T/»t Weath^F rf'vf ;■' f. ,, /y-;.' ■’; V :jr ,, ji i.,' ii IM. WMtlMr itfrMu P*rM*il iHndtwralMwnm Xoa aoudy, Oool«r tc (MbN^m pm« II THE ^ PaOTI AG ’ PRESS , ’,X: .,Home’''”"r^ .’i Edition*' VOL. laa jfo. 82 ★ ★ ★ ★ PipNTIAC: MICHIGANi TIJESDAV, MA(V 12, 1964—32 PAG]Ei^ ASSOCtATIO PRIi« reo PRESS INTBRNATIO lOo WOHT ON SCHEDULE - Work on the Howard C. Baldwin Memorial Pavilion on the Oakland Univeraity campus is proceeding oh schedule. Within a week the roof arches should all be in place, according to James Hicks, manager of the Meadow Brook Music Festival. Thp 2,000-seat pavilion and the Lula B. Wilson Memorial Concert Shell will be completed for the opening concert, July 23. OU Music Festival Building Called 'Right on Schedule' “Right on schedule,” is the answer to “How is the building coming for the Meadow Brook Music Festival?” James-Hicks, manager at Oakland University for the festival, says that nearly all the steel work is in place. Special cranes had to be brought in to raise the giant roof arches. ' Enthusiasm for the performing arts program has infected the contractor, J. A. Fredman of J. A. Fredman, Inc., 735 South Paddock Street. As his contrihntion to the endeavor he waived his contractor’s fee and obtained the cement for under the < seats as a donation. The oi^hing concerts July 23-24 will feature violinist Gordon Staples and cellist Italo Babini playing the Brahms Double Concerto in A minor with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Mary Costa will be heard in all three concerts the next week. Only July 30 and 31 she will sing Richard Strauss’ “Four Last Son^s” and Ravel’s “Sheherazade.” DUAL ROLE On Aug. 6-7 Slxten Ehrling will appear in the dual role of piano soloist and conductor in Hindemith’s “The Four Temperaments.” Pianist Leonard Pennario will be the soioist Aug. lt-14, playing the Khatcha-turian Concerto. Season tickets are now on sale, priced at $10, $6 and $3. Reservations are being taken by committees throughout the area and at the University. Mr. and Mrs. Semon E. Knudsen are chairmen of the citizms committee of the festival. 'fewer Study Cost OK'd by Waierford Board THe Waterford Township Board last night took a preliminary step toward the 4Utimate eonstruction-xil a saijitary sewer system for the township. ' The board authorized $18,000 as its share of a $40,-♦’OOO engineering study by the county Department of Showers Seen for Late Today Showers and thundershowers forecast for late today will probably end during the night with temperaturfes falling into the 40s. Partly cloudy and cooler with the high in the 60s is the prediction for tomorrow. Generally, fair and warmer is the outlook for Thursday. , Fifty-six was the low recording in downtown Pontiac prior ^ to 8 a.m. today. By 2 p.m. the temperature had climb^ to 62. I In Today's j Pre$s I, Poverty t\ight Johnson’s bill before | i House' committe^PAGE * Cancer Sabin announces discov-I ery of possible virus - PAGE 31. ^ Latin Aid “ I President offers funds, ^ credit to ease problems— PAGE 18. ^ Area News .....i ... 17 I i? Astrology ...r'. ,24 1 Bridge ..... .24.1 Comics. ........ .. • 24 f ' Editorials 6 I Markets 25 1 Obituaries 26 ? Sports 21-23 I’’ TV A: Radio Programs 31 Wilson, Earl Women’s Pages .31 .13-15 P^lic Works. '^e study would explore In- t^al sewer system requirements of ■■ ■ the four communities that would tie into a proposed extension of the Dequlndre interceptor sewer line from 14 to 23% Mile Road. Detroit ha^ indicated a willingness to extend its interceptor line on a revefiue basis payable by communities which tie in to die service. It awaits approvai of these municipalities. Donald Ringler, DPW deputy director, last night outlined the proposed sewer program to board members. Waterford, as the largest community to be served by the pro-DoSed extension, was asse $18,000. or about 45 per cent of the total study cost. PROPOR-nON PAY Other eommunities who are potential customers would pay for the study in proportion to their populations. R i n g*! e r minted out that study expenditures would later be credited to the com- . munity when the. sewer system is under way. Ahy community .which appropriates funds for the study but later decides to bypass the sew^r system would forfeit this amount, Ringler said. Cbnstruction of -the Waterford sewer system could be under way in two years, Ringler, said, and the systeni could be completed in ope more year. schedule! PRESUMED This assumes that plans for the interceptor and negotiations on laterals and arms with the four communities involved proceed on schedirie. 'The newer system would cost individual users from $1,- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) RuskJJrges NATO to Isolate Fidel THE HAGUE, Netherlands (iPl — Secretary of State Dean Rusk urged the complete isolation of Communist Cuba today, warning the Western allies that tlie Cuban problem presents tm danger of another world-shaking crisis. « In' an address to the opening session of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Council, Rusk coupled a plea for action against Cuba with a call for l^e Allies to pitch in and help in South Viet Nam. Rnsfc said manpower pnd miiitary assistance are not needed from the odier aliies in Communist - threatened South Viet Nam. He suggested industrial equipment, commodities, mescal teams and teachers would help to give the people a psychological boost. Speaking of East-West rela-lations in general. Rusk > declared that despite an easing of tension, there Still was no sign of any basic historic change in the Soviet position. Rusk said the United States is continuing to seek some avenues of agreement with the Soviet Union and other nations should do the same. . - Heayily Guarded \ MfNamarg in Viet Nam Hoffa Lawyer: No Connection in Union Loans Sayi Teamster Chief Innocent of Fraud in Pension Fund Cose CHICAGO (^—Counsel for James R, Hoffa contended today that the government brought together 14 disconnected loans to bolster its charge that the Teamsters leader conspired to defraud the union’s pension fund of more than $20 million.,, Maurifee Walsh, Hoffa’s lawyer in a nwil fraud and conspiracy trial In U.S. District Court, told tlie jury of eight men and four women in his opening statement that Hoffa is innocent. The government charged the Teamsters V"*®" president and seven associates had engaged in a scheme to defraud the pension fund through frad-ulently obtained loans and converted more than $1 million to their own uses. “'Hie defense of Hoffa is simple,” Walsh told thg jury. “He is not guilty of any crime to defraud the pension fund, and he did not engage in a conspiracy to do SO. ‘We will show that there was no connection between these loans obtained from the pension fund for building projects in widely separated areas that tended from Florida to California.” Walsh told the jury there was no fraud involved in the 14 loans cited in the government’s indictment, and no loss resulted to the pension fund from thede loans. “The finished buildings are worth $3 for every $2 loaned,” Walsh said. George Callaghan, counsel for Zachary Strate Jr., New Orleans builder who headed Pelican States Hotel Corp., which borrowed $4.6 million from the fund in 1959, said the. fund “never made a better investment.” The money was used to help finance construction of the'Von-tfinebleau Motor Hotel in New Orleans/ Callaghan said the defense -will show this loan was amply secured by the $5.«-million appraised valiic of the property. He said the borrower never defaulted on payments to the pension fund, and that the hotel was sold last j^ar for $7.3 fnil-lion. - \ Th€ government alleged, however, that the eight defendants raided the tension fund to help Hoffa out of personal financial difficulties. ^ AR ‘OUCH! ! !’ — “You dirty ... I mean you clean . . skunk,” Bruce Carson of Rochester, N.Y.; could well be saying. He was presented the de-scented beast for the dubious honor of being division chairman with the least Community Chest drive subscribers. -The skunk still had its teeth, however, and bit Carson. Violence Hits Town After Wallace Talk CAMBRIDGjE, Md. (iP^An outburst of violenpe in the wake of a presidenii^l catnpaign speech by ^^la-bama Gov. George C. Wallace left thilH center of racial strife ip the grip of new tensiolis to^ay. Two demonstrators and five National Guardsmen were injured in a melee touched off last night When about 200 singing, hand- Cuban Exiles HikeWarTalk MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Talk of impending military action against Fidel Castro gained mo-mientum today in this,Cuban exile capital, but plans, if any, were.shrouded in secrecy. Rogelio Cisneros, newly named chief in Exile of Revolutionary Junta—JURE—returned from a conference in Puerto Rico with Manual Ray, who has promised to be fighting inside Cuba by May 20, Cuban independence day. ; Another activist g r o u p. Revolutionary Recovery Movement—MMRr-reported it is mailing out English translations of aspeech by {$8 head, Bay of Pigs leader Manuel Artime, predicting “a long, hard war full of blood and sacrifice.” He was quoted in his March 18 address to an exile group as comparing Castro’s forces to Goliath and his to David. clapping infegrationists tried to march on the arena where Wallace had spoken. They met a cordon of some of the 400 National Guardsmen hurried into this sensitive spot just to prevent such an act. Wallace had already left the town of 12,600. He had addressed about 1,500 supporters in his campaign in the May 19 Democratic primary and was applauded more than 40 times during a 45-minute speech attacking the civil rights bill pending in the SOnate. Balk^ by guardsmen wearing gas masks and holding rifles with fixed bayonets, the integra-tionists squatted in the street and sang “We Shall Not Be Moved." T^ARGAS Guardsmen used tear gas to disperse them, arrested 14 and slapped an 11 p.m. curfew on the city. Gloria Richardimn, leader of the 2 - year - old integration movement in Cambridge, was among those arrested. NEW DORM ^ Construction Of a fourth dormitory at Oakland University is well under way on the north edge, of the campus. vTo be named Hill House, the dormitory will ^ive the university space for a total of 500 resident students i when it opens in the fall. 'Three dormitories — Fitzgerald, Anibal and Pryale — now house about 288 students. Tractor Kills Woman in Accident An Avon Township woman was accidentally crushed to death yesterday when she was run over by a small tractor opera tg^by her 13-year-old daugmihi,. i The victimNHrs. Frederick J. Gaff, 51, of ^79 Eastwood, was dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following the 5:10 p.m. accident. Mrs. Gaff and her daughter, Mary K., were wwkhig in the back yard when the accident Sheriff’s deputies said Mrs. Gaff was cleaning weeds from the; plow behind the tractor when the girl’s foot slipped off the clutch, and the tractor lurched backwards and over the The' youngster ran to the home of a neighbor, Donald Bennett, 3069 Eastwood, who called police and then went next door and turned off the tractor motor. ■ SERVICE SET Service for Mrs. Gaff will be 1:30 pm. Friday at the Donel-son-Johns Funerhl Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Surviving besides hel’ husband and daughter Mary are two other daughters, Mrs. Gene Underwood and Rowena D. Gaff, hot|i of Petaliime, CaHf.; a son, FradeHck R. of Pontiac; par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Dixort of Avon Township; nine brothers, two sisters and sevei^ grandchildren. ^ End Filibuster, Senators Plead Southerners Asked to Allow Jjjry Trial Vote WASHINGTON (M-The Senate’s Democratic leaders begged Southern senators today to drop their filibuster against the civil rights bill and permit the Senate to vote on pending jury trial amendments. Sen. Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., the majority leader, said the country is witnessing “-e travesty on the^legislative process.” Speaking amid growing demands Jor an immediate attempt to invoke clotnre to shut off further talk on that phase of the bUI, Mansfield, in an emotion-choked voice, said the reason cioture has not been sought before is that “In ail honesty, we did not have the votes.”* i V U-i “And, ip my opinion,” Mansfield added, “we do not have the votes now.” A * ★ Mansfield said “The times call out for a change in the rules,” including the cloture rule under which two-thirds of the senators preset and voting are required to limit debate. Mansfield had said earlier, that Congress will stay in session all year, if necessary, to pass .the .civil rights bill and other priority items of President Johnson’s prograpi-Mansfield’s plea followed one, by Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., assistant majority leader, and floor manager of the bill, appealing to the South-' erners to at least permit the Senate to dispose of pending jury trial amendments. Southern senators decided earlier at a strategy session not to permit any votes on the civil rights bill this week unless they cap get enough support to write into the bill a pending jury trial amendment. (Earlier story, Pages.) ^ ■ /). 1: Starts Series * of Confabs bn War Progress Security Tightened After Discovery of Cong Murder Plot SAIGON, South Viet Nam (yW —U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara arrived in Saigon today for a 36-bour visit and plunged into a series of heavily guarded conferences on the progress of the war in Viet Nam. McNaniara raced from one conference to another in Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge’s car, with flak jackets piled on the floor, on the seat and behind his back for protection against Communist terrorist bullets, hand grenades and mines. He was accompanied everywhere by a motorcade of ve-Iiicles bristling with pqllde and a truck loaded with' special Forces soldiers, their guns at the ready. U.S. and' Vietnamese security were taking, ho chances since discovery of a plot on McNamara’s life. Viet (jong agents were caught Saturday night trying to mine a bridge the secretary was to cross. McNamara Oh his arrival c shattered j Hie death toll climbed to 10 » Monday, when Mrs. Gladys * Sparwasser, 68, of Chisterfleld I Expect Return lofGuardlloit f Ibe last of some 375 Michigan <;^ational Guardsmen, including, c some from the Pontiac unit, ^ were expected to be released • from duty in the Anchor Bay tornado disaster area this after- i^woon. All but 35 officers and men from Pontiac, Flint, Owosso and # Lapeer were sent home at 6 t ip*’'’'** yesterday. 'The guard units C had been at the scene since ^ dawn Saturday. ? The battalion, commanded I by Lt. Col. MitcheU B. Tbom-as of Davison, was called to * dnty at the direction of Gov. 4) Romney to assist Macomb * Sheriff Lester Almsteadt and k. state police In the recovery f: operations. I More than 100 men frohi the •-Pontiac Guard were at the >acend. 3: Their primary mission was to *; patrol the stricken area and .f guard against looting. They also Ihelped in the search for miss-w W persons in die early phases •f «the recovery program. Township, died of injuries. She will be burled Hiursday. Service for Susfn Ann West-fall, 7, of Chesterfield Township was held Monday. The girl’s mother and three younger children were In tte hospital with injuries. Other residents were rebuilding, meanwhile. GROUPS HELP Carl Brandenberg, Chesterfield Township supervisor, said team dpent Moilday night tabulating offers, of help from organizations, labor ^oups and individuals. He said a group of Mennonites from White Pigeon had offered to help clean up the disaster area if the township could provide housing for the workers. |lBocirc/ Okays I Cost of Study % I (Continued From Page One) r bn to $1,12$ per Waterford j; resident, according to Bingler. t A,breakdown of the total in-T cluifes $390 for interceptor con-fnectlon assesjsment, from MOO to k 1650 for the latei'ld lin&^ the • -WTMt afcd from^% w^25 for %: the property connecting line. J ■ , • ★ •.-’Total cost of the Waterford <*• system is estimated at $12 mil-Viion. £ OTHERS IN AREA X, other communities included In • the service area of the proposed / interceptor extension are Avon 1 Township, Fontlac Town-3 ship and Independence Township. / The DPW is acting as agent VIn “ ■ n negotiations with Defroit, The appalling loss was underscored meanwhile by indications damages will exceed the official estimate of $8 million dollars. It may go even higher, Gov. George W. Romney said. A comprehensive report to Romney at Lansing said 180 homes were demolished and 1,-200 persons made homeless. LARGER FIGURES These figures were larger than earlier estimate^ Emergency aid to we area was going into a $1 million relief fund, after Romney pleaded for public contributions. One of the donations to the re-, Ifef fund ihis $10,000 from the Detroit Edison CoJ The Anchor Biw l^mado Relief Fund Is to be administered by a five-man board of trustees, with Brandenberg as chairman, and the American Red CrosO. Romney said the full extent of the damage and loss Would be known In about 10 days when insurance company estimates are completed. NO LOOTWG State Police Capt. Fred B. Davids said the area h virtualb^ free of looting, and Jionesty has been the rule. “For instance, one person turned in a wallet with $197 and no identification except a photograph of a girl, he said. “It was later claifned by a woman who could describe the photo-gr«Bh>” •: New Setup by Prosecutor Divides Office in 3 Work Load Divisions In the only reported incident, seven youths stood mute dt arraignment Monday on charges of causing a disturbance by trying to enter the disaster area in a Car earlier In the day. Davids said m a i h roads through the area will be opened to traffic today. Kenneth O'Connor, Red Cross director of emergency services, said the community now has an adequate supply of foodstuffs and used clothing. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AfH) VICINITY - Mostly cloudy with i or thundershowers likely today probably ending during nfght. Wednesday partly cloudy and cooler. High today 65 to 74, low tonight mostly in the 40s, high Wednesday 57 to 67. Winds variable 5 to 15 miles today becoming north to northwest 10 to 25 miles tonight diminishing slightly Wednesday. Thursday: Generally fair and warmer. Broad organization Within the Oaklhnd County prosecutor’s office have been set in motion by the man who has Just over six months to see them work. Richard P. Condit, who Vras appointed prosecutor April 1 to avoid a political hassle, yesterday announced the changes will take place immediately. Displaying a new organization chart, Condit said the prosecutor’s staff will now be divided into three main units: the, new domestic relations division; trial division and ^nth Oakland division. Condit said the redefinition of staR duties |s designed to meet the growing and increasingly complex work load of the office. The d 0 m e s 11 c relations division, headed by assistant prosecutor Jack B. Baldwin, will now handle all waivers of minors from Circuit Court, paternity^ cases, reciprocal r^uests from other states add counties, nonsupport and dependent parent cases. ONE DEPARTMENT Much of this involves administrative pupeV work rather than courtrbom appearances and is better group^ in one department, said condit. * Formerly, trial prosecutors were alternately assigned it wasn’t working too well," said Condit. • GOVERNOR AT OU - Gov. Romney is greeted at Oakland University by high school students Sue Turner of 234 Pioneef, Pontiac Central, and Jim LeFurgy of 2750 Colrain, Waterford Township High School. Romney was keynote speaker yesterday at the second annual Governor’s Conference on Student Leadership. Cily Commission to Hear Urten Renewal Measures Trial men disliked handling routine domestic cases, said Condit, and the continuous shift of usslgnmuents prevented specialization. B a 1 d w i n of 1750 lliUwood, Bloomfield Hills, has been with the prosecutor’s office since June 1963. Prior to that he was in an administrative position with Chrysler (?orp. ASSISTANT Waking with, him in domestic relations will be G. Bdson Hal-lock, an assistant prosecutor since 1958 who has had iraigthy experience in this field. Com|it said establishing the division involves' no increase « raise being pUnght Mr Baldwin will be the -main cost item in the changeover. Eight assistants in the trial division “will now spend time on specific crimes, in addition to general trial work,” said Condit. He explained he is not appointing a head of this division, because the three senior assistants who are likely candidates are all running for election to the prosecutor’s job this fall. ALL REPUBLICANS They are Robert L. Templin, Jerome K. Berry and William E. Lang, all Republicans. Gpndit, appointed by 0 a k -land County’s seven Clrcnit Court Judges, is interim prosecutor because of a threatened rift in county Republican ran|ks if one rf the three had been named to fill the Job vacated by former prosecutor George F. Taylor. Condit said he consulted the three candidates about his organizational changes and said all agreed they were neees and would not disrupt political plans. Third unit under the new setup ikonly a name change with the ^uth Oakland office in Royal Oak being called a division. William Lang remains in charge. TRANSFER Along with the reorganization, Condit said assistant prosecutors Daniel C. Devine would be transfered to the South Oakland division and Montague R. Hunt brought to the central county office. Uliban. renewal 11 e m s will dominate the lengthy agenda for tonight’s City Commission meeting at City Han. Action is slated on resolutions I Vacate several streets and alleys in the urban renewal area, particularly those that lie mission member. Both veterans in a land parcel bounded by recently stepped down after. Orchard Lake Avenue, South Saginaw and the Perimeter Road. That land is the proposed site of an A&P Supermarket ing development on the 15-acre parcel. Commissioners are also slated t^ honor R. Clare Cummings, fwmi ler supervisor, and John E. Linabury, former planning com- mapy years of service. Commissidhers will also be asked to okay a contract with the legal firm of Travis, Warren And Nayer for services involving the acquisition of additional properties In the R20 urbai newal project area. A resolution deeming it necessityrto acquire property at Jackson and Saginaw through coddemnation will also be up for approval. LEFT OFF UST The property had originally been tabbed for-acquisition but was left off the condemnation list early in 1962 at the request of former mayor Robert A. Landry, after the city reached an understanding with owners that it would be purchased at a later dale. ’The commission is also expected, to formally award a $40,341 contract for urban renewal site improvements to Anderson and Rnzzin Construction Co., of New Balti- He said the< sv^h is being made to give bo^^n broader experience. \ In another staff change, assistant Robert L. Shipper has announced his r^ignation effec-,tive hYiday. HOas been on the prosecutor’s staff since March 1962. Condit said he had no iplans "" the vimancy. NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thuhdershowers are forecast tonight for the middle Atlantic states. Showefs and thunderstorms are expected in the Ohio and Tenqjessee valleys and south to the central ,GuH ‘states.. A feW showers are slated for north Pacific statw and northern'i^tockies. It will be cooler in Mississmpi'Vdileyv'Me sguth aqd. central Plains and warmer in the Koi^thea^t and nor^rn Rockies And ’.Ptnina * Tiraffrc ToJI Hits <580 , EAST LANSING (AP)-Traf-fic accidents have killed 680 persons in Michigan so far this ■year,’ provisional figures com-pilitd by state )^lice> showed today. 'The highway death toll at this date last jear'-was 514.. Up for public hearings and final approval are two ordinances to rezone to Residential-3, property at 456 Mount Clemens and a 15-acre parcel south of Bethune Elementary School. Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital has proposed to build a 15-unit apartment building for interns and resident doctors on the Mount Clemens site. HOUSING PROPOSED Chfrles L. Langs, a major urban renewal developer in Pontiac. has proposed a 175-unit town house-type multiple- hous- In other bustoeito, commissioners will getNT half-dozen reports and zoning recommendations from the planning comihission, conduct hearings on several proposed public inh provement projects and receive deeds for several properties re^ Governor Addresses Students BirmiD^ham Area Registrations Accepted for Summer Program BIRMINGHAM - Ragto^a^ ons now are being a($oapted for Birmingham’s six-week elementary summer school program, to ;be offered June 19 - July 26. - .Summer classes will be held at Adams, Beverly and Westchester elementary schools. Parents can enroll their children |n the lobby of Westches-tor School from 1 to 5 pjm. through May 26, according to Director Richard Reiser. Gdv. Romney spoke to mpre than 500 jitudents and faculty advisers from 55 ' state high schools yesterday at Oakland University. Students attending the second annual Governor’s Conference on Student Leadership heard Ronuiey declare that "the very essence of Americanism is the fact.4hat we are children of a Creator.’’ cently purchased by the city. / JSK the college of business and '^coordinator for organization City Expected to Dissolve Mail Bureau 'The City Commission is expected to officially dissolve the city’s bureau of community relations tonight. A resolution establishing the bureau was adopted May 7, 1963. The bureau had been proposed by former Mayor Robert A. Landry to handle mail and correspondence for commissioners. On tonight’s agenda is a resolution to repeal the original resolution of a year ago. The move is being taken in an effort to cut expenses in the 1964 budget. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. had agreed to establishing the bureau on a 90-day trial basis last year, but often criticized it as a needless expense after the trial period was over. The bureau officially went into operation June 1. Community Relations Direc-toc Mrs. Patricia Kleindl has been reassigned to secretarial duties in another city department. I Romney added, “Hie frontier is over and education today plays a much bigger role in the country than it once Enrollment forms also can be picked up at any of the Birmingham elementary schools and mailed to Helser at Westchester School, 300yy. Maple. The summer program is designed to provide spepial help lor students who may have rpading and arUhiAetic difficulties. SPECIAL FROGAAM A special program will bo offered for the child who will enter first grade in the fall and needs more practice in the skills necessary for reading. Also, to be offered are enrichment courses in science, arithmetic, art, the JujOju: humanlldes^d typing. ;. A youth physical fitness program will be taught at Berkshire Junior High Schoql and Groves High School. The reading improvement course will emphasize reading and w r 111 n g skills, including work in speed-reading. Speech correction services again will be offered. Adams, Beverly and West Chester wjjl be among those elementary schools to offer library service during the summer. House is the author of several articles on urban renewal, neighborhood conservation, race relations and social action. LOUIS MILTON JR. Rapist Given 9 to 20 Years Was Found Guilt/ After Second Trial Discussion groups were led by C2ark E. DeHaven, instructor management at Michigan State University; Charles S. Dittman, director of Conferences, Hillsdale College; Russell Elliott, director of professional development programs. Division of Continuing Education, Oakland University. . Also, _J a mW McMonagle, Wayne State Umvgrsity professor, and June Sbada, family life director-consultant for the Archdiocese of Detroit. Six area schools were among those coplanning the conference. Students who coordinated plans were Linda Fought, Pontiac Central; Charles Haviland, Waterford Kettering; Larry Hourd and Panola Clark, Waterford Township; Randy Schif-fer, Wylie Groves; Phyllis Simon, Rochester; and Kim Kelso, Bloomfield Hills.. OU Library to Get Portrait of Kresge A color portrait of S. Kresge will be presented tonight to Oakland University by the Friends of the Kresge Library. Former governor Murray ,D. VanWagoner will make the presentation at the annual din^ ner of the library group at 7:30 p.m. Kresge is founder of the famous firm that bears his name and creator of the Kresge Foundation. The foundation contributed $1.5 million to OU for the library building. ’The period of May 15-31 has been designated as palnt-up, clean-up, fix-up time in Birmingham. , Mayor Charles Renfrew signed a proclamation setting the dates at the City Commission meeting last night. Thomas C. Brien, superintendent of public works, said his department will cooperate with residents and groups during the period hy fnrniiA-ing a truck for tlie collection of litter and ruhUe. He said the material must be in suitable containers. During the 20-minute meeting, the commission was requested to consider helicopter rides as part of its centennial celebration. The proposal, referred to the city manager’s office for study, was made by a spokesman for Helicopter Airways of Detroit Metropolitan Airport. A 9- to 20-year prison sentence was ordered this morning for 31-year-old Louis Milton Jr., of 404 Bagley, convicted of rape. The sentence was handed down by Oakland County Circuit Court Judge James S. Thorburn, who presided over Milton’s second trial which ended in a jury conviction April 14. Milton was accused' of raping a 19-year-old BlotunfieliT Township girl in April, 1963. , He was remanded to Southern Michigan prison at Jack- His first trial, in February, ended in a hung jury. In both trials defense requests that Mil-ton, a Negro, be tried by an all-Negro jury, were denied. Mijton still faces two other Charges of rape, one Involving a 31-year-dd mother of two last September and the other a 51-year-old woman in 1962. Board Sets Hearings on Mill Split Mel Ravitz, a member of the Detroit Common Council, will speak at tonight’s meeting of the Birmingham - Bloomfield Council on Human Relations. Ravitz, associate professor of sociology at Wayne State University, will s p e a k on “Population — Growth and Movement.’’ Elected to a 4-year term on the Common Council in 1961, Ravitz was director of community organization for the Detroit City Plan Commission brfore joining the WSU faculty*. The speaker at Uie 8 p.m. program at the Comniunlty Plane Tragedies'Claim 184 By ’The Associated Press Plane tragedies in this country and abroad since last Thursday haye killed 184 persons. Ten others are missing. Many of the victims were American . military personnel. A U.S. military air transport Jetliner with 83 persons aboard crashed short ^ of a runway and burst into flame at ClaA Air Force Base north of Manila yesterday. Seventy-three persons died in the wreckage, and another two died in the base hos^pital. ; ^ if \ir . Fin addition, the Air Force said, an American serviceman riding in a taxi was,, killed when the. plape struck the vehicle.. NAyY4»LANE ............. Ten'crewmen are’missing from .a :XJ.S'. Navy long-range patrol planip' that crashed at sea yesterday 20 miles o(f Cadiz, Spain. ’The" plane, based at Jacksonville, Fla., was participating in maneuvers off the U,S. Polaris sub-.^ marine base at Rota, Spain. Two men were killed yesterday when a V-S. Air Force C119 carrying 43 studeht paratroopers to a Jump mne made a msh la in a field near Searle, Ala. Also yesterday, four crewmen were killed in a crash in southern England of a British Vuldin bomber, one of a type that can carry Britain’s H-bombs. LM Saturday, the crew, ^ ^ ^ ^ “kTTJ plane near Concord, Caiit. a gm found in the. wr,eckage and mvesti- killed when his F105 Jet exploded before a scheduled landing at Hamilton Air Force Base, Calif. ’Ihe six-man .team was returning from an air show at Seattle. Last Friday, there' were only three ; survivors among the 49 persons aboard an Argentine Air Force Courier plane which hit a high coastal sand dune ' while landing in ai^^dense fog near Lima, Peru. • ; Forty-four persons died last Thur^ crashed and-burned in a rainstorm near Cooperton, Okla. The plane apparently exploded in the Sir. PRECISION FLYER ^so on Saturday, Capt. Eugeni J. : ^lin, 31, a member of the Air Force Inunderbird precjision flying team, was ' gators have sought to determine whether the pilot was shot by a passenger. Also on ’Thursday,' five men were; I killed when a British Royal Air Force | Valiant bomber crashed Jn Lincolnr. ,| shire. . ' ' * ^ ^ :A. '■1. 1/ • The Oakland County Tax Allocation Board will begin hearings tomorrow at the Courthouse Auditorium prior to splitting this year’s 15-mill county tax levy among townships, school districts and county government. The board will hear millage requests from school And governmental units. ......... Hie hearings wffl last for the next three days. The allo-catimi board will reconvene Monday for a preliminary de^ cision on (he rates. Hiese rates will be based on the, county’s recommended $2.3-billion equalized valuation, which is the amount on which the 15 mills will be levied if the figure is approved by State Board of Equalization May 25. The allocation board will reconvene May 25 to set final rates. AUDI’TORS SEEKING Based on the county’s recom- , mended valuation, the County Board of Auditors will be seeking 5.91 of the 15 mills toward financmg a pl-opos^ $18.4 mll-or cofimty govem- lion budget for ( ment next year. Last year the allocation board gave county govern- ' mem 549 mills toward this year’s $16-milUon budget. The . board last year alloted .10 mills to Oakland Schools, which is responsible for special education and other county wide educational services. The remaining 9.71 mills was allocated to the 30 school dis- ' (ricts in the county, less what-' ever amount was given to the ■various township governments. Requesting townships got any-wher&from 1 to 1.64 mills. " Tomorrow's meeting will begin. at- 9 a.th. and last until noon.; ‘ ' r,; , ^ ;■ , "' / ■■ - JJIE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 12, j004 l/Xj CUSTOM-SOFA SALE «uihi«iit liixiirioiiily wrayptil with Fortrei; Polywstwr Fibcrflll Regular 2S9.9I *229 Flexileal ' LiMime Construction Rtiular 21Mt Wool,Mylon SeotehCuanl Fabrics Regular 3S9.95 46 Patterns, now^pring colors, Wools, Nylons, ScotchCnard Fnrics ... All one prico. Wtth ooverad docks and extra arm covers Fine lurniture begins on the inside—One-piece Steel Utiit Goar-anteed for Life. Now witb Fortrei at the lowest Price Ever. 90 DAYS CASH OR UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY Expert Design and Decorating Service at No Extra Cost Bloomfield Hills -’ 2600; Woodward. *- FE 3-7933’ Near St^uare Lake Road . OPEN 10 A.M.-9 P.M. WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. Greek Officers Shot' illihgs Stir Cypriots NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP)-The killing of two Greek army officers and a Greek Cypriot y6Uth er by Turkish Cypriots heightened tension on Cyprus today. The Greek government denounced as “cpid-biooded Turkish murder” the shodting'* Monday in the old walled '^rklsh area' of Famagusta, ah »ast port. A third Greek officer was wounded. He' said they drove into the Turkish quarter by mistake in civilian clothes but in a Greek army car. “We were on the way out when armed Turks stopped us and ordered us out of the car,” said Capt. Panaylotis Tar-souilis, 38. “Three Turks in uniform add .a civ|Iian all armed with submachine guns opened fire at us without giving us a chance.” NOT ARMED TarsoUllis said he was not armed- , However, U.N. headquarters said it believed ■ all four men were armed and that evidence gathered by Irish troops indicated all had fired weapons, although it was not dear who had started the shooting. A statement read over the Greek national rKclio by Greek Defense Minister Peter. Garou-falias^said the four men were Auto Sales Spur Talk of Records DETROIT (AP) — Auto production and sales continued in high gear today, leading one trade publication tq predict that U.S. auto plants would set an high production mark with its 964 models. Ward’s Automotive Reports forecast that the U.S. industry would turn out 7.9 million cars* in the 1964 model run. Tha current mark ..of 7.34 million was aet with the ’63s. Eight of the 45 U.S. autq assembly plants worked overtime last itoturday as demand continued strong. Ford plants in Dallas, Norfolk, St. Paul and Dearborn worked the extr^ day, as did Chevrolet plants in Los Angeles, Kansas City and Janesville, Wls. The Cadillac plant in Detroit also was on overtime. U.Si. auto makers tuFned out their 6' millionth passenger car of the 1964 model run last Friday. The week also saw them build the 3 millionth car of the 1964 calendar year. Spurred by reports from dealers around the c o u n t r y that customer d b m a n d is running strong, auto makers have stepped up their production goals in recent days. shot after showing identity cards. Turkish sources said that during the shooting an aged Turk drinking coffee In a shop near the gate was shot dead. DEEP SORROW Greek Premier George Papan-dreou issded a statement in Athens expresiiing “my deep sorrow for the tragic event.” ' In Nicosia, Vice President Fa-zil Kuchuk, head of the Tuiltish Cypriot community, called the incident “deplorable.” It was the first time the Greek army garrison "bn the is- land has suffered casualties In the communal fighting which has caused the death of hundreds of Greek and Turkish Cypriots. The incident touched off Wave of sniping fire in Famagusta. A Turkish Cypriot riding a scooter was woundgd seriously. Greek Cypriots seized seven Turkish Cypriots. The 600-man Irish U.N. contingent sealed off the main gates of the Turkish quarter after unconfirmed reports that the Greek Cypriot national guard had mobilized north of .the walled city to attack. Russians Cite Prosperity MaSCOW lift - The Soviet Communist Party expressed confidence today that it will win the word war with Red China because of prosperity achieved by the Soviet Union among other things. An ‘‘upsurge of well-being of the working people” proves Moscow has the right line, the Comniunist Party newspaper Pravda claimed. In the third and last of a series of editorials giving Kremlin views In the Chinese-Soviet conflict, Pravda reiterated that “Peking’s theoretical concepts are designed to ‘substantiate’ and ‘Jnstify* the high-pOwer nationalist line of the Chinese leaders, to promote their hegemonic aspirations, to split the worldwide liberation struggle, to attract to Peking’s aegis definite circles both within and outside the Communist movement.” Pravda said the Chinese hope to achieve “the unconditional Ideological surrender of all those who do not share their views that by means of blackmail slander and threats...” •rhe Soviet Party said It has “assurance that unity of the Communist movement will be restored and strenj^hened” because the correct line Is proven by ever new (Russian) successes in the construction of socialism and communism, prosperity of economy and culture of a new society, promotion of democracy and upsurge bf wellbeing of the working people, growth of might and power of the world socialist system.” CAiX ENDORSED In Budapest, the Red bosses of Hungary and East Germany endorsed the Soviet call for a world conference of Communisl parties for a showdown in the power struggle between Moscow and Peking. East Germany’s Walter Ul-bricht, on a state visit to Hun^ gary, joined Hungarian chief Janos Kadar yesterday in echoing the Kremlin’s condemnation of Red China for splitting the world Communik movement. PMlwy RauiMmlaHva Haw WIDNESDAY—I to 3 i>.M. SERVICE ENJOY RESTFUL NATURAL-UKE SLEEPT0NI6HT without habit-forming drugs of any kind! Whenever you can’t sleep but you’re afraid to take a sleeping aid because you think it might be habit-forming —^here’s good news! You can take - Somi|nex with confidence. Somwex helps And SoMiNBX contains no habit forming drugs of any kipd; Taken as directed, SoMiNEX is gentle and effective. So, whenever you can’t sleep because of simple nervous tension or daily problems—take SoMiNEX and enjoy a good niidit’s sleep, Sominbx is absolutely not habit-forming. Simms Bros. 98 N. Saginaw We drove 3,243 miles to make a point abopt our Super Turbine transmission You can do it on the way to the grocery store Would we drive a Buick with a Super Turbine transmission* all the way from Pasadena to New York City just to win Class C in the Mobil Economy Run? Of coursd'. And just in case anyonerfailed * td get the message, we did it twice again. And won Class D and Class 6. Inall, Buick entered 4 classra, and won .8—more than -any other make of car. (Remember when people used to think Buicks used a lot of Turbine transmission? You bet. t Obviously you aren't planning to drive 8,243 miles to prove your new. Bpick js economical. And you can’t expect to get-as many miles per gallon as the experts in the Economy Run. Still, it is nice tp know you can win the economy run pround town. And the good looks prize at the saihe (;ilne. See your Buick dealer about it. No doubt he’ll think of a number of other reasons .to Buick Motor Division *Optloiwl at extra eo SEE YOUR LOCAL.AUTHORIZEO-BUICK DEALER. AUTHORIZED BUICK DEALER INJ^KIS AREA: OLIVER MOTOR SALES, INC.->210 Orchprd Lake Are, _Sh the Buick MhlbR at Ike General Motora .-Haw York World’s Fair _ Row Can SIMMS - il^iUford to Soil at Sueh ^low, LOW PRICES? Ilno.tKofof y fixlbrei, our bulfdlno, tKofoforo wo hovra no lont to poy. No fancy fiiifkiroi, Juat elmBlo diaployi, No erodit chorgod, but wo do r ImpoHont tho lowoat marpln of profit in tho Pontiac oroo. Llitod bolow oro somo 1ow-pricod Itoms on aolo tomorrow, Wodnoadoy, only from 9 a.m. 6 p.m. 100-FEET PLASTIC COVERED Wire Center Clothesline' Sturdy clotheslino won'f dtretch or sag. Easy to keep cloan. Wiro center for extra strength. Limit 300 feet. ex12-F00T Flastio Drop Cloth VACUUM ACTION Dust Mops 33.95 value — Easy Day ell nylon dust mop with indgnalle action for dusting in Vi tha llmt.' |77 Padded Seat ft Back JlesMlar«a.95Sei{er For all, lawn chairs -Floral- design, padded seat and back. Eos/ to Install — long lasting. I” 60-FIEClE StAMLESS STEEL Tableware Set -J'y FOUR . ■’f'.-'Aiv. ■' THE PONTIAC TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1964 g Gold wafer. ^1 let Unopposed Todaxi iri Tw0'^ Primaries WASHINGTON (AP) - Light voter turnouts were ^pected to-diy with New York Gov. Nelson A, liockefdler runnih(| unopposed in West Virginia’s Re-publtoan presidential primary and Sen. Barry Goldwater ot Arizona alorie on the GOP j»resi-dential iMilot in Nebraska. In bdth states, Democratic deiegates to be selected are expected to lavor President John- I Rockefeller has no opposition ★ ★ ★ Barry Appears Gaining ; for Isl Ballot NomMon WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Barry Ooldwater appears to be piling up backlog support among publicly uncOmmitt^ delegates which could strengthen his bid for a first-ballot Republican presidential nomination. If the Arizonik senator wins the June 2 California primary and adds that state’s ^ convention votes to his total, his strategists now believe he will come close to haVing 600 of the 655 needed for the nomination. If the state-by-state roll call of the 1,308 delegates at the San Francisco conventiorL indicates Gold water is headeri toward a figure only a few short of the magic total, his supporters, believe there will be some quick shifts made in his direction. They point to Wisconsin, far down the roll call line, as a likely source of Goldwater support in such circumstances. The state’s 30 votes are pledged to Rep., Byrnes in a favorite son holding operation. STATE PRIMARY Tliis served its principal purpose when it kept major contenders out of the state primary, in which Democrats could cross over. Gqldwater delegates probably won’t feel they have any further obligation to B3rmes if the Arizona senator needs them. Kentucky also seems likely to offer Goldwater some additional votes if he moves up within strijking distance of the nomina-tiott^as the roll Call proceeds. Kentucky is expected to cast its 24 votes on the first call for Sen. Thruston B. Morton as _ favtfite son. But Morton said he will release immediately any delegate who might ask t( change his vote; He said Gold- Nelson A. Rockefeller in the California primary. They already have written off Oregon’s Friday primary as loss, with the expectation that Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge will win that .state’s 18 votes. The Goldwater strategists expect Lodged backers then to appeal to the supporters of Lodge and other potential caljididates to vote for Rockefeller in California in an effort to stop Goldwater.' Coalition moves of this nature haven’t been very successful fn other states and Goldwater’ people are not worried on this score. .Th?y are worried about the possibility that former President Dwight D. Eisenhower might be coaxed into making some statement that would damage Gold-water’s chances in Califqmia. The weight of opinion is that Eisenhower won’t take sides publicly at this point. But the Goldwater strategists can’t be sure. water’s chances in California, weight of opinion is that Eisenhower won’t take sides publicly at this point. But the Goldwater strategists can’t be sure. wiit hatrthe support of about 15fel • ■ • intucky delegates. If Colorado picks an uncommitted or faVorito son delegation, . Goldwater’s backers believe they can count on* several quick, votes out of the state’s 18. CApPORNIA PRIMARY "The calculations of the Gold-water strategists are all built on the assumption that theb man will bowl over New York Gov. Bomb Hits Car of U.S. Employe MADRID, Spain OP) — A bomb damaged the parked autonfebile of a woman employe, of the U.S. Embassy today near the embassy offices. It was the ninth boinbing in Madrid in 48 hours. Since some of the bombings a(q)eared aimed at U.S. property, police sources expressed belief terrorists were trying to discourage, foreign tourists from visiting . Madrid for its annual San Isidro fair.' PITTSBURGH’S PERFECT PAIR Odorless endmel for wood trim, kitchen and bathroom walls, furniture Pontiac Glass Co. Officials said the expiosion, cleariy audible at the embassy, came 90 minutes before the staff would have left for lunch. A tire and other parts of the car were damaged. Police sources had reported eight small noise bombs exploded -in different parts of Madrid during the past 48 hours. Two persons were slightly injured and damage was minor. 23 W. Lowranca St. FE 5-6441 PITTSBURGH PAINTS r (AdvtrtiMtntnt) "SO UPSET BY CHANGE-OF-LIFE 1 SCREAMED AT MY HUSBANOr ★ ft The same sources said appar-entfy some of the bombs were thrown from passing cars. 