The Weather t;.S. W«tk*r Barm FartMit Warm! THE PONTIAC VOL. 121 NO.. 100 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, TUNE^, 1963 —30 PAGES tnnraD‘™SM™ST£B™TioNAL PRAY FOR POPE - Women and children 7—- ap pii.tof„ in Pope John’s home village of Sotto il Monte pontiff during solemn requiem Mass lasrnight; in horthern Italy pray for eternal rest of the The Holy Father was born in the village in 1881. Pope John's B^y Carried to Basilica DC7 Crashes in Sea Report Finding of Bodies Off Canada Coast Disaster Hits Craft Strangely, Swiftly Over Water JUNEAU, Alaska (S) — fffflanmrfy ^ ■■■ VATICAN CITY WV-Pope John j XXIII was carried in death t<^||n the crypt beneath the greatest night through the deepening Christiandom, near light of St. Peter’s Square mto.^ere. eafly Roman ChrisUans .^-awesome^told body Peter’s Basilica, which will be-|^ peter, the first Pope, nearly come his final resting place. 12 qqq years ago Bells tolled in mourning. Aj ’ crowd of almost 80,000 watched in hushed silence. Many wept. Romans by tens of thousands and tourists by thousands will file past a huge catafalque before the confessional altar in the Basilica tomorrow and Thursday in llaat tribute to the Then John XXIII will be buried cession last fall which opened the Vatican Ecnmenkai Council, perhaps the greatest event of Pope John’s reign. Jhat procession on Oct. 11 had man they had called the “Pope of Peace,’’ and the ’'Pope of Unity.” body ’TRANSFERRED Tire body of the 81-year-oJd pontiff whs. transferred to the Basilica from the Vatican apartment where he died last night after four days of agonizing sufferifig from a stomach tunwr and peritonitis. The body was carried through the great square oyer the same route as the triumphant pro- and children aboard a military-chartered DC7_ which crashed inThe seai. Sear^ vessels reported recovering bits of bodies. All hope was abandoned to v^here Debrir day for 101 men, womehy Grand Jur y Indicts Hoffa and? Others CHICAGO (AP) - James R. northern tip of tjie Queenjiioffa, Jegmsters’^ Union presi-Charlotte Islands in British^ associates were indicted today by a federal grand SwTft7^str¥ng^^^^ 0 y e r to 0 k the Nortliwest Orient Airlines four-engined propeller plane yesterday 60 miles off the Prospects Fall for Passage of Districting Bill Illness of GOP Solon Cuts S^ate Majority "Dtiiwn to Minimum been a picture in white, with Pope John a beaming, gesturing central figure aioft on his port-'Columbia. throne. I The 17th Coast Guard District Tonight It was^a picture in ^ere said ships at the scene ra-Mmber black. W Pope was'diog^, juat “evidence indicated an dead. The crowds which once j had cheer^ were silent. IN ’^IBUTE Prelates, diplomats and citizens of Vatican City, including the street sweepers and gardeners with whom Pope John liked to chat, calied at the papal apart- 3rd Escapee From Camp Is Captured TTie last of three young es-j capees from a prison camp White Lake Township was captured early today by Detroit police who found him hiding in a bathtub. When police surrounded Charles Byas, 22, in a Detroit home he broke away and ran to a second-story porch and threatened to Jump but was seized before he could leap. Byas, John W. Breathour, 20, of Port Huron, and Norman Royer, 21, of Avon Township, walked away from Camp Pontiac last Thursday. The camp is a minimum-security prison. Royer turned himself in to ' state police in Romeo Sunday. That evening Breathour was .seized by police in Port Huron. The pair waived examination this morning in Waterford Township Justice Court on a charge of unarmed i*obbery of a Waterford man five hours after their escape. - --.ludflo-Jflhn McGrath bound ' them over, to CTreuir Court'for -arraignment June 10. Will Ask Cify for Ifs Supporf Union Leader Seeks Building for Retirees Cecil C. Mullinix, president of Pontiac Motor Division Local 653, will go before the City Commw' Sion tonight to seek endorsement of plans for a drop-W center for Oakland County’s 40,000 retirees at the site of the old county courthouse. ★ w ★ This is step number one,’’ Mullinix said. “We are asking that the City Commission recommend to the Oakland County Board of Supervisors that the property be leased to an association of retirees for' a drop-in center,’’ he explained. * * -k Once we get the land downtown, we’ll get the money Tor a building,’’ he declared. He noted he has already received tremendous support for his plan, announced less than a week ago, including feelers “ ............. Division. More Stories, Pictures, Pages 8, 16,,17 ' In Today's Press School Elections Discuss Waterford, community college candidates - PAGE Supreme Court New trial granted In : damage suit against Wayne County—PAGE 5. Christie Mystery j Miss Marple suffers ac- ; ; cldent In her outing — ',{ PAGE 21. Area News . Astrology . . . Bridge ..... Comics ..... Editorials .. Markets . . .; ...28". i ...28' "I J/rRadioProgwnds2> j an ideal location for a drop-in center. ■Sr Betirees will be able to conduct their social activities and do their shopping right in the same area, he noted... In addition, because retirees generally lack transportation, the location right near municipal and suburban bus lines is also ideal, he said. ■k * k TTie property is currently being leased from the county by Sam L. Stolorow, head of the .Outdoor Parking Co. of Pontiac, for a pay parking lot. ★ ★ ★. The Pontiac man won a six-month lease in bidding last month. Step number two for Mullinix Is a court injunctioli stopping operation of the parkii^ lot. TTie local UAW leader declared that the property is not being used in accordance, with the :s of its donor, who indi- cated that it should be used for public purposes. A payimrkliig lot does not meet these res|rictions, he said. ment in tribute while cardinals bc; gan preparations to choose a new supreme ruler for the world’s halfbillion Roman Catholics. The cardinals, now administering church affairs, scheduled their first business meeting for Wednesday. The meetings,^ called general congregations, will be held every day for handling routine affairs and arrangements for the conclave that will elect the new pope. Vatican press officials said the formal nine-day .mourning period will, start Wednesday. The Vatican’s master of ceremonial set the date, they said, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) impact of great force. At least eight persons from Michigan, including the wife and fqur "daughters of an air force career man, are listed among those aboard the plane. The wife of Airman 1-C. Bob-ert Scott and his four daughters were among 29 civilians aboard the missing plane. The other three Michiganders are young servicemen. The disaster was the third worst in history involving predominantly military personnel. * .* * Aboard were 58 "military personnel, 22 military dependents, 15 defense department civilian employes and their dependents, and a Northwest Airlines crew of six. They were bound for Anchorage, Alaska, from McChord Air Force near Tacoma, Wash. FIND PARTS OF BODIES The Coast Guard said the cutter l^rrel and the , Alaska Steamship freighter Chena had both picked mutilated parts of bodies and all kinds of debris from the ill-fated plane. The debris included books, personal belongings, seats with the belts buckled, ah NWA (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) jury that charged them with frad-ulently obtaining more than $20 journment meeting, million in loans from the Centi^al States Pensiorf Fund. LANSING — Prospects for passage of Gov. George Romney’s congressional reapportionment bill weakened today when it was learned a Republican Senator committed to the raeaj^ ure may miss the le^isla^ ture’s windup session because of illness. br. Herman J. Ballard reported Sen. Harold B. Hughes, R-Clare, ha7^en a^iatiwirrn Claret eral Hospital since May 29 , and may not be released before Friday, the last day of'the final ad- The indictment, contained 28 counts and followed two years of investigation by the grand jury and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. ' * * 1* It charged the eight men diverted more than a million dollars from the loans for their personal benefit. ’The. total allegedly diverted included at least $100,000 which the goverpment charged was used to help extricate Hoffa from personal financial involvement. This included bis operations in Sun Valley, Inc., a Florida homes development in Brevard County. ★ ★ ★ The indictment accused Hoffa of Violating his duty as a toistee of I® 8200-million pension fund which has its headquarters Chicago. Russians Revise Plan MOSCOW (UPB - ’The Soviet Union announced yesterday it has revised its national seven-year economic development plan to emphasize the production of synthetic fibers and consumer goods. “I doubt if he will be able to come to Lansing at all unless he shows much better improvement,” Dr. Ballard said. “He is certainly not going to be there tonight, when the meeting begins, under any circumstances.’’ ★'. * ★ Hughes had promised Senate GOP caucus chairman Stanley, Thayer gf Ann Arbor he would support this week the measure which was kept from final passage in April because of a technical flaw. If Hughes' is absent, the Republicans can be sure of only 18 votes, the bare minimum required for passage, in the Sen-Sen. Thayer, upon learning of Hughes’ illness, announced he would hold a news conference I the legislative situation of the moment.’’ Sen. John Fitzgerald, R-Grand Ledge, one of Thayer’s chief deputies, said “We’re have to find another extra vote, We may need it.” Hquse Speaker Allison Green, R-Kingston, indicated yesterday the GOP would have the necessary 56 votes in the House. Green said he gave instructions for all (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) In Federal Government Kennedy Strikes af Race Bias __________etoos,Iodav to com- bat racial discrimination in'tfie fiederal government in apprenticeship and construction programs. ^' Kennedy got out a special stateinent saying “denial of the right to work is unfair, regardless of its victim.” He said it is doiibly unfair to throw the burden most heavily on someone because of race or color. ★ ★ k ■ Accordingly, the bresidgnt said he is: Directing the secretary of labor, under the Federal Apprenticeship Act, to require that admission to apprenticeship pro- indircctly by excluding Negroes from apprenticeship training. 