The Weather Delivered at Wrong Address Newsmen Told Craft More Complex Than Any Tried by Reds OOLD8TONE, Calif. UB— The U.S. spacecraft Ranger 4 crash-landed on the far side of the moon today and a space official called the feat another /of the long strides In space made in the past year. / -d James E. Webb, head of the National Aeronautics and Space Ad-ministration, told newsmen Ranger 4 was muon more complex than ' anything the Soviets have attempted./ f . • 'OOPS! — This truck dumped its load ot scrap tubing at the wrong, address yesterday when its brake ling broke /near the top of a hill on K- Third Street in Rochester. The truck, driven by George* F. Steiger o^ 5015 Durham, How' would you like to park on a multistory parking ramp about a half-block north of the Pontiac Press, step from your car onto an escalator and ride it up to an air conditioned arcade spanning three city blocks and overlooking a gleaming shoppers’ plaza we used id call N. Saginaw Street? This hi but one of many fantastic pictures of the future norm-town Pontiac painted yesterday far city, business and professional leaders in the (40,000 Central Business District Plan. 211 E. Third St. borne of Mr. and Mrs. Don Hall, who were not home. Steiger was not Injured, but the house was scatred and the sidewalk crushed. ' • A possible change of direction on the proposed county jet-major airport was expressed yesterday by Delos Hamlin, chairman of the. County Board of Supervisors and one of the original promoters of the controversial plan to establish the airfield in Pontiac and Orion townships. Speaking at a meeting of the hoard's aviation committee, Hamlin declared the projected need for a major airport in the metropolitan area is uncertain at this dime, He pointed oat that then is a two-year lapse si ace the sarvey to asoortala the aeed was com-' dose-up television pictures of the moon's surface wit! be launched by the end ot the.yegr, * * ♦ * A , 1 Ranger 4 was this country's first success in seven attempts to land a piece of hardware on the moon, and virtually duplicated the Soviet accomplishment when Lunik II Mt the moon Sept. 14, Moscow Time, 1999. S4-HOUR TRIP The 799-pound Ranger !, launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., Monday, completed the 28V 486-mile journey to toe moon in 94 hours. . W Still Seek Disarmament From Our News Wires WASHINGTON. - Secretary of State Dean Rusk said today the , United States will continue to - press hard for ah end to the arms i race while the atmospheric nuclear test liries is gdlng on in the Pacific. In somber tones Rusk told his news conference this country regrets the “necessity" for the new Increased Tension Expected, Page 17 Althojgh there was no way .of seeing actual-impact, scientists said Ranker 4’s trajectory before passjng behind the moon asswed that it would tand in the predfMed area. \ / .• "Since then thinking might have dianged to where only one major airport (Wayne Metropolitan Airport) ever win be needed in the area." Hamlin said. Electronic failureSxkept 4 from completing most of xions. It carried several a instruments, including i f camera to take dosiaup pic the moon’s surface. A timer signed to operate these dev failed shortly after launch. otber tmrmrieB of ientific Committee member Ray Lahti, supervisor from Wiaora, moved that .the county rehire Landrum Si Brown to supplement their report with information covering the interim. series began yesterday When a plane dropped a medium-yield bomb that exploded in the Mr over British-controlled Chrtsthttis friend. DETAILS METHODS Basically, the plan tfsfe, present negative; and noimiva, facts about Downtovyn Pontiac. It 0CtoQs methods ot bvercttoiiqg the negatives and Of emphasizing positives. Friday Cooler >. Alter Tonight's Possible Rain Wednesday’s high of 85 in downtown , Pontiac is just * sample Of whdt is soon (b dtutie. Today's ELMWOOD PARK, 111. GfV-Two men and a woman were shot \6 death today As they sat in a wrecked, expensive car at the end ot a relentless chase. The vtttttnur: Killed hy ,88-callber •» •, slugs,- were ideritlffed by * police m: Committee Okays PhilUp.lktovo. X of aw- Park, a massive than who formerly LrCneSee J U age managed a tavern-restaurant on / _ rr p »' U.S.-45 in Franklin Part, west of TOT U. O. DeilCtl Chicago. Ronald Sctvo of Chicago, young- / WASHINGTON ill — A Senate er brother of PhUUp. , Judiciary subcommittee approved Lydia AbaMn, n, of Ofeaga^ today President Kennedy’s, nom- tOlT (UPD — ‘ W tom-unefl needed just two min-njy to pass a 1 per cent in-ix eqvering Ml persons who f live'tn Detroit. iyJerome Cavwsgb signed at 1U23 avm., only 21 uiin- Russia Launches Fourth Sputnik in Six Weeks MOSCOW (API—THc Soviet Union announced today the launching of its fourth^ Sputnik in six weeks., / v ™ T One source said it was possible the next shot in toe series might come within 24 hours. He pointed out that President Kennedy said the tests would be expedited ak Tonight wiD be a different story. There’s a chance of a tow showers with the low dropping to At any rate, the county has no intention of proceeding further with the plan*, which would mean the purchase of additional property, without FAA approval, committee chairman Philip Rowston, Pontiac supervisor, stated. “Such efforts could be ail in vain," he DENOUNCES LANGUAGE \Rusk denounced what he called “nstoent language" now coming from\the Communist bloc condemning, toe U. S. test series. He said this, nowever, merely reflects the ‘‘weakness*’ of their, argu- Taas news agency said toe new satellite, dubbed Cosmo 4, went into ftp planned orbit around the earth and took 90.6 minutesto make its first circuit. Saturday will continue cooler with a chance of more showers or thundershowers. dr .to +. Morning southwesterly winds at 8 miles per hour will become northerly at 15 to 25 ip-p.h. tonight. Fifty-nine was top lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding g a.mi , The mercury had dimbed to 84 at 2 p.m. along a line just north ot Warren Street. Phillip Scavo’s wallet contained $1,118, and that of hi* brother $207. The woman carried identification cards of her sister, Mara Ann Mor-tora no who identified Jier body at the Cook County morgue. * Police Chief Petdr Rice of Elmwood Part said that Phillip Scavo’s wife, Theresa, mu shot to death by a bartender In a Franklin Part His second LAND BOUGHT The county already has purchased 445 acres,-including the Allen Airport, a private enterprise, on Gkldings Road, This will serve as a nucleus tor further expansion, Hamlip has said, in the event the (Cbntlpaed on Page 2, Ooi. 4) No opposition appeared during the 45-minute hearing hy the committee, headed by Spa. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich. Tankers Collide, Burn CROMER, England aW—Two Greek tankers caught fire .today after a collision in the Norib Sea and one was abandoned- No casualties were reported. tavern1 a year ago. ______________ wife, a singer known as Nikki North, is to be working in a night dub in the Cincinnati or Cleveland area, Rice said.. SMASHED INTO HOUSE The killings occurred shortly before 4 a.m. after Phillip Scavo’s 1961 llninderbird Swerved toon Elm grove Drive in a residential section of Elmwood Park and smashed into a house. Saginaw Street would end at Huron. North of that it would become (Continued on Page 2, Gut O tales” from Detroiters, he said. If it goes into law it would cut at least )5 million a year from the estimated revenue of the Detroit tax. City controller Alfred Pelham estimated the tax would rails 135 million a year and would affect 850 000 wage earners in the metrp-p-'Htan area. /> The tax was iwopoeed hy Mayor Jerome Cavanagh as a way Of meeting Detroit’s fiscal problems. in. the shoulder. police mn.ni . Police Sgt. Robert Olsen saidj toe bodies were found after he' ramMd a telephone call to investigate an auto accident. ‘The autovcrashed into a hemel owned by Rtxiglf Komfeind. Little j damage was dmeto the house. the United Mates and Creel Britain. the «fc-ek. ta tent projectile Mettled iM at 1:M p m. (Pe» liar Time). Its mtsston was to 354 DIb bn State Roads EAST LANDING lcnn Lackey, its Kemp St. Heading the awards, Lackey was presented with a special plaque for long service and “coffee pot” lamp for his role as "Chief Coffee Maker”' ♦ dr * Lackey also was named district representative to th/ executive board with Gilbert Pierce, 618 Ras-kob St. Awards for "Faithful Sendee” ent to Clarence Fortney, SS8 Receiving vardsj Cooley f Howard Bone.lBfln-W. Cleg Bordeaux, Nichols Sf-; Howard Crawford, 27 N. Ardmore St.; (Starlee Dun-1238 Feather-stone St., i Samuel K. Dow, 625 Cameron tffeje ♦............ Dow also received a veteran award tor 10 years’ service, as dkl Robert Bach, 416 Kuhn St. More than 200 persona attended the annual meeting. Guest speaker Wes Circuit Judge Frederick Zietn. who discussed “Scouting and ths Law."1 Warm Air Poms Into East, Rain Hits Southwest By THE ASSOCIATED -PRESS Warm and humid air streamed over fiie eastern United States today and scattered splashed areas from the Dakotas to New Mexico. t , t w The Weather Bureau said the warm and increasingly humid ranged from the western Gulf of Mexico northward into the central Plains states and eastward to the Middle Atlantic coast and inter-sr areas of the Northeast-ir ★. 1t " Rain sprinkled scattered lands from the western Dakotas acrosd Wyoming and southward to Arizona ahd New Mexico. Thunder-the lower Rio Papers, Union to Resume Talks Bargaining Mooting Slated Today; No Word Given on Progress DElJtOlT i# — Management and International Typographical Union officials were scheduled to resume negotiations today in an ef-fort to end . a labor dispute wide has halted publication of Detroit’ two daily papers. * * e ITU Local 18 and the Detroit Newspaper Publishers Association, which represents both the morning Detroit Free Press and the afternoon Detroit News in contract negotiations, met yesterday for two hours. The Weather Full U.g. Weather Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Sunny and continued warm today. High U. Partly ctoady and turning cooler tonight. and Friday. Law tonight M, high Friday R Southwesterly winds at 16 to SM miles per hour today becoming northerly IS mile* tonight. LANSING A] tional convent ed a move today to knock the constitution .a search and Seizure provision which some delegates attached as unconstitutional.' At fhe same time, delegates deleted the, traditional "liberty of the press" clause in favor of different wording. The oeareh and seizure proposal — sponsored by Ann Donnelly, R Highland Park, and Don Lawrence, R Vpsllantl — would have deleted a section allowing prow cut or* to use certain evidence In coart evea though It might haVe hken seised Illegally. Included among such evidence, a-as narcotic drugs, firearms! bombs and explosives, all * of Which would be admisuble if confiscated by police is an 'autotpo-j bile or anywhere etse home. e except in ai ruled unconstitutional by United States Supreme Court. The convention voted to retain the wording, 67-61. Delegate* who supported the uae of such evidence In criminal trials said they felt the federal court ruling was sot broad enough to cover the Michigan provision. Their view was challenged by opponent* of the word- '>»■, - -------—. In other action the convention voted 63-60 to knock out of the constitution the historic phrase guaranteeing liberty of speech and the press, substituting the words these ttberties.” James K. Pollock, R-Ann Arbor, argued unsuccessfully against the plank proposal. The present wording adequately protects broadcasting, he said. There was progress toward ending the today labor dispute and ITU picketing continued at both papers. ITU members have picketed the Free Press and News since April clainiing they were "locked ’ of .their Jobs because at Teamsters strike at the Free Press. CLAIM STRIKE ACTION The association said ITU member! as well as other craft union members had been asked to turn to work April 20 and tei the picketing a strike action. * * * Meanwhile the association also met yesterday with Local 13 of the Pressmen's Union. Members at that union have not reported for work since April 20. Joaeph Eekhout, Local IS proa- (Mmbl'l TfWHtm Chart Alpena to » Fort Worth 71 If Eicon*ba (1 39 Sum City U ft sr & & Efe*«8 itUJMttl to 37. MilVMko* §3 ij “.. i M Pittsburgh ew contract after covering Job aubstUnttona, sea-lority aad penaioas. The’ Pressmen and the publish-era association agreed to meet again May 2. However. Eekhout laid Pressmen would “return to work immediately" if the ITU withdraws its picket lines. * . * *. The present contract between the Pressmen and the News and Free Prett expired Feb. Romney Lauds 8 GOP Senators ibr Income Tax LANSING ID — George Romney, announced Republican candidate for governor, today gave what amounted to a pat on the back to the ehtfit GOP senators who joined 10 Democrats to approve,a-state Income tax in the Michigan Senate yesterday. Romney, a constitutional convention delegate, said in an interview that "Those senators who courageously put the state's interests above lesser interests have evidenced that type of courage and leadership needed to find solutions to our problems ’’ Before the Senate's vote, Romney had declined comment. United Church Women of Birmingham will participate nationwide observance of May Fellowship Day on May 4 with, a series of activities at the Franklin Community Church. A breakfast at • ami. In the social hall wftl be followed with a meeting In the sanctuary. Speaker at the meeting will be Rev. Gerald O’Grady, minister of Christ Church Cranbrook. The Birmingham group is one of 2,300 local and state councils of United Church Women taking part in this year’s tprogam, which has tiie theme, God.” Residents of the women’s cieties of member churches, will serve as hostesses. A nursery will be provided for preschool children. Leaders View Plans for Developing City (Continued From Page 1) a series of smalt plazas and mailt leading to the central plaza in the heart' of the North pection. The shopping district here would be surrounded by vast parking areas. Parking areas would also sur-l round the central section, but to a lesser degree., The plan calls for| removal of the old courthouse atj Saginaw aad Huron. On tide tote, the phut eaya/s park, eoaatrucHoa ef pevttea J displaying Pantlae protects and an office building wanld be ideal. Saginaw,’ south of Huron, becomes an-automobile access area, not merely a street. "This central gives values no shopping center, even the largest, can of-•r,”’ the plan asserts. W A W -It contains banks, business offices, professional services and i major hospital. The South section should be devoted to smaller stereo, or stores with special Hues of mcrrhandtoc, and bousing. It is here that consultants suggest the development at an "executive motor hotel and prestige restaurant,” and a landscaped parkway along Water Street from Saginaw to the Civic Center. into inspected, field 'grown, 2 year stock, pest mow wrapper roots. Just 300 at this price. Mrs. Mark B. Duffield Service for Mrs. Mark {Ehzabeth) Duffield, 52, of 19816 Sunnysiope Road, Beverly Hills, will be U a.ra. Saturday at the Bell- Chapel at the William Income Tax Plan Totters as Senator Stalls Bill - LANSING (UPI) - The income tax plan tottered on shaky ground in the legislature today as a move was made to delay final Senate action until next Tuesday. The Senate recessed its morning session until 2 this afternoon when it will take up a motion by Sen. Haskell Nichoh, R-Jackson, to postpone reconsideration of the Senate-approved 3 per cent income tax bill until next teek. Nichols, R-Jackson, said he mated time to work out amend-meats to the 14-bHI tax package before trading the income tax meaaure itself to the Hape. The ehaugee planned hy Nichols would give greater tax relief to buataess, he aald. Members of the Democratic-moderate GOP coalition pressing ll for passage of the program |-planned to oppose Nichols' move I in fear ft might kill the entire taxi* package. lay until tomorrow. Dzendzel ad-however, that Nichols couM delay action indefinitely if he wanted to., Nichols wants the package changed to exempt machinery and equipment from some $65 million In local taxes. He said this is necessary to improve the state's business climate. * * * Supporters of the tax package argued, however, ft might delay final action for a month. The legislature is presently scheduled to adjoin- May 11. ‘We’re not going to finish hi three weeks,” said Sen. Philip Rahoi, D-Iron Mountain. "We’ll be here longer." Opening last night's presentation, Mayor Robert Landry assured the capacity crowd "the City Commission will be behind this 100 per cent. There’s a Job to be done and only one thing, to do. Let’s get at and get it done.” Monroe Oamua, peesldeto the Downtown Pontiac Association (UFA), which now ti over the Job, ■■ man red Walter K. WUhnan, former city manager, will be executive director of the program for action sponsored by the DPA and chamber. Osrnun listed six committees already set up to “get the ball roll- In answer to the consultants’ warning that the whole plan hinged on private capital investment as its major source of financing, Osin un said "our entire program is geared for action. It's action that leiervatiM Application Press Theater Tour ' . " ~ ~ ji Moose make the following reservation for me on The 3«j. Raymond Dzendzel, Demo-il Pontioc Press Thoofor Tour to Now York City, departing wtte ftonr tester tow, twrei* L Tuesday, morning, May • and returning May 13. cratic floor leader from Detroit, s«id he would go along with a de- METAMORA -» All trains were stopped short of a bridge south of town here this morning while fire departments from three neighboring village! helped local firemen fight a blase that threatened to destroy the old wooden bridge. The bridge carries Metomsm Officials Uncertain Old Wood Bridge of Need for Jet Port Over Railroad on Fire Today Mrs. Mr.. I Address.. ..... ..................... Oi fOwrtlrtued From Page 1) j® CHy....... ............Phono, county goes ahead with plans to| I understand thot the $199 I hove enclosed includes [develop a major airport here. In view of the waiting action, pending the FAA’s decision, the committee decided to table a study at likely costs for the airport. The study was ordered by the board of supervisors April 10, to be com-‘eted within five months. Word of the FAA’s decision is NYC Chief Dispatcher E. J. Ross he ordered all trains to stop and make sere of safety before 'proceeding under the bridge. W V. O The bridge caught fire from , grass firs set off by sparks or exhaust from a passing train, ac-cording to the kfetamon fire Department dispatcher. I /! 8, y (transportation, hotel, theater tickets, plus other extra tea- ■ font mentioned in Prtit arfidtt. tores mentioned in Press articles. I tilso understand that if f hove any preferences for o ( room companion or am going «||h o small grgwp that this information will accompany this reservation. (Ilngto Room fit Islre) ' i agree to participate hi The Pontiac Proas Theater Tear expected by late June or cutty I under me following conditional July, according to Hamlin. If tbs* decision favors establfohitR the' I have included the full payment with this reservation/ (, proposed airport, the committee is J If I am unable to moke the tour I understand that I shall be I -xpected to follow up with the costj W«n a full refund proving I give notice hy April 1.1 under- | estimates. | stand thot resarvotiontiWfil be mode In order Or the receipt 6f |* The committee agreed, mean-l, applications and rttafmy name will be placed upon a wotting 1 while, to preptov 4 form letter ex-j* M if I pm not included among tho first 80. I understand ■ plaining tbe board of supervisors' ! *hat I may participate in, 08 of the schfdule ofovOntsexcept 1 airport plain and actions to date. ^ possible cbongos or additions mode necessary by soma 1 The letters will be sent ot me-1 9^ ^oyond control of Tho Pontioc Press, __________________________ nicipel governments in 'the coitoly.li,. ^ ^ __ __ -i ' * Reyulci*- 73c pock of 100 tablets. The genuine BAYES’S Aspirin lor —fast; fatt reiivf ef'hsfidothoi' - In the CBD fringe area, consultants suggest construction,of ' 'One Family Under rise apartments oriented toward] couplet, single persons, and retired persons, as well as development of a community college. ' , Planners emphasised that It hi important that the State High way Department put the M-59 lint from the perimeter road' to ItJI freeway beck In their Immediate program plaas. The link was dropped In January. Put Your Money Where it ‘Counts-Oii SIMMS DISCOUNTS On FAMOUS DRUGS BAYER'S ASPIRIN _______47c D.O.C. DENTURE CLEANSER s 39* I famous O.O.C. ctewisr ,» I clean d*rtur*« w<*OUt K"** LILLY'S INSUUN m. 99* Typ* -VSW- I u-40 intutin in all type*- Gtoutw 1 liUy'i' at dacaunh LAVORIS | Mouth-Wash ... 59c 89c PRELL'S shampoo 39° R*fl 60c I CwKSnna'* thenW*» •* I tube. 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Insulated covering* 3* 30* OCTAGON Boxes 4-inch size, galvanized finish — each 24* 36* Ceiling RECEPTACLES '4-foch porcelain, keyiess style - each .... 1 24* PONTIAC PRBSS, THURSDAY, -ypeboit Receives ^irst Overseas Arrived of Year D®TR0IT * The British * freighter Torr Head, making her •Ttat trip on the QreM;Lakht, be-*; came the first overseas arrival at !> 2ht fort of Detroit when she ' • • docked here yesterday. >£U Captain E. G. Davey was pee- U. 5. to Announce Each Pacific Test Kenya Upbraids Businessmen tor Misusing Loans NAIROBI, Kaw« MR)*—ttov-eminent loans and grants ore for developing basin aseis, not Ip I Caroline Has I I Her Education I | Partly Mapped | FARIjflNGTQN, Conn, ‘ (API— Caroline Kennedy, 4, has her educational future partly mapped out far', heir. Hollis French, haa&naster of tbs fashionable Miss Porter’s OaluMl *---*-* girls between the ages of If and 18. 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Fine sanforized cotton playweor In prints and solid color* Shorts, pedal pushers and slacks for sizes 7 to 14 and 3^ to in. Bonus Buy! FROLICS CASUAL FLATS Were 4.99 and 7.9* Children's Wear, Hand Sewn, Double Woven White Women'sNyfcn Gloves Elastic Leg ... Double Seat Women's Nylon Briefs Soft, Absorbent, First Quality CurHy Gauze Diapers Special £ for * I Purchase ■ I Nylon trick briefs with double seat. Whit* color* 5-8. Lingerie... Second Floor Were 6.99 to 8.50 “• Many wanted colors and styles in most oll size}. Big savings! Children’s'Shoes ... Second Floor Our Own Qualify Hprdwkk Boys' Underwear Briefs Peg. 7 for *1 69c Sturdy cotton knit briefs in i Ms 1 tizes 6 to 20. Hardwick brand. Boys'Wear.. ,. Second Floor n 1 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS Huron tenet - ‘ THURSDAY, APRIL *, MO ' * ta|B0U> *■ mpOWULD johb *. tan. Btcrtwrr *atf Adrtrtlaicg M O ¥iinii> » Jnw W. fiiwiiili. What’s Complete Story on Soldiers m Viet Nam? Is the American public getting a “cover-up story” on the role of U S. soldiers in Viet Nam, as It did^at the beginning of the U2 Incident? When U2 pilot Powers went down* a prepared statement was released saying one of our planes was missing after reporting oxygen failure. This was a counterintelligence maneuver, standard procedure in the spy business. ★ ★ ★ Our forces in Viet Nam are called “advlaora.” They are 1 'native troops. . This training includes flying the Viet Nam troops on raids via helicopter. U.S. personnel have been killed doing this, and some have died flying in supplies to the forces we are supporting. ★ ★ ★ Training native fighting units is another one of our activities, and we’ve lost some “advisors” Now fresh marine helicopter units are arriving with more U.S. manpower. Are we committed to another Korea • here? How many^ “advisors” do you put in battle before your Nation is at war? t h e purchase of stock shares ;; whose daily Hoe and fall are then watehed avidly by-the students. They pay a small price, a dollar per student, to gain invaluable experience and understanding In the workings of this nation's economic system. ★ ★ ★ Teacher Roland Hallquist of Pontiac Central High School is to he commended with the many other teachers in the school system who show the courage and initiative to do a better job of teaching. ‘Succotash’ Items In Today's MAT Column Make Interesting News Votes of the Pftople: ^ 'President Should Consider These Logical Deductions* Kennedy, during Us leisure hours over erad this: "You cannot help the wage earner by pulling down the wage payer. You cannot further the faredMCteod of man fay encouraging dan t) hatred. You cannot help the pear by destroying the rich. Yon cannot borrowed money. You cannot beep out of re ttap you earn. You cannot build character n's initiative and independence. You ly fay doing lor them what they could wave made ly the hstirhl Abraham and, weigh. mentally their true meaning. Two VS. Senator* Perturb Writer 'Religious Articles Needed Every Day’ ‘But 1 Don’t Want to GO Out!' Cuban Invasion Defeat Still a Bitter Memory An anniversary almost best left forgotten is the first birthday of the abortive “Bay'of Pigs” invasion of Cuba. $ Its repercussions are still echoing gnd its, memory will be a black mark on our record for years to come. Some MOO Cuban writes stormed ashore to participate ift the three-day debacle. Vital air support was > missing, and partisan bands within Cuba never got their diversionary assign-ments started. ★ ★ ★ ' Castro today is trying to raise a little cash by ransoming the survivors Off. : The inevitable investigations began and it was decided there had been mistakes made. Criticism was laid at the doors of the Central Intelligence Agency and the Defense Department. President Kxnnxdt drew his share. ★ ★___it jfL , Today, Castro is much stronger militarily, bat in much more severe straits economically. The shiploads of Russian arms have not helped esse the hunger pains, and rationing is in effect. The People's Paradise has a belly ache. ★ ★ ★ The current policy of economic blockade'Is proving more effective than any invasion force. The military equipment the Reds can spare, but fbod-—that’s another stpry. Famine itself Is often close at hand in the U.S.S.R. She cannot spare the grain for the fledgling Red recruits in Cuba. t la fact Russia and Red China have never really licked the agricultural production program themselves, despite years of Spartan existence under the tenets of Marx, Lenin and Stabs. Let’s hope that by the time the second anniversary of this invasion defeat rolls around there will be different hands on the reins of Cuba. Uses Unique Method to Teach Economies | A teacher in the Pontiac Public School District Is bringing the subject of economics close to the minds | and pocketooofcs of his students — exactly where it belongs if they are to understand bow the topic affects them in adult life, gf T' ★ ★ ★ ” ! Hie method of teaching iadades ) By JOE HAAS - That the Pontiac area had s large Indian population la proven by the fact that stone arrow * heads and stone hatchets are yet found In many excava- 1-78 Freeway find them by the* dozen, especially when the new road skirts the Shore of lakes. Some human bones also have been found where mounds | were built, as did the Indians for their burials. Writing me from Seattle, Fred Onaway says its World’s Fair is entirely that, and thinks we should have one of those mono-rail lines between Pontiac and Detroit. . Married on the day that the first trolley car ran through Ortonvllle, Willis Tucker will be honored at a reception at the Brandon Orange Hall there from 7 to 9 o’clock on the evening of May 1, his 80th birthday. Mushroom: What the .young thing thinks is n room in whteh to pat-'" It’s quite appropriate and prideful that some of toe farmer organisations call themselves “The Sodbusters,” for In busting toe sod they’re feeding the Testiif m ’Twill soon be tone to watch out for poison Ivy. You’ll have no trouble If you remember our annual warning— “Leaves throe; let It be.’ Slogan of toe leather moguls in their worry about toe big Increase In sneaker wearing: “There’s nothing sneaky about leather." This column is In absolute agreement with Mrs. Beverley Klammer of Drayton Plains, who phones that the meanest trick of the firms sending Junk mail is to use envelopes that are of toe same color as those in which we receive the Interest on our government bonds. In regard to toe claim of 8tate Highway Commissioner John C. Mickle, that a proposal of the con-coin lads and lasses In restricting the condemning of property for public use. would hold up Michigan highway construction for several years, a little retrospect on Pontiac Is in order. When the railroad was extended northwest from Pontiac over 100 years ago, it was held up for two years by a Waterford Township farmer, who Insisted that they give him a subway to drive his cattle under It. Central and Western Michigan Waited two years for a railroad, but the farmer got toe subway—and It's still there. Endeavoring to raise two crops of potatoes on the same land this year is George Overlay* of Commerce. He planted the first crop last week, which he expects to dig In July; then do toe second planting, which should mature In late September. The experiment will be watched with Interest. Robins are almost as numerous as the worms they pull from toe ground, but Mrs. S. W. Barnes of 27 Chippewa Road reports something quite unique—an-albino robin. Verbal Orchids to- David Lawrence Says: Steel Earnings Figure Misleading WASHINGTON—It's easy enough to bewilder the public with large though in themselves they may be a sign of weak-n e s s instead of strength. Thus the country was told ing the last 24| hours that toe] U.S. Steel Corp.1 had earned $55.81 million In the first quarter of this year. This sounds like a lot of money and promptly raises questions as to why a company which can make that large a sum in only the first cannot very long keep up its reno-vation of plant facilities. The need Tdt- MM^lrnizhuonTii-C^lBHBlf Big figures are being bandied about also by public \aflMals, who perhaps unwittingly give a misleading Impression. Lather Hodges, the secretary of commerce, for instance, discnssed the steel situation at n news conference on Tuesday and made name statements to the reporters which further confuse the problem. “They would have gotten about m—ey, Just like a bonanza. They would have also, under -fli® de-pi iVfutjpu schedule F ueceler-atlng schedule F—gotten an additional $tt mil Hon. They would have had ftt million extra Why do we have to read, see The Pontiac Press is to be com-and bear SO much from such peo- mended on printing the religious pto as Everett Dirk»*n »d Charles articles, especially to* Christmas fi.iw* u.S. Senators, who have and Easter stories. They ere always been against anything that simple, straightforward and easy is good for our country? They to understand, must think they are tunny and gj wo0(d ^ to have cute on TV. B , ,mI, n miin * f*^^**”1* Eneo.aha— ----- dentaad the Bible. More peo- ‘How About Printing^ pie *nH' read toe Stories In a Hobby Cotamitr We subscribe to The Press and have enjoyed it since moving herb about eleven years ego. Has The Press considered the addition of a hobby page or short column perhaps once A, week? We would appreciate such news especially announcing the new issues of stamps or coins. Would -Jws wiffH”** V I’m formerly of Pontiac, now visiting Lake Orion and reading my favorite old paper. The Almanac But what Mr. Hodges forgot to point out to the reporters is that the 8-per-cent tax credit has not yet been passed by Congress and, even so, would apply only to new The transcript made public by equipment—and not to other kinds his office quotes Mr. Hodges as of capital expenditures, having said: If, therefore, it were applied on “The administration had in the an expenditure of an estimated works and still has in the works *200 million for brand new equip- two phases of taxation bills which ment—a figure believed to be far quarter of a yepr should w asking wouW ^ p^-t of thq too big—U.S. Steel Corp. Would get ter price increases on its products. sitUAtion raised by U.S. Steel if a credit of only *16 million. This But precisely because of this ^ey had taken advantage under doesn’t go very tar toward taking superficiality or brevity of treat- ^ current situation of 8 par cent care of the 1365 million being ment, the American people arent tax-credit incentive. spent. ■ , seeing the problem in perspective. __——_-------------: ..........—— --------- , --------... — . Far the *55-8 million baa to be divided into M million parts, as (bat Is the number of shares heM by the SU.000 owner* of DA Steel dorp. Receiving 75 cents a share each quarter, or *3 for the whole year, means the bolder of common stock is earning less than 3 per cent on each dollar invested in 1950 when* the stock sold for more than (100 make it practical for your paper? Mabel 0. Kay 1765 West Square Lake Road ‘Why I* Psychologist Dealing In Politics?’ • I nave followed Dr. CTane In his crusade against college professors, his overemphasis on sex and his doctrine of compliment-paying. Although I doubt the validity of these ideas I do not doubt they have a relevant place in a column of this t^pe. By United Pram JL________ T^yTs^'uraday^ April ft, the U6th day of the year With 249 to follow in 1963. The mom is approaching its last quarter. \ • The morning stars an Jupiter and Saturn, The evening tear is Venus. On this day in history: la 1MT, the first British colon Dr, Wjlliam Brady ^isists: / Aspirin Is Still Aspirin ...to Be Used Sparingly With however, be bae mads sallies into the field of pafitlcs. He has stated font the Pence Corps Is an example of govoesmest competition with free sntaiptteo because It competes with private foreign missionaries, sad he has attempted to prove that the U.8. to not i ' a share. But nowadays an investor cad buy bonds or keep Ms money in a savings bank and earn more than 3 per eent. So, unless investors see some hope of larger profits and dividends in the future, the bee-enterprise system as a whole will face dark d^yi, and state socialism will be brought nearer. Far there’s a serious lesson to be learned from toe U.8. Steel Corp. figures announced on Tuesday ot this week. Is the first place, oat of the $55.8 million earned for the initial quarter ot 1 the year, $MJ million was used to pqy dividends on stack out- No matter faow thin you slice ft, it’s still baloney, and no matter how much ybu pay foa It, ft’s still aspirin. Of 756 persons who attempted I still believe the prodigious 'consumption of aspirin by the American people is.faad ter health and I'd advise taking aspirin in any circumstance unless one can rest died. So it is ter less dangerous than the other popular pain-killers, phenaeetin (acetphenetldin) and acetanllid (phenylacetamtde). Each of these pdinddllers is the main ingredient in scores of nos-trums exploited under proprietary names as remedies for coldf, grip, flu, hesd-i a C he, neuralgia, backache, rheumatic aches and pains, menstrual pain ot- what have you. I have taken aspirin (acetyl-sal- „ .__________________ __ IcyUc odd). One*, when I bad lion ter other purposes. But UJL acute subacromial bursitis, I was suicide with aspirin, only four' quietly for half an hour — indeed, such a rest or nap may avert the need or desire for such medicine. these are debatable political viewpoints, Dr. Crime espouses them In a column that ostensibly deals with psychological problems. This seems to be a. violation of journalistic practices. If he persists, I propose you forewarn your readers by heading his column: “Casa Records of a Political Propagandist.’’ 485 N. Johnson settlemmt la America leaded at Gape Henry, Va. In 1865, Federal troops killed Abraham Unooin’s assaestn—John Wilkes Booth — on a farm near Port Royal, Va. In 1877, Minnesota residents prayed for deliverance from a. plague of grasshoppers. A A A In 1154, a nationwide test of the Salk antlpoUo vaccine began in 171 different districts in 45 states. A thought tor the day: English essayist Charles Lamb said: “A pun is a pistol let off «t the ear; not a feather to tickle toe intellect.” THOUGHTS FOB TODAY We give thanks to Oei always -tor you afi, esnrtanffy mention-tog you la oer prayers.—I Tkess. The best and sweetest flowers of paradise God gives to His people when they ere upon their knees. Prayer is the gate to heaven. Thomas Brooks. Case Records of a Psychologist: Five Causes Explain Quarreling Only $7.9 million was left for debt retirement and about $1 mil- lly DR. GEORGE W. CRANK CASE* L-494: Amy H., aged 31, dropped into my office, accompanied by her husband. ‘FWd doesn't me a n y Steel actually had spent about $49 million of borrowed money ter new plant and equipment in the same first quarter of the year. Hence, the outgo was for in excess of the income. A h e As a matter of fact, the company three years ago embarked on a program of modernization of plant and equipment costing $1.2 billion. It has about $265 million still to be spent ter this purpose this year. It borrowed more than $800 million for the whole program and took the rest out of reserves. This money, on the other hand, has to be paid back sooner or later. If a company can earn only enough money to pay it* current dividend and provide lor debt retirement on what it has already borrowed, it The Country Parson ? grateful for the hour Ur two of relief tt gave me. But Tm a great coward and didn’t repeat ft. Recently, I quoted here e recognized authority, as follows: “The promiscuous use at aee-tylxalirvhe arid for relief of aches, aeeralgta, neeritls. tsasll-Utta, influents, WHMcutar rteeu-mattem, cystitis, etc. may toad First, she hi. hungry for more physical affection but doesn't know what is wrong with her, nor does her husband. Any hungry creature becomes cross and snarling. You parents have watched this in your she ac- 'children aa well as in yourselves, cused, and began hunger CAUSES DIVORCE Amy Is of an affectionate disposition. But her husband to bet So she picks at him, or nags him. Nagging whies are usually sexually to cry. “Aw, you know that Isn’t ■©,’’ her husband defended himself. “But you just nag and ar- beiag edema of toe ftps, league, eyefids, aeaa ar entire face, vertigo. “Dear Doctor Brody: "I have followed your writings for manyyears and mostly agreed with ypu. However, I cannot agree with your objection to aspirin. ’ ^Thirty-five years ago, I had, at ■ “F lev i more, cused to crj “As that i husbe Mmsc just i gue _______. . .. DE. CRANE life’s miserable." “Dr: Crane, I don’t do such a thing," she turned to me. - “But I get no sympathy at home: Fred acts like a hear, and growls at me. Nothing I do Is ever right. He says Fm crazy. “Far example, ha Ukes strong eheeae while I toe mine mild, se toe have twe kinds m toe .table. This asm at toned I derided to sample his eheeae, and be yelled. *Hey, what’s toe Idea? Eat years and leave mine atone.’ “Dr. Crime, I can’t ton you whet I’ve put up with during the eight marriage a Mg above toward Me briak of divorce. Amy and her husband also had no religious allegiance. They weren’t members of any church, so they received no regular urging toward unselfishness. A A' A Besides, Amy had grown up in a home as the only child. She wasn’t used to quarreling, there- Nagging la one way by which a wife sabeonactoUsly tries to irritate her hmband into laying hands on her. It In comparable Is the naughtiness at chiBreo who don’t mind a little speaking If they enn thereby |d their • matter’s attentfan aft the company and hack to themselves. Shakespeare perfectly understood this psychological mechanism when he wrote “The Taming of the Shrew.” Fbr women crave masculine dominance. When their husbands fail them, they subcon-. sdously hit upon this nagging as a means of trying to force the . intervals of months, me knee years of our marriage. Why does man ioto dominant role, swell, get stiff and painful. I knew he act like this?’' nothing about aspirin. I used hot packs and bandages fbr a week or so at a time. SCARFED WIVE* Some of you mature renders who And the more he meekly submits, the man inflated tbs wile increases her About 29 years ago, some one h*ve gone through marital squab- shrewish tactlce, eometimes edd- rlage. ___--to , a- ____• a_________to *-*— ~M---------- smill kn anssmaif 7 ' . . ten, or having her feelings hurt, at least until after her marriage. And finally, they didn’t employ mutual eompfimento. If they had earitor joined toe eompH-meot dub, they could have saved themselves much of tote trouble. Send for my medico-puychotog-leal bulletin “Sex FnrWtmiir in Min rlage.” Employ it to insure the illness of your mar* snggetoad aspirin, wMdi I found fates-of year'own, will be amaeed very effective, end over the yeers at mch petty critJdsms as these, whenever toe knee beglne to hart. And to think, they pay me to aft I take aspirin and get immediate and listen to inch childish quar-rclicf. This applies also to other “Why don’t they settle their teg tantrums and hysteria to the picture. Yet thte whole pcoceee can be entirely anbconerioui. Amy, for instance, had no conscious Idee of whet was wrong with her. awnn w. ersa* r?Ts,i«a rheumatic pains with which an ixSSSeea. f ^ consider aspirin the number one ly whew they am so simple?” many necessity in my medicine cabinet, !*<*» logically ask. and 1 feel you should give tt a That’s exactly why this pay- better rating than you do. “Stooenly, ly, lb help people Icon hew 6e adjust. And Amy’s difficulty The other four reasons foF-Amy’s 1 trouble are found te the fact that she has no children. Women Iter to fondle and care ter living creatures, whether these be cats .and dogs, or fanbies. You have add ft better than I — the kind word I wanted to spy for aspirin. major , face to let tl fm. SBVEK |AC PRESS, T^UftSDAY. APRlt Research May Show How Virutos Affect Astronauts In Space SAN ANTONIO, . to (AF>-America's astronauts may survive m Air Force Is concerned! enough (o have ordered extensive studies on probable effect* of virus-caused ailments during space voyages. The studies at the School <4 Aerospace Medicine at Brooks Air Fares Base here deal with two main arose, says Dr. Seymour S. Kalter, head of the virology labor* story; 10 * quoit 2 • piece Hooting > Sturdy colloptible metal fish minnow bucket .........1.88 bag, easy to »m R S-iiM Oyea (loader • Saturday 9 to 5:39 — Friday » W » I FREE PARKING ON WISSIN STRICT SI0K - .d; \%:tiki.* KCgfen?r Giant special purchata! Shorts, pedal pushers, surfers, capri's REPEATING A SELL-OUT If in our regular flock, would tell from 3.99 to 5.991 A fabulous selection of colors in solids, stripes a>td plaids. Easy-core cotton with concealed zippers, gripper woist bands. Fully lined, tool Sizes 8 to 16. 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Washable 100% Tremendous buys!’ Tops to wear in or out, short-sleeve and sleeveless cotton knits. Penis in woven plaid,' cotton tapestry, poplin, sateen, knits. Sizes 7 to 14. placquets, classic weaves cotton, a host of colors to complement your wardrbbo. S-M-L. Hurry Ini Houie*Ok|y Chances Only One in Fifty, $ay» Speaker Pear* TO Bim AGAIN—Sen. Dennis ChAvez, D-N. M.. announced yen-, terday at a Washington news conference that he will seek rer election in 1964. Republicans Fighting Public Works Bill as Political Weapon By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (ft — Divided Senate Republicans fought a rear guard action today against a J2.6-billion public works proposal they called a raid on the Treasury and a potential presidential political weapon. The tactical difficulty faced by the six GOP members of the Senate Public Works Committee— and it was shared by moat of their party coMeaguea—lay in opposing the administration’s proposal without being tagged as against public works. PROMISES ALTERNATE Sen. Winston L. Prouty, R-N.H., who foresaw possible effective political uae of the program by President Kennedy, promised to come up with an altamative when the committee-approved measure is laid before the Senate later. Prouty’s aides said this was likely to be in the form of an amendment to limit prestdentially . Pears objects strongly to par-posed addition of Kalsmaaoo County to the Fourth District, clearing the way for SAn, Carbon H. Morris, R-Kalamasoo, author af the uew Month-End Diomond Sole !4-Carat Total Walght Lynn Jewelers One South Saginaw FI 5*5731 \Vorld War II Marina Shows Thanks for Blood * 8T. LOUIS — >Tmde sources say 17 per cent of the $400 million annual record industry sates comes from the sate of "I do. I feel it is better to exercise control from the start. “There are disadvantages, of course. 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A grand buy at... ------- -------------■— ----------v NEW STORE HOURSI OPEN NIGHTS Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Idonday tOglili HI 9 P.M. aiMMr Mamas EVERY NIGHT 5 to 9 P.M. PARK FREE in any city barking lot DOWNTOWN Bring You the Greatest Values This Season/ nsuKauariOHo ’ SPORT COATS Specially Priced at ISO NORTH SAGINAW—Next To 42 ONLY-REDUCED! GIRLS' SWEATERS 100% orions In cofdigoa or slipover styles.. „ * . broken *izo* 3 to 12................ 60 ONLY-^EDUCED! QIRLS' DRESSES Beoutiful spring fabrics and W washable wearable cottons. 