A-'. ;•■■•,■■■•■■ \,^T Th» Weathiar W.i. ipTMthar rwMsit A Miserable/ (DeUlla Pff. il) THE PONTIAC PRESS Edition VOL. 121 "NO. ,28 ★ ★ ★ , PqXTlAC, MrcmGAN, TUE^AV. MaAcH 12. Tip ~^28 PAGES INTERNATIONA^ Four States St tickers Thousands Flee Homes as Rain Keeps Coming Tornadoes Set Off Troubles; Danger of AAore Expected From Our' News wires Tornadic storms today triggered a disastrous surge of flood waters which raced down mountain valleys and drove thousands of persons from their homes in four>^ TORNADO per, Tenn., statfds with an unidentified National Guardsman in the wreckage of Moore's service night. Five were injured by the t of a series which skipped across 1 Snow-Slicked Street Jammed Traffic on West Huron Yesterday Anfi-Gaullisf Won't Reject Political Life 'Olympic Games Hurt' southern states. Cities were i s o 1 ate d, h 0 m e rwere swept away and states of emergency and disaster were pro* claimed in the strickeh Kentucky, Tennessee, West IVirginia and Virginia flood-I lands. — Thawing rains kept pouring Romney Blasts Aide i down and tjie threat of tornadoes, I which took five lives in the south-I land yesterday, was not over. I Twister alerts were extended ; through parts of central Alabama and west central Georgia. Expect Commission to Order -Plans hr Sewerage Project The^ity Commission is ex*|after hearmg results of a sew-, fourth demolition pected to order plans and esti-ijiates tonight for a $1.5-million sanitary sewer project in Pori-tiac's southeast and northe.ast sections. A resolution which would authorize city adnfiinistrators to prepare a contract with consulting engineers for final plans and drawings will be up for approval at the 8 p.m. meeting 'at City Hall. MUNICH, Germany ( AP)-For-mer French Premier Georges Bi-dault will refuse asylum in Germany if he is banned from politicaT action to unseat French President Charles de Gaulle, an '^lide aaU 'May. jtavariaa officials, who sug- 11 The floods and twisters ..................................... proposed. He declined to com- of a violent March weather ment on Goodman’s activitira ex-1 whi^h i.nvPi»ppH thn cept to say be had appeared be- natjon from Colorado to Main^ Sion of ‘ U7ing to upset the whole] "This is the sort of thing that fore legislative committees pro-.other weather highlights includ-state program’’ on bills to em happens under an administrative posing new ideas for the Olym-^. ^ Midugu.-. bid ter IhOT aWflwlMt" gyiyicGMM.^. . 1 I i ! thliyi Goodmsil S iwfild I coc «nil NlAhrttskfl Tlip cnAw< ! . Romney said Walter A. Good- “You bring everyone in on hinder the program, scheduled ,rere 8 to 18 Inches deen in i man was "running around try- something and get tmiip set . . .! for dearance Arough Ae sec- ................... • • ■ ” ! ing to sUr up trouble” on the and some little guy down thej ond house this week. Bidaolt, said they cannot accept any such terns. Thus the question of Bidault's fate was thrown wide open again. The statement of Bidault's refusal tp renounce politics came from C^ar Stammler, the German editor who helped find, a hideout for the fugitive under-j ground leader in Bavaria. Bidault verbally requested asy-| lum when police discovered Sunday at a lakeside resort southeast of Munich. Then he sent handwritten appeal to West German Chancelor Konrad Adenauer. ^ w ★ * Adenauer, a postwar associate 'At an informal meeting last Wednesday, commissioners indicated they will go ahead wiA the proposed project. bills which have passed in the line moves in to try and upset] Senate and are under consider- things. " I norAwest Kansas, highwass i were blocked. 85 per cent of ] QnOW the schools were closed, and / VlUl t? OflUYV the R20 urban renewal project. There are about 62 structures erage study by the city’s engineering consultants, Jones, Henry & Williams of Toledo. proposed contract, most Involved is construction of twoipf them residential properties, major trunk sewers — the Mur- They were originally included in phy Park relief sewer and the the first R5M demolition contract Galloway Creek trunk sewer. ‘with Dore Wrecking Co. of Kaw-TO RELIEVE SEWERS. ^ |kawlin. The Murphy Park sewer would! f relieve overloaded sewers in the, contact was cance M south end as wdll as open un-;>ast Novemter w^en the fmm :erved areas to future develop-‘)»« “"^^le to complete demoh-, * jtion on some 74 of Ae 300 struc- - ■ .Itures under contract. The Gallowaji Creek trunk | commissioners will also be woutd'open avast unserved ar_eato okay ah agreement for in the northeast section to de-lp,^^^^ ^ p^gj^ty in the R44 velopment. 'urban renewal area from Grand In other business tonight, iTrunk Western Railroad for the commissioners will be asked to jextension of Cass Avenue south okay Ae advertising of the 'of Orchard Lake Avenue. Romney’s tirade about Good- the schools were closed, and man’s activities stemmed from roads were clogged with aban- ation in a House committee. -*hAS NEW IDEAS’ ja complaint in Detroit by Pro-1 doned cars and trucks. DurAg bis morning news Romney said Goodman parti-J®*"** Two storms hit Colorado from Predicted conference, Romney openly cipated in meetings which result-**“f*8et recommen- northeast and southwest, criticised Goodman durmg a ied in the Olympic bills being Qst'ons for Boys’Training School dosjpg schools in the eastern Claims Senate Probe '.[Hurt Pentagon Image, 0 low. movement and a close ally of de Gaulle, tridd to wash his hands of bis .country’s embarrassing guest by retummg the letter unopened. Adenauer’s government said R IS up to the state government to grant a^lum. The Bavarian Interior Mmis* try said it cannot decide whether to give Bidault refuge until he applies in writing. If he doesn’t ap^, lie «an stay as_ a visits in West Germany for Area monAs. In Today's Press Middle East U.A.R.fs Nasser welcomes unity, but cauUous* !y-1*AeBM. Lansing Industrial development bill ready for House vote -PACEtt. Cuba - GOP critics eau i Up 0ft war talk •• PAGE 11., 1 Area News r r AsAriegy 4^. 28 Bridge • 28 Comics .....21 Editorials 8' ] Markets 21 i Obttamries 21 E SptrU .'V.i. .. 17-11 . Dtoaters 18 tv A Radio Programs 27 Wilaoa, Eart ..... n Women’s Pages 11-13 FROM OUR NEWS WIRES WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Robert S. Me-Namara charged today that public confidence in Pentagon officials had been “needlessly undermined” he said, by a Senate subcommittee investigating the TFX fight- “There are s er contract. -------- ----------- Winter's latest blast with tern- part of the state and piling up foot-deep snow in Ae mountains The governor said Ais was an] Visibility was down to an eighthwet snow, freeing ram | example of the fact that “Ae,of a mile in Nebraska snowlands.if"“® people think the governor is Ae| w * * to^^th^ Jo^L'"a;e"? chief executive and head af state -Rain, fog and snow stretching government” and that he is fully,from Ae Middle West to the At-aware of everyAing going on in, lantic Seaboard. Glens Falls, ,state government. in y., measured five inches of "The fact is he’s just one of,new snow and up to four the bunch that mill around in'inches of’snow closed schools in this administrative hodge-podge, ” I parts of Maine. Chicago’s O’Hara I *"*• ®'»®* :he said. I Airport, the world's busiest. was| temperatures tomorrow. 1 ★ * ★ jjy £gg thrQygi, {^,0 Momiog winds souAeasterly at night.----------------- With spring just nine days away, Ae weaAerman predicted still more snow. He said some light rain or snow with a low of 28 to 33 may be ex- “We strongly believe, and are prepared to demonstrate, that the award of the TFX contract not only liras proper but definitely___________________________,—1_ serves the national interest,” McNamara said. Inn letter tn5«L John L. McClellan, D-Ark., chairman of the invesUgatiAg subcommittee, Mc-Namara asked to submit a full statement for Ae Defense De- partment. ♦ * ★ He wanted Deputy Defense Secretary Roswell GilpaAic to appear in his place jviA it, possibly later today or tomorrow. ★ * ★ McNamara said previous commitments prevented him from |appeacing J>afoFa the commiyee immediately. Hie subcommittee is investigating the award of a |«.54>il-lion contract tw an all-purpose fighter plane to General Dynamics Corp., Port WorA, Tex., ) 120-138 c posed to report to me persoir-aily. It’s ridiculous. It’s idiotic — 1 don’t know how to express it strongly enough.” 10 to 18 east to norAeast tonight] and norAeasterly at 12 to m.p.h. tomorrow. Thirty-three was Ae towest re-| cording in downtown Pontiac pre-1 ceding 8 a.m. The reading was I More than 4,000 families were 43 at 2 p.n made homeless and more than SECOND IN WEEK The SouAern floods were the second to sweep parts of Ae East in a week. page, N. Y., over the Boeing Company of Seattle, Wash., the McNamara assailed “Ae fragmentary releases of portions of tesUmony of witnesses who themselves are only familiar wiA part of the considerations underlying the decision in question. . .” He said Ais “needlessly undermined public confiiilence in Ae integrity and judgment of the iutfieat officials of the D^iait-ment of Defense.” 20 persons died m torrents which coursed through Ae Ohio Valley last week. This week’s floods threatened to be worse. Logan, W. Va.. with a population of 4,180, was isolated by Ae rampaging waters of Ae Guyandotte River. Major evacuation was begun in Harlan, Ky. The nocA fork of the- Kentucky River was expected to crest at Harlan at 22 feet above flood stage. ^ The flood death toll mounted wiA Ae waters. A Kentucky railroad man was (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) HERO CITATIONS—Our Lady of Ae Lakes students Thomas Sirbaugh (leh) and David Miller were awarded citations during last night’s Waterford Township Board meeting for their parts in saving the life of Cynthia Markee Jan. 22. Cynthia, 7, of 4111 Baybrook St. nearly strangled when her snow suit hood caught betweoi two tmanches of a tree. Ihe boys hxA her down and then Mrs. Robert Sirbaugh, Thomas’ mother, applied mouA-to-mouA resuscitation, reviving the child. Mrs. Sirtiaugh, a nurse, was also cited. LT. JOHN R. KUNE JR. Flashes MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-€arroll D. Rosenbioom, owner of Ae Baltimore Colts, was accused today in a deposition read in federal court of making a large bet against Ae Colts A a game in 1953. MARQUETTE (f» — A fire broke out Aortly before noon today A Ae dormitory on Ae NorAera Michigan College campus. The approximately 281 men and woAea students were evacuated. No AJuries were re- OU's Inlraniural Building to Be Dedicated Tonight The new $1.5-million InAamural Sports and Recreation Building at Oakland University will undergo a complete workout following dedication ceremonies tonight. DivAg and swimmAg, trampoline, basketball, gymnastic, tennis and volleyball exhibitions will follow Chancellor D. B. Varner’s dedication of Ae buiMing at 7 p. m. Mam speaker of the evening will be Don Stevens, Michigan SAte University trustee. He will discuss the ever-increasing demand for higher education. Sr ★ ★ Swimming and diving teams from Pontiac CenAal, Pontiac NorAem and Birmingham Sepholm high schools will perform A Ae new pool. STUDENTS VS. FACUL’TY Oakland University’s top mtramural basketball teams will compete on the new courts, while students will square off against faculty m a volleyball game. > ★ ★ Faculty members also will participate in a doubles tennis match in the huge gym. A University of Michigan team will demonsAate its gymnastic prowess tefore Ae specAtors. Short tolks will be given by BonnA Rae Carlson, 19-year-old sophomore from (Aro and Howard Hinkel, 21-year-old senior of 215 Perrydale St., Rochester. ★ ★ ★ Pontiac School Supermtendent Dr. Dana Whitmer will speak On behalf ofthe Umversity Foundation. Area Af Pilot Killed in Crash Was Flying Plane in Texas for Pleasure An Air Force pilot from Pon-tAc was one of two men killed when a flying club plane crashed in cattle country near Abilene, Tex., Sunday, the Air Force an-nounced today. _____________ , Lt. John R. Kline Jr., 25, Ae victim, is the son of Mrs. Evelyn K. Stoner, 178 Judson St. Also ktlleA was TJr WiBAm George, 22, of Brooklyn, N.Y. An AA Force spokesman at Dyess AA Force Base, where I Ae men were stationed near ' Abilene, said it is belAved that Kline was flying at Ae time of ; Ae crash. j A board of inquiry Was investigating the accident today in an effort to determine its cause. , I The victims were pleasure flying in a Beechcraft two - seater belonging to a flying club for personnel at Ae base. The crash I occurred 10 miles northeast of Ithe base. Lt. Kline attended St. Fred-I errck High School and Pontiac I CenAal High School. Just 2 Days! Gassified Pays! Mr. A. F. is a happy advertiser—his pAkup truck for 'sale ad appeared just 2 days and he received over 50 caUs. S«M immediately! W62 OODOE W-TON PICEUP. 49 other people are in the market or interested in a pickup tnick. Don't miM this golden opportunity to sell yours. People read the Classified Ads seeking items they wish to buy . . . let these people know what you have to sell with a Pontiac Press Qassi>-fied Ad. It’s ea^, economical and fast. Dial FE 2-8181 Ask for Classified TWO Bill does to Senate Draft Extension OK'd WASHINGTON (AP) - A four- year extension of the'draft law, passed by the house with only three dissenting votes, begins its senate Journey today. The Senate Armed Services Committee opens hearlngrtnr the Pentagon proposal with Assistant Secretary of Defense Norman S. Paul as the leadoff witness. The bill cleared the House Monday on a 387^3 roll call vote. The only no Totes came from Reps. Homer E. Abele, R-Ohlo, H. R. Gross, R-Iowa, and George E. Brown Jr.,' D-Calif. * House Will Vole Today on Record Military Bill ^ASHmc:______________ a record $15.8-biliion military buying bill. The measure would pay for 3,N8 combat aircraft, some C0,0M missiles—and a pair of 2,M8-mlle-an-taour airplanes the Kennedy administration doesn’t want to build. The RS70, a reconnaissance-strike plane that hasn’t yet been flown, is expected to touch off fireworks during the four hours set aside for debate of t|ie bill. It is the first major authorization measure to reach the House Republicans, who have talked about cutting the administration’s budget by $1.0 billion or more, are not expected to make the military procurement bill one of their tar- COMMITTEE REQUEST The House Armed Services Committee decided to tack JSS51 j million onto the administration’s authorization request to step up the RS70 program from the currently planned three planes to five. Behind the committee action is a controversy between Congress and the Pentagon over the role of (he manned bomber Satisfactory After Accident A 30-year-old Pontiac man is in satisfactory condition at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital after hk car slid on ice into the path of an-othdf vehicla in Pontiac Township yesterday. (xester M. Young, 2 Hazel St., suffered a possible concussion when his car was hit broadside by a car driven by Abramo Perani, S3, of North Branch. Sheriff's deputies said Young, traveling east on Brown Road, failed to stop at the M24 intersection. Perani was going south on M24 when the accident occurred at 3:24 p. m. ! years The committee’s report accuses the Pentagon of placing too much emphasis on missiles at the expense of manned airplanes, and labels this “a most dangerous course of action ... .” Past congresses have appropriated $1.3 billion for the RS70 program. For the Navy, the bill aul izes construction of 43 new Navy ships and conversion of 35 old Through County 'The other amendments had similar goals. Rep Roman Pucinski, D-Ill., wanted the maximum draft Rep. Charles E. Goodelh R-N.Y. proposedan Two Democratic candidates for state educational posts will meet with Oakland County educators lor an U;45 a Jn. luncheon during a day of campaigning in the county tomorrow. Lynn M. Bartlett and Donald M. D. 'niurber plan to lunch with school superintendents, principals and board members at Kingsley Inn in Bloomfield Hills. Bartlett is seeking re-election 9 state superintendent of public instruction in the April 1 eiec-tion. 'Diurber is an incumbent candidate for the University of Michigan Board o(^^Regents. ’The two also plan a 10:30 a.m. campaign stop at Miracle Mile Shopping Center and a meeting with Waterford Township teachers at 3:45 p.m. at Pierce Junior High School. Also on Thurbur's schedule is an early-morning stint of greeting Pontiac Motor Division employes as they arrive for work. Traffic Deaths at 254 EAST LANSING (AP) - Traffic accidents have killed 254 persons in Michigan so far this year, provisional figures compQed by state police showed today. Th'e toll at this d I can’t understand for the life of me, with all the stories I hear about the unemployed youUi of this country, why the armS services can’t get all the manpower we need on a voluntary basis,”! Gross complained. Two Democrats and a Republican sought to have the bill amended, but their proposals never got jjff the ground. Rep. Henry S. Reuss,TP5nrr wanted the draft extension held to two years. He said with the world situation in a state of flux, I the next Congress shou^have a chance to act on the draft, too. The amendment was rejected on a 154-43 standing vote after Chairman Carl Vinson of the House Armed Services Commltee said "of alt times for letting the world think we are reducing ouri force, this would be the wrong hour and the wrong time.” Father Slays Wife, Children Former Mental Patient Uses Claw Hammer MANCHESTER, N.H. (UPI) A demented father beat his entire family - his wife and four children — to death with a ham- it the desire of Congress that more men should be drafted when they 18 M or 19, instead of at the present average of 23 years. Pucinski’s amendment was turned down on a voice vote, Goodell’s on a standing vote of 134 to 59. PROVISIDNS The bill extends the draft law to July 1, 1967. It al^: —Keeps in effect for four more years a suspension of statutory MICHIGAN’S JUNIOR MISS - Diane Girard, 17, of Uncoln Park arrives in Mobile, Ala., to participate in America’s Junior Miss Pageant and is welcomed by Judy Prothro, Mobile's Azalea Trail Queen. Diane, sponsored by the Southgate Junior Chamber of Commerce, was selected in competition in Pontiac. Preliminary judging begins tomorrow with the finals scheduled for Saturday. Dead, are Hs Jap*m»rw8eT?ei buko, 38, and their children Franklin, 4, Patricia, 3, Elizabeth, 2) and Katherine, 6 months. “I have hurt ray faraBy,” Simichak told the desk officer after walking into police headquarters- He was wet and disheveled from walking in the rain. His clothes were stained with blood. At the Simichaks’ first-floor apartment in downtown Manchester, police found three of the diil-dren dead in bed. The wife and another child, Franklin, werrm celved by thr United States in McNamara to Head for Dyna-Soar Talks WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre-| agency’s two-man Gemini or-tary of Defense Robert S. Me- bital flights. Namara will make a flying trip ^h^ Gemini, in which the Air West tonwrrow for bnefinp that p^rce has a minor role, is due to ------far to determine the fate e 01 me armeu r" , * —_ forces". Without that, military manpower would have to be trimmed by more than 500,000. —Continues the system of dependents’ assistance allowances, ranging from $55 to $105 a month, for enlisted men in the lower grades. manned space glider project. It was announced today that McNamara, Secretary of the Air Force Eugene Zuckert and other top defense and civilian space agency officials will leave Wednesday night for a visit to the manned space and the provisions for special pay for foedical men ordered to military service. .r Subcommittee Asks Big Pay Boost for GIs WASHINGTON (AP)-A House Armed Services subcommittee rwommended today a $lf5-billion- plant in Seattle, return Thursday Boeing Co. They will night. “The purpose of the trip is to enable the secretary to be briefed by officials of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the Air Force and Boeing on the Gemini and Dyna-Soar space programs progress,’’ the statement said. 9-year pay raise for the nation’s The trip comes amid reports that the Air Force is facing possible loss of the Dyna-Soar project, which so far has cost $3()0 202. servicemen — $278 million more year was than the Kennedy administration proposed. million and ultimately will cost The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Some drizzle.with heavy fog thinning by afternoon, high 39. Cloudy, mild with a little rain or drizzle tonight, low 31. Cloudy turning colder with rain or mow Wednesday, high 31. Light variable winds becoming east to^ northeast 8 to 15 miles tonight and 12 to 20 miles Wednesday. It endorsed an $87-million boost in retirement allowances, and a future military retirement program pegged to the cost of living. think it is fair to say that the military departments are not fully satisfied with the pay scab subcommittee Chair At s t.m.; wind Tclocltr. S n Dinctlon: SouthMct. Sub >*U Tu«»d»r at S IS p.m. ■UB rliaa Wedoeidajr at S:4S I • Wrdntsdair at S:St Moon ritrs Tunc Mlfktit and Lawail TriBparai I 26 Lon AnitelM.,86 8l i 30 Miami Bt-ach 71 7S I 39 Mllwaukrr 13 33 Mendel Rivers, D.S. C., told the armed services committee. On the other hand, I think they realize that the cosroflhis bill is so substantial that any further increase beyond that which we propose is quite unlikely.” Rlihaat tamparatuia . XdOWMt temperature . Mean tenparature ... Itep. Carl Vinson, D-Ga., chair-maii of the full committee, shelved a ^^n for an immediate committee roll call on the bill. ” Instead, he called for an executive session Friday to talk it over. million. McNamara and his civilian scientific advisers are understood to feel the Dyna-Soar would duplicate research to be done by the civilian space U.S. Accepts Syria Regiim WASHINGTON (iB-The United States announced today it is recognizing the new Syrian regime which seized power last Friday. The fl p e e d y Washington action followed the new Syrian government’s promise to honor Syria’s international obliga- No Americans were harmed in the uprising, which saw a pan-Arab group, led by Arab nationalist Salah Bitar, take over the governmental reins. Worst Floods Sock Southland (Continued From Page One) killed when a train overturned from a floating home in their east of Shelbiana, Ky. Two persons were reported NATIONAL WEATHER - Show showers tonight will spread across portions of northern and central Plateau, the central Plains and upper Great Lakes. Rain is expected in portions of lower Great Lakes, the Ohio, Tennessee and lower Mississippi valleys into the aotithern Plains. It will be generally warmer in eastern third nation. Colder temperatures are due^ Mississippi Valley, the Plains states and into the Plateau. swept to their deaths when they attempted to cross small but swolleu streams In West Virginia’s McDowell County. Near Jasper, Tenn., the highway patrol was search^ for a modter and several children reported missing. Near Williamson, W. Va., a man was reported to have died of a heart attack while fighting floods. night clothes. Twenty-five families got out in an Army National Guard truck at Coeburn, V«. The death toll in yesterday’s twister onslaught rose to five a new tornado destidyed barns and tore down trees ra Newton County, Miss. The twisters struck most viciously at the town of Cullman, Alar., which was under tornado . alert today, and also hit in Mis-^Isissippi and Tennessee. I More than 20 persons were in-NARROWLY ESCAPE | jured, damage was estimated at Scores of persons escaped death I $4-million in Alabama akme, 24 narrowly. communities were hit and more Homes were washed into the than ISO homes and buildinga river waters at Jasper and at were destroyed or heavily dam-THintbn, W. Va., three persons fled'aged. the Dyna-Soar. McNamara has started a review of the Dyna-Soar and has ordered the Air Force tO present data and arguments justifying its continuation. Airliner Skids Into Snowbank No Injuries Reported Among 19 Aboard The father, Joseph M. Simichak; 39, a former mental patient and onetime Connecticut policeman, gave himself up to police. He was Wked on five counts of murder. Police said he battered his family with a daw hammer because he apparently was in financial difficulty and unable to support Commission postponed consideration last night on a revision of ialaries for municipal judges requested by Judge John C. Emery Jr- Tim current salary for one of Congress’ most publicized travelers, spent considerably loss than did many of his colleagues who went abroad in 1962. Powell spent the equivalent of $1,543.50 in American-owned funds during his 35 days in five foreign nations. He, as did most of. his traveling colleagues, used counto'part funds in some,countries. These funds are money re- the floor near by, mortally injured. They died a short time later at i a hospital. •SCHIZOPHRENIC TYPE’ Simichak, unemployed and a former airman, was treated nearly three years ago as a mental patient. He was described then "schizophrenic, catatonic ........""^7.....-... Doctors said he had a split personality that bordered at times on imbecility. A few hours before the killings, Simichak went to a corner store to buy food for his family. The grocer, John Damalas, said Simichak told him: ‘‘‘I have to-look after my kids. If we have to, we’ll eat own-bread and water. I brought them into the world. I got to take care of them.’ ’’ Area Salesman Dies From Gas Poisoning Birmingham real estate salesman Arthur Sevald, 62, was found . dead last night in the garage of BOSTON 141 — An Eastern Air a model home he was attempt-Lines plane with 15 passengers mg to sell at 679 Kingsley Trail, and a crew of four skidded on a Bloosnfield Hills, slushy runway at Logan Airp^ today and bumped into a snowbank. No injuries were reported. Frank Sweeney, chief inspector for the Massachusetts Aeronautics Commission, said after viewing the plane and the acci- Bloomfield Hills police attributed his death to carbon monoxide poisoning. Sevald, a Royal Oak resident, was employed by Fred Pierce, Inc. dent scene, that it a] plane made a normal ippearSj^the lal landing. The plane knocked down a few landing lights along the runway and crushed its own right main landing gear, causing it to list ■y to the right, Sweeney said. Birmingham Area News; Put Off Consideration-^ of Pay Hike for Judges BIRMINGHAM - The City nlcipal judge is swiate judges receive $1^00-EYE ANNEXATION The commission authorlaed the city attorney to take steps neo--aary te Annex the oF Some Spent More Than Rep. Powell WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Adaip Clayton Powell, D-N.Y., exchange for goods and services under the foreign aid and other laws. NOT TOP SPENDER But that journey, recently the most publicized of congressional ike PotoU Sja-ingdale Park not within the city limits. The major portion of the park was annexed to the city in 1938. " ^ The remaining 11,000 square foot section was purchased by the city in 1947, but never annexed. In response to a letter from the East Maple Property Owners’ the commission decided to woS"wfflrfte"#bup to alleviate city parking problems. Members ag^ to investigate abat Is being done in other cities ■ with similar problems. Theasseclat ion had requested that the- coipmissioa set up a committee to evaluate "problems created by public versus private parking." The group Includes property owners on East Maple Avenue between Hunter Boulevard and Adanu Road. junkets, didn’t even make Po#eU the top spender of the House Education and Labor Committee, adiich he heads. The two women committee staff , members who went along eachl spent more—Tamara Wall $1,653 [id Corinne Huff $1,775. As did many others who represented committees on “official business” abroad, Powell was accompanied by committee aides p|g|^ whose expenses also were listed. And former Rep. Carroll D. Kearns of Pennsylvania, who was th# ranking Republican on Powell’s committee until defeated last November, reported expenses of more than ^,(X)0 for The Michigan State University (foncert Band will present a const Grow High School March 21. Proceeds from the concert ill provide music Kholar- Tickets may be obtained from school band directors, at Peck Tailors, Demery’s, Inc., and the Wabeek Pharmacy. The annual Kite Flying C o n-test, cosponsored by the Birmingham Optimist Club and the City Recreation Department is scheduled for March 23 at Derby Ath- The contest is open to children between the ages 5 and 12. Awards will be given to the child with the highest flying kite, the most beautiful kite election swing through seven; and the most unusual kite. In the last two categories, only countries. AVAILABLE BY LAW The laws make counterpart funds available to members of Congress when they Igo abroad. Reports on the cost of congressional travel were published in today’s (fongressional Record by the House Administration Committee. The travelers themselves filed the reports as required by law and Powell's contained more de- hememade kites may be tered. Mrs. W. Gordon Stoner Service for Mrs. W. Gordon (Margaret M.) Stoner, 79, of 1377 Henrietta St., will be 3 ffm. Thur^ay at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Interment will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Stoner di^ yesterday aft-tail than most of them. For ex-er a brief illness. ample, the New Yorker noted Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. just how many days he spent injClalr Curtis of Alexandria, Va.; each country, and how much he a son, John G. of Birmingham; spent on tips, taxis and other a sister, Miss Ruth McLaughlin miscellaneous expenses as well as'of Birmingham; and four grand-major items like food and lodging, jchildren. Bus Bill Is Written Off LANSING Senate bill ta-t to be beijt propellers. Sweeney quoted the pilot of the DC 7 plane, Capt. Edward B. Leleecker of McLean, Va., as saying he feR no farridng action when his plane touched down on the runway. The plane came in from Washington, D.C. tricts tq provide bus service for students at nonpublic schools will not pass the Senate in its present form. That was the prediction today of Sen. Farrell E. Roberts, R-Oakland County, one of 29 sponsors of the bill. Roberts said the bill either will be substantially amended be- controversial fort it comes up for a vote, or 000 school children in the district j, school-d of ramifications in transportation costs for school districts. One of the provisions sure to be dropped, accordinfuto R^wrte, is a requirement that a district transport its private and parochial students to schools with eight miles of the district. OBJECTIONS START Legislators began receiving ob-week. jections to the bill this Roberts beard strong opposi- tion from the Bloomfield RUI* ^hool District, which complained that passage of the. bill would cost it an extra ^11,- Roberts satd a number of unanticipated problems have come up concerning costs that must be worked out before the legirtaflon is passed, but hd Indicated the bill’s backers were not retreating from its principle. The bill may be amended to require districts to provide bus service only for children attending private or parochial schools within the district in addition to public school students, Roberts said. Bloomfield Hills SchoohSupt. Eugene L. Johnson told a joint meeting of the school board and district PTA members Saturday that the measure In present form would almost double the $123,000 spent annually for operation of school SEEKS ASYLUM—Gewges Bidault, former French Premier and now Chief of the feared OAS’s political wii^, arrives at police headquarters in Munich, Germany, for questioning by federal prosecutor Antonious Berard (rit^t). Bidault has been offoed asylum by Bavarian state authorities on condition he end his fi^t to topple French President de Gaulle. Story on Pagel.) It also would require some 20 more school buses at a cost of $126,000 and possibly result in a request for a two-mill school tax boMt, Johnson said. He noted there were about 1,- alURXUllg 18 private hr cTiurcfi^ run schools. “We would be hauling to Pontiac, Royal Oak a^ possibly to University of Detroit High ei|^t-mile School districts receive reimbursement from the state for bus transportation costs according to a formula based on the number of eligible children using the buses, the number of miles traveled and the number of children per bus. Eligible children are those more than miles from their schools. The Shepherd "f/ow he that betrayed him, gave them a Matt. MrM L The name of "Judas," runs the story . . . Among the Jews meant "praise and glory" . . . Until Iscariot’s Judas sold ... His Lord for 30 coins and told . . . Where chief priests migbt discover Him. And “Judas" is a synonym ... For treason and all that is base . . And.., stantls forever for "disgrace” ... Be careful how .you treat your name .One act can bring it fame or shame. JULIEN C. HYER. \ THE PON'TIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. MARCH 12, 1903 THREE Female Foot Race to Psychiatrist's Couch Sugary Little Girls Soon Exceed Bad Boys' Spice By PHYLLIS BATteLLE NEW YOIW-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover recently revealed that auto theft—the crhne *‘de of the teen-age set— has gone up 9 per cent In the last year. He noted also that 60 per cent fimoiu DcWiit'i Kill for imlictic aclion. Seiidci brtn|!n| fur pallillive relief of piin, DcWiii'i Pills use mild diurelic sciion lo help your lyeiem deer mil ecid wisiei leO by slu||ish kidneys DcWm’i Pills ran relieve backiihr miseries and help you lead a more active life. DeWitt's Pills howto nOHT ^HMA I IRONCHITIS ATTACKS At the first aian of wheeelaa. short hr..fH louahlm from recurrine bnmehiL................................ Uilck choaiiia phleam. This usually eases breathina last, sllars coughlna; thus promotw sounder sleep. Get MWDACO St druiilsts. Peel better fr^t. of these thefts are committed by boys under 18. Girls were not. involved in the crime picture. At least, they m don’t steal cvs. ^ ln<, f a c t, girls don’t cheat, "Buy answer tests, run from home, windows — girl: don’t do ANY- phyLUS THING moraliy baTTELLE wrong or purely mischievous nearly as often as boys. Why is this? Are girls more moral, by nature? Are they repressed? Are they smarter? More scared of society’s reactions? Or what? ★ ★ ★ Some fascinating opinions o this subject were given so m years ago by the late psychiatrist John Leyy.^who noted fliat ‘Tigris arelusi as boys.” However, they don’t show it until their late teens. “Of every 11 thumb tacks placed under a teacher’s seat by Park Avenue (or well-to-do) 10-year-old children, only one was BURIAL POLICY AVAILABLE TO READERS OF THIS NEWSPAPER UNDER AGE 80 AND NOW IN GOOD HEALTH Time Life Insurance Company is making a special introductory offer of o $1000 Burial Insurance Policy, with Graded Death Benefits, FREE for 30 days, to readers of this publication in good health and under age 80. This is a brand new policy that provides many new and necessary benefits. It insures your Beneficiary Os welt Os Yourself ; . It INCREASES 4n^ volue!-------------------------------- ~ We moke This spedul FREE offer so ^ see for yourself, WITHOUT A PENNY COST, the marvelous protection it affords. This policy is issued so that you will not have to burden your loved ones with funeral costs and other debts and expenses. Fill out and mail the coupon below TODAY . . . TOMORROW MAY BE TOO iATE. SEND NO MONEY-SOLD BY MAIL ONLY NO AGENT WILL CALL Upon receipt dnd approval, we will immediately send you your new low cost $1000 Policy. There will be NO CHARGE for the first month. You will be protected FREE! The Iqw rate for.odditionar months will be shown on the policy. There is no obligation of any kind on your port to continue, unless you want to. This iso real bargain. You will agree when you see it for yourself. You will be the judge. No agent will call. It is available to you NOW if you act immedioteTy. MaTt tH^ coupon RIGHT NOW! Tim* Life Iniuronce Compariy on estaBJnh-ed Old Line Legal Reserve Compony. Its co-founder ond -first President was the late General Jono-thon M. Woinwright, hero of Botoon and Cor-regidor in World War II. II t» TIME INSCEANCE I CUT OFF HERE |ND MAIL TODAY! .. Drrt. ttEtl, Gca. Wataiwrifkl M*., Saa Aa put there by noted. 1 girl,” the doctor for DISCOUNTS Oh SQUIBB PRODUCTS MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS Squibb VIGRAN In public schools, where children come from less-economical-ly-comfortable families, the ratio narrows, but even then “only one out of every four tacks NOT A NATURAL URGE The reason for this relatively exemplary behavior in the youthful years haS nothing to do with natural urge's to be goDd. They| purely artificial, society-made urges. “Girls are brought up to believe nice girls ‘don’t do that.’ Boys, on the other hand, ‘will be boys’ in almost any environment They are permitted :Jllildl.JBflE8.frfe<|PWI tyjtlgk: and get into trouble.” So girls, In the early years, are cheated of the right to be humanly aggressive. Society promises them, in return for good behavior, a successful marriage, a beautiful home, and lovely children. * * * The trouble for girls comes lat-|er, when these wondrous promises of childhood are not completely fulfilled. ‘From her first sniffs aj the young Iddy JS N. Saginaw-/>ruir Orpt^ Dow^fismt fhotisK: Cit^ My Name is (Print) . Date born: Month. . Beneficiory’s Nome . . Day. . ,. .........Occupation..... . . Birthplace-. _____ Height. Sign Here X. j Address .............. , If Tn W*nl Frw PcIlciM j UkllotlM. N. Af«l Will FaaiUr. Makt Cmm* Ukt senses that it is not all Miss English’s finishing school for girls cracked it np to be. She considers herself cheated. “The pallid enjoyments of virtuous womanhood have begun to wear thin, and the full-bodied adventure# of the young men are much more attractive.’’ COMES TROUBLE Now “is the' time tO“ look forj trouble. The American girl in: her late teens is inclined toj “catch Up” on the boys. She has| been bamboozled into behaving perfectly. For what? The result: By the time those I little girls who wouldn’t put' thumb tacks on teacher's seat reach the age of 18, they are in almost as much trouble, of one : kind or another, as boys. —By the time-ihey are I*!, they are entirely equal with boys. ★ ★ * : And from the hge of 25 on, women outstrip men in the race to the psychiatrist’s couch for help with their troubles. Moral: Good girls go to heaven, but they have a devil of a time on the way. WHENEVER YOU CAN’T SLEEP ...take this sleeping aid with confidence because of simple nervous ten-kibn or daily problems, take SoMiNEX with confidence. Taken as directed, Sominex is so safe and effective you can take it whenever you need it. Tests in leading hospitals and among hundreds of private patients prove Sominex is wonderfully effective. You enjoy restful sleep, awake refreshed. Contains no barbiturates. Not habit-forming. Get Sominex for natural-like sleep. Available without a pre-scription. Ask for SoMinex. SIMMS BROS. 98 N. SAGINAW—DRUGS nriyiVMiiacnMd SINUS CONGESTION ■Ms oisirtH 8 kiylfw T8UMAC TABLETS Hilpt Ml M d|M dMB c mim liw InMit. H jfN wlhr IfM mil «N iton milin mt hm limiartt Tramx It saM «8| li Um Permission Required ATLANTA 'A — Sign outside of, Atlanta harware store: Husbands _ selecting paint colors must have i note from wives.” REPORT FROM MOTOR TREND EXPERTS ON THE '63 RAMBLERS: ime up on every other ear' Foctofy Raprasantotiv* Hara WEDNESDAY-2 to 3:30 p.m. REMINGTON Electric Shaver RECONDITIONED WaitSirviee- WedMaday of M*ry watk. ElMtrie, Shavire -Main Floor Twln-stkk Ftoof Shift with Instant Overtak* RamblerlB3.