Yh§ W^ailwr U,ll. Wtilhar Anr*** WiniWir. ut Niiow Matunloy •• r«i« in THE I^OHtlAC PRESS Hom«| Edition VOli. 1»0 NO. 20 ★ ★ ★ ■ ppl?iiAC. MicirfgAN. yicrijAV. mAkch a,vaoks rr4-|agrtr? Premier U Nu, Others Arrested W Sad Search for Victims Goes On and On Defense Chief Moves Fast ICE HAMPERS SALVAtilil^ l^e formed during the m«bt —j»i si mnriih land und waters of Jaiiwica Bay near Idlewild Airpoi' in New YoAr^d the performance following the hero’s welcome given Glenn by the city of New York. Author Abe Burrows Is between the Glenns. 2,000 on Hand for Visit it'tired front the office in Military liiforniiutls said V Nu ■•imwileir^ aTOwBan residence at 3 a.in. and taken away by soldiers. Thalk lived a lew hundred yards away. Military personnel in quick sue-■ession also arrested Thakin Tin. fitiatice minister and president of Burma’s ruling parly; the housing •lJlM-Mheers~.AstrQnauL icy for NEW YORK (API — Squads oflshow what caused the American mergency workers struggled in'Airlines jet to ^1 tinge to disaster, waters and biting winds today ® " recover bodies of Thursday’s Towatal imon, bodies or parts if crush victims, 1 of bodies of 65 of the 95 victims They al.so searched the wieckng<*l had been taken from the shallow instrument which mjgh'i waters of Jamaica Buy, Other items such as luggage, clothing and women’s handbags also were being collected. Men' wallets and even loose p a p e Fatal Flight Passengers Eager, Happy Travelers NEW YORK (m—A hriefejise eontalning $‘!5.0(I0 to 950,000 In 9500 bills today was found In the wreckage of an American Airlines jet which crashed Thursday. Police said It belonged to W. Alton Jones, former executive eommittee elialrman ot th<^ (Mies S«‘rvlee Co. > found floating around » veteran skipper of NEW YORK (UPI) — The passengers who boarded American Airlines flight 1, minutes before its crash Thursday, were a cross-section of traveling America — businessmen on the job, first-time air travelers, vacationers seeking relaxation. W. Alton Jones was one of the vacatioh-bound—he -'was to join a group includ- _ ■ shallerod fflune’s purl: were pulled from the bay and trucked to ■ an American Airiinies hangar at Idlewild Airport. They will he studied ip an effort ,to pinpoint the cause of the crash. _ off- the sky. At %. Capi. James T. W. Heist of Rolling Hills, Calif., had flown 18,300 hours. Of these, 1,600 hours were spent in the cockpit of Boeing 707 such as carried him and his passengers to death. President Kennedy t«)k a sonal interest in tlie investigation. A lop government investigator, who conferred with Kennedy by l)hone, said that the President was deeply affecled by the tragedy and asked that everything possible he done to prevent a lecurrence. The Boeing 7«T S«—esfKwSlully (Continued on Page 2. Col. 2) UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. U Thant, Burmese acting seere-fury general of thie United Nations, declined comment today on the army takeover in his country, a spokesman I6ld reporters'. . r™. minister, U ^ahre Laiari; trade minister, U Thwin; the Industries minister, U Rashid, and the minister for Karon State af-lirs, Sao Ilia Tun. The army suspended Pai’Iia-menl and seized strategic com-municulions. . tran-sportution and .tecuiily points througlioul mintry. UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (Am-Jolin ll. Glenn Jr., the first American to orbll the earth, toured U.N. headquarters today to repeated^ applause from crowds of employes, delegates and visitors totaling more than 2.000 In the economic and social council chamber, the Marine Tieulenant colonel told a packed ^)use space programs would rel^imacasingly tn international teamwork and 'The natural cent)?r for that teamwork Is the Urriled Nations.’’ He said ' he hoj^ countries would learn together and work together in peace.” / (Jletin,'^ who circled the earth 100-t60 mllcN high on Eeb. 50. Introduced MaJ. Donald K. Slayton as a tpnn »yho would l»e “going up in h low we«*ks. ’ ' TliP Seven members of the U.S. 3»aul team touml the council hers and general assembly liails alter meeting in ueling Sec-Tetary General U Thant’s office suite with fh'legates on Additional Pictures, Page 14 The astronauts got standing ovations on arrival, then In all the council chambers and the assembly hall and again on the way out. Their last stop was the meditation room. With New York City’s -wildest (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Pontiac Chants Sad Reirain to Cold Wave Blues TEMPERATURES 4 a.m.., 2 10 a.m... 7 6 a.m.. .1 12 m... .14 8 a.m. ,. 3 1 p.m. , .16 Winter-weary Pontiac lay in Ih clutch of a cold wave today for the second straight day, and the U.S. Weather Bureau’s forecast gave little hint ot much change for the better. ' The bureau said temperatures were expected to lip moderate throughout the stale today, reaching a high of 18 .U) 25 In Pontiac, but will stick around the next live days although not so severe. ing former President Eisenhower for a fishing trip into Mexican waters. The trip was canceled Thursday night, and Eisenhower was 'shocked and distressed" to issue t statement about the death of one )f his ‘'dearest friends." Tlie ins'trUmenI sought by air exp^nTs is a metal globe about the size of a basketball, the device is an automatic flight recorder. It A frequent hunting companion of ElseiihowTr, Jones was prominent in the world o' industlry. He was a top executive of Cities Service Co. and Richfield Oil Corp. Leader of many daring exploits during World War II, retired Adm. Richard L. Conolly'-t. ’ "Close-In ConoHy” to the men of the Navy— also was vacation-bound. Conolly was decorated by 12 foreign countries as well as the ■ . -II United Stales for his feats, such Low temperatures wil ran^!.^^ close-to-shore bombard- from 9 to 17 above tonight. It will beaches during be mostly cloudy and a UvnrUl-War II warmer Saturday, the high from"'°’'“' “• 23 to 32, with a chance of after-[SECOND RETIREMENT noon light snow. ! He and his wife were'going to ivacation in La Jolla, Calif., where ^ ” ([they own a hotel. ||‘~Thp admiral was looking toward Bomb HoaiH)elays Flight No. 1 alNY More Pictures, Page 14; Other Stories, Pages 3, 5, 7, 13, 15 keeps a second-by-second record of a plane’s speed, altitude, direction and gravity forces. By a careful stu4y. investigators might be able to ascertain whether it was man or machine which failed. . - At the controls ot the airliner, which suddenly turned and went down in a nosedive just after tak- NEW' YORK (API - American Airlines today delayed arid -searched its flight No. I the same number borne by the jetliner lliat crashed Thursday—afl-caller indicated a bomb was aboard the ship. -The flight was delayed two hours, but no bomb was found. The airline said a wqman reservation clerk in its V^est Side Airlines Terminal answered the phone and was told: “There is trouble on that plane —that plane going to Los Angeles at 9:45 a.m." "What do you mean,’’ the clerk In Rangoon, however, there were no troops on the greets and city dwellers went ajitout theb’ business Seemingly unperturbed by the events. A l^rge concentration of s(jldiers tooly station at the central police station in the heart of the city, and ^mailer concentrations were seen at all other police stations. Win declared in a radio broadcast appealing for calm that the army had acted to halt a vastly deteriorating situation and to save the nation from disintegration. Wbat motivated the staunchly geiieral’9 action "Like pied. i Iwmb," the caller re- JFK on TV Tonight N-Tesf Decision Due T„ "second retirement’— he left in I C/U-Qy b I 1 he Navy in 1953 and was to retire president Qf Long Island Uni- Press Hapjiy Birthday! > Business recovery one year -old as opinions Tliffer on '?• future - PAGE SO. ■ersity in thO I TO SEE GRANDSON 41 Mr. and Mrs. Sebastian Perruc-^ cio were among the first-time air f I travelers on the jet. They were en (Continued on Page 2, Co’. WASHINGTON UP — President Kennedy is expected to announce tonight that the United Stales will resume testing nuclear weapons in the atmosphere next month unless the Soviet Union agrees quickly to a reliable nuclear test ban treaty. •k ir k The long-awaited announcement of the President’s decision on new U. S. air tests, will be carried across the nation by network radio and television and to the world by the Voice of America. The White House announced only that Kennedy witl speak at 7 p.ni. Eastern Standanl Time on the subject of nuclear testing and dlsaCnjament. However, according to reliable advance indications he will make a. last-chcmce bid to the Soviet Union to join in a nuclear test ban treaty, backed bV strong international inspection, which coiild make further testing unnecessary. " An army source 10,000 troops up posts at key points the capitaJ and blocked roads leading in and Rangoon. Heavily arniM troops backed by tanks rlnge^Rangoon Airport. All flights In and out ot Burma were candled. ^ Car Exhaust Fiimes Fatal to Young Oakland Couple was not immediately clear. But the coup coincided with growing opposition to a govern- ment plan to nationalize Burma’s private import trade and a rise in strength of the extreme left-wing of the country’s ruling party. The nationalization plan had been scheduled to go into force ’ITiursday. The government had claimed that foreign interests were gaining a stranglehold on the nation’s economy, and. that many Burmese firms had been transferring their import licenses foreign companies. News Flash nut ion U.N, committee on the peaceful uses of outer spiu;-Soviet Deputy foreign Minister Valeria A. Zorin was one of those who met the space fliers. He told reporter later he congratulated Glenn and wished him further success. “I also congratulated all the other cosmoiiButs and the cosnio-naut to be, who Is flying next,” Zorin said. “I wished him sue-eess even more Ilian Glenn.” French Battle Moslem Snipers Report 5 Dead, 8 Hurt in Casbah Outbreak ps Cease Fire Nears A Pontiac area couple waa asphyxiated by carbon monoxide funaes early this morning as they sat talking in a car after returning home from a date. Pronounced dead shortly before 6 a.m. by Oakland County Deputy Coroner Dr. Isaac Prevette w’ere Richard P. Clark, 22, of 3155 S. Adams Road. Avon Township and Margaret E. Little, 21, of 136 Dwight St. The couple had been dating steadily for about a year. They were discovered overcome by the deadly fumes shortly after 5 a.m. by the young man’s mother, Mrs. Rayburn U. Clark. ’’Richard and Margaret left on . date at about 9 p.m.,” .said the grief stricken mother. “I awoke and heard the car on the driveway around 3 a.m. Then I awakened a second time around 5:20. and the motor was still running. ALBION (UPI) — Texas oil well t^ier Red Adair and his crew put out the flaming Oar-fleld.Mc Clare gusfter today by closing a huge hydraulic preventer valve as they, pumped thick mud into the hole at the same How Strange Space program shifts just coincidental? — PAGE 26. , Pied Piper I Soupy Sales winnirtg ‘Cus-g lard’s Last Stand’ — PAGE I S'?’ " I Ask Teacher I Parents should see teacher " about Johnny — PAGE 29. I Area News . Astrology . Comtes ... ^ Editorials . I High School I Markets I Obituaries Women’s Pages See Con-Con Vote Delay ‘lliey never sal and talked that long before," she told Oakland County sheriff’s depuues,* "so I .went out to see what was wrong. “The windows were all closed and they were sitting on the fn>nt seat.” The two were dead when Mrs. Clark found them, deputies said. The car belonged to Miss Little. Sheriff’s deputies said a hole had riisted out in the top of the exhaust pipe and in the trunk and that exhaust fume| were leaking through the trunk into the car. Miss Little, an assistant buyer for Waite’s DepartmenI Store, had been staying with a gu'l friend hile her parents. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Little are vacationing in Florida, according to her aunt, IMi's. Joe Little of 311 S. Winding Drive, Waterford Township. A proposed new constitution for Item as delegates launched into Michigan 4s not likely to on the November ballot because the constitutional convention will not meet a March ^ adjournment deadline, top leaders conceded today. Both second week.of debates ‘I think how we may go until the*middle or the end of APrU.” said Nisbet, “pr even run on into May.” Dusen said this probably would mean that the proposed new constitution would be submitted to the voteirs next spring rather than go on the ballot' this November. , eral possible w(,. . convention’s product might be included in the November election. Convention St.!phen S. Nisbet, R-Eremont, and, Richard Vjin Dnseii,. R-Bingham Farms, chairman oi the rules and resolutions committee, admitted could not be The convention is making slow i SEVERAL WA'S progress on Michigan’s court- Uni^r ail attorney generol's rul-lingyihe convention had to finish by^pril 1 to get the document I before the vptero this fall. Van Dusen said there were s' First, he said, the attorney general’s office might reverse tts stand on flie matter. Frank Kelley has replaced Paul Adams,'who was attorney general when the original opintop wtis issued. Adams recently was appointed Supreme Court justice. ^ /i-: *" ' ^hich the substitute the fentire hew document for the old. A third method would involve the gathgfii® of a sufficient number of voters’ signatures m initiative petitions to get the document on the November btillot. Another possibility, Van Dusen added, would be for the legislature — by a 2/3 vote of both house — to place tHt convention’s handiwork oh the ballot as a constitutional amendment which would 1 file The convcMtlon also a suit seeking tp upset the at-tpniey general’s opinion before the Supreme Court. ’ ' Both Van Dusen and Nisbet said they were unaware of any concerted move to fegee the issue, however. Both indicated they felt it would make no great difference whether the constitution was submitted to the voters in November or next April.. The girl, an only cluld, is a graduate of Pontiac Central High School. Her father is a foreman at the Coca-Cola Bottling Co., of Pontiac. Clark, a graduate of Waterford ’jrownriiip High School, was a swimming pool service man for Dotco, Ihc., an Avon Township firm. He is one of five children three sisters and one brother. • Dark’s father is a gardener and .maintenance man at Meadow'brook Farms. ■ ' ALGIF.RS (fft — French trootis (ought a wild, hour-tong battle wltli Moslem riflemen ip the ancient Casbah todhy. Thousands of trtwps ringed the squalid native quarter after crack units stormed into its narrow byways to put down Moslems who • • at them from rooftops. The sniping was crushed with gunfire and grenades. Unofficial reports set the toll for the Casbah battle at four Moslems and one soldier killed and eight Moslems wounded. For the city of Algiers, the toll for the day up to 4:30 p.m. was 19 dead and 15 wounded. Five of the dead 'Were Europeans, including soldier. In Oran, the other trouble spot, the toll up to 3 p.m. was 17 attacks, with 8 deato death and sacked Moslem ■shops in retaliation for the slaying Thursday of a European mother and her two children. “75 People ^ Wanted to Rent My House,” says Mrs. A, P. Z. “My Pontiac Press Want Ad produced calls faster than we could handle them—a total, of 75.*^ Rood Toll 75 Pet. of '61 The youth's body is at Moore Chapel of Sparks-Griffm Funeral Home,. Auburn Heights. Miss Little’s body is at Sparks-Griffin FUneral Home in Pontiac. EAST LANSING (AP) - I way accidents have killed 151 per-1 sons in Michigan so far this year,! provisional figures compiled by. state police showed foday. TfeTbll at this date last year was ’203. Pontiac Press Want Ads are good salesmen — put one to work for you! . . ? . Dial FE 2-8181 and place Youn today! > TWO i r afHB PONTH^C PRESS, FRIPAY. ,MA«CH «■ IBM School Budget for City Unveiled gill Cov«r lncr«as« in EnrQlim«nt «du6MiOfl pivgwm provided for INuitl«e »ut>Uc (‘hlldivii In HMKMtS wUI |»e pretty much the K|(n« «» thl* y.000 for teachera' normnl aal-ary Increraenla and JGO.OW held In irserve fo add to leanie cherki In case of a one p coat of living Incnniac denly and with aiich alckenlng fury that the pilot never had chance to radio that he waa trouble. The 18,982,606 poition now sel aside (or InalrticUon could futihe Ih' increased If the hoard finds II ran afford lo adjust upward Its salary and wage scales. Such ai adjustment was missed only oner it) the last eight years. The total budget would also grow If the boani aeeepts any of a number of ’’staff sliidy" proposals. These are proposals for tiff.044 worth of now programs over and above Ihe eurreni t‘a ^flight oontrol bos from the murky water of Jamaica Bay. ,/ . 'nils device, a amalt yellow metal globe about Ihe lilm of a baaketlNill, carriet a recordifg of Ihe plane’s height, speed and oth-eV data which the Invesllgatoni' hope win give them a due lo the* coujw of Ihe Iragsxiy , I NO(T.|lP. VKt . FAA Ailmlnisiralor Ma,)ccb Ha-Inhy, who flew here along wllh half a (io/cn air safety s|)eclalists from llic Civil Aeionautlcs Boani, cmphasi/cd there was no Indlca tion of what might have gone wrong. Total weight Was under the allowable llmll. and none of Ihe four engines had been run allowable flme. Halatiy saiil. Wlien the plam- arrived heir from Tulaa. Okla., Wednesday, the crew had reported some trouble with the radio and cabin pressure system, but this was corrected. llalaby said a eheckback on the previous 10 pages in the jet's logbook dlselos^ no iineorrected defects, and thus far (here has been no Indication of malfunelloning. llalaby said he gave l*n>sldent Kennedy a report by (eleidioiw after launi'bing the Investigation deeply affected by the tragedy. ■’The President has directed u to do everything within ou power to pr4*vent a is’cnrirnee, llayaby said. CAB Chairman Alan d. Boyd, who also flew to the wreck scene, said the mystery might be solved in a month. But he added that it could take as long ns a year. While seeking Ihe flight control box, hundreds of police, firemen and Naval personm’l from the nearby Ftoyd Bennett Naval Air Tlie fii-sl architect's plan for proposed new home (or mentally ill children -at Pontiac Stale Hos-^litul has been develop«’d. 2 ROniEP. FIND Tlie grappling ' continued through the night and morning amid shifting tides, and the grim sparchers had recovered 52 bodies by early today. The plane carried 87 passengers nd a crew of 8. Here is the timelalile of disaster: TIMETABLE At 10:07 a.m., Ihe huge craft rolled along the 1',000-foot way. broke ground after 5,000 feel and Ibok off. The plane cleared .a train trestle and a parkway in its as-•ent—ail normal, all according to esiablished pattern. A 800 feel, Capt. James T. S. Heist, 56—a veteran of 18,.300 hours in the air—made the pre-serbed, left turn of 20 degrees to head away from pb.ssible lAtGuar-dia Airport traffic and the Ozone Park section of Queens. He pointed his craft toward Brooklyn. Then it happened. Like a dive bomber, the airlin-’ suddenly plunged straight down. Off-duty policeman Arthur Rud-dick saw it as he drove on Cross Bay boulevard. Others saw it too, and they made for the bay’s shoreline. Within minutes, rescue However, now a local group of interested citizens working exclusively to promote belter facilities at Pontiac haS offered to raise money for a children’s dky-can out-patient and ri?creational area-i( the state first will come up with about $.500,000 to build the basic children's unit. and rescue apparatus clogged the one-road approach to the disaster scene. But, as Ruddick later observed, There was no one to rescue.” U.N. Cheers Astronaut Glenn (Continued Frb'm Page One) hero welcome behind him. Glenn, his wife, two children and parents arrived ahead of schedule. He gave a grin and a thumbs-up salute to more than 1,000 I'. N. secretariat workers from scores ot countries who the lobby of t building to welcome the first American to orbit the earth. TTien he and his family entered nonstop elevator :and soared off 1 the 381 h floor where U.N. ing Secretary General U Thant awaited the parly. With the Glenn.s were the oiher six men in the U.S. astronaut team, their relatives and U.S. Ambassador Adiai E. Stevenson. Thant litvlted (he group herb after learning the astronauts were coming to New York. Ralph J. Bunche; highest ranking American in the U.N. secretariat, took the group to Thant’ bfficf suite. He is undersecretary for special political affairs. An informal session with dele-gate.s on the 28-nation U.ijfe Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space—including the Soviet delegate—took plac« 'at the Thalnt reception. Tokens of affection ranging from a Bible to a trumpet poured 1 Glenn as New York Cto’ second d§y' of honoring him^c off to an early stot. / u^ot Russ Sign fair NEW YO^'(AP) — gThe New York W d ’ s Fair Corp; today that the Soviet Chamber of Conimerce has ^^ed an agreement to participate in' the 1964-65 fair with the largest foreign exhibit in the international area. The lease provides for 73,-000 square feet, obMrvance of World Dw of Pmy-by (he United Church wonum A DREAM FOR CHILDIIEN — This is a proposal for n mental health facility created especially for children by Detroit architects Ralph K. Calder and Associates, To be erected at I’ontiac Slate Hospital — if the needed hmds come in — it would have a lV4-itory hub area containing a swimming pool and an audltOrlunt-gym. Wide one-story spokes are school rooms, day-care and' out-patient facilities. The hi^f-whcel rim would (xmtain dormitories. Draw$ First Plan of Home for Mentally III Children Supt. Walter H, Obenauf today described the tentative architect' rendering as , a "fantasy at the present' time, which we i praying to get.” The njialn obstacle Is an appropriation from the State liCg-istaiure. The hospital has asked (or such funds (or several years —without success. WOULD HOUSE 80 The basic unit for 80 children would include living quarters, a school and a dining room. The $.300,000 additional construction would have lo be bought from _ campaign planned by the Foundation for Emotionally Disturbed Children. The fpundatiun's president. Dr. James McHugh, today said the additional construction had been accepted by the hospital and the state mental health' departmenf-’ as "a necessar.v adjunct" to. the basic children’s unit. At present, about 80 children are housed in wards constructed for adults — sonit-times intermingled with them. This condition has been decried by all mental health experts who have observed them. The new unit would be built especially for childrep. US'Spy Plane Reported Lost in Californid EDWARDS AIR FORCE-BASE, Calif. iy»—A high-flying U2 "spy" plane with a seasoned pilot aboard is missing and presumed down somewhere in this rugged region of mountains and.desert. Ttie "Air Force identified the pilot as Capt. John Campbell, 36, on temporary duty here from Laughlin >^B, Texas. He is married and has two children. Details of his mis^n were not The photographic plane had only enough fuel to last iinttT 10; is p.ni. Thursday. “It couldn’t he In the air any more,” a spokesman said. .Seven planes Jiave been searching an acea on a 100-mile ...radius around thls^base since 2 a.m. Other planes have joined the hunt from nearby March AFB, Norton AFB and the Naval Ordnance Test Station at China Lake, Calif. The plan was di'^iwn for the Foundation by Ralph R. Calder Architect and Associates. Its low-slung roofs, plenty of window-space, bright interior colors on elnder block are intended to give It "the atmosphere of home rather than of an institution," says Dr. McHugh. At the hub of the plan a pool and a gym. which cxiuld be used as an auditorium, , would provide reereational space— COULD AID OTHERS .Some distance away from this activities area in the wheel's would be the dorms connected by passageways leading like spokes to the hub. Through the day-caro facilities which are to be provided through funds raised by the foundation, says Dr. McHugh, "more children would he able to stay at home, coming to us «Uly during Ihe day (or treatment and schmd and returning to their own An estimated 20 to 40 children — depending on types of illness reprosented — could be handled at The out-patient clinic, also drawing foundation support, would be available for staff work with the parents of day-care children. Merritt D. Hilt Retires From Ford Motor Post Ford Motor Co. today announced the retirement of Merritt D. Hill, 59, vice president and general manager of the company’s Tractor and Implement Division in Troy. Henry Ford II. chairman of the board, said the company accepted Hill’s request for early retirement with regret. His resignation .was effective yesterday. No replacement has been announced yet. Hill of 965 E. Olengarry Circle, Bloomfield Township, Is retiring to lievote more time to personal Interests. "He's going to be 60 in Augu.st, and 've are just fortunate that he can retire now," said Mrs. Hill. Ford commended Hill, a native of Pontiac, for the leadership he has provided both within the company and the community. Hill joined Ford Motor Co. when its Tractor (later Tractor and Implement) Division was established August 1953. He served as assistant general manager uritil January 1957 when he was -named general manager. He was named a Ford vice pi|it!ident in May 1959. Prominent in the promotion of youth organizations', Hill currently Is seiwing as president of the Boy Scouts of America’s Detroit Area Council, trustee of the Michigan 4-H Foundation and a member of the board of directors of the National 4-H Service Committee. MERRITT D. .KILL He is an overseer of William Beaumont Hospital in RoyarOok. a member of the exec^ive conf mittee of the Oakland Qiild Gui|-Qinic, and chairman of the Oakland County Republican Cc mittec’s finance committee. Hill also is active in Chamber of Commerce activities, as chairman of the agricultural committee of the Greater Detroit Board of Commerce and as a member of the agriculture committee of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce. He also is a director of the Birmingham.-Bloomfield Bank, and has been serving as a' vice president. of the Farm Fiqiiip-ment Institute. Prior to hi,s affiliation with Ford Motor Co., Hill had been associated for 11 years With Dearborn Motors Corp. and Harry Ferguson Inc. Before that he was with General Motors Corp. for 12 years in a sales capacity. A.graduate of the University of ,I)etroit, he is a member of its 'lay board of trustees and Blue Key honor fraternity. In January Hill offered U. S. Labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg a Way to save $4.35,000 in federal funds to train farm tractor operators in Mississippi. Hill’s suggestion was to utilize the services of 160 farm equipment dealers in the 16-cqunty are Mississippi' instead of spending federal money. The Pay in Bit>mlniffham Tlfiea Women to Observe World Day oi Prayer BlRMir^GHAM - TTkS Mgroh of Birmingham will bti held at the Congregational Church, .IS" Woodward Ave. The theme for flili year’ •ervance la “For God Ito Loved tha World.” which waa written by Chriatian women In Uruguay and tranalated into more than 60 Ian* (Plages and 1,000 dlnlectN. Women IrtAn 18 area churches, I participate In the obscrvaiH'c 4»f the niiniinl 4'vcnt. Offerings received during Ihlw day are dlvidial between the liome and fonilgn mlHston of (lie Na-tlona) Council of ChurcliCK, wliich carries on the Inlerdenomlnullonul mission work. Following the mornrtig stuwlce Ihe cltalrmpn and her committee will ropeni the observance service for patients at Pontiac Slate IIos-pilal. The churches parttolpaling are Northmlnster Presbyterian, First Baptist, (ihrlst Church Uran-brook, Congregational Cliuroh, Embury Methodist and First The others are First Presbyterian, Franklin Community, Klrk-in-the-Hills, S,t-' Andrew Evangelical Lutheran, St. James Episcopal and the Beverly Hills Methodist. Dale A. Winnie of 136 Chewton Road, Bloomfield Township, has been named chairman of the newly formed Section on Patents, Copyrights ti Trademarks of the Michigan Stale Bur Association. Innie Is a patent lawyer And formerly with (he patent (Continued from Pago One) route from Ihelr Middletown, Conn., home to visit a married son, Sebastian Jr., a marine living in Pasadena. The trip was even more special because they were to see their 10-month-old grandson for the first time. Councilman Says Cavanagh Hit at Swainson RKTIKKD DAY BfFORE George T. Felbeck and his Wife of New York died only one day after his retirement’ following nearly 40 years with Union Carbide Co. Felbeck was a vice president, of the corporation and hud bqeh In charge of Union Carbide’s diffusion pl^nt al Oak Ridge, Tonn., from the wartime days of 1943 until 1953. He was beginning _______ aycound^he-worithTrrafr" DETROIT (/fi —Detroit Dnincll lan William G. Rogell i h s i s t s there is a “feud" going on between Gov. Swaison and Detroit’s Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh—and says a plan to build a riverfroni stadium Detroit is "another brick in the Berlin wall going up between them Rogell noted that Cavanagh suggested a downtown stadium just after Swainson proposed a similar project at the State Fairgrounds. Cavanagh knows we haven't got enough money to pay our bills, let alone build a stadium on 40 acres of land that would cost $4 million to acquire," said Rogell. "Bui apparently he wanted lo take the edge off Swaison's project. " Another round-the-world trip as cut off at its start (or the Rev. ,Dr. Laurence Lange and his wife of Bronxville, N.Y, A Presbyterian minister and a seminary consultant for the National Missions Board of the United Presbyterian Church, he was lo visit various missions. On Easter Sunday he was to preach at the Protestant Sunrise Sei"vice in .Jerusalem. A HAPPY SPORTSMAN Fly-casting champion John Rogell added that he believes a downtown stadium would be a potential "white elephant” that would sit unused much of ihe time. Army Will Release Some Students Early WASHINGTON (JD-Secretary of Defense Robert St. McNamara signed an order today authorizing early release of certain school teachers and college students who were called to active military duty as reserves or National Guards- The action will affect perhaps 600' or* 700 high school and other secondary school teachers and an estimated 2,500 students. It will allow them to get out of uniform as much as 90 days early lo take teaching jobs or to gnter college. They will not be demobilized more than 10 days before the registration date of the school or college involved. Under this policy, some will be getting out of uniform as early as July, with the- bulk eligible for lease in late August. American Seating Ca. Reports Drop in Sales GRAND RAPIDS .1^ — Anieri-m Sealing Cor stiics in 196] totaled $41,163,449, the firm'.s nuai report showed^ today. It but 1.3 per cent below the record volume $41,719,919 set in 1960. Net earnings for the »year were $1,625,837, or $2.47 a share, compared with $1,814,003, or $2.77 a share, in 1960. Romney Comments on Michigan Pressure Groups Poison Politics* WASHINGTON OP - Michigan's politicaUlae has been poisoned by econojjuc <*p ..pressures, according to George Romney. Romney, who seeks the Republican nominatidn for governor of the state, said here niursday night, ‘when you rrach the point we have in Michigan, where the party structure is economically ebn-trolled — then we are perverting citizenship."' The foinier president of Amer-j<»n Motors C^rp, addressed the International Christian Leadership Conference on "God's challenge to Cjiristlan in the United States. Romney -told the group that spiritual., values are the proper basis lor political judgments. Michigan, however, he said, too many people consider politics platform from which to promote group economic interests. Romney, who has been mentioned as a possible GOP presi-dentiakcandidate in 1964, said his stelte and the nation need a citizens party, free of economic dictates. He said the Unit^ States 'the highest expression of the judeo-Christian philosophy principles.’’ He s a i d overemphasis on economic interests could lead the United States into the very dlalectt45al - fighting. “We have brought pressures, to bear on government fqr self-seeking purposes to ah alarming extent,” Romney ^id. If we reach the point wherc'^we have too far rejected the Lord of this land, Jesus the'Christ, then we will have lost our freedom, warned. But he added: "The threat to oUr Christian heritage from within is greater the Communist challenge from without.!!,. Romney holds a position 'equivalent to that of a bishop in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormon). He said the men who drafted the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution were inspired by God to create a land of human,rights and relt-gious and moral (reedmns, in which every man can be held accountable by God (or his own acts. , Romney said the Unitb4 States as created as a nucleus of free-dorh to spread these values across the world. Biit he said this! nation has achieved onfy a'small measure of its potential; ’’Millions of Americans can’t vote because of their race,’ "That is how partial aebievemhm is, even in poUticaT area." The new state bgr section is intended to coordinate the effbrta of patent lawyers across the , state and those In txu’porate and j^vate (H'aotkM to better a«tualnt iwaerai attorn4*ya with problems tiiat may arise In this field. , The Birmingham Board of Education has approved the 1W2-HS salary achfidules for the prolcssloniil staff. The acheiiules are In line with the (Ive-yeur Imdgei project u|Min whii'li the November eh'clion huHed. Hcglnnirig July 1, ihe salary for beginning teachers with a buch(^ lor’s degree will be $5,000 with a merit maximum of $8,100. The beginning master’s degroc holder will receive $.5,300 with n merit maximum of >8,750. For a musters degree plus 30 hours, Ihe beginning salary will be $3,600 wllh a maximum of $9,250. Many Passengers Eager and Happy Dieckman, 35, had been in New York for appearances at the National Sports and Travel Show. Dieckman, who was responsible for development of much modern fishing equipment, was returning horpe to Costa Mesa, Calif., on the ill-fated plane. Prominent among the business executives aboard Flight 1 was Arnold .S. Kirkeby,. president of Kirkeby-Natus 'Corp., who, with his brother Edwin, once operated chain of well-known hotels. AND A FINANCIER Among their interests had been the Beverly Wilshire in Beverly Mills, Calif., the Drake and Black-stone in Chicago and the National in Cuba. Kirkeby continued to head a major financing firm. PAN AM TRAVELER Chester Kronfeld, manager of photography for Pan American World Airways and the man responsible for the colorful travel scenes on the Pan Am calendars, was bound for the West Coast on a photo assignment. Lee Eastmen of Scarsdale, N.Y., did not fly on flight 1 because he had a later re.servation. But his wife, who had been ‘bumped’’ along with him from in earlier American flight, did , and was killed in the crash. She had elected to use a single reservation, aboard flight 1 and meet her husband later in Los Angeles. Another who did not take the ill-fated plane was stewardess Sue Parsons, who normally would have flown flight 1 but received an unexpected day off. She heard about the crash when she settled down in front of her television set to watch the parade honoring astronaut John H. Glenn. LOOO Motorists in Area Still Need License Plates An estimated 1,000 to 1,500 Var owners in the Pontiac area have not yet bought their 1962 license plates, according to Willis M. Brewer, Pontiac branch manager of the secretary of state’s office at 96 E. Huron St. More than 600 people crowded to the office yesterday: others peeped through the 'windows at -closing time. Another 600 are expected today when the office is open 9 a m. to 5 p.m. It will be op^n_9 a.nj. to 1 p.m. Saturday.* Pontiac police ticketed 13 drivers without new plates “’betweep the deadline of midnight, March 1, and 7 a.m. this morning. Seeking Membership OSLO, Norway (*l — Premier Ei-nar Gerhardsen’s government recommended to parliament today that Norway open negotiations for full membership in Jhe European Common Market. ^ , , THK rONTIAC PKEHS, Fk^)AV^ MAHCH a, 19(12 TURKIC Pilot Witnessed Jetliner Crash. Saw No Explosions or Fires Before Tragedy That Clabned 95 Lives UTICA, N. Y. (Uin) - A m«T Nftvy oombitt pilot who iMwwMl tiM* crorii ot «n Amorlcnn Alrltnoo Boeing TOT , Aetrojet in Nbw York’s Jamnlon Bny Thursday with a loss ot 09 lives, said there was no IndienUhn of tire explosions pHor to the Irngedy. • W A * Capt. Robert G. Hnrrnr, 40, ot Oriskany, N, Y. was flying a Mohawk Airlines tllKlii dlrt>cl|y Ih»-hind the ill-fat(>d cruft. He said Urn jetliner, en route to Los Angeles, Calif., had left runway No. 31 a few minutes before his own plane. He said the big liner had feet, veered sharply to the left and then went li|lo a vertical dive Into the water. ^ Ibtrrar, a flight manager for Mohawk, was acting ns ndief pilot, on a trip from Idlewlld Airport to Saranac Lake, N. Y. He told a news conference after landing here that his own plane was atout 300 feet up when ho noticed the dip of the jetliner. A A A "I was distracted momentarily doing something in our ship, and lost sight of the plane, but just for a fraction or so. “When 1 looked again, I saw the plane go Into a vertical dive and 1 knew that a crash was Inevitable. “I radioed the tower of what happened and was told to circle the crash site so It could be pinpointed by rescue squads. I also observed and pointed out various access roads to the water’s edge. AAA "There was no sign of life, only bits of wreckage, fire and smoke,' he said. ny niGK BUCK Airline pilots have complaiiaid often and at times loudly of "dangerous manuevers” required to satisfy noise abatement rules. A A A V 'n»elr wartdngs may liave be-)me a tragic rttallly. It’s far too early In th«* Invesil-gallon of yeslei-day’s crash of an American Airlines Jet at New York to (haw any comrluslons. How»*v(>r, oluMllern’e to an antl-nols(( oixiinmuw- by tiu- III fated Taft's pilot has li(‘en inentlomsl as having a iHsisildc* part In tint tragedy. , ^ Ninety-five lives winili Ih( a high price lo |Niy fur the |hwo and <1111(4 of those living near New York liiternalloiml Alr|M»rt. Noise In airlwrt an‘«s has become an Intensified problem of the Jet age. To kotip peace with thole neighbors, airport managements and the airlines, with Federal Aviation Agency have put into effect certain noi.se-easing pracliees, HAVE TO TURN Since a jet engine cannot 1k( muf-fl(‘d below a nK'diiim roar, pilots have b(>en jnstructed to avoid spewing their engine noise over heavily iK>puiated areas as much possible. On take off, tho rem<(died by quick ward less iwpuloiis places once the plane Is nirbome. Fur landings, higher approaches are isHMimmended. Such prartlces have made it necessary at times for pilots lo handle their Jets in what they re- Sen7Sina-Fla. As a site for the proposed monument, Smathers suggested a location as close as possible to the spot from which astronaut John H. Glenn Jr. began his historic flight at Cape Canaveral, Fla. AAA Smathers compared Glenn’ achievement to the first airplane flight at Kitty Hawk in 1903. Both feats represent, he said, a monumental breakthrough in man’s conquest of the unknown. Cuban Exiles Launch Propaganda Attack MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Cuban exiles have launched a new offensive at their food-short homeland. They call it "Operation Drool.’’ ¥ * ¥ The antirCastro move entails mailing food sections from U.S. newspapers to triads and others in Cuba in an effort to make their stomachs growl in counterrevolutionary key. AAA The idea was proposed by Hal Hendrix, Latin-America editor of the Miami News, and exiles started the drive with Thursday’ big food sections. Citizens Bureau Notes Requests, Complaints Rise There were about 338 more requests for 'sendee or complaints processed through the Citizens’ Service Bureau in 1961 than were the year before. ■ The bureau reported 8,044 requests and complaints processed last year. The 1960 figure was 7,706. Two activities showed significant reductions in the number of complaints. Traffic complaints dropped from 27 in I960 to 14 last year and waste: CoJiection complaints went from 2,051 in 1960 to 1,759 in 1961, a drop of about 12 per cent. A, A A Both years the largest number of requests was for turning on shutting off water service. Pilots Have 6omp|ftined Before Noise Rul^ May Be Key to Crash News Analysis gardfd an unnatural' and p( tially dangerous ways, AOCBPTia) KULH8 ^ The pilots reluctantly ;ai»»pted the antlnotse procedures but de-dared they’d practice them only to the point where safety wasn’t sacrltt(!^, Tlmt point may have tweii ex-(•(•(wled yesterday. Anierlean Airlines Plight I batk Navy Ship Rescues ffsheilenTnl^ancI SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)-Ten fishermen marooned on a (tesert island are coming back to civilization on Navy guided-missile destroyer. The men wore si rntided on Clip-porton Island earlier last month when their Stin Diego-based tuna clipper, 'The Monarch, capsized and sank. Other fishermen discovered them \ early this week, and the USs Robison was sent to pick them up. AAA The Robison took the men aboard Thursday, transferring them from two small fishing boats which had taken them off the island. The Robison expects to reach Acapulc®, Mexico, about Saturday. TONITE and SATURDAY CANDY DEPT. DISCOUNTS Runway 81 liCft, a Jat-lraigth atrip cruwr(H!csi of gaining nlltlude while dlsbirblng a min tmum numlH*r of people Imlow. A. ★ * An Aslpoj(‘t Is a g(Kid cllmlicr—• ie of the best •- as J(d liners go. Yet a shnri> turn, coupleil wKli the fateful 8ti'ugKl" to g(dn altitude. •(Hild rob a plane of its momentum (Vei’ely ('iiougli to »'o«l H Into a deadly stall. . I A A A Much Investigation lies ahead be-foCf! any "piobable’cause" In this disaster can be determined. But there’s little doubt a fresh apprals at will be niatle as Jo'how far the struggle ng(tlnsl noise can t>e safi^ ly earrlod. Blanched ' Jumbo Peanuts 79c AAc LB. BRACK'S Chocolate Peanut Clusters 43' asty peonu 98 N. Saginaw -Mata Floor TONITE and SATURDAY Main Floor Specials Bowlers’ Liquor Sets / Regularise Seller—As Pictured j Bowlers' liquor set- has a bowling f P'" >^dle; stands 9'/2'' 'high and 'ffllKJI 6 shot-size bowling boil glasses. [KtliAVirdV Ceramic, 69' jig-Saw Puzzles Regular 98c Seller-Now Only Nearly 1000 pieces in this 20’/2x28-inch plz-zie -Choice of assorted titles. Limit 2. BiaDEST BAROAIN IN BOYS' PANTfllMgiiTB^AflPMQWTHs Guarameed FIRST Quality Boys’ PANTS STYLES FOR BOTH SCHOOL AND DRESS • Washable CORDUROYS • Wash 'n' Wear CASUALS • All Wanted COLORS Choice of Dak or regular waistbands. Unconditional quality guarantee. Extra long wear Sluliififiil BOYS'WEAR -Basamunt TONITE and'SATURDAY DISCOUNT SALE SIMMS 2nd Floor HOUSEHOLD DEPT. Tourist Trade Boosts Florida Tax Revenues TAU.AIIAaSh;t:. Fla, (Al’I 8|Hii'rcd hy a tmnmlng imirlHl aca-(ton, MoHda niiIcw lax collccllmw (link a lilg .lump Inal inonlli. 'Ilin 3'PPl'-c(‘nl-l('vy lirougltt $15.5 million In Fcl)i uary, up $1,2 million or iUM lair cent over lection for the same month last year, Comptroller Rny Green re- Nationally Advertised COSMETICS At SIMMS famous DISCOUNTS REVELONS Hair Spray SZ SATIN 35 r^J'V UNOUN PLUS Oleanslng Cream $4.00 VAL ^ 55 Wood —Extension Poly PLASTIC-Utility Hat t Coat Rack: Storage Bins $1.00 Seller 69 $1.29 I aliie 9T ihown — 10 ppg-extension rack to- ^ As shown — holds veg hold hots or coats, finshed wood is easy • toy;!, books etc. Nest tor Install, Expands IS to 40 inches. • space. Assorted Color.s. 48-In. MOP STICK HANDLE C Regular 39c seller —smooth wdod handle with high tension spring ond frame to hold mop 27‘ STAINLESS STEEL Poly PLASTIC-Handy s SugRr & Gfeamer Kaddy Stor^^Bin : ft Serving Tray $1.29 Value 57* 1 59 $3.88 Seller As shown — use in kitchen, bathroom, O gorogo e\c. Attaches easily lo wall or • yi,s shown — beautiful stainless steel cabinet-doors... holds pencils, papers, y won't rust, stain,: tarnish or corrode — bogs, pot and pan covers, cleaning • stays bright without polishing. For evelty-supplies. ' . * day and company use. Clean Basement Floor, Garage, Patio, Etc. Outdoor Flo-Thru Scrubher 1 99 As shown"— fountain scrubber attaches lo garden hose, till chamber with detergent -- pull handle tor suds, push for rinse shut ott valve in handle. Reavy duty plastic bristles, 4" ftew'thru aluminum 13/lnchHigh^Woven : Wax & Polish Floors With WjekerWastebasket :Wax-IHIIatic Waxer - r Defrost Refrigerators With Frost-Ban Spray LANOLIN PLUS Hand Lotion HARD as NAILS Fingernails 59o VALUE OQc BRECkS Creme Rinse $I 75 VAL W NOXZEMA ’Cover-Girl’ I SO Make- a a up In pnkwd. WiK? Q looM powd« or liquid W W LADY ESTHER Facial Cream $1.49 VAL 99^ “TONI” HOME PERMANENT $2.00 VAL 1T9 for all hair I Uylea. ■ LANOLIN PLUS Powder Plus It 75 VAL '122 natural ■ complexion M TRESEMME Hair Color $1.50 VAL 9D DESERT FLOWER Talc and Bath 50 30 t plus appn V (0X85 Simms resufvos COSMETICS -Main Floor Just Compare the Better Buys, in SIMMS CAMERA DEPT. Compare the item and tho price before you buy then come to Simms for the best price famous names at DISCOUNT Alwaysl SPECIAL DISCOUNTS TONITE New HI-SPEED Bitim Color Moyle Film Including the PRCXTESSING Regular $4.70 value-get tho new Hl-Speed daylight 25 film an(j tho processing ot one low price. Genuine Technicolor film OBF Choice of 2 Models Photo Gadg# Bogs Durable vinyl plastic bags with large front pockets and long shoulder strap with pod. Compare to $3.95 sellers 149 eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee#eeeeeeeeeeeeeee ARGUS ‘Autronie’ Electric-Eye 135mm Camera fully automatic electric-eye camero perfect color slides every time shutter speeds to 1/500 seconds, f3.5 lens and rapid crank wind Save'niore at Simms. $1.00 holds in layaway - , Z-O-O-M From 8X to 12X Power ZOOM Binoculars Compare tei $50 SeUer—Discounted VgrI-power binoculars are like having 5 binoculars in ' one. fingertip central focusing, amber coated lens. $1 holds. . 25” Famous AM—,Short and Long fPave 9-Transi$for Radio 87 28 OPEN TONITE and? SATURDAY! ’til 10 P.M?- SIMMS SHOE DEPT, DISCOUNTS Pr.-Ea.t.r Purchat. of I GIRLS' Endioott-Johnsoa PATENT LEATHER Shoes 57 2 2Prt. $B.OO 'Playwells' In dress .sctndols. pointed ond sond-points with hard wearing heels, composition soles and patent leather uppixm. Si?es 8'/2 to 12 and I2V5i to 3. New Spring Selection—Famous ENDICOTT-JOHNSON Men’s Shoes jand Loafers 4 96 Crusader' quality in black ontf brown uppers — all gonulwu' leathers In sizes 6 to 12. Cholod’' of dress oxfords and loafers. ENDICOn-JOHNSON Bmnd-MEN'd Work Shoes aud Oxfordt 5" : SIMMS BASEMENT DOMESTIC DISCOUNT Indian Blanket /MR 9-Transfsg?r 'Voyager' wlthi builMii antenna. Only $1 hold* in layaw^ quality 90% Rayon, 10%^ I blend blanket In 72x84 In^ kize. Moth resistant, washable blanket in blue, brovm, red, green patterns. , _______ SIMMS 2nd Floor APPLIANCE DEPT ELECTRIC Corn Popper \ -|97 : 12^^ : . aal 2 Cbrofflo Ant^ad toaster with toast Pops com without sfirring ond shofcing • shade coWral 2-sUeo pojHip -heatproof glass cover Full 2 quart • tufa. Modri T-82 toelory guoronleod eopcrcity Cord Is extra ot this prica f'toaster / ♦♦••••••••oia*#************!****^*********** $3.95 Value CloilJadio As pf(*jrecl - modem fabl^^ model rodlo with GE dock that lets you wok* up to music automatically Comes with G.E. lubes, rectifier ond full G.E worronty Buy now ot Simms Low D!s(»unt Pricel^ e«##eaee#ee#eyie#*eeseeeee»eeeeeeeeeee^ee» Jumbo 12:Ml-lnch Size Electric/Griddle With Control^ Regular 21.00 67' 13' Fully immersipl griddle v tachabis ( unit For pa^akes, eggs, bacon, eft ,*ao»o/Lmmooooo»o»moooooomoo0momm.o¥Oooo*epe Fully Immersible—With TILT COVER unbGam Electric pahI $24.95 Value Compiotely t--------------- ... built-in herat control. Tilt eoW tilts to 6 positions and tilt leg for frying. Famous controlled even Imol i feature. FOi'm Tim TIAC BHESS, FRIDAY, MARCH »> im Seattki y»ir Opening Ayiril 21 r i Church Group to Surprise With Unexpected Service IbaTOK. Wwih. iAPh mimd I* 4# (NiiwrtWwi wWoh Mfli wlw 4o w>t to to diuttAi «4uk) not txpttf tho diurehi** Ja b< (Mat " aaya Dr. LemwiJ Paier-wli, hM Iwm on* (tf tiw prlnct< ii(N to plitnnif to ilt« itoalUrivilhin 4itl ba ih« ilirtoumi Wii iMev«n.imMnt(« ftlm recNuntlnx to Wtotoll ftor, m^ii Itovllkm. Uinim' ak# ('ounlilovn fa^tUon Utt Th« Mr opaiw Kt noon Aprti '*'**<*» «re il»a Ihlnit* propte crluet of life. Por^« (hW, tort houm bofoTtt 1!^itcr Sun- noi rxp^'t rhurohru to b« having Anybody prcnch A Mrmon. d«y. doing? Dr. Pelemen, extCliUve •ecro- The emptwiiiit will b« on lu'lonoe For one ming. ( urinK for ohtl- tary of the Greeter Seattle Coun* and teitoutlogy, but a litone'a dren while iheir imienta eee the dl of (?h ‘ iiw fixmi ttui V), S. S<‘toto'e I'a-lfair Fi« amuher, oreaenllng alaiarted In BENSON a LUMBER - BUILDING SUPPLIES - PAINT and COAL 549 North Saginaw St. f FE 4-2521 4xi-w InsulaNd $465 ^TAUPOARO, Whit* .. & SPECIAL CASH and CARRY PRICESI . ROCK LATH $105 P«r bundio .... 