0 Issuin^'alT'TBXecMtive shortly to broaden the authority of the committee on equal em-pLoymeirt opportunity to include construction ^f buildings and oth- Related Stories, Pages 9,10 grams of the government “ 2 I pompleteiy "nondiscriminatory jasis.” • Asking for a review of all federal construction programs to prevent any racial discrimination in hiring practices, either directly by available, qualified Negroes er facilities wholly or partly un-jpose serious problems in every dertaken as a result of federal country,” Kennedy fumndal^grants. ★ ..'’W'" ■——. “Unemployment among American Negroes — and the resulting economic distress and unrest — Glance at the Racial Scene ' FROM OUR NEWS WIRES BIRMINGHAM,. Ala. - Negro attorneys to ask fedekal appeals court for Immediate injunction to strike down cit/s segregated school system. ' Justice Department attorneys press for order barring Gov. George C. Wallace from interfering with scheduled enrollment of Nbgroes at University of Alabama next week. University trustees announce acceptance of third Negro 'student for summer session opening Monday. SAVANNAH, Ga — Three of city’s tour downtown theaters integrate but two bow to public pressure and announce thdy will revert/to former status. (Jrowd gathers and two shots fired into air as two Negroes enter one theater, but no injuries reported and police control crowd. i PHILADELPHIA — Congress of racial Equality and Na-tional Association for the Advaxicenieht of Colored People announced they will cooperate in opposing, alleged racial discrimination. Each had been conducting separate and sometimes conflicting campaigns on city copstruction projects. said. —“These-problems jcan be met in part by the measures I have recommended to advance the growth of the economy to provide more jobs tor all,— and in part by the above and other measures to end job dlscrimlna-tioh in this country.” Kennedy’s statement was issued prior to a late afternoon meeting with 100 businessmen who have outlets in the South. At that White House gathering, he was expected to push for voluntary desegregation of hotels, restaurants, stoles and theaters. RIGHTS PACKAGE Whether or not his persua.sive approach works, the President is likely to go ahead with plans to^* ask Congress io approve a heavy package of civil rights bills. Thus, Kennedy is bent on iislng both the carrot and the stick in hopes of soothing the disconteut of Negroes and heading off renewed racial viblence in the South. . Agreement in principle on a civil rights package was reached (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) CWlTRWN, COOL •= Thrparty’s wms-The oool fortable spring weather left with May. Since June 1 thermometers have reached 85 or higher every day with no change in sight today or tomorrow. Gordon Cashin, 9, of 110 Chippewa, seeks temporary relief in a lawn sprinkler. - Bloomfield Twp. Seeks Water Construction Bids Oakland County Public Works Director R. J". Alexander yesterday w^s authorized to seek construction bids to bring Detroit water into Bloomfield Township. County engineers have estimated it will cost $2.12 • million to install 23 miles“-of transmission mains. Authorization to proceed was given by the County Bbafd of Public Works. Alexander said he will advertise for bids July 22 and 2S. The project will be split approximately in half for bidding purposes, he said, because the job is too big to be handled by any one contractor. Construction is scheduled to begin in October, and is expected to take seven months to complete. COMMUNITY WELLS Bloomfield Township presently provides water for 3,000 customers from community wells. The supply is unable to meet growing demands. Customers are now paying the township 20 cents per thoasand gallons of water. Detroit water will cost tpem 30 cents per thousand gallons, according to James Scott, director of the township water sewer department.- May Appeal on Tax Rate County School Board Raps Allocation mSomefTTrarn Tharged-aft »$238A additional $5 quarterly for 25 years to pay off a. county loan for construction, said Scott. ★ ★ A- New customers will be charged $100 plus costs for laterals or $600 to connect into the system, he Oakland County School Board mighlr file an -appeal to the State Tax Commission on the tenth-of-a-miil taX rate set by the County Tax Allocation Board yesterday. ' County School Superintendent William J. Emerson told fellow members of the tax allocation board that an appeal would be in order. School Board Chairnian Frederick Beckmam said an aopeal considered when his board meets June 13 to discuss a general education budget for fiscal year 1964-65. The school board had lequest-1 a .16-mill rate to raise 8370,-832. An allocation of .10 mills would provide approximately Fair and Still Warm Forecast Tomorrow Generally fair and continued warm is the weatherman’s pre-•didtion for tonight and tomorrow. Temperatures are expected to drop to a mild 63 tonight and rise to 8JI tomorrow. ’There’s a chance of scattered afterrioUn or evening thundershowers Thursday. , ■. * * ★ Sixty-four was the lowest recording In downtown Pontiac pre-ceditig„8 a.m. The thermometer reading at 2 p. m. was 88. According to Emerson the County School Board was within its rights to expect any allocation required up to 4 mills “becausa it is a school district,” This or any lesser figure required to finance a school district’s budget is the minimum allocation aceording to state law. The allocation board splits IS mills among county and township governmento, school districts and the County School Board. In setting the final rates, the allocation board awarded 5.19 mills to county government, and 1.71 mills to local sdhoul districts, less whatever amount is allocated to the various townships^ for local government. Requesting townships got anywhere from 1 to 1.64 mills. The Coupty Board of Sjuper-visors had requested 5.94 mills to „ maintain and operate the.county next year. The 5.19-mill rate will n-ovlde the county $11.4 million in taxes, which meapsihe budget will have to be pared $1.6 milUon. TWO THE PONTIAC PRESs/TURgDAy; Jfiolencaife in Florida When Integration Denied From our, News Wires Racial violence flared again last night in Gainesville, Fla. atid Negroes in Savannah, Ga., where two theaters backed out integration agreemeht, threatened new civil rights protests today. Groups of Negroes showered cars with stones and bricks in Gainsville. injuring several white persons. It was the second consecutive night of racial disorders in the city, home of the University of Florida. Gainsville Mayor-Commissioner Byron Winn named a bi-raeial committee to try to ease the teri-Jsion in the city, where attempts to integrate two downtown theaters first touched off the violence Sunday night. ' Four theaters in Savarinah had announced they would drop racial barriers. BiiUa few hours later, two rescinded the decision. Albert Weis, owner of the two theaters, said he went back to a segregated policy under Negro leaders amronirced they^** would resume picketing of the two theaters until Weis agrees tc inte^ate them. Elsewhere in the South, a federal judge said he would issue formal order today prohibiting interference with tho admission tomorrow of a second Negro to the University of Mississippi. Negro leaders in Baton Rouge, La., calVd a 30-day halt to integration demonstrations in the Louisiana capital, but new protests were promised for Danville, Va;, where more than 250 persons picketed city hall. An 80 - year . old woman was among the scores of young Negroes y^o marched in Danville. New ciyil rights demonstrations broke out ft widely’scattered spots today in the tense Mississippi capital of Jackson. All city police cafs were ordered into the downtown area following an announcement by Negro leaders that 11 picketing walk-in demonstrations would be staged every 10 minutes at ninr downtown business; firms, the City Hall and two city parks. By noon (Pontiac time), at iast- 28 Negroes had been arrested. JFKWasts^ Race Bios^rr pared plans for achieving “total integration- in-the area. A school to train young peopK and young adults in nonviolent demonstrations such as picketing and sit- Government (Continued From Page One) at a conference yesterday between the President and Demo-cratic - congressional leaders. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,,; D-Minn., reported. Humphrey, the acting Democratic leader, said the billr-would include legislation to ban racial segregation both in private business and in public facilities. One objective, he said, would be to give the attorney general power to start a federal court suit on behalf of any individual denied his civil rights. Although Humphrey said yesterday the administration’s proposals would go to Congress ti^Wl^, White Ho^ Pifess Sairetary Pierre Salinger told reporters today that “the President plans to send a civil rights message to Congress early next week.’’ ’Ihis was taken as an indication that the President has decided, at least in general terms if not on detailed wording, what he plans to a.sk from Congress |n the way of new legislation. It was understood that the administration now wants time for consultations and contacts, including some between Republican and Democratic leaders in Congress, to strengthen the chances of passage of a bill. DETROIT (/P) - A proposal that the United Foundation allowed of its 195 health and welfare agtSciS yesterday by Walter C. Laidlaw, executive vice president of the UF. Another federal jurist said he would decide /tomorrow whether hand down a similar order restraining Alabama Goy. George Wallace from blocking the enrbll-ment of three Negroes in the University of Alabama Monday. Judge Sidney Mize of Biloxi, Miss.,-sidd-yesterdayJhe_^would order Cleve McDowell admitted to“the “Ole Miss” law school tomorrow despite a warning by Gov. Ross Barnett that such an act would touch off “increased unrest and disturb-. ’l^e reconunendation was made by Laidlaw at the organization’ 14th annual meeting at a Detroit hotel. Lo(%l agencies now submit their proposed budgets to United community services, administrative organization for the agencies. At Birmingham, Ala., after .an hour and a half hearing yesterday, Judge Seybourn Lynne promised to rule tomorrow morning on whether an injunction should be issued against Wallace, who has vowed to stand in the door to keep Negroes out of Ala-baipa’s segregated public,schools ahli colleges. The other Negro student is David M. McGlathery, 27, of Huntsville. He plans to enroll at the Huntsville branch of the university. On another front, Negro attorneys are taking to a federal appeals court their request for an immediate injunction to strike down the' segregated school system in racially troubled Birmingham. Attorney W. L. Williams Jr. said the l/.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans would be asked for a preliminary injunction pending an appeal of a lower court ruling. Notice of appeal was filed Monday. Budget requests frbm'sfalFaBd national agencies are submitted to the Michigan United Fund, which is both the fund-raising and administrative agency for these groups in the state. REQUESTED The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report Y Generally fair and continued idnesday. High today 85. Low to-. Light and variable winds to- 10 i.m. In tost 40 In 1010 NATIONAL WEATHER - Scattered showers wd thunderstorms are expected over imrUonS of the northern and central Plains tonight while rain 1s predicted for the north Atlantic Coast states. It will be warmer In the eastern half of the nation as well as west of tho Rockies; cooler in the Plateau states. BIRMINGHAM - Alternate plans for parking in the southwest section were presented to the City Commission last night by the Central Birmingham Residents Association (CBRA), Robert Veryzer, spokesman for CBRA, collected 2,075 names on a petiton protesting the proposed lot In the block bounded by Bates, Merrill, Henrietta and Townsend. ________________; .r CATAFALQUE FOR POPE - A 10-foot-high structure, ...............ai- draped in black and surrounded with lighted candles, dominates New York City. The catafalque, symbolic of the death of Pope the center-aisle area near the altar of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in , John, will remain on display until the Holy Father is buried. 'UFShould Budget Its Agenties' and the cardinals are expected to ratify it in their opening busi-is meeting, This- wou)d^j2arry the .period through the feast day of Corpus Christ! June 13, though it might be-4nterrupted for IN RED ROBES The Pope’s body lay In state In an antechamber. The body was dressed in red pontifical robes, with a golden bishop’s miter on the head and red slippers on the feet. The catafalque was low, resting only two feet from the floor. Pope John’s face was white. His lips pression-rMmost a faint smile. His hands, in red gloves, were folded over his pectoral cross. The United Foundation is requested to raise the funds after UCS and MUF decide how much money should be allocated to their agencies. The UF would deal with the budgets directly and they would bypass the state unit, under Laidlaw’s proposal. “I recommend that the budgeting of all Torch Drive agency funds become the function of the UF,’’ Laidlaw said. Carl Bradley, director of the Pontiac Area United Fund, said this morning that , the local UF follows the suggested procedure. “We budget directly,” he said. Storm Covers Most of East By The Associated Press Rainy, cloudy and foggy weather covered most areas from the Ohio Valley to the Atlantic seaboard today as a coastal storm moved inland. Stormy weather hit mUch, of the coastal region again Monday. Rain nieasured nearly^ eight inches in Norfolk, Va. The storm weakened considerably during the night and heavy winds diminished and winds' port, Maine. Body of Pope irTronsferred^ ■ (Coritimied FronLEageDne) - predecessor of Pqpe John. Pope John’s own seal was in the flooring of the room outside. Two guards stood at the head of the catafalque and 10 Swiss guards and 10 palatine guards of honor stood along the walls. At three/small portable altars priests said Requiem Masses continually in hushed tones. President Antonto Segni and Premier Amintore Fanfani of Italy paid their respeqts aUthe catafalque. \ L’Osservatore Roman, the Vatican newspaper, said it would publish over the next seyeral days series of unpublished writings and thoughts of Pope John, MOURNING PURPLE Cardinals and diplomats walked in a steady stream up the royal staircase from the bronze door to the papal apartment. The cardinals were in mourning purple, the diplomats in formal dress. They knelt at the foot of the catafalque to kiss the Pope’s slipper. The prelates sprinkled holy water on the body as they knelt. The 1,000 citizens of Vatican City began to pass by the Pope’s bpdy toward noon. Some aged and stooped,. they wore their best dark suits. Prof. Antonio Gasbarrini, official papal, physician who had struggled for days to aid the dying pontiff, sat in one corner of the room. His face showed grief. Gandies flickered at the iour corners of the catafalque, mounted on multiple-armed candelabra. House Ways and Means Committee voted 19 to 6 today to block a scheduled July 1 reduction of about $4 billion a year in federal taxes on corporations. 