory. In humans, the clocks time daily cycles in body temperature, output of adrenal hormones, disease-fighting wUte blood cells, blood sugar governing fatigue and alertneaa and other functions. Similar clocks in birds, bees, cockroaches, plants and almost alt fomu of life alao seem to run generally on a 24-hour cyde. AAA The human clocks do not keep the same time. Body temperature usually reaches a peak in the afternoon, a low in the early morning hours. But adrenal glandk generally pour out hor- mones Just before your nmnial morning waking hour to help you meet the diallenge of a new day. SwitchiiM to night work can throw the clocks off sdieduk. Some peo-can reeet theta- ckxda more easily than others, or already have clocka that make them fed best at Studies aloi« thfo liae were described in an interview by Dr. M. C. Lobban of tbe MAUcal Research Oouncli Laboratories, London, Ei«land. Dr. LObban Is s ......e woman wbo Iqves the arctic. AAA Spitsbergen, Norway, wifii continuous summer dayUgbt, provided a p«iect s|X)t to test some Cambridgp Urflverslty volunteers. She took away their wristwatches. Soipe got watches taking only 21 hours to tick off 24 hours. Others got watches taking 27 hours to 24 hours. Found in Trunk ST. JOHNS, Nfld. ^AP) - Canadian police and yallraad officials gre tiyiag to find out who shipped a trunk from Toronto to Argen-4 with the body of a With no sunsets or sunrises to mark normal day and night, thd volunteers ate meals, worked and slept as though thdr watches really were counting off 24-hour days. Some men end women had more trouble tai adapting, Dr. Lobban said. are needed. But one could be that U somi signed to night work, he should be kept on long enough to reset his clocks, rather than being switched on and off night duty. Oh, My Aditng Head! A Common Xomph^int ST. PAUL. Minn. (UPD-Haad-acnes are the leadbg cause of abeenteeism from office and industry, reports the Minnesota Stale Medical Association, Physicians hear more complaints of headaches than MIN'S KRINKLi Ra«. $S.9S ROBES...*4" ' Maa't SraaAclarti Raf. $9.99 PAJAMAS Michigan Vacation Trail Music Camp Noteworthy t: Out ta t mlM of olU ooaUBu* throuch .^UoB MOton dttafi-IM •aedel fMUTtUM oad »oUU ol t^Mt lor lUehUM T»eotl«B«T».» By VaUed Piaaa latefMOkMl AU varieties of outdow life and recreatkm are combined with excellent instruction each summer to students at the National Music Camp at Interiochen. The camp, the worid’s largest and most famous arts camp, be-giiu iU 33rd season on June X. was esUblished in 1928 as summer home of the National High School Orchestra to test and develop musical abilities in America’s youth. The program has since been expanded to Indade private and CONN'S CLOTHES 71 N.Saginaw adhMhMNMhMdJl Guest accommodatim are available nearby. SIDE TB1P8 —M37 extends northward from Interiochen to the top of Old Mission Peninsula, whidi parts Grand Traverse Bay. At the tip ^ the peninsula >d(ands one * ' lighthouses erected ' akes region. »Moce than 300 inland lakes dot Grand Traverse County, which, combined with rolling hillsides, makes the area of year-round interest for visitors to Michigan. The campers are also Instructed in music literature and theory, composition, conducting, speech arts, drama, radio, -television, crafts and all forms of the dance. More than 12.000 students have attended the camp, an affiliate of the University of Michigan, during its existence. They represented every state in the Union and many foreign countries. IN 10 UNITS Stretching over acres adjacent to M137 in Grand Traverse County and along the shore of Lake Wah-bekaneas, the camp is broken down 10 units—five each for boys and girts of vinous age groups. Each unit has its own program, housing, recreational leaders and Fowl Decision Poses Ticklish U.S. Problem WASinNOTON IB - Then la goad news for the wortd’s water- Last year the camp presented ne of till first I in theiGreat an of strategic military value. W ★ ★ The deelsioa flads the General Service AdmiaistnUea with 1,030,000 pounds of feathers on its hands that It docM’t waul. It sent word to all federal agencies that if they need any feathen, now Is the ttane to speak up. Most of the feathers wen bought from Red China, befon the KorMB War, for military sleeplug bags and hospital pillows. Foam rubber sad other Texas is the only stole permitted 390 programs during its S7-day Tv congressional statute to divide five states If “ The principle asderfylag the setivltiea st the nonpr^ tastl-accordlng to President Msddy, It "learning perfsrmsnce" Each stadent ■ camper progresses as npMly as Ms talent and energy lermlt. Between June 26 and Aug. concerts will be given daily except Mondays, with as many as nine performances scheduled days. Lectures, recitals and other programs dui^ the week are free and a nominal lee is charged for afternoon and evening concerto of m ay or orcbeiM works by the National High School Symphony Orchestra. The HAMILTON PAIR AIMATiC WASHER GAS DRYER 5 RINSES! 2 SPEEDS! SUDS SAVERI Free iRatanation! 1I.LB. CAPACITY DELUXE GAS DRYER FREE..I^A11AD0N! UNITED OFFER With TrgJc 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH HAMILTON WASHER HAMILTON DRYER • Fabri-Set Temp, control—Mfs for i • Dual cycle: normal for regular loads; short for lightor loads. • Suds saver and Lint Filter lets ysu save detergent, rids lint. • SUndard Model... S199.9S with trade. fabrios! • Zinc-coated drum, eant nut, ehlp or corrode—ever! • Twin-air drying: gentle drying or fast drying speed. FREE DEUVBBT! 1 YEAR FREE SERVICE! ORDER BY PHONE! fHOOif HOUSEKEEPING ^ of PONTIAC 51 WEST HURON STREET FE 4-1555 CASH or Quick CRfD/f] GUARANTEED Better than your own original equipment tires! r'5**«iiJlloiitb 1 vvttsiwTHiitMMsstMiF TIRES For Most FORD, CHEVROLET and *< PLYMOUTH Cart, 1957 lo 1960- 7.50-14 -* BhekwtK^Tokthss For Most Buick, '49^ DoSoto,oi *49>S6p Olds, •49-5&T Padraid, *49^56 and Other Cart....... 7.60-15-BltKkwoM-Twka Typo (Whiteweh odd $3.| VAN Prices Shewn Above art Plus Tox and Your Old TWa Custom Cushion AJAX *DUAL Tread .Our Fl^ist NYLONf Gunranfetd to bo os good os or boHor Ition Iho original tiros that come on your cor and LOOK AT THE SAVINGS! DUAL ntlAD for groatsr milsago and bettor skid protection. Not iutl o fine tiro ... but one bf Iho FINEST TIRES BUILT. For Most fORD-CMfVROHr and nYROUm Cars op to 1957 UO-15-Olmkwdl-TNm Typo I For Most Ford 1949-y> P*Sote, I Chevrolet ond ^xO^XA I Tlymeeth Cert Other*. 1949-34. j. 1957 m 1940 , 7.I0-I5 Nsefaeoi I 7M-1S WsMwoll /.SO-14-Moefcwe» S.OO-14-Slsdrw Isbe Type fire f Te4eTypetrr* | Tebeiew Tiro | TeSetoee Tire '1788 *1988 I TsMle«...2IJf . ____WHtlWAll Time fcraWobeire ears oaduieeAvodeMeef SI Ad*ieee< •_______« ASPrkritoewn Ahev»nmFlwtov«!«>lYgg_Ojd_Tig_ 115 N. SAGINAW — Park Frgg Raor of Sfort •18‘» Plui Tax and Your Old Tiro For Most fORD, CHIV. and nr/UOUn com ugto 1957 6.70-15 BIACKWALL TUBE TYPE TIRES (WhifewoN* odd $3.1 T\\T.XTY-EIGHT THE POXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUXB 0, 1960 An 8.T0Mbot xnOerwMr im)un-|'^|]] pyjj DoWn Upkeep Cogt hu been found dn the e—“" -------------------------------------------- Better Mufflers Coming the origim^l price but the upkeep of a car that hurts n»st is about to get a slight break. ness. Important enough to force other companies to adopt some of its tactics. EXCLUSIVE! FIRST RUN GIGANTIC FEATURES STARTS FRIDAY THEGHNT OFMARiKTHON JYLEiDEM0N6E0T»i.ra A GIANT AMONG HEN IN A l^st Times Tortighf THE THREE STOOGES THE LEGEND OF TOM DOOLEY At least one manufacturer «rtll e<]Uip his 1961 models with mufflers and tailpipes which should last the life of the automobile. Exhaust systems have been a prime target for car owner complaints, mainly because they are apt to need replacing within two years or less. A recent survey by Steel Magazine showed mu^ fler manufacturers figure the average life of a conventional muffler at 18,000 miles. Number of Mentally 1)1 More Than All Others NEW YORK (UPI) - The National Assn, of Mental Health reports that there are'more people ' Metals far.mental illness than p«io, cancer, heart disease, tuberculosis and all other diseases combined. The association estimated that the direct costs d mental illness in the United States is more than S3 billion a year. Since namial aaaual almost 1%0M miles, this would mean a conventional muffler would have.in.bis replaced every year and a half. Some relief for car owners began showing up in this field in the last year or two with the adoption, as standard equipment. zlnp coated and aluminized mufflers on some cars. These units will la.st on the average of 32,000 to 34,000 miles, or almost three years of normal driving. Just as with many other items on your car, you can buy better quality mufflers than those which come as original equipment. But not many buyers who have uhelled several thousand dollars for a new car want to start replacing standard items immediately with deluxe quality. Some parts makers have been advertising lifetime mufflers but many of the ad claims contain a gimmick—lifetime means -mly the time you personally own the car. Mufflers usually rust from the side out. Corrosive gases condense and eat through the metal. Buick In Its ISM models tried a new attack on the problem with a single nraffler unit replacing dual exhausts. The single unit Is said to eliminate "cold” spots which lead to The newest development to come down the original equipment road is the ceramic muffler and tailpipe. Preliminary tests indicate ttesGL will last in the neighborhood of 90,000 miles. Ceramic units will be standard on all 1961 Ramblers. So far Rambler is the only line to announce pUuis to use the new mufners immediately. But this independent continues to b growing factor in the auto ' lb lUllCMLUDi Open Every Day PRIVATE DINING ROOMS for Parties OR 3-1907 I EAGLE; NOW! THRU FRI. ETERNmr MCKEYSHAUGHNESSr -5 Peyton ' Place AANA HOK TURNER LANGE BUDDY MORROW AND HIS ORCH. FRI. mi SAT. WALLED LAK^ CASINO BALLROOM -STARTS- TOMORROW PONTIAC EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING <J*. I I SUPER MARKETS IISI DIXR mCNWAT ■ 7SI0 HIGMAII* ■ 1100 lUW M. ■ iM«niwuMaiaunna I raoeu THrarr-Two THE PONTIAC PH3ES8. THUKSDAY, JUXE 9. }m Get Ready for Strawberries Over to mdiliiii's frutt bdl-eltheewe- ftvmi^be i wMdad ww oar ntdm tl|e_gtber day (i>r the umpteenth beniei. until e( rtfit comiateney *\ (opuonn Place cream, augar and vanilla la cMUed bowl. Beat untU cream enamy. Makaa 2V& ciqM fiOins:. holds its shape. (Do oot overbaat) ir pot of sacar gradnaDy, UeBdini Whipped Cream FriaWag Uae aa topping lor cake and other Makes 3 c«9s wHpped sere yea aB have ai green betries as Ug as o ti|pu>. rrom now on we’ll hv twfcep etoee watefaaadtry to be, tbCbirds to the herdea. Their iMct trick is to take Jnst one bite oSk the biggest, Joidest beny oa t»jiiaau. E * * * Ijtyoa’re planning a shower soon. ssr serve 3 to 10 persons MaOhke •SaoBd « — st£S? ________VlWfllW Ifcasme sifted flour. baking PWler ant‘ tiSaetknei sr 1 batter in’read with Straw- layers, bmy Butter Cream Frosting. The delicate -V---------1------------------------------------------ Hamburger Shapes upior_Diilljng to wire rack to finkit Hamburger is king of file grill in the outdoor barbecue world,.and appetites need no prodding to en> JJpt cake crosswise to make 3Joy H. Variaty la pteasant, bow- er, and the homemaker can do it wy the shape. Here a pieburger wheel is presented, taut file shape may be that of a doughnut or of a rolling pin. Several wheds smaller than the other, can. be pyramided — or ddight the ^il-“Squared Away" ham- Wtalpptd erwini OriM IcmoD rind In jar or container with comUne soup, milk, light and nutmeg. Shake well until mixture is smooth. Place in refr^era-tor for at least 4 hours. Serve in chilled bowls. Just before serving shake until soup is frothy. Gamisii each serving wkh a spoonful of whipped cream dusted with lemon rind Xtr additional nutmeg. Makes 2 to 3 servings. Pieburger Wheel I UupasiM wn Vi toupoon Mitry wM Combine cabbage and green beans. Blend mayonnaiae, salad oO, vhiagar, sak and oelaty salt. Tom dressing wtfii cabbage mixture. Makes 6 servings. en. Soaps made wHh dairy prod- ^liother hiu or pork ia war ■ > oarve with I Pineapple Happily too, the aoupahake can be prepared in advance. It is not only ready to aove, but is thor-anally chilled by that time — a mbit butte in sauce Mupoon ptf eatkaapligbawlaetti Im. Filled Pancakes a Supper Dish The pancakes ape big Mlows, hot, light and tender. Each two an put together with gently frixzled ham slices between. Then on top . . . great spicy-fragrant spoonfuls . of canned apple sauce that's been nd hupb^wlth butter, cte-afle^ and lemon. AB so to do. So good to eof. gramdated aogar (ab^ 1 eap to S of berries) andn^ ----------- froeao aa amal. The i^Tup pack calls for a syrup cnnaiatiBg ot IVb cops qf wgar dia-sotved in 4 ova of ' flU toes: and more cold syrqp to i half inch of Crumple-odlo-lane over the top of the fruit to lep it submerged. Freen. - - ■ --—4t- Strawberiies and fresh pineapple are combined in the following .0. It mMiei three idnts. Uae one on waffles, pancakes or cake Obmb&e sugif wd edthitardi. Gradually add plne^qiple and lenxm juices. Cook, stirring constantly, until thick and dear. Add butter. Stir imtil melted. Add diced straw, beiriaa and pineapple diunks. Cook low flams for a few mimfias. Cool and pour into tn randy to serve, detroet and pour, either hot or cold, over waffles tor a hearty breakfast treat. > ueSsryKaiH rteMwpooa^MB ia ifeils-sr-TStf- dniuniMti. alta^, butter, lemon rind and juice. Simmer 5 minutes: keep hot until ready to serve. Saute Hm slices in shortenii^. mM wswosn Keep warm in oven. Follow dlrec- . . tions on package for making pan- bread end^ thli^^ slicra enkea. Place ham slices between • «wP»e spoonfuto of i instead of iBoes of warm sandwich with a salad and you have a ly. Mahss M i*a/i Cooling Drink Has Caramel Flavor iWhv 1 UWNPOM vtalta eeni qrrup tSsah af Mit 1 oeiM of Mid milk 1 tsblwpaon laaioa }ulct 1 aiwrt vanOte 1m craaw ShriMad MMnut for topptni A A A Combine brown sugar, Vt cup allk, corn syrup an^sdt in sauced; heat to baOihg, it&riiig constantly, and cook about 3 mtot- aad about t-s af the toe cream Pour Into 6 tall idanes; top with acoop of ice cream and decorate with a few curis of shra^^'^ Icoconut. Makes 6 servings. WITH THIS COUrON OMW UVI »U Shae Repair Special! I'i ... Boyi* HALF SOLES IBilR W Value ■ UATHIR OR RURilR • I®? Valua ■ "• Fri. Hr Sot. Only With nil Coipwi OkIt CNILORIN'S HALF SOLD CHIAFn Udtot'Tep UfttFriOa la I Miaaloa S. S. KRESGE'S SMOI RIFAIR — RASIMINT DOWNTOWN tTORI Mix ground beet, salt, onion salt nd pepper. Flatten meat into dr-de about B-fatchea in diameter. Grin slowly; him once. Serve in ■ _ i wedgea with mixture of catsup,w salad oU and vinegar. Makes • aervinga. Place tomatoes and onions on grlB; sprinkle with salt, pe^wr and a few drops salad oO. GrlB slowly. Place onion slice on top of each tomato half; serve hot. Makes S servings. CHOICE CUT BY THE PIECE FBESH FRESH KCIOBY' LEAN MEATY ROUND CHUNK DRESSED DRESSED SMOKED SPARE STEAK BOLOGNA STEWERS RABBITS BACON RIBS 79*.a 19*" 59* u Vior 3 WholaJ J 35*. ^tha grill during SKriety, vaiy shapes — Hamburger is king cream and milk, fins sumraartima oodar baa r Bcaaoa To provide surprise touch of nutmeg and is topped with aerva with Icy cold whipped cream and grated lemon rind, OUiitsd with light p STOF IN AND SEI ME . . . g JACK SEEBOLD ;2; For • MoNliDwt-HarfraaTat 5 "CHEVY-tAND" SPECIAL IMPALA SOARQOO HARDTOP ::;DEUVEItB> with the following equipment: ,.fe*nSnirMfriLaMr liiff litllbMiniaMlii {mS OoM«n4 E Cmd i MATTHEWS ^rSSnv HARGREAVES, JACK SEEBOLD r FEdtral 5^161 SESTEBSmNJIRKET W. Hiroi OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK SKINLESS GRADE 1 MTIOIIS 3“^*! FKESH- DRESSED FRYERS U.S.D.A. CHOICE STEER Lb. 49' COUNTRY FRESH GRADE A LARGE EGGS 2*»S§' FIERI nOMCE EMfl MY...E*EIY MY!! head _ lettuce 21-25* banahas 10* lb. CAUr. ORANGES 29i PABCAL CELERY 19^ Stall CUKiS MICILII0.1 ^jrLbs.$l POTATOES 25 I RED RADISHES...........Bunch Sc Lbs. $139 TjAUtoiS 190 CNto $K=.s29i|$EBl^S29i BAZLEY'S OWN READY-TO-EAT SMOKED PICNICS 7-RIB CUT-—SLICED FREE PORK A LOIN zy^ FRESH, LEAN ^1^ GROUND ^ 0< BEEF ^7'^ RIB aNTER CUTS mm PORK R O* CHOPS S' STEAKS 69i CUBE Lb.QAK STEAKS PORTER HOUSE Oy* ORADC ONI ntSHMUlV TINDIMjOIN inb ■Azun t ox mm SKINLESS SPARE PORK INSTANT REMUS FRANKS RIBS ROASTS COFFEE BUTTER JCkOc. XTk 07 PTb- THE PONTIAC PRESS. THOtSDAY. JUXE 9. 1960 THIRTY-THREE. Banaoa Spill Salad Has Peanut Dressing ^Zl^r.^lBest Butter Made w1ae-«ttli ■ Hutted cutter, if you f >. Place banana o One for dte gMi ia this prdMer> Mn-aH^lctura lunctieon party aalad you can fix in a Jiffy. For die Peaipit Honey dreaaing, Uend 1/3 cud peaiAit butter with 2/3 cup aalad dreaaing and 3 table- top Une up three little aooopa ei For each aalad. arrange spcara of Belgium endive or curly From Sweet Cream topped with ja green mint cherry, each of the other two with a daiay of aalted peanut Add ^ Ught awiri of nutty dreaaing and bring the reat to the table for those who like more. Serve with piping hot oom bread and beoon muffina and coffee. "gradea of butter” is the baste growned Butter Frosting nora Good Thi. Woy iweet cream. Grade B butter ia there! ... Here’s a noteHom Consumer Marketing Information Agent. When butter rates 93 on the official Department of people prefer butter made from sour cream, but on the “official score sheet.” it is rated lower. Hw “top grade” label. "US Grade Ooidile A.” If it scores B2, It’s Grade A ... If H scores 90 or 91. butter is marked “Grade B.” The big difference . between are counted in grading butter, Bays Mrs. Joaephlne Lawyer. Some 45,000 alumimnn - dad homes will be built this year, according to estimates made by Reynolds Metals Oo. By tesming ig> butter and evaporated milk with confectioners sugar you can make a f rich and elegant browned batter frosting. Simply mdt K cup butter over low heat and keep over h-at until amootb and thoron^ily smooth and throughly blended. Makes enou^ lor M dtb cakes dr efte 13“ X r dbknv (One halt c« toasted cfaoppclp almonds stfarred in the i Remove butter from heat, and stir in about a third of the sugar. Add 2 tablespoons evapwated milk and the remaining sugar and beat t!) Hmownly Dessert _ . as eagy as 1. 2, 3 hi preptn-li« Fruit of The Gods for dessert. Put drained camied raspberrtesia a boad or individual dessert dlaliss. Pour canned apricot nectar eamr the berries: chill. BOOS HOLLANDABE - Serve Eggs Hollandaise with sUces of ham on days when meat is on the menu. You’ll be pleas^ to find that preparation is simple and resulta an^ wonderful when you try (he Mock Hollandaise Sauce and poached eggs on toast triangles for RRatleBs days. ~t ■ ■ Eggs Hollandaise Can Be Delightful Biunch Dish Pretty as a picture. Eggs Hol- finest brunch, lunch or dinner. - Eggs are favorites in spring meals — and ft’s not surprising. They’re so versatile that they can be used morning, noon or night. Not only do they star as main dishes St all three meals but they’re used in appetizers, snacks, desserts and salads. Eggs hsve other varied uses: to >aven souffles, omelets and cakes; to bind ingredients together in easseroies, croquettes and meat loaves; to thicken sauces and custards. As one St « B s( Mgh quality pratelif, bery. The delicate flavor and creamy texture of eggs is brought out by slow cooking. To be csriain fiiat the eggs you buy are at the peak of freshness, inM on branded, cartoned eggs. Buy eggs from refrigerated cases And store them at home in the refrigerator in the carton in which you buy theni. Eggs HoUnsdalse 4 poaclMd mi 4 thin •lion Mm 4 tMf( MMiif. cot la bait Fry ham slices 2 to 3 minutes or until lightly browned. Place on toast Top with poached eggs and cover with Mock Hollandaise Sauce. Makes 6 servings. Cooking eggs and egg dishes is a timple matter when you remember to treat the eggs gently. Use tew beat, for high heat toughens the protein and makes eggs rub- Make 1 cup medium white n Stir part of sauce into 3 alightly beaten egg yolks. Combine with remaining sauce and Mend thoroughly. Add 3. tablespoons butter and 5 tablespoons lemon Juice while stirring. Contiune until cook pietely blended. ~ih, vMh (IH& enj«t| | ^BARBECUE MEF^ nui OPEN PIT vwt/>€cufcx«iuce joeiwkcue^ 3PIH rn w«y» .-m inf pSoirfMtsni I ono w—• - (ofisnt ond I eock. thfoogh . . • ,ho’aotb*ow"sdl Stir in OPEN PIT •amecue sauce, j Sefvahotonplolaef I igoiiad bunt. \m SECRET OF SUCCESS IS THE BARBECUE SAUCE TRY THESE TASTY ^ OPBN PIT PBCIPBlp FOR A DEUCIOU6 COOK OUTI^ Cut tparsribs Inie aervluf pieaas. Csver fibs wMh Open alewinp cauls. Turn smd bruih frequsNtly with bsrbscus Seleci 2 le 2V^ lb. breilsn 4nmI sut lots tendug plessA Plueu chkken in bawl, cevar with Open PW Isiksan Sauce and ■Haw te stead ssascsd hmin^ •nd trill sb«al IS Inchss ■bsvu flewhit ceoit far SS le •nd brush with burbucuu remember the name You'll Nem Fot^ef the f hi or! VILLAGE SUPER MARKET 3342 AUBURN RD„ Auburn Hgts, 0f« Mml, Tim.. WhI. Tkns. 9 H.B. to f :30 p.B. FtL, SiL 9 H.B. to 9 f.iL Cloitd Saiddyi TBiS WEEK^S BONES BEY! Campbell's TOMATO SOUP SALES DAYS— THURS., FRI., SAT., JUNE 9, 10, 11 Witk piickiM Hi 95.00 w Btit *f ■Mil. piHliet Hii/w fnctriM.— Liait 4 cuu: con REMUS or MICHIGAN BUHER Lb. 59 GIANT Enjiw —INSTANT . . maxweuIO OMce ..'