^Caroftbe YeaiT \ a.1l Mta Pw CMlM-besI mileage of my ewin my dess (for tho 4th ymr in a row)-wM scored by a Rambler American Mfi Vdtb CLARKSTON LAKE ORION “One up on every other car” is an exact quote from Motor Trend Magazine’s experts after they road-tested the ’63 Rambler American 440 Convertible (pictured above) equipped with Twin-Stick Floor Shift, Rambler's exclusive sports-car option. Why don’t you, look at a Rambler? See how jnany^^ other ways it’s one up on the rest—with Deep-Dijp nist-proofing, Ceramic-Armored muffler and tailpipe, spar. . kling performance with proved economy, optional Re-clining Bucket Seats, a complete line of wagons, hard-tops, convertible, sedans, including the lowest-priced U.S. car. See your Ranald dealer, FREe Car Book* can save you h limited. Hurry to your R ROCHESTER Heugkttii B Son, Inc. UNION LAKE Ui«d CarAToo. Buy Now During Your Rambler Doaloi^s Used Car JIMSS Fine Cigarettes at LOW PRICES AT SIMMS Broi. Cigorettes — Mofvelt ond cade brands now at low, low prkM. ^*'*'*' MARVELS Cifaretfes PER CARTON ||1g Regular size, regular ^ ® Soboccoi famous. Mar- Bi vels in canon of 10 pUis Tax pocks. CASCADE Cifarettes PER CARTON Menthol floyered smokes w=*' liheri ; carton of I u pocks. ,026 I Madam! Do YOU LOVE lYour Husband? . . . sure you do, but do you redly lova him enoughNo fake .the time and effort to shop oround when you spend his hard-earned money? We mean for you hot only to look ot the odvertisements, but to actually compare the Hern . . . stores tend to od-vertise pretty near tho some price on o particular item — bul^ot of the qdaWy? Is it'American Mode? Does the Store stand behind the item? These ore qwes-Is you must answer everytime you spend that' d-earned money. Simms tries to price every n at the lowest possible price—and you should have money left over to put owoy for a rainy day ... so from now on, before you buy, compare tho item in personi Listed Below Are Some 'Husband Lovers’ Specials ForTomorrow 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Only WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT Genuine 'BEACON’ and 'CHATHAM’ 72x90” BLANKETS Sale of Usual $6.98 Values Never before at this low price —McAllister’ pinids by Chatham or Be^n reversible biqnkets—solid colgr gn side, ploid on the oUier. first quality with over A-Inch satin bindings.—Basement SCAHER RUGS- 3 for &8c vakies group of solids and tweeds — choice’ljf sizes with non skid rubber bocks. 1 00 WOOL YARD GOODS, Per Yard Value to $4 per yard — plaids, sohd cdors, |n 54 to 60 Inch widths. Finol clegrance price._ 1 50 WEDMESDAYONLYDISCOUHT Choice of Two Famous Brand Names in 7-Pc. Oven Ware Sets _______ — casserole with cover, pie plate ond dessert—custard cups. Clear oven heatproof gla*»-Fire-King or Glasbake brands. Guarontied 1 heat breakage. —2nd Floor *EASY-0FF’OVEN CLEANER f $1.00 volue—1 pound size jdr with oppikator. Cleans burnt on B* FLOOR WAX APPLICATOR $1.59 value — wood handle, opplicotor with washable pod. Omit I per person.............................. 96 WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCDUNT Large llVi-Ounce Capacity-Cold Trimmed Decorated Beverage Glasses ^ Regular $2.00 Seller 'Parti-Pbk' beverage glassea In assorted modernistic patterns with gold trim . . famous 'Hazel-Ware' modem glassvrares for ong,.--,.— -2nd Floor JOHNSON’S 'HARD QLOSS’ WAX C Regular 60c pint con of lelf-polishing floor wax - (node for all ■ floors, litn-it 2 COM,. :.......................... 10-In. ALUMINUM SKILLET . $$.$0 voluP — lO-indLOpen skillet with cod bdtdit* handle. ^^inches deep........................................ WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT n Fits Up To 32 X 80 Inch Doorways-Washabla Vinyl Folding Doors 99 $5.9S Value — Now Only-Save space with easy to install folding doors. Washable Z beige colors. —2nd Floor ROUND CLOTHES BASKETS $1.49 volue-woven wicker baskets vrith sturdy carrying hoiidlei 89' ‘MOTHER OF PEARL' TOILET SEAT $6.95 volue - white or block toilet seats with hinges. t7 only at this low price,.............................. Main Floor CLOTHING DEPARTMENT 4" Compart Anywhere! Genuine ‘BEACON’ Flannel Baby Receiving Blankets Irregulars of 69c Sellers Blankat ____ EachSAo Truly a better buy — soft, cuddly flannel in stripes, solids, and nursery prints, standard receiving blanket I whip-stitch edges. You must see 'em to appreciate their true worth. No limit — buy for yourself or for gifts. A . FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, TPUfeSDAY, MARCH 12, 196^ Clarksfon Teacher Pay Hike Schedule OK'd CLARKSTON — A proposed salary increase schedule for Garkston community school teachers calling for an approximate $100,000 annual budget increase was adopted last night by the school board. Schools Supt. Dr. L. F. Greene said in order to put the new schedule into effect this Septem- ber, a proposal calling for a five- for starting teachers with bache-mill increase would ^have to be lor’s degrees; approved at the polls. I * w * No election date was set last It calls,for an increase of $216, night. The vote will probably 'from $4,800 to $5,016, to begin- take place in May or June, Dr. Greene said. First proposed for board con-sideration in January, the new ning teachers with master’s degrees. ^ ANNUAL HIKES -----------------------,, — The schedule, which spans an^r .■■..■.■.i salary schedule specifies a boost111-year period, specifies annual i®®®" of $^, from $4,600 to $4,800, |increments in all teacher cata-l Top pay for i , NEWS OF k'" ■ A prtes Q of a master’s degree could reach a maximum annual salary of $7,790, which is $335 over the present maximum. Teachers with special degrees would earn from $5,242 to $8,140 under the new schedule over the 11-year period. Holders of At the present the school dis-'new salary schedule for board trict aUocates IS mills for debt consideraUon, It was presented service and 11.43 mills for oper- $7,45, an increase of $321 over the present limitation. Holder doctor's degrees would begin at $5,378 and attain a top salary of lieM ating, for a total of 24.32. The proposed boost would increase the total to 29.43. No breakdown of the proposed five mills between o^rating and spedfled Hit night When teachers first offereen the light- est turnout in several years was recorded. All candidates for office were unopposed. Oxford Top vote getters In Ihe vfflage election here yesterday were in- FAST TALKERS — The Romeo High School debating team hasyeached the qudXter finals in state competition, having won the district and regional contests in recent weeks. Members (from left) are Ken Seifert, Bill Volz, Kim Kaiser and Cary Kilner, all 16-year-old juniors. They will meet the Lansing School for the Blind team next Monday. Romeo coach is English teacher Richard L. Hill. Reassessment Fight Grows in Southfield SOUTHFIELD — The uproar here over reassessment is growing, Councilman C. Hugh Dohany said this morning. From the time residents received their reassessment statements from the assessor’s office last week, council mem-ers have been deluged with hundreds of phone calls protesting the additional charges, he said. Dohany noted that the increases are B Cleminshaw Report demanded by Mayor S. James Clarkson. the present assessing department eTiminate control of the assessor with a department head report- by the mayor, he added, inj.to the city administrator as is presently the policy in all other city departments,” Dohany ^id. The city assessor would then occupy a nonpaying honorary position and the logical appointment for assessor would be the head of the appraising department, he explained. "Su ;ch an approach would Dohany went on to say that, regarding the present reassessment problem, he plans to call meeting with the city council, sessor, city attorney, and the city board of review, to outline legal and other ramifications of multiple assessment increases. The mayor could not be reached for comment. for the mayor’s seat in the April election. ‘FIRST JOLT’ Tn his budget message last year the mayw recommended that Southfield base its taxes on state equalized values, a move that would serve to raise our seven-mill tax limitation by more than 50 per cent,” he said. “The city assessor should not be a political tool of the mayor, especially as we have a mayor who is obsessed with assessments,” Dohany warned. He pointed out that in South-field the assessor is appointed by the mayor and “serves at the pleasure of the mayor.” “If elected mayor, I will propose that an appraising de|^-ment be established to rqxlace Slated in Walled Lake Wood Creek Farms Bad weather cut in half the expeeted-veter turnout' in t h e village election in this southwest Oakland County community yes- Eelected to his second term as village president was Norman E. Krcider’ who polled 44 votes. Benjamin G. DeCooke and Mrs. Robert J. Swift polled 42 and 40 votes respectively to fill the AH csndidfttM lengecftor public office. Girl Bitten, Dog Sought LAKE ORION—Oakland County sheriff’s deputies are seeking information about a black, udiite and brown dog, about the size of ajbeagle, u«ch bit an ll-year-oU girl here Saturday. Sara-jo Hauser, daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. Les Hauser, 411 N. Shore Drive, wiU have lo undm'go a painful qpries of rabies shots if the dog is not located. She was bitten While in the Red Bam subdivision. The dog has a black forbad, back and tail and a brown muz- WALLED LAKE—Mayor Louis James has called a spe^ meeting of the Cify Council tonight to discuss the proposed city hall purchase. At a special meeting March 2, the council declared its Intent to purchase the Ramsey Building adjacent to the present city haU for $29^66. The vote was 6 to 1, with James the lone dissenter. The purpose of the special session is to answer “a lot of questions people want to discuss,” the mayor said. He noted that he has received many telephone calls, and has been stopped on the street by people who want more information about the proposed city hall. Tile council action “was done So fast that I don’t think anyone knows the answers,” tbe mayor said. Councilman Wendell Kellogg Jr., a member of the three-man conunlttee appointed to work out details of the purchase, termed the calling of a special council meeting “a little prematnre.” He note^ that his committee ! “not tonqxirt” its findings. TTie committee was instructed zle. White is predominant on his underside and paws and there is a white diamond on his forehead. Anyone seeing a dog fitting this description is urged: fo contact eitbiv tte OAland County Sheriff’s Department or dog warden-lyea votes to 165 no. Sewer Bond Issue Fails WHITE PIGEON (AP) - Voters Monday failed to give enough support at the polls to a pro-pos(^ $545,000 sewer bond issue. The prm>osal, whioti required a 66 per cent edge, ldreW“ 6Hly T7I by the council to have its report ready for the March 19 cOuncti meeting, he said. Drawings for Holly School Seen HOLLY—Preliminary sketches and drawings of tiie new Holly Elementary School were displayed last night at a meeting of the board of education in the high school library. Keith Weilaud of Charles Lane Associates was on hana to explain the plans. He is pnj-ect engineer for the proposed A tentative schedule calls for construction to begin April 10, with completion sl^ foe late October. The deadline for bids on construction is April 2. A $13,166 increase la teadi- by the board of education. Purpose of the rate increase i? to bring pay (d Holly public school teachers in line with that of other school districts and to encourage retention of experienced teachers. The new schedule boosts starling salaries $200. Teachers with bachelor ot arts those with master of arts degrees will start at IS^OO. , ■ ■■' . V ' J^omiac Board 6T J’'''ii;ao, Mid,;, gan 12,1963 About Treasury in our As a h ; "Str P™P»«y Uxe,. Your e. Confr k *®*^- ----- % ^^C3Slll^ * l_ T„ “'’ deducHh. ? P'>™illed ,o ' of 4«, ”"Iy those ca«...l.„. "^""t.re $1,400, Tuconie Tn elu. deduct th. • P^^nitfed to of4%lfllt"°t','‘°" end S'.«0, The fflv I.:ii ^ - c to The tax bn ®“bjecl to ^£'~~-?sss:::;ar;S~!sg Tax! ^otvth C«"$re? i!’!"''''‘‘' '‘*“«"- tnoeeas7nr^““ a. a . We — >’»»>■ aypensos and ^ expenses and ' <*ry truly yours *^‘iac Board of Realtors Tow Can Do Something About It! ACT NOW! Sign and mail llie three roiipons helow! Tliese will intlieate to your Senator ami ront^ssmen the fart that you want the present Federal Income Tax Code rontinued, wliirh allows FI LL DEDIT.ITON from taxable income money vou have paid as interest, rharitable gifts, taxes, property loses from casualty, and medical expenses. You must let your represenutives know how you feel ..". here is a tfukk. easy, elTective way to do so! .\U coupons will be immediately forwarded to W ashington Tor you! . Ylail This Cnupon Toilay to Box 37, The Ponl-iue Press P,U.JlttX 9, Pofttiacs Mich. Mail This Coupon Today to Box 37, The Pontiac Press P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. The Honorable Philip A. Hart Senate (Mice Bmldin£^_ Washington, 25, D.C„ Dear Sir: Your efforts are sincerely requesled to continue un-changed that t^rt of the I'ederal Income Tax Code whick allows FL'LL DEDLCTION from taxable income the moifFy we have paid as inlereid, charitable contributions, taxes, casnalty losses to property, and medical expenses. The consideration of thiia request is urged and will be deeply appreciated by me. Signed. The Honorable William S. Broomfield House Office Building Washington, 25, D.C. ............ Michigan Dear Sir: Your efforts are sincerely requested to continue unchanged that part of the Federal Income Tax Code which allows FULL DEDUCTION from taxable income the money we have paid as interest, charitable contributions, taxes, casualty losses to property, and medical expenses. The consideration of this request is urged and will be_ deeply appreciated by me. Signed. ......, Michigan I 7ZS" ■'T—-firtrilteri to assist home owners, home buyers, and otbem is sponsored by The Pontiac Board of Realtors, Pontiac, Michigan Ylail This Coupon Today to Box 37, The Pontiac Pres* P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. The Honorable Neil Slaeblcr House Office Building Washingtqn, 25, D.C. Dear Sir: Your efforts are sincerely requested to continne un-cliangeal Altai part, of the Federal Income Tax Code whick-allows FULL DEDUCTION from taxable income tlie money we have paid as interest, charitable contributions, taxes, casualty losses to properly, and medical expenses. Tlie consideration of this request is urged and will be deeply appreciated by me. Michipn. y. THE^PONTIAC PRESS « West Hiinm street n. TUESDAY, MARbi 12, 1963 xuou> A. rrmneuaD Pentiac, JOcfalgan SSSITj VtojPiMWint M< TIo* PiMldtat and Xdltor Jornn A. nm aacnUrr aod AdmUiiof E Honor Pupils Abundant ^ When 27 per cent of the students at a university qualify for honors, it Is an indication of high student ability and professional teaching standards. Such Is true of Oakland University, where the annual honors banquet is scheduled for Thursday. ★ ★ ★ Strong competition l.s one of the distinct advantages which certain schools offer, and OH is certainly well stocked with it. Too often students shy away from such competition, and seek colleges and universities wiiere the going is a little easier. They are only deluding themselves, for they must compete in life, and —four^ears aH^-snap” kbheel-ts Just, delaying tFe evenlual day of reckon-ing. Oakland 1’niver.sity has tried to quell early reports that it was a “brain-trust” school with impos-sibly high standards and only near-genius student.s. This was successfully done. The current high ratio of honor students should not lead anyone to reshr-' rect this image. The fact that so many are, doing honors work while living at hbme and commuting is something to ba heller lend encouragement and strength to other nations strug- ism of autocratic government. The record to date of the’Un-American Activities Committee fully merits the congressional vote of confidence just accorded it. It must be that this tough winter has been almost enough to make nudists change their minds, such as they are. It would be a big mistake to lower Income tax rates in top brackets, as rich people are the Government’s most efficient tax collectors. The Man About Town Ankles Aweigh! / Voice of the People: ^Fishing, Boating Titne Should. Be Divided Equal* Give ‘both fishermen and speedboaters equal time 6a the lak^ by letting the speedboater run from 9;30 a. m. to 6:30 p. m. This would allow about 9 hours for boating and also give the fishermen about 7 hours of peace: ' ★ ★ ★ Skiers over 17 years of age should be required to have a skiing license which would cost $2. Why should the fishermen be the only one to pay for.the lakes? Drayton Plains Fans Comment on Basketball Game Says Some Humans Offensive as Birds Now that we are about to declare \m on the pigeons downtown, I urge that we do likewise to the human degenerates who ‘Fill 'Er Up!’ Precedes Present Phobia David Lawrence Says: -By HOWARD IIELDENBRAND The hiking craze that has pretty well walked its course is nothing-new to a couple of Pontiac natives'who, circa 1918, onge walked to Detroit—well, almost. The two onetime peregrlnators are Mrs. Maurice Hammond wee Anne Taylor, now of Huntington Woods, and Stewart Beach nee Stewart Beach, now of New Tork City. ‘Blockade’ Need Not Mean War The MAT walked right into a report about considered That’s the harrt "wav m immediately checked consiaerea. mats the hara way to it_wuh the lady, wisely, since he sought Achieve top marks, and many of our an accurate step by step account of the pil-area young people are doing It. school, set out afoot one morning . . ^ M___________._______________________, barely out of Pontiac were picked up by Crowds liVince Interest sympathetic motorisT^ got thenrornb flying start as far as Bloomfield Center. WASHINGTON - When is. a blockade an “act of war,” and when is it just a pacific exercise of hallohal rights? President Kennedy has said rtlock-ade of Cuba would be an ‘ act of war,’” but his jse of the word | ‘blockade” too broad. grimage. answer is ' It .seems that the two adventurers, then In is he found fh LAWRENCE “Corpus Juris Secondum,” an authoritative compilation of I a w based oh judicial decisions. This book is often used for reference in our Federal courts in considering cases, mdui^ihg limiTH^ involve seizure of or damage to property when a “blockade”-oc-• • • curs. Deciding that progress thus far had dearly Under the heading, “Forcible demonstrated the ease with Which the Measures of R^ress Short of War,” the following definition is Castro government, such as the seizure of American property without compensation and the acceptance from the Soviet government of offensive weapons, including missiled and airplanes capable^ being used to injure American citizens in the southeastern part of the United States. As a matter of fact, the United tion but that the Castro govern-• roent committed an act of war when it allowed Soviet troops and armament to land on its soil for the purpose of preparing for an attack on the United States. Thus, “blockade” and an “act of war” are words that J.-iiend Many of us at Pontiac Central would like to congratulate Northern «n its well-deserved victory. We hope that Northern will go Pon^ Cenffa ^ High School Students As a neutral observer of the Where to Write Pontiac Northern vs. Central fiasco, I can understand and . lOF Jreil “8l . sympathize with the regrettable loss of self-control by several of ju answer to how a foreign pen the players. I have never seen pal can be obtained, write People-a more flagrant example of gross to-People Hobbies Conunittee, f53 incompetence on the part of an Waverly Place, New York 14, official. The first half was a New York. Include your name, veritable tragedy of errors, with address, age, languages spoken questionable call after question- and hobbies or interests. Also enable call going against Central, dose a friendly letter so the peris- This whole incident brings up son receiving your name Can-.ro-twD points: Northern, in a tour- ply more satisfactorily, nament game should not have Phyllis Anderson been playing on her home court; Waterford the entire concept of post-seaaon ___________________ tournaments is a clear case of the Michigan High School Athletic “t ail?”*,"*’” The Almanac BUI Rotsel 71 Franklin Blvd. ®y United Press International _ today is Tuesday, March 12,—-. “To the victor belongs the ‘he 71st day of 1963 with 294 to congratulate Pontiac Northern ( its District crown States could chMse to regard the interpretation a govern ment landing of “offensive weapons” chooses to give them. A course in Cuba tea hostile act by Rus- of “watchful waiting” chn always he adopted unUl some overt act could hold Soviet government removes all doubt as to w>nt is toaccounUbhlity. an “act of war.” Certainly there is no for theii? real meaning on what much success in coming" regionals. Although (Copyright, 19C) Then pk-king up steam as well as feet, they made it to Twelve Mile Road, at which point a meeting was held, f. in Bo^t Show at Mall As the center of a vast boating area, Pontiac has long needed"a boat show of Its own. Attempts in previous years to hold one here always^lled distance_ could be covered ... it would be , a_ 1 V.1 practically a^shoe-tn . . . the trail blazers up on the same reef—no acceptable- ^ showroom large enough. ★ ★ ★ This year the Pontiac Independent Marine Dealers and the Pontiac Mall got together and produced a fine show right in the lakes area. The Mall wa-S the perfect setting , .... j *1, ..lu u Many columns ago (have you heard of for the boats, and the, exhibit was „^„vement to replace the current Gre-well received. The dealers placed a gorian calendar with the MAT columnar? good variety of modela on display and many of the area’s boaters Force.” Bob Considine Asks: a staunch Central fan, I now will back our other Pontiac team in the finals, Good hick. Northern, and to Central Lsay there will be another year, boys. ___________A Central Fan ‘SINA Group Aims Are Ridiculous^ agreed that further exercise of their pedal extremities would be bootless. • - • • Mrs. H., with becoming shyness, now felt ’ the whole thing was a bit corny—but your columnist brushed a.side her doubts. Look at how much farther she and her companion walked than Pierre Salinger! given: “Certain measures of redress taken by one nation against another are Regarded as short of war, although they may involve an exercise of force. Such acts are usually, classified as retorsion, reprisal, .pacific blockade and embargo.' “The mere suspension of the reiation.s of peace usually subsisting between two nations, and the taking by one of them of such measures of redress against the other, does not of itself constitute war. . . “The so-called ‘pacific block-•ade’ is a means of coercion, or- How Much Does Bidault Really Love His France? Whoever started this “Society for Indecency to Naked Animals” must have nothing else to do but made the first of his many popu-sit back and think up crazy ideas, lar “Fireside Chats.” The moon is approaching its last quarter. The morning stars are Venus' and Mars. The evening star is Mars. ★ ♦ ★ On this day in history : - In 1904, a $5-milllon gift by Andrew Carnegie establlshetf Carnegie Hero Fqnd Foundation. In 1912, the Girl Sconto of America began in Savanah, Ga., when Mrs. Juliette Ciordon Low organized the first troop. In 1933, President Roosevelt NEW YORK — Soitw pertinent and perhaps impertinent thoughts on the news: If Georges Bi-d a u11 loves France as much he swears he does, why would he get La Belle in as much trou-, ble with Britain I and West Ger-j rtiany? Whyl doesn’t he re-" tire to Algeria? CONSIDINE Historically, he couldn’t cprry de Gaulle’s briefcase. Imagine the chiMrea going to the zoo and seeing the ui-mals covered up. How ezcHing that would be. a 230-bed floating hospital and medical school that during its two voyages to southeast Asia and South America made possible 4,000 major operations, treated 45,000 patients and immunized is trying to put or examined 'about half a million on a goldfish, people. 18, Germany invaded Aus- The next thing they’ll be doing bathing suit In I! (ria. A thought for the day: Presl-dent Franklin Roosevelt said— “It is an unfortunate human failing that a full pocketbool^ often groans more loudly than an empty stomach.” In Washington: First Manpower Report a Hit . . ' ir ★ ★ ,mt6Bm t» As one who is known for alway keeping his feet on the ground, yon may be tare that he wouldn’t belong to an air service in any way cloudy: inaugurating something brand new in the federal government. ’This was a special message on unemployment where It is now, where it’s going, Mr. Gilpatrie is a fine public what should servant. But he seemed to be on done about it.^HBflHi Bringing these programs painfully thin ice on that par- The President EDSON gether puts the focus on their ticular score. California was calls this “the No. 1 economic common ultimate objective ployment include tax changes, Clark, D-Pa. He intends to hold the youth employment bill, ex- further hearings over several panded educational opportunities months, at all levels, a strengthened un-mployment insurance system, broadened minimal wage law coverage and civil rights measures which will end discrimination in employment. awarded billions in defense con- problem.” The MAT thinks that addition. Their fine family includes six children, 27 grandchildren and. 12 great-grandchildren. of “blockade.” * ★ ★ This could have been construed by other governments as an “act of war” in Uie accepted sense. tracts last year. WesI Virguira got Care packages. PLUMS FOR TEXAS Texas came up with some great plums in defense work. North Carolina got hominy grits. We were happy to hear Mr. Gilpatrie state that Americans wilt have sole custody of the nuclear warheads which will b« ^ placed aboard" those mnlUnn-tional surface vessels which we hope will replace the 121 land-based IRBMs now in Britain, ' Italy and Turkey. The crews of such ships will come from all over the Alliance In time, this message may The message and an accompanying comprehensive report from Department of Labor on ‘‘manpower requirements, resources, utilization and training” brought together all the separate programs the President has proposed to reduce unemployntent. ★ ★ ★ TTiese programs began with the Depressed Area Redevelopment du'etion of unemployment, over 5.5 per cent the last five years. Thi itattstlcs and charts hr the manpower report all seem to point to the conclusion that unemployment will get worse as .-the population and labor fwce grow in the ISNs and 1970s, unless preventative meas-nres can be taken now. ' A foreword to the Labor De- Owing to the present unsettled conditions in the House Education and I^hor Committee, it is uncertain whether Chairman Adam Clayton Powell, D-N.Y., will hold similar hearings. But eventually it is hoped there will be joint Sen-Ote-House hearings on all problems affecting employment. In one sense, this may cut________ across jurisdiction of the Joint Committee on Ecoiwmic Repevt which was created by the EuD Employment Act of 1946. But in recent years the economic committee has concentrated on fiscal, monetary and general issues which only indirectly influenen employment. _________ ...^_ R 1* tl>« threat of growing Act oM96t, and the Manpower by Secretary imemptoyment in the years Development and Training Act of Wirf* calls attention ahead that has brought on this 1962. One section of this latter ‘wo otber supplementary re- new, special attention from (he act calls for an annual report to EresWent and Congress. Congress on the country’s man- Congratulations on this fine contribution to the sturdy-stock of Amerjcar-aiid how TOukt chance, you like to get Sunday dinner for that assem- He implied in his latest press blage? ^ conference, on March 6, that he would do the same thing again if he felt it necessary. So the argument turns on what steps It is necessapr to take" to keep armament and ' shipments of oil and other promts from reaching Cuba. —floating towers of Babel, egad! ^ . —but only our guys will have the but Mr. Kennedy took that jolt power. „ It seemed like a nice vote trf Verbal Orchids to— Mrs. Irving Swayze of North Branch; 91st birthday. Miss Amanda Moore of Romeo; 95th birthday. Mrs. Mary Grlep of 477 Orchard Lake Ave!; 87th birthday. confidence in a people who were considered so trigger happy.by the Metropolitan Museum of Art that the curator protected Mona Lisa with a bullet-proof glass shield during its exhibition here. rank in importance with the President’s budget and economic messages. The manpower report wW deal with human resonrees instead of fiscal resources. For as the President says, “Manpower is the basic resource.” ... “The ideal of full employment —in the large sense that each individual shall become all that to include a survey on vocational The gdod ship Hope has tied up he is capable of becoming and training, at a New York pier and Mayor shall contribute ifully to the well- * * it A “pacific blockade” is a le- Robert F. Wagner has proclaimed being of the nation even as he All tiiis material is to be made gitimate measure ofjqyisal for This tQL.be “Hope Week.”T!; S. fuHy rtun-es in that weU-being the subject of extensive congres-the hostile acts committed by the Hope, as you probably know, is -is at the heart of our demo- sional investigational. In handling vey of human resources. . „ The first, already issued, cov- c^erence on ers training acUvities in the first six months since the Manpower Development Act became law. It the Pi^- shows that 25,000 workers, un- * Pro^am. Uter, t^re at a cost of about $1,200 for each worker. The second supplementary report, still to be issued by Anthony J. Celebrezze, secretary. Health, Education and Welfare, is The PonUae Preu b delivered br carrier (or SO cenb o week: where mailed In Oakland. Omieiee. Llvtnf-ston. Macomb, Lapeer and Waan-lenaw ConnUea liia |1I.M a rear; elsewhere In Mlehloap and all other ptacea In the United Statee IM.OO a rear. All mail aubacripUcsu parable In adranee. Poatage has be— — be«a -i . V V THE yONTIAC j*RE$S, TUESDAY. MARCH 12, 1903 SEVEN Crater lake national pwk In Oregon records about 17 feet of snowfall, ^ average Mt In the 1950-51 season. The textile and apparel indus-tries 'use nxm than el^t million tons of coal in one normal UNOOLN, Ne^. (AP) ~ An inmate f|:pm Michigan was critically injured yesterday in a Ne-brasha penitentiary when a rx^ oh which he was attempting to slide to freedom from toe roof of the penitentiary broke and let him faU, Wardro Maurice Sigler WITH A HOME LOAN from onr association, yon can reborroyr up to the original amount oj^onr loan for fntnre repairs, remodeling^ or dt^er improyements—without reflnancing! And, this practical open end clause is only one way we help make home financing more convenient for you. Stop in today for full deUils. **«o/** t Savims t * * 75 West Huron E*tabli$hed 1890 FE 4-0561 ^ rtlpp.nnpt ^ CUSTOMER PARKINS IN REAR OF BUILDWS Member Federal Home Loon Inmate Hurt in Escape Try T invest in these bargain reported. Sigler said the injured convict was Frank Lucas, 50, Benton Harbor, serving 30 years on charges of robbery and shooting with intent to kill, would or maim, for the abduction and wounding of a Gothenburg, Neb., poilceman last October. Lucas also is wanted in Michigan for parole violation. Sigler said Lucas suffered fractures of the spine and hip when a small rope broke and he phmged Id toe gjrouad,^' panions in the escape attempt, Jerry Lewis Thomas, 21, and Edward Yates, 20, both from the state of Washington, were found on the roof of the cell block. Thousands of Satisfied Land Owners Can Give You the Answer The warden said toe men tore toilet stools from the floor their cells on toe top tier of toe eell Iwuse^ bore into-* aervk» corridor and broke into t^ attic. Then they knocked a small hole Through and* was attempting to slide W feet to toe ground when the rope broke. Big, Beautiful, Sunny HOMESITES (100 Ft. Frontage by 217."8 Feet of Depth) BELFN, new MEXICO MOGMNDEESmS -Till pfeHrty we'»« tmimi * M (feMA tt wt imtfImS It to b« from the description In tho loideri. Tho tconoty It boeutiful. We or* eatisfiod with our trKts ond plon to lieo born In tho futuro. oetlnt, sccnory insplrlnf. Prospoct of dotiriblo witor supply ond pouibillly of plontiful vo|o-totion... troos, ftassos, otc. ItoOundu bUUs stoms to bo 0 good prospoct for o futuro of proRiso, pdvonturo and succossful buslnoss opportunity. Clodyi Ord Janot >1400“D’’ Stroot Lincotn, NobrisU Norwegian manufacturers now: offer low-cost breakage insur-1 ance on most types of skis. Think nf It takas inly $1 to risenrt yonr spaciois balf-aert ranck sHi hi biantHiil Ri« Graadt Estatasl This Mtans that $1 dspasH givat yon the oxclnthfo option on this sunny proporty... whilo yon taki tho thno to oxamlno svtry singlo dotail and advantago about buying tola laod.J^’s right! You will rtciive full information, and WE HOLD THIS LAND IN YOUR NAMC WHILE YOU MAKE YOUR OWH DECISfUN! Yon must bo compittoly dolightod with this land bargain... or your $1 deposit will ba promptly sootbKk! TOTAL PRICE $299 / NO INTEREST CHARGES PAY ONLY $1Q MONTHLY! 50,000 American Families are Buying Now... For the.FutureU During the past ten yean... the tunny Southwest has undergone one of the most fantastic population booma of any era in our nation's history. And where did all the people come from777 From every aection of this country ; .tfoin.your s-------------*--------------------------------------------- The people pictured in this advertisement represent the 50,000 families who have already bought property in our Southwestern subdivisions during the past three yean. Some are buying their land now, with definite plans to retire in the sunny Southwest... wisely assuming that if they wait until they retire... the land may well be far too cbsUy for their retirement incomes'. Far better to buy the land now ... while the prices are still well within their budgets!!! " '■ • Others are buying their land as a deeply cherished investment. Not espeei^ ally to “get rich”... or to “make a killing;” rather ... as a most satisfying addition to their particular savings Und holdings. Owninhip of land brings with it one of the most proud and satisfying feelings man can ever acquire. And these thousands of families have taken advantage of the opportunity to buy a fine parcel of land ... from a dependable organization. Big tUngs are bapening in this sun-drench^ region of the Land of Enchantment! Today, Rio Grande Estates is a growing community of attractive homes, a splendid golf course ... with lush fairways creating a carpet of green under the bluest of blue skies! In the short months ahead, even more homes will rise as Rio Grande Estates takes iu place among the new, vigor- ous communities in the Southwest where the living is truly “easier!” Located just 32 miles south of Albuque^ue, and leas than 5 miles from _______n of Helen (where all dty conveniences are available) Rio Grande Estates enjoys a magnificent view of both the majestic ManzanO Mountains and the romantic Rio Grande Valley and River! AN “ARMCHAIR LANDLORD" FOR ONLY $10 A MONTH" spacious half acre homesile it------- mdhthiv!! Your half acre homesite measures 100 feet frontage on an unpaved ranch road, and 217.8 feet of depth. This it a lot of land... yet the total price today is only $2991! No interest charges... no carrying charges... no credit applications... and the terms are just $10 a month! Small wonder that ao many, xpany familifet have already bought thejr “estate under the aun"!! SUNSHINE SPLENDOUR! with comments similar to these shown here. 1 HAVE ALREADY DECIDED TO “COME OUT TO THIS SUNSHINE valley ” TO ENJOY A SPLENDID, NEW WAY OF UFE! Yes ... The Land of Enchantment is beckoning! And small wonder when vou realize thauthousands upon thousands of families are finding that LIFE UNDFR CONSTANT SUNNY SKIES IS TRULY THE GREATEST WEALTH that one CAN POSSESS! Where else in this nation can you find an average of 350 days of SUN- 0 “GROW AND EXPAND-77 WONDERFUL REAL ESTATL1NVESTIICIIT Looking for property with hi^ possible proTit? Beat mle to follow is to •BUY LAND TT AT A LOW PRICE... WHERE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT ARE TAKINO PLACEl" Tkit it Rio Grandt EUtdesl Now in its third year of developmeatl Nearly half a million doUart worth eA homes have been built or are now under constructionl Mile upon mik of unpaved ranch roads have been built. A FINE GOLF COURSEIS NOW IN DAILY USE! AND EVEN GREATER DEVELOPMENT IS ANTICIPATED DURING THE COMING YEAR! in Horizon Land developmenU in tho past three years. 5. Horizon Land Corporation is publici) owned... there ere over 2,700 stock- IMPORTANT FACTS ABOUT RIO GRANDE ESUTES • Founded in 1960. • Melf-aae lots meiswc 100 ft frontagt by 217.8 ft. in depth (typkel sizcL • Total prico is just $299 per lot ($1 etsMit uyt $10 montMy). FulTaae'iois avajl^V(or just $M9.'Ten^fetasstt;'only $15 MiiUily per acre. ----------- ------------------Torts. a No interest charges, no credit applieetfto by Lybrand. Rm Bros, gomory, is published aimuelly. 6. Horizon Land ts a meinber of tho Chamber of Commerce in each tree in which it develops lend. Horizon Land actively Ttocoiriiges alt goVwhmanL and trldt groups in their most careful scrutiny of all land being sold to tho public. 7. Horizon Land has over ISO porsons on-gigto in lend acquisition, planning and .. _________^ and pump included In Qie east of On hemes It Rio aandt Estitis. Homo prices rm|t from $8,995 to currently $20,000. a Taxes per VS^rrMtorreirtiy less tb« $3 per year. a . Title in a Warranty Oi Rtstrvi Yiv Land With CMfMaiet...WITH A ONE YEAR MONEY-BACK INSPECTION GUARANTEE After purthttsing your land, you have a 12-month period in which l> make a personal inspection. If, upon personal inspection, you find that this sale, jias been misrepresented AbiY MAfitlER, • • total refund request form at receive every single penny y resented IN ANY MANNER, simply fill out the n at our/ales office on the property. You wili ly you Jtave paid fa* mo GhANK ESTATES/ULEN, NEW kKXICO tka Atoiaaea Lm4 Carp„ a subaMiary of HORIZON LANO COIVOlUtTKM LOT PRICES TO RISE $% ON MARCH 21! Assets over S25 h References: CNamfetr* af Camaiarct, Tucson, Artr., Atboquarque, N; M., •altn, N. M., WMifox. Arli., El Pisa, Tales; Southern Arizona fioUARS*INVESTED IN THIS FINE LAND in acquisition, development, advertisin Stewart Title k Trust. Tucson, Arit: Mbrsltar it ising and censtruetion... ALL HALF-ACRE LOTS WILL RISE IN PRICE FROM $299 to $395 on March 21,19631 RESERVE YOUR LAND TODAY...SAVE $98 PER LOT. Rto Grawdo iseataf 227-2 Mam, H. M- nTiaeaMa eraaatt. riasM aal aaMa urafaHr to Ela Graae* EMaln. to aiy mwmt. m toei«al«e aalao. I7mb raakat w'Maiatata *Ma lUa tool miNCaa.