Thm W^allwi ti l. Wulhir lluruu l•«r«e■ri THE PONTI AC PRESS Home Edition TbL. i!ia NO. 7a' ★ ★ ★ ★ rONTIAC. MK'IlKiAN. lMO^'l)A^ , ,MA\ .a. K) »\V(;K.S '^ITfcP PRiSsh INIURNATIONAI. U.S. Forces Open Dominican Supply Lane ' ^ Selma March Cost $510 fiOO WASIIINCJ'I’ON lyi’) II cosl lli(* Depart mcnl 0,01)0 to protect the Selnia-to-Montgomcry civil rights marchers, the Pentagon said toddy. This raLsed to nearly $1.3 million the co.st of using federal troop.s and federalized National (iuardsnum in five major civil .rights crises dating hack to Dittle Rock in 19.'*)7. The Petilagon .said the $.'>10,-(KMI figure covered pay and a) lowanees for 4,860 Alabama Na-lional C.uardsmen called inid federal duty, plus transpoilation and other expenses in connec lion with the njca.sures taken lo protect the voting rights march in late March, U. S. lies Cut . by Cambodia ftp PholAlax HACK AMONCi DKM UOApER.S Neil Slaehler flashed this winning smile in Detroit yesterday as former Gov. G. MennOn Williams, one of his top supporters, looks on after .Slaebicr moved hack into the Domocrallc hierarchy yesterday. Slaehler defeated four other <-andidales for llie .seat oh the Democratic Nalional (.’ommiltee vacaljcd by former (Jov. .John B, Swain.son when he was elected lo the Wayne (bounty (dreuit (kiurt last month. The figure did not lake info account the pay and allow-aiu'es for about UKMt regular Army military policemen who also were used. Break Still Permits Consular Relations Stoebler Bock of Top After Winning Post WA.SHINCITON (API The United Slates was formally noti-fied by the Cambodian Foreign The Army has taken the |»osi- Ministry t(»(lav that diplomatic lion that lliese men would be relations Itave l)cen l)roken. drawing such pay and allow- * * * anc;es regardless of what duties . , „ f . S a e Department ollicials they were performing. ' Also excluded were the eX- "«‘es were deliverwl lo penses involved in u.se of federal U S Charge d'Affaires Alf Her- Rebel Snipers Kill 1 Marine ^ and Wound 2 Continued Resistance Is Indicated Despite Cease-Fire Accord SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican R<*public i/P) U. S, forces opened a‘t>up-jily corridor through Santo Domingo early today in a linkup r/peration amounting to an encircle-mmil of rehi'l force,s* in the h <> a r t of this b<'- leaguered capiUil. One IJ.S. Marinft^as killed and Iwo’^vounded by gniper action not related lo llie linkup. This brings to a total of fivA See Story, Page A-3 the official count of U.S. military men dead, plus 38 wounded, in four day? of action involving U.S, forces. mapshals and other resources of the .lustice Department, t;UAIU) FEDERALIZED The Alabama National Guard was federalized from March 20 h) MarCfi 28. ges( 1 f’hnom IVnh. DETROIT (M - - Former Congressman-at-large Neil Staebler is back in the lop echelons of the state Democratic party after five months of absence. The 59-year-old onetime party Campaign strategist was restored to the post of Democratic national com-_________________ mitleeman by the Stale In response to inquiries, the Defense Department also listed the costs of past Defense Department involvement in civil rights crises. The ('amhiHlian break, which still permits consular relations between the two countries, may have no effect on the proposed nine-power conference, on C a m b o d i a which Prince Norodom .Sihanouk has nrged since mid-March. ^ prisoners SEAUniED Ami'i'ican-soldicrs search prisoners In the center of .Santo Domingo after heavy fighting-in lliaf .sector of llie sirife lorn Dominican Republii' „ capilal, 'these troops are pari of a crack airborne unit flown into llie city. However, Sihanouk who Wants In September 1957, Pre.sident to,farantce his Dwight 1). Eisenhower called up Miculrahty. has rcTcnt- 10,500 Arkansas Air and Army V Sharp Quake Dominican Revolt Kills 43 in El Salvador Area Man WatchedSIrile A spokesman for the K2nd Airborne Division's paratroopers could not be contacted for information on any possible Army casualties. Intense rifle fire in the vicinity of the U.S. Emha.ssy at noon indicated continuing resi.stance by rebel anipers despite a cea.se-*mer fire agreement arranged Friday. Take Umbrella! Showers Due Plan on carrying an umbrella this afternoon and tomorrow as storm clouds hide today's sunshine. Today’s high will range between 80 and 88. Central Committee ye.ster-day. .staebler, decisively beaten by Gov. George Romney in the 1964 gubernatorial race, won out in a contest that po.sed a challenge to a resumption of his leadership. But he won in a walk, getting 54'// votes on the first and only ballot. .Stuart Hertzberg of Detroit, Guardsmen in a clash with Gov. Viet Nam and the United .Stales Orval FJNKaiiJ^ovcr admitting attending the conference. pupilsTriwCei Members of an Organization By L. (;ARY THORNE American States (OAS) peace , ' mi.ssion went Into the heart of .SAN SA1.VA1K)R, El .Salvador “Your lirst thought is lo pick it up and save it in ca.se you morning to begin l-iil'i A sharp earthquake killed need it," said Dennis E. Carrels of 7648 Sweetbriar, West Bloom- negotiations with rebels In an . 43 persons and injured about 300 field Town.ship. Negro pupils Tl>*Central High v ^ ^ in this Central American capi- The “it" was a 4.')-caliher automatic that 2' j ‘ The quake hit the neighhor- SantlTomlV’lT Terr Sail him.self even though he and 17 other University of i'„g easTfrom thVr'posii^^^^^^^^^ Santo lomas as well as San Michigan jazz band members were caught in the midst of a the'west central part of to UKrecd lo the dolay as th(‘ II nation couiu'il ('on /oiH'd after a weekend of nia Briton Opens SEATO Meeting ’A- Wilson Urges Negotiated Viet Peace LONDON (AIM. British Prime Minister Harold Wilson opened the Southeusr'Asia Treaty Oi'iiaiii'/allon'h minislerial eooleren(,e l(Klay.wltlv a eall tor "an honorahly ne(,;o|ialed sellle-menl" of the war in Smith Viet Nam, He appeided lor (lie same sort of seHlemenl ot Hie explosive Indonesian-Malavsian dispute. a civil war. But this is a hollow disguise." Ball said the Unilr^ Slates had provide«l assistance lo .South Viet Nam lor one purpose only "to help the South Viet thitiH'.se peoph' resist aggression aiul maintain their Independ "Both situations ('oiistilute a >UH threat lo peace and holli He detended U.S. air attacks on North Viet Nam. The decision 16 iilake stich air strikes, he told SKATO leaders, came allw the North Vietnamese intensified their infiltration of men and equipment into the South. "These strikes have been Ilnl* iled, carefully measured and controlled. They have been, <|l-reeled at liu|»eeac(‘ and tree dom." BIUTISII UUl.K "Inde|M!ndence means more than freedom from British rule or from the rule of tiny otlier former colonial |Kiwer, said Wilson. "It means freedom from aggressive outside inter Supply Lane Opened rhe strike affects 1,7311 workers, iaeliiding 253 em-I ployes at the hiotogleal lab-I oratories in Itoehester. ((7»ntinued From Page One) terence Britain is supporting the new fcHieralion of Malaysia against Indonesia. Wilson [KiintcHl out tervontion in the affairs of the H' hi-sli government has Dominican Republic: «'*'<>h-rs In Southeast Asia nirTAii « "“'“y '"’y NO DLTA1I.S , No details of Hie re.solution * * * were available, but it was ex- i He said if Malaysia and the pected to call for the withdraw- j Asian memliers of SKATO told al of U.S. forces, aiul possibly lo Britain that they no longer condemn use of, forced by Hie ! needed her help, "nobody would United States. U.S. Chief delegate Adlai K. Stevenson was expected to repeat the U.S, eoiitentioii that it had sent in troops and Marines to rescue foreign residents from a civil war. Heritage Day Head Is Pontiac Woman Appointment of Mrs. Marion n. Bentcr, of 36 K. Iroquois as Heritage Day chairman for Michigan Week has been announced by Dale A. Winnie, Oakland County chairman of Michigan Week. Heritage Day will be celebrated May 21. “It is the day I set aside for In-depth attention [ to the proud! history and her-^'^'1 itage of thel , state and of» Pontiac,’’ she' said. MRS. RENTER The 1965 Michigan Week (May 16-22) theme is “Michigan-Dynamic in World Progress’’ and all-communities, schools, organizations, companies and individuals are being asked to carry out their part of the expression. !)<• more pleased than the British govertimem aiul the British people” "We mu.sl work for negotiated selHcments that will bring lasting peace to the area, to Viet Nam, no less than to Malaysia,” .said Wilson. LONG TASK "This is bound to be n long and difficult ta.sk, above all, because those who have Hireal-ened the peace, have .so far shown no readiness to prefer the conference table to the battlefield. "SHiATO is not at present directly involved in cillier of those conflicts, but both are taking place in the treaty arya and both are of vital concern to the organization, its members and the peace of the world” The U.S. delegation, led by Undersecretary of State George Ball, intended to press for further allied asisistance to prevent a Communist takeover in South Viet Nam. “We have no territorial ambi tion in South Viet Nam. We are not there for economic gain. We seek no military base,’’ Ball told the council. DELIBERATE AGGRESSION South Viet Nam is the victim of deliberate aggression -Communist ‘war of national liberation.’ The Communists have sought to present their attack as The Weather Fuh\U. S. Weather Bureau.Report PON’nAC AND VICINITY - Mostly sunny, windy and warm totfay. High ^to Cloudy with scattered showers or thundershowers thhk afternoon. Low 52 to 58. Tuesday s^howers or thundershow^ and cooler. High 60 to 68. Winds southwesterly 15 to 25 miles^ay and early tonight. Wednesday outlook, partly cloudy add mild. t 1»mp«ratur(^ preceding 8 Al I a.m.; Wind velocity IS r Direction — Southwesterly Sun eats Mondby at 7:35 p.m. ' Sun risei Tuesday at 5:25 a.rn; AAoon tats Mdnday at 10:27 p.rr Moon rises Tuesday al 7:4l a.rr Party Cloudy — Warm Downtown Tomporoturos Ono Ytor Ago In Pontiac n l»lt 70 53 Sunday's Temperature Chart Alpena 65 47 Duluth 76 45 Escanaha 6t 43 Fort Worth 81 64 Srand Rapids 83 59 Jacksonville 87 57 Houghton 72 38 Kansas City " ‘ Lansing 84 60 Los Angeles Marquette . 77 51 Miami Bead. .. .. Muskegon 77 56 Milwaukee 86 60 Pension 02 49 Mew Orleans 79 65 Traverse yity 81 63 New York -77 6ff Albuquerque 04 48 Phoenix 91 59 Atlanta 81 55 Pittsburgh 84 57 Bismarck 51 38 Salt Lake C. 60 31 BMlon 55 42 San Francisco, 60 56 Chicago 81 63 S. S. Marie 65 46 Cincinnati 83 SO Tampa 83 65 82 40 Washington 84 54 79 63 InteliiJiliDiuil zone ol fefuge In .Snnlo.s snid bis foree.s were Hie wcsU-ni part of Santo Do |)uHed back becau.se Hiey were I exhausted after a week of, skir-mishe.s. IIKLICOP1EILS I , The rebels charged the Amer- IJp to now these supplie.s have loan (rojQp.s actually were mov- been ferried acro.ss town by lielicopters operating from San l.sidro t^ir ba.se, 20 miles east of Hie city, to a [miIo field adjacent lo Hie Holel Kl Embajudor on Hie WT‘.slern outskirts of the Do* mjiiican capital. The United States pu.shed another 4,500 troops into the Dominican Republic after President .Johnson said the reia'l uprising had l)een taken over l>y c 0 rn rn u nisi conspirators di-reett-d from abroad. The President’s declarnlion that a military buildup was nec-e,s.sary for security on the Carib: bean island, came a.s rebel fighters made a new attack last night on U.S. triMips despite the declar^td cease-fire. Rebels hurled grenades al American positions and ham-cred away with fire from automatic weapons. The outburst lasted about a hour. No casualties were reporled >n the American side. It was uncertain wbelher answermg fire by U.S. forces caught any of Hic rebels » Addition of the 4,.500 fighting men ordered in by the President will bring the total of U.S. Marines and Army men lo 14,- ing in on Ihein slowly. A U.S. spokesman said American forces were mainlalnlng a .slricfly impartial altitude, lie .said they are safeguarding an international zone, of refuge and in Hiat s^.sc, they are in the “front lin^’ U.S. Murines held positions to the west of the rebel stronghold. They moved into the strongpoints from their original |M*sitions at the seaside Embajador Hotel and a neighboring polo field which has been used for evaeunting refugees. U.S. parutnwpers are east of Hie rebels, wilh a defense per-iinj>tcr al San Isidro air base and defenses at the Duarte Bridge, the only means of reaching the air base from the capi- tal. Rebel groups broke t h c cease - fire after American units t(M»k over the front lines from weary troops loyal to the new military junta. Dominican Gen. Jesus dc los Area Student Saw Revolt (Continued From Page One) ii^strumcbt eases, according to Garrcis. The rebels arC entrenched between the two Amcriban forces in a low-income residential .section called Ciudad Nueva in the southeast section of Sanlo Domingo. I TRUJILLO RKGIMF-: 'I’liis area was the center (if insurgent movements against the Rafael L. Trujillo regime and was a stronghold of extreme left-wing agitators. The area of rebel operations reportedly covers about 15 blocks, a zone which constitutes the entire eommereial j section of the capital. Among the most frequently mentioned known Dominican Communists said to be operating wilh the rebcLs are Fidelio Dcspradel, a leading figure in i the old 14th of June Movement, a Castroile organization; and Asdrubal Dominguez, former president of the University of Santo Domingo student body. ]■ President Johnson said In a radio address last night the rebellion “took a tragic turn. Communist leaders, many, of them trained in Cuba, seeing a chance to increase disorder, lo gain a foothold, joined the revolution. Although they did not realize it al the time, the bpnd members received the first inkling of the revolt April 24, when a television performance was* canceled. Hostilities broke out that day. Rebel forces took over the radio stations and;began broadi I SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -RECEIVED WORD ^ I The reaction Was frantic yester- Americans and even the na- day when Michael Caslellino and The union rejeeled an economic offer aeeepled liy members of Hit' InleiTiatloiwiI Associallon of MacliiiiiHl.s yeslnday. T li e lAM liad readied an agreement (III a new cotilracl .sliorlly liefore a midnight Friday strike deadline, . A spokesman for the drug firm said Hie OCAW also rejeel-ed the company'.s offer of mi ad-dltloiijil five cents per hour wage lncrea.se for all female workers over and aliove Hie general In erea.se given inemliers ftf the 1AM. No new negotiations-had been callcsl when last ('onlacted. Wife Is Held in Knife Killing Claims She Stabbed Mate in Self-Defense Pontiac police are tiolding a .56-year-old woman for investigation of murder in the Saturday night stabbing-death 'oT her husband. John Robinson, 52, of 52 Ja-cokes died at Pontiac; General Hospital shor||jy after 7l30 p.m. Death was caused by loss of bl(Mid, according to Dr. John F. Naz. Robinson had been stabbed in the rjght arn\ and the brachial artery ha( been severed. His wife, Dorothy, who is being held at the Oakland County Jail, admitted she had stabbed her husband, police said. She told officers she used a knife for self-defense as her husband attacked her. Police said she had a, b r u i s e and scratch marks on her neck. 3 Tight Tots Stagger Sitter lives didn’t take it seriously,' said Garrels. Bandsmen received word they would not be able to leavB the next day because a bridge on the way to the airport was blocked. NAHONAU WEATHER — Weathermen predict raih'to-iMght from the upper Lakes region to southwestern Missouri, aloog the north Pacific Codst and oyer the northern Rockies 'i with posslUe snow in the central Rockies. It will be warmer , in the nortlMni. Plains and the mid-Atlantic Coastal region ' V lUBii the upper Lakes region to the southern The Michigan youths were moved to another hotel on April 25. This hotel — the Embaja-dor — was on the outskirts of Santo Domingo an^became the evacuation point for civilians. Watching the search of their hotel' while awaiting evaucation, Garrels said doubt began to form in the minds of Americans as evacuation was postponed four times in six hours. SHIP LOADED ' Originally the group was slated to poll out at" 5 a.m., but it was nearly 5 p.m. before they were loaded on a U.S. ship. “We heard hundreds of stories,’’ said parrels, “but I don’t think any Americans were actually shpt'at.’’ Rebel soldiers' armed civilians and the streets were full when trucks began the evacuation, said Garrels. ' 'V He added that he was surprised the revolt was so bjgz B£md^emb.ers, he said, did not reaHie they were in midst of a full-scale,revolution. Ironically, the U. of M. band T^isited Dominican Repubiic only Wcause a planned appearance^ Haiti was cancel^ due rumored unrest there. . twins Carter and Karen Hartman, all 5, were found sprawled senseless in the Hartman backyard. The baby sitter told police she had last seen them playing quietly. As the unconscious trio was ?ped to a hospital, detective iVork uncovered the culprit in the Hartman basement — a gaily colored fifth of vodka. . Police said the kids had consumed a ' pint among them. Their stomachs were pumped out. Car-Truck Crash Kills 12 African Children PRETORIA, South Africa (JP) •— Twelve African children returning home" from a singing festival died during the weekend in a collision between their truck and an* automobile, ipolice reported. ■Thirty - eight children were injured in the pile-up. AT THE APARTMENT Isiah Brisbon, 25, of 56 Ja-cokes told pdlice he was at the Robinson apartment when the stabbing occurred. He said Robinson went into the kitchen, where Robinson’s wife was, about 7:30 p.m. Brisbon told police Robinson staggered back into the living room about five minutes later bleeding padly. B isbon took Robinson to the hospital. The victim’s wife was arrested after hospital officials notified Pontiac Police of the incident.. Sgt. John DePauw of the detective bureau, said that' she was, scheduled to make a statement at the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office today. (ONFER ON GIFTED CHILD Dr E. Piiul Torrance (left) aiillior and professor of (‘ducalioiinl psychology. Saturday addressed the more Hian 250 educators attending the fourth annual Institute on tlie Gifted Child at City and (J(tuntry ScIukiI of Bloomfield Hills. Here the speaker cliuts wiHi George Roeper, founder and headmaster of Hie Bloomfield Hills school, and Mr.s. Roeper, director of the nursery and kindergarten. Birmingham Area News Urges Helping Gifted Children Bl.OOMFIELD HILLS - A noted educational psychologist aid Saturday that recognizing realivity in a gifted child is difficult, but that a greater problem lies in helping him. Dr. E. Paul Torrance, director of the Bureau of Education Re.search at the University of Minnesota, said that many creative students arc stifled in rigid ;h(M)l situations because teach* (irs are unwilling lo accept thBir ;omplcxities and will not allow them to develop in their own ways. The author of three hooks on the creativity of children, 'Forranee was the keynote speaker at the fourth annual institute on gifted child education at the City and Country School. More than 250 teachers, pi^ip-cipals, counSelor.s and psychologists from southern Michigan and northern Ohio attended the institute-. Torrance said he deplored a recent trend against new ideas in education, particularly with respect lo gifted and creative children. STRESS SITUATIONS Many such children, he said, are deliberately put into harsh stress situations, and the attitudes of most parents and teachers are - punitive rather than Helpful. He pleaded for more humane treatment for the child who “.sings in his own key and marches to his own drumbeat.” he viewed at the Cranbrook Institute of Science, Several species of the large, flightless bird lived on IHe islands of New Zealand. Some were as small as turkeys and others as much as 12 feel tall. The bones will be on display throughout the summer. The institute is open to the public from I to 5 p.m. every day except major holidays. The Olmec civilizalam of Mexico will be di.scussed by a Yale University jinlliropoldgist at the (’ranbrook Srliool auditorium Wedne.sday nlglil. The Olmetrs have been called the “basic mother eiilture from which the great classic civilizations of Mesoamerica sprang.” Dr. Michael D. Coe, a.s.sociatc professor of anlliropology at Yale, will deliver his lecture at 8:I5p.m. Memliers of (,’ranhrook Insli-lule of Science will he admitted free and guest tickets will lie availalile at the door. Sees No Need for AFT in Birmingham Intense and prolonged stress leads to mental breakdown, not accomplishment, Torrance said. Flexibility and originality drop under stress. " 'Children should be helped to question, to think, evaluate and evolve new ideas, he added. NEED UNDERSTANDING “Understanding, encourage- ment and tolerance of the non-conforming child are needefl,” » The president of the Birmingham Education As'sociation said today that he saw no, reason why Bipifuhgham teachers would join the American. Fed-era t i o n of Teachers union (AET). ' ' ^ ' ' R i c h a r d Sumner explained that there was no need for an organized labor union because the relationship between h i § group and the s c h 0 01- administration is “excellent.” j he said. ! "Rewarding Creative Behavior” is Torrance’s latest book. ' He.also is the author of “Guild-ing Creative Talent” and”‘Edu-cation and the,Creative Poten- tial.” , Am interpretive display o( bones from several species of the extinct moa bird can now ^Aeney Shtpffrent tosr Leads to Postol Probe DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - Postal authorities are searching for clues to the disappeararice of more tham ?30,000 belieYe^ stolen in a money shipment, from the Federal Reserve Bank ‘ in Dallas. ” U.S. Postal Inspector Ralph Wr Thomas said Sunday the money, $3dT00(nn bills and in yimes, was shipped, by contract truck April 21, ' A union representative said yfesterday that, victories won by a teacher “sit-in” in Ham-tramck for higher wages last week have prompted the AFT Td^Stteihpt to orgafilzeTn^ir--mingham and Southfield. The Birmingham Education Association negotiates wage contracts for teachers. each year and has 680 members, or-,bdttCT than 90 per cent of the teachers ehiployed by the school district. Sumner that there is a need for unions only when conditions require them “and tliat indefinitely not the'ease here.” The salary schedule of Birmingham teachers rates second in the state, he said. . > Selma Rights March Cost U.S. $510,000 (Continued From Page One) Air Guardsmen ’ into federal service before Gov. George C. Wallace allowed Negroes, to enter theTIhivefaljr^Alabam^ Three months later, Alabama Guardsmen were back in federal service, this time in a f^er- al-state „dispi|te over public .egranon school integration. The Army spent $3,171,000 for these operations of Alabama National Guardsmeii. Other ex-penseSi including communications, transportation ? qhd (he, like, are not included in this figure. The Army s§iid it did not have-cost data on these, ele* ments.( I Simms Clothing Specials J For Tonite-Tiies,-Wed. SIMMS DISCOUHT BASEMENT First Quality Men's White Dress Shirts shirlj of 65% Dacron, Colloii, sonlori/.qrl, i sloys, tul(ec) sleeve, lor collar. Sizes 14' Men’s & Boys’ 100% Cotton' Poplin Jackets Foul Weather Wear-2 Pc. Vinyl Storm Suit Sintni* Imw l^rire Slay complelely dry with' this clear vinyl suit of iockel wilh oltoclied hood and -L-Xl, tr Vinyl Zippered Suit Simmi Pr Heavy vinyl jacket with zippe.r front anci detach-oble hood, inatthingi. pqnts. Sizes S-M-L-XL. |8I First Quality Rubber-Booted Chest Hi-Waders Pe/fect for fishing etd, these chest hi waders have a steel ^ shank, arch support, leak-proof. Long losfing rubber soles. . ■ / ': ''tr' TriK r()N'riA(’Vl(K.!^S, >l()XnAV. ^lAV l. Ships Carry 1,400 Civilians to Safety .SAN .lUAN, 1‘iKMio lUco (Ill’ll More Ilian 1,400 clvlllauft, many of Uietn American women and children, arrived here from the Dominican Republic yesterday aboard two mercy ships of the 1),S, Navy. Some told nrrowinij stories of lenor at the hands of "wild lookliiji’' rebels. The W(H)d County, an I,ST, carried I,(Hit. persons nearly 10 times lt.;jj normal passeiiKcr load. The IJSS Knchamkin hrouKht anotlier :i07 refii(fees. The new arrivals hroiiKht the nuinher of evacuees in the |»ast week to nearly 3,0(MI. Navy officials said yesterday’s shiploads marked the end of I lie large-scale evacuation. ■ ’resident .lolin.soii said last nlglit l,f,(KI more US. citizen* and about .'1,500 nationals of other countries arc still awaiting removal from the Dominican Republic. WIVICS, CmcDRKN Many of tlie rcfug(‘cs put ashore yesl(‘rday are wives and (lilldrcn (»f US. servicemen stationed on I lie Caribbean l.s-land. Most had been waiting at the Kmbujador Hotel in downtown Santo Domingo for trans-p<»rtutlon to ships when the rebels opened lire on the building. Mrs. Kvelyn Moorman of Honolulu, wife of Marine .Sgt. .lack E. Moorman of Yakima, Wash., said U..S, Embassy of-j fieials at the liotel ordered tlie entire group of fiOt) to IKK) civilians on tlie lawn lo hit the ■ ground and e r a w I into the building. "I had no particular fear," Mrs. Moorman said. "The gunfire at that time was aimed at upper storie.s, and I didn’Jl know of any return fire. ” AI.MO.ST RUN OVER But Mrs. Cheryl Medina said she and one of her four children were almost knocked down by three men sought by the rebels — the editor of a Dominican newspaper and two bodyguards. Mrs. Medina is the wife of Sgt. Matthew Medina of Seattle. Wash. “They almost ran over us,” she said. “The rebels were chasing them.' They .got a little distance away when other rebels shot them. 1 don’t know whether (hey were hilled.’’ ' Mrs. Medina and ber husband were stationed in Santiago, .3*2 miles from Santo Domingo. Rebel,s supporting former President .luan Bosch arrested the couple and put them in I he I'lty jail for "safekiuiping’’ wiien the revolt broke out. U.S, Vice Consul Eraneis Withey inter obtained tlie Medinas’ release. Anotlier refugee, Mrs. (ieor-gette llohatiiioii of Jacksonville, /in., was on the patio of (he hotel wKli her (liree. children when the relnds arrived Tuesday morning. "Some were civilluns and some were in uniform,” she said, "They began shooting into Ike upper floors of the liolel and searcliing lor Ihe edilor III l.a I’rensa Clbre (a Domin lean newspaper). '’When they slarled shooting, I jirsK^it there for a momeni, MluniHHr Tlicn we hit (lie floor, 1 expected tin I any mlnule one ot UN miglit g<‘l liit liy a slray, bullet" Mr.s. Bn I ('(Kiinha of (iloiauis-ter, Mas.s , wife of a Navy chief petty officer. Was nj tlie hotel with her three children) "They lined Americans up along llu^ walls to lcl| them that as long as they stayed llicre they would not be hurt,” Mrs, CiKllnhfi said. "Tliey wore a wild liKiking band, and most of the women were very mucli Irighlcncd " „ MOM the MOST .Sundciy, Mny 9lli it MOTHER'S DAY . , and what a wondarful (••ling, what | lo «nobla you Ip giv* Mom lira moil lor wtiat you tpand • pUoiuro . . . Iha motl anduriog Irooiurnt from Simms. Pay More? What for? Simms is Right Here In Pontiac! -s Bare-Leg Glamour ^ ^ Seamless 100% Avisco Lac© Trim Full Slips Size .{2 lo to SINUS CONGE- . . . ke<>p you «wako at niRht? Mnk<> you.feol miterablft all day? TIu'n voii want rrlirf and want it fast! And thara jual what you get when you lak »YNA-CI.IiAR Decongi'slant 'I ah-lolB. One ctclusivp ''Hard-Core l ab-lol Rivpa up to 8 hours of relief! Just :i tablets give round-tho-cloek comfort. Kesloreafrep breathing; relieves A 4 'niK poN'iiAc pui<:ss, mondav, mav ji. imw Eye 2nd Vote on Bond Issue IIOMliX) A 11.4 niillinn txmd |shui> lur »rhiH»l i‘x|mM!ii0 |M' iilonp willi several oilier aiili(|iie ears al Ihe Horse and 1 lorsepowei " show al Orlonville ^■eaturin^^ nunu'ioiis e(|ueslrUiii CVenls, Ihe show will hepin al 7 p in. In llrandon )llph ScliiMil Stadium Proceeds will he iisnl for Ihe senior dil., projeii mem Del roll. Jerry Lynn'.Shanklln, 19, and Dian Kay Buck, ill, Ixitii of Ihrs-tlng.H, died .Sunday when Ihe <'ar In which they were pasHeiige her.s parllcipating in Hie annual 4 11 milk markellng *lour of De-Iroil this week. The lour Kriday and .Salurdav off a Barry County road and will be sponsorejl by the Michl hit utility |)ole, pi'oducerH Association William Beauchene, 19, and! . ,, ,, 47. Mh of L,,kC;."“rA) Orion, were killed .Saturday ( . .......i- >'• 1-75 near Troy. Offieera said 1 (heir cur hit the rear of a truck and veered off the highway. ,, I Club. ‘ Robert (IriindV 5L of Inter-' of (he annual lour is lochen, was killed Friday night j f" provide 4-11 (lub dairy mcm-when his car ran off a road in! hers wilh information on llie ' Cooperative Fxlension Service l,owrenee Is a inemlier of the Northwest Oakland 4-11 taklaiid County •onlinues lo ter with 847, ; crea.se. 41 per Mankslee County. Cilia Hill, 4. of We,St Branch, ' sdied Friday night when the cur in wliich hIic was riding left the road and rolled over near West Branch. complex milk ■ niarketiiig Injsl-lU'ss,. .iccordiug lo Jack Woiih-inglou, Oiiklaud Couniy 4 JT Club exlensipii ageni Oakland wa.s .second with 672, a .15 per ceiil iiicrea.se, and' ORCHARD LAKK Janet I. Macomb showed a 22 per cent; Windiale, a West Bloomfield increase wilh :i(19 apartment per High Sctiool senior, has won an ard under the National Merit Mother-Daughter Fete Planned for Thursday INDKPKNDKNCK TO W N-SHIP The annual .mother-daughter banquei of Sashabaw 1 United Presbyterian Church Cross Uitals less demolitions j will be beld al (i .'lO |i ill Thiii-s- Scholarship pi'ograii’i .)i li'a.s received a scliolar.ship from tlic Sear.s Foundalion Daughicr of Mr. and Mrs, Norman Windiale, .'1498 Frie, she plans to major in Knglish af Michigan Slate University. Teacher Will Start Missignary Work i Delegates on Hie lour will visit Hie MMI'A headquarters ^ and a milk plaiil. AftiT dlscu.s-sions on modenj milk marketing leehni(|ues, lliey will be tested I on I lie knowledge They have led. TO BKI'OBT ANSWFBS .liuiet lias mainlained grade aVerage on a 4 point ; :i,69 ■d to figure net totals. j duy at ttie ehurch, 5;i:il Mayhee. | aj West Bloomfield Higli SeluxiT, Wayne county had the highest i Tickets for Hu; dinner, whiehj She was among .some 14, ^____ total, 2,064, while O a k-1 l*'e Men’.-? Club j .semifinalists in tlie 10th annual Fand li.sted 1,942 and Macomb be obtained from Mrs. j Na'tional Merit Sdiolarship lest Jotin Borsh, 5965 Waldon. An j taken by 807,000 students entertainment program will fol-1 Hiroiighout Ihe Uniled .Stales. Oakland County bad the larg- Uie dinner, lo which the pub ! About 97 pi>r cent of the semi-- ■ ' lie is inviled. ' tiiialisls qualify as finalists. had 1,665. FARMINCTON 'rOWNSHIf Sue Tlircshcr, an Kdgewood They also will form a minibe Klcnienlary .School leqcher, will of grtiiips rcpresciifing enter training .hine 10 as a mis- boards oi diicrlor.s of milk sionary journeyman of Hie keling cooperiilives, .SouHicni Baptist Foreign Mis sioii Board. . . Miss 'I'lirestier, lllim Crand reported lo Ibc River, i.s one, of 48 young people chosen as tlie board’s first missionary journeymen. Hie lecl of fleers and consider a parlicular program, 'riieir soluliims will he entire gallon. 'file participants will compHe » » » I for the opportunity lo -become After an eight-week training one of the seven 4 11 dairy mem period in Richmond, Va , she bers lo repre.sent Michigan al expects 1(1 teach music al tlie next December's National 4-11 Baplisi (aillege of Iwo, Nigeria, ' Dairy (^inference in Chicago. FRETTER SAYS: FANTASTIC SPECIALS IN EVERY STORE NOW! # t t There Is a New HOME Just Right for i t t APPLIANCE BUYERS ATTENTION! MY NEW SOUTHGATE STORE OPENS TODAY! TO CELEBRATE I'VE CUT EVERY PRICE IN EVERY STORE —MANY PRICES CUT AS MUCH^AS >25 —HURRY IN TODAY AND REALLY SAVE MONlEY! HAND PICK the House of Your Dreams. Then See Oakland County's LARGEST MORTGAGE LENDING INSTITUTION Whoopee!!! AAy new Southgate store opens today and am I celebrating . . . This is it, my biggest sale of the entire year. . , I've cut every price and every one of my 8 great stores hayjt^o'ned in to h'oljj make it the most successful sales event of the year. Now is the time to buy, no mgtter what type of appliance, TV ' or Stereo you want. I've got it and the price has been cut over and above rny low, levy levels . . . This is the one sale you can't afford to miss. Hurry by today. ...... 21” RCA . COMBINATION Only 169,00 14-Lb. Automatic WasheY Hot Point Upright Freezer COLOR TV *r(-yiir Madil 249“ Danish Walnut Btpro Finish All Deluxe ^ CQOO Feature* I Ann-duly 149®“ Th* LOIRE • Mod«| M2708 U Elegant, trim, compact Styled metal cabinet in grained Walnut color or grajned Mahogany color. Dipol.e Antenna. I SPEAKERS Eight Zenith quality high lidelity speakers: two 10' woofers; two 4* and four 3V4,' tweeters. MICRO-TOUCH* 20 TONE ARM World's most imitatadi Only 2 grama (1/14 oz.) needle pressure. Play your records a lifetime with virtually no record wear. Dual Channel Stereo Amplifier Zenith 2Q ’'■Stereo Proclelon" Record Chepgor Balanco Controla NEW ZENITH DELUXE VIDEO RANGE ■ [ Get Fretter’s UulLow Price 82-CHANNEL TUNING SYSTEM TOR LONGER TV LIFE • 441 <* Dixie Highway - Drayioa Plain* 471 W. Broa.Iwav-Lake Orion l/02 W. Maple Rd.-Welted Lake 5799 Orlonville Rd. Lor. M IS-Clarkaion I .151 N. Main-MilflmJ E. Lawrenre S»t.-Ponliee Main Mreel-Bor healer FULL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE I INSTANT CREDIT—3 YEARS TO PAY POimAC WtniENOUSE TEL^RAPH RD* Vi MllE S. ORCHARD LAKE t Mile Softh of Miracle MUf , OPEN SUNDAY-FE 3-7051 - OPEN DAILY 10-9 SUNIIAY11-6 JIOMON^^ V V ;i I’llK I'ON'I’IAC l»IU<;SS. MONDAY^MAY a. Scientists Say Filters Helpful Cancer Study Shows Smoke-Tar Cutback numiX), N Y (AIM A two y»*nr stu toba«’Co Industry contends tbere Is no scientific pr(M)f of a connection between smoking and lung cancer. India, Pakistan Troops Stop Shooting NKW Ol!:i.llI, India (AIM An iinoffichd cease-fire prevailed In the Itann (rf Kutch today, but India and Fakistap had more than lOfMHK) troops stretched along their frontiers. No formal tiiare has been an nouia^l. It appeared, (however, that lH)lh sides were <’ontent to let the guns remain silent until monsoon rains fhmd the barren desert a couple «»f weeks frofn now, making further fighting Impitssihle, Tro(»p concenirallons were reportesi along other frontiers l>erlluusly close to the large population centers pf Calcutta and Lahore, There was fear that som^ minor incident would tout h oft a major clash -i NFAIt KltONTIKR Calcutta, with 7 million Inhabitants the largest city on the subcontinent. Is less than 50 ndles from the ICast Pakistan fnintier. Lahore, with a population of ncary 1KK),(KKI PaklstanlH. Is less than ‘M) miles from the frontier between West Pakistan and India. India and Pakistan have been hostile neighbors since gaining their Indepeiuleru'e from llrilain 11 years ago. Leaders of both \ coutitrles fired off warnings argi coupler-warnings during the weekend while Hrltlsh and American diplomats trl«l to create ati atnuts-phere for negotiations. A top Pakistani Foreign Of- fice official, asktsi in Kawfdpin dt about prospects for a formal trude, said: “Terms for this are' being negotiated in a prelimi--nary way.” Pakistan has proposed a simultaneous wilhdrawal of troops from lire Kulch. Iralla re|K)rtedly has agreed only to replace Its troofm with arimsl -boixler ixrllce, U.S. presidential envoy Henry Cabot I |i kiiMiutiv* VIM PrMld«i) ■uiln«M M»naa*r ■•■•r J. Rm Ifaokiing kditor MONDAY, MAY 3. iWiS iiAnoi.n A pitkokhai.d ___/T«i:» Tl^oMriON CIroiilillan Mkiigi AdVirr*ufnf"uir«ntoi Lnoal Artvarllalpt It Seems to Me . . Trend of Current Statistics Leading Toward Socialism Is Socialism “jusl around l.iic coi ner?’’ Or is 11 here NOW. YOU tell ME. Current statistics sliow tliat Itf)'.'. (yes, tlilrty-five) oi tlie entire national income is seized by governmental taxing authorities in one form or Jinother. ★ ★ ★ ONE mil of every SIX workers is on a.iHilillc payroll. Your r. S. Covernnienl (lisgorgOH $1 Old of every $ri Kpeiil for gowls and servireH. Federal aid lo Stale and local governinenlH has leaped from $.’1.8 billion in 1 !).")(> lo billion in llXii*. 'I'he sla- lislies come from the Weekl> Foreeasl and Labor Iteview. ★ ★ ★ Democratic Senator Harry F. Byrd said a nation nears bankruptcy when taxes commqjideer one-third of the total Incbme. Senator, we’ve reached that point. ★ ★ ★ No wonder Norman Thomas, perennial candidate on the Socialist ticket, refrained from running iast fall and declared; “I’m perfectly satisfied with Lyndon B. Johnson.” U.S. Prime Target .... Modest little skirmishes that for-' merly existed in international trade are slowly becoming full-fledged, all-out battles. V They’re global in character. And we’re a primary target. ★ ★ ★ The European Common Market awakened Western Europe to the great possibilities inherent In the export fields. They had been aware of this before, but the conformation of this fairly recent development alerted them anew to the potential sales that exist across one’s own borders. The balance of trade and the miovernent of gold is becoming of transcendent importance. ★ ★ ★- Every avenue available is covered by a host of nations to make their prices attractive. They are suspending c e r t a i n;4)revious forms of taxation. They are promoting cooperative advertising between disassociated businesses within the same country. They are making credits easier for foreign customers. Cer-, tain long-standing taxes on materials going into finished products will be rebated if the product is destined for sale outside the home country. ★ ★ ★ Japan has been working on her exports, especially to this \ country. Her problem is simple. \ Her wage rales are so far under ours that she can undersell us by disturbing margins without the slightest scheming. She has a sure-fire, built-in advantage that offers a formidabW obstacle for us to hurdle. Her sales in .(^ameras and sniali mechanical objects have skyrocketed. i ★ Primarily, all these nations are —workhag out their own personal salvation. But we stand forth as the number one mark. We constitute the most lucrative single market there is. They paint their most attractive “bargains” in Dur direction. We’re the “fat cat.” ; it ir if This is the lot of the cham-- pion. It always has been. And it always will be^ As the late ThVtnlprV MclM[aip> IIS pimised it ill his Ihiiioiih ('ailillai- advertiHCniciil: “The IViialty of Leadership.” l)(H’ior 'IVoubles .. , Great Britain faces an incipient medical revolt. ■ ★ ★ ★ 'I'he .gm ernmeni-o p e r a I e d Ilealih Service has existed nearly two decades and now it finds physiriaiiH and surgeons in open feliellion. More than 15,1)00 of the 2.'t,000 “family doctors” average a net $7,500, as against the .$2,500 for the average wage earner, and they are filled with wrath, indignation and diseon-lenl. ’I’hey operate in a si riel ly .socialiatie state that isn’t far from communism. This nation must take definite and precautionary measures to make sure that we do not fall into the the same unhappy category. All proposed State medical programs will bear close scrutiny and careful watching. One sharp variance seems to lie in the fact the medical profession there is overcrowded, whereas our own is alarmingly short of doctors. Out With Otd . . . i Escalation' David l^Jiwrenco Says: New Jersey is waging war on unsightly junk yards. So are many other states. Once, there was no such thing as an “automotive graveyard.” The array of corpses was insignificant But that day Is gone. Currently, the census of these deceased contraptions is an awesome figure. In fact, we in Pontiac contribute to the size of the problems with these wonderful and scrumptious new cars we turn out. They help number the days ^ the has-beens on the ¥oad. But the derelicts shouldn’t despoil the\ landscape. Abandoned, cars ought toNbe hidden from public view. This fallVin line with our President’s progrkm of “Make America More Beautiful\ ★ ★ , ★ . V New Jersey says the simplest \ way is to screen them with tree's and shrubs. It suggests the State assist in certain cases. Oakland County suffers from one of these eyesores out Mt. Clemens. County or Township officials should investigate and ascertain whether there isn’t some way to fence off and conceal these misshapen wrecks whose appropriate epitaph might be; “Cone — and Forever Forgotten.” WASHINGTON - The state of of a n a r c Ify in Santo Domingo. which caused the United States to .send its troops to the island to p r o -tect the lives of Americans and other foreigners, points up one of the! most seriousi challenges that! laces the world" how to deal LAWRENCE witli the countries that are not yet capable of governing themselves. Organization of A n Stales. Whether it’/Viet Nam or the Congo or theHiominican Kepuh-lic, the basic problem is the same. The Communists pay no attention either to the M o li r o e Doctriiie or to tlie Organization of American States, and carry on their infiltrating taclics and divisive operations everywhere. But once the l.alin American eouniries are unili'd and riicog nizt' realistically tliat their own survival is at stake, the chances of diminishing the caiiadty of the Communists to make mischief will he materially i m -proved. SPUR ANTAGONISM Many worthy resolutions have been adopted in tlie past by the Up to now, homage has been paid to the concept of scIL’ determination and the independence of peoples, but, while this is a commendable theory, inability to apply it effectively has turned out in practice to be detrimental to human welfare and progress in many areas of the globe. , ' The only hopes so far a^ troubles in this*hemisphere are cop-cerned, lie in strengthening the 6rganization of American Stales which have denounced communism and outside interference, but the Communists in t u r n have worked uj) considerable an-tagoni.sm , to the United States in all of I.atin America by accusing this country of imperialistic designs. Indeed, the landfUg of U.S. Marines and troops in the Dominican Republic now will be so characterized again and again in schools and colleges and in other centers where the Communists have an In- fliiciiee. And in Conclusion... Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of« your peripatetic reporter: Jackie Kennedy lives in a glass bowl and she might as well accept it. Currently she has been seen' dining, with Mike Nichols, successful Broadway director, and the gossips have started to buzi ^ Football is destined to experience the loiigest season of all t'im e in 1965. NBC-TV opens the fall campaign with a broadcast of the Boston-Buffalo. game August 8th, and there’s weekly action until January. Long-suffering wives will blow their tops........ . . . They tell me this is hard to say rapidly: “Sarah, in a shawl, certainly shoveled, soft snow softly.” ■ ■ ■ ★ - :★/'. ir Overheard: “This year I sent my tax moi^y straight abroad and saved the\ Washington middleman.” . . . y, . . . . . Off a driver, a golf IhaB^ revolvi^ “at the rate of 2,0^0 a minute but off a seven ironVit increases to 10,000. Mine re^h 2.5..... . . Barbra j^treisand is the least prepos.sess-\ ing looking girl that \has scored a smash Broadway hit in a decade.. When she comes on stage in “Funny Girl” first time, you thmk someone off the street went through a wi^g door. But she pi^ks a wallop. Her TV ap-, pearance was a tremendous success.