.nice. TENUTA SUPER MARKET $439 1 3515 SASHABAW ot WALTON VELVET BRAND ICECREAM c All Flovors Big Fomily V2 Gallon 49 U.S. GRADE "A" WHOLE FRYERS FROSTY ACRES FRESH FROZEN BUDS m-msH nozn ouimiKE meat pies O'r 99‘ 4 >•'89* PET MILK L.S. SUPER MARKET 331 S. BROADWAY, loke Orion KLEENEX I O' Corton of 200 |j| BiW Mslal • PiMinr • RoMahosd ^ FLOUR U.S 5 pound bog Colifornio Swoft-Rip# JUMBO 27 Silt Cantaloupe 3<«^1 CALIFORNIA LONG WHITE NEW POTATOES tot 59- FELICE BISQUICK OQc Big 40 ox. pkg. QUALITY MARKET 238 S. TELEGRAPH OpMi lf«r Dry hctoliiif SiB4ay-T9 ul to 19 pjk lESR-WmS-UQUOl 1 ( THIRTy-FOCK THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE *, IIWO PkkiedfjdiCaD Be a Good Snack 1^ «»» to Slow Sondwich • In all SpanUMpeakiiiK c tries, a favorite hot aeather hors d'omvret is pidded fish. UK Firri KrMde wMi salt and .a little lemon Juice, let stand an hour. Then wipe off. and simmer in a cup of SpanMi dive oil for ,1S minutes. Add no water and the heat moderate. When fish k ib hot oU add 10 pepper-cons. 3 hay laavas. half a cup of vbiecar and 1 small onion, thinly sliced. Place afi this in a deep jar or bowl and store for at least 24 houT|. DeUdom served c No Subsidy Now NEW YORK (UPI) - In llK, FRiHle Fanner paragrThnniF tteation of 3.000 copies of her cook A aiadwiefa adthin a sandwich, this Bed-Slaw Sandwich. Between slices of dtriched bread is neat" fiandwich-3 slices of roast bed hold h aervintt d your favorite cdKace slaw. Butter slioes d enriched bread. On ' the buttered bread, ptace a aUoe of roast beef, cover with cabbaae ^w. a second cut of beef and top with a bread dice. Sods onion rings in ice water for about half an hour before dbsp-fat frying them. Outdoor Cooking Expert to Grill Your Trout Says America’s finest family of dressings Maitettiv Agent. High mi Uw favorite barbecue Ust.fure ttycr-bcoil- TOs week, sfioppen wfil a^ola ftyna waignig two b» two tar baihacaa aad Mveral Ki have teatured aieni. For tat n adiBK, kok tar a Wtd wtta phaav meaty bread and tags Tima akap-pera taoUag tar wagm to atrsteh food doDai^ can do M by buying a whota bird and cutting it in half w in pieeds, Mm. Joaepldne Lawyw CHARCOAL BROILED TROUT—Large or small fita can be grilled on a charcoal tire. This method of cooking gives a real woodsy flavor tp the fish. If you're worrying about gettiiig the fish done, do some on-the-stovc cooking of it ahead at tiine and fiaish the job outside. No matter whether you catdi your own trout or buy them frozen, ail ready for frying or griUiag, at ■upennarket, you’ll find grilled trout to be one of the finest foods denied smoke. Place «n a griS or charcoal broiler and broil 1 or 3 minutes, or until fiak flakes earily Kd with a fork. which you can prepare trout for eating al fresco, both given below. ~Silher way. it’a bast to let the trout haw before cooMng them. In 'James Bcurd's Fish Cookery,' the author Am BaarTa Broiled Treat Dip dressed trout in flour and len in mrited butter. Sait and pepper them and arrange securely in a wire grill. Grill ovw hot coals for about 4 to 6 minutes, di big on the alae the fish. Brush with butter during the cooking. A good way to use_______________ loaf it to cut It into small squares and layer it with leftover Kggbrili and tomato sauce in a iwltilg gui; sprinkle with grated ‘ beat in the oven. Barbecue Appeal to Buygs »t roaat aaems untalcrestttg, Ida chnek roast can bs usad for barbecue Instead. The seoret tor sbooen Is throe fold U.S. Choioe grade blade churit. Have H out 1 to Ita tacli Grill it no noore than awdl__________ For added flavor, amne folks Uk to marinate R tai a baibecua in tae refrigerator overnight SooM ny this tow helps to malm it note tasir peak to supply. Stx to oeali to about tas averags price per pound for frtoh potatoes. Re-taat taem disootar in t tae grosn eskta is net good Mttog. Keep the ones you buy to a cool dark place, and trim U yeu want a roaat tar taa easy to eat apea, lay flat aui yea tatat'batoa, yeuH use fbero ta jdeep It ttero to anjf frotfl eolor You will still find striKbsnies ftnni ether states, tod Michigan's harvest Is startad. and youTl probably And a fsw to many toarkeis to taa end of this week. Plddngin the southwestern pari M the state get under way to fun swing to Juno 8 or 10. By Jun^ IS, you '' find them to vitauM. Evaporotod Milk AAoket CrHcmy Scrambl«d Eggs Using evaporated milk >ou can beautifuto fluffy of eflotf. Just beat sfac eggs fluffy, then bqat to 1 cigi p tablespoons evapontad milk, teaspoon Salt and M ' Over low beat melt em utter to a frypan to cover the bottoip of the pan. Pour to the km heat about 5 to 8 mtoutes without stirring. Stir lightly, cover and cook until done, about 5 to 6 minutes longer. Makes 4 to 8 de- OiBWkiUW tsasnlsK wl tas saiyx attoehed. aad « This Is the tims of year when greens tar aalad are moro plentiful and of better quality thanitoeual. Foe a taste treat, one may choose ennhinations ot the driicate salad bowl lettuce, tender rotnatae, es-carole, endive v spinach as well as the more common leaf and hand Isttoce. Thera is a heavy supidy of rodiahea and a good npidy of cel-sry to go ataog with As aalad partkms eat to lit year family Have you nottoedt Many stores aro leahirtog dairy prodUcta and win conttoue to do w during June. This month is the peak of milk ★ * ■ If you'have fairly food«i»d fish «y one pound each) and want be sure they are evenly cooked, the NationAI Fisheries Insttlute suggests partly cooking them in skillet first and then griUing them In the open, like this: Charcoal Brofled Trsat For each aerving, plan ot dressed trout (% pound to 1 pound each). Heat about Ml cup oil to large skillet for 2 or 3 trout. Saute it done, about U) mtoutes. Brush the fish with liquid con- Try the cottage cheese with DELICATE NATURAL ELAVOR iH Fairmont makes cottage cheese by an unhuhied natural process, not artificially. This is idiy Fainnont Cottage Cfaeese has a delicate natural flavor that moat cottage cheese does not have. A delicate natural flavOT that blends just right with the flavors ijf your favorite fruits. A dehcate natural l^or that makes it ddiightful to eat straij^ from the carton. See if your family doesn’t eat more protein-rich cottage cheese wdien ifi Faiimont, V P with its delicate natural flavor. rc Fairmont Cottage Glieese CREAMED LARGE CURD / OtD-FASMIONED SMALL CURD € : Weitown OPEN EVERY DAY INCLUDING SUNDAY 9 A.M. to 11 P.M. GRADE A Solid — Crisp — Icsbsrg HEAD lETTUCE f*ESH-FIRM—RIK . -mmm TOMATOES We copiy o complete line of paper plofes, cups, charcoal and all picnic needs! California New Fresh PEACHES WHAT A DRINKI WHAT A RUY! DOUBLE COLA 6 ^ 3 9’ rou> rAVOMTE BEER-WINE-LIQUOR \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JUNE 9, I960 THIRTY-FIVE VTrioofFiuits \ Blend in Sauce It'i ttte sauce, say the French, that makes the diA. So why not add a new lauce to your repertoire that will taiiii; a' touch of magic to Spring mmus. Y criuhcd pineappi*, SratneS J cup M*ai*u reuia* ^ V« cup *r*BS« Ivilc* •> 1 twupoaa srtUd arans* riad Mix brown sugar and cornstarch; stir in remaining ingredi-enU except orange rind. Simmer gently 10 minutes; add carange rind. Make a Soup \ From Cress , and Shrimp rTMs quickiy-prw^pared FOR, SALE What maktis a baby grew? Plain old Mother Nature, plenty of fresbair, tweet tleep am) whpletome food. And speaking of wholesome food, Gerber Strained Foods lend a ^‘helping hand” to your baby's growth. All are specially processed to retain a high degree of precious food values. Each one it designed to fill a specific nutritional need. Same gdes for Gerber Junior Foods. Importartt! Because quality has always been our first consideration, more mothers the country over use Gerber than any other baby food. All Gorbor Baby Foods are prepared with the care that only baby food specialists can give, / j ^ Only Qorbor Stroinod Foods Hsvo AH Thoso Footuros: c ,/ WIDE^P*JAR WITH qUiOK’TWISrOAP , NSW 8HOP-EAST LABEL FOR GmCKBR 8KLKCTION RlffllEg AMS OX?R BUSlNEeS ... OUIl QggT BpSMBSS U C^rber. baby foods mim Whife Cdt stems tram watercress, leaving leaiy top loraya; remove any leaves oit bottopi cutaway stems and add leaves to sprays. Remove any top fit fiom brath; turn into medhim-siaed kettle; add atercress stems — there sSbuld be a generous padeeddawn cupful; add water. Simmer about It mhiatfM or untU broth has dtattaguMiaMe uatercrem flavor; strala«. dbi-raidiag stems. Retara broth to kettle; add frosew shrimp potato soups; slowly briag to a When panbroilfng steaks chops, use a low temperature and do not cover the meat. Pour off the fat as it acromulates. PnnSAPnJC-OBANQE sauce -r Plnea^e or beef tongue. For that matter, no one says you haa an affinity for many mieats. This pineapple- can't use it on dessert if you want to. It will keep orange sauce would be delicious on ham,' pork in the refrigerator. Add watercress leaves — there should be 2 cups packed down and cream. Drain shrimp, rinse in cold water and drain; aM. Reheat slowly to wilt watercress leaves. Makes 8 servings. WHITER NYLON COnON MID DtCDOH No more yellowed nykm! No more dingy cotUHis. In automatic wtshea or regular washers, clothes come unmaculately clean, really WHITE-white with Roman Bleach. This cleanser b^ch dissolves the clinging film that yellows nykm, causes dinginess. Dtscovtr lh« cfiffwrnnc* wHh Roman Bloach. ROMAK bleach OUALITYl^OWPBICES.M SERVICE! Atlos Super Market Sole Diltf: TkwMay, lue 9 |e WeteeMiy . luf 15. iHcliiiif SuitY. Jut 12 b. ArmoHr's ''Sfor" SHctd BACON 1 % 49* Fr«sh, Lbbii SPARE RIBS 1 Chicken of the Sea 1 Hamilton Grade A 1 Chunk A JraLorS* eggs 1 SI 00 TUNA 1 y 39v Fresh TOMATOES on the COB # 49« 19‘- LoFrance a Zhi LoFronce 39* SLICEIf POTATOES 29* • leer • Wine • Liquor to Toke Out CerMr leldwiii Atro. end WeHon ihrd. THIRTY-SIX THR FONTIAC PREgS. THURSDiiY, JUNK 9, 1960 34 Foreign Students to Visit Area Hosts Sought in Farmington High Schoobrs From 21 CounfriM WiH Be Guests July 1 and 2 FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP » lUrty-iDiir forcisn hi udatB wOr vWt the and 3 u gueits ct the CIarence> viUe American FMd Service. The countries, are tourii« the United . . i i SJSr-^SiJ' Clarkston to Hear Jl'iSSrrsrSI iHonof^ PianisI ■ SlWtOUNDED — One lone boy ballet dancer. Jay Hotcfakias, stands among a bevy of prMchool channen and listens to UiM minute inatrucUons for the annual Waterford Toamahip recreatiOB depaitniem ballet radtal to be preaented at 8 p. m. Friday and Saturday at the Waterford Tmmjfiip High Schotd. Seated in front (from left) are Debbie Haynes. Madrin Hodler and Mary Jo Wal- lace. In the second row are (from left) Maureen Noland, Nancy Wittkotf, Martha Mcaendon, Madonna Chapin and Bedry Spraher. In the 'tMrd row are ‘(from left) Nancy WPaver, Sharaa Laako/ Lisa .Bozek. Rachel Byers, Janice Kanfidd and Ann Johnaoa Mary HotchkiaB (left) and Jane Ann Kabana stand betide Jay. (See story on Page 37.), Wew York Honeymoon Fellows Am Nuptials WOKHI-Area nawb'weds, .Mir^" and Mre. HBlard P. ._5SS:SS.?sS!2£ nairiafe Saturdtof hriLJMIhttr uS^ann^atiNiledUhe. * *’ r' The laMa it Jia^isnpfr loM laine -nick, dgliitff *lr. m. Walter Nlghtto- gale St The bridip^^ la M of Mr. and Mi*. Notah Poaey of MM Loon > DCNNB MOPFAT 'Local families who have an extra bed can extend good, old-fashioned American boqiitality.' School Supt. Louis £. Persons interested in beemning boat families can contact Clarence »gh School for additlaMl information, Schmidt said. ^ eseba^to students wIB atvive fa Am arcs shortly after noon My 1 and thea be taken to CtarasoevtUe High School Afternoon activities (or the group have been planned for both days fay the Local AFI| Committee Argentina, Greece, Indonesia. Italy,'Japan, Lebanon, Norway, PaUatan, the Philippines. Switzerland, South Africa and Uruguay. NCCCDean to Lead Tour Negro Evangelist, 81, Will Accompany Him to Europe, Africa Approves Contract for Work Avon Twp.OKs RoadCbIqriding AVON TOWNSHIP AVON TOWNSHIP - The Avon TWnMhip Board last night . proved a contract with the Okk-tand County Road Commissioo to provide for cbloriding all unpaved roads in the towi)^. outside the tmiage of Rochester. Palmer, dean of North Central t3uistian Orilege, will IdaVe day to lead a stx-week evangelistic tour of Earope, the Holy Land ind Alrica. ★ A; ♦ Palmer will be acconipaiied by Marshall Keeble. 81-year«ld president emeritus ol NashvfBe Chris- Keeble wUl be the first Negro evangelist of the American Churches of Christ to go to Africa. Ihe tmo mea w« hegla their tear hi londsn aad wW go from there to Paris, Fnuridert aad Bsme. They wiU preach to sev- Christ thdiaghiai Earape. Fitan Rome they will go to Bie Holy Land where) they will i 10 days touring and studying religious conditions. dr ★ A The remaining weeks of the trip WiU he spent la Nigeria where Palmer was a missionary from 1954 to 1967. WhBe In Nlgerie. Iho ovangH-hits wtn lead two tratahig lec-. oae among the Eflh- es of Christ and two Christtoa Bchosis la Nigeria. Planning to accompany Dean Palmer' and Keeble is Rodney Grantham, of Crawfordsville, Ind., a freshman at NCOC, who is stwfy-ing to be a preacher Church of Christ. He has raised 8900 of the M.SOO he needs for the trip. Tlie group plans to return to the college on July 20. n F. Mac-Fort Wayne, lad., iUMunce the engagement . of flirir doubter Sandra Jean io Lae H. Ihompaon.. son of Mr. add Met. Gtean Li Thewnpooo of «B34 Chacmie R4., Union Lake. No weddbic date has been de- ed in the three-applkatkin chinrids milL on .each-MJlOO of . program are {ntmary roads now vahutian outside th* village to pay catH fbr by the oommbshm and lar the cUoriding program, those already oiled. The eeet el the preieet wM be ttn per mSe, net to exceed W,- The first payment of $5,000 will be made July 15, with the balance due Dec. 31. The township electorate will be Cheboygan Would Let Chief BeGole Quit NOVI - Police Chief Lee BeGole has been informed by the OMboygan (3ty Council that If he will submit a aecend resignation af ^police chief three it will be accepted. ■eOsle had takea the Mgker. paylag Cheboygaa Job la Febra-■nr. hat . CAROLYN THOMAX A July 58^1tB'dale haa been set by Carolyn Thomas and Howard Vamon. The bride-elect is the daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. Rutherford Thomas of SOM Union Lake Rd., Walled Lake. Her fi-aaee, who U sUUoned at Selfridge Air Force Base. Mount Clemens, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Vamon of San Antonio, Texas Junior Women' to Have Luncheon and Installation ROCHESTER-Members of the Rochester Junior Woman's Club wlU convene toorro*r at 13:30 p.m. for their Menntal luiicfteon end to-stallation of officers at the Ro-nda Inn. , Mrs. Louie Steib, senior advise in install Mrs. Richard ( Jerome, president; Mrs. William Beard more, vice president: Mr.<. Robert E. Chandler, recording sec-gtary; .Mo. JLiciianl SfiU...c(u>. respanding secretary; and Mrs. Leroy A Aldinger, treasurer. Twenty members will be welcomed Into the organization at the luncheon. Outgoing officers also will be honored. Oochairmen are Mrs. FMriunan and Mrs. Robert Con* Novi Schools to Borrow on Sta^ Aid $16,80^ ( NOVi The Novi Communily Bchnois DtoMet gained sUte ap-nml y«i|lenlay to borrow $16,800 for operating •xpanaet against 1960A1 anticipated aUte aid. School district borrowings against anticipated aid throughout Michigan for the current fiscal your have soared to $38,-6lt,(M,'acoordlni to State Depart- The only roads not to be includ- ■eked to authorize a tax.apread of ril E. Insurance agents Dale and Nina dartin and the Jerome HIU ~ ance Agency were named agents at record to haddle the famnance bustness af.the townahip. ★ ' * ♦ They will be adeed to conduct survey of the'towirehlp’s present policies in the next 60 days then to But in April, BeCkile gave nose to (3ieboygan that he was returning pemumently to NovL His resignation was refused but be return^ to Novi anyway, intorm-ing.Cheboy^ officials tbst he would think the situation over. That was May 1. The Cheboygan Council is now tirtd of waiting for an. as has instructed its city nuuisgvr to ask BbGole fdr a new resignation. It Was Their Downfall MOBILE,- Ala. (UPD-TWo brothers were sentenced to 10-yeer-terms after pleading guilty to robbing a state liquor store. Authori-ties said the two were caught W “ they should be handled in the fume. The final plat for Stratford KnoUs subdivision No. 1 on Avon rood, cast of Springhill subdivision was approved, subject to the (Inal approval of 4.1 acres recent^ add-d. The oulxfivislan contains 4B lots. dARKSTON—Vinner of the Society ot Amerieah M "Concret MM Award" cailler this year, DennU Moffat, wtil glvc recital at the dsrkatan Conservatory di Music at 3 p.m. Juae 18. , it, it It His program will include Works Of Usst, Bach, Franck, Chapio, Gnnodoi and Debussy. Jle holds a maatcc of music degree in piano from the American Conservatary aaC has played with the Chicago Symphony and the tern University Syn phony. Moffat has appeared in concerts throughout the United SUtes. Europe and the Far East. Bishop Emrich at Rochester This Sunday ROCHESTER—The Right Rev. Richard S. Emrich, bishop of ihe Epispopal Diocese of Michigan, will make his annual visitatian to St. Philip Episcopal Church here Sunday. ♦ * * A class of 36 wiU be presented by the Rev. Edgar A Lucas to be confirmed by the bishop at the 11 service. Asslstiiig aiU be Philip Hohl, lay-reader, and Mrs. Ida Whateley. director of religious ducatkm. Church School commencement, it which awards for attendant k'UAbe given, will take place at hc“:15 a.m. service. It wUl mark the close of the Oiurch School program until the nnkldle of Sept^' ber. Me dreMtoiiag o 8abi4a aecldhto eiyslals «d pe^ A IM enwB saeand her She cmied her grUadmotber's srWte BiWe wttb a comge ot white The bridegraom’s, skder Ruth was lAMd ot honor. Bridesmaids^ srere her Rster Barbara. Cathrelne Scbulto of Waited Lslto and her cousin Ere Cey ot*FnnkUn. MRS. HOXARO F. rom __________________Uahets were the bridegroom's coi^ Ridtia Der* darian of Ommerce and WUUam 1 of Wlxom. The hrlde-I’t brother Mark was Junior ‘and the bridi David was ring bearer. A recepdon was held Jn the VFW Hall here. ^ The newlywMs wiU.live in Mi-ford. Clid)viioinen Prepan for Pioiic Tuesday ROCHESTER — Preparatlsas Avondale School Voters Meet Hopefulf Jonight The Avondale (3tizens Committee win sponsor a "Meet the Candidates" program at 8 p.m. today at Avondale High School. The six candidates bidding for election to the three posts open on file Avondale Board of Educa-day win give brief talks about their qualifies tions and sir views on, current school prUblems. A dtort discussion of teacher mure, wMch also will be on the ballot Monday. wOl Be preaealed. During the cofbe hour to follow the talks, thoad attending have the opportunity to meet each nual picnic Tureday of tba Roidi-ester branch of the Hattonal Farm and Garden Aaan. The eveid win take place at 13:80-p.a. at the home of Mrs. Jamre JUt-Ui«. S688 Delano Rd„ near' Oxford. * , ♦ ♦ Cfodtairmen ‘for Bw day wiU bo Mrs. Robert Halbiick ^ Mrs. Beatrice Nash. ♦ ♦ * Other members of thrir committee are Mrs. Larry Shafbier, Mrs. C. W. Shepard, Mrs. Charics er, w. Oscar, J. EDWARD D. EVAN80N $2,000 Worth of jRwolry Stolon From Window Jr, Mrs. Lawrence Weymouth, Mrs. Flovd Withrow and Mrs. A1 Abo Mrs. Henry McNaDcy, Mrs. Walter Methven. Mrs. John Khodry, Edward Bowen and Thb to the JaaL meeting of Rochester garden clobbers until their Fall Flower Show In September. ROYAL OAK - Police here a A June graduate of Concordia | royaL 0 ,fminary, St. Louts, Mb.. Ed- |ookii« lor______________ ward D. Evanson of Rochesterwindow of the Kent Jewelry .has been named assistant pastor of Cram Lutheran Church in Milwaukee, Wis. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Evanson of 606 S. Rochester Rd., he will hto new duties in MU- waukee upon ds ordination and instollafion as a minister. Store. 