1 i a u o r. cigarettes, automobiles, telephone ibe^ Jlag of Venice, the Jtalian B city where Pope John had been patriarch before his election, k hung from one wall.______ The mourners came ai without interruption. Among the first was Benedetto Aloisi Masel-la, cardinal bhamberlain who handles routine affairs of the Vatican . _ administrator until the conclave, to be called later this month, elects the next pope. The first meeting was attended only by cardinaiS who were in Rome when the Pope died.' "..........--r- Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, French-born dean of the College of Cardinals, sent formal notice of the Pope’s death to the other 81 members of t|ie sacred college and summoned them to Rome. Major decisions left over from the reign of Pope John await the new Pope. He must decide whether to continue the Ecumenical Council which Pope John convened last fall and which Was , suspended automatically at his death. ' AIM OF UNITY ’The council’s aim was greater Christian unity, and it is considered almost certain that the new Pope will summon the church’ 2,400 bishops back to Rome to resume its work. The new Pope also must decide whether to move along the path of better relations with Communist governments which Pope John had opened in hopes of erasing the plight of Catholics behind the Iron Curtain. The committee bill Would extend without change for one year tax on corpora tton profits and ihe temporary excise taxes. Rxeept for the tax on telephone calls and airline tickets, the existing temporary rates were levied in 1951 to help finance, the Korean War. The new bill seemed certain to clear Congress before the deajf-line. To clear the way for quick enactment, the committee tem- porarnjTpuTaslde: work-on-Ken-^ nedy’s program of permanent tax revisions and rate reductions. The administration tax program would provide individuals and corporations with $10.4 billion in tax relief spread over a three-year period and the committee tomorrow will resume work on a compromise version. The cardinals will vote twice daily in the Sistine Chapel until two thirds of the princes of the church agree on a. choice. Although neither a lesser prelate nor a non-Italian is barred, the new Pqpe probably will be an Italian and a cardinal. The favorite among the “papa-bile”—those considered likely papal candidates—is Giovanni Battista Cardinal Montini, 65, archbishop of Milan and the first car? dinal created by Pope John. Although he was not a cardinal at the time, he was n as a papal prospect bei HShfrkfing HopesTall (Continupd From Page One) GOP House members to be on hand and had not received a single absentee notice. The legislature was prepared to reconvene under threat of a referendum to be squght. by Democrats if it enacts a Republican-sponsored plan for hdngres-sionSl reapportionmept.' As lawmakers gathered in the capital for a scheduled three-day session and final adjournment. Democratic iState Chairman Zol-ton Percncy made an llfh-Hour plea for a “bi-partlsan meeting’ on the issue. But Romney qpickly reaffirmed his intentiOH to Mand by the redistricting plan In its present fprm, and shrugged qff the suggestion that a statewide referendum vote might result If it is passed. “A referendum Is provided for in the constitutldn. It’s their right to have one if they want to,” he said. CHANGES Ferency asked the governor tb meet with Lt. Gov. T. John Lesinskl and legislative leaders from both parties to discuss making changes in the reapportionment bill’s Wayne County por- tion. The rcdistricting plan, to set up the 19th district to. which Michigan is entitled under the I960 U.S. census, has been hanging fire since April 27, when a drafting error stalled its passage before the legislature recessed. Democrats, coubting on the possibility that the bare voting edge held by Republicans then may have diminished because of pressure from con^essmen unhappy with the bilj, have tried several times to compromise. They would let the Republicans divvy up outstate districts while keeping Wayne ' County, traditionally a Democratic stronghold, for themselves. Any plan, to pass the legislature, will need J18 votes in the Senate and 56 in the House. Romney says he expects the votes to be on hand. Ferency said the present plan -which was written by Wayne County Republican officials—has four major defects, chief among thejn the i.solatlon of Negroes into a single congressional district. DILUTION’ He said its reshaping of the six Wayne County districts also would result In “dilution of the voting strength” of the area's P6iish cdihmunity by putting Hamtramck Into a district heavily Negro, Vote to Block Reductions on Tax Rates Three alternatfre parking plans were presented by Veryzer and Rolland Wilkening, con-shltant to UBRA. Of the three, plans, the one which the CBRA favors concefni redeveloping the block bounded by Maple, Southfield, MerriU and Chester. As. outlined by Veryzer, the plan calls for acquiring the old Hill School property, the playground and northwest comer of Maple and Southfield for parking. The Hill School ndmlnlstra- Probable That JFK to Delay Italian Visit WASHINGTON (AP)-Prosident Kennedy probably will put off a scheduled visit to Italy un^l after the College of Cardinals elects a successor to Pope John XXIII. Taking note of the pontiff’s death, Kennedy—first Roman Catholic to hold the U.S. presidency-said Pope John’s “wisdom, compassion' and timely strength have bequeathed humanity a new legacy of purpose and courage for the future.” Kennedy originally was scheduled to fly to Italy on June 20. But the conclave to choose a netv Pope must begin no earlier than June 18 and no later than June 21 SincS it is likely to last five or iix-xteysrr:the„;average length of previous 20th century conclaves— Kennedy would be unable to visit ..........after he goes ahead ly firm plans to tour iny and Ireland.' Birmingham/Area News Alternate Parking P^ans~~ Presented Commission other, suggestions were decking this lot for added Baldwin playground space now and eventually using it for parking. Wilkening, who is associated with a Detroit contracting firm. estimated the CBRA;proposed-kR would accommodate .475 to 500 cars, eventually He said^ costs for a minimum structure range around $850,000. Other plans introdneed by the CBRA were to deck the mu-ntcipal let off, Pierce Street or purchase the north-half of the Community Honie block. * * This would include the Merrill right-of-way plus some library inxqierty and Community House auditorium expansion over the propped lot. Hope Is Lost for Missinglf (Ctontmued From Page One) menu and postcard, insulation from the plane, three iinlii-flated liferafts and dozens of pieces of. twisted, broken metal. Tbe crash wiped out or left only one surviving parent of seven families.. There.were 33 women and children on the ■flight. The DC7, under charter to the Military Air Transport Service, took ofMronLMcOlbrd AFB at 8:30 a.m. (PDT) yesterday Elmendorf AFB at Anchorage. The last message from the pilot, Capt. Albert Olson of Sumner, Wash., came two hours, 36 minutes later. He radioed the air station at Sandspit, B.C. for permission to climb from 14,000 to 18,000 feet. The city will assist tto year’s Birminsbam Arts-JesthtoMAtfr -anywhere from $1,000 to $1,500, according to L. R. Gare, city manager. The request was made at last night’s meeting. R. F. McLean, chairman of the arts festival, 4a|d the committee #on|d iippre^te any matofliTTB^^’"^ jistonce it could get, namely a truck and dflver iTBmisport^— sceaery, stand and chairs. Thr Arte FestivaL June-^ will be held at two locations. According to McLean’s letter to the commission, ‘’the main events will occur at the Birmingham Art Center on South Another airlinec was northbound at 18,000 one minute behind but air control tried to message Olson to go to 16,060. There was no response. After that neither the ground station nor the other plane could contact the DC7. The missing plane carried six inflatable life rafts With capacities of 20 passengers each. It also carried 100 life jackets. The Coast Guard gaid a person could not live In the 40degrce water more than 10 to 15 minutes. Scott, a native of Cafo, Mich., lived most of his life in Bay City before he joined the Air Force at the age of 17. He preceded his family from a Florida assignment to Alaska. The fifth Scott child, was hospitalized in Bay City and unable to make the trip, the Air Force said. The three Michigan men reported missing all had joined the armed forces less than a year One of them, Pvt. Robert A. Delonjay, 19, of Onekama, joined the army only four months ago. He was graduated from Onekama High last year. TThe' other two men ri8ted,Tbbth 18,'held the rank of airman third class in the Air Force, They are Raul Reyes of Muskegon and Charles Couch of Cassopolis. OLD AND NEW - Maj. Gen. Clay Hodges, 103, oldest llvlnif U.S. Military Academy graduate, reaches to shake hands with Cadets Colin P, Kelly III (left), of Media, Pa., whose late father was WdHd' Waf ll’8 first Medal of Honor winner, and Richard E. Eckert of Carlisle, Pa., during graduation week exercises yesterday at West Point'. thm huUding woaU be ihltted to toe comer of Maple and ...........Baldwin _________west ef B a School, accordfaif to toe plan. Cranbrook Road and In the The city spent $1,490 when the .1962 festival was staged at the Art Center; $354 in 1961 when the festival was held in Shain __jind $1,297 for the 1960 festival, also aT ShaiirPark;------ T. Ralph Alexander, 1975 Shipman, has been elected president of the Bimingham Lions Club. Alexander is sales manager of Oakland Monu-s ment of Royal I Oak, a division! of Sheldon Gran-I Ite Co., Detroit, f Also to be in-| stalled July 2 are;# i Harris Machus,' Machus Bakery,I first vice presi-l dent: Frank W.* W h i t s 0 n, Bir- ALEXANDER mingham Insurance Agency, second vice president; and Donald L. Cummings, Wilson Drug Co., secretary - treasurer. Karl G. Lindstrom Service for Karl G. Lind8from, . 81, of 999 Pleasant, will be 1 p.m. Friday at the Nelson Funeral Home, Chicago, lU. Burial will follow in Memorial Park Cepne-tery, Evanston, III. Mr. Lindstrom died earlyi to- . day after a long illness. His body will be at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home until tomorrow morn-ing. Mr., Lindstrom was a retired^ reprewntative of the Taylor Firm, Chicago, IlL Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Elroy L. Sandberg of Birmingham; two sisters; four brothers; and two grandsons. Mrs, Dray ton Ptebllcbct Service for former Bloomfield Hills resident Mrs. Drayton (Mabel L.) Prebilcock, 68, of Fos-toria, will be 2:30 p.m. 