'TOP HOTELS Two of-the bombs exploded in first-class hotela—Castellana HUton and Fehix. One blew up .a^dnst the commerce ministry ai^ another in the area’ of the U.S. Embassy.' ^0 persons' were, Injured last night when a bom|l>-went' off in front of the Hotel Gran ■». w»ii ■ Via. mme windows were broken. the bombings, the: surge of tourists is so large that Jhotels and pensions are.booked up for not lesrf' Uipn fliTee weeksi Police are -searching for the bopAers but. no arrests were-Immedilitdy reported. Suffocating heat waves alternating with nervous, (^mmy feeIing8.7accompaniea often- by irrital ....... feelings^accom]; irritability and ----------- are well-lmown to women suf- fering the functionally-caused distress of middle life “change"! In doctor’s tests, Lydia E. Pinkham Tablets brought relief from such distress to woman after woman among cases •---------------- ftbli teSM. Get -Pinkhiyn Tablets. Bil^E When stabbing pains suddenly itaif j in back,-joints pr muscles... get DeWitt's Pills for quick,'lasting analgesic 'relief. .DeWitt’s Pills make pains fade away, and improve hatural body functions to help clear up the cause. Don’t **K*nlrl /\v«sr in viam **■ Tal'* a Imh i DeWitt's Pills In Weat Vteglnbi. and voteg are not counted. Goldwater, the GOP front-rUn-‘ ner in delegate strength, may run into write-in oppMtion in Nebraska from supporteri Henry Cabot Lodge, Vice President Richard on and Rockefeller. LITTLE ElTFBCr Hie ekptfeted Rockefeller and Goldwater victories In the two presidential primaries may have little effect on the GOP presidential race. Neither vote is binding on delegates to the pptjaiuan m iportersv of {6, former »rd M- % Republican National Convention. None of the candidates for the 14 stMts on the West Virginia delegation are pledged to a candidate. Most of the Nebraska delegate candidates favor Goldwater. Six district delegates are being picked today, and 10 at-large delegates are to be chpsen June 1 at a state GOP convention. R|)ode Island Republicans are also picking their cortvenUon delegation—at two district and one statewide oOnyentlon te-night.'^lne state has no primary. barrV backers . Gov. John Chafee says he hopes the delegatiim will be uncommitted. Supiiorters of Gold* water say they have four back* ers on a slgte chosen by the GOP State Executive (!)ommit-tee and plan to fight for more. it -k it Nebraska and West Virginia also have primary contests for governor and congressmen. Races for governor held chief attention In both states. Rockefeller mn busy campaigning today^ Oregon where six GOP presideli^l contenders, square off Friday in the week’s' most Important political test. Ooldwater made his only prl- inary appearance^ In Nebraska Mpnday night. Speaking (q 'll statev^ radio-television net> Work, he attacked the Johnson administration’s handling of the war Jn South Viet Nam and said a Republican president could bring peace to Southeast Asia. Horse Player Lamentst ( HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)-May-or Louie Welch told reporters Monday a citizen had telephoned him to complain'that, thanks to him, she missed bet- .an't Find a Bookie ting on the Kentucky Derby for the first time In 10 i^rs. Her bookie went out of business because of the mayor’is recent police, vice and gambling Investigation, she said. • Wl ARI CLIARINO IfUIr WAREHOUSI 1 ; :,USED FURI^ACfS 1 : Got--.Oil — Limiftd Supply ,A S Also 3 NOW Gas Fumocat ot v% Price f . •• • 7200 Cooley Ik. Rd-UNION UKI HEATINO €0. EM 34m $ Hai^e The CASH Behind You When You Buy That New Car FINANCE '/ ■ ADVANCE how jf works. First decide on the approximate amount of money you will need. Then go tetany Community Notionol Bank office ond get your loon approved, usually the some day. You will be given a commitment letter and the money will be hef^^your beck V coll. Now^you'egn feel secure know-* ing that your money is waiting for you. There is no charge until up to 45 days after your check is actually issued. -i. Bank 16 OFFICES-Downtown Pontiac ... W. Huron... N. Peijry... KeegoNarbor... Wpifed Lake... Unionlake... AAilford..'. Lako Orion ... Waterford ... Woodward ... County Center... Romeo... AAail... Rochester... University and Bloomfield Hills. , V _____, : Member Fed^rkl DepotU Imurancfi Corporation '' ■ .^"'1 ■ THE l>ONtlAC. PllE^gti TtjfepAY. m W li)(H “Arfcadia*’ HEMnNSMD WSITI •tur« •mpliflar obntnini 22 ■l•btranic componanU.includ-MiK C trarwi«tor«, to slv* you moro porformonqo, greotor •mplifior roilabllity. Micro-i Lllhtc otreuit tmoHtr ttuin g ' match haail. Ampllfiar taalad Winat dirt and moiatura. Sa M o< tha drat to anjoy battar a $9m CADILLAC HEARIKG AID CO. or PON^AC 4S >Vatt Huran PI 8.2733 l»ONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CiNTER Opan Evanlngt HI 8.30 9M. 8*24113 Wants Senators Quizzed in Baker Case WASraNGTON (AP) - Sen. aifford P. Case, RrNj., told the Senate Rules Committee today it has a responsibility to get to the bottom of the Bobby Baker caser~.and not treat senators as ‘*N0 investigatloh of Bobby Baker can have any real meaning vrithout an investigation of the relations of members of the Senate with Bobby Baker," he said. Baker resigned under fire last Oct. 7 as secretary to the Senate’s Democratic majority after questions were raised about his outside business and financial dealings, in-which he ac(]ulred a clalm^ fortune of morO than/ AZ million. Case saifT the i^es < |ee. In its investigation of 1 er’s affairs, had given the I pression that it wanted to “pi an end to an unpleasant episo<^ to close the door, to jjkish i whole matter aside in the I that it will soon be forgott SORRY STATE “I suggest it is intoler^ that we leave the matter in f sorry state,” he said in ( mony prepared for hearing of the committee. Over a month ago Casej rc^ quested ah opportunity to be heard by the committee, nok at a report of its findings i closed session was Issued only i and recommendations. An'invl- last week. - tatkm /to Case to ai^ar in | \ Case protested at the outset of his statement against the faliure to have a public hearing, saying that “what we are concerned MuthernersGoinHuijdle in 'ASHINGTO^^ (AP) - South-1 senator^ huddle today on !W to plgy their hand in a new ittempt to write their own ver-ijon of a jury trial amendment into the civil rights bill. This one gives |he defendant in a criminal contempt action bill a choice: a jpry^ial and the possibility o^-iftufer penalty over a nonjnry trial adth The Dixie bloc bypassed a bi partisan, limited/ jury trial proposal that had been pending business —caljing up Monday night the proposal Of Sen. George A. Smathers, D-Fla. This gives the SouUiemers another crack at reversing a one-vote defeat last week on a jury trial amendment proposed by Sen. Thruston B. Morton, R-Ky. NO VOTING Just when a vote will come on the Smathers’ proposal ntay be known after a meeting of the Southerners today, but Sen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga.,'i8aid he didn’t think there would be any voting this weejc. Administratidiiliupporters had predicted a vote Monday or today on limited jury trials. This went by the boards, and Sen. Hubert H. Humplurey, D-Minn., floor manager of the bill, gave the Senate a verbal spanking for the long debate over civil rights. '^It isn’t the South that’s delaying the civil rights bill," he ■ ■ Tt’s the 81 senators who ■ih '> said. do not live in the South.' Humphrey held the Senate for a late night session and indicated more of the same would be forthcbmjng- Monday night’s session lasted until a ihinute before midnight with nearly half of the final six hours spent on quorum calls. Missing Tug Back in Port PORT AUS’HN (AP) - The commercial fishing tu| ‘Scotty,” missing over Sunday night, arrived in harbor here Monday. The tug owner, Don Brennan, 30, and his brother, Richard 33, of Port Huron, said they did not know they had been reported missing and were being sought " ■■ ’ey had The Brennans said they decided against trying to get to harbor In the dark Sunday night and dropped anchor at Alabaster until daybreak. with" is the integrity of the Senate and “the restoration of public confidence” in the Senate. He urged, as he has before, that the committee ask each member of the Senate these questions: QUESTIONS Did you ever have any Iness or financial dealings with Bobby Baker, jjirectly or indirectly? If so, what were they?” ja ★ Did Bobby Baker ever give you, get for you, offer you or offer to get for you; any campaign contributions; any help in making up campaigit deficits by gifts, purchase of tickets or otherwise; any retainer or employment: any perfer-ment in committee assignment otherwise: anything of value?" Heart Attack Kills New Jersey Newsman PLAINFIELD, N.J. (AP)~A, Wallace Zimmerman, 65, who started with the Plainfield Courier-News in 1908 as a delivery boy and worked his way up to publisher, died Monday of a heart attack. Zimmerman, who had suffered from a heart ailment,-retired as publisher last Dec. 81 but continued as vice president, of the Plainfield Courier-News Co. ■V Case skid this was a way for the committee to get Information denied it by Baker when he invoked his Fifth Amendment protection against possible selfincrimination and refused to answer questions or produce documents. “If. other persons can be called to give information on the Bobby Baker episode, why not members of the Senate?” Case asked. “Why should senators be treated as a privileged class? Should the preservation of the privacy of senators outrank the preservation of the integrity of the Senatp as an instltuUpn?” ^What’S General Motors doing at the New York World’s Fair?-Well, at our Futurama exhibit, the Futurama Ride takes visitors decades ahead. Into jxlier sbace, through the frigid Antarctic and down beneath the sea. Into the steaming tropics, through fertile deserts, past mountains-man has mastered, and into cities you have never imagined. Then, there’s our Avenue of Progress and our new Product Plazas. See you there? Take the trip that's worth the trip to the Fair. (It’s Fri^e!) ff rV'u.'T' ; .... - WHHW TMI CAN N Sure of Savings CHUCK SnAK 3» S«Mr X iMf _______ ■kidc eiit idAASAIINM WITH SeWI SN. .. .'C3r AIMf. . . .^39* ^8Y.WCH ■HttM* • • • • • eNsr 97 HSUYW^ ^ MS Crew* # e e e Om. W7 lANfiMVmOnN MMrt PlM . . . .I..I.1S Head Lettiict I2< SdM Cris|i l4flM HmnI LAST UMM MS. 8/H« UNIA LM HOTlAKID MppImPim. MAX .’.is ir ,vZ3r "'^25* Fniit CMittaH. . .SZTT SHAMiOex 14.0.. OnrPS Mcs. . e CAMMIU'S ^ , . . . Coi/ld SAVON Coupon Special! MaxwoH Coffee C * UmH: Om : 1-U. Cee 66* ■ WMi tk!( coupon and |3 purckaio. or more, ■ axeluding boar, wino and cifaroHu. H Valid through Monday; May If ^ > SLIHWOOO Kaxa* SAVOlN • MAYTON PLAINS Effaeti^o' thru May ' 18. Ri\ht Niarvad to limit guantMoc ..VVv'A’t %■ ; i:rK, I 'M THE PONTIAC PRESS Voice of the People: ■eatir TUES^Y, MAY U. 1M4 iw* IdItW ^^sSiE^ExnstMwtw JOMK A. Hot*, o. Mamhm 1^1 A«l llMMttr Ionia stage Production Given Excess Ballyhoo It 18 seldom that the action of one theatrical 'produces the plot for another. But this phenomenon of a by-product drama recently made headlines In Ionia. ★ ★ ★ The dramatis personae are, In order of appearance: • A young miss playing a lead role in a high achool preaen-tation of the onetime Broadway hit “Damn Yankees.” o A 1^1 cleric whoihonght the 16-year-old star overexboaed her characterization of the dancer “Lola ” p r 01 e a t e d to the school board, and circulated hia objection in'the church bulletin. o A Couple who took exception to the censure aimed at her and voiced their feelings In a letter to4Ke local newspaper. si A group of 1 ha-church hierarchy who will consider the pair’s petition for reinstatement following excommunication for the public airing of their views. The title of the realrllfe offering, the run of which will assuredly be limited to its initial performance? /Tempest in a Teapot. Fbr that’s what the goings-on across the Sthte amouht to. there is, however, one decided note of consequential serlquisness about it: the not unlikely deleterious effect the publicity and Implied rebuke will have on a sensitive and impressionable teen-ager who is the innocent victim of the cWade. Innocent, inasmuch as she was undoubtedly playing her stage part under direction of the school’s dramatic department. We believe that the .zealous chmsohman fpttld' h a v l?«liter aqryed Christianity, the community and tiie young lady l^fidiiis criticism —^if indeed it were justified—taken the form of a little private couiwe|-ipg with the principals involved. Alien Space Yishors Get Down to Earth? Those to whom flying saucers are a special dish will smack their’lips jover the latest reported sighting-in New Mexico^! on^ of the mysterious objects. /★ : ★ ★ Re^ or fancied sightings of UFOs . (Unidentifiable Flying Objects) have been aired since About 1947. So persistent were accounts lending credulity to the genuineness of the unearthly craft that the Air Force established a special arm to investigate reports of UFOsi r During 16 years, more than 8,000 reported sightings (3h0 last year) of unexplainable , airborne vehicles were run to earth. All but 7.7 per cent were accounted for by known phenomena. The Air Force doesn’t say that those unexplained necessarily indicate interplanetary sig-nlflcance--^iperely that the solution is still up in the air. ■> ★ ★ ★ During the height of the flying saucer hoopdedoo, there was quali-. fied speculation in high places as to the validity of the notion that our planet was indeed being visited by beings from outer space. Many competent authorities granted it plausibility. One national-circulation magazine gave' the subject feature treatment with a summation that didn’t rule out the possibility of unannounced and unknown visitors. Another gs^e it equal prio^ty, but purportedly . reVealed that the objects seen were aircraft prototypes of our own—but of such advanced design and secret status that even our own Air Force was not in on it.j ★ I : By now, saucers l]^av|8( pretty been relegated to the mythological llmbO res/rvedK|w supernatural manUestauona t madi^ixjriodlcally claim national attention. But those saucer diehards cart ,. ding to a last straw of hope in the knowledge that since our own planet' Is jindeniably inhabited, other planets — libw beyond our cosmic ken — logically are also peopled. And as we are currently making feverish plans to begin a round of interstellar social calls, why might not some of our spatial contemporaries have had the same idea a bit ahead of us? Court legalized Negro Struggle By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON — For thrde centuries American Negroes had been waiting at the gate that kept them in the Jim Crow cellar of American life. Then on May 17, 1964, the Supreme Court unlocked it for them. On that far-reaching day in May, the court said public school segre-* gation because of a child’s race was wrong, that it meant unequal treatment and was there-fore uncopstitutlonal. But the ruling really went far beyond schools. For in effect court said die very MARU)W principle of segregadoa is wrong, whicli meant fp-om then on Jlegroes -conM fight with confidence against all forma of segregation and dlscrlmina-tioiHn public places. They have been fighting since. And many white people — including the clergy—vho had sat .idly by through the decades until 1954 have Joined them in the struggle. ★ ★ ★ But prejudiced whites are an obstinate army who never , really believed the Declaration of Irtdependence ndiiclp said all. men are created equal and have tried to ignore or defy the court in preserving segregation . and discrimination. ^ ' NO MONOPOLY IN SOUTH Even some white Christian cTiurches still refuse to let Negroes in. And Negroes are discovering, if they doubted it, that the Sopth has no monopoly on prejudice. They have found it intensely against them in the North, too. If it had not been for that court decision of 10 years ago, the American Negro mlidit stiB be suffering discrimination in comparative silence for Ae law—4>r Ae court’s Interpretation of Ae law—was against him. Police would probably have felt far freer to smash Negro protests because of a decision of the Supreme Court in 1896 which said segregation was constitutional. It wasn’t until M years later that Negroes were able to begin chipping away at that decision. NAACP SET STRATEGY The real niarch began in the 1930s when the National Assoclatiori for the Advancement Of Colored People decided on a strategy which was^rowned with the final triumph of 1954. ' TTifs was Ae strategy: bit by bit, case by case, fight all Ae way up to . the Supreme Court specific cases of disr crimination, Uke segregation of Negroes on buses, trains, in graduate schools. Theyi won case after case but never total victory. ' N In each specific case the court might say. the segregation practiced was wrong without ruling out the principle of segregation. That finally came 10 years ago, thus wiping out completely the decision of 1896. Negro agitation will increase this summer and even if Congress approves the kind of civil rights bill the Negroes want, it will still be, as their leadership has said, only a part of what they feel is Aeir due. American League’s Top Ten Batters Player Club G AB R H Pet. Oliva, Minnesota .......23 IM 23.45 .441 Fregosi, Los Angeles 21 67 18 26 .388 Freehan, Detroit ;.... 16 54 5 20 .370 Bressoud, Boston .....23 95 15 35 .368 Robinson, Baltimore . .23 87 12 29 .333 Richardson, New York 20 839 15 29 .326 Siebern, Baltimore ... 23 79 14 20 .316 Tresh,'New York . . . . : . 18 57 5 llB .316 Allison, Minnesota ... 20 73 18 23 .315 Mathews, Kansas City 22 86 13 27 .314 Verbal Orchids to- Frank Fuller - of Drayton Plains; 81st birAday. Mrs. Lizzie Rich ' of 4264 Woodstock; 84th birthday. Mk Nellie Williams pf Lapefer, formerly of Pontiac; 81sl " ' birthday. ’ ^ CpmmenU onResignMion of Volunteer Fireiher^ i My husband belonged fo the Walled Lake Volunteer Fire Fighters Assn, until May 5 when it resigned as a body: This resignation was accepted by council members who are tired of discussing this problem and by those who refuse to change tt bad decisioiu ^ince when do council members cease to act in the people's interest? ★ ■ "A The problem was passed aronnd, tabled, delayed as long as the volunteers could understand. Their only alternative was to resign. Was this the wish of the few who hold the reins of Walled Lake, or the entire city? ★ These firemen were proud of their job and showed it at every call by responding the fastest way possible. They learned these techniques by meeting twice a month for drill and meetings. My husband works days a week, y^t he was willing to give up part of his only day off to help. We do not have a healthy community when men who offer their time and energy can be used as pawns in the race for power of a few men. Mrs. Wesley Goff Walled Lake The Rug Peddler Write on Suit Against Waterford Twp. David ^Lawrence Says: Facts Show JFK Npt Hate Victim WASHMOtO^ President Johnson made a strange speech a few days ago which surprised many people Aroughout the , country. He attributed Ae assaniina-tioqof his predecessor to “hate” and fear and “bigoti y “ This is some-Aing which is so much at variance’ wlA the facts published Aus far con cerning Leei Harvey Oa-j wald, Ae ac cused assassin, I that it has' caused wonder LAWRENCE ' whether Mr. Johnson’s address was prompted by an overemo-tional speech writer or wheAer he himself has concluded that the assassination was produced by the alleged “hate” doctrines of some of Ae people who wer€ oipposed to Mr. Kennedy. ' Speaking last Saturday.at the dedication of Ae John F. Kennedy Cultural Center in , New Yorit, President Johnson said in part: “John F. Kennedy was Ae victim of Ae hate Aat was a part of our. country. It is a disease that occupies Ae minds of the few but brings danger to the many.... prejudices or “bigotry’’^in Ae land had been pretty well dispelled. But President Johnson’s remarks raise .Ae question as to just why, after a lapse of sev-eral months, Mr. Johnson chose to revive Ae theory. Could it be Aat Ae Warren Commission has divulged to Ae President gome Informa-tion Aat has not yet been made available to Ae ^blic at large? Authoritative sources den] this assumption. The whole Aing has an air of mystery, because on its face it just doesn’t seein consistent wiA Mr. Johnson’s approach in the past. While he has condemned the action of jhe assassin and has also coialemnSdv“bigot^ hatred Aat populi Bob Considine Says: The Uke Oakland Heights subdivlston has sued Ae Waterford Township Board in order to prevent a water tank from being erected at Ae entrance to the subdivision. When Ae subdivision wasr built the township and builder signed a contract stating no tower could be built Inside the boundaries. Now one is being built 50 feet outside. Before last spring’s election, offkiaj operate in finding anoAer location.' AA dowered the boom and Ae matter was cloi exhausted Ae funds of Ad snbdivisioa’s i torney has been in court every Mohda^' Ae exception of three, for n^or f " I wonder if tife amount paid to Paul Mandel, xWaterford’s attorney, for this/one suit wouldn’t have more than paid tlm additional cost of pnother location for Ae tank. Curious I pretended to co-> election, officials The UsnLt has rrkSri 'Disgustj^” stated that Uke Oakland Heights residents are disappointed in Ae outcome of Ae suit-against-Waterfprd Town-He shduld speak for himself. ben I nave something to say. I’ll say it and Ae only time I’ve felt it necessary to defend my rights has been against Ae board members of Lake Oakland Heights Association. Roger Johnson Drayton Plains Nixon Has Nebraska Right in His Hip Pocket Remarks Continue on Past City Election “If we had more centers like this, if we had done our job a little better and we had'feared a little less and our hatred had been minimized and our bigotry driven underground — John Fitzgerald Kennedy would be here with us today as our 35th President. GAVE LIFE “He gave his life for his country. He need not have given it excepf for those who hate and those who fear and those who ,Jrighten easily aiid those who “feel insecure.’’ When Ae late president was assassinated, there we re-. many people who attributed " Ae murder to the ,“h a t e. wave’’ in America. ^ But almost every piece of evidence. AaLhas been made public since indicates that Oswald had a deranged mind and that his aberration started in his youth. OMAHA - If Richard Nixon-ever declares formally for the GOP nomination he can enter the fray with Nebraska onpe again in His hip pocket. It gave him his biggest single state edge over JFK in 1960, some 170,-000 more votes, 62 per cent of the total, and CONSIDINE judging from his sifring through ♦hia area Ae Other day he could duplicate Ae feat. Nixon has been employing a neat one-two-three punch technique during his orbit of the poUtical-arena. He comes on business, stays to speak at a nonpoUtical function, and leaves on a political note. rytog'Ae war to Communists in NorA Viet Nam and Laos with VieAamese troops. He charged LBJ wiA being “more liberal and more fed-eral-centered’’ Aan JFK, and predicted' that Robert Kennedy will be LBJ’s running He concluded, as he has elsewhere: “But I’m not campaigning here or anywhere.’’ Pontiac’s only newspaper used Its position to great advantage in the city wide election of commissioners. The most militant segregationist couldn’t have worked harder to suppress the voice of Pontiac’s Negroes., The Press should be commended for Ae effort to take Ae right to elect officials out of the hands of incompetenta and giving it to those better qualified and for Ae way It was camouflaged. ■ Now all we have to do is wait for steady and rapid progress. I am sure Ae Negroes can see just how much Aeir vote meant. Perhaps there was no significance in the fact the two districts that supported losAg candidates contain.nearly all of Pontiac’s Negro citizenry. FVed L. Anthony 482 S. EdlA Before Nixon left Omaha, three well-known Nebraskans announced they were supporting a statewide letter-writing campaign for Nixdn under Ae cap^ tion of “Nebraskans for a Free Choice.’’ Aim .is to persuade voters to write his name on Ae.baUbt in today’s presidential preference primary. I see Ae ex-mayor is very unhappy saying Aat the' write-in names are illegal. If he knew that it was illegal, why didn’t he say so before election? No, he thought he had a 100 to 1 shot of being elected. But it backfired on him. I thought that Ae. vote between Webb and Wellbaum would be split even and he would be sitting high, but found out Wellbaum had a few more friends Aan he had. Those pamphlets he had put on cars parked around Catholic chprcKes Sunday morning didn’t do him any good. More power to our new mayor. One Voter His erratic behavior was no-* ticeable A Ae years immediately preceding the'episode at Dallas. LESS bigotry Could Oswald’s action have been p r e v e n t e d if there had been less “bigotry” A Ae United States, and is it conceivable that; €ven if Acre were more centers like the J o h n F. Kennedy Cultural Cepter, John Fitzgerald Kennedy would be here with us today?. Medical history shows Aat, irrespective of th« ideology df any country, there are d e -ranged mAds which are re-sponsAle for Ae commission of crimes Aat are Aexplicable on any rational or logical basis. The business in this case was with his friend Don Kendall, president of Pepsi. 'The speech followed, and the third stage Was best described in Nathan Nielsen’s interview A the Evfening World-Herald, a staunch Nixon-for-President pamper in 1960. UNITE PARTY " “To win the pre^dency in November, the Republican National Convention in July must nominate a candidate who can unite the party (Ae former vice president said). “ReferrAg to himself as 'titular leader’ of the GOiR, Mr. Nixon said that ‘one of Ae best roles I can play’ , between iiow and the convention ‘is attempt to brAg Ac Rc-publicah party togeAer.’ ” ., Asked wheAer !Sen. Gold-water could unite Ae party as the presidential nomAee, Mr. .NhcOh answered Aat .this would be determined by how Mr. Gol(|^' water conducts himself. In Washington: GOP Having Serious Squabble? Nixop said he had differences with ail-the GGP candidates, but he will support the nbmi- Until how it ’had been widely assumed Aat Oswald was A-sarie and Aat his crime was that of a demented individual. The theory that it could somehow *be associated with hate or CUBA EXILES He urged recognitipn of a Cuban government in exile, tightening of the blockade, ground inspecti9n . of Cuban bases if (He Russians: threaten over further U2 flights, and car- By BRUCE BIOSSAT s'AN FRANCISCO’(NEA) -The Republican party may be in the greatest internal trouble of its Jong life. The gulf between its mod-eraA - HI}eral wing and its right wAg wi'denirigto perilous dimensions. The very rious con 7elt, • on this' score by many diussai leading Republicans was underlined by a number of GOP governors who attended Ae recent Western.Governors’ Conference here. They are back in their home territories now. But they left behind Aem in Sau Francisco, where the 1964 Re-' publican presidential nominee will be. chosen in two monAs, an* atmosphere A which are mixed, a shrugging resigna- ^ tion, resentment, bitterness and fear., for Arizona Sen. Barry Gold-water for the GOP nomination. The growing belief that Gold-Water may,be very close to that prize if he wins the California primary June 2 is the matter which so deeply worries the other Western governors. tremists — who would assure Republican defeats at presidential and governorship levels for Ae next two decades. governor Let’s be blunt about the elements of Ais concern: 1. They believe — and Aeir view appears to be shared by all but one (d the nine Republican governors outside Ae West—Aat to nomAate Gold-water may be to pick Ae worst presidential loser since Alfred M. Landon of Kansas in 1936. ; ■ Another troubled speaks: “It strikes me they (Ae archconservatives) may be less A-terested in winning an election than A possessAg the wreck- .rM- 3. These same leaders were severely annoyed regar^ as harsh/ rough- The, non-Goldwater westerners were stunned Aat a candidate Ijke Harold Stassen could collect 105,006 votes to Barry’s 262,000 in conservative Indiana’s presidential primary. Says one western governor: “If we choose"jBarry A ’JuIy, it . looks to me as it we’ll get our 'tails beat in November.” praraces by GoMwater forces pmsAg for convention delegates A state after state. Governors A San Francisco echoed a complaint heard often ip many parts of the country — Aat“ruIe-or-ruA” tactics by Goldwater hackers are .forcing “good people” to wither out of the party or into iniictivity. The only exceptions to -this mood among western governors are Governors Paul Fjannin of Arizona and Tim Babcock of .Montana, who are, of course,. 2. The non-Goldwater governors, a majority by 13 to 3, believe further that to nominate Goldwater would be. to place the party in the hands of “rinrealistic” arcfi-conserv-atives — here-and-there exr this newspaper as well a carrier lor, SO cents ....... mailed .«n Oa^nd. Genesee, Liv-li ingston, MadSmb, Lapeer land -----------------s It Is tWOO a I Micniaan and in ,the~ United - All mail subr ---- places States S20,00 a year scriptions * payable ________________ Postage 'has bee>% paid' af the 2nd class rate at PontM& Michigan. Member of .ABC. J::. ■y' ’ ; ■' ' d'- i -• PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, TITESDAV, MAY 12. 1064j ■iv:/ ’ I _j_____>• , i' 8EVBW,J DSms Ironing Qut Position Votes Due on Antipoverty Bill Amendments ^ WASHINGTON (AP) - The cruclfd voting on amendments to President Johnson’s antipoverty hill Is expected to begin today In the House Education and Labor Cktmmlttee. . it ★ ★ Democratic members of the conimlttee have been meeting In caucus for a week to Iron out their position A to 8. Slight mars. *1 crew soehs, 4 pair care cotton In white v striped tops.* Boys’ sizes 7 to 10«/4. Misknlts. handkerchiefs, 4 For men*s silk ties SECONDS! Irish linen In onerous man-size. Neat- tp I ly hemmed; many with 1 ■initials. MisWcaves. Allover, under-the-knot w'’! patterns and stripe. In ty 1 blue, brown, black and 1 gray combinations. . Ji dress shietds, Z tor garment bags IRREGULARS from _ nationally-known makerl Plastic-lined for protection. Washable. Save! 'Holds up to 16 dresses! 84 Inches, full-length zippers. Solid colors. Some clear fronts, some quilted. Spring-Summer Avondale fashion-right print fabrics brand cotton denim Dacron® polyester-cottons, acetate and acetate- ■ cotton blends. Light, me- 10 to 20-yd, pieces. Sportswear favorite in red, mid? dy 'blue, eggshell, faded blue, turquoise, pink, oharcoal. 36,- in. wide; washable, pre-shnmk. diunf, dark ground prints, novelties in 48-inch widths. Big savings! guest toweiSf S tor toot-easing mats ninon panels, ea. SECONDS of well-known Steven’s quality! 11x18-Inch size with dobby border; fashioned-f ringed. '1 SECONDS! 18x30-ln. sponge rubber mat lessens fatigue. Marbelized colors. DiSj;oloration.s, 1 Tailored acetate ninon* weave panel curtains in White; 40rin. wide, 63 or 81-in. long. Gord-odgedI WEDNESDAY NMGHT SDOPPiNG: Downtown till 8:30; Lincoln Park, Pontiac, Madison, Dearborn till 9:00; Northland, Eastland till S:30 ■■■ dresses, .i2‘,4-241^ mci. iMPERBWrS! 2 of many styles. Washable.. Fonts, solids; 12’i-24>,i incl. ^ $4 nightgowns, 2 for women^s shoes IRREGULARS! One-and * few - of * a - kind styles. Pastels and* checks, S, M, L. Comfortable, fashlo'n-able pumps in high and mid neela> Patent and .calf in black, colors. * ’3 men*s belts, S'^for canvas footwear lawn chairs, 2 for Black or b^own leather* in nien's siz^ 32 to 42. One-size elastic style m black, navy; brown. r*< (gfl SECONDS! Men’s 1. tp P low canvas styles. Bas- W w a /. ketball and tennis / , i. hm Styles. Very slight , fmi mars. Weather-resistant plastic webbing: so|id white or green/WnIte'. Folds. 1-in. aluminum tubing. *6 comfg chaise pads . Head-rest style. Solid, gallon girdles Slimming stretch; in panty girdle. White. S, M, L for juniors.'. ‘ Also belt..^/' •" ; i J ■■ W mV- h; als^) White. ^ r misses* slips, 2 for Summer-white acetate style has Ja double skirt, assures nq. .see-,, through.. Siaes / 34-4Q, ■ i'X X\'’ I *3 bogs* slacks, 2 pr, ’ *5 W:t New high pocket style ■ in combed cotton twill or printed cotton sa-- teen.. In size$ 8 to 18: spoH shirtsi 3 for •SE(i;.ONDS! Short ' sleeve cotton.s in many .Nolid-s and .patterns. S, -M.: L. Misweaves, i ' * SJWS ■*4' knit shirts, 2 for mcn*s attache caae enameled seats SECONDS ! , Collared with placket fronts and x pockets," .some with .SECONDS! Handsome rh m * leather-look vinyl plas- !k jC . Pres.sed - wood toilet ^^ tic in black or ginger. ‘ x/B Large size, Maw.s. ‘■E* ■ .sCat ha,s pla.stiq com-position finish, non-' m 1 emblems.. iljs4uits. V , V flusMiftdcnilTu* . corrosive fittiiiAs.. ^ i- . ■\ • V. '.V.'' ■ -AV./'v ■■ .. ■«'Xi- 1^:1 THE PONTJAC FllKSS, TUESDAY, MAY 1%, 1904 - ' I ■. -r . Public Hcipring Is Set LANSING (AP) ^ A public htaring will be held in Detroit May SO on a proposed widening of Bilbt Mile, Rc^ from six. to eight lanes, the State' Highway Department has announced. A moiiB thiui ISrinile section between Southfield Expressway and (Iratlot Ave. ill scheduled for widening at an estimated cost of |7.6 mUliOQ. “It'S SO good It's - what?" It's so good it's guaranteed. You’ll Ilka this bread or you'll get your money back. Deiectable with meals !.. delightful for snacks. (Ideal for toast end sandwiches, of course.) JANE PARKER High Sugar Foods Cheat Your Health ByDR.WnJJAMBRADY When children at home or in schoof are encouraged or permitted to take pop or chocolate malted for refreshment, instead of milk (or skim milk or butte^ milk) or fruit juice, It is evident that their parents or teachers are not concerned about nutrition and health. . The objactloh to sugar, candy, sweetened beverages, cookies, cake, ice cream and other sweets, as a regular daily part of the child’s diet, is not that kugar in any form is Injurious to health or (in my opinion) even harmful to the teeth, but simply that it cheats the child (and so I call the items men-tfoned “cheat-food”) because it quickly satisfies appetite and spoils or ploys normal appetite or desire frr more essential foods. The child can’t get the blo- the vitamins sind minerals he needs by sucking on candy or . drlnUag a hottlesrf pop. Besides the items mentioned, other cheat-foods, particularly Sugary “breakfast foods” and things made of refined white flour (starch), satisfy appetite for a little while and yield quick energy to enable the child to exert himself in a spurt of play; but as soon as the calories yielded by starch or sugar are burned, &e poor kid is out of gas he tires and quits. He prefers to sit and watch others play. On TV, at the movies, at Uie football game— it’s the Yankee way. He be-conws soft, namby - pamby, tired, lazy, peevish, lethargic. INDULGE IN ALCOHOL Should clrcunutanoes make him conscious of his inadequacy he can still blunt or kuppress for a while that uneasy feeling by indulging in alcohol. This, too; is the American way. One who has vlte — bet-' ter-than-average nutritional condition — feels just fine and dandy all the time, and one who feels fine and dandy would hardly need cocaine, heroin or alcohol at any time. It is my belief that one with vlte just naturally practices to- il one v trltional deficiency (malnutrition) feels “the need for a stimulant” or vaguely wants to feel better — these are the reasons an alcoholic in a sober interval gave for drinking. In my Little Lesson XVI, “The 7 Keys to Vite,” you wiU find the corrective, protective, regeneration, rejuvenation, reduction, basic health diet — it is a pattern on Which to build your own everyday diet to suit your individual requirements. SUGGEST^ DIET The diet as given includes 4 glasses of milk a day, but no bread, cake, pie, pudding or cereal, and of course no dessert. To build your own everyday diet add plain wheat, in one form or another. Are^^ejttQfs to Air Reports Talki on Coriditlons at May 25 Meeting Present and future conditions of real estate in Oakland County will be repwted on by four area realtors at a meeting May 25 of leaders in Industry, govern-meht and the real estate profession. The event, to be held at the Bonnie Brook Golf Club, is spon-iored by the Metropolitan Detroit Council of Real Estate Boards and will include real estate prospects in five counties. More than 500 real estate brokers and salesmen representing the 12 Realtor Boards in Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, Monroe'and Washtenaw coun-tiOB/are scheduled to attend, according to Harold A. Mein-inger, Council chairman. Sixty-second reports on local opportunities will be presented by Fred E. Sheldon of Befridge and Morrison Realty, 702 N. Woodward, Royal Oak; attorney Philip E. Rowston, president of the Pontiac Board of Realtors: ESverett J. Wilson of Wilsorf Realty, 545 N. ’"Main, Milford; ,and Milton F. Wekver of Weaver Realty Co., and president of the Rochester Board of Realtors. Rotid Tax Revenue lncreases.hr County Oakland County today received $1.05 million as Its first annual quarterly share of gasoline tax and license plate receipts from the State Highway Department. The amount is $420,86(1 more than the county received for the first three months of last yMr. 'In addition, the county’s 88 Incorporated cities and villages are getting another $1.5 million a) their share, with Pontiac’s $273,858 heading the list. The money is part of $48.7 million being paid to counties and municipalities throughout Michigan for road maintenance expenses, according to State Highway Commissioner John C. M^ie. > the county for disbursement within the next couple days. Oakland County municipalities will get the following amounts; Berkley $58,867; Beveriy Hills $26,961; Bingham Farms $2,090; Birmingham $70,604; Bloomfield Hills $11,768; Clarkston $2,480; Clawson, $87,366; Farmington $19,740; Terndale $88,030; Franklin $10,047; Hazel Park $63,311; He said the State Highway Department is keeping another $43.2 million as its ahare of the gasoline and license plate money. RATED SECOND Oakland County’s share is second among counties only to the $6.3 million going to Wayn^ County. Macomb Ck>unty is getting $U3 million, Lapeer County $285,207 and Livingston Ck)un-ty $260,593. Money for cities and villages was received today by An Income tax bill passed'in-1958 set the individual exemption at $600.and perrtltled married couples to file joint returns. A new technleal cnllegl for the blind has just at Sabatta, Sabatta, near- j In Ethiopia, JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTfiD -HIGHEST >RICI> PAID—- . IF« Pick lip FE 2-0200 I eONTMC SCRAP g Holly $11,523: Huntington Woods $23,164; Keego Harbor $7,263; Lake Angelus $425; Lake Orion $7,91Q; Leonard $2,299; Madison Heights $89,807; Milford $14,847; Northville $12,956; Novi $27,289; Oak Park $92,401; Orchard Uke $5,581; Ortonville $2,841; Oxford $8,058; Pleasant Ridge $9,590;, Quaker town $2,329; BMhbster Jtl6,073; Royal Oak $283,807; ^th Lyon $5,495; Southfield $154,786; Sylvan Lake $6,295; Troy $66,-467; Walled Lake $11,007; Wix-om $8,485; Wolverine Lake $8,-506; Wood Creek Farms $3,106. Other area communities’ shares are; Almont $4,437; Brown City $4,318; Dryden $2,-752; Imlay City $7,(168; Lapeer $20,655; Marlette $6,188; MeU-mora $2,158; Romeo $8,881; UUca $8,057. LOOK A-tlT THIS way: Would you sell your home and eonienwfonho amount of Insurance you now carry? If Ih# answer ■ It an emphatic “NO, of eouriG notl* then you are not <;arryltio enough protection. Let's totk Kenneth G. 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Void if prohibited, taxed or restricted. Ypur customer must pay any joles tax,.Cosh vdlue I/20th TIni U.S. delegation to it the fall seaslon of the General t United Natlona has' conclnd- Awembly have not Improved Uiat Red Chlna’a chancea of I significantly._____________________ MIDAS MEANS IT! YOU’LL NEVER HAVE TO BUY ANOTHER MUFFLER miDAS ^MUFFLER SHOPS • Guaranteed In over 400 MIdaa Shopa, eoaat-to-coBit, U.S. and Canada e Free Inetallatlon • 10 min. lOrvloa Budget Plan available. i MIdae Mufflers guaranteed* against rust, corrosion, blow-out wear-out for as long as you own your car. 'Replaced if necessary hr a $3.50 service charge 435 SOUTH SAGINAW • FE 2-1010 MUn>tSIIS e Plpsa • shocks • skat silts Com Pain Slops Nem-Doep Rollef Starts in Secondt- Coms Soon Uft Right Out!; Inatant^iitint Dr. SchoU’e Zino-pada do I everything for you . . '. Stop coma fo/or« 1 they can develop when applied at the firat aign of aore toea . . . Stop pain in a jiffy ... Remove corn* one of the quickest ways known to medical ecienoe. Waf e off in bath. Authoritative U.S. officials believe France’s recognition of the Peking regime will heve little effect in the assembly. U.8. sources Indicated that France has made no effort to drum up support for Peking and many countries which formerly worked for Red China’s cause ore expected to give only token support. One factor has been the Chinese attack on .India. There is even more concern, the sources said, over China’s belligerence in its split with the Sdviet Union. VOTE LAST FAtL The vote in the assembly last fall wds 41 in favor of seating Peking, 57 against and 12 abstaining. q Reddaway said he saw the wife of Oleg Lenchevsky in Moscow twice “purely as an individual.’’ Lenchevsl^ defected to the West In 19U. ★ ★ ★ ' “Both visits were short and I simply passed oral messages of greeting and affection from Oleg Lenchevsky to his wife,’’ Reddaway said. LONDON (AP) - The Financial Times reported today that Czechoslovakia has refused to renew a contract to supply fopd to Cuba. ★ ★ ft Quoting usually reliable soSffc-es, the business daily reported that Czechoslovakia had contracted to deliver to Cuba by September 250,000 tons of frozen meat from Argentina and Brazil, 67,000 tons of canned meat, 450,00(1 tons of fertilizer, 1,600 tons of canned cereals and vegetables, 10,000 carloads of flour and 2,100 tons of canned fruit. “The food under this contract,’’ the paper said, “will be delivered but faced with a difficult food situation at home the Czech government seems unwilling to do much more.’’ CAMBRIDGE, England (AP) —Peter Reddaway, a British exchange student deported from the Soviet Union, today denied Soviet charges that he tried to persuade the wife of a Soviet defector to follow him to the West. the Gulf iioiismarming plan means expert ^ice for your heating equipment choose from these 3 service plan^ O ANNUAL TUNE-UP • Cl^ your oil burner • inspect flues and stack • Check filter cartridge • Lubricate burner motor • Check draft stabilizer • Cheek controls and switches W. Inspect.str^iners and nozzle , • Adjust air and oil mixture • Adjust ignition • Cement air leaks • Vacupm-clean heating plant and exposed flue pipes where necessary (replacement parts additional) $15.00 ' QbASIC YEAR ’ROUND SERVICE Gives you the annual tune-up and in addition you get year ’round, pn-call serince as required for period^shown below. No'service.call costs except required replacement parts.. . (Service Plan B is effective September through May) , ^ * Only $18.00 ENTEBBE, Uganda (API-Four soldiers were given prison terms Monday for their part in the army mutiny which British troops put down last January. 'Three of the soldiers received three-yesr terms and the fourth got 18 months. Four others Were found innocent. ★ ★ 'iF'' In neighboring Tanganyika, 14 soldiers were convicted of mutiny and sentenced to terhis ran^ng ^ from 5 to 18 years. Five others were acquits. ROME (AP)-Franco Bartoll Avveduti, ousted president of Italy’s government banana monopoly, has been sentenced to three years in prison, His was the stiffest sentence given 82 persons convicted Monday night by a Rome court of falsifying docunoents and rigging bidding for retailing of bananas. Forty - two were acquitt^. 'TUNIS (AP)—A government commission will set indemnity for 2,000 French farmers whose 500,000 acres of farmland Is being nationalized. t A bill approved Monday by the Tunisian National Assembly banned farm .land ownership by foreigners and authorized, immediate seizure .of foreign-owned farmland. 'lUnisia last year had agreqd to make the takeover over a five-year' period. ^ BRAZAVILLE, Congo B®" public (AP)—The Congo Republic and Cuba have decided to establish diplomatic relations, official sources said to-day. TOKYO (AP) - Twenty-four crewmen of the Nationalist Chinese- freighter Chupg Kai are. missing. The ^ Greek motor vessel Paean and ' Japanese. patrol ships rescued 20 men shortly after the Chung Kai sank^ff thei KUAU LUMPUR, Malaysia I taiy truck collided 18 mUesIkiUlng 16 rubter southern tip of Jhpan Mondey.| (AP)—A farm truck and a mill-{south of Kuala Lumpur tiajkiy,|persons were inlyred. Ten FLEETSIDE PICKUPS World’s favorite pickup model, Two body sizes; 6'/-: and 8 feet. Two wheelbases: 115 and 127 inches. Body extends clear out over the wheels. Excellent ride with coil springs all around and independent front suspension. Cab and lower body panels are double-wall construction. Strong ladder-type frame. Standard engine is 230-cu.-in. six. A 292 six or 283 V8 available at extra cost. Also 4-wheel drive. QUALITY TRUCKS COST LtSS Cheek the T-M-T truck deels new at your Chevroht dealer's MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. 631 OAKLAND at CASS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN FE 5-4146' WHEN YOU SHOP WKC 8-PC. MAPLE BUNK BED OUTFITS • EACH WITH 2 FAMOUS • EACH WITH 2 RESILIENT • EACH INCLUDES COMFORTABLE MATFRKSES STEEL SPRINGS LADDER & GUARD RAILi Q COMPREHENSIVE SERVICE' COVERAGE Grivea'you the annual tupfe-up, plus year ’round. ‘ on-call service during the period shown" below and in addition the parts listed below will be ’ riepaired or replaced Without extra charge should it be necessary, • Aquastat • Fan Motor • Electrons * Nozzle Ignition Lrads • Buriier Motor ‘ Stack or Circulator Ftolay • Bressuretrol • Fuel Oil Pump •. 'Transfonner • Cirdulator Motor ‘ Standard Thermostat » Draft Regulator Service Plan,.C is effective from Septembei; , through May. ''Only$2B.97 -.Let US help you decide which plan best suits ‘your needs — call: Pontiac, Michigan Gulf Oil Corpofation %' > .■ . i T 4, -V u 8-PIECE 2-iitch POS^ BUNK BED OUTFIT $eoi Hollywopd Bed Hand Mattress Set ::;:|Compl*t* with inn«rtpring gij^mattros^, box spring, watn-.-x UA nniuu hnadboard and lege ••• NO MONEY DOWN Special low prk*. Sturdily built of tateot hardwoods i;:-:;: ’ jmn with Map!* finish. 2 b^e, guard rail, ^ ladder, 2 mattressas, 2 springs. F^£N MON. THURS. 