308 W. Fourth St., yestetxlay morning and escaped with appre imately $3,000 worth of Jewelry. The theft was discovered at 4:28 B.m. when the breaking gtom touched Off the store’s burglar alarm. Police said about SO diamond wedding and engagement jsets were sttden. It 1 I Disraeli who noted that Deed Not Right ?!;|the h^'^thTw^“ trolman (3i(ton Shofner was sot-________:________________ poided for three days without pav! for opening parking meters and pushing down violation flags for motorists whose parking time had A/ your aoryice with security... OAKLAND POLICE SERVICE m Neiiabla (nMistrial, commercial, rostOeottal prepoe* ty protoetien by properly trained anO supervisor bonded and insured private peliee. • Tampert/y pr eonfnetuat aarviea; day$, nighh, waakaiufa. hallSaya * MoMa patrol • Faat patral • Armad guarda OAEUND POLICE SERVICE e.o. 407. PenMM, Mtaateaii. Day •, NieM> mi r.irrr MCTchants Hit All«Day Tic-Upg Seek Keego Parking Plan KEEGO HARBOR - Enforced parking to being sought fay a group of merchants here who claim that all-day paHcers are hurting their Ctoiming that some plan needed for UmHed parking are the the south aide Orchard Lake road. OajgilU'nB Is'TfeARB^- Hm diildren M Mr. and Mn. Wifi Sutherland ef 867 Morion St, Rofneo, wUl note their parents’ SOth' wedcUng aimivenary jrith an opda houre for relatives and Mends Sunday. The event wiB he in the Ffapst Methodist Chnrcfi at Romeo from 3 until 5 p^. The Suihertonds have two sens and two daugh-tan. They are EMward of Roueo, KenneOi and Mrs. Jay Eldred Jr. of Rochester and BIrs. Clayton HuD cf Phoenix, Arii been determined yet Spokesman lor- the group, day-on Bo^}ing m told the Council that the majority of businessmen favored Enforced parking had been in effect for two years' in the city use of parking meters. However, many merchants complained that the meters were hurting their business and the city had Hiein removed late lari year. Merrhaate at that time saM Bmtemen taM eeaM dris e to aeaiby aad paik (rw. The merchants themselves had 'asked that the metc|s be installed ortidaaUy &>r the ■if-ff—~l Jg hniny aniigto 9W. If enforced paildag to realized. It to expected poUcemna would be needed. Baldwin PTA Elddi John Tyson PrtsidRnt RIXSIERTER — John Tymm baa been elected preaidem of the Baldwin School PTA for the U60« ol year, med to* serve with him are John Chtora, mother vice teacher vice president; Mrs. James Robbiio, recofding secretary; Mi*. George Goble, cor- Oouncil ddegates are Mrs. Artur Ferguson and Mrs. Paul Ayres. SLEEP BEHER-FEEL BETTER-LOOK BETTER Be custom-fitted for a famous mattress IFIIIl'tIMFIITPBIFKr AMAZINO dticovary roveok osuct mutlrots firmneit ond length you need. New I Sdontillcl The enly sure way to bvyi Coiac In now fbr your fm fitting. . FREE Cuitom-Fitting CoKltE IN NOW! TN» ipMiol MTvim oveM* gumwedt. pro* vsMi mMehes We riawiy danwatrate yosr Nri ntonrea Choka $m> for ym bi evwy wey I Se, why bwy a mattrm bUndlyf Now, yau pay naibbig for o CMtoM-fIMng. VhM A today. Before you buy ony furniture anywhere Pay us a visit — Check our price togs and see the best choir values we have offered in over 20 years. Over IQO on disploy. SEE THE;tV LOUNGER A> $99,50 Value-- Only <69 50 for riTBI'S BBT OmrTBtytUft • 0pm Thvnday and Friday 'Hi 9 • HI-WAY FURNITURE MART, /S J 2 WOOD WADD 4 VF. B/RAd/NCHAM. M/CH. J MOCKS ... .V. THE PONTIAC mum THIRTYSEVEX Voters StubbOTn Aboiit Cfamgcg ^ IMSUSessions Can-Con May Not Get Far to Start June21 «TA.r.MAaAIf DKFHQfT Si Jutt bectuie b gtate cbOb b oomtitiitkxiBl ooo. Only 10 ata admitted AIbiIcb and Haw^, conrtltutteiii tarittm In the aoili Century. More oonventioa have been held than then have been And the eiataa have beaten Rep. Header to Run for 6th Election they have allewed to pee*. Gee* wtthiat a vete ef the peeple. The people have the final woixl in any>vent in Michigan and moet other elates. No conetitatton be^ comes effective in them until and unleu it is approved tv a major Ity (d the dcoimte. Normally a constitutional convention, once tts delegates are sworn in. is on its own. It is be- To Htod Drug Group DETROIT (UPI) — Charles W. Hahn, Muskegon, was dected president o( the Michigan State Pharmaceutical Assn, ft tts TTtti annual control ol the govemor or “jejnnent one, or ipdt and go Mlclii^ called a eoastitulionat mventton in US7 to reviu its constitution of 1850, but when the to a vote the people rejected it, U0.SS3 to 71,133. A nema ' ‘ ' by the fovemor up with a new dMdt in 1874, but tbia, too, WM defMtad at the poUs. II b, 0. -ana. .1 to 130,783 thte the Woivwine State WASHINGTON im-Rep. George Meader (R-liHch) announced he win file his noralniaag petmora for re-election June 10 to qualify fw Michigan’s Aug. 2 primary. to the Hsau _____ from MeUgaa’s IwisMsaal District The dtotriet addltton that ^ would . "revltaliu and modernize" Con-that it would better meet had voted five times against call- H. Wells, Battle Crctet. and expressing national doUcv. in ttie last 30 years. EAST LANSING « ~ Michigan State University’s annual summer school gets under way June 21 with a program including a 10-week sesskn, two five-teerii sea-sions, a'fine arts f^val, and a got its present CbnBtitution in 1906. Majorities voted against calling conventions in 1926 and 1942 to 'modernize’ 948 and 1^. the majority voQng on the calling of a convention approved, but both prm>0BalB failed becauw a majority of all those voting in the election* did not vote favorably on conventioo-caUing. tore crttfe Richard Griffith and landscagpe architect Garret EckbO. Sununer 0 • H r s e a win be af • fared by nearly aB unttceiaMy In a atotement, Meader said he would run on hit record and ■i«n work for a "more aggpetaive foreign policy," among other objec-tlvea, if he ia returned to Cangyeu. „ _ „ The Washington veteran said In The Pennsylvante -Cbrnmistion It said the one of 1873 could be brought up to date via amemh pointed out the atate’s c the GuU Lake Biological Slathin. From June 20 to Aug. 27, a restiy amnimr operate at Dunbar Foseet' near ~ ' Ste. Marie. Coureea in park From Regular Our lowest price in vey will alao be offned at Dim-bar Forcat begliming June 20. Credit counec in art and design raer-Ast School at I June a to July a. Waterioid High School to Present Ballet Recital Summer AcMvities fo Include Fine Arts Fete, Workshops, Institutes Sponsored by the township rec-reatton departtncnt, the show is expected to attract more than 2,-I, aoeording. to the (firec-tor, Mrs. Osrot WoUe. The story deals with the iteeam of an Irish fairy and the tale of Ikavorsa City. Ooutie and tl I be available at To Run os Democrat KALAMAZOO (UPI) - ’’OooM Dream WMh Alb’* Is die The words and music of theme seng were written by Mrs. ^Lswrenot Payne. AB of the - by at 8 pjn. Friday tnm 4 to 11 jonrs ef ago bovo " — - ymt to prep- Suit Charges Negroes Denied Voting Rights little leprechauns. There wiB be tiny pixies, fairies, six miaddev- formlng in the ballet redtale. Chrysler Marks 3Sth Year With moomcars DETBOIT (UPI) pradactlea of 9M0MM Feuf^-UM ereattm of Walter P. Cbrgraler and bla rngtonis-i begaa to nil aff Om asaembly Maxwed. Chryaler iutroduoed the Firm- laelBtfM to U states. restourant operator, has an- i aevenib U Democratic qomtaatian for Kalamazoo County ragieter of deeds. The Republican Ineumbont, Leonard Fcltea, win leek hiS - The public ia Invited. There ia WASHINGTON (UPD—The federal government Ttteeday filed its first suit under the new civil law rights law. charging that Negroea in Bienville Pariah, La., were denied voting rightsJn aa^otficially-raScOoneer^^Bern oT ladaTl^ criminatioa." Atty. Gen. William P. Rogm aiuiounced the euit, which was fUed In Federal Distriet Court in Shreveport, L#. The suit accined local white iiHB groups ana the Blcnvflle voting registrar with untowftiUy purging 500 Negroes from the voting rails prior to the 19H clectian. The government asked the court to issue an order aimed at stricken from electkm raUs tor bolt also called for appointment of a voter rHeree to protect Negro voting rights in the ■ ■ ■ pariA. Louisiana p Nomincrtos Postmostore Frank, Coidditt, and Gerald A. Oatrandw, TTout Lake. THIS IS THE DATE FOR... bonus eorningsl All Savings Received by ihe 10th of Each Month Earn from the lit! y/2% .Free Forking in the R^ir 200 N. SAdlNAW ST. ■ mm THIRTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSBAY. JUXE 9. IIHSO New Bus Service Starts Today TO PONTIAC TRANSIT CORP. We know this welcome will be echoed by many people who are happy to have bus service once again. We want to urge all of these people to ride the buses often and encourage their friends to use the new service. We know the people at Pontiac Transit Corporation have a reputation for outstanding bus service and that they deserve the support of all citizens of Pontiac. We know that they will provide prompt, courteous and efficient service that will make them very welcome indeed. Sove Time ... Enjoy Convenience ... Sove Money t^lDE THE BUS The Pontiac Press THE PONTIAC PRESS^ THURSDAY. JUNE 9. 1960 THIRTY-yiNE Gala 'Hills Tea A festive membership tea, held in the Bloomfield Hills home of Blrs. James Q. Ooudle, lira. Walter Williams and Mrs. Harwood Bacon, was hosted Wednesday afternoon by St. Joseph Merby Hospital AuxUiary. Several hundred wranen were in attendance, including many charter members of the organization whose chief interest is the clinic bt the hospital. ★ ★ ★ Pouring at the afternoon affair were Mrs. Ralph Polk, Mrs. E. A. Christie, Mrs. Ralph Allen, Mrs. James Roach, Mrs. O. E. Baldwin, Mrs. Robert lYicker, Sirs. Henry M. Simpson, Mrs. John Maddox and Mrs. A R. Davis. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Simpson is chairman of the membership committee. She was assisted in her duties at the tea by Mrs. Tricker, Mrs. G. D. Wright, Mrs. Floyd Schoonover, Mrs. Clifford Dick, Mrs. Charles Wagner, Mrs. H. Guy Moats, Mrs. Maddox and Mrs. F. O. Rorabaugh. The auxiliary is deep in plans for its gala fall social and fund-raising affair, the “Denim Dance." Mrs. Davis, dance chairman, will meet with her conunittee Thursday to continue work eqieclal-ly one who is known to have limited meai» — is not expected to make any return. That he makes an effort to be agreeable to her guests is all a hostess generally asks of him. ‘ For r e p e a t e d hospitality, there does come a time when even a bachelor may be expected to make some effbrt to Peaceful Coexigtchcp Best, Says Abby Stay Out of Wife's Neighborhood Wars By ABIGAIL VAN BVREN DEAR ABBY: My wife often gets involved in neighborhood tiffs. It’s usually over the children. None of these disagreements are very serious or lasting, but there is jdenty .of commotion at the ABBY So regardless of how your particular hosts feel about this, it would certainly please them to have you, let's say, send the wife a few flowers on an anniversary, or sometimes take her a box of candy; even a lew toys for the children. . ' Or, as a special treat, if you can manage it onoe h year. Invite the husdand and wife out to dinner, or to tbe theater. ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. Post: My bus-band has Just been made a pi^r in bis firm. Would It be proper to send out announcements to this effect, and If so, how should they be worded? Answer: It is tbe hrm that sends out cards announcing that your husband has been made a partner. They also usually repeat the announcement as an advertisement in the business pages of the newspapers. ★ W A Dear Mrs. Post: When a , group of women goes out to dinner together and the bill is always divided evenly, isn't It bad manners for one or two In the groqp to order the most expensive dishes on the menu7 Shouldn’t all try to order food within the same price raiige when die biU is split? Answer: They most certainly should, To order expensive dishes to be paid lor by the group is most unfair, or at the very least, dioughtless. i I Niblfck Members I Plan Golf Date i Thirty-four members were t present for die monthly Nib-* lick Otfb luncheon following r the golf game and regular busl- rently mad at and I am sup-t posed to be mad at that woman and her whole family. My wife says a husband should be '‘loyal’’ to his wife and back her up. I am by nature a friendly guy and 1 don’t like 'oeing mad kt people who haven't done me any harm. This is a sore point between us. Abby, and Fd like your opinion. FRIENDLY DEAR FRIENDLY: A man who ’’gets mad’’ at a whole family simply because of a quarrel between wives, shows his stupidity, not his loyalty. Let your wife fight her own battles and don’t get involved in the neighborhood squabbles. ★ ★ ♦ DEAR ABBY: My husband plays poker with a group of men every Saturday nij^it. For one lame excuse or another no one else wants to have the game at his house, BO it winds up here almost every time. As in every crowd, there’s always someone who wants to play "one more hand’’ to recoup his losses. As a result they play until dawn. I don’t have to stay up to wait on them, but 1 can’t sleep witii those poker chips clinking all night. Am I being unreasonable to ask them to have the game somewhere else once in a while? * MRS. CHIPS DEAR MRS. CHIPS; If you want to keep the home fires burning, take the chip off your shoulder and throw it on the logs. Many “poker widows’’ would love to have your pnto-lem. At least you kiiow where your husband is every Saturday night. ★ ★ w DEAR ABBY: ESeven years ago I married a man whose parents were European-bom. His family thinks he has a halo over his bead and I have horns growing out of mine. They all speak very good English, but when I’m around they start talking an.old country language which they know I can’t understand. They claim they don’t speak EngUsh because they don’t want the children to understand what they are saying. Yet tRey use the most vulgar words in the English language when the children are present. I don’t get it. Don’t tell me to complain to my husband. His parents can do no wrong. How does a good wife who loves her husband cope with a problem like this" NEEDING ADVICE DEAR NEEDING ADVICE; Ask your husband to teach you a few WM<^r^i£il foreign language. Then learn a few phrases. Next time his family congregates, toss out a phrase or two in their native tongue. -Look wise and chime in occasionally. Hiey’U assume you know more than you do, and soon they’ll figure they might as well speak English, or learn another language. * ★ W CONFIDENTIAL TO "BER GIE”: True confession may be good for the soul—but it’s usually bad for the heel. Don’t nag him. WWW "What’s your problem?" Write to Abby in care of this paper. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. WWW Abby’s best - selling book, "Dear Teen-ager,” is on sale at all bookstores. FfV« Pays Today in Woman's Saction Perkin and Mrs. Norman Berry of Pleasant Ridge and lirs. Norman Berry of Birmingham. Joan Lang will entertain at a linen shower Wednesday cverring and the following evening Martha’s sister. Mrs. William Jamet^will give die spinster dinner at Red Run Golf dub. Miss Mehrer wifi be married June 18 to David Frsdric Myers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sumner Myere of Ann Arbor. Mr. and Mrs. Myers wffl give the rehearsal dinner June IT at Birmingham Country Club. An evening idiower was given by Mr. and Mrs. Jade Beattie and Mr. and Mrs. Dana Larson of Ann Arbor with leis of orchids for the bride flown from Hawaii.' Vincent Wall gave a theater party for the couple May 29. W W ■ W Dr. and Mrs. John C Pearce of Denver. Colo., (Mary Knecfat) announce the birth of a son,, Michael Alan, May 13. ■ . w w w Mrs. John W. Blanchard has returned from an Eastern motor trip. She visited her daughter Sally in Boston. Mass., and stopped at Skidmore fol-lege to pick up her otoer daughter Betsey to bring her home for tbe summer. Betsey’s classmate Linda Lewis of Oneida, N. Y.. accompanied them home and will be their guest for several days. Mr. and Mrs. David Walker Lee have returned from several weeks in Europe. They were accompanied by their mothers Mrs. Harry M. Lee of Lansing and Mrs. Roy L. Bones of Topdu, Kan. WWW Mr. and Mrs. Denton Anderson will entertain at dinner this evening before the benefit performance of "Merton of the Movies" by St. Dunstan’s Guild. w - w w Virginia Penrose, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cement A. Penrose Jr., sails for a summer in Europe June 18. Her aunt Mrs. Allison Monroe will give a luncheon for her next * were completed for toe threa- • week tournament, beginning June 14. C Mrs. George S. RMs wm » guest for the d«r. Mis. Wil-« Uam F. Grant wiU be hostess *■ to the group for toe July \ luncheon meeting at her Sodon field Hills. Cranbrook Music CuiWs telephone comynittee was honored at a tea Wednesday afternoon at the Brook-side drive home of Mrs. Max Fruhauf. Committee Chairman Mrs. Charles Himelhoch, left, of Birmingham, discusses the group's summer programming Jester McCoy of Ann Arbor, director of the Michigan Chorale and Mrs. Arvid Andresen, also of Ann Arbor, director of die Youth For Understanding Progam of the Ann Arbor-Washtenaw Council of Churches. . Thuroday in her Grosae Points Harry D. Hoey, headmaster of Cranbrook School, and Mrs. Hoey are expected to arrive home from South America^ just in time for tbe graduAtion ceremonies the end of this week. Mr and Mrs. Hoey have been tfiveling iii South America lour months, y W W W M|r. and Mrs. Lyman Qraig entertained at a lami^ cocktail party Sunday for Mrs. Craig’s brother-in-law and sis^ ter the Glen Douglases of Spooner, Wis. They all left Monday moiii-ing for a motor trip in northern Michigan. Unit Installs Officers The Pontioak Chapter, National Secretaries Assn., installed 1960 chapter officers at a candlelight cerentony following Wednesday’s dinner meeting'at Devon Gables. WWW Serving with Mrs. Kay Rector. incoming president, will be Mrs. Garland Woody, vice president; Mary E. Johnson, recording secretary; Mrs. Warren Trevethan, corresponding secretory; and Mrs. Michael Kerensky, treasurer. WWW The annual chapter scholarship was awarded to Carolyn Brinker, student from Pontiac Theresa McVeigh reported on the division meeting in Lansing in May. New noembers Mrs, Ernest R. Kyte and Mrs. Qeatus Gamer were b ' Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Gariand Woody and Mrs. Charles Woody. Will Loud Pair Mr. and Mrs. Percy Blynn will observe their 4()th wedding anniversary with an open houae from 1 to 5 p.m. for t^r friends Sunday at lyle drive, EHxabeth Lake. Tbe reception will be given by their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth J. Meyer. Committee for Festival Honored at Tea Mrs. Max Fruhauf opened her Bloomfieid Hills .home for tea Wednesday afternoon to honor the telephone committee of the Cranbrook Gardena . Summer Festival. w w .★ Chairman of the 35-member Committee, Mrs. Charles Himelhoch arranged to have Klme. Sandra Severo, Lester McCoy and Mrs. Arvid Andresen present to meet With the group and discuss the part their organizations will play in the unique summer festival. WWW ITie Michigan' Chorale will open the series June 26 mder the direction of Lester McCoy of the Untverslty of Michigan Musical Society. The concert win be In the Greek Theater. The 70-member Chorale of talented high school youth wUl Mrs. Arvid Andresen of the Youth for Understanding Program of the Ann Arbor-Waah-tenaw CouncU of Churches was behtad-the-seenes woifa in |dan-ning toe first South Ainarlcan tour of the group. WWW Mine. S' vero’s ballet will -appear on the July 10 program on Cranbrook EMte grounds. They will be accompanied by 25 first chair men from the Detroit Sympiwny un-. der the direction of rValter Poole. Final program of the series wA be July 17 to the Craiv-brook Stadium. The Dave Bni-beck Quartet of American Jaxz fame will be heard. Mme. Sandra S vero, left, will present her famed Stvero Ballet m the second program of die Cranbrook Music Guild Summer Festival. She is shown with coin-mittee member Mrs. Wtdter Skinner^ of lakewood drive in the garden of the Fruhauf home. FORTY ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JUNE 9. 1960 Candlelight Core (NEA) — Diidng kgr-1%M icn Iw mnaaUc, M b* drafadi«. Your Uurtldi riMMU bo «~de«r Tei! or ^ ■pctMnt MdeMCDt (hade. Avoid ftp- This Exerctee Wffl Help wfll kx)k dark and diadowy in dim light. bashful . BIKINI Cam* on in ... the fMhtone art fine! Under the (un or in the water, our swim suits' will win your admiring glances.,.artdprovide a maximum of action for comfort. From bikinis, modified two piecers and dressmaker styles. In Alex of Miami and Lorch of Dallas. 26 W, Hufx>n St. Your Thighs Too Bulgy? By iOSEPHINE LOWMAUr You cannot mix ikimpy ak VMi bulging thighs, or knee-length skirts with pipestem legs and bony knees and etqtect the most attrac- Always ^ r ddrts a Ut fuller if your and wear your skirts a little longer you have ddimy legs. toes, lifting the heels u far temn the floor as poariUe. Hold for a few seconds and slowly lower heeb to the floor. Do this S times each morning and each night It wiQ take a few months to see a .difference since you actually are building muade. Of course a in poundage also will hdp. the calves can be especially troublesome—they may be either too large or too small. The first of the following two exercises will indease th^ measurement of the lower leg if you do it many times each day. The second exercise wfll reduce the calves. 1. Stand tan. Rise high on you' ti» waU to brace yoursdf. the left knee up in front of you. Now hide with the left 1^ down toward the floor and a........ ward the rear. Continue until you have kicked about 10 tiroes that leg at first—graduaUy working up to the point where you can kick SO times with it 1 For reducing the calves Us the floor ‘on your back. Lift the left l« up as tar as you can with knee. As you Uft the leg turn the toe back toward your head. Lower leg to floor. Do the same thing with your right leg. Continue alternating left and right. Let me warn you not to execute this exercise suddenly. Feel your way along. Now, for tixwe bulging thighs, try this exercise: Stand tuting the wall or a chair or the md of ttas bed. Take hold of the ii GRINNB-L "Oonish Modam", Rag Now Sava $945 . . GRINfsIELL'S, 27 S. Saginaw FE 3-7168 •T>» STECK "FrsrKh Frovineter Rag Now Sava $1035 . . . %W $196 $945 .. . $760 $1M EXTENDED ACCOUNTS AVAILABLE, V. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 9. 1960 FORTY-ONE Eyton Michigan Awards Degrees to 13 Area Studento Cqllege Commencemm^^Highlighted in June Entem Midiigui IMwnity, YpiUantl. "will swird aegreei to followi^ area atuaenta at ite 107th June commence- Fktak Edmund Banner Jr., Donna Jean Broeted, Mary Oleta, Moore CSuate, Adeline Marie Ciotti. Joel Neal Goldberg, CaixdyB Kay Henry, Yvonne Elizabeth McFee, Dale Edward Perrett, Debnar Raymond Sehrala, Stlrley Gwendo- , lyn Tant, Rodney G. Treala, Joyiw Elnora Watson and Martha Grace Wendland. W W ★ Ellen Van Dusen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Theron Van Dusen of Bennington drive, Bloomfield Hills, received a bachelor of arts degree from .Skidmore OoUege, Saratoga Springs, N.Y., Sunday. She is a member of International Relations Chib, Chorus, and Studio Arts Oub; treasui^ er of College Government Association, and servOd as house counselor. ★ ★ ★ The William Bradys of West Comdl street were surprised at a housewarming Sunday afternoon. Forty people draped in to see their new home, and shower them with gifts. Most surprised were the Brady children, Tim, 4; Leesa, 3; Kris, 2; and baby Scott, 11 months. Mr. Brady's birthday was Monday and be was feted, also. it * * Mr. and Mrs. Harold G. Andrews (Ina Sprogis) of Madison Heights announce the birth of a (taughter, Judy Renee, June 1. at WUliam Beaumont Hospital. ” Grandparents are .Mr. and Mrs. John Sprogis of Rochester and the Charles H. Andrews of North Joslyn road. * w w Tapped for Arista, senior women's honorary society at Western Michigan University. Kaiamazoo. at the annual June breakfast Saturday, were three area graduates. All are Juniors studying secondary education. They are Barbara L. Taller-day, daughter of the R. George Tallerdays of South Avery road, Waterford Township: Gail E- Mitdiell, daughter of Jack C. Mitchell of Walton boulevard; and Marlene J. Lazen-by, whose parents, the Royce K. Lazoibys are of Drayton Plains it it -k An informal open house was held by Kathie Hunter in her West Iroquois road home Monday evening, honoring her University of Michigan classmate,. Joanne Wood. The young cdlege set presented a farewell gift to Joanne who left yesterday to join her parents, the Harry J. Woods in their new home at Long Beach, Calif. Pattie Kline assisted Kathie with arrange- State _____ _ Charleston. 