3-6x. 7-17.. jfl ,23Q yards • •• BETTER DRAPERY FABRICS 45" wide. Both prIMs and solids In assorted fabrics. Dress up • top quality • leathers • scientific fit 140 YARDS WASHABLE*W00LEN$ Crease resistont, 54" wide. 85% wool, 15% nylon; All spring plaids. Safa how... . SI YARDS OALIITTA COORDINATES WcH designed cotton prints kv misses or holf-eixes.........REDUCEDI GOLD CREST rsag8 THE PONTIAC PRKSS, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1962 'ELEVEN PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE Opwn Monday Through Saturday 10:00 A.M. to WOO 9JA,. DOWNTOWN PENNEY'S STORE HOURS: j Open Monday and Friday 9:30 AM. lo 9.00 PM. L » ^ All Othfar Workdays 9j30 AJA. to 5t30 WIA Columbia Students Raid Girls C TOMORROW AT 10 A.M. MIRACLE MILE STORE FOR INFANTS 40 RHTERRI1Y TOPS Save on 100% cotton maternity tops now. Gay solids and prints for summer. Sizes 8 tar) 8. 33 COORDINATED DIAPER SETS . Roys' handsome diaper sets In brown, gold or.blue | Ideal for a gift. Sizes VS, MVS.......’. I 3 CRIBS <<|M Pint hardwood construction with double drop side. T Six year size......................... Hr 27 0RIB BUMPERS . Smart three piece crib bumper. Vinyl covered | DU and foam padded Gay print cover.......... < 1 1 ERMINE QREY DELUXE CRIB gmgmmm. Double chop sides, stablizlng bar, other fine j|j|63 features. Minor scratches..... ....... w w FOR GJRLS 25 ARNEL TRIACETATE SKIRTS Smartly styled skids far summer wtHj knife pleats * that slay In awn after washing. Steps 5 to 6x, 7 to 14. 36 CARDiQAN SWEATERS Ideal for school on cool sprinjfdays. While ofton# acrylic, soma colors broken sizes.. ... TOMORROW AT 9:30 DOWNTOWN STORE 'third floor 41 ONLY-LARGE SIZE BATH TOWEL! 22x44" extro generous size ... thick looped cotton terrys..... 2- *1 175 YARDS - BETTER PIECE GOODS A mm, Arnel rayons... rayon and tiUta... regulated* /forllsr for gingham cottons................ mm W 120 YARDS-COTTON PIECE GOODS- .. ■ Excellent quality cotton percales In * .A for *1 attractive prints.. • • •« •* a • &*.-*.• e|» # # # • «■ 12 ONLY-WARM BLENDED BLANKETS : 72"x90" extra long stea... nylon bound... ▼Jj| solids...patterns......................... w , SECOND FLOOR IS ONLY—NISSES’ SPRING 00414 M. All wools... laminates... flR % or.fall length.. .'REDUCEDI.I IE 46 ONLY-ENTIRE STOCK MISSES' SWEATEES Penlons . . . bulkys . .. cardigans . . . ‘ slipovers... broken sizes... REDUCED. 48 ONLY-TODDLEHS TRAINING PANTS Absorbent cottons... strong elastic tops 7 >. NR. RRn ». triple crotch ... A TOT QQ 12 ONLY-BABY BATH SETS Soft tony towel and washcloth sets ,.. IHlD fata shower gift Rem.. GWw AAAIN FLOOR 21 ONLY-REDUCED-MEN'S HAH | Top quality far felts... ^BNNk-; most wonted brim styles.............. Mr 7 ONLY-MEN'S SPORT COATS # M Woob and wool blends... $19 masculine patterns...brokonsixee.!■ 33 PAIRS—MEN'S OR BOYS’ SHOES . Cosuols... dross styles... nylons... genuine leathers... REDUCED!. 7 PIECES ... MATCHED LUDQA0E Sturdy wpodee frames... scuff resistant plastic covert........... 3" V9 BASEMENT 40 0NLY-C0TT0N STREET DRESSES 34 ONLY-COTTON TWILL SHIRTS 4 Long wearing army fall cotton .... ,. ™ R ** long tieenee... diwt shirt collars.. ■ FOR WOMEN 22 ONLY-ASSORTED SATIN PILLOWS - -- . Many shapes and colors In gleaming satins.. . add ' ■ ® ” d touch of dolor .......l.,..;7.. 28.ONLY-TODDLER SUNSUITS Ruffled styles for girls. He-man tailoring for boys..... 12 ONLY-FITTED CRIB SHEETS Adorable nursery dmlgns on good JT* quality mutfat... fas ttondard cribs. 2B ONLY-MEN’S UNION SUITS long or short tfoeve. * long teg styles... sizes 48 50 Only ... REDUCEDI..,. 100 NETS SF0BT SHIRTS A wide ossortmentaf dytes one colors Including button downs. • Both short ana long sleeves. FOR MEN ZOO YARDS—48” DRAPERY FABRICS . Cotton — cotton/rayons — prints — solids , . attractive designs.' - 10 ONLY-INSULATED DIAPER BAliS Sturdy plastics ... bottle compartment... zipper tops.... .40 MEN’S SUITS Seat 100% wools, some wool and dacron® pol/sMsT blends. Styled for easy living. M W0NK SHIRTS Tl& oence wWght twill in kokht or grey. Ideal for working around the yard this spring. S, M, L .. S D0E-L0N JACKETS Wind and . weatherproof vinyl jackets. Clean with • damp doth. KnR trim. Broken sizes. 34 KNIT SHIRTS Long or short tteevet, cotton orocrilan® acrylic knR, placket W button front S, M. L 38" |33 9“ 188 . SS GETTER DRESSES Choose summer jacket ond coat dresses ^ • at a big savings. Some cottons. Junior, $D . . S1 A Misses, Half steds................ H t0 , ||f 1S SPRING SKIRTS # ’ Choose surface Interest cottons, soma pastel wool plaids. ▼^E Ideal for wearing now. Broken sizes...... ■ 25 RAIN AND SHINE COATS A gay assortment of poplins and reversfctes in cotton. An ▼Bl * , ideal coal far this time o< year. Sizes lOlo J8.. — 13 UNIFORMS Women's uniforms in cottons and dacron qrnmm . mg* polyesters Mar reduced. Whtto only.* fO J|®® . Broken sizes.. ... ............... W w FOR THE HOME FOR BOYS 12 FUSTIC RAINCOATS An kteol safety toot for bays. High visibility for , lowvtsIbilRy weather. Sins6to 14...... 41 SPORT SHIRTS i Young Gentry sport shirts for boys. Three-quarter length sleeve. Prints and solids. Sim 12 to 18., 129 WOMEN'S COTTON H0USEDRESSCS Misses ... half sizes... reol saving....... ...l.i. 50 only... -REDUCED! Better DRESSES a spring stylos . .. half sins ... *4 -*6 -*8 6a pairs... MISSES’ SPORTSWEAR a dan-river cottons . • knaa-knockars 49 pairs. . . REDUCED! Una’s Oxfords • dross stylos • finoat leather* • amcalamf valwa 6“ NEW YORK (AP)-Two thou-sand Columbia University male pus «d Barnard College, Colum-bia’a female branch, early today. Thar ware quit “St'a Just spring,” said a t The utudents aaaembled along the brood walkway that traverses the campus. They were dad xnoatEy.il! Bermuda shorts and crewgBCk sweaters. Same threw l and chanted slogans. JFK's Vacation Ending; to Meet With Macmillan PAUf BEACH, Fla. (AP) -rrsaftiant Kennedy, his Eaati holiday drawing to a cloae, pre- i with British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and gets fresh reports on the flVst volley in tka new U.8. nuclear test series. Kennedy was cruising aboard the Honey Fite Wednesday after noon whsc he xeestvad word that test No. 1 had been find at dawn over the Pacific near Christinas Island. But he issued no state- Ha has stayed in the background after giving final authorization Ifaeeday for the tests in the atmosvhere to commence. The first explosion followed his go-altopd by only hours. He was informed Tuesday night that the tests would. get under way Wednesday unless weather interfered. Shortly after midnight they surged across Upper- Broadway to the Barnard campus, blocking Broadway traffic far 15 minutes. Stems got into the high-walled campm, but none entered the buildings. dr 4t * • Girl undergraduates, in night clothes, bting from the windows of Bernard dormitories. A police sergeant. who hap-| pened to pass in a radio car, summoned a squad of eight patrolmen and the male students were quickly herded -from the Barnard campus. STOPPED CBOWD The students then surged to the east side of die campus, toward Johnson Hall, the graduate women's dormitory. dr ★ dr'. Police circled the campus in radio car* and stopped the crowd. •i ' it , ★ * About 1,000 students made another try in die direction Barnard, but lost interest when they heard police summon ' fire ■da. 'The hoses Will discourage them if nothing else will,” sergeant said. '1 of 8 Dental Patients Has Tooth Extracted' NEST YORK (UPI) — Ons oi of every eight dental patients has a tooth extracted and two out oi 11 have xrays, a suryey fay the American Dental Association The survey report noted that the average dentist has 1,184 patients who visit Us office 3,130 times a year. GOLD CREST QUALITY BRAKES SUNDAYS OPEN Hi FRIDAY] SATURDAY! Get in oh the Month's big sweep of savings! ^N|VE4KS>* Don’t miss a thing... Posney’shasvnlnas for you, your family, your homo! , find fabalons savims on ilips, hosl •ry, .new fashions •.. meh, now’s year chance to stock nf on shifts or eten get that new jacket you've wanted. And, there ere downs of expeptiowd bnyt far hays isf girls. Harry! IdSIl THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 26,11 m TWELVE Illness of U2 Pitot's Spouse Still a Mystery After Rumor Denied *5.79 Gallon Exterior Long Lasting House J^aint Save *1.02 ATI \ WASHINGTON t*-Mrs, Barbara 'Towers, wife of U2 pilot Francis Cary Powers, has been discharged E Georgetown University Hos-, a spokesman there said yes-OT. ♦ The 27-year-old Mrs. Powers, I taken to the hospital,In a coma I last Friday, left on Monday with I I the nature of her illness still I j something of a rtiystery. | Power himself was not ffifimedi-ij «tely available for comment on .a New York Post newspaper story .today that quoted him as saying -his wife had indigestion and that h report she had taken an overdose of steeping pills was silly. REPLACED IN BED POSTS — Agriculture minister Mikhail Olshansky left, and Petr Y. Antropov, minister of geology and minerals, have been removed from their posts in the latest Soviet government shake-up. Olshansky had been under -heavy crttfclam for failing to- meet Soviet food production gods. just ujf "Charge It** Applies easily. Lidas veil, has r» markable durability. Resists mildew peeling, chipping on any exterior wood. Rich, modern colors resist fading, stay truly bright... choose/ from 6 color* and white, pint trim, white! Brighten yonr hope with Master-Mix. When Mrs. Powers was admitted to the hospital, polios said she was reported to have tafcm an over* dose of a sleep-inducing barbiturate. And, a hospital statement Said she was being studied to determine the cause of her illness !SMiich is probably due to a medi- Tough Elastic Paint Filip Guards Your : Home for Years Speaks for Publishers NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Charge Account - On Sunday, the day before she was released, a hospital spokesman said nd* diagnosis of her ill* ties* had been nude. No further information on her condition was immediately available from hospital officials .today. w Sale! Easy-to-Use Latex Base Flat The presi-, attacked as irresponsible those critics who would “have the public believe newspapers are fading) away." * • Mark Feme, AN PA president, told more than 1,200 publishers, at the ANPA convention that “a new stridency has crept Into some of the ‘professional’ criticism leveled at newspapers — something quite the opposite of constructive drlti-cism.” In « prepared address, Ferree argued that such critics chop at the ..roots of the newspaper tree, “never recognising that they, with all free citizens, live and work in the shade of that very tree.” Ferree, executive vice president and general business manager of Scrippo-Howard Newspapers, warned that if newspapers—as a fully independent medium of news and opinion Special Asphalt Driveway Coating Re*. Odd 0*1. Charge It Master-Mixed Latex Base-Hat Paint -...a high-quality paint... makes home decorating easy! Brush, orjroll it on in the morning, use rooms same day. No painty odor. Colors and white. Bny today—Save 91.32. fust spread on blacktop driveway or other asphalt surfaces and get new protective beauty. Dries quickly. t)ne pail coVera *300 to S00 square teet. Got yours now and save! Shop tonight. Friday an|i Saturday nite ‘til 9! Driveway Costing Applicator ... .2.49 tauimulsio^ driveway coating Sale! Exten. Ladders 1 16-ft. 8.99 20-ft. 14.99 24-ft. 19.99 28-ft. 23.99 32-ft. 27.99 36-ft. 31.99 GARRICK $175.00 Wedding Ring $100.00 __ _____ frtded, "criticism would wither, not for lack of a target but for lack of its chief protector." He declared that newspapers were prepared to use imaginatively all opportunities of the space age, and announced the creation of a scientific advisory committee of the ANPA. The committee win assess ways of adapting the latest scientific findings and equipment to newspaper technology, he said. GROOM'S RING Whan You Buy o DIAMOND SET CAMBRIDGE $500.00 Wedding Ring $125.00 Loose shingles? Rain leaks? Get a new Sean reef, mv. Cbossa J-fafcl shingles, lock shingles-' many mere!. Call FE 5-4171 for FREE Estimate Budget-Priced Storm Windows Up to 60 *| 077 Veiled laches lO Charge It Rustproof aluminum needs no Easy-to-Install Fiberglas® Panels 36\96in. 8W (barge It Add ream beauty indoors and out. Um for shower doom patio coven. Coast Guard Claims Distress Call Hoax 24 N. Saginaw, Pontiac NEW YORK (AP)—The Cbast Guard says a purported distress call from an aircraft over Die Atlantic Ocean was a hoax. A “Mayday" message, received Tuesday night at Pease Air Force Base in Portsmouth, N.H., gave the position of the “plane" as sev* eral hundred miles east of Boston. The Coast Guard sent planes and cutters into the area Wednesday. No aircraft had been reported overdue. ' Later, die search was discontinued. J|lk 1962 High School .JwUL. Graduates ‘M a Better Job With Mort Pay” Why take a Job at once which may be boring and deadend. A business education is rapid and reasonable in coat. You can be earning a good income at pleasant work, enjoying the company of interesting men and women- BuarWnrisl or itwipatli student! aif elect Speedvrtttne, the e»»y to leant ABC Uterthand ejetem, or Oregg ihorthtnd. Professional Account-ins, Higher Accounting, end Junior Accounting. Oenernl Business. Clerk-Typist, nod Office Machines progremg ere ottered. Our permed mg, tree wliinm terVlee vtu be nvnitoble to reu when you graduate The threat employers In the tree call upon us to flu Mexico’s most-traveled highways are patrolled daily by a fleet of 'green jeeps equipped with two-way I radios and repair devices and i manned by experienced mechanics. There is no charge for assistance they render except for the actual icost of gasoline, oil, repairs or {spare parts. Hand-Operated Utility Mixer HOMART 74‘* NO MONK! DORN* Jack Fonts Hold Up 20,000 Lbs. Sears Price 8** (Twigs It Helps Mop sagging, squeaking flown in house er barn. Extends to 7-fl, 2 in. Save more at Sean! PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE 1962 Kenmore ”600’* Portable Dishwashers I YOU’D NEVER f KNOW IT . . . but Fm wearing bifocals! j-rEES** of DWheai * ISCLOP^ } NO MONEY DOWN oo Saar* Eaay Paywaod lloo Washes best by actual tesfr in our laboratury! New spray arm sad water impeller plus Roto Rack give all-oyer cleaning. MO’ rinse. Helds service for 12 FREE Homo 10-Day Fm wearing nwiso No-Line Glasses 1962 Kenmore "20 Others tip to.......69.95 Dr. C L Phillips Optometrist EYES EXAMINED-* CLASSES FITTED Jnat $ty **Charg* It** OPTICAL DEPARTMENT Satisfaction guaranteed or your money hack1 SUMS mmms mm jewelers1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. APBIL 2H, 1862 Salfin Asks De Gaulle Called as Witness Why Not Cat Overtime, Hire Idle?1; AF Mystery Satellite Launched in California POINT ARGVEZJUb. Calif. »-The Air Force launched • mystery satellite from tMa West Coast mie-sile base In the predawn hours today. INGTOR of witnesses it wants lor the treason trial of the captured chief of the and-GauUist secret-army in AlgaHa. Among them mFn+ idem de Gaulle and the nomtly retired Premier Michel Mr. Unlem the witnesses are called, Attorney Jean-Louis Thdor-W Sot Our Otttatandiiif Collictiaa of SPRING CASUALS $2 «• m IfR Mating Shoes 50 N. Saginaw mute at his imminent pre-trial hearing before an examining magistrate. 1 i The lawyer anid he particularly wanted to question the witneeaet about an aasa—lnatlon attempt on Salan when he wee commanding French forces in. Algeria and about the May 13. 1059, Algiers . uprising by Salan and others that led to the return of de Gaulle Pondtr Consolidation CHEBOYGAN (ft- Rural CBe-boygan County residents have planned a aeries of meetings to discuss the coneoUdetion of 19 rural school districts to build two new elementary schools. A millage vote to finance construction Is pro- Labor unions in some at the leading industries, notably steel and autos, arc particularly concerned. The Auto Workers Union BIG 10-LB. CAPACITY Coldspot 13.6 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator Freezers Was At $299.95! «>£iQ88 Automatic Defirost ■ jfmjW M-■ NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Paymeut Plaa You never defrost fmh-food section of this nh> priced Celdspot! True freespr stores over 162 lbe. Jumbo crisper. Butter chest, Handi-Bin, 16eB nth, Magnetic doors have flash hinges. DRIES ALL FABRICS 5 TEMPERATURE SETTINGS landlords! NO TftADE-IN REQUIRED phone NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Gives yon 5 temperature settings... All Fabric or Air Only for .fluffing clothes, drying plastics. Features bandy Load* A-Door, flexible timer for all fabric drying. Safety Door Switch, lint trap. Durable all steel cabinet with rust-resist-ant Acrylic finish. Gas Model, 6743 sale-priced at.... ,. . $117 You Saw. •31“ on Sears Silvertone 23-Inch TV (overall diagonal) SAVE (^9S Regularly $179.9! Dependable performance, approved picture power, new movie-square screen and full-projection comm will show yon what is meant bv “It’s Sears for Quality**! Come in and see it—You’ll buy and save! >|F - Portable Radio with Batteries Regularly *259* REDUCED*60! Regularly 159.95 "Ted Williams" approved “800” series Silvertoue trsmirier portable with haMerim, plays loud and dear-anywhere. . .See ■ it — Save! • * NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan j Three-cycle automatic with 2-speed agitation and spin for safe, washing of all fabrics; built-in lint filter, big 10-lb. capacity, 5 wash-rinse temperatures. Has Porcelain top and tub that resists rust, stains. See it, buy it at Sears tonight! \ *26M Silvertone Portable 6 trsmdftter* bring elation* boowimt in. * V play, hundreds of hours nn Iwiterin included. New atMealher c»«r. Nice! Saginaw St Phone FE 5-41 Satisfaction .guaranteed dr your money back STORE HOURS Nationally F Our All-time Best Seller... Kenmore 3-cycle All-fabric Automatic Washers 2-speaker, true Stereo sound with * ■ FOURTEEN THE PQNTIAC PRESS. THUBSDAY.«APHIL 26, jpea 'Group Aefivities Help Family Thrive' f TOPEKA, Kan. (AP)-U Men-to infer Foundation psychologist says the difference between families that thrive and those that go downhill mans to be a matter of finding things that are satisfying to (Ach and yet involve all jbf diem, * . *. * : Dr. Lois Murphy told a marriage counseling workshop for Methodist ministers Wednesday * study of GO found that in their fabdy fcaefc* grounds these was lear\ moving fewer tfvoroes. Two-thirds of the /amities were active members of a church. She said the church was the ody inotitution to which the' entii* family can belong for a long Reds Warm Up for May Day Parade in Berlin On the other side of the wait, West Berlin planned its own big Day demonstration. Hun-tanks and heavy gum rattled ^ of thounnds ^ exp?cM Dick Clark Married PHILADELPHIA U s Dryer. ..hirlpool-----------------RM P Fully guaranteed-beautifully refinished. RCA Whirlpool Automatic ^ Wstkor. ^ $9995 ■ ___________________, Reversible Foam *118 Cushions. • Bag. 155J4, 2-piece Living Ream Suita rsAQ in 1N% Hylon Cover, Reversible Foam ▼ | /Q Cushions. Rag. 1H.9S, 5-piece Seetieaal Sate.- .m ■ ■■ Banna styling in aN Ryton never. Be- $1^0 versible Foam Cushions. . MISCELLANEOUS FURNITURE GAS and ELECTRIC RANGES FAMOUS GAS RANGES Roe. 179.9*. CteiM of IS- <£ ■■HP 1 RECLINER CHAP; lag. 44.98. Re- Bag. 99.95 Fanout Compact Cas Range With AutesMtic Tap Burners. With Trade. Rag. 1SS.SS Frigidaire ST Electric Range ■wmi super site even. Ail deluxe features. With Trade......................... STEREO-HI-FI PHONOS 4 "HOT" BUYS REG. 29.95 SHETLAND FLOOR POLISHER THE PONT! VC PRESS FIFTEEN THURSDAY, APRIL «6, 1962 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, AR Types of Models Fill OHseum CARnival Delights New York Auto Buffs foothold on! to the dhow when stmlebaker. uncover* It* mww( model, the * $4,500 Avanti, a ISQ-milean-hour performer with which the South expect to keep American shores. The show, however, is a Mecca for the young and especially for the teen-agers from, the sidewalks of the city who caress lovingly the Ferraris, Jaguars, Mas-era tis and othew famous names. And where else can a commoner sit in a Cadillac and Rolls-Royce, or whatever Ms Choice, in the same tour? — sad, far the first time, every American make, are in the show, I hoping to win friends and ens- t tnmers, • I For many it will be a vain hope. j Despite over-all prospects for a better sales year than last, the bloom definitely is off the importJ ] market,. And only those makes which offer a reasonable chance.1 jfor parte and decent service can! NEW YORK - For those who loVe ears for cars' sake, the Internationa] Auto Show this week is offering a paradise limited only by the sightseers' endurance. Spread over three floors of the ' New York Coliseum are sports j cars, town cars, family cars, me 1 ing can, superluxury can, rfifd-1 get can — experimental and pro-' sale, I1 The Avanti, available with a supercharged engine, is the latest luxury car market, dominated so tar by Thunderbird. Many of the can are one-of-a-kind models, although with tare exceptions such as stylists’ dream can, everything on the floor la (or sale. A vast nuniber of the imports'®®!® NOTE Die show opened last Saturday, ban* on the heels of an announcement by Ford that the current to justify tlie building of a subcom-market for small-care, suck as pact in the United 9tatas. And even an the show began American Motors confirmed reports Aat tt has dlsoonttawad Ha ifatropoRtea, a tiny two-pnsaen- Southern Senator Says Congress Has No Right to Fix Voting Test WASHINGTON (UPIl Ea stand tor exclusive American sale. Neither of these marketing decisions fazed Volkswagen, the Acknowledged king of* the imports. Carl Hahn, gneral manager of Volkswagen of America, promptly announced his dealers had an all-time record sale of 18,500 cars in March and that the German company -plans to sell 300400 car* and 30,000. trucks in die United States this year. • Southern senators warmed up to their task of blocking the leadership’s dvfl rights, bill today. One member declared Congress had no more right to fix voter qualifications than it, had to ‘tchgnge the boiling point of water." The challenge was tossed out in a speech prepared for delivery by Sen. Herman E. Talmadge, D-Ga., first scheduled Southern speaker for the second day of full debate on the literacy test bilk The legislation would permit FLYING WEDGE Studebaker's new high-performance prestige car Is *• the Avanti (Italian for “forward") shown above. All new. the vehicle offers a three-speed ' automatic Trio to Continue Traffic, Medical Research Studies A study of highway traffic and two medical research projects will be carried on' by three Oakland County residents following recent approval of $185,166 In research contracts by the Wayne State University board of governors. The largest of the contracts Is $120,000 for a program of highway traffic research conducted by Dr. Albert J, Mayer at 25755 York federal elections. . Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield, Mont., put the Senate on notice that after a reasonable j period of debate — presumably tote next week — he will file a cloture petition to limit further talk. MAY FALL SHORT But most senators expect Mansfield and GOP teodef Everett M. Dirk sen, HI., to fill well short of getting the required two-thirds vote for the gag rule. In that ease, Mansfield sold, ’'Their effectiveness is not limited /to this group, however, as the patrols help children fora good habits which they carry with them into adult Hit. Hi addition, the patrols have a definite influence on drivers, tending to make them more careful. Four Pontiac area safety ph-t rollers have been named to join 116 of thrir fellows from across the state to represent Michigan at the 26th annual AAA Patrol Rally to Washington. D. t, May 10-13. 'Lance' Pounces on Intruders at Commerce Missile Base “Wo are limited only by apply,” Hahn said, "and that supply to turn ip limited by the number of Wtakers available In Germany.’" 1 He said Volkswagen was hired Automobile flub of Michigan are: Ray' Sutherland, il, of tt Williams St., Crofoot School: Janies Crump, 1ft, of $41 Prospect St., Eastern Junior High school; Michael Aldrich, 11, of 114 Glendale Ava., Rochester, Woodward School, nod Robert Afedole, U, of 2>70onelson School. In lauding the work of the safety patrols. Ernest P. Davis, Auto would have had a mauling he would never forget. Constant training of throe reliable animals to “kill" sn com- By REBA HEINTZELMAN “Lance,” a giant German shop-herd sentry dog at the Commerce Lake NUer base, prickled up his radar-like sms and gave a nasty nerve-shattering snarl. In the early evening darkness, his keen cense of smell had detected an unwanted intruder inside the double fence surrounding tb«4*tiJJtary base and he strained at the leash of his, handler. That night, and others, the same tiling happened again and again. of protection, according to Capt. Charles Harper, commander of the commerce base. “These dogs are not pets after their regular nine-weeks' training session has been completed," he said. "They are vicious, highly specialized fighting animals that tmot nrt .samoa Kilt ika tnrlitriHlinl Southerners opposing the bill were making a generally uniform : argument that the legislative ap- 1 ; proach to unconstitutional — and [ that the measure Is unneeded. ! Talmadge, in tils prepared ad-i [dress, said experience with the t Vt8t and 1960 civil rights laws and agencies they created "completely refutes the contention” that a voter qualification statute is needed. On Friday, the grotto will tour falMoue national htofortc 'sites, Including the Lincoln Memorial. 8wt> Jima Memorial, Tomb of the Un-known Soldier, Washington Monument, thgCaphol, Mt. Vernon end other points. Had there been no Identification made, or had the intruder started to run, Lowe would have been released with a "Get Mn’ and "Hold on!" The "visitor" tonal djdposaprogrant i under the 'direction 'd| trust no 'png but the individual handler —, and we keep titom that way.’’ ; ' TRAINED IN TEXAS Man-dog teams are trained at Lacldand Air Force base to Texas, then assigned to various military units, after the JIght-to-kill indoctrination period is finished. All of the canlpee (mostly "Safety {patrols are one of the most effective methods ever devised for' protecting school children. ■ •< 'is# U.S.N-Test Sparks Some Protests New Orleapiani Say ExcomiRUftication Is Better Than Mixing NEW ORLEANS (UPI)-A group Of Roman Catholics today risked banishment from the church tor rallying behind segregation lead-■ra with a hattfo rrv of "hotter By The Associated Pre s America’s rxnropMnn ,of nu clear tests in the air brought three email demonstrations to foreign countries, thousands of «-pressions of dismay, indignation, concern, tolerant understanding from friends, bitter denunciation from the Communists. Leander H. Perez Sr., s o u t h Louisiana political leader and foe of integration, Was the major speaker at tost night’s mam protest to Archbishop Joseph Francis Rummers orders to desegregate pftrochlal schools in New Orleans this fall. Mixed with fear was the underlying but' faint hope that an all-out nuclear race between the United States, and the Soviet Union still might Iw averted before tt gets out "of hand. TOKYO NOISIEST ■ Die noisiest demonstration was to Tokyo, where 325 leftist itu-, dents, Communists, Socialists and members of the Japan Anti-Bomb Coundj shouted before the U.S. Embassy and tried to enter the embassy compound. Japanese police drove them off, but the leftists have promised to demonstrate every day during the test series. , "Our church leaders are taking directions from the Communists,” he said. Perez, Mrs. B. J? Galliot Jr. and Jackson Ricau, a; leader of the New Orleans Citizens Council, already have been excommunicated for their fight against Hummel’s orders. RECEIVES OVATION The crowd stomped their feet, clapped their hand* and gave a s h o u t i n g. standing ovation to Perez. Mrs. Gaillot Was present, but did not speak. Ricau was not School Official Asks to Leave Asst. Supt. Hufziger Offered Top Post in Trenton District WHERE SLUG LODGED—Robert Puke examines the.hole made to a metal kitchen cabinet when * 30-caliber slug ripped through the front window sash and ricocheted into the kitchen area of the home on Sashabaw Road in Independence Township recently* The case is still being Investigated. Ex«P,harmoci*t Upset Claricion in 1960 for 4th District Seat Origin of Bullets Mystery Ray L. Baker, pharmacist turned < politician, announced today he wilfi j Still Probing Shooting seek a second tend as Mate reprh-sentative from Oakland County’s 4th District. The ttjear-old Republican to London, 14 Americana-most of them students In England— marched up and down Ml night Embassy with Pontiac schools Asst. Supt. Otto C. Hutziger, credited with leadership of the district's SM-million building program, has been offered a position as superintendent of the Trenton School District, south of Detroit. Captain Harper explained that although a dog to constantly tormented to be vicious, he to never mistreated. However, they are not handled gently, either. dent, said that the bullet could either have come over the backstop or else could have been fired by someone in the wodds near the range. The range ot the teeaHbcr Die qrigin of two 30-callber rifle bullets that strayed to the premises of Claude Parke, 4832 Sasha-baw. Road, Independence Township April 14r to still a mystery. Mrs. Elms Parke was sitting to the living room at 3:45 that aftgrnoon when a slug smashed through the white ptoe Window sash of the front window. The bullet whizzed within two feet of where she was sitting and lodged in a metal kitchen cabinet. The following day’Parke dis- c-urn bent James Clarkson by Mine UN votes. For 2T years previously, he owned and operated a drugstore Ip Berkley. , , * Baker, planning a vigorous cam- before thb U.S. antinuclear placards. A mass meeting was planned ( for tonight by the British antinuclear organizations. ftCVIETS PROTEST About 50 ban-the-bomb demonstrators sat on the sidewalk outside the UJ, Embassy to Copenhagen. A Soviet commentator charged President Kennedy’s statement last March that be did not want tests had been shown up as "the biggest lie of dll the false assurances made by anyone in the Weet." ' to three to four miles, according to Hitchcock. Several other houses are situated between the range and (he Parke home. Elmer Wilson, president of the Sportsmonn Club, behoves the shot was' fired from the woods rather than from foe range. -. He doe* Not rule out the possibility of A, slug going astray over the big mound but thinks thisNis unlikely. The targets are placed at the base of the mound. paign, said his nominating petitions for the Aug, 7 primary are already to etocdldtion. . * 2 Used Car Garages Are Hit by Burglars •(floes, tt Patters* tit, at 6 p m. today. Hufziger, 35, was hired here to October 1954 as an administrative assistant "to give leadership to our construction program," Supt. Dana P. Whitmer recalled. "He has done an excellent job," he added. been parked la the garage with the garage door open. The home to located about a mile directly east of the Oakland County Sportsmens Club’s rifle range. However, the range is backstopped by a 35-foot mound of earth jvhich a bullet could not penetrate. STILL INVESTIGATING U. S. OKs Bid in Stott WASHINGTON rtflfri - The award of a Jil million defense contract to Bay CMP,' Mich., Shovels, Inc., for II cranes for 12%-toa mounted trucks. Was announced yesterday by Sens. Phfflp A. Hart and Patrick B. McNamara, Uftf Woight Curb* LANSING tt—The State High- "With the explosion at Christmas Island, a new round in the nudear arms race has been started," the commentator said. Officer Worth Hitchcock of the Oakland County Sheriff* Depart- I I THE PONTIAC PRESS, THPB8PA" Guard Alin. Mating Saturday in Lansing LANSING (XI — Some 900 Michigan military mm and thdr wive* tor Mundl Hospital here, arid he treated Mies Taylor tor a alight Regular 94.49 Save More at Scare! Reg. $2.98 Hoes, Bow Rake*, L H. Shovel, Garden Clears 2977 Dixie Highway OR 3-9312 FREE ESTIMATES NoebUgetions... jest call FE 5-4171 lor a free estimate on mdteHals and installation. ' Travel Starts Book Slowly Pronounced, of Course, Goof In the 1400s, the- Game Was *Gouff State Author Turn* to Political Field for Latest Effort By GEMMA 8TRIKFU* “Homstein’s Bof by Robert Trarer By PHYLUS BATTELLE NEW YORK - It should be no shocking surprise to the dubbers of America to learn that the game of “golf" was originally spelled 'gout*4 (pronounced, appropriately. "goof’). That waa back in the 1400a, and the "gout ball” tian't that lovely?) ‘ VHP made of leathers packed in of them woa ha ads gown—aad Scotland’s rightful title waa ss> The pride Miller feels heritage becomes obvious when he is asked the difference between PabUsfted April 11,1M2 “Pour me another drink, fella!" [leather. The bourbon flows freely duripg * to * the U. S. senatorial campaign in ‘"Hie first recorded history we ‘ Homstein's Boy.” jhave la that In the 15th century, Homsteto,» “^Parliament passed a law prohibtt- “ ■ * ing the playing of golf. King James n he was; who banned it because it was an age of national defense, He slipped, without realizing it, into a boastful brogue ... . •Why, lass, I don’t know exactly When asked why moreSoetamen their staff drown their defeats and swim in their victories. The author, Michigan’ "Anatomy at a Murder.” he makes it up to the reader with the exdttog. taster temp* of the f His story is of two college friends (locale Michigan? . obviously so) who get together and nobody was taking archery practice. They . were too busy slicing the gout ball with a wooden stick—which was the first version of the club” The speaker was Lawrence Mil-r, representing the Soots, 'who claim to have Invented golf. 'Most of years later. Homstein, from the East, Joyously becomes the campaign , manager tor Us “boy,” Walt Brawler, from the jackpine background of the Upper Peninsula, after persuading Walt to run for the U. S. Senate. h the campaign, ear her* >, a successful Edinburgh lawyer, admitted he was, himself, ’one of the world's keenest goll-•rs.” As such, he. offered a concise. emotionless accounting of the history of the world'e most humbling game ... overplayed philosophies. Tims Corps 4 The love scenes are handled with unusual and ‘rare tact and delicacy.. / / The point of this book? Ti quote: "Under what other form of government In tide whole mad world could the sons of a saloonkeeper and a Junk dealer go out and try for one of its highest elective offices? ... Where did you hide the booze this time’ Brush Fires Sweep Northeastern U.S. By The 1 meets to it Press Hundreds of brash fires swept the northeastern sections of the nation yesterday blackening thousands of acres of woodland and [ was playtof at vised the Irish rebeOton 1 whet you ploy to your Country, but it Isn't the divil's game w* play at 9t. Andrews and ither links. We Scots hev* q horrid haUt of sitting bunkers to dead middle o' tbs fairway to trap a I American gouf mon, and at cetera. ‘Ye never played golf, t ye knickle tots a Scottish d 1st GOLF WIDOW "It’s quite dear from Watery, he said, “that Mary — Queen of Scots, that would be—was the first real golf widow. Oh, literally she was that. 'It was regarded with great disgust by file people when she went out to play golf with Lord Both well only day* after the demise at her husband. Lord Damley. “She played at 9t. Andrews, at come. A fine dub—or did I mention that?” ■ fact, that he a St. ^Andrews, Including two of championship quality. His total aimaal duet, for all IS ctabs, were M pounds (abeut.flM). Which ex- plains why Seotiaad Is subtitled In Mil, he continued, James H —than the Duke of York—lived at Holyrood Palace, a great edifice which still stands to the heart of damaging several dwellings and i Edinburgh. Two English noblemen, destroying a factory. ! visiting him, claimed that golf * * to la British invention. And for the next two days the ★ ★ A, weather forecast from New Jersey *«**• of coumerit northward through New York and *“«*•*.*« «*J* mnmv Maim should be established or de-tato New England predicted •■uyL|oU--d „ the outcome of “• ■ match to be held between the An estimated 4.900 acres of gram 8,^,* ^ James - teamed and tlmberiand were burned In I with whatever Scottish partner he Albany, Schenectady and Saratoga|«hmil(t choose, counties of upstate New York. brush fine here swept across open! u lecui erase to the peat three days. Fire-] men called for help from almost 50 fire companies yesterday in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Jersey City to battle the blazes. a Mr. Mm Petoreene, ehoeamk- Stage Hand I* Drowned in film Studio Mishap MUNICH, Germany (AP) stage hand drowned when a boat capafaad Wednesday on an artificial lake devised at the Geiad- shooting of ‘‘CXptato Sinbad,” a Police said Askar Lfadner, 24. and three other workers took to the boot/ also made for the film, during a break in filming. The three others were rescued Immediately. Divert recovered Lindner's body half ah hour later. 4 SIZES Assembled—Knocked Down CEDAR KriTS 11W SERVICE Friday and Sitarday Special! MISSES’-CHILDREN’S TENNIS #w 2Jl // MONDAY JLjf* sad niDAT w\ # j si 73 MONTH SAGINAW thi SHOE A Sale Shop Sears for ALL Your\Lawn-Care Needs CRAFTSMAN Craftsman Rotaries, No-pull starter Quality-built 18-In. mower with many 044.99 features. Powerful 2H-HP, 4-cycle Eaea- 59" start engine. Controls on handle. E-Z oil-fill, drain. 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APRIL 26, 1962 NINETEEN Khrushchev Seems to Be Quieting Down Wf TAMER mazlow | AnnooUInd Preaa New* Analyst WASHINGTON — Soviet Premier to lpad toe mech into Ml periods because ha** getting ddsr. This, it tn», would be comfortli Western nervous system has kept a-ttngle. This bubbly and tmagteativt man, |ust turned 68, has been notoriously impatient with delay and atutfad shirts. He acted as if under compulsion to' get the showron the road, no matter what He ban led them before and mim chaifing back tika a refreshed bear. a bit or HAM Hi has always had a bit at the bun in him, a determination to dominate every scene, even it be has to dream it up, like a But now lor months, compared with the earlier Khrushchev, 'he has seemed rather withdrawn. tThere haa been tern flamboyance, in word aad deed, torn animal spirit, lees thunder to his threats of lightning. At least ho seems that way to An example of the stowing down hi the Khntobcbevian tempo—if that's what it to—urns laid on the week with release of He dismissed ministers as Mger boys and insisted only the No. 1 men could settle anything. As late as Fobfuny, he was calling far a meeting with President Kennedy to discuss disarmament. But the interview with Cowles showed be bee changed I Now ha wri there should be only if their diplomats can first negotiate agreements or tftoM| can publisher, Gardner Cowles. * * * ' to the pen Khrushchev seemed Messed with the need far a summit, Without such preliminaries as e meeting of foreign ministers to see if there could be any agreement before the top man got underground, end never would, there ie no veto* in email tactical weapons. ty April 13. 1962, he had changed. At that (line, refusing the kind of nuclear teat ban it the Woat wanted and knowing Kennedy would resume testing if he didn't, Khrushchev This doesn't sound like the bouncy, hard-driving Khrushchev of old. Nor was it his only recent /______ of hearf, although it’s al- ways been tough to figure whether to* many changes were in him or Just In hio tactics. In an interview with American columnist Walter Upmann in 1981 Khrushchev said Russia had In the future Russia would match all teste carried out by the West — whether underground, in the atmosphere, or to President Eisenhower invited him over here for u So his moments of calm after crises don’t necessarily mean that he is getting Meanwfcfto, he's had aome problems at home in this past year, despite ww* spectacular successes like orbiting men around the earth. One of them to the fact that the tUwaiana have a miserable toqd supply. * * * This alone would bo enough to make many u leader a little eelf-' directing the dee- The fact that to built a Berlin crisis all through the /last half of 1961 and now, in 1962, has let it quiet dowq doesn’t, by itself, signify any change to the Russian He created a similar crisis in least they know bow to deal with “■i. They may not be able to of the world before he could feed hit own people better. R may have had a sobering effect on KhrushcfewV. ■ 0 h ♦ A Western leaders will begin having uneasy moments if they believe Khfwshchev is getting tired m a I01 n GOA $m i VA RD Customer Produces False' IdenfiTication PHOENIX, Arts. IB — Again and again, Mrs. William Miller, derk at the Arizona Public Service Go. office, explained to the customer that no persona! checks were accepted without identlflca-on. The man explained to had left his wallet at home and had no other identification with him. 'T sorry," said Mrs. Miller. Whereupon the man reached into his mouth, withdrew his upper piste and showed where his name was engraved on the choppers. Waid Week When 111 lanrict Shops aid Saves! Lowed Prices e! the Season Open 'HI § P.M. WARD WEEK SALE CHARMING DUAL-PURPOSE ROOMS, LOW-PRICED AT WARDS! sofa bed, chair, 3 tables PRING STARTS THURSDAY!1 iff ■LKCTXIC PAINT SPRAYER 1—UUHLY 813-98 Fsalptssf, xligerxif, ftsaMsAts, Ail tltt* Irk tprayw states aalattag 9 to 7 Aass fatter Asa by tesSkPlBg N A. MLA* SPRING SPECIAL ate. awn ■■■■, — far fcosry ar fal* am M-aa. |ar. LMt aparataa aa I ll «A 9M8 spate AC. ■h-» <** WALL MINT MUSH Xu *2* At HwabutopwisRtohlgipm. faadaaal type paW hraah. Mala af 189% pam.Tyaou brWtet, » k flfpil to / PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, APRIL 8A ]B«i tWMfTV WARD WEEK WHEN ALL AKHGA SHOPS AND SAVES LOWESTPRICES OF THE SEASON WARD WEEK SPECIALS Out They Gol FOAM BACK RUGS ONE LOW PRICE Wool, nylon ond wool nylon blends. Choice of any five large sizes at one price. 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Study of data from the experiment may take weeks. Despite two complete successful flights of the world’s largest , known rocket, Saturn will not ' soon overcome the Soviet lead * over the United States in booster ^^camvWU power* yesterday In its second straight- MILLION-POUND THRUST successful test. The Russians are using a rock- in * CLAYTON’S * month end sale SOFAS m CHAIRS TABLES e DINING ROOM TABLE LAMPS • BEDROOM FLOOR LAMPS • POLE LAMPS savings up to 50% modern and colonial AT n^hl BLASTS OFF — With its el. large engines delivering 165,000 > pounds of thrust apiece, the Sat-; urn rockets roars away from foe et with estimated thrust of one million pounds for manned and unmanned space flight*. The most powerful operational U.S. space booster is the Atlas-Agena B with first - stage thrust of 367,000 pounds. Saturn has eight more test flights scheduled in the research program before it will be ready in 1964 to carry foe first manned Apollo spacecrafts into earth orbit for periods up to two weeks. Van Braun, director of NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, .said two more tests of the first stage only are planned to build up reliability. Second-stage testing will start with the fifth flight in July 1963. The fifth HUfough foe 10th\ research flights jvill carry unmanned models of the Apollo. V ★ *, it L This Saturn series, designated C-l, doe* not possess the strength | to push Apollo to foe moon. That task has been assigned an advanced Saturn, the C-5, with first-stage thrust of 7.5 million pounds. Von Braun\said the initial C-5 test flight is set for 1965. By 1966 [this monster booster is expected to be ready to whirl a three-man Apollo team around the moon and return it to earth\ Manned lunar (landings will follow, possibly in <1967. To Address Conference WASHINGTON III — Dr. John A. Hannah, chairman of the Civil Rights Commission and president of Michigan State University, will address the closing sesrion of a national conference on school segregation here May 3-4. DILLINGHAM ARTISTIC 8EEMAY LANE MERSMAN IMPERIAL HEKMAN COLONY HOUSE REMBRANDT STIFFEL BETTY LEE SprifM A Carlton Haywood Wakefield JAMESTOWN WILLIAMS 8EALY v SIMMONS Quality Furniture and Rug* 90 Days Same as Cash—Up to 24 Months to’ Pay Free Parkins In Front of Store OPEN: MON. and PRI. 9 to 9 — TUES„ WED. and SAT. 9 to 6 * CLAYTON'S * 3065 pRCHARD LAKE ROAD—PHONE 682-1100 Telegraph at Elisabeth Lake Rd. Pontiac Mall di vine! delightful . s . dreamy GAIA PROM DRESSES Simply delicious! Bon-bon pastel prom, dresses for tHe loveliest night of the year. Nylon sheers; luscious laces, nylon velve- GRINNELL... • Upright $ 88 FARRAND. $ 99 HARVARD... ME^UM $125 VOSE GRAND $1QQ USED • REAL VALUE 1/7 wOrlitzer lyric jQ o O GRAND USED Z.77 Good Nationally Known SPINET ‘389 Artist Studio Model Spinet 1 ONLY ‘488 CHURCH ORGAN ESTEY FOLDING $ TYPE ORGAN-NEW NEW F?0M HAMMOND SPINET ORGANS.. *695 HAMMOND WAL. SPINET— Acr. FORMERLY SI36S — used... 1 ,UOU USED TELEVISION Admiral 21" Console . $68 Motorola 21" Console $62 General Electric 16" Console *18 Admiral 16" Console *23 SAVE ON NEW STUDIO SAMPLE PIANO $0oc —SAVE UP TO 20J New 8 Transistor POCKET RADIOS AMERICAN MADE ■WITH CASE, EARPHONE 1 AND BATTERIES GRINNELL'S, 27 *S. Saginaw St. V IjUdgef Terms — Open Fricjay *til 9 P. Mi | v$i9-98 Right: Flower Garden veiveray . . . taffeta and nylon sheer .........$16.98 Genuine white bunny tor ” cope-stole. SPECIAL......... ...... $10.90- A Pearl Necklace FREE with the purchase of a formal from Alberts 1s;■A1 .a i ■■■■ • ■' ' ■ i 1 - -y • ■ v THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1962 JTV ‘TfT;“ n“1 “V........