8 FRI. NIGHTS ’TIL 9 PARK FREE AT REAR OF STORE! Nylon FOLD-A-BED 100% nylon ^>11* covtr. Choic* of colon..ReVariible foam cuth-. . ion«. Separata Sarto innar-springmottrats. NYLON SOFA BED . Slaapi 2 at night. Concoalad boddingT compartrfiant. Spring construction. Lovaly nylon cov-ar. Foam padding. '169 - No 4 $ 58 Roll- away Bed & In-nwspring Mattress F«r lingla tixa. Adi'uttabla Foldt pp cornplataly for aaty j ttordga.'Hat cotton. . BUTTON FREE MATTRESS AND BOlf SPRING SET \Extro firm smooth top in- * nerspring ~mottress and matching l^x.spring by Rast-onaiie. ^ ^ Betli • 9^0 Q0 WKC, 108 North Saginaw Street... Federal 3-1114 A A'J,'V ‘ I A‘ i 4- -"w* j, p Yfl'f'■)' '',V '/'■‘:N:r " 'w' : ' THE PONTIAC PKBjiS. TUESDAY. |HAY 12, m4 1 1^111. •mm t-A-S-T MiMiotMr« ifivias irchtiU-Schools Groups « CPISTUH lITQtATimE SALES is Oaklind An. FC A-9591 MuiSr Suspect's Death Ruled jSuicide by Police tONIA (AP)~8tate police pet. Bdward Goes .mM today the death by drowning of accused axe murderer Kenneth Lee Maurer was a suicide. Maiirer’s cement • weighted body was found Monday night in FOR THE GRADUATE IN ELECTRIC lOR REGULAR MODELS Thl4U&»Mc pt/uffiutL Se€ ii-dmon4etfuiUiL* Km TpUtMIS LIBERAL ALI^OWANCE TRADE-IN UStlirili Siginiir^ FE.2483I the reservoir at the State Hos< pital fpr the Criminaliy Insane. Two cement biocks were tied to the body with ropes at the waist and feet, Goss said. it ' it "The autopsy showed no bruises,” said Goss, "and all of the knots were tied loosely in front. Prom all indications he could have freecLhimself at any time.” The 32-year**4**^ :caiao\\ t Savirks J it . ioan:S ★ 75 West Huron ' Estnblishetl 1890 ir.or.r,«nrif ***** FE 4-0561 Member Federal Home Loan Bank System SPORTING PROiPOSmON We’d like you to try m If you’re not satisfied, you get your money back. You have our word. We guarantee everything. That means the rlght-Tiow response of .Marathon Super-M gasoline when you touch your starter or move out to pass. That means everything from a lube job to a brake adjustment. Why do we offer ^ you such a guarantee? We’re that sure of our products and our dealers, and that anxious to make you one of our customers.. How can you lose? You can’t. Around tho world Around tho eornor , SUPER-M GASOLINE Thank you tat loading tbia.n>aaaaga itcLi Mirathoa. We ho|^ you ook^ MaraUgm’a bn^caats of Detroit Tiger baseball gamaa ouRadio and TV- j: . :■ -A *r r ‘ -Jjllx. ,riiE Pont; 1 ^ " ■ , , , TAC, PRESS, JUESDi^Y. MAY 12> 1904 . 7w.. r'. ■ hi ’Junior Editort Ouiz on'- SHIPS QUESTION: Why are ships called “she”? ir ir i( ANSWER: Old-time sailors always had a special affection and reverence for the ships which carried them over the dangerous sea. They looked on then) almost as living things. Eyes were palnM on the bows of Egyptian and Greek craft (1) by which mey #ere supposed to be able to spy their way. Statues of goddesses were often placed in the bows of Greek and Roman craft — the famous “Winged Victory” (2) gives the feeling of this custom, even though this was not a reai figure head but a st|tue set up to commemorate a naval victory. Statues of the Goddess Athena were often used on Athenian ship^ and the custom became carried on in the use of later ships figureheads, a great many of which were female figures. The old time sailor identified the figurehead with the ship imd probably, from this came the habit , Prtsented In ;th« Inter st_j)F Interi^tional goodwill . through the cdoi^atlon f J)fie Advertisirig Council, the J Consejo Nacionar de la I ^icidad, and the Newspaper Advrertislng Ex^utives Ai 'ociation. THE PONTlkC PRESS ■ t Ex-Con Denies DETROIT (AP) — Ex-«>nvict Bruce Waiter Lelkett denied . Monday he was the killer of two slain Fredericksburg, Va., po-nen and a North Brunswick, N.J. filling station attendant, police reported. Assistant Whyne County Prosecutor John A. MowatP- sald Leikett, 26, made the denial at Wayne County General Hospital vdim he Is a police, prisoner. Though Mowatt said Leikett admitted he was near, Tuesday’s slayiiyj scene of- the policemen. Mowatt said Leikett told officers he and a man. known | to him only as “Dominic” wei'e near the Fredericksburg shopping center where the officers were shot to death and that the two planned a break-in at one shopping center store. Leikett, recently freed from Lewisburg, Pa., penitentiary, was badly injur^ in a car collision during a flight from police Friday. Police, said they found the slain officers guns and handcuffs in Leikett’s car and also a gun of the type used to kill the policemen and the HHing istation man. THIRD ATTEMPT The questif^g of Leikett at the hospital Monday was- the third attempt iby police to talk to hiiA. /* ~ Deputy police chief Richard Humphry of suburban Inkster said Leikett, under sedation from his critical injuries, was too incoherent for Interrogation on both Saturday and Sunday. Murder charges against Lei- kett in the policemen’s slayings have been issued in Virginia. The officers were shot to death In their patrol car behind the shopping center early Tuesday. Mowatt sajd as soon as Leikett has recovered sufficiently from hia Injuries he will be arraigned at the hospital. 2 Mofhws, 6 Childnn Train Hits Automobile 10 Are Killed MESA, Arlz, (AP) - Ten occupants of a station wagon were killed yesterday when a Southern Pacific express train traveling an estimated 60 miles per hour smashed into the hide at a^crosslng. Two sisters, one of them pregnant, and their eight children were the victims. - They were Mrs. Lola King, 26, of Phoenix and her two children, Shelley, S, and Vicky, 4; and Mrs. Ina Lowe of Winkleman, Arts., and her six children, Cliffonl, 10, Mi-chell, 8, Unda, 7, Karen, 5, Mark 3, and Gregory, 1. Mrs. JLowe was pregnant. The 14-car train, pulled by two diesel units, ripped the station wagon in half. I Investigators quoted Engineer W. W. Witt of Phoenix as saying he was on the wrong side of the cab to see the station wagon approaching. -CAR INTO PATH An officer said the car ran right into the path of the train «8 though the driver didn’t see it or the signal at the crossing three miles south of Mesa. Corn canneries use a machine called a succulometer to measure the maturity of com and enable to canner to decide when it should be picked. DIE*nNG DIVIDEND — Charles W. Robertson, 36, of Springfield, Mo., is down to a “slim” 371 pounds now and finds he can gk behind the wheel of a car. This wasn’t a possibility last Oct. 18. when Robertson went on a diet tipping the scales at 544 pounds. His goal is to weigh 300 pounds by next fall and 200 in 1965. A pebble struck by the blade I of a 32-calibre bullet, according of a power-driven rotary lawn to the U-S. Department of Agrimower can travel with the speed | culture. ■ ■ Pesticide^rb V^SHINGTON W - Pres$. denF Johnson signs into law tor day a bill tightening Agricultitri Department control over tbl sale of pesticides. The bUl, sponsored by Sen. Abraham A. Rlblcoff, D-Conn., ends the system' of “protest re^ . istratlon” lor such products andt in effect, Yequires premarket|ng government clearance for thena * *■*''.r ■ Under protest registration, ;! company can market a pe^tickli even if the department has dif approved it, or can continue tp market It without restrtetions even though the depai^^ finds after experience thgt use should be limited. The government’s only course is to take the maitter t| #laanf*ltisssl Kw lo w MMM? msv asaa»M.-. trude Martin, Mrs. G. F. Rod-dewlg, Mrs. Marjorie Morey, Mrs. Claire J. Hinckley, Miss Potts, Mrs. Mert... Jennings, Mrs. George MorroW and Mrs. Everett Reese. The Walter K. Wlllmans of West Iroquois Road will be aboard the “SS France" m11-Ing from New York Thursday for a 42-day tour of Europe. Included in their Itinerary of 11 countries are the British Isles, and the French- and Italian Rivieras. Mrs. George Brinkman ,o/ Clarks-ton (from left), incoming president of Pontiac Junior Woman's Club, checks new correspondence with Mrs. James Clarkson of St. Jude Drive, project chairman and Mrs. George Watters of Murphy Avenue, outgoing president. Guests Sfiould Not Hove to Endure a Dog at Party Returning to California after a week’s stay in Pontiac is Mrs. Flora ‘Goodale of Concord. Aunt of Judge Clark Adams, Mrs. Goodale visited the judge and his wife in their West Walton Boulevard 'home. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Jennings of Parsons, Tenn. are leaving today after a week’s stay with Mrs. Jack Rammes of Sylvan Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Roeser of Ann Arbor, formerly of Pontiac, announce the birth of a son, Frederick Grant, May 10. Grandparents are Dr. and Mrs. W. 0. Roeser of Neome Drive and the Grant Newtons of Morris Plains, N. J. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Why do so many pice people with dogs have So little regard for their guest^* fort?' When we “ visit these peo-j^ pie, th^ir dog^ jumps, up on. us the mdanenti the ddor.isl opened, soon as we sitl down, the dogi jumpa. furniture right next to us. When we sit at the dining room table, the dog is under the table, with his nose on our legs. friendly, and the father’s present wife is invited to the wedding; where does SHE sit? ♦ ★ ★ Should she be right up front with the relatives in the wedding party, and beside her husband at the head table at the wedding dinner? NEEDS TO KNOW if only a part of it is true, she should take a good look at herself in the mirror, and listen to herself talk. He even puts his paws up on the tablecloth, “begging” for food. (’The master thinks nothing of feeding the animal with his hand, and then goes right on eating. Yich!) ★ W -ir We love dogs, Abby, and have always had one. But when we entertain, our dog is not included with the guests. Do you agree with those who have the “Love us, love our dog” attitude? Or can you see our side of it? THE“E’s”in HILLSBOROUGH DEAR “E’s”: I can more than SEE your side of it — I’m ON it! DEAR NEEDS: The bride’s mother and present, family sit in the first pew. The bride’s father, after giving away his daughter in marriage, then goes to sit with his present wife and family in the second pew. The father’s present wife sits beside him at the wedding dinner.% DEAR ABBY: Re the man who a c c u s e d his good and faithful wife of every dirty deed in the book: I have been down that road myself, and I, too, was sick at heart at all my husband’s accusations and suspicions until I learned that It aU came from his own guilty conscience. Everything he was accusing me of doing, HE was doing — the rat. , VIRGINIA BEACH Arranging ^play money' place cards for Pontiac Junior Woman’s Club annual dinner J^pnday in Old Mill Tavern are Mrs. Clarence A. Pudney of Elsinore Drive (left), dinner chairman, and Hazel Potts of Navajo Drive, hospitality chairman. Shower Is for Those YOU Invite Pi Omicron Chapter Reelects President DEAR ABBY: A young, rather pretty little marri^ woman lives next door to me, and she is always telling me that a door-tOHiobr salesman made a pass at her and she had tqput him in his place. She claims the mailman, milkman and grocery man have also made improper advances to her, and she had to tell them off. Get It off your chest. For a personal, unpublished r e p ly, write to ABBY, in care of The Pontiao Press. Enclose a stamped self - addressed envelope. Mrs. William Johnson was re-elected president of Phi Kappa Tau chapter of Pi Omicron national sorority at the recent annual meeting in her home on Lorberta Lane. For Abby’s booklet, “How To Have A Lovely Wedding,’" send 50 cents to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. r V i n g as vice presi-dent will be Mrs. Bruce Church along with Mrs. Alvin Heft, reoqrdlng secretary; Mrs. RobertN4artin, corresponding secretai^''and Mrs. Robert Hausman, treasurer. A donation was pledged to the Oakland County Children’s Leukemia Foundation. Mrs. David Brannan and Mrs. John Salow were recipients of the second and third formal pledge service. Attending the sta^e convention Friday in Kalamazoo \yill be Mrs. Martin, Mrs. Heft, Mrs. Walter Jeffreys and Mrs. Brannan. .Arrangements for the June banquet at Howes Lanes are being completed by Mrs. Robert ^harf and Mrs. Martin. By ’Ibe Emily Post Institute Q: I am going to give a shower for a friend. I called the bride-to-be’s mother to tell her about it. A few days later she sent me a list of names of friends and relatives whom she thought should be Invited. I hadn’t asked for this list and did. not count on extra guests. Am I obliged to invite them? . Golden Anniversary for Shriners A: The bride-to-be’s mother had no right to send you a list of names without your having asked, and there is certainly no reason why you should be forced to Invite the extra guests. „ You can telephone your friend’s mother and explain that you have to limit the number of guests you can invite to the shower, and that you are very sorry but you will not be able to Invite those on the list. DEAR ABBY: With so much divorce and remarrying these days, isn’t there some wedding etiquette for divorced parents of the bfide. and groom? Abby, I have the same mailman, milkman, grocery man, and the same salesmen calling on me, and I have never had one speck of trouble with any of them. Do you think she is maldng all this up, or can it be true? WONDERING DEAR WONDERING: She’s probably making it up. But The 50th grand council session of the Ladies of the Oriental Shrine of North Apier-ica, Inc. will be held in a Detroit hotel May 17-23......... grand high priestess and other national officers. A reception will follow. " /■' Say the bride’ll parents are divorced and hbve both re-marned, but the bride wants . her real father to give her away, yjfhere does the father go to sit after he has given the bride away? Surely h&..ddesn’t go to sit with the bride’s mother, who is sitting with her present husband! And if everyone is Janice Burns to Be Honored of Shower Janice Burns of Sylvan take will be honored at a bridal shower Friday evening in the West Pike Street home of Mrs. Elmer Quine., Mrs. Stuart Willson and Mrs. Robert Larson will be cohos- Some 35 guests were present at a dessert luncheon and shower Saturday, honoring Miss Burns, in the home of Mrs. Howard Lamb at Union Lake. Cohostesses were Mrs. Byron Nolan and Mrs. RoBe Smith, both of Clarks-ton. Formal activities wOl begin when ^he high priestess of the local chapter, Mrs. Earl Lough of Farmington, welcomes members to the formal dinner Sunday. LOCAL PARTICIPANTS Mrs. Carrie Lee of Birmingham is cochairman of publicity for the convention and are Mrs. John on of Cass Lake and Mrs. Hugh Gibson of Pontiac. is also a member of the patrol. Other local members par- This affair will honor the Relative Opens Home to Ceremony A luncheon - reception in Devon Gables followed the recent marriage of Frances Eva Sener to USA Capt. Gary Nemet. Both are recently of Korea. Judge Cecil McCallum performed the early afternoon • ceremony in the home of the bride’s grandmother, Mrs. Fred Saner on Murphy Street. A May 23 w e d d i n g is plann^ ,by the daughter of • Mr. and Mrs. Curtis H. Burns and David % Willson, son of the David T. Willsons of Oneida Road. ■ ^ " This treasure of a travel coat by Lee Hetman features twin rows 'of crochqt banding, from the front hem and over 'the shoulders to the low slung side-bett: Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Sener, parents of the bride, ' are former Pontiac residents, now with the U.S. Operations’ Mission in Seoul. Korea. Her husband is the son of M SeF Tonight Members of -chapter* CL, PEO Sisterhood, heard rieports of the 45th state convention at their Monday meeting. Oakland Coun^ Asso-ciaRon of Educational Secre-ries will gather for the annual Bosses’ Night dinner this eve n i n g JA Roma Hall on Schoolq-aR Road in Detroit. Assisting Mrs. C. L. Morgan in her Kier Road home was Mrs. R. B. Fell. Mrs. Fell and Mrs. H. W. Chapman were convention delegates. Dr. E. L. Marietta, head of thrWs^jiess department, Western MicJBgan University, will speak concerning “The Care and Feeding of Bosses.” Music will be provided by the Livonia Women’s Chorus. Details concerning the remarriage of a widow and divorcee are described in thfe Emily Post Institute booklet entitled, “Second Ma^;riage.” To obtain -a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, seB-addressed e n v e 1 o p e to Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press. ' The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this column, ’ ' Mrs. James Houck Is Proxy, Will Also Be State Officer Albert Emsly, vibe president; Mrs. Robert Adsit, secretary; and Mrs; Victor Maiden, treasurer. ' Also installed were Mrs. , Sadler, and Mrs. William Mar- Auxiliaries represented were Jimmy Dey Auxiliary 12, Be-_mis Olsen Auxijliary 13, arid Wright Fournier Auxiliary 161. . PMitlac Heritage club members appreciate a^d study antiques, Mrs. Walter Obenauf, Davisburg (left) and Mrs. Mert S. Jennings, Wenonah'Drive, admire an antique pitcher pvoned by Mrs. James ^ Youngblood, Orchard Ridge Road. The club is. holding a gourmet dinner party and nien’s night Thursday evening at jhe Youngblood-homei Mrs. Obendiif is chairman of the 'event, assisted by Mrs. Jennings, Mrs. Charles Ip,tson and Mrs*. Don. Hasler. . ■ Yi. FOURTESlN THE P^NT^I^AC l^ESS. TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1064 The 13th ptnendmeiit. to the ' .... \ pIxAlblttng Btavery WM ratified Dec. U. 1866; “How come everybody doesn't eat it?" Not everybody knows this bread is sold only at A&P. But now you do. We guarantee j^’ll like it or your money back. JANE PARKER How Much to Charge hr Room/Board By MARY FBpajSY Consultant In Money Dear Miss Feeley: We have a probI|pm which my husband and I would like you to solve. My brother has lived in our home for morej than 20 years, having the use! of everything] in ou{ home, as well as room and board. He has accumulated a tidy I sum of 340,00o| cash in ji h e savings banks, .stocks and bonds and mortgages of over 312,000, and 36,000 in government E bonds. He is retired now with a pension of 3218, a retirement income check of 3137, and social security of 3123—along with the Income from cash savings in the hanks, dividends from stocks and bonds, and interest from the mortgages and E bonds. He has never given us more thaii 312 a week for his room and board. Up to about fit 37 wehkly. years ago, -it wgs | retired now My also, with’ in comparison to my brother’s, and he says that if my brother does not pay at least 330 a week he must get out right away; VERY CRUEL I talked with .my b r 61 h e r about it and he thought we were very cruel to ask 330 weekly and-will NOT pay it. We want to do what is right by him as y/e love him very dearly but. feel that he can well afford to pay us more. My husbai\d talked with attorney and he said, “You should have ordered the freeloader out years ago and do it at once.’’ We want your advice as to the amount he should pay as we want to still be friends. Mr. and Mrs. M. E. S.. Sodus, New York Deaf*TS4r. and Mrs. S.: I can’t help but wonder how you got hold of those figures regarding brother’s financial situation. Is it possible he would be so brash as to drop a remark Gracious and Beautiful Entertaining on a grand scale or just a gathering of the clan ... the perfect setting is this native wild cherry dining room Jby Ethan Allen. It welcomes with the warmth and charm of its beautiful lines and the painstakingly hand-rubbe J finish speaks eloquently of your good' taste. Show your treasure^, in the hutch top and stow your linens and silver in the buffet below. And there’s always room for one more at the table — it. extends to 92” with two* 10” leaves, to seat 10 people. But do come see our complete open stock collection of Ethan Allen furniture in maple, pine, cherry, and mahogany ... you’re sure to find just the combination of pieces to suit your heeds! DROP LEAF EXTENSION TABLE 42”x28” closed, 42’’x72” open, extends to 92” ' with two lO” leaves.1136.50 ON DISPLAY AT BOTH STORES 56” BUFFET with ^OPEN HUTCH TOP.....6418.50 SEE OUR 3 NEW MODEL HOMES in FOX HILLS Opdyke B,ejtween S. Boulevard and Square Lak% Rd. Open Dally From 11 •k 24 WEST HURON ST. In Downtown Pontiac FE 4-1234 ' Open Monday & Friday 4080 TELEGRAPH RD. At Long Lake Road. ; 644-7370 Open Mon., Thnrt. & Fri. •lU 9 about hJfi 3^,00(NtfBaving8 during the dinner table conversa-Uoh? , Or to mention an Income amounting to 3M8 h month—at a minimumi — w h 11 e he was handing you 318 for his weejdjr room and board? If brotoer’s no brighter than that, he shouldn’t blgme you for upping hlg ante. I think you can Insist on one-fourth to one-third of his income, or 327 to 335 as his weekly payment for room November i)ow$ are planned by Judith Ann Bellows, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nile L. Bellows of Mechanic ^Street and Robert Eugene Hoffman, son of the Robert W. Hoffmans of South Bend, Ind. and board and the privileges of your home. -You can love him Just dparly, if he pays his own freight. And you don’t need to yrorry that such cruel treatment on you^ part is going to wreck his health. Brother sounds tough ai they come. Dear Miss Feeley; I have some E bonds that will soon.be 20 years old. Should cash them and renew them < Just leave them stand as they are? Which will be best, cash the 20-year-old bonds or cash the* bonds that are now just 10 years old? Where can I send to get estimate on the interest due so that I can be sure that the bank that cashes them is not making a rake-off? Mrs. L. E. t., Waterloo, Ind. Dear Mrs, T.: You’re recdving the same amount ol Interest on all these bonds, S6 you’ll receive the same percentage of yield. But of course you’ll receive more money from your 20-year-old bonds, since they have been accumulating interest for a longer period of time. Ar ' ★ ■ If they happen to( be 318.75 bonds, each 20-year-old, iFsold, will pay 334.43. The 10-year-old bonds will pay 325.52 each. There might be a few pennies difference d e p e n d i n g on the month you purchased them. As for anybody getting a rake-off on your profits, put your mind at ease. The value of each bond will be established by the paying agent right on the bond itself—and it will be checked for accuracy by the U. S. TYeasury Department. New. Manager's Special! 8” X 10’^ PORTRAIT For Limited Time Way Belote Normal Co$t • Only one offer eeeh 6 months • (iroujts, costumes and persons ! years slightly additional.! KJEIWIAIJE’S • • Photographers 45 W. Huron St. OPP»"l«e Vontlae Press, Phone for Appointment, FE 5>3260, FE 5-0322 ■ THIS OFFER ENDS lUNE 27 mmmmmmmm NO MICKEY MOUSE “Wake Reservations Now for Summer Classes! Jost "old-faihionad" raading mathods (Phonics) with individually tailored lessons. Basic literacy instruction (or the deprived non (or slow) reader or (or the unsuccessful driver's license applicant. Free pre-testing. CLASSES — 1 reachw to I Pupil Plan Abllity-Gfoaped Wotkthopt Open ol Reduced 8oIm|| t YEARS EXPERIENCE - 5 Years Assistant Pretesser at B.l PHONICS-READING - CLINIC FE 5<6212 MRS. GARYS. GRULKE Gl^AHAM Brides Speak Vows in May Cererrionies White carnations decorated the Trinity Methodist Church, Keego Harbor, recently for the marriage of Bonnie Fay Albertson to Gary Scott Grulke. Some 400 guests attended the reception in the VFW Hall, following the evening cere-mo ny performed by Rev. Elmer Snyder. Parents of the couple are the Clayton Albertsons and the Norman Grulkes, all of Keego Harbor. White Chantilly lace over taffeta, touched vrith rhinestones, fashioned the bride’s gown with three - tiered skirt. An overskirt formed the cathedral train. PEARL TIARA A high Swedish tiara of miniature cultured pearls topped her lace veil. Pink carnations centered her bouquet of. cascading white carnations. With Connie Sue Albertson, honor attendant, were bridesmaids Cheryl Grulke and Faye Langdon. On the esquire side were best man, Walter Steward and ushers Robert Alderson and Michael Grulke. The couple, will reside on Cadillac Street after a wed-dihg-trip to Niagara Palis. A home on Chenlot D r ,i v e awaits the Albert Kenneth Grahams (Janet Marie Turn-bull), presently on their horn eymoon in Upper Michigan. The Central Methodist Church was the setting for their recent vows spoken before Rev. William H. Brady, followed by a church recep- The Alex Turnbulls of Sey-n^ur Lake and the Albert L. Grahams of Allen Street are parents j)f the newlyweds. PEARLS AND LACE Pearls and sequins highlighted Alencon lace motifs on the bride’s gown of white or-g a n z a over taffeta which swept into' a chapel train. A pearl tiara cradled her bouffant veil of silk Illusion. Pink sweetheart roses centered her cascade bouquet of white carnations. Mrs. Jbmes Thompson of Oxford attended her sister as honor matron and Mrs. Robert Turnbull served as bridesmaid. Janet M. 'Lawrence and Charles Cooley were flower girl and ring-bearer at their uncle’s wedding. D a 1 e M. Larvick assisted the bridegroom as best man and James,-Thompson was groomsman.' Robert Turn-bull of Oxford and Philip Swartz of Clarkston, seated some 300 guests. row Old? tJoS£PHfAf£ lom4AA^ Here are some of the questions women who are following my 9-Day Reducing Diet ask. Q. “Can I make any changes, add anything at all to your 9-DayDiet?” Beaut]^ For Yon and lor Your ANDRE’S ‘^naturally” curly permauent Complete V with cutting and styling Extraordinary Special Reg. »25 PERMAMT NOW $1050 ONLY -L-6 ANDRE’S Colmplete with haircut. Shampoo and set "♦995 iVo Appointment Needed!^ Beanl^ Salon 11 r^. Saginaw St. > PHONE FE 5-9257 A. The trouble with this idea is that if you begin making changes you may make too many. Actually, you could use two tablespoons of -hutter or margarine on your eggs, bread and vegetables, instead of the smaller amount I indicate in my 9-Day booklet without any great damage to yoUr hopes and figure, if that’s the only change you make. I have found that most good cooks use seasoning generously and I am not talking now about herbs. If you are overweight you are probably a good cook or have one in the family. Q. .“Can I repeat your 9-Day Reducing Diet over and over again? ! have a lot of weight to lose.” A. This diet was planned for » rapid and' short reducing period. If you have manf pounds to lose you should do so more slowly. Nine Day gives you an encouraging flying start. After nine days you should begin counting calories. Hold your daily intake to between 1200 and 1400 calories a day. the menus for Here ar Wednesday: BREAKFAST One-half grapefruit ' One boiled egg One thin dry slice of whole wheat toast Black coffee LUNCHEON Chl9ken sandwich (no butter— MoUi Im. nooB coveRiPicS • draperies .REDSPREt|DS • 4uP COVERS thin slices of whole wheat bread) Sliced tomatoes or canned tomatoes One glass Skimmed milk ^ DINNER Minute steak or chops Salad of shredded Cabbage and carrots One-half cup spinach-greens or broccoli One-half grapefruit One glass skimmed milk If you would like'to have the complete 9-Day Reducing Diet, which gives you substitute foods, send 10 cents and ta stamped, self - addressed en-veltqie with your liequest for it to Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press. V^ideSti’iposMarkf New Sp^^t Jacket Onp of the moBt^popuIar sport jackets for this Ift weather seasoh will certaliilj^ be the wide-striped seersucker jDacron-and-cotton, says the American Institute of Men’s and l^ys’ In red, blue or gray stripes, this wash-and-wear coat will be worn for city and country wear. Some of the coats of this type ip'e now available in stretch fabric, for extra comfort. Quality Traininir by Lopez Sterling Beauty School Walton Blvd. at plxto Hwy. Drpytbn Plains OR 3-0222 Stylette Beauty Shop Special on permanents all this week Marie Tennyson 18 E Rutgera 8t. FE 4-66ZZ POIIHAC Chair 6 Table rental • Candelabra • Olaesware • Chamiiacne Olastes • Punch • Fountain • Silver Trays • Banquet, Bridge, Round and • Poker Tables e Chafing Dishes. • Wheel Chairs e Hospital Bods • Baby Beds a Crutches • Walkers a Coffee Urns • punch Bowls a Coat Racks • Xilvorware. and dishes a Silver Toil Service -RENTIT-s-u Master Craft lU BELT VIBRAtORS PER MO. FE 4-4044 140 Oakland Ave. SPRING SUITS * COATS '/, to i/i OFF 1S9I WooJwH, Bloomn.ll. MEET to EAT RIKER FOUKTAIN in the Lobby of thq Riker Building 35 W. Huron St. Customed Upholstered Furniture Choose from a wide ronge of fabrics that truly show fine craftsmanship and quality furniture. “Fine Furniture and Quality Carpeting Sinde 1924” ^ 5390r5400 DIXIE HWY. ' DR 3-1225 OPEN FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 EASY BUDGET TERMS Birmingham Cuitomert Call 334-09R1 —No Toll Charge Don’t Throw It Away . j. S REBUILD ITS TODAY! S Our experts will restore new comfort, M hiqher quality into your present mat- M tress or box spring . . . compare M before you buy I ’ 'J ■ 'OHEOAY....... SERVICE V I Guaranieed in Writing .7 Years I OXFORD MAHRESS CO. : ■ 497 North Perry St., l>oiitlac /FE 2-1711 ■ ■ SERVING the PONTIAC AREA OVER 41 YEARS ’ ■ ■■NNmmmmmmmmmmmmMmmiimmmmimhmmmmm \v si <4^ Ai' ■ THE yONflAC PRESS, TtlKSDAV.'MAY i2. 10 033-8866 VFWUnif Names New Members Delegates and '’ alternates werh chosen and new members, initiated at a recent meeting of tha “City of Fon-tlae" auxiliary to Post 1370, Vateraas of moign Wars haldliiVwVFWW Attending tha. Dhpartmeni ...... cmivaouoa will af Mkbigan ba MrEDixla Whlta.and Mrs. Robert Aimak wipi Mrs. Prank Vidor nnd Mn. 0. 0. Blrdlnll as altomntas. Fifth district dflagatas nra Mrs. Gaorga Pappas, Mrs. Mstthaw Jonas, Mrs. Dlxla Whito nnd Mrs. Hasal Bums. Mrs. Du Wane Jonas, Mrs. Robert Almas. Mrs. Virgil Vandscar and Mra. Blrdsall. COUNCIL DEUSGA'nSg Mrs. Janwa Smith and Mrs. Dtada White are dalagatas to tha County Council while Mrs. Ihonuui James and Mrs. Jonas are alternates. ' it it it New members initatad at Friday's maathig are Mri. Mlohaal White, Mrs. Jamsa Ni^arsmi, Mil. Frank Vidor, N^. Carl KaUy and Mrs. Milford Fullff. To Remove Marks From New Hem To ramova marks from tha ham of a dress aflar you have langthanad It, idaca a cloth dlp^ with vinegar under tha old banr, and press wltti a hot Planning a mid-August wedding are Sharon Lee Walker, daughter of the Leo Walkers df Lakemew Drive and Richard Thoma$ Hurst, son of the Paul Hursts of San^ derson Avenue. The William F. Bang-harts of Irwin Drive announce the engagement of tiiair daughter Cheryl Anthea to Stephen Bradshaw, fon^ of the Sam Bradsham of Judson Street Study Groups Namo Dates MACBDAYOAROIINS Membari of tha Maceday Gar dans Vxtaniion Study Group YriU meat Jbne 3 at 1 a.m. at Pontlao Lake for the annual picnic. It will be a co-bperntiva salad hmcheon. DRAYTON PLAINS The Drayton Plains Extension Stuidy Group will meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. for a lesson In landscaping given by Mrs. Basli Thompson and Mrs. Joseph Dugas. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Edward W. Krem will open her Meinrad Street home for the affair. Try Muslin First Before cutting the final pattern for nn expensive garment such as a coat, test the size by cutting the pieces out of musUn and making any nec-esssiy adjustments. PTA's in Action CENTRAL ELEMENTARY A barbecue and spring fair will be held from 6 to 9 p.i Friday. Color' cartoons and pony rides will be featured. COTTAGE STREET A haunted house, colorad movies, food^nd door will be featuifd at the school fair from 4 to 8 p.m. Friday. All proceeds will be uiid (w the purchase of playground equipment. EMERSON Farewells to a cook and a teacher will be givan ajt tha 7:30 p.m. Wednesday maiting. Mrs. Evelyn Woodworth has taught at Emerson sinoo 1M7 and Mrs. Edward Elfson has worked in the school's kitchen for the last 10 yeai^s. Mrs. William Wright, member of the state board of tho Michigan Congress of Parmli and Teachers, will install afR-oari. Mrs. Charles AuatiB 1| thanaw president A"8priiwMUiloala"wUlba prosentod at tba T:M p.m. meeting in tha nwHl-purpoaa VoeaL string, and Inilni-ment ormipi will partteteta under tha dtroetkiin ol Mra. Dalo.Wllliama, Leonard Holliday and Robort Woltara. insti^tlM of cMoara will precede the program. WAgmNGTONmVlN(P The yiar'a actlvttlia will ba aummartsad under tha program title "Wbat'f Nkw at Irving" during the T:S0 p.nt Wadnaaday maatlng In the all-purpoaa loom. plajfad t’s artwork n and the fifth wUlbadis- ^a bands will play. Jprry . bistrutnantal Instructor, will load group Btaiglng. The annual PTA carnival will ba hidd tram • fo • Friday. Entartabimant, ■" ba foa- FrbnkYoukstetfor of Wayne tata University the 7:30 p.m. State University will roeak at .......... Wednesday ^New-Moieri- Wheiti ■9 miBsmis Style 8«MI» at OaNwlh Qr^lioiis onSidr for tbo WoHla^ tbat Cates OR 3-2011 Appointment not alwaye neeeueay ^dBSlDfadoHwy. Free Parking • Otrayimn^ 1 1 HfloMs Sibtf’ 1 Season witli Shorts amtSbiits 7 i -P ' flfir Coolest combo under the sun — shorts and shirts . — new" and very newl i Team up Bermudas with X' '71 ¥ ^ 1 1 sport shirts In crisp 1 IlHMtili : cotton or cotton and Dacron. Brightest idea by the ■ pII jBHwwfi®/I countr/s biggest sports- wear specialists. ^ ■ Button-Down Shirts In frost blue or cron- COO berry. ^ 1 ■ \ Deeptoned-Bermudas . \ : 5” 1 ^ 1 HUR^N at TELEGRAPH I meeting in the multi-purpose room,' Exhibits from the science fair will be displayed. Twenty dancara, ranging in age from 3 to flS, will perform during tha Saturday school fair It noDii to 4 p.m. Tho Minna - Tonka -indlan dancers are made up of rep-rssantattvas of nine tribes among which an tho Sioux, Qhlppowa, Pueblo, Sauk and Fox. Chalrmon for the fair are Mra. Wsyne Good, Mrs. Bart Schmuker, and Ron Bunker. .White Suit Look Gains Male ftrvOr Ibl "while look" In aullB bo a big favwlli ttila «nu predicts tha Awvwrfoan of Mani and Bam' Wear. lulla-^la actual white for aRWWia-wlU ba avaOahli: t it it Many at tha ooidi and otford look that wUl gtva a oomparohk affael. Thaylrt cool, eomfort- and’ la more Oattarfog, wlRi a Step Up to Clean Build a inMll atap for your chlldran and plaet tt In the bathroom as lhay can usb tha an chain ar aUiac aldaeli. U.S. hana laid IS,tl«,MMn ggsinlltt.*^ “ Hims COIUOTID SV MM. DAB 6ISNS, MOTHH 06 | One of the wooden of babyhood, isthedevelc^inent of manual dexterity. Busyflngen become aware c^^elr iiaefulncia at 3 or 4 monlha. Exciting to watch baby dincover t^at Angen are fine for sucking, playing with and getting the feel of everi^ing from nose to toes... toys to clothes. At 4 to 5 nionUu he can grasp toys ... at 6 to 7 hold his bottle securely. Eight or 9 months find those hands working together \ .. and oh magic moment, at I year, he can pick up and pinch-hold small objects with nimble thumb and forefinger. P.S. If baby doesn't conform to. the above “norms,” don’t worry. He'll do these things in his own sweet time, the best time of all. Braokfoat bonanxa with a flavor bonus. How about a special cereal furpriM for baby? I Oerber Strained Oatme^ or Mixed Cereal with Applesauce and Ba-lumasl There's a flair for brightening an •■BMllO. Each cereal is cooked wSa ini and ready to serve. Both laaM a wily delii^tful flavor... a wonderfully smooth, moM Mx-ture. As for nutrition, they*ra ea-fiched with iron and B-vltamhu. Twe seek storlea. (1) If you'ro more than one tot In your houa< why not initial . sock bottoms with indelible ink? Saves Porting time I ... prevents mla- I mating. (2) Re- ' member, socks should be checked for fit as often as ahoea. Tight socks can cramp tender toes, too. 4 in your houa< I emmamm I Vesalabla viewpoint. Babies, like grownups, should have plenty of green and yellow vegetables because they have high vitamin-A value. (That's the Vitamin needed to help maintain normal vision and healthy skin.) Oerber Carrots, Sweet Potatoes, Creamed teinach. Mixed Vegetables and Garden Vegetables are especially high in vitamin-A valne. Like all spod-tastlng Oerber Foods, they're specially processed to protect preci^ vitamins. As for meal-appeal, Oerber Vegetablee have come-hither colors and garden-true flavors. Small wonder so many babies love them and thriva on them. Oerber* Baby Foods, Box 72, Frerqgnt, Michigan. k NfllMOIRi. Mim DAY or EVENING CLASSES>i«gister vdiile there are still ppeninpl Come in Teday or Phone ns... im S. SAGINAW, FE 4-BS82 UlUiilRftBRgggtvttifljtMasaoaaoooooosoone Uhta's Smart Summer Wear Greenery... fresh and appealing... by Country Set. Green and white stripe Kyack skirt and Jamalcas take a smartly styled blouse of white cotton. Sizes 3-15. Blouse. 4T Skirt Jamaicas 500 800 700 ’\\V>' yr So wonderfully cool . . . this jjnort straw will draw raves ail summer long. . “SlieTS to TO AAA to B widths 13” Matching purse available • HURON at TELEGRAPH "1 / \.vV ..i ■ Fr / ‘ M r:,i r-r ' VF - : ‘, 'p'' ’ rrl.t i , '''",: ' * " , -' k0>- I Lv> ''■' fCHfe ig^yfaiiiii-'iauassi ttnBSpaiy,,MAY''4i- i9e«':. • I '' ''' A« ' ' j (f "'1 tjw j ' r ‘ ' * »'* ' ; Afj, '' A'wv t') , ' v'*'4,'‘T5i ' i r ' ' ' V'"r t^f.vA ?x , I,,A 4s ‘ ! » N‘, ’"AvV;' , F< < v " 'I Sunfrost—- one of the lightest, coolest fabrics that ever sailed you^hrough o wilting day in great form. It's blended of Dacron® polyester and pure wool ^ worsted: crisp, cool, wrinkle-free. A fabric that retains its good tailoring whatever the weafj^er. Palm Beach , fashions it' with their famous "Contour Collar" for perfect' fit; in natural shoulder or conventional models. Choose yours in classic shades of , navy, brown, ,ojive . . . new shades of olive, black, clay. You'll fijid Sunfrost suits In sizes 35 to 52; in ' alI> proportions. 59.95 •Reg. T.M.'GoodallSanford Incorporoted ' ■*' * ' OUR PONTIAC MALf. STORE IS OPEN EVERY NIRHT TO 9 ,P.M. \ .. '• kr" i A,'■■Ft r:;i: -j. ■ < / ;Vi " ' '.THE PONTI Ac T^SDAV, MAY Vi, 10(14 “P^TIAC MICHIGAN. kochesier Mulls Lodge, OKs Budget ByROQBRSRIGUSY ROCHESTBR^VIlIage Council last ni||ht reconuncnded a major diange In the Blks re- quest for retonIng on Ludlow and adopts a 19644S budget of $470,700. Following a heated open discussion of Blk plans to build a lodge nekt to 8SS Ludlow, the council set June $ as the date for a public hearing on the is- It also recommended to Robert Smltha, project arcbl-jtect, that the resoning application be changed to a re^, quest for office soning im stead of commercial.. Kicking off discussion of the controversial issue. Village Clerk Maxine Ross read a petition signed by 47 Ludlow residents objecting to the proposed construction. , *. *4?Auncil President John O’E^nell said hev calculated about 68 per cent of the Ludlow residents disagreed «dth Elk “We didn’t expect a conti^ versj^* Smltha, spokesman for the Blks, told the standlng-room'cnly crowd,In,the council Smltha objected to application of the word “commercial” to the Blk’i proposed “We are not a shopping cen- Petitions Filed for Area Posts D«acllines Pqu for Four School Districts Candidates for election to four area school boards filed petitions before yesterday’s deadlines. OfficoHMekers in Holly, Walled Lake and Brandon school districts turned over their signature-listings by 4 p.m„ while in Dryden applicants who ^iU appear on the June 8 ballot were given two more hours to file. A list of those wha have filed petitions to fill vacancies and their respective school districts follows; BRANDON - Two 4-year terms; incumbent Vice President Charles Pangus and incumbent Thomas Thompson; Dale J. Fortin, 270 C^ar, Ortonvlile; and Fred J. Fisher, 2390 Allen, Brandon Township. One 2-year unexpired term: Russell L. CuUum, 335 .Joslyn, Groveland Township; Mbrs. Low ise Weeks, 3411 Reese, Brandon Township. Former President Clarence Moore resigned last moftith creating the two-year expired term. One 1-year unexpired term: Raymond Harris, 3001 Weide-mann, Brandon 'Township. Former Treasurer Harold Webb vii«' resigning creating the one-year uwxpM term. y DRYDEN—Two 4-year terms incumbeqto E. J. Milliken Jr. and Mrs. Do WALLED LAKE - Two > year terms: incumbent President Dwight L. Wiseman, incumbent Trustee John C. Cllark and Mrs. Columbia Lawrence, 4396 Cedar, West Bloomfield Township; HOLLY -r Two 4-year terms: incumbent .^retary R. Wiiiiam Fagan, incumbent Trustee Earl F. Farmer and Robert VameijJ 506 Elm, Holly. , County Postmasters Elect New Officers The Oakland (founty Association of Postmasters has elected Charles L. Curtis of Southfield its president. Other officers are Robert W. Fagan, Holiy, vice president; Richard W. Crowner, Clawson, secretary ■- treasurer; Francis J. Dohahue, Unim Lake, dis-, trict director; and Leona M. Amos, Waterford, c(^ty director. - INSPECTORS The lanes will be qmrated by service toanaggrpi ,4pMn JooaJj car dealershiiigl end quai^t^ mechpnics. Motorists driving imthe Farmington arCd daring Ibo program are. urged to poll into one of the lanes. More than a half-million vehicles checked in the 1963 na-! tionwide safety check need^ immediate attention to om more of the items affecting safe driving condition,”; Undhert ’4s be checked ace brakes, front and rear lights^ steering, tir<^, , exhaust system, glass, windshield wipers, rear-view mirror, horn and seat belts. “Equitily important 4n our safety check is the challenge to all drivers to check their conduct l^ind the wheel,” Lind-hert noted. “Both safe cars and safe drivers are needed to check accidents.” Wheat Plan Outlined by County Unit Grade school musicians in the Avondale School system are tuning up their instruments for a spring concert May 19 at 7:30 p.m. in the high school aiMi-torium. All band students in the fourth through sixth ^ades will join for the annual affair. Featured wili be a fhtie quintet, composed of fifth^aders from Elmwood and Stiles Elementary schools. Auburn Heights and Stonq Elementary schools will also have musical representatives in the concert. Turkey Dinner Slatpd by Davisburg Club DAVISBURG — The women of Austin Chapter No, 396, Order of the Eastern Star, are sponsoring a turkey dinner Saturday at fhe-Masonic Tiemple. Open to tito public, the meal will be served at 6:30 p. m. Details of the new wheat pro- gram were outlined again today by the Oakl ' “ :land County Agricul-turql Stabilization and Conservation (ASC) Committee. Committee Cbpirman Robert H. Long is urging wheat farmers to obtain information on the program. 'fo^be.. eligible for certifi-and diversion payments, which are a iresnlt of the new legislation, wheat producers must register by Friday. . Applications will be received at th? ASC office, Room 3, 63 Oakland, Pontiac, The new pro{p-am is a certificate and acreage diversion plan applicable to 1964 and 1965 crops. LOANS, PURCHASES Pric^ support loans and^ purchases will be available to growers oh any farm where wheat acreage does libt exceed 4he farm allotment. , Further information on the prografe can be obtained at the ASC office. .* ‘ that a bowling alley and bar in the lodge would be too cloze to (he Avon Township Arscott gave other reasons the lodge should be built elsewhere. He said it would add more traffic, be a spot-zoning precedent and take away potential residential property. HEARING SET After Smith agreed to amend the rezoning application the June 8 public hearing date was set. i“'nie decision will likely be made following this hearing,” C’Donnell predicted. Making slight additions to the funds for sidewalk repair, tree maintenance and sewer and water, the council okayed the new $479,700 budget. It was clipped $3,500 from Village Manager Paul York’s .'' “It’s, a realistic budget,” O’Donhell said, pointing put that the millage levy would remain at .18.5. He said the council was ‘‘mighty< proud” of it and commended York for a “nice job.” The 1963-0^ spending total is expected to reach $492,010. Significant reasons for the next fiscal year’s, budget cut include elimination of council members’ salaries and the $32,500 bill paid this year- for the new Department of Public Works garage and urbian renewal work. In other business last night, council authorized the confr.act tor a second appraisal of property to be acquired in southeast Rochester, should the urban re-i newal plans be accepted. Leslie R. Tripp, realtor and appraiser of Pontiac, was, lected for the .appraising job. ^ Jo Represent Area League R0(;hHSTER ~ The League of Women Voters of Rochester will be represented at the state council of the Lehgue by Mrs. Robert Williamson, president, and Mrs. Allan Albert, plate item chairman. The council, which meets biennially in the interim year betvfeeh slate conventions, will meet at Benton Harbor-St. Joseph tomorrow and Thursday. Discussion will be centered around the current program of the League Of Women Voters of Michigan: A study of public welfare and the relationship of federal, state and Ipcal programs. TO ASSUME DUTIES - A 17-year veteran of the Roches-ter Police Department, Sgt. Robfcrt C, Werth, 43, will assume the duties of chief July 1. Appointed by Village Manager Paul York, he will succeed the present chief, Sam Howiett, whose resignation becomes effective on that date. New Police Chief Named by Manager in Rochester ROCHESTER - Robert C. Werth, 17;yepr veteran of the Rochester Police Department, last night was appointed by the village manager to replace retiring Chief S^m Howiett. Werth, a 43-year-old Avon Township resident, has been with the force since 1947, the last 14 as a sergeant. He will aj^p into his new position July 1, the date How-lett’s resigiiution Is effective. , Hpwlett will becoiqp assistant chipf-of. plant protection at Na-tiopajl 'Twist Dt’ill and Tool Co. Since Werth joined the force he has seen it double to a staffs of eight. For the past J4 years ‘’I IbW'biafs been working the 3-11 p.m. shift. FATHER OF FOUR . A member of tiw Homer Wing Post No. 172, American Legion, Werth lives at 1024 Harding. He is married, and the father of three girls and a boy. In addition to confirming Worth’s appointment, the council also again probed the problem of parkfaig facilities in the downtown area. Council President John O’Donnell said the Rochester Area Chamber of Commerce is presently polling downtown merchants to seie what they are willing , to contribute toward ,U parking lot. . • He said of those businessmen who have already answered the chamber’s questionnaire, two- thirds are in favor of purchasing parking lot property. LOOK OVER SITES Council reviewed two sites on Walnut prp^sed as parking lots, and found the coat of each to be high, members said. Rough figuring^ showed the price on Walnut to be about $750 per front foot. The subject was tabled until the chamber’s poll is completed. BETTY K. WELFARE Mr. and Mrs. Erwin J. Welfare of 46841 Pontiac Trail, Novi, announce the engagement of their daughter Betty K. to Daniel W. Booth. The prospective bridegroom’s parents are Mr.-v and Mrs. R. Starr Booth, 3230 Griiidley, West Bloomfield Township. A fall wedding is planned. MWX DONUTS 84>4 NORTH PERRY Pontiac; Michigan Phone 334-9041 Everywhere ^ lUevil^s Food reg. iFHed CAKES TRY OUR 101 VARIETIES! DoNuts Made Around The Clock So You Are Invited To Take A Peek Anytime pawauMMiiiiz J . I EIGHTEEIir tHE PpyXlAC TOeIs, 1^UESIDi.l4 MAY^^m ri .On !• |jij«rv® ck>ofn«ss l9| the princIpQl CO us• of hearing impairment. There it no treotntent Of surgleol operation that will cure Nerve Oeofnest. People that toy "I can hirar but eon't understoixl'' utu-ally suffer from nerye deafness. We iKrra ovoiloble o brochure telling the inside story of nerve deafness. Write to The Pontiac Piess, Box No. 33. I .