JL _tj— Edition PQNTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JULY 0, 1902 —3G PAGE® One-to-10 Megaton Device Knocks Hole in Ionosphere Boy, 2, Missing Siiwo Saturday Park Outing in West of State From Our News Wires HESPERIA — A 300-man army of policemen, boy scouts/ and volunteers-resumed a search at daybreak, today for a 2-year-old Cht: cago boy who disappeared Saturday. . A skeleton crew of state police searchers stayed through Sunday night but found no trace of missing Daniel Lee Moss, whp-from a party of 15 dt the Vida Weaver Park in this little western Michigan town. Third U. S. Try in Pacific Bursts' HONOLULU UP)—A powerful hydrogen bomb exploded 200 miles above the earth and lit the reaches of the Pacific from Hawaii to Australia for .six minutes starting at 11 p.m. Sunday night 4 a.m. Pontiac time today. —ft marked success orr the third try by the United States for the high-altitude test from tiny Johnston island- Some SOt members spent a discouraging day. yesterday as they looked tor the boy. No tram of the tot was found. But there was still hope us state police culled In another squad and additional volunteers Joined the hunt. Waikiki Beach al 4 a.m. This Morning Then, Boom! And Night Became Day The little boy vanished while on a picnic with his mother, . Mrs. Dorothy Moss, 32, and Mrs. Doris Bradley of MuBkegon. Premier of Algeria Seeks to ’ ..... Austrian MDs Stage Walkout Moscow Charges ‘Crime Committed’ Russians Denounce U S. Test ALGIERS (JPi — Premier Youssef Ben Khedda made peace Overtures today to his rebellious deputy, Ahmed Together, -the two women had | Ben Bella, whose army supporters have taken over the 24-Hour Strike Called by Medical Assn, in Demand for Fee Hike taken it youngsters to the park Moslem section of Oran and now control most of weit-Saturday for what was to haveVm Algeria — --------------- two ministers to the^ai^ the area to help searchers and ital of Rabat to seek reconciliation with the dissident a helicopter from Traverse City]' > joined in efforts to find the1 Mrs, Moss told state police the last time she saw tie bey he was playing oa the .banks of a shallow river which passes through the park. But Bata-police ikin' divers probed the liver thoroughly yesterday and failed to turn up any trace of the lad. State police at the Newaygo post said they had been unable toilnd any clue i what happened to the boy. Even a 10-foot deep pond at a sawmill was drained in an attempt to find the boy. The search party went through , old__buildings, garagoN and shacks In hopes, of finding little Danny,/nut/with no sucess. The boy was described ns weighing'shout tt pounds,. hav-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) It's Cool, Man, Cool ^deputy-, premier who has VIENNA (API—Austria’s 13,700 doctors launched a 24-hour strike today, demanding higher fees from I he government-i Pontiac area residents are in for been demanding looser ties. sory health Insurance pool. with France and close links a medical spokesnu far as we know” all the nation’s Strike nifyiqffc on emertfency duty. to the Cornnkmiat world. jfar «« we know" t Ben Bella, id&ifrlhfcMAfoBlh U.A.R. President-C.Hmfll Wtafot Nasser in Cairo, left .Sunday night change from the hof, humid I presumably for Rabat, where he weather of this weekend, !wa» awaited ^ Ben _ • ■ . ... voys — Information’ Minister Mo- Forecasters predicted that io- hammed Ya/id and Minister ol lou'Stale Rabah Bilal. LObiDON UR - The U.S, high altitude jtuclear blast over the Pacific wot denounced by the Soviet Union today and criticized and defended in Britain. Watchers in the distant Pacific got u spectacular dlsptavof fireworks. “The crime lias been commit ted,” declared Moscow Radio. “Tlie IJ.S.A, exploded its nuclear device^ in space -despite the decisive protests of all mankind — precisely on the day when the World Congress for General IHsiii-muiueiit and Peace begun its work In Moscow.” The Conservative Evening Stand-1 systems is going to run into bilard defended the blast as a neces- lions," said the Standard. “It is tary step Iq the development of as well to find out how vulnerable antimissile missiles. they are before . breaking the ’Since the cost of antimisBile|bank.” -In England, the explosion was criticized and defended. But hf. R. C. Sutoliff of the Meteorology Office Department of Research, said the blast was too high ‘to disturb the world’s weather. Moves to Dissolve Film lin Missing Corn Probe HALT RADIO SIGNALS anticipated, the explosion apparently knocked a bole in the ionosphere which reflects some types of radio signals from place to place on earth. Reports from Japan indicated ’ communications were affected. Some places were expected to be without radio com-munlcatlonTbr 32 hours; In Hon- ' radio stations were washed out only briefly; before < day’s high would he 73 \ Tuesday will he partly sunny and cool with little temperature .-Itange. the temperatures for the next four days will average four degrees below the normal high of 1( to 81 and low of It lo 88. From IQ a.m. Friday to 10 a.m, today there were ,$ rainfall. The lowest temperature pi- ing 8 a.m gi-ees at 1 s Hostess Spurns Safety, Calms People in Crash AMARILLO, Tex. '(£>—Linda Howard, an unruffled Continental Airlines hostess, spurned safety yesterday! to reassure her 13 passengers as their turbo-prop Vis-r count crashed three, minutes after taking off from the Amarillo Air Terminal. The 13 passengers and 3 crew members escaped minutes before several'explosions rocked the wreckage. Several passengers suffered blnst produced 10 minutes of pyro-... . ■ ... . . ilechnka, and .newspapers were yM flodjkMWt calls f*m New tfe* Austrian Trade "^Federation. tHg- eilrioU8( olhm pan- j^gS - prOfCNl UmiOllSt rtttlllll * t of th* j ‘ ' + it * I, , . Mpd,4ca' Aaroelaltoi. j. •' mV, 0u ,. y.'cbmniunlcatlm | wh,ch WHU'red th* "*,kou‘' blackouts were reported In various # * * !parts of the Pacific, as scientists! I The conflict over the sickness had predicted, j compensation fund involved only) ,.mH)on. whw MMn(. .. . „ . _ |Vienna doctors, but 'He res' of, hHV,, HMNtt|led ,he hi|th they hailed Ben (the nation s physicians Joined the * 1 About 1,800 heavily armed At-g<-r|an troopH flocked ficnm the Moroccan border Into Oran over the weekend and received Ing cheers Ihc hero of Algeria's Istrlke nititmle lest, Britons were as- | ___________ Mired the exptoston would have H nocpenaciicc. w _w - ■ J m effect on the enrth> weather. Ben Bella slogans appeared on!. Tbe clo«Uira_had demanded an, walls throughout the Moslem quar-!,acfeaf‘ lhat 'v!°uld h , rai*fd| "The explosion was loo high lo ter of Algeria's second largest city.|their lePS bv 6’’ P*r.cen<. undp':disturb anything of meteorological Boy Scouts and children’s groups!,hc nc'v Ul,der ,lbf °'disignificance,” said Dr! R. C. Sul- paraded with huge portraits of the(COn,,acl r the avt',a*p monthly in |dlffe of ,he British Meteorology deputy premier - come of a medical pructllionei office s department of research. No Ben Bella slogans appeared!was wUraa,ed as aboul ,40°- ♦----- in Oran 's European quarter where j 97 persons died in street fighting last Thursday. French police patrolled the streets of the sector by agreement with Moslem author- LANSINQ. tAP) —AUy Oen. Frank J. Kelley moved to-tfttoMlMM^'Ncw f,*>fltand. to dissolve The Woodbury Oratft CCi which is under- going investigation for a $110,000 shortage of corn In government storage. Kelly also asked the Ingham County Circuit Court to appoint4State Agriculture Director George S. McIntyre temporary receiver of the company and the Michigan Grain Co., at Decatur, both owned by Woodbury Grain. The court additionally was asked for an order asking the two firms to show cause why the receivership should not be made permanent and why they should not be directed to turn over all of thelf- assets to the receiver for sale. ----------------------—.------t—*--------► A fourth Btep taken by Die attorney general called for a temporary restraining order to prevent the defendants from removing any of the corn, records, or other 'assets from Its elevators at the two southern Michigan towns. Earlier story on Page 35. As one observer said, "for two r throe . seconds, It was early sunrise hi the flash from the nuclear explosion above Johnston Island reached out to Hawaii. Quickly the sky reddened from its earlier hues of white and green to pink, rose and deep orange. Theh just as suddenly, It Was night agaifi:" In Auckland, New Zealand, flic blast produced 10 minutes of pyrotechnics. New Zealanders, panicky or i curious, called theh* newspapers. Hies. Calls Peer in Doctor Sfrikei Hundreds of Europeans from], Oran lined up Sunday in a feverish effort lo get plane scats fqr 'ranee; REGINA; Sask. (UPH Pre mier Woodrow S. Lloyd said today, he had called in a British labor peer to help find a solution to a French informants said about 120|9.sne down ns safely a* possible. > “I don’t know If I was really afraid or not. There was no time for that.’’ ( She said she . reached the of thq plane, seconds before' tbe cruh, ’'MU Into an empty seat and did not have time to pui the aeat He said Yazld and Bitat could be expected to reach an understanding with Ben Bella. Yazld long has been a close friend of Ben Bella and Bitat shared 5’a years of French lm-prisonmcni with (he dissident lead- Lloyd said in a prepared statement his ..Socialist administration asked Lord Taytyr, a former labor member of Parliament and a medical consultant, to "study” the medicare situation. But Lloyd added “it cannot be said- thpt he Is coming as a mediator.” Last Day to Register for August Primary This Is the last day for Oakland C o ii n nr resident* who haven’t reglsfimd or voted In the paat four years to register to veto In the Aug. 7 primary. The Pontiac City -Clerk's Office at Oty Hall, aa well as most city' and township clerks, will remain open until 8 p.m. In onset where clerk* are ac- homes, notices will be posted nt city News Flash Kast-Weat compromise today and endorsed n declaration of neutrality by, the new Laotian neutralist government of Pro-mlcr Prince Sduvanna Phourna. (Knitter story n Pago it). , I A private medical insurance or ganizatjpn's proposal aimed at ending the strike also was being considered by the provincial government. Lloyd, whose weekend statement* Indicated no softening of’ the Medalist government’s stand against the striking physicians, spent two-and-a-half hours last night conferring with Tre Afterward both Lloyd and Blak-eney had only a “no oomment’’ for reporters’ questions. However, it was considered likely they discussed a compromise proposal offered by Medical Services, Inc. /MSI) aimed al removing doctors objections lo practicing under a socialized medical plan and getting l hem hack lo work. “Lord Taylor Is recognized throughout the world ns an outstanding surgeon and as n parliamentarian," the premier said. “Comments from a person of his stature can scarcely go without careful consideration by the medical profession and the government.” 8 , Taylor, a doctor and fellow of the Royal College of confirmed in London that he was coming to this Socialist-governed province nt Lloyd’s request. But he refused to comment on his chances of working out a settlement of the dispute that has cut medical service to close lo a million people to 'emergency only" basis. FIRST JOB would be right (o offer any tton, because mediation means both sides would have to^be agreeable." • ' Taylor said Ms first Job “Is l< advise the government," TayW said he did not know def- lij. DOCTOR IN MA6KATCUEWAN — Dr. Geraxdt Beck ‘(left), Jacksonville, Fla., visits witt) a patient In the hospital at Leader, Sask. Dr. Be|*k came to Leader last week^to help out AP during the doctor strike In Saskatchewan. The province’s doctors quit last week in protest to ! the government’s compulsory medical insurance >!*"• ' •: , | ' ] ,//. Immediately the Soviet Union denounced the United States for exploding the one to 10 megaton thermonuclear device. It called it an aggressive action timed to coincide with the opening of the World Congress for General Disarmament and Peace in Mos- Eyewttnesses agreed It was the most spectacular sky show they had seen. In Hawaii for sit minutes the night became bright ns day. glow above tbe northern horizon, spreading across A dear sky to Ison. /Then a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Kills I, Injures 3 Avon Twp. Man Dead After Bloomfield Hills Accident on Woodward An Avon Township man was killed and three persona injured yemerdny in a two-car accident in Bloomfield Hills. Richard A. Dickinson, 27, of 2820 Hickory Lawn Road was dead w arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after jhc car’In which he whs idlng went out of control and collided with another automobile. Dickinson was a passenger in a ar driven by James W. Hamilton, 27, of 290 W. Buell Road, Oakland Township, according to Bloomfield Hills police. JO Hamilton la ,br serious condition at the rame tps-pital with a pos-concussiOn Oakland Highway Toll in ’62 went out at control and rolled The accident occurred just south of Hickory Grove Road. Czanstkc and his passenger, Beverly Quatrine, 25, of St. Clair Shores, are. at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Czanstke la listed In fair condition with a concussion. . Miss Quatrine suffered possible internal injuries and multiple outs. She is In satisfactory condition, hospital authorities said. It was Bloomfield Hills’ second fatal accident thjs year. The Day in .a Women to Hear Nominees Countdown Js Stctrted ff on 7V Relay Satellite Emergency Now Health Center Tex., a few minutes alter takeoff. The 13 pas- seriously injured. See story on Page 1. Telstar could pave the way for global radio and toleyision pro* grains within about four years. Technicians started the countdown shortly after dawn today. . Fuel was piped into the giant Delta rocket. The satellite itjeLf, - tucked in the Delta’s bulbous nose, wfui given its final checks. . i ■ • *•’ • ir*: • Bel] Telephone Laboratories of the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. built the complex satellite, and will pay all costs involved in launehiagTeslar.oa A Thor-Delta rocket and tracking its orbital flight, The cost is' estimated at $3 million, which Bell is to pay even if the mission fails. If aN gees as planned, television viewers In America and Western Europe will see the first live transatlantic TV programs within a week, with slg- The satellite’s planned orbit range from 600 to 3,500 miles above the earth. With its more than OOP parts, Telstar weighs TO HANDLE PROGRAM Andover, Maine, which has sending and receiving capability, and HolindsL N-jf., which will receive otjjy, are the two principal U.S. gssund stations. The hospital emergency detriment has changed. It has become community health center. This is how stuff physician Dr. Vernon C. Abbott describes die emergency department at Pontiac General Hospital in his article ap-pearing., in the latest issue of ' Modem Hospital,” a magazine published for hospital administrative personnel. “To be sore, the injured are ■till cared for In the emergen-ct department, but these canes are outnumbered by the respiratory Infections, the acute end chronically ill of the community who find their way to the emergency depart-Dr, Abbott writes. day or night ... and each year their numbers, increase, for nowhere else is adequate 24-hour service, given. -PRESENTED PROBLEM “This has presented a serious staffing problem to the hospital and a greater tax bit emergency department facilities, which are usually not designed or organised to care for this ever-increasing volume of pittents. “Pontiac General Hospital .. , was faced with this emergency problem . . . Last year, R,1N patients were treated In the emergency department, an In-crease et 1,M ever the volume of five year* before.” He continued: "They come The prob of the the emer-on eight-hour fTbe three major U.S. televl-, gsm networks are planning a 12-bilnute news transmission to Europe via Teletar. The European pondenettag Union, represent-Mg M countries will handle a --------„ |Qr heaming to the Unit* program fi It States.' The European program will orig-lime in ~ ‘ Brussels, Belgium, and be shot to Telstar through ground stations at Goonhilly Down, Eng* m - Transcontinental television Gash Injuries Fatal to Area Father of 5 A Drayton Plains father of five died Saturday in Grebe Hospital, Detroit, of injuries sustained in three car collision in St. Clair Cgunty near Marysville a week tBonald R. Smith. 90, of SSOS m Villa Road had suffered multiple skull fractures In the Four others were In- Smith was driven by Francis V. O’Rourke, 40, of 1M S. Avery St. They were en route to the FDR Union Camp school in Port Huron when the accident occurred on rJjS. 33, four miles southwest of Marysville. Smith was employed by Pontiac Motor Division as an electrician. He is survived by his wife and five children ranging in age from 1 to 10. Previously, only on intern handled emergency patients as they arrived, with staff doctors on call for serious Injuries and ailments. In the 10 months that the new AIRLINER WRECKAGE—This Is a doseup of the Si-million Continental Viscount that crashed Sunday in a wheatflddeast of AfflSfblb, Despite ‘Cautious Optimism’ Viet Nam Frustrates U S. Vjfhr SAIGON, South Viet Nam « — i tie through the jungle and guerillas While briefing officers speak of the for daya on a bag of rice and then Vietnamese war with “cautious op-'die needlessly as a result of fum- Dr. To Battle Injunction Dr. VERNON C. ABBOTT YORK (UPI) - An at-for the Flight Engineers has said he .would go into Federal Circuit Court of Ap-today in an effort to lift a restraining order barium a strike against Pan American Woild Airways. C. of C. Seeks Direct Flights From Pontiac Officials of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce today titkSned the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) in Washington, D. 0. for authorization of direct airline flights from Pontiac to Chicago and Cleveland. In Washington to file the petition ere Max Adams, manager; Carl Rogers, president; and Harry Woodman, past president of the chamber. U.S. Rep. William 8. Broom-aid. KOakland County: said he would support the appeal loo per cent.” A recent chamber survey of -local business and industry showed Interest In direct access to Chicago and Cleveland was high enough to support the proposed flights. The current North Central Airlines one-plane service from Pontiac Municipal Airport ia to SauJt Ste. Marie and Detroit. Authorisation for those flights expired June 30 but they will tinue until further word from the CAB,----- Plan to Appeal City Tax Ruling Vigilance Group Says It Will Take Its Case to State Supreme Court The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Partly cloudy and cooler today with a high of 75 and a low of 52 to 58. Tuesday will ha mostly sunny with little temperature change. DETROIT IP — Suburban Detroit’s vigilance tax committee says it will ask the State Supreme Court to reverse a lower court de-' cision that Detroit’s income tax on nonresidents is legal. The committee deckled on the appeal at a meeting Saturday. It voted to circulate petitions throughout the state calling lor legislation to prohibit any govern-' meni body from enacting an income tax without a vote of the people in the affected areas. Berkley Mayor George Kuhn, committee chairman, said 260,000 signature* are needed be fore next Jan. 1 tor preeentatlon to the legislature. Detroit’s one per cent levy both residents and nonresidents who work in Detroit was upheld last Monday, the day after it took effect, by Wayne County Circuit Judge Neal .Fitzgerald. American military advisers are quietly reading a hook banned fay President Ngo Diem's regime. 1, The book, Albert .Fall’s "Street Without Joy,” is a history of the bloody and futile effort by the French to win the Indochina in those same jungles eight years “Why, they did the same things e're doing,” an American major in shocked tones. JUST ARRIVED He had just arrived from mor training camp (n Texas and had not yet learned how war in South Vtet Nam grinds up men and frustrates American military minds. Dressed in immaculate khaki, American advisers arrive con' vipced that more helicopters or a bling leadership. At this point, the Americans begin to talk of a war lasting several years. They say the turn of warfare is to kill or capture the enemy, but speak more and more of the value of ‘‘keeping the Viet Cong on the run.” WILL TAKE TIME America has been building military traditions and ah officer corps since 1776, the U.S. advisers say, and tt will take time la do the same in South Viet Nam. Americans express conviction that the war cannot be won unless President ’Diem's government wins-the active support of a majority of the South Vietnamese. SAIGON, South Viet Nam m-Government forces have suffered a series of setbacks In sharp clashes with Communist guerrillas In the north, a communique reported tonight. In three operations, the Viet Cong guerrillas killed at least 42 South Vietnamese soldiers and made off with weapons and ra- in the mountains and Jangles. new wrinkle such ap armored amphibious troop carriers will put the > seal of death on the Viet Cong guerrillas. They expect to work with Vietnamese officers of the quality and spirit of. those in the armies Amer-■a is allied with in Europe. Then, as they stand sweating in the stinking, jungle, the American* watch thousands of Vietnamese troops drive deep into guerrilla territory-1n American helicopters U.S. river boats — and in long operations kill a handful of Reds. The Americans see brave, smiling little Vietnamese troopers bat- The Americans speak in hushed tones of seeing prisoners summarily executed and of finding bodies of women and children in a village burned by napalm dropped from planes the United States has sent m. V “ ' ’ How, they ask, can the allegiance of the people be won under these conditions? PROGRESS NEEDED Everyone in South Viet Natn speaks of the need'for social and economic progress for the peasant and villager to counter the prom-of the Communists. William R- Usallis of Cranbrook School in Bloomfield Hills is of 15 outstanding high school , and junior college teachers who have begun « specialty course at Stan-ford University Intended to to* crease their teaching skills. nie teachers are recipients of William Cro Fellowships, award-basis of personal ac- Each is provided with a $750 grant plus a $250 family allowance, set up through a bequest of the late New York philanthropist. The group meets with historians in a variety of fielda for lectures and seminars. The teachers are studying under visiting professor, Some American officials don' use the word “reform” because that-wdisturiuL the governments-in contrast with eight months ago when the United States committed the first of 8,000 advisers now in .South Viet Nam, nobody speaks publicly of pressuring Diem Into granting “progress.” Now, American officials say Diem’s government seems aware of the need for progress and that it will come as soon as the security Situation improves: • To Arraign Man jinBeachFight Bunning to Start for AL Stars at D. C. Stadium Searchers Resume Hunt for Child (Continued From Page One) shorts, Sgt. Robert Hallada, commander of the Newaygo State Police Post, said there was no indication that the boy could have been kidnapped. Hie Moss’ have two other chll- Ap miMn Thunderstorms are expected to be Plains and northern Plateau parts of the Southeast. Some coast. It will be cooler dren. Moss is a long-distance truck driver for a trucking paiiy in the Chicago suburb of Summit. The area where the boy is missing is about two square miles and is heavily wooded. Teed-Ofi Golfer Can Cool Off in New Facility s Eagles and birdies may be giving way to bass and pike at Pontiac Municipal Golf Course— especially for golfers with a i 'hook." The Department of Parks and Recreation has finished construction of i new boat landing at Crystal Lake Off Golf Drive just west of and adjacent to the golf course, according lo David E. Ewalt, director. Thor's N-Mission Is a Winner at Last (Contihued From Page One) through with White shafts ' light. Jhe explosion marked success by the United StatesOrTITOKfixI explode the giant thermonuclear warhead carried aloft by giant Thor missile. 200 MILES UP The blast—most powerful of the current test series—was carried aloft to an altitude of about 200 miles by the Thor missile, it took 15 minutes for the rocket to reach firing height. Communications m many Pacific areas were blanked immediately, Some Honolulu radio stations were washed out by Interference, but returned to the air shortly. The Japanese Overseas Telephone and Telegraph Oo. reported transpacific telephone connections with Honolulu, Oakland, Calif, and Buenos Aires were knocked after the explosion. SIREN WORKS Honolulu police paid a civil defense siren in a rural area started screaming when the blast went WASHINGTON (AP)-Jim Bun ning of Detroit and Don Drysdale of Los Angelas were named today as starting pitchers in Tuesday’ 32nd AU-Star baseball game li the D. C, Stadium. Manager Ralph Houk of the New York Yankees, who manage the American League team hinted that CamiJo Pascual of Minnesota probably would follow Bunning. Bunning, 30, a right-hander, has 9-4 record. He won his last start Friday from Baltimore; This mikM Banning's third All-Star atari, He opened for the American League In 1957 and the 1961 see- BRANDYWINE, Mtl. (UPI) ight- persons were killed early today when a car doing an estimated 100 miles an hour sldeswlped another automobile and careened into a third car on Route 5 near here. ond f Army Chief Denies Foul-Up in SE Asia WASHINGTON (Pi—Gen, George . Decker, Army chief of staff, has issued a statement taking issue with reports that the fight to pave South Viet Nam from the Communists Is fouled up. An Associated Press story from J~t. l^av«morth, Kan.. had reported that a number of officers were disturbed because they felt South Viet Nam military operations were confused and Ineffective. Crash Is Fatal to 8 in Maryland Cat,Doing 100 M.P.H. Sideswipes Auto, Hits Third Vehicle Pontiac Resident Faces -Charge of Assault With Intent tp Murder Angelo Tony Marzella, 24, of 113 Third St., who allegedly beat another man into unconsciousness early Sunday morning, will be arraigned today in Waterford Township Justice Court on a charge of assault with intent to murder. Marzella, while a large crowd stood and watched, repeatedly hit and kicked Gene Feist, 23, of 2327 Richwood St., according to witnesses. The fight broke out following an argument between the two men at Sandy Beach In Waterford Township, they told Water- The victims Included a baby, born dead at the scene. Maryland state police said all of the A trooper said he witnessed the spectacular crash, which happened about 11 miles from Washington. All the victims were from Washing- I Feist was taken to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital where his condition is fair. Service lir Aron) Gourigian, 79. of 990 Burnham Road, Bloomfield Hills, will W 1:30 p. m. Tuesday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial to Oak HfflGemetery. Mr. Gourigian died Saturday of a heart attack. He was a retired fpipfoye of Fisher Body Division, Pontiac. Surviving are his wife, Asad; ne son, Jack Negoshtan of Pontiac; three daughters, Mrs. Johh Manooglan of Rochester, Mrs. Walter Garbacz of Detroit, and Mrs. John Godoshian of Pontiac; ton grandchildren, and three greatgrandchildren. New Constitution Improvements Cited by Romney GRAND LEDGE UP) — Improvements obtained in Michigan's proposed new constitution never could be achieved by amending the pres-ent document, George Romney said Saturday. ________ “On the, other hand, the points the opponents have cited tor opposing the new constitution are so limited that they could be achieved through amending the rove,” Romney said. The Republican gubernatorial candidate told (he Michigan conference of Seventh Day Adventists the new document contains more than 100 substantial improvements and praised citizen efforts that led to the constitutional convention. “Only by methods of this sort, in Michigan and in other states, can we as citizens halt the tide of big centralized government; with its necessarily heavy and direct loss of individual freedom,” Romney said. Discriminating' Tasto? PORT ELIZABETH, South Africa (AP)—Shakespeare’s Othello hfls been banned from Cape Colored High School courses because of the mixed marriage of Othello and Desdemona. The fight started about 3 a m. when Marzella and a companion struck up a conversation .with two women in Feist's parked car. Feist1 and Richard Axford, 21, of 2376 Richwood also were to the car. —at 25 South Store Only! | 12*/g" x 1.2Vh" x 5Vi" Size Knick-Knack 'DRAGGED FROM CAR’ In, an argument that followed Marzella allegedly pulled Axford! from the car and hit him in the face. SHELF The two women Charon Micell, The trooper said the death car!24' of 23*9 Wood Drive and Char-, attempted to pass another car at point where Route 5 narrows from four lanes io two lanes. He said the car flipped over several times, then crashed into coming, vehicle. The driver of the third car Was Injured seriously but other occupants of the vehicle and the sldeswlped auto escaped serious injury, police said. Among the dead was Joan Ball, When told that he was, Marzella| reportedly hit the victim again. The story was based on inter-122, Washington, whose baby was views with U.S. officers who have returned to this country after serving as advisers lo South Vietnamese forces In the battle against the Communist Viet Cong. Decker’s statement, said the story does not reflect accurately the opinions of responsible Army authorities in Washington or in the field.” bom dead at the scene. The other Victims were Identified ds: Barbara Hollis, 15; Jean Jack-sob. 19; Evelyn Adams’! 