^ny tt eafaiM wta ka laaiteialato rHwmttt. (Raaarra aa mnuj )ala sa yaa ala far tka AOORESS _ cirrszoM ^ TNH uvna Expma miiMacH St, toss. EI^HT THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY^ MARCH 12, HUDSON’S^ BUDGET STORE maker's clearance! well-k wash-wear Big selection of wrinkle shedding fabric-blends including Acrilan acrylic-rayon acetate! Birthday Sale! - f i One glance and you’ll want several pair at this low price! Imagine! These slacks are from one of America’s better makers for dependable quality! Plus they wash-wear . . . saving you expensive dry. -ix .L- , -‘-pwdable wear or neat appearance. Replenish hile they're priced at these big important sav-cotton knit. Men's sizes small, medium and large. They won’t affect the long depend) your supply of T-Shirts now while i lags. rmlihlif*—HsteM't Bl'DOET 8lM»-r»a«ia« Mali Three popular collar styles ... regular, button-down and snap-tab! Don’t miss this big selectioo! Cotton broadcloths, oxfordclodis and Dacron* polyester-cottons! Today’s most wanted collar styles . . . regular, button-down and snap-tab! Yes, in this great event, you’ll find a style you like! But that’s not all . .. these dress shirts are priced for exciting savings . . .just $2 each . . . you’ll want several! All are short sleeve st}’le for Spring-Summer coolness. Wash-and-wear, little or no ironing atid they^re ready to go again! White, blue and com. Men’s sizes UI/2 to 17; but not in all styles, fabrics or colors. Slight mis-weaves won’t affect the long wear or neat looks. FAMILY • NIGHT SHOPPING Every Evening till 9:00 P.M. Monday through-Saturday .. . Free Parking. NO PHONE ORDERS! THE PONTIAC PiaBSS. TUESDAY, MARCH 18,-1968 NINE HUDSON’S/fW BTJDGET STORE I IIQT CnilR n AYQ shop and share in these exceptional 48'th BIRTHDAY SALE savings! New fashions, apparel and accessories for Spring Lfiu I r UUn im 10 Easter... fresh, new furnishings for your home! Below are just a few of the exciting values! NO PHONE ORDERS! printed-stripe BLANKETS 4M BIRTHDAY SALE! Light, warm, toft cotton . . . jutt the right weight for Spring! ROSE, BLUE or AQUA decorator ttripes oh white. Completely Washable, acetate tatin binding. 70x5N)-in. size. Buy two and double your savings; last four days. OUR POUCY: You Pay No More at Hudson’s Bud^ Store! Our compmsoH shoppers are coustasstlf ebeekiug prkerdl over Lo ussmi n^;^em fdr~tteTi ones. TELL US IF W\E’RE WRONG!.Remember, your every purchdse is backed by Hudson's tradition of satisfnotion! ^ stem, our prices are as low as any- T£N THE PQNTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAFtCH 12; U.S. yield maple^ liqn !"Mp. Air force Fires ICBM Be modern with VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. 6986 Sample plan for a father and mother, both ago 30, with a 3-year-old child and newborn baby. THIS ONE PLAN provides lump sum insurance on Dad's life $ 5,boo THIS ONE PLAN provides leOOO THIS ONE PU^ provides life insurance for each child under 18 . 1,000 “TJHIS ONE PLAN provides outomatie coverage for new babies (after 15 days).... . 1,000 THIS ONE PLAN CAN ALSO PROVIDE $200 monthly cash income for the family if Dad's not there—for as long as 20 years... . 48,000* THIS ONE PLAN is available 24.19 for this low monthly cost.............. *Thi$ example shows benefits available at plan's beginning. If Dad s death occurs in eleventh year, for example, this amount would be half of $48,000. In this way you pay for no coverage "overload ". Bear in mind, also, that tho above plan it just one of many possibilities. Above all, this it flexible life insurance. The monthly income you select may bo contidtr-ably less than the $200 of this tiampio, (' your Social Security and Group benefits. INSURANCE By NATIONWIDE - NATIOMWIOC UFC INSURANCE COMFANV HOME OFFICE: COLUMeUt. OHIO 1 Sell Your,.. Television -J orj ,fr-f' // ■ 'J . \ Sewing Machine With a Pontiac Press Classified Ad! . . . Most people do, it's a good habit to hove. Pontiac Press Classified Ads will bring you fast action when you wont it. Regardless if you ore selling or buying o sofa, washing machine or TyoEuurn cleaner youMI find Classified Ads ore your best friend! National Classified Advertising Week, March 10th-16th Dbi FE 2-8t8t The Pontiac Press Classified Department ■.VA-.-.V . ’ THE FD^TIAC PRESg, TUESi)AY, atARCH 12, 1963 j i;i,Bvgy The Gold Room in Oakland University’s student <»nter li^as the setting for the sixth annual Golden Gavel dinner sponsored by City Federation of Women’s Qubs on Monday. Recipients of the goiden gavel for attendance at ^e dinner were the American Business Women’s Association, Tipacon Chapter, for Panama Canal for the mammoth project. The St. Lawrence waterway is the only place on this cdhtinent where tolls are charged for the use of water. ★ ★ w Former past presidents introduced were Mrs. B. B. Rousch, Mrs. Paul Gorman, Mrs. William McClure and membership over 50, ana“the~"~Mrs. RaymoncTL. Cole. Italian American Ciub Auxiliary in the membership-un-der-49 category. Mrs. Merrill D. Petrie, president, welcomed the assembly and Vera Bassett offered the invocation. Mrs. Richard Veazey, program chairman, introduced Howard Ueldenbrand, Pontiac Press Man About Town. ★ ★ W Former Congressman Hostesses were Mrs. Henry Healy, Mrs. Fritzi Stoddard, Mrs. Charles Crawford, Mrs. Charles Barrett, Mrs. Russell French, Mrs. Gorman and Mrs. McClure. On the courtesy committee were Mrs. Paul Spadafore, Mrs. Donald Lucarelli and Mrs. Sam Calabrese. Mrs. John Wilson assisted Mrs. Dyer with reservations; Mrs. Coie. handled publicity; Geor^ *.:Dbna^^>RfeyaI-------Mis^-Jrtm--5eh«»eder --------- Oak, spoke preceding a showing of “The Eighth Sea’’ made by the Caterpiliar Tractor Co. of Rockford, 111., and narrated by Walter Cron-kite. About to speak on the film “The Eighth Sea," shown at City Federation of Womens Clubs' 6th annual Golden Gavel dinner Monday at Oakland Uni-~versity, is former congressman George A. Bonder0 of Royal Oak. Mrs. Merrill D. Petrie of Qherokee Road (at right) is federation president. Seated is Mrs. John Napley of Kellen Lane, chairman for the event. Construction of the St.- Lawrence Seaway, according to Mr. Dondero, is the greatest earth-moving feat in our time. Delegations from all parts of the world have viewed this 27-foot-deep waterway which takes ships up to 860 feet in length. SDf CASUALTIES ThAw were only six casualties among some 22,000 laborers who worked on shifts 24 hours a day, six days a week, for five years. Three thousand pieces of heavy equipment valued at |75 million were brought from the Womens Section Personals Mrs. Randall E. Spurgeon, decorations; Mrs. William Belaney, programs. Mrs. Roland Zilka . played organ background music. Members Gather for Meetings Congregational Church groups met Friday. Mra. Mary Howell showed pictures by famous early Italian artists of Holy Week at the meeting of the Saybrook Group. Mrs. Raymond Swaney opened her home on ^Middle Belt Road for the meeting. The luncheon committee was comprised of Mrs. Mason Rich, Mrs. William Coleman and Mrs. Wilbur Ott. PmUm Fr»» Pfc*Ui , Mrs. Norman Dyer, Shore View Drive (center), ticket chairman fojr the federation dinner, welcomes Mrs. Albert DeSantis, Winkelman Road, of the Italian-American Club Auxiliary, and Pontiac Press Man About Town Howard V. I the most Jet service to Nothing's Wrong With Girl! What's Wrong With Son? By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: What, is wrong with a mother who will let her 14-^ear-old daughter accept a present from a 20-year-old boy who is trying to get through college? My husband and I can’t understand it. I told our son tonight that L U if this lltUe gold - digger has to have a |40 present he can quit school and go to work. We are having a tough tioM putting our son through ABBY president of a club of old ladies who can’t speak English either. Listen to this: Almost every time I am talking on the telephone she breaks into my conversation with “DOCTOR** or “HOSPITAL!” Thfa means I have to get off the line immediately. I understand it’s the law. A couple of minutes later I pick up the phone and she is laughing and talking to one of her friends. She has pulled this sb many times it isn’t even funny. What can I do about it? ANNOYED * * ★ DEAR ANNOYED: Call your telephone company and ask it to Investigate. one dollar for Abby’s new booklet, “HOW TO WRITE LETTERS FOR ALL OCCA-SIONS.’’ Mr, and Mrs. A. C- Kirby of Maqcday Lake have returned from a three-month tour of the West. They enjoyed an extended visit in California and stopped in Las Vegas, Nev., and Phoenix, Ariz., on their way home. It it it Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sdiwanz and son Jonathan, Franklin Road, have also returned from a western trip. They stayed In California and Mexico. Twenty-five members and one guest, Mrs. Harold Dudley, were present at the meeting of the Colonial Group at the home of Mrs. Elwood Bigler on West Iroquois Road. Mrs- Everett Russell, Mrs. L. tell and Mrs. Roy Smith were hoste^ for the luncheon. The group sewed cancer pads during the meeting. the air line with the BIO JETS YOU Are Invited to a Koffee Klatch «WMEItS"f6WER-tflr Pontiac Office THURSDAY 9:30 A M. March 14, 21, 28 You are cordially invited to attend our 49th anniversary celebration OPEN HOUSE - - m- — FURNITURE SHOW MIAVS OW V TONIGHT, WED., THURS.—MARCH 12, 13, 14 ^ 7 to 9 p.m. \ REFRESHMENTS! GIFTS! DEMONSTRATIONS I This is a Show . . . Not a Sale! Come . . . Join in the Fun and Festivities . Help Us Celebrate Our Anniversary ... At Either Store I ly didn’t think a thing of it. Why doesn’t her mother keep her in where she belongs? Thank you. CONSTANT READER it it it DEAR READER:, Don’t blame the girl’s mother because your son spent more than he could afford on a giR fOr the girl. When a girl gets a gift from a young man, her parents have a right to assume he could afford it. The world is not going to lock up its daughters ro young men like your son will be out of temptation’s way. DEAR ABBY: I share a party line with a’woman in her sixties who can’t speak a word of English. Sie is Osteopathic Auxiliary Sets Party The Oakland County Osteopathic Auxiliary will hold a salad luncheon and cu4 . party 12:30 p. m. Wednesday at First Federal Savings of Oakland. Spring hate will be modeled by members. Proceeds of the luncheon will benefit the auxiliary’s acholarship fund. Mrs. James HL - Quarles. . president of the group wiU ' ■ be assisted in arrangements^ ; by Mrs. Andrew B«ry, Mrs. H. V. Larabee, Mrs. L. Gale ‘ Huddle, Mrs. Harvey R. Brid- “ ensUne and Mrs. James G, Matthews. i DEAR ABBY: I wish to take issue with you. You said it is bad manners to use a toothpick in public. Well, why do the, finest jewelry stores sell solid gold toothpicks? HAS ONE it it it DEAR HAS: Back scratch-ers and toenail clippers are sold in the “finest” stores, too. But that doesn’t mean it’s proper to scratch one's back or clip one’s toenails in public. Hate to write letters? Send District Head at Amvets Meeting Here District No. 3 president Mrs. Margaret Willis was guest for the Sunday meeting of the Wright-Foumier Am-vete Auxiliary Post No. 161. Mrs. Edward Maison will represent the post at the Camp Oakland dinnor April 15. ....★ ★......★.....-.. Books will be collected by the group befmw April 1 to be distributed to Dearborn Vetorans Hospital. Plans have been completed for the golf league to resume at Morey’s Golf Course. Beginning May 2, golfing will be held each Tliursday. Former league members are invited to join. * ★ ★ The Amvet ladies’ bowling banquet win be held May 7 at Airway Lanes. MARCH 14-r“Rrig/i£ Future” Are you THE 1 in 100 with a well-lighted home? You can easily have adequate, attractive, “eye-saving” light! MARCH 21—“Bye Bye Don’t fret on washday, when you can have happy results — CLEAN clothes! MARCH 28—“Ground the WorldP* You, too, can go around the world — in your own kitchen via everyday foods With foreign intrigue. Of course there is no oharge. Reservations can be made by calUng 333-7812, extension 333. BE THE GUEST OF THE HOME SERVICE DEPARTMENT OF CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY ECON-oidfy fuxiiit-are sex s. eXGiiiTA.'w* jramifore 4bO<4iB 33XaCX30 KWr. TWELVE' THE rONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAKCH 12, 1903 N^w 'Experh' Do Damage to Youths in Love \dd sliced lemon to water in aluminum pans and boll. This wUl brighten un^nsU. CURTIS MATHES LE-4-Wg« CemfcinatiM r TVCimiii »299”./. SYLVAN STEllEO M T.V. SALES - SYLVAN CENTER - 2363 Orchard Lake Road By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE Dcj^ Mrs. Lawrence; Two •years ago pur daughter, just out of high school, married against our will. Now she has left the boy and wants us to help pay for the divorde. She says psychologists like you say that parents force teen-agers ;to marry by talking against their boy friends and girl frteiKto. She made without thoughtful consid-1 many eariy marriages are bound th^ expected—a social and eco>| The new experts are the com- jnoniic partner”*''*' •“ eration. to be short-lived. She contracted her marriage, NOT ALWAYS SO 1 expect, to indulge sex attrac- | Once this was not Phone: 682-0199 says we made her marry. •k Paramount Beauty School ★ Fnrollmrnlt Availahlf in Day or DiirkMir WIGS Cla^r.! WrUr. I’honror PHONE i-Ieancd < •" ^ !■ EI)E«AL nW S. Saginaw, EagU ThoaUr 4-2352 Bldy.. Pontiac, Michigon sold-Styled Answer; I am not a psychologist. However, n»y unpsycho-logical view is that divorce is the inevitable and of the kind of marriage your daughter seems to have contracted. Refusing to help her get or 1 decision that should not be ms Once tioD. Jchildren knew that besides se?, parents’ Well, faith in fts permanence marriage involved land, money, “ eligible partners, was not her fault. With millions buildings, children, crops. | was not because they of other Youngsters, she lives in Their expectations were not were better children. It was time and place that spends formed by propaganda on the de-^ because they knew parents had millions of dollars a year promot- lightful excitements of sex. 1 experience In economics ' ___^_____±___-_±_ _______ than they did. marriage. I So when the excitements] Today it’s different. •’The young Everything from movies to cos- passed, they weren’t disappoint-:do not regard us as experts on meti^ds glorify it as paramount ed. sex attraction. We’re middle- and ^erlasting. With no expert- They stayed with the marriagelaged fogies who have forgotten ence to question the promotion,'because it had produced what'anything we once knew about it. partnership rooted in ipu> posers of pop song lyrics, grade-; tolerance and affection. B movie scenarios and sensa-] Instead of marrying “against tional fiction. ’They are supreme-i ly influential people, my friend. And we must not feel so discouraged when a child prefers their moonshine to oq( counsel. I ★ / ★ * I As part of the society tlv»t supports the moonshine, do we have: a right to walk out on the credulous child who’s been blinded by it? ' ‘ It is a question that calls for earnest thought. , | Around World Knit Suits *59" to *14S Domestic Knits by Dolton and Kimberly. Imports from Israel, Italy, Austria, Belgium and France. Three-piece suits that v^ill remain in your wardrobe for years. Sizes 8 to 15. New- from Andrew Geller the Less-Look Shoe High fashion on a new heel . . . 2V2 Inches. Not high . . . Not medium . . . but just right. Beautifully slim lines. In gold Casino calf or black patent. *26 HURON at TELEGRAPH Mon., Thun., Fri. 10 to 9—Tuos.^ $ot. 10 to 6 r*ntls« PrcM Ph*t* Safety patrol boys don't wear the hats, bat they're sponsoring a ladies' McConnell PTA Thursday from 3:30 to 7:30 p.m. Admiring the hat being tried on by Hilda Medina, Willard Stjfeet, who's a captain of the service squad, is George Mo Knight, Osmun Street (left), captain of . th^ safety patrol, nndfKenneth Harger, fifth grcde teacher who sponsors the safety patrol. Dinner Schedufe? Waterford Township’s Fashion - Your-Figure Club will hold a “sip-and-bite” dinner Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Waterford Community Center. Tickets will be on sale at the door. Candid Wedding in BriUiant Natnral Color $j^c;oo Special It 8x10 Color C»ndld» From up to SS Prooto wUhln to day to fpocial prico. KENDALE’S PHOTOGRAPHERS 45 W. Huron St. FE 5-OStl (AirertlMatut) Up HINTS COUICTIO OY MRS. DM «RMR, MOTHM Of I The debut of a baby la a happy event, indeed. Smiles reign all .............. around. You feel relaxed and rested. Once home from the hospital, however, try to use your strength sparingly. • Offers of help arc worth their weight in “breathers” for you. • Simple, easy-to-prepare meals, with things like frozen casseroles, are energy-saving. * A few minutes rest before you’re tired do more for you than an hour when you're plumb tuckered out. ' * A change of shoes, at least once a day, is a foot ’n body perker-upper. Today's bubits advance at such a fast pace, they’re ready for solid food almost before you can be-Ucve4L ^Usually cereal at first.) Gerber Baby Cereals are specifically designed with your baby's early nutritional needs in mind. They’re erviched with a special kind of iron that's easily absorbed by wee ones. Calcium and B-vitamins are also added to further your baby's nutritional well-being. Ourbar laby Carualt are designed to pamper inexperienced palates, too. Flavors are delicate, the way they should be for babies. The texture is ever so smooth and nke-to-the-tongue. Chin chat. First-time psrenU are sometimes a bit dismayed tc that baby has al- , most no chin. All I babies have re- | ceding chins. It's Mother Nature’s way of making it I easier for baby to feed from bottle or breast and feeding itself develops baby’s lower jaw into a good strong chin. dismayed to nnd soon need vitamin C for sound gums and body tissues; the de- | I ^lopmeDt of strong bones and | teeth. Gerber j Strained Orange ' or Apple Juice provide two excellent ways to start your baby on this important vitamin. The Orange Juke bu nat- ' ural vitamin C.JThe Apple Juice is vitamin C-enriched. Both are pasteurized for baby's protection. Gerber Baby Foods, Fremopt, Mkhigan. Fletehers Are Married A reception in the Hotel Roosevelt ballroom followed the vows of Darlene Joyce Maloney and Ray Laverne Fletcher Saturday evening in Church of the Atonement on airitonville Road. Eev. Donald Andrews officiated. Parents of the couple are the Clyde A. Troxells, Williams Lake Road and the Howard Fletchers of Mann Road. The bride appeared in ballerina - length white nylon net over satin, styled with Chantilly lace bodice. She wore a short veil with pearl tiara and carried white carnations, pink roses and lilies of the valley. Attendants were attired in pink chiffon. Honor maid Lynne Bane carried blue carnations and bridesmaids Mrs. James Rollison and L o r r i e Roshavcn of Fenton carried pink carnations. Duane Baumgras was best man. James Rollison ushered with the bride’s brother David J. D^aloney. After a * h^ymoon at Houghtpn Lake, the couple will live in Pontiac. School Sets Orientation School guidance department will sponsor a prehigh school orientation program for all ninth grade students and their parents Wednesday at 7 p.m.-Following a panel discussion and question-answer pe- .riody students -and parents * will meet with their guidance Extra SpeciaU Superb Oil Permanent Complete SPECIAL OFFER A Combinalioa of Sarvica Ragulatly Pticad at tIS.OO lor • SUPERB SALON PERMANENT • FASHION CUT, • CONDITIONING SHAMPOO „ , , • COIOR RINSE___Complete Extraordinary Special Reg. $23 Permanents $^2^0 Now Only Beauty Salon fe ii N. Sagtnuw St., Between Lawrence and Pike Sts., Acroaa from Strand nieater IS/lagncrvox. factory-authorized POCKET-SIZED Mag no vox Radio Enjoy room-fillmg sound from this small but powerful 8-trans-slstor radio. Battery, earphone, leather case included. 1995 Transistorized Mag no vox Stereo No tubes; The most thrilling music ever heard from a portable. Mlcromatic record player has diamond stylus guaranteed^ for . 10 years. Records last a lifetime! 99,90 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC STORE ... 27 S. Saginaw St.. . . Phono FE 3-7168 THE MALL . .. Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Rd_Phono 682-0422 Power-packed FM-AM PORTABLE MAGNAVOX RADIO Now Only 'Surfside' is the smallest, most powerful FM-AM portable ever made. Has 9 transist6rs, whip antenna and autornatic volume control. Batteries. ^ Q9S earphone, and leather case Included. x EXTENDED ACCOUNTS AVAILABLE. Drop Coloring Into Flowers X Pretty trick for flower af-rangements—put a few drops of food colorii^ in the water 'before arranging the flowers. THE-PONTIAC PRESS, TtJESDAY. MARCH 12, 1968 THIRTEEN, EASTER doesn’t stop with Sunday when they’re wearing ^diuards shom Their Easter rxxl lookf go on through spring and summer. So very right for youthful fashion ... with a fit that does the most for growing feet They’re built to last... and priced to please. Jnm JgW “Where Fit Cones Fint ” Sill ^,eb>U’ Junior Bootery 10M W. Hsrsa 3344)725 (H«r«i ctewr, mn isxksi* aiy) «hop Mty 9:30 Tm fi Men. end Fri. TUI 9! MARIE JANET CRON AN A mid-June weeding is planned by Marie Janet ^^€ramat~0fz-GreeiL. Street^ daughter of the Charles Cronans of Union Lake, and Raymond John Senk, son of the Raymond P. Senks of Keego Harbor. Post Officers to Be Honored Past Matrons and Patrons of Pontiac Chapter No. 228, Order of the Eastern Star, will be honor^ at a dinner March 25,. it was announced Recommended by Doctor Use Soap on Your Face at the Monday evening business meeting of the chapter. Mrs. FYed Cleland and Mrs. Robert Gilbert headed the refreshment committee. By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN Q. For years, I used creams of all kinds. I used the full treatment of many well-known brands. The more 1 lubricate my face, the more wrinkles I get. I talked with friends and they said, ‘‘Just use more cream.” Finally, I talked with my son, who whUe he is not a dermatologist. is a physician. He said that nature usually provides sufficient oil and that he thought the wisest treatment for any w 0 m a n ’ 8 skin is to cleanse the face thoroughly each night with a mild soap and water and then rinse well with ctM^ water. Then, he advised, apply a coating of pure lanolin because lanolin is the nearest substitute for our own natural oils. In the morning, he said, cleanse the fdce with witch hazel. That was two years ago. I have followed these instructions and you should see my clear, unwrinkled skin. Do you think this method is just for a few people? My son said, ‘‘I don’t think women need all that glop on their faces.” A. I have to disagree witii youiy son in some respects. If I had TBed soap and" water on my face habitually, I would be as wrinkled as a dried-qp prune. Women differ. Some just naturally have drier skins than others and as the years pass the natural oils diminish. • I agree that many women work on their faces with stren- and that In nntil It’s a wonder tha poor face does not full Knitting Qasses TUESDAY thin FRIDAY 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. The Knitting Needle 4S2 W. Huron FE 5-lSSO CANDIES 3rd Lecture in Series Set at Oakland Pniiilc Sdtool |R 4te_ Space Age” Is the title of the third lecture to be presented in the World Tteport Series, sponsored by the scholarship committee of Oakland University. Norman Roseman, assistant professor of teacher education at the university, will deliver the talk at 10 a.m. Monday in the Gold Roonv on campus. A question and answer peflod will follow. An award by the university’s continuing education de-, pactment will provde a free You probably have a nonnal skin and for that soap and water are tops. Also, remember Uqit you applied lanolin*\very night lanolin is the base for creams. Q. Is it true that arranging one's hair in a pony tail makes the hair thin? ★ A. Some experts feel that this style, when used habitually, may play some part in thinning hair. If you wear your hair in this waty, do not pull it too tightly. Q. Why is swimming considered to be such beneficial exercise? choice, in the liberal arts section of the continuing education department for the best question submitted. PTAs in Action Company Sets^ Koff'ee Klatch The Hbme Service Department of Consumers Power Co. will present a demonstration on home lighting Thursday at 9:30 a.m. This is the second in a series of Koffee Klatch sessions open to the public. Sfkits Professionally Removed on “CLEAN ONIT’ Bundles ^ 1 3 99f VOORHEIS 1-Hr. Cleaners 4160 W. WALTON BLVD. nai rmUM A4. Mf., i: A. ^ause your Body weight is supported by the water. Therefore, it is not too strenuous an exercise and does not build lumpy contours but rather streamlines. Also, there b something extremely relaxing about water. | Water therapy, with special exercises, is used in many illnesses—polio, for example. j Many people who are not al-1 lowed more strenuous exercises are permitted to swim. For this reason, swimming is an exercise you can tote through the years. It is extremely helpful to those who are nervous or underweight. Qualitij -Atojd.... -Aft Wfliji 2440 WOODWARD AVE. PONTIAC MALL Pontiac PTA groups are meeting this week.* WHnriELO PTA wUl meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Officers will be elected. A physical educa-jtion exhibition will be presented jby students under the direction of Elaine Hoe. HERRINGTON PTA will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Election of officers will be held. Mrs. William Wright of the PonUac PERMANENT SPEOAL...........$6.50 ____ Haircut — Set Complete STEPHEN __ LOUIS BEAUTY SHOP FE 6-8000 Buckner FInaiiee BuUdtog, M W. Ruren 8t. Physical Fitness while students demonstrate gym exercises. LEBARON PTA will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. for election! of officers. Cranbrook teacher Nancy Bower will speak on ‘‘Social Studies Today.” There will be a nursery for children. WEBSTER PTA will meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m. for a 'meet, eat,, and greet” smorgas- EAfoiMlLOtl UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULESI Easlof to fako and moro •Hoctivo than tha powdarad and lloutd food supplomont, aiw eeiti low inetuaino Capsulos, suited tojgi INQiyiDUALLY ^ Thiels and pupil perwnnel ^ ^ ^ Iservices for the Pontiac School WIOTTIEr' PTA will m bat iWednesday at 7 p.m. williaml ^ PTA noil meet ^ Lacy, assistant superintendent schMb. will speak on plans far ^ ^irl s^ts transferring Whittier itudants to ’^f P^**?*®* I MeCARROLL PTA wUl meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Speaker will be detective Wayne Bud-demeier af the Mkhtgaa State i Police-Jpvenik divlsioiu . ; McConnell PTA*w111 meet iThursday at 7:30 p.m. A member I of the Michigan Optometric Association will present a program on “Seeing Fit as a Fiddle.' LONGFELLOW PTA wiU meet Thursday at 7:30 pjn. Election of officers ndll be held. Mrs. Henry Storer, reading specialist of the Pontiac sr^ls will FINISH HI6H SCHOOL AT HOME I PreparB now for ■ Icollege ora better job ■ I DIPLOMA AWARDED ■ I Writs for FREE booklet today g| \ NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ■ \ HOME STUDY ■ ■ P.O. Box 6314, Dotroit 34 5 I SL7-3420 ■ [Name..................J HAddreu................g ...................■ I State....... .....P.P. ■ laTitation to the Hard of Hearing * OPEN HOUSE ★ Franchised MAICO Dealer Dnriiig the Month of March! MEET HEARING CONSULTANT Mr. Harry Alison from the MAICO LABORATORIES ^and discuss your hearing problems with an executive from the laboratories of Maico. May we suggest that you telephone for an appointment. See Our Complete Line ofN.ewest Charies W. Akers Maico Hearing Glasses and Hearing Aids See the exteniive eolleetloa of hearing ^aaiei, hehind-' tbe-eiT llill, ladiei’ harrette modeU and ipeciil aidi deiigned for "hard-to-fit” hearing loMca. FREE HEARING TEST FREE TELEPHONE HEARING PAD Umlp* Clarify Ttlephane Coiwarioltown Kaieo’t preeialoB audiometer will eheck yonr need for hearing conreetioa. No obligation. Call for an appoint, ment in the priracy of jonr homo or office. BETTER HKARING SERATCE, 103 N. SAGINAW ST., FE S-7569 In With Pontiac Optical Center, ArroM from Sinuna ... iiTogularlty with Modic-Way caps. DON'T DIET-nIUST EATI kt thousands havo dona, yau can 100lbs.and KEEP ITOPFI' MEDIC-WAY 385-9Z05 WILLIS PTA will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. for election of officers. A demonstration of gym Announcing the Adult Charm Work Shop Personal Instruction in: • Poita • Postura • Figura Control • Cosmetics “mRolF"Sti^ • Foshion Coordination JC Complftf 9 Court# CluiM suit 6:30 P.M. WtdMiday. MAich 13 2ad noof 4i0iast- Pontioc Moll I CORA BAILEY PTA will hold ;a “book fair” Thursday at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Orville Gauthier, head elementary librarian for Pontiac schools as speaker. Elec; tiASADENA, Calif, (AP)-Four expTosipnsTtTTar-aWay si been observed in One week, the most ever noted in such a short time span, astronomers at Mt. Wilson and Palomar observator- is say. Only 126 of these explosions, called supernova, have been recorded since 1885. ★ * ★ ‘A supernova is an explosion of stars or gas with the brightness of perhaps a billion suns. It flares to peak brilliance in a few days, then fades over a period of months. As soon as an observatory spots one they notify all others and they analyze its light makeup. Dr. Fritz Zwicky of the California Institute of Technology I said finding four in one week doesn’t mean they’re happening 'more frequently. He said this is I a quiet time in our solar cycle, ihence the night sky is darker and faint objects can be more easily 'detected. an organization to coordinate political planning.' ★ * ★ Indications were that the progress toward union would be slow and gradual. There was speculation that an Arab summit meeting might be called to discuss the idea. The fraqi plan callsjor Yemen later. Nasser has not committed himself althbugh informed sources said he welcomed the proposals warmly. There was no official comment from the new .Syrian government. Fro-Nasser mobs in Damascus demonstrated in the streets chanting for unity with Egypt. PROGRESS SLOW An Iraqi delegation in Damascus,^ hsadad ^ Deputy B«miCT IS “a fifth column of Moscow.' Nasser joined Egypt and Syria Close Guinea's Borders Ito form the United Arab Republic for Currency Change CONAKRY, Guinea - President Sekou Toure yesterday announced Guinea’s borders have been closed and all communications put under strict control during a changeover in the nation’s currency. Old currency must be exchanged by Thursday. Hie new and old money has the same value. Toure told a meeting of party leaders the currency change was necessary tO| stop counterfeiting. ^'Truth is the cornerstone of all honorable and successful business'Let us build'our business on this cornerstone and faithfully serve our patrons.'* WILLIAM H. KINDY, Founder TheKSndy Code 1963 marks our 55th year of service to optical patients. It is good from time to time to set forth a statement of principles. The following is our code, as important today as at any time in our half-century of service. Prescriptions Registered Optometrists are in attendance at all Kindy offices to examine your eyesight and to prescribe the ^ lenses. Vision not correctable ses shall bo called to the patient’s attention with ad vice to consult with his family physician. Should you have your eyesight examined elsewhere, simply bring your prescription to Kindy and it will be f^thfuUy filled. Lenses All Kindy lenses shall be ground of the finest q^uality optical glass to the exact spc^incationa called for by their prescription. This accuracy shall be guaranteed in writing. Any changes necessary will be made for a period of 90 days without additional charge. Frames All Kindy frames jriiall be-designed -to grip lenses securely with no strain-producing high spots. Physical frame adjustment shall be made without charge for the lifetime of the glasses. A person’s glasses cover one-third of his face and affect his appearance more PHILLIPS KINDY President than any other accessory. It shall the duty of each Kindy dispensing optician to conscientiously recom-TTiftnH the frame style and ipaterial that most enhances the wearer’s appearance. Contact Lenses Each person who chooses Kindy contact lenses shall be thoroughly fitted and acquainted with the sensations that contact lenSes produce before they order such lenses. YoUr ability to wear contact lenses shall be further protected by a 90-day guarantee of satisfaction during which any changes necessary will be made without additional charge. Kindy contact lenses shall be warranted against loss or breakage for the lifetime of the prescription at a nominal service charge. Hearing Aid Glasses For those who.need. complete jwrvicft__ for hearing as Well as vuion, Kindy supplies convenient hearing aid glasses built to the highest standards of the hearing aid industry. Transistorized design pives you high power, compact dimensions, light weight and long battery life. Service --Ta-the Kindy^taffr^fae-flaost impor- tant consideration in every case shall be the patient’s irreplaceable eyesight. It shall be our duty to make as certain as humanly possible that your glasses are absolutely correct— ONLT 21 r" By General Eleetrie ELECTRIC COMPANY 825 WEST HURON STREET FE 4-2525 so light, so right, and oh,sowJreshing! f W enjoy ISTROH’S M and taste 1 what ’ fire-brewing does for beer flavor! Brewing over direct fire creates a lighter, a smoother, a finer beer flavor... and Stroh’s is America's only fire-brewed beerl Try Stroh’s. Premium quality always . . . popular prices everywhere! * The Stroh Brewery Co., Detroit 26, Michigan j AMERICA’S ONLY FIRE-BREWED BEER I THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY. MARCH 12. 1963 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. Fewer People Flew in 1962 There were fewer than two pas- the monthly average in 1962 »aa sengfers a day on North Central only 34.5 passengers. Airlines (NCAT flights out of j Only once did outbound patron-Pontiac Municipal Airport last age ever match or exceed 150 for FIFTEEN ____UMBO DRAWS GAU£RY - John Gever- ink Jr. shows a CAI teen dance gallery how form the limbo low he can go in the limbo. Joining hands to and Luke Sharpe. Bosa Nova to Bonnie-Knee-Hop rraUu rrm rk»U “stick’’ are Karen Holgerson year. Figares released this week show a total of 421 outbound airline passengers last year, less than half the number recorded in 1961. Outbound passengers in 1961 totaled 896. Only tocrease tasLyeirJSlI- ---'____________---------MMMirr—«n ~ a month—in August 1961 with passengers on a four-flights-per-day schedule. LAST YEAR’S HIGH Last year’s high month was July, with 53 outbound p gers and two flights daily. Last year, 79,16^ pounds of la afar breiglrt, according to J. 0. Edwards, station manager. There were about 4,000 pounds more freight carried on outbound flights last year and some 28,400 more on inbound flights. * ★ * A decrease was noted for pas-' caitled on bound and inbound flights. There were 202,255 pounds carried in 1961. One reason for the cargo decrease, in addition to fewer flights, is that the air express depot at the airport was discon-1 sengers on tobo'iind flights with tinned last year, I 347 patrons recorded last year Outbound air express dropped compared to 784 inbound pas- trom 62,351 pounds in 1961 to • ' 4,448 pounds last year. Inbound express totaled 48,022 iq 1961 and only 494 pounds last year. Yesterday^ Twisters Fly Today sengers the year before. Some of the slip in patronage is due to fewer flights last year. ’There were four flights daily during the summer of 1911, but two were canceled iq September of that year. It is also possible that a 3 per cent hike in airline fares, which became effective Feb. 1, 1962, _ . ’ aeeountedrfor’somr-of tfac-de= « outbound flights last yewnmd 9,833 the year before. Inbound By JOE MULLEN R may be in vogue for adults, but the twist is already considered nearly passe by Waterford Township teen-agers. Hep youngsters wiw dance twice a month at the. Comrana-ity Activities, Inc., baildiag. have all bat abaadoaed the twist for daace stops such as the bosa nova, limbo, bird, fly, social, bonaie-kaee-bop and others. Variations of these and numerous unnamed chorus line dances are also poimlar arith the young set. Most of today’s teen-agers like Roads Unii Set to Acquire Right-of-Way Properly The Oakland County Road Commission is prodeeding with plans to -acquire right-of-way property foe 24 paving. wid«iing * and reconstruction projects. . \ *. A Board of Supervisors resolution eliminates need for Circuit Court condemnation proceedings. State law permits bypassing a coodemaation Jary bearing in order to expedite road projects, Read CommissioB Chato-man Sol D. Lomerson ex- commlssioB makes ap the dif-fereace, he said. . .... Parents seem assured Jury proceedings take »ud» n* b more time and may delay road projeeb beyond the coostniction Lomerson said. Under a faster proceeding, Lomerson said, a public hearing , on necessity od taking pn^ierty for a proje^ b held before the county’s three road conlmission- to meet the awards, the road music fast said Robert Bauer, CAI director. Bauer spins the “platters” at Friday ni^t dance sessions when the band takes an intermission. Various local teen bands alternate in playing at the dances. “I pby about four fast pieces to every slow one,” he explained. “Then later In the evening, when the dancers become weary, tbe ratio b about 58-56.” Baure b pleased with the fine attendance at CAI dances, as toU as with bdhavior of the participants. We average between 350 and 400 youngsters and have had as many as 550,” he sakL MORE GIRLS THAN BOYS. Uusally more girb tiian boys attend the 8 to 11 p.m. dances. CAB RUUNG DUE ’The Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB),u slated to rule on the need fir airluie service Sere in the near future. Much of the decision will be based on patronage. Originally, the CAB anthof-bed NCA service at Pontiac Municipal Airport on a “nse It or lose it” basis, setting the minimum quota at five passengers a day to justify continued airline service. Ail but four of the projects are: scheduled for thb sununer, he' pointed out. Lomerson said no difficnlty b expected in acqnirfaig needed right-ef-wjy property for most of the projects, bat the and don’t hesitate to allow their dang^ters to jp. The yonag ladies seem generally more thnsiastic iJtont dancing than beys. There are usually about sii adult chaperons and from two to to four auxiliary police officers the dances. ’Trouble occurs rarely. What little has, was mi- snpervbars’ resolution “just fas Roads to be affected by the projects are . Bogie Luke Road, If necessity b established, the road commission may proceed with the project, putting money into an escrow account to pay for jHvperty taken without reaching purchase agreements with owners, Lomerson said. INDEPENDENT APPRAISALS ’Die amount of the money put In escrow b determined by independent appraisab of the db-puted pn^ierty, he said. A three-man ronunbsion appointed by Cirenit Court later determines jnst compensation for the dbpated prop^, according to Lomerson. If the money in escrow b inadequate Bauer’s only lament b that the same chaperons are carrying the burden. He ..would like to have other parenb pitch in and volunteer services. Livernob, 11-Mile, Southfield, Adana, Baldwin, Big Beaver, Cooley Lake, Crooks, Fagmington, 14-Mile, Cranbrook, Haggerty, Halstead, Maybee, Milford, Voor-Avon, Nine Mile, Sands, Greenfield, Mount Clemens, South Boulevard and l^Mile. Air mail on outbound flighb totaled 12,183 pounds^’in 1962 compared to tf,215 the year ' >ihid flights,Wre before; on inbol were 6,074 pounds in 1962 and 26,080. in 1961. Bus Riders Dip in February Pontiac Transit Corp. buses carried 2,200 fewer passengerO last month than in the same month a year ago. Patronage on regularly scheduled runs totaled 72J47 in February, according to Glen Crawford, general manager. 