8.C.. where they met their son, MaJ. Delos E. Keeleaivand-^ildren Charies, Michael and Marlene Sue, who arrived from the iCanal Zone. The children returned to Pontiac with their grandparents and Maj. Keelean will arrive here later in the week. it it it Mi-s. Sharyn N. Palmerton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Zielke of Berwick boulevard. received her bachelor of arts degree at Albion College, Monday. Mrs. Palmerton also received her State Teacher’s certificate at this time. She pleted the requirements for her degree in September of 1959. The John Venemans have returned to their home on Dwight avenue after spending live nfionths on Anna Maria Island, Fla. Area Man Bridegroom in Double-Ring Nuptials naymond Bernard Gnmdy, son of the Raymond Grundys of Airport road, Waterford, was graduated from St. Joseph Preparatory School, Bardstown, Ky. with awards for sdMdaistics and music. it k it Gene Lodce Beaudiamp of Chippewa road has been named area chairman - tor the 19th National WAVES reunion of the siHsaUed “Petticoat Navy.” AU former WAVES.^ their hurtwnds and children, are invited to the reunion in Dallas, Teoc. July 29^ More than 80,000 women served as WAVES in World War H, and over 5,000 are currently on active duty from Alaska to Africa, as wett as in the Oon-tinental United States. A bachrtor of ftaie arts de-' East Bethlehem Luther a Church of Detroit was the setting for the Saturday evening nuptials of Anita Lou Bariass of Warren and Robert Eugene Hoisingtom The Rev. Edmund SchUdt officiated at the double-ring candlelight ceremony fidlowed by Holy Com- MR8. R. E. HOI8INOTON The Eugene Hoisingtons of Gid-dings road, parents of the bridegroom, Joined Mr, and Mrs. Irwin Alan Bariass in the receiving line at their daughter's reception in the church social hall. Claasic simplicity distinguished the bridal gown of crystal white daugMer of Mr. and Mrs. At Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa., Phillip Martin Hubbard Jr., of South Berkshire road, has received his bachdor of science degree in industrial manage- bouquet taffeU which eztewded into a court train. use motil in Alenizm lace re-embroidered with sequins pearis, was appliqued along the portrait neckline of the pointed basque bodice and on the bouffant skirt, styled with butterfly bow. it it it Pleated taffeta and lace fashioned the princess cap which cauidit the tiered veil of silk illusion. An orchid centered the bridal cascade of stephanotis and ivy. Mrs. Joseph H. Riley o( Reading, Pa., her sister’s matron of honor, appeared to bouffant tal-lerlna length bHge cMffon over taffeta with a Dior bow accenting the bodice. A veiled beige caplet and short wMte gloves completed her ensemble. Yellow streamers fell from her round bouquet of yellow cama-ons. William Hoislngton stood as best man for his brother. Seating guests were the bride's brother Bruce and Lawrence Conley. it it it Shoulder Corsages of orchids accented Mrs. Bariass' beige silk watercoior print sheath and the blue-gray sheath with lace bodice selected by Mrs. Hoislngton for her son's wedding. The newlyweds are spending two weeks at Niagara Falls. A good way to revive wool garments after wearing or unpacking is to hang them in the bathroom - - and turn on the hot water in the lene on the accordian. shower. Wrinkles will steam out. Philatheas Scrutinize, Socialize Memben of the First Phila-tbea Class of First Baptist Church met TUeaday afternoon in the Educational Build^ Mrs. Tinney New President Mrs. Homer Tinney wilj prertde at the meetings ot Alpha Chapter of Beta Theta Phi Sorority for the coming year. Other officers dected indude Mn. OecQ Denison, vice prertdent; Marie Schimmel, treasurer; and Mrs. Orben WiHdos, dal gathering. Mrs. Margaret Putnam pre-skled following group singing conducted by Mrs. Gertrude Wflliams. Also partidpating was the Kennedy family. They told of t^ recent mission in the Belgian Congo. The Rev. George Kennedy sang vocal selections, accompanied by his daughter Char- GoldStar Mothers by Mrs. Hcnwit Joamon. Mrs. WilUne rapertqi on pIsM ler the etOem party eehednied lor JoM n at Ted’s Restaaraat. Mrs. Olea Griai, Mrs. TTimey was fioateas to the group for a cooperative dinner at her Elizabeth Lake road home WUliam Nicholai of Pontjac. ServiiM on her committee Mrs. Homer Thmey, Mrs. WObert Davies and Mrs. D. R. lObbie. Guests were Mrs. H. E. Gilmore of Albuquerque, N. M., and Mrs. to Attend Parley Gold ^ Mdheri (Maimer No. 9 will attend the board meeting I Lansing July U. Minutes of the recent convention dd in Jackson were read when the group met at the Disabied jra avenue Tuesday evening. Mrs. Bii« O. Cole of Orton-viOe road wiU entertain the mam-ben June 13. Business meetings win recess until Sept 6. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Seward Schultz and her committee to the 35 pres- Weory? Stretch (NEA) — When we are fatigued we feel a natural tendency to slump. Try to stretch instead. Stretching is an excellent way to ease strain from weariness. Slumping, on the other hand, cramps the muscles and will add to that tired feeling. LINGERIE for the Graduate SUPS GOWNS PAJAMAS BABY DOLLS CAN CANS ROBES Lot's Go to TOGS Sub-teen lun clothes for the busy set that load such an active Ufa! Arthur's young fashions have the dash and dazzle that sub-taens love. Complete Stock Regular 1,99 and 2.99 TEmilS DRESSES 3.98 •"J 4.98 NOW r-2 69 fjcme 3.98 Ride The Bus Downtown! 41 N. SAGINAW STREET ? 3!nt. fashions, right for FUN IN IDE SUN Eaasy care amal dress with Its own bloomer for alt active sports. Piaatad or swing skirt. Sub-T«^n Sub>taaro gat in-tha-fashions . . . drip-dry cottons, suits in piai^ anid prints or tank suits. Aiso pleated skirt, sun styles Sizes 8 to M. HIE BATIK PRINT What could be brighter for the sunshine-season thart our mix-matas, ready to go boating, biking or hiking? The batik-lika shirt, buttortad down front in white it clavarly cast with white slim saikord cabin-boy pants, belted, in print. Sizes 8 to 14. Four Pontiac area alumnae will attend the annual Wellesley Weekend on campus in WeUesley. Mass. Leaving Wednesday were' Mrs. John M. Campbell of Glengarry road, Mrs. Richard H. Marr of Fairfax road, and Mm. John K. Armtarong of Randall Court, all of Birmingham; and Mm. Philip L. Lunde of Milford. Reducing! use... 5.98 STEADY PARTNERS ... 3.98 7.98 Ready to keep you company oil summer tong in our botik-like print set styled with . oll-freshness ond pep! The sleeveless shirt is white buttoned, down front; the skirt, full and breezy 4s belted in navy, buckled in white. (Shirt 3.98—-Skirt 7»98). Sport Ikop-Maia JToor FORTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRRSS. THURSDAY. JUNE 9, 1960 Some 300 were present in the 'school’s multipurpose room. Oo-ehalfmeB Mrs. Joe Ooniink SBd Mrs. rred Garchow were assisted by a group of flftk grade mothers who served. WEDDING GOWNS $4995 S.S.S Bridesmaids’ Gowns ^25 INGRID'S Bridal Salon One of Oakland County's Largest 1 Perry at Pike FE 8-3300 LeBoron Graduates at Dinner Melvyn Staebler, assistant principal of Madison Junior High School, welcomed sixth graders a,t the annual dinner for the gradua-|tion class of LeBaron School Monday evening. Sharon Johannson a program, presented by the sixth graders, with participants Margaret Boehmer, Danny Voyner, Pamela Gasson and Carol Harris. The sixth grade band played several numbers conducted by William Brown. The sixth grade chorus, announced by Judy Lawson, sang I live numbers directed by Rosa-;mond Haeberle. Will Graduate Nurses Aides CAMP CURKSTON It^g a Day Camp With Weekly Overnight Camp4)utg ^ OPERATED AS PART OF CROSSE POINT CAMP A most ideal camp, consisting of 73 acres of beautiful roll-toj^tod at £luJluton_in Oakland^owty.^It is a day c^P -----------emight camp-out, a stepping stone experience to overnight camping . . . with dinner and breakfast cook-outs . .. riding . .. farm life — all in one camp. Far Infennation CaB Graduation exercises lor nurses aides who have completed a six-months-in-service training program will be held at Green Lake Resthaven Friday at 8 p.m. Lawrence Keller, assisted by Mary K. Myers, R.N., nursing d i r e c 10 r, and Mrs. Frank Dwyer, R.N., administratqy, will present hcmor certificates and pins to James Armstnmg, Ethel Cook. Mary Dickinaon. Doranne O'Connell, Gladys Myers, Irene Rachels, Lucille Segnltz, Gaudia Topa and Myrtle Weaver. Buffet refreshments will be served to members of the graduating class and their families following the ceremony. Set Open House The Widow and Widowers Acquaintance Gub of Pontiac will hcdd open house Tuesday from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. at Malta Hall on Perkins street. •This club is for all single persons over 35 "years " of age." Don't Babble (NEA) — U you’re lucky enough to have been asked out by that six-foot dreamboat in your English class, don’t babble ceaselessly about yourself and your interests without asking about his. It will probably be your only date with him if you do. ITS THE FIT THAT MATTERS ... FOR A SHAPE THAT FLATTERS 1st Foderal's expertly trained corsetieret fit you correctly for comfort and figure flattery. Summer time is playtextime..,. Ploytex ponfy briefs with cool cotton lining Keep thot PlAYTEX shope in comfort oil summer longl Ploytex Introduces a new ponly brief cool cotton lining . . . just In time for oil those won^rful summer oc-tivitiesl Slips on and oW in seconds. has new non-roll tfp. XS-S-M-L. 595 "AAoglc Controller" ponty brief gives extra tummy control. 6.95 DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday / \ Unit X MOMS of AmericA IK-monbers met Tuceday at the Elte-beth Lake rood home of Mts. rank Emery. Each member ' a sack Mrs. Duncan McVean reported on the natkSnal convention in May at Altoona, Pa. Members doMted to the "Pref MOMS ChalmHui Mrs. Howard Ertes of Btnni|«tinm, and for drapee at the Oemmeroe Nike Members also participated in the recent Memorial Day parade and Hear Convention Report Perry Mount PuR eervlong. Mn. Edgar Thomas srill open her home on Center street lor the Jime 21 meeting. +4onor Mrs.' Russel Steele Striddand of ‘ Country Gub drive, Bloomfield Hills, was among seven Uhiver-rity of Michigan graduates bon- ' today in Ann Arbor bw their contributions to U. of M. 'alumni activities. Mrs. Strickland was former chairman of the Alumnae Council and a director of the Alumni Assn, since 1955. She Is a member of the class of 1939. Demonstrating one of the games to be featured Saturday at the "Jamaica," a Mexican bazactr, in St. Vincent de Paul parish hall, are Mrs. Daniel Navarro of Blaine avenue, at right. Mrs. Jdhn Cantu of South Sanford street, blindfolded, attempts to strike the pin-atas filled with candy, guided by Mrs. filil^rto Jimenez of Jrwin avenue. Biide-El&:t Noimalee Applauded at Shower Normalee Braid was honored at a miscellaneous shower Wednesday /vening when Mrs-Carl Dahlgren and daughter Mary Sue entertained 29 guests at their Garland avenue home on Sylvan Lake. Miss Braid announced her attendants for her July 9 wedding. Matron of honor will be Mrs. James Braid of Detroit and maid of honor. Miss Dahlgren. Serving as bridesmaids wil^ be Mrs. H. Halladay Flynn of Flint, Ann MacDonald of Pontiac and Linda Lewis of Chicago, a sorority sister of the prospective bride at the University, of Michigan. Carol Flynn of Flint, niece of the prospective bridegroom, will be flower girl. BR0nn» XQ OFITOA The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carroll C. Braid of Rosewood drive. Her fiance is Albert Hayes Flynn, son of Mrs. Southard T. Flynn of Flint and the late Dr. Flynn. The couple will speak vows in Central Methodist Church' at 2 p.m., with the bride’s brother, the Rev. James Braid, and Dr. Milton Bank officiating. Guests at the shower were Mrs. Braid, Mrs. Flynn, Mrs. Roy Stroupe, Mrs. James Braid, Mrs. H. H. Flynn, Mrs. Quentin Waddell. Mrs. Carroll Osmun. Mrs. H. C. Cites, MUdred Hobbs. Dr. Edith Snyder, Mrs. Earl Bartlett, Mrs. Howard White, Mrs. Alton Hole, Mrs. W, W. Abbott and Mrs. Mae Grondin. Twenty-six couples attended Women’s Silver Lake Golf League play at 2 p.m. Sunday for Husband’s Day. Others attending included Mrs. Robert Zimmerman, Mrs. Allen Palmer. Mrs. Max Thompson of Van Dyke, Mrs. Thomas Lerew and Mrs. Loren Farrril of Detroit. Mrs. Earl Zimmerman of Rochester, Hil-dred Smith of Royal Oak, Barbara Hoddy of Dearborn and Linda Lewis of Chicago. Miss Braid and Mr. Flynn were also honored at a dinner in Flint Tuesday night given by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rutherford and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Millikcn at the Milli-ken home. Mexican Bazaar Saturday Our Lady of Guadalupe Guild of St. Vincent de Paul church will or a ’Jamaica,’ a Mexican bazaar in the parish 'hall on South Parkq street Saturday from 5 to' 11:30 p.m. Feature of the evening for tbei children will be the shattering of, several pinatas filled with candies' and goodies. Mexican food will be* served and baked goods will be' on sale. Dancing will begin at Men's Day Noted by Golf Leaguers Jake Martz and Mrs. Harry Freeman had first low net of 32; Todd Brackrit and Mrs. Louis Daniel, second low net of 33; Del Cote and Mrs. Kenneth Thayer, high net of 63; Richard Simpson and Mrs. Phil Dorman, low putts of 13. and Mr. Martz and Mrs. Freeman, four strokes with blind hole No. 9. Piano Recital Held at Church Mrs. James Paramo is general chairman of the fiesta. Working with her are Mrs. John Cantu, Mrs. Daniel Navarro and Mrs. Filberto Jimenez. Sisteihood Gets Reports at Luneheon Pupils of Mrs. W'illiam Heitsch held their piano recital Tuesday evening at the Chapel Congregational Church. Participating in the program were Douglas Christie and Robert McGure, Linda , Erhard. Dennis Sulo. Gail Gallant. Cheryl Saville, Ardyth Gallant, Christine Collins, Cynthia Guido, Karen Dagenois, Michael Jameson, Sandra Savdle and Marsha Goldman. Others included Deborah Shepard. Linda Perry and David Sisterhood members of Temple Beth Jacob gathered for their annual luncheon meeting Tuesday afternoon at the Temple. Officers Mrs. Charles Ger-sten, president; Mrs. Harry Arnk^f, recording secretory; Mrs. ^rwln Birnkrant, corresponding secretary; Mrs. H. Malcolm Kahn, treasurer; and Mrs. Robert Moore, financial secretary, gave their' annual reports. FM--SIN CLOTHES Summer fun separates are here ... set now for a sun-sotional time. Our THREESOME BONUS SET ^499 Popover Blouse Matching Jomoicas Solid Block Pants The shgrts set in block and white print with on,.Rxtra -pair of solid color pants . . . oil in wosh and weor cotton. Dork Seom or Seamiest HOSE ' 59* 3 Pair $1.50 - CatcH4 A skit on conducting meetings was directed by Mrs. Alfred Simmons with the aid of Mrs. Irving Schlyfestone, Mrs. Sam Stolorow, Mrs. Paul Wein-ner, Mrs. Jerome Peters, and Mrs. Kenneth Solomon. DEL Rev I FASHION DISCOUNT STORES 22 NORTH SAGINAW STREET NEW POUCY 1.000 BRAND NEW DRESSES • Juniors* 5-15 • Misses* 8-20 • Women*s liVi to 24«/2 • Petites • Sheers • Cottons • Sunbacks The Price **Del Rey** Made Famoiu DELREY I FR5W0M PgCOWIT STORES 22 N. SAGINAW ST. Musical selections were by Mr. and Mrs. Victor Lindquist, accompanied by Mrs. Addison K. Oakley. Rabbi Nathan Hershfield announced the forthcoming annual convention of the Central Conference of American Rabbis to be held in Detroit June 21-26. Temple Beth Jacob will be among the lx>st congregations for the event. Give Your Child . . . "FUN with a FUTURE RENT A Now Bttsy Ross Spinof PIANO! Lotsont Includod GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. II I. HurMi, PoMisc, FI 4.0566 •— OpM Mea. aiN Pri. Evm. UNIFOR/iAS Junior, Misses, Petite, Toll Girts ond Half Sizes. The OXFORD SHOP 59 West Huron FE 4-7212 Bon'Lon f.. FATHER'S DAT by PURITAN One sure way to Dad's he*rt! Through Amarica's No. 1 knit shirt'. For nothing looks . . . lasts . . . launders a full-fashioned Ban-Lon Brookview. Omr suggestion; Chose it inVVheat, Puritan's Father's Day Cok>r-of-the-fnonth; also In a whola collactiort of exciting colors. S, W, “t, and XL. $395 106 Noith Soginow SlrMt Opa« FrMoy Niftita 'til 9 P. M. THK PONT?Ar PPKSS. THURSDAY. JUKE 0. I960 FORTY-THREE Bigler-Kelley Vows Told Flpr lier mindagc to Jowpta Charles Bi(ler of darlMtoa Saturday morning In St- Benedict Church, Mrs. Patrlda Marlene Rohrer Kdley chose waltz-length white silk organza over ice-blue tatfeta. A hand-cascade ol white orchids and Uiie-tlpped carnations oonople-mented her shoulder "cloud'* veil of ice^due silk illiHloa. The brMe, «ai«htor at Mre. Beajanda Bohrer o( Ptagtee aye- was given In marriage hy her naele, Bldwid Bohrer. Mr. and Mrs. Matt Jerdaa o( Meant Morris are parents at the brtde- Attendants included maid ol honor Patridg Meagher; the bride's sister Mrs. Michael Pole-sak; the bridegroom’s slst^ Mrs. \yuirara GraidMUgh of Mount Morris; and Mrs. Arthur Wyzgoskl. She is the cousin of the Rev. Robert Wyzgoaki who solemnized the nuptials. length dreaeee et bise ayten over taffeta. Hewers for the honor maid were bhm daWes. and lor Mr. and Mrs., Samuel UForge of Walsingham Center Ont., attended their granddaughter's wedding. Mrs. Peter Proux, the bridegroom's grandmother, came from AuGres. The 1>ridegroom's sisief Mary Jordan Lome Linda at the College of Medical Evai«ellsts. While at EMC, Mr. Butler, president of the Pre-Medical Forum, appeared in the 196S40 edlton of Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities. CYNTHU SUE KELLEY Cynthia Sue Kelley has received a bachelor of arts degree In psychology from Kalamazoo College, Kalamazoo. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Perry G. Kelley of Linwood street. Miss Kelley U a member of the Eurodelphian Gamma Society and the Women's Recreation Associa- ROBERT O. JOY’NER Robert 0. Joyner has received his bachelor of arts degree with a major in history from Sioux Falls College, Sioux FaHs, S.D. The aon of Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Joyner of Osceola drive, he was Junior vice president, and i member at the college. If you consider buytog tinted Keep ha^bag contents to mini-stockings, recall: they look much mum; saves time when looking darker in the box than on the for things, and when changing leg. handbags. Ms. ' ^ ^ Speciol purchose from America's largist manufocturer of custom upholstered furniture! Beautiful, luxurious quilted choirs in polished cottons and textured fabrics with foam cushions which ore reversible — and -the contemporary styling which blends in ony room! VERY SPECIAl! ««- ^119.50 SPECIAL PURCHASE . . . Timed For Father's Doy, June19 Centamporory and Colonial CHAIRS $11950 to ^i395( C. fBelow) Platfohn rocker for old-fashioned comfort and to modem beauty; solid maple frame; reversible foam euihloos; pleated skirt; choice of fabrics. $129.50 A. (Above) Dad will relax in this comfortably sturdy wing-back chair with solid maple frame, foam cushion which Is reversible. Choice of attractive fabrics in prints and solid colors. $139.50 B. (Center) A high back chair with plenty of 'built-in eorafort pateh-wotk tweed covering, solid maple tlaaae. Also available in other fabrics. $119.50 OriN THUU., FKI., MON. IVES. 'TIL 9 JmI SpiiHi of Oichord L«k« Rood Free Farkkie.st FrMri aad SMe of Stare * lateriar Decevatine Caaasal At Na Hrira Cast Ji. ■ ■ ;,v V V. FOHTY-FOrR The Wetither THE PONTIAC PREIiSE OVER PAGES 118th YEAR ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. TlfTRSD^AV. JUNE 9, 1900—60 PAGES Friends Came to Aid SHE MADlf IT - Bedridden from injuries received In ai\ auto accident six weeks ago, Mrs. William Goodwin of Milford nevertheless was able to see her only son graduate from high r»nlUc PrMi schoot last night. Hundreds of her friends and neighbors arranged to have her taken to Milford High School on a stretcher. Her son, Keith, hands her his diploma while her husband looks on. 6-Month Drought Ends Buses Roll in Pontiac On Stretcher, She Sees Son Graduate Mom *s Dream Is Realized By KKBA HEINTZELMAN Thanks to the efforts of hundreds of friends and coworkers, a bedridden Milford mother was able to watch her son graduate from high school last night. As. misty-eyed Mrs. William ★ ★ ★ Goodwin watched from a stretcher their diplomas in the j>re.sence of in the crowded Milford High School Auditorium, the pain of a recent accident injury was momentarily forgotten. Her son Keith was among 143 Milford graduates who received Polio Didn'l Cripple Spirit ■Blaine Wins Scholarship By HARVEY ZUCKERBERG Red-haired Ellaine Schweitzer turned a handicap into an asset. She has had little use of her right leg and 16ft arm since she had polio 14 years ago at the age of 6. As a result Ellaine, has been strongly determined to do well, according to counselors at Pontiac Northern High School. She has done so well, in fact, that she has been awarded a two-year scholarship (all expenses paid) to Eastern Michigan College by the State Vocational Rehabilitation Department. more than 2,000 spectators. When the boy was handed the document, there was a loud round of applause from the entire assembly. * ★ * Mrs. Goodwin, or Rita as everyone knows her, still maintains she the luckiest person in the world, spite her unfortunate accident six weeks ago. She drives school bus No. 13 for the Huron Valley School •System. On her way to work May *, a blinding early morning sun blocked her vision as she attempted a left turn from MSt to the school grounds. A north-bound sUttonwagon rrwbed Into her car. She was taken to Pontiac General Hospital with a chipped hip bene, chest Injuries ELLAINE SCHWEITZER Sunny 76 Tomorrow to Follow Cool Night Sunshine end a hfgh temperature of 76 is the prediction for the Pontiac areh Friday. Tonight will be clear and cool with a bw of SOl ★ , ★ ♦ ’ According to the weatherman, skies will be sunny Saturday with temperatures continuing warm. ' Southeasteiiy winds this mo Ing will become 8-15 m.p.h. From a low of 48 degrees at 5 a.m. today, the mercury had' climbed to 74 by I'p.m. in downtown Pontiac. arshlp came from Mm. Lon Davts, teacher-counselor for the physically handicapped in the Pontiac schools. It Is obvious, says Mrs. Davis, that handicapped students have physical obstacles to overcome in the course of everyday school attendance. HELPED BY FIUENDS From the first grade on, Ellaine has had to have students help her by carrying her books, running errands and performing other small tasks she could not do with-tance. Her junior high school classmates carried her to and from first and- second floor classes for two years. However, the m o s t _ serious obstacle, says Mrs. Davis, is the student, himself. A disability, of course, affiKts the attitude and performance of the afflicted. Some may compensate by unaccepted aggressive behavior. Others may allow themselves to become too dependent and lethargic. Ellalur, who will receive her Ugh school dlpkMiia next week, (Continued on Page 3, Gol. 5) For 31 days she lay in her hospital bed fearing she would be unable to see her son graduate hold open house after commencement as she had planned. However. 