^ Purely p Yet there was no other course left to the United States government, which feels an obligation under international law to protect not only the lives of its own citizens but those of other countries as well in order that no provocation shall be given for European intervention in the The episode in the Dominican Republic, however, could have a salutary outcome by developing a model for the handling of similar disturbances in the smaller countries throughout the world.. (Copyright, lt<5, Now Yortt Hory Tribuno Syndlcoto, Inc.) Voice (if the People: *We Demand Insurance for V.S. Servicemen' We aren’t in a. war. President Johnson soys so. But how are the six children of the U.S. pilot just killed in North Viet Nam going to eat? The President explains the-governinenf can’f gntnli war risk insurance as this i.sn’t a war. ■A Ar A “The (Ireat Society.’' Bah. No “war." No insurance. We demand it for Americans who are slaughtered “in action.” P. E.C. fwo (>)i!imenton Avoiuhilc Sch(K)l Board Why (loeHn’l the Avondale school board realize when they have a g(K>d person on the hcIkkiI staff’.' lirstend, they neglect him and let him go. AAA I worry about tiow my etilldroM will he able to get Into college. ’I’he scliool system Is so low tliat most good colleges don’t recognize It. H's lime more people tixik an Interest In these matters, rather than just talking about them. MOTHER OF SEVEN I tliink it is (lisgraeeful for the Avondale Board of Education lo belittle Mr. .Shackleford as ttiey are doing. It is time the elll-zens of Avondale seliool.s woke up. AN IKATE AVONDAi.E ‘Left Turn SujfKestions Aid Traffic Flow’ Latin Unity Ne^ed to Halt Reds I have been a delivery truck driver In the City^ of Pontine for HI years and found Mr. 11. M. Gritchficld’s article on the proper 'metliod of making a left turn lo be most timely. On iiiaiiy (wcasions I have found it most frustrating to sit and wait through a iiiiiiiher of signal changes while only one cur made a left turn at each light change. I thiuk It would expedite the flow of traffic if all drivers would heed Mr. Crilchflcld’s article. CHARLES E. LEWIS affairs of the couuliies of this hemisphere. WATERFORI) TOWNSHIP ‘Put Brakes on Foreig:n AidUiive-Away’ Collective action by tlic nations of tlie Western Heihisphere is logical, and no country wishes tliis any more fervently than does the United States. QUICK ACTION » But it would' have lu'en impossible to convene a meeting of the OAS and .set up operations in time to prevent American citizens from being Injured in Santo Domingo. 'I’lie U!S. payments lo foreigners in H)64 totaled nearly $40 liillion, exceeding receipts from abroad by alioul $2 billion. These figures cover only the recorded transactions. The Nation’s balance of payments has been in the red every year since 1957. ★ ★ ★ When arc we going lo pul the brakes on the perpetual foreign aid give-away and pul our house in order? Let’s write our eon-gres-smen. ED HAMMER I-AKE ORION Capital Letter: Action hud to be taken quickly, and the formulation of an appropriate plan left to eulmer moments. Tliere is need for tlie adoption now of a comprehensive project that would call for instantaneous intervention by the armed forces of a group of , countries of the Organization of American States whenever a crisis develops anywhere in which the lives of foreigners are endangered. , Congress Termed Braver on Birth Control Subject The original, Monroe Doctrine has been broadened and now is legalized by the U.N. Charter as a regional arrangement that permits the countries of this hemisphere to take care of their own problems. By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - The brand new “Population Crisis Committee” headed by ^ former Sen. | Kenneth Keat- \ ing claims that j t h e legislative I branch is much “braver” than | the executive tion explosion is playing havoc with our foreign aid attempts to raise the standard of living in underdeveloped ar(;as, she huffsL, subject of birth control. RUTH Mrs. Phyllis MONTGOMERY Piotrow, its lively executive director who used to be a legislative assistant on Capitol Hill, says a major goal of the committee will be “trying to stick a little backbone into the executive branch.” “Do you realize that contraceptives' are on the ‘prohibited list’ of products ineligible for aid loans, along with narcotics, bubble gum, cigarettes arid per. fume? It just doesn't make sense, because Sargent Shriver’s pov(?rty program will furnish American communities pion^ for contraceptives if they request it.” Priinting out that the popula- Reviewing Other Editorial Pages One Way Stop (hose who are resisting them in the South. The Columbus Dispatch In view oj all the uncertainties of this age, one of the things the cosmonauts have to worry about p>hcn they venture into the neighborhood of the moon is whether or not the earth wiU be here when they get ready to come back. On Reply... BARBARA Barbara Zimmerman. On August 15th, the Beatles appear in S^hea stadium which seats 55,-000. The tickets haven’t even been printed but the advance demand is twic^ . the capacity. I’(i pay tri| price to escape.'■■X .; ... Rumor says^ JaUkie Gleasqn may run for mayor of Miami Beaeh. . .........Overheard: “If they put those police dogs in the New York subways as they talk, they better replace the candy machines with fireplugs.” I—Harold A. Fitzgerald ’ The New York Herald Tribune President Johnson set out to answer the Vociferous critics, both at home and abroad, of his policy' on Viet Nam, andy^ also the Communist aggressors, who;-seem not yet to believe he 4ns what he says: He did clearly and convincingly. He recalled some of the lessons of history — the lesson of Munich, where retreat eif-couraged Hitler to advance; and the lessons taught by Presidents Truman, 'Eisenhower and Kennedy, who stopped aggressioris by standing firm. These evidently had receded in the mind of President de (Jaulle when he went before the television cameras almost at the same time President Johnson' did. The French leader declared himself against foreign intCit vention in the internal affairs of another state, yet he refused to endorse the American effort to^ turn bade intervention. tinct from the rebel VieL Cong in South Viet Nam) another invitation to come to the conference table at any time and any place. Keating and Mrs. Piotrow opened the committee’s offices here last week. •REALLY TIMID’ She says that the “really timid” department of government is HEW, which “could be doing so much to distribute birth control information through its grants to clinics.” She views Congress as the “one bright spot” hi the committee’s war on overpopulation, and points to a recently They can have peace if they want it; or continued war and punishment if they insist on them before they are persuaded that they have nothing to gain by their present course of aggression. You Know? The Minneapolis. Morning Tribune He upheld his decision to bomb North Viet Nam by explaining that his previous policy of restraint was misconstrued as weakness and therefore served to encourage the Coihmuriistr r ^ tacks. He replied, to criticism of the bombings by pointing out that air attacks were restricted to legitimate targets sifeh as bridges and .munition dumps, thus to reduce the power of the Communists in Ae North to' take the land and the Tiveg of It should now be doubly clear, following Mr. Johnson’s speech at Baltimore, that the United States will not retreat; that it will continue to hit the enemy both in the North and South, without recourse to. nuclear arms; and that it will continue to fight until the Communists ■ a rce convinced that armed atla^ will not yield domination over others. Once, convinced of that, they jnay be #eady fW a negotiated settlement. And when, they are, they will find the. United States ready. The President extended to any of their governments (as dis- During a TV. movie depicting the story of David add GoUath' ' a father turned h Tim, his year-old son. “You know about David and Goliath, don’t you? You go to Sunday School.” Tim thought a moment, then replied, “Yes, but t don’t think they’re in my class.’’ introduced bill by Sen. Ernest Gruening of Alaska which would create neW assistant secretaries in State and HEW tocoordiriatethe government’s policy on the population problem here and abroad. QUITE A LECTURE Testimony just released by the foreign relations committee suggests that Sen. Joseph Clark delivered quite a lecture to Secretary of State Dean Rusk on the subject of dealing with the population explosion abroa’d. When Ri^sk kept saying that we could riot make birth con-trol devices “compulsory,” Clark backed: “Dott’t fence with me.’l He said Rusk knew jierfectly well that He was not talking of compulsory birth control, but rather of encouraging other nations whoiri we assist financially to make sjich devices available to their- people. s newspaper at wall as au AP mailed In Oakland. Genesee. Livingston, Macomb, Lapeer and Washtenaw Counties If Is $18.00 a elsewtiara In Michigan and all other places States $20.00 a year scriptions paydbla Postage has been pakt at the 2nd class rata at Pontiac, ------ Member of ABC. Mrs. Piotrow .says her research toj date Indicates that “people at the wotjung levelqf iovernmepl arOying to do something about population control, but those at the top who have to testify on Capitol Hill, are scared to "death of Con- 1 -I:’ J- i; ■ They shouldnJL^e^-she4dd^— because “Congress is way ahead of the executive branch on this matter.” (PWrlbuted by King Poatorei Syndicate) riiK i‘(>N'nA(’ ri(i<;ss. ,mav m. A—T fifj REMEMBER . . . Misty and fragile, or tailored and trim, fine spring lingerie for every mother 99 and 99 Slips, petticoats and gowns swirling in a froth of imported nylon loce, or daiptily embroidered with full double skirts for wearing, under her cool, summer dresses. 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Twin print nylon sheer dress with *df full skirt. Choice of block/white, furquoise/white; 14yj-24’/j ... . ... .. .... 10.99 d. Princess styled sleeveless sheath. Crepe, silk organza rushing trim. Black, blue» maize. Sizes 12 to 20........ .........••..:..14.99 OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 iDrqyton Plains Store Open Syndoys Noon to 6 DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS ' 1 A- H I IK K( )N'n A( rUKSS. .MONDAY, INfAV a, M>05 Panorama U. S; A.. North Dakota Voters Take Aim on Laws, Officials (EDITOR'S NOTE - A jlexible approach to lawmaking in North Dakota, A histone neension at an old /tri Ixtillc ground. A inolirr (>l ilttm Imkn in h'rnturkg and It hirdhdog hoa In Ohio ara among glimpses jrom the V.S. scene this week.) mSMA KCK. N I) , (fll ^ V 0 I r s on lh<* wind-swppl pralrU'fj ni'«* (IcvclopiiiK a liabil ol craHmH pt'w .slatulcs ciiacUal l)V lli<‘ l»'|,;lslalj4i^' l)(‘l'oj;c the nol only laws. (Citizens ire lakiiiK aim at stale ofli- enacled by . this year’s leglsla- ture. Many state j^offipials say the legislature will have to return for a Special session In June to pass a temporary sales lax lire cause of a Ihrealenoit referral election this summer Slioin' ni.\T Vice PresKlent Hubci'l Humphrey, dies out to give fc:dwar(l Mertins, !>, fi piaylill poke In the I ihs as llie Ollull Air I'oi Nch , \e.slei(li awai'il.s iliiinci presKlciil stopped to chat with children of '(' itase personnel upon his arrival in Omaha, i'. Humphrey spoke last night at a hrotlierlimHl ol Ihe National CunhTcncc ol (liri.slians and j Nol III Dakota voters have the i con.slilnlional powca lo petition I lor elections to recall officials ■ from olficc, enact their own la.w.s and repeal laws- tliey don't approve: They believe in using that power. ago. North Dako- Anti-U. S. Floats Seen JAKARTA, Indonesia lUlMi Pro.sidcnt Sukarno today reviewed a belated May Day pa rade ol about .'«),tMK) students and trade unionists. Some jiaradc floats had an anti-American theme. Congress Due for Busy Week tans referied a series of tax laws to popular vote and defeated them by whopiiing margins A similar campaign is under WASHINGTON (AI’i - Money hills lolaling $28,4 billion oc-yiipy the House Ihiif week while 0 I 3 HxuidijBj/'Brjatun j.WATfR WONDER I 3 Autonriatlc 6as s the Senate continue.s its debate on the administration's voting rights bill. 'I’here will be major side attractions in both branches of Congress, with the House Judiciary Conimittee pressing for a final vote on its own voting rights bill and the Senate Finance Committee holding hearings oh the House-passed medical-health care measure. Senate leade;^ hope to reach some crucial ^cisions during the week on the Voting rights measure; House Icad^ want to clear their chamber’s dheltet s it can consider the companion bill next week. The House today considers eight comparatively noncontro-versial measures, which range from financing' community health services to establishing the Agate Fossil Beds National Monument in Nebraska. A $7.9-billiSn measure financing the Labor Department and the Department of Health, Education and Welfare arc on Tuesday’s House program along with two smaller money measures. They will be followed on Wednesday by a $15.3-billion bill authorizing a Defense Department program of weapon procurement, research and development. The balance of the House docket inclijdcs a $5.2-billion bill spelling out the scope of later appropriations for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and a $409-million health research facilities measure. when you buy this FRIGIDAIRE JHACnONWllSHEII! YOU RECEIVE YEAR PROTECTION PUN AT NO EXTRA COST - Automatic Soak cycle-plus Jet Action features galore! New Jet-Awoy lint removal "jets" lint, n out of the tub^ • Jot spin saves drying time. • Clothes come out loose Model WDA-6S, 4 colors or white! 'On* - year warranty for repair of ony defect without charge, plus four-year protection planforfumishing replacement for any defective part in the transmission large ca-pump, T \ .mim FE 5-G1G9 Lawmakers may have to as-.Hcmhie again this fall- if their tax laws are defeated. 'Hie North Dakota Lcgl.slalure also mip|)ortloned Itself (hlfl year under a fcdniil nlf| fhof \ *fhnr» ealy prom-* ^ !••• BUY, SELL, TRADE, USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT.ADS. One 1-lb. 4-ox. Loaf Mel-O-Crusf WHITE BREAD With Pufchate of 2 Loaves «' 3 ^ 43* ej, otce RED RADISHES IRESH CARROTS-GREEK OHIOHS 45 S. TELEGRAPH—TEL HURON CENTER J to 9 Daily--Sat. 8 to 9 398 AUBURN AVE. Open 9 to 9 Daily 536 N. PERRY at PADDOCK Open * te.f Dally NORTH HIIL$ PLAZA N. MAIN ST.—ROCHESTER Man..T«M..Sal. f t* «-We<.^TltHr..prl.»le f ”i: ■■ riiic I’ONTJAt' PIIKSS. MONDAY. MAY!;i, llMK-i A TIi« Fint Worid Wor ,;'L „ How Sow th® War in 1915: 24 Undersheriff Suspends Son Written By PHILIP VAN DOREN STERN for Nevrspaper Enterprise Association 1 ' wa.' Illustrated By John Lane The pcoi)le of llie United Slaleit, who wanted to reiiioln neutral, were brought nearer to tile Kuro|HUm eontllet In the Npring of 19115. In February Germany de-elare,d British waters to be a war zone and on May 7, witidn ■siglit of tlic Irish eoast, sank tile Lusitania with a loss of 124 American live.s, After that, relations with Germany grew steadily worse. Most Americans outspokenly favored the Allied cause. But they vtill wanted t«» stay out of the war. When 191^ began, the American economy was depressed as a result of tlfc shock of the declaration of war in' Kurope in August 1914, Arms shipments had not yet started, and so. far oply wheat liad advanced in price. Then lOtigland began to make heavy purcliascs, and tlie mines and factories of the United States were S(K>n busy with war orders. NEW ERA By mid-July a new era of Sometimes this wds difficult, but he always It led to take the s((ber, rational cour.se in time of crisis. Before the year was out, however, he moved toward a policy of military preparedness. Youfhs Driven From Beaches America's distaste for llie war III at was decimating Europe tiHik a rcrnnrkable turn in December 1915, wlien Henry Ford embarked on his "Peace Ship” venture. A newspaper story, reporting that 20,000 iMcn hod been slain In battle the day before without even bringing about . a ehiMige in position, prosperity was under way. On September 25, an Anglo-French loan gave those countries more credit to buy more goods. Very little could be sold to (Germany, because there was no way of shipping it there while the cvcr-vigilant British fleet patrolled the entrances to_thc North Sea. T h e scholaiiy American president, 59-year-old Wood-row Wilson, favored the Allies, but he was determined to keep the United States neutral. GALVESTON. Tex. (41 -Thousands of youths reveling in an unofficipl splash day In this Island City were driven from two beaches yesterday by officers armed with clubs, shotguns, rifles and tear gas. Lawmen from the Galveston IKilicc, the sheriff’s office aiuj the Texas Hangers clearwl the East and Stewart beach areas in less than ah hour, ending an unofficial celebration that began Friday when boys and girls from nine states started streaming into this Gulf of Mexico resort center. No Injuries were reported during the clearing operation, but 53 persons were treated and released at Galveston hospitals during the three-day period. Galveston Police Chief W. J. Barnes ordered ' the beaches cleared whep several girls complained they had been robbed Ty Brought home to him how utterly senseless the unceasing slaughter was. In 1915 the famous Model T; which was bringing in millions ofjidollar.s of profit, had been on I he market for oply six years, but it Ivad already made Ford rldi enougli to | unfavorable newspaper com- hidulge in (expensive gcsluic! ‘1)1. UETHOIT (UPI) - A Wayne County sheriff’s deputy was suspended by his father Saturday after l»eing charged with a shakolown of t|ie owners ot a Hedlord Township party store. John I*. Hommarito, 2f, as. signed to the sliorlff’s rackels s(|uad, stood mule at Ills ar> ralgiinnuit ladore (,‘anton Town ship Justice of Ihe Peace llidph l'’oote. lie was released on $2,000 personal ImumI for exaniluallon May 14. Bommtii ilo is the s o n of Wiiync C 0 u n I y Undershcriff Janies Hommarito and it wiis his father who sus|H'nded him I from the depiirtment Soutar, Hdrnioch Win Eastern Pin Doubles BLOOMFIELD, Conn (AP)-Tommy llarniscli of 'roiiO' wanda, N.Y., and Dave Soutar ol Detrott capturtHl the llMi.5 Eastern U.S. Men’s Doubles Bowijng Championship Sunday night with a 24-game total of 10,-ini. iSecond place wept to a pair of (!onnectlcut bowlers. Hob .*11)011 of Stamford and Jack Burr of Trumbull. They bad lO.ltil. Mike IJmongello of North Ba bylon, N Y , atul Italph Et)gan of Yonkers, N Y , wie third will) 10,134 Ct&ntral Chile Jolted by Strong Earthquake oral urea hh g rftijor earthquake on Marjch 20 which took a heavy toll of life and-property. MEN WANTED for p.l.T. • Full and Part Tiaia • Day and Ivanlng l••■lon• • Tuition ii Low • Pay aa yeu Oo iLECTRONIOS CLASSES NOW FOHMINO S*..,i (•( )k(l C«lal««iM NAME..................... ADDRESS.................. PHONE.................... CITY..................... He chartered a small ocean liner to takd an Oddly assorted group of Would-be pcace-maker.s to Europe, And some-how the reckless pl)rase, “We’ll get the boys out of the trenches before Cbrist-)))i)s’’ got a)o)H)d when Chrlst-ma.s was only a few weeks away. CRACKPOTS What had begun as a well-intentioned effort quickly degenerated into farce because all kit)ds of crackpots, attracted to ibfl scheme, drew Tile sl)ip sailed on Dec. 4 and arrived at (Juisthma, Norway, on Dec. 19, where the sad comedy suddenly -came to an abrupt eild five days later when the disillusioned lulllionaire abandoned ll)e p)()ject and jcturned l)omc. Christtnas passed, and the soldiers were still in the lietulies. Over tl)cir huddled forms, explcKling shells kept sending down the letbi)l iion rain that l)ad.bccn extcrnil-nating European youtl) for more than a year. And tla'io was no end in sight ' Detectives .said Hie alleged sliakedown was iigaiiist I lie own ers of the E and G SupcrcKc Store in llolford Townsliip. SIX TICKETS They were alleged to liave sold li()iior to Illinois liist March. Hommarito alleg^dly demmul ed $2(NI not to turn tlieiii into (he .Slate Liquor Gonirol (^)iii mlssioii. .SANTIAGO, Chile (UIM) - A strong eartliquakc Jolted w j,d e areas of cenlrid (-’Idle last night. First reports said lliere were iippnreiitly no casualties. T li e t<‘inblor struck in the same gen- ELECTRONIC INSTITUTE TECHNOLOGY 2457 WOODWARD AVE. DETROIT I WO 2-SS60 But he allegedly agreed lo accept $100 if tile store owners also purcha.scd six $10 tickets to a party for Sheriff IVIcr I-Buback, June (i For Appoinlment Call 67.%54M ANDREW I ADDLEY I'hlisical Therairist Masaeiir I Addlcy, Phyilcal I) l*onllitc I.like Itoiiil Ilmit'N tl II.III. ■ H p.i (ilohcil Miimtiiv IMiime One NOUN THE MOST IN DRY CLEANIMO DRAYTON MARTINIZING Op*n iiM PM- and stripi^ of their battling suits on East Beach. The young crowd, which included many college students, hooted at officers as they left in their cars. PONTIAC Rotkeote PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPERS ‘ 2 South Com 332-4643 Church Hymn Is Interrupted by Brief Blaze (Advcrtl^tmint) More Comfprt Wearing FALSE TEETH -------a pleasant way to overcome loose plate discomfort. rASTEETH, an Improved powder, sprinkled fortable. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. It'a alkaline (non-scid). Does not sour. Checks “plate ir breath”. Oet FA8TEETH today .t drug cdunUrs eveiywhere. LEWISTON. Idaho '(AP) -The congregation of the Lewiston Orchards Methodist Church was in the midst of the third verse of the opening hymn at their 11 o’clock Sunday service when the pastor interrupted the singing. '‘The church is on 111*6 Let’s all leave very carefully,’’ he announced. - congregation filed Tiut, and looked for the fire. The blaze whs JoQated in a bird’s nest atop' a lar^«,^30-foot cross built into the of the church. A fire engine from half a blofck away doused thl conflagratiop. The congregation went back to resume the hymn. RIB STEAKS Juicy 39 lb. Young Turkoy DRUMSTICKS 3ibs*>1»« Grad* 1 Skiniett HOT DOCS -----1 Enter Our\ . FREE‘Famifr o/4’ FOOD CONTEST TODAY! FOOD CONTEST^IOUAYJjM^is^ _ j If you’re completely satisfied with numdrum driving stay out df tiger country. Fierce beasts sufch as the GTO roam at wilt, growling and snarling in the night. Sleek Grand Prixs and BonneVilles slink silently by. Here, top, prowls the ThaMnde-Tnck agile Le Mans,and the ferocious 2-1-2; the graceful Catalina and the nimble Tempest. Bucket seats and luxury flourish. Carpeting runs ranapant. Horsepower _ .. „ ^ ranges from 140, in the swift Tempest six to 376 in the Pontiac. People seen entering tiger country never leave. You have been warned. . rOHtl8C.TIR9r8 PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION , 65 MT. CLEMENS, PONTIAC 15. MICH. RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 89 (M-24) LAKE ORION, MICH. SEE THEM ALL AT YOUR AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALERS IN METROPOLITAN PONTIAC JACK W. HAUPT PONTIAC SALES, INC. \ t' N. MAIN STREET, CLARKSTON. MICH. KEEGO SALES ond SERVICE, INC. 3080 ORCHARD LAKE RD. KEEGO HARBOR. MICH. . . HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. 160 S. WASHINGTON, OXFORD, MICH. SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK, INC. 855 S. ROCHESTER RD.. ROCHESTER. MICH, r 'MIK, I'ONIIAC' I'HKSS, MONDA V. iUA V a, MMW Ford Repeats Blast at Viet Policy Critics l)KTH(>IT (AIM Itcp, (irnild H. Konl, |{ IVIlcli..-Mll|)|Mir(«'r ol 'sidnit JohiiHon'.s |K)llci(‘K Vk't N»m, wurnwl critics •Sunday ttiAl a "miscalculalion could li^d to serious consequences for all mankind " "'t'hc House mlnoi'ity leader, vls|lln(.; his home slale, lold a news (’(Miference (hat "■minor ities" (d college students and tencliers opixtse U S, suj)port of South Viet Nam Me said actions of this mlnorlly coidd "c trihulc" lo a tniscalculallon I'ord in a speecli last wi denounced such crilics. Sunday, referring lo the Dominican Hepu1)lic crisis, IM>rd back c d I’resident Johnson agaui. ANOTHER CASTRO? "We are now reaping the un foilimale harvest of the Itay of rigs On Cuha),” he said. "The United .States cannot afford to have another (.’astro (Juba In the (■arll)hean.'‘ Ford, here for a REAUV FOR CONU A LI S. Marmo is swathed machine gun ciirtridgc.s a.s he patrols the jungles nc.ir ‘ suspected \'icl Cong vdlagc on the perimeter of Da Nang a l)ase in South \'iel Naur MIGs Not Bothering U.S. Planes in Viet WITH U.S. 7th FUEET (AP) - Raiding American warplanes and Communist jets are frequently within five minutes of each other in the skies over North Viet Nam. However, since their surprise success in downing two American planes a few weeks ago, the Communist fliers have shown no sign that they were rdady to engage in a sky battle with the superior U.S. interceptors. Before raiding North Vietnamese targets, American pilots get briefings on the presence of MIG jets in Communist skies. These briefings are based on atrbbrne electronic spotting, which has been greatly tightened since the MIGs staged their one-shot attack. The Communists evidently have grouped their MIGs around.Hanoi and daily fly missions over the city and the port of Haiphong. COVER FUGHTS These cover flights are frequently in the air at the same time U.S. raids are taking place. Although most U.S. raids have been fairly close to the 17th Parallel between north and South Viet Nam, they are often farther north. At jet speeds, the flying time between the opposing airmen often narrows down to a mere 5 or 10 minutes. American pilots tend to take the presence of MIG pilots in the skies as a matter of course. ‘‘They’ve got to get in their flying time the same as we do,” said one combat veteran. U.S. RAIDS . By • Washington’s orders, American raids so far have sparwl the Hanoi-Haiphong area. In effect, this has created a sort of privilegt^d sanctuary in the sky above these areas. The MIGs are up there frequently. American officers will not give intelligence estimates concerning the activity of the small North Vietname.se air force or predict American strikes at it. Drowns in Maple Lake PAW PAW (AP)-Joseph Bell, • 40, of Grand Junction drowned in Maple Lake Sunday vwhen, officers said, he stood up in a small fishing boat and fell overboard. Arntrica'ctargcf# Mling TOILET TANK BALL 75c AT HARDWA/te SrORfS : ■ INCREASE UVING.SPACE- : Let BIG BEAR Craftsmen aSE-THE-SQUEEZE : appearance before the Michigan Stale Den lal Associalion, shar«‘d the iiew.s eoiiference with Dr. Ed ward It. Aimis, immediate past president of the American Med leal AsHOCiulion. Bolli Ford and Dr. Annis attacked tlie administration’s Medicare bill and Ford charged Uoiigress wllli being a "rubber Nlainp" and a "mere u(|juncl of the While Hou.se" Ford said the .SEttiale likely would follow lloliHe approval (if Medicare and "rubber stamp thta bill ns it has rubber-.stamptxf just about everything-else that has come from the White House" Dr. Annis repeated a chaige that a number of congres.siiuoi opposed Medicare privately but said they had been tlireatened with political reprisal if they voted against the bill. * “Tins Is a sorry kind of repre-senlulivetgoveriiment," Dr. Annis said. h’ord prtHllclEsl tiial if Medicare becomes law many people will be "sorely disappointed" over what he called "minimal benefits’’ at a high cost. He called the Republican al lernallve |)roposal "far prefer able," CITES LACK Dr, Annis said tlie adminislru-tlon’s bill has been successful so far because of support from "labor bosses" and a layk of public understanding / ollu'r Communist nations have made gains ip Hade and dll»-loinallc concessions under "sO-■called peaceful coexistence ’ while Amei'ica has been offered little in return. Bofor<( the stut(! d^mlpl group’s annual tmudlng, ^'ord crlticlml Ihe U S. general foreign policy. He said .Soviet Russia and ICiO(.y |i«in wait fa HiiImiII » 1 D-^Scholls lino-pads MONDAY&TUESDAY FEATURES 4fh and 5fh Rib ROAST Thrifty Beef U. S. Choice Tend 65k 69 fresh sliced 1st 5 ribs 69< 75< 1st 3 ribs 75^ 79< However combat fliers from 1 the aircraft carriers make it no | secret that they would like to i tangle with the MIGs again. | Apart from making sweeps 1 around Hanoi, the Communist j pilots evidently are reluctant to provoke such an action. 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Assolm MViSiymzeN A mm TOP VALUE 25 STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON ~ j-wA.- vTi Jim rREnv.n drafvu • WIENERS I JIlSTANT COFFEE f 08 VaKd rhr« Sa.«rdoy JOh ■ VoM thru Saturday, ^ | Valid thru So mm X mU mL ■■ a. m an la L'*** O | •’ MORTON FRUIT PIES ■ ANY THREE IV448 iOAVIS | I MEl-O-SOFT BREAD • I VoWd thru Saturday . ! t rettrve tlM rIgM to limit qucniitits. Prices "1 never heard of Social Se ciirity until I yvas 21 years old All i licard was whelher you were wet or diy, for the court hou.se group again.st them” The reason I'resldcot Johnson did not hear anything about old people when he first came to Wusldiigton was that ill the cynical world of politics there were not enough of tliiun to make a noise loud enough to be heard In the halls of Congress. In this century ther^Mias licen startling in-Oreasc in the niimher of persons past 6S. IJkc this; hi JliOO there were ,11 million. In 1940, 9 million. In I9(i0, Ifi O million. In I9r>r>, 18 million. The proj(>ction for 1980 is '24.8 million; for 2000, :t2,:t million, * * , ★ Old people not only have in-crea.sed in great members, but they have hecomb organi/isl and vocal. Politicians are facing up I he fact that you had heller worry about the old folks or else. : WITH Infant For much of Ibis cenlury, medical science concerned it- self, not wiMi the aged, but with the infant and the adolescent. The results weye gratifying. In IlHH) the death rale from the <-omiiiiinlcahle diseases of chlldluKHl ^ such Ihlilgs as measles, scarlet fever, whooping cough and dlplitlierla -was (15.2 |H‘r thousand. Today, those 'diseases almost have, been coiu|uered and the death rate Is iiCgllglhle. ......... Then the doctors lurned Ihcli alicnhon lo ailmeiils of Ihc adults and Ihc agisl. and again the rcsidls wei«“ good. The iiver age life expectancy of Aineri cans shot upward in a ste(>p' curve. In I900.il was around 48 yetu's, T)Mlay II is around 70, j On Aug. 14, 1988, I’re.sidenI H(M)sevelt sigmsl the Social Se- j ‘urity law and said il was “a 'ornerstnne in a. structure that s lu'ing built but is by no nienns •omplete," His words were prophetic. NOT SOUVFI) Social Securily has help('d (he aged, but it has nol solved their problems. Over the years Congress has passed at least eight Aniendmenis lo the So< ial Security Act, liherali/.ing and Improving the lu-nefits. It currently has under considera- tion a bill for IVledlcare under Social Security. But the federal action hhs not kept puce with the problem, eveti though most of the otates aimt provide Nome form of ohF age aaslslaiuie. AAA It In us dangt>rouH to gtuieral-i/.e about old people as It In .about teen-ugerH, DemocratN, llaptlHlN or chorus girls. Many of them arc; well adjush'd and happy. But many of Ihem also are III, discouraged, hopeless .and helpless. To them the licking of the clock (jay after day grows louder'until It seerrts lo be a bell tolling their doom, AAA That In why Piesident .lohn soi| luiH chosen Ibis month of May lo try lo rally Ihe nallim lo the probhuiiH of the Hgcsl, He knows nilllions of thtun need more money, but be Is etiually interested In bestowing upon them the prlceh‘ss Ingre (Ilnds of optimism and hopev "All I said was: ' Show me a filter that delivers the taste and I’ll eat my hat.” TRY NEW LUCKY STRIKE FILTERS BURIAL INSURANCI SOLD BY MAIL $1,000.00 or moro. Iiiuod lo og* 90. No oQonl will coll. No m»d-Icol oKani. Monoy bodi guoron-U*. OLD LINE LEGAL OESERVE Iniuronco. Fr«« dololli. Taor out od lodoy. WrlUt C*n)ral Socur-lly lit*. Dopt. H-20H6 W18 W*it Roiodalt, Fort WoUh, Toxoi. »"pBad Breath Urtost talirng 'Charcoal Comp, tablot Sweetens Mouth Stomach in 5 Minutes or yuiii 4.19 back at (lrii|i|!at. Chitw Bail am tablali whanavai youi lirealh may ollanU. rawiiM 38 Models and Sizes to choose from BI6 SELEGTIQN! Riding Starting at aligns Reels StfAtinp; at 18” Rotary Starting at »38“ SPECIAL YARDMAN ’64 model ONLY . ......... $S99s Society Hill Lawn Food $ 187 ♦5000 sq. ft. coverage •Non-burning •Feeds grass for months We, [Accept Trades Just say “Charge it”... or buy on easy terms where your dollar buys MILES more 140 N. SlfilMW • 146 W. HM Open Mon. thru Fri. Til 9 -r Sat. 'til 6 P.M. A enneiff ALWAYS FIRST QUALIT>rP SUNDAY MAY 9th PRICES REDUCED THROUGH SATURDAY Waffle Baker ’n Grill Stick-resistant {|rids, thermostatically controlled heat and automatic slgnol light. Chrome-plated finish, black trim. Vanity-Case Hair Dryer reg. 19.88 4 temperatures. Vinyl plastic hood fits over bouffant hair styles. Nail polish drier inch with 1%^ removable vanity mirrorl 12" Electric Fry Pan reg. 19.88 Teflon •-coated for no-stick cook-ing, no-icour clean upl High- 1XL8S domed lid for more cooking capacity. Completely Immersible. Save Pennerest Canister Vacuum with 9-pc. Accessory Set reg. 44“ NOW 38 88 No down payn^ent, just $5 a month! ’ No tugging ., . floats on air ' 1-HP motor, toe-touch on/ofF switch ' Accesso^ kit iocl. tool caddy, furniture/dusting brushes, drapeiy/upholstery tool,, crevice tool, spray de-moth-er, telescoping wqnd * Double stretch hose, rug and flopr nozzle.' PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS: 9:30 A.M.to 9:00 P.M. A - liS I rifi#'- PoNriAc piiKss. Niondav, may a. l>r. and Mrs. John E. Tirrell (he's Ihr president, of the new Oak land Conntj/ Conunuhity College) hrought their fine ehddren to San-day's reeeption at I'ontiae Northern High Sehool. In the pieture atr the left are Paid (kneeling) who eele-lirated, his ninth birthday Sunday and III year old Erie. 'The girls at the lea table are Christine, 12, Ann, 7, and Alice, 3. All the girls were pretty in pink. mm ih Go to Club Reception iPMEN'SSSSiii After Kirk Ceremony I ;;*ij........ Ill A wtei X li, 1'. 1 Let Your Affection Show A riuTpUon in thn Orchard l.akc Country Cliil) followed the m a r r i a K e of Patricia Joyce (iilchrist to James Al-I Tuck, Saturday at Kirk-in- Pride Can Be Too Costly thellills, ■Satin petals and re-embroid-wed Aleneon lace highlighted bridesmaids Kristin Wagner, (Tiicago; Mrs. (iordon White, Kan.sas (Jty, Mo., and Barbara Mosher, junior maid. Robert Tuck was best man for his beother. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs, Frederick A. Tuck .If. of Northville. By ABKiAIL VAN HIJUKN DKAR AHBY: I am tired (d reading articles on how worn en should “treat” men. 'I'be w 0 m e n are told to get new d os, f e m 1101 hes, interested sports, a 1-ways smell i fresh and j sweet, and | flatter a ^VBBY man’s ego. Baloney! We women have pride, too, you know. I am a lot more attractive in many ways than most of my married friends, and I have a lot of love to give. But here I sit — starving for affection. Men are the dumbest animals in the world. PROUD IN LOUISVILLE DEAR PROUD: The only way to get love is to give it, and pride has nothing to do with who makes the first move. The dumbest animal in the world is the one who has a bale of hay in front of him, but starves to death because he’s too proud to.-eat it. husband and 1 don't gel married before she does. My husband .says I sbould forget it as Ibis state recognizes common law marriage and, besides, it is too much red lajH'. I'd like your opinion. NOT MARRIED DEAR NOT: It will be worlb tbe “red tape” wbicb, in reality, is “mending” tape Talk to your clergyman about a quiet ceremony for you -and your husband. And dor\’t worry about shocking him. He’s heard everything. DEAR MAdtlON: With plea.sure. Now wili everyone who knows the score please refrain from voicing it? Hale to write letters? Send one dollar It) Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, for Abby's booklet, “How to Write Letters for All Occasions.” a Bianchi gown and chapel train of ivory peau de .soie for the niece of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Mosher Jr. of Bloomfield Hills. A double Dior bow caught her illusion veil. She held a bouquet of iilies-ol-lhe-valley during the candlelight rite performed by Dr. Harold C. DeWindl. With maid of honor, Laurie Leitch of Fi'uuklin were the DEAR ABBY; I recently flew from Florida to New York just to see “Hello, MIy/’ I had purchased my tickets six months in advance. The play was everything I had anticipated, but a man sitting behind me knew the entirte score and he sang along with every number. It was maddening. The next Evening 1 paid $.'> to see “My Fair Lady.” I had never spent that much on a movie in my iife. Would you believe it, Abby, again a man sitting behind me sang all the numbers with the cast. DEAR ABBY; I )iad better prepare you for a problem you never had before. Our 19-year-old daughter is getting married next month and we are giving her a church wedding with all the trimmings. That this happened two nights in a rpw was really' too much. Won’t you please say something in your column to' silence such .songbirds? MARION , First Place in Art Show Is Abstract At the current exhibit of the Pontiac Society .pf Artists, Mrs. Maynard Cotcher’s abstract painting, “Study in Color” won tpe first place award in oils. Second and third place winners are Arthur Hays and Mrs. Mary Sue PrGston. MRS. JAMES ALLEN TUCK In Zanesville, Ohio I hope you won’t think we are terrible, but my husband and I have never been mar- . ried legally. We have lived together common law, but no one knows this. I know I will feel guilty in that church when my daughter is -being married if my James Hensels Wed Card Party for Group Deanne Dunzweiler of Oriole Road exchanged vows with James Robert Hensel of South Genesee Street, Saturday, in the Trinity'Lutheran Church, Zanesville, Ohio. Their parents are the William Dunzweilers of Zanesville and the Robert Hensels of Sheboygan, Wis. Rev. Waltqr A. Pohl performed the candlelight rite. KABUCHISLEEVES The bride’s gown of white silk organza featured kabuchi sleeves and sheath skirt, bordered with Veni.se lace. She carried white roses. - Oakland branch. Woman's National F'arm and Garden Association, is sponsoring the annual dessert-brfdge party, at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, in the Pleasant Ridge, Community House. Birmingham women heading committees -are Mrs. F. G. Hornfisher, Mrs. P. Er Wilson, Mrs. L. A: Smith, Mrs. A. H. Ruggles and Mrs. C. F. ' Wells, ticket sales. Alumnae Club Plans Dinner Honor attendants word Mrs. Durbin Dunzweiler and Nancy Hensel, Lynn Weber, Palatine, 111., Julie Gouty, Fort Wayne; Nancy Fields, Indianapolis, and. Mrs. Jon Rogovin of Columbus, Ohio. Darcie‘ and Derrin Dunzweiler were flower-girl and ring-bearer. Mrs. George F. Ward is publicity chairman. Proceeds from the affair will go toward a college scholarship handled through the Michigan Division, WNF&GA. ; David, Ingroff of Stillwater*, Okla. was best man. Ushers were Durbin Dunzweiler; 'Terrance Tobey; Cincinnati; William B e i I f u s s, Cleveland; .Richard Bimler, Houston, Tex., and Tom Cervil, Apple-ton; WiS; - -------------- ■ ponnd Bfadburn Feted at Party MRS. JAMES ROBERT HENSEL After a honeymoon at Gat-linburg, Tenn. the couple will reside in Pontiac. - A bridal shower, on Thursday, with Mrsv Josefih Sawyer of Howell Street, hostess, honored Donna Jean B ra d-b u r n, fiancee of Roger. Lee YaWAlstine. Their .parents are the Warren V. Bradburns and Alva VanAlstine all oflKeego Harbor, and the late Mrs. Vah-Alstine. Dutch Girl Is Speaker at Sorority Members and guests of loin Eta chapter of Pi Omicron sorority lieard Oakland Un IversKy exchange situdent Marja Bruin of Holland at their annual breakfast Sun day, The setting for the affair will honor Dr. Rulh Strang, an ADK .sister who is one of the speakers at the International Reading Convention being held In Cobo Hall this week, Mrs, David Walks, Mrs. C. E. Wilson and Mrs, Wiley will assist at the lea. Fourteen guests were present at a recent surprise dinner parly for Mrs. AnnaN^^e Lee who is retiring fpom IW work in the Pontiac. Central High School cafeteria in June. Also lionortKl at the event in the West Walton Boulevard home of Mrs. Fritz Kasat was retiree, Mrs. Una McFarland. A.ssisting hofstesscs were *the two women’s coworkers. The Oliver .1. Saxtons of Kingsley, Mich, announce the engagement of their daughter Valita Mae to Raymond Adam Wolf Jr., son of Mrs. Gladys Wolf of Buckley, Mich, and Raymond Wolf of vSaginaw, both former Pontiac residents. A June 12 wedding-date is TTtK PONTIAC PIU^SS. MONDAt^MAV \mn Drill Team A-13 Will Model New Styles MoUums nnd girls of the Rae Yens drill lepm of Pontiac will model clothes from the Bol)etle Shop Wednesday evening at llie Kilts Temple, « p .n Pna’ceds from the fashion show which Is o[Hm lo the ptihlic will he used lo help finance the drill team and color guard's trip lo Hoslon, Mass and Chicago, III. this summer I MRS. C. I). WILLIAMS They will he (IcIciKling Ihcir nalional chat)iplonshi||s which they have won the |)asl two yj;ars, ('■encral chairman of the show Is Mrs Donald Rurnell, MOl)KI,S Models will Inf lude molhcis, Mrs. Julius Hcrcs, Mrs. Ucai-aid Hurtem, Mrs. Arthur Voor-heos, Mrs. Albert Kayder and Mrs. Kenneth Higgins dil ls who are modeling are ,j Miss Walker Is Attended by Sisters Rayner, landa Aide Sheila Thcmm, Kathy (Irct'ii, Nancy Ituelle, Linda Kreps and Marcia Hoellchei v. Kour sisters of Hnrbara Ann Walker allende’d her as she became Mrs. Carroll Dougins Williams, Saturday, In the Da-visburg Methodist Church. They are the daughters of llic Kerris Walkers of Hose Township Mrs. Julius Beres, St. ,ItuU; Court (left) avd N(U icy Rue lie, Alhi Street, try ou clothes they icill model in Wednesday's JasInou shorn. Spon.sored hy th.e Rne Yens drill team of Ronliac, the H p.m. event at the Elks Temple will feature fashions by . the Bohette Shop and hair styles by Murray's Beauty Academy. others are Janet Holland, ('indy ('arie, Debbie Vivian, Rosemary Hobek, Janet Row ston and Sharron Burnet I. Ilulrhinsons Pledge Vows in Dearborn Off on a New England hon- I ('ymoon are the (!arl Duane llulchinsons (Sandra Lee A/. ■ oiani who were wed Sunday in S(. Sarkis Armenian Aposlolic (.'hurch, Dearborn. A reception in Airway Lanes followed the afternoon cere-- mony performed by Rev. Der Souren Papakhian. CHANTILLY LACE Chantilly lace enhanced a gown of white silk organza with cathedral train for I h e daughter of the Samuhl G. Azoians of Dwight Avenue. She carried red roses, white carnations and ivy. With Sadie Mary Az.oian, her sister’s honor maid, w e r o bridesmaids Meriellen S i r -baugh, Karen Ric»; and I’ain-uel 1-ovejoy. Paula Sirbaugh was flower girl and Chris Hickey, ring-bearer. James Reed was best man for Hie bridegroom, son of Mrs. Clyde Hensey and Robert Hutchinson of Independence Township. Robert Hutchinson Jr., Arthur S. Az.oian and Norman Hickey were ushers. Put an End to Old Joke *^RS. C. miTCIUNSON I The optimistic head of the largest driving school in England hopes to put an end to the myth about women drivers by making them driving instructors. According to The Insider’s Newsletter, Denise McCann, chairman of the British School of Motoring, plans tp hire IT) female instructors -because a survey she conducted shows that many women and some men prefer to be taught by a woman. “The old music-hall joke about women drivers is dead. I am now going to bury it,” says Miss McCann. “About half of o u r pupils today are women and the logical development is to use women to teach them." ('onliivuiiif!; OUR BIU SPRING COLD WAVE SALE Alive niul l.ovcly TO 00 Set and Styled Hairt'iil Included Right now - when you want it nioi>t —, we i there oiilrtandiiig ^aliier - Mtiiitiy Saier Saggeslioiis! Ailmind IU,rl„hlr j\ii‘-lloiiililiiiiiitr Easy M„„dt 'PIIU' Kit liiclii.lctl fifl If irilig Ad ni iral Only /3 ( u. 11. (^ihsim HKhHlCKHATOR iHKiy/m 1 lii K<‘ i'op I'rce/er (iuiiipui liuciit -lli-cp Roitaiy Door .Sioi-iiKr; -- KnH Willi li \ r^rlHliln (irifiprr. A(;Bi;ai VAH'i' IKtOVKR ^ aciiiiiii (llcaiier *49»* TV’S f«n- Personal Viewino; . . . I .ai'K<- <■ no UK It lor ftliiirp-clt-iir — .Siiiiill (-iioukIi tti be carried! (ih weighs 12 Ml rill niE/\ uh els $(,()95 Throw Vour CIoIIion Lino Away AU rOMATlC DRYERS (ipiippyil Klpplrii! (;AS or ELEC l ine *158 lliiiifs Ilf Pleasure with a STEREO i Jiylvania STEREO with EM and AM RADIO T:“;" •'*‘258 :n)” Two Oven GAS ran(;k I'of great 11 eu. ft. 2-Dr. CE REFRIGERATOR FREEZER $aQt) Auto. Defrost ^00 NO MONEY DOWN (!om«Tiic-nt Terms 'EN MONDAY AND HUDAY ^klo 9 ■ Gt; -y .:'- r Y- ■ of PONTIAC 51 W. HURON A’ A l* (_7{eumot(e ME I CAREfRGIRL A NEUMODE favorite .j , . wnllr;.