- Every Set Is A 98 Piece f PLUS Complete Service of Twelve 12 Dinner Plates 12 Cups and Saucers J Bartra Caps 12 flruit Dishes 12 Salad Plates for Breakage 12 Soup Bowls 12 Bread and Butters Insurance PLUS 2 Platters 2 Vegetable Bowls for Serving Sets Regularly Sell for Up to *100.00 Your Choice for 10 Days Immediate Delivery but Stock on Band la Limited Don’t wait if you want it for Mother’a Day Layaway or U*e aa You Pay Up to 10 Month* on Budget Term* 59S0 PLUS 1 Gravy Boat 1 Creamer 1 Covered Sugar Bowl CONNOLLY’S OFFER EXCEPTIONAL SPRING VALUES IN GRACIOUS IOVING roK^1S^RM0D^RN 98 Piece (Service of 12) Imported Vitrified China '> Every Set 1$ Chip Resistant True Tranducent Beauty 25 Patterns in All Shapes—Standard—Baroque and Modern Coupe. Only a Few Examples Shown Here .* \ i WALLACE STERLING SILVER FOR LESS THAN LYNN MAYBERRY (Coronatloa Shape) Daiaiy ibmi la mh pink. Imvw la mml flowers In blue, pink and white Piece Starter Set Service of Four 4 Each, Knives—Forks—Sel*d and Tea, 63* 32 Piece Service of Eight Bb, Knives—Forks—Salad and Tea.. ece Service of Twelve eh. Knives—Forks—Salad and Tea. 12720 19080 OLD ORCHID (CORONATION) Flak flower* with green leaves Platinum edge. HARVEST Brown wheat with gold trimmings BARCLAY Black decoration. Platinum trim. OLYMPIA Flower in bins and green. • Platinum edge. SHANGRI-LA-CORONATION SHAPE ' Blue end gray color*. Platinum trim. JEWELERS MIRACLE MILE, 2203 Telegraph Open Every Night . FE 2-8391 DOWNTOWN, 14 W. 1 Open Monday and Friday Nighty FE 20294 GWEN Pink nee with brown atem*. Platinum edge. Violet Patterns, add a little lea* than 10% for Sea Ro*e and LaReine. All silver pri pointed include Mrs. Zander, membership; Mrs. James Dan-do, youth activities; Mrs. Walter Souter, cancer; Mrs. Charles Whitlock, America*, ism; Mr*. Frank Flnkle, national home; Mrs. Ed Schema rehabilitation; Mrs. Ayres MJL-ler, legislative; and Mrs. Ellis Witt, publicity. St St St Guests were Mrs. Floyd Cav-erly and Mrs. Walter Craniek of Auxiliary 4139, Lapeer, also Mrs. Frank Jones and Mrs. Michael Blarney of Pontiac. Ayres Miller is commander of Post 1008; cosponsors with the auxiliary, of the poppy sale May 24-26. Mrs. Milter and Za chart as Naastrom are poppy chairmen. Female Bossism Reaches a Peak in India's Hills NEW DELHI (UPI) - If a woman wants to wear the trousers in bar family, aha should move to the iaolatpd hills of eastern India. There, among many of the Khasi tribes in the small mountain villages near Pakistan in Assam state, the woman is the boss and man is strictly a second-rater. h h h The women do most of the work and own the property. When a man marries, he goes to live in his wife’s house. He spends most of hit day lolling in the sun, smoking his pipe, and watching the baby. If a woman tirea of her husband, she, dismisses Mm and picks another. ★ ★ * And when a mother dies, her property is passed on to her youngest daughter. The only way for the older daughters to get their share is by consent of their younger sister. Sons get nothing and neither do fathers. * * * There are a number of dans within a Khasi tribe and naturally the chief usually is a woman. She la charged with protection of the clan’a members, in addition to being arbitrator of marital disputes and chief tax collector. Will Mark 25 Years Former Drayton Plains residents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Reppuhn of Church Street, Clarkston, will celebrate their twfcnty-flfth wedding anniversary Sunday..—T hair son, Roger, will be On hand to welcome guests from all over the state during the 2 to 5 p-tn. The couple’s other children ere Mrs. Henry Barber, now living in the Philippines, and Larry of East Hampton, Conn. L. Denman, Birmingham (left) ontf Mrs. Stephen L Goodale, North Glenr tarry Road, Bloomfield Township, greet Mrs. Roy F. Smith, Bradway Beta Sigma Phi Sorority city council officers, Mrs. Joseph Galardi of Ross Drive and Judith Brown of Andersonville Road, greet honorary member Adah Shelly of Washington Street and Joan Menser of Ross Drive before the Founders' Day dinner at Edgewood Country Club. Twelve Pontiac chapters and two guest chapters from Birmingham and Rochester participated in observing the sorority's 31st anniversary Wednesday. Sorority Marks 'Day Please Call Reasonable Request them Is not ask that they call before coming out? # a *• A: It is not at all unreasonable for you to expect your inlaws to cell before coining out to are you, and unless your tone was other than Madly she had no cause to fed hurt at what you said to her. • * dr * Q: i very seldom eat dessert and when I have dinner in a restaurant I always ask the waiter to faring my coffee with my meal. I have ben told that this is not proper, except when eating a sandwich..Will you please tell me if this is true? A: If you like your coffee with dinner, it is quite correct to uk the waiter to bring it with your meal. ’* * ★ ’ Q: Is it not rude to answer a telephone by saying JYea? ft is one of my pet peeves to call someone and have a “Yea? bellowed at me from the other end of the line. I modi prefer to hear “HeBo or at least “Good morning, May I please have your opinion on this? a a * A: Although "Yes? is not actually rude, “Hello is preferred and correct when an-s we ring a telephone at home.. A business telephone id answered with the firms name, dr ★ dr Q: When and where do wren-re remove their gloves? The following experiences'" leave me confused. I have noticed that some women leave their Boulevard, Bloomfield Township, at a Hawaiian bridge luncheon Wednesday for members of Oakland Hitts Country Club and their guests, Outgoing president and next year's city council Vice President Mrs. Elmo C. Jones (center) presents Oakland County children*s school library director, Mrs. Howard Armstrong, with the sorority's duck to purchase new books. Mrs. Clyle Haskill (left). Beta Sigma PhCs dty council new president, handled some ISO reservations for the annual event. Where There’s a Will There** • Way Hail, Hail! For Smokers Only they ait down to sat. They remove coats, fun, etc., and leave hats and gloves on. Some wfll may their gloves and. still others will lsave one on and carry ths other. WOEi you please sat me straight on this matter of gloves? A: Properly, women wear their glorea to ths table, remove both of them there, place them oa their laps and lay their naphtas over them, dr dr * The EmOy Post Institute of- variety of subjects concerning etiquette. H you would tike the booklet entitled “The Mew Baby,” and 19 cents to cote and at arifaddrsawrt. stamped envelope to the Emily Post In- By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My man smoked three packs of cigarettes a day and chewed up a whole box of snuff, too. He said that Ms mouth felt like the bottom of a bird cage. He got a prescription from Ma doctor for a o m e t h tag that was guaranteed to curb his desire for smoking. I don’t know what it was, but I know I aaw a miracle happen because my husband hasn’t smoked In tour years. GLUE'S WIFE dr . ★ dr* BEAR ABBY: One day, 12 yean ago, I decided that amok-tag was a filthy, stupid and expensive habit, so I made up my "tind to quit. This is what I did. The moment I walked into .*Tvn quit smoking.” After’ that I couldn’t very well bum a cigarette off anyone, and I didn't carry them myself. I knew that I didn’t dare beg a smoke or Td make myself look Hte a real Jerk. It was a matter of pride. NO JERK * - dr . * t DEAR ABBY: Attar having the cigarette habit for 40 years, I teak’ my cigarettes out of my pocket and said, “You have been bossing me around foi; 40 yean, aovr I am going to basil yon around." 1 put away the pack and never DEAR ABBY: When I had to have a cigarette before I could open my. eyes..fully in the morning, 1 knew I had better quit. I tried to taper off, but that never works. I finally walked into a church one morning (it wasn't even of my own denomination) got down on my knees and prayed to God to deliver me of the habit And do you know I haven't smoked or even had the desire to, since? When everything rise fails, try prayer. AN ORDINARY GUY dr dr dr DEAR ABBY: My husband smoked like a chimney. Ha had a lung X-ray taken at the suggestion ot Mi physician. A dark rtiadow was discovered on his lung. Fortunately it was not can- off that part of ths Xrsy and timed it to a package of cigarette*. He carries It with Mm constantly and now every time he is tempted to moke, ha. looks at that X-ray and takes a p instead. GRATEFUL * dr-> * DEAR ABBY: Here ta g proven method for overcoming the cigarette haMt. If a person smokes 49 cigarettes a day. he should eat down to S the that day, 38 tlta second, 27 the thbfl and so forth. It takes a lot of willpower, but if I could da It -a was a 4-pach-frday motor for 32 years) anybody caa. WILLPOWER WILL Nail Stick Tip years ago. I’m now 92 and feel ••to- ’ , W. H. E. (Ontario) THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1962 TWENTY-S&TEfe# , 4'COME IN ANYTIME M LEARN TO KNIT *. CLOSED GOOD FRIDAY IS to t»M, THE OXFORD SHOP t. Saginaw St. (Across frost Neianer’a) Teens Talk About? Others Teens i A 16-year-old Lai Angeles girt [ told us *1 am in mixed groups . mostly at parties where everyone is less inhibited and politics or ■chooLtalk is just a precursor to telling off-color jokes.” . John Shepard, 17, of Sioux Fads, I S.D . said in his group the top top-1 SEIHI-ANNIJAL SALE! found — to no one’s great surprise — that when girts together topic *"■ is BOYS. Nearly 11 per cent of you said that that’s bound to be tbs subject at hand. And what do boys ham on their minds when they get together? GIRLS! , That wss the answer given us by 69 per cent of the boys’ For Your Wadding QUALITY and Quantity aroi\er STOCKINGS "History because it’s my favorite subject. Lorn because it’s usually their problem. College because that’s ini my future.” G R. HASKILL STUDIO Mt. Clemens St. , FE 4 Deaton, 17, of Canoga Park, Calif., We were a bit set back- by Joseph Hoi linger, >7, of Plays Del Rgy, Calif., who said: "I don’t fed this is a fair question. I think you’re trying to develop the fact that teen-agers aren’t aware of the world situation. This is untrue.” NOT “PROVING" ANYTHING . The (act is, Joe, that ws don’t set out to prove anything. Our goal is to find out objectively what America’s teen-agers think about the myriad things that occur hi the world today, wbotiter it is acceptance of a fad, lor marriage, going into the armed services, or picking movie and TV favorites. It happens only twice a year and now is the time. Wonderful saving opportunity for one week only. Proportioned Archer hose. Seamless or with seam in hi fashion colors for spring. If All Else Falls Heed the Vikings* The Viking Medieval Raad- WlTHOUT SEAMS Demi-Toe...... Heel and Toe .... WITH SEAMS Day Sheer .... Walking Chiffon Support Hose .. SHOPPERS’ SPECIAL CREATE THE Perfect for shopping or spectating. A trim ta-Jiercd shoe punched all over for coolness, and cushion-arched to m«lcf walking pun deligjht aum casual look for Dresses to Wear With a Mini mlssas and fa pathos • nubby tweeds • boucles • basketweaves • double breasted styles • cardigans • push-up sleeves • full bads • greet new spring fashion odors • junior petites and misses sizes a huge sttotffon of misses'Spring sufts 15.88 sfuniting collection of misses’ Spring toppers 11.88 Sizes A'/t to 11 AAAA to C 10tt-ll, 11.00 Additional Evening* Until 9 FREE PARKING IN PONTIAC 200 NORTH SAGINAW STREET PLENTY OF FREE PARKING* Open Every N ight 'til 9:30 P.M. ROTH STORES OPEN SUNDAY V HE " Ilf© 6 < ' DIEM’S Crisp spun blend with easy swinging pleated skirt. A Bit of sleeve and a bit of bflt... in black, royal or brbwn. Sizes 10 to 1$. IN CLARKSTON - WATERFORD on OtXir HIGHWAY-Just North ; of Waterford HilJ ROBERT HALL SPRING COATS Twmrw-AiOHT _____________ - h li Woute’s Faskfoo Shop Si Oar Niw Poitiac Mall Stare W***'". #*» __ tan*"" >n4p*cV*W«» ua^*20 ind3sx Won, Pliable, . tocktblc a SHORT 116 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1962 Group Honors Woman, Baby Oakland County Female Employees Speech Improvement Association met ‘Itoeaday, at the home of Mrs. James mith Orchid Street. The program centered around "Baby Day*,'* honoring Mrs. Wayne Coons and her 6-week-old Mv7 Wayne Jr. The OCFESIA presented Mrs. Goans’ new son with a gift. Next meeting, May 8, will be held at the Medical Care Facility Building in the new Oakland County Service Center at 5:90 p.m. All women employees of Oakland County are invited. 'Starphfish Fie!' Linen* destined for storage should be landered but not starched. This prevents damage by silverfish—pests who are attracted by the tasta of starch. Keep Line Cleon. Any clothesline made of non-absorbent Fiberglas is easy to wipe with' a sponge or (doth wrung out of soap or detergmt suds. Do this often to protact dean clothes from the soil which is bound to settle on an outdoor line. SpiCLdC COAT ENSEMBLE $179° Reg. $29.99 Fashion-new cotton burlap coat, fully lined to match the woven gingham sleeveless sheath. (The dress is fully lined, tool) A terrific fashion find, marvelously priced at only $17.90. Turquoise or gold. Sizes 7-15. EXTRA HEAVY RAILINGS '1.99 per Bn. ft. The "Do-It-Yourself” Rail With the Custom Look (Wei Extra Heavy PORCH COLUMNS $1000 As Low As 11# X Non-Skid UNIT STEPS Fir « Stop In ? mcmviiiciurva my - Concrete Step Co. 6407 Highland RoadpuR) Telephone 673-0773 Add tauty to Your Horn. With Concrete Steps and Railings Open 'til 5.00 Saturday i i Personal News The Drippiest V Driest of 'em All Representatives from GApferal Richardson Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, have returned from Washington, D. C-, where they attended the annual Continental Congress of tht National Society, DAR. ★ it ★ Delegates were Mrs. Frank Allen, chapter regent and Mrs. T. W. Jackson, first vice regent Other* were Mrs. W. a O'Laugh-lin and Mrs. tods B. West. They also attended the Michigan reception and the banquet; both held at the Mayflower Hotel. ★ ★ ★ Returned from a vacation In Miami Beach and Jamaica, British West Indies, ate EUa Hetherington of Mechanic Street end the Charles dementi of Keego Harbor. ★ . ★ it Judge and Mrs. Jade A. Stolson (Barbara Carrier) of don-neaut, Ohio, announce the birth of a son, Bret Louis, April 15 in Brown Hospital, Gonneaut. The baby's grandparents are die Louie A. Carriers of Birmingham and the Sven Stolsons of Canneaut. dr it it Mrs.-August Hauber of Ocala, Fla., was the Easter guest of the Edward ShigteyepfArgyle Avenue. * ... it ,★ ft Home from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., where aha visited her son-in-law and daughter, the George Cotmam, is Mrs. Dorothy Leakey of Birmingham. dr it it Mr. and Mr*. Ram ah Sitterson of Romeo were Easter of their son-in-law and daughter, the Raymond Ellsworths of Seneca Street. dr dr ★ The Elmer Bonds of Neome Drive and the Melvin Bonds at Ogemaw Road, vacationing on the Gulf Coast of Florida, recently visited in Sarasota. ★ it ' it Blanch Meidlein of Charlotte Avenue was luncheon hostess to members of the Jolly Ten Club who gave seasonal readings and planned fund-raising projects for local charities. ★ it it Anna Marie Piedmore of Walnut Road la attending the annual conference of the Michigan Association of Educational Secretaries, a department of the Michigan Education Association, in the Jack Tar Hotel, Lansing, today through Sunday. She serves on the board of directors of MAES. More than 300 secretaries from throughout the state are expected to attend the seminar which will center around the theme "Partners hi Education.” , It’s never any problem to look wiiiam when you’ , wear dotting mode of seer- GOOD COFFEE BIKER FOUNTAIN 17 W. Hwee sudsed by bead or When dry, re “reedy to wear" again — no Ironing is ever needed lor tide “grand-daddy” of the modem7 drip- Brush on L her Next time legs, apply shaving effective titan’ Uttering with your WHOUSAU MTAIL jMTttiSr OAKLAND FOAM PIODUCTS CO. ITS Auburn US-2144 Class Organ LESSONS MORRIS MUSIC MS. Telegraph Across from Tel-Huron Pontioak Chapter Honors Secretary of the Year Pontioak Chapter of the National Secretaries Association honored Secretary of the Year of Oakland County at Fox and Hounds I n: Wednesday evening. Mrs. Carl Cronkrigfat, the hon-oree, was presented a statuette at the dinner by Edytte Perry, last [year’s Secretary of the Year. A certificate and an orchid also were given to Mrs. Cronkrigfat. Press advertising director, spoke on Ms reeeat trip to the Orient, highlighting Mb visits In Japan and Hoag Kang. Among the guests were Jeaimine Garnett, Bonnie Woods, Matte Johnson, Nancy BaUow, Kathy Shower Is Held for Bride-Elect Completing the guest list were Lillian Matney, Audrey Slckel-smith, Mrs. Jack Henrickson, Carol Brisker and Phyllis Rabaja. Mary Eleanor Lockman was chairman of the affair. Decorations were arranged fay Mrs. Winifred Woody- Bride-elect Marianne Kay Crosier was honored at a miscellaneous shower in the home of Mrs. John Greenlee of Sylvan Two interlocking heart-shaped mIm inscribed "Marianne and a" 'centered the refreshment table where places were marked fox the honoree's mother, Mrs. Harold Crosier of South TDden 'Avenue and Mrs. Shtelda Dierkes, mother of Norman S. Dierkes, bridegroom-elect. Other guests included Connie Crosier and Mary Dierkes, Mrs. Richard Crosier, Mrs. William Roach, Margaret Miller, Mr*. Rosa Locke, Mrs. H. Edwin Scott, Mrs. James Stewart and Alice Bego. ne 30 vows in Orchard Lake Community Church Presbyterian are planned fay the amide. FcOLORS] UNLIMITED McVeigh, Square Set Dancers Plan Dinner Event Square Set aquaie dancers are making arrangements tor their dinner dance Saturday at the Roosevelt Lodge. Vice president Sam Wellman will preside over the activities, in the absence Jack Ralph. Look smart and fool terrific in our soft leather stack-heel with stepeasing comfort built right in. Breeze-thru perfs cool as you stroll. In bone, brass-dotted. Here’s top-quality for just 1 Mi PONTIAC MALL With Our Pittsburg Maestro Color Mixiif 1 OVER 2,500 COLORS! IN ANY FINISH I PONTIAC .GLASS CO. I 21 W. Lawrence SR. I » J pk LADIES’ SHAtT APPAREL ' #TOLy^lil EASTER Fabulous quality COATS SUITS Imagine! Right now at the beginning of the wearing season... these fashion conscious coats and suits on SALE! Our Regular Our Regular 29.95 Values 22.95 Values Our Regular 39.95 Values 1588 *1Q88 *2488 Our finest wool jersey laminated coats! Smart basket weaves! Finest all wools! New laminated Creplans. Smart colors and patterns. Sizes 5 to 24ft. RAIN and SHINE COATS Values to 14.99 $4)88 Gay colon and prints... reversible*, print Untifra, tackle twill* add new Chesterfield styling. Sian 5 to IS. CHARGE ACCOUNTS PARK FREE J5litSS Home Denttiqfftniticpi and Sewing Course Phone 1«E 5-4171 • Kenmore Upright Vacuum COMPLETE WITH ATTACHMENTS Complete With Attachments 154 NorthSaginaw Street Phone IE 5-4171 yoartapaBy lack” SEARS ^afAfidon guaranteed or TWENTY-HfrlTO ’ you- over can nil town IN ndt Ctmi t IXf find the hivt we DECORATOR FABRICS for DRAPERY - SLIPCOVERS UPHOLSTERY Beautiful Trimmings Traverse end Brass Reds ISIS STilifnuk ni-siss «>miNlW IUSKMM PEGGY’S MlftACUt Mat Zig-Zag Console Sewing Machine Sale LIMITED TIME! After Easter SALE! Nsw Spring COATS now reduced to 24. 33. • Fine Monotone Tweeds • Waffle Weave Whites • Checks and Herringbones • All Wool Fabrics ,, • Juniors', Misses' , Charge Your Purchase Open Every Night 'til 9 Pork Free and Easy - After Easter SALE! New Spring SHOES now reduced to 590,o1690 Formerly 8.95 to 24S5 • DeLiso Debs ... Rhythm Step • Foot Flairs... Arpeggios > • Sandlers A large selection of quality foot- I wear substantially reduced for quick clearance. Dressy tailored 1 or casual shoes in a wide range of colors and materials. \ m w , SALE! New Spring DRESSES now reduced to 14.18.22. • Stunning Pure Silk Print* • Smart Jacket Dresses • Arnell Jersey Stripes • Sheaths and Full Skirts • Juniors', Misses' After Easter SALE! New Spring SUITS now reduced to 22.» 68. NewSi-Froin the Hills ■jr Btmi SAUNDERS BLOOMFIELD WWJf — Vica- q«ic«y, and tt b a wise trawler itatata mm am to Mb ardata, Fla., where they vl lira. WBsoa’S parents, the Henry B> mmara. pt Mr winter home through the benefit for Camp Oek- eMfctropolitu wMi the opining Malay avaning, May 21. ... ♦ * Ip * Mrs. Hobart T. Hell haa invited guaata tor luncheon and a jbower Friday honoring Mm. Richard French. • * « •* Aaang the other guests wtH be Mra. Robert Craig. Mr*. John Stler, G. N. kfff>follt, Mrs. H. D. Stoll worth, Mrs. Ham Lewie, Mrs. Arthur Emery end Mrs. George Villctn Jr. * «L ’ * * Mm end Mra. Chtotae L. Jr. ml their lour child:________ turned tMe week from Fart Land- New Owner. Betty Parden PERMAHENTS REDUCED OOwW Kwtw-re JsBe MUs ,4 MARY'S BEAl/tY SHOP * Shows Slides on Family Life ip Local dub Robert Jenoo, executive dimeter at the Family Sfrvicc of Oakland County, showed slides entitled -People With Problems” before the Pontiac Ruatn— and Pro-fessional Women's Club at a dinner meeting la Hotel Waldron. Narrstfou with the Slides ex. plained the work el ths Family Service. Mr. Janea stressed the need lor family life edu-catlon Which Is the Intelligent approach to family problem*. He was Introduced by Mrs. George Pud-duck, chairmen of the health and Mra. M D. Star presented a check to Mr. JfBOO from the club to eetabfirt! a family life education gram hi Pontiac. Special 6988 NO MONEY DOWN on Sear* Easy Payment Plan ItY Ken more for top quality cleaning equipment-priced to fit any budget. Has a powerful % b.p. motor for fast, efficient rug beating-cleaning action! It • lightweight, easy to carry . i. designed in mod efn styling with fabric xippered outer bag and dia posable dust bags that are easy to change. Handle-mounted "on-off switch is convenient! See it now and save! 1 Yaniinnft-Srwinj: MarilWn. Mata Moor • Fine Wool 2-Pc. Demi-Fit • Fine y/ool 3-Pc. Demi-Fit • Fine Wool 2-Pc. Walking Suits • Firie Wool 3-Pc. Walking Suits Sorority Planning % 3 Events And » Magnifying Mirror Need TH» PONTIAC PRICES. THUKSbAY. APRIL »8. 1962; Lambda Tea Delta Sorority members’ dimer dance at Foreot Lake Country Club Saturday is one of three annual spring events on the dyb The other two era a 1 ft Mb Miy 12 to apply makeup, but to have the prefer tools eta tag. Practically SB women Key 28. Chairman for the dance to Mrs. John Hem. Local members attending will be the . Charles Harrises, the Reginald McNichols and the Robert McMahon*. ♦ A * Other wJth'aprlag Mm William Janean and Mbs-Ernest Grabs who are WOOb-ing « imatTT At our new Pontiac Mall store open every evening unfit 9 summer changes from one suit! Meet the Palm Beach Fashion-Fiver, a Dacron blend wash V wear suit with the extra pair of harmonizing slacks. Versatile indeed, you can wear it five different ways pond, look smart and cool in every version. Rich textured, remarkably wrinkle-resistant. Needs refreshing? A jew hours washing and drying time is all it takes before it’s ready to go again. See it in 3-button models with pleated trousers in smart shades of grey, black, brown, tan arid olive. And wo wide range of sizes as you’d expect. • hImJLV pH] Mm n the Pontiac pbkss, Thursday. April gg, jit LOOK...MOTHER PEOPLES FOOD MARKET WITH FREE GOLD BELL STAMPS 888 Orchard Lake Ave. SALE DAYS THURSDAY APRIL 26, thru SUNDAY, APRIL 29,1962 14-oz. BOTTLES SNIDERS HOTTER (FORMERLY TOM’S MARKET) NOW! PEOPLES AND FOODTOWN HAVE , 8 GREAT SUPERMARKETS IN THE PONTIAC AREA TO SERVE YOU! SLICED CHUCK STEAK lb Assorted Hygrod*'- . ■ - luncheon meats Press# Vs ,.n!9 'yjtA Hot Dogs k Oykg Tender Beef Uver Lt Your Choice CAMPBELL’S VEGETABLE SOUP BLUE RIBBON) IfceWfc* CREAM STILE CORN*IB* UueRiPhj PORK 1 Tomatoes J f BEANS DElAONTE FRUIT COCKTAIL FRESH-FLORlDA NEW-SOUTHERN BANQUET**-FROZEN e APPLE e CHERRY ' e PEACH * FAMILY SIZE ttdCMky I US Quit Hwy. (FORMERLY TOM’S MARKET) ANOTHER PEOPLE’S SUPERMARKET a* 888 ORCHARD LAKE AVI. nwi> ) 11 i^uiuiuium ‘ • ' JgywwMiiiy^ ^ ^|| food Tw»-IWt< »C—S«— O»po« if • ' ; Tood Town People > Bonus Stomp Coupon Eg- jf> ' M RA ;h) (If nil Stamps With hirckast |f> J§f StM^sWMNrAm ||> ell■ V ' ISp* ANY FRESH ||( ;i| OF ANY2 PKGS.OR MORE OF || f m_ PORK ROAST 1 RACON ________Mi M Extra Cold Bell $ Stamps With Purchase |: OF ANY 2 LBS. OR MORE OF |j COOKIES I; ONIONS -----^jS » jbnIrtT5i5^ E -|*«» l»M ■- > . ,f; i1£. . ■. «#* 1 YES, WE ARE GROWING WITH PONTIAC! . ' „ . . — fa*meri*ah iAmRi GkAPE 2 000 1 JELLY 1 3m :l MAXWELL tyOUSE or SANKA THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, APRIL 26, IP6» THniTV^ywo Shredded Wheat Crumbs Fig Meringue Torte b Easy to Make, Store Help Filmomatoes »29L Hiwinl SI . FE 4-2947 Richey, creamier, "■^superior iiL^ PA flavot/?^^. LUNCHEON FARE — Something new In the Topped with cheese, these tomatoes are baked luncheon line are tomatoes stuffed with meat, before serving. Good use for leftovers, chicken or seafood and shredded wheat crumbs, i , Your guarantee of superiority FRESH DRESSED Grade 1 SKINLESS U.S. Choice PETERS SLICED 3 BACON ib.. Hickory Smoked Florida Seedtess Doz.\ Grapefruit 49* Form Fresh Grade 'A* WHOLE Cqlifoniia^^i ASPARAGUS filled Peaches Ifor a Garnish Choose Chicken or Pork tor Early Barbecues * Chopped eggs give a fresh-as-a-daisy look to "Daisy Peach Jialves” — heated canned ding 1 •peaches filled with a mixture of jeggs, celery, ctkry powder and i ■seasonings. Serve them hot is gierfect partners for beef patties, Schicken, sausages, meat loaf/and jfish. Canned dings lose none of their sunny color and feaciou* 'flavor when heated; in fadlt helps lettiphasize their natural fragrance. Daisy Peach Halves ' 1 can (1 Dt. 13 oz.) ding peach ’ halves pi cup finely-diced celery • l* teaspoon curry powder S 2 tablespoons Ifotter or maiga-i Tine / 11 teaspoon flour lb IpMtont minced onion peach syrup * 2 hard-cooked eggs, chopped l Drain peach halves, reserving ;syng>. Place peach halves cup* •side up hi shallow saucepan or ySkfllet Poor about % inch of {syrup Into bottom of pan. Cover •and simmer about 3 minutes to » Meanwhile, slowly cook celery ' Jand curry powder in butter 2 to 3 minutes; stir id floor, onion, 2 .'tablespoons syrup and salt. Gentry mix in eggs and heat through. £spoon mixture Into hot poach halves. Makes • or T servings. (1 .cup filling). ■Molded Tuna Salad •Just Full of Things 1 Gardeh salad loaf makes a tasty Diaeh entree. Add 3 cups of boiling water to i (• ounce) package ‘of lemon-flavored gelatin. Stir un-ftil gelatin is completely disaolved. •Add 44 teaspoon.of salt and 2 jjtshlsspnnns erf vinegar. Chill •k is the consistency of unbeaten fa* white. J| ■ | * * * • Mix gently into thickened gela-.tin: ’3 <644 or 7 ounce) cans of *tu»a. drained and broken 'chunks, 3B small radishes, I ■sliced, 1 cup oif crushed canned •pineoppU with its sprup, Si cup •of wabmts, 2 small tomatoes, cut JfaUo thin wedges, 6 pimiento-'stuffed ottves, sliced, 2 large car-,rost, cooked and diced, 4 chopped scallions and 1 chopped green 'pepper f Turn into well-oiled $ fay 5 by 3* •inch leaf pan. Chill until set. Un-mold. Makes 8 serving* of 232 •calories each. Mushrooms Hold Filling Soi Blue Cheese $ The pungent flavor of American • cheese and tang.of sherry Sprint up it marvelously in tins elegant vegetable dish. Servo the cheese stuffed .mushrooms for a special •occasion with broiled steak. <* roast bpel - 2 pounds large, fresh mushrooms [ l cup One dry bread crumbs I Dash minced chive* * 2 tahiaepoons butter * % cap crumbled American blue * cheese (about 3 ounces) S ti cup sherry 114 cap heavy cream sfsws ffoiee a small piece of Woe cheese hi mA cavity. Cbok bread knuaha and chives in butter fust long enough to boat crumbs lively. Ttorn crumbs with remaining crumbled blue cheese, f Place a layer of drumba in a ntfored casserole. Lay mush-fwhw, cavity side up, ou crumbs. Starts wise on top. Sprinkle with t Osver esaseroio and bake st i lor 25 minutes. Makes 8 If toe weather is warm, this may'/he the week to barbecue chicken outdoors. If the weather does not cooperate, try an o barbecue. Heavier supplies broilers are available and prices am lower to attract yogr attention reports the Marketing Agent, Mrs. Josephine Lawyer. Retailers report rather unsettled price conditions for other meats, but there am good values from a price standpoint when you Chooee the meat specials. Them is a scarcity of top grade eef. Since it is not so important for ground meat; chuck roast, or corned beef to be of top grade, specials oh these seem particularly welcome. There are larger shipments of pork and light customer demand. As e result several cuts including the shoulder roast, apareribs and bacon are given special emphasis this week. The Boston butt Is the leanest of al pork cuts and makes a fine rotisserie roast if boned, rolled, and tied. Although wholesale lamb prices are up, retail prices remain at abort the same levels they have been. One may, fled rib and ahortder lamb chops at leas than usual'prices in some stores. Retailers say that veal price* are nechaaged, and that mare quality veal la hegMsfog to arrive at fids season. Fish catches are itnproviifg. with warmer weather.. Especially economical buys are perch at 39 to cents per pound and smelt at1 about 19 to 23 cents per pound. HIGHER PRICED Total supplies of fresh vegetables are below those of g year ago’ this spring. Flnr example, it is forecast that the production of tomatoes for the early spring states is about one-third less than, and average. Cucumber production is 30 per cent below 1961 and 27 per cent below average. This explains prices of some produce items continue high. 6 medium firm tomatoes, washed 3 biscuits (1% cups) shredded wheat, finely crumbled 2 tablespoons minced parsley 3 tablespoons melted butter Se margarine 2 teaspoons granulated sugar 4 tablespoons Parmesan cheese H teaspoon tarragon *4 teaspoon thyme *4 teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon pepper m l cup chopped cooked ham, chicken, shrimp or crab meat *4 cup sliced mushrooms (optional) Cut a slice off the top of the tomatoes, and wtdi a i Grad# 1 LARGE Chunk Only On too other ha Wring crops are la nr oaring Is mately 1.1M more cariote of fresh fnrita and vegetables were unloaded at the larger terminal during the previous week. Wholesale prices for cabbage, were lower dee to huger anp-piles. Fresh fruit supplies are a little larger. There are heevier sup-Louisiana and CaHfomjR Strawberries. Strawberry production in the esify spring states is forecast at 20 per cent more then 1961 and 9 per cent above avenge. The increase in production is all in Louisiana as the result of increased acreage and yields. Puerto Rkn and Mexico are shipping larger supplies of fresh pineapple. Remember that the Mexican pineapple is green fp color when fully ripe./ Its fg” content is high, and Bar that «ea* am it does not keep lot* at room, temperature. Use it before It bo- Baaanao represent a good frrtt bay whoa yua eonridre coat «ua> Morning Sondwidt Hard-cooked egg slices and crisp bacon between slices of buttered toast and served with Jam la a 1 Sandwich suggested by the VS. Department of Ajpicidtunr for the younger folk. Although wholesale egg prices have risen slightly, you will find retail egg prices about the same as a week ago. Cheddar cheese and oleomargarine are listed among features In some stores this week. BOLOGNA MICHIGAN All-Purpose 50 IBS. 2 FOR CELLO-PAK 2 FOR CUKOR 19° 2 for California W 1ft MR IS Florida ■» orangestSS SISTERS’SUPER MKT. 608 W. HURON ST., Near Webster School 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1962 THIRTY- Don't Freeze Chiese Cheeses with aromatic or strong! odors should be Stored in a jar or! container. These are best used soon after purchase. Normally. I cheese should not be allowed to] Youth Groitp to Serve Breakfast Sugar and Butter Will Glaze Onions ONtypuREvmuA WE mist, RICHEST FLAVOR Bake In a moderate oven (3S0 degrees) lor twenty minutes, or until topping is bubbly and bread is golden brown. Cut each pece of bread Into S or 6 dices. (firmly packed) 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 2 tablespoons dark corn syrup H cup chopped pecan or walnut Fill greased muffin cups 2-3 full. Bake in preheated oven (425 degrees) 15 to 90 minutes. If desired dip tops of hot muffins |n melted butter and then in granulated sugar. Makes 12 large muf- SPECIALS FOR THURSDAY, APRIL 26 THROUGH WEDNESDAY, MAY 2nd . .. INCLUDING SUNDAY. APRIL 29th. 1962 * V - AC SUPER AO AAARKET ALWAYS I AI8LE _ Lu AFTER AtSUE OF COFFEE Choice of Grind* fissh-**f sister, Dorothy,,of 529 Nevada Street and Wayne Lee, 23 Warner, go over the way they will act when they work with a group of other young people UL the Newman* AME Church Sunday < BORDEN'S / COTTAGE CHEESE Largo 16-oz. FACIAL TISSUES Rice Makes Container for Meat, Mushrooms, CRISCO Borden's American or Pimento CHEESE SLICES Serve In rice ring, or over hot cooked noodles, garnished whh tiny watercress bouquets. * Tasty Finger Food o For Toddlers FINEST FOODS LOWEST PRICES FROZEN FOODS STOSt HOURS: W BEER - WINE —LIQUOR TO TAKE OUT CORNER BALDWIN AVE. and WALTON BLVD. KOUNTYKIST 4 Whole Kernel CORN can 1 TABLE KING ’ ★ CUT GREEN BEANS #30S CAN 1 it CUT WAX BEANS #303 CAN it KIDNEY BEANS rOUR CHOICE 10!. NESCAFE INSTANT mu COFFEE *1 |.9 BUTTERFIELD Whole or Sliced POTATOES -wp io# Canada Dry CANNED POP Fl/writ Q° “‘I’ FOULDS NOODLES •vrw • • SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Seven ! • Jocal residents were add, hungry •’Ind hoarse — but safe *- this !; f morning after a night adrift in an »~'on crash, said Named to Commission LANSING ID — Gov. Swainoon For Motoring Pleasure 8parta and Henry J. Dongvillo of Fountain to tho Michigan State apparently Higginbotham didn’t aee him there when he left. could turn any way he desired on Nobody got a chance to tell a one-way. throughtare. WCKAKITIIHmillOf UKUCKYTWttfTYWHWms row» rnowii? SOLID VALUE the above list, plo«ieo drop In at your nearest THRIFTY DRUG STORE and pick up YOUR JL FREE PRIZE, a SOLID COLOGNE regular $2.25 size f Complete with hood and built-in oloctric outlet. available in three Dana fragrances TABU, 20 CARATS, ^ AMBUSH Heavy Duly Brake Floid SAVE 33c SAFE FOR ALL CAR FINISHES • Performance to spars • High boiling paint • E«eeds SAE Spec. 70R1 and Fed. Spec. W-H-910 ► Regular (12 szj Site •ad Thrifty OMtt Vi OFF SALE Rag. $1.00 TUSSY DEODORANTS Roll-On, CAl Cream VV D’ORSAY INTOXICATION V THi FREE Atomizer SHOES AFTER EASTER CLEARANCE SALE used's *.dium -£*** els. Si*«* 416 9Mk OURPWCE Reg. $1.19 Bo of 36 Tact/ METRICAL Q < WAFERS O* Rag. 98c Full Pound RoH HOSPITAL JB conoN 3 Barbara Could Annual V' Reg. $5.95 ^ THRIFTY’S ALL-IN-ONE MULTIPLE VITAMIN 366 Tablets FULL YEAR’S SUPPLY $<*49 Children's 0«I t» andwWtoteo^^ styles With flat or sizts 816 to 3. OUR PRICE PLASTIC DRAPES 87*, lace, flora If, Ideal for any IOchoosatn«.«>»»^#1 nita MICE * PURCHASE of Men’s or ladles’ GRUEN WATCHES For Year Cottar#; Patio, TOILET TISSUE t| Economy pack mode, by Doe* skin In white, pink, ydlow. 10 Roll Pack . 69^ r Rag. $4.70 ^ WALGREEN 8mm Color MOVIE FILM FULL 50-FOOT ROLL Price Includes Processing OPEN DAILY ( 9 m 9 SUNDAYS 12 * 8 CONSUMERS ft CENTER ^ DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE PRESTONE PRESTONE PRESTONE PRESTONE THRIFTY DRUG STORE, 4895 Dixie Hwy., IS A PACKAGE LIQUOR STORE FILLED BY US QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE HAVE YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE 4895 Dixie Highway Huron Street 148 North Saginaw St. 1— *49.75 SMwwl to**»' gruen Watch *22** I L *59 50 IT-h-it UWW ORUiN WATCH *26*| I tog. $71.50 *ers gruen watch *32** I Jg.»J»J0t74wwiem;* OSUEN WATCH *26** tL.. *49,its twrwt ton GRUENWMOf *22*J 1 i 'PRESTONE* 1 Whitewall | Tin Owner ® GnwHm ANtw ij loot hint || 30 Seconds [tW* I 57' ffleeaeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeefteeoee R BARBARA GOULD ' fl I POMPOM ■ COLD CREAM | leg. $2.50 $]25j 1 $1.75 1 Barbara Gould I Astringent Lotion !1' Exhibit Offers Feast and what they mean. You pan throuf!r a depiction of the Brazilian rain foreet where Chariei Darwin conceived hit "Origin of the Species." ' You go neat to the Spacearium where you are hurtled through ■pace by meane of the worffa largest projection screen, an eight-ton aluminum dome suspended in a theater. Asteroids, planets, suns and galaxies whiz ever your head. Now you climb down some stairs to the Junior lab. This is a Disneyland for brainy youngsters, who can measure impulses from electric fish, run an atondc pinball machine arid try to hit the moon with a rocket. films showing simultaneously, das* zling the mind with admtee’s many facta. WIND AND SUN Next you pass through a hall with graphic illustrations of what -aroused man’s curiosity: wind, sun, waves, lightning, etc. Another passageway illustrates how man’s senses can* ha wrong. There ate a series of optical illusions, including s whole Weston town on a slant Folks come reeling out of that one. Then they stand in a which ■HwJidfgll (lit faiiu6| Stou Sale Ends Saturdayl LOWEST PRICE THIS YEAR DURING W.A/S GREAT ANNIVERSARY SALE 75% DACRON-KRFECTO BLEND Muni Look Your Bast In America's Bast Selling, ltd Wearing Comfort-weight Suits. Nowost Silk Lustor Colon In Slock, Navy, Brown, Olive, Sizes 36 to, 46.' Bogular, Short and long. • Not a retread, not a second—but a brand new famous Davis tire!* • Time-tested tread pattern resists skids even on wet roads! • 100% Nylon cord-strongest die cora known so industry! DACRON C0RD-WASN’N’WEAR SUCKS 20-10-5 balanced formula be^W keep your lawn green aUmmuun 22-lb.bag! SANDRAN IS AU VINYL-NEVER NEEDS WAXING SANDRAN Sale 5T Serw* Wti IseeW taaelae Cereals Tie Only 39•* Vinyl Asbestos A* Mm-tM OmM, ~ 9V AaonaONS lalaid THe eihtei Em-woo 10*u FUSTIC WALL TILK All OTHERS 50% WILL MOVING CUSTOM INSTALLATIONS-FREE ESTIMATES-CALL FI 4-5216 THE FLOOR SHOP 99 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET OPEN FRI.ond MON. TIL 9 Plenty of Free Parking in Ovr Lot Roar of Store FE 4-5216 !1E_ KentileA MarfeUondSpattvr'B' 4V4* Y SUPER SPECIAL FREE! ($1.95 Vmlmo) WITH ANY Oil 2 sanctum DACR0N-C0R0, WASH ’IT WEAR MEN’S suns USUAL RETAIL PRICE... >45 iMMaiMN.ii la MJIJU. m..s ■SIMM|9IMnW0 TILE PATTERNS 6*Ft. Bssc A Vice TtvUk leg. 1.07 Compare low, low Sab Prict on TMs Wizard Dokixo 22" Power Mover Tlmti cm T00IS !®17 Transplanter Nett PREMIUM SENTRY* • Puts more rubber on the road—better motion! • 12% deeper treed then new car tiros snort mileage! • 100% Du Pont Nylon Coed! • New polybutadiene rubber! MVtS 53* • 4-cycle, 2H*UP. CUnton-engine with cast iron sleeve! • 4 trimming heights! •Close trim design! Oafr M(Vat Wizard Powsr Alewsrs-Cbesee Over 1,000,009 Tim* These prict* m gaed le aN Western Am Caaiaaey Rolf 162 N. SAGINAW ST. Phono FE 2-9253 V. R. CHRISTENSEN, Managor SATISFACTION 6UA1AMTRB 01 T0OI K0MKT SACK At tka Family Store BALANCE WHEEL SI.50 Wheat Weights Included THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRILS, 1962 THIRTY-SBVBy1 ■«tl! MO OSLMATION* CATHOLIC KNISHTS OF ST. tiSOUCI 1106 Penobscot Ruilding Detroit 26. Michigan, WO 2-9793 v Please rush free tacts on' Insurance plan for Catholics. J railway car that appears to be I moving because of optical and j audible Mahons, i origin or srzcu* J You Come next to e large . Occupation............................ { Mbit depicting the development of —'0* major diacoveries .. County ,. U. S. Univorsity in Beirut Notts Enrollment Jump BEIRUT CUPP <7- the American UniveroMgr of Beirut has an knroilment of 2,970 from 54 countries, according to the universi- ty's registrar. That to needy half again aa many atudents as regie-tend tor the hat school year. Woman studaats tUa year number 654. Arab atudento account tor about Tl per cent of the atudent body. The university dates back Find Diamonds^; Useful for Burnishing Surfocds NEW YORK (UPP - A new use has been fouhd for dfeasonda, both natural Or man-made, according to a spokesman for a Re- search Laboratory dy. N, Y.' W Be said that one of the oidaat methods |pr toeing the surtoee finish of M i/ftFfHItifMiliiiiiitiir iituumiMtiHMf... . J il fni , iiiinu tfitt, TltlitTY-EIQHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1 m ' Leaky Defense Plagues Detroit Efforts Tigers Stumble to 9-8 Setback in Sloppy Game FteMing Miscues Play Key Role in Wild Win for Kansas City Big Pitcher Wing for Red Sox Cager Conley (jets Fast Start DETROIT 0—A tighter dele in Bob Scheflings's words, is the Icy to another strong pennant challenge by the Detroit Tigers. The manager stressed this in his comments throughout spring training. "We have to Improve our infield defense/* he repeated often down In Florida. "We have, to get better second line pitching. Defense and relief pitching were the only places the Yankees outplayed us last year.” 1 After Id games of the new sea-sea, Sebetfing has seen little to encourage Mm. The Tigers, now 5-5, have been terrible ia the Held. To say the relief pitching has beea mediocre would be a generous appraisal. Scheffing’s worst nightmare -came < yesterday as the Tigers Kicked away a 9-8 decision to the Kansas City Athletics. Tiger in-fielders committed five errors. A passed ball and a wild pitch permitted the A’s to score twice. GAVE f BUNS "I guess we gave them six runs all together.” said Scheffing, who saw little humor in file s&ndlot play o( the Tigers. "This is one game I'd like to forget right now." | Sloppy fiekKag figured at least every Kansas City J That was la the eighth and reliefer Paul Foytack allowed what 1 proved to be the deciding raa to oeotw m a wild pitch. Scheffing employed 21 players in a late and futile effort to pull out the victory. Five pitchers and three shortstops appeared pi the boat scare along with a succession of ptochMttem and pinehrunners. The A's used 14 players themselves, Inchkllng four pitchers. it' dr * - Bob Grim, a veteran making a comeback after recovering from 1961 arm lameness, finally stopped the Tigers. He halted a four-run Tally apt brought the Tigers within one tun of tying in the eighth. Then be retired Norm Cash, Rocky fcalovito and Steve Boros In order In the ninth. BOUGH DEBUT Rookie Doug Gallagher made his first start tar the Tigers—end he must have thought he was bade in the minors. Jake Wood’s throwing error helped the A’s touch Gallagher for one run in the first. Steve Boros made, two^errors in the second as the A’o again scored one "run. GaHnghar finally waa removed after the A's seared, three teas he flu fifth. He lamed three walks aad three singles la the Inning aad Sdufllag mercifully By The Associated Press Towering Gene Conley, rescued from mayhem on the hardwoods by the arrival of the baseball seals rewarding the Boston Red Sox with a quidc 4tart that could propel the 31-year-old right-hand-to his best season in the majors. , ■ — A A : fi-The multi-talented Conley won his second in three decisions Wednesday, limiting Washington to five hits and smashing a two-run homer to aid his own cause a 7-1 Red Sox triumph that made a hate cf a third-out grounded. Sum Jones came in with the bases fall and the A’s promptly scored another run on Dtak Brown’s passed ball. , That made it 64 and Jerry Walker was breezing. The Tigers managed to get to Walker in the sixth when they scored their first four runs. * A A Walker walked Billy Bruton and A1 Kalins singled. Norm Cash’s ■ingle to right produced the first Detroit tally. A walk to Rocky Coiavtto loaded the bases and the second run was forced in when Walker hit Boros. FORCED IN BUN Danny McDevitt rushed in to rescue Walker and forced in other run by walking Bubba Morton, pinchhitting for McAuliffe. < But then McDevitt enticed Brown to hit into a double play with the Tigers’ fourth run scored. The A’s went right to work to boost their M lead against Foytack In the seventh. He walked . two batten before Dick Bowser singled one home. Howser tried te advance to second on the play and was oat by a mile until be kicked tee boU out of Chlce Fer• scored on the play. Jury Lumpe toadied Foytack fog a leadoff triple off the center field wall in tbs eighth. Lumpe | soared tte actual winning run on Fhgitack*s wild pitch. The Tigers made it interesting in the eighth with their four runs. Bruton's two-run single was the •key blow. Vie Wertz* pinch stogie { •land pinchhitter Larry OMborne’s| 'fiMtoe out drove,in the other run. Dut flit hitters esuldn't quitel match ths^fieifien' golden give- / sent the Senators reeling with their seventh consecutive defeat. A ■ 'A It’s one of the fastest starts of this nine-year career tor the 6-foot-8 fire-bailer who broke his left band and jammed two fingers on his pitching hand while playing with New York in. the American Basketball League this past sea- TOP SHAPE// Now, in top shape from his early arrival and taking Ms rsgo-lar place in the rotation from the start of the campaign, Conley Is hopeful of posting his top mark. His previous best was 12-7 la I960 with Philadelphia. He was 1344 with Boston in his American League debut last year. . Cleveland' held' first place despite a 6-2 loss to the Las Angeles Angels, the New York Yankees edged the Chicago White Sox 7-6, Minnesota snapped Baltimore’s four-game winning streak with a 3-1 triumph and Kansas City outlasted Detroit 98 in other games. The Red Sox struck for five runs in the fourth against Senators’ rookie Jim Hannan, gt Red Wings' GM Retires three on Frank Malzone’s homer aad two on Conley's shot. Gene had Washington blanked on two hits for seven innings before singles by Bob Johnson and Ken Retzer and John SchSive’s double brought a run across eighth. A A A The Angels snapped the Indiana three-gaihe winning’ streak with rookie right-hander Bo Belinsky hurting a four-hitter and allowing only one earned run. Leon Wagner’s fourth inning homer off Pedro Ramos, making his first start since he was acquired fay .Cleveland in a trade with Minnesota, put Loo Angeles ahead {o stay. LOPEZ HKKO Hector Lopez’ two-run single with the bases loaded in the ninth capped a four-run rally that it for the Yankees and Rollie Sheldon, The White Sox had built a 6-3 lead, with a 17-hit attack that chased Whitey Ford as Jim Landis led the offensive with a homer, triple and double. Die loser was Ed Fisher, working in relief of Juan Pizarro. Adams Decides on Retirement After 35 Years Decision Is Announced This Morning Following Confab With Norris DETROIT (UP!) - Jack Adams, colorful general manager of the Detroit Red Wings of the Nation!) Hockey League for 35 years, day announced* hig retirement from professional hockey. Adams, 66, a native of Fort William, Ontario, originally came to Detroit In 1927 to take manager-coach of the then one-year-old Detroit Hockey Club. He had just completed a ten-season National Hockey League career with Toronto, Vancouver and Otta- 5 AP rMahi GETS RELEASE —Old veteran pitcher Robin Roberta packs bis bags at New York Wednesday after being given his outright release. The farmer Phillie star hopes to stay in baseball. He did not pet to pitch tor the Yanks after a rough spring train- Roberts, Labine Receive Their Walking Papers NEW YORK (AP)—A couple of right-handers who once possessed two of the proudest names in baseball — Robin Roberts and Clem Labine — have been given their walking papers. Rofaeris, who was baseball’s winningest pitcher over one six-year period tor the Philadelphia Phillies, drew his outright release from the New York Yankees Wednesday. Labine, n top relief man and pitching mainstay of the old Brooklyn Dodgers, was released by the New York Mets today. Roberts is 35. Labine Each was overlooked in the expansion draft. Their outright release is the second for each. Each Tigers Box Score Hovscr. M DtlOrcco cf Lump* 2b fi2«S lb S I 1 1 Cub ! 