‘".y LBJ Actions! Dispel Some Latin ^America Doubts WASHINGTON (AP) With dispel Let Johnson hM moeed 1 about hit interest In thdr problems and in the Alliance tor Profreas. felt he ' said at the White House Monday nighf after hearing Johnson Mnounce |M million In fresh credits under the i^lUance to 13 Latin-American nations. Johnson said the United States will double its assistance activ- ities ^nder the program and ‘*there will be twicd as much accomplished as in any previous year." ★ ★ ★ After addfiessing the Latin American ambassadors to Washington and the chiefs of missions to the Organlution of American Stages Johnson signed U separate loan agreements covering 13 countries. Normally such agreements are announced by the*State Department, ACCOMPUSHMENTS H H. fMITHf 7/«SliiwMliie g j IjJ ah AROUND THE DUCK ALL AROUND THE CALENDAR ALL AROUND THE COUNTRY ALL AROUND THE CAR A Buick Wildcat clips up a hill on our 4,011-acre Proving Ground at Milford, Michigan—on a “road inside the laboratory.” The “roadf' is a chassis d3niainometer with walls that are treated with 36^inphes of glass fiber to absorb 99% of the sound. With a car positioned on it, it can re-create the speed, the load—practically all of the cDnditiohs, of the open road. ' , Qilp engineers use this uncommon combination of "room and machine to examine, evaluate, and eliminate car noises that shouldn't be there. Scientifically. Precisely. Under exacting conditions. It's one of the reasons why today's GM cars ride so smoothly and quietly, even though hundreds of moving parts are working fast and furiously inside. It's also part of what we mean w;heiL.^e say our cars are “proved all around”: tested this way and that way to know how every part will work for you. In Michig^, at Pikes Pe^, in the Arizona desert, on streets and highv^ajrs coast to coast, we test our cars the long way, the hard way, the right way. On the world's truest proving grounds. Which is why a GM car is ^ likely to be worth more when you buy it, as you drive it, when you trade it in. /, ON IHE WORUrSTROtsrPRlA/iNG GROUNDS ! CHEVROLET • PONTIAC Y>-OSM0BILE - BgipK - CADILLAC • WITH BODY BY FISHER if- '' /■' 'W ' f"''l'--(v vy^ ■ >" J:^^'\' :•■• 1' ^'’V- r; '■ TWENTY THtE PONTIAC PI S. TUESDAY, mAy VtF' 'W '■ ^ ■.//■■Vi’’: LANSING (AP)-Nlneteen restored battle^ags carried by Michigan vdunteers during the Civil War will be rededicated in ceremonies to be held hi front of the State Capitol May 22 as part of the annual Michigan Week observance. The fla^, housed for many years in the State Capitol Rotunda, became tom and worn and were sent out to be restored by the State Historical Commission. Reds Claim Violdfion PANMUNJOM, Koiwa m Communist North Korea charged today that aircraft of the U. N. Command violated Communist air space twice in reoeint weeks. The charge was made at a NwUn| of the Joint military R«stored Battle Flags'* Will Be Rededicated *^6 median age of all women workers in the United States is now 41 years, the National Con sumer Finance Association reports. Old MiU Tavern Every Fii S p.ai.-9tS0 prni. Su^oy 12 Noon-S pan. International Buffet ChiMbn Under 12, $U0 Adults $t7S OR S-U07 Waterford LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actor Peter Sellers and his wife, Britt Ekiund, have answered the |1.5-on suit against them by Twentieth Century-Fox by suing Fox for more than twice much. RHlMn DEtlOATESSiN AT NYf DAIRY r«mtHrUim_Our Ftm Kothor comod B< ISCWJij HmfuMim K5.4001 NrfiMl NNUM TM»TIR WMkSqiti Ooa. II a.iii.lo It Mb Caiy, Audrey Giant He^m BEAUTIFUL GIRL I BECOMES^ APETRIHEOl MOMSTERi I TBCHNICOLOR* APARAKPICIURESREIEASE armistice commission aeoretari-at. The ll. N. Command said it would investigate. “The air *"*> has not like of May 17 last year,*' saM North Korean Col. Han Joo-kyung. On May 17 Capt. Ben W. Stutts, 0^ Florence, Ala., and Capt. Charleton W. Volte, of Frankfurt, Midi., were captured after Communist ground fire forced down their helicopter north of the Han River. Col. Han did not mention the fate of the two officers, whose return the U. N. Command has repeatedly demanded. Sellers, Wife File Cduntersuif Against Studio The Long Beach pilot was scheduled to arrive at Oakland’s International Airport at a.m: P.D.T. (»:26 p.m. Pontiac time) 17 hours after taking off in her twin-engine Piper Apache from Honolnln 2,400 miles away. Five hours after takeoff the Federal Aviation Agency reported she was 400 miles at sea and “going nicely.” Fox sued Miss Ekiund for alleged breach of contract and Sellers for allegjBdly inducing the breach. The studio complained that she refused to continue her role in the film, “Guns of Batasl.” Sellers and his wife filed a crosecomplalnt Monday asking for . $2 million damages and an addition $2 million in punitive damages on the grounds that Fox’s suit constituted malicious pros^tion and abuse of legal Sellers also said he suffered damage to his health aifd reputation as a result of Fox’s suit. Selleb suffered a heart attack tore than a month ago and spent several weeks in a hospital. Aviatrix Heads OAKLAND, Calif. Aviatrix Joan Merriam winged across the Pacific today toward Oakland and hef much-delayed goal of clrciing the earth on the route originally charted by Amelia Earhart 27 years ago. Miss Earhart vanished In the western Pacific, apparently without a trace. On the Honolulu to Oakland flight, longest leg of her 27,500-mile globe-girdling journey, she received routine navigational aid from a weather ship stationed halfway between Hawaii and the mainland. MANY PROBLEMS Weather and mechahical problems have plagued the 27-year-old professional flier since she set off on her adventure in mid-March. At the start, she hoped to becmne'.the first woman to circle the globe alone by air. But Jerrie Mock, a Columbus, Ohio, flier accomplished that feat on April 17, after flying a more northerly route for a total of about 22,800 miles. Bad weather knocked Miss Merriam off schedule in the early stages of the journey. Then, when she reached Guam earlier this month; she was plagued by a series of mechanical problems that forced her to turn back several times. Bad weather forced her back to Midway Island en route to Honolulu. On Sunday, engine trouble forced her back to Hawaii after she was some 200 miles out. 23 Women Continue Air Race AUSTIN, Tex. (0J*D - Twenty-three light airplanes, all piloted by women, prepared to leave force Texas airports today in the International Women’s Air Race. The race began at 10 a. m. yesterday at Monterrey, Mexico, and will end . when dU planes arrive at Gainesville, Fla., by 5 p. m. Wednesday. Six of the planes stayad overnight in McAUen, Tex., near the Mexican border, saying they would start the second leg of their race today if the weather clears. Thunderstorm forecasts and rainy weather had caused foe six to stay in McAllen. Dotty Anderson of Bluffing-ton, Ohio, was’pilot of fob first .plane to land at McAllen and also was foe first to depart for Austin. Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) officials at Austin, In the center of foe state, and at Tyler, in east Texas, reported some of the planes were spending the night at those cities. It could not be determined how many of the racers were at each airport because the FAA does not distinguish between members of the race and other flights. All entrants must at least fly over Austin and Tyier to be timed, but they do not have to TTie next checkpoint In foe race is Jackson, Miss. Fiem Installing Chairs GRAND MPIDS (AP) -American Sealing C!o. here is installing 17,000 new red and gold chairs, valued at approximately 1400,000, at the Seattle Center Coliseum, (fompany President James Vermeuien said they will be in place for a June 5 opening of foe Pacific Northwest Shrin-ers’ convention. Making 8th Film in 10 Years Actress Puts Her Family First AND INTRODUCING PATTY DUKE By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - S t a r s who think they must keep grinding out products to maintain their status might take a lesson from Eva Marie Saint. Ten years ago she won an Oscar as support-1 ing actress in her first movie,| “On foe Water-front.” nW making her eighth film, “36 Hours,” and she still gets top mcmey and star billing, with James Garner and Rod Taylor. and foe relaxed honey-blonde I Eva’s ohly other outing be-said she welcomed the return to sides foe eight features was a work. recent Bob Hope television com- “I don’t mind foe lapse be-' edy. An early veteran of live tween pictures,” she said, “but | TV, she wanted to see if she two years is a IltUe too long.” [would like foe filmed variety. 8 FILMS She didn’t. THOMAS Why has she done only eight films in a decade? “Because I’ve always considered that family matters come first,” she'said. “Many of the! pictures I was offered were to be filmed in Europe, and that meant separating the family, which I don’t believe in. nied. Thurs. MAY llSlIi MAY 14th 'YOUR FAVORITE FLAVOR ONLY R«gulor 30c RilAXt.. take a SHAKE BREAK at Dairif Queen Forsythe Dairy Qneen 61S OKliard Lk. Rd. Naar Ottawa Or. ClarkstoB Dairy Qneon 5890 M-15 2 Blaeki Off Dixia Hwy. Jay's Dairy QnOen Pontiac Trail at Mapla Rd.-Wallad Uka MdUillin's Dairy Qnoen 4710 Dixia Hwv. Naxt to AOP Joslyn Dairy Queen Jotlyn at Pint v.i..ui»D.i.rQ»«« Stephens' Dairy Queen 5608 M-59 (Highland Rd.) 2 Blocks last of Pontiac Airporf Dawn s Dairy Qneen 1525 Baldwin (2 Blocks N. of Walton) CMIlDRlN^KUnder^ 12^ “HIROSHIMA - MY L0VE» 1:00 -> 10:15 ........plus: »THE 400 BLOWS'’ 8:30 > Only This is her first movie since “Ali Fail Down,” two years ago. COLONIAL UNTERN BE YOUR GUIDE TO GOOD FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICES Make Every Wednesday Night Family Night AT HARVEY’S COLONIAL HOUSE CHICKEN • DINING ROOM • COFFEE SHOP • CAR Service • CARRYOUT served • FAMILY STYLE Includes crispy golden brown lip smocltin thicken cooked fo perfection, with soup, yetgetoble, whipped potatoes, biscuits and hot chicken gravy. 5836 DIXIE HWY. Phone OR 3-0940 ■■■«MMMHM.MlMMMMMBIMMHnHMMMM.MHHMi|BBHMMMMMMMMMHMM T1' $|75 ALL YOU CAN EAT! WAtERFORO “We all went over to Cyprus and Israel for ‘Exodus,’ and it was too much. My Husband — birector Jeffrey Hayden — was able to g9t away, and wp took our two small children. My parents went along to take care of them, since my housekeeper wouidn’t fly over the ocean. “It got to be quite a produc-tion--and it-was potentially dan-g^Qlis, Cyprus was just having the beginnings of trouble, and there were shootings almost every day in Israel. BACK TO HOLLYWOOD Now, I’m happy to say, there “A GREAT, MOST DISTINGUISHED HlMr WIITHERING J^HEIGHIS seems to be much more produ tion in Hollywood again. And now that both my children are school all day, I expect I’ll ba working more than I have in the past.” Eva’s devotion to her family has probably cost her in excess of $2 million . One deal alone—, for “El Cid” — would have brought her $350,000. “The fortunate thing about having a working husband that y nings. i'-* “Why? I don’t know, but he ;i shonid be throwing that pitch ^ two, maybe three, times at eachbatter.” . Dressen added that pitchers get rattled after a few hits and ^ instead of relying on their best f pitches — which may not be their most accurate — thoy|^ throw straight balls.” ' '-0 “Look at Hank Aguirre in ’JJ Saturday’s game against Baltl- ^ more,” he said “Aguirre re- J tires the first 14 guys to faoij’j; him. He’s pitching like he’s Lefty Grove and everyone starts ♦ wondering if he can fire a no- » hitter. i X ★ ★. * ' ' 'Then, tvham, Joe Gaines sitt-*-gles and Aguirre loses all his Hill Rise was dueto get in his final big work this morning, going one-mile. Roman Brother and Quadrangle, the other two expected starters, who wound up fourth and fifth in the Derby, also got in their final licks Monday. Ror man Brother went the one-mile in 1:41 1-5 and Quadrangle sharpened his speed with five-eighths of a mile in 1:01 1-5. stuff. Dick Brown, a qatchtt I can’t hif : who played here and c anything below his waist, hitq a home run on a high fast baltj;^-’Then, two more singles and you begin to wopder if Aguirre wlMK-last five innings. ‘ “As soon as that guy singled, Agdlrre lost his concentratioqz-He started throwing the oUP ; straight ball with nothing on it ■* because he was afraid to walk , someone. Well, anyone in the ;■ major leagues can hit a straight ball... it’s like taking batti^ ^ practice.” V Dressen pointed to Dave l^lckersham as being ”t h e smartest pitcher on the dub . with the least amount of nat* -oral talent.” The ’Tigers Will open a three-game series against the New York Yankees toni^t at Tiger Stadium with Mickey Lolich (2-1) facing Al Downing. Aguir-• te (04)) will meet Ralph Terry in Wednesday night’s contea| and Wickersham (4-2) or Frank ^ Lary (0-2) will face Whiteyri* Ford Thursday afternoon. M ■fhe Yanks will take a five-game winning streak into to-. night’s contest, while the Tigers * are hoping to break a five- ^ game losing string. Gridder From Penn (iets MSU Award - TUST LANSING (AP) ~ Two,^ Michigan State University fooKI ball players from Pennsylvaniai^_ won top honors in spring drill at the annual squad picnic Mon*' day. * Coach Duffy Daugherty gave' tht “coach’s award” to linebacker Charley Migyanka of-East Konemaugh, Pa. The^ “coach’s award” is similar to*" most vah^le playo*. > ^ Harry Ammon of Holt, Mich.,,;, who alt^nated at fullback am| halfback, was named the modi’ improved back. Buc Hurler Sidelined 7 . HAMMING* IT UP-Race Driver Eddie Saqhs of Detroit, who has been having, trouble getting his rear-engine Ford up to racing speed,- takes time out from practice at the Indianapolis-500 track to ham things up with Beverly Meyer, 20, . of Indianapolis. Sachs, despite the Beatle get-up, did not sing. PITTSBURGH (AP) - The, Pittsburgh Pirates requested^, that pitcher Don Cardwell b#« put on the disabled list.due iisii ,uue< w • sore arm. This places thit legal llmiU Pirates one over the legal..— of 25. They are required to cuL their roster' to 25 players midnight tonight. ■-T X lAi; ri V-nvo mStm Tickets Available for Tiger Contest The t«le i : : i ; yChanc* ,0 I ’ 1 » ? Lstfnfln ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ x-P*e*d 2 man In Wi. y-F*c^ 2 man HBP-By Drabowtky (Fragoilt, By Newman (Reynold*). U--*t]»v*nA N*pp, Rica, Stawarl. T-^121. A—3,337. 4 110 ZImmar 3b 5 14 2 ____________________ 5 12 0 Kirkland rt 5 0 0 0 Hinton It 5 0 3 0 ...... *b 4 12 0 Skowron 1b 5 0 0 " 3b 3 1 2 1 Lock rt * ■ 2 1 1 0 0 0 MoCorn?k p 3 0 0 « Cottier" 2b„ 2 6 6 6 ?SSSC*i.rp“S?!!? Kiln* p 0 0 0 0 14 4 I 4 Total* »‘1’ * Iked for Cottier In 7ih» b-Struek Millar In bjackion Waablnglon ............ 10* m | e-Ad*lr. PO-A-Balllmor* 24-7, ' Ington 27-13. LOB-B*ltlmor* (, ' "®t?%lnton, Orsino. 3B-Zlmmer. HR— Lock, Powall. #B-Aq*rlclo. S-jRoWnJon. McCorm'k, L, 0-2 4 1-3 10 5 5 5 3 Millar .....'3-3 1 1 1 Walled Lake, defending champions 0/ the Press Prep golf tournament, made its position clear yesterday in defeating Pontiac Northern and Berkley in a double dual meet at Municipal course. Leading the Vikings with 37 was Tom Green while Jim Giroux had 38, as the team took 198 strokes. PNH had 210 strokes with Dennis Burwell and Dave Schieb getting 40’s and Berkley had 214 with Erick-Miller getting a 39. ^ At River Rouge Park, Fred scored a 4-1 decision over St. Mary of Redford with Mike Murphy firing a 42, Ed Moreski 44,'Jo& Murphy 45 and Bill Mercier 48. ’ " Walled Lake leads Ae I-L conference with aJf-1 record, with Southfield in 2nd place and Northern 3rd. In a meet at Pontiac Country Club, the Eagles of. St. Mary won over St. Mike, 4-1 despite Rick Lavoie’a 35 for the Mikes. Frank Kladzyk and Larry Bia-lobrzeski each had 40 for Marys. Baseball Practice Set The MG Collision Class A baseball .team will practice W^nesday at 5 p.m. on the JaycM No. 2 and Saturday at 4 p.m. bn Jaycee No. I. \ UNITED TIRE SERVICE NEW-TREADS SPECIAL 7:50x14 TUBELESS->-12 MONTHS GUARANTEE Add $1,Per Tiro for While Above Prica* PluoToxand Recoppablo Cooing. UNITED TIRE CAN SAVE YDU MONEY ON BOAT TRAILER TIRES and WHEELS. ALSO AU SIZES of COMPACT and FOREIGN OAR TIRES at TERRIFIC DISOOUNTSI United. Tire Sells All leading Brand* ... Firestone,' Goodyear, Goodrich ftg. At D.i** count Priced * . OPEN MOK. thru FRI. 8 to S-SAT. 8 to,6-CLOSED SUNDAY Sports Calendar WeONRlDAY F*rtKl*l* at Barkity Imlay CI*V •* Capac Milford at Kattarlng Oak Park at North Farmington Birmingham Grove* at Detroit Thur*ton Track Pontiac Northern at Southfield FarmlntRon at Waited Lake Lake Orion at Warren O I Orchard Lake St. Maty '-“"'-g at nvi..«v lid HIM*, Northvllt* at Clarance- ly at Ptim St. Michael 1, Northvlll* at lA St. Frederick at Waterford Oak Park at North Farmington Birmingham Grove* at Detroit Th Cranbrook at Gro**a Point* Kettering at Southfield FItxgaraTd ‘ ' -------- Lapeer at Clarkaton Triple for Apprentice Monday Hazel Park DETROIT (UPI)-Derry Snyder, a 17 - year - old apprentice rider, tum^ in the first triple of the season at Hazel Park Monday before 9,583 fans. ’The Tucson, Ariz., lad booted home Wandering Boy to a neck decision in the featured Speed-Purse for his third victory of the afternoon. Earlier he scored aboard Femininity in the second race, and Eddie Lake in the fourth. 'Ringing' Good Time OAKLAND, Calif.. (AP) -Nearly lOO amateur boxers from Pacific states compete at the Oakland Auditorium today and Wednesday in the Western Regional Olympic tryouts. MICH. COLLROe SCORB Spring Arbor 4, FerrI* _________ Hlll^ale 4, Central Michigan Spring Arbor 7, Hillsdale 4 I II, Farri* 2 (consola- ’ aJohnsMn cf I 6 0 o Tgtal* WTUifatala, M4IU *-**crlflc*d for Paal* In lt^' " Salkad for Smith In Mhi c-lln r RMli In Uhl d-R*n for Burj ^Hlt Into'-foro* play for I Ifh^ f^lt Info tore* play for -Baliay, CJamOnta, Sfargall. ihmatl 27.1#, Pittsburgh 27-14. OP-aroskl, Allay and Clandaiiom Cardan-—■ ■-‘insom AAcBaan, AHay and LOB-CIncInnafI I, pllf*<, ."irasr sst'T; H R BRBBSO ,44*. Bills, W, 2* .... ^Dickson ........ Paal* !!!!«!!!!, . 2 man’in W WP-Waale. U-Oorm*n, William akoudas. Smith. T-3;00. A-5,902. #M ? S i I } I 110 2 #061 y-Pa«*d 3 Nlfhl 0am* ST. LOUIS H PHIUDBLPHIA ab r b M ab r |i IH Plood cf 4 « 0 0 Rojas cf 3 12 0 Groat a* 4 0 10 Calllson rf 3 0,1 0 Whit* 1b 4 0 0 0 Allin 3b 3 0 11 McCarvar c 3 0 0 0 Taylor 2b Lewit rf 4 110 Calar If lavler 2b 2 12 3 Wine *s iadacki p 3 0 0 0 Culp p aCovIngton Baldschun 0 0 0 0 Tefal* 31 3 5 I TOfals 30 1 4 2 a—singled for Culp In 7th( B—Ran for Covington In 7th. PHIladalphla I ... B-Taylor. PO.A-St. loula 2747, Philadelphia 27-11. DP-Trlando* and Wine; Boyar, Javier and White, Slevars, Winer and Slevars. LOB-SL Louis 3, Philadelphia 4. 28—Allan, Calllson., HR—Javier. S — P H R BRBBSO 1 0 0 0 0 WP—SadackI 2. Balk-Sadeckl. PB—' O-Secory, Burkhart, ------ ~ -2:0*. A-11,200. Nlnhl Gam* IAN PRANCItCO HOUSTON ^ abrhbf abrhM ^ Alou rf 4 0 2 0 Kasko * ■ - - - ........ .. ____0 Fox 2b 2 10 0 Mays cf 4 0 10 Whlft rf 4 13 1 McCdvay 1b 4 1 1 0 Wynn cf 3 110 4 0 2 0 Aspro'nt* 3b 4 0 0 0 .... „ 3 0 0 0 Staub 1b 4 0 11 Hart 3b 4 0 10 Williams It 2 on Shaw p Dutfalo p eSnIder 0 0 Farrell p 14 110 0 Taffl* 11 4 I 1 _ _______ for Wllllami In 4th; b- Groundad out for Pagan In *th; c—Filed out for Ouffalo In *ih. San Prahclscg . B-0'D*ll. Hart. PD-A-San Franclico B-u uoM, narr. rw-«—o 24-9, Houston 27-13. DP-Ka. ^ Steub; Bsteman, Fox and Asdromont*. LOB—San Francisco I, Houston 4. 2B—MpCovey, J. Alou. S—Fox. ^ in IS B BB BB HOt-B-AMP -fHI6 K0QUIKBB A A//?Af. CONflNUINC i-f ROpCN'f MAVB IP BB HARP -TO BB FIRM.. . OLSM Neprs Leagt/e Title Rjchards, Burton Take Track Honors Broad lump — Rompal (OL), Stac 3U, Naboiny ($T). 20-SV4 Bob Richards of Bloomfield Hills continued his unofficial ha-sault on the state high school mile record yesterday. The flying senior was clocked in 4:16.2 as the Barons lost Royal Oak Dohdero, 70-39, in a dual track meet. Clawson’s Brodie Burton was the individual star with four first piaces against Rochester. But the Trojans had little else and Rochester ran off with a 64-45 win. Walled Lake took Kettering in stride, 64-45; Romeo downed Avondale, 61%-47‘/&: and Orchard Lake St. Mary moved a step closer to the Catholic League’s second division westside champion with a 72-37 win over Theresa. Richard’s time was the best in the mile by a state prep this spring. He aim held the previous low, 4:16i7, set in his Iasi try. STATE MEET State records can only be set Finish HIGH SCHOOL AT HOME — IN YOUR SPARE TIME AS LOW AS SEND FOR ■H FREE BOOKLET IP YOU ARB i; OR OVER AND HAVE LEFT SCHOOL .00 per I MONTH in the state meet. If there is a dry track and the weather is warm, Richards or Redlord’s Art Link should lower the standard. . Burton won the broad jump, pole vault, 100 and 220 for Clawson. Junior John Pellerito of Rochester finally cracked the school record in the 880 with a 2:94.4. Pellerito had been under the Rochester mark for the half mile two other times, but had finished second. Fr. John Gabalski, coach at OLSM, will send the Eaglets after the league westside title tomorrow at Orchard Lake against Ecorse St. Francis Xavier. p - Burton (C), Jarvis (R), Broad SIwf l>u*'',L *^*^|** 1^*' Msinld (C), ........... (C), 0. Smith “isrSi' W'v,' IR), I .. ...h (l» ILL. - Thiala (R), ChurchUI (C), I (R), 6. Smith (R) ir.9. t), Badoll (C), Turner (C), 1M - Burton (C), Jarvis (R), Bough-ir (R) 10.«. High lump — Cl mpiMlI (R), OaWlH n Smith (R), E (R?m roiav — Rochester IThlolo, Kraut- ...... _____________ (ST), Tallotaro -'^^frauch°VST),*'*Rompol (OU, Hopkinion, M ^'ui’sothoi 0 relay - St. Thoroea, 1:37.5 tot.put - JaWonowikl (OU, Tracy ), Legal (OU. 434% ... (Qj_) fi, be- —-y (OU and 70, BMomfltld HINa If (BH), Penny (I lawrocW*%i! Rki ..-JW — Rum Brown tO), Wot Dondero, 1:35.^“ Richards __________ (BH), Town sc""l rocoR?" * **’'**^'' **H?gh huiroiM — Brown ID), Pauli (D), Menoar (BH). 15.8 (track record) 880 — Keiirney (BH). Preab^n Crandall (D)7 1:Sf.< (track record) 440 - Ron Smith (0), Keller (BH), Wetari burg (BH). *104 ■ — hurdlee — Brown (D), Pauli (D), ______(BH) 'i. ——" 220 (BH). re’lev — Bloom f, Mike Keller, . JH)._____ Mile relay - Bloomfield Hills (Tom. Kearney, Mike Keller, John Perron, Richards). 3:33.0 (track record) Romeo 81 til, Avon 47Vi Shot put - Jacobs (A), Hackett ( avislar (R). 4r - d iWp Hewlet (R), Carter (R), io'”ro>f.y-’^"ron5?lU'!5, (ebel). I (A), I High hurdlet — chepmi ween Chamberlain (A) jUnderwood, / I), lie DO-Han (A). Itanley (A), Boiyk (R), Carter 880 -- SI **M0 -*?owler (R), Jenks (A), Hutchin- •y*7.rt!3 _j,ow..hurdlea - W^lng (R)r^?5 Mile relay — Romeo Carter, Bozyk). 3:44.4 (Dettrich, povrier. 84, Kettering 45 Frey (WU, Pilcher 20-3'/3 ninski (WU, Dustman ,.,^). 47-S^ 12MK 10.75;2i $2000 "aaig” i6.ee:? 14.34;;?; $3000 25.32:? 21.51:? $5000 56.B2J:^ MORTOAQE F r42.20:?. AYMENT SERV IDE 1ST, 2ND & 3RD MORTGAGES COMMERCIAL LOANS * $5,000 TO $100,000 I Fraa Oonaultation in Tht Mvaoy of Your Hama* ANniME FE 4-3737 MICHAEL ALLEN MORTGAOI 9BRVICE HART schaPpNkr The MmI Famnu Ifame la Fieor EXTRAORDINARY VALUE for a vory ordinary pricol V..., ,1 ■', . J,; i.Mir.l Protect Your Eyes with SHATTER-RESISTANT GLASSES Lightweight • Attractive • Look like regular glasses WORK PLAY STUDY Thorough^ Examination by a Registered Optometrist* ''Dr. Emil Ondre, O.D. The Optical Dept, at Sears KNOWLEDGE SKILL EXPE HENCE Swenrs Second Floor Shop Sears 9 .^til 9 Thuryay, Friday & Saturday Downtown Pontioc Phone FE 5-4171 'I- WENTYFOtTR • / , ' Wildcat ^trikes Banned by Judge Rail Unions Urged to Obey Injunction WASraNGTON (GPI) ~ A rail union leadar today called on till pembwn to obey a tW-oral court order banning wildcat atHkes over terms of an arbitration award. H. E. Gilbert, president of the Brotherhood of locomotive F i r e m e n and Englnemen (BLFE), alfo urged railroads to refrain from taking Job^nittlng steps that the union is challenging before the arbitration board. Gilbert Mid some carriers disrupt seniority systems and force some flymen to move long distances to retain Jobs. This is crgalng an *‘oxplo- injunction yesterdAy barring any walkouts ovor ternis of the award. I know emotions are running high, but this is a court order and it must be obeyed," Gilbert Mid. Railroad spokesmen warned that Workers who refused to show up for work without a lawful excuse may be fired if the wM stoppages continued. Federal Judge Alexander Holtcoff granted a permanent He advised the anion to take Its complaints to the aipbitra-Uon boam tor clarification and then come into court If It was not satisfied wito the re* Holtsoff said defiance of his order could result in cohtempt 'of court findings against union leaders who encouraged any PREliS; Tuls THE BBRRYh JUDGE HOLTKOPF^ NORTH «A«« W09 0 A 10885 «K72 WEST A None W109T4S3 ♦ KJ8 A10968 EAST ajioot WQJ8 ♦ Q4 2 A 8 84 8oin]a (D) AKQ878S WAK 14 Pus 2 4 Pan 3 4 Pass 4N.T. Pan 8¥ Pau 8N.T. Pass 6¥ Pass 84 Pom Opening lead—¥ 10 —--------------- By OSWALD JACOBY Here is another safety play from Emid Rovere’g new book "Modem Point Count Contract Bridge.” South finds himself in a rather comfortable six spade contract. If he is the least bit careless, he wiU lead thel king of spades at"^ck t w 0. JACOBY West Will show out and South will spend the rest of the day complaining about^s tough hick. \ if South is caref(lH^,:jie won’ have to complain. He will lead ^ spade to dununy’s ac6 at trick two. West will show out, but it won’t embarrass South at all. He will simply lead a trump from dnnuny and' win Hie trick in his own hand as cheaply as possible. Then he will get back to dummy with a club or diamond and lend dummy’s last spade. It won’t matter which card East plays. South will wind up with all the trump tricks. While Fomcast By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (Mar. 21 f®, April ®TaIjRUS■ (Apr. 20 tP May 20): ... -p(aca of employment ... atreai orlBl-... .... Tu------ nallty, flair for perionallty. chai.... ------ approach. You gain by rovi^iiM c I%rlstict which are usually "hWffinA . GEMINI May 21 to Juna 20tJ Cydb «'b.T^ii.yra"E'SfERW; IxPRESSiON. No time to bury Tlghl "'?rNc‘i^ of window. Take direct ulo (July » to Aug. friends and business. ( OMatoJ .......................... "*5lg&7)?Wto'^t"’S): Unusua. ing'^n'id ^tolSM?**tncludos'responsibl’ity to employer, marital partner. Achievement comes with time. Shortcut t"«m-ods now Could tend to loss. _ LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22): < out In open with desires, requests. mSspher^fs 'oni^^cffnge, covery. Go wlt(i fl*. Be ready to arourlty could be gained jhro'ugti sug- Kru*ho«io*2: w through originality, breaking away from routine. Welcome new Ideas. ' ....... ptof^ ^»l^h**WI„-.- "bogged down." appearances oecelving 19): Avoid extremes. Be aware of security. Take steps which represent greotosf ' In-tbrance." Includes area of domestic relations.' Frank talk with family member required ... add will prove votuable. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. U): Spot-llghf of attention on YOUR EFFORTS. Oood to put across ideas, programs.' ■ You have, sympathetic audience! Fine lunar aspect emphasizes' ROMANCE. Make this a banner day! _ PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20): Friendly Obposition provides stimulating challenge . . . o^rtunlfy to show jbiTities. Welcome suagestions, ideas, don't be petty --------a.., fhrough to new area IF WEDNESDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY , . . you are hanf-worktog, oersIstMit, ^t otoo roquire period* x>f relaJeation. ' GENERAL TlNDENttES: goes direct in motlito .ln ViR(K iSp labor activities.' Union leaj ' Uranui’ |, poinNng ^ pewsworthy statement. (CapyrigM ifM, Ganarat Faatuil n* Carp.) ■ ■ ' ■4 Gilbert, who said the intjunc-ilon was a "harsh" one, was busy trying to end a walkout against the Milwaukee road at Spokane, Wash. MAIN COMPLAINT ’The BLFE’s main complaint appeared to he directed against actions takeik. by some railroads to require long-service nen, whose jobs are pro- he will have to lose a diamond, he will make his slam. Was South’s choice of a BERRY’S WORLD spade lead to dummy’s ace Just luck? Not at all! He couldn’t handle Jack-ten-slx-two of spades In the hand bat he could If they were in the East hand. If South had held the ten of spades instead the eight, his lead of the king of spades , at trick two would nave been correct. In that case, he would have had a simple finesse against the jack in either hand. But with the jack and ten both missing, he could only handle four spades in the East hand. tected for life under the award, to move long distances or take jobs away from home to stay on the payiull. The union is not contesting fhe carriers’ right to lay off more than 3,000 firemen with less than two years service, a union spokesman said. The award eventually maji; eliminate 33,000 firemen’s jobs.' By Orl Groburt DRIFT MARLO By Jim Berry Q—The blddJaSrhas bt louth WetTJtoHli 4 Pass j ♦ ¥ Pass $4 N.T. Pass 4¥ di/Y IfM i lilt PRonrs ifH Dr. I. M.'Levitt. Tom Cooke and Phil Evans ALLEY OOP By V. T. Hamlin Eait Pass Pass Pass You, South, bold: . 4AQ6 ¥K J42 4A2 4AQ84 What do you do now? -A—Sid five no*tnunp. Ttnir pertaer is trying for a siain. Let him plaee It. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of bidding four hearts, your partner jumps to six no-trump over your three no-trump. What do you do now? MAI AotTA / wxi MEtoi wxma ■UM/ rTHRVCDUtPflBT AVAN WITH A aWrar RSCKET UKB THMT IN ANCtUNT anaacR, ihsn z CAH'ioct CAPTAIN EASY By Leib'lle Tamer “Now, Mr. Reuther—you know you can’t believe everything you read!” BOARDING HOUSE WHY SHOULD THAT sTORy, WITH oiurs PMOtt) AMP APPIU44 ALASM HIM aor SILilVB---- WPMaK TMAT AIAKE^ SOU A) AYAUTCAWTIC R6H1N0 FOR J ( THERE n 16 I A Pl6H TAXES TWE a i ^.cao'x: 6AiT AND PULLS THE LINE, CAOSlMG A nc TRIP CATCH tD RELEASE The SPRING GEAR5. ai ^ WHICH iNSTAMTLy 6TART WlNDlNS UP THE REEL AND PULLlM© IN THE NOW, THEM-*^ 5HOUL-D X etX)02\He THAT ReLL STARTS Ringing wren the fish arrived ATTUETU^ X MIAE YOU TOOK A SUPDBN DISUK8 I N-NOTHlUai TO WWR QUAkTaito H8RB. AMP > COULO VOU MOViPTO-HMai WHAT'STHft ^ KIMPA5TEP ~^MATTSg. QUILV > JIMKIP MIXCAPTNM MORTY MEEKLL By Dick CavaUi BOV,AMirooreo/ iwoNoaziprhA oemndioooiDWK ‘ THIS WNDOPVlOBKi f DONTnUTANyMAIL V iNA«rroo\Y-wis X^^VCAVOPF/ THATf0eme5n:..i!M ) OOlNOTDRLXriNFCK MY BOTwasveYT/ % ^ M ^ y " aMMIfNM,lM.TJAI.»ltihl.aH: -■ B NANCY OUT OUR WAY ' NO, 1 PIPN’T I THINKTHAT } MATH EXAM WAS HARR.'I'M OUITE EURE 1 CAME UP WITH ALL ^ THE RIGHT AKJSWERSV E50V, 1 WISH I HAR Y WELL, I WISH I ^ HALF TH’ COMF1- } HAR JlST HALF TH’ DEMCE HE HAS/ \ COMFIREMCE YOU 1 THINK 1 GOTMOST) HAVE / ITHIMKI OF 'EM RIGHT, BUT J GOT MOST OF 'EM 1 COULR BE WROMGt AM’ J WR0MG.'^^L\ COULD be A NEW LITTLE GIRL JUST MOVED INTO THE NEXT HOUSE By Ernie Bushmiller GRANDMA By Charles Kahn OH,My/...aHBLL dOMt HOMS LOAOtO DOWN WITH THiNOa WHE'a , CHAROSP AT THE ' aroixsa. DONALD DUCK THETHIWXERS By Walt Disney \ . .-'■.v'A' j, . ■ I-\ ' I ';r'" .7f'. f ' ■ ‘ h: ' .. ■ ' ■■' '■ ‘ ' h ■ " ■' ■' ' . THE PONTIAC mKSS. TUESDAY> MAY 12, 10(54 -■ll - V, ' TWENyY^fivC MARKETS Good Gain The following are top prK»a covering Bales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale padkage lots. (Quotations fre funilshed by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Selected Issues Pace Market Poultry and Eggs OSraOIT POULTRY ETROIT (AP)-PrlCM paid per po Detroli for No. I quality live poull iM , light type h ................-'r 5 lbs 25 Heavy type ht . ______________ _ S-ti heavy roaiters over 5 lbs 25-26j broilers and fryers 54 lbs whites I9-20| - tk 21-22. Barred Ro«k 21-22. DITROIT 1001 OBTROIT ”-----■“ ROIT (AP)—Ego prices paid par at Detroit by first receivers lining U.S.): ...iita Grade A limtbo 33^t extra large 3t-3Sj large 30-34) —"— *' latSe 3»Gli medium 24. I - Chicago AAercantlle ___________ steady] wholasale buy- 95“r!&ts,T«/v*r54-i^] ’'’eg^gi*a&ot**stead?; wholasale b nt.r'2^i]'",;ixr2?; i s^23Vy; standards ^Vai dirties checks 25. CHICAGO MULTRV CHICAGO (AP)-lOSDA)-Llve I try: wholesale buying prices unchan roaste/s 23-25] special fed White 1 Livestock DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)-Cattle »flO. Slaughter steers and halters steady, cows steady; couple loads high choice 1050-1160 lb steers 22.25; few choice 900-1150 lb 21-22; choice 1150-I2S0 lb 20.30-21.75; good to low choice 11.50-21.00, choice halters 20.00-20.75. Hogs 500. Barrows, gilts and sows steady, U.S. 1 200-229 Tb barrows .................. _ _ ________0 lb 15.75- 16.00, 2 A 3 190-230 lb 15.25-15.75, U.S. 12 A 3 300-400 lb SOWS 11.7M275. Vealers 125. Steady, choice and prime early 32-35, choice 20-32; good 22-20, standard 10-22. . Sheep 000. Slaughter classr............- steady, choice and prime shor 1 A 2 pelts 23.75-2A7S., ^ . CHICAGO LIVMT6CK CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) 5,500; butchers irxxleratbly mostly steady, 1-2 190-2W -16.00-16.25; around 200 hart at 16.25; mixed 1-3 190-230 lbs 15.25-16.00; 230-250 lbs 14.7515.25; 2-3 240-260 lbs 260-300 lbs 13.75-14.25; mixed 1-3 325425 lb sows 12.7513.50. ^ Cattle ».M0; calves^none; • NEW YORK (AP) -• Steels, mohsrs, savings - and - loans and selected Issues paced the stock market to a good gain early this aftamodn. Trading was modwately active. The market was mixed at the stoirt, then moved irregularly idgher. While there were plenty df losers Scattered throughout the list, the market level improved as the session wore on. The newest sensation was Calumet & Hecla Urhlch soared morb than half a dozen points before paring the rise to 5 points or so. A report that ita already-' known copper discov«7 in Michigan contained substantial sup- plies of high-grade ore triggered heavy buying. The stock opened on 25,000 ^res and - pushed ahead in active trading. SHARP GAINS ' Sharp gains were made by savirtgs-and-loan holding companies in the wake fo a published survey stating that the percentage of delinquent home loans from these insUtuti'ons has been running consistently below the year-ago figures. Rails also moved ahead solidly, with most gains fractional, although Soo Line spurted about 3 points. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .7 at 307.S with industrials up 1.0, rolls up .4 and utilities up .3. Prices were irregularly higher in moderate trading on the New York Stock Exchange. C!orpora^ bonds were mixed. U.S. Government bondsi edged higher. American Stock Exch. Flgurn after decimal point! are eight NEW YORK (AP)-Amarlcan Stock ^xch^^ga trantactloni today: Creole P — . Gen Develop .................. 49» Hell Lamp .................... * imp Oil ................f..... Ini N Amor ................. Kaltar Indui ............ NJ Zinc ...................... Syntex .............. ....... /3H Technicolor ................. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP)-PolloWrng It a of lelactod ttock tranaactloni on the N Stock Exchange with 1:30 p. AblxittL new ' 4Vm' 37W 37Vii ABC Con .60 25 15 14« ' ‘ Admiral, 22 16 15t Air Red 2.50 17 56Ui 56 Alco Prod 1 69 27 .30 10 2346 : Am MFd .90 163 22V6 I AMet Cl 1.60 147 4946 < AmMotori la 108 15 Am NO 1.60 32 4346 - ----itical 2b 9 75 ; mOptlcal mPhoto . 3 14046 140'A 140'/4 -t 116 2746 254t ) 14 2546 2546 ! 40 1546 15'/3 1 3 1846 1846 1 54 1446 1346 14 Arms! Ck wl lb butcheri noitly high --------- , n«d> 200; 37 head choice Ibiprlng Haughter lambs 26.00; good 6 choice 23.00-25.00. Stocks of Local Interest Figures alter decimal points are eighths OVER THE COUNTER ITWKS The tollowlng quotations do not necessarily represent actual are Intended as a guide to the approximate trading range ol the socurN'**-^ BM AtKM AssoclatMl’’'Truck ........ 14.3 15.2 \Bin-Dlcator ................... Braun Engineering ............1» 30.» CItliens Utilities Class A ", Diamond Crystal ........... . 1S.3 16.3 Maradal Prodpcts Mohawk Rubber Co. ■. — . ■ Michigan Seamless TubO Co. Pioneer Finance ............. Safran Printing 26.4 28.2 27 5146 51>/a 5146 ... 2 63 63 63 - ' 27 4146 4i.ru’6^ CartarPd .40 Case Jl CaterTr 1.60 73 8 746 8 Cencmnst Cerro 1.40b car-teed .60 CassrtdAlrc 1 ChampSpk 2 GhmpHn 1.20 Checker Mol Ches Oh 4 ChIMII StP 1 ChPneu 1.40a CRI Pacif 1 ChrliCrtf .66t ar*F*n Voo ... . V/2 + 1 1346 1346 1346 . 36 39 3846 38'/i + 13 3446 34 34 ... 20 42 4146 4146 ... (38 55 54Vj 5416 - 12 18H 18'/6 1846 + 156 1646 1546 I6V4 + 28 5946 59 59 . . 60 7046 6946 7046 + 6 4J44 4346 4346 + 17 34'/6 33H- 3346 - 30 4546 45 45 , 53 44 4346 4346 + I 2646 i I 26W - 7 414's 4146 4146 - ’/6 19 34'/6 U'M 34'/j - Vt 1 1646 1646 1646 ... 48 75 74'/s 75 + W 33 ny? 8.. :ollinRad .40 ;bs 1 :oi Gas 1.22 Jol PlCt .53t ComICre 1.80 ComISolv 1 ComEd 1.40b ConEdls 3.30 ConElecind 1 CnNGas 2.30 ConsPw 1.50 27 3346 33 33'/6 t 22 1646 16 16W — v. 419 5146 5046 OO^i + V. 36 3746 3746 3746 + '/• 20 7046 70 70 + 46 6 354's 3546 3546 + +s 47 131'/4 129W 131 +146 20 44 43'/6 43V6 - 46 11 1646 16W.................. FarroCp 1 Flltrol 1.81 iFirestno 1 PstChrt 1. Fla Pw 1.12 Fla PL 1.28 FOst Wheeler FreeptS 1.20 PruOnf 1.50a hds.) HMh Law Last eng. 4 4746 47 47 — Vs ”11 la'(t 99 jt*AI 39H 3r ’si 2746 2646 27V6 6^ ^46 71V6 ^!v6 28 2346 2346 23H 28 57'A 56'A 5646 i7t iia r “4 110 3046 30V6 i 0 Accept 1 Gen Clp 1.20 Gan Dynam GenElec 2.20 8*"A^r‘i.^ OenMot l.80e GPrecn 1.20 GPubSv .26e OPubUt 1.28 Gen SIg 1.20 GTelSiH .88. GenTIra .50 6a Pac 1b Ga Pa<: wi GettyOll .lOe Gillette 1.10a U W/s 2m m i2>/i . V r r 208 89W 88H 89W 47 27 2646 2646 Qoodreh C^yr 40 2346 2346 2346 39 64 6246 63'A 9? ’1 ^ ^ 25 5346 53>A S3'/6 x32 4246 42 42'A % |46 14 2646 2646 26W I M8.0 : 311 1.60 HamPap 1.20 Hanna Co la Haveg .60g UmrrUHr M 42 5M6 57'/6 W46 ^ '/i 10 414e 41'/4 4146 + —H— 73 6546 6446 65'/; + , 1] 3346 3^ S'** “ it HerePdr .i5)e 132 1 36V3 + ( 146 riett Pk ..... Elect Homes! 1.60 »'T.i2b HoUStLP .72 Howe Sd .40 Hupp Cp .31t' 3246 , .. .... 1746 ,1 4(46 4 W 4(vs + '" riii:: —I. 114 25% 2546 2546 .- 46 ,23 61% 604's ..... 86W 4 IntBusMcIV 5' IntIHarv 2.80 InMIner 1.80a IntNIck '2.20a In) 'PmHl 1 Johnshfaiiv 2 -•iLogan .70 lesitL 2.N f Mtg 1 KalserAI .90 KaysrR .4Q-“entw^t^ 4 5 471 469 ' 471 + V 17 587 S84W 586Vs +2V 10 7446 7346 74'/6 + V 71 7646 75 76 +4 40 7946 7846 7946 + ’/ 9 1246 1246 1246 .... 36 33'/4 33 3346 — 4 26 5846 S8W 58'/6 - 4 I 2346 2346 2346 + 4 -J— 6 5746 5746 5746 + 4 10 18 1744 1744 - 4, 19 7546 75% 7546 + 46 44 3446 34% 34'/s ' —^ 13 2146 2144 2144 — ' 28 8446 83% 8346 -4 15 6044 6046 60% KImbClark 2 KlrkNat .40 Koppers 2 18 3546 35 2 28 28 15 30% 3046 rp*l?r? 7 1246 1246 1246 - 87 246 1746 1 2H . LIttonIn 1.98f LockAIre 1.60 Loews Thea LoneSCem 1 LonaS Gas 1 LongIsILt .92 .. . - - - 1-46 17 5746 57'/j ........ , 30 18% 1846 1» M% ......... 20% 20% 2046 I 2246 3 I 2246 + _____ llectr Lorillard 2.50 LukensSt 1.60 16 3446 33% 3 I 23% - I 6% ..... $iTn1 Contlns 2.20 9 34% 34 24 4946 49l 13 85% 85 33 38% 374. .. 18 63% 63% 63: 13 64%.......... 79 33% 85% 3746 4 187 ! I 2546 + Crow C .75t CrucSteel .80 Cudahy Pk 19 3246 32 3246 -+ ' 7 53% 53% 53>/6 + ' u nyi. ^ ^ ' DanRIver M Oayco Corp “lore 1.20 M&Hud .301 " ©as i Det steel .60 Disney .40b DomaMln .N 7 25% 25 84 9246 r’' 1 i............... 19 32% 3^ 3^ + 23 46% ; 2 26 ' * iL i 15% 15% - % Dresser 1.20b duPont ■ “ Duq Lt 26446 264 2^ +1 7 31% 3146 3146 Dyn Am’.40 —E1-—• East Air Lin 134 33% 3M 33% + 20 1»% 1^46 129 + n' ’4 M*9% If* + % EastGF 1.491 EastKo’ 2.30a EatonM 1.80 ErleLack 9 Evershrp '. ) 42<%^ 42 - 10 10 1 I 24% 3446 ! ' 446 '4%' Fairb Whit FaIrCam .SOp Fairch Strar "edd Corp 1;' :edDSIr 1.30> Mad Sq Gar MagmaC .250 Magnavx .90 .11 6746 66% —M— r 1)3 47Vi 47,% 12 l9'/j 19% 5 146 146 12 3946 3846 39 18 36% 36% .. AOarMId 1.15 Marquar - .25e MartInMar ' MayDStr 2 McD^Ir .. MeadCp 1.70 Merck 2a Merck wl MerrCh .30g MGM 1.50 Metrom .40a Mid SU 1.16. MlnerCh .70 MinnMngM 1 ST,'.'6! S31' V. a k % IK! E& T: ;......................... ill Pirn Bow .90 90 39% . Proct8,G 1.75 13 8246 « 8J - Pullman 1.40 9 33% 3VM 33 ... PureOII 1.60 198 5046 4946 50 - ' —-R— ^ RCA .60 266 33% 33% 33% - Wh.i'5^* TliSS S5S M.^4?t ,fi?(2T?S RepubAvla 1 8 13% 1346 13% . . RWb StI 2 20 44% 44% 4^ + Revlon 1.10b 31 3446 34 34% - Rexall .50b x128 AVA M46 47% + % ReynMet .50 76 4046 39% 40% + ReyTob 1.80 XSO 47% 47% 47 - Rheem .4fle II 18'A 18 18% — RlChfOII L80 X39 5346 5246 53% - RoberICont 1 3 26% 2646 2W ... Rohr Com 1 4 16% 16% 16% - Roy DUt 8.791 61 4646 46% 46% - Royal McB 24 1446 14Vj 1446 + Rydar Syst 26 14% 14 14 - IfiWac SL SanP 1 Schenley Scherg , Schick SCM .431 ScottPap 8 6446 64% 64S6 15 61% 61 61% .......... 3 29% 29% 29% StRegP 1.40b 13 32%’ 32% 32% SajiSmp .21 1,46 10% ,1% 1:1: + % 18 15% 15 15% + % 39 36% 35% 35% ... 5 47% 47% 47% + % 21 6046 5946 5946 + % 25 4646 46Vj 46% -8 104 104 104 ... 55 48% 47% 47% + 5 9446 94% 9446 + 1 34% 34% 34% + 37 61% 61% 61% -24 78% 7746 ' 78 ... lire- StdOII C Sti»5illn< r’”‘l’.2« 49 64 ti f B. g?s-46 Teachers Vote for AFL-CIO Pick Bargaining Unit at Detroit Etoctilog DETROIT (AP) - Detroit’ public school teachers chose an AFL-CIO union group Monday to represent them in bwgaining with the board of education and school administration. The city’s 10,000 public school teachers voted 5,789 to 3,848 for the Detroit Federation of Teachers (DFT). The election was the climax to a power struggle between the DFT and its rival tehcher organization, the Detroit Education Association (DEA). The DFT is a relatively new organization in education. The long-established DEA is s professional group affiliated with the giant National Education Association. OTHER CLASHES The two organizations have clashed in similar disputes in New York, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Cleveland, Chicago and oUier cities. In winning the Detroit election, the DFT gained rights as sole bargaining agent for the teachers in areas of salary, status, teaching conditions and personal welfare. It will appoint an 11-member Teacher Representative Committee tc( discuss problems with the school superintendent and administrators. Any agreements reached will be sent: to the Board of Education which retains authority to make final decisions. If a deadlock ensues In negotiations between the DFT-domi-nated Teacher Representative Committee and the superintendent, a conference committee n^de up of board members, teacher representatives and the superintendent will be appointed. If there is still no agr-eement, a special mediation committee would be appointed. News in .Brief —t—' X61 2146 21% 2146 + % 47 78% 78% 78% + •' I 30 59% 59% 99% .. nS 5B6 .,,% S%-i,^ UGasCp 1.70 66 38W ssCp 1 -...tl^M . USBorx .80 USGyp 36 US Indus) US Linos 2b •—>lywd 2.40 Plywd wl ui f US stool 2 Unit Wrwlon UnMatch .40 jsi 2r 36% 36% 19% 1946 9346 93% - % 9% 9% - % 39% 40 ■ .— % 7846 7846 - Xl4 40'. 2 79 . 2 394.. .. , 24 51% 51 149 120% 115% 120 +2Vs I 55% + 1 5% 5% 24 12<% 12 34 3TO 3646 13 50Vs 50'/4 -v-r-": 1 3346 33% 3346 + 46 1 1246 1246 121/4 17 ll'/s 11 11% 8 16 15% 16 . 2 37% 37% 37% . 119 1446 14% 1446 + - 3446 34% 3446 . n Tex Is S% 42% 42% ■>« 24 23 23% 6346 62% 43Va +1% 11 P46 4% 446 ..2'*74% 74% 74% 37 13% 13 13'/4 X62 75% 75% I 3346 33'46 . I 39% + NatCan NCashR . NDalry 2.. NatDist 1.20 NatFuali 1.36 Nat Gon .030 NatGyps 2b NatLoad .750 « NY (font .50g. NYChl SL 7 NY Ship NIagM Pw ' '50 29% 2846 29 60 10946 107 109% —N— 51 48% 47 48% +1% 6 61% 61 61% ■' 19 17% 17% 17% 35 67% ,67% 67%, 29 80% 79% 8p'?4 35 27% 26% 27 6 32% 32% 32% X7 9% 9% 9% 39 52% 52 52% tIaoM Pw 2 torlolk W 6 I 2.40 NoNGas 1.8. NorPac 2.40a NStaPw 1.36' 12 127% 127 127 22 47% 47% 47% .... 10 54% 53 54% +1% 9 54% 54 54% + % -JCldent .25r ' Ohio Ed 1.90 OlInMalh 1.20 JtlsElov 1.80 Outb M8f .40 Owenslll 2.50 OxtdPap 1.20 ) 4746..47% 47% — % ICTSif ™,20 sn-Am 1.21 iramPIct 2 srkoO 1 x5 9|% -Irll .18 32% 3146 32% 49 12% 12% 1*4( 19 31% 30% 31V 301 M% /SV2 78, 33% + 46 -w— ■ 4*1 14% 1446 14% — 22 30 29% 29% + . . 32 131% 128% 131% +2% 34 44 43 ^44 , 35 47% 47% '47Va 'stgAB 1.40 'ostgEI 1.20 'hlrlCp 1.80 WhlrfCK , .. — WHItoM 1.10 ‘ 18 32 Wllsn Co 1.60. 11 7 WinnDIx 1.08 x16 3 —Y— X16 47% 47 47% 17 70% 76% 74'/a + Sales figures ara unofficial. « otherwise noted, rates of dlvl-the foregoing table are annual ------------- • ^ — lost quarterly _ _ _ , payments not designated ai regular ara IdentilM In tha following footnotes. ^ . e-juso' extra or., oxtras. .^nnual rate plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend, d—Declared or paid In 19M plus stock dividend, e—Declared or paid so far this year, f—Paid In stock during 1963, estimated cash value on ex-dlvMend or ex-dlstrlbutlon dale, g—Paid last h—Declared or paid after stor'--- split up. k—Declared or r, an accumulative Issue ___ds In arrears. ,p—Paid this________ — dend .emitted, deferred or no action taken -* dividend meeting, hr—Declared dr 1964 plus stock dividend, t—Pay-during 1964, estimated cash last year, k dividend with* d’lvl* this v|Mr,_dlvi- .1—Sales In full. ^ _ cld+j:alled. x-Ex dividend, y—Ex uivi lend I and sales In full. x-dls-EX distiubu .ion. xr-Ex -rights. xw-WIthouf warj rants, ww—With warrants, wd—yvhen distributed. wl-WJien Issued. nd-^Next day delivery. < v|—In bankruptcy' or receivership or being rdorganUed under the Bqnkruptcy Act dr securities assumed by such companies. fn—Foreign Issue subieci to'proposed interest equalization lax. Mrs. Harry C. Williams, 4400 Lamson, .^ Waterford Township, told polltie yesterday that 18 gallons of gasoline were siphoned from the tank of a pickup truck parked on her drive. A thief entered the pastor’s office at United Pentecostal Church, 178 Green, after prying a lock ^f a rear door and stole 121 front a desk, it was reported to Pontiacj)Olice yeaterday. Attic sale - Parish hail. Lake Orion. Wed., May 13. 9 to 3. —adv. Garage sale. May 12-14. Clothes, furniture. 28 S. Shirley. FE 4-5886. -adv. Garage rummage i mals, mlsc., 158 W. ’Tues., Wed., 5-7. ale, for-Rundell, —Adv. Rummage. ’Thurs. 9-12. Indian-wood and Baldwin. —Adv. Rummage Sale: St. Andrews Church, Hatchery Rd., May Mth, 9 a.m. —Adv. Delaware Auto Plant to Add Night Shift NEWARK, Del. (AP)-Chrys-ler (kirp> said today it will add a night shift to its Newark plant June 1, meaning some 1,000 new jobs. Chrysler officials said the jobs will add approximately $5 million to the annual payroll. They estimated the plant’s production of assembled cars will increase by one-third. Grain Prices 1.96Vs-46 . 