1 SPRING FORiCASTs WETI !l«|tair thot* baMMiMt l•ok■ NOWI ALUMINUM COMBINATION DOORS PRE-HUNG Standard Sizes 'A Prlm^ton atudent wrote thgt •he had read about the aclence fair and wanted to l^ndiw what to* -iiurdwa were EII^--ThlB Is the Navy’s new Grumman A2F Intruder, an attack aircraft due for delivery to the U. S. fleet In 1963. The plane is surrounded by circles of the various types 6f bombs, rockets and missiles it is ca- pable of delivering, although not in the quantity shoWn on a single mission. Tlie photograph was released in Washington Tiiursduy by the Defense llepartment. lU. S. Navy jihoto via AI’ Photofax.) Part oi Glenn's Rocket Booster Found in Africa CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -A scored iwjket fragment found a a South African farm has been identified as a niece of booster 109D which hurled astronaut John H. Glenn Jr. Into orbit. The 3-foot by 2-foot sheet of metal was flown herb Thursday and markings stamped on the surface definitely tabbed part of the fuel tank on Glenn's rocket. Identification was made by General Dynamie for one more day." SPEND TIME READINO Tlie doi'tor, an athletic man who loved to ski, sis^nt his last days putting his affairs In order and residing, sometimes professional Journals, sometimes a few of the thousands of letteis ha i celved. ' ' Two weeks ago complications t an undisclosed nature arose and Dr. Kayar went to SI. Joseph's Hospital in Highland for four days. Early Thursday his condition worsened and he returned to the hospital. Dr. Kayar told his physician, "I'll never see Friday." He died about four hours later. Price, spice and everything nice! Who ever thought a car that saves like this could have so much sizzle? Chei^olet engineers, that's who! Liveliness and luxury for a low, low price were exactly what they had. in mind to begin with. And they began from cratch with a whole carload of ingenious new ideas designed to give you more car for your money. That spunky 6 with gas-sipping stinginess is just one example. Another: a new unitized Body by Fisher that's fit for a full-size family inside, e^sy to park outside. Still another: tough but gentle one-piece Mono-Plate rear springs that outdo many a bigger car for quiet comfort. And along with the doUar-saving dependability you just naturally expect in a Chevrolet-built car, Chevy II has a flock of features that cut upkeep costs to the bone. For example, the various front-end components—fenders, iengine compartment, the works—bolt on and off to make repairing eaSy. Any wonder Chevy II won Car Life magazine's 1962 Engineering Excellence award hands down? (The only wonder would be if you settled for anything less—once you get your hands on one at your Chevrolet dealer’s!) Whito accents this navy or black IShBVI/ [[ H0V8 Look your loveliest on your day in i . . . at 0 very purse'-pleasing priew This solid color coot-style step-in is ^prettily accented with a white coltar^hd % sleeves. Navy or black, sizes /2 to 20 and H’/a to 24'/2. Budget Fashions .,. . Third Fto $099 They fit Hke skin! When a sweat shirt has LEGS irjstead of ARMS, you know H's Iba ney^asH Fle«eiatians r- to buy new plant and equipment so a» to become more efficient. They face “featherbedding” and union restriptioBS. They ^re confronted with demands for a sfam^er and shorter work-week plans for even five years |^ead. There are plenty of pirople who have urged the Administration'to give more thought to the fundamental ills of the national economy and lo be less concerned with temporary measures and gimmicks. In 1923, a new weekly nows magazine entitled Time was published for the first time by Briton Hadden and Henry R. Luce. In 1027, Babe Biith become the highest paid baseball player up to that date when he signed a contract for $70,000 a year. Practically nothing, for example, has been done to encourage the creation of jobs for the millions of youngsters combig out of school every year. In 1943, the battle of the Bismarck Sea began In which American airmen eventually destroyed a, Japanese convoy of an estimated 21 ships. A child born Into a Christian home Inherits physical characteristics. However, though a child’s parents may be devout Christians, hiO own spiritual condition is not affected by his physical birth. A pcnmn’a.own salvation comes only by a personal Christian exporl- I wonder if the doctor who charged “Ann K.” $6 for repairs brought tools, supplies, etc. worth $5,000 or more. Would the doctor make a free sendee call the next day if all was not repaired satisfactorily? Did the $6 include pnrlli (prettbrlptlons)? Master plumbers have to serve an apprenticeship, and as a Jiiiimeynian Indure they can qualify lo take Ihe state exam. They are llirensed by the state health de|Miiiment to protect htmllh through better plumbing. I wonder if “Ann K.” ever asked her doctor what quality plumbing means. Master Plumlx'r David ‘Meter Man Method Not Proper for U.S.’ A thought for the ^ay; Mark Twain said: “Good breeding consists in concealing how much we think of ourselves and how little we think of the other persons.” 5150 Cheyenne ‘Attack on FDR Isn’t Justifiable’ dismayed at the vicious at- Using meter men to spy on dog owners is not the proper way of solving problems in a free country. Why not hire a good honest man for a dog warden and have a stiff fine for people who keep dags without licenses? lack by The Press on former Pres- mfeht be missed, but people are Roosevelt. As a teacher I pretty much what we expert them pert of extortiOB Burmigh sMkes ' or tineats of strikes Is constant-iy before industries, large and As tor investment, businessmen ask -thenjselves whether interest rates are ever going to come down and whether these may even skyrocket upward in the next few Dr. Harold Hyman Says: Excessive Fluid Retention Is a Job for Your Doctor Instruct students on the necessity of properly Interpreted history to tell us of the worth or failure of any figure in American history. lo be. Let’s make people feel «iey are honest until they are found guilty. PhlUp Hart 151 Starr It should be acknowledged that worth has not yet been coiw(l-tuted and it is only the amateur historian Who attempts to do so. Smiles They are tojd Oiat the international balance of payments/is the cause of tile trouble. Yet exports are high. ENCOURAGED TO COMPETE They read that ttie Kennedy Administration intends to penalize American companies that haye Although many ot us are ac- men. Maybe the needle can be cused of being full of “hot air.” avowed by effective use of drugs actually we are half water. Our All this takes a bit of figuring, to be sure. But, with few exceptions, the results are most gratifying- water balance is regulated as precisely as the tides of the sea, so far tor high tide, >so much tor low tide. Sometimes the tide goes out bit too far. Periiaps we didn’t drink enough fluid. Periiaps we got rid bi^t plants abroad to compete, of too much by upy of our kidneys with Eunmeans.^ Yet Europeans are encouraged by tariff reductions to come here to compete with American companies. | Busiiiess is told by our gov-enunent to risk Its money in underdeveloped countries and, in effect, to abandon or disrupt profitable operations in Europe. For a copy of Dr. Hyman’s new leaflet “Lose Wel^t Healthfully,” send 10 cents to Dr. Hyman, care Of The Pontiac Press. Herbert Hoover in 1944 said ol the Yalta agreement, "It com-a strong foundation on to rebuild the world.” Mistakes were made here because we were not used to dealing with an ally who did nqt hoitbr our code of morality. Franklin Roosevelt was Imperfect, but history has not ever called him traitor. A Kentucky boy of ten has been smoking cigars since he was seven. He should get a watch if he quits when he’s 21. Silver Is a conductor of electricity and we get a shock every time we get change tor a dollar. A blotter is usually what people hunt for while waiting for the ink to dry. ‘®' Probably the -most efficient chaperon is the need ol a shave. or digestive tract. Perhaps -we lost 'It through our skins due to oveikeatlng or per-, spiration. We say we • are parched. The doctor says we’re dehydrated. . / Either, way, we feel thirstj/and we restore the fluid balance by drinking whatever liquids Are at Case Records of a Psychologist: Should Youngsters Read Column? Portraits ■ hand. by JOHN C.» METCALFE It would be a great delight . . . To be driving through the night To some Shangri La Sometimes we overdo high’tide and get flegding of the tissues. Our fingers i^ll and we can’t get rings off. There’S pitting of the shins. Shoes become too tight and leave dents \riien they’re removed. West . . . For a long vacation The fare iTOks ^ rest . . I would like to reach under the eyes. We know we f aven tent . Or cabana I could rent There it would be lots of fun . . . To watch sunbeams 'swiftly tori . . . As th^ play in /»l/ufr9« rsti Hit clouds on high . . . Peek-a-boo along the sky . .» And my stomach I would treat . . . With the finest but somehow we have gained weight. Sometimes, under more serious conditions, fluid accumu-'lates in chest cavities, the abdominal cavity, the body. Wherever the accumulation oc- food to eat . . . And' I’d catch curs and whatever we call it, up on my dreams ... In the there’s a disturbance of water bal-moonlight’s surfside beains ... ance that is much less easy to deal C9i, it would be grand to stay with than the opposite condition "of ... In such place so far away dehydration. . . . ^ I jiKt finMcial s^i^h ix>oK8 FOB CAUSE . *• . . . For a tnp of timeless length. ^our doctor’s first task in the By DB; GEORGE W. CRANE CASE Ir447: Betty J., aged 12, is unusually precocious, for education columns like this are seldom read until young folks attain the Junior year of high school. “Dr. Crane,” Betty began, “I read your column frequently. “And I can truthfully say that I haVe learned some-l thing Bom every article. “My Dadd(r and Mother ___________________ tUBk tiiis Is aU right B&t the par^ of my jjri chmns til^ of 1$ yean is too im-' — your simply ended by column by this tales, or eqphemlstic statement:' fldence. “Most divorces start in the bedroom.” 1 did not elaborate or say another word. Yet an elderly publisher in Wisconsin can- The Country Parson Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Gntske of 6 North Shirley Ave.; golden wedding. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Crowe of 48070 North Shelby Road; 66th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Beulah Eban of WaterfrttoT82nd birthday. Mr. |ind Mrs. Seymour Arnold of Holly; 56th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Amanda Wtotley of Walled Lake; 81st btrtoday., ^ Mr. and Mrs. O.' B. Long investigation of fluidl retention to determine the cause. Maybe it’s something reasonably obvious, like taking in too much salt or overdoses of ACTH or some related sterolid product. Maybe it’s ah ihferthm ot the toeu^ wifil tubercle bacilli. Maybe it’s a manifestation of hmrt faiinre or kidney tronble. celed my column at once the ground that: "Dr. Crane is an immoral influence.” But his front page still carried lurid stories of sexual assault. Ah|^ he switched to a woman advice columnist who began her recent column with my same statement: “More divorces start in the bedroom'than in any other room of tile house.” Now why do you suppose this Wisconsin publisher would cMI me 'an humoral influence, when I am a double doctor. (Ph.D. and M.D.) ’■For they say you" discuss sex Aud the special lecturer on fam-problems. , hy matters before Catholic, Jew- "But how old do you have to ^be and most of the major Protes-before you learn the so-called estant denominations? Then they will stop coming to you for facts, instead, they may consult “alley" instructors, who often gi^e them false or exaggerated data. J So encourage your children to read this and all the other edu- r.--6 'Facts of Life'? “I thought the purpose of education was to remove our ignorance so we could learn how to act wisely and thus be happirt?” YOU BEf JURY Should this important function of rendering sound medico-payrtiDlogical advice be left to As you can point in striking out blindly until the cause has been pin-pointed. of Flint; 66th wedding anniversary. some on us.’ Even the worst ot tis can’t help< being 'j^rtly good — It’s as if virtue rained doWh on us couldn’t help gefttSi Once the cause is known, treatment may be highly mcressful. Maybe it’s just a matter of cutting down bn salt or fluids or of stopping a course of ACTH pills or Injections. Maybe it’s a matter of toning the heart with digitalis or of drawing off flui^ frmn chest or abdo What do you readers ttiink there’s not much about this case? Frimt page’iHwspaper stories” almost’every week recount lurid sex assaults on^ women. And they often fail to employ the discreet euphemisins that I use such as \ “erotic calories,” etc. ^ . For example, I have often dted the fact that about 50 per cent of all American marriages are f^il-toes, either) because of actual divorce or constant duarrelingt. In one such record, J to Dr. Panl Popenon or myself and othw experts speciflcaily schooled tor this crucial task? catlonal columns in Ihls newspaper. 0 And send for my booklet “Sex Problems from 2 to 20' Years,”, enclosing a stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. Alwxys write toDr. Oeorge W. Crene !? The PontUe nees, Pon- ...........^ You readers again may serve as trie jury, for newspapers are becoming vast "Universities in Print” and thus need to select their “faculty” witti care. (Copyright. U6S) As regards the time for children to be informed about the farts of life (or their adoption), we urge you to tell them when they sisk. Parents, please don’t binsh or parry their questions of givo Tb« Aasoelstcd Prim it cnUtM exelnavelT to the use for rtoubU-cetloB ot til local ^ewe printed ih this newspaper -- —” *- __ -___________ .rate at Hlchlcsn. Ifsmbff ot. ABC. year. Alt mall aubecrlptlene payabte i, TCT rONTUC 1*RKSS, j RIDAY, sMAECH 2, 1902 Nelyhbdra Griyw~ Witt F«mfly Over Craih Vtetim They All Loved Him ... Now He's Gone Ky ^AAO f, IIHNNIGIII^ MWEttU. N.1T;4p) n- xw-a we the little g«y with the crinkly grin shoveling mow from the sidi«mlk|i of Ms elder Mighbots. On wintry mornings fre'd be out In the street helping to get helky •utomobilee started. -that wes Stephen A. Shnn, 48. lie kissed his wife, Ruth, and* two mungsters, Emily, a ' old Monde, and Stephan Jr'^, a sturfe T-yeaiNold, and said g^< bye Thursday. He left on a business trip to the West Coast. ^ ' He never «»me Ivick. .Shan was one of the 95 victims In the jet airliner crash In Ja-nmlvB Bay. W for the «.^R. Kinney Cc^. in iwarhy New Y«k aty, ' ^ In a scene repeated 'many times round, the ooipitry Thursday, frtenda and nelj|hban!l went Into__________ ,. the comfortable brhik home to particularly througli the gray ^patches of ice left tnr a recent atorm, and quleto ly tenden!d their condolences, to the family. Peter J. Smith, who eonwio Mrs, Shan when they learned of the plgne dtwsh, With tanrs Willing In ( her eyes, she told them of M/r hours of suspense. She knew her husband was lohwduled to take that plane, but maybe there waa a chance hd wasn't aboard. The tragic con-ftvmatlon came hours later. Tree-lined Macatee Place was a »d spot Thursday night. Ihc short street has only 18 houses lining It. Neighbors elose i airNo. s, Uyea af No. 4ISS. He was almost wordless. His eyes gUst-Ms glasses. He sat silently aln the parlor aa people tiled In and out. The aians' daughter Emily aat curM up on tha sofa leafing through the newspaper stories telling of the crash. UUle Stephan Jr. was upatatrs in a lied-ntom—perhaps too young lo i-eal-Iw his loss. AIfnMl R, Boyd, wlto liven across the, street at No. 447, aummod up the neighbors' reaction. \, * Sr W ‘Steve was a devoted famf^ man. Whether you were a friend or a‘ stranger, he waa always ready lo help you. Why, just, a few weeka'* ago, he went out of hli way to drive me to the railroad atatlop when 1 couldn't get my oar started. It'a a big loss to our community." Mre. Shan walk«!d out to the front door with one neighbor as hi‘ ended Ms visit. She ‘‘.Sieve was always merry,! always happy. He enjoyed life, I must hang on lo that thought," He lived at 448 Macatee Place, a short residential street In this Long Island community. A commuter, he waa Inventory control- Nixon Urges GOPers to Leave'Welchers' BERKELEY, Calif. (AP)- Fo^ mer Vice President Richard M. Nixtm, a candidate for governor of California, Is making strongest attack against the John Birch Society and Its leader, Robert Welch. At a news conference, Nixon urged fellow Republicans ThuiW day to quit the ultra-conservative organization bo(;ause Welch won’t. "Welch." he said, is the Birch sociely." Describing the former candy-maker as dictatorial and Snll-Re-publlcan, Nixon said he would not endorse any Republican candidate who does not make the choice between -Dwight Eisenhower and Robert Welch." This was an apparent reference to statements attributed to Welch calling Eisenhower "a dedicated conscious agent of the Communist Miami Weather Unit Reports Driest Season MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The past six months have been the driest since the U.S. Weather began keeping records at 'Miami International Airport In 1939. - The Weather Bureau said only Hij9 Inches of rainfall were recorded during the six-month period ended Feb. 28, compared with the normal average 25.18 inches. The previous low of 13.66 was recorded during the same months of l9^-].9^2. REPEAT Bt POPULAR DEMAND! 1962 Model ZENITH Model J-2705Y big screen 23-inch deluxe lo-boy console with 20,0QP volts of picture power, sunshine picture tube, Zenith target-tuner and hondcroffed service-saver chassis. / 199 95 with trade Model J-2705Y COME ON IN AND SEE ZENITH Color TV Radio Dispatched Trucks Give You Immediate TV SERVICE SWEETS RADIO and APPLIANCE 422 West Huron Street FE 4-1133 Open Mondoy ond Friday Nights Tort’, girit’ 2.99 DRESSES 2^ 'CHARSf IT Wide sweeps to whirl her to the head of the Easter parade! Pastels, vivid hues —a gay assortment of carefree cottons at a tiny price. Sizes 3-6x, 7-14. 23-36" wide, 64" long. White steel removable slots, washable, 2 ik Rog. 10.99 vinyl ptiidtd toy chotr 3-ft. gray or aqua vinyl chest holds lots of toys, doubles os TV seat. 088 Savo on baautiful 45-pc. dinnarwart Spring Glory in pink br Sandalwood in Mocha accents. Service for 8. 16“ Get everyday low, low'discount prices on all your medicine chest needs . . . WHY PAY MORE? New arrivals! 2.99 SPORTSWEAR 239 'CHARGI IT- Swaetert: short-sleeve cardigan, slip-ons, 34-40. BIOHieft Liz-looks, tailored; white, colors, ^38. SkirtB, eiockt: spring fabrics, cottons, 10 to 18. Monday through Soturdoy ’ PBDCRAL OMPT- ^TOHMSt DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON tUlNS EtCB^ ' THE POWTIAC nmiSS. FRIBAY, MAHCH «. IIMW DO AWAY Wim HABD j and BUSTY WATBR! Yoi Can Have SOFT WATER for a FEW PERRIES Per Day Havi a whitar woth, softer clothes, lovilier complexion and even sove up to 50% on soap. WHY BENT a Saftanai a Unit? Have Teai Own S ior ai Little ai $|25 I PER W WEEK 10 TEAI WARIANTT Including Soles Tax NO MONEY DOWN For Further Information, ('.all . . . CRUMP ELECTRIC, Inc. Att Distributor lor RornoM* Watm Conditionlno’ Rqulpmonl 346S Aikin Rd. UL 2-3000 FI 4-3S73 ! It’s Time to Start Plaaoiag to Baild for 1962 (rWAT AT BRKAKrAST — I’rrKidenl Kon-nt“dy tulkn to rvnngelisl Billy (jcuham Wednex-day at the JOlh annual Presidential Prayer Breakfast tor Our National LeaMld<-nt and Crahum spoke at the breakfast, sponsofed by the Senate and House prayei' breakfast groups and tite International t'lirlstlan l.A*nderBhlp Conference. Wdllendas Use Nef for 1st Time State Lay Requires Precaution for Show in Minneapolis A beautiful fri-level home with 3 or 4 bedrooms. family room with fireplace, 2Vi ' baths, spacious kitchen, sunken patio, 2-car garage attached. WE BUILD IN EVERY PRICE RANGE WE ARRANGE TIIe FINANCING liiirtbethLoKe U OPEN SAT. and SUN. 1 to 6 , WE TAKE TRADE-INS “AMERICAR DREAM” hy Frericks Bros. Dasign and Cfacamting Sarviw Includtd With Every Home MINNEAPOLIS MP» - The great Wfdlendas for the first time in el^t years are using a net under their high wire act at a Minneap- olis circus. Karl Walltnda, 57. head of the troupe, said ■ Thursday it doesn’ make much difference. But hi added that he thought it tfort of took thd edge off the act. the audttorium Officials p elrcuN la showing Raid lorney called their allcnllon to a slate law which makes Its use mandatory as a safety prccau-tton lor such shows. Herman Wallenda and his son Grunthef, ride bicycles across the wire, about 30 feet hlRh, with Karl perched on their Shoulders in the current act. The Wallendas wei-e showing a similar, seven-person pyramid until Jan. 30 when two were killed the troupe fell while performing in a circus at Detroit. Stabs Girl at Drug Party NEW YORK WV-Stephen Glazer, ), a plumber’s helper, has confessed that he stabbed his young brunette (inancee to death during an argun\ent who was to buy heroin to continue an hours-long irc^ics party, police report. Liz and Eddie Will Ee^ain in Europe Awhile Party Gal Dies at 75 HOME (AI — Americans may not be seeing much of screen star bilizabcth Taylor for the next year or two, except in the movies. Friends say that the ncitreas plans to stay in Europe for a while. SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-C.wen-dolyn MacBoyle Bcelthold,. onetime gojdcn girl noted for her lavish parlies, died Wednesday, She was once dirt'clor of Idaho Maryland Mines, which her first husband, Erroll MacBoyle, developed into the nation’s second largest gold producer at J40 minion. She and her husband, Eddie Fisher, are buying u chalet at Gstaad, Switzerland. Appart-ntly they plan to live there. When she has finished work on 20th Century Fox’s miiltl-million-dollar ‘'Cleopatra,” her next film will be made in France. Singer Eddie wants to try his hand as a movie producer. Actress Elizabeth wants to try her skill - in g lYench-typc m.vstery-8Usp<-iis(» picture. JS HERE ♦ 158 OAKLAND AVE. CALL FE 4-1515 Pontiac's Only Authoriz«d Muntz Solos and Sorvico C&V ELECTRO MART Opon 'til 9 Friday and Monday Tiny Guide Package Steers Polaris Flight CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -A Polaris steered by the smallest inertial guidance system ever carried in a U.S. ballistic missile successfully flew a 1,500-mile course down the Atlantic tracking range today. The guidance package is so compact it can fit in a filing cabinet drawer. The system and a lighter, streamlined nose cone flown for the first time Thursday are being developed for an advanced, longer-range version of the submarine weapon. BIG 4 HARDWARE at KEEGO lURDWAIIE • 1 Only 3041 Orchard Lake Rd. 682-2660 All INSULATED UNDERWEAR l^Price! No. 66 Circular Porter Gable Saw Was NOW $44,95 ^38^5 4*Qt. Presto * Pressure Cooker $12.95 $ 088 G.E. Toaster Oven *26" Sunbeam-2 Only WA” Fry Pan ,$19.95 « Sunbeam Mixmaster $42.95 «2r Vogue Deefrie Can Bpener $19.95 « 9” Mirre Eleefrie Broiler $ 9.95 ^ 7*® mkSppCT Red Swat Shirts .w* 1“ Untan’t Lwtiw GannHatfiom $4.95 « 2“ SpoilsBMn’e ^ Top'Laee Boats $6.95 $ 449 u»an«« CraMeatSaw m.» 7“ FibcrUesDure-Tub^ With Faucets. MA95 Landiy Tdbs - W® at TOM’S HARDWARE only 905 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-2424 HELP! WE NEED THE ROOM! [out They Go!| RIDING TRACTORS Brand New 196l’s at Real Savings! Limited Quantity! BUY N0W-S4VE! If you plan on buying a 'kiding Tractor for cutting gratt, working a garden or any other chero around the house, you'll really Save $$ at TOM'S HARDWARE. Seo Them on display now! Wo toko Trades and offer easy budget terms. 1961 SpringHeld ROTARY TILLER , »i2r 3 H,P. Briggs & Stratton engtne. Fall 26" Tilling width, ond comiuete with reverse Gear (1 only) TWIN GARBAGE CRN Uf RACK ON WHEELS $g9i Final Clos«-Out INSUUTED BOOTS $099 Complete Suit iNSULATEP UHDEBWEAB 5SS $S9,9(4lwfl.nd Floorsmifli FLOOR FOUSNER $0g8B Twin Plastic Pail 99<' Devoe Pairff in 1,100 colore LU6ITE WALL PAINT M9 Tire Link Ooor Mats . / •. ^.. .. . 99p 1.98 Cocoa Door Mats.... .. —. 1.3T AutonatieSooMe Blanket (1 only). .16.99 UIHRDS 48 Home outfitting company S. Saginaw Downtown Pontiac ...Uliffi OUTFITfYOVII home A—1- THE PONTIAC 1TOSS, FiUDAY, MAliOlt 2, HHja N*tNB cribe Seeks to Eliminaie March After Error One Cent Sale UAI< 1MIVI.I0 NKW YORK (Ai») Anylwijy cnre to Jolit Iho locloly (or ItM BboUUon of Iho month o( Mur<*? Juit mntl me Hppllcatton. ^tlr . Kvtin My ediluilnl i My (Mate* the been itvtng me m terrible ribbing, 'Hew run enyone low a whole of Me life—parilculariy at yonr agfT' mahdtng gleefully, the expert- I mentioned the exited,, em« to • friend ttf wine ‘ * *'l wee lejeoted by a girl named Amy, and the eluw bully kiiw^ked out u front tooth and took away my lollipop." THKOKY FAIUI "That explaina It, ■ ’That’a why you wioon- |!ayriiolO|w In «< I he ha(^ uie ani actouily have a grudge againat ..............to forget It.'* UOV1.K bigger mental IxHi-bim. On Iho VHih o( Ftdinmry. I wrote n ooluntn (or lh(^ next day and dalod It April 1, IhuH omitting the : powder, iprlnkled Avoid _— ..d by looee platee. Oet t any drug counter. March la either ley or mufldy, frigid pr windy. U la like an adoleacent unable to make up Ita d. It haa bdth feet In winter i. only, one hand held out to tb* wormti^' apring. ' March and try w ..«a^* ••• But hla tbeiNY ooUapoed when 1 pointed out that 1 had lost fven iveltlor giria In kindergarten—and had other teeth knocktid out and other lolllpopa taken away from me by the claaa bully—In October and May, moniha I prlxe-hll^ly. March I* an ambuah, a pneu-amla month, unpredictable and untruatworlhy, Whatever Wnd of The only reaaoii why I can lhat I foigpl March Ihia year II M'ully lan‘1 worth remembering When you gel riglil down to it, Maroh la one of the dulleat piigea bn the calendar. It wax (luring Ihc Idea of March that Jullua Caei|Hr went out for a c'bffee brouk with u bunch of Roman senatora. Remember what happened to him?....... you put on In h la'llkely t be the wrong kind by nightfall. in March la'llkely to turn out to Even the U.S. government (eels aon»y for lasople In Moriah. '|lmt'a why you now don’t have to make your federal Income tax pay-menla until a month later. No wopder I forgot Maix;h. Wliy Only iieopla who enjoy all klnda of weather enjoy March—iieoplc thrill out of being kicked In the alomach and palled on (he Iwick at Ihe Nani(‘ time. A IHHAHTEK MONTH March baa lamn a kimi of dla- iiHler monili In hlatmy. Ii 1h ilw month of Ihe Boaton Maaioicrc, Iho month when Naimlcon escaiied from Elba. . p0g (Catcher—Canine Contiyil Officer English' language Knows Inflation lly IIIGK WEHT WASjUNmX)N (UPI) , - c; NorthCotA-'Parklnaon, the noted author and word-watcher, haa devoted much time lo obaerv-Ing the behavior of Ihe Kngllah language In Ita nutururatate. In the courhc of hla atudlea, he defected a verbal phenomenon which appearod to be forming H fixed, or (tonatnnt, pattern. Ihia led to the formulation of I'arkinaon’a law on gobblede-gook, atated «a follows: "The printed word expands to fiU the apace available to It.” INmTION EXAMPLE lids type of Inflation was de-f 1 n e d by Parkinson as "too many words chasing too little meaning.” As example^ of how It occurs, he cited the terms "dog catcher” and“dlshwash- Oive them enough space,,, he said, and they will expand Into “canine control officer" and "utensil maintenance man.” Parkinson's law kept coming into my, mind as I was reading WERE YOU BORN ON APRIL 14, 1902? If 80, Penney's may have a gift for you. Please contact JoAnn Van Tassel at Penney’s Miracle Mile Store. FE 8-9628. the transcript of a mtUlary budget hearing released l(xlay by the lIouM delenae appropriations Hubcommlltee. siieclmens of language expan-atun — or so It seemed to lUip. I)a,nle| J. Eluod, a Penn- Afler first voicing howilder-ment over the term "peiTcntlle limitation,’' F io od dlsfwvured that the Air Force was seeking a st>ecial clothing allowance for some 2,000 "rocrultlng sule(s-men." Promote Three in Air Reserve Unit to Major PENNEY'S—MIRACLE MILE OPEN MONDAY Thru SATURDAY 10:0Q A. M. to 9:00 P. M. “What In the world ts a ir-crultlng salesman and what do you want with 2.000 of them, anyhow?” the ewngressman Inquired. He said, "It reminds me of what the Irishman said about the giraffe — ‘There Is no such animal.’ ” An Air Force spokesman, proving Parkinson’s law, then Promotion of, three members of Ihe Pontiac Air Reserves squadj ron to the rank'of major was an. nounced today by Lt. Col. Johp L. Underwood, commander. t«N> little meaning. "We use the term "reci-uiUng salesmen’ (©.describe those members of our recruiting force who contact directly potential enlistees as opposed to the remaining members of the recruiting service who perform support duties.” he explained. A few pages later, Flood stumbled across a budgetary item proposing an Increase from $201,- . . ’This 1 do not believe,” said Flood. ”Whut la the world Is protabrlcatcd meal? Is It edible?” It turned out that prefahiical-ed means the meat has been boned. all forget March? Lel’i simply wipe It out nitogelher, and give 16, days more to lovely April days more to splendid September? any case, friends, please don't mail me any iHstket calendars with the moiilh of March dix'led by a blue pencil mark. I've already received enough to Inst me a lifetime. ■5' •vliil sa «*v •lt*r I L TO TIMK I.IF'K INSlIXANCK t , SAN ANTONIO a IMtR Bvriii Media *M(uuifacturer’t suggetbid Mait price for the fuU-riie 4-door Newport redan, exclusive of destination charges. If'hite snail tires extrat Promoted were Dodge G. konian,. 354 Ascot road, Charles ____1, 28249 Schroeder road. Farm ingtdn and John M. Sanders, 1415 Epping lape, Bloomfield Hills. Mb]. Melkonlan Is an 18-year veteran of the Air Force and during World War II. He Is rently Information o f f I c e i Ihe Pontiac aquadron. Maj. Bares scei-ved as a navi gator in both World War II and the Korean conflict. He flew 55 combat missions as a navigator and holds the Air Medal and the Distinguished Flying Cross with two oak leaf clusters. He is an 18-year | veteran of the. Air Forep. Maj. Sanders has served in the I Air Force since December, 1943 and was a navigator during World M V P -gv ^ < ’^^JVfVERS^^ blosWiiimg for spring WHEAT and BEIGE Step but smartly this Spring in a lovely fashion from Penney;s. Wheat and Beige sparkle.|!^iis ^ring in new designs of aU wool. See new surface texture, new styles, new charm^ Infects. Select your conV today. - f. 'v '■ ■ TA95 T. jj339j5_ Stereo Consolette, Name Brand..............$ 69.95 Zenith Sterao Console.... $165dNI Emerson Stereo, AM/FM.. $158.96 19-lneb Portable New In Crates...........$119.98 Zentth 19'’ Portable...... $139.05 Westinghouse 23-lneh TV Remote..................$215.90 Sylvania Stereo.........$ 89.95 Stereo Reoord, 4 Track, Tape Recorder, American Made $153.09 WE SPECIALIZE IN COLOR TV STANDARD BRANDS From -f »399»» WITH TRADE BUY NOW and SET ■f-hrtpjtrint 90-Ddy Replacement ALl-PORCELAIN 1 Automatip WASHER (Sjarantee of SATISFACmON HOTPOINT DRYER lO-lb. tub capacity, ou-tomafic water temper-atores, triple rinsing, woter-soving pa^ol load control, full-time underwater lint filler, duol ootofflotlc detergent and dry bleach, putontoHc Bodloientfwhi-oot, convenient lop lood- Large Capacity Lint Filter Factory Wairanty Free irtstallotlon n28 HOTPOINT DISH WASHER • Maple OuHtno Bead • Upper Lever Jet Spray • Double Roll Out Shelm • SpeHenn Rbue Qedor FRETTERS tow, LOW PRICE BUDCIT terms ■ 30 Doyi fxthong* ■ GENEROUS TRADE ■ FAST 24-HOUR UR TO J6 ■ If Not Fully SoHifiid ■ AUOWANCE ■ DELIVERY MONTHS TO RAT NO MONEY DOWN ON ANT PURCHASE Courteous, Alter tko Sole S»rvit» “FretterisCaK DIsoeuiil Makes the Big Difference Prove It teteumlf - Service Cetnes First BeganItewef Wee^ FRETTER APPLIANCE 10:00 A. M. to 9:00 R. M. MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE ROAD Open Doily 10 A M. 'til 9 P.M. - FE 3-7051 - Sunday 10 A.M. 'ti! 7^ fM .'-I ISt,- : , ■ .J3BL ■ V ii . THK PONTIAC PHESS. FlUnAV, MABfcH lipei Pontiac Area Deaths I, ^HKITTA ANMAimH liM iMmi recelvixl . tfiiatfiL AiraMr nwtdent ' ■ ...................................... bw, . ....... He WtlMid with iSnnihic Mittor Dlvtihm in itKI. imtt niMtw ol RoclHwler lx)d|» No. 5, FAAM, nndu pHltX)n of Iu>oheRler Chapter 65. OHS. Surviving mv hl« wife l.aila ami s mother, MrM. Zerntde LeSaRe of fiwhirntri lAK'hl arrange>t»«"ntn are by ClKley’* Kuw^l Home. SurvlviM mr« two aoirt. HW Jo|eph^«vy HoyhiU, Ann A^ « PMt tMwyiale and Fhy of «hn—*«- » »«"«** Miami, fit., and aiRht lirandidiU^ Njilim Mm. Amlwugh died uitaxpaclfd' ly of a heart conditloii on Feb. 13 In Florida. JAMKA C. OAKtt .tame* C. Cant of 147 Bagley St. dli«d yenterday at hi* home after an nine** oi two month*. He 67. He waa an insuranee agent and a former employe of Crand Trunk \tentem Railroad Co. Mr. Cant waa a member. Newman A.M.E. Church and Gi-inalter Lodge F * AM No. 19. Prince HaU Affiliation. Surviving are hie wife Willie Mae; a daughter, Mni. Zulla M Cnga of Pontiac; aeven grandchildren; and three great-great grandchildren. Sendee will l>e 1 p.m. Monday at Trinity Baptiat Chun'h w(th bur iai in Oak Util Cemetery. HU My i* at I lie IVnnk Camilhcri Funeral Home. ' OSCAR BKANIIT AUBURN HEIGHTS - 0*c Brandt. 71. of .3203 BeHste St, died at hi.* home early this morning after an illnea* of several months. Hla body is at Moore Chapel of Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home KRICEST L. IJCftAOK AVON TOWNSHIP — Service for Ernest L. LeSage. 68, formerly of Avon Township was to Probe Near End on Local 614 Report on the Union's Records Must Be Filed 1st in Washington In th» m*tl«r ______—---------------- ln|^^RuueU Jaynet, minor. Mo. To Dalo Jaynea. father of child. PeUUon havint bean fllad te Ihit Court •Ileglnc that tha preeent whereabontt of the father of aald minor child are nn- be pieced under the Jurisdiction of thie In the name of the peon-----.... _— of Michigan, you are hereby notified that the hearlna on eald petition will be held «t the Oakland County Service Center. Court Houee. IJM ------- eervtce beroof. t The Pontiac Frees, i o make personal Adamt, Judge of aald Court. In the CIt of Pontiac In aald County, this 27th da SSiALO E. A0A1O Deputy Probota Milttar Juvenlla DItUIod March 2. I»e2 MAKE POLICE DEPARTMENT PONTIAC. UICBIOAN The following Is a list of Impound W automobiles which have been declarf" abandoned and are therefore scheduli for sale at public auction, persuant „ Section ZSa of Act SM of Public Acts of 1»4( ICL. Utt. Sec. 297,252).. ----- TEAR UCENEBMOrOR 1254 None U4PO lU 411 *2 16* 425 ..........1«2 moo 135.. 1956 HZ 2325 0340 255 ---- HZ 2527 » 032 735 HZ 3525 nU45 508 RY5227 S13 35 437 M BTW22 MWA22 534L ■ale of the abo*e vehicles Of neio on Saturday, March 15, 1252, 1 30 P.M . at the Lake Street Yards, the Department of Public Worka, 117 ;e Street. City — Lincoln The ai « , lodtw « Gilbert Fu-. m. OiirodR. Mawmic gr*v«Eldo senriee will be cMucted at 3 p.tn. tomurrow at Moutit Avon Philippine Cigars Really Roll Into U.S. SAN FIUNCISCX) tUI’I) - One of the larg««t blilpment* of ITilI-ippine cigani ever to enter the United Stnle* wa« unloaded re-»>efilly In San Frandteo from American President Lines’ S S Preaident Hoover. ana More thau 350,011(1 haiiihrolled, l(mg-f(Iler elgans arriveit on t h e shtfi from Manila. a a a 'nie ahlpmenl miirkwi tlie alrong-d ii'luwi o( tlie Plilltppine elgiira I tlie Amerlemv (iilme«*» miirltel atni-e World War H when I’hll-Ippine cigar* were 30 4HT eeni o( toinl fmle*. CattiR to G«t ID Cords 1 . FRANKFOItT, Ky. (AP) - The state'* department of agriculture la taking ateiM to give every herd 9f cattle In Kentucky an idcntltl-eation card. Officials said each herd will be given n permanent mimlier. ullowiiig Immediate locution und Identllk'iition of a herd In the event of a disease outbnnik other emergenete*. An investigation of Teamster Union recoi-ds of Pontiac l.d about the Iwo-monlh search of books dealing with financial and organizational acliv ilies of the iwal*. Last Januaiy, the Lalior Heparl tent’s Bureau of Labor Munage-lent Reports (BLMR) wnt three invest igulors each to Pon'iac and Detroit. ★ « ★ Louis Woiwode, a former FBI agent who heads the BLMR office in Detroit, said the invesliga-tkm had "lakm longer thap anticipated but Is now pretty well is concerned." “I have no comment on the outeume,” he added. “The findings will be reported to our office In Washington.” Woiwode and another BLMR in vestigator, Robert McCarthy, both said the Teamsters had been 'most cooperative. There was no interference and we have plaints.’’ The investigators conducted the inquii-y to determine it there were any irregularities in financial reports the two locals filed with the government In accordance w’ith the Landnim-Griffin Act, It was understood the Investigators spent much of their time in Pontiac looking Into the affairs of scandal-scarred Ijical 614. Tie local was investigated five years ago by the Senate Rackets Committee, whose counsel RMrt Kennedy, now attorney general. ★ * * At the time, there were charges union funds had been misused. Before that, a suit was filed in CJhkland County atcuit Cour* seeld^ an ageounting of J1 million in local funds. Nothing ever »me of the case, * ♦ ★ Teain8l,ers Presidnet James R. Hoffa put the Local under trusteeship in 1954 when two top officers were sent to prison. Some lime later, Hoffa’s brother William was named a business agent for the Local. The present investigation deals only with records dating back to Jan. 1, 1959, when the law became operative. EARN MORE ON SAVINGS SAVINGS IN BY THE VOTH OF THE MONTH EARN FROM _ THE 1ST AT t Advanceil Payment Shares Certificates Current Kate PURCHAS 4 ICURRENT RATE •/. Established in 1890-Never missed paying a dividend. Over 72 years of soutid management-.^your assurance y of security. Assets now over 74 million 'dollars. CAPITOL SAVINGS Want Monument to Mark Worlds Best Fossil Bed F0.S8U.* Wyo. Mfi-Effoil* are under w«w to ostabllsli a imlional iment hero csimmemoratlng what may he the best Wsh fossil b4Hi In the world. Stale geologist Horace D. Thomas said the TtW-foot butte which contains the Mails once waa at least 1,0(10 trot under wa^ r.» Dead fish settled at the bottom and were left undtsturiied because scavenger fl*h cotild not live In such d«^» water, The fish were then tburied In countless layers of mud. .'knue fist) eYlnu'ted from the htilte are iM'llevtHi lo have lived Nl million year* ago nl the hegln-mug of the mammal age Hae of the extraeled fl*h was Isiught by Flsenliower last year a* a gift (or Japanese Emperor HIrohito. Hens Are Busy os Bees .ST LOUIS (UPI) - i:gg pix. ducera say 3 million liens avei age 3 million eggs a day In the SI, lw»uis area, or about pei-son each day. American Consumer 'Cautious Optimist' ANN A*RB0R (UPI)-v Hi# American oonaumer now la ‘^cau-tiouily optimistic'' about (he na< tkm's econotnlc (iituro, the Uid* veralty of Michigan Survey Ra-seitroh Center ropwts. * A A In a recent swvey of consumw attUudos and incUngflona U> buy, the center reports people In every economic bracket roaUse bielnem trends have turned up and they expect further Imfknvement. autontobUe* in vey ahowmi. But It also dlocloaedl that the opllinlsm expressed by conNumer* had Ihtii tcmiauxal l»y restraint n'HulIfng fixirti the ' w- 'HNlons ot 1958 and eai-ly IWil. On Civil Service Jobs 1.AN.SING (47 — Tlic i>crmanont Ha nover of state Jobs covered by civil service totaled .3,133 last yeur, the Civil Seivlce Commts-sloii reiiorls, ’lliere wen- J.Ml ro-slgnallon*, ItHi dismissal* und 573 lost lo lh)> service because of re-llremeni or death- CoHItr Road Church Schmdulft Revival Rev. Albert Osoper ot the Vlrot ,>enl«coal,al Chumh on Williams Lake Hoad will i&each at (he revival to l>e held Nunday throngh Mareh ll at the (niHer Road Oommunlty Chunh, 1345 OolUer ■^oad. Meetings will begin at U a.m. Sunday and conllnoe each night at TiHO p,m. except Saturday. lUo de Janeiro iRIver of January) ls| The Navajos are »h« jlndian tribe In the U.S. Ftiud Wiitteii ttmiam JimiSItLaiiitJOMeilBOW- STORE MIRACLE MILE LADIES’ Jackets and Tunics Regular lo $19.93 '5 Ladies’ Weather Coats Regular to $19.95 1 Regular lo $7.98 Ladies’ Blouses Children’s Sizes 3-6X Snow Suits Regular to $19.98 Regular to $14.98 Ladies’ Skirts *3 -.’6 Girls’ Winter Car Goats Regular to $25.00 * Vi OFF Girls’ Winter Coats and Coat Sets Regular to $29.95 !^off Regular to $29.98 Ladies’ Dresses ’6«,*10 H , 'Pre-Teen Sportswear 1 - Dresiei, Sweaters, 1 RIouses B Regular to $14.98 i Viwf Men’s Topcoats Regular to $75.00 VsCFF S Regular lo $69.95 ' § Ladies’ Winter C H8.m’28 Men’s Corduroy Slacks Regular to $6.95 *3 Men’s Long»Sleeve Sport Shirts Regular to $8.95 .$199 Regular $15.95 Ladies’ Sweaters ^3 and ^6 Regular to M3.9'5 —Odds 'n' Ends tadies’ Shoes , ^ so Styles Mi and V ' Use a Convenient Lion Charge I 8|wolal Now Tina Friday, Marsh Shl J ir FAMILY Sl« *♦» S PIZZA e Chan* and Papparoni i For Broek (s«t — Wneh — Wniaer or TV 9 Snsckil Also urved In our Coffee Shop S or Co(fb Servlet I I ^ Open Dally S A. Mt la I A. M. FROSTOP DRIVE4N Ij ills W. Huron Ndfar lliaaboth Loka R4. NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED GIOSE-OUT On ALL SOFAS and CHAIRS lo Nake Room for New Models! TRUNDLE BEDS Girf-r Hold bunk bed';. $g450 rMrlv,fm>-riri„i WING BACK SOFA HIDE-AWAY.BED StRTA OR SIALY ^ ’138®“ BOX SPRINGS or MAHRESSES Smooth Top ’29” Us's scuf" sad tolA-*\ never cloQ* Newly designea rnsidle ahTout to stand up Under the washing needs of today's Family! Exclusive ''Service-Simple" design never has to be pulled away from the wall! Servlca, if ever needed, is fast and low cqatl A GREAt VALUE NO MONEY DOWN - NO PAYMENTS 'TIL APRIL KRAZY KELLYS FURNITURE and APPLIANCES Rochester Rd. at Tienken Rd.-North Hdl Plaza Center, Rochester ■■V- FHIUAY. MAECH a. 1902 FRIDAY AND SAT^AY ONLY SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK mMrm SUPER SPECIALS Tine POMTIAC PEES8. F»lDAY,i INARCH j lOoa No Child Is Impossibl&'to Teach, Staio Woman Proves ftdUor’M Not0~rhls U the ll mhIiIiik m ImhA. If JehUd vmmA wrJt». for tx- (W«» which ulac when I ohl^i Hut tlw re«I heart of tht fouM ‘’“'lIT* I'fS «ob-heU«Vera ^ J'''" ^ Si «-*« the lypewrtler. .!«««, «mpk( ahe wHtea hi. name on a I. with material far pa,t method 1. -the book.” - thinking, ^ •'W' , ftdUor’M Not0~rfHs fi the second fend amhuUndJ stores on Mrs. JooeHm tfArkoi of JonesviUe. who unm noUohlpide attention for her nine yearf work in trying to help children who could not make the grade in thetr aerty ysars of regular loUngf mr tOfWNII) V. *KKi» «aeiiMMl miien Patriot Writtea tor the AP JONKSVILtE-A tenner weial worker who ha. won nationwide .nt-tentlon for her nine yennr wnrk with eehoolchlldren nrevlmnay eon-sldei-ed guhnormitl i. ol the way somr tearhers hnmlle similar ohlldivn. Mr«. Jocelyn D'Aikos elmriic« tunny teacher, "throw ui> a wnoke-Kcreen of phony woixIb to confuse parent*." A* an example she gives this «valuatlon of a pup'l written by a teacher: “Mataratton experience ha. nat ptaoed him In the readlnewi eatogory. Thinking »kUI« idace him In the atrategy group. I'n-cooperative. Cliance. of mic-ceeding very poor.” Thi* same boy, after spending three pcriixl* of one month each studying under tiio D'Arkos method, has finished his ytar of eollegr with As, Bs and one C, she sa; Mow did she happen to evolve her method, which can be used to teach any subject? ♦ ★ ★ Mrs, D'Arkos taught in elementary schools in the Wc,st and in Michigan, was a piano Instructor and finally spent 20 years six'ial worker at the Child Cai-e Rureau in Wayne County, here she found delinquents -who weix» intelligent but who had "simply built up mental bairlers against learning and were woefully ignorant.'■ In 1M2 Mr*. D'Arkos and her/ husband, Franel*. a acape architect, built their try home near Jonesvllle .he began her cruMde nest. As word of her iwlnarkal achievements sprea^ through newspaper and mag^ne articles and word of mouth/ requests for How doe* She apply 117 A ★ ★ .She begin* with A «i«w pupil by iduiwlng him In n. ritori time that sun aorompll.h aomethlng. lertal and ofterinK a M of pralae ipk( Him write, hi* name sheet of |w|)er, tnon ha. him ll over and over until he ci\n write It without iielp. if he can read only the slmple«t sentences, she gives him, * fbrri grade level booji, which he I. sure to be able to read wiliKHit difficulty la eontronted with material far ability. Use of the typewriter ik a pay-chologlcal as as a pvacUcid •t^. e«p«ciall\/for younger chib dren, since tfn grade bchool pupill know how to type. Mastery of th* lypewrlter add* greatly to a t^lld's Confidence. Mr*. D'Arkoa saya. part method 1* “the book." Mrs. D’Arko* give*- ,each a looaely-bound pamphlet of typewriter paper., Bach ; must be put into thll book*4yp-Ing exerolees, Hpelling, w^tihig, arithmetic, maps and other lUu*-tratlon* are preserved'within It* •age*. Why is the book ao valuableT Delay Congress in Red China Reason Not, Given but it Could Be Because of Moscowf's Meeting TOKYO m - The meeting of Chinese Communist parliament tmhcdulod lor Monday has beenj postponed. Announcing this today, the New China News Agency gave no reason but said the postponement was decided upon recently by the standing committee of the National People's Congress (parliament). The meeting had been sohed-iiIihI to begin on the same day as govlet Coipmunlst party ses-lon In MoscoA. There had been speculation the two numtlngs might emphaslxe dllferenees In sight Of any book oan cause a bUthly dislurbedi reaction. Mro. D'Arfcos explain*. , ehltdran believe they will ahfiially hale baoks. Mie srt .Soviet news agency, from the Russian publication Red Star which says it shows a ballistic iwkel ready for launching. No further details were supplied. All OK in Last Jet Report parture clearance, Heist repeated It. Then the pilot notined IIh> tower he was beginning his takeoff rum “American One rolling.” Radar departure control tlion gave Heist hts pattern instruc- Senate OKs Boost in U.S. Debt limit WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate has passed and sent to President Kenrtedy a bill to temporarily boost the national debt limit to $300 billion, an increase of $2 billion. The instructions were rep back from the jet. That was the last message from the plane before it crash(>d. TREMENDOUS SAVINGS ... FRI. . . . SAT.. .. MONDAY flEORGE'S HALF PRICE STOCK DISPOSAL GENUINE HALF-PRICE SALE! FRL SAT., MON. JUST SAY “CHARGE IT” '/2 PRICED I ,’/2 PRICED I V2 PRICED I 1/2 PRICED LADIES’ DRESSES I Sport Omi Its Oropoi, Wi *2-*5 GIRLS’ COATS $10 Car Ooalt $20 Wool Ooats $500.$! Q MEN’S SHIRTS $2 Sport 3.99 Whii $j|OO,S20 Ladies’ Sportswear I4IBIoutot 2.99 Skirts tlN.SIN V2 PRICED Probe Yields 37 Dead in Debris of Fallen Hotel CAIRO, Egypt (AP) _ Thirty-seven bodies have been recovered from the debris of a third-class hotel in Asslut, southern Egypt, which collapsed early Thursday. ★ ★ W All the victims were Egyptian. It was feared there might be bodies buried in the rubble; The collapse of the thre^slory TOPCOATS ’opeoats . INSuitt-Coats M9-»25 FAMI^ SHOES LADIES' WEAR - SPORTSWEAR V2 PRICED Main Floor .35 UOIES’ANKLETS, /2 price . .. 1.00 $ 20 FORMALS, DRESSES, Vz price..10.00 $199 GENUINE MINK STOLES, Vz price ... 99.00 $ 99 MINK TRIM COATS, Vz prtce.........49.00 ^ _ ENiAIttlltS^ !r^20«| PER pack-limit 3 MEN’S FURNiSHiRGS-ya PRICED Mam Floor 3.99 MEN’S CAPS and HATS, Vz price..... 1.00 1.00 MEN’S TIES or SOX, Vz price. 50o 3.99 SPORT SHirlTS, Vz price........... 1.88 3.99 COTTON PAJAMAS, Vz price... .1.88 5.99 MEN’S SWEATERS, Vz price .2.88 5.99 MEN’S ROBES, Vz price...2.88 BDYS’, GIRLS’, INFANTS’WEAR '/a PRICED Second Floor .39 BOYS’, GIRLS’ANKLETS, Wprfew.... i6c 1.99 GIRLS’ DRESSES, Vz price... 1.00 1.00 BOYS’, GIRLS^ POLO SHIRTS, Vz price 50c 3.00 BOYS’ COnON PANTS, Vz price ..... 1.50 .69 INFANTS’ Receiving Blanket, Vz price 35c 1.59 FltTED CRIB SHEETS, V^ price ..... T9c V2 PRICED LADIES’ COATS $20 pmt, Sport $N Oran Styl* *10-*25 CASHMERE COATS A $' 39 >/2 PRICED FUR COATS, STOLES SCSFnrOeahi $t49FurSfola ’29-H»9 NYLON 01^ no Quality 1.00 Seamlass 25°-50< V2 PRICED LADIES’ Slips-Gowns 1.N Fan a Vi l.» Palama-Oowna $|00,$2M ’/2 PRICED Ladies’BRAS; GIRDLES 59o Brat $5 Brat-6Mlaa 25‘.*2“l V2 PRICED I V2 PRICED | V2 PRICED NOW GiORGi'S 74 N. SAGINAW NEAR HURON . SPREADS & DRAPES 5.99 Spreads S»99 0rape£. TOWELS and RUGS 39e Towels 1.99 Hugs . 