THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn# Edition 'PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. MONDAY,, APHIl/M. Idffil—PAGES Whirls Into Orbit Leaders Soften, Agree on Early Talk With Nikita Tet's Drink to Knowledge' Bids for Cooperation in Price-Sotting Process in U. S. Chamber Talk WASHINGTON Wi—President Kennedy and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan appear to be broadening their Joint approach to summit diplomacy in a WASHINGTON president Kennedy told the U.S. Chamber of Commerce today he wants to see an economy kept stable by tne free forces of competition so the government^ will not need to intervene in the price-setting process. The President delivered to the chamber’s 50th annual meeting a sober appeal for cooperation among business, labor and government He said this would keep the economy stable, protect the dollar, and expand foreign commerce. “There areas where conflict exists between private interest! and government interest must be met by all of us who care for country,’’ Kennedy said. w( move toward more informal contacts with Soviet Premier Khrushchev. This seems to be one of the chiet results of the weekend White House conference between American and British leaders. Another reported result is agreement to soften as far, as possible] , . z . U.8. and British conflicts of L . x ’ , interest over reshaping]P|ir|/ Dpt/ipu/C worldwide trade patterns|l\U3i\ l\vfICff J on Britain’s entry into the . _ # European Common Market. uJOffllVI Darp COSMONAUT WAVES - Gherman A. Titov. Soviet cosmonaut who circled rtfapwodd Vt times, smiles broadly and waves welcomers as lie and his wife, Tamara, leave New York's Idlewild Airport last night. Titov flew la from Moscow on a Russian turboprop airliner to a big welcome at the airport. Secretary Wains Reds Must Abandon Thair Secrecy Obsession U S. Secre- Soviet Union lor the current series of UJ. nuclear weapons tests apd pledged to work for disarmament and a ban on testing. Hie criticism of the Soviet Union was muted and indirect and apparently reflected a desire by Kennedy aad Macmillan to keep on good terms with Khrushchev. hear a dramatic reading by actor Praderick March- after a dinner honoring winners of the Nobel Prise and other talented persons. The President offered a toast to knowledge and peach. FIRST FAMILY'S DINNER PARTY - Poet Robert Frost (right) and Mrs. Richard J. Walsh (Pearl Buck) exchange greetings in the East Room of the WMte House Sunday night. The First Family and. their guests are gathered to LONDON (AP) tary of Mate Dean Rusk warned to0ay the East-West arm* race cpnnot be ended unless and until the Soviet Union abandons its obsession on secrecy: He spoke at the opening ministerial session of the C e n t r a 1 Treaty Organization (CENTO). NEW YORK (if)—Soviet Cosmonaut Gherman Titov said today there is enough room in outer space for everyone. But he jokingly questioned the wisdom of trying to send the U.N. Security Council to the moon. Titov made his comments on a tour of U.N. headquarters, where he was given ant-enthusiastic reception by U.N. officials and visitors alike. His pretty wife Tamara accompanied him. U, 8. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson personally welcomed Titov at a reception in the Russian’s honor S U. N. headquarters by acting Secretary General U Thant. - •. 49 Nobel Winners, Other Talent Kennedy Toasts Dinner Guests The summit maneuver presumably reflects the same attitude and it pointed toward future weeks rather than an immediate heads of government meeting. In fact It was leaned that “The Soviet Union has, thus far, been unwilling to agree to an effective treaty banning all nuclear testing,” Husk said, “la the cir- WASHINGTON (AP)-Presidenl Kennedy toasted Ms 173 dinner guests—Nobel Prize winners and men and woman of letters — ai the most extraordinary collection of talent ever gathered at the White House. ’ had no cboim but ,0 assume its responsibility to look to the common detente and conduct a limited series of atmospheric nuclear testa.” Bask then added) “Secrecy Child Misting After Offshoot of Tornodic Storm Hits in INinois haviag to have • Mg format can- 1 fere we. “They think H should be poaak hie,” one well-informed diplomatv explained, “to have more flexibility in summit diplomacy—to get together from time to ’time | He called them all together Sunday night—a potpourri of -the famed—to honor the Nobel Priae From Our News Wires SPRINGFIELD, 111. - Ripping winds springing from a tomadic storm system collapsed,(fy roof of an elementary school tolky and oae child was reported miming. Rusk assured America’s friends 1n CENTO that the United States wouldJfKOn working with them Replying in tbe same vein, Titov said ttwouid not be too difficult technically but there Were enough problem! on the >earth for the council to solve ftyut. *• Titov spoke ' ' jttgilMj nomic and sc her, mill f parity. He got when he entmi He said he hoped interna ttoaal CENTO contiate of Pakistan, Iran, Turkey and Britain. The United States takes part in its ( work as an associate member., The alliance grew out of the j In gay, good humor, some started after-dinner waltzing in the north entrance hallway where Mr Force musicians were playing. MOVtg INSIDE One of the flrN to) take a turn in Made tie on the Marble floor was Dr. Linus c. Pauling, Nobel Hill Record Altitude for Winged Croft; Goes Higher Than Goal EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, CaftL (AP)—The X15 rocket apace shot more than 48 miles into apace today, a record for winged craft, and apparently achieved, its goal of flying higher than ft was designed to fly. "dark cloud” la the sky. His action may have averted a major tragedy. 1 In Detroit the U.S. weather bureau reported shortly before 2:90 My far the eco-council cham-packed to ca- Kennedy started Ms toast with a touch of humor. He reported that Nobel peace prize winner Lester Pearson of Canada had in- Proved. They're Hopping /Self. How much mete enormously difficult It would be for one person to try to solve problems of conquering outer space all by himself.” Titov, smiling and in obvious good spirits after a night on the town, was greeted with e hunt of applause pm several hundred spectators, as his motorcade arrived. Titov, in Soviet style, applauded right hack. Scientists said the foul-up in date.'from ground radar tracking stations made it impossible to be certain immediately that the designed altitude of 290,000 feet, or about 4HA miles, had been passed. But preliminary computations, they aakl, indicated it lad. When he called lit the most extraordinary gathering of talent at the White Howe, Kennedy added lightly—“with the possible exception of when Thomas Jefferson dined alone.” Kennedy was greeted with a rh-. ing ovation as he entered OooM-tution Hall, but many of the defc-gates did not join in the applies*. But he quickly produced laughter with an observation that he was pleased to afe that the chamber had chosen for Ha new preai Birds Like Twitter of Plane Motor Officials Escap* Crash VIENTIANE, Lam (I) m A four-engine plane chartered by the International Control Commission crash-landed today at Wattay Airport. All 42 passengers and five crew •emerged unhurt. Space agency" pitot Joe Walker set the he w mark of about 245,000 feet at thetop of 3,650-mile-an-hour climb at the steepest angle the rocket plane bns yet tackled: 38 degrees. Thirty-three degrees was the previous steepest . OLD MARK 41 MOLES Walker thus topped by a substantial margin the old, mark of 217,000 feet, or about 41 Utiles, set Oct. 11 by Air Force Mhj. Bob WMte. COMPLIMENTS CHAMBER Kennedy- complimented tip; chamber on it* 50 years of service, declaring that the establish-(Continued on lM§e 2, CaL OF Tornado Forecast Issued for Area This Afternoon Pontiac area residents were warned of severe thunderstorms and possible tornado weather late this afternoon. The forecast was issued earlier today for an area that included the entire southern portion of Lower Michigan. . * *- * ■„ According to tbe UB. Weather Bureau, bulletin, severe thunderstorms with targe hail and damaging winds and one or two 1 NORMAN, Okla. (AP)—A high-pitched twitter, comparable to the |aound of crickets in late summer, may have caused the 1900 crash of ’ an airliner in Boston. The Federal Aviation Agency's Civil Aeromedical Research Institute here has reached that conriu-sion after a two-year study of the apparent affinity between startings and Lockheed Elect ra aircraft. New Zealand to Buy $1*Mlllion U.N. Bond WELLINGTON, New Eealand (API—Prime Minister Keith J. Holyoake announced today that New Zealand would subscribe tor a million dollars worth of the United Natiom P0O-n>ilUan bond issue. ' _• ' Holyoake said New Zealand’s share of the issue was S830JBU, 1 TWO) r wKm t|P JpP THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 80, lMg Court Refuse to Speed Ruling on Apportionment WASHINGTON Cft-Tbe Supreme | Hurt Court refused today to send tm- lative districting la tM elate had mediately to Michigan the official ‘ * ‘ notice of last Monday’* decieion calling for reconaider(Bai of an apportionment wit mvolvtag the Michigan Senate. F ’ Under usual procedure, the no-tice will go to the Michigan Su-1 preme Court sometime after May The highest tribunal in last Monday’* decision overturned a Michigan Supreme Court ruling August SchoUe, who made the complaint, naked the U S. Supreme Gwrt to speed up Ha notice to Hie' PRESIDES AT CEREMONY — Madame Duong Van Minh, wife of a Sooth Vietnamese, army general, reviews the honor guard aboard the former U.S. Navy escort ship USS Crest- vfew at a Saigon dock last week. Madame Duong presided at christening ceremonies renaming the vessel the VNS Dong Da II. Nuisance Taxes Come to Life Lawmakers at Roadblock LANSING IE — After weeks of .beer, liquor and what-have-you overtime sessions, the legislature through the legislature. o closer to a solution of Michigan's nagging money problems than it was three months ago. 'It ♦ ♦ w | Income tax bills appear to be 4tad. And once again the patch-foe - existing - tax - structure contingent is on the uprise. I WWW The ’’nuisance” tax hackers are fopving now to gather their forces into a cohesive unit that can ram a package of levies on cigarettes, Rain, Snow, Fog Covering Broad Area of Nation My The Associated Press Rain, light snow, fog and cod weather extended across broad areas of the nation today from the north Atlantic region into the Plateau states. W W w Warm and humid weather end much of the South, with showers in prospect In the middle and lower Mississippi Valley and in the Gulf region. IftTBafts of snowfateaid-the' ground in'Fraser, Colo., and lain April snowstorm dumped about three inches in Denver. Light rain and fog covered the north Atlantic area westward to the upper Mississippi Valley. The 41 extended into Iowa and north-mi Illinois with thunderstorms reported in eastern Iowa. * WWW "Thunderstorm* rumbled across scattered sections of western Kansas and Oklahoma and the extreme northern edge of north central Texas. The Weather Bureau laaued a forecast of hail storms send damaging windstorms in sections Of fUtlshnsny WANT TO GO HOME If a majority rallies to their side this week, lawmakers can meet their new May 11 target date for adjournment and go home to start working On re-election campaign. ‘> , All of them dread a marathon summer battle that would carry clone to the Aug. 7 primary and leave voters with a hostile attitude toward a legislature that couldn’t get Its work done. While the tax writers go to work, the cut • the - expenses - to-the-bone platoon win get a chance to speak its piece again this week, w w w Its leading standard bearer Sen. Lynn 0. Francis, R-Midtand, who was elevated to Senate majority leader last week when Sen. Frank D. Beadle, R-St. Clair, was thrown out for joining the income tax supporters. Fraaels, for the second has tossed out for coustderatioa a program for drastic cutbacks In state spending. It i nr hues such proposals as s 10 per cent slash in mental hospital personnel, cutting 1,500 care from the state motor pool and reduced appropriations for the public school employes retirement system. Francis is not alone in his thinking. “I say. thpt if wt can’t have a real solution to this tax problem, let's cut back state expense hll along the line and live within our income,” said Sen. Philip Rahoi, D-Iron Mountain. “I am through with patchwork taxation, Student Strikers Go 'Back to Work' fi • p ■. f NEW BALTIMORE UN—All the strikers among Anchor Bay High School’s students returned to classes today for the start of the new school week. " h * it' The high school office reported conditions normal and “no inci-Most of the school's 361 students went on a strike last Friday, refusing io attend classes in a protest over principal Rudolph Kamtachke’s firing and suspension of eight teachers. * * * Substitute teachers served [place of the suspended teachers— disciplined for wearing black armbands after defeat at the. school district polls of a teacher tenure County Awards 3 Road Projects to Begin June 1 have been awarded for three county road construction projects slated to get under way June 1. Two bide totaling $31,163 to the Oakland Paving CO. for construction on Farmington Road Horn 12 to 13 Mile roads and Rdhardson Road from Haggerty fo Green roads. Peake Atybift paving Co. was awarded a $30,900 contract for Long Lake Road between Rochester and Dequindre roads. Scheduled completion date of all tree project* is July 14. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Severe thunderstorms and tornado waather Is expected through late this afternoon.* Low tonight 56. Tuesday partly cloud and cooler high 16. Winds southeast to south increasing to 1# to M miles then drifting to northwest late tonight. « S s .*». Wind velocity I S«a Mte tihsMsy St 1:S! p m. SOI Hsm Tueedev at I t* a m Moon aeta Monday «t 3:21 p m Mian rlaaa Tataday at 4:JS a m. Oawnt—n Teaiaeri n ; Hlaheet lUovoat temperature h .Mean temperature . I Weather—Sunny. Tear Ac* la rentier Seaday'r Teaiperatara Chart I Albuquerque IS 41 Lea Angeles 08 O Atlanta It ft Mlimlbweti tl W 44 if Milwaukee It 4S 64 36 Muskegon - 61 SS 7S 41 Neoarleans 66 74 4* 46 New fork IS 49 44 33 Omaha -66 46 j 96 Petition 4* It NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers arc expected tonight from the Mississippi Valley and the Lakes [region eastward la tha Atlantic ah .well af on the north Pacific coast while snow fiwriet are forecast tar foe northern and central Rockies. Warmer Irmpwetirss are expected hi the middle end southern Jptaatfe states, gnized the politically sensitive issue of nuclear weapons as a source of embarrassment to the to • Western governments span. The revised security treaty he-men the two countries calls for consultations in advance before any nuclear weapons are based in Japan. O’Doone^s remark was touch off a 111 Frankfurter Will Miss Rest of Court Term WASHINGTON (H Justice Felix Frankfurter's office said today he will not take part hi the Supreme Court’s work for the remainder of the court’s present i but anticipate returning to the bench in October. The 79-year-old justice has been in George Washington University Hospital since April 5 when he collapsed at his desk. # * His office said in • statement that he la continuing *jo improve but that his physician had advised that he not return to foe. court til fall. The present court term probably wifi run through June. There is no fixed date for the terra to end. The justices decided in the light of the court's docket when to bring the term to a dose. Michigan state officials did not object to immediate Issuance of the notice. | * V* The Jugh court made no comment in its order today rejecting the speed-up request. COHEN CASE In another case, Mickey Cohen, former Los Angeles gambling czar, was denied a Supreme Court review of his conviction and 15-year prison sentence for federal income tax evasion. Two Teen-Agers Hurt in Crash Pair Escapas Death When Car Hits House; Other Mishaps Injure 2 Two Avon Township teen-agers escaped death yesterday evening when, a car in which they were riding careened out of control and smashed into,the front of a house in Rochester. They are among four persons hospitalized in Pontiac today with injuries suffered in area traffic accidents over the weekend. Critically injured hi the Rock-eater mishap was Marilya Viro-, stefc, 17, US Texas St. TMHftfoftrt at the car, John R. MolHco, 17, m W. Maryknoll St., to report Both are In St. Jooepl Hospital. Rochester police mid MolUca was driving east on University Drive about 5 p.m. When his car of control as he attempted to pass another near Ludlow Street. HIT POLE HOUSE The car struck a utility pole, veered acrorn the street — where it narrowly missed two other trees and smashed info the bay window of a house at 640 W. University Drive. Mollies was thrown out of the car when It hit the pole. The girl was later fatten from the wreckage. Police said Mollies ar the girl apparently hit the accelerator pedal accidentally after the ear went off the street. MolHea could aot explain how tha accident occurred, police mid. Joseph Lipka, 30, 30 E. New York St., is in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital from, injuries suffered Saturday night when a car in which he gar went out of control and hit a telephone pole on Or-tonville Road near Seymour Lake Road in Brandon Township. '•* * * Also in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General is Douglas Danielson. 5-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Eric H. Danielson of 294 N.' vteted for qrhat waa in anbataace the aame tax charges. Hla appeal argued the ex-mobster had thus been placed twice la doable jeopardy, In violation of the Can- On his latest conviction, Cohen was sentenced in federal court in Los Angeles on July 1, 1961 to the prison term and fined $30,060. Ten years previously, he was convicted of a willful attempt evade tarns by filing false returns. He was then fined $10,000 and imprisoned for 3% years. * * it H' After the 1961 conviction, lower federal courts refused to permit Cohen's re lease on bull pending appeals. But Justice William O. Douglas of the Supreme Court ordered him released on $100,000 bail and commented that Cohen's appeal raised a substantial question for consideration by the highest tribunal. * it .* Justice Douglas noted he favored hearing Cohen’s' appeal. Justice White took no pert in consideration of Cohen’s request. Safety Checking Starts Tuesday Cars Can Ba Inspected Fret at- Many Places Throughout City Bullets Whistle Past Police in Shooting Probe A volley of rifle shots whistled over the heads of Pontiac policemen last night a.s they were Investigating a careless shooting complaint near the U.S. Government. Warehouse at 8T1 E. South Blvd. Arthur McQellaii, 69, 1106 Boston Ave., told police a bullet near his head as he 'was walking on the west ride of the warehouse about 9:30 p.m. * * * Officer* said three more shots were fired, apparently from a rifle, they were looking in a nearby field for the gunman. Police were unable to find any of the bullets or foe persons shooting them. Witnesses -told Pontiac poliee the boy ran in front of a car driven by Grover C. Rone, 24, 23 Carter St., on North Johnson near Augusta street Saturday afternoon. Papers, Union Renew Efforts to End Dispute DETROIT (B—Union and ma agement bargainers were scheduled to-renew efforts today to solve the tabor disputes that have idled this city's two daily since April 11. '» ♦ /hr • 1 Representatives of the Detroit Flee Press and the Detroit News were to meet this morning with leaders of Local 10, Paper and Plate Handlers |Inku. There also was a chance tha publishers might get together agate with repreeeetativee of Local IS, International Typographical Untan (ITU). Both union memberships voted not to return to their jobs April 20 following an earlier strike oi the Teamsters Union against the Free Press, during which both it and the News suspended publica- Roae said he was unable to slop in time to avoid hitting file boy. K, Former Queen Chat LONDON m - Premier Khrushchev today paid a call on. Queen Elisabeth of Belgium, who is in Moscow on a private visit, Moscow Radio reported. It said they had HjQ|te>dm to touch off a furore "a friendly conversation, song Japanese political parties. The Mate Department's denial came after a rthalter statement from a UA ith Air Force spokesman in Japaa wha said: “There are an and la Japan.” The apsfc O'Donnell's remarks were made at a news conference. In impend-' mg to a request to assess Red i’a military strength he said the Communists had the capability to stir up trouble. "But if there was an all-out war they would have to face what we can glue them,” he stated, added Us comment about ti clear armed aircraft at Pacific Teacher Seeks Dem Nomination for Legislature A Livonta high school teacher has'announced hi* camfrdary for the Democratic nomination as state representative from Oakland County's 4th district. He to Archie H. Bailey. 