'ITie passenger total for February 1961 stood at 75,158. Crawford said there was no clear cut reason for the decrease. EU;E PARKING, FI.U? It could have been the ad-event of free parking downtown, or the flu that’s going around might have kept people at home,” Crawford said. Maybe it was just weather. “’There are many things that could have affected bos patronage. A drop of 2,666 could result froin jnst one bad day.” The February total was substantially under the 80,113 passengers reported for January. Thb b a normal drop due mainly to the shorter month. Buses used some 6,962 gallons of gas in driving about 37,264 last month.' WAVES AT RECORDS - 'The official flag of Pontiac Motor Division b dbplayed in the hall of the division’s administration Air freight totaled 13,858 pounds building every time the company seb a new sales record. Pontiac has set five consecutive monthly sales records since the 1963 models were introduced. Mrs. Maxine Render, a secretary in the sales department, is shown admiring the flag. freight reached 42,108‘hounds in 1962, compared W 13,574-m. l961. Tot Dies of Injuries DETROIT — Four-year-old William Dudley of Detroit died Monday of injuries suffered last Thursday when he was struck by a truck at a Detroit inter- Bus Patronage Up in '62 There were some 70,549 more bus riders in Pontiac last year than the year before. Pontiac ’Transit Corp. buses TV,Ponte Are. Chamber ot according to a tally of monthly patronage figures released by Glen Crawford, general manager. It was the corporation’s best calendar year since beginning operations here in June 1960. Last year’s total compares.to Commmw Airport Committee has argued that flight schedules here don’t satisfy needs of area business and industry. * * * Civic leaders have been urging direct flights to Cleveland and Chicagb- in the morning with return trips at night. Recently, NCA initiated a flight to Cleveland. The CAB will find that outbound patronage averaged a little more than two passengers a day in 1961 and 1.15 a day last year. ^ A , Last year’s patronage averaged With the monthly “use it orlgbout 17,300 per week. The year lose it” quota at 150 passengers, before it was about 16,000 per week. Revenues ib thb year due to an increase | averaged 16,1Q0 per week during in student bus fares last Septem- the last half of 1961. ber. It b normal for the, last half During the first six months of of any calendar year to produce last year the total patronage was I fewer passengers since it con-476,302 for a weekly average of tains the bulk of summer vaca-18,319. ^ . tion for studenb, when patronage at its lowest ebb. REVERSED IN ’61 That balance was reversed in 1961 due to a sharp There were about 411,225 passengers in the same period the year before for a weekly average of 15316, . , The last half of 1962 saw 424,- ‘he Pontiac area’s gnomic cli-a reported 830,252 passengers in 499 passengers carried on busesj"™3te during the last half of the T96I. "for a 16,326-per-week average. last year wl^en patronage was better than the highest month of 1961. ★ ★ , Figures represent student and adult fares on regularly scheduled runs. They don’t include student trips and chartered buses. The weekly average also went up last year, although it stiH remains Rightly below the 17,500 per week originally estimated by the firm as the minimum needed to make any money. Judy Garland Returns NEW YORK (AP) - Singer-actress Judy Garland returned Monday night from London where she attended the premiere of - her latest motion picture and made a live television appearance. be tabulated reported until July since the firm operates on a fiscal year ending June 30. MAY SEE PROFITS a weekly average below the 17, 500 minimum may result in prof- Passengers totaled 419,025 and FDR Jr. Has Regained His Driver's License,, WASHINGTON (AP)-Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr. b legally back in the driver’s seat. He ^_____hb District of Columbia driving test and won back hb license. Roosevelt, 48, had gone 29 months with a suspended license for. traffic violations. Records at Bartlett, GOP Foe to Talk in Waterford Last year’s figures, showing 5L868^ more passengers in the first half, indicated a more sta-' ble economy for the whole year. The best month of 1962 was I March when 88,508 rode Pontiac h Transit buses The worst was Au- 0 gust with 60,349 passengers. For the year before, the high ford Township this week, was-reached in October (79,553)1 ★ ★ ★ id the low in July (57,000). ■ | Bartlett b slated to talk lomor- While monthly patronage never : row at 3:45 at Pierce Junior High slipped below 60,000 last year, it School and Hatch wiU speak State Superintendent of Public Instruction Dr. Lynn Bartlett and hb ^publican opponent for the office m the April T election, Ray Hatch, will both speak in Water- It b anticipated, however, that the Department of Motor Vehicles show he passed hb test Jan. 22 and regained the license Feb. 27. was lower than that twice in 1961. Abo last year patronage hit 80,-10 or better in three months. Thete were no 80,000-passenger months in 1961. In all, there were four months Thursday at the same time and place. Sponsored by the Waterford Education Association, the spealv. ing engagements are (^n to the public. Sick Children Learn 'Ps',Qs Hard Way Several Massachusetb school children were taken Ql rt^tly after eating pobonous jeguirity beans. And in Loubiana more -than a dozen schod children were hospitalized after a 9-year-old boy shared a “pocketful of peap” trith Jequirity beans are aboOf the size of a small pea. are reddbh orange with one blade spot so that they resdnble a lady bog, and are used for costume jewelry in countries sudi as Haiti. Chewing or swallowing one can cause death. * ★ ★ ’The Louisiana boy’s “p were laburnum pods, which look temptingly edible but can be quite Should Use Tree Spray in Winter Spraying b not for the biri. That b the finding of Walter P. Nickell, naturalist at the Cranbrook Institute of Science. He urges area residenb now when the leaves are off the trees — to avoid killing migratoiy birds coming tiirough Michigan in the ^ing and fall. About 325 species of birds migrate through Midiigan doiii% nesting season, white normally there are no more tiian SS species present during winter, he noted. ■ By spraying during winter months, when the trees are bare, less than 25 per cent of the bird .population would be affected, he said. He explained tiiat birds feed on tree buds and ultimately die from the poison they absorb. from the northern part of the township, accordbg to Baner. “But, we h I s 0 get several ‘ youngsters from thesoutherni area and still others from out-| side the townsh.ip,” he said. “Groups from Clarkston and Pontiac, for example, are always there.” PARKING’S PLENTIFUL Even udien the CAI gymnasium b crowded with dancing Uwns, thm b plenty of parking ^ce avaibble in the lot. “Some of the boys drive to the dances, bat not too manyi” Baner said. “Most of the kkb are brought by thefar parenb and picked up when the dance is over. It’s a common practice for a parent to drive five or sb youngsters b the n e ig h b 0 r-hood.” Majority of the dancers hold membmhip in thd Waterford Ckunmunity Center Teen Gub. The dollar-membership fee enables them to attend ei^t dances in the current winter and spring series. it it ir Nonmembers are welcome, but nuiit pay 50 cents for admittance to each dance. The dances are ^)en to teens 14 to 18. Catholic iBoder Die$ in Pennsylvania Hospital MOUNT CARMEL, Pa. OB -Bbhop Uwrence F. Schott. 55, auxiliary bbhop of the Harrisburg Catholic Diocese, died yesterday in Gebingqr Medical Center at nearby Danville. He was admitted to the hospital several days ago. Cause of death was not disclosed. One Cadillac in a million! With all its models, colors, interiors and equipment choices, it is possible to specify a Cadillac that will never be duplicated. No other fine car even comes close to providing Cadillac's opportunity for self-expression. No wonder It's Cadillac's greatest yearl VISIT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED JEROME MOTOR SALES COMPANY 276-280 S. SAGINAW ST. • , PONTIAC, MICHIGAN \ SIXTEE^^' THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESjPAY, MARCH 12, 1968 Republicans Ease Up on War Talk Over Cuba By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican leaders appear to be veering away from the kind of criticism of President Kennedy's Cuban policies that might let the Demo- RHIMES DEUCATESSEII AT NYi DAIRY rmmtmHmtOmrrmmmrn Ke«h*rCetiwd B««f SPECIAL LUNCHIONEVEirnMY ■raalctaft - Dimm CwFkle CenrOeHwHw cTats try to hang a label on them. “war party” firm policy apd stands fast by It, criticism will be stilled.’A (AdTWtlHnMiiO “0ldat40,50,60?” Man,iietWise!PepUp Tliouunai an pappy at 701 So, If you fael w«k. low la anargy, W at M, 80 ar SO, quit lilamiDf U on an. If you want to feai younaar, try Oitm Tonie Tablati at onoa. AIk> Tor drbllity duo juit to rundown body'a la^ of iron, tha ''balow-ptr" laoUnga you may can "baing old", PuU pap In both mat. Try Oitiaa- faal pappy, yaan youngar. 8-day “fat-acquainted lua cOiU little. All druggiM -/-DELICIOUS FOOD-r ^ In Dslighlfvl Surroundings ^ 4 N. Soginow FE S-5591 I ^ 6:00 A.FA fo 9:00 PAL Doily J Carryout Serviem WATCH for OPENING JUmOUNCEMEIIT SOON! Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y., who has been the No. GOP critic of the administration’s course, came up with an endorsement Monday night for actions he said appeared to be hardening t h e President’ policies toward Cuba. He felt it as I important, Keating said, “to jspeak up in support of the government when it moves toward a more vigorous pplicy on Cuba as it is to criti-ciii"tl!ien it is not.” WWW This seemed to fit the pattern laid out earlier by Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Diricsen jof Illinois when he said he I with Kennedy that a lull blockade of Cuba would amount to an act of war and “I don’t want to go to war.” BIG REACTION How much these statements reflected reaction from the country was not divulged. But Dirksen said he was “up half the night” answering long distance telephoni^ calls from persons who wanted to congratulate him on hjs television {statement. Keating, whose mail is flooded | jWith letters about Cuba, seemed ^ jto be happy to find some presidential moves he could praise instead of condemn. 1 WWW, He told a RockvlUe Centre, N.Y., audience that “bipartisan support like the rock of Gibraltar will back up whatever measures may be necessary to end the Cuban menace ” He added that “when the government adopts a Keating voiced support for Kennedy’s announced intention of pressing members of the Orgah-lution of American States for action to track down Communist agents and to counter their activities. He said this was the real offensive threat from Cuba. NEW COMMITMENT Keating tagged as “a new and iportant commitment” the pJunior Editori Quiz on- 1 SATURN FISH SANDWICH FRENCH FRIES SOFT DRINK OR COFFEE 0 THE TASTE TREAT OF THE SEASON BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY HED BARN Telegroph of Elizobefh Lake Rd. QUESTION: Why does Saturn have rings around it? ANSWER: When Galileo, one of the first astronomers, was studying this big yellow planet in 1610, he noticed something strange about its shape. In 1656, Charles Huygens, with, a better telescope, was able to see there were bright rings around the planet. Since then, many astronomers bavd studied this magnificent spectacle which many feel to be the most remarkable in the sky for, as far as our telescopes can see, there is no other heaven^ body with a ring around it. Elxperts believe the three rings, which lie in the same flat plane together, are composed of billions of small gravel-sized particles. The rings are only 10 ihHes thick and are transparent enough so that other stars may sometimes be seen through them. They may be material left over alter the plaUlt was formed. Saturn carries nine moons along with H; one, Titan, is the largest in the solar system and the only one with an atmosphere. Don’t figure on a trip to Titan, however, for its atmosphere is composed of poisonou^asses. FOR YOU TO DO: You won’t be able to see Saturn’s rings with a small handmade telescope, but you can have wonderful fun making it. Lenses (1) can be bought; or you might get them from a discarded camera or modifying glass (don’t use anything valuable.) The small lens (3) will be near your eye. Slide tubes in and out (2) to make image sharp. ment of Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara that the United States would not stand by while Soviet troops put down any rebellion against the Castro government. ★ ★ w He took a swipe at McNamara's Feb. 6 television presentation, saying it was three-fourths concerned with justifying past actions and only one-fourdi devoted to 'the substantial Soviet threat remaining” there. it it it But, he said, administration leaders recently had given “fac- tual, haid-hittlng evidence of the pTeaent dangers” of the thl^t ofi subversive activities and Communist infiltration from Cuba. 'I hope that the officials of 0 government, bear heavy re-' sponslbilities in this area, have now accepted this thesis and that the signs I have noted truly reflect a new willingness, to face up to the hard facts in Cuba.” ETiUlKEEGO “Sweet Bird of Youth" "Best of Enemies" WEDNESDAY FREE 6-PACK OF COKE witk the pvrchaM of i LARGE or MED. PIZZA CARRY-OUT and Delivery NEW PHONE 334-0795 Wheel's Pizza IFormerJr *'tke Snhiaarine #21 162 Baldwia Youth Recounts Slaving of Wyandotte Teacher WONDERFUL BONELESS FILLETS- frieJ to 3 crisp golden brown- $1.00 French Fried Potatoes • Cole Slav Tarlare Sauce • Rolls and Butler ALL YOU CAN EAT Every Wednesday and Friday 3650 - HOUIARD ^ DIXIE J®**"/®**y HIGHWAY ot Drayton Ploint DETROIT (AP) - Robert Trombleyi-16,-who admitted strangling a suburban Wyandotte school teacher, retold his story of the slaying at a preliminary hearing yesterday before Juvenile Court Referee John Kurland. The youth gave details of the killing of Mrs. Beulah Sechler, 55, similar to those he made in a statement to the Wayne County prosecutor’s office. He told authorities he strangled her with a belt and drowned her in her bathtub because she re- on a date. The youth’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Trombley, were not present at the hearing. He had refused to see them when they appeared at the Wyandotte i police station following his arrest Sunday. Kurland ordered young Trombley held at the Wayne County Youth Home pending a formal Juvenile Court hearing in about three weeks. Samuel Brezner said a request that Juvenilis Court waive jurisdiction to permit the youth to be tried'as an adult will be filed after all his statements have been transcribed. | ★ ★ ★ Juvenile Judge James Lincoln will rule on Brezner’s request at the formal hearing. AUDREY IN HER TWO greatest film HITS! msEsimm "luraiiYS ilMACMBMIunni scrnna QUALITY fNTERTAINMENT AS USUAL AT YOUR DOWNTOWN STRANOI State to Pay $2 Million for Paving of Shoulder LANSING (AP) - Two miUion dll be spent to pave tlie sin ers on 50 miles of Interstate highways during .the next year, the State Highway Department ’ ports. The highways were built or designed before interstate freeway specifications were changed to require the shoulder paving. £ (X)lUMBUP1(TURESmawMVID$USSXmD«aM iaOillgGiElSfllL 1 nROONEYilHARRIS "WAR JRMBIPL MAUREEN O'HARA JEFF ' r3sfalll|=] ivffl! CHANDLER IN COlOlt 1 •AfJra himctA&7 Maybe it would be cheoper to trade on a new one! Why not shop the new nnodels and then see the Pontiac State Bonk for a LOW COST LOAN! 'Thrifty" rotes, just $5.00 per hundred per year! Convenient payments with up to 30 months to pay. Life insurance protec-, tion at no extra charge. Enjoy trouble free transportation NOW! NOW PAYING 4% ON 12 MONTHS SAVING CERTIHaTIS PONTIAC STATE BANK MEMBER F. D. I. C. . a: /THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MiMtCH 12, 1963 i , SEVENTEEN Farmington, Ferndale Quintets in Action Class A Regionals Ti/ioff Tonight; PNH Playing Host It is Class, A regional basket-llaU tournament time and Pontiac Iforthem’s champion quintet finds ifself right in the middie of the glossy goings on. There are eight regional “At’ Michigan this week and the Huskies are cast in the role of ayplaying host. The fact that they are hosts commands a little more respect for their chances of succeeding to tf|e quarter-finals next week. The 15-3 ledger the Huskies have posted gives ample warning that they are a pretty good cage team. With such pre-tourney favorites as Benton Harber, Detroit Pershing and East Lansing eliminated from the Class A playoffs last week, the tournament has reached the point where all teams must be taken seriously. One slip and this year’s uniforms go ' mothballs. ■nPOFF TONIGHT The tournament at Northern wiU tipoff with the PNH-Detroit Catholic Central clash tonight at 8:00. The Shamrocks boast a 13-4 log and a tournament-tested coach. ' . Detroit CC is led by «-4 senior Marty Kwiatkowski, the team captain and leading re- bounder. Guard Bill Stackpooie leads the scoring attack for the Shamrocks while 1-2 Bill Mac-Innis provides ihore hei(^ BUI Abele and Mike McDonald round out the starting five. Coach BiU Fpley is a ten-year veteran of the tournament wars, having guided CC fives to the state championship two years ago and into the semifinals twice previously. The Shamrocks are reported to favor ball control tactics although Foley admits to mixing up his offenses and defenses as the situation dictates. PNH has picked up a lot of momentum and reached a new peak by handing a good Pontiac Central team a solid 58-42 thrash-i^ Saturdqy nignt in the district finale. ^ The Huskies h«re won ^ straight and with IfaynenDw-iels giving Gary and Roger Hayward a helping hand on the backboards, they are tougher Uiaa ever. With the solid all-round play of backliners MUie Burklow and Jerry Reese added to the rebounding and scoring threat of the front line, Northwn in expected to make its presence felt this week. The Chief contender for the PNH regional crown will be Livonia Bentley which meets surprising Clarkston at 8 p.m. Wednesday. The BuUdogs from Stevens and Roland Kent round out the starting five. Coach George Fefles is in his first season as varsity head mentor after moving up from the junior varsity slot. Their last defeat came at the hands of unbeaten Grosse Pointe in December. They have bei^t in 6-5 BiU BoUin and 6-3 Vem Bergman. NEW CQACH . Guard Jim Storm is the play-maker while 6-6 forward Wayne during the regular season but appears to have overcome that shortcoming. • Guard Dan Craven is rated the best shooter on the team while Larry Gardner has spar- Claricston is a darkhorse that must prove its mettle. Possessors of a 5-7 regular season record, the Wolves showed real talent in handily winning the district tourney (three games) on their own court. The emergence of forward Ken Miskin as a fuU-time performer has been a big boost in the Clarkston attack. The talented Miskin seemed plagued by. personal fouls Lary's Arm Passes Crucial Test as Tigers Lose Faces Chicago in Exhibitiort - Tigers Travel Tonight on Grapefruit Circuit for Oriole Contest LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) - The b^ news in the Detroit HgerS training camp today was that righthanded > pitcher Frank Lary got a passing grade yesterday in the first test of his ailing pitching arm. Nicholson), struck out walked nary a man. Lary was quick to point out that he never cut loose completely, but relied on a couple of curveaand a slider. “My shMilder felt good all the way aud the enly pitch that got away from me was that horned baU to Nichoisoa in the second inning,” said Lary. He explained, “It was a slider that hung up too hi^ and he belted Hpre^ good.” Tiger manager Bob Scheffing was happy, but cautious, in his comments on Lary’s first appearance of the Grapefruit League. BATTING PRACTICE Scheffing said he would use Lary in batting practice Wednesday intheexhibition game agpinst the New York Yankees at Fort Lauderdale. the Baltimwe Orioles. Yesterday’s 4-2 setback was the ’Tigers’ second successive setback by that score. They lost to Minneapolis 4-2 Sunday and now are 1-2 in the Grap^ .fruit League. ’The White Sox pitching staff, which had yielded only one run in 30 innings until the Tiger nearly saw its 4-0 lead vanish in that inning. Bobo Osborn and Jake Wood singled off third Sox pitcher Eddie Fisher. Billy Bruton walked to load the bases with none away. Bubba Morton drove a long fly ball to left which Tiger alumnus Charlie Maxwell just pulled down off the fence. Osborn scored after the catch and the other runners advanced. A1 Kaline sin^ Wood h(»ne toraake it 4-2. Norm Cash then hit into a ^-ble play and the inning was over. •SrkiM LandU ef I 1 S S 1 Vo* lb ISIS I------------ —-------- C’shaa lb 4 S 0 1 Horiof If S S 0 0 N'Imd rfU 4 1 1 1 Morton If 1 • • 1 M-xwell If i S ( • XoUm rf 4 0 S 1 *-H-b'sT rf 1 0 # 0 C*»h lb 4 t 0 t V I V11 McAff. lb 4 0 I 0 - tmTOi » » 01 S -Tfliiidoo c l 0 0 0 Lolmr < 10 0 1 nuuipc lb 4 0 1 0 B’lhcrdt p 1 0 0 0 Vuj p 0 0 0 0 b-Wkrd 1 0 0 0 p-C’Utlno 10 0 0 a‘iiBiiaB.P 0 0 0 0 Pojrtaek p 1 0 0 0 e-Martln FO 0 0 KUnO p — PUber p 1 0 0 * " ~ ^ Highland Park wiU meet Detroit Northern in the nightcap at 8:20. ’The Ferndale regional title game will be at 8 p.m. Saturday. ★ ★ ★ Farmington drew Adrian as ita Dom Mauti put him into the regular lineup last week. Center Mike Bray and forward Bob Osgood carry much of the rebounding load for the Wolves. Other Class A regional involving area teams are at Ferndale, and Ypsilanti this week. Unbeat-1 en Ferndale (17-0) will play Warren at 7 p.m. Wednesday and regional semifinal opponent the Ypsilanti pairings and wiU clash with the Maples at 7 p.m. Wednesday. ’The winner will meet the Fordson-Ann Arbor survivor for the regional title. Adrian has a 14-4 mark this season and finished second to East Lansing in its league race. Farmington was runnerup to PNH in the I-L and has a IM I mark this year. Laker, Capac 5s in Favored Roles College Trio Gains in NCAA Tourney^ By ’The-Associated Press ChteagO Loyola, Arizona State and New York University—a trio of nationally ranked basketball the final Associated Press poll, wind-up of a Philadelphia Palestra overwhelmed Tennessee Tech 111- tripleheader. 42 in' the Mideast Regional at Bowling Green whipped .-Notre Evanston, 111. Fourth-ranked Ari- Dame 77-72 in the first game of Mw'^l^lve th^l^etoMl' Mideast doubleheader at J^mhS of S^NCM^III-ii" f'" West,Evanston and Oregon State rrient after surviving first round |Eugene, Ore., and downed Seattle 70-66 in the sec-ment after giving first rounajj^y^^ ^ w * * I burgh 93-83 in the Eastern Region- nn. .u . . .,. al at Philadelphia. The three teams, along with' Lary worked the opening three innings of a 4-2 loss to the Chicago White Sox. He»was touched for two runs, five hits (including a solo homer by rookie Davie WIN four and Philadelphia, Bowling Green and West Virginia and St. Joseph’s Oregon State, all scored first were victors in the Eastern Re-roond regional Victories in games‘gionals. The Mountaineers snb-at three scattered sites Monday ;dued Connecticut 77-71 and the night. iHawlu took an 82-81 overtime Chicago Loyola, rated third in-squeaker over Princeton in Hie ond game of the far West Regional doubleheader at Eugene. ’The last remaining berth in the NCAA tournament will be filled^ tonight when the winner of the: Big Six Conference is determined. i UdA and Stanford wound up in a tie for first place with 7-5 records land meet in a playoff at Santa I Monica, (Talif. TWO RECORDS Mideast Regional - Chicago, Loyola set two NCAA records atj the expense of Tennessee Tech. The 111 points established a Because of past performances, West Bloomfield and Capac are slight favorites to cop regional basketball titles this week in Class B and C tournaments. meo opposite Mt. Gemens (Tin-tondalg, West Bloomfieid, owner of a 14 record, qualified for the re-gtonals with a narrow 5544 victory over Clawson Saturday tion tomorrow night against Fenton at Clarkston. Hie Class B I tourney will open tonight with Rp- I GIVE UP — Cincinnati shortstop Eddie Kasko relays to first in time to get a double play in yesterday’s game despite *** in Class D. the handwaving efforts of St. Louis Cardinal Gene Oliver. ’The Cards won, 11-3. Saginaw Arthur Hill — the team that appears to be in the driver's seat since Benton Harbor was ousted by Holland last gle team scoring high for a regulation tournament game and the] 69-point margin of victory was the; largest in the 25-year history of the tourney. The Ramblers opened a 61-20 halftime bulge which they increased to 93-30 before reserves' took over. Butch Komioes supplied the scoring impetus with 34 points in triggering Bowling Green to its 11th straight victory against Notre Dame. Chicago Loy-[ .wu v ..v, «. ola clashes with sixth-ranked Mis-1 DETROIT (UPI)—Detroit Red make any difference who we ^Tir*sda^"^enTrmMts Red Wings Hold Key to NHL Race-Abet Lakers staged a fourth quarter rally to overcome a 14-polnt Clawson advantage. Dan Qreig and Bob Aumaugher figure to be big point-getters in the Garkston regionals. Meantime, Fenton took jts dis-itrict crown at Northville with a I slim 54-52 margin over Northville. tThe victory capped a hectic week for the Tigers. IVERY CLOSE During the week-long district , ,, . tournament, Fenton managed to Arthur Hill Favored wm three games by a total of n.-.,, A four points. Thus, if tension la a m Gass A Tourney factor/the Tigers will come weU- prepared. Fenton enters regional play with a 13-5 record, which Is identical to that of Clintondale. Marysville cagers must wait until ’Thursday to begin regional action. The Vikings slipped past Croswell-Lexington 60-54 Saturday at Port Huron to qualify for regionals. ’The Marysville squad now has a 16-3 won-lost record, which is the same as West Bloohifleld. Marysville will play tonight’s winner Thursday. Romeo, which takes on Clin-tondali! tonight, has the poorest record of the five teams. The Bulldogs have a 10-7 slate after Saturday’s win. Romeo advanced to the Clarkston tourney on a 6741 triumph Saturday over Royal Oak Shrine. 2 Chainpions Left From'62 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two defending champions, few tourney-wise clubs, and host of teams new to regional basketball wars ^ are included in the field as the'sdonc eoefe wk the state high schbol basketball tournament starts tonight. ’Twenty-three games are on tap. Two of these are in Class A, five in Class B, 10 in Class C and The two Gass A games have Detroit Denby meeting Mount Gemens at East Detroit, and Pontiac Northern taking on Detroit Catholic Central at Pontiac Northern. Saturday - doesn’t play until Jhe Bulldop looked go^ on of-Thursday. The state’s No. 2 team ‘‘‘"“e meets' eighth-ranked Alpena at Flint Thursday. Defending Class B champion River Rouge does not play until sissippi State and Bowling Green opposes Illinois, rated No. 8, in the semifinals at East Lansing, Mich. GET THE BALL! — Bowling Green’s 6-11 center Nate Thormond (42) fingertips the rebounding ball out of bounds in the NCAA regional game against Notre Dame last ni^t. Notre Dame’s Larry Jesewitz (20) and Jay Miller (30) also are interested Jn the bail along with BG’s Elijah Chatman (35). Bowling Green won, 77-72. Who'll Start 'Ball' Rolling? Friday. Far West Regional — Arizona State, triggered by Joe Caldwell’s 31 points, pulled away in overtime for its 10th consecutive success after trailing Utah State throughout' in regulation play. ’The Sim Devils overcame an 11-point deficit. Wayne Estes kept upstart Utah State in contention with 32 points. Seven-foot Mel Ctounts clicked for 30 points in Oregon State’s triumph over Seattle, which was pac^. l)y Eddie Miles’ 28 points. Arizona State goes against the Big Six Conference representative iriiile (h:«gon State’s foe in the semifinals at Provo, Utah, Friday is San Francisco. "Kgefs^S^etiUSloJr Wing manager-coach Sid Abel feels his team “holds the key to tional Hockey League. Although out of the running for the regular season championship, Abel said of tbe Wings’. Jourth place standing: “,We are happy iriiere we are.’’ * Detroit has clinched fourth place and a date in the Stanley Cup playoffs. With six games left, the Red Whigs have 67 points and are six back of third - place Montreal. Toronto and Chicago are tied for first with 76 points apiece. “We won’t win it,” Abel said, ‘but we’re going to have a lot of say About who does. ★ 1 He pointed out that the lYmgs If the race ends according to Abel’s crystal ball’ Detroit would meet Chicago. *44 But, if his forecast goes awry, that’s all right with Abel. “We’ll take whoever we get.” Unbeaten Jo-Jo’s became the first Pontiac Parks and Recrea-, tion Department basketball team play five of their remaining to qualify for a state tournament *h*ilf* the three top^bgrth last night when it defeated meet in the play-offs, althou^ of tonight’s Detroit Holy Re- Montreal has the best record against us this season.” deemer-Detroit St. David clash at Roseville. Third-ranked Britton will take on the Flint St. Mary-Detroit St. Elizabeth winner ’Thursday. Britton looms as a heavy favorite in Class D sincO both Galien and (Champion — the No. 1 and No. 2 teams — were ousted in the dis-Itricts. figures. The Bulldogs, coached by Ed Battani, bloomed late in the season. After losing four straight in January, Romeo'stormed back to win seven of its last nine games. CLASS G GAMES A showdown between Capac Rec Playoffs Near End Jo-Jo's Wins Stale Spot clubs — two each with the Maple Leafs and the Black Hawks and one with the Canadians. The other game will be played here ’Ihursday against the New York Neopolitan, 75-66, in the Class D playoffs. LAKELAND, Fla. OB - “’Die first batter for Detroit... Well, somebody has to be the Tlgm’ leadoH batter and It’s a game as to who it’Ube: The Tigers just don’t have a “It’s a tough one,” said man-'times. Phillips’ speed is better ager Bob Scheffing. “I’m going than Giico’s and Chico hits more Abel said, “We could make it Other city recreation badi^-ball activity saw Westslde Rec- after one quarter and couldn’t catch up. Steve Thompson paced West-side to 74-67 triumph over Local 653 with 22 p^ts as the union team was eliminated from the playoffs despite 17-point efforts by Jim Gardner and Clarence Douglas. move into the final round of the |Gass A and B division playoffs. vei7 tough for any of them to'respectively, with victories. finish firef ” reattoirand McDonaMYHrive In Colonial Lun^. a^^ Jiy of course. „Gias«FB>inte.inu8t the wayside when McDonald’s iinffljrosse Poinl&“St. PauTip-"*' pears likely this week in Class C regional^ at Ferndale. Tonight’s games pit Detroit St. Charles against St. Thiitnas vrith the winner tackling St. Theresa Thursday. St. Paul will meet Mt. Clemens St. Mary in the second half of tonight’s twin bill. Capac, rated No. 1 in the final Associated Press poll, is one of the few undefeated teams In the state. Tbe Chiefs have a 156 record. St. Charles, which is also unbeaten in 18 games, can be (expected to make a good showing. The Detroit school-normally competes in the Catholic leagues. John Scheuer paced Capac with 18 points Saturday as the Class C powerhouse swept past Ridi-mond St. Augustine 7045 to gain the district crown. If all goes as expected, the heralded clash between Capac and St. Paul will occur Thursday at 8:20. first get by St. Mary’s. Mt. Clem- to start off trying -Bubba RiU-lips there.” homers, so his power is needed Be picks Toronto to win the ' title, followed by Chicago and Montreal. The Leafs have the PhiHips? He drew 20 walks in 148 games for Cleveland “PhiUips ahuiya iias bees hit:!^ ting eighth and he’s not going to get many bases on balls there. reilr^ S the ^ He has to protect a raUy with 11—VkiMitta*. nmuM, ftpMriis, carlo. T-a:M. a-im. qualifications of a good man. What they need is someone who draws walks like Eddie Yost, runs like Maury Wills, is a tou^ target like Albie Pearson, or hits often enough like Bobby Rkh-ardsoo. Unless Jake Wood breaks into the startii^ lineup — and H’s milikely — the T^ers will be hard pat to find a saccesssfnl kad-efi batter. year before that 14 in 113 games. 'Last time I led off was at Buffalo,” said Phillips. That was 13 years ago. DROPPED TO 7TH Chico Fernandez, who led off last year after Wood was bendied will be dropped to the No. 7 slot in Scheffing’s current planning. “Giico didn’t walk much either,said Scheftii«. “Only 48 swinging at everything instead of waiting for baara on balls.” Lions to Play Browns DETROIT UB - The Detroit Lions will open their National Football Lea^ exhibition series adge-bceaise-tte- Hawks five of their last six contests on the road, Abel said. "It’s a little difficult to go on the road and finish «i top now,” he said. SOFT SCHEDULE Montreal could be a surprise champion for the sixth time in the past seven years, he said. The Canadiens have the softest schedule left and Abel said, “barring injuries, they’d be in good Aug. 10 at ’Tiger Stadium in g position to take over.’^ game with the Cleveland Browns. . Abel saU^ “It doesn’t really In Waterford Township activity, Spencer Floors won the ^post-season Class A playoff trophy by taking Lakeland Pharm-acf^ second time, 7942. Lakeland, however, had previously earned the right to go to the state Gass A tournament in Detroit by winning the regular season loop race. BALANCE Jo-Jo’s victory was paced by Milford Hillie’s 19 points, al-thou^ five players hit twin figures for the winners. ’Thompson (22) and Alvin Keel (20) were a potent duo for Neopolitan which feU behind 28-U scored a 61-56 victory over the ens clobbmed New Haven 6645 lumbermen. Bill Dunstan’s 19 to qualify for the regional tour-markers were not enough for Colonial. Spencer’s winning pace was established when sub Joe Umphrey came off the bench in the second quarter to rally the floormen into 38-34 halftime lead that they continually increased in the second half. Umphrey hit nine irf his 14 points in the second quarter. John Herrington and CTiuck Gillis led the winners’ attack with 24 and 20 tallies, apiece. Tonight’s action in town has a Class C playoff twinbill at Madison JHS betweenn Local 594 and the Pontiac Police at 7 p.m., and Town & Country Lounge and Mtchigan Bell at 8:30 p.m. |/?egfono/ Games | CLUS B-Vent«n vt. W. MaomtWM. ---------A T». Dttrott Aorttaani. i— . I"'' KlfeHTEEN THE PONTIAC PltRSS, TUESDAY, MARCk 12, 1063 TOliiNAMBim riMT boi'Md NCAA BBOIONAU BA8TKRN REGIONAL w York D. n. PltUbunh U ■ — ■ • —, CoonKtlcul T1 “t PrlDMUn II. Orer. iST REGIONAL T7. Netit Dun* 71. V3f»8.V“kiS!SKXl* _____ItM* Unlvcnlly It. Utah 8U Tl. OvertbiM Or*|oa Blit* TOBealU* M ___ NAU AT RANBAB CITT OrunbUw, La. TC. AiIuuim* BUU M AllUnuirP* Collet* «. TuikUn, B.D. M North*ni Mtablcan 7L CalUornU W**Un> IBAKER and HANSEN Iniuranc* Company INSURANCE -ALL FORMS- NOME OWNERS PACKAGE POLICY A SPECIALTY Pontiac YtAQA Teams Win Boys Enter Rec Swim Several boys from PontiaciRochester; and Lorraine King of| Swim Club will participate Sun-day in the boys’ championahipl meet at Garden City. backstroke n»e Michigan AssoclaUon AAU »«* in the 50-yard freest^e.-Age Group and Team Swimming meet be hosted by ^ Garden ^ .1^., City Department of Parks and Recreation. Last week five girls from Pontiac took part In the first annual girls meet. The girls represented the Pontiac Swim aub. The Pontiac YMCA swim team won two of three divisions Saturday against Rochester. Pontiac midgets won 41-38, the preps won 65-18, and Rochester Juniors won 45-43. BCMMART UIDarrS' lO m*dl*y ^.?o*f»r*. ^Byil*r^^ah*f*r, ^ The girls included Sue Smith, iPi *Bro«n*’ri tud* h i of Bloomfield Hills; Dehra Cort, W Linda and Kathy Ebhert, of R'iuriir-5'^S{**Mi«i7' 40 lr**itjn*—Tom Brown (Ri Hoftn iRl 0»UtW*7 (W). Tim* ti t. M b*ek*trok* .-. ^(,m*»d (PI D*we (Ri .... .... JO br**ti*trok>—Klknn ipl ICtMipmiR (Ri Jl*hl*r iPi Tim* 11 1. 10 Ir** rilAy^oEUAC iXiAtlinb mntllF rf l»y — PontUc . ______in. wOllll»r»y. R. Bf Amouri Tim* 1:17 3 10 fr*«ityl4—Btor n* (P) Connd (RI Porrltt iPl Tim* — - “ tnd. m*dl*jr—T*dlln * IP) M. I Amour «TIIV KING EDWARD” ^mofpen-roof wagon-convertible.^ ■■ V' I want to command America’s fastest production car (over 150 mph at Bonneville)—one of the world’s highest-performance, 4-passenger luxury cars.^^ 1 want to live it up with the dough 1 save by picking America’s lowest-priced [ I I want to be a rich pedestrian.^N<4f4t then|/u Your Studebaker dealer, that is. US 3|cWagonaire by Studebaker i|c4(Avanti by Studebaker (who needs to pay an extra $8,000-plus ior a2 -t-2 Ferrari?) ^C^k^kLark Standard by Studebaker (i***d ■ sk^k^k^kWhat are you-some kind oi a nut? See all the great ’63 Studebakers at MASTERS MOTOR SALES DAVIS MOTORS VERO BEACH, Fla. (UPI) -Maury Wills says he could break his own all-time record of 104 stolen bases but he won’t “press’ to do it. ★ ★ w 'I don’t feel I have to prove to anyone that I can steal 104 bases again,’’ said the Dodger shortstop, whose electrifying speed on the base-paths help^ him win the National League’s most valuable player award last year. ■’I know I could break my own record if I wanted to but I think LUCKY COMDBlNA’nON - The Rochester Merchants were “B" division champions In the Detroit recreation ice hockey program this season and finished as runnersup in league playoffs. Last year the team represented Dixie Tool & Machine and finished as league run-nerup, also. ’This year’s w i n n btt In last year’s uniforms include: (back row L tQ RJ Bob Wilison, ^y Kiteylan, Ron DeSmet, Jim Dietle and playing-coach A1 Quesnell; (front row L to R) Hugh Remley, Mike McCarthy, goalie Tom Churllla, Terry Milobar and BiR Ventola. Not pictured Bill Booth, Dave Foote, Dennis Milobar and Dave Bossoy. Given Green Light by Alston Won't Press Theft Record-Wills it’s kind of selfish to set goals like that,’’ said Wills, walking toward Dodger Stadium here with a bat over his shoulder and a glove at the end .of his bat the way kids stroll to a sandlot game. “When you get right down to it,” Wills said, in that soft, easy as close? And who knows how much power the club will show? Maybe it won’t be necessary for me to steal many bases at all. I don’t steal just for the sake of stealing.” As was the case last year. Wills will be given the green Ught -# ki. I-* bases again by manager Walt ELfi.; ml lE ra Ato"..-rto ,tapi™M.«ry4o«n' influence how many bases I’ll steal this year. “Who knows if I’m going to get[' 208 hits again like I did last year*^ Who knows if the games will be abuse the privilege. GILUAM LAUDED Michigan Officially Ties for Track Title CHICAGO (AP) - Michigan offically • (pkes its place today alonside Iowa as 1963 congress tournament. JJnited Van Lines tacked on a 3,139 three-game block Monday Inight to the 3,071 it shot Sunday to take the lead with 6157 total. Helin Tackle of Detroit, which ihad led since Feb. 26 with its 6,157 jdropped to second place. I John Snodell of St. Louis gained first place in regular singles with a 727 three-game series. Andy iHudoba of Youngstown, Ohio, who .had led since he shot 725 Tues-iday, fell to second place. I King and Hulsey teamed for 1,341 to take second place in clas-|sic doubles behind Joe Joseph and Billy Golembiewski of the Helins, who shot 1,378 Feb. 26. dispute with the National League baseball champions at his home in Puerto Rico, McCov^ the man who’d like nothing better than t(\ camp at first base and stay there—ia acting like the'hap-piest man in baseball. In two days, he has rapped four tremendous home runs, a, pair each game, while putting solid support behind nuuiager Alvin Dark’s prediction that this could be Willie’s biggest year. McCovey, always a blaster when he had a chance to play, is ticketed for left field this season in the Giants’ defense of their pennant—a position he accepts but hardly cherishes since he started out at first base and knows it best. But that’s on the assumption that Cepeda is at first. If Orlando continues to balk, it’ll probably take manager Dark all of 30 seconds or so to decide who’ll be his first baseman. SAVED TERRY First base or outfield, he’s look- QUAIITY. DISTINCTION J OMl WIIK OMtXl INSTALLATION ing for big things from McCovey, a 6-f6ot-4 left-handed slugger who took a. couple years off Ralph Terry’s life with that game-ending line drive in the World Series last fall that came wito a foot of being a game-winning, two-ruh single. Bobby Richardson- of the Yankees caught the blast with two out in the ninth, the tying and winning runs on base, and the Yanks leading 1-0 in the seventh game. Right-hander Ike Delock of Boston was the^'victim of McCovey’s two 400-foot plus drives Monday, each with one on, that carried the Giants to a 9-7 exhibition victory at Phoenix. Angeles Dodgers 8-7 at Orlando; Kansas City edged Pittsburgh 10-9 at Bradenton; the New York Yankees J)eat Milwaukee 9-5 at Fort Lauderdale; St. Louis whipped Clndnnatl~n-3 at~St. Petersburg, the Chicago White Sox downed Detroit 4-2 at Lakeland, and the New York Mets— honest—won their second in a row, 9-3 over the Phillies at Clearwater. In other games in Ari2)ona, the Chicago Cubs downed Houston 5-1 at Mesa, and Cleveland toppled Los Angeles Angels 54 at ’Tucson. At the Florida camps, unbeaten Baltimore made it three in a row, 7-5 over Washington at Pompano Beach; Minnewta edged the Los LA’TE RALLY Baltimore, trailing by one entering the ninth, pulled it out with a three-run burst, two on a double by Boog Powell. Bob Allison and Earl Battey cracked home runs for the Twins’ victory over the Dodgers, and ninth-inning doubles by Dick Green and Gino Cimolij wen for the A’s after Ted Savage! of the Pirates had tied it 9-9! with a three-run homer in the top! of the ninth. I With ailing Mickey Mantle still sidelined, Roger Maris took up' the clubbing for the Yanks, rapping a three-run homer, his first of the spring, and five hits by rookie outfielder' Duke Carmel led the Cardinal’s romp over the Reds. ^ Els&where: _’rwo unearned runs in the first inning handed the loss to Bo Belinsky in the Indians’ victory over Los Angeles; a two-run homer by Billy Williams touched off a four-run first inning that featured the Cubs vic-i tory, and the Mets, who’ll takej ’em any way they can get ’em,! got some help from second-line | Philadelphia pitching. | MONDAT’s rioars ir^uict. sutMinUd chultr leott. LEWISTON. MAINE -'Suiar Rajr Rob- .... ..iwn. ML Mo« York. knoSod out BU> HOLLYWOOD. ONV. - Du WMk. m Thornloo. 