19^-99* ■mtua SHEETS' &BLAIIKETSI PONdAC PBiR^S yjRIDAy MAECH % I06t March 1,1962: A Day of Grjm Conffasts in New York SADNKSS MARKS THE SCENE - Smoke in the nlr from fhe wreckage of the American Airlines jet which crashed shoilly after taking off Tiiursday from New York’s Idlewild Airport for Isw Angeles Ar riwMss matches the grief in the hearts of rescue workers probing through the scattered debris in search of bodies. It was a day of pain for the relatives pf the disaster’s 95 victims. AF FfesMss The air was full of joy and gaiety as astro- HAPPINB88 M L . .._______ , naut John Glenn, Mrs. Glenn and Vice President Lyndon Johnspn ride along New , “‘it 'i <1 ’ ^4 ” 4'''*'’^% r A: THE UNDERWATER SEAKOII - A skin diver emerges from the shallow waters of Jamaica Bay after searching for bodies and clues to the disastrops plunge of a jet airliner after it took off from New York’s Idlewild Airport Thursday. A helicopter hovers the scattered wreckage as a fireman (right) probes the shoreline with a hook. All 95 persons on the plane died in the plunge of the jet as it was making a turn about three miles from the take-off point. AFTERMATH OF CRASH - Wreckage of an American Airlines jet, some of it still smoking, is shown in the shallow waters of Jamaica Bay after the airliner crashed shortly after taking off from AP Phototax Idlewild Airport in New York Thursday. Firemen probe the debris. This picture wa.s niade by one of the firemen. , LOOKING FOR BODIES - 'Pdice wade and took for bodias ojf victims m the crash of an American Air-/ lilies 70? Astnoet Thursday, The water of the bay was shallow. All aboard the jet were killed. ’The p sengers were bound for Los Angeles. » York Caty’s Broadway toward the City Hall during the welcome ptfrade given the nation’ll hero Thursday. Glenn’s iWlte a?id the vice president appear to be dodging some of the confetti and tbm paper which was showering down upon them. It was a scene of gladness and bubbling emotion. ON ASTRONAUT WAY — This was the scene Thursday as astronaut John Glenn’s motorcade moved up lower Broadway through a cloud of ticker tape. AP PholofAX Glenn and his wife are visible in the second car, between two security guards in the lead car. Broad-Way for the day. - AP PfeoMxS JO — .^tronaut Glenn waves back to the cipwd greeting him Thursday dutMg the parade held in his h«ior in 'New York City. Historic Trinity Church is in the bad^ground. •' ‘ ^ AP'.PkiAafat TICKER TAPE greeting - Astronaut John Glenn in lower center of picture is almost' engulfed with the shower of paper greeting ^ tossed over the parade on Broadway. Glenn’s wife and Vice President Johnson are riding with the hero. _ ' - <'/■ \ / 'A’ I. ll THE PONTIAC PREajS. EIIIDAY, MiRCH S . W . . " «)' I VlFTEBlf GirtMistaken for Jet Victim $h«^t Stfward«n Whh Sani* MatiM qi On« Killad in N«w York to Chongo Hit Builniii mWiNa WJN, m. Cochran hM aourcea couatituto the bnala tor three major enterpiiaea, Induatrial Vopo H«lpi 2 Eicap« Thon f !••• HimMit hlmiblf, Weal Berlin ^police re<| iK>ried. BKIU4N (AP)-ed a man and two women eacape liiUi Weat Itorlln Ttiiiraduy nlghi, ihen came There waa no fhooUng. Thu rafugeaa' eaoape route waa not dla<'Joa^. One out of every tW worltera In' the U.S. la employed In hoapttala. «nd Wnrnnt INSURANCI MOUNT UNION, Pa. (UP« - A National tOvaraeaa Airlinea atdw. ardaaa, unaware that ahc was mta-tnlMfily MantlfleA ag the Lola KMly killed In'tba craih ot an Amartean Airlines Astrojet, eat calmly In tl New Voric apwrtmant o|. • gl friend while bar if Hwalted vmfi ot her fMta. .Soon after the Jet, craahed In a N\eamp near New York's Idlewlld Aliiwrt Thursday killing KV ber- friends and nelghl^ began and ^rs. CUftoB Kelly. culling Mr. “Friends kept oalUng Mild they heard refaMla that a Ixila Kelly, a etowMdeae Ms the idBiM, was UlMd.*' Bat Bio Kef-lye refused to go along with the repoHo, “WO Airlinea In New York, and they Anally contacted Lola in the, apartment of her friend, Carol Frank," of Pittsburgh. "Lola was completely unaware of the mistaken identity,” they aatd. R mis- The girl for whom Lois w taken was Lois A. Kelly, 23, a stewardess aboard the Ill-fated jet. The victim was a native of Haver-ton, Pa., and, like Lois, was living in California. The Clifton Kellys said they were very happy to learn their daughter was alive, but were sorry for the parents of the victim. Mackie Hails Bill for 45-MPH Rate on State Xways LANSING at - "rainmtiiiBneirOTn C. Mackie today backed a 45-mlle-an-hour minimum speed limit for Michigan freeways. Maekle Thursday hailed house approval of n WU, sponsored by Hep. Lester O. Begick, B-Bay City, sotting the pilnlnnu" Un>M. The measure now |foos to the Senate. ' The bill, Mackie-said, is aimed at "keeping the Sunray driver type of motorist ott the freeways." Many freewftys’ accidents are rear-end collisions caused by slow-moving veMcles —• mostly old cars and trucks, he said, w * ★ Nearly 90 per cent of all cars on the freeways travel at more than 45 miles an hour, he Safd. But the other 10 p« cent is causing a high percentage of the accidents. MSI) Students Win Awards 40 Taking Agriculture Get Scholarships and Honors at E. Lansing - EAST LANSING (AiP) - Honors ere presented to more than 40 iicblgan State University agri-jlture students in ceremonies ere yesterday. Awards by student dubs, iltural companies and campus ;partments weib presented for ;holarship and contributions to impus programs at the annual mors program. Alvin C. Bailey of Schoolcraft ion the 1962 College of Agricul-kre Scholarship Achievement Lward. He received a S2M check rom the MloUgan Farm Bureau, nd the Alpfca Zeta Senior Schol-rshlp Award. He compiled a .83 scholastic average and lU-A average lor iree t tichard Arnold, an agricultural )nomics senior from Plainwell, *ived the award for contribu-g the most to campus activities a student in agriculture. He has lintained a B average, has med his own agrlcultui;al pub-relations firm and produces a ekly farm program on a Detroit evision statiwi. ther semen to win awards in- ynn D. Mason of Nashville, »ert Harter of Carson City, ice Vlllwock of Niles, James :ker of St, Jdms. ^ohn C. Bruhn South Euclid, Ohio; Joseph M. CO of Clairton, Pa.; John Nye St. Joseph, Doris;'Magnum of rvey, Ill.J. David Lietrke of De-ti and Hugh A. Curry of Belle- alabms MaifcM 231 8. Toitgrsph FREE!! 9.00 worth of f rocoriot given ooeh week. (sltlsdlDt beer, wl»« MiS eltsrettei) THIM6 to BUY. SIMPLY ENYEIYOUB NAME owiiif loch Sotordoy fw. r no«tr BOf ho PjrosoBt to win ENTER THIS WEEK! THE FONTIAC^ PRB8S. FEtPAr.qiAltCH 2, Young CellistiWill Celia Turner to Oeli« MwlU Tumei-, «nt comluct«ii‘ ot ttm Pontiac the podium Toeaday evening to o^uct a pdittoQ of the aeaaon'a ftnirth concert. Mm. Tttrner, cloaely asaocl-ated with the drchestm In Ita nine yearn of growth, will con-duel the first half of the pro-ijrnm. Selections Include the Corelli "Cont'cHo GttJSso In G Minor" and Mozurl’s "Symphony 40 In G Minor." voimo CKIJJST To PLAY Slxteen-yeaiHtld cellist David Elcher will play the cello conceiiante in the Corelli Concerto. David, a junior at WaUed Lake High School, has been a member of the orches^ tra for two years. In 1961 he partial Interlochen scholarship htwn the orchea-tra. Obt addlttod he held, tor the second consecutive, year, a Foeler Foundation Award to the camp frean the University of Michigan. David is principal celjhil of the select 150-plecre Michigan Youth .SymplKHiy Orchestra siamsored by the University of Michigan. His music adlvltles include five seasons at the National Music Camp at Inter-lochen, .membership in his school orchestra, a string trio, the Southeastern Michigan String Symphony, Kingswood S<;huol - Cranbrook's Chamber Orchestra and participation iii Walled Lake High School’s mixed chorus and vocal ensembles. He has been named a 1963-63 recipient of a $1,380 ach(da^ ship to the Interlochen Aril Academy. An honor student scholastically, David studies with cellist Gretchen Dailey of Ann Arbor. Darid's parents are Mr. and Mrs. . David N. Elcher of Orchard I.ake. coNinJurtm, i»:rkal---and~sharps— have otherwise. tongued. My gentle, patient ‘‘spoil’ husband eats his meals downtown to avoid her. We tried a home for the aged, but in three days they called and asked as to come and get her. She raised such Cain there that the home was in an uproar. She is domineering, sarcastic and cruel to everyone. I know it is terrible to feel this way about your own mother, but she had made my life miserable. She hasn’t a penny. Don't say it’s her advancing age! She’s always been thi^ .way. Can you help me? NO NAME PLEASE DEAR ABBY: I am a nervous wreck. I am 54, a grandmother several times, and I feel' like a servant in my own home. My problem is my mother. She is in her early 70s and enjoys the best of health. She has always b(‘en a m^-dler and trouble-maker. She has lived with me for the past 16 years. I recently had my children and grandchildren here for dinner. Everyone left early in tears or anger. She it brutally their parentsTust as' parents spoil children. Your first obligations are to your husband and family. When elderly folks become obstreperous and behave like children, tmy should be treated with the same patience, understanding and firmness. Don’t expect any change in your mother’s conduct until you lay down the law. ABBY DEAR NO NAME; You’ve allowed your mother to run your life for so many years, she wouldn’t know how to be- Optometrists Auxiliary Plans Tuesday Dinner In observance of Save Your Vision Week March 4-10 Women’s Auxiliary members of the Oakland County Society of Optometrists plan a ^nner Tuesday at 7 p.m. in North-wood Inn, BerWey. S^ety diairmen of local clubs and organizations have been invited to attend the open meeting. Mrs. George Haric-less of West Walton Boulevard or Mrs. James St. Louis of Lakewood Drive, Drayton Plains, may be contacted for tickets. "Safe driving Requires Qood Vision’’ is the theme for 1962’s optometric society observance. Guest speakers for the dinner will be Professors Gordon H. Sheehe and Leslie R. Silver-nale. Milo W. Chalfant of the traffic center program, Michigan State-University, will present a panel discussion on driver improvement and highway safety. Dr. James Iloe will discuss optometry’s role in vehicle operators’ improvement. DEAR ABBY: I would like lo know if you personally would think a person "ignorant and crude” because he crumbled up his crackers and dropped them in his soup in public? This i.s the only way I can enjoy my soup, and every time I do it 1 catch heck when I get home. "PA’ ’(born in 1884) DEAR "PA:’’ As far as I am concerned, it is perfectly permis.sible. I never would think less of a person for indulging in such a small, harmless pleasure. AAA,. DEAR ABBY: What is the procedure when you receive a Wedding announcement from people you have met very casually for their daughter whom you don’t even know? Seems like a racket to me. WONDERING DEAR WONDERING: Could be a "racket” without strings. However, send them a nice note congratulating them, and wish the couple well. A A A ^ Still worrying about the same old, problem? Write to Abby for a personal reply. Enclose a stamp^, self-addressed envelope. Looking forward to Tuesday’s dinner in North-rvood Inn, sponsored by Oakland County Society of. Optometrists Women’s Auxiliary are, from left, Mrs. George A, Harkless and state auxiliary safety chairmen Mrs. James S/. Louis, opMmetric society presi- r,' '.4- V dent Dr. /. Rffymond Kuzara of Lake Orion, auxiliarf president Mrs. Kuzara and dr. St. Louis. The group met Thursday in the home of Dr. and Mrs. Harkless to finalize plans for the “Save Your Vision Week” observance. , • ■’,/: orbit in the Friendship 7 space capsule. The astronaut and hli browneyed wife were in more of a whirl yesterday than Col. Glenn’s space capsule. Their New York orbit started with their atrlval by plane, continued'through a ticker-tape parade, a city hall welcome and lunch at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. A A A With only a little rest there was a dinner, a trip to the Broadway smash hit, "How to Business Without "ReaHyTrytiig,-six other astronauts and their wives. Finally the Glenns attended a ' dance at the Waldorf’s Empire Room where son David, 16, got into a nightclub act. AAA Through it all, until t h e Glenns left at 1:15 a.m. Mrs. Astronaut smiled with her happy warmth. Today, the Glenns, the other astronauts and their wives and families have one official event scheduled. They will visit the United Nations at the invitation of Acting Secretary General U Thant______ Whether they would rest or go shopping later, they didn’t say. LOVES EXCITEMENT Rest? For Annie Glenn? "Oh, I thrive on excitement,’’ she told New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller yesterday. Later, she told reporters: "I was so excited it gave me extra energy." After attending the theater last night, the astronauts and their ladies went to the Empire Room, but the Glenns didn’t dance. SHEPARDS DANCE Navy Comdr. Alan B. Shepard,who led the way into space, also led the way on the dance floor with his wife. They were joined by some of the other spacemen. Despite autograph seekers Glenn managed to order a brandy and for his Annie, a grasshopper — a sweet cocktail composed of equal parts of creme de menthe, creme de caco and cream. David Glenn, and his 14-year-old sister Lyn -soft drinks. Dolores^ray, the actress-singer^jfepwBd at the Empire Rooni, dl^te4t|d,a song to the marine colonel^ "Around the World in 80 bays.’’ /' Glenn tossed back his head and laughed. Then Miss Gray enlisted the aid of David Glenn in unfastening the zipper of h|r outer costume during an OT-stage change. Miiss Gray commented that she was happy to see that other members of the family had mechanical aptitude which brought cheers and laughter from the Glenns and the audience. When the astronauts and their ladies called, it a ni^t the band struck up the Marine hymn. Mrs. Glenn summed it up when she said, “It was a long day^ but fun.” FUN FOB ALL And it was fun for the other ladies of the astronauts. Their wives rode with them in the ticker-tape parade. Each got a .standing mmtion from the 2,000 guests at the ]IValdprf for the official lunch. Others sharing the limelight were Glenn’s parents, his inlaws, and Mrs. Robert R, Gil-ruth, wife of the Mercury Inject director. For them the applause was thunderot^. n Another guest at the lunch was the astronauts’ nurse. Dee O'Hara, who had flown in from Cape Canaveral for the cere-tiTonies. "I’ve never seen a parade of such magnitude," she said, wide-eyed. The diminutive Mrs. Glenft «nta extend to compoelUon and toaching, In 1087 her ‘'Chip- ' pewa Syntphony." wnjrola-' •loned Iv lit* Pontiac Sym-phoh/ pi^eatra, received Its pnmler pertormance. Her oiHHict chamber opera "Bite of Cloth’' received Its Initial production at the February mi-etinR 61 the Blrmlnghnin MuhIcuIc. ' A A A W<>ll-kni)wn as lh«' diroctoi el ihc Wlll-O-Way 'Approntice Theater, where ehe has launched a master ciaiis in thcal# bringing important theatrical talents to the urea for critique of students’ efforts, Mrs. Turner also nar-rates a dully radio show from Detroit. In private life she Is Mrs. Kenneth Turner and the mother of three children. A A A Following the intermission, Felix Resnick, new conductor of the on:hestru, will direct "Knlghtsbrldge March" from Coates’ London Sul|e, Btirber's "Adagio for Strings" and "Romeo and Juliet" by Tschal-kovsky. Mr. Resnick has just returned from tour with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in which he is a member of the violin section. 4n addl- ■III , •., DAVID fJCDER lion to conducting the Pontiac Symphony, Mr. itosnlck cofi-ducls the Gi-osse'Polnte Symphony Orchestra. The program Is set for 8:30 p.m. at Pontiac Northern High School. Tickets are available at the door. Women s. Section Mrs. William McCall of St. Joseph Street recites lines for fi^r role in the Birmingham Village Players’ presentation of “The Pleasure of His Company” under the watchful tutorage of her PonlUe Preta Photo daughter Tracy. Tracy 10, has been a salaried listener during the five weeks of rehearsals and knows the script as well as her mother by now! Playing 'Ingenue' but I Role hr YersafHe Mother of 3 “I can’t play an Ingenue forever," laughed petite and pretty Mrs. William McCall of St. Jo.seph Street, better known to Birmingham Village Players audiences as Peggy McCall. She was commenting on her role in the Players' current production, "The Pleasure of His Company,” in which she is cast in one of her frequent roles. It is easy to see why this azure-eyed mother of three is usually so cast. Althoughrher husband is this year’s Village Players president, Washington, D. C.-born Mrs. McCall’s interest in the stage started during her- dtiys at Foukain Springs High School in Petmsylvania. Theater work began as, and con-inues to be, "just a hobby.?’ IN GMEL8JCA PLAYERS Before her marriage Mrs. McCall was a member of the ’ Cl\elsea Players in New York. City. ^ and her husband have appeared behind the scenes and before the lights with the Players for over 10 years. Mrs. McCall combined her t a 1 e n t s in everything from painting sets to silversitiithing and the stage. Her husband’s main ,interest, before he took on >he duties o( president. Were centered around lighting and staging. Mr. McCall de- signed and installed the lighting equipment at the Players Chestnut Street playhouse in Birmingham. AAA Mrs. McCall has appeared in at least one of the Players’ performances each year during her membership. s A year ago she had a part in “Hay Fever," and two yedrs ago she played the lead in ‘"nie Diaty of Aiine Frank.” “Diw" was perhaps her most satisfying role. She found the part "quite-an experience” because it is "so moving.” CHARM BRACELET A heavily laden sterling charm bracelet bears Mrs. Me- -. Call’s "Oscare,” mementoes “awarded” by her husband after each of her stage appearances, ’ A t i n y silver streetcar recalls her part — “ai very small one," .she emphasized, " — in ' “about three lines!" — Streetcar Named Desire." „ (blue enameled half-moon which she made herself Is reminiscent of her, role in “The Mopn is Blue," and "the only gold charm on the bracelet” was necesfeitated by her role to “Solid Gold Cadillac.” ■ A A A With only seven members in the present cast, memorizing lines was no mean task. Tracy^ her fourth grader at Daniel Whitfield School,, helped m. "I paid Tracy a dollar to listen to me recite," Mrs. Mt> Call said. Four evenings a week, for five weeks, Mr. McCall . stayed home with Robin, 4; Bill Jr., 8; and Tracy, 10, while his wife rehearsed. Sunday afternoons were devoted to rehearsals too. A A A ‘Td enjoy playing opposite my husband," she said, "but we couldn’t afford the babysitter that often!" TAKES COURSE Besidfbs looking after a Brownie, a Cub Scout and a vivaciops preschooler, Mrs. McCall takes a Great Books course in Franklin once a week. Reading, shefTiiid^ is "a great relief from, housework." ' A • • A ■ A When time permits, hnd there hasn’t been too much of it lately, she pursues the art of silyersmithing in her basement workshop. Some lovely, silver bracelets have resulted and the McCall men are the . proud beneficiaries of some . splendid cufflinks. ★ A ■ A Perhaps, in the far, far dl^ tant future, Mrs, McCall will no longer be cast in ingenue roles. It’s unlikely though, that such an active and talented painter^ actress, jewelry designer and homemaker ‘ will i ever run out . of roles to play! TllK pitkss, tW)AY, MAliClt a, I0B2 i'/ ^ ^ t’ skvkntkhk Spending^ Inflates a Woman's Morale By Bunn MIUJilT “Do ytm Think Women aiw Bmo* tlonal SpendarB?" was the Intrl* guing tide of an article in a r«h cent Jwue of a magaslne devoted to the Atnericaiii home. ' ■ ' ^ A ir • Eapeettng to find a "Yoi" answer to ttha meitton, I was suiv prisftl to ftniftt answered in the negative. Maybe that is because the artlole wad written by a man. Only a woman knows (for she iwrtalnly Isn’t golnR to tell a ■nan) Just how often she does buy somethlne to got an omo* lloiial lift. When a housewlle gets cabin fever and takes off on a rainy day for a shopping expedition, almost anything she buys is bought to lift her spirits. MPENUS FOB A liFT Whether she shops for a silly hal, a dress In a shade that makes her “feel good,” or for some gadget for the house, she is bujdng to add a little xest to a dull day. Wlien a woman has a birthday that marks a 10-year inllestune, and a long look hi the mirror is anything tint ri^assurlng — It’s likely to send her to a luxury shop In search of some new clothes that will “do something lor her.” What they do mostly of course, Is raise her morale. When a woman gets down in the dumps for any reason, nothing does her quite as much good spending a little money. The amount isn’t important. Tt'r the simple act of sjpending money that seems to give a woman « lift in trying times. Of course, women are emotional spenders. A woman egn go for weeks or even months oarefully pinching pennies, buying only what is necessary, comparing prices, and being a good manager. And then comes a day when she needs a lift. She takes oft on an expedition that has but one object— to buy something, anything. And almost always she eomey Wliut she spends on a new hut to gel u new lease on life she doesn’t have to spend for a w sion on a psychiatrist’s couch. AAA Teen-ager in your family? Read Ruth Mtllelt's booklet. "Tips Teen-Agers." Mail 25 rents to Ruth Mtllett Reader Service c-o (The Pontiac Press), P.O. Box 489, Dept A, Radio City Station, New York 19, N.Y, Easy Does It (NEA) — Plunging headlong into a diet regime without competent advice is no way to add pluses to your beauty score. Soap Types Vary (NEA)—All soaps or detergents are not for all people. Experiment to find the one be.st for you. Co n ce rt T om o'rro w 0,^™ All-City Book Fair Slated During National Event Plans tor the annual all-city book fair April 10-12 are announced by librarians of the Pontiac Public Schools; Mrs. Oeorge Gray, president of the Parent - Teacher Association DAR Chapter Hears Talk on American Indians .to,-. dians” by Mrs. Eldon Gardner highlighted the annual meeting of General Richardson Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, Thursday, in the Ottawa Drive home of Mrs. Maxwell L. Shadley. A A * The speaker explained the many skills and crafts which our ancestors learned from the tribal chiefs. Mrs. Harry Bates told of finding a cache of stone Indian tools on the Bates farm near Clarkston. Slidjes were shown of St. Mary’ :hOol for Indian Girls, Pine Ridge, S. D., one of the major D. A. R. projects. Assisting the hostes.s were Mrs. Grant Beardslee, Mrs. Donald E. Adams, Wilma E. Doeblcr, Mrs. Elmer Buddenbaum, Mrs. W. F. Todd, Mrs. D. R. MacDonald, Mrs. Bates. Mrs. E. M. Wilmot, Mrs. Louis L. Dunlap, Adah Shelly and Mrs. A. L, Travis. Mrs. Halsey Davidson of Lake Orion was a guest. Alumnae Assn, ta Visit Canvent Members of the Siena Heights College Alumnae Association, Oakland Chapter, will attend a day of recoHtc-fion in the new convent of the Sisters of St. Francis XaVier, Frazer, Sunday, from 1:15 to 5 p.m. Rev. Oswald Marshall, S.J., will conduct the program which will close with a social hour and refreshments served by the Sisters. Council; and Mrs. Earl Oltes-vig, and Mrs, Howard McConnell, Council representatives. AAA Dates of the fair, to be held in the library room of Pontiac Noi-them High School, coincide with those of National Book Week, whose theme for this year is "Read and watch the world grow." PTA'members will take an active part in publicizing the fair and in encouraging attendance by * parents, students groups. Art departments in the secondary schools and children in the elementary schools will cpntribute posters and decorative displays, Some 2,000 new Ixwks, designated by publishers as their most outstanding current titles, will be'on display. The books range in appeal from preschool to young adult. Hold Meeting of Beta Sigs Members of Alpha Omega Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi ^ rority, gathered Wednesday at the liochesler home of Mrs. Donald DeVoe, Secret pals will be revealed March 14 at a party in the home of Mrs. Vincent Schneider, president. Director of the Minneapolis Sym pliony Orchestra, Slanialaw Skrow-ac/ewakt, will appear with the 125-voice Michigan State University Oakland chorus coupled with his orchestra tonuwrow at 8:15 p.m. at Pontiac Northern High School w w ‘"'A Appearance ot.JJ)e aymphony Is part of the hlSUO-Communlty Arts Council 1962 lecture-conodrt series, SkrowsosewiM, s 88-yesr-old native of Poland, la In hit eeeond year at the helm of the Mlnne-aiHilla Symphony. He follown a dlNlIngulshed group which In-eludes Eugene ormamly, HImllrl IVIIIro|iouloN and Antal Dnrutt. riie MSUO Chorus, now 1\4 ye ars old and the university’s larg-esl student organization, will be performing off-campus for the first time wtien it appears with the symphony. Th«’ group will sing in the original Germim, Brahms’ dramatic "Song of Dr'sllny" with Ihe oreheslra. Check Glitter (NEA) — Many mature wonu^n make Ihe mistake of affecting too much gllUer. In addition lo shiny eyegla.ss frames in vivid color, Ihey’ll wear earrings, a pin, a peek-lace and several hracr'lets. 'I'his creates a busy effect which is unattractive. Observe Anniversary The iOth anniversary of the organiz.ation of Mizpah Temple No.7, Pythian Sisters, was observed Thursday evening in Fellowship Lodge Rail. Mrs.. Qaude Wiley was in charge of the program, AAA Mrs. Adelbert Ayers supers vised sewing of cancer pads and Mrs. H. Delos Nicholie, captain of the degree staff directed a practice session. > Spring flowers and a cake bearing the colors pf the Pythian Sister order centered the refreshment table where Mrs. George Gleason, Mrs. Glenn Griffin and Mrs. Wiley presided. Mizpah Temple degree staff will assist Oxford Temple with initiation March 13, The group will participate in the style show and card party March 28 in the First Eederal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland Building. The City Council of Beta Sigma Phi Sororily is sponsor. As an Easter project, play equipment" will be donated to the hematology department at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Mrs. Russell Perkins was welcomed into the chapter by Mi-s. Robert Terry as a transferee from Xi Beta Beta Chapter. Mrs. Frank L. Garard, newcomer from Syracuse, N. Y., was a guest. , : NEW. WAGON” BUFFET You’ll enjoy a wide selection of foods in our outdoor, candlelit atmosphere. From our huge Covered Wagon, you’ll find Appetizers, Fried Chicken, Spareribs, Prime Beef and Others: Vegetable and Salads, Potatoes, and of course, our own Hot Rolls and Breads, and Rich Desserts. “LEAVE THE CALORIE COUNTER AT / HOME BECAUSE YOU’LL MAKE MANY/ ’TRIPS-BACK TO THE ‘CHUCK WAGON’.’’ / EVERY BIESDAY 5:00 to 8HN) p.m. Woodward at Square Lake Rd. FE 4-6630 SUNDAY breakfast BUFFET—EVERY SUNDAY 9 lo 12 Enjoy Our 4th Annual “Fresh Strawberry Festivrir Short Cutter (NBA)—If you’re short and Haven't must waistline, beware of Wide belts no matter how chic they may look on others. They’U have the effect of sawing you in two. Plusier flgurea'of Indians are ton Irate visitor oneb wrote her used In eitoibita at the Smith- congrrssmitn “to stop the ftnith-sonien Ihgtftutlon In Washington, lonien from ehooUng aigl etofftng D,C. Tliey are so reallatlc, thatlall ft Tickets Set Met Performances to Run May 21-26; Orders Monday Public mall sale of tickets for seven Metropolitan Opera Co. productions, scheduled for May 21 through May 26 at Detroit’s Masonic Temple Auditorium, go on sale Monday. Mail orders will be accepted at the office -of the Detroit Grand Opera Association, In Ford Auditorium, Detroit. ★ AW “Lucia dl Ijimmermoor” heads the list of seven productions, May 21. “Salome" will be offered May 22; "Madame Butterfly,” May 23; “Alda,” May 24; ”l.a Forza del Des-tino,’’ May 25; "Cosl Fan Tutte” at the matinee performance May 26, ahd "Tosca” at the evening performance that same day. Opening night curtain will rise at 8:30 p.m. All other evening performances will begin 8 p.m. The matinee will start at 1:30 p.m. A A * Several cast changes announced by Ihe Metropolitan Opera involve Gabriella Tucci, wlio will sing the role of Aida in that opera replacing Mar-gherila Robert!; Frank Guar-rora, who will sing the role of Amonasro in the same opera, replacing Lorenzo Test!; and Morley Meredith, who will sing the role of Don Alfonso in "Cosl Fan Tutte” May 26 at the matinee, replacing lYank Guarrera. Public- window sales will open April 2 at the , Ford Au-, ditorium box office. This can be your year for o better town -and even crobgross con't stop you! There is now a simple, proven way to overcome the crabgrass problem. You actually stop crabgrass before it starts with Scotts Halts. You can do this as soon as the snow is gone. We Also Carry These Fine Products ''GREENFIELD" Crobgross Killer "DOW" Crobgross Killer "AGRICO" Crobgross Control We Deliver—No Extra Charge on Order Over $5 ItEGAt FEED aid LAWS SUPPLY CO. Pontiac Store BloomlieM Store 28 Jackson St. 2690 Woodward FE 2-0491 FE 5-3802 4266 hlxie Hwy. 0R\-2441 KIOHLTKKN ■fHK PONTIAC PBEM, FKIUAY, MAR^H a, IWa hM T3 ■bite iNiriM covfringl CHoptfer 34 FctC FBEB M«kt Op Drai9iiitiitioiii CaU or Come In mERU noRmpn FE 2-4bi0 file PMittec rtprcte «n ror In Thuridfiy'* wonwn’i ■ tion. Chnpter U Gkdd Ster Moth< nra* b«neflt cnrd pnity will bi^tn t:30 p.tn.' TuMDliy nt the Flint F«dml Saving* and UMn i elation of Oakland Building and not at 6 o’clock ax prlntM yt day. can dopend on EtiOflUM quality Eoch brilliant rfona is selected lor you by our diamond exports and snt In mountings that Oi IV as tomorrow- On,cl $^^50 to Si.’JOO.OO r.cnvenicnt Ocriil Tenn* JEWEMV C». 25 North Sagiuaw Street AP Pk«ur» Pri.scilla Jcjfrey, a l7-year-old senior at New York's Carden City High School, display s a letter she received from Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India after writing him regarding a social studies class fxtper on the theme "Nehru's Neutrality-—A Myth or a Reality?" The letter was included when she submitted her composition Thursday. Edison Contest Focuses on Working Women By MlllUICIi LAWRKNON ^ Nowa|W|Mtr Knlerprlxe Aa»n. She la 14 years old — a alendei. dark-eyed child whole mother died aeveral year* ago. With her brother! and father ihe Uvea In a ilum'a ceUar apartment where she ■haree a kitchen cot with a TB-yeaiMild grandmother. She la a problem In her overcrowded achool. She haa had brushei with the police. Pioneer Girls Hold Missionary Rally at Church .Some 450 Pilgrims, Calonlst and Explorer Pioneer (Jlrls, guides and helpers met for a missionary rally at the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church. Entertainment was provided by Nancy Tabor with a flute solo, Susan Kowalsky, Ruth Leonaid and Maiy ^Dee Stewart, a vocal trio, and Leonora Schoonover, organist. Guest sptuikcr for the Tuesday rally was Jean KtUalea, one of the six mlsslonnrles supported by Pioneer Girls llu'oughout North America. For the past 4'-i years, Miss Killaloa has served in Thailand under the China Inland Mission, and is presently engaged in a speaking topr to reach as many 'ioncer Girl groups a.s ix)ssiblc. "where dining is a pleasant adventure” RhXOM MEIN DEI) by "GOIRMET" Supper I'lub DINING Eveniugs DINE IN ELEGANCE SERVING SENDAY DINNERS Featuring “Jean fioroskn” at the Organ BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCH Open 11:00 to 2:30 A.M. - Closed Monday SERVE SPECIAL PARTIES by RESERVATION Rhone: MY 2^193 Local women arc invited to pnr-licipale in a cook-off to find the '■Queen of the Kitchen" among working girls. Sponsored by Detroit Edison in Cooperation with Central Business Di.strict Association. Hhe cook-off will tK> held as part of the Salute to Women Who Work Week program. which begins March 19. The grand prlTife will be a new deluxe electric range (the queen will have her choice of model and color), offered t»y Detroit Edison. E-dtson will also award electrical appliances to seven finalists; Including a second prize of an electric rotisserle and a third priie of an electric blender. Any girl or woman working full time who lives in Wayne, Macomb or Oakland counties is invited to submit a favorite recipe to: "Electric Living," 2000 Second Ave-le. Detroit 26. Each enti-y must include testant’s name, ag«^ address and occupation and she MUST be able to compete in the cook-off. Deadline for entries Is Wednesday, March 7, midnight. Home economic experts from newspapers, radio and television will serve as judges and select the s^ven most interesting and promising entries. COOK-OFF The seven finalists wiU be announced on Suhday, March 18 and will compete in Ihe cook-off at 9:?0 n.m., E'riday, March 23, in the electric living department of Detrfoit Edison, 2000 Second Avenue. The decision of the Judges will be final and all entries will be the properly of the Detroit Edison Company. E. 0. George, Edison vice president In charge of sales, will be host at a special luncheon for the finalists and the judges after the cook-off. 'A great number of folks are under Ihe impression that girls who work are lost in front of a kitchen range. The cook-off could help prove this is not true,” he said. George said that since the company sponsors other contests for Edison employes, this one will not be open to them or their immediate families. Interlake Group Holds Workshop Seventen members of the Inter-lake Extension Group attended an all-day workshop Wednesday in the home of Mrs. Robert Scharf at Orchard Lake. Mrs. Wilbur Ott gave a lesson bn new appliances and Mrs. George Rupert gave instructions for la'iindering new fabrics. After luncheon served by hostess, Mrs. Rupert announced a hat workshop with details of materials needed. Mrs. Ott showed the group the new technique of tissue-paper painting. New members Mrs. Francis Lohoff and Mrs. Neal Scott, a guest, were welcomed. Lies by Adults Undermine Child's Respect But the biher ttvertng site was feellni^ Irlumpliant. With a friend, ahe hkd Just seen one of those movies which certain thenter ope^ atom loudly advertise aa "For Adults Only." Oenoriblhg it sparkling eyes, she said, "It was real boss, man you know, hot, a real araoker."^ Nurses Get Diplomas Rev. Francis Stack, pastor of St. Hugo of the Hills Church will give the rommencement address Saturday at the McAuley School of Practical Nursing graduation exercises. Among .30 students who will receive diplomas from Sister Mary Xavier, administrator of St. seph Mercy Hospital, are E^lninc Mary Farrell of East Rundell Street and Mrs. Betty Jean Col(‘ of Lexington Place. ★ ★ A Dr. Michael C. Kozonis, chief of the nxedical staff, will present the class pins. Westernoires Set to Whirl Westernaires Square Dance Club meets this evening at Drayton Plains School on Sash-baw Road. ★ ★ ★ Dancing is 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. with Nont»^ Hill as caller. Refreshments will be .served. The dance is open to anyone interested. For information, -contact Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mac-Afee or Mr. and Mrs. Keith Armstead. Posture Plus (NEA)—One of the quickest known ways to improve your appearance takes a second: stand up straight. If you don’t believe this, walk to a full-length mirror and try it. You’ll be amazed. College Notes of Interest .Sollcilutlon chairman for the new James W. Wood Learning Center to be built at Stephens College, Columbia, Mo., are Mrs. W. Fred G. Nibbclink, OiThard Ijike and Mm. W1I-, liam M. Berridge Jr., Bloomfield HiMs. Among the 1,725 students enrolled at the Independent residential women’s eollege from Bloomfield Hills are: Joan Arnold Anderson, daughter of the Rol)ert E.‘ Andersons; Jo-aephine Bourne Joy, daughter of the James H. Carmels; Vicky Ann Krdssl, daughter of ihe F. J. Krcissls and Mnillyn M, Wiggins, daughter of Ihc William J. Wigginses. Birmingham students include Karen Ellen Bennett, Nancy Jane Bowie, Susan Gilmer, De-ncil Anna MoGarrlgle, Mollie Mosher, Karen Ruth Nelson, Marlene C. Potvin, Katherine M. Wiggins, and Julie Lynne Gainer, Bloomfield Township. ★ A ★ Elaine Sue Reich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Goldon L. McCombs of Pompey Street, Waterford Township is listed on the honor roll for the fall semester at the Freed-Harde-man College, Henderson, Tenn.. She is majoring in education.' * W ^.ikf Mrs. JeiTold W. Mnben of Neome Drive is a member of the executive board of the newly created University of Detroit Dental Hygienists Alumnae Association. The organization is open to all graduate dental hygienists of the school. Some 120 reside in the metropolitan Detroit area. "Fluorides and Fluoridation” were discussed last week at Alumnae Day in the Veterans Memorial Building. A ★ ★ Barbara Everett, daughter of the Irvin C. Everetts of Markle Street, has become an active member of Asher Student Foundation for Women at Michigan State University, East Lansing. The Foundation is a living unit for young Christian Scientists attending the university. * ★ A Carolyn Benninger, a Central Michigan University senior, received the top student award of the , Michigan Association for Health, Physical Education and Recreation at the organization’s recent annual meeting in Saginaw. Miss Benninger’s parents, the H. H. Benningers of Orchard Lake, attended the ceremony. A physical education major, Carolyn was honored for her* professional achievement as an undergraduate in the field of physical education. She is board president of the Women’s Recreation Association on Central’s campus, member of the Pemm Club, the Aquas, also Delta Psi Kappa and Kappa Delta Pi honorary societies. She plans to teach on the secondary level after graduation. ★ ★ ★ Beverly W’ells will be a member of the Concert Choir at Central for the spring semester 1962. The annual spring tour is scheduled for March 21-23 and will cover the western section of the state with concerts at Fremont, White-cloud, Grand Haven, East Grand Rapids, Holland and Ionia. Auditions Continue Auditions are continuing for the Waterford Civic Chorus, directed by Arden H. Sears. The group meets every Monday evening'at Kettering High School at 7:30 p.m. Enroll NOW! INSURE YOUR FUTURE Prepare yourself for o career in the Beouty Profession Miss Wilson Closed Wednesday FOMTMC Beauty College l6Vi EAST HURON Enroll Today Phene FE 4-1854 Behind Knag*'$ . . 2nd Float The sparkle went out of her eyes Ughting e clgkreUe, she sajd t#)l-eranlly: "You some kind ot a hick or something? That ’For Adults Only’ sign if Just for kooks. It’s for show. It dflsi’t mean nothing. Any kW can get In there If we’ve got the you-know-what." A»UI/ra 1411 "Grownups He to you too often," I said. ■ ^ ___ Girl Scouts Get State's Greetings LANSING (AP) - The legislature has extended 50th birthday congratulations to Girl Scouts of Michigan. ★ A ★ In a resolution sponsored by Reps. Josephine D. Hunslnger, D-Delroit; Walter G. Nakkula, R-Gladwin;, Allison Green, R-Kingston; and Michael J. O’Brien, D-Detroit, lawmakers congratulated the girl scouts "for half a «-entui’y of dc’dir cated service," Shower Honors Future Bride May bride-elect Carole Eliza-both Morris was honorc'd at a miscellaneous sliowc'c Wednesday •ning in the* liome of Pnlriciu Boughner on Whlitemore StfeOf. ■ A cake in the form of a bride, complete with veil and bouquet, centered the refrc.shment table-Among some 40 guests were Mrs. Charles E. Morris arns less limn $3,000 a year. In sharp contrast, only oni' out of 10 women work when the husband’s In-(;omo Is $7,000 oie more. ★ we Miss Pi'lerson sends these sad Bridge Club H9lds Regular Meeting Wednesday Duplicate Bridge Qub met at the Elks Temple with seven tables in play. Winners, north and south were Mrs. Gordon Longstreth, and Dr. Lorraine Willis. East and west-winners were Mrs. Lester Hamilton and Mrs. Dan MaePherson. ★ ★ ★ Other winners were Mrs. Charles Patrick and Mrs. Carl Bolten, Mrs. James H. McGuire and Mrs. Harry Cardoze Jr.; Mrs. Ernest L. Guy and Dr. Maurice Wilhs: Mrs. Earl Hucbler and Mrs. James Ross. It Will Help You Both Get Hubby to Diet Too IIV JOHEI'IIINE WIWMAN I Q. "Please give me ar Q. "How can a woman who has fw flabby upper arms." to sto|i and cook for her family | btnml tall. Take i control her diet while she Is shoi)-ping and ewiklng and serving'.' Please give us some suggestions” A. This Is a |«4 question. It 1 surtdy more difficult (or a Oman to count calories when (ul (l-how and touch the hnek of your nOiid with the books. Stretch the arms sideward, shoulder height, bend your elliows and touch the books to the buck of your head. Lower arms to sides. Continue, arms bp, then books at liack of head, arms sideward, iwoks to back of head and arms down. ★ ★ ★ Q. "l^lease give me your advice, I am 5 feet, 2 inches tall and weigh 135 pounds. Am I overweight? My bust measures 36 inches, waist 27H inches and hips 40 inches. I have a medium frame. This is extremely important to A. 'Vou are alioiil 10 |N*unds eiilories and concentrate on hlp-slliiiiiiliig exercises. ★ • ★ ★ If any of you would like to liave my tested, hip-slimming exercises, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for leaflet No, 3 to Josephine Lowman in •ai(' of The Pontiac Press. •tatlotki* to Illustrate a need for federal aki for day-care, services to children of working mothers. She points out that the "relatively smail" sum of $10 million (ah, don't you wish you hod relatives like that?) could lake care of from 10 to 16,000 children. NO MinPKRVKHON But 15,000 children aro also a "rolatlvely smAU" iiortlon of the national problem. The dismal fact is that a Bureau of Census survey shpws lhal (here are 400,-000 American children under 12 whosi' mothers wink full lime, wild have no ■ planiuxl scpcrvi-slon, .So pfu'haps il is not sucli a wildly (ar-oul idea, after all — al least on a local community basis — to separulo the careerists from the home girls. Let the wom^n who are Iralmxl to use their minds go off to work during the day, leaving their little ones (and a little money) In the gentle lumds of the women who were groomed for nothing but the natural job of being loving mothers. Perhaps a loiml church or nursery could provide the facilities for this system. Ah, but I supixi.se tlie idea Is too simple to eateh on. Especially if (here's n chance lhal big old reliable Uncle Sam will step in, like Santa Claus. Women's Groups See Color Slides Albert Riddering showed colored slides of his work in the mission fields in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula before the Women’s Association of the I'irst Presbyterian Church. The Mary Martha Group served the Tuesday lunch- SJides of India Shown at Meeting of Soroptimists Dr. Chandis Reid showed color slides of her recent trip to India before the Soroptiml.st Club of Pontiac at a dinner meeting in Hotel Waldron. Highlight of the Xloiiilay program was a display of native Indian crufts, copper, brass, leakwoiod and Inlaid marble, be-’KrabTbiimffMurt^ VMWw. en by Indian women. The spetiker, who is assistajit to the superintendent of Waterford Township Schools, spent 10 months in India with her husband on a joint B’ulbright fellowship, conducting workshops for headmasters of secondary schools stationed in four different sectors of India. The February issue of The American Soroptimit carries article on the "Advancement of Status of Women" by M. Virginia Sink of Clarkston. Miss Sink is first vice president of the Sorop-timist Federation of^he Americas and is a project engineer working smog control. /' Alwut ono-halt of lh« milk pro-1 used for butter, cheese, It'D criMim ' 'duced in the U.S. Is used for drink- and numerous other dairy l>ro-/ing or cooking. The remainder is I ducts. , n J’ree-flaring sundress or jumper - Bucce.ss style of the young fashion world! It's extra-easy to sew with no waist fitting problems. Make blouse (or cool days. PrinteiiPaltem 4605: Children’s Sizes 2, 4, 6, S. Size 6 .sundress 1% yard* 35-inch (?ibric; blouse 1 yard. Send Thirty-B'ivo Cents in coins (or this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for lst<’lasg mailing, .Send lo Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Prt'ss, 137 Pattem Dept., 213 West 17lh St.. New THE NEXT BEST TO A BEAUTIFUL SECRETARY! WON'T REPLACE THAT GIRL FRIDAY... 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Education Is Topic I for Church Group Merbbers of (he Alden Group of the, B'irst Congregational Church participated in an educational discussion led by Mrs. Don Griffin, Wednesday evening at the church. | Devotions were given by Beth Gustafson. the find in beauty care SPECIALISTS In STYLING and PERMANENT WAVING RIKER bIdG.—35 W. HURON ST.—FE 3-7186 Have You Tried This? Two Fats, Two Sugars Mix in Ice Box Cookies How long is it since you made up a batch of Ice Box Cookies? It’s comforting to know that the making of dessert or light refreshments are in the refrigerator. Mrs. Oar-ence J. Williams of Rochester shares her favorite recipe of this type with us. Her children grown, married and busy with grandchildren, Mrs. Williams finds (ime to do things she couldn’t in earlier years. She does church work," belongs to the VFW Auxiliary and a few social dubs. ICE BOX COOKIES By Mrs. Clarence J. Williams i.i cup butter or margarine 1 cup sugar 1 cup lard , 1 cup brown sugar 3 eggs, well beaten 4 cups siftfd flour 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup slivered nuts Cream butter or margarine with granulated sugar; cream lard with brown sugar. Mix the two together. Add beaten eggs. Sift dry Ingredients and add. Add nuts. (Slivered nuts make cookies slice .more easily.) Mix well and form Into rolls. Chill in refrigerator overnight. When ready to bake, slice and place oh very lightly greased pan. Bake at 350 degrees for about 12 minutes or until lightly browned. If cookie pan is greased too much, the cookies will spread. Books not only improve your mind, they can help you improve your body, too. This exercise, de striked in Josephine Lawman's column today, for flabby upper arms. The executive board of Women’s Association will meet at 0 a.m, Tuesday in the church. White salvage material is gently needed by those who wil! sew cancer pads at the church on Maach 15, the association reports. ★ ★ ★ The July-August Group is in charge of the March 27 luncheon fqr the Women’s Association. You are invited to view Exciting New Spring Fashions at the K1N6SIEY INN presented by HIIDA’S VOUnQUE Wednesday, March 14th—Luncheon at Noon Formal—Informal—Casual Perfect for Everyone WE ARE ^TILL DANCING ... “THE TWIST” ... EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT Now It’s in the 15th Week! ' \ - - Sunday Buffet Brunch—11 A.M. to 2 PJW, Sunday Dinners served from Noon to. U P.M. CALL FOR RESERVATIONS NOW .MI 4-1400 • JO 4-5916 TaillCISCAn FAMILY CHINA Maytime Pastel pom-poms on sturdy china that is guaranteed for a full year. Created by one of our proudest brand names..-Franciscan, itiakers of "the beautiful best In dinnerware...” 16 Pc. Set for Four............$24.95 4S Pc. Set for Eight . 74,95 Eigbt beautiful Franciscan Casual China pai-ems from which to choose. ' SPECIALS ... ' IMPORTED FROM ENGLAND FAMOUS JOHNSON BROS. CHINA S0Fc.Set English Countryside... 50 Pc. Set Friendly Village ..... $19.95 V$19.95 Michigan's Largest Dinnerware Specialty Store NORTH END OF MIRACLE MILE SHOPNN& CENTER ON TELEGRAPH ^D. OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. TO 8 P.M., SUNDAYS 10 A.M. TO 6 P./i^. Telephone FE 2-8642 ;i WfcKTV > THK rONTlAC P1US33. FJIIIDAY, vi)erlmontnl radar devalopad under Ins dinadion at the 1-1, Monmouth, N J , Army SiKiml C«ri»s lalxnalorj'. The 10-tH)und device ran he cairltHl In mnhat by a soldier to s|)ol tanks, Jei'ps or men movlns In daiknes,s or fOK. Tate, i)i-oJeet enijlneer (»f a team which crealtsl the In.Nti-ument, said It was iHUdfSTted •ently and has not yet been fully tested. City Water Dept Pumps Fewer Gallons in 1961 NOTICE: If You Can’t Oaf In, Drop Material Liif in Mail-or,;Wo W»l Drop By and Kok It Up. Hie Tontlat Water Itepartmeni |ium|K>d nearly 'A>8 million fewer Kallons of water la.sl year'lhun the yjtar before. Tlie Ukil pumpnKe lotttled 3,M0,-f)3fl,(KK) (>allonK aceordin({ to Her- •t G. Parker, walcw sup«'rinlend- j„n,. ,vhen .H8,:{.K),00f) K'dlons were ent. The lilfiO fiRure - •• 798-R£M,0()0. ord pnslueiion year for Ponliae Motor Division. 'Hie combination Rave the water department its Old year with 1,■182.927,000 Rallons pumped. pumpiHl. The worst month was February with 243,972,000 gallons. In 1960 the top month was July with 394,043.000 gallons. “Alttch of th«> dru|>." said Parker. “I» beeause we had a relatively eool Minmier with good rainfall. It’a bien a long time Olnee we’ve had a long, hot, dry Another factor is the local General Motors divisions. Water usaRei. , . , last ^ptember when tract was being negotiated HOT and ORV TTie summer of 1953 was ■ hot and dry. That was also a SENSATIONAL STEREO OFFER . . from WAYNE GABERT’S RCA Victor STEREO COMBINATION WITH FM-AM RADIO An Your Sehool^g AetIvHiot Now Appoariim In tho Prolu? f ’ ; 1 '''' j^ECiy g, loca^...’