25. at 4224 Griffith St, Berkley. Bailey at Livonia’s Bentley High School and to treasurer of foe Berkley Democratic Club. Tho past Bailey soaks to presently held hy Ray L. Baker, last week announced Ms bid Jar re-election. //."v- v..J • ; a* rvMii FEARED DROWNED — Edward Dewey Rickefrbacker, 23, nephew of tamed flier Eddie Rickenbacfcer, to feared drownid. The body of hto companion, Richard Rapoport, 23, waa found yesterday In an overturned sailboat which the two were racing .off Los An- BIRMINGHAM - Alec Wytoti.; organist and choirmaster at foe Cathedral of St. John foe Divine 1a Nrtr York C3ty. will dose tha 196143 concert asrtaa at St. James Ktotoeapl Church May 15. Wyton, who aim to headmaster of foe Cathedral Choir School, hasserved as both organist and master in many fanpga churches in the US. and En^ond. Para la tasriea. Bpgtaai, he graduated from the Rfefai Academy at Maeto, Oxford Ualver-•Hy, with a master at arts degree. Msec IMS he has been a fellow at the Royal Csllega of Vehicle Safety Check Month begins tomorrow in Pontiac sponsored by foe Pontiac Area Cham-Commerce Traffic Safety Committee in cooperation service clubs, new car deal-era, filling station operators and the Pontiac Police Department. Drivers will have foe opportunity to safeguard themselves and others without cost by participating in the'annual inspection. These pa Ming inspection will be given safety stickers lor their windshields. No motorist to placed aader any obligation to nfealr defects found In the inspection. He la merely Informed that they exist. * Kenneth S. MUler. traffic safety committee chairman, has appointed Robert T. Flynn as vehicle safety check chairman. * . * * Committee members Include Charles M. Tucker; Pontiac Po-Clayton Randolph and Sgt. Lawrence LaBair; Joseph J. Zabelski of the Automobile Chib Michigan; Dean Wilson and Vim. Deusen, driver training instructors; and Mrs. Janies St. Louto and Dr. Gfeorge Harkless. During the entire month, motorists may have their cars in spected at dealers and filling stations displaying free check up signs. ■ ♦ " 'it } H From May 16-19, vehicle safrty check lanes will be set up at various spots in the city on streets and an eye vision test trailer will be located at Huron Saginaw streets for free vision examination. The vehicle checks* will cover brakes, horn, mufflers, glass, lights, rear view mirror and windshield wipers. He has been a fellow of the American Guild of Organists since 1960 and is a member at foe New York Musician'* Chib. Tlcketa for foe folS p.m. concert can be obtained at foe cjjproh office or Grinnell Brothers In Birmingham. Walter Nickell. a naturalist at Cranbrook Institute of Science, says font spots appearing on homes in. Bloomfield Township may be -aused by a spray used to treat diseased trees. A rash of purple spots which have appeared on a«ddsen homes in the area In recent days have been blamed on numerous things. At least one resident told police he was worried the spots chine from null ear-fallout. Township police said the spots ftity have come from a purple liquid In elm tree buds blown hy The Dfoy in Birmingham New York City Organist Will Be May 15 Artist chatman ’of u* sae% lighting committee. He ffiso waa % member at fob Automotive Manufacturer's Association fighting com- Hto wlfb Hsian M. and mother, Mrs. William Jovanovich of Detroit, aoratvb. . ‘ tally rsgHgnta that any memorial tributes be made to foe Michigan. Hsart Asaortatiqn. Grover C Mail Service for GfUVer CJ Mell, 69, of 1368 BettnaviUe St, will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at foe Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be 2:30 p.m. in Roaeland Memorial Gardens Cpmeteiy, Jackson. Mr. Mali died yesterday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, following a long llln—. *, a retired portal employe and and veteran at World War I. Surviving are tour sisters and tour brothers. Ml Hoe Jovanevlcli Service tar Milton- Jovanovich, 56. of 1030 N. Woodward Ave. will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Bell Chapel of the William Hamilton Co. Mr. Jovanovich died Saturday following a heart attack. He was an electrical • engineer with foe Ford Motor do. for years. He was s member of the Society of Automotive Engineers and \MSUQ Students on 'Peace Walk' Along Woodward small group 'of marchers, most bf them Michigan State University students, , walked along Woodward Avenue from Pontiac to Birmingham yesterday to protest nuclear weapons testing. The group, numbering about 1| ton pereeaa, was very orderly sad paraded along tha side of the Nad from the old Oakland County Courthouse to the northern edge of Binniag-ham. according to Birmingham poliee; A spokesman for the marchers, Sheila 6’Rourke, 1439 Pontiac Drive, Sylvan Lake, said the 'peace walk” was a protest by local residents who oppose nuclear testing whether it's done by the United States or the Soviet Union.” Birmingham police earlier had warned the marchers that they must keep to the side of the rood to avoid being charged with parading without • permit in violation of a city ordinanoe. Clear 2nd Area for Big N-Blasts Ban Against Shipping* Air Traffic Sat Around Johnston Island From Our News Wires . WASHINGTON - A ban against shipping and air traffic was clamped today around Johnston Island where the Untied States to expected to fire soon tie high altitude nuclear bursts—the most spectacular and perhaps the most Important of *ts Pacific test series. The order closing oft Johnston —the American teat aite la the Pactfle ■ was announced April 6 and does aot aeeeaaariiy mean The Atomic Energy Commission has said the public will be advised three to four days before any high-altitude teats. The government has warned that file testa may interfere with aviation and navigation frequencies. It appeared likely that the schedules of American and foreign airlines would be affected. Dr. Harold Brown, director ef the Defease Department, said yeoterday la a television Inter- of TNT) to one or more megatons. The first two tests conducted at Christmas Island were of the medium yield range, meaning less than a megaton and more than 20 kilotons (200 thousand tons of TNT). Traffic Toll Now 369 EAST LANSING l»-Trafflc accidents have claimed 360 fives on Michigan highways so far tills year, provisional figures compiled hy the state police showed today. The toll on this .date, a year ago was 446. Training Iraqi Troops BAGHDAD. Iraq (AP)-Premier Abdel Karim Kassem said today the government has sent troops to northern Iraq for training as part of a general plan to fight the country’s enemies. JFK Appeals for Economic Cooperation (Continued From POge One! ment of the chamber in 1912 was turning point in the relationship of government with industry. There was more laughter when _ l added: "And some any the events at this April also marked a tinning point." From that reference to the steel-price battle. Kennedy went on to obeerve that he tamed this April would Indeed ‘•“-'been ar turning point In the that ti may have awakened wider knowledge of the necessity understanding between business, government and labor. Even Hwragh the cheers from chambers ef renameree around waa elected, Kennedy said, he has been Impressed with the es- taa by reentry has become involved In III a speech prepared tor delivery just after President Kennedy’s scheduled appearance on ae platform. Chamber President Richard Wagner fended the steel price Increase 'which Kennedy forced -rteel firms to cancel 2ft weeks ago. Wagner, a Chicago oilman, deplored and denied the mistaken impression—which he said many people gained from the dramatic steel price struggle—font inflationary pressures are fostered by industry’s so-called greedy desire for profit "Nothing could be further from the truth,” Wagner told about 4,000 delegates' at tha opening session of the chamber's 56th an- . nual meeting. "Steel had already been subjected to throe increases in wage costa as well os increases No Wander Hare Loot to Tortoise Trace 1-Track ^Minded Turtle f at «* executive GAINESVILLE. Fla. (UPD — "There must he something wo don’t know when a’ turtle to able to make a trip from the Island, a speck of sand 1,400 miieo away, | says a University of Florida Carr maintains that aoee a turtle nett o course tor n distant objective it follows it in a straight line. Cur, along with Navy peroonnel, will track .the turtles fry airplane, rtiip, or bom a mountain or a beach — or Konaedy’s speech to the ne- Dr. Ankle Carr aims to find oat how they do ti. *Trts got to bo ntero than Jart tousle er. maims hffinvlse to aecamrt tar tiw tartlet aavigattag slltitiis,” aa* Out. •They’re la « To prove hto belief, Carr proposed attaching miniature radios to the backs of turtles and tepritiag them over tong distances. The Navy bought Carr's Idea sad I ration was h § before a business audience a forced, the country’s major | steel praduesra to withdraw their I $6 a tan price Innoaoe. Wagner, chairman of the eaeco-I five committee ef Champlain (til I R Refining Ox, told foe J * ' i ifalegatos that busi- Tbe University of Florida biologist hopes the vsfri—1will prove the turtle doera’t wander at random until he lifkli a landfall. If Carr tl comet, foe next step will be ” determining the aoniee at the turtle’s navigational aid. tot earlier experiments, Carr attached helium-filled balloons 1 curbs on executive power, should j fiehto In whfoh l then on ”—«■ htierats. Wagner told the delegatee that "the two culprits stowing dawn America's growth are lint, high Idjlr ' '"UlH Metis TOT PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. APRIL 80, 1062 a Powder Keg Woman Journalist Dios LONDON (AP)—Eileen Ascroft, 47, one of Britain's most Influe*. Hal Joum* lists with editorial control over downs of women's mac* azines, died Sunday. Miss Ascraft was the wife of Hugh Cudlipp, Joint managing director of the mass circulation Daily Mirror. complicat# Spring’s in the air, love's everywhere Comploto With COVfll (Utystth* Valley) COT y One Man Killed and Y3 Hurt in Cloth With tot Angelos Police Cambodia and Booth Viet Nam have oftepi served at havens lor political refugees since the two states became independent of NEW ADA CHAIRMAN . John P. Roche, professor at Brandeis University, Waltham, Cambodia broke relations wth Thailand last fall after a long ae- Regular $2 98 value — go!- P vonized steel garbage cans 1 are approved for city and " township pickup. Side drop handles, limit 2 cans. Spray Mist . . Dusting Powder Parfum da Toilette Perfume . . . #6.59 Q OU . PER GALLON All fresh Hock In white and decorator icolors .... Kem-Tone is fuffy washable * . xrubbable toot Limit 4 gallons. Dr. Steele, JFK Aide, to Speak to Joint Group Wednesday Night CSS c,-es Hie nation's chief of veterinary public health will be the speaker at a history-making first Joint meeting of the Oakland County Medical flodaty and the Veterinary Medical Association of Oakland County at 7 p.m., Wednesday at.Kingalty Inn. .The speaker Is Dr. Jussi 1. Steele, formerly ef the Michigan Department ef Health, whe new also Is • member of Presiasst Larga 20-Gallon Capacity $4.95 Value-now As shown — completely perforated burner with cover,; stands on legs for bottom draft feature. Limit 2. Ideal for BOAT and LAKE U*#-PinB 7x50 Binoculars With CARRY CASI ■Hfl Ropier WMOVeho Painless If Safety Styls ^ Pet Mail Trimmer With 7-Inch NAIL Fill Sale of a Group Bathroom Fixtures Values ■mmigi to $149 I #V Imported Copy of ' *2.95 S tllet A graduate of Michigan State University's medical school and of Harvard, bo has servud as consultant toi the World Health Organization of the United Nations, the Pan American Sanitary Bureau, the International Food and Agrdulture Organizatoin, the U.S. Defense Department, State Department and Agriculture Depart- Trim pW*' noil, jurt lik. th» vO. morion do. GuaWiSaid no crocked or spt ROilt... absolutely painless. ■ Comparable to #79 Sellers—extreme wide-angle 578 feet to 1000 yards, full 11-degree field. Genuine 'Scope’ prism coated lens. Complete with leather cases. "•U." type. Only 6 on sale. $1 holds for 30 days. Catholic Cleric Salutes Bardot, Part of*Heritage' DUON, France (AP)-An aged member of the Roman Catholic clergy saluted Brigitte Bardot Sunday as “an. element of the national heritage." Canon Felix Kir, K, mayor of Dijon atxl dean of the National Assembly, . visited the company Him* INKSTER (IS—A 3-year-old boy was Jh critical condition today aft- $1.98 Value Police said Raymond Travis was in the park yesterday with Ms mother, Mrs. Norma Travis, and was sliding down a playground slide when two nearby trees Adjust 7 ft, • in. to I ft., I in. Ctilingt Floor-to-Ceiling Pole Lamp Regular $7.95 Value , JHj 3-bullet head lamps on heavy duty W ■ . seamless tube pole. Individualhght controls. Use In nearly any room In your homo. 1916 Christinas Card Is Finally Delivered CLEVELAND « — A Christmas card has been delivered 45% years late, but nobody seems to know who sent it. The card, postmarked in 1916, was addressed to Elmer Beeman, 1573 Roycroft Ave., in suburban Lakewood. Angus Moore, who has lived at DOG-TYE STAKES Congress authorised setting aside ground in New York Harbor for the statue of Liberty in 1677. Only qt Simms ^ Complete WATCH, OVERHAUL Plus Needed Parts fofl ■WPS* Complete Ports J *• and Labe* - TOUR WATCH Will In • Disassembled, Cleaned and-OKed • Worn or Broken farts Replaced • Genuine factory Parts Used, • Watch Adjusted and Electronically Timed • Full Year Guarantee . on labor Repairing ♦godly nwted.wofchee. Genuine BISSELL 'Shampoomaster' Rug Gleaner Applieater Original $6.95 Value—You Get ft at Simait far As shown — hondy oppfi- 4AAA h color is used with foam SHI ,/J shampoo to clean rugs and I carpets to Ska new again. i, . Genuine Bisseti. RIB •« Ct BOYS’4-Pc. SUITS Regular $2.95. Vakds—linan suit has coat, pants, shirt- and tie. In choice of navy or tan. Size 12 only. —BASEMENT fM.ep—naannnnaeeaeeeeebeeeefMBi Wax Your Floor* This Easier Woy With mm Wax Applicator BOYS’JACKETS nBe Winner ef Daytona ROO-MJIe Race SPORTS TIRES logy Tomie ANDERSON SALES end SRVICS 230 L Ifte St. FI 2 *309 GIRLS’TOPPERS wmar. --M OUR LOWEST-EVER PRICE ON FAMOUS Regular $34.98 Vmlm-Nato extra pickup' . . . dear, real Hi-fi Tone tram this1 compact 16x6x6% inch size table model radio. Guaranteed by Simms and fast service wimn needed. $1 holds lor 30 days. fancy prints or fin sister-same —BASEMENT >IN. SAGINAW SIMMS 2nd Floor HARDWARE DEPT. DEMONSTRATOR SALE of Hi-Power BINOCULARS GEORGE’S BABY WEEK SPECIALS At SIMMS TONITE and TUESDAY SIMMS 2nd Floor ELECTRICAL DEPT. CLEARANCE of Broken Size Ranges in CLOTHING and DOMESTICS —TONITE and TUESDAY ONLY- SIMMS 2nd Floor HOUSEHOLD DEPT. TONITE and TUESDAY SPECIAL SALE Kennedy, Goldberg to Address UAW |i™S^ See Rocky F Fancy-Fresh TURKEY Fin# Baked, Fried or Bar-B-Qued Center Blade Cm._______ STRAINED riusww 1r hafhiauamjsh. CAKE WtL\ LURCH MEAT SIO^WJ j f3 3 i-Jy/ithCoM Stokely THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, APRIL B0,19ff It is evident, however, that 9 Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.t., j might be opposed by WagiMr tot re-election in 1964, takes a much mors serious vie# of the incipient conservative revolt The Conservative Patty, Inc. announced last *eak that It will oppose Rockefeller add Republican Sen. Jacob K- Javtts, who is up for rejection, at the GOP convention in September, ' ‘it ★ ti l, Failing .that, the conservatives will try to get enough signatures to win places on. the November. In' New York State, candidates lor statewide office can be nominated independently by getting 12,009 TO CREATE DISSENT While Rockefeller and Jayits seem assured of getting their party's nomination, the conservatives hope to demonstrate significant dissent which might be telling in the November results and thus affect RocgefeHer’s chances for the 1964 GOP presi- The view of Keating and i other Republicans is that thp servat ives might be able to si a body blow at Rockefeller In usually Republican upstate New York. - Most politicians agree that Rockefeller hap lost-ground there, net only because of his divorce but because .of what some Republicans regard as a sort of New Deal type of adfolnistratfcm in Albany. # ★ # As far back as February Rocke- fallar was asked og a nationwide i program U he to the right He replied, "Not in the riightcot.* COULD BE DRAFTED Rockefeller flguno to run well hi Now York City, particularly If Wagner sticks by Iris Whether Wagner wifi do that re-mains to be seso. He mid he wouldn’t allow hlmaalf to draftad, adding that President Kennedy “knew how I felt’ respects my judgment.’’ * * # It is not in the political cards that the Kennedy administration will give up easily on New York and on the President’s leading potential Republican opponent in 1964. The possibility of a Wagner draft cannot be ruled out rov’n imking the §tep. At Uutgotfre going to build that new houee pou’ve wanted eo long. Whg not than the fun of gour plan• ningf Little thing* ore big new* to tho*» «f» " gj Phone the Folks Long Distance Why not call tonight? You can dial most station calls direct If you call person-to-person or collect, you can help apeed your eelM If you give the operator the Area Code of the place you're calling. Michigan _ Bell Telephone Associates say that both Rockefeller and Javita w»h«t«t»» this movement, which started earlier in the year among Republican they regard as the liberal viewpoint of the two. to Talk to JFK Seen as.Significant to Futura Administration Nans for Medicine WASHINGTON (AP) - Seven of the American Medical Association's top officials an Invited the White House Tuesday for talk with President Kennedy — talk that could Ugnal which direction the administration will take next in ks fight for a medical care plane. An AMA spokesman said the seven bad accepted an invitation but had received no ward as to what was behind it or what would bh (Hemmed. The President la committed to a program of medical care for the aged financed through the Social SeoiHty systeih. The AMA is strongly opposed, saying Kennedy’s plan is unnecessary and would lead to socialised medicine •* * <# -*7., Presently, the ndfflfariatratlor Mil is atuck in the House Ways Drama Critic Dies at 67 LONDON (AP)-Anthony Victor Cookman, 67, drama critic of the London Timet since 1999, Sunday. * TEL-HURON * SHOPPING CENTER NEW STORE HO The following stores will be P . ■ DAILY 9:30 to 9:00P.M. Children's Shop Cunninghams Kresjje Osiun's Shoe Box Sew’N Save United Shirt Winkehnan’s j Wrigkys “The compoct-Convenient thopping center** FREE STAMPS SWIFT PREMIUM <* IMPERIAL Smoked HAMS SHdhk Portion 5-7 lb.: BLUE/RIBBON FARMS BEEF Chuck Roasts Butt Portion 4-6-lb. Pot Roast Cuts Beech-Nut, Special Label Coffee Dartmouth—with Coupon Ice Cream (Mir Oat Ml Pork Maps T Practically Benches Pwk Steaks Pssshks Skinless Franks SAVE I-lb. Leon, m 49* SAVE 10c Audi. Grade 1 Cel Cream or Whole Kernel SAVE WRIGLEY COUPON mem fie rifhf to fair geeeMm. wrfglay* 93 Score M 14k Chi. Dos. • Sweet Mixed Feat • Peas ft Carrots • Tomato Catsup if4** • Cut Beans ,?£ • Sliced Wax Beans Butter Oranges Lergg, Luscious, Sweet * Florida U.S. No. 1 ER GIFTS FASTER as THE frpNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 80, 1962 FlVfll Alabama Goes to Polls Tuesday Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths ' Shop TONIGHT, f ‘ Thui^a^FtMiM and /Saturday Mighli M# ' Y1 To Nominate Governor, Senator and Others in Democratic Primary PARK FREE on municipal lot alter every evening. ‘j ' $ J Phone Pi 4*2311 far IVee Delivery on II Or More Ordei ★ Big Savings for Bedroom and Bath! ★ Charge Everything You Need m Waited Fourth Flggi| SPRINGMAID SHEETS SPRINGKNIGHT MUSUNS Reg. 2.19 twin size I Reg. 2.49 double size........ Reg. 1.90 pr. cates........... Reg. 2.19 twin fitted bottom .. Reg. 2.49 double fitted bottom races may attract a record number at voters. Hie record is 08,-462 votes cast in the 1968 guber* 1 NOTICE! ! 0010 CROSS AMBULANCE SERVICE CO. IS NOT USIID IN YOUR YELLOW PAGES SPRINGCALE PERCALES TERRIFIC SAVINGS ON STRIPED CANDYCALE PERCALE SHEETS TOO! Pilot Lands Plane in Field; Plans Take-Off on Hoad 2Wti 3L Jtkm GRAND HAVEN (UPt» — An East Detroit filer who safely landed a small plane, ‘ carrying three paaaengers, in an Ottawa; County field was dtw to late off itoday from. On U.S. 31 express-1 Constant Improvement Justifies Confidence»... The Qoneleorr Johns Funeral. Homs 1$ always bright, clean and attractive. CONNIE LOU SCOTT I ORION TOWNSHIP £!' Grave-1 side service for Connie Lou Scott I infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs I’ Clarence Scott ft 3738 Grafton ltd. was to. be 4 p.m. today at Dray-j WASHABLE FEATHER PILLOWS; FOAM RUBBER BEP PILLOWS 3.99V«(m> Rag. 4.99 extra plump ton Plains Cemetery from Gods. Funeral Horde, Drayton Plains. The infant died Friday, one day after birth, at Pontiac Osteopathic. lohne Funeral Home and to aaa these thing* for yourself. Every room 4 perfect for It* purpose and as sty tractive as though just new. are grandparents Mr. and tfre.doeed in. Clarence B. Scott of MacKenzie.l State police said the plane would Tenn., and Mr. and Mrs. Otha towed out to tte highway today Qnxflff of Louisville. Ky„ a broth-H ***** er darence Jr, and two eistere.' ^ ^ 8U8tained ^ mlnor JUdy ** ■** >t hfltne-[damage to the left wing and tail To Prosecute Solan j , .................................. * PARS (AP) - French authori-j^; *L Governor's Wife ties announced Sunday that Andre,GiV0S Birth tO’Son 1 Gavalda, chief government attor-. ney In tte appellate courts, will TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — A son handle the proeecution against ex*|was bom Sunday night to New Gen. Raoul Salan on charges of . Jersey Governor and Mr*. Rich* fpbvenive activity. The trial ■■■'*» f 36" LONG, 10" WIDE, 14" HIGH REDUCED TO $123.00 OFFICE 3RD FUMT OFEH MIST ISA to IF. A—SOI. 1 to IF.A MARTEX 'CAMELOT' TOWELS BELLEAIR MUSLIN SHEETS 1.99 if perfect 1.29 if perfect Reg. 1.99 Reg. 2.29 BATH TOWEL HAND TOWEL TWIN ;Y'| DOUBLE V *1.19 7T *1.65 *1.79 S9c if perfect fingertip #r washcloth ... 44c 2.99 if perfect bath mat ....... M9 ftc pr. 4Sa84" pMew eaeeo... «m* .pr. Tte Sturdy, rodiont white finish muslins. THE PONTIAC PRESS 'Water Skiing Mean* of Relaxation* ‘ MONDAY, APRIL 30, 1962 Suit Space Exploration KjMovement Forward Tboperation in space was vividly demonstrated recently at Cape Ca-nJgreral. The unspectacular hut scientifically important launchings of un-ntanned satellites have a way of go-injr largely unnoticed while public enthusiasm for Project Mercury and ifl(*8even astronauts is at a peak. ★ ★ ★ „ More than usual significance, ' however, attended this launching since it set a history-breaking jeeord of being the first interna* Atonal satellite. The 128-pound satellite, instrumented by Great Britain was fired hjto orbit miles above the earth by; a United States rocket. It is designed to run for one year on sun ppteer and will aid the study of cosmic rtfs and the ionosphere. safe operation is the basic fact that the boat must be seaworthy to begin with. "Give Consideration to School Efoetfon* ‘Owner of Property Explains Situation’ More than one water accident comes back to inadequate preparation prior to launching. In the rush to begin the season, essential maintenance can be overlooked with * disastrous effects. There have been many cartoons about boat owners who failed to insert drain plugs after having their boat laid up during the winter. But this still happens. Putting the Same old equipment aboard each year without checking its condition also can lead to trouble. Life jackets can wear out just as anything else. Steering controls must be in top condition*' The Almanac It Used to Be Such a Friendly Game An unsafe boat on the lakes Is just as dangerous as a safe one with a reckless driver. David Lawrence Says: Voting Standards Are State Affair a03P Dixie Highway It could require an employer to hire, whenever there are enough applicants, at least one colored became they suspect the good faith.of certain state* and 66 not wish to take the trouble to prove In court that those state officers have exerdaed discrimination, the provisions of the Constitution which give the states the sole power to fix qualifications of voters can be ignored. If, indeed, a state can fix a third-grade education or' a college degree as a standard for qualification, it will be asked: Why doesn’t a state have the constitutional power to determine and prescribe its Own standards of "literacy" and to apply them equally to all WASHINGTON - An editorial in the New York "Times" on the subject of "qualifications” for voting has startled many of the constitutional lawyers of the country. The doctrine expressed is novel. It is that, when the 15th Amend-ment was adopt-ed just after the CivS War. this action gay* Con-grass an overrid-ing power to fir voter qualifica-j^BnK^H Just This, That Items Submitted by Our Headers That Make News ‘How About Helping the Unemployed?