1ST. Mrmpbii. Tonn.. 1. Lm Anfolu. dsSooM Monw Um PARIS — WoneoU PorUU, laW.'Mtkiey W_______________________ Thist Tkste Enjoy IhelWs Hnest Bouitxin since 1795 FAULTY TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED n m iM _______ m V U li €7 174.179 ( 43 IM 2H lfSM7 DTNA- FLOW MONDAY’S BE8LLT8 RELIABLE Transmission 41 N. Parke FE 4-0701 WEDNESDAY'S GAMES SunJrol au aTOiigiJ ' Introducing the NEW,Elegant r r 3" 4" 5"! In the test that tears ’em apart...the Daytona ”500”. Ford durability conquered the field! Score another big win for Ford—this time at Daytona, February 24! The Daytona *’500” is one of the toughest tests of automotive machinery. The twisting, turning, acceleration and braking a car gets in a little over 3 hours and 15 minutes at Daytona easily equals the wear and tear of 2 or 3 yeara* normal driving. And over70,000 spectators saw^liamatie— proof of the stamina and durability built into the ’63H Super Torque Ford, Outperforming competitive cars in a field of 50, Fords finished 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th! Daytona was open competition, too—not a “private” test arranged by one car builder to favor his car’s strong points. Never before has one make dominated so completely a major U.S. 500-mile track event. Ford’s 5-in-a-line victory at Daytona stands as a spectacular demonstration of total performancel f A HOW THEY RAN ' '^T DAYTONA FORD 1-2-34-5-10 PLYMOUTH 6 PONTIAC .7-8 CHEVROLET...... 9 DODGE did not finish CHRYSLER V .' did not finish J FOR PROOF THAT FORD CARS OUTPERFORM COMPETITION...DRIVE ONE! JOHN McAUUFFE FORD, INC. 630 Ooklond Avenue Ponttoc, Mi^higon .-■ 'A THE PONTIAC PRESS, Keep Ca/q/um Intake of Standard Amount By DR. WILUAM BRADY “Dear. Dr Brady: ' “Now that the regirten for rheuipatism has stood the test of ‘three years for me, J f«l it is about time that I write to say thank, you for-persuading me to use it. “For 21 years I had had Joint troubles, with nearly ever^-Joint in my body giving much pain at some time or other. Usually it was called ‘neuritis’. . . but three times I had acute bursitis in my shoulder and once in n\y knee, disabling me so that I could not work. It lasted three or four weeks. “Three yeprs ago I decided to go on the regimen for rheumatism. Have had no real trouble since. If I feel pain and stiffness coming on I ‘ boop’’ mycalcium- D, I and B intake, as yOu suggest. and presently feel o.k. again. No more neuritis or bursitis for me—life is so much more wonderful without those aches and pains.’’ Sincerely yours, (Mrs.-----------) * * If you do as I suggest, Ma^afn, it will be unnecessary to increase your daily intake of calcium, vitamin D, iodin and vitamin complex. The regimen I suggest for preventing the rheumatiz is a regular daily ration of these essentials of good nutrition the year around or from now on. It is not that booping the intake after a period of insufficiency t helpful, but the purpose (rf the regimen for rheumatism 'm any circumstance is to bring your nutrition up to normal or nearly normal, by^hetter diet and supplementing the diet, and keeping it normal. The , regimen for rheumatism isn’t medicine. Booping the intake of vitamins and or minerals doesn’t cure, anything. including the most popular narcotic, alcohol. Is long pertRlnln{ to ,------- hygiene, not dUegge. dltgno-ur iicotindn. will bo ODgworod by WlllUm Brody, U b oUmpod oelf- ____cMod onyelopo Is tent tc Fontloc Prtti. Pootloc. Mlchlgoo. (((opyriRht, 19S8) Even if it brings a degree of relief or improvement greater than any medicine can, don’t deceive yourself that your rheuma-iz, “arthritis,’’ “neuralgia,” neuritis," “bursitis,” low back pain, or other complaint (see Little Lesson 26, “The Calcium Shortage, self-addressed envelope) is licked for within a month after yoii quit Capsule of Culture Offered Unionists NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. (AV-Union leaders are back in college 35 cents and stamped,jfor a course that includes going to the theater and reading such as Eugene O’Neill’s ‘"The Hairy Ape” and “The Plays of Ibsen.” JACOBY ON BRIDGE NOETH AQ8S3 VKJS ♦ AQ1062 WEST EAST *1071 AK964 ¥963 ¥2 ♦ 954 ♦K87 dEJlOSS *K86S2 soirni (D) ♦ AJ ¥ AQ10874 ♦ J3 *AQ4 Both vulnerable West North East 1 ¥ Pail 2 ♦ Pan 3 NT. Pan V 6 * Pan 6 ¥ Pan Pan Pan Opening leid— king of hearts, since I could afford it, and drew trumps. Then I led my jack of diamonds and it held. At this point it appeared that I was going to make seven. The diamond finesSF had worked. All I had to do to repeat it and discard my jack of spades on a third diamotid. Fortunately for my future peace of mind, I remembered that just because a finesse worked the first time it might not work the second and that I had bid six, not 1. I won the second diamond with the ace and was very pleased when East mutter^ something that did not exactly sound like “Oh, fiddlesticks!” Then I finessed my jaek of spades and made seven after a|l. suppler^nting your diet or re-turntoThe pure, refinedj nam^y-pamby diet that brought on your studies are part of an 11-trouble in the first place, you’ll be right back where you were before. Anyone who tries to worry along consuming less than HA pints (three glasses) of milk daily is certain to have an assortment of complaints, which if he is as ignorant of nutrition as most Yankees are, will make the poor geek a good customer for all sorts of analgesics, sedatives, tranquilizers and narcotics JACOBY '196.3 TWENT V-OXE - Businessmen Hit ‘ e«s and I'in^ce s*j iw- a'i.i M-, MARKETS The foDowing are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Eletroit Bureau of Markets, as of noon Monday. Produce NEW YORK (AP) — Tobaccos!decided to drop its proposed year-and steels made gains in a mod-1 long study of the possible casual erately higher stock market early • relationship of totocco use and Woni. dipr. S».lb. b*| Pcdblo^.' ».»: bag Potatoci. 2S-lb. bag Mart Moderately Higher Tobaccos, Steels Report Gains this afternoon. Trading wu slow. Gains of most key stoclu were fractional. A scattering of issues advanced a point or more. While an atmosphere' of lethargy still prevailed over the market, the tobaccos were spurred to a sharp raBy by news that the American Medical Association the development of Various diseases. The chance that the study would produce some adverse jrablicity for the tobacco busir^ was one thing vliich has tended to depress tobaccos, although they have been responding to steady investment demand in spite of itl -Corporate Bond PriceslW The fact that rails continued to lag behind the mildly rising industrials was a discouraging factor to analysts. Liggett & Myers, up more than 2, was the best performer among the tobaccos. Gains exceeding a point,’Ijowever, were scored by Philip Morfis, Reynolds, Loril-lard, and American Tobacco. Autos were mixed, with General Motors and Chrysler up slightly, American Motors down a fraction, Ford and Studebaker unchanged. -Prices were nuxeffoSTht^ ican Stock Exchange in quiet trading. Carnation fell more th ......... a point. NEW YORK (AP] — Corporate sectors. Trading was extremely I . i e l ‘•^jBbnd prices opened mixed today. I quiet. ‘‘ American StOCK Exch. Most changes Were small. Fractional gainers among cor- *'**'' *‘**’““ ". ' ♦ * * I porates i n c 1 u d e d Boston and Yo^'fAPi-A^*!n I Over the counter dealers in Maine R a i I r o a d 4>>^s at 22^4, cti n pw .. «h nj zmc ... . n-Poultry and Eggs TJ. S. government securities! American and Foreign Power 5s pSJS cm?‘.: ehJ‘/w wm^“ ioli {posted no early changes in either I at 72% and Consolidated Edison TJSJ ch.”' - •*-I intermediate or long maturity 3%s at 91. ______:te41 WblUemort; agr It: dear ceutln o( Ireok Olll. Plor-cnca and Harold McNamara Recltnloa of the Roeary will hr --—-7. Miir«h II. at I Bparki-Orlffln Pu->me, Funeral lervlce will neia Wedoeidky. March 13. 10 am. at St. Vlnrent'l irch. In^rment In Ml. neral Homey CARLUH, WMCk I." li«3. i LoltTPAlaeivlIle. yohlo. form and Mr«. imr !<-Slple Chapel with Rev. ” "-eltoii and claUnt..JaU y Mt. Park A 24-year-oId Detroit man will be examined in Pontiac Municipal Court March 27 on a charge of negligent homicide in the death Sunday of a 16-year-old Waterford Township girl. Earnest T. Brooks was driver of a car that crashed head-on with a car driven by Jean Ott of 3599 Oakshire Road, on State Street near Washington Street. The girl died at Pontiac General Hospital five hours after the crash. * ★ ★ Oakland County Assistant Prosecutor Barry M. Grant yesterday requested a warrant against Brooks after witnesses said Brooks' car was over the center, line and speeding when * it collided with the oncoming Ott car. In a formal statement, Brooks toM Grant he could remember nothing about the accident. The girl’s 15-year-oId sister Mary and her mother, Mrs. Wilbur L. Ott, 43, were reported still serious condition today |t Pontiac General Hospital. Brooks, who suffered minor in- lTtond. march • Death Notices OKT OUT OP DKBT C S.'?.1*h'o, j"“G a^ikV-ariifln*Pu- _____ ______ _.J »; d»ar mother of Mri. CbarlM (Orote Irenel auchel. Aubrey W. aoi* X. Lee CatIcii: deur tlaler of Mra Marnret Deecham, Mra. Bdwari Knoblock, Mrs. J. H. Butley am Charlea P. Lee; alao suniyed b: three irandchlldreB. Funeral aervlce will be held Wednetday. March 13. at 1 p.m. at the AUen'a Funeral Home, Lake Orloa. with Rev. Robert Hudglna. Merten L. ------- *'• —1 Rev. Alfred ORODPS. CHURClUca. OROANIZA-tlona. K» lor aelling ’ ? PE 1-30M IN i)i:ht Arrange to pay all your . Mila with ana email weekly paymeot. BUDGET SERVICE F» 4-WOl IIAKX YOUR HOBBY PAY........... M)f. Op«nlM lift »hop. mU hob. blei through os. Wrlfo P.O. boi Pay Off Your Bills , PaymenU low aa Ilk wk. Prat^l your lob and Cradll Home or Office Appointmenia City Adjusiinciit Service ru W._5iron__________^PE_5-kMI WEIGHT SAPELT AN6 newly -------- la. gg •inii BCHOM wT-iS*; uficA in. Linda and David brother of Robert and heid”Wadiie8day, IRVINE, JOHN R., 1 huaband of Ornevli le Funeral aervlce will be Thuradav, March 14 at < < at the RIchardaoniBIrd Pu-I Home. Mllf< ■ ~ Mr. Irvu e RichardSbn- wUl lie DD-nird KACHOORA. Idved’hiiab-------------------- dear uncia of Andrew Kachoora. Funeral tetvice win be held Friday. March Ik at 3 p.m. at the Bparkt-Orlffln Funeral Home. In-terment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Kachoora wlU IM In atate 3 4 PLAN afford MICmOA? credit WANTED: MAN 25 TO 4S YEARS Of ago. drug atore. Baperlencad preferred. Ooud working jr Huai have own tranaporta —--------- ■ ....4-SMO PEI44M d largeal budg- W'ANIED ilnancf or***cie«Ut _____ .. train for manai^ment poaltlon. Mum br 34-3g Teara old. high achodt graduatr. Salary dependant upon eaperlcmr and ability. Poaltlon linmrdlBlFly avallabla In the Flint area. Phone Mr. Hall. Davlaon, Mich.. OL 3-3148, ~ WANTSp a RILL MAN FOR Fwwrnl Dirsctors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-7757 D*. E. Pursley Donelson-Iohns FUNERAL HOME WANTKF) AT OXCE rut Bnd make big mooey. Men ■< iected must be neat, and hbva a di termination to work hard, benefit Call OR 3-0922 between S and Help Wanted, Female ATTRACTIVE YOUNG l.4Df model li.ilr atylrv. Call i any day MAfaIr 4 CURB GIRLS. APPLY AAW HOOT Beer, 12* North Perry.__________ ELDERLY LADY FOR BASYBIT-*4— —^ housework. Live EXPERIENCED WAITRBSBE8 ' imedtately. Apply in w. Highland Road experienced' waitresses hr# ■ - - Pled 4370 Highland. I'VELYN EDWARDS / "VOCATIONAL cbUNBEUNO SERVICE" ; Tefepiione FE 4-0584 4'; Waal Huron Suite 4 Stenographers To tork - - arlM raj upcjn eis kajfOir^ Freston Waikar'f -M North W— InstrilctiMS-SciiMh 10 LEARN HEAVY EQUIPMENT. 220 hia.. on Doaera, Drag LInea. etc Free placement. ••Key," 5330 W. 0-Ml'e Rd.. Detroit 21. Dl 1-7323. learn SUCCESSFUL SELLING. New method. Pontlic Preaa- Box 34. _ LAROr OR E3LPERIXNCED WOMAN WANTS A N T R _______officea. 332-4302_____ FURNITURE REPAIRED AND H EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OPERA- HUNTOON FUNERAL ROME Serving PomiaoOar 50 Yeara n Oakland Ava._FE 2-OIW l^^Wanted Fsmole 12 8 WOMEN WANT WALL 'WASHINO HOUSEKEEPER Voorhees-Siple funeral home ^ Eetabliahed 40 Yeare SPARKS-GRIFFIN PUIfERAL HOME "Thoughtful aervlce" juries in the accident, yesterday demanded examination on the charge in a preliminary hearing Pontiac's newly reorganized Civic Improvement Advisory Committee will hold its first. , - . ^ meeting tomorrow night , at 7:30 bef®" Judge Cecil McCaUum. in the City Commission meeting chambers at City Hall. The advisory committee, first organized about four years ago, hasn’t met since before last April’s monidpal election. City Commissioners moved to Area's Dems Step Up Drive MRS. WARREN TEEPLE Service for former Pontiac res- .................... „ Went Mrs. Warren (Ida M.) Tee-l Also surviving are grandpar- re-establish the 75-member com- Oakland County Democrats are pie, 81, of Union City will be'ents Mr. and Mrs. Charleslmittee Dec. 18. stepping up their campaign ef- held in Union City Thursday. • jThomas and Alex Evans, all of' ♦ , * * j forts for the April 1 spring elee- Mrs. Teeple died of a heart Lapeer. j The committee consists of 70 A®"- ailment after a brief illness. Surviving are two sons. Pern Little of Union City and Harvie Little of Pontiac; seven grandchildren; and 15 great-grandchildren. ’ citizens appointed by commis-l County Chairman Sandd M. CHARLES F. WINTERS WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- I station attendant was robbed'ofj i ‘«t night hy a man armedi will be 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at the,^jj|j a knife v^ffan Funeral Home. Ann Ar^l tmptoyed M Armed Bandit Robs li bor. Mr. Winters died Sunday after a long illness. Surviving are his wife Ruth; two daughters, Mrk'. Richard H. Lemaster of Pontiac and Janet, at home; two brothers; a sister and a granddaughter. CARL K. HARRIS LAPEER — Service for Carl K. Harris, 61, of 1 W. Nepessing St., will be 1 p.m. Thursday at sioners and five citizens-at-large named by the mayor. MAYOR MEMBER f* Ct 4* tlf I i Mayor Robert A. Landry, City bas Mafion Worker |Man««er Robert A. SUerer, City Commissioners and members of jthe administrative staff will at-A W htt e LakeTownship gas tend tomorrow’s meetnig. - “The purpose of this meeting is to formulate a ' to be followed by the Levin today announced the appointment of a committee to make arrangements for Democratic candidates to be seen and heard by county voters. ★ ' w * Chairman of the committee to schedule the candidates’ couqty appearances is Ralph Johnson of Oak Park. Johnson will be as-' Corey’s. 5410 Highland sheriff's deputies that the man canie into the station about 8:40 p.m. after having his gas tank filled and asked if Greer knew him. piUVCU ilL 5 Ttt—-il_____J -*•**- ------^ *T. TTBiivii vvaiVlii/IJJ Road, toldl Township; Mrs. Roy Reulher of^uf^hTTu fhura'di?: M*ycru; and promoting understanding 0 orchard Uke; and Mrs. Hank ' «ith° iSv *^“o;€ lmairnv*m*nl nrnivramc ”____... . ' city improvement programs,’ said Landry. Commissioners have indicated the newly appointed committee EWridge of Ferndale. When Greer said no, the man, will Concern itself mainly with believed to be in his late 20s stimulating community interest pulled a knife and demanded I in neighborhood housing and im-money from the cash register. jprovement programs. The man took all the money! - ♦ w ★ j except change and then left, driv-j one of the major reasons why mg east on M59. jthe committee was reorganized commissioners felt past Port Huron, Detroit Join in IRS Quest f PontlAc: age CHOICE WHITE CHAPEL LOTS. »f Mra. Donald; ......‘ 1 Marvin e, Reaaonable PE t-250*. RKl^M state Lckground. ref, I The Pontiac Pre>»____________ RN FOR MD OPnCE. NEAR PON-— - General. WUl con— - ’ aurglcal training, required. Renly t ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDINO a friendly adviser, ' ”” 3-5122 after 5 p.m. --------- ~E 2------- DAINTY MAID 8UPPUES. 7391 ______ _________ aervtca held Thuraday. March K nii. At 8t MlcnaeTa Church. lolerment In Catholic Cemetery. ITT, MARCH Ifl 1*1 Ellrab," • 14. a Hoj. ... ..... Jem _________ 35»» Oakahlre; aia 1*. beloved daughter of Mr. and Mra. Wilbur oil: dear tranddaufhter of Mr. and Mrs. William Coleman and Mrs. Ernest Ott; doa~ held^' March IS at l:|d p. Spark'S -OriffJn ••••*-mth RcT. Mat Funeral Home ARCH 1M3. 45 Dilie: ^ Mr*. Vlrfiola I Kenntih Poo Mrs. EtU ------------ alao aurvlvad by tour inucniioren and nine indchlldren. Funeral .........- I be held Wednesday. March » United Presbyterian Chui ROCHESTER aAeA CLERK TYP-let. Hl(h school graduate. Ap-proklmately I montba eaperlence Must have lood typing skills t33S. PeraonnA by Morgan. 23524 Woodward. PlMaanP RIdte. U 5-135*. __________ SALESLADY. DEPENDABLE PER: jpjjwerlmnd •" ’ , __________ PE 5-7MS.___________ , ON AldJAFriR^lHia DAW MARGKl-----------,. 12. 1W3.I lUlJint bA.reaponglbU| Knowledte for any dabw contracted by any I iieceaaary. Call 363-2*51 other than myself. Emett Ceylon, view appointment. 518 Dltmar, Pontlae, Michigan. ' e SALESLADIES . we.O MECHANIC, CHEVROLET 8ILK PRWER raWf{5^' cON§mOOT. van! l?ifr'o5 CAMP CHEVROLET. MILFORD i, '---------------'—------- Organist Available ■--yrlenced, church and fune... a. e44.»tl0._____________ - alteration, REPAIR wasHinos and ironinos.. pick ifp and delivery. Call 8-7*24. WOMAN WANTS ENVELOPES OR h^“^.‘^7nVi;‘i‘oM^atyOR*3^ 9511._______ _________________ YOUNO"^W^ **^k**rE*f?M?^ CESIENT BLOCK WORK. SPECIAL- ? _______..'ANTED _______2877 Dlile HI '_______ BOYS - 11 FOR RESTAURANT YOUNO HOUSE MOVIMO. SINCERE. CULTURED .WOMAN -1 DgKp’ J p iTd' InV'MATERIAfS. BEND AN EAR •TOWN * COUNTRY POOD CO. --, I, gjijn. We have stream- WAITRESS. 1* OR OV^R. APPLY used 2»4a, 25c each; 2*8xl2.fool and 14-loot. 11.20 er-"- — —' ■ furnaces and bollti Phone 33S-5332. ^TRY PLEASE? If You Sow on Automobile Accident, Wednesday, Morch 6, at —OakhimhAre.”^w. Johnson PLEASE CALL EMpire 3-0392 or KE 7-6270 Call collect tee tvill pay charge committees were concerned with too many areas of city government, thus limiting their effect. Exam of Druggist Examination .of Howard Mojdue Jr . tempted murder. DETROIT (^i -.Port Huron! . Mayor Ray Mathlkisn and De-j^^^J^nnki n- — ._/Kph“.„......... Joaeph W. Moeller. RecltAlon of the Rosary will ba tontfht at i p.m, at the Rlchardaon-BIrd Puberal Home. Walled Lake. Requiem Mata will be held at 18 a m. Wednesday. March 15, at St. William's Catholic Church. Walled Lake, with Rev. Father Raymond Jones officiating. Entombment In Holy Sepulchre. Bouthlleld FREE ESTIMATES Oiv , - I bik, will finance. R. B. Munro \ k f . need apply Pull I Electric Co. FE 54431._ \ A / yy __________le BE 4-3W___________ l^c?Ji£i'iwAkwD ELDERLY LADY FOR' Dresi—king & Tullwlnf 17 JoumeymM. PlumKr. Cm-«r*'SS ------------------------------ ployment with eacellent oppor-l wages PE 5-3853 or FE 3-8837. fumty f°r” . CUSTOM TAILOR B paid Blue Cross, "^raonai "'office!* ?lty Hafi, S.'~^'rke. iUMP WANTED TO W DRESSMAKINO, TAaORINO. Furw k. Edna Warner. F 19 deaikn. 2388^011 CEPTION WORK HELPFUL. THIS ] ‘^oiNEER experienc'd I POTENTIAL^AS MTaisS. NONE HIQHE_^ LONG FORMS ENGINEER. EXPERIENCED BUSINESSES ARE , IN A DEFI-; prtpared and typfd m your home. I KITE GROWTH STAGE. PORi Deome Lvle FE >"0252___________ PERSONAL INTERVIEW CON- gyERAOE FEE IN YOUR HOME TACT PON LACEY AT EM 3-4130 ^ r Dunn. Tts Accountant. 5 WOMAN FOR FULL TIME WORK. r*ntiinQ ri*wn»r4. MO Woodlf'' Mkh. “““ troit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh to- ,do^^ot^,have ad^[k^eV«n^ wAlFr^di*™ Mntrlbulkmi when mv husband; mm Indlnnmood Rd . Lake Orlan. «s?4— day agreed to unite their cities’ efforts to have a federal data processing center located in southeastern Michigan. Meeting in Cavanagh’s office, each mayor said his city b better qualified for the contro-Venbl Internal Revenue .Serv- t November 19th. | contributions i rased away la.. ------------ — wish to take this method t azprosa my heartfelt thanka t each for your k'-^ *“.• ful eonaldtrati pa^r of m t. Moat Olnoara- pmUllb P. HacL... — ------------ The PUlty Funtral Roma, i ..........------------------ FOREMAN. Ml 5203S. or FE 5A286 Blood Donor5 URGENTLY NEEDED *9 Bb Poanive. (7 Rb Natattva OETROrr BLOOD SERVICE 18 SOOTH CASS Must |®PJJ*** ^ a pleaaant teleptone manner. Experience desirable but not esaentlal. F7ye-B( ,Anaiiitiii| t Decoroftili 23 ______ra earning Troth Sig lo' R^n 8 per week. Coll Ar tpixM- »» CAB DRIVERS WANTED. MEN OR| Qw-rv;! women. Apply lo BUI WtllU. Chlofl~ Cnatln rtrrr 17 CohJlto- Partor B, Woldioiv Ho4ot.l|t.i DECORATTNO - MnrmTO - —-'^•-^™t?^f *opportunUy'^r CHURCH VISITOR. BIRmInoNAM Plaalorlnk, - bopertnr noo Eel iS* Win tnito Bo it 541 Pari lima vlallatloni homes, new dlieounU for aoah. 8S2-8828:_________ . . ------ . -,,ui,„ta. Car U nacaaaary. Write A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR la 82. Portlae Press ------— — ■ SCHOOL BOY, MtMT NU VS. j ESTABLISH ED WATK1N8 ROUTB Work oeoatota sad wookenda.' oorolne ibqwo ovoroto. FE 2-3883. Ci“ »nor full Tiia position for book- 130* W. auros._______________ koopor — man or woman. Stou Exrrilant opportunity, e. Reply PoaiiAe Prooa per room, complete > ... DECOR ATINO ______________OB 3-7384. PAWTINO. PjrSSPia. REUOV. .— Pord OP55W1M442--------------------------- It irro R Nine Mile Rd. Pemdolc. Mtehtibhr thot oddreoa being where tho vohlelo It itortd and moy bo toipoetod. March 13 and iVlNS Jl?Si ___ _____________________PubUa Auo- tloa for otih to htotMot bidder. Car may bo ------- Nonen OP ruRUG " tteo la boroby stvoa „ . ^lkawiBf’'oppllcot^ "!< chanio from and 115 to Su; . cptnd tbo Sny< orto u on PontUc Peraona laUroated are requeitqd to be ------ A copy of the lonlng map and ttod change le on., file to the ••-- -7*nahl^ Clork ind nw- CLADDS ARNETT JR. GRETA V. ^<^** Starch 12 and t\Ventv-six THE rONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1963 AveriH's GLENN'S rs *-7371 __. TE 4-I78 JUNK TRUCKS I PAY CASH > PFtrlman Motor, PE 2-8MI ^ TOP 1')oLXSlr$$ Clean I’.set! Cars Jl'KOMIi "Bright Spot" PMvipi Can lOSINm* an4 UW'Can I UMd Can MARMADUKE By Anderson & Lt tormi. PATTmwon cnVROLXT CO., lOM 8. Wt>OD-| IbK. nd wHh whtto l»rJor. V* ------------ hotl«f. «|] DIPAUA CrtnVORT. i , J woodvard. Blr- ' ,--- ------------------ , nrtmham Ml «-4W______ ' and UsMi Con 106 cHjivY-^,«j^t^ u« 07 |wr month. Cfti nc AWl. Umritaa’^uU) ItU BUICK tm: IIU POBD 8 on, tlM FE AIM! ______ '«M BUICK SUPBR. full’ P S^hu."^p5"r« CHEVROUIT "••• t lXMR BjE-0 wUh itandard ahllt tran “‘-u will ilva yod lop ecor altraeUva Almond belie one ner car that la Unmaeulate In- wdward. Btnntntham MI V Y IMPALA CONEVkf- * .D|>OR^CLl wnllB. 12.000 mtles pvt. owner •1.M5. Call Tom Tracy at 3M- Z— ___________ IMti BUICK SUPER. FULL PRICE. - jytwTBOr cars' * Ellsworth AUTO SAU'.S M77 Plile Hwy.___MA MJno OUT-STATE MAKKETS Extra Top Dollar FOR LATB MODELS M oliie work Fu.l price ^lnly HSS with no moo' rv down LUCKY AUTO BALES. ■•Poiitla.-', piw^nt Lot." IM 8 bo't'AlmLAC CIJUPE' DK VILLE 17,Ota acliial mile,, lull prr LLOYD'S b'llspence UncQln — Mercury — C Meteor - English Fo 2.12 8. Saginaw \-i: 2-9131 ___oniy Dlsc^nl 2338 Dlkla Hwy. 1951 CADILLAC {^'UPK DH VILLE 1 XAd^. heater, hydramatlc i,mli,toh. one owner, and only Urvs. Good condition. Only — eaiiv term,. JEROME-FERGUSON. Rocheeter Ford De,'_' IWI CORVAN "95" iPANEL TRUCK E^y’’em»™”pAW CHEV- ROLET CO . low 8 WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINOH AM, Ml 4-2735 •' JEEP A WHEEL DRIVE _ fllAteir top condition, ex- $?95 Tull tTire SI\\KUVN 7)ODg"k. Inc. • 711 8 sailnaw FE S-ASAl 1957 CHEVY TON PICK-UP. A real mce one. No ru,t. Come In and lee for yourielf. Priced rliht. . PEOPLES AUTO SALES - UOahland ...... LLOYD'S XAlnroln - Mercury Comet Meteor English Ford H':'’2-913r_______ IfSS CADILLAC COUPE. GREEN and whites poweV-ateertng. f- brakes. 40.000 actual mllei, llrett are Included. $300 dowr -149 03 per month. JEEP 1959 eHEVROLET BEL AIR 4.DOOR V B engine, powergllde. turquoise fintsh. Only 91005. Eaay terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 8 WOOD\4^RD AVE.. BIR- MINOHAM Ml ^35.___________ 195« CHEVROLET STATION WAGON -standard shift. 9200, FE 9-9027. 1957 CHEVROLET 3-DOOR 8TAND-ard transmission. Full price 9597. wionUi. Buy Marvel Motors OI.IVKK BUILKvaiuIJEKP. e 210 Orchard Lake Harold Turner, Ford. CHEVY WAOON 19M, 9 PABBENOER S'y'^ca‘r“'‘3^.*T.,«*«Me^‘^ $895 Tttll Price (QWI S Year Warranty SPARTAN DODGE. Inc. I a. Baglnaw 1959 FWRD “. TON UTILIW PICK CHEVROLE. —... - .. ward AVE, BIRMINGHAM. pIcK UP. 1»59 ford. ’.-TON. NEW motor. $800. FE 5;d92^;_ _ WE HAVE A NUMBER OP HANDYMAN SPECIALS Picknjis P;inels , aiul Stake Trucks to Select k'mni ^BEATTIE ••Your FORD DEAIOT L. ON DIXIE HWY IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT ■< OR .3-l'2*n '.-TON CHEVROLET PICK UP. good condition. Good tire,. W AND FORD PICK UPS. pickup, and long wheel base »y Pi»couiit 2335 Dixie Hwy. Better ^ Used Trucks lOW) 2 Year Warranty aSPAKTAX DODGK, Inc. Saginaw FE 8-4541 automdtle transmission, rat ring. 17118 one li > down needed to drive this »orne. LUCKY AUTO SALES, tlac’a Discount Lot.” 193 8. i>owi‘r steeling nnd brakes. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Only 91595. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEV-ROLET CO.. 1000 8. WOODWARD . BIRMINGHAM. 1 CHEVRO^xET BI8CATNE Marvel Motorjs GMC Factory Brandi OAKLAND AT CABS FE 6-9485 ___ «M-^MKVY PANEL, *6S; SAVE Auto, FE 3-3278.______ Auto Insuroncs_____104 AETNA CASUALTY '"'111 OLl^RVEirEY 2 CARS *17 imUM M IvT l' AGENCY -SPECIAL-1962 " C IIIlVY .•MONZA series. This car has n^ton. rcki good engine and In excellent condition. Here is """ll995 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St. 1< E 3-?>54 CHEVROLIDT IMPALA I CHEVROLET CO. 19(2 CORVAIR MONZA COUPE »peed box. otw Owner new c, trade. 11.895. WE TRADE SUPERIOR RAMBI.ER 3M Oakland_____________FE 5-94.' 1962 MONZA COUPE. ♦'SPEED BOI bucket leau, only 12.000 mile,, owner, like new Sale price i 81495. Suburban Oldt. 565 8. Woo W|nl. Birmingham Ml ♦4485___ 1962 CHEVY IMPALA SPORT ^oujie. Power iteerinf.^r^to. r a*2M FE 4-7231. lifler 3 p i : RI88HH iiTBEL V8 enflo ~p*ATna®?^ 1000 S. WOODWARD AVI., lUR- MINOHAM, MI 4-2736 _______ 1900 CHEVROLET 3-DOOR. 8 CYL-luder. Powergllde radio healer, alillewal! tire,. Llglit blue tln- TEBTON cyiVROLirr'CO.’, *’1000 8 WOODWARD AVI., BIRMINO-HAM, Ml 4-2735. iIM7 MERCURY TAKE OVER PAY. . PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO, 1000 H WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM >lue flnlih. Only . PATTERSON CHEVROLET cp.^ W^8. WpOD- J guess he heard-you bragging'about your tires being puncture-proof! d Cart 106 Ntw and Uttd Can 106 Kambler-)ecp 32 B. Main Street 1957 CHEVROLET 210 ♦DOOR __ dan. 6 cylinder, tlandard ihlft. blue and whUa flnlA Only .5595. Ea»y term,. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO^_ 1000 8_ _ WOODW ARD ‘ 1953 FORD 3-DOOR. 9 CYU I Oowr condition. M(^55Br 19W COMET 4-DOOR. SS3-01U 1 u^ji^later^ pieaaanr'car to drive and 80 CHEVROLET BIBCAYNB 2 door with radio, haaier. and atan-dard traneinUilon, aharp lurquola color. 8200 down, paymenta ol 849.05 Ouaranlaed Warranty LLOYD'S Meteor-Engllat Ford 232 8. BaKhiaw FE 2-9131 59 CHEVY 4 - DOOR SEDAN. Itandard tranamlaaloln 6 - cylinder engine, aiw rubber. Immaculate throughout. 1100 down and tU.70 BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 8 g. Woodward MI 6-3900 CHEVROLET. OUTH. 912 8. WOODWARD, MI S>rJDODOt HARDTOP, GOOD running condition. $250. FE 4-9045 alter 8, FE 0-0470. radio, heatetr and excellent wl —" Urea. Shamrock green a factory finlah with harmo me Banner wheel cdvera. 1 will not only catch your wlU jwrform to^i^caie you Ii'a a tap value at our ^ow p of only 8895. Can be II die and arrange all financing. It no problem, ear can be aec.. _. ISO 8. Saginaw, Unlyeraal Auto, FE 5-4071.____________________________ 1958 FORD. HAS RADIO AND HEAT-er. In excellent condition, very low price ol only 5197 with imall weekly paymenta ol 52.21. No money down needed on thia c— Call or aee credit manafer I White vAI KINO AUTO SALES. 115 S. Saginaw. FE 8-C'"* 1894 VERY CLEAN FALCON, ALSO —0 Chevy very deam Be e. call UL 5-2157. T-BIRD 1940 HARDTOP II power, extra .nice Uireagh-I U.IOS lull prTca. ■ (OW) 3 Year Warranty SPARTAN DODGE. Inc. 211 B. Baglnaw_______FE I-454I 1956 MERCURY 2-DOOR HARDTOP, ThIa one baa radio and haater. In excellent condition, full price 5147 and email weekly paymenta of only 12 21. Call or aca credit manager Mr. Cook al: KING AUTO SALES 3575 W, Hurfm St. __________ FE 8-40(8_______ 1957 MERCORYS, 8 TO CHOOSE la In aacellent condition. Fu price only 53*7 with amall weel ly paymenta of 83.33. Call or ae credit manager Mr. Cook at: KING AUTO SALES 3375 W. Huron 8t. __________FE ♦4068_________ 1161 PON^nAC CATALINA CONVBR-tlbte, two to chooae from, radio, heater, double power, one bronre and one baby blue finish. 830C dowt, paymenta of M9.41 per month 34 Months lOW) Guaranteed Warranty 'LLOYD'S ' Lincoln—Mercury—Comet Metorr-Bngllan Ford 333 8 Saginaw EE 2-9131 BURDE MOTOR SALES. INC OAKLAND COHNTY^S NEWEST IMPmiA* Ma'n ( ________ 1957 PLYMOUTH 4>DOOR SEDAN, j has radio and healer. In excr lent pondltlon, lull price of only o}*Lfil^|3.21.*NO*Mo'^EV^WN Cooitat-*** "”*** Hr- KING'AUTO SALES 3375iJV. Hurm SI. x»59 PLYMOUTH V5 STATION WAO-on automatic tranamlaalon. power steering and power brakes. An at-trunro iheTalio siflrTnfi Biut smt gray vinyl interior tfim. A fine family car that performa and taandlM very nicely. Oueranteed for a fuU year and mlced at only ‘ old car of Juat 595 wlE__ '--n myment. BIRMINaHAM •SLER PLYMOUTH. 511 S. 51735. FE ♦llTl. i I^EHd iloD. V • r y r. i\»l Mn „„ i* ^ ’“^ljM?NaHi^ 1151 PONTUC TEMPEST STA'HON wagon. Automatic, radio, haatar, whitewall tires. Light graaa fln-lih. Only 51,555. easy terms. PATTERSON CHETOOLkr CO., 1900 8. WOODWARD AVE., BOUinfO- HAM. MI 4-5714._________________ 1962 8TARCMIEP 4 DOOR HARD-top All power. 4 berrel. 5 004 nillea. I3.5S4. OR IHM after 5:30 MUST SELL — 1953 TEMPEST aporte coupe. Cetl after 5, 535-3734. 1956 Aambler. real OOOD. —T SAVE AUTO. FE V3375. 1944 RAMBLK j^’jn’*heetrr°^ mellc trenemMlon. automatic tranamlaalon! 31.00 - .... mllee, all rad ■ T MS g. Woodward ard transmtaslon. n BILL SPENCE Rambler-Jeep • 31 B. Main street CLARK8TON MA 5-54(1 ” mRMINOHAM BAMBUCB Ml S. Woodward _»» * rifUOEBAKERS, HARDTOP^ AND We \ Think This 1442 Cadillac convertible la one ol the loweat ^mllme and-In VlongTlme.’ Thli'black beauty has a black and white Interior. It la under S.4M mtlea. 54,245, WILSON pontiac-cadiLlac 1350 N. Woodward tMlNOHAM_____Ml 4-1430 1990 RAMBLER. 4 - DOOR, SEDAN, bdla beaters airtematic tranunla-Ion.' whitewall tires. 5150 down nd 535.50 per mo. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER WOODWARD, MI 7 3214.____ 1954 PLYMOUTH 3-DOOR, 8TAND- —' tranamlaalon. Pull pr' *- . here — Pay here. Marvel Motors, hEW RAMBLER CUSTOM 4-DOOR SEDAN Classic model, equipped with AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, wk dow lifts. No money down, .434.43 per month. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 9. 134 8. Saginaw. FE ?o;"L 158 DE SOTO 2- DOOR HARDTOP. Bportaman model, has radl^ ’ heater, power brakes and steering, at' real honeat to neaa black beauty. FuU KliiiG AUTO SALES, BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 864 g. Woodward_______Ml 6-4 1454 FORD CONVERTIBLE, UOHT blue, automatic tranamlaalon. A Florida car. no ruat. 4154 dowi and 842.91 per month. BIRMINGHAM RA54BLER . ^ SM 8. Woodward________Ml 4-344 1941 COMET 2 DOOR RADIO. HEAT- KESSLER'S DODGE ) N. Lapeer Rd. Oxford Next to world’s lariest grevel pit A 8-1400 or OA jMT, S7 radio. 0 COMST, STA'nON WAOON. 4-heater, automat^ ^ whitewall tires. ' JOHN McAULIFFB . L‘ FULL PRICE $1995 Standard Transmission $162 Less Not An "American" This Is the Full-Sized Compact 1957 PLYMOUTH. STA'nON I 9-pasaenger, sport iuburbai excellent condition, no mo n, 528 per month. We' hai arrange all financing. Uol< Auto, 150 8. Saginaw, 1959 PLYMOUni F FORD ^VROUST. ROCHESTER. OL 1966 PLYMOUTH. r DODOE CONVERTIBLE, EX- y Discount. 2335 Dixie Hwy. I CORVAIR 700 4-DOOR SEDAN. ras for Only 61.395. £ 80N CHEVROLET ( WOODWARD AVE., HAM. MI 4-2735.___________ oSy’^^'^aS^'terw^ SON CHEVROLET CO-. 1‘JOO S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINO- HAM. MI 4-2735____________ 1959 CHBVROLEf BEL MR 4-DOOR 6vcyander. Powergllde, radio. er. whitewalls. 6995.. Eaw- tc PATTERSON CHEVROLET FORD 1961 FAIRLANE NO. S You must aee this one to a; ctatv It. $1.995-fuH ^tee.- (OW) ^Year Warranty SPARTAN DODGE, Tnc. SPARTAN DODOE INC. 11 S. Saginaw____FE 6-4541 1%2 DODGE DAKJ 2 door, big V8. auto.^ transmL Sion power brakes, radio, heater.' Exceptional. I960 THUNDERBIRD LLOYD'S ‘ Ltncotn—Mwcury-i-Otmwt Meteor—English Ford 2« 8. Saginaw FE 2-9131 rv,..D 2-DGOR, RADIO. H----- ER. AUTpMATIC^^ ^redlt .162 COMET STATION WAOON - Like new. 625-6046.____________ i960 COMET 4 DOOR STATTON wagon, radio, heater, and — malic tranamlaalon. aharp llnlah. a real mile maker, dawn, paymenta 849 85 per i BIRMINGHAM!-TRADES. Every used car offered j for retail to the public is a bonafide l-owiier, low-mileage, sharp car. •51 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, RED ............$3,495 •61 THUNDERBIRD, -J Bulck Club Coupe. - - Keggo Pontiac Sales 1962 Tempest Guaranteed Warranty R 5c R -Motors^ -RiOYD S IN THE AREA ItewaliS. eutomaUc transmUsion. Call after $985 Full Frice SP.^rTa!\ DODGE. Inc: Saginaw_______FE 5-4541 Van Camp Chevrolet, Inc. KING AUTO SALES 3275 W. Huron 8t. _________FE 8-4054 ,_____ JOHN McAUUFFE Hardtop ..... ... •59 CHEVY CONVERT,, RED •69 FORD STATION WAOON •59 PON'nAC 2-DOOB HARDTOP .........51,295 '58 PONTIAC. VERY SHARP 6 05 FISCHER BUICK 1961 RAMBLER. AUTOMATIC, LIKE 515 8. Woodward, B ham Ml 4-9100 ~ — ............... 1^,7 OLdB. 95. 4-DOOR HARDTOP. pbwer atcertng. power brakea, automatic tranamlaalon, electric window llfta. metaUc blue, with' matching Interior, 44.004 actual milea. no lifter nolae In thia baby. 1100 down. $29.43 per month. P.8, HAS NEW TIREa 'EXII BIRMINGHAM rambler — B. Woodward ...... BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER SInct 1910" ON DIXIE HWY IN WATERFORD ■ AT THE STOPLIGHT OK 3-1291 232 8. Saginaw FE 2-9131 $1,295. SUPERIOR RAMBLER ; 550 Oakland________FE 5-5421 1957 OLDS, CONVERTIBLE, SHARP . automatic, no r week. Credit foam green finlah. Only tl.999. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE.. BIR-MINOHAM AVE.. BIRMINOH AM., Ml ♦2735 ___________________ j 1953 PONTIAC EXTRA CLEAN. RA-dlo, automatic. FE 9-2204. I 1454 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-door { VlaU, Hydramatlc, Power atoeiing and brakea. whitewalla. all 1"—‘ klde trim, l^w down payment! Haupt Pontiac Open Monday, tueiday atid Thuraday unlU 9 p.m. Clarkaton_____________MA 5 HASKINS JOSS. 1961 FORD. 3-DOOR SEDAN WITH CANCELED? REFUSED? ■VOUXr, DRIVER T'anctSf^M^dJiulo_ Local Servlce-Terma FOR INFORMATION CALL FE 4-3535 FRANK A. ANDERSON, AGENCY 1044 Joalyn ' “** fortif Cor* ■ lOiY ikdOKfCKOKUBTEHT BOLTD tea nplBh. Only $895, eaay te:— PATTERSOif' CHEVROLET _ , 3000 8 WOODWARD AVE., BIR-ijn^HAM. Ml 4-^735, lg6l« HIAT. 600 ♦DOOR STATION I CHEVY LITTLE BUST. I 1956 CHEVY. 2 - DOOR, RADIO, BIRMINOHAM RAMBLER S CHEVROLET STA'nON feiieni condition, the full price la only ilSI and Bfe weekF^™^ ' 1954 CHEVROLET SEDAN AND IT 1 .the UUle « B driving, full * BIRMINOHAM rambler 646 g. Woodward______Ml fr3 1964^VAUXH^ MDAN. TOW ONE - oSIr^'ei quail Interior, 51.595. Ea» I Patterson Chevrolet 1000 8 WOODWARD AVE.. BIR-1AM. Ml ♦-------- lia,BU8nN HEALY. 3000 DELUXE. Artre Wbeelg. overdrive, Ilk# new. Jwat deal. ---_ Authorlied Dealer for MO. Sprite Auatln Healy. Flat. Morgan. HUlman, Sunbeam Trl-pmpL and RAMBLER. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland__________FE 5-6421 VW HEATER.' WHITE WALL -- EXCELLENT PAINT 106 TAUXHAUL. 65M 1656 ANOLU. 6606. and 1956 filLLMAN. 6400. Pontiac Sports Car Inc. Oft Auburn FE 9-1911 1K9 VOUesWAOKN THAT 18 IN Ilka new condition, gat beater redlo, heater. 5995 full prlcel 34 klontlu (OW) Onarwnteed Warranty LLOYD'S tOwwte — Marewy —Comet -Meteor — Engllah Ford 331 8. Baglnaw . ' FE 2^131 1159 AND 1957 VOUC8WAOENTi5M 1. New 1(1 Ptot and Rambler. ------- -- —T. gallon. 1955 CteVY^_ B*L WB STIC*. GLENN'S MOST CARS CARRY 100 per cent duarantee for 30 day. •62 Bulck. Convertible '62 Cbevy n, Hardtop •59 Pontiac. Station Wagon •61 Monu. Coupe. 4-speed •04 Pontiac, Hardtop 01 Chevy. Bel Air. kdoor •00 ^Utc, Station Wagon •61 Falcon, 2-Door. Sharp •54 Chavy, Station Wagon •82 Chevy, Innate Hardto, - •60 Ponl^, 4-door . 81595 ;$4 Chevy. 2-door tlx ..... : 11?^ •so Chevy, L.......... •51 Comet, Station Wagon '"I Olds. 4-door, sharp . •60 BonnevUle Hardtop . •58 Ford. 2-door, 6 cyllnO •84 American, .wagon, gas •(4 Pooth^ 2-door. ^ USED CARS SPECIALS 942 CHEVY lna>»l»----top, super sporT with V8. f transmission, radio, Ilka ni dltlon, silver blue finish. 962 CORVAIR Club Coupe, wl standard transmission, radio, lo of gas mileage and a maroon fl HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds C WALL TIRES. 610.M 1. (.'All credit mgr., Mr. it MI 4-7500, Htreld Turner, FORD 0 OLDS DYNAMIC 88 ♦DOOR lice wagons around. Why pay ou* can^J---*"-------*" tlelti. Md hn’k»' 1961 OLDS CULES8 CcfbPE. RED, price only $395 with no mon down. LUCKY AUTO BALE "Pontlac’r DIacount Lot." 193 Saginaw FE ♦2214. 157 FORD 2-DOOR HARDTt with radio and heater and real excellem condition. The t or seFTiredlt mangger Mr. Co >.-RETRACTABLE. HARD-convertUile. beautiful tu-1 and white, V8 engine, Month. (OW) T LLOYD'S DON'T BUT ANT NEW OR J8ED car until you get our deal! Completely reconditioned uiod car ' low prices. HOMER RIGHT MOTORS, me. Chevrolet - Ponllae - Bulck OXFORD *■ ■ •■ OB 3-8057. Lincoln—Mercury—Comet Meteor—English Ford i¥'2-*9m : MERCURY.. BTAJLDABD .1961 OLDS 8TAHFIRE CONVERT-Ible. red with white top. red Interior. fully equipped for your driving pleasure. Only 16.004 mtlea. So much for so UtUe $2599. Bub-, urban Olda.. 565 8. Woodward. Blr- mlngham. HI ♦4485.