1.51% t.52%-% 1.S7%-57 . TAtPA Bid Paf:^ June 1 Waterford Of(s Blacktopping Following a public hearing last night, the Waterford Township Board voted to proceed with the blacktopping of Lake Angelas Road and set June 1 as thO dale for bid open-^ ing. Total estimated cost of the special assessment district is $11,467, or $6.14 per front foot. V The estimated high front footage coBt in relation to other recently established blacktopping districts was attributed to the extensive excavation required and to the large number of trees to be removed. Cost estimates , were prepared by Johnson and Anderson, the township’s consulting engineers. The hoard also approved a special street lighting district for Watklns-Pontiac Estates following a public hearing. YEARLY CHARGE A $6.78 annual assessment was specified for each of the district’s 59 residences. In other business, the board reappointed three planning terms expire May 29 to new three-year terms. The commissioners are William Shunck, James Clarkson and Paul Van Roekel. Also last night, the board ap- Pontiac Bank Names New Branch Head nager of Pontiac new Opdyke-Wal- "IPQ The appointment of James Vernor as manager of Pontiac State Bank’s new Opdyke-Wal-tion office was. announced to-| day by Milo J. Cross, presi-l dent., Vet nor, of 4551 Ardmore, [ Bloom fieldi Hills, has been with the bank four years in various capaci-ti e s including VERNOR assistant branch manager. A member of the Amerieaa Institute of Banking, Vernor attended Culver MiiiUury Academy, Blooiiifield High School and Ferris State College. His great-grandfather, James Vernor Sr., discovereid the formula for Vemor’s ginger ale in 1868. His grandfather, James, Jr. I, took over the business in 1896 and operated the enterprise until his death in 1957 when the controlling interest was sold to other parties. The-new bank office is located at 2240 N. Gpdyke next to the Blue Sky Theater. It will open officially at 10 a.m. May 25. Girl Falls Off Car, Is Seriously Hurt A 16-year-old Highland Township girl, riding on the fender of a moving car, was seriously injured when she fell off yesterday afternoon. Under intensive care at Pontiac General Hospital with head injuries is Cheryl GOans of ^ Woodruff Lake. The driver of, the car, Earl Granger, 51, of 566 leaker. Highland Township, told 7sheriff deputies that CheryL-and-his daughter, Janet, 16i were on the fender while he w|s delivering newspapers. Ja.netlalso fell but was not seriously injured. pointed Planning DirectorJRol^ ert Dieball to the librafy advds^ ory committee replacing Roy Alexand^. BUSINESS PRESS Alexander, coordinator of secondary schools for the Waterford school system, asked to be relieved of his duties due to the press of school business. In other business, the board rezoned a lot at Cooley Lake and Hospital roads from Ckim-mercial-2 to Commerclal-d. An auto repair shop is planned on the site. Finally, the board designated May 29 and July 3 as official holidays for township employes. Both clays'are Fridays that precede Saturday holidays. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “My two sisters and I have-funds which we woUld like to put in E bonds. We are in our early 60’s and would like all three n£mes on each bond. Is this possible? What is the highest E bond denomination, also purchase price and maturity value? How long is maturity? After maturity, do we have to sell or will bonds continue to receive interest? VThen sold, hew do we stand as regards income taxes?” H. M. A) You are wise to buy E bonds at your ages. You can have no more than two names on each bond. 'The highOst denomination of an E bond is $16,000, the purchase price is $750 per $1,600, and the maturity value is $1,000.' E bonds now offered mature in 7 years and 9 months, and the government has allow«i an automatic 10-year extensiorf period. If you sell you must report as income the total increment — earned while holding. Q) “My only stock is American Machine & Foundry, for which I paid $40 per share. Do yon think I should buy more stock now at around .19, so that if it gets up to SO, I could get out even?” W. S. A) I cannot advise you to buy more shares. What you propose is called averaging down, and there something very appealing about the practice. Nevertheless, no one should attempt to average dowa unless he has strong reason to believe that the stock involved has a good outlook for improvement. American Machine & Fouhdi^ Oakland Ck)unty Democrats expqct a quiet convention 8 p.m. tomorrow at Wylie Grove High School, 25200 W. 13 Mile, Beve^ ly Hills. Party leaders foresee virtually no disagreement over candidates or political beliefs as at-stepded the April 8 Republican rounty convention. Congressman Neil Staebler, only Democratic announced candidate (or governor, will be the convention’s keynote speaker. Although delegates to be elected to the June 13 state convention in Lansing are not bound to a particular presidential candidate, the preference is expected to be President Johnson. y CNB Honors 91 for Service In a ceremony yesterday at the Community National Bank’s Club Overdraft, 91 ehnploves were presented service awards. Thp award winners included eight persons with 30 years service. The are A. C. Girard, pres-ideat; Robert R. Eldred, executive vice president; John P. Niggeman, senior vice president; Carroll L. Osumn, senior vice president. Dawson C. Baer, assistant vice president: Mrs. R. S. Craft, Miss Pearl Smith and Lester Lyons. The award program was initiated this year following the bank’s 30th birthday. Awards consisted of emblematic jewelry f e a luring the bank’s Indian trademark. 1,651 YEARS ’The 91 honored employes represented 1,651 years of bank jfervice. Organized with less than 20 employes operating from a single office, the hank now has 400 eihployes and 16 offices serving 100,600 custpmers. Hearing Scheduled Two Charged With Holdup Armed robbery charges were brought against a 21-year-old Pontiac man and a- teen-ager yesterday in connei^ipn with the holdup Sunday of the Clark on Station, 382 Orchard Lake. Arraigned before jMunicipai Ju(Jge Maurice Finnegan were Nelson Hardiman, 423 Hightend, and Nollh' Carroll, 17, of 497 Arthur. The pair demanded a pre-liminay hearing, which was scheduled for May 20, and were jailed\in lieu of ^,000 bond each. « Hardiman was arrested shortly after the station, attendant, Frederick Turner, 2?, of 229 E. Beverly reported to police that he was robbed of $^ by two men at 10 a.m. In searching % vicinity, police found Hardiman hiding on the ground behind a bush on Palmer. . * ir : Hr :/ Carroll whs arrested’ at his home yesterday afternoon. Pontiac police said the pair iias admitted the| holdup aS well as the robbery hf Clark station at 157 Auburn May 5. has been hurt badly by the sharp fall-off in bowling alley construction, which has resulted in a big drop in its plnspotter installaitions (from 12,000 in 1061 to 5,600 last year). Earnings declined over the same period from $1.69 a share to $1.09. I would retain present hold- , ings for possible recovery but would not add to them. (Copyright 1004) County Dems Expect Quiet Convention “One resolution I know will come before the convention will be on the oommunity oirilege proposals, which have been overwhelmlngty endorsed by the Democrats befhre,” said James M. McNeely, deplity county chairmiim. FILL VACANCIES Some 250 elected precinct delegates are pxpected to attend. But since nearly 100 more precincts are without elected delegates, firat order of convention business will be a roll call, followed by caucuses to come up with lists for filling vacancies. After the keynote speech, the meeting will get down to the niain item, electing 184 delegates and en equal number of alternates to the June 13 state convention in Lansing. Although Democrats have already divided the county into 18th and 19th districts for organizational reasons pending redistricting, the present 18th District taking iii the whole county will be the unit sending delegates to Lansing. Pontiac State Bank Declares Dividend The Pontiac State Bank Board of Directors yesterday declared a dividend of 50 cents per share to all stockholders of record as of May 12. Milo Cross, president, an-^lounced the dividend tbday. The dividend will be payable on June 1.' Business Notes MacManus, John & Adams, Inc., Bloomfield HiHs, has been named advertising and iNiblic relations counsel for General Time Cnrp. and Thiokol (Chemical Ck>rp. General Tiriie is the world’l largest manufacturer of tiian pieces, including Westclbx and Big Ben lines. Thiokol, first to manufacture synthetic rubber, produces solid fuel propellants. ' ■J, " '■' , ■■ ', ' .......................................................................................................:,''--'f"l,' ;, ' "' ' '■ ................................................................. rwisNTY-i^: ' v' , '■. •: ' . ■ . ' '' . ' ^ ,' • ' ' I ' /r' ^ ''/ . Vf /’ ^ ’ ' '' royfTiAC piii&sg. titespay, may, 12. io64 D^fbs in Ppntiac, Neighboring Areas an Church. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Leaman, a retired Pontiac Motor Division employe, died yesterday. His body will be at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, T. i-: L ..1. L 1 ., n -_A4i*onUac, until Thursday mom- olic thurch with burial in Perrf , ^ SHAWN M. ACORD Requiem Mass will be ot-fered for Shawn M. Acord, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Acord of 82M Highland, Waterford Township, at 10 a.m. tomorrow in St. Michael Cath- Mount Park Cemetery. .Arrangements are by the Hun-to6n Funaaal Home. The baby was dead at birth Sunday. Surviving besides the parents are grandmothers Mrs. Theresa Pryomski and Mrs. Martha Carr, both of Pontiac. FRED M. CpPENHAVER Service for Fred M. Copen-haver, 76. of 4000 Farner, Waterford Township, wUl be 1 p.m. Thursday in Coals Funeral Home, Waterford, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Copenhaver, a retired (ruck driver for CMC Truck & Coach Division, died of a heart attack yesterday. Surviving are his wift, Julia; (wo daughters, Mrs. Franklin Uacine oA Rochester and Mrs. Alvin Smith of Pontiac; two sons, Gerald Marvin, both bf Pontiac; 10 grandchildren; and two great-gran^hildren. Also surviving are stepchildren Mrs. Eugene Swaney and Robert Curtis, both of Pontiac. MRS. JANE E. GRAY Service fpr Mrs. Jane E. Gray, 86. of 2 Dtica will be 2 p.m. tomorrow in Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Gray died yesterday following an illness of several weeks. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Don P. Thomas of Pontiac; two cons,» Neil W. and Keith M., both of Pontiac; three grandchildren; and a great-grandchild. E. B. HOWARTH ORION TOWNSHIP - Serv.-ice for former resident E. B. Howarth, 78, of St. Petersburg, Fla., will be tomorrow at the Palms Funeral Home, St. Petersburg; with burial following. Mr. Howarth, a former state representative, senator and assistant attorney general, died yesterday after an illness of two months. ARTHUR B. LEAMAN WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Arthur B. Leaman, 71, of 1715 Porter will be 1 p.m. Thursday at Cedar Crest Luther- Surviving ire (ils wife, Augusta (Agnes); a daughter, Mrs. Kenneth Switzer of Milford; a son, Gordon J. of Tulsa, Okla. two brothers, a sister and two grandsons. QUINTINL.KENNADAY Service for Quintin L. Kenna-day, 40, of 8S Mark Will be 1:^ p.m. Thursday at Bgthany Baptist Church. His body is at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mr. Kennaday, a salesman at Sears Roebuck & Co., died yesterday after an illness of three weeks. Surviving are his wife. Mar-, garet; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lenn W. Kennaday of Pontiac; and two daughters, Kathryn Ann and Christine Lm, both at home. The family suggests any memorials be made to the Bethany Church of which he was a member. MRS. MILTON J. WEAVER HOLLY TOWNSHIP - Serv-ioe for Mrs. Milton J. (Mary E. Weaver, 73, of 12435 Fish Lake . will be 2 pmt. Thursday wt the Dryer Funeral Home, Holly. Buriel will follow in Lakeside Cemetery, Holly. -Mrs. Weaver died yesterday after a long illness." She was p member of the Fenton and Pamona Grange, the Golden Age of Fenton, the Holly Senior Citizens and the Good Neighbor Club of Newark. Surviving are two sons, Ronald of Holly and Leonard of Laurel, Md.; two daughters, Mrs. Maxine Beardsley of Clarkston and Mrs. Vivian Auten of Holly; a brother, Sel-den Horton of llighland; eight grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren. MRS. HAROLD 0. EAD WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs. Harold O: (Norah E.) Ead, 73, of 6847 Clunbury was to be 2 p.m. today with burial following in Acacia Park Cemetery, Southfield. Mrs. Ead, former co-owner of the Ead & Graves Insurance Co., Birmingham, died Sunday after a brief illness. She was a member of the Birmingham Business Women’s Club and the First Church of Christ Scientist, Birmingham. Surviving are two daughters [rs. Harland D. Harris and Mrs. Charles F. Zeigler, both of Birminghani; a sister; seven grandchildren and seven greatgrandchildren. MARTIN F. KENNOY TROY — Service for former resident Martin F. Kennoy, 75, of Madison Heights will be 10:30 a.m. Thursday at the Price Funeral Home. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Kennoy, a retired meat-cutter, died yesterday after an illness of several months. Surviving are his wife, Agnes; two-sons, Martin F.»^ Jr. of Chesterton, Ind., and William J. of Warren; three daughters, Mrs. Virgil Bailey of Troy, Mrs. HELP TOUR SON FILL YOUR SHOES BY TEACHING HIM SOUND INVESTING ... you can leam about tha modern way to invest by reading our free bookiet. The Modem, Way to Invest." You'll find out how to obtain the three essentials of sound (i) careful setection, (2) wide diversification, (3) constant supervision. Write for "The Modern Way to Invest" ■— today! INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS FE 2-9117 818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG. The doors of lour establishment ore olwoys op^ to those seeking f advice or counsel pertaining to funeral matters. Thoughtful Service Outstanding in Pontiac for Service, Fjicilities 46 Williams Street 2-5481 , TT Perry Leitch of Oxford Mrs. Gerald Curtis of Royal Oak; and 17 grandchildren. WILUAM L. ST. CLAIR PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice for . William L. St. Clair, 49, of 903 N. Opdyke will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Allen’s 'Funeral Home, Lake Orion. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. St. Clair died yesterday after a month-long illness. Surviving are his wife, Lyri-ette Shirley; his mother, Mrs. Victoria Lancaster of Livonia; three brothm, Walter of Clark-ton, John ^of Oxford and Clair of Walled Lake; and three sisters. MRS. NELSON F. SHARPE FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP Service for Mrs. Nelson 1 (Mary E.) Sharpe, 91, of 20832 Tuck was 11:30 a.m. today at the Voorhees - Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial followed Woodmere Cemetery, Detroit. .Mrs. Sharp died Saturday after a long illness. She is survived by two nieces. State Musician Group Elects Areta/A^n VP Wallace E. Earl, president of Pontiac Federation of Musicians, Local 784, recently was elected a vice president of the union’s state organiimtion. Earl of 2300 Anders, Water ford Township, was also named a delegate to the union’s June national convention in Portland, Ore., along with Peter G. Flore, 341 Elizabeth Lake, local secretary-treasurer. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIBO'S Th» Board of Education of Lak* Orion Community Schools, Oakland County, Orion, Michigan, will receive sealed for the construcWwi and completion Maintenance Garage et the Blanche ----------— School, Lake , Orion, nentary ! until 2:00 Board ot Education, t ......tigan, at which time ar lace'SII bids wllITte publicly opened ar ead aloud. Separata proposals wllh be received i Base Bld-GENERAL CONSTRUCTION Proposals must be on form , furnishet }y the Architect and be accompanied by i bid bond or certified check In th< amount of five per cent (5%) of thi proposal submitted. Plans and specifications may be ob ' — -nd after Thursday, April 30 office of the Architect, Tara pata-MacMahon . Associates, — tects and Engineers, 11! Lake Road, Bloomfield t , Bloomfield Hills , MVh^rjn^* _____ In the amount of $10.00 must submited as a deposit for eoch set .. plans and specificatolns, same to be refunded upon return of plans and specifications In good condition within ten (10) '**/(ccepted* ®er? wlll'*'& required to Idrnlsh satisfactory Performamce Bond and Labor and Material Bond, each In ‘he aipounl of-100% ot the contract, the otal j^t^oj^whlch shall be paid by the '‘A*r%rpposa1s' submited shall remain ■ — ot thirty (30) days i of Educat>on r Board of Education Lake Orion Community Schools Lake Orion, Michigan HUGH BRADY Secretary May 5 and 12, 1964 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING notice is hereby given ot a public aring to he held by the white Lake From Residential to Commercial DIs-■Ict: Lots 131 and 132 of Cooley Beach Subdivision, part of N. E. 'A pf S. W. V. and part of W. Vi of S. E. 'A of Section 36. Commonly known as 1282 Union Lake Road, and tha adloinlng vacant lot. Persons interested are requested to b resent. A copy of the map togethe Ith a list of the proposed changes L 1 file at the office pf the township erk and may be examined by those Interested. r Charles Harris, Chaleman White Lake Township Planning Commission. X STANLEY FREVILLE April 24 and May 13 8 Lake NOTICE Of public HEARING ._tice Is .hereby given of a oi hearing to be 'held by the Whi Township Planning Commission Township Hall on lyiay ’* - to consider the follow Zoning Map. From Agricultural to Resldence-1 .DIs- foliowlng changes In the trict; Part of the East 20 acres ot the Southeast quarter of the Northwtest quarter of Section 36, commencing at f.apprbxl-ly llnf of mately 666 ft. to the Westerly 1... .. the East 20 acres of the Southwest quarter of the Northeast quarter ' 36, thence 0° 3' 20" East ■ ........................SoVthei distance of 321.95 ft. to the SoVtherly ' line of property heretofore • cdnveyed by these granters .to Glenn S. Wright, -thence South 89° 8' 0" East 659.75 ft. to the East Section Line of Section 36, thence South along said Section line 371.95 ft. to the point/ of beginning. Also known as 1090 South Willjams Lake Road, containing 5.70 acres. Persons interested are requested to be present. A copy of the Map together with - list of ——- -................ ... examined by those Interested. Charles Harris, Chairman STANLEY FREVILLE • ) Secretary April 24 end May 12, 1964 Nm II and ii> 19«4 At 4:00 1W< . Feri^ale ... lino Where the vd -Jirn’TSkt II. I address being where red and may ba Inipac ADVeRTISEMENT FOR BIOS ha Board of education of Scnool pls- sMied^slda foF’iha Construcilon'and'c^ platlon ot an AdditiM to tha Orajm tia- ba‘ received as ilructlon manlary School, Orchard Laka, MIehipan, r'l964f‘at tfe"o?flca oi% BoarS'of Bdl? catto,^^|0^hard Lake Road, Orchard ^aparata propa nuet bt on forms fumithad Tr' ?!?tiiSd“c'h“srr tS; iva par cant (5%) of tha flitted, *--2Ktei,X(Vy,Ti»?; 5-ArchiWl,.J;era^?ej "TO! ■ on and an..... office of the Ai____ ... ______^hon Associates, Inc., ,1191 ^uare Laka Road, Bloomtiald ^A*'ilil!k In tha amount of $25.00 must » pT.1.'?"!?a T tTcTOT wrdiaurtliil! WiV; and Labor, and Matarjal Bond, #Khl^ amount STtob'S’^Hha‘c&traS’’ Ijw I cost ^ which aball ba paid by tha **Alir pSopoiaU' iubmltted iihall remain *■— tor a perM of thirty (30) days "BoarU* of Education ^raaarvaa ttw to ralact any or all bids In wtwla part, and-to walva any Intormalltlas sWi^isMiTo Fractional of West B _________ ...jt Bloomfield Township and Cities of “-—o Ha ■ Keego Harbor . MrI? FRANCES*^ ^slcretary Death Notices ACORDl MAY 10, 1»64, BABY SHAWN MARIE, 8226 Htahland Road, Waterford township; beloy^ Intent daughter ot Arthur and LH-llan Acord; belovrt Infant oraM- JkTM’s. MTa'r^ Fte X^;^T3.rl'oTm,'’^^Wc« ^^A(?HICEf 46oo'Farni^ Ser“'’Jf'jur C^Jten'ffref? d^r fattSr of Mrs. Franklin (Gertrude) Racine, Mrs. Alvin (Thelmd) Smith, Gerald and Marvin Copanha^; dear step-father of ch/ldrSr and. two .9''»at;fi'-an‘*4 7 to 9 p.m.) GRAY, MAY IT 19446 JANE^ 2 Utica Road; »s held as LOST: MALE LIVER-WHITE BRIT-tany Spaniel, Ortonvilla area. Re-ward. NA 7-3144. LOST: male WALKER HOUNO, orange and white, vicinity Water-lord end Drayton Plains. OR 3-8453. LOST: MALE BRITTANY SPANIEL no collar, vicinity of Avon Town-.......r 3-1990. LOST-SIAMESE CAT, CHILD'S PET/ Vlelnl^^Huron Gardens. Please LOST: SfULL MALE BROWn Poodle, Ticinity Sa$hBbaw-Wood. h..i( Friday noon. Reward, wiy In--I..., call. 674-1477. STRAYED OR STOL^, BLACK and tan bdagla, from 223 Parkdala St.. Sat. MOV 9, FE 4-2409. 1 REPRESENTATIVE. EXCELLENT opportunity for advancement with a natlonaf finance company. Prefer a man around 25 years of age. Must be-, high school graduate. Good starting, .^salary with car allowance furnished. A.liberal plan of company benefits. Apply plates, 4476 "... Plains. 6 Dixie Hwy., Drayton 2 Men 19-40 Years Old We vrould like two men to work with us who can . work 3 or 4 nights a week, good pay for staady workers. Call FE M243, 5 to 7 ' Ik for Mr. ~ •- 4 weiIl~dressed men, FULL-parf time, use of car nactssary, $15 pdM evening^romml^on; FE T4 to 21 TO WORK IN OUTSIDE ORDER DEPARTMENT, GUARANTEEtJ, SALARY, CALL MR. RENO. 335- $125 Weekly Guarantee If you quality, please phone tor Interview appointment. A married man-- under 45, heat ap|>earance, nnvt t*r. home phone, high school , willing to work 9 to . 673-85W. AT ONCE, 4 MEN FOR, PRIVATE II between 3 and 7 p.m. A-I STATION ATTENDANT, n6 Others need apply, 314 W. Walton between 7;3P-10;30 A.M. ATTENTION: START IMMEDIATELY! MECHAmeAlLY-INCLINED MAN No sales experience necessary as we will train you. Must to able to get along on $500 per month to start. Job is permanent. Cell OR •’* — - 7 p.m.. t--'-*-* — BAKERY DRIVER SALESMAN Guarehteed Salary Free Insurance Free Hospitalization Contact Jack Ralph, 196 W. n ,Equal Opportunity Co. BUCKNeIr FINANCE COMPANY —........XTt Age 21 to 26 High schdol graduate Some college preferred e military strvice completed Litora? Vtariing’ siftarV7 with opportunity for advancement, excel- it fringe bei^lts Inclut Id pi^lt sharing. If ! lAl/iFY phone Mr. B« 1541 for appointment. BRICKUYER WANTED IMMEDI-ately, wages only. Call Highland 112-817-4106.______________ - . BLOOD DONdRS URGENTLY NEEDED BARBER, E X C E LLENT JOB,, young and steady. OR 4-1521. buf(=er and painter. Experienced only,- -plenty of work; Pontiac Auto Body Service, Saginaw C^l DRIVERS. STEADY AND part time. Day or night shift. Also - -a drivers. 101 W. “----- CAREER AND LIFE INSURANCE sales with established clientele, guaranteed salary and commission,' paid vacation and Insurance bene- < fits. FE 2-8528. ' \:W' ^ wkirtfd MdlE j 6 CARFEMTER FOiTmODW FIREFIpHTERS Salary I4,9«l ~ 16,049 Minimum raqulrtmantsi Haight 47W Inr*— -------- •— jK ...jtf hirvt b«ti> ^ ------ cltv w Pontiac Parke. Return anallcallon to par- - iai' by Y Mn *^'y »'V964T 6ll~ M>6ciR8'^ AW6"“^ hands, 14 Mila Tool and Die Inc. 4704 Oalamar»-Rwal ■uRfRifciANSnfFAWIL Wire door work. Dock repair, t general malntanance work, hours at $1.25. Must to sol g^ physical eondlllen. In Ing Friday and laturday I-43(l0.Cass-Ellzatoth laka Ro ikPERiwamrANOie'AFriAE’N. steady year around. $1.75 par hr, ‘ ‘ C. Kusk Ft M943. FIRESTONE YOU N^TMift '’polil* INsft «icii ■ GOOD WITH MATH. EX- g8?'fSg?ERm. ^•^"‘•'i^rMOUNT CAR TIRES AND SMALL TRUCK TIRES. FIRESTONE STORE n BquaTSp^rfunlly^ir^^ GAS STATION ATTENDANT, «if-chanlcal exp., full time, 30 or older Walled Lake area, MA 4-9426. gardener, GiRiRAL Land-scape and lawn work. Experienced tractor driver desired. Apply 32611 Franklin Road, Franklin Village. George Wallinglon Smith,__________ oTnb daalersnip. ary. Mi Oakland, »“I5piy WAITED, KxpiRi: ry, good starling sal- GRILLMEN *nd'*!?ur( HANDYMAN FOR MINOR RB- pslri and malptenance work In ri pair shop. A, L. Damman Co 1200 Naughton Rd., 689-4700. HAVE YOU Had Experience in Wholesale or Retail Management Thera are opportunities for men a 5 figure benefits nc panys. We w I not consider any- _____ .. years of age. If you qualify, for more Information call Mr. Laurin for appointment Interview. 3384)438.________ l“NlIb 5 MEN WHO NEED $700 . Call 673-1265 fi MASTER BARBER WANTED. • 8 W. Lawrence. ____ MALE COLLEOlTfupENfS LOCAL REFRIGERATION CONCERN needs experienced commercial refrigeration and air condition r— ........... .........0 service air conditioner and Ice machines. State experiences, age and wege expected. Write to Pontiac Press, UBORER, NO experience NEC-essary. Equal opportunity amploy-er. 682-0970.______ MACHINE HANDS PIPE FITTERS TOOL MAKERS JIG-FIXTURE BLDRS." BENCH HANDS Day end nights. Long hours. , ARTCD, INC. 3020 (pdlanwood Rd. MAN TO WORK I be experienced - auto parts clerk. . HOLLERBACK AUTO PARTS f h. 338-4054 MEN FOR LAWN CUTTING WORK with Locke mower exp. 18 or over. FE 54)857. N. C. R. NEEDS CASH REGISTER SALES REPRESENTATIVE Applicant must to 24-30 years of age, high ——■* If qualified please contact ... . cal Pontiac branch office at 562 ■*'. Huron, 'Or phone FE 2-0285-tor Opportunity Employer phone, $130 weekly guaranteed to - stai Michigan State Emi ., ' >, Wednesday, 3 to ■ Bryan. State Employment Serv- Needed at Onc^ Service Manager 25 to'35 years of age to manage Chrysler, Plymouth, Rambler and Jeep service. New shop. New equipment. Apply In niarenn rtKII V _____ Rill Sdmistis. O.D. AND I.D. GRINDERS, Experienced only, part time. Briney Mtq. Co. 674-0436. _______ NEEDED: 7 MEN AT ONCE! NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY! , To work with Pontiac branch of large electrical appliance manufacturing ■ company. We will train go on our payroll ing bonus plan and high Immediate' earnings. Call FE 5-9243, 5 * 1. tonight only. OPPORTUNITY . .......... . . ,-.r future ana are willing to do a totter than average day's work for a totter than average opportunity — yve wogld like to talk to you. We can Introduce you to men earning $10,-000 to $13,000 per year In this area. 5-6115 tor jnterlvew., PARKING LOT ATTENDANTS. 17 PLUMBING .REPAIR MAN, EXPER-ienced -In pump work preferred, but not necessary. SelSry plus commission. Write qualifications. " " ■'12, Farmington, Mich. REAL ESTATE SALIsAEN estate division, i excellent opport "BUD" NIcholle inity. / H. Delos REAL ESTATE Salesmen needed. Men or . Real Estate • i|*le Hwy, 6'...... A; 6^5-261 'T^t WqiitBd , i Salesman , Plumbing Haoting “ I Motarlal* Building f Many company _tonell Apply parsonnal Oapt. Montaomery Ward BxparlancacU llceniad s. .. broker capoela of making tw mon-vay. Lawrence W. Oa^ioM, Realtor, I to txparloncad. Dixie and iiRvICg ITAflOM talesman with talent to manage men and money. Special program. Sun Oil Company. Call Jim Grom me S a.m.^:30 p.m. Ml 6-6674 (local call from Pontiac). After 7:30 p.m. call 452-4005. ------fALl^N"WAfiTl(S' Salesman ntwlad for now and used houses, wide awake men wtflr want to makO above avaraga Incom. Bxpralanced full time man only. DON WHITE, INC. 2S91 Dixie Hvry. OR Fanfiry'e? Dixie Hwy. corner of Tolegrapi Rd. Apply In person Mon., Tuei or vyed. I0 d.m.-I2 nr- ' goodJIrenf----"-"--' STATION AttiNDANT, BXpgRi- ence not netoiwry, dope'----- honest, full time. Apply In Chamtor'a Oulf, 136 Joslyn. Board and room. experience, pay. r work family general WB NEED 20 MEN BETWEEN ages 25-45 with good drlvlra records, drivers license required. S1.75 per hour, 40 hours tor 2-3 months, (3 shifts available), must to able to past company physical. Apply 14 sTcer T SERVICE ger, Chrltman Chevrolet, .. At 4JI791 Rochester — OL 2-9721. X 85, stating quellticatlons. We Need Men Over IS for all kinds of (x ospaclally landscaping and ------ handling, Aton.—FrI., 8-5 and S 8:30-12. APPLY AT U S. ------- AAANPOWER INC., vrorlds largest temporary WHEEL AND UNDER-HOOD AAAN tor auto reconditioning work, full-” » employment. Call 334-077S. YOUNG MAN FOR MECHANICS helper, minimum age 18 yrs. old, $1 per hr. to start. FE 2-6687. YOUNG MAN who Is capable of typing and willing to learn transportation business apply to Norwalk Truck Lines, 853 Woodward Ave., Pon- ly year i in 14W B YOUNG MEN. LOADERS AND drivers for rubbish trucks, steady work, report 8 a.m., reef ot 653 S. Eaton Rd., Birmingham, Mich. evening. Fo Pace, OR 3 BABYSITTER. FE 4-0672, BET. 6-9 BABYSITTER NEEDED MONDAY, 5 COUNTER GIRL WHO ' d assembling, personal- CURB GIRLS, 18 ( ply j »6 Dixie. CEMETERY PUBLIC RELATIONS work. If you «re not satisfied with your present earnings you should answer this ad. Present employes' earning $150 per week and totter. We need 2 neat appearing women 0 get a COSMETICIAN, MUST BE EXPER-lenced, references, full time or part time, lee Drug, 4390 Dixie CURB GIRLS WANfED. MUST BE over 18. Blue Cross and other fringe benefits. Apply In person only. 2000 Opdyke Rd. Blue Star CURB WAITRESS Night shift, uniforms and i furnished, must be -----------' Apply in person. TED'S BLOOMFIELD HILLS ce!* ^eply. DENTAL secretary State age and experience, typing-end bookkeeping knowledge neces-sary. Reply Pontiac Pres; Box ”•* u c n I H I. ASSISTANT .EXPERI-• ence not necessary. Reply Pontiac Press Bex 16.________ DRUG AND COSMETIC CLERK. Full or part afternoons.' RUSs's Country Drugs. 4500 Elizabeth Lake DRUG CLERK, MUST BE EXPER-lehced, references, • full time or part time. Lee> Drug, 4390 Dixie EXPERIENCED C Dart time. Appiv EXPERIENCED GIRLS PHONE soliciting FROM OUR PONTIAC OFFICE, $1.25 PER HR. ---------call MR. MCLEOD ) ST/kRT, J 5-6762.' EXPERIENCED FOUNTAIN WOM-da^ shift or afternoons. Also drug clerk, some sales experience preferred. Will train days of afternoons. Union Lake Drug, 8050 Cooley Lake Road. EM 3-4134. Kve e P'W**"* mSS: neceiiery. Will .•^ovemenl, set' afy**and^ bmn. pXor pert-time. i every ( \AjypSi. X'wly To HOUSEKESI^iIR. S dTyrU.^'SSln Tr.Steu'! 682-3787. Week, exp. only. FE 4-724L________^ NO tnv«»imwu4 siw vv» delivery. Free Training, ,i^51.“'2'.T6; HOUSEWIVES TO TRAIN' AS SALEWOMEN Your enlh()tlasm and _______ __________J tha place ot experience, several sv on regular weekly scnedules. You will receive a la ary | commission and to eligible lor complete program ot empio Please apply directly to our Pontiac store In the Tel-Huron Shopping Center, Telegraph at Huron. kind and reliable OLDE^R women for child care nights, da-talls. FE 4-1286. KITCHEN HELP, EVENING WORK, full time. Rocco's. 5171 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains. KRESGES SALES UDIES Needed at once, paid vacations, Christmas bonus etc. Apply et - 6620 S. Telegraph, Birmingham, NURSE ASSISTANT FOR leneral Practice Physician's of-Ice. Give personal data, refer- ----- experience and expected salary. Reply Pontiac FOR MOTEL HOUSEKEEP-lAI 6-1848. RECEPTION- M A N I C _ . ------------- 1st wanted. Philips Hair Design, 332-9279. MIDDLE AGED LADY TO COOK for a recreational farm at Meta-mora, live In, ret. CaH OL 1-0578. MIDDLEAGED LADY FOR LIGHT Apply 60 Ogemaw. FE MOTHER'S HELPER FOR PLEAS- 1, TV, references. MA 6- OPENINGS FOR EXPERIENCED sales girl. Lion Store, Miracle Mile, must have transportation, apply 10-12 A “ WASWER WANT-totwelff^fc^^ _ ...w facet to your personality—fo have another IDENTITY besides --------"—id mother?" Please apply directly to our store In the Tei-Huron shopping center, Pontiac, Tuesday through Wednesday during store hours. Miss Karla, manager, w*' RECEPTIONIST FOR MEDICAL laboratory, full or part time available, must to 20 years of age or older, able to type. Must have high school education and drivers license. Call after 2 p - -- RELIABLE BABY SITTER PLUS housework, 6 days, own transrar-fation, over 25 yrs., $25 a Week. 852-3417 after 4 - - REGIONAL MANAGER ' Every once In a while a rare opportunity comes along with an outstanding national organization. jCoppercraft Guild otters you this type, of career. Position requires 'ganlzetlon. Weekly guaren- fhe details. Write: Mr.. E. T. Doty, Coppercraft Guild, Fourth and West Water Streets, Taunton, Massachusetts. SALES PERSONNEL, Saleswoman PART-TIME FOR BETTER JUNIOR SPORTS ** WEAR OPERATION, EXPERIENCED ONLY. NADON'S, MIR- SECRETARY FOR BIRMINGHAM sales office of OEM Auto Parts Mfg. Mature and efficient able to run teletype and have own tres-portatlon. Send resume to Pontiac Press Box No. 88. STEADY WOMAN FOR HOUSE-work, must have transportation, 1 day per week to start. EM 3 TELEPHONE WORK Openings for 4 girls, no experlenco necessary, $45 a week guarantee plus Incentives and bonuses, . 52 weeks a year. Apply lo-4 p„m. 10 W. Huron, Room 319,________ WAITRESSES, DAY oN NIGHT shift, experienced In food and !ry"S*'b^625l2W***'^''** Waitress, Friday and Satur-dey nights. Behind tor Sun. n 9 p.m. 682-5872. WAITRESS — ““wanted," ----- GIno's Restaurant, Woodward. 338-1338. WAITRESS Dining room, day and nights. A |ily In parson-only. TED'S , BLOOMFIELD HILL^t WAITRESS FULL AN5~PART TI'mI also dishwasher.. 1765 N^, Telegraph _ at Jilxle.jAgply in persM. y - WAITRESSES Good wages. Hospltsllzatlon. WAITRESS, NEAt'aPPUraNCE,' apply Dunlap's Dinars 623 Auburn Rd., FE 5-9862. A. •ry. Plfutv * imd ccupl*. oo«d Mlary p ilshtd apt. Send reiutna ■lac PrtM Box No. 17.___________ Wt HAV« A FANTASTIC 6pIAa-tlon going. Now la the time to get ____ ™ _________ In 1 »— ... tantaatic earnlngat You can u our drganizatlen. Part time atart, houMwIvet weleom* i appointment, FI 8-S411. Phone FB.................. ed inatitute, 1140 S. Michigan Chicago, iF«605 DRRSSMAKINa, TAILORINO AND alteratlona. Mra, Bodell, Ft 4Wi. MBN'a AND LaOiIIS' AiTiRA> tiona. OR 3-51M, Waterford. REMOSBLINO, TAILORINO Atib fur work, Edna Warner. FR $-2S36. A LOVELY HOME FOR CONVALES-cent, firat floor. OR 3-OW4. 6pifllN68 AY >6NtUC LAtffc -----Home. 673-5142. stonvcroft nursino home -ocheater — LIcenaed, — Nlo^ng and TrvcUng ALCOA, KAISER SIDINO ______5LIN0 and ADDITIONS Kraft Siding & Roofing FREE ESTIAAATBS FB 4-S4M KAISER ALCOA ALUMINUM ilD-INO, AWNINOS, gutters, STORM WINDOWS - DOORS, PA- BROKEN ASPHALT DRIVES RE- palre^ —' "------ —‘ —**'' Free nWJ^VSi''' DRIVBWAVS,''courts, ETC, aMV aixe, contractor, FE 1-2614. FREE EStiMATikS I^aI^KING LlStS arid driveway. OR •*-*” FREE ESTIMATES ON DRIVEWAYS and parking lota. You may 852-4110 until 9 p.m. Johnstone Wall Repair Crackgd and leaking basement wa 33S-9W4 ........... 8W-8 -----®oSiTWSAH¥i^~ - - • -ished PE 44)777 . Generatora—RMUlatora—Startera Botteries $5.95 Exchange Blacfc Uyliig BulMlRg NlMfirnixotioR Spannoa and Son, call collect 437-2811 HOME IMPROVEMENTS Kitchens, forrr)lca counter additions, plumbing remodeled baths, Recre- ----- ------- raising, ...T, .... ...ctrical. per cent guarantee HOUSERAISINO / general cement i rum. FE 1-8S43. CARPENTRY-ALUMINUM SIDING OLJ^ ^a^lng, 40 years experience. FE CorpEt Service-CleaRiag Driven Training Enveitra«gli)ng AEG EAVB8TROUGH, OACVA-, nixed and aluminum; Free .eatl-matea. 8T3-7458. A AND G EAVESTROUGH, OAl-vanlxed and aluminum. Free estimates. 821-7488. MS.S GUTTEft COMPAf^Y' tifnatee. 6734888. |. Free e •REE ESTIMATES ON {?II’cTfTO»."‘- JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING sanding and finishing, 28 years experience. 312-8878. BROKEN CONCRETE AND PAVING brick for retaining walls, patios, walkways, outside fireplaces. Oakland Fuel and Paint Co., 45 Thomas, PE 54188. MfeRlbiJ ------------- delivered. 2«1 C 'patios. NEIDRICK BUILOIN6 SERVICE -Home, Oarage, Cabinets, Additions. FHA TBR85S. FE 44808. TALBOTT LUMBER Glass installed In doors dows. Complete building si 1028 Oakland Ave.______ BH^Sternge COAn Wide van lines MITH MOVING FB 4-4884 PaintlHg nnrf' jiecwntln^ AAA' PAINTING AND OECORA-tlog, 28 years exp. Reas.- Free timates. Ph. UL 2-1388. , iNfg^iSC IIPrElToRr aTTso spray painting. Frad estimates. 8824812._________^_____________ ' oimiDi. Pianajvntng WIEOANyL A-1 TUNING AND REPAII^lfl Oscar Schmidt______________FE 2 FOR GARDENS AND LAWNS. PLUMBING, HEATiNO BEWUrJ. ---------boljer^. ^nvemljn^ Rtumbing 8. Heating. REHlBiEgBipnwnt_____ DWARE POLISHERS Wallpaper Stsotner Floor senders, polishers, hand' senders, rumace vacuum cleaiws. Oakland Fudi A Paint, 438 /Or-chard Lake Ave. FB 54150. M MOVING SERVICE/ RBASON-rates. FE 5-1438, FB 2-2808. Bob's Van Service EXPERT ROOFING, SIDING AND gutters. FB Mr' ________ NEW ROOFING, HOT TAR gency service. Insurance roof re- Rubbiili Haaiiiy RUBBISH HAULING, GARDEN plowing, and manure MA 5-1828 or OR 34588. Sand, Orovel, D|rt GREENWOOD LAWN SERVIC and Equipment Co. 874-1184. ....soiL. etsek" biftriXRB. Gravel. Also grading. OR 4.1848. Hi-H Service _____r AND OUARANTEL, 818.88 up. Obal TV and Rad Tree Trimming Service A. E. DALBY TREE SERVICE 'Idiae-stump removal. Elm spray-Ihg-trlmmlnr ff 4.%r/v Ihg-trlmmlng. FE 5-3008, FE 5^3025. Ban a LARRY'S TREE tRI*A-ming and removaj, FE 2-8448, TnicB|ig LiNQ AND RUBBISH, NAME nr price. Any tliiia. FE 84085. LIGHT MOVINgV TRASH HAULED. ling. DRAYTON- IGHT ------------- -- trash hauling. 882-8840. light AND HEAVY TRUCKING. Trade Rental Trucks to Rent Industrial Tractor Co. 82 S. WOODWARD S 4-0481 FB 4-14 Open Pally including Sunday THOAAAS UPHOLSTERING 4488 W. WALTOiT BLVO. FE 5-8888 BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls and windows. Reas. Satlslac-tlon guaranteod. FB'2-1831. WeiTMHiiig Windew^^i^^^ DAVID HART WINDOW CLEANING Today's ^st Buys Are Found in THE PONTIAC PRESS WANT AD PA0ES iitey's Landscaping Grading — plowing — rototllllr ■■■■■ dARbER FLOWING an5 VarD any aliOi OR* 4-080S after i. Ceiwalw ~3t [NiNbS • - Jrslng Ho_______ •RACTICAL NURSi WILL CARE tor patient In her homo. 338-1248. lOOM FOR MAL# bA rtrtALl! patients 24-hour cart. Apply to 2330 Hummer Lake Road, Orion-vRla, Mich, or Phono NA 74223. rates Equipped. UL l-tm. V*-3518. ' Fbl lT& hT' MAbLiM(S;"tWAlft • black •• • -------- dirt. 882-81 HAULING AND MOVlIfl • ■ PE 8-8383. Paintiny A Oeceratlag 23 . . INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR ^^ntjng. Free estimates. EM A-l>AINtlNO An6~ PAPER HANGING eAi-EKiBN«.BU « n L, parvring, free estimates. 8824774. ERlfERf >AINYing AftbinSCT- I, paper removed. OR 3-7354. bRiRFii BROfHiRS**'. Commercial—Residential Inting and Decorating OR 3 iNting and paper HAiiGl— II work guaranteed.’ L. 1. Seybert 7100 Redmond Road. I N O, m/aLL PAINTING, PA .........- washing. Tupper, OR 3-7081. Teievision-Radio .Service 24 HAVE YOUR RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE YOU SHOP Trained Service Men, Reasanab prices. Free Tubs Tatting. ■ CALIFORNIA DRIVE-AWAY Planning M go westT Drive' bn* o our sharp lata modal can. Wa wll Wanted diHdreate Bear^ 28 LICENSED HOME. Mk. OR 3-0427. Wanted Heaw^^ AUCTION SALE E V t R Y 8ATUR- ISED OPfME FI portab/a typewril ness macninet. FURNITURE, FILES —lar and other t— OR 34787 Or WANTED CHILD'S PLAY HOUSE. Must ba raasenable. UL 2-4708. WE BUY Old gold, plaYiNUm AND ESTATE JEWELRY. Con-nelly's Jewelara, 18 W. Huron. Waatod to Ront~^ Si 0 MINISTERS WOULD share homo, rent apart-East sida of Pontiac. 2 OR 3 BEDROOMS UNFURNISHED HOUSE WITH REASONABLE RENT - FOR FATHER AND TWO UAUGHTERI GOOD REFERENCES __________ MUST be near bus route - AND IN PONTIAC - WANT BEFORE summer, would LIKE A OARAGE OR BASEMENT-PLEASE CALL FE 4-1788 ANYTIME OR FR 24181 EXT. 270 BEFORE 5. terasted In rental with option to purchase, particularly II located either on lake or with lake privileges. Radius 10 miles from Birmingham. Desirable rental maximum 8250 unless excptionel prop-rty. company kelhrenees. Cell Mr. f:3t A.M. to -S P. 1 4-5100. Ext. no. Eyes. A 33 WILL SHARE “own Yransp' to right party, FOM family VACATION Ctfi Lake — baaulilui grounds -boat — swimming - float - awing — sleeps , 2 adults — 2 or 3 children, 875 weakly. 882-2764. iNORTHERNTr/TK E FRONtTOIr. ' month, at Hub- Warren Stout, Realtor 180 N. Opdyka Rd. FB 84188 MUL1 IPLd**‘(!(TINO SERVICE all~Ta5h "FHA or Gl aquitlas. Wo will ■ ‘h Immodlataly. Call oally Reoms With Beard 43 near 'bUs.‘ home PRIVI- casR 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS - HOMES , EQUITIES ' WRIGHT 382 OAKLAND AVE, FB 2414t Rent Stores 4$ ,.HAS REAR DRIVB-II Dixie Hwy., OR 3-1381. $t6rE : "GE^ RESULTS WE NEED listings. Call ua today Oaiit Office SoOCe for oulck sals and ton” market DON WHITE, INC. 2881 Dixie Hwy. ____Phono 874-0484 reOor partridge "IS THE BIRD TO 8BB" SELL TRADE OR BUY - CAlL George Blair for quick rasults. OR J-1708,._________ ____________ TRAOk OR EXCHANOte" listings WANTED CLARK REAL ESTATB-FB 3-7888 ) X 40' MODERN BUILDING IN tha new FOUNTAINEBLBAU r ' ZAI also 30K70' with full bason RAY O'NEIL, Realtor E 3-7103 OR 44427 lOO'S'QUARE F'EET AtTRJkCYiVl office space, el $185 per month on 2-year lease, on W. Huron St. lust east of Tol-Huron Shopping Csntar. K. G. Hampstead, Realto Huron. FB 4-8284._____ CONDITIONED 28x30 BUILD- WANT TO SELL? PROSPECTS GALORE JAMES A. TAYLOR, Realtor 7732 Highland RiL- (M58) pR 44308 W/(NTHD 2-FAAMtV INtOMi ¥6K CASH.- PAUL JONES REALTY Ing With lull baaament. Corner Good parking. Located at 282 TalMraph. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor PE 3-7103______________ OR 44427 lERN ONB-RObM b 15 par month, Includl... lights. Bateman Realty _________ 377 8. Talagr--" Pontiac,— ---------- Rent f*1y- SOTob!" ASSOCL Apnrtmenti-Furnished 37 154 N. AND 2..... RbOM......liip'icTINt' apta. an Pontiac Lake and Highland Rd. All utlTltlaa Included. Ph. m. Lilay, 87311180, 2 ROOMS, CLEAN, ADULTS ONLY, ROOMS, CLEAN, UTILITIE Adults, -no drinkers. Reference Huron-Telegrtph aTea. 334-2W, koOMS AND BATH, REFER-ance required, 334-1887. erea. Ratarances. 885 month. Call ...................... FE 8-3888. S-ROOM UF Waterford t.. nishod. 8110 pi R APARTMENT, . All utilities fur-■ month. FE 3-7I7I. LAkB ORION, IkkE FRONT FLAT, S rooms and bath, utilities Included, adults only, no pets. MY 2-4881. 6M~BWR-55M~r-irew'tufffih The Fontainebleau Apartments FE 5-0936 FE 8-8082 ukPEk ROOMS AND BATH. iST FLOOR MODERN 3 ROoW ■ - _____ FE 44068,_________________^ ROOMS AND BATH, DECORAT-- refrigerator, * dren, apply at "The Pinfry," a;m. ■ 3 p.m., 107W N. Sagina 6 r60M$, DOWNTOWN, flO PE CLARKSTON LAKEVIEW APART- ments. Modern 2 ----- *’ " per mo. Include! frigerator an'* * Adults only, and MIS. UN N 4-7223. CONCORD PLACE LUXURY APARTMENTS BLOOMFIELD HILLS ADDRESS •Immediate Occuponcy » 'Tha Ulilmata In Private Living' One and 2. bedrooms balconies — beam ceilings. Children Invited. Near churches, shopping, receratlon. V4 mile to Chrysler Freeway. 2 FURNISHED MODELS OPEN FOR YOUR INSPECTION DAILY AND SUNDAY 12 TO 7 RENTALS FROM $150 _____ briv ward to Square lOka to Opdyko Road. Wt Ing at the c CALL PE 24818 or Ml 64500 GREATER BLOOMFiaD REAL ESTATE CO. OPEN 9 to 9 DAILY oated swimrhipg pool, shuffle-oard courts, putting .green a, formica cupboards, till 'laste/ed walls, oak floors lew I- and 2-bedroom, DE brand new . ______________ . _ LUXE apartments. Drive out West Huron to Cass Lake Road, tufH right to OPEN signs. Adults on|y. No pets. Ranting Nowl Sec them THE FONTAINEBLEAU APTS.' FE 84092 FE 5-0836 COURT apartments Y DETAIL FE 8491 40 X 60 NEW BLOCK BUILDING, brick front. Past advancing area on west M-59. Suitable ter atora or offices. Will lease all or dividt, J. C. HAYDEN, REALTOR EM 34604 11)751 HlghlBfid Rd. (M88) Sale H^vt_____49 BEDROOM, SCAR OARAGE. Fenced yard, 86,950. 67342«. 2-BEDRbOM; CORNER LOT EaSI of Joalyn, Inautatad, full bsmt.; fenced, m-car garage, FE 84203 2-FAMILY integrated in one of Pontiac's nicest fast location!. Can ba purchased FHA terms with 5'A por I mortgage. . H. C. NEWINGHAM UL 2-3310 ---------jSfACIis------- Gardener's' Haven with flov everywhere, plus 6-bedroom ho basemont, garage and atoi bam. 83,500 down. TRADE. NIX REAL ESTATE UL 2-2121 UL 2-5375 IME, EXCELLENT 3 AND 6-BEDROOOM homes, $12,- ybur lot or ______n Bldg,, Co. OR 34191. 4-BEDkOdM RANCH, PULL BASt- Pav^ street. Dishwasher, ----------- built-in oven and ranee. 1278 Ash-over Drive. (Adams Road Blvd.) $25,990. UL 2-5592. f In Waterford, 810,500. 474- II FE 8-3958. 5-Room House - Keega ■ VERY GOOD CONDITION Gas heat, fulF'basement, 2-car garage, storms and screens are combination aluminum, wall-to-wall carpeting, glSssed-ln porch, CALL NOW - OnIy 87,500. JACK LQVELAND 2100 Caas Lake Road 802-1255 5 ROOMS NEAR WISNER, basement, garage. REALTOR PARTRIDGE . "18 THE BIRD TO SEE" -ROOM HOME, 1 BEDROOMS, lull bath, alao W bath oft mar— bedroom, aopsrata dining ns full basement, oil heal. 2VMar garage. Large landscaped lot with good garden spot. Phone Al's Lai scapln^mornings, FB 44220* : Body, 97 S. f $65 A /ilbNTH / 8es_prlncipal, Interest, tSMs aluminum ca porch, ft you In. 673-5234 neat , 2-bedroom ■ all ' aluminum home,. large lot bnd nice porch. 8300 Is total down '-----------'* IILLTOP REALTY $450 DOWN No closing cost for this 2-|)odroom aluminum sided lull basam^'' horiie with gas heat. Close -West Bloomfield High School. Full |»rica $6,450. , j; J. JOLL REALTY / FE 2-3488 or ' 882-0: Wyman Lawli______Manager ----OlfTi-TOt kARe^T" PREVIEW SALE PRICED AT ONLY SIO.MO ROOM." full basamant. "Quality Built" on your lor or ouri. W. H. BASS multiple listing service BASIC BILt 3, or 4 badroon- ......,.n aiding, rough plumbing aioetrlc complete, full beMmant, ...... down on your lot, furnish matoriola to finish, ARTHUR C. COMPTON i SONS ....Huron ... OR 1-7414 Evas. OR 1-4888. Fi »7050 BUILT IN 1980 2 • atBkOaM. large paneled living room, 14x18, kitchen 12x13, utility, large corner lot, air cooler, Stonsv Lako. 27.500 terms. OA fr1588. 'BUY A SWIFT HOME NOW Com« Out and See ThEm Today! 2810 S. LAPEER RD. .fE. 3-7637 n bonus on North elEa, alum. EY OWNlfk 3-badroom ranch, near Union Lake, Immediate posiestlon. This buy can't be beat. EM 344». cOoikd bova 2-badroom ranch parched on lot. 115x150'. Carport, storage------- paved atraat, across from grade 852.48 month plus tax — ---- anea. HAGSTROM REALTOR, 4900 w.- Huron, OR 44358, avas. call DRAYTON PLAINS Excellent location, cloaa to avary-2- badrm., 2-car garage, Hrlum. tanead vard. 'storms POfITIAC REALTY Baldwin Ava. pb M27S REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BlEP TO EBB" reerMtion .room, 2VS-car Mraga, vi-Kiw lot. By owner. Call OL 1-1748 afttr 8 p.m. , H6Mi Aif b IOilRlil’~r Zonad eommerelar Lot IJ* x 8-r«om rernodalad hoy8»i apWa tor [RYI HURRYT 5 hornet In axcallant X”SoWwN*'’|tAY“! Pontiac do not have to ba a veteran ) *’Vl1,W. Cornell "88,000. 200 W. Cornell 8,800. ’2S»;Mi!S: . 247 W. Longfellow 8,500. We have the key'- HURPYl RAY O'NEIL, Realtor ,C LK. Rf M.L.S.' bath, ua heat, i utliify'Toom, low .......... laymant .......... .3M.58I8 JUDAH lake AREA-3 EibRddM bl-laval. 1144184. Low down payment buy bedroom home. Out of to* er seys sell. Priced at Last tenants livsd hare for at $85 per month. This . will pey for Itself. Dan Ecimonds Realtor Ma 4-4011 325 Pontiac Trait Walled Lake BLOCH B^., ^^1288. NEIGHBORHbOb, OitLY saw oown, 2 bedrooms, largo " • Ing room, aepsrata dining rc breakfast noox, full basement, list. A.» 00," REAGAN Mixed Area 3-BEDROOM RANCH e yurs old but looks Ilk basamant. Many axtri pet, etc, Only $12,200 w NICE 3 - BEDROOM HOME, will V, Is bargain at 87,450 u mant, Earaga and only 810,800. Call Mrs. . FE 2-8412 870 W. Huron MIXED BARGAINS SELEa YOUR HOMESITE NOW ZERO DOWN OR TRADE 01 - FHA - VA Office Open Daily, Sunday MODELS OPEN DALY 2 ta 6 ’ 8 A.M. ta 8 m. 317 WEST HOPKINS PHONE 333-7555 MICHAEL'!. REALTY we 1-4200 UN u SAKE ALL HER DREAMS COME TRUE. Look at -------------- styled beautiful i Clarkslon *• — Ck UMdroom i 0 a beige , ell s..-,- . .-he most tdbulous country ;hon you'll over see. Complete n to llreplace and Indoor F-- ... ... ...y I, _____ ____ ____ garages. Solesi It 6017 Bluagrsss, Franklin Blvd. Area CITY OF PONTIAC CHEAPER THAN RENT $55.00 MONTH Excludlnt^ Taxes arid lufurahca $47.00 DOWN RAY O'NEIL, Realtar 1520 Pontiac Lk, Rd. Open 10 to 6 OR 4-0427 M.L.S. FB 4-1704 MODEL HbMt NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME **ll?*Jlnlsh. 