* The piotUM in The Press showing Lewis Boyd and his family Portraits enough to extend genuine coopera-tiDh in space exploration. been a good provider tor SI of our' Dr. Harold Hyman Says: a laid off car hauler tor more thap a year. Re has run out of unemployment compensation and ia unable to find a job. We have lost our home, truck, hospitalization, insurance, etc. He is M yean old and can still do an honest day’s work. We have an I and 11 year old still at home. Vbr yeans at has paid ia a lot of income tax. Why can’t something be done tor him and others like him or dp they have to change their color? Do you suppose if he were sent to New Oram* the White Cttisem Council would find Urn a Job? Claudia M. Crosby Milford TJIMI uviumaiiaTij* flnt issue of that new monthly of Segregated Schools magastno - to have international circulation; •A rather forthright example of u.s.a. n, v jtg$ how some areas in the Deep comes to Oakland County fog, the gist south feel toward segregation was at its profusely illustrated 10-page srticle nfcted in an editorial from the 8hreve- « w POO Journal in Unilalona. b^ng , resume or what’. Shaping up tor .The occasion tor the editorial was ^ fall.8 election. The gist is a*Velcame for the editors of Ameri- George Wlkken Romney cq’5 newspapers visiting in Mew Or- Who seams to have a front row reserved leans. We are merely reprinting a seat canter on the political bandwagon, pettion of the editorial for our read- ± * .boat era to aee what some southerners that baby rhinoceros ben in stkhd for. Oakland Comity. Planning a western vacation camping trip Aw tola summer, Barry Pahhnan of Waterford shows me an almost continuous lint of overnight stops on manmade jafc— that did not exist JO years ago. The Old Farmer's Almanac says for the Pontiac area this week: ■’Peppy; not plppy” Sequel of a hard winter Is a large warty-toad that has hibernated lor several years under the bade porch of We Possess the to Prevent Tuberculosis “The Senate of the United States shall be composed of two senators from each state, sleeted by the people thereof, tor six years and each senator shall have one vote; The electors In each state shall have the qualifications requisite tor eledors of the most numerous branch of the state legislatures." This rotates specifically to the sole right of the states to fix voter "Qualifications.",, It Is obvious that every voter must always be given a square deal and cannot be denied his chance to vote only because of race or color. Bat to say teat because tbs active infection, may be protected, by simple treatment with an apti-tubercuious pill. Case Records of a Psychologist: .■The editorial said in part: *f “Wo would particularly like for :oor distinguished guests to kavo jig opportunity to study «U •aspects of Louisiana’s fine ■snrially-BCgregated educational System. Wo would like for them *S» visit Louisiana’s wkito mad Negro schools aad see for thera-adves the caliber of education available to all dtixena. Wo would tike for them to bo impromwd by ‘the fact that the quality of Itodlittes for white aad Negroes 3o the same —that the pay acalea •Aur white and Negro teachers are equal — and that a groat sag* tent of our economy is geared to .$e role the Negro educator plays 3)i our segregated society.* ilii' ★ ★ ★ traffic fatalities. .'We feel reasonably certain that m* moat editors like ourselves did not y . i have time enough or linger long " crlJal UP enough to inspect the school systems. saraue •farther we fed that Louisiana of J8 Auguste at would base a hard time selling her Mr. and Mrs. philosophy to many visitors from the at sn Irwin An. Mr. Sad Mn 1 of OS Bast Squar Make Sure Your Craft >. Is Safe for Launching ■* **£*J?Z Fending Use Technique to Stop What the proponents ol the new legislation before the Senate this week really are raying is that, feedol TMe Week Delicious, Tasty FRENCH CRULLERS 6 hr ^—YS k GIRLS CUSHION MSOIES • PURfcFECTlY WASHABLE IF YOUR TEENAKI IS 6RADUATIM THIS YEAR *| .. .you con tab lb IF out of GIFT by choowng a graduation watch fa* our fira (Moral GRADUATE-SELECTED ELGIN WATCHES dwMR b *dml iMin km will fcnUiRwinnRuywwM SIBLEY’S Miracle Mile Shopping Canter OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. INTERNATIONAL (DEEP SILVER) HOLMES and EDWARDS SAUCE LADLE IN FOOTED PRESCUT CRYSTAL DISH Early American Style. 6” Dia. x 3" Deep. Assorted Silver Patterns. Ideal For Sauces, Gravy, Candies, Nuts and General Use! 5,00 Value FOR 'EVERY SPECIAL MOTHER ... Iqr day, by night, thf rial 'MICHIGAN’S LARGEST FLORSHE1M DEALER cihanae" fy ^ *b° **** the gayest shoe, about town. Geras have a graciousness of manner, art m gentle on year feet Today aaa the new collection of Genu, young shoe faihitftu, for yon. USE YOUR SECURITY CHARGE Miraeln Mile Shopping Center Open Everting* ’ill 9 CRAIG’S GIFT! Also Not , Illustrated Attractive Relish or Nnt Dish... ! " i” Leaf Design__ pressed Clear Crystal with William Rogers . 'Precious Mirror Pierced Shell Shaped R«l»h Spoon. Friday N..I. jiiV.AM-nMm - _ , *«« 69* «&. . Prime. Add 2 Sc For Boning On Each Item KAZAR says official Itet of LONGINE3 WATCH WINNERS. “Ladies AT MIRACLE MILE FREE I HAIRCUT ■f„,,FPR KAZAR 'YOU . . . during the period of our MANAGER’S SPECIAL” FOR CERTIFICATES FROM! SPECIAL PACKAGES OF miRacle mile F«,vusja TOWARD PURCHASE OF BOTANY! SLACKS & Knit Shirts JEWELERS CAREFREE CAFES . To introduce you to our CAREER GIRL SALON MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER ... and to acquaint yeu with iny talented staff... V. , ... Miss JANICE . . Mr. LEO ..Miss JUDY ..Mr. GARY . / In case you have just had your hair cut, we will continue this fabulous offer thru Friday, May 4 at our beautiful CAREER GIRL SALON at Miracle Mile. There will be no cost or obligation attached to this Manager's Special Oner. To avoid disappointment — phone in advance for your FREE haircut. Or, if you prefer, come in at your convenience. . Count on ► Penney’s bring 45 pieco apodal Extra Special During Manager’s Weeks 8 for our regular $15.00 fragrant oil permanent*, to for our regular l0 $10.00 te $25.00 permanents* 5U * Styling Department prices lUdblly highei JUMBO SOFA PILLOWS ■■ Theee SPECIALS at our Miracle Mile Salon Only Our Phouo mi Our PONTIAC MALL CONTINENTAL $ALON 682-0420 \y_ „ HOURS 9 to 9 iESfSS ■5 PENNEY'S—MIRACLE MILE OPEN MONDAY thra SATURDAY HhOQ AM to 9:00 PjM See Rocket Blast Off ATTENTION PARENTS SHOPPING CENTER JEWELERS donnell SHOPPING CENTER CAREER GIRL SALON S. TELEGRAPH RO. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. A PAIL 30, 1802 BRIM 1ft FAMILY TO SEE IK “KIM CIRCUS” Thru May 12th 4 FREE SNOWS DULY Fun for Everyone FOOD FUR MARKETS S. Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. Discount RMi Tic kcts Arc Availabll . it All Miraol* MHc Shopping Center Stores! HOODED SWEATSHIRTS 23'* Roli-about Oiwall ms m m. In. ptahm vtMlnt vm Cabinette TV CHILDREN'S SHOP Engineering breakthrough makes possible lower-than-ever prices on brand-name 23" TV Guaranteed* for a full year, and no trade-in needed, the , Roli-about Cabinette TV features: Hand-wired chassis e Easy-rolling 3* casters • Genuine hardwood veneers and hardwood soiida in Charcoal. Mahogany or Walnut-grained finishes with Model 23T17 TV in matching finishes on metal, slightly higher. Used fBgl CAMERA PHI ' Clearance A Real Opportunity to Get a Truly Fine Camera fa Like-Nevo Condition at OUTSTANDING SAVINGS! • KEYSTONE NEW CENTER ELECTRONICS, INC. • BAUER SS Movie Camera, including telephoto. wlde/Angla 1—. alnntrlc-eye. • AMPROlMfnBOUND With S lenaee.......... e BRUMBERGER tVatVi Aaio-Projector..... • BELL nod HOWELL 8mm Companion ....... • POLAROID Highlander................... • RICHOFLEX 2y«2V« with Cdae and Aeeaeeoriaa e*. KODAK Item Masbaiee Camera with Caw .. . V a ARGUS C44,CampM* with Telephoto aad Wide-Angle ten*... .............. SOLAR 5x7 Enlarger.................. MIRACLE MILE CAMERA SHOP. 2205 Sooth Telegraph FE 4-5992 ..B64.S0 . f249.50 . *52.50 .•14.91 .. 124.50 . *19.95 ... $35.00 RADIO-TV SALES & SERVICE Miracle Mile Shopping Center Ana FE t PROMPT, PERSONALIZED SERVICE^ "I CANT HAVE EVERYONE'S BUSINESS -.; BUT I SURE TRY!" , - "Wa'II stand on our Hands la please everyone who takes the time and effort to shop at our store. We'sknply offer the biggest DISCOUNT possible, plus sonelderati service.. • and make certain ear customers are entirely pleased after we yova delivered their purchases. Simply, yes... but appreciated. That's why we continue to grawsd foot." FLOOR MODEL SALE .. 91M.II FROM OUR TRADE-INDEPARTMENT Iprswt Iteree, AM/FM ... MM ...9111.11 REFRIOERATOtt—Frigidalre-WeeHnghewM - ZeelNi irFertsWe........914A Kelvinator and Admiral “'■*»ma>mmmtm .. .9121.95 BRANCO Redie, AM/FM, ...mm from $29f5 itSS...^..tu. ** AUTOMATIC WASMERS — reconditioned Pysert OmR EeMe ♦ * v.»0 1» , >MMtt< lamtsetr deck Radio .. ..»• 1IJB treeiBi tv. «......< tmjB \ THE PONTIAC FB3BSS. MONDAY* APRIL 90, IBM U.S. Fallout Like Glow PONTIAC - HU BUSINESS ___lyUL_ | INSTITUTE A Professional School of BiuiniU for High School and College Graduates Include: SECRETARIAL PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTING HIGHER ACCOUNTING . BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION CLERK-TYPIST OFFICE MACHINES Pontiac Business Institute Bulletin of Courses Will Be Sent Upon Request Pontiac Business Institute 7 W. Lawrence 8t. FEderal 3-7028 The problem la how to keep those crews sharp. TTiree suggestions under consideration: Let them use their working hours studying tor an additional university degree: surprise them at odd times by unannounced inspections; let them shoot one every now and them—from their regular sites, not from Canaveral or Vaindenberg. “The latter seem to constitute the unquestionable majority, and thus the chances of raising'the money are poor. Even the comparatively small sum of nearly $3 million in cash to pay for the 60- It's always Y a privilege to matte sound loans. George Battleehaw, 44, of. Far-well was injured fatally Sunday night when Ms car was side-swiped on a Gilmore Township road in Isabella County. MISCELLANEOUS John Herbert Townsend, 51, a Shiawassee County fanner, was killed early Saturday in a fall from a railroad trestle while walking home from an auto deddent. A coroner's Jury ruled he died of a broken neck. WlCE-AeMAR Milk-Drinking Honors Go to Irish Nation Home ID- The Irish are the world's top milk drinkers, says the Food and Agriculture Organisation in mQk consumption statistics released Saturday. walking sheers SLENDERIZING SEAMS OR SEAMLESS MtRACLE NO-SIND TORS Neumode Hosiery Shop ! North Saginaw St, FE 2-7730 Automatic Defrost 12 Cu. Ft, Refrigeralbi'With'Top Frefezer SAFETY SERVICE At A Price Substantially Below Any Comparable Model! WHILE THEY LAST jutyutt Br*K*VJ,d B Balance 'WITH TRADE A deluxe 12 cu. ft Refrigerator with Urge family size 107-lb. True Zero Top Freezer and Fully Automatic defrosting in Refrigerator Section. Deep roomy door shelves (big enough for half gallon milk cartons) full width Vegetable Crisper. Available in Sunshine Yellow or Bermuda Pink. Take advantage of , this tremendous buy now. He who finds ho has something to soil And goes and whispers it down a well, Is not so apt to reap the dollars As hi who climbs a tree and HOLLERS. . .. and the .very best way to "HOLLER" profitably A FAST ACTION. LOW COOT ' PONTIAC PRESS WAIT AO NO MONEY DOWN COMPLETE SET OP TUBELESS WHITEWALLS any ana 4 for OwHtu LOOK AT THE PRICE JUST SAY 'CHARGE IT* CALL re inn TODAY UAS3 Open Monday and Friday Evenings 10 9f00 PJL CALL FE 4-1585 FREE CAR SAFETY CHECK i %HE PONTIAC PRESS., MONDAY, APRIL 30, IS62 ^5SKTEff^ ^ofQUAunr "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY Boneless Rump Roost ^UPER-RIGHT" QUALITY, SKINLESS, 10 TO 12 POUND Fully Cooked wM.wH.if SEMI-BONELESS |Bjk. NO CENTER SLICES REMOVED 5 it 99* Ail Purpose, Pure Vegetable Tomatoes APricotHalve8 - 5 Freestone Peaches 5 LB. NU Afrr HAND, HALVES wX" Bartlett Pears ... 5 dexolo Oil Poos, Cuf Corn Mixed Vegetables Spinach—Loaf or Chopped Peas and Carrots Chopped Broccoli Ml. PKOS. Crinkle Cut Potatoes French Fried Potatoes Grape Juke JS Margarine .f 4 Wc Tomato Juice. • 4 aS* I APiinMM, Nouewwse aap sbamo Sultana Rico •. 2 £>. 25c Orange Juice. • 3 aS» I Apple Sauce.. t un 1.00 Grapefruit Juke 4 SSI AH eHsee 1MI ONEAT ATUKTIC 4 PAOPIC HA COMPANY, MC. »TggrMwar YOUR CHOICE LI r THESE VALUABLE k COUPONS^ (Aeeran vwsrAMHHP, 3(111 DS CHIOMN WOOOU, ROW Oa gam cream op mushroom i ft CAW f *00 ■ a ax ■■ ■ SUNNYBROOK GRADE "A" SAVE 16c JANE PARKER LARGE EOS Apple Pie ; 39‘ omiy 39* ROUND SIRLOIN (Pull Cut) or Cuba 170® ftO® M Jr “• THE PONtkAC PRESS, MONDAY. APRIL ao, lftflg FOURTEEN Kroger Lowers Food Cost$....Gives Top Value Stamps Too Smoked HAM SO Extra VJ.lMVab* FEWER BOOKS PER GIFT WITH TOT VALUE STAMPS! BOSTON BUTT ROAST . 49* CHICKEN BREASTS as EXTRA STAMPS WITH COUPON WOW tiirac OR CENTER HAM . seen SLICED BACON... FLAVORFUl SUCIO Serve fn Save Bacon Buy one... get one FREE! 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SO* -rsz, 2 •OTN Foe u< ■ Oli .t Inot hi Pin 11 Mh KUL ImimB VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON *v imm Others helping are chalrmaR Mrs. Richard publicity; Square Dance Club Elects New Officers Wistful at the thought of leaving high gehool, but excited at the prospect of entering college next fall are those three high school seniors who will at- Huron Gardens Extension Club Elects Officers tend Sunday's annual Punkellenic tea. From left ere Sharon Stickle, Lowell Street; Suren Bronoel, Pioneer Drive; and Pally Myers, Chippewa Road. 1st Baptist Pastor to Address WqPU Rev. Robert Shelton, new paatar at the Flat Baptist Church, wfll speak before the Fowttee Unit, Women's Christian Temperance Union, May 22 Beaumont Service Unit to Meet Sbaron McRae Plans to Wed George Palcdan Glamorous Grooming foai for Highland Perk "NOSEY*' £***( a Eskimos Hospital ■2*2 school of warn urn * . a Ural Prmrtmg. ***** SHARON RUTH MeRAE THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 9Q, 1068 rirmax Members of Pontiac City Panhellenic Association ore lusty with loot-minute preparations for4 Sunday’s annual tea for prospective college girls and their mothers. Checking **Speaking of Sorqrityn pamphlets at a committee meeting are (from left) Mrs. George R. Yansen and hfrs. Robinson L. Bronoel, who or^ tea cochairmen, Mrs» Cecil H. Myers and Rosamond Hoeberle, incoming Panhellenic president. Panhellenic Unit Plans Set Tea for Coeds-to-Be Dell, Mrs. nomas Shearer, Mrs. Arthur Bentley, Mrs. AndrajDaWllde and Mrs. Charles Smith. Chairman of the clean-up committee is Mrs. W. H. Rage-dale, assisted by Mrs. Wayne Small Party at Home Is Better By the Emily Pest hwdtatr Q: A relative of mine, aged ■ 17, eloped three months ago. Her parents have Just found out fopt she la married and expecting a baby. They are making plus to give a recaption in a public fcaU. inviting gjtout MS people. A Mead is also planning to give a shower for for. I think, under the circumstances, the reception and ■bower an out at order end will.leave the family oped to criticism. Will you plrass give your opinion concerning this matter? At A 'Urge reeepfion would be In questionable taste, but there is no reason why the bride’s parents may not give a small reception at home in honor of their daughter's marriage and invite nfottvaa and ctoaeet friends. It will be best to dispense with a bridal show-«r; inter on, her friend Siva a stork shower Instead. * * • * Q: My husband and I were “■fried 20 yean when i divorced him. After living apart for two years, we realized our mistake and wen remarried. Next month we wilT have been “■fried 25 yean — that ja, counting the two years we were separated. I would like to know if, under the circumstances, it would be proper to have a party of some kind to celebrate me occasion, even (hough we did not actually live together for 25 years. A: It win be quit* proper to Ignore the two Unhappy yean you wen separated and celebrate the 25th anniversary of your original wedding day. Business Women’s Unit Makes Donation to Family Life Agency Pontiac Business and Pkt>> fessfonai Woman have made a contribution to one aspect at Family Service of Oakland County's program which is not they deal with subject matters concerned with family Ufa: such areas as uadamtandtac normal problems of childhood development; how to handle certain amecta of chfld be- the Business and Pwjpfoinl This U the Family Lite Education program of the agency, geared to help prevent families from having problems which become so serious that professional help of the casework staff is necessary. tag and (haling with the adolescent; problems of marital adjustment; and the "second forty years.” Family Life Edncation a bring in any Of their q under the areas dl They ataa'laaai bow of problems. ' 11m leader’s v * them to hatafee protfoma la a>r GROUP’S WORK Family life Education discussion sessions arc led by a Discussion groups have been formed within the community and the agency has provided the professions) leadership. The cost has been paid out of special fund*, from groups such as Ih money received from the Itustasm and Pftfoatisnal Women a! Pontiac will be used to give leadership' to a group that is unable to provide the Q: What an th* proper greetings to the bride mid groom at thrirwreddb* recep-ttanT Also, what is ona sap. * poaed to say to dm parents? A: Congratulate th a bridegroom and wish the bride hap-phmas. Make same polite remark to the parents, such as: "How lovely the hride is,” or "What a charming couple they make,’’ etc. r 31 Mrs. if. Anne Stapp, president of Pontiac Business and Professional Women's Club, endorses a contribution club members have donated to Family Service of Oakland County's family life Education program. Approving lookers-on are Robert Janes, director of FSOC, < and Mrs. Lao McDonald, BPW vice president. Womens Section Solemnize Hansen-Baker Rites To ‘Set* Tables "America the Beautiful" will be the theme tor an exhibit of table aetttofot and flower arrangements by some 1# imw. bera of foe Michigan Division. Woman's National Farm and Garden Association, Wednesday and Thursday at Wifofot Kay and Co., in downtown D*> n success, Wright Kay has pro-sated * 91.000 award to the Division for its Camp Kett Fund. Camp Kett is a 4-H Club training, center for youth lead- white candles and red srhI-uma will ha used for a "^tapflt of July Buffet’’ bring arranged by Mrs. Patterson and Mrs. h-grigg. A white antique Viennese lace doth with flag blue Concert Set for May 16 7 I Tim PONTIAC WI|Mt MONDAY, APRIL HO, lPfr SIXTEEN C. of C. Unit Spring Fete Is Plonned CAPITOL BEAUTY SHOP p w. Bmm oh. b«i*i FE 5-8912 O'*-.Am. mo Jtt. FIRST COMMUNION PCKBAir .Some ID members of the Michigan Junior Chamber of Commerce Auxiliary will attend the District 8 aprlng meeting this evening in. the Firat Federal Savinga and Keep alive a wonderful memory. As a service vie will open, on firat Communion Sunday by appointment Specialising Quality Portrait* . SAVE 30%-40% During Our ANCTJAL MAY Reupholstered.or .New Custom-Made Furniture You can be aure of fine quality and. superior workmanship at WRIGHT'S ... whether you're shopping for new Upholstered furniture—-Or with to have your old pieces rejuvenated! Phono today — we'd be glad .to bring fabric, samples to your home. No obligation. AH werkmoaaUp guaranteed 5 years» Honored guests will be state officers, Mrs. Donald Higdon, president; Mrs. Arthur Salley, recording secretary; Mrs. Phillip Avery, corresponding secretary; Mrs. John Adams and Mrs. Jinks Gary,' vice presidents of Districts 8 and 7, respectively. OPENING Lorraine Merkovftz, president at the Pontiac Auxiliary, the hostess group,. will welcome tbs assembly and Peg' gy*s Women’s Apparel, Mirada Milo Shopping Center, will provide fashlona for a style show. Auxiliary members who will modlsl an Mrs. Norman O’Brien, Mrs. Richard Jorgenson, Sirs, Cramer Partridge, Mrs. William Kennedy, Mrs. William Dean and Mrs. Rich^ ard Templeton. Mrs. Kay Rector (right) demon* land’s assistant director of continuing strates the use of a twin letter copier for education, at Saturday's sixht annual Margaret Mclnemey, certified profes- secretarial workshop, sponsored by sional secretory, and Janes P% Dicker- National Secretaries Association, Pan* son, Michigan State University Oak- tioak Chapter. r«s« nw rw Secretaries Attend Workshop HATS of DISTINCTION . . . smart styling for any occasion with • hat styled only for you; Match any an-, semble . . . remember, just a little material will do. Ve-DOR JS'SISKi miMtaSM'rf 2-4387 Furniture Makers and Upholsterers FE 4-0558 Diet? Eat Slowly (NEA) — Dieting? Eat slowly; chew food thoroughly. This will help to main that aching void seem full. Officers attending from the Pon-tioak Chapter were: Theresa McVeigh, president; Mary Johnson, vice president; Mrs. Laveme Mar-kelwitz, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Garland Woody, recording secretary; and Mrs. Cart Cronk-i right, treasurer. # ★ 0 ! Miss McVeigh extended a wd-' come to the group from the chapter along with Mrs. PrlsdUa Jack-1 son, institute coordinator, who i greeted guests on behalf of MSUO. Following the morning session, : James Dickerson, assistant di- hospital service, followed with a talk on “A Planning Program for Making the Secretary More Effective.” Secretaries and their guests visited office equipment displays and attended a luncheon where Mrs. Cronkright, 1981 Secretary of the Tuesday Night Is was Margaret Mclnemey, certified professional secretary, eduem- FREE LESSONS from an expert, along with the CHA-CHA-CHA. Be on hand at 9 P.M. for all the fun. v tion chairman Michigan division Michigan Bell Employe Honored at Retirement Ladies9 All Weather Coat Fully lined, hounds- « ramrtotoMM mittee included: Mary Johnson, reservations; Mrs. Cronkright, finance; Mrs. Russell Brackett, publicity; Mrs. Laveme Markelwitz and Mrs. Joseph Tessmer, decorations. Also serving were: Mrs. Warren Trevethan, Mrs. Michael Kerensky and Mrs. Thurle Higgle, exhibit*; and Mrs. Ernest Kyte Jr., Mrs. H. H. Young, Mary Hubbarth, Mrs. John Duncan, Mrs. Daniel Bennett and Mrs. Cleatu* Gamer, mailing. Over 300 friends and associates 1 were on hand at a retirement tea honoring Mrs. J. T. Engle for her 38-year-career with Michigan Bell Telephone Cb. The affair was given by the Traffic department in. the company lounge Thursday. The occasion was marked by a gift presentation from the traffic department by Mrs. Frank Bentley and a life membership certificate presented by MTa. William Sprel on behalf of the Telephone Pioneers of America. Harry Lee, traffic manager, gave a short sketch of Mrs. Engle’s telephone career, which Included work in Ann Arbor, Detroit and' Royal Oak. The last 10 years Mrs. Engle served in Pontiac aS a force BSBUMN-S OLD NHL TAVEBN style. Wear for rain i Waterford, Michigan Design Lies on Function DOCTORS, BUILDERS and INVESTORS MULTIPLE APARTMENT ZONED 10 acre baautiful location on Northwestern Highway, Extension on 12 Mile Road and Orchard Lake Road—fARMINCTON. Homes for Elderly—Convalescent Canter Planned. 