5X2 l S 11 0 foytack p • p iM«oaMhc p • OOltiWetU t llllirn • OOSSRHU p 0 1 0 0 0 Brown c 3 cotters* * l Ocftsskcr p t b/Uv»lkP I Fncndet M 0 hMurvtll } IBrrtoU u ■ HOMS IMab 1 far McfulHf* to On . w-r japet In Ml t WOltett to 7th; d—Ran tor Jlr*- ____* ggjS.trW JSJ-ST&JS __IS??—Knnut car I^^SatoSTw^ It. DP—Howser. Lump# tad Sieborn S. LOB—Kanim* Cttjr it, Detroit 7. 2B— iSSS «u f 1U ( IU I M 0 mkI i may be at the end of his baseball career, though Roberts says doesn’t intend to quit. Labine not immediately available for comment. Roberts, who won 234 games with tiie Phillies, was near tears as he packed his bag in the Yankee dressing room. WANTS TO STAY 'I want to stay In baseball as an active player/' he said. “Nap finally, I am a llfite shocked it this release, but I think I am still capable of pitching.” He ‘didn’t pitch an inning tar the Yankees this seas York picked him up after he had been given his outright release by the Phillies after a 3-10 season last year. He didn't fit into our relief plans and I couldn’t work him into the starting rotation,” Yankee Manager Ralph Houk said. “It is our feeling that he should have every chance to get another job and tt te for that reason that we re releasing him at this time.” Labine, who made a career as a relief man. played on four National League champion teams -Brooklyn in 1963, ’55 and ’56, and the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1969. He and catcher Joe Ginsberg were released from the Mets to make way tor catcher Harry Chiti, purchased outright from Cleveland, and right-handed pitcher Dave Hillman, purchased from Syracuse. Bloomfield Nets Clarkiton Bloomfield Hflte won Its second WajOte Oakland tennis meet to three starts yesterday defeating Clarkftan JHfc Larry HuD and Larry Parrott defeated Wilbert and Hetherington the A doubles match, 88 and 7-5. In the-other doubles, Dave Baumhart tiki Jim St. Jain won oyer Theakston and Hetherington 34, 6-4 and -94. Stogies winners for the Hills were Jason Hail, Eddie Anderson and Bob M. Smith. OvtersJl the Hills team te 5& His name has been on the Stanley Cup nine times — twice as a player, as manager-coach three times and as manager four times. Adams announced his resignation after a meeting this morning with dub president Brace A. Norris. He issued a statement which said: “I now feel that the time has come to bow out. I have tatted this over with Braee Norris this morning at the Olympia, who went along with my decision to retire,” Adams said Norris had asked him to be available in an advisory capacity “so I will not be completely out of the picture." HOCKEY GROWTH The association of Adams and Bruce Norris’ father, the late James Norris, signaled the real birth of pro hockey in Detroit. The Norris family parr based the franchise in 1WS after Adams had practically run a one-man operation la the Olympia for six years aad was chiefly responsible far getting the dub and the sport entrenched la Detroit. Adams remained as manager-coach until 1947 when he gave up the coaching thtties to Tommy Ivan. Ivan was replaced by Jimmie Skinner jn 1964, who then was replaced toy Sid Abel in 1968. Norris said Abel would assume e dual rote of manager and coach tor the coining season. RETIRES — Jack Adams today announced Ms retirement as general manager of the Detroit Red Whip in the National Hockey League. Sid Abel will assume joint duties as coach and general manager while “Jolly Jack” will continue to Mm the dub in an advisory Jim Lemon’s pinch-Mt two-run homer with two out in the ninth beat the Orioles and Chuck Estrada. Don Lee won it, limiting the Orioles to three hits for eight innings before coming out so Lemon could hit. Ray Moore pitched the ninth. Baltimore’ tone run came on Jackie Brandt’ homer in the seventh. m PRESS BOX t By The Associated Press Don (perfect game) Larsen, who had the world on a string in 1956 but was all tied iq> to knots four yean later, has successfully retraced his path and stepped to as stopper for the pennant-hungry San Francisco Giants. Making his third appearance, the 32-year-old right-hander came on to the sixth inning Wednesday night with Pittsburgh threatening, struck out the side and allowed only one run the rest of the way in the Giants' 88 victory over tile National League leaders. It gave the only pitcher ever to hurl a perfect game to World * 'story — hie accomplished the feat tor the New York Yankees against the Brooklyn Dodgers in '56—a record of one save and two victories to his three outings. The save by Larsen, who Freshman Charles Clark accounted for 14 points in a 106-18 dr’ It \ A Mike Joyce, Conner Michigan star from Royal Oak, Is the only rookie on the Triple-A Indlampo-Hs Indians. Ms Arroyo Is oat tor a few days. The Yank relief am has a atrsteni ligament to hte throwing arm. The Cabo have farmed out hurier Morris Stevens. | .dr A w A roller hockey game will be played next Tuesday night at the RoUadium between a Rolladium team-and a Motor City squad. Starting time to set for 8:30 p.m. A 'A Y Basebali Commissioner Ford Frick says he has taken action against the parties concerned in the Casey Stengel-beer ad affair and that it is a ‘‘closed incident.” Casey said last night he has not “ d as expected. Keg'World Series' Listed for Detroit Detroit, long regarded as one of the nation’s top sports centers, will host the first world series'of professional bowling on the lanes at the ultra-modern ThunderfaowlJ Arena, 4200 Allen Road in suburban Mien Park. That was the announcement of Don Rogers, president of the National Bowling League, who indicated the Detroit Ttomderbinte | would meet the Minneapolis Twin Cities Skippers to a best of five game series starting on Friday, May 4. The dates were delayed until the Skippers had clinched the second round championship. The T-Birds walked away with the first half honors and were second in the last halt The series schedule calls tor stogie matches on Friday, May and Saturday, May 5, starting at 8:30 p. m.; a doubleheader on Sunday, May 6 at 7:30 p. m. and the fifth match. If necessary, on Monday, May 7, at 8:30,p. m. Softball Toam Entries Accepted Until Monday A total of 27 men’s softbaBli teams have registered tor the city | recreation program, however, ad- ] ditional entries are still befog acid but entry tees must be ( posted fay 5:0 p.m. Monday April 30th. Entry fees for oat of city spooned teams B 885.00 ar ' teams, 00.0, The final mangers’ meeting tor the league will be held Thursday May 3rd. at 7:0 pm. at Pontiac Central high school, i League entries should attend this meeting. It will cover team daasl-fications, scheduled, rates and procedures tor playoffs. The regular 1 a is aat to atari May , 14th. ONE OF FIVE Boon — Detroit 3rd base-man Steve Boros fails to hte knees aa ball y on throw from outfield following. artMafea Sliding Gordie Windhom went on to score. Boros had two of five Tiger errors to a wild 98 teas to Kansas City. Larsen Stops league Leaders couldn’t find the plate to 190 when he was 1-10 at Kansas City, further enhanced the trade hy the Giants that rent young pitchers Dom Zanni and Ed Fisher plus outfielder Bob Farley to the Chicago White Sox for Larsen and Billy Pierce. VETO *8 Piprce, like Larsen, has a 2-0 record for four of the 10. San Francisco victories between them, and they've added the pitching depth Manager A1 Dark wanted. Zanni is 18 with the White Sox,. Fisher 0-2 am) Farley O-lor-7. AAA Elsewhere, the 'Chicago Cuba nocked off the Los Angeles Dodgers 98, Milwaukee topped Philadelphia 7-2, Cincinnati added to the New York Mets1 problems 7-1 and St. Louis aqd Houston played to a 58 tie in 17 innings. Gomez Didn't Make Hall but Helped Many Others BALTIMORE (AP) Vernon (Lefty) Gomez, a former New York Yankee in civilian clothing, took the play away from the Baltimore Orioles Wednesday. The one-time star southpaw pitcher, now a salesman for a sporting goods firm, tossed more than his share of verbal curves while speaking at luncheon honoring the Orioles. “I didn’t make the hall of fame,” Gomes said, ‘‘but I helped sorqe other players to get throe. ‘Jimmy Faxx hit more than 50 ABC Team Titles Back in Midwest DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)-AU of the American Bowling . Congress Tournament team' championships were beck to the Midwest today. Two*oI the three 1961 ABC team titles wept to California end Texas. This year two of the torero an championships were captured by eqiuds from Illinois and another by one of the game’s most renownedXoutflte—Don Carter Gloves of StVLoute Carter Gloves, eMch succeeded Brentwood Bowl of ^an Francisco, beat 57 other teams total to win the crown and $200 top professional group. hpjfoe runs— and about 36 muW have been off of me, “No one knew Joe DiMaggio could go back on a ball in center field until he started playing be-tnd me.” Gomez said one of the main tee-sons he learned as a pitcher was: ‘while you’ve got the ball to your hands, you’re safe.” ' "One play I got down pretty >11,’’ Lefty said, “was tte one where I pitched and then ran to back up thted base. If X j before the runner, I was ue of an overthrow.” Gomes said as a batter te bad only one weakness-* pitched.ball. When I went to the plate, fans used to yeD, ‘tori ’em lefty — ~" a foul’.” ‘One day I hit tte third double of my career-counting 'Ugh school ball—and then I waa picked off second base.” “Manager Joe McCarthy asked what happened out there?’ and * •aid, I don’t know, I’ve never been out there before." Recalling hie term as per at Binghamton, N.Y., Lefty ltd “we clinched last place4'on opening day.” "During onejltretch we lost 11 games to a row, and then we had a game postponed. I threw a victory dinner for tiie team.” tth its 6248 Division to tiie Strike ’n Spare of placed Meyeriand Builder, ton, Tex., as the regular champion. Tte Chicagoans $2.50 for their 3128 total. Tte booster division tenip title stayed to ,the Midwest. Cahril Lanes of Mount Csripil, IB., became the 1962 booster champion with its 2861 total worth $250. Syivania Electric, Ottawa, Ohio eld the title last yrito. Competition to the five-man r event, which drew 5J0 teams, 4 wound up Wednesday night. L tt L Castle Lanes of San Iton-cisco, the final Classic team to bowl, finished with a 5441 total after shooting 2737 for its final three games. The 69-day meet ends today when champions in doubles, | gles and all-events will crowned. Leading in the CUss^c Division are Bob Foote. Pueblo, Colo., to singlet, 759; Glenn AUL-son-Dick Hooter, St. Louis, doubles, 1431, end Jack Winters, Philadelphia, all-events 2147. Rassling Giants Mtart in Fflature at Armory Tte battle of two giants—Rickie Cbrtez and Klondike Bffl hea~ the rassling matches at the Pontiac Armory Friday night. to a feature tag »«■»«*, Larry Chens ' Domenk Bravo sfl face I N urn berg and Kurt Von Strohrita. Tte other match has Joe Smith time is 8:0 and all tickets are The game was halted by curlew and will have to be replayed. Orlando Cepeda, who has been troubled with a groin ttjury, drove in four nine to pace the Giants attack, doubling home the first ran to the fourth, then putting it out of reach to the sixth with a three-run homer off Pirates’ starter Bob Friend. Rookie Gaylor Perry picked up tte victory with Larsen’s relief.' After Cepeda’s homes, Friend sailed a pitch over Ed Bailey’s tend and tte Giants’ catcher took a couple of steps toward the mound but .Pittsburgh receive: ' Don Leppert grabbed him. Both benches quickly emptied. Order was Just as quickly restored. And Bailey then homered. BIG 8th The Cube wen it with four to the eighth off reliever Larry Sherry, Ernie Banka tying it 68 with ids fourth home run and Andre Rodgers clinching It with n three-run homer. Rodgers wound up with five runs batted to and provided Don Elston with the victory. Tte Dodgers built their edge on homers by Duke Snider and Willie Dnvie. Ron Piche making hie first start tor the Braves, kept the Phils at bay with a four-hitter while Eddie Mathews’ sixth homer, to the ning, followed by Jot solo smash tagged Chris Short with tiie defeat. Piche gave up two hits and two runs to tte first toning, but was virtually untouchable thereafter. Veda Pinion stroked a double and two singles, against the Mete in support of Bob Pmfcey’s four-hit pitching. Puricey went the route tar tiie first time this season. Bob Miller toolc the loss. Tte Cardinals forged the 58 tie In the ninth' when Ken Boye: drove i in ,the run that knotted it with e tingle oft Dick Farrell Tte Obits, who trailed 48' after tout innings, hid moved ahead in the eighth on Merrit Ranew’s first major league homer and a run-attiring double by pitcher Jim Golden. Tte game waa the longest extra intog night game, hy time, evei played to the NL. ssHITiSa* B3S&LZ 3111 State Golfers Make Their Exit Dick Whiting, Schubeck Ousted-in North-South Amateur Tourney PINEHURST, N. C. 0 -Michi gan's two remaining hopefuls reacted tte end of tte trek Wednesday to the 62nd renewal a the North’ and South Amateur got tournament at Ptaehurst Countrj Club. Dick Whiting of Lathrup Village veteran Red Run amateur, fed b> the wayside yesterday aftemoor to tte 3rd round of match pia> after winning hie 2nd-round mate) to tte morning. Van Own tewed to Dndtoy Wy-ereg of MeKhmey, Texas, M. John Schubeck of Groan Male m----- — a 68 dedaloa I 2nd round to Bob Cochran c Louis. fferotprvftoal matches wen der way today with two ex4 and South etempin— Billy PAtton and Cteries Smith, c tog to tte faature attraction. Ed Tutwller, 1-up conquer -Mending N-S champion BUI 1 man. met Dr. Ed Updegra Wysong tangled with Dale Morn **rt Dr. John McKay faced Ho bart Mantey to complete the qoar tor-fink) slate. Bait for Title Fight LONDON — Harry Levene W-fl 1.50x14 7.60x15 9.50x14 t.25x15 BRAKE SPECIAL SEE THE LIVELY • Oalaxie 500XL • Fairiane Sport Coupe •Falcon Futura NOBODY BEATS OUR BARGAINS FORD, INC. 630 Oakland Ave. FES-4101 THK POKT1AC PBESg, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1002 THIRTY-WINE 'Prosperity' M for Ball Players Banned Mikes Seek Grid Funds arwooimo. 111. (UPI) — the Milwaukee Brxvex; - a^curidea nal» by a real estate firm whose HO stoekhoMore s|ade SO present sad former Jer league baseball playere. ' ‘gggj|\ 'f V* *'’ Robert Cranaen. Assistant note Secretary of State, eaid he ifpald act as head of the State faeurittos Department In proWbtt-lng stack sale by CIA be., a Delaware-baaed corporation which owns buildings on Chicago's South CS^ toe. Is see of 14 eater, prises headed by E. Petrie* Wagner, tt, CMcagn, a m toei. same SI todldtoga. He told uatted Press Btt—tins! that <*A toe. Is the earn* as Con- as a part Debussdiere's Recess Spent With White Sox to attar sleek Sir Wagner said he has met officials of be Federal Securities and Exchange Commission con* earning Ms dealings and would mast today with state officials. DENIES WRONGDOING Wagnar denied any wrongdoing. He said Ms real estate dealings, which returned dividends of 30 par cent to the stockholders, were only aimed at making Ms baseball player friends prosperous. MHe*ve acted to good faith. Oar actio ns have beea distort l red, twisted until It made es leek Rko slum landlords Instead of a group of fellows who got to-•'.getter to boy real estate," ha . said. , Wagner said the baud of director* of Consolidated Investment Included pitcher Billy Pierce of the San Francisco Giants; third baseman Ken Boyar of the St Louis Cardinals; pitcher Bob Shaw *• Ssffif4 * Hobs 4*1 < , OMa Mortbsm 4 ? - Ml 0*4.) f r«rt» I? otue iuptdi so as ooach Jimmy Dyhas; former Ctoveland Indian ceitchac *• W dr dr The vice president of ComoU-lated Investment is iormer CM* cago White Sox first Walt Dropo, Wagner mkL other b*aebafi players among Ms Investors. "Due to the unfair publicity that has boon received— the pamcutkxMMs would be ue-fair to our investor*." SEVERAL VIOLATIONS found a Urge number of building cods rtafaUtiw fa 10 of the buildings owned by the Map. Wagner lepifad that Me loan* can be made. veeOgeuaa ef O vestment to the County Dropo said he had teal of the buildings aaemed in compared) with others fa (he sam "they Pierce said he has aeon "on or two” of the structures “and would not call them slum bulk Inga." Dyke* said that “as far as knew everything wag above bond. I was only fa one building and NEW YORK (API—Some of the boys went to Port Lauderdale, Fla. during Easter vacation. Others whooped it up in F One of toe boys, Dave Debuas-chere of the University of Detroit, is spending the holiday with the Chicago White Sox. Debuaschere was s great basketball star at Detroit. Hi aver-aged 3B points s game during the career" that ended when Detroit loot to Western Kentucky In toe first round of the NCAA championships. dr 4r ♦ When the basketball season ended, Debuaachtre was. swamped with pro offers both in baseball and basketball. He choae to combine the two. The White Sox paid him a fancy bonus, probaMy about 570,000, with the understanding that he could also {day pro basketball. DECISIVE FACTOR "That was one of the decisive factors," said the 31-year«id collegian. “Detroit, tor one, wouldn’t consent to my playing basketball In the off season, Chicago agreed fa let me try it both ways tor a year or so and see how it goes.” Debuaschere was drafted by the Detroit Pistons of the National Baaketb&ll Association and the Chicago 'Majors of toe American ttball League. He said he probably would sign with Ms home town dub, Detroit, although the offer was considerably leae than the reported 125,000. classes and you had to get up early to go to desses after playing at night. Thau we would go right into baseball, too. The baseball team always would have been working out a long ton* before I ‘ fried them. "With two sports there shouldn't be any problem keeping in shape 11 toe tone.” Early Wynn took one look at this Mfa right-hander and observed, "he ought to be good. When he cuts toe ball loose he’s two feet closer to toe plate than I *m.” FIRST LOOK The White Sox got their first look at file collegian In action last Sunday while losing two to the Kansas City A’l: A1 Lopes didn’t pick any soft spot for too rookie. There were men on first and second and one ball and two strikes on ton hitter when he called for Dave. He retired too bettor on a fly ball, wild pitched a run in while walking a man and then mowed down the next “He really can throw hard,’’ said Lopez. “I like what I have set him.” Ray Bares, fax pitching coach, echoed Lopez’ thoughts. Eddie Short, the general manager who sighed him, said he expected DeBuaschere would remain with the dub after be graduates fa June. don’t think there will be any problem fa playing the two Oporto," be stlto “Gene Conley did it with the Boston Red Sox and Boston Celtics. Actually, I think it was tougher in college because yoq had' to make up Soo Skaters Bow, 6*3 BUFFALO, N. Y. * —The West! Raxbury, Mass. Conleys won theizj second straight National Amateur! Junior Hockey ChamptonaMp yes-f terday fay beating Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., 64. Front End Alignment ZSZ9195 rag sad paper drive this gator-day. The paipsse ef the drive Is to raise feeds far mm football equipment at tt. Mike aext tog. Anyone havtog papers or rags af any Mad to donate to the free pickup far ajstm he rectory, FE smwihSW mB3M| ^Bal SFar* wstAro SO—uwm- rntBaffiSec—■OU MPhriMifc; Dsdmrs; 1), Cubs; i). SdMck rdsi linsw ____ . J. 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Oxford took Imlay City CMT and OrtonvilJe doubled up Labi Fen tan TO-35 in other action..: heeler Masted Rotaae «V4 la n*/t led by Chris Aha aad Pete Long with two let place* 1 spalled a sweep of 1st by Kettering In an 88% fo 10% swamping ef L’Anse Creuae. Orv Mullens took the 100 in 10.4 and the 230 in 224 and Mike Popovich had a 4:40.8 mile to pace the CkptafcM. Mike Campbell, Andereon, Buchanan, Bill HavUaad. Reinhardt, Paterson and Haitian ah triumphed. | KELLY STARS At Oxford, Dan KeUy J0F$S57 SURPLUS 19 N. SoffiMW LETS GO FISHING SEASON OPENS SAT, APRIL 2t WE MU. UCENSi AND TROUT STAMPS HIP BOOTS Heavy floated sole, olive groan color, inside knee harness half strap. New —1st quaity. Reinforced heel. $888 WADERS Chest high inside ppgket, cleared sole, olive green rubber doth Ikied. 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I Milford pUai op U% potnta la M for IforOntito ml Mi hr Weet ItlaemfleM, Dick Nldbafo wm tha IU be U aoeaada the M0 he M4 aad woe hi a three- Nelson of the victor* *et a new school aad Milford Held record with a t:M.l 8*0. Bathey of Northvtlle took both hanDe*. Ortonville won both relays and got two lata from Larry Jackson in its opening dual. Tom Sherman, Mile Moore, Ron, Kassuba and Tom Parker also won. Parker led a 220 slam. Weat Bloomfield arid Milford high achoals chalked up dual meet golf triumphs Wednesday. Paced by medalist Warren Hall’s 42, West Bloomfield defeated CbuenceviHe, 181-210,1 at Ifoti-tiac Country Club. HaH received support tram Bob Thompson Jand Dan Armiatead, who posted Hk The win squared the Lakers’ record at 1-1, Milford scored a pair of victories at Highland Hills. Larry Hoy took medal honors with a 39 as the Redskins.trimmed Holly, 187-190, and Hoy and Tim Barnes carded 40s to feature a 212-227 five-man win over North ville. m , 1 Ammo. ceiiieoo, h t, ro-J- PhLMdetphlA 24-12. MvuM fru MW. imm andTtevwe; Menko, Me-MJBaa and Adedek: T Aaran. McMillan UK) Pldle LOB-Phlladelphla >. Milwaukee i. ts-tau.. w loan, UE-Mathew*. Adcoek SB—OMBlM. “ aw*, ir-iwtaf.. . . . L-lilnT - it! mufm » Tilifiprai .. itt* ... 1*1 i tetrad* > . *81 Wi If } f ifSTp . *«•* WIT) TlUll Mt« m run Hr A** to Mh. .....flf tg sm 0 j. PO-A—MtonMotT KR Mb Umar* n DP—Power tad Bittey Lab iiSBSSt. mm ip* iiiaJ'r * Mi jrt'HtifeL } Warwick it tilllMJ ■awiiM rf J8 1.bM.JU. Swa iiiivai Oram'e w MilrimU p Hm .. P.Alou rf .. tlttHoak » .... 4 if Mr « liiilSMrt lit hw * «41tfw'lU a 144 Davenp't » 41 l 0 Friend p ... 141 i 0 aClemente 14 4 itaiwa • ... 141 iBHwie a .004. Olivo p .... 4444 .■ > Ml g | 111 4 0 4 0 mn1 B — Maseroekl. PO-A—San Francteco 27-4. PltUburgh 17-11. DP-Oroat. Mum- and Stuart; Maoeroakl and ------ -Sm Franc Ueo 4, Ptttaburtb , ■ .r.l*. Skinner. Kuwin. Davenpo... _ ler, Oroat. m-M*h/jnt-j; b-Fltod oo to 41b: ^rttodifw •k oat Hr Scheffer to 4lbi Jot Browne to 15th; J—Feraud out Hr Tto-fenauer to Util k-HIt Into double pl»r flMBMMW to ITwi i-Orewted ut Dmbrlebt to 17th. AT-,...:::::::“8SSK -Orammul Jovlor. PO-A-H. UwU 1. BouoUn I1-1J. DP-UlUe, . Anudfl-ud Lukir: imoHIteu UUU wd Javier. Aipromonte ■d Larker LOB- St JB—Oliver, Oolden. m. s-uuS: B XBBBSO TMH > 4 1 4 iST ■■ ___ Larker; UUU _ Louie 1M Houoton 15 Ti ilnno*. Oo4*y. SB—Warwick. Mtoooo. abrkbl T Da'vU "u 4 4 2 * Wliltome ] aoioboro t 4 4 W — W.ttovlo, cf 4 111 J & R AUTO STORES us r. siemw UMRf'l *88® cWhtt* J/JJ Hr Carilo to 7th. ^ wfffi | nuroan. Brock. Chicago 17-4. DF uTliidSlMre r, Gilliam Md Moot 1 B*nk<. LOB—Loo CvU, ..4 * . f ■Eton (W, 1-0) 1 . i * 4 HBP—By T tSSnj (WuSiama). ’ L Sherry. P^-TilHO Smith. Sti ttniafli T—1:14. A—4.144. TNAK4N CAN BE DOWN PAYMENT SERVICE SPECIAL • Align front end • Bmmoo front whotlt • Chock and adjust brakes • Pock front wheels a Add brako fluid 88» Yoko op te l months fo m§ Moos# Tryouts Saturday I Chief a DwpSVC Opener; Cranes Downed by Hamtramck Lefty BID Jackson, Lake Orion I scored a 10 victory with the-win-1 pitcher, haa given op only eight L,,- „„ rfn^UOii the plate in the I ItohilwipiWNHrwwrttat.Nt JackiOB etruckout five and walked foir white winner John Williams Strode out eight and walked flu*. •> , V W-MSU Baseball Teams Rout Non-League Rivals Pitcher Eddie Stivm gave up only two htta and had 10 strikeouts in defeating Truer. He abo drove in two runs with a single and double. Mike Dertemcacta- sooted twice on Sttvera' hits and also had an rbi. L'Anae plays host to Kettering next week. “Johnson “Arkansas Traveler Boats99 “Tee Nee Trailer^* CONVENIENT PAYMENT PLAN AUTO SPRINGS Factory Rebuilt INSTALLED FREE Kalamazoo matched Albion with a doubleheader sweep over Adrian. A home run by Flank Stuckey gave Kalamazoo a S3 triumph in the opener and Jourhit pitching fay John Mason boosted the Hornets to a 43 decision in the second Polynesian Filly Brings Top Price at Koeneland LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP)-Poiy-tady, a 3-year-old Polynesian filly who won the Astoria Stakes mat year, was sold Wednesday for $120,000 at file annual spring, sale of thoroughbreds at Keeneland She brought the top price as $0 thoroughbreds went through the auction ring. taking an off-day from Big Ten competition, routed Alma twice. The Spartans took the first game of a doublshasdar 23-5 and camt bade to take thp nightcap 14-2. At Ami Attar, Michigan stomped Notre Ddma 1S-7. The Wolverines collected four home funs — two by catcher Joe Murdto—in an lS-hit attack. ia N1AA play, Albion opened Hillsdale batters powered out six raw in a big sixth inning and went on to mi 114 victory ever Ohio Northern in an interstate game at Hillsdale. 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Ota. ia addition to our gotmntee of flawless manufacture. Our guarantees axa honored in Ml 60 Matas and Canada at 00,000 Firestone ad-■H| • wherever you drive. BOY I0W...WHILE THIS OFFER USTS Air-Cooled CAR CUSHION THE PONTIAC F&K8S, THURSDAY, APRIL 18,1982 YQRTY-TWO GOOD NEWS FOE OAR BOYERS Glenn Has a id Full of Uk*-N«w, ; ‘Late Model Used Cars NOW AT REDUCED PRICES! No Formal Application Received by NBA for Moving to Frisco Racing in 2 Divisions to Start at 1 o'clock for Juniors NEW YORK (AP)—The board of directors of the National Basketball Association adjourned its spring business meeting Wednesday without receiving a formal application from Eddie Gottlieb, president of the Philadelphia Warriors, to move his club to San Francisco. The 2nd annual Holly to Fenton canoe race on the Shiawassee river will be held Sunday with entries for junior and senior divisions. The race will start at Mill Pond in Holly and conclude at Bush Park hr Fenton which is about 1 hour and 45 minutes of paddling. Co-sponaored by the chambers of commerce of the two communities., the race with 25 entries was held in a snow storm last year. It id the first race of the season sanctioned by the Michigan Canoe Entries can GLENN'S MOTOR SALES 952 Wait Huron FE 4.7371 FI 4-1797 THE DAY IT SNOWED — The Brendel Lake Ski Club on II-59 in the Lakewood subdivision, got7 an early start this year. In fact die day The Press photographer found 14-yearold Ferrill McCarthy water skiing a week ago, die, temperature was in the firs and it was mowing. The dub already hfts its jump and ■atom course out in the lake. /» \ shift. Some newspaper stories have Gottlieb selling his Philadelphia franchise to San Francisco interests with Syracuse then moving to the Pennsylvania city. Los Angeles already is a member of the NBA mid a second West Coast city would cut travel costs. Racing Association, register up to an hour prior to the draw which will be held at 1 p.m. after which the junior race will commence. The senior racers will start at approximately 2 p.m. Boat Numbering Curbs Thefts, Recklessness Trophies will go to the first six places with a trophy and $25 tor the winning team. The two chambers of commerce will climax the activities with a tug of war battle of their own after The directors do not expect to begin the search for a successor to Maurice Podoloff as presidsat until late this year. Podoloff told the directors at their opening meeting Tuesday that this was Ms final year. He is 71 and has been president of the organization since 1946. By TED JONES Marine Designer J. P. Morgan said that a man who had to ask if he could afford a boat, couldn’t. This oft-quoted remark has dope more to scare people away fra* the water than the sinking of the Titanic. Morgan fas referring to luxury yachts —{really ocean-going liners — hi vogue during his era when small boating was impractical. Today, such monsters, requiring immense crews, are out of the reach of everybody but royalty 1 and shipping tycoons, so if that’s {your idea, give up now. ' A boat now is no more expen-, sive than and can be financed just | like a car. If you’re in the 16.000 Some states are even more strict, so new buyers and oldtime owners alike should recheck the rules. A dealer, Power Squadron or Coast Guard branch can advisa where to apply for the number. In 11 states, where the Coast Guard handles numbering,* auy post, office will provide an application. The ambers, la Work char- Inflated Balloons Make Handy Buoys In Boating Customers always appreciate Ups to make their boating more enjoyable. Here's one you can pass along: Suggest they carry several toy balloons in their tool kits. Then, if they should drop equipment overboard, a weighted balloon can serve as a buoy to mark the spot. .v'jpoiN* $2Qtt the last five years is the addition o| numbers. fitegistration letters and figures There wasn’t anybody else mentioned, although there are as many top golfers here at the tournament ever saw. Winners of 16 of 21 touraments this year, National Open Champion Gem Littter and more than 100 from the star-studded tow ■slashed at pax 71 over the 6,616-yard Oak Hills Country CWb course. Palmer was seeking his third Texas Open championship in a row and he had a record back Of him to indicate that he was playing about his finest golf. SEASON OPENS Sat., April 28th Get All Your !>upp!i«i at S. C. ROGERS Lower Deep V-Hull Is Boating's New Twist Powerboats show the new twist ha a lower deep-V Mill line. There is talk about catamarans and hydroplanes, skimming dish designs and hydrofoils. Some predict that these are the boats of the future. Meanwhile, boatmen are spending money on sturdy and almost old-fashioned hulls carrying a deep V from bow to stern. This boat shape uses water as a shock absorber instead of an anvil. It speeds through waves rather than pounding off the top of them. A more comfortable ride. Nine companies are now building deep-V variations. WE ALSO HAVE A GOOD Deflected Shot Nets 1-0 Win for Buffalo ASSORTMENT OF CAREFULU/ SERVICED USEDBKES^tffftK Tests in rugged offshore races proved tint the little boats could safely handle Mg waves. Boating families seem to want the same seaworthyness in more protected waters. The introduction of workable outboard drives for inboard engines came along at the same time, They are particularly suitable for the Veed hulls. The boat lifts considerably whan It gets up on plane, but inboard outboard motors can deliver power from both heights without the cut-down transom necessary with outboard Owners have two new complaints. Police in busier areas ate so active tracking down improperly numbered boats that they spend no time chasing reckless operators. Some states are not using boat registration income to improve conditions for boatmen but are, instead, funnelling it into the general fund. But boat numbering, overall, has progressed smoothly. BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — The player who made the shot got an assist and the teammate who unwittingly re-directed the shot* into the goal was credited with the whining goal. That’s part of the story of how Buffalo defeated Springfield 1-0 in sudden death overtime Wednesday night in the fourth game of the American Hockey League’s Cal-der Cup playoffs. The action moves to Spring-field tonight where the Indiana, leading 3-1 in the beat-of-7 aeries, hope to wrap things up with their unprecedented third straight play- TUNE-UP TIME SPRING . . . Hum to bring your cor in for « ENGINE TUNE UP GUARANTIED WORK BY 1PKIAUSTI REASONABLE PRICES WE SERVICE MAIXORY IGNITIONS DON'T WAIT ... GET SET NOW FOR SUMMER CALL TODAY—FI 2-4907 ’ WOHLFEIL-DEE 2274 S. Telegraph U. (Acres* from Miracle SPIN-CAST Push-Button OUTFIT FE 3-7068 60 S. Telegraph Open 8:30-5:30—FrL 'tfl 7 NYLON Regatta at Laka Lansing The Lake Lansing regatta will be held May 13th for power boats. Sanctioned by the APBA, Lake Lansing is located near East Lansing off Haslett road. Raring will be held in lour desses of runabouts and four classes of stock hydros. NEW HEADQUARTERS WHITEWALL TUBELESS Unfortunately, the hulls look more like boats than birds or airplanes and don’t have quite the glamor of flashier designs. MERCURY OUTBOARDS The FMemae’s Pal @ MERC-110 9.8 hp 55 lbs. Kalina The 'Lightning" is back la the hew Marc-110 . . . lightest motor in the 10 hone-power clan In history ... it will outperform smaller than most 6 horsepower motors. For hunting, fishing, light runabouts, pontoon boats, auxiliary power, or general utility, the Marc-110 is the best in its dess. White, trimmed in Mack and chrome. Singh lever Central mmmaw APRIL SPECIAL! ******* $75oo TRAD! ALLOWANCE Many Complete Used Rigs at Bargain Prices at 10% Down THIS WEEK 0NUI FORp-CHEVIE YOUNG'S MARINA UNITED TIRE SERVICE ,710x16 ■ Ifi, wimmrnm HACK tuet rm WHIT! 10.88 12.88 1760x15 BLACK ruet rvtt white . 12.88 14.88 750x14 •LACK ’ TUBELESS WHITE 10j8 12.88 800x14 MACK TUBELESS WHITE ; 12.88 14.88 THE POXTIAC PRESSt THUKSDAY, APRIL 2*, 1962 Lawyers Sum Up Their Arguments in Pro Grid War NFL Attorney Cfotmg That Rival AH Trlorf to Stifle Competition BALTIMORE UP) i- fe- player draft,*’ argued Gerhard Gessell, NFL lawyer. “The records ahow that NFL action was to compete—not to pie- I BI.AfKWAIIS Guaranteed 21 Months Full 4-PIy Nylon Cord Tires ALLSTATE Cross Country 6.70x15 Tube-Type Black or Whitewall was tax and old lire off your ear Sports Calendar 7.10x15 Tube-Type • Cut-skid tread gives you faster, safer stops and starts on every road in all weather 15.44* 17.44* IJBELESS NYLONS blackwall or whitewall • Silencer buttons reduce the road vibration that causes most tire squealing Soft-ride rubber increases tire life, to help fortify against road wear 6.70x15 TUBELESS TIME SERVICE GUARANTEE If tire (till during the monthly guarantee period, we will, at oar option, either repair H wit haul eert or in exchange far the eld lire, give yom a new lire or a refund, charging only for the period of • Quality for quality, price for price, ALLSTATE is your best tire buy NO MONEY DOWN Sears Truckload MUFFLER SALE 6 or 8-cylinder, single exhaust Chev. ’54 to ’61 Charge h Allstate Heavy Duty Type You pet 30% longer muffler life. 14 heavier aieel then plain, light gauge ateel muffler*. Extra inner shell reduce* noise. Free-flow design distribute* heat evenly, lessen* back ppeasare. Wo. parry a complete line of exhaust and tail pipe* for mo*t car*. Snug-fitting Clear Plastic' Seat Covers Cheek Below for Your Car! Year Regular ... 1949-’52........ f 6.49. . ... 1956-57........ 5 8.98.i ... 1950-’53.........$ 6.49.. ... 1949-’59..........8.49.. ... 1949-’54........$ 6.49.. ... 1955-’56 ....... 8 8.98.. .. l954-’57.-----..f 8.49.. ... 19S4.’55,.......815.98.. .. 1958-7.1 ........8 8.19.. . I960______________8 9.w:s. INSTALLATION AVAH.ABLK Regularly *21.95! Preteet* upholatery INSTALLED \ Charge It Long.wearing see-through protection for your car up* hplsierv. Heavy pleatic clean* eoiily with a damp cloth. Will not ereck, split or discolor. Have them installed while you shop. Shop ionite ’til 9! Auto Aectuumriro, Perry St. Hum-merit Satisfaction guaranteed or your money Phone FE 5-4171 SHOP AT SEARS ANft SAVE Ti it * □lEEsap MUFFLER Black dr Whitewall L761I. 7.59x14 IS4** Black or WMtewall 7.10x15, 8.0Qxl4 17— Black or Whitewall 7.69x15 19** nrm HroRTy-froro THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 10«g* YANKEES SET THE PRIQE PACE WITH BIS BUYS LIKE THESE Fiberglas Spin Rod or Spin Cast Rod Ceric handle. Designed for pushbutton reel. SO Yds. Braided NYLON CASTING LINE DuPont Nylon. Choice of tests. mountaineer GE Sealed BEAMS Famous Quality, Double Knee DUNGAREES ... 100% PURE Weights MOTOR OIL ChaUmtg* Price RECOH STARTER. THRQTTIE CONTROL. ■ Special 'Grouping Famous AC and ChaMibion SPARK PLUGS First Line. In Original Cartons. ICATTER RUGS NYLON BlENtm BLANKET Solid color. 72 x 70 sites. 7 colors with ace- Better Quality! Extra - heavy, high Foam- Filled TOSS PILLOWS I mm&M THE PONTIAC PfeBSS, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1962 100% FOAM SEAT AND BACK CUSHIONS LIFETIME CONSTRUCTION HIGH GRADE DECORATOR FABRICS TUFTED BACK CLASSIC CONTEMPORARY DOBBS CARLOAD PRICE CLEAN ELEGANT MODERN CONTEMPORARY DOBBS CARLOAD PERCE 3 -PIECE SUITE DOBBS /tk CARLOAD $ PRICE Priced as Shown With Massive 72” Triple Dresser 3-PIECES WITH 60” , TRIPLE i DRESSER, & SHAMED MIRROR AND DECORATOR BED 9-PIECES WITH 54” MR. and MRS. DOUBLE DRRSSER FRAMED MIRROR and DECORATOR BED Hand Rubbed Selected Oil Walnut Highest Quality Construction Equally Tremendous Values and Savings in Matching Correlated Dining Room Collections iBCttsasna- 2600 WOODWARD-BLOOMFIELD HILLS Expert Design and Decorating Service Op^>10 AJM>9 P.M. Wed., Thwrs.,FrL, Sat, & 'til 5 THE PONTIAC PRESS * THURSDAY, APRIL M> 1908 -ratWjwat'. Bridge Blue Bloods Turn Feud Into Personal Battle of Barbs (Editor's Mote — Within the past several months, too V. S: bridge masters have swapped the national leadership bade and forth, along with barbed personal com ment. AP staff writer Leo Anavi, whose 40 pears of bridge play embraeed the nation’s first tournaments, examines the competition between the two masters — both of whom he has pUyed.) Mager, 41, and his wife, Daisy, a tree lance commercial artist, MUSIC BALK Last Timas Tonight "RAINTREE COUNTY* By LEO ANAVI NEW YORK (APi—The continuing feud between two monarch* of bridge has remained personal rather than , dynastic,’ Chartea Goren of New York and OawaM Jacoby of Dallas. Tex.; ire still slugging it out in a battle of words. | i YmSL Goren points out mat he has been the nation's leading master point winner to 19 years; Jacoby, who once lorded It over the lesser princes, believes he has caught ap or is about to catch up. too annoyed by the Goren-Jacoby feud. They remember the Culbert-son-Lenz matches of the late thirties, which definitely put bridge on the map be a national same. Jacoby played with Lenz and lpst that contest through a combination of unfortunate circumstances. He exploded into manhood across three yeare and three girls. mb u55t *Ho M PEffflNWT IDUMGtRS ..t-r —3rd THRILLINQ FEATURE!! ■ An Advonturo in Terrifying Suspense the. Scenic Northwest! The two were friendly once, as friendly as bridge blue bloods can be—distant and with reservations, they are now exchanging barb* and epithets with abandon. Actually Filmed match or a comparison of pointr at the same tournament or at different ones. There are so many of these regional attain that one gets confused. BASIS or COMPARISON Jacoby believes master points acquired at future matches could form a basis of figuring as to who la mightier at the game. Be suggests that the coming tourna- ■Freo Ride on the Fabulous Moo Sky Circus Train!. might do in this respect Goren will be playing In On- A Musical Holiday of Fun for Everyone! ANN ARBOR t*-A University WATERFORD DRIVE-IN EARLY BIRD ADMISSION This Coupon Whon Presented at Our Box Offko Along With ONE DOLLAR COMING SOON “ONE TWO THREE” “YOUNG DOCTORS” “KINO OF KINDS” Any ivoning Before 7:30 P.AA. will Admit Baaror and AN Other Parsons In His Car This Coupon Expires May 18,1962 PUBLIC NOTICE EXCLUSIVE FIRST >H0WI> Shows 1-3:10-5:20-7:30-9:30 FIRST PONTIAC SHOWING BFECTNE JVM 27th util UNI yuuy MM CRICKET •HWMta V* La show] WL* > Who PlanTioMSATTuSiAa AaOVClWDAMAJMD Pi ANTED A Monty Legend In The Hi arts Of The World! AT ALL TIMES-EVERY DAY JAMSFRAN(3SCI)S*B^UCEBENIVEn*6f^6ORYWAL0(H7‘VnflANNATNAN FnMIiRtn HA50HM Sc"W«r *i snmu sum . m/ * Must? mm jr- ki/wumiiwwinM p^!^HWIpUn.smni«s»iwJ«mniSHnciWi ”Hgh»0 -THEY ANSWERED THE CALL 0F-, JO, HIGH ADVENTURE! Sr .mmutsuarms'. I KEEP IN SHAPE FOR NEXT FALL Free Instruction-All Summer Beer A Wine to Take Out! Fortino-Bicmar mis Bar-Restaurant WRr H-M W. Horn MM4-H MlII 4825 Highland Rd. (M59) 674-0424 WATERFORD EAGLE Greatest Terror Tale Ever Told! JOHN WAYNE PONTIAC GRAND OPENING continues at SECTIONALS lUf. $199.95 Pc; Living Room Suites FREE Towel Rocks tut tin PLENTY OF FREE PARKING at FRAYER S von get lowest PRICES-HIOMEST QUAIJTY AND THE SAME DEPENDABLE SERVICE OUR CUSTOMERS HAVE ENJOYED FOR THE PAST 19 YEARS. BARGAINS LIKE THESE EVERY DAY A^IRAYiR'S • Admiral 17” Portable TV....... 1.119.95 • Ftddtr* 1 H.P.Air Conditioner • Admiral 2J” Full Console......... 199.90 • Deluxe Nprga Sat Dryers •... • CLL1S Cu.Ft.Refriferator.......19M0 1 • Admiral 14 Cu. Ft. Froozor.... • Westinghouse Automatic Dryer.... 129.00 • Wait Starao-with AM/FM 13 CU. FT. WESTINGHOUSE REMEMBER!! NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR DELIVERY - INSTALLAHOM -SERVICE AT PRAYER’S THE PONTIAC PHE^S, THURSDAY. APRIL 26, 1868 Find Five Hvrdeied injennessee Fire NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)-CKy official, aaid today five member. ti a Nashville family were Ret to death and their home wa» eat afire hi an effort to cover up the ■laybRfc ■ - The bodies of Mr. and Ml*. Dewey B. York, their two chUdroi and alt mother were found to the York home after firemen an. .mihmd a call to put oat a in the four-foom brick house. ,T.;% > "a * ★ ' lit Howard Boyd of the Nuo-vffle Fire Department laid all five ot'lhe victim, had been toot and their bodies had been riashed. dr. h' * “ft was definitely a case of arena to cover up murder,’* “ ‘ •aid. Yljrk was an insurance sale> man. .Officials had . no immediate theory on the reason tor the day. Pontiac; Nearby Area Deaths The victims, in' addition to Mr. and Mm. York, ware their sons, Beany, 14, and Don, 3; and Mm. Utft FW». 