‘"'V.. THE PONTIAC PBESS ^ Turn fo Thit Pago FrlHoyg for Sonhr High School Nows pootiaC'mich®^ TWEKTY-ONB Stress Careers Waterford Kettering Mimics TV Antics at St . Frederick Pupils Dlicutf Goals ,Witl .With Ouost Spoakfrsi Await Danco Tpaight K»U«t1nK High .School tpotllght c « takOfon r By gllZANNR POIMBAR Now that exdtment over the een> lor dowtij the Student Oduncil career day and the eophO: more dance headline the newe dt St, Frederick's High School, TIte Student tJouneil career day today features 1* speakers from various professions sOUi as . do«!tor, lawyer, nurse, social worker* and stale trooper. Its purpose is to Inform students of requirements and qualifications nee ally cheerleaders ,built sliideiit Rat« 5 Out of 8 Rounds in $tote Compotition, Place at Conference By PAMKIA MOKlilH The debate team of Pontiac Northern High School is one of which we are proud. In state competition, the debaters won five out of eight rounds. In the Inter-Lakes Con-lorence, the team also raptured many vlcloriea. Tl»e varsity debate team made up of Bill Bassinger and George Kovach on the affirmative side, and oh the negative side. Sue Franklin and Sue Simpson. Junior varsity debate team members are ^bert Russel and Valens. Both take the nega-.tjve-'-stand*_______________ Next year the debate team will be entering the Suburban lieagne made up of schools In Eastern Oakland County and Western Macomb County. Peter Evarts Is team sponsor. Senior Prom committee chairmen Are Don Glowhz, Kathy Mur-phy, Sharon Wheeler, Terry Patr terson, Lind Larson, Jim Hund and D1 Ann Call. Dave Shields and Gayle Defoe conclude the list. Pontiac Northern Polaris published a greeting from Astronaut Lt. Col. Jolm H. tilerni today. The greeting was received by last year’s Polaris sponsor, Mrs. Ann Ess Morrow. Along with the letter were varlons pamphlets nhd hn »f- Tickets are on sale for PNH’ forthcoming production of “bihe^it the Wind” March 22 and 23. extra, splrtt as they appeal'd In Talent literally filled the air Wednesday niorniiig ai Waterfoi'd Kettering, as sludeniK presented the first talent assembly of the year. After the flag salute was glVhn by Student 0«m('ll Presidr.'iil Toili McKinnon, senior Jerry Goff was intix)due(^l ns muster of ceremonies. PIRST ACrrH First acts on llu- agenda were the Coronadoes playing the "Peppermint Twisr and the girls’ ensemble singing "l/>llie Tu Dum.” These were followed by Jeri Hobby and Connie Condon who presented i modern jazz dance lo “Top Hat." Kettering’s furetgii exehange student, John Simon, was next with a guitar solo, “the Object of My Affection.” a pantomime, was then performed by Cheryl Central's Class Rings Offer Variety of Colors By WADE WH-KIHON Tile (radii lornil Pontiac Cenlrel High class rings exempllfytng the long history of the scltool were (ilstrll)uled in Fel»runry. Oitiored Waterford Twp. Sings for Honors High School Choristeri Bring Excellent Rating Home From Festival Itv MAKY KAY HTIt/.KI.ICtKI Honors galore sl(.w(‘d uiM)n llu' inusieiil sludenis ai VV a 1 e r f o r d Township lligii Presenting- lire seventh act was a comlw playing "Summertime,’’ followed by a duet by Kathy Freeman and Mark Byln^pn, a humorous skit by .Sue Jackson and John Anderson, a second Jazz danct Daisy Maes Tab Lir Abners Sadie Returns to St Mike\ the boys' ensemble singing “Oh Won’t You Sit Down ’’ ‘Blue Moon, ’ sung by Terry Kraft, a danc^by Kathy Martin, Frances Young, and Susan Rogers Painter’s Rage,” a vocal by Marlene Colgrove, original poetry by Bill Pelletier, and a piano solo by Connie Griesltcch, ronduded the program. Allhough there will Iw tio school for students Monday, it does not mean tho teachers will experience a vncalion also. The WKH5? faculty will play host to the Waterford Townsliip High School faculty as tltey participate in a joint workshop. Dr. Carl Byerly from the Detroit Boai'd of Education wilj address the teachers on “The World of Work.’! This will be a summary of an extensiy,e study of changing employment patterns in 14 major metropolitan areas in the country. SADIE HAWKINS’ IX TOWN ~ Micliaclitc Gwen Wilson, in Daisy Mae attire, dreams of one Lit’ Ahner site spotted in the Sthool halls (he oilier day ~ Dave Moreno (visioni. (5wen and Dave are among Hie many to-be Dogpatch characters 'vlio an- ' staking their claims " for the Sadie Hawkins Dance tomorrow night from «;30 to 11:30 In the pa'iii.sh hall. Sponsored liy the juniors, the "Daq>y Mae Sway" will feature a cake walk and niiUTiage bootli. AI the receiil Annual Mala iiml EaNcmblc l<'i>stlvul aj W a y n c Stale Pnlverslty llav Meii'ii Kil-Ncmble hraiight haihe an excellent rutliig. Menibers are I’niil Kiimley, Steve W a g n e r. Tom Talaba, Jafin SmHbsan, and DIek Walsh. Receiving a superior ruling at the festival was Steve Wagner, a lenlor, wlio sang a solo number. Also receiving a superior ralliig were Waterfdi'd's Madrigal Singers I comprised pf Bobbi G r o s J e a ig Mary Hodges, Sherry Zunnqth, Margaret / Wilson. I.inda D a’ v 1 s, I John Me^er, Paul Kuniley, Dick Walsh, and Heidi Bergemuiiii. MONDAY’S LUCKY Iniit ()clolH«r, over 300 cluim i liign were handed to aenloix, junlore, and sophomores. Whiln the mulii design of Hie ring picturing n bust of dilel pontine in full reremonlul dreaa Is set and unehangenhle, ntane sires and ealars offer students min-h eliolee. TIm> anmial Teen-agers Traffic Safety Conh'rence was li<‘ld last Saturday at Pontiac Northern High ScIkkiI. Pimtlae Central’s delegates, driver Iralning Instructor Dean Wilson and numerous Htiulents, were on hand for the safe driving lips. Later, In lh(> coni|s‘ll(ion for the Chaniher of Commn'ce trophy and plaque for (he lM>st talk on teen-Hlji' driving pi'olilenis, delegate Hill Graves tisik higliest lionors and accepted tlie Irophy untl plane for Cetilral, Kcleetlan at candidates far Ihe Nilllansl Honor Haricl.v In In llin lliiul singes Slid results will se two yesrt (Without iMtcktws, without «h Easy to ln«to»-t9x9 12‘ BURKE LUMBER Drayton 4495 Dixie Highway OR 3-1211 DuPONT’S 501 CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE Vou. have seen some light weight 501 nylons offered dt around $6.98 sq. yd. Here is something spectacularl Fropi one of the largest nylbh producers In^ the CQuntry comes this thick heavyweight DuPont 501 IsJylon, proudly carrying the Big'N' Continuous Filament Nylon Story The country's maior nylon producers, long famous for yarn fhot was superior, wear-wise, have created a new type that is sweeping the country. 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Lrt one of our trained home decorator salesmen bring samples from the largest stock onywhwoi NO ORLIGATION, OFCOURSE CALL HOW . . OR 4-0433 CUSTOM DRAPERIES, TOO Save $30—Reg. $89 CUSTOM TRAVERSE DRAPERIES Select from over 20 fabrics, over 100 colors, pottems. Stripes, plains, pot-tems and prints. Includes Inttalla. lion and aU 9KU 4990 DIXIE HWY. Open 'til 9 PiAA. every night eiLcept Tuesdayk-^'tii 6 PAA. THK PONTIAC PllESS, FRIDAY, J^ARCH i 1063 twektv.tiirek for Homo limuovoinoiit niiMiinijil II and IlMlUlllliljlli Home i« the family center . . . we’ll help you to enjoy it while the youngsters are growing up. If you arc thinking of adding a room, moderni/Jng your home or finishing off an attic, see us. AI^D TO THE VALUE OF YOljJR PRESENT HOME WITH A HOME IMPROVEMENT LOAN HOME LOANS MORTGAGES We Purchase Land Contracts RAL SAVINGS • 761 V. HURON ST. • DOWNTOWN • ROCHESTER • DRAYTON PLAINS • WALLED LAKE • MILFORD Lansing Man Want^ U.S. fO iCover Cuban Honey Loss Umm OR *- Th« only Amerl. i»n lm|M»rtcr erf Cuban hbney ta hopeful 11)0 U. S. aovernmont will ootno up with a aubaldy to awiMten the loan of hla ohe-tlme |3i unnuul bualneaa. J. Harold Sesatona, 66, of Lansing saya hla honey buslnee washed up I>e(!mi8e of an executive order by Pi’eaident Kennedy, placing an eoDbargo on all Cuban im-IHMia. ‘ ,' The ban out off an estlinaled 98S million In Imiwrla fitmi the If the cigar Industry receives a aulMldy froin the government, I hope we can get a honey subsidy, too," .Sessions said. The world-famed El Aqulnaldo honey was sold for 28 years In the United States In leading department stores in New York, Chicago, Dctioit, San Fi'anclsco, St. IjOuIh and Philadelphia. "I don’t know what w« Will do now," he mi wed. "My wife and I always rigurked desperately tot a way to niake a living. He became associated with an importer of the howy In Tamila, Fla. The firm grew tq where it was Importing 350,000 pounds of honey annually belwt*en 1950-56. "We would have stayed hlg if "astro hadn't bcirome a lousy (,'ommunist," Sessions declared. 000 POUNDS I.KITT Sessions said he has a small Inventory of about 600 pounds of the Cuban honey left over from an October shipment for final processing. m going to ration It out to my customers and dose up shop by the end of the month,” he said. An Associated Press story relating the fate of H«wslons* business caused him to be deluged with orders and telephone calls seeing the last shipment ol the UNOK KAKNKD fjn.UOO Imports fell off after Castro rose to power and the firm was Importing only 70,000 pounds of honey when It was hit by the embargo. The last order for 48 dozen bottles of honey will go to a customer in Elton, S. D., Sessions said.' The firm once employed many as 41 persons. Sessions said he employed only eight women on a part-time basis after 1956 when It became more difficult to get honey from Cuba because of Fidel Castro's control of the island. The Cuban government certified that the honey was gathered while the flowers were in bloom. The honey was shipped to the United States between October and May for processing. Sessions said the embargo hurt his former employes only in that some of the workers used their wages for Christmas gifts. Most of the women, he said, were married. A year later, the ImiNtrter died and HeHsloiM took over, trans-ferlng the optwutlan to Michigan. I 9 < Now 2 Can Live St!Nsions had an annual payroll of nearly $80,000 dui lng his peak biwIncMH yeai'H. Hla pi'OrilH ranged from $20,000 to $25,000 dur., Iny the same period. After Castro's rise to power. Sessions’ profits were cut more than half. The ftnanelai loss to Cuba lie-cause of the embargo, Sessions said, woiijd las upwards of *Wl,«00, honey also w«* used to fla-| v(ir bread, c(M)klcs, fi'ultcake and laoimit Inittlc. The firm used a fleet of 11 tnicks to carry Items flavored with Cuban honey throughout Michigan, and some 100 distrlbu-tm's scalteied throughout the United Stales also weie ettiployed in pronxiting Cuban honey during the 1950-51! pcrliHl, Sessions stiid. Sessions added that h« had to sejl $50,000 In oiulpment when his bUHlness began to full off because of Iho drop In Imports. Sessions said he was not bitter about the embargo. "Kennedy had to do what He did," Sessions said. "I only hope I <-mi start Uisl-ness all over again, someday," ho added. Cheaply as 1, on the Honeymoon^ NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y. (AP) ■Newlyweds cun honeymoon at Niagara Falls at half-price during .June. Hotels and motels In the plan will charge honeymoonen» single occupancy rates and restaurants will give them two meals for the price of one, the Chamber of Commerce announced Wednesday. Under the plan, couples present their marriage certificates to the chamber office when they arrive. The chamber then supplies them with a list of cooperating mer- chants and tours. Chinese on Tfie’~WattoiiaIist held -island of Quemoy farm a profitable crop called "Iron potatoes.’' Artlllely shells, fired from the Communist mainland three miles away, are dug out of the fields and sold as scrap iron. RECREATION ROOMS SEE ... BEFORE YOU BUY! FAMILY ROOM ALUM. SIDING KITCHENS PANELING ^ BATHROOMS • (!eilino tile ON DISPLAY AT THE POOLE HOME IMPROVEMEMT CENTER Whar* Mr Myoairt Pi CALL FE 4-1594 Jggil FratEiliMilM ftrAiqrTip* I VZZTi opanFrkfcv DETROIT EDISON GUARANTEES ELECTRIC WATER HEATER SATISFACTION OrYour Money Back Buy the flameless electric water heater that fits your home. Call on it for shower after shower, for wash after wash, f(H* all the hot water you need. If, any time within a year, you’re not satisfied with the heater’s performance, call us. We’ll ^remove it and return the full purchase price, including any Installation cost! Other exclusive electric water heater advantages: <5 Long life—no hot spots Install anywhere —no flue needed ,5 Free Edison service for electric operating parts when manufacturer’s warranty runs out. 162,000 of your .neighbors throughout. S. E. Michigan enjoy the benefits of electric water heating. You can join I ;them -by shopping- for-your-nW- |j flameless heater where you see the HjOT emblein—the syinbol of an electric water, heater retailer. EDIS 'M Grand Opening SATURDAY, MARCH » ik ★ ■ ■■ 5 DINING and WINING AHBAS ★ ★ ★ S1NQ.A-L0NG PIANO BAR Twiat At Dance ★ Twlat Some More Greater Than Ever ^ THiri*QIS^^IAC PRESS. FRIDAY, lilARCH 9. 1969 Urge McNamara Daftnia Chiaf Rafusad to Um Fundi Votad in 1961 for Bomban WAWHNQTON (AP) - The llouM Arme4 Servtcea Oo^nauee he« Mgnln urM the Otfehee ne< perimenl to continue eimteRlc bomber production end move eheiml with development of the 2,000>mile>en*hour B7Q. ★ at The committee vote Thuridiy, wim 0 rcploy of action at the 1901 comircMionul eeRVlon. Secretary of Defenee Robert S. McNamara hna turned down the plan. Congreu luit year voted more han tSOO million to continue pro-ductlotf of B52 bombera after next fell, and move the BTO toward production as a combat aircraft. McNamara refuted to spend the money voted to boost the manned bomber program. UeMAY DISAGRBRS The Air Force chief of staff, Gen, Curl Is E. LcMny, disagrees with his civllinn chief. He has dorsed the munni'd Iximber pro> gram In testimony before House and Senate military committeos. And recently, he took his case to till' White House. President Kennedy was reported to have listened attentively, but left the ■ decision with McNamara. A prototype B70 is taking shape now In a hangar on the Mojave Desert. It Is expected to be ready for flight trials by the end of the year. But current Defense Department plans call for construction of only two more B70s, leaving the new plane In the research and development stage. R<»n«l Whitt Ntw Hta*^ of Improvtmtnt Asm. White, mi Wot^iiM Waterford Township, was albotad of the Sylvan Shorts Improvement Association of Waterford Township at a meeting of the organisation this week. ★ # * Qthpr officers are John Qotts-chalk, 2732 Woodbine, ylct president; Mrs. Claire J. Hinckley, 3750 Elslilor, secretary; Mrs. Russell A. Grover, 3768 Woodblns^ treasurer; and trustees Mrs. Caii Leonard, 3740 Elsinor; Mra, Leon Slrlln. 3986 Klslnor and Donald Bradford. 2600 Woodbine. ^ fomily dinners • SPECIAL FRIDAY DINNERS • FISH DINNER 85c • SPAGHETTI DINNER ... ,85t Beer and Wine to Take Out! FORTINb-BICMAR BAR • RESTAURANT 94-98 W. Huron FE 3-9446 FE 2-6229 HURON BOWL LOUNCE The JERRY LIBBY Gkiortet For riiie-Cnreffiaimhtnt ond PsIiciourDintng, Stop.ot the Hpron Bowl Loui\go this weekend. Pizza and other fine dishes ore servod from our , kitchen of unequolfed ex-ceUence. FE 5^2502 2 Negro Ministers Win Plea for Bail BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (AP) Two Negro ministers have been released on bond on orders of a federal judge after Alabama state courts rejected their pleas for The ministers, The Rev, F. L. Sliuttleworth and J. S. Phifer, posted bonds and were released shortly after U.S. Dist. Judge J. Hobart Grooms set bail at $300 each Thursday. •k-k-k Shuttlesworth was sentenced to 90 days Ad Phifer to 60 days In 1958. They were convicted on disorderly conduct charges stemming from an integration demonstration on a city bus. J two remained free for more than three years because of a long series of appeals. dining at its very best elegant yet casuall Doily and Sunday 10 A.M. to 2 A.M. Banquet Facilities Alpine Inn RESTAURANT and COCKTAIL LOUNGE 6707 E. Highland Road White Lake Township For Reservations Cali 887-5168 Prince Charles Attends First Palace Party LONDON (AP)—I^ce Charies, the schodboy heir to Britain’s throne, has taken a small step toward joining adult company. k k k He attended his first palace luncheon party this week given by his mother, Quren Elizabeth II-Charles sat in for .his father. Prince Philip, away touring South America. The informal Wednesday luncheons are the queen’s way of getting to meet prominent figures in the arts, politics, the church and industry. k k k ’The prince, still pale from his recent appendix operation, mainly looked and listened while the queen and his great-aunt. Princess Marina of Kent, led the conversation. COUNTRY HOE-DOWN MODERN WESTERN wd HIELBIELT MUSIC ^ Heor Lively-Peppy WENDELL SMITH asd HIS BAND '^Friday’’Sidurday 9 AM, Promtnode | Spadafore Bar 6 K. Com (Corner of Huron) Dominican Priests Set Meeting to Elect Head VATICAN CITY (yv-The general council of the Order of Preachers (Dominicans) is to meet at Toulouse, France, to elect a new msis-tcr general after the Rev. Michael Browne becomes a cardinal March 19. k k k Pope John XXIII named the Irish-born head of the Dominicans among 10 new cardinals last month. Announcement of the Dominican meeting gave no date, saying only that it would take place soon after Father Browne, dons his red bat. SQUABE and ROUMD DANCING Known from Coost-to-Coosl os Detroit's finest in Squore' end Round Dancing. COME STAG OR COUPIES pre-lentendan(:e I at CAMPUS TUEbAy,MAIlCH6 GALA ST. PATRICK DAY DANCES at Both Ballroom* ' .iAJ.UgDAXJMARCH.47:-★ 79S7WMdwaM,0«treit encing Every Thun., Sot., Sun. CAMPUS BALLROOM / Fenkeil and Uvemqie Doncing Evwy TuM., Frf., Sat. flNIlTODCHfSTRAS^^^^ IHI *l!2S£MSLSBSBSBHr NOW SHOWING! flock Hudson / Sanika/Bolily/illkilitf Darin/SU MODERN AND SQUARE DAMCING SRTURMT NIGHT AT OXBOW LAKE PAVILION 9451 Elixebeth Lak* Road at Union Lake Road LIQUOR—BEER—.WINE Telephone EM 3-9124 N0W!» EAGLE SATURDAY OWL SHOW ! 10 PM. I ' Rjll-tengthand-ftbulous- on film fbr the firsthmeB •MW/WOEKir '4(1 , •nwsr«fu.SA* 50th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION! of the Original 289 SEAT EAGLE THEATER Starting MON.-Fun! Surprisesl Door PrizesI APPEARING ICHTLY Enjoy Outstanding Talent in the Fabulous AIRWAY LOUNGE MWIIET FACILITIES Up to 500 Capacity CALL 674-0426 for your dancing pleasure ... le BOB ■ mm' onAim; BOB UW ' On Organ and Piano “MID HiF’ MIlflE Drums—Tromhona-,. Vheal fiOBEIJllE Trumpet and Bam BOBWIBIiAIIB On Sax COMING MARCH 4th-WATERFORD’S OWN TALENT... The GOROWADOBS Doing the mm TWIST” Teenagers Welcome! frmjIdmission_ IN OUR BANQUET ROOM-IiOO P.M. to 5:00 P.M. -4SgSIII6lfLiUIDRII.-M-59 ,y -'-I, i; w*riA A T1IJ5 tW'TIAC PRBSS, FKIPAY, MARCH 2. 1002 TWlNTYyrW. Contract Switches Coincidental? Ma«'iiry crnft w NctlJolm (ilann >mn mirh mn «d. New York’ii two tor I governor lire R^inub 'lliougli M«W»y* «!•»> fontoMH torlMfilny nmok. It Ww^y happen*' their gentle nnd HecuntnuxlnUng utter a Metny browii over an at' tniiimemt, they wnriiettrnea run tiont to hla pride, and he aeldoiu atnucH a Ivord derived from the jreineinheFii, what ho luu done. f, if! illTO N|l|lfTCiUMIl)flV - |»rp. which also has the cmilract John Olenn has successfully oi-hit-for produdng the Gemini two-man «d. New York’s two senators and space craft, the next step aftorigovemor tire Republicans, "m5eLD OVER 2nd WEEK! BORON PRESSURE GROUP 3. Space Dally reports this week that “powerful forces in CMigress’' have called on NASA to Initiate a broad research program to develop rocket engines capable of using fuels derived from boron. Scientists have contended that boron Is antiquated by our hydrogen fuels. Bontn is derived In Muskogee, Okla., by the Cattery Chemical Co., whose headqnariera are In Pennsylvania. Space Daily listed the boron pressure group as Kerr, Sen. Mike Monroney and Rep. Ed Edmondson, all of ad Rep, James Fulton and Sen. Joseph S. Clark of Pennsylvania. 4. Republic Aviation CoCp. of Long Island produces the F105D Thunderchief lighter bomber, the striking plane of the tactical air command. Recently its $1 billion air force contract was drastically cut back, and thousands of employes are facing layoffs and job ■ iss. A huge contract was instead given to McDonnell Aircraft Oorp. of St. Louis to produce the Navy FUOS plane, which will replace the nOSDs. Coincidence: Sen. Stuart Sym-igton of St. Louis is a ranking Democratic member of the Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences and a former secretary of the Air Force under President Truman. Webb, until his appointment NASA director was on the board Menon to Hecfd Group NEW DELHI, India »V-Def«ise Minister V. K. Krishna Menon wiU lead the Indian delegation to the lunation disarmament conference beginning ii\ Geneva March 14, the Foreign Ministry announced Thursday. ' 1 STARTS 1 ' 1 TONIGHT j 1 FOR YOUR COMFORT , * ' IN-CAR ' , 1 HEATERS^ ' ' NO EXTRA CHARGE 1 ^ Open 6:30 P.M. Starts 7 C A REAL ROCKIN'-SINGIN'-^TWISTiN' PROGRAM! J aVIS-THE ORIGINAL TWISTIN' KIDI gg5sgs^AY. MAXeif 1 im y !ir«. 1 mwi (OidtImMr «l Klgwt) BY BRUNO KmiB^ LAKELAND, flu. — MiuMger BoK Schefniig hii Inm»im ,8 4ts* Renter to thoae who keep ■cream-ling about the Inflah) gnus being In aome other baaebalt ip or the pltrhlng mound being iryone !■ ready to trade ail ^ .l^era and our Inflelden berauaeNIt looka tike aomeone el«e Tiger manam aner a hot day at workouts tor hta top hurlera yea-lerday. Nil Regan «^aa whipping the I (• the batten,, aa were Lan, Boa Moaal and Am la foot, ttuqr were I MiiWBh to have ' to oatdwi e to have |ham eaae « • Vtllo. ’•I've heard ao many peopin making trades for ua they make sense anymore," said 8diet> "Why should I give fto^rk for Jim Perry, or one of parting pitchers for Pedro Ramos. Cal MrUsh or some of the other names that have been awed about? "We have the best starting pitching ataff in the a few Ix^ who can help ua In bullpen. Sure, I could use a . Nig bullpen man but not by breal^ up my staff,'* Sdiettlng d, "Why «e«M I givo Yoytaek fW'|Psnyrv.Ps|rta«k bag a bet» and lost Itt fbgrttMik had M atrikeautN In Ift ' ' had M In BM tifurea on other pltdiers mentioned In Hipm trades. VTuik Laty, Don Moasl and Jim Buminf are SchatfliiK's big three. They are not on the maittet. Paul Fbytack and Phil Regan are part of hia iNKomlary starting line. Ron Kline came ttirough with ttiree oompiete games In his short stay with the ‘ngers and Hank Aguirre and Terry Pox had good relief The one Sdiefttng Is hoping will be ttie on* who will help out the g^ina margin betwMn the Tan* and tha Tigers Is Sam Joim, the ST>ysaisoU| vetersn from Hous-ton of the 4’fittonai Lei tbrmeiiy of ttie ^ i Qlants. ■ . V Jones won 31 and M slid had ismed runs marks ot;,3.tt and 3.S3 for two years with the Giants. From th^ Press BoK LAKELAND, Fla.—There’s no place like home. For Vic Werte the start of the 1962 spring training camp with the Tigers Is "Just like coming home to stay," It has been 9 years since Wertg started his spring baseball training with the club for which he started his Major League career. Since 1952, when the Tigers shuffled him to the E|t. Louis Browns, Wertz has had a strong desire to swing a bat for his “adopted” home town again. ★ ★ ★ "I have never convinced myself that the trade with the Browns was Justifiable. It didn’t make sense," said Wertz after shedding his Jersey following a good workout bi the opening of camp at Lakeland. Charlie Gehringer wga jpOUMad. msttiMieP^tttt^^^'rwlg'“ ■‘""■^TBfuticKlnSon was' manager of the Tigers In 1952 when Wertz went to the Browns with Dick Littlefield, Marlin Stuart and Don Lenhardt for Ned Carver, Jim Delsing, Bud Black and Dave Madison. What didn’t make sense for Wertz was the fact that for six years prior to the trade he was an every day player for the Tigers. Detroit in exchange was getting a player who could play only once every four days. He and Oarver were naturally the big names In the trade. ^ ★ ★ ★ The trade hurt Wertz. When he walked the Tiger training camp at Evansville, Ind. iji 1943 frOm his home in York, Pa. he was the youngest player on the roster. The Tigers trained at Evansville because of wartime travel restrictions. OLDEST ON SQUAD "The oldest player on the squad was Roger Cramer who was 38 years old. I was 18 and like most kids starting in baseball I never figured I’d ever be the oldest player on a baseball squad,” Wertz said. Today at 37 he is the oldest member of the Tiger squad in Lakeland. Sad Sam Jones is eight months younger. "1 stayed with the Tigers one month, then anoth«r mt^ith with Buffalo before gidng into the serviee,” said Wertz.” Detroit became my Major League love,” he added.. After his discharge in 1946 he returned to the Tigers and his career grew with experience. He was a popular choice in Detroit. In 1949,1950 and 1951 he had his best years. He hit .304, .308 and .285 and had 133,123, and 94 RBI’s. When the Tigers failed in their pennant bid in 1950 the rash of trades to put the team back in con-tejqtion the following years started. ★ ★ ★ A dejected Wertz went to the Browns In August of 1952. He went to Baltimore then Cleveland where he had great years in 1956-57 after a battle in 1955 with non-paralytic polio. A broken ankle in the exhibition season of 1958 allowed him to play in only 25 games that season. He was traded to the Red Sox in 1959. During the nine years away from Detroit, there were rumors on four different occasions that lie would be traded back to the Tigers. “I had a good year at Boston in 1960 and they figured Qiey had a chance so they weren’t going to make any move to trade nie,” Wertz said. "I gue^ I hurt my own desire to get back to Detroit by just having a few too seasons.” he Jested, ★ ★ The 5Ur hope in nine years came last September and it wasn’t a rumor. Wertz was back "hmne.” The Tigers lost nine producj^ baseball years of Wert*. He knows he won’t be a regular now, but he still has a big bat, one he hopes will produce a lew clutch hits to put the Tigepriiito the 1962 pennant chase. i-|Seton Hall. Hubie White iors, topped by Ohio State’s Jerry nova, Ken Charlton of Colbrado, All-America Has 3 Repeaters NEW YORK (AP)-Five f Villa- Lucas. make up the 1962 college basketball All-America announced today by The Associated Press. Named to the first team with Lucas were Terry Dischinger of Purdue, Billy McGUI Of Utah, Chet Walker of Bradley and Len Chappell of Wake Forest Lucas, Dischinger and Walker are repeaters from the 1961 All;Anwii-ca. In addition, Lucas is the first 3-time A|l-America since Oscar Robertson of Cincinnati. . ...... Lucas, Dischinger and McGill topped the voting-by 322 sports-writers and Radio-TV broadcasters. On the basis of five points for first team vote and two points second team nod, Lucas Jim Kerwin of Tulane and J^rry Smith of Furman were,named\to the honorable mention list. Th^ H.M. also included Mike Wroblew-ski of Kansas State, Paul Silas of Creighton, Mel Counts of Oregon State, Leroy Ellis of St. Johns, N.Y, Cornell Green of Utah State, Bob Rascoe of Western Kentucky and Ron Warner of Gettysburg. GREAT TALENTS The talents of the first team are well known te dribble fans. All are tops when it comes to shooting, passing, floor work and rebounding. Lucas. 6-8, led the Buckeyes to their third straight Big Ten title Rudomstkln. SouUitra C * —*"t. »«nJor, BSoto » West Vlrslnis t !«.. Prineston. W.Vs. iarl0i NMh» K«ntuoi^ 6 : sopiiomorc. Lm« Ctisrh JfonsB, who rsportad to Lake-land General Hoapltai on Wadnea-day, had minor aurgary performed on hie neck. Ik. A :* "AooupleinmrfiMwet from his Ae<& and laboratory teate tor maUltancy, hut _______ _ 'Jonaa ahould ha back In oamp within'thrae sikeU>sU tesm si i .jcted fcjr Tlis AMoetsted Prsii on t bsela at rotes tram 3IZ epottevrlteri a rsdio-TV brosdessters. rgtST VRAM Jen? Lucss, Ohio Ststs. S foot 8 Incli* ag4elenm*M»s It finally happened! . ’The 300 Lounge basketball team wound up on the short end of the ■emre for the first time this season Thursday night in the 2nd round of the Qty League’s aassi A idayoflli at Pontiac Central. After psMIiMr 14 aaa bm* to epea the playoffs, fito IsHtoga oagers bowed to the ism each tallied l7 points to pace CIO’s upset victory. Fred Davis; added 15. Dave Diehm coUectedj 21 points and Larry Peet contributed 19 to the Lounge offense. Buckner Finance advanced to the finals of the Class B tounia-meat with a 70-M triumph ever ClarkBton. Roger Nosek rilled » ■points to qwarlMad the wto. Bob It was a nto«nd-turi( contest all theway.aOtodattheendofthe '1st quarter, 17-18, and managed to stay<>.in at half-time, 34-29. Lounge cut the deficit to 5461 after three periods and the aO repulsed all tfaiiito.to the 4lti atoosa to win, Tom Dnbbe and Steve Tbomp- VictM- Paints defeated the'Bomb-ers, 52-46, in the Class D tourney. Dane Bourgeau meshed 19 pednts for Victor and Johnny Hurner was high tor the Bombers with 18. Three players hit double figures, ipped by Harry ^ Kunkte’^r 14 as the PiNitiac Police doufiwd Fdice Maricet, S34i|. r ■V- TOURNEY SCRAMBLE Lee Melear ball to teammate after sf^Iling to floor the SdUthem Conference basketball U Va., last night. Wayne Isaacs', Va., is the world’s only foot vaulter. He did it twice earlier in the season — 16-14- i«- toe Millvose nieet and 16-% in toe Boston A>A. gam6s. •k m k 'Then he c^e down with the flu and In /Uw LouisvUl^ meet couldn't ev6n clear 14 feet. He Indiana ’ tankers set records in the only events held Thursday, ers broke hto.own s^le mark in 17:376^ and Ted Stickles set a 200 indivkiual medley record in 2;00il. The Hoosiers led Michigan by 9Vi points going Into today. The Michigan s k a t e r s play Denver tenlght seeing a berth In Saturday idi^t** final oppMtto Michigan Tech. Tech MlcUgah Stote to the locer*B bracket Unproday, S-L Ohio State and V^sorarin, the toq> cage teams, Claidi tomorrow but toe Bucks already have the cfown. ehtertala sota, Iowa is at lUtaKris and Purdue vs. Indiana in the teletdsed contert. The cmiference yesterday discarded a pnqxMKd round-robin football slate and suspended a rule which would have required each team to play eight conference foes annually. Spencer Floors Class A Champ at Waterford Spencer Floor Covering won the Class A Waterford Recreation basketbaO dwm^onddp last night by defeating rnniierup Lakdadd narmacy. 64-47. season witk a U-1 record. Lakeland won » and lost 8. All three setbacks w«re administered by Spencer la as imny games. Steve's Market rooted Urn’s Barber Shop 77-Si6 in a battle to see wUch .team woold be left In ttw C3aas A beller. Spencer bad Vttto tronUe wto-nlnk. The flow eoverlag team led by U potato mod at ttw contest Bofh teams posted Hw aame wMbat at fMd gtob. bto Speaeer kaA a 18-U Oifa at Ike went back to sick bay and missed the National AAU Cham-ihips last week. But when he arrived today he said he felt fine. 'Biit," he cautioned, “I don’t expect to break the record every time I vault. I’ve been Working out all week and I think I'm ready for a good one." Gubner liketrise has spent the winter breaking all the indoor shotput reewds in the book. His best is 64-11%. Theie is only one better thrown on the bodts, Bill Niedw’s 65-10 world outdoor record. The.. 260i>ound Gubnei?, a New York University sophomore, said he intends to reach at least 65 feet Jn the K. of C. meet. The 600, matching Bill Crothers of the University of Toronto against record holder George Kerr of Illinois, could turn into the best race. Crothers has been charing Kerr's 1:09.3 Indoor record all season. But fills is their first head-to-head meeting. , ★ k k John Thomas of Boston University, badt in form after a 7-foot high jump last week, hopes to do. even better. Hayes Jones of Ponfiae, Midi., goes after his 29th. straight Indoor victory in the 60-yard hurdles and Frank Budd of Villanova tries for his 15tb' in a row in the 60-yard daqh- In the absence of Jim Beat^, Tom O’Hara of Loyola of Chicago, is the mile favorite. He ran a 4:02.3 behind Beatty two weeks Chude OllBs ten^ the winners wttb 18 pofaits. Tom Ntek-man netted IS tor Lakdand. Gary Heatoa scored YO markers for Steve’s wkUe Homer Hanfsoa of Tim’s hit 88. Ptayi^ start Tuesday in the Succ^l^ul Operation onShmidt's Shoutder ANN ARBCHL (UPD — Joe Schmidt, vetmn Bnebacfar of the Detect Lions, underwen't success-ful shqulder surgery at University hpspittd yesterday. ITie Lkms received word yesteiv day that rookie ha^ck Pat Stud-still also requires ourgery naaNI*. 3000; Joe Itoimto, Sche-nocliidy, N.Y., mi,-, and Bill Bunettn, Frowio, Calif,, 20T1, Another qiiollfyina round Will h« held Friday, with lemlflnali and ftnola Saturday. 3rd Archery Golf Shoot Sunday at City Course Tlie third archery golf ahcnt of the year will !» held thia Sunday at Munk-lpnl golf mairae under the aponsonihip of the Pontine Wlilfe Buck Archera Club. # A A lleglatrnllona will be taken at the city itnka from K a.m, to 3 p.m. and (he. entry fee la |1.60. The imblic la Invited and cnit prizea will be awarded. AAA In (he February competition, Harry Nicholaon won the low handicap division with DI o k Schaeffer taking 2nd place. Doug Arthur was the winner In the low actual division, followed by Richard Bentley- 6DBA, Ladies at West Side Pontiac Loads on Un* at Elks Stato Event; Womon at Muikogon ' By (SniCK ABAllt Two more big bowling tourniy ments get started here tomorrow as tho various stote events tlnue, A A i( Huron Howl will he the iKc of the North 8e«»»tM£l#n‘. $MM HBTMl SPIIITI. Moore to Face 10th Spare Foe Monroe Moore of Pontiac will be aklng on his KHh opponent oi ‘Mako Tl»t Spare” leleylslon show Saturday night. f*' Tall Milt Molhousen, a Soulh-west star from 'Fulsa, Oklalwma, will la* his next foe. Moore has won $23,IX)0 and could break Don Carter's record ot $'27,000 with a big showing this c could earn a total of $10,000 more it he won again, made regular spares and then toppled the big 6-7-8-10 jackpot setup. The latter siuire Is valued at $8,000 now. TIte .300 Bowl staff member left for New York (his afternoon in order to start hla usual pre-program practice sessions. Goal for Carry Back NEW ORLEAN.S (AP)-CniTy Back, assured of a place among ling's Immortals despite his ;k Imm uncestiy, can step Into fifth place among all-tlmc money winners with a victory In Saturday’s $50,000-addcd New Orleans Handicap. ftTTEITIOI 8U NRIER!!! IE SHE TO ERia TV BOWL 1st Prize Each Week-Zeaith Color TV! 2Hd Prize... Zenith Portable Stereo Phono GRAND PRIZE... 1962 Rambler Classic 400 A lEN COITEST EIEB KEEK!!! Gel Your Entry Blank at the Huron Bowl or Airway Lanes Today! BE m TELEVISION!! Stop ill Now for Fiirther Detallsi! HURON BOWL AIRWAY LANES 2525 Eliiabefh Lake Rd. 4825 Highlond Rd. (M>59) FE 5-2525 674 0424 We'reCetebratiigOurBirtliday MIMentliLeng... _WITH—A BIG SALE HERE’S WHAT WE HAVE PLAHNED FOR THE WHOLE MOHTH OF MARCH ... i95a\ »959 SPEaALAOW PRICES ON NEW CARS! PONUAC CATALINAS for ............. .$2725 TEMPESTS for ...... .. $2186 BUICI^ SPECIALS for .. .$2305 ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS ON USED CARS! , the ShefO'®"' Vt. fobu'o®* 3-loy®» Every doy we’ll hove 4 Anniversary Specials—-used cors priced so low you won’t believe it. Here are some examples; ~ 1959 BUICK...... .$1595 1960 FORD........... $1695 1956 MO ........... $ 795 1960 BUICK CONV.... .$2295 SPORTS CELEBRITIES On March 17 come to see famous football stars from the Detroit Lions and Pittsburgh Steelers plus our own Tom (the bomb) Tracy. PontlaC/ Buick Caravans... We'll have many models of each line so you can drive them yourself, see hpw thrilling it js to be behind the wheel of a new Pontioc or Buick. • Pontiac • Buick 223IHAIN Oliva 1-8133 aocHEsnu 02376305 mm PONTIAC maik^h 2, iw Next as Pre[r 5 s End Season % *lt** C«NW I iTiii’iim Ml diniHx wMU Soullih(*Ui OiOd*^ Qipnty Mill icJmmM « IW-rktey, WtH'lIord «l Kmn ----------------- ... . .. injftcm iind Pontine Nurlhom ■ , ---------fcliedulei to- nlfhll.- , / _ i«r three weehi gamM, cvWyiody lingt down rurUrin o« the IWm 6a emnpnlan ihUi •vwMng i|n4 hnpeftiUy look Iw wirdi to mk tilwrii dkiWcl lour Wnlled Ukf. Otpt two IMMPII ItOMi «mMmI nikl wn by downing the Jaya A farmingion vkriory i^i t^e HklppeM' cKpenae, lw«en Berkley and Karmtnglon. The only Ihlng nt stake In the PttH-NValled Lake game la Northern's hopes of rinlsitlng ni lUgh as 3rd In the final standings. The Huskies ( tin (>nUy slmn; 3irl spot with Houllilleld. WalhHl l. land ichedulc. Avondale tries to upset visiting Clawifon and take Orion is a def« Intte itndeixlog at' home against Troy In Oakland A faatures. ampalgn attar 16 losata. Kait natralt la esgocted ' have no troahle wrapphig up the KuNleia Midilgan I The Chiefs can \yrap up 2tMi liluce In the Valley standings with win over Northern, which has en the bmp's hottest outfit for Uie past tliive weeks. Unnie lime Is 8 p.m. at Ihe PCll gym. The No, 1 contest In the Eastern Michigan c 1 r c «11 pits Femdale against Kimball at |ioyal Oak In a batlle tor 3iyI place. Both lt!anu have 7-4 p;ml recowlg. Oxford VI alts Waiertwd Our Udy of the Lakes tonight In another atra game rtf keen Interest. North Farmington will be attempting to climb a notch higher In the same league at Cherry Hill. League Under Swim Meets Way Tonight High achool ’ swimmers start rhioning up the water tonight in search three conference champlon- Suburban bHips hold tn'elitninaries while the i:a.slcm Mi<'hlgan i.s deciding whether HInntngham .Sea-holm will reign again. The Saginaw Valley and North St FredrAlumni Clash Saturday at PCH Gym Ht. Vyederlck baNketball Ihiin will have a reunion with Ntam Sif yearn gone by when Ihe current Ram varsity meetx der present coach Oene Wright. They are IMck Doyon, John Bradley, Dick NIMwis. Tom DOrocher, Ted Dobskl, Dick Nlckeraon and Mike Reed. Other Wright-coached boys lo appear will be Wally (tuarlCN. <«ary and Jen> Dlrker, T'hll landry. Bob Broasdel, Rob and Body Yapo, Dave lufkin, Jim Spadafore and Charles Oullwird. Completing the Alumni will be Roger Nosek, Red McMahan, Del Chaves and Jerry Bradley, who played before Wright became coach. A preliminary attraction will have grade school cagers In ac- I Arthur The Valley ii Hill, The host learn nml l‘'tlnt Norllwrii are ex|>eel«sl lo Imitle for lioiiorn. Poollac Ccnlral'H chances are very slim. hullcrfly and Individual medley in the preliminaries. His llnic.s were S6.1 and 2:16.2. Ibth Wolf of Seaholm was first in the 100 and '200-yanl fna'slylcs and is favored to (sip bolh events lonighl. The EML meet gets under way Fitzgerald and Souih^-ld expert- ” <,n.m will be' PNH's ehl.-f hope in the meet N.S.SA honom. Pontiac Northern Is rhumUm. The Huskies fin-in this meet, Spaholm is expec ed season In fight off a .hallenge by Kimball and triumph in the Maples’ pool. •* The 400-yard fri'estyle and diving finals are scheduled lonigift in the Valley and N.SSA meets. Preliminai'ies will qualify swim- fourth place. Thui-alon and Fitzgerald are expected to battle for hononu The host school edged Fitperald in the final meet of the se&n to lake regular seakon lamors. flouth-, BRONCX) STARTER, — Joe Fisher Will be In Holly’s starting lineup as the Broncos close the regular season at West Blixtm-field tonight. He has been a big reason for a good finish by the former Wayne-Oakland power. Prep Cage Standings ' - gAnmuf-mmtmMj SS«S!irri If i iEfe'S MOPIMIONAI, WRESTLING I rvKsy ovriD ssS srt laiw-how Rochester Five to Meet Lapeer TrI-County champion Rochester, i twice conqueror of Lapeer during the regular season, has drawn tlic ,, lUiiir iwiimini niiM niHWii iiki inijiiy city Panthers In the fliut I’ound of the irii CTass A district basketball tournament oil the Rochester »x)urt. The other half of the Rochester "A" district . pits Utica (12-3) against Troy (1.3-2). Utica meets Troy next Wednesday, Lapeer (aces Rochester Tliursday and the two winners clash Saturday for the title. The Rllng III ClasH A (nr Ihe flrst SOUTH c»ntbau^ . Vs V? ■ii S.S 6.70*15 Toi. $7.95 7.50*14 $8.95 NIW BIOUUR TIMS ^.70*15 14.88 7.50x14 $9.88 8e«rl. Import sad Ompsiil N«w Hitvcn . M»mphU Brown City Drj?dfn mers for fliuil cvenls .Saturday.:field finished third. Kimball holds a 12-6 point edge wHii,.,Sciih()lm going into tonight’s ever Warren Wedne Yager. EMI, THREE .SCIKMIUS Sepholm and Kimlxill qualified Several Area Mat Stars 59-43 victory /3s #*| f T*ll Z' '* ;^0peiulate4itMam^ Class D pairings also were determined at Rochesjer yesterday with Memphis drawing a bye and Pontiac Emmanuel drawing Richmond St. Augustine. Walled Lake drew Adrian as Us opening foe In Ihe eight-team “A” district nt Ypsllnnll. The VI-klnga will meet Adrian Wednes-|day at 7 p.m. on the Eastern Michigan University Fieldhduse floor. ____ Country Di SouTh \,yol........ North Pormlngton ao Dondtro ........ Crnnbroak total of .39 swimmers between 1200 freestyle relay team got the them in last week's preliminaries. | Bluejay Ists. Ferndale was the only other school i to have tankers In the finals. Tim Cash of Kimball estab- leagiie record In winning the ilHI (reestyle final. He was clocked in 4: IS. Bill Watta of the Knights was second and Ferndale’s Lloyd tioodwin Ihlrdt l.yim Minilli aial -lint Henderson of Si-aholiii were fourth and flMh. Daryl Kifer of Warren set rec-oi-dg in the iiO fieestyle (23.2> and the too, freestyle (.518). .Soulh-lield is now 7-3. Pro Grid Suit AT BOOnSTRR Clsn A titles v«. Troy, March 7. f{nsb'^Mar«h^rry_]"^^ Rfohmohd CISM & mors at. Mary va. Emraanuel-Bt. Ausui-Valley-Country Day wln- Oakland County area wrestlers ere competing at three different sites today as the state reglonals got under way. Flint Northern and Hazel Park, Class A meet hosts, were favorites. Defending slate champion Wiley Viverelle heads a well balanced Northern team. Bill Kettlcwell Gary Burger among the Parker standouts. inter-Lakes rhamps Ken Kiin-mel. Skip Mellroy and Don Teels make PMI a solid contender at Flhit. Pontiac Central la then' led by Saginaw Valley Records Mean Nothing in Almont-Diyden Game Almont’s only two victories this players in the league, has carried season have come at the expense of Dryden. Hie Cardinals are confident that they can make Almont return part of the favor wdien the Southenr ... ™« - Thumb arch-i:ivali.-dash t(M1j|^lJlfilpea-.4^^■-pasf-t:ames^^ CeSHer Pf*'**' There are 18 other Maples in the finals, inelMding: prtp:.;Att-| I America Don Spencer. ITie Maple J 'Star set league records in the cDufek Will Headline they intend to complete presenta-l5t, Benedict Banquet lion of their $10 million antitrust; ^ suit against’ the National Football' Don Dufek, freshman football Lhague by March 15, i coach at the University of ♦ Ah j Michigan, will be Ihe main This would put the trial consid- speaker at St. Beiiedlct’s annual erably ahead of schedule, NFL sports banquet Monday at 7 attorneys said they would require pju. \ little more than a week to present! Over 600 men and hoirs are ex- junior sharpshooter is averaging their side. I pected to attend the affair In 16 points a game. , I Motions by both parties ht the i st- Benedict hall. Forward Ray Bollaert is the big suit will be heard following the I Bruce Martin, sjjwrts janinauiieee -seorer for Almont. But he bar been IprescHtations - - - j- Hr radTo station WCAR, will be r tr- e®Hfer Judge Roszel C. Thomsen re- the master of ceremonies. Mon- Bill Harris and guard Tony Patch, cessed the trial for the weekend roe Moons locjil bowling cham- titlists Art Fowlkes and Wayne Lee. Unbeaten.Tom Brown, Don Wilkinson and Jim Bales carry Walled Lake’s top hopes. Water, ford and Kettering will also be In Flint. ............ WRlIed Lake v>. Adrian. &m : Ypitlantt Qmtral v arch 7, 8:30 p.m.: winner. ce .seems wide open -at Hazel Park after the favorite, Farmington, featuring Ihe Cook boys, appears strong along with Fitzgerald. Bill Shelton, a 138-pounder, is the top Southfield contestant. Hazel Park is not as strong as early season. Frank Stagg graduated, Ron Black moved away and Tim Davis suffered a broken arm. Rick Hams of Kimball and Don-dero's Dave Yohe are among the icounty’s top boys. 7 cUp. AT yPSILANTI Oaat A BallavUle vi. Ann Arbor. M m.: Romulus v . St. Mary , . Bnnadicl . ; efimant ! . Fradarlok . Mlchaal . N catBomc tai^ua^AII and KaoavMMa Catins NO MONET DOWN UNITID TIRI SnVlCf Oh#a Man., Than., Trl. 'Ill S 1M7 BsMwIit Aft. rg S-8811 d OLL . OTHER AREA RECORDS Open 12 Noon COCKTAIL LOUNGE Luncheons and Dinners Open Bowling Allamoou Laaguan InvUad ant year'a Bawling Laagnaa WONDERLAND LANES Cor. Ilaggarty A Htahardion Rdn. Not lo Commar IXTIRIOR NATURAL WOOD FINISHES Now you can actually atatn, can actually ai ush plywood or surface in just nnlple operation. latex is my to apidy, dries in-* mat^ erf minutes, end prMuoqs e lorely. j satiay fiiusk that sdll stand both washing aad weathering. tlAKLAND FUEUsd PAINT CO. 41« OSCHASD/LAKE AVI. PHONE FE t-SISP 1 LOOK FOR TmS SIGN A Symbol of Quality Savings SUPER DISCOUNT PRICES BRAND NEW WHITEWALLS *13“ ;:?£!} *14“ *18“ 1 ' nbACk WHITE ;ai?*166<'*18“ I *1P^9“ IJSIIJ $18“ $19*0 Plus Tax and Exchaagi S.M-15 Rctnad Blaekwall "CHARGE IT" We Honor All Males CnNit Cards! SIZE BLACK WHITE sits-ls 8.95 10.95 aoe-14 1.IS-1S 1D.95 12:95 8.80-It T.M-IS H:95 13.95 S.SO-14 8.60>18 |l2.95 14.95 Ph» Tax—SxeliaaSe RtIrxadafeU Ttr* , 77 Weal Huron Streot iMARKEl ■ I;' ' \ onr Cliild Sihmtc(| in Sriiool 'J'I!I-’, rON'I’lAC’ IMtKHS, I UH)AV. MAKCll 2, IlML* umrr MAUto ^ I'WKM'v-ww'a " ! ' , , H '■ t To Aid Youngster, Obtain Teacher's Help The parentu, with the knowledge o( thia aludent’a intcnae> desir go to college and hia willingneaa to work and almggle lowacd that end, convinced il»c cminaclitr that the lH»y alainlA l*c givon a chance to moke a ti'y. After till, h(« gradeo liad heen gianl. Wllli encouragement at liome and help at ludaiol, tlila laty did « cml In going to college, aivl ’ grndiinled In the upper fourth of Hy Or. 1. M. MvHt, Cooke and I'hil Evam By Lou Fine In a allUHlIon where the atiidenl la making ptMir gradea, n aoliitlon la for parenta, ctMinaelorN, teach-) t'ra and Ihe aludent to concentrate on incaenl dlffUrultlca befttre htH'omlng 1(01 (;oiHTrii(>d' about which college or what future xhould he iilanned, VVIa-lhcr your child la idurlUig NcluKil or la ah-emly In lilgli aclaail, get an imdei'alaihllng with Ida teachera. Parenta, temdiera and counaelora can achieve much when they work together for the benefit of the child. By V. T linmiin lly I,KHI,IR .1, NAHON, I>. Kl>. Profeaaor of Ktluealloii, Diilveralty of Houlliem PaUfonihi Teachers, ns well aa parents, me Interested In haying children succeed at the higheat level possible. Parents and teachers have the a goals children. They want them to learn ns much td as fast and well as they 1 possibly can. 1 However, loften teachers land parents find lit difficult to talk Hto each other be-I cause their first DB. NASON meeting Is spent trying to solve a problem. teuchi'r know that you s vice and help. Cl) Offer your help in solving .your child’s scliool problems, If any exist. (4) Piepure a li.st of qtaislions which you wish to ask. How much homework, if any, Is expected? How docs my child get along on the playground,' does he enter Into the play? What I9 his life like in school? How does he act? Is there any way In which we parents can tsxiper-nte with ,vou, the tencher? of II Junior high mcIiooI Ntiident "TMMilh yimrs ago. The euiiiimdor felt that the Ntiulent waa not e.u|iable of sueei'iMlIng In college. MONDAY! Heallie that you share respopslhlllly. bOokl«l In itrulriia n uooimri III " ■ ■ IldM Vmir CliUit Suoo( Imck. inimry oriUr or roali. VOU’DtWkOBWONMUa . BWOUiHT US BACK Menu «3R UOMG , SPiaAL MBASON? 3 I KBEPINO AWPUU.Y dull ABOUT m S'.'iil'n'ir'’'’*"" (Iriiorol rnul OflUo New York 1, N.Y. OUR ANCESTORS By Quincy Siu’h questions give Ihe teacher an opening for a (rank discussion wltliout making it secni thtiiLfilicJs-___ critlcIzlhgT SucTi~djs(’us8lons can bring about a firtn understanding. Johnny is playing truant, Susie is having serious trouble with arithmetic, Jim Is misbehaving the playground. Too often the parents feel thi their child, while the teacher feels the parents show little sym-liathy for school problems. There is a way to avoid this conflict. When parents and telchers compare notes on children BEFORE problems arise, troubles can be averted. You can ease the situation by: CALL TEACHEB (1) Making an appointment in advance. Write a note or make a phone call. Teachers need to schedule appointments when they can give their attention to you rather than a roomful of pupils. (3) At first meeting let the At Ihis jKiint it becomes tlie leacher and you working together for the benefit of your child. CHILD CAN SUFFER When goals and a.spirations for student are not the same at home and at school, the student suffers. When Ihe counselor says the boy ha.s the ability and should go to college, and the parents gee no way to have this happen, or wlten the parent has hopes of cdllege for his child, and the counselor says the ability is not there, the student is caught in the middle. Such a situation existed between the parents and counselor ...I tUAS dtm THINKING THAT A9 LONa A6 VDU AND CXXM.A Age THE BERRYS “The third hit that Yankee cannoneer Molly Plt^r made today! Doesn’t she know woman's place is in me home?’’ BOARDING HOUSE . By SIDNEY OMARB For Satardoy "The wise man controls hi§ destiny . . . Astrology points the way.** ARIES (M»r. 21 to Apr. 1»): Friendship is A t«io-w»r street. Realize tf-*-and make It — ' be practical . --realUedr-OUi^ I kTNEW You had BAD MORl^- FAUSM.' VOOK I'VE <501 TO ^ attempted 3EST;^/ /^EE/TME-' <5Kow MORE Feeble 3[^(4uDience is iM > r EVERY D/\Y, BUSTER / IT ^HOULD> FtORMORE- .................. f ABYSMAL (6N0RAMCETHATX I PLM T&<&(Ve ATALK ONJ MY 81(3 t (SAME HUMTIMG feats AS A As^ra« vat* % ''TACRrs (Apr. 20 to May 2tf): Don't cay "Vaa" tn connection with community project or extra work at olflee . .. . unlesa ,,you wo ^prepared ^ to_ iBcrlfice _______ . . ______ U your GEMINr (Kay*'21' to Jmo*21)*:' Aim "peewee" shots apt to miss. Sesk the best .. , . give your 'fltmost attention to anything yc " take. Time to make plans^ to Time to make plans for future, especially those Involving EXPANSION. CANCER (June a to July 21): Cycle, 1n past days, bds not been up Ho par. with sincere etfoit on you -■ *- “■ 1. Today stud loved one yo of affection. 