10 minutes to Northland Center— 10 minutes to Pontiac, Michigan, next to Kandshwod Shopping Center. Plans Ready for FHA or Conventional Wants Participation, Call Owner . . . JOHN F. MURPHY—PHONE: GReenleof 4-S81I Throw away your tension pills and boy s LUXURY ROCKER America’s finest — available in three sizes to assure a perfect fit. We bring you this wonderful opportunity for great savings! A variety of styles < <. dressy, tailored, Casual. Not ail sizes in ail styles. You're stiri to find some outstanding values. COAST TO COAST TO BIRMINGHAM Tujuhette. Extension Unit Names Officers for Coming Year GRAND OPENING SPECIAL CHARTER MEMBERSHIP PER WEEK FIRST 70 MEMBERS (as a count designed for you) THE FAMOUS FIGURETTE GUARANTEE NATURALIZES SHOES MG. to *15.99 1 YEAR FREE If W« fall to get the following mails hi 6# dint OVERWEIGHT TJ^IUCE* Lose IS Brands Adi t inches to *1 toeh«e off Bast - Improve hips and waist - pa ware aad re-Tnke one inch proportion body •If ankles. ■essnmnenti. The nttdon9$top executives •. < In Government and Industry are heeding medical authorities' advise. They are moving the rocker . into their offices as well as their home to relieve tension and aid relaxation. American Girl Shoes cR,wasagimL Presbyterian Unit Meets for Lunch The Women's Gelid of Oakland High and Mid Heels. Wedgies and Flats. Discontinued Stylesl Regular to $9.99 More Quality Furniture f or Your Money 144 OAKLAND AYR. Dsyss M as eiafUmt and attracthrs in a bathing snhf Na? Stay atom ’.and baap trim ai FIGURETTE! Completely Air Conditioned “Const to toast” Hours 9 to 9—Sol. 9 to 5 - For From Trial Call I E TgB PONTIAC PfcBSA MONDAY, APRIL 80, 1062 Nine Pounds Off MID AFTERNOON, Glass of tomato Jute* DINNER On# piece of lean meat, steak or roast (five or six ounces) One-haU cup squash (yellow preferable) One-half cup string beans One glass skimmed milk, one apple Newcomers Plan Closing May Fete Newcomers Club announced plans for its dosing dinner in May during the recent meeting Further steps will be taken at the next meeting May I at the home of Mis. Michael Presby, Sleepy Hollow Drive. Bouquets of daffodils were held |hy Cam! Anne Carr, maid ol honor •and Mrs. Hoy Fanner, bridesmaid .'who wore apricot nylon sheer If you would like to have my complete 9-day diet In a small booklet, sand M cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request to Joeephine Lawman in care of The Pontiac Press. » Valentine-Harrell Vows St Michigan Mats University. Mrs. Kinder chose a royal blue taffeta sheath dress for the wedding. The mother of the bridegroom appeared in a two-piece dress of soft green silk «h»nhmg interlochen ' Adds More Woodwinds INTERLOCHEN - A resident woodwind quintet composed of well known concert performers la thg lates| addition to the permanent faculty of the new Interlochen Arts Academy, according to Dr! Joseph E. Maddy, president of the academy. • ‘ The quintet includes Ramona Dahlborg, flutist; Don T. Jaeger, oboist; Fred E. Ormand, clarinetist; Donald Wayne Haddad, horn-1st, and .Melinda Dailey, bassoon- _____________tt llU Ask About I ZOTOZ Qmwi SOCIETY GIRL ______________ Permanent Wave "Stays right” even after constant comb. ftAQg tag and brushing yet never kwes its soft-to-the-touch look and feel W . Including Haitcut, Shampoo, Style Set * Miss Dahlborg is a. graduate of (he JuIUard School of Music, and has been an instructor at both JulUanl and Stephens College in Columbia, Mo. She her performed With thq Yale University Symphony and has given ngdtals hi Town ^all and Carnegie Hall in The new Mrs. Valentina is a Junior at Michigan State University where her husband received his degree. He fc affiliated with Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity. With Miss Dahlborg they wiU continue doing concert performance* aa the Interlochen Woodwind Quintet in addition to teaching at the arts academy. Dr. Maddy filled, he. added. Heading the academy’s science department will be a British scientist, John Charles Rung#, graduate of Trinity College, Oxford, England and exchange teacher of science at Phil-lips Barter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire. The academy, which opens next September, is a specialized school for gifted students of high school age.' If will offer a full collie Helena Rubinstein 5 Color-Tone Shampoos ADOS COUM NOUGHTS AS IT Ct£ANS Th# white restaurant with the orange roof on U.S.-10 at Drayieh Plains ntar Loon Lake ia'IMSous all ovar this area for . HOWARD,, Jonmonj 148 N, Saginaw -- FE 4-1549 VI RECEIVING BLANKETS FITTED CRIB SHEETS Reg. 129 99* HOODED TOWEL SET SAKE! DAINTY SHAWL #498 Young Fotk* Shop- SALE! TOPPER SET Reg.3J9 *2.98 Drip dry/ plastic lined. Girl or bay style. Solids, stripes • or printed pastels. Small, Med., Large and Extra Large. SEVENTMOf 90 48 N. Saginaw BABY WEEK Mothgr, Aunt or Grandma, you can bast express your lovo with a gift from Arthur1! for tho baby. Tako advantage of tho big savings on thoso easy care baby things. Buy now and SAVE1 SALE! Hand Knit SWEATER SET 498 $308 better maker raincoats reg. 14.98 to 17.9$ Ijp You're beautiful in the'rain (and just as pretty when the sun Is shining), See our wonderful collection of fall-weather coats at this special price. Colorful prints, cotton poplins^ , chic Chesterfields, tackle Jwill, pretty / print linings, Slim button-ups, gentle flares, new collars. All wonderful buys,- all sizes for juniors, misses, junior petites. /'[ifj;.* Coat Sol»n-iSecond Floor ( N ID member* racaiva axcluiiv* MIRACLE MILE CAREER GIRL SALON btnItK Then SPECIALS at oar : Miracle Mile Salon Only Our Phone at Our PONTIAC MALL CONTINENTAL SALON EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC glLftSS MONDAYt APRIL 80, iy<*2 Broun Error Still Major Problem Complex Air Traffic Control Problem Being Solved (gdUoTs Mote — There have been four fatal collisions involving commercial airliners since ItU. On March 21, there was almost a fifth. The following dispatch discusses the weaknesses and strengths of the present traffic control system.) WASHINGTON — Q. What deficiencies did the March 21 incident dtoctaaef A. No wrakncme. that were, not already known to eklat. R at endued largely from human er-fkr, and tke human error stemmed largely , from the preo-mtren generated by an antiquated ayatem of keeping track of traf- Q. What |a being done to reduce ie strains and stresses of a controller's job? A. First, Improved training at the Federal Aviation Agency’s Air Training Center la Oklahoma City. Second, FAA Is conducting medical research designed to pinpoint specific pressures and fie. Q. Why in this year of 1962 and this age af electronic marvels shook! there be anything antiquated about controlling air traffic? A. The entire Air Traffic Control (ATC) system Is not antiquated. But one of Its major segments has not changed since IMS. Namely, 'controllers record flight information on stripe of payer that are placed In racks and moved up or down la accordance with altitude changes. Each atrip contains the name of the aMtoe, flight number and cur The controller responsible for the near-tragedy over Washington was handling eight such' strips simultaneously and forgot to mark one of than with a revised altitude. The obvious need is a device that will keep track of flights electronically so controllers can concentrate on fewer planes and fewer problems. Such a device is being developed. Third, the agency is rapidly adding modernised control to traffic centers with better and more efficient working conditions. Fourth, FAA is trying to obtain funds that would let controllers retire after 20 years service. Fifth, controllers are being allowed longer and more frequent rest periods.' Q. Is controller training adequate tor the increasing demands? A. The Oklahoma CHy facility la regarded as one of the world’s finest. Many foreign countries sent their own ATC personnel there. A good Indication of its thoroughness b the feet that M per cent of the trainees flunk before they even get into a control center. Q. How come the federal government has spent mill ions of dollars 1956 and we’re still having near collisions? , .* A. FAA officials themselves admit that research for the past few yean has been overconcentrated on an extremely complicated ATC system that still Is years away from achievement. There has been toe little done to the-way of Immediate, Interim Improvements. Also, it has been difficult to attract top electronics personnel from private industry Into paying jobs. The chief weakness to FAA’s research porgram has lack of top-notch manage- ment personnel to give the gram some hard-fisted direction anddecUon. ‘ Q. Do yoq mean there has been no progress since the 1966 collision over Grand Canyon? A. Not as much as there should have beaa but actually more than the -"alters of doom" would have you believe. Vast Improvement* have been made bCoontroffing ea route traffic, particularly at high altttndeo Involving the jets. There Is much better coordination 'between military add civil ATC. Use of radar has been expanded in fantastic proportions. The FAA has streamlined ATC by reducing the number of controlling centers from 29 to 21, which means there are fewer ‘‘hand-offs’' from one jurisdiction to another that it is a significant safety advance. The chief bottleneck still involves traffic near airports themselves, when congestion mounts. Q. What is the chief' reason for near-collisions? A. Basically, the trouble lies to the nixing of traffic flying under visual rules and traffic The latter planes are monitored, controlled and separated by ATC. The former are not, and the majority of potential And 'actual collisions involve at least ene aircraft not operating under ATC guidance. One point to remember is that just keeping airliners apart is fairly simple; most of thh headaches involve the for greater numbers of private, business and military .aircraft. ' Q. When frill wf get significant improvements? been a KAZAR says. “Ladies A. FAA Administrates Majeeb K. Halaby dace net expect major reductions to lira r nolfolau Incidents much earitar than three years. There will be constant improvements wfthin that time but Hala-by’s three-year estimate is really drastic development*— as semiautomation. Q. Then shouldn't ! leal squeam-ih about flying wound to a sky ^iparentiy loaded' with potential disaster? A. There to no me- hiding the fact that ncar-coIRstom occur too frequently. Bat the tact -that they are only “near-eolifolaas'’ points to some underrated safeguards In the ATC system. Q. What major anticollision tool to next in sight? A. The FAA’s most ti—tdtsfo gaol U an aatematte altitude reporting device, which wM be part of the present “transponders” already to me on jets. The “transponder" flashes to a radar station a {dam's exact position. Scientists are working on a refinement that would odd attitude information to transponder communications. Hie altitude reports would' ap- Probe of Rate Hike by Gas Co. Ordered LANSING <11 — A hearing and an investigation were ordered by the state public service commission yesterday on rate increases put into effect last tall by Michigan Gas Utilities Oo. Or. * a commission ordered the company to show cause at a hearing here June 18 why its rates should not be reduced or revised. . ★ it . a A petition by the city at Monroe toe a rehearing of the commission’s order granting the increase was denied, since it was filed six months after the new rates took effect. Planes get on potential collision pear automatically on the raidar courses daily. But while ATC cannot always prevent two aircraft from staffing on such' a course, it does act soon enough to keep the incident from becoming an seek next to tile plane's image. Achievement of this major advance should coma well wiftlp the three ymtt estimated for overall revisions to ATC. JUST OFF TIE PRESS! ,1962 Grtat Lakti and St. Lawrence Seaway CraisM Get your few copy Miy from your LOCAL TRAWL AO CUT GEORGIAN MY LINE Fwt d Wwewart DttraN 21, MM. 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MITCHELL CLEANERS & SHIRT LAUNDRY 2267 Orchard Ufa Rd., W. Bloomfiald Twp. ff 8-9671 SYLVAN CLEANERS 869 Orchard Laka Avanua FE 4-9881 during the period of our MANAGER’S SPECIAL” To introduce you to our CAREER GIRL SALON at MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER ,... and to acquaint you with my talented itaff... ..Miss JANICE .. Mr. LEO ..Miss JUDY ..Mr. GARY THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTiAC, MICHIGAN, NINETEEN MONDAY, APRIL SO. 1063 Benga Is Cross Plate 51 Times in Five Games Phil Regqn Needs Help From Aguirre to'Score 13-6 Victory Over LA Dodgers Never Dizzier Than Meta and Phillies Shades of Brooklyn! gtuart’s homer was-,the only run in the second. THREE HITTER Ed Bailey'! home run and three San Francisco double plays supported Pierce’* three-hitter against the Cubs,, while Willie Mays crashed hi* sixth homer of the season with a man on base. Sanford hit Ren Hubbs tat the left ear - with a fast ball in the first inning and Hiibbs was carried from the field on a stretcher. Later, he was reported to have no aerlous Injury.' Reds and gave unbeaten Bob Pvrkey hit. fourth victory. The Cardinal Idas, and the sweeps fay Pittsburgh and San Francisco, dropped St. Louis from first to* third. Pittsburgh took over first on the pitching of Bob Friend and. At McBean. Friend threw a four* hitter at the Dodgers in the first and McBean shut them out on seven hits in the second. Rookie Howie Goss’ firqj^major league homer brought the Pirates from behind in the opener, and Dick DETROIT lit—Bob Shelling said it cduMn’t be done. His Detroit Tigers are trying to do it anyway. "Hall, we're making more ran than last year.” laughed the manager after the Tigers romped over the Los Angeles Angels 134 yesterday. "I didn’t think it was possible." That was the fourth liming of1 the New York Mets’ first game ; with Philadelphia Sunday. New1 York got seven runs on four hits, 1 two hit batters, a wild pitch, twg j errors, stolen, base, a sacrifice fly and some' incredible Philadelphia play afield. It put the Mets off and winging' to an 8-0 triumph that extended their winning string to dub record proportions—two. The streak was halted in the nightcap when the Phillies bombed Oaaey’s boys 10-2. QUIET GAME In a more sober affair at St. Louis, $tan Musial went 5-for4 with two homers as St. Louis split with Cincinnati, the Cards taking the first 16-3, the Reds the second 43, In San Francisco, Jack Sanford and BUly Pierce had three-hit shutouts as the Giants swept two from Chicago, 7-0 and 6-0. In Los Angeles, Pittsburgh regained the top spot with a sweep against the Dodgers, 6-1 and 1-0, In Houston, Roman Mejias’ ninth inning City and Los Angeles, neither widowed with overpowering pitching. MARBLES CHAMPS — Archie Powell, B, of McConnell School, accepts a trophy from Richard Fitzgerald of The Pori-tian Press tor winning the IMS city marbles championship. PhiUip Mendoza, 11, of Malkin school was runnerup. Powell defeated Mendoza in the finals Saturday morning at Oakland dsion over Milwaukee. The Mets’ fourth kmine^as as weird as Frankenstein iad complicated as a ftuatait novel. It featured, among other things, the, Meta putting two runner* on third at the same tifae. AH hands were safe and a run scored when the PhilBe catcher tagged the wrong maA and another player eventually threw the ball away. MOT IN BROOKLYN „ And there was Frank Thomas, who was hit fay a pitched, ball a four-run rally by Minnesota in the eighth inning to break up a 4-4 tie with Cleveland in the opener. Tuttle had three hits, in the second game including a homer. and one by Bob dchipidt. Early Wynn, 43-yearedd White Sox right-hander, pitched a three-hitter in'the nightcap for a -Chicago sweep of the four game series with Boston. It was Wynn’s Bret triumph since U«t July and the 293rd ei his career. Hershberger, whose home run won the aaaner for. right-hander Johnny Buzhardt, drove in two runs in the nightcap with a bases-loaded ager Gate Mauch refused to come out of the dugout when beckoned by the umpires. •—U- —— A* --— .4lu JLM*>ia Unil Baltimore ecbrndf six runs in the seventh to overcome a 3-2 Kansas City fond. Jhtts Snyder opened, the inning rift ’a pinch homer. Jim Gentifo also homered in the in- When it was over, the Mets had seven runs and rookie AlJeckson. who spaced tight hits, had Ida first victory. Home runs by Tony Gonzalez, Don Dimeter and Wes CtfHngton featured' the angered Phils 14 kit attack off four New York pitchers in.the second game. Bobby Wang, who allowed only one hit over 43-3 innings, got the victory in relief. Vaida Pinson and Gordy .Coleman of the Reds and Mridal locked home rum in each game at St. Louis. MinlaTs Mg day boosted Ms average to 396. Ken Boyer drove In Use rum and Cart Flood had four hits in support of Larry Jackson’s six-hit pitching loped by the National League, the mgjori had A .grand total of 49, Just one stay of the record eet by the two leagues on May 30, 1966. The American League mark of 37 Wat set on May 28, B61. MARIS CONNECTS Three home runs—By Roger Maris, Ctetis Bayer and Bill Skbw-ron—helped the New York Yankees sweep a doubleheader from Washington 34 and 114, and boosted them into first place, u Ball game in front of CMcefo as Cleveland lost ttkgrip omfhe lead. The White Soxritt/oniy one homer in their 3d^ud 5-1 twin bill sweep overAoston’e Red Sox but that hornnr, by rookie Mike Hershberger accounted for the Winnimrfun in the opener. CHICAGO (AP) - Early Winn DETROIT, (AP) — The Detroit Tigers need pitchfog help and they need ft immediately. And vice president JUcfc/nr-re 11, in charge of dealing; and wheeling for the says: “I’ve talked trade with every slightly bettor than that of John Buzhardt, who set down the Red Sox on four hits for a 3-1 triumph in which rookie Mike Hershberger hit his first major league home run to break a 1-1 tie in the Mickey Wright and lessen Play for Title Today AUGUST!*, Ge. (AP) - They didn't exactly burn up the course, in fact they shot their worst rounds, but defending champion Mickey Wright aftt persistent challenger Roth Jeans stil were around today 'ftfo the first playoff in the 23-ysar history of the women's Titleholders Golf Tournament. •. * * Both posted uninspired 77s Sunday in the final round and finished with 734wie totals of 39ft Miss Wright, who won last year with a 299 total, had to sink a 10-foot putt on the difficult 18th green at Augusta Country Club to stay view,’’ said Wyutto a host of reporters, ‘Tnv«tre gled to fteve you beck.”. Wynn hadjust set down the Boston Rea Sox with a snappy three-hit, 8-1, performance, his first victory since last July 17. Five days later Wynn called it quits for the 1961 season because of arm trou- /Minnesota, held homeriess in Its 8-4 filet game victory Over Cleveland, went on a six-homer binge, two IJy Johnny Gory!, to grab oft the second game, too, 7-8. tm twin defeats dropped the Indians from first to third, a game behind sa!ffis„_aw2L._______l Mile Record Set. by Oxford Thinclad fat the running for the $2,380 pot the girls will divide after an 18-hole playoff. The winner will pocket $1,400 and toe loser $1,100. Barbara Romack made a strong comeback after a 19 Saturday, but Marilyn Smith, with 75 for 300. j Japanese Boxer Wins j Orient Title in Upset < TOKYO (AP>—TVtrio Kosaks of' Japan staged A stunning upset] today, dutaluggiag champion Flash j Moss Showing Signs of Knowing Family LONDON (AP) - Ante TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 10, flPif AHOY BOATERS! Sn (It forOur New 3 In 1 Outboard Motor and Boat Policy, Offering • "All Risk" Physical Dam* age Protection for your boat, motor, trailer and miscellaneous boating • Bodily Injury and Property Damage Liability. • Iledlcal Expense Coverage for you, your family -and your guests. FRANK A. ANDERSON MB® IQ44 K»LYN m PONTIAC. MICH. I'M' Nine Wins Pair toilGain Lead Share By (he Associated Frees I Mitogen, defending Big Ten | baseball champion,, climbed 'iiito a first place' tie with Illinois by sweeping a doubleheader irom Minnesota Saturday. •' «r * The Wolverines aoored S3 and 3-3 victories over Minnesota while Illinois defeated Indiana 3-1 and then saw its five-game winning streak end as the Hoosjpts copped the second game of a doubleheader, 3-3. Ohio Mate climbed within one game of the feeders by taking a pair tram Purdue, 14 aai S t. Wisconsin defeated . Northwestern, M and S t, while Iowa and Michigan State split with the Hawkeyes winning, IS-1S and Michigan coming back for a 7 5 wla la the nightcap. None of the contending teams will meet this weekend. Friday's games find Illinois at Wisconsin, Iowa at Indiana, Michigan at Michigan State, Mlnm Ohio State and' Purdue at Northwestern. Doubleheaders Saturday have Illinois at Northwestern, Iowa at Ohio State, Michigan State Michigan, Minnesota at Indi and Purdue at Wisconsin. ERRORS HURT Ron Johnson limited Indiana to turn bits to the second game of thetr doubleheader but four errors and a wild pitch by Johnson led to Illinois’ defeat. Doug Mills twirled a four-hit victory for Illinois In the first game. Michigan took advantage of ib tory sad Men made it a sweep SEE tha NEW Wid« Track Pontiac HAUPT SALES AND SERVICE MA 5-5544 ROCHESTER throe-run homer la the fourth Inning of the nightcap. Ohio State received shutout pitching from Dave Stazenski in the opener but the Buckeyes had to score three runs in the eighth inning of the second game to vanquish' the Boilermakers and remain one game off the pace., Michigan and Illinois have 51 records and Ohio State la 4-2. Wisconsin (33) pulled into a fourth place tie with Indiana on its one-run triumphs*' over Northwestern. MSU SPLITS ' Wisconsin scored three runs In the fourth Inning of the opener and then captured the nightcap when Russ Williams hit a sacrifice fly in the final inning to chase home the winning run.' Iowa scored five runs in the first inning on Bob Sherman’s three-run homer and a two-run triple by Howie Kennedy but the Hawkeyes had to come bade with six In the eighth* to win the first game. Michigan State took advantage of fivo'-Iowa errors to win the nightcap in which Dick Sutton tripled home the winning run in the seventh and then ranped .home on a sacrifice fly for an insurance tally. Ef* ■ sta&j fist Arnold Palmer slammed a 7-iroiP Springs. He tied for the Masters with a birdie barrage on toe final holes and then canoe from behind “Bud” NICHOLIE calling— Taka the financial risk out of boating, intura against firm, theft, damage and accident. GET ALL THE FACTS! 