'Thursday in the Fostorla Methodist Church there. Burial will be in W e s.t Deerflel(T(^mefery. Mrs. Prebilcock died unexpectedly yesterdoy in Marlette Community Homital. Her body is at Blqckmore-'Tubbs Funeral Home, Mayvllle. Surviving are a brother Albert Roebiger of New Hudwn and a sUter. Director Selocfed for New State Unit LANSING W Gov. George Homney today announced the appointment ef Bernard Conhoy of Ann Arbor as executive director of the new department of economic expansion. a ' w, A Conboy, 41, a marketing and management consultant tw the Detroit aceduntina firm of Ernst & Ernst, wm fUF the new position June 17. Senate confirmation' is re^ed. ^ i Donald Valloy, chairman of th^ board of the Nationaji Bank or Detroit, was named chairman of the deportment's advisory council. i THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JUNE 4, 1963 THRsi Grand Opening QUALITY ACTUALLY COSTS YOU LESS AT ALL DOBBS SHOWROOMS Lifetime constructioh, nylon fabrics, rubber reversible, cushions,' 72-i'nch sofa, $159—$16 Down—$10 Month, Cornporoble savings on other sizes. Ration: The amount of food required daily by man or animal. iodin (older spelling iodine) required daily to maintain good metabolis, good nutrition, good health in child or adult. Cri (rhymes with ski): Word coined from the initial letters of the cumbersome phrase common respiratory infection, In the early hours or first day or two of any such infection — the period when it is most communicable — before anyone can tell whether it is m e d s 1 e s, in-f a n 111 e paralysis, epidentic meningitis, scarkt fever, diph-1, flu qr^whatnot, call it cri. DEDICATED ENTHUSIASTICALLY AND EFFICIENTLY TO SERVE YOU Donish Contemporary, nylon and long-wearing Growpoint fabrics, rubber cushions, 76-inch so*?a. $179—$18 Down—$10 Month. Available in 82-, 86-, 90-, 96-, ICX)- and 110-inch sofas at comparable savings. PROFESSIONAL BUYERS AND DECORATORS ASSURE YOU THE UTEST STYLE? AND VALUES Scandinavian Reproductions, solid wrap-oround base finished in rich walnuL long-wearing Scandinavian Growpoint fabrics, rubber cushions. 82-inch sofa, :$f 89^19-Down^^l-e-Monthr ----------^ ^ PAY-OUTS FOR PROPERTY TAXES, INSURANCE COMPETITIVE SHOPPERS GUARANTEE (|A YOU THE LOWEST PRICE I9ll Pillow-back hi-grade decorator fabrics and rubber cushions, reversible seats and bocks. Plush comfort. 92-inch sofa, $199—-$20 Down—$10 Month. OVER 300 lOFAS AND SECTIONALS IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 90 days CASH or Up to 36 MONTHS TO PAY OPEN 10 A.M.-9 P.M. WED., THURS., FRI./SAT PALO ALTO, CaUf. (AP) Maria. H. Casaurane, 70, of J*alo Alto, went downtown Monday to get some-information from the American Automobile Association. Police said as Mrs. Casaurane turned to drive into an adjacent parking lot she stepped on the gas instead of the brake dnd her car went right through a plate glass window in the AAA office. Two AAA employes, Florence West, 48, and Wade King, 52, were treated for bruises and released, police said. ALL BEHIND HIM NOW - Midshipman Daniel K. Kennessy of Summit, N.J., standsaehind the load of books he had to work his way through to graduate at the top of his class at the U S. Naval Academy: His aver'age for four years was 93.9 He’s also a top relief pitcher for the Navy baseball team, Regular Use of Iodin Helps Ward Off 'Cri' HByrDftrWILUAM BRADY—ihave associated an iodin ration AAA Inquiry a Real Smash f Ex-Goodrich Heoti Dies * LYNCHBURG, Va. (AP)-Sam-uel Brown Robertson, 84, retired president of, the B. F. Goodrich Co. of. Akron, Ohio, died Monday after "a long illness. , Robertson joined the rubber company in 1918 and became president in 1934. He retired in 1940. Marine green turtles, prized for soup, are known to travel great distances, some as far as 1.400 TOilra'from their birBipIace. the cri. I knew no reason] to believe the everyday intake of, iodin was more important in that Ration: The amount^dfTespect-than the everyday intake A few j of calcium or iron or protein is. Xcan't say I know better now Actually I know little or nbthr.. ing about it. But I must say 1 have been impressed by the steadily increasing number of reports from readers who say, as does this Wisconsin lady: “Read your column every day and find it helpful in many ways. “)iave had no colds since have been on an iodin ration.’’ SPECIAL BUY You'll Find Only At SIMMl, Have fo Shout- Our LOWER PRICE TAGS Speak for Themselves ... and listod bolow are itoms that prove what wo moan . . . vqluos and pricot that talk toW^O- in tho common language — MONEY and. ______________ how to save it. The best way wo know is to compare boforo‘'yoO buy. Check, the item, check the price. Then come to Simmt fpr Guaranteed Savings. We reserve the right fo limit quantities. Here Are^ome ‘SHOUT AB0UTI»RICES' For Tomorrow Wednesday 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. LOWEST PRICE Ever OB WASIUBLE Fibre Window Shades Complete With Roller _ 0 white or fan colofisd shades cut to measure up to 36-inches. Please bring in correct medsuremerits mail or phone orders at this price. No limit. -Reconditioned .32 AUTOMATIC 9-Shot Pistol Bejgian_ fobrjque outoWotic pistol ^ith’ ,9-»hoi....... slide fety. - teoture. | You Must Have Polleo Soginow—2nd floor^ PLASTIC SHADE PULLS-2 for white morlMlized plosticfor any shade. 25* SHADE BRACKETS-Pair for For outside or inside rollers. 6' Pli^ic ClethesEBe-IW-R. Regular $1.00 Value-NoW‘ strong and durable wire L center plastic clothesline H won't sag or stretch. Limit /, 300 feet. 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS If it were at all likely that the iodin ration could dq any I would not harm in any circumstance I’d hesitate to mention these reports here. Happily I am s u r e, cocksure if you like, the iodin ration can’t do any harm, and so I bring it to your attention and ask whether you-have noticed any such apparent increase in your immunity to cri, and if so,’ how do you account for it? Please don’t construe my recommendation of a suitable daily ration of iodin for everybody as approval of the use of medicinal iodin or iodides as a remedy for the cri. That’s a medical question best left to the judgment of your physician. For a clearer understanding of iodin deficiency, frdm which great many adolescents and adults suffer, particularly in the Great Lakes basin, send a stamped, self - addressed envelope and ask for the pamphlet, '’hie Iodin Ration.” (Copyright, 1963, National Newspaper Syndicate NO BIG * flAgifWNIH MTHOUR HOME LOAN rr take it whenever you Tests in leading hospitals and among hundreds of private patients prove Sominex is wonderfully effective. You enjoy restful sleep, awake re< ] frBgh«d.Containk«a.lMtbitU: rates. Not habit-foftning. Get Sominexfpx.mtutaJU. •f“1!ISp.'Svalla^^ without a pre- Hosn-suYEii8 omm ask how we can give such fast financing service yet plan each loan so carefully Answer: we've long specialized in home loans. Let us plan yours with rent-Uko monthly pa3rments that pay 'principal and interest cover real estate taxes and insurance too. Visit our loan counselor now He’ll plan a “four in one” mortgage budgeted specifically to ypur needs. 4 76 West Huron Ik 0Hablished 1890 FE 4-0561 . ut CUSTOMER PARKIHO IN REAR *4, .^4,*- OFBUILDIHO DO YOU TAKE VITAMINS AND STILL FEEL TIREOr ir^irtakt vitamin* ABd-4UiU feel tired, your trouble may be due to Iron-poor blood. Vitamins alone can’t build up iron-poor blood. Biit Geritol can! Because just two Geritol tablets, or two tablespoons of liquid Geritoi. contain 7 vitamins plii.t twice the iron in 1-lb. of calve,s' liver. In only one day GERiTOL-iron is in your bloodstream carrying strength and energy to every part of your body. Check with your doctor. And if you’ve been feeling tired because of iron-poOr blood, take Geritol, liquid or tablets, every day. You’ll feel stronger fast in just seven days or money back from the GeriVol folks. *Due, to iron deficiency anemia In Natural Color - All Have Full 6-Ft. Drop Roll-Up BAMBOO SHADES 3-FOOT WIDTHS 1.29 I 4-FOOT ^IDTNS^^ e^FOOT WIDTHS 2.49 ' 8-FOOT WIDTNS ZM Roll-up bamboo shades insure privacy ’ without loss oj light and ventilation. Complete with cord. Unbreakable Hoavy Wall Poly Plastic M ' Un labalad Famous eraad SIMMS BROS. 98 N. Saginaw—Drug Dapt. WHENEVER YOU CAN’T SLEEP ...take this sleeping aid with confidence Whenever you can’t sleep because of simple nervous tension or daily problems, take Sominex with confidence. 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ORION - Village dais hde are going to wait two weeks before committing L a k e Orion to one of the four ^plans offered by their consulting engineers. ^ During that period, the heads ^ Of Oxford Village and Oxford and Orion townships will have - to decide whether they want, to Join in the project. Answering ‘to demands of the Michigan State Water Commission, Lake Onon Iras come tip with alternate solutions to its sewage problem. Now the pressure is on the three other communities. Meeting in a joint session at ship, Oxford^s engineering advisors. “Lake Orion knoW what it has to do but doesn’t kn^what the other goveramental un^want,” Village Pi^esideni Irvine : told the group. the Orion Towiiship Hall last night, heads of the two villages and townships discussed present sewage problems in their respec- tive^nunicipalities____ _____ Also in on the talk were representatives of Hubbell, Roth & Clark Associates, Inc., of Birmingham, Lake Orion’s consultant engineers, and Johnson and Anderson of Waterford Town- ties are really interested and have any intention of building a sewer they should come-toifiejre with a firm commitihent on Ju^ 17,” Unger said. ’The Michigan Water Resources Commission has ordered Lake Orion to discontinue its pollution of Paint Creek. In addition to citing th^ cJfic^violation, the commission has stipulated that -completed construction plans and specifications for treatment facilities should be available by next December. “If the other three cotnmuni- He asked Donald Ringler, deputy director of the Oakla'nd Coun-Department of Public Wprks, lere was any chance of the couW Contributing to this project finanmlly. iwer was “no.” < federal'^unds However, ^ngler said there was certainly r^son to make application for fede^l funds. He explained it was feasible that almost 50 per cent of the project could be paid for under the Accelerated Public Works The second possibility would be to obtain funds, 30 per cent or a inaximum-of-g^,000,~througb~the State Water Resources Commission and public Law 660. Ringler said that although the county could not contribute funds to the projfect, it would be “ready and willing” to assist in the actual construction. STUDY PROJECT - The elected heads of Oxford, Lake Orion and the two surrounding townships attended a meeting in the Orion Township Hall last night to discuss the possibility of a joint sewage system. Looking at a map of projected sewer lines are (from left) Orion Township Supervisor John Lessiter, Lake Orion Village President Irvine J. Unger, Oxford Township Supervisor Harold T. Camp-, bell and Oxford Village President Allen E. Valentine. Oxford Township Supervisor Harold T^ Campbell asked Unger what he (Campbel!!) could take back to the people to sell the project. "A sewer system,” Unger replied. Ringler said the county might be able to assist in a' sewage study of the township before the forthcoming meeting. The county representatiyejlso explained that in 15 years,' trunk sewer would b^ coming up Paint Creek from Rochester and thus eliminate the need for a treatment plant. But Lake Orion can’t wait that long. - An giderly couple was killed yesterday in a twor car collision at Ebelipg and Van Dyke, four miles north of here. William B. Clunas, 81, of Good-ells, was dead dn arrival at the Community Hospital near Al-mont. His wife, Lida, 79, died about an hour after admittance, SPEAKER - Dr. Evart W. , . . of appointments at the University of Michigan, will address the 90 graduates of West Bloomfield High School during their commencement program at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow. Troy Hears Builders' Proposals TROY—Representatives of the Builders Association of Metropolitan Detroit finally got their chance to present zoning recommendations to the City Commission last night. Couple Killed in Area Crash Two-Car Collision Occurs Near Romeo According to Romeo State Police, Clunas failed to heed a PATRICIA GLANCY making a wide left turn Van Dyke when his car was hit broadside by another^ -vehicle traveling north. Driver of the other car was Mrs. Carol Jane Standberg, 25, of Detroit. She, her husband Thomas 17,_and_^thfiir jon, Kevin. 