21); If you ca hart. It begins budget matters, care . . . with maen LEO (July 22 to Aug. avoid public appearanc do so. Today and I miulltatinn , , . for I respect. Ave . bafea. . I*aranlpa, Mi bu........... ».• aV •... ■ ' i. bUek .. .... HOO 11 NKW YOKK (AIM-llte Niock inm-kei drifted off hr pome mo toim MonkroPil oHily till* ntlei'-iioo. TriidloK wiir nwHli'iale. U>RH«R of k«*y Rt(H-kR went from tmctlonk trtOea__piPd^_par^_r*- . ........... itrUou'W reralvara (tooludine D.R.l , «.me — grade A Jumbo JR-Wf eatra 'man IR^' Browna ~ large Sl-33'ti: medium R>-imall 3«H: eheoka 3i-UU. CHH'AUO rRUOHCE CHICAOO. Feb. 31 lAFj - (URUAi t.lve poultry: Wlioleaale buying pri higher to 1 lower, roaatera 29-"a If*** *®i Plymouth Rc rWaan mmirn a»B BfiQS jh; I cwci reanuie egonanie ■«. -oi . .. prlcea unchanged, n per sent or better grade A ^Res 3»'y: mlaed »tk; med-luma 3gt4: atandardi 3«tli; dlrtiea td'a. checka 35Mi. I'llnp wR* on ln'«|iulitr one. Im voRlnifiil Imylitft ctmllmitul ninonK RomiMtf ,llit> It'HdliiK oHr. Nonfer- roUR niclulg mIikhI hiKhrr ft lulls wore firm. , TOTAL liOWr.K AllhotiKh nuto uRsomblles wt up Hhnrply In Fobniary fnmi yettr hko, tlu* total wiim dttwn fixmi Jamuiry. Machine tool dent were oft and Jijinuary Rtructiun otillays In February were the lowrRi In rIx motiths. * * A I Oiyt Rlld about tWo polnth- Brok- Sfdectlvf unlttR held oiii sulll- ers were Inclined to attribute eieiilly, liowcver, ro that the de-ktM',s weakness to a continuation Bonds Hold Upward Trend 1'lie inaiket was mixed in early trading after Ijiree days o( steady to somewhat ItiKher prices. A slide by Oenernl Mnlni's up-aulomotlve gnmp and brouKht cmition to other sta-llons of the IIhI. NKW YORK i,1^ Hoad prices colliliuied Ihch- iipwaivl ^naut al Ihc Mill! of iradlnx loday. They have Ins'll hlKlier niosl of the week. York SRiek KxchuiiKe. Few ehuiiReN nmouiited to a full |Mtlni lait there were many Hiiiall plus slgllN. Rails and uliliiies were mixed. cr ihe counter dealers In U.S. Pacific (ias & Klcclric 3Vis se-diales up 1/32 or 2/.L>. l^inR iss es ^ advancsl l «l 81‘i, for just hold umhangett 10 up 2/32. Hick,^,,, mirket was fairly quiet. p„,„, p.^^n the con- liHliisIrials led tlie way upward vcrlibli' seclion was umisually iii-la eor|M>rnte trlfdliiK oa the New I active. I ■ \ . of nervous miIIIii)| (bHowliiB thei Issuance of « final jud((inent Inj Ihe itoverrimimt's l3-y«ais«ld on-iltrURt suit whlt.^ has rmulted in an oi^er that Du fA)nt divest Itself of Its 63 million shares ol OM. Du Pont was down more than a point after showing a gain of a imlot at the opening. Chrysler lost more than a polnf. Foixl easefl. American Motors was active and fractionally higher aft' cr trading on a RUCcesHlon of blocks. Prices on the American Stock Exchniig«> were generally lilghe In moderate trading. Syntex rose about a point. Also on the upsldi Te Pnntepcc Oil, Atlantic Ue-scareh, Biitlah Petroleum, Magellan Petredeum, American Beverage and Shawinlgan Water & Power. Stepan Owmleill, Mead Johnson and Signal Oil ‘’A’’ loi about a point each. American Stock Exch. .fEW YORK tAPr American atocK FIgurea after decimal pt^iita are eight! Agree on Pact at Consumers New Labor Contract Will Bo Approved on Local Leveli Soon Cohu Bl»e Oyngm Am rfy Tlg*r . 8 4 NJ Zinc . .31.1 Novo Indua . 43 Pmclflo Pet LI 14 8 pgge Her .. .11.3 Sherw Wni Ihe New York Stock Exchange JACK.SON UPl Ncgotlatore (or Oonsumers Power On. and Ihe International Utlltly Workers Union reached agreement last night on a new two year contract. ♦ A ★ The union Indicated ratification of the pact will be completed on the l(M'al level soon, llie union represenlR 5,800 rvinsuiiiers workers In M l/)wer Michigan cmmlles outside the Detroit area. Agreeniont un (he was otflelally announced nt UiW Ikin. Inst night, aliiMWt M hours after Ihe old pact had expired at nddnight Wednesday. Union workers stayed on (he job. Federal mediator Paul RIchetia and state mediator Ed Oinnors had st(‘pp1% Raydhiei 76% 76%+ %lRayth 83% 83%+ % Reich cn .3/1 29% 29% + %' Bepub Av 1 93% 93%—IVs Repub Sll 3 91' t 91% r % Revlon 1.10 7 7 Reyn Met .90 '*'**> '-®l *' JSs* SI* .^IRlclilM Oil 1.80 14 43% 43 2??*^ Rohr Corp t 8 23% 23% 5*2“ Royal Out 145d 148 38% 39% .... RoyalMcB 2 13% !3% JS*. :: _S_ "" Safeway SI 1.60 If 92 90% Pay hikes will be six cents 0% %*'*'*! I hour Tor the first year and seven " '*■ li cents the second year. Averagt* ^tralgkdH.JWde'-TMy’^ layfiSf "operational” cm-"""" "" ployes under the old contract was 21% 31% * *1 --------- M% g%- 's' I 64'% 64>4 I 33'4 34 + 39% 35%- 'll 0t*AfcP i r 811 140 iS«rSd« iiinitv 100-29.00; sheep compared last;™Pf’'^P „ week slaughter cia..« steady to, strong. I Reg Pap 1.4t 27 V *7V. i»an D Imp U 1 41V« 41%+ V. sohopi'y * ; 97% 97%^ ''il®'*’"'"* I 36 ’ 36's+ % SEabALRR 1.60 I 41 41 — '% Sears Roeb 1.40« I 25% 25%+ V, Shell Oil I.IO , 43'% 43%— % Shell Tran 70d slaughter --------- most cliolce and prime ..w lambs 18.00-20.00: 126 bead wooled lamba 20.40; good wooled lambs 17.90-10.M; and prime gbom Iambs 18.( -nd choice ehom lambs i« choice slaughter slaughter me 86 Ib. Anaconda ,50c Armco BU 3 ArmourACo 140 Antul Ck 1.60+ Aaid Oil 120 Afcbleor. 1,201 so cnoicc Biaugnwr ewes a.w+s.w. Cattle 300. Slaughter claasea itwdy; standard gteera Jb,66-23.50: utUlty mixed offerlnga 17.00-30.00; cowf W.OO-IT.OO; canners and cutters 13.00-16.00. Vealera 29 not enough W set up quotations. Sheep 100 not enough any one class or grade to set up quotations. Hogs 100---------------------' sum bey * 2 and rTS5r3’"lfl‘23S"?b'T/7S' 3 180-2M lb 16.25-18.79 : 2 a lb. 14.76.16.29; '30(MOO lb. s< .75: 40O-S00 lb, sows 12.29-13.79 > 12 00-13.50; compared last w 6. gilts and sows steady. 54 16% 16% 3 26% 26% 1 1»% 128% I 1 19‘% 19'% 36, w- %| 37%+ % Ideal Cam .80xc nil Cent 2 « ?*60 ^ la ' 93 9‘» T/i ws -igperry Rd X.12i W..T___ S^geM.50 . tIv: Unit to Run Exchange 1% ^% mTvin Event of N-Attack NKW YORK Ul’I) - Provisions for an emergency committee to run Ihe New York Stock Exchange in the r event nuclear attack on this country, has been approved by exchange bers. Under provlkions of the new amendment to the exchange constitution, If the exchange board of governors decided an attack imminent or if a quorum of the botird were nol available bee 1 attack, tlic Ixiurd functions ■' ''*1 would be turned over irtimedialejy “ ,*5|to an emergency eommlltee. Soybean Futures in Good Demand l-iiSr-i 5 56 % 56% 90%+ '- Bu«ine»B Upturn Juit 8tlMf^nyy Recovery is 1 Year Old By RAlin DAW(M>N AP BusIniim NtMsni Analyst NEW YORK (AP)-Thts hurt-9RS raoowry calebnltHi lt| Uni Mrthday this niontlt «dth tbim peopio ntlUing It an old man rI+ ix^dik. Qthara ihinlc that aftar a Hfunrnli 'or two in tha aarly wttaiM ot^tm ymr, h«'s Just rsiidy to iko soma more find stciia (o^ am. Tliey are duiared by a honithy voliinta of auto salts, Thty not* tht«l,stool mills and many maktrs of tliirabla goods have backlogs of orders to keep them going for some time. ^ A 'Sr ‘ a Total employment Is high and Ihe rule of uhemploymeni fell In January. Consumers appear willing to continue to Niiend, even If I to what they buy. Government spending seems sure lo liMToase, both for gtxKls and In governmenl payrolls. Many eeon-omlslR feel that (he momenlum of other factors of the economy is far from spent. Yet they must admit that Janu-aiy brought a fallout of dlsap-jiointing statistics. 8UOIIT DOWN TUHN Whether It was bad weather or InisInesK fatigue, Ihent were slight downlums In retail sales, iHtrson-al iiKxmie, Induslrial oul|mt. To many, primed for a continuing ad vance by exdling official pr^lc-tions, this was ao shock. But olh-it comparable to. Ihe bobble In Ihe recovery last .Sep-tomber. Here is the reasoning of those who think there should be a gotxl advance before Ihe summer lull— and then a stronger forward spurt in the fall; JOBS — Bad weather snarled outdoor activity and hampered some inside work but lotal em-l ployment fell lielow 6 per cent of-the labor force for the first time in months. . units, a gain of 31 per cent over 'lous ’yMr. induiitry opu-., link ' sales will be even higher when better wenther lures wayi. And a l^eral Reserve Board sutvey of oonsuiner Intern Uena showi more himlllea than uaual nay Uwy plan lo buy a new In January, before they course, l^nomlita m, fOrceij that historically slnrl late »r this year. HMTORY-l should still have __________ of momentum loft thia time’ — they cite inventory And they itreis that aUps In the Induatrlal production Index, In personal InoomiM, and in the length of the evrrage work week, such ns dialurbed people in January, often are due to special and temporary causes. This time It could be the teealher rather than faltering yet In the fundamental business upturn. Car Output Increases 50 Pet in Last 2 Months DFITROIT (UP!) - New cur pixKluction thus fur this year is up nearly 50 per eeni from 1961, aceording to Induslty figures. R e p 0 r I s released Thtirstlay by (he five big manufaeliirerH slttnved they hulll 1,16'l,02d with 780,242 a year ago. Produellon lor E’ebruary was about 47 per cent better than the same month In 1961 — a total of 535,797 curs againiU last yeur'i .364,.'I8.5. Daily Target Set for Steel Pact Imad m out ns many dollars „.s ^ ,1,4.1 for Contract Passes many ever and taking on a little more inslalment debt. Much of the money goes for services and soft giKids, but some big ticket Items like autos are getting more now. NEW ORDER.'? Makers of durable goods re[Kirt a rise in orders and Ihe biggst backing in two years. STE:EL — Orders and output have risen shniiily. Produellon .so far this year totals 19 million tons, compared with 11.9 million tons In the like period of 1961. The big question is how much of the ordering is hedging against ai possible strike this summer and how much is for normal u.se this spring, based on expectations of better business for the consumers themselves. The mills say (hey have enough oi-ders now to keep them busy for many weeks. AUTOS — New car sales from Jan. 1 to Feb. 20 came to 791,411 Boeing 2 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK ■ , CHICAOO, March 2 (APt—Rogs 3,500; ^ active, butchers steady to 26 higher. lOe weight. 240 lbs. and up lully 26 higher; sows steady to strong, Instances 29 higher; mostly X-2 190-239 lb. butchers co jo, ,, . .s. ------ +4 bead. at 17.15- Bullard 0-17.00 Butova .60 ■ Burl Ind ,r >; mixed 1-3 190-240 It 280-315 Iba. mixed 1-3 300-900 lb. sows i4.ou-ia.3s;, 600-600 Ihs. 13,25-14 0. jCallah Mne Cattle 300: jtalves none: fresh receipts CambB Lk .31 mostly cows: one load slaughter steers Cam^up 2.2 on offer: cows moderately active, steady; Cyt Dry 1 other classes nominally steady; load C'*” -I*® prime 1,342 Ib. slaughter steers 30,00: S*"'**’'^ * Utmiy and commercial cows 14 60-17.00; vany va i utility up to 17.00, canners and cutters " ‘'“f,' 21 23% 3.1% 23%— '+ 48 46% 48% 46%+ % KennecoH i —C_^ jKem C Ld . 14 5% 5% 5%+ U% 13% 13’% .. . . 4 26% 26% 26% + % ^ 43 17 1«% r *<»“« Ch 1.20b 1 M% f*?5 Itfv'enf^Sp'TBO 4 18% 18% 18%_ % flSrP«k * ” —«»J«—• Sunray 1.40 13 56 53H ^ ^ ^ ^ 14 24‘/a 23% 24 ^ V, ........ - t “'% 3l%* ?*;Sco°h6o“* * —.K_ T«X O Prod 60 I Kerr McGee .80 29 44% 43% 4+% + l Jex O Sul 1 .1 Kaiser Al .90 39 34% 33% 34%+- 29 29 24% 24% + !« Ut l iSJJ gtJ it Paper 1.09 it Tel & Tel ITU I 83% 33% 83%+ % I 43% 43% 43'%+ % I 85% 89% 85'%+ ■% I 35% 35V, 35% ) 24% 1 24% ? Tex P C&O 1.20 16 41] .2i5e .... 87%+ % i I 44+, 43% 44%+ 1 ! 42% 42% 42% . . > 42% 42 42 —1 I 24'4 23% 23%+ V - ... 58+4 98% ... 16 45'% 45 49 — V, 48 21% 20% 20%- Vs 41 101% WOVs 100%-!% 41% 41>%+ % J.S sw/4 19% 191' ■ 16 3T% 27Vs 27‘„- 9 40% 39% 40%+ .. 3 97% 96% 56%+ Vs 1 12% 12% 12%+ % 14 14% 5 49% 9 336, Stocks of Local Interest lulsiana Gas Co. Allied Supermaikeis Aeroqulp Oorp. Arkansaa Louis:...... Baldwin-Montrose Ch. Co. Borman Food Stores ......... Davidson Bros............... Federal Mogul-Bower Bearings Barvey Alumlum ............. Hoover BaU It Bearing ...... ^onard Refining ............ Ri 44»4 44*4— MGM 2 21 70‘'4 eS’e 70‘/8— ' ii“ife“54+.’^^ iT^pis 21 22 21% .18 54! s 53'% ---3 38%-23%- _ 3 65% 65 65% + % . 6 38% 38V. 3»%- •' 9 56Vs 5P/S ^9%+S^ 4 20%„28Vr 20'% + » a% 11% ii%- ' Y 17% 17% 17% —D— 1 14% 14% 14»%- % 4 17% ITVs 17% 18 45% 45% 45%+ % 4 54Vs 54% J...... 4 18 18 1 2 29% 28% 3 19 26-% 28% 26%- ' CHICAGO (AP) — Most Soybean futures were in good demand today in early transactions on the board of trade. 6ut grains stuck close to previous finishes in a mixed range. Dealers said the support for soybeans continued fo be short Covering. [j,-,-' ,T They said that although tenders !7^ Vs again were heavy the retenders !*JI>+ vgere relatively small, suggesting that commission firms may be holding on to sizeable stocks for processing firms.’ the fii-st several minutes. 21 iD'l ti6% ii6'-U ''’Imercial business was understood 1 43% 43% 43%1 % Export sales overnight 8 67% 67 ’ 67 “+ *% included .'si Targo of corn to the! i? 36%' 36's :S+r '* Kingdom and probably one| 14 *gs" *93” vvheat lo Israel. The latter 4 28'% 28's 2«'+T >'ilacked confirmation. 18 3V/, 37-a 17'+i-''l| • 7 23'% 23% 23+s 2 38 39 39 . 3 42% 42% 42% P SST’ % r% .,** - CHtCAflO 76/?24'% 23% 24 + '%! CHICAOO, Msrcfi i 28 38% 38% 38%+ %;grsln priett: 2 49% 49% 49%+ %' Wheat— 27 57% 5? 97 - % Mar ..... 14 39 38% 38%+ V, May Jl.... 5« 7IV4 78% 7ff%-%+Iuly » ... 2 12 13 13+ %.Bep. 15 29% 25% »%+ % Dec. 5 57% 57% 97%......\ Corn- 15 90% 90% 90% + -% Mar —"— Glass Workers Strike GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) - GlaJi zlers and other workers at seven western Michigan glass companies were on strike today in an effort to gain a 15-cent-an-hour pay raise in a new contract. PITT-SBURGH (UPI)-Chief bap gainers for the steel industry and the United Steelworkers set up a dny-by-dfiy "fargei date" beginning today in efforts to reach agreement on a basic steel contract. The lop tcaiiiH, led by chief Industry negotiator R. Conrad Cooper and USW PreHidont David J. McDonald, s^d they would resume talks this morning to eonttniie to work toward an early Ncttlement. ThP March 1 deadline for an agreement In principle, set when he sessions opened E’ch. Il, ame hi.stoi7 Thursday along iomc of the optimism that had preceded- it V------- -—’ ’ Cooper, iii response to a question Thursday whether a new target date had been set. said: ‘‘Tomorrow.’’ Honor Local Manager Burt Gold, general manager of Ward’s Home Outfitting, 48, S. Saginaw, was presented an award of merit today from the Kroehler Manufacturing Co. for outstanding merchandising of the firm’s furniture line. In a Joint statement Cooper and McDonald said, “We are perfectly- aware that this date of March 1 has been given a lot of signifleanee all during our negotiations, have been disenssed only In terms of self-imposed target dates rather than inflexible deadlines.’’ - Despite the passage of the original target date, there still was hope that a basic pact covering 430,000 steel workers would be reached by this weekend. Plenty Cuban Cigars Here in U S. for '62 General Motors aeeounled (or more dun U |Rir cent of ^he tW«>-monlh output. The giant firm built StH,.12a ears, e+mipured with tZH.OSK IiinI year. Ford Motor Co. jiixxluced .l.'W,-2tK curs In the period, up from 225,426 a yimr ago. A ' A A Oirysler re|xirted two-month production of 92,304 care, compared with 74,211 last year. * ★ Anierienn Motors Corp, said II made 78,839 Ramblers, compttred with 14,190 for Ihe same period in 1961 — a 78 per cent Increase. Hludeluker - Packard, crippled by a six-week strike, was Ihe only (Inn to show a drop in pnaliietlon. It made 6,334 ears (Ills year, down from g,SJff a year ago. made 302,186 cat's, compan'd with 194,646 last year; E'ord 152,060 versus 108,687; Chrysler ,37,756 against .37,290; American Motors 37,461 compared with 20.164. - * ♦ AMC within an eyelash of claiming third place from Chrysler in car pi-oduclion. According to the reporis, Chrysler made only 295 more cars than American Motors Iasi month. 'Revenooers Lock Doors oi Green Stamp Co. DETROIT liTI — Michigan has seized I lie property of Merchants Green Stamp Co. ’ Slate Revenue Department lii-Vestlgators Jacked; the—ftmHT"" doors and begun Inventorying its merchandise after a warrant charging merchants with nonpayment of,^ne $4,900 In sales taxes was issued Thursday. Sidney D. Boodman, district director of the Revenue Depart’s sales tax division said the state moved in just before a group of creditors fjled an involuntary bankruptcy petition against the trading stamp firm. Grain Prices J 3 (AP) Opening . 2.16% Mar. ......1.-33 V+ 'Va El&Pov 1.4(1 I. 37% 37%- +, WMirortKr"— —w— %'8ep. Dec....... % Oats— .^jaar___ i!13% Dec’, i May Lard (drums]— ..........8.57 By JOHN T. CUNNIFF AP Business News Writer NEW YORK-The aroi o{ Cuban cigars apparently will te tickling palates In drawing room, dub and restaurant for some time to come despite President Kennedy’s embargo on Ha-ana’s goods. Havanas cigar smokers, at any rate, ai# remaining-surprisingly 1 10% 10%+ Vsiwaatg . I Warn Lam 156a I Wn Bancorp I V« wn Un Tel l.« 23 36% 36'/< ......— * Bk 1.40 5 29V+ 29'/a ____________ • “ -- 36% 38% 36%+ • 31% 31%. V +»+• 48'% 49'% 3 54 % 94% 94'%— % 8 83’% 83% |3%+ Monaan CK lb 23 49% 49V4 49<%— % Westg Bl 1.20 Mofit D Ut 1.40 1 35'% 35'% 35'% iWhirf Cp 1.40 Mont Ward 1 II 33% 33% 33% Whit* Mot 2 Motorola 1 4 82% 82% 82%+ %lwUsoniiCo 1.8C XT WoolwoWt 2.60 . „ , 1 9^;;; 97% .7-^ *•” v**’" 171 4 15% 15 15%+ % . •—I-?- Ig 1.20 17 116% 115% 115%.-2% X*'*, a% i;-: ^—1. * 1 Sb a T 9 4 100% 100% 100" Nat Dlstm 1.20 19 27% WV, rn/. . - n Gen 3 7% 7% Nat Gyps 2b 13 54% 94% VelUngton 1 Ve^ltagtc^ P _ „ . - Seag 1.20a Dome Mtn .70 16 72(Dow Chem 1,60 " ! Drees Ind T20 (Font l.SOe • Duq Lt 1.24 Bat* rM R*coid al Ortnedtick- Co _ AUeg Pir sya . 479 « 3-13 4-2 Eaton Mlg«1.80 ElRondAS 1.20. ElBMu* .lie ' Enter El .« 1 46'% 45% 46%.. . 1 25 25 25 +- Vt I 68 67'% 67V»-1 ) 31% 31% 31'%— % 5 246 244 244 -1* ) 30% 30% 30%— % 4 81% 31% 31% ■ 11 5% 5% 97%. 5 41% 41% 41% ... 13% U% 13%+ % % 'Nat Lead 7Se % Nat Steel 3 New Eng El l.U I NY Central /. NVCh&SL 2 vJNYNHAHart NY Sltlpbd *"a M Pv 1.80 19 95?“■•» ,sr8^'»oKI 8 25% 29% 2S%— % . ?.•*“ ™ dividend* In 1*1 Tit! T^, ^ Uhi* mrm rimuirI ofUhtoMur >z dlvUtflOdji fa) Ui9 forccoins ftonuibl disbummenu bas^ on Treasury Position - Th« Cl compared ■ *Kb. ; . I 9,617, Property Tea Rale Up LANSING OB — ‘Die average E"™. property tax rate in Michigan ^ creasetl 49 cents to 134.71 per II,* 000 of aawMcd valuation last yter, the stato tesrt! pi as^ssors rspost-cd today. r N Oa* 1.50 10 44’ S ilr ii statutory limit. rate, are remaining-surprisingly however^ thinking has unconcerned about thjL tradeJian, ^ ^ ftBS^oome manufacturers, with the notable exception of those in Tampa, Fla., are equally as calm But taking no chances, they a DuPontHaslOYears to Sell GM Stock FUtrol Firestone Tb" F*UmartP 2.871 a—Also extra or extras’ b—Xniiual raui plus atoek dividend. d-DecIared or uld 10 44% 44»4 44^% “ IF' plu* etotk dividend, e—Oeclaredi 15 32'% 31% 32%+ % 2” ex-dl*trlbutton date.] — I CHICAGO (UPI) — Barring i'.7w'.48,reversal by a higher court, t t’^ *4 half-century association of the Du Pont clan of Delaware with General Motors Corp, wilL^come to an end before 19W. ' — • M) •X'^fldend diffo y-44qtlid!SJS^^ Low 711 dividend. x-dl*-Ex I «v* a»m„^+=--------r-— right* XW—WIHwut ' m-, ™vj-in.. 7731 tOl.4 SM ^ 7*.0 100,1 00.3' 17.1 «.< j jYearAge 70.7 IM 17.9 Bt;7 -S3.t ;[mi-«2 dllgh 7K7 101.7 I0| 97J 91.4 99.9 .J4l .... 90.1 S7:t 75J 01.4 11.9, - (Fla » * L L!2 Ihgod Pair 90b PMC tip 1.40 I 4»4a 48% 49% ...... 32% 32' 5 48% 40% «V4+ % ,3 24 MH.FORD - A nonpmfll Indui* jrlHl d«veU>|>m«iit tfW|>oi«»loii will bn tomwl h«r« lo wtlriml Inddalry to lh« am and ^ nupport «xlat» Ing Induatrlal tlrma. Organlaatlon of iho corporation will b« Iho Job of Hut Mllfbrd Owmbor of Conmnorco Induatrlal Ilevolopment Conunlt|ee, Oiana Mlabllahod, howavar, Iba Firemen Save Herman Galle, 80, Sad Over Age, Sets Fire to His Home IMUY CITY -t An 8«-yt>ar-old linlay City man was nearly suc-cesstul In his appm-eiit attempt to commit suicldo yesterday afternoon by setting fire to his house and shutting himself up inside. In critical condition in Hurley Hospital, Flint, with burns mainly on his head and hands is Heitnan Uullc of 555 N. Almont Ave. According to f,apeer County -■^lualffltLJfiBlilmi- ilia was N|M>ndent over the Inactivity brought about by his advanelng years. Ho wanted to go out and shovel snow at alHait 1:30 p.m., they said, but his wife wouldn’t All of a sudden, lire elderly man said, “I’m going to end it all and when I gel through there will be nothing left!’’ He rushed out to a shed bt'hind the house, got a five-gallon bucket and filled it with fuel oil. Then, in front o:( his wife’s horrified eyes, he spilled it all over the rugs. She ran out screaming, ’’He’s going to set the house on fire and lock himself inside.’’ She went to a neighbor's house and tvhlle a call was being placed to the sherlfl’s department, puffs of smoke \ver»- Seen billowing from the house. Wholellbarted support of the development corporation, which will encompass the entire Huran Val-ley School DIsIrici, was given by members of the Milford Chamber of Cmnmen'c aty meeting yesterday. \ While (he industrial corporation and the industrial committee will each be a separate unit, the two will work In close association to eliminate duplication of work and to provide greater assistance in adviuiclng the Industrial development program for tho urt*a. James M. itahi, ehalmian of the chamber’s Industrial (smi-mlttee and manager of the Mil-lord branch of Hirst Federal Havings and l,oan Asaodatlon of Oakland, said the next step In forming the corporation would bo the eb'cUon of a lM>ard of dinwtors. I’s expected Ihera will be 2.5 directors, ” said Rahl, “and It will be up to them to elect the officers of the corporation.” UKE ROf)IIK8TER UNIT “Our plan is very much like le one In Rochester, where a poration was formed and already has promoted a new Industry, the Rochester Aerosol Col-poratlon, he added. “Not much in the way of funds wRI be neidid, but with It a great deal can be accomplished. The money would bo used lor operational purposes only.’’ Finances would come froin^cy:^n,jnfO^ Taxpayers h and would amount to about $300. “When larger amounts are Involved the corporation would only act as a liaison between the investor and the manufacturer who wants to locate in the area.” “Much of the paper and work will Ih» done by the I trial corporation,’’ said Ki foot “The prime concejrn of the corporation will be to find a suitable area that can be used for an in-dustrisil park,” Rahl added. FOR BETTER CHANCES ‘We already know our chances for success will be better if we have an area that can be concentrated with industry because services can be provided for all at cheaper rates. ” ‘l^caI-i»niBg.-boards and real-The rmlay aTy fire depattmehti tors will benefit the corporation was summoned.' Firemen had difficulty rescuing Galle because his body was blocking the. back door. The doors were not locked. They took him out on the back porch and found no sign of life at first, they said. He responded, however, when a resuscltator used and then was rushed to the hospital. The one-story house was gutted by the flames. No estimate has been made of the damage. Sets Troy Meeting TROY — A new square dance group in ’Troy will hold its inii-tial meeting at 7:30 p.m. Friday, March 9 at Johnson-Niles School on Squwe Lake Road. Herb Rose of Warren will instruct and call the dances for the group, .sponsored by the Troy Branch of the Metropolitan Detroit YMCA. Board member Mrs. Robert Bevier of Booth Road, Troy, said . a number of area residents have expressed interest in organizing the square dance group, and that others are welcome to join them. Information about square dancing and other newly^orgMized ^YMCA activities in the Troy arta may be obtained by phoning Mrs. Bevier or Bill Beck at the Birmingham YMCAj^ which jponsora th^ newTTYoy extension" branch. psny. Willing to accopt rmpon-sibility. i a t i I y adaptable to contact with piiUie and clianti. Familiar with hiring, aifimating, buying and foiling. Marrind, 33 yeara old. If you aro looking for a dopandablo addition to your tiac Piwt. Box No. 6 to arrange Pine Knob PTA to Meet Monday, Elect Officers CLARKSTON—The annual election of officers will be the highlight of Monday’s meeting of the Pine Knob Elementary School Parent-Teacher Association. The program, starting at 7:30 p.m., will also include the showing of the film, “Sociable Six to Noisy Nine,’’" concerning children in this age range. Refreshments will be served. • iininvi House Dems fo Fight Bills hr 19th District LANSING, OB - House Demo-crats have agreed to fight two Republlcan-siHtnaored bills to create a 191 It Omgresslonal DIsIrtcl for Michigan. Rnp. Joseph J. Kowalski, ll-lle-IniK, lloiioe liemoeniMc Koor leader, said DeoHicrata agreed In eauciw Hiuraday to liiie up solidly agalMat ineaaurea apmi- Beadle's plan, already past Senate, woul^ form u new district out of Southern Macomb Cnunty mid Southeastern Onklaml Cnunty. Th# fnnln loutare of the Fnlka Bill woorid carve a now district out of St. Clair and fJipeer (muntles and eaitern Gehesee Ctmnty. A House vote on the measure has ln>eii pul to Mareh H. k V. I 'Both are plane to deprive people of their rightful voice in coii-grttSNlonol elections," he said. 'Neither one does anything about tho big population disparily In the present dlNtrlclK.” Open Building for Retarded Gov. e would veto II II II < DISCUSS BENEFIT - McrriLee Ohrstrem oI Oak Park luid John Lorang, socrctai-y of the Walled Lake Optimist Club, review the program for the production “The Money Saucer," a space-agc comedy lo be preiitented at 8 p.m. Mui’cli 12 at the Walled L<»ke Senior High eantlin Prsti Phato School. The show is being sponsored by l|ie local Optimists to raise funds to support the Walled Lake Little League baseball teams. Mer-riLee, 19, Is affiliated with Variety Internationul Productions, Inc., Houston, Tex., the firm producing tlie play. Would Help Pay for Sewer NORTHVILLE - Opening of new Infirmary Building housing 220 handicapped, retarded patients was announced today by Dr. Robert 1. Jaslow, superintcndenl of the Plymouth Stale Home and Training School, the stale’s newest facility for the mentally retarded. Admission of patients began Jrcs-loixiay, and will continue into June when the building is expected to be completely occupied. TOWNSHIP e will be asked sometime before the end of the year to subsidize the initial cost of constructing new water and sewer lines to promote industrial development. while the averageJstalc equalized valuation for child in the state is about JiSJWO the valuation in the area is only $9,600 and is continuing to drop due to a lack of tax support from industry. Under the proposed plan, recommended by tho township's Light Industrial Committee and approved by the Township Bouid, up lo one mill would be levied to finance the extension of sewer and watel" lacillties into the western industrial area of the township. Voters will be asked, probably In August, to provide the collateral required by the Federal gevHwneBt te guarantee the bonding program that would be needed to finance the project. The overall program would cost slightly-Jess- than one mlHion dtd-lars. Township officials noted that it probably would not be necessary to ever collect the full mill any one year but only that portion needed to cover the principal and interest payments on a federal loan. INDUSTRY NEEDED In a report on its findings during its 1% years’ existence, the Light Industrial Committee wrote: “Taxes on residential property in Farmington Township will increase considerably if we do not take action to help stabilize them with industrial development in those areas which our master plan provides for such use." The. need for more light industrial development iia that po^ ti«n of the township zoned tor this ] JUDITH A. CHAPMAN A July 14 wedding is planned by Judith Ann Chapman and John P. Boyer announce the bride-elect’s parents Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Chapman of 412% 14-Mile Road, Walled l^e;. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mra- Phfllip A. Boyer of Detroit and the late Mr. Boy- When Piggy Bonk Pundt Mount U|F-Put them to work in sound securities. A piggy bank Is a good place to start saving. Trouble is, money can^t grow there. Sizable funds should go where they can earn and grow. NEPHLER-KINGSBURY CO. ' FE 2-9117 ALL ORDERS EXECUTED AT. REGULAR COMMISSION RATES '/'Pondac'a Oldatl lurmtmml Firm" " •18 COMMUNITY NATIONAL lANK IL06. pressing, it was Stated In the n-port. “It is being found impossible, however, i to attract the Industry without water and sewer facilities dentlal growth' It will become more and more difficult to maintain the preaent operating incume per child without making tho local lax more M'verc, the c mlttee’a report stated. Township offlcjnls anheipale that much of the revenue that is brought in by industry ipnnectlng onto the water and seWer lines would pay for the bonding program. \ As a new industry liook^cd the facilities it would be required to pay proportionate sjiares b( the cost for both, the main lines already const meted and the needed laterals. Michigan Week Unit Sets Student Editorial Contest LANSING Ur> — Michigan's high school students were offered a chance today to win a one-year tuition scholarship at the college of their choice by writing an editorial on the constitutional convention. The contest, part of the 1962 Michigan Week observance, will produce a winner in each of the state’s 83 counties. Those entries be Judged In statewide competition to determine the grand prize winner. ‘This contest should he ex-wofthwhlle for both Michigan Week and (he oonven-Ron,’* said Herbert Daverman of Grand Rapids, chairman of (he Michigan Week Program Board. up will l>e announced at a constitutional luncheon in Lansing May 26. Runners-up will he presented with copies of (he new constitution, autographed by delegates. Daverman said cditoriald will be imited to 500 words Or less, with May 10 set as the deadline for entries. Awards will be presented to the late winner and runners-up by Gov. Swainson- Chairman of the luncheon meet- ‘We h(^ to arouse more interest in the new constitution ammtg otir young people, as well as to make them more aware of,^ the many advahlages of our great state.’’ URGES COOPERATION Davemian said he hoped news- Plymouth State Home Gets New Infirmary for the Handicapped MlchlKati, whlcli plcktxl up lltc new district us a result of population gains In the last decade, will a congressman from the state at large If (ho legislature fulls to agree *00 a reupportlon-ment plan, i AREA UNIOUCIIED Some observers predicted Upper Peninsula Democrats In the Bouse might go for one of the GOP plans since both leave their area untouched. Annllier hill, sponsor<«d by Sen. Carlton II. Morris, R-Knlamaioo, and favored by Hwalnson, would HMluee U, P. representation from ■loe Collins, Democratic state chairman, blasted the Beadle, plan Thursday as “clearly aimed at depriving the citizens of Oakland County of their right to' greater representation in Washingfpn.’’ It would give 600,000 Oakland County residents one cottgressman but allow two congressmen for 700,000 others, he said. Tell PfgliiBmory-JRkms of M53 kbIow said, “will brovliln mnne " Jaslow said, “will provide the walUng Ust. Patients will be admitted directly from the waiting list and by transfer from other Mate facilities. “Transferring patients from oth-state institutions will create vacancies which will also be filled Trom the waiting list.’’ LANSING (ilV-The State Highway Department has announced preliminary plans for a $2.6-mil-lion pro.1ect to widen MSS in Warren and Center Line in Southern Macomb County. :>re arc over 1..500 patients awaiting admission to state institutions for the retarded, Dr. Jaslow pointed out. Hils Is the third patient building opened at the Plymouth State Home. The first. The existing five-lane pavement between Eight Mile Road and 12-Mile Road would be widened to seven lanes and the lour lanes divided highway between 12- and 14-Mile roads would be widened lo six lanes of divided highway. The second, a 220 bed unit, was opened in November 1961 when 320 patients were transferred from the Farmington Untr"*Whietr"viw closed due to budget cutbacks. The institution currently has a capacity of 490. Marilyn Wood Engaged to Robert D. Morgan Announcement is madg of the engagement of Marilyn Joyce Wood Robert D.‘ Morgan of 448 ,N. Court St., Lapeer, son of the late and Mrs. Jesse T. Morgan of Clarkston. The bride-elect is the daughter ______ of Mrs. Charles F, Martin of Ypsi- Ing will be George^Rotmiey, a vice- lanti and the late Dr. Efiiest Wood, president of the convention. 'An April ? Wedding is planned. At Rochester PTSA Meeting Tell Hospital Plans ROCHESTER — Steps being taken in planning for construction of the Rochester unit of Crittenton General Hospital \vere outlined for lo offer trt print-so™* 200 local ciilzcn.s here last ^ iners during Michigan Weei, May! One of the main points brought Port Huron feyed foi; IRS Center LANSING (H) — The legislature, ter what happened to the resolu- that the State Health Department has approved our sewage disposal system, our sewer problems are nearly resolved.” can’t agr^ on whether to back a move to bring a federal internal revenue facilitity to Port Huron. The Senate approved a resolution supporting the proposal Tliurs-day. But an hour-long furof in the House ended with adoption of an amendment to a similar resolution asking thp fedeM government to locate the planned data processing center somewhere in Michigan. The change camfe after several lawmafcera reported that Detroit, Mount <3emeng, Pontiac, i^ttcAsoh and probab^"4»er cities want the federal facility, too. tions. I don’t think they pay any attention to our resolutions in Washington,'’ he said. “They: have greSt big wastebaskets down there." Federal authorities have indicated they plan to establish a data processing center employing about 1,500 perstms in the Midwest. At least two, other states besides Midiigan' have indicated an interest iri befag chosen'for the site. Port Huron, suffering , from heavy unemployment, offered to bidid a 200,000-square-foot office building on a 3^acre site and I lease It to the federal govern- If this approval had not been given, the sewer line!would have had to be run over two miles to the nearest sewer. , j lease ii lo ine leoerai govern- Perry W. Greene.lRgGrand|ment |w $1 a yw. If it-ir chosen ^ipids, said it really didn’t mat-1 for tiie procesdng center. Arihoiir's CompfirB TKICK SLICED BACON ATLAS SUPER MKT. BALDWIN at WALTON discnssioti after presentation by hospital officials was that approval has been given This is not an unforeseen savings lx?cause plans had been made for a reasonable connection, he pointed out. \ •Water has never been a problem," Sara D. Eugene Sitery, Crittenton Hospital administrator, •afid Methodists Set Prayer Vigil on Ash Wednesday TROY — The Big Beaver Methodist CSiirch will begin the l,enten vlth an all day Prayer: \figll on Ash Wednesday. The sanctuary will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m for those who wish to ccane in f p*r fvAnnmni Wfii ......... 8*,.IBS u?'^wiTrV*in*r!lhi'i)ii>ly**r»t it»l• •MDiy M«Ui»ii<'^ iiAit rti««*, *i>« »i ^ SA'LAKV TKAINI I'. I.INCl olfll* tl» NnUUIUll IMHIIIIIH'I' ii|i«)> (V»!itili(iiiii»i Write mn i|u>i Itli'iaiuni to P»iill«( P 0 Him ;iA)A ^■"SELLING AHtllVf tt Ui, Wftimii lililieiil «r'?t "iViv ”'yn« one"" Umuil!l”^f •plUnt «iut funt )>*|< inniit iucfemifill men never sold before joining our nnllonelly ViiSJx, I 'A iCmsm TIUJtKi;i^ diiveri Muei be wilmw u Irnvel lOl' IvAKNlNt'.^ In the djlvioA protMelM. We Sfievriteiii " tiiyr duly "8r»{> ,.. J»L.SJ*!!Oj*«i___ WAMTEDCLAea A WE lEAt> K-A3»S?=‘.E Hlirlw AMOO 7 wflfynWurVl---------------- KAHN HiXTHA MONUV IM irOIIH •litre llnie by beint t Mtiidie AN KHPRniKNCKII UK A I) I V I ojwrtu^. iMpentl netUly ■tiuii. I NK*:nKI> WffH i own irtneporltltoo for J ehilrlren. | dtyt wbite molber worka. vlulii- i Uv of Wlllltins l.tke Nil tiiil I ««•■' • I"" I mahV btri'Kic 'i-o i.IVk tN ! ric j mi A SSI STAX 1 MAN3\(iH< j /inrHv *or* <•0hl•^^ ' NAIION'N^^ ^ / \1 lUiMK^ oPttil Atrtir~ E Jt PkhT- wmt~'raANfflFoi«- lU Ct«i Etke Rotda. Wblle un V.Tri'A uTfiT EXPERIRNCKD WAITRIDM. Apply Htwtlltn Utrdent RttUurtnl, Ml Ortnit Htll Rd.. Holly, fciaWiTi^^WOMaF T«R~H008B. r"i I'rATriitWIlEWaMlf FOtS ,.nki.ig pt.ebU.b..^ l, AlilU . r:: n\n\> or^Wman #6h iJohI* hnu«i*«urk Mu»l Hv«i in. No i|un> i.eke fJotd, off Ooniti^e£„e Rutd. l>ly el l)3« Auburn 11,1 Ho pbinie iitlla pletae (iiUl.i. (XMIK Nroiirn expkri- Vnred Aiioir In lieraoo Wmitina Inlve III j'flio MAi Ai nuoh l.tke SiiS...... lof!Jo»*aM . iVAN'fED ifAWi r,'Toii;trrffomri& ... ....‘8W.«"j,t 11 CASH ‘^w«o?b Jirb?by.w?„r».rx Bust ros;\^”x:XyTum.iii HiiIihi l.tkt iiotd off CommtKie lAnuBw y<<>H Whni1»^ g5C‘’wa:^.*fery' I A nT-K »>Tfi?MBByFr oWi^ mri. muel be tbie to lype. tkle .............“eXna ibtn iviMini $tnflc«~Sii|i|ill9« II n^1^ I Ml t noMffy BAflYHlTTB: lnou!«r woi'kii. \ And BIU«b«U) 1. iioimi':Kii;i4;i*i rier*t lefereneea*' Ponlltr Pre I'WAiTIIEim pim EVtimniin p. run or lit,I llme._ No Mundtya '' ' Unro"" l.tke Ituti'la, _ j WOMAN TO LIVE 'in, ilO(^ _ ; I tmn ‘ _ I*: ' WANTiai 'oENTAi, AAPiafANf ............. KM rMM ,, WANTKli KiXPItolKNifRii WAtf- lirW'iTKi^Arti, UiJi'!«„....... •uiimM Strvic* WORK (H)AIlANi ........ ■ilKn’AiuTchlldren g clothing. PE. M______________________________ Income Tax Service 19 CORNER PIKE and MILL SJ8. FE 4-riP3 If Ml—*!:-*— rNCOME TAX, BOOklCEKPlNG, Notary »3-»6 average. FE 8-3878. 5*U, .Second_________ "TiTYOUR HOME or' MINE long Moving and Trucking _____22 1ST CAREFUL MOVING. rates. UL 3-38W. 838-3818._ aTIJOVINO BERVlCfe. RKASON- «II38. 3 - ROOM, PRIVATE ENTRANCE and bath. in N. teldgrapb. ROOM - kifCHirTAND bath My furnlshad - freahly Id — heat lurnlabed --jaraied bedrooms — laundry illltles - uhlldren waloome — decorated SLATER'S 83 N, PARKE 8T Doys FE 4-3Mfl Nlghts_FE 4-8137 3 hOdMFNEFR~YMCA. ALL PRI*' _yste._PE 4Un8^^_____t „ 3 ribOMB AND BATIL UTILl¥iE8. CoUJIle^^oiily 883-3«e7^ioy __ 3 n6oM8.“'p(ifVATE DATii. NEAR '^Jir ' fkJtyirta^V.,--. W^. ViyyfWAlifTwve.-wrvytilNA^yS,^ ‘ArJU»-_ MODKRM IN EVERY DETAIL lilfinAB»r, I8*^aiu?k‘* XL. M. i ■ 'gtiuSrASS , Rorni':.stivR,\ Hawlnglitm__ WK.ST SUyURHAN ja®\gv^land 3180 caas Lake Road __8«8U!IW $9,500 6oW«T5WrOFFlCBTil*ACB. *P-proalmatal^ E300^at|. «. lloor*^*Woal*”?or doctor! JfanUal. I'lBDROOM.’npTR T nUliad,. MA 8-80(10. (:7lUij>HkN W'li:i.cOME.' clean S badroom. motlerii. FE 4.7383^ kVEDO flAkBOR, ON CAM LAKE. Year around 3 bedrooms, gas IUauTTbedroom home, au-tomaUo oil furnaoo Rent Houiet, Unfurnithed 40 my or business offloes. Reaso-il(i let«e. Brewer Ueal Kstnte 40HKPII F. REHZ, BALE8 MOR, FE 4-8181 Eves. FEJ-0833 MP rent -r“B3dJbXE TtaoM oftloe suite, psiieled walls, lots of light. Baoohd floor. W-Lawrence Bt Sea Oanaral Prlnt-tiig fc Oftloa, Bupply for detalla. OpvSck FOR of jjarklnf Butimu roadT"Pliona' FE 3-3^3: OFFIcinRrfLDtNa, 1483 BALIj-■ Ave., OR 3-3888,______ 49 Altenijoii. Retired fe-iSfYife'S 81.W0 down, 870 month. Waterfront Coay 1-bedropm, Modem, 87,880. 8800 down. Dorothy Snyder Lavender 1 bedroom. 0A8 HEAT, COU-pla and child. 3800 Williams near Pontiac Orive-fn. OR 3-4773. 3-BEDRCX>M MODERN ON OVL- 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX Automatic heat — Full bi WILL DECORATE 175 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 _s« East Elvd. R.iat Valencia ■I hreb-bedroom brick new'-er style home, tile bath, basement. oil heat. $3o month. Imme- t SaleHeuiei^ 2 WEST 8UBUBHAN HOMES, 3 bedrooms, 1% baths g*m*e»-Nice lots. Waoltop^roads. Xrl-level rick alum, oomblnatlon. Also rick W-level. Close to schools, lelson Bldg. Co. OB 3-0131 itBEDROOM. HURON OABDEN8. • — down psymeut. FE 8-1873. .Ibedboom ranch ' Immedlste possession. No credit Check. „Bu.mr iww g«rag«. g«N i, M«r«h»U n«»r Au- ■' pace: REALTOR OR 4-0438 BUILDER COLORED 3 Bedroom Homes "Q" DOWN NO COSTS NO NOTIIINC Of?THia*CHANCE OF A LIFETIME Over 30 locsUont to choose from del St 838 Franklin lekdtys and Sundays 1:30-0 ■ Open Evei^___MLB^Member I r APARTMENT WATER- I FE B-348«.'FE 3 light HAULING. BASEMENTS Clean up. Reasonable. 4-4362. _________________ Pointing & Decorating 23 18T-CLA88 PAINTING, DECORAT- Hlei, couple only. 87 Park Place. 4-ROOM UPPER NEAR DIXIE Hwy. $88 mo. MAple 8-234' COLORED- 3 ROOMS AND B. 4-BEDR06m HOUiE, FE'^*4-iaM*'weekdays! EE 4-0713 nights and weekends._________ -ROOMS. BASEMENT. iS, will Uke 81.800 for *3,m i WEBTQWW REALTY__ Why Rent? Buy for Less 3-Bcdruuin Ranch FACE BRICKFRWT GAS heat ” ™ LARGE LOTS $100 Bonu.s To the First 10 Buyers y\TTF.NT10N! Work gusrani FE 4-7140. ------------ AAA PAINTING AND DECORAT-■ - 28 years exp. Reas. Free cs-ates Phone UL 2-1388. _ a 3'ilOOM unfurnished AP" 865 and 860. 38 8. Edith. __ i-3141. aparTments, furnished i unfurnished. 880 to 880 a mon Pontiac Lk. r- 3 ROOM and I f. Free estimates. FE ETOWA ENGINE REBDILDERB 8 CVLINDER-8U0 Ocyllnder—8M This tncludee valve grinding, rod bearings main bearings, cam bearings, r 1 n g i, plM, timing chain, gaskets, oil filter, labor. AU en^es out and degraased. All work guaranteed — free tow-inc. 11 lU. at steyenaon. Royal ' EEBDILT MOTORS No numey down—34 moa. to pa} Motor Ekchango ^ 401 8. Saginaw _FE 3-7431 TOOR sanding - WITT PE 8-3733 , - WATERLOX - ..... Apply Personnel Dept. Mr. Jack \Vhitlow Darly Between 8 and INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR BILLS SR., FLOOR plasTERInO FREE ESTIMATES ULL8 i _______C W88.__________ :L COOPER FLOOR SANDING, Bb.. guar. Free eet. OA 8-3881. R. O. SNYDER FLOOR LAYINI^ Plastering Venice PLASTEBiNO AND REPAIRS i }.-wp„i|,p. intervicw.s a’ •s« 'Pst Lee. FE 2-7822. l ' “ able upon reipiest - INTERIOR ieneral Hospital Are le 2 rooms, basement, cl Id warm. FE 2-8770. ONE VACANCY Clean, comfortable, quiet, nicely furnished 3-foom, Suitable for sli>- 3le person or couple. Cflose to owntown. reasonable rent with utilities furnished. Reference -qulred. No children or pets . —tpointmen* newly redecorated. I ’ TS rooms NEAR WALTERS LAilE. 880 a month. FE 8-2387.______ rooms, f BR(X)KLyN 8UBD1- •Pat Lee, FE 2-7822. 8T1M/ EM 3-0163 1 lil- cm"'‘8K PAINTING AND DECORATING - . Home Improvement loans at low I bank rates and oonvenler* Boauty Shops EDNA'S BIAOTT SALON PermanenM 84.80 Shampoo and Wave $1.75 KEYS »-3287. jm 70 Chamberlain Boats—Accessories UyrOU DEMAND TOE Bl^ evinrude* motors BRUNSWICK: BOATS ORUMMAN It OLDTOWN CANOES ALUMINUM AND WOOD DOCKS tee-nee trailers Your Evlnrude Dealer Harrington Boat \\'ork,s fha~terms' Telegraph Bd FE ^8033' Licen^fMMiders^ JILDIND SERVICE I Cabinets, Additions FE 4-6808 Building Modernization _______ Islng. C ____e Work. Nothing ______ PAUL GRAVES CONTRACrriNO Free Estimates__________OR 4-18U COlltPLETE MOD ERNIZAHON aervice. Residential and comraer-«dal. All work guaranteed. FHA terms. Licensed—bonded—Insured Guinn’s Construction FE 6-8132 COMPLETE BUILDING AND REt-modeling. Small Jobs done imm dlateiy. F—- — Bldg, Co., WALL PAPER STEAMERS DRILLS, POWER SAWS 883 J08LYH FE * FE 8-2762 or FE 8-2763 1 to 8:30 LI 2-7327 or LI 2-4677 after 7 p.m. _____Westown Realty_ ANNETT Near -Longfellow School Lot or car accepted as dn. feme. *Lot 80™' 160 fronts $7.50 Down, Near Wisner Newly decollated 8 rm. bungalow, new kitchen, glassed and screened porch. Base-me^nt, HA heat. Vacant. Franklin KnolI.s Brick ranch, 3- bedrms.. 2 fllll ceramic baths, 3 fireplaces. family rm. 13x10. garage. Upper Long Lake, Privileges High dollar paid for furniture and -‘■"-incea. Airport Rd. OR 3-0661 LET Us BUY IT OR SELL IT FOR YOU. OXFORD 3 ROOMS, NEWLY DECORATEDj, -~4Ua.-baths---oale'Th>oriC“'"^’^ walls; stove, refrIg., heal . water furnished. 683-1042_____ 3-EDROOM APARTMENT, WEST Bloomfield area, reasonable ren‘ for part-time caretaker. Reply b Box 86 Pontiac Presa. 3-BO(m CORNER APARTMENT, near schools and truisportatio-Stove and refrlg, Included. Co •--t Mrs. Hollenback. ™ •«“ HOMES FOR Or Will Sell PONTIAC AREA ISaUTIPUL RANCH HOME —J bedroom and family room. 1**S Lake Oakla^ - shopping. ,u...slOD. Prlva.. dock. Call OR BY OWNER —^'KXCBLLENT CON-■“tloo — Clean. 4 large roonis Id bath. FuU'byement. New 3-ir Karaao. 8300 down. FE 8-8370, ODD LOTS e removal, trimming. Get ...... —g-O'fls. Plywood, ail six ■ estimates. Nelson i ^ 3-8191. Cobinet Making ALUMINUM STEP AND EXTENSION LADDERS*, Wboiesale and Retail! AVIS CABINET SHOP, 1570 Opdyke Roand laiifo |irt. r*uU prl(i» ♦11,100 on 1"HA term*. OulHtandiiiif 5 rooms Tliln woijilorfil hdmt «Uo iinnr Pontlko Motor lint i boilruonit. gnrng*. Iiud All oxotllunl nimllng gunr Imo will uiuv* you in lhl« Colored A reoomtlllonod homo t|irauih- i’lld k * wklliout '^bk'»«m«nt tbit could bo UnOd ko on liioome, OK Uilii bkobmont It not mi lor »n nddltlonkl tklully. ♦DUO down, tnd ♦15 k month, movot you In. ^ K. J. (Dick) VALUE!" Kcftltor EE 4-3!531 345 OAKLAWP AVg. » TO « KAMPSEN KI'AI.TOK - BIJII.DKK Let’s Trade Houses House tmd One Acre irytlor l.ocktcd' In Clkrknlon ki kxpranwky, -Ith eiipkn- Drayton Plains Dandy two bedroom blinlk-low. bealilKul tile bulb, atioamllned lutchen. btte-mcnf. recrekMon room. 'r'."g'."‘'prred‘'?tr,'.r ♦!!?;. • GAYLORD cluJos^ washer a lot For ♦11,760, I Call FE ♦-♦«•]. 40 ACRES for only ♦6,000 Close to Pontiac. Vacant land, call FE 8A603, THREE-BEDROOM Jkncb home with 80x160-11 tot for tlO.SOO Gas healJ©airTuV 2-2821 lor any fur-__.-tiler Iriformatlon. FOUR-BEDROOM HOME with oil WardOrchardsr Roman Brick ^raugtmunbir|hprS««*jlu^^^ Tuifl PONTIAC, PKEStS, FRIDAY, MAHCIt 2. 11^2 THIRTY Tllk^f Humphries O MORtOAQK CCMITBi Jue< walkST** ‘ " PACE NO MONEY DOWN w 8ft;rpfis2*& glipotk from, JftgDEl^OlPBN OAllt IM ■J'SiSLiffli HIITER “sr. ■uss.jyii.ssviiv' l!ft»”Ta*l5ne *’*••**"•’ iqilTH •IDE. 3 hedrooillii, bath, din.^^riion^gai heal, lull base- KAlt OPDyKB, 10X340 lot. 3 bed-lOins and bam, large living room gas beat, if.gm. terme. 160 to 6360 down, a and 3 bed- wH’ wlll"‘bmM “to" iuH* yo'u.^baa II. C. miter, Ileal Estate, 3IW0 "Young-Hilt Homes' BEAbhY^ mean better _B1 mmx irt paynieht on 4- or 6-bedropip •me In Rochester •obooi distrlol. Clarence ,C. Ridgeway 286 W WAtTOT^”'”’^ FB 6 1001 PINE f,AK| ES'I'ATEB COiaWIALS - TBI - OUAp lEV-ELI - RANCH HoVlEf, Pvl uaftoh. nurk tor r«ttdentii. priced ■i lalAM inolUdlnt improved lot. HOWARJ) T. KK2AT1NC) CO. 12-1 !30 daily exceyt Tburaday. ROOM HOUSE TO BE MOVED or lorn down, good oondtlloii, beat oHer. FB 2dlga8.____________________ Ecofi-O-Tri $8/^LS — DOWN WIU. BOn.D ON YOOH LOT OK OURS TO MODEL: Bllnabeth Lake Rd. to, Union Lake Rd. south (b Farnsworth. Right to modol. OPEN Sat. and Bun. 3 to 6 p.m. Week-day by appolnlment, J. C. HAYDEN. REALTOR 80 E. Walton _____* FE 8-044: Near MSUO A Real Hiirgain Lovely 3-bedroom brick rabcb located oil estate sine lot 140x200 Includes planlcied walls, oak firs., fireplace. 2 ccranilc tile baths, full dhilng room, Full basement, with extra larye reoreatlon area Only 2'A miles from Rochester, Full prfoe only 618,860. Easy T. A. TAYLOR. Realtor IIEAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 1132 HIOHLAND RD. IM60) DAILY 8-8 SUN. 1-6 OR 4-0306 LOOK "CALL” lom ehelt home. Supply I Nothing down On your I irs. Call daya or nlglits, F NEW HOUSES $00 lOa\g lake rights Needs lovliH Haven of rest a time. Only n small down payment 'TlIl hagstrom REALTOR 4000 Highland Road iMf>0t Ppntlac i, 682-0435 OR 4-0368 KENT >rth Side 3-I Immediate po.ssession. Beautiful country kitchen. Tiled bath. Hardwood floors. OU heat. Total price ♦8,160. Call tonight on Urls. WEST SIDE — Walking distance to General Hospital. ■ 4-bedroom home, full basement, oil beat, garage. Immediate poskesstbn. Now Pjlt^-iB'onth Includes everything Visit 3 bedroom models , on Ca lisle Just off West Kennelt, blocks from Fisher Body. for young I 6-2181. ---------- - 2-CAit_QAR*OE and only MOO (IdWn. Nice living and dining area. Large kitchen, exta large utility, closets galore, 116' front. Jlear Sashabaw and PACE REALTOR OR 4-0438 BUILDER BATEMAN Let’s I'lade nice condition, I BRICE SUBURBAN — Immediate possession to this 3-bedroom home • - Large roomy kitchen LET'S •^RADE Watkins-Pontiac ESTATES Most desired area close to all schoolg, close to town, black top stroeis and plenty of room for the children to roam. In area of all newer homes. Sacrifice on this 3 bedrm.; price reduced to 18.460 with Just 10 per cent 1 new 30 yr. mortgage. )0 ft, lot. Call Now. Pj)rt ^upboards, i basement with finished rec. room, all nice condition. Loke privileges. GOOD INVESTMENT — West Side 3-famlly. 3 bedrooms each. Hardwood floors. Full basement, gas heat. Annual rentals ♦2.340. Out-of-state owner desires sale. This Income will aoon nay tor Itself. Only ♦16.800. Terms. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FE 2-0123 — Open Eves. Free Parking DREAM HOME , 3',4 ACRES 5-room home, 2-car attached garage, aluminum .siding, full basement, extra 24x40 fruit and tool building, 83.000 Income from fruit and berries annually Must be seen to be appreciated. ♦21,500 on terms. WM. T. (TOMl REAGAN Leaving .State landscaped Hon. Nicer and beautiful c SCHRAM Make A Date To inspect this 3-bedroom bungalow with 11x11 living room and a 32x24 attached garage. The comer lot Is 81x221 Price reduced to 89,600 for quick sale. Located on Crooks Road south of Auburn. 