'BLd'NPCU (Complete Insur Insurance Protection 49 Mt. Clemens Street FE 3-7850 Cranes Suffer Double Setback in Loop Debut Cranbrook’s spring sports debut in the Interstate League Saturday The Qinsa-loat to Cleveland University School 8-3 in baseball and 4-1 In tennis. cut routed Oran brook starter John BOfesdoa witha ftve run sixth laatag. A triple, hit batter, walk, two wild throws and a Cranbrook collected only four hits, including a solo homer by Billesdon in the second inning. John Harada won Ms stogies match, 43, 6-2, for Cranbrook s BIG IN TEXAS — Arnold Palmer, who put on one of his great finishes Sunday to win the Texas Open for the third time to a raw, is surrounded by enthusiastic youngsters seeking tf IMSIN his autograph. Palmer birdied three of the four closing holes foe a 4-under par 67 that gave him a 373 tor t$e 72 holes. •t.iW’ Ml l»T‘ Arnie Birdies 3 of Last 4 Holes for Title Patented Palmer Finish Wins Texas Open Hr aBffSk *«a mSsms 9 1 F ill f- 1 iTTl SAN ANTONIO. Tex. 1 4*4100 Open Doily ond Set. t A. M. to 5 7. M. Badger Driver 1st m 200-Lap Battle INDIANAPOLIS Ob-Norm Nelson. Racine, Wto., took the toad on the lMth tap and'stayed ahead yesterday to pick up 31.000 to a 200-lap stock car met viewed by 8,000 fans at Indianapolis Raceway Park. Nelson, driving a W Ford, took over when leader Len Sutton. Portland, Ore., blew a on Ms 1961 Pontiac. the Spartans’ captain-elect burst through enemy lines with bonecrushing force to lead the green team to a 334 win over the whites in a Saturday scrimmage undyf game conditions. Saimes scored three of the give his team a 27-0 halftime feed. Party Amman added the fifth ttaehdowe ot a 16-yard ran following a pass toteroep-(ton. Bari latttawr also aoored. Dan Underwood, a right end, was the game’s only casualty. He braised his right shoulder but to expected to play in the Old Timers game, May 12. / * . ♦ ' # The blues, composed chiefly of varsity placers, defeated white* 304 Saturday in fito University of Michigan’s second «.u jor scrimmage of spring football M 141 | Practice. forced him oat of Ora feature. Every drop of whisky in Sir John is 10 \feors or more old, blended with ^the choicest grain neutral spirits. it. n nor. to* ism whom man Mutatr mtum co.ir.t loose,’’ white tbo defense Mowed DISCOUNTS HERE! ILL BRASS REW TIBESI TX’ aAR First Quality #AII Tyrol or Nylon gMgsa a m hack 7,18 670x15 w 9.8, 710x15 iua net me WHfrt 10.88 12,88 760x15 750x14 10.81 n»aiss aj white «*»ei 000x14 •lack 1X88 ruteUSS .. M white ie.ee NO RECAItaAtU TIM NEEDED! YOU PAY ORLY ADVERTISED PRICES AT UHTOO T1RI AM now posooagot car tiros oes priced ptoo Fodaral Taa rndsM tiro off yasr oor. Advertised prices wo the ararimm you pay lor now tiro* ot Unhod. VISIT UMTEB TWt TODAY ... ANO 3AVT FAIR I For This Salt Open Mon., Thurs., OWN PART 8-d-Ct06B> 5UNPAT UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. Finishing behind Nelaon, in order, were Don White, Keokuk, Iowa, 1963 Ford; Sutton; Rodger Ward, Indianapolis, 1961 Pontiac, and Mitt Curcto, 1961 Ford,. 'A. J. Fbyt, Houston, Tex., the' 1961 Indianapolis 500-mile winner, signal-caller, set was riding in second place when touchdown with Pontiac' blew a fire and end John Yana, crashed against the outside wall * past the halfway mark. Foyt was • All other aeons were accom-not hurt. plirited by runs from tnskte the Quarterback Dave Glinka pttebed 35-yard scoring paaa to captain Bob Brown, and Bob Timber-lake, a potential sophomore file second jor League Boxes nvvsw*. mm: l I p. sj aEi jj!| l| at*, li j &£A\ffi3As ■W..rrnrj|MBl. SbSSiS m-arnmlm. nti| € |Vwsq ajfi [ i 771 Kr„”, Hi fit Iff Hi iff S'm «sa rhr%\ - - .ijauS* 4 t a a uitMrjp mvi if* f if if flfl.; «»»« * HUlrr • Pitres L nv mi b Whits mrj ■ iBSsrj.* PO-A-Chlesto HU. San Ptssrises rr-u. dp—Pltros, ramp snS Cspeds; Kodgsrs. UcKnlgbt and Bank,; Pacaa, Hillsr andCepsdai Santo art VtSt* Tstab *1418 v iutri r a HUIar and Capada; Santo art ■ ! I gg*»«*• •*> jkxowui. audoL ’T—i-.rr. Cleveland Pair 1st at Milford, StatD Woman's Moot Ends; One Now Leader at Michigan Men's A Cleveland duo to champion of the-1962 Milford Doubles at Fairgrounds, the Michigan State Women’s tourney is ov*r for another year and the Mlchlgai event has a new leader in. all events. - Dick Gonder and Joe rolled 1,457 several weeks ago and the score held up throogh yesterday's finish. Jim Copley Jrv and 25-yard pan to Phil Syzak of Dearborn wound up ... 2nd at 1,417. Harold Bauman Of uSSuT i Royal Oak and Ferndale’s Don Zhruner teamed for 1,411 for 3rd, Bob Garrett and Joe Sawyer, Pontiac, 1,406 and Ralph Beematt and GUARANTEED i NEW TREADS 6.70x15 7.50x14 TlMCwTUSEUSS PWl Tax andRatraadabl, Cosing. Blackwell Only. BUY NOW Use Year Cradlt PAY IATER GUARANTEED USED TIRES $3» NEW TIRES IfM Sixes Alee Nave Lory Selection of Haw Trends for AN Foreign end Compact Cora AU. SERVICE GUARANTIED MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER FI 3-7845 121 8. MoMcebn St. Ff 3-7846 „ . AeVXLAND ’’ .„. •Iffies.*. |]i1 £*" IHISSi 7 llli mw*m Wxi* mu**-. Jmjritit7BWs^^ ^[^LySSipfe ******* SScAOO --- abrhM SlhM ante ib lit * uses at 4181 % | w« 4 * ihiws; till u iHt ■Jo nis or i»s»w,5r^A>>rt«i» w* Cunnlnsbun: Schmui*. JUSSHf »»• ■' MwE^SfsSo a.«» Hi! ITT \ Harry Qagei of Milford Pgh game of tea tournament was a 264 pasted early to ptay by Detroiter dee Stenett. Edmond Oldsmobile of Detroit won handicap honors with 3,617 and numerup Process MokL War-mi, toed high actual of 3417 at fe women’s battle to Muskegon. Marie Enkine-Bfaiy Kennelly of Hatdock’wte handtoep doubles at L2BL Detroit start Elvira Toepfer and Anita Cantaline ted in actual to L177. Marion Ladewig of Grand Rapids won stages and actual with 651 and 1,878. James W al barn of Greenville tobk singles handicap with 138. Joyce Roemlto, Detroit, won all ‘ " l L929. John Grabeta fit Monroe find 2,131 t* go ahead to i petition at Kalamaaoo. _ State Ladias Throats at Pro Keg Tourney NORWALK, CaBf. (UPD-Two Grand Rapids, Mich., women, including perennial champion M». Marion Ladewig. were within striking distance of the lead today in the Women's Profesatonal Bowling Association tourney here. Patty McBridge had 1,653 and Mrs. Ladewig had lM as the 16-game, two-day 37,100 tourney reached the halfway mark. The leaders eons Ruby Chong. Oakland, Chill., and Carol She* fin, Buttslo, N.Y, tied at IM pin*. Shirley Pointer of Pontiac, Mlcto, is taking part SALESMEN! . If you traroi sH dsy and .era looking for the perfect spot to rari your weary boras . . LOOK NO FURTHER! Psiliss Lake RsM $5* PH 2 Mifes West of Airport 1 ------- * imiiiiiiiliiiimiiiiiiiMF I 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 80, 1902 Wolverine MUers Win Drake Event Had Penn Relays Muscle It DaveTotk Clears 16-2 in Coast Relays PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The comparison of times and distances between the annual Drake and Penn track and field meets this year results in two. definite conclusions: Drake had the speed and Pem the muscle. A check of summaries from both meets in fills annual figure filbert field day shows Drake competitors bettered their Penn counterparts, 11 to 7. Ten ■ of Drake’s superior performances were in the running events, while six of Penn's toppers were in field events. Taking the track. events first, Florida A&M's sophomore sensation, Bob Hayes, turned in a 9.S DOUBLE WINNER la the only ether comparative individual competition, Ray Cunningham of Texas was clocked in :13.9 at Drake for the 120-yard high hurdles, while Penn’s, only double winner, Russ Rogers of Maryland State leaped and ran the same distance in :112. Penn runners bettered Drake figures in only one of the relay races, the 880, in which Villa-nova’s quartet of Pat Nicastro, Paul Drayton, Bob Raemore and Frank Budd, negotiated the distance in 1:3$, as against 1:29.3 at Drake for Florida AAM. Cffort Top* All Known Marts and Recognition Is Expected WALNUT, Calif. (ApAa world record of 18 feet, 2 inches in the pole vault was on its way toward fffidal recognition today and the owner, Marine Lt. Dave Torit, lea an even loftier target. • "i hope to Mt IT feet.” the 27-yearoid leatherneck from Camp Pendleton declared. 1 Relatively unknown until recent-in track and field circles, the slender 8-foot Marine eclipsed ail official and unofficial marks in the annual Mt. San Antonio Relays two days ago. TOP PERFORMANCES In the other relays: Florida AAM, with Hayes the anchor '‘man, cut out a 40.8 in qualifying for the 44Mtna); Texas Southern ripped off a 3:11.4 in a mile relay qualifying event, Kansas took the 2-mile la 7:35, and the 4-mile in 18:57, Missouri the sprint medley in 3:11.2, Southern Illinois the distance medley In 9:508, and Nebraska the 480-yard shuttle hurdiee in 58.8- Billy Joe Evens Score With Hobart Manley by Posting 7-6 Win PINEHURST, N.C. (AP) — A few years ago when the Carolina* Golf Writers Association honored Tar Had Billy Jot Patton fay presenting him their Carolina* Golfer Of The Year award, be accepted it conditionally. . At the time Patton hadn’t created much of a stir in golfing circles since his one-stroke miss behind Ben Hogan and Sam Snead In file 1954 Masters and victory Colavlto -"|BAOT DftoO avoids the tag of Los Angeles catcher Bob Rodgers as he readies for the plate while umpire Ed Hurley makes the call. Colavito came home from first on Steve Boros’ double to center and when Rodgers made a throwing error to a vacant Pttehfrs mound. Born also scored in the third faming. Hie Tigers won the game, 134. ^ _ In the same events at Pem, Abilene Christian's winning 440 was clocked in 41.6, NYU’s mile relay combine in 3:12.9, Michigan’s 2-mile quartet in 7:37.8 and its 4-mile team In 17:13.5; NYU’S sprint medley winners in 3:253, VUlanova’s distance medley Californians Setting Brisk Pace in WIBC PHOENIX, Aria, ifl - California bonders are setting a bride pace as file Women's International Bowling Congress national tournament begins operation catch-up Joins Ridan as Kentucky Derby Favorite Two-time Olympic champion A1 Oerter threw the discus 198 feet LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)-Own-ers and trainers with 3-year-olds eligible for Saturday’s' Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs apparently don’t year* easily—even in fans of reesnt eye-popping performances by Sir Gaylord and tournament that same spring. But he promised the writers that he’d win something again to merit their high rating. TUNNING STREAK The 40-year-old lumberman from Morgan ton has backed up hia promise. He won the Carolina* Amateur last summer aad followed up by winning the Southern Amateur- last Saturday he won Ms second North end South with a 7 and S trouncing of Hobart Manley of The tournament doesn’t end until May 16, but most of the game's big guns already have bowled, and some of the current leaders are going to be hard to catch. ' The top five in each event: Sir Gaylord the 7-5 choice with Ridan held at 2-L 30 bofaes. He raced to a five-hole lead at the turn and led by six before three-putting on IS. Although he missed three putts of four feet or less during the Wins Not Tourney ij CORPUS Ctifcisri. Tex. (AP)-Antonio Paiafox crushed lanky Frank FroeNfa* 84, 8-4 to win No Box Seats Available as Usual in Derby Stands LOUISVILLE, Ky, CAP)—'You The track sets aside about 25 SSvtaJS*** "HormRnetFB IkW nmch yemr. to 10 J*WT than — tt. im— *•— iuwl sssat toni*. mnuv mu-am to—jmtoTTto Stott «—to There are amp trees — three delightfully droopy weeping willows, one flowering peeefa In toD pink blossom, two flowering crab-apples that have gone crazy with their blooming ability, end our brand-new pride and jay, a weeping flowering Japanese cherry aa dramatic, in its little crooked pink way, as Fujiyama. MoroCoafortWearing FALSE TEETH uSTjU^SRST rAgrmrns! si atoms— Pina— —tuuitod on •va). Data jwt wur. otn—a “pi*u odor jxeath". Oat FASTBBTH today to Sroa —t •vtrfwbtea. 1t h h. Add to this a fountain, honeysuckles, rosea, geraniums, petunias, azaleas and ivy — a 45-hy 25-foot garden that no suburban gardener I now would bather to plant. In the suburbs, gardening is so easy that it loses some of its appeal; to New Yprk CSty it’s nidi a great and costly challenge — Tend Patio Garden With Love ham are concrete, and everything must be coddled constantly grow in wooden tube — that a family's garden cornea first =All Permanents COMPLETE WITH CUT AND SET ■y NONE HIGHER Export licensed operators t^give you on easy-to* (nonage hair cut, long lasting permanent and becoming hairstyle. No Appointment necessary, permanent complete in two hours. HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SHOP I 71 N. Seginew Over Bosley Mkt. 313-9660 CHICAGO (UPI) — The Interstate Commerce Commission brought Ms mobile hearing on proposed creation of the world’s longest railroad to the nation's rail center today. oHm commission prepared hear more arguments lor and against, the proposed merger of the Great Northern;' Northern Pacific; Burlington; and Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railroad. lent that Is exactly tbs reverse of the become cemndary aa the family with ttw ranted plot of potential beauty goea about' the work of But to M worth Mr Ah me, yea. i the city family has a prob- next door singing to the bath. Into room fBtofl a neighbor's dtosntot music, nad to above an! kotow come the SM of other people’s totovWm I nodes warns la New York City's awnaBad modern lgxnryg apartment Thus, the patio to the gatattr ‘ Oil the city patio, yon hoar the bum p| Da Mg city’s activity — and that to a wdtarns sound become M to a reminder tbat business to good, and at long asm to good there win be to ipay tor these tea and Arguments Hying Today on 4 Railroads' Merger The merger Is opposed by the Milwaukee road, the only other railroad in direct freight competition with the four railroads for , Tbs Milwaukee recently halted passenger service west of linne&polis, Ml"" Milwaukee President William J. and Seattle tracks. The GN mnd the NF rejected the conditions and continued Independent operations. The GN and the NP currently awn both the Burlington and the SPAS' railways. The Great Northern operates through St. Paul, Minn.; Minot. N. D.; Havre, Mont.; Glacier Park; Mont., and Spokane,'Wash.; the Northern Pacific through St. Paid; Bismarck, N. D.; Billings, Missoula, Mont, and Spokane, and the Milwaukee through St. Paul; Aberdeen, S. D.; Miles city, Mont.; Missoula and Spo-‘ ane. The Northern Pacific finished laying its tracks west in 1883, and the GN in 1893. The Milwaukee pushed west into competition with the two railroads to 1909. tog its hsaring at Seattle, Wash., April 3 to impose six conditions on the railroads 11 it should approve the merger. Ike Milwaukee contends H would lose ft million n year to annually In increased should the merger go through. The Milwaukee’s proposed conditions included provisions lines to North Dakota, Montana and Washington; trackage righto for the Milwaukee over lines of the merged company in parts of Washington end Oregon; Milwaukee acta Billings, Mont.; revised •witching charges, and rata adjustments. The commission 34 years ago freed to the consolidation of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific provided they would allow the , which opposed the use Spokane, Portland 8# led no pity tor as, 4 New York Is a wonderful piece to visit, but tt also to a ocstly, challeighg. exhausting, marvelous place to live! BACKACHES immHmi there to! some, evidence today that your "arhtag back” may be a hereditary pate to the Wipe. Dr. Benjamin R. WIMbavger, ns—cinto pwtoaaar al surgery at Ohio State University, has the And he cites the cases of one Ohio family in which a father and U of his 13 children have quite similar pains of this nature. This, and other cases, lead the doctor to believe most victims are born with a susceptibility to slippejl discs, and that ordinary activity, rather than unusual strew, can bring on discomfort to such afflicted family groups. If true — it’s a diac-usttog injustice by nature! -------------i WM» Or wKwoffto-scriptfon in a wMn choice *f from# stylos and colors. GLASSES Choose the frame style to suit your individual taste and porsonollty from hundreds In our studio. Lenses ore available in neutral grey, jgroen or brown. BUDGET TERMS AVAIURU 109 N. SAGINAW ST. R. STEINMAN, O.D, Deity tiMAJd. to 5:10 F.M. Friday 940 A.M. to 840 Ml. fl 2-2895 ML-NIW «d Motorola’s latest engineering breakthrough makes possible lowest pries ever on brand-name 23' IV TILE b-nfl" 1st Ovality SfKpHHi OPEN MON., THURS;, FRI. TIL 9:00 P M. % FREE PARKING IN REAR OF STOREI TOPPING *SAIX FMCS (Ohs. Fob) 39*. OENUINI ORIENTAL MOtAIO TM1 12-x12- Me Solo Price 1st Ovality My Per Sheet CEILING TILE irxit" 6Vie n. (Slight Irrog.) 9x12 UMEOfl INNS RUSTIC WALL TILE \ DuPONT’S LUCITE XA/AI I DAIKIT inoim.lv mien v Starting at i You Pay Only $16.95 for the Special Oil Burner Clean-Up HURRY—-ond take advantage of this fabulo us NEW service contract that guaiarrtbts yOu FREE labor ho matter how many service calls you require all year long! /You pay ONLY FOR FARTS if they are needed. Our expert service men will clean and adjust your fur-na^e, replace the nozzle and filter cartridge! putting your furnace in 1st dose condition loll for only $16.95 . . . again, unless additional parts are needed. ACT TODAY—fill out I accompanying coupon and mail to Economy Oil and forget your heating worries with that superior fuel, GULF SOLAR HEAT. TWliNTY-ti»fe MONDAY, APRIL 80, 1962 In Macomb MOHTQOMlRf^r WARD CO. ^ HEARING AID DIPT. If you can hear, but cannot undenfanc^; we cart help you!? CALL US FOR A FREE HEARING TE$T:. . . In our office or at home. rfrwfc: 682-4940 EsL 233 BATTERIES, CORDS, REPAIRS ON ALL HEARING AIDS PONTIAC MALL A Ray Township youth was one of two Macomb County 4-H oven all achievement award winners an* nounced Saturday Bight at Richmond High School in Richmond. meo, with a pantomime and piano soloist Howard Fglker, 14, of 72750 McKay Road, Romeo, were win-ners in the small group division. Nine other Romeo area 4-H workers were among top award win- Shirley Idles. 17, of 76040 Me-Fadden Road, Romeo, and Patricia Lawson, 14, of 17941 Irwin Rond, Romeo, were winners in clothing competition. Their entries wiU go to the state show.- * Bonnie Kay Holerno, 17, ot Mount Oemena, was the other winner of THE PONTIAC TRESS, To Vote Constitution as One Document? LANSING w — It la highly ly that MhMgaa wiU vote on Its new constitution as a complete document, and not medon by ■notion. . Indtottoa make this virtually a foregone certainty, and the ftwl decision could come today or fa- A resoluti Twelve of the convtotion* 14 ounfttee chairman voted in an tafofmal Associated Pram poO tor auhmimton of the new basic law aa a Public Hearing Slated on Southfield's Budget SOUTHFIELD—Local residents will have the opportunity to air their views on the city's proposed budget of {2,387,171 for nest year at a public bearing Wednesday at | p.m. at Southfield High School, on Labaer and 10 Mile roads. The dty council and Administrator Donald V. Smith held the last of several meetings on the budget, up {311,669 over this year's, on Saturday. For the first JJme since Southfield became dty, all department heads were present. Ameag them were 0MI Do- id. 1 wham budget had beea long-awaited by the coodcII. Angelo. an appointee at Mayer S. dames Clark**, has been under fire by Ctoaolhnandoted. The first meeting of the Civic Cantef Advisory Commission is scheduled for next Saturday at 10 a.m. to the No. 10 Elementary School on 10 Mile Road. TO NAME APPOINTEE ' Dohany said today that he expects Hollywood to name Ids choice for commission appointee at tonight’s council meeting. Hollywood is the only councilman who not made his selection of a___ to serve on the 17-0, 1868 c; Plastic Milk Carton «». Candidate forifonoK Orders Auto Dealer to Rehiie Workers Plow Country Trip J J PARIS CAW ri«M— ChariH Does Change-of-Life Make You . Fed Older Than You Are? RENT SOFT WATER 48 S. SAGINAW - DOWNTOWN - PONTIAC COOLEY SOFT WATER 00. FE 4-4404 food Now People's Food Market 888 Orchard Lake Avenue (Formerly Tom'* Market) Fresh! Lean! Tender! Fabulous savings on this gorgeous now bedroom suite! Your choice of sumptuous wal- T nut, gray mahogany or Chantilly finishas. Plasticized tops resist heat, bums, stains. Featuring quality construction throughout... The most exci Peters LIVER SAUSAGE 39; Your Choice STOKELY’S FINEST ALL FLAVORS OUR LOW PRICE I DAM I S I—I Sealtest or Borden’s COTTAGE CHEESE Fresh, Frozen BANQUE1\DINNERS Smart-Styled Danish modern at an unbelievable low price anyone can afford UJRRD5 48 SOUTH SHGinnui IlSN Highland ltd. 1 m2±£ i IMUmIhI iuCMwi >l» 1 1 KTSCtoltyUltM. 1 u Siii | Ctostd WXMI , 1 Kennedy's 35 ^-transistor f^R ZENITH lOsR^POtKET ■r^ RADIO 12cu.n 2-DOOR MofikRERN^UpRS HaiWaw . WITH TRUE SEPARATE | ZERO-DEGREE FREEZER I Pint time ever alibis se motional low prka for RwmiRCA, I Whirlpool refrigerators in beautiful decorator colors. Big f freezer section holds 107 lbs. IretM food. Soper storage •doory. Million-magnet door—no latches. Model HC42:T with trade. ‘ ' “ST *219,0 ‘ 1 °*«f V. - r Free Delivery, Installation, Service, Warranty! Toe Zenith features in 1 this anel Sound out treat speaker. New DESERT i PATROL Model UA33. SpodeNy led priced CELESTE COMPLETE DINNERS from 11 a.nu DANCING TO THf JOE ZABELSKI TRIO OPEN 11 A.M. to 2 P.M. . m Ip pPwi Ooor to /.IDiAoit Co- ■Ffg- OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9 . PHONE 602-2330 Comer Telegraph md Elizabeth Lake Hi APPUM*CE THE PONTIAC PRgSS. MONDAY, APRIL 80, 1962 TWENWFTVE Will Select Winner - the House knuckles down to wwfc today after a 10-day Easter vacation. white tee Senate plods along with its debate over a MU to pro- second attempt will he made'after major recommendations have pace is anticipated in.' the months!the literacy test bill, leaders ob- roore debate. With tee tided barring committee hearings white the Senate is l/wM cleared Congress so far, but aome ahead. , Iviously are not disposed,to let this others have passed one chamber . Although ’ the Senate is pretty issue bottle' up action in other ***— 1 -- the other and a quickening I well stymied at the momAtt by fields indefinitely. ALLIANCE, OM« (AP>—Ltocote Hart Sr., 06, Ohio Supreme Court judge from 1935 until his redfO\ meat in 1957, died Sunday. Judge || Hart had taught tnteraatktei* lew international relatione at Mount Union College ter 9 yunra. He was fhut vice p rail dent cf the Ward o‘ EXCLUSIVE DRIVE-IN SHOWING IN MICHIGAN! land, will be given to the elate trooper cited as mote outstanding for his contribution to community heroic action. literacy teste. No major bills were ticketed for immediate consideration in House, bub before the end of thp week leaden hope to bring up a hill urged by President Kennedy to set up a private corporation to own and operate a communications satellite system, sent, some committees have canceled their mletlngs for the duration of the battle. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee called a meeting today, however, to start work administration's $4 9-billk>n foreign aid authorization tell. This is one of many major, pieces of legislation urged by Kennedy that remained to be acted on as Congress reached the half-way point in its planned eight-months SHOWS: 1:00-3:l 0-5:20 7:30-9 30 P M Strait LAST 4 DAYS!! Before the week ends Senate leaders reportedly plan to initiate a move to damp a time limit on the debate that began last Wednesday on the voter literacy bill — the administration’s principal civil rights measure. The bill, strongly opposed by its Southern foes, would exempt anyone with a 6th-grade education from having to take a state literacy test to qualify as a voter in presidential and congressional elections. The first step in invoking the Senate's anti-filibuster rule is filing of a cloture—or debate limitation—petition signed by 16 senators. Once such a pet it ion is filed, it automattealiy is pul to a vote one hour after, the Senate meets on the second day thereafter. Its adtoption requires a two-thirds majority of senators voting. A two-thirds majority never has been obtained for .breaking a filibuster against a civil .rights bill, but party leaden say they may have a better chance this time since tee 1969 Democratic and Republican platforms called for a literacy test measure. Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana has said that if the move fails by a substantial margin, the bill, win be laid aside. If the vote is close, he said, a For All The World K TO Enjoy! YJS21KEEGO A Musical Holiday of Fun for Everyone! 7 ^ WONDERFUL SONfi ' HITS (Z. mum Safe WALTDISNEVS All-cartoon feature finocefuo mm MmOCOKKU TECHNICOLOR* OPEN 7x00 PM. ★ EXCLUSIVE ★ FIRST SHOWING Next: “Light in !»• Piazza” HURON THEATER NOW SHOWING SOPHIA LOREN Academy Award Winner! JL 'BEST ACTRESS' QSB The He arts OfThk World! MO/. ,af5*WE HEW COMEDY Sm£5( HORST RCLM0A.H ARlENt CH GAZZARA r €S3 THE Uoung Doctors A Fi»a Rida for th# Children •a tea Mua Sky Circue TraM Get Yaw "Early Bird" Admission Tickets from Yaw Gasoline 'Service Station! steltSSCMf FRI.—TIM OF KIMS boh ENJOY EXCELLENT FOOD 1 Try Our BUSIRESSNEirS LUNCHEONS [ft's where ■Hie fun tokos place. NOW OPEN and CELEBRATING JSSiB HIGHLAND S NEW STORE NT Bffli PONTIAC M CLOCK UMNO ALL-TRANSISTOR TAPI RECORDER 4-SHAKIR SYSTEM P0RTASU STEREO SALE PRICED GRANCO FM-AM TAI Superb musk hall FM-AM reception. . High sensitivity, wide band selectivity. Drift-tree performance. RuNtiw antenno. ( mo SO/L88 | $39.95 JO^ RLE RADI6 ^■1 12-HOUR SPECIALS! TUES. ONLY ADMIRAL t Cl. FT MFMBtetATOU Avm TOe SrooMr. t-Voer War mu i Ms vrhiCrmss »Y TO ADMIRAL COWUOUTV NWWMiwamL WESTINOHOUSE n cu. rr. a-ooou igmawci nrsiN.w 1 satep.R.TearWOnmrap. S&... *208 EMERSON COMB. tV fianteAM/iiARlMo SR... 199 ADMIRAL W** POKTAHJI TV KHnTrMr’s SSeM. S?L. TO RCA WHIRLPOOL BMIIRf— ORDER BY PHONE • NO MONEY DOWN NO MONEY DOWN- 3 YE AES TO PAY SATISfACTION GUAGANfge GW IIOIII^iMatJGG% THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 80, W2 TWENTY-SIX Don’t Shield Yoor Child Painless Education Can Produce Softies vantage. However a pupil who ia ALWAYS (uccestful lad s preparation lor life in a university when some failure to inevitable. At the ' university level many teadtors feel that it takes a low grade to stimulate students to work harder. Their teats are constructed varsity? Those youngsters who always To add to the chance of failure, competition for grades is stiffer in college. The student la now ia classes made up of top students from many high' schools. nORAUWf ALLEY OOP CAPTAIN EASY QV**/. OH, MY GOODNESS/1 (HEY NANCY— V WHERE YA J \ S ^ OPINE? THEY MI9HT RAISE THE POSTAGE TO FIVE CENTS BY CHRISTMAS WHATS THE IDEA? A MODERATOR leeopmeeo'vo 86 IMPARTIAL/ 66£? THArtf EXACTLY, WHAT HE DID/ NOW, AS MODERATOR, ,WHATCOYDUSAY? > [WAIT,MOW,WAIT V-V BEFORE VOL) SAY > \ TOO MUCH/ HAVEN'T | I SEEN YOU UP IN / YOUR ROOM TXKIN’ ' YOUR EXERCISE J l WITH ARAIK O' I PUNY LITTLE 1--- ' DUMBBELLS <— WHILE A HIRED V— OUY WASCUTTIKT I— VOtJR LAWNT /— 7 ANSWER ME ^— V THAT/ F "T! WON, MOW/ > I AIN'T TRytN’/ ’ RIPPLE'S POO 1 BALANCE A ENNIS BALL > J HIS NOSE-- \ I'SO KIN YOU, I YOU WASN'T / 50 LAZY- V* / X NEVER N \ COULD UN- 1 1 PERSTTANP /WHY PEOPLE / WHO HATE TO POA / LICK THEM- 1 SELVES LIKE w TO MAKE J OTHER J PEOPLE \ v. po so JY \ MUCH/ y DONALD DUCK iujuy I have counseled DR. NASON many college students who had just received deficiency notices, Da in some subjects — perhaps even an F — for the first time in their lives. Almost universally these students panic. They lack experi- Their feeling of success is actual-r greater because they first ex-periened failure. And they do better work In succeeding seme cause they have learned to work to overcome difficulties. Academic discipline and mental toll are necessary if our young people are to gain sufficient intellectual strength and responsibility. At the junior and senior high school levels, success has greater motivating effect then failure. Teachers use this principle to ad- Quake in Japan Derails Train Forty-Five Hurt, One Dead as Houses Are Destroyed on Honshu TOKYO (UPD—A jolting earthquake. today derailed a freight train and destroyed several bouses in north-central Japan, killing one person and -injuring 45. The quake caused buildings to sway slightly in Tokyo, but its main force was centered on the northern end of Honshu, Japan’s he train •ajartag I traffic 'It sent people running into the streets from their hornet, offices and stores. Police said most of the injuries were caused by trampling in the panic. One Ugh school stu-' > out of a Polish Primate Hits Red Rallies as Antireligious GNIEZNO, Poland JAP) — Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski again has openly criticized Polish authori-charging Communist youth programs violate freedom of worship. The Roman Catholic primate of Poland in a sermon Sunday also accused officials of this 1,000-year-old^ central Polish town of inhospitality. He said they had ignored history by diverting the age-old annual procession of St. Adalbert, Catholicism's first patron saint of Poland, from the main street to the side streets. Some g,600 worshipers braved a cold drizzle to follow the hymn-singing procession of nuns, btsh-chbishops and Cardinal Wyszynski through the streets tor an open-air mass before 980-year-old Gniezno Cathedral, the first Catholic cathedral in Poland. TIM fatality was Mrs. Midori Sato, who was pinned under a wall in Sendai. A child was seriously injured In the same ana In the wreckage of her home. Department stores said the quake knotted articles from tbelr ■helves, mid widespread reports of broken glass snd crockery were re. edved. The quake was registered at 11:TT ain. (9:27 p.m. Sunday Pontiac time). CHICAGO (AP) - J. Morrie Jones, 06, editor in chief of Child-craft since 1989, and vice presi-- dent of the Field Enterprises Educational Corp., died Saturday. Jones, who joined World Book Encyclopedia ip 1940, was born in Aberystwyth, Wales, and came to the United States in 1923. Danish Freighter Sank in Caribbean, Tug Says WILLEMSTAD, Curaco, Netherlands. Antilles W - The 11,647-ton Danish tanker Anglo Maersk, which caught tiro last Monday, sank northeast of llartmque, the Dutch tag Caribbean Sea reported Saturday. The British frigate Rocket reported last Wednesday that dames aboard ths tanker (sen extinguished. The frigate said the 54-man craw abandoned ship, but six men wsnt back aboard after the flames died down and that the captain requested a tow. Two sa " aura reported Injured. Astrological ■^forecast 0 h** ms#.* i -TUf .mhf —■ Cfntrih ' jutV1 aTie as^* w?fc*ets t»* 4tm ia ifebk tw «Mfc Inst a bit am U‘8SnISa (Itay « W fww »l): n yw mM mMI mbt tonflutoil —rtiitt] tt iniM Half yon wtoht charm yew »a» to Hm “wtaimr * drele " Ba yawr- ‘‘eJarwePtie Mr u>: mm. tiaa aaa ialSa. Too *ot to ba mow indapaaSaat. Taa aaak vara and maaw t il iilf aapiwwaa Try aaw idea*. Thu known yaar t1»w«. daairaa a»d r SSSSwb «B ladwr ItoSjty iorclnt it 'Xlaht fSto* yrntjindVtt^to Irt'ofhf r poawbM, pa aaay a UK Oraat aalaca paaaMa daaa IS 1m "aLpy^aaSmT’tYmT -- •rmmjiBrsrarai'a member, *11 that atlttara to mat paid. Msfiim SSSWSKSS am aanaady. Tala Haw to wwa. High school teachers must keep this in mind. They must help students gain the rririlience required to bounce back from temporary failure, show them how to overcome a low test seme and still make a satisfactory semester grade. PARENTS SHARE MAMS Parents are not without guilt In this natter. They attempt to shield their children from the difficult times, the embarrassing situations and the frustrations that they themselves faced. It ia only human that they wish the children they love to have a better, smoother life than theirs. But in providing it they deprive the children of valuable experience. Pareats fall to reaUae that they became the people they are by overcoming problems which they U.S. Plans Satellite to Measure the Eqrth WASHINGTON (UPD — Ths United States plans to launch a blinking satellite nexj^...jpoaUi scientists srpund the world can use it to measure the earth.' The 345-pound ANNA satellite will cany high-intensity beacons which will flash bursts of light toward the earth from a nearly dp-cular orbit about 620 mjles Sigh. The flashes will be used as “tri-angulation points” along with the known positions of stars in the background. OUR ANCESTORS Chicago Editor Expires Thoes of as who have to ride on top should pay tourist economy instead of first dam fare!" BOARDING HOUSE \ WHATCHA THINK’ 1HAT*6NMEANS, A LOOEY .FREE 6RUB £ TEA 90NEDV. SOUNDS PRETTY MOTTY-TOnV rf r—them SQUARES TAL* FUNNy*/J: f LINGO/-—WHATCHA SAY CM SOME FOIST CLASS r“2z5^ UPTOYlN AlRSAN'SNe / OORSELMES FANCY | MONICKERS* YlE AIN'T/ ET 6INCE1H* BULLS jrr \ Kicked oner our a | nMULLU3AN/jr^ « TYttB XTINK YIE'RE SAFE ON DIS STREET, ROCKY—DE/ RAILROAD BULLS WONT CHASE US IMS FAR/YIB - Km MAK1B/UKBTOUR-ISfeFOR ACOUPLA -« Hours,dsN Blip back An 6RAB A ODICK , FREIGHT OUTAtbWN: J NANCY MORTY MEEKLE 'zm , UHEr MKS0R3 FIRST CUSTOMERS- OUT OUR WAY By Walt Dhmy if THE flOXTlAC PRESS. MONDAY, APRIL 80, 1962 TWENTV»gEV«P What! No More Blohdes? pice Carbons Now Automated MARKETS The tafiowtagm top prim corering sale* at locally green " produce by groewn and sold by then In wholesale package Iota. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, Monday. Bnt No Group Leadership « Buyers Attracted to Low Mart NEW YORK (API— The mariwt Jogged to the upside in moderate trading early thlp UJ. Steel halved an early re-wery at more than Jones A Laughfin was down about Republic 8teei steady. Bethlehem eased. Internatienal Harvester wail as by a 2-potnt gain lor Du! Predict Decline in Steel Output Product The Uet was higher from the start as selective buying bucked tq> the average. Some of the improvement was due to the fact ■ that stocks last week * hammered down 4o their The averege was shored by gains of around a point Texaco, American Tetepta Haon, Wool worth Prices were mixed on the Ameri-sn Stock Exchange foitaderate trading. Gain of around a i or better were made fay Aeken Chemical, Canal-Randolph, Cell-man Manufacturing, Hamilton Electro and Westmoreland Coal. cures, Ses. .... Celery, root ......... HoreeruUak. ok. .... reruttpe, UM. ....... roUtooe, u r~ I more than two years f and many were low enough to at-e tract buyers. . TALKS ON ECONOMY Bond Prices Open Mixed By HAM DAWSON AP Bustoese News Analyst NEW Y O R K -. The higher the mountain of paper grows the more business scrambles to crawl out from under. Often to do ao lit turns to—more,„.if_—different, paper. Americans may fed they’re en- i,... . _ __ n___.____tering on a punch-cant existence, Magazine Says Buying Ufi the way from the pay check Patterns Being Based to the tax collector's checkup. But j jin business offices the idea is to On immediate Needs Ut paper work. The paper work load ia not only stifling, it’s in-CLEVELAND, Ohio,, (UPI) -Jcreaalngly cortly at a time May steel ihlpments will fall 10, cost-rutting is high fashion, to 15 per cent below April’s at * w * i reduce inventories and re Magnetic ink or infrared treated to buying patterns of a year| carbon paper, fireproof paper Photocopy Equipment, Minnesota office handle the rest of fite Mining A Manufacturing, A. B.|n“n*n"rkrtt Rhubarb. Hothouae. box Rhubarb, Bothousa. ML . Turnips. topped, bu....... Poultry and Eggs "•non % • Wall Streeters drew en-ement from President Ken-remarks to tbs United it States ^Chamber of Commerce fat * which hrssaid he waids to see a f* stable econbmy through tree combe government will l intervene in the DBTBorr roiiLTsr Drrnorr. April M iAPt—prU |»»r P**M M NEW YORK (AP) — Bond prices, to a full point or more were North-opened mixed today with many era Pacific Railroad 4s up 1*4 at issues unchanged from FHiay'o|014, GUdden Wts by 114 1M14 close. land Duquesne Light 414s by 1 at * * * 99. Over the counter dealers la U.S. ' government securities said the! only changes*in the list were aj few gains of 2/32 by some of the issues. Activity was!" limited. Dick, Eastman' Kodak. Add in otter types of forms and the paper work market goes to 3475 million a year. Tm years' ago, the sales were around $300 million, the Business Forms Institute says. PUNCHED cards: Punched cards, especially those associated with banks, are the ones the public is most likely to see. But they lead an ever-busier life In business offices. International Business Machines has Cards instead of paper are tew used rot only for checks and money orders but for freight MBs, sales slips, tax forms, Mgtakay tickets and tMtoiimefat state- Other office time and Idbta savers: Bril and Howell kas a can stuff up to elfibt documents into envelopes, seal and stamp them at a rote of 7,200 envelopes an hour. UARCO, Inc., Bsrrtagton, Hi., says its cotitfc-lope can print billing information ■■■■HI form, while on ago, Steel Magazine predicted to- day. vtorp* bias lMt: light typ H tm iNMi o»ar l i and fryer* H Ibe.: ’ DSTROIT, April prU M I AT)—S|( MR ________) *» Detroit by Aral rs- ceirer* (tasrailH O.I.I: ''TV _ Whites—Orsda A ntn. l»rt« 3S-3S; Utilities appeared to shade low-‘ i initial corporate trading on I York Stock Exchange 1 industrials were irrog- Net Cb«B|S . Noon Mon . El Bm u»a stseks ....*31 +,» +.4 +5* ... 353 2 in.* ter tea Week Aio Mootta A|s .. ... 351.7 J1T.6 IM2 547-5 2514 131.4 1413 354.7 ..507.5 U12 141.5 354 5 1543 Lo* .... .. m.l B72 1422 3*22 . ..Mi.7 Ini 1J6.4 ini 1941 Xi(h ... 1941 LSV .... ....Bit UM 145.5 BM . 315.4 1112 UU 3U.4 Enough chickens are raised in the UK. to provide about five for every man, woman add child. chemically coated paper that prints without use of inked ribbons, carbon paper that duplicate only part of the Information typed on the original—you name it and chances are' the business forms research boys have it. card that a salesman can punch,|the other iq a preprinted envelope instead of filling out a report, and, the. customer can use when pay* electronic machines In the homeling. The national weekly said users will do more inventory cutting ir. May than they did in April because most at their April tonnage was in production at the mills before they thought of canceling or ^ m ^ (our ncmt Umej deferring it. - and labor savers: This resulted In April ship- Carbon paper activated by foments, on a dally average basis, Jfrared light can . turn out 1001 were only (per cent tower than copies a minute on conventional; those of’ March. j duplicating machines at a cost of 'fhird coit a copy, according Chrysler Changes to Delay 63 Unveiling Until Oct. I Since the tabor agreement, t have reversed their buying pattern and instead of ordering far in advance, the're ordering for immedi- model cart until around Oct. Virgil 8. Boyd, vice CHIC AGO rOl'lTET . CnPCAQO. Aprll lO .(ATI—I ___j poultry: WbfltHAte kurtsi pries* Rock frysr* 16-15. CHICAGO SPTTSB AND BOGS CHICAQO. April M (AT) — OMMSf ock Exchange CHIEFS NOT WORMED The magazine said that steelmakers wiU book most of a month’s business in the month preceding it, then 20 to 30 per cent of the tannage after the month has started. to itH producer, Old Town Carp., ~»w York. (The cost of typing letter is put anywhere from 30 60 oenta.) The new carbon paper'can 'be used for letters, Idea to expect Ike ere. ear^r. I* a*J!rinted ^ Wh *W”0f Chrysler’s Dodge and Chrysler. Plymouth divisions have put their LOOK, NO RIBBON . new models on sale in late Sep- National Cash Register's chem- tember the past two year*. How- DETROIT iAPI—Chrysler Corp^inch wheelbase and the VafitjOt is told its dealers that major will stay at 106.5 inches. styling changes will delay public The Dodge Lancer is expected introduction of the company’s 1963 to mewe up to 111 indies, compel- diifctly with the Ford Fairtane. The Dart wifi grow from 116 to 120 inches and the Custom 880 wifi remain at 122 inches. Although order backtags have shrunk by nearly one-third to the last tour weeks, mill executives "S”w.fefWftTIt ns KIM: me wSi Mil n s 56%: Eni tUi »te*dy; wholerala buying price* unchAbied, 7o per eeol or better grade A whltei Ml btlMd lH: medium* 384: etaodsrdx MH; drtlee54%; eheeki ftlW YORK (APV-VMtoSks of (elected ctosk trsoMcUcoi so '!■> - mm Brooms wa1 *— *Wkmi — 11 66% MH MV- H .m B 8B Hi i ♦> IMS U MH *2% ■%-% * 10% 14% 14% + % dueer told steel that If recent bookings reflected market conditions we weald be oat of bust- Livestock tt Mb DETROIT, April M (API — Hof* 700. A Barrow*, tilt* end xcvx ate lower; few a '-ti U S. 1 MO-MI lb*.. berrowx end gUte a " 'T-/ ----— £ —d t ll»f a 10.75: mBms si •2L* _ , 'il lJ-H.J»rnumber’s sad * . xowe, 13.M-U.00. , _ 5 - 3J UH IS __ 0 MM MM MVk M SS! StS+ s ii% n< sit 3M Ibe.. lt.IS-lt.7t; n---------------—. _ lb«„ 14.M-1A7I; eowi number 1, a, end s 1. 300-400 Ibe. ll.lt-14.SI; inumber I Sr1 S ___JW^^lJ.M-^13 ® I 13M lie. eteer* II: 17 heed Wfb cholee ? ■ round 1100 ML eteore 17 60: moet cheloe f ateeri M M-37.00: mixed loeda -of high. J toOd, ond lew enolce (Mere M.H-MM; } good grade ateeri ai.M-U.U: utfflty co- * 15.60-1g.50; ■ few up to iV. cennera m *g jSk 14% 14V-% OeoTubUt 1 OTtlAKl .71 QeoTtre new, OePacCp Jb OeUyOU The producer said tha dustry figures that some of the orders that have been cancelled will be retartated. I Eastern mill* report (hat cancellations from automakers and **% «*- ** j appliance firms have been offset n% r%+ >;to sMUte extant by reinstatements from smaller customers. S Bib Mb qm+ ft srsstar8 cuttere 11.50-11.50. u , Celrea—ISO. Around 1.00 higher: pMi 57-40; good sad Choloe 30-17; atnndn 19-10; cull end utility lt-11. Sheep—1100. Sleughter lnmbe I , -nd prime jhorr Tt«;Tl*i».wra a 5S s* £b- si£ a: ft 177 lift HV* ISUrf W ■ MH M% M% " S SJV, 03% MV. OraceACo 1.00 Grand On .00b SMATM 160 Ml 175% U4 175%+1% ° AnrTob 1 11 AmVlacoee 7 “ AMP me .75 How uJrti __ ping demend!°*100 heed V-V smSmTSi U> Autchere 10.75, moetly 1-1 1PP-M5 SW^EdSd l-l“Ml« lbTl6r76.1I.S; lota largely M tmW M ll4-T4Jri ml»d 1-1 360-450 Ibe eowa 11.0-H.M; 1-3 450-540 Ibl 1100-11.00. ObtUp ILiM: otltee a__. . alow, enolee sad prtsw •Uosbter •0 to 1.00 lower; lower gladea etesdy M 17% MV. MV.+ ft a » MH M% MH+ ft B 8ft 44 44H ■ mm m%’ ■ „ iTssats! wu i»»^|f 17 41% 4 I Nft ■ ■ „ ■ If 14% 14% S4%~ % S n 16 »V< 35% + % R IS MH S% Mb- Jt 10 41 41% 41 + ft.. IS 17% MH M%+ H» 14 17% 17% 77%+ % * 7 MH S7% 17%+ % * f F ? C ' “ 17 UH * Bank Head Named on Bond Commiflee 1 m «% »%+ * had .35* ^ » ... SlReg Pap 1.40b M M 14% S4%-717* - • «%+ Hlppwppor U S Mb tt% «%+ . 41% 41% drib-gtjgrogi,_ 41 aft « 5 - Hi Sneering l.40e 50% •— j Schick f 18% MH M “ ' ' -------“■ 1 ) lower: notion M rower: Mb end veelera wmmmw. STlSIAJDK.’W: !SRJfV,'SVSSP at saa IJUwl^d^iMaUyJrlme 1*10 lb“helf«* 16 00: cennera end cottars UJ5-14.M; few .tenders raelen 11.00-15.0^ rood utility end commercial bulls 11.00-54 M: SS4 choice 53i3l.il: Uhty ir 1 MH BH M% i sa»a&- ■ .If ni% u Been Roeb 1.4*1 M MH *4 ig* ili% uijt:. -t&bSii Sft^ft J «%«% Sjtrft b EF M* as+'ib » gft n% u%+ % 3 36% 36% 16%. 7 17% 17% 17%+ % 4 M% M% M%— H 14 8% MH Klft AlfredsC. Girard, president of Community. National Bank and chairman wNfoe bank’s board of directors, has aeen named chairman of the volunteer savings bond committee for Oakufod County. I’Th 15 54% 53% 5*% .... arn Co* 1.50 I &% 54% ft Sou By I.M %tsquwe D la f * 8% ig .*■«* M Mila ‘ 1JS id Oil Cftl 2b ■lit BMP *• Budd S^JOc i <1% 41% 51%- % i 5 § gft+* 1 m m 15%....... 3 13% 13% Bfi+ % 7 U 5% 13 + % 1 13% 13V. U£ * J% 38 490 — en a 6 53% 53% SSV.H_ 17 » i iTiftl 14 15% MH MV— % etu uu aw 31 13% 31% 5%— % bid OU NJ M 46 47% 47%+'Ve B(d Oil 00 1_U% 16% lt%+ % Wend MM_______ Wen Drug TiT _ _,T __ M%— % IS Mb MH M%+ % as asftift 1 15 29 16% 19% + % » 50% 59 M .... 14 S% Mb Mb- lb I M% M 54 —ft 4 M 11% lf%— H 7 41% 41% 41%— H 9 MH M% M%+ % • i ft MH Mb.... 81 44 MV. 17% Kill itoa a vena JP Mb : S% 1 ■ At .M 9 33% 12% 32%— % T r Rath ,40a 15 77% 21% *1% + ft T - - 1 71% T1H 71%+ ft | JtL M% 57%-. .. I tfc M% MH—% 41% 41%— % eulli 12.00-IS.05. s amen and of prlsu HO lb fed e eatern Sr*:*1_ . wooled ISmM 11.50: M UM end.ES”.?*1.1 choice lit me will muddy fleeces^7 50; g**J* *■** good end ctrofee native wwoted aleughter -Aj* choice aranud M lbs shore fed lnmbe ;gnra In 75e Iambi ltSS-ltOM: some good to mSS SWKP.yt with No. 1 potto 17.00: peekege with H>. 8 .potto 10 50: ara... i st sst-. Cempb 8eup 2.10 1115% 115% 1U%... 1 MH 84% 1W+ .... M 74% 14% MH . 2 61 61 15 S% 5% Jb M 30*. 15% M% . 13 40% M% 39%— % 1 54% 53% M%+1% ■00 I.m ’ M M% MH Sh+ ft ig* IKBflE,! eP c«% 5 11% icstily coated paper can be used without inked ribbons in some business machines. The ink in the paper is released when ftruek by a type key. Selective carbonizing process is offered by the Mittag division at Burroughs. It will duplicate only part of the information being typed an the original. The partial copy contains all information needed, say, tor a customer. Fireproof silica paper is ] duoed fay Standard Register. It is expensive but useful for valuable items, such as deeds or stock certificates. Some 50 companies compete for the copying and duplicating mar ket nfoae. Theta total sales run around $350 million a year. They estimate that AO per cent of all general office work is routine copying. s. to part topart- U.S. Savings Bonds in every Getting under way Tuesday, the two-month drive is the first since' 1961. Special attention wifi be given to increasing participation in the payroll savings and bond-a-month Now York City's Size Increased by Surveyors NEW YORK (AP) - New York City has picked up 118 additional acres' over the past six years. The City Planning Commission said Sunday that New York's growth simply was the result of more accurate surveying. The count is now 204.681 acres, or 819 8 square miles. ever, there had been discussion that an earlier date might be used this year because of slumping ■ales of 1982 models. not only hi wheelbase but in sheet metal and overall appearance,” Boyd wrote. He gave ao specUto details. However, It to aaderetoad the compaay to mafctag as effort to separate the Dodge mad Plymouth lines Which look like twtas Plane Penalties Begin Tuesday Union Approves New Contract at Parke, Davis DETROIT (AP) — Members of “ fe. union local representing MOO Davis A Co. • production PH j yesterday ratified a new thrae-yehr^ contract Approval by members of local 7-17$, Oil, Oroalcal and Atomic worirers, w a s unanimous. The contract calls for a. wage hike of five cents per . hour earii year for three years. \ * * * \ The new agreement oafisvfoc i supplementary ,■■■» .half-holiday, making« total of eight holidays. The firm voluntarily opened an Improved five-year penaton and hi-suracne agreement to replace the old agreement, which had two years to tpn. ”,8ss irl 5 0% 13% 53%+ *% >1 55% 61% 5t%+ " 1 43% 43% 4fft... • 53% 53% 8ft- _ 8&8&S if* ^ \l 3ft 8ft ___/(lint -ebValRR >hmeo JJSt iOPOtaw 2.40 M 33V. U% B% !^^sft=ft —u^- _____ . 6 M 31% J UaCAiMOe J.N M M7% 104% II American Stock Exch. , (PtfiirM shot decimals ere In elfhth * ts% tf% ts%- % 34 111% 115 1M M glj gH St* ft Wh* if I lf ■.M-- Mftftk Tit Lit 7 41 ItH 40 h tlffirajrs 2 4Se M W 34% 0%!.. . _____ ft In ■ M H _ 10 33% n% 31%— % WliB.t ■ UattPratt 30 UdOmTO i.m Hff M '» 34 USPrelsbt 1.15 IS M USOypsunt 2 60s S M mmm » m* NSW YORK (API—American Stoeki: insures after Seel mala an In afghttui Cal XI Pw .... 