« K »|- rill N*u%oilm‘ Hfiueiy l>h"l 82 N. Soginow St. MISS n >1.1.1 NS MISS HNS SKY MISS SMIDDY MISS CIIAHMAN MISS CAHUY MISS HKCKKIi MISS MASSKY FREE Aroa-Widv ; DELIVERY SERVICE | Romantic News Is Announced for These Area Bride-Elects Fit^lMdu PHARMACY, IHC. ■ i 880 WOODWARD-Medical Building ; Mercy Hospital FE 2-8383 FE 4-9915 : ^ ^ ^ 1^ 1,1^ i, II 1^ mg 1^ mg 1^ n 1^ Collins-Rogers Miirv Kjflliryfi (dlliiis, flauKlili'i' of Mr /I It (I Mrs lOdwiird I'", (,’ollins of Ulooin field mils and Charles Kit gcMH) li 0 g 0 r 8 of Chippewa Hoad are eompleling plans for an AngiiHl wedding. His par enis are lh<‘ Hoherl 1). Capip hells of Moselle, N .1 He at lends Cnieral Motors liisli Pile and is nllilialed with Phi Della Theta, III Meadiiwlfivvii Driv e an- 11II (1 n (• e Ihe : eiigagenK •iif (it iheii (hmghler I'iiirieiii 1 Mo rene lo Elwyp Richard Tiilii, son of Mr. oiul Mrs. I,eo 1 Tittu ' Bessey-Prop( HOME CARE EQUIPMENT FOR SALE OR RENT • HOSPITAL OEDS • COMMODES • ALL TYPES OF WHEEL CHAIRS • CANES and CRUTCHES • PORTO LIFTS ■ RED BOARDS • TRACTION UNITS • WALKERS • BATHROOM AIDS Dlfl£ 334-2529 AMERICAN ORTHOPEDIC 1066 WEST HURON STREET - PONTIAC er A .liilv HI weddinpdale has heen set hy Lillian Heijsey of Tawas City and Janies Prop' er, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence I'roper of McKinley Drive. Slie is the daufrhler of William Hessey of Tawas Cily und Mr.s. Junior lliuhl of Clio, Mich. Smiddy-Tatu Mr. and Mrs. John Smiddy Hunger Helps The best time lo plan meals is when you are hiinpry Your apiHiUfo helps in the deeision-makiiif'. of Kenilworih Avenue. A July II wedding-dale i^s set. If.- Chapman-Fifzgerald Th(‘ Harold J. Chapmans of Oakleaf Drive, WesI Hloom held Township, anfimince Ihe engagement of Iheir daugh ler'Donna Lois lo Parlick L»'o Kilzgerald,, son ofyflie James ,1. Fitzgeralds of Walled Cake. Carry-Magnon Karly fall vows are planned hy Catherine Carry (if Hazel S I r e e t and llk’hard J. Mag nan, son of the Albert Mag-nans of Air|M)il Hoad. Her parents are Hpbert F. Carry Polly's Pointers of Pontiac and the late Mrs Bmcker-Sution- A July wedding is b e i n g jllanned by l^^i^da Becker, (laughter of‘'the'Joseph W C;iLsu[) for Job Beckers of Orlonville, and Ijary Lee Sutton, son of the Itoberl W. Sutlons also of ()r hHiville. Maisey-Starkey Late fall vows are planiu^d by Marie Arlene Massey, daughter of the Alfred J. Masseys of Perry Lake Hoad, Hrandon Township, and I’vl. Hob II. Starkey Jr,, .son of the Hob II. Starkeys of Perey King Court. do not have doghouses. POIJ,Y DFAH POLLY This is hard lo helievi' hid il really works, | Pour (omato ealsup on Ihe j DKAH POLLY Wh(‘ii eal copper bottoms of pans and ] log chicken or Other IoihI eiilen just wiiteli the tnrnish dis- ! with Ihe fingers, we use clean nppear.-M. F. C. | sponges instead of paper mi|)- DKAH POLLY I make my : liiishand's swinl shorts withoiil | Hie fuss or holher of filting, lin- i J"'" i'""* "t' .. f. .. ...J er^hcmeal I wash Maxine Knox Married to David Cuellar Boatright-Sh&pard A .) II 1 y wedding Is being planned by Hose M Boatright, daughter of the Harvey Boat-rights of Cregory Road, Or-ricin Township, and Jamef C. Shepard, son of the Walter Shepards of Clarkston Road, Orion Towriship. kins that stick lo the finger Wet tlie spong(>s and pul one ■h place al Ihe lilhle. AH- j I ll iiiumeal I wash the spong(‘.s, ; or'measuring elastic for the t j "use a boxer pattern and buy I I" man's knitted laief in Ihe IcorriTl size. 1 pin Ihe brief in-1 K'*'*'' f'"' I side the shorts and with a few i ^ids who keep wanting to wash j ' rows of stitching around ttve I ‘'‘'"ds all through the | elastic waistband, boxer fash- •’ ion, the shorts are finished. | * ★ * This is a good pointer for | .V'""* '»»»'''• irii: I im:st im:hivia!M':ms iin i hi: COl rSTHY Oin AINAHLK ()?^LY AT AM)KT:\S All Permanents I!nCOritlitionally (Inarnnleed Aiidrrs iSiijUTiiio PoniiaiKMil Complete with hair-cut, Shampoo and Set Iteiitdar $15.00 NOW Keplar ^:!r).00 Fmiianenl Novr sioso ).MA Complete ""naturally” curlv pi:kmani:\ F >0 APPOLVniOT .NCLDLl) X^ .Vnilre’s Quality ami Service .Vre .Supi eiiie Beauty l^alon 11 N. Saginaw St. FK 5-9257 mothers of hoys to follow MRS. R. K _ ! making ideas . . . send them to BDBllAY/ferMbm Bricde Dons Taffeta for Weededing Lois Margaret (Carlson chose while pcau taffeta appliqued with Alencon lace, for her marriage to Richard (Hen Hu^kson, Saturday, in the First-Pre.sbyterian Church. A petal headpiece cradled her silk illusion veil and an 'orchid centered her bouquet of. white Shasta daisies. Parents of the couple wed before Rev. Galen 15. Her-shey, are the Lester K. Carlsons of Crayton Street and the Glen R. Hicksons of Tilmim Drive. * * ★ Attending thfe bride were Mrs. David Niles, Mary Aiin Piltz, Mrs. Gary Haner, Mrs. Gary Thomas and Elaine Carlson. Teri Slabinski and Lyle Carlson were flower-girl and ring-bearer. ' Richard’s attendant were MaMes Kokqnas, Robert Bliss, Larry and Kenneth Carlson, Stan Slabinski and William Puglise. „ Polly I’ress. You'll DKAJt POLLY > for reading j jf p„||y u.s(>.s y ■ homework, I use a wire pir j i>,)jn|(.rs. lo baker lo prop up my biHik | I a table. H can also be used i a book rack. SIDNEY of The Pontiac receive a dollar »ur idea in Polly's Mother’s Day Gifts from singer! STYLE-MATE* Zig-Zag sewing machine bySINCERt -• Zig-Zags to hem, mend, overcast without special attadirnenlT • Smooth straight stitching, loo! • Exclusive front drop-in bobbin • Forward and reverse stitching Improve Fish A simple way to improve j the looks and flavor of broiled fish filet: add choppecl parsley or pimento combined with melted butter. Another of those clever teenagers with an idea that 1 am going to adopt for liolding the diclionliry open on my dt^sk,— !>OLI,Y DEAR POLLY.- : My Pointer ' relieves m’cdless anxiety after an important item or paper has been mailed. 1 have found that ' by inserling a sheet of paper I the size of the mailing enve-j lope) and the same size carbon paper inside the envelope before |,addrcssing (or making nota-j*‘ions), a duplicate of the exact* f'From " and "To” addresses i .will be made. j I keep this with all pertinent •papers until 1 receive an ac-»mowledgment from the recipi-r:nl. I If there is too long j) delay I ! fcan check back to learn if I ! imisdirected the envelope. — HELEN DEAR POLLY - I am sure many of the readers have dogs so they can appreciate this hint. ■ To keep dogs warm, line the floor of Ihe doghouse with a thick layer of pine needles. Besides the benefit of a cozy house,, he will remain free of fleas. -- MRS. D.K.F. GIRLS — I ani sure many of you' dog owners will try this. It sounds logical on boUi counts but I don’t have a dog and my friends who have dogs Want some help with your homemaking'' More than 2(M) hore-shorteners are featured n Polly's 3‘2-page booklcl. To )i(ler, send your name, address and SO cents to: Polly's Pointers, care of The Pontiac Press, P.O. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio Cily Station, New York 1.9, N.Y. She Learns English Fast NEW YORK ilt) -A Greek girl who didn’t know a word of English three years ago has won the top prize for articles in the annual literary contest co-spon.sorcd by tht Columbia Press A.ssn. and the Writers Club of Columbia University. Soteria Houbavli, 17, who came to this country in 1962 on a five-year student’s visa, wrote the prize-winning entry, “The Journey,” with a dictionary at her side. A ★ “She has a hypersensitivity to the .sounds of language,’’ reports Principal Louis A. Schu-‘ ker of the Jamaica (N. Y) High School, wherq the young girl learned all the English she knows. A reception in the Halian Amerlciin CInh followed I h e recent marriage of Maxine Knox lo David Dexter Cuellar, of Detroit, in St, I’hilips Epls copal (Jiurch, Rochesler. A * A Parents of tlie couple are Mr and Mrs. Henry H. Knox j of Ogemaw Road and the Be«, ('uellars of Rarllesvillo, Okla. With Mr.sr Melvin V. ,Sellers, her sister's lionoi matron, were bridesmaids Shirley Hodgi's Mrs. Gary Kalsvin-sky, Wyandotte; Karen Hale-man, and Susan Knox, floWer-girl. Gary Kalsvinsky was best man at Ihe ceremony performed by Rev. W. P. Schullze. A A U s h e r s included Robert Vaugh, Detroit; Gary Gazette, Melvin Sellers and Ray Franks of Southgate. Robert Knox was ring-b(huer. MISS HOATRICdir Use Old Brush Cleaning around faucets and other hard to reach parts of your sink Lj easy if you use an old toolli brush and semiring powder. McL<‘od Cai’ix *l Sale IK : 5-7087 rT-nHBLUELUSTRT Electric “I Can’t Believe It!” Recentif a lamily shopping for an organ llstanerf to Ihe Cohn and ihe wife exclaimed, "I can't believe that an electronic organ can aound so-er-btlitvtabit!’’ Our salesman merely smiled politely because we're quite accustomed io hearing people gropp lor words to describe Conn Organ tone. The secret of Conn's«tone li no secret at all. In lad, we broadeesHt at every opportunity because it’s just one more of those advancements that spell Conn leadership. Simple devices called couplers are commonly used in electronio organs to permit the playing of different pitch levels at the same time. But unless there's a separate lone generator for each pitch, as there Is In the Conn,,the resulting sound Is more make-believe tharr, as our triend put it, believable. Come in and make some of Conn's believ-sble sounds yourself. Depress i single voice tab and then add voice upon voice hear how every instrument retains Its Identity while blending perfectly into a soul-stirring ensemble. The one thing you'll find hard to believe is how so much wonderful music can cost so little - as low as $995. ;»4 MOUTH TKUK(il{AI‘ll MUSIC Plenty of Free Parking FE 2-0567 A( Ross I' KOiM TKI, HURON Mats tomorrow SIN C E R today! SINGER SEAflONC CENTERS DOWNTOWN DONTMC 102 NORTH'S^AW | PHONE 333-7929 PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER > , PHONE 682-0350 ■■ . ^>>J . ' AA tradttriirk oTTHfSiNliER .COMPANy-U'sted in phone book unde( sirjcol C^Sawany ■ dOimOll S Hair SlyUsls Lady Pampering PJus MONDAY-TlJESpAY-WEI)NKSI)AY Every day we pamper our patrons, of course, i)ut Mondavs, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays we are'able to offer that little “extra” because our pace is intime leisurely on tKese days: Start the week right then come in and get a permanent wave and shampoo, set and styled haircut-, combined sk I'or only .................,......... Try Hair Color for Body. ' We Sell and Service " i/igf/t Stylin/i priees slightly higher 682-0420 AppointimMils INot, Always INece.ssary Open 9-9 Sat. 9-6 TUK rONTIAC I’HKSS, MONDAY, MAY a, flMI5 , Sl«rn«;«, Hcpulr, ItoMlyniiK By KkimtIh, Our Ouh 12:1 W. ♦rii-VOSS 8 LB. WASHERS 2Q« 12 LB. WASHERS 25« 20 LB. WASHERS 35^ iCON-O-'WASH ' I ' I... 0 Must Be Able to See Hurt in Others HY MUlUiCL LAwnim'K: DKAU MIlS. LAWItlCNClil: I Ji«vc n neighbor who’s mukliig trouble for mo nnd my children with other mothers on our Tiiey won't let llielr cliildren come over and piny with mine uny more. TIdk woman hu8 hold 0 grudge; ALL PERMANENTS 395 INCLUDES ALI nifS. 1 Noi* Liinlre Sliaiiipoo 2 Elulleriiig Iluir Cut 3 l.anolin Nciilraliziiig i Sniai'i Stylo Soiling HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY 78 N- Saglnav O/Hin lUorntng* at 8 AM-Over Bozley Mkt agiiliiHt me ever since the day I l(H)k her little 1 girl home and told lier she was driving me cra/.y. The child is very grabby with my little l)oy’s toys and that day I couldn't stand the M^ream-Ing because I had an infecto( twill. NoIxKly oven H|)onRB to me on the street, .. tilven an Infected tooth and howling children, I think It was quite reasonable for you t(» lose your temper with one child tr h<'i* aiol llo* wlioh* ruiiiil}. >lark lli<>: ralclitlar now. May 9 is ln*r hif( «lay! Dining 4‘nlalilinhinmils liavo gone all out to niakt^ this a ('(‘sliM-day sIm‘will not i'orgri. ' "T” ' >• ■ • ■ . . , 4,^ . - i „ ,, _ , ■ ■■ ■ HOW UNOEQ NEW MANAQKMENT | hC3£2^ SPECIAL All hcMnc Vl«w ■, ' I - Rtgilil BmW* Th» Ctiatca unmI «mIm4 !• Airpart RiNiwnyi" p*il«<4<«i> Mup. mM, cMc* *1 pmulitt, d— DINNER : font Out »o Olftnof far r coufd get warmed up. THIRD START Phil Regan, making his third start of the year, sufferetl the loss in the opener. lie has been the victim of inept hitting each time. The Tigers liave scored only four runs in tile 21 innings he has pitched. Regan lias allowed seven earned runs in that span. The Boston runs off the tall right-hander came bn a third-inning home run by Kd Rres-soud and Felix Dtontilla’s bases-sacrifice fly in the sixth. Gates Brown, who scored the Tiger’s lone run in the second inning, made a weak throw to the infield after catching Mantilla’s fly. Swift, however, did not think Brown’s sore arm had anything.to do with it. “It would have taken a good throw to get (Carl) Yastrzem-ski,’’ Swift said. “But Brown caught the ball wrong — away froiR his "body — and was npt in any position to make a good throw.’’ The Red Sox blasted four home runs two of them by rookie catcher Mike Ryan — in the nightcap, and jumped to a 6-2 lfiad..a£ter three innings. Yasir'ski If C'nigl'ro rf Thomas lb Mantilla 2b DETROIT A Hf Michigan's Draper Dons Golf Crown Special to the Press PINEHURST, N.C. Tall Tom DraiMtr, a Birmingham, Midi, chemical salesman, wasn’t supposed to impress any- BSth North and South Ainai golf tournament last week. But he did, and in a big way. The 6^, 250-pouiid Draper waltzed through his early iiiatehes and eame from be-hiiHl to take the title Saturday with a victory over New Yorker Bob Allen. “It was the upset of the century,’’ laughed Drajair after his l‘Up win over the 7,000 yard No. 2 course at Piiieliursl Goun try Club. u tuna^ removed from my stomach," Drafier explained. “And in addition to S|M)Uing my oppiinent 24 yearn in age, 1 showed up late for llie match and didn't get to practice” CONFUSED Draper thought the 36-hule match started at 9:30 a m. instead of 30 minutes earlier and showed up at 8:57 a m. He teed oft three minutes later and promptly lost the first tlireo holes. But lie hoiiiieed haek to tie I lie matcli on Uie 19th hole and He went ahead to stay after 35th and parred the final liole to elineh the title. “I felt good, mentally and phy.sleally, iMifore the tournament 8 t a r t e d," Draper explained. “But I lione.stly didn’t tlilnk I could pull out tlie championship.” SIJDINt; PUTOUT Delroil Tigers first busemaii Norm Cash slides inlo first base to nip Boston's Tony. Conigiliaro in Hie eiglitli inning of yesterday's first game, Conigiliaro had grmmded lo Cash. Detroit I’lteher l'’red Cladding (20) liaeks up the play. The Tigers lost a (loiihlelieader, 2-1 and 10-3. Lucky Debonair Wins Two Brothers From Holly Win Safari The Shoe' ^Grabs Derby Glory Two brothers from Holly, Albert and Patrick Widing, won the third annual Texas water Safari at Freep. SB—Organ. 5—Brown, Freahan, Horton. SF—L. Thomas. . . IPJ H R -ER BB SO Lonborg ........ 6 0 4 2 1 5 , Radatz ■ Lainabe L, 0-1 . . i-3 i Wlckershatii .I,-.. 2^3 8 Navarro ........... 2-3 3 o r 1 ,1 Los Angeles 3, Kansas City I Chicago 2, Minnesota 1 Detroit 9, Boston 8 Cleveland 7, Washington 2 New York 9, Baltimore 4 Minnesota 3-4, Chlcagg 2-5, 1st game I Innings Boston ,2-10, Detroit 1-3 Washington 3-4, Cleveland 2-2 Baltithore 4-5, New York 2-0, 1st gam Los Angeles 10-5, Kansas City S-9 Today's Games Washington (Richer! S|) at Kansas City (Segui 1-2), night Boston (Stephenson 0-0) at Los Angeles (Chance 1-0), nir'* Boston at Los Angelas, night Washington at Kansas City, night Baltimore at Minnesota, night Chicago at Detroit, night New York at Cleveland, night gallery in the history of the event, 11,275, hung on to .watch the dramatic windup. . LOUJ.SVILI.E, Ky. (AIM ~ lli.s name is Willie Shoftmakcr lint tliey should change it to .Ies.se James for tlie way he stole the 91st Kentucky Iferby with an almost forgotten colt, Lucky Debonair. Sliocmakcr, often not at his best in tlie Kentucky Derby, outrode, out foxed and out-thought every jockey, owner and trainer Saturday in the I'/s-milc classic to gain, what was to him, his greatest victory. “Shoemaker was great," said Lucky Debonair’s trainer, Frank Eatrone. “If he can ride like this and get that many breaks in tin; rest of them, it will be all rigiit. This guy just out-thought evcrybo(iy in there." "It was about lime," Shoemaker said, “I was getting tired of getting beat in this race” “1 didn’t give Shoemaker any instructions before the race," Catrone said. “I knew he’d done a lot of studying and knew what i stride, and wlien they hit the he hud to do” Actually tilings were made a lot easier for Shoemaker when Flag Raiser, who usually starts like a bolt of lightning, didn’t break so fast. This meant that lAicky Debonair wouldn’t have to work too hard to catch liim. STRATEGY Saving his horse's power, Shoemaker moved l.ucky Debonair into perfect position coming out of tile first turn. His strategy now wAs not to push -Flag Raiser, who was on the front end, too hard and thus keep the pace slow. Down the backside tliey wfeDK Flag Raiser on the front and Shoemaker holding his breath, hoping that no one would catch on to his strategy until it was too late. final eiglilli he turned his liorsc loose. TWO LENGTHS In four strides Lucky Debonair was two lengths in front and full of run. Shoemaker went to the whip and held on to nip fast-closing Dapper Dan by a neck for the $112,(KK) first place money. They were at the half mile in 47 1-5 seconds, at six furlongs in 1:11 4-5 and at the tnile in a slow 1:37. Shoemaker was breathing easier with every Palmer's total score was 277 and second place went to Chi Chi Rodriguez, who had a final-round 70 for 279. It was the first victory for] Palmer since the Oklahoma City Open May 18, 1964, and gave Arnie a distinction few people can enjoy. He left Las Vegas* richer than when he' came — $14,000, in fact. Palmer headed Monday, along with most of his fellow pros, for the $100,000 Colonial National Invitational at Fort Worth. , m Three years ago Palmer won' the Las Vegas tournament and ailso the Colonial. Arnie has no objection-to repeating history. I The 120-pound Rodriguez went on a birdiie binge, bettering' par on the final four holes. “Man, you finish pretty fast, Palnier said to Chi Chi. “I learned tliat from you," replied Rodriguez. Doug Sanders had a 72 for 281 aid third place. LUCKY DAY — Two happy grooms, one leading Lucky Debonair and the other with the blanket of roses, parade down the track of Churchill Downs, as they take the Kentucky Derby winner baeik to the barn. Houston ........ Chicago ....... St. Louis ..... Philadelphia ... Mllwaukaa _____ San Francisco . V York Los Angeles 4, San Francisco 3 Chicago 0, Houston 3 San Francisco 4, Los Angelas, 3, 10 It lings Cincinnati 9-10, New York 4-0 Philadelphia 4-10. Milwaukee 0-2 St. Louis ^S, Pittsburgh M San Francisco (Herbal 1-0) at SI (Simmons 0i3), night San Francisco at St. Louis, night Arnold Palmer, $14,000 Chi Chi Rodrigue;, $8,0 Doug Sanders, $6,000 ... Sam Si—' " .. Nagle, $4,750 -Bill Casper Jr., $3>750 .. Miller Barber,. $3,750 Bruce Crampton, $2,900 Dick SIkeO, $2,900 George Knudson, $2,400 -jSck Nlcklaus, $3,150 .. Charles CcMdy, $1,825 . Jack McQowan, $1,825 , 64-49-71-71—277 70- 67-72:70-279 49-68-72-72—281 48-71-74-70-283 71- 73-49-70-283 71-72-75 Tony Lemp, $ 73- 70-72-7V-284 49-70-74-72—287 48- 74-48-77-287 49- 74-72-74-289 74- 71-47-78-290 71-75-73-72-291 71-73-72-75-291 49-74-72-77-292 73-71-73-77-294 Signs With Red Sox TRAVERSE CIT Y (UPI> Tom Moorman, a 20-year-old shortstop from Traverse City, has been signed to a minor league contract by the Boston Red Sox. ' ' " Three in Hall of Fame DETROIT (J’) - The late bbx-ing champion.George (Saginaw Kid) LavigheJ will be indu(ited into the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame May 19 along with baseball’s Leon (Goose) Goslin ari(| Tennis’ Mrs. Jean HoXie. Announcement of the election of the three, which brings total Hall' membership to 5L was made Saturday by Hall of Fame Commissioner Nick Kerbawy. Hayes Jones, Pontiac Olympic track star, apd Bobby Layne ex-Lions’ quarterback were edged out in the voting. Lavigne, vjrho topped the voting among |20 deceased nominees, was unbeaten f(^r . 13 "4^- straight years in the ring and reigned as the world lightweight champion from 1896 to 1899. He lost only five times in more than 60 bouts.., He died in Detroit in 1936. ^ Goslin, who '■won the American League batting title with a .379 average in 1929 and compiled a .316 lifetime mark, provided the key hit in the Detroit Tigers World Series championship in 1935. Mrs. Hoxie, only the second woman elected to the Hall, is known around the world as a, teacher )qf tennis. Her pupils' have won more than 200 national championships since 1937. Tom Rolfc fini.shcd third. Native Charger fourth. Hail to All fifth, Mr. Pak sixth and Swift Ruler seventh. The others in the order were Flag Raiser, Carpenter’s Rule, Bold Lad and "qrushua. ^emaker, who was winning hb^rd Derby, brought Lucky Debonair to the finish line in 2:01 1-5, compared to the track record of 2:00 set last year by Northern Dancer. Catrone said Lucky Debonair probably will leave Tuesday for the Preakne.ss at Pirplico May 15. If all goesi, well there, it will be on to the Belmont Stakes, the third jewel of’the Triple Crown, at Aqueduct June 5. .. ±______±... ★........... The $112,000 Lucky Debonair received from the Derby purse of $1.54,.500 boosted his bankroll to $237,4.50. As the third choice in the betting, he paid $10.60 and $2, 'I'he race was delayed for one-lialf hour by a fire that swept through the box seats in the fourth floor of the clubhouSc, causing the evacuation of 3,500 of the estimated crowd of 100, 000. One Change in Tourney ST. PAUl,, Minn. (AP) - Joe Menola of Westchester, III., piled up a seventh place all-events total of 1873 to save the American Bowling Congress Tournament from a scoring shutout'Sunday. Menola, an Italian immigrant who came to the United Slates 10 years ago, was the only bowler from nearly 800 Sunday to crack the top 10 standings. The 33-year-old candy maker shot 623 in the team event, 683 in the doubles and 567 in singles but fell 35 pins short of Hank Raasch of Minneapolis, who has led the all events since April 14 with 1908. Stanley Cup Is Returned to Montreal Honors for Beliveau After Cangdiens Top Black Hawks, 4-0 MONTBEAI- (AID Tlie Montreal (^anadiens and Jean Bellvenu are back on lop of tlie hockey world. 'nie Canadiens, after an ab-nce of five years, regained tlie Stanley Cup .Saturday when they limnnieK'd tlie Chicago Black Hawks 44)^.^curiiig^.alLfeuc.g(Uila in tlie first perltKi. Beliveaii, n longtime star who set'rneil to l>e waslied up in the rjrst half of tlie National Hockey I.eague season, (*ame back to win tlie (^)hn Symthc Trophy which goes to tlie most valuiilile player In the playoffs. WINNING GOAIiS There was no doubt that Beli-vciiu's selection. In the four games the Canadiens won, all on tlveir homo ice, Jean .scored the winning goal three times and assisted on tlie fourth. Boliveaq finished the playoffs with eight goals and eight assists getting five goals and five assists against Chicago in the finnls. He poured the champagne into the Stanley Cup while his teammates battled for sips. Bcliveau broke Chicago's back when he scored at 14 seconds of the opening period Saturday night in the seventh and final game of the series. He also assisted Dick Duff In Mohtreal’s second goal at 5:03 and the Hawks were out of live running. Toe Blake, who coached the Canadiens to five straight Stanley Cup victories before running into a five-year drought said “I got more satisfaction out of this cup then all jhe Others. We had a hard year and a lot of troubles. But it didn’t creep Into the players. They worked hafd and deserved everything they earned.’’ Boys Club 6 Loses, 4-2 St. Clair Shores Junior A team defeated Pontiac Boys Club 4-2yesterdayln the Howe’s Hockeyland Post-Season League. Mike Dunlop and Ron Prince scored the goais for (jhe Pontiac team which has a 2-3-1 Tonight, the locai sextet plays the Geronimos. OPPOSITE PONTIAC MALL FRONT DOOR PARKING 2255 ELIZABETH LK. RO. FE 4-5216 ffOLLeo itt A 1 tStM*^**** ,1 Solid Vinyl TILE 12'xl2'» IQc 5 Colors lulEa. INLAID TILE 9X9 6 /a. Ceiling Low Coot TILE tile Slight 71/. 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City Bowjer's Game Wasted Miss Szot Rolls 264 in WIBC Tournamont Aussie, French Netters i Duel in ‘Singles' Finale PANT t>K HKt'Oltl) This heave by IIimto Hossi hel|)cd Detroit St. Anthony break the shot (nil relay mark in the Orchard Take SI. Mary Delays yesterday. SI. Anlhony was the team champion. l‘AltlS mrii Itoh Hewitt of Aiislralia, who onllasled Pierre Daimon „r lOance, I’, :t. TO, Pti; f> II li I III a .sioililmal round of Ihe i’ariM lnl(‘rnalional leuni.s loiiinami'nl Sunday, met Pierre llarllu'.s of l’'rance m Ihe men’s singles final today, Oail Sheriff of Australia look the wiunen’s crown Sunday by healiiif.; ('om|>alriot Kay Toyne, li ;t, I li, li :i. SI Aniliohy set records In Ihe two mile relay (B OAtHi), medley relay (2 .Ml), shuttle high hurdles (1:1.104), shot put (182 feet 8 Inches) and 440 yard re lay (: 4(1,04) SI HenedlCtlne il 9, SATURDAY 'til 5 WIDE tkACK at UWRENCE FE 5-6123 STORE I' •J T |]mroil B«n«(llctln*, (M) Orchnrd L«Ki> SI. Mary (Ml, Saginaw SS Palar and Paul {M)i S. Mount Clamana SI. Mary 14i 4, (TIa) Jacliion SI. Mary (Ml, Nadlord SI. Mary (JJIi f. Farmlnglon Our lady of Sorrowi ID) f. Dalrolt SI. Wisconsin Ace Posts Easy Win in Yankee 300 (%H-|0| In TliP Press) DOUTLAND, Ore The lour tuimpiil litgli gmni- of 2114 hy Marvt'l ,Sy,ol of I'nuHiic s I 111 waan't nnnugl) lo (lul I.HT and her itarlncr .hmim (lofd Into the to ) 10 of Ita- WfIKl doubItSN event yealerday. Minn Szo( finished with a lolaf of (MKI |)in,s but Ihe douhlen lolal was 412R, two pins out of the lop ten. A new first |)lace (eam In Dl vl.sioii 1, Kau.sl Hole! of UiM'k-ford. III . .sel Ihe (lace at the Woman's Iniminllonal Howling Tongn-ss Toiirimmeiil Sunday. The Itoi-klord li>am acluallv look over lir.rl jilace wilh a 27(111 oil Ihe la(e Saluiday nighi squad with .leanetle (Ir/elnk’s BOB .sc-rie.s .setting the puce. The team replaced the Wiehila Proprle-lor.s which had led since the lom namciir.s lhii<| day. In Dlvi.slon I doublc.s, Lorraine Petersen and Clara Meyer of (iarden drove and Anaheim, Calif , rolled 1140 for fourth jtlacc, and Connie Powers and Kfhel llanilh of Detroit, Mich , had 1129 for ninth place. .UJST ANOTHKU .ShlA.SON The firsl club hqr.se .show of Ihe new sca.son al Bloomfield Open Hunt (Jlnfi was of little concern (o .losh, the doj( hclonging lo Instruclor .John SImigh-li-r at BOH Young rider Marc .Schwartz gets a chuckle at seeing the rcsling jiooch The big hor.se show at BOH take? Jilace in .June. TwoPublinx Golfers Share Tourney Title Sell wope, Thompson Fire Sub-Par 71l in Handicap iv»nl 'Hu* victory drought for Hill Schw()|ie of Fttidford In Michigan Puhlinx golf competition ciur^ on Til lo un end yesterday when wound u|) in a tie witli Allan Thomiwon of Pleasant Kldge In Ihe MPCiA handlca|) lournament at Morey's dolf and Country Cliih. The 49-yeiir-old Scliwojic, wllli-out a victory In Ihc |msf three years, cardtKl a Iwo-uhder par ;i4 :i7 71 to sluirc Ihe (op ,s|)ol wilh Thom()Son who liirned In a 1.'i-:iB-7l. ■» INDIANAPOLI.S (AP) • Norm Nel.son of Itacine, Wis , drove his I9B.'> l^lvmoulh to n suddenly easy victory in Ihc Yankee .100 stock car race Sunday afler Parnelll .tones.of Torrance, Calif., blew Ihe engine of his 1964 Mercury ahoul 10 miles from Ihc finish: Until Ihc (-ngiiic (juil, .loncs had malcticd hard luck with harder driving and wa.s i-dging .steadily away from Nelson on the twisting 2'i-mile track at Indi.inaj)olis Raceway T’ark. Nel.son’s time wa.s 1 hours, 50 minutes, 42 seconds — slower than the record of 1:47.29 set by Fred Loienzen in a Ford last year. NcLson’.s average speed was 78.024 miles per hour. Senators Take Two Cleveland Vidimized by Popups U45 Plymouth) Don Whilo, Kookuk, IM4 Ford) Roger Regelh, We»t . wit., •’ l««4 rord) Sol Tovellii, By The Associnled l‘ress A foul pop has instilled new life In the last of a vanishing breed. Jim King hit the pop that enabled the Washington Senators to edge Cleveland .1-2 in the fir.st game of a doubleheadcr Sunday. The fcal so exhilarated the 12-ycar-old pinch hitter that he drove in the decisive run with a single in the Senators’ 4-2 .second game triumph. King is Ihc only remaining member of the hew Scmalors, who.se 28 players collected in the American League expansion draft for $75,000 each. Now in his ninth major league season, Ihe last five with Wash- Inglon, King hadn't had much success this season in his battle to remain in the majors and save the 1%1-vinlage Senators from extinction. Before Sunday’s doubleheader, he had only two hits in 28 trips to the plate for an .071 average. BASKS LOADKD But Manager Gil Hodges selected the outfielder to bat for Ken Hamlin with one out and the bases loaded in a 2-2 game in the eighth inning. King quickly became involved with another original Senator, Cleveland first ba.seman Chuck Hinton. He lofted a pop fly into foul ((uritory just beyond the Indians’ dugout hear the stands. Hinton caught the pop but flopped when it came to keeping Ed Brinkman from scoring from third with the winning run. Brinkman made it, and King had hLs fifth run batted in of the season. It was in the eighth inning of the second game that he got his sixth; again being called to the plate as a pinch hitter with the bases loaded and one out. T’his time, batting for Joe McCabe, he popped a single to center field that scored Don I.KKk with the run that snapped a 2-2 tie. i Cronbrook Places Second Golf Drought Ends in Central Mich. Relays Cranbrook’s .sophomore-laden track team made the best showing of Oakland County schools, in the Central Michigan Relays Saturday by finishing second in Class B'. River Rouge ran off with its fourth straight champiortship with 68 points. Cranbrook posted 60. Flint Central won the Class A title with 49 points. Roseville was runner-up with 42. Tom Kearney of Bloomfield Hills set one of 11 records by winning the Class A mile in 4:24.95 to eclipse the old standard of 4:27.6 set last year hy Dion Stewart of East I.4insing. Ron Short of Farmington won the Class A pole vault at 12-10 and the Birmingham Seaholm middle distance relay team was first., Dale Thinclads Win BELOIT, Wis. (AP)-Hillsdale College scored three victories in relay events and walked off with one individual title in the 24th annual Beloit College Inlays Saturday. No point totals were kept. Doug Hansen was a Hillsdale individual winner, taking the nrlile in 4:34.7. Lee Stewart of Romeo took the Class B 100-yard dash and Holly’s Tom White won the “B” low hurdles. MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) - Sum-mtrlfs o( th» Cenlml Michigan Relays: CLASS A High Hurdles - I, Don Hatchett. Flint Central. ?, Mark Combs, Flint Northwestern. 3, Monroe Dent, Flint Northern. ■* Lansing Sexton. 5, Bill Tipton, Pontiac Central.'Time Mile Run — 1, Tom Kearney, Bloomfield Hills. 2, Jack Shephard, Bedford Union. 3, Steve Bruns, Ann Arbor. 4, Randy Dorres, Davison. 5, Nell Teieran, Birmingham Seaholm. Time — 4:24,95 by« DIen S lari, East Lansing, In 1964. sh — I, George. Hoey, Flint Central, 2, Richard Robinson, Mount Clemens. 3,' Howard Diebln, Birmingham Middle Distance Relay SeaheUm Fremaulh, ! Northwestern. 4, Ann Arbor, 3,- Port Huron Northern. T — 5:53.25. ^ " relay — i, Detroit Thurston Dan Jarlack.1, Ralph Stanller, L. I**!',. PL'.TT'Ro»«vlllle. Ai-bor, T-«:13.2. High for Miss Smifh SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) “ Marilynn Smith has won her first golf tournament in more than a year — $1,275 first money in thq $8,500 Be^y Rawls-Peach Blos.som Women’s Open. ilcr tltird straight one-under-par 71 gave her a 54-hole total of 213 and a one-stroke victory Sunday over hometoiyner Miss Rawls in the 13th annual tourna-meilt. AAarylynn S Betsy Rawl Mickey WrI Elsewhere in the AL, Minnesota edged Chicago 3-2 in 10 innings before losing 5-4, Baltimore swept New York 4-2 in 10 and 5-3, Boston took two from Detroit 2-1 and 10-3 and Kansas City defeated Los Angeles 9-5 after losing 10-8. A member of the old Senators and the majors’ defending home run champion, Harmon Kille-,brew, Yinally clouted his first homer of 1965, a two-run blast in Minnesota’s eighth inning that tied the game 2-2. Then, in the 10th, he beat Chicago with a run-scoring double. WIN NIGHTCAP ...The White Sox won the nightcap behind Fioyd ^Eobinson’s first-inning homer and a two-run shot by Don Buford in the third. The decisive run came in the seventh on Ken Berry’s double and a single by Danny Cater. . Tip—I, Cl«renc« Marlin, Mount Prep Slate Veteran Robin Roberts stymied the Yankees on six hits for his third victory against no defeats. 3, Andr.................... ^ Dor* Lavalals. Pontiac Central. 5, between Bob Gray, Clerkstor), TnB Fi Bacon, Flint Northern. . 44(*.yard relay - 1, Flint Central (Pat: Ion, Peacock, Hoey, Yedlsak). 2, Flint Northern. 3, (tie) Birmingham Seaholm Warren Lincoln. 5, Mount Pleasant. Flint Central Time — ;43.5 (New Ing record of In 195*). Shuttle relay vMujiiB relay — .1, Hnn Aroor toaemer, Defer, Holt, Stevens). 2, Pontiac Central. 3, Lansing Sexton. 4, Flint Northwestern. 5, Flint Northern. Time - ;57.6. (New meet record, beating old mark of ;58.I5 sel by East Lansing In 1962). Mile relay - ), Flint Central (Love, Love, Watson, Lasler). 2, Roseville. 3, Detroit Thurston. 4, East Lansing. 5, -------- _ j.jj , Farmlng- Bloomfleld ,H sntls, H Jim Golden and ________ •I Park. 4, Dick Ward, Gr Fred Bolle, East Detr YEP.' AND copenhage|i gives ME A REAL TOBACCOlLIFT WHEN I wJiNT IT. Farmington at Walled Lake Pontiac Northern at Waterford Pontiac Central at Kettering Tiger Averages t Orcherd Lake St. | St. Agatha at Royal Oak St, A SI. Michael at St. Frederick ■ F.lttgerald at Avondal# Madison at Clawson Rochester at Troy Lake Orion at Troy Warren Woods at Country Da: Wood ..... Horton . McAullllt . Waterford _. ,_________ Riverside at Norlhvllle Pontiac Northern Lumpe . Sullivan . Thomas . Oryden, Anchor Bay al Walted-L«ke-8t Milford Kettering, Lapeer al Oxford Brighton, at West Bloomfield Only two players In the 266-tnan field managed to equal par-^Pondac’ii Glen Harding (39 34—73) and Opn Curyla of Detroit (36-.17-73). AlUiough S c h w () p e and 'I’hompson shared medalist honors, vSidiwope lu'ld n one-.stroko edge in the handicap division-67 to 68. Schwopc a member o f I Morey’s golf team, took double-bogey.s on the first and tliird lioles, l)Ul slormetl back with j four birdies and an eagle In llio' fmg) six holes on the front nine. 'His eagle came on the par 4, 245-yard No. 6. Schwope’s drive cut the sharp dogleg left witli the ball landing 50 feel from tlie pin. He rolled it in for an eaj{le two. Pontiac city champion Dick Roliert.son (Hisled a 36-39—75, along with anotlier city golfer, Paul Bada, 36-39-75. MPOA TOURNAMENT Bill Schwop* 34 37-71) All9n Thompson 35 36—71) Glon Hording 39-34- 71) Don Curylo 36-37-73) Bill LIloe 40 34 74) Cocll Priest 37-37-74) Dr, Roy Smith 33-4I.-74) Jim Anderson .17-3I 75) Lee Gobi 34 40 75) Poul Bode 36 39 75) Dirk Robertson 36 39 -75) Dr. Ben Wolle 36- , Ed V 1-75) J ' HANDICAP DIVISION ChomplMithlp Plight Bill Schwope 7 First P Hording 73 4-69 I PllghI Kutmlch 75-1-67) Drui -6-6*) Joeques 76-7—69, Socond Flight ■* ■“ Boettcher 61 Cousins 79-10-691 RIchordton Il-t2-6f Third Plight LIvosoy 90-27—63) Poor Mitchell *2-13-69. Michigan Nine Tightens Grip pn Big 10 Race CHICAGO (AP) - Undefbted Michigan tightened its grip on first place la.st weekend while dealing a severe blow to Illinois’ Big Ten baseball title ' hopes? The Wolverines, deep in good pitching ran their winning streak to six straight Saturday by taking a twin Rill from Illinois 5-1 and 2-0. Clyde Barnhart fired a three hitter (or the Wolverines ih' |he opener, before Bill ^pp set the Illini down on only two hits in the nightcap. A sweep by Ohio State over Wisconsin kept the Buckeye hopes alive as they remained only a game off the pace with a 5-1 record. Indiana downed winless Northwestern twice Saturday, 15-1 and 8-2. Michigan 6 0 1.000 -- Ohio. Slat* ’5 1 .*33 1 I 3 ,500 3 Illinois . _ ____ Michigan Slate 3 3 .500 3 Minnesota 3 3 .500 3 Wisconsin \ Purdue \ Northwestern ' Orioles Option Pitcher NEW YORK (UPI) - Darold Knowles, 23-yoar-oId lefthanded pitcher, has been optioned by thd Baltimore Orioles, to Roch: ester of the International It Bloomfield at MillortI ly at Bloomfield Hills 'hdale at Clawson neo at Anchor Bay I Flinf South) Pontiac Northern at Water! Ponliat Central al Saginaw Sparma ........ 0 Gladdipg .. 0 Seale 0 Totals 9 X—inclufiai plichars. rARANTBt TuMiMt NOW TrVad , PIMtTtX 1 amt Any Old Trtadabl* TIr* . OhEN OAILY *-5>—SAT. M UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Avc. Go To Orion I For Your V GTO and SAVE at... RUSS JOHNSON MOTON SALES M>24, Lake Orion 693-S266 ! I Complete line OF BRIPGESTONES ON DISPUY START,HG $23096 WITH ONLY $25.00 DOWN A. Young, Jr. f030 Dixit Highway Oroytqn PlBim_OR^d)411 ■4 THE K)N I rAC rllBSS; MONDAV, MAY », 1005 B—8 PKillifs Sweep Twin bill Giants W^ip Ailing Dodgers By The AHHoclated Press Willie McCovey Isn’t standing still. He can't. His feet hurt when he does. McCovey, whose throbbing slws la-l) tootsies feel comfortable onijr when lid's on the move, got out of the batter’s Ikix quickly Sunday, hammering Hob Miller’s first pitch In the 10th Inning for a homer that IKiwered the San Francisco (Slanls to a 4 2 victory over I,os Angeles. McCovey'h homer, his second of the game and fifth of the season. was the first off Miller In 76 games and 143 innings dating back to Inst April nn 1 record. Locgl Riders Triumph Pontiac riders grabbed two firsts and a second In motorcycle races at Millington yesterday. Hay Pace captur 0 gnnIllR lb 0 Re/nnlfl) II |"(wH?r""l’uflow tn, HAZEL PARK (UPl) Jockeys Earl J,, RirSj5IT"suid Rubin Lambeth have been handed five day suspensions by the board of stewams for careless riding in races Saturday at the Hazel Park Race Course. He was beaten only liy Ed Roberts, the North Carolina College star who was voted the meet’s outstanding performer, and had a meet record Sl S-sec-ond clocking Friday in the 440-yard intermediate burdles. Roberts, who ran a 9.5 second JOO to beat him, was a member of two record-breaking North Carolina College relay teams. Roberts, Norm Tate, Terrell Amos and Robert Jolinson low-red the meet mark to 41.4 seconds in the 440-yard relay and to 1:24.8 in the W-yard relay Jn two of Saturday’s four meet-record performances. 0«l«« I, Kanjnt C e, KansAs City 7. 2D - Gatawood, Mathews. SP ol Boh ('liarlcs of ('hri.stcluircli. 5 New Z<‘almul, Is-llic fir.sl sonlli-’ 1 paw golfor ever to win a major I'i ciiampion.ship lie won the 1963 Britisli Open. Try new Lucky Strike Filters HARNESSi RACING TONITE B;30 P.M. fp'olyerine Rthtway at the ' DETROIT RACE COURSE SCHOOLCRAFT «d MIDDLtSElT Prep Track Results INSIDE CONTROL Cdutino il, L«k* Orion M Shot Pul - Brophy (LO), Bi (LOI, Donovon (C). 41-llW. Hlah Jump - P»pk (C), Wllion (LO), with every FOLDING Picture Window Awning 8Ft.i (LO), Frnncii (C). H O. 880 Rnlay — Couiino. 1:40. Mil* Run — W*ll«r (LO), Bull# (L^ Hughes (C), 5:01. High Hurdles -- Moore (C), WII: (LO), Francis (C), I7.J. 080 Run — Hollens (LO), Matron! ( Burincky (C), 2:11.8. 440 Clash — Monersky (C), MIssIk (C), O'Conner (C). I0.». Low Hurdles — Moore (C), Frencis (C), Polleson (C). 21.9. 220 Desh - MIssIk (C), Shields (LO), O'Conner (C), 2 ‘ Mile Relay — Aluminum Awnings 1. No Exposed Bolts 2. .Q51 Thick Aluminum Sid« Panels Throughout^ 3. 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MAY ». lOOfl AlIDIF-NCK Al.l, KAIIS A 3-month-<)ld leopard cub sila with its back to a wall as llirce rabbits move in close for an inspection at the (’orno Park Zoo at St. Paul. Minn. The AP Phaiol«K leopard used to share a pi'ii with a bear cub, but the bear died. Now tiie leopard i^i in with the rabbits for company, Lone Survivor Has Nightmares of Crash AMERICAN FAU-S, Idaho. I AIM Billy Warford, 12, has niRhImares about the worst au-lomoliile acCldenl in Idaiio's history, hour Fmniett residents and Billy’s mother, father, three sisters and a brother, were killed. He is the only survivor. "Me re(/ain('d consciousness when lhc\ were [iryinR the car door open, " the minister said, "The tir.st thiiiR lu‘ saw was his little sister Shriver Announces Change in Yardstick on Poverty WASllINCTON (UPl) Tlu« federal Rovernment’H War on Poverty proRrum is using a new yardstick to determine just which American famiiies are really poor, H. Sargent Shriver .)r., dU rector of the Office of Economic Opportunity (OE()), announced till' change ye.sterdiiy even as the U S, Chamber of Commoreo was challenging the govern-ment’s old standard which says that any family earning less than |;i,IHMI annually is poverty-stricken. Shriver said the new sluild-urd would take into cansider-ution the respective size of families and whether they live III urban or rural areas. It Is bused on llie Agriculture Deiiartment’s "economy level foiKl plan,'!' which figures a basic cost of 23 cents jier person per meal iifr day, A family of four with an annual income under $3,310 and iin individual wllli income under $1,B40 now would bO classtsi as pmir. Previously, the figures were $3,000 and $1,500. DIFFERENT LEVELS For families of two, the poverty level would be $l,0U0, and for families of tbree, $2,440. ShrtVer snid the original $3,000 yurdstlek for all was set liy the Counell of Economic Advisers ns n “rough rule for Initial purposes and not Intended for long-term plun-nlng of the anilpoverty pro-grani." He said the new definition takes into occount food, rent, other costs and the size and geographical location of |>oor fainllles. The hit (llfference between the two staudards, he hiiUI, Is that the new method Includes a larger number of childry'n than the old 1^ million histead ot II million, lie said It applU^ to 34.0 million peng)im In tlie United States, 76 per cept of them white. The Cliamber of Comtiierce lias«A a.t they are j icfmrled idmiil lo do. Some I Arid) countries are hound lo ; break lornud r<‘lallons with Went Germany. Should any go So far as to recogiil/e the (!om munist goveniinent In Kast Gei' many, It Would be a blow for Erhard. Next week bring.s a major nic!