4 Bedrooms Large carpeted living and dining rooms, baths, full basc- _4au' a.44 nE la.ssA ILU.itrtW IVAN W. SCHRAM Realtor FE 5-9471 M2 J08LYN COR. MANSFIELD HOYT 3 bedrooms, kYtchen,‘'lots of cupboard, space, full basement, 114-car gaVagO. 1 ----- —._|j, .center, lo closing costs.- ‘■Pdr that- perso DRAYTON PLAIN S-room brick rant... ^ living room 14x18. ■nd excellent lake privUe fou will want to move i n and you can. 81,100 c •lus costs on new . 30 yr. n lage. Act Quick On 'This. LET'S trade . Carpenter Let us show you how to n I prom during the wi sonabie terms to suU, LET’S TRADE Investinenf lly Kat« Oaann s«U< lyn TaA»>» - Tills lovaly ' imrek An oUlor liunia. jlaminal tsrmi. with 3 badrooMs, family room. il'" 173 MONTH-Idas DOWN 3 large bedrooms. 14x|3 kitchen rulT basement. Corner lot. gas heat. Seward pear Auburn, Pon- PACE REALTOR OR 4-0438 BUILDER ihan. Truly, a lovsiy nlae« live. PrioaO at only LIST WITH u# -and tradt. Will m»mr trailers, ears, land Ountraols or •mailer homta ml. soma properties. 31 yrs, experlsnct. Optn 8-1:10. Multipi# Usllng •trvlot. I.. H. BROWN, Realtor Pb%S“»o*;“‘y,mi. CLOSE IN Income locaUd In nlet rtsldsntial area. 2 apartments-ana Is carpeted and has lovely fireplace. Aluminum aoraenc end storm windows. Large teneed In lol with fruit trees and beriTes. CAI.I. FOB COMPLBTB INFORMATION. WILST SlDl*. — CITY 1-room oolonial - r l!i. I. 11X12 d r garag. 4 slioppli lemenl, oil' Ing center and school CLARK ♦YlVaN MANOR BUBPlt r^c. appointment to shui •40 ACRI'-S, north" 'a oooo invehtment 8-room resich,'breeaeway end garage, 14 fruit trees, raspberries, strewberi-les. several hundred evergreena. Horses permitted. A nice place to retire. Call tor price and terma. SMITH . WIDEMAN 3 bedrooms, ful. __ ___ oldsr home In the city Is In good condition and ideal lor large family, Right terms tool CALL^EARLY. FE 8-046$. C'^ SCHUE'IT 1034 W, HURON ‘ OPEN TILL LAKE front t winter prices on Square Lake nort|i of Pratlac, 2 bedrooms d ln*^Oek- :“?u1t‘ 5I'*lots**wmS6cd." hike "privileges Only ♦11.600, '■ 3-1888 — RES. FE 4-4812 CLARK REAL ESTATE 3101 W Huron Open 8 to 8 __ Multiply Usting Service Homes-Farms VANT A HOME l.IKB MOTHER AND DAD'S? OK-see this spa-i>"T,e „ full base-ahd breakfast fori' - fireplaces - picnic facllh HANDYMAN Here Is a special deal, large 1* room home. Only one block from vlcw*of*a large lake. Yhls house l^ul!*prlcc w'ooo^wldt goodTc'rms! $66 per month. CRAWFORD AGFNCY 368 W, WALTON FE 8-2308 808 E, FLINT______MY 3-1143 BiltliMit 0|H>ortunltlBi EOUtPMENT FOR .Ml/------------ STAl adOD POTENTIAI., Fieai# oaii between 8 a. m. and » n. m. dM-JIte ?HL*'oolip?tN?' ***'^**' Slliiili I'ri^lliiiiif S|i01> Ct'V.eal!J\Jlfi"*8C§i’‘r.. for MA 0-M33. ygnlon. ‘ It’s hard to believe that just a few months ago you could sing hjgher than I could!" WATERFORD TOWNSHIP FHA or (11 terms, for this bedroom home. Full baseme recreation room, 12x12 kitchen. bl(^ to school. Full pries oi PACE New' v3-Bcdroom Ranch-type bungalow besement. attached 2-oe and bullt-lns. 3-oar garage. 2-Bc'ir(X)m buncfttow im, ildinB. 2 Acres I In the city wlUi 3-bed-of oommgrolal frontage on ire OTOROE R NICHOLIE NORTH END Two-bedroom taomee. Just decorated. Hardwood Boors, tile bath paved street. Low down payment and easy monthly payments. THREE BEDROOM Full basement, hardwood floors, oil heat. Just decorated. It's nice and the payments are reasonable. SUBURBAN 3:bcdroom home near Crescent Lake decorated, oil heal. Pay- LAKE PRIVII.EOES with this 3-bedroom brick home - carpeting - gas heat -- large brick farage — privileges on Sylvan ake - $11600. Will take your equity In trade. Quick possession. MILLER COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE, t-room --':k ranch. FHA approved. $1,200 1 move you In This spotlessly in home with nearly an acre land. 3 bedrooms and den, lrtttt»gr--- liMBolsrtor • '-ttiw^ uied rec. room. 3-o.ar garage. Call for partlcvilars. CHARM AND PERSONALITY. A -.bjdroon, -- OPEN : .SAT, - SUN.- 12-6 I’.M. Beautiful "Fox Bay" DIRECTIONS: Out M80 to Williams Lake Road. Turn left to Elisabeth Lake Road. Turn right approximately 14 mile to "Open Sign." ARRO "We Trade —We Build” LAKE-PRONT (XITTAOE — Completely furnished, sandy beach: bice, fenced yard, boat, boathouse, raft and dock Included In the price. DRAYTON AREA Three bedrooms Bath and one ha Youngstown kitchi lalt. Decoratedv 1 Call Mr. Oastell FE 2-1313 Nlcholle-Harger Co. W. Huron St. FE Lots—Acr«nga g ACRE6 gan Rui SK S'S d partly wooi nan developn Leslie K. Trip]), Realtor 16 West Huron Street FE 6-6181 Drayton Shopping Center, •die for business .1. on 3-2411 or NA Plan Now OR SPRING BUILDINO IN CHEROKEE HILLS! You should ses these secluded wooded, rolUng 100 ft. sites. For bettor r-- —........ living - Carl W. Bird. Realtor )3 Community Nat'l Bank Bldg. w 4-on Ooo(|^ 10-r a?"i28.o8o''« pond, Sacrif •ms. call n< TRADE OR SELL J'c"l.„Vrn‘.ra7t“In» X satahlUhed Hume ImpruvemenI Business Only «4,«00, Real Bs- .■;(:;i':defWd*;!'w'nn’}li Res, FK 4-48I3. _______ Templeton (rill I.ifiiior Bur Slrai(!;li One of the oesi in me ci Poiitlai', All rosl- Plenty of parblng arcu. AprusI mutely 120.000 to handle L. Templeton, Realtor i,l38_qrchard_Uke ll^l 882 OWW your own on ®*g‘,5'''invesl ment ^r^®o"*d"own*"jia»“ lHollte.'*^“lmma 'Monument Co . Wjnonajjillim,___________ Sals lond Contrncti^ 60 "'^AN JMMgPyomi Land Contracts l"ut“Re'’aUo'^ {l^Vs'agln'Swm" "giii A ahVfii uMHiente for T8 car nr later. Tr pi,ViSi6WTH7~i<><)D'‘'rTiAN« • j^rjatloji.^^sell or trade, Call aflar ~ ‘ b'IJY - SELL -'fliABE Sweepers - duns -Uowets Baums fe ITaTgraveBl“l47 W, H KQUri-Y IN 3 UHnitOuM IflUlACL fill small vai.allim Haller ^AHDPti'^'rii-;' wti.i.'nui.i; M or iradn lor giM>d,ca>. Ma 4 .Rd* E 4-3880. J. C. HAYDEN. REALTOR. FE OlND"^NTRACT8 BOlfaHT ANY -wtiere tn: Michigan. Earl-OaTtolS. Realtor, 6811 Commerce Rrttd. Orchard Lake. EMplre 3-3511 or EM 3-4086.___________ - On tl plastic luuui. 3-car will handle. COMPLETELY FURNISHED. Va- Uve , kitchen li_ tiled. Basement r garage. 812.600, f ^ ma^^who li^ handy. west of Fontlac with laks prlvl'-legee only one block away. Needs some finish but a BAR- .......♦5,080 with Juet 84T- U can make money i Trading Is Our Business " William Millcr nReallqr F'F'. 2 0263 ql 670 W Huron Open 0 to 9 “ O'NEIL MUL'nPLE USTINO SERVICE RE1PIRIN07 Then you will surely woot to See tnli neat bullt-ln kitchen. baths, beautifully paneled recre- WEST SUBURBAN — 3-bedroom ranch, setting on large, well landscaped lot; Spacious .living room. 1>4 baths, attached garage. Only ♦12,960. OVERLOOKING ELIZABETH LAKE — 6-room bungalow, locat-----------------. Olockto handy transportation, interior n TED McCullough, realtor OPEN 9-9 SUNDAY 11-8 PHONF: <182-2211 multiple I.lSTlNO SERVICE -0628 TRADE EQUITY IN 3-BEOROOM HOME - WEST SUBURBAN - FOR MODERN HOUSE TRAILER. LAKE FRONT PLACE - _____ LAROB LOT WITO 1, „ TREEIS - Wp.L TRADE; WRIGHT 382 OAKLAND FE »MI.4 kept, low maln-aluml-famlly FE 2- MUM^LE UBTLNO SERVK^" Hollv. Apartment 7-famlly on mato street. In the village all apte. giifumlshed with private baths and entrances, new- • ly. painted and In excellent condition. Income over 8328 per month. A sound Investment at ♦20.000. 1382 W. Huron. WOOmiDUi LAKE A hmiey of ,a n—.v,..-,—h on % acre, tot, 6 years old and like newU-Uvltlg roqm. .-dialng room aito bin c*rpeted^ -Lovely torge kltehed, 3 big bedrooms, ■ IVi baths, roman brick fireplace. better North side areas. There Is • basement and 114-car garage. This home Is In excellent condition and selling for 88,960. We will appraise your home for a trade! DRAYTON WOODS 3-bcd-room brick and aluminum ranch home featuring a carpeted living room, spacious kitchen, a beautiful 21-ft. famUy room with ra ledge-rock fireplace, also a full paneled basement, 214-car garage with paved drive and a fine West suburban location. The lot. Is 100x160 and 18 completely landscaped, This home Is being offered for glO.OOO and you can use our trade-in plan. • G.L's I^p Money ,Down GILES JOHNSON 28 YEARS OP SERVICE ORTONVILLE ’ „ Lake froii-lage on Bald Eafi 1 iLoar DAB * D^arooniK, ii.acurii. full bath, utility room, dining space, large living room with fireplace. Basement has 3 bell- bath, ideal country living. WOLVERINB.LAKE „ ^ „ 20 minutes from Pontiac and 30 minutes from Detroit. 3 bedroom ranch home. All large rooms, fire-place. 2 lots, boat, dock. Many more features too numerous to SS!rXft^?"« '^ll‘5.a“rrw« FE 4^6364.' A. JOHNSON & SONS REAL estate - INSURANCE 1104 S TELEGRAPH FE 4-2533 ____ lok* f roptrty Sole Butinm Projwrty S7 Commercial Good brick-front business building on busy Pontiac thoroughfare. Includes several furnished apte. and plenty o< parking space. Over ♦6.0W a year indome. A safe and Brewer Real Instate JOSEPH F. REISZ, SALES MGR FE 4-6181___Eves, FE 6-0823 TRADEX {Money to Loan 61 abard ,i,a8.f ,. """TiSV* fv',"^"1ieir--------- Otur. ____48 Orchard Mi, Ave, :EiVlifA'rfiB UErBRlEH|A'foft^ .sir ..t; 'iriADK OR t uViNti ' hiYiiiT ANp 'ftlliii'liilWl -v’l?!____ ' UgUIDATING UlNTlRF STOCK r.l!trdrivr/b'ei,‘r,i:irk%.r mvwitVTMjNrt MUtti’ oot “‘iwy tarm« ourrrm U 36i!|1."“' virnNfj (XI D^raylun FIsl • ,1‘> » AUe'ri/ 8fli'”j8ll9,“" wiLL"'nt ade' icQun'Y wllh desi UU«, I Sol* Clothing 64 2 ^FOHMALS,^ MOII'T 3”Wfci)UlN(T“DRI«liSK8,“5'IZ8! "T5 and 12. Hqasanable. FU ........... ~ ~ "EARLY" Bifib"' Self<1 Ion of ,Maple, llii'uiinglmm. Ope'i NKW^UQUIRREL STULW^i it U M M A O E ~8 A LE.' OIR L' ladles- (dutliliig. F8: ri-86.l‘ 'wiaiDiNO ■ (ibwN~ii()OP,' LIN(,'()LN||,ahOB ^ ^ |Ua lung I AA'i'IHENM. ie-^Av F»1 )-1 MoHfcHTTBiipii'f'x'iff ' Vl newj:i^ 3-0360 . MiiVDHJ, flfUHT' hIclT. “'■IrliB; W!'"6‘'2S1^ •tall s iREPOssF.wi) na Ec-rnounf ma- I chines have been checked by our I fMotory branch and h«va a new YOUNU MAN’i! VKIL. NlfJW • ttToviiiH "oF aTI' kinUh" HINOril' M^PITIK'MONT! lnUg''ind Zlit Za|| Ijiitton hole* FH: ft-»407! t'anUorSttWlng Cantc rtf i, alta S0I9 Household Goods 65 Baraam 1 a-6843. DROP LlCA^ mahogany 1 ble, 630. Matching end tables e coffee table. 110 each. Call at 1 OAS SPACE HEATER, 612, DIN-Ing room suite. 624, studio couch, glO, refrigerators, gig up. Clirome ■' ““J, ilg, gas and ...........■■ — oocaslom **an*i^’- Baey“t auburn, avenue COMMEaaAL. 00' fringe on main road with 8:-room brick home,^ excellent locale for any type business. Good bift at only 812,600 easy terms^ or will trade for free and clear home or. Income property. GII.ES REAf.TY CO. FE 5-6176 ■ 221 Baldwin Ave. Open 9 a.ro. to 0 p.m. MULTIPLE LIB'HNO SERVICE DORRIS SPRAWLING MODERN that's planned for 1982's Informol living. describes: ttils contemporary deslgHed LAKE-FRONT home. A spacious living r— 13x21, wlQi massive mn . dining room 10x11, modern kitchen with all butft-tns 8x21, 3 bright cheerful ' ' beautlfi ■ Si,- i»W minutes Pon-810 down. 3-1286 - NORTH ROCHESTER AREA. AT-- tractive remodeled 4-bedroom home with IVa ceramic Ule bath, flt-eplace, hot water beat, storms and screens. 2-car garage, 6 very scenic acres plus reduced terms. OFF J08LYN ROAD, very good 2-bedroom ranch home with base-„ ment, garage, large lot. Only $12,-750 very easy terms. H. P. HOLMES. INC. FE 5-2963__________ Eves. FE 6-2868 WEBSTER E ORION — OXFORD Scenic area. Has flowing stream which has been dammed to form 1-acre lake stocked with trout. Nice woods, acreage tillable. Large comfortable nome, good bam, hay and grain storage. You muet see to fully appreciate. $24,-990 with $1000 down. V C. A. WEBSTER, REALTOR OA 8-2518__________■ MY 2-2281 ; lots—Acreaga 3 H HOME. 816,860 A tfAssive corner fireplace sets off tnls islve bedrooniis. 114 baths . ha.AMMV tAftIra IIVaI 28x60 R A I TRADE. Iavfsh*Bv'lngr56m' tion. Oro„. _________ _____________ equipment — reasonable rent, Just 87,500 down. FINEST SUPER market In town, 16 miles from Pontiao. Grose near 1360,000 for 1081. Bxeellent bldg. - J , g25_oon pju. BARS! BARS! Tavern - Gross WIP.OOO with jreal estate, $62,000: only $20,000 down. Tavern — Gross $48,000 with rAl estate. $40,000 with $18,090 down. Tavern — Gross 842.000 with real estate, $36,600 with $16,800 down. Liquor — Gross 800,000 with real estate, $80,000. only $20,000 down. Liquor —- Gross 840,000 with real estate, 883,000, only $20,000 down. Some can be bad without real estate. -Now Is the time. Get Id by May, , Peterson Real F;state MY 3-1681 ' port vicinity. OR 3-2688, DUE TO ILL HEALTH I MUST sell my new beauty shop. Real buy. FE 5-4487, FE 4-6622, shop. 4 BCIOTHS TO RENT TO HAIR -‘••Usts. FE 6-402k OR 4-1022. BEAUTY SALON quarters, good business, can tioi-ly. MElrose 7-3631. GROCERY WITH BEER AND Wine take nut. 8 room apt; for ownel- or ^tal Income, $3,000 down^ 340 E. Pike St. FSS 4-4127. AIRY BAR-RESTAURANT COM-blnatlon. Plxza equipment. Well -------- ------------------ Need $25 to $500? -See Seaboard ■ Idione F'!''. 3-7617 1185 N. Perrv St. PARBTNO NO PROBLEM Seaboard Eiriance Co. CENTURY FINANCE COMPANY Lake Orton MY |:}623 giford OA l-«32 Rochester OL 1-8104 LOANS TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS 125 TO $600 AUTOS : LIVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODS OL 6-0711 OL 1-BWl PL ^35X8 PL 2-3810 "FRIENDLY SERVICE" 62 A Mortgage Problem? We Make nfortgage loans to meet your requirements. Any property, any amount.- Prompt dependable service. Remodeling and construction loans. Cash and con- NOWI to consolidate all your bills and pay off your land contract •—* ----1—prpvldlng - " Seminole. FE 2-6608. taohments. Close-outs. 818. Vao-uum Center. Call FE 4-4240. WALNBT EXTENSION DINING for 8A1 E 4-6673. Used Maytag gas "ibson refrlgeratoi, freezer across top PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITES, brand new $68 to 1288. $160 weekly. Pearson's. 43 Orenar' Lake WYMAN'S USED TRADE-IN D«PT. ■burner Apt. gas stove .... ♦ .3" Oas stove ... i Ouar. Elec. RefrIg. .. attachments. In wood Opl; -full pri 'mtir ottV oF ” ** FOR THE HOME ' “and --- to pay. i_______ ances of all kinds _______ . USED. Visit our trade dept, real bargains. We buy, sell or trade. Comb opt and look around, 2, adres of free parking. Phone FE 8-8241. FBI 9 TO 9 OPEN MOH.-SAT. B TO 6 24 MONTHS TO PAY 4 miles E. of Pontiao or 1 mile E. of Auburn Heights on Auburn. M68. DL 2-3300._________ 0X13 FOAM BACK RUGS. BRAI --- $14.88, $22.15 and ,824. ------ TUgs, 130.99. 0x12 - , $7.06 and 81 ,,42 Orchard Lk. FB 4-7881 ___________ AUTOMATIC bLeOTRK? DRYER. Berry Garage Door Factory 'Seconds Available at 'sizeable discount 2388 Cole Street, Birmingham E 2-0203____________MI 4-I0: Rebuilt and Floor Models Maytag Washers ....... Gibson Eelrlgeratori '"hlrlpohl... iryer, ne Hoover UpMght, OE Sweeper ta Portable TV, ni The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP Of PoBtlt. 5i Weet Hurdh PE 4-1565 [ 34 88 . llOSiOQ BUNK BEDS, BRAND NEW. HA-ple. blond' and 'jirought Iron, $37.60 complete: also trundle beds and triple bunk beds. PSARSONB. 69 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-788I. ift.is Used electric range Frtgldalre retrigerato Used Frtgldalre waeh.. ....... Crump Electric, Inc, 3468 Auburn Rd.__________FE 4-3873 WYMAN'S THIS IS IT, BARGAINS, OALORC! «ortbil3*»oo« SET. $88.00. . PIECE DINETTE SET 838.00. INNERSPRINO MATTRESS AND matching BOX SPRINOa $48.00 TABLE AND BOUDOIR LAMPS FROM $3.88 . X 13 RUO ..... METAL WARDROBE .. U8T A PEW OP THE MONEY SAVING ITE6J8 ON SALE IN BOTH OUR S'fOHEJ' ..... LOW PRICES ON OL.. STOCK THROUOHOUT STORES. .... - ......- COME ON IN - SEE WHAT WB HAVE - LOT US SHOW YOO HOW TO SPEND LESS AND BUY MORE. EASY TERMS. NO CREDIT PROBLEMS AT WY-MAN'S. $38.00 $10.88 ONEY ® ■ IN ■ ■ „.j1ILAR R ENTIRE — OBR ws AtiTTQUE bed FOR SALE MA 8-1804________ ■ AK TABLE; DROP-LttAI® kble: 3 hanging lamps, 1 kerosene lamps, eome ROUND dining many old lectrlclty; ‘3-1 oom outfit; e euptmard. 2-pc. i__________ . other Items in china, glass, si etc. Lots of picture f----- Sunday — 10345 Oa ■ - of U.8. 1 Hi-Fi, TV & Radies jjeenrod Michigan TAKE OVER PAYMENTS ON I>« — TY.jL.-_; **-•* weekljf Sills iMiscellaneotts ' ‘-n ' THE-!>dN ilAC PRBS8, fIuDAY, MAECH a, IWi nxw. »■» khar 1 p m. AlMr i p.m. j^SrSS^^ hiuMr. HardWArd, •>Mt. auiwIUi. «NMk »D|il jdM Md flUuMu. tow* Mrolbor* nint, IMpar Ktmloa* ■lid Rutloloum. HiiloHT Bom.r rn «A«i - iuCF Aiib COMMttRCIAI. rS?i, iidwiii. CKiiBNT"ailM,' KCADV MaK niAl. ■ CX>NTHOt“ ............. - ooiiAPl*. Butlonllol** blind h*ini b; dlAllng. of A63 full prloo. PI nt 4.1|»n. El.IDCTOfC~irion«lf' ^wn!^*b3foMacli{mry 6t after ^ TV, n»ed. «4n«|JgS- _ OBITE B‘HAM_T1I»A'...„ DAILY tlo to 0, Fftl. ’Tit, 0 PRACTICE ORGAN sranaen wvlth Ampliner . MORRIS MUSIC 34 s. Tolegraph Road laqrosa from Tol-Huiryi Inish. Dtra'ol action. *iaicr‘“ - —■- ..... and detiveied mi^h KF.CONDITIONKD upright planoi and 3 ami ed organa. Bargains small down pavments. Up to 36 mot. on balance. GAI.LAGIIER’S L YOUR ler’a. We ) T^dil lb, rg 4-0 m :w .3^* AUCT^dN 'aiB» rielDAY ...i;jw p ih. lERY SATURDAY . 7:30 p m “opbn^^i'dAb wiekVo “ “ doSMM»a«n 0000 Dixia UHIHWAV sAWabAlTM At to A M ™ pqurpment'. toc'aie M2y*'tRen*"*^'i'’*«pltei* %'ea? ”l 1471 Waldon RoadJWetob lor fui tber delalli nett Tbura. and FrI Jolm O Bader, Proprietor, Bn Hlokmott. auctioneer. Oiford. o-aioo auetlon. Loceted 4tf mllM noi ra.-ittSS.'tJKl-'ff. now. '60 Ford 000 tractor. A-1, ■00 Ford heavy duty, front end Oliver adjualablc 1 ‘01 Malone llO tpreader. '01 Nee Tfort « ™. —ler pli._ --------- other good tools. Metamora Bank Clerk. LaVerne Stern. Prop. Bud Hlokmott. Auctioneer. Oxford. OA BO TrtAIN KITS. CARS. LOCOB, oftioee Iq C^Mtland anci Mac-...^ SiJxi HORSES and HORSE TRAILER. It SALE r BUY. SELL. TRADE vno — 0UZ, z Burr^abell, 375 S. Trtej.-^. KELLY HARDWARf New and Used Guns Complete line of bunting equipment. Myers Pumps. 3004 Auburn at Adams UL 3-3440 Open Dally Till 6 p.m.—Sun. SPORT AND CAMPERS SHOW THURDAY — FRIDAY SATURDAY — SUNDAY MARCH 1. 3. 3. 4. Doors open Fre* admli Free ,gj#h» «>' Bee an die new Camp' Trailer Bee eferythliw wator aporte Bpeclal show pricea. A-A-JA BLAB WOOD DEUVEKED or you pick up. off Baldwin on Mill Lake Road. Dial OL 1-0731. Alberta i-umber mi* ABC, ' WOOD.^^RNACE^ TI Rt Sny*^___ 673-0179 runnAiwJ!i, r a «■ *»* 9 wood, tow price. BbbiBf & Suppliit THNNKWEE W pleasure horses. i also rtde» pony with rALEEB . standard broi and drives, 1 Shetlan saddle aim bridle, a __________priced. 1300 E. Bne Rd.. Rochester ML0tl7, "OAiTEb 'eNOUSH CHESTNUT mare, ^enj.ojd. gentle for cbll- », OUARTER. I ■ OA 0-3170. OR8E8 and 1 WELSH . Brocker. Meta- CARNIVAIa By Dlek Turntr If "WIml do I siiy'.’ Wi>ll. from iho diishlMMUff say wr w ovrr 'I’oprka, Kan,, handing north-northwrsl at 48S miles per hour!” TRAVEL TRAILI'RS — Winter Rates — F. E. Howland, Rentals Highway ■■■" TIrss—Auto—Trucii 92 7 00 k 14 t^llewalls 130.00 OOOOYEAR SERVICE SrORE 30 8. Casa Ave. _FE 0A133 ST/ffibXRD BRAND lilW" TlRli. Trad# In on Osnoral Safety Tiros, lave up to ti ol Mfg.'a U$t prloo. Black or wbllawalu. ED WILLIAMS 401 a, Saginaw at Raeburn 0iio aWO AND ihdck tibbb .,1,^ f,J. NEW WHITE Wi exchange. ”Idfe •LL TIRES, i I *40.00 plus —________Urn* road I guarantee. Tire DIscc 401 8. Saginaw. USED TIRES, RBOULAR-MUD- CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE oar. Cylinders rebored Zuck Machine Shop. 33 Hood. Phone FE Mstor Scuutfri Vespa .Booolera, E-B terms. An-derionllales B Bervloe, FE *4301 Motycyclti 95 \H1 HARLBY DAVIDSON 14 OV- d^ro'^vai^urteoT*- HARIjfiV ---------------- Blcyckt ■ 96 WINTER PRICES ON RBOONDL Honed Uied bivyoles Besrietta'Bike A Hobby Shop 20 E. Lawrence FE 3-7043 -----------------------------97 Bouts—Accauoriai lO-lWr MASTBRCHIAVI! J horse Johnson. 0030 And< Rog. Watefford, ble top. deck ebatrs. t: nhl ooAt il.TOO, uie< »ft€i: B CENTURY kory Hldiq .. .da Rd, flkh .y'VnVM ....“mMl’t,-,.™........ "Get Aboard" AUTIIOmZKD pbalbh ^ Owens Orulaera. Century, Bkee- ?r7.i^r..°j;fir.ud?Tnlf'M.?.*u‘?; uigest .Selections" IufPt.AV IN PONTIAC AH 10 PER CENT DOWN IIP to 60 MOntHH ELCdMEJMSY TERV dEJMS _.K WALT ■TODI Mazurek Murine j^SfabN" SKA RAY *“(!PbA¥7A PORTA-OAMPK We Welcome KESSLER'S MARINA 10 N. Waiblngton, OA 0-1400 Okfgrd JOHNSOir OUTHOAKI) MOTORS Htarcraft boati. kater trailer*. __________________ AT TONY^ Marine on 1001 Evlnrude mpto,ri ' boot*. 3000 Orchard Lak* Keago Harbor. —a- nsiTisrstr I'AKE^ AbVANTAOE OF iVtR'TtCR [>r ce«, Lay-A-Way your boat and hiojor tin spring. PINTER'S “HIGH DOLLAR" RcftlJjhkrp Convertibles Ponllaea, Ubavrolala. Olds, RulAt, Fords Burti 101 GLENN'S Motor BaU* W, Huron at. FE 0-73?!* Nbw «n^ UiBdliari 1007 OOnVETTB ENaiNE, FUWL raoe 4 Inober, oomplate, 7.000 mllao. A-1 .oondltlw. WlMfh Better Used Trucks CMC Factory Branch Ai55 FiaEOf! mile*. On# 0-7130. t06Kiw UBII Used Cun 106 Ntw end Uied Cun 106 AKRONCA CHAMP EXCELLENT condition, Juit relloon*ed, Of. Wanted Curi-Trucki ' 101 any car THAT NEEDS REPAIR. Itelly'. Bump Shop ft Auto Sale*. 184 Orchard Lake Avo,. FE 5-0300. naro naae ay^. em u-uje, ID. 700, DUMI'TRUCK. 1 r sale. SL 4-0400. New and Used Curs 106 New and Uied Car* 106 New and Uied Car* 106 ______BROOM ALFAU la nay. MA 0-3030._______________ OR SALK HORSE AND COW hay. OL 0-0700 _____________ Farm Produce APPLES, CHOICE crIspy apples, all varieties. $1.00 bushel and up. Fresh egg*. 40c, Babago potatoes. DeCOnIck Broe. W. Maple. Or- ----- . .. ---J Opgn xo *- - POULTRY, E008. APPLES. VEO- ______flower* and plants.’hon^ baked good*. OAKLAND COUNTRY MARKET, -■*- ----- FOR JOHN DEER9 i Idea spreaders r" oblnery Co., O------- 7-33g3. AHo Homoitto cl McCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS HEW AND USED USED CHAIN SAWS L_ _ CHAIN SAW RENTALS KING BROS. FE 4-0734 FE 4-H: PONTIAC ROAD AT OPDYKE J GET A BETTER DEAL ON . IR8TREAM LIGHTWEIGHT Travel Trailer. Since 1032. Ouar-•"*»ed for life. See them and get ----------■— at Warner ■"-" A MESSAGE FROM US » TO YOU 1 Which w* feel will be of great Interest and Importance. Row fm ! move Into a"completely°fumlshed 1 pSTTROra^MpBiyE H^^fo^^ AKC PEKINGESE PUPP ..................... AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES. Terms. Stud dog*. FE A3630. Smb DOG PUPPIES 7 WEEKS ______________wormed. BRITTANY SPANIEL I — - year* old, OR 3-0104-______ BOXER PUPPY MALE, 0 WEEI papers, $10. PE 5-1076. GERMAN SHEPHERD POPPIES, quality. Temperament guarantee'* Reasonable. MA 4-10$7. ■ MALE PUPPIES, SMALL TYPE, t CoefcM, $o' each. OL 2-Ol$6. McNARY'S TAILWAOOER K E ! nels. boarding. — *— •nlng, OL I-0M4. PCaroRANjUI^MALB POODLE service. each, ttifotir. POPpiBs]— BABknrs. all pet STUD SERVICE. 10%'. DEEP AP- equaUed In staUsnent ^ day) Over n the wide fW|A <>* ■'So'^jifOrent floor*pl „ seleot ti—.........- lent used mobile h duced prices. Stop o Bob Hutchinson Mobile H6me Sales, Inc. ' Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1203 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK l962 CREES ARE NOW ON DI8PJ.AY■' Truck Campers and Travel Coaches! STOP OUT TODAY OPER SUNDAYS Holly Michigan:_______ME “4-671 Parkbur St • T railep-Sales" Featuring NW a ^e^ure —Buddy QuaUty MobiU !-way between _ JACOBSON TRAIUHt SALER Good buy* on dRtJay modi*. Service and part*, winter prides on Centals. 0600 Williams Lake. Drayton Plains. OR WML__ ____ home type trailers, 10 PER CENT DOW|t Om ‘— el trailer- ‘".'O « _______ Complete Une of parto and bottled gas. FE 4-0743 . '3173 W. Huron E3CPERT MOBILE ROME REPAIR service: free estimates. ‘Stowfe^’Ho^e*' Sdea. *uc. 4301 Dixie Hwy.. Drayton. Platbs, OB 3-1303. ^ MORE Oxford Trailer Sales and Court - ragabond. Paramount, OtMlii' General. YeUowstooe and Stawi with Foam-a-waU, 50 floor, plans, h*l!ve‘”Ur',ri.ctS?Su7^Jr^ r, 34M Auburn. UL Bee U$ Today f ^ Every Buyer—A Winner I'>eryone Purchasing a New or Used Car • riilay, Saturday and Monday Only Will Receive A Prize The C.rand Prize Is a '5.S CHEVROLET 210 d not be preeent Winner Will Be Announced Tuesday, March 6, 1962 at 7 p.n at Bill Spence Ramblerland FREE WITH EACH NEW CAR OIL CHANGES FOR ONE YEAR FACTORY SPECIFICATION 1,000 MILES OF GAS AND LUBRICATION FREE WITH EACH USED CAR A NEW BATTERY AND FREKQLLXHANGE-AND LUBRICATION ' FOR ONE Year . - A NEW CAR Iiickiding License. Title, Sales Tax, Radio and Heater, Whitewalls and Factory Equipment PRICES .STARTING AT $1489.20 '61 Chevrolet Impala $2195 •59 Rambler American $895 '59 Rambler Super 4-Door with radio, heater and* whitewalls. Individual front ’56 Pontiac Wagon $495 ’57 Plymouth Savoy 3-DOOR With 6-cyIlnder engine ------------clear Standard transmission. $695 ’59 Rambler American ^’iS^Me^fO-TIardtep— radio. heaOer, and whtte-. Real economy ipeclall $595 1 perfect running dondllionl lice and clean! $777 '60 Mercury Monterey 4-DOOR with radio, heater, automatte tranemlsalon, sparkling bronze with.-glowing whltewallsl 8POTLE8S Condl- $1595 ’59 Chevrolet Wagon $1395 ’57 Buick Convertible $666 ’57 Mercur' 4-Ooor with b: power- No rusti cury M 4i bi g eo rusti Flno Monterey -nglne. Pull conditlonl ’58 Pontiac 4-Door SUPERCHIKF with full power, Beautiful red and white flnlsbl $895 9... Out of .10 Can Buy — No Money Down! 1 BILL SPENCE RAMBLERLAND ^LES"' 32 S. MAIN STREET' .CLARKSTON • SERVICE M A 5-5861 Harold Turner REPEATS A SELL-OUT SMASH HIT WITH PRICE BUYERS ....OQffiE 100 BRAND NEW 1962 FORDS“!Tr'STCX!^^11— 1962 For d Falcon 2-Door Sdn. .839 1962 Foi $i 'd Fairlane Club Sdn. 1962Ford-G $2(0 alaSe Club Sedan )99 1962 Ford ' !500" Convertible (Tt) ^ FULL a full year foctofy warranty WE GUARANTEE ALL CARS TO ' ' BE DELIVERED 100% AS ADVERTISED * ATTENTI0Nrt96OCFCSRD“‘OWNE:RS 11 We have an immediate outlet for 207 1960 Fords. Buyef is waiting, cash in hand!/Let’s both take advantage of this opportunity! 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. ---BIRMINGHAM MI 4-7500 " JO 4-6266 :7 •/: M V' ' ■ ' r THg POytlAC PRESS. FRIDAY, TMAIU TI 2. lQft2 TinilTY-FIVK ^rfwniim Chevrolet VOLKSWAGENSI M«« AUOlorifWl D««ltr WARD.McFXROY, INt •n OHKVItOMQT 1MPAI.A lOr.. k><%^ whIU nniih. Only II.IH. lafiw •UtOj^(IOW< BOB“‘kART MOTORS (40 "—■-‘- WfWli Power iteerlny •no whlt*w«ll tlr*>. Thli o«r hM been eioep-tlonblljr well-owed lor, ”•” ' $895 FISCHER BUICK ^«i?sPi^vaTOi4ir* • * . I960 buiCk 9-Passenger Wagon LeMbn. MMlta aitte with e«w-to-eleen »U »tnyl tn^rior, Bedlo, heeter, Dynenow, Power eleer; Ing. Power brekei end whllev " tlree. Immec^b^l^ Pull price FISCHER ‘■■“•‘'■'•“Twiete—— 1M S. WOODWARD B'HAM MI 4-6222 ACBOBB prom OBEBNPIKLD'8 'M BUIOK 3-DOO^ HARDTOP, DY-nenow, redlo, better, whltewslU. 1-owner, tl.4li0. rK 2-XW5. MUST GO! '54 end 'S3 Buick ... 409 •53 Chevy station wagon 475 Economy Cars___22 Auburn •67 BUICK SUPER 4-DOOB POW-er brakes and steering, good con- dltlon. PE 6-7100.__ •66 BUICK 2-DOOB HARDTOP. ALL power. Reas. PE 4-2260._ l%i BUICK Elcctra 4-door sedan. White ^th blue Interior. Radio, heater. Dy-nanow. Power steering. Power brakes. B-Z Eye glass and whitewall tires. True luxury car. In Impeccable condition. Pull price $2695 FISCHER BUICK 784 8. WOODWARD B^HA64 ‘ MI 4-6222 ACROSS PROM OREENPIELD’8 1866 CADILLAC CLUB COUPE. RA-DIO. HEATER AND AUTOMATIC absolutely NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments ol 424.78 per mo. Call Credit Mgr.. Mr Parks at Ml 4-7600. Harold Turner, Pord,___ ^AWON WAO-lEATER. AB-DOWN. )28.1S_ per “•VCTSXSw... asikiffsii .«■ 1861 ChBVROLET XMPALA 2-door hardtop. V»‘ engine, power-glide radio, beater, whitewalls. w7Sirt.sx'jf..”a% ham. Ml 4^38. _______ 1801 CHEVROLET I M P A L A 4-domr hardtop. V8 engine, auto-aiitle, / power steering, orakes, Windows and 6-way seats. Solid BcV^craSVRO?J?r’ CO.. ^ 8-WOODWARD AVE., BIBMINO-hSm. m «-7738. U6l COBVAIB MONZA .COUWE. ”sundard ehltt. radio, heater. Only 1855 bHEYBPMT DIO AND HEATER, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY D078N. Ass^e payments ol 4* 78 per mo. c»n rrodtt Mgr., Mr., Parks at 4 7800. Harold Turner, Pord. ■S7 CHEVY, 210', 2-D06r. MA 6-1808 1958 CliF.VROI.ET Impala Convertible. Black i White top. Radio, heater. Pov -• glide and nearly new whitewall tires. Big engine. Full price $1295 FISCHER BUICK 7m 8. WOODWARD B’HAM MI 4-6222 ACROSS PROM CBEENPIELD^S OUVER ■BUIGK DOUBLE V/ CHECKED USED (CARS '57 BUICK ....$795 beMir and whltewaUs. *56 CHEVROLET '.$695 BEI. AIR 4 DO(Bt 8Sa>AN. With Automatio TranamJeil^.Y-* *?>• glne, radio, heater, 78htewalls, . and a dait blue sparkling lln-Isbl '55 DODGE ....--.,$285 4 DOOR SEDAN, etilent. Condtltool '55 FORD .......••$245 3 DOOR SEDAN. Wth A^atle Transmission. Radio, Heater, and nice 3 at. earl 'S3 CHEVROLET . .$275 4 ’Door -sedan, wlto StMdard Transatlsslan, radio beater I OLIVER BUICK 118 Orchard Law' FE 2-9101 . .... over payments msko-VrfgpV OHAVRbLET hAM^ 1088 PoMd IW^I'04^ .ass " *‘®' " 1164 MUIOK ilARD'f(£p" •" 188. MSHtOURl?****"'- tAKEBlbE m6to!w ®* “*’• 311, W. M^nteelm MIAKp-^eONVI*ffiili. I-Itl- raio and.heater; bfjtffiii one. LLOYD MOTORS. Llneoin Meroury.Oynet.Meteqr, 23a 1 I'ATTIiUSON * CIIKVHOLF.T (O. 1008 8. Woodward Ave.. BIrmIngh Ml 4-2736 & ISAXiOrSKfr *’,Vi OAKLAND AVE.. PE 4.4078. .wae.e.1. »n|int. oHovnoLmr co.. looo $ wood- WARD AVB-. RlRMlNOllAM. Ml SATW-»73y»^ 1960 CORVAIH ■ Moor aedan. TUrquotee, Radio, .healer, auto- matlo and whitewall lort and economy all age; Full price " $1395 FISCHER BUICK WOODWARD B^HAM MI 4-6222 CROSS PROM OREBNPnDLD^ i860 CHEVROLET door sedan. O-cyllnder englm 000 actual miles. A onc-c..... and eitra clean You better be first I PATTERSDN CHEVROLET CO 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BlrtMlNQHAM. MI 4-2736. . •87 CHeVy, 1 OWNER. ^EL AIR. MA 8-1284. FALCONS Ml TilbHbBjkillRo HARO'i^l^. Full power. Rurfundy finish with nalie leather Interior. 8,000 actual miles. Just like new Only 83.186, Easy lerme. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO, 1000 8 WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINO-HAMJMl 4-2736. —- PORD O-DOOil. VEl 3M878. C. Manning__ fOllh Vg 8'nOK, NICE. "a •65 PORD. COURIER. BEST OP- ler. 473-W31. ____________ 1868 iraRD C^VERTIBLE. RADIO AND HE^R. ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Assume pay-menU of $18.28 per mo. call 1868 FORD l-OtlxiRWAOON. RADIO AND HE^BR. absolutely NO MONEY DOWN. Assume psymente of $32.76 per mo. Call Credit Mgr., Mr. Parks at MI 4-7600, Harold Turner, Ford, $1095 John Me All li f fe. Ford 030 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-4101 light blue flnlsh. Only 111 Bfasy terms. PATTERSON CHEv-__________' " " •---........ 7.--------------- ...u ----•--- LIQUIDATION LOT 10 B. Saginaw__PE 8-407 ’58 FORD 2-DOOR CJJSTON ‘•3W^^wlth V8 straight .tek,ar..^n« i REAL GOOD Larks and Hawk? Mazurek Motor Sales B. Blvd'. at Saginaw CHEVROLET. AUTOMOBILE LOANS lor new, used cars, ’ — JEROME "Bright Spot" MueiT m6vbi baroain 10 Pontiac hardtop, power, A-1 4-CadUlace '63^to •86 $186 i ’58 T-Bird Hardtop with full power. Thlr Oeauty is only $1895 JliROMK , 'Bright Spot" OrehAiTi IgA)ii C*** : 8-0488 W.r rlu. SnAer^S?, ^ no money down. $}7.24 per mo.. One year guarantee! BOB HORST r.iiu'oln - Mercury te block B. of 16-Mlle on US IRUaHOHAM MI 0-4 BOH HORST Lincoln - Mercury One Block S. of 16-Mlle on US }0 BIBMINOHAM MI 0-46M COMPACT SPECIALS MONZA COUPE Automatio transmission, radio and hsater, COMET Economy standard transmission, whitewall tires. Like new. 4-door, economy s SII^*^MOTORS 334-7181 ;?Sirs* HOB HORST Lincoln - Mercury One BlockvB. of 16-Mlle on US BIRMINOHAM________MI 6-1 ’61 .FORD 2-DOOR ih Radio. Hester, Automatic 'ransmlHslan. and Whitewalls I $1795 Julin McAuliffe, I'ord 830 OAKLAND AVE, EE .5-4101 USED WAGON SAE1-: 8 wagons from 1866 up to 1860. 2 door 4l^oor, fttoidara shifts sn< automatio. ^Ctoma^and you will Frank Schuck, Ford t Buckhorn Lake MARMADUKB Br And«rM»i dk f.eimlnir He cun go imm u dt>ad slop to -10 miles per liDur in 3 seeimd.s' d Con 106 t SEDAN. [ nu .MDNKY DUWN. AS-I 4.7600. Harold Turner Pord. 1060 FORD CUSTOM ‘'30O ^ 2-DOOIl sedan. VO engine, Standard, transmission. radio, heater, whitewalls. .---(J^Jy |ggS. . lOOOS. WOODWARD Easy terme PA^TTERBON CHEV- I'wo-ione blue KOLET CO., It ■Easy terms. Pi... ... .... . 6VB.. BIBMINOHAM, Ml 4.2736. WILL TRADE A •63 FORD IN good ruimlng condition for a later —|)s aromatic Ufers please. ^0 LINC6LN 2-DOOR Hardtop, with radio, heater, automatic transmlislon, power steering and brakes 1 Beige finish and mateMne trim, one year guarantee! Puu price only ' 41.706 BOB HORST Lincoln - Mercury New M2 car, with radio, 1 whitewalls, 14 •1,48........* 46.02 per month. R & C RAMBLER e Rd. 1%1 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN STATION WAOON ?r”*brake*s‘!'^'rBd7o"^ hcalor"*'w?i?*-walls. Factory offlclars car. Low miles and like new. Only 42.686. Easy terms. :69 MERCURY WAOON COldljfUTER '’’interior *’m* dlo, heater, one-year guarantee! BOR BOR ST Lincoln - Mercury One Block 8. of IS-MIle on US 10 BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-4538 New and Uted Cart clip^RJiLKT^cb. Ww^wurd Ave,. DltiuitiKhAm. Ml 8 MICRCUHY t-PASdKNOlCR BOB BOKST Lincoln - Mcrcurv Oiie_Bloo^k 8, of 16-Mlle on" ikw EHd UMd cm m TMit Week'* specie I 1140 Ford FelrlMw #». V-4, aut malic, 4 door, aedan, radio ai healer, 1 owner, vary nice. $1495 IIM Plyibanth 4 door V-«. aut matle. radio and MIer. beaui id whit*, very spe- oTa| price. $895' See Ue Hefere You Deal R6R MOTORS imperial C|ir^sler. Plymouth. 724 OAKLAND AVb! PE 4.162 "wAKWB"cji.rArt)iiiW"e7iuH . Crake Motor .Sales l-l'! 8-6822 ^ I RANil'oivrAllON- BPECIAI^^^^Il THIH Voi d 2 do«r .. ..... j'onUac 2 d Ford 2-door Zr'!i 'ettS :cTn FActoiv ornnlNl 4'door with AUto-m»ttc trAiiAmliiilon. r»dto. h9At-er, biff tnsltif, awfiity beltii, Hkv new Ontt yeur guArAiilet*! Full pilc« unly 1501$ HOR.ST l.iiuolii - Meicniy One Block 8 of 16-Mlle on U« limMINDHAM Ml 61 BIRMINGHAM GOOD TRANSPORTATION 6 Mercury Jiardtbp, nice ______ 6 Royal Lancer hardtop ... 1 Pord V-8 club coupe 6 Packard, A-1 running . 4286 6 Lincoln. Cuprl, ......... 4.146 6 Pord hardtop, sharp ..... 4346 6 Pontiac mar Chief, hill Pwr 4386 •Superior Auto Sales FE 4-7600 Compare These Prices! 1 •62 NI'AV CAR TRADE-INS 68 CHEVROLET Bel Air 2 Door With V-l Engine, and ------ " Traiismlsslonl Only 4841 9 Ran 18 LarL .. 18 Chevy v 18 Pord w 17 Chevy rp*"” ■/. il286 67 Pontiac Hardtop 4 886 PICKUP SPECIALS RUSS JOHNSON 87 CHEVROLET BEL AIR lop. 6 Cyl. Powerglido Tn (tlon. Low MUeagel $925. 58 ED8EL - A Clean one $2895. Bl ^TONTIAC Conj^erUble MANY MORE terrific SAVINGS! Homer-Hights n M24 in Oxford ^anjjop,^_w]^_radjo, heat- low mileage $395 Down! JI'.ROMI'. "Bright Spot" W.58 OLDS r^86 t'door^herdmp^^All whhc $1I').5 • FISCHER ItLK K WOODWARD Bhlll Ml 4-6222 _OREENPIELDf •80 OLDSM^BILE WnAMIC . dour sedan, with hydramatic transmission. Power Steering and Power Brakes, a low mileage car Olnwlng While Finish. Bank Rates IIAUPT PONTlAi (•I.AtlKHTON MA 6-6688 .......... ■■ of USIO on MI6 Open HAD CRI'.DIT? NO CRI-'.DlTi you havr 860 and a steady job. We will arrauge financing on a oar for you. NO'COSlQN-K R 8 NEEDED. Reestablish your credit. Bee Mr. White at 3276 W. Huron lat Elisabeth Lake Kd.l or Mr. Hendry it "■ ° Saginar whitewalls. Beautiful blue __ white flnlah. Only 41.006. Easy terms. PATTERjfON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE , BlhMlNOHAM, Ml 4-3736. 066 OLDgMSSiLB sPicEiEI BDB ilART motors 848 Orchard Lake at Voorhels FE 4-6020 ,„„.„BJLi¥w¥OU'R“"NKAV ’ ” OLDSMOBILE FROM MOUGHTEN & SON 620 N. Main. Rochestei OL 1-0701 1080 OLDii CONVBR'HBLB. FULL POWER. A B 8 O L U T E L Y NO MONEY DOWN. Assume pay- 832,11 . . . Parks at MI Harold Turner, P—"* -------rwiii* I. Excellent condl- onroiTwotMI . -.. t PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE. engine. Power steering, • iinish with red trim. Only Essv term ------------- CHFVROLET C with red trim. Only |i08. • r m s. PATTBRSON ________IT CO^ 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINOHAM. MI ’59 PLYMOUTH FURY 4-door sedan, sparkling condition, with V8 engine powerfllte transmission fine tires.v one-owner, lovely tu-tone blue ftnlshl 4L006. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth 013 8. Woodward MI 7-3211 .Wli^ jS W Caililtitc Coup* Thli waek a«anly u a hi« niloaf* $495 pown JEROME 'Bright Spot'.' ■■PfetMii'' i8i4'’rOT6i9fOtt»imiiiAiriri^ iBooTWipM ,lnn.|t«a-S down^ miop liummiiAN an5 Slark iliekfv, CInwson 4 Mile Hoad, belween Oronks and l.AKEMippj MoroiiH HELP!! WERE BNOWED under 'Snow Sale' TH18 18 NO SNOW JOB, WE WANT TO MOVE EVERY CAR ON THE I.OT o u R* Ipapan’S^on* pro- ORAM. SHARraN YOUR PENCIf,, 80 YOU CAN MAKE YOUR OWN DEAt„ NO REA80NABLE OFFER It rejbctei Real'sharp. 1-owntr, U.OOO miles! sharp. 01,801 ^JVROLET impala COH-r. Btaiidard shift, 0 cylln-15,000 miles, Real 8l«rpt 1080 OLDS M 4 door hardtop. Low mileage, 1-owner, full power. 42,288. 8 PORD 2 DOOR V 4 doors. 0 ohoose Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 B’ham 1987 CHRYSLER CLUB^ COUPE. -,adio. heater and white fALL TIRES, absolutely NO 4-7800, Harold Turner. Ford. BUY YOUR NEW 0« USED (JAR DURING OUR BIO Anniversary Sale! -SHELTON PONTIAC - BUICK ROCHESTER OL 1-8133 SPOTLESS!! 1959 IMPERIAL SOUTH HAMPTON SEDAN. Buok-ikln beige with Interior to match. 4-way ^ower. swivel front seat rthT accessories. $2095 WILSON PONTIAC - CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward BIRMINGHAM Uf 4-1930 Chrysler - Plymotith 912 8. wd^yil MI 7-3211 CHEVROLET ’59 CHRYSLER An excepHonar Wlndebr 4-Door hardtop, eparkllng clean interior, radio, heater, automatic trans- Beal good tires 1 enerl Outstanding vi BIRMINGHAM ■ STATION WAO- _______________lodel, 8 cylinder, 4-door PowergUde. power steering, power brakes, power gate. Oood tires, padded dashboard. 2-3024. Moote Electric ’56 CHEVY 4-DOOR A real nice 218. VS wlUi auto- HASKINS "OK" Used Cars •88 OLDSMOtllLE "OO’V oonvertlble, lull power and equipment, beautiful gold finish 1 Show room new iteerliu. p< lUveFblne nisalon. pc rakes, beau 'noh»W,?«tr.ms,t brUe?' rad?o7 beauf&y*^ld* •n CHBVRObZH- m. AIB-4 boor HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds JUMP INTO SPRING WintAr Ih nn thp.:3aaw£>34-r-:--r-enri3se(it:ainiiTC6gWe~zero^ .. why buck the unpredictable spring weather... we can predict these cars will give you nothing but excellent service.., so why not buy now, and enjoy Spring driving in style and comfort. 1959 Plym. 1958 Pontiac 8-Pasiengw ebatlon wagon, bae radio and heater, power brakes and power steering, automatio transmission, whltewell tires. An extra fine auto. $1295 $1195 Our Stock Is Large and We're Ready to Deal... Stop and Shop On Our Friendly Lot 1959 Pontiac 1957 Pontiac WE $1895 $$95 1959 Pontiac...I960 Pontiac radio and heater, whitewall tires, an- almost new .body, Hydramatic transmlaelon, all yours for only: - Convertible with Hydramatic transmission, radio and heater. Here Is another Retail Bargain that won't last -A- -R- -E- $1795^_ $R095_-BEAHNO- 1959 Plym, 1960 Pontiac in antomsttc tranam f ^cmomlcal ear. $1195 Bonneville. Convertible. Thle one Is itrtetly tor the- Sporty. It has radio and beater, Rydra-.matlc tranimlmlon. -pa.war brakes and power gtjerlng, whitewall tires. $2295 OUR L WIDE SELECTION WILL GIVE YOU ALMOST ' COMPLETE ■ -FREEDOM IN 1961 Pontiac Bonneville Station Wagon, hat radio and heater, HyMmatle transmission, power brakes and 1961 Pontiac" $2995 power eteerlng. It'g a i tire mist color. $2595 1961 Pontiac" 1961 Pontiac WE ; Bonneville Vista, radio and heater. Hydramatic transmission, power brakes and power steering. Sparkling white finleh with ted interior. Ventura Sport Coupe. It has radio and heater, Hydramatic transmlsBlon, power brakee and power steering. Thli Is rea. eonably priced at: -A- $2895 -$2695 -R — 1961 Pontiac 1961 Pontiac. - E - Bonneville Vteta. has radio and heater, Hydramatic transmission, power brakes and power steering, this one Is gleaming gold with matching leather in- Yentura Sport Coupe with Hydramatic transmission, white-wall tires on thlt hoqey with radio and heater. All mndard mmNG^"I5EAEINGT2895 $2595 YOUR CHOICE Shop on OUR BIG LOT Where There's Parking Space Galore 1961 Pontiac 1960 Ford with radio and h and heater. Is a --------------- --------------- Hydramatlo transmission, power automatio t.--------- .. . brakes and power steeAng. This good looking and running e ■ ----- ed. priced right. $2595 $1795 FACTOftY BRANCH RETAIL STORE PONTIAC FACTORY BRANCH- FE 3-7954' "Goodwill Used Cars" 65 MT. CLEMENS ..ST. -RETAIL STORE FE 3-7954 - SAVINGS/.- DEPENDABILITY - VARIETY - SATISFACTION SAVINGS • --i ■ • _Vf. i'Vf’ TtimTv-sik TTIW PONTIAC PnKSS^, FRinAV. I^rABCTlI 2, looa rmid. uQW-oMr «a»hk iuoan Sr«J.C}m3'*« .Ml rsJs! "^{•SSuiru .-h»'R.»V-|-Ooor wlUi «-(!vllnri(ir rnKlni null >li •ntmluion Alio h»» i»iHo •n. roid O-M»lle IriutxmUMOii. iw««r brakvii. powfir alrvim*. h«*l«r •nd •psrkllni tlrni. 1957 Ford 2-Door, Thl« Cuatom ' f jidTo VnT OlMiming rod »nd «hit* and u li r»A|ly 1958 Ford Hardtop and i\fw lliaa. Sparkling black and whilg IlnUli and vary clean TRANSPORTATION SPECIAL ^ 1956 FORD 2-DOOR WAGON. 8-cyliiuler engine and Ford-O-Matic transmission, radio and heater, window washers. $395 1962.-^DEMQS^ Galaxie 500 4-Ooor Hardtop wUti radio, haater. power ataaiing. windahleld waahari and whltawall Uraa. Crulae-O-Matlo tranamiiilon. Falcon Squire Both of These Csr* Carry NEW CAR WARRANTY^* Priced To Sell! BEATTIE MOTOR SALES, INC. “Your WATERFORD FORD Dealer Since 19.K)’ 5806 DIXIE HIGHWAY OR 3-1291 Service and Parts Dept. Open ’til 9 pm. Daily No Money DOWN!! Just Assume the Payments on Almost l50 Repossessions, Bankruptcies, Storage Cars, etc. . AT KING AUTO SALES — Liquidators - Choose from Examples Such as These . . Car .. i Bal Due Pymt 1957 Ford Station Wagon............. .$.397 $3.82 1955 Mercury Hardtop ............. ..$97 $1,08 j957 Rambler Station Wagon ..........$21>7 $2,85 1955 Chrysler Hardtop .......L:......$197 $1,88 1957 Chevrolet Delray ...............$597 $5,88 1956 Plymouth 4-Door^................$ 97 $1.08 1956 OWsmobile ‘W Hardtop.......... .$197 $1,88 T955 Lincoln Capri $297 $2.85 1959 Volkswagen Convertible .e........$997 $2.85 ■airtomatir BOB lloitST Lincoln • Memuy AmfiwiUMlCwt 1IM $1595 John McAuHffe. Ford «W OAKkANn AVB. Fi: 54101 • 1955J 1957 Stttdebaker Station Wagon .. 1955 Cadillac Coupe DeVille ...... 1957 Plymouth 2-Door .................$297 $2.85 1956 Mercury Hardtop .................$197 $1.88 1958 Plymouth 4-Door Station Wagon $497 $4.95 1953 Ford with floor shift 97 $1.08 1955 Chevrolet Hardtop........■••••• -$197 $1. 1959 All-State Motor Sc&iter .........$ 97 -$lf)8 J960 Dodge, like new !................$997''$10.20 -Plus' Many Others- TRADES ACCEPTED. WE WILL PAY OFF THE BALANCE ON YOURJPRESENT CAR • TWO GIANT LOCATIONS 3275 Wx HURON rE8^f»088 115 S. SAGINAW FE 8-0402 'THESE CARS TRADED IN ON 1962 IMPORTS 1%1 (ORVAm Monza ....$1895 I'kiO .STl’DEBAKER ...........................$7.50 with r«dld. ItMtri. «>v.vlUidtr »ngln« Atlikl 19.5') t IIIA'KOl.ET Impala ................$1395 J-I^pr 19.58 CHEVROLET 2-Door ......................$795 Hkdlv. h«»l»r, « cylinder ailckl 19.57 POX'I'lAt: Catalina ...................$ ?>5 HAHtrroe, r>dlu, h»*Ur. Iiulan»tlr. triiiimlAdonI 1957 ODDSMOBIKE Sedan .............$795 1956 PlAMOUTli' Wagon .............$345 Rkdio. lickidy kPd Hick •hlttl 1^933 CAI)1LLAC Hardtiij)..........$ 4')5 I'LUS 40 I'ShT) IMPORTS I.\ STOCK! AUTOMOBILE IMPORT ' AUTHOBiatD BMC DKALKtt " Au»tln-H«*l»y--8prlt»- -MOA- MO-MIdget MtirrltxJkgutr- Aira-R(^m«o l.aiii'lk 211 S SAGINAW ^ «imI )hN Cun ^ dW^igAM jh. HAM, Ml twin. tN, MIt. Oil c ’-SAVE NOW- E • ■O'",.' ' ' ' L N B V I !■: T R K T ’ • V 1 N H , 0 1. C BUY HERE - PAY HERE F', 0 fyinllkc nonnovlll* Cbn- vkiilblt with rMlIo. h«»t»r. ImT' ig itud buck*! m illv* and m* ov riKMi wlUi a wlilta IIHIO ni.pHMOBIMn . ’C ^ymanta'c D (liavrolH Convartibid with radiu, liaalar. powar bntkya inoitUily payinanta of fl ig«d rord convgrtibla. BMrkllnt. Uvandar with a wintd top. Haa radio, haator, pow»r brakaa. powar ataaflni and whllawan ttrf*. Can ba muiTA XU avrolat V-l Oaaivertibla atandard tranamlialon, I, haaiar and whltawall . Thia ona la aolUl whlia a whita top. rull priha . Paymanta ol $54.31 y 5l»>. i5 Ford Opavartlbla with radio, »Kl»A«aaa.l| |^)d •ri» cor ining bli ly 51455. lack top. Full prioa 1550 Ford (>iivartlbla. Sparkling oT,?i‘'3.“i;ir‘±r- 168 Ptymouth Convartibla with autoRiatlo trananilaalon, radio and haatar. Jat black finlah wlUi a purt whila top. It raally ahlnaa. Full price Lloyd Motors - USED CAR PLAZA 2.12 S. SAGINAW /. FE 2-9131 YOUR AND 5 Free 1 WIN I Free Ooffw ONE OF 10 RAMBLERS-CLASSIC, .STATION WAGON, SEDAN PLUS ALL EXPENSE-7-DAY VACATION FOR TWO IN IRELAND I JUST COMB IN AND REGISTER SAVE UP TO'$1,000 ON NEW LEFT OVER '61 RAMBLERS NEW 1962 RAMBLER hi:atf:k. radio, automatic transmission, WHITEWALLS AND WINDSHIELD WASHERS $47 Down and $52.08 per Month AT BlRMiNOHAM AAM8LBR ONLY HURRYl This Won't Last Buy Here . ^ . Pay Here 1959 rambler atom 5-Door with a-oylli 5-Door with autoniattc traniniiaaion, haatar \anit whltawall lO.OW actual milea anil la car la In mint aomlltlun. 'ull prica 5556. 19.58 CHEVROLET station Wagon with engine, ^atftndtrd iri 1959 RAMBLER , S-erltnitor 5-Oyllndar UaUw Wagon with, *i’ai tt1nd‘«t"tlr.pn'^^ ‘ - —^d ythar antrji^loan and nioa oa^ 1961 I'ORD Falilana "600'’ J-Door. Tlila gam hai a V-S angina, auto-~-“i trani^laalon, 1960 RAMBLER 4-Door Sedan with f-oylindar engint, automaUc tranamlaalon, radio, hoatar and whltawall er, powar brakaa, power atajr- tiru. Hera la a raal aconpml- akoa^n Ing and whltawalt tlraa. $1886.' oar automoblla for only 5UM- •* 5356. 1957 CHEVROLET ry1fndVrT«jfi'.,W:niV.J; i^!Si.„r.o.iif.tit- p^oaS'iigUi BIRMINGHAM RAMBLEft 666 S. Woodward, Birmingham MI 6-3900 T IS PROTECTED OU ENJOY A BONANZA of SAVINGS, SIMULTANEOUSLY AT \ MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES "Chevy-Land" ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEED WARRANTY - .THE ALMOST NEW CARS LISTED BELOW ARE ALL IN TOP CONDITION AND TITLED IN .GENffiAL-M0T0RS-"NAME' '61 CHEVROLET Sedan......................$2395 IMPALA SPORT SERIES With all the extraa Including EZI glaaa, power steering and brakaa, automatic transmission and whltawall Ures. AIR CONDmONINa TOO! Sharp Imperial '61 CHEVROLEf Pickup .....,$1695 ti-TON UNIT LOADED WITH CUSTOM EQUIPMENT, This one will do most any lob. '61 CADILLAC 4-Door .$3895 '61 Chevrolet IMPALA SEDAN engine, standard t $2095 '61 CHEVROLET Hardtop ............$2295 A very sharp BEL AIR 4-DOOR with power ataartng and brakes, Powarglida tranamlsalon, padded dash and a sharp adobe beige ttnish. '61 CHEVROLET Sedan ........... .$2095 '61 OLDSMOBILE F-85 ....,.$2295 OTHER "CHEVY-LAND, TOP CONDITION, USED CAR VALUES'' ’M PONTIAC Slation Wagon 5-PASSENOER^jory ai $2595 •61 MOXZA Ouh Coupi? r Interior. Really beauU- ppea 9 AM, - 9 P.M. Daily - ^ A.M.. 6 P.M. Sat. | $1995 .. $995 ’58 CHEVROLET Delray Sedan _A.I sharp solid sierra gold 2-with 6-cyllnder engine standard transmlsslon7 - R .nTV- '..vavw.- rrin tht. $895 •60 PONTIAC • ( atalina Convertible This gem equipped with Hydra-ing^^ramo”^heater”atfd $2095 ’61 B LICK Skylark Couiic This little Special equipped $1095 ’60 CHEVROLET 2-Door Sedan $1595 W \01.KSWA(ilC\’ tunvertible $1295 ’59 CHEVROLET Bel Air Sedan $1295 $1285 ’55 CHEVROLET Bel Air Sedan A 6-c y M n d e ^ ^wei^llde $495 ’.5<) FORD Cu.stdm Sedai nomlcal standard 1 $895 ’60 CHEVROLET Parkwood Wagon 8-cyIlnder engine. Powergllde transmission, radio, heater, Just like new. Real sharp adobe ‘60 CORVAIR^ 4-Door, “700’’ Series This little green gem equipped with Powergllde tranamlsslan, radio, heater. Whitewall tires and beautiful solid green finish. Fairly priced at only $1395 ’61 CORVAIR 4-D'oor, “500” Serie.s This economy special equipped with automatic trani Fairly priced $1545 ’59 “T” BIRD Just Like New Power steering, power brakes. ____ transmission. --------- ivory and Jet black flnleh. ■ - proud beauty! $2285 ’57 CHEVROLET 2-Door Sedan V-8 engine, standard transmis- $895 '60 CHEVROLET Biscayne 2-Door ’.S8 CHEVROLET Bel Air Coupe $995 ’61 CHEVROLET Bel Air Sedan 8-cyllnd*r engine and Power-rllde . transmissloi — - $1995 ’61 CHEVROLET Biscayne 2-Door Economical 6 - cylinder engine with standa-rd transmission, heater, signals, washers end - twilight blue $1795 ’59 CHEVROLET >^-Ton Pickup from. Stop IL -------- a selection. You’ll hi ■ saving y $1495- , $995 '61 MONZA 2-Door Club Coupe I PowergUdo transihlsston, radii^ heater, whitewall t..,.. _____ onyx black finish with red leatherInterior. Many ether $1995 ’61 CHEVROLET Parkwood Wagon d-passenggr with, rgdlo, heater, V-8 engmt, automauc transmission. Real sharp solid Roman .^195- ’59 PLYMOUTH Fury Sport Coupe This one equipped with radio, . heater, aotomafie transmission, power , steerlng.y Beautiful ivory and. onyx kwh^Rmw-ndih-wuK $1395 ’59 RAMBLER American 2-Door Thii sedan you stuply must ^n^rmtA. ‘The ^te«( I .