36 KAIaer Indux •. J.1 Cohu Elec .... 4.5 Mead John ...132 OWt Mnf .... 21 MatMHlkjUOt . M Creole Pet .... 35.4 MMkP Rln* . 11.5 Dynam Am ... 11A NJ Zinc .....312 Ply Ti«er .... 1M Nov* Indua . 5.6 “A Derel .... 154 Pae PeFttd .. 14 itt lamp ... 4.5 Slneer Ltd ... 6.1 ip Chem ... 7.7 SUel Aik --- 7.8 IS OU ....44.6 aonotene ..... 1.7 IS Wet ... 74.4 Technlco ...15.7 St u I »% 11% *l%+ % m. t 5#% so% ■%!..!: Mb 5 14% 0% 33%—% ■H ■% 30%— V (arwuardl ArtlnM '1. MayDStr 120 Bobos Ah- 1 Ckil.TO * 44% 43% 44 -I 30% K fM' 13% 11% 1 mate tradtas nan «f thi oooMjtg^ ....tt} it! 33 3 35- 1.40 3 43% 43% 8%... « 77 K M%— % 2 41% 43% 41%— % 11 5% - .~~ 3 45% «% 4S%-14 MV. 54% 54% 4 19% «K ME. M 41% 41 « '• v „ .96 r Mb 35% M%-% ______I Mb 4 73% 31% 31% Only OU Pd M 1 53 »7V. M% a—— ui 44% MH 4Mb- —V— Ate Mpla Hen 2 11 1M% ijiS •* i ® l 1 MfS MH 19% M Mb M% 64%+ .41 •_ (0% 60% 53% (I —w— WHTD Ijmui i.BV ■ Mil rajs WM7S ... Wn Banaerp 1 IS M% 29% 79% fib h S L45 5 M% 5% MH-H WaatSA BA 1.45 J 37% 37% W%+ % *™TB LM J» S4% M% Sft-% 12ft a Sr * - Ce 1.M I MH 55% M%+ % *2. *cyp % Erls Apriww_________ .. MeLouth Steel Ce. ineUfMI Bsamleea .. ::: Wolrerlne Wyendotte SKtlh fbHbtito mm ..-ft s las^a*:R. BM Asked ....; Tg m .16.37 ti.M ^MMSaJirohjI mm w PLYMOUTH IB - Evans Products Co. at Plymouth announced net profits of $76,274 in the ftast quarter of 1962, compared to a' of $1,298,508 in the same period of 1961. Edward s. Evaas Jr„ eeaapaay Grain Prices CHICAGO WMIN ^CHICAGO, AstU 30 (AP)—Orain epen- whbbt Oete toy .......ItlH .Itoy “ ul ... .....1.13% ltd •p ...... 1.16% asp lee ...... . .J20 Dec tor i..'....t£% Mer 70% fra ..l.U Tn. :i:m% 75S 100.5 Wt IM 71.1 M32 S3 75.1 1000 71.7 ror Evans Products Co. Reporting Profits totter that the Urst-quarter fig-ares show “a slgstttoaat Improvement’’ ever 1M1. The net profit for. the quarter was equal tt^ five cents per share 1,442,596 share* of common stock outstanding as of March 31, 1962. Last year’s loss amounted to 58 cents per stare. Opposition Forms to Detroit's Tax on Nonresidents "With the new models there will The Plymouth Trill retain Its 116- Major Linas Would. Cut; 'No Show' Passangars; Also Overselling WASHINGTON (UPI) - The neon's major airlines will institute policy tomorrow that will penalize careleroneas of both the passenger and the airline. Effective May 1, an airline passenger can expect to: — Pay a penalty of $5 to $40, depending on the price of his ticket, if he makes a reservation tafia to roe or cancel It. - Collect a penalty of IS to $40 from an airline that has confirmed his apace and then dentes boarding because it has oversold the flight. Grains Start Week Light and Mixed ' ment benefits and for an additional \May 1 is the day tha 11 airlines ‘ start their program to reduce the number of '‘no show" passengers and autk. the number of ‘‘over- sales" by the carriers themselves. The plan frill last for six aottHia.| After this ‘ should he continued. The airlines levying the double penalty, which applies oaiy > ervatioas for flights within continental United States, inch American. Braniff. Continental, Delta, Eastern. National, Northeast, Northwest, Trans World, United, and Western. The 13 local service carriers are not part at the plan, although to certain cases these airlines may collect the "no show" penalty on behalf of a trunk airline. Plans Viet Nam Visit WASHINGTON (UPI) -Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara announced today that he wifi make an inspection visit to embattled South Viet Nam on his way back from NATO meetings this week Athras, Greece. . [Wa// Sfreef Chatter NEW YORK (UPI) 23 Gilbert of Van Alstyne, Noel A *m!Co. believes that the recent heavy Ms M.i seUoff haS been dimactic in nature. tis says that in violating the last Treasury Position ______ (API—Tiro c*»h pAst- tbs Trsssury csakosrsd xrttti vpostts ftscsl yssr . , July t ........... 75.6l0.5M.S4T.t3 yffinnh ftssbi ysar (7.117.134.734.54 WJft 8Htk / April 14, JM1 Sbtobns ........MTO.S4t.7W.31 ■HP* .. ...... 77.60.737.51194 ■Mt»l«l) fiscal yrar 75.11A3M.011.M ... 5M.lti.ii5.M37“ . 17.3M.243.7tl. MShb 5434.991340 01 4 M (tolls lMJl sff 145 He notes that when a decline hccura on a nerrs item, such as the grand July’s indictment of four steel companies for price firing, action Can be readily appraised. Gilbert sees some moderate near-term seilfog but la inclined to believe that strong price betterment is in the offing. ' Paine, Webber, Jackson A Cur- DETROIT (AP) - Opposition to Detroit’s newly crested income tax began to trim legal shape Saturday when a group of suburban officials derided to file as a nonprofit corporation with the Michgan Corporation and Securities Commission (MCSC). The Vigilance Tax Committee of Michigan would eliminate a provision of the city tax aflecttog noo-residents who work ia Detorit. The coeunittee, comprising mayors and other Detroit tubtnhan officials. was forming plans (p thwart tha city tax... Berkley Mayor George Kuhn was elected president. The group may begin separate legal aotion or Join a suit already filed by Detroit Attorney Thomas L. Poindexter, who also oppress the tax. Committee members were arired to assist the tax fight by obtaining ftaancta! becking or legal talent from their own cities. CHICAGO (It — Tbs pain ■ares market started all the week an a fight and mixed trede today as brokers awaited posting Of first notices of intentions to deliver on May contracts in the P*t«- There was some firmness in wheat and rye. hot the market generally easier during the first several minutes of traaiBc-ons today or the heard of trede. May corn slipped a major fraction on a brief early flurry of selling, but quickly steadied 1 on support credited to an acctnntda-tion of resting orders. Cbm arrivals were the heaviest in many months at 731 ears, of which ilS were consigned to t)ta Commodity Credit Otap. T Ford of England> Reports Profits * 34 Per Cent: Motor ( 08 - Profits of Fold England, which 18 le a wholly owned subsiding of Ford of America, dropped 'ast year by 31 per i pounds i The company’* a veals that profits in : down 11.S million a million) compared with the 1 us year. They fall from 317 million pounds ($943 million) to 212 million pounds ($62.16 million). Sir Patrick Hennessy. British chief of the company, reports "an even more serious deterioration In the first three months of 1962.” 1 Clay, W. Reich President Confer on Split Berlin 1 BERLIN at-Qen, Lucius D. Clay. President Kennedy's retiring envoy in Berlin, and Rfey* Heinrich brofataef West Germany reaction bottom the market is suggesting that a new base may have to be formfd before any important turn-around deuolps. Under the circumstances a policy ef using extra care in making advisable. A apnkwmsn lor Luebke said the talk took plate "in a friendly and hearty atmosphere’’ r Looking beyond die current yaari t!IP Value Line investment survey points ou( that the automobUe industry is still a cyclical industry that is Probably nearing an interim produettan peak, and that averege tedput ,to 1965-47 fe expected to be no more than 5 par cent abowe the 110 level. L. O. Hooper of W. E. Hutton A Co. says that the. rayon industry, which hardly starred during some of the rodent tub year*, seems tu ba resurgent — apparently as a result df- technotagfoal developments which have made the better aad more desirable in tires, decorative materials and apparel. E. F. Hutton A Co. advises the inverting public to "buy sparingly” unttt tfcare to technical rebound ia in the oflteg. News in Brief waehrod teate an estimated $31 fo change, candy aad cigarettes ft vending machines, it wte repot to Pontiao police yesterday MM Baldwin Are.. Quick Clear. m. HB0 niripal Gotf Course, O 1TW$NTY*BIGHT THE} PONTIAC PRESS. MQyDAY, APRIL HP, 1962 Prince in Austere Prep UOMDON (UPiy- Prince Charles, ^-year-old heir to the British tfcrbne, tomorrow will enter his prep school and a new life of early rising, cold showers, had regular chores designed to iwfa* a man of him. When the tousle-haired prince enters the Gordonstoun School in Scotland he will be following the ' footsteps of Ids father, Prince Philip, and, in a sense, will be leaving boyhood and entering youi« manhood. Philip himself will take Charles to Gordonstoun, flying him the €00 miles north from London in a plane of the queen’s flight It is possible Prince Philip will take the controls himself. Queen Elizabeth will not accompany her husband and son. If the queen and Prince Philip have their way, there will not be much information on Just how Chariy begins his new school life.’ As,they did when he first., weat to school — to Cheam which he now has outgrown— the qnoea and her consort through the Backing ham Pal- in a letter to hews and publicity media last Friday Queen Elizabeth’s press officer, Cmdr. Richard Coivilk. asked that there be no. "additional” reporters and photographer! present at the school tomorrow. “The added strain and burden of publicity upon a young hoy of Prince Charles’ age, on Joining a public school for the first time, can readily be understood by all parents,” Colville wrote. KKAI. austerity The new austerity Prince Charles wili encounter at Gordonstoun will begin at once w hen he dons the school's no-frills uniform, supplied for Just over 12 pounds ($33.60) by an Edinburgh tailor. For daily wear it consists of navy blue shorts without pockets, a navy blue sweater worn over an open-necked blue-gray shirt, and gray, socks. The {wince’s school wardrobe also includes a hooded duffle coat for protection against the chill mists of the Scottish moors, working overalls for use in the workshop and during such chores ___T _ __ „—-Public Hearing an Wednesday ROSALIND WILDOXN City Clerk April IS, notice or PUBLIC HEARING to Iwrrty given of a public I_ tag to be held by the White Lake Township Zoning Board ad the ft-jta OB Monday* Itay'lT UO, YlSf P. *“ following change* In I Zoning Ordinance. ** amend the White Lake Tovnehtp -.-—Zoning Ordinance by ARTICLE XVI — RESIDE* DISTRICT Section 16,1 — Permitted Usee and Otb-; Applicable Provtalgn*. Hie provisions ! the Arlcle ehe" w- -—*>— .knee II District provided in tbia ordinance, no Mi land shell he erected or used District except (or one or men ‘ Mowing specified purposes: 1. Any use pannltted h District. 1. Two Family Dwellings. 3 Multiple Dwellings. Section 111 — Area .a _ . ..... hereafter moled Broadway Honors Best for *62 thousand and fire hundred' Awards to 2 English Stars NEW YORK (AP) — Two English stars, a \ London play and an American musical are Broadway'* 1962 Tony Award champi- —with five awards—was “A Man For All Seasons” by Robert Bolt, which Scofield appears. Paul Scofield and Margaret Leighton won the annual medallions presented by the American Theater Wing Sunday night for distinguished performance. Named as the outstanding play Moslem Soldiers Kill and Escape Thrtfe Slay Europeans in Their Unity Then Flee Into Hills The Mg musical, “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying,” captured seven prizes, including one to Robert Morse as the male tune-show star. The citation to Miss Leighton was for her portrayal in Tennes-Williams' 'The Night of the Iguana.” ZND STRAIGHT YEAR It was the second straight year that the silver trophies tor stellar dramatic acting went to visitors from London. The 1961 winners were Sir Laurence OUvier and John Plowright. “Thanks for being so nice to the limeys,” Miss Leighton enthused as she received her prize from Dame Juditch Anderson. ALGIERS (I) -soldiers were slain as they slept | last (right by Moslem troops of their unit, posted near the can frontier, reliable sources reported today. After opening fire on their comrades, the tone Moslem soldiers fled into mountainous countryside with ell the weapons and ammt tkm they could carry, the ini The voting by the wing membership for the outstanding female musical star ended in a tie between Arina Maria Alberghetti of, Carnival” and Diahann Carroll of “No Strings.” The incident occurred at a frontier post near Manila, located about 10 nriles west of the Moroc- Another tie was registered in the choreographer category. Agnes De Mille of “Kwamlna” arid Joe Layton of “No Strings'1 vide the honors. Tho slayings * by troop* arriving to relieve thaw on duty at the post. An la an effort to f It was not the first time kms serving in the French army have deserted their units in the Algerian interior. But it toaa the since the French-Algerian cease fire went into effect March 19. Moslems in the French army have Join the rebel army since the cease fire was signed.' Hie French army is still manning electrified barbed wire barriers along the Moroccan and Tunisian frontiers in order to bar entry into Algeria of 40,000 rebel troops in the two neighboring countries. The rebel forces may not cuter Algeria legally until a vote Is held on Algeria's future. Meanwhile in Oran, French army writs returned to the center of the city after withdrawing briefly earlier In the day. During the brief withdrawal of the armor-supported troops, cars and delivery trucks were able to circulate freely. Ike Heads East Alter Vacation in California Sukarno Pats mimunists the Back Section 1C. 10 — No aeeaeeorjr bulldli portions thereof shall approach nea - ------------‘TrT*T*lhaa (an < tTA, Indonesia OB — Presi- • declared today he had respectability to Indo- * I i became he is « beneficial to ________________ „ ________________ bvr of units may be eoaotruetol when '■tore then twenty-five per cent (31%) .............area shall b* severed —in which all Gordomtoun boys, take part — as lawn mowing once a week uxt an occasional whitewashing of school walls. ' Striped pajamas and a plain dressing gown complete the standard-outfit. - Gordonstoun, founded in 1934 by one-time German schoolmaster Dr. Kurt Hahn, does not go •in for blazers, badges or old school ties. Area ^Of JLeL Every topic ES spiv: U provide >t less U t and an additional a on every lot. A (rent yard the «n depth of which shall be thirty (30) it. Where a front yard of greater nr s depth than above specified exists la at of a dwelling or dwellings In — ice on one lido of a street______. the depth at the (raid yard of any eubsequenUy erected feel or Isas ■ enty five (71) feet or men. than I___ minimum aide yard shall he rtitoon (16) feet. No multipie dwelling shall he MK — - -- parcel at land at lees (75) feet at tta as--- than seventy-flva ( Hidings la which wfcfah is deataa* ___________ or hied for the gregatlon of person* la excess of twenty-fire (IS) the width of each (Ida yard I depth required r lot fronting up etlon 16.6 — (tear Yards. In a an Sene, the depth of the rear l not he Mo than fifty (66) depth of a rear yard abutting ____net shall not ha loot and non. — ho greatsr than the depth of a (Nat yard w depth of a yard floor river shall not he • Seas, and it shall ho measured In height and may net occupy n ten per seat <«%) of the M a: 1 portions i . interment in Cemetery. WBtsrr alley, ARE DEBTS WORRYING YOU? dot out of debt o —No ohargt for budget analysis Wrttoor phono for trao koshMt, MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNCEI.LORS d largest bnig- Pay Off Your Bills _________jb (torero Homo or Office Appalntmi_ City Adjustment Service c. J. OODHARDT FVHEBAL D. E. Pursley Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL BOMB fsHSltt Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME HUNTOON uyfa^vypM:M?^5. SPARKS-GRIFFIN C|to»toryU4« BEAUTIFUL LOT, I______ Mount Pork^Cemetory. Call after LOT WITH ONE ORATE. ON AND SFrim THU" DATS April 36. IM. 4 will --“^^WtNSl ______ tana mysaU. Oavd Lost md f«ro€ . 8 mt» ■' i LOST: BLACK AND TAN OWMI Bound to Pwtlae Towmtolp.^ Ptod- on gtatlon, Lak* Orton. Reward. MT 3-ltM. LOST: glkxU WHEEL AMO TIRE off truck m tho vtclntty of Mon-or>A] 1NM. Ato**A *"* Reward. W^toPQSw of national argaiiutloa Mari be avtr is. uomti TAN AMD WHITE HER- High .chool grad, and tofitoto tony, child's not* PW»M«9. LOST: UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE HWiTjIStf iSS Bid^1 rri. f* tale*, and to lad promotion. Car .lurnlshad. H«lp Wairtsri NWS * F3§>rsa - »»» TO START A GROUND FLOOR OPPORTUNITY—$90 MAN OH WOMAN WITH OAR •onto* several Mtodrad Watntoe o us tenters, Oomatorco Township-Apply I 3O-0 M a.m . 160 N. Parry. 1 young mas. 19-36, Beet appear-expansion' 'unusual nr inlormaiMa oaB Mr. Taylor, OR 3-6T6L 3 PJbTNI t WB NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY LOOKINO wj S&CB TO BETTER THEMOBLVES. A mato-dlvlMqa kit year oM com. paay expanding aorthwtol program, aad. wul oaloot 1 men to start training Immediately, golto-tion through 'teat doaigaed to Had man wan are poraoaahta. am-bltloug, and with iMHf to team a now field. ragarOSM af P**‘ experience. U you MaSy oo Met’ aad persona! Mtowllw. rev win aTTraLt4e uudfe s:cr'F&^^o ATTENTION life MKRVB CON-■umen with Rawlelgh ProduoU in pgntta*. pan*ad Co. Mast have desire lo earn 1106 per week and up. See or writs Oman Rose. IIS W. Y pel) anti. Pontlao: or write Rawlelgh, Dept. MCD4SP4T. Freeport, m. be started aa ^ V , A WEEKLY GUARANTEE Promollea and pay toereaaes depend ott DOW fast you lean our dwi ,bagla tralalag PHONE LI 2-6666 total p.m. A-l MECHANICS WANTED TO kortonwod ears and trucks. AH maku, all models. American aad Foreign. Oood epportunUy fiy too right men. Apply Andy Cslkl Oarage, m Baldwin Avo. A FART-TIMB JOB Needed at once — I man tar evening work. JON guarantee and bonus. Can Mr. Orton. OR 3-0*33. 6 p.m. to tl p m. Montgomery Word - Pontiac Mall NEEDS FLOOR COVERING ADJUSTER Interested in Unprpvtaf your future? Multiline adjustor with 4 or more years experience, needed tor Pontiac area. Prefer , under age 40. Contact Springfield Insurance COkTni Penobscot Bldg., Detroit. WO 1-4M4. BENCH HARD ssVTdr.vasi a and gmugts. Men with those auall-flcattono only seed, apply. Oeorge Gage Co., 33093 Telegraph Rood. Southfield, Mlchlxu. KE 66109. SALESMAN l,FULL TIME Excellent Opportunity BODY Designers For Experienced Man Apjfly Personnel Office Full Sized Layout Detailers MUST BE EXPERIENCED Aero Detroit, Inc. U71T RapahUe Oak Pork. Mkh. JO 64HS BIBLE SALESMAN. FE S6864. 7:306:30 Evening*. THE CUSTOMER IS KING! WE ARB LOOKINO POE 1 MEN e# who eaa sell ea Pitryose rather than hr aecMent. Expanoe paid training. Uyou .here near and art ever 36, eaH PE 6-906 for Interview. BRIDGEPORT AND LATHE OPEE-stori. 1st elstg only. 1003 Rocheet-or Rd. at 19 Mila Rd. T&C FOOD CO.. INC. CXDST ESTIMATOR MECHANIC. Wit UP^_AjB iSSUrfcirWKt: quire 6796 Dixie Hwy- Clartoton. heal estate salesman” Pull time. Experience xreftored. Member of MatoS* Lioflag Service. Phone PK 5-9471 tar appointment. Ivan W. Bchram, Realtor. Export one od In lob »hop process- SINOLK 1HDDLBAOBD MAR FOR laadoeape work aad tana chores, mare tar beae than wages. PE jifluS!!' yg^Mtowmbtye ing and ooainattng, Precision at-' chined isd taMSgttad asosmhUos tor aerospace components. sewing end etutoai upholstering. FE 44666. 6-5 WRITE PONTIAC PRESS BOX 10$ WANfeb I AMBITIOUS fiJtt ta res'*e«*ate,*ateen^ood future ter ooe who is wBfaag to work. Sltoo floor time. Oood percent. experienced ambitious man f°lchCmaking jSgo”Cug*toy**day gragh at Matoo Eoad. Sort. “ lbaro' MS. Hunter,’ sir- TOOTfS fiAN pkEDED. UUE Jjo SYSJI S« ti’SS"Jffi graduate. 6131 fighteadlld. (M- DESIGNER OP nimwr TAfif C WANTED: TKUCK IfECHANic /- LUTONu JUUL,a toll ySn^pnriwa experience ta the S5tv tool geometry on aU type* ot cutting tools. Send Resume to Pontiac Press Box 18 saml opportunity tmpioyar I notoH^dro»iMaMa^ywmg^mra to aestat mgr. to mrrm wark. rU 30th 1:004:00 p.m. Tu«*. morning. ( YOUNG MEN Aga to in to If yea’re experienced ta Super market, gas gtattano. office* at any full or part-time tak er school aeiivitlat than Involved meetotg and tnlhtog to people, Die Makers AND Die Barbers please call me today I may m a permanent, good paying Job . tar yea. TOM SHARP WO 2-4346 guaranteed salary $si par weak DEPENDABLE MAN Htlp Wrortsd FsemiI* 7 AN EXPERIBNCND BEAUTY Operator. Imperial Ssanty Balsa. SIS Auburn Ave. BOYS BOYS BOYS “ 14 to 17 pari tune. Bare money BAR WAITRESS EXPERIENCED, sober, prater, married and «• f over, pert time, eleee n. PS 9 BABY SITTER. WHTTE. LIVE IN or 7 a.m. ta 6 p.m. 1 days. OR MW. aftor achool and all day Saturday helping ofOeo manager to mu wark. ialaiy- Mr. Orson. $47-3073. EXPERIENCED SIROLE MAN for geaaral formwork. 3463 Dutton Rd., Rochester. EXPERIENCED MAN FOR ME- BABYSITTER AND LIQHT hoaeekeeplxd. la Iflv.M Lrt* araa. Refertaeee required. 663-1663. BEAUTIFUL LINENS FREE FOR havtag a Ltata Party hi year Ill FULL TIME CAREER OPPORTUNITY BAKERY BALES OIRL. BETWEEN ■ aad 3k. (day week. Ea wvwi.-or Ban. 11 aa hear to (tort, mot have own transportation. Andersen Bakery. IM W. 16 MBs, Birmingham. MI 4-7114. SSSSTSSh? bnckgroaai. yet mniwqil «»• others so well os btanseU. To this man wo aMor a |wmnml paa- gjsgaut"M%?s5 asm. yet. affillalloa aad W6P»ri BAKER or Apprentice Baker Ted's has an Immediate *ealaf far ea experienced baker or apprentice briter willing to te trained. 13 te 41 peart at eg*. Andy to person only TED’S woodward at Square Labe Rd. *downtaw^rifles’ '(itote'miaum^ ttana. 9g*„tort_oalary expected. Write PaaMac Prose Box 76 mtorvtow write Mr CUrmco M Hoffman. «IM Whtte Ptae OPENINGS ' Noat^ a^Ttw* ” CaST anAtBskteS6lrl:* super^Chlef Drive nmi: Telegraph near Dixie. CLERICAL TYPISt , Oo.. WtaBei* ” rouu! >* niw>w|litow SS' gatofy. High echeol odacattoa. car aad phono reqotrvd. Okr IS man average 1133 weakly. First week guaranteed S1IS. Alto t route opaa to Ottacd-Laka Orton / area. Oto 3-dMS. CURB WAITRESSES FURNITURE dALEdMAN. EX plane od ta Oriental. Permanent UomRora] Oak 3U Washtagtoo. Royal Oak. __ JSt JS8r*55flK!t tn? A? „ pty la P««a dgr OROOM TO TAKE CARE OD HAD* TED’S Woodward to Bqaar* Lake Rd. yfPpiflPp Mite ‘gggag^agt Economy Car* » Aobura. LAUNDRY MAMAOER. RKMBI-sneed ta all datalta at produetton corntr flf CTMli. sad famBy wash, state Mtoroga* tad salwy expected Reply to Pontlao From to to. MfevAMT wn*iti tiyypieiii bbtrSkH llltitAlTnPt u itot tu iiiiiflfl PrtM See oorTioi mmrnger. Wltaon. Pen-Usc. OdUlaTlJto N Woodward, Ptrmtnghain. Mich. ^-^^,111 MOD| eotetoheaimg. STjhin* or Mr. Srora, OR 6606. Center NerthvUIe. Cm wr. tyft,... SMiluxNdsb WAirilUnrSl B snenced Waitress , „____tTnwL'f'Bj, i^VaalSrA^^-loS^I: mtSdULl EXoTto stay wm Inyaiid. man lor homo Jinn OENEitAL HOUBSWE6*Ka>iYB care of I chlldroa. Live to. Ill oSitiuL MbuiiwonM: tin oook. every Thuraday. and ovary iAiHCOIORIST ANb iUMp Ut. u DonnolFi, 663-04SO. PontUo MANAGER lad loo apparel store oxperioaosd. only JULIET DRAYTON PLAINS U 6-1866 Mr ~ hotwooo 9 and ll a MILLINERY MANAGER Or sxporloaeod saleswoman . manage mllUnory dspartmstt I Flint. Top salary. Paid vac-"— many other boat"*- lifl Director. 