3 — , — rooms on Frembas Straet batwun Dixie Hvry. and Hatchary Rd. ARTHUR C. COMPTON 8. SONS NO DOWN kAYAriiNT NO MORTGAGE COST NO PAYMENT FIRST MONTH fiJII baa Vltchan < . —- - .' room, I „... model at 678 Klnnav ni rjina. Optri I to S daily i Sunday. HAYDEN NEW HOMES BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS NO MONEY DOWN ' Trl-laval or ranch starter ho on your lot. AAodel open 104. 6. FLATTLEY, BLDR. 3614881_________Bvaa. EM 1 NEW I I4'xi8' family n nd modam kitaian aluminum, priced at s la btlck and aluminum. Wa ft two of these priced at 813,-'"h 81,330 ------- :i?h OPEN ^76 RC&Jiltl IJMdroom lakt front. 84 fott afor, axtarjor antique brick ilumlnum. Hugs IMng* room dining apace, m batha, aps-cioui kltction, bullt-ln oven end cofTiDitft horn# in ®vtfy ci#?#iis 8l8,m with cash to rnortgage. Win accept trade. Dixie Hwy. to foot of Waforford HIM. ■ BLAIR REAL ESTATE < OR 3-1708 1 badrooma, living room with natural tlraplaee, dliiing room, break- ?aVaMll}l(l««y.t.?3;i naOr Washington Jr. High. Lulii R. Tripp, Realtor 75 West Huron llroat FB 54161 (Evanlr 2 bedrooms and dan. Exfra k ffiln'V^'ovrinW Glassed In porch, peilo and gari 821,800. OWnar. MA 6-1033. REALTOR partridge "IS THE BIRO TO 0 sag" ROCHESTER AREA 3-badroom brick ranch, tlraplaee, garage, V, kcra. 118,500. 24odroom brick In villa BSS. ■ ^---------- riTia^, ^ I bam, 118,500. .n home, 1888 model, built-m-bath, big garage, 818,750. m exocutlvo^s nome, 8 rooms, acre, axcallant locstlon. 844,800. MILTON WEAVER, INC., Roalfo 118 W. Unlvaralty SECLOSION Tbadw rage, of Lake. 8 In trade. HAGSTROM 4800 W. HURON,. Eyanlnoa call OR your Mull RBALfOf SYLVAN VILLAGE ST. MIKE'S story trama, 4 hut. 88/SoiMU. 850 plus taxei tor HILLTOP REALTY SYLVAN village. uNlo^ Lake Aks/R ' kkidk rinch, 3 ^reoma, large jamTly rom 2 brick flreptacai, 2 full Vacant-Waterfprd High " som, Mk lloora, 2Kar g nice lot on rivgr, $850 .. In on FHA tarmi. $13,800- SL HILLTOP REALTY 87142 WATEkFORD-tLARkStbN AREA NO DOWN PAYMi NO CLOSING C09 TRADE 7-ROOM, HOUSE - .CLOSE TO GENERAL I^OSPIT"' ------- basEment>^uto NT-^OTOMATIC HEAT ___ CONSIDER TRADE ON HOUSETRAILER - LAND CON--TRACT ETC. ’ WRIGHT FE 24141 Eves. 8ftor S, OR 14458 toll froa raOd, ifrket. .RORABAUGH 1'/i baths, largo £*1*04..- .. ■||y. Vacant. 111,300. FB M083 .... WILLIAMS LAKB PRIViLBOtS' 8 rooms and bath, full basamar nict lot, $7,000, S700 down. AL PAULY, Realtor . 4516 Dixie, rear OR 3-3800 FE 3-7444 3 BEDROOMS TRI-LEVELS RANCHES , FanSSfRl! FROM $10,500 WITH 81,080 DOWN J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor " 4404 10781 Highland Rd, In North Pontiac NEW 3^DR00M HQN|E $29.00 DOWN («y|ih apaclal Plan for wgrfcars) "EVERYONE CAN BUY" WIDOWS, DIVORCES^ aV|N FEATURING! CHOI«,LaCATIONS SAVE NOW BUILDER'S aOSE-OUT NOTHING DOWNI 3 Badroomi Full Basement $61 MONTHLY excluding taxes and Iniuranco Furniture Finished Caolnaiha . Storms and Screens Avallablo SPOTLITE BUILDERS FE 448H 37 N.E, Blvd. A-1 BUYS Clarkston Sehoolji 3,bedroom brick front " ‘ rooma, large lota, i $350, monthly paymo WIDOWS, DIVORCEES, EVEN PERSONS WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS ARB O.K. WITH US. SEPARATE DINING ROOM Dally 8 toJi__i JlW; 3 to 8 CALL ANYTIMB DAILY ONLY4LEF3: Kettering'High 2-badroom ranch, full basement, 2-' Mteda rKrtatlon room* itortod In bawment (lomt moforlfll P'LiJillHanST'naU. 81^800, 10 par can! down Ptoa.eaato Near Shopping Center area, knotty pihe walls, 2 fire-PlacM, lot 128x380. PlaM n^ modarnixing and redacoreting. ig»-aonsbla often will U eoMidered. iSo) ""monthly uymantt' Includl^ taxes end Insurence about 880. — WATERFOXD XIAITT IRWIN (NORTH END) - Miedroom ,brkk' and dining roam eembine-Hxiem kltdien and «ar » (NORTH SUBURBAN) ~ 3-bed> room bungalow with ancland front porch, full baaemant with auto~ matie gas IWat and hat water. Situated an„ approximately ] with fruit trSas. C- ’-"---‘ (IT., MIKE'S ARiA) - l-bad- (RilORT PROPERTV) - Naif Roscommon, 10'acres Qf land and cabin with 2-car garage. Situated' In tha heart of vacation lai"* «*'" « hunting and flihing. Price sonable. Will ti - nd, Oogd ' liK- OPPICE OPEN SUNDAY MULTIPLE LISTIK--- GEORGE IRWIN. INDAY 1 TO 8 M S-TMl 1- ■'.■A*' ...V ■ r<- TWENTY-EIGHT ■'.:E!l55S5L TempletoB' K. 1. Ttmpitfon, Realtor, IW OrcWtf um WpWI m-OMO De-Duxe., Iranc* to ipMlout^l to porttctkm. ^ondiomo throi' ciwt*Kl bwtroomi. Tho 13x17 ------ladgerock ExpOMd boMmenl ■— GEiS OFF BALDWIN, looking tor ■ iharp homo? Thli ono It o ploaiuro to - '^jrpotlng, hordwood f-*"* I, batamoni with rocn ompoct kicthofl. gat — "‘ling, ownlngi, t,„vi It. Tormt orrongod. Mi ACBB8, only 1» r N.w. of city. S largo Carpoting In living roi lar^ pleti^ra window, I anomr ------- - - - heat. Double garage and a huge workthopi SEE THIS BEAUTIFUL Attractive... flatted braeieway and garage, aka privllaget on WatkInt Lake II add to your enloymeni of fhit Largo kitchen, platlerod j *K.j| hardwo^ floort. cent down, plut EARLY POSSES- walli and beautiful Only -- •sai‘ Humphries FE 2-9236 If no antwer, call FE ^S»M n N. Telegraph Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Clarksfon VillagB with fireplace, full dining r tun room, breakfast room, llghtful kitchen, m baths. menl. Completely carpeted except ■ " "" im. Conveniently located on "y landscape lot - --- street. Immaculate- lures. Ottered at $23,000, terms. Elizabeth Lake States While trimmed In block. This 2 bedroom home has full basement fireplace and large carpeted llvin room and fireplace Ip basemen recreation room, hot wafer heat glass paneled patio, I'/V-car qarage fenced and landscaped yard. $1S,JOO. Terms. Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor 344 S. Telegraph FE 37140 EVES. FE 3-7303 RHODES LOTUS LAKE, Ideal lake frc home, 3 bedrooms, full basemei 2-car garage, beautiful shady f WILLIAMS LAKE, beautiful ranch home, attached garage, property fenced, SO' canal frontage. $1S,f00, LAKE FRONT LOT, 1 OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 5 ALBERT J. RHODES, BROKER FE g-230S 351 W. WALTON FE 5-4713 HIITER NEAR CASS LAKE - the t .. tive home. 4 bedrooms, carpeted living and dining room, 2 fireplaces, lull basement with bar In recreation room, breezeway, attached 2-car ga- WATER FRONTAGE -rooms and bath, large II carport, city water and PRICE REDUCED $2,000 - f room — 2nd fireplace, room ■ — Intercom "— 2Vs-car garage plus Call nowl - $24,00 eider trade. BRAND NEW andT ' 3 bedrooms — gas heat and attached 2-car garage — Its nestled on a 100x120' lot — $13,400 with $1,350 down — plus mortgage costs. FRUSHOUR & STRUBLE REALTORS MLS 393P Elizabefh Lake Rd. FE 8-4025___________FE 'BUD' Close-In Suburban close to bus; excellent condition and featuring big living room with fireplace, slate vestibule, dining room, eating ares In kitchen, .laundry room off kitchen, breezeway and rear porch, ful landscaped ground $2I,50( Priced Rent Beat^ ONLY llrM-down on this cozy 3-bedroom brick terrace, handv north side location, near bus and school; Includes separate dining room, full basement, gz" heat and hot water. By appoln "Bud" Nicholie, Realtor 49 Mt. Clemens St. FE, 5-1201 After 6 P.M. FE 5-0198 GAYLORD dressing room off master room, carpeting. This home nestled among stalely shade Irt— Lovely view. $14,990: Terms. Call vety view. $1 E 0,9493 or 7 WANT A NEW HOME? ( plans. Quality builder. All f ing arranged. Small acreage _________ able. Call MY 2-2821 or FE 8- Flint Lake Orlo LAWRENCE W. CAYLORD Broadway and Flint, MY 2-2821 or.FE 8-9493 Lake Orion, Mich. KENT ^EST SIDE - 3-bedroom hi , -fpOod location. 22-ff. carpeh ing room, bath with showi ff. family room. Roomy k QH heat. Garage, handy t fidw^Af .*500 WU^'$2,500 n6rTH suburban - 3-bedroom h^e on large lot. Good cupboard space in kitchen. Full basement, ^1 h«at. 88,950 with $1,500 dowri. LAKE FRONT Nice 4-bed’room r -j. Nice 4-oeoroom . ....... suburban lake. Car- I living room and dining . Picture window. Tiled bath, heat. 2-car, garage. See It now' floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 plxlp Hwy. at Telegraph ,FB 2-0123 or FE 2-1984 ' tie, 3 bedrooms. Car- peted living r Full priio $4,900, U5 per month. GILES REALTY CO. TIMES places. Carpeted ai Perfectly landscaped. $300 down plus, costs. CLARKSTON VILLAGE Brick rancher In newer residential area. 3 extra size bedrooms, 20' 18' farm size kitchen. ;ra?.*r! ! plus costs or take over 4W mortgage, or trade lor horse farm. Hurry on this SMALL FARM Well located, 4W acres I Ortonwille area, good .----- — A well-maintained 4-bedroom modern home with enclosed sun porch, barn and other bulldipgs. $13,9M, d garden » TIMES REALTY 5219 DIXIE HWY. MLS 4744)394 OPEN 9 TO 9 ______ Val-U-Way NEAR OAKLAND AVE. 3-bedropm ranch, large kitchen, utility room, gas heat, fmced backyard. Full price only $7900. $300 down, FHA terms. ORION TWP. . - family size kitchen and utility room, attached garage, gas heat, large lot. $9500, $3» down and only $79 per mo. Including taxes and Ins. OAKLAND UNIVERSITY AREA ------------ ring i---------- ------ area, kitchen, utility, full bath, gas heat. Ready to move Into. Large lot 40x200. Only $8850, $250 down, $49 per mo. on land contract. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR F.E 4-3531 345 Oakland Open 9-7 CLARK JOSLYN AREA - Plastered walls — full basement — IV] baths — gas heat — Price only $13,900 — terms. LAKE FRONT - Union Lake beautiful lake frontage —,nl( sandy beach — cottage style ■ 50x150 - Price I I — $125 mo. HURON GARDENS — 3 CLARK REAL ESTATE W. HURON FE 3-7888 ) BUY, TO SELL, TO TRADE CHEROKEE. HILLS BRICK RANCH HOME A deUghfful 3-bedroom home not too far odt and not too close in. It has all the extras that a home-loving couple " ' short years they have lived there. Now have sold their business and moving away. Many bullt-lns, such as Thermodore oven and range, abundance of cupboard space, 2 fireplaces, living room carpeted, extra lavatdry, rear yard with aluminum awning covered patio,and Anchor fenced for privacy and enfoyable summer outdoor living. Flagstone entrance hall with ledge-stone planter. When you see this It should be the end of your house- 3n*.'$22,» 9-FAMIlY INCO/^E Brick apartment building o.... west side that is a good tax refuge In many ways. You r— —"** substantial spendable it an investment of this asking $11,000 down. REALTOR PARTRIDGE “IS THE BIRD T0\SEE" DORRS BEAUTIFUL ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES. $13,950. 3-bedroom home on easy FHA terijis. .>.—■«- ........_______ healthy .......... an exclusive 40-acre Anchor fenced lake front park with club house and pure s»" beach. Summer lifeguards for yi chl.dren's protection. 2 blocks . new elementary school. Tastefully draped. Wonderful kitchen, 14'x14' with the permanent practical beauty of ceramic * " countertops. Ceramic b fordable bedrooms down, large p< eled dormitory bedroom up with built-in single beds and bull! wardrobes. A paneled recreatl have a party. Gas heat, drive and good garage. I plus closing, costs. WEST SUBURBAN in Union I ^ AND RAMBLING C frame 4-bedroom ranch style hoi plus exceptional family room, w . fireplace. Spacious living roo "^well planned kitchen with beauti cupboards and bullt-lns, bath a half, attached 2 ROCHESTER AREA. This ey pealing brick and fraifie ---- - 1,300 sq. ft. of living area and 2-car a situated on a sw enhanced by p Ing Is worth while Investigating at $18,950. Selling appointments; 2V!i baths, wonderful kitchen with gar- neighborhood of < BRICK COLONIAL. $12,950. A large 7-j-oom family home located across • frSn Oakland, Park tafth rich wall to wall carpetihp, JJreplace, teau^ , cupboards. All tiled bath, new FA I gas heat, 3-car garage. TASTEFULLY DECORATED. 3-,^-room home, $13,500, on Gl or FHA terms. 32x32' oh foundation with a hobby haven basement, with one of the nicesf paneled recrewlpn - rooms you have Over inspecTted, $1,500 air condifloned heafing system throughout. This horns Is beau- rlfiillv riernraten anri numer. tifully decorated i ous built-in features you will a mire. Must be Inspected to be a ^i> H—^^.’41' JOHNSOlSI .f?.; LAKE PRIviLIOfS, cut* 2-bedroom with possibility of third In Unfinished attic, lull basement wir heat, anclosad front porch, price 8$;950. Hurry on this ont WEST SIDE, 5-room ^story framo A. JOHNSON & SON FE 4-2533 8. TalOBraph ARRO WE BUY - WE TRADE WHY TAKE CHANCES? l-YEAR WRITTEN GUARANTEE on material and workmanship by LOCAL REPUTABLE CUSTOM BUILDER, any size, any style. Prices from 811,400 and up. Your CANAL FRONT — Newly dacoratod. This bl-level has 3 bedrooms: one with bullt-ln bunk end chest. Carpeting In living roo 2 baths, tamlly n I bargain. Owner' transferred 4-BEDROOM in ST. MIKE'S parish, *'"tr home In excellent condition, l-toSSwall carpeting, bath and W, PHONE 682-2211 5143 Cass-Ellzabeth Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE O'NEIL MODEL 4240 LEDOESTONE. You can see Our Lady of the Lakes Church and School ' I Beauty Rite model. Three-biMroom ______ . with an attached 2W-car ga-famlly room, sunken kitchen a _ ---- ------ . of fhe flnevi features of this beautiful home. You are Invited to Inspect Its fine viork--manship and quality. Drive out Dixie Highway to Waterford Post Office, turn left on Ledgestone. LET'S TALK tradC TRADING IS TERRIFIC ! of the wise ones v E7 reafton for yourself^ plus Income, here's your chancel Excellenf West i location, only a block froi Tel Hurori. With a 2-car g rage and carpeting a. 1 and out, featuring sihs, large activity handle on Land Contract. $110. a month Including taxes and r 3-bedroom t er.. Neat as a pin. $9,700. -Total Price. Down payment $70. Hurry on this oi WEST SIDE SUPREME - " 7-room English -Brick Tudor, featuring 14 x 23.4 carpeted living root- ....... landscaped, plus many more outstanding features. $21,200, closing <£sts. ABSOLUTELY NOWHERE can you ^y a 3-bedroom brick tri-level with large family room, fireplace, landscaped, paved drive, 2-car attached garage, Dor-wal to rear patio and all the extra --Z financing elder a trade. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor __J PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 9-9 OR 4-0427 M.L.S. EM 3 0531 BATEMAN Guarantees Sole of Your Present Home _____ HILLS— lust west Of Rochester nicely landscaped t Creek. .Impressive 8-room sq. ft. of living area and 4 years old. Newer than living, 2 fireplaces, family .. and a' terrific counfry-sfyled kitchen. Real suburban living In a beautiful country area. Just $27,950. with approximately $3,-000. down plus costs. Make your appointmegt. NOW. IMMEblATE- POSSESSION ALMOST NEW; Tri-Level In Highland Estates. 3 bedrooms 1'/2 baths, gas heat and electric bullt-lns In kitchen. Water, sider walks, full concrete 4driveway to oversize 2'/i Hwwt A-:' .'L ■■ . THE PONTIAC PRESS, TtJKSDAY, MAY 12. 1904 By Kate OMthnltelM Preiperly RAMBLING RANCH BeautrtuI 8-r«om rambling ranch, early American styling liullt In 1911. About 1,800 tq. ff. living rca plus attached garage. This a quality all windows double glassed, oak tiooi s, ' ils baths, ceramic tilt, natural ledge-rock heat-o-lator, fireplace In Dvina room. 3 bedrooms, bullt-ln dining rgom an diarge pah-recraatlon rroom, ulll'ty • badch well 15x30', ,, .........J willow tree, good sandy beach. $1950 zjgwn to magic '"“®ENCE RIDGEW'AY ties, thrifty----------- ----- - 13' X 34' recreation area for hour ot relaxed enloymeni. $IO,5go^|ilua closing — duplicate o 7E HAVE SEVERAL TWG- AND T H R E E-BEDROOM HOMES, AVAILABLE WITH LOW DOWN PAYMENTS. DOWN PAYMENTS START AT APPROXIMATELY Near Eastern Jr. Three bedrooms, 12' x 14' living room, 10' X ir dining room, 10' x 12' kitchen, full basement, l-car garage. In need ot some repair, but. cheapnf" ------------- “ Only $5,000, recommends Near General Hospital Has a 12' X 13' living room, 11' x 12' dining room, 9' x 12' kitchen, plus one-bedroom down qnd three up. Oil forced-air heat, 4-car garage. Only $9,000. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 942 JOSYLN COR. MANSFIELD MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY KAMPSEN Your neighbor traded Why don't you? SEMINOLE HILLS sturdy well older home In a good ar... . rooms and bath, brick fireplace, hardwood floors, basement, gas heat, 2-car garage. A real good I of Auburn, 2-bedroom full basement, gas ■ garage. 0 nice lots. Only $8,950, $1,000 PRIME NORTH SIDE LOCATION up, V] bath In basement, lation room, screened porch, ar garage, 50x125' lot, near ything. Price to Include !, carpeting and drapes. Ask-114,900. Terms. THINKING OF SELLING? Want cash? We will get It you — Give us a try. Call Dave Bradley, George Jackson, Fred Rosevear, Rahel Levely, Lee Kerr, Leo Kampsen, or Floyd Sommers. 1071 V n$t. MIDDLE BELT ROAD 3 bedrooms, two baths, llreplace, dining room, nice kitchen, breakfast room, family room, large screened porch, patio, 2-car attached garage, carpeting and drapet. Large well landscaped lot. Lake privileges bn Hr---------- Lake. Priced at $23,500. by appointment. ' north JOHNSON Lovely two-story family ho excellent condition. Large living room, dining room and k'— down. Three large bedroon bath up. Basement, oil he Priced at $10,500 with PRICE REDUCED Mixed neighborhood;' I'/i-slory home ■ In Very good condition. Big .living room with picture window, family size kitchen, * ■-bedrooms and bath. Extra bedroom up. Basement, gas carpeting, fenced yard. Priced ,300 $9,950, FHA, I. East LAKE ORION-LAKE FRONT 3 lots on Elkhorn Lake. Lovely wooded lot. Nice home wl“- ‘-‘-f living room, kitchen with 113,900, TERMS. John K. Irwin & SONSr REALTORS 113 W. Huron St. — Since 1925 Phone FE 5-9446 Evening—Call FE 5-9446 STOUTS BesLBuys Today Horse Farm .... ________ ____jrn^-beOr...., home with basement, IVj baths, well located 5-acre parcel, 2-i pasture' land. Only minutes fr PontiBC. Priced at $18,900 » St. Mike's Beautifully kept 4-bedrobm oldei home, large vestibule entry, separate dining roomj modern kitchen, 4 large bedroorris, bar ment, oil heat, stool In tos ment, screened front porchroi car garage, walking distance' ------------- Only $12,500 with Economy Home Attractive 3-bedroom aluminum sided home, located In / - Heights, basement, gas -------garage. Only $750 down, - possession. Oakland Ldke * Privileges with this fine ___ ranch home. Feafures 3 spaejous .bedrooms, basement with recreation rcram, shower, gas heat, ey-■ tra:large (2)rner lot, paved street, • convenient to school. Only $14,900 with terms. Income Well located In good rental ai off Oakland, solid, 2-famlly, rooms and bath each,': basement with brand new gas fired, water heating plant, shaded ner lot, one car garage. Only $12,500 with terms.- 'Talk about a ‘united front’! If father orders nine to ( to my room, mother orders me to clean it!” 2-BEDROOM HOUSE IN GRAYLING Oil 473-1040 afitr i._______ ADAMS RBALfV MILLER LAKE PRIVILEGES a real b 2-bedroom home and oq|y down plus clollhg costs. Well-to-wall carpeting, attractive kitchen r garage. ;e It. Only $t LOT OWNERS Interested Ir home? Let us give you h figures. A model to fit yoi need end e price to f pocketbook. The very best of materials and a reputable br"-'--Call lor details. I SIDE fleet clean 2-bei full basement, hardwood , plastered walls, aluminum I end screens, new carpeting Miller Realty FE 2-0263 0 Eastern _____________; FINISH- T WORTH THE ASKING PRICE. ST. BENEDICT'S 3-BEDROOM COLONIAL Carpeted living room end dining room, full basement, gas heat. Incinerator, 2-car garage. CLOSE TO DONELSON SCHOOL, CITY BUS LINE AND ST. BENEDICT'S. -FULL PRICE, $13,500. LAKE ANGELUS GOLFVIEW ESTATES SHARP TRI-LEVEL HOME leafur- 1, l'/2 Smith 6t Widemap FULL PRICE-VERY CLEAN d neat. Two-bedroom bungalow Ih full baseinenl. New gas fur ce. Paved street. Easy terms. X-ROQM MODERN—Paved strekt. full basement, 3 bedrooms. — Walking distance of downtown. Priced et only $7,500 and real SPECIAL—Near Pontiac plant. Lovely 4-room modern In brick and frame. Basement, gas heat. Completely Insulated. 1'/2 baths car garage. Large 43x200 li for only $10,995. Here Is ( gain. WE TRADE. CHILDREN BELONG HERE down. WE TRADE. mastone and frame. 1 closed porch. Fireptace, -------- AC furnace. Goodk clean condition. Owner leaving state: Call EM 3-7344 or EM 3-4443. ILL BUILD r- 4-bedi;oom . with full basement, aluminum siding. All large rooms *nd real country style kitchen. Select oak floors. Only $12,500. Ask '" Mr. Brown. Evenings call a.m. to 9 p.m. Multiple Listing BROWNL, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lake Road Ph. FE 4-3544 or FE 2-4810 ANNETT West Side-Close In Only T block from Ponflac Central High, 2-s' bedrms. ull basei__ .. anxious ____ estate. Wllf Terms. Brick-Lake Front furnace, I Will sacrifice. _____r Straits Lake, 4 rrris., 2- fireplaces, Ige. ki en, separate dining rm, rm. in full basement. . of large frees, 100 ft. frontage. Golf course at i , door. $24,000, terms. North Suburban English Colonial, solid brick construction, home In immaculate condition throughout. finished. Full basement, rm., 1-acre lot, 2-car aft rage. $27,500, terms. , W. Huron—Commercial S. Johnson,, c iS than ,: .Including any com multiple buildings. Uieful m e e,c I a I use dwelling. Terms. WILL . TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. "Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 ; WARREN STOUT, Realtor I Tji W N. Opdyke Rd.^ Ph. FE ' Multiple Listing Service. FE 8-0466 Income Property 2-FAMILY INCOME, 5 ROOMS UP, par month, fireplace, 2-car garage, bargain for S9,500. farms. PAUL JONES REALTY, Lotf • Acreage 4-FAMILY INCOME ON WEST SIOl lished). Always jaths air-' — francea. $14,900. FE 5-781)5. ....... automatic washer, elec. dryer, tubs, 2-level terrace overlooking lake, 2 fireplaces, garage, —' —' Picture windows to lake upstoits and down. Also toilet and shower In basement. Beautiful hillside location Greens Lake, west o' terford, OR 3-8374. McNelve, er, $23.500, $10,000 down._ BEAUTIFUL HOME SITES, 80'xlOO', in Sunny Beach. Walter's L,ake. Two sandy beaches, $10.00 down. —-------- By ownef. MY 2-0940. CALL US FOR LAKE SUBURBAN AND FARM PROPERTY CRAWFORD AGENCY MY 3-1143 MY 3-4571 CASS LAKESIDE. .... __________ YEAR-'ROUND 3-bedroom. $150. Annual lease only. 482-2332.____________________ CHURCH BUILDING Union Lake privileges on )’/!i acres. Suitable tor nursery school, clubs, ducatlonal organlza- APPROXIMATELY 2 - ACRE PA CEL WITH PRIVILEGES ON I PER STRAITS' LAKE, $3,000, .lions. 28x50' building. Huge trees In the hean oi growing area. $24,000. EARL GARRtLS 4417 Commerce Rd., Orchard Lake EMpIre 3-2511 EMpIre 3-4084 LAKEWOOD VILLAGE, WATERFRONT LOT, 100x174 FT., $4,750, $1,500 DOWN. LAKE LIVING L 6 f SV PRIVATE sand beach. Swim, boat-docks, fish. 15 minutes to Pontiac. $795. $10 down, $10 month. OR 3-1295. BLOCH BROS., FE 4-4509. LOON LAKEFRONT IN JAYNO HEIGHTS. 2 COMPLETE KITCHENS, MANY EXTRAS, ““ OWNER. OR 3-348L_______ LAKEFRONTS DUCK LAKE . Vacant lot v 90 ft. frontage on water and 178 $1,000 down, $28.50 month. DUCK LAKE — Year around lake porch, family room, gas near, uerge wooded lot. Only “ 950, $1,450 down, $75 month, mediate poskesslon. WALTERS LAKE - Ideal home for a retired couple. Includes aluminum siding, lifetime roof, plastered walls, fireplace, hot heat, garage, fenced lof, ----------- beach. Being sold furnished for only $13,500. Immediate possession. James a. TAYLOR, Realtor REAL ESTATE - INSURANCE. 7732 Highland Road (M59) -OR 4-0304____Evenings EM 3-7544 LAKE LIVING LOTS. PRIVATE sand beach. Swim, boat-docks, fish 15 minutes to Pontiac. $795. $10 down, $10 month. OR 3-1295. BLOCH BROS., FE 4-4509. LOT ON OAKLAND LAKE* ____________OR 3-2477 1 3 miles of Pontiac - - .7 ACRES — RIGHT ON Lake ^ Clarksfon Schools bedroom home — 30x34' overall heated porch Is 10x55' well - $17,950 - $5,000 down, Lots of room to build anotHffr home too. LAKE PRIVILEGES ON MACEDAY — and use of bathhouse goes with 2 corner lots at Nelsey and Visgar — $2,500 takes both (Cash) BIG FISH LAKE FRONT LOT -51x300' with new year-aroi ' " bedroom home — storpis. screens — Insulated too — _ _ ment — hoi water plant adequate for much larger borne — living room Il'4"xl7' _ house overall — $10,950 - i 24x34' UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE OVERLOOKING. GOLF CO and'lake, Wlxom area, 5 lots . 200 ft^ paved road frontage, $400 style, ,w, ..replace, iding, private FE 8-4095 .... ____________‘iL\^~Knf- d modern IM cabin, naar Au I River, OR 3-0787.__________ 2 CORNER LOTS — on “-'ley Rd.—Macedey s - $2,500 cash h 5 ACRE SCENIC BUILDING SITES NEAR DAVISBURG GOLF COURSE ON PAVEMENT - 112-frontage,, they're really choice. 10 ACRE SITES — 330'x1320', treei, between Fenton and Flint, $4950. 1 mile from paved road. 0 WOODED ACRES WITH HIGH ELEVATION on corner choice building sites $12,000. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 425-1453 PER CENT DOWN. AKE OAKLAND PRIVILEGES. BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOT, 100k 120 FT. ONLY $1,800. TERMS. WATKINS lake PRIVILEGES. BEAUTIFUL CORNER BUILDING LOT, $3,000, $1,000 DOWN. SMITH-WIDEMAN REALTY HURON_________FE 4-4524 Bald Mountain Rd. 143 FEET ON PAVEMENT $300 DOWN A well drained parcel. In a cation of good hOmes. LADD'S, INC. 3835 Lapeer Road , Perry (M24) FE 5-9291 or OR 3-1231 after 7:30 4 ACRE$-Wlth panoramic v Hilly and wooded paradise Is a description. $8,800, terms. ) EXCEPTIONALLY beautiful a< dotted with pines and oak, backing ^tate land. $247 per ac C. PANGUS, Realtor 422 Mill St., Ortonvllie NA 7-2815 NICE LOT WITH NEW SEPTIC system and well. Near Cess-Dodge PEOPLE LIKE- 'CLARKSTON hills ESTATES" Jfhe following 1- to 2-acre sites ar I r still, available. LOTS, 200x412 at $3,900. ' LOT, 200x200 at $3,500. LOT, 200x175 at $' $4,250. CORNER LOT, 273x294 at $3,900. Choose your futqre homesile now in this .well-restrleted subdivision. Close to all facilities of Clarksfon Village. SELECT YOURS TODAY! CLARKSTON REAL ESTATE 5-5821: 5824 - LAKE FRONT ) ACRES SPRINGFIELD' TOWN- shlp, mostly tillable, ............ wooded rolling land. $9, beeutifully 12 ACRES WHITE LAKE TOWN- 50-ACRE FARM-ORTONVILLE AREA 2 bedroom farm house with barn, spring end some woods,— $13,750. c' PANGUS, Realtor 422 M , 7-28T5 83 ACRES-MILFORD Scenic rolling land, apple, pedch and pear orchard, 70 acres tillable, 3-bedroom home, good barn, 24 'stanchions, milk house and other bldgs. $400 per acre, terms. Annett Inc. Realtors equipment. Realty. 33! City an-J Country 335-8511 or 482-14< WELL LOCATEP BUILDING 24X1 DEAL FOR ■ ness: 016,950 CASH TO MOR GAGE. * CLARENCE RIDGEWAY REALTOR IB w. WALTON 338-4C Multiple Listing Service Sole or Exchange ir FHA 3 Pdr cent. JONES REALTY FE 4-8550 SYLVAN LAk¥^T, .BY OWNER, ditloning. Wiirtrar lake privileges, private beach, all contract, WILLIS ■"iii'ics, paveef street, FE 2'«''m ' cp x.sibi nr m']* Lincoln cdNTiNeNTAL, ap- iXimatelvr-lk.OOA miles, air Con-gooeMand BREWER, BjWhieM HOP 1 Walton lalling MY 2-J BARBIR SHOP POO, Cornar of Walton *nd Perry, win conilder lelilng equipment fiWOWiiH'ffp In' SMA'CriroWN, very buey, lllnesa end P"r«?h«j •rofe.Y?|..rVT.r.?*li..ton- ecceplad 752-2955 affor CABINET MEN ssTn ws'hvs:; buiftlSS: ill profilabl* builnaw. narerlaf itock and all tor fha amall In-approximately $10,500. nci mil - tint lime offered. Aik tor commercial olllce. real tstale. ; KAMPSEN REiftJ.TY 1071 w; Huapn St- Alter 5 p.m. PB 4-4738 BATEMAN COMMERCIAL BUILDING ., high ceilings, city end clly get, large payed front parking, zoned for menufec-turlng with railroad frontaBa, Bl aligning equipment, byil- INTERNATIONAL TRADERS CLUB COAST'TO-COAST TRADES 347 S. Telegraph Open 9-8 Sunday 1-5. Ponflac FE 8^^441 Detroit wo 5-2823 COIN LAUNDRY AND DRY CLiAN- COMPACT RESTAURANT IN"UNI0N ■ ake Shopping area. Reasonable 'Ice. Ideal tor couple. For ep- ORY CLEANING PLAtiT . High volume — big net. A-1 condition. Fine area. Pr MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER 1573 Telegraph "" ' _ - . gross with a 5-year lease with escaiaror ciau and renewal. $11,000 plus sloe «ets you In. CLARENCE RIDGEWAY REALTOR HAROWAIOE STORE, GROWi NO ----- Telephone Jim G . ............ 8 a,m.-4;30 p.m. Ml 4-4474 (local cal' from Pontiac).--------- " — telephone 425-4085. Partricige 3 ISLAND COTTAGES II furnished 2 bedrooms' a :reened porches. 5 beautiful li a boat ride — yi CANDLELIGHT And checkered tablecloths appeal restaurant 10 ml. fronV Pontiac in the heart of town. Priced at $7,500 MEM. partridge 8, ASSOC., INf. OCFICE8--THROUGHOUT MICH. INTERNATIONAL TRADERS CLUB COAST-TO-COAST TRADES ........ ron Ponflac FE 4-3581 RESTAURANT-PIZZA "$Si -,jlpment,' seating .. now doing an excellent closed f di, .... ...... .... _ month. Located in northeast Pontiac. Owner would consider trade to. a home or home equity. Price $13,950, $3,500 down. HAROLD R. FRANKS, REALTY 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3208 34. . ... sMll or lease, or MANA&E- it for miniature golf, 334-0924. Michigan, wants oul. ------ nicely decorated. TAVERN Cty ot 12,00 out. Good, equipment i __________ ____ Including ., quarters. Sacrifice for only $13,000 with $5,400 down. Statewide—Lake^ Orion 1175 LAPEER RD. OA 8-1400 AFTER - ------- Sale Load Coatracts 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See us be Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-84 Open Eves. '— “--------- ACTION ... and confrac.. ..... . small. Call Al^. HI iter, FE 2-0179. LAND CONTRACTS FOR. SALE, high. discount. Call between 12-5 ----“;-Era Realty Coi Wanted Coatracts-Mtg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently^ wanted. See us before Warren Stout, Reallor ... Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8145 CASH For land contracts, equities _ mortgages. Don't lose that homec Small mortgages evallable.' Tbd McCullough, Sr. 482-1820. I NEED LAND CONTRACTS, REA-sonable discounts. Earl Gar ' Realtpr,. 4417 Commerce Road. 3 LAND CONTRACTS our deal before you wanM. (Set ... _ _____ ... sell, CAPITOL SAVINGS 8< LOAN ASSN., 75 W. Huron. Ff 4-0541. $ TOP $ BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU. can BORROW UP TO 31,000 OFFICES, . Waned I i—Birmingham LOANS' $25 to $1000 ____' Insured Payment Plan «■— ■ . BAXTER. 8,-UVINGSTONE Poniiac State Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 »» - MamytoLoan ' ' *1 Xlceniw ^jlle#n^^J«one^^ LOANS' Its to Miwk) $1,000 Usually on first vial*. Quh* «rlfn«l-ly. hpiplul. FE 2-9026 .... .lumbar to call._ OAKLAND LOAN CO. Wans TO $1,000 To contolldaia bills Into ont monthly paymant. Quick service, nWEYAufTLOAN CO! 7 N, Perry St, fK MiSI 9 to 5 Dally. Sat, t to 1 TEAGU£ FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER ROMEO / 214 E. ST. CLAIR •-OANS 81,000 LIVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODS OL 4-ton WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $1,000 Va will ba glad w help yoi STATE FINANCE CO. Ml Ponflac State Bank Bld( FE 4:1574 Mortgage Loaat CASH Loans to $3,000 a Insurance Included Oi lance et NO EXTRA c _____ .. Apply In Person Family Acceptance Corp. 3)7 National Bldg. 10 W. Huron — FE 8-4022 HOMP OWNERS ' CASH UNLIMITED Exclusive plan. Remodel home. Pay uast or currant Consolldalc Into one low monthly ........ jxfra caih If you need some. Cell anytime. Big Baar Construction Co. FE 3-7833, MORTGAGE ON ONE ACRE UP. With 150-toot frontaga. No appraisal fae. B. D. Charlas, Equi- S. Talegraph. FE 4 QUICK CASH tOANS .UPT0$3,00Q You c home even though not fully modern usually In two days time. We give you the full amount In cash. There Is not a penny to pay tor appraisal, survey or abstract. You also now receive a free credit life Insurance policy. Consolidate your oebts, pay taxes, make home Improvements with our money. See and talk It over with us without obligation. VOSS AND BUCKNER, INC 209 NATIONAL BUILDING PONTIAC, PH. FE 4-4729 Swops 50-WATT KNIGHT TRANSMITTED, swap for camping equipment or — 338-9787. 1943 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, / praxlmately 13,000 miles, air c ditloning. Will trade tor good li contract. WILLIS M. BREW! FE 4-5W1 or 482-2073. BLACK REGISTERED POODLE pups, trade tor sewing machine, . automatic washer, car; etc. 425- FURNISHED 5 housetraller. 1 I4INK STOLE, SILVER'BLUE, EX^. condition. Like new. Reasonable. ■ ' 5-4534. Sale Household Goods 65 1 GRAND BUY WE SELL WHAT WE ADVERTtSE 3 rooms brand new furniture $284 Includes; Beautiful 8 piece bedroom suite with box spring end mattress and choice of colors. 9 piece frieze' living room suite with foam zipper cushions end choice ot 4 different suites. (1) 9x12' rug and a beautiful 4 piece dinette . (Itemi a Early American or Danish modern living rooms and bedrooms about '/] price. Bunk beds, trundel beds, roll-a-weys, sofa beds and rockers et great savings. - Plenty ot factory seconds, lots ot used ranges and refrigerators. Everything at. bargain prices. LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE E-Z TERMS - BUV-SELL-TRADE ' Open 'til 9 p.m. Dally, Sat. 'til 4 1440 Baldwin at Walton FE 8-9898 Easy terms. -LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE Open 'til 9 p.m. daily. Sat. '"' ' 1440 Baldwin at Walton' FE 8-9898 COMPLETE APARTMENTS i furniture. 791 Doris, corner Featherstone Rd., East o’ GREY WOOL RUGS WITH P'Aoi 9x12 and IO'/jx13, reas. Ml 4-9470 after 4 p.m. !-DOOR refrigerator, $45. 21-Ihch televisions, $25 and up. Good working order. Michigan Appliance Co., 3282 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-8011. up •'■uciL ■ 8tt^3,_42^28. 2 MAff6GANY“sFEP^E'Nb~TABS^^ , glass top to ' fit, Dayitrom , $75. 482-4988 2 SUPERIOR AtlfuiUE BEDROOM suites. I with marble top dr»««eJ Other furniture. FE 4-7112. 3>IECE LIVING ROOM SUTFC other living room' furniture, FE 4-0737. ________________________• i HEYWOOb-WAKEFIELD T OR 4-0884 fYEAft CRIBS, $14.95 / Pearson's Furniture,. 210 E. I 7 - PIECE DINING ROOM SET/* bglhropm space save bookcase, 5>UBS.12j<13 ai 12X15 nylon rugs, $i_____ ____... \ pads, $4.95. LIneleum. rugs, most sizes, $4.95-up. Pearson's Furniture, 210 E. Pike Street. THE FtOC„ 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD ■ • FE 4-5214 30-INCH ELECTRIC'~STO\ Sflta H«HHhoM >Oooiii 65 bedroom outfitting CO. 4470 DIXIE HWY. Drayton Plains 673-9441 A DiAu.iiN6ir"iwrfi6*lNtlsO^^^^ lawlno m»ehln«. MaKei fancy da-|rarnii buttonnolas, d hamii luit by dialing ... _Jca, MO.JO. AMchl Ntcchl-ilna. ft I-4WI. BARGAIN HOUSE MOVED'' TO l1 Magnavox Stereo, $75. Call FE i-3378. 42-JNCH‘SINK A*Nb cabinet; .......... . .:9(i Information, 647-1577 ' wibbiNo announcRmeWTs "St dlscopnl prices. Forbes Printing and Office Supply, 4500 D I x I' Hwy., nexf to Ponllac S t a t Bank, OR 3-9747 or Ml 7-3444. $53.95 FILE AND STORAGE CAB-Inet, bargain at $35.50. General -Printing, FE 2-0)35. 80 GALLON BRADFORb ELECTRIC J537 Ledbury Dr. 500'GALLON PROPANE GAS TANk 4J»jl,_- ........ ,300 "USED 2x4's 1959 AMERICAN WAGON, PAINT sprayer, 12-Inch ‘ ' 1548 afler 4:30 p.r 2,000 FOOT OVERHEAD IRRIG/ tor^Wlth osclllators. FE 4-1543._ AiR-CbNblTlbt4AIREr23~K^^ 1 window n I. Available fi Gardens. _______. ____ PFA^FaUTOMATIC ZIG-iAG Ino machine. Makes buttonholes, ^Jli__»«,*. riAisivw mnHwl Pav oft account In 8 months ------ per month or $57 cosh balance. Universal Co. FE 4-0905. Rastic wall tile _ B8G TILE OUTLET, refrigerator, $25.," electric stove, $35; 31" TV, $25; washer, $35; retrlgerator with t^ freezer. Delivered. 474-1484. REESTABLISH YOUR CREDIT, '"-y do without the things you d tor your home? Furniture, rpetlng and appliances. $10 down ;Id give you a second chance. Tilly Home Furnishings, 2135 :le Hwy., cor. of Telegraph. ToTR ' FORNI EEF R Rd., Wed-Fri., 10-4, 343-4994. SPECIAL DAZE Refrigerators, .renewed $48-$68 , Wringer washers, rebul|* Automatic washert Rebuilt,. Installed $88-$98 GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOPS STUDIO "COUCH, ROCKER, TV chair, round coffee table, dresser, SELLING MY FURNITURX MIS-cellaneous oblects. FE 5-4072._ _ sIlling out complete home. 13 cubic ft. refrigerator, 1-year-old, dryer and washer, 1-year-old, western saddle, ski equipment, cottage articles, all kinds of rutri- sTnger console sewing M chine. Makes fancy designs, mor grams, buttonholes, etc. Just ; !!i-s ________ All nnAPJitinr I price, $36.60 • SPECIAL 130 A.MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE-Conslsts of; ' 2-piece living room suite with 2 step tables, 1 cocktail table and 2 table lamps. ) match with 2 vanity , ___ _________suite with double dresser" chest,, full Innersprlng 5-plece*dlnefte set, 4 chrome chairs, Formica top table, 1 bookcase 1 9x13 rug included.-AII for $399. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON .... PIKE E 2-2150 SPRING CLEARANCE Used Apartment sized refrigerator $29.95, used elBCtrtC range *39.95, Reconditioned water soft- \ CRUMP ELECTRIC 3445 VSuburn PE 4-3573 SOFAA REGENCY STYLE CARVED TWIN ^DS, DRESSERS, REFRIG-rockers, misc. FE 5-3458. TWIN NEEDLE ZJG - ZAG, months old. Blind hems, be . holes, fancy stitches, moiiograms, all withouT attachments. Payments of $5.00 per month or cash price, ^ $52.10. Michigan NecchMEIna. FE * 8-4531. USED RANGE AND REFRIGERA-tor, good condition' at $2.00 4ach per week. Used Stereo, good condition. $3.00 Wringer washer — SWEET'S RADIO t $42.95 ........$29.95 APPLIANCE 334^77. WASHING MACHINES, CON\^N- tlohal, automatic; pump, 1129.50 value. $89.50, scratched. No down -------f. .Michigari, /luortscent. 393 Orchard Lake.- , WYMAN'S USED BAR.GA1N STORE' AT OUR 16 W.ePIKE STORE ONI’ Twin size bed compi-zte . $'?-? Apt. size gas stove K?-? 5-piece dinette seT^.....W9.9 2-piece living roonY^mte ... !29,9 34" electric range . ..’*29.9 ^-■-"^eXrwaslIer......... Guar, electric refrigerator' Easy terms .... VI- will consider _________ otter, Contact Rochester Paper Co., Rochester, Michigan or coll 451-8121. ________' _ ______ .....ANCHOR FENCES MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 BEEP AND PORK quaiters. Opdyke mxi. ee »-/v4i. BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL AND gas furnaces and boilers, automatic trical supplies. Crock, soil, cop* per, 4haltk and galvanized pipe and fittings. Sentry and Lowe Brothers paint. Suoar Ken-Tone and Rustoleur Bottle Gus Installation Two 100-poUfter cylinders and equipment, $12. Great Plains Gas _Co.,_F^E 5-0872._ ^___________ BUMPER'“pbbL TABLE; WALNUT bedroom set; odd end tables and chairs; assorted lawn furniture and E AND COMPLE^ STOCK OF "Pl fittings — plastic; copper ana casi Iron for drains. Plastic, copper and galvanized for water. Black for gas. Montcalm Supply, 154 W. ■ Montcalm. FE 5-4712. CLEARANCE SALE desks, roll top, executive, secretarial, files, tables, chairs, mimeographs, offset graphs, Thermofay, 220 V. Forbes. 4500 Dixie Hwy., next to Pontiac State Bank OR 3-9747. ______________________ D. J. CABINET SHOP- '24 W. HURON . 334-0924 Custom cabinets, formica tops, sales of formica, sinks, hoods end taucets. COMPARE OUR PRICES. DISCOUNTS NOW ON TYPEWRIT,-ers, adding machines, desks, chairs, files, mimeographs, e t c., new and used. Forbes Printing and Hr Sa^ Mlic«llaMj>iii 67 SIMPLICITY l-SPniD TRaHsMISV an^*lnow'*'*'' ****'-■-**- TM|{1 lAi; MAIIMAUUKE '.■'I' 'V; ’ MtKSS, tIjksdav r By . Anderson & LeeminglTravel Trailer* singer AMTOMA??C'"ir(>-ZAG atwing miohlna. Dial modal-fnod- •rn waldul cabinet. Taka c pirmmt'ot um par iftonth 9' months or $41 cash balai t Uhlvarsal Co. FB 44»05. iMALr&o'tBbXftffTttbTMrm deep wall lubma^lbla pump (new) --£ 8 mm movla protector, Fugica i — Short wave (police) reealver. paired. CAna*a Rental. PR 8-444^ iPRING SPECIALS ON ALOMTWa/W 5»tn.tiin.'i"^ -------- fALBOff LUMBER" fHf"SALVAl‘roN ARlviv" RED SHIELD STORE SHIELD _____ Evar fl^' ST. Clolhlhg, ** Furniture, '^ppllaneas. tORNADb AtJo" FALlIbUT SHEL-lar. Protection for a family,without a basfimant. Coil $1,500, will sail for $450. 435-3848. USb GLIDOEN >AiNt5’FW’bBC-Orating your home, you will \ l,g. I0G4 'i I UtfLlfY TRAIl"ES, (FFbOf TT lO-lool flat deck, new spare wheel and tires, like new. $300. 438-3144. SED AND NEW FUft’NACES.^CON-versloni. FE 3-7171. WE DARE ANY FOOD ....... service to match this. Sprti^g .Goods Use our loaner freezer It needec . No gimmicks, don't be misled. Take advantege of these great savings dallvered to your F—‘ meats and groceries, no APACHE CAMP TRAILERS models on display, Open dally till 6 p.m. and Sundays 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Apache laclory hometown daeler, giLL COLLER, I >1 Lapeer on M31. to buy ca; SIWTNGS ' GUNS-BUY-SELL-VliADE-Burr-Shell. 375 S. Telegraph. NEW BROWNING ~ .....JGS UP TO 40 PER CENT Example specials; ^fut^^uj; fr^ar Hand Tools-Machinery 68 Fishing Supplies-Bait* 75 i^tulPM^tl'T TO HAisVcRVcKE^ reasonable, 18 Shbrt St., PB 8-84S8. ......_ Sand-Gravel-Dirt condition. $175. MA 4-1808. CONN CORONET AND CASE, USED J semester, $100. 852-5192. GOOD "EieCTR IC GUITAR” amplifier. PE 5-4590. GRINNELL CABINET GRAND UP-rlght, oxc. for hall or bar room, solid walnut cabinet, exc. tone. $75. 682-3487. Guitar Headquarters Music Center 268 N. Saginaw FE 4-4700 JANSSEN PIANO SALE. NEW 88-NOTE PLAYER PIANO Completely electric bench Included, $1,350. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. _________ FE 2-0547 " new, slightly USED HAMMOND ORGAN / liodel L-103. Frultwood with curved legs, 3 weeks old. $995 terms. I Family of fine travel trailers. Comes with twin bed lounger, HIde-e-bod. Complete Salt Con-talned, with Bower hot water heater, shower end lavatory. , Also-SbmethinQ New- In The 15W FranINIn - cPme out and see It. Priced tu selll ''Gold Seal" means Top Quality I SPORTLAND CAMPER TRAILER-Slaeps' 4; oft ground. Don't buy anything - until you sea this Holly travel Coach 15310 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4 477) ''pan Dally and Sundays— CAMPING SITES Swimming, sate •PjoSl'-.ElshlhOj^ 74 INCH OVER ----- ----- new Sy ' - teen, $130. 343-3538 attar 4. USEdFdOLF""CLUBS”"f^R SALE. r, REASONABLE /L) BLACK FARM SOIL, d8- Rd. 483-5740, , 489 Lochaven l-A TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRY, sand, gravel. Delivered re; _JUdd Feiguson.jOR 3-6^._____ BILL")SALE"'S~1>IT,'""SAND, GRAV-Jl, bdaoh sand,JIII. EM 3-6373. BEAUflFUL RICH,” black' 1=AR'M I 4-1741. gravel, stone, etc. ...... BUCK^ ANt^ FILL^DTr¥^""€h1AP. BLACK DIRT, TOP SOIL, SAND, (III and gravel. Mel's Trucking. FE 2-7774. ^"LACK TOP SOIL AfitrZdW MA- landscaping, trucking, top " old cow manure, broken slde-[$ tor retaining walls. FE PERFECT BLACK DIRT, TOP ISTL PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS supply, sand, gravel, fill dirt. OR 3-1534. PEAT HUMUS Fast Loadhg Doily AKC MALE TOY POODLES, 7 weeks, $100. OR 3-7075. MALE CHIHUAHUAS, 1 RAT TER- , $15 I from Tel-Huron PORTABLE ORGAN BY LOWERY You're Itivlled to come In and sae and hear the latest 2-keyboard por-.table spinet organ. SEE US BEFORE YOU BUYI GALLAGHER'S MUSIC CO. OPEN MON., AND FRI, 'TIL 9 P.M. SALE GUITARS . . . ACCORDIONS Loaners and lessons^£E 5-5438. ■ USED SPINET PIANO, (5000 CON-•""-in — A real buy. Lew BaN hound, $25.J£Shorl St.^E 8-8488. beautiful female beagles, II weeks, $20 each. FE 4-8400._ 3 adorable" LONG HAIRED KIT-tens, 4 wks old, $5. FE 8 1398. 4 #>6dDLES, , famalat, AKC raglstorad. field champloh sired. MA 5-2951 C REGISTEREb POODLES •3-9747 p; 7-2444. DRAYTON PLYWOOD MOVING TO NEW LOCATION 4112 WEST WALTON BLVD. ___ DRAYTON PLAINS • ELECTRIC LiGHT FIXtURES; ALL rooms, 1963 designs, pull downs, balloons, stars. Bedroom $1.19, porch, $1.55, irregulars, samples, prices only factory can give. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Or- FOR DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hardener Simple Inexpensive Application cheap. 334-4026._________^ _ _ GE IRONEr";' PORCH "'GUD"ER'. Radip - phonograph. Hi-Fi. Desk. $225. WIegand ; Wlagand ____ ________________________________ Elizabeth Lake Road, akc DACHSHUND PUPS $10 DOWN. FI: Z-4VZ4. Plano tuning—Organ JAHEIMS KENNELS FE 8-2538. _repaj^r. _____________________—--------—------—--------------- UPRIGHT "pIA"NO, GOCib CONDI-! LABRADOR PUPPIES ________ FE 5-3441______________ AKC P06DLE"S, 8 WEEKS, CHAM- ----- ... pg USED ORGANS Wurlltzer, Lowrey, Baldwin and Gulbranson organs. Sales and rentals - FE 3-7168. Big savings, excellent condition; lust serviced by our service man for Immediate 71-A GUN COLLECTIO'N "FOR" saI'E ACCORplON-(5UITAR LES_SONS _Power tnower, $10. 473-9403 affer 5. , Service. IR'ONRiTE, $»rBbY'"S 24'' COLUM-bla bike never used $45 21" reel “"AfTD A-1 POODLE STYL grooming. 473-5404.____________ bSown registered, female podle. IVj years. Sell or lease. No children. Also black poodle pups. 425-2943.___ _________________ BRITTANY PlJPS. AKC. CHAhA- . $45 - $75. 474-0747 BATHInG AND GROOMING, PICK- Pulaneckl. beautiful LARGE MALE COL- JACOBSON ROTARY, $30, 2 9X12 JIM'S SALVAGE OUTLET, EVERY-thing brand ne- ■’•i*-**"** prices wholesale r without' lights, sliding door; I ANYTHING ____ of Blue Lust arpet. Rent electric sham- . McCandless Carpets. AVIS cabinets ^ 1570 Opdyke _____F E _4-43iJ ■ OUR OFFICE AND STORE HAVE MOVED TO 40 CONGRESS Manhole rings All sizes round i BLAYLOCK «... square 4" to 30'* COAL 8. SUPPLY CO. ■WINDOW, ‘sXIO-FOdf, tent?"^ OzT^Dutton Rd. OL 1-4785. P"LA?TIC pipe SPECIAL, FOR THE with heater. , 11,79, Thompson : PLUMBING CO., S. Saginaw, FE 5-2-100. * PLYWOOD DISTRIBUTORS 375-N4Cass A ~ -r- e-. PONTIAC Kitchen Specialties Kitchens, vanities, tile. 334-6329. RE?0R0 C " SHOWERS, COMPLETE faucets and curtains, $49.50 , $34.50. Lavatories, tom--^ with faurtes. S14.95e toitetsz ^ lessins° Tr°at‘‘e'’ p”an''oVBam|BEAUTIFUL SHOW QUALITY AKC guitar. Call today (or further infOr- collie puppies, MY 2-1901. mation. GAU.AGHERS --- SHOP, FE 4TIM6, $tore Equipment DOBERMAN MINIATURE I Pinschers, $75, FE 8-3481. 73 DOG, PART COLLIE AND""GfR- SHOWCASES JEWELRY TYPE, 3 LIGHTED, $45, 1 unllghted, $20. Days Ml 6-6450, Eves. Sporting Good* APACHE CAMPERS- BILL COLLER, the Apeche Factory hometown dealer, Is h" holding his annual Sprlng^'time Shepherd, loves children, free lu good home, seeguard at Bloom-tleld Open Hunt after 4 p.m._______ GUINEA PIGS, •ARAKEETS, GUARANTEED talkers, baby and breeders, 731-9483 after ' CLEARANCE SALE BRAND NEW 1942‘APACHE CAMP TRAILERS, $285. PARAKEET, BABY MALES*$4.95. ^^IrsL Rochester. J)L 1-4372. ure-bred" br/jtany" PUPPIEF, - -• 8$lW4. PUPPIES, PEDIGREE old, $35. F PIGEONS rollers" Cheap, ORJ-28M II 4 models of^the n POODLES, PARAKEETS, ries, fish. Pet supplies, bird Hatchery, 2489 ubu 2-2200. - -display.. The R vucK, »z;o. Raven, $495. Ch $525. Silver Eagle, ;$645. The n registered TEA-CUP CHIHUA-hua puppies: Chihuahua and Toy Fox Terrier stud service. FE 2-1497. foot Buffalo model complete v side canopy, $495, and the Got Eagle, $795. BOAT AND CANOE SPECIALS, NEW ALUMINUM BOATS, $79 NEW aluminum canoes, $149 NEW FIBERGLAS BOATS; $109 N FIBERGLAS CANOES, $149 COAST GUARD APPROVED NEW 1964 PONTOON BOAT^ WITH <;aNOPY AND COMPLETE STEERING, $395. OVER , 50 DIFFERENT MQt .V .AQDI OF BOATS AND CANOES DJ^PLAY. • WHERE PRICE AND QUALITY ■'"EN DAILY 9 A." SUNDAYS 10 A- TO 6 BILL COLLER 3 MILE EAS-T OF LAPEER' D /VONEY DOWN, $ Beanies, Poodles, Yt. igs, Pekingese a coming every day — Shop^FE 8-3112._____ FOX^jTERRIRS, 9 wkl Peti-Hunting Dog* SILVER FEMALE POODLE PUP-ples. FE 4-2931. TOY POODLES," BL6NCf;""liCvBR, all ages, $50 up. OR 3-4792. WEIMARANER" ~A n o GERMAN shorthair puppies. OA 8-2195^ Auction Snlu* 80 AUCTIONEER - V PERKINS EVERY SATURDAY EVERY SUNDAY z;oo Sporting Ooods—All Types Door Prizes Every Auction ___ _____ ____ry Audio We Buy—Sell—Trade, Retail 7 days ilgnmenli Welcome b&b auction Public Auction of Assets Michauds' Food Market, 4( Lapeer Road, F....... " " ......... Entire Meat and Grocery Store Equipment, fixtures, groceries stock. *Jphn Bell Auc-tloneers. CE 8-1738. I'ianti-TreES-Shrob* 44x10 fbAILER HOME iN LEES-burg, Fla. Will sell or land or contract or auU value. Phone OR 3-7445. BLUE SPRUCE, NORWAY AND Scotch Pine, you dig. 4290 Fen-more. Elizabeth Lake Road to N. Avery. 