3. were taken to Community Hospital wher^. .they are listed in satisfactory condition today , -Another son, John, „2, escaped injury. Clarkston Group Slates 'Spring Finale' Dance CLARKSTON-Clarkston Gardens Subdivision Improvement Association will hold its “Spring Finale” dance Saturday at 9:30 p.m. at die CAI Building in Waterford Township, Music will.be provided by the Novi Landowners to Consider tinder terms, of a 1960 plan involving these communities, a trunk sewer was to run from Lake Orion to Oxford with a treatment plant adequate for both villages and sonnfe adjacent areas. Proposed Sewage System A joint plan is one of four alternatives presented to Lake Orion by its enginers. NOVI — Property owners here will consider the proposed Novi-Walled Lake se^ge system at .a public hearing^^'nday night. ’The hearin^will be held on the necessity of establishing a special assessment district for financing the project. While Walled Lake can pay . for its share through an ad valorem tax levyt Novi would need a special assessment district because the whole village will not benefit from a sewage program. The portion of the village to be affected i? roughly the area between 12t4-Mile Road and 14-Mile Road extending from the Wixom city line to a half mile west of Haggerty. TOTAL COST Total cost to residents of the proposed special assessment district has been estiamted at |1, 188,700. This would Include $457,400 for an interceptor and pumping station and $250,400 for the trunk sewer, all to be constructed by the Oakland County Department of Public Works Farminglon Council Sets Two Hearings on Rezoning FARMINGTON-The City Council last night scheduled two public hearings on rezoning requests. Both will be held June 17 at the City Hall. which would require trailers to be parked behind front building lines. Tlie planning commission has —B^hal^aOTe^reer^f-lima^TjfftpM Grand River Avenue be rezoned to permit construction of an ef-fiqicncy apartment complex. 'The code previously provided public rights-of-way. Last night’s decision was a re- Thomas Duke Is'the potential (vision of the original suggestion developer of the properly be- jlliat accessory buildings be re-tween the Rouge River and Iquired for the storage of trailers. American Legion property. Making up the rest of the esti- mated cost figure is $480,000 for lateral sewer lines, which would be handled by the village. Harold N. Ackley, administrative assistant, noted that the estimates don’t include any government participation in the program. “We could cut the cost in half with a federal grant," he said. . - . j Walled Lake councilmen are provrsion to the zoning code proceeding w ILb preliminary planning in the hope that federal funds will be available when the plans are. Novi’s public hearing is scheduled for 8. p.m. at the Commu-nity .Building,,. Sets Art Week in Troy TROY—Mayor Robert J. Huber proclaimed the week of June 21 27 “Troy Arts Festival Week,” at last night’s meeting of the city commission. Duke has planned 113 single-.bedroom units similar to the River Glen apartments which he constructed. Facilities would include space for 170 cars to be parked. Plans necessitate changing tlie property to a general commercial zone. It now falls into industrial, residential and parking zones. The other change recommended by (he planning commission is for a house on the west side of Liberty south of . Grand River Avenue to be office rather than residential. The request came from John Allen, who proposes converting the house into professional offices. However, the planning commission has recommended that the entire block, across the .street From the new municipal building, rezoned to comply with the city's master plan. Hearingi on the; apartment However, that plan was never put into effect, mainly for financial reasons. The village’s attorney, Robert Parent!, pointed , out that Lake prion doesn’t have to have another community joining in the plans. However, he said the village did want to “extend the invitation” to the other governmental units. We can’t wait any longer,’ Unger added. Heads of the four cominunltlBS will meet again oh June 17. They are scheduled to decide then which municipalities will participate in the project. Workers to File DETROIT (UPD -Officials of Iron Workers Local 25 said yesterday they will file a formal protest to the National Labor Rela-Board”eonceming ■ the- lions bP’ .................. rector during strike. Henry E. Cooper, business manager for the local, said (he complaint will be filed against Thomas Roumell, regional director, for publicity stating that the strike was illegal. Roumell last week had warned the union that he would file a formal complaint against it if the workers did not return to work yesterday^ He said a required notice of intent to end their contract was not given and the strike was illegal. Meanwhile, some 1,600 members of the local returned to their jobs yesterday following a vote Sunday affirming a new contract witli tlie Detroit and Michigan chapters of the Associated General Contractors of America. Northern Michigan U. to Award 279 Degrees 7 JOYCE H. WOOD WANDA PARTIN Mr. and Mrs. Claude Wood, 5030 Granger, Brandon Township, announce the engagement plans will be at 7:.30 p.m. and of their daughter Joyce H. to on the proposed office building pi,,eu_ ,^f jy]p gnj at 8 p.m. • ■ I George Plceu, Detroit. An nie* council last night added a| Oct. 12 wedding is planned. The engagement ot Wanda Partin to James Dinkins is announced by her parents, Mr,, and Mrs. Francis'Partin, 947 Brushwood, Walled Lake. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles I). Dinkins, 3165 Chenoa, Union Lake. ^ MARQUETTE (AP) ^ C o m-mencemeht ..Ceremonies for 279 decree candidates at Northern Michigan University will be held " inday in the university’s field-house at 2p.m. / Substantially the builders re-cass Milton orchestra, Tickets iterated their former recommen- may be purchased at the door. Topqrs m limi da.tion for smaller minimum lot sizes throughout the city, stresS^ ing the R-IA one - family residential lots. TlfeTRveToi that minimum sq. ft. with sewer and 21,780 without sewer were too large. However, the commission presented its position, which included the point that reducing lot size in the R-IA section would lead to a greater number of residents there. This in turn, the commissioners agreed, would lead to overloading of the Evergreen sewer system which handles the district, and the necessity for construction of a new sewer connecting with Detroit. , ___ Also part of (He developer’s recommendation was a request for the commission to consider the unit or “cluster” type of city, planning.' This type of land division provides a park site to be set for use by surrounding area residents. ‘No action was taken in what City Manager David E. Firestone called a “very good’' session with the developers. Dies of Heart Attack Before Car Hits Tree LAPEER—A 60-yedrtoId Oregon Township woman died of a heart attack yesterday before her car crashed into a tree on Bronson Lake Road. Police said an autopsy on Mrs. Edwin Moody, 60, of 3878 Bronson Lake. It showed that she died before the accident happened about 5 p:m., a half-mile west of Gray Road. Milford High School Picks Top Students MILFORD - Patricia Glancy and Mark Watson have been announced as the top boy and girl acaJeMcany Tii^e Milfortlfligh achievement award for five ' years. School graduating class of 1963. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Glancy of MS Clark, High-1and7"PHtrlcla is r^nember-oL the National Honor Society, forensics, all - league choir. Youth for Christ Club and, is a cadet leacher. In addition she is vice president of the future teachers, treas-, urer,of the student council and treasurer of Her senjbr class. She RecipienL-oLJLJFord Motor Co. fund scholarship, Patricia has been accepted as a student, at Olivet Nazarene College in Kankakee, 111. ^rk Is a Btudenf council representative, editor of the year-book, president of the National Honor Society and secretary-treasurer' of the . varsity He is a member of the future teachers club, senior varsity 'baseball team and the . model has ranked as No. 1 girl in her Msebaii earn and we _moaei class for the board of education'Umted Nations Assembly delega- LeRpy Winklers Travel Honepoon in Michigan UNION LAKE-Hoijeymooning in northern Michigan are newly wed Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Donald Winkler Jr., who exchanged their vows Saturday morning in St. Patrick’s Catholic Church. Rev. Lewis M. Ellis officiated. The bride ir the former Cath-leen Ejlen White, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry White, 9201 Hickbfywood. Parents of the ^ bridegroom are the LeRoy Winklers, 1837 Shankin, Commerce Township. gertip veil of silk illusion was bounty Scholarship, attached to a headpiece of lilies ■of the valley. tion. ■'Son of MrsrEtizabetlriVatson, of 1104 E. Commerce, and the JaleJJavid-WatsonrMark^ranked No. 1 in achievement in his ^lass for the last sije years. He . plans to attend Michigan State University and has been awarded a Michigan State scholarship as well as the Michigan lace and tulle was chosen by the „ - , „ ,, ^ bride (or her wedding. Her State University qiub of Oakland She carried a cascade of while First 'Y' Benefit Dance Scheduled Friday Night carnations, Stephanotis and liliemjhe first of four dances planned of the valley. Delores White was maid of Brides-» Mrs. Richard Slavin Serving as best man was Keith Ashley of Troy, brother-in-law of this summer to benefit YMCA building prograins throughout the-county will be held at the Royal Oak - YMCA, 1016 W, 11-Mile Road, on Friday from 9 p.m. to midnight. Donations from the dance will go toward construction of a gym- .,11 , , , „ • ------ - luwaiu uuiiduuL;uuii ui a njm- A floor-length gown of nylori the bridegroom. Ushers were ngsium and pool at the Royal Oak 1 L...______ . .. . ^ '-mm Ronald Winkler of Walled Lake.i.y.- Tickets for the dance can be ’ bridegroom, and purchased at Connolly’s Jewelers, purchased at Connolly's_______, Timothy White of Union Lake.!K52 n. Woodward, Birmingham, brother of the bride. ^ * j One of every five dollars the i The reception was held in the {Michigan farmer receives comes Dublin Community Center. Upon Jrom the sale of fruit, vegetables t their return from their honey-iand specialty cropis. Annual moon the newlyweds will live in j sales amount to piore than $150 Highland. 'million. STAFF'S Rochester, for boys and girls MRS. LeROY D. WINKLER JR. Hubble-Mann Rites ■"eoncernlng™"the'-ae^" r^^^^^^~^PirW&hirtQxiord OXFORD-William Jay Hubble claimed Paula Darlene Mann as his bride at 7;.30 p.m. Saturday in Oxford Methodist Church. Rev. F'red Clark perfortned the nuptials. Parents of the bride are Mrs. Darrell J. Stalnaker, 56 N. Washington, and Orton G. Mann, 3916 Dearborn, Avon Township. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Charles Hubble, 161 Frederick, and the late Mr. Hubble. rtr her wedding the bride chose a floor-length gown of Chantilly lace and chiffon with a bouffant skirt thflt ended in a tiered chapel train. A Juliet crown Of Chantilly lace and seed pearls held her three-tiered fingertip veil. The bridal bouquet was comprised of White roses, lilies of the valley and carnations. Dr. James Maucker, president of the Slate College of Iowa, will be commencement speaker and NMU President pr. Edgar Hard-will confer the degrees. Philinda Ashley was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Delmer Schons of Clarkston and Mrs. Gary Laidler of Oxford, Sisters of the bridegroom, and Mrs. Robert Mann of Oxford, sister-in-law of the bride. The duties of best man wOre performed by Gerald Bates of Fort Worth, Tex. Ushers were Gary l4iidler, Delmer Schons, Robert Mann, brothk of the and David Stjfong of I>apccr. Flower girl was Alane"* Marie Mann, niece of the bride. Eric and Erin- Stalnaker, brothers of the‘ bilde, were ring bearers. MRS. WILLIAM J. HUBBLE The Thomas Community Hall was the setting for the reception that followed the riles. The ndw-lyweds are on a honeymoori trip motoring through, the West. Contest/ Yes! We will give this bicycle eway to a boy or girl who hat registered In our store . . . just come In, fill out the entry blank . 