‘||ng of the Noiili Allanllc 'I'rerdy Organi/.idioti (Council in London, with Secretary of Slate Dean Itiisk attending. Husk and the foreign minlslers of the Soviet Union, Itriliiln and Eiilnce are to meet Miiy It) in VIenlia lo celebrate tlie lOlh imniver.sary of the Auslrian stale treaty, This Is a big chance lo talk abont Viet Niun If fhey have iuiything lo say to each other. IMPORTANT ISSUE The same week also hi inga an I iinpoi lani ^Issiio bcloi e the lor | eign miiil.slers ol the GoiOmon I Market West (iennany, P'rance, Italy. Uelgium, Holland Luxembourg They will liy to iigrm^ on a common line to i negoliiile with the United Slates iind others on an litlernallonid I agrciuiicnt (or gain The U S, | government con.stder.s this it vitid piirtof the KeniU'dy Kouiul of talk.s to lower internalioiiiil Iriide barrier.s ‘ [ There Is some expts'liifibn j that de Gaulie's Erance will i liike a slaiid Ihal will , niiike | progress .slow mid lrou|iU\some,' .Soon atler Ihf Rig I'onr nuM>l lug In VIeniiii Rrliish Prime Minhslj" Harold Wilson will (sai fer Ih'cie will) olhi'r leiidcr.s of (he si'ven Oiilioe Euro|ieiin l''ree Tiiide As.sociidit>n He will try to get llinn togtdher oif proposals for closer ties with the Common Mai kid, Again HeatJs State AFT I) ET It O I T (AIM Henrv I.inne of Gro.sfu* l‘'olnle Piirk wim rceh'cled fircsldent of the Michigan l''ederation of Tench-ers (AI''LCIO) Saturday. Tony Kal.ser of Hamiramck and Erik Thort'sono (p Hedford w e r e named vice pre.sidenis. YOU CAN’T BEAT A&P FOR TOP QUALITY AT LOW, LOW PRICES! "SUPER-RIGHT" 10 to 12 POUND SKINLESS Semi-Boneless Homs Cooked Of QUALfTK . CLOSED SUNDAY AS USUAL SWIFT'S Premium CANNED HAMS 399 6 LB. SIZE "Super-Right" Quality, Government Inspected FRESH FRYERS Whole or Half 59: lAr No Center Slices Removed ir No Excess Fat Less Cooking Shrinkage 'k Fully Cooked . . . ^ All Skin Removed Not Just Smoked Cut-Up, Split or Quartered c 29' Chicken Livers 59* Chicken Gixiards ^8*^25* Cut From Mature, Corn-Fed Beef - "'Super-Righf' STEAKS Center Cut ROUND Cube or SIRLOIN Beef Chuck Roust Ground Round Stenk " ’ Hygrude Cnnned Hums Sliced Hulibut Stenk . . 59* 89* 49* 89:99 lb. c >199 T-Bone— ..............lb. 1.09 J sin 4 Porterhouse Steak ....................lb. 1.15 "SUPER-RIGHT" BONELESS AAC Rump or Rotisserie Roast....... ^>^ 99 Allgood—A&P's Fine Quality SLICED BACON 2 - 95‘ 1-LB. PKG. 49< "SUPER-RIGHT" COUNTRY STYLE 4^ Bacon THICk SLICiD |2 "SUPER-RIGHT" FANCY ■■ Sliced Bacon - 59‘ SPECIAL SALE! Save 24‘ iiGHT O'CLOCK COFFEB 'fc' Speilal Canned Fruit Sale! Holves or Sliced Freestone—1-Lb. V3-Oz. PEACHES Grade "A"--Purple—1-Lb. 14-Qz. V I mm PLUMS Whole Unpeeied—1-Lb. 14-Oz. APRICOTS A&P Brand—Our Finest Quality YOUR CHOICE 400 CANS ^F ^F FOR ^ A&P Grade "A Apple Sauce 4 “" 49* Prices Effective in all Eastern Michigan A&P Siiper Markets through Sat., May 8th MORE A&P VALUES On Next 3 Pages K-6 'I'MK I’oN'riAC rHii:ss.M(Wi)AY.MAV a. low Infegrationisfs Are Now Taking Aim at Housing in PlOsh Chicago Suburbdn Area CHICAtJO inU^KittdoH clriv<>! In moviti({ to tinril) Shore, ii pliinh Huburhnii «rea alooR Lake Ml( hl|;nii whet e ‘ few Nefjroos live. fnlegiration leaders said today (hey will begin an Intensive housing drive next month, with , llie aid of hf). volunit'er eollege stiidenis, while and Negro The program is liiiilt along the lines of Inst year’s Mississippi ProjeH. .says Its executive /lirector, William Moyel’, .'It “Our assumption is that the Northern suhurhs air closed cotimuinltles Just, like tlie South is a eloswl si«'|ety,'' Moyer said, MAIN TAlUiKTS The summer project’s main targets artf (he more than 100 members of the Kvanston-North Shore Heal Estate Associatioii, which serve .‘125,IKK) residents in the North Shore area The pnigram has the hacking „ol the American Erleiids Serv-ice (’ommlttee, and local church and civil rights groups, Moyiu' .said. opn atoi's to sm ve all, the lasiple who come into their door qual ly,’’ Moyer said “We're asking them to call and show houses without mentioning religion or nell said "We tjon’l make poll cy. ileal ostaler agents are hired hy people who want to st'll their li«mes tp act on their behalf and carry out their wishes” (dencoe, melinber. a project coimnlltee Last year, he said, five Negro families moved into the North Shore and none was placed hy a real estate agent IN THE MIDDLE "We re asking the' real estate S, ,1. O'Connell, ’presidenf of the real estate board, says his group "|s in the middle " of lhi‘ conlroversy, "We re only agents, " O'Con The .sUidenIs, who will under-, go a week’s luloring in the non violence technlfiiie, will inler view persons who have homes lor sale. They will try to per suade them to list the homes with real estate firms on a non-dlsetiminalory basis. Interviewing will begin in .lone and continue through the summer, .says Sally Olds, 21, of l(k;al movement “We’re trying to get ns many students as possible from the North Shore,” Mrs. Olds said, “This is going to be a local movement, a grass roofS move ment ” Most of (he Negro students will come from Chicago and will ment In the Soulh unlil we face our problems here,” said Mrs. Olds, wife of a broadcasllng »" 59* ALL PURPOSE ALUMINUM FOIL A WW Wonderfoil " I "”’ - 59* Waxed Paper . . "—22* AfirP'i Every-Doy Low Prices "00 t Health & Beauty Aids I Check & Compare! What are you paying?^ LAB TEST . 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I 59 JAR I Instant Coffee . . REGULAR OR DRIP COFFEE A A Maxwell House - 83* A&P PREMIUM QUALITY AAA Instant Coffee . . 99' MAXWELL HOUSE—15c OFF . AW Instant Coffee . . ‘ 84* VACUUM PACK—REGULAR OR DRIP ^ A&P CoHee . . 2 1” feu Bugs . . .. . 'r«" 82* OUR OWN _ Tea Bogs . . . . 49* RICH, DELICIOUS A OW Hershey's Cocoa 27* CHOCOLATE SYRUP AA Big Shot .... 59 INSTANT CHOCOLATE . h . P.D.O... . . . S' 45* KIDPLEASING AA. Jack Frosted ' 59 MILK AMPLIFIER BOSCO • • • e • • CHdCOLATE OR PLAIN 1-LB. 6-OZ. JAR 59* Ovqltine . . ... 59* .. (•»iH W;- ACrP's Every-Day Low Prices on i Canned Meat and Fish ICheckStComparetWhat are you paying? r DINTY MOORE Beef Stew . . . 'can 42* SERVE HOT OR GOLD i A A Hormel's Spam '2a°j 39* SUPER-RtGHT A A A Chili with Beans 79* SUPER-RIGHT—CORNED ^ Beef Hash . . 3 r® BROADCAST SLICED A Dried Beef . ..39 Star Kist Tima 4‘c« 99* Beef Ravioli 2'cAi^37‘ Breait O'.Chickan, Chicken ol »ha Saa or D«l MonU Tuna Fish S 4 2^ 99‘ HORMEL'S Chili with Beans '2a°m‘^29* SUPER-RIGHT Corned Beef . . 2:?k 43* COLDSTREAM PINK ^ A A Salmon . . . . 2 ^"”89* BANQUET « A — Boned Chicken — «« No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No Limits. •. 'hiK- roN'riAc PHKss. yioTNjDAv, M/vy a, lod.-s News in Brief From Around the World Flights Over^japan Sea Will Continue, U S. Tells N. Korea I'ANMUNJOM. «Koreii (Al') -Maj. i;«n. William P. Yarborough told North Korea today lhat the United Slates wiii continue its patroi tiights over the .lapun S^a and wilt take appropriate measures to protiud its nlrcratt, Yarlxnougli, senior U,N„ member of tlm doint Militaty Armistice Commission, made tile statement at a commission meeting which discussed an at- tack Wednesday by two Nortli Korean MIC.s on a U S. HB47 reconnaissance plane. The American said “Russian and Horlli Korean aiirraft are also engaged in similar fliglits near Japan and SoiAli Korea l)ut ever bKim atlackitd (Ju^y liuve ne by our side.’’ Nortli Korean MaJ. Gen. Park (-liung Kisik cliarged tliat tlie American plane had violated Nortli Korean air space and said it had been .shot down. Yarborough said the plane had never been closer than 50 miles to Communist territory and (.ailed the attack “vicious and unwarrante^l “ He ridiculed tlie Communist claim lliat it luu| lieen shot down. The Defense Deparlment suIcK in Washington Hull the plane was. damaged LONDON (AIM Queen Kli/, abetli ll’s litisband says lie came very close to getting tight during his eight-week lour of Asia and Australia, In a radio interview Sunday, Prince Philip told of attending a baii(|uet in Horneo and being offermi a harmless looking drink, "U lasled very giHsI," said the prince. “I liad Iwo lumblers of il I could hardly walk aficr ward." Tlie spectacle gave ills hosts “immen.se pleosure," lu> added. A spoke.sman al the Malaysian government's office In Lon don said ilie drink apparently was a local liorneo brew made from tapioca roots. P HAG II K, (Y.echoslovakia (AP) American |Mict Allan Ginsberg was crowmsl “King of Majales" liy Prague's younger set in a bealnik May Day week celebration lhat .set this Communist capital on lt.s lieels. The Red regime inaugurated a new “liMise leash".policy after three previous years liad brouglil violent May Dijy clash es between police and youth. Tills year police merely watclicd whim tbousand.s of young.sl^rs tlneatencd to storm Ihe stage ill a “big beat ' festi vat In an entertainment park. Cliairs weie tlimwn as some of the bands failed to plea.se the largely mop-haired and hlgh-heejed audience. The musicians retreated hastily, i'J.DI'llU.Y HVSTANDKIt.S An elderly bystandci slmok bis bead In dislielief as one liffl cer said “We have nothing to do willi lliis" The youtlis also crowned' a pretty college girl 'Mi.ss Majales,'' l)ut Ihe hlggcsl ovation went to Ginsberg, for years the idol of Prague's beat generation. IIKRLIN (API Tliree Kast German teen-agers escaped to Wesfe- Herlin during the weekend, but a fourth man was shot in liis l)id for freedom. West Rerlin poll(‘e .said tlie youtlis tore through the barbed wire obstacles in northern Ber-lil) late .Saturday. LOWEST PRICES! CHECK and COMPARE A&P'» Ev«ry-bay Low Pricis on Daify Foods 1 iCheck & Compare! What are you paying? ' WM,. * Muenster Cheese ' ” 39 PROCISS CHEESE SPREAD ^ M Ched-O-Bit . . 2 69 A&P SLICED Swiss Cheese . . 39 69‘ MEDIUM SHARP CHEESE Frankenmuth . . DAIRI COUNTRY (lmitai»ion Chant Spraod) WWW Cheese Loaf . . . '» 49* PINE QUALITY—1-LB. PRINT ^ Pc Silverhrook Butter 65 READY TO BAKE Biscuits ... 10* I-'.^ .. ... , f I A&P't Every-Day Low Prices on I Frozen Foods j icfcecllr & Compare! What are you paying? v LAMBRECHT CREAM Cheese Cuke . . e liirE’ 69* BEEF, CHICKEN, TURKEY, HAM OR SALISBURY ^ ^ Banquet Dinners 3o* Lemonade . ^ 10* ORANGE DRINK WWW Birds Eye Awake 37* TOWN SQUARE A Bread Dough . . 39* G&W Pizza . . . 39* A&P't Every-Day Low Prices on Cereals | |Cfcecll[ & Compare! What are you paying? ^ TASTY OAT CEREAL jai • loVi-oz. Cheerios • • • • POST'S WW M i^ugar Crisp ... 37* POST'S—WITH PRUNES «W OW bran Flakes ...32 KELLOGG . eWA Riiislii Bran • • • 30* Nabisco , ewew. Shredded Wheat ' 33* T rix . • • • • • . °«. 3 7 Alpha Bits . . . 37* SUNNYNELD Quick Oats . . . KELLOGGtS Rice Krispies .'. GENERAL MILLS Wheuties . . . . CEREAL TREAT Lap'n Crunch 2-LB. lO-OZ. PKG. Corn Flakes . . . POST'S—WITH STRAWBERRIES Corn Flakes . . . 39* 35! 28* 39* 24* 33' A&P's Every-Doy Low Prices on Canned Vegetables |C/iecllr & Compare! What are you paying? | 3- LB. 4- OZ. CAN 29* 10* SULTANA—FAMILY SIZE Pork & Beans . SULTANA BRAND Pork & Beans Pork & Beans 2 »h, 27* Golden Corn . . 3 «« 49* Freshlike Corn 3 49* GREEN GIANT WHOLE KERNEL _ — — Niblets Corn 4 69* Mexicorn ... 2 39* A&P grade "A - Cut Green Beans 4 59* DEL MONTE - Cut Green Beans 4 89* Green Beans mLr2 49* STOKELY'S FINEST ^ Cut Green Beans 2 STOKELY'S FINEST Shellie Beans ANN PAGE—RED Kidney Beans SAVE ON BAKeO B&M Beans . . SWEET, tender Freshlike 39* 2 39* 2 i- 27* .'•v--"29* 2 ciSi 41* wttMur.it ^ ,.LB. mm Sweet Pens . .2 CA^NS 4 I A&P GRADE "A" SMALL - \ Sweet Pens . . 4 & 89* Whole Beets 2 -^7* A&P WHOLE W WW White Potatoes 4 c hs49< VLASIC BRAND OW ■ Sauerkraut . •. . 2T^ DEL MONTE STEWED _ WW Tomatoes ... 4 cS 89* I A&P's Every-Day Low Prices on Soups and Crackers kheck & Compare! What are you paying? | HEINZ OR CAMPBELL Soups VA^RflfTIES ^ HEINZ OR CAMPBELL ' - CaIIMC VEGETABLE M ' JOUpS VARIETIES V ANN PAGE Tomato Soup . . ANN PAGE t ■ k Mushroom Soap6" 97* 79* 10* '89* Soups VECCTAIU ... ' NABISCO Premium Crackers SUNSHINE Hi-Ho Crackers 15* 28* 39* A&P'i Every-Day Low Prices on i Dietetic Foods [ |C/iedc & Compare! What are you paying? NATURI MADI — BARTLITT Pears NATURE MADI FRUIT Cocktail NATURE MADE Peaches DIETETIC SWEETENEI Sucaryl , . 2 0^ 39* .. 2 J 33* ,. 2 49* 6 OZ. ^ CC . . BT*-. # J BLUE BOY PEAS, CUT GREEN BEANS OR Cream Corn . . 2 » NATURE MADE Apple Sauce . . FRt.'.Cii.;TU Dressing. /■' FRENCHETTE Dressing . . '• FRENCHETTE Dressing i!.':''::.. . . • A&P'i Every-Day Low Prices on Fruits.and Juices i 29* 13* 37* 49* 39* n iCheck&Compare! What are you paying?! A&P GRADE ' A" « WW A 4 99‘ JARS ^ * A&P Apple Sauce A 1-LB. A A Apple Sauce 3 Jim’ o3 FANCY CRUSI^^ ,.lb. Dole Pineapple 4 ^ 89 5 99' Grapefruit . . THANK YOU BRAND, BLACK Raspberries . . DEL MONTE Fruit Cocktail SULTANA BRAND Fruit Cocktail a&pAsectic WholeFigs FRASER—MANDARIN Oranges . DEL MONT-, SLICED OR HALVES Peaches . IOn\, SLICED , Peaches # 1-LB. 1-OZ. CAN HALVES - . . .4 4 Bartlett Pears MORGAN S Apple Juice . . ORANG. DRINK Instant Tung . DEL MONTE Pineapple Juice 89* 39* 37* 4 c';Sf 97* 85* 69* 4 89* 3 turned l(Mii'isl to come Itore to see stalely Soulli em hom<«s restorwt to their splendor of a eenliiry ago, comment on the Ntottlmenlal Suiidny iincrncM)n‘ vlHlI, whhrh tneludnl a ride throiigh Hie streets In u horse-diawn surrey with a fringe on top. Crowds of visitors and resi-donls turned out to welcome her to her native blast Texas hoomliig steamboat slop. It is trying to re('u|>lure Its past as a lourjst alli'aclion Tile grand ojd homes, with their great drawing rooms, sparkling chandclieis and cob lections of antique furnishings S r iSi llAMHOAT STOP .lelferson, population now II, (MI2, m 17 miles Irom Mrs, .loliii son's birthplace in Karnack, Tex , and she ciune here lo high sclUMil 40 years ago. In its hey day in the IlUiOs, the city was a of French and Spanish in lluencCj were on di,splay for a Ihreediiy illlh annual pilgrim niiige sponsored by Die Jessie Allen Wise (Jardi'ti Club, placed on UU'n home In John son City at May 13 ceremonies opening it as a cnilral Texas hill country tourii^l attraction. Dressed in colorful hooped- I skirts, frock coats ‘costumes of the gay .social life hero a century ago residents provided a colorful talilemi in the streets and homes for-Hie tourists. Mother of 2 Charged in Husband's Death They all bore I he Texas lli.s-loiical Sociely’s landmark pla(|iie, just like one lo be SPOKANF, Wash (AIM The IM'ileral Hiireau of InVjesllgallon charged a ^fi year i»ld mollier of Iwo, Mrs. Nonna J, (ireniz, with .secoiul degree murder Sunday in the death of her husband, an Air Fok'C .sergeant: Aiilliorilies saiil Technical Sgl. (Jorilon F (ireniz of Hancisk, Mich,, (lied ahoul 4 4f> Saturday aflernoon shorlly afU'r he was stabbed In the back with a butcher knife in his Fairchild Air Force Base home "It’s like a Journey btick to yesterday," Mm. Johnson sgld as she viewed the sights and lunched ohder a "Tree of Heaven" in the lush garden of "Cuardian Oak," a mansion built in 1859 and restored by its present owner.s, (he Dun Lest^ The first lady listened lo tales of the past at Hie Kxcelsior Hotel, a Jefferson showplace dating back to the I8r>0s. Mrs. Johnson stopped in to ee Hie presidential suite named for Itiitherford B. Hayes that rents for $28 a day and one named after her that costs $12. During the 2«0-mlle trip, Mrs, Johnson drove by for a glimpse at her old high school, only to find if burned and a new one there. hli^ jnet the (win daughtei'f "of a boy I usisl to go I(| dancis* wllh," And there was her old high .school principal, (Icorge Bran .son. who announced hady Bird "didn’t make an error all year In her algebra” when she was In his class. Dies of Mishap Injuries FEINTON (AIM - Douglas M. Damaron, 21, of Fenton, died ■ Hiinday of injuries suffered April HI when a car in which he was riding rolled over on Fen-Ion Hoad in Denesee County, A record 21,03(1 trademarks w(‘r(‘ i.sHiied In the nation last year. &P is the STORE that SAVES YOU MORE! VegetaA/e Sale Iona Sweet Peas . . . A&P Cream Corn . . . Iona Tomatoes . . . .> A&P Sauerkraut . . . A&P Tomato Sauce > Comstock Wax Beans A&P Spinach ..... Iona Cut Green Beans > Iona Cut Wax Beans < A&P Beets WHOLI OR SLICfD Your Choice at Savings 4 49 CANTALOUPES Barlinica Grapes DARK, SWEET GRAPES FROM SOUTH AMERICA 39 Tomatoes FOR SCHOOL LUNCHiS Bananas 3 2 69 29 FROZEN FOOD BUYS! A&P Leaf or Chopped lO-OZ. PKG. 10 Cut Green Benns 4’'<°l 69* A&P FORD hook or M Bahy Lima Beans4'»”69‘ A&P FRENCH STYLI 'STICKLESS" COOKWARE now at Supermarket Savings ^ J NEW HAWTHORN / TEFIHIM'COOKWARE for no-stick cookiny, no-scour clean-up Save 16^^ Jane Parker ANN PAGE PROVES FINE FOODS NEEDN'T BE EXKNSIVE Ann Page Gelatins 4'“^ 49' Ana Page Chili Sauce 25^ APPLE PIE . 39 All Flavors JANI PARKER 2-LAYER WHITE, CHOCOLATE ICED Square Cake • • • JANE PARkER SWEETLY ICED ^1^ Glazed Donuts • • 39 I For Outdoor Cooking ANN PAGE Jane Parker Potato Bread Barbecue 39' Save 11c on 2 Loaves Sauce l -PT. 12-OZ. BTL 49 PricM Effactiv* Through Sot., Moy 8th in dll Eoitern Mich. A&P Super Morkett r ' ' ' ' o . . ■ THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIflC^TEA COMPANY, INC. I J[^Super Markets ^ AMERICA’S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT SINCE 1859 r For Lawn and Garden Care Plantation Lawn Foods A&P Fancy, Solid Pack WHITE ALBACORE TUNA 4 99< AISORTID PLAVORt ^ ^ A Popsicies....l2 39* Ice Milk .......... - 39* KRAFT'I, RIMiNTO, OLIVR RIMRNTO OR riHIAFFLR Cheese Spreads 2m?s49* Orange Juice... 69 Tomato Soup , 6'cAn5^59 NUTLIY —IN QUARTRRt _ / Margarine ...,5^tns 89 Pillsbury Biscuits/ort'o 10 Jane Parker 13-|^g Recipe ANGEl FOOD 1-LB. 1-OZ. RING 39 A Delicious NEW Jane Parker ^ Coffee Cakel DANISH HONEY BUTTER 11-OZ. SIZE 59^ HAPPY GIFT IDEA ! 20-10-5 Long Lasting Heavy Nitrogen Formula 22-POyNI> BAG 1 99 pifd^ula 10-6-4 ROSE^SHES 99* EL 1” GRASS SEED OXFORD-PARK ^ REGALO SAVE 30^ Mellowmood 5 |89 B. BAO ■ 4 LB. BAO mu PvIe VEGETABLE SHORTENING NYLONS r „ I. '> ' ' '''i; 3-LB. CAN JO( I 2‘'& 99' "tuf DOC ■ox -i. I’ll 1C HINTIAC Is Another Dien Bien Phu in Making? (EinrOiVH Nom The lo{ bwing diHiHilch /» urrl/ZifM Ity jJnUed Press hUermliomt'e foreign news aiudgst on Sfw-cial assignment in Viet Nam.) a * t By PHIL NEWSOM DA NANG, V 11! I Nfliti (UPI) «» Am«rlc^tnH ul thin bristling nir bus« sooff nl th« Idea tipt M thlH (;()ill(i be )iti> ■ other Dlen Bien 1 Phu. Miiy 7 1h the lannlverHiiry of Ithut d e r e ii t Iwhlcb broke the Iflghllng .spirit of Itfu! Kreocli and drove the m from Indoeinna in 1054. The tnasslng of (.’oirtmunist Viet (’ong forces clos(! to Da Nang leads to s|>eculaUun they may attempt similar tactics against the Americans. From among the 9,000 Ma< rines assigned to guard the base, I got the Impression the Marines almost hope the Reds will try. Brig. Cen. Frederick Karch, their commander, only remarks dryly that the Marines will do their job. ★ * ★ And tlie tough young men under Karcir.s command, each one a walking arsenal, daily are probing closer to the green hills marking tiie beginning of the mountainous jungle which gives the Viet Cong cover. SHOOTING BACK As they push their way through the shoulder-high elephant grass and into .suspected Viet Cong villages, the Marines are being fired upon and they are shooting buck. The French lost some 16,000 of their best troops at Dien Blen Phu because they underestimated the enemy’s ability to bring up heavy artillery through the JunghHl mountains. The Marines intend to rhake no such mistake. Ultimately their defense iM^rimeter will stretch beyond the 12,000 yards which is the approximate range of a 105mm cannon. There is no evidence so far that the Reds arc bringing in anything that heavy. NO INTENTION But as the young .men push their peri m e t e r farther and farther from the expensive hardware pailced on Dan Nang’s airfield, Karch says he has no intention of sending them into the hills on a man-for-man basis against the guerrillas. He disputes the theory that it takes a guerrilla to kill a \ guerrilla. \ Guerrillas, he says, only can bte defeated through convention-al\yarfare. They can have the hills, buti if theyv want their prize "they! must come here to get it. j Except\for tha approaching, anniversary\^and .seeing Da Nang | as a political prize, there is in i fact little toVompare between | the French position of 1054 and tlie American one t«Klay. Despite the presence- of 32,-000-plus Amerlcuns here, only^ the MariiMs are capable of fighting as a ground un|t. It is tedinieally a unit under Houth Vietnamese eommaiid. Even the air strikes that are being flown by Amerlcati i)llotti are nulhorlzed first by the South Vietnamese. 'I’he Frcn<;h were figliting a French war. SIMILAIiniES • For the communists, Ji o w-ever, lliere are sImllarltleH. Most of the Viet INnig successes have come through military surprise and political infiltration. No one here pretends to know their military lidentions. i’olitically, the most frequent line of s|)cculaliun l.s thut the Communist's seek t6 wrest away control of perhaps as many as a dozen of South Viet Nam’s northern province.^ before consenting to go to the peace conference table. With their line puslied some 20<' mile.H clo.ser to Saigon, tliey then could afford a peace wliich would permit tlicm to nibble away at the remainder of the country at tlieir leisure. BACK UP THEORY Communi.st tactic.s last Fcl)ru-ary lend sup[M»rt to the theory. Aided by fhMMl damage, they successfully cut Highway Number One which is South Vietnam’s only all - weather road running north and south along the China Sea coust. 'riiey also Route 19, the east-west highWiay running from Qui Nhon on the coast to Plel-ku, an American helicopter base In the central highlands. * -k * Their success was only temporary, but in between lay the liiige cliunk of territory for wliicli today th(>y :irc lielicvcd making a determined bid. FAMIUAR TERRITORY It is territory familiar to the French. Just above Pleiku lies the town of Kon Turn. Forces led by North Vletnuineio Gen. Vo Nguyen Glop drove the l'’rench from Kon Turn ami Pleiku became their last foot-hoid in the central highlands. The thunder of jet fighter-bombers taking off for attacks on North Vletnariiese targeta.or lending ground sup|H>rt b> In-(country fknitb Vietnamese forces drowns out the sound of hum-into' on nnll tit Du Nuiig's bulging air base. A * *r It is unsafe to lurzard a gu»ms as to llie value of tlie American (‘(luipinent |Kiuring into tlie,base close lo tlie saniiy b(“acliCH of the Uhlrui Stm one figure ban died about Is $2 billion. STRAINING AT SEAMS Whatever it Is, the base la straining at the seams. Tent cities have sprouted on harrm-ks lawn s. New structures un( going up overnight. And the single mess hall never was meant to handle the 15,000 Americans who fly, maintain and protect an awesome display of aerial fire power. ★ A A Hut the job Is brtng done. 1,26(1 MISSIONS In a cavernous hanger close lo an FlOO whose Communist bullet holes were being patched, squadron commander J. A. Min-ish of Y e 11 0 w ,s t o n e National Park pointed to a chart posted on a wall. It showed ^,266 missions flown in 32 days. In that same period more than a million pounds of bombs hud been d r o p i> e d upon the Viet Cong. An F104 squadron swept in after Island hopping from its base in (’alifornia. FIRST MISSION In less than 24 hours, .squa-| dron commander Maj. W. W. Iwin of Wenatchee, Wash., was] flying his first mmsion. Tlie job here is .not only to fly missions against the (.’om-munists Another part of it is the rescue of pilots who.se planes have bei'ii shot down. For Ills part of that Job Maj. Ronald Ingraham of Bclhesda, Md., wears the Silver Star. DON NICHOLIE -HOME- -BUSINESS- Alt t o,,. In s u ra nPe For Anyone OFFERINQ THE VERY FINEST I IN INSURANCE^SERVICES 53V2 West Huron FE 5-8183 \. GLASSES With Spring Action Temples Don't (lip down • ra foco comfortably a Hold Firmly but Gontio Qno P plastic frames 109 N. SAGINAW ST. E. STEINAAAN, O.D. boily 9i30 A.M. to 5:30 PfI. Frid'oy 9:30 A.M. t« 1:30 P.M. FE 2-2895 11.10 THE PON riAC I*11KSS, MONDAY. MAY 8, lOOfl Air Officials Fear Major Drinking Problem Among Private Pilots WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal aviation offidala fear Uiey may have a bigger drunken flying problem among private pilots than they ever suspected, Tlie basis for this concern, a House Appropriations siitM‘om-iiitttee was told, Were the findings of some 00 autopsies Conducted on crash victims, Nnjwh 1C Ilnliil)y, In testimony Mjirch 2 before he reslgmsl ns h'oderal Aviation Agency aa-ministralnr. The testimony has just been made public. ntiout OOn fatal na,shes each year killing !MKi to 110(1 persons in general aviation. “To our great surprise, there ha,H eome out of these autopsies a much more serifuis drunk flying problem than we under-nUkkI there to he before," said Halaby stressed' that he was talking about prlvale pilots, not airline pilots. AIIIUNP^ |‘li:OTS "The pVohlem on air carrier,s, a.s far as we can ascertain, d(H*s not exist. The airline pilots do not drink," he said. For the past, several years, he explained, tl^ere have been “We thought that the average pilot, with the amount of expert- . ettce,be, liad had and the resiwd he had for the elements, josl would not drink before flying," said Halaby. “We now. find Ithal one third of the sampling we have taken of these fatal accidents in the year l!Mi3 were probiddy uiafer the Influepcc of alcohol." What to do about it? Halaby saUI: “The airplane docs not know whether the driver of the airplane l.i drunk or sober, We cannot build into the airplane a sobering device or an overcontrol that will take over when the |)ilol is being a damneri fool." going up within eight hours after consuming any alcohol. Ho said the agency was considering some tougfier regulations. The FAA, he said, now has a rule against pilots flying under the influence of alcohol. Hut, he added, it Is considering a rule to prohibit any pilot from He also discussed the hope that education would be of some help. He said a lot of people Jhink that "you <‘an have a cou-|)le of drinks without affecting your al)lllty to fly. “In fact," he added, “there Is a Uigond in the flying world that one or two drinks might make you a betjer flier. Of| course, that was cultivatrHl In World War I, and it Is absolutely not / JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED -highest prices paid- r#? rick up FE 2-0200 HUY, SELL, TUADE. USE I’ONTIAC PHE,SS WANTS AD^. VANKEEIS OSCARS TO YOUR TAIREST LARY Mother... Your Fairest lady of Them All! RR SPECIAL PURCHASE OF SERVING GIFTWARE 7-PlitE CHINA CUP AND SAUCER RACK Beautiful hand-dec-.oratud china cups and taucart on 3-sh*lf hanging wall rack, a gift that Mother will cherish. REGULARLY >2” $197 DULY ENAMEL CHAFING DISH Ov«n-to-tabU chafing dish kaapt food warm for hourl. Heavy quality enamel pan and burner. White cooking pan with heat-resittant handle. NOW ONLY SOUP’N SANDWICH BIG SEVEN PIECE SERVERS Salad Set mugi ond plates. Detergent proof. Choice of colors. NOW ONLY DDUBLE WALLED INSULATED mCHER iteps drinks hot et DDUBLE WALLED 4 Piece INSULAHD DOUBLE WALLED 6 Hece INSULATED Carafe Set Pitcher Set Large decanter, two serving troy: Insulated thermal wall keeps drinks hot or cold. NOW ONLY Large decanter, B lorge mugs and serv- ■ ■ W ■ troy. Insulated ■■ W ■ ■m^O ■■ M decanter ond mugs SB S ■ Ilf keeps drmks hot or W , NOW ONLY W. mSTAHOlHO PUROHASE Famous "Nationol Silver" oouBumu INSULATED SERVINGWARE Choose from these insulated double wall pieces, all atone low price! For Mother's Day gifting. ^ THERMAL DOUBLEWALL MUGS 'Double wall mugs with curled lips and large handlet. Heavy woven finish. DOUBLE WALL OLD FASHIONEDS Serve cool, refreshing summer drinks in these old-fa ioneds. Curled lip and woven texture finish. STRIPED INSUUTED TUMBLERS Large size tumblers for everyday use. Smooth, epned lip and woven tekture finish. YOUR CHOI E Hi Gift Boxed Btmi PBIITIM STORES MIRACLE MILE SH0PnN6 OERTER S PERRY AT MONTCALM If, 'Mil I' Mr XHK PONTIAC PHE«S, M()N1)AV, MAY a, UMI/J B^lt MOW ‘TWIST’ ro ('llUllCil WOIIK -Teen ugers al 1/Uton, Bedfordshire, Kiigland, gather among the tombstones of a 12th century parish church for a “beat and barbeque" session as part of a two-week religious mis- sion Uev, Micliael 'i’urnbull, 2'J, in cliarge of ’ the youth work, said tiie purpose was to “make people see that religion is not really stuffy.” New Way Found to Stop Hair Loss, Grow More Hair HOUSTON, Texas - II’ you don’t suri’er from male pattern baldness,^ you can now stop your hair loss . . . and Krow mon; hair. For years “lh(>y said it ( (mldn'l !)(' done.”-But now a firm o( laboratory eonsultanl.s lias developed a Irealmeiii llial is not (tidy slopping hidr loss . . . Im| is jcally gn)wlng liidr! They don’t even ask you to lake their word tor il, if they lu'liove tlial the IrealtnenI will help you, they invite you to try It tor 32 days, at their risk, and see for yourself! Naturally, they would not offer this no-risk trial unless tlie treatment woi'k('d, Howevc'r, it is Im-I)ossil)le to help evei yone. Th(‘ great majority of cases of excessive htiir fall and baldness tint the beginning and more fully deVel-opod stiiges of nuile iiattern 1)!il(Ilicss and cannot be helped. But, if you are not aha-ady slick Imid, how can you hi' sine what is iK'tiially eaiisiiig your hair loss'.' Kven if baldness may .seem to "run in your family,” Ibis Is certainly no prixif of the eiuise of YOUR hair lo.ss. Many eondilions ea^i eaiise hair loss. No mailer whieli one Is eaiising your hair loss, if you wall until you are slick bald aiid your liair rools are dead, you are bi'yond help. So, if you still have any hair on lop of your head, and would like to slop your linir loss and grow more hair ... now is the time to do sometliing about it before It's I(M) late. l/iesel) bahondory C’o^iHullanls, Ine., will supply you with Ireiil-meiil for 32 days al their risk, if lliey beli/ve llie Ireatnieill will help yo(l. .lust send Ihem the information listed below. All queries are answered eonfiden-IliUly, by mail atid without obligation. Adv. ) OBLIGATION COUPON To; IvOPRch Uiboratry Consultants, Inc. Box 116001, 3311 West lybiin St. Houston, Texas 77006 1-am sulmiitling the following information with the under-slanding that il will be kepi slrietly eonfidi'nlinl and that I am umler no oliligalion whatsoever. I now have or have had the following eondilions. , Do you have dandniff.'...........Is It dry?........or oily?....... Dws your scalp.have [timph's or oiher irritations?................ Doi's your forehead become oily or greasy?......................... Does yoqr scalp ileh?.....................When?.................... How hmg has your hair been thinning?............................... Do ym still hi^ve.hair?.......or fuz/,?......on lop Of your head. How long is il?...........Is.il dry?..........Is il oily?.......... ' / Ailaeh any other informatton you feel Oiay l>e hi'lpful. NAM.K ....................................................... Asks Approval of Aid Measure LBJ Reports on Foreign Aid Progress WASIIINtmiN UP President Johnson said bslny, “We travel II dlUlciiH road" in administering the foreign aid program. But he said, “I am persuaded that we are on the right road.” Submitting to Congress a 124 page report on aid aetivities In the 12 niontlLs ended last Jliiie .‘HI, Johnson said tiie diMannent “DemonstrateH tlint our pro gram of interiiatlimal iwsiHtaiiee is fulfilling its promise tojlie world and tq Amei iea " The President said the program HieetSilMilli liiimiiiiitur-hill anil iialiaiiul goals iiiul asserlial; “Our own security rests on the security of others. Tjieir good health Is our good health. As they prosper, we prosper. Our'concern’must and does Iranseend national borders." Keoimmic aid commitments during tliQ 12 montlis ii|>-prom hed $2.:l lilllion. ".Sl(»wly, but f believe stead ily, all lliese efforts are leading iialloiis to greiit**!' economic prosperity and social stability," the President' said. "C^ntrics such" as Greece, Talwanf’^nd Israel, long recipients of our economic snp|M)rt and encourage-nittiit, are emerging to a stage of progress wliere tifhy no long er m Ife said this was being done by eneonraging and Insuring pilvate Investilient, by coneen-triitlng on eoiintrles “able to follow tile disciplined and arduous path to progress,’’ and by emphsizing long-term development iirnjecls. In tlie l2Tnonlli perliMl, lie said, more Ilian 4fi per cent of (lie aid jirogriim was in llie form of development a.s.slstunce, eompared wllli '211 per e(‘iit tlireo years figo. WASHINGTON (API - The Senate f*iil)lie Works Committee wa.s urged lotil litd P.M.{ Tues., Wed., Tliurs., tat. Til I F.M. ff You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! 1 075 W Huron St. Phona 334-9957 ■.H ■;■ '* **>'^ PlUliSS. MONDAY, MAY d, 10(W Gas Marketing Probe Begins WASHtNGTON (UPl) - The Federal Trade ^ Commission (FTC) opens ap tavesUgatlon to* day into gasoline marketing, whh li It deacrilies as "(» matter of illril companies, in deis-ndent pr(Kluc<“rs, service station o|M*ralors and I he molor Ing inihlic were summoned to testify at Hie piil)lic lieaririKs, ex|Msted to run at least two weeks WlLnesses called for today’s hearing included officials of the National Oil .)ohhe,rs (Vuin-cll, Michigan I’elroleiitn Association, Tidewater Oil Co., Texas Independent rnalueers and Royalty Owners Assoela-tlon, K(M‘k Island Refining Corp. and Suiiland Refining t^orp. The henrings were to cover a wide range of 8ubjee|.s - price Wats, gasoline grtides, compeli-lion between mmu'-bnind tint! “unbrandiHl" gasolines, and the" “market structure tind competitive behavior of the various segments and levels" of the industry. A A * the I'TC;, responsible for “preventing discriminatory and other monopolistic and anticom-I)ctitivc" practices, said its aim wa.s to determine “the most effective and appropriate remedies” for the industry's problems. MUCH INTEREST Tlie investigation ha.s Jittract-ed a good deal of interest, according to the FTC, which said It received a large amount of mail, including many requests to testify at the hearings. A * W The mail included a complaint from a service station operator in Hollywood about a “miserable cutthroat” competitor down the street, a claim from a man in Silver Spring, Md., that a gawline commercial on televi-sFm was “an Insult to a person’s intelligence,” Ex-Secretary of State Interviewed on. 86th Birthday Byrnes Opposes $l Billion Aid to Southeast Asia /editor's I^OTK -- ./«mic,s- F. Bj/Wles, who celebralml his Sfiffi birthday Sunday, hrld many lop imilions in ici/i.i/o tiyy, eiiWuUor and ludu ud bronchos of the i/oimnmirnl N'ow livhi/ in rrlimiwnl in Columbia, SC,, IlynwH f/irrs his views OH IikIendeni governments if we refuse to confer with those who are opposoc^ to us. Wandering Boy, 4, Is Found Unharmed ENGADINE (AP - Roger Pratier, 4, who wandered aWay from home Sunday morning, was found unharmixl some eight liours ImRt about three miks from lliis Upper Penltmiila village. P'o|l(;c said Hu; l)oy was apparently heading for Lake Michigan. He was discovered about one half mile from the shore. Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain For the first time scl found a new healing substaneo with the astonishing ability jo shrink heinorrholds, stop it<;h“ iiig, and relieve pain wiUioot surgery. In one hemorrhoid ease after another,"very strlk I ng Imnrove-ment" was reported 'and verified by a (lo<;tor'B oiiservatlons. Pain Was relieved promptly. Anil, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or ro-Iraetion (shrinking) took place. And most nmii/.ing of all— this tinprovemi'iil. was maintained In cns(*s where a doclor’s observations were conUmied over a period of many monllisl In fact, resulls were so thorough that sufferers wore able to moke such astonishing slater ments as^PileB have coaoed to be a problem I” And among these aufferers were a very wide va-^liety of hemorrhoid conditions, some of 10 to 20 yeara’ ataiwiing. All tills, without the use of narcotics, anesthetics aalrln Dyne*) - the dlseovefy of a world'fiiimous research institution. Already, Bio-Dyne Is in wide use fur healing tnliired tissue on all harts pf the iKuly. This new healing substance is olTerod In suitposilory or i/int- coiivenleiil Preparation H Hiin-positories or Vreparatioii H Ointment with special nnnli--ator. Preparation H is sold at nil drug counters. TRAVEL TO EUROPE With Your Neighbors 3 PERSONALLY ESCORTED TOURS of Europe - covering Scotland, England, France, Switzerland, Germany and Denmark. 21 DAYS ALL INCLUSIVE FROM DETROIT., only 846 40 WORLD^S FAIR WEEKEND Includes hotel, Fairadmis- , sion, tour of New York City, (3 Days, 2 Nights) *19*’' LOOKING For Exciting Vacation Ideas? STOP AND VISIT OUR OFFICE AMPLE FREE PARKING BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE 440 11410 2221 S. TELEGRAPH (ARCADE) uO&^OalO ARN MORE ON SAVINGS SAVINGS IN BY THE lOTH OF THE MONTH EARN FROM THE 1ST AT CURRENT RAT£ COMPOUNDED AND PAID QUARTERLY' CAPITOL SAVINGS S LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 West Huron 338-7127 Dowiilowii Detroit Oditii .'',oullili*ld OKice- Washinolori Blvil. CKl'j. SoulMinId , Corner Slulo Sirgul al 11 Milo Koad WO 2-1078 KE ,7-6125 Home Office Laming Member Federal Home Leon Bonk System ^,1 TIIK PONTIAC PRKSS, MONDAV, MAV H, um.V THia ms C~1 IIIUna«d I iim Baldwin Avt.;| 1278Oo«|iy f j fU M-l» «t Wim"”i Ut» N. I e«n.r C«l«mbl« | Unl.n U*. VlllwB* " «"» l'lM» QAI P RAYC Monday, May 3 thru wNLC UAl O Wednesday, May 5,1965 ECKRICH SM0R6ASPAGK 1 Pound *VA Paokago f ^ BANQUE POT RATH BACON 69 SLICED dCAl [fan pint Quality Colura HTLOMS _______________________ 5Br I __ « ■ 3 Pair TIDE Packaga Wangnors Lbw Calorio ORANGE DRINK i ■! *t-y -'‘Ml C—9 rHK. J'ON'l iACV I'HXSS. MONDAY, MAY .'I. KMW Not Going to College?—Go Get a Job By I.JSBUK J.*NANON. El». I>. Not plannbig to go to (rulloK<;V K you ant! one of the many of this yoar’a high school gradu-alcs who feels that college is not for him, my advice to you iM'gitm with n simple statement ■ <;«'t stariNl at soinetiung. You don't have to wait until you liave your whole life planned and have decided wluii you ulllmalely wi!.h to he You triay ra-ver iciich. such a ‘*0 lo the lop. JACOBY The bidding in tlic box look place at one table in the recent Vanderbilt (Tip team competition. In knockout team matches each hand is played twice only and the International Match Point scoring pro-duces condh tion.s that call for tactics similar to rubber bridge. In particular, if either side can acquire a big swing on one hand it is well West’s double of one open-inj; heart bid was. the start of his campaign to get bis opponents to double him at the game level. North’s jump to four hearts was on all purpose bid designed to crowd things. When West refused to be shut out, North passed. He felt sure that his partner would take some action. That action was a five heart bid followed by a five spade bid by West. The North "Went right on to six hearts. The six bid was a definite gamble. North was certain that his partner would not hold fro/oi lliat lii.s .side i iiol (ll|imon(l.i West’s d o u ll I e was bad ludgineiil. lie had two iices but Ids oppoiieiifs had hid a vtiliierahle .sliliii against those tw(i aces ami there was a g(Mid chance that both aces would not make. West really slionid have gone on lo six N|)a(|es niitl iiecepled a siire small loss instead of risking Ihe l.iiilill points that South got for making six hearts doubled. The six-.spiule l)id would have .still given this We.st's learn a net loss on Ihj* liaiul. At the otiicr faille West was doubled i*e spades, lad Ihe loss would have been a small one instead of an enormous one. Q—The bidding has been: North Rati South Went 1 V Pa.s8 1 A Pa.s« 2 A Pass Y(iu, Soutli, fiold; ♦ K J 8 7 6 VQJ3 ♦A.M +A2 What do you do? A—Almoat any bid that your partner won’t pass ts all rlxhl here, but the recommended call ia three hrarta. Ton plan to bid again. idiuies ranging up to , rent direi’lory, $11,(100 wllh no coi[ege ' Although college IroCiung does pie|)aic a peison for profes.slon-al Joh.s with more .security and. sonu'llmeH. higher pay, it no TIIK l»()N'HA(: I'UKSS. MONDAY. MAY if, imr» C—8 jisin(?ss'-and Finance. Trade Moderately Active 'llie following are loj) prices oovoring salea of lnces nutre lhan a |M)lnl Losses of around 2 wen* taken by Driver Harris and AVC (^orj). Down a point were Syntex amj American Bdok. Fraclioiial gainers includellng and indiserellons manufacturing organi/.ation had a factory in the South. It ap-poifited as head of the factory one of the most respeelahle eli-Izeos of t lie eommnnity, who was recommended hy the hank and hy previous employers and who was regarded as jt billliaiit priKluctlon engliieer. Under personal pres.sure for money, the plant manager first sliirled pockc'llng rash sales to employes and milslders The New York office was aware that certain invoice numbers were missing but was always told byt he plant manager lliat tlicy liad been voiced out and torn up. A.; MunugenJenl Safeguard.s undercover operative, assIgtUMl to the plant as a shipping clei'k, Ix'cnme aware of tlie plant manager's activities and lie admitted llietl exceeding $100,000 To file .south, with more room to spread Old, II is not expechst to cause major problems. Tlie river is not expeclod to cume wltliin four feel of flood stage at St. Louis, and will only approach floiHl level al ciiesler and Cairo, III . the Wealher Bu reau said. There was slill major strain on the levees upstream where patrols kept watch, and .sand hags were placed Io reinforce weak spots. IMlOVIDINt; SHELTER The American Red Cross slill provided shelter for 791 per.sons along tlie river, and .said it as feeding 5.09.') mostly levee workers Al Clinton, Iowa, where downtown stores h'av(> Immoi closed foi-10 days, more to di.seourage unessential traffic Hum because of water hazard, merchants reopened their establishments to- HEAVY LO.SS Aslor, wliose liini has been hsiTeting out thieves lor eight years, estimates Unit internal thievery accounts for a $1 l)il-lion loss yearly to industrial and retail cstahlislmumts, Going tlirongli Ids tiles, Astor came up with tills example of a tnisltxl employe’s thievery: The manager of a di.scount store wllli a volume of $5 million a year allered receiving DE.STIlOYS COI'IES 'I'lien lie made arrangements' whereby lie would receive large .sums of money in return for destroying all co|iies of invoices and sliiiiping n'cords for mer cliaiidiKe going In ciisloniers in colliislon willi him Farther upstream, removal of i harrier dikes across road- j ways and tributary oullcts was io progress. Hot in tlur Ilannihal-Quincy section, the water was building up again after three inlerrup-tioiis in tlie Iasi 10 days I'aused ' by levee collajises which diverted water into 25,000 acres of lowland above and below Quincy. a city of 45,(MM) on a high bluff, on the Illinois side of the river. One break just south of Quincy drove 150 from 40 homes. reports Io indicate lliat the stor* received mucli more merchandise tlian was actually delivered. He was in collnsion with a vendor who paid him one Italf of Hie excess |)ayment. This store manager also stole lieavily on .Sundays, when lie loaded up his own aitlomoliile. Aslor says his ('ompaiiy assigns operatives wlio pose as everything from purlers Io de-pnrlment managers. "Normally we can locale a prolilem and hung il Io conclii-sion in 00 Io 9(1.days,’’ he says Trial of Klansman Begins With Acquittal Predicted ANOTHER .STORE Management salegmirds discovered Hiat the niHiiager had opened a store of his own in his wife’s name and Hint he had stocked and financed il with Hie money and merchandise taken from his employer’s store. This dishonest store manager had been ir close friend of the owner of the diiicounl chain for 15 years and entertained him al Hie liome wlienever the owner was in town. HAYNEVILLE. Ala. (Ill’ll-'riic [ (rial of a Ku Klux Klansman on | charges of murdering Detroit j civil rights worker Mrs. Violnl Liiiz'/.o gol under way today with j the (Iclcnsc iircdictiiig an ac- ’ (|mltal. "I believe the outcome will he our favor," said Klan attor-■y Malt Murphy before enli'r-ing the courtroom of 2nd Gircuit Judge T. Werlb Thagurd. A 70-iiiun panel, ineliidiiig line elderly Negro, was sum-inoiied for the trial of 21-year-old (,'olllc Leroy Wilkins. The jury that will actually hear the case will be picked from Hie panel. Selection of the jury is expected Io take most of Hie day. Here’s another: A New' York City garment it SUCCBSSTUI % % Investing ^ $ I % By R()(;ER e. spear (Q) “We have $20,000 U. S. Government bonds bought early in 1054. They are due in September 1072 and redeemable in 1907. We arc rccciv: Ing interest at the rate of %'k p«>r cent. We would like to pul this money into something that would give us more income. Would we lose the interest by cashing these bonds In now? Please help us if you can.” N. N. (A) You hold a Treasury issue which probably cost around 96 in early 1954, when money rates were lower. You can sell these for around 90‘/z and you will receive accrued interest up to the date of safe, so you will lose some principal but np irfterest by disposing of them now. The bonds yield 3.95 per cenf to maturity, Which takes into account the big discount at which they sell, as well as the coupon rate. I see no,reason why you should not sell, if you require more income. In their place, I suggest San Diego Gas & Electric; Continental Can; Consolidated Edison and Lone Star Gas. wa,s called, Murpliy again looked around and said "Is I.yn-(loii Baaines .lohnson, the f’resi-(leiil of Hie I’nilcd Slates liere, Mr Baailift’’” Wilkins sal quietly lor Hie most part, hut sometimes hit Ills fingernails, Two of his fellow klansmen, William 0. Ea-, Ion, 41, and Eugene Thopias, 42, also were in tlie courtroom. Tlicy are to be tried later in the Liuzzo slaying. Loan Office Opening at Miracle Mite Tim Lowndes County circuit •purf convened at 9 a in. CST i III am. EDT) hut Hie c^iurt spent an liour on routine liusi-1 ness. Wilkins’ trial gol under way al 10:04 a.m. C.ST (12 04 p,m. EDT). RAISES HAND Judge 'I'liagard asked prospective jurors if any wanted to be excused. One man raised his hand and announced: “I have a previous opinion.” “We’ll come to that later,” Thagard replied. A loud burst of laughter filled the courtroom. A * ★ The judge later excused another man who requested to be di.smi.ssed on grounds of “extreme nervousness.’’ ANO’rilER RECESS The trial was underway only a few minutes when the judge reces.sed again to discuss in chambers with attorney the pretrial motions filed by Murphy, Shortly before the recess, Murphy disclosed the names ,of 18 defense witnesses he said would appear during the trial. Among those named were FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and President Johnson. Commercial Credit Plan, Inc., vyill open a new pcr.sonal loan office twlay at Hie Miracle Mile Shopping Center, 2247 S. Telegraph, Bloomfield Township. Glenn S. Hartman, 2219 Royal, Berkley,' has bdbn named manager of the new office. In addition to pcr.sonal loans, the new office will provide a consumer goods financing program through which the public can finance the purchase of appliances, furniture, television sets, musical instruments and other merchandise. .Commerical Credit Plan, Inc. and its affiliates have offices in principal cities throughowt the United States. “Is J. Edgar Hoover here? Murphy said in a booming voice and looking around the courtroom. When the President’s name “Recently, Genesco purchased the firm for which I work. They have made us a very attractive offer for the’ purchase of their stock. Do you think I should accept it?” V. D. (A) Genesco, in my opinion, is well rpanaged and is worth buying. The company is still mostly in footwear and apparel, but has broadened out by acquiring a large variety chain, S. H. Kress & Co. Genesco is acquisition^minded and ' ha's made marked progress along this line in recent years. Earnings were up sharply in 1964 and the stock has shown excelltnt technical action. I believe you are very fortunate to have an opportunity to purchase the shares at a favorable price, and I certainly advise you to, do so. Roger Spear’s new 48-page Guide to Successful Investing is now ready. For your copy, clip this notice and send $1.0^ with ydur name, and address to Roger E, Spear, in care of this newspaper,' Box 1616, Grand Central Station, New York City, N.Y. 10017. (Copyright, 1965) News in Brief Some $150 in cash was stolen from a Birmingham service station early Saturday morning. Birmingham police said Stone’s Standard Service, 347 S. Hunter, was entered by breaking a window. Police arc investigating the recent theft of $205 from ithe office of J. Robert Slerling,‘*31, 309 Pontiac State Bank Building. .Cross Burned at Holly Home Rummage Sale: Grace Lutheran Church, Genesee at' Glendale. Thurs., May 6, 9-6; Fri,, May 7,9-12.. _adv. St. Andrew’s Confraternity of Christian Mothers Annual Rummage Sale. Rochester, Mich., May 6; 7. 10 a m. -9 p.m,—adv. Rummage Sale: First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham, 1669 East Maple, Tpurs., May 6, 9 a.m.-6 p.m,; Fri., May 7, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. —adv. Members of a white family in Holly watched a cross burn early this morning before the home in which they’ve welcomed Negro guests. The two-foot cross was close enough to the Charles Hughes home,' 314 S. Saginaw, to blister the paint on the outside of the building.. Mrs. Hughes said she, was convinced the cross'carried a racial mes^iage. “We have Negro friends to whom we’re very close,” s^c said. Ignited ^bout one foot from the house, the cross was spotted at 1:38 a.m. by Holly Patrolman James France. He said he saw two boys run aroupd the house and Into the swamp behind it, but he did not pursue them because his first concern was to extinguish the fire. Rowe’s Farm Dairy is NOT going out of business. Farm Fresh Dairy Products, available as, usual. 4100 Baldwin Rd., Pontiac. —adv. Rummage Sale: May 4, 10 a m. All Saints, Exchange Street entrance. —adv. Appalachia Home Feasibility Study Set Mhs. Hughes, who brought: out water to put on the blaze, said I her family was “very, very 1 concerned” about the incident. BEREA, Ky. (AP) -Berea College has a $13,783 grant from the Office of Economic Opportunity to see if a house with indoor plumbing can be built in rural Appalachia for $4,000. I The proposed structure would be a one-story, semifabrieated, frame dwelling with movable j inner walJ|S. , I The low cost would come I through use of local materials, exact patterns for uijskilled workers to fol|ow, and self-help, y 1 low-unit' financing, said Rude lOsolnik, head of the college’s 1 industriali arts department. TIIK/PON'I IAC Pfil'.HS. MONDAY. MAY It, 1005 Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas “f DKBOKAII LKF. I Mr, KIlioK wnii killed Siilnr- ^ Graveside Hervlcc for Deborah I day Iti an auto aeeldonl. He Cullen, 6-yeck-olrf'daughler I was o machinist at New Dy-of Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Cullen ! namics Corp. in Madison 44 Lincoln, was to have lM‘eti 1 j Heights, p ni, tiMlay at the Lakeview | Surviving are his wife, i,or her Cemetery, Clmkston. The baby died yesterday Survlvor.s | n c I u d e a sister, Donna Lynn at home, and grandp/irent.s, Mrs. Ethel Cullen of Clarkston and Kaymond Gi roiix ol Chieiigo. . Susan )wnslilj) ■shyli'rian Ctiurch, I’ontiae. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. George (Shirley) Woods with whom she made her home> three grandchiidreii; tfuee sis ters, Mrs, llradley Scott of I'on Mrs. Chat'les Mall of Wa lua; two daughter (hdleim of Waterford T.......,, and Diane Elliott at home; two I Oxford Towirshij) and Mrs, E<>n grandchildren: one sister, Mrs,!'"" Weaver of Clarkston; and Eraiik itahccs'k ol Waterford Arrests Made on Fowl Sales Rahman vs. Sukarno e hrother. Towii.shlp; and a hrollier LAHHA ANN EILIIAin Laura Ann l''ilhai'|, inlaid daogliler ol Mr and Mrs Lied Click Lilhai l, m; Mui|)li\, died Salurda). Service will he held tomnr-row III Pandora, Olim Local ai-langcmenis arc ladng handled l»\ \ o.aliecHSi|, le Luncial llol Surviving in addition to lier parcnis are two lirotliers, Terry and Wayne, both at homiy and grandpareuLs, Mr, and Mn*. CLII EOUD E. HAYES COMMEKCE TOWNSHIP •Service tor Cliflord IS Hayirs, In', ol TM:. Ithieliird will he 2 f) III tomorrow at the Kiehard-son-Hird Eimeral Home in Walled Lake Place of luirial will lie aiiiKamecd laler Display uuuuigi'r (or Mont gOMieiv Ward and Co al the I'onliae Mall, Mr. llaye.s died M'slerday, Surviving are his wife, Dor-olhy; two sons. Barton of Idv- Gerald iMihurt of PoiUlaC, Mrs! | Dorothy BoberLs of Alaliama ter, N.Y.; Ihrei four grandeliildrei sister: and MABTIN N. MADSEN Service for Martin N. Muji.sen,! fM, of lIHiLi Hickory, Walerford | Township, will be 1 Wislnesday at. the Coals Fin Home, Drayton I’lalns, with j i burial in Lakeview ('emelery, l Independence Iowrislup. | (cry, Troy. MRS. CARL (). JACORSON BL()()MLlELi>Sl'()WNSHlP lte(|ulcm lligli Mviiw for Mrs ('and O (Margaret Mary I Ja cohsoii, 44, (d 122li Cedarliolm l.aiic will be 10 am tomorrow al SI, Hugo of lli(‘ Hills Cluireli Bloomfield Hills. Biirial will he ill Hopkins, Minn Tlie Bell Chapel (d Win It. llaniilloii Liineral Home, Birmingham Is III eliarge of ai rangemeids, ' Mrs, .laeobson died Salurday. She was a numiber of Si. Hu|?o of the Hills Church. Surviving besides her h u s-hand are a daiigliler, Beverly, and a son, Gary B., holh at liome; a brolher; Iwo .sisters; and her pareidsi Mr. and Mr.s, D. Negy id Cliieago, •WasIIINGTON (HIM) - Federal and stale agents at day-i breaK .hxtny • began arresting or serving summons on 77 persons j in II stales on charge,s of .sell ' , iiig mig'i alory game hirdx liderior Sc'cretary .SImirl L ! Udall, who announced Ihei eraekdowii, said lhal numerous | deer, ()iiall. and Service for l»awrcnce E Han- 'dren, 4ri. of Killfl Mark Hopkins, vin, i m i-a. . will be l:;t() pm. lomorroW at' nwiTm ,ak c' ’ James Episcopal Church, ' , ! ,7 Birmingliam,. Burial will lie in al Cmiic-' ^ ^ ommcrcc will be 10 a m. ' i Wi'dnc.sday at Our l.ady of Bef- Mr, Mad.sen died yesterday, ugc Cluircli. Burial will he anile was a sclf-ernploycd painter, jp.miu,,,, „,,,ne Hj, ' i "<>uiieed Surviving are his wife, Marie, j„ ,.i,.,rg,. „f ar-' will, he reeiled al I’angenienl.s. fl P m. tomorrow at the ('. J Mr. Handren died suddenly I'C.odhardt Fiitieral Home, Keego .Saturday, Me was a partner in H'lrbor. Arthur Voting & Co., certified | Me MeEall died siiddenly yes public iieepuntants. A member of ,S(. J.'itnes Episcopal Church, he was al.so a member of nafiotuil and local (!PA a.ssoeiations, the Recess Club, Oakland Hills Country Club and the University of Michigan Alumni Club. Surviving ar^ his wife, Margaret; a daughter, Heidi, atid two .sons, Kirk and Gregory, al| al home; his mother, Mrs. Alice Sharpe. Hahdreti; his stepmother, Mrs. Arthur V Handren; and a brother. Contributions may be made to the Scholarship Fund, U. of M. Club of Detroit. MILS, ruth II. OSKKY Service for Mrs, Ruth H O.skey, 157, of 492 Colorado will be 1 p m. tomorrow at the William F. Davis Eiiiteral Horne with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Oskey died Wednesday following a two-year illnes.s. She is sitryived by a brother, Henry Howard of Pontiac, and one sister. JERAL L. RUSSELL Service for Jeral L. Itus.sell, 49, of 44 Whitfield will be Thursday al the Edwards Funeral Homri, Doniphan, Mo., with burial in Doniphan Cemetery, Ripley County, Mo. His body will be at the D. E. Pursley F'uneral Home until 7 p.m. Monday. Mr. Russell died Sunday following a six year illness. He was a machine operator at the Pontiac Motor Div. Surviving are his wife, Evelyn; a son, Jeral Jr., and g daughter, Mrs. Allan Travis, both of Pontiac; and his mother, Mrs. Lydia Brezicka of Holla, Mo. ers. Also surviving are two broth- DONALD K. ROSSER Service for Donald K. Rosser, 29, of 3048 Sterling will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with burial In White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Rosser died Saturday after a long illness. JULIA MAE SPEARS Service for Julia Mae Spears, 1-day-old daughter of Shirley Spears of 488 Arthur, will J)e 1'30 p.m. today, at. the William F. Davis Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Surviving are her mother and her grandparents. ALVIN D. BEASLFY HOLLY — Service for Alvin D. Beasley, 63, of 6307 Grange Hall will be 1 p.m. Friday at the Lake Street Church of God, with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery. The Frank Carruthers Funeral Home, Pontiac, is in charge of arrangements. Mr. Beasley died Saturday after a long illness, He was retired from the Pontiac Molol-Division. Surviving are hi:?, wife Easter; one son, David of Delray Beach, Fla.; and nine brothers and sisters. \ lerdiiy. Retired from the Miehi-gan State Police, he wa.s an Oakland (bounty Circuit (-'oiirt officer and II member of the Michigan Law Enforcement As.soeia-tion, \ Surwing are his wife, Gertrude; IWk) so'ns, John M. of Saginaw and Michael P. at home; his mother, Mrs. Laura Bose MeFall of Keego Harbor; and Iwo si.sters, Mrs. Jack (Marjorie) Garbirl of Keego Harbor and Mrs, Haneel (Laura Jean) Boatright of Union Lake, lie said other piireliaNes involved ducks, geese, doves, nuiisli hens or nills, and cools. Also involved were biiiilings, u form of proteefial mlgnilory songbird. Udall said the stales involved wei(‘-Alaliama, Arkansas, Florida, Kenliicky, Maryland, Mlssl.s sippi, Missouri, Ni'hraska, New York, Norlli (,’arolliia, and Vlr-' glna. Market hunting and .selling of migratory game birds were ou(-law(»d in 19111 by Hu* Migralpry Bird Treaty with Britain and (’ilimda. Violations were considered mlsdenu'anors or minor offensives by the courts until ItItIO when lliey were elas.sified as felonies. Cdall said 245 eoiiiUs of vi-olaliiig migratory bird regiila-(|ons were Ievh>d against the persons arrested or suin-inoned. He said (he eharges were based on evidence gathered oyer 2'j years hy undercover agents of the Kish und Wildlife Service. During the investigation, the ag(>nls made 141 water fowl purinvolving from 2 lo lit) Balunan’s (‘oinmenls brought laughter from his audience, which luelud(‘(l several ambassadors from Europe and Asia. Halunau Is (52. Sukarno is 1)3. Controversy Flares Over Agent's Post CA.S.S01*()i-LS (Al>) Long a one man o|mralion. Hie Midi Igan Stale University Exlenslon Service office for Cass Counly was (K'enpied loday by I hr persons wliile a controversy simmered over the direelor-ship. Agent Harold Sparks wa.s no-liiii'd formally Friday hy the M.SU extension (ie|)artment that Ills services were being terminated immt'dialely. Sparks lias declined to leave as ordered .earlier. Former (.'lare Counly agent Richard Seliroeder and Kent County 4 II agent Dennis Sellers arrived today on Huiiporary basis as ordered hy MSU to. replace him. 'I’lie governor’s offiee’has been asked for a hearing in an effort lo make public the reasons for dismissal of Sparks from the post he has held for 24 years. A copimiUee of Cass (bounty residents al.so has lieen formed . in defense of Sparks and sup-DETROIT (AP)—Gov. George ports his-fight for reinstatement. Romnew and a,70-member biisi-, ----------------- Governor, Group Back From Trip MILS. WILUAM G. HOWLAND INDEPENDENCE T 0 W N-SHIP'- Service for Mr.s, William G. (Helen) Howland, 35, of 6515 E. Washington will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the First Methodist Churqh of Clarkston. Burial will follow, in LakeviUw Cemetery, Clarkston. A member of the Clarkston Women’s Bowling League, Mrs. Howland died Saturday after a long illness. Her body is at the Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home, Clarkston. Surviving besides her h u s -band are three daughters, Char-liss, Billie J. and Glennda C., and a son, Fred, all at hotiie; her parents, Mrs. Vclona Taylor of Pontiac and Wilford Mc-Mulle of, Pontiac; three sisters, JOHN E. SHEARER OBION TOWNSHIP - Serv- iind political group are home from their lO-day Ei , , , „ o. , Pean visit with congratulatory Shearer^ 55, of j criticism from Rare Money and Art Stolen QUEBEC (AP) Mrs. Richard Lohff of Water- j Cemetery. 3251 Baldwin will be 2 P m. | Qemoer-its Wednesday at , the Voorhees-Si-1 The trip’s announced purpose pie Cli^a^l, Pontiac with burial p, encourage trade between in Sashabaw Cemetery. I We.stern Europe and Michigan. Mr. Shearer died suddenly The delegation visited the six oiJFRFC (Al>) Thin,, Sunday. Jle had worked 35 years lEuroncan Common Mark(>t Thirty- in the maintenance department' countries abd Switzerland paintings and three col- of KIshcr Body Dlvaon ■ TJ , itolrT, oi the' Aerie 1230 and the Democratic jymos llare>iand Sen RavmnnH Mu.stum. Club of Pontiac, Mr. Shearer p Dzendzel of Detroit criti the stolen arti- also served on the executive I -.ed the rin as a^^ immediately board of Fisher Body Local 590. | mantuvJr Both said Roley ’ Surviving is his wife. Char-1 trip to ^mpaigr^r' President. I House Republican Leader! reported by Robert Waldron of- Grosse! Pointe said Romney’s speeches 'v^lchmen tied up in the mu-abroad were Uon-pOlitical. I« basement. “To say hb b running fori ^^be men were not injured but President is inaccurate,’’ Wal-; biken to hospital with mild dron said, “but to say he is be-' FIDYD J. WOOSTER SOUTH LYON - Service for Floyd J. Wooster, 77, of 119 W. Liberty will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Phillips Funeral Home. Burial will be in South Lyon ford Township and Mrs. Rich-1 Mr. Wooster died Saturday. | considered for President is TIED TO CHAIRS ard Davis and Mrs. Donald He w^s a member of the First: ” | Fcbce said one of the watch- Arntz, both of Pontiac;, and j Pre.sbyterian Church; South' Bouiney said r e p e a t e d I y | men left the building about 9 grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Lyon Lodge No. 319, F&AM; I'^bcoughout the ' trip that his j p.m. to make rounds outside. He James Apley of Auburn Heights, the Order of Eastern Star; and *’f^'^‘-’bes had nothing whatever was seized by two men, who put '^!«S. GEORGE HUBBARD BIRMINGHAM - Service for Mrs. George (Evelyn L.) Hub-hard, 64, of 1184 Dorchester will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Don-elson - Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. the Worden Farm Bureau. Surviving are his wife, Nina; one son, Adelbert J. of South Lyon; and one grandson. to do with politics. A number, of businessmen who accompanied legislative leaders and the .Governor said they made .several valuable contacts on the trip. , Romney remained at home in British workers have developed an, alarm clock designed the Detroit suburb of Bloomfield to wake deaf and blind people Hills over the weekend. He was Mrs. Hubbard diiiti today after I tiy means of a vibrator placed scheduled to return to his office long illness. She was a mem-1 under the sleeper’s pillow. today. a handkerchief around his face. He was taken inside and forced to call his companion; who was then overcome, Both were tied to chairs and tape was placed over their eyes. When the two men did not answer a routine telephone check, police were sent to the scene, The stolen paintings had been lifted from their frapies. Hospital Ends Open Houses Poiiliac Sliite llo.spital will not hold an open hoii.se th|s year during National Menial Health Week wlilcli opened icalay ae cording to Dr. Donald W. Marlin, medical supcrinlendi'ni. Willi nearly 10,000 person.s conincteci during the year, llirough .scheduled tours of the hospital or speakers from Hie liospitnl staff, it i.s felt hy hospital officials that a year round ()|)cn door policy is |)referable to an annual open house. In making the announcement. Dr. Martin said organizations and the general public are invited to arrange for scheduled tours, speakers and other hoij-pilal prograpis. The superintendent suggested arrangeiiients should be made by contacting the ho.spijal’s community relations department. Death Claims Radio Vocalist Service for Pontiac Soloist Set Tomorrow Pope Speaks to Americans (Message Carried Via Early Bird Satellite NEW YORK (AR) 1‘anl VI .spoke to the American people live on television for the flrat lime tixlay via the Early Bird communications satellite, and commenUxI on the "as tounding Inventions" of science which made the telecast possible. Speaking In I'lnglish from thp Apo.stolic I’alace, the pontiff appeared on the NBG TV "Today” show. , The 1(50-word transatlantic greeting to Americans came via the 85 pound cylindrical satellite which ha.s been in orbit since last April (i. The text of the pontiff’s address: "Dear people of the United Stales: "We are very happy to greet you today liy means of this startling new communH'utlons satellite. MODERN WORLD "This mcKlern world aiul its inventive genius continue to amaze us with its striking discoveries, Who would have dreamt Jlial siu'li means of communication would be at our disposal in our lime? "The tremendous power of man’s intellect is reflected in these fislounding inventions and scientific advances. Would that nil of tliese were dedicated ex-•lusivcly to the benefit of men ■very where! V * * "We pray to Almighty Gwl thaf lhc.se marvelous discoveries will serve the cause of peace, and will make It possible for men to cooperate with each other in making this 11 better world and n happier place where men grow and develop mlo the likeness of their creator and find fulfillment of their desires in.sofar as this is possible on this earth. A aerlea of controlled explo-Hlonn were set off recently In Lake Superior to obtain a profile of a portion of tl>e earth's criiHt. Noiica Of eutfne » a U h«r«l»v ulvwi by- -- May i, IMJ, at .. Woodward, carnda laiul Counly, Mlchloan, public Hla of I960 Plymouth 6, I-door, baarina larl ------ -"■■■'-“A .... ‘■-'-I, for car lal number J10II300M, will b lo lha hlghatl bidder. In may la mada al HJOO W.......-...... (lale, Oakland Cflimty, Michigan, lha placa discounI ; 4/l»/aS. . AaacHiAT.iia COHPOBAIiO May :i and 4.% a. Kallh NOTICB OP PUBLIC 8 rlira It haraby gluan try Ml lhal on May 6, 1968, al NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE llgnad lhal nfl May 6, 1968, al LO «'< am al IVSOO Wrmdward, Ferndala, ( land linmly, Michigan, public ynla i 1989 Chtyrtlnr a, SAb 4 door ladan, b Ing Iba larlal number MSTIIIWSS, wM held, (or cn»h to lha OaTihnd r ORPORATION . Kirllh investors! WE ARE OPEN TONIGHT ,. . and every Monday I veiling from 7 to 9 p.m, for Your Added Convenience. “We invoke upon all of you an abundance of heavenly blessings and graces; may your grand nation prosper in peace and happine.ss,’’ Come In and Discuss Your Investment Problems with a Registered Representative. Watling, Lerchen & Co. 2 Norttf Saginaw St. Pontiac, Mictiigan FE 2 9274 Service for Ffoyd A. Campbell, 15p E. Iroquois, a pioneer radio vocalist, will be at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial in Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. Campbell died Saturday after a long illness. He had lived in Pontiac for 60 years. For a number of years he was a tenor soloist at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York. Ho was a past president of the Orpheus Club of Detroit and a member of that group for 50 years. (M/fdwv. AiyiJlMORIAL OP YOUR LOVB Here i» a gift for eternity — a besiutiful Barrc Guild Memorial created by craftsmen, and guaranteed to endure forever. JBARREl iGUILDi He whs also a lifetime gov-1 ernor emeritus of the Michigan Male Chorus Association. Monuments PRIOR TO RETIREMENT Prior to his reitrement several years agOy, he was employed by the Sherwfn Williams Co. ' Surviving in addition to h i s wife, Lucy, are a daughter, Mrs. Daniel C. DeGraff of Birmingham, and a son, Endres of Wilton, Conn. He is also survived by a brother and six grandchildren. Advance Parafroop Unit Arrives in Viet WILLIAM J. BEAUCHENE LAKE ORION - William J. Beauchene, 19, of 785 Markdale, ((jied Saturday ef injuries sustained in an automobile accident. His body is at Alienas Funeral Home. A hiechanic at £)umatic Devices, Inc., of Madison Heights, Mr., Beauchene was a member of St< Joseph Catholic Church. Surviving are his wife, Karen J.; a daughter, Deborah A., al home; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Beauchene of Lake Orion;-and' two sistfers, Mrs: William Flood of Berkley and Elizabeth A", of Lake Orion. WAYNE El'CENE ELLIOTT OBION TOWNSHIP -I Service for Wayne .Eugene Elliott, 47, ot 165 Schorn will be 11 a.m. Wednesday at the Flummerfelt .Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in East Lawn Cemeteiyt Lake Orion. J r SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — The advance unit for 3,-500 American paratroo"pers arrived in Saigon today. The balance of the three airborne battalions was expected within a few days. The paratroopers are the first U S. Army combat ground unit assigned to Viet Nam. U.S. and Vietnamese officials said they would "fherease security ot key installations and press the war more effectively ” to around 36,000 men. There already 8,500 U.S. combat Marines in South Viet Nam'. Commanded by Brig. Gen. Ellis W.- Williamson, the airborne contingent includes two infantry battalions, one artillery battalion and the equivalent of one battalion of various support units. Sixty,, men. were in the advance unit. U.S. officials declined on security grounds to, say |zhen the main force would arriv,e. But they said they would be stationed at Bien Hoa, a big air base 12 miles northeast of Saigon and at Vuntay, a coastal city 40 miles southe'ast of Saigon. J'_ . 7 ■■ ■■1 The new arrivals comprise' most of the 173rd Airborne Bri-! Stationed on Okinawa. j Stationed in defensive roles, a U.S. spokesman said, the American paratroopers “will free Vietnamese combqt troops for offensive operations.’’/ U.S. officials announced that three new Army helicopter, companies of 260 men and 25 helicopters arrived over the weekend. there are now 12 Army helicopter companies in Viet Nam, two Marine squadrons and several Vietnamese squadrons. I U.S.,Navy jets blasted a railroad siding and three boxcars 100 miles south of Hanoi. Groundfire was light and all the planes returned to their carrier. Other ■ American aircraft bombed suspected Viet Cong positions in South Viet Nam, including a heavy attack on a Cdmmunist-infested zone north j of Saigon. •*. y# - * . A U.S. official said there were no air raids over North Viet Nam today, presumably because of bad weather. U.S. officials said Air Force Capt.; Ronald E. Storz of Ports-, mouth, N.H., disappeared in a light observation plane last Wednesday and-a search for him has been abandoned. positions in South Viet Nam, including a heavy attack on a Communist-infested zone north of Saigon. 3^,000 MEN ; • n : U.S. officials.sai(llhe.a3:bo.rne cratingent would bring the total U.S. strength in South Viet Nam RESUME STRIKES After being idled Saturday by unfavorable weather, U.S. jets T§SRmed air strikes Sunday against Communist North Viet Nam. fci CONG POSITIONS Storz took off Iron) Oong Ha, close to the border with North Viet Nam, on a flight of about six miles. U,S. officials did not rule out the possibility that he went down in North Viet Nam. Other American, aircraft bombed suspected Viet- Cong ; U S. Marine medium tanks went on their first patrol Sun-I day. The 52-ton M48 tanks, with j Marines clinging to their sides, encountered, only scattered Vfef i Cong fire. There were np casu-1 alties. ■, ‘ ; In London,' the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization/s ministerial conference opened with a call, from British 'Prime Minister Harold Wilson for “an honorably negotiated settlement’’ of the war in South Viet Nam. OPPOSED TO TALKS From Peking, came a Communist Chinese announcement that it was firrhly opposed to any peace talks on Viet Nam or Lacfe during a proposed international conference on Cambodia. The New China JVews i|gency said the PeKing regime , was '‘resolutely opposed to the endeavor of U.S. imperialsim and its followers to bundle together the question of Cambodia and the questions of Viet Nam and Laos.’’ . The British believe the proposed conference to j guarantee Cambodia’s neutrality could be used for starting talks on the fighting in neighboring Viet Nam and Laos: North Viet Nam issued angry blasts on several fronts, including a protest against the Australian government’s decision to dispatch andnfantry battalion to South Viet Nam." Hanoi protested to the three-nation control commission that the United States and South Viet Nam had seized a fishing boat with four fishermen abp84id fn^ North Vietnamese waters. ,7 .VtV The North Vietnamese paper People’s Army claimed the Communists shot down 163 U.S, planes over North Viet Nam. last month. ^ The U S. Defense Depjartment said since U.S. air strikes bdgan Feb. 17, it Hlis announced, the loss of 33 American and three South Vietnamese planes. ...Jf'J Jl-........J ORDER NOW MONUMENTS . . H95 MARKERS ..... $35 SELECT NOW FOR MEMORIAL DAY Memorials for Over 72 Ycar.s Open Evenings Until 8 P.M. Sundays 1 'til 4 INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry FE 5-6931 Bronze Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Perhaps it’s because they remind of happy days of the life that has just passed. It may bring to mem-/ory days in the garden, or a hippy fvent of which flowers are jso often a part. For many reasqns, ' flower^ serye their highest ultimate purpose in bringing beauty, to the memory of the funeral, , ' (Phone * (Federal 4-4511 (PoA.ldnq V Our on-Aokm 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC ggo(g3=>0^|=>0^3=SK)^}=><^^ Death Notices TIIH'l'pNTiAC rilKHS, MOr^HAV, MAY :t, lima lilli WwM M.b » Htlp w«it.il kJ, » Ktir W.rt.(l M.k =:fl5s™ "£ aUTJSfS. £,I'!.■=Ei sL.tti.jr* iL'S“fEC.Vi:"i!ir IfSfl rlSriE: ri‘t»ll(*s III The 2, 5, 18, 47. 5«, fi.t, 77, 79, 83, 108, 112. 4 Men Needed rtnd ^/iir ton z'vzz't: ‘CSv* .;:.s'.Ts.,s FORMER BEU PifUlH ~.,sLr»v.v±.s.r«. [k. HOUSEWIVES riAtioNAi tmmt 'i:S«3Sr' rrr?.....!.:';.' »*“». ei?7A MiORJ 'CAR SALESMAN Xni''L',r':'e i::" wANitn, ,,io.k .AYM^ EK«l.«nl ppportunlly for ,,lv.nc,. m«n, ll . you h.v. proven K& MAruiipl rr .JtC MIrN '» WAMii l V ^0^•) YtAUS 0^^^(,|;N|ERAI^ ........r £rH"''r MANPOWER MECHANICS GAS AND DIESEL I " " " m7p,„7A,i ^ ......................... ......... ..... ; » s.rS “ -A w..,.- N«k PRESS WANT ADS HAVE THE LAST WORD RESULTS! HH5-“rrsF ’’rriss.? ;-„“e I T«in no* , A B A M. TO 5 P.M. grt I ' .§H£' ..oJ'SSKi "°”o. „,„ D. E. Pursiey "HUNTOON SPARKS-GRiFFIN People Are Shopping Everx Day.. Thru . The Pontiac Press Classified bection It's the ffuick, Phone 332-8ia lATE TIlW PONTIAC PHKSH. MONDAV. mat Jl. J» 47/HZZY Hy Kttt« ()HHm> S«l« Mouui Skara Uviiig QuoAari .i3 c^i i-tom^batkmU*^""Is »'ur WAITRESSES arKsr«'“"' "Sriiir.rirrr,..™:.'. ■.Tzz:i::u wmOWM WISHFI. HOliM Km' W' ym. )o I: MOTEL HOTEL 1 TO'50 WARREN STOUT, Rftullor | .Si™-- smMi Vi'X CASH ■ ■■■................... kT;:;%Jo^Mlu'‘’KC^TA^ 48 hours, :Sal«Housei 49 R.:^ l,nprovo.on, | " ‘'£r£vouM.u£"" Heipw-ni-,0 B rr-'A’in'" •'"rA£iV:u,.:ix.,.r.r^'’'. blood DONORS Work Wanted Male 11 —! ITRGENTIY NEEDED ; A T Spring pean Up , RrAUTOR reanio BuiuDt •“ST-, .,i»AW.i‘“i SHSHai ..........„ i";?.V 'r‘l' "i »■'•"»••• r « LAZENBY Frushour. Struble I ROY LAZENBY, Realtor ....... ‘ GILES HUDSON'S ..^’'‘liME^r. ... o!:r.:r::.c..n. o.: -r * :S,;: ^ ~ M ixed , .'iZv\orJi«.H.«A’’"'^?iN, 4 bEDR00M TRI LEVEE ■, toTM*'"Ar^e*............ ’ ACRE BATEMAN _____S TO SELL FR0^ FULL I^LOOR TIME TRADE-IN PROGRAM OR 4-03061 BE7l;t7S5B":-^-= = A"=" .= ;=sss;7^ s^Esi:pii=l “;S^~ ■ c-?r.,.s: ‘.Ti. ,s ;s"».‘S: „i.=i I ’»fr Taylor Realty ,.,-.rr.r:' wrTo.„ ^ ’ i».A sr;^rr:;x,,r';s -s'sr.,''-; ...A.I'!?;,™' I-A LAWN SERVICE ! K,,,oA 3 c.,C'r „ _ „ ,„rSiS,:ps:;:A; i,si“-!is=?« SsSS smm isSkisisr^^ ,,irir=,„ isSsI. I;??:""::?" s,".'rr?..,‘v, ssss O'NEIL U.r'r^..r? ,^Mri"Se7v.r’f” A-1 BUYS WATERFORD REALTY v.„ ta;^^ KENT I'frfSs ■mms Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor DORRIS sssisfi ANNEn (NCOMI? On (orn«r Ini, J unv< kltnnlt. Two ] room nni ix •|)IT Will) T/A oil h«n| wllli IwiatiiMV l«ni«l. liuoK mil f^rliMI a 'linni «n(j conirol «|r Honing e< IiiOmI >0 ncr* Mkhinu lake liaii eil" nlea AlEwlnia,“*'l(U**v* m*!Iil«iir* imilllHim. |ir, iiXlht. Iiome. aeiioi 1(^CRE FARM 30 mlnutei npr|h of Pontiac, MmfernOad^ k^lche'n?'^))*! nil heal. Snr" laiiek. Proili I horte harn. aihTlllmial" a ‘Verry park WAflRFORT viLlAGt lllu\hmte"I IiT"V1',Smi '"lown'’'n'l» TIMES REAITY Income Poporty 50 9FAMIIY APARTMENT, i ROOMh PrtCl» r-p A 1 INVESTMENT WARDEN E Mwyy PontlM;. ■ , , /»,' BUy, ' »BLe, ' ANO TRAtfi we nei oAD »HOT AND NIBLil slieiu, Freil'k Baloadlny, UL T-1I»T. SPndl-6rav«l—Dirt 76 raaionable, OR BEAUTIFUL iilverlieil Mil, i 17*1 BOAD OBAVei , TOP S< lark ilhT, ill! iand. Iiiifiriinu T Yard i oAp* pF pgAT. e OB ;i IAND, ORAVB'., « l«>3. RICH BLACK ^ attention truckers 0011. T. »=IU, e work. gM M7X i ILI biRT, MAr l.OAPgD. $ ^ YARD Lake Property i ACHfc tAKfe rNONlAE '‘Khl I’ll jusi charge in, iMtrtv 6hop. FE s9Sflo. I chai’|.je it, and <’ljar|.i(» out!” TV re i-m? B Walton, corner ol ; AND WHITE 17" DIRT, TOP SOIL, Fill. I Mel s ITurklng Ffi » 7774. s Hia(k diht, a yards lellvereil, TB 4 ASai. WAY ORAVEL AND PUL dellverarl. Hn , 4.T743, FI S'HS'' 1" WARD PAHTRIDOF AI » 4 JMI OR WO SI7W R LADY OP THE l.AKIiS 1 ullee and large lakefionl PARTY STORE RESTAURANT on. Money to Loon 61 Sole Household Goods l5aNS !*iri,ll¥:r I ENGINE GOKART, :i,l IL II Atwaler nutlroard. FE- Tea I ) UAh ANil OH MJifNA(E andler Henllno. OR » SAJJ. eURNACBS lAKB BUIIDfc'RS Sli Id, graval, till dirf. I i,,Ali sl/FS. i rFF USED TIRES For Sole Miscellaneous II c. IIORSBPOWFR SUMP i'll IP DOING ANNOUNCeMBNlS lOP SOIL, PPA ^^SAND^ “S'la'ifjV CK DIRT, FIIU DRY CLEANER lu waII cnrpRlIng, dining , lnclude‘< crtilifr. 1 lown 6(r; i&OA kSS l AKEFRONT AL PAULY, REALTOR 4SU DIXIE, REAR i ISOO EVES. FB ;i 7 PLEASANT ACREAGE: WHEN yOU NEED $25 TO $1,000 BATEMAN STATE FINANCE CO j MM I nnuac H Mortgngo Loans BARGAIN SALE d''let'y'spl’n Dry''"' ^ ^1 WEEK SPECIAL j Hand Tools-Mochinory 68 V" RADIAL ARM SAW IPOWER LIAMS LAGE Ironlage. t4,i00. S ACRES TTO'kMO' rnllino hard Ion road, ST,750, Teimi parcels nea John K. Irwin ntQf. Oil AC furnAci High. PHced «f onl) onTy 10 per cent dbwr ^ TERMS 0 ACRES - vIIUt And 0 ACRES Party Store SDM . CRUMP ELECTRIC | BASSt'TT 3PIECE BEOROOM. I Mysical Gooas ■ ANY NEW KOHLER I 71 CAMPBELL A8? 7:100 SYl Vi I EES I BEDROOM SUITE ■S';.:.". CASH - CASH, GOT SE ROOMS Of CARf*ETING. Tlngh. OuMers I I ED WAYNE WIsfonUn Itio off. LEW BETTERl Y, Ml A8002. BA( DWIN SPINET ORGAN, USED HA6 PAfCUIDlOfC MU6t Ull lAKE PRONt ‘homes NEW utfd. J. L. DAlly Co., EM J LAKE LIVING, PONTIAC 15 ^^iMVO^^lArrm ^ ^ ...... , IrtAM 10^ couplV. A rrM n^ FOR | BRANG NEW i URNITURE P J 3j|)t N "'“"/I JoirREAiTy"’ 1 Home Owners W7s °,rso'w«tkiy ... ...’p’rTT.iiB‘‘»Mcr*™M‘’”’.»,oo»s, «a»a» «» « ”78 (Belt.,) $3 We.kU iJrAND NEW CONSOI E PIANO ROCHESTER -LAREVILLE RESTAURANT-TAVERN ' Drawing lubB'lanXl l”o c'^aM'r'aX I CHECK, LOWEST RATES $478 NEW I 141 $4 Weekly | (Best) ROOM BARGAINS hlor High, EKcepllonal well ton/ shucled two bedroom hungaloy ^ North Point Reoitv BE A WOLFE, a?8:il.H I) Nell ( rowe, 114 E 4lh., Ro, Spring Building Sites rx 1' from lake, ctfn be arra FE 4 3544 or F6 >-4810 ' SUBURBAN WEST amlnum sided J room. Excellent Beautiful family i yrtln^rtt^a.Too'wMh VOO dowtt WARDEN REALTY HURON OR Upper LonmLoke OMFIELD MILl\ SCHOC ROLFE H, SMITH, Realtor I f ;i 7848^^^ ^n'vlT’*’r e :i iin? STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE t J:. 6-ZDO/ Li can’t rail , : Mail Loan;l)y-Phon(> w"beoroom (hrd|7$d h<‘W) t)( GALLAGHER'S MUSIC I Ifl E. HURON EE 4 OSf I Rdyal Oak Stora 4324 WoOdWar I BETWEEN 13 and 14 MILE 1 OPEN MON. ERI. 'TIL 9 PM. 1 FREE PARKING BRONZE OR CHROME nala, BRAND NEW IF NCH ELECTrtiC RANGE. 1 II OR 3769/ 1965 PLASTIC PIPE PRICES ; HAWAIIAN ELI CIRIC STEEL GUI ^ : Irtf. 3 lack ampf. FE 4:)7l8. ^ jlFONARD BABY GRAND PIANO, I LOWRY HOLIDAY. JUST I IKE ORGANS. ALL STYLES , Silver. Schoolhou HOUSEMAN SPITZLEY I nern dissolving 338-0000 I Sale Land Contracts SYLVAN LAKE ull baiemeni, room s excellent possibllll rms available. LAKE ORION Evening* MA 4/321 Waterford Hill Manor 1 to 50 LAND CONTRACTS * ■ Home Owners ■ MONEY ^ ;rib;'iio.83r i lb., S17.62 PI •wer pipe, ».3 ,l OA^ BUNK BEDS It Of 15 styles, trundle t: lete 149.50 aSd up F BETWEEN 13 and 14 MU OPEN MON, FRI. 'TIL 9 P FREE PARKING j 1450 "lull pr^ke*' Sale Farms 561 SfBEOROOM FARM Coll FE 8-0066 Sislock & Kent, Inc. 13M Pontiac Stale Bank Bldg ! barn and 2,14j feet ol road In 338-9294 334-0977 ' age. $14,900. $2,500 down. WALTERS LAKE-r-RONT , COZY I BEDROOM LOG CABIN I C. PANGUS, REALTOR $7,800 I0»» DOWN. IMMEDIATE - 430 ^,,,5 7 2815 u’ake privileges Call Collect N CHOICE VACANT LOTS $395 24 ACRES AND e BEbnOOM H Smith & WM.eman I Northern Property 51-A *2'/, ACRE LOTS NEAR AuSABLE | Township. --ACRES Baldwl $5,000 down, IN ORrONVILLE KO road. Total price $3,000 c« HUMPHRIES REALTY ot'fPJ-.'! WARREN STOUT, Realtor | riRh'rMORTGro^E pSn^ '* *■ opdvke Rd. FE 5-8145; ARE LOWER open Eves, 'in 8 pm ' MORRIS PLAN MORTGAGE CO, $2,800 DISCOUNT Sold for $14,750, present beinnci . $121559 al $100 per month, 4 uier-: on7y w,m*ca^"" , SwopS 63 Warren Stout Realtor ‘........;.. 150 N. Opdyke Rd Ph FE 5 8165 3 BEDROOM RANCH, ONE ACRE; ■ ACTION I l”;a.''Xre'yrT'IchTckT9'3'^37,T on your land contract, large or I rep. Hoyt Really small. Call Mr. Hliter, FE 3 0179,17-FOOT CHRISCRAFT, im hp. Broker. 3640 Ell.abelh.... ‘ COMPLETE DINING ROOM SUITE, ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE AgTOMATIC ZIG ZAG SEwik '".A'lrcroTi FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR, OR 3 0903. GAS RANGE, 2 YEARS OLD, LIKE Ro4d. sanded I . swap. OR 3.2674. CONTRACTS FOR SALE, M954 FORD, NEW MOTOR. _ ------------ AUBURN," Chevy 6, slick, 2 wheel heavy GOOD DISCO HEIGHTS AREA. Frushour & Struble t. 1397 h •tardwei ^ Crock OIL AND .......... ....... autorraiic water healers, hardwert and elec Irical supplies Crock, soil, coo. per, black and galvanUed and fillings. Brothers pah and R I. OR 3 HEfGHTS SUPPLY ,2485 Lapeer Rd. FE 4-5431 BEEF AND PpRK-^HALF AND > CHEVY. SWAP pR HIGHEST 4 3718. ...... $20 down, $20 month. Bloch Bros., OR 3-1295, FE 4-4509. HUBBARD LAKE, BRICK RANCH unlinished Inside. MA.S-7221. KALKASKA" AREA 5-ACRE CAMP Business Opportunities 59 33 ICE CREAMS Wanted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A GAS RANGE. GOOD CONDITION,' . I PORTABLE ir TV FOR PHOTO « Inch, $59 FE 2 8726. I enlarger.,034-6429. GREEN CHANNEL- BACK LOVE ALE bR TRADE EQUITY lAKE condition. 644-4783. front. Black Lake for travel HAYWOOD WAKEFIELD CHAM I trailer. 482-2925. P*one labie and chairs, electric ; Opdyke Mkl. FE 5 7941. Bottle Gas Installation Two 100-pound cylinders and agiilp-■ ----1 Plains Gas Co,, favorite i B available. Own and opi ur 0 wn old fashion I parlor. Very profitable a 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS CAGE. stove, best offer. 363-3748. FE 5-0872 CASH 'x6' Mehogdoy ently ' See I NICHOLIE . Box 834 F MILLERS^URG 1450 HARRINGTON HILLS Three - bedroorh bi LJving room. Kitchen ____ Full basement. Oil F Vacant. Only $11,500 oi TERMS. NORTH SIDE Living and dining area, kjlichen. Full .basement. Oil HA he«l. Vacant. About $350 moves you Ip. BETWEEN ONAWA.Y AND ROGERS CITY Low, long rancher with attar garage, 3 bedrooms, fireplace, . the water. Will accept Pontiac area properly, Tom Bateman, realtor, Pontiac, Michigan. -FE 8-7141. WATERFRONT- LOTS ON FAMOUS Martini Lake, largest Inland lake In Mecosta County, the Pbiyland o( Central Lower Michigan. Cabins .V.B8 . lu deal. WARREN STOUT, Reoltof 1. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8141 CASH For equity or land contract. Small-esl possible discount. Mortgages available. Call Ted McCullough Sr, 462-2211. Sale Clothing 2 FORMALS, ..IZE e voiui.1 LIVING ROOM __________________ _ _ (rew, Sylvan Village. ■ MAHOGANY DINING ROOM REN- ID CARRY . . -Grooved ihogany V-Grooved Open MON. and FrI. Special electric guitar sale, solid body, electric, plus carrying bag and amplifier, $95.00. New selection of used pionos and organs. Come in and see these low priced bargains. W u r I i t z e r ”4300" and "4500" organs now in stock. See all these top buys at the Jack Hagan Music Center DRAYTON PLYWOOD Elizabeth Lake Roae 332-0500 30; TROMBONE, $35) COlf- Automatic Car Wash 50c wash. Slay In, car. Dr minutes! Several cities open. ARRO REALTY ^ 5143 Cass-Elizabeth Road H. jpoR land CONTRACTS- 3 1355. 1 Welt, LAND CONTRACTS, R,EA- May 10. Lots sho Lackle, Barryton, I SUBURBAN Three - bedroom bungalow. LIvInc and dining area, kitchen and util |Re|prt Property 52 About $300 moves you In. Eves, call MR. ALtON FE 4-52 NICHOLIE HARGER CO. $33 PER MONTH Payment Including Interest after small down payment, will buy a genuine Redwood or Va Redwood Fog J bedroom size summer cottage, GONTPLETELY MODERN. Nothing more to buy. Just move MICHIGAN 'i j, -Business Sales, Inc. "■ ' JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER - * ^S73 S. Telegraph FE 4-1582 COIN OPERATED AUTO WASH ’ Your opportunity to get In on the ground floor In this fantastic and last growing Industry. Let us explain ^he operation and details to ment and *}o'taliohs and arrange financing. Ask for Mr. Hoose or vet, $20. Both Waltz Length. Good Condition. OR 4-1887 after 6:30 p.m, 2 LADIES FORMALS, SIZE 12, ■= CLOSET COMBINATION W I code ballcock E.'4x, pre-linished mahogany I plywootl 4xH pre linlshed mahooany plywood t'l-FORMALS, SIZE 1 I NEED ------ -------- sonable discounts. Ear Realtor, 4417 Commerce Ro( EMpirc 3 2511 EMpIr S E A S O N E D LAND CONTRACTS! tioor lengl FORMAL.S, 3 SEM'I-FL...... . ........- doming. Reasonable. FE 8 9724. A LOVELY FORIvLAL. WITH LONG-over skirt, size 10, $15, OR 39170, FITTED BODICE WEDDING GOWN, Chantilly lace, chapel train, size 18. Call between 1 and 4, 338-8439. FLOWER GIRL'S DRESS. plywood $ TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland IRWIN BALLERINA, 32 OvYight. SHORT / "'sEWme TACHfUE^ DPLuJe CLEARANCE’ OF y 3 E D OFFICE rAftiMFT ^ fumllurfi ana machines. Forbes, buUon^ holes, off account In 9 MOS. AT SB elso buy . PER MONTH OR $72 CASH BAL- CIRCLE FLUORESCENT.’ LIGHTS, ANCE. Guaranteed. Universal Co.,] newest lights tor kitchens $12-95 j FE 4 0905, I value/ $6.9$, factory marred. 'nice' GA^ stove and REFRIG- 5-2766. , $35 f . Harris, FE . . .. ZT E 2.520j^ SiZE 5 dresses; SKIRTS er, lav. toilet, : lank, chlm- _____ ______I Pontiac lures hardwood floors ant wall to wall carpeting, sharp kitchen and dlnlni beaches tine fishing Open every day. 10 A 2 Mi, east. Fj-ee DON'T SELL YOURSELF' SHORT!. Lots-Acreage . Sewer, water, LAKE FRONT. A real nice year round 2 bedroom bungalow with hardwood floor and nylon carpeting In the living room. Real sharp kitchen and dining area. Full bath •,*ake ?rohl. Large utility rdom with lots of cupboard space. 