21; Vincent Whitfield, 22; Oliver N. Arm* stad, 20; John L. Ford, 22. The driver of the southbound ir, Salvatore J. Balazzolo, 34, Lexington. Park, Md., was reported in serious condition. lotte Leist, 23, of 2970 Woodbury,I Walled Lake, told police Marzella I then dragged Feist from the car;) Martella hit and kicked Feist repeatedly, according to the women. At one point they said, Marcella asked a companion to check and see If Feist was still alive. Saginaw St. |Bet*een Penury's and OrtnntU'l ll (Saar Water Street) ” Tonight 'til. a (FX I Joe Puertas, owner of Sandy Beach, told police that he .was advised by two unidentified men following the fight to keep quiet about the Incident. - Flat Cigarette* at LOW PRICES at SIMMS Marzella was brought to the Waterford Township Police Station Sunday afternoon by his father. He is held in Oakland County jail awaiting his arraignment. Report Goeg to Swainson Wind Up Care Study “By golly, we finally got one. Groat!” a jubilant Joint Task Force official said. The Thor was the same type missile that had failed twice before in efforts to explode the big nuclear warhead. The nuclear warhead scribed as In the megaton-plus range — equivalent to more than one million tons of TNT. It was exploded at an altitude of about 200 miles, unofficial sources said. “If your golf game is off, -try [fishing," slid Ewalt to announcing I completion of the new facility,. The Thor rocket and nuclear device apparently performed perfectly; A task force spokesman, asked of the blast was considered a cess, smiled aha?said, Jy." "Certaln- LANSING (UPI) - A five-year study report on health care with 45 recommendations calling f tighter controls "to give the public more for its money” was expected be in the hands of Gov. John B. Swainson today. The ---- governor's , commission, chaired by Wayne County Circuit Court Judge George E. Bowles, called by former Gov. G. Men-Williams in 1957 after a public uproar over an increase in, Blue Cross and Blue Shllld. rates In the 'state. Judge Bowie* said the c formed fate an, “action program" to meet many of tho state's burgeoning needs In the health care 'We expect it (the report) to 'be studied by the governor and others concerned and translated into action,” Bowies said. The 94-page report edited for, among other things, a streamlined network to govern hospital construction in Michigan. It would be administered through the Michigan Health Department but would be responsive to regional and state INADEQUATE HOSPITALS The commission people said they found, that some hospital* had sprung up that were Inadequate, costly awL not givlng zuffident care. "The public and its elected leaders must become convinced that proper planning of health fadUHiM is one major stop forward In the battW of mounting costs,” the re- port unfa. .Hw, cornu ly followed these ef a throe-year .probe conducted by experts In the field who atudtod Michigan health economic* through the University of Michigan and financed by a *sss,ooo grant from the Kellogg Foundation. The exports, who released their report a year ago, called for l state agency to administer and direct all facets of health care. The commission, however, disagreed and instead recommended that the governor establish an advisory commission on health carp sure something Is done with the study. , aS'si: Famous Step- hans Bros, Cig- The commission suggested that hospitals take the lead hf consolidating suck related services psychiatric cere. Women’s and orthopedic hospitals and tubercu-’ care In creating “truly'general -hospitals.**' - • ’**” MARVELS Cigarettes PIS CARTON 1111 Mtsulsr- ilisr r»gu- *** Isr tobaccor. Famous M............ Marvels in eartoo of ■§ ' ttasoka. - toss tas CASCADE Cigarettes Ptlt CARTON AH Ns a lb 01 flavored ?|iW Imoktt with filters. # Full carton of M , Piss Tss Is N. Saginaw ~Matojneer TOE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULT 9, 1962 THREE i - HaJtl wM once the richest colonyjcaplte ‘income lower than Baltic in the French Empire. /New no $70 a year. And 90 per amt ot its Latin-Amerlcan republic has a per 13,006.000 population la Illiterate. f 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS SWMpt - Ousts - Brushes Magnetic Broom 'FRUtTrOF-THMOOM' Ironing Board Pad and Cover Set $1.79 Value 87*1" 87 Magnetic broom really pick, up J ^J ^^dard ^ire boards, dirt, dust, tint and hair-tor use • ,00% coWon ,ron,"9 cov#r on a.lt floors. Long wood handle: • ond P°d. Guaranteed fruit-limit 2. 1 :• Of-The«Loom set. ••••t»W.#.eeeieeeeeeeeeoeeee»ee*f •••••••••••»» mm Poly PLASTIC Handy Waste Basket $1.20 Seller 14-quort cupotity — 13a 14k 10-inch size. Marjbroof, rustproof and light weight. Assorted colors. 87*! « 1 199 Poly Plastic -18-Quart UTILITY TUBS $1.20 Seller ro: Durable Poly Plastic : Wash ’n Rime Pail 17 Soapy hGefk^ No Credit, Is Due Dad for His Son's Success JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, ® .»~ G. Mennen WilttaWsV/aBsiet-ant U.S. secretary of state lor Africa, comes under almost constant ridicule in the South African Die Tnuuvaler, official dally, of the ruling National party and mouthpiece of Prime Minister "Soapy” and cartoons him In ait .erartcratcd htnrtto. The paper’s political columnist quoted Williams statement on African conditions, then added: "Anyone reading the above idiocy has to be told the source. The speaker cap be only 'one man: Soapy Williams, President Kennedy's insult t6 Africa.’' A The published account quoted Williams^ss saying Africa’s whites mistakenly consider the Africans antiwhite. He added in this account Of a speech that he had al- CITES STATEMENT A -Transvaler editorial, dted a statement, attributed to Williams,1 declared that communism was' ctfftfediiAJffca. It said: "That a man ably is the most important of American foreign policy cerning Africa can preach. aensaJikeUhat-lS'net-oidy" ing, it is deeply tragic, because ifj this continues the only result can' be a catastrophe which would af-’ feet the position of the entire West! . “Is there still any hope that,' American foreign policy will be determined by men with some knowledge?’’ When Williams toured Southern Africa last year he missed only South Africa because the government found Jt “inconvenient" to receive him at the time. The nationalist commentator recently ways been surprised on his_visitt declared that -no convenient time is likely to be found before the year'2000." SI..VI Seller 98 North Saginaw 87 jb with si lot easy cor In home, sto sd colors. I _ 1 As pictured-tub with side • Aj pjtlured_fun |6q, hondles built-in for easy corry- J crty |or was|, ond rms, ing. Many uses in home, store, • the same pail. Bale li shop etc. Assorted colors. 15” * sorted colors diameter. S! WATCHES DISCOUNT-PRICES Uu FREE LAYAWAY VVMIV Our PrtcffS Are So Mention the Famous . Compare Our COUNT PRICES Ret. $39.95 WATCHES-now...-, nca low We Can't BRAND NAMES EVERYDAY DIS- 29" Reg. $49.95 WATCHES-now ..., 32" Bet. $51.95 WATCHES - new... 39“ Reg. $11.60 WATCHES-now .... 4T" Reg. $19.9* WATCHES -now ... ...... 49" 60" WATCH DIPT.-Main Floor 'Air Conditioning jPlenty Popular in U.S. Airports bard repently being named Rochester chief of police. Lombard gave his son some advice —not to become a policeman. ■Absolutely Shockproof New Battery Driven Toothbrish and FREE Family Size Famous TOOTH PASTE. Made in Switzerland With 2 Extra Brushes Exactly as shown — rotery brush to really give your teeth a thorough cleaning. Interchangeable brushes so the entire-family can use It . . . and in complete safety. Choice of family .size tooth paste free. 98 N. Saginaw —Drug Dept. MWTiNiii frliM1’,' HOLDS-T0NITE and TUESDAY SPECIALS^ DISCOUNTS on TRANSISTOR RADIOS I NEW YORK (UPI) Perhaps it’s only logical, but airports the leading users of air conditioning. according to a. survey.. I -All but 10 of the nation’s 62 major terminals are fully air conditioned, a ratio higher than any other type of structure, reports an information service. The first complete air condi-tionihg eystem in nfrrefmffiars was installed at Washington National Airport in 1941 by industry pioneer Willis Carrier, the report said. quality America Caw and Earphone Only nine other full systems were set up by ISM. but ft were built In the next five years and another IS now are in the works. t.ompare to f.iv.v.i Deluxe Reoltone AM — Short____Wave - Long Wave broadcasts. With battery ond ear- Largest of all is the cooling system at New York’s/. Idjewijd Airport, where nine machines in one utility building serve 10 other terminal structures scattered over ,655 acres. | I Idlewild, with 6,300 tons of cooling capacity, has- expanded so Tapidly that another 3,000 tons is being added, j 300 Labor Laws Passed , CHICAGO - More than 300 la-|bor-relations end wage-hour laws ,were' enacted by various state [legislatures Inst year. California and Illinois, two of the states, [provided machinery (or arbitra-[tion of labor disputes. Paying for a Mortgage Is Easier Than Paying Rent Our open end conventional Mortgages include in their monthly payment: Interest, Principal, Taxes and Insurance. Each time you make a payment your equity in your property increases in value. Each monthly payment is a sound investment in your family’s future. ^ If you have been dreaming of owning your own home ... come in and talk with one of our friendly, courteous representatives. We Offer a True OPEN-END MORTGAGE • You may pay up the mortgage at any ’time without advance notice and with* out penalty. • Your mortgage can be increased at any later date to the original amount borrowed for additional improvements or for any other satisfactory reason. • You may pay interest and principal in advance at your convenience. • Terms on our conventional open end mortgage up to 25 years. • You may pay any additional amount at any time without notice or penalty. RRA 6-TRANSISTOR Radio W ith 9-1 oil Battery 13" 3-BAHD 9-TRANSISTOR 99 9-TRANSISTOR 87 Martel AM and FM radio comes complete —case, battery and earphone. Deluxe 9-transistor. 4-BAND 10-TRANSISTOR 87 44< fm 10-TRANSISTOR Compare /L to $im ug Aloron AM and FM with FM A F C. which locks in stations. Comes complete with batteries ond eorphopes. Super deluxe Aloron at lowest price ever. •I North. VJIKT BELOW-COST-OF-MATERIAL Prices on FIBERGLAS Ready-To-Hang DRAPES '.imited' lotsl Sensationally underpriced! All FIRST quality, easy-to-core-ior FIBERGLAS — never needs dry cleaning. RUFFLED VALANCE Fiberglas Curtains Choice of 63" or 72" Longths Original $3.98 Green, gold and champagne colors. Ready-To-Hang-2 Lengths Fiberglas Drapes In Solid Gold or Pink Colors Famous brand, ly. Only 87 pqi low price. $8.98 Floral DRAPES 50x63" panel.. Just 20 pair. *97 r pinks. Ideal . h $12.98 DRAPES—2 Sizes gold. PER PAIR $15.08 Large DRAPES 100x63" 697 'ES 7" HilultMB 100x84" In gree Just 37 pain ■Now Only— J — Bargain Basement’ SIMMS IS 0PENT1 Hi ond TUESDAY 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. for That* EXTRA BIG PRICE-CUTS 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS IVEREADY' Flashlight Battery 918h Stair Treads ,Save halt or. famous Evereody—the battery with nine lives. Stondard cell size, guaranteed leakproof.- Limit 8 batteries." RUBBER Regular 35c Each Black or brown colors to choose from ... curved nosing, ribbed rubber to protect step. •••aoaaoaaoaa SNYDER Indoor TV Antenna m Complete, nothing else to buyl For block ond white, color TV, plus. FM, VHF and UHF fr#^ quencies. With lead-in wire, ready to use. Limit ' 1 per person. ‘TURTLE WAX’ Famous Car Wax Regular $2.00 Size Bottle 16 ounces of easy to dppfy car polish ... gives your' car that 'Hard Shell' finish in minutes. Limit 2 bottles.' •••••••••••••••••■••••he******** WN Space-Saving-Accordion Stylo Folding Vinyl Doors 99 Reg.f5.95 Value—Now Fit doop openings 32x80 incheo. Washable vinyl in while or beige colors. Easy to install — no special ’tools needed to instoll ’em. 2 Big 20-GALLON Garbage Can Complete With COVER All metal galvanized cans with side carrying handles. Approved for city and township pick-up. Limit 2 cans. 6-Foot Folding STEPLABBER Regular $5.95 Value—Save Here All wood ladder with steel rod reinforced steps, handy pail plotiofm. Folds for carrying and 'storage. Limit I. This*May Help Save Your Life Safety Belt 399 Made of durable 100% Nylon Coprolon easy airline buckle fastener. Easy to in yourself. "Protect yourself and family from loccidents with belts. French Pn il Styling-Famous SUNBEAM Electric Block $$22.95 Vnlu*~ISow contrasted wTtH goTtf finM 177 2-Slice Electric Toaster “PR0CT0R-SILEX” As shown t- Proctor Sil.x toaster with automatic pop up, crumb tray and shod# control for toasting darkn.ss. Gleaming* chrom. finish, Fully guaranteed. 98 North Saginaw 1 Street -SIW. , A \> \it ' ,fC~ ■-J-L—■■-■■■■ '■■■■ ./ ,v, ' .*L ‘ 1 --V -v- Siss Florida o Dumbbell; 1 Report No Pro wirings, 5 Miscellaneous let Rink Ifcoirwi Court Rink authoritiea lay a sheet of polyethylsne, urethane^fnaulation. 1 Shape Took Work mr skating ring at Haddonfleld,N.J, change from'Ting to court tp 5 ■Hr. with helping produce 1 form. Gloria Jgmtyt,, j was crowned Satur- Jght after winning both'the uit and talent divisions and (or flnt place In ‘ the evening gown -competition. % work out three, limes'a week .with wrights.’? she said! “One, of . thgsi is a 25-pound barbell which f lift overhead from the floor.’’ By Xbi Associated Jhmss At least nine persons w4 r < killed in separate traffic accidents ' ' ichigan over the weekend. About 40 per cent of the total volume of export goods produced in ithe U.~sr~ii iMd^ep"# indBF ’ trifl machines, automobiles, many Among the latter were a Motmt Pleasant man and wife* killed in . a light plane crash and 4 suburban Detroit man who urns struck by lightning while watching pidy in Urn Flint Open at Warwick Hills.’ > ! out DtwM rid’nlM ever In Shiawassee Township Of Shiawassee County. Leldon Long, 29, of Kalamazoo was killed Sunday when leitU-S. 131 and hit a tree near Cooper in Kalamazoo Count& Richard Dickinson, 27. of Roch-iter was injured fatally Sunday when his oar collided beaAon with another auto in Bloomfteld Hills. ear intersection collision In Detroit. Joan C. Grigorian. 3l, of Dearborn was HIM Saturday when her car and another collided at SHI intersection in Dearborn. MISCELLANEOUS: Paul Tinetti and his wife Phyllis, both 42, of Mount Plesant died Saturday in the crash of their light plane in a wooded area, near Tormenting Rectal Itch Stopped In Minutes Science Finds Now Healing Substance That famptir Slope HeWuf eed Pain, of Mao reported and! veri- New York, N. Y. CSpeeisI)-One of the most common afflictions is O condition known as Jack Moyer, 37, of Leasing was llled Saturday night in a two-car crash one mile east of Pi* mondale in Raton County. «iSS CLOGGED TOILETS in ajHfyl TOILAFLEX ; Toilet g® Ordinary plunger, Jttit don’t properly. They permit oampmamd •ir and aratar to ipUth back Thu, ijm--- ‘ 'e a man, pot you loMtha* w , wHinly deCIfnad __________ jo air or water can aa- eape. Tha full pressure plow, through “ , gSwgjag maw and iwtobca it am, Can’t nttal \ ur. oouait-nw ttuat BKOAN FRIDAY I_ The Associated Press death ' count began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight Sunday. Richard Ruleau, 14, of Cedar lUver- was kiUed Sunday when Ms bicycle swerved into the^pathb^ i.ss.af Jeffrey T. Gray, IS,, of Manton was killed Saturday night when his motorcycle collided with a car on u.s. 131, about two miles north of Manton. Tile body ef CUreoce E. Golden, 72, of Momma was found tanday beside railroad tracks In a field near Monroe. Police said Golden was struck by s passing train,............ "iteklMrpHaaZ It it most embarrassing for th# victim during the day and especially aggravating at night, no matter what you’ve — without results - here’s good news. Far tha first time, science bicycle swerved into the path Of a day as he creased U.A 1#, six ^Hag, 36,"of Kalama- killing properties alao help pro- ■ car on M35 south of Cedar River, miles north of Hint. «»died sSJr after hesuf- WPff* - ,deM,^ttr JbronMt. I^Dwtsdw. JWU^^cGuire, 34, of De- tereda h^en^te^ad^e into >nX?%eTitriking improm- i. M, of Clio was Ernest Youngblood, 35. of Madison Heights was struck by lightning and killed Sunday as he watched the Flint Open Goff Tournament at Warwick Hills. MMHUPP prompt., ... r ... . burning iten alia pajn. It actu-snrinks hemorrhoids' iy sh without surgery. Medical science has proved this substance produces a tamarkaMy affective rata of healing. Its germkilling properties also help pro- FREDDY’S PRETTY FOXY—Most dogs and foxes fight when they meet, but neither Bobo, the German .shepherd pet of a Comstock family, nor Freddy Fox, his playmate, have been hurt. State conservation officials say there’s nothing illegal about keeping a fox as a pet. But the odds are Freddy will be return-^ , ing to the woods one of these days, leaving Bobo minus a play-mate. tlfltMWIWWWGWWW Mined in cases wharaa doctor’s observations wort continued over a period of months I Among those sufferers were a wide variety of hemorrhoid «9ndi-. duration. covery of a world- nvneai .») - 4 4"; HV/OH.... as Preparation H*. Ask for —' “ ’“'ipfippr Preparation H Suppoeltoriee mmm------------3 Foreign Aid, Face Action Medicare in Congress WASHINGTON l» — Two measures at the top of President Kennedy^ legislative program — foreign aid and health care — hold the attention of Congress this week.- Senate consideration of health care for the aged under Social Security could continue Into next The House, meanwhile, will be debating a $4.7-billion foreign aid I authorization measure, with final voting scheduled for Wednesday or Thursday. PAS8ED BY SENATE The President mad\a strong plea for both measures arhis news conference last week. \ The foreign aid measure been, passed by the Senate, but in considerably different form. The money provided is substantially the same in bbth the Senate-passed ■ and the version the House Foreign Affairs Committee reported A group of House Republicans and Democrats Is mounting a drive to nairinto the aid the federal budget is i V00RHEIS “1 Hur” CLEANERS The Professional Dry Cleaners OPEN TUESDAY MS a.m.- 2 p.m. Closed at 2 p.m. for inventory. Regular store hours resume Wednesday McClellan, D-Ark., headed by Sen. Stuart Symington, Milo:, resumes its probe of government stockpiling practices. Atlantic Sky Busy NEW YORK (UPI) ■*« International airlines carried out a transatlantic crossing on an average of every 11 minutes in the peak season last year, The International Air Transport Association reports. ^zaiKTa eare-jm^ i CONTACT LENSES . . . miracles in plastic that ran mean a new concept in a natural, becoming appearance. It is possible that -you may enjoy a new freedom from glasses ... becoming, natural appearance and the other advantages that minutely-sized contact lenses can give, ff you think you would like to wear contact lenses, your inquiries are Invited. •UDOIT TERMS AVAILABLE 109 N. SAGINAW ST. E. STEINMAN, O.D. ) P.M. 0 P.M. FE 2-2895 E milm* SAVE ON THE WES MVS: Monday, Tuesday, Fresh, Lean GROUND BEEF n TENDER, JUICY \. ‘ cure 0 5 STEAKS 0 in 9 0 lb. es re Lean, Meaty PORK A : STEAK "1 >d _ — 9 0 lb. I WHITE BREAD 2 s 29* Hamilton Grade A LARGE EGGS 3 7u. JO-BO >OGFOODi 300 2 Cant HEAD LETTUCE Large - Solid Heads PEOPLE’S m FOOD TOWN FOOD MARKETS SUPER MARKETS w: * / { w I' | PHQ :U/1/Vr UDoiM SHOPWaita's Monday, Thursday, 1 .., \', Friday and Saturday Nights till 9 PARK FREE on City Lott after 5 eVCRV ftOQft AfR-COttOlTlONED Charge All of Your Purehaia* FAMOUS MAKERS! LITTLE-OR-HO-IROM! SUMMER SPORTSWEAR '^1 ’ ■: AIRIJFT LAUNCHED - The first of 1,500 infantry troops from Ft. Riley, Kan., boarded 20 let transports-which would fly them nonstop to Germany in the largest jet airlift attempted fay' thr Military Air Transport Service, The troops of the 1st In* fantry Division will relieve a battle group Mow stationed in Germany which will be returned by the same aircraft. As troops marched under the wing Of one of the aircraft, cargo was loaded on another in the background.' WHAT DO YOU NEKDT nn p.a.s.s. Pereonal Arrangements €k> Over Big m Ecuador AaiAMORMENI U5. After Little Girls Thatcher, and Wernet INSURANCE WASHINGTON tUPD - Ull», ' long-stemmed girls, considered 1 in pome countries to be the outstanding export of the United States, are just more ugly Americans to the males of Ecuador. The State Department, which lately has been paying more at-tention to the personal relations (Advertisement) OVERWEIGHT * ,WM!"“ EXCESS FAT Should Be IMMEDIATELY Eliminated If you WANT o Shapely Symmetrical Figure Sond today for this Now METABOLISM Book »NO (We Have NO Medicine, Diet or Anything f/sa to Ml You) I in weight BOOK ■HOmHmHMIB HttHPRPPP __ MR*. - ■ ■ stand year own esse tnd -msy A BooR ip sent only .ts those wish and never You .ant told ItVW overwenjni Can be corrected and WHERE to look for HELP near your home. . save you years of misery ana embarrassment, Diet alone is MOT, and never ha* been, the one and only answer to the problem of excess fat , This Book contains Information generally known only to specialists. It explains the physiology of human Metabolism and the relation between glandular function and Obesity. It tell* why some individuals can eat all they ..... want and need ts rsduos. The edition is limited. Notice may not appear again. Write at once—today for your copy. SEND 4 (Four Cent) gtompa (16c) to help cover distribution cost. You incur no obligation. We have no medicine or anything else to sell. You will never he asked to send us a penny of money. ADDRESS O. Conway (RARInc.) Dept L Z 2 Bex 1314,Albuquerque,N. M. of foreign affairs, revealed that it is trying to' assign short girls to work in the U.S. Embassy at Guayaquil, Ecuador. Herman Pollack, deputy assistant secretary for personnel, told a House Appropriations subcommittee in testimony made public today that the department’s policy is designed to keep female employes happy in their overseas posts. Pollack was questioned about a newspaper report that single girls of no more than 5 feet height were given preference for Ecuadorian assignments. The story said taller girls are shunned by the local bachelors, Who are usually shorter than Americans. , Rep. John Rooney, D-N.y., whose State, Department budget inquiries have kept diplomats on the edge of their chairs for yean, found the newspuper story. Pollack admitted he was the “diplomatic sleuth” who discovered why some State Department women workers were unhappy in Ecuador., “I was In Quayaquii for a very brief visit last fall and did have an opportunity to talk to every employe at that post, and a minor point was made of the problem irf Ecuador posed by a single American girl of unusual height finding suitable male companionship, and I did bring' back to Washington, among many other notes, the suggestion that this be taken into account in making assignments to a post like Qudyo^ull,” Pollack said. “I thought you were too busy, Mr. Pollack, to be engaged tn looking after the love life of your people In any post,” Rooney said. “Mr. chairman, if to keep one of your valued staff employes happy and content it is necessary to providewan assignment according to height, we hope to do that," Pollack replied. "It 'is Important that we try to have people who stick to their jobs instead of moving them and reassigning them, which would mead additional costs." ** MONDAY TUESDAY Specials 'Giant Size SURF 591 iso off 5E SE Lean Sliced Lux LIQUID L ?nN 4c Off 12-Oz. Lux Bath Size SOAP 2>-33‘ PRAISE F tea. Size-7e off.. 3,or 4 1* PRAISE E lath Size-10C off 2 35* SPRY 3-lb. Can-55 off . - 75e Alcoa Aluminum wSks bonus buy ■ ’■ BUD 33‘ Wax Paper 2 £49° b4m Ovan Bakod SEMIS.... 'g 29* Pfumreia banish litii...... . i-uk $035 IliUn B ■ i g Pen fc Shads Exy Fronch MESSRS ■ .~23‘ Lindsay's Giant Ripa OLIVES. ■ ■ .sST" Bordan'* Eagla Brand Mm ... ■ 'srSS* Largo MEE2E . 2-rBfr '.V - .■ BIHS8BLUE s SS- Wara 3.99 to 4.99 Woro 5.99 to 8.99 Scoop up everything you need in summer sportswear ot big savings! Still a very nice selection in solids, plaids, stripes and prints ... oil little or no iron, all by famous makers. Sizes 8 to 20; not a complete i| every piece. Savel onge in Yalle'i SportiuearThird Floor *6 macficale Dacron-Nylon-Cotton Batiste image Whisper soft Dacron polyester, nylon and cotton batiste' slips enhanced with lovely lace and embroidery. Shadow-poneled front and back for Complete opacity. And Image is proportioned three ways; bust, hips and length for perfect fit; White, sizes 32 to 44. proportioned! | at butt •»« 2 at hip*..f J in langth.1 TO FIT YOU I (B > average hips XT- full hips ... Short. AvSISR PERFECTLY Your choice of roll *leev$ or sleeveless ... Adele's Black Watch Plaid Sheaths Very smart for now'and on thru the Autumn season... Adele's sheath coat dresses'with either roll sleeves or sleeveless. And they're sanfor- ized, need little If any Ironing. Action back, self belt. Sizes 12 to 20. and 14'/a to 24Vi, In a black walch plaid. Or, choose a brown watch f?lald. « Oriusi •.. Third Floor Phono FE 42511 •k ■ r p f -- ’ i } Taxmer Do About Foreign tHE PONtUC PRESS Huron Street .Vm* i p-Jh. It Seems to Me lgelncreaseinPoiitiacSales meficial to This Entire Area *Aides Underpaid— Missed Firework* How About Cooks?* in Auburn Heights nurse’s aide, but .how about the cook, who cooks, washes dishes, makes mentis and serves for such r with Pontiac automotive activities Time Hasn’t Changed ^ ---------------------------------- Whole area is hftving a buny good jt hath reBpect not to the fei ‘Estes’ Affair Small Compared to Some* t Compared with the Goldflne-Adams scandal under the. Eisenhower Administration, or the use of his official stationary by Eisenhower’s Air 'Force Secretary to . solicit busings for his company, the Billie Sol Estes affair is a small one. J*' ----W....TT.... ' - The local car is a sensation to j date. In general, there have been ■ g 25 per cent more cars and trucks | built in the first six months than t there were a year ago. However, Pontiac proudly points to a won-5. derful advance of nearly 63 per' * cent. This propeas in Pontiac '£ sales carries right through into * the local Fisher Body Division. * Figures for the first six months £ show a total of 298,291 units * against 183,325 for the same $* period in 1961. ★ ★ ★ -nfc This is absolutely remarkable. L. C. Goad, Executive Vice President, in loimmenting on the Pontiac perform-§nce, declared: § “The entire General Motors or-Sanixation is proud of the great plowing that Pontiac has made. And Significantly, figures for the most recent ten days show that this whirl-gjrlnd progress continues." ★ ★ ★ E. M. Estes and his skilled ** aggregation of department heads and production line workers are gj entitled to the heartiest congratu-r la (ions of the entire community. It Their product is a winner. It £ commands attention and respect £ throughout the Nation. In the meantime, the GMC "Truck and Coach Diviaion has & moved sharply forward with 44*395 units as against 34,898 a X y«w ago. ★ ★ ★ to the multitude, our form of government is called a democracy. Wherein there is not only an equality amongst all men in point of law for their private centre-. verities, but in election tq public offices we consider neither class nor rank, hut each man is preferred according to his virtue or — to the esteem in which he is held for some special excellence; nor is any one put back even through . poverty, because of the obscurity of hia person, so long as he can do gootf * service to the commonwealth." ★ ★ ★ Doesn’t that sound as though it were written yesterday by a joint conference between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon? Well, it wasn’t. Thucydides said it —some 2,400 years ago. And in Conclusion .. ,.. . Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of. - your peripatetic reporter: * A Washington rumor says JFK is "fighting the censor’s ban on ‘Lolita,’ so Bobby and Teddy can see it, too."..........Five years ago, the Asian flu took 86,000 lives in this country. Some doctors warn against a repetition this coming winter ............TV people and citizens in general are watching the pay TV experiment at Hartford............ Jack O’Brian, N.Y. Journal-American, nominates Bergen Evans as the worst voice on TV. O.K. And I insist his cackling giggle is worse than his . voice....... , ___When the world’s Preparation for the November Show David Lawrence Says: U. mFuture Is Tied to Its Prestige and 3 million additional were put in since Kennedy'# Secretary of Agriculture took over, '’ll undue Influences existed, it got a lot , ... more results from Republicans and GENEVA—The acting secretary signed to alleviate conditions in remain under the banner of the independent farmers than from the ... -. .. . .. .. .. (MtuMtAwiakAil Atmasn ITnitarl M aiinne itcolf " >' ______a— minted the July 4 fireworks as my children and I (Ud? I have lived here for seven years and have been very grateful forthe wonder-ful displays the voiuhtefer firemen nut on. f hope we have the fire- biirk next vear. __ glad the boys’ club «tart-ing again and wish the Man) of directors success and a bife thanks to Sam Sheeky. ‘ * ’ Mrs, Harry Hart Auburn Heights ? rv ‘U.S. Must Cease Giving Aid to Reds* We must stop helping oommu- ........ nlsm, whether by: trade, political There ia no proof that the cam- concessions, technical disclosures, paign contributions he so freely soft talk in the United Nations, handed out brought him any spe- recognition of Outer Mongolia, pil-dal favors. His grain elevators grimages to Moscow, or support held 33 million bushels which the for the Castro type, government paid him to store. We must avoid economic collapse Twenty-one million bushels had by scaling down extravagant do-been left In his .warehouses by the mestir programs, and halt the Eisenhower Administration; 8 mil- squandering of our money OR un-llon were put there by farmers, realistic worldwide aid programs. Time to Stop Portraits general of the United Nations. U Thant of Burma, recently invited the editor of publication from each of 20 tries to meet here in a four-day conference to examine and discuss^ the various pro*] grams of the U. N.‘ This writ the editor if ”U.C. News & W Report,” hap-1 T ,nRMl. pened to be asked LAWRENCB from the United States. i, recenuy invnea 1 impoverished areas: ‘CONCERTED ATTACK’ Thus, acting Secretary General U Thant said three weeks ago at a press conference on "the United Nations Development Decade”: WAS ‘‘Now, for the first time.it h&s been decided to make a concerted attack on the age-old problems of poverty, ignorance, and disease, using every resource which is .available to us whether it be national or international in character. Moreover, It has been decided that this concerted attack should United Nations itself.” The foregoing ready describes, in effect, the theme of the meeting with the editors here in the last few days. . The economic and social phases have been up- By JOHN C. METCALFE I am hqunted by a melody . . Praises Coverage Given to Religion I appreciate the coverage on the Billy Graham crusade. Your at-, tention to religions affairs is most however, are always in the back- commendable. Through our faith ground. As the political turbu- in God we can combat Communist lence in the world subsides, the op- aggression, portunities for constructive work in nonpolitical fields will immeasurably increase. (Copyright, 1W2) The so-called political aspects, The Almanac Whether on the problem of economic development in Latin America or Africa or Southeast Asia or the Middle East or on kindred activities of the U.N., it has been refreshing indeed to hear the informally expressed views of editors from other lands. Dr. Harold Hyman Says; There's More to , Girls, Than Thom Wedding one-hour record, he’ll be driving a Pontiac, of course. ______ .. it____★... ★....... I can’t prove ft, but i’ll bet a sugar cookie Beman or Charlie Coe will win, t h e National Amateur golf title, and that c o n t eatants for you Pro* sode of Gun- f When Pontiac vaidt^. cJear---up'"fastest man on wheels goes after the glte third position, no one really felt It could hold the place long, as jjtiere’s such sharp competition from 111 low-priced cars. But we still ding tenaciously to this charmed spot. As pveryone knows, the all-out battle in the automotive business is one of the fwwt intensethere1s. Sister units to General Motors would just as soon Inatch a sale away from Pontiac as feey would from anyone else. Hence, gontiac’s eminence has come over the hard route and has been chiseled light out of solid rock. X 8. E. Knudsen, former Pontiac laanager, Is now heading Chevrolet, find. Chevy is having a' wonderful ge*r; but Mr. Knudsen and his brethren would substitute a Chevrolet sale for Pontiac without taking a quick breath—arid vice versa. ★ ★ ★ J Ail hail to Pontiac and Tempest. .& They're champs. ........■ fight Is Successful .... to. Years ago, Fourth of July was followed by stories of Americans ■Ulimed, blinded and actually killed J^ftreworks, ..__......_ -...... ★ ★ 1 The total was appalling and The Chicago Tribune decided “to *£[ do something about it.” Officials t collected their depressing figures and published the results. It was #i; tedious and unrewarding cam-H paign. The apathetic public sat in f disinterested judgment and other || papers joined very slowly. But, finUff the campaign assumed heartening proportions like the ycovwrblal snowball. 11C ★ ★ ★ . , usually well Informed not only about what la going on In their own countries but on the trends In world politics. . This writer has been sitting next lo Borin Karpov, head of ov of the feature press services , of ti.e Soviet government in Moscow. He served in the U.N. Information Office for four years and has ir/iny American friends. The Russian editor proved to be a stimulating conversationalist whose views on the Importance of morality and the voice of reason in Here are some figures of interest to parents of daughters: According to the Department of Labor, the number of working women now approaches 24 million. By 1970, the department anticipates, the army will number over 30 million. 1 Of women presently employed, more then half are married. And, of these 18 million or so, more than a million and a half are mothers with children 18 years old or younger. Students at Smith Gollege are being informed that the unmarried graduate may expect fbwork for 40 years of her life, the married In my experience, the origin of moct neurotic complaints of middle and later life, too often blamed on the menopause and related "female disorders," rests in sheer boredom. All of which Is my way of advising the parents of daughters that there is more to the art of living than orange blossoms and wedding bells. ...______■_________________: By United Press International Today is Monday, July 9, the 190th day of 1962 with 175 to follow. Hie moon is in Its first quartet. The morning stars are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. The evening star is Venus. * A A * In 1776, George Washington summoned his troops and had the Declaration of Independence read to fhem. In 1816, Argentina formally declared its independenice of Spain. In 1880, President Zachary Taylor died In the White House of typhus utter serving only one year and four months ot his term. Which J used to know . . , In the days of gay and golden youth. . . Countless years ago . . As I lis- ten to the plaintive tune . . . calling from afar . , . It is like the distant lambent light . . , Shining from a star . . . And on hearing all’the tender worda . . Softly sung again . . . They possess my mind wjth memories . . . And my v . heart with pain ... All the dreams Ernest A. May which once upon a time . . . Were so close and dear . . . In this moment of my loneliness . Clearly now appear ... I am haunted by a song of old ... That has captured me. V Smiles ft if weren’t for high school and college kids who would correct the grammar of the grownups? A' A A Mothers often say, "I just don’t know what to do with my children.” What would they do with- \ out them? „ ' AAA The more friends you pick the happier you are, unless you pick them to pieces. A A A A naturalist says it’s possible for a person to hold an alliga- tor’s mouth shut with one hand. Sound* like a snap. International affairs today are not graduate about 25 years, far different from those of this The director of the Woman’s writer and may lend substance to Bureau of the U. S. Department of the belief that we are :.i process Labor advises young women that of achieving a peaceful balance in nine out of every 10 are going fo Reviewing Other Editorial Pages E. K. GAYLORD smoke” will have a happy ending . next season—which hasn’t been true before ...........Here is a photo (nod retouched) of my old Friend, E. K. Gaylord, now 89, Publisher of the Qklahoma City Oklahoman. On his next birthday, I’m sending his photo to American newspapers with the assertion that he’s the youngest looking 90-year-old man in the world. ★ ★ Ad in the Evansville Courier: “Open Seven Days a Week. Also Sunday.”........ This has been a year ot spotty rains. Metarfiora has far too much and on the west coast of the State, some crops are already gone because of drought. Showers in Southeastern Michigan have been unusually scattered......... Insider’s Notebook says Vice President Johnson discovers that a lot of world affairs. It has been Interesting to note how the views ot the editors coincide on the subject of why-the work of the United Nations Isn’t better In tl Similarly, the prestige of the U.N. is based on what the Security Council and the General Assembly do. In the latter body comhlnnttono and coalition* ot factions sometimes bring result* very i the work for a livelihood. ' A A A In-October, Barnard College, the woman’s division of Columbia University, will join with seven other women's colleges in establishing a series of vocational workshops whose purpose is to help college-trained women to re-enter the labor market. < OPPOSE TREND Despite the trend a majority of undergraduate women at Michigan State University, recently scribed to the belief that woman’s place is in the home.” AAA And most young women, of my acquaintance appear to have little* ambition beyond obtaining the little gold band that encircles the third finger of the left hand., What these theugMIe** youngsters seem not to understand Is the plight they will face when they are forced Into the labor market by economic necessity or by sheer boredom. In later years their children wilt have sufficiently matured to leave the nest and thejr husbands will have outgrown them as the result of the wage earner’s continuing The theory thet r-wgpaper» should present information that their readers might find dull and uninteresting clashes with the (act that sensational news of disputes m and disagreements never falls to “^ergr*^at« ^om,*n at Michigan make the front pages. State . University recently suit- RELATED TO PRESTIGE Basically the future (if the U.N. is related to its prestige. If the public in a given country has confidence in the policies of the U.N. on vital questions of International relations, this same confidence will J extend to the work done by the U.N. In special fields. Vandalism Philadelphia Evening Bulletin The city of York, Pa., is trying a new approach to the problem of vandalism, which ' has been rampant in recent weeks.” Appropriate rewards will be paid to those who catch vandals in the act of destroying or damaging property, both public and private, and report the offenders to the authorities. AAA It Is sometimes forgotten that keeping the peace and protecting property I* part of a etttsen's duty, If no officer of the law Is nvuliable -when crime Is committed, But too often the peaceful bystander considers It simpler, or safer to turn n blind President Joseph F. Periconi proposes thal the Police Department recruit retired patrolmen for supplemental patrols. % * * * / He points out that these mew have the legal right to cirry a pistol and are fully aware of the responsibility. We also think Commissioner Murphy should r do not always approve. Lately, In the U.N., the so-cai'ed _ Afro-Asian bloc, for Instance, ha* Hie Country ParSOD operated In a way that alienate many people of the United Stnlca he lost his Texas seat....... More June grads are planning to The theory is expressed again take postgraduate work than ever and again that, by new icomblna- began outlawing fireworks before In history. Educators are puzzled-—some of them' unfavorably impressed ................Queen Wilhelmina, now 84, is one of the richest women In the world, estimated at $600 million........... against ttlt wanton loss of eyes, Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s— bs and life. Today It rests In the “Joe” Nephleh and “Stu” Whitfield be of forgotten ttilngp. Bt)t the for the deepest masculine tan In the jtawti lilltftl ait mute evidence of area; the, J’s—the nd today, they’re almost a dead except those in . community handled by experts. A nation wr before The Tribune for in-, and perpetuating this bat- (he Tribune’s triumph. t; t situation. Saskatchewan -Harold A.. Fitzgerald tions or alignments In the voting, the main goals ot the U.N. may be sidetracked. The U.H., however, Is trying nevertheless to do a job In the economic, scientific, health, agricultural and educational field*. Much valuable work In guidance and training has already been done. For the U.N. seeks to be a coordinating body and strivsa to mobilize the brains as well u the financial support toi many won-' tries in programs that are de- utils Just as Paying cash rewards to Informers on vandalism Is a realistic approach. Row It works in York, Pa., will be worth watching. Youth Gangs New York Journal American Whon teen-age toughs I urn a busy Btreet Into a battleground with bullets mowing down passers-, by, It is time for this city to crack down on gun-totlng gangs, AAA This outrage on the Upper West Side resulted In grave wounds to two bystanders. Unless eur law enforcement agencies aet swiftly aod sternly, It will be another Hummer of violence. The police knew the youth gang* that are ' dangerous. They should break op these gangs whenever they congregate. The police *hould ’ ’ have the right to nearch these young hoodlum* for weapons whenever they gather. A A A Three members of the Turbans, the gang that initiated the West Side blood bath, carried J2 caliber revolvers. Where did they get these weapons? How many more young hoodlums ire roaming the straw with fiuns? Bronx Borough recognise the need for pntvbl* by cltlsen volunteer*. With a/rnUhon youngsters turned loosed for the summer, the need forv actlon Is urgent. / U.S. Treasury Life tines The solvency of ihe U.S. Treasury is a grave, concern to thoughtful men and/ women,' for It in-volves honor' and integrity with morality and common decency. The national character of the United States suffers a deep. Injury when, despite a backbreaking burden of taxation, the government continues year after year td run more heavily into debt. AAA Thta regard over our H*cal soundnes* also relate* to the corruption of character by giveaway* of public money. Thorn who demand sound economy in government are not feNlek per-non* devoid ot humane considerations. On the contrary, they are normal persons who place great value on high Ideal* and sound principles. AAA These are among the people who care about America. They are the Constructive*. They are the Patriots. WWI Veterans New York Herald tribune “Veterans of World War I of the U. g, A. Inc," are trying to stage an 111 billion-plus raid tm the United States treasury, and appear within shooting distance of auccess. , A ' A ;A If It succeeds, It won’t be because Congress wants to put veterans on » *tos.iin-month rein. It will simply be because Cun- gressmen have had a /ear attack ot spinal atrophy. The grab Is In a bill Introduced by Rep. Winfield K. Denton, of Indiana. Singling out the veterans of World War I, It would give each one who had served honorably fi>r (to days or more a pension at 9108.87 n month tor life, provided only that hi* Income (exclualve of retirement pay) Is less than $8,400 annually It single or $3,66o if he tuts de- About half of all Worid Wa? I veterans now receive pensions on a sliding scale, Payments range up to |90 a month and will total about $1.4 billion this year. The Denton blfi would k)ad another 700,000 veterans on the rolls at a first-rear cost of nearly $1 billion; its estimated total cost, between now and the timfi the last World War I veteran dies, ;ig. $11.6 billion. AAA' 1 The Mil was buried In committee until the pressure group got behind a discharge petition. Ntov the petition has nearly 989 signatures, close to the MR needed to fores s veto. And It Is geRerat-. ly conceded that most of the too seared to veto against It. A A A The taxpayer* had better make themselves heard quickly. Meanwhile, If we could venture a bit of friendly advice to the voter* of Indlana’n Eighth ( at District, It would b retire Winfield K. Denton, World . War.t- _vMRH«,"»rera_'IBIcb, * pronto. D this were dotte, folds . Jh* Auoouud Ptmi la mtttM I'S’isb'sp i,*E?B fljn 0*kl M»oomb, mi ..... j CountU* It li ill.OO * II !SllllS::;| 19 ? , ,v< /' r ’ • '■ ,, '-.-THE'' PONTIAC. ^RBSS,^ - S{/ASM£K CLEARANCE! MANY ITEMS REDUCED 60% SOME EVEN MORE! JAMAICA SHORTS Chopse from solids and prints in sizes 8 to 18. Save 1.10 now. Just say chorge it. Were | QQ MISSES BLOUSES A large assortment of ruffled and tailored cottons 1.99 GARTER PANTY Famous frillirin garter panties. Now reduced for quick sale. Sizes small and medium QQ only. Were 1.50 and 2.00.... PAJAMAS-PAJAMAS A fabulous buy on all cotton pajamas for the miss or Mrs. Stripes and prints! not aJJ sizes. | qq . Were 3.98 H ..... T..... WALTZ GOWNS A gorgeous selection of gowns and kookie gowns. Sizes S-M-L. 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I*77 Store Horn 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mindly thru Saturday ---1 Phone 682-4940 TELEGRAPH ROAp at ELIZABETH' LAKE ROAD . -1-T>pnr< _ .■ _ ■ Jewish Joumalitt Dies; Translated Hungarian STQRM WINDOWS-POORS [ Set Up Education Plan . WASHINGTON u trade in die handshake on a smooch? . . "£ It seems to trie tbatafeiw lent (except la show I ctes, " where everybo r Mi dr-7 everybody Is . where embraces were exchanged were at family gath-ertaga or meetings with girlhood bosom buddies. But today my husband and 1 On go for dinner at the apgrt-. ment of a couple we met only gw week before at a cocktail party, and before we can step dwr die threshold -(why don’t they go all out and carry os demos the threshold?), we’re globbed with lipstick. IS IT REAL | It sure Is friendly. But is it for 'lilt, XT. * * * * Not that we object, w h r n I the problem Is, I think i should be some ground « when I reach out my fo greet a guest and the already lunging at I look like * cold fish, and she $)oks like a pushy she-wolf, and ft takes two martinis before we Steady ourselves. ; W hr .ft.* , , J Then, on the next meeting, the Confusion mounts. Now I am the one who puckers up, while she is dm one who ventures the clammy palm, and it may be months before we have the courage to arrange another dinner date. i www | When you have a wide assortment of casual friends, it be-' comes even more a puzzle, f, As you're driving to a re- first move. (Usually my husband breaks the. deadlock by embracing the female across the stoop not because he remembers the current terms of the re-tetlonshipr he just likes girls.)-ALWAYS KISS Of course, the problem easedinafew citsesrThere some couples, who from, the second meeting, -ALWAYS kiss acquaintances. These, I've noticed, are gea-' orally people d‘f foreign extraction or a theatrical bent, or who’ve been around Els* Maxwell a lot. : And there are some people who NEVER kiss, however long ties ofen are New Englanders or veteran newspaper reporters. W W h But for the rest of us — those who are neither for nor against a friendly, harmless peck on the cheek, if the company is cordial —it t» a disturtiing-socUd prpb-J- Americans today are music-happy — according to the happy makers of musical In- They spent a record $530- mil-iion ior instruments last year. That’s more than double the •ales in 1950, fin the announce^ ment, there’s no notation as to how much prices may have gone up.) And by the end of 1969, they expect annual sales to hit the billion-dollar mark, w w ★ The underlying factor in this boom appears to be that teaching methods today make it possible for music students to play in a minimum of time. " w w . # There is more stress on easy Clwd harmonies, rather than UioseMHEliSiBififilliWiS'acales we adults fidgeted through as chil- BEAUTIFUL CONTEMPORAH """ ” Fine Quality High Pile Nylon Frieze In Choice of Vibrant Colors • BROWN e TURQUOISE • ROSE BEIQE DIAMOND TUFTED FOAM BACK MATTRESS and BOX SPRING • 54" Double Dresser and targe landscape Minor • Matching 4-Drawer Chest • Bookcase Bod e Innorspring Mattress and Box Spring o 2 Boudoir tamps o 2 Foam Rubbor Pillows Pictures simulate similar selections ORCHARD Phone FE 58114-5 FURNITURE COMPANY YOUR CHOICE at one low price *159 OPEN Mon. and Fri. BBB P.lt NO HONEY DOWN ONLY ♦O PEN MONTH 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVE.-3 BLOCKS WEST OF S. SAGINAW, PONTIAC BANK Investment Certificate 4% Guaranteed Return Holds Its Full Value Bii:" 13 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation , This Meant ) our Deposit is Insured by an 4/iency of the V.S. Government No Erratic Fluctuations Better Yield Than Numerous Blue Chips Motional [ Bank e t .9 • ■e-"Y\i a c 55 i , THE POytiAC ITOiSi^ MOyDAY, JULY 0, iW NIKE Unit Hostile to Program Goodwill Tours Blasted rcrJw*- JT •" ^ "1 UPmi poison accomplished, and that anyway, at a total opst of 5256,000, including 51.200 a Week for Adams, , the ipfos-wm too high. and drummer Buddy Rich. i Max Isenbergh, a deputy assist*! ant iacretauy .ift eharge-ofthe 1 program, acknowledged under questlonh^; that the department received rqxwta "the conduct of 1 many of the troupe, Including < Adams, had been damaging.” ’'; i leenbeigh tnststed, however1, the 1 personal differences among the; troupe were kept offstage and did ] not interfere with the audience re* l action to jhe show, which he. called “excellent.” i Rooney retorted there wax no i way of telling what such shows In, *p0t, the whole cultural , ex* change program undqr which per* formers are sent abroad to win friends for the United States is viewed dimly by the subcommittee!, which holds the purse strings for the operation. HOSTILE QUESTIONING Testimony made public today on the State Department’s request for 54.1 million to run the program-through-fiscal 1963—up 51,2 million from last year—contains pages of hostile questioning of department witnesses. Rep. John J. Rooney, D-N.Y., committee, described the papers supporting the budget request as “a scenario.” He concentrated most of his attack on the four-month tour of Afghanistan and Southeast Asia by Adams' troupe of 23 performers. REPORTS FINDING He produced reports from-State Department posts in the. areas visited by the troupe disclosing bltter feuding amors the per- Committee work session in Washington, D. C. Gov. Rockefeller was the speaker at a dinner opening the three-day session for, candidates. ' Mtaart MEETS ROCKY—Sonja C. Egenes, Republican candidate for Congress from the 5th District of Iowa, meets Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New , York at a Republican Congressional Campaign - Penney's Is Moving . . . 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S2 and S3 16 Swim Suits............................S6 and $8 50 CdHoh Robes TTTTTT";.............11$4 25 Plaid Umbrellas............................ 1.88 FOR CHILDREN 36 All Cotton Daytima Dresses, Solids and Prints 1.50 25 Girls' Cotton Slocks <3-6x) ............ ......$1 30 Girls' Cotton Slocks (7-14) ...... ........ 1.33 48 Girls' Cotton Sleepwear ...............$1 to 1.44 25 Boys'/GIrls'Oxfords ..........................1.88 48 Summer Handbags Assorted Stylos 55 Woman's Cotton 175 Cotton Print Boxer Shorts 3 for 1.44 I I I I I » I I I I I I I I f I I I I I I I • L TOWNCRAFT UNDERWEAR regularly 3 lor 295 COES ON SALE AT FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY Stock up on Towncroft® T-shirts, shorts, athletic shirts, briefs...at Penney's only! Count on Penney's to bring you the most comfortable underwear you’ve ever worn ... Pima Prince! Pima is America’s finest combed cotton ... grown in the great southwest, land of truly superior cot* tons. Piina is extra long staple cotton ... stronger, more durable, longer wearing. Pima is extra soft, extra absorbent. i . gives you all the comfort you want. And, Towncraft* tailors rich pima with every construction extra. Get deep cut armholes, extra long length for tuck-in, tapered neck and shoulder seams, heat resistant elasticized waistbands, contour seats.. ./every detail. Now, because %e know that nothing can sell them like wearing them ... Penney’s deduces the price to this fabulous low 3 for $2,501 Get to know the amazing comfort of Pima Prince at sensational anniversary savings! It’s the biggest underwear value in bur. 60 year history! i i i i i i i i i i .».. I fv I I I I CHARGE IT ... it's easier to Pick, easier to Plan, easier to Pay! PENNEY'S r DOWNTOWN OPEN MONDAY, and FRIDAY 9:30 A* M. to 9:00 P. M. / , ALL OTHER WE|K1>AYS 9:30 A M. le 5:30 P. M* \ PENNEY'S - MIRACLE MILE NEW STORE HOURS* / OPEN MONB|AY THRU SATURDAY , 9:30 A. M. to 9*00 P. M. '■'ft m ,i —TOE fOSTIAC' PRESS. MONDAY. JULY », I9M SPECTACULAR VALDES MW BEIAG The Family Shopping Center Spends a Comfortable Night iir Hospital* ~ THE FINEST VATCBKEPAHH ATLOU-MOM . CompIeteWalcii Overhaul t»1u8 Needed Paris for w Monarch’s MONDAY and TUESDAY ONLY!- Jf%| SOLIDS, CRISP ■ —— a4$i« -—— ItKJL. HEAD LETTUCE ’ LONDON (UPD - Sir Winston Churchill, 87, battifog against a possibly dangerous side effect to his broken thigh bone, spent a “comfortable night,” Middlesex Hospital officials said today. twiCe-a-year MEN'S SUITS Substantially Reduced for Immediate Cleatttnee - — WERE MOW $29.95 '• 'Mr— $39.95 ,_f' rli|,|l'11'..r~~ -—: $40 . $59-95 The choietil patterns and colors. In summer or yean-'round weight*. Regular Jhe PyiceJncludes... , m Thorough cleaning and oiling' m Necessary parts wp|*ced _ ■ • ■ 1. “w fienuineFactory narteyaed ...—— “ — Expertly adjustea and timed «. 12 months guarantee on labor repairing : Men's and Boys'Wear Miracle Nile Shopping Canter Charge Accounts Invited Open 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. OVERHAUL end CLEANING Only ... 5®* , AU Work Expertly Done On Our Premises MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER MALL AREA -FE 8.9381 . MiracK' Mile Shopping Center FE 2-0642 • FAX A hospital spokesman said the wartime British leader was being given anticoagulant drugs to treat phlebitis, a condition in which the vein is inflamed and which could lead to the formation of a blood . (dot. .,:iL................;..... A medical bulletin issued yes* terday said there had been no extension if toe phlebitis, which was first reported Saturday. Churchill broke a bone in his thigh 11 days ago and underwent surgery to knit the fracture. •HAPPENS OFTEN’ Hie spokesman said: ”11118 sort of tiling (phlebitis) happens quite often with people who have undergone a major operation, regardless of age.”