1 . nothing to buy , . . ho obligation . . . lust say hello, sign and you are In the contest. Bicycle prize at our Roehester Store oyly. • KIDS tennii sheet priced according to style Sitd tixe from $3,99. A DD'Q JUNIOR SHOES J I r\rr J ROCHESTER 481 N. Main Street ROCHESTER Open Fri. to 9 F. M. THg PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JUNE 4, 1963 Airlines Lose Argument^ Wheri Does a Stewardess Become Too Old to Fly? SERUNG By ROBERT J. SERUNG UPI Aviation Editor i WASHINGTON-Can a 3?-year-dW airline stewardess find hiap-pineifn with an airlinie that says 32 is too old? No, lovers air travel, this isj not a line from a| soap opera. It is,| ...or .was, the cnixf of a labor dispute! that attracted at-^ tion coast to; coast—mainly cause the skies above, hath fmyriike a 'fiygirl scorned be-caum of age. Tbe billing issue began burning when American Airlines, negotiating a new contract with its 1,500 stewardesses refused to eliminate a provision in the exiting contract: Namely, when a irf reachM^WllStf to flying and accept another job with the airline* : The stewardess negotiators said this was grossly unfair--uhchiv-alrous and unrealistic—that neither American noj any other airline has a right to terminate a stewardess’ flying career on the basis of chronological age. The stewardesses either had an acute sense of good public relations or received some astute ad- vice from their parent Transport Workers Union j(TWU). They promptly called news conferences and a nhmber of stewardesses circa 32 got their pictures plastwed ail over scores of newspapers—the gist of them being: ‘’Does this girl look too old to fly?’’ Obviously, they didn’t and American — with legitimate reasons for its retirement policy and only 10 girls out of 1,600 who are over 3^ame out second best in the battle for public and press sympathy; The airline finalljr extend^Th^ age limit to 33. OTHERS INVOLVED But th^ alleged problem of the “aging stewardess” is not peculiar to American. Braniff and Northwest have a retirement rule with an age cut-off of 32. AUlhree^il^^ niation into effect six or,/keven years ago bnt applied it" only to girls hired hencefwVIl^ All have a nun^r of steward-iSses either ovm:^2 or those who will reach tim age in the near future wit^t having to take ground jobs. th^ /ule—it is an age at which a girl is young enough to start a new airline career, - These carriers cited one chief reason tor the 8top-flyirig-at-32 For public consumption, the, airlines say they do not want to lose the services of attrac* tive, intelligent and personable young women; they Wrely want them to go into other channels of airline work before they’re t old to make the Plus the frequent time off, with a maximum 35 hours monthly duty allowed. The profession still has a huge turnover, but there is evidence that toe turnover affects mainly toe younger girls; a stewardess who has flown for four or five years nuy stay on another four or five or even longer. Behind that public argument .is a private fact of life which all airline people admit: When a stewardess flies a cectaia length of time, she may never want to quit at all. Five years seems to be the magio number for this phenomena^ although it may vary by individual. Ihere is something about fligh^crewHBomradeship, esprit^ de corps and toe very romance of travel which to toe majority Of older stewardesses jar ontweighr wny pmind job — incittding matrimony. Added to the intangible attractions is a more practical one. The stewardess profession pays well, considering all the side benefits such as almost unlimited free or cutdarO travel. Involving WayCounty LANSING UPiy A new trial has; been ordered/ny the State Supreme Coupe in the case of a child injurra in a traffic acci-{ dent involving a sweeper operated by the Wayne County Road Commission because pictures taken more than two years later were introduced as evidence. The court held that the exhibits did not meet the admisability test of reasonable representation. The pictures* purported ttf show that ^^^dtherowe^ier war iwt ralsiHg dust to create a hazard but were taken more than two years after the accident. Negligence was claimed and damages were sought on behalf of Darlene Kaminski, then ' 10 years old, injured in a collision betw(»n toe sweeper and .a car in Wayne Township in 1959. The claim was not allowed by the lower court. The high court upheld the local Circuit Court in a denial of a suit brought by a group of Vlint Public Works Department employes who were laid off in 1960 because, there was no money to carry on a construction program. Richard Bickell apd a group of other city workers sought to be reinstated in their jobs ' iority rights and back pay. The lower court held there was no cause for action. Also upheld was a lower court decision awarding compensation for two years loss of salary to William Sharon, former superintendent of schools for Spalding Township, Menominee County. Sharoii was voted a new five-year contract in 1953 with a raise to $5,600 a year - although his foriner contract still had one year to go: had a right to dismiss a case because the plaintiff did not show up in court on the trial date.. The suit by Harry Banta ofj Detroit against Steve Serban of Flint, involving an accident in Flint in 1957, was dismissed by the judge when neither Banta his attorney appeared in court. ' Two school board members who voted for the new contract were defeated in a try for re-election and the.new board voted to terminate his services at the end of the old 1951-54 contract. Sharon was out of work for two years before be took a posl-110 n as superintendent of schools at another district. The Supreme Court ruled that Flint Circuit Judge Donald Parks MSU Relaxes Coed Curfew EAST LANSING (UPI) -Cinderella curfew governing Michigan State University coeds will be lifted next fall. Under a new ruling passed by the all-womeni students association, aii MSU coeds wiil be able to stay out of their dormitories at night until 11:30 p.m. Previously only upperclassmen or second-term freshmen with better than a 2.0 average enjoyed such privileges. Reporting time for first-termers or coeds below a 2.0 now is itl»;3ff“p:m. 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Pontiac, Kfichigan - - TUESBA¥, JUNE 4,4^ — ^ —— E«cutlv» yic» Prtatdent and John W, FinozitALD Secretary and AdvertlalnK Dire THOMMCni culattoa Mana Pope’s Death Sorrows World In the death of Pope John XXIII all mankind has lost a dominant figure that was striving to provide the stimulus for world peace. great love for all people and a de* „ 'sire foir world unity. His work was essentially . preparation for the Ecumenical XJOhhcil. Pope John's contribution to life x Unlike" other re-I nowned leaders, it was Pope JoHN^ the man, wh„o was loved and revered, rather than his position as head of Lthe. Roman Cath- POPE JOHN xxni oUc Ohurch ★ ★ ★ ■ It would almost seem that greatness was something with which His Holiness was bom. It is an established fact that from, a humbie beginning Pope John’s rise to prominence from within the Church was far from spectacular. Early reports indicate that he had always carried out his, various duties ih a falthhil and conscientious man-, ner with little or no fanfare. But in the fall of 1958 when Pope John was almost 77 years old he was unexpectedly elected Pope afid from that day forward until his death his .surprising spiritual personality electrified fnillions. , recommending cooperation ‘ and attempting to lay the foundation for world brotherhood. • ★ ★ ★ Unfortunately he did Hot live to complete his mission. We ^ only hope that his role as a peacemaker wiU be continued. Pope John XXIII has I«ft us all a bit kinder and wiser by being among , us, Stat^lnconi^ax Voice of the People: Two Pontiac Edua Thank you for the generous recognition h? The Pontiac Press , editorial. We consider our years I of-work in the Pontiac Schools as a pleasurable and satisfying experience. y The pleasure Is doubled, however, when we know that our labors are appreciahid. We h^ve felt that through the jMdium of . education We could best serve the boys and girls of Pontiac, and we are glad to have been a part of the educational development. WIERSEMA 318 W. Iroquois -----iTedand MfldreihWierseiiui ‘MemorialV Group Voices Gratitude Another Feels Cats Should Be Licensed On behalf of the officers of the Pontiac Memorial Day Associa- In regards to “fcqulrer'j” letter about restricting cats, many feel- the same. Cats de- tlon, I wish to thank the many stroy a lot of 'gaiM and mng their help. Without them our ^ M«i points out that 100 congressmen from districts the number of American farms with a population density of 1,0Q0 has driyped from 6.8 million in jq qqq mile voted I9M to fewr than 3.7 nUllion ..Uberal” consistenUy. Hie re-and Is probably headi^ for under who represOntod the a ml lion by IW. more prosperous districts, .Voted “Since agrlOTlture has devel- conservative more than half the oped a highly effective p^ time. But the denser the popula-ductlon machine and its unneed- jion, the more liberal the voting ed human resources have been record shifted to the city,” Hlgbee ' ★ ★ ★ Jn coatrasti amoBf-gresimen from districts with "Thui far tee federal budget to relieve the problem of 2. And nearly half of tee oon-servativei voted that way all Verbal Orchids to— brotherly love, which so many water, leaders preach but do not always nmgg apply in the perplexing contro- ,, ... , Here are some of the rules, ® * many of them still observed near- COMMUNIST TOLERANCE ly 700 years later: It may be argued for a long - “In the very building in time whether the example of tol- which the pontiff lived they (the erance that Pope John XXIII en- cardinals) will form a conclave deavored to. impress upon the te which all will live In common, Communists caused some Italians without dividing walls, curtains prices next year and ball them out with a new subsidy. City congressmen, tired of appr''prl-atlng millions' to support prices generous than tee fedOral budget to relieve tee urban problems of surplus people.” Carrying thia study Into the state government field, Dr. Hauser declared In a Stanford Uni- ’This development has been verslty lecture that under-rep- )uld Just as soon let farmers responsible for a political realign- resentatlon of urban areas and Mrs. David LeMarba of 151 Starr; 98th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. George S. Shnitzhofer of Highland; golden wedding anniversary. Dr, Thomas A. Neal of Detroit, formerly of Birmingham; 87th birthday. Mrs, Ellsworth Stephens of 195 Oneida; 85th birthday. , Mr. and Mrs, Frank T. Lefurgy of 123 Augusta; 55th wedding anniversary. Me. and Mrs. William J. ManSfleld of 169,Gage; golden wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Berndl of 571 E. Mansfield; golden wedding annlver-sarjr. ^ in Italy to vote for the Communist Party in the recent election there because teey mistook tolerance of Communism for a supposed acquiescence in its pernicious demands. But the Pope’s move will some j^ay be regarded as a step in the direction of better contact and closer communication between those who live Inside the Communist 'countries and those who are trying from the outside to keep alive the spirit of human courage among the oppressed peoples. or. fabric between them, with only one private room. No one can get either in or out. —“No one will have access to the cardinals locked in conclave. No one may send deputations or letters to them, under pain of excommunication. stow in their own sweat. There Is a possibility hero teat the two sldea might get together in a mutual back-scratching hug teat would give bote what they wont at the expense of tee U. 8. ’nrea'sury. ’That has been done before. But it is admittedly no way to solve problems. ment in America. Proiperous oval- - reprdtientatipn of rural farmers have been traditionally areas had undoub^ly kept the businessmen and Republican, governments of each of the 50 But their numbers are decreas- states as well as that of tee naming. In contrast, the city dweller tlon more cdnservatlve than the has since the great depression people; And he predicted that the shifted more and more to the Supreme Court’? d e c 1 a 1 o n on Democratic side, particularly in state reapportionment o a a e s the lower Income brackets. Their “may produce a most dramatic The great shift of U.S. population from country to city that Is responsible for this confliet has — "A few windows will, how- been going on for more than a ever, be left open in the conclave century, that food may be passed in to the cardinals, but no one whatsoever may pass through these windows. Three days after tee cardinals have entered the conclave, if In I860 the United States was . 