1 car attached garage. Nicely , landscaped lot. Thiv home Is in excellent tondlflon Inside and out. Call before It's gone. DRAYTON WOODS. Here Is the home '■ type hills' ____ the -young executive type couple. Situated in rolling —‘ed area. 2 bed- .™„, ___________ck, featuring large living room and picture window. ■ Nice dining area and hardwood tioors. 2 car attached garage with cement drive. Full bath and large btllity rdom': Lovely large lot with Plenty ol shade frees. Some, lin-■ ■ ing work to be done on the side; buf — ---- SA-2-5-10 ACRES. ' OA 8-2013 A. SANDERS.^ ■30 ACRES Excellent partly wooded* 100 pi cent usable 30 acres located ne; Orlonville. Priced at only $12.50 Recession-Depression Proof Business DON Exceptional High. Earnings PART-TIMEWORK , FOR ADDED INCOME r persons, male o» GIROUX Reliable female, a,uo - ,u handle the world famous R.CA1, ..... -- --- westinghouse REAL ESTATE < After 5. FE 2-9502 or FE 4-5039 4511 Highland Rd. (M59 ) 473-7^37 CLARKSTON AREA , COUNTRY HOMESitES We have 4 parcels left In restricted . Clarkston Hills Estates.: Located corner of Reese and Hplcgmb-lyst 3/,.-mlle. N.W. of Clarkston. The parcels have a minimum' of 2001 It. road frontage and up to a depth , ol 400 ft Priced at $3,900 eacn. Sylvania, G.E. _ . TELEVISION and RADIO TUBES sold through our latest modern type tube testing and merchandising units. Win not Interfere with your present employment. To qualify you must have: $3,490. Cash hours weekly. Should Aet up to $500 per month In' your spare time. This company .wilt extend financial assistance to full time ft desired. I, today. I ing ottered for sale !. The parcels have ’•ssr,! ■ !98. vy. Waltpn FE 3-7883 5854 Clarkstpil Real Estate l ■ T MA 5-5B2I ' TELEVISION ' P.O. BOX 3373 YOUNGSTOWN 12. OHIO sell. CAPITOL SAVINGS 8. LOAN ,ASSN.. 75 W. Huroil. FE^-0541. QUICK CASH FOR LAND, CONTRACTS Clark Real ‘Estate, FE 3-7888, Res. FE 4*4813,_ _ Mj;^CIark WE BUY-FOR OUR OWN. RETLL last service. Bring your contract and abstract with you. Ask tor, Mr. Brown Sr., L. H. Brown,] Realtor, 509 Elizabeth Lake Road.i Ph. FJE_4-3^_or _FE^ 2-4810.^ j Money to loan “ 61 32-pc. set dishfes Free Tables and Lamps Free Foam Pillows TEEN' coat! _OR 4-0067. Sale Household Goods 65 1 GROUP BEST BUYS (Licensed 7 FINANCIAL WORRIES? Let Us Help You! BORROW UP TO $1,000 34 months to pay _ ,------, available BUCKNER' NORGE REFRIGERATOR; 12 CU. It., go^ condition,-$40. FE 5-4334. PHILCO automatic WASHER, 1943 model. Almost new. Reason- E STEREO. value, $4.95, 'eclory Michigan Fluores(:ent, COMPLETE stock; 0 PIANO, ont»t, »5u; CoABt Wid«t SPtNFT, WALNUT, ALMOST NpW. RUCkiNG and rOIlDoZino npticlrtllilno in umiilKir |ob«. Clark-hion. MA 5 1229. Peti-Huiiting Dogi 79 ieWMAN^^IPPHlROS, I MALF. EEK-OUD KlTriNS. 2 MALt, 5 2242. DACHSHUND PUPS, TERMS. Sluil dogi. Jahelmi. FE 8-2538. Alril’OALE PUPS, AKC, CHAMPION slack, $50, FE 4 1114. Akc dachshund PUPPIES. StUD dogs. BSTELHEIMS, Fe 3 0889. .KC BOSTON T E tl'R 1 i H, MALE .K(, female BEAOLi, PUP, $35, 731 6814. KC POODLE STUdS-CLIPPINOS, Orchard Grove Kennel, MA 41113. ikC COLLIE pups"” TEAlipoI rary D and M„ warmed. 4710 In- AKC T > $100. I y sIlver poobLEs, . OR 3 7249. AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES. STUD service. IMATODD'S, 332-7139, AKC Coy and miniature I’liodlrs. 473 5130, AKC poodle PUPPIES, TOYS and mlnlaa, black, eurlcot, silver. $60 and up. Stud ^rvee, Tlkl'» golden Prince Cherming end Tiki's silver Pouka. 451-3445. ALL PET SHOP, HAMSTERS, 5S FE 4-6433. PETS. FISH and SUPPLIES. Ion Lake Feed end Ret Shop, 5 Cooley Lake Road. I E KITTENS. FREE 1*6”GOOD FREE KITTENS TO GOOD HOME. FREE KITTENS, I WEEKS OLD, llller-tralned. 444-9443. TWINS, « weeks, FE 4-4339. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, AKC, $75. MA 4-2504. HUNTING dogs; CHEAP. PERSONALiZlD POODLli CLIP-Plng^OH 3-0920. . POODLE PUPPiES, AKC. SILVER and whites. 8 wks. Good qualliy and temperament. 45V-4747. POODLES, "'BRdWtr 'MiNIAfURE female, silver toy mate, $75 each. 473 0242^3-7134. PUPPIES ~ 333-74C Richway Poodle Salon 821 OAKLAND ,FE 8-0024 S m'a L L,.WFM’TE' Ml nTaTUR E poodles, $40 MA 4-1395^ SIAMESE CAT, FImtLCE, I-YEAR-old, declewed, very clean, reasonable, OL 1-0743. _ _ UkC PLOTT HOUND PUPS, BRED 2474, alter 4. _ TRY BEFORE YOU BUY YOUR HOME FOR A PIANO ...__________ ONLY $2 PER WEEK ORINNELL'S (DOWNTOWN) 27 S. SAGINAW UPRIGHT PIANO IN EXCELLENT condition, reconditioned. OR 3-5484. USED GRAND PiANO, 5',"WAL-nut, good condition, bargain — LEW BETTERLY, Ml 4-8flM. USED GULBRANSlN ORGAN, LikE $595 Washer, $25. Electric i Free 9'x12' Rug WITH 3 Rooms New Furniture ONlY $327 $2.50 WEEK OR CAN,BE ________________FE 5-4712. dog" and martin HOUSESYklb-dies turn. 748 ^^hard Lake Ave. ENCYCLd”PEDiA, r945,”24 VOLUME. Lib. approved. Sacrlllce, 543-3515. refrigerator; $25. Dryer, '$35. FINE W I G, BEAUTIFULLY Gas stove, $25. Refrigerator with » .... 'Iti battery 14-FOOT CHEROKEE RUNABOUT hoat and frailer, $100. Call ‘ ____J 4. 33«^M39. uTOOt CHRIS C'RAFT~RUNAB0UT . DELTA runabout with I "" fiberglass top, boat cover er. Beautiful - Only $1,495. 5 panel. Turquoise and le. This one Is like ...... ;4i $1,295 1963 Vj-ton plekup. Turquoise, tlqi: 4-speed transmission, heavydt ; . TOM STACHLER t AUTO & MOBILE SALES iWi m Nitffn It. 2-4nt 14-FOOT FIBERGLAS RUN-A,-BOUT, vinyl top and curtains, lights, 30 h.R. I Mercury, tilt trailer, full pried $450. FE 4,9503. IS' MFO RUNABOUT'wiYh 'DEX-ter , trailer. 35 h.p. Evinrude "Latte" With electric starter and $995.1 646-6060 after 6 p.m. Cond. We also Carry the - Cruiser and Clam-shell (_ aluminum) pontoon boats. Paddle tfberglas sdeck boats, rpleasure. •" Good lor skiing o Patterson Chevrolet Co,' Woodward AVe, Ml 4-27351 . BIRMINGHAM__________ 1958 Chevy station wagon _____________ 1961 and 1962 Pontlacs .. $1095 up 1963 Ramblers,'1961 Chqvy' $895 up Plenty of pthers and trucks ECONOMY ^ARS 233J Dixie Hwy lV58 BUIC'K 2-DOOR SPECrALYfeAi dlio- and heater. Our as-l^ price Doc's Jeepland , Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 5210'Holly Rd. Holly, ME 4-6'771 — Open Daily and Sundays “ v GMC 1959 BUICKS (WE are loaded with emeral green and 1957 CHEVY. STICK SHIFT. GOOD Call Credit rubber. Clean. $300. FE 5-1706. I Dealer. 1 1 1958 CHEVY FOR sale OR TRADE, 1961 CORVAIR MONZA. 4-SPEEb. ..lue Irak ' ' _ FE 2-4124.__________________ | Fully equipped, $700. 335-9364. 332-9194 1958" CHEVY IMPaIA 2 - D6o"R 1961 CHEVY 2-DOOR, WILL MAKE ■HA'VE"~2)''BOtH [ ■ ' ■ ■ ‘ ““ _ excellent second' i. ... . ... -......... whole family, Fawn I ■ansmisslon. Full price, of only, automatic, only $S (k— , FACTORY BRANCH - New and Used Trucks FE-5-9485 ---- 675-OAKLAHO H $495, 1 MARVEL -• 251 Oakland / ' marvel - 251 Oakland / 1962 DODGE LANCER, 707-AUTO., 24,000 miles, owner . transferred. 1962 DODGE 2-DOOR, STICK SHIFT, ?5d1o^ tSater, Sharp, $895. HUNTER WjDGIE.—Birmingham, -Ml 7-0955. " Repossession 1963' FALCQN wagon. No money down, $7.46« weekly; Calf Mr. Jones at MA 52644. DeWer .; Y,', ‘T-... ..kririirTbrf 1 THK I'(A'I’IA(' I'Hli’SH. MON'IJAV. MAV H, 1005 1963 Ford ""^$1595 BEATTIE igKHS'S 1963'/:, FORD i-miffi 855 Oakland Ave. ,.,ua v;‘"^:r.ur7T:. Spar tan Dddqe 11^=1 '’5£"».S« 'eJH-SrSt-: "is lt.rl -l WANT New Car Warranty No Gimmicks — Just Built-In Confidence “■s S 1964 CHEVROLET WAGON. Row-. |rE“i, f.sss-i 1961 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE ¥imm fimi iiliss PONTIAC-BUICK 651-9911 855 ROCHESTER ROAD , 1960 Pontiar^ Asking $1095 Coll Mr. D«jrHI Thybault McAULlFFE ESTATE STORAGE LUCKY AUTO LOOK Volkswagen Center . Pontiac Retail Store 65 Mt. Clonions St, FE 3 7954 “c'CrsIar/ Over 75 19604964 Ronaults liRVf/rCirlpsf $2.98 to .$1098 olive’s Li BRICK ,u, i,.k.. Toniperalures Going' Dp-— Our Prices Going Down I NEW CAR TRADES 1964 Buick Eloctra 225 Convortifc 1964 Buick Electrn 22.5 coupe . 1961 Buick Elecirp Conver’lible $3181 $1,581 1964 Buick Wild! 1963 Buick LoSabro coiivorliblo, red 1960 Cliovy Bel Air'4 door liardtop 1961 Buick LnSabre < le' 1961 Buick Elcclru 4 Door Hardtop 1962 I 1961 1964 Buick Special 2 Door, V 8, Slick $2,788 $2188 $1,088 $3,188 $1488 $2,988 $1,588 $1,288 $1,888 T" MM® Ellsworih AUTO SALES 964 PONTIAC SAFARI STATION »,fWriTV'' DON'S 677 S. LAPEER RD. -ABSOLUTELY- SPECIAL PAYMENT PLAN you need help getting your credit re-established? If so, and you need a , come to the place where no application is turned down. All we ask for 1960 PONTIAC WFEKl Y PAYMENT 1960 CORVAIR $697 $697 1957 PONTIAC WAGDN $197 $397 MwS/d ,969 Au..n 9-.oor ..n, re.ay i PON1 : "Almost Too Nc ;; 1965 D A 1965 Bpnneville Coupe Was $4190.86 Now $3597 ■|ACS 5w to Be Used" EMOS 1965 Bonneville Vista bCk co7dovl’7j^*l9irk btCb^am IpT.Horl”'""''' Was $4707'48 . Now $3995 ’ 1 1965 PONTIAC 2 PLUS 2 Was'”$4486.21 Now $3824.55 1965 PONTIAC Tempest S~ “£v« - $700 Discount, , 1964 Pontiac MAY SPECIALS mmME mws VAL-U-RATED USED CARS 100% . Written! (guarantee romemP'' 1963 OLDS F-85 4-Door, V-8, mso^s - - ,5« $1695 $2195 Top.......$1195 matic,, radio, $1295 brakes, sffarp Birmingham trade. . ' $1995 OLDS "98" Luxury Sedan, with full power. Factory Air Conditioning ..... . $2495 - - s.„,„ . ,$2695 1963 Pontia^^ °"'"$2195 1963 Pontiac I960 OLDS steering. Brakes, New \6 1961. OLDS Cutlass Coupe, V^8, heater, power steering. Only , 1963 PONTIAC Sports Coupe, power 1963 : aT^he^' $2095 1963 Pontiac 1963 PONTIAC Catalina 6-Passenger Wagon, Power Steering, Brakes, a Real Buy at Only $! 1964 OLDS "88" Hardtop, Power Steering, $2195 1962 Pontiac $1895 1962 Pontiac? '’°"''$1895 1962 Pontiac ;.S $1995 1964 Tempest . $2395 .. 1961 Tempest $695 4962 Pontiac :$1855 1964 Pontiac $2695 1964 Pontiac $3742 1963 Pontiac $1995 1963 Pontiac $1995 1962 Pontiac $1995 $$ Top $$ Dollar $ave 1964 ( CHEVY Impala. Conve Shift, Fire Engine Red, White Top 1964 OLDS Starfire Coupe, Full Power 30-Day Unconditional Guarantee 1964 OLDS F-85 Coupe, 6-cyl. engine, : Guarantee $2595 V-8, Stick $2995 0- $1995 WE HAVE OVER 21 CHEVROLETS - ■ - FORDS - PLYMOUtHS .. RAMBLERS ' ' TO'CHOOSE FROM “2-YEAR WARRANtY RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC RAMBLER 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 \ . ON M24 IN LAKE ORION LAKE ORIQ)N MY 3-6266 GIILG’v.G’tJIiST 44 C 10 mi’- I'ON'riAC I'HKSS. MONDAY. MAY a. lOOfl fT; I I Nntlao't POMILAR YNi«TiH lAST TIMIS lONITI 1 “WHAT A* WAY TO 00!” “KITTEN WITH A WHIP” TUESDAY LADIES’ DAY Service Slated for Spike Jones EAGLE \TUES.|__________ FRANK SINATRA . "A HOLE IN THE HEAD” ■ LoS ANOKLKS (AP) Rosary will 1)0 recited tonight for Spike Jones, the band leader who introduced washboards, cowbells and cannon as innsical Inslnnnenls and arranged songs that kept people listening to I hem, Jones, who once Icj'iiw'd him self the dandruff in long hair music, died in his sleep at home Saturday. He was M A spokes-i,nan for llu' family said death was caused bv emphysema, a respiialorv alllicllon 'Bewildering, Frightening' Mov/e World Is at Julies Feet By genE: handsaker HOLLYWOOD (AP) - How does it feel at 20 to have the movie world practically at.your feet?'' “Very j^ce," .said Julie An-drewH, “but ttllghtly hewlL (lering Atxl a llllle frightening" The temperjiture outside the sound stage was in the 80s. The lovely Londoner, in polka-dot slacks and white shirt, looked cool and distractingly benullful. miracles (WorRer "v J SIARRING ANNI UANCNOrr 1 The cnicriaincr, borii l.lndlc\ ■Armstrong .loncs, suffered from aslluna aiaj rc'spiralory Ills in Ins lal(' yc4us lie was released Ihrcc wreKs ago from .Santa Momc;i llos|iilal, where he had hei'U 1,'ikeu after an asihmalic ;d1;ick The Hosarv toiughl tiild Mass Tiu'sdav at 10 a m will be in St. Vicioi'.', (hiirch. West Hollywood Inlerineiil is to follow at llolv (’loss Cemetery, Los An Ban on Mexican Imported Labor to Be Reviewed DKTltOlT (API A Michigan advisory panel will be selected lo assist the U .S Department of Labor in deciding whether to ladax Jhe ban on imported Mexican labor. Secretary W. Willard Wiriz said Saturday. Before her three plt^diires were released, she expInlniHi, ‘i had more fretslom. I can't go anywhere now without trclng recogni/.(xl" GIVES I’KKLING Success gives her the feeling that every new t>rojecl nuisl be better than the one before. 'Mary Poppins,” her first picture, in which she played the high flying, vocally magnificent governess, is the hottest film In Disney Sliidio history: -Studio accountants gh'cfiilly luedlrt a worldwide gro.ss of $(17 million. icalisi Hc'idcs he. wido\ Helen (iiavco, .huies leaves a son. Spike .Ir , 1(1, da.e'hlers Leslie, l.'i, and (iina Marie, G, and Linda, '23. a danghii'r h\ a Michigan's pickle industry, Ihe nation's top pickle iinxlucer has complained aboul Ihe ban. Wirt'/ said Ihe panel also would have authority lo make recommemialions on Ihe use of 'Braceros", Mexican field workers, in ca.ses of temporary labor shortages. Th(‘ secretary discusswl the possible relaxation of Ihe ban as principal speaker at Ihe Democratic Jeffer.son-Jackson Day dinner Her critics hail Miss Andrews “The greatest muslcstl talent show business has pnatuced in 2f) years" In little more than a year her price p<'r picture has risen from $!!)(),(KK) to $700,000. What next for Ihe International star'.' Gertrude Lawrence Story,’’ In Hollywood the following June. She shares a rented Beverly Hills home with daugliter Emma, Vh, a houseke«|)er, a nurse and a toy white pcKHlIe. She and husband Tony Walton, a .set and costume designer, run up "enormous’’ longdistance phone bills. His current film assignment hi in I/)ndon. Miss Andrews said Ihe "sup-IX)S(xl antagonism’’ between her amr|)r(Kluc(>r Jack Warner “has lM>en blown up la'yond all proportion." |le chose Audrey ilepburn for the film of “My Fair Lady,’’ in which Miss Andre,ws had starred for 3'/fi years on Ihe stage In New York and l.ondon. “I certainly don’t l)car any malice,’’ said Julie. “Who knows? He may have something I want to do someday.’’ Three Reruns Die as Aircraft Collide WESTERLO, N Y. (AP) An aerial photography flight by an industrialist, a Justice of the peace and a state police Investigator endied in death for the three Sunday when their two aircraft collided. EJlled were ftwlghl Hannay, 47, of Westerlo; William Furman, 37, Westerlo justice of th(! pence ntul l-eonard Garramotie, about 35, of V(K)rh(!e8vllle, assigned to the state police Bureau of Criminal Identification. State police said Furman, flying in Hannay’s helicopler, had Inleiuhxl to take |)lj tures of Garrarnone piloting his single engine plane. When Antony Armstrong -Jones was married to Princess Margaret of Great Britain, lie became Ihe first mail of non-notilc birth to marry into the British royal family since llie reign of Edward IV in Hie 15th century. Vaudeville Showplace in Farewell Offering After the .siH'ctacularly beautiful “Sound of Music’’ and “The Amcricani'/alion of Emily" she wants roles “as varied as possilile,’’ ABOin-FACE Her present about-face is as a mis'-sioUary's wife of the early 1800s in an adaptation of James Miclu'ner's “Hawaii" SEATTLE, Wash (AP) They turiuxl off the footllglits for goexf Sunday niglit at the Palomar Theater, once one of the jewels of the vaudeville kingdom built by the latC Alexander Pantages, The theater, in recent years a movie house, will he torn down and replaced a self-parking garage. Inaugural Address Now 0 JFK Memento miniature edition of President Kennedy’s iiiuugurnl nddress. PrDilcd on gilt edgexl, hniul-made papei' «i>d IhiuiuI In navy blue calf, Ihc hiNik measures I 't. by 2Ati inches. WORCESTER, Mass nil’ll Here’s something new in Kennedy keepsake A local firm has pul on Hu' market (at $3.50 per copy) a i LOOK WHAT’S UNDERTHE ORANGE ROOF! Served Every Saturday; .Sunday, Monday and Tuesday COMPLETE DINNER INCLUDES 4 pieces of Golden Fried, Juicy Tender Chicken French Fried Potatoos Colo Slaw Roll and Butler Coffoe, Tea or Milk Choice of Howard Johnson's 28 Famous Ice Creams or Sherbets SERVED 11:^0 A M. TO CLOSING UouiARDjounfon'5 3650 DIXIE HWY. at Drayton Plains HOME OF THE SPECIALS Fine Foods — /yir/aor \ IILS aml IIKK Coiiples Mslil - MONDAYS ^ Special — I Full Price, I Half-Price BL'SINKSSMEN’S lAJNCIl NOW! at 7:DD S 9:35 I Everybody who's ever been funny is in ill STANL^KRAMER Mfi"" “irsA MAD, MAD, MAO, III ADI n» ifUnLII ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: 'jl'ho cross-section of a helicopter’s blades, shown at the top of picture, resemble those of an airplane’s wing and both allow aircraft to fly for the same reason. Moving air takes longer to pass over the upper curved part, creating lesser air pressure above. The greater air pressure on the bottom ex^>rts a lifting force. Of course, a helicopter’s blades revolve while an air plane’s wing remains still. The secret of why the ’copter can perform so many tricks in the air is that the angle or pitch of the blades can be changed—which has an effect similar lo that of changing the angle of a paddle while paddling a canoe. Blade- angles are controlled'by the pilot, who uses “the cyclic pitch stick’’ to guide the copter forward, backward and sideways, and “ the “collective pitch stick” to fly up and down. When flying ahead, the pitch of blades changes as they beat around. In position (1) the pilch is flat; with (2) it is beginning to turn and by (3)^,has a sharp angle or pitclj.j. In (41 the pitch is decreasing and in (1) it is flat again. These different pitches are what the word “cycle” means? In the other movements, all blades have the same “collective” pitch; the small • drawings show how different movements are made. ^ ^ Sophia Loren Martello Mastroianni TONIDHT an:20-5:30 S] EXTRA: “A Tribute To Sir Winston” • CARTOON FOR YOU TO DO; Use your imagination a bit — dream of a little one-man helicopler just big enough to fly .by yourself when y()u're old enough to get a pilot’s license. T^ese little one-mai) jobs have been actually built; we may see them in the skies some day. Miracle M;le-k WateifQid.i gjtoSKii DRIVE-IN tHEATER FE 2-3201) r. (-78 AT WAiToH^VO. EXIT -BiSHfflr. Bingo YOUR GM CAR THE IT DESERVES! Everything’s explained in the important Owner Protection Plan booklet you get with any new GM car or truck. Handy tear-out coupons outline the recommended services you need to protect your investment. Crank-case ventilation valve service is a typical recommendation for a cleaner, better performing engine. Your General Motors dealer is your best assurance of Genuine GM Parts, factory-trained technicians and modern Guardian Maintenance facilities. Visit your GM dealer soon. And remember, a car that is serviced regularly is a safer car to drive. f general motors^ NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR >4 Guardian fVI AINXENANCE CHEVROLET • PONTIAC • OLOSMOBItE • BUICK • OPEL KADETT • CADILLAC • CMC TRUCK 7f t : ‘".1. TMK I»()NT1A(’- IMIKSS. MONDAY. MAY J), l»(W C—11 -Television Programs- Programt furnithad by •tation* litfad in thU column or* lubjacl to chango without notiong for 58 Judges in circuits Wil. 8:45 (56) English VI 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry - Go-Round 9:00 (2) Mike Douglas Dick Clark heads guest li.st. (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read 9:.30 (56) American History 9:55 (4) News (56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (4) Truth or (consequences (9) Friendly Giant 10:10 (56) Our Scientific World 10:15 (9) Chez Helene 10:30 (2) 1 Love Lucy (4) (Color) What’s This Song (9) Butternut Square 10:35 ( 56) French Lesson 10:50 (9) News (56) Spanish Les.son 10:55 (4) News 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Movie: “Han)let” U948) Lawrence Olivier, Jean Simmons, £asil Sydney (Parti) 11:20 ( 56) What’s New 11:30 (2) McCk)y^ (4r (Ckilor) Jeopardy (7) Price Is Right 11:50 (56) Reading for Teach- (9) Movie: “Value for Money” (1955) John Greg-son, Diana Dors, SUsan Stephan, Derek Farr 1:00 (4) Lawman . (7) After Hours 1:30 (2) (4) (7) News, Weather TUESDAY MORNING 6:10 (2) On the Farm Front 6:15 (2) News 6:20 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews ^ 6:50 (2) News 7:00 (2) Happyland (4) Today Gig Young, singer Louise O’Brien visit. (7) Johnny Ginger 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:30 (7) Movie: “the Wanton Countess” (1954) A lid a Valli, Farley Granger TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life . (4) (Color) Call My Bluff (7.) Donna Reed (9) Bingo 12:20 (56) Science Is Fun 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 30 (50) Jack La Lannc 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Mate* Game (7) Trailrnaster (9) Razzle Dazzle (50) Western Movie 4:‘25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Movie: “Spook Chasers” (1957) Bowery Boys (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Adventures in Paradise 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot “Saskatchewan Big Game Fishing” (7) Movie: “The Royal African'Rifles” (1953) Louis Hayward, Veronica Hurst (50) Little Rascals (56) Ragtime Era 5:30 (91 Rocky and His Friends’ (50) Teen Dance ' N (56) What’s New'' 5:45 (9) jhigs Bunny 5:55 (2)'Sports (4) Here’s Carol Duvall ACROSS 1 Posted 2 Conservative (comp, word) 3 Disencumber 4 Abounds 5 Traiisjxirted 6 Rises 7 Unit of reluetancc 8 'I’hrougli (comb, form) 9 Idaec apart 10 Marine worm 13 Bundle of cotton .15 Finishes 18 102 (Roman) , 22 Perches 25 Fish sauce 27 Cerlain tide 29 Independent 32 Receivers of charily 34 Schoolmaster (Scot ) 35 l.atid parcels 36 Beehive 37 Feminine name 38 Lubricant 3(1 Walk wearily 11 Painters’ stands 4'2 Trampled 15 (Jose ranks 51 City In Oklahoma 52 Farming (ah.) 54 Paddle Answer to previous Pii/,/,le pixie Medical Society Admits Negro Doctors CHARI■O'n'E, N.C. (AP) The North Carolina MiMileal So ciety has admitted Negro physicians to full membership. Sciontific membcrsljp had been granted Negro doctors In 1955, allowing them to attend meelings, vole and hold office The House of V^'elegalcs volwl 117 *28 Sunday lo admit Negroes to full memhershlp, Including lal privileges. Death Toll Now at 7 in Congolese Bombings I.EOI’OI.DVIU.E, The Congo i/l't The (leiilh loll tu Saturday lUghrs L(-opoldvlllt‘ homhings has risen lo seven, willi as many as 55 people injured Three o|)en air liars In the native (|narler ol Hie eily were the largels of wind otllcinls he lleve were hand grenndes. I’o lice hnve li(‘en maintaining road lilcM'ks around the city siltce the bomhings, and several persons have been arre.sted, Boy Admits Killing Sister With Knife ELLSWORTH, Kan. (AP) -A 13-yoar-old boy, hunted down by a posse Sunday, has jadmlL ted stabbing his younger sinter lo death diir'lng a fight over a game of lilde-aiid-Heek al their I, Run. home in Wilson, A Kansas Bureau of Inven-ligation agent said Roger Mlku-le(‘ky fold fuiw he drove a steak knife Into the back of Alice .yiin Mikuiccky, 10, Saturday nornlng. Counly Ally. G. H. Miller Is expected lo take the boy Into juvenile court to determine how lo liandle the ca Today in Washington VielGIsGelTop Priorily in Tax Refunds Quake Jolts Capitol Again in Northwest OLYMPIA, Wash, (AP)-The earthquake which jarred the Pacific l))orthwest last week shook up the 15,300-ton dome on Washington’s State Capitol, but the lid stayed put. It was the second beating (4) (Color) rU Bet (7) Father Knows Best 12:35 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) Come, Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Jack Benny (4) News (7) Rebus (9) Movie: “Driftwood” (1947) Ruth Warrick, Walter Brennan 1:10 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (56) Children’s Hour 1:15 (4) Topics for Today. 1:25 (56) Arts and Crafts 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) (Color)- Let’s Make a Deal '(7) One Step Beyond 1:55 (4) News (56) American History 2:00 (2) Password (4) Moment of Truth (7) Flame in the Wind 2:20 (56) Safety Circle 2:25 (56) Profile of a Lady 2:30 (2) Playhouse 2 (4) Doctors (ITDay in Court 2:50 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:05 ( 56) Teaching of Commu- from an earthquake for the massive concrete, stone and steel structure. It took its first in the temblor of April 13, 1949. That quake toosened the 180-ton cupola — or birdcage — atop the dpme, threatening to send the stone missile plunging down through the Captol rotun- 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News WASHINGTON (AP) - 'I'he government lias set up a plan to speed income tax refunds to military personnel who served in Viet Nam during 1964. 'I’liousands of servicemen paid faxes on military pay wliieli Jolin.son recently ruled was at least partially tax-exempt. The While House announced today that taxpayers who served in Viet Nam in 1964 and have already filed returns may claim refunds by submitting amended returns refund claims. To speed processing of the refunds, amended returns should be marked at the top of the form: “Amended — Combat Zone.” The White House said servicemen filing amended returns, original returns or claims should attach a statement showing the number of months served in Viet Nam in 1964 and the total amount of pay excluded from taxation. WASHINGTON (AP) - A new American fighter — the YF12A — streaked through the §ky Saturday, and President Johnson said It set two world speed records. Tlie previous hdsts, lie said, had been set by a Soviet 1)166 jet. Tile President said the YF12A exceeded 2,(MM) miles per hour on a slraigli) cour.sc, and hit 1,-688 miles an hour on a closed course. The Russian jet had posted limes of 1,665.8 miles an hour and 1.491.9 miles per hour. Tile records were set on two flights made by different crews al Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. The straight course crew was composed of Col. Robert L. Stephens of Gilmer, Tex., and Lt. Col. Daniel Andre of Memphis, Tenn. On the closed course crew were Maj. Walter F] Daniel of Oklahoma City and Capt. James F. Cooney of Newhurg, N.Y. lian Science Monilor, said it questions whether largc-.scalc economic development programs can provide the aid nced-e “I think in Juarez,” he said. t-just hope they remember they gpve me this exclusive rtory! ★ ★ ★ Noel Coward and Sir John Gielgud were at this partj)t for Vivien Leigh — the guest who wasn’t there—because sheL —was in England—after a screening of “The Ship of FooIst —and T asked Noel how he was—a ridiculous question, admit. “Me,” he twinkled, “Oh, Tm as merry as a grave.” . .. .★ ★ ★ WASHINGTON (AP) - Texas is no longer the nation’s biggest state, but its roads and highways have the most junk yards. The figure according to a Commerce Department survey: 1,602. Runner-up Georgia has 1,055 and Alaska, the biggest state, had 57. The survey was released by the White House Saturday, and was taken after President Johnson, a Texan, declared: “I want lo make sure that the America we see from these major highways is a beautifuf America.” VYJR(766) WXYZd 270) CKIW(800) WWJ(950) WCA^d 130) WPONQ 460) WJBKQ 500) WHFI-FM(94.7) WXYZ, Newt CKLW. News yVJBK. — ______________ Rofeert E. Lee WCAR, News, Joe Bacarella WPON, News, Sports WHFI, Music by Candlelight WHFI, Music tar a:M_WXYZ. Alex-WWJ. Business WJR,------- CKLW, Tom Shonnon S:4S-WXYZ, News, Sports. WWJ, Threa-Stat Extra WJR, Lowell Thomas t.OO-WWJ, News Emphasis WXYZ, Ed Morgan xvCAR, Boyd Carender i WJBK, Music WJR, News wwj, Phone Opinion WJR, Sports . . t:30--WJH, Reasoner, Music l;00-WHFI, News, Mohtage WJR> World Tonight, Con- cert of Poverty ; ♦iOO-WWJ, News, Sports • WJR, News, Music t:3»-WJR, Economic Club t:3S^WPON, World Today lOrOO-^WXYZ, Madcap -Murphy, Music WPON, News, Bob Greene WJR, News, Kaleidoscope 11:0»-WJR, News, Sports U:1».^WCAR, This Week At UN . 11.33 WCAR, Boyd Carender Midnight ' CKLW, Music til Dawn, 1I;30-^WJR, Music Betpra Western WCAR, News, Delzell 3;30-WJR,- Music Hall ' WWJ, Roberts CKLW, Eye Opener. DaVies WPON, News, Whitman 7:00—WHFI, Almanac ’ «:00-WJR, News, Guest WHFI, News, Almanac l;30-WJR, Music Hall »:00-WJR, News WCAR, News, Sanders WWJ News, Riley y.:1S-WJR, Open House tfJO WJR, L VHFI, News, McKenney lAOb-WJR, News, Haas TUESDAY afternoon I3;00-WJR, News, Farm WWJ, News, Music WPON, News, Ron Knight CKLW, ftofS, .Grant WXYZ, Marc Avery ,Muslc WCAR, News, Tom Kolllns WHFI, News, Encore 13:15—WJR, Focus 1:Mt-WJR, News, Art Link-letter CKLWi News, Joe Van 1130-WJR, Wohieri'3 World 3:00-WJR, News, Elliott Gazette .............- - CKLW, News, Dave Shafer WXYZ, Davio Prlficei |. |:0»-WCAR, News, Bac«ro|la THE MIDNIGHT EARL . Jane Fonda’ll contribute to our romantic summer in NY. She’ll make a movie here for Her Man, Roger Vadim, who’s writing it and will also direct . . . Glenda Farrell’s iri St. Luke’s after surgery . . . Paula Prentiss left Payne-Whitney and went upstate to rest ... Mrs. Edward Durell Stone, separated from the famous architect, feels that her book, “Not In Lone Splendor,” will be Very explosive in some areas. . " V \ "ir ~ - Jk ' TODAY’S BES'f LAUGH: Bobby Goldsboro lives so far out in the suburbs he has to take a bus to get a cop. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “If you have charm, you don’t need anything else. And if you don’t have it, it doesn’t matter what else you have.”=Shon. EARL’S PEARLS: Marriage, claims Milt Kamen, is when a guy gets billed for the times he cooed. A fellow complained that he was married 15 years ago by ja ' Justice of the Peace: “And I’Ve had neither justice nor peaeie ever since.” , . .That’s earl, brother. (PAYOir""’ BILLS) AND REMODEL *170110 HOME ^ If yaur horn# i« half paid far we'll thaw yao haw fa ramadel it and lawar yaur manthly jpaymants. Widowart, paniianars may 'ol«^ qualify: ^ ' —— - "S?'' EXAMPLE I UNPAID BILLS .... . I REMODELING HOME . . I BALANCE ON HOME . i ^50 I amazing m thousands Or . homeovin^ I BONAFIDE IMPROVEMENT k \ INVESTMENT ca 1$ W. Lawrence St., PeoHac E Rush deuUt .at your, new plan, , cnie Hall VMicete. Inc.) - r: C- 12 rilKi 1H)N;1’IA(> FHK.S8, MON0AV. MAY .M. nu ONE COLOR I I Boyle Finds Visit to Chinese Tailor a Must in/South Viet Nam Ily IIAI.IIOYI.K SAIGON, iSoulh VUM Nam (AD This Is a sIranRa war Indeed. It Is I lie first war I’ve been la where a reporter has got his uniform (Mislom niade liy a lallnr, I don’t believe even llichnrd llardliiR Davis, the moHl Rlam- The leader of the dm ol thieves to whom I was nderred has his headiiuarters in what looks like an abandoned warehouse, just as do American Runp on television programs, When I ex|)lalued wliat I wanted, the ehlet ihtel, who shall remain namelesH \in tael he said he preierred it that wa.v 4Ulered me all the opium I wanted, lull ,said he was all roVe ’ to the floor. Giving the hat search up as a bad job,' I stomped off again to the gray market. This time I managed to buy a used pair of lioots about two sizes too large and a weathered riarksack which some I' lench Deglonnalre must hove dropped at the Iv tilo ol Diet! Itlen I’lui buck in HIM, It was NO heavy that merely carrying it back to my hotel made me break Into a sweat. POST r.XCHANtiK ■ My last |Htrl of call was the po.sl exchange No American off to a war zone without/a fajipwell call at the PX for/a box of chot'olate candy bars, ^bme boxes of hard candy, a pushnuttnh can of shaving lather and a bottle of insect repel-leiil, 'Hie post exchange here Is stocked with an a.M,sortment of goiMlIes not particidarly useful in jungle fighting. They include hi .sets, i lassh al Iph 11 graph rec'ird.N, expensive camera.s, and several s«“ls of golf clubs, .lust looking at themjnade me fee' h(ovv>‘',.k. 'I'hc’ I ,saw .something that really loHcinated me. It was a bean bag pricisl at 85 cents. I bought it. At that pric<> I felt It wjls too good a bargain fo pass up, and I thought it would he nice to he the only guy in tlje wai with a bean bag of hl,s very own. Hesldes, It may conu' in ban dy if I need something to throw at the unfriendly Viet Cong. I’d rather play bean liag with lliem than any other game 1 can think of. \ A A 4 Wally Paper says tml.Y.our I KI I: 64"x66" WALL SCENIC with fb« porchoi# of 10 rolls or moro c our Wallpapor bargoini. WALLPAPER X__J bargain center 1021 W. Huron ... Just I'/i W. of Tslsgraph IlilY, .SKI.I... TltADK IKSK PONTIAC PnKS.S WANT.S AD.S, niNKSK TAII.OIl .So 1 weni to se<’ l.uong, llii- I ChinT^e' l.'iilor, wim is known ns *' Ihe tasicsl ni'cdle in the Kiir \ ,1f) lioiir.s, he whipped I IiunIi jacket and Iron , ,, I , set s inai maile a lellow look like .loeNUt olhcially is,sue ‘ omlad •GltAV MAUKi:’l” „,„l .logelher clothing to reporters nor will it ' sell it to them. They .sometimes '‘'"‘•ii can buy it, however, on what is euphemistically known ns "the "l.iiong, gray market," loo long." Area Births ’I'he following is a list ol le ' cent Pontiac area births a.s le corded at Ihe Oakland Counlv Clerk's Olfice ihy name of father 1: H«rlliiy W. Brdrty, W4^ Owioni •Xtberl D Burke, 1/1 .Summil Blthurd a. ( r6/let, IM.'i Berwirk Wllllem C. Green, Id Donald 0. PoOerson, ■pill H. Walsh, « Gr Paul L. Wllatin, 424 M Voyd L. Canoy, 406 N. Saginaw Arthur I . Atkinson, 461 Serond Gerald D. Campbell, 9,1 Chlrago Ralph F . McAvoy, 1/401/1 Leon B. YulkowskI, 205 Oneida Robert I . Menaon, 97 E. Hopkins Paul J. Tourvllle, 3662 SI. AAary Richard 1. KIcll, 42 Wenonai. Richard C. Aiken. 1010 Beecbland Francli i. AAeadoe, 421 Third Robert C. Fealherslon, 625 Clara Larry L. Garrii, 720 Alberta Henry D. Tolbert, 521 Desota LMlIe R. Lohlt, 2815 VoorheH Earl J. Rudd, 714 Scoltwood Willard J. Smith Jr„ UO Edison Andrew KasOrow. 2I3S Otlrum W. J. McAlister, 3423 Grafton James R. Mardls, 211 S. Jessie Percy Patrick, 4»6 Dllmar IrvIn E. Holden, 1791 Hayes Louis A. Wllllamsi 445 School Ira D. Brake, 1595 Seymour I Cllttord E. Knllten, 3405 Perr Thomas R. Puckett, 132 Fernbarry Douglas W. Robertson, 1241 Dulrain Joseph R. Schultz, 1106 Lynsua William G. Franklin Jr„ 268 Bondala I 5 Speed Control a Automatic Presiur • Clog-Rosiatant • Reloasa Round • Sewa Forward Bobbin t Dams, Mends • Monograms • Satya On Buttons* Makes Button • Sows Rovers* t Embroiders Automatically I Zigt-Zags, Overcasts, Seams FULLY GUARANTEED FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION OR 4-1101 jcomplete with JCabinet and Accessories AUTHORIZED HOOVER SERVICE DEALERS HEW 7-FOOT VACUUM CLEANER HOSE Braided Cloth, All Rubber EXchangable With (|A Q C Your Old Re-Use-j# ^ W able Hose Ends , mV Regular 7.50 W ('.omp Jn or Free Delivery^ PARTS abd SERVICE QN ALL CLEANERS Ditpotal Bagi-Hoie»-BrushesrBelts-Attachment$-Etc. "Rebuilt by Curt's Appliances Using Our Own Parts’ WE RENT nPEWRITERS and SEWING MACHINES Fully Guaranteed Attachments Included 1.25 Week Fm Home Demonstration-or 4-1 lOt n- Within 26 Mile Radius COST’S APPUAIVCES Ftu*oryAuthmti*riWhll*OtuXrr n MW LOCATION iUI HATCHERY ROAD \ ^ OR 4-i m Turn West 2 Blocks en Hatehery gd. Open Monday Uhd Fridoy ’til 8 P. M. , 1 i* Th0 W9atb»r U.t. Wtttmf P»r« Warm, fliiowmn THE PONTIAC W VOL. liH NO. 7» ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ r‘ON'riA(\ MICmCAN. .MO^'l)A^, ,MA\ MHiV 10 I'ACiKS ) HKKtIi INMiHNAIIONAI. 10« In Dominican Republic U.S. Force Bolstered U. S. Ties Cut by Cambodia No Reasons Given for Break in Relations High Court Backs Cuba Travel Ban MKioT (;oi.ij:(;k I'lucsiiHwr aimmii :t00 OfikIniHl County rosidcnts Kr«Tl IIk> presi dent of Oakimid Community CoIIoko and lil.s wife, Dr. and Mrs. .lolin K. Toiiill (leftI, at a reception yesterday in Pontiac Northern High School, The event was sponsored Jointly hy Ihe hoard ol Iruslees of the college and area branches of Ihe American Association of Dtilversily Women. (Additional pi<-lures, paue A-12). ' / PHNOM PK, Nil, Camhodi; lAI’i The national radio an nonnci'd lislay ('and)odia ha: ilecided to break diplomatic re lallons will) Ihe llniled Stales. WASIIINCTON (AIM The Siipreine ('(airl ruled hsiay Ihe secretary ol slale has Ihe con sliliilional power lo hat Amerl can oili/.ens from IravellnK I" Cuba. Selma Rights March Cost Defense Dept. $510,000 The radio said Priuci* Noro doin SihaiKMik, Ihe c h I (‘ I of slate, rc|)orled Ids decision lo Ihe (.'ambodlan people in an of-licial message, WASHINGTON (AP) II cost the Defense Department $510,000 to protect Ihe Selma-lo-Montnomery civil l ipids marcle CIS, the Pentagon said today. This raised to nearly $13 million Ihe cost of using federal troops and federalized National Guardsmen in five major civil rights crises tinting back lo l.il He Hock in 1957, lowances for t 4,K60 Alahnnin National (ituirdsmen called Into federal duty, plus Irans allowanc IMirtatioa amt other expenses In eonnection with the measures taken to protect the voting rights march in late March. Ihe position lha would l)(' drawing such p;i C 0 n tent s' of Ihe message were not immediately available. allowances regardless ol w diilics lliey were iierlorming and ol whid The Pentagon said the $510,-1)00 figure covered pay and al- Th(' figure did md lake itdo accoiinl Ihe pay and jdlowances lor about 1,000 regular Army military policemen who also were used. The Army has taken Also excluded were the expenses involved in use of federal marshals and olher resources id Ihe Justice Deparlmcnl, taiAlU) I’KDKHALIZKD Tlie Alabama National Guard was federalized from March 20 lo March 28, l‘'oreign Minister Koiin Wick receivi'd Ihe U .S, charge d'affaires lo announce Ihe decision, Ihe hroadc .".st said. Chief .liislice Karl Warren (h'livered llu* (i-.'l decision Th(‘re were three separah' di.s.sents. Said Warren lor the major lly: "The questions lor de< i-slon are whether the seeretary of stale is staturily authorized lo refuse lo vnlldale the passports of U..S. citizens for travel to Cnlia, and. If he is, whether Ihe exercise ol that authority is ('(mstitiitionally permissible. Rebel Uprising Is Taken Over byReds-LBJ Enemy Again Fire* On American Troops Despite Cease-Fire We answf'r. both (|ueslions in Ihe affirmative" AP Romney Reluctant Tax Relief Bill Is Signed ^la res|H>nse to inquiries. Ihe , Defense Department also listed Ihe costs of past Defense Department involvement in civil rights crises. LANSING (ypi — Gov. George Romney .signed the Democratic-backed .senior citizens property tax relief bill “with reluctance" today. The governor said the program — estimalod to cot^l between $13.5 million and $15.5 million — “is far __________________ TVom being the best program the legislature could In September 1957, PresidenI Dwight D. Ki.senhower called up 10,500 Arkaasas Air and Army Guardsmen in a clash with Gov. Orwil E. Faubus over admitting Negro pupils to Central High School in I.itfle Hock. Federal troops were used: The operation, extending frorn .September 19.57 to May 1958, <’Osl $4,898,000, . Jafce Umbre//af'''7V,'‘“‘’"'' '"'"''v relief for our senior citi- Showers Are Due ^^ns “However, I am akso Tonight, Tuesday vinced that a real need exists Plan on carrying an umbrella tonight and tomorrow as storm clouds hide today's sunshine. Today’s high will range between 80 and 88. Scattered showefs or thundershowers tonight and tomorrow will bring cooler temperatures. Tonight’s low will be in the 50s and tomorrow’s high in the 60s. In view of the obvious legislative indifference and refusal to even consider the recommendations of the Pelham Study Commission, the choice confronting the ,people of Michigan, and especially those.65 years of age and older, is apparently one of this program or nothing at this time.” MISSISSIPPI GUARD In October 1962, Ihe late PresidenI John F. Kennedy called out about 8,000 Mississippi Guardsmen ditring......the riot- marked integration of the University of Missi.ssippi. Here, loo, sizable regular federal forces were u.sed. The Pentagon said this federal military operation, which lasted until June 1963, cost $4..364,000, It wak addl'd, however, that a coMsulale-gcncral could be es-lahlished al Phnom Penh if Ihe U S. government so desire.s. NO HEA.SONS No reasons were announced for Ihe break. However, rela-. lions helwcen Cambodia and the United Slates long have been tenuous chiefly because of raids along the border with South Viet Nam’: CamlxMlia blames the a t -tacks on U.S. - Vietnainese forces. Saigon charges Viet Cong guerrillas use Cambodia as a refuge. Hostile feelings also were arounsed in Phnom Penh by a reference in Ihe magazine Newsweek lo Ihe Que<'n of tiam-bodia. The conri ruled on an appeal t)v l.ouis Zemel, a Middlefield, (ionn., ski re.sorl operator, Ih' wanted to go to (!uba, he said, to become a belter informed citizen. HACK AMONG DEM LEADERS Neil .Slaebler flashed tills winning smile in Detroit yesterday as lornicr Gov. G. Mennen Williams, one of his top supporters, looks on after Slaebler moved buck into the Dr'iniKiatic bierurchy yesterday. Slai'bler defeated four olher candidates for Ihe .seat on the Democratic National Committee vacated by former Gov. ,)obn H. Swain.son when lie was elected lo the Wayne County Circuit (kiurt last month. .SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic l/D 'rite llniled Slale.s began ru.sbipg anolber 4,500 troops to tbe Dominican Republic today after President .lohn.son .said the rebel uprising had been taken over by (Tommuncst conspirators directed from abroad. The President's deelaralion that a military buildup was nec-e.ssary for .security on the Caribbean island, came as rebel S#e Story, Page A-3 REFUSED PERMISSION The Stale Deparlmcnl refu.sed permission for the trip undei' a travel ban imposed in January 1961. Zemel .sued, but a special U.S. District Court in New Ha ven ruled against him' in a 2-1 vole. One of Ihe three dissenterx today, .histice William O. Douglas, quoted the late Pope John XXIII to the effect that lo know Communists one must mingle with them. Staebler Back at Top After Winning Post fighters made a new attack last night on U.S. troops despite the declared cease-fire. Rebels hurled grenades at American positions and ham-ered away with fire from automatic weapons. The outburst lasted aJiout a hour. No new casualties were re-- Former Congressman-at-large Neil P”*'^*** American side. It ^ WHQ iin^AHaiti urhpfhpr antaurpr. . I .. 4 u 1 r X i was uncertain whether answer- Staebler i.s back m the top echelons of the state Demo- ore by U.S. forces caught cratic party after five months of ab.sence. Douglas said he agre(?s there arc areas to which t.'ongress can restrict or ban travel. The U .S. Embassy in Phnom I’enh, attacked t w f c e in the past year, has maintained only a .skeleton staff since 1963. In ,Iune 1963, Kennedy ordered 17,000 Alabama Army and iContmued on Page 2. Col. 6) U N OBSERVERS Al one time during the frontier troubles, the United States urged (hat United Nations ob-.sorvers be posted at various points along the (^ambodian-.Soulh Vietnamese border, but Sihanouk’s government rejected the idea. - c ‘‘Pestilence may rage in a region making it necessary to protect not only the traveler but those he mighf infect on his return. A theatre of war may be loo dangerous for travel. ()|ber like situations can be pul. ONI.Y DANGER any of the rebeks. 'I’be 59-year-old onetime party campaign strategi.st ★ ★ ★ . w.s restored lo the post of Democratic national com- Marines and two paratroopers I killed, and 21 Marines and> 21 I pafatroopcrs wounded since j|lT6r jmQQ6r6d I American forces began landing "But the only .so-called danger pre.sent hdre is Ihe Communist regime in Cuba. The world, however, is filled with Communist though; and Communist n'gimcs are on more than one (■ontipx'nt..:’;.'.