74. There are lour mail Rood groups as major divisions bat scientists estimate blood group factafs are capable of producing aboq| 132,710,400 combinations. Papes Po—ible Life Imprisonment Found Guilty of Hil-and-Run STANLEY DROZDOI Stanley Dnmtowdd, 69, of 556 Nevada St dtod at St Joseph Me*, cy Hospital yesterday alter an Mi ol five yearn. Mr. DcPsdowaU had been a chef at Pine Lake Country Ctab and a member ol St. Vlnosnt de Paul Catholic Church. Surviving are two eons oI Ctorlaton end Arthur H. Nelson af Pontiac; a daughter Mm. andra DuPont in Indiana; and five grandchildren. Mr. Droadowki’s body Is at the Pumley Funeral Home. LOUIS W. DDREf Service tor Louie W. Deneen, 54, Of 675 Robin wood Ave. will be at 1:U> p.m. Monday at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial to Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Deneen, an employe of Boice Builders' Stfpply, died early this morning of. a heart ailment at University of Michigan Hospital, Ann Arbor. He had been ill several months. Surviving besides his wife, Blos->m, am a daughter, Mrs..Jacqueline West of Clarkston; and tone eons, Louis Jr., Theodore nd Terry, aH at home. OUVER B. BOSQUE Service for Oliver B. Riegle, 67, of 3439 Riegle Drive will be at ‘ 30 p.m. Saturday at the Voor-hees-Siple Chapel wtth burial to Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Riegle was a self employed contractor. He died yesterday morning at the Veterans’ Hospital to Dearborn after a'long illness. Surviving are two daughters, MT*. Robert Fisher end Mrs. Le-Roy Wheaton, both of Pontiac; eight grandchildren, and threi AUel*ieeHMto»M»»i»eMMMM»>st>eMM» ft NOTICE! SOLD CROSS AMSUUNCE SERVICE CO. |?1-; IS NOT UlTfD IN YOUR YELLOW PAGES ftomCRpmiAihr Qridr lay hhwaisl | •fMMMw 394 South fapanur |lMR3>S>lMarB..e4»»Ryi 34 HOUR SERVICE anytime! IMS 4-1531 CITY OF PONTIAC OAK HILL OTTAWA PARK r MUNICIPAL CEMETERIES A NEW POLICY Flowers come from God and are a fitting symbol of life in all , its beauty. Flowers are the embodiment sf our hope of eternal life. The use of flowers, therefore, to an eloquent testimony of ‘love and respect, and to a beautiful and attractive memoriali-satlon. To display this aftectkm.and respect, authorized bed plantings and floral urns, with annual flowers only, can be used, from April 1st to November 15th, the gram growing season. Fresh flower bouquets and potted plants will also be permitted on such specific days as Easter-Mothm’s Day—Father’s Day— Memorial Day-Armed Faroes Day and at time interment and may remain for a period of seven days before removal. plants, not called for, will ||Mf||g| — 1-* “Flower Bed of Memories.” and unsightly, they create an impression of neglect, rattier than remembranoe. Such to called "everlasting flowers, not only become very unsightly from weather conditions but create a Serious problem to the cam and maintenance program of-the cemeteries in general. For these reason, it to not poaMble to permit any of these Imitation flowers as decorations. Artificial wreaths, winter wreaths and winter blankets are permitted from November 15th to April let We respectfully fetoRt ■ ' • TMMmFft ----------------------B - _____' i ' you for your cooperation. Board of Tmatees Also survlvng are five brothers, Joseph of Pontiac, Leo to Missouri,. Edward of Toledo, Ohio, Albert of Coleman aqd Manuel of Midland; and two sisters, Mrs. Eva Nelson of Pontiac and Mrs. Jeanette Mor-ley in New York State. / CLAIR CAREY OREGON TOWNSHIP — Service for Clair Carey, 65, of 3600 German Road, will be at 1:30 pj Saturday at. ttfc Baird Funeral Home, Lapeer, with burial in the Oregon Cemetery. Mr. Cvey, a farmer and a member at the Lapeer County Farm dtod at his home thii morning of a heart ailment. Survivors indude his wife Leola; two eons, Royce in Lapeer and Clair at home; three daughters, Mrs. Raymond CranlCk and Mrs. LeRoy Diamond, both of Lapeer, and Mrs. Donald Stroman of 1m-lay City; a sister; a brother; and 13 grandchildren. SAMUEL J. HETTINGER LUM — Service for Samuel J' Hettinger, 89, of 5545 Lum Road will be at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the Baird Funeral Home in Lapeer. Mr. Hettinger, a retired farm-r, died this morning of a heart ailment after a brief illness. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. William Sibley of Lake Orion; two sons, Orion of Pontiac and Merritt of Grand Blanc; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Grace Winn of Lum; a step-Guy Harding of Houghton JS grandchildren and IS great-grandchildren. JOSEPH V. HENRY ' WALLED LAKE — Joseph V. Henry, 52, of 373 Wellsboro St., died Monday in Veterans Memorial Hospital, Muskogee, OJda. aft-five-week Alness. His body to being brought to the RlchardSon-Blrd Funeral Home here. He waa a member of Walled Lake Lodge No. 528, FAAM. Surviving are his wife, Ha; three sons, Larry, Jeffrey mid Wyman, daughter, Dottle Jean,- all at’ home; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Henry of Kingston, Oida.; four sisters and a brother. JOSEPH HORNACEK TROY — A Requiem Mass for Joseph Homacek, 75, of 3330 Big Beaver Road, will be said 9 a.m. Saturday at St. Columban Church, Birmingham. Burlalwill be in White Chapel Me«s/ri£d\ Cemetery. Mr. Hornacelt died yesterday at ABBOT H. MHHMJRON HIGHLAND—Service for Abbot a Middleton, », of 3605 Middle Rood, will he 3 p.m. Saturday at Richardson• Bird Funeral Hem* wtth burial to follow in West Highland Cemetery. highway commissioner for Township from 1915 to tUl, Mr. Middleton died yesterday at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital after aii iHness of 10 days. He was a member of the Oddfellows Lodge to Clyde. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Susan Spoor and Mrs. Elea-/dark, both of Highland; a eon, John of Milford; 10 grandchildren And 19 great-grandchildren. MRS. BESSIE MAY PEASLEY HIGHLAND — Service for Mrk. esske May Petsley, 71, of 3135 Beaumont Drive, will be at the Vaa’t Hof Funeral Home, Grand Rapids, wtth burial to follow there. MTa. Peasley died yesterday at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital after a short illness. She was a self-employed seamstress. Surviving are three sons, Orville E. of Grand Rapids, Maurice F. of Highland and Walter W. of Milford; two daughters, Mrs. Lillian Biller of Highland and Mm. Ruth Robert Hackney was found guilty yesterday of assault with intent to murder in the hit-run injury of • Pontiac Motor Division engineer. Circuit Judge Stanton G. Don-deco announced his verdict after a four-week trial delay during which Hackney was examined by a sanity comminion. After'hearing reports from two doctors, Judge Dondero ruled the defendent mentally competent to stand trial. * penalty of Me Imprisonment when he is sentenced by Doa-der0 May 18. The defendent and his attorney, George Fulkerson, waived a jury trial. Taking the stand in his oym defense yesterday, Hackney admitted leaving the (scene last September after his car struck Mark Light foot, 45, of 3069 McCUntock St., to parking lot at the Motorcar Transport Co., 1280 Joslyn Ave. Hackney claimed, however, he did not deliberately try to Lightfoot. He said his ear struck Lightfoot as it swerved to avoid another vehicle in the lot. Rebuttal witnesses called by Asst. Proeecator Richard P. Coodit said there was no other ear In the lot as Haekaey claimed. E. May of Grand Rapids; three sisters, a brother; 23 grandchildren and 25 great-grandchildren. MBS. MARVIN C. STEVENS OXFORD - Service for Mrs. Marvin C. (Jean G.) Stevens, 74, of 17 Mechanic St., will be 2 p.m. Saturday at the -Flumerfelt Funeral Home. Burial will be in Ridgelawn Cemetery. Mrs. Stevens died yesterday at her home after an illness of six months. She was a member of the Oxford Music Club and Immanuel Congregational Church. She to survived by a nephew. JOHN F. TOOLE BRUCE TOWNSHIP — Service for John F. Toole, 16, of 8780 Bord-man Road, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Almoot. Bufial will be In the Scotch Settlement Cemetery. The youth was killed Tuesday in an automobile accident. A junior at the Almont High School, he was a member of the 4-H Saddle Chib and Future Farmers of America. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George F. Toole; three sisters. Mm. Mary Forrest of Ontario, Calif., Mrs. Helen Marsh of Utica, and Mrs. Phyllis Treutte of Almont; and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. John Toole of Brntu, Ont Anti-Commie Bill tor State Vetoed by Swainson As a result of injuries when he was struck, confined to a fit ★ Hackney also faces charges statutory rape, while he wa JEROME Olds-Cadillac is NOW ACCEPTING Charged With Theft, Two Held in Jail Two men charged with the theft of 9418 April 12 from Richardson Farm Dairy, 7350 Highland Road, Waterford Township, were bound over to circuit court yesterday by Justice of the Peace Patrick K. Daly. * Melvin Spooner, 6221 Bi Rd., Brown City, and Bartholomew Paladino, 3274 Evtutoa St.,- Waterford Township, both {decided innocent at yesterday's examination to charges of breaking and entering in the nighttime end safe burglary. Both men are being held at the Oakland County Jail on bond of J5.000 awaiting arraignment in draft court May 7 at 9:30 a. m. on the "NEW EASY TO MOVE-UP TO" Otdantoliife GOOD NEWS TO 1962 CAR OWNERS! Jerome 0!ds-Cadiliac NOW offers you a plan whereby you need not repent at your leisure .. • but instead you can NOW MOVE UP and INTO an OLOSMOBILE, immediately! Don't delay another day! Come in AT ONCE and let us show you how we can do it for you! JEROME Olds-Cadillac 280 S. Saginaw St. FE 3-7021 LANSING Ul — Gov. Swainson today vetoed a bin to outlaw the Communist party to Michigan, terming it dangerous legislation William Beaumont Hospital, Royal and unnecessary duplication. Oak after a short illness. He was! * * * a retired landscape gardener. I Swainson said it also would give! Surviving are Ms wife Mary £.,; too much power to the attorney one daughter, Mm. Dan Jewell of Troy; and two sons, Joseph S. and Fred, both of Birmingham; 10 grandchildren and eight greatgrandchildren. A Rosary wfllbs said at 8 p.m. The governor, leering Ms see-end veto of the current legislative — I "In direct terms,” he said, authorizes a stogie official, acting in awesome solitude, to determine whether any political party — by whatever name it be called — has I8.,its purpose the overthrow of our government by force or by violence. Howard Johnson's HIGHWAY AT DRAYTON RUINS ALL YOU CAM EAT FOR ONLY FROST-FREE REFRIGERATOR WITH SEPERATE103 LB. FREEZER • Porcelain Vegetable * Butter and Cheese •ttspor Comportments O lift off Egg Shrives * Multi-Position Shelf • AN Porcelain liner You can bo sure... if if s WESTINGHOUSE OUR LOW OVERHEAD* FAMILY OPERATED STORE WILL 98% OF THE TIME, ALLOW OS TO BEAT ALL DEALS FREE FREE INMKDIATI DELIVERY DPENEVENINOS'TIL 9:00 SAT.'TlLllIt UNMET TERMS 36 MONTHS TO PAY 589 Orchard Lk. Ave. IM frHE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL M, 1063 IflORTY-BIGriT By Dr. LM. LtrRL Tot Cegfce nl PM Bve» ‘Couldn’t Let Him Fry* 'somyI Jl TSSr" HAVE OONt »sjy gan ako were cited far. risking their lives to save others last year. . William H, Peck, of Mason, was singled out for. dragging Carolyn M. Oonorton, IT. of Holt, tram her homing oar before it exploded. darenoe V. Smith, af Saginaw, was honored for rescuing 14-year-old Richard J. Haller after the youth fell from a railroad bridge Into the Saginaw River. Nemak, M, wme on guard at a recovered. ( OTHER HEROICS Smith, 25, a railway fkpud maintained haw the Haller boy in the wafer calling for help. Smith jumped la, struggled with dm frightened bay and then towed him 45 feet to shore. ON DEFENSE - Arthur S. Flemming, former director of ttm Office of Defense Mobilisation, defends Ms copper stockpiling action yeaterdiy at a Boat Finds Berth in Swimming Pool ST. LOUIS IB — The heated waters of a motel swimming pool provide a snug winter berth for Two-Day Fete to Salute Nation's Medal of Honor President sendees subcommittee probing Charges of excessive stockpiling with Mg profits to suppliers. WASHINGTON UR Kennedy will open a tworday observance here Saturday of the first presentation, in 1863,'of the nation’s higtfcst military decoration, the Medal of Honor. Some 275 descendants of the six Union spies who received the first medals an expected to bevm hand for the WMt* House ceremony. There also will be a special program at a Washington ALLEY OOP Peck reached in, grabbed Mias Caronton and pulled her from the car. Hie tires Mew out from the heat and minutes later the fuel tank exploded, enveloping the car in flames. Northrop N156 to Toko Place of Old, Obsolete Aircraft OUR ANCESTORS CAPTAIN EASY HOUTHATP MAAB ThiOrHKCWiw my body* v ym»tndi wSFfT'll’TMf ou> iM-iAT?] iMWEf BOARDING HOUSE HAR-PUMPH/ANV NANCY ■ HE ” FOLLOWED ME HOME 4 > FOR 1 MILESJ BUT HE LOVES I JUST COULDN'T LOSE HIM Atttitpies MORTY MEEKLE AMP He HA6 A CtfUMTHAT O066NTGO RUM-TIDDY-QUM ANYMORE... MY FATHeR RXfiPlHSM.H^VGRy HANDY WITH TD0U5... r HAVE A MAMA COLL THAT PC66NT^AY MAMA ANYMORE, AND MY BROTHER HA6 A TRAIN THAT P065NTGO CHOO-CHOO ANY MORE... MY FATHER 16 AD50 QUITE CRAFTY. I^MOUK FATHER HANCV WfTHTOOli?? MV FATHER*? VCRY HANCV WITH TOOL'S. r GOOD GOSH, \S IT MY TURN FOR 6UAK.P DUTY ’ S—, AfiAlKI ^ V l ALREAPYT DONALD DUCK FORTY-ynrg THE PONTIAC PRESg, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1062 Seek Man Who Robbed Midtown Detroit Bank DETROIT Police arid FBI agents today sought an unidentified gunman who Had from a mid-town branch Of the Detroit Bank REAR FOR THESE SAVMCS ASAWU.. HERE'S OUR HOTPOINT ONE H.P. AIR CONDITIONERS *0W OKU hiohlano I IN I p°ntiac I MAU I Says Freeways Not a Cure-All Mayor Cavanagh Tells SeRate Probers Mass Transportation Needed ^NEWtl962 Sabotage If Suspected in Bank of Cuba Blaze HAVANA (AP)-The Communist newspaper Hoy said it was presumed that saboteurs set the towering fire that broke out Tuesday night on scaffolding surrounding the incomplete ao-stary National Barrie of Cuba. Six persons were reported treated lor smoke inhalation from the fire, which firemen controlled after several hours. 19” PORTABLE A COMPLETE HOME EMERSON^ 23” TV-Stereo |g§ FM-Radio Comb. • W 12 cu. W 2-DOOR No-Frost REFRIGERATORS ONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER WEST1NGHOU5E REFRIGERATOR WITH TRUE SEPARATE ZERO-DEGREE FREEZER Own this big new RCA Whirlpool and you have 2 appliances in oneJ ... A roomy refrigerator and a separate freezer, fig freosor section holds 107 lbs. frozen food. Sapor storage.doors. Million-mognet door -no latches, frodel HC-12-T with trode. 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WF extra discounts that moan important saving to you by buying this woekl HM 6-TRANSISTOR ROCKET RADIO 10-TRANSISTOR PORTASLE RADIO l«Mn hriUr mm. «*■*>»—. ***** MM. , METUMRJM POLISHER CMh**rvg**M *•*,.!•> L v Auto. Uocfric CAN OPENER ******* ***d*r. Um m woSKto rk— M**. b*tMri** *** rwinriLi piw. M«*Hr w wdt WeSiMk *«•*». I»llp MM* I “"si7*r *17” 1 •v WFFY THE PONTIAC>RESS. THURSDAY, APRIL >6, 1962 Tin following are top prioea covering sales at locally grown produce by growers and sold by .......,J are tarnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as at Produce Apple Ctter. I salt. grassr. ttZu'XZU bu 8S£t£» Steel Issues Recover Slightly ..... j.i§ Rhubarb Hothouse, bos ......&>. JS RhUburb, Hothouse, bo. ......... Turnips, teppeit bu. ........... Poultry and Eggs MTOOrf POULTBT DSTROlT, April M (API-Prices paid per poobd at Detroit for Mo. — J Ir|«i H lbs.: Whites li DETROIT EGOS CHICAGO POCLTBT CHICAOO. April M (API—Lire poul-tir- TThtlmltJirlne.ptloee IV fewer to f hlrher: roosters ji-54; special f White Rock frjrera IS-lIV; White Rc fryers 17-14. chicaoo auTiaa and boos CHICAGO, April SI (Apt — Chlca —IMP Dsiilissai — Butter eteat •to burins prices unchanted; AA 11V.: M A 57V,: H B ill.: i; ear. to B MM; M C MM. ■ —ak: WBMimTi buytas prices V r; 70 par Mat or better trade M: Blsed M; mediums MU; fit dirties S4V; checks MM. Livestock HEW TOBX (API—Following 1 of selected stock transsc lions on I York Stock Bachance with noou —A— DETROIT. April M (AM) Cattle 364, Calres M, Hate ■ST: sad stands n» nssis awn Dams ■ be It reel: cows fuU» steady; bul ceots higher; few loads high c lflMHO lb. steers MOO; most c 1000-1300 lbs. etoere JS.lk-37.75; i loade hkh good and low choice i 30.00-M n; moat good steers XS.SW-I standard steers if.OO-U OO, utility i Today's log. 100. r hellers 17.30-30.00; I lo.oSdn.oo?^ 33.00: Ututty and choice M.OO-JH.OO; standard U.OO-M.OO; cull and utility 10.00-S3.00. , •bet# CMipered lest week choice and print Mom lambs steady to M cents fiAife: lower gtalMHoolt teJI cent; lower: sUaghter own 100 lower: matt ■oatterlnt good to low etudes eU«i JJ 0OS7.0o: standard steers SlJASI.il: few uttltty l SI.M; uUfity gj* Teals rs 30 Mat "Stfiaw **Ho*eO100W*i|lerrui leSefJ tere.JfeaWW Svid&Wifrai? 13.73-13.M; boars lt.S0-tS.00. »°art^«rw CHICAOO, April 1 ■toady to SS lower, m—, —... Wedaeedey's does; sows tttady; good shipping demand: moetlr 1-3 100-331 lb. SHB M-M-W-Tm. Moris SM Jnod nKS head at 17.65: mired 1-3 I 3M Ibe 10.M-10.70 : 330-300 I TMSi >-3 S40-1M Ibe 15-35-e-ouad 130 lbs. 14.M: load Ma MM; mtjod 1-3 300-lJJM-MJI; 3-3 400-dM, lbi OMtl. TM taltM -n-wv., tor (loan mod heifers steady on limited sales: cows slaw, ttaady: other desses ■carte, eteady; load choice with orlme end 1.1M lb daughter steers ■Sad alters a iMMI: short loa. tty end standard 000 lb Holstein li ft: rev food h«ifm tt 00-1500; com-■Mittal 11.00: canners and cutter* 13.56-10.50; utUlty sealers 10.00-33.00: cull 13.66-utlllty and m—nr|tel built 11.56-31.66; >0.00: medium and good 0M-000 M Medina steers 31.M-SSJ0; good and aT gOO-MO lb feeding steers ifoo-M. Sheep 300; smaU supply hardly enough for a market tost: tow sales slaughter lambs week; slaughter twee steady: choice 100 M iStifd slaughter t---------- sip eull te good WMBrmh good and choice M lb thorn few lambs frath ehern Mte jillj ^cuii^t NEW YORK (AP)-A slight recovery by steels and gains fay selected issues featured a mixed stock market early this after noon. .Trading was moderate. Gains and losses of moat key slocks went from fractions to a point or so. * * * The steels, nattered down In yesterday's selloff, were priced attractively enough to attract some buyers, but there was little emphasis in their comeback and gains were strictly limited. * A A Record earnings for General Motors was accompanied by a fractional gain in that stock but a muddled price pattern in autos group. RESPONDS TO ETK Atty. Gin. Robert F. Kennedy’s announcement that the Government will not appeal the final Judgment In the decision on hois du Pont must divest itself of its 63 million shares of GM stock was received writ by the market Du Pont recovered more than 3 points, adding some beef to the stock averages. month anid a Jump in; toot orders were reported, The background of earnings was good but stocks continued to show little appreciation. Other news also was favorable. Higher auto sales Bonds Mostly Unchanged NEW YORK .(ft—Bond prices were mostly unchanged at the start of trading today despite an unexpected drop in the British bank rate. Normally such a move would help bood prices but todgy investors were holding Off commitments until after the treasury disclosed plans for the May refunding program. Hie terms were due be made public after the dose of today’s session. The British reduced their bank rate to 4tt per cent from 5 for the fifth cut since July and the third in six weeks. The rate sets the interest pattern for all lending in the country. * * * Over the counter dealers in UB. government securities said the only price changes at the starti were a few small advances by toe longest issues. Volume was at a| minimum. Studebaker - Packard ita quarterly loss was only 63.6 mill inn compared with RJ mil’ lion in the year ago quarter. The stock was firm, as was American Motors. Chrysler dipped a fraction and Ford, off nearly a point, continued bacidng away from Ita spurt of a couple of days ago. Prices were irregularly lower in slow trading on the American Stock Exchange.. Mead Johnaon dropped more than 2. more than a point were taken by Anken Chemical, Aerojet-Oansra) Bell Telephone of Canada, and Ohio Manufacturing New Haven Clock was an active fractional 'loser. Also on toe down-aide were R. C. Williams, Occidental Petroleum and Valspar. Canadian Javelin, Syntex, Sunset were fractional gainers. American Stock Exch. (Plfuree after decimals are la elfhihi NEW TORE. April M (API—American itoeka: Cal BPw ... 35.1 Mtad John . Cohu Bee ... 7 Mld-W Ab . COBS Mbs .... 11.1 Hero Indue . Drum Am .. 14 fit Pel Ltd. Goa Dovtl .. Ill Pose Her ... Imp Cbem .7 10-10 Soutane Makers Report Top Auto Sales Pontiac Division Si ts Now Record for first 20 Days of April DETROIT (UPD — Record end near record sales of au in toe first 20 days of April were [reported today by the leading car manufacturers. Pontiac sale* of 36$44 units fat the 30-day period were the best to the company's 36-year history. OldsmobUe reported a 64 per cent in sales over the period last year, with 27,018 care delivered to customers. Halter Indue . i-4 Scientists do not know why Inhabitants of the mountain states are bigger than Easterners and Southerners. The New York Stock Exchange (bds-i Slab 1 lb 4 37% I Fm • IS MM Tr* 1.30 M MM M Lev LattCbjr-37V 37M— V 8 S MM MM MM .... * !L. !» §& ;;■; Philip Her 3. PhlUPet MS mSMV! 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SPtesel 1.50 51 513 307 IW -SV Square D le iff* 5* 2*15 - 52^, PI 7 MV UM SIM— M j 8 8 8 ii »s r ¥ ♦ i mm mk mm ____________IS ISM ISM 1SM+ M 5B|W US U MM 31M MM Square D la I MM M 1 ■ Std Brand 1.SS f TOM SOM SSM- Std Holla 1.1H J MM gft MM .. ■Id QU Cal 3b M MM MM M — M HflBuij MV SIM Wb- M Std OU NJ so* li Sm ssm ssm .. Std OU Oh 1M S MM SSM MM- M Stand Pkf I UM ISM UM— M Stan Wer r~ - “ 74> 1 i UM I L2TkV 1.M SvtftACo 1.40 at m ate a . „ ___________. U 5TV S7M STM- Lib lloNAL JM M MV UM ISM- -LtetbUr S 7 MM M SSM-1M UHo IS S.SOf M 114M HIM 11IM-1M Lockh Aire 130 71 4SV 44V 44M- V Loew'e no* MM ISM SSM'' LnneS Cent I 41 31V 31 21 - Loots out 1 a MV MM 23V- LtrOlard 2.41 14 MV UV MV- ™ns= —IS t STM ST WM-M$ By 81D MOODY AT Miwsfestons Writer NEW YORK - Dsvil, armed M i sling, slaw Goiter — Item S. Morris, armed Mitt twice. 'A Goliath, in fids csss, was the Bank of America, the biggest to toe world. Actually, the bank survived as did Morris. But if the hank emerged wiper from the fray, S2 million worth. Pw yean tot Bank of America had won the lisa's share aai then some of the naderwrittag af California State Bonds. That means fee state at California floats a bead Issue aai the firm Dodge safes of 1UM wore the highest for a first to-day selling period la ate moatos sad Cadillac safes of 8,778 aaits established a new April high In the division’s 60-year history. American Motors said it sold 22,-479 units as sales "continued their upward trend.", SETS NEW RECORD Chevrolet sales for toe lMayii period of April 11-29 set a new all-time company record of 66,607. That was almost 16 per cent higb-than the previous record for the period set to 1960. Bakk also reported safes to- days of the month. Baick deafen delivered 1UH cars to show a It per eeat increase over the same selling parted last year. Chrysler-Plymouth dealers posted big sales gains over 1961 as they add 7,443 Chryslere and 17,-656 Plymouth-Valiant units. The Chrysler sales were the. best for that period in aeven yean. * ,* * Ford said its, sales during the Homemade ‘Slingshot’ Slays BankyGoliathS mtiLjmsm to ____one sido of bis modem marble-top deak you can tosh out over tbs Hudson. From tbs other you can see the 9100,000 IBM computer being Installed behind glass psitMtaBB to the heart of the office suite. The delicacy involved for the bidder is to offer the lowest interest rate for California yet still ■all the bonds at a high enough return to entice buyers. It Involves figuring out to tour decimal places and somewhere in-there the underwriter must allow for his cut for services rendered. * * ★ The Bank of America played the game so well that no one had bid agatotf it for California bonds since 1956. Until last falL h INS with sm Thomas C. Ptowdos Waidtew, an Albany, N. Y., attorney, had been a very minor member of the Mg Bank at capital of I1M.0N, would gat tossed a tow boms. Bat aa their capital paw, Morris thought the growth merited a little meat. "We assumed the bank would give us a couple of hundred more bonds," Morris recalled. One thing to another, however, and the bank finally sent Morris a letter freeing him from his ties to its syndicate. NOT TOO SORRY 'I was not overly sorry this,” said Morris, who was *1- 20-day period were the highest for ready looking for pebbles for Ms any 20 days in Us history. Sales totaled 98.900 units, or an average of 5,800 per day. Ihe previous high was the first 20 days of December, 1954, when Ford dealers delivered an average of 5,582 cars s day. ■ling. 1887 from Princeton University with honors in math. He took U Job in the actnarial department of the Equitable Assurance Society — “H was about toe stay U. S. Annouhc&ij No Appeal on After World War U he worked f ee for several W811 Street firms to Du Pont Ruling «» 7 In three small rooms overlooking WASHINGTON (to—Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy announced today the government will not appeal from the final Judgment entered la the Dp Font-General Motors earn by Judge Walter J. LaBuy of Chicago. A A * The decision brings to aa end 13 years at litigation to compel Da Pont to dispose of Ita IS million ahum of stock to General Motors. Kennedy said that, white the eonrt did not accept al of the an air shaft. A An the while bands, . Morris saw a growing field for computers to cut comers in figuring interest charges in submitting underwriting bids. M MM MV M. . M S’* UV 8%+ M S 15 MM S4V«— M S 4fM 41 4| — W S MM UM UM— M B BM ISM MM— M 13 MV 33 in(— M 3 MV MM SMb- M tl 53V 53V »V-_____ t WM 45V 4§V- Trsoiltron 11 MV MM MV— Trl Coot .Jte 5 4SM 4SM, 4SM + ----- -a 4 MV M M —JJ— 1 MM SSM MM— IT 108M IBM ... 3.31V 51 ttft-V i as Sm aft-mi Ud Pee US* U MM Mu MM+ USS AH LM J» 31 33 31V M UBtt AH* 3 2 46V 44 MM4- ---."9S — 1 IV Iv SV ■_____ __ M SSM MM MV- U 3CM 3SM 3P.« V ®a On to 1JS IS M 37V STM— I - ’*!« anise T M MM Sge- M -r. ra™ sR ass1.. • *S If* SS ISM MV MV-f M JM Mae* 3b I M MM M —If U 3 Sv MV M OT Bras f. s M MM S -M 4 MV MM Sm^ V 08 Bub SM $ MM BM Siv + M M K UM uv7 V US SmaU JSp 7 MM MM 31V a K HV fiylg obSTsT. “ft *» ffv t MM si Si . _Oe Wbelee, Jt » JIM njk UM 11 OM 43 4JM+ M Onrt Meite fl 8* aft- “ft i•» «-• ^ + 5^0SW “ gv MM- rertea As MM SIM 34M+ V r* ElAPow l.M JS4M S4 M - M —W— Jelwortb 1 4M 5V SV— M j WnSeaeSp1* ! MM MM MmT M j gj SibS wSSSiir s|| - - u 1 P ft HiK« #.ir »* 1 ft ft- mwf Is Wilton A-Co 1.M 1 MV Wtaa Dts J4 Judge LaBuy's judgment "achieves toe baaie ends of tola Important UtlgatUn. .A A A The judgment require* the Du PenI Co. and the Dn Pent family-control tod held tag company, Christiana Securities Co., to dl their General Meters sleek held- to Ike 1 n finite s m Ua Elec I.M “ Cel 3b IGrain Futures Mart Is Generally Weak CHICAGO (H — The grain futures maths! turned .toward general weakness at the start activity on the board of trade. Oats, rye aad soybeans sHpf toUf R .. I, MM 4T III i.rn T MM MM MM- V _ChM T UM UM UM Hi > IT 4SM MM BM+ M Middle S Ut 1.54 34 37V 37 37 - M pair a Cb M > 31V tiv UV— M Mpb H«o 3 U1U 114 115 Minn MAM JS M «TV SIV STV-1V " Pas A 1.M S MK S 45V+ V -----—r-n. & j. ||jL. ‘r —N— 11 MV M M ______ - 4 MV MM MV MM Can JR 1 14M MM MM Traders said the entire market appeared to have been influenced somewhat by liquidation to May contracts on which first notices of intention to deliver in the pits may be made next week. Commercial , _ _ . . , _ MAPI CD —Not Dairy 2 . 3 MV MM 14V MM MM* ft Hat DtotB US S4 MV M|C MV ^ ftft- ft buaiDesa 1S1 described as father at low abb TM 7* TM- I —Y— Tate a To* SSr 3 MV MM Ynfit mar i ti mm 8v _ , MM MM— V duA T MV SIV UVV V «*s™- u T7M hk t*v+ (j Exports again s s. *V - . V Nsv Sat El 1.13 5 35V MM MM* ] . „ — — fel8f«K * r* ml 4 33V BM 33V ■ IfflTY NHAHsrt 1 IV IV IV g KJ ars IBM 151V* V IF Oss 155 i 47V ft Sm-’m 5?£Yu ! s i mi P*L1 * gj “ft S^ia^Me^SS*" m^ib^noSt dhddsn^'^Drelared arufsigi.yarLvS.. 3 8 8 flSBCTL- Grain PricM » :rra:::::W ®....... W .irag::S:::::Sa 111 Laie'tiwnnir ■M 5^.::::::::::^ STM MM Pk H 14 XP, SV SSV -4 MV MV JM BUM UM ~ ,'< 4SM 4t M MV 5te J;fl r—Declared or paid I Aritebf t resetes 1 csttaMM eaab —*— *t«vbmap 1 then” — 1 _ , np working on their bond poet’ ceursee but 1 read 1 IPs a long trip to New On- So, having already built his own hi-fi set Morris built ids own ■mall computer from a I860 ktt. His TV repairman built him second. 1100-MILLION PACKAGE Flicking a switch and waiting for his creation to warm' up, Morris set out alter the Bank of America. The battlefield he chooe was a IlSS-ndBlon portion at a UN-million underwriting California pnt np ter Ud last August. .. He couldn't afford to Ud on the whole thing because the required 6100.009«ood faith bond 0A the first 6100. million took up most of the firm’s capital. AAA Use of his computers and 1$ minutes rental of an IBM computers’ time down the street for 620 helped Morris cut Us bid very fine. Ike ourprioe of toe Bask and ento'a. Than1 eras some doubt on Wall Street Morris would be able to da bonds but he did and, as he says with a modest smile made a little over a mil- flpft « asw hog outride of thnt tt hasn’t US modi. We go out to little maw, maybe. But 1 SHE’S THE MOST - Leah Sowdon, 335 Liberty St., Is toe first Tei-Huron Shopping Center employe to receive toe center’s monthly Sates Achievement Award, presented to the employe Judged the must courteous and capable. Miss Sowdon has been an S. S. Kresge store sales woman for six years. Handing over a certificate of merit and 625 to Tei-Huron gift certificates is Lawrence Rattner, s representative of the center manage- Saleg Also at New High GM Earnings Set Record DETROIT If) — General Motors, the world’s largest automobile preset new corporation earning and sales records to the first three months of 1962. GM said yesterday its profit of 6374 minion in the January-March quarter equalled 61A a share asri was up 69 million over the previous record quarterly earnings of 6365 or 61.28 a share set in the last three months of 1961. Safes tar toe first tone months of this year totaled *S,MS,M0,000 compared with N.flStokflS to January-March, 1969. In announcing the earnings and ■aim figures, GM President John F. Gordon and Board Chairman Frederic G- Danner attributed the record level to a high level of geo-eraT economic activity and strong customer preference for GM products. MUM ON RECORDS The GM announcement made no mention of the new records in ■ales and earnings. tt ameuated to eight cento a ■hare for GM stockholders. The QM officials said the cus-omer demand for passenger cars in file first three months of this year “continued trends that had become evident in the last quarter of 1961." A A A Danner and Gordon also attributed higher earnings to the foot that hard top and higher priced models in all company lines have become hot sellers of toe year., . . These, to tarn, produce a better return for toe company, they arid. Also noted by toe GM execu- Rate Cut to 4% Pd. by Bank of England LONDON (AP) — The Bank of England rate was cut today fey half a point—from S to 4% per cent. It was the third half-paint cut to seven weeks as the British treasury continued to relax the freeze on credit tost k tost year. The Bank of England rate seta the interest pattern for banks and other lending institutions throughout the British teles. One effect of the eeriee of cuts has been to stem toe flow of money from foreign investors wishiiw to take advantage of the high British interest rates. This has bean one factor to toe continuing drain on UK. gold re- eled off to akput » per seat of the market to contrast to toe 87 par seat they were holding AB GM divisions continue to re* pest record asks for mid-April. April. Chevrolet said its sales In the April 11-20 period totaled 68,887 units, up 41 per cent from a year age and up 15-6 per cent from toe previous record period ef 1900. flwHiy OldsmobUe and Buick ■Iso reported high salts to the April 11-20 period. Cadillac reported a record; Olds its best store I960 and Buick its bast store 1956 and Pontiac said its safes were the highest to the 36-year history of the division. SECOND KILLING next month Morris Pk> wden-W ardla w underbid Bank on another 6100 million to> ____ i, eareing Cbliforoia awer 61 tafi* M 7afT- Opto tehton hi interest charges sod making 6700,000 for the tiny firm. ,5mb i&s. its MS < WJ ti 5SSJ if Si if i! T7J f»Z MJ MJ ss Ear s; zi s? S i 3 i e li Wi ns 83 Treasury Position .......... i ^ftn.MJ.mjj .Wood Furniture Liked ’Ll. fall UM MmAo Si mi GRAND RAPIDS rising M7 4 15 7 MJ mj trend in Os national Food home-mu mi 183 ma un s SB fit 5 S8|B M*eh’ jm.t 134 4 S^moolMy analysis by Sridman fr t IJ71.435.455 54 | n.»M.3M.I$3 I (JM.4M. if DwK. fJS. AVESAOES °!RwMI:,mT. f n SM.3M 153 IT Wltkdrawalt (Meal not1 12^1““ . ■ 434-71 teM B«t IN million of the find quarter profit eame an a dividend from Ethyl Corp-, paid sa earalngs of News in Brief kaeyrs thfeves crawled through an unlocked basement window at the home of Karine Owen; 210 Prospect fit., and stole a cash-register type piggy bank curtaining 619 between 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. last night. tral Methodist Church Fellowship Hall, M-50, between Cans Lake R4. and Porttoc Lake Rd. Friday, April 27,4 to t p.m., and Saturday, April 26, 6 to 2 p.m. Pancake Supper, St Mary's la the HBls Episcopal Church at the comer of Joriyn and Graemhfe|fL Saturday* April 28, from 5 to 7:J0 p.m. '* —adv. mage gala. ’Fridhy, April 27th. from 9 until L The Ladies National Leagre. At 128 W. Pike Gu to Bargain Box, 295 Oakland Awi. •. —adv. Waaied: Disstloss of (Mhtofr dishes or toys, tor ■ Church Rummage Safe Building Fund. Before May 5. Call UL 2-4407 or UL 2-3538. -feta, .. Safe at rtret ChriatUa : Church, Friday, April 27, from 3 to 8, and Satflday, April 26, 9 to 28. E. Huron ai Mill, n THE PONTIAC ^KESS. THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1002 FIFTY^Oitt/ 2 Held on Bond in Bank Holdup Examination May 24;, Third Akin Sought by ttt, Flint MlcS bay ary - two runt men were hdd an bond today pending examination on tof charges stemming from the Tuesday Holdup of a branch of the Geneses Merchants Bank In Flint * A ★ Fry Jr., SO, waa held 10,000 bond on a charge of bank robbery hi the theft of 90, 088 from the hank. Ernest ! on $100,001 Robert PuUem, M, was hold an WHJN bond on a ehargo of aiding and abetting a bank robbery, " Both Fry and PuUem demanded examination at their arraignment in U& District Court yesterday, ft was set lor May It ♦ ' Sr ■ Police said Pullem drove Fry and a second man sought In the bank robbery, Joeephus Mance, 30, of Flint, hi a car after the robbery. Fry and Pullem were arrested in Flint Tuesday night. Mance still sought by FBI agents end Flint police. Fry, polioe said, also is wanted on federal warrants for two holdups of the Damen Savings and Loan Association in Chicago. Nuclear Tests May fiinder Pacific Flights WASHINGTON (UPI) - The UJS. atomic tests are likely to interfere with certain eommunica-tion circuits and force centals-tion of Some airline flights over the Pacific. LANSING m - Democrats have eet in motion a plan which they hope will kill off a Republican-sponaored legislative nappoction-ment proposal which won 81-49 adoption in Michigan's constitutional convention yesterday. The Senate would be increased four members to 31; the House continued at 110, Oakland Cbunty would get another senator immediately and probably another after the 1910 census. Nine Dcmowsts, beaded by convention Vice President T o m Downs of Detroit, aabmltted a It uaaafo for them to fly. The Federal Aviation (FAA) said yesterday that the interruption at communications will be a byproduct of testa at Johnston Island. The first blast in the American teat series was set off yesterday near British-owned Christmas Island, The Atomic Energy Commission has staked out a danger area around Johnston Island effective Boston Paper Wins Typography Award PHILADELPHIA ID — Hie Ayer Cup for exceUenoe in newspaper typography, make-up and printing has hem awarded for the second time to the Christian Science Monitor. ★ , * ’ * The Boston newspaper won the award in 1JM3 and has been cited In 34 previous contests. The cup ie awarded by N. W. Ayer A Son, fisc. A total of 7T8 daily English-language newspapers were Judged on their March 14 issues. The data waa chosen by 16t after all issues of that week were published. . W W ' dr The cop last year waa won by tbs New York Herald Tribune. The Milwaukee Journal copped honorable mention for newspapers of more than 80,000 circulation. The New York Times won second honorable mention and the Art* zona Journal third. "Rapid Progress Being Made in Use of N‘Power WASHINGTON (AP) - Rapid progress is being made toward the control of thermonuclear fusion—to harness the power of the hydrogen bomb for the production Of electricity, an Atomic Energy Commission scientist Wednesday. ♦ dr W Dr. Arthur E. Ruarit, chief of the thermonuclear research division of the AEC, told newsmen that laboratories in this country and in western Europe were solving many at the problems. WWW But he tempered his optimism by saying that so far it was not proved that this sort of reaction could bo controlled for the production of usable power. He held a - news. conference shortly after speaking to the American Physical Society. PREDICTED FALLOUT BELT * The shaded area on each aide of the UA. nuclear test sues in the Pacific — Christmas and Johnston island* — Illustrates the expected tropospheric fallout belt around the globe in the early stages of the forthcoming nuclear teats. Prevailing wind patterns in the equatorial AP FUMii regions of the islands indicate troposphere fallout will extend 1,000 miles north and 1,000 miles south of Christmas and Johnston islands as it drifts around the earth. Darker area indicates fallout overlap. Teacher Asks lor Mark^Twain Books in Africa And now a school teacher in a remote section' of Africa, has asked . his home state for a set books by Mark Twain, 1 native of Missouri. Rudman ie one of ISO American teachers sent to East Africa for two years. said ho wanted the books to ia trod are something new In the form of lectures, believing Mark Twain would be most applicable of all American writers. Rudman said the echoed doesn't have sufficient funds to order the books from abroad." Missouri Gov. John Dalton lid he hoped “some kind-hearted Missourian" will accom-moderate Rudman. who gave his address P.O. Box 262, Kampala, Uganda, East Africa. Would Separate New Document for Voters Dems to Fight Apportioment Plan To be effective, however, their JFK Asks Copy oi Editor's Talk With Khrushchev PALM BEACH, Fla. -sneak thief filched $20 from a service station cash register yesterday. The description noted he was traveling in a late model Cadillac. CONVERSATION PIECE — Muscovites pause to examine the Zaporozhets, a new. Russian passenger car with rear-mounted, aircooled 28 horsepower engine. The snappy little,'compact, named for thp southern Ukrohdlul iflty white it ip mapufab-farad, has a top speed of6j|AiUw an hour. death at too ago ef 84 has ended a long and fruitful career. By developing a method for zeadtag .iSSttSi .. too decided kr jmW PHI firth* constroetton of Twe-sen asphaltic csnsrst* MVMMBt M llllstde Drive from Burt Street to CM* t—- -in* Rood Is now oa fUe to my office ton* or public Inspection. H™ Notice Is also hereto not ie* or mrmiwrn to oqw- SI •nneU Rood. Teo tee hereto astro id Umt it o 14, iSSI, to reeolBtton tt *** ~de- OLO A BARKtLIY. City Clerk ______April to. low NOTICE OP SPBCIAL ASSESSMENT Two-inch ssoholttc poyement OB Sim SM. To: City of Pontlec, Bennie Patton. A. Protoppas. Mr. Dorris. N|ek Flore*, Wobb Purl . Compear. - - — Rudolph Arellano. Lym. — (tale Joyner. Howell Davis, .. Cohen. W. S Church. Lvl* H. ___________ Jay D. Wilkinson. H. Harris. Jam** Baas. Robert J. Young. Mabel --------- Csrl VanScholek. BhJlvart Dr*-. ______ mond Wood*. Wm. J. Heltech, Mary Heltsch. Ernest MoOtabdte 'AC .flOg Peet. Freeman James, Clara Pink, John Plawskl. Oeorge E. Moron. Abb Jook-son and to ail persons Interested, toko notice That the ron of the Special -------------afore made by the City ___|___ ________ purpose of defrnytRf that part of the cost which the Com- ------- decided should be paid Bad _____ _y special assessment far construction of Two-Inch asphaltic, Ie pavement on Elm Street 1 idock Street to Jessie street la bo* file to my office for public 'Help! I'm Being Held Captive by Phone Co1 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (APV Dial 119 and you get the correct [time and temperature, courtesy at i savings and.loan association. It’s ntirely automatic, and also confusing to one young citizen. Mrs. Odette Patterson, the firm’s advertising manager, said a mother .told her that her son got up at « a.m. and dialed 118. Wide-eyed he woke her up and told her, “Mother, that man’s still there." wowpi or awom. asm—wrr' Two-Inch asphaltic concrete on Stanley Avenue. • To: Ink to Birdie Hrigto. floors* W. Newlto, tall Jaworskl, doors* W. flota- tion. Chamber to sold City, oa the ef Mar A.D. IMS st 1:00 o'clo review Mid aaeeeemeat. nl t end place opportunity will persons Interested to be hi a ted April ». IMS Mr. Parr. K. Darts, Oetdon __________ Mr. Mwartig. Bob Ji Margaret Brown. Mr. Ifinil. Montoolm Builders Supply. Borrtoo Savines S Loan. Mini Housing itiilsiilftt OidgtJk.aBa Roy L. Starnes, tarn Nil* on. Georg* P. Self. JbStos TUrnbull. Donald Brooke, Richard Mond* and to all paradM toter-t toko notice: That the ran of — Special AMoeamant heretofore mad* to tha City Aoooeior far tto purpose of defraying art jin af tha P2 title concrete payknant III flSa L _ file to toy office Hotloa~ie~alaoheroby riven that the iMMSttm and “ “ “ Pontiac, will Chamber to a i City. review said aasesament. at__________ and place opportunity wlS be given ---------------.-1 to bn heard. Two-inch Mpkaltla oeatrite land A vena*. To: XUta Bates, X. Lucas. Herbert Nelson. Catherine Ibllit Arthur X. Wagner, Oent Duncan, dears* Hoots, Brorett Hutchinson. Herbert Danielson. Jack Oman hem, Prof fctagrotoea. MI Vr(IW.~- «_____ t-___ sited, taka notloe: That I ___ City Assessor , rot the pu of dofraytoa that art of the _ ■’hlch the Commission daetdad should a paid and borne to special a mag* sent for tha oonetrnction of Two-fate sphaltlc concrete pavement on Woed-md1 Avenue from Inkorido Drive to Dresden Arana* t o Inspection. » hereby dm T of the City Ctemtar tosaldCIty, on the tot day at May A IL lata at too o'clock P.M. to MUM/ Mtd assessment, at which «WSflMM opportnnlty will be mSi ' all persons InUrested to be beard. SrSftojti M. IMS W. o. mu ----------. City CM April as, 1 NOTICE OF IT SPBCIAL i asphaltic mm visa. Dr. Douglass worked out his system In the 1920s to a series of expeditions sponsored by the National Geographic Society to excavate and study long-abandoned Indian settlements of the Southwest With Its guidance, he established the age at many pre-Columbian ruins. Dendrochronology to based ooli the fact that a growing tree adds a layer to its trunk each year. Cut across, tha layers resemble rings, each with varying width and makeup caused by seasonal breaks in temperature or rainfall. Where changes are sharp, the Mr. Bailey. Mr. ■___________________ tali. Mr. ftomanoUl, Jam** ChMUefc. Harold AThm, Mr. Burklow. Mr. Lawson. Mr Doolln. First Mortgage Dorp- Detroit Mortgage *■ TRMIte Company, Wmdall (1m«r Irwto. Mr. Kdward. ___ __ .... Mr. Fry. R. C. Cummtots. Ptlste Lvmaa. Ernut Boyd, Ruttc* * Zobna Burling. Mr. Msero, Mr. Wgbar. E *~* LgBtaB Mg to all --------- the B*sd*l ' th* construction at Too Midi stehsltto coster*t» pavement on First Avenue trosa Puller St root to Alton* Street to «N--- fll* In my attic* for public loapoetto Win is nlis tor iky given that_________ ommlsnlon and the Iwmitf th* City geipriats. By counting tha rings of trees whose foiling time is known, and matching overlapping patterns with i successive older generations, ex-' peris can trace a chain of living]] timepieces hundreds of years back. it fe fr Hie method is known as “cross sting." Beyond the world of living trees, It can be extended to beams, posts, and other wood left at archeological sites whenever the necessary ring sequences can be found. Nona OP SPECIAL A ‘ ‘ in Carp., Bits — _____t tatertotod, th* Pan of th* Spo-4HPWH—ahmtotor* m*d» to th* City AoMtoor for w* purpose of dacrmytng that part af tha aoat which the commission doeldad should to paid and bona to gpodi! uaas*m*at for th* -instruction of Two-in*h nophaltto — -,»t* Mtomont on HMMlS Arena*_ Basswood stmt to Woofhrnrd A venae •- -— “ fll* In my office for public Drop Assault Chargas Over Lade of Evidence Assault and battery charges against five men who allegedly beat an Army sergeant a week ago were dismissed in Waterford Township yesterday by Justice of the Peace Patrick K. Daly due to insufficient evidence. The five are Jerry Zimmerman, 24, of 18 S. Sanford St.; Thomas Gonzales] 24, of 863 Linda Vista Dr.; Marvin Jewell, 22, of 33 New York Ave.; Steven Saunders, 23, 118 Oakmont St, Auburn Heights, and Richard Meger, 19, 28 W. Auburn St, Auburn Heights. Plan to 'Wire' Churches nones of special Two-Inch asnhaIHe cn CAMDEN, N.J. (API—The Ro-man Catholic diocese of Camden has ordered burglar alarms installed nrevery church. A spokes- -—mrSO it *M do- ______*aUoa of dto City ----— t# ooostvw** cugk, guttor, 5 pod*, gravtl. SOS rmatod wont on Carlisle Aswan* from JMNMt Hoad to H. tt. Lot* Ml aid STBowa Vista Heights Subdlvtstoa. and oa E*oa*it ' Read. N. si, from OMttid* Assail to Maasft*ld Mania at Mb sstlmstsd *o|t M of fl.Tfl.te, and that th* plan, pnftto aad Mflmato of (Old ImpaovnainS te on (U* far public toMOotioL ' It to JMser totond*d to maotfart said Improvement In socordance with •— plan. profU* and wtlauto. and ttof coat thereof shaU to Oafraytd bp dal agMfMMRS aooordlng to frimteo) ___that all of tho tot* sad paroal* tg land fronting upon •liber ltd* of Carttato • Avenue from KaaMit Hoad to fltojkjb f of Lots 1ST and >«« Buena VIstaBetfbta Subdlvtstoa and Ktaatot Road norti side, from CarUato^toMlf to M»niHws Avenue ItaU eonstitutv th* specUl *#-M**m*nt district to defray ILUMI S “a* estimated coat aad npacn* SM ad that MCI.M of tha aottaatod tooi nd exponaoa thereof (ball to paid froaa )• Caaltol Imwosomoiit Fuad. ' - M NOTICE to HEREBY OIVXN _ Ey That at Com mission at SB* City m Pontiac, Michigan wlU meet In the Com- ----in ■ff-T" on May J. MSI k p bl to hoar aaSEMUM* and Ions that may to made,by partus Mod. * No. TIM Bated April if. ISM NOTICE OP SPECIAL ASSZOSMBNT Two-Inch asphaltic concrete oa Fo*-tcr Street. To: Mrs. Katherm Hetteh. Cheater * Stott* Elliott. Alfred to Mary Arnold. Leo Matdock. Mary Iaman. Juan Moyet. _______ J. Vntatt HiuMd, . Hardy, Oriee H«lUch, Hanry DaOchoa. “ ‘alph A. Lotono Mid *• an pt«---- roiUd. Ukt p**f : tWTwl ^, the Mil AfloeMment heretofore • by tbt cttr Ams ph* of dtfnyUwi Mft .w av. pu.ll..Uw. AaniAsii slkMlW ia . ’gtoS April Cj*y mV In'ro&n£ « waojK -Glared to to th* lntonttoSl of tto dty ammlmloa to eeeetSBjtetoBWlpto tnoua concrete recap and curb r*S**0«-ent. and related work on YoorheU oad fro* Orchard Wu Road to Toto-■aph Road at an smnatad coat af E4.04O.1O. and that tba plan, profile ad estimate of said Improrsawt to a ttto far public laaptotton. . It to furuacr intended to oonotonct ttd Improvement to assarognog Wttb to plan, profile and tstlmato. aad that m cost Utorwot Mas to am apod to Mdal assessment according to B|M|I n. — review a noted cost aid' expenses theeeof ShaU »e paid from th* Capital Improvement NOTICE H HEREBY GIVEN That tto Cmmliilen af tha CUr of onttae, Michigan will meet In tha oante I eaten cha tolar an May 1. ten at S O’gioMt p.sa. to hear eugtestlont and objections that may to EMM to NIW Interested. WjO. No. IMS Dated April W, ISM a tha commti S o'clock P.l Dated Aortl If. UM w. o.lmk OLGA ■ n — NOTICE Of INTENTION TO OOSf- icoeeemont. at which gtruct two-inch MtonUnoM concrete eppartuatty wiu to riven map, curb repair and related work on treated to to heard. sactPike stmt. — You on haetto notified tent at a regular oteotlng of th* qhtopMpliL.H tto City ofpootlac. Michigan, told April K ISSS. by motuftgn X-*** #*-dared to to tec Intention of tea Cm Commission to construct two-fnoh btiu-mtnouc concrete mem ogfll totatoj City C tpra M notiob or srHCiAL ---tab asphaltic pa Mr. ManfcaosMp. Mr. Week. Ad- wm. om* KL n#*,.1"- Ue o. Cano*. Martin Tatar. Mr. S Mr. Hois worth. Mr. Oroal. Mr; Federal MtoBis Adto., A. M. _S|j i m Wilma O. Devaney. Howard BaUrwy. Mr. Meato. Mr Wrinkle. Theodore Cagle, Cotonkt P*d. Bav.jh — ““ - -----h. Mr. Pea vfiii Corp. as— interested, take notiee: That Sanford Btreot to tost Boulevard at an Mtenatod coat of glf.WS.M. aad teal .W-rirt^uiS.1? spectlon. 