482-4354. 50-FOOT HILLCREST MOBILE home, slightly damaged, new, OR 3-44I2 or OR 6-9454. 1959 g^FOOf OARDNSI" UPRIGHT spreaders. Large selection. 10 tri $15. You dig, Open dally. 12 m N. of Pontiac, 'A ml. N. of I. -Intersection. Cedar .Lane Evergreen Farm^ 8970 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-1922. MAJOR Tree SERvrei. Free'Estl-mates. FE 3-7449. MCN E lUs” NURSERy" f943 NEW M'(3bN TRAILgRTIFlBS'. SALE NURSERY STOCK BVER- rens, shade trees, shrubs, about varieties of landscape size. Dig your own. Dixie Hwy. at Maybee -kston, Ph. MA 5-0984. NU'MBER 1 grade'" CANNA! bulbs, 8 lor $1. Short St. Hobbis* & Suppliu* Livestock 2 PIGS FOR SALE, BOAR AND Sow. 493-1882.__________________ 2""^WS, QOSd MILKERS, 304 CRE-Orlon MY 3-4472. REGISTERED ARABIANS, filly 2 years old, stallion 1 yi old, very gentle. $250 each. 4 boa'roing stable OR 3-5437.________ 4-YEAR-OLD MAIE I Breed. Call after sea; Koaa, uavisuv EQUITATION, JUMPING, DRESSAGE INDOOR AND OUTDOOR RIDING Groups welcome — ANY AGE Horses, bought, sold and traded. HORSES TRAINED AND BOARDED Box Stalls, rolling----- WANTED Sorrel mare sa or older of ( Sublect 1 - temperament, w.-n-v. .V . approval as represented. NA 7-4571,________ 1941 OLIVER (3C-44 LOW TIME, like new and a 4-wheel tandem trailer. Equipment In good r tlon, no rust, at 4347 HIg Road. Call 482-2410.________ trailer $1,000. Cleveland Disc digger $1,200, 11-wheel cultipacker $1,-200. Bycrus-Errie Crane with I-yerd bucket. 4335 SASHABAW RD. MA 5-2161. Barber Green top soil ■ FoilF Franklins and Cree's McFeely R . 1140 M15, Orton- o6t resErvXtiSns IN EARLY - Brand new ■ - Craas, sleep from 4 to 8 people, some overhangs available, soma without -ovarhangs, pressure water, gas,— ' ' TRAVEL COACH 4-4771 Open Dally and NEW WINNEBAGO PICK-UP CAMPERS TherlhO'Panel construction 30 per cant lighter. 1-plece riveted walls. Right campers and vacation trailers. SALE-RENT F. E. HOWLAND 3255 Dixie JDR 3-1454 1¥W ARISTO 'kEEPS 4. $"895*NEW Tawas 14' $1,395. OOODELL, 3200 S, Rochester Road, UL_ 2-4550. RESERVE YOUR CaMPER NOW. Hosklos Trailer Rental, *' “ ~ ^ , FE 4- I. Pad- TRAVEL trailer" RbfiTALS up. EMPEROR Tent Trailers, . .. up. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping bumpers. LOWRY Camper EM 3-3481._________________ awning, $1400; also '58 30-ft. Trout- 1310X50 liberty mobjl h6aa6. Irede-ln allowance On your present s-ln your household furniture B mobile home. Used 8' widei as low as $250 I lake cottages. ■ized Detroiter Pontiac Dealer Bob Hutchinson 1 Dixie Highway OR 3-Drayton Plalnb >n 9 to 9 Dally Sat. 9-4 Sun. 12-5 ------- ....... —.......IC., 43p1 Dlx- la Hwy., Drayton Plains, OR 3-1202. HOLLY, 1959, 8x24, 81,350. ______________405-2431____________ Instant Living . . .. 12' wide, 50- to 40-tt. panda and double units available used 8' and 10' Gem. Also pickup campers. 50 Oxforci Trailer Sales 4UST SELL - 1942 BUDDY MO-blle home, 50'xlO'. Taka ments. Call FB 4-1421. Parkhurst Trailer Sales FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING IS TO 40 feet. Featuring New IVI— Buddy and Nomads ocated halt way between Orion _ ^ Oxford on M24, next to Alban Country Cousin. MY 2-4411. kLE-LEASE-RENT, 55'XIO' . I ' SHORTS MOBILE HOMES _ od Used Home Type Trailers 10 PER CENT DOWN. Cars wire d hitches Initallad. Complete line )f parts and bottle gas. Wanted Clean Trailers : 4-9743_____________3172 W. t Rent Trailer Space GENERAL DUAL 90s IN WRAP-pers, Sweapstaket Prize. Getting married Sat. Need cash. Teresa. ---------- MY 2-4304. EXTRA G05d"MODEL ' . Extra tools i ' JOHN! APRIL SPECIALS Factory blemished Seconds. Guaranteed 400 X 14 hwy. - able. Davis Machinery Co. John Deere, New Idea. Homellte chain saws. NA 7-3292. Ortonville. _ L^l~1954 ‘"FERGUSW" TRAC'fOR, all newly reconditioned. FE 4-4588 Cj^klns^_________________ M0P"EL"A JOHN DEIRE 1 working condition. Ml 4-1044. iiEW"'"lLND U S"E D tRACTORS; chain saws. Evans Equipmen Pontiac Road at Opdyke cc rIRST AND SAVE.-------- DEERE, HARTLAND AREA HOWE. Phone HARTLAND 2511. Motorcycle* ___________95 HONDA SUPER HAWK USED ARIENS TRANS-A-MATIC rotary tiller, 14 h.p., 330 S. Hospital Rd., Union Lake. _____ USED F R A Z E R ROTOTILLERS, parts and service. Travel Trailer* WANT ADS ARE FAMOUS FOR ■ "ACTIONS Just Doil 332-8181 8.25 X 15 hwy. 10.00 X 22 traction Call Dick Curran Home ^82-1061 5 down — $9 per week K. & W. CYCLE , YAMAHA 5-SPEED TRANSMISSION COSTS LESS TK-IN ANY 4-SPEED IN ITS CLASS Complete 1944 Line 7440 Adburn,. Utica Phone 731-0290 ALL NEW 1964 Avalairs, Flollys, Tawas Travel Trailers ' 14 to 28 fL, self-contained Order now andthave T for vacation ELLSWORTH AUTO ' and TRAILER SALES 4577 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-1400 MATCHLESS, 1956, 1830 PAYSUN, Boat* - Acce*sorie* - FLOW LIFETIME GUAR->, Frolic, Trotwood, Garway, e, Comanche. Driftwood, Tour-'ne, and Bee Line. Clean lO-FOOT FIBERGLAS SAILBOAT, reservation' trailIr sal'e"s and ------ 5690 Williams Lake Road, Drayton — • OR 3-5981. airstream lightweight travel TRAILERS Since 1932.* Guaranteed for life. See them and get a demonstration at Warner Trailer Sales, W. Huron (plan -to loin ont Wally Byam'.s exciting caravans). ----- --------- ------ODD boat, Johnson 25 h.p. motor, trailer, skis and tow rope. All for $300. Call --- 12-FdOT FIBER GLASS BOAT, 7Vs . h.p..motor, trailer,.$225, 482-5595. 14-FOOT (fUR'LYCRAFT AAAHOG-end plywood boat. 354-3440. a. Travel. Trailer -TRAVEIMASTER- -CENTURY- -ANDER-ETT^ 198 l^FOOT AERO-CRAFT SKl-DART. of 25 Johnson electric. Skis and tarp. .... ....- ijjyj y[|| 14-FOOT FIBERGLAS.OVER PLY- ' complete stock get lust what 14-FOOT GLASS AND MAHOGANY 35 - horse electric motor, trailer, 682-15M, after 4;J0 p.nh. 14' LAPSTRAKE BOAT AND COV- 14 HORSE POWER EVINRUDE MO-tor, approximately 1953 rnodel — starts good, 175. OR 3-4033. T4.FOOT BOAT TRAILER, NEEDS Boat* — Acce*lorl*ji 97 14-POOr PLYWOOD BOAT, 820. OR 3-8002 ' _____ ........ rtUNA- 15-FOOT YELLOWJACK bout, steering, windshield end new upholstered seels, excellent condition. Cell 473-2281 eder 4 p.m. I7-P‘66f CHRIS CftAFT" |P61»tS. men, 120 horsepower. FE 2-7711, 7-FOO’f ■ CHRIS CRAFt. 10$ ER. OR 3-2874. ' ___ _ n 7-F06t "OWfNS CABIN-CRUlSlS", fully equipped. 75 Johnson motor Huron IrellSr $1,4l0. ' ........ jn moTor, II 473-4119 1 hTpTj oFnTSTT shift, ^Throttle conlroP $158. e33-2546. 30 HORSEPdwER bVINRUDE Motor. $295. PE 8-4484. 35 JOHNiOlii BL'BCTRiC'aND CON-iroi*. Like new. OR 4.1423. 1958 dHSis-CiRAPf illvor Arrow, 20', 214 HP. Deerborn Interceptor engine. 12280. FE 44370. iW'CHRI*-(:RAl^ (TAVALIEKr 18' - las h.p. V8. 140 hours. Excellent rnndlllon, $1,995. Trailer optional. 24 Clive. 482-4028 1943.ARROCRAFf ‘ PIBREOLAS ■ — ‘).p. Johnson, frailer, 473- 7738. aluminum BOAT, re-FOOT MICH-el|, nearly new, $150. 47^0831. ALL-WAYS a BETTER DEAL BOATS-MOTORS MERCURY -SCOTT MCCULLOUGH Trailers - Marine Accessories CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALE . 43 E. Weton 9 to 9 FE 8-4402 BOAT AND TRaIlIR, iff At IN , 15-11. Renkin. 75 hp Mercury motor. FE 4-1543 Cliff Dreyer's Gun ond. Sports Center lorlzed Dealer For EARLY BIrI)" SPBCIAliT" Michigan Turbocraft Sales Complete line ol new and used lejl boats by Turbocretf. Sylvar rantoon boats. SpIco-SKI Inboard and outboard boats, mr—*---------- In CaUfornla. Evinrude, Renkdn or"-—-'-------* streak. 2527 DIXIE HWY. OR/4-0 ' EVINRUDE MOTOR DAWSON'S SALES Tlptleo Lake________MA 9-2179 j'ohnsoH sales -"liSvici gray. 12-1 493-1179 t Kessler's Carver Boats — Mlrro Aluminum COMPLETE SERVICE AND PARTS OVER 60 BOATS ON DISPLAY Dorsetts — Thompsons — son Boats — Ellmlnetors DEMONSTRATION R ALUMIDOCK OPEN MON., TO FRI., 9-9; SAT., 9-4; SUN., 10-5 PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains MI^IN^ON LOON LAKE OR 44411 MARINE INSURANCl, M.*0ger tW Hansen Agency NEW 1944 FIB^ROLaS eOA trailer, 40-H.P. electric moti complete, 11,299. .... ..........................$115 #w boat Trellere ..............* " New x14 FIberglae Duo.......... Big Dlicounti At Buchanan' , 9449 Highland Rd. PINTFR'S MARINE AND JOHNSON DEALER Brings. You Thompson Bros. Boats Take command and let perfor... ance tell the Thompson itory ol 40 years of boat building. KAYOT PONTOONS ARE HBRBI ..... Opdyke 9*9 FE 44924 PONTOON BOAT, 14-FOOT, ASSEM-bled. 4484 W. Walton, FB 44144. QUALITY INSURANCE ON BOATS *nd motors, includes FREE trailer coverage. BRUMMETT AOBNEY, MIRACLE MILE. FB 44589.; STdP DREAMING Let Us Help You Save! BOATS-MOTORS-TRAILERS DOCKS Discount prices still In effect Harrington Boot Works 1699 S. Telegraph Road Start the Season with on ALUMINUM-CLINKER-MBERGLAS STARCRAFT BOAT Match With Your Favorite MERCURY OUTBOARD MOTOR -CRUISER Inc. Clinker Boats--MARINER Fibarglas Boate- -SEA R -GATOR CAMPING TRAILERS--BIG SAVINGS— 23' clinker, ,l90rH.r -STERN DRlVB- ’Birmingham Boat Canter N. of 14 Mile Rd, efAd______ JO 4-4727, Ml 74133-Open D»l|y SEA RAY 500 CUSTOM Deluxe, 1943 40 h.p. Evinrude electric ihift. Call after 6, OR 34442. 8 guaranteed — Can I 10% DOWN or TRADE OPfeN MON., TO FRI., 9-9; SAT., 9-6; SUN., 10-5 PAUL A, YOUNG, INC. ' Used Boot Clearance USED OUTDOARDS '61 THOMPSON, 19' '42 THOMPSON, 17' Sealancer, 80 h.p. Volvo l.l Trailer, head, top, $2,450. McBAY SPORTSMAN, 17' 185 intercepfor, $1,495 ' Boat* - Acc***orl«* Tony's Marine New 15toot flbarglass I 682-3660 “ WfiA/TtL fitAf AttY'DlAtr"'" Kar's Boats - Motors, Lake Orion 14-POOT aLu'MI- I 1-1154, WALT MAZUREK'S LAKE and SEA MARINA AUTHORIZED DEALER CHRIS CRAFT, CAVALIER, SEA SKIFFS CORSAIR AND THOMPSON OWENS CRUISERS 24 ft. express 4 sleep, 185 h.p. $4,245 18-fl. Express 4 sleep. 225 h.p. $7,250 — * iMep, twin 225 h.p. '■ fiSIsixi!’ ' it S. Blvd. FE 4-9587 _ .i. a. Thors, 'till 8 p. m. Sunday 12 to 4 p.m. Wanted Con-Truck* ASK FOR BBRNie AT- BIRMINGHAM CHHVSLER-PLYMOUTH INC, 112 S. Woodard Ml 7-32 E 2-9878 2020 Dixie Hilltop Is Buying Factory Official Cars "Tep Prices lor Tqp Quality Cars" 962 Oakland Ave. __ F6 4-996( ■ " ■ ■"LATE MODEL CARS" High Cash Prices Sullivan Buick-Pqntlac Seles LLOYDS BUYING Good Clean Cars 2023 Dixie Hwy. M&M Mansfield , AUTO SALES ARE YOU BUYING A NEW OR COURTESY CART we WILL BUY YOUR LATE MODEL CAR WE PAY MORE. 1104 Baldwin Ave. 335-5900 SPECIAL price PAID FOR 1955-1943 CARS VAN'S AUTO SALES ) Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1355 GLENN'S I F6r clean CARS OR Ellsworth WE NEED CARS I TOP dollar for GOOD clean cars matthews-hargreaves 431 OAKLAND AVENUE -______ FE 44547_______ WANTFD: ittiik Car*»Tradn 101*A ALWAYS BUYING I I JUNK CARS - FREE TOW * $ TOP $8 CALL PB M143 ““ AU^NOSOinNC. Used Auto-Truck Ports 102 CHEVY feN(3INE$, 4's AND 8'S. OR w and Used Truck* 103 MONEY MAKERS 1964 Ford $495. 1962 Ford Econoline Panel with a beautiful red flnlshsTheater, signals, only $1295 1960 Ford F-lOO Vz-Ton Pickup “-e 8-ft. styleside box, gre< „ « —... gnJ 5| finish, V-S engine, heater a $1095 1960 Ford F-250 %-Ton Pickup . with the 8-ft. styleside box, red tlqish, V-8 engine, and tr 4-speed transmission, heater; and signalsl ■$1095 1962'Chevy Vz-Ton Pickup S-ff. fleetside box, 4-cyllnder ( Cl, green and white finish, ci cab, radio, heater, only $1495 / 1962 Falcon Ranchero Pickup this one has a sparkling, ' finish, radio, heater, only $1195 BEATTIE FORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" Home of SERVICE after the Sale On Dixie in Waterford • OR 3-1291 , 4-4844. t954 FOIB I 9.58 FORD #-400, l4-PQ6fTS0W> stake, 57 pMCfi4' dump stake, 43 Chevy m-ton Winch Fruck, 40 Chevy Ik-ton, 4-wheel drive, tqul^ ment In good condition, no ruat, at "”T Highland Road, f "------ F()#T»ICir~ 1959 F(3REn>|CkU#, 844S. dPbVkt Hardware. PB,JF^.__________ i"943 ford '/1-TON PICK-UP, L6V( mileage. 424-9845, ^ 1962 GMC Pickup 7 V; ton, stenderd tranamlielon. Fleet-side body, redio, heeter, 81,445, Crii^man Chevrolet’Co. Rochester OL 3-9721 19*2' CHEVROLET 'V'l-'fS'N; box, good condition, 1 owner, sherp, 2931 Seebeldl, Dreyton Plein*, OR 3-6249 4tter 3;30 p.m, • ■i^3 ”fMB fo"(» "WtTON, L6ii6 '— 4, redio, heeter end to" Priced to sell at It,St . rricea lo sen er ei,aau. Ferguson, Rochester FORD ■ , Bettur Used Trucks GMC 1942 Suburbens Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS FE $-9485 CLEAN 1954" CHiVRd'Ltf~Vi-f6N ; jfEP, Awheel drive, aluMT- num ceb with snow plow, MA 5-4788. '______________ lEEP BUICK and JEEP 210 Orcherd Leke Auto Insurance 104 AETNA CASUALTY $25,000 liability, $t,250 medical. $12 Also low rates lor collision. BRUMMETT AGENCY Mlrocle Mile FE 4-0509 Next to Pontiac State Bank GOODlilWS , For those who have been Canceled or Refused It can provide fIrsMIne coverage, nd protection plus yearly pra- proved driving record. CALL NOW FE 4-3535 '"^"*7dh».e<, Foreign Car* 5. 220 W. Yale. FS SbllO. with no IT- ... .. LUCKY auto sales ’ "Pontiac's Discount Lot" Road open to our. lot 93 S. Saginaw . FE 4-2214 1940 VdLKSWAdlEfi, fiAPld, HiAT-er, whitewall tires. Abaolulely ho money down. Paymenft of 87.M par''wMk. SM.Mr,.^arka at Harold par-t................. Tumor Font, Ml 4-7500._____________ 1941 VW StDAll, REAL CLEAN, 1942 VOLK5WAOON Rad ^Dr. Sedan with radio, white-' walls, clean. $1,350. 1942 VOLVO; LOW MILfiAOU, very clean. 1941 DKW-AU 1000 S, hardtop. $595. Pontiac Sports Car . Inc. 335-1511._______ BiAOTIPUll' 1943 KARAAAHN OHia ------------ AM-FM rs- «llant condl- - AUTOBAHN MOTORS, INC. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER . VS mile north of Miracle Milo 198495 full price with no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot"' , Road open te -193 S. Saglnpw FE 4-2314 19^Cadlllac convertible. All white ' with leather trim. Power steering and brakes, plus other power accessories., 11,000 tnlles. .Only $495 WILSON P0NTIAC-CADILLAC N. Woodward Ml 4-1930 1959 CADILLAC COUPE reaty beautiful ww mileagt w car trade, white with black d white Interior. Extra sharp 1940 CADILLAC COUPE Lika new Inside and out. Raody 4g go. $1,845. JEROME Motor Sales. 280 S; SAGINAW FE 8-0488 960 CADILLAC SEOAljll OEVILLi: Clean, one-owner, low- mileage. All power equipment. Owner sacrl-" 'ng for 82,100.. Ins^ It ony at 502 Shoreview Drive. FE 2- ' r-V fr;\ ■ TIUHTV____ THE rONTl*AC PRKSS, TI'^KSDAY. maV vJ. AIR CONDITIONEi) SUMyiER ENJOYMENT IMA* MiaaMi'iIma AMAtMM n*Ulll* Ulhl Itrlor. I It ft 01 BtTotowrt or IroO*. WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC ISM N. Woodward Mt 4 ltM Birmingham, Michigan Cadillac. Htw WMl |M J W IJMIR, M f$m, H. R YOU CAN BUY THIS ^tf« Codlllii*: ««ll»*' black wltti Varhlta top. Powar (toaiJna anC brakai, radio, heator, lofl-rty glai*. Still In tactory warranty, tor only tans, tats down, St months, GMAC. 'WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward Ml Blrml^ham, Michigan T»53'CHEVY CONVERtiBLE. GOOD h Marathon. 335- t«4 “PONTIAC / ifS4 CHEVY, »5. PONTIAC AUTO lyaa c.ncvT, aro. rwi-iiir^v Brokara, FE 4.»I00^_________ TwrojiW~3-DOOR, POWER- giida. $iso^e .4:Wi.K_____^ »54 dtilVY CONVERTIBLE, RED and whita, new top, radio, twjljf* whitewalls, ( cyl., $350. UL 3-2780. 25t5 HlclwyJ.awn, Rocjiester. _ T»5« CHEVY STAT ION WAGON, Powergllde, lair condition. $350. 483 4025.___________________ 1057 CHEVY BEL AIR, 2-DOOR ^8, II prlce^^$405, $5 down Marvel Motors $20.58 p( 25) Oakland Ava. 1058 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 2'-DOOR price with no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" Road open to our lot. IS J^Saginajw__________FE 4-22H __CHEVY 4-DOOR hARDTOP, $305. 1040 Hillman 4-door, 34 m.p.g. — $350. Good condition, owner. UL 2-1700. 1058 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler • Plymouth 012 S. Woodward ____M]_7-3214 CHEVROLET, 1041, STATION WA-gon, power steering and brakes, V-8, automatic, whitewalls. Good condition. $1,350. Ml 7-0225. 1042 CORvAiR MONZA CONVERTl- whltewalls. Authdrised liquidation price, $507 or $4.80 per week. Estate Storage Co. 100 S. East Blvd. afAuburn 1959 Chevy Impala 2-Door Hardtop V8 Stick radio, heater, white with red Interior. Looks and drives most like a new $1095 Patterson A Gpob stock. Easy .^T thATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 $. WOODWARD AVE., BIR MINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. ____ I960 Chevy 2-Do6r Sedan with 4-cyllnder engine, automatic, transmission, - $995 PATTERSON MAY Specials M CHEVY Va-ton 13 PONTIAC 4-door >0 CATALINA sedan 10 IMPALA 3-door n BUICK 4-door 10 VW 2-door 11 STARCHIEF 4-door 13 BUICK 4-door 12 COMET 2-dpor Money Back Guarantee SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 223 N. Main OL 1-8133 ROCHESTER, MICH. MANSFIELD AUTO -- SALES 1104 BALDWIK FE 5^5905 AND FE 8-8825 PLENTY OF EXTRA.., SHARP' Convertible , 2-Door Hardtops and Dependable family^ Cars! MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 BALDWIN ■ FE 5-5900 and FE 8-8825 1840 CHEVY 4 very nice, PB lf«" CHtp/|I6LeT ’2-060R ■ ’SEDaIj with original horlton , and matching Interior,.! maculate. Bconomloai raSlo,* ...... A very well cardd>r car antaed In writing lor ona y Full prica only 8885 8asy paym arrangad tp suit your bud«et- BIRMINGHAM 812 S. yyoodward Ml 7-3214 1840 CHEVY cONVfRTilti, SCYL-Indar, slick, raal nicel Whihi finish. Haskins Chavy-Olds, Clarkslon, MA 5-1404. _ _ ____ 1840" CHEVY 4-ttOdR ' WA66IS, Chevy I perftct. 1858 • OAKLAND FE 2-2351 M chIvy 941 tORVAiR" iOO, SfAlif6A#D like new - Sharp. UL 2-4508. mf chevy' impala'^conver^tt- 1961 Chevy Parkwood Wagon 4-door, V8 engine, aulorhatlc transmission, power steering and brakes - Radio, healer, $1,485. BOB BORST BIRMINGHAM I, $85 di AUTOBAHN MOTORS, INC. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER -'T Mile North of Miracle Mile 1/45 S. Telegraph FE M53I 1841 CORVAiR 4-SPEED TRANS mission, 3-door. $885 full price, with no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" Road open to our lot S. Saginaw 1841 CHFvROLET (STICK ... ,DOOR CORVAIR 700, POW, ergllde, excellent condition. OR 3 4530. 1841 CHEVY KEEGO PONTIAC SALES LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" Road open ot our lot. . Saginaw_________FE 4-2214 1858 FORD StAfFON WAGON, RA-dlo, healer, economy engine, while-wall fires. Absolutely no money down. Payments at 83.85 per week. See Mr. Parks at Harold Turner, Ford, Ml 4-7500. _____ 1858 FOWVDCtbRrSTICrK; 4 GOOD shape^$425. 473 1454. _ 1858 FORD 2-DOOR GALAXiE, "V-0 402-40733 b heater, whitewalls. $’650. 1962 CORVAIR speed’transmisslon, sharp. $1,3 VAN CAMP CHEVY SjLFORD MU 4-1025 T962 CHEVY 4-Door Sedan $1747 Patterson Chrysler-Plymouth 1001 N. Main Street Rochester . OL 1-0558 1842 CHEVY“SUPER SPORT CON-vertlble, 408 4-speed posltractloa. 4-3375. 1862 CHEVROLET IMPALA SUPER Sport convertible. Black, white top. Black Interior. 404-5582, Milford. 142 chevV II 400, hardtop - whIfwelK Eves. OR ;M482._______ 1843 IMPALA" 2-DOOR HARDTOP, power steering, powergllde, 13,000 rnhes, $2,385, cell alter 5, 334-3845. 1861 t H E V Y' COWAIR, 2‘b60R Monza, 4-cyllnder, 4-speed, radio,' heater and whitewalls, one-owner, extra clean. Priced to sell. Jerome Ferguson, Rochester FORD Dea,ler, OL ■ KEEGO PONTIAC SALES 63 CHEVY NOVA II ___station WAGON _________ 1843 CHEVY IMPALA (TONVERTi-bter beautiful beiQer radio and beater, automatic transmission — Power. $175 --- Village Rambler white outside. Chev-Olds iMPALA“c6NVERTF 4-speed tronsmisslo i price Is low- I AUTOBAHN' MOTORS, INC. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vj Mil# (!lbrlh.of Miracle Mile 745 Sf Telegreph FE " 4531 Wl CHRVis:LlR ''NEW''y6RKE 4-door hardtop equipped with eulo mafic transmission, power steer ing, power brakes, power seal power windows, radio, heater A most attxecllve metallic blue vfnyl* Interior ' A line performing 'smooth handling car that Is to please you. Easy terms price only $1,585. BIRMINGHAM . , CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH 812 S. woodward 1963 CROWN IMPERIAL 4-T)o0r Hardtop Full power, Chrysler executive C4r. Beautiful maroT" '"’'Un leather Interior. .$3597 Patterson GOODWILL USED CARS • 1862 TEMPEST Sports Coupe, radio. 840 CHEVY Impala f-door sedan, with 6-cyllnder engine, automatic, radio, heater, $88 down. $1,08.' whitewalls. You'll $8851 $85 down. sharp! $1,285, $85 d( 1858 FORD 4-cyllnder standard transmission; radio, heater good only $385. HAUPT 1 Mile North of U.S. 10 on Ml Open MONDAY, TUESDAY hi THURSDAY fill 8 p.m. MA 5-5544 Mbw tn4 IlKMl Cww ^ 841 CHI yarflbl franifr arflble /Zrr'STli,CTr ______________ whitewall liras. A .ipofly Alaikan whita with a rad vinyl Inlirlor and a black, top. A amoin handling (Ina performing cpr that Is guartn-—" - writing for • tuif yaar. I iika eMrylhiiw abMt thia BIRMINGHAM Chryslar - Plymouth $. Woodward ____ Ml 7-3214 I “DODeE"DAif~W*o(SN, ■'*■*- Saginaw FE 2-8131 laiFlPbliO. EWE, I'ANO spring iptclal at 1963 Dodge 9-Possonger Wagon ________ .vioaei, wn,. r angina, stick shin, rat 13,000 tPlI*^ <^na-owri $1845 Patterson Chryslt^Plymouth 1001 N. Main Slre«l ROCHESTER 01----- I844' FbRb~COWi7 EXtlLrt^^ condition. $250. ^3^4^3S. _ ' F'b R'b,“ “mechI^ good, $40, call MA 5-1403. Attar Jfit fUM 4ini|r LLOYD MOTORS Village' Rambler 444 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM AW ,,4,3800 wagon. Bx 1854 Ford, ____"Cair Drayfcn Plalni, 4738728. ofion7MYT204t. I'|l2 FALCON wW66n,“ EXCEL- AUfb- 1855 foWd IbbOR, Ic, (:ieai; FE 8IIM4. 1854 FORD CLUB VICTORIA, RA-' healer, eutomallc transmission 473-3044. _ _ 143 iSORD GALAXIE 500 HARDTOP, A-1. 474-1242. __________ FORD 430 Oakland A LLOYD V MOTORS 1843 i=AIRLANE 4-D(X)R PCYLIN- In writing tor II year, a np-quallly car that top-value at our low price ot $1,885. Easy terms arranged It your budget. BIRMINGHAM ✓ Chrysler - PlyMoulh 812.-^. Woodward _ Ml 7-3214 - WHlfE 'l8»' f»LYMbDt1d, Obb^ condition. $300. 4*2-312$._.^_ l^LIANT V-200 4.b65R, 1841, AUTO- )321K Saginaw l857*^RO,’i^. C p.m.,^A 5-0041. extra sharp. $1085. Jaroma Far- guson, Rocheitar_FORD Dealer, 1843 FORD'GALAXIE SOOroiTatlO. FE 2J4573. _____________' f843 FORD' CONvIrTIBLE OAL- 1857 FORD STATION 8-CYLINDER ' *—*■', perfect second car, $185, $5 down and $10.84 Marvel Motors 25) Oakland Ava. FE $-4078 i857 FORD SfAftON WAGON 8-PAS-------- parts or as It. 1851 senger tor pari Studebaker, $50, .. _ - Ihlnjg ol^aqual_ value^ 4$2-481$. 158 FORD 2-bbbR HARDTOP, '$45. Save Auto, FE 5-3270. _ 1858 THUNDERBIRD. ^BLACK 2-minor repairs. $485 bALAXlf" 500, V-8, -J JEIP WAbbfilEER, AWHEEL drive, 10,000 ectual miles. Loaded will) everything: Power steering, brakes, alr-conditloning, Independ-• ■ ‘ --------'—, positractlon. __P WITH METAL CAB AND ' hydraulic snow plow blade. 4-- “-1, (2) 1850 Fords, h for 8150. EM 3- wheel drive. / 3134. 1854 LINCflLN, FULL POWlR, rubber, taka over payments. >57 MERCURY (iONVERT IBLE, clean, $150, Sava Auto, FE 5-3278. 1858“ MERCURYT 1858 MERCURY 2 OOOH HARD-top, good condition, law mllaaga. many extras, rnust sell, $425, will ------ a^)(wi -Ing, ( s, bla< il finish. One-______ ______ _____ Jerome Ferguson, Rochester FORD Dealer, . See II odayt Only $285 full price with ow, low weekly payments ot $3.75. SURPLUS MOTORS I S._Seglnaw_ FE 8-4034 58 ford' 1942 COMET VILLAGES STATION wagon. Radio, heater, automatic transmission, Full price, 11, '" STATION ...B-owr' L 473-3538. WAGON, $450. Ferguson, ^ORO_pealer,_Ol^ 1j;8711 CLEAN' 1858 FORD CONVERTIBLE, auto., balance due $428. 4805 White Lake Rd., Clarkston., betweei 1858 T-B I R D, WHITE CONVERT-Ible, power steering and brakes, leather Interior, Crus-O-Mallc, radio, heater, exc. condition, reasonable, MA 4-2027. »40' FAIRLANE '560; V-87' AUTO-mallc, radio, power steering, OR 4-0024. 5 condition, 8525. After 4, FE lucky AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" Crulse-O-Matic. OL t-1034. 16 FORD 4 EXCELLENT, ‘57 PLY-moulh, nice, $145, '54, '55 Chrysler convertible, '53 Cadillac convertible, '57 Pontiac. Economy Cars, 2335 Dixie. 185TFORD WAGON, 27,000 MILES, after s, FE 8^6428. - 1840 FORD, NEEDS BODY WQRJC 3-8052. _________ 860 FORD 2-D60R, RADiO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. LUTELY no money down. Payments of $5.45 per week. See Mr. Parks at Harold Turner, Ford. Ml 4-7500. . _____ 1__________’ . accept o*t;rs,_ __ ___________ >58 MERCURY MONTERIY, FAM-lly sedan, radio, heatar and automatic transmission, $585. LLOYD MOTORS 8-PASSENOER LLOYD MOTORS radid, whitewalls, excellent condition. $88 down, choose your own payments. AUTOBAHN MOTORS, INC. 1/5, .Mile North of Miracle Mile 1745_S. telegraph_____F E 8-4i 1862 MERCURY M 0 N T E R hardtop, radio, heater, automatic transmission. This car sale 1 LLOYD MOTORS 1963 COMET 2-Door Sedan $1596 Patterson Rochester 157" OLDS. ___________ . Sharp. ,$300. FE 5-3448. power steer-g aiid brakes, end whitewalls, ,585. Jerome Ferguson, Roches-r FORD Deajer, OLJ-8711. mi “FALCON STAflbN ' WAGON, $485 lull price. No'down payment. Buy herel Pay hbrel No credit | problems! j Cooper'"Motors 4278 Dixie Dreyton Plains l84rFbR'b 2-DOOR GALAXIE WITH ... .... -w. engine, only 1959 Olds Supei- “88" Hardtop door with automatic transmis . adio, heater, power steering, and BOB BORST ' ■ JOHN MCAULIFFE ' FORD 430 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1861 “ford“GALAXIE' CONVERTI- Llncoln-Mercury 520 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM Mr^4-4538 larOLbSMOBILE 'dynamic''"88", automatic transmission, power steering and power brakes for $1,- 485. LLOYD MOTORS 232 S, Saginaw____________ HOr'Fb’RD 4-bOOR, RADIO, HEATER, AUTOMATIC transmission, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTE- V.V x.X Aa4"^Aicr\/ nnuuM D»um*n»< It HeroldJ^er^Ford^M-7m ,r T-BIRD CONVERTIBLE, 4-vay power; steering,_ brakes, win- JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD , Cheer w.rh the Rest-Then Get One of the Best Deals Available at ROSE RAMBLER! Big stock of new '44 Ramblers Used cars at wholesala ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Commerce, Union Lake ^ EM 3-4155 “DEAL WITH Houghten & Son OldSmobile—GMC-»Rombler , Delivered NEW 1964 > PLYMOUTH-VALIANT $1754 Heater-defroster, electric windshield wipers, dual sunvisors, dL recfional signals, cigar lighter, JOl Horiepower 4- OAKLAND , LYMOUTH , Phone m»«4 LLOYD MOTORS ■ CONVEI M2 OLDS 4-DOOR, DOUBLE POW-er, radio, heater, exc. condition, $1885. MA 4-1808._______________________ SPECIAL SPECIAL SPECIAL For Sport Lovers COMBINATION BOAT and CAR 1842 Ainphicar convertible. Drives jn land and water. Cost $3,700 - > steal at $2,000. Come ' ' WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC N. WoodwaTB Ml 4-1830 Birmingham, M,lchlgan COME VISIT RUSS JOHNSON'S ' Used Cor Strip .... PONTIAC Catalina 4-door . ... 1942 PONTIAC 4-door Catalina $1775 1842 CHEVY Bel Air, 2-door $1355 “ ' PONTIAC Catalina 4-dqpr $1175 1857 DODGE Hardtop 2-door 1858 GHEVY Convertible ....... ..... 1857 PODGE 4-door Sedan.,™. $ 145 1?S8 RAMBLER Classic T. » 685 --------------------- .. . J ,2 PONTIAC Catalina RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac-Rambler Dealer M24 at the stoplight, Lake’Orton) MY 3-6244 n- GONViRTIBLii t.^'cT.otrbig iST "" ' LLOYD' ■'MOTORS' 1962 Olds .................... Matching Interior, buckali, cohiole, automatic trantmltaion, powar •laerlng and brakai, radio, htalfr. Sharp) Ona BOB BORST Llnealn-Marcury--520.*$. Woodward Av« rMINOHAM - A.. ~'W >nfeor ladan'l tts6. FE S-0881. 1963 Plymouth Fury Canvertible VB automatic, radio, haatar, poi staarlng. and whitewalli. Ona 0 ar, new car trada-ln. Black v 'rad vinyl Interior. Thli Is a Ih $2395 Patterson Chryiler-Plymoulh 1963 Plymouth Convertible V-8 automatic Iran; “•'war steering, II black finish, r radio, heater. $2395 PATTERSON Chryiler-Plymouth , toot N. Mein Street ROCHESTER 0 MILES, . 332-7687. 1963 VALIANT Convertible Automatic, radio, heatar, black with red Interior and whitewalls. trage-ln, EX- CELLENT condition. $1895 Patterson Chrysler-Ph mi N. Mall esteF PfWTIAC 2-DC engl .. . FE ^13.______________________ 1856 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE FE 4-8885. ___^ 1954 PONTIAC 4-OOOR, g60D CON- 1857" PQNTTaC STAR CjtlEF HARD- ■ i8ie ponti'ac. 1275. . _________FE 3-7414, 1858 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN, 4-D60R, 185'8 PONTIAC B-DOOSTHARDTOP, _________________ $385 lull price. down ^payment. Bu^ r—‘ “ ■ problems 1 Cooper Motors Dreytto 858 PONTIAC STAR--------------- power steering and brakes, white-walls, Inquire 150 W. Tennyson WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC ___ ... Woodward Ml 4-1830 Birmingham, Michigan , 1841 PONTiAC CAtALINA CON-verflble. Power steering, brakes. Red with white top. $1,450. FE 2-1876.___________________________^ tible. 473-77 UP TO $5, A, MILE YOUR SAVINGS BY DRIVING TO "THE BIG LOT" STARK HICKEY FORD 14 lyillf Rd. E. of Woodward Extra Special I960 CHEVROLET 2-Door Sedan $1195 PONTIAC •TIETAIL STORE 114 OICL H ■ A T ■ IT WHITEWALL TijilM. absolutIly no money DOWN. Pa---------- Payments ot $1.85 pqr ween, aao Mr.» Park! at Harold Turnir Pord. Ml 4-7SM. / LLOYD MOTORS 1841 PONTIAC TEMPEST, 4-DOOR ladan, radio and hgatarf autom-Ic transmliilon. vinyl inlarlor, tine car at a low price at tt,S Village Rambler 444 S. Vl/boOWARI^IRMINOHAM 5 FULL 1841 PONTIAC 4-DOOR. price with no mdhay down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" Saginaw open to our lot. 183 $. Saolnai* FE 4-M14 1962 Pontiac Star Chipf 4-Door Hardtop transmission, powar steering and brakes, low mileage, lOne owner, full price 81,885. BOB BORST 842 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-vertible, radio, haC - transmission and 1 LLOYD MOTORS 232 Saglnawr____________FE 2-8131 1942 PONTiAC CATALINA 4-D06R, power steering end brakes. Bast otter. Call FE 4-4684 altar 4 p.ih. 1842 PONTIAC CaTaLINA H^Rb- LLOYD MOTORS 1842 CATALINA, 4-DOOR HARDTOP. 20,000 ml. $1,750. FE 2-2870._ 1842 PONTIAC CATALINA, l-DOOR TiiiAPisT: ‘4-cyCjRder. 3-,.^.»d. $1,500. OR 3-0778. f843 GRAND PR IX, C'ORDAVAN and Ivory, trl-powar, 1 Ing, I positive traction, deluxe wheel discs, many more, has never been In the salt, 7,000 miles, must sacrifice, 7023 Petlx Drive off White Lake Rd., I mile weH of US10, Clarkston. ____ 1843 PONTIAC WAGON. CaYALINA 8. DA 8- MUST~SELL~T845 BONNEVILLE convertible. Low mileage, will consider old trade. OR 3-48^ ___ 8« PONTIAC SONNEVILLE Homer Right SPRING SPECIALS! I owner 81,385. NEWt oHd UMd Ciri 104 mi YEMPEIT 4-D00R.'V-324. au-•«v»iir n>dio htalar, whitiwalls. IhItM. 11,400. 473-4478 1375 Scott 'wlnSowT^ai 'Ith axtras. 1944 6T0 CONVERTIBLE WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward Ml ---------- Michigan tmiri ■Mt^BLiirToSSC rA6R) ano haalar, 1-bwnar trade. Our price Is 1485, " Villacje Rambler 1843 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vertlbla with full powtr. A white car with beautiful rad Interior tor LLOYD MOTORS YOUR franchised dealer for Chrysler Plymouth Rangier leep,"- We Believe We Sell the Best and Service the Rest I It Will Be Worth Your While to Drive the Extra Miles, BILL SPENCE Chrysler-Plymoufh-Rambler-Jeep Clarkston, 4473 Dixie MA 5-5841 New and Uwd Corf J04 a-jJsA______________________________ 1843, EAMBLM CLASSIC I door, •uto. 11,000 mlias. LIk Wtai. PE 2-2474, ______ 7 STUDEBAKER, I mafic, 850. OR 3-5413. New End UiEd Cart *104 Vllage Rcimbler SUBURBAN'OLDS "Birmingham Trades" 100% WRIHEN GUARANTEE Every cor listed carries this fluarantEE. Take the guesswork out of buying. Get one of our Certified Used Corsl Bonk rotes. 1963 OLDS ”88"s, “98"s 1961 OLDS “88"s, "98"s t"rSrMtrlir8^5’?’ ”*Pric^ From $1295 1963 OLDSJ-85's Cutlids^Cau^at, '^“5 WAGONS we HAVE THEM 1858, '40, '41, and„'42. 10 models lo choo»e from. Priced to sell. 1963 BUICK Skylark ^Dqor Hardtop with buckatj, V-8 angina,, automatic, radio, heater and powar steering. 1962 OLDS 9-Possenger U* ri5io!“«; Beautiful maj-oon tinlih. 1963 OLDS “98"‘ Coupe Bucket teats, full powar, black finish with matching Intmlor. 1962 Buick Convertible Electra with bucket seats and full power. Only 17,858 miles. 1960 OLDS “88" 4 door hardtop, with automoflc transmission, radio, heatar, powar equipped. Only $1295. 1962 OLDS Cutlass faX tilV* «s.*''« owner new car tradal 1961 OLDS Cutlass ?aX' h”.ir.rr^hta•^ll^bp >«Als, Sharp ntw car tradal I960 CHEVY Convertible Impala, V-8, automatic, power gr?'whT?:;Sll,.'’^*BTr‘mlni'a'S: QUALITY Used Cars at LOWER PRICES 2 Year Warranty See BOB MARTIN or BOB YATES 565 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-4485 BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every used cor ottered tor retail to the public is a bonotide 1-owner, low mileage, sharp cor. 1-yeor ports and labor warranty. 1843 Riviera, all power ... 1843 Buick Electra hardtop . 1843 Buick convertible 1843 Buick 4-dOor hardtop , 1843 Buick hardtop air cond. . 1842 Buick Custom Invicta . 1842 Bulclo-tpvicta hardtop 1942 Buick 4-door ............ Buick 2-door Buick _________________ 1841 Buick Electra hardtop 1841 Buick LeSabre hardtop 1962 Buick Special Convertible $1685 ----- ---------------j,j,5 $1785 sedan ... $1585 I860 Buick HARDTOP* — ■ ■ (-door s« ■ hardtop . $1295 $ 585 $ 785 FISCHER BUICK ■REPOSSESSIONS- . SANKSUPTCIES, STORAGf URS, ETC. TAKE pVER PAYMENTS WITH ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN CAR PRICE WEEK CAR , PRICE WEEK 57 FORD .. Convertible .$197 $1.63 58 FiAT .,. $697 Sports Roadster $6.72 59 FORD .;. 4-Door Hardtop .$297 $2.35 60 PLYMOUTH ...$397 Stetlon Wagbn $3.14 58 RENAULT HaVsunRootl' $197 $1.63 58 MERCURY , $197 Clean Car $1.63 59 PONTIAC Double Power $397 $3.14 57 MERCURY $197 2-Do^ Hardtop $1.63 LIQUIDATION LOT Located i Slock off Oakland 312 W. Montcalm FE 8-4071 - POSITIVELY-NO MONEY DOWN MAKE PAYMENTS - SPOT DELIVERY 1959 Plymouth 4-Door Hardloi Price A Week . . .$297 $3.30 1959 Ford stick, 8 $297 $3.30 ..$397 $4.45 . .$197 $2.13 1956 Lincoln .. 2-Door> tjardtoi (200 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM-PRICED FROM $97 TO $1997) Cor Price A Week 1958 Rambler .... $2.13 2-Door 1957 Buick $197 $2.13 2-Door Hardtop 1959 Mercury ....'.. $397 $4.45 2-Door 1955 Chrysler ... $97 $1.10 W. KING AUTO ^SALES HURON M-59 ot Elizabeth lake Rood '8“4088 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 RAMBLER FOR 1964 FACTORY OFFICIALS' CARS CERTIFIED MILEAGE Now Available 24 JVIONTHS GUARANTEE 1^3 RAMBLER ■ $1489 C ONLY AT VILLAGE ABSOLUTELY- NO CREDIT PROBLEMS NO MONEY DOWN -SPOT DELIVERY - JUST MAKE PAYMENTS- Cor Price A Week '57 Buick .... ,...$297 $2.35 BALANCE DUE '60 Valiant.. ....$597 $4.72 BALANCE DUE '58 Pontiac... ..;$297- .$2.35 BALANCE DUE '60 Ford ..;.. ...$397 $3.14 Car Price A Week '60 Falcon .....; .$597 $4.72 balance'DUE '60 Edsel ........:$597 $4.72 ' BALANCE DUE '59'Ford........ $297 $2.35 ‘ ■ BALANCE DUE . . '60 Chevy .'—.$497 $3.97 BALANCE DUE ' ; mmiMwm BM] FE '8-9661 : 60 s. telHgraph fe 8-966T ACROSS FRCll TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER ■ ' Y IV. ■. A ' I, tj' i ^ ^ ,, ; I THEO^ONTJAC TRBSS. XttP^SpArAMAY 12, 10«4 ■Television Pr^rams- ! ^ f’ -i# JSlEliSSl, '' - ' < •" ■■ ^ , ■ si Praj|iramt'fUtnl«h*dl by ttqNeni llitad Iq thli column or* lubloct to ehango without netico. TONIGHT f:M (2) (4) News, Weather. Sports (7) Movie; ‘$Man Beast' . (In Progress) ' (2) Woody Woodpecker (56) Exploring the Unl- 6>2I (7) Weather. News. Sports liM (2) (4) National News (!) TMnbstone Territory (56) Turn of the Century 7:46 (2) Suspense (4) (Color) Weekend (7) Rifleman * (6) Bat Mastarson (56) French Through TV 7:30 (2) Twilight Bone (4) Mr. Novak (7) Combat (6) Movie: “Target Earth” (1964) Kathleen Crowley, Richard Denning (56) Intertel 6:91 (4) Oregon PHmary (7) McHale's Navy f:l6 (2) Petticoat Junction (7) (Color) Oiwatest Show (9) Inquiry 9:36 (2) Jack Benny (9) Front Page Challenge 10:90 (2) Garry Moore (4) (Color) ^ndy Williams (7) FugiUve (9) Newspiagazine 10:30 (9) Nature of Things 11:00(2) (4) (7) (9) l^ews, Weather. Sports 11:25 (9) Movie: Encore Theat- 11:30 (2) Steve Allen (4).XColor) Johnny Carson (7) Movie: “The Big Hear (1963) Glenn Ford. . Gloria Grahame. 1:09 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Best of Groucho 1:15 (7) After Hours WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:29 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:39 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Qassrooiii (7) Funews 7:69 (2) News (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:10 (2) Fun Parade 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show 8:30 (7) Movie: “That Uncer-tain Feeling” (1941) Merle Oberon, Melvyn Douglas' 8:45 (56) English V 8:50 (9) Warm-Up TV Features Preview on Primary By United Press International TWILIGHT ZONE. 7:30 p. m. (2) Man intends to prove that he can bring back people from thO dead. By HARRY FERGUSON WASHINGTON (UPI) The best guess Is that members of both major parties will spend jnort) than 6^ million on this year's elections, national, state /and local. COMBAT, 7:30 p. m. (7) Saunders and Caje are hel by two SS men who want to get back to their own lines. OREGON PRIMARY, 8:30 p.m. (4) Interviews with some of'the candidates. ANDY WILUAMS, 10:00 p. m. (4) (Special) Guests are Joey Bishop, Osmond Brothers, and The Good Time Singers. NATURE OF THINGS, 10:30 p. m. (9) Science program on how size effects the actiqns of animals. 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-— Round 9:00 (2) Movie: “A Night in New Orleans” (1942) Pat-rica Morrison, Preston Foster. (4) Uvlig (9) Kiddy Komer Ka^ toons 9:10 (56) All Aboard for Read-Ing 9:30 (9) Jack La Lanne 9:85 (56) Numerically So 10:00 (4) Say When (7) Girl Talk (9) National School (56) Spanish Lesson 19:15 (56) Elementary Math 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Word for Word (7) Price Is Right . (9) Chez Helone 10:40 (56) French Lesson 10:45 (9) Nui-sery School Time 10:56 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (2) Real McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Get The Message (9) Romper Room 11:10 (56) Let’s Read 11:25 (56) For Doctors Only 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) (Color) Jeopardy (7) Missing Links 11:55 (56) Arithmetic for Teachers WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Your First Impression (7) Father Knows Best (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) Ttuth or Con- Medley 2 , 3 r r r r r r r r \i IS 14 15 IS It; ift 2l a F U' 5T * 3T 7T 45 IT 48 44 SI w SS SS St ST SS so 12 ACROSS 1 Larg^ plant 5 Feast day (comb, form) 8 Present 12 Rowing tools 13 Deed 14 Notion 15 Stroke 16 Scottish sheepfold, 17 Swerve 18 Grimaces 20 — fideles 22 College cheer 23 Blemish 24 Grab 27 Ductile 31 Gibbon ^ 32 Vehicle 33 Noise 34 Had! 35 Bitter vetch 36 Hawaiian garland 37 After-dinner sweet 40 Tendency 42 Priority (prefix) 43 Mine shaft hut 44 Ransom 47 Cowboys, for instance 51 Operatic solo 52 Harem room 54 Ostrichlike bird 55 Prevaricator 56 Penpdnt 57 Pheasant brood 58 Congers 59 Affirmative reply 60 Very (Fr.) ^ .DOWN. IBushcfumps V 2 Precipitation Ocean flyelf 4 Natural fats 5 Bdg 6 High card 7 Ocean vessels 8 Donora ■ 9 Roman date ^ iO>Pedal extremities 11 Biblical weed 19 Knock 21 Masculine nickname 24 Pleased 25 Rant 26 Greek god of war 27 Pastry 28 OUese 29, Mortgage 30 Gwaint's wife 32 Rite 38 Wea{K>ns 39 Before 40 Also 41 Feel regret 43 Crustaceans 44 Chest rattle 45 Great Lake 46 Clock face 48 Chieftain 49 Infeipret . 50 Takes to court 53 English stream Answer to Previous Puzzte (7) Ernie Ford (9) People in Conflict 1!:35 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) All Aboard for Reading 1:00 (2) December Bride (4) Conversation Piece (7) Movie: “The Gay Intruders” (1948) John Emery, Virginia Gregg (9) Movie: “Boy Meets Girl” (1938) James Cagney, Pat O'Brien 1:19 (56) French Lesson 1:30 (2) As the World T^ (4) Make Room for Daddy (56) World in Focus 2:09 (2) Password (4) (Colw) Let's Make a Deal (56) Adventure In Science 2:20 (7) News 2:25 (4) News 2:39 (2) Hennesey (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (56) Spanish Lesson 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Queemfor a Day (9) Friendly Giant (56) Memo to Teachers 3:45 (9) Misterogers 4:09 (2) Becret Storm (4) Matd) Game (7) Trailmastoi: (9) Razzle Dazzle (56) Teachcrama 4:25 (4) News 4:39 (2) Bowery Boys (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Hercul'4i 5:60 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Flat Top” , (1952) Sterling Hayden, Richard Carlson (9) Captain Jolly and , Popeye:^ 5:15 (56), Friendly Giant 5:39 (56) that’s New 5:55 (2) Wdithcr (4) Cara Duvrll ITowQship Votes to Be City; 1 Not DETROIT (JS - One Western Wayne county township decided to become a city Monday. Another rejected the same Idea. ★ ■ ★ Nankin Township voters approved incorporation 8,086 to 2,237., Taylor Township disapproved by an approximate 8 to 1 margin. Nankin will adopt the name of “Westland” if nine persons elected to a charter commission form an acceptable charter. The towtudiip Has a population of 70,000 and 20.9 square miles of land area. iPresidential Campaigning—No. 2 Parties to Spend $200 Million in '64 (EDITOR’S NOTE This is the second of five dispatches, by the national ^reporter of United Press International on the techniques of presidential campaigning) It can be nothing more than a guess because the area af political funds is a dark, dank jungle from which explorers return with nothing more than a bag full of generalities. There are l*ws govenring committees can spend ($8 million) and how much a person tee ($5,009). But these are Sudss cheese laws — full of A political party can have as many national committees as it chooses an^vf person can give $5,000 to 100 dHferent committees if he feels Wilhed. •h ★ -\W John F. Kennedy ipent $912,-000 to win the Democratip nomination in I960 and the Kennedy family supplied $150,000 of it. PERSONAL EXPENDITURE Kennedy personally put up $60,000. The family also purchased an aMaiie for $365,169 and leased It to Kennedy at $1.75 a mile. A man wild) that kind of family money obviously has a long advantage against a poor man In preconvention fight as Sen. Hubert Humidu*ey of Minnesota found out in 1960'when he was locked in battle with Kennedy for the nomination. Kennedy destroyed Humphrey's presidential hopds in the West Virginia primary and Theodore H. White tells a poignant story about it In his book “The Makipg of the President”; final SATUR^Y “I remember the final Saturday morning after It was revealed that Kennedy's TV expenditures alone across the state had mounted to $34,000. “Humphrey had had but of his assiltonts infontaed him that the TV stations that had booked him foir a Sunday night halt hour were threatening to cancel unless they were paid that day, cash in advance. “ ‘Pay It,’ snarled Humphrey. ‘Pay it! I don't care how.’ “Then, realizing that his crestfallen aide was, like himself, destitute, Hubert pulled out his checkbook at the breakfast table and said; ‘All right. I’ll pay it myself.’ SCRIBBLES CHECK He scribbled a peisonal check. “Mrs. Humphrey watched him do so with dark, sad eyes and one had the feeling that the check was money from the family grocery fund or the money earmarked to pay for the wedding of their daughter who. was to be married the week following the primary.” Humidirey lost the ixrlmary and withdrew as a candidate. The man whd knows most about the collecting and spending d! political funds is Dr. Alexander Hea«l of the University of North Carolina. He was chairman of Presl- Broadway Again Awake After Rip van Winkle Act ByEARLWaSON Is it possible that New York, the celebrated Stay-Up City, is going to start staying up again . . . after a sleepy 20 years when it went shamelessly to bed at a decent hour? , I I hopped out of a cab at the Copacabana around 2 a.m. to find myself slicing through a long sidewalk line of white-jacketed and evening-gowned i»rom mungsters there to catch Sammy Davis Jr. in his “third show.” “Hiese wUheat reservatkms. right this this way,” a chap who was sort of a traf-, fic cop for the crowd said. They filed In, circled the bar and/ went down a separate stairway to their tables. WILSON It’s a sort of “live late, late 8ho< right on the streets of NY. The “third show” has bwn outan^ for years in NY until Copacabana Boss Jules Podell decided toat the World’s Fair tourists and other factors, might make it worx ‘Yes, our crowds are staying later,” Jerry Bems at 21 Club a«w ... DavW Niven and Sen. Javlts appeared in TOihtory to leiWe. Nivewls off to Finland to do a movie with Kim Novak, ■Honey for the Bears.” Cand niawning was at Sardl’s qnUe convincingly denying a rumor that she’d missed a “J?eBo, DoBy!” Lathi Quarter said R had tables JaAmed up a^st toe kitchen. Oscar Winner Sidney Poitler came to the Copa to cheer Sammy Davis who, in his first week of the third-show policy, broke all attendance and caslureceipts records. There was “late action;’ all over town. Was the"Go^to-bed early” trend dead? Jt came about during World War II when a dim-out curfew closed bars at midnight. Suddenly, now, again, there wAs a feeling that “There’s (night) life in the old girl yet;” THE AMDNIGHT EARk. • • Paul Anka wiB be Steve Lawrence’s replacement In “What Makes Sammy Run?” ndien Steve takes a week-long vacaticm... Aren’t Tammy Grimes and Harve PresneB planning the wedding “as soon as possible”? Ahbe Lane tells TV interviewers in advance she toiwn’t want to bo asked about Cngat. When Geoige Bums was casting the “Mr. Ed” TV series, he, turned down one actor who’d applied for the lead, and the' actor's agent asked for an explanation. Burns answered: “He’s just not the kind of guy a horse would want to be seen talking to.” ★ ★ ★. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Conscience is what makes you tell your Wife, before somebody else does.” EARL’S PEARLS: The experienced baby-sitter is one who puts the baby in front of the TV set, so she can watch them both at the same time. » B(toby Morse tells of the hammy actor named Beamish, who fell into a lakp^ Each time he .came up he shouted; “Help! Walter Beamish is drowning!” That’s earl, brother. (TM Mil SynSIcatt; Inc.) Radio Programs— WJR(760) WXYZd 270) CKIW(800) WWJ(9S0) WCARQ130) WPONQ 460) WJBKd 500) W[jFI-FM(94.7) SsIS-WJR, News WWJ, News CKLW, News . WCAR, News, Bacaretli WJBI^ News, Robert E. Lee WJR, S^S WWJ, Don Kremer , fclO -WWJ, Business WJR, Bosiness WXYZ, Alex^ Dreler WHFI, AAusIc for Modems *;45 WJR. Lowell Thomas . WXYZ, News, Snorts WWj; 3 Star Extra k;M—WJR, Baseball; Detroit vs. New Yet* 7^^WWJ, News, Emph. WXYZ^Bd MOrflan / CKLW, Bob Sieorist ' f WJBK, Jack the,Bellboy WCAR, Boyd Cail^der 7:«»-iWPON, Ben Johnson. 