-j: mitteeman by the State Central Committee ye.stor-day. Slaebler, decisively beaten by Gov. George Romney in the 1964 gubernatorial race, won out in a contest that po.sed a challenge to a resumption of his leadership. But he won in a walk, getting 54 til vote.s on the'^irst and only ballot. by 3 Tight Tots .SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ~ The reaction was frantic yesterday when Michael Castellino and twins Carter and Karen Hartman, all 5, were found sprawled Stuart Hertzberg of Detroit, sensele.ss in the Hartman back-Dcmocratie slate finance chair- yard, man, finished .second in a field it * ★ of four, polling 1% votes. The baby sitter told police she last Wednesday. FORCE BOOSTED Addition of the 4,500 fighting men ordered in by the President will bring the total of U.S. Marines and Army men to 14,- Rebel groups broke the ceasefire after American units took over tfie front lines from weary troops loyal to the new military junat. , had last seen them playing „ , niHAMv Ac AHa nnr>nnc/>iAiic *i»Ia Dominican Gen. Jesus de lo.s ' I'm back where I think the quietly. As the unconscious trio said his forces were Partly cloudy and miid weather is predicted for Wednesday. This morning’s low temperature reading before 8 a.m. was 58. By 1 p.m. the mercury gaVe the Pontiac area a preview of summer as it registered 84. He said he would sulimit recommended improvements in the program to the next session of the legislature. In Today's , Press SEATO Confab i British leader urges ne-gotiated peace in Viet t Nam - PAGE A-2. Detroit Talk Ford blasts Viet critics, f-Medicare bill - PAGE A-10. Drinking Fliers Major problem feared ^ among private pilots— PAGEB-10, I Area News ......... A-4 | Astrology,........ C-2 | Bridge .. C-2 | Crossword Puzzle . . .C-11 | Comics ....... C-2 | Editorials .... . . . . A-45 | Markets .......... C-3 | Obituaries .........C-4 |, Sports . . .....B-l-B-3 | Theaters,.... ’....C-10 I TV-Radio Programs C-ll f Wflson, Earl ..... C-ll I Women’s Pgs. A-12-^A-lS I The bill will grant tax relief starting in 1966 to persons 65 and older who earn less than $5,000 annually and hdve lived-,, in Michigan for .seven years. It would exempt from property tax the first $2,500 in assessed valuation of homesteads such a person owns if the property is a.s.sessed at $10,000 or le.ss. The state will reimburse local governments for lost property tax revenue. SCALED DOWN Virtually all Republicans had voted for the legislature measure after it had been scaled down in the Senate from a costlier House - approved bill. School Vote in Rochester A $1.1 million bond issue will be decided |it the polls today in the Rochester School Dis-trict. The issue is planned to finance construction of a swimming pool and a 600-seat auditorium at the senior high school. Dnly property owners are eligible to cast ballots on the proposal. most important work in politics was sped to a hospital, detec- ^ck because Ijjey were eels accomplished, ' Slaebler live work uncovered the cubrit exhausted after a week of skir- Staebler live work uncovered the culprit exnausiex in the Hartman basement — a The rebels charged the American troops actually were mov- I.EI) PARTY colored fifth of vodka. As .state chairman from 19.50- police said the kids had con- , . , , 61 under former Govs. G. Men- sumed a pint among them. *bg m on them slowly, nen Williams and John B. Their stomachs were pumped ^ spokesman said Amer-.Swainson, Slaebler led the party out. (Gontinued on Page 2, Col. 3) through some of its brightest .____^ _ ____________________ years. He resigned his post as national committeeman In campaign for governor last year. He was congressman al large from 1962-64. The election yesterday filled Dominican Revolt the post vacated by Swainson when he was elected to the Wayne County Circuit Court la.st month. AreaManWatchedStrife Staebler said he was,.support-ed in his bid by Williams, U.S. Sen. Patrick McNamara and Phillip A. Hart and the 12 Democrats in Michigan’s congressional delegation. Staebler said the contest did not indicate a split in party ranks. ^ By L. GARY THORNE “Your first thought is to pick it 4ip and save it b case you need it,” said Dennis E. Garrels orV648 Sweetbriar, West Bloomfield Township. The “it” was a 45(Hcaliber automatic that 22-year-old Garrels discovered under a sma in the Hotel EmbajadOf tiT stfile-tdrn Santo Domingo. Garrels ducked behbd a sofa when rebel soldiers charged through the hotel in their search for guns and political enemies. “Much is made of factions in our party but it is more a matter of personality differences in ideas and styles of action. / Since three soldiers were nearby, Garrels decided against arming himself even though he and 17 other University of Michigan jazz band tnenibers were caught in the. midst of a civil war in the Dominican Republic. “Our differences are infinitesimal compared with those in the Republican party,” he said. The local man asked a U.S. Navy man whether he Should pick up the pistol and was told to let it lay. REBEL REVOLT v Witness to the rebel revolt against the government, the U. of M. bandsmen returned last night from a 15-country concert tour of Central and South"America. PRISONERS SEARCHED - American soldiers search prisoners is the center of Santo Domingo after heavy Righting in that j sector of the strife-torn Dominican Republic capital. These troops are part of a crack airborne unit flown into the city. His election did not encourage him to make another try for public office, he said. His term will run until the Democratic National Convention in 1968. , ^ . The st&dents, many belongings left behind, were evacuated from Santo Domingo along with 1,200 other Americans and Latbs last Wednesday after five days in the middle of the civil war. . “Things were getting pretty frantic. The shots panicked (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) ll‘' - ■ ‘r/f i‘()N'nA(’ IMIKSS. MONDAY, MAY n, llKlrt Delay U.N. Debate on Latin Action IJNITKD NATIONS, NY. Ifll Wllh llm (’onsnil of lln-.Sovlol Dtiioii, Iho U,N, .Sccmily (.'ounMl Imlny (lolayoil (lobalc imlll IIiIn allcnioon on llu* piTN once of U.S. mllllilry forccH In the Oominienn Republic Soviet AmbaNnmIor Nikolai T. Kedon^liko aurml to the delay a.i the ll nalloii council con* vened after a weekend of ina neuverinf; on a Soviet recpiesl for urgent diseussion of the Do niinican problem Briton Opens SEATO Meeting ikon Urges Negotiated Viet Peace LONDON (AP) - British Prime Minister Harold Wjison opeiied Itte Southeast Asia Trea ty Oryatli/allon's mlidsterinl conference l.sslbly to (!ondernn use of forced by tlie United States. U.S. Chief delegate Adlai K. Stevenson was expected to repeat the U.S. contention that it had sent in troops and Marines to rescue foreign residents from a civil war. Heritage Day Head Is Pontiac Woman Appointment of Mrs. Marion H. Bcntcr, of 36 E. Iroquois as Heritage Day chairman for Michigan Week has been announced by Dale A. Winnie, Oakland Countv chairman of Michigan Week. Heritage Day] will be cele brated May 21. “It is the day set aside for in-depth attention to the proud history and heritage of thci^j state and of Pontiac,” she said. MRS. RENTER The 1965 Michigan Week (May 16-22) theme is “Michigan-Dynamic in World Progress” and all communities, schools, organizations, Companies and individuals are being asked to carry out their part of the expression. "Bolli sltuallons constitute a serlon.s threat lo peace and both urgently neec lell alone to follow their own path toward |Hrace and freedom.” BUITI.SII RULE "Independence means more Hum frtu'dom from British rule or Irom the rule of any other former colonial |M)wer, said Wilson. "It means freedom from aggressive outside Inler-Icrence,” Britain is sup|M)iting the new fixleratlon of Malaysia against Indonesia. Wilson pointed out tliat the British government fias more soldiers in Southeast Asia today than any other non-Asian country. He said if Malaysia and the Asian members of SEATO told Britain that they no longer neetled her help, “nobody would be more pleased than tho British government and the British |)coplc.” "We must work for negotiated settlements that will bring lasting peace to the area, to Viet Nam, no le.ss than to Malaysia," said Wilson. • LONG TASK “nils is iMiund to be a long and difficult ta.sk, almve all, because those who have threatened the peace, have so far shown no readiness to prefer the conference table to tbe battlefield. "SEATO is not at present directly involved in either of these conflicts, but both are taking place in the treaty area and both are of vital concern to the organization, its members and the peace of the world.” The U.S. delegation, led by Undersecretary of State George Ball, intended to press for further allied assistance to prevent a Communist takeover in South Viet Nam. “We have no territorial ambition in South Viet Nam. We are not there for economic gain. We seek no military base,” Ball told the council. DELIBERATE AGGRESSION ‘South Viet Nam is the victim of deliberate aggression — a Communist ‘war of national liberation.’ The Communists have sought to present their attack as The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly sunnj^ windy and warm today. High 80 to 88. Cloudy with scattered showers -or thupdershowers tonight. Low 52 to 58. Tuesday showers or thundershowers'and cooler. High 60 to 68. Winds southwesterly 15 to 25 miles today and early tonight. Wednesday outlook, partly cloudy and mild. At I a.m.; Wind velocity 15 Direction — Southwesterly Sun sets Monday , Sun rises Tuesday Moon sets Monday at 10:27 1 rises Tuesday at 7:41 One Year Age Highest temperature Lowest temperature .. Mean temperature Weather Sunny t 7:35 p.m This Date In fS Y 30 In 1911 Sunday's Temperature Chart Alpena, 45 47 Duluth 74 45 Escanaba. 41 43 Fort Worth 81 44 Grand Rapids 83 59 Jacksonville 87 57 Houghton 72 38 Kansas City 87 45 Lansing 84 40 Los Angeles 70 53 Marquette 77 51 Miami Beach 77 73 Muskegon 77 54 Milwaukee 84 40 Pellston 82 49 New Orleans 79 45 Traverse City 81 43 New York 77 40 ----------- 84 48 Phoenix 91 59 81 55 Pittsburgh 84 57 51 38 Salt Lake C. 40 31 55 42 San Francisco 40 54 81 43 S. S. Marie 45 44 83 50 Tampa 83 45 Washington 84 54 V? NATIONAL WEATHER — Weathermen predict rain to-1 oi^t from the upper Lakes region to southwestern Missouri, . jtkKg the nwlhi Pacific Coast and oyer' Uie northern Rockies v*^ ^ilMpowible snow in the central Rockies, It will be warmer ^ ih fte northern Plains and/ffie mid-Atlantic coastal region ‘ Lakes region to the southern u civil war, But this is a hollow disguise.” Hall said the Unlleti Stales had provlde<| nsslslance to South Vicl Nam for one pui|)ose only "lo help Hie South Viet-iiamese people re.Hlsl uggresHloii aiKl maintain their iiHlepeml He defended U.S. air altarkH on Not 111 Viet Ham The decl hIoii lo make such air strikes, he lold SIOATO leaders, caine afler Ihe North Vietiiame.se inlnisi-fied their Infiltration of men and e(|uipnienl Into the South “The.se strlkc.s have been llm lied, I'arefully measured and (onlrolled. They have been dl reeled at Imfiedlng the move meal of uririH and Indnwl men Into South Viet Nam. They have been designed to bring home to the regime In Hanoi the risks and fosls of continued aggression." U.S. ACTIONS , Then liirnhig to erlflelsm In Ihe We,si of U S, aelions In Vlel Nnm, Bull saiil: "I iniderslaiid Hie goml Inlen-lioiis of IhoNe people. All of us (leplore violciiee. Hut I still find It curious Hud mmry who bewail the desiruelion ol hrldge.s and munitions in Ihe Norlli .spenk so lillle of IIh' lorliire and Intlinl did Ion and loss of Imnuin life sidfere<| In Hie South by Hie vie-lirns ol iiggression. "The cent l id Issue we l ace In .Sonlh Vlel Nam should, I Ihink, he eleiir for all to ,st;e. ll is whether a .sniidl slate on Hie periphery ol (jimmunisi fpiiwer should he permllted to imiinlajn its freedom. And Hud is an issue of vital importance lo small stales everywhere." U.S. Force Boosted ((^onllmied From I’age Oiiel lean forces were maintaining a strictly impartial attitude. He said they are safeguarding an liiti'rnatlonal zone of refuge and In that sen.se they are in Hie “front line.” U.S. Marines held positions to (he West of (he rebel stronghold. They moved Into the strongpoints jlrom their original posiUon.s at (he seaside Kmbajador llblel and a neigh-lioring polo field which has been used for cvaeualing refugees. U.S. paratr(M)|Kir.s are ejisl of the rebels, with a defense perimeter at San Isidro air base and defenses at the Duarte Bridge, the only means of reaching the air base from the capital. 'I’lie rebels arc entrenched Area Student Saw.Revolt (Continued From I’agc (|nc) everybody,” said Garrcls. The morning of Hw evacuation, those who wereio pull out were gathered on the hotel lawn when rebel troops began their search of the hotel. SHOTS FLARED “I had gone back in when the shots broke out,” he said. “I ducked behind a sofa. That’s where I found the gun.” People out on the lawn took cover behind automobiles and ini^trument cases, according to Garrcls. Although they did not realize it at the time, the band members received the first inkling of the revolt Saturday, April 24, when a television performance was canceled. Hostilities broke out that day. Rebel forces took over the radio stations and began broadcasting. RECEIVED WORD 'Americans and even the natives didn’t take it seriously,” said Garrels. Bandsmen received word Saturday they would not be able to leave the next day because a bridge on the way to the airport was blocked. The Michigan youths were moved to another hotel on Sunday. This hotel — the Embaja-dor — was on the outskirts of Santo Domingo and became, the evacuation point for civilians. Watching the search of their hotel, while awaiting evaucation, Garrels said doubt began to form in the minds of Americans as evacuation was postponed four times in six hours. SHIP LOADED Originally the group was slat- ed to pull out at 5 a.m., but it was nearly 5 p.m. before they were loaded on a U.S. ship. “We heard hundreds of stories,” said Garrels, “but I don’t think any Americans were actually shot at.” Rebel soldiers armed civilians and the streets were full when truck began the evaucation, said Garrels. , He added that he was sur® prised the revolt was so big. Band members, he said, did not realize they were in the midst of a full-scale revolution. Ironically, the U. of M. band visited the Dominican vRepublic , only because a planned appearance in Haiti was canceled due to rumored unrest there. * between the two American forces in a low-income residential seelion called Ciudad Nueva in the souHieast seefion of Santo Domingo TRU.IILLO RE(;iME This area was the (jenter of insurgent movements'* against the Rafael L. Trujillo regime and was a slronghold of extreme left wing agitators. 1’lie area of rebel operations re|M>rtedly covers about l.l blocks, a zone which constitutes the entire eoinmereial section of (he eapitul. Talks Fail; Drug Firm Shut Down Employes of Parke, Davis and Co, walked off Hie Joh at tlie Detroit and Roi'lienter plants at 10:30 tIliH morning, eloNing down priHluetioii IliuiM The aellon wa« taken by Oil, (.’liCmleal and Aloinie Workers International Union Local 7 176, afler 13 hours of conllniious liar-gainlng hroke off al dawn The strike afleets 1,7311 workers, Ineindiiig 253 ein-ployecN at (h<> hlologieal laboratories ill Roeliester. 'I’he union rejeeled an economic otter aceejiled liy nieiiihers ot Hie Inlernatlonal Association ot Machinists yesterday. T li e I AM tiad readied an agreement on a new contract sliortly before midnight Friday strike deadline spoki'sman tor tlie drug firm said Hie 0(;AW also reject'd the eoni|)any’s offer of an ad dillonal five eenli^|ier hour wage for all fCfiiale worker ■i' and above Hur general in aSe given memlVrs of Hie 1AM. X No new negotiations had been ■ailed wlien last contacted Among the most frequently mentioned known Dominican Communists said lo be operating with the rebels are Fidelio Despradel, a leading figure in the old 14lti of .June Movement, a Castroite organization; and A.sdrubal Dominguez, former president of the University of .Santo Domingo student laxly. President .lohn.son said in a radio address last night the rebellion “look a tragic turn. Communist leaders, many of them trained in Cuba, .seeing a chance to increase disorder, to gain a foothold, joined the revolution. INCREASING CONTROL “They took increasing control, and what began as a popular democratic revolution, committed to demdCrarcy and social justice, very shortly moved and was taken over and really seized and placed into the hands of a band of Communist conspirators.” The army leaders of the rebellion said they were fighting to return ousted President Juan Bosch to power. But former U.S. Ambassador John Bartlow Martin, in Santo Domingo in a semiofficial capacity, told newsmen that he was convinced the uprising had been completely lake nover by Castroite Communists. Martin said Bosch would be heartbroken to see what the rebellion had turned into. TAPED INTERVIEW In a television interview taped Saturday, Bosch said the revolution was won until the United States intervened. He said it is now America’s responsibility to bring dem-ocray to his country and that he had abandoned any hope of a military victory for his supporters. Bosch said the uprising was democratic and was not in any way under Communist control. Bosch, the only freely elected president the Dominican Republic has had in more than three, decades, is an exile in Puerto Rico. President Johnson emphasized that other factors were involved in the dispatch of more forces. • FOOD NEDED He said food must be distributed to people who haven’t eaten for days, sick and wounded must be given medical attention, and steps must be taken to avoid an epidemic because hundreds of dead have lain in the streets for days. * ★ Anthony M., Sblomon, assistant secretary for economic affairs, left Washington yesterday to coordinate U.S. emergency relief and economic efforts here. President Johnson also sent TovlHg iTrhbassador W. Averell Harriman on a tour of T America as part of a dijpldmatic drive to win support for his move to prevent the Dominican Republic from turning into second Cuba. I . Wife Is Held in Knife Killing Claims She Stabbed Mate in Self-Defense Pontiac police are holding a r)6-year-old woman for invc.sliga-tion of murder in the Saturday night sliibhing-death of her hu.s-hand. John Robinson, .')2, of 52 .la-■okes (lied al Pontiac General Hospital shortly after 7:30 p.m. Death was caused by loss of blmKl, according to Dr. John F. Naz. Robinson had hec'ii stabbed in the right arm and the brachial artery had been severed. His wife, Dorothy, who is being h e I d Jit Ihe Oakland County .lail, admiUetj she had slabbed h c r husband, police said. She lold officers she used a knife for self-defense as her husband attacked her. Police said she had a bruise and scratch marks on her neck. AT THE APARTMENT Isiah Bri.sbon, 25, of 56 Ja-cokes told police he was at the Robinson apartment when the stabbing occurred. He said Robinson went into the kitchen, where Robinson’s wife was, about 7:30 p.m. Brisbon told police Robinson staggered back into the living room about five minutes later bleeding badly. Brisbon took Robinson to the hospital. The victim’s wife was arrested after hospital officials notified Pontiac Police of the incident. Sgt. John DePauw of the detective bureau, said that she was scheduled to make a statement at the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office today. Sees No Need for AFT in Birmingham Thcv^president of the Birmingham Education Association said’ today that he saw no reason why Birmingham t e a c h e r would join the Amen^n Fed-e r a t i 0 n of Teachers union (AFT). Richard Sumner explained thaj there was no need for an organized labor union because the relationship between h i s group and the s c h o o.l administration is “excellent.” A union representative said yesterday that victories won by a teacher “sit-in” in Ham-tramck foj higher wages last week have^prdmpted the AFT to attempt to organize in Birmingham arid Southfield. The Birmingham Educatiiin Association negotiates wage contracts for teachers each year and has 680 members, or better than 90 per cent of the teachers employed by the school district. Sumner said that there is a need for unions only when com ditions require them “and that is definitely not the case here.” The salary schedule of Birmingham teachers rates seond in tli'e state, he said. (ONFKR ON GIFTED (1111,1) Dr! E Paul Torrance llefi) iiiitlior Jind profi'SHOr of •duciilional psycliology, .Saturday addresaed the more than 2.50 ediicalor.s attending Hie fotirlh jiniuial Iii.sliliilc on Hie Gifted Child al (3ty and (5)iinlry .School ol Hloomfiidd llill.s. Here Ihe .spenker chal.s With George Hoeper, touiider and headnia.ster ot Hie Bloomfield llill.s school, and Mrs, Hoeper, director of the iiar.sery and kindergarten. Birmingham Area News Urges Helping Gifted Children BLOOMEIELI) HILLS A noted edncidioiiid psychologist aid Saturday tluit recognizing rcfdlvily in a gilit'd child i.s difficiill, hid that ducsday iiighl. The Olmecs liaye been called the "basic mollier culliirc from wliich the great clii.ssic civilizii-lions of MesoameriCii sprang” Dr. Michael 1). (\)c, Jts.sociafe professor of anthropology al Yale, will deliver Ids lecture at 11:15 |).m. 'I'he Olmec civdization of Mex :■(» will he discus.sed l)V a Yale Memliers ot (.’ranlirook Institute of Science will he JidrniUed tree and guest tickets will lie jivjiilidile at llic door. (Continued From Page One) Air Guardsmen into federal service before Gov. George C* Wallace allowed Negroes to enter the University of Alabama. Three months later, Alabama Guardsmen were back in federal service, this time in a federal-state dispute over public: school injegration. The Army spent $3,171,000 for these operations of Alabama Natipnal Guardsmen. Other expenses, including communications, transportation ’ and the like, are not included in this figure. The Army said it did not* h^ve cost data on these elements; t' ,Men’s& Boys’100% Cottom Poplin Jackets /r Foul Woathor Woar-2 Pc. Vinyl Storm Suit [ Slay completely dry will: ::leor vinyl suit ot picket atloclied hood arid tl* Vinyl Zippered Suit s /V Heavy vinyl jacket with zipper-front anct detachable hood, matching pants. Sizes S-M-L-XL. |88 ■i-*- 'TIIK I'ON FIAC I'MF-SS. ,MO^I)/V^. M/VA ;i. HKi,'. Ships Carry 1,400 Civilians to Safety SAN JUAN, I'lUTlo lti«o (UIMI More lliuii l,4(X) clviliaii.s, many of thorn Amaican women and children, arrived here from llie Dominican Hepnhlic yesterday ahoanl (wo mercy ships of l|ie (I S Navy .Some (old arrowinij stories ot (error a( (he hands of "wild lottklnj^" rehelH. The W(s)d (.'(snily, an I..ST, carried l,(ll(i persons neiirly (0 limes |(s normal passenKcr load The lISS Kncluimkin whet h e r they were (lie lly Jiiil lor "sidt^eepinf;’' wlien •evoll Itroke oul. ■i. Vice (' o n ,s u I l•'rHn(;ls Mrs, Medina and her hushand ' , ,, ,, , were slalioned in SanliaKO, 32 WlH.ey ater obtained (he Med di(le,s Irom Sanlo Domingo lelease. ItelaJs supporlni(< I o 1 m e 1 Aiiother rehinee, Mrs. (ieor rresideni Jinui lloscli arreslisl , ^elte lioliaaaoa /.y.5 la I lie 1 (At H U ^ 1 New 1965 Model ’•■Corppare to any $300 unit - vertical ?or horizontal operation provides stereo recording and play-bock ql the lowest price 2-speed, copsion drtve, separote volume ond Tone controls, 2 built in speokers and 2 microphones. Not os -illustroted." $1 holds. 1 -Main PRESS, MX>Nt)AY, MAY a, lUOfl U) Phillies Sweep Twihbill ';n. Gianfs Whip Ailing Dodgers By TTie Asoodated Press Willie McCovey isn't standing still. He can’t. Mis feet inirt when Me does. M»‘(;«vey, whose tlirolibing (fiz© 13-1) tootsies feel comfort* able only when he's on the nwve, got out of the batter's lM>k quickly Sunday, hammering Mob Miller’s first pihdi in tbe lOtb inning for a homer tiint |M*wenal the San Krancis«*o (Hants to a 4 2 victory over I-os AngeU's. McCovey's homer, his sei’ond of the game and fifth of the season, was the first off Miller in 70 games and 143 Innings dating bn<;k to lust April atul put tbe finishing touches on a lost weekend for the problem plagued Dodgers. imOKKN anki-k The IhKigers got the it slow and easy— taste its full rich JIaVor Enjoy a tnic l)ourl>on of fine (iiialily atawclcoine price *409 J256 Cosh no. us Includot AS TOHOO Hiram Walker’s TEN HIGH ALSO AVAILABLE IN 100 PROOF, BOTTLED IN BOND-S YEARS OLD VIWAI HIRAM WALKER & SONS INC., PEORIA, ILLINOIS 9-5 and 5-4, Cincinnati swept the New York Mets 9-4 amt 10-0 and the Chicago Cul>s ende<1 lifous ton's 10 game winning streak, It McCovey hit a two run homer following .lesuN Aloii’s single In the seventh Inning and then pul the (Hants ahead to slay in the 10th. A walk, a sacrifice and Ex-Yale Star on Way Back QlJAfilJICO, Va. (AP) - Kor a num who hadn’t run com|M*tl lively since last fall’s Olympic Games at Tokyo, Jay Luck had to admit his comeback effort was at least oti schedule maybe even ahead. Tim 24-year-old former Yale captain, who flnisluHl fifth In the 400-meter hurdles at Tokyo, had just placed swond In the invitational 100-yard dash of the nlnlli annual Quantico Relays Saturday. Me was beaten only by Kd Roberts, the North Carolina College sliir who was voted tlie meet’s outstanding performer, and had a meet record 51.3-second clocking I'YIday in the 440-yard Intermediate hurdles. Roberts, who ran a 9.5 second 100 to iK'at him, was a member of two r(*cord-breaking North Carolina College relay teams. Roberts, Norm Tate, Terrell Amos and Holrert Johnson lowered the meet mark to 4J.4 seconds in the 440-yard relay and to 1:24.8 in the 880-yard relay in two of Saturday’s four meet record performances. MICMIOAN COLLBOE SCOEBBOARD ’'X’h ■n Michigan |6, Tolndo 0 lie 7-2, Ohio Northern 3« I 73, Perris State 1-4 3-1, Hope 2-2 (2nd game, I "hlgan 3 3, NortI Michigan 5-2, Illinois 10 Michigan State a, Iowa Hllljdole », Davenport ( Eettern MIchlgen 0, Michigan Slala 3, *?hlcago Rugby Club Track Michigan Slate 97, Ohio State 43V5 EeUern Michigan »8, Case Tech M, Harvey Kuenn’s single produced an insurance nm. Tile Pliillie,s put llie opener out of reach with a four run sixth inning built on Infield hits l»y C(K)kle Mojas and Alex Johnson, a walk and ii misjudged fly by Hank Aaron that brought in lliree runs. Clirls Short, chi!cked Hie Itraves on seven hits for it 4-1 record. Richie Allen lilt n homer and two singles in the o|M*iH!r, then strokwl it triple ami double In the niglitcap tlwil rnlsed his nv-erage to ,394. Tony Taylor and Wes Covington homered for tlie Phllles in the nightcap sliigfest, Covington collecting No. (i. KKY ItOLp: Tim McCarver played a key role for the Cardinals In the opener, starting a four-run fifth inning rally with a single, scoring the deel.slve run |n the sixth after reaching base on ( Alley’s error and then driving in two runs in the .seventh Inning. Will) that kind of supixirt, Rob GIbson bnaigbt his record to 4-0. Hill White finished llic sweep with a leadoff homer in the ninth inning of the nightcap. The Cardinals had been held to one hit by Roi) Veale - Ken Royer’s fourth inning homer until they broke './trough in Hie eightli to tie the score. Major league Boxes _ ab r h Blair cl 3 111 A.Lopu li 4 0 10 Aparlclo *■ 4 12 2 Rlch'ion *2b 4 0 10 Powall If 4 0 11 Traill cf * » • » Snider II 0 0 0 0 Manllc 4 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 e*|>il (C), Wllwn- Monortky (C), (C), Francii (C), O'Connor « Low Hurdlos -(C), Polleson (C). 21 — -------- Mlisik (C), Shields (LO), 0 Dash oner (C). le Relay -- Lake Orion. 3:51. WHY HOT... GH IN SHAPE AT HOLIDAY HEALTH CLUBS!! 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SD-Cnmpanerle. J’3 S MINNBSOTA 3 0 11 MeCraw 3 A II Mailln <; !5Uir,7.,* 4.1 1 2 'IJii h I 0 I 0 riihei A 0 0 9 10 0 0 WASIIINOroN CLBVBLAND ki** r I 1 ”" ** Tolalt 14 4 I 4 Tolali 32 1 Waihinglon ooo 200 OH Cleveland too OOO Ilk Made fat preminm-UremoldiCthit Ure ihooldsell for>30! • Meat the MO* Bover Ike! aply nylon, promtum loalc Local RiclerH Triumph ’ontlap riders grabbed two flratH and n se4 Guardian maintenance CHEVROLET • PONTIAC • OLOSMOBILE • BUICK • OPEL KAOETt • CADILLAC * GMCJTRUCIL; , 'o / 1A TMK l‘()NTIAC: VRRSS. MONDAY, MAY Jl, lOOff AUDIENCE AIJ, EARS ~ A S-monUi-old leopard (‘111) .sits with its back to a wall as thiea lahlilts nipve in rlo,ir for an in.spin'tion at the Como I‘ark Zoo al SI I’anI, Minn The AP PholoICK leopard used to share a pen with a hear eub, hut the liear died. Now Ihe leopard is in with the rabbits for eompany. Lone Survivor Has Nightmares of Crash AMTIHICAN EAtd>S. Idaho (AP) Billy Warford, 12, has nlfjlitinares about the wor.st a»-lomoblle aceident in Idaho’s history. Four Enimetl /•esidcnts and Billy’.s mother, father, thr6e sisters ftild a brother, were killed. He Is the only survivor. The Warlords, Elmer, 52, his wife, Zona, 46, Claude, 22, Dar-, lene, 20, Alice, 15, and Dorothy ■'-..Fay, 9, of Elkins, Ark., were kllhsl April 15 in a two-car crash near Massacre Rocks on the old Oregon Trail. The spot, about 125 miles northwest of Salt l,ake City on U.S. :iON, gets its name from an 1862 Indian ambush that kilU'd fewer petsons than the automobile aeddent. BROKEN LEG At Blower County Hospital, where his broken leg was put in traction, Billy came out of deep shock and met the Rev. Peter Petersen, minister of the American Falis Assembly of God Church. •‘He regained con.sciousness vyhen they were prying the car door open,” the minister said. "The first thing he saw was bis little sister. " T suppo.se my father and mother are gone''’ he asked me. "And 1 said, 'Y(\s, they’re all gone.’ •’ The minister said Ihe boy has hud nightmares ever since BROKEN WA’I'CIIES Hilly has decided to keep bis father’s broken jiocket watch, the Rev. Mr. Petersen said, and a wristwatch worn by his brother. Both stopped at exactly 12:;i5 p.m, Billy spent Easier in the hospital. lie receiveef toys, Easter baskets, flowers ^ and .several letters, some with moncjy. 'I’he letters contain(xl offers of adoption. One was addressed to “Little Boy From Arkansas Who Was in Accident, American Falls, Idaho.’’ . Billy’s older brother Clyde, 26, k East Wenatchee, Wash., has People in the News; By The Associated Press arranged for a light airplane to carry Billy to his home. Billy will live will) (!lyde, his wife son and daughter MORE OPTIMISTIC “He’s more optlmi.stic now,’ says the Rev. Mr. Petersen.’ He spent the last few days drawing cowboys and 'Yogi Bear.’’ “Me wants to fix up his bicycle,’’ says (;iyde. Soviet Official Is Injured in Fall SAN DIEGO, Calif liB-Christopher Crosby, 22-year-oId son of bandleader-singer Bob Crosby, was married in San Diego, Calif., Saturday night to a Danish movie starlet as 40 wedding guests hummed Mendelssohn’s wedding march. The humming wasn’t a stunt — Crosby’s parents had forgotten the sheet music for their son’s wedding to 21-year-old Britt Semand of Copenhagen. NEW YORK (AP) A Ru.s slan United Nations official remained in serious condition today from injuries suffered when he fell three fhwrs from a window of his Manhattan apartment. Yuri Ragulin, 40, was taken to Lenox Hill Hospital Saturday night with internal injuries and multiple fractures. Ragulin is a Soviet l#gal officer attached to the Social Affairs Department of the U.N. secretariat. A friend, Alexander I mertnykh, who lives in the same apartment hou.se at 435 E. 77th St., said he went to Rag-ulln’s seventh-floor apartment about 11:50 p.m. and that “ ulin was missing and a window was open. Peering out the window, he told police, he saw Ragulin on the roof of the four-story Russian Baptist church next door. Ragulin’s wife, Diana, was at a movie, and their daughter, Maria, 5, was asleep in the apartment. U.S. Aide in Seoul for Talks Wklt W. Rostow, chairman of the U.S. State Department’s policy planning council, arrived yesterday in Seoul for a three-day visit with Korean government officials and economists, during which he is expected to explore ways of achieving a self-sustaining economy in Korea. Rostow Shah of Iran, Wife Stop Over in Paris The Shah of Iran and Empress Farah Dibah arrived in Paris yesterday for an overnight stopover on their way to official visits in Brazil, Argentina and Canada. Dedication Is Surprise for Cardinal Francis Cardinai Speilman dedicated an addition to a school* for the blind yesterday in New York City, and the occasion turned into a surprise birthday celebration for th^ Cardinal, who will be 76 tomorrow. ’Two. blind pupils presented the cardinal with a gift and the school chorus sang “Happy Birthday.” ^Need |U. N. Groups to Probe Religious Bias' Supreme tlourt Justice Arthur J. Goldberg proposed In New \|ork City last night the creation of a neutral, factfinding United Nations commission to investigate religious discrimination throughout the world. Ooldbt^g addressed the inaugural dinner of the Jewish Center for ,|the Untied Nations which is to be built on the site of %«yni|gogd^ on Sast 51st Street in Manhattan. . • an announcement which came as a surprise to Goldberg,:; it isaa disclosed that the library in the new center irittvlh named in his honor. Hie library is a gift of Mr. and ^‘lllekai^ Rassan of Washington. Centenarian Succumbs in State Nursing Home Shriver Announces Change in Yardstick on Poverty WA.SIIIN(m)N (UPl) The federal goverimunil’s War on Poverty program is using a new yardstick to determine Just winch American families are really |»ooi B iSargent Shriver ,lr., dl re<‘lor of ihe Office of Econondc Opporlunlty ((R60), announced Ihe change yesterday even as the U.S. Chamber of (knninerce N cballeiiglng the govern Ill’s old standard which says Ibal any lamily earning less Iban f'l.lKH) annually iH |Hiverly-strlckeii. Shriver snlif Ihe new standard would take Into consideration the respective size of tonillles and whether they live to urban or riii nl areas. It la based on Uie Agrirullure Depai’lmetit'a ’’oconoiny lovol food |ilaii,’’ wlilcli figures a liasic coNl of 23 cents pin- |)erson per meal per day. A family of four with an annual Income under |3,3t0 and ud will) Ineome iiiuler an Ijlillvidiial 61,S40 now] would l^o classed as poor. Previously, the figures were $3,000 and $1,500. DIFFERENT LEVELS Foi* families of two, U)e poverty level would he $l.»0«, and for famlllea of three, $2,441), Slirlvor said the original $3,000 yordstlek for all was Set by (he ('ouncll of (economic Advisers as a “rough rule for Initial purposes iiiid not iideiided for long-term plnii-idng of Ihe antlpoverty program.” He said the new definition takes Into account food, rent, otl)er costs utid the size and geographical location Of p5Servlc4i, delivery andi^lvll warraWy included. Buy nd’$ un^ollengod discount jiriceii NEWEST 1965 MODEL SPECIAL PURCHASE! 2-SPEEDS FULLY AUTOMATIC WASHER BUY! You couldn't want more in fully automatic washing convenience features . . . you couldn't pay loss than Highland's new rock bottom price . . . check it! ... 2 speeds, normal and gentle for extra care fabrics. 2 cycles. Big 12-lb. capacity. 3 wash and rinse temps. Water lovol control feature, exclusive magic mix filter dispenser. Exclusive 9 rinses for brighter, cleaner clothes. NORGE 6IANT SIZE 14 rouKD CAPACITY 2-SPEEDS FULLY AUTOMAHC WASHER Washes a 2 lb. handful to a big family 14 lb. hampeiTul. 2 speeds for wash, spin and rinse. 3 cycles for regular, normal and automatic soak. Water temperature selection. Timer controls, lint filter, "plus capacity" powerful action agitator, super spindry. Water level'control feature anll Murenu of Markets ns of I'VIdoy. Produce Anolai, N. Spy, bu. Applai, N. Spy, C.A., I) Applat, Sail, bu VedBTADLBt Onloni, dry. 50-lb. baa Onlont, graan, di. ben. Onloni, tall. 31-lb, bag Parinipi, Vi bu. Parinlpi, callo naK, di. .. . . .. . , Polaloai, I Poultry and Eggs DBTROIT (AP)-Prlcei p DITROIT SOOI DKTROIT (AP) Eog prkai paid nai ---- . .. .. ------, (including U.S,)i racalvari (including madlum 7l lli CHICAOO BOTTER, 1001 CHICAGO (API — Chicago Merca Exchango - buying prirai unchongadi V3 icor 9] A SI'/i) 90 D >9 C tars 90 B ami 89 C SPM. Eggs barely ilaadyi wholesale buying ■—‘•an^di 70 1 imi Ul dirties CHICAGO POULTRV CHICAGO (API (USOAI- CIve pou try; wholesnle bOylng prices unchange to I hlgliori roeslers 3A-J9( special 1e While Rock (ryert I9-JIV3. Livestock LMICAOU l«r| — bulchers slaady to J5 •'•onen U ^ s siaaoy ro « nignarj r* .71) 1-3 310-400 lb sows IS.OO IS.IO) .. --------- ,59590 ibi 15.00- 1.5-15.00) boars 15.50) 50 40 lbs 1J.50-I3.50. Cattle 5,000) celvei 30) tiaughler steers laos cnoice eav-iru/a lu -s 24.50-25.J5) mixed good end c American Stocks NOON AMERICAN , NEW YORK (AP) - Following Is lilt ot selected stock ""JJ American Slock Exchange with noo prices; (hdi!) High Law Last Chg. Aerolel .SOa 5 24ft 24ft 24ft - ft Assd OIHiO 4 4ft 4ft 4ft Mias Cplrt . 14 1S.14 1S14 1S14 ^ Barnes Eng 2 22 22 22 + Fargo (3li| 20 3 3-14 3 3-14 3 3-14 Feimt Pel .150 ‘ ‘ Fly Tiger __n Oovel Giant Yel .40 Goldfield Gl Bas Pet 4 2 1ft 2 , 8 2ft 2ft 2ft 13 7Vx 7ft 7ft 15 8ft Oft 8ft + McCrory wt 14 5ft 5ft 5ft Mead John .48 32 22 2W. 21ft - ' Mich Sugar .lOg 1 5 5 5 , Scurry Rain Sbd W Air Signal Oil A ' 'Technicol .75 24 22ft 21ft 21ft - Un Control .20 17 5ft 5ft 5ft + ' Webb &« Knapp 58 ft 5-14 5-14 Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are alghthi OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from NASO are representative Inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 a.m. Inter-dealer market change ’ throughout life day. Prices do not Include retail markup, markdown o AMT Corp.?:.................. 8.1 Associated Truck ............. 17.2 Braun Engineering ........... 22.2 Citizens Utilities Class A .... 30.2 Diamond' Crystal ............ 14.4 Ethyl Corfi...................43.4 Mohawk Rubber Co...............21.7 . Michigan Seamless Tube Co. 25.2 Pioneer Finance ............, 8.4 Safran Printing ............: 14.4 Vernor's Ginger Ale .......... 8.4 Wehr Corp.....................21.2 Wolverine Shoe .............. 33.4 Wyandotte Chemical ........... 34.4 Quotations compiled by the NASD at approximately 11 a.m. Bids’ are repre- sentative Inter-dealer prices and do not Include retail markdown or commission. Asked prices have been adjusted upward to Include approximate markup. Winkelman's ................. 14.3 15.3 Vesely Co..................... 10.4 11.4 MUTl/AL FUNDS Bid Asked Aftlllaled Fund .............5 9.29 510.04 Chemical Fond — 15.15 14.57 Commonwealth Stock .........; 9.73 10.43 Keystone Income K-1 ........ 10.05 10.97 Keystone Growth K-^I ........ 4.35 4.94 Mass. Investors Growth .... 9.89 10.81 Mass. Investors Trust ...... 17.80 19.45 Putnam Growth .............. 10.49 11.48 Television Electronics ...... 8.90 . 9.70 Wellington Fund ........... 15.49 14.88 Windsor Fund ................17.18 18.07 ’Nominal Quotations STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by The Assaclalad Prtss 30 IS 15 40 ind. Ralls Util. Stocks Net change ........ -.5 -.4 -F.4 -.3 Noon FrI..........493.9 170.4 174.7 339.4 Prev. Day ....... 494.4 171.2 174.3 339.9 Week Ago ........ 491.3 171.9 174.1 338.8 Month Ago ... 479.2 173.4 174.0 333.4 Year Ago .........434.0 143.4 151.4 303.1 1945 High ...... 494.4 177.8 177.3 339.9 1945 Low ........442J 149.3 147.3 322.8 1944 High ...... 47SA 189.4 147.2 332.4 1944 Low ....... 406.4 150.7 148.9-»4.7 DOW-JONES NOON AVERAGES ’ STOCKS: 30 Indus ..............919.34-f0.45: 20 Rails ..................... 212.g-F0.33 15 Utils ..................... 141.79-0.21 ?0N®i!??* • ■ ...... 40 Bonds : .. ...............y-90.13-FO.02 10 Higher grade rails .....’..f: 84.79-F0.05 10 Second grade rails .......93.8S-0.03 10 Public utilities .......... S|^.78-F0.04 Stock Mart Moves Irregularly NIfiW YORK (AP) 'llie sUwk market moved Irregularly In active trading at the o|ienlng today. (iaina and loHKe;i of moHl key Ml(K-k« were fractional. Cenerul Molorw rose Vs to 101) Va on an o|>enlng block of 4,300 shares and was trading n point below Us historic high us Wall Street awaited decisions from (iM’s directors wli« meet late IcKtay. Kor weeks the Street bus iHien wondering whether (IM will propose u stock split or possibly declare a higher dividend. FORI) FFIJ. Ford, strong last Veek, fell ‘fit to (il on openers of B,IKK) and 3,500 shares. Chrysler eus4td. Cojipers were mixed in tlie wake of news tiint most foreign coptter priKiticers linve raised their prices. Du Pont lost more ttiun it point find Jersey Standard was off a fraction. U S. Steel eastkl and American Telcpltonc was firm. 4P/^^^VFRA(iFS On Friday I h e Ass(K-lated Prhss average ttf 00 sttK'ks rose .4 to 340.3, a record closing high. Prlce.s were narrowly mixed on the American StiH^k Fx-cliange. The New York Stock Exchange DIOTROrr (AP) «ov. Oeorge Romney and a 70-memlMn- busl-and political group are liome from Uieir leiHlay Kuro-ptian vi.slt with congratulatory :omments and criticism from DemcK’rnls. The trip's announced pur|Kwe was to encourage trade iMilweeu Western )0uro|>e and Michigan. The delegation visited the six Furopcan Common Market countries and Switzerland. NEW YORK lAP) Inlliiwlnu Yogk "stuck * IXthkng# "wiario: —A— f L»l Ch^ ■ 10 7y/k 25‘.^ 25H - Aii«o cp .wc 10 w/k Alleah Lud 7 7 Alt«g Pw \M \ mt AillDdC 1-lkOb 10 53H ilH siiiH’i ,i is is AmStadl'’2;'o 14 ?Bft >Bft AmAIrlln 1^ ^ M 54^^ AmBdctt L40 21 59 »ft 4.1........ i • ■ ’j 14 79 7Bft 1 AmEIPw 1.14 2 44ft 44ft 4 ColllnRad .40 CBS 1.20b Col Ga> 1.28 Col PIcf .541 ComICre 1.80 ComwEd 1.80 Comrtt •ton Edit 1.80 lonElecInd 1 Congo* 2.30 ConiPow 1.80 Contalnr L2 0 Coot Can 27 14ft 14ft 14ft — 1 10 79ft 79ft 79ft -F ' 3 79 79 79 + < 4 50ft 50ft 50ft - ' 4 25ft 25ft 25ft + s 41 39ft 39ft 39ft -F ' 13 32ft 31ft 31ft - ‘ 4 33 22 22 5 39ft 39 39 - > B 2.40 434ft 34ft 34ft ' 3 77ft 77ft 77ft -F ' 3 57 57 57 -F I 14 34ft 34ft 34ft - ' 4 25ft 25ft 25ft /o *4^^ + ! Control Data 59 52 52 lift 1 I lift - CrowCoR .?9t Cgown CoA .. Cruc StI 1.20 I 34ft 34ft 34ft — < Deere f.40o Del Hud 30g DeltaAtr-1.40 DetEdls 1.30 Del Steel v40 Diem aiu « 10 19ft 18111 18'ft -t —D~ 2 25ft 25ft 25ft - 3 22ft 22ft 22ft 7 44ft '44ft 44ft - Disney .40b DomeMn .80a DowCh 1.80b Dresser 1.20 duPonf 1.2Sd DynamCp .40 10 75ft 75ft 75ft -t East Air Lin EastKo 3.40a East Kod wl “atonlWf 2.20 ;IBon^ 1.55 JIMusll .04g El Assoc .54f I 41ft 41ft 41ft - 12 165 144ft (_______ , . 4 82ft 82ft 82'/. -F » “ 54ft -F = EmersonEI 1 EmerRad .40 End John EgleLack RR 2 39ft 39ft 39ft . 2 3ft 3ft 3ft .... 18 30 19ft 19ft -F 1 "•f iiS + ' Eversharp 1 FaIrCam .SOe Fairch Hiller Fansteel Met Fed Mog 1.00 Fedd Corp l FedDStr 1.50 FerroCorp ' 20 15ft 15ft 15ft — ft Flltrol Cp 2 14 41'/4 40ft , 1 20ft 20ft 20ft - 1 2 75'/. 7Sft 7S>/4 - I, 24ft 24ft 24ft - >, 14 48ft 47ft ,J fiS: r HfiMIbur^ 1.M MflclaMnji^ 1 nooK cn 1.20 House F 1.80 Hupp Cp ,25t 1 i IlCent Ind 2 igarfiand 2 I 42^ 42^ 484 484 I 30^ ^ t/4 I $6% W/4 4 i/1i inti Packari \fo ITECkIBr BO 3 41ft 41H ( Jones&L 2A0 —R- 10 I05ft 1C I 54ft 54ft 54ft 4 13 17ft 17ft 17ft — ' LIggettAM 5 Lionel Corp Llllonin 1.871 LIvIngiO .741 Loews Theal I 82ft 82ft 82ft I 88ft 88ft 88ft ) lOft lOft lOft - 1 20ft 20ft 20ft 1 39ft 39ft 39ft Mad So Gar MagmaC 1.40 Magnavox I Marquar .25g MartInMar I MavDSlr 1.50 McDonAIr .40 Mead Cp 1.70 12 40ft 40ft 40ft 3 57 57 57 5 34'/4 34V4 34V4 MGM 1.50 Mid SUt 1.24 MlnerChem I 4 57ft 54ft 57ft + ft 2 43ft 43ft 43ft ' 10 52ft S2ft 52ft Mohasco .70 MonIDU 1.40 MonIWard I AAotorola 1.50 I 39ft 39ft I 34ft 34ft 4 ft , 120ft 128ft ■ 1 75ft 75ft 75ft 4 NatCan .4 NCashR 1 NalDalrv 3.40 Nat DIsi 1.40 5 33ft 33ft 33ft -F u.t Cn«i I iO 1 34ft 34ft 34ft 4 40ft 40ft . NalGyps 2b NalLead .75g Nat Steel 2 fzlnc NYCent l.30e NIagM Pw 2 Norfolk W 4a NorNalGas 2 NorPac 2.40a Northrop I Nwst Alrl .80 NwBan 1.50a Norwch 1.10a 12 17ft 5 29ft 17 39 4 59ft 5 131 5 44ft 42ft 42ft — ft 17ft ,17ft - ■' 29ft 29ft — 30ft 38ft 4 57ft 57ft 4 130ft 131 44ft 44'/. 