____________ 1962 OLDS 99 FOUR-DOOR. T H E, i ■ ■• road in ev--------- >ed^ rar~y hardtop, full p 1957 PONTIAC 4-door hardtop, uae n«w^ rower brakea, ateerlng, and oonunental RACE'S USfiD CARS 2546 DIXIE HWY.__OR ♦1444 Birmingham Rambler £66 S. Woodward .....-...Ml &3900 Where Service Is "King” WHY FAY MO?^E^ OLIVER BUICK 1961 Buick LeSabre Wagon ...........$2575 1961 Buick Invicta 4-door ..........$2295 1959 Buick LeSabre Hardtop..... $1495 1947 Jeep—6-Ft. Plow ............;...,$ 885 Buick Special—Wagon ............$2385 _ T96fFRenRuU~4J?ogr, Clean.............. .$ 695 1962 Buick LeSabre 2-DoonTar3fop' 1960 Opel Station Wagon, Stick.......$ 975 1959 Chevy Wagon, 6-Passenger ......$1288 1962 Buick Skylark-Hardtop .........$2595 1960 Chevrolet Biscayne 4-Door .....$1395 1962 Buick LeSabre 2-Door ....., 1960 Buick Electra Hardtop ....... 1962 Renault Gordini .......... 1^ Buick LeSibre—4-Boor, Sharp . 1952 Ford F-6 Dump Truck ............$ 465 1960 Buick LeSabre-4-Door ..........$1775 1961 Buick Wagon—Special ...........$1995 1960 Buick LeSabre 4-Door Hardtop ..$1895 1960 Pontiac Wagon, Nice ...........$1995 1961 Buick Special 2-Door ..........$1785 1961 Buick Eilectra Hardtop......... ^375 1962 Buick Special Convertible ...#..$2385 1962 Buick Wildcat 2-Door Hardtop .. .$2W 1961 Renault Gordini 4-Door .........$ 895 l9bU Comet 2-U6or Sedan .............$ 895 1959 Buick Invicta 4-Door Hardtop....$1595 1959 Opel' 2-Door Sedan .............$ 695 1957 Buick Super 4-Door Hardtop.....$ ^5 1957 Biiick Special 2-Door .........$ 495 1454 FORD V8. 4-DOOR. 4454. r‘ri 'vhHx; inme btater. white side-4ib-..f«4 4rimv--Lo» J aezatS- “’^im »r. ESTATE STORAGE CO. „„ -------- — -------- 1»(8 FORD IxOeOR. 541 Vfc S SALE PRICE. 5547. Low Weekly -------- ---- - — *— t of 54 54. Cell FE 5-7161 ONE - OWNER, 1454 FORD PAIR- 1961 MONZA COUPE WITH RADIO, heeler, powergllde end bucket eeet-Don’t misi one it $200 dowt paymenu of 03.0 per month. LLOYD'S equipment, good condttton, I 411 Atlentlc. Milford, Mlchl - MU 4-4148____________________ 1162 FORD OALAXIX M300R BE- dey. 446 onglae. 4-epeed I-----*- elon, redlo, beetor. whitew otor Co. Only 1-- . JEROME-FEMUSON, 1 Peeler. OL 1-1711, BUY YOUR NEW RAMBLER HOUGHTEN & SON <■ Mein B Rochester OL 1-11,-OLDB "M" CONVBRTIBLB. \» like new and the full price U only $05 with no money down to buy. LUCKY AUTO BALKS. ’ Pontiac s Discount Lot,” “ Saginaw. FE 4^14. iqr®2**9ul 13 BUICK ........ JUNIVEMAL AUTO ' mlleege. electric FORD 634 Oeklend Ave. 1959 Ford radio. Iieate^r. beautiful tu Dish, rune fine, full prici 0. 1956 VW 2-door. ftn7 running condition. I reel bergeln, full price only 12.295. 1956 Dodge ' Custom Hovel rencher. beeutiful tu tone finish. whIteweL' tires, redlo heeter, full price only 115. SURPLUS MOTORS IieyiiMDta ot 147.15 per i LLOYD'S FE 2-9131 1961 OLD8MOBILE PlS ♦DOOR SE- IF YOU ARE BANKRUPT ____ YEAH WARRANTY S-PART?VK iRRiOK^^nrr Beginew _____FE 8-4541 I FORD ♦DOOR SEDAN, V5 Bh-^glne. stenderd ti-----'—•-- — Ce» terms. Rochester JEROME-FER-Ford DeMer. tomobile. hes redlo end h In excellent 'OondiUoss .lull pru only 5397 end weekly peymeni KING AUTO SALES FORD I960 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE door, 6-cylli]der. powergllde. In er. whttewell tires, eolld white i leh. Only SI 295 Eesy terms. Pi TERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1— 8 WOODWARD AVE., BIRIONO- SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oeklend FE 5-9421 114^ CORVAIR ^40 - 2-DOOR, Powergllde. 17.404 mllekTeke ever peyments. OR 3-4544. 1964 CORVAIR "#00 ’ 4-DR, POW-ergllde. redlo, heeler. wUtewells. One owner, low mlleege, tper* stm new. Only 51.495. EeM terms. , PATTER80H CHEVROLET CO.. 554 W. HURON ST 1004 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIR- 171 PE 4-1717* MINOHAM. MI ♦3735. GLENN'S FORD 1587 3-DOOR HARDTOP PPT yellow cer with metching rlor. Come In end look el lltUe creem puffi $445 full (bw) 3 Teer Werrenty , SPARTAN DODGE. Inc. J ■ ■ B. Beginew_____PI 1-4541 P-ORD OALAXm "354" » convertible. IM engine, Cruls - G ' Mellc tmemleslen. redlo. hoeter power steering. Ford Feclory ce. end only 3.004 roUes. Only $2,795. Eeey terms. JEROME-FEROU80N, Rnehester Ford Peeler. OL l^97^l. l$63 FMr. 1200 SPIDER DEMO. A beeutifu. red. only $1.4$S. SUPERIOR RAMBLE! 554 Oeklend____ FE 5-9431 SALE 1962 Chevy aia Sport Mui. V$ e crKllde. power steering .. ->rakei, power windows, beater, whitewall tirea. tanperl '$2295 latthews-Hargrcavcs Oeklend Ave._FE 4-4547 MERCURY MONTEREY 1 FE 5-4171 WUI deUver eer dey to your hornet 154 >■ Segtnew. 1 Corvette Be sure to eee IhU 1451 Corvett reel cleen fed besuly wli metching Interior. Redlo. bceb end eUndnrd-trenemlielon. $L$$ WILSON OTtte^LAC Woodward BIRMmOHAM USI FORD. PAIRLAine, CLUB 8E> ^^$184, MU. Auburn Bd. “ if Ouerenteed Werrenl.v XLOYD'S Lincoln -r Mercury. — Comet Meteor — Englleb Ford FE'Z^m LOOK \VHAT the MARCH W IND , BLEW' IN! An Immeculele door sport coupe.____ trensmieslon. power steei brekee, redlo end hoe,,., extra cberp low mlleege i H.m_for llle one. FuU ptle* ............... KSQUIRB AUTO BALES 114$ 8. ■TELBORAPH ip. $31-1 "ACROOB PROM MDUCLK MIL 1960 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CQN-vertlble. Hydremetlc, power si-— Ing end brakes. Maroon fli----- $1,815. easy terms. PATTERSON ■ CHEVROUh' CO., 1000 8. WOOD-1 WARD AVE., BIRMINOHAM. MI . ■______________; 1143 PONTUC SPORT COUPE. POW-ree»OTeblc. After 4 P~ ' **** Right 1454 Ponttee Cetaltnn S-door ae-aenr x TwrTlikrii-btiie hennty with radio, heater end nutometle tri&lffillllOD.. The condition —te exceptional and ao Is the prtc "WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward OLIVER BUIGK 210 ORCHARD LAK£ FE 2-9101 RUSS JOHNSON’S WAGON SALE Ua RemUer Ctaeslc Wigon . 1941 Rambler Cleeelo Wagon . 1441 Rambler Station WOgon . 1954 Rambler SUUon Wagon . 1554 Chevy Brookwood Wagon . 1957 Pontlee Station Wagon ... 1457 Ford Station Wagon ... 1954 Dodgi Station Wagon . LIKE NEW SPECIALS Save During Our -Big— 5TH Annirversary jALE- Epottac 4-door teden ... Bbick Skylark .......... Corvelr "744" iKloor .. — Pontiac 4-door hardtop . 1962 Cetallne SpoHe Coupe .. 1943 Rambler Ambeieedor . SELECT USED CARS 1957 Dodge Hardtop ..... 1951 Ford ♦Door Sedan ..... 1954 Cbevy 1. Sid. Bbift .... 17 PooBeo 1-Door Hardtop . n Ford BteUon Wagon ...... IS Olds Boden ............ 1155 PonUee ♦Door ......... 1555 PonUeo ■ 1-Da«r .... 1954 Chevy ♦Door .......... 1954 Ford Ranch Wnsot,..... SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK___ Rochester OL 1-8133 Mon , Toof.. Thure. S:» la Wed., m.. BM.. 4:38 to I RUSS lOHNSON PONTIAC-RAMBLER M-24 at the Stoplight MY 3-6266 "Todays Television Programs— I foniithed by sl»tioiu llrted in thU column are robject to THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MARCg>I2, 1963 TWENTY-SE ;vily I withont notice I 1—WXYZ-TV Ch>nael O—CKLW-T TONIGffT 1:00 (J) News .-». ' (4) M Squad <7) Movie: “The Son of Dr. Jekyll.” (In Progress). (M Capt. Jolly and Popeye (M) American Econoiqy 0:00 (2) Editorial, Sports 0:25 (2) Weather (4) Weather 0:30 (2) Highway Patrol (4) News (7) News, Weather, Sports. (9) Quick Draw McGraw (5fl) Frendi Throuj^i TV 0:40 (4) Sports News (7) News —- 7:00 (2)- Hennesey (4) (Color) Weekend (7) Mike Hammer (9) Whiplash (M) .House We Live In 7:30 (2) Real McCoys (4) Area News .......... 4 Astrology ....... . . 20 Bridge ........... 29 Comics ........... 20 Editorials Markets .. ....... 21 Ubitoarics .... . , , 23 Sports ......... 17-11 Theaters .......... It TV A Radio Programs 27 Wilson- Earl ...... 27 Women’s Pages.....11-13 relieve overloaded sewers in the south end as well as open unserved areas to future development. The Galloway Creek trunk would open a vast unserved the northeast section to development. In other business tonight, commissioners will be asked to okay the advertising of the fourth demolition contract for the R20 urban renewal project. There are about 62 structures in the proposed contract, most of them residential properties. Tliey were originally included in the first R20 demoliUon contract with Dore Wrecking Co. of Kaw-kawiin. it * * That contract was cancelled last November when the firm was unable to complete demolition on some 74 of the 300 structures under contract. Commissioners will also be asked to okay an agreement for purchase of property in the R44 urban renewal area from Grand Trunk Western Railroad for the extension of Cass Avenue south of Orchard Lake Avenue. Action is also due on planning concerning requests to rezone property from 887-881 Glendale Avenue and three lots on Park-dfile Avenue near Baldwin Ave- The officials said Bidault had; been living in Bavaria under a I false name, a violation of German! entry regulations. i Bidault. 63. heads the political ! arm of the terrorist Secret Army Organization and its campaign to overthrow the French president. Her’ls wanted in France on treason charges. Bavarian Interior Minister Heinrich Junker said Monday night Bidault stands a good chance of getting asylum if he applies formally and fulfills certain conditions. He did not specify the conditions, but it was understood the Germans want a pledge from Bidault to abstain from all political acUvity. * ★ * Adenauer's government said it has no objection to Baveria granting a haven to Bidault under certain conditions, apparently meaning if he lives quietly and eschews politics. The West German constitution allows each of the 10 states to grant residence permits to foreigners. The new $1.5-million Intramural Sports and Recreation Building at Oakland University will undergo a complete workout following dedication ceremonies tonight! Diving and swimming, trampoline, basketball, gymnastic, tennis and volleyball exhibitions will follow Chancellor D. B. Varner’s dedication of the building at 7 p. m. Main speaker of the evening will be Don Stevens, Michigan State University trustee. He will discuss the ever-increasing demand for higher education. ★ * ★ Swimming and diving teams from Pontiac Central, Pontiac JVorthern and Birmingham Seaholm high schools will perform in the new pool. STUDENTS VS. FACULTY Oakland University’s top intramural basketball teams will compete on the new courts, while students will square off against faculty in a volleyball game. ★ ★ ★ Faculty members also will participate in a doubles tennis match in the huge gym. A University of Michigan team will demonstrate its g.vra-nastic prowess before the spectators. Short talks will be given by Bonnie Rae Carlson, 19-year-old sophomore from Caro and Howard Hinkel, 21-year-old senior of 215 Perrydaie St., Rochester. * ★ ★ Pontiac School Superintendent Dr. Dana Whitmer will speak on behalf of the University Foundation. .U4C k-E-u'incic • Sunday, the Air Force an-i , . , ^ , .. HAS NEW IDEAS nounced today. and murky weather Romney said Goodman parti- Lt. John R. Kline Jr., 25, the spread from the Middle West to cipated in meetings w'hich result- victim, is the son of Mrs. Eve-Atlantic seaboard, ed in the Olympic bills being |yn K. Stoner, 178 Judson SC I DIES IN DIXIE proposed. He declined to com- Also killed was Lt. William: One death was blamed on the ment on Goodman’s activities ex- George, 22. of Brooklyn, N Y. jdixie floods - A man killed !cept to say he had appeared be- Air Force spokesman at 'when a train overturned at a tore legislative committees pro- pyggj pop^e Base, where 'washout east of Sheij)iana, Ky. posing new ideas for the Olym- t|,p ^^p^. stationed near j A man whose truck was be- ; Abilene, said it is believed that |lieved swept into a creek in Ken- Tbe governor said he did not Kline was flying at the time of jtucky's Pike County was also bethink Goodman's efforts would the crash. j liev^ to be dead, binder the program, scheduled A board of inquiry was invest- ★ * * I for clearance through the sec- jigatiijg the accident today in an The worst flood in history for j ond bouse this week. 'effort to determine its cause. jparls of southeast Kentucky Romney's tirade about Good-' The victims were pleasure f|y-|chased thousands of resident? man’s activities stemmed irom ‘"8 » Btechcraft two - sealer from their homes and casued la complaint in Detroit by Pro-1° a f>y*ng club for property damage running into ar bate Judge James H. Lincoln that Personnel at the base. The crash | estimated millions of doUars. the governor’s budget recommen-ioccurred 10 miles northeast ofj stale police reported that dations for Boys' Training School he base about 75 children were ma- were too low. ' ■ j rooned in Riverside School. in ^ You Name /f;! ."TTiTiS' I Officers said there was no immediate danger. Roads in the' area are under water. The governor said this was example of the fact that “u..v-people think the governor is theT If- chief executive and head of state II. government’’ and that he is fully: r\ ‘ I r-aware of everything going on in| UtlZZlQ EfC i"‘ state government. ^ * I BaP'^f ' c*s*ng creeks and riv- “The fact is he’s just one of toppled homes off their foun- the bunch that mill around in Inerahirps* ^®"’';dations in southwestern West Vir-. this administrative hodge-pddge,”^.pK w . ® ginia, forcing hundreds to flee he sajd. »’®^8e-,fo higher ground and’isolating at ‘Tew people realize what a SSe r vp ^«‘"’ least one city, mew jus executive structure is,”j^sj „jg(,t. About an inch of stow Disaster crews went Into ac-® fell in the Pontiac area. There are some 120-130 or- i - • * • j gaiHzationfWnd agencies sup- L .k”™*' - . . . . * I away, the weaUierman predict- ed still more snow. He said some light rain or snow with a low of 28 to 33 may be expected tonight and snow wiUi colder temperatures, tomorrow. Morning winds southeasterly at 8 miles per hour will become 10 to 18 east to northeast tonight and northeasterly at 12 to 25 m.p.h. tomorrow. The ouiook for Thursday is cold with snow flur- he said.. i posed to report to me person-: ally. It’s ridiculous. It’s idiotic : — I don’t know how to express i it strongly enough.” Thirty-three wasRhe lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a m. "nie reading was 41 at 1 p.m. HIT BY TORNADO - This is what’s left of house flattened by a tornado yesterday near Cullman in north Alabama. One woman was killed In the house by one of a series of twisters Ar rh»ut*4 which also hit parts of Tennessee and Mississippi. Five were known dead and scores were injured with damage in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. I tkm at Logan, as the city of ' 4.100 suffered extensive damage from the swirling Gnyan-I dotte River. Mayor H. H. Cnd-! den declared the city a disaster I area after the stream reached 30 feet at 6 a.m. Four more persons were dead (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Police Trying to Solve Headquarters Burglai;y DETTROrr (fl —Folice are try-"^ ing to solve a,burglary in their own headquarters building.. Someone pried open a metal filing in the switchboard room of the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office on the fifth floor. ' j The loot was only $2. But a| pidice official ^id. “It’s not thej omney, it’s the principle of the Just 2 Days! Classified Pays! Mr. A. F. is a happy advertiser — his pickup truck for sale ad appeared just 2 days and he received over 30 calls. Sold immediately! tioo I DODOE ‘4-TON PICKUP. 49 other people are in the market or interested in a pickup truck. Don’t miss this' golden Opportunity to sell yours. People read the Classified Ads seeking items they wish' to buy . . . let these peo|de know what you have to sell with a Pontiac Press Qassi-fied Ad. It’s'easy, economical and last. Dial FE 2-8181 Ask for Classified . TWC THE P0NTI4C PRESS. TUESDAY. MARCH 12, 1963 Bill Goes to Senate Draft Extension OK'd WASHINGTON (AP) — A four-.Committee opens hearings on the year extension of the draft law, I Pentagon proposal with Assistant passed by the house with only | Secretary of Defense Norman S. three dissenting votes, begins its j Paul as the leadoff witness, senate journey today. The bill cleared the House Mon- The Senate Armed Services I day on a 387-3 roll call vote. The House Will Vole Today on Record Military Bill WASHINGTON (JP) - The House votes today on a record $15.8-billion military buying bill. The measure woujd pay for 3.000 combat aircraft, sOme 60.000 missiles—and a pair of 2,000-mile-an-hour airplanes the Kennedy administration doesn’t want to build. The RS70, a reconnaissance-strike plane that hasn’t yet been . flown, is expected to touch off fireworks during the four hours set aside for debate of the bul. It is the first major authorization measure to reach the House floor this session. The bill is subject to later appropriations. Republicans, who have talked about cutting the administration’s budget by $10 jnllion or more, are not expected toSnake the military procurement bill one of their targets. COMMITTEE REQUEST The House Armed Services Committee decided to tack $363.7 million onto the administration’s authorization request to step up the RS70 program from the cur- the Pentagon of placing too much emphasis on missiles at the expense of manned airplanes, and labeL this "a most dangerous course of action . , Past congresses have appropriated $1.3 billion for the RS70 program. For the Navy, the bill authorizes construction of 43 new Navy ships and conversion of 35 old ones. GOP Ready for Naming of Roosevelt WASinNGTON (AP)-Republi-cans appeared resij^ed today, to letting Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. win confirmation as undersecretary of commerce. _____________ [ Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel, rently plann^ three plaqes to'R-Calif., .said in advance of Roose- five. Behind the committee action is a controversy between Congress andy the Pentagon over the role of thejuanned bomber in U.S. defenses in the years ahead. The committee’s report accuses Congo Crowds Hail Tshombe ELISABETHVILLE, The Congo (AP) — President Moide »Tshombe of Katanga Yeturned to Elisabefhville today and got an aimost hysterical welcome from thousands of his people. Tshombe had been away six weeks. He has been in Europe for medicai treatment, leaving shortiy after ending Katanga’s secession from the Congo. Thousands of Africans, dancing and shouting, lined the 20-mile route from Kipushi airport to Elisabethville. velt’s scheduled public appear-before the Senate Commerce Committee that he does nqt expect any serious fight to be made against the nominee. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., said he was advised Republicans will delve into the record of the son of the late president. FEW TO FIGHT Sens. Jacob K. Javits and Kenneth B. Keating, New York Republicans, have let it become known they will not fight the appointment. Roosevelt, who lives in Washington, was listed by President Kennedy as a New York appointee. Sen. Winston L. Prouty, R-Vt. who has expressed doubts about Roosevelt’s qualifications for the $21.000-a-year post, was set to quarterback the opposition qes-tioning in committee. Now 48, Roosevelt served two terms in the House. He tried for the Democratic nomination for governor of New York in 1954, but had to settle for the state attorney general nomination. He lost to Javits while W. Averell Harri-t|man was winning the governorship. only no votes came from Reps. Homer E. Abele, I^-Ohio, H. R.| Gross, R-Iowa, and George E.i Brown Jr., IK^alif. w w * I can’t understand for the life, of me, with all the stories I hear about the unemployed youth of this country, why the armed ser-! vices can’t get all the manpower i we need on a voluntary basis,”] Gross complained. Two Democrats and a Republi-j m sought to have the bill amend-1 ed. but their proposals never got] off the ground. * * ★ Rep. Henry S. Reuss, D-Wis. wanted the draft extension held to two years. He said with the world situation in a state of flux, the next Congress should have *11 chance to act on the draft, too. The amendment was rejected on a 154 - 43 standing vote after Chairman Carl Vinson of the House Armed Services Commitee said “of all times for letting the world think we are reducing our force, this would be the wrong hour and the wrong time.” ★ * * The other amendments had similar goals. Rep Roman Pucinski, D-Ill., wanted the maximum draft age cut from 26 to 22 years. Rep. Charles E. Goodell, R-N.Y., pcqposed an amendment declaring it the desire of Congress that more men should be drafted when they are 18 H or 19, instead of at the present average of 23 years. Pucinski’s amendment was turned down on a voice vote, Goodell’s on a standing vote of 134 to 59. PROVISIONS The bill extends the draft law to July 1, 1967. It also: —Keeps in effect for four more] years a suspension of statutory' ceilings on the size of the armed | forces. Without that, military ] manpower would have to be trimmed by more than 500,000. —Continues the system of dependents’ assistance allowances, ranging from $55 to $106 a month, for enlisted men in the Jower rades. —Extends the doctors’ draft, and the provisions for special pay for medical men or(jered to military service. The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Some drizzle with heavy fog thinning by afternoon, high 39. Cloudy, mild with a little rain or drizzle tonight, low 31. Cloudy turning colder with rain or snov Wednesday, high 36. Light variabie winds becoming east ^ northeast 8 to 15 miles tonight and 12 to 20 miles W( ‘ lemp«r(UTe prtcedinii S m.:^tnd ytloclir. t m.p Father Slays Wife, Children Former Mental Patient Uses Claw Hammer MICHIGAN’S JUNIOR MISS - Diane Girard, 17, of Lincoln Park arrives in Mobile, Ala., to participate in America’s Junior Miss Pageant and is welcomed by Judy Prothro, Mobile’s Azalea Trail Queen. Diane, sponsor^ by the Southgate Junior Chamber of Commerce, was selected in competition in Pontiac. Preliminary judging begins tomorrow with the finals scheduled for Saturday. Poisoning of Fish Frightens Ifalions MANCHESTER, N.H. (UPI) A demented father beat his entire family — his wife and four children to death with a hammer early today, police reported. The father, Joseph M. Simi-chak, 39, a former mental patient-a^ onetime Connecticut policennm, gave himself up to police. He was hooked on five counts of murder. Police said he battered his family with a claw hammer because Ije apparently was in financial difficulty and unable to support them. Dead are his Japanese wife No-buko, 38, and their children Franklin, 4, Patricia, 3, Elizabeth, 2, and Katherine, 6 months. “I have hurt my family,” Simichak told the desk officer after walking into police headquarters- He was wet and disheveled from walking in the rain. His clothes were stained with blood. At the Simichaks’ first-floor apartment in downtown Manchester, police found three of the children dead in bed. The wife and another child, Franklin, were on the floor near by, mortally In-ired. They died a short time later at a hospital. SCHIZOPHRENIC TYPE’ Simichak, unemployed and a former airman, was treated nearly three years ago as a mental patient. He was described then a “schizophrenic, catatonic BIRMINGHAM - The City Commission postponed consideration last night on a revision of salaries for municipal judges requested by Judge John C. Emery Jr. The current salary for a mu- SANT’ ANTONIO, Italy (UPI) -A “cyanide psychosis” today hung over the, tiny villages along the banks of the Dora Riparia, northwestern Italy’s “River of Death.” Thirty pounds of poisonous sodium cyanide from an ap-piiance plant were dump^ into the river by mistake Saturday, kitting an estimated 500.000 trout and other fish, 25.000 birds, 3,500 wild rabbits and 200 foxes. French Strike Hits Railroads PARIS (AP)—A series of two-houiy^rikes in support of the striding »coa|.,. miners threw France’s railway system into confusion today. * * * Many suburban and tong-line trains were delayed frptn 15 minutes to two hoursy Commuters were thrown off ^edule. Many were unable to/crowd into the few trains running and had to take buses ^ private cars. The rail^workers set no precise time foi^hutting down any par-ticulartine. Instead, they planned icR^walkout as a sudden sur-•ise action. Uncertainty hovered /er the whole rail system. ★ ★ * The coal strike entered its 12th day with neither the government nor the 200,(KXI idle miners giving ground. WANT NEGOTIA’nONS The miners continued to defy government draft order which threatened them with fines, imprisonment or loss of pension i 30 Mum^Xlch “ 51 rights as long as they refused to .......’*orinnrM back to work. They demand . » Yo........... ' ^ --->----» 31 M Omaht “ lifting of the draft and opening of 4T.negotiations as conditions for their yittiburih^^^ M return to the pits. 34 13 8. rranclaco 13 53 30 8 8 Storte 35 43 35 8«attl« 45 34 31 Tampa 54 33 30 Washlnaton 40 Ob« Year Afa I Highest temperature . to»eet temperature . Mean temperature . . Weather: Wet mow UMaZraai UJ. WlMHUt HIUAU Ai^ rheteraa NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow showers.tonight will spread across portions of northern and central Plateau, the central Plains and upper Great Lakes. Rain is expected in portions of lower Great Lakes, the Ohio, Tennessee and lower Mississippi valleys into the southern Plains. It will be generally warmer in eastern third of nation. Colder temperatures are due in Mississippi Valiq^’, the Plains states and into the Plateau. The government has said it will not negotiate while the miners flout the draft order. It has taken no action to enforce it. News of the poisoned water spread fear of human deaths but none has bem report^ so far. Health authorities said the poison now has been diluted sufficiently so that there is little chance the river water would kill a hun^an. ★ * * “Only a nliraele prevented the accident from becoming a major disaster,” a local official' said. He said a number of faAi-ers picked up fish dying from the poison, cleaned, cooked and die them. * ★ ★ Health officials said the poison apparently had not spread to the edible parts of fish that were still alive when they were landed. DANGEROUS But dead fish washed ashore could cause almost instant death when eaten, they said. ★ * ★ It will be a long time before residents of this area 30 miles west of the industrial city of ’Turin get over the psychological and financial effects of the accident. Piero Franzi, 29, a carpenter, said he will never eat fish again. “1 ate four trout Saturday nigbt and I am still alive,” he said “but I spent two sleepless nights after the first alarm was flashed.” Franzi was eating the fourth fish when a radio news bulletin warned the villages sodium cy- anide had been dumped into the river. “The delicious flavor of the fried trout turned bitter as soon as I realized I was eating poisoned fish,” he said. “My wife burst into tears and I rushed out for the parish priest.” Airliner Skids Into Snowbank No Injuries Reported Among 19 Aboard Doctors said he had a split personality that bordered at times on imbecility. A few hours before the killings, Simichak went to a corner store to buy food for his family. ★ ★ w The grocer, John Damalas, said Simichak told him: ‘“I have to look after my kids. If we have to, we’ll eat corn-bread and water. I brought them into the world. I got to take care of them.’ ” Area Salesman Dies From Gas Poisoning Bloomfield Hills police attributed his death to carbon monoxide poisoning. Sevald, a Royal Oak ibsident, was employed by Fred Pierce, BOSTON ifl — An Eastern Air Lines plane with 15 passengers and a crew of four skidded on a Bloomfield Hills, slushy runway at Logan Airport today and bumped into a snowbank. No injuries were reported. Frank Sweeney, chief inspector for the Massachusetts Aeronautics Commission, said after viewing the plane and the accident scene, that it appears the plane made a normal landing, but skidded on slush. The plane knocked down a few landing lights along the runway and crushed its own right main landing gear, causing it to list badly to the right, Sweeney said. The only other damage appeared to be bent propellers. Sweeney quoted the pilot of the DC 7 plane, Capt. Edward B, Leieecker of McLean, Va., as saying he felt no braking action when his plane touched down on the runway. The plane came in from Wash- Birmingham real estate salesman Arthur Sevald, 62, was found dead last night in the garage of a model home he was attempting to sell at 679 Kingsley Trail, Worst Floods Sock Southland and more t (Continued From Page One) ‘ 20 were injured b a r r a g e and more than 150 in tornadoes which raked k sissippi, Alabama and Tenn« late yesterday and early today. The threat of more twisters hung over the southland ♦ V ♦ ’The Birmingham Weather Bureau flashed an alert of possible twisters ip the Cullman area, which took the worst of.yesterday’s storms, and in SyUicauga and Tuscaloosa areas. * ★ ★ Tornado damage was estimated at more than $4 million in Alabama alone. At least 24 communities were hit by the tShnado homes and buildings were destroyed or heavily damaged. Traffic'Deaths at 254 EAST LANSING (AP) - Traffic accidents'have killed 254 persons in Michigan so far this year, provisional figures compiled by state police showed today. TKh toll at this date last year was 202. Soviet scientists are working on a way to create artificial gravity overcome the effects of weightlessness' on human beings on long space flights. Birmingham Area News: Put Off Consideration of Pay Hike for Judges BritishJalk to JFK Aide on Polaris LONDON (UPI) - President Kennedy’s special enve^ Livingston T. Merchant conferred wiUi British leaders for two hours here today to try to narrow Anglo-American differences on a proposed multilateral Polaris nuclear force for the Western Alliance. Merchant, assisted by U.S. North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Ambassador ’Thomas K. Finletter, met with Foreign Secretary Lord Home and Lord Privy Seal Edward Heath at the foreign office this morning. In the absence of the ailing Defense Minister Peter Thomey-croft, high officials of his ministry participated in the talks. nicipal judge is $5,000 arhile a-sociate judges receive $1,200. ^ EYE ANNEXATION , The commission authorized the ' city attorney to take steps necessary to annex the section of Springdale Park not within the city limits. The major portion of the park was annexed to the city in 1138. The remaining 11,000 square foot "'section was purchased by the city in 1947, but never annexed. In response to a letter from the East Mpple Property Owners’ Association, the conunission decided to work with the group to alleviate city parking problems. Members agi^ to investigate what is being done in other cities with similar problems.,^ The a s ■ 0 c 1 a t lo n had requested that the commission set up a committee to evaluate “problems created by public versus private parking.’.’ The group includes property owners on ^st Male Avenue between Hunter Boulevard and Adams Road- The Michigan State University Concert Band will present a concert at Grove High School March 21- Proceeds from the concert will provide music scholarships. Tickets may be obtained from school band directors, at Peck Tailors, Demery’s, Inc., and the Merchant'planned a later meeting with Prime Minister Harold Macmillan for a face-to-face review of the controversial prob-jWabeek Pharmacy, lem of a NAIX) nuclear force which the American diplomat is currently discussing with a-number of NATO Allies. The annual Kite Flying Contest, cosponsored by the Birmingham Optimist Club and the City BRITISH INFORMED Recreation Department is sched- March 23 at Derby Ath- Diplomatic sources said Mer-iu,j p: y ' chant informed the British lead- ers of the outcome to date of his talks with Allied diplomats in Paris, Rome and Bonn on what type of NATO nuclear force they desire. Tlie contest is open to children between the ages 5 and 12. Awards will be given to the child with the hi^st flying West Germany was understood! *‘**5’,i.**** beauWnl kite to be among those who are keenly interested in the American project for a multinational Polaris armed surface fleet manned with mixed crews that would cost some $500 million a year for an initiar 10-year period to rpount and maintain. and the most unusual kite. In the last two categories, only home made kites may be entered. This fotve would be truly multi-nationally owned and its units, could not be withdrawn by individual nations. Britain prefers, at least for the start, a NATO nuclear force which would consist of nationally owned contingents, including V-bombers, American Polaris submarines, and tactical delivery vehicles from other allied] nations. Mrs. W. Gordon Stoner Service for Mrs. W. Gordon (Margaret M.) Stoner, 79, of 1377 Henrietta St., will be 3 p.m. Thursday at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Interment will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Stoner died yesterday after a brief illness. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Clair Curtis of Alexandria, Va.; son, John G. of Birmingham; a sister. Miss Ruth McLaughlin of Birmingham; and four grand-'children. 'Bus Bill Will Fail' LANSING — A controversia Senate bill to require school districts to provide bus service for students at nonpublic schools wil not pass the Senate in its present form. I That wastoday of Sen/Mirell E, Roberts, R-Oakland County, one of 29 sponsors of the bill. Roberts said the bill either will be substantially amended be- SEEKS ASYLUM—Georges Bidault, former French Premier and now chief of the feared OAS’s political wing, arrives.at police headquarters in N^unich, Germany, for questioning by federal prosecutor Antonious Berard (right). Bidault has been offered asylum by Bavarian state authorities on condition he end his fight to topple French President de Gaulle. Story on Page 1.) fore it comes up for a vote, it will be tabled pending study of ramifications in h-ansportation costs for school districts. ★ One of the provisions au-e to be dropped, according to Roberts, is a requirement that a district transport its private and parochial students to schools w i t h i eight miles of the district. OBJECTIONS START Legislators began receiving objections to the bill this week, Roberts heard strong opposition from the Bloomfield Hills School District, which complained that passage of the bill would cost it an extra $216,-000 a year. Roberts said a number of unanticipated problems have come up concerning costs that must be worked out before the legislation is passed, but he indicated the bill’s backers were not retreating from its principle. The bill may be amended to require districts to provide bus service only for children attending private or parochial schools within the district in addition to public school students, Roberts said. Bloomfield Hills School Supt. Eugene L. Johnson told a joint meeting of the school board and district .PTA members Saturday that the measure in its present form would alnwst double the $lf3,0M spent all^ nnally for operatibn of school buses. It also would require some 20 more school buses at a cost of 1128,000 and possibly result in a request for a two-mill school tax boost, Johnson said. He noted there were about 1,- 000 school children In the district attnding 18 private or church-run schools. “We would be hauling to Pontiac, Royal Oak and possibly to University of Detroit High School” Under the eight-mile provision, he said. School districts receive reimbursement from the state for bus transportation costs according to a mrmula based on the number of eligible children using the buses, the number of miles traveled and the number of children per bus. * ★ * Eligible chilldren are those more than 1V4 miles from their schools. 11)0 name of runs the story . . . Among the Jews meant “praise and glory” . . . Until Iscariot’s Judas sold ... His Lord for 30 coins and told . . . Where chief priests might dis-' cover Him, - ^ And “Judas” is a sym' onym ... For treason Ini all that is base . . . And startda forever for “disgrace” ... Be careful how you treat your name . . . One act can bring it fame or shame. JUUEN C. HYER. Ferifiqle Fo^t Race to Psychiatr;ist's Couch THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. MARCH 12, 1963 Sugary Liffle Girls Soon Exceed Bad Boys' Spice By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover recently revealed that auto theft—the , crime “de resistance" of the teen-age set— has gone up 9 per cent in the last year. He noted also that 60 per cent Iptini ia joinn'and muKles n_______ yo» fe«l miicriMe tod tired, try worid-fimoui DtWiti'iIhlls for their positive i ■Mitesic Ktion. Betides hrin|in| fast T palliative relief of pain, Oc Witt's Pills | use mild diuretic action to help I your .system clear out acid wastes leli I by sluuish kidneys. DeWitt's Pills f I can relieve backache miseries and [ [help you lead i DeWitt's Pills (AdvertlaacneiiC) TOW TO FIGHT ASTHIU works to^o It !h?/Sf***!*i,\“****V.i^***** heip^^Vemorl thick, choking phiotm. ThU ususUf eates DreatQing fast. sHaFS eoughlaf: thus sounder sleep. Oet MSNDACO of these thefts are comn^itted by boys under 18. Girls were not: involved in the crime picture. don't steal cars. In fact, gifts don’t cheat, lie, buy answers tests, run awa; from home,-aoa| windows — girl: don’t do ANYTHING moraUy wrong or purely mischievous dearly as often as boys. Why is this? Are girls more ntoral, by nature? Are they repress^? Are they smarts'? More scared of society’s reaction^? Or yhAt? ★ * * Some fascinating opinions on this subject were given som years ago by the late psychiatrist Dr. John Levy, who noted that "girls are just as human as boys.” However, they don’t show it until their late teens. “Of every 11 thumb tacks placed under a teacher’s seat by Park Avenue (or well-to-do) 10-year-old children, only one was #33,000 ^ BURIAL POLICY AVAILABLE TO REAPERS OF THIS NEWSPAPER UNDER AGE 80 AND NOW IN GOOD HEALTH Time Life Insurance Company is making a special introductory offer of o $T000 Burial Insurance Policy, with Graded Death Benefits, FREE for 30 days, to readers of this publication in good health ond under age 80. This is atirand new policy that provides many new and necessary benefits. It insures your Beneficiary as well as Yourself ... it INCREASES in value! We make this sp>ecial FREE offer so you can see for yourself, WITHOUT A PENNY COST, the marvelous protection it affords. 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Wainwright, hero of Botaon and Cor-regidor in World War II. -------------- CUT OFF HERE AND MAIL TODAY Mull !• TIME INSURANCE CO.. DrM. '»U. Geu. W.ta«ti(kt BU.. Buu A My Nome is (Print) put there by a girl,” the doctor noted. w ★ w In public schools, where children come from less-economlcal-ly-comfortable families, the ratio narrows, but even then "only one out of every four tacks was placed there by feminine hands. NOT A NATURAL URGE The reason for this relatively exemplary behavior in the youthful years' has nothing to do with natural urges to be good. They are purely artificial, society-made urges. “Girls are brought up to believe nice girls ‘don’t do that.’ Boys, on the other hand, ‘will be boys’ in almost any environment They are permitted much more freedom to kick up and get into trouble.” So girls, in the early years, are cheated of the right to be humanly aggressive. Society promises them, in return fex good behavior, a successful marriage, a beautiful home, and lovely children. ★ ★ * The trouble for girls comes lat-•, when these wondrous promises of childhood, are not completely fulfilled. “From her first sniffs at womanhood, the young lady senses that it is not all Miss English’s finishing school for girls cracked it up to be. She considers herself cheated. “The pallid enjoyments of v tuous womanhood have begun I wear thin, and the full-bodied adventures of the young men are much more attractive.” COMES TROUBLE Now is the time to look for trouble. The American girl in her late teens is inclined “catch up” on the boys. She has been bamboozled into behaving perfectly. For what? The result: By the time those little girls who wouldn’t p u t thumb tacks on teacher's seat reach the age of 18, they are in almost as much trouble, of'one kind or another, as boys. By the time they are 25, they are entirely equal with boys, i ★ * ' And from the age of 25 women outstrip men in the race to the psychiatrist’s couch for. ^T5ninrslMM?