.,...... A British medical authority said the foot that there had been no extension of the phlebitis was a good sign and added ”It seems the condition is responding to treatment and is being checked.” President Kennedy sent a get well message to the wartime hero over the weekend and Churchill replied. Good wishes and get well mes-_ s have been pouring in to the hospital where Churchill is being treated and to his London home. Churchill broke his leg when he ijjppcd and 1 id Monte Carlo. Styled by a Decorator For you who appreciate good Window Treatment' and Fine Tailoring... Landslides, Floods Claim 51 in Japan TOKYO (AP) — Weekend landslides and floods in rain-swept southern Japan took a toll of 51 killed, 21 missing and 58 injured. Weathermen warned of-new-de*}~ stniction as Typhoon Joan Approached. Rescue workers in Tara, northern Kyushu, recovered 30 bodies as they dug into thousands of tans of earth that buried about 50 homes when rains loosened the side of a mountain. Flood damage was heavy in Is-ahaya city, whose entire population of 65,000 was ordered evacuated Saturday when flash floods swept through the downtown district. In 1957, . Isahaya suffered 315 flood deaths. Contact Lenses Easy for Children to Wear SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPD -Children seem to take to contact lens wearing with more enthusiasm than grownups, Dr. John R. Cassa-day, of South Bend, reports Pediatric Herald, a publication doctors. “Not only are youngsters comparatively easy to fit.” he said, •‘but they adapt quickly to the tenses and wear them without discomfort.” Most children will wear the lenses 10 to 12 hours a day by the end of the third week, the doctor has found. For Family Rooms, Dens, Recreation Rooms Nobby Textures, Boncle Casements, Sheers a__In Cottons, Linens, Fibergtas and Many Other Fabrics of Your Choice 'Call FE 2-0642 For Selection in Your Home JVo Obligati- Open Mon. thru Sat. 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. Formerly “The Yard* Stick.” ALL SUMMER SHOES MUST GO ICa fHarqtiiap DIAMOND1 Connolly's offer a new budget series of the popular marquise cut diamond sets. Available In 14IC yellow or white gold. Diamonds enlarged to show detail. Choice of These 3 Guaranteed Total Weights! Va CARAT Vz Carat V2 Carat of Diamonds of Diamonds of Diamonds $13950 $1995° $29950 TERMS r When shopping for a diamond you should always make Connolly's1 OF- COURSE your ,irst or h>t ‘,op- MIRACLE MILE T V \ D'OWNTOWN 2203 Telegraph—Open Every Night 16 W. Huron ft 2-02?4 I fE 2-8391 ■ Open Monday and Friday Nights | T - All Women's Summer p All Children's Hi Heels and Med. Heels ■ SANDALS 388 and 488 ir 1“ and 2“ Reg, 6.99 .1 Reg. to 3.99 Woman's and Girls' Canvas and Dress - > All AAen's Flats ! SUAAMER SHOES l88 and 288 , 4*8 Reg. to 4.99 Reg. to 8.99 l Miracle Mile Shopping Center Open Every Evening Until 9:00 P.M. at MIRACLE MILE EXTRA VALUES MONDAY and TUESDAY Sal. Starts Moaday 6 P.M. High Fashion REMNANTS SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCESALE SIBLEY’S SELECTIVE STYLES MEN’S, WOMEN’S and CHILDREN’S SHOES Choose From Famous Brands Florsheim, Winthrop, Vitality, Accent, Grace Walker, Goose, Simplex Many Others. A TERRIFIC SELECTION IN ALL SIZES AND STYLES. IN SPRING, SUMMER AND YEAR AROUND WEAR. 20% to 50% OFF Bring the Whole Family and Save Many Dollars In This Gredt Sale! USE YOUR SECURITY CHARGE Miracle Mile Shopping Center Open Evening* 'til 9 * Penneys (s-Kc r* _ Easy to work with ... Easy to carl for... Penney’s Regulated Cotton Count on Penne/s 60 yeori of expertenea to help you fashion a back-to-jehool wardrobe for your children or a fall wardrobe for yourtelf. Penney'* has never stopped looking and learning anfjleading,In’gMng the women who sew the neweit in fibers, In coloring and styling. Now Penney'* Is opt front again with exclusive Penney designs In Regulated Cotton. Penney'* Regulajed Cotton Is all Sanforized, easy-care-machine washable with little or ho,Ironing. Choose prize prints, gingham stripes and IMiJiH plaids and coordinating solids In neiw stay-fresh tones on blue, red, ■■Mb green, brown, gold, and many others. Penney** has the fabrics that m BIV become the fashions of Ml '62. — Use Your Penney CHARGE CARD PENNEY'S-r-MIRACLE mile Open Monday Thru Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Dress Length Pieces From Expensive Bolts Satins—Wash 'n Dry Cottons, Crepes Etc. $100 Values to 69c yd. A yds. Sold by the Yard Only-29c Yd. Women’s and Children’s THONG SANDALS 19* S-M-L Little Girls’ 1-PC. Wash ’n Wear ROMPERS All Cotton—Sateen—Poplin Gingham—Seersucker Reg. 1.00 SrM-L 2 for 1«® 2 to a Customer-Limited Quantity Little Girls’ Dress Up 7-Pc. SUITS BROKEN SIZES Reg.5.99 Limited Quantity $137 FIRST COME-FIRST SERVED MIRACLE MILE CHOPPING CENTER JptSay*'ChargBh'* i OPENClAllY ♦ Months to Pay 9i30A.M?.0 P.M. . * jg .«*•!' ||||||| “ WVi * , r •?: CENTER ELECTRONICS, INC. Radio-TV Sale* and Service MIRACLE MILE SHOPPINO CENTER OPEN DAILY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MALL AREA FE 8-9607 APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAYS: UNUSUAL-NO ... WE DO IT EVERYDAY! ! It Is not unusual for a customer to como In and toll us Hay have a price on a cfrtaln modal appliance, TV or ttaroo and think wo can not do battor. In mast all casos thoy find wo will do ssHsr In prico and alio give sarvico second to none. Try us this week for tool honost discounts on all hotter name applianebs. 30-Gal.WaterHoator........i 44.00 Eaay Spin-Dryer.............SIIRn It Qu. Ft. Refrigerator, 2-Dr... $109.00 Kelvinator, Auto. Washer..... $169.95 Emorson 1-ton Air Oond......$139.95 ROA-Wllirtpool DehumMHier.. $ 69.00 Emorson Dohumidifior........$ 49.00 LOOR MODEL SAL FROM OUR TRADE-IN DEPARTMENT REFRIGERATORS - Frlgldalre-Westlnghouse Kolvinator and Admiral from *2995 AUTOMATIC WASHERS-raoonditianed $88.00 Name Brand 19" Portable TV Now in Oratos...............*.. Zenith 19** Portable .......•. .$139.95 •RAN00 Radio, AM/FM, I Tubas. Emorson Olook Radio • 21" COLOR TV....... .12411 .8 T9.ll ..$319.95 f UNIFORMS §L‘ AND f MATERNITIES SAVE UP TO 50% OFF y. AND EVEN MORE ALWAYS COME IN AND GET Outstanding values from our regular stock. A wide salaction of drossy, casual and tailored stylos—but not all sjzes in all stylos. A truly groat sale. FRETTER’S Low, Low Prices NEW 1962-2 CYCLE S8MJ10* WASHER 916 CAPACITY-BIO VALUE REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER ggNE------ Values to *14.99 Ladies' Leather Italian Sandals... $322 NO MONEY DOWN jp Ladies' White Tennis Oxfords... $277 Features all wash and rinse tamps ... porcelain enamel wash tub... 7 rinses... newest console styling, etc. NO MONEY DOWN Narrow and Medium Widths Our Famous Brand Children's Shoes $387-$487 WITH TRADE Model LJAOI ‘168 00 %%'’ K - i m ■ Refrigerator never needs defrosting.« super storage door has handy shelves and compartments... giant full-width crisper... and more. ONLY ‘ 182 I BUDGET TERMS Itt MONTHS TO PAY 30 DAYS EXCHANGE If Not Fully Satisfied GENEROUS TRADE ALLOWANCE FAST 24-H0UR DELIVERY HO MONEY DOWN ON ANY PURCHASE COURTEOUS, AFTER THE SALE SERVICE Frsttsr's Carload Discount Makes the ||f Difference - Prove It to Yourstlf - Sarvlca Comas First RS|»r4ISSS of PrlOD Our Famous Brand Men's Shoes..... $647 Loafers and Oxfords FRETTER DISCOUNT APPLIANCE Use a Uon Charge MIRACLE MILE CENTER UjUittUy S. TELEGRAPH AT SQ. LAKE RD. iMHWI' OPEN: Mon. thru Fri. 9:30 a.m.-10 p.m.. FE 3-7051 Sat. 9-9—Sui\. Closed u 1 i I I ‘ v -W-i "P m* ■ W - : | | i g | *|| f ' - \ " Mpw - 'V 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, #ULV 0, im RFT& _ ron nuron-raacKinac- isionu iwx ./ >■ • .' ' * * v , .. ...... Saturday will climax this wxk'i CoUflty. Dwn» HYANNIS PORT, Mass. (AP)—imer homes for the President b -***» ‘ * ITaniiartir m1aum) hit tricif tn IU P*reM«t Kennedy enjoyed Us visit 09 ttnt Cspe Cod weekend of 1962 Baffgiyy M'Orw*• — — first.( Choice for t). Si Court to the Blue Water Festival here. More than 50 sailing ships are _ entered in the race. A. fleet of j the hilt. > He stayed In x “J™0®yachts and some startled-looking He cruised. He swam. He traced white house, the Squaw Island are expected to start. ,tnm «designs in the sand with 4-year- home of Morton Downey, soft * *- * nL~P Fox anoW <*®uKhter Caroline. * The President was outdoors week as a Judge of the TI> S..Dis- - « rene; «■ « vxrilT"1* perfect weather for more I— trtct Court fOt western Michigan. Sunday afternoon. Oft- the-weekcod the Justice Department has recptnmendrd the ap-. polntmmt of the Muskegon County circuit Judge, friends BROTHER WAS ALONG , Part of the^ time Tte ^laxed on the stern deck of the 52-foot fam-JEljrmerGovrtrMennen Wil- Qy cruiser Marlin. With him was 1® Ms youngest brother,“Edward, a “ candidate- for -the Democratic Hams named Fox circuit judge _ 1951 afterjhe latter had served *■ 1951 after.the latter had served two candidate- for the Democratic years «is chairman of the State La- nomination to the U.S. Senate lfikJlnMmt HaUnI JhnJwm MuccQphlKAttK flllH tllP lft t" bor Mediation Board. As a circuit Judge he earned ...ini. waiMUttMitn lni> iuHirinl fir » nomuKtuuii »v i»w y.v. from Massachusetts, and the lat- as a ciivuu juugc •» wikJ a ter’s wife, Joan. ................****** quick reputation fra- Judicial acu- The President's other brother, men. The Michigan Judges Asso- Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy elation elected him its president and Robert’s wife Ethel, sipped and since 1989 he has been chair- aiong the water on skis, towed man of the court administration by two jet speedboats, committee of the Michigan Bar * At one point the President and Association. • began FM’s political activities hr 1W when lie-first became active Democrat. Three times ran under the party label L„ * Congress In Michigan’s 9th District, which has failed only enct in its hlotory to oeod a RepubH In 1950, when Gov. Williams nar rowly .defeated Harry F. Kelly, Fox ran ahead of the rest of the party ticket in the district arid was credited with having considerably aided the governor in the western part of the state. Losing Hair? Could Be You Worry Too Much PHILADELPHIA OJPI) - « you’re losing hair fast as an old shaggy dog maybe you worry and fret too much, a University of Pennsylvania researcher theorizes Dr. Albert M. Kilgman, professor of dermatology at the University's medical school, told of a man and a woman who lost hair from worry. He terms, this “telogen effluvium” — or the ‘shedding of “resting” hair*. The man was tried three times for a murder but escaped the hot seat each time on legal technicalities. The fourth time in court he was convicted of first-degree murder and shortly thereafter began losing hair at a fast rate. He escaped the chair eight weeks later on more legal maneuvers and, by the time he was pardoned,’ had grown a mane t beatnik would envy. The woman, disturbed about, prospects of a serious operation, worried beroelf out of a head of hair, and finger and toe nails as well, all of which grew back Ai one —- his youngest brother Jumped feet first from the Marlin’s stem for a few minutes of swimming near a rock breakwater stretching from the Kennedy dock. LUNCHED ON BOAT -The First Lady and the President's convalescing father, former Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy, had lunch aboard the Marlin while a dozen of the others had a picnic on Egg Island, a narrow strip of sand often under water at high tide. ★ ★ ★ After all the other bad gone ashore, the Marlin pulled up to the Hyannis Port Civic Association wharf. The President, in blue pullover and gray slacks, strolled to the beach with his brother Edward, in black sweat shirt and bright ||| trunks. MOST OF CLAN THERE There they had a few minutes of small talk with a couple of dozen Hyannis Port residents. That was when the small boy appeared with the beach ball. Nearly all the Kennedy dan assembled at their seaside sum- “Heating” hairs.-KligmaTi“said oeeur Wfien lS.OOD hairs ol a normal head have stopped growing to rest a bit. He theorizes a heavy loss of hair may be ‘‘a direct ei result of excessive anxiety.” However, he emphasized such a phonomena is only one of many causes of temporary hair loss •‘and certainly not a common one." He cited pregnancy and the use of drugs as more frequent Slbw Speed Dangerous NEW YORK (UPI)—Statisticians report there are six times as many highway accidents at 35 miles an hour than at 65 m.p.h. But the injury rate at 65 is twice that of 35. (Advertisement) Step SIMMS Sts I Timas F««tw at txd m to turn Gat BtIMnt Mow Many Weer FALSE TEETH With More Comfort ramiofn*. • likaiine ■at---der. Holds (sue teeth Ct^' rASTEETH I I Center ii IQS M SAGINAW \\ fE 2-0291., -'W^ot’Anr/ Boat Race to CliinaxjCfia*en Counf .-weexeno ^1^^ jESaHRsfcr--. . v * ■mSSBm- *:> PORT HURON (UPI) fWWiiBnl Port HutW-Maddnac Island race TULSA (R-The young twin sens Sshinisv will dimay this week’s of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Dutsch emoon uit- w w » gkle. the list Per 01 steei inoustry aroci«io.ue« hbrfanrttf ■^p^enr and^^KemS^at- “Grand-apererwarlie^^ longer -• grandparents Mr. and rose to a recoid 1 million in 1958, inlMrs. Jilt 2 AllolTwelve Grandparents v w , x J ,n . Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Michael. ^ " r All tbe grandparents live in Tul-oa except Mrs. 0. H. Harkreader, who lives in Salem, Ore'. -A ,' lUbes yuiuig twin awn of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Dutsch don't lack for grandparents. They have 12. ...J,- ■' : Darryl Dean and »il«r Dwayne, born April 96, have ma- Theyll show Red Kneel Mrs. T. M. Harkreader and temal great-grandparents, — and Mre. Gustav Staub and Mrs. ‘(Sr ■ IH..... ...... __________■ ..... ior UR um uitiu ui|iruo. v. uu in Hyannis 1870, but an admission charge of ents Mr. and ljl.50 kept the crowd small. 'and Mrs. Mrs. (J. tl. uuiscn iu ioiumg to u* O. McMfchael and A Steel Institute. Boardof Education LONDON (UPI)-AccordiiM -Radio Moscow, Russian designers planned *to take to an interns-onal fashion congress In Hungary a group of “up to date” dresses— with hemlines two to two and a half inches below .the knee. wii'pMtpone itt regular meeting ofJuly!2unt" w w^ until July 19. Sppt Dana p. Wtattmer said today , me UUtUU Wm iMj wax- w M'MM Jl unit on the bids more qtdddy on July Steer Owned by Multon & than fay w«3flw~fcr its next ___mAAtina .lulu 2fi_____he ex- '^TvEtiinroRKrrtJPD — The num- Dn thetr fafher’s side, the list ber of steel indust^r stockholders ^ . innn«. __ aranHnappnta Mr .and rose to a record 1 million in 1958, the flgurel The Pimtiac Board of Educiaom Dr. Whltmer explained that bids were expected to be received July IT on the planned fl,250,000 addition to Pontiac Northeni High School. The board will be able 19 UMUI uy ---- 'reat-grandpar- a 70 per cent increase from 1949, The acre was originally defined C. H. Dutsch according to the American Iron as the amount of land a yoke or ______________i ciaa! VMiniir> oxen could wow in a day. oxen could plow in a day. A googol, in mathematics, . -—, i followed by lOO zero » (Aarerntv»Jiv=»< Stops Constipation dseto'/^agMoa out and shrSKo tbn MW| Aetpsr unique on the i m, mat. PClMfUOIW DovOy IIMUU WWj on the nerve renew* in*, «nmu»n ™ ■maw movement*'ot vour lower colon, CotoHAio relieves even chronic con- .■alarm ituorniohl m on Mini Ip It (A At tOLUNAlU rgiicvw vmuntv w stipaltoo overnight, t* «0 gentle it wai hospital proved We even for expectant mothers, lalredsctoni Slie 41* blue Meet to Name New President Curtis Publishing Co, Directors to Appoinl Top Officer Today PHILADELPHIA (R - Directors uf the Curtis Publishing Co. were called to meet today, ostensibly ‘ name a new president. An official of the firuL whirit pjlbllahe*- -thtf" Saturday Evening ’ Post and other magazines, said in advance of the meeting the lead-g candidate was Matthew Joseph iilligan, 44. of New York, a gen-i-ittl cprporate executive and a director of Interpublic Inc., and McCann - Erickson, International Communications Affiliates Inc Culllgan nerved nine yearn with the National Broadcantlng Co. an -n executive vice prenldent and member of the executive coun- cil. advertising background helped make Mm a leading candidate. Advertising had dropped off in The Post. It was the first directors’ meeting since Robert MacNeal was relieved, after 12 years as president of the firm last June 20 following continuing heavy financial loss which )ias plagued the company. TO NA MJK PRKSIDE NT A three-man committee was set up to select a president for Curtis, which also published Ladies Home Journal, Holiday-and Jack and Jill. Curtin, which recently moved nome of itn editorial and bun!-nenn office* to New York, reported Itn flrnt deficit in lla 70-year hintory In 1061, a lonn of $4-2 million. For the first three months of this year it reported a deficit of $4.7 million despite a major change in the. format last year. The Post changed editors twice during the same period and the Journal also acquired a new editor, Trying to cut losses, MacNeal had reduced the weekly Post to a bi-monthly during the summer and the Christmas season. Sweden estimate*- 4wr~ reserves oi iron ore will last about 200 years more at present mining rates. BP JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED j»-HIGHEST PRICES PAID- We Pick Up | FE 2-0200 .a STEAK "Super-Right" is Fully Matured, Groin-Fed leef, Selected for Superb Taete and Tandamast ONi HIGH QUALITY, NO, CON FUSION—ONE PRICI AS ADVIRTISED SIRLOIN “SUPiMIGHr SKINLESS All Meat Franks JANE PARKER SLICED Frankfurter Rolls A&P BRAND FROZEN, SLICED 1-LB. PKG. OF 12 47 c 29c FRYER PARTS Cut from Fresh, Government Inspected, Top Quality Frying Chickens TENDER, MEATY Legs RIBS ATTACHED Breasts LB. 45< 49< A&P BRAND FROZEN, SLICED Strawberries .... “1° "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY Strip Steaks f.59 Ideal for Outdoor |>^> Cooking “SUPER-RIGHT” QUALITY Boneless Rump Roast or Rotisserie Roast LB. 89< AfirP BRAND—OUR FINEST QUALITY Grapefruit Juke 39( A&P BRAND—OUR FINEST QUALITY Tomato Juice 4 ’-"cAir- 39( CHARCOAL BRIQUETTES 10-LB. BAG 20-LB. BAG 59‘ Lump Charcoal 1.09 5 H, Me ASP BRAND-SECTIONS »*0|| Grapefruit . . 4 «a.V 69c Instant Milk r-0flf(B.s SUPIR-RIOHT CANNED Bisquick . . . “W* 39c Corned Beef , . Iff 39c WHITE HOUSE NON-FAT, DRY Giant Tide 69* SULTANA BRAND Pizza Mix 3 ,lfcoi01 1.00 Fruit Cocktail 4 «« 87c FREE WITH ANY PURCHASE AND THIS COUPON Monday. Tuesday or Wed.~only July 9,10 or f 1th ONE 2-OZ( yAN OF ANN PAGE GROUND A a ■ m MM u oz I ONi 2-OZ* CAN OF ANN PAGE OROl Snider s Catsup . ■ • 2 ■ 2v« E Black Pepper Tender, Young Kernels FRESH, SWEET CORN 49* DOZEN EARS Italian-Style Bread JAN* PARKER ^ K# 1W-U-BREAD SPECIAL L0AF Joy Liquid SS -'SSf 49c Mr. Clean Sunnybrook Grad® "A" MEDIUM SIZE Good in all ARP Super Market* In Eastern Michigan on any af the above date* ONE PER FAMILY — ADULTS ONLY Fresh Eggs SjOO 3 D0Z. ■RRNIfRNMUTH ■ - :=.' ' "»' 'Ml1»— Sharp Cheese 11 5v* P0PSICLES & 12 «* 39c ted thru Tuesdey, July 10th _____ Super Market* in latlem Michigan ONI PER FAMILY — ADULTS ONLY COME SEE...YOU'LL SAVE AT AGP NUTLET BRAND All Pricq* effective thru Twee., July 10th In all Eastern Michigan AAP Super Markets 10c OFF 1-PT. 12-OZ. AQr LABEL STL. OHAT ATIAHTIC * CACiriC T»A COM,ANY, INC uper Markets MARGARINE QUALITY A CAf THIS1 QTR’D TP ctn*’ 4#WGi COUPON Oeed thru Tuesday, July 10th rafll at all ASP Super Market* In Eastern Michigan ONE PER FAMILY — ADULTS ONLY COME SIB...YOU'il lAVl AT AGP ) THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY, 9, *962 2 Youths Fail to Free Jail Inmate Handwriting on thie Wall fqr Condemned Building PALliMORg w -Demolition of "He said he would slow down so I could turnip out. He-war-BQ-bjgTaBwOOvff^ jumped.” TOOKUP CIIA»E ,,, s ./ Sheriff Lloyd I Panzer and Deputy Joe Turner of Lincoln County took up the chase, and 27 miles northeast of Russell the fugitive's car overturned. - >,, “ Mrs. Wilkerson and Ireton were taken to the Russell hospital. Both were reported In satisfactory condition. Sheriff Galyardt said Burke had been held in the Russell Jail five days last month, He escaped June. 30 at Kansas City while be ins returned to Baltimore.. Says U. 5. Has Area to Shelter 60 Million CALLED GALYARDT , Ireton entered the sheriffs of: fice and. asked Grace Wilkerson, the radio dispatcher, to see the sheriff. She called Galyardt at his home. 'I walked over to the Jail and noticed a boy outside carrying a shotgun," the sheriff said. "When I got inside this man Ireton told me ‘We want Conway.* I pushed him back and caught the .other boy by surprise as he came through the door. ' grabbed the shotgun out of H hands and he took off out the back door and I took off after him.** . gunplay Sunday but t sheriff spoiled their plan. -One youth shot his- way eut. of the sheriff’s office and fled lit a 1 «tnla« «nr ^tl^^ w^ftn-htistager He released the woman, then wrecked the car in. a high-speed chase and was pinned in. the wreckage. ** * The other youth fled oh foot and Was caught near town. No charges have been filed against the pair;. Sheriff Milton Galyardt said the vo were Phillip Dean lreton, 20, of Kansas City, Kan., and Marshall M. Burke, 16, a runaway Baltimore children's home. He said they were trying to re-ase Paul Francis Conway, 24, of Elizabeth, Pa., held on a bad check charge. DROVE AWAY Ireton, pulling Mrs. Wilkerson out the door, fired six shots at the sheriff, but missed. ireton forced the woman into a car and drove away as the sheriff fired a shotgun blast through the rear Window. Mrs. Wilkerson said Ireton told her; *If 1 hear a sound out of you, you’re dead.” He got gasoline at the edge of town and drove off without paying, after pulling a gun on the attendant. Mrs. Wilkerson said she tried to calm Ireton as he drove east, pursued by highway patrolmen. "I told Ireton to let me Mrs. Wilkerson related. “I that if there Were more shooting or a wreck I would be hurt and EXTENSION PHONES! EASY ON THE FEET! EASY ON THE EYESI m Besides savingyou countless footsteps, a con* venient and colorful extension phone Is a joy to behold. What's more, you’ll appreciate the privacy of an extension phone where you can talk without being overheard. And at night you’ll sleep better, knowing the security that an extension by your, bedside gives you. An extension phone In color costs only pennies a day after a one-time installation charge. You can choose an extension phone from the three models shown here. NEW YORK * — A civil defense officW„«aya..Jthe^uaik»-baisufficient space to shelter from SO to 60 million persons from nuclear THE PRINCESS PHONE CHECK MW ROUBLE CHECK them all-no advertising medium reaches out like the daily newspaper. The newspaper goes into nearly 9 out of 10 homes every day.1 Adults? Almost 90,000,000 read a newspaper every day.1 Homemakers? Three out of 4 check the ads in the daily newspaper before making their main shopping trips of the week.8 Teen-agers? 72% of them will read a newspaper today.1 Since the whole family reads the daily newspaper, it's the one medium in which you can reach everybody. More facts? Check withus. v lAuditi and Survoyt Co. Study for Bureau of Advertising, AN PA.* *BBDO Food Presentation No• it EVERY DAY...ALMOST ALL YOUR CUSTOMERS READ A DAILY NEWSPAPER IN THE PONTIAC AREA, THEY READ THE PONTIAC PRESS fallout. William P. Durkee, director for federal aaeistance of the Office of civfl Defense, said Me department hopes to have., 236 million ahelter spaces In Komee, schools, transit facilities and at places of employment by 1967. Duekee spoke Sunday at the opening of the 27th annual conference of the National Association of County Officials. Robert E. Condon, New York City civil defense director, told the group "all indications’* are that there is enough shelter space in the city to protect the population against fallout----------~ But. Officer, It Happens to the BEST of Us. . . TUCSON, Ariz. »— Policemen Charles Lugo and Norris Stokes > on their way to work when their car stalled and caused a traffic Jam In downtown Tucson. The red-faced officers explained later that they had run out of gas. Be Sure! Be Safe! Be Comfortable NextWinter Order Dependable Fuel Oil Gee Today! Pontiac's Oldest and largest Independent Fuel Oil Distributor is now accepting orders for next Winter's fuel oil . . . Do as your neighfor has already done, dial FE 2-8181 and be sure of complate heating satisfaction. Gee's fleet of new, modem GMG Trucks (meter equipped for accuracy) distributes batter quality furnoco oil in Fontiac, Drayton Plains, Clorkston, Orion, Auburn Haights, Bloomfield Hills, Keego Harbor and the surrounding area ... Be Sure, Be Safe, Be Comfortable, Call Get today. *A PULL OIL TANK ILIMI. NATIS RUST. CORROSION AND CONDINSATION IN PUIL OIL TANK I it LOW SUMMER PRICKS ARI NOW IN IPPICT! ★ lyDCIT TIRMS ILIMINATI no run. RILLS IN. COLDIR MONTHSI It’s little! It’s lovely! Il lights! And because it’s so little and dainty It will fit into almost any nook or cranny. It comes in five decorator colors with a separate beige ringer, if you wish. THE WALL PHONE In your kitchen or laundry a wall phone is as attractive as it is convenient. You can choose from four tasteful colors the one that best complements^hecoi^seheme^fyourroom. *7; ‘ ffli / /Uf THE DESK PHONE Available In five exciting colors to harmonize With any decor, a colorful extension lends a bright and cheefy note to any room. It fits easily on a desk, table or counter top. To order your extension phone, just call * our Telephone Business Office. MICHIGAN BELL @ TELEPHONE COMPANY ' 1 i frOURTKEN , I si ji( rf ^ „,(^,„ . i THE C FHKSS> MONDAY, JUtV Q, 1962 ' »|'li Columm^t ^ Ftood&i F4 I ’fw | WWi Interesting Mail ^wjmpgEWns NEW YORK (AP>—Thing# A tvdumtitut might better know If he didn’t open hi* mall: Americans now have 10 million, traffic accidents annually involving gome IT million can or trucks. iNaee there are - approximately 70 tnfllinn vehicles, the grim fact of highway safety is that the average] ■ driver has nearly one chance in four o( being in an accident each year. Studies show t ha t wearing a seat b e I t cuts WA& COST MOKE If you're not afraid of spooka, you can\biiy a ghost town near Cardwell, Mont- u has 1,000 acres, 30 buildings and JO mining claims. It coats tlie Army more to supply a WAP’s wardrobe than to outfit a male 6L It Is getting less expensive to give Rover the broadening expert- do w BOYLE chances of serious injury by SO r EEGO I 0UP0N T Lolumni GOOD ALL WEEK Bring Coupon With You 100 SifOtim Oil Ctp. Limit 100 76* 100 JUcwBic Acid Tabs. n* Limit 100 100 UNICAPS Revlon SUN-BATH • for a lovely tan 1.10 Value 79* IMt Om Tube RETIREES . . . Bring year prescriptions t us. We will save you u to 20%. per cent. . 'pmF:.. Did yap know that 500,000 people in tills country now keep bees? ence of travel. Some motels now court guests 'with dots by supplying ifree meals to the pooches. Quotable notables: “No man is lonely while eating spaghetti -* It requires so much attention’ Christopher Motley. PLANNING TO MOVE------------- About one in 10 U.S« firms plans ► move or enliuge it# quarters , in 1962., A .firm In Washington, D.C.. Is trying out a reverse form of credit card. For $10 a year you get a card which entitles you to pay cash. * Gen. U S. Grant was tjie last music-minded of American presidents. He claimed he knew only two tunes. One. he said, was Yankee Doodle”-the other wasn’t. A majority of America’s 350,000 blind test their «|ght after becoming adults, and mom than half aim past .65. V. DOESN’T HELP Do you believe that giving coffee or other hot driAks to the tipsy sobers them up? The Yale Canter of Alcoholic Studies found it does not—it only keeps them awnke. Actor. Oscar Hcmoika write*; 'Know what!* made , of - tour grapes? Whine!'.’ Inmates of Clinton Prison at Dan-hemora, N.Y., designed and built atohurch within the maximum security penitentiary. They dedicated the $250,000 edifice to Sti Die-mas, “the good thief,’’ who died beside Christ on Calvary. WE'RE SPORTY THOUGH We are criticised as a people physically unfit! but last year more than five fnMton Americans went siding, 40 million went boating, 50 million hunted or fished. The jumping spiders probably live at a greater range of altitude than any other creature on earth. They have been found in the depths of coalmines and 22,000 feet up Mt. Everest. It was J. M. Barrie who observed, “God gave us our memories so that we might have roefes I in December.’’ , Laos Peace Pact Hopes Up as Confab Impasse Eases CASS LAKE PHARMACY fit the *lop light 3000 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD GENEVA (UPI) — A reported easing of the impasse in the Laos conference sparked hopes today that a peace settlement might be completed for signature by the foreign ministers in Geneva about 10 days. Conference leaders agreed In extensive weekend consultations to push ahead with off stage efforts today to narrow the remaining differences which have delayed a neutrality declaration for Laos. A plenary session of (ha 14- Westem sources said the outstanding problems could be settled In a matter of hours, given Communist cooperation. They were reptaled encouraged by tbe latest series of private talks with Laotian vanna Phouma. The Communist Chinese and their staunch supporters the Communist North Vietnamese were taking the toughest stand, with Russia seemingly a little more cooperative. - None of the few remaining problems have thus far. been "definitely” resolved, the sources said. But the indications were that a number of choice "formulas’’^ have been worked out, designed-tp pave the way for compromise. The Issues were: the terms for the withdrawal ot the Southeast Asia Treaty Organisation's (SEATO) protective “umbrella” from Laps, and the merger ot pro-Western forces In Laos. U.S. Asst Secretary of State tor Far Eastern Affairs W. Averell Harriman stood fast by his oppo-| istion to the Communist demand t for a declaration formally announcing fbe SEATO’s protection from Laos. merger in Laos, however, was seen to offer greater difficulty be-' cause of the Communists' firm re-| fusal thus far of provisions for any safeguards in the Geneva accords against cheating by the Cdmmu-nists. Mae par sheet ESTIMATES 0l,r ,Bftll,,a,l0n WOrk D°na b* E*Pirt,! ISTIMATI»| Open Mon., Thurt., FrL, 'til 9:00 P.M.-Froo Parting In B*«r of Store! If You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! 1 075 W. Huron Sf. H "^tCA WHIRLPOOL ★GENERAL ELECTRIC ★KELVINATOR ★FRIGIDAIRE ★GIBSON ★ADMIRAL RCA WHIRLPOOL Big 13 Co* Ft. Willi Top Freezer W £ NQjMKMifY DOWN HJC13 ‘ ' FREE! 5-yr. Unit Warranty 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH 12 Cu. Ft. 2-Door 107-lb. 1>«i© Freezer, Automatic Defrost Refrigerator Deluxe in every respect, in decorator colors. \0O with' trade liC 12 T RCA WHIRLPOOL 14 ■ I . CU. FT. with 163-lb. Bottom Freezer ms u a FREE DELIVERY FREE 5-Year Unit ■Service FREE SERVICE! KELVINATOR FOODARAMA— 12 Cut Ft. Refrigerator- 13 Cu. Ft. One Door 13 Cu. Ft. 14 Cu. Ft. 2-Door Across Top Freezer Dial Defrost Refrigerator Section 41” 6 Cu. Ft. Freezer Wide—What a Box! and only •258 >00 with trade 198* with trade USE OUR METER PLAN — PAY ONLY PENNIES A DAY ! GIBSON 14 Cu. Ft. 2-Dr. True Freezer and Refrigerator. Deep, Roomy Door Shelves NO MONEY down 1 with trade For those who have a Freezer 114 pu. ft. of fresh Ijf ood storage. Han provision for 2 ice cube trays only. Every inch designed for food storage. with \rade NO DEFROSTING EVER Our Own Specially Trained Technicians Service Every Product We Sell! ADMIRAL GENERAL ELECTRIC Refrigerator* 9 Cu. Ft. With —Freezer TOP FREEZER 2 Slide-Out Shelves Roomy Door Shelves—Thlnwall Fiberglas Insulation NOW ONLY 13.2 Cu. Ft. 1962 102*lb. True Freezer Auto. Defrost Refrigerator 2-Door Packed with. Wonderful Features 25800 with trade with trade 90 DAYS SAME AS C&SH ^ GOOD HOUltKEEPINdCZ, of PONTIAC 51 WEST HURON STREET OPEN TONIGHT and FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. SHOP by-PHONE FE 4-1555 W\ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 9, 1962 Yog Gave Ticket to Her *y the Emily Post Institute Q: My lister and I lttd tick* etc for a show. The day we were suppose! to go my sister / became sick and cotild not go. ' I called a friend and explained what happened and asked her If she would like to use the ticket. She was delighted to go. .She has evidently taken it for . granted that she was my guest as she has tnade'ho offer to' pay for the ticket. I certainly did not intend . this as the tickets were quite expensive. Could I possibly ask her to pay for the ticket} A: , Videos you asked her If she wanted tp buy the ticket when you offered it to her, she .quite naturally thought you were inviting' her to the show as your guest, and I don’t see how you can now ask her to pay fdr it. MRS. ALBERT XSM8LEY —Qi~A friend of mine is going tu be married soon and his best man is giving a bachelor din* ner for him several nights before the wedding. 1 have been invited to this dinner and I would like to know if it is customary to bring a present to the bridegroom at this time? A: Unless there is a plan to give the bridegroom a present from all the guests and you have been asked to contribute a certain amount toward it, you will not be expected to bring any present to the. dinner. New Chief Honored by 2 Units Wright - Fournier AMVETS and Auxiliary honored Mm. Albert E. Emsley, newly elected Mibhigan State Department president of AMVETS Auxiliary, during a reception Sunday. The afternoon affair was given at the home Of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Chrisman. Demonstrating William Beaumont Hospital’ssecond circular bed is Owen R. Pinkerman, director of the hospital, as two members of the Birmingham Junior League, Mrs. Henry E. McDonnell (center) of Butternut Hill Drive, and Mrs. Thomas H. Clark of North Adams Road> both of Birmingham, ob-~ serve; The~ league's check for 1830 enabled the Royal Oak hospital to purchase the needed bed used for para-■ plegics, heart cases, severe bums — cases where it's difficult to move the patient. Q: My mother and father died several years ago. I would like to donate a stained glass window in our new church in their memory. Witt you please tell- me how it should be inscribed? Should it be- VIn memory of-John and Mary Smith" or "In memory of Mr. and Mrs. John Smith"? A: It should be inscribed, "In memory of John and Mary Smith." Special tribute was paid to Mrs. Emsley’s work by Post Commander Edward Mason and Auxiliary President Mrs. Edwin Good. Guests included members of the post and auxiliary, Mrs. Chester Burton, district three commander; Mrs. Harold Willis, district three auxiliary president; and Mr. .Willis.____ Mrs. Emsley trf Woodland Drive was elected to the presidency during the 17th annual convention of Department of Michigan AMVETS Auxiliary last weekend at the Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel in Detroit. wmmmmammmmm Womens Section Abby Says: Tell Him Friends Should Be Kind By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: We have a friend who brings up a subject which hurts and embarrasses us. You see, my husband’s brother served time. It’s all in the past now. Joe Is going straight, and we are trying to forget it. This friend is always using expressions like, “jail bird,” "did time in the pen” and "up the river.’" hurt a bit” — and then they go to work and the kid almost goes |nto orbit! No wonder children‘are scared'to death to go to a dentist. MOTHER baby sit before she is entitled to a paid vacation? CURIOUS DEAR CURIOUS: Oh -about 40 years. Of course it bothers us. He knows about Joe because he’s lived in t h t s town all his life and it was no secret. What can you do with a per- DEAR MOTHER: Any dentist who tells a patient that it isn’t going to hurt, when it will, should go back to school and study (A) Ethics, (B) Psychology, (C) Dentistry. P. S. Don't overlook, however, that a child often will protest more out of fear-than from pain. How's the world treating you? For a personal, unpublished reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. MRS. CHESTER G. HENSLEY DEAR ABBY: Could you tell me how long a person has to For Abby’s booklet, “How To Have A Lovely Wedding," send 50 cents to ABBY, care of The Pontiac Press, Box 3365, Beverly Hills, Calif. we shut him up? SENSITIVE DEAR SENSITIVE: Real friends abide by the Chinese -proverb: “Spealrwot orA~rope in the home of a man who was hanged." Your “friend" should engage his brain before he puts his mouth in gear. Take him aside and tell him. DEAR ABBY: Either my sister-in-law has a wild' imagination or else she is the world’s biggest liar. Yesterday she told nfe that her nine-week-old baby turned himself completely over in h i s crib! She also said that her two-and-a-half-year-old daughter could do the twist. Have you or any of your readers ever heard of such accomplishments from babies their age? FROM MISSOURI DEAR FROM: Are you really "From Missouri" or do you just want to be shown? Your sister-in-law could be telling the truth ton both couhts. ' DEAR ABBY: Will you kindly say a word to some dentists who will get a child In their chair and say, "This won’t Reveal Plans for Marriage Mr. and Mrs. JElmo Hunt-work of Farmington announce the engagement of their daughter, Sharon Lee, to Alan R. Adams Jr., son of Mr. and,, Mrs. Troy E. Williamson of Williams Lake Road, Waterford Township. They have set Apg, 4 as the wedding date. Marilyn Drumm Weds Chester G. Hensley *J3efore a background of white delphinium, gladioli and palms, Marilyn Lorraine Drumm exchanged wedding vows with Chester G. Hensley, Saturday evening in the First Congregational Church. Rev. Malcolm K. Burton performed the candlelight ceremony. White carnations complemented Mrs. Drumm's gold brocade sheath dress. The mother of the bridegroom wore beige linen over a silk print. Bheath aresi Her flowers were i tangerine carnations. Sore Throat No Chic q&.-Styles Turn to Mufflers By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK ~ Last year fashion designers ruffled us up to our ears In furbelows. This fall and winter, they want to muffle us up to our ears. jktns of mink or phony mink wrap-arounds, or 8-and ten-and 12-inch wide scarves of fabric or other fur, wrap a woman’s throat as if every designer was scared the customer was in danger of pneumonia. off look to the back. But to this observer. .from numerous collections seen, about*the only squarihg-off is in the treat-' ment of sleeves, set into, the -bodice as a man’s jacket is tailored. * But definitely, no football. sleeves still are set so low that the overall effect through the shoulder is one of curve, rather than square. In both suit and coat silhouette, the theme is narrow, but there is allowance for ease of walking by use of Inverted pleats, -gores or subdued lliresr Suit Jackets mow a trend toward Added length, with f many collections showing jack-ets all the way down to finger-tip, and most dropping well below the waistline. Those muffled nedclines we spoke of earlier usually- are separates — remove the fear or fabric and you have a , neat, collarless setting for your favorite multistrand necklace. The muffled look is u major trend of fall and winter fashion collections of women’s^ apparel being shown "this week for some 250 visiting fashion reporters who are in New York for the semiannual dla-^ plays of the New York couture group and its auxiliary membership. The week-long Shows will Include highlights of collections from 24 couture group members, plus the &ssorted aux-ilaries who will display their latest creations, from hairdos to bowling fashions — in other words, the gamut of what women will wear in the coming seasons. SCARVES EVERYWHERE Now, about that muffled look tor daytime — it is a rare suit, costume or coat which is . not accompanied by a rectangular scarf around the neck, and tied on the left shoulder. Some of the mufflers are so wide and voluminous they cover a woman's ears, chin, nose and most of her coiffure. Hats go right along with the covering- trend:- -And -so- do-shoes — boots make a grand walk-on — as seen in millinery and shoe shows yesterday. SKINNY SILHOUETTE For the woman shopping for a tail and winter wardrobe, besides all that neckline wrapping, here are things that she should watch for, based on the New York collection of designers and manufacturers: In suits and coats, primarily the skinnv. narrow silhouette will prevail, with a tremendous revival of what we once called the Princess, with subdued bodice, hinting of a classic high bustline and its no-belt shape flaring at the hem. — This shape also is called the Rajah, the garment industry’s newest term since Mrs. John F. Kennedy’s visit to India and Pakistan. There is much talk in the fashion industry ©! shoulders getting wider and of a squared- Dr. Kabcenell Marries Muriel Chalfen in N. Y. Dr. Nathan Perelman of Temple Emmanuel, New York City, officiated at the mar*_ riage of Muriel Chalfen to Dr. Personal News Robert J. Kabcenell, son of the Michael Kabcenells, Orchard Lake, Sunday m the Hotel St. Regis, New York City. Daughter of the Solomon Chalfens, New York City, the bride wore a sleeveless white cloque gown and a tulle veil. She carried white Cymbldlum orchids. —The Andrew Curds of East Walton Boulevard were hosts at a family picnic. Visiting with their parents were the Bruce P. Boyds, the James H. Curds and the Bradley Gallihers and their families. The James Williams family canre from Flint and the Russell Williams from Bloomfield, Mo., Other guests were the Truman Bolins, the Orville Duncans, Mrs. Icy O. Morris, Nelson Duncan, Mrs. Arthur Tapp and daughter Dolores. ★ ★ * The Brant Cottermans and son Mark have recently moved fromJ^^^est, 111. to make their permanent home in White Plains, N.Y. Mr. Cotter-man, a former Pontiac resident, is the son of the Don R. Cottermans of West Iroquois Road. ★ ★ ★ —The Foster Leverlngs entertained at an-outdooe dinner at their home on South Jessie Street. Mr*. David Chalfen, New York City, attended her cousin as matron of honor.________ Martin Kabcenell served ar best man for his brother. Ushers were Dr. Ernest Kafka, -Dr. AlexHnderGtasm*n,Jr Morton Levine and Joseph Jordan, all of New York City. The bride was graduated from Hunter College and received her master’s degree from the New York School of Social Work. Receiving guests in the church parlors were the newlyweds and their parents, the Dr. George Crane Says; Dr. Kabcenell attended the University, of Michigan and the U. of M. Medical School and is presently a research fellow In the department of psychiatry of Albert Einstein College of Medicine. After a European honey-moon,thecouple^willresid^ln-New York. Among the out-of-town guests were Dr. and Mrs. Har- ■ ry Amkoff of Illinois Avenue. Ford A. Drumms of West Strathmore Avenue end the Chester E. Hensleys of North Williams Lake Road, Waterford Township. Many Just Playing Sick Different Look in Fall Stoles GOWN OF SILK Small calla lilies secured the bridal veil of silk illusion worn with a gown of white silk organza over Chantilly lace, featuring low-placed lacf tiers and chapel train. A crescent bouquet of Alburn lilies and Sftph-anotis and the bridegroom's gift diamond cross pendant completed the bride's ensem-ble. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE M-461r Clem G:, aged 43. was painting a house. "But his ladder slipped," his boss Informed "and fell Maid of honor, Carolyn Collins, and Dona Ferrier of ftwnsim, who was flnwerglrl. wore white organza over batiste, accented with pale blue cummerbunds. They carried white delphinium and feathered blue carnations in blue lace hearts. Clen about 15 feet, landing on his left shoulder. “We took him to a good doctor who "decided, after X rays, that there was nothing seriously wrong. ■ "The doctor said he was bruised but In a few weeks Clem would be as good as new. a with such negative thinkers? Are they just trying to stay Sick for the sake of hoodwinking insurance companies? "In my own youth on a farm, we'd have brushed off Clem’s types of bruises and been back in the fields the next day. “For in those days Americans weren't Cry-babies who coddled themselves unduly and became ’worry warts’ trying to deceive their families and insurance doctors." They are using illness as an escape from lacing grim Reality! WORRY WARTg And our present national psychology of appeasement and , fear indicates that Uncle Sam has become a neurotic and a "worry wart," tor Uncle Sam is simply the sum total 61 all his citizens. DR. CRANE Summer elegance is In evidence in this afternoon tunic dress in black and white bamboo printed silk. It's designed by Jean Louis. The wide boat neckline emphasizes ah extended shoulder line. Waist is sashed. Bridesmaids, Mrs. Alexander Lucier and the bridegroom’s sister Linda, also In whiter— ganza, held blue delphinium and feathered white carnations in . white lace hearts. Jerry Davis, Royal Oak was best man. Wayne Johnson Jr., Union Lake, Joseph Brady, Waterford and Alexander Lucier comprised the usher list. V Returning from a Southern honeymoon, the couple will tie-side on East New York Ave* hue. The bridegroom attended "But that was six months ago. Clem still holds his left ~amr across hlr “chest "and moans and groans, for he lays he Is still hurt. "The insurance company had him checked again by two other doctors, all of whom say Clem Is OK. “But If people are watching him, or his wife wants him to do some lifting around the house, Clem turns op a wow of semi-invalidism.-' ♦ * “Dr, Crqne, what is wrong MALINGERING Millions of Americans now malinger. This means they subconsciously develop aches and pains for ulterior purposes. Consciously they may deny such attitudes both to their doctors and even their own family. In New York City it is even considered a marie of social ritz to have your own psychiatrist, and to be So neurotic you must swill down liquor at night in order to relax tor your evening meall (UPI) — The stole with an armhole gives the fall costume a different look. Seen in collections of trend • setting American designers, the stole with an armhole takes on an elegant accent when the armhole is circled in fur. The wearer dons the stole by putting it over one hand and flinging the rest of it over her shoulder. Modem Couture, one firm, showed such a stole in red velvet with fur trim. "Cruise in Luxury But subconsciously they delight in the extra attention they receive or the freedom from doing their proper share of the , It has been estimated that 20 million Americans consult doctors in this country every week. At least 10 million of them are "worry warts” or negative thinkers. Their aches and pains lato .chiefly1 psychosomatic. Churchill warned Hitler that the British would resist any In-' vasion of their island with bare pitchforks, if need be. And Hitler, in all his might, backed down. Even'brave men think twice before they tackle anybody with guts or courage so read tomorrow’s follow-up of Gem's case and quit being so chicken! An invitation to orulea aboard the fabulous yacht which belongs ' to Aristotle Onassls Includes the luxury of a private marble bath with gold fitting*! These are standard equipment in the bathrooms attached to each of the,! eight guest staterooms on theft shipping magnate’s world mous pleasure shlji. | ,'fl Dr, awrt* W., Schedule Meetingj ion« »nd W'Siiurto wwwTmSmi »mt e’h’.Tli1«“ <1 ■ (Copyright, IMS) Thai Pontiac will meet at t pJtt* day at the lllaak on Myrtle Street. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JULY ( T ii: I „,. J —I from the salelfor the acquisition and lease of pf federal duck stamps, exceptjw a*t e r f o u/ 1 management ar Tor printing and cost of sale, goes I throughout the United States. =AllPemiattents= COMPLETE WITH CUf AND SET $495 NONE HIGHER Expert licensed operators to give you an easy-to-manage hair “cut, long lasting permanent and becoming hairstyle. ....——- ■- No appointment necessary, permanent complete in two hours. HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SHOP 78 N. Saginaw Over Bosley Mkt. 333-9660 VBSEZ2SZZSZZSSZZBSZZZ& \ 'Harry' NICHOUE N Definitely a figure JoUdwer, ' this , painted lace duress scintillates with allover bead and 1____crystal embroidery. ~~i£s Jrom Edward Abbott’s collection, by Wilson Folmar, The hemline is jeweled in scallops. In the Pontlae area, the cancer control, program of the Michigan Cancer Foundation lit carried on by more than one thousand volunteers. ,/ The foundation has plaftned a tribute program in honor of those workers to be held this evening in the Civic Ifyom of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association in! Pontiac. CALLING-Let Our New LJFE INSURANCE DEPARTMENT Serve You and Your Family 1. Complete Fsmlly Programming I. Pension and Disability Income 3. Business Continuation 'Bud' Nicholie Insurance kuSOCOOOQOOOOQOOOOOOCOO Newspaper Enterprise Assn. ‘Men are just little boys grown up." When a woman says that she Model’s Seeking Mink Eyelashes doesn’t mean it as a compliment. In fact, that statement makes her feel as superior as a man feels when he explodes: "If that isn’ just like a woman." By GAY PAULEY . I'PI Women’s Editor NEW YORK — Pamela Quinn; top-rated model from Australia, breezed into New York with the announcements that: just as friendly as the folks back home. If she doesn’t get to visit the Statue of'Liberty she will be "terribly cross." CATCH ON LATE One of the first things she will shop for is a set of phony eyelashes made of mink, "a status symbol with us models in Sydney." Food prices In the United Staten stagger her, especially the price of steak which is cheap In 31 Every girl In Australia copies what the American girl is wearing, but gets around to the "new" in hairdos and make-up about six months after they've caught on here. And the modeling profession s looking up for girls from the land down under. Everyone in the United States is Miss Quinn, 20, is a wisp of i first time in PONTIAC! UNION CARBIDE’S NEW INVICTA PROCESS the drudgery of POLISHI SILVER J Unretouched photo of a sugar bowl and bread plate that and half of which were treated with INVICTA Finish over 4 years ago, e polished The treated sides still retain their original lustre! BRING YOUR SILVER IN TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATE SILVER REPLATING INVICTA SALE DURING JULY ONLY Let us restore your silver to its original beauty. Take jour precious worn silverware, heirlooms and antiques out of hiding and have them gorgeously QUADRUPLE SILVERPLATED by skilled silversmiths at great savings. ARTICLE REPLAYING SALE PRICES* Cream Pitchers..........7.95 Sugar Bowls —............... ®-95 Waste Bowl*' ~.a.............................. *-95 Tea and Coffee Pots, ea..........—------—-----13-95 Water Pitchers---------—----------------.-----13.95 Serving Trays (per sq. in.).. REPAIR SERVICES AVAILABLE: Dents Removed Broken parti repaired or replaced kTiflt prhttari for iih*rpUti»t only • • • INVICTA Proem it additional ... the INVICTA Process • prevents tarnish and stains • washable... even in dishwasher • harmless to your finest silver • unaffected by foods • won’t peel or discolor Bring your silver holloware out of hiding and,into daily use! Let us give it the benefit of the new "INVICTA" Process. Years of exhaustive tests by Union Carbide Corporation shows that INVICTA-protected silver won't tarnish, even with constant use. INVICTA finish won’t peel, chip or discolor. Resists stains from boiling coffee, salt, vinegar or alcohol. Bring youf hdllQware in today for a free estimate without obligation. F. K PAULI CO. Pontiac’s Oldest Jewelry Store THE STORE WHERE QUALITY COUNTS 28 Went Huron Street FE. 2-7257 girl—she stands 5 feet, S'-i Inches tall, bjit weigh; only 7 stone (translation: 91 pounds), she has huge blue1 eyes, wide forehead, -fair skin, and red hair. She also has a tremendous sense of humor and is a conversational whiz. Of her size she laughed, 'we make 'em small in Australia." Of U. S. prices, she decided "II I lived here, I’d have to marry one of your Texas millionaires." Miss Quinn was named photographic model of the year in votes by stores, advertising agencies and magazines. As a result of her winning, she is getting the trip to the United States with stops in Honolulu, San Francisco and New York, has Australian-designed wardrobe made of fibers by Celancse, one of her sponsors, Id between sight-seeing she Is being photographed against backgrounds of tourist attractions In this country for use later in Australian newspapers and magazines. Accompanying her on a visit which lasts until Aug. 1, are Laurence Le Guay, professional photographer, and Alan Bruce, president of a Sydney agency which handles advertising in Australia for Cclanese's export operation. PAY ATROCIOUS The model said that the pay for an Australian model is "atrocious" compared to rates in the United States where a topflight photog- rapher's model may earn $60 an hour. But she pointed out that the Australian pound goes farther than the U.8. dollar, and that her average earnings of 80 pounds per week, approximately 8160, Is comparable to that of a top-flight executive. She said department stores and advertising agencies in Australian cities, Sydney and Melbourne particularly, have stepped up the demand for models in the. last few years, using them increasingly in newspaper and magazine advertising. POLY CLEAN Clean Your Clothes in ' Air-Conditioned Comfort at SANDRA'S DRI-CLKANtiTTE Coin OpsrsteS 691 tirchard Lake FI 3-9828 Houn: 0 to 0 Dolly — 10 lo « Sunday Miss Quinn, a native of Newcastle, 160 miles north of Sydney, is the daughter of a hotel owner No Conrad Hilton type of ty-I," she said, "but what we call a publican — an innkeeper.” Her high school teachers encouraged her toward an art career because of her talent for sketching, but she began a business course after graduation. Then a talent scout for one of Sydney’s modeling schools spotted her, asked if she would sit for some photographs and her new career began. WON’T BK ‘TYPED’ That was nearly threeyeurs ago, she said, and Miss Quinn has no intention of becoming "typed" at io many U.S. models do. "I can start out as a iLJ-vcor, old In tho rriorhlng," she laughed, 'and grow old as the day goes pulling By four p. In my cheeks and am up to here In slinky gowns and diamonds." 1 Her accent, which has overtones of the English cockney has created a few problems here and there. 1 JXeumode MISSES I S-T-R-E-T-C-H ANKLETS •mall medium , lar«* 3 pairs $1.00 4- All first quality 39* Open Mon. and Fri. ^til 9 B.M. Neumode Hosiery Shop * 82 North Saginaw St. ■, / Fl$ 2*7730 To Honor Volunteers Cancer Unit Sets TO be welcomed All volunteers in the area will be welcomed by the president of the North Oakland County Unit d of Trustees, Dr. Glenn W. Bylsma; chairman of Volunteer Activities, Mrs. M. D. McLintock, unit service chairman, Mrs. H. pnwin Scott: education chairman, Mrs. , Philip Francis; and office chapman, Mrs. George McCorkle. Special tribute will be p the Unit Board of Trustee*, the volunteers who .staff tho unit office, the hundreds of womeii who sew cancer/podgy and the ywnny people who coordinate, and carry out the cancer, education, public Information, and . service programs throughout the George E. Gullen Jr;, director of labor relations, American Motors Corp., and 1963 crusade chairman for the Michigan Dancer Foundation will be guerft speaker. The barbershop quartet "The Resonairet" will 'entertain those' attending. The Michigan Cancer Founda-. tion is-an -agency oF the PtmtSc Area United Fund and carries on a complete program of cancer education and service to the cancer patients In the community. Give Thanks, Gals, (of Little Boy in Men By RUTH MILLETT But actually women should be thnnkful that there Is some of the little boy In most men. It’s what keeps them interesting. It accounts for their never-ending interest in sporls — an Interest that many of them have succeeded in getting their wives to share. Few women would go to ball games alone, go hunting or fishing or camping or boating alone. But a man often sells his wife the Idea, of doing these things and eventually she may enjoy sports as much-as her husband. AVOIDS RUT It’s the forever-young quality in man that keeps him adventure-,me enough to want new experiences and since women, by nature, aren’t nearly as venturesome as men many a married couple leads more exciting lives because the husband revises to let their life get into a rut. It’s the boyish quality In a man that keeps him forever fascinating lo a woman, Just as the girlish qualities In a woman are endearing to a man. And it's that quality of thinking young that makes a man willing to take a chance, when a woman is often too conservative to warn to risk the safe and comfortable r a chance at something bigger id bener. So let’s not feci superior lo men because they are so often “tittle boys" at heart. The very fact that Sunset Club Slates Trip Sunset Club is departing for Bob-Lo Island July 20. Infor- mation regarding the trip and dub may be obtained from Mrs. Ann Burns or during the next. meeting. The group, sponsored by the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department meets every Thursday at Stevens Hall of All Saint? Episcopal' Church, Pike and Williams streets/ from 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. It is a senior citizens' club Open to an who are 60 or more years of age. they are makes women’s lives- PERRY PHARMACY'S MEOICAL MIRROR Antiperspirants Q. ITUI you please discuss enti-perspirants and underarm sweating? f have, yet to flndf a preparation that will keep my ■ armpits dry. A. No antiperspirant is likely to . be 100 pnr a it effective. Careful studies made on one "roll-on” antiperspirant revealed some in- . teresting things. Using a very -sensitive device to measure water loss through the skin, investigators -commonly found a higher output of aweat in one armpit when both were tested in the same subject under identical and simultaneous conditions of stress and heat. -When the ‘‘roll-on” preparation was applied daily there was a lag period of several days before any antiperspirant effect was noted. On the other hand, the drying effect persisted for several days after use of the antiperspirant was discontinued. Of 13 persons who used the “roll-on" antiperspirant as directed, only 7 noted some drying, in none of the subjects tpsted was there an absolute ces* sation of underarm Sweating. However, 12 of the 13 subjects found the preparation an effective deodorant even though it had no effect, or very little effect, on the amount of sweat produced. (A edical Mirroi W hat drugs will your next pro. scription call for1 Because no one can answer this question, we carry thousanda of preacrip-lion drugs in stock so those prescribed for you will be in* stantly available. Fubllthed It A Public Service ly PERRY PHARMACY' PRESCRIPTIONS , PROFESSIONALLY PERFECT PROPERLY PRICED 1251 BALDWIN at Columbia 333-7057 689 EAST BLVD. at Parry 333-7152 Let i * Furniture completely re-bt RE-UPHOLSTEIl YOUR WORN FURNITURE while' you’re away i on vacation! using all new materials • Steel reinforced full web bottom and hand-tied aprlngs • Choice of styling • Choice of many beautify! cover fabrics • All workmanship guaranteed S years SOFA Re-upholstered 23950 CHAIR Re-upholstered as low as .... $3950 Phone today—we’ll be glad to bring fabric samples to your home, so that you may select the material and'color: that’s Just right for your room! WILLIAM WRIGHT and Upholsterers ' x . 