6 37 bEffeyEtoEt lEffroti— H n WORKUIS. projects. All s AppUcsUon Hammers 1. ABLE CONSTRUCTION WORKERS, •pywaigd — ujT. ■*' yradgo. wriu diotoT, Paid vacations, W. A&SSk otifco. REOIBTERED NURSE FOR IN- |aattoe a^t^lyApSnUa?lh-eu Box No. IM. Equal opportunity smployw. ■ . R^ABIJB^ P*kK)_H_krORR BaBy SHORT ORDER COOK ExPoHsncod. MI 6-S6H. SHORT ORDER COOK. WAIT-tow*g and oAihoma, Day at atom Mflo Bd ” NEED EITOfaik. WAITRESS, eashlor tor night in, Mas part hg>4 wort. Ago 39 to g| years. (■ miL ipogn — SILK PRESSER 7 WANTED: OIRL OR WOMAN, rAITREfl eounttr WAITRESS. DATS. OM LUNCH. S66 Joslyn. r A N T ED ELDkHLY RETIRED ralld ‘todyl* wST'ffrnlSi *privat* furnlshsd apartment and aU utlll-tles lor companion ship. 663-1763. WOllAN TO LIVE IN, MORE FOH. —ViSP *****- “U *fter ®:3*. WOMAN TO DO HOdgEWORK _ , wAriHb ; Women- who wish to earn good money on port Urno basis. Avoa tet^r&td^rriK Drayton Plains FO Box Si at WANTED MAIp FOR OENErAL — k. 'Must Mva ear and -----------nights, a adults. WANTED RELIABLE B1BT8IT-tor. avo hi or go homo. OB 3-7736. tor, lire In or go homo OR WANTED EXPERIENCED-- __’^1 solar Rd., Roohootor aftor 6 p ROOM, BOARD, PLUS sow a ■oath w Mptotont moth- Oft Cloaners. irt E. Pike. AIX ABOUND OOOK FOH DATS, reply to F.O. Box US. Union Lake. SHtohHn. , , OOOD OENERAL COOK FOR rmoarmd Oood boars. - *■ EBAL ESTATE SALESPEOPLE wanted for fan tftoa wsriL Vory jood ^commission rates. Ask far CRAWFORt) AGENCY PONTIAC Osteopathic HOSPITAL sa coajuncuon wnn no now expansion nragnun, has spa nines tor tbs following pootttau avaft-Obio ea an torsa tom* — no . Registered Nurses exporlsacs. Att~ 3 glrtHg la g June Graduates igraduate school of Nurotag pond-tag State Board Examination! Shift Differential tor all ampler to ■wklng I: to to U:(g p.m. and 11:61 p.m. to 7S» tone opportBniUoo for advanow- saEstaas; Paid Life Insurance PONTIAC Osteopathic HOSPITAL 47*4 N. Perry St. Poiitisc, Michigan JKP,TTT"' ■ SALESMAN SALESMAN itotod iorrtioiy. High call-btr. non-prossurs gH*6SIW oroforrod. SUdtoS. • 6 * > • Wrtto*Mr.rHn *■* EVELYN EDWARDS oopSKr IK But tuna *»n* 4 Phone FE 4-0584 SALES i aged S4i tor salaried sslsi. aih to £Stmti iP*r -* “* Pontlso * i 44337. Finish High School Na ctkudi, rapid progress, pr. part now (or collage. Study ■ noma to spars time. Per flu book lot write to Natl on tl School of Homo Study, Dept. FP, Sox wrOotriSr1 — ACCORDION rtrStt^l Mghlgu 55 OAOAN PH Wsrk Waatsd Mala roqioaohh CEMENT t lng ssUmator. clerical work sag work. Will appreciate opportunity tor Interview. Writs Psallao Press ** liflllMli--------------- tLECriut- pun,____________________ tan noeda wort. OR 3-3343. lawn Wore and OAitb'ffN! WANTED LAtWI td jyEE^ND I WOMEN. WAUL WASHINO AND g*nsr«l cleaning. FE 4-66*3. COLOlCiB-WdHAN DfetRES DAY r^nt&sr tr>M ** p,f MPKRATT: WANT ANY KIND Of work, my homo. PE 3-6613. IRONINGS WANTED. NORTH END FE 3-1436, reference!. ____ 1 ‘work, PB L UrijHtojd HAntfau — liM.% —Lj> ijin, _________ PR M364._________ " WA8HINO0 AND IRONINOg WANT. Od. 674-1*43_________ Building Sirvirs SuppUfli 13 ADDITIONS. REMODELINO, SA-ragoi, carpentry, brisk, block end cement va^L Licensed. ON 3-1616. ADDmokl, RlBd'bftLti(6. house ralidcg, masonry, carpentry. aluminum sidles, basements under present homes. PE 94177. BuTlSI N 5 ’ MODrihWtZATtON ipewvomsnt Irnlir at low ____Jugi^rfjrUar BUILDING A PORCH! HAVE outside door and frame. PE Mto* CARPENTEB W 6 * K. REMODEL. tag and addltlono. ok 3-6777, CEMENT WORk: AtL tdifis. 16 repair wwE"nt 6-16SC__ L. A. toUNO HOUSE MOVINO ~~My ooaipnod. wc Ttoto. ITERINO. NEW AND REPAIR. >ias. It sMit. wffyt pons specials 1x3 q» C H. AIRPORT LUMBER tr* irr-n1 id. qr BULLDOSHfO, EAEEMERT9 DUO, drag Una, front snd loaddr work, dump tracking. Pros ootlmgtoo. ELKrraiTiioni' nm m NEE ESTIMATES OR ALL WfR-tag. will flMaao. R. 1. Monro _Etactri0 Co. PE 6-0431. II ■idciipkifi 4 Tmw n BOOKKEEPINO, ALL TAXES EM Mill DrsnEwMm * TsHsrisj 1/ DRM8MAKD40. TAILOMNO AND custom plow. mao. drao, **uo*‘ boto-thI and PLofiBRT'^115 Tawu. xaf*mm. ________ yard oradino. plowing and disking, vicinity gf Airport. OR |®a AL'i COMPLETE LANDSCAPWO. UddHto gradJNg. plantoig, trso removal snd trimming, dtsktaf. Black girt, tap sail and snavat-tns 776 toott Lake Road. PE ring or OR 3SIS>. Iau. iAHoscAPmo BHMK FE l-ttgi aftor I p.m. COMPLETE LAWN WORE. PIN- gtSSBito* — — “ ~ tok MnM nvwiMj IMP UirifoAMt Awb Ltini, plowed, grasgod and lovstod Rta-Unqjii. Prao git ■Mil, or boto-tillincT pb hW. ..Wixqjft&sau. warstfgga”1*” mwlelnio w ACCURATE EXPERIENCED ~ W. R. BOLlrr Cl lIllllEl Bflfal II BOARD POE ELDERLY LADlkS VSR m , My TOE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 80, 1962 TWENTY-NINE Mtevtef mi TiiiMii it !5sSK8k3B^L6V BUILDINGS MOVED ud |ftrt(«i FIC 3-73(3. lHMIaBLIWo,----------- PthHf 4 8Monrtte| ^ H A norma too dbcoiut- ^ab^q RuimNo Atm wall washino No jok too moll. FE MOM TibiMM-Mi Stnric* 14 WABPB kepaSVehvtce mo yrii^akflo mm t*»un* Moot Potto to Stock 'KrSvSS mXatmss Wanted CkiMrM ta Boat'd It *anted i kTohchLa " an6" ‘i DONATIONS W Waatei la tool OTTAOB HOME FOR OB loko, Birmingham, art*. to I young p -im, 9M ‘ B II 8 3406 wanted i bedroom home root with EMIO to totf. moll dot menu. FTC 6-MOT.__ f ANTED ROOM ANb BOARfo FOR elderly woman, oon poy |gS.$o Mr awAw« BUILDER CASH 48 HOURS 9^WScm WRIGHT OriNdg^iAST "snjEjSFclW ^MfflOLKTQW REALtT^CO^ LIST s.!?T«f®3sajir ** ATJOHnSON & &)NS REALTORS FE 4-2533 Bond home*. Ink* proporty.fi norong*. Wo here buyere tor MNMOi MJm till tor ^Atsepssr^f# J. CUMMINGS. REALTY. AMO wXntsd to m ii*o* otb-or ton Weet Side. Weet r ^ bon. FE Mm. “WE NEED” Lake Properties iOTS—OOTTAOBB—TR. BBS! FOR RALE AND FOR RE) stivers Galore * * ‘Woes Apartnit- FBrqjihfttj 1-ROOM EFFICIENCY m N. Fsddock ***’**"feB MOSS ROWS FRONT. FIRST FLOOR. iu boot. utUlUoo (umlobod. M Park Ploeo, FE M7M SLATER'S M. FARES ST:.. ... Days FE 4-354S Mlsbto FE 44137 * ROOM APARTMENT. AfepLTS ONLY 011.60 PER WERE. UTIL1----FURNISHED. FE f- AND BATH, LOWEtt, IQ COT- ----FE Hill or FS 8-3306. FRIYA1 ’ IQS Center. FE 2-33S0'. . sCTr *mm CANCELLED - DENIED inn Driver* Monthly Payment Flans Complete Coverage , Effoetivo Immedlotely AarUn-NorreU. Aieoer 333-62 Oakland auto bufflt . n sT&m oi fiiio H uiw totelipalr REBUILT MOTORS . NS money down-34 mo*. to poj MI s, ^mKow *h"*^* wi 3-7433 lueaieat Water BraoWof SUPERIOR basement water-prootoro. All work guoror*—■* Free estlmatac/FM mis. STARTERS AND REGULATORS GENERATORS $5~95 UP 343 ABborn_____FE tolfU Isaaty Skeps . _DNA‘B BEAUTY SALON JsBSHmHL. IS Qmmbortoto Ito I FI AWN LET S HAVE FUN WITH Lonoa'i Boole. Sylron Flooto. Sell Boeta. and crart. Teenee trailer* Do tt youreeK wood and aluminum dock*. BANK TERMS __ Open Friday Evo. SUNDAY 10-1 Harrington Boat Works _• Your Evlnrude Dealer A-l ADDITIONS. FALL-OUT SHEL-1Mb. SmEER ANYTHINO IN BOMB REF All EXCAVATIONS ‘ •FECIAL LOW' hen. rooSM. tom* w tloue Mich Icon M batbrooou. kltoben, — Alt work cooronto . Construittan. FE MHO. TirOAEl to FAY. COM-aide modernisation oehrtn tor home owners. One **H wBl brine -----------baud- SM* CARPENTER WORE OF ANT UM RoosTFE S-SMS oftor S (apt diaaiti TTJSON CARPET SERVICE toll "Ooorko*' MAMSM Csla LaaaKriss (■tai Trfsrtef isxru'ffi Ferforotod eloy or filer pike ALL SIZES DRAIN APE OATES SUMP CRO^ ALL MKEB H Orchard LM.QAV* PE »TM9 Proem OR 3-7163. pqy WALL IRNTALUm ^irojTN- FIBEROLAB SUFFLIBS. MUNROB Ploetlce. MM ASdoreenrlUe Ed.. Wotortord.____________■ KTbWEeO FLOOR LAfiW6. undtag end ftolenlnf. Fh. FE laciNks Ton Service BETS * NACEERMAN Tost tost or our*. FE Mill. FE 5-22(7_____ms N. Ferry A-l MERION BLOB BOD. DEUV-- erle« Bode or you pick up. 1001 Crooks Rd PL %4Su. Class A Merion Sod Mo per yd. delivered Discount It Jriekod up — MS acres pdnMMI Merlon SogsJp|MIS|, Inc., Utleo LANDOCAJPINO AND KXCAVAT-DW, SEEDINO. SODDINO. Free ostlmotes UEDINO. SODDINO. ORADWO. ta-r^nwim W SPRINO ClitaNUF - MAINTt mom, O-j Loodso*PrT*OR MWI TALBOTT LUMBER •mete Bui id Inc Suppllei Brand AVgr fe < Free t >R Mil * year* experience. FE Ml ROCKCOTE PAINTS^ mrw wwU^Sea Herrte Sto; Hooe Tjtetet EXPERT piano TUNINO ftaSSSfaWsrar Wiennd Music Center ,ytnA space eeberved FOR TOUR SOREBI on SERVICE AD , DIAL FE MIS! TOOATt TUNINO AND.NEFAININO. » hour serrlee, all work caarMNsod nSfir II* N. SAOINAW IQ A»P u. . —“ Fii-MH J-ROOM. PRIVATE ENTRANCE. A4 PLASTERING AND REPAIRS Rose. Pot Loo. FE MW. COLORED, FOUR LAROE ROOMS BROWNIES EARDWARE FLOOR BANCwSS - POLISHERS Wall paper steamers jgssfr--------- CHRISTIANS. ] ROOMS. MS A L POWER SAWS COLORED: PARTLY FURNISHED Wallpaper Steamer LAROE. LOVELY 4 AND BATH, noer airport, aduNo only. OR 1-1*43'. UTILITIES FURNISHED” CON-structlon worker* pretorred. FE WEST SIDE, 3 ROOMS AND BATH rwri oiuej, i nww mi# »«***. Strictly iprivate. All wttlltleB fum. afe« msT r.g!%tfeir Apartmsnts-Unfurnished 31 PRES NICARAUOA LIST JsMnM stomp ass IteMsMT Hi-fi Service MICKEY STRAKA • TV SERVICE DAT on NYNS. FS *-lM« General Tree Service ASH, ^Ag^URMnt HAULINO AND RUBBISH. ANY- tlme. FE 4-0M4. HAULING AND RUBBISH NAME -oar prtoo. Aay am*. FE sms. LIOHT HAULING AND YARD clcenup. FE HMI. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCEINO RubbUb, HU dirt. jmBm fravel and treat tad toadtn 3-0S03. trodi iteotel Trucks to Rent Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. f. jst- wood,*k ««. Open Dolly Includlnc Sunday THOMAS UPHOLSTER 1RO »7 NORTH FERRY ST. FE S4&» BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walla anTwtSSK. iaea Setla-toetton cuaraatood. FE M«n. WALL-MASTfitj WALL AND WINDOW OJU FNM MHMATNn — WALL CLEANINO AND FLOOR pollrtiInc Free etUn.au. W1W AOgv^mj^n. ,t f 1«A m "^=k£ V**" NORGE RfTJRSJv13 OR t ADULTS. no A Zb* araixirall gamBSia wmVtotrt »~muT •hooms BFfifliggrkiLiwit- We* furnlebed. PootUe L*k« NOOKS. LOWER. ftkX BATH. Pkl-vaie emrnnee. FE 4-MM 6k 3-Room aFartmeNT, Pri LAROE ROOMS. LAKE FRiyi- ROOMI. liEAT AND CLEAN. X)M ANb Oath, couple or nc>* woman. No caudrea. • S3 ROOMS. GROUND FLOOR. IU per week piu* wMlfiloo. lSW Ruby. UL MSI* __________________2___________ 90 OAKLAND t rooms. M*- Call Mrs. Aadsnoo. fisms. nUhcd. FE ’»-303S. lOJtS APARTMENT, 1 ri MM*.________ m. #, mi wuiUA ni/uMo 3H Orchard Ltekt. FE m $ room, and bath. FE rooms and bath, heat, hot water, romcorotor and s t r" -tura.^Near Fteber Body. SM ROOMS AND BATH. I WELCOME. Near Oskow L 3-38*0 EM 3-3844. ROOMS AND BATH IN DRAY-ton Plains, &*aL HI “*“ **-irieerator, and Otote $M mo. FE 3-WM. ROOMS AND BATH. HEAT, HOT water, near ---- FE 4-1708. IMMEDIATELY TAIL A m*ka& anTSowor.”ltoom ed. Eaey walk-up on Sue line ana close to schools end ell shop pine. Con bo coon anytime. Calf tor app’t. fe MM1. U no oaeder, nf MSS*. *M E, Flko. COLORED. JEFFERSON TERRACE I room* and bath, newly decorated. Hoe re tended. Auto, gas na ______ 4-ROOM APART. Utilities furnlebed. SM per Upper Mooaa onortidoot. w hzt m pear_wo*k. M t furnlebed. Hi Andereoa. FE I NEAR PONTIAC MAt,L tor. »7» per---“■ OR 3-11*3 Modem 5 Room APARTMENT STOVE AMD REFRIGERATOR FURNISHED. MS PER MONTF APPLY AT 103 BLOOMHEL1 TERRACE. NEXT TO ST, JC SEPH’B HOSPITAL FE j-lMl. E W L T bECORATBD 3-ROOl bath, beat, hot water. Wetorfort OR 3-0710. All WS0MM. after t aiS I kodroome Air eoadltlenad MODERN IN EVERT DETAIL Atfaim * FE AMIS taaaaer. M Salmor tot- Apt. UNION COURT APARTMENTS Are yea looklnc tor aleaa attractive apartment where the patera friendlyr cool la eumn Uno. warm h winter Niro. Tl I roome and bath aaartmt . rent tor MjMr moath' Adulu only In tble buildlnf. E. O. Bamp-etead. Realtor. 1M B. Huron. FE tig * MM orrJTE 1-7*71. wBnm^fmragcm iSi. tz s^EiSb i MSTreWJr 1 per week FE 8-337*. 3 BEDROOM. LAEEFRONT HOUSE oa Wolverine Lsko. with sttaeaed EBBOO HARBOR. NEWLY DEO-crated Mralehed one bedroom ‘—w none Case Lake. -A d “1 r. ST war ishIJ By Dick Turgor *•10 qwwiyiHMmimbmikatoto* . 'Tve taught Janie not to buy things we can’t afford. Now all I have to do is teach her there ARE such things!” Isot Mmso, Ustersiiksd 44 3-ROOM HOUSE. INQUIRE 30* Voorhele. ___ ______ 3 LARGE ROOMS AND BATH. I-ROOM TERRACE. GAS HEAT. email family. FH M4M. „ BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP WEST— MM fvaaboe. til*. wa 4-uii. COLUMBIA kEA\ SALDWIN, isrsx, *^*va?f ---,UE NY S- “ THESE HOMES ARB FOR . RENT $55 MO. ■ OR WOL SELL New 3 Bedrooms Carpeted Gas Heat Dining Room All Areas • Available Soon MODEL AT 906 Kettering FE 1-3(71 after U REAL VALUE by S. B. R BUILDERS NEW 3-BEDROOM. LAKE FRONT. Oxford area. IIM a month. OA iwW lPlSWSto, OM_________--- peted Available soon. FE S-387S. U to t. REAL VALUE NT I. B. S. Builder*. __________________ New 3-bedroom, Ml month. ««• peted. Rent-option to buy. Avall-aklo toon. Ft H*ll,^ to„». REAL VALUE BY I. B. 8. Bulld- rsnt with ornovL t&jfx. $55 A MONTH 1M Corwin. 1 block cost of Oakland. i Mock north of Montcalm. Roar Auburn and Bast Slvd. ms per manta, oa* Hot and carac* available. See manager. 111 S. i on he asm. WATERFORD - 1171 Dlxl* Hwy. | rooms and bath. Oa* beat, largo yard. Open t Lais CsttNfM ‘round, hid* a way homo on l— Orica. I rooms furnished.. WUl **11 or trado With reasonable down payment or wUl lease tor rammer, can MX tsiM or garage, FE 3-7733. _______ NICE ROOM AND HOME WITH kitchen privileges for omployoS woman. U Lexington Place. FE tmST SLEEPING ROOM? PRIVATE EN-trance and tmlh. amis floor, roa-tonable, cleaned dally. 171 A Tote- fl3WHd ROOM — WEST IffiE. -----avpilable. FE I-173S. 70 ROOMS. REASONABLE IS N. Cate ‘ MAIN BUST CORNER LOCATION, neit to a large Drug Sin*. Suitable tor mon'a furnlehlngx. Book store or many other bust-aeasaa. Fin boaomeat, gee boat- tor day end night. WUl deoorute tojwdt ta^R CUjB " "—' “ ipfles 47 gm^iinruto^aH^ 1 loot loteH fwpsrty m UILDINO t.000 SQUARE FEET. rassf. ■pace for MS per ■PH NMfig aii 1. — verted to tutt UnanU, FE 3-7003 DOUBLE STORE. I WASH ROOM8 go* boat end gae bat water furnished. la an opt bldg, oa ataln comer, adit • to a Urge drug ■tore. * SB *MR call collect. May be eeon at 444- R. Flko. ’ IUILDINO „ ::i|| Pontiac Free* jpg U. TAR SETTLE. I BURNERS. |! TRYING TO TRADE?. Wa need no cash. dMhounte. mortgagee. or anything but n sufflelont equity and a detlra to trade «f TRaSSGc - FE 4-lSVt — REALTOR ml_----------- —‘ t SMALL BEDROOM ROME, OAK-land Lake privilege*. (7.4(0, (500 down. 3071 Olmstood, 017 1-0803 lake prlvUegoi. schools, < Pee beet, $13 050. OB 3-3 2 BEDROOMS. lft-CAR OARAOE. enclosed breeeeway, lot iux300, dead end ktreet, lake prlvUeges. ROCHESTER AREA S bedroom borne with ftreploei on 1 acre, 081-0313. 3 BEDROOM HOME, north end, furniture i ihtmwi ubat kbta. -it;- OL 1-1015 finer 0:30 p.m. 3-BEDROOM HOME. 470 FIRST Street. FE MHO.___■ 3-BEDROOM HOME $9900 673-8758 3)4 Bedrooms $550 Down tbsll near Auburn. Full dining full basement, gas hear loot borne near st. Fredrick. PACE OR 0-0(36 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH Htobland Estates, off Weet M-M. fun basement. MiUt-ta oven end rang*. Recently redeeprotid. Priced at MAMS, No down payment to quoBftatk buyer. Treter-*—■ ~ 7-4525. -BEDROOM. 1-LEVEL STOWk rancher. Built 1(54. | bath*. 1 fireplaces, built-in* and dishwasher, Thermopane fines throughout, Mar garage. Take pgtvOgaoa large ML woedod and landscaped. Now bOmg redecorated, clarkston ----- (NO KONEV HVN) 4 ACRES located M^Jkoobester Rood. soo down. Clarence C. Ridgeway ROOM8. GAS HEAT. DRAYTON i ROOM BRICB'HOME IN INDIAN Vlllajfe. ^ Unflnlahed «ocond_ floor 140 Ogemaw, ____________IB ON H<~- Small down payment -ep»—»^i--2l!SSS^i!SLmi53rawJ5S»E5i22li* It-ROOM HOUSE. IDEAL FOR IN- 200 X 200 The beautiful yard and t kept I reem borne, arfth i Dixie Highway 321 SOUTH TILDEN Saw hcrwN. .» bedrooms - Storms and screens. Lawn, shrub-bery. Judeh Lake. mTs-MIMT- ochoolx. Coll nt (-1171. ASSOCIATE BROKERS- 14S FrankUn Blvd.___FEJtMM SI .000 DOWN. 685 HOMESTEAD Eve* OA 8-3080 - LAKE ORION. Large down payment. Prieed i "PONTIAC REALTY 737 RMdwb* BT OWNER - (-BEDROOM ROME on Terry Loko goo heat, otorme and. (croons, fully IngnmlM to.* too (10(* down. FE 3-07(8 or BY OtirNER. 3-BEDROOM. LIYINQ room, eon porch, and Oil *Uo basement, 3 full bathe, gas boat, and touted to BUILDERS EARLY AMERICAN aHa i&r w,uoc COLORED n u»-lng room, carpeted. Picture wta-dowe. Big lot. (300 down. SM wAnros-PONTue estates 4 bedrooms, full basement, 1< 1*0x150. A sac rifle* at Ill.Mi *CAM I*K« WATERFRONT . 4 bedroome, ole* kitchen and IP 4 bedrooms, work. U ml. wool of FooO*< IMOt rmiotrsd. ■ KLWOOD WBALTT OM41 UNBELIEVABLE tfs* Transparent SI. . »i.50o down t r no mortgago eg 6U. „ -ly payments 4104, Including tax** and lnsuraao*. W* aggrevaUr-wlth quallfylpg or mortgage cost Immediate oeeanaboy. E arc Home Sales. JE FM33 or C 44171. STARTER HOMES AS LOW AS $4riOO NO MONEY DOWN ON YOUR LO MODEL OMQL DAIL 10 * O. FLATTLEY, BUILDER **** Oommer-- Holly Apartment 7-tomUy on moio street fa village. AU apt*.. unMinigbod wttb “‘t* “* entrances, Watkins Hills Brick 3 geweroyi bedrooms, ceramic fiM-.t iMMi Aftrarnlve spolan. newly carpstod living , room, dtn-■— ft*n»l fiijl base- rot. fMl-out'(belter. Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor 3*4 S. TELEGRAPH ROAD FE 3-784*_______. MA 5-S431 HOYT “Vof that pereonal Interest" ESPECIALLY FOR YOU Long, low (Wonky brick roach besuUfal fi— ------- . _________ MON, pleetered wall*, utility attachod t-o*r garage. All a_ . floor lcatad South Bloomfield itighiaeiAe. Consult Us today our liberal toad* puu. MILLER- • in. only AMraotty* 34*dn, ■______ turlng hardwood floore. carpeted fivkag. rom, ISMt, double — kitchen, all heat, fenced yard. Only trsso - MS* ' $70 month. FHA TERMS. (3M down plus tag. cost*. I'lrodroom numb _. built In UP*. Extra bedroom, eep-Xretely bested off tiled “— - Aram, storms ant tiled bath. TSUI price very ate* beat ham*. plastered walls, .. .in bath. Nice Mfta dry boeement. fenced yard. (1*500 Reasonable terms. Wl/l consU trad* for 3-bedroom. ( William MiUtr, Realtor . FE 2-0263 (To W Huron ' Open • to *' HANDYMAN SPECIAL ( room*, ft aosomoM. IfitiM lot ta ^ood locetioo. Only HUES can 1 acres, 4-bedroom, largo living room, country styl* kitchen, 3-cer (arose with breexewey, oil fired hot water heoter, choice location, will accept trade tor REAGAN ANNETT Canal Front-■ Also prlvtlofoi os 3 lakes Well-built nome h*s living room 17x-II paneled ta knotty pine, dining area, compact kitchen. 3 bedrooms and bath, utility room — Oil BB heat. Vacant 111- ____________j. Newly radsslrat- *d, excellent condition, largo modem kitchen and family-rm.. Rved^roed °$U,fo6 TttOM rr, COLORED 3 Bedroom Homes "O" DOWN NO COSTS NO NOTHING SHORT OF MONEY? W* have a 3 bedroom homo with gae hoot, large combination kitchen and dining room, good etaod lot that lx Smh end a slab tor a 1 aar f*>Q|*- All this and mare Mr only (7.7M and small down payment - DIXIE HIGHWAY A beautiful 4 room brick wttb gae boat full basement, mis eun- of°Txtrae f joe« “with*this homo! available M*,#0# *"* t*rau *** CRAWFORD AGENCY M W. Walton FE M23* «* E. Flint_____MT 3-1143 •ELL OR TRADE - Lovely > bedroom brick rancher wttb full bMtmwt oak floors, gae beat, ammhmm storm a. TbU lovoty homo to anotlooo. About • yrt. Old, Moa lawn, pawad at WUl accept oar. Mid contraot, house-trailer or vacant pnporty a* ' payment. Aak tor Mr. R Evening! call OA MIIS. siSTo MM DOWN All for only (lMM. I PER own DOWN MW wttb lay--- £VSt llami Lake. 3 home. Owner n _______ _______»ble dawn payment from roneol* porenoier wfil receive oonoldoratioi. VMl:.g^ full booomont garage. Only 440* ELL OR TRADE - Lovely to bedroom brick rancher with evtr-elie attached two-car garage and 1* ACRES OP LAND. Outam built, completely earpeted. Fireplace, Ift bedbe, built-in weeber. dryer, oven and range. One acre landscaped. Over 71 shrub*, tree!, rases, ete. Only (34,050. Good protective roetrietlcM. ir" ~ from Pontiac. Wm trad* contract, smaller homo, jiST with us r w* buy. sti._____ toad*, fl years experience. Open M:3*. Multiple Listing Service. L. H. BROWN, Realtor * MS Elisabeth Lako Road Ph FE 4-3564 or FE 2-4810 If BUD" Low Down Payment Qflick Possession torraoo, bandy ti. ____________ taring gecoroue living r* separata dining room, full b ment. Total price 17,450.00 Beets paying rent, can now Northern High Area Spick-and-span 3-bedroom bom* ‘ - within easy walking dliBbe* to Northern High, nutomnUo heat and hot water, garage, fenced rear yard, pavod street. M to (ft per eesU mortgage, balance sM.ii per monto taetad-tag taxes and insurance, “BUD” Nicholie, Realtor • ML Clemens St. FE 5-1201 or FE 4-8773 after * n.m. fE toMTS GAYLORD FAMILY ROOM. Util ft. Ml pan- ‘ I WbUlm. toree-^edroom 1 garage, concrete drive. Price (11,504, includes washer and rer. gae brat Can nTtoMM. LAKE FRONT LOT far (3. MS. 78* 2M. can FE MM. IM HOME buUt-ln b BSI'da irlce IU u iir to neal t rooms, basement. Only HIM* with (2.504 down payment A toad MM. CaU MY 3-MII “ ■st this Mora tt to too MM- Lawrence W. Gaytor# N£W/ Custom Built HOMES I. Top* to quality. 31; 3. Satisfaction gimnmtood. 4. ArchtteeUiral servtoo avallabol. ti. r*. KAMPSEN REALTY and BUILDING COt . FE 4-0921_____ LAKE OAKLAND I odroom brick roneh. Large dta-ng uwn. MS sq. ft! ftnisbid roo-roatton room. Fraud PUNS. Frt-rot* boach rad boat dock. Only WILL BUILD °MiVliig,oS*o83* Hivi 3 Mnm, um. full bUMHM model io mam, Don McDonald ‘ attached gang*. Excellent neighborhood near Elisabeth end CM* Lake Road*. Ibid to a Mari to see! You will agrao If* a good ‘— -* B1T.MB. Brarajwitof wvs RETIREES Moot Util* borne t on Heokilh Lake. _ „ offer « equity to MjM ksdjn JACK LOVELAND O'NEL bendy to triu grndooL^_. __™_. buy to the city M (U.TM. AH ftFRlMQ AND BUMMER TOOlBR wm HRv-. under to* Mg ebad* bora So QSi to •itt aluminum st carpeted Urine room, dtnktg i btnatten. Finish eJ »Ppr plus iraxliaately (1.400 down. TOUR CHANCt Mdroom and den i at HUM. cm-;, i. wttb rap-' natural flr*- ONI OF THE HARD TO dining room, breakfast nook M#h flroptoe*. Fafitoi,., basement, practically now oil furnace, water softoner. 2-cer garage Solid vqfem at 2-c-ar garage. BolM value SI MMM; again you'U nood approximately NM. Mako Ling you dlicharg* with your ■ . ,v ,-^t ■ RAY O’NEIL. Realtor 7 “ “ “ ‘... I “Dm Opeo 9* STOUT'S Best Buys Today EW OFFERINO - On* of nlceri family homM W# have eoon, to "VgreEjlMk: ■; bedroom Cap* c g* closet*, basement, oQ convenient to shopping, v Nj* rat*. Exterior fli- JTtt VU MBs eur MfttfUe mmM « Mm - afesi, point ment. r "■ to DOME - Newly Ml toot I ft* bedrenm homo. Iraelnl to Dto bum Hotgbtt, *8*0 M'MNMto b^t ^rs^rttsryf Worrell Stout Realtor tHIRTtv THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 30, 1862 W|M*H*«m $9,500 mu MH Mttow reoch-et»<« kern* fen year lot. Full basement. 1 fhb flfeore, til* bath. birch cup-board* OR 3-7033-auteMcNAS .art meter VOL'H LOt OR OUftS furnish material to finish. ARTHUR C, OOMPTON * BON 4*00 W. HURON DAYS OR f-fU Hli, d HiM OR FE 3-704 SAM WARWICK HAS IN SYLVAN Lika beautiful field stone catoptel bouse at SHI Renfrew oft Sherwood St T 1 bedroom brick, plastered. Mb bsths. city water, m Bwer. paved streets. S car ca* Me. terse recreation room. AM-_ Intercom system Taman built-Ins. lake and boat privilege. SSI,00S cate. Boose guaranteed lor full year. Open Sef and Sun. or by appointment Phone 6*2-1714 or 682-2820. Quality I Cherokee Hills Levety Mite —- SrmtSBm ■ kitchen ___ enclosed __________ , dC .bteSf te clnerator etc VERY DESIRABLE LOCATION. Priced to sell - Terms con be arranged ! New ellng In I celling wli h Bungalow — Cherry p draperies uni W1 fireplace. Dining r lined kitchen with I Ins. garbage disposal too. T baths. 3 large bedrooms