30 bus-driving friends, their husbands, wives and neighbors decided to do something about getting Mrs. Goodwin to the school for the graduation exercises, and then planned one of the biggest, and best open house parties in the area. All tUs w GOP Rallying for Nixon After Rocky's Blast Vice President Keeps; Quiet AExiut Challenge I to Clarify Stand | i WASHINGTON (^ — Republicans in Congress generally have rallied behind Vice President Richard M. Nixon in response to the challenge flung at him by Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. Several, however, agreed with Rockefeller that Nixon should take a clear stand on the issues faced by the [nation. A number withheld [comment, as did the vice 1 president himself. ★ A ★ Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R-Ky) said Wednesday, "If he feels this way about it, he ought, to become an active candidate. Let Rockefeller and Nixon debate the issues before the convention and if Nixon is nominated, as I believe he will be. Rockefeller should openly and vigorously support him." Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel (R-CaUf) said he has urged Nixon in the past to speak ovt on Issues, but added: “Hie vice preatdent Is a member el the admliilstratioii and. In the main, the President's record will be the basis lor this year's presidential rampaign.'' Sen.. George D. Aiken (R-VD laid, "Mr. Nixon ought to mmuu out before the convention on both national and international issues.” Aiken also said he did not approve of Rockefeller's criticism and saw no possibility that Rockefeller could win the GOP presidential nomination. Sen. Karl E. Mundt,(R-SD) strong NTxon stipporter, ^said Nixon has presented his views on various issues over the years. Mundt added. "He has pointed out that until he has a status of his own he feels he is part of the (Eisenhower) team. I think his position is entirely appropriate.” Sen. FraacU Case (R-8D) eom-mented, “Hiat puts a little spice (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) One hour before the ceremonies were to begin, her husband broke the news that a station wagon would arrive along with a stretcher-on-wheels to take Mrs. Goodwin to the school. Later she said. “I had given up all hopes of ever seeing my only son graduate from high school, I will never forget the wonderful thoughtfulness of all those who made it possible.” In Today s Press Comics ................. County Ngws ............ Editorials ............. Food Section .......... Markets ................ Obituaries ............. Pel Doctor ............. Sports ............... Theaters ............... TV t Radio Programs Wilson, Earl Women's Pages RUNNING AGAIN — For the first time since Dec. 5, Pontiac buses are rolling the streets again. First-day riders boarding a coach in the downtown area arc Irene Fisher (left'. 87 Water-ly St., and Rae Gibbons, 256.3 Woodbine Dr., Waterford Township. Symington Cheered by AFL-CIO 12 State Delegates for Stu Eleven Coaches Service Four Familiar Routes Passenger Load 'Light' but New Firm's Prexy Is Optimistic Buses in Pontiac are running again. The city’s new bus firm began operations at 5 ajn. today, ending the city’s six - month transportation drought. Eleven buses were operating this morning on four established routes. Police Chief Herbert W. Stra-lay eame under Are from John W . Htrlinger, manager of the Pontiae .Area Chamber of Cwii-meree, for relusing to allow the finii to slalion three buses downtown yesterday lor advertising purposes. Straley contended that^he buses had not been licensed, according to Hirlingef. (Licenses were obtaired in Lansing yesterday afternoon.: •a ■(^, * "I can't figure it out," Hirlinger said. "New cars are allowed in parades without licenses—and these bu.scs technically are the [city's. The company finally obtained [one liceased bus from another subsidiary firm which was stationed [downtown in the afternoon. P. J. Giacoma, company vice president, said drivers reported passenger traffic "light' this morning ■ t and educational activities in ( "Prospects i GRAND RAPIDS (^'—Sen. Stuart istratlon and Vice P_____ Symington, encofiraged by a warm! N‘*on. [state R^ubllcaivdominHl^a^. ing. however." he added, reception at the state AFlX^lo! The union side-stepped endorse-.................................................. very encourag- fhe 1 biur-Mfppru riiuuiw*!-. convention here, has been told he ment of a presidential candidate, > J number of people who look a will get some Michigan V9tes for;but Hs president, August Scholie. Schollf. iT-elected P***'*’^*^”'* rham*e on raiehing the bus on the Democratic presidential nom-jand other top officials have thrown * ® increase in his $12^(Xi| the «n*t day.*’ MM. l«elrs„pp,«t.K™„ody. Three of the Ite'^ 102 Demo AD.VHNISTR.ATION | Barney H o p k i n a. i our fingers cr«^. ' he sa«i. eiItir*:Wa?es riri (rith Symington accused the Republi-: secretary-treasurer, and William »» bus ndeiN won t Sr Sfor ySnS and Vdd administration of gradually Marshall, new executive vice pres- bo known until mormn^.ft w-ork-^ i M ‘be United Stales "into a ident rhoseif to succeed the late »bo>r (^Uections later r™,Murppy, . » »«• dei>gatM» to the party's national i The convention also proposed “If we're doing 50 per rent of convention next month. personal and corporate income the buslnews Ihal the previous ^ ^ |bu' '‘bo convention voted over-,taxes as a solution to Michigan's line did in Deceinlwr. we'd bo Gov. G. Mennen Williams and |whelmingly to establish a politicali(ina„ciai ailments. (Continued on Page 2. Col. 1) other stale Demooratlr leaders ^action fund with a penny increase have endorsed Sen. John F. Kennedy for the nomination and hope to win all the 51-vole delegation to their pause. "It is very presumptuous to say that Kennedy has sewed up all 51 votes just because the governor endorsed him,'' said Dr. Fred Matthews of Dowagiac, a delegate, alter meeting with Symington. Symington's strength in Michigan likely will become apparent, Matthews said, when delegates assemble at East Lansing June l8 preconvention meeting called, by the governor as delegation' chairman. The 1,200 delegates to the union convention, representing some | 750,000 AFL-CIO members, gave Symington a roaring weleome and he responded with a sharp attack on the k^senhower admin- Reds Quickly Release Lost U.S, Glider Pilot LUEBECK. Germany (R-Amer-1 lliat group had also been re-, in recent years ps long as seven lean glider pilot Richaixl E. Schre.. leased, together with their plane, weeks, der. who k>sl on a champion-1 with unusual ease and spcAd. They * * A ship flight yesterday and landedj were held four days compared | The East German Communists ■ “ ~ ....... ' ■ ........ - . . . ..gjipggfjQjjg'' Starts Research Cruise MOSCOW fAP) — The Sov Academy of Sciences research .ship Mikhail Lorndnosov has left for a four-month crtiiae in the i'O'-thwest Atlantic, the Soviet news agency Tass reported today. More Vet Benefits LANSING UK-Disabled veterans eligible lor a $2,008 homealead tax exemption are alsd eligible for an additional $3,000 exemption l|, they ofOce hfis held. I in the six-cent per capita dues levy. One and one-hall eents of the new Ncven-eenl levy will be earmarked (or politieal aetlvUies, raiwing an estimated lliM.OOa a year. , Scholie said the fund Win be used chiefly lor registration drives AFL-CIO Seat Goes to Beach Unofficial Word Says State Executive Board Post Is a Certainty Unofficial word was received j from an authoritative source to-| day that Charles A. Beach has| won a seat on the executive board! of the State AFL-CIO. "fhe report came directly from the floor of fhe organization's con- j vention closing today in Grand, Rapids. I Test YOUR Driving Skill Skillful Driving How to master 30 of the most - erueial situatioiib of modern ZL traffic IT WORKS EVERY TIME! Small ads with big pnUing power mean RBSULTBi This ad. like most others, found a buyer for this item on the FIRST DAY. about SO MINUTES after the paper came out. Buying or selling you get quick results In Clasafied Mvertls-ing- Tou'get ACTION in a hurry JUST DIAL FE 24181 ini ask for a friendly Want, Ad RcprcsealaUve . _ . . ’ . . , _ ---------------------------------------------------------------- _ _ . in East Ormany, was allowed to to similar groups being detained hsaid that Schreder'i leave Cbtnmunist territory with his glider today. , The 44-year-old flier, from Toledo. Ohio, was met here at the border crossing into West Germany by his wife Angie. She had not been allowed by Communist authorities to itocom-pany his trailer crew which had driven across the Iron Curtain border a few hours before to retrieve sailplane and its pilot. rrtam to West Grr- The sB-met:J glider landed Sefareder 30 miles insidr the Ear aan border near Kiueti not far from where all Air Force carrying nine persons was forcH down by Soviet fighters iu..t . ^ Pontiac on Ike Mk-higan AFL-CIO executive board In more than llvr years. Another ares labor chief, Fred V. Haggard, president of the Oakland County AFL-CIO Council, receives a board seat automatically by virtue of his position as a county council president. . There "were a total of 4Q aeota to be filled. A slate of 40 candidates. including Beach, vdiis ■endorsed' by the delegates at laigc prior to yesterday's election. checked before he was released. This was not immediately explained. PresumaUy the Communists simply meant they ci)pcked out the gli^ pilot's story of getting lost and landing by mistake. Tke East German border poUce Jwd altowed Hie three gHder crrwmea to drive Into Eawl Germany and pk'k up Mirr-der and kK' piaac. The East German* reported;T^" Schreder had landed safely with- ... . u . out injury to himself or damage . Although tabula^ of the M-to his all-me al glider. lots have not been completed. S h-eder,-a former Navy com- ®***’*’^** to have a suf- tn; 'Jy vho tokh the Distin- fiow* of votes to carry - ' ' r . inT Cross and the| • • '■ won the Ameri-' ■T txintest in Quake Jolts Tokyo ■ t -tf two boys I'Klrr owner TCHCVO (API—Tokyo was jolt-a urrk ed by a moderate earthquake to-; in'day. It caused high buildings to h .inJ s .ay slighily. There were no dani-- ' a ,r repwts. > , •f I V \ ^ , ; ..... By maxwell N. HALbEY WHAT ARE THE ODDS? Choosing the best of two or three lanes .entering an intersection can be an interesting game. Practice makes perfect. Don't pick a left Unc where the fkat car gtvos cincs that It may try te tarn left and be held pp by oncomtng traffic. Another poor bet is n right lane where tlm first ear suggests it may try to 4 tnm right ami he delayed by a steady stream' of pedestrikna Any lake with a cumbersome truck Is u»t a smart ebelee. The lane witk tke moat ears cmM - be year best bet. Clip tnd SpY« TWO mioAom THE PONTIAC PRESS. THtfRSDAY, JUNE 9, 1960 a. Michael's to Graduate |n Second Try 58 in Exercises Sunday , r i r» • tor County Post Kronenberg Files for Clerk, Deeds Registrar on Dem Ticket Baccalaureate service will be|lastic honors will be bestowed, will held at'7:15 a.m. Sunday tor the be held following a Mass. Com-58 graduates of St. Michael School. A breakfast for the students and their parents, during which scho- Boy, 13, Wins Spelling Crown 7fhe Day in Birmingham Six Bloomtield Teachers Get Scholarship Grants ■ Valedlrtorian of the senior class is Kathleen Henrctty, 411 Third SI. Salutatortan Is Daniel Danny, 34 W. Rnndell St. The commencement address will he given Sunday evening by the Rev. Merwin Lenk of Ann Arbor. The Rev. Leon Kennedy, pastor of St. Michael Church, will present di[domas. Following is a list of the ! Tennessee Lad Tops Girl, 13, in 3rd Effort, Michael school gftduates: With 'Eudaemonic' Barbara Ardeli Jana Brntham Nancy Budwlt Carol L Paul ChaDdrlatna Tbomai Dabba Patrick Donohua Oaorse Drake Dantal Dunny Ttaomaa Parrall Wllltam Planlfan William Pranial Hottachalk John Oallardo WASHINGTON (AP» - »enry Feldman, 13, Oak Ridge. Tenn . Maria cranan won the I960 National Spelling Bee championship today. He had tried twice before. I Barbara Hotlacl Runnerup was Betty Jean Altr schul, 12, Norfolk. Va. |Kathl«n Hanral Henry clinched the title by joJiph' I'orrect spelling of the word daemonic. ” The word means pro-|olf?oi ducing happiness. ju'diuTki^cSir'’"’ ,PhlUlp Oourala Larry Harbart Paul Harding Richard Haydan Joseph Haitian Blaine Hlarock PM Lau^^r Donald Mountain lo Ann Wilhelm Before that Henry had correctly judith Schiicht spelled "velleity." Betty, Jeanj ji?uJn5”wMiiav. mis.sed that one by spelling itjMary Jo Wrum^ •‘veleite." That word means thej; lowest -degree of desire, mercj willingness. j.. • ' j -T J' MI8SKD WORD. PLUS ONK DIOniinCltG lnCllQ.ll Under the rules of the spelling/qj. South DokotCI bee the winner must spell cor /'-'^ OUUt/J UUK.UIU rectly the word his opponent j misses and then spell one morej*J^U* word correctly. Hie new champion finished 20th | last year. He was also in the na-{ . , i tkmal contest in 1958. His hobbiesl^P"* a <'ahm on the electricity, playing the trum- South Dakota reserv^ion to get John E. Kronenberg is going to try again to win the job as Oak-Iland County clerk and register of deeds on the Democratic ticket. * * * His party'^unsuccessful nominee two years ago. Kronenberg, 37, (rf Royal Oak. . yesterday paid the $100 filing fee In lieu of nom-iating petitions at the Courthouse. Kronenberg Is manager of the Royal Oak-Berkley branch of the Secretary of State's Office. He says he la an “ardent supporter” of his bOsN, Secretary of State James M. Hare, in his bid for governor. "Oakland County needs to modernize its county government,' Kronenberg said in officially an nouncing his candidacy. Jurors serving in our county courts are selected from a list prepared by politicians with a large number of repeaters and professional jurors — thus denying proper trial by jury,” he said further. Kronenberg, of Til N. Altadena 81., lost to incumbent clerk-register Daniel T. Murphy Jr., 98-532 to 91,30; in 1958. Bom in Femdale, the candidate is a graduate of Henry Ford Trade School and attended Wayne State University for two years. He jbeen a resident of Royal Oak since 1945. BIRMINGHAM - Six teachers in the Bloomlield HUU School District have been awarded scholarship grants to assist them ’in- advancing their educations. * * ★ The grants were awarded by selection committee of the Teachers Grant Committee, set up last year by four area doctors, “SiBce this was our lirsi year, the grants were for nominal pet, and track. Argentina Asks Return of Eichmann BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (API—Israel appears certain to reject a demand from the Argentine government for the return of Adolf Eichmann, the former Nazi official captured in Buenos Aires by Jewish agents and whisked away to face changes^ of mass murder of Jews during Worid War! He is a member of the Royal Oak Masonic Lodge, F. & A.l the Junior Chamber of Commerce, the American Legion and the Royal Oak Safety Council. He is the father of three children. Kronenberg bas served as chairman, vice chairman and treasurer of the Royal 04i Democratic Qub. Riefel, the first South Dakota Skxix ever to be noihinated for the office, resigfned after 23 years wth the U.S. Bureau of Indian Wain to make Ihe race on the Repubican ticket. it * * In the November election he will face Ray Fitzgerald, a farmer was the secretary of agriculture in the first Democratic adminis-| branch’ manager in February of tration in South Dakota in a gen- 1955. He is a Navy veteran, eration, ----------------- Emmett J. Leib New President Big Mac Fete Friday Hospital Says Briggs , SI, IGNACE *-Ti» 10,h .nni-iContinues to Improve * * * i versary of the establishment of the i BENNINGTON, Vt. Ifi — Hen- Argentinp in a note to the|^j,p|^j„ap ,y Patnani Memorial Hospital I s r ae l I ^ve^entWednesd^l^^p^^^,^ here Friday with! “«-«y Waiter O. (Spike) night charged the seizure violated! ,u Briggs, 48. former president ot its national territory and wamed!®«'‘^hon of bronze plaques on lhe> baseball team that it would complain to the northern causeway. (JovWilBams I,hough his United Nations unless the 54-year- and others associated with early i name is still on the critical old ex-Storm Trooper, is handed baqh this week. “Once the hidirated restitution of Eichmann lo Argentina Is ac-romplished,” the Argentine note said, “the Israeli govemment's way Is open lo request his delivery through means eonlem-plated by international law.” the Argentine ambassador to Israel, Rodolfo Garcia Arias, was called home, and there was a pos-sibiDty that Israel's ambassador to Buenos Aires, Areih Levavi, would be asked to leave Argentina. But it was not expected that Argentina would go so far as to break off diplomatic relations with Israel, at least for the time beiijg. ^ses Rolling Again Over Pontiac Routes iContinued Prom Page One) doing well at first,,'' Giaeoma Judicial Assn, Lauds Pair He admitted that since bus service was halted here Dec. 5, many former riders have turned to other means of transportation. “It'll be a long, hard pull for awhile." he said. ’Onder a lease agreement between the city and American __________________ Transit Corp.. the city gives thej justice Albert C. Carr, firm a one-year franchise, andi leases all the company’s rolling! equipment — which exempts thej firm from costly state gasoline j and weight taxes. Following the meeting, the guest |i of honor was pitesented with gifts|| and cards from members who in-'| vited her to sit at a “H>ecial’'j birthday table. |G0P Rallying Around Candidate Nixon (Continued From Page One) Maybe we’U THIS IS m Now In Downtown Pontiac,SIMMS Bios. Opens Anotkei STOBE! sms& L ^ Sebaar and Ruth Shar- PROJECT MERITS They were selected on the merits of projects for which the grant was intended. AppHcants fhr the grantlT submitted letters outlining the research, coarse of stadjr or travel for which Ibe money would Save a livelier oonventlon.” Rockefeller challenged Njxon to |declare himself now on vital issues, not after the GOP national conven-jtion. The governor also assailed numerous adminls ration policies.j CAUGHT BV SURPRISE In a move that caught political I friend and foe by complete sur-Iprise, the draft-available Rocke-I feller said Wednesday in a state-1 Although there are grants for research in industry and science, there are few grants for advanced teacher training. “This Is especially true In the case of high school and elementary teachera. “The grants are expected to attract the highest caliber of teachers to the school system,” he added. e Birmingham Soroptimist Gub will install new officers and induct new members at a meeting tonight at Devon Gables. New offleers are Dr. Meidon Everett, president; Maxine Lus-combe, fliut vice president; Mel Collins, second vice president; and Irene Hanley, secretary. §oroptimist members from 19 other Michigan clubs will attend the installation, along with the executive secretary of the Soroptimist Federation of the Americas, Inc., Martha Service. Service has held her present position since the federation created in 1936 with dubs. The organization has gro to 789 clubs in eight countries. The Birmingham OES 220 last night honored Sister' Lillie Miller, chairman of the Sick and Visiting Committee the last eight years. Worthy Matron Phyllis Martz in- The Oakland County Judicial Assn, last night honored two of its senior members and elected officers for the coming year. The event was the association’s final meeting until fall. It was held at Rotunda Inn in West Bloomfield Township. ★ ★ h The association's new president is Springfield Township Justice Emmett J. Leib. The 50-year-old justice opened a law office in Holly shortly before World War II. He was named an assistant Oakland County prosecu-1949, a position from which he resigned in 1951 to devote full' time to his .law practice. Leib is a charter member of the county association. Other m-w offtoers are Orion ToH'DkhIp JuKlire Helmar (L Hlanaback, flixt vice presideJU; West Bloomfield Township Jus-tire Kobeii F. Seolt, aerond vire president; Bloomfield Township tarj : and Novi Township Justice Rotiert Anderson, treasurer. In one of his final duties as outgoing president, Farmington Township Justice James Lawson paid a tribute to Joe Terrien. county Justice Court coordinator, for aid to justices and the association. But the newly Installed president waa ftrst lo agree that the highlight of the evening occurred when all eyea turned lo Judges Efed F. Stevens and John J. Schulte. Stevens. Oxford Township justice of the peace, and Schulte, Farmington Municipal Court judge, were presented plaques by their fellow members. The awards, never before presented to an a.ssociation member, wore in recognition of each man’s "Iqng and devoted service to the principles of justice." Between them the Jurists have 68 years of Judielal service In the (xmnty. Stevens' a native of Oxford, has been justice of the peace for 33 years. He has been a Mason for 50 years and is a 58-year member of the Knights of Pythias. Judge Schulte has been Farmington justice and Municipal Court judge in the city for 35 years. He is a charter member of the Michigan Justice of tl Assn, and was named honorary president in 1958—an honor never before bestowed on a member. Judge SchuHe, 75, has ne missed an association convention. He plam^ to retire from office when his flresent term expires In 1964, Both men received ■ standing ovation from the turnout of about 75 Judielal figures. * Hosting the season's final meeting were West Bloomfield Township Justices Elmer C. Dieterle and Robert F. Scott. Guests at the dinner were Circuit (fourt judges Frederick Ziem and Stanton G. Dondero. nomination has flimly insisted || upon making known hla program || and his polleies not before, bnt | only niter, nomination by hla !