\ for DISCOUNTS On SQUIBB PBODUCTS MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS Squibb VIGRAN VITAMINS 100 for 8T.M TMERAORAN-M mjj IN eapsules for......W JCTMAAHUgL rifuTurJBaa WHENEVER YOU CAN’T SLEEP ...take this sleepint aid with confidence Whenever you can’t sleep because of simplenervous tension or daily problems, take SoMiNEX with confidence. Taken as directed, Sominex is so safe and effective you can take it whenever you need it. Tests in leading hospitals and among hundreds of private patients prove Sominex is wonderfully effective. You enjoy restful sleep, awake refreshed. Contains no barbiturates. A)of habit-forming. Get Sominex for natural-like sleep. Available without a prescription. Ask for Sominex. SIMMS BROS. 98 N. SAGINAW—DRUGS SINUS CONGESTION ■MiiiiiriHAhiitow Madam! Do YOU LOVE kYour Husband? . . . sure you do, but do you redly leva hhn enough to take the time and effort 1o (hop Ground when you spend hU hard-earned money? We mean for you not only to look ot the odvertisements, but to actually compare the item . . . stores tend to advertise pretty near the same price on a V particular item — but what of the quality? ^ Is if'American Made? Does the Store stand behind the hem? These are ques-k you must answer everytime you spend that hard-eorned money. Simms tries to price every item of the lowest possible |&!ce—and you should have money left over to put away for a rainy day ... so from now on, before you buy, compare'the item in person 1 Listed Below Are Some 'Husband Lovers’ Specials For Tomorrow 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Only WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT Genuine 'BEACON' and 'CHATHAM' 72x90” BLANKETS Sale of Usual $6.98 Values FIRST QUALITY Never before "ot this low price -McAllister'-plaids by Choth-om or Beacon reversible blankets—solid color on one side, plaid on the other. All first quality with over 6-tnch solin bindings.—Basmnmt 3 for 1 00 WOOL YARD GOODS, Per Yard 4 RA (Dccupation. . help with Iheir troubles. I • ★ ★ ★ TRUMAC TABLETS •m In M LC. WNsIt it tki satiiv UiiM SMs Md Cmdi k hi tskia lakTMlMw rrtM It«»CMtcttlka. Nkpt *ita Hi k|M daw csriliH k nikn Ini kssOiei. It rM salkr tna Ml d «N ikin utmu aid km kfid fOMT pnpsrdkn-Tkk kM kk dkert uIm km bkd Tnm nd W- WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT Choice of Two Fambus Brand Names in 7-Pc. Oven Ware Sets 87‘ ; shown — tosserole with cover, pie plate ond 4 I —custord cups. Clear oven heatproof gloss-Fire-King or Gloiboke brand*. Guaranteed t heol breakoge. —2nd Floor ^EASY-OFF’ OVEN CLEANER Sl.OO value—1 pound size |or with applicator. Cleans burnt on M 2111 Mills Pir fidton-best milate of iny ur in any diss (tor the 4th year in i row)-wss scored by a RamUar American 440 with everdrive in the N ASCAR-Sanctiened Pure Oil Ecenomy T«L first of three events in the 1963 Purs Oil Parformance Trials ' CLARKSTON LAKE ORION BiH Smikr, Iik. ' One up on every other car” is an exact quote from Motor Trend Magazine’s experts after they road-tested the ’63 Rambler American 440 Convertible (pictured above) equipped with Twin-Stick Floor Shift, Rambler’s exclusive sports-car option. - -i- Why don’t j^ou look at a Rambler? See how many other ways it’s one up on the rest—wth Deep-Dip rust-proofing, Ceramic-Armored mufflerTtnd-tailpipe, sparkling performance with proved economy, optional Reclining Bucket Seats, a complete line of wagons, hard-tops, convertible, sedans, including the lowest-priced U.S.car. See your Rambler dealer. FREE Car X-Rmy Book* can save you hundreds of dollars in buying a new car. Supply limited. Hurry to your Rambler dealer! ROCHESTER HMibteR A Sad, Ik. UNION LAKE Famous Stephana Bros. Ogarettm — Marvels and Cascade brand* r ot low, low prices MARVELS Cigarottes PER CARTON A1 O Regular size, regular M * ® tobaccos Famous Mar- BB vels in corton of 10 P|ui Ten CASCADE Cigarettes PER carton i|2fi Menthol flovorad ■ ^ ttnokes with fitter*, full ■■ corton of to pock*. Plu* Tea Baby Receiving Blankets Irregulars of 69c Sellers Truly a better buy — soft, cuddly flannel in stripes, solids, and nursery prints, standard receNing blanket sizes with whip-stitch edges. You must see 'em to appreckiiar their true worth. No limit — buy for yourself or for gifts. Se&c& Used Cars, Too. Buy Now During Your Rambler Dealer's Used Car VALUE PARAD E THE, PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. >fARCI^ 12, 1903 IVEl Message About i^ontiac Board of Bealt, Pontiac, JCchigan ors are sure you h K jOfit Tax! “ your n-t tn P'^nal W” WJ^rm etc. ^ from wind floor? ‘'•"•Hweau.a,. The Treasury ia a„L* "eo„:: "■■•» .o pe™.,,, •f4%!."f ”"'•■••>» »»'. .hose e.™a„ ST" ■" "■e 5% ™,e. - deluded i„ "«»nl.jecu„ WeJio L ” ®^Penses and '^ <^'7 truly y„„,^ i’owiac Board of Realtors ■ 1 Tou Can Do Something About It ! ACT XOW! Sipi and mail ihe three conpont below! The^e will indieale to yoyr Senator and ConureMmen the faet that you want the present h'ederal Income Tax Code continued, which allows FULL DEDUCTION from taxable income money you have paid as interest, charitable gifts, taxes, property loses from casualty, and medical expenses. You must let your representatives know how you feel... here is a quick, easy, effective way to do so! AR coupons will be immediately forwarded to Washington for you! q/. ■I‘I‘ Mail This Couiton Todav to Box 37, T he Pontiac Press IM>. Ito.v 0, Pontiac, Mich. Mail This Coupon Today to Box 37, The Pontiac Press P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. Mail This Coupon Today to Box 3 7,'The Pontiac P^ss P.O. Box 9, Pontine, Mich. The Honuruhle Philip A* Hurt Senate Office Huildiiii; Wabliiiigton, 25, U.C., Dear Sir: Ypiir efforts are sincerely requested to continue un-ehangetl that'|iari of the Federal Income Tax Code which allows FLLI. UEDtCTION from taxable income the money we have jtaid as interest, charitable contributions, taxes, casualty losses to properly, and medical expenses. The ennsideralion of this request is urged aiid will lie deeply apjireciatcd by me. Signed. The Honorable William S. Broomfield House Office Building Washington, 25, D.C. Dear Sir: Your efforts are sincerely requested to continue un» rhanged that part of the Federal Income Tax Code yrhich allows FULL DEDUCTION from taxable income the money , we have paid as interest, charitable contributions, taxes, casualty losses to property, and medical expenses. The consideration of this request is urged iknd will he *' deeply appreciated by me. I 1 Signed..... I I Signed... 4 ‘ 1 ,, Michigan 1 1 I 1 1 1 w'! The Honorable Neil Slaebler House Office Building Washington, 25, D.C. Dear Sir: ^ Your efforts are sincerely requested Ip continne nn* changed that part of the Federal Income Tax Code which allows FULL DEDUCTION from taxable income the money we have paid as interest, charitable contributions, taxes, | casualty losses to property, and medical expenses. The consideration of this request is urged and will be deeply appreciated by me. This eflbrt to assist liomo owners, home buyers, and others is sponsored by The Pontiac Board of Realtors, Pontiac, Michigan I, H' ^ -1 ■/ .'7 ■ \- THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. MARCH 12. 1063 Crater lake national park in Oregon recorda about 17 feet of snowfall, tlie average set in the 195(^51 season. The textile and apparel industries use more t|ian eif^t million tons of coat in one normal year. Inmate Hurt in Escape Try WITH A HOME LOAN from onr assoeiation, you can reborrow up to the original amount oj^our loan for future repairs, remodeling, or dt^er improvements—without refinancing! And, this practical open end clause is only one way we help make home financing more con* venient for you. Stop in today for full details. 75 West Huron Establuhed 1890 FE 4-0561 Member Federal Home Loon Bonk System (fonstitution Supporters Nome Muskegon Chief LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - An inmate from Michigan was critically injured yesterday in a Nebraska ,^tentiary when a rope on which he was attempting to slide to freedom from the roof of the penitentiary broke and let him fall, Warden Maurice Sigler Sigler said the injared convict was Prank Lucas, SS, Benton Harbor, serving N years on charges of robbery and shooting with Intent to kill, would or maim, for the abduction and wounding of a Gothen; burg. Neb., polfcemaa last October. Lucas also is wasted in Michigan for pvole violation. Sigler said Lucas suffered fractures oi the- spine and hip when a small rope broke and he plunged to the ground. Two companions in the escape attempt, Jerry Lewis Thomas, 21, and Edward Yates, 20, both from the state of Washington, were found on the roof of the cell Mock. The warden said the men tore toilet stools from the floor of their cells on the top tier of the cell house, bore into a service corridor and broke into the attic. Then they knocked a small hole through and was attempting to slide 60 feet to the ground when the rope broke. to miB futt Why invest in these bargain hnmesites? Thousands of Satisfied Land Owners Can Give You the Answer Big, Beautiful, Sunny (100 R. Frontage by 217.8 Feet of Depth) FULL HALF-ACRE BELEN, NEW MEXICO RIOGIiStfflIEEaSSIEg Ution — trcM, irtstn, itc. Rio Gtwidi Estates seams to bo a lood prospect for a future of promise, edvintuie end successful business opportunity. ‘ Oidyt Ord Jonas 1400 "O" Street ' tl ROUS ynriull Think ef it! It takes auly $1 to reservt your spKious halt-acre ranch site in beautiful Rio Grande Estates! This means that your $1 deposit gives you the exclusive option on this sunny property... while you take the time to txamiai every single detail and advantage about buying this land. That's right' You will rtcaive full information, and WE HOLD THIS LAND IN YOUR NAME WHILE YOU MAKE YOUR OWN DECISION! You must bp completely delighted with this land bargaki... or your $1 deposit will bo promptly TOTAL PRICE $299 / NO INTEREST CHARGES PAY ONLY $10 MONTHLY! 50,000 American Families are Buying Nqw... For the Future! During the post ten years... the sunny Southwest has undergone one of the most fantastic population booms of any era in our nation's history. And where did all the people come from??? From every section of this country ... from your State ... even from your city!! The people pictured in this advertisement represent the 50,000.Mfeilies who have already bought property in our Southwestern subdivision^uring the past three years. Some are buying their land now, with definite plans to retire in the sunny Southwest... wisely assuming that if they wait until they retire ... the land may well be far too costly for their retirement incomes! Far better to buy the land now... while the prices are still well within their budgets!!! Others are buying their land as a deeply cherished investment. Not especially to “get rich"... or to “make a killing;" rather ... as a most satisfying addition to their particular savings and holdings. Ownership of land brini:s with it one of the most proud and satisfying feelings man can ever acquire. And these thousands of families have taken advantage of the opportunity to buy a fine parcel of land ... from a dependable organization. Big things are hapening in this sun-drench^ region of the Land of Enchantment! Tctday, Rio Grande Estates is a growing community of attractive homes, a splendid golf course ... with lush fairways creating a carpet of green under the bluest of blue skies! In the short months ahead, even more homes will rise as Rio Grande Estates takes its place among the new, vigorous communities in the Southwest where the living is truly “easier!" Located just 32 miles south of Albuquei^ue, and less than S miles from the town of Helen (where all city conveniences are available) Rio Grande Estates enjoys a magnificent view of both the majestic Manzano Mountaim, and the romantic Rjo Grande Valley and River! AN “ARMCHAIR LANDLORD” FOR ONLY $10 A MONTHS That's right! ,Think of it!! You too can become the proud owner of a spacious half here homesite in sunny Rio Grande Estates for only {10 monthly!! Your half acre homesite measures 100 feet frontage on an unpaved ranch road, and 217.8 feet of de]^. This is a lot of land ... yet the total price today is only $299!! No interest charges.. .-no carrying charges ... no credit applications ... and the teims are just $10 a month! Small wonder that so many, many families have alrtoly bought their “estgte under the ran?!! SUNSHINE SPLENDOUR! The “guest book" at the Rio Grande Estates reception office is crammed with comments similar to these shown here. MANY, MANY FOLKS HAVE ALREADY DECIDED TO “COME OUT TO THIS SUNSHINF. VALLEY" TO ENJOY A SPLENDID, NEW WAY OF UFE! Yes... The Land of Enchantment is beckoning! And small wonder when you realize that^thousands upon thousands of families are finding that LIFE UNDER CONSTANT SUNNY SKIES IS TRULY THE GREATEST WEALTH THAT ONE CAN POSSESS! Where else In this nation can you find an average of 350 days of SUNSHINE SPLENDOUR each and every year? Wb^ else in this nation can you find such crystal-clear air... low humidity... and enough space to “GROW AND EXPAND"?? WONDERFUL REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT Looking for property with high possible profit? Best rale to follow is to “BUY LAND... AT A LOW PRICE... WHERE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT ARE TAKING PLACE!” This is Rio Grande Eslaies! Now in iu third year of development! Nearly half a million dollars worth of homes have been built or are now under construction! Mile upon mile of unpaved ranch roads have been built. A FINE GOLF COURSE IS NOW IN DAILY USE! AND EVEN GREATER DEVELOPMENT IS AN-nClPATED DURING THE COMING YEAR! MPORTANT FACTS ABOUT RiO GRANDE ESTATES • Founded in 19M. • Half-acre lots measore 100 ft. frontage by 217.8 ft. in depth ftypicil sin). • Total prict is just $299 per lot ($1 utpesit and $10 monthly). -w full acta lots available for just $549. Terms $1 <«pMit; only ?15 monthly per acre. • No interest charges, no credit applications. • All lots deeded to you on fronting unpeved rinch roed. • Dept, of Heelth-ipproved weter. Well end pump included in the cost of the bonus currently being built at Ko GrandO Estates. Home prices range from $ 8,995 to $20,000. e Taxes per V5-acri lot currently less than $3 per year. • Title insurance readily available. a Warranty Deed issued free of charge. Riswvi Ymt Laad With CeiifidtRCd... NOTH A ONE YEAR MONEY-BACK INSPECTION GUARANTEE After purchasing your land, you have a 12-month period in which to mate a personal inspection. If, upon personal inspection, you find that this sale has been misrepresented IN ANY MANNER, simply fill out the total refund request form at our sales office on the property. You will ' ud In! receive every single penny you have p N^is^^/roinudg^^^K3rCoupoi^o3«^ LOT PRICES TO RISE $96 ON MARCH 21! Rie Grande fsTitei 227-2 Belen, N. M. , « nnndsMc Oc^t. Plnw .tUe I I~ CneOe Eatatci, la wir aanr. at IndicaM ktitw. Upaa rtetto* W' tM aeuut. I aiatt kt tallr taUtfM wHk ikl. laaO aankaM^Twf St7 I »il.*si'l’;2lu iia t . Grande Estates Is one of the best known new developments in all of the Southwest Now in Its third r-------' growth, and with more thin 5 iSIlUON wiaARS ir------- ■ *............. INVESTED IN THIS FINE LAND I ° ue ky stt aiasee t-k. WILL RISE IN PRICE FROM $299 to $396 on March 21,1963! RESERVE YOUR lANO TODAY...SAVE $96 PER LOT, I ADDRESS ■ cirr 8 20NC THIS emt marcn si. iits. With a Pontiac Press Classified Ad! Just one plan provides lump sum insurance on your life... it also protects your wife.. ..and each dependent youngster is insured, too. If a new baby comes along he's automatically covered after 15 days at no increase in premium. Best of all. it provides for a cash monthly income for your family if you die.. i income th^t can last as long as 30 years. This cash income really rounds out your family’s protection. And you pay for no waste coverage. When your chiidren are tots, the length ' of income benefits is at a maximum. ,'\s they grow older and protection needs lessen, your protection tapers o(T. too. One plan does the whole job...and it’s available through just one man. your Nationwide agent. Call him — he's in the Yellow Pages. NATIONWIDE INSURANCE 256 Telegraph Koad Pontiac, Michigan Phone 338-6986 Sample plan for a father and mother, both age 30, with a 3-year-old child and newborn baby. THIS ONE PLAN provides , lump sum insuraiu;eon Dad's life.. THIS ONE PLAN provides life insurance for Morp . . .._... THIS ONE PLAN provides - life insurance for each child under 18...... 1,000 THIS ONE PLAN provides automatic coverage for new babies (after 15 days)..... 1,000 THIS ONE PLAN CAN ALSO PROVIDE $200 monthly cash income for the family if Dad's not there—for as long as 20 years. . . 48,000* THIS ONE PUN is available for this low monthly cost................... 24.19 *This example shows benefits available at plan's beginning. If Dad's death occurs in eleventh year, for example, this amount would be half of $48,OCX). In this way you pay for no coverage “overload". Bear in mind, also, that the above plan is just one of many possibilities. Above all, this is flexible life insurance. The monthly income you select may be considerably less than the $200 of this example|, depending on your Social Security and Group benefits. . . . Most people do, it's a good hobit to hove. Pontiac Press Classified Ads will bring you fast action when you want it. Regardless if you are selling or buying a sofa, washing machine or vacuum cleaner you'll find Classified Ads are your best friend! INSURANCE BY NATIONWIDE National Classified Advertising Week, March I0tb-16th Dial FE 2-8181 The Pontiac Press Classified Departnient ^7^': W C 67.' Eui tope (Irm. balance »te ' " ' tie buying pricee unchanged Market Mixed, Very Quiet Gains Shown by Tobaccos NY Press Idle Until Monday By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK -Some g o v-ernment economists — and many businessmen—are getting plateau NEW YORK m - Gains by tobaccos featured a mixed and very quiet stock market early today. Changes of most key stocks were fractional. The tobaccos strengthened on Bws that the American Medical Association has decided to drop its proposed year-long study of the possible caiual relationship between the use of tobacco and the development of various diseases. "nie rest of the market gave Uie same spiritless performance which has characterized recent sessions. Steels were unchanged easy despite the sixth straight weekly rise in production. MOTORS MIXED Motors were narrowly mixed. General Motors gained a fraction. Ford and Chrysler eased. American Motors lost a fraction. Lionel, yesterday’s iiiost active gainer, was steady. Liggett & Myers advanced more than 2. Reynolds and American Tobacco rose fractionally. Lorillard added about a point. Daughter for Iran Shah TEHRAN, Iran (UPI) - Queen Fcrah Dibah of Iran gave birth to her second child today, a daughter. The new baby weighed eight pounds, 14 ounces. Louisiana Land, and General Plywood. Among losers were Aurora Plastics, Hollinger, and Pacific Petroleum. American Stock Exch. Flgureg After dtcimil point* gre elfli NEW YORK (API — American Stock Cal El Pw .. l?«t: Jit^Ve'l . Merck rose more than a point up, fractionally were U.S. Smelting, Baltimore & Ohio, Public Service Electric & Gas- Du Pont and Woolworth. Among fractional losers were Goodrich, Montgomery Ward, Air Reduction, Texaco, and Southern Railway. Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange and most changes were narrow. Gainers included A e r o j e t-General Unions Must Yet Ratify Publishers' Contract NEW YORK (AP)-Eight major New York newspapers, presses idle for 95 days, wait at least until Monday to resume publication. The striking printers union has set Sunday for a membership meeting to vote on ratification of a proposed contract. when the econo-lingers for long on a pla-They — especially the DOW-IONEB NOON AVEBAOEB Quebec’s most valuable mineral product is asbestos. The New York Stock Exchange Striking stereotypers and mailers are still negotiating with the publishers on new contracts. The publishers and six nonstriking craft unions also must agree on new contracts. CONTRACT EXTENSION A major problem of negotiators is persuading the AFL-QO New York Newspaper Guild to extend its contracts with the publishers by nnore than four months—making them expire at the same time as contracts covering the craft unions. Publishers agreed to a common expiration date for contracts of all 10 newspaper unions—a major demand . ---- “ ( 42'i 4JV« ■ 7 U'4 SS7* 55% Guild contracts with the dailies expire Oct. 31, 1964. Negotiations boffied dovm Monday on the issue of getting the Guild to extend its contracts to expire two years from the date publication resumes. Guild representatives said they the contract expiration issue from Mayor Robert F. Wagner. WANT OTHER THINGS’ •niomas J. Murphy, executive vice president of the Guild, said: If we are going to be asked to extend our contract, we want other things. Money is tion—and other things beyond money.” The Guild considers its Oct. 31 contract expiration date strategic, since it comes just before national elections, and before the Christmas season when newspaper advertising is heaviest. In Cleveland, Ohio, two papers are closed^the Plain Dealer and the Press & News. ’That blackout reached its 103rd day today. Contract negotiations were hekl Monday between publishers and two of the three striking unions—the mailers and printers. ’The machinists union also is on strike. Businessmen Hit Plateau Fever Strikes ’This disease is characterized by queasy feeling ’The economy has been on a plateau for several months. It is a high one and tilted to the upside, with many of the key statistics showing a slight gain. But it’s a plateau nevertheless. And that makes many nervous. That Is what’s behind Uie persistent questioning: ‘‘When will the next recession start?”; and 'Can we stave off a recession altogether by taking some measure such as cutting federal income taxes?” While the economy loafs along, many businessmen are holding expansion plans down,- preferring to wait for a sure sign thkt eon-sumer demand will take up the existing slack in productive capacity in many industries. Of late, some have decided that the recession they feared this year will be staved off at least for a time. And they are dusting off plans to modernize or expand. Many are counting on federal tax cuts and increased government spending, and any monetary stimulus that later may seem to get the economy off the plateau and oitto an upward trail. Others, more cautious in their views of what Congress may do, are still victims of plateau fever. And so, too, may be many consumers, ’They have been spending right along. And they have increased their installment debt of late, especially in buying new cars. Byt there has been no buying splurge. Both consumers and businessmen have been taking it easy, enjoying good times—if they have jobs and if their products have been selling well. UNCERTAINTIES TROUBLE But the uncertainties have been troubling them. What Congress will do about taxes is one^ Anqjher is whether this year «riU bring something ol:.,. a showdown between labor and management on basic questions of automation, job security, cost cutting, the wage-price spiral. Still another Is the effect on the American economy of the unsettled and confused international situation. Involved are American exports, investments abroad, erosion of the gold reserves, the strength of the dollar on world exchanges. Ford Officials Predicf 'Very Safisfacfory' 1963 DETROIT (J’l — A ‘‘very satisfactory year” for 1963 was pre- would seek an interpretation of dieted for Ford Motor Co. today by Chairman Henry Fo-d II and Flesident John Dykstra in the annual report to stockholders showing all-time record high 1962 prof- its. Ford and Dykstra discussed the future in a review of the com-a'c^idera-® previously reported 1962 profit of $480.7 million, a 17 per pent increase over the 1961 profit of $409.6 million. Pontiac Firm Wins Contract It was 6 per cent above the 1955 record of $454.2 million. While predicting another good year for 1963, Ford and Dykstra said car sales would depend ‘‘to a great extent, as always, upon the performance of the general economy.” They said abundant consumer credit is available and that there Ire indications consumers are spending some of their savings of the last two years. INTERNATIONAL GAIN ’The report, mailed to more than 300,000 stockholders, emphasized Ford’s international expansion. Rochester Company Sells Reel Division Pontiac firm, Eames and Brown, Inc., 55 E. Pike St., has submitted low bid for the mechanical trades contract on struction of a physical education building at\ Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti. The local firm won the contract with a bid of $337,645. Low bids were announced yesterday by the State Building Division in Advocates of a tax cut, especially a quick one, say this could do more than any other single act to solve the plateau uncertainty. 'The psychological effect could be greater than the fiscal one. Tax cut enthusiasts argue that consumers and industrialists alike would feel better, would antici -pate better times, would plan and spend accordingly. FISCAL GAINS The fiscal gains might be less real. The cut in federal tax rates corporate and individual individual incomes might be swallowed up by rises at other levels of government, and by increases in other federal levies. Both labor and management are urging tax cuts — although each has a different notion of how taxes should be cut. But many citizens are worried about what this would do to the federal debt, to monetary policy, and in the long run to the basic health of the economy. If the economy were sliding downhill, there would be a few qualms about taking tax cutting and government spending measures. Because it’s on that plateau, the qualms are widespread, with or Without justification. The Bronson Reel Division of| Higbie Manufacturing Co. has been sold, it was announced today by Carlton M. Higbie Jr. president of the Rochester company Two executives of the dlvi- the 40-year-oM firm, one of the top five fishing tackle manufacturers in the country. Heading the new trio of major stockholders as president is industrialist E1 me r Houghton. Houghton said the firm will continue to operate in Bronson and under the same name. Retaining his present title as vice president and general manager iq Bert Ward, who has di-j' reeled the operation since 1946. Completing the top management team is Ldurence Higbie who will QDntinue as vice president in charge of sales, advertising and marketing. Harry Hahn, director of in-strucUon for the Oakland Board of Education, will be the keynote speaker at a conference of reading teachers at Misericordia College in Pennsylvania March 22 and 23. Ted Carlson, 86 S. Marshall St., told Waterford Township police yesterday that his car was broken into at the Huron Bowl parking lot, 2525 Elizabeth Lake Road, and a record player valued at $49 stolen. Pontiac Lions Rummage Sale, K. of C. Hall, S. Saginaw, March 15th and 16th, 9 to 5. -Adv. Guitar, piano, organ. Prpfies-sional teachers. Music Center. FE 44700. -Adv. Treasury Position 5.10IAU.373.70 T1A1IJ7S.072.I4 n.SS4.5M.l*0.« M.I»l.SM.S53 Sa 1SJ77.507.1M.M Marek 7. un 4.sn.«07.oi5.a Grain Prices LtTW Mar ... S?c News in Brief Factory sales of cars, trucks and tractors made outside the United States hit an all-time high of 1,044.799 units in 1962 as! against 926,496 in the previous! year. I ’This was the first time Ford production outside the United States went above a units. It also was the fifth consecutive year international sales attained record Ipvels, "reflecting sustained postwar growth of demand for automotive products in the free world,” the report said. Major subsidiaries in Great Britain, Germany, Canada, Australia and Latin America were credited with sales gains. Ford also cited what it called an ‘‘important upturn” in total defense and space sales. ’These increased from $95 milljon in 1961 to $248 million in 1962. Ford said this was due primari-' to inclusion' for the first time of full-year defense sales of Phil-co Corp. Ford acquired Philco in December 1961. Rummage i clothes, March 15-15. lip To Date Laundry, 87 S. Saginaw St. Adv. Engineer at Pontiac Gets Germany Post Clayton B. Leach, executive engineer in charge of chassis for Pontiac Motor Division, lias been named assistant chief engineer in charge of product design and development for Adam Opel A.G. General Motors’ subsidiary in Germany. Leach of 2216 Lake Angelas Shores, Lake Angelos, will be based at Opel’s main plant in Rosseisheim am Main. Leach joined Pontiac as a draftsman and designer in 1937. He became an executive engineer in December, 1961. Successful ^Investing Rummage Sale at Congregational Church,^ N. Woodward, Birmingham. March 13, 8 a.m, Selling Wave Hurts Value of Pound LONDON (AP) - The British pound sagged in value today after selling wave swept Europe’ The pound was being quoted against the U.S. dollar at $2.79, 29«, 3-32 of a cent below Monday night’s closing price of $2.80. Fw the second straight day the state-run Bank of England intervened in an effort to prop sterling. It hurried to buy up pounds, using dollars from the nation’s hard currency reserves. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am about 60 and taking care of my invalid father, who depends for support on his Social Security and common stock dividends. He owns 270 shares American Telephone, 100 shares Ford Motor, and 25 shares of General Motors. Have you any suggestions as regards his holdings?” J. W. A) I think your father is extremely fortunate to have you to depend on, in addition to his stock investments. There Is nothing wrong with his list except that it is not weU diversified and his yield, particularly on Telephone, is rather low. He has about $33,000 in American Telephone, $4,200 in Ford, and $1,500 in General Motors. Assuming that the capital gains t^ would not be excessive with his moderate income and double personal exemption, I would switch all the Ford into General Motors, improving the yield from 4.2 per cent to 43 per cent; and one-half the Telephone into Standard (hi of New Jersey, upping his return from 2.9 per cent to 43 per cent. Q) "Two years ago, a group of us neighbors started a small investment club, putting in $10 per month per person. We are mainly interested in growth and are now dollar-averaging the best stocks and getting out of the bad ones. We would appreciate your evaluation of the enclosed list” D.C. A) You have on the whole an extremely good list of stocks, and I believe you should be warmly commended for using good judgement. Avon Products, the great door-Uxloor cosmetics company, is a fine growth situation. Pfizer is one of my favorites in the drug group, and Litton is a fast-rather fully priced at present. I like Electronic Specialty, Minnesota Mining, Purex and Beam Distilling. Kendall 0>., is not a growth stock and Kimberly (Mark’s earnings have shown little bounce in recent years. These conoments are necessarily of a capsule nature, but I sincerely hope they will be of some assistance to you. (Copyright 1963) THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1»63 Would Let Cities Issue Bonds ---------^ . • ' , ' ■ '■ Develophfient/ Bill Ready Vote XANSIKC —-A proposal Co give cities power to finance in* d u s t r i a 1 development sites through revenue bonds was ready for a decision by the House today after emerging from debate little the worse for wear. * ★ * No serious objections arose Monday night as the bill — a key part of Gov. George Romney’s program to put new life in Michigan’s economy two companion bills moved up for a vote. A facts-and-figures sales talk by Rep. Gilbert Bursley, R-Ann Arbor, helped the three-bill package along, and Democrats, who earlier had raised questions on the constitutionality of the bonding proposal, gave the issue no more than passing Bursley sailHie Was “hopeful” but uncertain of the bonding bill’s chances of gaining enough support when it goes to a vote today or tomorrow. “I’d rather say nothing at all than go out on ai limb," said Bursley, “but I think the constitutional question in this bond- Uemoefats had challenged the bill on grounds that cities, by pledging their full faith and credit behind bonds issued as an inducement to private investment, would be risking loss of taxpayer’s money. Bursley explained that the bonds would not be general obligation issues, but would, be repaid through income from rents and leases of the industrial properties. In addition, he said, companies would pay taxes as if they owned the properties they use. ★ ★ ★ I concede that there still is some* risk involved,” said Bursley, "because bonding attorneys are very cautious people. But these provisions are designed to appeai oniy to reputable complex who wouldn’t be likely to default on their investment.’* Burley, who is the chief sponsor of the Romney economic pro- gram in the House, admitted the question of constitutionality might ultimately have to be resolved in 90urt if seriously chai-■ nged. He said, however, that some 1250-miUion worth of such bonds have been issued by municipalities in 18 other states where similar enabling legislation has been passed. Among them, he added, are states Competing with Michigan for industrial investment. / The bill provides that a city may issue bonds without a vote unl^ 5 per cent of the registered voters petition for a referendum. In an amendment added last night, the 5 per cent figure was substituted for 10 per cent. * Amother amendment — to limit cities to financing properties within their own borders — was defeated. Rep. Alexander Petri, D-Ecorse, proposed . _ ing that “we should proceed with a little bit qf caution.’ Waterford Trustees Get Increase in Pay WaterforjJ ^Township Board members last night voted to increase weekly meeting compensation from $10 to $15 for its four The pay boost, which will amount to $1,040 a year, was ing proposal has been settled.” I proposed by Trustee Byron Cole WE HAVE MOVED to 368 W. Huron St. Come ond see us at our new address for all your insurance needs! Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD 368 W. Huron St. Ph. FE 4-8284 CSS CCS ^ ^ELECTRIC^ AT MITCHELL'S ON THE NEW iMilf . . . »tcur*t«lT . . . p»rl»cllf « SmHh-Ceran* tUctrIc Mtbit. YOU tJAN WSITI UECTmCAUY. winpl* b*low o* Artiilic Krip» typ,. It lopki pmiiliigly lUt goad \ptA.epML EASY TERMS LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE Worth ^oginawy ^rL6lo>l A Reputation Built on Service tAefikle'r Have been servin^Pontiac investors for over twenty years. If you hove o question on investments coll the oldest local investment firm in Pontiac for respected advice, fast and accurate executions. INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS FE 2-9117,_. 818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG. IMMEDIATE QUOTATION SERVICE. Our Facilifie$ Extend From Coast to Coast and supported by Trustee Joseph McGee. It becomes effective April 8. In suggesting the pay boost. Cole pointed out that prior to Waterford’s booming a-charter township, in 1961, trustees were paid $20 a meeting. At that time, according to state statute, the limitation for trustee meeting compensation in charter townships was $10. This figure was revised to hs last year. ★ ★ ★ The terms of both Cole and McGee expire at the end of this month. Neither is seeking re-election to the board in the April election. OTHER BUSINESS In other business last night, board members authorized the police department to negotiate immediately for rental of a teletype system at a cost of $60 monthly. Captain William Stokes told the board the teletype system would save the department numerous long distance phone calls to other police departments as well as improve efficiency of the local communication system. Representatives of the Water-* ford Township Friends of the Library were advised last night that a report by a township board library committee on a proposed public library is forthcoming. APPROPRIATION PUZZLES Library Friends President Mrs. Ralph Eaton told board members she was puzzled about the ease with which the board recently appropriated more than $20,000 to the recreation deparUnent, but won’t allocate funds for the library. ’The group’s vice president, Mrs. John Naz, cited the fact that the Library Friends first petitioned for consideration of the public library last August. Board members approved a request for the purchase of a new typewriter for the clerk’s office but tabled a request from the fire chief for 1,000 feet of all-dacron pending receipt of written price quotations. An application from The -Mall shopping center to operate an amusement concession to coincide with its first anniversary celebration May 6 through 20 was ap^ proved. A fee of $150 will be imposed by the township. Construction Dowa in Waterford Twp. Building permits issitod by Waterford Township during February were valued at $164,010, less than half of the $380,852 valuation for the same month last year. * ★ ★ Last month a total of 28 permits was issued compared to 34 in February 1962. This February six residential permits valued at $112,610 were issued. I Last year in February nine such permits were issued at a jvaluation of $191,990. j I During the past month, no com-' merciai permits were issued. Last February commercial per-! mils valuation amounted to $134,-' 400. I AP Phota|K SOX AND FRIENDS — Mrs. Pat Johnson (right) and Mrs. Peggy Hayes, Media, Pa.,-humane society officials, spent two months running down little Sox to remove a collar slowly strangling the dog as it grew. V'”-’ " ’ ■ * vs,., j ta, «. V Little Sox Is Safe • . After Long Chase ] WILMINGTON, Del. ifl — Little Sox, a homeless dog described as about 90 per cent beagle, didn’t like people—and as a result nearly died. Sox lives today because people, especially two women, like the dog. ★ ★ ★ Sox was seen wandering in the suburban community of Green Acres about two months ago, a tight leather collar around its neck. Residents became concerned and notified the Delaware Humane Association. Mrs. Pat Johnson, president, and Peggy Hayes, another official, brought food to the dog, who gobbled it, standing aloof and alone, rebuffing lall affection. TRANQUIUZER DOSE A week ago the two women put a dose of tranquilizer in the food. The dog was wobbly but still ran off when they a^roached. ’The next day they added a sleeping potion. They then gave chase, trapping the dog with a leash. ★ ★ ★ Dr. William Butler, a veterinarian, removed the collar. The dog is now in the Johnson home, adjusting to people and other dogs, and apparently enjoying both equally. "He could not possibly have survived the tightening collar,” said Mrs. Johnson. Sooh, she said, he will be offered for adoption. It is estimated that 17 million Americans suffer from an allergic disease. I To Air Liquor License Bill LANSING (UPI) - Sen. Paul i Younger, R-Lansing, announced j today the Senate Liquor Control ICommittee will hold a public I hearing at 10 a.m. tomorrow on a bill that would increase the [number of resort liquor licenses in Michigan. — 1 SAVE $60 ON INSUUTION Ambassador Insulation C«. 