$550- TODAY'S LULU: '62 Chevrolet=^^^:^*^2®^ TWO TO CR006B FROU sharp solid UtuI Ivory and blue. Both eara for Mtly $2595 attliews=Harr reavei FE 5-4161 631 Oakland at Cass : Oaldand Csuntys Largest Volume Chevrolet Dealer FE 4-4547 ; •! THB PONTIAC FKESS, FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 10( --Today's Television Programs- lb «Ui odlbiNb MW ibltlMM to VthMl* wlthgul iwltoo I l-wiiiSvOliaiiiiil ■ b-Obili^ (S) Movto (Cont.) (4) Wyatt Karp (9) Popeya (Qwt. (99) Or. PoBln'a Glanto (9) Waathar (4) Waatiwr (T) Mahalta Jackwm Stngi (2) Nawi (4) Newa (7) Newa (9) Tiigboat Annie (!») Tlckar Tape (2) SIporti . (4) SpoiiH (2) Newa (4) f (7) Newa, Weather, Sporla I (2) PreaWent Kennedy (4) Preaidant Kennedy (7) PreaWent Kennedy (0) Whlplaah (S6) Story o( Money (2) Prealdent Kennedy (4 Intematlonpl Showtime (7) Soupy Salea (9) Movie "Paclflo Ren-dexvoua.” (1942) Young man fetalled to decode t meaaagea. Lee Bow* (56) Probing Mind (2) Third Man (4) Showtime (Qonl.) (7) Hathawaya (9) Movie (Cont.) (2) Route 66 (4) Detectives (7) Fllntatones '• (9) Movie (Cont.) , (56) For Doctors Only (2) Route 66 (Cont.1 (4) Detectives (Cont.) • Pr«flo«i FBI (7) TT Sunset Sbhlp 49) Tommy Ambcpae (96) For Oocto^ ilnii You 9iM (2) Father ol the rfiide (4) (Color) Telephone Hour (7) 77 Stinaet Strip (Oont.) (0) Four Just Men (56) Ate ot KInta loioo (2) Twilight Zune TV Features nAWlllUK, 7:30 p.m. (2). 'The Pltchwagon.” Young drover killed on trail, and his fellow c hoys try to raise money for his widow and chlldran. I»a(ent medicine operator (Buddy Ebsen) volunteers to use his musical talents ) stagei benefit ahow. HOUTB aa, 8:30 p.m. (2). •'Shoulder the Sky, My Lad." Start Ma^ tin Milner and George Mahorls confronted with problei trying to explain the brutal slaying of man to his young son. KOBKRT TAYIA)B‘« DBTKO-TIVIW, 8:30 p.m. (4). "Night Boat." Psychollc killer (Scot! Marlowe) eludes police dragnet, and hunts for victim among thrillseeking passengers. Taylor stars. THE HONGS OF IRVING BERLIN, 9:30 p.m; (2). C!arcer of famous composer will be traced on "Telephone Hour," with Ginger Rogers as both host and performer, Other stars Include Janet Blair, John Raltt, Johnny Desmond, Mindy Carson and J o Bushkin Trio. Songs Include Pretty ' 'Jexander's Ragtl gtime Band" 1»4lisr''“(^(«r)r*"''- 7i06 (2) Meditations 7:10 (2) On The Farm Front 7:ia (2) Accent 7: so (2) Deputy Dawg 7: as (4) News 8:00 (2) B'wana Don THB 'TWIUOHT ZONE. 19 p. (2). "To Serve Man." A 9-fpot giant from another planet* drops in on earth and creates turmoil trying to convince people he wants peace. Lloyd Bochner and Susan Cummings star as two United Nations officials. Duke ot Earl Top Hit Here are what young people think are the top records of the week, complied weekly by OllbertJyoutti Research Corp. 1 Duke of Earl ........... .............. Gene Chandler 2 Hey! Baby ........................... • • Brttce Channel 3 Smoky Places.............................The Corsairs 4 Let Me In ..............................The Sensations 5 Midnight In Moscow ....................... Kenny Ball 6 Crying In the Rain ..........*.........Everly Brothers 7 Chip Chip ....... ................... Gene McDaniels 8 Don’t Break the Heart That Loves You ., Connie Ifrancis 9 She’s Got You ..........................., r Song) ' - " '. The Ikettes 11 12 Bdby It’s You ..........................The Shlrelles What’s So Good About Goodbye ............The Miracles Twistin’ The Night Away ................. Sam Cooke Break It to Me Gently ................... Brenda Lee Dear Lady '^st ................. ........U. 8. Bonds WhAVs Your Name..........................‘.Don it Juan The Twist ...........................Chubby Checker Her Royal Majesty .....................James Darren Cajun Queen ............................ Jimmy Dean The Wanderer ................................. Dion Acaoss 1 Prima donna S VIolUi’a partner M08ICAI. MOMENTS lit Donkey ^ ■t Mlmtckcrs r r r r IT IS 14 nr IS \l nr r SI ET 2T W sr J K r 1 ?T w IT VT 0 io r u B 1 14 B B1 ,(4) ivipphons Hour (Com,) (7) Tnifst: Comiptors (9) Cpuntiy Hoedown (2) EyswUitoss (4) Chef HwUley (7) Target (Cont ) (9) Playhouse 15 (2) News (4) News (7) News I (9) News (7) Nsws, Hports (2) Weiilher (4) Weather (9) Weather (2) Sports (4) Spoils (9) Telescoprj UAW (2) Movie; 1. "Beau (2) Movie; ’’Beau Gesie.’’ (1939) After dlsap-p<‘uram-«t ot sappblr^ three brothers Join French Foreign l.egioii, Gary Cooper, Ray Mlllnnd. 2. "Paper Gallows" (Engllsli: 1950)• Writer be-comes obsessed with his murder story. (T) Weather (2) Movie (cont.) (4) (Color) Jack Paar (7) Movie — 1. "Christmas Holiday.’’ (1944) Soldier is about to leave for home Christmas furlough. Deanna Durbin, Gene Kelly, Gladys George, 2. "Black Friday." (1940) Boils Kni-Iotf. (9) Movie — "The Postman Always Rings TWlce." (1946) Young man and woman plan to murder girl’s husband. Lana ’Turner, John Garfield. By BOB TIIOMAH AP MovleTV WriK' HOLLYWOOD ~ Ever gel hit In t|M face with a pie? j tried It once, back In my giddy youth while covering a comball picture with Jack Car- HA’niRDAY MORNING son. He slapped kisser with a chocolate cream, whipped - cream topped, so I What it felt like. It felt lousy. All that goo dogging (4) (Color) Diver Dan (7) Rural Newsreel (2) Captain Kangaroo (4) (Color) Bozo the Oown (7) Crusade for (Christ (4) (Color) Pip the Piper (7) Courageous Cat (2) Junior Auction (4) (Color) Shari Lewis (7) House of Fashions (2) Mighty idoijse (4) (Color) King Leonardo (2) Allakazam (4) Fury (7) Circus Boy (2) Roy Rogers (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Citizen Soldier (9) Billboard gluing your eyes shut. Despite this ob-| vlous discomfort, xHOMAS ■ of Hollywood’s biggesf names are eagei-ly offering themselves as targets tor hurled custard (actually .shaving cream) every Friday night. SA’TURDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Sky King (4) Mr. Wizard (7) Junior Sports Club (9) Country Calendar___ ttiSinzrW'TOenT Flicka (4) Milky’s Party Time (9) Droit De Cite 1:00 (2) Video Village Jr. (7) Superman (9) Buccaneers i:S0 (2) "Sued for Libel’’ (7) Silent Service (9) William Tell 2:00 (4) Championship Debate (7) Movie: "Badlands of Dakota” (9) World of Sport 2:30 (4) Pro Basketball - Lakers vs. Hawks , 3:00 (2) Changing Times (9) wrestling 3:15 (2) Doctor Answers 1:30 (2) Wrestling Champions (7) Wrestling 1:00 (9) Movie: "The Gold Express" 4:30 (2) Big Ten Basketball-Purdue vs. Indiana (4) Ask Washington (7) Pro Bowlers 6:00 (4) (Color) All.^ar Golf (9) This Living World 5:30 (91 Comedy Time Some of the victims so far: Frank Sinatra, Tony Curtis, Burl Lancaster, Mickey Rooney, Robert Cummings. They have been guests on a far-out TV show starring Soupy Sales on ABC. Soupy is just as amazed at the caliber of his guests anyone. "I can't understand il," he says with amazement. "Imagine a guy like Sinatra coming on my show. He gets $50,000 for doing something like that: from me he got $150. and he paid Networks to Carry Kennedy'Test'Talk WASHINGTON (AP) - . The ABi^CBS^and NBC television and ] radio networks and the Mutual Radio network will carry President Kennedy’s address tonight. The President will speak from his White House office at 7 P.m,. on- iiuctesrToting' and^disarma-ment. The speech will run about ;3D minutes. ■ - To(day's Raidio Pro'(3jams - - WWJ (sm WWE <1S») WCAE Ul») WPON (U6S) WJBK C S:SS-WJR, Neva iTTf J, new* wzrz. Herray, WIntei CKLW. Nava WJBR RoSart X. I WCAR,- Newa. Purae WPON, Nava, Olaen Show wwe, news, asuweii CKLW, Nava, Joe Van lidb-WJB. Nava, Shm VIM, *««a. MaxvaU WXY:^. “Marty McNaeley -CKLW? Hewf, 70a Van WPON. Neva, Olaen Show 1:99—WPON, Music, Neva WWJ, Neva, Maxwell WXYZ, Winter, News WWJ. News, Maxwell WXYZ, McNeeley, New. WPON, News, Lee Lyons I:90-WWJ, News. Maxwell 9:99—WCAR. News. Sheridan WXYZ, Weiss, News* WP(HI. Neva, Lee Lyons 9:9*-WWJ,- Neva. Monitor «:00-WWJ. Monitor WWJ, Monitor WXYZ, Wales, News CKLW. Haws. Davies Music WWJ, News, Monitor ™ S^^rl., Davloa WCAR. Sharidaa S:09~wja. Claeslesl Moale WWJ Mmltar T 8:3a-WJR, Music HaU WWJ. News. Monitor CKlW, Bporta, Pavlas WCAR,. Neva, Biwrldail THyTY. 'SKVIIN Adenauer Calls" Mis Man Home BONN, Gwmany Ml - Oianciri« lor Konrad Adanmim* has iB-Hinictod his Moscow ambassador, Hmis Kroll, to return ImmodlatolF ami rxplitln imports iilirging fHit he pi-oiiosrd Western rrctsfiiUlon of till* Odcr-Nolssc lin<^, the gov-rrimcnt uiinounccd today. TO THE REHOIIE Ksscxvlllc Hnuw-|>IaiUT (.'cell Millctic (iaullilrr and tlcrald Kahn, all of Buy (.’l(y; wcic'^^nh'' of a brings In three flshoi-mcn who were HirumlfHl on .Saginaw Bay group of 25 trapiied six miles om on the iMiy liy diifling .‘mow in his sn()w buggy. Tlie rescued flshennen, Lyle l.tiPan, Ij'sler covering llie •'I'oad ” out onto liny ice. Hi8 Success Formula: Pi(es) r (Not) Square was the m'eomi (Imo In four months that Kroll had bet'ii In illineiilly Willi the government. woH recalled In Novembsr rejMirta fioin Moscow said he made proposals lo Premier, KhruHlu;h(‘v about Ihc Berlin and man (lucsUons which did not conform lo Bonn iwllcy. Kroll denied this and, after re-ixatlng lo llie cliam-ellor, was ex-‘I'uted, and returned to Moscow. Soupy Winning 'Custard's Last Stand' Nikita Renews ^11 fof Geneva Summit right in the Attacking Pilot Given Refuge The fact that Soupy records for NEW Y 0 R K - Ginger Rogers, after worrying over the problem for several seasons and asking questions, confesses she stumped. She doesn’t know why women hade such a hard time in television. "It seems to me that television s like automobiles,” she said. 'Designed by men, and mostly tor men, _ - ------- --------- - ------ '*■„_____________*____..............poltoe-'-rfrarna -will- . Prince J)lm:odom--ii»ihaHeuk-r-cai^ —"Hv nexr 8ca.son ihei*e protrably-iepiaodi the attack on Diem “God’s punish- ' ' ................... and denied the South Viet PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (F) Cambodia gave political asylum today to a South Vietnamese fight-pilot who flew to safety here after attacking President Ngo Dinh Diem’s palace In Saigon. Bar U.S. Chief From E. Berlin Communists Retaliate Against Restrictions on Soviet Head BERLIN (UPD-The East Gei^ man Comibunists today barred the U.S.. commandant in Berlin from entering East Berlin in retaliation for American restrictions on the Soviet commandant. The Cambodian action seemed certain to further Irritate Cam-bodlan-South Vietnamese relations alrt:ady severely strained by repeated border Incidents growing out of South Viet Nam’i war against tf guerrillas. Diem’s government has accused Sihanouk Of allowing the....Veit Cong to operateLirom Cambodian territory. Neutralist Cambodia has rejected these charges and irt turn accused South Vietnamese troops and planes of frequently violating Cambodian territory. A V.8. spokesman said tke » U.8 dant, MaJ. Gen. Albert Watson II, had no intention of trying to enter East Berlin until the East Gernians UR restrictions on his civilian political aides. The East Germans barred Watson on orders from the Russians. The ban was announced by the official East German news agency ADN, dnd a Soviet liaison agency notified U.S headquarters by telephone. 7 According to the U.S. spokesman. the liaison officer said Soviet commandant Col. A. V. Solovyev asked the East Germans to can ban on Solovyev from the U.S. seittor of West i Berlin. ■The Americans barred Solovyev in December because the Communist police prevented Watson’s East Berlin without an identity check. The Americans contend that such checks by the East Germans violate the Western ^ied rights 6f freed(xn of movement in Berlin. Yhe British and French have n(rt _b^ed Solovyev from their aectort. British Explode N-Device Under Uevada Desert WASHINSgTON (UPI) - A small British nuclear ^vice vlas set (111 underground in Nevada Thurtday in a test pf a new trigger mechanism and safely techniques for handling atomic weapons. It was the first foreign-made atomic bomb ever' expired 1 the ^United States, In London,.- authorit^ve the test would-ad- They said the test,- which also involved a new trigger, used hydrogen device in the low kilo-ton range, which meant its force may have, equaled abodt 20,009 tons o( -IKT. have against lougli aflri' tlon—Popeye, 1 slow al fli’st,” he recalled. "The teen-agers hated me, because I hud replaced the lust half-hour of Dick Clark. i disc film may mitigating factor. 8ALE8’ TKAIIJ4 1 wrote ulMMit Soupy u ycuf ago. How h<‘ came up through radio and TV in HuMtlngton, W.Va. Cincinnati and Cleveland, flnqlly clicking with a dally slapetlck show in Deti'oit.^ven making the ABC n«‘lwork on Saturday morning, I low he gave up assurance of $1.50,1)00 a year to crack the bigtime in Hollywood. He has ciacked It. Ho went on 1 way you feel yourself, a loeal show last March, playing "I knew 1 was making It. conHHStl- Tile leen-agcrs lecanted and l(wk ,Sou|)y lo their hearls. Tlie sub-leens always lovc'd him, and the adults got with it, loo. "We' healing Popeye,'^ .Soupy reported happily. ■’ "The show didn’t feel right; il was the same way it haci been in Cincinnati and Cleveland. But after three or four montlu: it began to feel different. You can tell when a show is rolling—from the mall, the audience reaction, the amazing 60,00^ copies in t Angeles area amne. ABC saw the light and gave him nlghtti:ne bei th on the network, His show—a wacky offering qf puppets- and pratfalls—confounded the critics but appears to ' catching on. LONDON (AP)-Premler Khrushchev renewed today his argument for opening the 18-natlon >nevn disarmament conference on the summit level — this time note lo Italian P:*emler Amln-lore Fanlani. In a note broadcast by Moscow Radio, Khrushchev rejected Fan-fani’s suggestion that a summit meeting on disarmament be postponed until a "critical or final stage.” It Is difficult for»uB to agree that such an approach promises anything good," j^rushetev said. 'fy^dde forMenf 5dys Ginger Rogers Cambodia Off ers Cu Safety After Bombing pf Saigon Palace Cambodia's c.f’ of stale. Nam government’s extradition request for sub-Lt.’Nouven Van Cu, 25. about programs.’’ Miss Rogers admits she doesn’t understand this attitude. PRETTY 8A’nSFIE» Ginger, however, does not find this , a personal problem. She Is safisfied with occasional TV guest starring appearances, including her hostess chores on tonight’s salute to Irving BecHn on NBC’s Telei9ione Hour, hand-picked motion picture roles and some stage appearances. couple qf seasons back, she talked into rpaking a pilot film for a series, in which she played twins. Sihanouk said thqt after the Vietnamese pilot crash-landed at a Cambodian airfield he c^eclared he had revolted against Diem. The prince said the 'pilot was served soup and iced coffee and "quickly began making friends with Khmer (Cambodian)' pilots.” .Sihanouk expressed no sympathy foi* Diem, who escaped injury in the attack, but denied that he had ever incited the Vietnamese to rebel against the pro-Western leader. Rule Pilots Negligent GoHisioir CHICAGO (UPI) -r- Both pilots involved in the collision of two airliners over the Grand Canyon in 1956 were guilty of negligence, ' 'ral judge ruled here Thurs- Judge William J. Campbell ruled the pilot of a Tnupa World the ^OL bC7 “failed to maintain proper lateral vigilanoe." The planes flying at the same altitude on converging flight pat-collided at 21,000 and all 128 persotft' aboard both craft were killed. Campbell set April 2 for a hearing to determine damage awards. The ruling involved four suits filed by the estates of four per-killed in the mishqp. U.Saeads World in Aid to Emerging Countries UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) —The western world far outstrips the Soviet bloc in aid to underdeveloped contries,. especially in Africa, a U.S. survey reported-today. The United States leads all countries in-direct aid in addition to being a heavy contributor to U N. ' that' furnish help to the By CYNTHU LOWRY AP TV-RadIo Writer Tonight Miss Rogers will dance and sing. She’s a natural choice as hostess, for she appeared many Berlin shows over yeai's. ABC. whose .shows seem to dote I way-out titles, has a couple of collectors’ items reming up next week on "Ben Casey" and “Naked City." On Monday night Ben’i adventures will be wrapped ir For the Ladybug, One Dozen Roses.” And on Wednesday, called "Today the Man won'l be a single series starring Who Kills the Anis Is Coming. woman, and as far as 1 can find out very, very few women behind the scenes have any say “Sponsors liked the idea of a GIhger Rogers Show," she said, "but nothing happened to that series. There’s Interest in pther ideas, but they want to see pUdts and a performer can’t spend endless tihie making free samples— not when there are other things on the fire.” SALYERSVILLE, Ky. (AP) -ig John Hank, a man who identifies himself as the town’s handy mah, is p hero today because of his daring rescue of some 40 persons stranded ,by rampaging waters. Hank, who is slightly over Six feet and weighs 215 pounds, waded into flooded areas of ^lyers-vilie pulling a motorless boat, and rescued some 40 persons stranded by flood wters of rampaging Licking River. Boyal Oak Man Saved by Delay From 'Flight One' ROYAL OAK (AP) - A . ______ Oak man narrowly missed death on Ahierican Airihies’ ill-fated Flight 1 Thursday, simply becau^ he was late. ,Floyd ChurchiU, 51. of 2M5 N. Wilson Ave., a projectionist with the Jkm Handy Organization, missed his plane in New York after haying been delayed in the dismantling of a company exhibit in Boston. at the end of 'an Idlewild runway on tak^-off, killing all 95 persons aboard.' Among the dead was Robert Paschall, of New York, a production stage manager for Jam Handy. Atesked Man With 'Gun' Holds .Up City Market A man wearing a brown plastic mask and holding his hand in his pocket as if holding a gun held up the Peris Market, 100 Auburn , at 11:20 last night. Chris Randzeperis, 68, of 96 Park-hurst, working in the store, gave him $11 in small change and lour $1 bills. 'Hie ho0u|TTn8«feescaped in a car driven by another m: ManRescues40 During Floods Kei^ntucky Town Lauds Hero for Pulling Boat to Stranded People Moscow Ambaiiaddir Must Explain Actiont on Bonn Policy Industrialist, ^4, Dies 'builders of Washburn-Crosby Co., forerunner of General Mills, Inc., died Thursday. , n *■ Sereiiee ^ ’til 9 r.M. 770 ORCHARD LAKX AVE. FI 4-0SM Mleblton T.E.8.A. Lie. «U9T SPECIAL PMCE With Tha AS on FURNACE CLEANING •T.50 MICHIGAN HEATING CO. * t| Newbefry St. FI C><621 RCA COLOR TV Sweet’s Radio TV WORKEII ir HOURS Hank’s feats occurred Tuesday, but" did not come to light Until an official mentioned therti to Gov. Coinbs Thursday. Hank said, "Somebody had to; , w just couldn’t let them drown." Hank said he and Paul Marshall, whose family Hank straight hours without rest, pulling the boat hundreds ot feet through water five feet deep in places. "He was the only man in town who coulg have done it,” said County Judge Clyde Salyer, "He’s a big husky fellow, kind of and could walk in deep water without falling down.” SAVED MANY watei iraTtime In the Ijttle boat, Salyer said, "These people might still be isolated—maybe even dead he hadn’t of gone in there and got Han, 45, said the cold water didn’t.bother him. -I swim in cold water the year round and didn’t pay too much attention to it. I just wanttd toget the-folks out. • RENTAL • SOFT WATER Only ^3 • LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. 88 Nswbcrry Si. Pi I-8621 Try our now, unique, personolixofl. building ondT loiiibdelingT Call us for free details MOTT Constniefidn EM 3-3690 Install Safety Belts MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP). -With the observation that they save a lot of lives. Public Safety Director Floyd Mann has caSdered belts istalled on Alabama Big|nmy Patrol cart.* 1M2 RCA ShiriH Dtym 1481 GAS or ELECTRIC >00 I Inifolled CLOSE-OUT of 19^0 ond 1961 DRYERS AT SPECIAL PRICES OPEN EVERY EVENING TIL 9 P. M. ELECTRIC COMPANY . 82r W. Hw«m 6. PI 4-2S2S Hr -■4. ■27- '7 jTHi(tyy-F.iGHT TIIR lrAltCH 2. 19(ili j now : ' r«^d Slorts to Senre You Bofttr/ DRAYTON and RONflAC A SENSATIONAL SPECIAL PURCHASE of Studio Couches ond Sofa Beds! / Famous Simmons Quality Simmons studio couch sleeps one comfortably. Has innerspring bolsters, choice of colors. Two mokes interesting corner arrangement. Lkl '69 Only $7 Down i Simmons studio divan with innerspring bolsters ■— sleeps two comfortably. Smart skirted base. Choice of colors. Simmons California modern sofa bed; Smart sofa by day, comfortable bed at night. Biscuit tufted back with attractive welt trim. Choice of colors. 'QQ ■ "f . *99 Only $10 Down S -' - i. Oil Only $10 Down Simmons Danish modern sofa bed in a smart tweed cover. Sofa pillows ovail-able ot slight extra C0(St. Sleeps two comfortotHy. ' AMPLE FREE PARKING! EASY CREDIT TERMS! '• O O" • • • '* «i •' PONTIAC STORE OPEN Monday ond Friday 'til 9 , Crayton plains store open Monday, Thursday dnd‘Friday Til 9 THOMAS Rl ECONOMY 3tl SOUTH SOCIIUW STRRT • PONTIK Phone FE 3-7901 4945 DIXIE HICHWAY • DRAHON RUINS i 'Phone OR 4-0321 ^ 1 A r rht WwOar IH< Of IHOW I* Ing after taking off from New York's Idlewlld Airport on a scheduled nonstop flight to Los Angeles. All 93 on the plane were killed. Only 52 bodies have been recovered so far. Might Take a Year to Solve NY Crash NEW YORK (AP)—'^hat fail-iiion was still a mystery today, me of man or machine caused an And top Federal Aviation Agency American Airlines AStrojet to investigators Indicated It might plunge with powendive fury to a'remain a mystei^ for ns long as .«l)littierlng disaster in the shallow I a year. waters of Jamaica Bay? The B«ielng 707 Jet-es|MiciaHy The answer to this grim ques-l adapted (or .speedier takeoffs Fatal Flight Passengers Eager, Happy Travelers from alriMiiis siirroiiiided )>y residential areas — carried OH persons io death and explodedgy leni Police cars were withdraw! from the area at the height of the brief fight to let soldiers lake over the job of restoring order. Green and white rebel flags waved some areas in defiance of the French. Barbed wire baniers sealed off the old quarter but after fighting had died down to random shots, one exit into the Place du Gouv-ernement was opened to let Moslems go to a nearby mosque-Moslems are in the closing days of the observance of Ramadan, a holy mwith in their fahh. TROoilS PATROL Although the ouibreak r down, troops in platoon strenglhj Visits Actors Backstage in NY Defense Chief Arrests UNu, Other Officials ASTRONAUT MEETS STAR - Astronaut Joiin H. Glenn Jr. shakes hands with Rudy Vallee (right), star of the Broadway hit "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying," during a backstage visit at New York's 46th AP Ph«M»ic Street Tlienter Thmvsday night. Glenn and his wife Annie (lefU attended the performance following the hero’s welcome given Glenn by the city of New York. Author Abe Burrows is between the Glenns. Invited by U Thant Glenn Visits U.N, Today NEW YORK (AP) - John H. Icnn'-Jr., (he blastoff of tills j city’s wildest liera welcome still tlon of the, city, alert for sign.s ofl^atlons headouarters today, further di.sturbance. I * * * Among tliose accompanying At Ihe French naval base tow'n of Mers el Kebir, Adjoining Oian, European mobs shot five Moslems to death and sacked Moslem shops in retaliation for the slaying JQiursday of a European mother and her two children. News Flashes WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Defense Department announced today that early releases will be granted an estimated S.lOO military reservists on active duty who wish to study or teach lii schools and colleges. LONDON (UPI) — The Communist New China news agency said today that the National Con-B session which had been Monday has been postponed. JFK on TV Tonight N Jest Decision Due WASHINGTON (fl—- President Kennedy is expected to announce tonight that the United States will resume testing nuclear weapons in the atmosphere next month unless the Soviet Union agrees quickly to a reliable ^uclear test ban treaty. •The long-awaited announcement of the President's decision on new U.S. air tests, will be carried across the nation bv netwmrk Conn., home to visit a.nmirtedTsmu^t^lififfrtel^fiigraWISWl^HrBrffie Sebastian Jr., a marine living The White House announced only that Kennedy at 7 pjn. Eastern Standard Time on flie subject of nuclear testing and disarmamenL 1 ' However,, accoiriing to reliable advance indicattons he WilL make a last-chance bid to the Soviet Union to join in a nuclear ^st band treaty,^ backed by strong internatlQnal inspection, w[hicli couldlnake further testing unnecessary. Glenn is Adlai E. Stevenson, U.S. ambassador to the UN. The visit was by special invitation of U.N. .Secretary-General U Thant. Hio hour-and-a-half tour Additional Pictures, Page 14 includes an informal session with delegates on the 28-nation U.N. committee on the peaceful uses of outer space. - Glenn, a dowii-to-earth gentleman except when he Is hi his space suit, was visibly overwhelmed by the outpouring of an estimated four million New Yorkers greeting him on his first day Tragedy also took the stage Glenn Day as 95 persons perished when an airliner plunged into Jamaica Bay after takeoff from Idlewlld Airport. It was this nation’s worst plane crash Involving a single “commercial aircraft. mxmnd the world On Feb. 20- The line drew a w'ave of applause from Ihe audience. After the performance Glemi party went backstage. Hie astronauts congratulated the actors and actresses, who in turn L'ongratulated the astronauts. During Inlermission of the hro-act musical, Glenn remained in bis third-row center seal. After the show, it was off to the Waldorf-Astoria hotel’s Empire Room where the Glenn party was entertained by singer Dolores Gray."" ..... ' .. RETIRES FOR NIGHT Later Miss Gray told the .Marine officer, "Tliank God you’re back.” The Glenn family then retired to their 13th-Hoor Waldorf-Astol-ia suite. After Glenn leaves here Saturday for a weekend visit to his hometown of New Concoid, Ohio, his schedule calls for his being on the job Monday at Langley Air Force Base in Yirginia. Opposite the U.N. giant streamer has be«*n erected in Glenn’s honor. Placed there by the Assembly of Captive European NatldiM, the banner reads, ‘Thank you CSblonei Glenn for _ _ kindling'our hopes. Signed. The People of Captive Europe.” Ex-President Thaik's Son Is Killed by Stray Bullet in Gun Fight RANGOON, Burma lift— Burma’s defense chief, tSen. Ne Win, seized power for the second time in 3 V2 years today and arrested Premier U Nu, ex-President Sao Shwe Thalk and other members of the govern-ment. , ......______ One casualty was report!^ in" Ihe army seizure of power—the of Thaik was fatally wounded by a stray bullet when Thaik’g. guards and troops exchanged flre». Thidk was Burma’s first president. He retired from Ihe office in 19.32. , Military Informants said U Nn was arrested at Ms aiiburhan residence at 2 a.m. and taken away by soldiers. Thalk lived n few hundred yards away. Military personnel In quick succession also arrested Thakin Tin, finance minister and president of Burma’s ruling party; the housing minister, U Zahrc Lalan; the trade minister, U Thwin; the ln» dustries minister, U Rgshld, and the minister lor Karen State aL fairs, Sao Hla Tun. SUSPENDS PARLIAMl^T The army suspended Parlia-lent and seized strategic coni-munlcatlons, transportation giid security points thrbughout country. troops and tonlM tool nb posts at Key pblatB throuf hoat (Continued on ATTENDED PLAY After a late afternoon rest and a private dinner. Lt. Col. Glenn and .the six other U.S. astronauts and their families attended the Broadway hit show "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Tiying." Other theatergoers cheered and applauded at theiri entrance. About I.IMM |M-rsoiis stood In the freezing cold oiilskle was on hand when II The actors added a line to the show. 4n referring to American taiow-how, the line pointed out, as prime example, the develop-1 ment of the Friendship 7—the capsule ^ich took Glenn 81,000 miles on his three-orbit journey “75 People Waiitetl to Rent My House,’' says Mrs. A. P. Z. Fumes Fatal to Young Area Couple' A Pontiac area couple was asphyxiated by carbon monoxide ,fumes early this morning as they € sat talking in a car after retum-' 1 ing home from a date. Pronounced dead shortly before 6 a.m. by Oakland Cbunty Oi^ty Coroner Dr. Isaac Prevette were Richard P. Gark, 22, of 31S S. Adams Road, Avon Township, hnil Margaret E. Uttle, 21, of 136 St. ^ RICHARD P. CLARK The couple had been dating steadily tor abont a year, They were discovered overcome by the deadly tomes shortly after 5 a.m. by the young man’a mother, Mrs. Rsyburn C. Clark. "My Pontiac Press Want Ad produced calls faster than we could handle them—a total of 75.” > Aft«- 3-p^m.- Pontlac Press Want Ads are good salesmen — put oen to work for you! Dial FE 2-8181 and place years today! See-GomCgn Vote Delay "Richard and Margaret left On a date at about 9 p.m.,’* said the grief stricken mother. *T awoke and heard the car on the drivreway around 3 a.m. 'Then I awakened a second lime around 5:20 and the motor was still running. . ^ ‘ "They never sat and talked that long before." she told OaMtoid County sheriff’s deputies. _ "so I went out to see what was wrong. MARGARET R. LITTLE "The windows were aH Mosed -and they were rittlng on flie trsM seat.” The two were dead when Mrs., Clark found them, deputies saM. The Car beltHiged to Miss Utde. I^eriff’s depuUes said a Mie bad rusted out in the ti^of flbe exhaust pipe and in the trunk and that exhaust funihs were leaking throng^ the trunk into the car. Miss Uttle, an asiMant buyer fw Waite’s DepattouM: jStore, been staying with K gid Irieitd while her parents, Mr. and Mm,. A proposed, new constitution lor Michigan is not likely to appear on the Nevonber baflot because the constitutional' convention will not meet a'March 31 adjournment deadline, top . leaders conceded today. Both Convention President Stephen S. NIsbet, R-Fremont, and ~ BieBard Van Dusen. "I think now we may go until the. middle or the end of April," said Nisbet, "or even run on into May.” Van Dusen said this pobably would mean that the proposed new constitution would be* sub- A HAPPY* SPORTSMAN Ry-castmg chamBion John Dieckman,, 35, had' been in New York fqr. appearances at the Nk-on Page 2, Col. Bingham Farms, chainnan of the rules and re.Bolotions coni-■miftee, admitted the deadline coiiM not be met. milted tto ^he voters next spring ral^r than go on the ballot this 'November. ’The convention is making slow progress: on Michigan’s court sys- Under an attorney general’s ruling, the convention had to finish by ^ril 1 to get the document before the “voters this fall. SEVERAL WAVs Van Dusen said there were sev- eral posi convention’s . eluded in the November el< Ruis 5ig5 fear NY fair First, he said, the attorney general’s office might reverse Its stand on the matter. Frank Kelley has replaced Paul Adams, who was attorney general c, when the original opinion was issued. Adams recently was appointed Supreme Court-justlce. ^ = substitute the entire new docu-for the old. method would hivolvejYoj.it \vo rid mg-oLa sufficient--------- her of voters’ ative petitions to get the on the November ballot. The Goaventton also could file a suit seeking to upset the attorney. generars. opinion before NEW YORK (AP) - The New Fair Corp. announced today that the Soviet Chamber of Commerce hat to participate in the 1964^1Srwitb-thaJs foreign exhibit in the internat area. “Hie lease provhies. 000 square, toet. FInrtda, according to her auxK. Mrs. ;toe bittto d 3U S.^W!fl^ Drive, Watorliord Ihwiitldp. T # * * ^ The girl, an only jhlM. is m graduate <4 Fmittac X^tnd lUgh SehooL Her father is a toreimm at the OoeurCeda Bottling Co., at Another possibilit.v. Van Dusen added, would be for the legislature — hy a 2/3, vote of both luse — to' plato tht convention’s BolhTVan Dusen and Nisbet said they Were unaware of any concerted move to force the issue, however. Both indicated they felt it would make no great difference whether the constitution was sub. Htoh swimming po^ service man tor , Ddteo, hic., an Avan Towtridy___ Road Toll 75 Pet. of '61 He is one el live dfltoms ho* handiwork on flie ballot as a coh-t mHted to the voters in November stilutional amendment which wou||d or next ' f AMI. EAST LANSING . (AP) - Wsh-way accidents have killed 151 per-sms in Michigan so far ftiis year, provisional figures compiled by state police showed today. The toll at this date last year was 203. Clark’s father is a gardener and matotenance man to Meadowtoodk vnns* . „ • t , •* Clark’s ^ la a| wmWmdf of SpaiksjtkifGitl\iiiMtoR«mt^ I; TWO mMn m TOB IPONTIAC PE^SS, mtPAV. MAltCH «rlp^ ^ School Budget forCity Unveiled Itkf Proposfd Only Cov«r IncreoM in Enrollment May Take Year to Solve Crash Itw educAllon pro(fr«m provided for PonHiic public uchool phildron In '196343 will be pretty much the M thU yMr'a — II the Pen* tine Board of Education elVsIn to the preliminary buditei pn^ed luat night. But there‘11 he 59S more etudenta to take care of next year — a record total of 21.^28. So the proix»s«l $9,790,790 record budget la $.140,000 higher than Ihia year's, admlnlslrntora explained. No mlllage hike has been asked. The disirirl could meet the higher hudgel beeause of expect-dd Inereaseo la slate aid follow- In IMt-n. A large chunk of the would gO to pay teachers: $13.5,690 for 25 new teachers, an estimated 1135,000 for teachers' normal salary Increments and $66,000 held In reserve to add lo teacher pay-checks In case of a one per cent cost of llvir® incirase . The $6,982,6066 portion now set aside for instruction could further be increased if the board finds it can afford to adjust upward its salary and wage scales. Such an adjustment was missed only once in the last eight years. The total budget would also grow II the board aeeepis any of a number of “staff study** proposals. These are proposals pir wOrfh of aew programs hhove the earreat edu-catloB program. The "staff atud- heard at a March 8 board meet- Also not included in the operational budget presented last night is capital outlay for buildings-The district at present is engaged in constructing a $700,000 addition to J^erson Junior High and is ready-a Sl-million addition to North-dM High School. A decision on a millage hike will have to be made by the board in June, when definite figures on the final budget, tax allocation, state equalized valuation and state tOonllnued From Page One) tkound for upstate New York followed the doomed jet from the ninway, and Us passengers got ghastly, bird's-eye view of tl tragedy. Hero it how one of them, Joseph F. Farano of New York, de- 1 it! “The Jet made a besutlfUi Many Passengers Eager and Happy (Continued from Page One! tional Spoils and Travel .Show. Dieckman, who was responsible for development of much fishing equipment, was returning home lo Costa Mesa, Oslif., the ill-fated plane. Prominent among the business executives aboard Flight 1 was Arnold S. Klrkeby, president of Kirkeby-Natus Corp., who. with his brother Edwin, once operated chain of well-known hotels. AND A FINANOIKR Among their interests had been le Beverly Wilshire in Beverly Hills, Calif., the Drake and Black-stone in Chicago and the National in Cuba. Klrkeby continued head a major financing firm. PAN AM TRAVKIJRR Chester Kronfeld, manager of photography for Pan American World Airways and the man re-spom^ble for the colorful travel scenes on the Pan Am calendars, was bound for the West Coast on Top federal invesligalors who flew hero at the express order of President Kennedy hoped to retrieve the jet's flight control box from the murky water of Jamaica will t A millage increase would probably be needed if ihe board decided to accept all of the $399,044 worth of staff studies and to grant extra salary increases. Lee Eastmen of Scarsdale, N.Y. did not fly on flight 1 because he had a later reservation. But his wifi*, who had 'bumped” along with him from an earlier American flight, did nd was killed in the crash. She had elected to use a single reservation aboard flight 1 and meet her husband later in Los Angeles. Another who did not take the ill-fated J»Iane was stewardess Sue Parsons, who normally would have flown flight 1 but received an unexpected day off. She heard about the ct-ash when she settled down in front of her television set to watch the parade honoring astronaut John H. Glenn. The terrific splash—a 2(Kl-foot geyser-wns the result of the 690-degiw-hot engines hitting Ihe Ic walf'i. Tile plane disintegraled instantly. scattering Us Iwlsted mains over u mile-iouml ai i‘s of the plane burned and .sent up smoke palls. This device, a amall, yellow mgtal globe about the size of baskeUMlI, carries a recording of plane's height, speed and oth-data which Ihe Investigators hope will give them a due to the cause of the tragedy. NO a-UE VET FAA Administrator Majeeb Ha-laby, who flew here along with half a dozen air safety specialists from the Civil Aeronautics Board, emphasized there was no indica-what might h'ave gone wrong. Total weight was under the allowable limit, and none of the four engines had been run over the allowable time. Halaby said. When the plane arrived here from Tulsa, Okla., Wednesday, the crew had reported some trouble the radio and cabin pressure system, but this was corrected. Halaby said a checkback on the previous 10 pages in the jet’s logbook disclosed no uncorrected defects. and thus far there has been no indication of malfqpctioning. Hsiaby said he gave President Kennedy a report by telephone after launching the Investigation But Midwest Still F-Freezins: Spot Cold Relief Today By the Associated Press Temperatures moderate^ across the north central region today, after nearly a week of below zero weather, breaking a late-winter epeU. But unseasonable cold gripped most of the nation’s mid-secam and freezing weather extended aerroa the major pturt of the country. Only areas in the South and Pacific Coast were out of the cold belt. It was below zero again this morning in northern Midwest sections. But readings for the most part were far higher than Tburs- day ^vhen the mercury dropped to 46 below in Wisconsin. TTie coldest air appeared confined to sections of Michigan and W'isconsin. As the cold air moved from the Midlands into the Northeast, temperatures dropped to -23 Traverse City, Mich., and -22 in PelIston,,Mich. They were near ■20 in Green Bay and Stevens Point, Wis. But in Minneapolis, which had a record March low of -32 Thursday, it was only 4 below. In International Fails, Minn., on the Canadian border, the ' 2 above compared to Thursday morning') 35 below. FIND #2 BODIES The grappling continued through the night and morning amid shifting tides, and the grim searchers had recovered 52 bodies by early today. The plane carried 87 passengers nd a crew of 8. Here is the timetable of disaster: The Weather TIMETABLE At 10:07 a.m., the huge craft rolled along the 14,000-foot runway, broke ground after 5,000 fe«?t and took off. plane cleared a train trestle and a parkway in its as- cent—ail normal, all according to established pattern. A 800 feet, Capt. James T. S. Heist, 56—a veteran of 18,300 hours in the air—made the pre-serbed left turn of 20 degrees to head away from possible LaGuar-dia Airport traffic and the Ozone Park section of Queens. his craft toward Bl Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report fON'HAC AND VICINITY — Fair, slowly moderating temperatures today, high 22. Partly cloudy, not so cold to-Bight, low 17. Saturday mostly clou.dy, warmer, chance of •ome light snow in afternoon or evening, high 30. Easterly v^ds 5 to 14 miles today becoming southeast to south 19 t« 18 miles tonight and Saturday. At I a.m.: Wind Telocitjr. to r Oireetlon^-Northeast. Bub uts Frida; at 0:24 p.m. Bub rises Saturday at 7:01 a.m. MoOB Mte Friday at 2:06 p m. BaOn rleu Saturday at 0:10 a m Da»ata»a Temperatarci Tlili Data IB H Taan Laweet Veaiperatarn in 1*26 l^ratwa Chart _ Houghton Lansing Marnuette Muskegon Pellston Tharsday In Peiiltae tas reeerded dewntawn) Blgheat temperature ............. ,10 Tr-.. - I Albuquerque 62 I -10 Fort Worth 44 I -4 Jackeonvllle 01 ! -11 Kansaa City 20 I -0 Los Angles - 50 40 I -7 Miami Beacb 13 70 I Chicago I Cincinnati . 121 Denver Omoha e"FrliWc? 65 "40 11 8t, Ste. Marie 3 -17 13 Seattle 30 21 10 Tampa *“ " 3 Washington _ Weatber-45unny . Oat Fear Ago 1b Foallae Klfliest temperature Lowest Ttmperatura deeply affected by Ihe tragedy. "The President has directed us lo do everything within our power to prevent a recurrence,” Hayaby said. CAB Chairman Alan S. Boyd, who also flew to the wreck scene, said ihe mystery might be solved in a month. But he added tha could take as long as a year. While seeking the flight control ttx, hundreds of police, firemen and Naval personnel from Ihe nearby Floyd Bennett Naval Air Station grappled for the mutilated bodies of the victUhst day are divided bcti sloi Qhurehes, which A DREAM FOR CHILDREN - This is a proposal for a mental health facility crested especially for children by Detixiit arehlteets Ralph E. Calder and Associates. To be eroded at Pontiac Slate Hospital — if Ihe needed funds come in — it would have a IH-atory hub area containing a swimming pool apd an auditorium-gym. Wide one-story sj^es are school rooms, day-care and out-patient facilities. The half-wheel rim would contain dormitories. Draws First Plan of Home for Mentally III Children The first arehiteet's plan for proposed new home for mentally ill children at Pontiac State Hospital has been developed. Supt. Walter H. Obenauf today desertbed Ihe tentative architect's rendering as a “fantasy at the present time, which we are praying to get.” The main obstacle Is an appropriation from the State Leg-Isinture. The hospital hao asked for such funds for several years —without success. However, now a local group of interested citizens working exclusively to promote better facilities at Pontiac has offered to raise money for a children’s day-care, out-patient and recreational area— if the state first will come up with about $500,000 to build the basic children’s \init. WOUU> house 80 The basic unit for 80 children would include living quarters, school and a dining room. The $300,000 additional construc-on would have to be bought from campaign planned by the Foundation for Emotionally Disturbed Children. The plan was di'awn for the F’oundution by Ralph R. Caldc Architect and A-ssbeiatos. Its low-slung roofs, plenty o( window-space, bright Interior colors oh cinder block aro Dllended lo Rive it “the atmosphere of home rather than of an Institution,” says Dr. McHugh. At the hub of the plan a pool and a gym, which could be used a.s an auditorium, would provide ■rcational space. COULD AID OTHERS Some distance away from this activities area in the wheel’s rim would be the dorms connected hy passageways Icfidihg like spokes to the hub. Tlirmigh ihe day-care facilities which arc lo he provided through funds raised by the foundation, says Dr. McHugh, “more children would be able lo slay at liiR the day for treatment and schl and returning to their own homes at iilglit.” An cstimat^^d 20 to 40 children —- depending on types of illness represented — could be handled at the day-care facility in addition to Ihe resident 80 children. The out-patient clinic, also drawing foundation supiwrt, would be available (or staff work with the parents’ of day-care children. Merrill D. Hill Relires From Ford Motor Post The ’Dayl in Birmingham Area Women to Observe World Day of Prayer ’ dbutONGtlAM olia6rv«M« or ■■■ ... of World Day of Pray* or iiy tho Unitid CNwh Womoii or »iw"‘..-------------- “ itiwiMim win M h«M di tho latlmi Oiurolk aa||i N. WoodwRuil Avui , Hi« ihoiiM finr Ihia yoar'a ob-dervanco la "fw God go Lovod tho^orld.!’ wMOh waa wrltton by woi^ clmlnnan, will parilclpdto Ib Hm observance of the annual eyiwt. work. Following the morning nervlce the chairman and her committee repeat the observance service for patients at Pontiac State Hoa-pital. The ehurckeo participating are lor’s degree will be 15,006 with a merit maximum of |0,100. The beginning maafor’a degree holder will roceive 95,900 with a nwrit maximum of $3,70(1. For a masters degree plus 30 hours, the beginning salary will be $5,000 with a maximum of $9,350. Cbrlot I Church 4Jran-OongrcRatlonal tohurch, Embury Mclh^lst and First The others are First Prcsbyic-rian, Franklin Community, Kirk-in-the-Hills, St. Andrew Evangelical Lutheran. St. James Episcopal and the Beverly Hills Methodist. Dale A. Winnie of 135 Chewton Road, Bloomfield Township, has been named chairman of the newly formed Section on Patents, Copyrights gi Trademarks of the Michigan State Bar Association. 'Winnie la a pilfolinitltii‘'1IRd was formerly with the patent Royal Oak Man Saved by Delay From 'Flight One' present, about 80 children housed in wards constructed for adults — sometimes intermingled with them. This condition has been decried by all mental health experts who have observed them. lyn. Then it happened. . Like a dive bomber, the airlin- • suddenly plunged straight down. Off-duty policeman Arthur Rud-dick saw it as he drove on Cross Bay boulevard. Others saw it too, they made for the bay’s shoreline. Within minutes, rescue teams and rescue apparatus dogged the one-road approach to the disaster But, as Ruddick later observed, 'There was no ope to rescue.” Property Tax Rate Up LANSING im ~ The average property tax rate in Michigan increased 49 cents to $34.71 per $1,-000 of assessed valuation last year, the state board of assessors report-today. The foundation’ James McHugh, today said the accepted by the hospital and the state mental health department as “a necessary adjunct” to the basic children's unit. Ford Motor Co. today announced the retirement of Merritt D. Hill, vice president and general thanager of the company’s Tractor and Implement Division in Trpy- Henry Ford II, chairman of the board, said the company accepted Hill’s request for early retirement with regiet. His resignation was effective yesterday. No replacement has been announced yet. Hill of 965 E. Olengarry Circle, Bloomfield Township, is retiring to devote more time to The new unit would be built especially for children. U2 Long Overdue on Training Hop Over Desert EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calil- (AP)-A U2 plane—the > type that went down in the K«>eFaHRanagelv41e^was^ Soviet Union two years ago—was long overdue on a training mission today and presumed down somewhere in the Mojave desert. The U2, capable of reaching altitudes of more than a dozen miles, was due to return to Edwards about 9 p.m. Thursday. The plane hasn’t been seen or heard from, an Air Force spokesman said. The 112 had only enough fuel to last until about 10:15 p.m., the Air Force said. The- Air Force said the U2 was 1 a routine training flight but would not go into details of the mission. spokesman .said U2s have been stationed here for some time and have been flown on research and development flights and in support of test missile firings. “He’s going to be 60 lii August, -and we are just fortunate that he m retire now,” said Mrs. Hill. Ford commended Hill, a native of Pontiac, for the leadership he has provided both within the company and the community. Hill joined Ford Motor Co, whSi it.s Tractor (later Tractor and Implement) Division was established in August 1953. He .served as assistant general manager until January 1957 when he wa^named 7 MERRITT D. HILL Ford vice president in May 1^9. Prominent in the promotion of youth organizations. Hill, currently Is serving as president of the Boy Scouts of America’s Detroit Area Council, trustee of the Miehigan 4-H Foundation and a member of the board of directors of thq National 4-H Service Committee. He is an overseer of William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, member of the executive committee of the Oakland Child Guidance Clinic, and chairman of the Oakland County Republican Committee’s finance committee. Hill also is active in Chamber of Commcjce activities. of the agricultural committee of the Greater Detroit Board of Commerce and as a menjber of the agriculture committee of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce. He also Is a director of the Birmlngham-Bloomtleld Bank, aiid has been servlng-asra^^-presldent of the Farm Equipment Institute. Cleared of Role in McDonald4)eath^ Prior to his affiliation with Ford Motor Co.; Hill had been associated for 11 years with Dearborn Motors CojT). and Harry Ferguson Inc. Before that he was with General Motors Corp. for 12 years a sales capacity. A graduate of the University of DetrMt, he is a member of its lay board of trustees and Blue Key honor fraternity. In January Hill offered U. S. Labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg a way tp save $435,000 in federal funds lo train farm tractor operators in Mississippi. Hill's suggestion was to utilize the services of 160 farm equipment dealers in the 16-county area of Mississippi instead of spending federal money. Romney Comments on Michigan ^Pressure Groups Poison Politics* WASHINGTON - Michigan' political life has been pdisoqed by economic pressures, according to George Romney. Romney, wIm seeks the Republi-caii iKHnination for governor of the state, said here Thursday nig^t, *‘when you reach the point we have in Michigan, where the party sthicture is economically controlled — then- we are perverting our citizenship.” for political judgments. In Michigan, however, he said, too many people consider ix)litics a platform from which to piromote group economic interests. The former president of Amer- ROmney, who has been mentioned as a possible GOP presidential candidate in 1964, nid JMs state and the- nathm need- a citizens party, fFee' of economic dictates. He said the Unjted States the highest expression of the He said overemphasis on economic interests could lead the United States info the very dialectical materiallam it is fighting,. “We have brought pressures to bear on government for self-seeking purposes to an alarming extent,” Romn» said. "If wereacn the point wher^ we have too far rejected the Lord of this land, Jesus the Christ, then we will have lost our freedom, the Declaration of Independence and the U.8. Constitution were inspired by God to create a land M hnman rights and rell- which every man can>he held accountable by God for Ms own acts. Romney said the United was created as d nucleus of freedom to spread these values across the world. But he said this nation has achieved only a small mea- ROYAL OAK (AP) - A Royal Oak man narrowly missed death American Airlines’ ill-fated Flight 1 Thursday, simply because ho was late. Floyd Churchill, 51, of 2505 N. ’ilson Ave., a projectionist with (ho Jam Handy Organization, missed his plane in New York a(t-liaving been delayed in the dismantling of a company exhibit in Boston. The plane plunged into a swamp at the end of an Idlewild runway take-off, killing all 95 persons aboard. Among the dead was Robert Paschall, of New York, a production stage manager for J a Handj^. BBellon or aa antomobfle oom-paay-lMfMNi aitabHiiiiiig a firm la Bia Diminibaw dwa. Tht MW ■Uifo'bar Boctfon It In-ImmM 10 cmNfdinkt* Um 0M«rti o( jiMtMit ibroat (hi state UmM'lo norpoiate and private itloa t6 batter acqjitelnt gmaral ih Th« Birmingham Board of Education has appravBd tha 196343 salary Bchedulea for tha profosslonal Maff. Tha achedulas aia ,|n line with the fiva-yaar budget jprogect upon which the Novamfier election Bar U.S; Chief From E. Berlin Communists Retaliate Against Restrictions on Soviet Hoad BERLIN (UPD-The East Gcr-lan Communists today barred the .SiCggpiMulaot in jBecUn front nteHng^st Berlin jn retaliation (or American restrictions on the commandant. A V.S. spokiionuui Mid less because the U.S commandant, MaJ. Gen; Albert Watron II, had no intoniton of trying to enter East Berlin until the glMt Germans lift restrictions on his Niliita Renews Call for Geneva Summit LO N D O N (AP)-P I Khrushchev renewed today his argument for opening the 18-nation Geneva disarmament conference on the summit level — this time in a note to Italian Premier Amin-tore Fanfani.' In a note broadcast by Moscow Radio, Khrushchev rejected Fan-fani’s suggestion that a summit meeting on disarmament be postponed until a “critical or final stage.” is difficidt for us to agree that such an approach promises anything good,” Khrushchev saij^. The Pontiac Township man who furnished liquor to 13-year-old Randy McDonald the night before he was found dead near a Rochester skating rink last Saturday has been cleared of any implication of foul play. The story told by Roger Mc-Lintock, 21, of 3134 Eastwood Road, was substantiated by a lie detector test yesterday, according to Rochester Police Chief Samuel Hewlett. He said investigation into the circumstances leading up to the boy’s death is continuing tt^ay. An estimated 1,000 to 1,500 car vners in the Pontiac area have not yet bought their 1962 license plates, according to Willis M. Brewer, Pontiac branch manager of“the wrretary"of staters office at 96 E. Huron St. More than 600 people crowded into the office yesterday: others peeped through the win^ws at closing time. Another 600 are expected today when the office is " tspfor^'asn, to:JJp,mr~^ open 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdayr Rule Pilots Neolioent in Canyon Collision CHICAGO (UPI) — Both pilots involved In the collisitm of two airliners <)ver the Grand Canyon in 1%6 were guilty of negligence, a federal judge ruled here Thursday. Judge WUUam J. Campbell ruled Hie pilot of a Trans World Airiines Supereonsfollation and the pifot Of a Uidted Air Ltees DC7 “fiHM to maintain proper lateral vlgUance.” The planes flyiitg^t the^sanK altitude on converging flight patterns o^lhled at 21,000 and all 128 persons aboard both craft'were killed. CampMI set April 2 for a hearing to determine damage awards. Thi ruling invdved* four sdits filed hy the estates of four pei> sons killed in the mishap. Seeking -Meititership The East Germans barred Watson on orders from the Russians. The ban was announced by the official East German news agency ADN, and a Soviet liaison agency notified U.S headquarters by tcle- According to the U.S. spokesman, the liaison officer said Soviet commandant Col. A. V. Solovyev asked the East Germans to bar Watson because of an American ban on Solovyev from the U.S. sector of West Berlin. The Americans barred ^lovyev in December because the Communist police prevented 'Watson’s East Berlin without an identity check. The Americans contend that such checks by the East Germans violate the Western Allied rights of freedom of movement in Berlin. The British and French have not banned Solovyev from their sectors. 