| party.” j| Neither the nation nor the GOP,;| Rockefeller said, can march into,I he future holding a banner | 'whose only emblem is a ques-1 tion mark.” | ♦ * ★ Rockefeller apparently briefed President Eisenhower at a break conference at the W'hlte House before flying to New York and releasing his 2.700-word state-lent. The statement contained only praise for the President, but noted that hjs service was ending Rorkefeller criticised the nd-mtnlatration's handling of defense, edneatlon, medical and labor- management progrgma, and urged a reorganisation of the whole government structure, espeeinlly In view of the U2 spy plane incident. , There was no comment from! Eisenhower or Nixon. Nixon conferred privately with the President Wednesday afternoon follow Ing a meeting of the National Security Council. Rockefeller also announced he would head the New Ym* state delegation to the GOP convention in Chicago. Polio Didn't Cripple Ellaine's Spirit (Continued From Page Onei has not let herself rely on the support of others. "I used to think I couldn't do anything,” says Ellaine. "Every-j thing was being handed to me — | taken care of for me — and then realized that 1 couldn’t make anything out of my life if I didn't try.” SCHOLARSHIP DECISIVE Ellaine said she had no intention of going on to college until Mrs. Davis told her she might be eligible for sponsorship by the Vocational Rehabilitation Depart- !• WUI I She I (sometimes for an hour and a half) — “often, be-cause of n transportation problem. we couldn’t gel together to study, but I would help kids with their homework over the tele- ] phone when they asked me ... | they helped me plenty.” . Ellaine now says she wants to {become a certified public account-j It. ! Some 50 fellow students willj [wish her luck at a graduation' Iparty she is having next week. I TVEIR BIG .NiOHT — Highlight of last night's meeting of ^ akland County Judicial Assn, was the honoring of veteran mem-•rs, Farmington Municipal Court Judge John J. Schulte (aecaad om leftt and Oxford Township Justice t"red F. Stevens (center). angratnUtMg ttelfi art Wntoeford TowiMliip JnaUoe Donahj E. Adams (left), a state Bar Xlfti, commisaloner; Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem (aecond from right) and Farmington Towrahip Justice James Lawson, immediate past pnenident the axKCia-tion. Ziem pmemed the fifit g( two pUquea: drui atore to o xvmyTHiNo I » for 27 t i«r wlut thu bad to pa; bafore BItnmi came to Toi ___Vjuct - bIttir ooobn at dmcoukt pricm - BARGAIN MIX ID Main Btore doea not have apace to handle bis lat are needed In every home. But now, we are openina »not)>»r atore at 25 SOUTH SAGINAW 8T In order to brine to Pontiac and Omkland County folba theae 'Bl» Itema' at a GUARANTIED M%tol0^ ItaTINOB off reaular retail prleea . . T and notblni but OUARAHTnD 20» lo taft MONEY-SAVERS #111 be atoebed at BIHUCB 25 SOUTH. Aipreaent w* have ALL NEW. PIRnr QUALITY PURNITURI In atock but aa--- buya — and It Ukea tine to find ’em — we will tiock then. —- 25 SOUTH becauae we feel that Pontiac and Oakland County folka i "tl^d to th?a« qUARANTEED to 50-V SAVINGS or • I other SIMMS Intenda The aame SIM ^ no hlgb-prceaure-eominUilOB 9 hlfh credll p hlah reot-leeae iwe own the bulldlnk) no ekpcnelve fUBmlcka . . )uat HONEST GOOD GOODS at DISCOUNT PRICES. NOT cheM gooda at reiuir price#! Remember, theae GUARANTEED 34« to 5«‘’o SAVINGS on big I at SIM5U 25 SOUTH Saginaw (not at oar main atore i and It la , no aaleamen to preaaure you OUR LOW PRICES TALK FOR bVES and remember the all new atore hour#, from ) p.ro. to S p.ro. ao dad can drlVe the family down afur auppor — and Saturday IS . i p.m. Plenty ol 5c dty parking’ all-around the etore. Come tn and round — you'll be pleaiantly eurprleed to aee mia^ you cm . and you may buy with assurance of OUARARTEED ta tSW _________ • ®f.S?ed*l KWrilSSf. MO.E.S aad i*CK IN-HUNTING ALLOWED Here Are A Few Examples of MONEY-SAVERS Now In Store 1“ 12.95 Empress Benches Wrought Iron. Foam Pillow 4" 10” if 19.98 Step Tables Limed Oak or Walnut 8” 8” 19.98 Coffee Tables Limed Oak or Walnut 9” 5” if Webbed Love Seats 24.98—Aluminum frame 9" 14” if Maple Step Table $29.98—Early American 12“ ‘69' if Wishing Well Planter Wrought Iron—Ceramic pot . 69' Hurry — plenty of Some Itemt — Few of Others SIMMS'25 SOUTH STORE HOURS M9n.3pjii.to«pjN. Tees.) pjn. te 9 pjo. WsW.3pjiLte9piii. Thors. 3 ^ te 9 Fii3|Mii.to9pjii. Sat.10ojo.te5pjii. plenty of Sc City Forking Lot* Noor Store , SIMMSJE 2B SOUTH 2S SOOTH S56IN5W ST. Nait to I. C. raiMyi With GUARANTEED 3T/o to 5f% SAVINGS On All New First Quality MERCHANDISE -Vo Salespeople — h's Self-Serve — When YOU See The LOW PRICES & QUALITY, You Wont Have to Be Sold! * Here's A Personal Message From The SIMMS BOYS Tolling Why They're Opening Another Store . . . SPECIAL NOTICE: Remember These ITEMS at SIMMS 25 SOUTH Sog-inqw Only! — Reason; because we don't have floor space at Main Store for these big furniture buys. rilOAT aad SATUBDAT S«l« •! LADIES' WEU MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS Cool, Summer Featherweight Ladies' Jackets 99 1 Stripad juk«t by RHAF80DY — combbd oottoo itiMn itbardine. un-Un«d top-all. larit roundad collar. Mi paarlliad baMoni and Jumbo cruecot the pad pocktu. Wear with aUcki. padal puiheri, eaprU. Slaaa lO-U-14- iTli. WASH 'a WEAR Fabric Udias’ SHORTS SUO Vain* 97V SitM 10 to IS Easy to ciro for wash 'n wear shorts in good selection of stylos and gay colors. Save 'more at Simms. lodies' CAPBIS PEDAL PUSHEBS SIsos lOto It 1 Regular values to $3-choice of capris r pedal pushers I wanted colors-^ checks, or stripes. lapMl oi NSCOimT raiCE ai LADIES' BETTER Swim Suits S' 88 Volues to $16.99 Udiai' UTHING SVITS ■88 ^iriiTtiWJwai Main Floor Regular $49.95 Value Give ‘Dad’ Taalt Far Father’s Day —Fri. ond Sot. Specioli—Use Loyawoy Plon— r POWER SAW cuu*n«’a at 45 degraa anile with Made to ■pare. Ball bearini slip clutch prevenU k 1 e k > back or buckitnc. Com' plete with T'lnch blade. Ooisr ID hold! in lay- ‘WEN’ Electric Solder Gm Kit $10.95 Vdlue IB metal carry and atoracc box — •et hae. 100 watt iniTant-heat aoldertni lun and tipe. Bverythlni Umtiik .... falorcbangoabJo Blad«t 5-Pc. SAW SETS I / Reg. SIS9 ■ . /amoni Brand 7-ia-i ! ELECTRIC JIG SAW ! $29.95 1 ^88 ■ Value I / ! a" graduated rip and circle cutting I guide cuU 45 degree bevel on either ■ aide, power Illuminating light on * the work. No load ipeed of M50 I strokes per minute. : Lock-Lever Pliers 59 Valna 97* * Aogular $lJ9^aIna j Jaws loc^ with pc*- I jusU t o locking . sUe up to I-lnch. ■ Easy 10 release. I Imported. 2x4 FOOT PEG BOARD 'ERIE' Swivel Bom Bench Visee Sa^y lajo loaha ..ai-aa I aitja Ti.. Bgyr aja * lUlU Bay Oae Im Teii Dal WORLD'S BEST DAD' Trophy Cups At Keforod THE PONTIAC PRESS, TIirRSDAV. JI XE 9. 1900 MAK[ mu pms . . ogoin This Year As For the Past 27 Years — BETTER GIFTS For DAD COST MUCH LESS AT SIMMS - Here's Proof ! JUST look Over this pagt-full of gifts for your dad, notict the many cuf-prlcei. — — Shop Friday and Saturday for proof-plenty of unadvertised FATHERS DAY GIFTS i two specials, but a page-full of BETTER GIFTS af LOWEST PRICES-same LOW PRICES Throughout the store. 3Q make oyEH pm WoM The Kids Have Fun In the Sun, Too With Fine Cotton Wash and Wear Playsuits 3.98 Wash ond weor meons easy care . . with no ironing, ever. Regular styles with short legs and ol» the popular "skort" type. Gay prints, neOt checks, bright stripes and smart solid colors, sizes 3 to 6x ond 7 to H . . in pink, blue, red ond white. Do come in today Little Boys' Matching Shirt and Short Sets *1.98 Set Wash and wear cottons. Mony patterns and styles. Sizes 1 to 4 and 3 to 6x. Others 2.98. Woile's Chi/dren's World . . . Second Floor Boys' Proportioned POLISHED COTTON CHINO SLACKS 2.99 / y Proportioned to fit . . . m slim, regular '\ \ and husky The polished cotton fabric ithout a care, blue, jrey, washes easily and dnp-dt M Sizes 6 green and black Waile'i Boys' Shop . . . Second Floor Have Fun In the Sun . . . and Save, Too! Washable Canvas Casual Shoes Perfect for sports, gordening, beach, loafing, TTsRTng etc. Fine quality convos with sturdy rubber soles. The cushioned heel and insole for extra comfort. 3.99 2.99 White Block Navy SHOP FRI. AND MON. NIGHTS TILL 9 O'CLOCK! FUN You'll Love The Sun In Your New Pique Patio' Sunback Dress Majestic Summer Co-ordinates o. Italian Blouse b. Riviero Pants c. Batik Print Blouse 5.S d. Motching Skirts 10.S retty tulips cover the white background accented with glittering rhine- Ji stones on the bodice. Take yours in either green or brown on white. Sizes 10 to 16. Also a similar style in sizes 8 10.98 You're the look of summer ... so fresh and crisp in the fashion fabrics that hove mode Mojestic famous. All in sizes 10 to 18. Come in tomorrow for your Majestic co-ordinotes. Inexpensive Presses . . . Third Floor Wailp'i Sportswear . . . Third Floor Contour Cut, Cotton Knit Lollipop Briefs In Women's Sizes 5 to 8 85‘ Your favorite cotton panty wfih nylon-reinforced Cuffs The heat-resistant elastic waist keeps its snug fit fhrou^ countless washings lingerie . . . Second Floor "Chin High Chokers" Arc Fashions Newest Friend *1.00 *--*2.00 Strands and strands of pseudo pearls or colorful bftads heap high at your throat. One of five strands ... in white, red, black and pretty pastels Waite's fewelry . . . Street £Ioor Eversoft"^ Summer Handbags a hondful of fuxury ot a tiny price ... and the easy two-way comfort of the convertible ARROW BI-WAY SHIRT with the collar you con wear open or closed Summer living is easy In b lightweight Si-Wayl Sleeves ore short cut for comfort, famous two-wpy collar fits perfectly, great, looks gr^ worn en or clot either open or closed. Expertly tailored in air-conditioned fobria that keep the heot out, let the Breeze in. Choose yours from our fashion-fresh selections in ky white md frosM colors. i Map , . . t THE PONTIAC PRESS. THLHSDAV, Jl'XE 9. 1960 r OUT WHERE THE COUNTRY CAN TEAR A TRUCK TO PIECES- Chevy middleweights get j/3 more work done in a day! Where they used to deliver 2,300 galbns of liquefied petroleum gas in othqr trucks, Petrolane Gas Service of Lortg Beach, California, ‘ can now deliver 3,500 gallons a day! That's 7 days a week usually, over back trails and up into high rock country svith maximum GVW loads. And with Chevy’s Torsion-Spring Ride paving every foot of the way! “You don’t get any more jolting on washboard roads than you do in a passengej car, or any sidesway on curves," says driver Bernie Stone. “I used to take some rough roads at frtm 5 to 8 miles prtehofir. Now I can go 30 over them." Petrolane has over 200 Chevrolets hauling for them. Jf you think we’re excited about Chevy’s independent front suspension, you ou^t to talk to the truck owners who are profiting by it. ■ They!! tell you Chevy’s torsion-spring design is the hottest thing to hit the industry since trucks began, Drive one-that’s the proof, short and sweet. WORTH MORE BECAUSE THEY WORK MORE! CHEVROLH SniRDI-BIlTTRUCKS See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer MATTHEWS HARGREAVES, INC. 631 OAKUND AVENUE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN FE 5-4161 TO BK DEDICATKl) - The 11-million-dollar Portage Lake litt bridge between Houghton #nd Hancock in the Upper Peninsula will be dedicated June 25. It has the world's largest lift span, which weighs 2,250 tons. On its lower level Ar rstuio the span carries trains, and on its upper level, motor traffic and pedestriaas. Secretary of the Army Wilber Brueker and State Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie will speak at the ceremony. But No Land For 14 Has 21 Legal Wives 75 Michigan Eagle Units Mass at Flint Convention SALISBURY, .Southern Rhodc.sia UPl) — BaliAva Ben Mjera has so many wives that a special law may have to be written for him. Baluwa Ben. 61, has 21 wives and at least 89 children. "The government man, he said FLINT (UPI) — Delegates from , 75 units of the Fraternal Oixle Eagles began arriving here today for the government by having them ,he organization s 55th annual 'put their fingerprints on a long state convention. piec% of paper. | Officials of the organization said * ♦ * j action to intensify Eagle activities Officials said they were con-jin several areas was planned, insidering amending the land law | eluding the group's program for to provide Baluwa Ben's extra 141eliminating job discrimination based on age. uwa Ben said. from heri^be enti>r population Is his family-wife count. Polygarny, far from being ille-' gal. is subsidized. A new law provides extra land for extra wives—' but only up to .seven wives. T was happily married to my 21 wives and then along came the government." Baluwa Ben said. "It just be all or nothing. How ran 1 give seven wives land and not give land to the other 14? Kver>'thing used to be peaceful." Baluwa Ben listed his 21 wives With New SPRING-O-MATIC Starter! No more tugging at ropes and cables! NEW SHOCK - FREE windup starter provides easy and trouble-free starting! FINGER TiP\ CONTROLS for ] stolting, stopping, adjusting engine speed. REPEAT OF A SELL-OUT! SAVE ‘10.25! Regular ‘52.88 I'h H.P. 22” Rotary Mower NEW EASY STARTER Just wind up spring . . . press button it starts! NO MONEY DOWN Smotl Monthly Payments NON-SKID Puncture-proof eosy-roll tires • SAFE, Eosy Spring-O-Matic Storter • ADJUSTABLE Grass CuKing Heights • POWERFUL IVi H.P. 4-cycle engine hos 1-yeor worronty • CLEAN—No greosy mixing of gos ond oil • BRIGGS ond STRATTON dependoble eosy-fo-stort engine Free Delivery Shopping Areo ' STAGGERED WHEELS for mowing ^ hord-to-reoch spots —better control wide 22" swoth|— mows big yords fost ■— yet.eosy to hondle on rough terroin i DOWNTOWN PONTIAC—TELIhURON—DRAYTON PLAINS—ROCHESTER—MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. S. KRESGE COMPANY MISS MADELINE WILSON PERMA-LIFT STYLIST Will b« in our foun-dotion deportment Friday ond Saturday, Jane 10 and 11. Let Miss Wilson help you with your figure problem. For the Women of 1960, Only One Like It! SOFTEST cooTesT figure-molding '•MAGICOOl"** by Permo • lift* designed oj miracle “Elastomer D"f, a riew, I /f cool, air whipped rubber < with 50,009 pores. Be lean—Be fitted Today Style No. 2005 Pantie Brief XS, S, M, L Also Avoilol^le in . . . $>T95 Girdle $ 8.95 f * Average Pontie........$ 9.95 Long Leg Pontie.......$12.50 Fiiday 9:30-8:30 Only Follow rho Crowds. Come Early. mmsssM $1.99 Ladies' Summer SKIRTS 1 Ladies' Swim Suirs..........$1.18 $1.99 Ladies' Sun^mer Shorts - Blouses ic 69 2tc Ladies' Paatics.14c ■ISSSBSSIll $5 Ladies' Summer DRESSES 2 8-44 ArncI Drosses.$5 wmmmw $10 Ladies' Roin-Shine COATS 5 FAILLE COATS .$10 ■!S33C!!!!?I 99c Boys' and Girls' PLAY SHORTS 59 c Soys'-Cirls' Swim Suits ..$1.99 Emmmt Quality 1-6 Training PANTS 10 Birdseye Diapers. .. .$1.69 dos. BPHSICTITB Come, Save! Botes YARD GOODS 22. "P yd. 69e Bath Towels .3Sc l!S331Z&!I3B Better Royon, Docron CDRTAIIIS 88 GEORGE'S I George 74 K. SaginasP—/tea led Stampa I 74 N. SefiMsP Ftoa-tad Seattle THE rOXTIAC PRESS. TIIITISDAV. Jl^XE 9. 1960 MAKE OVI BROASTED CHICKEN DINNERS Curb lEEnUlGEl DUVE-m (•M IMst* (CB-M) Bpcs arp the only insects of importance in distribution of pollen to fruits durinR the period of blossom. Of these, the honey bee is the only one that can be dis-jtributed where wanted and when needed in the orchard. Poor or Ivan - He's Got a Pain in His Pocketbook _________________jtumtiffliftH_____ NEW YORK tUPI) — If a Mos-|Sumer items .listed by the Nation-,w worker should lase his shirt. l«l Industrial Confeirni-e Board in its latest map of industry. I he’d have xto work 15 hours to j make enough money to buy a new That's 1.500 per cent more than jthe 56 minutes a New York City lorker would need to purchase I the same kind of cotton shiil. Wall Streeters, scanning the list, concluded that here is a major j reason Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev scuttled" the summit! conference. | •\n Anieriran works three mlniiteN to make Jnoney to buy one pound of sugar. It lakes Ivan one hour and four minutes to buy These ^re part of many < TONITE Lost Times EVERY FRIDAY 4:30 B.M. 'til Closing. All You Want Fried Loke Erie FRI. ACADEMY AWARD WINNERS "ROOM AT THE TOP" and "DIARY OF ANNE FRANK" The market men say Khrush-i chev’s action in Paris and his re-| cent bellowing are a big noise to! lake the minds of his peasants off! thif things U. S. workers take for granted. The conference board used as a ba.se for New York pay, $2.17 an, ■ hour. For the Russians it used four TIBlf ■ rubles an hour. Moscow prices r F If Y ■ I were based on information in the The list doesn't even mention the eleetrieal applianees, the automobiles, jnotor boats, hiunes with flower gardens, ancT myriad other luxuries the Kussians 't get at all. If, Ivan wants to buy his wife ■ rayon dress, he has to work 73 • hours and 30 minutes. The New Yorker works four hours for the! 5 same dress. I The conference board makes no I comment on the prices. But even I with the high cost of U. S. living, ■ we have it better than Ivan. ■ U-S., Red China Envoys I Hold Two-Hour Meeting WAR.SAW, Poland tm— U.S. Am-I bassador Jacob Beam and Red ■ china's Ambassador Wang Ping- : HOWARD : JOHNSON'S S 3650 Dixie Hwy. ■ DRAYTON PLAINS , who have served off and on • contacts between Peiping "and g Washington for 21 months, had B two-hour meeting Tuesday.. No de- ■ tails were announced ■ i Beam was scheduled to bring J up the question of admission of ! American newsmen to Red China! Slat a meeting last month which was B, postponed at Wang's reque.st. B Their next session is set for July! B:15. Every Make and Model Reduced lneludinf(: REMINGTON REM-RITER Reg. $79.93 NOW 5) S4777 OPEN AN ACCOUNT REMINGTON QUIET-RITER Reg. $128.77 NOW 5 ””iii A SPECIAL PURCHASE TOE Z'~’'caa'- MSWA ' Reg. J7500 ~~ NOW $1.00 A WEEK Sessions Electric Alarm Clock Reg‘. S'/.9.» NOW 99 42-PC. MELMAC DINNERWARE SET SERVICE for EIGHT NOW End Lot S29’5 Value $095 $1.00 A WEEK UJUl JEWELER P Saginaw street (Saae Block AS Peuiey's) i ' i Il’s FUN IN THE SUN TiRM at CoauMon! Open Tonight 9 p.m. ud EVERT NI6BT Except Suder ^ UniXNM MEN'S BOXER HPE or LASTEX nPE Swim Trunks Ploin or Patterns Reg. 1 ^ 1.90 I end S1.57 BOYS' SWIM TRUNKS BOXER or LASTEX Six* 4.B S-M-L 84' *1" Various Stylos A Colers Ladies’ Bathing Suits AM $037 Sizes Up Many Styles eed Colors Girls’ Bathing Suits S-6X 7-12 $137 $177 1 Up 1 Up Folding COOK-MASTER Charcool GRILL 1.87 FULL 24" ADJUSTABLE Bar-B-Q GRILL REINFORCED LE6S *6i7 Large 24" Fully Adjust. Electric Bar-B-Q GRILL WITH HOOD $1277 CANDY STRIPE FULL '/j-OAL ••SPIFFY" PICNIC JUG 8? "CORONET" Ruggwd Litaweight PORTABLE ICE CHEST m LARGE COLORFUL BEACH TOWEL ■UI7 LARGE BEACH BALL 39’ 20 INCH Celoifnl SWIM RINGS 62’ STURDT-AOJUSTARLE CHAISE LOUNGE ‘6.77 FOLDING ALUMINUM CHAIR WiHi Woodall Arm Raet ■6.77 PERFECT FUEL Hone-PicBic Ear R-Q HIAUETS 1Qi^68’ Smiiier FIATS $467 Men’s Canvas CASWIS $057 Nafionolly known 5.,^ ^ makes. .First quolity Bays' SIbm II lit heovy canvas up- *• pers. Bouncy rubber spies. Many colors. Usually 4.00 CHILDREN'S Beach Shoes $167 Colorful beoch shoes for spring and summer weor. Mqny colors to choose' from. Usually 3.CX3. Sites 8V2 to big 3. CONSUMERS CENTER Disemmt Departm^t Store 178 N. Saginaw Open Daily $ to 9| ■\ -..I .mi yiAO im THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNK 9. 1960 $23.95 8PA113ING GOLF CABT .........$15.45 $ 7.50 FEBNWOOD WOODS ..............$5.50 $ 5.50 FEBNWOOD IRONS ..............; .$ 3.50 $15.00 SPALDING GOLF BAG ...........$ 9.95 $11.50 SPALDING TRU-FLITE WOODS ...., .$ 7.75 $14.75 SPALDING KRO-FUTE GOLF BALLS (I DOZ.) ..........$ 9.95. Tmm fricM M an^ taiMbail l^alywaiit WELDEN SPORTING GOODS Invitational Starts < at Pine Lake C.C. MaWAlKEE LOS ANOELB8 TLEt ELAND By BILX. CORNWELL jingly call it a "blame it on your be Dearborn’s Ralph Ellstrom and Pine Lake Country Qub ^Jfx^rtner" | Howard Neilson. ^.n.«o^c Ibera like to think of it as a "fun”, i T.J?"* “ «0»TO.\ kkl ■ 2 0 Cre»n 5b 1 • Runnrit M> 5 1 WUlUnu U S J Keouch ff H, they all have a “ball’* every I tournament. Sometimes they jok-j year In the Pine Lake ' Invitational Eolf tourney. 