1 tt T ‘ made to the «t» AMOtoar tor pate of defraying that part M which tto MUkltoHS iSHl ment*for *tto Sonatructlon ot Two-tdeh|U profile and aatimata, and that BHBHP thocaaf |Mi M jfiMHfilF • gpeclal assessment according to* frost tag, saAJkst aS af tSatotoaSd oamiaoi _________ttiag upon either sldt of East Plk* Streatfrom Sanford Stmt to Bar. Boulevard ahaU constitute tto sjjp asphaltic eoneretc pavement Stmt tmu * * Stmt la now High — —SB til* in mr offrpa to Id ssossemsnt district t* defray - vf the estimated oeet ana _ hereof and that tU.MT.rf of tto mated cost and unodato ttMtoi l to paid from th* Capital ItopmM ___ __ igm Mptod vori » -"3-r ag----------------- to ladmitoS trad*, gravel aad Mated ____stona t, and that thi -■— profile and aatimata of said ton- . Cite Clerl April M, 1 NOTICE OP SPSCIAL A Jama Wilson, Vernon E. Tartar. Bertha A. Hrodv. Florence and June S«hlsto*T. John pidto. Marta RMnIl Jama Parks, Elbert BlusdUMtil. A. H, Booth and to aU persona tntemted. take notice: But the roB of th* Special Aesmmont heretofore made to the City Assessor for tea purpose of tofrevtn«|*—. ‘ the Cmm- H * aaid and clmred to ti further Intended — mpwvigilt in tto plan, profU* aad ootitoMOfw JflAI th* cost thereof Stott to defrayed to special ssssesment according to frontage and that aU of tho tata and Nl# to. land fronting upon either side af Dewey Street from Kennett Road to tto north Sis if Lob W and Ml. Hnroa.V Heights aubdlvtslon Aejl eonetitoto gniftal assessment district to defray tits.40 of tto estlauted eori and •*-peases thereof and that M4M> af tto —-■.mated cost and expenses thereof shal paid from th* CapMal Improvement F*“4 NOTICE HI HEREBY OIVXN that tto Cemmission of the Cttir ol Pontiac. Michigan will meet In tto Com-mlsston Chamber ro May I. Jpro at l o'clock p.m. to hoar sagroinini and objections that may to mada to pantos Interested. --W O *•- T14I Dated AprU M. 1W OLOA BARKELET City Clerk April M 1W NOTICE OP INTENTION TO COW-tract two-tosh kftumtoow ■—— u. map. curb repair aad rotate Ban ford Btreot. You, on hotter notified thot at i regular meeting of th* Commission of Urn City of Pontiac. Michigan, held mission decided should M. _____________ born* to special aiooaanwnt for th* ten-I (ruction of Two-Inch asohaltlc concrete pavement on Stotntongh Court from stht* Avenue to Augusta Avenue on fll* III ~ ' cierea hi we «w Intention of ™-Commission to construct tyo-toch mtnous concrete romp, curt raptor. t of nmux. ate ___ .____ „ aflta and ootitoato'ro •aid Improvement ls cn Ota for public ff*1ji%rttof In tended of May AJ>. 1MI l te r3--------- ■_____________ persons Interested t •ted April M. UM OLOA BARKELET. City Clerk ■I _ STS& special assessment accardtog.to gegtgpj Te: mid O. Lang. Oerald Bauer g n. A. Middleton. Bafael A I Oarcla. Jo* Donald c. rornu. uwwsei ewirw-Wm. Robins. WUUaU Ooodman. . (.union Norman. Bradley Cax. — diocese isid Wednes* wtl*ML,Kate M. Purrant. Btoph day the ihffoton resulted from AHliMitiiKiiiH' He do- . ...... dined to elaborate. , land fronting upon either side jfgljtord Street (ram Baobura Street to Sum Boulevard shell constitute the spectal —tuns sSUk w 'ij NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVXN ■That uia Coaim Pontiac. Mlefalkaa ’clock p.m. to to* Dated April M. UM soot In the Cm ay t, 1W *f toMeto*oaitim AprU M, HW NOTICK or INTENTION OBOlHI: Htar AprU Jd. Mil BlffllBfrTTTrTi ■ 3w district te n . ■ — . i.. 11e ted tee. . , thereof and that glMTO M of tto aril' mated cost aad expenses !*■--------- “ to paid frosa tba CapltaJ 1 That tto Cemmlsetmi of tho CMp *■' &saes3rr®r 'clock pro. to hdnr , dgmwwroe wi .bioctiono that amp to maw to panto of to fl.auWTMte“5e!» - ■ - Dated AprU M. MM ________—iprU M UM. ’ An Ordtoaaet to amend the Ordjnoner — by amending to* title of eOw ________* and by amending Section 3 and 1 of said OratoMn*. tto OSy of Pontiac Ordains: liritro i. That too ntta m Na. W to amtadad to n TITLE I provide tor the toroo-mrn — aww-i —• rwgxlaUon. lmpsnidtog and gtemrol of dega and to* Mromb ttan of dogs ngntooirroto* to tto OSy m -onttae. Section 1. That Soctlon > of Ordinance o. SM to gmaiitas to road as follows Section J. Open application to tha City Clerk, giving to* pan awn* and roridenm of Sm applicant aad pmonteHro ef * valid certiflcato of vtouladtlro opomW rabies rod a motel tag bearing tto words hnmwataod dog rod Si* year of such Immunisation and upon tto payrnsnl " to* Woonce to*, te herelnalter pravld-' M Clerk or authortsed agenl „ harbor a clag at th* ( ----ilnattng the «illoa. P. H. Blood :deor »1»-ter of taA and ArUa Jenkins: ANT OIRL OR WOMAN WEEDING a friendly advisor, phone FE 3*5123 after 5 p m. Or iTno an* ewer call PE M711. Confidential DAINTY MAID 8UPPLIE8. 13* " tomMo*. FR 3-103.^^ Mac: ace M: dear fatter of Mn. Potto; dear arandfather of Dr. Robert J. Petta: alee aur-vlved by three goat craadchll-dren. Committal eorytea will be held yagy, jfTnt. 11 a m. at thaTim>li of Meanrlee. White Chapel, with Roe. Theo- terment la White ChaoeL Mr. Oflbreath will lie ta state at the Voorheee-SIple Funeral Home from Thunday until hoar of HXNRT. APRIL 13. 1M1, JOSEPH V.. JT3 WeUebore. Walled Lake; oco M: beloved haebaad of Ha Henry: beloved ton of Mr. and fin J. d. Henry; dear tether of Larry. Jeffery. Wyman, and Dottle Man Henry; dear brother of. Cathbert Henry. Mr*. W. I. Lanier. Mrs. Roy Wlee. Mre. Otto Outhrle, and Mn. Hrneat Funeral arrancemente are pendlne tt Richardson-Bird liHeM Rem*. Wafted erhete Mr. Monty “* * a iUU. HUMPHREY. APRIL 33, Utt, William. II Center M.j ace at: Moved haebaad Humphrey; dear father of Thomae D. Humphrey. Puneral eerrloe will be held Than it y. Donation-Jotma Funeral noma. Interment h White OnaMg Cemetery. Mr. *------— Bent Mate a. Johne Funeral H« MIDDLETON, APRIL M. Abbot E.' Mtd Middle 1 Hirhiend: die IS: dear IMi of Mn. Busen Spoor. Mn. Blea* nor Clerk, and John Middleton: alee survived by ten |—------ dren and It treat gram Funeral service will be urday, tat it at 1 the Rlehardeoa-Btrd Home. Milford. InUi _____T Be In | the lUcbardcfla-Btrd Home. tMtlRis ^ sr r LmnInn* wffi be held nernl sendee wfl be held Than- the' Doneleon - Joho*° Vuneral Home. Interment ta Rivenldt Cemetery. 7— — -------- will lie ta PEA8LEY. APRIL ft, ltd. BE8-Me May. ltd Beaumont Dr . mhlnnd: tat VI: tear mather of Mn. unite Biller. Mn. Rath £ May. OrrlBe E.. Maartoo P., and Walter W. Peealey; dear els-ter at Bdleea H. Cramer, Mre. Bdlth Peek, Mn. Ruth Bedt-■ man. mmMN. Ethel Harper: elae *amyad by 0 grmgfihtl dren had tf tront granachlMrsn Mn. Ptaetw hne been taken MM It Hi Van't Hof hi Brnna. Orand RdMdi. far eu. lee aad burial. XBvWMMBt ta Ciaa.mebart Cemetery, oraai ______ ______i aH taret ^________ grandchildren. Funeral milti will beheld Saturday, JUM M at t'JB pjb. at tha Taorheee B_____ I __ ago M: beloved iS of fii Se*wffl bTheld'Batarday! Api K at t p.m. at the Plumerf< Funeral Nome. Oxford, with Re *MdtHf NbrnlM yCfieeattac. la* tanuaf ta Rldaetewa Cemetery, ftaftai. Mrs. Stevens will Be ta Mate at the Plumerf ait Pu-neral Home. Oerfecd. im4 af n—to 1 WE WISH TO EXPREBB OUR heartfelt thaake end eppreeieuoo to OTr many frlende. nelfhbors. mem bare of the church of Chriet C. J. OOORARDT PUnVrAL —-T.0easattror~ H BRATTc£P?SuNi|ltOMOE 3-TWV D. E. Pursiey rumnwL BOMS Invultd^Cur ^artlea Vodrhees-Sipl© funeral home. Donelson-,Johns FUNERAL HOME HUNTOON to Tean ' rtc 3-oite SCHUTT ENLAROED AND REMODELED, SPARKS-GRIFFIN CmriHwUte 4-i Resurrection. White Chapel. PR FR t-lUS. BEAUTIFUL LOT, PERR?' *mnt Fart- mRi— ^ -i.m. PR LOT WITH FE 4-5245 lobtV mostly collie, brown end black wtth 4 white feet, faded black collar. Tan curie peer back. Square Lake Rd.-Tele«rapii ana. Howard. FR I-IMA B. Marehall Ship, Loot In vicinity of Rrofer'e at Pontiac MaU. tta* ward Offerad. Phone FR MW attar iT hOki: 3 RRtTTANY SPANIELS, mala and female. Tlelnlty Fw* tlac Airport. OR 3-S3M. Help Wantad Malt tunny available for an lmattan* tlve hard worklns man with the quailtlee naeaseary to deal with Ptmaa aad eompanlee of eal- ikawMb ■feMaa Mia __________... ..ante eppor- tunlty on salary plus Uberal com-mleeleo hotle. Previous salts ex* perlenee holpful but. dependabls gaaagtf tssr ™ AUTOMOBILE SALESMEN * PART-TIME JOB M oast — 3 man fa ork. Mt* euarante* L£ij . Auto Salesman dnt ta tatretMd i Excellent nay pli rfchSSSTlohn Ford. d» Oakland x« AbjustEk w Intereeted ta Unprorlnd your fu-luref Multiline adjuster wtth 4 or more years experience, needed far Footles area. Prefer under etc 40. Conlaot Sprtafflald In-sirsneo Co., n Fenebeeel Bldg., DMtaR. WO 1AM». iUTOMOBILB MECHANIC. MUST BIBLE SALESMAN. ll |Mi,' 1:B4:B Evenlnte. RARRRR WANTED. A GOOD MAM DESIGN ENCilNbfiR TEST ENGINEER TECHNICAL WPITER Positions available for man with hl|h pressure ^valves related ta M.*C. ISfg. CO lit Indlanweed Hd. Lake Orion COdT ACCOUNTANT Or ESTIMA-tar tar emeB metal parte, lead srsiurajautrS COST ESTIMATOR MsWssM Msh 4 ORINDRR WITH ID OR OD FOR see end and third shift. Apply lMo .a m* eeok: also ealad maker. Me— .Oemta^lt. 3MP Union LEADS LEADS LEADS VwNai eMtat men. beak men. mtdor men. Hotoat deal ta town. Ro eenvaeetar AU leode. No nbnetat problems. We cony our own-paper. One at the beet !• naaatat plane ta fitch. Frsvteae tfy. yea map ears up ta BUM . a year er letter. FereaeM ta-terviewe only. FH. fwnj r B * LOCAL tfOlR OF LABOR Direct chain hat opening due to advtmocmeat far mcchanleelly Inclined young men to learn bald* neee and also menace service department. Salary Mss. For further mMte call Mr. Rdwarde collect. « tint ____________________ MECHANICAL ENGINEER process development nod ______lion ta preducte for aerospace industry. NEEDED PIPE FITTERS MACHINE REPAIRMEN and PAINTERS Must Be Jburneyiitah Apply Employment Office PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION Pontiac, Michigan .srcsr • world's iartest heating _ IggHi pany. m South sattoaw. MAN FOR LAWN WORE. EXFER-lenced with Mtka mower. MA Aim, MAN 8EEKINO PROFESSIONAL career. Straight salary, commission. | week paid vacation, retirement, croup insure nee. Call Htfh school grad, and be able to converse Intelligently. Man hired wffl be tbocouthly trained ta man* element, bnitaesa function, sales, and^ealee promotion. Car furn- IwoH m IN PUNT 33S-14M r AMTTO l P M. 1135 TO ST A NT THE CUSTOMER IS KING! jOOKINO FOR 3 MRN in sou on Purpose rath-by acoideui. Rxpenet tag. If yon have n fir T&C FOOD CO., INC. i now taking agtaUa-•OMs poettoon ta an jgmayT.*3r maoS 'evloig salee o itTKwl m FE 5-S41I. while ta _ between ntee 041 «Mb prevtoue sales experience lie contact work will I eldered. “■—^ “ — -BAKER or Apprentice Baker GsHfi. Andy in peftw only ______ aloli BAB YjBITTER. BUDDLEAOED. white only. Live In. Cell alter A* “t s-T3ei conditioned dry rleanere. mi experienced, goad opportunity, MA a-73t>7. sfto Telegraph. CURB WAITRESS U OR OYER thd an Inside girl. Super Chief Drive inn. Telegraph yar Dixie. CURB WAITRESSES Tad'* has Immediate spaaing fo curb waitresses. Mast be 11. Ay ply to person only. •TED’S Woodward at Beware Lake ltd. CURB WAITRE88. II Ol -----Drive in. gft DRUG-FOUNTAIN CLBRK. PART M. experienced only, references Union Lake Drugs, EM 3-4134. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. SEE JWMt Hal sB.jr lolgereoo, Kresge’e Mlr- _______BT kXPRR^fcNOEp H.A I D eleenlng. 5 days. area. Cill iftff I p.B>. Fk rdw». EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OPERA- Dlner. PE 3-93M i keeping house. er nijUdlseasd. miles Prose. Box Live ta. Write Pontiac fibUtLr LadT To stay with OIULL COOK OR SHORT ORDER cook; also salad maker. Morey'i Country Club. SMI Union Lake Bd 353-0414, b'RILL COOK AND CURB OtRLS Andy aaw Boot lew. SUB. Saginaw. HELP WANTED: LADIES FOR retail hatch meat dsltceleeisa and bakery eeuntere. Interviews will be taken this Friday. Ai 37, 3 p.m. to i p.m _ mi lUrjRamai__________________ centrilly located. Telegraph and irtg Interior Decorator for new Curtain /and Drapery Shop at Pontiac Moll Shopping OwMer. Apply it/ ARDEN /SHOP INSURANCE OMCE. PREFER some experience, bookkeeptaf. esc rets riel, and “M*l*"li career opportunity, no others need apply. Age 4MK Write full particulars Box 117, Rochester. Michigan. MATURE WOMAN HELP ELDER-ly May. 1 day. very light clean* teg, and odd Jdha. RjdjMDI. PARTY PLAN REOIBTRRED "NURSE FOR IN- aB,'IB6BLltAdtt) eaHi yr. Call now. LA 7-347T hlKJEP770NItT IN NORTH p6n-tlec area. Btate full auaUBeatlona gigMlmsUBWBRtaBtwllt | Experienced I Inij and e»tim« Sr m ftcU ef kladnaas. floral pattnYurtag SwS Swfft ■MifTI-------------- JH. ‘ ‘ n LOtpiO MEMORY OP WIL-Uam E. IMtfieMn. who pseead a^JftSV'Sd plaaeaal Are a pleaeure ta recall; fetsln?Ko?srw& Ta claep ka hand ta tha hatter •fft^ssiwsur"- ----1 lOhT safrlV -anB Pay Off Your Bills Gty Adjustment Service TM #■ nwtob _____SJS5 [IGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS ■ RtajBitaJftfc BMd. J addeet andlargeet bud* mx axeun At IS aJl. Today th ----- tTbt Prats • rssUss it cc U the s, is, u, «, 0, n. ». m. m iv. it, m, n. ta M.N, m. ,b j MAkkUas man n fc h . waled her sale* work. Ocnelel* tag of eervlcing eetabllthed customers aad establishing new accounts. 1113.10 average weekly earnings with I1M guaranteed during trutang vim Moot bavt good car. fie and neat r““““ MECHANIC. tune of and Urtii general repair. Steady em-uloyuient. Prefer references. In-quire 6756 Dixie Hwy.. Clarkaloli. REAL ESTATE SALESMAN Full lime. Experience preferred. Member «( Multiple LMfiag Service. Phone FE M47l for appointment. Iv»n W. Schrem. Realtor. SINGLE MIDDLEAOED MAN FOR landscape walk aad. farm chares, more tar home thdh wages. FR 4-401._____________________ iWf"™'" ' SALESMAN ' .Sami retired wBh retail sale* experience to Mjimy an commission bests. Mon. through Bet eves, x lb I pja. Apply to person ConoUyi Jewelers. M W. i in ii mill1 imifwiijipi 13.000 yr.. age 4Mi. LA V34T7. --------------------------^ BflP" «■«•••> CRAWFORD AGENCY Bi«- atm PONTIAC Osteopathic' HOSPITAL Registered Nurses . . J0S.0' TO MdM3 dependtax upon gwalWcetlone and viperteuoe. All 3 shifts In all departments open.l Licensed .Practical Nurses tlM.W TO gM0.ll dependta* upon quallflcatlan* end experience. June Graduates "EW&532&r* Shift Differential lor all employee werktag 3:0 to 11:0 p-M. and 11:00 p.m. to 7:W Paid Vacation* Paid Holidays DRESSMAKING. TAILORINO AND elteretlene. FE 4-3«t3. DRE88MAEIN6, TAILORtNd. At teratlcna, Mr*. BodeU. FE 4-1063. Sick Lears Benefits Social Beowrity Experienced Farconnel Contact: PONTIAC Osteopathic HOSPITAL 47J4 N. Perry St. Pontiac, Michigan WANTED AMBITIOUS MEN OR young women with some music tatiram. Salary phis commission, ceil FH Milt or apply 373 Auburn Are. REAL ESTATE we hare many aaw proep tar tae Bloomfield Kills lei d houses. Must be a un- willing to Wi >le Should I s of our Bloc OHMxeIS- —lUSEMAN-BPITELEY ' Ml 4-740 WO 34111 Evenings lfA 1-7311 ivelopers ------ —s-ei-t- «te since OPPORTUNITY ■aloemau Interested ta aa—. rtSsatai- Oaklend CO. area# available An-pair taj^r^ited^^April3 EVELYN EDWARDS •VOCATIONAL COUNSEUNO SERVICE" talk Boat Huron tarit* Phone FE 4-0584 INSURANCE OFFICE msssnetArx. ar."!a.T0Sisft mmt. 40t Poottae Btata llaak Bldg, FE HUt. SALES U indVMl Em i ‘IiS Boakkatfiafl A Tutf frriiiwilthu t TritirIa|~~Y? CUSTOM and roto-tlll, Oerdens * anywhere. OR 34ldi. OARDEN PLOWINO/ REASON-GARDEN PLOWING IT LOT OR a-room furnished OR 3-13M. 1 OR 1 ADULTS. tad ROBINWOOD apis., partly fbrotebed. OR 34M». tlmatee. | OR horo-nlL' iMb' igfai1__________ BALL LAHDBCAPINQ SERVICE FE 5-7441 -**--*- — hcwM Tax Snttet tMMnSfF. jlttiap «r4 Traddin _ _ "5 A1 MOVING SERVICE. E .BUILDINGS MOVED fully taaan Bid. Mover M c~*—* AND Rl _______it your pi_— irnr-in 0~QRtf£iP1^0~BilMniNW and geregee cleened. FR 3-73*3, MWE NEED” ■ALE AND FOR RENT Buyers Galore awm»~ ( FUBNIRERD AND l— ^AROE ROOMS^UTILITES ! t*im(fikiff a BLOOUFneiD townshif wrii-l>ea lvenhoe. 4110. W> 4-1321 ■SffiStfWBSP hook* kp+iciENcv aLl uni-ttlee furnished. Pcaflee Luka ---'.Royal Apts. I1M Highland Sea Mn. Judd. Phene *74- ifcjAiirp UtUmee. < 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH i entrance. Utilities furnished N. ferry. FR Mtlt. -J___----------*------- VnboiiaA- r/:aFfgffi. 3 ROOM APARTMENT ADULTS only tU.Mper week. Utilities tarnlebed. FR *401. 3 ROOMS. ALL FR1VATE WITH 1 1 fv'W, VP *15. Ffc 4 ORbuNb VlAor. i r'StS" _______ Akir lifB f 6fc colored. Frirato entrance, dtl B. Jessie after *. 3 ROOMS 3-ROOM, DOWNTOWN. 114Y welcome. glgJg. FR MW 3-ROOM. UTILITIES FURNISHEfa. adMta. FR MNI___________ S-ROOM, MUyaIr '' ENTRANCE. call FR M4P4, __ BACTR^t^^RTigR^T. kmt LIOHT H A UL fN O. . RUrillSH. odl-OBRD^.FOUR LAROM. BATH-OTTER. OARAOE. PM month. Oae heat and (wage avaUablo. Bat manager. 10 1. Edith ar aU PR 44371. PAINTINO AND WALL WASHINO No Job too small. FR MOM. utilities. FE MIN. ss 3 3*00 RM 343M. WAlWl^ORD on Dkata Hwy . ft roMi Md bulh. Ou bitl. lurgu jura. OpM WOMAN WITH SECRETARIAL Experience tar position at responsibility. Desirable working ecadb liana ta educational institution. Bend weuma to Box 04, WAITRESSES AND COOKS FOR night warit Apply 00 Union Lake Road. WadTer Thun. ------------------------rctfRB 'GIRLS ij^hritb: h ' KENT $55 MO. , OR WILL «BUi Hew 3 Bedrooms Carpetea1 Gas H«t Dining Room All Areas AVONuMO SOUB MODEL AT 906 Kettering B. R. B. ROILORBB RENT WITH OPTlbN 3 hidroi rooch type. Fans brick, manta plus tatet. Will fay - Sell w MICHAEL'S SB MM3 "O 0^0 L.ORED - SOUTH[ BOULEVARD ..reileble soon. REAL VALUE RY B. R. i. Br1,J'— freme, MW. 979 ^pml« —. - -- rowneend 0-4031. MODERN HOME IN WALL*D 3NTCA1 B. Builders. RBAL VALUE BY B. R. 8. Build-0400? RENT WITH OPtlON Pontiac Biwn, •> and 1-bcdroom homes as low *e goo par manta. W1U Buy - Bailor Trad# MICHAEL'S . TI *4633 WB 3-4300 HE 5-4303 Ll 541*0 RENT WITH ornow TO BUT. $55 A MONTH W(Wla I '"payment "or JB*p gammer. Call MU 44134 “ OUOOPA ALL MODERN. 8LXEP» BEDROOM. NEW^t CAB OAKaOE (Hmertxaxa. OR £tm.________ 3-BEDROOM HOME Alumtatan elding. MU beeement. $9900 BMOORBJUlUNg. -----—msf* jronjsi; J5W**" ? I .ROOM..HOUSE ON^HOWARD ___________Ftaio”*1 O-ROOM AND UTILItIBB ON Roeheeter Rd. Tray. hdT water heal, tlb-ear garage, over I aero. rp^t 3-0U far ap- hV±t;nt $1,700 RQURT for 101. BALANCE, - month. FHA. 3 or gas neat. Northern t.700 meguitt ro: *7,000 (00 a u 3 baarooen*. gi High district. 1 eroom ranch, 3 beta*, carpeted, - ta(«a lot. Smell down peyment. — Terry L*ka tUrlL_--------- end ecreene. fully toenleted (I *00 tiooo iaan. FE S47*S < n»O0fi'. FARTIAi.-, lekefront. 013.(00. Finished homes — istarter homes. ient®wm TO* SALE: 3 LAROB LOTS »-rtaat boose WNh xle " all new kttehan. M. •MB* cash Ht qu quick aale.ri^* ________shower steam boated. Rasy walk-up oa bus line and close to schools aad all shopping. Can he seen anytime, cur for x\j2 ■? ------ weekly t-------------- rtY> W7iw gutter—Tour home. Approved by the Children'e taeHtali. me 300034 W. O. King. 0 —. Clemens.. EXPERIENCED DRIVER Hardy at OR 44400. WANTED 3 AMBITIOUS MEN ~'"1 sales experience to work, ear oeaHoantaL. daga fuliru' ■t who I* willlnx to work. : Work Wantod Mala n CARPENTER WORK. EITCH-- —* recreation rme. a apart-—tabiny^and yopolr. MT ■NT WORK west sipi. /]ge»6fi~AfAatf'-menta, heat, hat water, stove and refrigerator, near BL Benedict M4 >007 Hgjggg fusdi 2f I CALL BELLA ALL MORE CASH galn^HmSe* FR* jJfiu" FORCOLbRED fbheSTl ere ted bedroom. taaSSn^gdUM ‘dren wtleome. tClMil w low ll M untarnished SLATER'S SO A MONTH. EISA fykriri room house Needs fixtne hw BvaaMe IO.SO*. , Newtneham. Realtor. UL: 84310. CLARKSTON AREA—PBEDRo6m homo, full boaament. reeeaatlen com. Umar geraxe, lot MB*0O. 10.(00. Qg HSl Place. PR ■PPPMIII. _ HdtfAf»' tNiBweg^im • and. M W. Tbnhyeon. FR (MU. room f6r o|urnjcMAN pfcl- FRANKLIN VILLAGE ItedPima brick cotcnMl an bflty sltbl s^ssisi ass Modern kitchen wtth aetam epaee. H. i-BEDROOM BRICE, BEST OF- TsjTZRas”*-* BT OWNEJt. ibtALt DOWN fAY In mWBM over Mjnwnti ex iMW TiUrte diti ie Motor i iTi-im r SLEEPING ROOMS. I W3&3F*a .LOW oast, country living — 3-bedroeta. %uir garage - lot tax T^TiSsVLirrr- mm------------ full basement. Jggtah all milder dhurMtad*h m*_______ __ »4ilo pr MY 3-ltal. karrer a coo- room . full baseewnt’ ’Luke Orton mSjrtJ^Mr bta»idd.WMY,g3m or FR 3-8110. Barret Conetmctlon. NOTHING DOWN ^ TJttE PONTIAC PftESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1962 SYLVAN SHORES M. UELS 'VfK*W WJ*4 _ .'ftg HIITER JmVtPBtfB "'“WbifM* Btf ■ACT SIDE." I MNW Kick. rcvra ____If wtth*0?°lrttboqt e«i««»L BUI tB MM ffem.I. C. •Bl “--11 bUi MM cm. L±l“* myAif-tiit 11 m.....iwit mm. I MM it*-both, bom- SACRIFICE TRI-LBVEL mi s?.r SHS?w!roiTw: je_„ 1K2neMlr*Hl!U echSl |svsp?^ as inii rip- ~ - - RETIREMENT OffiMp* 3 FAMILY am, Imh. i mi money maker for IN' M opto- BM MM ond rft;wag,a St irruicd. CRAWFOUD AGENCY bi-jest am 'TRADEX' drier rod Qrtclourerta —___derivedla tarn older (Hi boat, loot ltd or ftrrj 8t In tholioBrt of tUage, t specious MMtto"** Here* lr'mil? wKirjsafmm * fenced la M M ft. *M. Or-lia fro mil, nr 4 mm *»• nm tod exceptionally clean throughout — Mako the Made bo- 1M1 «. Cam TMfcg BATEMAN DORRIS Colonial sffm*t»cBsnsja! boort; tdral tacbmlboei or pro-ftMtoMl atta. MM WV|I 2SL ts ISI.tW, VttB |J 500 down ind For Young; Doctor or Professional Man «L* oak floert. plaswrod well* and all lane spaclou, room. Lota of seldom fraturrs tad antra Diet, BrauUful condition and targe won laadreaprd lot Thl» la a better than tood bur at only tlTSOO, with Juet tVIM s&l for - °*w LET'S TRADE White Lake Area IT; ft would make a woaaonai fatally boair. Full 1 rtorr hoar, recently (Mod will) arboatoa rhiaxltr Bew gar fur-aaco tad hot water heater. 3 *®V.n3S JBS!»V« town Footle*. *0.000 term *ttu^Cp%U.O^T^ Trade Par ratiler bone Brick rancher la Diaytaa Wood# burn la IM*. Walk-oat kareaieot with ir.r&n&rs c.v,iC3Maf«£fr ‘ ArchHactaral Drawing Autttn WorrrU. Axency MMStl ; liipta Mflr..........._ irBWrj: .. JIATORS ________________ .JtfULATORS UN Exchange pad Ouarantrrd EAR-LIPE SATTERT CO 303 Auburn Are- PE HIM EDNA’S EBAUTT SALON __ PWanaibta >444 _ — Larson Botins Days-* Whoa Toa Purebaao Tear . Larson Boat—Free Gifts HORRY DON'T SB LATH I Tear EvufRUDX Dooior Harrington Boat Works mis a TMesrasa rtHW 44 ADDITIONS, PALL-OUT 8 PAUL ORAYES Oi Prop Eotlmateo chjgaa' boi i. kltcben. --------job* rf tSur 0# TO M YTtAM TO '......oaaramptim eerytae nr non. Oar uU wtD bring M oothnatr of rour buUd-“•w* c a rpe ntsr wore or a ny htadTioMPB M4S after g Cain laaaWsi U-WASH-IT ■ *&r - Viiiiw i win ii| TgiwamgmB: AN®® fences Cast; CARL L. RILLS SB., FLOOR Ircsnm Tax Service sa,-a Class A Merion Sod -JNN4 up — ifs aerar . „JCTIB _ “ Parma/ las.. PMoa 8*e6ino. soddiko, 6 hading. JKJ r Lpadeceptng — PC Pals yKwn mower repair ^RBMitouv.rv uiV^r a!a£n!r * rt,v, Proa aiaihi sad fWA BATRSrfFK It* TO oeslna . .47o Un. ft. SVi ft THg**-’ Malta. K Iff - 1 tt. rt. rath 4S« aft Waterford Lumber to AirgarilwT CaffToa s-otm TALtiOTT LUMSER 1»» ^^uWATiF1 **^t*4-4M» ua8Sgi inW\» Nsw ond Used TV tVe^®S?" ROCKCOTE PAINTS „ ^■gBj^sars*! » r— EXPERT PI AMO TUK1NO Rt Matter Craftamao ^msOURs aciiYicp . Wiegand Music Center ___minimum________ TORINO AND REPAHUNO. ' hour aerelee. all work laartato Wallpaper Steaiqer Plow ttmfnt. pottahore. k|a4 wheel., ,w ttaayi tsr CsBsctsn FREE NICARAUOA LIST M *f>'**nl ^Aulwra1 Helgl Johnson s Radio & TV Ootorod TY Serrloo l# E. Walton PC S-4M Ucanead IQoktgaa TCSA MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICE OAT 00 1YBB- PR S.IMS Trading. Is Fun We Make It So ti« I—_______i floor tam- MaMStoThrisiaea — . _____am - t dtoMito — * lorgo picture window. — fata- Ur - etnATRiiiiriSM rowan 110.050. with It MO dOWh plat LETS TRADE DEAL. LOT'S TRADE Cit^ Bnnytky I ^ : dot b good. Roeeieoata roc, ____ and PA oil bool, jntoe iroaii LET’S TRADR Low, Low Moathtr par went of M4, Including taxes and lnjuraaee 4<4 per oont lntereet. nattered' Welle. oak ftodn, fuUr laealated. gar boat. ) bedroom., good north iMo location. Total price SAIN. Trading Is Our Business °%pffn»LELISTTNO NICHOLIE "suasrusu. ».-» decorated, oil BA beat. VACANT CAST TURKS. SEMINOLE Hn.lA .oo tcreen*. two-car xarage Terms. NICTOUE-HAROER^CO lib W. Huron St. PP HE LOTUS LAKE TM. cottage with take prteUegee Pm isl carpeted Uftam roam. I bedroom, good tiled kitchen. a for larger mr Pontiac MODERN FARM HOME Oa 11-J acree. Large Urtn* parlor. I good ttaed bodr A-l TREES, M- PER CENT OFF Mlo on Spruce, Pine and Fir troop. Regular price « other Rd.. S mUM vmI m Omar — REALTOR FE 3-7210 MM Auburn Rd., near Adame IPECIALXBXO IN TRADES Tree retnoral, trimming. Or bid. «ta-i4ig or pc SATO. General Tree Service ftLfftfW"--*" Bass & Whitcomb "BUD" Trucking ASH. TRASH. RUBBISH. CLEAN-up, PC 4-4M»: AaULINQ AND RUBhlSR ANY- riAOLiRO ANb aflBRlsU: NAME .roar prior. Asp Mme PP M4M. EiOHTHAULlNO aRTtwIB n ftngjaw; wocKmen MM MSB. Eastern Jr. High Area walktat dTNbaoe to Baetora “T» W* to tats, .s ra-_ k and (rant borne, (at seat hot water. I bedroom, or' bath, .e pa rate diking rate m» and MiaOBe, gara* id drlva. Qgferad at I10.M for.jroureelf today! 20 Acres Draytou-Clarkston Area Bu liable for eabdl riding — L cated on Weldon Road Mat aft * -*-*■— 4 aaar gatrr— ’ M-Tt Expre.ai to wbYwato Truck taatol Trucks to, Rent P AND EQUipMERT _ Jamg Traeke—Seml-Trallert Pontiac Farm and Induatrial Tractor Co. “ WOOBWAM W* WOODWACT Open DQUy Including Si UpMstaHaj E 5-8888 BLOOMPIELO WALL CLCANENS. WALL-MASTERS ------DOW CLEARI I WALL Aft WlRPOwl FREE EgnMATRC 1 ______ WALL cbeAlOwO AND Pl^io^ polUtalci Prat ootlmatoe. StiSErtsnflre “BUD” Nicholie, Realtor IS ML Clamant St. FE. 5*1201 after 6 p.m. FE 2*3370 ANNETT trlct. handy to at Midi tad tm ay Pall ba.ament. i West Side Income Os ahaded lot naar I . plat and hospital. Well kept Roma hat lit floor rmureom, S^JEVSySS; r... i.^,1_m Lot Income help mako pay-monte 1 ear garast. Mood Jot. StoSto tarme. sLovers CARNIVAL By Dick Turner FIFTY.THim| ‘■This only confirms the Senator’s opinion that we . need a better defense against more conventional RED BARN SUBDIVISION $00 Ranch Types Tri-Levels Colonials Cape Cods We Trade , Located op Perry St (MM) ko-tween Lake Orion and Oxford, behind Alban'. RaataaraaL Open II to S pm. SPOTLIGHT BUILDING 00. NOTHING DOWN NO CLOSING COST $100 FREE FURNITURE with CORWIN HOUSES YOUR CHOICE 3-BEDROOM BRICK FRONTS 3-BEDROOM WITH CARPORT SAM WARWICK BAS IN SYLVAN MAI Renfrew oft Sher-. A 3 bedroom briok, wST Mi tyitom. Tappan e gad boat pririlego. COLORED 3 Bedroom Homes "O'1 DOWN . NO COSTS NO NOTHING DON'T MWS OUT ON TPM epANOi OP A LIFETIME Oeor IS location! to thoaot ham WEST SUBURBAN Lake Roada. Thlr U a mutt ta WgKjJJMj ponwll — Own- JACK LOVELAND to Cate Lake Baud Ph. MP-MM OPTIONAL:- Basements 2 Bathe Built-Ins Storms and Screens MODEL at 706 CORWIN 1 BLOCK WEST QP OAELAND 1 BLOCK NORTH OP MONTCALM pa asm or pi mw to Ills U I-73I7 or U Men after T p.n Woetoera BoaBe____________________ NEV; HOUSES $00 Down $75- For aoath Include* everything Vlelt I bedroom model* on Car tl.le )u.t oft Wool Eonaett, I block* from Plthor Body. OPEN It TO I DAILY SPOTUt/ BUILD1NO 00. • YOUR LX)TOR 6URS M.Us. 'HITE LACK modern, (urnlthtd, Oa-bwBMNW VWW . jt • It,mo dews, m Dorothy Snyder Lavender 8 Eeaa llMS7-g4It L±a« PRICE POP PACT SALE A CUTE 2-bedroom, laipohi M—» Sr ON ISOOO down. Middle BtralU WE trAOh Naar Wlt—kilti Lake - Cute I-bedroom ranch homo. Large Bring room, carpeted. Picture windows. Big tot. ISM dowa. 064 monthly. WATKINS-PONTIAC ESTATES I bedroom*, tall basement tot lSSxMS. A eetrifie* at IlMta M.0M dowa. •WILL BUILD ___ g__jam. ita bat be.emrnt model to .now. Don McDonald WEBSTER LAKE ORION - OXFORD Attractive Modroem raoeh r — ^^*^***% yftoh H hardwood Ik h tiled floor, aehod IH-cor garage. *33.004 wtta I3.M0 $9300 Model Available NOW SHOWINO, 3-bedroom, full baument, home with OOS floori. gat beat. copper &ONET*bow/w,e arrange NO MONEY DOWN MOORL^ — Mo Mertg^jt Ooeta Brand new. 1 cloteu. oak .(taMi Kited kitchen. Payi MI NI order new. lot, . BETTEBBUILT FE 4-3200 HAYDEN ECON-OTRI 3-Bedroom Tri-Level $9995 Includes 83’ Lot $1495 DOWN BRICE AND FRAME Immediate Possession Oft Baldwin Are. north ^NfffcRfcAI^Y SUBURBAN NORTH kitchen, IDo both ' with ebower. Lbxatre gae idtsv 1 rifi PUT YOUR MONEY TO WORK INCOME month Income ... keeping moms. Sal -■— Vet 3SIbE&& ram light hou.e-and lower ~M Msato. ftjr6 $700 DOWN WATKj^Oiy TWP. SMITH WIDEMAN 413 WEST HURON STREET OPEN EVESTfE 4-4526 GILES mdy' PAMS'ft*n*VK! VEST SUBURBAN BBKE. mmmm natahod to r9mk arte mew lot. Tala homo, to better than now and priced tow Mr quick aale at 114,000. 4 BEDROOM brick bungalow to eOUeu locate. Pun baaomi-.-. 1 OAT garage. Pared drive aau ■GILES REALTY CO. ,1SroLTOTJI UOTPIO<>MntVICEU HOYT Its USB ESTATES raiwVTbedibonu. U room, dining, room, kltchei laat condition throughout. Lai privllegee oa SlUmMtfa Lake. KENT Unbelievable 1 COLORED OREST THE BPRINO In a 48 3-Bedrootn Ranches Fnli Basements PAVED STIiaBYS OAR MAT__________ MODEL LOCATED AT MS JORDON (Corner Pmtboretoae) S kloekl eaet of E. Blvd. ' woet of Opdyke Ed. KotokMtood to lilt WEST SUBURBAN - Only I down tor thle 4-rm. end t both ,|S»C“* —' ----- terford e $9,990 •JBi. fSXkS?r\ •14.000, ANTMivo brink CLARKSTON ____ ranch home. 3 badrme, carpeted living and dining rm11* bathe, githeat, screened palta. k>r tot*, near tchoole. Ill.tM. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor Antique^ n°°k ranch dealgaad ea 3k£aw5?£ ■Si I vifi, i nr mmmk Hunt Qub Area Very aotato M agsm with pratotaaly MW 1 kldwoai trl-levcl bam*. Oood top remngbaad bmrihf wooded wtth htoo riding trail*. Own* m toiotos — t*t iSsjMC 1 FE 8-0466 TRIPP $40 DOWN—FHA 0 DOWN—VETS Htghtoad^j^aa^ruottoa Co. Hoidwood ftoam. ] good used bedroom*, baeeaeat, boat. M.0M. Aad only NB «! down poyme a. > family i I ______ and batlTba prieigf,4^A Call Mr*. Howard. PE 14411. MlUer Holly Apartment 7-famlly on mom taroot In the village. AH apu. uafumltbed wtth SSaTeSf ^Moonth Watkins Hills Brick I generous bedrooms, ceramic IIrod batt. AMhomVi Hiw, sHm^ Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor ■44 B. TELEGRAPH ROAD PE 3-totd _______MA *4431 O’NEL GI SPECIAL ira A NONET — 4 bed- frsageMrs I oharthei. L SLWmiS&S^nSIS ssaiira.bw« Mr °Prokech* >n ranch homos to OhoMaRom: __to bedrooms, basement, recreation mam. paved drive sad __^tota/Prieod at: cL-tjrLgxre way tad two-car fangs. MW land leaped Priced at: NllS Shewn by eppolatmest. K. Irwin h Sagi - ftoaitom -32JQL* BARGAIN —^w WttBsw - mr-Jm*w w WRIGHT agp'ijras. ,svw be maws gav Moo. HI K-’Ekm Realtor ^ e»ta^ Ms Nuusm E-OTVJ SA! New electric hot water mBBr. Near Union Lake abopptng. Move ^Omur Leaving State ’ 3 bedreomt, large bath, gaj fu‘ nac*. i(Tear garage. Pgn grit onto M.M0 with |TM da . A month WaUed Y2«r^biB|l HAROLD R. PRANKS, REA Id WARE AN OFFER » CWBOT forced Homes-Farms gAMt tor tamlobod, uaftotebod ltke^e at t a g o, largo ggfooaoi M.500 for g real tharp lake homo, pictured, hardwood floou. It.too tor 3 kedream eoontry home, feoead. plootorad. hardwood own. LITTLE FARM -bedroom bungi — aom Of land. ass'oKWi 111.500 PO LL PRICE -— ■'*v«JM*r-‘ *— rancher i faraace. toi.oi*k. WOULD TOC — tike gam I month and t rau for yogpi for free. Thl* 4-famHy toee wUl do U for f*a,P*rf*«tc dltton to oad oul. Two to lota. Priced at oaly UI 0M ■ will acnetder tradoT . 4 .'Bra2 UNDERWOOD HEAL ESTATE MM Dtoto. Jaat aorta of no «M-wir*"’*MA 5-mo MA S-IY41 COLONIAL HILLS — Lovely brick rancher with attached two-car garage radiant heat, meoty decorated terreatd patto for 00m-fortahlc sammar living. ftrapto««. Uled k*fh7“ —1 ■ bat in Ritual Lot 75x300 . . * Brick homo OR Hatchery Rand -m.nTmaAa“1«SrT-Oak' ftoort Pleasant Lake 1ST'toSgtoMWEtWwfir CT bcaL ^SELL^MlViT? Tormt. PrivUagct OR pleasant Humphries FE 2-9236 Model Open Daily 11-7 P,M BeautHul” ARRO ‘NWjjNErg ww, w H TfiSESf^-S^-iK s»bfmm to poreh. I-car garage, epach— lot Lek* prtvUegct. Immadl WALLED LAKE AREA — Over TOWOTieOMKgJW, GAYLORD . cian Tit Min. Lawrence W. Gavlord a&gLTnu. ft BE IRWIN Lake.' only 50.000.lc • 2-Kf fna eeromie lavishly , mV ■ 050, About 4X000 dawn. Ceil rage. Large shaded St Priced at OlAOOA Approximately SLMS down mortgage ----*■ xmsL down payment —*1. Umi trade ONLY SMS* DOWN will move you Into thto S bedroom bungalow. IdH toot living mom, 11H fool kitchen, full basement aa M x US foot tel Monthly pay-meals SIS. Including tasec r AREA -(to bay la a betakT”Large living room with fireplace, nice mframt fun basement, corner tot (ton ho banfM with no down payment OB cur Ol bill wjntBews pay jrpKSxS!^ G.I. No Money Down RAY O'NEIL, Realtor OFFICE OPEN a-e PAL . h 3m a. Tetogreph PM 3-7153 FE 3-1530 MULTIPLE LirriNO BERTICE b- - . — A--»- rk renm maun «• fSd si. raC’rSru Pan* Mrararif Oft petod and drop**.------------ ■ town' pur nTbh EDi unit*. $0x34 COMPLETELY FUHHMHBP cattago, aa Tarweli b Call OL 1- Ltttle Plaid LaU. at ' EARNS LAKE - 3 LAEE FRONT i SSCt?*aw £Sb Ji&Br I5PS2SS! t SH Dae to Relocation Will Sell AU or Part OAYLORS, MICH. — Mg acre. with treat age on I lakes. DOMINI, MICH. - 100 oa Saddle Rag Lake with 34* moder ‘ “ MIO. MICH. — 3-bedroom 'SuMtag, <1 to hospital 1-0771______4474 Dixie Hwy. tort Fragarty 52 fed, Lake st. Halra. ______ fishing, privata huintnc. water • ports, mias of forest mhar~ — advantagm to area. Throe subdivisions, we finance. Investigate. Ratal Oak itm Olve-away price, tad low, taw down payment. Ideal tor kaabnni and iwe. DAIRY QUEEN COTTAGE FOR SALE, NEAR West Branch. FE 4-0000. . fctwtw Prayrty S3 Outstanding building, equipment and location. Half the usuxl dewn WANT TO BE A OENTLBMAN farmer? come out and took over our 4 seres - plenty of room tor vogotoblea and fruit. Tan era ftah too- there’! IS* toot on the Huron River. Three bedroom frame home with fuQ basement and attached garage goes with the UL Oesn Bouse sradMr ratio Oxbow Lake Bead, Just north of Cooley Lake Read. Reasonable price with terms. m/chigaSTbCsiness SALES CORPORATION JOHN A- LANDME88ER, BROKER 1473 Telegraph Road FE 4-1*11 MONEY MAKER ta^^otttotradln)^ ^buy In heart ^of squlppej Drive IS restourant. Lo- Isti jlrnsji, 54 a SCENIC BUILDING SITES 101b acres with good read frontagi and wonderful now. $4,000 tome. lit*acres'. Socd'lwnPfaML tie ally an tillable 13.300. ALSO M rare ft 33 "mil per at C PANGUS, REALTOR ORTONYILLE 1 Street_____NA 7-3510 COMMERCIAL LOT to Qodge Pork. UtolM w R. Bag- Highland I. After 4. Road (M-Sf). OR OR VdMO. d6nelson pare' 6NELWN'l^RE-Ea^A MXCT! jaa*i— [-ACRE LOT WITH FOUNDATION of Pontiac location. Priced — .. value. Only 11.544. consider trad-M| '—•*•*---------oqrity. L. Coffin, LI »13M. nv&F'SJ™ mAJ&M ^N. oooh. Broker. Earilrad 4331 WRIGHT akland Ave. ‘ PE 4-4441 IE - NORTH EDOE OP PON- 13 ACRES - 3 miles fl jrrvrm '5 ACRES OR S LAROE BUILD- Clortnv estate. H. R Finn. 100M Crocuslawn, WT 4-1344, Detroit. LONE PINE FRANKLIN AREA |«al0ul u F*re teitea. ihtw, nt r—trlcHePi. gagtn rtm.Jlntr ot r HI-HILL VILLAGE bufld fhi Jf aHriurj ___.w___i. wmi LADD'S INC. p. atiWar^l 4^ wSl rarima U*d rad take SV“todU,” -^tog ■■ . l$$aUS SXSM M145x155 43 454 Laky Proof v MkMt S3.IM Btchaxaa s Raven 104x351 43.100 KAMPSEN PM 4-4441 1471 W. HURON ST 7854 AndersonvUle Road. 10-UNIT APARTMENT Exctllent condition with tor an additional II anti tag 57.500 par year Ineo COM with totWdowX' NATIONAL BURINBSg BROKERS 10U Orchard Lakr *-- PE 3-TO41 Salt $r ExdiRRts I ROOM HOUSE IN DURANP. T^n^insns- ^ ty la Pontiac. CoU 073-— 3 00 P - » propM U0T RKBTa'URAHT. FIRST time offered. Reason for selling and groM art cenftdsnlUI. until —“e Pontiac Press, Box 54 CLAS8 C BAR AND BUILDINGS ‘ aora*. S homes an Wlxom Road, tar Mflferd. aU or part. Price Tsvern (Idly equipped, up total price. $5,000. Abe, we have vacant properl lee. commercial and Industrial. STANDARD-OIL Service etatlena available hi Troy-Clawson areas. Moderate tavern-mnm~V7vemwtoeri ~ ‘ ■ Call MI $-5311 days --- M MM I Sait Land Contracts CASH GOOD. SEASONED aaa n»r ft frentags rad over 055 R. deej> Wsstd C—tncts—Mty. tO-A IMMEDIATE BALE' r 530.000 per year 0 A-l Sunoco rapiwtaaSSw^amilE^ anywhere* You win make mors profit selling Sunooo's exclusive I custom rttifia Ssaollne. enroll now In our now ealer training ccjncr. lwooi starts Km, May 7th. Requlip msnts 1-Completo Aweek paid trahdag course. S-Modarate ln- isnt far mors a ability, deal me. 4-Expoet West Side Mr. Priors MI 5-4304 aASS "G" 5100,000 groat, moot down. day wtok operation. BUILDING COMPANY FOR Furnished 3-bedroom brick plus lxksfront, duplex and oH lake lets. Sacrifice. EM 3-0333 BEAUTY SHOP AVAILABLE MAY IsL Beautician ^MMIM bullness; OR 1 DOCTORS, BUILDERS AND INVESTORS MULTTPLB APT. ZONED It seres, beautiful tocriloa Northwestern Highway, Extension on U Mile M. and Orrimrt Lake Id. FARMINGTON MeW plxrmed. Next to Eeadaiwmri Shopptaf'Ci tor. AO utilities. Ptons reedy I FRA or conventional. Trim Is p Uclpattoo. Call owner. John Murphy. OR 4-3511. Outstanding Cash In on bowling boon. «ps that. SLMS to 04.05 Investment can provide excellent Income Immediately. For pereenal Intorrlew •end name. aSiraee rad phone No. to Pontiac Praea Box *3. Worth 1°Tt*tlrTOlfc>,g-iJCW CO PRIVATE OWNER -1—r 'its miL_ _ Small modern — utility bNOfts. 1 cottakes city water and gas. Boned business. channel Iris on largy lake, near KSEt, Jmafl. medsru — - building. 4 cottages, city and gas. Xoaed business ......... —n aril all or TRADEX" TRADES AND BXCEANOBS ____ „_BtrequlP- -meri onto ( years at*. Netting, after ass expenses, aver 11.446 5 month and Ins reusing every year. Located at jm .tabMto* me bra Sum highways, a j cut be missed 3 b.R home -cleded at 4*7,005. Make sa offer ea the down payment. Balance at mi eir maMk. Crier ytetutM ^Suldk NATORALLT! LeW Hiteman Realtor i'i_IMI W. Huron «4»E Member MU PARTRIDGE (D ASSOC, REALTORS INESSES THRUOUT MIC-■ HURON PE 4-35*1 “I wish they’d wrap candy ban In quieter paper. My . teachers all have such good hearing! ” ESTABLISHED SMALL GROCERY -‘-ye. money maker, low down Standard Oil Has large volume station for lease. Financial assist' ance, complete training program, guaranteed income. For further information call MI 6-5311 days or FE 4-6905, 6 to 9 p.m. In busy northern row celtont |rose. Living Quarters. W1U consider trade. Owners health forces sale. Resort Sacrifice sale due to Ulricas. IT eriMaa. T «w*"* *“• •» heart of hi f. R. HA Htghlai Land Contracts ABILITY To got each tor your land tract, equity or mortgage at_ eat possible discount Is a* service ww Sava given for year*. Approx-lmatoly 500 tavmioru watting. DraVtooe thn tohme. Can Ted buyer trtdge ACTION Broker, 3000 Ells. Lake Bd. CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. H. J. Ven Welt. StOOMridawy. on 3-1300. _______ ■AST SERVICE AND LOW DIS-COUNTS ON LAND CONTRACTS. y o. if — -----— HAYDEN. REALTOR. PM Immediate action satisfactory teepeettaa of property Road Owrrsl^. Orchan^LaVe. 'S3ro*Vl$U?i WHEN YOU NEED $25-TO $500 We wUl be glad to help yoi STATE FINANCE CO 000 Paritlao Mato Bank Bldg. ____FE 4-1574 BAX^.-U^fS&NX tot Pontiac state Rank Bundle FE 4-153B-9 BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 Peattte - Drayton*! *** Walled Lk, Blrmbij' CENTURY PIN 5NCE COMPANY — MY 3-1533 OA $-j*B OL 1-0104 $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE PART. CONVENIENT , 34 mooma to repay LOANS Signature Or to M months to nfhy.. PHONE FE 2-9206 OAKLAND Loan Company 3$ Pontiac Mato Bank Bldg. Need $25 to $500? . S6e Seaboard Phone FE 3-7617 11B5 N. Perry St. parkDn» ho PRoatmif Seaboard Finance Co. TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR. ROCHESTER ROMEO --- *“ JO MM L 1-5701 3-351C Mortgage Loans Voss & Buckner, Inc. CASH AVAILABLE NOW! To oonsoMdato aU your bills aa pay off your land contract i mortgage providing Wa ‘ any homo Improvement ■ “ tt per cent i to ouaUfyT irucUon, rt: $750 TO $2,500 CASH LOANS OB ftutot, home oquitles. homo furnishings arid equipment. 34 to it months terms. Group an your debt* into too account with only one place m pay. Family Acceptance Corp. 317 National Bldg. LO W. Hurra. ItooBaa A Mortgage Problem? We make mortgage loaae to meri your requ)f$m*ms. Any property, aay amount. Prompt dependable service. RemodaSag and conduction loans, cam and consolidate dalle. Cbefl Martg. and Rarity Co. 363-6333 or 003-0700________ 43 stock, (wap fort OM 3-0150. 14 FOOT PLYWOOD RUNABOUT and traitor. Tl” beam, with a M horse Mercury motor, bout oever and water sale, will awap for travel bouse trailer or era tor too# can re 10-ACRE FARM. 5-ROOM MOD era bungalow with aapanstou attic. good garage, small bafn Uva 535 Dixie Rwy.___ DR 4-03* MULTIPLE LIBnHP SERVICE 1956 PLYMOUTH AUTOMATIC V-5. 104$ fibril MlWJEMMMmKidfira new. 3 - 7.50x30 truck — i *0007**' FIB ERG LAS IS FOOT THOMPSON riT'D^reorAasenEvSn‘^ ia^fBbw: YiAR 6Lp HfcBotf-•00 II Dtosri UwriaTleluxe with in tool*. *3.704 or trad# far late model tor er house traitor, none OR 3-3434. NEW CARPETED 3 - BEDROOlt ROME win trada aartotaa for sasTfsras r soon, re 5-3*7*. It to f. REAL VALUE T 8 B 5. Builders POODLE PUPPIES »FOR SALE OR ' trade. Carpet, pMjra deepfreese or ? OR 3-4374^ OR 34170. SohilaiMahaMtaada t ADMIRAL TV, EXTRA PINE. 75 refrit, and stoves, afl .slses, 50 to lm. Desk, $10. Xtostrto dryer. Ml. Obit crib. It. Sofa bed. $U: bedrooms, $$7; living srr&i tx. wrM and ruga. Evsrythlna In used furniture at bargain prlets. ALSO new uvna rooms, bedrooms. dinettes, rugs, mattresses. Factory seconds, about It price. B-B tom*. ‘ BUY BELL TRADE Bargain House, Ml N. Cum at lAfayetto re^faitl Open 111 I Monday and Friday, WALL TILE. $*’■ Me ft. VINYL LINOLEUM, YD. ._______Me -auTLO- tile Ida a, iaoinaw 0x15 NUOg . ..■■■■ ..MAI jA. VINYL LINOLEUM .........Me YD. PLAanp WALL TILE ..-MBA, BAO TILE OUTLET. 107$ W. Huron 13x11 KUb I BRAND NEW) $40.50 Pearsons Furniture, M Orchard 'Lake Ave. 15-FOOT CHEST FREEZER, f-month old. 0140. PE 5-3303. IT’ TABLE MODEL TV. 536. Pearaon's. ■ PR 4-7551 IT PORTABLE IT Sllvarton .. IP OM......... 8’ Km cram .................... WALTON TV FE SOM Opm $4 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn 21 INCH RCA VICTOR TEL*VI-stan. consols model. Blende. A-l eradttton. 5 year* eld. re $3773 R *£i»34°°” AUTOMATIC WATER B re-conditioned. 50-gal. glass lined electric water heater, $ year* old. ““ — “ • ....... $16.55 MdMl.Hr21 floor au-. .. 6105-05 lfouTlL f Speed Q« r*floor m AUTOMATIC WATER SOFTNKR , repomemed. save M par cent. Maytag troner. balance ........tl» Norge automatic washer ........IN I BBAUTt^tL DUL-A-AeMON Pfaff automatic alg-aaf sewing machine In n beautiful cabinet. —-FLOOR MODELS- S.B. AUTOMATIC, SODS (AVER Installed ^guaranteed HAMILTON DRYER itaW^gjralt, - Admiral Ramgarotar, M tori I ^ ssinja**" 6145-00 GOOD 51 W. Hurra USED. Tristt our irsds dept- tor realbargatao. We buy. sell or trade. Come out and took aroamLS acres ef free perking. ftinaPf 5-03U. _____FBI J TO I OPEN MON .-SAT. | TO I $4 MarriM to pay ! miles B. of Pontiac or 1 mile R. of^Araura ^righto on Aubarn, 7T1LL TRADE SMALL NEW ‘01 Ford eonvortlbto. g WE HAVE — $ HOMES TEAT WE wM oonstdor trading down payment tor patattag latar. L. n. Brown Realtor. Ask - tor Mr. Brown. Fh. FE 13010. Evenings call OA AMU. Sola Oaiyag__________(M 1 FLOOR LENGTH LACE WED-ding gown, sis* IX Never warn. $$o. re f“** FORMATS. WEDDING OOWN. ^o IX like raw. irr swnM may io IaeFT ■ “ ir% WONDERFUL BUYS BARGAIN BOX 4M B. Woodward. Birmingham. MI 0-4130. store hours drily 104,. Tuesday 14. Saturday 0-13. Wanted: used consignment clothes rad household aritetoe.1 Monday and Thursday, 10-3. Berry Garage Door Factory Seconds Available at itaiabll discount 13H Colo street, Birmingham ™ *4001 Sfl tJE ■3P0 . DAVkWPORT. KIDNEY shamdi aim tom— condttlon. FE 5-7330. I With $Wri*Mib«V»g ‘ conditloo. 