2nOOixio Highway FE 5-8405 Sine. 1947 Gat or Oil BteiulAiii Distributing System Gives You WALLWALL COMFORT!-' Cali Us Today!. You Will Not Be Without Heat Overnight! eOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. PHONE FE 8-0484 3401 W: Huron TONIGHT at 9:30 P.M. ON NBC-TV THE DICK POWELL THEATRE Williairi Shatner Robert A. Brown Geraldine Brooks Star in “COLOSSUS 'presented by CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY TONIGHT at 9:30 P.M. ON NBC-TV Cttaranteerf Equipment and Imtallation! OAKLAND INDOOR COMFORT BUREAU Engineers thet specialize in ... for courteous service CilL today! Stanley- Garwood HEATING SSOSCmaUu-Kt. Zilka Heating- SS95 nrrli.nl Lk. Ans draw Ukr SSl-lSlt Bryan F. French asis.TMtksu ISnrtlM K»«97S Heights Supply- XMSbvrarKd. rmtlM> rE4-S4St Volverine Heating Co. IJZ4JWW«Arr.^, CATHOLIC WORKING PEOPLE YOU CAN* GET lOW COST HOSPITAL INSURANCE FROM OUR NON-HtOfIT SOCIETYI If you work hard for your money you’re entitled to get as much value as poasible out of it. 'The low-cost hospital plans offered by our non-profit society saue you money — give you and your family protection for less! THIS ineurance is offered by the Catholic Knights of St. George — a Catholic fraternal society that has been serving Cathr dies for 81 years. Protection is available for Hospital Room and Board. Doctor Fees. X-Rays, Oxygen, Blood Trmisju-eions. Maternity Care and many similar expenses. Income benefits are available that pay you oash when you’re hospitalized and when you're recuperating at home! GET all tfie facts on low-cost hospital and life insurance plans for Catholic working peo^ Discover for yourself how little you pay fox finest protection! MAIL THE COUPON TODAY By CtMiHr, Mtmbsraliia llmittd It Cothslici C.th.NS Eaitkts W S4. Qrarf*. IIM res.kuM BsilStaii. Dttr.ll iS, Mlrkli.a THE PONTIAC PJEIESS. TUESDAY. MARCH 12. 19e>.} ■ «AM aIJJCN t SOW IMC. AI.WATB A BUTEB OF JuW e»n. Tnt towing. OR 9-1*98. BI .DOLUR JUI^ CABS AND tnigi~yR 1-1888 dnyi, evtningi. FOR THAT "TOP POLLAR" OH ~ SHARP LATZ MODEL CARS Averill's ■ r. uJT urn •TOP DOLLAR PAID" FOR “CLEAM" USED CARS GLENN'S JUNK TRUCKS. I. PAY CASH. Penrlmnn Motort. FE 1-8881. $$ TOP DOLLAR $$ FOR Clean Used Cars JEROME "Bright Spot" TOP 88 CLEAN CAR8-TRDCK8 Economy DUcount 9339 Dlxln Hwjr. WANTED: 'S8-'61 CARS Ellsworth ULT-STATE MARKETS Extra Top Dollar FOR LATE MODELS M & M >NT1AC DRI XIE BWT. Uss# Auto-Track Porta 102 1*9* BOICK FOR PARTS. GOOD ------r. trnnsmUilon. 850. 3*'' Now OBd Uiod Tracks 103 1*95 FORD H TON PICK-DP. GOOD 1 condlUon. Only I ROLBT CO.. 1( ;. PATTERSON CHEV- JEEP 4-WHEEL DRIVE Stctlon ^?tcrt**'to'*nove! $795 Full Price (OW) l-Yenr Wnrrnnly Sl’AKTAN DODGi:. Inc. I 8, Snslnnw_______FE 8-4541 1991 CHEVY H TON PICK-OP. JEEP ______Jti Denier” OLIVER BLTCK and JEEP no Orchard Lake *1958 FORD */<-TON UTILITY PICK-up. Good running condlUon. Only t599. Eaiy termi. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1*0* 8. WOOD WARD AVE.. BIRMINOHAM. "■ 4-1795. ___________ pick DP. 1*9* FORD >4-T0N. 1 motor. 88*0. PE 5-0*11. HANDYMAN SPECIALS Oyer 11 Pickups Panels and Stake Trucks to Select From BEATTIE ■■Your FORD DIALER Since 1*10” ON DIXIE HWV. IN WATERFORD AT the stoplight ’ OR 3-1291_____ 1M5 VTON CHEVROLET PICK-UP Ooov motor and tlrei. Need> tome ------1. OR 9-1188 toy worr. mv ^ii^. "FORD DUMP TRUCK. 5-YARD in r/wuiitiMi Oood Urvt. L 2-3t5> 104 8L008 death broefll. *18.080 un- ‘“‘$11 QUARTERLY T CARS *17 brummett agency no S. Telegraph FE 4-0589 _____ CANCELED? REFUSED? YOUNG DRIVER 0»er 10 yre. experience Ineurlng Canceled anti Refused Auto Local Selvlce—Terms FOR INFORMATION CALL FE 4-3535 FRANK A. ANDERSON, AGENCY 1044 Joslyn _FE 4-3595 Fursign Curs 105 1*81 JAQDAR ROADSTER, SOLID, Jed «^sh. only *8*5, easy terms. FATTER80N CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIR- MINOHAM. Ml 4-1195.______ 1*81 FIAT, 800 t-DOOR. STATION iJmpJrandRAMBUER. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 1*9* VW HEADER. WRITE WALL TIRES. EXCELLENT PAINT. LOW MILEAGE CAR. 818.75 PER MO. Call credit mgr Mr. Parks at MI 4-1500, Harold Turner, Ford, list VADXHADL. *500. 1*9* ANGLU, WOO. and 1*5* HILLMAN, 8400. Pontiac Sports Car.Inc. 487 Auburn FE 9-1811 1851 VOLKSWAGEN THAT IS f - like new condition, gal heate radio, beater. 8**8 full priml 14 Months (OW) Guaranteed Warranty LLOYD'S Lincoln — Mercury — Comet Meteor — BngUsh Ford 131 8. Saginaw FE 2-9131 1990 AND 1851 VOLKSWAGEN. *588 each. New '83 Flat and Rambler. ■M Malco, *0 miles per gallon. 1*8* MOA ROAOan^. wheels,' light green finish. Ohly 88*5, easy, terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 8. WOODWARD AyE„ BIRMINORAM, Ml 1*51 BUICK *m. 1864 FORD WAG- on, 8150. FE 5-1991. >■ ____________ 1*59 BUICK SUPER. PULL POW-“ two. PE 4-7411. 1*55 BUICK that is IN EXCBL- 1*11 BUICK SPECIAL 4-DOOR 8E- 1(81 CHEVY IMPALA CONEVRT-Ible, green, white top, green Interior. triple power steering, brakes and windows. Big engine, big car, small price. *3495. Sub-(lihan Olds, 565 8. W -------------” 1*62 CORVAIR MONZA COUPE, 4-speed box. one owner, new ear trade, S1.899. WE TRADE. SUPIlKIOR RAMBLER tlM.96. S9 down a naw, UMversal A NOTICE e sedan DeVIUe and -----■ ■n fairly goo Saginaw FE 4-2114. 1*62 MONZA CODPC. 4-SPEED BOX. bucket seats, poly 12.«0« miles. I-owner, like new. Sale price at (1495. Suburban Olds. 965 8. Wood-yard. Birmingham. Ml 4,4465. 1962 CHEVY IMPALA SPORT coupe. Power steering, radio, .white-wails. wheel discs. 10.900 miles. *2,250. FE 4-7131. after 9 p.m. s (QW) lloyi5'S Lincoln — Mercury — Comet Meteor — English Ford 232 8. Saginaw , FI-: 2-9131 Economy Discount M95J)lxle Hwy. 1958 CADILLAC CODIK DB VILLE ----- ----- hydramalic LLOYD'S Meteor - Engll^ Ford 1*<* CADILLAC COUPE, OREEN and white, power steering, power brakes, 40.000 actual miles, this one Is new Inside and out, the price la not low but the qutIUy le here, hae no rust and new tires are Included. 8300 down 848.03 per month. BIRMINOHAM RAMBLER 000 8. Woodward MI 0 urban Olds. 565 s do, ..radio a n i 180 S: teclnftv. New ai|l Uwd Can 106 •nd white 1900 TOKD V-Oe stick. Iteire. $100 at Panchuk lloim. jgw Hwy. OR i-im. V 1 cSByRoLin “ Ian wttn standard ItC at our low price of _, ____ Easy terms arranged to ,fU your budget BIRMINOHAM CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH. *U - I. WOODWARD. I960'CHEVROLET BEL AIR STA-tlon wagon, V* engine, standard shut, radio, heater. Light blue, finish. Only *1.395. easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE.. BIR- MINOHAM, Ml 4-2195.________ 1*00 CHEVROLET 3-DOOR. 6 CYL-Inder, Powergllde, radio, heater, whltewell tires. Light blue finish. Only *1.1*5. easyterms: PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINO- _____ xhltewalls. Twilight blue ftnieh. *1,505. Eaey terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. --- - ■ WOODWARD AVE., BIR- MINOHAM Ml 4-2735. dth a 1*97 Corvette engine and high lift cam, solid lifters. 4 on the floor, runs out perfect! All gauges and tach included. Yours for, $495 ■ BILL SPENCE Rambler-Jeep 32 8. Main Street Clarkaton_________MA 5-5581 1*60 DODOE 3-DOOR SEDAN. 6-cyllnder. automatlt. extra clean, low mUeage. Light (due fli^. ^y *1.095. Eaay Verms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINOHAM. Ml . lOWi 2 Year Warranty SPARTAN DODGE. Inc. 8. Sagtoaw FE t-4541 ROLET CO.. 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE . BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-2735. *M CHEVROLET^^BISCAYNE^ 2 dard transmlaaion, sharp turquoir color. 8200 down, paymenia of 849.85 Guaranteed Warranty LLOYD'S Meteor-Bngllah Ford 232 8. Saginaw FE 2-9131 1(57 DODOE HARDTOP. OOOD running condition. 5290. FE 4-9048 alter 6. FE 8 *470. 1959 DOIWE^^ys'^4-DWR^ SEDAN radlo,'*hc*ler and excellent *hlte^ while ^factory Ilnlsh wlto^harmonlxj chrome spinner wheel covers. This but will jwrform to ^please you ud It** a viue at our *low price of only *895 Can be financed with little down and small monthly notice BIRMINOHAM CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH. 912 8. WOODWARD. MI 7-3214. .__________________ 1958 0 BIRMINOHAM RAMBLER MINOHAM Ml 4-2739. 1*57 CHEVROLET 1-DOOR 8TAND-trd transmission. Pull price $5(7. |5 down.^7 34 per month. Buy Marvel Motors 351 Oakland Ave. 11959 CHEVROLET. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. RADIO. HEAT-' XB AND WHITE WALL TIRES. $Si75 PER MONTH. Call credit msr, Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner. Ford__________ CHEVY WAGON 1959 vn” *53.83 Je*r* month ° lOWi 3 Teer Werranty SPARTAN DODGP:. Inc. Saginaw______FE g-4541 CHEVY WAOON 1*58. 9 PASBENOER *caV!''*Kr'*i.0«“‘rVdMCd*'to $895 Full Price (OWI 2 Year Warranty SPARTAN DODGE. Inc. 211 B. Saginaw_____PE 8-4541 1956 CHEVY $145 1(59 Ford. 1951 Cadillac 195 1)54 Buick and 1*59 Rambler *96 ea. iconomy Discount. ”— one home LUCKY AUTO Si "Pontlae's Discount Lot." 1 SmUgaw. FE 4 2214.__________ 1999 CHEVY IMPALA HARDTOP. tl.OaO Alex Motors. 924-3192. Ml CORVAIR 708 4-DDOR SEDAN. Powerglide heater, whitewall tires. Only $1,395 Easy terms. PATTER-SON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 S WOODWARD AVE . BtRMlNO-HAM. Ml 4-9735 1957 CHEVROLET 210 4-DOOR. VS Easy te:------------ ----- ROLET CO.. 1000 S WOODWARD AVE . BIRMINOHAM. Ml 4-1735. 1*51 CHEVROLET BI8CAYNB 4- Marvel Motors 351 Oakland A«e. -SPECIAL- 1962 MS* CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-DOOR Tcyltodcr. Powergllde. redlo. beater. .i^ewalli, *995. Eaay terme. PA'tTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 8. WCX3DWARD AVE.. BIR- MINOHAM. Ml 4-2735.________ CHEVY 1»SS IMPALA Moor^hardtop^. ri>on^ $985 Full Price (GW< 2-Year Warranty iPARTAN DODGE. Inc. 211 8 Saginaw $1995 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 1*61 OLDS F "*6 - *2.495. EaMr tl( '61 Comet, SUtloo Wagon tl< '60 Olda. 4-door, aharp ........ 81! '68 Bonneville Hardtop ........ 811 '5* Ford, t-door, * cylinder 81 '80 American, wagon, gae aaver 81 '5* Pontiac. 4-door **' :, Station Wagon '5* Chevy, '61 Pont^. '61 OldKA '60 Pontiac, x-noor . era '57 Plymouth, Station wagon .. tt '96 Chevy, 4-door, iharp . GLENN'S 1%2 Chevy Greenbrier HASKINS USED CARS SPECIALS 1962 CHEVY I HASKINS Chevrolgt-Olds ' Your Croasroads to Savings " US 10 and MIS lA 5-5071 _____MA 5-6106 *62 CHEVY IMPALA VS 2-DOOR Sion? r^to'’and mllMge. *2.8*0. Financing arranged Conelder trade. M7-474*. After *61 MONZA COUPE WITH RADIO, heater, powergllde and bucket seats Don't miss thU one at *200 down, payments of *53.49 per. month. 24 Months (GW) Guaranteed Warranty LLOYD'S Lincoln — Mercury — Comet Meteor — English Ford 232 8. Saginaw FE 2-9131 1*96 CHEVROLET 1953 Chevrolet ... UNIVERSAL AUTO SALES _________ ______... electric windows, power seat, steering, look this one over, at only *1.9*5. (OW) 2 YEAR WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE. Inc. 1*57 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR STATION wagbn. A real good family automobile, has radio and heater. In excellent condition, full price S****4^ N™* ***'tlF^jPA7“>'nla or see credit manager Mr.' Cook KING AUTO SALES M* CHEVROLET BI8CAYNE 4-door, 6-cyllnder. powergllde. beater. whitewall tires, solid white fln- ra'RSON cHKv^i'r*'ro!. *’wo6 S. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINO-ham. Ml 4-2735. i*s* CHEVY'S. 2 TO CHOOSE FROM both one * *hd VI, sharp slTperior rambler 55* Oakland__________FE 5 *421 1*80 CORVAIR 700 — 2-DOOR. PowergiSe. 2TOOO mller --- payments. OR 3-4*48. 4-DOOR. POW-raoio. neater, whitewalls, per, low mileage, spare r. Otdy 81.**3. Easy tenns. ..«» '■hevroLET CO. rx’ li quliranleed"lor a'fuU year. Our price ta only *1,195 and easy temu can be arranged to fit your buitort. BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH. *12 S. VfUUDWARD. MI 1*57 DODOE CONVERTIBLE. EX-condlUon. full price *497, 1955 CHEVY STICK. RUNS GOOD *•" —-V Auto. FE 1-2278. ^roRD IMl PAmiJkM N^ ***** l*6W)*ShYw*Warranty SIWRTAX DOlKrE. Inc, SPARTAN DODGE INC 211 8. Saginaw_____FE 8-4541 ExcepUonal 1960 THUXDERBIKD Full power, radio, heater, whlti Motors 1959 DE SOTO. $180. OL ! 1955 POHD 4-DOOR SEDAN. HAS ccllent condition, the full ______ lo*!***low'*2.'&. cl5i 1*5* FORD, OALAXIE, 2-D O O 1 FORD 956 FORD 2 DOOR. RADIO. HEATER. WHITE WALL TIRES $10.06 MONTH CxU credit mxr.. Ur Parks at MI 4-7500. Harold Turner, XOTICK 195$ Ports 2-door atalion wagon. 1 01 room and a real good car - DUcount Ut.’* 1$3 i ____ „ .._l low a. —. ------ attractive weekly payment# of $321. NO MONEY DOWN. Call or tee credit manager Mr. Coo^ KING AUTO SALES 3275 W. Huron St. FORD ) FORD V-g 2 DOOR. RADIO. MONTH. Call credit mgr., Mr. ‘ MI 4-7500. Harold Turner. _____4-DOOR SEDAN. V8 En- ____ atandard trr---- heater. Like new $1,395. Sa« OU80N. OL 1-9711. ike new throughout. Only terms. JBROMB-PER-Rocheater Ford Dealer. 1960 A N O L I A. 2-DOOR SEDAN, beater, whitewall Urea, economy apeeial. This la a Only $895. JOHN McAULl wfe"**' " FORD •' *30 Oakland Ave. FORD 1851 2-OOOR HARDTOP Sr yellow car with matching r. Come In and look at this lltUe cream puff! *4*. price! lOWI 3 Year Warranty SPARTAN DOUGE. Inc. 11 B. Saginaw______^ t 8-4541 1(82 FORD OALAXIE ''5*0 ■ xL _________ -....._je. Cruls Matle tmsinisslan. radio, heqter. power steering. Ford Factory ■—■ and only 3.*** miles. Only *2..„. Easy terms. JEROMB-PEROU80N. Rochester Ford Deafer. OL 1-97U- 1*63 FIAT 13*0 SPIDER beautiful red. only *2.4*5. SUPliRIOR RAJitBLER 59* Oakland__________FE 5-9421 MARMADUKE By Anderson & I,eemine 195* ME^URY TAKE C I guess he heard you bragging about, your tires being puncture-proof! New and Uud Cars 106 New and Used Cars >53 FORD 2-OOOR. 6 CYLINDER. Oood condition, f" C05JET 4-DOOR. 682-0715, 1*57 FORD'S FAIRLANE-. 5*0 HARD-' I. sharp cars, low aa $397. $S 1 and $5 per week, we han- $ FORD. HAS RADIO AND HEAT- at KINO AUTO ____Saginaw. Fg $1402 1858 rOHD. -------- s DOOR STATION actual miles. Florie* C-, — ---- - and lll tl per month. BIRMINOHAM RAMBLER 65 8. Woodward_______Ml 6-3*00 161 COMET g DOOR RADIO, HEAT- buy at *2*0 down payments < 546 80 per roonlh. 24 Months (OW) Guaranteed Warranty LLOYD'S Lincoln—Mercury—Comet FE 2-9131 1*63 FALCON FUTURA COUPE. BIO engine, automatic transmission, radio. heater. whUewaU tires Factory 1999 FORD 2-DOOR. RADIO. HKA7-ER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. WHITE SIDEWALL niUCS. *6.'79 I COMET STA'nON WAOON !4 Months (GW) LLOYD'S (OW) 2 Year Warranty .SPAKTAX DOUGF. liR. 211 a. Saginaw , FE 8-4541 MERCURY 2-DOOR HARDTOP. of only 52.21. Call or see credit king"AUTO SALES i TO CHOOSE VSEE THE "DEPENDABLE8 " KESSLER'S DODGE 0“ adio hlaffT' '^aSomaUc transmission, whitewall Urea. $1,195. JOHN McAULIFFE , FORD BIRMINGHAM TRADES Ii!very used car offered for retail to the jiuhlic i; a bonafide 1-owner, low niileajve, sharp car. 61 BUICK CONVERTIBLE. RED ............*2,49 '61 THUNDERBIRD. 15.000 MILES ...*2,79 '61 BUICK LeSABRE . *2.19 ■5* BUICK 3-DOOR « ' HARDTOP..... ...51.30 '59 PONTIAC 4-DOOR 5* CHEVY COHVERT . 1 New and Urad Cars New and Uied Core FOimAC, 4-DOOR OTAR tf. I owner,' sharp, bo rust mileage. (i,75*. Wi »-em. 1986 PONTIAC * PASSENGER S lion wagon, jukt the right fan car. Has radio and heater — Is In eieelleflt condition. Full prlcr only *297 withe smaU mtr'-ly payments *3.33. Call or • credit manager Mr. Cook at: KING AUTO SALES ZSCw: _____Umput btation . Automatic, radio, heater, /all tires. Ught green finish Omjr »I,3»8, easyterms. PAT-TERSOif CHE7md condition. 5*95. Sll Atlantic. MlUord, Michigan, MU 4-8185 ^ 1956 heater, full price only 895. SURPLUS MOTORS VACATION SALE ' 1962 Chevy Impala Sport Sedan. VS engine. Powergllde. power steering, power brakes, power windows, radio, heater, whitewall dreg, Imperial sliver with red Bilerlar. ' $2295 Matthews-Hargreaves 531 Oakland Ave._FE 4-4347 19W MERCURY MONTEREY 1 LLOYD'S Lincoln — Mercury — Comet Meteor - BngUsh Ford 331 S. Saginaw Eli 2-9131 FISCHER BUICK 515 8. Woodward. B'ham MI^4-9100 1957 OLDB. 98, '4-DOOR HARDTOP, power ^sleerlng. ^power •’t'tJlc window lifts, metallr blue with matching Interior, 48.000 actual miles. - no lifter noise In this bsby. 8100 down. 838.63 per month. PS HAS NEW TIRES TOO! BIRMINORAM RAMBLER 666 8 Woodward_JIU 6-3000 1962 Tempest Convertible with radio healer, whitewalls, remote control mirror, less than 11.; 000 actual mUcs. priced to sell al •BEATTIE '•Your FORD DEALER Since 1930 " ON DIXIE HWY, IN WATERFORD . AX the stoplight OR 3-12^n 961 PON'HAC VENTURA 4-DOOR hardtop. Hydramalic. power ing and brakes. Vtoyl trim. foam green finish. Only 12.095. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO,. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM AVE.. BIRkUNOHAH. 1953 PONTIAC EXTRA CLEAN, RA- 1960 OLDS DYNAMIC 89 4-DOOR statlOD wagon. One of the f e w nice wagons around. Why pay a 961 OLDS CULES8 COUPE.. RED. white vinyl top. bucket seats, equipped with V-* engine, auto- Woodward. Birmingham._________ 19*1 OLDS STARFJRE ^CON^RT- }erlor.™fully equipped tor your driving pleasure. Only 16.000 miles. So Auch for so Utile *2595. I Is.. 565 8. Woodward. Blr- 1962 OLDS 98 POUR-DOOR. THE king of the road In eyery respect, fully equipped for your driving pleasure. Sale priced at *3.795. Suburban Olds. 565 S Woodward. Blr-mlngham. MI 4-4465. buy: yol'r new RA.MHI.F.K . HOUGIITEN S: SON 8 N. Main A Rochester OL 1-9761 Ouaranteed Warranty LLOYD'S Ltocoln—Mercury—Comet whitewalls. Beige fhil^ Onli 81.495. Easy terms. PATTERSON Ask tor Credit Manager ai U* 8. Saginaw. Corvette Be sure to see this 1958 Coryetle. real clean red beauty with matching interior. Radio, heater and standard transmission. 81.8*5. WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward LOOK WHAT THE MARCH WIND BLEW IN! An Immaculate 1*57 I Ilaupt Pontiac open Monday. Tuesday ar Thursday untU ) p.m Oarkston_______________MA 5-5566 1-OWNER 1959 CATALINA 2-lJbbR hardtop. 22,000 actual miles. 97 E Longfellow. FE 3-7604. Call after 5 19*3 PONTIAC. CATALINA CON-vertlble, black. 4-spced. 3 two- DON T BUY ANY NEW rsr until you get our reconditioned u HOMER HtGHT . steering, and continental 19*0 PONTIAC BONNBVILL* CON- NEW R AMBLER CUSTOM 4-D(XIH SEDA.V $1995 -Standard Transmission $162 Less Not An "American" This Is the Eull-Sized Compact ONLY AT Birmingham Rambler 666 S. W oodward MI 6-3900 , Where Service Is “King’’ WHY PAY MORE? OLIVER BUICK 1%1 Buick LeSabre Wagon ............. $2575 1961 Buick Invkta 4-door..............$2295 1959 Buick LeSabre Hardtoji ......... $1495 1947 Jeep-6-Ft. Plow ..................$885 1962 Buick Special—W^ajgon ...........$2385 1960 Renault 4-Door, Clean............$ 695 1%2 Buick LeSabre 2-Door Hardtop......$2895 1960 Opel Station Wagon, Stick........$ 975 1962 Buick Special—Sedan ..............$^45 1959 Chevy Wagon, 6-Passcngcr ........$1288 196? Buick Skylark—Hardtop ...........$2595 1960 Chevrolet Biscayne 4-Uoor ......h$1395 1%2 Buick LeSabre 2-Door .............$2495 1961 Renault Dauphine 4-Door .........$ 795 l'»60 Buick Elcctra Hardtop .....,..,.$1995 1%2 Renault Gordini ................ $1295 1%2 Buick LeSabre—4-Door, Sharp .....$2695 1952 Ford F-6 Dump Truck..............$ 465 1960 Buick LeSabre—4-Door ...........$1775 1961 Buick W'agon—Special ...........$1995 P)61 Chevrolet Impala Convertible ....$1895 VW Buick LeSabre 4-Door Hardtop ......$1895 P>60 Pontiac Wagon, Nice ............$1995 l‘)61 Buick Special 2-Door ..........$1785 1961 Buick Electra Hardtop.....i......$2375 1962 Buick Special Convertible .......$2385 1949 Buick Riveria Hardtop...........$ 450 OLIVER BUICK 210 ORCHARD LAKE FE 2-9101 K PONTIAC SPORT COUPE. POW- Priceid Right 1)5* Pontige Caul! exceptional and ad la the price 8**5. WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward" Save During Our Big ' 5TH Anniversary SALE 1961 Tempait conyertlble .*22! 19*1 Tempeat 4,dnar sedan .... *1*! 1962 Bonneville Hardtop ... . *2« 19*1 Corvalr Mooaa ... .>j.*1« 1*62 Buick Wildcat ...... *31! 1961 Pontiac Ventura 819! 1*59 Rambler Super 4-door . * 8! 1861 Buick Special Wagon *15! * Daytona hardtop *1995 SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK Rochester, OL 1-8133 Open Mon.. Tuea.. Thura. »:3* Wed . Frl. Sat.. 1:30 to 8 RUSS JOHNSON'S WAGON SALE 1*62 Rambler Classic Wagon 1*41 Rambler Classic Wagon 1*81 Rambler Stotlon Wagon 115* Rambler Station Wagon 1*58 Cheyy Brookwood Wagon 1*97 Pontiac StaUon Wagon 1*57 Ftord Station Wagon 1*54 Dodge Station Wagon LIKE NEW SPECIALS 1*63 Grand Prix 1*63 BonnevUla Vista .... 1*63 Rambler Ambaaaador . SELECT USED CARS 1*63 Tempest *-door sedan .. 1*97 Pontine Hardtop ....... 1*5* Rambler Wagon ......... 1*67 Dodge Hardtop ......... 1*6* Ford 4-Door Sedan ..... 195S Chary *. Std. Shift.... 1*57 Pontiac 2-Door Hardtop , 1*97 Ford StaUon Wagon .... 1*55 Olda Sedan ............ 1*55 PonUac 4-Door ......... 1*55 Pontiac >-Door ........ 1*54 Chevy 4-Door .......... 1996'rord Ranch Wagon RUSS lOHNSON PONTIAG-RAMBLER M-24 at the Stoplight Lake Orion ' MY 3-6266 THE PONtlAC PRE^^: TUESDAY, MARCH 12. 1963 —Todays Television Programs— Prog:nim8 fiirnlsheid by station* Hsied In flils c I are subject to cbanjc without notice TONIGHT I 6;W,{2) News I <4) M Squad | (7) Movie: “The Son of Dr.j Jekyll." (In Progress). | (9) C^pt. Jolly and Popeye^ (56) American Economy ' 6:20 (2) Editorial, Sports 1 6:25 (2) Weather i (4) Weather ■ 6:30 (2) Highway Patrol ^ (4) News i (7) News, Weather, Sports.! (9) Quick Draw McGraw ' (56) French Through TV j 6:40 (4) Sports ' [ 6:45 (4) News (7) News 7:00 (2) Hennesey (4) (Color) Weekend ! (71 Mike Hammer (9) Whiplash (56) House We Live In 7:30 (2) Real McCoys | .,(4) (Color) Laramie (7i C<^^^bat (9) Movie: “The White Tower.” (1950). Glenn Ford, Valli. (56) Trio, 8:00 (2) Lloyd Bridges (56) Drama Festival 8:35 (2) Red Skelton (4) (Color) Empire (7) Hawaiiaiv Elye ' 9:30 (2) Jack Benny (4) Dick Powell Theater (7) Untouchables (9i E’ront Page Challei.ge 10:09 i2i Garry Moore (91 Political\Te,kfcasf ■ ' 10:30 (4) Chet Huntley Reporting (7) This Is Discovery (9) Mary Morgan 11:00 i2) News (4 News (7) News (9) News ' 11:11 (7) News, Sports 11:15 (2) Editorial, Sports (4) Weafher (9) Weather 11:20 (2) Weather (4) Sports (7) Weather (9) Telescope UAW 11:25 (2) Steve Allen-Variety <7) Movie: “Ten Tall Men,” (1951 )T Burt Lancaster. 11:30 (4) • (Color) Tonight—Carson (9) Movie: “Split Second,” ■{ 19531. Stephen McNally, Alexis Smith. WEDNESDAY MORNING TV Features Britain and Narcotics MOVIE. 7:30 p.m. (9) "The White Tower.” (19M). Five men and girl set out to climb dangerous mountain. Glenn ford, Valli, Claude Rains. • JACK BENNY, 9:30 p.m. (2) Beautiful girl and two young immigrants find America’s not golden land of opportunity they thought it was. Robert Taylor’s guest host. DICK POWELL THEATER, 9:30 p.m. (4) Two young immigrants find America’s not golden land of opportunity they thought it was. Robert Taylor’s guest host. CHET HUNTLEY REPORTING, 10:30 p.m. (4)-Study of British system of narcotics control, in which addicts register as such and buy drugs openly with prescriptions. THIS IS DISCOVERY, 10:30 p.m. (7) Highlights from daily children’s show, “Discovery ’63,” designed to acquaint adults with program. Subpects range from chariot races in Rolman Forum to white mice walking tightropes. MOVIE, 11^ p.m. (7) “Ten Tall Men.” (1951) Story of adventures of 10 comrades in French Foreign Legions. Burl Lancaster, Gilbert Roland. • (91 National School Show (56) English VI 9:55 (2) Editorial 10:00 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When (9) Romper Room (56) Our Scientific World 10:15 (7) Hollywood Report 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Huncti (7) Girl Talk (56) French Lesson 10:50 (56) German Lesson 11:00 (2) McCoys ■ (4) (Color) Price Is Right' (7) Jane Wyman (9) Movie: “Girdle of Gold.’ (1952). Jl:05 (56) Spanish Lesson *11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (7) Yours for a Song (56) E'ood for Life WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 6:00 (4) Continental Classroom: _ Atomic Age Physics 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:20 (2) On the Farm EVobt 6:‘25 (21 News 6:30 (2) College of the Air (4) (Color) Cont i ne n t a l! Classroom: American Gov- Terrell St., Waterford Township, Enters Guilty Plea to Burglary of Hotel Michael D. Brown, 22’, of 6902 ernment (7) E'unows 7:00 (2) News (4) Today (7) Sagebrush Shorty 7:05 (2) B’wana Don 7:30 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (56) German for Teachers 8:30 (7) Jack La Lanne (56) Friendly Giant 8:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 8:55 (9) Warm Up 9:00 (2) December Bride (41 Living (7) Movie: “Appointment for Love.” (1941). Charles Boyer. (9) Chez Helene (56) l.«t’s Read 9:15 (9) Nursery School Time 9:30 (2) To Tell the Tfutli yesterday pleaded guilty in Oakland' County Circuit Court to a March 5 nighttime burglary. Brown was accused of breaking into the Waterford Hotel, 5803 Dixie Highway, and taking liquor, cigarettes and a portable radio. He was arrested a few minutes after the burglary when Waterford Township police officer Ray Wilhelm saw him toss empty cigarette cartons out the window of his slow-moving car. it * * Wilhelm trailed Brown’s car after spotting it near Anderson-ville rtnd Airport roads. ★ A * Circuit Judge William J. Beer set sentencing for March 26. f7” 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 I 17 18 19 20 22 23 24 p5 27 28 29 30 Hsi 34 p5 36 39 po 41] 42 43 44 45 46 48 49 51 52 53 54 55 S6 12 12.00 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (56) History 12:25 (2> News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Trum or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best 12:40 (9) Morgan’s Merry - Go Round (56) Spanish Lessons 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (9) News 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Leave It to the Girls (7) Gale Storm (9) Movie: “Blossoms in the Dust." (1941). Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon. 1:10 (56) French Lesson 1:30 (2) As the World ’Turns (4) Best of Groucho (7) One Step Beyond (56) Worlif, History 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Merv Griffin (7) Day m Court (56) Adventures in Science 2:25 (7) News 2:50 (2) Divorce Court (7) Seven Keys (E3) Young Artists at Work 2:55 (4) News 3:00 (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day (56) Discovery 3:30 (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Scarlet Hill (56) Superintendent Reports 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) American Bandstand (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Discovery ’63 (9) Mickey Mouse Club 4:45 (56) French Lesson 4:55 (7) American Newsstand 5:00 (2) Movie: “SAn Quentin.” (1946). Lawrence Tierney, Raymond Burr. (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) M 0 V i e : “Africa Screams.” (1949). Bi Abbott, Lou Costello. (9) Larry and Jerry (56) What’s New? 5:30 ( 56) Friendly^ Giant 5:45AC9) Rocky and His Friehds (56) Indu£*ry on Parade 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall WASHINGTON (AP)-“WaiUng for Mrs. Jones’’ might well be thd title of the program on tap today for a House Commerce subcommittee. ★ ★ * Hallie Jones, co-owner of the I addrett 36 Moutht l« 40 Compllcitlont Illl Amwer Ui Prei 44 CIcitrU 46 Cured i 47 Slouui 48 Low hi M Flih SEPARATION ENDS - Twins Roger D. Brooks (left) of Miami, Fla., and Anthony J. Milasi, Binghamton, N. Y., were reunited after 24 years yesterday. Orphaned after birth, the youths were adopted by different families. Roger traced Anthony after a stranger in Miami mistook him for his brother. Saw 'Strangers on Train' 79 Time^ 7 Carol Burnett 'Back' in Movies By BOB THOMAS AP Mdvie-Teievision Writer HOLLYWOOD -'Carol Burnett was fired from her first movie job. For a while I was itt4he bn office of the Ivar Theater on Hollywood Boulevard,” she recalled. Tt wasn’t a bad job. They piped the sound track into the box office so I could at least listen to the pictures. I can you everyI line and sound! effect in ‘Ivan-| hoe.’ ‘Then I moved across tiie street to the Warner Hollywood, an usherette, so I got to see the pictures. I saw ‘Strangers on a Train’ 79 times. I got fired because of it.' “You see, ^ was a big fan of Alfred Hitchcock and Robert Walker, the director ahd the star. In’t want the picture spoiled for anybody. ‘One night a couple wanted to inside during the last five min- utes of the picture. I wouldn’t let Thej^ complained to, the manager and he tore off my epaulets and told me to turn iq my Firm President Didn't Know Everything's in Mrs. Jones' Department small Kansas City radio audience survey firm, Robert S. Conlan Associates, got a big build-up in absentia Monday when the subcommittee attempted to check on the accuracy of the firm’s program ratings. Let the Kennedys Walk-Tony Perkins Will Run By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—The Kennedys may walk to keep trim—but Tony Perkins runs . . . when he sees a green light. “I start running no matter where I am, to make the green light before it turns, ’ he says. Tony streaks for the green light whether he’s on 5th Ave. or Broadway, and so far he hasn’t knocked anybody down. “Everybody in New York’s hurrying anyway, so they don’t think I’m crazy. They just think I’m slightly extreme,” he says . . . Still, I hope this isn’t taken up by the masses, for we’d see great hordes of people huffing and puffing up all our streets. The rumor ran around town that Joan Crawford was marrying Gov. Rockefeller — I reached Joan at home (she had high tem-WILSON perature). “I repeat I’ve only met the man once,” she said. “I swear on my Girl Scout oath and Screen Actors Guild card it’s not true-but of course I’m flattered.” ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . London papers front-paged “Judy Garland in Plane Drama' when her jet made two passes at the fog-bound airport, then went elsewhere. . . . Bob Hope at the Blue Angel gave pianist Bobby Short one request: “Don’t play ‘Thanks For the Memory’ ”... William Holden angered some Parisians — he told an interviewer some of ’em were impolite and bad-tempered. ★ ★ ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Jack Cassidy spotted this sign in fortune-teller’s window: “Will Be Closed Because of Illness—Next Friday.” WISH I’D SAID ’IHAT: With income tax day coming around, fellow told Larry Lipskin: “I don’t want to take it with me— I just want to have it around to say goodbye to.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: “I never knew my accompanist drank—till one day he showed up sober.”—Joe E. Lewis. EARL’S PEARLS: Well, anyway, there’s one thing to be for baldness. It’s neat. Frank Ross wonders at all the fuss about the walking craze: “I always walk home from Las Vegas.” ’That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, 1963) -To(day's Raidio Programs— WJRI760) CKLW(IOO) WVJ (9S0) VXYZ(1270) tbARUlSO) WPOKMI4M) WJUK(ISOO) WHFI-FM(94.7I •;8*-WJR.’ Item WWJ. Nem CKLW Nem WCAR. Becarell* WJBK. Robt. B. Lee WXYZ, Newi Wt*()N. Nrwe. Bporti WHFI. He»i <;I|-WJR. BuilneM WWJ. Biulneu Neeri CKLW. Bud Devlee WXYZ. Alei Dreter WHri. Tom a»y WPON. Norm o’Nelll/8liow 7:8»-WJR. Item. SporU WWJ. Pkone Oplnloa WXYZ, B. Moruui CKLW F. Le*le WJBK. J. Bellboy WCAR. Cerender WHFI. Are*. SUte Nem 7: II-WXYZ, Ue Alu ' CKLW. B. Slen-tal WHFI. Tom doy 7:J»-WJR. Chorml WXYZ. J. Bebeetten CKLW. B. SteIdD 7;44-WXYZ. Lee Alan f:*9-WJR. World Tonliht WPON. Newe. City CommiMlon WHFI. Nem. Tom Cloy l:Ii-WJR. Concert 8:16—WWJ, Lent Senqpn 8:M-WWJ. Foye Eltubeth WHFI. Nem. Tom Ooy WPON> Norm O'NeU Show' WXYZ, Ale* Dreler l:l*-WXYZ, Ue Alon 18:88-WWJ. World New* I8:4I-WWJ. sini Along 11:88-WJR. Newe. SporU WWJ, Newe WCAR, News. BperU CKLW. Joe OenUle « WHFI. Newe, Tom Cley I1:1S-WWJ, Organ Muele CKLW. Bob SUUn WCAR. Coenmentery 1:I8-WJR. Muele WWJ, Muelo WCAR. C WEDNESDAY MORNINO WXYZ. Wolf, Nem CKLW, Ferra, Eye Opener WJBK. Niwi, Mere Artry WCAR, Nowe. Sherlden WPON. Newe, Arle. Weetoi WPON. Dole TIno 8 WXvk. Wolf WJBK, Newe, Mere Attry CKI W. Newe. Toby Deeid *WwjW(|% Wtm^Ouert wxrk. Wolf CKLW, Newe. Oeeld WJBK. Newe. Aetry S:Sn-WJR. Muelo HeU WXYZ. Wolf. Newe CKLW. Newe. Toby Deeid WJBK, News, ATOry WCAR. Newe. Mertyn WPON. Newe. Dole Tina WHFI. Newe. McLeod 18;8t-WJR. Newe. Muele WWJ, Newe. MeiUne WXYZ. Bteekleet Clok CKLW. Joo Ten WJBK. Newe. Reid WPON. Newe. Jerry OUen WHFI, Newe. McLeod 18;89-CKLW. U WJPK. Ntwi, 1:19—WJR, Newe. Oodfrey WWJ, Newe. Lyntgr CKI W. Joe Ven WXYZ. Paul Winter WJUK. Newt, Retd WCAR. Newe, B Mertyn WPON, Newi, Jerry Olaen WHFI. Newa. McLeod U:M-WXYZ. Oordoo, WInUr WRONESDAY AFTERNOON 8;aa WJit. Newi, Farw WWJ, Newa, Empbaeli CKl4v Joe Tan WXYZ. WlnUr, Ntwa WCAR. Newe, Furta WJBK. Ntwe, Raid WPON, Newe, Jerry Olaen WHFI. Newe. Bur^ck WWJ, Newt. A 1:IS-WJR, Oarry Moore WXYZ. Bebaatlan CKLW. Joe Veil WJBK, Newt, Lea tiSS-CKLW. Newe. Bbllt'brk S;88-WJH, N 0 w 1. Jimmy WCAR, Newt, SJwrtdaP WPON. Newt, Ben Jqbiuon WHFI. Newt. Burdick WXYZ, Newt, Sebeitlan CKLW. Newi. Deeiee WJBK, Newa Laa WPON, Nowa, Ban Johnson WHFI. Ntwe, Burdlok 8;8S-WJR. Muelo HeU WWJ, Newt, Bumper Qub CKLW, Joe Van t-WJR. Newt. Muele RaU CKLW. Bporu. Daelet WJBK. Newt. Lee WCAR, Newa. Bbarldaa She arranged to fly in from Kansas City today to answer dozens of questions about the operation of the Conlan survey business its president, Robert E. West, said he couldn’t answer. HANDLED ONLY SALES West, though he worked for the firm for 12 years and has been iresident since he and Mrs. Jones Mught it out in 1959, declared he ‘couldn’t put a survey together toi save my life” and handled only le sales end of the business. ★ * ★ Time and again. West deferred to Mrs. Jones’ superior knowledge of business details, saying “Mrs. Jones handled all field work” and That’s Mrs. Jones’ department.” ’The repeated answer b^ame such joke that even West joined in the laughter. ’Mrs. Jones sure does a lot of work,” he remarked at one point. ★ * * ‘She certainly iS'an invaluable woman,” Rep. John E. Moss, D-Calif., remarked acidly. Tpie Kansas City firm. West sald»^ makes telephone surveys in various cities to determine what percentiige of the audience listens to a particular radio station. INDEPENDENT OPERATORS The actual telephoning, he said, is done by inderandent operators from a list kepfbji his company. Testimony showeii they are paid $22.50 for 16 hours of telephone surveying per week. The surveys were sold to stations at prices ranging from $609 to $199. ★ ★ * The Conlan firm is the first in foe rating and survey field to come under the subcommittee’s public scrutiny in a wide investigation that has been 18 months in foe making. Other bigger firms gare scheduled for later in the week, including foe Nielsen Co. which dominates foe television audience rating field. It is a pleasure to report that Miss Burnett has been rehired by foe film industry. This tifoe as costar with Dean Martin in a Par-anxMint romp called “Who’s Been Sleeping in My Bed.” NAME J'OR HERSELF During the decade between foe two jobs, the Hollywood high school grad managed to make a name for herself on Broadway ‘Once Upon a Mattress”), in television (The Garry Moore Show), and lately on television specials,, in Las Vegas and on foe road with her own show. Whether Carol is happy about Hollywood now is a question, saw her on the first day of her work in foe movie, and she was slightly dazed. • “The hours,” she moaned, nt to bed early last night because I know I had to get up at 4:30 to be at the studio at 5:45 to l^t my hair curled. “I finally got to sleep at midnight and woke up bright-eyed at 3. ‘Go back to sleep,’ I kept telling myself; ‘you’ve got another hour and a half to sleep.’ I couldn’t. I finally got up, made some cdffee, opened up cqp of peaches and made some dm toast. If this keeps up, they’ll have to fill in the bags under my eyes with putty.” SHOOT OVER AND OVER That wasn’t the only source of Carol’s bewilderment.' “The work,” she groaned. “I don’t know how film actors do it. Everything I’ve ever done has been in sequence. My first scene was one in the middle of foe picture. How do I know how I’n| sup^ posed to feel? ★ “And we shoot scenes ovei^ over. I’ve always done once. The last special I did (|vi Robert Preston) was all straight through without a h Film actors have to n again and again and do them well every time. My admiration for a performer like Jack Lemmon is greater than ever.” Make Square Spaghetti LOWELL, Mass. (UPI) - The’ Prince Mararoni Manufacturing Co. announced yesterday it hasi begun producing a new product { — square spaghetti. Administration Says Nyet to Soviet Flights WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ttie government’s top air official indicated today the Kennedy administration would continue to oppose giving the Soviet Union permission to operate commercial flights to the United States. Federal Aviation Administrator Najeeb E. Halaby, appearing on a Voice of America interview beamed overseas, said, the Russian airline “Aeroflot” was not really a commercial carrier but “just an adjunct of military aviation.” . “’There is no civil aviation in foe Soivet Union,” Halaby said. “They do not operate on the free trade exchange of rights and rates and routes that we seek in foe world ... we think the fuselage is for fares, not flags. ★ ★ * Negotiations between foe IMited States and Russia on a bilateral air agreement broke off several months ago. At least two U.S. carriers are known to be anxious to get authority for Moscow flights, but Halaby’s comments made it clear that official government policy is down” for the time being. Radio Free Europe Reaches Commnnisitfs Weak Spot ... And hit$ it! Hits it with the Free World’s most powerful weapon—truth. 80,000,000 once-free people in Eastern Europe get strength and hope from that truth coming through to them every day from the transmitters of Radio Free Europe. In Poland, in CzechoaloYakia, Hungary,Bidgaria, Romania... throughout the uneasy Soviet empire captive peoples are atill reaiating Red domination. Hers Miami Beach 'Impressive/ Report Dems MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)-The Democratic party’s convention site selection committee looked over Miami Beach’s qualifications as a location for the 1964 presidential nominating convention and then headed for San Francisco. “This is a very impressive place,” William S. Potter of Wilmington, Del., chairman of foe site cwnmlttee, said Monday. “Miami Beach is definitely in foe running.” Miami Beach offered $600,000, tops of any city, for the conven- on. Other cities besides San Francisco bidding for foe convention are Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia and Atlantic -City. ’The decision will be made late in May. Hilling Ha^ Here Radio Free Europe acta as one of the Free WoHd’s major weapons in the cold war. It ia hitting hard at Communiam’s soft underbelly. These powerful broadcasta are supported by private American citizens .. . thousands of them. Your help is urgently needed. Stand up with them and be counted. Send whatever you can contribute. Radio Free Europe Rind AmMkmm Aowh'i to Cmmmim F. O. Bo* 1963, Mown Vonwii. N. Y. PuMiAW o« 0 piMie tnui <■ eoopmUion milk Tkt AdMTUtittt Couneit tnd Dm * THE PONTIAC PRESS SONOTONE House of Hearing 29 E. CORNELL (UlT Baldwin) Pontiac____FE 2-I^2S COLOR TV SERVICE and SALES RCA — ZENITH CONDON'S Fiadio & TV 719 Wnl Huron St. FR 4-978S ANODIZED SCREEN 6 ENCLOSURES 8x12 ^487“ Installation and Tax Inc. • SIDING • STONE • RAILINGS • Door Awnings.............. $24.95- • Doors 2'6"x6'8"............ 19.95 • Windows—Triple Action From .. 6.95 PET ALL YOUR DEDUCTIONS • PERSONALIZED • CONFIDENTIAL NOTl B0UN*)r SERVICE Open 9 to 9 Daily 42 East Pllce St. FE 4-1192 Saturday 9 to 5 p.m« WaMmi N*tal IMfs OFFICE MAINTAINED ALL YEAR TIOUND