0« D«lock p 0 0 Slurdlvuil p aRepulfkl for Your BIG DEAL on the Wide-Track I960 PONTIAC li’iil--- teimw nME-W MJLOOMKK AIL ACCEKMJ^ Don’t Wait for the Rush! hiw Yw 'N POITUU! ^ JULY 4th We’re EXPLOHIIG Witt lEALS-DEMS-DEUS! June is the month for YOU to own the beautiful 1960 Wide-Trock Pontiac. With the months of fun and Sunshine ahead you won't want to miss the^ pleasure of driving your new 1960 PONTIAC from the Pontiac Retail Store. Don't wait! Pick directly from our stock while the selection is big! We have the model, the colors, ond the accessories you want! Join the Crowd of Smart People at the PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 63 Mt. Cleibens FE 3-7954 ' ■ ' * " . ,\r »-8*Je 0 T*UI> 3S I A ■—riied oat f ■7 8ln«l«l for Mor Thockrr tn Ttp; Tony and Tommy O’Brirn are regislerlnE from Detroit Golf Club. Tlie Skovers posted a time again at Pine .“'V * Lake C. C. where the 11th annual « ^ ^ Invitational test began a four-day I Numrous teams already have g,'”],*"* m stand today with 18-hole qualifying shot their qualifying rotfhds and »_phi!!ij« » p>A-ciev»i»nd s7-«. b® rounds to determine play by a par ’T2'by Byard and Whiting j^p-power flights. is the best scorecard to date. Pme rr*ncort» HR-oreeo. s*dow*ki. As usual, it’s a selective drive—Lakes par reads 36-aft—72 and (he ,p h ^ krbsso' i;_5tu»rc. Tho alternate shot tournament, which E»»»irm 3 * i o 1 > chfew?*?** I the reason for the "blame it! Match play in all flights starts oAi«k ,1 J J i ? HR-wmn-r su a your partner" quip. ; Friday. Single matches are sched-,l. ,-i. MS ? S S , AU,bu« The two partner tee off. select ^ Sertr”" } i i 1 ? . m,«u the drive they want to use then semifinal# and finals set for| wp--Bori.nd o^>i«k. McK.niei, sir-or«n « ,hre;g;^hTJ^.^\s-« -arehes are slated to v... H««.b.ck r-5 n ,, Elmer Prieskom. Ptne Ijike’s --------------- ( hicaoo ^ ^ new vor- b j<.hn.on genial head pro, reports that HI —. . t, Aptrtcio u 4ooo Kubei »s-U two-man teams ar, entered in DieS Following Ko/O J ! S S if , the tourney and flights and pairings will be announced for all of them tonight of qualifying. ague Boxes Burton el 4 111 Sch nd'ot 2b 4 0 0 0 Malbewt 3b 3 0 1 1 Aeriio xf 4 0 0 1 Adcock lb 4 0 01 Covmgl'n U 3 0 3 0 bSpongler If 0 0 0 0 Logon u 3 0 0 1 :rondkll c 3 0 0 0 Loriur tb 3 0 0 0 1 Hodfoo lb 0 0 0 0 1 Snldta ct 4 I 1 t DemeWr IT 0 0 0 0 Hooronl U 4 0 10 Nool lb 4 0 10 N Sberry c 3 0 0 0 PITTSBl RCH hW Vlrdon cf 4i 1 4 Groat »s 4 < 3 1 Skmner If 4 : 1 1 1 Buiki u soil > McuLim p 0 0 0 0 1 Ruth p 0 0 0 0 WIIU M 3 0 10 oEucfloa 10 0 0 LIIIU H 0 0 0 0 WUllonu p 10 0 0 cOOTlo 10 0 0 0 0 NtlBon lb i < 1 2 2 Bouch«« lb 3 0 0 1 too Moryn 1/ 2101 > ToUli 31 1 4 1 LoMno p 0 0 0 9 Ttlolo M 4 7 4 iiiSft i' B 3 0 Avfrill c 4 1 1 ; B 0 0 Alnutwr 2b 4 0 2 ( t ' A—Struck out for for Covington In H { willlomi m Itti. 0 0 Fa«” p** 1 1 9 0 0 Drob tky p 0 0 0 1 1) 0 0 »L Jobiii n loot 1 0 0 a Johii» n p 0 0 0 Mortbeod p 0 0 0 ( bThorkor 10 11 cKlndoll 0 0 0 j ! lm AifciM 000 m Ota—1 !' B—Winiy, OlUlam. PO-A—Mllwbukee I 34-11. Loi Angclet r-l3. DP—Logon ond [ Adcock 3. LOB-HUvaukeo 4. Los An-1 gein -5 2B-Bnitoo HR—Moon, mider. |S_WUUtan.. OP-Molho*. MMsSLiili LOS ANGELES — ’The world po-A-PiiLburyh champion Dodgers of Los Angeles OB-Put*bur*h ft. jj^.p (Kipor league teams and - in addition have working agree-„ ments with seven others. IP HR ERBB80 “ 4 112 .h«ad DroU ■raced Several talented teams are NEIL’ YORK (AP)-Tommy Pa-the eonelusion ! rheco. a 20-year-Old Puerto Rican smiin i 1 fighter injured critically in a box-ing match with Benny Gordon at »Tor»e.> not—By Anderwa (M^U» WP—An-derten V — Burkhart. Varga. Conlan. Dooatelll. T—5:S0. A—9 Ilk Dast Control MA 4-4521 EM .3-020: " St. Nicholas Arena Monday night,: T«ta PO-A—Chicago 24-1' .. „ _JB-Chicago 5. Ne' 3B—Loper HR-Lpn. Manlle I champs Tony and Tommy Skcn-er.k^- aT m'.’^ccorting' to'an 'an-of Bob Babbish and Bill O Bricn. | J ---- 'Other strong entries include Gordon had stopped Pacheco ,r h « Perry Byard and Dick VVhiting just seconds before the end oflg'»» *-5> i i i from Red Run, Jim Funston and,their scheduled 10 rounder. He iw. 3-n 9 3 o BUI Krall from Plum Hollow, Ray was rushed to a hospital where West and Don Patrick from Red dc Howard Duffbar performed a' ------ Run, and the Pontiac tandem of;9o.minute operation to remove a Dick DeWitt and Dick Robertson, blood clot on Pacheco’s brain. :**^**a citt washinc Another very capable entry will The fighter never regained con-'raieic cf *S2'2 9 tfnir S b y -----------— Lump* 2b 4 100 Le« p FREE Okie) p rr'wbr'ge iKIcly D cKrsirlti Complete OIL .CHANGES The Best Meter OB Tee Can [vet Us» InYm Car..., b-S!crtncef*'f< grounded nty 10 11 aGreen cY U 0 0 0 Tetalt SI “ " lor Woode»hlck ti SSi-l ly. (Bequer Bcortd 7th PO -A-Kan- ___ ____ ______ Washington 27-14, DP— Woodeshick. Valdlvlelso and Gardner; Carey, Lumpe and Sltbern; Carey and Sle-bem. LOB — Kansas City 4. Washngton 6 2b — Carey. Whlsmant. AlUson. Kra* vlt* 3B-Green. HR—AUtson Bauer S-Throneberry. Baltey. Valdlvielso. SP — •) FU» WUE ANO EXCHANGE 2rofOO ONir EVERY 'HRE BRAND NEW! oftwr sins marked down proyrtfowotely TAKE TILL FALL TO PAY! Ed Williams . 451 S. SAGINAW --L: L,. : oSimBOIE THE PONTIAC PRESS. TIII^RSDAY, JUNE 9, 1900 Spring Check of Boat Motor Is Simple Precaution « vou were the perfect out-Mhat other gear docs not rest onltirc lower unit is also rerommend-boaitlw last fall and carefully pre-lthem when, you are operating. Theicd by Smale. Drain the flu d from p^your motor for winter stor-lbest way to assure this is to coillthe gear housing ^ ^ ch^s are you can take itiextra line around the top of the the proper lubricant. ^ of ^iLe It on yourigasoline tanl^. ;drive pin on the propeller shaft is bolt, and ^y many hourf of| Another ch^H’k pointSmale says, not worn and check the prop, trouble-free boating this spring, jis the throttle linkage. All moving propeller may be a mala . But if the press of other activi-parts betwi>en the throttle enrbu- malfun. llon and It If ties caught up with you, as they retor and magneto should 1^ lU'i |„oi|, nk-ked or bent, take it to did with many of us. and you justibricatiHl. Replace badly, worn link-| pulled the motor off the boat or age. Fill grea^ fijtings on the | ■ left It haneinc there on the trail-'pivot shaft waih grease and keep iSIi^all wSrer vou^d better give lubricated all year. | By the way, if ypu naed to make It a maintenance^eck before you 1 A thorough inspection «f the en-|a call oh yoUr dealer, you might ^t out on the water. If you don’t, | that old outboard is apt to fight | back. I The entire Job Is very simple j and shouldn't take you over an hour If yon follow a set of bssle recommendations outlined by Bill Smale. division engineer at Evlnnide Motors. Start with the ignition system, j If you have ve»y many hours ofi running time on your spark plugs, the safest and simplest thing to do is replace them. If you don’tj need new ones, clean carbon off! the old ones and reset the gap.j Check the spark plug connectors; for corrosion, especially if .vouj used your rig in salt water. Cracked or worn rubber insulators! should be replaced. ; Next comes the fuel s.s-slem. ' Remove the rarburelor sediment | bowl, which protects the carburetor from gummy deposits present in fuel, and clean both filter and bowl with neutral spirits or thinner. Check fuel lines for cnicks and leaks and replace them immediately if they show damage. This should include the fuel line to each of your portable tanks. * ★ As a word of caution, always be - sure your fuel tank lines are free; of kinks and in such a position; have him check your motor’s coils add condenser to see that they are operating properly. If you left your portable tanks partially filled with gasoline last fall, there is a possibility gum deposits may have formed In the tank. To be sure of getting this all out. remove the filler-cap casting and mechanism and scrub the gum loose with acetone or lacquer thinner. While at it, work this material through the fuel intake strainer to be sure it clogged. Again, a badly giunmed tank can best be cleaned by your dealer. <)n the electric start models, be sure your battery cables are In lop shape, and It’s alwaya beat to start the year with a fully charged battery. * * * Remove the outer plate from your remote control box head and lubricate the entire head with a Check the ignition wires for wear and cDiTosion and pay particular attention to tlie spark plug connectors. waterproof grease. Check to see that steering cables are tight and in good condition, and also lubricate the steering pulleys. You or your dealer can judge the work that needs to be done on your boat. It may need some caulking or painting or both. On your trailer, you should lubricate the winch mechanism, all the rollers an^ the spring shackles. To save trouble later, it is wise to remove and re-pack the trailer wheels and replace the grease retainers If they show any ■ear. This is basic maintenance, but a few minutes spent now will save you possible dlRiculty Iqter this when it’s especially distressing to miss even an hour of beautiful boating weather. No One Injured as Machen Beats Alonzo Johnson CHICAGO (AP)-Eddie Machai ttie No. 4 heavyweight contender, went through a tot of motion without much progress as he gained his 34th victory against two defeats Wednesday night. Machen wanted to talk more about the June 20 title bout between Ingemar Johansson and Floyd Patterson than his own unanimous decision over elusive Alonzo Johnson in the Chicago SUdium. The nationally-televised bout produced a lot of swinging and swaying, but nobody came cIok to being hurt. Moore-Schoeppner Contracts Signed TORONTO (APl-Oontracta for the world light heavyweight cham-pionahip fight between titleholder Archie Moore and Erich ,Schoep-pner were signed Wednesday in Mayor Phillips’ office at Oty Hall. The only persons missing were the fighters. The bout will be staged at Toronto's Varsity Stadium Monday, July 18, with the ageless Moore guaranteed $200,000 or 35 per cent of the gate Schoeppner, undefeated European champion, will get $50,000. A OfWay return-bout clause was included In the contract. If your prop looks like this, it should at least he repitched, and possibly replaced. If gasoline was left over the winter in the fuel tank, remove the connector attachment. clean the tank thoroughly of any pum deposits and check the. filter. Also check fuel hose and connections for cracks. V'Bottom Runabout Passes Stern Test I Vibration Often [ Is Big Cause of \ Outboard Noise 1 Quiet-operating outboard motors I are taken pretty much for granted 'Itoday, but few people realize that Lone of the chief causes of noise I comes not from internal operating ! noises within the engine, but from vibration, amplified many times ;by the boat hull, which acts like a * giant sounding board. Drain the lubricant from the lower gear case and refill to the top hole with the proper gear case lubricant. Maximum Economy Range Important > On almost every outboard-powered planning hull there is a maximum economy range that occurs somewhere between the planing 'speed and the maximum speed of the boat, according to research by the Evinrude Boating Foundation. j Every outboard owner can save on fuel costs by determining as nearly ns possible that maximum economy ^ange according to the load he is carrying. A few runs with varied loads will normally allow the owner to determine with fair accuracy the speed at which his boat will get maximum economy in miles per gallon of fuel consumed. Ex-Weight-Lifter Golf Pro CRYSTAL RIVER, Fla. (UPD-Paul McGuire, golf pro at the Paradise Country Oub, played tackle and was a member of the weight lifting team during his student days at Whichlta University. Passing Peok at Yolo N^ HAVEN — In a game against Princeton# Yale’s'^junior quarterback, T o i^m y Singleton, tossed eight forwaAl passes and all were completed, setting an Eli football record. Farm Spread for Tigers DETROIT - The Detroit tigere will have a farm team (Victoria) in the Texas league this year for the first time since the season of 194T. Citation was the last 'horse to win the Triple Crown of racing^ — the Kentucky Derby, the Preak-| ness and the Belmont Stakes. He; did it in 1948. I Crew of Detroit Boat Club Will Vie in Regatta HENLEV-ON-THAMES, England (J) — The Detroit Boat Club is one of eight American crews which will compete for tie Thames grand I challenge cup cohjpetitlon of the The c for vibrktion is isola- Henley Royal regatlq next month. Harvard's lightweights, winners of 26 straight races, will try for a third straight Victory in the grand challenge event. Harvard's heavy-■eights howeyer, will pask up the' .. . tion, which is why Evinrude Motors By WM. TAYLOR MCKEOWN .made by the Marscott division of and still handled smoothly without aircraft-type Editor, Popular Boating 1 George O'Day. which keeps the \- any attempt to fight the driver or vibration mountings that innnvafinns in nleasure-^ shape for its entire length. Along rWl on the turns. eliminate the rigid connection be- . , the bottom are long ridges which Five more passengers were motor. This re- T., IT’S SKIINfi—All skiers don’t have to depend on snow, which has been lacking thus far this winter around area slopes, as is shown in this picture. Jimmy Jackson the top man on the U. S. Water Ski Team proves that even the experts get their lumps as he sails through space ready to hit the water after being thrown while practicing at (Typress Gardens. Fla.' the new ... WEST BEND 2 H.P. “Shrimii” realurinp: • Manual Rewind StarUr • 360 Pivot for maneuvering e Level-type speed control • Alr-rooled e Self-contained fuel lank MICHIGAN BOAT SERVICE We Service What We Sell 3080 W. Huron St; FI S-S94I ? that might great interest. Called the Hunt 19. it version of the larger boats in which hiuidle large Richard Bertram finished first and mally be dangerous for a - ^ ^ ^ ^ came in second in the recent boat, and assigned marine ^ngi- 4 gged Miami-tivNassau race ineer Jim Wynne to give ,t a work-fni,e ^ . iout for a Popular Boating test ro-I 'port; 16-foot to eliminate air intake noises. Ischool of Concord, N.J. r,™. ^ wta lio chop an anil.- Most small motorboats today ‘ ® ^ and sometimes jumping dear of start with a v-shaped section at P*’" the water, he found the boat could the bow and broaden as they run ' Straight away runs were made hold course even with his hands off alt until they are almost flat- at various throttle settings to jhe wheel—not an experiment to bottomed at the transom. Ray find how much speed was neei>s- try with a conventional boat. Hunt of Boston had other ideas. ' sary to get the lioat up on plane. ' j;gy,,‘r lesis were run on Hor-With experience ranging from ,-radual turns were tried and miand waterway off the small-sailing classes to the de- ^^^h speed to see if Laud.>rdale Marina. S« lor a sign of the Americas <1ip eon- h,.el or skid ex-! graduation exere.se Wynne ran tender. Easterner, Hunt do«-s not ■,pp^sively. With a Volvo engine and' (he Hunter 19 through the sleep hesitate to experiment. Aquaniatic inboard-outboard drive. the Inlet and out Into the The result is a fiberglas hull, the boat lopiied 39 miles an hour .%llantir. j The (iuU Stream offshore was! kicking up with rolling ground | swells topped by a confused chop.| ! Through it all skippi-d the Hunter 19. with the v-hull giving a stable j ride. Though this hull design draws more water than similar flatbot-tomed boats, it refutes the, idea that a boat of this type must be ; slow. The Hunter 19 is a fast runabout that can take rough seas without pounding, and its diffen-nt look in; hulls might start a new trend in ; boats that can venture off-shore. The propeller slip-clutch, intro-outboards some 35 years ago, but common to most motors only recently has finally won out over the shear pin, according to the Evinrude Boating Foundation. The important advantage of the slip-clutch to most boatmen is not that it eliminates a n u i s a which It does) but that it provides the means to power clear of gerous reefs and shoal waters— places where a dead propeller resulting from a sheared pin, could lead to serious trouble. SEA-HORSES ^oHnsan MOTORS Thompson Better-Bnilt Boats Full Line of Marine Paints and Hardwaie The Complete Sports Equipment Shop GASOWS SPORT CENTER 1 Door From Orchard Uko Av«. 1275 CASS LAKE HD.. KEEGO HARBOR FE 2-580J SLAYBAIIGH’S MITEV POWERKI I. — The little boat isn't much l.igge^ tlian a water ski, but Jimmy Jackson has it roaring on the water at 25 miles an hour at CJpress Gardens. Fla There’s haretly enough room lor a passenger, so Betty (Honey Bear) MactSilia bounces-along behind. It's neat transport at ioh on a hot day. Black Hawks Sign Michigan Tech Aee ! HOUGHTON (API - John! Kosiancic, a senior from Michigan Teih. hius signed a contract with; the Chicago Black Hawks, of the ’ National Hockey League. : The 21-year-dd right winger, who will graduate Sunday with a ; degree in business administration, holds Tecjj’s all-Ume Ihree-yeari igoaj-scoring record. Kosiancic ! scored 64'goals and 131 points in ! three years of varsity hockey with ! the Huskies. ! HHili 41'MP — Test engineer Jim Wynn puts the new Hunter 19 through its paces by jumping the runabout off a wave. The hull, which carries a v-design all the way aft to the transom, has proved succes-sful in handling heavyjoffshore seas. STOP IN AND SEE ME . . .• RAY SLATHA ♦or a Motthewi-Horgreoves 'CHEVY-LAND" SPECIAL IMPALA HARDTOP DELIVERED WITH THE FOLLOWING EQUIPMENT: rmrmrriUi nsd 4pfr«Bt*rs. ft eorA llrrA. uT'^SrAlc wl»«*». rr»nk tmmUi vrntlMnl*- »ln«lf kf) l•fklnJ rlwtrlr »l5«k. ^rklni br»kf ssrnini ll(hl. jl»v» r»m- bnfcw. bUJ nm •iMrUifv »U Ui mmt uw« llr.'BW P 631 Oaklond at Cats «U fc««rEl ini am ----- RAY SLATHA FEderol 5-4161 Excellent" Trade-Ins Now Available ★ Century ★ Chris-Craft Cavalier ★ Slick-Craft Fiberglas it Mitchell Aluminum (iOOD SELECTION of USED BOATS Complete Skin Diving Equipment Ski Headquarters MERCURY OUTBOARDS 6 to 80 H.P. Trade Now “TUNE UP TIME” See Our Factory Trained Mechanic Ajax Trailers Docks • Hoists INLAND LAKES SALES 3127 W. Hurltm FE 4-7121 Honre: DaUy til « The Best in Boat Supplies . . . The Most for Your Money! TRY THE REST ... YOU'LL STEER FOR HERE! Have a DEMONSTRATION RIDE Picli out the boat you would like to own . . we'll put it in the water and let you try It before you buy itL No obligation, of I course. Whatever your boeting needs, see Slaybeugh first . . I Oakland County's most complate Marina . right on the water! 1 MOTOR IN AND FILL 'ER UP ^ DOCK FACILITIES ^ DAILY 9-6 P. M.-FIIDAY TIL 9 P. AL-SUMDAY 10-3 P. M. lots of Parking SLAYBAUGH’S YVa Miles North of Telegroph 4030 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0411 FI FT THE I’OXTIAC PRESS. TIII RSDAV. Jl \E 0. IDC.O V'\ '■ Business and Finance L. ..j Prices Turn Weak on Grain Futures CHICAGO » — Grain iuturps prices ranged from mostly steady to weak today in slack early activity on the board of trade. Soybeans were under fairly stiff pressure and down major fractions during the first half hour on the nearby months. Wheat and oats held unchanged or within minimum fractions of previous finishes while com and rye cased slightly in spots. The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Farmer'i Market by growers and sold by in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Wednesday. Dealers said there apparently were no new trade influences in the market' and that the scattered selling again appeared to be direct liquidation. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN MARKETS IRally Stretches Into Fourth Day Detroit Produce rnoiTs Ap^i. Narthtra Bps. bu. Appiw. Btmte. bu......... StrairberrlM. it qU. NEW YORK - The stock market stretched this week's rally into the fourth session in active early trading but was running into increasing difficulty. The rapid rise was faltcrint* on short-term profit taking which SCHjbrought fractional losses to a niim-'“ ber of steels, motors, chemicals, and coppers. AnpurtkUi, doi. bclu. Bcrti. doi. bclu. Broccoli, doi. bclu. CobbOKc. bu. •};lf Hotho.iM. l-lb I 70'’4,Turmpa. toppe . 73*^1 •;;;:ic.bb„., b«. } 511" ColUro. bu. . J Endive, bu. . Li bu. ■ 'i-Bid; A-Ac There is a need for 5,800 additional physical therapists in America. OROINANCS NO. UOt An Ordlnbnct to Amtnd Bettlona 1. 1 kod 3 ot OrdlnkDce No. UN ■ntitled the Annual Appropriation Ordinancf the Year tMO. 1: June 1. 