270 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-0558 $ wpfi •>< ivorv f / vi ; V \ 18519161 rife PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, JULY1 9, IMS SEVENTEEN h Her Favorite 6 <* '! LLAWHENCE srprise A»*ji. ' Malcolm Scott Carpenter, cfatjd of the “broken home" and ebem-the high school football flop, the adolescent pilferer, drifter and etdf-confeseed “no good," :l8 my lavortte astronaut. And I herewith hatl the NASA psychologists who hAd the eoa*age and enterprise to pan him. into the elite membership of the Project Mercury team. They ire certainly members. o( nnlv Inn'” Mill to a sleazy future on the basis of share his impressions of those un* hia adolescent past. pale the “X” Of the human spirit on the pin of w' ‘ Conventional, graph-ridden, categorizing psychology would have found it a Cinch to doom Carpenter So let’s take heart, We, Americans who get SO down when our Ions.’ and daughters’ adolescent rebellions and inertias seem', to point irrevocably to adult faihn*. * He’s made quite apufeof himself, this astranaut who was the ’no-good", boy, At his poet-flight press conference, he could quietly ascribe his fuel failure to his own "impatience." But, lest .you get the Impression that be is one of those phony, to^-herqlc heroes Who ‘Always says, "It was my fault," he could as quietly correct the suggestion that his third orbit crisis was due to “confusion." SHARKS IMPRESSIONS He could take time to really Twice R Year We Hold This Amazing Sale! Outstanding Values fromOur Regular Stock Reg. Priced from $9.99 to $15.99 Casuals $090 earthly marvels of sunsets thsf rose arid fell for him atone. In the face of his Wife, its could grouse a lock of such open pride and involved, love as to make anyone Who saw it almost as sure of him as she is. And he to the father ef e Httto daughter who was able to lepfe into the siiddea and un-self-eon-sclons doses of exhausted childhood without fear of any grown, up prods and whispers of 'Wit up. That’s not the way to be- ’m sure that his fellow sp< n are sterling examples American Valor, rectitude and It’s been* said that a smashup In his ; souped-up. car was what changed the "no-good" boy into a purposeful, man. Who knows? There are many roads to Damascus — a truth that graph-worshiping psychology iowee to forget. It was | troth wed known by the groat Out G. Aung, most nverenr of all psychologista who once wrote thtot "It was Paul’s hatred of the' Christians that set him upon the road to Damascus which was to decide the whole course of his life. He was brought to this experience ring.* with conviction the course in which he was most completely mistaken.” “Oakland County's Largest Shoo Store" (jtQMjjMt ^immtK LUSTRON CHOLESTEROL WAVE WITH PURE CHOLESTEROL FOR EXTRA HAIR PROTECTION This woridsrful nsw wove actustly protects hair against dry snds and frist—whlipsr soft but so lasting. Pr«. Manlcvr. With Even IIS and U* C.ldw»»« Beauty Salon Snd Flaar ■ Op.n Mon. and Ha^You Tried This? Smooth Creamy Pie ts Mode With Sour Cream Of JANET ODELL el i*; 1 So may blessed be the courses skill, but Malcolm Scott Carpenter iit.whidi-0ttr beye and girls seem 'to be most completely mistaken. Recently we met a visitor from Fenton, 'Mrs. Carrie .Morse. She gave us her favorite' pie recipe. *.. ★ .. ★ .M. ■ Mrs. Morse is busy fixing Up, her new home. She does a lot of church work and enjoys visits with her grandchildren. SOUR CREAM PIE By Mrs. Carrie Morse i cup ground raisins 1 cup sour cream 1 cup gucar V eggs, separated (save whites for meringue) 1 teaspoon cinnamon dash of salt Yf teaspoon nutmeg % teaspoon Allspice - 9-inch unbaked pie shell MIX all tilling ingredients together and pour into pie shell. Bake at 400 degrees for 10 minutes. Reduce heat to 1 335 degrees and bake 35 min- 1 utes longer. ’ Let cool, then 1 cover with meringue. jg Make meringue with the 3 9 egg whites and € tablespoons 9 sugar. Cover cooled pie and I sprinkle with granulated su- | gar. Brown in hot oven. I Can You Answer CONTINUING i ja, mi tered down look but will be Just fluffy enough to be manageable. Constant exposure to sun tends to fade the natural, lively color of the hair. Compensate by applying a color rinse. it ★ When suntain fails to dear into the hair at the forehead and temples a pale streak or "high water mark" develops. Cover It with shaded to match t!ie plexion. Blend smoothly with cotton squares moistened with witch hazel. One last tip: If hair care seems unusually troublesome during the* summer months, why not try a abort, short do? It makes hair care a breeze and you might find It surprisingly attractive. The sheikdom of Kuwait, desert country smaller than New Jersey, is the world’s fourth largest oil producer. Its estimated annual revenue from oil is close to half a billion dollars. Photographer 518 W. Huron Street Near General Hospital FE 4-3669 - *8.90 - *10.90 HURRY IN FOR BBBT SBLECTIQNI Choose your fmritt drmy, tailored and casual stylos. PAULI’S SHOE STORE 38 nJ Saginaw Sire.‘1-Open Friday Evening, ’til l R&-; - Butte Knit We Invite you to our advance showing of new knits. There is newness in style ... In amazing resilience thbt eliminates "stretching out** and "cling resistance." Knits, so beautiful in textures that are seaionless.. . in perfect good taste for now and now on. Lefti Double Knit. , . the Surplus Cross buttoned bodice with o flair. Elegance added in the leather belt. Black, brown, beige or red. «| nr AO Sizes 10 to 16. 40«tfo Cenfen The Costume in three parts . . . varlgated trim on the' A A AO chaoel jacket, brief sleeve blouse. Grey, brown. Sizes 8 to 18. bfooIPMF tefti Double Knit Fringe Benefit In two parts... smart skirt and 30.08 crop |acket, Block only. Sizes 8 to 14. >J USE YOUR CONVENIENT CHAROS ACCOUNT Press 3alon-3»eontf Fleer ' 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY,, JULY 0,-3968 H^h-tKKN Girl May Rot Return to Russia for School NEWARK, N. J. (UP!) - Hul-dah dark. 15-year-old Negro (icbralfeftl >ho spent the put year in Russia, says financial problems may prevent her tram , returning to the Soviet Union. Chinese fooperatkwi yomitted th» familiar formula' employed up to two'or three yean, ago im-which tiie Soviet Union was hai^ra as the leader ot the eociaUat camp.,,, No program wu printed in ad* vance ot the congress opening but a Pravda editor, Nikolai Gribichev, promised Khrushchev’s personal appearance. Frpncw Gains 490,000 PARIS -^France’s population reached 46 million at the start of 1962 — 23 million women and 22 mtlltoir*inen. The 1961 increase wad 490,000—340,000 births ill excess of deaths and 150,000 immigrants in excess of emigrants. by "American imperialism. lluidah said Saturday night she would like to return to Russia after her summer vacation, but fin-uncial difficulties might keep her home. She did not elaborate. The Russian government paid her expenses last year. OPEN NI6HTS tu io pjuumo ft.M. to eJGu. Mao said that despite Taiwan's "occupation**—by U.8. military forces, Red China is for peaceful solution of disputes, adding, with* out elaboration, "We still offer the ••It is well k no wn to what lengths the reactionary press in the Mes’s lau-Lon' Knit SPORT SHIRTS Nead little or no Ironing. A**o colors. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Boys* $1.98 Value SPORT SHIRTS MimOT WEATHER APPLIANCES sfn HOT DISCOUNTS! BOUGHT AT SAVINGS!... TO BE SOLD AT SAVINGS! OUT-OF-TOWN WHOLESALER GIVES UP GIBSON UR C0RDITI0RER and REFRIRERIIRR FRWCHISE WE BOUGHT 'EM AT THEIR CLOSE-OUT PRICE! GIBSON AIR 0NE-H.P. CONDITIONERS 2-ipiid. 118-volt. I1/,-amp. Just plug in. Expend-a-meunt included. Famous Gibson Slumber Matter. Cools Beautiful cabinet. Quiet operating. New in original factory crate*. d be selling ter $1M,M. OUR PRICE *137“ Gibson Giant 14 S: 2-DOOR REFRIGERATOR New 1962 model. FraaMiie refrigerator with live Mparol* Inter*'. Magnet door. Other conv*ni*nco looluro*. Now in originol factory crate*. t refrigerator ta be sailing for much OUR PRICE GIBSON DEHUMIDIFIERS WITH BUILT-IN HUMIDISTAT New 1962 model. Portable with roll-around cotter*. Remove* 3 Mi gal*, water daily. Powerful 14,000 cu. ft. capacity. Include* built-in pan. New in original factory carton*. OUR PRICE ig tor 009,00, *63 GIANT PORTABLE 2-SPEED FANS Giant 16" size. 2-epaad. With SALE SUSS ELECTRIC SPIT 24" B.B.O. 6-TRANSISTOR POCKET RADIO Cany cote, aarphon*, 'phono cat#, HERE'S THE FABULOUS IMPERIAL MARK XII AT A LOW SALE PRICE! COMPLETELY AUTOMATIC WASHER 2-SFEEDS! 11-CVCLES! Loweii Price Ever . . . and Packed with Automatic Faatwrat Galore. Safeit, Mott Powerful Wathing Action Everl.... Water-Saver Control, Magic-Mi* Dispenser Filter, Automatic Bleach Blender. Fully Illuminated Tap and Ovar a Doien Mora Outstanding Feature*. Model HA-91. Sale-Priced with Trado. 90 Free 0# livery, ff test edition, Jr! leryie# end , 249 WhbgV TMMITiL ZENITH QUALITY TV AT ALL-TIME LOW PRICE NEW 1962 19” TV PORTABLE •Tap Zenith feature* in thi* anal Sound-oul front tpeaker. Now band twitch tuner. Built* crafted tervlce-taver chaiti*. 18,000 volt picture power. 172 Sq. In. picture area No money down, 3 year* to pay. $149 NO MONEY DOWN NEW1962 MODEL PRICE BREAK! DANISH MODERN 23” DECORATOR LOWBOY TV EXACTLY AS ILLUSTRATED ORDER BY PHONE NO MONEY DOWN BElixahffft L«k# HA, Corner Telnrapfj N«xt Door to J. L. Hudson Co. NO MONEY DOWN 3 YEARS T9 PAY 100% SATISFACTION DUARANTEKO or MONEY BACK 100% tncri r.oe. it*™ hurt wiera rrt* Miv*ry ti imPMitd Reg DECK 167 SHORTS .. ■ .1 GIRLS’ SWIM SUITS .. BOYS’ BERK PANTS PLASTIC BAT and BAI±—49C RAIL and SHOVEL . Load* of fun at th« beach PLASTIC WAGON . Sr. . . 66< SUB-SCOPE 1 2 Sealer \ GLIDER A 16“ 1 FOLDING 169 \ DECK CHAIR 1 ALL FOAM CHAIR 297 TlCUSHION 4"1PATI0 ITARI E Attractive 1IHDLC finish 1*7 2 MAN POLY FOAM SNORKLE MASK • Will held the weight of two men VINYL AIR MATTRESS 0 Bright color* 1” • ARMY TYPE FOLDING COT • Sturdy malarial ALL METAL TACKLE BOX 0 All motel «• VINYL BEACHBALL • Urge .; Mike ■• w '4*98 Volt SWIM MASKS • Unbraak-able face .plate ,r I THE PONTIAC PRESS NINETfifcft PONTIAC, MICHIGAN V MONDAY JUtY 1082 Have Old-Time Informality 3 Small-Town Banks Left in County By JIM DYGERT If you figure thedaysrare gone forever, when you and the bank prwilrfent weixi.-firoMwmg~Triends ' and making If deposit was only an -4weu8ftc4^^tereept--the^atest sip, you’re just not living in the right town. The right town would be Oxford, Clarittton. or Souih.Lyom. -★ ★ • # They are the only three towns in Oakland County^where you can escape the blandneis 13 OTsp fieW drive-in branch offices and,savor ^the taste of banking still flavored by that old-time home-town informality. , ’ bank’s comparatively young management, Pickford is 44. Oxford bank moved to its present location in 1922. A steadily.Increasing business may force expansion of the building or construction of A new1 one. OXFORD — The Oxford Savings Bank is Oakland County’s oldest bank as well as one of three left in the county .that are locally and independently owned. Established in 1884, the BANKj sane and attractive purchase offers. Harold A. Pickford, the bank’s executive vice president and cashier, says: ; “The directors feel we can give better sendee to the community than a larger bank. We believe in a small-town independent bank and we’re sold on OJdtord." CITES MANAGEMENT Another reason put forward by Pickford, who has charge of day-to-day bankihg operations, is the Eye Club Week ;A n n v a I MSU Pa rley Expected to Draw 1,200 From Throughout State Some 30 county 4-H’ers left today for East Lansing to take part in the 44th annual Michigan 4-H Club, Week on the Michigan State tMVBllltjt,»fWp|f,»S. ■ -. An international flavor has been added to this year’s program which is expected to draw about 1,200 youths and leaders from all oyer, die state. County delegations will split Into SO groups, each representing a foreign nation. Each group will be advised by an International Farm Youth Exchange delegate who It either has visited there as an IFYE. 'The club members will then elect their own prime ministers and ambassadors. ,. Themg of4he event is “Strength to Tead—Faith to Follow.” WWW This year for the first time, series of classes will aid Club Week participants deyelop 17 kinds of skills, varying from social dancing to news writing. One session deals with the Peace Corps, Its Job and scope and what It has to otter a young of three suggested by Robert I* Jones, 48-yeartold executive vloo president ~«ntf - cashier ” ol^e Clarkston State Bank, why many local banks have been absorbed Into chains headquartered In Detroit, _Royil Oak, Pontiac and TOnJ,..• ■ ‘ Jones’ explanations are agink management that fails to groom younger men to succeed it, a large loan demand and pressure from the larger banks in the form , of tempting offers to stockholders. ★ 4r ‘if.......... Though Jones won’t .predict his bank will never Join a chain, >he reports the directors “ thinking of it now.’"tHe lists the advantages of a small-town independent bank as better service and the dose friendship and knowledge of depoidtors.i " t.. Both the Oxford and Clarkston banks have, turned down offers from larger banks. Neither would be eligible. In any case, to Join a Detroit chain,; as state, law prohibits a branch more than 88 miles from Its home office. The same is true for the Slate Savings Bank of South Lyon in the opposite corner of the epupty. Executive vice president- of the South Lyon Bank. R. H/Orr, 62. is older than Pickford Aha Jones but no less energetic, Orr agrees independent bank can give a small town better service. The main reason for mergi Not only are the three batiks the county’s only remaining smalltown independents, they are also the oldest., Oldest of all is the Oxford Savings bank, It was chartered with the state in 1884, taking over from G. S. Holbert’s private bank-started two years earlier. The bank’s first president was William J. Tunstead, over whose still in itr same location, celebrated its 100th anniversary in Jurte. MOVED AROUND 1912 About 1912, the bank moved Paydays also are crowded at the Clarkston State Bank, the third oldest; whereitwpbuttch ing expansions have taken place sTHcI the bank was chartered -in 1913 by a group of local businessmen unhappy with their banking predicament. A private bank In town had closed bi 1912 and the businessmen were taking turns at making daily trips over Jarring roads into Pontiac to bring back change for local stores. After a year of this irk- hardware gtorethehank was first] some routine, they decided a local located and whose son, George, 88, is now president. The hardware, The bank, still at its original location' at iS S. Main Stl; was Enlarged by an- addition in 1935 and by Another in 1955 when the main building also was modernized. Second oldest bank in the county, the State Savings Bank of South Lyon^- was-organized in 1905 by— local business men and beg^n operations in the building now oc* • cunied-by-Race’a t3wmBr»r~ NEW BUILDING IN W About i920,"lt movtST to A" new building a few feet , away at the corner of Lafayette Street and 10-Mile Road, its present location. Herbert Letchfield was the bank’s first president. Harry J. Long is Serving parts of four counties, the bank was remodeled about 19 years ago in the midst of a steady growth experienced since Orr Joined the--bank’s staff -IS years ago. The bank had resources of tl,A-m!!iion then, and they now total about il-mllllon. | With more than $6.5 million in resources juthe Clarkston State bank was a must. FIRST CASHIER First cashierr R._ST. Acheson, was a retired railroad paymaster 1 without bankihg experience. On aooui m2, tne umia movcu opening day, a Friday, he tossed r. —. -rrr——— to the present location of Stub’s deposits into a garbage cap bought (Bank and almost $6 million at Barber Shop and in 1922 to where 'at'A local hardware;- He and some Oxford Savings Bank, the three - tt now stands on the northwest banker friends straightened things banks appear well set to remain comer of Washington, and Burdick ou* over the weekend, streets, I Acheron was cashier and Guy ; Just as the bank has had three a. Walter , president wifil 1814 locations during its H years, it also when George King came from has had only three cashiers — Detroit to assume both tasks. Un-Clarence E. Stanton until his death til bis death In 1947, rite bank In *1921, then Frank . Olive, until was known as “George King’s 1 1948, then Pickford, | bank.” In 1947, Waller resumed A clock on the wall of (be the presidency, i Independently strong for as long as thOy wish. . ; Perhaps, if bank chain branches rer completely—automate their drive-in windows with pushbuttons entirely lacking in the art of conversation, the county may witness great migrations to Oxford, Clarkston and South Lyon. , SOUTH LYON — Serving parts of four counties — Oakland, Wayne, Washtenaw and Livingston — for 57 years, the State Savings Bank of South Lyon is Oakland County's second oldest bank. It has. been subjected to loss pressure to merge with banking chains than the county’s other two small-towp banks that have remained independent. MARKSTON — Third oldest bunk in the country, the locally owned Clarkston State Bank will celebrate its 50th anniversary next year. Though the bank looks dfiferent from lf*r original home because of expansions in 1935 and 1955 and a remodeling in.. 1955, it's still in the same place. It was begun in 1913 by a group of businessmen who were fed up withUavellrig rough rouds to Pontiac banks every day. In another feature MSU staff members will discuss more than 30~careers, the opportunities and the training required. AMERICAN HERITAGE Rev. Robert Richards of Dundee MM speak on American heritage. Mm. Polly Johnson, originator of a ^Monthly magazine feature “Dear PjHjr,’’ .will discuss boy-girl relations. Three adult leaders accompanies by the Oakland County group. They are Mr. and Mrs. Warren Trevethan of Rochester and Mrs. Violet Sherwood of Walled Lake. 300 Picnickers in Riot at Shelby Township Park SHELBY TOWNSHIP—A spilled soft drink touched off a among 300 picnickers that finely quelled by 11 police cars from six police departments here yesterday. Three of the picnicker: Williams-Uloth Vows Told Wed in Ortonville ORTONVILLE — The summer wedding of Kay Ann Uloth and Louis A- Williams was solemnized recently at the Ortonville Baptist Church with Rev. Perry DeYar-mond of Edmore officiating. ★ * A Parents of the bride fire Mr. and Mrs. Everett J. Uloth, 178 South St. The. bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Lee Petoskey, Ml The bride wore a floor-length sheath of white organta over taffeta. It was fashioned with short sleeves, Sabrina neckline appll-qued With ro-embroldered Alen con laee sprinkled with seed pearls,, and a detachable overskirt that swept Into n chapel train. An orange blossom crown tipped with, seed pearls held her bouffant veil of silk illusion. She carried bouquet of stephnnotis, centered with white orchids, on a white Bible. Carol Uloth attended her sister as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Virginia Williams, sister of the bridegroom, Judy Whyte of Grand Blanc and Judy Sedlar of Chcsaning. The bridegroom was assisted by Ted Klinger ns best man. Ushers were James Ware. John Uloth, brother of the bride, and Jack Mattery of Month Bend, Ind. Flower girl was Beth Matcoux, cousin of the bride, with John Petoskey -of Lansing serving as ring bearer. A reception was held in the church bast&nent immediately following \he rites.-After a honeymoon in Northern Michigan, the couple will make their home in Ortonville.’ • ■ Am vet-sponsored outing at Green Glen Park. 49099 Ryan Road, were awaiting arraignment -in Macomb County Justice Court today In Macomb County Jail. william Kudina, 29. his Wife, Rose, 21, of Detroit, and Melvin Koliba, -24, of Haun tramck, were charged with disorderly conduct. They were hauled off to Jail by - Macomb County Sheriffdeputies late yesterday afternoon after a melee in which two special deputies assigned to the p|rk, George Karchner, 40, of Roseville, and Desmond Bishop, 40, of Chesterfield Township,, suffered minor Injuries and torn clothing. HELP SUBDUE RIOTERS Police from Romeo and Center Line state police posts. Shelby Township. Utica and Warren helped subdue scores of picnickers who started the riot when Karchner and Bishop attempted to ar-•est Mrs. Kuchna. Deputies Marvin Sauger and Duane JJeitoll helped the two special deputies finally subdue the three. It all started, according to sheriff's deputies, when Karchner, restrained Kucluia from striking the father of an uni-denuded 16-year-old girl who had spilled a soft drink on Mre. Kudina and naked him to take hit wife from the dance pavilion. Mr*. Kuchna broke away and when deputies caught her and had her handcuffed in a patrol car, Koliba intervened and let her Out. Kuchna and Koliba si ruck deputies and koliba was hit in the ensuing scuffle. Mrs. Kuchna finally .recaptured and handcuffed hands and feet. The picnic was sponsored by the Amvets J. A. Cougler Post No. 49 of Detroit. ^ ;r- > Pontiac Tempest SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER IN METROPOLITAN' PONTIAC FOR NfW-ACTING USED CARS, TOO. PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RiTAII STORK ( Control Motors Corporation 5 Mi. Chaions, Pontiac, Mich ■ JACK W. NAIIPT PONTIAC SALES SERVICE N. MAIN ITRirr ' CLARKSTON, MICH. KEEGO SALES and RUSS JOHNSON HOMER NI0HT SHILTON * SERVICE* INC MOTOR SALES MOTORS, NIC PONTIAC-IUICK, INC 3080 ORCHARD LAKI RD. 69 BROADWAY. (M-241 100 S. WASHINGTON 221 MAIN STRUT KIIOO HARBOR, MICH. LAKI ORION, MICH. OXFORD, MICH. ROCHESTIR. MICH, ' \ ■■■ PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY., JUX.Y 9, 1»6* Litterbears Park Rangers at Yellowstone t YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. HI — What Yellow-Mom National Perk needs is not a good five-eent-dgar — but a btarprouf garbage can. ^ Oldest Wood House in U. 5. NearBoston Two Women Talk Casualty; ' They're Sisters TOPEKA, Kan. »— Mrs. Frank Turner, .Topeka, and MrU. Lula Towles, Los Angeles,, struck up a casual eonstmtim at thp Topeka Off-Sided Vision CHICAGO Although {or Crazy Stunts This Scheming Duck Finds Hitchhiking Easy ST. PETERSBURG, $&&& Mrs; Lora P. Davis was adopted by shHcfchlkhg daeft . T r She was driving In heavy traffic when she saw the' duck on the person had identified a picture presented on his right, he remained unable to identify a picture pm- BRAKE * Check, adjust, feat brakes * Repack (rent wheel bearings * Check, alien front end * Adjust steering * Balance front wheels ?95 PAY AS YOU RIDE cm Itaoli Steak SaL blue Ribbon farms Order Blade Chuck Cut Swiss Steaks Whole Center Slices Round! Steaks 59t 79! TsbloTrimmed Tender-— 9 Cube or Rib Steaks 89t Naturally Tender Beef SaL Naturally Tender, Table Trimmed Chock Roasts Center Blade Cuts 49! Fresh Lake Smelts Men effective ffcre Testdsy, July 10. ITe reienre fie rlfkt fe limit feeefMss. Save on These Outstanding ^Coffee'=- 59* sfSpry SPECIAL LABEL 3-lb. 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I, ' weakly PAY AS YOU RIDE EAR SERVICE STORE 50S.Com FE 5-6723 TvT1 WC' x 7 THl/PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 0, 1962 Will Have Problems MIDDLEBURG, !,Va. (AP)- Wrs. Paul Entenman of New York City wifi find out that moving in after a president can bring prob- “pK-1 ''' "*• ' ' *-------- Voice Guides Law to Death Scene * But subletting the Glen Ora estate here from President and Mrs. Itsnnedy, Mrs Entenman gained K of dm house,, the, furnishings, front grounds, the swimming pool and the guest house adjoin- inherited guards' But she also inherited -the security restrictions that surrounded Wf estate in the hunt country sec* tjkin of Virginia when the Ken* hedys visited. They will continue, it was reported, as a protection to^the presidents-personal property as well as for the varied Equipment which the government has on the grounds. ALEXANDRIA, Va.' (AP)-"Op- erator, nanfrrm^elp Will yoldwife 4wd been wounded by a slug that pierced her left cheek and lodged in the left side of her head. She was taken to Alexandria Hospital where she told police that she and her husband had gotten up about 4 a.m. for a cup, of coffee .when Cottman complained he was unable to sleep. Mrs. Cottman said she left him downstairs, returned to the bed? room and fell asleep. “I just don’t know what . happened,” police quoted her as saying. The double shooting apparently took place as the two children slept In a nearby bedroom, police said. An investigation disclosed powder burns on Cottman’s hands SHd about die wound In his temple. Cottman was a veteran of 30 years in the -securities business. His film is a member of the New York Stock Exchange. JERSEY CITY, N. J. (l) --Cam-ty and city authorities meet today to map legal steps aimed , at ” ing bookmaker Joseph (Newsboy) Moriarty to a J2.6-million fortune uncovered in two garages last week. Police Chief Austin J. Conley scheduled a conference with Hudson County Prosecutor Lawrence Whipple and Police Director WiUlam McLaughlin to decide on a course of action before a Hudson County grand jury tomorrow. Conley said the grand Jury will be asked to Indict toe Imprisoned Moriarty for various gam- Two carpenters stumbled on $2, 421,840 in cash in the trunk of abandoned automobile | Tuesday. HOFFMAN’S MKT. 526 N. Perry St. Open 9 to 6 Daily—9 to 9 Friday We reserve right to limit quantities Expect Hot , Floor Fight in House Jersey City, County Officials Seeking to indict Bookmaker WASHINGTON (UPI)-A strong defense by Secretary.. oL-Dean Rusk for continued U.S. aid to Yugoslavia was.made public to* day qfi the House began debate the foreign aid bill, ji A hot floor fight was expected on the whole issue of American assistance to Communist nations. Authorities sky they are tain all the money found thus for belongs to the B-year-old Moriarty, now serving a 2-to-s-year sentence in Trenton state prison tor possession of lottery Meanwhile, toe search for more money goes onh. ~ fed/’ Connley said, “U’l tain more will turn up eventually. He (Moriarty) has been in operation for 20 to 30 years and he must have saved more than we’ uncovered.” Moriarty has refused to confirm or deny ownership of money. Air Crash Victim Is Identified as German Duchess MECKLENBURG, Germany Wl — A woman killed in a plane crash near here Saturday was identified today as the British-born Duchess Helena of Mecklenburg.’ The police commissioner Muenster said a report Sunday that the crash victim was a Princess of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen was wrong. The false idntilica-tion came from local police. The duchess, 38, was flying from her summer home at Hempen on the Island of Sylt in the North Sea to Duesseldopf to join her husband. She wag the only passenger in a two-engine plane chartered from Air* Lloyd, a German plane rental firm. The pilot of the plane also killed- /Mfarm and nrsara are buying Otdmnrtabllm Disclose Rusk Defense committee has-approved, a foreign ^1 iiiillmiliHlIim hill Inliillim 668,500,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30,1963. This is 2210 million less than what Kennedy want-bdv. Further cuts may be voted on the floor.- ^ The Senate already has adopted an amendment to the foreign aid Mil that would allow, only the shipment of surplus foods to Yugoslavia and Poland. But Rep. Bob Casey, D-Tex., -plana to lead a fight to cut off all aid entirely,--- Rusk, in hitherto secret testimony released by a House appropriations subcommittee, said he believed it was "important” for the United States to help Yugoslavia. "It is quite true that Yugoslavia is a Communist country,” he said, "but we do not believe Yugoslavia is working hand in glove with the rest of the Communist Bloc in a conspiratorial design aimed at the overthrow of governments all over the world.1 The House Foreign Affairs sub- Rusk said in the appropriations testimony that it was tins defection of Yugoslavia from toe Sovief Bloc that opened the way for saving Greece from Communist-led guerrillas in the late 1940’s. The guerrillas had been supplied and trained in Yugoslavia until the split, he said. Rusk said a "very substantial part” of Yugoslavia’s trade Is now with the W«fnt. He said it Is less than SO per cent with the Soviet Bloc. "Even though at times they may not say things or do things that we like or that we find helpful, Rusk said,. "The fact that they are independment is a matter of some concern to us. Our judgment is that they are.” Rusk said the alternative to this policy would be to “drive Yugoslavia toward the bloc.” • NOT HELPFUL’ "We do not believe that would be of interest to the free-world,” . said. ‘‘lt^would nat he helpful h for a member of the bloc to be on toe bordera of Austria, Italy and Greece.”. Rusk said there have been Important matters on wMeli Yugoslavia has departed from toe attitude of Moscow.' "They were the first,’fori ex-aple,” he said, "to resist and in their own case destroy the idea that Moscow was supreme within the Communist parties, "They have resisted Moscow’s . proposals for troika arrangements 'which would have destroyed the office of secretary general .Of the United Nations and Indeed the organization itself. _ _____ They have worked with the great, members the difficult question of financing the UnitedNatlons — again contrary to toe Soviet position— and on questions of nuclear testing, they have indicated that they have not agreed with the Soviet Union.” YHI 1 CAN ENJOY BETTER HEALTH I Ul aJU YES, os « safe, effsetlve remedy cad toafo, tenulae O-JIB-WA BITTIRS Is without equel anywhere Is the world. SotMod customers daring the past 47 years oeaHoeally ~fS5l miBs thoy'war shell tor. 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Soviet authorities were afraid he'd turn young Russians into real cats who might get out of control. ‘READ ABOUT BIOTS’ "They had read about riots caused by rock "n roll and I don’t . think they wanted any of that,” Goodman said. ‘‘Strangely enough SELL-OUT CROWD But a sell-out crowd turned out J Lenin Sports Palace for hie windup and called the band back for 20 minutes of encores. Ja^M!wSr& f . . • < n. a_a linfAWinl slice Attaint! flsWllTMlfl ttV I was In accord with the Russians. That was the last thing I wanted-1 wanted applause from the audience — that was all I wanted." Speaking at a farewell luncheon for Western correspondents. Goodman disclosed that both American and Soviet authorities had been apprehensive about the tour which was bank-rolled by the U. S. government as a goodwill gesture. The four struck a snag that delayed Sunday night’s final concert 20 minutes when members of the band demanded to be paid off before going on. Ibere was no explanation for the delay in handing out the payeheeks. Negro trumpeter Joe Wilder of New York sat out the concert in protest against a deduction in his The rest frequently went to great trouble to show their enthusiasip the visitors from America. Some had difficulty with the po-lice. Leningrad and far-away Tashkent. An estimated 100,000 persons heard the band and moat of them applauded entoualM!^^ were exceptions, but mafty ottheae were older people or Communist ■at on their bands. first rate. $JU, the toOr considered it a successful contribution to the improvement of Soviet-Amertcan relations. . Hie U. S. Embassy stoo indicated it was satisfied with the tour. internal dissension. Goodman pro-ferred older tunes, while the band wanted hot, modern stuff. leading the band — sometimes pro- body who thinks his job H tough should consider, that of a mtn responsible for setting up a -new chemical plant. The applause would have been The embaeay’e cultural officer, even greater if (he band bad hot ~ — - Goodman and the band were flying to the West today. Most mem- plus Goodman’s casual mauner of Goodman was plsinning a brief holiday in England. Hard JobSetitog Up™®*"**® NewJMcaiWI^,^ Fido's Flakes tor Humans Robert N. Stapleton, training director of a large chemicals company. fold a recent meeting of the J “ Institute of Chemical ____ _____ that his duties in start- lng a new company plant At Torrance, Calif., included: "Juggler schedules, builder of blackboards, consultant, purchasing going to New York but agent, janitor and laborer,, working 12 to 16 hours' a day -or midnights.” MINNEAPOLIS (UP1) - If yoipr dog is hungry In the thorn-lng, don’t force him to eat a messy old (teak bone, invite him to join you in a nourishing bowl of cereal. sM, . A Minneapolis company has developed a new infrared toasted com Md wheat flake especially for dogs. It Is to provide If your favorite cereal runs out, pour some of Mdo^g In fpKI "With a little sugar. and .cream, you’ve got some pretty Victoria Celebrates With Trading Dollar flakes may lie- the torenwsier of a similar cereal product for VICTORIA, R..C.«UiTie. CSUtfS■ • . of golden "trading dollars” can 1m Oporata on Princess for Romoval'of Tonsils LONDON (AP)~Princess Alex-andra, 25, underwent an operation today for the removal of septic tonsils, - r ' ',"ij '■,;{<* >*,**- ^ An announcement from Kensington Palace said her royal highness’ condition was "very satisfactory.’’ Alexandra la the queen’s first cousin. g* guiueil UBUMH WWW" ;:***‘y heard as Victoria celebrate* 1t» centennial. \ ■■ 'A *■ W. ★ Produced by a Victoria service club, the gold pieces cost $1 each. They can be spent at local stores. JR * >. ,w ■ Made of jewelers’ bronze, the coins ate the size of the Canadian silver dollar. , - tjjj** The front shows the bastion of old Fort Victoria and foe words "City Of Victoria Centennial, 1862-11962." The reverse shows the dpg-. wood, the service dub's emblem and the statement that this is a souvenir coin. Blasts C. of C. on Tax . Cutback Sen. Byrd Calls Stand on Proposal Dangerous and Panicky WASHINGTON (UPD Harry F. Byrd, a former member of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Board, has publicly broken with, the organization, terming its call for a tax cut “dangerous and panicky.’1 ★ * Byrd, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, yesterday questioned whether the chamber's stand on the fox cut had the back, lng of the membership. la a latter to Presides! H. Ladd Plunder, Byrd said he was Inviting state chamber* of commerce "to comment” on the Byrd, a long time budget watchdog, said the chamber's call for an immediate fox .cut in the upper and middle income brackets would cost the government 19.5 billion in revenues annually. He termed the proposal "fiscally irresponsible in the highest degree," “It Is a matter of enormous importance," Byrd said, “when policies of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which have stood for a half century, are laid aside and fiscal irresponsibility on the part of the federal government is advocated.” He formed the tax « Icky.” Plumley denied Byrd’s charge. In a weekend letter to Byrd, anticipating the release of Byid’s letter, Plumley said a tax cut was a necessary first step toward Improving the economy. Cheer Underground When Tunnels Meet GRAND ST. BERNARD PASS, Italy (UPD — Swiss and Italian iRinero shook hands, cheered and drankwine toasts to each other recently when a dynamite charge blasted out the final link of a 3H-mile tunnel under the Alps. The Swtsa and Italians had been working tor 47 months from opposite sI4m of towering Mont The |16 million tunnel, when completed next year, will eliminate miles of winding, often-snowy mountain roads from the Roma to Paris route. The Road Was Clear but Driveways Weren't LINCOLN, IB. IB - Shirley E. Gomick backed out of the drive at her home onto the street. So dU Charles E. Routson, who lives acroee the street. aged, no one u Injured. Great Salt Lake waters are said i be seven times more salty In the* the oceans.— IHERRIFF-flOlLIH 00. firSiSKP* 7 "RW To liny Thm* IXClUSIVf DISTRIBUTORS SHIMHFF-OOSUN CO. MS.eass UkS RA, torilM FII4SSI Mm. Kroger lowers food cost... gives Top Value Stamps too! 50 EXTRA STAMPS WITH COUPON-HYGRADTS Canned Picnics WITH RIS ATTACHED CHICKEN BREASTS 551 FRESH B0ST0M BUTT PORK ROAST 39 LB. U.S. Gov't. Graded Choice Tendcray ROUND! steam WITH BACK PORTION - —e WOF «««-» ^ ..;. 1 - . .—I------- .. CHICKEN LEGS .... .. 45 RANCH BACON 0 ^ ^ 2 ^ko. 99c I BORDEN S ELSIE! CMIANCBSp CMSRHY ORAME CHR LIA^S KW9CK KRISP THICK SUCID i TWIN POPS or FUDGEES SAVE"9« ON 2—BORDEN'S PLAIN CREAM CHEESE ......«IO SAVE 10C-BORDEN'S CREAMED COnAGE CHEESE ... 39 12 39! WITH THIS COUPON Coupon valid at Kroger In Pontiac Mali. Pontiac Parry St., Drayton Plain*, Union Lake, Miracle Mile and Oxford through Tuesday, July 10, 1962. _ Limit On* Coupon pet fouill) KROGER HALVES FREESTONE PEACHES gjp •sr 4-sfOO 2-1/2 CANS JUMBO 27 SIZE—SWEET WESTERN CANTALOUPES - 3 79c WITH THIS COUPON—SPOTLIGHT INSTANT COFFEE io-oz'“*r WW SAVE 30c Coupon valid at Krogor in Pontiac Mall. Pontiac Perry St., Drayton Plaint, Union Lako, Miracle Mile and Oxford through Tuesday, July 10, 1962. limit Ol Ons Coupon per fi WITH THIS COUPON NDU DETERGENT SAVE 20* Coupon valid at Krogor In Pontiac Mall, Pontiac Parry St.. Drayton Plaint, Union Lako, Miracfo Milo and Oxford through Tuotday, July 10, 1962. Limit Ono Coupon per fondly. - u.s. no. i NEW WHITE POTATOES 10.-69 WALDORF TISSUE KROGER FRESH SUCID CRACKED WHEAT BREAD I Coupon valid at Krogsr In Pontiac Mall, Pontiac Perry St., Drayton Plaint, | Union Lake, Miracfo Mile and Oxford through Tuotday, July 10, 1962. Limit Ono Coupon por family......... 17 SAVE 6f 'EksasrZ plus 30® YOUR BOOKUT . irs&aSss-sss-!; I1 rtH. <«r-" 1, so «x«A,W ^JlroSro Wro- , I ■ of 4S-<» JJ« OFF IAMI—SAVt IS* RINSO BLUE KINO sin FtNN DUTCH PUCK AND STIMS MUSHROOMS 5a 8* £*1 50 EXTRA STAMPS WITH COUPON AVONDALE mu CORN or GREEN BEANS 10 69 50 Extra ! T 50 JXTRA h-m Top value I TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH COUPON AND PURCHAS! OF $1,00 OR MORE OF ADVERTISED |AVONDALE ITEMS IChm* vaNS *1 Kr*s*r In Pmii** Mail, PmIIm Parry^ St., Draylro Plain*, Unlro lilt, Klr*«l« Mil* MS Oibrl thr* S*t*rc*y, _ e Pf"1-- %/AllUf ' U ------- We roserro the right to MsN, Pontiac Perry St., Tuasdsy, July 10, 1962. AVONDALE PEAS OR TOMATOES SAVE % I UP TO 23* f 303 CANS I 50 Extra Stamps | 50 Extra v'^. Stamps _ WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF . WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHA5S OF I 2 IBS. Silt SIZI STEW SERF OR 3 LtS. I KROGER CHERRY CRUSH ! GROUND BEEF | LAYER CAKE 50 Extra SStamps ■ 50 Extra vMui Stamps 0 FURCHAl/oF I WITH THIS COUFON AND FURCHASI B I VALUE « WITH THIS COUFON ANO FURCHASI" OF ■ 0e 3-lS. CAN HYORAMTS ■ MCTFKfS. MOORR SANOWICH OR limit eusntitiot. Prlcot and Itom* sffoctlre at Kroear In Fontlas Drayton Plain*. Union Lako, Miracfo Mil* Snd Oxford through Sgi dt' ■ p ppp '/■ 1 THig, frbNTLAC PKKSS, MONDAY, Jt%V 9, im II ,1;f European Industry M&rs ffiefeaf* Hfe/f ROME — AH roads lead here, is some pcoentric with a bad map once observed, and most of them are clogged with Flats, It General Motors, Ford, Chrysler or Rambler had as much of a lock oh the Up market aa Flat has on Italy’s, Bobby Kennedy would be alerted and Immediately deploy his Sherman Act task force. flats, a proud name la the tiflfeel trade, come la slses ranging tram the soo, which |s about the slw of the excavation your diagonal bathtub, all the %iy up to massive trailer fntoka and electric-cable municipal bases. The company is a major contributor. to the "Italian Miracle," the industrial renaissance which is one of Hie envies of the Western Americans who vigorously bombed Fist «»d Knipp ptantl during World War II now regard with wonder the comeback of firms that were leveled by B17s and ■ole owner of Ida Industrial colossus and probably the richest man hi the world, another year to dispose of Ms stool plant •* which made half a Milton del-inn hut year, The terms of the unusual agreement signed after hi* release trom prison as a war criminal require that he be given a "fair" price mr that holding, NOBODY CAN PAY Nobody, nor company, apparently can afford to get up a sufficient tertWinds Delays N-Blast Low-Yield Test Placed on 24-Hour Weather Hold in 3rd Cancellation NfcVADA TEST SITE (UPD-A low-yield atmospheric nuclear test was on a 24-hour weather hold —today after desert winds forced the third cancellation of the shot. The firing, described as aa atmospheric test- to nnalyee an-clear explosions, was postponed by' the Atomic Energy Commission and the Del nlent and rcschedi morrow. However, adverse wind conditions could delsy I further. The test originally was scheduled for Saturday along with another shot that was the first above- , ground nuclear explosion over tl continental United- States since the * world powers placed a moratorium | on atomic testing five years * * A * Four military tanks seen mov-1 ing into the test area Saturday, gave rise to speculation that troops ] arid armored vehicles would par-1 tk ipate in mock war maneuvers j on this test site in connection with j the nuclear tests sometime i week. Saturday’s atmospheric shot, triggered a few feet off the desert j floor, followed a below-ground 1 blast Friday that sent a towering I dust cloud thousands of feet Into * the Ay. Former Prisoner Walks 300 Miles to Finish Term NASHVILLE, Tenn. UK — A man j says he walked almost 300 miles j -to-retumto^NashvIlleand-ip r___ a nine-month workhouse term Tie began 31 years ago. ★ t ★ ★ "This was something I knew I had to do," Roy Elmer Miller, 53, said yesterday. "I got tired of look- l ing behind me for a policeman I and that tap on the shoulder that I never came."■ Miller said he left St. Louis ("I don't have an address’’) about s week ago and wnllted nil but about 1* of the MS miles. He said he was sentenced to a 1 road gang in 1930 for stealing a j truck. He had served about five | months when he was handed a w ter bucket one day and sent to a spring...~~rr—” • dr dr .’’I just kept on walking," Miller J said.1 "I’ve been walking ever * since. I’ve just been on the bum.” Why return now? ★ Or it "I {figure when I get out 111 1 have ja clear conscience and maybe ! I caii start over and make some- j thing- of myself yet," he replied. Water Helps to Start Fire- In Seat of Auto WELLINGTON, Kan. IB- Water helped start a fire In a car here. Firemen said the seat In r ear owned by John ADMIT was let afire by rays of the sun shining through water in a glass bottle on the seat. Only about 9 per cent of the world's total lend area is really cultivated; according to United Nations surveys. Of this amount much ot it lies within the United Mates. ■ he was sprung and-began to pick up the pieces tt" Ml I Hat, bunding from almost , ao-thing, constructed plant* that of air hallowed ear ims in South Rhodesia, Ghana, Sudan, and Iran. . .. It has* hand In the industrial modernisation of Paraguay, East Pakistan, Brasil, Mexico, Leba- bf Pompeii. It goeS far Jbeyoml oars, trucks and buses. . . Fiat buildr tractors, earth-movers, planes, electrical equipment, locomotives, railroad curs, diesel engines, aircraft parts, highways and housing projects. JK, jkh , F' -. T It tunneling under the Great it. Bernard Paw, constructing co- and Morocco. Tt has a car assembly -plant In New Zealand, makes refrigerators and machine tools, operates service stations along Italy’s expanding autostradas. It is helping in the construction of a 50,000-ton nuclear-powered SUPERSONIC FI MS builds supersonic Lockheed FlOfo oh .license, helps build , the French Caravelle and General Electric's JTO jet engine. NATO nations buy Its G91 subsonic jet fighter plane, which is able to take oft from and land and fields. sought vertical take-off and land-‘ (VTOL) add has sub- lagfighter < milted plans for an exotic s-englned one-man tighter that will climb" straight up from Us pad, level off and bolt onward to twice the speed of sound. -Prof. Giuseppe Gahrielli, Fiat’s' aviation division director, put the matter of VTOjL in Sharp focus recently. ; * ' ■dr "The most Immediate and challenging problem that science and technology are tackling today Is that of vertical takeoff and land-tog,’* he told a research group. “Hds problem Is just as complex as that of mechanical flight some M years agot. . -. the reaH-ssttoa of VTOL Is of remarkable semiprepared terrains without any need tor costly atikl vulnerably runways. Connections with out-of-ihe-way areas will thus be facilitated. “Through this Innovation, operations will be possible from limited, 'Fiat has directed its efforts find ways and means of reducing take-off run, devising a compounded motor-propelling system through which a conventional plane can take off apu land within tody approximately 200 meters." Win or lose on this particular NATO bid. Fiat, like so many otb-industrial complexes on the Continent, is thriving a great deal better than a number of those of the conquering nation. Gun Fan Can't Find His Version of Bible ________fflS ® — A gito fancies’ walked : into if bookstore here and asked the woman clerk if she had a copy of “The Shooter’s Bible.’’ ./ dr ,dr Sr— 'Why, no; sir,” she said cheer-ily, "but we do have the King James and the Revised Standard." SJSg S»!S.AiS”wUwffi affi is. ELIZABETH A. M*HT®H «|. Mwwy To'Ctrl Wuoklla. father of Mid minor jhUd. > iS, ■: v, /: ' Petition bavins been filed ta t Court allesins the preeent whereaboi of the father of Mid mlnoroWW i i Oakland County Lakeside H< removal of p Inlets; tart act between « Bid forms and^Specification, may ba obtained at 1N Branch Straet, Pontltc, Mich, on Tuesday. July m. »••*. Md* will be opened at 2:0# p m. Tuesday, July Mth, IMS. ■ Iv giif if | »8 TWENTY-FOUR f! THE EONTXAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY W 1»M wsm. Only 3 per cent of the U. S. population lived In California in 1900. J compared with t per cent in i960. r- raceroa ',2r£zs‘-*&l ruling In a itatnment released yesterday by Harold E. Fey, editor ot ‘The Christian Century,” aa undenominational weekly published In Chicago. “We are in agreement with the Supreme Court,” the statement read. “We believe the court's rul- the religious conscience and the proper fuhetion of religious and governmental institutions," it said, dr, “Each ( separate govemmimt/ the Statement continued, "should stay out of the business of writing or sanctioning officials prayers and leave that purely religious function to the people themselves.'' WALLED LAKE AMUSEMENT PARK , P. 0. P. $1.00 At AN Times! 'Prayer'Ruling JippfpvedWISU Protestant Clergy CHICAGO (UPI) —Nineteen Protestant-, leaden—representing nine denominations have endorsed die recent U.S Supreme Court decision prohibiting government officials from prescribing prayers for public schools. Explains Action Vincent Price a Busy Ulan OK'd Tour of College, Eaton Farm to Prevent Propaganda WASHINGTON (UPI) - Th e State Department permitted a Soviet student group to avoid a possible Soviet propaganda advantage. The department said that if it had refused, the Soviet press might Collects Ari lo Sell M asses protects the integrity of *•"» are hi the area normally 'AII»AreB?ad in Alalia Crash' Italian Line Report! as .Search Forced to Halt in Bombay Monsoon BOMBAY, India (AP) — Airline officials said today there were no survivors among 94 persons aboard an Italian Jetliner which *ashed near Bombay Friday. The report that all 85 past gers and nine crew members had perished was Issued by Alitalia in a report to the Rome headquarters of the airline; * * * The announcement came search teams bogged down by mud suspended efforts to remove the rest of the bodies from a hillside east of Bombay where the four-jet DCS went down heavy monsoon rain. FORCED TO STOP Searchers brought out about 50 bodies before lashing rain and bowling winds forced them to halt operations. The Mg Jetliner, In service less than four months, was en route from Sydney, Australia, to Rome, with stops at Singapore, Bombay, Karachi and Tehran when II hurtled into 700-foot high Nimgiri Hill around nudnight Friday. .★ ★ ★ Alitalia gave no explanation for the crash. Airline officials had said earlier that the plane was last in radio contact with the ground three before it was due to land at Bombay's Santa Cruz Airport. The crash site indicated the Mane was off course pared to Make an Instrument landing. TTiere were reports that looters had combed through the wreck- pc rams ; UBS if BEEF Sowed Everyday ★ ★ ★ ★ DANCING Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat* Juves. to the JOE ZABELSKI TRIO George and Marie Slonaker’* 2325 S. TELEGRAPH RD. MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING mtm-i> mimih FREE RIDES fOR THI CHILDREN ON THI BiUI SKY ________K--CIRCUS TRAIN—— ■ • NOW SHOWING • La ■ HEnTlf GLENN FORD • ERNEST BORGNINE torpedo run have' made a big hSBe out of It. what he a-a-y-ei The Russian student group touring Oberiln Collage at the time. Both Oberiln and the Eaton closed to Soviet visitors. Rep. Glenard P! Lipscomb, R-Calif., asked during a dosed House Appropriations subcommittee hearing March 9 why the exception was made in this case. EXPLAINED ACTION today, induded a statement froth the State Department explaining that It made the Oberlin concession generally in the hopes the Soviets .would do the same for our student delations. .“Having-granted the exception to visit Oberiln, the department believed that It would be detri- the nation to a couple of months. It this move to bring art to the masses catches fire, the salei2,SOO before the sale starts, would eventually be extended to| "Prices will run from JMl to 400 stores, he said. V JtMfiO, with moat IWlIer $500, and ‘The possibilities are stagger* the majority of those under $300. tog,”'1to declared. “This could belAB will be framed with j descrlp- ed. “Refusal of permission tor travel to the farm would have; presented the Soviet press with an opportunity tor propaganda. “Further, it would possibly have made a negative impression on the SCvlet visitors which .might have •polled any effect their American tour had on them." Eaton has bees togs that be hopes will ease Best- ed Soviet Premier Nikita 4L The statement said Eaton telephoned the State Department April 16, 1981, asking for perm into have the students visit his tore*. . ......... The department replied it had no objection. Couple Hurdles Faith Obstacle, Weds Anyway TOMS RIVER. N.J. (UPI) - A 1962 version of “Abie's Irish Rose" today had Its storybood ending with Ion Glicker, 18, who is Jewish, and his Catholic sweetheart, Patricia Kroner, 17, off on a crosscountry honeymoon. The young couple was married at it. Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church here yesterday after overootniag a aeries of chargee threatened to aeparate them. Ion’s father, Herman, a Flushing, N.Y. real estate man, had been opposed to the marriage because of the difference in religion!. Although hia opposition had lessened since May, he and his wife. Ion's stepmother, did not attend the wedding. But several hundred persons Jammed the church to witness the ceremony. The Rev. Henry Murphy performed the double-ring ceremony the altar rail. BY BOB THOMAS the Mggestthlng thatever hap* AP Movie-Television Writer NO CATALOGUE ITEM There won't be any offered in Sean mall order though, he said, because of the enormous volume. ' ’ Through Ms television appear-ances, lectures and books, the Actor has become the country's’ top promoter of art appreciation. HOLLYWOOD — Warkwao n to seventh floor of the big Sears, Roebuck store to epst Los Angeles are surprised to find Vincent Price as a He’S, there most every day,: poring over the! beginnings nf could be “the greatest sale of art In history.'' Price's enthusi-l for- rrtl -J i . THOMAg and he might be accused for his zeal. Except that he could be right. He is coHectiiw, framing labeling paintings of the Vincent Price collection, which will go on embarking on its culture Writ. and delighted," he remarked. "The reasoning seemed to be that this was the ultimate to home furnishing, which is the company’s biggest Held. Also, the art would attract a different kind of cua- visit Sears. . “I started In mid-May and TVe been to n whirl ever since. Already I're bought 1,700 paintings and etcMnga; I've got to have AP Phatof*. TAKES BABY HOME — Actress Diana Lynn and her radio executive husband, Mortimer Hall, pose‘ with their new baby, Mary Amanda Mortimer Hall, as tlBy left St. John's Hospital to Santa Monica, Calif., yesterday. The baby girl, their third child, was born last Monday. )ar Electric Device )etects Speed Traps CHICAGO (UPI) - Can you beat police radar? M6toriits have tried by filling their auto hubcaps with tin foil and dragging so-called static belts along the pavement. Neither works, says a Chicago who advises better driving practices as the way to beat radar. To help drivers avoid radar traps, this manufacturer Is marketing an electronic device which detects radar signals and warns the driver he la speeding. The device, called Radar-Gard, emits a buzzing sound anytime an automobile goes over a prescribed speed — radar or no radar. Year-Old Boy Notes Usual Signs of Spring BALTIMORE (II — The theme was written by an 8-year-old boy In Calvert School. It began like this: ’’Spring Is here. The flowers and trees are blossoming and our g* and electric bill Is much lower.” By FORREST EDWARDS KAOTENG ISLAND, Off China UB—If Red China attacks in the North Formosa strait this summer this spit ot rock rising out of the sea may be the first target. ★ ★ ★ * Through a stovepipe-sized telescope, this correspondent watched Communist troops working on one of several new big gun positions directly opposite this Nationalist outpost island. The distance: four miles. For Nationalist Chinese troops, Kaoteng stands sentry Just 0,f the tip of Red Chins’* Huangchl Peninsula, which throws a thin protecting arm around a Communist navy base In Lo-Yan Bay. Lo-Yuan would be a major Any Red Chinese Attack Would Hit Minute Isle the Reds are readying themselves for such an attack: A top Nationalist military leader says: * 9 dr ★ 'Without the capabilities to a major objective, the Comihu-nists may concentrate on a relatively minor target." Bookstore Fighting a Long-Lost Game BALTIMORE IB — A lost cause to be sure, but it's still being advertised. ★ ★ ★ The latest sign appeared In I bookstore near Baltimore Street: Help Stamp Out TV — Read Books.” _ fin x,« M rasters. Closest to the mainland of any of the islands in the Nationalist-Matsu complex, tiny Kaoteng sn tenths of a square mile) place from which to watch enemy and a place from which to fight If necessary. PREPARED TO FIGHT There Is evidence the Nationalist defenders are prepared to fight. ★ dr ★ Like the rest of the Nationalist offshore islands, Kaoteng is dug into solid rock. It withstood a 3,-000-shell bombardment in 1958 without major damage and is in far better condition today. Rock , caverns deep below the surface are piled high with food and ammunition. Fresh water Is available from springs. The young commanding officer said: “We are in position, now, at this moment, to last for many months without a single resupply operation.” An amphibious assault against Kaoteng would be expensive. * * * - Much of the island rises in sheer cliffs out of the sea. ★ ★ A Well-gunned itself, Kaoteng also can call on bigger Peikantang, two miles away, and still bigger Mat-five miles away, for artillery barrages to rain down on the sea approaches. Although Kaoteng could be token, an American military expert who has been on the tiny Island •ays the Rede 1‘wauM have to pay In awfully high price for la awfully small piece of totoL” Why do the Nationalists bclisvt PUTT-PUTT GOLF Drsytss Fists* Os LM LShs phon« on sans Alwsrs Open U Henri | Dsr Mil $75,000 In Cash Also Trip to Hswstl tkm that can be pasted on the back. Each rf the first exhibits will comprise 75 works. As with any Sears merchandise, the buyer Can have it right away. Hence I need a lot ot replacements for The tolttal sales will be to Of* ver, Huntington. NX, Oklahoma City. Kankakee, 111,, Appleton, “ Mlotto^XC^andlthsae ____ to.amee: Sacramento, Buena Park, Pasadena and San Diego. “The idea to not to compete with galleries to the big cities,” said Price, "and we wUlprobeWy not undersell them. This is a program to bring art,to areas where it is not- otherwise available.” Besides the galleries. Price has canvassed 20 of the big unlversl-ties tpr works of stddent artists and picked up wholesale lots at UC3LA and Santo Barbara State. He said he plans to extend his search to all major art ..schools' and perhaps even commission greets like Picasso and Braque to create lithographs tor special " ited editions. * ■ " * ^M**0T . No antiabstractionist — the’ crammed walls of his own home are. riotous with color — Price nevertheless is soft-pedaling the 'JMto Btoh*. . _ *.’ —— His reasoning: “1 think too many; fine craftsmen have been overlooked to the melee for abstractionism. Besidfs, the best abstractionists are beyond my budget, rd love to havs a Jackson Pollack to the collection, but they run from $6,000 up to 130,000." Lost Timed Tonight “TNI DAY TNI IA1YH caught rmrwx-is" EAGLE: Starts TUESDAY MIIBON THEATER NOWI at 7i00 and 10(321 \W ,v Y DO j 1 THEY H m ever ■r 9 WTuRti W # If TO aJ v r Possess THE 0 %» LlVlNGf i DEBORAH’ _ KERR *r TAe ] junoceftpy NIGHTS I SUN. ADULTS - 90c MATINEE - 65c CHILDREN ~30e NOW SHOWING WAIT DISNEY [Un‘VUW IMF H«m tag JLan evenniame, probably ■ Because of the older circuit’s loss of Henry Aaron, An ankle Injury jg last! sustained last Friday forced the Milwaukee slugger off the squad. NL Manager Fred Hutchinson picked Warren Spahn, the Braves’ brilliant southpaw, to fill the void, giving him eight pitchers, the same number selected by AL Manager Ralph Houk. The 41-year-old Spahn has appeared in seven previous All-Star games. The loss of Aaron notwithstanding, the Nationals boasted an some hittiiig^^aFray ieff'By ^VUlie ""the league’s home Tommy Davis, its batting and runs batted in leader, Orlando^ Cepeda, Roberto Clemente and Ken Boyer. These starters will be support'd by such sluggers as the redoubtable. Stan Mu-slal, who hammered three home rims in a game Sunday; Ernie Banks and Felipe Alou. The "American League's star-studded squad is not without pow-hltters of its own: Inthe lnng line-ugjwill4>fr'the^New York " I —M and M boys, Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris, have hit 19 home runs between them in the last 15 games; Leon Wagner of the Angels, tied with Mays for the homer leaderahlp of the Majors, and slugger Jim Gem tile of Baltimore. Wilting in the wings will be such long ball hitters as Rocky Colavito of Detroit, John Romano of Cleveland and Norm Siebem of KansasCity'r 1 A right-handed opening, duel between Burning ahd Drysdale past AU-Star games. Burning, whq has forked in four previous classics, pitched five perfect innings, performing in both of the 1961 games. He was the win-of the 1WI game- Drysdale retired nine straight batters in the first 1959 game, but Was tagged for three runs on four hits in the second gatne that year. ★ • dr * ★ The addition-of Spahn, who won his eighth game of the season Sunday against 10 defeats, gives the Nationals a second-left-hand* 199 39 H.,,7jttJl M 321 99 10* 10 43 .3 174 29 It J If 1M 21 93 4 24 J P 3 h. *9 70- 49 I 150 lit w I Bunning, Oet. 133 134 37 1 Fmmhim. -Minn, 147 143 37 11 M’quett*. Bos. 133 133 34 I . PITCHINO . Pitcher/ crab IP H BB SO W 1,1 KoufaxT L.A Mt Ut 47 tot 13 4 Shaw. Mil. JStM. » » f I Purser. Ctn. “09129 3* B It 1 Parrell. Uoue.‘ IN It 31 H lit Pryedaie, L.A. 150 13a 41 123 13 4 Martohal. S.F. M0 133 93 17 M t Olbion, 8t.L. 130 »3 « 113 10 9 Spahn, MU. .. 130 133 30 S3 110 WIMBLEDON QUEENS — Mrs, Karen Hantze Susman (left) of Chula Vista, Calif., and Billie Jean Moffitt of Long Beach, Calif., winners of the women’s doubles championship at Wimbledon Saturday, arrive at New York’s Idlewild airport Sunday from London. Mrs. Susman also won the women’s singles title. Tigers to Make Strong Second Half Bid-Scheffing wmmmmmrnmmmmmmm Yanks Reverse Rotes for Return to First By The Associated Frees ________ The roles were reversed, but the results were the same: The Yankees won. Slngles-hitters Bobby Richard-m and Tom Tresh, who have 15 home runs between them in their major league careers, turned slugger along with Hector Lopez while Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris, who have 670 career homers between them, punched singles Sunday In-New-York’s 9-8 squeaker ter Minnesota. The Yankees fourth straight triumph, along with Chicago’s sweep of two with Cleveland, 6-3 and 8-4, boosted New York into the American League lead agdin, the 10th time this season they’ve been on top. FIFTH CHANGE The swap of positions, the In- Coins Ends Victory Famine By BILL CORNWELL GRAND BLANC — When the 5th annual Bulck Open golf tournament began last Thursijay^-big Bill Collins was almost out of sight on the PGA’s official money list. - Now he’s in the top 20, thanks to his 69,000 reward for winning the $52,000 tourney, Sunday, at Warwick Hills Country Club. The rangy, SS-year-old Collins vaulted from 47th place to 17th alter shooting remarkably consistent golf here to edge faltering Dnve Kagan by one stroke. • Collins, fighting an ornery bacli ailment as well as stiff competition for a four-day stretch over Warwick’s 7,280 yards, fired an even par 72 in yesterday’s final round to go With previous scores of 70-71-71 for a 72-hole total of 284, four under par. WWW It was Collins’ first triumph the circuit since May of 1960 when he won the Hot Springs Open. FLAYED CAUTIOUSLY The 6-foot-4 Collins, one of the longest hitters in,the game today, admittedly played cautious, conservative golf, Sunday to end his long victory famine. -Tie fought off the challenges of Ragan, Billy Casper and cigar-smelting Joe Campbell to pocket nirg" gf-and plus an extra* 81.000 for making a movie tor the —“ sor today. Collins had earned only prior to his conquest at Warwick Hill*. His 1962 winnings have now risen to the $18,000 neighborhood — and that’s a nice neighborhood. ★ dr ★ For five weeks prior to the Bulck tourney, Collins had been playing the poorest golf of His ca-★ ★ * Motor City Classic Next Stop tor Pros tBe professional gold cavalcade, headed by newly-crowned Bulck Open champ Bill Collins, invades Knollwood Country Club this week tor the 11th edition of the Motor City Open. fhe $35,000 Motor City classic runs Thursday through Sunday at Knollwood. Among the amateurs was Michigan Amateur champ Mike Andohian of Pontiac. An 18-hole qualifying round whs being played at Knollwood today to complete- the starting field. * dozen places were a( stake, for amateurs and another six for now-PGA proa. Among the entries in today’s trials wgs Pontiac’s Bill (Bluster) Pembroke. \ reer, due in large part to the fifth lumbar in his back which kept -slipping ogt„ot-place,'"'feTmcting hhr'hip and body turn. Four treatments from a Flint chiropractor, Dr. Floyd Supemaw, got the lumbar back into its Scores on Page 26 proper place and Collins was able to swing with reckless abandon. His final treatment was taken yesterday morning. Collins shot 34-58 In the finale, canning a 10-foot birdie putt at No. 1 and dropping a spectacular 80-f o o t e r for a “bird” at No. 7. Coming home, he bogled the 10th and 18th holes. "A brilliant 67, the tourney’s lowest round, vaulted Ragan into title contention Saturday. He trailed coleaders Collins, Pete Cooper and Tony Lema by only one stroke starting the 4th round. FALTERS IN STRETCH all of Ragan’s hopes were dashed in the stretch run as he bogied three of the last four holes. He wound up with a 72 and a 10-foot birdie putt on the 18th green enabled him to finish 2nd with a total of 285. .1 who shared 3rd with Doug Sanders at S8S, niatle -strong" llfle* bid and pulled within one shot of Collins alter turning In 35, but back-to-back bogles on the 15tH,. 16th and 17th stopped his threat. dians falling one. full game off the pace, marked the fifth time this season Cleveland has been ihand out of first place. And, teams take a break for the first AU-Star game* it was the 20th time this season the lead has changed hands. Detroit and Los Angeles each held it twice and, early in thie Season, Chicago and Washington once each. Los Angeles fell 2Va games bo-[hind when Boston administered ff 5-4 defeat to the slipping Angels. Detroit swept two from Baltimore, 5-1 and 3-2 and pulled to within five games of the top. Kansas City outlasted Washington 6-5 in 15 Innings, Lopez’ homer In fhe ninth with Maris, who had reached oh an error, on base, staked New York to a 9-5 lead. Whitey Ford, however, walked the first two men he faced in the last of the ninth, and Don Mlncher^clubbed—a three-run homer off Luis Arroyo to make- it close. Richardson and Tresh hit early inning homers with the bases empty, while singles by Maris and Mantle sparked ar three-run New York seventh inning rally that broke a 4-4 tic. PAW PAW CONNECTS Charley Maxwell was the big gun in the White Sox sweep Cleveland with six hits, including a homer and triple. The double loss snapped Cleveland’s six-game winning string. Juan PizarcQ struck out ntnejmd-limHetf (He In-dians-to'Shven hits in the opener. Four unearned runs in the first inning of the nightcap made easy for Ray Herbert. Pete Runnels’ eighth-inning homer was the difference in Boston's conquest of Los Angeles and Campbell azso met his Waterloo the’Red Sox.first baseman the same finishing holes, lie lnt0 the jeague batting lead with a .340 average. The homer gave Boston a 5-2 lead, but Los Angeles rallied with two out in the ninth. Kansas City got its winning run in the 15th on an error. On ah attempted squeeze play the batter missed the ball and catcher Ken Retzer trapped Jerry Lumpe, who had been on third, In a run-down. But Senator third baseman Ed Brinkman dropped Retzer's throw and Lumpe scooted home with the winner. double-bOgied the treacherous 17th and bogied No. 18 for a 73 score 287 total, good for 5th position. Cooper and Lema shot, themselves out of contention early. Play was halted twice by thunderstorms between 12:40 and 1:30 p.m. and the first storm resulted in tragedy as an’ Oakland County man, Ernest Youngblood of Madison Heights, was struck and killed by lightning while running for shelter along the east side of the 6th fairway. The Bulck event had Its second hole-ln-one Saturday when little Jerry Barber aocked a 2-Iron shot Into the enp on the m-yard 17th hole. Butch Baird aced the 3rd hole oil opening day. Both Baird and Barber won new cars worth $5,200 for making their noes. Five pros bettered par for the 72-hole - distance and four others equaled it. Par at Warwick 36—72. Cleveland Angel* -----jsota Detroit Saltimors AP Phstofos OPEN CHAMPION *- Bill Collins chips to the eighth green ofc the way to waning the Bulck Open at Warwick Hills yesterday. Cbilins finished with a 284 for the 72-bole tournament. MATURDAY’N RESULTS Cleveland 3, Chicago 3 K*n»«» City 9 SUNDAY'S RR York (, MmnoMta H, Cleveland 9. Lee Angeles 4 ______ 9-3, Baltimore 1-3 Rental city 9. Wejhlngl NATIONAL LEAGUE Wes Lett Pet Angela* .... 91 .31 .992 21'4 K'i Milwaukee ........ 42 43 .494 Philadelphia .. 34 49 .424 ®"*SS ::::::: 8 *• r York 23 99 .290 SATURDAY'S RESULTS ... j York 9-2, at. Louie 4-3 Pltuburgh «, Philadelphia 4 Ohlesso f. itllwauke* t. H tnntnge Cincinnati 10. Koueton i "" Prancleco 10. Loe Angelet 3 SUNDAY'S RESULTS Annie* 2, San Praneleco o Philadelphia' »”?WPlTubureh 4.0 taskipu *li!W*Houeton* 0-11. eecond | TODAY’S GAMES Na games scheduled ^ TV £«***■* »rv sam Parnell* Takes Feature INDIANAPOLIS (AP), — Pan nelll Jones, Torrance, Calif., led throughout the 30 laps Sunday and captured, his first sprint auto race feature ol the season at Raceway Park. DOUBLE HANDSHAKE — Jake Wood of the Tigers gets a double handshake, one from pitcher Paul Foytack and one from Billy Bruton, as he scores after a two-run homer against AP fhetatas the Orioles In the opening game of yesterday’s doubleheader. The Tigers won both ends 5-1 and 3-2. Twmbill Sweep Keeps Bengals ift£losePa€& Foytack, Aguirre Score 7th. Victories as Big , Mound Surprises ■ DETROIT (AP)—The Tigers, er-ratic and frequently floundering in the first half of the season, will make a run for the pennant following the three-day All-Star lay-,jff. That's the belief of manager Bob Scheffling. A * * Schefflng, still an optimist after last week’s series of bitter frustrations, predicts the race will boil down to a three-team scramble in the second half of the season. “New York, Detroit and Baltimore — that’a the way IPs going to be,” Mid Sehefflag after the Ttgen finally captured a doubleheader In their 12th try Double Triumph Ipp&fyf' ~ BALTIMORE IeTROIT Adelr 2b 901W Brandt if 4 4 4 # Ftther Stti\ A—Piled oul I r Flutter In 4th: c E—MeAulUte, Wood. 24-11, Detroit T7-12. r- and Gentile; Wood, 1_______I _ LOB—Baltimore if, Detroit 4. 2B—RobUiton. " “No, I don’t mean it’s going to end up in that exact order. They’re the best clubs, the ones "at should fight tor first place.” dr A dr Schefflng was heartened by yesterday’s 5-1, 3-2 sweep of the Orioles. The Xtosr»- sltowed"7iTfn ” brilliant pitching, timely hitting— and they even made a couple of double plays and got a break for a change. FIVE BEHIND The double victory left Detroit five games behind the first-place Yankees, still in fifth place with a 43-40 mark. The .amazing thing is, despite their midadventures In the first portion of the campaign, the Tigers are so dose. Still to be passed by .the Tigers to make Schefflng’s prediction cmnetrueareHierLoiiAiigeteR Angels, Minnesota Twin* and AP Photefex SACRIFICE FAILS — Tiger catcher Mike Roarke is forced at second as Baltimore shortstop Ron Hansen gets off a throw to first in a vain attempt to double Paul Foytack. The Bengal pitcher had tried to bunt Roarke to second. Hitchcock Battle-Scarred in First Year as Pilot Sfe? ck, in just a half season as a major league manger with the Baltimore Orioles, finds his job Add rhubarb-infested. His latest skirmish Sunday involved a disputed fly ball, a jostling match with umpire Red Flaherty and some healed pout-game comments. ¥ * * After the second game with the Detroit Tigers, Hitchcock charged Flaherty made a call that disgrace to baseball." fly ball by Detroit’s Jake Wood drove right fielder Russ Snyder of the Orioles back near the wall. Snyder leaped, deflected the ball high above him and it ime down in his glove.___________ H W~ d 4 Flaherty, racing out from behind second base was abouj. 80 feet away and signaled the ball safe. Wood raced to third- and ired the winning run in the Orioles’ 3-2 defeat after the argument simmered down. Billy Bruton’s single drove Wood home.' d d d 'Hie ball hit Snyder's glove, went behind him, hit the wall and then he caught it again,' plained Flaherty, "When it hit the National Public Links Qualifiers Under Wqy BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)-The 150 entrants in the 3?th annual U.S. Amateur Public Links Golf Championship begin action todjsy with the first of two days of qualifying 'rounds on suburban Tonawanda’s Sheridan Park Golf Course. After 18 holes today and again Tuesday on the 6,697-yard, par 71 cop-ae^ the low 64 will begin four days of mafoh puiy on Wednea- mi..........** wall, it meant the baiter was safe.” "I was about four feet away from the wall,” Snyder said later; "The ball went straight up and I caught it. It never hit the wall;” "It was a disgrace to baseball to make a call like that,” seethed Hltchcok, whose Orioles also lost the first game 5-1. "Everybody in the park knew It was an out. ”It was a lousy, shameful call that cost us a ball game.” Hitchcock was ejected from the ime by Flaherty. "He put me out and said I put! my hands on him,” said Hitch-'I did. I was trylqg to keep Snyder away from him, Hitchcock put his hands on and was shoving as he tried to W»t through the players to meJtc E*t my attention,” said Flaherty. Hitchcock previously -had been Involved in rhubarbs with opposing managers Bob Schefflng of the Tigers and Ralph Houk of the New York Yankees. Tiger Averages BATTING AB I II HR RBI/ Kalin* ... 149 32 49 It 39 Colavito ..ill 44 *4 30 If Wert* .... 40 3 12 i | .100 I in is m i » J8 ■___P .....M3 90 nj I -39 .Mf EE;;: fi |;| i | $ • 7. a#. « 1 8 J mm if A tf Hj§ Farley .... 73 0 12 I 4 .Iff •Total* ..1944 391 9*7 199 399 .349 .•Fin a .... 10 MW 33 17 ...jehwlta j i it 17 n li Aiulrr* ... 7 3 MW 94 tt 44 .... Jon** .. 1 3 90 IT 17 41 LM Bunning .. 0 4 133 1M 37 M 3.H Hi i#i»r i 111 HI 42 4, IK 134 399 434 lito 0 0 0 Morton rt ar-Ran (or Heraog In 9 911 4 E—Nona. FO-A—1______________ ut when winning run acored). 7-11. DP—Brawn, Fernand** and OB—Baltimore 2, Detroit 9, IB—OentUe. Wood. Colavito 2. Vood. HR — Gentile. SB — Wood All three of the surprise clubs of the early months of the season have started to stagger — and if the Tigers begin to. show any measure of solid consistency, they can easily be Overtaken. Scheffing's inclusion of the Ori-| oles in his prediction was a big J surprise. The Orioles are worse oft ... a than the Tigers, who’ve beaten , \i\ j them in nine of 1) meetings. Bal-' i timore Is below .500, and is seven 9 games out in sixth place. ' dr ★ But all along, Schefflng has regarded the Orioles as a tougher club than the Indians, who throttled the Tigers three straight last week. Jake Wood’s hitting and the work of ScheMIng’a twin pitching surprises, Paul Foytack and Hunk Aguirre, carried the Tigers PRESS BOX Prince Gamaun, owned by Mrs. Albert W. East In of Wayne, won the $7,500 Torpid Invitational pace Sportsman’s Park Saturday night in the fastest mile of the Chicago season, a li ) 2/5. ★ ★ dr The Detroit parks and recreation zoo-meter medley relay team for the 1S-16 age group knocked throe-tenths of a second Mf the national age-group record Saturday, winning In 2:02.7, at tbn Fort Wavne Open AAU martin, tiling and diving championships. d>. ★ * Tom Skelly of Garden City, in Sanfu IV, iron the 150 cubic Inch hydroplane event Sunday at the Buffalo Launch Club International Regatta. Wood had four extra base hits ■ two homers, a triple and a double. Foytack earned his seventh triumph in the nightcap with four-hitter. Both pitchers went the distance. WIN NO. 1 Wood cracked home runs his first two times at bat in the opener and Chico Fernandez chipped in with a two-run homer. The Tigers jumped to a 56 lead in the first two innings off loser Milt Pappas. They were able to coast behind Foytack, who left 12 run-stranded. The only run off him came on Whitey Herzog’s seventh-inning homer. Aguirre had u tougher struggle - but with the help of Wood and tut umpire’s decision captured another one-run victory. Wood scored tilie winning run with two, outs in the ninth follow* ing his heatedly protested triple. Billy Bruton sent him home with a single. ★ W dr The triple came, on a fly to right that Russ Snyder tipped high abovs him and than caught. Umpire Red Flaherty ruled th«t in between the deflection and th« catch, (he hall hit the wall. AajwxA ‘ A' Wood’s double led to the find-Detroit run In the first inning of the nightcap which the twice tied before losing. \. , I ; VS / '.Tgnmti&MX'* Cup' THal fiacGt Cut NEWPORT, RX (AP) - Dense <0C rolled in. a* visibility to ton than 50 feet/andforQaf cancella-tioc of Sunday's America*! cup THIS COUPON HWI tSI OK ANY BRODIES; - MUFFLER (Offer Expires Mr SI, 1962) •Hog Tills Ceopeu With Ym By Ito Associated Aon With the National League lead at stake, the Loa Angeles Dodgers cached in with a pair of back-to-back aces—Sandy Koufax and Don for LONGER LIFE jet the All-New CUSTOM COATED* HEAVY-DUTY MUFFLER Muffler*, Sent Bolt* ond Shock Absorbers INSTALLED FREE— in Minute* WHILE YOU WAIT BRODIE'S MUFFLER SERVICE 121 Woyne St. Store. Open 9 to SiSO daily. 1 0 to fitO. FI 4-4900. Dodgers Regain First Place THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. fULY 9, 1962 The two pitching stars collaborated on a time-hit performance Sunday as the Dodgers* climbed back to the top with a 24 triumph at. San Francisco. By winning, Los Angeles edged a half game ahead Of the Giants and gained an even split in the key tour-game set with it* historic rival. ■ to to to It took some doing, however, despite the superb pitching. Koufax, toe left-handed strikeout specialist with (me no-hit victory this sea-went five perfect innings ami did not allow a hit until the enth, when Jim Davenport and Orlando Cepeda singled. HG8CUE JOB ....... The Dodgers ffoanlly cracked through southpaw Billy O'Dell tor their two runs in the eighth, but Koufax failed to last. Drysdale, the 15-game winner who beat the Giants in the series opener Thursday, was called in to quell a ninth inning threat—and did the job. MUM the two pace-setters were staging their tenae but sedate duel at Candlestick Park, things were exploding elsewhere in the National League in some parting /---------— ! BUY NOW- ■ ■ • _____ use our money! fireworks before the first All-Star game break. Twenty-eight homers wen hit, a one-league high tor an eight-game scbedulea ^lth J3 of whep Wflltenfrtfsdoubled, Tom- Cincinnati, where the Reds swept the Houston Colts in the longest doubleheader In major league history. It,took* hours and 7 minutes for Cincinnati to win 12- 8 and 124} in 13 innings. ANOTBEREEOORO Stan Musial powered his way to a share of still another record, rapping three homers as-St. Louis smothered the New York Mets 15-1. Third-place Pittsburgh shaded Philadelphia 6-5 after losing to the Phillies 84. And Milwaukee divided with Chicago, taking the game 5-3 behind, Warren Spahnafterdropping the opener 74. The Dodgers peppered O’Dell Pontiac Woman Wins Shootoff for State Title Muriel Pace of Pontiac won the Michigan Women's Trap shooting championship Sunday at Wsiled Lake._________ She outahot Rita Ficcabota of Flint In a dramatic shootoff that carried to SO extra targets. Both women broke M of a 100 In the regulation round. In the first SS-blrd shootoff. both clipped M. In too second M, Mrs. Pace broke *4, one better than her opponent, R. D. Leonard of Adrian won i n 10x100 from to ; Art Hickey of Saginaw was the toubtos'Champ. o-«-■■■■* Hugh Driggs Jr. of Palmyra, Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, BH- Iowa In the three-day shoot. £r vmrmSALS, ENJOY YOUR VACATION! PUT YOUR MIND AT EASE .jfr TRAVEL IN SAFETY AND COMFORT WHY TAKE CHANCES WHEN SO LITTLE BUYS SO MUCH GOLD CREST MUFFLERS • BRAKES fTB Orcbord Lobo 1U»d (noot Tofotmpb) FE 3-9426 for 12 hits but were held In chfeck by the southpaw and the tough Giant defense until the eighth, , my Davis singled him home and stole second, and Frank Howard followed-with' another double, to to to Koufax, whose nine strikeouts raised his season total to made him Leaguer to reach 200' twice, ran his record to 134 with Drysdale’s aid. The sidearming right-hander came on with one out in ‘ and a 2-0 count on Willie Mays after Bob Nieman’k pinch single _______walk to Jim Davenport. Drysdale completed the walk to Mays, filling the bases, but got Cepeda on a^foul pop and Felipe Alou on a force play. Moore. Casoer High in Wesfside Victory Monroe Moore and Johnie Casper led Westside Lanes to victory over Huron Bowl in three straight matches of The Travelers Tourney at Wonderland Lanes yesterday. ...'to to -to Moore averaged 210 and thelfk THE PALMER METHOD 4f PiUme* ' CWING THE FUSH __InoMiuat MdyjRtifea, w^iah - enussi the slubface io be open at Impact, usually rswlll In a push. These ere shots which fly straight, but to the right. * Those who chronically push the ball usually hove the body and the hands toe faroheed of the hell qt With bends end body too for ahead, the clubfoce never squares up at impact. To cure this, stand more erect ot address, with the bock os straight as , possible. Your head should be behind the ball of address — and at, Impact . Keep your head steady ond you'll probably cure the push. »r*- Fastest Time in Race GARNETT, Kan. (AP) - ^an -Connell of Fost Worth, Tex., driv-Ing a Coopff Mtonaco torougK fastest lap times this sportacar race has ever seen, won the Lake Garnett Grand Prix Sunday. Connell set a record of » mljka j _ trieffigkfr 1 mile course circling Lake Garnett In 1.47 seconds on the fastest of The first match was won 17-1S, with Moore scoring six potato •cored tear potato, Stan Cure point. For Huron, Paul George was high with W and Ml for seven potato with Dick Cartnkihel with three potato at *83. West Side took the second match 11-3 and the third, 13-8. Moore scored 244 in the third tor live I, while Mike Samardzija bowled 227 for three points for Huron. Warwick Scores FINAL MUCK OrBN SCORES I Bill Collins ...........70-71-71-72—284 Din Rasan Billy CMpor . Dour Sanders .............— —- Joe Campbell .. . 74-71-80-73—287 Johnny Pott ............70-73-73-72-288 Bob Ooalby .............71-73-71-73-288 Jerry Barber ...........71-71-72-74-208 Tony Lema ..............71-00-72-70-288 .. .i-07-72—288 ,74-70-72-70—1M 73-80-72-«g|| Al Oelberger ...... Pete Cooper ....... Don January ....... Jacky Cuplt . Bruce Crampton . . Oeorge Bayer .,,. Stan Leonard ..... Cary Wddltcoff ____ Dow Plneterwald ... Oardner Dickinson . 72-74-73-70—280 72-72-73-72—380 I2-71-73-73—388 .. .73-73-74-73—381 . . 70-78-73-71—201 ..^4-*»-72-70—201 .. 73-73-80-77—201 .. 73-70-72-78—201 ...72-71-70-78-201 . .73*73-74-73—202 .. .72-60-77-74—302 ...71-73-73-78—2*2 Bob MoCallltter . Jon Ouitln _____ Mike Bouehak . Dave Hill Mike Krak ....... Tommy Jacobe Butch Baird Charlie Blfford Bob Ooeti ...... Julius Boroe .... Paul Harney ... Daft aikea .... Fred Hawkins .. Jack Rule . Harold Xneece . . 70-73-73-70—318 . .76-75-73-72—388 BHHPMimPMMHI. .78-7I-7I-78-2M Jay Hebert ..............77-70-74-7*—388 .78-74-88-78—208 .71-77-75-74—207 .70-77-78-78-307 78-76-71-76—207 .70-73-77-77- SSI .71-74-71-77—307 . 78-73-73-78^-307 .71-73-76-76—200 74-74-73-77—208 71-70-173-77—V .74-31-74-70—2.. .78-77-72-78—200 .77-73-74-78-200 78-77-71-70-200 Don Maeeem Oeorge Knu< Al Balding Howard Brc— ................ Moon Multtne ...........77-74- Larry Mowry ........... 71-77-73-78—200 Day Brewer .............75-72-77-70—300 Bob Harrison ......... .71-72-76-60—300 77-73-77-101 . .71-70-73-71 73-70-76-02—100 . .74-70-74-13—107 . ,76-74-79-78—307 .70-78-00-08-318 . .I6-77-84-7C Joe *Lopea ........ Oene Bone ......... Jack Burke Jr...... Dave Marr ......... A-Bob Uttler ...... Dick Stranahan . . Bert Weaver ....... Claude King ....... A Tom Draper ...... A-Larry McMillan . A Wayne Btherton A Oene Hunt ....... A Don Taylor ...... pro m6nrt distribution Collins. 80.000; Ragan. 84 600; Casper, 62.800; Campbell. 83.300; Pott, Barber, Ooalby. Lema. 81.(25 each; Baxter. Shave. Oelberger. Cooper. 81.380 each; January, Cuplt. 61.126 each; Crampton, Bayer, Leonard, Mlddleooff. Plotter, wald, Dickinson. Perroe. 6800 each; Rudolph, Rodrigues. Venturi, 1080 each; Eggers. Bondeson, Powell, $800 each: Fairfield. Still, Dustin. McCalllster, 6327 each: flour hak. Hill, 8320 each; Krak, Jacobs. Hebert, Baird, 8107 each; Sit-ford. Ooetr, Boroe. Harney, Blkea, Hawkins, (130 each; Rule. Xneece, Main, Masaengale. *110 each; Balding, Knud-ion, Brown, Mullina, Mowry, (44 cacti. See the New T-100 500 c.c. 295 lbs. 9-to-I compression ratio wide ratio gearing SPORTS TIRES Easy Terms ANDERSON SALES end SERVICE iSO iTPfka St. FE 24109 Arnold Palmer Favorite 356 Goiters Start Bid for British Open Title Scotland (A • The TKtJfjN, world’s greatest swingers took Scotland’s nasty “little giant" old Troon—today In a week-long quest for the British Open Golf Championship. A total of 356 players from a score of countries teed off on old Troon and its neighboring links, Loch Green, in two days of 36-hole qualifying for the championship proper. ...to.. to to Even the most confident professional and top ranking amateur admitted he was only chasing after mighty Arnold Palmer of Latrbbe, Pa., who is defending the title he won at Birkdale in England last year. BIGGE8T FAVORITE . Gamblers ma