1,000 Motorists in Area Still Need License Plates Pontiac police ticketed 13 drivers Without new plates between the deadline of midnight, March 1, and 7 a.m. this morning. Defense Chief leads Army Coup in Bunna (Continued From Page One) Rangoon. Heavily armed troops backed by tanks ringed Rangoon Airport. All (lights In and out of” Rurma were canceled. In Rangoon, however, there were no Imps on the streets and city dwellers went about their busi-seemingly unperturbed by the events. A large concentration of soldiers took station at flie central police station in the heart of the dty, and smaller concentrations were seen at all other police statkms. Win declared in a i^io 'bnfod-cast ani>ealing for calm that the army had acted to halt a vastly deteriorating situation and to save the nation fiwm disintegration. WhirnotiViftil the dtaimchly anti-ComnMuJst general’s aetton But the cotqi coindded wtth growing o^wsititm to a government plan to nationalize Burma’s inivate import trad* and a .rise in strength of the extreme left-wing of, the country’s ruling party. A ----- The naliohidization plan had Badn and ahmg tlie Sfoira Cascades ranges tuming-4nto rain showers in the lower elevations and along the Pacific coast. Rain t in the fasten! Gulf, south portk>i»-of the mid-Mississliipi / D 'Texas^noast. It will remain cold in tte f i will ba cdkler in the Gulf stat^ wfaSeo d «r awe du^ will preyt^ ' ‘ —^ in the festmi "and^/ieiMithee iwnn Afiaallewtetee i evdl ekewherr."^ X loin Mofork Corp. addressed the' 4ateinati«nal Chriirtian Leader-sWp OMference on “God’s challenge to Chill ia the Uidted gtetes/ -Romn^' told the : qpirituai values are' ’irroper principles. ” * ' * ,v But he added: ____ "The _ threat to our Chjistian heritage from within , isi i^eater fiian the Communist challenge from without.” , warned. Romney holds a- position equivalent to that of a bishop in the Church of Jesus Christ of Lftter-Day Saints (Mormon); e sal4 the men who drafted Its potentlaC ----W-^if Millions of Americans can’t vote because oi( their race,” “That is how partial our achievement is. even in ' political area.” OSLO, Norway UP) — Premier Ei-nar Gerhardsen's government recommended to parliament today that Norway open negotiationi .for Thursday. 'The government had full I claimed that foreign interests _ I stranglehold on) the nation’s economy, and that many Burmese firms had been ■A .* Martcet. in the'EuropeanftraiufaTitft their import license* t6/ fordgn compemies. TliE PONTIAC rWESS, PllIDAV. MAHCU a. imw No Child Is Imposswle to Teach, State Woman Prove (iditor^s Notth-ThUt is tkeond (and concluding) story on Mrs. Jooslyn D'Arkos of Jonssville, who won nationwide attent0n for, her nine years’ work in trying to ketp children who Could not make the grads in their early years of regular schooling.) BY OONNin V. lUOKD JImAmh €IU»«ii l>Rlrtot WrtttM for Mio AP JONESV^IXB^-A tomtRlf iodal worlter who has won nattonwldo at-t<>ntion few hor nine |«sars* wi>rl< with Hclwwlchlldren previously •considered Nubnormul Is erKleHl of (he way somi' tcu«,'her« handle Hlmllar chlldrtm. Mrs. Jpcolyn D'Arkos chaiKcs many teachers “throw up a smokescreen ot ptony words to cfonluse parents." A ,* ★ As an examplA she glyes this ' evaluation of a ilUpU written by a tS&chert . categoiy. Thlnkln« skills place Mm In the strategy "troup. lin-cooparatlve. Chances of sue-ceeMng very ia>or.” This same boy, after spendlnK three periods of one month each studying under the D’Arkos method, has finished his second year of college with As, Bs'and one C, she says. ★ ★ How did she hnppen to evolve her method, which can be used to teach any subject? ★ A Mrs. D’Arkos taught In elementary schools in the West .... MtCll.tK”bi was A...plaiKs Jn and finally -spent 20 years as a social worker at the Child Care Bureau in Wayne County. It here she found delinquents who were intelligent but who had "simply built up mental barriers against learning and were woefully ignorant.’’ In 19SH Mrs. D’Arkos and her husband, Francis, a retired landscape architect, built their country home near Jonesville and she began her crusade In earnest. As word of her remarkable achievements spread, through newspaper and magazine articles and word of mouth, requests for her help poured in from desperate parents in nearly all the .W states. One letter came from Sweden, another from Austria. dUST ‘UNTRACKED’ "Unless they have a child with learning difficulties in their own families, piany people just don’t realize that the majority of trou> bled pupils have no reM- mei drawbacks—they hkve sOnply become untracked," .Mrs. D’Arkos ............. She calls sncii .pupils “loft be-hlnders’*—aim it was this category ^hlch led her to develop her method, although it works equally well with all cMIdren. Mrs. D’Arkos contends if all schools used her method the probt leras of today’s educators would all but vanish—especially in the realm of discipline. A A “It has worked completely with the physically handicapped, epileptic, deaf, blind,, cepebral, palsy victims, feeble-minded, superior ^and emotionally disturbed," ‘says. * Just what is 1 ing method? short tlma that he can accomplish somethlpg. sheM of paper, , then has him trace ■ ovar and over until he caii H without help. If only the slmpleHi so she gives him a first grade level Itook, which be is sure t« ‘ ‘' to ixMdi vrUhaut difnayliy. la eoafronted wHh material far beyood his ablHIy, / Dae ot the typewriter Is a piy chological as well ae a practical step, especially for younger children, since few grade sc'hool pupils know how to lyl>e, Maslrry of (be lypewrtter adds greatly t child’s confldencei Mrs, D'Arkos Hut tlie real heart iM thp fours part method la "the book." Mrs, D’Arkos glvea each chib u loosely-bound pamphlet of blan| typewriter paper. Each lesgon niiiat tie put Into this book»dy|^ Ing saeroiseN. spellini, writing, arithmetic, mnps and other inus-ti'utloiis are lucscrved wllhin its pages. Why Is Hie lusik so valuable? sight of any book can < ii*'’ 8WAIXOWH FORK -w EmbarrasHcd, but smiling, Athuleene LuRae Peterson, 21, of Fort -Worth, Tex., is shown before under-,-.fOlng“;snrgery for^ssmoval 0f,« regular dinner forit fidwwtr In xray) which she swallowed. She was reported In satisfactory condition today. Miss Peterson said she was talking with a *<<* never conqtiwn anch cMidrcn aotnally hate books, ohe says. *'ltal tfcey won't hate something they Ihemscivm create." Her pupllg fill from BOO to 900 pages before their first btMiks are done. Then, umlm- her guidance, lliey cr«*ale liaiid-tmiled leather ••ovei'N for lhpm-~anollnT move III the riglit III Incri-ase lh(< piipIlH' M;U-coafldviic'e. A('UOMri.MIIMENT Will'll the impll can look Imck ,ci’ his work thus prcservi'd, lie (eels a sense of accuinplishnieiil not |Kissihle when his daily efforls Miv grad<‘d, then rolegated to a waNtehaskcl as Is done in scluiol, Mrs. D'Arkos soys. In .learning to spell, » impll will wrile page after page of Hie wunis and sentences under r. During iy|>lng lessons he Will start with line after line of exercises, • then graduate to tile tyiUng of words and sen-emres. • History, geography, sclem’e, algebra) geometry and all other sub-'l jeets, advanced and elementary, I go Into the book. Some of theJ more advanced volumes contain J psychology, phlloso|)hy, original I comiHisillons, physics, chemistry I and /.oology—anything under study || thus preseived. will convert any non-liellover’s thinking. A deal boy, Ig, who couldn’t do even first grade work and was iinaecepiable la any sehool Was eiileriMl In Ha- alalh grade afior I years or work, mostly laloreil by his moHier, wlHi the guldanee of Mrs. D’Arkos. Moon alter entering st-liool he won a third prise la a eoiilily-wMe seleniai exiillilt. A kindergariner wlio was Ihreal-•uied wlHi having to repeal klnd<;r- I gai'len "becaime he dldn iyadjusl I properly to the sehool HllOalion," I h-arried wllhlii days to write and I Nliell Illinois, stoploeoed. Sas- | kalehewan, pt'iairlmis, li < rliage and do/.ens (>| oilwr hardil words. friend about his tonsillectomy and was holding down her tongue with the fork handle whM 'T'Pf'to laughing arfft (the fork? * just went down." Tlie Incident happened In a Fort Woth coffee chop. Two Die in Flames Above Drugstore HOWARD CITY (AP) — Fire roared through living quarters above Watson’s drug store here early today, killing the owner and his daughter. The bodies of Otter W. Watson, 51, and his daughter, Cheryl, 12, were found in the rains by firemen. Both were burned beyond recognition. ..A A A Police Chief Harvey Williams said the blaze broke out about 3:.20 a.m. in the rear of the nine-room apartment above the store. It filled the rooms with smoke. The two o<;eupants probably were asphyxiated before the Podophyllin is a drug obtained I from the American mandrake of May apple. The drug has cathartic and escharotic properties. Jackie and'Kids' Government Seizes Back Home After Week in Florida WASHINGTON (AP) - Mrs. John F. Kennedy returned to the capital Thursday night after a week’s vacation in Florida. The Kennedys’ two children, Caroline and John Jr., were with her on the flight from : Palm Beach in the family plane. The Firet Lady is scheduled to leave next Friday on a trip to India and Pakistan. Trujillo's Millions SANTO DOMiNGO, Dominican Republic (AP>' — The government has seized )32,931,587.73 worth of properly from the estate of the late Dictator Rafael L. Trujillo And members of his family. R announced Thursday, including more than $22 million in cash. Trujillo and members of his family owned or had a share in most of, the republic's business enterprises. Properties seized included real estate, stocks and bonds, and interest-bearing notes. State Awaits March 14 for Road Project Bids LANSING im - The State Highway Department reports bids will be taken March 14 on 23 highway construction projects totaling some $10 million. The projects include five contracts lor construcUon of 14.4 miles of 96 Freeway in Van Buren and Allegan counties and for modernization of U.S. 31 between East-port and Atwood in Antrim County. A dagoba Is a hemispherical structure built of brick. Found in Ceylon, it usually contains a relic of Buddha or a Buddhijst saint. BOATS Ri$dRTER-17' CORONADO-21' AtNEWKIRK’S-Kaago Harbor GetaHoise! WHEEL HORSE. OF COURSE The suburban tractor with 22 optionalattachfng tools to help you get more done-bave more fun niere's a mountain of responsive mmde la this compact suburban tractor... with all the took you need b tadie light of yqur yard work, Tilla’,aeeder, cultivator, rotary and reel type mowers, dump trailer and snow removal equipment are just a few of the work •avers to team up With your Wheel Horse. No wonder so many smart folks are saying, “gel a horse” tWheel Horse, of course!). Ride a horse. Take a free test-drive, now. PRICED AS LOW AS We Take Ti MG BBOS. Pontiac Rood af~Opdyke » 4-1112 IFE .4-0734 SALE _ 5i West Huron Street Girl Mistaken ~r THE PONTIAC PRESS. KHIDAY, MAROTJ, 1008 - I to Chango /Hit Businoii for Jet Victim Sht'i SfwwaNitM With Scini« Namt p On« KilM tn Now Yoi4( msiN(j «i;N, (AP)--a»rj« CiHihrnn him (te-ldcnJ ihHt il>e hu»-‘-WM «r i)wntr)fi « iP'm'rnl Wore 1 no) hti; hlny Thivp limifiA litter he imretiuswl the Wore Wwinewlay « man eame In. wioviHi « i»iwoi in iiimiii wd $tat«'t Attorndv Genoral iiMik |1‘J5. . ' . Oni'o In onlHi((h, CofluHn dotW- , Favors U.S. Wator Bill nalioi««l wntnr re^ Vopo Holpi 2 EscqpO .........................If Time In ihut e\|>dniie o( vinico iMdween payday*. l^ANSNO fA!*) Ally. tien. F'lank .1. Kelley went 1o Wnshlng-tun .UHtay to leiiUty fcefoio a Senate comtnIUtHi In ituvor o( a bill to i'lWtO iKiuretil ootuiell. Kelley Wild Mlchlunn favorH bill becttUM the alMle’i water re-tourecH conutitute the l)n*lii for tln*>e major enterprlaeH. InduMlrlal manutai-lurInK, tourlal buNinrea and agriculture. ThtA Nets Himsttf BJIRUN (API—An Eaai Geiitmtt liullreumn heltaid a iimn luid Iwu women tiHcttpe tpio Weal Merlin Thuriidity nigbl, iJten came over hlmaelf, WoW^ Berlin police ye-purtwli. I There wa« )io ahootliig, < The refugee#’ ««;Hpo route w«» One out of every tlO worNore In Iho U.S. la employwl In hoapltnla. MOUm' UNION, Pa. (UPM - A !^allon«l Overaeaa Alrtlne# alew-ardem, unaware that ahe waa mla-lakenly Identified ea tlie Lola Kelly killed In the eraah of an Aniertcan Alrllnea Aatrojet. aal cglmly in the New York apartment of a girt friend while her dlatraught parents awaited word of her fate. S(*iii after tfa* Jet clashed In a KwatTip near New Yoik’* Idlewlld Alrimi’t Thursday killing 115 |m‘i-sons, friends and neighbors began calling Mr. and Mrs. (Tilton Kell.v ‘Vriends kept ealHiig ii# and aald they heanl report# that a lads Kelly, a slewarde## mi the |dane, was kllh'd.’’ Hut the Kelly# refuaed to go along with the report#. "We decided to wall and "We called Nnllonal Overseas Alvlines In New York, and they fin ally contacted Lois in the aiiaii' nienl of hiT friend, Caret kVank,’ o( I'lllsburgh, "U)ls was complete ly uniiware of the inistaken iden tily," they said. The girl tor whom Lois wits taken was Lois A. Kelly, 23, a stewardess aboard the Ill-fated jet The victim was a native of Haver ton. Pa., and, like Lois, was living in California. The Clifton Kellys said fite.v were very happy to learn (heir daughter was alive, but were' sorry for the parents of the victim. Mackie Hails Bill hr 45-MPH Rate on State Xways LANSING m — Slate Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie today backed a 45-mile-an-hour minimum speed limit for Michigan freeways. Maekle Thursday hailed house approval of a bIM, sponsored by Lesfer O. Beglek. B-Bay (Tty, uettinK fbe tninimum Umlt. The measure now goes to the Senate. The bill, Mackie said, is aimed at "keeping the Sunray driver type of motorist off the freeways.” Many fifeeways’ accidents Cear-end collisions caused by slow-moving vehicles —mostly old cars and trucks, he said. Nearly 90 per cent of all cars on the freeways travel at more than 45 miles an hour, he said. But the other 10 per cent is causing a high percentage of the — cidents. MSI) Student Win Awards 40 Taking Agricluture Get Scholarships and Honors at E. Lansing EAST LANSING (AP) - Honors iehigan State University agri-Iture students in ceremonies re yesterday. \wards by student clubs, agri-Itural companies and campus parttnents were - presented for iolarship and contnhutions to mpus programs at the annual nors program Alvin C. Bailey of Schoolcraft >n the 1962 College of Agrlcul re Scholarship Achievement vard. He received a 9350 cheek wn the Michigan Farm Bureau, id the Alpha Zela Senior Schol-ship Award. He compiled a i3 scholastic average a n d alntained an all-A average for chard Arnold, an agricultural lomics senior from Plainwell, ived the Award for contribu-the most to campus activities sfudent ln agriculture. He has ntained a B average, has red his own agricultural pub-relations firm and produces a kly farm program on a Detroit /ision staHcfii." ~ ler seniOTs to win awards in m D. Mason of Nashville rt Harter of Carson City. ; Villwock of Niles, James ;r of St. Johns, John C. Bruhn uth Euclid, Ohio; Joseph M. 1 of dairtw, Pa.; John Nye . Joseph, Doris Magnum of sy, 111.; David Lietzke of De-and HugK A. Curry of Belle- Ikilabrase liarini 2it S. Tubgraph FRCEH $20.00 wiwrrii of groceries eech week. rsMiuatBs taw. «iM limnic to BOT, SIMPLY iiTEBToroyanr- Srewiiif i£di Sal«4ay Etrt. Tea aa«d Mf iw prMmf .fo wia fNTElt THIS\WEEK! THK rONTFAC PUKSS. FllinAV. MARCH 2. lQ(t2 Spending Inflates a Woman's Morale Bjr ninOH MnXKTT It's the simple act of ((pending mpa^ Bn(orpi1iM)i Aien. 'niioney that mems to give a worn* bo you Think Women are Km6* hn a lift in trying times. i Of TOurse, women are emotlum t^l spenders. A woman con go tor Wfieks or even ntonthi eartfully ptnchtng^ennles, hiiying only whnl is nece^ury, compni'lng prices, and C^iiK H goen-ager in .your (iimlly? Read Ruth Milieu’s booklet. "Tips on Teen-Agers.” kViail 2.5 cents to Ruth Millett Reader Service c-o (The Pontiac Press), P.O. Box 489, Dept Radio City Stalton, New York 19, N.Y. Easy Does It (NKA) — Plunging headlong Into a diet regime without com-IK?tent advice is no way to add pluses to your beauty Soap Types Vary (NEA)—Ail soaps or detergents are not for all ia.H)ple. Experiment to find tlie one best for you. diamond Tomorrow Uirector of the Minneapolis SyAi phony Orchestra, Stanislaw Skrow-> BCisewiiki, will appear with the 125-voice Michigan State^nlvarslty Oakland chorus ‘coupled with his orchestra, tomorfow at 8; 15 p.m. at Pontiac Northern High Hcliool « w A Appearance of the symphony is pni-l of llie MSUO-Ommunlly Arts t’resenlailves. Dates of tlie fair, to he lield in the library room of Pon-Uae Nbfthern High ffohool, eoindde with those of National Book We«'k, whose theme for (his year is "tfoad and waleh the world grow." PTA members will lake an aelive part in publid/.ing the fair and in enema-aging attendance by parents, students a n d interested (-ommunlty groups. Art departments in the secondary schools and children in the elementary schools will contribute posters and decorative displays. iipollii Hyniphuny. Ho follows a ilIslIugulNlMHl group which In-cliulcN Eugene Ormniuly, Dimitri MllrO|M>iiloN uad Auliil Doriitl. The M.SIIO Chorus, i«)w 1‘A years old and (he university’s larg-esl sludent organlrallon, wtil be perfoi'inlng ottcampus for (lie tirsi tone will'll it appears wllli llie symphony. The group will «lng in tlie oi'iglnMl (Jerinnn, Brahms’ dra-nmiic ".Song of Dealiny" with the drehcslra. Cheek Glitter (NEA) -- Many m a lure women make the mistake of Utfrding loo much glitter. In addilion lo s li I n y eyeglass (raines in vivid color, llii'y’ll wear earrings, a pin, a necklace and several brnci'Icts. This rn'ates a busy effect which is unuttradlvc.’ Short Cutter (NEA)—If you're short and haven't must waistline, la?-wan»”«f™wide belts no matter how chie they may look on others. They'll have the effect of sawing you in two. Mail Sale of Opera Tickets Set Met Performances to RunMoy21-26; Orders Monday Public mall sale of tlckds (or seven Metropollian Opera Co. pi-odudlons, scheduled for May 21 Ihrougli May 25 ul Detroit’s Masonic Temple Auditorium, go on sale Monday. Mall orders will bo iiccepted at tile office of the Detroit Grand 0|H*rn AsstHdation, In Ford Auditorium, Detroll. Sr A ★ "lAieiu dl Lummermoor" heads thcjlst of seven firodw -tlons. May 21. ‘'Salome” will be offered May 22: "Madame Bullerfly," May 2.'$; "Aidii," May 24; "La For/a del Des lino,'' May 25; "Cosi Fim Tiille’’ at llie rnaHneo per-forniancc May 20, niul "Tosca” at the evening iierformanee that same day. Opening night curtain will rise at 8:30 p.m. All olhei-evoning iiei-formunccH will Ih:-gln 8 p.m. The matinee will start at 1:30 pm. A ★ * .Scweral riisl ehangi's announced liy (he Metro[)olitiin Opera Involve Galirlella Tucei, who will sing the role of Aida in that opera replacing Mar-gherilu Roberli; Frank Guur-i-era, who will sing the role of Ainonasi-o in tlie same opi'ra, replacing Uiren/.o Testi; and Morley Meredith, who will sing the role of Don Alfonso in "Co.sl Fan Tulte" May 26 at the matinee, replacing -Jimank Guarrera. Public window sales will open April 2 at the Ford Auditorium box office. Observe Anniversary Tlie lOlh anniversary of the organization of Mizpah Temple No.7, I^thian Sisters, was observed Thursday evening In Fellowship Ixidge Hall. Mrs. Oaude Wiley “WHS“1tr^ C^ of the program. captain of the degree staff directed a practice session. Spring flowers and a cake bearing the colors of the Pythian Sister order were on the No, 7, Pythian Sisters, was oli- " George.....Gteasoii, Mrs: Glenn Griffin and Mrs. Wiley presided. ---- Mizpah Temple degree staff will assist Oxford Temple with initiation March 13. This can be your year for a better lawn-and even crobgrdss can't stop you! There i.s now ti .simple, proven way to overcome the erabgntsa prolilem. You actunlly atop crabgraaa before it aturta with Scotia llalla. You can do thla aa soon as the snow is gone. We AlsuLjMrry These Fine Products 'GREENFIELD'^ Crabgross Killer "DOW" Crabgrass Killer "AGRICO" Crabgrass Control W(' Deliver—l\o Extra Charge on Order Over REGAL FEED and LAWN SUPPLY CO. Pontiac Store Bloomfield Store Drayton Store 28 Jackson St. 2690 Woodward 4266 Dixie Miwy. FE 2-0491 FE 5-3802 OR 3-2441 You’ll enjoy a wide selection of foods in our outdoor, candlelit atmosphere. From our huge Covered Wagon, you’ll find Appetizers, Fried Chicken, Spareribs, Prime Beef and Others: Vegetables and Salads, Potatoes, and of course, our own Hot Rolls and Breads, and Rich Desserts. “LEAVE THE CALORIE COUNTER AT HOME BECAUSE YOU’LL MAKE MANY TRllPS'BACK TO THE ‘CHUCK WAGON’.” SIJJVDAY-_BRE^FAST BUFFET^i:VERY SUNDAY 9 to I2 - EnJ^^ur 4tK~~Annual ‘ ‘Freu/t Su uwberry Festiv^‘ wmmm THE POKTIAC PRESS. FftlDAY. MARCH «■ IMH Budnew Upturn Jint SfaurtlngT Recovery Is 1- Year Old Hit fallowtnit U« to, iwmlni Miw flt prodiio* Iv iwwwTi ■nd MM bv th«m M P«ol»g« W*. Quotatloni arc fumlahed by th« tViroH Bureau at MartwU. i ThucMlAy. D«troit Produce Mart Takes Directionless C»bbM*!^«uitr bu. . CkbbDft, r»a. M. CkbbkM. ktwMIknl rkrtkty rkrroU, «*"* “*■ NEW YORK lf>™T1»P alwk ma^ krt iclniMM'd Into n IwndlCM pat-It’rn In «I(AV Irmtlng early today-(>nln« and locsea most key stocks were small. A slight trwlenry toward the upside WHS shown In the Inegular otiening but several trices were cut as trading continued. the total was down from Jan* uaiy. Construction outlays In Feb-were the lowest In alx months. Machine tool orders oft. International Business Machines picked up half a dosen points In a fairly i^tlne recovery mm Korvette slipped about a point. seemed little Ineenttve to nll.v. Although auto assemblies In Feb--imry wcie up sharply from a year tfom a silgtit decline IhUrsday lag WT eraabed tsllli the lest of St lives. Amerloaa AlrUnea traded about unchanged. Koyid Dutch was up about « .. .... llBonds Hold Upward Trend Poultry and Eggs DSTUoiT roii tav orraoiT. Mkrch i iahi Pi iH-r pound kt DtlroH tor No. SqI::; Skrrkd nook* 31-U; dttokilnss St. osTaorr aooa Drraorr. Msreh l (APt-Cit prle«i ------------ -I Dktrou br flrkt r»- Whiuw—OTkdk A lui - - ■ TkJj.- . iiehickk'Jsf*-” ;i NEW YORK I,tn - IV)iid prices ('onllnu(‘d their upwui-d trend at the start of trading today. They have been higher most of the week. W ■* A or the counter dealers in U.S. government bonds quoted intermediates up 1/32 or 2/32. Long Issues held unchanged to up 2/32. The market was fairly quiet. Industrials led iW way upward la eoriwrale trading on the New 3»4*; m«dtum York Block Exchange. Few changes amounted to a full point but there were many sinnll plus signs. Rails and utilities were mixed. ★ A A Pacific Gas & Electric 3^s series X advanced 1 at WMi. for Just about the only movement ing to a hill point. Even the convertible section was unusually inactive. polnl In actlv* trading as It con-tlnutNl Its recent alnnith. Shell Transport li Trading gained a frac Hon. The Royal Dutch-Shell group of companies reported higher «arn- ____ were off fractlonnlly. Steele edged off on balance. Ralls continued to produce fractional gains. Prices were mostly higher on the American Stock Exchange. Moderate gains were made by Syntex, Technicolor, Hell-Cbll, 01-annlnt Controls and Creole Peiro- Agree on Pact at Consumers Ntw Labor Contract Wilt B« Approvod on Local LovbIs Soon Amt)rican Stock Exch. risurak kftkr dMimkI poInU kr» klshtl YORK. Mkroh I (AP>~Am»llci JACK£I0N Oft Ncgollalors lor Consumers Power Co. and the In-ternallonal UtlUly Workers Union reached agreement lost night on new two year contract. AAA Hie union Indicated ratlflcation of the pact will be completed pn the local level soon. Hie union represents 5.800 Consumers era in Ixiwer Michigan ouiside die Detroit area. ■ • irafi”: iSS Ck 1« » T«hn?c5 STOCK AVKaAOKS rimell** br Tb* SiiMlklkS f'*** Ikd! RkAa mu. BUt Nooo*'*Thuri. ... 371.8 1*4.8 141.7 *8] Rrtr. Dky 17t.7 1*4.0 141.3 Isi WMk Ago Month Aso Tckr Ato ------ High m 34 3 113.7 *33.' ancAOo rBoorcR CKICAOO. r«b. *• (API ~ fU8DA| -Liv# pouHry: Whol«»kl* burlng price 1 higbor to 1 louor; roketor* ^1. WhlU 8^ Irytr* *0; Plymoulh Rock CMICAOO BBTTER AND EOt CHICAOO. Mkrch I (API — Chlckgo rrcknUlk mchkugo — bulUr itokOy; cent or bktwr griUo A., whm Livestock DETROIT tIVESTOCB DETROW. Mkrch 1 (AP|~I rocolpU, ckttle *08. cklvok 1 nl 100, ihcep 100. Ckttlo «o»P»« week Oic tmkU cupply of choli kteon knd hollerk »tokd" *~ (ituidkrd kbd good grkdee Bteers knd hollm wokk . lower cove 38-50 cent* higher; fully etokdy. *™und 7 hoM mUe choice end prime 0^1000 lb. . 38 00: moet choice oteera 000-1*01 JO.28-37A0; mlied. hl*‘>„««><) choice steera *8.#O-J0.»; moat auers *3.00-*5.00; htkndkrd aleeri *2 60: uUllty ateera 18.l)0-3d.8o. ---- lokd choice hellera *00 lb. 10.00; ml*ed lokda high good knd low choice h«u«ra 24.M>.a5.W: good hellera U.0O-J4.5O; i »rd holfera 10.8O-31.B0; , uUlltj h 17.0(yi0.B0; uUllty cowa 10.00-n.W; nera and cultere ll.SO-lO.OO. moatly 10.00: utility bulla 10.00-31.00: cuUor bulla —npkred Ikat week veklera ------------------------- The New York Stak Exchange NEW YORK (AP)—Following of ikloclkd atock Iruiako'*— “ York Stock SkoSMil* AP ^ NEW YCBUC (AP)-*Ths ness noovnyscgIsbrotM its lint birthday this month with aonw peojds calling It an oU man «b reauy, Others tMnk (bat altar n stumbla or two In the early of the yeer. he*s hist ready to take eome more firm sttpe llN^ werd.. They are, cheered by e heelthy volume of auto aeles. Hiey note that steel mills end many makers of durable goods hsv« backlogs of orders to keep them going for some time. was'omelally announced at 11 tie p.ni. last night, ahnsst M hours sttor the old pact had expired workera atayed on the Job. Federal mediator Paul Ricketto and slate mediator Ed Connors Imd slopped into the negotiations Tuesday. INOLUDKB INBURANCK A company spokesman said the new pact included improved hos-pltallintlon coverage and a two year economic package Including pay Increases of 13 cents an hour. The company agreed to p^ mranoe coals lor dopendenls of emptoyes the first year of the steady, prime JS.00.41.00- good and choice 30.00-M.OO: standard 38.io-J0.00; cull and utility U.OO-IS.OO: sheep compared lest week slaughter olktses steady to strrog; SSSs«*.‘3J:‘’r*.“*heWm‘i‘« !:sK ??ft.«%,£4oroi rJ ‘c”3i to choice slaughter ewea 0.0M.8O. CktUe *00. Slaughter elasus 7 head high choice IW Ih. etMM «■»: Vealers » nrt^et^r “ -** second year. Pay hikes will be six cents hour for the first year and seven snts the second year. AAA Average straight rate pay for consumers’ “operational” employes under the old contract was about J2.92 an hour. Unit to Run Exchange in Event of N-Attack NEW YORK UPD — Provisions for an emergency comm it-tee to run the New York Stock Exchange in the event nuclear attack on this country, has been approved by exchange members. amendment to the exchange con stitution, if the exchange board of governors decided an attack was imminent or if a quorum of The board wero not available because of an attack, the boai-d functions would be turned over immediately n emergency committee. By HAM 0AW8ON ■Ides wtU b* U^hw when better weather luras tnowtNHind cillMM to; the ways. Aiid a ^^rai Rt Bogril wtvey of tkmi ihowi mw. Usual say they plan to buy a new r this year. HISTORY-Recovaries usually •how a bobble or two, like the In January betore they run tl oourae. Eoommlata aay that forcea that hlatorically start laU Total employment Is high and iR rate of unemptoyment fell In January. CoiMumers appear willing to continue to spend, oven II choosy as to what they buy. Gov-spending seems sure to increase, both tor goods and in government payrolls. Many economists feel that the momentum of otlier factors of the economy It far from spent. Yet they must admit that Janu-ry brought a fallout of disappointing statlsttCB. HUCillT DOWN TURN Whether it was bod weather business fatigue, there W4irc slight downturns In retail sales, personal Income, industrial output. To many, primed for a contiitutng advance by exciting official predlc-this was ho shock. But others call It comparable hobble In the recovery last September. Here is the reasoning of those who think there should be a good advance before the summer lull— and then a stronger forward spurt in the tall; - Bad weather snarled outdoor activity a some Iniiito.. w»i£«hwt....lotoL. ployment fell below 6 per cent of the labor force for the first time In months. A A SPENDING — Consumers are laying out as many dollara taking on a little more instalment debt. Much money goes for services and soft goods, but some big ticket items like autos are getting more now. NEW ORDERS - Makers ' durable goods report a rise in i orders and the biggst backlog in two years. STEEL — Orders and output have risen sharply. Production so 'far this year totals 19 million tons, compared with 11.9 million tons in the like period of 1981. The big question is how much of the ordering is hedging against a possible strike this summer and how much is for normal use spring, based on expectations of better business for the consumers themselyes, .Hie mills say they have enough orders now to keep them busy for m?ny weeks. AUTOS — New car sales from Jan. 1 to Feb. 20 came to 791,411 Car Output Inaeases i|50 Pci in Last 2 Months DHTIWIT (UPD - I pnxiuctibn thus far this year is up nearly 50 per cent from 1961, according to Industry figures. r I 8 relenseil Hiurstlay by the five big manufacturiTS showed (hey built 1,164,024 curs in January and February of 1962, compared with 780,242 a year ago. AAA Pi-oductlon for February was about 47 per cent better than the same month In 1961 — a total of 535,797 cars against last year’ 364,385. Glass Workers Strike GRAND RAPIDS (UPD - Glaziers and other workers at seven western Michigan glass companies were on strike today in an effort to gain a 15-cent-an-hour pay raise a new contract. Honor Local Manager Burt Gold, general manager of Ward’s Home OuUlttlng, 48. S. Saginaw, was presented an award of merit today from the Kroehler Manufacturing Co. for outstanding merchandising of the firm’s fui> niture line. I, a gain of 31 per cent over In a recovery should still have sevtttol months of momentum left this ttowi — they tlto Inventory lit thd ' litowiriM piwIuctton index, peroonat Incomes, and In the length of the average work week, such as dlstuited peopla In January, often are due to special and tempoNry oauiw*. This time It could be the weather rather than Daily Target Set for Steel Fact Resume Efforts Today ps March 1 Deadline for Contract Passes PITTSBURGH (UPI)-Chief bargainers for the steel industry and the United Steelworkers set up a day-by-day “target date’’ beginning today in effort.* to reach agreement on a basic steel contract. The top teams, led by chief Industry negotiator B. Conrad Cooper and U8W Prestdenl David J. McDonald, said they would resume talks this morning to continue to work toward an early General hlotors accounted for more than 05 per cent of the' two-month output. The giant firm built S48,8!ift cars, ixanpared with 42H,05H last year. Ford- Motor Co. produced 3-38,-218 cam In the period, up from 2'2ri,428 a year ago. AAA Oirysler reported two-month production of 92,.T04 cars, compared with 74,211 last year. AAA American Motors 0>rp. said It made 78,839 Ramblers, oompotod with 44,190 for (he same period, in 1961 — a 78 per cent Increase. Btudebaker - Packard, crippled by a slx-wcek strike, was the ’The March 1 deadline for an agreement in principle, set when the eessions bpehed Feb. 14, bey came history Thursday along with some of the optimism that had preceded it. A A A Cooper, in response to a question Thursday whether a new target date had been set, said: morrow.’’ In a Joint statement Cooper and McDonald said, *‘We are perfectly aware that this date of March l has been given a lot of slgalflcanoe all during 4Hir ne-goHations. have been discussed only In terms of oell-lmposed taiget dates rather than Inflexible deadlines.” Despite the passage of the original target date, there still was hope that a basic pact covering 430,600 steel workera would be reached by this weekend. For the month of February, GM made 302,186 cars, compared with 194,646 last year; Ford 152,060 versus 108,687; Chrysler 37,756 against 37,290; American Motors 37,461 compared with 20,164. A ♦ A / \ AMC within an eyelash of claim)-Ing third place from Chrysler In car production. According to the reports, Chrysler made only 295 cars tharf American Motors last month. 'Revenooeis Lock Doors oi Green Stamp Co. DETROIT (T) — Michigan ha.s seized the property of Merchants Green Stamp Or. State Revenue Department investigators locked the firms’ doors and began inventorying Its merchandise after a warrant charging merchants with nonpayment of some $4,900 In sales taxes was issued Thursday. SidnejXo. Boodman. district director oK the Revenue Department’s salgs tax division said the state moved in Just before a group of creditors filed an involuntary bankruptcy petition against the trading stamp firm. fun?*?SS?* brifrrt. . hUers I... 32.80-38.00; 22.28: Jo»a gyoa lo. *-<.77' uesnese i. snd commerclaJ cows 14.50-17.00.: Hoi- cenco In . ftetns'' up to 17.00; esnnera »nd cutterr - - . . moatly lJJSO-10.50; utility «nd com mer cisl bulla 10.00-21.60: coiqile good veslen moderately active, alaugh eady to 38 lower: aiaughtei ------ ..... ---------- sroOled slaughter Plenty Cuban Cigars ihhre in U. S. for '62 By JOHN T. CUNNIFF AP Business News Writer NEW YORK—The aroi of (Tuban cigars apparently will tickling palates in drawing room, club and restaurant for some time to come despite President Kennedy’s embargo on Ha-ana’s goods. Havana cigar smokers, at any rate, are remaining surprisingly unconcerned about the trade ban. And some manufacturers, with the notable exception of those in Tampa, F!a., ate equally as calm. .........A .A A . . . But taking no chances, they are Du Pont Has 10 Years to Sell GM Stock CHICAGO (UPI)s— Barring a reversal by a higher court, the hall-centuiy association of the Du Pont clan of Delaware with General MotonOirp. will come to an end before 1972. U.S. DIsMet JudgiB Walter la already combing the world for substitute tobaccos and, depending on human fickleness, are hoping to wean cigar smokers away from C^iban blends. A A A When the embargo became effective Feb. 7 many of America’s 13 million cigar smokers envisioned the day their last Havana would vanish in a puff of smoke. Recently, however, thinking has dianged. PLENTY FOR 1962 Cart Carlson, executive vice presldemHErf^rcia Ar^ega, Inc., said, “There-Tl be good clear Ha-cigars’on the market over a year from now, believe me.” ’The Bayuk Qgar Co. of Phila* delphia said It has about a Iwo- will hot be affected to any way by sanctions against Oiba-American ‘Tobacco Co., whose subsidiary, (Xiban Tobacco Co. of ’Trenton, N,J. is a major producer of Havanas, said, “We anticipate no curtailment in 1962.” divMt witUa li yean-Two Du Ptfflt du _ were ordered to get rid of 63 stock witidn teee years. Because the two corporations will sever tbeir GM connection by I States leads all coum distributing GM stopk to t|» ' sharehtdden — many of them Du Ponts — family was given 10 years to divest itself ot shares in GM. Ford OHicial Sees Best Year Since '55 ATLANTA ID - Automobile sales in 1962 are expected to hit the highest peak since the record year of 1955, in the opinion of a Ford Motor Oo. executive. A ■ A A ‘"rhe total market is showing real strength as compared to last year,“:Mid Vice PMsideh^^^ D Mills, who is in charge of (he Lincoln-Mercui’y Division. “The prospect is that 1962 will be the second biggest year in history in total sales,” he said in an interview, 'A A . A During the 60s the trend will continue upward. Mills predicted, because of several factors includ-ii« a Mrth rate bulge and increase in driver-age population. News in Brief , Main Cleaners. 4460 Elizabeth tjakp Road. WalerfoEtfc Towmsfatn.' was broken into Thursday -night and $3 in change taken from the cash register. Entrance to the building was gained by removing a masonite panel in the eastside door. Several cleaning order manufacturers and unconcern by smokers stems from at least two Manufacturers, retailers and some smt^era laid to substantihl The embatgo may not be wholly effective. Cuban cigars made to other countries stilFmay be imported, specifically from the Canary Islands, Canada and Mexico. Most seriously hurt by the some 6,000 w&rkers to 35 com-, panics in Tampa, Fla., which produced 750 million all-Havana cigars last year. covered this mornii^. CUet James R. WMto and Oapt. Albert fl. Rayner of the Pontiac Fire Department are attending the annual Fire I^artment to- Such confidence from leading sinkhwt' Confertoce, session which concludes today in Memphis, Tenn. di sapper; BaMWitt E.U.B. Church, 210 Baldwin, Friday 5-8. I^kisif Far Barptos? Oo to Bargain Box, 295 Oakland Ave. ' Lavatories complete $14.95, Mi*b-igan Fluorescent, 393 Orchaixl Ponttae .Coia Club display and sale of coins. Rosevelt Tqmple on State St. Sun. 10 io6. ' T -ytfK PONTIAC i^UK^s. I'lUDAVr^tAitc'n % innij --Today's Television Programs-- 1‘roKrMii* luniliiiiiMl by aliMlloM IM«d in ijUn rniDAY nvEN0fo 6:00 (2) Movie (Cont) (4) Wyatt Eatp (7) Overiaral Trait (Cont.) (9) p(^ye (Cont.) (SO) 0r. Peatn e Otanta oitK (2) Wrather (4) WoHthnr (7) Mahnlln Jackson Sings OiM (2) News (4) News (7) News (9) Tugboat Annie (96) Ticker Tupt? 6:40 (2) Sports - (4) Sports 0:4s (2) News (4) News (7) News, Weather, Sports 7:00 (2) President Kenne«iy (4) President Kennedy (7) Prbsident Kennedy (9) Whlpinsh (5(i) Story of Money 7:30 (2) President Kennedy (4 Intemattonid Showtime (7) Soupy Sales (9) I\lovie — ''Pacific Ren dezvous." (1942) Young man working for Naval Intelligence Is detailed to decode enemy messages. I>sc Bow- (7) n Sunset Strip 19) Tommy Ambrose (56) For Docipn anil You (2) Father of thiF Bride (4) (Color) TVlepll0}» Hour (7) 77 Sutiaet Strip (Cont) (9) Four Jiist Men (96) Age of Kings 10:00 (2) Twilight Zone 8:00 (56) Probing Mind (2) Third Man (4) Showtime (CJont.) (7) Hathaways (9» Movie ^nt.) 8:S0 (21 Route 66 (4) Detectives (7) Flintslones (9) Movie (Cont.) (56)‘For Doctors Only 0:00 (2) Route 66 (Cont.) (4) Detectives (Cont.) TV Features RAWHIDE, 7:30 p.m. (2). "The Pltchwagon.” Young drover killed on trail, and bla fellow c boys try to raise money for his widow and children, Patent medicine operator (Buddy Kbsen) volunteers to use his musical talents to stage benefit show. ROUTE 66, 8:90 p.m. (3). "Shoulder the Sky, My Lad." Stars Martin Milner and George Maharts are confronted with problem 0l trying to explain the brutal slaying of man to his young lion. ROBERT TAYLOR’S DETECTIVES. 8:30 p.m. (4). "Night Boat." Psychotic killer (Scott Marlowe) eludes police dragnet, boards evening excursion steamer (4) Telephone Hour (Cont.) (7) Tariet! Corruptork (9) Country Hoedown lOtM (2) Ey«¥lti(i!es8 and hunts for victim among thrill-seeking passengers. Taylor stars. THE HONOH OF IRVING BERLIN, 9:30 p.m. (2). Career of famous composer will be traced on "Telephone Hour," with Ginger Rogers as both host and perform-Other Stars include Janet Blair, John Raltt, Johnny Desmond, Mindy' Carson and Joey ‘ ‘ - Include "A 'Alexander's Ragtime Band" and 'Easter Parade." (Color). THE TWIUGHT ZONE. 10 p.m. (2). "To Serve Man.*' A 9-foot giant from another planet drops in on earth and creates turmoil trying to convince people he wants peace. Lloyd Bochner and Susan Cummings star as two United Nations officials. (7) Target (Coni.) (9) Playhouse 19 moo (2) News (4) News (7) News (9) News 11:12 (7) News, Sports 11(10 (2) Weather' (4) Weather (9) Weiiiher into (2) Spoils (4) Sports (9) Telescoptt DAW (2) Movie: 1. "Beau 11:80 (2) Movie: "Beau Geste.” (1939) After disap-pearnnee of sapphire, thi’oo hi'olhers join FVench Foreign I.s‘gion. Gary C() ceiils for “mouse medicine”: to the dt-parlinent in his appeal for help. Biologists returned the 50 cents and sent along some mouse food and feeding tips. “I fed him what you told me - to.’’- ..the boy wrote back. -"-He loves it find is getting along better .since I started feeding it to him.” The strike, launched by the Transport Workers Union at the start of IIh> evening rush hour Thiir.sday, was the sei’ond against Fifth Avenue t’oaeh Lines and III -siilisldlaric,H in less than two ! rnonlhs. » , • Hut II WHS the first against the new eompuiiy iiiHiiagement lieiiiled l>> Irtuisit niugiiate Har-, ry ’U/elnlierg, who says he needs flliuiK'liil heljt ri'oiii the city. City-o|)eruled subways and btia lines, plus several smaller prlvula bus companies, scheduled extra runs to handle the overflow. Their routes parallel many of the Fifth Avenue's, But In the Bronx, bus service was almost totally cut oil and residents of outlying areas not served by •sitbwaya had to •eramble. The city pul Into effect an emergency piogiam legalizing group riding in taxicabs and Suspended i parking and other traffic control' ' measures. . The uniutt. called Its menibers out after the line lakh-off 29 cm- . ployes. The walkout idled n.ntKT' company employes. Install Safety Belts MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -With the observation that they ,• silve a lot of lives. Public flafety’ ' Director Floyd Mann has ordered • seat belts Istalled on Alabama- ' Highway Patrol cars. ' ! TV-RADIO 8 Man Rescues 40 Kentucky Town Lauds Hero for Pulling Boot to Stranded People 770 ORCMABD lAKB AVB. FE 4-SMl Mlchlfan T.E.S.A. U«i «Uff> pathy for Diem, who escaped in-,|ury in the attack, but denied that had ever incited the Vlet- SALYER.SVILLE, Ky. (APt -Big John Hank, a man who identifies himself as the town's handy man, is a hero today because of his daring rescue of some 40 persons stranded by rampaging flood waters. Hank, who is slightly over six feet and weighs 215 pounds, waded into flooded areas of Salyers-ville pulling a motorless boat, and rescued .some 40 persons stranded by flood wiers of IdclnngT^lvmv SPEOIAL PRIDE With Thii Ad «i FURNACE CLEANING •7.50 MICHIGAN HEATING CO. 88 Newberry St. PI 8-<62l Industrialist, 94, Dies police drama will work in an Washbum-Crosby Co., forerunner episode called- ’’Today the Man|of General 'Mills, Inc., died --Today's Radio Programs WORKED II HOl'lLS Hank’s feats occurred Tuesday, but did not come to light until an official mentioned th^ iQ^ Goy, Combs Thursday. Hank said, "Somebody had to; you just couldn’t let them drown." Hank said he and Paul Marshall, whose family Many first rescued, worked 11 straight hours wBhout rest, pulling the hundreds of feet through water five feet deep in places WZYZ um> WCAR (1130) WFON WJBK, Newi, Reid WYOIL-Rewa,-OlMa-8t iissa^WJR, ■nmt for Maile WWJ. Newe, Monitor WCAR, Conrad v CKLW, Morgan, Van SATPROAT AFTERNOON U:Sa--WJB, Newt. Farm WWJ, Newe, Itaiwell WXVZ. -UcNedey, News CKLW, News. J WJBK, Newt, kfoia , WCAR, NOWS, Purst WPON, News,. Obeh Show U:za-WJR. Time for Husle WW^ Ntwa. Maxwell CKLW, News, Joe Van l:0(HrWJB. Newe. Sfaowcaee WWJ, News, Maxwell "He was the only man in town who could have done it,” .said County Judge Clyde Salyer, "He’s a big hu.sky fellow, kind of tall, and could walk in deep water without falling down." SAVED UfANY Hank, said the cold water at a time k ite; little boat. Salyer said. "These ^leopie-might still be isolated—maybe even dead — if he hadn’t of gone in there and got Han, 45, sai4 Jhe cold water| didn’t bother him. "I swim iiK»ld water the year round and didn’t pay too much attention to it. 11 just wanttd to get the folks out.”| • RENTAL • son WAJik Only $3 LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. 88 Newbarry St. PI 1.6621 Try our new, unique, personolized building and remodoling. Call us for free details and estimates MOTT- Construction Co. EM 3.3690 1962 RCOfRirtprohO^^ [ 148 GAS or ELECTRIC ^00 I Installed WXYZ, ....... .... CKLW, New*. .Dxvtes WCAR. ShertdSo WPON, News, lee Lyons CLOSE-OUT of 1960 ond 1961 DRYERS AT SPECIAL PRICIS QPMJ l;2A-WJR. Music Hkll WWJ, News. Monitor CKLW. Sports. Davies WCAR. News, Sberidai WATERY WAR MEMORIAL - This Korean War-vintage F86 Sabre-Jet escaped flood water which covered the main street of AP Pbototax Milton, W. Va. In the background is Milton High School. The plane was put up as a memorial to war veterans. ELECTRIC COMPANY n