1«M BHecI n Ordinaoee to appropriate the «i .. .... _________ levy ot July. UM upon all the Uxabic "property In the Cltj^ of Pontiac, Michigan, to defray iiyiendlturn and llablUtlee for the fiscal year ending .... —j of December. A.D. IMO. requiring and authortxln| tlie levy- ting the levying on the Mid city us roll of July. UM and also requiring and authorising thq, return of the l»M City. Bchool Id C^ty --------*--------- ----- Bectlon I. fhst section 1 No 13N be ofid the cam amended to read as followi Beetton 1. That there shall be raised by taxstton upon all the taxable property In the City of Pontiac, I. Six Hundred ’Thirl] 1 ItablUtlei d the a Section 3. There X levy'of the City c liabilities’^Iherrof*) "■llCSgef ^ ' lolowlnj^mo^nu. Mayor and Commissioners $ 1 City Manager 3 ------- of Pin--- Legal^jegartment City Assessor . ICngInerrIng Dcpartmrn , 3-dos. crate A prrpondcriuu-p of gainers outwrlghf-d loaers, howeverj Advances went from fraction^ to a The afrcrafl-missiles and electronics continued to move ahead, although more moderately, as Washington's mood favored increased spending for space age dc-,fensc. Selected gainers elsewhere in the list bolstered the average? Gains of more than a point were scored by Texaco and i:astman Kodak. Rails resumed their rally with fractional gains for New York Central. Pennsylvania Railroad, and Atlantic Coast Line. From Emmanuel School 19 Seniors to Qraduate graduated at baccalaureate ser-•ice 7:30 p.m. Sunday anti com-; mencement exercises 7:;!0 p.n.i Wednosdav at Emmanuel Baptist' Church. Dr.' Tom Malone. sujH'rintendent of Emmanuel Clirislian School and pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church, will deliver the baccal.ia-j reate sermon. by the seniors. Following is a list of the gradii- Rlchard Lo«e Sharon Smith Judith Srangler Prank Weltn Richard Toun« Judith Spangler, salutiiturian, will give the welia>me speech K conimeiicenient and kathr.i n Cole, valedietoriun, will give the farewell addrevx. City Underwriters Elect Floyd Blanzy IIK HOl.DS HKK HAND — With his hand holding that of his former wife, Swedish actress Anita Ekbcrg, British act,or Anthony Steel climbs back of a chair in a Rome, Italy, cafe as he starts to chase a photographer who barged in - on their farewell dinner Tuesday night! Although their divorce bocarflc final last month, they de- cided'to show they weie still friends arid so they dined together with Anita's current boy friend. At left is Swetiish director Ingmar Bergman Hidden behind him is Franco Silva, Italian actor and Anita’s present flame. The other two women are not identified. I Floyd Blaiiz.x, 4021 Ledgestone SI.. Waterford Town.ship, w;»s elected president of the Pontiac Assn of Life L’nderwriters pt the organi-izalion's annual awards banquet j yesterday. Poultry and Eggs MTBOIT POCL-TB^ New U.S. Citizens Feted by Elks Club Drntorr. iTy'-Vie/s Heavy type hens xv-n, uxi 11-13: Iwavy type roaiteri 34-27; brolleri and fryi - ii.jj; barred ~ " llnga 21-» DITROrr. ITvSer'to'" loose ID 30 < e B Urfi ____* A Jumbo 33 i 3001; Urge 30-9 ke 34-30. Livestock Zenith advaneed more than a point and Ra>1heon waa close to. a point higher. The ticker tape was late for a' ten-minute spell at the opening.' I Lower were U.S. Steel, Bethlc-. hem, Jones Si Laughlin. Ford, Un- , ......... ... lion Carbide and Kennecott Nearly 200 new U.S. citizens liv-|veleran organizations helped with i Fractional gains were made by in the Pontiac area were hon- the dinner: Blue Star Mothers, ra wide variety of ls.sties including1"*'’ annual American Legion Cook Nelson Post „ , isears Roebuck, Montgomery Ward.!"'''>-\g banquet sponsored by|!M, Chief Pontiac Post of the :?«iJJ«'>,Al*-»,'>rn.iBoeing. Douglas Aircraft. General ‘he Pontiac Elks Lodge. i American Legion, - Olson ................ ‘he Mot. rojiolilan Methodist Church i" dApoH was featured s,N-aker at 'h^’ ^tar the 6:.10 dinner at thp Elks rent- : pie. III Orchard I-ake Ave. A ★ A Mi.ss Janice Antona, who teaches He spoke on Americanism and dasses before the new citizens re-what new naturalized citizens must tj,eir papers, directed some do along with other .Americans to qj students in a special pro- Others named to offit’o are Cor-, nell Wilson, secretary-treasurer:; •lohn Griesen. first vice president: | Clair Johnson, .seexind vice presi-' dent; Tliomas Knox, thii'd vice pi-esideiil; and Ltiu Pohl, national eommittecm.'tn. Serx ing on the board'ot direcloi-s California’s San Bernardino are Thomas MeKinstry. William County is so Uirge that it could Coulacos. Mack Oakley, Cui-tis Pat-, hold all of New Jersey, Massaehu- ton, Olin LaBargc and Charles: setts. Rhode Island and Delaware. A^tugh.an. State-Sized County Martvof tumd SfcarM UNITED INCOME FUND UNITED SCIENCE FUND UNITED CONTINENTAL UNITED ACCUMULATIVE FUND For Praxpertus and dcKrip-live liirranirt. wiihoul obfi- advrriiwmrac. ^iuitlell At Keed. Inc. Principal Underwriters Roy C. Mitehtll ^•VFFICKS COAST TO COAST'' V duckx io. Dynamics. North American Aviation, Phelps Dodge, Allied Chemi-DETROIT EGOS ic®*. Air Reduction. Westinghouse Standard Oil (New Jer-cat?x ta'ciuded: Isey), American Tobacco, and ciudr u s ,r»d-|•Iohns-Manvillc. 33-15; I New York Stocks Admiral Air Rrduc Allied Ch . Allied Strs Cattle- helteri very xi to llshtwplglit ■ iteady; few icai >. Mlex limited eeri and helferx. Heady chdlcr *13 lb heifrri itandard heltrn 17.M-II.50; cannerx ■ r«.: S™an” limited cnouyh In Low Noc Baldwin Rubber Co'.* (Early Mornlnx Qt —- decimal pr' 17 1 Kelsey Hiy I preserve freedom and the nation’s aj the banquet iightiM I heritage. ! The Elks Male Chorus sang. The .... * Boy Scouts of America presented . 7«^ - Annually the Pontiac Elks stage ,t,g colors, ; 3o!i a similar‘dinner for area citizens! _________________ I* J naturalized at the courthouse dur-10!ling the year. Armour su' h pint to Stratton, but sfj tion, six blocks from his home, to! the cnnxiel held Dr. H. H. Savage, pastor of First Baptist Church, will be speaker for the Northern baccalaureate begin-at 8 p.m. His topic will be Kod turn hhnself in. Said Rickie. “I .just ' *,go for a walk. " Eaton Mil Klour Group Faces |;'Laiiguage Problem WWlc he was in jail awaiting I sentence on a fedcntl charge ot Itraasportlng forged checks, Stratton said Baird offered him $10,000 jto kill the Washtenaw County j judge. Qen Dvnam . 85 5 Switt&Co 132 5 Tfin OA"* 27 I Texaco . . 45 5 Tex O Sul . 30.7 Textron 30.6 Timk R Bear ■ fS }| NEW YORK (UPI) ^ The na-ij Total Operating Revenue Net Operating Budget to bi Raised by TsxAtlon .. Otrbsge Collection ........ Owrbage Disposal _______ ‘This Freedom: Whence?” 15S Pds' .. The Rev. Joseph I Chapman, gJJ uofor* pastor of Bethany Baptist Church, I o Tei & ei is keynote speaker for the Central'Seli baccalaureate starting at 7:30 P His speech is entitled “Life Withloood'rich ' a Capital ’L’.” . lo?Jh’V*i« Jot AAiP . igieyM , „ -...... iOulf Oil _ 29.1 Un OssCp ; Nome Ontario Minister Church Synod President Total SanlUtlon to be ratted by Uxatlon (above lax llmltatlen authortiqd Capital Improvement !!. Leas Reappropriated Bur- Total Operating Budget to be RsOaed by Taxation .. t3.5M.gg7.S6 dRbt service « be relied by taxation . to be rqlied by taxaUon. OS.A0.g37 5g Section 3. That tald sum of Three Million Seven Hondred Thirty ----------■ and Stx Hundred TlUrty GRAND iUpidS (fi-Rev. Tenis VanKooten of Hamilton, Ont., Wednesday was elected president qf the Synod of the Christian Reformed aurch at opening sessions in Grand Rapids. He served as yiiod president in 1958. Dr. William Rutgers of Bellflower. Calif., former president "of Grundy College in Iowa, named vice president. Rev. George Grlfter of Grand Rapids was ns^ned first clerk. mentioned In Section 3 be a acrordanca with t prape'rly*w* In acrordan ■ ---- of rter 1% for the __________________ _______ upon the , IMI City tax roU. ThU amendmenfTe necesaary aa It It baaed Ut”"s£*d ^f ^ «e deed Bghty One Million. One RuiidrM Thirty Three 'Theutand. Two Hundred dollan fgMI.lI3.3S0.0gi which pcrmlU a kvT of 11.17 mills and wUl Increaae (He contingent fund In the awMunt of nftv Two Thoueand. Tea doUara aad M/IOt cente ri5S.tlt.Mi. , ScctloD g. This ordlqancc shaU takt Anmedlatt affect after paaeage .thonol by the TltE Commlselon ot the City ol Pontiac, aa tt U hereby deomod to be ai eaergenev ordlnanre within the meaning of Chanter VI. Section 1 ol Chartor of Uie City of PwoUac. Mado and paaaad by the Cfty Com-mlaMoa tht of Jvne A ft - Iggt PBfUP B. R07VRI7MI. t R RVANR Hammer Pap 26.3 a Lln^. vZ Inciust Ray . . 15.3 Int Rand . . 73 6 Inland 8tl . . 44 1 InUrlake Ir ?7.5 Int Bus Mch 542.4 Ition’s largest sight-seeing organiza-lrestaurant and at Baird’s plant. 716 lion is having language difficulties,'Ann Arbor Grinders, was con- ’*« Gray Line Sight-Seeing Compa-|,ijT„p I American Bandstand. Will Look at Proposed 4:15 (2I secret storm, Bor to Discrimination (2i Mge ot Night. (4) Yancy Demnger. by Real Estate Men (9i Robin Hood. 5:00 (2) Movie. LANSING (A^A public hearing j u 1J T . . '9* Loiwy Tunes and Jm- will be held June 21 in Detroit on a proposed state rule to bar dis-jj-.g^ ,7, ^in. cnmination by licensed real es-(9) Jac LeGoff late men -in selling or renting; ___________' Slate Hearing on Home Bias homes. I Lawrence Gubow. itate corpora-{Clunker GoH in Its J^IGEB BASEBALL, 5 p.m. (2).l|,p up in ihe wake of a state !| THEY WIlX WED - Peter Brcck, 31, star ol the television series "Black Saddle," and dancer Diane Bourne, 27. pose at the marriage AP Ph*l«r*i license bureau in Los Aitgeles where they obtained a marriage license Wednesday. They told newsmen they wUl be married Saturday. $5 Million Due From U.S. Slate Needs Fire-Resistant Hospitals LANSING (ff)—Mithigan has only one-third of the beds needed in fire-resistant (aciiities (or care of the chronically ill and the mentally ill, the State Health Department said W^ednesday. On the other hand, the department added, the state ha.s more than 73 per cent of its estimated need lor general hospital beds. The appraisiil was made in an nnual revision of the state's plan for hospital and medical facilities construction. The plan is the basis on which federal funds will be granted in 1960-61. Albert E. Heustis, .statr health commissioner, said preliminary estimates indicate Michigan will receive at least $4,900,-000. The figure for the current fiscal year was $6,100,000. The state plan indicalc-d that] of 73 hospital service areas- gon, Presque Isle-Montmorency, Newaygo, Gogebic, Ionia, Wex-ford-Missaukee. Crawford-Oscoda-Roseb^mon. Sanilac, Arenac-Gladwin. Cl^e, Mason-Lake, Gratiot, Oceana, losco-Ogemaw, and Mackinac, Van Buren. Emmet, Montcalm, Lapeer, Alpena-Alcona. Hillsdale. Clinton, Eaton, Chippewa, Livingston. Ottawa, Monroe, Lenawee, Bay, Berrien, Jackson 1 Grosse Pointe. The s.VRtem was dcNigiied to I Kcn-en and downgrade prosi>e<-] live house bu.vers and renters •; piMsessIng characteristics and I manncr(st|is deemed undesir-’j able. . Paul L. Adams has Areas with the greatest need include New4>err.v, Bad Axe, Monroe, Liidlngton, Stambaugh, .Northeast Detroit. Tawas Clly, .Muskegon and Cass City. Existing facilities in these areas t * * I range from none with fire-resistant Then, for (our months, their facilities to less than 60 per e?nt olil sedan stood in troni ot their jof the Ix-ds needed in acceptable U)S ANGELES — 3iar,v .Ahrens, 71, died last Decemlier. -j Her husband. John. 80. retired i lumberman, died less than a ' iiionlh later. doubleheader Is telecast from Bal-!, timore's Memoijal Stadium. PAT BOONE, 9 p.m. (7). Bot Rydell is Pat’s guest. (Color.) UNTOUCHABLES, 9 ,30 p.m. ( (Rerun). Wil)i:am Bendix stars a hijacker and kidnaper who captured, after a difficult pursuit, by Eliot Ness (Robert Stack). . 1 • SPRING MUSIC FESTIVAL ‘ home. Folice finally im|tounded faeillties. 10 Dm (2) The rRg violates slate law.,' |j. mtid It as junk to cover stor- The state plan estimated therei ^beTtra^frodo^LS'tm'FA REVIEW ' “«e .sis.s, (should be^^Oll general ac^te care! ducting; violinist Aaron Rosand.l a legislative committee ulti-‘ '’“"‘‘T'in harmonica Virtuoso .lohn Sebas-;lately must review the proposed: '■"'• '"I"' construction are .o,G61 m tian. and pianist John Browning puic which is expected to arouse; are featured. i bitter debate in Ihe light of con- ERNIE KOVACS. 10:30 p.-m .; sistent refu.sal of lawmakers to ap-(7). Edie Adams. Cesar Romero prow civil rights measures with and Hans Gonried attempt to; similar content, ' .... .* 7 * - identify the contestants who oncoi Under the rule, real estate men i were in the wews. I would be forbidden to refuse seiv-' Ahn-ns, ll\e»( at zm lleighitt ' , Suin-rio- • --------- 'ontained | fire-resistant structures and 4,133 rul Motor* stock jin unacceptable buildings, and 43,t*5 in matured s bonds, ol'leers said. JACK PAAR KHOW, 11:.'10 p.m.lice to any person beeaii (4). Jack's guests include Peggy 1 color, religion, national origin ( Cass (md Dick Van Dyke ancestry. ACROSS WORI.Il CITIES . .1 BoIlvUn city 7 Bpanlib cUy 3S P*netr»tf n Molt facile «3 U.8,-wartlnie . 47 Wine Teasel 3 IndiTidutls 7 Refreshing S Mineral rock I —c- Vegaa. r- 3 4 r- 6 7“ r 9 12 u“ f J 15" t rm M] 1 Fn 23 24 a" 26 5 m ■ w w P 2” j r E r sr t tl M 1 5 ■ w n L 1 5 n 1 1112111 ' mmm 4T 4T w II SI 52 w 54 w E sT B sr .: th*-re called the home and was | i told: i "We aren't sa.ring anything to Take 1st Steps Toward , Grand Rapids Airport Greer Does Fine Job in Portraying Eleanor • By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Greer <}ar8on — about the only redhead courageous enough to wear a'bright red outfit — risked It at Danny's Hi^jeaway between scenes of playing Eleanor Roose-» velt In "Sunrise at Campobello.” To exclama- tions of "Isn’t she beautiful?” she explained it was a break in the routine of wearing a wig and false eyelashes to resemble Mrs. F.D.R. as a young woman. Due soon at Campobello—via two boats and two planes—Miss Oarson said, "In the picture, nobody's to recognize me—they’re going to recognize Eleanor Roosevelt! They said It couldn’t be done—but Bobby Darin' equalled Frank Sinatra’s weekend biz at the Copacabana . . . Zlva Rodann, the Israeli sexpot who claims she fears splnsterhood, forgets to mention she was married In Israel to ’’Zaplk.’’ I was congratulating Hollywood restaurateur Dave Cbasen, food adviser to TWA, on the delicious din- r nets I had on recent TWA jet flights, and he said, "Naturally." The top flights now serve Chicken Charlemagne, Bob Hope’s favorite dish (garnished with artichokes and mushrooms); grenadine of beef (my favorite) — and will soon be featuring New England boiled dinners — sans cabbage! WILSON (•ml ri.il Special considenitinn for aid j from federal funds will go to general hosiHtnl projects whlgh j Include a ps.vehlatrie unit or wliieh will result in a coordinated program for the ehroni-eall.v III. the stale plan re-\ealed. .\l least 13.84fl beds are ; needtsi for such i»a(|pn|s. The plan i-eporied 43 rountiesj ^ j either have no facilities ‘ for| iskillf'd nursing home care or none MIDNIGHT EARL . . . 'in fire-resistant structures. j These counties, which will havej Keely Smith swung a heavy wine bottle to chrUtqp her IRANI) RAPIDS — Develop- first claim on federal funds for j new yacht—and did $300 worth of damage to the hull . . . The ni of a ni'w $6.977.(K)0 commer-j skilled nursing home construction, Crosby boys gave Ed (Harwyn) Wynn a gold lighter iiucribed:! for Grand Rapids are in order of priority: .. j-xo the East Coast Bing” . . . Mrs. Burl Ives’ll co-produce herl (•d forward today with lirvin-i Luce, Otsego, Baraga, ' husband’s next film j ZIVA TV News and Reviews The Babies Were Adorable but, Unhappily, Not Show By FRED DANZIG NEW YORK (UPD-David and Steven Bom are 18-month-cld twins who appear in a Pabhim-and-formula TV series called, Happy. The show had its prem^r last night in the first half of the NBC-TV hour occupied by Perry Como during the season. I hope the Born boys do not take it personally when I say I didn’t rare for their show. Oh, 1 think they’re adorable little guys and I’m not blaming the aeries on them. (Had they been consulted, Ihe thing might have Improved.) The gimmick in this series is for the baby’s (ace to be seen in close-up while an off-camera baby-type voice offers adult-type captiems, or comments, about the shenanigans of the grownups around the hoi device that depends some mighty clever punch lines and interesting facial exprcsslon.s and body contortions. A d A In last night’s opener, the spired captions commented on uninspired domestic scenes that involved Ronnie Bums and Yvonne Lime as daddy and mommy, respectively, and Lloyd Corrigan as Uncle Charley, the good-natured, oafish helper. min-charged laugh track the immature look of the show THE CHANNEL SWIM: Masqia< rade party launches a play-at-h(>me feature for its NBC-TV viewers this Friday night: Guess the identity of "Mr. X" and maybe win a sports car. Now planning ahead (or next weasoD, Perry Como reports Ms staff is hoping to set up guest-swapping deals with Bob Hope, Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra. Marion Lome, recuperating from major surgery, surprised -and pleased Garry Moore with her announcement that she hopes to return to the CBS-TV hour before the season ends on June '.i. Garry didn't expect her back until the fall. ♦ * * e two-hour production ol Macbeth to be presented orr NBC-TV in November, went before the color cameras this week in the Cheviot Hills of Scotland, Producer-Director George Schaefer reports. Maurice Evans and Judith Anderson star in the drama. Teachers Federation to Send 3 Delegates The Pontiac Federation of Teachers will send three delegates to the Aug. 14-19 national convention of the American Federation ol Teachers in Dayton, Ohio. ★ ★ ★ They are John Keinert, 71 Lor-berta Lane, PFT secretary; Russell Buller, 190 Riviera Terrace; and Roland Hallquist, 160 EIxmoor St. ■A ■* -A Keinert will also represent, the PFT at the Merit-Pay Woilcshop July 11-15 at Syracuse University. Honest man Mark Twain said: I was gratified to be able to answer promptly and I did. I sajd I didn’t know. ” rangemenls among f ■ps taken towardjhe facility, "onstruefion work is expected to with romple- n 1962 Seeks Court Order !; in Aircraft Strike Kent ('ounly supervisors unani-j mously approved yesteiday dinance oftering for sale $3,975, ;000 in general obligation I'Kinds toj HARTFORD. Conn. (AP) — A pay for the area's .share of devel- strike by thousands of United Air- opinent tW: 14 B-fore Christ •-Today's Radio Programs- «(^CAR (113(1) WXIZ ift Corp. workers moved into its second day today with the company determined to keep its plants open and .seeking a court order to stop mass picketing. A A A Seven of United Airerafl's plants in Connecticut, cmplo.vjig aljout 33.000 productoin workers, are aflc>cted by the walkout. . Since the strike got under way on a full scale Wednesday more than 30 persons have |»cen a re.stcd in pieket line .skirmishes. United Aircraft plants arc engaged in work on government tracts. ProdiRfion wcjrkcrs repres('nted by the United "Auto Workers (UAWi or the Intema-WJBK (1300) tional Assn of Machinists (lAMl. CONIOUT •:0»-WJR. Tlftr B»Mb»lI WWJ. N*vt CKLW. Non WJBK. Ncwi WCAR. Mui)e WPON M««t SporU 0:30-WW3. Bu-ioeu W3BK. BfUboy t:SO-WrON, Jorry Quin “ 0:0B*-CKLW. R, KsowIm . •AS—WJR. OuMt Rouw (-WJR, MutK l;30-WJR. Uui)c WWJ. Mua)e to D WCAR Woodllni: rRlUAI MUR.NINU «:00-»JR, Acrlcullure W)VJ, NfW». HobriH WXYZ. Pred Wolt CKIW Rooator 7:0O-)AJK. Nt«t. Must 44 )W3 Rc*«. Roberto WfXrZ. R«»i. WoU -CKLW Ne(n. 7oby C WCAR. Newt. 8twb-)dAi WPON H«»a. Camt CRIW He»a DiTid WCAR. WpoH. M4V4. Comp l:S0-wiR. iittfle H>U WPUn' Nect Lai I • ;SO-WJR. Jack Ha OOO-WJR. MUile WXYZ Bpeodvay CKLW, Joe WCAR. Ne«V weON (mock UirlA l:S0-WJR Tliue lor Munc PRIDAY APTERNOON lt:00-WJR. Wm. BiMAhAD W Nava. RAncArt CKLW. Jo* Vad WCAR Ne»« Pur(» WPUN Nava Lfvu lt:S0-WJ^ TUnt for Muil W’JBK, Rrld In a statement Wednesday, the company said it could not comply I w ith* two demands by the unions —a union-shop and ajitomatic pay increases instead of merit raises. Supreme Court Justice William O. DougUs’ll hike the Wrhitej Mountains for a National Geographic article . . . Tony Per-! Kins Is studying French, will attend the "Psycho” premiere Ini Paris . . Steve Reeves was In Mae West’s beefcake troupe; he i says, "I was second muscle on the left” . . . Broadway gag;j The actor’s pension plan will never work—how can you get an actress to admit she’s old enough to collect one?” Veteran actress Mae Clark (who got a.grapefruit pushed In her face by James Cagney in “Public Enemy”) returned to Bt-oadway and walked into the State Delicatessen “to smell the salamis again.” A waiter, who didn’t recognize her, said,! "Listen, lady, people come here to eat salamis. not to smell! them.” ... Art Hannes has a TV family; he’s Ed Sullivan's! announcer, and his wife and three kids Just filmed a soap suds commercial. ★ ★ ★ , EARL'S PEARLS: With Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra both operating Italian restaurants, some one figures the new show biz slogan Is, "You’re only as good as your last pizza.” TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Taffy Tuttle Claims one of her neighbors Isn’t very bright; "Why, If K wasn’t for his toes he wouldn’t be able to count to eleven.” WISH I’D SAID THAT: Cynical Joey Carter says he’s been reading the scary headlines, adding; "I’m so worried I won't start a long-playing record.” Vincent Lopez reminisces In his book, "Lopez Speaking,’ about the prohibition era In N.Y.: "Those were the days of Instant Scotdx’ . . . That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, IStJO)**,.^ SAVE! for limited lime only $7.35 Reg. Price! Pontiac Glass Co. 23 W. Lowrence St. FE 5-6441 Second TV? SOUNDS ( i UKE 5 GOOD IDEA! TRADiS ACCIPTIO ., 12"C.E.........119.95 16" Motorola . .$24.95 17"H.C.A........$29.95 17'*Philco $34.95 17"C.B.S........$34.95 17" Heliciaiten $34.95 21"Mniitz 21"PhiIco . 21"C.B.S. 21" Motorola 27" Muntz . 21" Motoiola Comb. . SPEtlAl 17" Portable $69.95 $39.95 $59.95 $59.95 $79.95 $99.95 $119.95 OBEL RADIO—TV SALES-SESVICE 3930 [LIZABITH LK. RD. OPEN DAILY 9 9 FE 4-4945 SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Hearing Tests SAFE—CLEAN—ECONOMICAL—FHA TERMS ELECTRIC HEAT FREE Egtimafes Phone OR 3-3792 or FE 5-5439 , Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Eng-|lish author of “The Ancient Mar-Bk liner,'; remarked: "It often amuses ,jme to hear men impute all their I misfortunes to (ate, luck or dbs-jtiny. whilst their successes or igood fortune -they a.scribe W, their jown sagacity, cleverness or pene-3:S*-CKLW Nfwi. oaviaa (ration ’’ 4:M-WJR. Mue)e Hill wr\VJ, Nfv*. Lynkrr W XVZ, Wlntrr CKLW. .Nrvi. OAVie* WJRK. Mule WCAR. Npvt. Bennett WeoN Cerrler* Tr*d* - ... ComnoAKe Nei WXVZ. Winter CKLW. Dkim W.IHK, Uu((|r WCAR. Kf»» Bennett WPON Bob LeVk l:3*-^WJR Millie n>II ) M-WJa. RbWA. Must* WXVZ. WIntor MUNTZ TV Member of iBfectroaics Auocialiea FE 4-I5I5 C & V ELZCTRO MART tv^“ren4al BY DAT OR WEEK AIR COIMTIORMO GAS HEAT It -you want qualify in « fumece'and duct work, call for free heatirtg survey. *570 Now yniole Hovso air Conditioning as low as »770 tvrs cufIrtL Lsss .1- FE8 BROTHER'S HEATING and COOLING Want a Second Hand Race Cart 1 you TRflll wont to buy on* of Wolton'a good ua*d TV Mts for tb* icnnily or r*cr*crtioD room. 07T*r 65 good ui*d a*b to choos* from. 3Q day h •xchang* priTil*9*. *14.95 .P WALTON: RADIO & TV 515 W. Walton icor. Josiyn FE 2-2257