20 per cent urban, 80 per eeht< rural. In 1000 is was 30 per cent rural, 78, per cent nrban, almost a complete reversal. Thia trend continues. number is increasing. ★ ★ ★ One of the major problems of the Republican Party today is how to capture a larger share of the Ur^H vote, as I distinguished from the higher income suburban vote which Is largely GOP. economic and social changa” in the United States. Pope John eased the way for a ho new pontiff has been e This brings up s problem — reappertionment. Making n first public report on research done by Nan Market of University of Chicago, Dr. A f(|rlhqonUng Twentieth Cen* Philip M. Hauser, former a?- , ^oomb, iMtn and WsX « OounUca It Is tlt.oo s y«sr; i. »»m7 Jia msll subsorlpnons psjriU)]! A PONTIAC PiS“ES^. ...:-rv.- 1, THE PONTIAC Pi^ES^. TUESDAY, JUNfe 4, 1963 > -1 SEVEN $$$$$$$$$$$«$$$$$$$$$$$«$^^^^^^ $$$$( $$m $$$$$ ^$$$$$^ $$$$$$$$$ ^$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$ $$$$$$$; $$$$$$$< $$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$^ $$$$$$$$! itorne 3|ortgag® $$$$$$$ ^$$$$$$ :$$$$$$ $$$$$$ of your OVffH lYientS' ^$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$ H«Uon«J\ ■ w - ,.„ia«»u'*'?u1mowo'' • lAflf oro % $$$$ ■\3 > $$$$$$$$$$ .. ^9^!?$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$^ '■r ir'if $$$$ $$$$ ^ TUE PONIIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 4> m3 Pope's Death Mqy Alter Russ-West Relations By JOHN M. mCUOrSwER AP Diplomatic Writer WASHINGTON - The death of Pope John XXIII se( lined to have a profound impact on the future development of re-I latior^ between [the Soviet Union land the Western f powers. The pontiff in L-recept m o n t h s |had been en- ___»d in a deli- ■cate and subtle HIGHTOWER effort to open up a speaking acquaintance between the Kremlin and the Vatican. Whether and how this effort will be continued must now depend on his successor. A s Washington authorities understood the operation, the effort was largely due to Pope John’s deep personal interest in doing what he could to save the world from war in the nuclear age and his immediate aim of improving the condition? of the Roman Catholic church in Eastern Europe. ★ ★ * Washington officials have had rtothinf to sajr publicly about the Pope’s quiet campaign to promote his objectives in relation to the Soviet bloc. Privately they have watched the dfevelopments with extreme interest, aware that lessening of tensions between Rome and Moscow would have a far-reaching effect in Catholic countries and Catholic communities throughout the worfd. The most dramatic of wents in this movement came last March 7 when Pope John received Alexei Adzhubei, Soviet Premier Khrushchev’s son-indaw and chief editor of the Soviet newspaper Izvestia. It was the first meeting between a pontiff, and an important Soviet Communist figure. There was speculation at the time that their conversation might result in a visit by Khrushchev to the Pope later this year, ' Adzhubei sqid simply that the Pope and he had “talked about advancing peace.” The Pope had taken at the very outset of his rule in the Vatican a sirong and praetical-anti-Com-munist stand, decreeing that Catholics could not vote for Comiflu-nists or fellow h*avelers in elec- firm anti-Communist attitude. But in the development of relations between the Vatican and the Kremlin, ideology evidently was not the immediate issue. The Pope seems to have been concerned rather with the possi- ★ ★ ^ tions. There was no doubt of his bility of change in the Communist system and with the prospect of taking advantage of changing conditions to advance his own aims for the promotion of what he called in his recent message peace based on “truth,.justice and brotherly love.” ★ ★ ★ problem was different from that of his predecessor. Pope Pius XII, whose leadership of the church paralleled the Stalin era in the Soviet bloc. Pope Pius had to deal with an implacable hostility from the Kremliti and wlde-against church leaders in the countries of Eastern I ity of East-West talks on a great Europe. i variety of issues, including some Khrushchev opened the poss)ibil-| involving the church. ★ ★ ★ Monfini Top Papal Pick for 2nd Time A worldwide outpouring oLsOf-VA’IICAN jarx (AP)^or^^4^ mr afthT M orPcJe John —.. xxin symbolized today the pon- tiff’s striving for unity and peace in the world. CARDINAL MONTINI 6 HUNSISTOR WESTINGHOUSE SUB-MINIATURE RABIO SIX TRANSISTOR SUB^MINIATURE RADIO is gift packed, will fit in shirt pocket or purse. Has large easy to read tuning dial... built in ferro-core antenna . .Alnicd speaker with automatic volume control for constant sound level. 6 transistors and diode. Gift vpack Includes genuine leather travel case, earphone, and two penliglit "aa” ^Is for up to‘75 hours $1 |88 STEREO & TV SALES 'fil 9-Tu*., W«d., Thurt. 'fil 8-Sat 'til 6 2363 Orchard lake^Read (Sylvan Center) Phone 682-U199 Just like you are : whisri you p r o c t your property with a Home Owners' Insurance policy that includes fire, theft, liability, windstorm, and many other risks at d saving in rates. Call US' second time in less than five years, Giovanni Battista Cardinal Montini, archbishop of Milan, is favored for election as the new Pope, ★ " ★ Only the new pontiff can decide the .future of controversial policies initiated by the late Pope John -XXIII. Those policies will figure strongly when the sacred College of Cardinals convenes to elect a new spiritual ruler of the world’s half billion Roman Catholics. Among them is the continuation of th6 Vatican Ecumenical Council, considered the high point of Pope John’s efforts to modernize his church and lea d it toward Christian unity. Others include Pope John’s efforts to negotiate the release of Joseph Cardinal Mindzenty from -Red Hungary, and his drive to improve relations with the Communist world. ★ * Cardinal Montini, 65, was one of the Pope’s closest advisers during the first phase of the Ecumenic^ Council last fall and. was the first cardinal created by Pope John. Although not a cardinal at the time. Archbishop Montini was mentioned often during the 1958 conclave that elected Pope John. The cardinals do not have to name a Pope from among their number, but no prelate of lower rank has been elected in 600 ears. In Vatican circles, it is taken for granted that Cardinal Montini will lead on the first ballots. The big question is whether he can win the two-thirds majority needed for election. Within the sacred college, lines are drawn between Italians and non-Italians, progreissives and conservatives. ’There are 82 cardinals, more than ever elected a Pope in the past. Italy still has the most, 29. The other 53 come from 30 nations. non-Italian has not been elected Pope since the Dutch-born Adrian VI in 1522. Along with Cardinal Montini, the most prominent “papabile” — likely candl-dates-'-are all Italians. ★ ★ ★ Cardinal WillSlart Canonizalion Move BOSTON (AP) - Richard Cardinal Cushing. Roman Catholic ;hbishop of Boston, says'he will immediately for ^onization qf Pope John XXIII. to solicit prayers and all inforhtation concerning favors granted tnrqugh his inter- Catholics in expressions of grief for the humble pontiff. The only ones not reported to have sent messages of sorrow were the militant Communists in the Chinese camp. Premier Khrushchev an avowed believed in ho God, told the Vatican, “We retain good memories of John XXIII.” HUMAN SPIRIT President Kennedy, joining his process for mediately” the Cardinal day. “It is the wish of all people that his Chrlstlike character be subjected to the detailed process for sainthood. This will take many, many years and all the evidence required by the Church must in due Course be assembled.” World Sorrow Symbolizes fope’s Striving for Peace From Our News Wires The Pope’s death seemed to bring much of the divided world together—at least temporarily —as no other event in recent history had. Men split by different beliefs in politics, religion, social justice and economics joined to pay tribute to the “Pope of unity and Presidents and dictators, kings and queens, democracies and Communist states—all sent their condolences to the Vatican. Protestants, Jews, Moslems, and nonbelievers his personality, his sincere and candid interest m^ p^^ ’ wholesome openness of his nature, made friends on every side. Few, if any, who came close to him, could resist his heart-warming charm.” ★ ★ ★ , Government, business and labor leaders joined in praising the Pope’s work and expressed deep regfet at his passing. Gov. George Romney said the death was “untimely and unfortunate loss for our troubled world.” Romney, who,is a Mormon, said the Pope’s death is felt “particularly because of his exceptional ability and dedication to human betterment, peace among nations, and religious tolerance and understanding.” Henry Ford II, board chairman COMhfTE OPTICAL SERVICE PONTIACMALL OPTICAL CEMT8R Open Evonints’til 8i39 68Mm join^ the world’s Jhalfdiiillsn^ of Fwd Motor Corrsaid the Pope dandleIm fellow Americans in < sorrow at the death of Pope John XXIII, said the pontiff’s concern for Jiuman spirit “transcended all boundaries of belief or geography.” Kennedy, a Roman Catholic, said the Pope’s “wisdom, compassion and timely stren^h bequeathed humanity a new legacy of purpose and courage for the future.” Tributes to the Pope were expressed by clergymen and laymen of Catholic, Protestant, Jewish and other religions. The five American members of the Roman Catholic Church’s College of Cardinals said the world will miss the Pope, whose great contribution was unity and understanding among the various faiths. STATE MOURNS Michigan residents of all faiths have joined together in mourning the death of Pope John. Catholics began an official nine-day mourning period yesterday, and spcial requiem high masses have been planned throughout the state. Solemn day mourning will occur during the final three days of the period. In the Detroit diocese. Archbishop John F. Dearden an- cessiMjamctJie;^^^ jiQunced_xequim^iilgh masses will be said in all Detroit Catholic churches next Monday. A Pontifical Mpss was also scheduled'to be sung in Detroit’s Blessed Sacrament Cathedral on Monday. FolloWhig the announcement of the Pope’s death. Archbishop Dearden said, “The warmth of ir$l|vALUABLE~COUPON|libfilfa ] Offer Good Wed., June 5th WITH COUPON ONLY HOFFMAN’S original-tasty “butcher boy” STEAKS Wateh for Hoffmqn’s Main M. Thursday Juno 6th HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS 526 N. Perry FE 24100 has “left a deep and permanent; imprint on our times and^ qur world. I ♦ ★ ★ ■ “His contributions to peace, to understanding and to good will among men will stand forever as a lasting memorial to a great and inspiring leader,” Ford said. Walter P. Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers, said ‘the cause of world peace and human freedomTOst a gallant champion.” ^ Getting "CRAAAPED" At Your House? 