7:15-WXYZ, Lee Alan CKLW, Fulton Lewis WWJ, Phone Opinion 7:3*-CKlW, Tom City WXYZ, Teen Bulletin 7:40-WJR, Fen Pin TiSS-wXYZ, Alen l!»-^wwj, ^sle Scent, , News UniRhesle titO-WPON, < Ben Johnson T0:J#-WWJ, 1 10:45—WWJ, Music riScene l1:0O-WWJ, News Final WJR, News, Spoils , WCAR, News, Sports • 11:10-WCAR, ;Commenfe ll:25-WCAR, Boyd Calender WJR, Music & 11:3e-WCAR, AfVusiC CKLW, World Tomorrow WEDNESDAY MORNING «;00-WJR, AgrI. WWJ, t|ews, Roberts WXYZ, Wolf, Music, News »!»-WJR, Muilfhall ■* WJBK, News. Avery WPON, Jerry, Whifmen . 7:0e-WHFI, Mews, Ross WPON, News, Whitman 7:30-WCAR, .News, Sheridan 8:30-WJBKi News, Avery 9:0O-WJR, News, Harris ■ WCAR, News, Martyn WHFI, News, McLeod t0:00-WWJ, News Ask Neighbor WXYZ, Breakfast Club CKLW, Joe Van WJBK, News, Reid WPON, Newsi Ron Knight WXYZ, Paul Winter, Miitlc News WCAR, News. B, Martyn WSONSIDAV AFTERNOON 1IiM,-WJR> News, Farm WWJ, News, Fran Harris WCAR, News, Purse ItilA-WJR, Blid Guest Show Art LfiiKletter WXYZ, Sebastian, Music, WJBK, News, Lee WPON, News, Bob Lawrence CKLW, News, Shlftbreak l:0b-CKLW, Davies ------ ■■ Sheridan WCAR, News dent Kennedy’s commission on campaign costs and la the author of a massive study on the subject call^ “The Costs of Democracy.” ,, V Some of his findingi: • Republlcsns almost always have mwe money than the Democrats. The eatjmate for the 1960 national committees’ expenditures was; Republicans, $10.1 million; Democrats, $9.8 million. ’ I ★ . ★ w • Unlike a man-to-man battle, the party with the most money losw oftener than it wins. Franklin D. Roosevelt was out-spent by l)is opponents four times and Harry Truman's campaign chest was empty at one stage of the 1948 election. CORPORATE CONTRIBU'nONS • Corporations are heavy contributors, usually to the Republicans. In 1952 Dwight D. Elsenhower came out in favor of the Tldelands Oil Bill and officers and directors of the 22 largest oil companies donated $300,000 to his campaign and $6,000 to the Democrats. • Labor leaders and labor organizations 1 a r g o I y give tkeir money to'toe Democrats and It Is a slublo contribution (a totol of $2.2 million in 1960 at all elecUon levels but not necessarily that full amount to the Democrats). • Many persons contribute to both parties and jultify their action by saying they favor the two-party system and want the fullest possible debate on the issues. Cynics lean to the belief that they merely are working both sides of the street and want to be able to do business with whichever party wins. • Big individual contributors can be reasonably sure of a reward. Maxwell H. Gluck, owner of a dress shop chain, contributed $26,500 to Eisenhower’s 1956 campaign and was named ambassador to Ceylon. It would havo passed unnoticed except that when Gluck appeared at hearings on his qualifications it Sabin Announces Finding of Possible.(;ancer Virus SAN FRANaSCO UB-Dr. Al-bdrt B. Sabin, developer of live virus oral pi^ vaccine, salfl last night he has discovered a virus he hopes to prove can cause cancer in humans. ^‘It would be too good to be true, but it could be true,” the famed virus spedaliat told a meeting of physicians and scientists at Mt. Zion Hospital. “Np human cancer has yet been proved to be caused by a virus,” Dr. Sabfo SaM. But he and colleagnes, he said, have isolated a virus from the thymus gland of an 18-year-old Cincinnati youth suffering from chest cancer. Tumor cells were extracted from the gland, lie said. The cells lived and reproduced under laboratory conditions. At first, he said, no virus was Paper Goes Back to Work “What could be true is that this virus has a causal relation-,Ship to certain-kinds of cancer,” said. The isolated virus seeids to be biochemically related to a of viruses that cause tumws In ibbits and a certain type of African monkey. Dr. Sabin said. The virus alM moves from cows to man, causing a nanma-lignant tumor known as “milker’s nudles,” he.added. Labor Dispute Settled at Washington Star WASHINGTON (AP)-A labor dispute Jthat halted publication of the Washington Star was set* tied early today, federal mediators announced. Representatives of printers and the Washingtm publishers association accepted a proposal by William E. Simkin, director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service. It calls fpr reinstatement of chapel chairman Paige Dozier— but without back pay. Printers at the Star walked out early last Friday. The Star published abbreviaM editions Friday, Saturday and Sunday but pressmen joined the walkout Monday, forcing the newspaper to halt all publicatlbu. RESUME WORK The agreement called for resumption today of i^iblication by the Star, an afternoon and Sunday paper. in proposing terms, Simkin warned that unless agreement was reached, “the present dispute may lead to a more widespread curtailment of news media in the nation’s capital.” The agreement calls for discussions between the printers and publishers of “appropriate procedures for paste-up proofs,” using established grievance procedures an(l dlMmssion of the types of notices that can be posted by chapel chairmen. Dozier was fired last Wednesday after the Star said he posted an illegal notice. Simkin’s pi^posal — accepted ty the two sides — urged that Dozier “be returned to^ work l^ith other employes without loss of rights, benefits or privileges but under the circumstances of this .case, with no back pay fqr any period prior to return to work.” evident, then, after 20 days of culturing a virus began to appear In large numbers. STRANGE TO HIM The virus from the youth’s tumor, he said, “was unlike any otoer virus that has been described m encountered,” in hu-nuui cancer. He added toat his report evidence — “a little bit el Ught cmning from the dark- “I’m always prepared — I’m a veteran by now — to fall flat on my face,” said the Russian-born medical pioneer. developed he didn’t ktlbw the names of the prime ministers of .Ceylon and India. , FAILED TO DELIVER • The underworld contributes heavily to political candidates, but only on a municipal and state level. Charles Binagglo, leader of the First Ward Democratic Club in Kansas City, Mo., was murdered in 19|!0. The most prevalent theory Is that he was killed because he had failed to deliver the political Influence his underworld associates thought they were hugdng. One estimate is that underworld political contributions in 1952 Amounted to $16 million. How are political funis stwnt? Here is Heard’s breakdown on toe Republican* ainl the Democrats in 1$56, essaa-tially\toe same for both: General expenses, salaries, transportation, rent etc. — 48 per cent. Television those — 2|) per cent. Printing, purchaahig and distribution of. IHeratarW — 14 per cent. Newspaper and periodic*! advertising -r 9 per cent. Radio time — 6 per cent. Outdoor billboards — 3 per cent. One-of-a-Kind S6LE 80» Tampan CytltYalOvan Elacfria,W!thlaat MB TnMSAVAIUItl FEA.2K2B aFIFRTRItt FE 4-2525 ^ELECTRIO 825 W. Huron COMPANY Rosafflond Williams SONOTONE aPLCemoN ' 1*3-1225 ‘ It tii SvppRtt . RUlimoIlDt Buy How and Save on Thest finaraiilooil -£e(uofv.£»ij& 4 Early-Bird Spdoialil C.WHII0K 1032 Wosf Huron Streot CE dlCAW "poNfukCtot_____ SvtiyihiHgIn Sfodernbmtiom Interesting incidental items that have appeared over the years in reperts from both )m>'-ties; For liquor in St. Looia — $6(L30. Corsage for Mamin Els^ enhower — $30. Corsage icr MargareA Tlrumaii-$15. fb pay a traffic ticket In Mnyland — Next: Baby Usslng mi TV .) I. i'; t' :,1- •'^v''; -f. , V ■7-- 'mh ,■ ' '} THIETYTWO ,'t& : ■ i4'....................... Grass Firfc Hike Waterford Total A raah of grass fires pushed the numbo* of alarms handled during April by tbe Waterford Township F|re Department to ail, just 82 more than In April IMS. Gross fires last month ac- K PONTIAC FRES^, TUESDAY; MAY 12, 1964 counted for IM alarms com> pared to just 64 during the same month a year ago. ★ w * Alarms for the first fou months this year total 300 compared to 326 ftt* the JSnuary through April period last year. Fire damage so far. this year, however, is well under that for the same period of 1063. The four - month totals are $63,366 and $1M,36S respectively. COHSyMgKS eowiti COMPANY inft»tUtces^ tUte* Handb^i-BromnX [WATER wonder! Automatic Gas Water Heater Gives MORE hot water WHEN you need it.. Exclusive Otmaml-O-OUrt ficure the hot wster you need, and heat it accordingly. Fast heating for ■wash days .. . slower heating when demand is small. Saves you money! Control Cont. Beautiful, functional. Coppertone columA reach. ! Suparglss-lintd I tank, tough and I durable. Guards ! iagainst rust and I corrosion. | thSnM WATER I WONDER it fast and I Phone 333-7812 I Bum Memory Hobqes—Vanishing Breed By JfERRV BUCK RICHMOND, Va. (» - What ever happened to the hoboes used to know as a kid?t I haven’t seen an honest-to-goodness hobo in years. Apparently in this age of prosperity they have been squetebd employment. But to a kid ih those first post-depression years they were everywhere. The railroad tracks were only a few blocks away and every freight train brought more of them to the Louisiana bayou country where I grew up. Looking back, I suppose most of them were derelicts, bewildered and abandoned, but in those days they seemed like soldiers of fortune. GLAMOROUS UFE In old lelt hats, knee-length coats and open-toed shoes, they had an aura of glamor. They came and went like the wind Desk Is Eyed for JFK Library WASHINGTON (UPI) - The desk the late President John F. Keimedy used during his last fbrm as a l).S. Senator would be donated to the Kennedy Memorial Library under a resolution sponsored by Sens. Pat McNamara and Philip A. Hart, D-Mich. The two senators introduced the resolution yestwday. They said that Kennedy bought the chair he had occupied in the Senate chamber as a remembrance of his eight Senate years. The chair will be in the library. , “It occurred to me it would be very appropriate for the Senate to complete his tableau by providing also the desk in the Senate chamber last psed by the late President as a senator," McNamara said. CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY Noted Surgeon Dies TOLEDQ, Ohio (AP) - Dr. Burt G. Chollett, 88, a pioneer ip orthopedic surgery and one ofthe founders of the National ^ Society for Crippled Chfldren, died Monday. ^ctorTtJy^^ price smAshi M MYMERTS FOR 7 FUU MONTHS Sale ALUMINUM , SCREEN and STORM \ WINDOWS 16" ANY 6IZE uxcapt picture window. Lotott Poimalum modol. 4 windows minimum. Installation oxtra. No ladder climbing > f well romovo your old sash and pay you for 'om.' Chargja it— NO PAYMENTS FOR 7 FULL MONTHS ALUMINUM DOOR RIOT! $1700 otir II . ; ri I I I, J i yfl Lji. V ; I FACTORY-TO-YOU SALE! ^ALUMINUM AWNINGS SAVE to 50% . , MW at the lowsit prices of ths year and gst ^immodiots unhurrisd, corsful inst^loilon by Bwdman ■ factory tioinedmMrti. iBUBNER/ $0000 IMPORTANT . our Lowest Prices of the Year! AUMINUM SIDING ALOMMUM GIHTERS R00*FING and every meal was a picnic around a camp fire. ' ★ ★ We had no sidewalk in front of our house on which to scrawl a sign, but the hoboes all seemed to know my mother was an easy mark. She was always good for a plate of scrambled eggs, bread and a cup or tWo of coffee. Sometimes I would beside one on the bank steps and watch him wolf down the food. Dad had a brick yard along the tracks, and for a time it was a hobo Hilton. There wasn’t much demand for bricks, for months at a time its kilns stood empty. We used to play there, up the chimneys, down through the tunnels, and out again, yelling, just to hear our echoes. The hoboes tiurned the kilns Into harbors from the wet and the cold — and perhaps too front the world. A knapsack tossed into a corner and a blanket on the floor and it was home until the wail of a train whistle called them on again. HOW MEAL A few bricks made an excellent hearth on which to set a battered pot. I pooled my nickels with the hoo^ for a sack of beans and salt pork. Its odors filled our cavern, and nothing ever tiist^ better. We sat around the fire while the rain dripped outside and I heard embroidered tales of places that seemed to me like the Arabian^ Nights. Once, I remember, I brought over my horde of comic books and we sat by the fire reading. W A * I was especially envious of one iii|genipu8 fell^ who fashioned a home out of an, abandoned auto: It sat under a weeping willow beside a brick pond fllled with junk. W ■Sr ★ It was a shell. The motor and wheels, even the fendo’s, were gone. He stripped it bare Inside, then plastered the walls and chinkeid the holes with newspa-p^s to ward off the chill. Froth the junk hoap he salvjyed an car seat and it was. chair and bed. Ap upturned crate was table. .^j . HOME WRECKED Later, long afterward, a gang of us braced ourselves against the willow and shoved the car into flie pond.. A little sadly, i watched it settle into the miirk: They are gone new, and no hoot of a diesel wili ,iswer bring them back. Uke our childhood, they are gone. W world’s tallest racia afa jFuego, Chile. TIja average "MPrimo or Storm o STORM WINDOWS and DOORS- • PRIME WINDOWS • PATIOS ENCpSED, QIass or Sorton . jmu Complofowith allhardwar* SHOW ROOM OPEN 8 >.M. to 8 P.M. or lator on roquost. u WNIN6 and STORM WINDOW SALES SIS ORCHARD LAKE AVE., 1 Blook East of Tflograph Rd. (Nr. Tom’s hdw.) FE 8-ISOS Cali Mon. thru Fri.4ilI P.M. FES-7808 An improvement on any gasoline VdLT'iEK f ^ But only Standard Oil Dealers have it « JE.9-0200 fffiS Or DAI Operator, ask (or EN(trprlsa « - - — '«> . «• FRei GIFTS WITH M gasolines accumulate tiny impurities. But o’nJy American, Brand Gasolines receive the-Last Chance filtering of the American FINAL/FILTER.* )l?|So“hext time—Buy American Brand Gasolines. Drive "fill’er iiivfilfeFAd in and say ’er up'filtei'ed.' You expect more frorh Standard and you ggt it * PATENT APPLIED F6R StANDARO OIL blVISION AMERICAN OIL COMPANY ,0 1064, THE AMER)ds COMPANY, CHICAGO. ILL: \' ■ '(i ■ ■ 'TV ;v'Viv.; ■;■ ■ > - t « . . J j U K:. U . ' 'U,)i ' Mil 111!■XI The Weather THE PONTIAC PRE VOL^ 12a NO. 82 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUKSDAY, MAY 12. 19«4—:}2 PAGES E&^^%%U^!iST£jlNATION/SL I 10« RIGHT ON SCHEDULE - Work on the Howard C. Baldwin Memorial Pavilion on the Oakland University campus is preceding on schedule. Within a week the roof arches should all be in place, according to James Hicks, manager of the Meadow Brook Music Festival. The 2,000*seat pavilion arid the Lula B. Wilson Memorial Concert Shell will be completed for the opening concert, July 23. Oil Music Festival Building Called 'Right on Schedule “Right on schedule,” is the answer to “How is the building coming for the Meadow Brook Music Festival?” James Hicks, manager at Oakland University for the festival, says that nearly all the Steel work is in place. Special cranes had to be brought in to raise the giant roof arches. Enthusiasm for the performing arts program has infected the contractor, J. A. Fredman of J. A. Fredman, Inc., 735 South Paddock Street. As his contribution to the endeavor he waived his contractor’s fee and obtained the cement for under the seats as a donation. The opening concerts July 23-24 will feature violinist Gordon Staples and cellist Italo Babini playing the Brahms Double Concerto in A minor with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Mary Costa will be heard in all three concerts the next week. Only July 30 and .31 she will sing Richard Strauss’ “Four Last ^ngs” and Ravel’s “Sheherazade.” DUAL ROLE On Aug. 6-7 Sixten Ehrling will appear in the dual role of piano soloist and cohductor in Hindemith’s “The Four Temperaments.” Pianist. Leonard Pennario will be the soloist Aug. 13-14, playing the Khatcha-turian Concerto. Season tickets are now on sale, priced at $10, $6 and $3. Reservations are being takeh by committees throughout the prea and at the University. Mr. and Mrs. Semon E. Knudsen are chairmen of the citizens committee of the festival. Sewer Study Cost OK'd by Waterford Board . The Waterford Township Board last night took preliminary step toward the ultimate construction of s a sanitary sewer system for the township. The board authorized $18,000 as its share of a $40,r ^000 engineering study by Showers Seen for Late Today Showers and thundershovyers forecast for late today will. probably end during the night with temperatures failing into the 40s., Partly cloudy and cooler with the high in the 60s is the prediction for tomorrow. Generally fair and warmer is the outlook for Thursday. Fifty-six -was the low recording in downtown Pontiac prigr to 8 a.m. today. By 1 p.m. the temperature had climbed to 70. In Today's Press Poverty Fight Johnson’s bill before House committee—PAGE Rights Bill, Dixie senators huddle on jury trial amendment - PAGE 5. Latin Aid President offers funds. credit to ease problems— . ' PAGE 18. Area News . . 17 ' 1 Astrology . . .. i Bridge ....24 ; . 24 ’ Comics Editorials y. .,.x Markets • 4% 25 Obituaries 26 f Sports 21-23. ' ' Theaters 20 ' TV & Radio Programs 31 * Wiisoil, Earl . , , 31 Women’s Pages 13-15 .4i' the county Department of Public Works. .The study would explore*Jp-. ternal sewer system requirements of the four communities that would tie into a proposed extension of the Dequindre interceptor sewer line from 14 to 23% Mile Road. ' . Detroit has indicated a willingness to extend its interceptor ifne on n revenue basis payable by communities which tie in to the service. It awaits approval these municipalities. Donald Ringler, DPW deputy director, last night outlined the proposed sewer program to board members. ' \ Waterford, as the largestcom-munity to be served by the proposed extension, was assessed $18,000, or about 45 per cent of the total study cost. PROPORTION PAY Other communities who are potential customers would pay for the study in proportion to their populations.' - R i n g I Q r.,p«inted out that study expenditures would later be credited to the com-munitj/ when the sewer system i$7under way. Any community which ‘a p -propriates funds for the study but later decides to bypass the sewer system would forfeit this amount, Ringler said. Rusk Urges NATO to Isolate Fidel THE HAGUE, Netherlands m — Secretary of\State Dean Rusk urged the complete toolation of Communist Cuba today, warning the Western allies that the Cuban problem presents the danger of another world-shaking crisis. In an address to the opening session of' the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (N^TO) Council, Rusk coupled a plea for action against Cuba with a call for the Allies to pitch in and help in South Viqt Nam. Rusk said manpower and military assistance are not needed from the other allies in Communist -threatened South Viet Nam. He suggested industrial equips ment, commodities, medical teams anjl teachers would help to give the people a psychological boost. Speaking of E'ast-West reflations in general. Rusk declared that despite an easing of tension, there still was no sign of any basic historic change in the Sovibt position. Ru^said the Unite^fi States id continuing to'deek some avenues of agreement With the Soviet Union and Other nations should do the same. \ . Heavily Guarded McNamara in Charge Hoffa, Others Raided Teamster Fund Legal Costs Probed as Trial Continues in U. S. District Court CHICAGO — James R. Hoffa; president of the Teamsters Union, and seven codefendants raided a Teamsters pension fund in order to help Hoffa out ♦of personal financial difficulties, the federal government charged Monday in U. S. District Court. In his opening statement oT the ihail fraud and conspiracy trial of the eight defendants, Charles Z. >Smith, special assistant U.S. attorney, said the government would prove , that they fraudulently arranged $25 million in loans from the pension fund over a 4% year per- Starts Series of Confabs on War Progress Security Tightened After Discovery of Cong Murder Plot ^I^LGON, U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara arrived in Saigon today for a 36-hour visit and plunged into a series of heavily guarded conferences on the progress of the war in Viet Nam. McNamara raced, from one conference to another In Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge’s car, with flak jackets piled on the Meanwhile the Labor Department prepared today to dig into Teamsters Union financial records to find out how much the union has paid in legal expenses for its oft-indicted president, James R. 'Hoffa. “We ire going into the various cases involved,” said a spokesman for Secretory of Labor W. Willard WIrtz; who announced the unprecedented investigation Monday. Assistant Secretary of Ubor James J-. Reynolds said the investigation, may. take at least six weeks because of a maze of financial dealings, between Hoffa and.his various lawyers in a number of states. An Avon Township woman was accidentally, crushed death yesterday when she, was run over by a small tjractor operated by her 13-year-old daugh- While the Labor Department has conducted thousands of investigations into the alleged improper use of union funds, a source said the Hoffa case is the first involving the question of legal fees. COST ESTIMATE The amount of Hoffa’s legal expenses has been estimated by labor sources from hundreds of thousands of dollars up to $1 million'! ' . . Although the La^r Department Vian only investigate and make public the amount of union funds paid to defend Hoffa, the probe might open the way for individual Teamsters to sue union officers to recover the funds. In Chicago, Smith told a jdry of eight men and four women that $1 million of that $25 million was diverted to Hoffa’s own use. Smith said the loans were part of a .scheme to help extricate Hoffa from personal financial difficulties stemming from his involvement in a housing project for retired persons in Brevard County, Fla., called Sun Valley Inc. Robert with U. SAIGON — U.S. Secretary of Defense McNamara (dark suit, center) walks .S. Ambasador Henry Cabot Lodge after leaving plane at Saigon Airport. At'right is Vietnamese Defense Minister Maj. Gen Tran Thiem Khiem. Tractor Kills Area Woman Girl, 13, Accidentally Runs Over Mother ter. The victim, Mrs. Frederick J. Gaff, 51, of 3079 Eastwood, was dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following the 5:10 p.m. accident. Mrs. Gaff and her daughter, Mary K., were working in the back yard when the accident Sheriff’s deputies said Mrs. Gaff-was cleaning weeds from the plow behind the tractor when the girl’s foot slipped off the clutbh, and the tractor lurefhed backwar4s and over the woman. The youngster ran to the home of a neighbor, Donald-Bennett, 3069 Eastwood, who called police and then went next door and turned off the tractor motor. * SERVICE SET Service for Mrs. Gaff will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at the Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery.- Surviving besides her husband and daughter Mary and two other daughters, Mrs. Gene Underwood and Rowena D. Gaff, both of Petalume, Calif.; a son, Frederick R. of Pontiac; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Dixon of Avon Township; nine brothers; and two sisters. Violence Hits Town After Wallace Talk CAMBRIDGE, Md. (iP)—An outburst of violence in the wake Of a presidential campaign speech by Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace left this center of racial strife in the grip of ipew tensions today. Two demonstrators , and five National Guardsmen were injured in a melee touched off last night when "♦■about 200 singing, handclapping integrationists floor, on the seat and behind his back for protection against Communist terrorist bullets, hand grenades and mines. ♦ -He was accompanied every where by a motorcade of vehicles bristling with police and a truck loaded with special Forces soldiers, their guns' at the ready. U.S. and Vietnamese security were taking no chances since discovery of a plot on McNamara’s life. Viet Cong agents were caught Saturday night trying to mihe a bridge the secre-. thry was to cross. Cuban Exiles Hike War Talk MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Talk of impending military action against Fidel Castro gained momentum today in this Cuban exile capital, but plans, if any, were shfouded in secrecy. Ci|neros, newly namea chief in Exile of Revolutionary junta—JURE—returned from a conference In Puerto Rico with Manuel Ray, Who has promised to be fighting inside Cuba by May 20, Cubarr independence day. .Another activist g r 0 u p, Revolutionary Recovery Movement—MMR—reported it is mailing oUt English translations of a speech by its head, Bay of Pigs leader Manuel Artime, predicting “a hard war full of blood and sacrifice.”' . He was quoted in his March 18 address to an exile group as comparing Castro’s forces to Goliath and his to David. Construction of the, Waterford sewer system coujf be under way in two years, «ingler and the system cmld be com:, e,yeai pleted in one more,' SCHEDULE PRESUMED This assumes that plans for the interceptor and negotiations on laterals and arms with the four communities involved proceed on schedule. p „ tried to march on the arena where Wallace had spoken. They met a cordon of some of the 400 National Guardsmen hurried into this sensitive spot just to prevent such an act. Wallace had already left the town of 12,600. He had addressed about 1,500-supporters in his campaign in the May 19 Democratic primary and .was applauded more than 40 times during a 45-minute speech attacking tRO civil pi|[hts bill pending in the Senate. Balked by guardsmen wearing gas masks and holding rifles with fixed bayonets, the integrationists squatted^in the street and sang “We, Shall Not Moved.” TEAR GAS Guardsmen used tear, gas to disperse them, arrested 14 and slapped art 11 p.m. curfew on the city. State officials met into early morning on the disposition of the arrested. rr Two were treated at Cambridge hospital, one fo? a cut and the other for the effects of tear gas, then were “returned to the National Guard armory. Two pthers were- then sent to the hospital for treatment of minor, injuries. P«ntiac ^$s Photo |The sewer system would cost individijjal users from $1,- iContinued Page 2, Col. i) NEW DORM — Construction of a fourtlwlormitorj^ at Oak-l^d University is welbunder way on the north edge of the campus. To bep named Hill ,H%ase,- the dormitory will give the university space for a total of,500; fe^dent, stvidents wheirit Opens, in the fall. Three dormitories — Fitzgerald, Anibal and ■^ “FFyale -^ now house about 288 stqdents. , /, Deputy Atty. Gen. Robert Murphy said charges to, be filed against' some., of those arrested still were under study. ARREST LEADER Gloria Richardson, leaderTof the 2 ^ year - old integration movement in Cambridge, 'was among those arrested. Those not hospitalized were trans^ ferred to National Guard hqad^ quarters ifi Pikesyille, across .Chesapeake Bay and north of Baltimore. ^ ' The guardsmen ordered into Cambridge before Wallace’s appearance at. the invitation of the Dorchester Business and Citizens Association. included units which were palled out at the height of similar violence in Cambridge' last summer.- McNamara on his arrival conferred tot two hotifk udth Lodge. After a quick lunch at Loctse’s residence, he began a series of conferences with top U.S. military officials. SET TO CONFER He is scheduled to confer ith Maj. Gen. Nugyen fthanh, South Viet Nam’s strongman premier, tomorrow afternoon and leave for Washington a few hours later.' There was some speculation that MacNamara during his visit would announce a tougher . U,S. stand in South Viet Nam, possibly including the evacuation of American dependents. Communist terror attacks against Americans and Vietnamese in the streets of Saigon have increased lately, and all US. military establishments have been placed under heavy guard. ' The secretary on his arrival made only a two-minute statement and answered nb quesf: tionA FIFTH VISIT Here for bis fifth, visit since the U.S. military' buildup in South Viet Nam began more than two years ago, McNamara promised the United States will provide “whatever is required for however long it is required.” Air Force police checked all arrivals Before McNamara landed and inspected the VIP room where he stopped after getting off his plane. Dean of the House Dies at Age 85 ' \ A } WASHINGTON (ff) — Rep. Clarence Cannon, D-Mo., pep* pery guardian of the -U. S. pocketbqok for decades, died today: :^e was 85. Dean of the House for years, he bad been in Congress since -1922, a member of the Appro* priations Committee, and chair-jnanf pf the group since 1941 exu qept for the periods 1946-48 and 1952-54 when the Republicans were in control.. In that period he'had presidad over appropriation of more than a trillion .dollars -7- more than any man m history. Bat he was proudest of thf billions he had helped chop out of requests. Rep. George Mahon, I>-Tex., is in line to succeed Cannon as chairmah of the powerful committee. , • . ' . '' 4.' • 1 UaVd HJAU JXVN ■IPIVO V' . . .1. PONTIAC PRE^S.. TUES^I^J^y,' MAY ij 1004' TK‘I'H V i;. lorhado Dead Buried Today MOUNT CLEMENS (AP)-Eight ot the 10 vicUins of Friday’s Anchor Bay arCa tornado ware buried today as contributions poured in to heip survivors rebuiid their shattered The death toil climbed to 10 Monday, when Mrs. Gladys Sparwasser, W, of Chesterfield . ★ ★ Expect Return of Guard Unit i ' The last of some 375 Michigan National Guardsmen, including some from the Pontiac unit, were expected to be released from duty in the Anchor Bay tornado disaster area this afternoon. All but 35 officers and men from Pontiac, Flint, OWodso and Lapeer were sent home at 6 p.m, yesterday. The guard units had been at the scene ’ since dawn Saturday. The battalion, commanded by Lt Coi. Mitchell B. Thomas of Davison, was called to duty at the direction Of Gov. Romney to assist Macomb Sheriff Lester Almsteadt and state police in the recovery More than 100 men from the l*ontiac Guard were at the Their primary mission was to patrol the stricken area and guard against looting. They also helped in the sear^ for missing persons in the early phases (d thie recovery program. Board Okays Cost of Study (Continued From Page One) 050 to $1,125 per Waterford resident, according to Ringler. A breakdown of the total includes $350 for Interceptor connection assessment, from $600 to $650 for the lateral liiie in the street and from $100 to $11$ fhember crew died when a C124 military transport crashed and burned in a rainstorm near" (Joopertoh, Okla, The plane apparently exploded in the air. ' ‘ PRECISION FLYER Also on Saturday, Capt. Eugene J. Devlin, 31, a member of the Air Force Thunderbird precision flying team, was killed wheif^his F105 jet exploded before a scheduled landing at Hamilton Air Force .Base, Calif. The six-man team was returning from an air sho^ at Seattle. Lastf Friday, Jhere were only three survivors among the 49 persons aboard - anfeArgentine Air Force Ck)urier plane which hit a high coastal sanrf' dune while landing in a dense fog near Lima,. Peru. Forty-four persons died last Thurs- | day in the crash of a. Pacific Airlines plane near Concord, CalK. A^ gun was found to the wreckage ana tovestir gators have sought to determine whether the pilot was shot by a pasSenger. ’ Also on ’Thursday, five mdn vroye killed when a British Royal Air Force " Valiant bomber crashed in Lincolnshire. ' program at the Community House is the author of several articles on urbah i^ewal, neighborhood conservation, race relations and social action. 9 to 20 Years Wa* Found Guilty aW $econd Trial Milton 1^11 faces two Other charges ,qf raj^, g|je involving S^tOtohw a 51- year-old woman in 1962. \ Board Sets Hearings on Mill Split The paklknd County Tax Allocation Board will begin hearings tomorrow at the Courthouse Auditorium prior to splitting this year’s 15-mill county tax levy among townships, school districts and county government. The board will hear millage requests from school and . governmental unite. The hearings will last for the next three days. Ibe allocation board will recimvene Monday for a preliminary decision on the rates. ’These rates will be bas]ed on ■ thq county’s recommended $2.3-biliion . equalized valuation, which is the amount on which the 15 mills will be levied if the figure is approved by State Board of Equalization May 25. The allocation board- will reconvene May 25 to set final rates. AUDITORS SEEKING . Based on the county’s recommended valuation, the County Board of Auditors will be seeking 5.91 of the 15 mills toward financing a proposed $18,4 million budget :(pr county govern-^ ment next year. Last year the allocation board gave county goverh-meht 5.19 mills toward this year’s $16-mllllon budget.. ,The board last year alloted .10 mills to Oakland Schools, which is ^ responsible for special education and. other county wide-.educational services. TTie remaining 9.71^ mills was allocated to the 30 school -4is-tricte in the cpipity,. less udiat-eVOr amount was given to the various {ofitoship. government^. Requesting jownships got o(ny-where from 1 to 1.64 mills: Tomorrow’s meeting will bp-gin at 9 a.m. and last until 'vkh ■-’L ■X. A ■St ‘i’.Vi,' .. ',,,1.". r • ■ ■ i'HK roj^TIAC rRKSS;- 1_)A V, I'l A t[ 12. 1 mil. DETROIT (AP) - Ex-convict Bruce Walter Lelkett denied Monday he was the killer of two slain Fredericksburg, Va., policemen and a North Brunswick, N.J. filling station attendant, police reported. Assistant Wayne County Prosecutor John A. Mo watt said Leikctt, 26, made the denial at Wayne County General Hospital where he is a police prisoner. Though Mowatl^sild Leikett admitted he was near Tuesday’s slaying scene of the policemen. • . QUESTION: Why are ships called "she"? ★ ' ■ \ ANSWER: Old-time sailors always had a special affection and reverence for the ships which carried them over the dangerous sea. They looked on them almost as living things. Eyes were painted on the bows of Egyptian and Greek craft (1) by which they were supposed to be able to spy their way. Statues of goddesses were often placed in the bows of Greek and Roman craft — the famous “Winged Victory" (2) gives the feeling of this custom, even though this was not a real figure Jiead but a statue set up to commemorate a naval victory. Statues of the Goddess Athena were often used on Athenian ships and the custom became carried on in the use of later ships figureheads, a great many of which were female figures. The old time sailor identified the figurehead with the ship and probably from this came the habit of calling the ship “she.” The old sailors lived a rough life, but they were romantic characters, looking forward longingly to the time when they would return to their wives and sweethearts. “She’s a sweet little packet,” a sailor would say of his ship, at the same time probably thinking of his sweet little sweetheart at home. ' ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Here’s a picture that’s fun to color. Use dark blue on the watej^and light blue on the sky, leaving some parts of the figurehead white with gay pinks and greens here and there. Ex-Con Denies Killing Police Mowatt said Leikett told officers he and a man known Jo him only as “Dominic” were near the Fredericksburg shopping center where the officers were shot to death and that I he two planned a break-in at one shopping center store. Leikett, recently freed from Lewlsburg, Pa.j penitentiary, was badly injured in a car collision during a flight from police Friday. Police said they found the slain officers guns and handcuffs in LeiketPs car and also a gun of the type used to kill the policemen and the filling station man. THIRD ATTEMPT The Questioning of Leikett at the hospital Monday was the third attempt by police to talk to him.' ' Deputy police chief Richard Humphry of suburban Inkster isiaid Leikett, under sedation from his critical Injuries, was too incoherent for interrogation on both Saturday and Sunday. Murder charges against LoU kett in the policemen’s slayings have been issued in Virginia. The officers were shot to death in their patrol car behind the shopping center early. Tue.sday. Mowatt said a.s soon as Leikett has recovered sftffleienlly from his Injuries he will be arraigned at the hospital. 2 Mothers, 8 Children Train Mils Automobile, 10 Are Killed MESA', Ariz. (AP) -r- Ten occupants of a station wagon were killed yesterday when a Southern Pacific express train traveling an estimated 60 miles per hour smashed into the vehicle at a crossing. Two sisters, one of them pregnant, and their eight children were the victims. they were Mrs. Lola King, 26, ■ of Phoenix and her two children, Shelley, 3, and vickypH'Ttwti Wrs. f^»wc of Winkicman, Ariz., and her ‘six children, Clifford, 10, Mi-chell, 8, Linda, 7, Karen, 5, Mark 3, and Gregory, 1. Mrs. Lowe was pregnant. The 14-car train, pulled by two diesel units, ripped the station wagon in half. Investigators quoted Engineer W..W. Witt of Phoenix as say-j ing he was on the wrong side] of the cab to see the station wagon approaching. CAR INTO PATH | An officer said the car ran right into the path of the train as though the driver didn’t see it or the signal at the crossing three miles south of Mesa. Johnson to OK Pesticide Curb WASHINC/rON m - President Johnson signs Into law today a bill tightening Agriculture Departmen't control Browns Grade A Jumbo — 19. medium 24V»; small ') — Chicago Merca r steady) wholesale Ing priMs unchanged^i »3 score AA 3 9J A SJVt; to B S5M) e» C 3444) 90 B 3SMi) •» C 34. !'..35SWS» c A whitw «) mixed M) medl- ..... ___________i V'/u dirties 35'/i) checks 23. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO |AP)-(OSDA)-Llve ^1-try: wholesale buying prices unchanMd) rrwsters. 23-23) special fed While Rock fryers IH*. Livestock 1130-1230 lb steers 20.30-21.30) most choice heifers 20-20.73) good to low chplce heifers 10.-20) utility cows ’^iSoos *%. Barrows and to 23 cents higher) U.S. I 200-223 lb barrows and gilts 14.00-14.23) mlx^ 1 Early Trading Moderate Market Posts Mild Advance NEW YORK (AP) - Steels, motors and a scattering of other industrials posted small gains in an irregularly higher stock market today. Trading was moderately active. * Rails also moved ahead mildly. Ulilities were up on balance. Meanwhile profit taking hit some of the speculative favorites which have dominated trading. Texas Gulf Sulphur sllpp^ about 2 points and Curtis Publishing lost a fraction. SALES SUPPING Although retail sales slipped a bit in April for the sectond straight month, Sears, Roebuck came back more than a point. Woolworth lost a fraction. All the Big Three motors posted fractional gains. So did U.S. Steel and Jones & Laugh-lin. Other top steelmakers showed scant change. Monday the Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose .3 to 306.8, Prices were mixed with most changes small on the American Stock Exchange. Syntex gained a point. American Stock Exch. FIgurm afttr daclmal p Ekchanga trantaefiont today: Craola P ...... Gan Oavalop . In* N Amar . ZMIch Cham . Mich Sugar ‘ Teachers Vote forAFL-GIO Pick Bargaining Unit at Detroit Election The New York Stock Exchange IK (AP)-FolloWlng l» a - ------- jfpek Ir-------- York Stock Exchai —A— Salaa (hdi.)HWiLl ACF Indui AMreu 1 Admiral 1444 IS 1 4444 44'/y 4 Had Stri 3 ...lltChal .30 Alum Ltd .40 Alcoa 1,20 AmAIrllnai t ^^j5par*^m \m Cyan 2 lElPw 1.14b .1 Enka 1.40a AExport .7Sr Am FPw .73 GrandU .40b, (IHIL) NMl Law L^lt C 14 22H 22Vk 2244-4-i 24 24'/4 -14 34>/4 34 34 - —H— 4 3344 3344 3344 - Honeywa HookCh 12 S7V4 S7>/4 - 3 3044 3044 30'/4 - 44 7 3844 5744 3844 -1- 44 . 12 3044 3S44 3044 - 3 3S'/4 3S'/4 35'A + S 4444 4444 ‘ 4444 -h 11 33H 33xl-mate trading range of the „.™.i Engining CItUans UtllBles Class ) Diamond Crystal Maradel Products ■ , Mohawk Rubber C®-., ? ?? ? Michigan Saamlass Tube Co. 1».4 MUTUAL FUNDS SM Asked Affiliated' Fund ............ «•»» cnemical Fund ............... 13-43 Commonwealth Stock ...........17.75 Television Electronics . 13 Hid. Rails Util. ! Net Change ........-fl-0 +.4 +.3 Noon Tues. . 439.4 144.1 152.7 Prev. Day . 435.4 147.7 132.4 304.r wSik aS? . 435.5 144.3 151.7 305.' Month Ago ..... 437.1 144.5 U'.3 304. Year Ago ..;... 344.0 142A fl4.4 272, 1944 High ........ 440.7 147.7 153.4 307. lau . 404.4 150.7 1 48.9 284. . 407.1 152.5 151.1 284. . .*41.1 121.4 134.9 242. 1943 High . Pl-ev. Day . 81.3 101.0 Week Ago 41.3 1«.9 AAonth Ago 41.2 101.4 Year Ago .41.1 101.2 01.0- 87,3 90.8 17.3 - 90.7 93.2 1943 LofW . 79.7 99,5 47.5 ; 44.4 DQMC^^ONH NOON AVERAGES Bofden 2 Borg War 2 —'-IS Mta ISS 1.40a I 7144 71'A 7144 -I- BrlggsS Brist N rick ePL I 3 2i'A 25Vj 25Vj .. 5 '2344 2344 2344 - CallahM :17( Camp Sp .80 Can Dry 1 ' 3444 34H 3844 . I 14V< 1544 U'A + I 5944 S9'/4 3944 -h Chrysler 1 CIT Fin 1.40 CttlesSv 2.40 ClevEIIII 1.20 ColoPaf 1.20 ColllnRad .40 CBS 1 Col Gas 1.22 ComICra 1.00 Corned 1.40b / ConEdIt 3.30 CoriElacInd 1 CnNGas 2.30 ConsPw 1.30 Contar Cont 4 3744 3744 3744.+ 10 7044 7044 7044 + 4 35'A 33'A SS'A + I 129V4 129Vi 129VA + t 'Can ‘ 25'A + /IT 37V< - Copper Rnge Corn Pd 1.50 Cromptn 1.20 Crow C .751 Crown Cork . 1144 1144 1144 31 10044' 99'/j 10044 + 1 31'A 31'+ 31'me along. Y'l «' By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “My two sisters and I have fuads which we would like to put in E bonds. We are in our early 80’s and would like all three names on each bond. Is this possible? What is the highest E bomf, denomination, also purchase price and maturity value? How long is maturity? After maturity, do we have to sell or will bonds rantinue to receive interest? When sold, how do we stand as regards income taxes?” H. M. A) You are wise to buy E bonds at your ages. You can have no more than two names on each bond. The highest denomination of an E bond is $10,000, the purchase price is $750 per $1,000 and the maturity value is $1,000. E bonds now offered mature in 7 years and 9 months, and the government has allowed an Pushing Buttons a Strain CHICAGO (UPl) - Automation is causing nervousness, heart strain and exhaustion in the men who push the buttons on modern inachinery, according to an industrial expert. Dr. Rolf R. Coermann, head of the biotechnology departo at West Germany’s Max Planck Institute for Industrial Physiology, said the adverse effects of automation are just now starting to show up. He reported to a Cheiago Medical School audience yesterday on the results of a study of young control panel operators in West Germany. “Work demanding a high degree of continual mental alertness with respect to production )Uts a greater strain on the leart than heavy physical labor,” he said. County Unit of Red Cross Slates Dinner I More than 3,000 persons in Wyoming are engaged in the sheep business. The Oakland County chapter of the American Red Cross will hold its. annual dinner meeting Thursday and elect officers for the year. ' "The dinner will be held at St. James Episcopal Church, 'J55 W. Maple, Birmingham. Dr. Rodman E. Taber, as^ sociate surgeon, division of thoracic surgery, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, will he the principal speaker. Dr. Taber will discuss recent progress in open heiart surgery, explaining that the Red Cross rie^s to provide.minimum of 500 pints of blood to make sible an average of 32 heart operations per month in the Detroit area. . Included among the officers .elected will be'a chapter chairman and ten directors to three-year terms . on the chapter’s I board. .// After a three-year technical training period in automation skills and five years “on the job,” the workers displayed ‘marked nervousness and slowing down of reaction time.” MEN TESTED The men tested worked mainly in coal mines, steel works and post offioes, Coermann said. “A chief indicator in the measurement of the effect of his work on the pushbutton man is the heart rate, and In the studies it has been shoyra that if the average rate increases above a certain limit, there is' a decrease In actual productivity and an onset of prolonged exhaustion,” he added. “The need fbr continuing attention and vigilance, the need for continuing menial alertness, appear to increase the heart raie substantially,” he sajd This problem, Coermann said, is beginning to be of concern to the managers of the factories who are beginning to recognize it. • \ Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-fhe cash position ■' *■" treasury compared with corre- ----^ dale a year ago: - May 7, 1964 May 7, 1963 * 7,461,876,107.00 $ 7,380,477,419.23 r July I 71,310,749,684.18. automatic lO-year extension period. If you sell you must report as income the total increment — interest earned while holding. Q) “My only stock is American Machine & Foundry, for which I phid $40 per share. Do you think I should buy more stock now at around 19, so that if it gets up to 30, I ■ could get out even?” W. S. A) I cannot advise you to buy more shares. What you propose is called averaging down, and there is something very appealing about the practice. Nevertheless, no one should attempt to average down unless he. has strong reason to believe that the stock involved has a good outlook for improvement. American Machine & Foundry has been hurt badly by the sharp falj-off in bowling alley constructiop, which has resulted in a big drop in its pinspotter installations (from 12,000 in 1061 to 5,600 last year). Earnings declined over the same period from $1.69 a share to $1.00. I would retain present holdings for possible recovery but would not add to them. ’ (Copyright 1964) CNB Honors 91 for Service In a cersmopy yesterday at the Community National Bank’s Club Overdraft, '91 employes were presented service awards. The award winners included eight persons with 30 years serv- The are A. C. Girard, president; Robert R. Eldred, executive vice president; John P. Niggeman, senior vice preside^; Carroll L. Osnmn, senior vice president. Dawson C. Baer, assistant vice president; Mrs. R. S. Craft, Miss Pearl Smith and Lester Ly- The award program was initiated this year following the bank’s 30th birthday. Awards consisted of emblematic jeWelry f e a t u r i n g the bank’s Indian trjademark. 1,651 YEARS The 91 honored employes represented 1,651 years of bank service. Organized with less than 20 employes operating from a single office, the bank now has 4Q0 employes and 16 offices serving 100,000 customers. News in Brief Mrs. Harry C. WUiiams, 4400 Lamson, Waterford Township, told police yesterday that 18 gallons of gasoline were -siphoned from the tank of a pickup truck parked on her drive. A thief entered the pastor’s office at United Pentecostal Church, 178.Grwn, after prying a lock off a rear door and stole $21 from a desk, it was reported to.Pontlac police yesterday. Attic sale — Parish hall, Lake Orion. Wed., May 13. 9 to . 3. —adv. Garage sale. May 12-14. (Dlothei torniture. 28 S. Shirley. FE 4-5886. ' -adv. Garage rummage sale,' for-. -mals, misc., 158 W. Rundell, Tuei, Wed., 5-7. -Adv. Runpnage. Thurs. 9-12. Indian-wood and Baldwin. —Adv. t 101,426,^J^86; 309W54,643,347.94 303,747,133,525.79 1 Rummagc Sale; St. Andrews I Church, Hatchery Rd., May 14th,* ■ 9. a.m. . —Adv. . 'A ... A j..,. AjA.