48ft 49 4 , 84ft 84ft 4 I 50ft 50ft -4 ) 47ft 47ft 4 3 42'/. 42'/. 42'/. + | OtIsElev 1.9 0 Outb Mar .40 Owenslll 2.70 OxfdPap 1.20 7 14ft 14'/. 1 117 117 1 ,3 44ft 44ft • _P— icGEI 1.20 PacTAT 1.20 Pan Am ,60 ParamPIct 2 ParkeDav la Penn Dixie 1 Penney 1.50a Penn RR la Pennzoll 1.40 PepCola 1.40 PfUerCha la PhelpsD - ■■ 21 39ft 3?'/. : 15 11 11 , I El 1 12 77'/. 77ft ; 8 59ft 59% ; 14 73ft 73% : 1 39 39 : 13 43'/ii 43'/. ■ 11 53ft 53'/. ,7 50'/. 50 2 U TJIJ 12 45 44¥. 15 75'/. 75 75 RCA .40a RalstonPur Rayetta .48 Reading Co RelchCh .20a 4 58ft 58ft 58ft - ^2252, 22!^ 1 43'/. 43ft 43'/sr ... 9 42ft 42 42 4- 7 22% 22ft 22ft - 9 13 13 13 - 5 14'/. 16'/. 16'/.— 11 45'/. 45ft 45ft 5 45ft 45'/. 45'/. 4 4 35ft 35ft 35ft - 23 42 41ft 41ft — 23 42ft 4T/t 42ft ... 7 24ft 24ft 24ft ... 4 41 41 61 ... 3 22ft 22ft 22ft .. 1 25ft 25'ft 25ft .. 53 41'A 41ft 41ft — + 'A 25. 49ft 4*ft ( x12 41ft 41ft ' 55 78ft 71ft : 4 lift lift 1 5 38 37ft : (hds.l Hlph Law Last Cbu. StautlCh 1.40 4 4»ft 45ft 4.5 ft ft 8l«rlDrug ,75 14 34'/. 34ft 34'/i '4 Sleveni 1,50b 4 5J'/i 4J'.S SJ'I I >4 SludBbakvr 45 Sft 5ft ft 20 24 23'ft 24 UnCarbld* wl Un Elec I.IJ Un Tank'1.60 Unit AIrcft 2 .... 3 iSH Sy/s MiyJ,, USBorau .60( 1 22'/% 27'/% : 6 14^ 14^ 1 3 23'/% 7y/9 : 9 30'/% 30'/% i —w— whIteM 1.4 Worlhing I. 13 33ft 33'/. : 5 34'/. 34'ft : 88 45ft 45'/. ‘ 30 Sift 51 ! 15 33'/e 33ft : 4 80 80 SO - ■ tlgurei dends In Ihe foregoing table are an dlibursemenli h*^ on the Iasi quarl extra dividends or payments not d naled as regular are Identltled In following tOolnotes. a-Also extra or extras. b-Annual rale plus slock dividend. C-LIquIdalIng dividend, d- -Declared or paid In 1945 plus slock dividend. e-Pald last year. I-Payable In slock during 1965, estimated (x-dlitrlbu- 1—Declared or oald after stock div r spill up. k-Declared or paid Ihi an accumulative ■ Issue with dIv i-Pald this year, div dend omitted, deferred - _______________ _____ at last dividend meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1944 plus slock dividend. I-Pald In stock during 1944, estimated cash value on ex-dIvIdend or ex-dlsirlbullon I Issued. nd-Next d v|—In bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such companies. fn—Foreign Issue sublecl to In- Grain Futures Hurt by Selling Pressure CHICAGO (AP)-Selling ps/s'-’ sure weakened the grain futures market today with some contracts Qf wheat, corn and soybeans mi a cent or so during the first several minutes of trading. Trade was slow near the end of the first hour with soybeans % to cents a bushel lower, May $2.85%; wheat % to % lower, May $1.44%; corn unchanged to % lower, May $1.3S; oats % to 1 cent lower, May 71% cents; rye unchanged to Vt lower, May $1.17V4. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (API—The cash post of the treasury compared with co ----•‘Ing date a year ago. April 21, 1945 April 18, 1 $ 8,444,985,281.04 $ 4,041,345,483.99 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— 95,253,475,374.97 94,341,411,431.47 102,475,004,202.93 103,540,402,831.70 X-Total Debt- > 318,540,924,238.98 309,308,084,653.81 Gold Assets— . 14,413,042,159.91 15,441,582,023.14 X-Includes 8284,114,947.24 debt not sub-lect to statutory limit. Friday'* 1st Dividends Dtclartd BOND AVERAGES CainplM by The Auecleled Press 10 10 18 18 16 Rani Ind. Ulll. Fgn. L.Yd. tt change FrI. 83.5 .102.0 88.4 94.7 93.8 Day 83.5 102.0 88.4 94.7 93.8 834 101.9 88.4 94.4 93.8 834 102.1 88.7 94.4 934 J3.I 94.3 5 Low .. 82.2 101.0 88.3 92.4 .... 14 High 82.9 1034.88.4 92.2 94.2 4 Low 80.5 100.8 ' 87.2 90.1 92.9 Romney, Party Return Home 2 Traveling DemsCall Trip Political Move 'More Likely' Trusted Worker Thief? By JACK LEFLKR AP OuHineRS New* Writer NEW YORK. - A thief in a business firm is more likely to he fl trusted employe ttinu nil ordinary worker. 'Iltal's tlie conclusion of Haul D, Astor, president of Manage meiil Rnfeguards, Inc., n nation wide prAleclIvo and InveNllgHl-ivc agency. Two Dem(W.‘rats among tlie travelers, Secretary of Slate James Hare and Sen. Raymond 1). Dzendzcl of Detroit, criticized ' the trip as a political mtmeuver. Both said' Romney used tlie trip to campaign for President. Rouse Republican Leader Robert Waldron of Grosse Poinle Said Romney's speeches abroad were non-polltlcal, BEING considered “To say he is running for President is Inaccurate,’’ Waldron said, "but to say he is being (!onsldered for President is accurate." Romney said repeatedly throughout the trip that his speeches had nothing whatever to do wltli politics. A number of businessmen who accompanied legislative leaders and the Governor said they made several valuable contacts on the trip. Romney remained at home In the Detroit suburb of Bloomfield Hills over the weekend. He was scheduled to return to his office today. Appalachia Home Feasibility Study Set BEREA, Ky. (AP) -Berea College has a $13,783 grant from the Office of Economic Opportunity to see if a house with indoor plumbing can be built in rural Appalachia for $4,000. The proposed structure would be a one-story, semifabricated, frame dwelling with movable inner wails. The low cost would come through use of local materials, exact patterns for unskilled workers to follow, and self-help, low-unit financing, said Rude Osolnik, head of the college’s industrial arts department. Loan Office Opening at Miracle Mile CommerciapCredit Plan, Inc. will open a new pisrsonal loan office today at the Miracle Mile Shopping Center, 2247 S. Telegraph, Bloomfield Township. Glenn S. Hartman, 2219 Royal, Berkley, has been named manager of the new office. In addition to personal loans, the new office will prpvide a consumer goods financing program through which the public can finance the purchase of pliances, furniture, television :, musical" instruments and other merchandise. Commerical Credit Plan, Inc. and its affiliates have offices in principal cities throughout the United States. Car-sTruck Crash Kills 12 African Children PRETORIA, South Africa MP) - Twelve African children returning hpme from a singing festival died during -the weekend in a collision between their truck and an automobile, police reported. Thirty - eight children were injured in the pile-up. Fresh Wa% Flood U)NG BEACH, Calif. UP) - A Coast Guard pahrol boat crew had to pump water for two hours from a 95-foot schooner Gallant Lady moored at a dock here. Sometme aboard forgot and left a fresh water sp^ot turned on overnight and floods the vessel. Tlic riumon is tlial u Inmled employe Ih In a tielter |M>aitlon to Mlenl wltlioiil (leteclloli. Motlvatlona iiHunlly are to finance drinking, gambling and imilscretloiiH. HEAVY MWS Aslor, wliose firm lina lieen ferreting out tlileven for eight yeara, eHllmaleH llial internal thievery accounts for u $i billion loss yearly to incluStrlal and retail establishments. Going through his files, Astor lime up with this example <>f a trusleorts to indicate tliat tlie store received mucli more mcrclian-dise than was actually delivered. Re was In collusion with a vendor wlio paid him one-half of the excess payment. Tills store manager also stole lieavily on Sundays, when he loaded up his own automobile. mnnufaeturing organization had a factory in the South. It appointed as head of the factory one of the most respectable cil-1/ens of t lie coitimiiiilly, who reeoinipended by the hank and hy previous employers and who was regarded as a iirllllanl piTKliictlori engineer. Under )Hirsonal pressure for money, the plant manager first started iSH-kdling casli sales to mployeS and outsiders. DESTROYS COPIES Then he made arrangements wliereliy lie would receive large sums of money in return .for deslroylng all copies of invoices and .slil|)ping records for mer-liandise going to customers In 'olliislon wllh liim. ANOTHER S'rOIlE Management safeguards discovered that tlie manager had opened a store of his own in his wife's name and that he had st(H7ked and financed it with the money and merchandise taken from his employer’s store. Tills dishonest stoi'e manager had been a close friend of the owner of the discount chain for 15 years and entertained him at the home whenever the owner was in town. Here’s another: A New York City garment By ROGER £. SPEAR (Q) “We have $20,000 U. S. Government bonds bought early In 1954. They are due in September 1972 and redeemable in 1967. We are receiving interest at the rate of 2%> per cent. We would like to put this money into something that would give us more income. Would we lose the interest by cashing these bonds in now? Please help us if you can.” N. N. (A) You hold a Treasury issue which probably cost around 96 in early 1954, when money rates were lower. You can sell these for around 90% and you will receive accrued interest up to the date of sale, so you will lose some principal but no interest by disposing of them now. The bonds yield 3.95 per cent to maturity, which takes into account the big discount at which they 8ell, as well as the coupon rate. I see no reason why you should not sell, if you require more income. In their place, I suggest San Diego Gas & Electric; Continental Can: Consolidatecl Edison and Lone Star Gas. ★ ★ ★ “Recently, Genesco purchased the firm for which I work. They have made us a very attractive offer for the purchase of their stock. Do you think I should accept it?” V. D. (A) Genesco, in my opinion, is well managed and is worth buying. The Company is still mostly in footwear and apparel, but has broadened out by acquiring a large variety chain, !§. H. Kress & Co. Genesco is acquisition-minded, and has made marked progress along this line in recent years. Earnings were up sharply in 1964 and the stock has shown excelltnt technical action. I believe you are very fortunate to, have an opportunity to purchase the shares at a favorable price, and I certainly advise you to do so. Roger Spear’s new 48-page Guide to Successful Investing is now ready. For your copy, clip this notice and send $1.00 'Die New York office was aware that certain invoice numbers were missing but was always told byt he plant manager that tliey liad been voiced out and torn up. A Management Safeguards undercover o|Miratlve, aHslgned to the plant as a shipping clerk, iM'came aware of the plant manager's activities and lie ndmlt-led IheR exceeding $l(K),(K)fl. Aslor says Ids comiiany a.s-signs operatives wlio pose as evcryllilng from jsirters to department managers. “Normally we can locate a |irn|ilem and bring it to conclusion in 80 to !HI days," he says Interior Depl. Confirms: Flood Biggest on Record By The Associated ITcss Soggy dikes held back the powerful thrust of the swollen Mississippi River in tiu! Hannibal, Mo.-Quincy, HI., area hxlay as residents of oilier communities up and down Hie river wailed for the worst spring flood in history to run its course. A flood of this mapitude is calculated to occur only once in 100 years,” the Interior Department reported, confirming that the flcMKl was the biggest on record. Tile floiKl, yvlilch began in Minnesota, parts of North Dakota and Wisconsin during March when snow began to melt, has taken 14 lives and caused $150 million damage in five states. In the Hannibal-Quln(;y urea, the river is on the rise again toward a predicted crest Tuesday. NO LEVEE 'Ohly 23 families have been evacuated from low-lying areas in Hannibal. About 100 persons have fled their homes in Quincy. Hannibal has no levee protecting its population of 20,(K)0. The water had begun falling in a 15-block industrial area which Jhas been flooded for about ,a woek and most of the streets are passable. floiKl stage - wlilcli is 16 feet — since April 6. Upriver from the Quincy-llan-nibal area, several small towns were iiammcrcd liy llic floorls. EVACUATION Officials feared that battered levees would not hold in the Illinois towns of Keithsburg, with 963 residents, and in Hull, population 535. Most of Hull’s residents have been evacuated. Julfport, 111., was marked only by the peaks of roofs and treetops. Tile 250 residents fled two weeks ago. A broken levee Saturday night five miles south of Quincy, a city of 45,000 took some of the pressure off the Hannibal area. After the levee break, flood-waters ran 15 feet deep across 7;700 aces of farmland. It increased the Amount of land under water in Adams County, 111., to 25,000 acres. More than 20,000 acres were covered upstream in Henderson County,. 70 miles to the north. BEGAN RECEDING When the levee broke, the river began receding. The Mississippi dropped Saturday night at Quincy from Wednesday’s record high of 24.8 feet to 23.5 feet. The high in Hannibal was 24.6 Friday, but it fell to 23.6 early Sunday. The river began rising again, however, and the U.S. Weather Bureau predicted a crest Tuesday of 24.7 feet In Quincy and 24.5 feet in Hannibal. The Mississippi has been over Cross Burned at Holly Home to Roger E. Spear, in etp of this newspaper. Box ‘1618, Grand Central Station, New York City, N.Y. 10017. (Copyright, 1965) Members of a white faniily in Holly watched a cross burn early this morning before the home in which they’ve welcomed Negro guests. The two-foot cross was close enough to the Charles Hughes home, 3M S. Saginaw, to blister the paint , on the outside of the building. Mrs. Hughes said she was convinced the cross carried a racial message. “We have Negro friends to whom we’re very close,” she said. Ignited about one foot from the house, the cross w^s spotted at 1:38 a.m. by Holly Patrolman James France. He said he saw two boys run around the house and into the swamp behind it, but be did not pursue them because his first concern was to extinguish the fire. Mrs. Hughes, who brought out water to put on the blaze, said her family was “vei^, vqry concerned” about the incident. Sandbagging continued in Nio-ta, 111., across the river from Fort Madison, Iowa. Water receded at the rate of three inches an hour in the Quad Cities area of Davenport, Iowa, and Moline, Rock Island and East Moline, lU, EVELS OUT Officials have said the crisks will be (iver wlien the crest passes Quincy and Hannibal and the waters level out in the wider channel of the lower Mississippi. Government officials said the record water discharge in St. Paul, Minn., exceeded the previous maximum flood in 1952 by 38 per cent. A spokesman for the Geological Survey in St. Paul said, “during the April 12-2( period at St. Paul, the Minne'sota and Mississippi rivers discharged more than 800-billion gallons of water, enough to supply the needs of two cities the size of New York for about a year.” News in Brief Some $150 in cash was stolen froifi a Birmingham service station early Satuniay morning. Birmingham police said Stone’s Standard Service, 347 S. Hunter, was entered by breaking a window. ® Police are investigating the recent theft of $205 from the office of J. Robert Sterling, 31, 309 Pontiac State Bank Building. Rummage Sale: Grace Lutheran Church, Genesee at Glendale. Thurs., May 6, 9-6; Fri., May 1, 9-12. —adv. St. Andrew’s Confraternity of Christian Mothers Annual Rummage Sale. Rochester, Mich., May 6, 7. 10 a.m. - 9 p.m.—adv. Rummage Sale: First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham, 1669 East Maple, Thurs., May 6, 9 a.m.-8 p.m.; Fri., May 7, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. —adv. Rowe’s Farm Dairy is NOT going out of business. Farm Fresh Dairy Products, available as usual. 4100 Baldwin Rd., Pontiac. —adv. Rummage Sale: May 4, 10 a.m. All Saints, Exchange Street, entrance. -^adv. Money Shipment Loss Leads to Postal Probe DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - Postal authorities are searching for clues to the disappearance of more than $30,000 believed stolen in a money shipment from the Federal Reserve Bank in Dallas, ^ Af U.S. Postal Inspector Ralph W. lltomas said Sunday the, money, $30,000 in biUs and $506 in dimes, was shipped by contract truck April 21. \ V’rtVffirB ■ TIIK IMJN'riAC I’HKaSH. MONDAY. MAY ». \ hs in Pontiac, Neighboring Ar^s DKIIOIIAII LKK GilLLKN Graveside service for Deborah Lee Culien, 6-yeek oid daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Ernie Cullen 44 liln(‘oln, was to liave been 1 p.n). today al tlie l.akeview (Jernetery, (Hark.slon. Tla* baby died yesterday. Survivors 1 n c I u d c a slHler, I) 0 n n a Lynn at Imine, and grandparents, Mrs. Ethel Cullen of (-’larkslon and Raymond Giroux of Clilcago. LAURA ANN EII.IIAUT Laura Ann I'llluirl, Infant dangliler of Mr. and Mr.s Kred-erlck Eilhart, IKi Murphy, died Saturday, Service will be held tomorrow in Pandora, Ohio,) Loenr ar-langertuoils are being haiHlIed by V(M)rbees S i p 1 e Fiinend Home. Surviving in addition to her parents are two brotliers, Terry and Wayne, both at home, and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Eilhart of Pontiac, Mrs. Dorotliy Roberts of Alaliama and Harry I,. Roberts of l)eln»lt. MARTIN N. MADSEN Service for Marlin N. Mad.sen, 84, of 186‘A Hickory, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at tin* Coals Funeral Home, Drayton Plains, with burial in I.aki'view Cemetery, Independence Township. Mr. Madsen tary Sliiarl L Udall, who announced I li e cnickdown, said lhal niinii'roUN d(‘cr, (|uall, and oilier types ol resident game also were pur-chii.sed, Rahman vs. Sukarno A Boxer Rebellion? TOKYO (IIPII - Malaysian Premier Tenku Abdul Rahman today offered to fight President Sukarno of Indonesia lo sellle their dispute, ‘iiidoiiesia’s coiifroidatloli againsf Malaysia Is not a ((iiestion of single c()iid)al lielween .Sukarno and me," Itah niitii said in a speech to llie l<'<>relgn Cy MSU lb replace liim. ilie governor’s office has been asked for a hearing in an effort to make public the reasons for dismi.ssal of Sparks from the po.st he has held for 24 years. A cotntniUee of Cass County residents also has been formed in defense of Sparks nnd supports his fight for rcin.stalement. Rare Money and Art Stolen QUEBEC (AP) - Thirty-three paintings and three collections of old money were stolen early today from the Quebec Provincial Mujseum. Exact value of the stolen articles was not immediately known, but it is believed to rijin to several thousand dollars. The burglary was reported by police, who discovered two night watchmen tied up in the museum’s basement. The men were not injured but were taken to ho.spital With mild shock. ■nED TO CHAIRS Police said one of the watchmen left the building about 9 p.m. to make rounds outside. He was seized by two men, who put a handkerchief around his face. He was taken inside and forced to call his companion, who was-then overcome. Both were tied to chairs and tape was placed over their eyes. When the two men did not answer a routine telephone check, police were sent to the scene. ’ The stolen paintings had been lifted from their frames. Hospital Ends Open Houses Pontiac Stale Hospital will not hold an open liwise this year during Nalional Mental Health Week whlcli opened terinlendont. With nearly 10,000 iwrsons bonlacted during the year, througli scheduled lours of the hospital or speakers from the hospital staff, it is felt by hospital officials that a year-round ojien door policy Is preferable to an annual open hour. Martin said organizations and the general public are invited to arrange for scheduled tours, speakers and other hospital programs. 'rile su|)crintendenl suggestixl arrangements sliould be made by contacting the hospital’s community relations department. Death Claims Radio Vocalist Service for Pontiac Soloist Set Tomorrow Service for Floyd A. Campbell, 156 E. Iroquois, a pioneer radio vocalist, will be at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial in Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. Campbell died Saturday after a long illness. He had lived in Pontiaq for 60 years. For a number of years he was a tenor soloist at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York. He was a past president of the Orpheus ciub of Detroit and a member of that group for 50 years. He was alsq a lifetime governor emeritus of the Michigan Male Chorus Association. PRIOR TO RETIREMENT Prior to his reitrement several years ago, he was employed by the Sherwin Williams Co.. Surviving in addition to h i s wife, Lucy, are a daughter, Mrs. Daniel C. DeGraff of Birmingham, and a son, Endres of Wilton, Conn. He is also survived by a brother and six grandchildren. Advance Paratroop Unit Arrives in Viet SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — The advance unit for 3,-500 American paratroop^s arrived in Saigon today. The balance of the three airborne battalions was expected-within a few days. The paratroopers are the first U.S. Aiiny combat ground unit assigned to Viet Nam. U.S. and Vietnamese officials said they would “increase security at key installations and ffress the war more effectively.” Sixty men were in the advance unit. U.S. officials declined oh security grounds to say when the main force would arrive. But they said they would be stationed at Bien Hoa, a big air base 12 miles northeast of Saigon and at Vuntay, a coastal cily 40 miles southeast of Sai-gon. The new arrivals comprise most of the 173rd Airborne Brigade stationed on Okinawa. 36;000 MEN U.S. officials said the airborne contingent would bring the total U.S. strength in South Viet Nam to around 36,000 men. There already 8,500 U.S. combat Marines in South Viet Nam. Commanded by Brig. Gen. EUis W. Williamson, the air-boThe contingent includes tWo infantry battalions, one artillery battalion and the equivalent of one battalion of various support units. Stationed in defensive roles, a U.S. spokesman said, the Amerr lean paratroopers “will free Vietnamese combat troops for offensive ojierations.” U.S. officials announced that three new Army helicopter ewn-panies of 260 men and 25 helicopters arrived over the weekend. There are now 12 Army helicopter companies in Viet Nani, two Marine squadrons and several Vietnamese squadrons.- RESUME STRIKES . After being idled Saturday by unfavorable, weather, U.S. jets resumed !air strikes Sunday against Communist North Viet Napir U.S. Navy jets blasted a railroad siding and three boxcars 100 miles south of Hanoi. Groundfire was light and all the planes returned to their carrier. Other American aircraft bombed suspected Viet Cong positions in South Viet Nam, including a heavy attack on a Communist-infested zone north of Saigon. A U.S. official said there were no air raids over North Viet Nam today, presumably because of bad weather. U.S. officials said Air Force Capt. Ronald E. Storz of Portsmouth, N.H., disappeared in a light observation plane last Wednesday and a search for him has been abandoned. CONG POSITIONS Storz took off from Dong Ha, close to the border with North Viet Nam, on a flight of about six miles. U.S. officials did not rule, out the possibility that he went down in North Viet Nam. Other American aircraft bombed suspected “ Viet Tong positions in South Viet Nam, including a heavy attack on a Comifluni'st-infested zone north of Saigon. U.S. Marine medium tanks went on their first patrol Sunday. The 52-ton M48 tanks, with Marines clinging to their sides, encountered only scattered Viet Cong fire. There were no casualties. ! In London, the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization’s ministerial conference opdhed with a call from British Priroe^inister Harold Wilson for ‘^honorably negotiated settlement” of the war in South Viet Nam. OPPOSED TO TALKS From Peking, came a Communist Chinese announcement that it was firmly opposed to any peace talks on Viet Nam or Laos during a proposed international conference on Cambodia. The New China News Agency said the Peking regime was “resolutely opposed to the endeavor of U.S. imperialsim and its followers to bundle together the question of Cainbodia and the questions of Viet Nam and Laos.” The British believe the proposed conference to guarantee Cambodia’s neutrality could be used for starting talks bn the fighting in neighboring Viet Nam and Laos. North Viet Nam issued angry blasts on several fronts, including a protest against the Australian’' government’s decision to dispatch an infantry battalion to South Viet Nam. Hanoi protested to the three-nation control commission that the United States and South Viet Nam had seized a fishing boat with four fishermen aboard in North Vietnamese waters. The North Vietnaniese paper People’s Army claimed the Communists shot down 163 U.S. planes over North Viet Nam last month. . The U.S. Defense" Department said since U.S! air strikes began Feb. 17, it has announced the loss of 33 American and fiiree South Vietnamese Pope Speaks to Americans Message Carried Via Earl/ Bid Satellite NEW YORK (AIM P()|)c Paul VI Hjmke to the Aincrlrnn people live on television for Itie first lime bKlay via the Early Rlrd (•(unmimlcatlons salelllU), and commetilixl on the “astounding Inventions" of science which made tlie lelecnsl possl- l)le .S|MUiklng In English from the A|m)sIo11c Palace, Hie |>ontlff appeared on Hie NRC TV "To day" show. The 160-word transatlantic greeting to Americans came via the 85 pmiml cyllndrlcnl satellite which lias been in orbit since last April 6. The text' of Hie pontiff’s address: "Dear people of the United States; ",We are very iiappy to greet you tcKiny by means of this startling new communications salel-llle. MODERN WORLD “Tills mtslern world and its Inventive gcniu.s continue to amaze us with its striking discoveries. Who would have dretfmt that such means of com-mimlcallon would lx* at our disposal in our time? “The tremendous power of man’s intellect Is reflected in Hiese astounding inventions and scientific advances. Would that all of these were dedicated exclusively to the benefit of men everywhere! “We pray lo A|mlgbty God lhal these marvelbus discoveries will serve the cause of peace, and will make it possible for men to cooperate with each other in making this a better world and a happier place where men grow and develop Into the likeness of their creator and find fulfillment of their desires insofar as this is possible on this earth. “We invoke bpon all of you an abundance of heavenly blessings and graces; may your grand nation prosper in peace and happiness.” A Noriiui of coiitrollMl explosions wore set off recently In l^ke Superior to obtain a profile of « portion Qf the earth’s (‘rust, Npiica oe eusi.K Nolle* li lM»*(>y elvan by Ih* uml*> ldn* ' ;1' ■ r ;.vL ■I 855 WEST HURON ST. PONflAC ^ ':r'h 'I'HK I'ONTIAC rilKHS. . .M/U ;i, iiKi.'i i>onllia»i POPULAR THEATEn I AST TIMtS TONITE “WHAT A WAY TO Q0!“ “KITTIN WITH A WHIP" TUESDAY LADIES’ DAY EAGLE iTUES-l_________ FRANK SINATRA “A HOLE IN THE HEAD” Service Slated for Spike Jones I,os ANCKI.KS (AIM Ho Hury will Ik* reoitcd (onlKht for Spike Jones, tfie band leader who introduced washboards, cowbells and cannon as musical litsl'!'itmenls and ari aiiHeil sonyii Ibiil lic|i| |)C()|)lr lis(cM|n(i lo llicm .lonoH, wbdf once termed him self Ihe daTidrnff In Ions hair miiNlc, died in bis sleep at home Sainriiay lie was r)!!. A spokes man tor the tamlly said dealb was cmi.'icd liv empliysema, a respiralory attlicllon .J^wildering, Frightening' Mov/e World Is at Julie's Feet Three Persons'Die as Aircraft Collide lly «ICN|H: IIANDSAKICIt YWOOC HOLLYWOOD (AIM - How does it feel at 29 to have the movie world praclically at your feel? "Very tdee," saiti Julie An (hews, "but slightly bewll derinjt And a llltle fritthl’ enin«" WK.STIcm.n, N V (Al'i An I aerial pliolop,i apliy lli|-dil b.V an I (Jerirude Lawrence ,Slory,” in iuduMlrlalisl. it Juslicc ol Hie Hollywood the followiiiK June. peace and a slfile police inves j She shares a rented Heverly tigator ended in dealli lor llie j Hill^ home with duugliler ih'fe Sunday wlien their two ICmnia, 2‘v, a housekeeper, a * * * nurse and a loy while |m(Mlle, * A a Hefore lipr three pictures | She and huslnind Tony Wallon, Killed weie l)wl(-;hl Ihiiiuay, were released, she explained, "11 a sel and costume desliiner, run T/, oi Weslerlo; Wlllhun IMii.' , had more freedom. I can't t{o| up "enormous” |oii(.j (liHl(ince luaii, :i7, Weslerlo iiisllcc ol Ihe anywhere m»w without belnit phone bills, Ills current Him peace and Leonard (larramone A look WHAT’S UNDEH THE The temptnatun; oidside the sound stage was In the fids. The lovely Ijondoner, in polkadot slacks and whlt6 shirt, looked (‘ool and distractingly beaullful. The enlerlaincr, born Lindley Arrnslrong Jone.s, suffered from a.'ilhma aild rc.splralory ills in his lale years He was released three weeks ago from Santa Moiuea llospilal, win* been lidien alter an Ban on Mexican Imported Labor to Be Reviewed assignment i.i Miss Andrev I London. I said Ihe attack 'ognl/ed <;iVKS I’KKMNC I Success gives her Ih.- f.•eling anlag..nlstn" b.-lwe.si her lhal ev(*rv new project must be iI" '" Warner "Inc: better Ilian Ihe one before. ^ "Mary |•op|.ins," her first .... ' picture, in which she played (he "''pburn lor Ihe Him ol "My , high flying, vocally magnificent ''‘"'v ........ DKTHOIT (AIM A Michigan, d'>verness, hs the hottest film in j ailviwii y panel will be selected i l^iMiey Studio history ' to a,ssl,sl Ihe IIS Dep.irlmenI of | aeemmtiint.s gleefully predict Labor in deciding wbether to worldwide gro.s.s of $tiV iliilllon s had star Studio "" ' London which Miss An ■d lor !i's years New Yoik and about !lti, ol Voorheesville, signed to Ibe .stale police Hu rerm of Crimlnale-ldenlltlcidiotr Stale police said l''urman, llyliig in Ihinnay's bclicopler, bad Intended to lake picluies ol (hiriiunone piloting his sIngh' <'iigtne |)lane ieilhmalh' MirdCi6 S: (worRer “• I !UANKIN(iANNl HANCHOFT J The Itosiiry tonight and Majis Tuesday at 10 a nt. will he In St. Victor’,s churciT, We.st Holly’ wood. Interment is lo follow at Holy Cross Cemetery, Los An •lax Ibe ban on imported MeX lean labor, .Secretary W, WiL lard Wirt/, said Saturday. widow. idi.sl Her critics hall Miss Andrews "The greatest musical talent show business has produced in Michigan’s pickle industry, j‘25 years” In little more than a the nation’s lop |)ickle pisxiucer j year her price per picture has has com|iiliuned about Ihe ban. ' ri.s(‘n from $11)0,000 lo $700,0(K(. Wirt/ said Ibe panel also Wbat next for Ihe Inlernidionid would have authority lo make sHir? ecommendalions on Ihe use of i A A A Hraceros", Mexican .field After the spectacularly beau-/orkcr.s, in ca.ses of temporary tiful "Sound of Music” and :(bo»- shorliiges. "The Americani/ation of Kmi- "1 <-erlatnly don’t bciir any malic<-,’’ Niild .lulie, "Who knows'.’ He may have something I want t(» do someday” Hesides Helen Crayso, .lones leaves son, Spik<‘ Jr , 1(1, daughle Leslie, i;i, and, Ctino Marie, and l.inda, 21), ;i (lijiughter by Vaudeville Showplace in Farewell Offering (AH I ShlATTLI” Wa.sh They tU(He(l off the loollights for good SnndjiN night at the I'aloinar 'The.aler, once one ot over His hiaP love, GIRLS. SOrJUS Ij, ^ JlAuciHS! MAPI C0108. pieflisulie ORANGE ROOF! Served Every Saturday, ^Sunday, Monday and Tuesday COMPLETE DINNER INCLUDES 4 piocos of Goldon Friod, Juicy Tundur Chicken I tench I Fled Holatoes Colo Shiw Roll and BdUer Cotton, Toa or Mijk Choice of Howard Johnson's 28 Famous Ice Creams or Sherbets SERVED 11 $0 A M. TO CLOSING UouiARDjoiinfon':( 3650 DIXIE HWY. at Drayton Plains HOME OF THE SPECIALS STANUYKRAMfR mA MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD” “ONE OF THE YEAR’S 10 BEST FILMS!" -N. Y. TIMI 2nii •Ffftr Marriage Italian style > Sophia Loren FUMED m COLOR! ♦tdiyh Mareeiio Mastroiaiinl TONIGHT at 7:20-9:30 EXTRA: “A Tribute To Sir Winston" • CARTOON QUKSTION: How tan helicopters go straight up and down and hover, as well as fly forward’? ' ★ ★ ★ ANSWKK: The cross-section of a helicopter’s blades, shown at the top of picture, resemble those of an airplane’s wing and both allow aircraft to fly (or the same reason. Moving air takes longer to pass over the upper curved part, creating lesser air pressure hbove. The greater air pressure on the bottom exerts a liffing force. Of course, a helicopter’s blades revolve while an air plane’s wing remains still. The secret of why the ’copter can perform so many tricks in the air is that the angle or pitch of the blades can be changed—which has an effect similar to that of changing the angle of a paddle while paddling a canoe. Blade angles are controlled by the pilot, who uses "the cyclic pitch stick” to guide the copftr forward, backward and sideways, and the “collective pilch stick” to fly up and down. When flying ahead, the pitch of blades changes as they beat around. In position (1) the pitch is flat; with (2) it is beginning to turn and by (3) has a sharp angle or pitch. In (4) the pitch is decreasing and in (IHt is flat again. ~ 'These different pitches are what the word “cycle”*means. In the other movements, all blades have the same “collective” pitch; Ihe small drawings show how different movements are made. FOR YOU TO DO: Use your imagination a bit — dream of a little one-man. helicopter just big enough to fly by yourself when you’re old enough to get a pilot’s licence. These little one-man jobs have been actually built; we rhay see them in the skies some day. • First Showing the New, All New pHiTnii-il ALL WEATHER FUN ROOM EXCLUSIVE FEATURES • Prime quality (not storrh type) leakproof Slider Windows • Heaviest gauge Aluminum _ J\wning ’ ■ • Patented new Roof Drain • Awning has recessed shadow box ends • Insulated, color matched. Lower Panels • Telescoping Gutter design • Convertible tor all year use • Interlocking Colorweld Root design • Heavy duty extruded Master Frame , . Aluminum Combination WINDOWS .^^lit^ Aluminum SIDING and TRIM Insulates . . ."home is warn)er in Winter, cooler In Summer Saves on painting and .-upkeep Saves on heating bills House stays like nev< for years to come OPEN SUNDAY 10-6 P.M. DAILY 8-9 P.M. ROOFING • GUTTERS and DOWNSPOUTS • INSULATION Iron RAILINGS • CEMENT and BRICKWORK FE 5-9452 Phone 26400 W. Eight Mile ! 1,'/, Mile West of Telegraph East Side iPoiitiac 'j Downriver " I, Birmingham-Soltthheld--I Toledo 1 lCT;G»IGjTW45241¥J-35951 Royal Oak II. 7-2700 | CH. 8-4261 | FREE full year supply of REYNOLD’S FOIL with a visit to our plant and showroofn C 1 " . r ., II ' * v„ TIIK roN'I'IAC l*Ul<:sS, MONDAY. MAY ,1. limA ONE COUIR I yi Finds Visit to Chinese Tailor a Must in South Viet Nam Hy HAL IIOYLI-: .SAKION, Soulh ViH Niim (AP) — This is H strange war Indeed It Is (he tirsl war I've heen in Where a lepiirlet has got his Untform eiisloiii made liy « Qlliiese tailor. 1 don't helleve even Klehard Harding Davis, th« ino.yl glam orous ol war eoiT»'.s|)oulenlM, Went to I li a I lengtii. Hut out liere palroni/.ing a ('hinese tailor isn’t a 4tixury, it's a necessity. *<;haV mahkkt' So lar, I lie doesn't oflleially clothing to' re[)orters nor will it sell it to them. They soinetiines r an buy it, however, on what is euphemlsllially known as 'llie gray market" IlOYIJC gov(*rninenl i.sHue eomhal The leader ol the ileii ol thieves to whom I Wtis referred has bis headquarters in what looks like an abandoned ware-lioiise, just as^ do American gaiigs on lelevision progiams AAA Wlien I explaiOerl what I wauled, the chlet (hiel, who shall remain nameless In lael he .said he prelerred It that way (illered me all the opium I wanted, hut said he was all out ol governnuMit ntulorms "This has been a very IhmI inonlh lor stealing,” he ex plained ( IIINKSK TAII.OIt .So I went to see Liiong, Ihe Chinese lallor, who Is known as Ihe laslesl neiMlle In Ihe Kai ICasI In :ifi hours, lie whi|>ped logellier a hii.sli Jacket and Iron ser.s that made a fellow lisik like the while hunter on an Aliiean .satari. A * A l.uong, yiai made Ihe pants loo long," I olijeeted "Not l large and a wealliered rneksaek wl 'i some I'leneli la'glonniilie must have (lro|i|H-d al the Imitle ol I Men Mien Phu hack In I1l!i'l It was so heavy llud merely carrying It Ic' k lo my liolel made me hi enk iulo a s- * pt'S'i' KXCiiANta-; My last |s»ii at call was Ihe |Mi,sl exi li.oige No Ainei lean ever gis-s oil lo a war /one wilhoiil a farewell call at the PX lor a Ihix of ehiH-idate candy bars, some Imxes of hard candy, a pushhullon can of sliaving lath ei'Aiid II hoMie of liiaer-l re|iel leal The jiii'il exe'...... here Is slocked wilh ........oilmeni ol goislles not parllenlarly uselul in jungli' II; ' "hig 'flu ■ ■l'•(le hi I' sels, elassh al phonograph reeoids, expensive cameras, and sevend sets ol goll eluhs .lusi looking al tliem made me leel liomes'ek Tlieo I saw something limt re " ' I me. It was a bean bag pr' d at Hfi cents, I bought it Al llial price I fell it was loo goisl a iiargaln to pass up, and I llioilglil 11^ w(Mild l)e alee lo he llie only guy in Hie wai willi a hean hag ol Ida very own AAA Mesides, It may come In han dy It I need something lo throw al Ihe unlilendly Viet Coiig I’d rather play liean ling with them than any other game I can think ol ^ A H 1^ Wdlly Paper layi. ( ml Your IKtL 64"x65' WALL SCENIC with (ha puKhata of 10 rolli or mera of eur wolipropar borooini. \ WALLPAPER BARGAIN CINTHR till W. Huron ... Just PA W. ot To|o|raah IlllY, SKLL. THADK IlSK PON'I'IAC PKKHS WANTS AlW Area Births The following is a list of re | rent Pontiac area births as re corded at the Oakland County (Merk’s Office (by name of I father): PONTIAC Oontia W. Yoiinu. r:0 Ml > Irmcni llArrtl S. ABhliy, IIM Ordiut Harilay W. nrady, 194/ DwIaM Onbarl D. Burka. 171 SutmnO Richard R. Croilar, I06S narwIiR Ranald E. Hook, :iilA HaialaO Robarl r. MolyneuK. MSO AAaybrr Robart O. Whilr, 4.l«» Rolu .lamat W. Bray, 1/ Hovay ‘ Rodnay I - Dunli, J.rjl rilnirldga William C. Oraan, ll Olanwood (laranca A. I aporga, J30 Rltbwnod Donald O. Pallarion, 85J Emar»on Pill H. Walih. 41 Grnan Paul L. Wllion. 424 Marinn Jarry G. Elllton, 175 Carr Charlai A. Frailar, 129 Jackmn Harold O. Wblllna, SSI Flldaw Robart T. Evan*. 4145 Cllnlonvilla Ray E. Millar, 44 Qraan Voyd L. Canoy. 4M N. Saginaw Arthur 1 . Alkinton, 451 Sacond Garald O. Campballl 93 Chicago Bannla I. Vlndanl, 237 W. Yala Dax M. Ball, 213 S. Sanlord Jamai C. Cola, 91 PInagrova Sarvando R. Marquai, 413 Oimiin' Robart E. DodI, «4I Manomlnaa l.avl A. HIrKh, 2(3 S. Paddoc k Varnoo P. Joiaph, 7»9 BIgbam Ralph F, McAvby, I740'/S Invarnass Arthur 1. Whalay, 439 Branch Francli H. Jonai, 51 Fanalay Ronald L. Brown, 2439 RIchwood David O, JackBon, 15*7 Pontiac Laka Jame» H. pobarta, 2*7 E. Wilton Robert H, Laltv, 23(5 Chaltlngham Roy W. Fulti, 35 Feirgrova L*on B. Yulkowikl, 205 Onalda Robart L. Hanion. 97 E. Hopkins Paul J. Tourvllla, 3552 St. Mary Richard L. Kloft. 42 Wanonah Richard C. Aiken, 1010 Baechland Francli E. Meadoa. 421 Third Robert C. Faatbariton, 525 Clara Larry L. Garrll, 720 Alberta Henry D. Tolbert, 52l Daiota Robart J. Young, 705 Dorrii Thomai R. Hutnphrayi Jr., 20 Putnam Lailla R. Lohlt, 2015 Voorhali Earl J. Rudd. 714 Scottwood Willard J. Smith Jr„ 140 Edison Andrew Katurow, 2135 Oitrum Paul V. Summer!, 152 N. Paddock Avery D. Findlay, 2493 Fllntrldgt Harry lAIrlght, 491 Bay McAlilb W. J. McATlllar, 3423 CraHon Jamei R. Mardli, 211 S. Jeitle Percy Patrick, 495 DItmar Thomai R. Puckett, 132 Fernbarry Douglai W. Robartion, 1241 Dulrain Jos^ R. Schultz, 1104 Lyniue william 6. Franklin. Jr., 250 Bondala Drnnit J Williams, .13 Shaildan (,lan K Shaahy, 141 kanllwoilh lamea J. Simmons. 2029 Kingston Moliail f . Schullr, 3124 I Incolnvlaw Umar I. Perry, 4/;i3 Jarnrn I aonard O. Graunstadl. 7422 5. Shaker Charles D. Robbins, 1304 Oregon John T . Angus, 3540 Graflon thlan I Ian, 10 Bloomllald Tarrate .lames Carlhon Jr., 231 Flihrr Rolrarl G Perraul, 4021 ChanIrtI Harvey J, I oyd, 105'i Gladtilone Place Rttuar It Ulr lih, 2.159 Garland r.eorga Williams, I* Edrnurtd Royal D tloirsa, 1091 Joslyn I laretica H. Powell, 79 Latayellf I eRoy E BelleleulMe, *2 N. Anderson (harles N. Dotson, 52 S. I ramla , Duane H. Benedict, 5510 Aylesbtiry Charles W Francisco, 6411 Harrirll Paler J McCauley, 3196 St. Clair Waller I -Koichka, 312 Foiirlli Robarl Hagarman, 5201 lynsua Roy D. Gilbert Jr., 253 W. Wilson Percy B. Dillon. 515 S. Paddock Willie Driver Jr., 404 Howard McNeill Daniel R. Parrott, 2951 Churchill Frederick L. Puikai, 4510 Edgawood Stephen K. Watkins, 227 Oimim Warren W. Welch, 4107 Parkway Ronald E. /arba, 1054 Voorhali Adrian F. Gllboa, 1351 Oanalla william h. Brown. 3514 Mark Road Charlei W. Ward, 115 N. Tasmania hennelt R. Belcher, *10 E. Wide Track lames L. Bunion, 5525 Savoy Robert E. Eason, 537 Otsola Robert A. Floyd, 143 W. Longlellow Jackie W. Hood, ISOVS Oakland Thomai J. Oliver, 373 S. Cass l ake Carlton R. Samson, 44.10 Ellrahalh Lake Robarl J. Whitney, 37 N, E. Blvd. Leo 0. Wilktr. 913 Boston Robart J. Broca. 3854 Beechgrnv5 Alex E. Lloyd, B5 Murphy Richard A. Soucy, 3033 HI VIIIa Ralph D Savage, 1531 Hood lohn B. KOhIman, 3101 Horbfil Donald F. Lowan, 1*05 Auburndala William D. Hall, lOKVs PramonI Oaorga W Ostrander, 1173 Charrylawn CLARKSTON John E. Harding, 5351 Peach Clyde Alvis, 5330 Waldon William H. Lanz. 5955 Mary Sue Robert L. Young, 9545 Suiln Lana louls R. McDonald, 7000 Felix William W, Williams, 4955 Mohawk Robart L. Bt'own, 4857 waldon Robert E. Green, S420 Cramlana Bill Cola. 542 $■ Baldwin ORTONVILLE Irvin. E. Holdan, 1791 Hayes Louis A. Williams, 445 Schoolhousa Ira D. Brake, 1595 Seymour Lake Clllford E. Knlllen, 3405 Perryvllle Jean P. R. Hellas, 33 Church Joa D. Dunlap, 90 Dennison William G. Fischer Sr., 573 Tenview onoa VIRAND HEW WHITENS:;., Airtomatie ZIQ-ZAQ CONSOLE with Cam* , OR 4-1101 complete ^53^^ LU. • 5 Spaad Control • Automatic Praiiure • Clog-Raiiitont o Ralaaso Round • Saw* Forward Bobbin Oom*. Mand* • Monogroms • Sow* On Buttena • Makot Button • Saw* Ravorso Holoa Einbraldon AutemaUeally • Zigt-Zagi, OvorcasU, Soams FULLY GUARANTEED FME HOME DEMONSTRATION ONLY $^25 par week Trada-ln Accaplad AuthoriMd Whit* Dtalor Porto and Sorvico On AU^jkot with Cabinef and Accessories AUTHORIZED HOOVER SERVICE DEALERS NEW 7-FOOT VACUUM CLEANER HOSE Braided Cloth, All Rubber ExchangabU With Your Old R«-lfs«-able Hots Ends mV Regular 7.50 dome In or Vriie Delivery PARTS and SERVICE ON ALL CLEANERS 95 Disposal Bags-Hoses-Brushes-Belts-Attachments-Etc. "Rebuilt by Curt's Appliances Using Our Own Ports^ WE RENT TYPEWRITERS and SEWING MACHINES Fully Guaranteed Attachments included 1.25 Week SI 450 Free Home Demonstration-OR 4-1101 Within 28 Mile Radius CURT’S APPLIANCES F«H^iM7dlR(lierFsfif fkUdfr MEW LOCATION Mil HATCHERY ROAD OR 4-1 til West en AA59 (e Aiipeit Rd., Neifit to Hatchery Turn West 2 Blocks on Hatchery Rd. III. Open AAenday and Friday 'til 8 P. M. 1 wy’,s M ill limicc Smite? AMM<:n.so\ IHAMv A. >prMng the I’oniiur inr.i l.ir moip tlmn ,,o ynirs. Tlir lIlItTMHI^ glTim|r,|||||,|., Min iiiiil griiiMinnii —“ilii |M iM i alioi,.t” »( Ii,enn„„*i- Brrvirp lliiil makt h lii-iiiram ,• IV.tif. ii„n < iimi- alivr. MICHIGAN'S DRIVE ★ IN FinST iNSUUANCE CONVENIENCE In Your Cnr-Undrr nooJ-Qa!rl;^^^^^^^ Svrvio for Yool pn«a^ dS NDERSOH J[niu/t6Ac£. ymxLiiT'i' 71 ZIndersoki / new: l)'ivc-In Wimimv Scm'. c i.s ons ol llin many NEW (.onvenienc es! 0.„- NEW niodcn, nfficr nu il-NEW .„nr.,, .in,I .l,M-.,r .ln in,,,.,.„ .... We invite y„„ visit us ece wlialV new in J,i.Mil-„nee Senices. Private ||•ll■klnK urea just oubide our IVciv Lobby KiilruHce. I liiAK A. AGENCY immANCf: HOWE William , Frank A. Al\DER,SON Builder, ]\oel K Cburbnue.proprietor „f ,be STATE-WIDE CONSTRUCTION CO. 6i>3f> \imond Lane, CUirkstoiie FE 2-1930 Personally 8ii|)er\ised Every DeUiil In The Construction of Our New Modern Quuriers. 1044 JOSLYN STREET, Pontiav - Phone: FE 4-3a^3.^ !. 1 4.-i4- m The Wealhor U.S Waalhar Spra*