1150. BARGAINS GALORE! I-Pb. sofa bed and matchlag ehalr 5-Pe. dinette set . Choice of color* to ehrom T&rxs:...... Pram 53.m| WYMAN'S B a A d T IF U L SfNOKB SLANT needle deluxe rawtoc maeblne. Zto Bagger, to iNnd sewing table. nEm 0M ertake on pay-monte of 07 per month. Unlvtnri Co, re 4-0005, COLONIAL CRADLE. QRlOINAL-iv mo. n»fr>M m.A4. tom OR 3-0713. $ule MaosohaM 8aads end tables for Ml. PE t-3047 1 LOVESEAT 511.10. REPRIOKRJ tars, all slass. $1$ up. gwlv rocker M. Otto arid etoetric star tor* ELECTRIC DRYER. uT REFRIO-era tor, $35. Oa< stove. $1*. 11" TV. 540. Electric etove, 035. Wash or. (30. FE I54N$. ---- ELECTfac ----------- ELECTRIC EIOVR. MX FE 4-4B4 iiLiWhki ' kJMm an6 1 t*K- I. Large I________ dinette, rotor. 444.54. 3 wee,s ora. Htde-a-wsy bed tii.54. China earinet lit. TV’s. 414.4$ up, 3$ to choose from. Small buffet SO 50 Dresser $5. Table .mode) radio tdAS. ' BUT-BELL-TRADE PEARSON'S. FURNITURE I -3 Orrhsrd Lake Ave. FE 4-7051 ! v PRICE - RE/Bcn. BXAUT1- LIQUIDATING xarrutE stock ft >ckers. lamp* and to**— ■'E*VUER«rNV«” ^BEDROOM ofrmrfofO Otto » ta £T MAYTAG WA* • batotah*. tot-—Us. Irregruers, terrific values, tttehlgan Pluo-rumyl. inraruhaid GL FIX UP If Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY four tncawwo ufams _ cun 111 N. SAOBfAW ih. Only 1171.50 Lakriand R< I Plato Rwy. RUGS-------- teak ..oio.oe up Stori, ■ordwiri. wiring. RUMMAOB SAlJ. APRIL »4X hum $4. 1350 Chernrlawn. BINDER. 034.13 6aM. LATE liOD- S. **li**9jMM------ FARM-iRESl Rot i Lard MEATS ^ ■...........RRKfi | pw Ohops, cantor cut .Me S. fart sausage .l ib. for 4100 Kfmra marmot - jqginti ELECTRIC m HARMONY GUITAR^ Double ptokup. only I menlhs eld. FE 4-0268 ORfifNMix pUyer *Aho n« woritl^ order, with many rrito, A^«d^rarktalrirae. mnhogsnv GRINNELL’S atsy» BIB STUDIO COOCREB. TABLES, •hairs, HoIlyWeod bads, rofrlger-ator, electric stove. PE $-3417. small davenport and $ ~^» Chairs, PL 3-3374; SOFA BED | AND CHAIR. petsssssd. Over "75 models to enooeo from ftlees ’ otoril MMNV' Over ___a PrL_ , portables, llO.H. tig ment. Cart's JMI TAKE OVER PAYMENTS Fbitoe refrigerator, Ukl now, «$Cta $» deUvera! Phlleo IT - TV 400.00, 11.31 WOOk. $3 delivers I FIRESTONE i SECTIONAL SOFA ..$30.1 ____ Maple Bunk Bod .. .$M.( Foram Mattress and Boa_________ “irtng Sri ............*35.00 televtolen. 040. OR 3-5*50- Homs T nylon, each. « fCJetSUod, WYMANS BARGAIN STORE USED ITEMS PC. LIVINO ROOM SUITE $$i.M OP A BED ... $U 44 4-PC DINING RM. SUITE .. $44.05 SOFA BED APC DININ' _______ CHEST OP DRAWERS DRESSER WITH ‘“*" 30- OAS RANOE U W. Ptto M tonra PE MM Hi-H, IV 6 Radis* Johnson Radio & TV Oood need TV’s Buy-AeO-Trade I E. Walton PE I4M Llcnted Michigan TKSA wood — Afoot aid 10 lari leiillhs 3x* and txl$ naidrari uhiaka. Ala* suboldtag to oH. wTaMM. Si rllh straight (1 4X230 ~l »i" HORSEPOW1 of 4 I sari T$e dellvend. Oat 1X13 RUOS . 7] WALL TOE. 04“ CEILINO TILE . -BUTLO" TILE. I tAPOOT UHUUMS ____________I Preeeer like new. CrafUmu 1“ Joiner and U" Hx sSW. OB 4-1*73. if. »AOfl$AW it IkTTa Ml* to*- i3ii f * brary table. OL Alofl, OAS STATION EQUIPMENT. COM- KSS. *• OIRLS- OR BOYS- BIKE, 16" WIT ‘ -atiilng wheel Cub Seoul unt-irm sise if, girtorblaok fm start »• II gulf Brito bile party rasa, sis* 13. tadtos brown and » start slap 33, OR $-1547. ipltoncos: refrli-.. • washers, dryers a| jMK HOT WA — “i__________ _____js? FlIorescent,' tal Or- •hatd LvVw — to, . KENHORE IRONER. MS. PINO rang Uhls, *3*. picnic table -** Lawn mower, 430, 134-7783. KEY CUTTING" MACHINE btonht. PE I ItM.__________ LOVELY SlNOER gEWINO ‘ M.**.' Largo note with or without lights, sliding doors. Twrids bm. IMS-■b Phi1 ■ ■1 “ ~V TriW.-Fi^on. r~whoats. g whool traitor. PLUMBINO BARGAINS: jsSr^r ~ P$AVE PLUMBINO CO. RUMMAOB ^L*J1°°MIXMA8TEH •WM. ------ i ..’T—.— »»». ■JSSArtJSTig. fobmr.... RELAX-A-SltOR J-falAL i like brand new sacrtflee $41*1 after i REBUILT RAND MOWERS FOR sale. 304 Oakland Ave. ROMEX 14-3 WITH OROUND 01.75 STAINLESS E &LSTtL^t'tSSl ~ > m Orahrad Lahe TYPEWRITER. NEW ROYAL S Ce«: « £ Si TALBOTT LUMBER As YtowIm OOODYEAR^SERVICE STORE . a -i-- -w_ wlm USED tomatie Wash 1 ir ehatoe tor amSifstore prices, O* a «■ MM West, WHEEL-RONAE AMD BOLE MS toratom and ssvlpwi eat, itriaa movers. Iflkrx. tawnatowers. IF' ■to ^PV large $>aqb rare| -1 A NEW jANl— jit *|Jiir as $7 parliL,__ lettsrly Music Co. ID *-*003. LOtoREY OROAN. BEAUTIFUL holiday model, pereueeion lustra. ----V nswsst mods! spinet frult- --J mar win gSiKe Hr MM. PI 0-3103 after A — —f»" nk*n \ 130 EAM^OOMDIAN $50 00 fl) USED SILVERTONB^CHORD OROAN _ BUY OP THE WEEE Brat line OttlSranem Spinet laaoe 1 maple end 1 m3«8 -Ob Wtograd. the man to on to iBaJvs$ptJBiS as ■ rad bear the fabulous Rialto banter model or$u by Oulbran- “>• "lS,SSmtoVl3UEir mos^jss^r tor your oenvwtooee, of Or$en WIEGAND’S > MUSIC CENTER Poriln* Area Oulbrasses Dealer t; OUR NEW LOCATION ^ m Elisabeth Lake ltd fOpp Pontlae Mall) re 3-4034 mT1® WEBER DUO ART FlAYSr Oraad Piano completely rshullt null the toti|wu action ever unsigned and hat excel- STSSn? irauxl organ, (L7M LtjgOd'Mk KrnbjU gjato piano. GALLAGHER'S ADDING MACHINES. I CASH R ROISTERS $1 __Valiev Rnstoeec Mach______ tie W Huron re 4-11T7 ADDING MACHINES NfW, Used. Rebull/—“Terms" OraSto-Pilas astvlee “Hero today-here to itay." Pontiac Cash Register WLh|tof;________PE g romllAM. • Apache Camp Trailers gy,%£3«ISLr^.-Afc Caa©e»—Boat*—Motor* £**0*4 svgp 1 an colter $ mile ndto Of Lapeer THE "PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1962 wat Krmssp ara % jjtAitt^. MEL’S TRUCKING SlCHBLACX TOP BOIL PEAT humai, loaded or delivered JM. Burn*. tM Rochester Ed. Worth. ~7T ALL KINDS or WOOD AMO KIN- HE3 1» - " "If AKC RgglSTgRlb; BLACK Okfc-men Bheuherd. Stud eerrlce. M _ Park Island, Lake Or log, AKC DACHSHUNDFuFSglo sow, etsd sow, rn bjIm. COON DOOB SALE OR TKADE. mala and lomele. MA 0300 OERMAN SHORT HAIR POINTER bo*.. aU shots, houss-broken eao be aeon gat. and Sun. 174. MA 5-1704. O K R M A N SHKPHMMC' IMPt Son'* ini tuiikUvn. 13 it ,tolk. Mil Hlxon T «*.. Utica. 731-8481. 4:M p m. to —T&an ELKHOUlfD Ft*#. to He. mo on $-ubi Master b^nnixs. all _____ ShedToslrWaBe. ritdtB wttfa paper*. MS. Mala Corn*. ped- ggyjjp?: sarfogn malttBb'dSS: smaIX-- Mfsorttr1 11.00 pair. Iff 3-M83. 01.00 pairM. _- aeNAK^S T^Jt~ I E~N-nela, boarding, tralntn*. trim- PUPPIES, MIXED COLLXKS, 0 week* 034-3077 MDOISTKlutti AKC COCKKR PUP- sfefKN^^ET. ' tor NOODLE POM SALK, n 0-0740. TALK1NO STRAIN PARAKEETS, canaries aad tropical flan. Ctaare Bird Hatchery, Mtt Auburn. UL WHTTE POtoEifl A DACHSHtiaB PAY$L25 WEEK MPWT1 WT SHOT FE t-3113 - -ti AUCTION LIQUIDATION BALM. ' Hadler, Mich. Frt. and Sat.. 0 p.m. Iis: 4 p m. Surplus m*-aiia* bare |ot to to. Our lose AfliBMhl J»t. .fUHML‘~«iC ___a freeway. at potto auction at HI WatUa* SS-.TSJSU’ai.BTS wMtael&S •5»m and .iijptjli,_ ’atr^^ y^-a ADCTIOI*. SA~f5 I i.jwpay ttmJ2SrzskB£ 30 bead Bolstetn cattle, abaap. i hap, grate — 1001 0(1 Moot trac-Oor, T~T|tltr Mil JtoftB traatoy, ■ U*; tflaaabaauty. VToll liaa farm ' 222jny*pana mS W iS™ ear* H»UaMltaiaaS*ofUSrtrS*-Plymouth Bnnth. Floyd Kabrla. dark, jftmmKBWnft SMs&s Appraloal Berrien. Open lor con-atenmeat Monday thieugh Friday. JBt* mi {BS%aareWL.*L-. (0c; Juniper Spreaders, (tfijm » sr&,BsEEra yqi mtitfr. ItAOttrUL JBfc r^2?T?*S3&«&£ ,, AD*cnESrr terms ICING BROS. T^omac ROAD AT OPDYKB PiVe HORSE ROTARY TILLER MttttjnsMEL “ BffiBuBvHeBXZTT gtfH] ^act6r. TRACTOR WITH “‘wTldlR Ira plow pal_________________________ JOHlT BEAN ORCRARle flfrOAl1. «iw ARo-roarrAiftTMw asm plantar*. Alas aaw unto drills. _______ DAVIS MACKINBRT CO. •hm Nnhm •ter Unrip naT cap Salttand toad 1011. — usad tractors In Matotri 4 aad 0 itars, W* finance. • Hardware. Hart- isEBrrnsoTwi lfl»rs-riding mowers, as* ontvMPfi * novtn * tillers. Krins, MwPtate Kwf. BtedfU. WANTED TO »JT |iA» cultlratar. OA —It ttv M Call OL 1-0488 if YkLLOWBTONB—IDEAL LIV- lt-FOOT CHR1B-CRAPT. TRAILER. Pontiac ate. M m.p.b. OB 44640. Bariahi*.r,1M\MMr' tSL"?K Lot 14, TO 4-03M or IM-tttlL lt-FOOT ALUMINUM dliMTUN- Mart 'rt Mercury1' motor MI 4401 g mteaVg ltJJOOT^OTROCHAFT HOUDAY. enctoMd' JLti 5*t2no“’MiTelt graph, Lot 1. 4t^ barjayawar Eriaiuda motor! tut. A raflnad tody bn* beta sols mSSF%PS aa: Ms1W'pJenS' ofTe5o*#t°Md ftor- 1962 MODELS ARE HERE! Plihiur Run-About*—CmlMrg ae£“ IlUfora*0 For tppoinT-ment call Detroit wi 4-7633 O’DavBallboato, T-Town Canoes CHRVBLER MARINE MOTORS EATON POWERNAUT AND MERC CRUISER OUTBOARD DRIVES Scott and West Band Inters Alloy TraUars and BMtHolsto Marine Aaeassories and Sporting taint. FE t-tid. a ■ ■ « ■ ' w suiai il Trtiler. Hbm iniOvip U2&S8tSM& A MESSAGE ” FROM US v>S| ' TO TOD lStS ____ __ tfewn. We btttere the! oar ewAWAs ulaa Is unequalled to Jhe wide field of In- trzfl&ihjffrit nttat Mow out soonl Ton llad you did. ' Bd> Hutchiator* Mobile' Home Sales, Inc. 4M1 OMa in._ ORj-lNS OPEN f DAT* A WEEK 6amp trailer, nkarlt neW, --- REPAIR contained, as latMIS, Maw models cemlnc In erarydsy. Oet your in ■wayjg. MARINE ME JSpSm a Now Baby IMS FRANKLIN - 10. O' and 30 Mean HOLLY MARINE J 'u E 46x0, 1 Sales and Rentals Vacation iratlaro^ IS. 1A 17 ft. fNjrwiio >1* * camper*. utro juSntYATlbsCS NOW F. E. Howland, Rentals M40 Dlrle Hwy. OR 3-1400 Oxford Trailer Sales end Coart V*« /reX"1 .M°snrt bare no staHsw W ** ** hare 1.000 »*tleflad enstomers and eS.’s.-jrvstnsK For A Beany Good Buy See Us TOdul PtrldromTWMer Seles -FINEST Of IWSM UTOIG— •s^1w5mSBb snd Osfard M TSjjT Uf Od 9 aad bait rafoo —-1- ■ TBB TIME IH NOW I FOR Ud TO FKJKUF AND SELL SALMf 0 4-OTTi BRJUID NEW MACM. FONTttO WtttwQn m wilIiams s. So»'now at Niabsru _ USED-tort) MDJSO^TIRES m p5i Wwl L^*llifcES~girr yggggg ■RYU trade amt-oldi ttanad uaad btsyaUa. •sEts-Accssseriss W a LASS BAR. IS MOOT, WIDE bMSL IS MOM Power Johnaan eleotrle, Republic Ttlt Trailer. BHEpf*'* • HORSEPOWER OALE BUCCA-neer Ft MM altar 4 p.m. iJpooT rpErwo® Bar TOT Wo^tS^ “c S0BdW0n- ITF66r PLTWOOb BOAT,' »■ FOOT CEDAR BOAT. TRAIL-j. If bartt uowar ir—‘ tar, 0110. MA 43U0. a;-i^'wmST [. M h.p . < „ CUSTOM and bnartaman .... ... aanyattodt lop ---Suthart*—. — —,—. 14-FOOT FIBEROLAS BOAT. 0120. s Motor ar sllable FE 5-7744, TAMM 14-foot ' damn.’ ■ horse power Scott motor. A-t “ 0400. KM 0-IM7. after 4. li-FOOT ARROWOLA8S WITH oonyerOtoto tom M HP MvlMtait, alaatrla atartar. trauer and a*-J *— 4M3 Kempf, Drayton Plains. REVEAU HULL, I FOOT i Inch beam. O borte Willy* ln-baard. nawly npbalsterad. f cor-ars. coorarUblt top. Bait attar. a8tnS»OOT MAT SALES S3 B. Walton FE S44S3 Dally M Sun. 14 it-FOto CRUISERS INC. WOOD wlndshlald, staerini UihU hard-wara, now top slda and back our-tolas dime- marenry alaatrla mo- •SHLanffcW « am Mae wttb eonTertlbls tap. 00 b.p. Jobnaao. Alloy trailer. 0700 B. M*Tr^!61artrA. u HoksE- 1 Physical Damsta and Llabtttty tow Qaal i Special Eadsartawa premiums tor salt Boatinc OET TWK 'FACTS CALL FRANK A. ANDERSON AGENCY erulaar. was I 1^MW“W KELLY HARbWARE N4 Auburn nt Adams UL OJM Open Dally ’MI 0 P-m^— BOAT MANUFACTURERS SALE. nlr i lsft!**Oito%sctL oSlSm! JEW REDUCED PRICES ON OALE OUTBOARDS, and Packaf* Units, with fibardaes ar alum. SCumM lb. Beat Traitor OSS-Out board Motor KW-Auburn Baud satoa A Barries ,ilS W. Auburu Ed. PL 0-1107 NEW 11 FOOT GLASS BOAT. MO-'tor, trailer, 01.1*1. Rsw atom, runabouts. 0315. IF alum, boats tsu?srtawarjtt •a.ss: alrtTJa FISHERMEN 13- FOOT ALUMIirUM BOATS 14- FOOT ALUMINUM BOATS (A^raAMK’TRAILERS $119.95 PINTERS MARINE SALES , Open Sundays_ 1370 E. Opdyka FE 44SI JOHNSON MOTORS SEA RAY BOATS aerocraft aluminum O' DA Y SAILBOATS Z9XSSXJ2fe«m iSSLER’S MARINA WoMtoStsn. OA MM Oxfon Outord _ eptojyySgfpAS, Sundays » noon to 5 p.m. • Swey»IW** 'fiiSCREK MAklNE SALES arfll mw bo known na LAKE AND SEA . MARINA7 AUWOROUkD DMSI1 . ag-liss sr? sas MARMADUKE By Anderson A Leeninf Mset Marmaduke, Charlie. He’s the nelghbortwod chaperon! OUTBOARD - Plywood hardtop boat, alb6 14' ■fit tutor atrip bsai koto In SMS OSndMtam. Call after f p.m. FE 0-0070________________ ioS starcraft aluminum boat aad 70 horsepower Johmoo motor, boat ear ar and aU aocee- taBWtuWJtr' axparianoa. 3dM Orchard l But od Kaaso Harbor Fbona WANTED a •usmSt"* HIOHE8T PRICES PAID .. _ - SPECIALS — IS ft. aluminum pram ... S 00.50 14 ft. aluminum flsblnc bout (llMI _ BEE TEE NEW MSB ' ' Thompsons tad Jesiuane IM04I , PAtJLArYOUNGrlHC. '— ‘‘‘-'a Hwy. on Loan Luka bpao 7 days weak AERONCA 11BC, V8&. ^ CLUB Ml________ able. Ereaupa wtt Omni OR fedB. 7F*% y—led CEre-TfMcfce 111 tLWAY* A BUYER OF JUNK ears Proa towbto70K 4-ldPl. 1S MUCH AS 000 FOR JUNK Ol uaadaara. FESiWL SHARP LATE UODmL CABS Averill's oojunkacTrs*-,(SiSk towoo ' maucKs, w I. ROYAL At FE 0-014 CARS wanted: 195$ TO 1961 They don't have to be alaan sharp. Tip doUars paid. Jam i_ p I SM ask orf John ar Silva B(« HART MOTORS 443 Orchard Lake Aye OUT-SfATE MAftKEtS Extre Top Doller FOE LAYS MODELS M&M MOTOR SALES Marrla MeAnnaUy, owner I Oale MeAnnaUy JUST N. OF P^CTIAC DETVE-IW _ SB DIXIE HWY. wvw vuiAn ummiu UMMm GLENN'S $25 MORE Far that hl«b grade wed nr. tea wiit^toto dfaioaUwSw/WS ” WANTEb; ‘|4.’«I CABS~ Ellsworth ANTED: masm pl GOOD USED LATE Used tot^TiMek fterts IB FjjRD^ HARDTOP, PARTS Oft straSi^itlto!* eoi^aU.,W*Vmi Nsw «Bd Itssd Tracks 103 ATTENTION Piek-np truck owners aad vs-catloners. 14S0 Wolvartn* Camper, If rent m to see, come out or call me. EM Stm. Robert Lowry. 1336 Haepttal Rd.. Union Lake. Better Used Trucks GMC Factory Breach 1004 CHEVROLET to-TON PANEL. Excellent condition, plot. PATTERSON CHEVROLET OO., MM & ypOOWMU) Atm.. BIRMINO-HAM. 50 4-3730. TRUCK SPECIALS MM dodge Panel 0100. 1850 ford Ranchers OUM. ISM CHEVROLET H Ton panel tceondl- ____ ___ _____ ..anemia- eion, HIM. MO CHEVROLET. U.0M Tebdem Dump^ completely recondltionedt USED trucks CASH OR TRADE DO McAULIFFE FORD ijgyc ■■ tRUCK 1962 FORD TRU( F-MS with e new car saMSSSsa. OLOM. FRANK SCHUCK FORD 'M-34 at Buckborn Lake_ . Lake Orton ,1ft 3-MU 1040 CHEVROLET <4 TON FtCK- Nsw end Used Trecki 103 ISa 4 TON DGOOE 2xfr£sS R&R MOTORS mhr kllaot AYE JEEP_ Oliver* CK and 3M Orchard FR vett._____ TOLL ACCEPT ANY REASON-able attar. 1040 Ford Truck to BaBLd . Auto Insurance ' Low rakaa for safe drlyers ALSO Payment Plane We Write all forms of Insurance FRANK A. ANDERSON AOEMCT 1044 Joekrn___________fe tW4 FsrsifB Cars 105 OR PHSf. 0344 UN AUSTIN-HEALXY, SEIfKA toon arerase. MB 0-7410-1000 METROPOLITAN. ~~ ‘_______ 1010 FEUOEOT. 403, CLEAN. Excellent abape, 01,040. Wl-4400. 1000 ENGLISH FORD CONSUL. OR PORSCHE CONVERTIBLE. ■50 engine. Make offer. MI 4-0430. OfCA, 1040. SUPER DELUXE. 4-daor sedan, excellent condition. NEW CAR TRADES *62 AH Sprite Roadster wagen ! I Actual i ’58 Hillman Wagon "Oaa Mtaar" . *57 Porsche Coupe ’57 Volkevragen Sedan ’57 Volkewagen ' CON VERTXBLE" *56 Volkewagen SOMton WagonT Prices Start at $595 AUTOMOBILE IMPORT. CO. .WAsr^-fru 1940 VOLKSWAOIN DELUXE B1 with lunreof. l owner. Price 1- jgr HrCmC ■ SPORT$CAtS tr 4**;BoS8olaM*S^EH&di Also Sunbeam Alpine, Hlllmai and Margan. Ready for Immad Arallabia an all Import*. Superior Auto Sales 550 OAKLAND AVE. VOLkSW^fiNS! Volkswagen gale* and Serviee WARD-McELROY, Inc. Nsw oad Uisd Cars UVXUie • vHI « let. Vow mfleaga, % "hX’rtmc MOTORS OH Oroherd LtoeAle._30H0B New bettwr. mT 33700. 1007 BU1CK SPECIAL l-DOOR berdtop, axeeltont condition. jaraSBwS EHssbW" - -- " — -- 1840 BUICK EUBCTIU "30r' 4 doer hardtop, full power made* wifi extras, aolld dark blue fin lebl Haskins Chevrokt-Olds 1841 BUICK l-DOOR, SEDAN. RA-“■ vhltewau Met good _____muet tall. On 3-3M1 Fm*1® 1840 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 2-doar. 4 roar* to role ooT MBTiTilBiSbirARb AVE. BIRHINOHAM. MI 4-3734. 1000 BUICK 4-DOOR ----- MtUr, automatic 111 If iOUL ion cokva flaifti mumn^nrnaStt- MA 5-1000. 10N CHEVROLET' OONVKRTI*LK. V-0 sutomattc. power Wska* ^A-l 10N CHEVROLET 4-DOOR WAO-— -“*■ 4-cyl. ungtna. rudto* UuumMm prica 41.440. (to# I BOB BOftST. ..... ..>rcury CB block 8. ef 10 MU# « Ol. 10. Mnetut-Jn. MI Q-4030. mgmm ifT jro^ #fcr awitaad ^^r SnuiStaSiAli00^ Jam 1961 CHEVROLET ____MOTORS noo^ HEVROLETFONTIAC-BU I( JNHa: o« t___ i'cBEVitourr. oim un pon-touTwAdapi imi._________ ss&m. loot or WOODWARD I AVE., BIRMINGHAM Ml 43730 «W CHEVROLET IMP ALA 4-DOOR “1 opaK-=3c: _____ rune. flnkb! RAO MA 0-1404. _________ MM X WOOL____________ AVE. BaUCNOMAM. Ml 4^734 1040 CHEVROLET IMPALA 5-DOOft bardbop, whs VI angina, pswtr-gbda tranauilsalon, radio. Ilka ^T^eoadBeei etild Harm gold k heater, itbl 054 month^' wbb roc —■ ABM, a m. LLOYD _______ TORS. Lincoln. Mercury. Comet, ttotoor. 033 A Bagiaaw H. FE 1000 CHEVNOLET BI8CAYNE 3-door eedsn o cylinder, otandard shut, rami, jMlar, whitewall* TEisoN5^hETOiLrrmcd.. Piw® S, WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-3735. 1959 CHEVY 2-DOOR A nice elaan Blscaynt, radta beater, stick shift, tm rnona auto bales ___ white finish. Only ______ Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. IBM B. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-3736 10M CHEVROLET BEL AIR _ doer hardtop. V-4 engine, power-(liBa, O-teeabtoe 4MWMU dhm p’aT-TERiIoN 1?HETOO^IW*r ISM g. WOODWARD A MBMOHAM, Ml 4-3734, jh cn SoBllART MOTORS OB Orebard Lake Atra, PMH 0M CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE wblto with turquoise trim. BtlcL 4-barraLM.000.FE 3-0M3. (Jerry) UN CHEVROLET NOMAD BTA- FoweT^Saerlng and brake#, baatar. wnttowalle. Only »— *-rms. PATTERSON C__-CO- 1000 8. WOODWARD BM milaa- Ol.lfe. OB 3-NU lifl THUNDER BIRD 3-DOOR hardtop, tow mBaaua, EM 3-3BU IBM FORD CONVERTIBLE FAflB-LANE "M0" with an all white waakT Cali Mr. manager at King >0 ill ». Saglnsw FE_____ 1060 CHEVROLET PARKWOOD 4-— wagon. V-g angina, power .. brakes, radio, b alto. BUrer blue. 01 1000 8. WOODWARD AVIvHB-MINOHAM.M1 40730. ISO CHEVROLET IMPALA. dON-vasMbto A color, doap eraon matching top, power glide, tires and In excellent shape. mission, power otoorixA able attar. wT Cbary, 1004 Chayp, lots Pardomsfli 4-door. r&w&SSnra& 1047 BUICK 3-DOOR HARDTOP. and moothly payments of $3044. LLOYD MOTORS. Uneoln-Mer-■unr Ocmri Ifftesr, 333 a Saginaw. PE t-4131. -------- —VBBGS SL^SpS^rJajS oft balance duo ef NIT. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. flBFZito woam w. Buna <*t Elisabeth Lake Id ) Ft MX CHEVROLET MXXR, FAIR coaQBtM Floor shift and much chrome SB engine. (BIB Bonnie Brinr, Pontiac Lake, after 3.1A 1050 CHEVROLET. TRI-POWER, 3N Sapaad. FE 6-4704 *alg^s.%agiirm UM CHEVROLET PARKWOOD Ml CHEVROLET IMPALA. door hardtop, Ham copper « cream^ full pawar, axe. cm MARVel“ iIotORA* ^351*’ - liifum , n HIT EW ALL __EB. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. AaiWM payments of flfe‘iTFSS%%S« Harold Turner. Ford. _ boo CHEVY "CONVERTIBLE. OWN. “Sw! ______________ AIR 4- aybador. FowergHda. ra-boater, aun tan copper ftn-EK PATTERSON CHBV-i1 CO.; 1000 8: WOODWARD --------fQHAM. Ml PAW. MdMXA. 3-b00R IN. LBS -- ---- box. ISAM SF** ar. n MA Raw eeN NH tm |tl •A 0-DOQN mom. Rlggtne, —- It CHRYSLER, fUDIO AND heater, 'MM condition, ap money dawa, KB prior 0307. Assume jMmeaU_of .410 par month Call Mr. wfito. Credit iluWt, ir“ " “* *■ nal ohlii 1 with radio S3S 04 Tnonthiy" LLoV? MOTORS Lincoln. Mercury. Comet. Meteor. 331 ». Baglnnw. FE MU1. HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TINES. POWER 8TEERINO. ABSOLUTELY WO MOBET DOWN. * ---- MI ATOM Harold Tumor. Ford. INI ENOU8H FORD. 4-DOOR. ' “-7 radio aad tttor. mom 4 DOOk Ike to trad ’N Chryi FB 04311 -----choose from at only ttlM. Baay terms. PATTERSON CHXV-Rourr co., mb A woodward AVE. BIRMINGHAM. 1C 43TN 1958 FORD 4-DOOR SEDAN. VI EN- 10H FORD. PAIR LANE. 540. •*— hardtop, full power. IN ___HIS. FE 4-lMT 1057 FORD CONVERTIBLE V-0 engtos, stick shift. Stock with rod trim. Only Q7N. Easy terms. FATTEltBON CHEVROLET CO.. 10M 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIR- 858 FORD. RADIO AND HE-excellant condition, no down, full prida (BPI7 A__ Bsnssr &u£.u a.T.t NO FIAT BMNCH1NA COlTVl DLK RADIO, HEATER, WH1 WALL TIRES ABSOLUTELY MONET DOWN. Assume payments of ntAB par month. Call Credit Mgr., Mr. Parks, at 4-7500, Harold TUmtr, #ord year warranty I TV M»m UA M. BbiMnr a paint Needs new'n t. rsdio. bister. __ Uf uniitin 1 Mm-ihorp! CLARK8T0N MOTOR wwiBli M» Orohoid Ltiu. 99 Mm: _ 1962 T-Bird -Hardt* rdtop tor. fully 176 B. MansflelA FE MtOA 1962 FORD GALAXIE'500’ V-8 e n gt n e, automatic transmission, radio, heater, white- sidewall tires, power steering. Chestnut finish. Only /,000 miles. Official’* car. Only $2579. Easy terms. JEROME-FERGUSON LBtfl New and Ussd Cars jrieert^ and power hrakae. co5a-lT«mirt.] o It* 2r&m BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth S. Woodward 1014 Compare These Values isSyrEtWe XPJK' MwmMlif.. Hid. . 1847 PPM Fmlrlane 500, 4 Baer *°P’ SoMf after refused Superior Auto Soles-550 OAKLAND AVE. RAMBLER NEW 1962 AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION . RADIO AND HEATER WHITEWALL TIRES WINDOW WASHERS ANT!-mE2E TURN SIGNALS . 12 mo.—12,000 mild warranty—All toxto ond licBnod $59.00 Down' $55.16 Mo. (Dpl*vwr«d) SECECT USED CARS 1961 CHEVROLET 1960 COMET. 2-Door Sedan with radio and whitewall tire*. This to,«___JH HI____________ •oiks, a sharp Birmingham trade, to. Bros. This mtal cmtdMon. M prtM ♦ IJW. 1959 FORD , tourptoa Ml prica Oaty $991. 1959 RAMBLER ■d-cylinder with outpmalic tronuni*- 1959 CHEVROLET ttw» Slrattoghom trade. Vest must ana this. 30 mamho to poy the tuH jirica of only $895. 1959 VAUXHAU. - BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 666-S* WOODWARD Ml 6-3900 I860 THUNDERBIRD HARDTOP. IT rttriltrla power. 1 .aamar aad real sharp ear, month' LLOYD ry-Cotnai-- iaw. FE 3413L Uoo. saa this one Pull pr ______ -jasthly paymtuts at (MM. LLOTDkftnWB,ISr-'-Mercury-Comat-Mataor 333 1959 FORD CUSTOM vi. . NmlP^RPI transmtoaloo and full prtot. One year 'trarranty I Bab ) Lincoln Mercury. One Stalk of XI Mile on u J MI MS3t. 1964~FORD' A-OK. TRAN8POR ban MMlal tut nt MABV _ ,_____ MARVEL iui», MI OAKLAND ATtC. B-4QTO. Buy haw, pay hare. Up FORD OALAE1E l-DOOR hardtop with Automatic transr TORS. Lincoln. Maraury. Osn Meteor, MB 8. 8aglnaw Bt. Mia 1151 FORD 4-DOOR STATION Wl._ ON. RADIO. HEATER, WHITE-WALL TPtKB. ABSOLUTELY HO MONEYS DOWN. AMUmo psy-mente of BM.TR~PltJMM. Call Credit StfT^rnim-n! — 4-7500, Harold Turner. Ford. J BUY ANYKDfD OR MODEL gtt^MOTOR ““ JE" *“ - tot FORD 4-DOOB, RADIO HEAT. IPt. JtU TO MA TIC TRAN 8- DOWN. Atsama naymtato of BM.' --------cj»n artfit.kg- wblta _______ _____ ____ ------------------.RKBTOffSfo! TOR jJgjLEt. B4B Orchard Lake. UM FORD PAIRLANE CONVXRT-Ms.. Vt meter, Fewer steering and brakes, good eoodltton, MM; UM Ford 3-door, automatic, t- .feJMLMMp. “ ‘ 1167 FORD PAIRLANE — . (torn with V-g. awtamstts transmission, radio, hantor. one-owner, and no money dtgitl imuma ttdrb*moycS^i£(AlV ' —i. Meteor, Comet. 133 B. | rantyl BOB BOBUT LINCOLN IRsCSBsZtFS alon. whitewall t qnoise finish. Ft pawar steering, f LLOYD MQ173BB. I .l-Mercury-Comet-Meteor. 8- Baglnnw.' FK SBUI. LINCOLN \fK§jR-r°roeB^k2k ^ “■ __ __'! LLOYD ifiAM S eato, Maraury, Comet. — KBagtnaw. FB MUL 1557 MERCURY l-DOOR HARD-top Radio aad baatar, tutoiaatle 1 traasmtoaton. tilt down and assume monthly paymeote of 434 17. LLOYD MOTORS. Llncoln-Mer enry f%net Metaer. - MB B. at•) nmt.-lmiiui.. - - . Ilf* FORD CUBTOMLINE 3-DOOR straight stick trsasmlMian, Vt aBMmt axoaltoat toadiUea. Take over payments at 11 It par weak ABSSluriDLY1* NO “m O N ifV DOWN. Aito Bala*. Ft Huron (at Eltoabeth r6 ^-^&LAar Mjf. dear, power brakes, power atasr. & ifftt ii**' •*l‘ New Cor Sale Now Going On! $99.00 DOWN WILL BUY A NEW 1962 PONTIAC •ORA 1962 RAMBLER DEMONSTRATORS 1962 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 1962 AMBASSADOR RAMBLER WAGON AB rod. pswtr tliutos. power brakaa. Baa this cn* aad sav< 1962 RAMBLER CLASSIC 400 SEDAN WAGON SALE 1961 RAMBLER Super Wgyon .$1795 I960 RAMBLER WAGON ..$1295 J tyltodir. stick Shift, law paint. 1959 RAMBLER WAGON ..$1095 1959 RAMBLER American Wagon .... .$ 895 d-cyllnder. lUck shift. Oaa an VS*. 1955 FORD RANCH WAGON 395 Used Car Specials I960 FALCON 2-DOOR SEDAN .............$U95 t-c^yUnder. .Uck shift, radio, batter. A bargain. 1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA HARDTOP $1395 V4 engine, stick 4-4oor. 1959 RAMBLER AMERICAN 2-DOOR .. $ 795 t-eyUnder, aBab. radio, baatar. Oaa aovor. 1958 FORD FAIRLANE 500 ...............$ 795 V-B anttne. power ateartag and brakaa. 1958 FORD FAIRLANE 2-DOOR ............$695 1957 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR SEDAN ......$ 495 v-g aagtte. aatomafte. radio, betear. 1956 CADILLAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP ... .$ 895 Fewer steering, pawar hrakae. 1956 CADILLAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP ... -$ 995 Power men ring, power hrakae. " 1956 PONTIAC 4-DOOR SEDAN.............$495 Power titering, pawar brake* > ' 1956 BUICK 2-DOOR HARDTOP ...._______$ 495 Aatootatta. radio and baatar, A bargain. ' j 1960 RAMBLER AMERICAN .$1495 1960 RAMBLER 4-DOOR SEDAN ...........$1295 f-ayhater, stick ehlft, whftiwite 1957 BUICK 2-DOOR SEDAN 795 Automatic. whlUwalla. radio, hoator. iaiA ■ ' W. 1957 PONTIAC 4-DOOR SEDAN.............$695 RUSS JOHNSON i M-24 at the Stoplight Sg LAKE ORION MY 3-6266 flfTlr-six laiMCpi 104 4- THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1969 1955 FORD 4-DOOR mm 8agtne^ll7K * MOREY DOWN. Assume psy-| meats af S17.W Per month Call Credit Mfc'iritifa at “» 4-liaa, Harold Toner, Port. NMHdlM{n 104 taaou ra*Hui MB PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR NBLVB-i. Power No eying not brakee. Ursa and battery. |3M. Ml power ;^rb.;‘«i.?*Vfi KKroW Lincoln. Mercury, Comet, Hrt— M l. Saginaw it WHW. RADIO. HXA'npt TRANSMISSION. NO MONET DOW1 WHY NOT? Enjoy the comfort and prestige of a Bolck? Here'i a fin* dynalfowdawl whSteaall^ilrea^ai you eea own ter «b- $1395 Remember, we encourage you to check our cart with a mechanic you know and trust. FISCHER BUICK . 784 S. Woodward, B’ham MI 4-6222 * ACRota prom ORixinmcuyi Sharp Cars GLENN'S ’M PORD t-door, m pontxac kardtop ’M PONTIAC power ....new M OUR IP hardtop. lire* •MM aa .. tUM sharp 31*03 w*n. . tiees tt PORD wagon, power • Mt •m STAR CHIRP hardtop .. HIM M Pontiac Mner hardtop HIM *3* CHEVROLET Moor, cleao I 3M GLENN'S Motor Sales „ ^bMWeet anna Street PE 4-7371 PE 4-1717 iif? PLYMOUTH, SPASSINOER wwn. A-l Name, tit MT MM Mmjmi B ARE : you FUSSY? ■ - jjfe OOCXH WE'VE O O T A CAR HERE THAT WILL MEET THE DEMANDS OP THE MOST EXACTING PERFECTIONIST. Mtt Rutek Ltojatoe eedao. Raby Mae with metehtn* Martas, radio, beater, dynaflow, saat beHe. E-Z eye (late lad whitewall (tree! PrtC* $2495 FISCHER - BUICK 784 S. Woodward, B’ham MI 4-6222 ACROSS PROM ORIEBHFmUya 1»M PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN 4-door eedao. Sadia and heater, bydram site treaeaileetna sharp V owner and naif 33,300 miles ea this see. MilR . \ 1959 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, conyertlhle, silver (ray. ' emeel-lent condition. (1.0*0. OL S-33S1. MtJBT SELL, 10M PONTIAC fTA-tlon wagon, radio, heater, auto. “---------t. Q1M. OR 3-H4T, HASKINST OLDS DEMO SALE HASKINS Chevrolet-Qlds New MdUmjCm 1961 PONTIAC WILSON pontiAc-cadillac 1350 N. Woodward I Birmingham Ml 4-1930 1IM MET*6 dbOmCRTIBLEP radio, MRlMHiKli. -a ece-owner, warn ear trade! tlB down. mK per Bkl LLOYD MOTORS, Uneota, Mereury. Com-et, MeWTTHS. Safins» PE 34m. car warranty. MU pries SUN- SI Pslcoa 4-door, aparMM« ret finish, rotM and Beater, automatic treasmUslaa, deluxe trim. Pull price SUSS- t I doer, • eyltn- Stirk Hickey, Clawson 4 Mile Read boMraea .Crooks aw Mila, miwmr the Oawsm Hm Ihgfl t»p_ RAjflTWB 4MEMCAE DE- UNM| MOTOR RALES MS Orchard Lake PE Mm CRAKE MOTOR SALES FE 8-6822 Wm mi gwdlwi tm-Rmwm «• ms. R&C RAMBLER . SUPER MARKET ( 3-41M lit* Commerce Ro PUBLIC NOT1CEH (ml chonca 10 gat thaw municiple cart at a , ltd) good buy. MUST LIQUIDATE IMMEDIATELY! (3) 1961 Chevrolets, 4-door, V8 angina- with outotnatic frantmittion. No Money Down. ‘(f) 19$1 Ford, V.8 angina v No Money Down. (2) 19$6 Fords, 4-doors. Government cart. No Monty Down. . (1) 1957 Chevrolet Business Coupe, Government ear. hjo Money Down. g SWiALIor h straight stick transmission. THIS WEEK ONLY . 1957 Dodge445oor____ _• •• Im-S27S 1957 4uick445por............ . ,U; ... S495 1957 Pondac 4-Door............... S495 LUCKY AUTO SALES 15 Yoon in Pontiac Here Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. - , 193 S. $AGINAW ' * fE 4-22T4 End-of-Month Sale All This Week at MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 5 BRAND NEW 6.70x15 or 7.50x14 Whitewall GOODYEAR TIRES WITH EVERY CAR PURCHASED—AT NO EXTRA COST ALL WITH ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE (Small Additional Charge lor 800x14 Tires) "Chevy-Land” FE 5-4161 631 Oakland at Cass FE 44547 Ea Cash Mooted I $W Bel. Due 3*7 S3 U PACKARD 3 door IBaL Oaa 3*7 «t SJ «t K L-.nJ',!arUc,%.ua *2. etst* ^3^ > N PONTIAC hartlip sharp I SaL Dus 3»t 3U3 Wk. . W PORD 3 Saar stick! •aL DM 037 H.N Wk. Bat. * ^tia wk. 34.13 Wk. 1 M PLYMOUTH 4 Saar sharp! Bat. Dus S(t| M U Wk. . CREDIT MAN OM POTT-.. 150 S. Saginaw ~ r LOT PR 34171 LOOK t*sS!i<8u Saxlnaw, PE ,333. Ea moasy down. %^3pg M3 S. 1913 OLDSMOBILE tt 3-DOOR hardtop With Mack finish Rsdto. Power' steering and brakes. S1.S7S. Oaa yaar warranty! BOB wF— 1*6* OLDS 39 OOMYER11BLE. Pawar steering tad brakes, ta-' die. heater, powgr eatsnna. 3L77I. er and whlUwsns. gioas. *Tianf^rr inTi-Tr^ MANY MOHI TO CMOOSE PROM! ; HAUPT PONTIAC TWri- I960 OLDeMOBELE ‘W’-fcONViSi r m 111 . uitmulU Munki tag MS Makes! ItoarkUng e . flnlsh! And U tn Uke aew Do You Like to Go First Class? WERE STILL ON A SELLING SPREE-BETTER HURRY! We Believe We Have the Largest and Best Stock in Rochester '60 Bonneville 3 Seer hardtop, fww Mimas; 1958 Olds 1959 Ford 1959 Buick 1960 Ford 1959 Buick (lisrhu. power brakee, Bptra- sarlnts If yea buy aawl wja msn ln RochaeMr- Extra whltewalla. rldee a^l • See sv CPU OT PERLMAN 1960 Buick 1957 Pontiac wwer Chief t-door wagon. By draasatta. rsdlo. heatsr. Aa Id sal family wspm sod reatr (a Siva the ray best la ssrrtae. Better hurry! ■aa or Can JOKN DONLEY 1959 Pontiac •tar Chief setsa. Hydrsmetlc. Don’t ha (aa latet 1959 Buick 4-dear etdan. Dynaflow. radio, boater, whitewall*. A iwt and white heeuty. Neally aa eyefuL See or Call JOHN DONLEY 1960Vduxhall Pour Star sedan. Radio, heater, law miioa«t. a real pae (new. The prioe Is right. See or CHI CY PERLMAN '59 Chevrolet Impale 3-door hardtop. Power Here's the Cream of the Crop Right Here on Our Loti 1960 Buick LeSabre Convert. Pawtr steering aat brakee. Dynaflow transmission, radio, boater —* -*•*—■*- Ym with while top. 1956 Pontiac ■Iseten. Y-S engine, radio, heater, hhsa aad Ivory first or sisiS family ear. 1955 Buick 1961 Tempest 4-Door Sedan StiHraS flaWLS I960 Comet 1961 Pontiac CSmearUHa with p 1959 Pontiac 4-Door Hardtop Fewer steering sad brakes, Hydramati* transmlsisoa. wbltewau ttiwa. Beautiful eeppsr finish. pawer staeiMk aowar hi ...... i. n. — HydramatlC. radio, hOOUl 1960 Valiant '59 Bonneville 1958 Pontiac Mar Chief four deer hardtop. Fewer steering and brakes, Hy-drsmatlc, radio, heater, white-walle. You go first slam In this 1961 Pontiac DEXTER KENNEDY '59 Chevrolet 1960 Ford Ki ▼-» sngtns, radio. Baa ar Call CY PERLMAN 1960 Pontiac •to *r Can JONN DONLEY 1958 Buick with trim. IP Ford Oalaxl* ceavarttbla. Power _ steering, power brakes. Pord-O- ] QR{] Kfllfelr Matte. Y-S sngtns, radio, heater. A CAAJ UUiCF. ■aa to OhO NOE IMLTM wjjR~~ hiaati- gee or C See or CaU PAT JARYIS I960 POnUOC 1959 Ford 3-daot hardtop. Fewer steering. hear this — guaranteed — Only a« «to miles. Yes. that’s right, •aly SS333 mites. It's hsAottfuL See or Can CY PERLMAN 1961 Monza fto* BMW used. | '57 Chevrolet | Are- Birmingham Ml t-rrn iUp Valia NT V-»i *-d6or ste- i^j?»«in^te£»i M gold finish with Prwy tap, gee or am JOHN DONLEY 1956 Pontiac tire*. A local one-owner eat really aa eyeful. •to ar Can RON HOELTON See or CaU PAT JARYIS NEW CAR PRICES START HERE: TEMPEST $2186. PONTIAC $2725. BUICK SPECIAL $2304 COME TO SHELTON rrs ONLY > SHORT RILES TO I960 Buick Pontiac ROCHESTER Buick Mill1 223 MAIN ST. - OL 1-8133 ACROSS FROM OUR NEW CAR SALESROOM realty ready. Bltra low afto-ago. . xrf i ■m « cm Nat jarym 1961 Buick immsa tsr\ tea or, Can EQtr SHELTON '60 Chevrolet DCXTBt^EENNEDT I "Top Grade" Gars 'Top Grade" Allowance For Your Old Car '61 BUICK LeSabre..,... $2885 46w hardtop, mtowaSt trnnwlislus, radio, haoter, pawar Nearing, power broket, whitewalls, tinted glatL cadet Mua (inith. '61 BUICK LeSabre...... $2685 2-door etdan, with automatic tronsmlssten, radio, heater, power peering and brakes whitewall^ spot light and fawn mist finishl '61 PONTIAC Bonneville,. $2885 fmmbraksLgeMfbibhwMifMtching triad ' '61. BUICK LeSabre.. . ... $2995 m»rtng.pa«wrhrwlmmmtiriatleu%gMieMdi!griawf5Sto feted Chratae ride awldingt. '60 T-BIRD Convertible... $2495 A tparUng ysBow ftalth wtb • W*« «fh fnl powv and whbNmSsI '60 FALCON Wagon .... $1195 WMi radtey heater, gtondard trnnwnWoa with deluxe trim! Beautiful afl wddte fhhlii '60 FALCON Ranchero... $1095 Picta-p vutih a tight Hue flnlsb, radcb heater, whiiewalli, the pUwp you have beto looking tori '60 BUICK LeSabre...... $2285 ilniib mb • tehte topi drape ride wtedow noMngil '60 PONTIAC Starchiet.. $2285 '60 SIMCA 4-Door.. . . . . $695 Sedas «d* 4 epeed Irabimbikuh radio osd beoteri '59 BUICK Electro....... $1895 *225* 4-door hardtop wMt M poww, rodtag heater, whitewnlL lawn mtoflnlih. Buick'* bast In'591 '59 BUICK Electro........ $1785 Atber suriteh-urih uutuuiuilt kwi mutate r, ratlcb heater, psum ttenteg and pottortrahuLTriitownlls and dated glouri '59 BUia LeSabre...... $1685 84eer Sudan, mh rad and white ftddt, outetuoHc tranimhiion, raJto heater, whitewall chroaw window moldingil '5? PLYMOUTH Savoy... $995 Adoor sedan, vriStoiSoteqfclraitonltelaiv radio, heater and extra deem! *- -**1 rnml Anttkl Ddauniui coral Tinisni '58 BUICK Spedal...... $1185 4-doof 8§Jm Trill outemalte lMMWM|y ftxfto, hecitir^ wfUtvwat^ power riMilng ood brakeil '58 BUICK Century...... $1185 Howltop rib roeflojy beAQi riliMAi power steering, power brakeil '58 BUICK Special..................$1285 Wagon wth automatic Irnntiwluteii^ radio, heater, power Nearing and power broke* and whitowalln '58 EDSEL 4-Door.................. $685 Wh rad mdteHafcMhisite letter BswwKradaad tehSeMeM '57 BUia Special .__________________$885 4-door hardtop wWh radio, heater, whftewaib and a beautKel dorit gressi liniihl '57 CHEVROLET 2102-Door $795 ASototMe iroiiimhilon, fodtab heater, VS vrfth a tu4eao finish. '59 FORD Wagon..,.... $1185 Wlh aetesteMe traemteriaiL rsdhb heater, oledittelh brameteyl kW '56 BUKX 4-Door ..... $595 Stdea Mb aetomailc traemMaR, rodla, heater aed a told hies Mil 210 Orchard Lake A'THfc Mjp, mi lii or hardtop. I Ck« radio on : trnmiliiton, one b going $995 taros. Wo ere tatting this one ge Cheap. , . $1595 I960 PONTIAC Super 2-door herdtop. n has ell the ftavy likii radio and heater. Hydromolic tronsmission, wl.ito««ll Kras This one b going real tew* ■fttd 1959 PONTIAC Cotolina convertible with radio ond (ton. Wo ite very proud to daw end all thta one es * b In excel, lent condition. 1959 PONTIAC. J^S£S^ fcxinovUle Convertibta. hot “ — - end, (Motor, Hydrouutle tret sion, power brakes end f steering. Here is an exc running outomoblla. $1995 ' $2095 $1695 195 i h m i tart see it »l $ll295 mission, it has ppwer brakes and power steering. TMs one wll be real hard to beqt-at any lot Our -low price le •1960 PONTIAC. 1958 PONTIAC- Cotolina 4-door hardtop wfeh Hydromolic transmission, power broket dnd Steering, has radio and heater. Another ttao bargain from your friendly Retail Stare. $2295 1960 PONTIAC $1795 1 Thta 2 door b q Star Chief with I960 PONTIAC whitewall tires. Also has a radio ’ out heater, Hydromolic traesmls-sion, power brake* and steering ore but a few of the selling appoint- sionj power brakes and power Steering ond whitewall tires. $2295 1960 PONTIAC Catalina end H It a convertible besides. It has radio and heater, Hydromolic transmission, power brake* and .power steering are but a taw of the many NneHatures present I* this automobile. ' $2295/ • 1961 PONTIAC , This 6 powengw Catalina wagon l» M the car for that summer trip, b hot radio and heator,'Hydramottc ’ transmission, power 'bn^as and power steering. A large family . would really appreciate this one. power brakes and power steering, has Tri-fowtr angina and 1* Just the car (or you. $1895 1960 PONTIAC Cotaltao I-door sedan, h has radio and heeler, Hydromattc transmit-itai, this one has power brakes and power steering. TMt One b h mint condition. .$2195 ' .1956. PONTIAC Here Is a hardtop that Is a 2-door, It hot radio ond heater, oub-motlc trtmsmtasloe end Is fust the $595 ' 1959 CHEVY-. ■ station wagon with hot a radio fl_ HHSNJ, ’ one would bn oe etdraihtao car far die weekend of fishing yov'vd ‘been thinking about; $2496 $2195 $1395 1961 • PONTIAC Catalina • Convertible with radio ond heater, Hydramatic transmit* sion, whitewall tires, power brakes and power steering, an exba nice car. $2695 1961 PONTjAC Ventura • Vista model and formerly a factory official ear. It has radio and heater. Hydro* matic transmission and al* ways been kept in excellent condition. $2795 Shop . On 11 Our I -BIG-1 .-LOT- J Where 4 There's I Parking Space , Galore • For YOU! ; . WHY BUY NOW? fmmmiw AFTER THE SALE- The Season is The Reason WE SERVICE . , ■ "Goodwill Used Car Lot —at — 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 FACTORY BRANCH RETAIL STORE SAVINGS—DEPENDABILITY—VARIETY.—SATISFACTION—SAVINGS FE 3-7954 REPOSSESSIONS BANKRUPTCIES • STORAGE CARS ESTATE STORAGE CO." Tfi LIQUIDATION LOT ..........J| — 69 Cars Must Be Liquidated — _ ; '57 Mercury 2-Door Hardtop with a kraal* and tan flnleh, heater. ” Storage Price $497 $5.28 Weekly . ’58 Metro 2-Door Hardtajj, Beautiful red with • white top, stick ihttt. Claw Iniid* Storage Price $497 $5.28 Weekly '58 Hillman 4-Door rf Storage Price $497 $5.28 Weekly *57 Ford Retractable Hardtop with an all white ftnlah, and to beauUful tnalde and unlit Storage Price $797 $7.96 Weekly ’56 Buick 2-Door Hardtop«wllh' a powder blue flttoh. Storage Price $397 ’60 Renault Dauphine All xreen with s leather hitortor. low aUtoage, Storage Price $597 *59 Hillman Sedan ’ - 1 4-Door oMi an aU black ftnlah and red taidbur Interior! Storage Price $597 $578 Weekly '53 Nash Rambler •Ooor Hardtop Qood irnnaportotloo. Light gnua with a white topi Storage Price $97 $4.89 Weekly radio 00* heater. $5.78 Weekly 97c Weekly '56 Ford 2-Door rhtte (talih, Perl, automatic tranemtoatan. Storage Price $197 $187 Weekly ’55 Oldsmobile 2-Door Hardtop. BeauUful powder blue and rune like newt Storage Price $197 $187 Weekly '56 Dodge 2-Door Hardtop- ItauUnil black ftetoh with leather Interior. Excellent IranaporaUocI Storage Price $197 $1.87 Weekly '*55 Mercury2*Door Hardtop. Beautiful black with :a white topi Merc-O-Matlc trani-mleilon, radio, beater and Whitewalls lfaehancially perfect I Storage Price $297 $2.77 Weekly *56 Plymouth Wagon Storage Price $197. $2.77 Weekly '57 Dodge 4-Door BuauttM coral and white ftatab. Automatic tranemlerioa. radio, banter. Batata ear, prioed to aeUI Storage Price $297 $2.77 Weekly ’57 Ford 2*Doof Stick, ; -2Stea. glowing Mack with a white tap. radio, hatter, mechanlcaup *0004! Storage Price $297 $2.77 Weekly ’56 Chevrolet 2-Door Bla. h< > Phjrf Storage Price $97 97c Weekly '54 Ford Wagon Country Sedan, 4-Doer Ns ruat. Bsauttful (net ftetoh. Storage Price $397 $4.89 Weekly *55 Buick Special 4-Ds->r Hardtop with an all Mask ftnlah, radio, heater nod automatic traneWilieton. Really claaal Whltewalli! Like M* WN|k- Storage Price $297 $277 Weekly '55 Ford .Victoria $4.87 Weekly and Hydrai Storage Price $297 $277 Weekly , ’55 Buick Convertible With automatic tranemlaetoo. radio, taster and beauUful fllftaft rad ftetoh. New tap. and whitewall*. Thl« one l* Uke newt Storage Price $497 $578 Weekly ’57 Ford 2-Door Ranch Vara with a beauUful mtot sreea ftetoh. VVrd-O-lfiUe traaa-miealon, radio, tatter sad prtoa way below teaital value! Storage Price $497 $578 Weekly ’54 Buick Super J-Door Hardtop. Beautiful powder blue flatob. radio, hunter, whrte-walto. Extra clean! Storage Pride $297 Storage Price $397 ’57 Chevrolet 2-Door , With s d-cyllnder, eUek tranimtoelon. light green ftetoh. A really ntea ear throughout l Storage Price $497 $5.28 Weekly ’55 Pontiac Catalina $578 Weekly ’55 Chevrolet 2-Door Storage Price $297 $277 Weekly *58 Plymouth 2-Door , Md’whliwtatol* ^ ^ A«mM° Storage Price $497 $5.28 Weekly ’53 Studebaker 4-Doof todanwHb powder Mta ftetoh and etratght tttek. Brat (ood traaa- Storage Price $97 97c Weekly' *53 Pontiac Z-Dodr .. ick ftetoh and whitewall*. 97c Weekly j with a VS Storage Price $97 '52 Ford 2-Door With Mick ifatft end a VS engine. Rwu Uke Storage Price $47 47c Weekly* *53 Ford 4*Door S^ Mtha rawdejj btau teddk. T4 e Storage Price $97 97c Weekly* ’56 Chevrolet 4-Door Jit Sedan wMh an aH black flatob, tefl engine. PowergUde tnuumtoi Storage Price $197 $1,87 Weekly *52 Chrysler 4-Door ^ Imperial witk a dark green flatob radio an* beater. Storage Price $47 ■ ? 47c Weekly FE 3-7161 We Arrange and Handle All Financing! Credit Man on Duty to "OK” Your Application — One Location Only to Serve You Better — ESTATE STORAGE CO Comer of Auburn Rd. and South East Blvd T’Wfi mm&z I ?tff THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, APRIL 86.1062 Eto OF THE MONTH SALE New Gar Trade-Ins ' ’58 T-Bird Hint top with radio, heater. *kil»waIH, powtr it»«rto| pow; . tr brake* and paver wlndowe! : $1795 '60 ! Volkswagen | With radio, beater, whitewall*. I $1195 '59 Chevrolet gow^rtth *•«“* •»<« $1095 '61 Chevrolet w*jgjb» with null* teat- "$2195* '57 Mercury loinmnaui with radio, $795 • '60 falcon Solid Mae with radio, beat-end whitewall* An economy '60 Ford whitewall*. Extra cl $1295 $1495 '61 Ford $1995 '61 T-Bird $3295 '60 Falcon h£t£ ttto^tnSamlSffil: $1545 '57 Chevrolet 2S°$eo'3s.7« HSto'hSiS!?' $895 '59 Rambler Amtrlceu with radio, heater end whitewall*. It la e jewel throughout! $795 "**$995 ' '60 Ford A-l $1295 '57 Buick $695 '60 Rambler American with radio, beater and white walla I $1095 PARKING ON'REAR OF* OUR LOT John McAuliffe Ford 630 OAKLAND AVE. OPEN MON., TUE., THURS. TIL 9 P.M. MI? BANKRUPTCIES, STORAGE , ETC. With Absolutely & CHOOSE FROM ALMOST 100 CARS SUCH AS THESE: Car Bal. Weekly f)ue 1 Pymt. Car Bal. Weekly Due Pymt. '58 Chevy 4-door Wagon..............................$597 $6.89 '56 Ford 2-door Stick V-8 ........................ $197' $2.21 '57Plymouth Hardtop.........$397 $4.45 '53 Ford 4-door Stick.................................97 $1-09 '59 Renault Dauphlne_____... ..*...................$497 $2^t . '56 Lincoln Premiere Hardtop.......................,.$197 $2.21 '56 Mercury 4-door ............. $297-' $3.33 '57 Ford 2-door Automatic 8.........................$397 $4.45 '57 Plymouth 4-door Wagon .....................,....$497 $5.57 '57Buick Hardtop............................. ....$597 $6.69 '55 OldemobHe 88 Coupe......................... ...$197 $2.21 '58 Chevrolet, like New.......................... $797 $7.$8 '55‘Chrysler Hardtop............................. $197 $2.21 '56 Ford Fairlane 4-door......................... $297 $333 '57 Buick Comprtible .................. •••••••• $797 $7.88 '56 Chevrolet 2-door.... *........................ $197 $2.21 PLUS MANY OTHERS '58 Mercury 4-door .......................,......... $497 $5.57 '56 Oldsmobile 88 Hardtop.......................... $397 $4,45 '57 Rambler 4-door Stick............................ $197 $2.20 '59 Chevrolet Sedan Delivery...................... :$597 $6.69 '55 Buick Convertible............... $297 *3,33 '57 Chevrolet 4-door Stick 6.........................$497 $5.57 '56 Pbnflac Hardtop....U.............................$197 $2.21 '56 Rambler Station Wagon........................... $297 $3.33 '55 Ford Pickup,newmdtor.................... ........$397 $4.45 '53 Chevrolet Station Wagon.............j.,....$ 97 $2.21 '59 Ford, 1 owner’................................. $897 $890 '56 Plymouth Station Wagon..........................*.$297 $3-33 '55 Buick Hardtop................................. ..$197 $2.21 '58>ord 500 Hardtop.................a....*...........$797 $7.88 '57 Chevrolet Hardtop................................$497 $5.57 Harlfcy Davidson "74" Motorcycle..........,...$397 . $4.45 PLUS MANY OTHERS LIQUIDATORS Comer W. Huron (M*59) — Elizabeth Lake Rd. PHONE APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED OPEN 9 AM TO 9 PM DAILY - 9 AM TO 9 PM SATURDAY BILL SPENCE^-NOW OFFERS FULL LINE OF "JEEPS" wm FULL 'JEEr LINE JEEPS PICKUPS STATION WAGONS TRUCKS Come Out and Take a Demonstration Ride Today 9 Out of 10 Can Buy With No Money Down Over 40 Good Select Used Gars in Stock '58 Pontiac Hardtop Steer wtetMhUutat..hilin $1195 '57 Ford Retractable WMb V-8, ouK $1095 # ” '51 Rambler American gjgggtt’gg K eai |* »e e*l Nmei* • tW ae $48 par mote w*h SI50 doeml $1595 '60 Comet 2-Door . ‘ $1395r>.— '61 Chevrolet Corvoir 4*ar ed* web e Mg *et*A 4e**4 aw—l—io^ owe owwar; aew car Wodw M J— lAe a— la every woyl ’ $1845 '58 Chevrolet Bel-Air 2-deer aedea wih automatic a—h alee—d later. Geerutead octet JJr 8* baawyt Jew the aew $1195 '61 Pontiac Catalina CeneenMn. w#h outomotic heat. minion, radio, heater, power steering and Mm. BoateM maroon finieh erlth while topi $5895 '59 Ford Custom .*300* with a V-8 engine, automatic transmission, radio, heater. One Owner, new cor trade-in! This is one at the shortest we have ■ ever hod on our tori \ $1195 . '61 Chevrolet Impala Convertfcle w*h V-8 engioe.au*>- $2595 '57 Chevrolet 4-Door Sedan with V-8 engine, automatic $945 '61 Rambler Classic Super notion wogon, with 6-cyl engine, radio, healer. One owner $1995 '60 Rambler Super SoHic nation wagon wtih Acyl $1595 '60 Ford Galaxle 4-door eedon, with V-8, auto* matte transmission, radio, heat- tone blue finish. $157$ '57 Chevy Convertible 1 With fowerglide transmission, V-8 engine, radio, heater, white* walls, out of state cor and fat very deanl New top and a harvest gold finishl $1190 . '59 Rambler Oasslc I Super 4-door with 6 STATE AND FEDERAL Delivered in Your Yard for Only *1795- .This is_the Car that Won the Mobil Econorny Run with 31.11 miles per gallon. *45 DOWN *57 A MONTH —36 MONTHS TO PAY- BILL SPENCE OWNER CHUCK VANCE Sains DON GRAHAM Solas 50 GALLONS OF GAS WITH EVERY CAR PURCHASE! wh\ lSALES •\r- CLARKSTON, MA.5-5861 SERVICE GENE SPENCE SALES LOU GREER Salts Mgr. LES PICKUP Servica Mgr. THE, PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APR^L 26, 1962 FiTTr4mm •Today'^ Television Programs- Long-Titled Shows Blossom on Video mm (ft Love of Lite M) (Color) Your Vhat Im- «:« (ft Movie (com.) (4) Wyatt Earp (7) Hone Kant (coot.) (ft Popeye (Cont.) NEW YORK — The hour-long television program mafly hw been the year in which titles became almost as long as the programs themselves. For example, there was a "Naked City” episode called "Today the Man Who Kills the Ants is Coming." There is an upcoming "Route 66" show called "There I Am. .Thane I Always Am." light and nine word subtitles art • RENTAL • SOFT WATER tl:M (ft Sports (4) Sports (9) Telescope UAW lit 91 (ftMpvie: “TO the End ol Time." (1946) A returned GI tails in leva with widow ol tiler. Ooy Madtent. Dorothy MeCMie. Robert Mitchum, Bill Williams, Tom Tullyt. (1) Weather 111* (ft (CUor) Tonight (7) Riverboat (ft Movie: "Hideout.*’ U$4) LINDSAY ^ SOFT WATER CO. t Meehswy It. PI Mill LONG TITLE PRONE Producers of "actuals"—documentaries , public attain and educational shows—are die most long title prooe ol the lot CBS recently had a program whose official tide was "The Great Chai-lenge—U S. and U.S.S.R.: Coexistence or Collision?” SONOTONE House of Hearing frm Hearing Taste NBC doesn’t try to save words, either. A typical tide tor one at Its documentary shows is “NBC White Paper No. U—Arms and the State,” followed fay an a» planation ol what the tide means. ABC tries to slip the sponsor’s name into the title—"Bell and Howell Ckne-Upl Back to Bho- (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day (ft Movie: "Judge Haniy’s. Children” (M) Lorents on FDm toll (ft Verdict Is Yours (ft (ter live Daughters (T) Who Db You Trust? Ml (ft News Is Liz Trying to Steal Scenes in 'Cleopatra*? By EARL WILSON Teamsters Eye Master Contract Hoffa Would Bargain for 1.7 Million Mon at Ona Tim# Wlnrmr..,’ 1 $>’•«• Whonavor • * * . Howovor You Travol... Call Us-FE 8-4048 HIRLINGEB SSZ 28 «. ran it.—fomtiac Site (ft Movie (Cont.) (ft Outlaws (coot.) (7) Donna Read (ft Movie (cant) Ml (Ml Travel MB (ft Movie (Copt) (ft Dr. Kildare (7) Real McCoys (t) Movie (oout) (56) Balance ol Fear «|W (ft Tell It to Groucho (4) Dr. Kildare (com.) (7) My Three Sons (ft Playdate. (ft Zane Cray Diggm union in uk country, puma to seek a master contract lor the vast majority of truck driven in (ft (Color) George Pierrot (7) 3 Stooges and Ginger (ft Popeye and Pals (56) What’s New? Ml (7) Overland Trail (M) Watch Your Language 6:46 (M) News Magazine I II (4) KUda and (MUe Features THE MIDNiGHT EARL... Marilyn Monroe’s new Calif- home will haw* a room especially tor her ex-fetber-k^law, Isidore Miller, when ha visits . . . Jackie ’ Gleeson'U get SOOGs plus a tat percentage tor the film, "Papa's Deli-I cate Condltton" . . . Andy WUIIams’ bride CTauMai will be screen-I tested by MGM. Bob Hope saw Frank Sinatra off on his tour, and crackad: “I feel Sen. John L. McCteUan, D-Ark.. recently urged paaaage of a bill he introduced in the Senate putting both the Teamsters and the West Coast International Longshore- FOQDS Formerly Harrinon'* drill Rowe I ndcr New M»iw|cmci.t, NAB MALKASIAN 1300 NORTH PERRY ST. Across From Modison Jr. Hklh School Bust Lancaster Defends Walkout on TV Program NEW YORK (AP)—Actor Burt Lancaster, Who walked out on a television show, says he frit that OAS Bombs Airliner, , Steps Up Terrorism ALGIERS, Algeria (UPI) -Ter- m.n $29.95 mN m.n $39.95 $49.95 $49.95 $49.95 $79.95 $59.95 Airport today and staged a series of hit-and-run raids in the city itself despite rein forced security patrols. ♦ w , w Nine Moslems were killed and It others wounded in scattered attacks by commandos of the Secret Army Organization (OAS) In Algiers by 11 a.m. T? Fertilizing Pays Off, !lTSays Farm Specialis Thieves No Worry Today's Radio Programs Feels Teachers Can Play Key j Ecumenical Hole j DETROIT m — A public school administrator said today teachers can play a key role in fostering ecumenical spirit In the nation's ITHACA, N. Y. (UPI) - One To Pay Out School Aid LANSING (B—The Department of Public Inetruction bee released about $30 million In state school eld payments fek^tpril. The pay- CONDON’S TV SPECIALS r r r r r r r IT IT F IT t ■ ■ FT ■ if TUP PONTIAC PRESS, fHWOi\Y, APRIL fed, SIXTY starts NATIONAL, C^Y These High-Flying Fashio t ^ are Top-Notch Values at Sears I'fifflfr’fj. Down-to-Karth Price €olton Knit Shirts Hr*. 39*! Coml>*d rollon dip-on or ti«> Q '-l® •Id* »hlrt. Si«*t 6-24 rao». . t3»ars« h 79* Colton V Nylon Shirt,................M Knit Training Pants Reg. 39*! Dbl. knit col* n n„ £ - ton. Shrink*!* con- ^ trolled. Site. 14 fU. UL/ V <:h«r«*li Fitted CHh Short* n . it Infant* Deft., Mala floor seamless stretch nylons Stretches to thterncip, while it Reg, | molds itself to your leg for ■ perfect fit Royal Purple fashion Of tones 'in sizes short, mod,, long Of Choose from: cotton checks, cotton ginghams stripes, solids, • cotton broadcloths, prints. Choose from: jacket dresses, fall skirts, shirtwaists,' balloon sleeves, scoop necks. Choose from: ■sixes 7 to IS, sixes 10 to 20, ’ sixes 14Vfc-24Vk Hosiery Bar, Maim floor Choose from: lace trims, ribbon accents, flower trims, appliqued trims, embroidered accents. Choose from: beige, mint, pink, blue, lilac, peach, maize. iiCy' ' ; Drip-Dry Stretch ,i Creepers Crawlers ft Sears Price ,1W ■ Nylon or cotton and giylon. Km. •lip double bib. Panel,. Fit op to II mot. Infants* Soft Cotton Receiving Blankets Reg* 81.25 9. QO< NO MONEY DOWN on Scare Charge Account . Ladies’ Dresses, Second float Gym Set with Lawn Swing and 8-ft. Slide shop Sears TONIGHT ’til 9 Neat and Natty !) Pedal Pushers Qdilted Crib Blank*! ■ ■ 3.47 boys’washfast * 1 sport shirts I 97c ^..... ' , ... Charge It fine cotton in nedt all-over and conytnatioiul prim,.. Regular •pread collar, arr top-,ritch*d, have permanent stay,. WaahCsrt color, . i, mefsrlaed. Sava now! ,Roys' 82.99 Cotton TwiU Pants, 4-10.. 1.97 Boys* Raincoats Reg. $3.99 2.44 I Boys'B ear, Main Floor Regularly $49:98 in vhM| hues—spirited patterns—smart styles Yonr choice of a vast assortment of trend-setting fabrics and styles. Wanted new colon in cogjon — gabardine, dock, sateen, cord, woven plaid, stripes and tapestry. Includes new knee-capper lengths.. Sixes 10-20. Kerry brooke Walker Short Sets.......set 1.88 NO MONEY DOWN on Scan Eaay Payment Plan 4 passenger lawn awing, 2 swings gym rings, glide rid*, trapes* bar, dunning ban and galvaniaed •1**1 platform slid*. Rusl-rrsistant, sine plated . chain and hardwarr. , • Toy l)ept., Perry Si. Basement L each Charge It I.tidies' Keadr-to-Wear Dept., Second Floor Men’s Fashion Tailored raincoats Reg. nI°° 815;98 ff Charge It FsshhntHright, lightweight fabrics in all-weather styling. Choice of black or green check pettern in sixes 36 to 46. Be prepared for those rainy days, get your raincoat now and. save 96! Shop tonite, tomorrow nntil 9 p.m.! Men’s Fiddraaster casual slacks women’s leather casuals men’s leather casuals Regularly $6.99 £, Charge It Attractive Wedgies its bone, white leather with cut-outs. Comfortable, 'carefree wedgies take to your active, life... ma$e for summer fun. In sixes 5 te 9. Stye today! Halter Sandals hi bone or white, soft glove leather. Snug-fitting. Play year way. through summer in them fashionable sandals. In tiaes 5 to 9. Shop Sears tonite Charge ft Oxfords or Slip-ons ha sixes Y to }2 Here’s flexible, lightweight comfort you’ll enjoy all summer |sm Moc-front styling, trim and masrn-line, in mk leathers which bend freely with your foot. Springy Searofoam soles. Slip-ons in brown, .Mack; oxfords m black, brown, satoko. . Shoe Dept., Main Floor , r'» '*■ f f Charge It1 Crease-resistant cord Jacks of 65% Dacron and 35% cotton in choice of charcoal gray, dark green or tan. In siaes 3Q to 40. Priced to save you more- at Sears. Hurry in today! 154 North Saginaw Phone FE 5-4171 SEARS ROEBl) mm mill* u MU):4 ■ J k DETROIT (UPt) — Detroit .Common Council took only two minutes today to unanimously pass an Income, tax affecting 880,000 people In metropolitan Detroit. Rhino Born in Royal Oak oaah oa hia person, police said. | RonaM 8eaao carried RK. L Police said Philip Scavo ‘was!I shot once in the .leftside of the] neck, the woman twice in the ] I head, and 1 Donald ScavO haS a j neck wound. The three vkhmsn had bled profusely. j j POLICE. CALLED ' ^ | j "Police Sgl. '-Robert Olsen said 11 | the bodies were 1oun0 af\pr he i received a telephone call to in-}; | vestigate an auto' accident. | The auto ‘crashed into a hornet owned by Rudolf Kofnfeind. LWJdT damage was done to the taure. 11 Mrs. Korafeiad tolH^pe, Amo- ; I Hated Pm* she wda awakened | about 3:48 byVriood crash and a screech oj/oirakes. pounds at hirfh‘. 'April. .19, Wu only the rhirioctfos bom in the Unj(ed States. Mo Msixla and. tin* papa, named Colo, were sented u>,.the Zoo. in 105T, when two years The zoo opens May )0, ZOO’S NEWEST*— TV little one's name la Harvey, and -momma casts' a weSry eye ail newsmen during, its debAt at tl* petrojit ?oo in Royal -Oak. She liilnks?'llaivey is somethin:: v«ry special — and she's right. Weighing 75 THE .★ it-it,it it'. VI KH. li»«2 uiut rAbU HOOTIAC. MICHIGAN, THtHSDAV, «0 PAGES . s oniFar Side of Moon Flight Is" ‘ by. NASI - Newsmen Told C r a f t More Complex Than Any Tried by Reds (KJUMTONS, Calif. i*>— The U.$. spacecraft Ranger 4 crash-landed oh the far side of the moon today and a spjym official called the feat another of the long strides In space made in -past year. James E. ,Webb, head of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, told newsmen Ranger 4 was much more complex than anything the. Soviets have , templed. . Dr. William Pickering, director of NASA’s Jet propulsion laboratory which built Ranger that despite the failure c lectropic system In th» craft ’ the tact that It moon "gives Us confide can pend Instruments to the. ■noon with the accuracy needed/’ He said another Ranger to take close-up television pictures of the moon’s Surface Will be launched by the Hid of the year. Ranger 4 was this country’s first success in seven attempts to land a piece of hardware on the moon, and virtually duplicated the Soviet accomplishment when Lunik II hit the moon’ Sept. 13, 1959. 84 -HOUR' TRII’ • The- 390-pound Ranger.-. 4, launched front Cape Canaveral, Fig., Monday, completed t he 231,-486-mile, jdurney to the moon in 64 hours. Although tinge was no way of seeing’the actual impact, scientists said Rafi^A's trajectory before Phasing Behind the moon assured that it would 'land in the predicted area. Electronic failures kept Ranger jjufrom completing most of its missions. It carried several scientific instruments, including a television camera to take close-up pictures of the moon’s 'surface, A timer designed to operate these' devices fallen shortly after launch. Ready to Launch U. S.-British Satellite Today CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (j —The world’s first internal satellite, a product of thp^Unitod State# and Great Britain, wan ready for launching/today. A. ♦' A A' Thor-Delto^rocket was set for the mid-^y, Attempt to hurt the 132-pouar Anglo-American pay-load Amo an orbit rouging from 200 to 600 miles above , the earth to study the ionosphere and cosmic radiation. - m The shot originally was scheduled for April 10 bat was called (he explosion of t research .and 1^, . , , ^ development device, rather than f fJQQy GOOifiJ Amereon atomic weapons. The new aeries got Adams Retires as'Wings'GM finished atomic weapon. " A similar‘devic^ Ukely Will be used for the Second blast—expected in a few days — as ■ the Aper Tonight's Possible Main . Increased Tension Expected, Page 17 Sid Abel 'to Succeed Hockey Veteran and Double at Coach United States pursues one of the major goals of the new last series: greater weapons efficiency. * REACTION DETROIT n, posed a further problem tor the Income tax contingent.-The veteran lawmaker voted wtttjihe moderates on the question hut served notice he’ll withhold his vote — the crucial. 18th — on the other measures backs a MU to exempt manutac- from local personal property taxes. The MR, designed to gnr industrial-growth, II part of Gbv. Swain-son’s tax reform program but was dropped .out qt the coaUtton package. * ' V. H the U House Democrats stick together, only CoaHu and i vote for the Income tax I Swainaon, who s-tayed'Tip all Tuesday night to follow the Senate "debate, hailed passage of the income tax bill as “an enormous victory for .tufe people of Michi-’’ But he added: Press Theater Tour Miss Mrs. I Address.....« .*.... ........... I I afy,.........Phone)......................................'I I understand that tha $199 f hove enclosed includes. I. ■ transportation, hotel, theater tickets, plui other extra fea- ■ ■ tures mentioned in Press articles. * ^ 1 1 also understand that If f have any prelferences for a | room companion or am going with, a small group that this | information will accompany this reservatiorC (Stoefo *oem 6K> lalro) I agree to participate in The Pontiac'Press Theater Tour I under the foNowing condition*! I have included the full payment with this reservation. | If l:am unable to moke the tour I understand ^tat I shall be 1 given a full refund providing I give notice by April 1. Ijpimw* turing machinery and equipment | etond that reservations wifipn mode to order of H^rweiptaf I applications and that my name wiU bepioeed up6n a waiting list if I am not indudad among, t h e first 80. 1 understand .• I of the schedule of evenh excepf fof passible change# or additions mbde necessary by soma avant beyond cor^rol ail The tontioc Press. NURSERY PRUNED IUedj-le-Niet Rose Bushes IpdAllT UBUCED Iw T0NIGHT-TBI.-SAT. pi^-"' Yij'iif'' ''MoheyWIiinf SIMMS DISCOUNTS On FAMOUS DRUGS BAYER'S ASPIRIN 4 T Regular 73c pack, of 100 tablets. The genuine BAYER'S Aspirin for (ait, fojt relief of heodqcho. 1 LAVOR1S Mouth-Wash 1 •h 59e I 89c ww 1^ I7-WM* W* «X temom I tovom mou«h-'*»o»fc 1 D 0-C. DENTURE 1 CLEANSER 39s 1 65c I Famou. 0©C * 1 dean dariwm | PRELL’S I SHAMPOO 1... 39c I 60c 1 Con^*o,ra'* - •hamP0° 1 tub*. Sttkmm of ini*. J LILLY’S I INSULIN l uw 99* 1 wan ■ t.illy's 0> discount FREE KMOAROO CUP COLGATE Ofie TOOTHPASTE iRP Regular $1.^9 size’ - full Id ounces for upiri slomach In Wwl adults and children, VITAL1S HAIR TONIC 93* SIAAILAC or BAKER'S BABY Infoni's liquid formula* tdqube^o miking or 'Uirtfoa .HntA’tS'COOS per cwfeHor. >/• I isi ml l:Uni- / kid THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 36, 1062 NINE SALES FOR BOYS! Handsome group of boy*' 1.99 knit ihirtt, taro 62c. on tvory one, tavo laundry, too TO BUN AGAIN—Sen. Dennis Chavez, D-N. M , announced yesterday at a Washington news conference that he win seek re-election in 1984. bend*, mesh knits. Short, U sleeves, smooth cotton, cotton-Docron* polyester. knits. Novelty stripes, solids, 2-tones; sizes 8-18. *Rt$. TM. D*Foni Cup. 2.99 dock slacks hs'll li va in all summer, wash #n wear Sanforized® cotton duck, only Republicans Fighting Public Works Bill as Political Weapon By Me KBELL WASHINGTON m — Divided Senate Republicans fought a rear' guard action today against a 92,6-billion public works proposal they called a raid on the Treasury and a potential presidential political weapon. ★ dr Ike tactical difficulty faced by the six GOP members of the Senate Public Works Committee— and it was shared by most of their party colleagues—lay in op* posing the administration’s ^ pro- The 19tii District would be carved from Uvingston and western Oakland counties, plus a smalt slice from northwestern Wayne County. Other districts would be sub-tantialiy altered. “They’re bad amendments," a spring crop of savings with easy pickin'* in every department at . Federal's SALES Bride Dies in Crash; Parents Off on Trip TORONTO (AP)—Tw* Canadi- to a hospital in Burtingtoo, Vt., in serious condition. ; Month-End Diamond Sale SPECIAL PURCHASE UNBELIEVABLE, BUT TRUE Men's reg. 3.99 and*4.99 short-sleeve knits; save 1.72 and 2.72 on every famous shirt Supar savings on girts' tops, Jamaica shorts and padai-pusksrs for summer ’A-Carat Total Weight Our most dramatic purdfaso In years—you'll recognize the famous labem The manufacturer had to unload—you'll find cardigans In handsome cable stitch, buttoned front and collars with contrast trims, pullovers with 3 and 4 button placqwets, classic we^vtis.;. poncho, link-omlink, bulkies. Washable 1W% cotton, a host of colors to complement your wardrobe. Hurry Ini Tremendous buys! Tops to wear In or out, short-sleeve and sleeveless cotton knits. Fonts In woven plaid, cotton tapestry, poplin, sateen, knits. Sizes 7 to 14. Lynn Jewelers One South Saginaw FE 5-5731 i Homemade -Slingshot9 Slays Bank Goliaths MARKETS The following are top price* covering sales ot locally grown produce by growers and sold by fi*m in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bateau of .Markets, ’roduce ■othanbu . clntoih ____ irthern Sdt Wall Street Jn Uncertain Mood . A pain, NortharnSDT addIo*. Hah Rod........... TSO STABLES BmU. topped . ...... Carrote. topped, be* ... NEW YORK III — Steels ered partially In s mixed/ stock market early totjpy. Trading was moderately active. ‘ft Vft ■ j Gains and losses of fractions to about a point prevaited among most key stocks. / .:r •. * -m Fractional gains were posted for Sju, S. Steel, Bethlehem, Republic Steel and Inland. Jones ft Laugh-lin recouped a poiiit or so. Buyers once again were nibbling at the steels which have' I tend down to what some regard were mixed. Building materials as “bargain" prices. and rubbers wen mostly lower. The business news background Makers Report Top Auto Sales 4-IS: mii} tjrpt roatoati over I m. U-, St; wsfisn and fryrri 3-4 »«.: W hi lei 14-40; duckllnti 11. Comment: Market about steady, eelpti maAerate and ample -- -trade Horn. ______, DSTBOrr BOOS - Detroit, April m -iafi—Ess priet paid per down at Detroit by tint r> ' iifttti (tpoindtoa u*»: Whites—Grade A Jumbo H-N; ixtr larg* 33%-38; large 32-37; medium 29-SI 1(0-210 lb. barrows aad lb. lt-lt.Mj « * 13.40-14.40; iw» 12.75-13.21 2 and 3 400-400 *. soars tad 1 400-400 lb. sow boars 1L*8-1L ___ Vbakca SO. Steady, prime 35-**: good and choice SI-34, staadard 23-21; cuU and utility 11-13. «uS~ SM. AMbad 240 light weight OnMt naatar iambi in run; haiassa sham Iambi aad sew; prices tmchantod on Uaoited early supply slaughter calssss. Cattle 60S. Slaughter steers, hellers Satd awrg hUly steady, bulls 40c bJadier for the weak; Ud head high choice 1143 - jo. steers 22; 2 loads loir to art rage ehoioo (toon 27-27.44; mixed loads high sss s b sbsk ss nui hdim n«; rtaniard^htff*™ 30-" Spay hatftrt 17*0-30; foK----- 17-cancer • and — camp, hoga l . •etiro, steady; gam alow, steady ta .. Iwrer; hulls and realers steady: doaen loads at MM; high choice and 1510 lba 24.24-24.40; load mixed choice bad prime 1000 lb. yearlings 2079; part load choice 400 lbt. 26.00; bulk chalet >40-1240 lbs. 27.00-21.10; mixed good and Choice 1110-1300 lbs. 20.24-2770; mixed good and choice 090-1140 lba. good 23.7440.2S: load standard and good 1240 lb. HoUtcm steers 22.74; standard 1000-1200 lb. Holstein steers *i.** “ h3tarshl^.79*10Sotele-to«+27*00; M.»; utility 14.74-21.00^ stssiwsri •^MrtSrU- _______________________________ .fir USSha WAS; packags choice It sham lad lambs WUh No. 2 pelts 17.se, Sc Vaod 144 lba. ll.to; cull to good WMlM a-mlai* uVKto; rn* ad cutters 12.40- H______.,4S4tow*fi bulls standard realers 31 00-34 00. 3^.00; _____ ' Tff Stocks of Local Inforest Anted -.Supermarkets ......14.3 14.1 AriuawS LouSstaaa Oa. Co tl l 43 RalAvto-Moat. Chem. Co. PM. 12.4 12.1 1 Knew FtoiMKorot ......... 14.4 17 RaaMIMogul-Sewer Saertrigi so 2 «< Barrwy AlamlW .............23.4 24 -jEoror BaU * Bearing 5,1 ■PJL. Santa >* Drilling fraaeeeaUneetal Oas .. IwaWi- oiiisx a* General Motors was up" a traction after reporting record earnings but motors as a group were irregular. Chrysler and Ford took snpll losses. American Motors was steady. ft*-.. * ft order-retail stocks were up moderately,' with Wool worth (ex dividend) recovering about a point but cj^tnlcala, nonferrous metals oils, rails s utilities and tobaccos Mostly Unchanged NEW /YORK at—Bond prices lostly unchanged at the start trading today despite an drop in die British rate. *- such a- move would bond prices but today in-tors were 'holding off commit-its until after the treasury disclosed plans for the May refunding program. The terms were due to be made public after the close of today's session. The British reduced their bank rate to 4% pkr cent fromr 5 for the fifth cut since July and the third In six weeks. The rate sets the Interest pattern for all-lending in the country. ♦ dr Over the counter dealers In U.S. government securities said the only price changes at the-start were a few .small advances by the longest issues. Volume was at • minimum. fairly geod bat the Wall Street mood still remained uncertain. The scattered evidence of selective recovery was regarded as chiefly technical.' Burroughs waa active and down around a point in another, spate of profit taking. / ft ford lost at 97 on a big blocgk ol 12,000 shares and Shell Oil eased % at ST on 9,000 shares. * ft .★ ft. Prices were-generally lower on the American Stock Excvhange. Losses exceeding a point wan shown by Mead Johnson and Aerojet-General. Insurance Co. of North America gained about Losers included Anken Chemical, Snytex, Draper, Louisiana Land and Ogden. American Stock Exch. (Figaro after declmel. art ta blghUu NEW YORK (ATI—American Stock.: Sahn Bn ... 7.1 Kaliwr Indu4 . Ij * Bn 4.3 Musk P Ring 11.! In the first 20 days pf April were reported today by the leading car manufacturers. Pontiiac sales of 36,944 units In the 2May period were the best jin the company's 36-year history. Oldsmobila reported a 64 per cent Increase In aides over the period last year, with 27,018 card delivered to customers. Dodge sales of 1MSS were the highest for a first M-day (telling period In six months and Cadillac sales of 8,778 nits, established a new AprU high In the division’s 80 year history. American Motors said it sold 22, 479 units- as sales “continued their upward trend." SETS NEW RECORD crooib~’P4t Oen Devil Imp OU . Mi NJ ____ 14.3 NOVO Indus . : E EtE*!; . *4.1 Shorw Wm . *4.3 rcchalco Die New York Slock Exchange JIN YORK (API—Following it a U«t| Sale*__ Ni*L/ 1 of soloctM stock traaiieUaui on tbo Now fbdi.l High Low Ud Ch*. __ ( York Stock Kxehnngc with Wednogdap Forom Dull 10« it Jgk 13% .BMjW Fctl.io oon prices: lFr**Ot Sul 1.2" 4 94% 24% 24%4 % Fltacy Bow .44 V __^___ FruthTra 1.20 2* 24% 24% 24*-% *“*■ Sotos Noll 'G' /• IpolaroW** .20 (Ms.) High Lew Loot Chst.iOfo AeccfK lb 1 22H 2*4 22%+ H.ProctAO 1.44 1410 24 nW »l% 77%+% Oja Clg»r 1.30 3 wym* J4%— % PubSEAO 3.1 4 14 10% 41%— % Oca Fds IA4 > 47% 44% 44%. 44 49% 43% 42%—1%'C— ^*- • “ “ “* “* “ • M A S — t] ^ sS r s*=i& is~ i u n, 7 20% 24% » 5 Jf 14% 14%— Tiro 171 MS* U _ tt% S»%— % $• Fae Cp lb It 72% 91% 41 %— % EJfsfs S 9HR 2^ 2 ISC L;S » ». JK cfYio ” 2 8% 8*:.5 FMFIatoO 220b B 43 42% 4 84 22 6. 7 10% 14 204% It 04% ; Sr. -1 /% aft , 138 M% wk 56Vi... « jf 5^-' c eves sscn 44% > •% 4% 1% • a. *3.-. I 11 21% 24% 34%-% -R— 42 40 94% 1| Mb 23% 14 34% 38% _ . 20 Mi 10% b SU 2 104 41% 49% 90 —1% ( 1.10 04 Mb 44% 44%-2V« __Drug SOb 129 42% 42% 43%-l% lepn Met .90 M 24 B 32 -2% ley Tob 140 . 30 04 63% 03%—* "“v“* “ ‘ TO 4 41. 40% 40%— 0 20% 20% 90% RCA lb Bayontor .1 Raytheon 1 Of lb 1.7S4 B 31%— %]9j ^*p_> „ q + g'2.1 10% 17 — %' 1Mb 1Mb—1% - -Tii. «•= *3% a% a —1% SSBhIRJP s 44% 14% 14% + ft xS fig iP . 4 13% 12% 12% —% °*^ *** 01 10 20% 20% 30%+ % U Mb.Mb Mb— 23 20% 24 B ... B 48% S% 44 %— 28 41% 2* B —1_ 9 21 80% 50%+ % win It 9% 8% 24% Dry O 2.40 2 103% 103% 143% _ .«■» 1.20a 10 26% 36% 20%-f % Atl Cst Line 2 3 42% 41% 41%— % AM BaHn 1.40 2 93% 22% 52%+ % ---CD. 14 2% 1ft 2% ____i Coat .60b 11 B 21% 21%— Aveo Carp .70 I 20% B% M% .. iSH 1.42% 4 «ft-r I 2S%-4 -a, WlWtosrtws AO* 1 17% 27% SSjp 5 Sr U 04 ■■■! 3 82% 32% 42%-% wwr - sway 14 1.1 ,—jo Load 1 StRog- Pap 1.4 Son DImper U Slhenloy 1 Scbaring 1.44s Schick Scott Fas .44 B lb I 51%+ • »% 8% *%— 14 86% 34% 26H— .. 1.14 1 28% 11% 28%+ ft 40a 7 04% 04% 84%+ ft ‘ U% 11% 27% 17% II Tran 70d » II 17% 1=1 Homeslk 1.40a Hooker Ch 1 Hotel CD Am Housed pm j.) HoustLAP 1.40 IW 1.40 4 Wb *1% 91%—lVs s joi it B H% if + % 1.12 9 « %3I% 36%— % I LB I 14 » 26%— % In llllfftlU 119—4% W I S 47% 67%— % SSI I 1% 1% 1%-% l.Bf 14 42 48 • ... 2.40 74 40. SMb Mb- % > .14 1 'Mb 84% % ferirv.1 || s^-A. “ 5% Sit «-'* ... I mS i7% i7%. lie 4 14% 14% 14% 9 lf% 13% 13%—% tool C«m 74 - b '« fl Crnt 2 1 1 S* Rand 3a ' J np toW itl 1.40 36 41 __ pdttjab b i.io i 20 ii m * s »ter 100 IrS? «PS mWrdr\ « g% BSt?5L 74 ISS oKmuf is m” mp prr=,» *4 MIS S 12 33% 31% 32%— « 3 1^4 13% 12% 1 llrib 112% lMb+ ft 4 Celanese 1.20 so n Celotak 24p 7 37% ? S §5 “ “ S% S Crow Coll in Crowfi Z-” * “ Croc SU 14 27% 27% 47% . 90 44. *1% «„♦.% S 94% 69% 44%—1 1 10% Mb lift 1 44% 94 M%— ft 15 Mb B% B%— » IP. 47% 40 + 2 22% 22% Mb— I g f>_ 1 5ft 13% 13%+ % J S’* S„ M4+ ft 34 27 20% 20V«—1ft 4 4 4 4 — ft 14 31% 41% 31%— ft 4 114% 114ft 114%— ft 40% 40%—1% 8 24% 23% 13% 14 37% 37% Mb- % 147 IB 122% 124V “ i ii%. mSHi 4o n% 24% iift-r sa 7 47% 47% 47% to «MW Mb—% EdU .44 7 l|% 2*7 “■ ______ Os 11 I Sou N Oas 2* 19 6ft 4* Poe 1.10 20 Mb W ___ Ry ljl 1-Mb 5* - sparry Rd i.m M 5ft Mb 5ft- ft —* LIS 11 31 31 «. .. D la 19ft 9ft Mb- % 49 45% M M , » H 30% 31 2 21 B B 10 2S% B K%+ ft y*y - 5 10% 10% M%+ Sv°g,*« i||S; Kfs, !! ft, 9 » : :: rzi-IJSsm Wd 3.90T 20 117% rlllrf Std Mi 'US 7 24% Std OU Cal 2b 41 00% std on lad lb 1 9ft BImh b Hi Md on Oh 2J0 Stand Pk( * isa Stan War 1.20 . 2 to ----1 Ch lift 1 44% Drag IB 4 Bft ----- mJr ib i »3% 33% VBh 14 Jft 4ft it 1.64 IS »L 27 H. •/ bCa LSI 1 4ltb 43ft 43%— —T— Ttna Ooo ,1.12 B 11% B 23 — T««il0 LB 127 24% S5%« B%+ ' « a. : »-»=! ' VXr _______ 1 30% Bft 8*t Un Carbide IB SI IB 107 147. —1 On Zlaa 1J0 I 8% Sift Mb... Un OS/Cal B I 51 tjft/jnb .. Un Fob 1.8a 43 Bft Br B%- Unlt Air Lin Bb 1 33% 33% Bft . Unit Aire 1 S 6ft 4*ft 44%-l% sf liib^ssH F^ . s* An* 5% » 9ft K M^-ift r------------ » oi ' 6ft 6%-i% —M— 44%+ % C»PJJ7I 44 04% «% 5%—] ^ sa gM**- 14 U 42', StAJS?* S’* Cbm. •* SR i 'j Middle S Ut l.i Mtoerscb-B 2ehMC0 tod1 A Measan Ch lb #H‘U >45% sift mb- ft /« uft u% Uft+ ft . » Mb Mb 39%+1% 1. 1 37% 17% 37%— ft 1 arib 22% Bft 14 114% 115% 115%—2% M lift *6% 64%— ft a 5ft 5ft 4i%+ « UV u% 11% u%- % Pontiac Division Sets New Record for, First 20 Days of Aprij By UD MOODY AP Newsleatnres Wrtti NEW YORK - David, armad with a sling, slew Goliath. William S. Morris, afmad with a I960 homemade computer, dew him tirice, Jr* * ★ i the Goliath, in thla < . Bank of America, the biggest in the world. Actually, the bank survived as DETROIT (UP!) - Record and & J?? ~ nu-nrj —emerged wiser from the fray, record aalm of automobiles Mflrrit emerte(] richer — almost U million worth. Far mars the Bank of -Anted-•>kni wan the Uon'o chare and then seme of Bo underw riting of Colifonda lints Bonds. That Mate of OaUfomla floats n hood looue and the Arm that submits Be Md with Be lowest interest charges to California gets to market Be bonds. The delicacy involved for the bidder la to offer the lowest interest rate for California yet sell the bonds at a high enough return to entice buyers. It involves figuring out to four decimal places and somewhere in there the underwriter must allow for his cut for services rendered. -it , k The Bank of America-pliyad the game «> well that no one had bid against it for California bonds Chevrolet sales for the ltVday since 1966. Until last fall. period of April ^20 set a new aQ-time company record of 66,607. That waa almost 16 per cent higher than the previous record for the period set in 1900. Buick also reported soles Increases during the middle 10 days of Be month. Buick dealers delivered 1*909 cars to show a 71 per cent Increase ever Be same selling period last year. Chrysler-Plymouth dealers posted big sales gains over they sold 7,443 Chryslers and 17,-____ ____ 656 Plymouth-Valiant units. The|fn^ig~hbn Chrysler sales were the beat for gyndicate. that period in seven yean. Morris, who had formed a partnership la 1M0 with orb Thomas C. Plowdee Wardimw, an Albany, N. Y., attorney, had bean, a very minor member of She big Bank of America team. Morris’ 4m, which started with capital of 11*0,108, would get tossed a few bones. But as their capital grew, Morris thought Be giowB merited a little meat. "We assumed the bank would give us a couple of hundired more bond*," Morris recalled.K)ne thing 1«T to another, however, and the bank finally sent Morris a letter his ties to its totaled 98,900 units, or an average of 5,900.per day. The previous [high waa the first 20 days of December, 1954, when Ford dealers delivered an average of 5,562 can day. g $2.6-Million Loss Reported in 1st Quarter by S-P SOUTH BEND, ind. IB — Stude-baker-Packard Corp. today reported a loss ol |2.6 million for the first quarter of 1962,. compared with a loss of |6.5 million bi the fint quarter of last year. * * * President Sherwood H. Egbert told the company’s annual meeting “It to our belief that; although it to somenrhat difficult to predict, the second quarter will be in the black.” Sales in the first qaarter totaled $72.8 million agalnet *81.8 million In the tint three months of 196L Vehicle sales also were /tg despite a 40+lay strike Bat halted auto building from Jan. 1 until mid-February. Egbert said sales totaled 21,734 can and lrucks this year tom-‘with 18,196 last year. Grain Prices CRICAOO GRAIN CHICAGO, AprU IS (AP) — train: Wheat Oats 2.40% Mag .... 2.12% JSto ..... . i.ii yBSTvA.., . 1.11%. Jul7 . • I M_7 (n" . .18% Dae. ... - STOCK AVERAGES DroM kg tbs AnsrlsM Press Ss. JL&'Jl —t 4 ^1- —A-MS IMA 141.S MM m i 121.5 141.4 554. it 121.2 MU K 1733 142.2 BI. I JTft 1 » 4 !*%;®4Bft-ft| * » ICra* a.mafi cp Xs sjcl 2 Net Cab - ^ Rat Dairy I jgV,.Nat- DMffl 1. _____ ySmTy ” »' lift Mi Uft+ftljj} ** Vi tst r fiiSS-ig iB TV A* 1 St 8ft gft- IJ* J m A ROW I 1 to 21 2» i BSTO e a ea tW ri«+ iii^i^, Curtiss Wr 1 Chemical 77 4 42.4: _ R. g' K j uft {4% Mft.j mutual rums________ JpIJoo/" 10 lift uft Sft+ ft I ^|BmS|MAROC 1.2* 4* 44% to 44 — ft ifji “2^* *-------« » 1. Svt | .fe L% 12 « S i KiEfiSL ! 8 B m, I - 14Va 21% MV- Ifcl »»■** ,j» ** s'- Sft-%t 4 3ft Bi JB BUmj I Uft. Uft Uft. _ “Hr— '/ rflS, fi*" 134 _ ,4*4.15*.U11» Fair Cam 3» 44% SI JW —IftIFao AWAIT B .... I .jmlUBlB Fair wrat / TI 4% • |%^|%+ ftParam Flit I Aarll 41. 1401 Fanstoal B 3 21% Bft 11V- ft'Parke Da to * M71.SM.440.M Fl»g««oo to . 1 44V 44% 44%+ ftlFmtor. JC U * FA Charts'1.471 15 toft 5% 4f%..... Fa F»AU U 71.MS.U4.551I7 FHntMO jBl VS% Bft Bft- % Fs RR 3|s • T4.M.I04.1M3I FliFW At 44% 45% 4S%+1 Pmt Cota l.( I4I.I7S.271.070.TC i Fla PWL LB/B « 71% T7 . HB JM 17 xaa in 1st hiVmS Pats. .MS to 22% Mft B%,+ % Phelps D 3 2,*.^ «taL*u» Is Treasury Position im —N- nONW AVERAGES to Ito Asasrtatai to W Jl — RaBs I»4. UWs. F««; Ml Wim°WsT 72.3 ms Pro». Day 713 100 7 u fl & if ManhsttsiL tower just above WiU Street. * * * - Jr.. From one ride of his modem marble-top desk you can look out over the Hudson. From the Other you can eee the 3600,OOO IBM computer being installed behind glass partitions in the heart* of the .Office suite. - Mm secretaries glide Braagk the IKtok carpets and around the NOT TOO SORRY I was not overly sorry to aes Fonj said its sales during the this.” said. Morris, Who was al-20-day period were the highest lot toady looking for pebbles for his any 90 days in its history^ Sales sling. Morris, 45, had graduated la 1937 from Princeton University with honors In math. He took a job la the actuarial department ol the Equitable Aseurenoe Society — “it waa about , the tolly opening for a mathematician up working on Belr bond portfolio. . After World War II he worked for several Wall Street firms In bonds until he set up his own firm in three small rooms overlooking an air riiaft. All the while iie saw A for computers~Tocut figuring interest’ charges fitting underwriting *T never took ray computer Mines but I read a lot of books IPs a* long trip to Now Cs- So, having already built his own hi-fi act,.Mortis built his own •null computer from a 9860 kit His TV repairman built him second. |1B MILLION PACKAGE Flicking a switch and waiting _jr his creation to warm up, Morris set out after the Bank of America. The battlefield he chose was • 8100-million portion of a MS-million underwriting (Allfornix He couldn’t afford to hid on the whole thing because the required opaniat $100,000-good faith bond on the first $100 minion took up moat of the firm’s capital. ★ ♦ Use pf his computers and IS ,-w minutes rental of an IBM com-i ji% puters’ time down the street for Id., r * “ .......* * »% $20 helped Morris cut hto.Md very irprise of Be for Betts when BW. hud It fl J Where Morris used to have' rix But if success .baa made him, it hasn’t spoiled Mm, , He’s bought a new houra. “But outside of that It hasn’t chaagad us much. Wa go out to dinner a little more, maybe. But I get the Aad around a corner, ant, af right of the glowwing IBM fra* chine, he Still has his MO computer. SHE’S THE MOST - Leah Soydon, 336 Liberty St., to the first Tri-Huron Shopping Center employe to receive the center’s monthly-dales Achievement Award, presented to the employe judged the must courteous and capable. Mtoa Sowdon has been an S. S. Kresge store sales woman for six years. Handing over a certificate of merit and (25 in Tri-Huron gift certificates to Lawrence Rattner, a representative of the center management. — - ", Sales Also at New High- GM Earnings Set Record DETROIT (B — General Motors, the world’s largest automobile producer, set new corporation earring and salea records in the firtt three months of 1962. ★ * GM said yesterday its profit of 9374 million in the January-March quarter equalled $1.31 £ share and waa up $9 million over the previous record quarterly earnings of $389 million or $1.28 a share set in the last three months of 1961. - Sales for the first three i .of Bis year totaled H.Ni.WB compared with $------If F. Gordon Flrodinc G. record levej-fo a high leva) of general ecepdmic activity and strong preference for GM prod- ONRECORDS The GM ranouncement made no mention af\the new records in sales and earnings. Gordon also attributed higher earnings to the fact that hard top and higher priced models in all company lines have become hot sellers of ths year. These, in turn, produce a better return for the company, they said. Alas noted by the GM raeeu tto4s raw a slackening la Be demand for leas profitable com- cste’s. There was some doubt on Wall Street Morris would be able to ■ell all hll bonds but he did and, as he says with a modest'smile e a Uttle over a mil- *4“°“'" ^ ii SECOND KILLING Hie next month Morris and Mi imi bt hi miPlowdervWanHav, underbid HI 31 «j «3 nVpank on another $100 Billion to-’*•* to* "* "•,kUei saving California over $1 mil- —__________ Bon to Interest’ charges and mak- a!i i£uislig£i *”* FW.000 for the tiny firm. The Bank has reesupai since, Takes Option on Property ior Plant at Eaton CHARLOTTE (B- — ywtoto4BI-inois Glass Co., hendquaurtsred at Toledo. Ohio, has taken option on 139 acres to nearby Eaton Township with tentative plana to build a new glass container manufacturing plant. \ R. H. Mulford, president, said the rite selection was one outcome of a four-year study of nstlonat1 marketing conditions, location of existing industry, .capacity and availability of fuel, raw materials, transportation and l^bor. Charlotte late last year lost upwards of 200 production jobs by the bankruptcy closing of Recor-dio Corp. - Mulford said whether hto firm eventually decides to build on the optioned site depends upon several factors. They Include results of current aubeoil testa for construction purpoaes, rezoning of-the tract far industrial use and further consideration and authorization of the project by the company’s board of directors. nsMiw/y eSatoSriTyB ... „ JrarrEgg*-* ‘IsgtAJeHFgs Am Coni EgfJHI om M com S=ar W to, ft* sift B7—ft r ttj~i Y VM.Pa a tr tohjto wiNinstmi ■ ; M O SSi Umh I* Mft Bft M%: .... PhUARdf lb 47 52% 53% Bft^ ft 4 Bft 14% toft—T 5 9ft 21% B%+ _ 24 ST. 6% Bft-lft tv gtttto,r BOW JONM 1 F.B. AVXRAOXS to |oAl. Ito.tl S| ASS 20 RoUt 143.to ft Si \ it uuu ixye «s f.H . \ s 45 Mock* 33014 up MB , V Volum* to 1 p i 1.444,ISO ' And Morris has moved to u elegant suite to the new Oirae- Wood Furniture Liked QUND RAPIDS (B-A ririag tread/ to the national wood hooae-bold furniture industry continued ta March, according.to a regular monthly analysis by Seidmap ft Seidman of Gran Rapids. Indict Fann Tycoon in $828,577 Fraud PECOS, Tex. (UPI) - Farm tycoon Billie Sri, Estes was aider indictment today oa state charge* of allegedly stealing $828,577 from six west Texas fanners fay selling action against ths 3T-i«ar-old boy wonder financier who ibdO JO pen indicted by k federal | ey an charges of fraud. .-•> More ritoraea are expected. |t8 million at the first quarter profit eaine ra h £' Ethyl Corp.', paid oa earnings e previous yean. Both tanned t dividend nonrecurring i It amounted to eighty share for GM i said the cua- eled off to about It per oeat sf Be maifcef ta eOabraet 4a the IT per, cent they were holding All GM divisions c&nttaue to report record sales for mid-April. April. Chevrolet said It* sales in the April 11-20 period totaled 66,607 units, up 41 per cent from a year ago and up 15.6 per cent from file previous record period of i960. Cadillac, OldsmobUe and Buick •Iso reported high aalee In the AprU 11-20 period. Cadillac reported a record; dds its beet sinct 1966 and Buick its best since 1956 and Pontiac said its sales i srere the highest in the 96-year history p the diviskjn. w -...7 News iii Brief (Jakaewa thieves era* I eft through an unlocked brae meat window at the home of Karine Green,’ 210 Prospect St., and stole cash-register type piggy bank containing $39 between 7:30 had 9:30 p.m. last night. N-anuual Rummage Sale, Central Methodist Church Fellowship Hall, M-HL between Cass Lake Md. and Ponthue-Laka Rd. Friday, AprO 27,4 to 6 p.m.Xand Saturday, April 26,* 8 to 2 pin*. —adv. •per, 8t. Mary’s In the Hills Episcopal Church at the comer of Joriyn and Greenshleld. Saturday, April 28, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. —adv. Rummage gale, Friday, April 27th, from 9 until L The Ladies National League. At HI W. Pike Leaktag Per Bafgatasf Go to Bargain Box, 296 Oakland Are. ■ —adv. dishes or toys, for a Church Rummage Sale Building Fhad. Before May 5. Call UL 2-4407 or UL 2-3538. The 'eight indictments handed T*4*- down last night by the Reeve* Rummage Sale at First Chrtofira County grand jury ware the latest church. Friday, April 97, from 1 to 6,' and Saturday, April 9 «b a ~ 2$. E. Huron at Mill. : * u THB FONtlAC PRESS.- THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1062 END'OF THE MONTH SALE New Gar Trade-Ins ! '58 T-Btid »4nk« and powar window. I $1795 '60'. Volkswagen With radio, hyatcr, whltawalla. $1195 : '59 Chevrolet ' i-Ooor with radio, btatar and white walla. $1095 '64 Chevrolet ••Door Hardtop with radio, b*at-»r, automatic, powar (tocrtnf, powar, brakto and whltowalla. $2195 > '57 Mercury bOlOYWITJBUC with radio, Jksater, automatic, whltowalla. I? $795. '60 Falcon MUd htoo with radio, Haator ■poclaT throurhout |A° $1295 '61 Ford OALOXni a-Door with radio, $1995 '61 T-Bird With powar atccrlhf, powar hrakaa, whltowaUi. Beautiful half a llnlihl $3295 '60 Falcon t-Door * Station ~WaMB. Radio, heater, automatic traaamlaalon, whltcwallc. Solid blue flnlihl $1545 '57 Chevrolet •Door with T-t online, atand-ard tranimlaaloo, radio, boater, whitewall*. Beautiful turquotea and white flnlahl $895 A-l '60 Ford $1495 '59 Rambler $795 59 Ford $995 ’60 Ford 4-Dopr with radio, heater, automatic tranamlaaion. Idaht blua flnlahl 7 ' $1295 '57 Buick 4-Door with radio, boater and whitewall* I A nlca (lowing tu-tona finite I < $695 '60 Rambler American with radio, haator and white walla I $1095 PARKING ON REAR OF OUR LOT : John McAuliffe Ford 630 OAKLAND AVE.' OPEN MON., TUB., THURS. TIL 9 P.M. FE 5-4 *T mu> BANKRUPTCIES, STORAGE CARS, ETC. With Absolutely , m wmmmm CHOOSE FROM ALMOST 100 CARS SUCH. AS THESE: ■■i ' ..................-... .....■■ bf.............. BaL Weekly • • * • BaL* Weekly Cor Due Rymt. Car v ' ■ Due Pymt. '58 Chevy 4-door Wagon ►.4*........... $597 '"$6.69 • '58 Mercury 4-door $557. '56 Ford 2-doar Stick V-8....... $1*7^ $2.21 ' '56 Oldsmobile 88 Hardtop ......$3S7 $4.45 '57 Plymouth Hardtop , $4:45 . i '57 Rambler 4-door Stick $2.20 '68 Ford 4-door Stick '. ......... $1.09 '59 Chevrolet Sedan Delivery y $6-69 '59 Renault Dauphine $2.21 .'55 Buick Convertible $3.33 '56 Uncoin Premiere Hardtop.... $2.21. . '57 Chevrolet 4-door Stkk 6....... $5^7 $3.33 Pontiac Hardtop '57 Ford. 2-door Automatic 8.... .........$397 $4.45 '56 Rambler Station Wagon........ ......$297 $3.33 '57 Plymouth 4-door Wagon.'... $5.57 . *55 Ford Pfckup, new motor........ $4.45 '57 Buick Hardtop.*r«,....,... $6.69 ■. 453 Chevrolet Station Wagon $2.21 '55 Oldwnobile 88 Coupe...... $2.21 r(jQ | 0^uuj. * '58 Chevrolet, Like New........ $7.88 - '56 Plymouth Station Wagon.... . \. $3.33 . '55'Chrysler Hardtop $2.21 '55 Pjuick Hardtop.. $2.21 '56 Ford Falrlqnp'4Hdobr....... > $3.33 '58 Ford500 Hardtop.. $7.88 '57 Buick Convertible.......... $7.88 '57 Chevrolet Hardtop $5 J7 $2.21 ‘ Harley Davidson '74" Motorcycle... 4445 PLUS MANY OTHERS PLUS MANY OTHERS T LIQUIDATORS Corner W. Huron (M-59) —‘ Elizabeth Lake Rd. PHONE APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED OPEN 9 AM. TO 9 PM DAILY - 9 AM. TO’ 9 PM. SATURDAY BILL SPENCE-NOW OFFERS FULL LINE OF "JEEPS" ,• PICKUPS f ' i ■ ' f *' ’station WAGONS TRUCKS Come Out and Take a Demonstration Ride Today 9 Out of 10 Can Buy\With No Money Down Over 40 Good Seleck Used Cars in Stock MMaH baa aad Mna liko a aa . $1195 ■ '57 Ford Retractable W4i V-hw $1095 . '61 Rambler American S-door mdaa wall a 0W M>a m $1195 *61 Pontiac Catalina dilation, radio, hater, powar stow-tog and broket. Baouliful moroon finish with white lopl $2895 *59 Ford Custom ■ V-8 angina, oulo- 81195 '61 Chevrolet Impala ■ h V-8 angina, outo-- ^595 *57 Chevrolet 4-Door Sadna wirti V-8 angina, automatic to a ana ownar, now W bade tot Varyahorpl $945 \w *61 Rambler Classic Sopor Motion wagon* wMi 6-cyL angina, radio, hooter, Oao owner and la o aaw cor trade tol $1995 *60 Rambler Super Cloide tension wogon wMi 6-cyL, y hooter. Oao ownar de-toi $1595 '60 Ford Gottycto 4-door sedon, with V-motic trantmission, radio/, or* whitewalls, gleaming tona blue finish. $1575 *57 Chevy Convertible With Powerglide transmission, V-8 engine, radio, haator, white* walls, out of state car and b very doanl Now top and a harvest gold finishl $1190 *59 Rambler Classic Sopor 4-door with 6-cyL standard shift, with individual stab, Royal blua with on ivory top* $995. ■ *59 Rambler 2-Door WMi radio, haator-and white-walls, 6-cyL standard shift, light blua ond we have two to choose from. $888 *60 Rambler Deluxe 4-door with radtoing soap, whitewalls.. standard shift, d gat missel Bright yellow with a blacktop) $1185 \ ,*61 Chevrolet Pickup Custom cob with radio, hooter, Fleetsido 8 ft. box, rial nice onel $1650 *57 Chevrolet Panel 16-ton with new tiros, good condition throughout) $595 j, , *57 Ford 2-Door Custom, 6-cyf engine, with a ' ‘ loaf shiftl Radio, hooter, rubber, runs real good. $485 *54 Chrysler 4-Door New Yorker, wkh powar boar ing ond brakes. Automatic trona-mission, like new inside and out. Only one,Men Ihbl $550 *61 Volkswagen Sedan This fide jewel wifi anil itself. H is Bgfit blue, and Is only — $1495 *60 Rambler Classic Super 4-door with rodid, heater, whtttwoUvredining seats. Glowing blue wfth Kory topi $1395 *53 Ford Custom Hardtop/ radio, heater, aromatic transmission, V-8 engine, little rmt and runs goodl $188 *46 Harley Davison Model "74" with many extrot and in good condition, looks real sharpl v $275 v ‘ t *61 Falcon 2-Door * Custom Interior, tinted window* 7JOOO acted mileron thb nbony black beauty! ■'*'V. $1795 jevrolet fbrlcwood $1395 . —We Always Keep the Best and Wholesale— wmriMm 11962 RAMBLER i Ameriain 2-Door Sedan % with Heater, Washers, Foam * Rubber Seats/Oil Fitter, * Muffler, Tailpipe Guaranteed for Life of Car * L - V ALL TAXES , , / t STATE AND FEDERAL ’ Delivered in Your- . Yard far Only, -*1795 This is_the Car that Won the Mobil Economy Runwith 31.11 miles per gallon. *45 DOWN : -*57 A MONTH -36 MONTHS TC7 PAY- BILL SPENCE OWNER CHUCKVANCE Sales DON GRAHAM Sales 50 GALLONS OF GAS WITH EVERY CAR PURCHASE! SALES CLARKSTON, MA 5-5861 SERVICE- GENE SPENCE SALES ] LOU GREER Sales Mgr* LES PICKUP Servlet Mgr.