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Thermostat maintains climate you select. No-draft circulation. | ^0^0 IlS volts. Reg. 169.95 STORE 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. DAntinA IIaII PHONE 685-4940 Monday thru Soturdoy rUlllllHl lllllll Talagruph at Elizulwth taka Reoii £:sasKra ) fr THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUN^ 4,1»63 NINE High Court Step Could-Speed Integration WASHINGTON (APJ - The Supreme Ck)urt, impatient for soW time with the pace of r^ial segregation, has taken a new step that couid help speed the process. In an important case from Illinois, it ruled Monday that a group of Negroes complaining of alleged segregation need not exr haust their remedies under state law^befbre tumlpg to the federal courts. Lawyers were studying the decision today to figure its* impact on the faturei Some-fell that if broadly applied and broadl^ iiH terpreted in/future decisions, it might do much to circumvent the elaborate system of laws, adi^nis-trative procedures and the like that some Southern states have set up since the high court outlawed school segregation in 1954. ONE AIM Negro leaders assert these laws have one aim: to delay thorough desegregation as long ns possible, or to defeat it aitogether. There was no certainty yet what effect the Illinois case might have, for’ example, on an Alabama" ease^JovHn the courts. On May 28, federal Judge Sey-bourn H, I^ome ruled that Nfr groes dicing a sweeping injunction against separate schools in Birmingham had not exhausted remedies under a 19M state statute. This law gives school boards almost unlimited powers to assign pupils to schools. — SPECIAL notice- final MEETING OF THE PONTIAC AREA HAMMOND ORGAN SOCIETY *63 S dais he would order them to draw The Illinois case was brought up a desegregation plan unless under the federal Civil Rights Act, they apply the pupil placementlwhidi dates back to 1871 and au- State Recount in Final Stages Slight Vote Change Dims Pern Hopes LANSING (ff) — The recount of the April 1 Vote approving a new state constitution was more than three fourths cmnpleted today with little significant change in the tally. With 1,537 preclncte recounted, hiere was a loss of 204 *^es'’ votes and a gain of 189 “no" votes. This cut 373 votes from the original margin of 7,829 for the constitution. ' There are 1,969 precincts to be recounted. Representatives of the state divisioB saJd they still hope to complete the recount by the end of the week. ’ James Inglis, petitioner for the Democrats in the recount, meanwhile announced he has reached an agreement with Atty. , Gen. Frank Kelley and the counter-petitioner for those favoring the constitution for the release of voting machines to be used in school elections next week. “All paper materials in connection with the madiines, including absent voter ballots, envelopes, exhibits and poll, books will continue to be safeguarded," In^is said. “Only those rare examples of machines which are actual exhibits are excluded.” There are stUl some machine precincts to be recounted, Inglis said, but n6 requests for voting machines for use in school elections have been received from those areas. thortzes suits in federal courts against persons who deprive others of constitutional rights. COMPLAINT The complaint from the Illinois ..egroes said; In Chenot School, St. Clair County, segregation is carri^ on within the building, with most of the Negroes ittend-ing classes apart from the whites and compelled to use separate entrances and exits. When Neigrqes complained that this was unconstitutional, lower federal courts dismissed their suit on the ground they had failed to use administrative procedures provided by state law. - A A A But Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas, writing the high tribunal’s 8-1 decision, said it had indicated in an earlier ruling ‘that relief under the Civil Rights Act may not be defeated because relief was not sought first under state law.’ No clear-cut rule of thumb can be laid down as to when a complainant must first ekhatist state remedies before turning to the federal courts. Douglas noted that in cases “where strands of local law are woven into the case that is before the federal court, we have directed a district court to refrain temporarily from exercising its jurisdiction until a suit could be brought in the state court.” A He added: “We have however, in the present case no underlying of state law controlling ttis litigation.” He said the constitu-tion^lighiJUeged by the Negroes is “plainly federal in origin and nature." “HE GREW HAIR” Warren FeaUiew, ClBysbucg, PeniM. (ik*t Altoona), a rej^-rw hair by the I,e8ley Home Treatinent Method. He did not have male pattern baldneas. - MEN AND WOMEN Learn if Your Hair Loss Can Be Stopped and Baldness Prevented Mr. Fi T. Brodie, repreaentfaig the Lesley Hair and Scalp Owk sultantS, win give hair and scalp consultation to hair wmried men and women In the Waldron Hotel In Pontiac, Michigan, Wednesday only, June 5, 1963, from 1:00 p,m. to 8; 00 p.m. Decide today to give car* to that pfized personal appearanee asset—a good head of hair. Come in and tSk. with thie Lesley Consultant regarding your hair and scalp problems. Learn how you can treat yourself right in the—‘ vacy of your own home. F " checkups hi your city by a Consultant assure success in the minimunn. period of time. If you have dandruff, excessive hair fall, thinning hair, excessive oiliness or dryness, itchy scalp. tion at once. A little time spent now may save a great deal of regret later. ,—You incur absdutely im chaise or obllga ■ not we bdleve you can be Iwiped, , how long it will take and how much it wUl cost. If you are accepted lor treat- , ment, you will be given a written guarantee folr the length., of time treatment is required, on a prorated basis. Nearly half of our clients are women. Lesley Hair and Scalp Consultants have established a very high reputation in the field lor refusing any case that does not fall under the scope of its work. Mgle pattern baldness Is *IE:3^I It's "The Berties!" laspberry Sundae Bush-ripened, juicy red raspberries tumbling over delicious DAIRY QUEEN, famous for its country-fresh flavor. You'll love it! Cone in for a Treat TODAY! PONTIAC AREA dairy queens ■ I............ ONE COMPLETE SHOW TONIQHT Starta at 71OO p.m. vided, among other things, for the of downtown store facilities within 90 days. Today, the lunch counters in some stores are closed,. One is covered with baskets of artificfal flowers, and there is a basket in each of the seats, A leaflet paints another detail of the picture. 'There has been much talk against downtown merchants who agreed to integrate their facilities,” it says. WHO REFUSED ‘But little has been said about the merchants who refused to go along with this policy. Lest they be harmed, I would like to mention them by name.” Three stores are listed. On the one hand— The Rev. Wyatt Tee Walker, AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD-With ”55 Days at Peking/’ it becomes apparent that stayaway producer Samuel Bronston must be an admirer of the late Cecil ,B. DeMille. Bronston already has shown DeMille’s fondness for American history John Paul Jones,” Biblical epics “The King of Kings”, an^' costume classic El Cid.” New Bronston! is presenting “ssf -Day| at Peking,” THOMAS which .is beMillean in its attention to lavish, authentic back- ^Starts Tomorrow I ■OUBLE-EXCITEIIIIEWT SHOW!4 than there t^as last month during the Negro demonstrations. So it is an eerie quiet, breathless and uneasy, here in the qye of the storm. AGREEMENT A biracial agreement, worked out between white businessmen and Negro leaders, ended the demonstrations in May. It pro- chief strategist for the nonviolent campaign of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., said the* issue of dismissing charges against Negroes ■ last month, must be set- 'If not,” he laid, “we’ll start demonstrating again. We’ve got 5,000. who would go to jail.” JAH,ED > - : About 2,400 Negroes were Jailed between April 3 and May ?. And on the other-r-Attempts are under way to organize the white populace of Birmingham. An estimated 800 persons attended a meeting last Friday night-and-^there was another Saturday, even bigger said a wit- A newly formed organization claims to have obtained 20,000 signatures on a. petition calling for an election to restore the commission form of government in the city. ★ ★ ★ _ The former administration was voted out of office last November. One of its top officials was T. (Bull) Cpnnor, hard-bitten segregationist. The election was contested and^ the new administration was seatfed only recently 'after a ruling by the State Supreme Court. M1^T4TIMES The'new mayot, Albert Bout-well, and his nine-member council have met four times. Two members said the racial problem hah not yet been discussed but that they were sure it would be taken up. The issue of desegregating the schools has complicated the prob* leln. ■ ★ ★ ★ Last week, U.S. Dlst. Judge Sey-bourn H. Lynne refused to order immediate desegregation. But he said he would order a plan for desegregating to be drawn up unless state pupil placement lawp are administered without discrimination. Negro attorneys said they will appeal to higher courts for an immediate injunction against, school segregation. Desegregating the schools would be, potentially, a much iwore explosive action than desegijegating the public facilities in some stores.. . 'The quiet here,” said a police officer, “may be because everybody’s got his .eyes on the university right now.” Three Negro students are scheduled to be enrolled In the University of Alabama* system next Monday. '-■.it ' ★ * The officer added, “After that, who knows?” Fidel Secretly Returns Home HAVANA (AP)-Prime Minister Fidel Castro slipped back into Cuba unnoticed Monday as public attention focused on the death of Pope John XXni.- ^ Castro’s swrecy-shrouded acrL-val at Havana airport from the Soviet Union report^ly took President Qsvaldo Dorticos by Surprise. No one met Castro, not not even his bodyguards. All Moscow papers carried front-page accounts today of Cas-tto’s departure. Soviet Premier Khrushchev and Defense Minister Rodion Y. Malinovsky saw him off.-..... ... .. DeMjltean in Scope Eastern Western a Fine Flick By BOB THOMAS » high-pow-|wh0 grounds, ibmsfe-4>f a ered cast and ^ic-scalp action and its sprawling plot. ★ ★ ★ Since DeMille was the screen’ most successful showman, the comparison is not bad. Peking” is indeed a fine movie, in the strict sense of the Word. It moves. It has characters you care about. It has heroics and perfidy. It is big. The story is such good film terial that it is surprisibg it ’t-been used^beforfr.-Iircon-cerns the Boxer Rebellion of 1900, when foreigners in Pekjng were beleaguered in a forced United Nations for 55 days, under attack from the anti-intruder Chinese. Leaders of the holdout are David Niven, the British ambassador hopes to ■ avoid aiT fl war, and Charlton Heston, a gruff major of the*.U.S. Marines. Ava Gardner is the mysterious Russian baroness; and there are various other, English, Americans, Russians, Germans, Japanese, French and Austrians. - ... * A * Also limitless Chinese, mostly imported to the Spanish location from England. They include Flora Robson as the empress, Leo Genn and Robert Helpmann as her bat-tling advisers, and other, more authentic types from Limehoiise. ^Director Nick Ray, who doubles 18 the American ambassador, Ifeeps the characters interweaving with a minimum of confusion, and action expert Andrew Marton (the chariot race in “Ben-Hur”) provides some marvelous battles. ★ ★ ★ Vi^at they have created, of course, is an Eastern Western. Replace the Chinese with redskins and the multinationals with pioneers, and you have .the siege at Ft. Apache and the charge at Feather River all over again. ★ * ★ At a time when Hollywood doesn’t seem able to afford spectacles any more, it’s nice to know that we will be getting them from Bronston on the plains of Spain. of his body has a meaning in the life he lives on the ocean floor. Lobsters eat crabs or any small sea animals they can catch. Their enormous front claws allow them to seize these small ,Mimal$. Notice that one claw (A) is heavier than the other (B), . big claw has rounded blunt teeth and Is used to seize and crush the prey. The small daw, used to tear up the prey, has sharper teeth. You, pisy notice that the big daw is on the left hand (A) in the small picture and is on the right in the larger two lobsters. ’Bhis is not a mistake, for lobsters vary jn this respect. - At night the lobster tiptoes around on his five pairs of legs looking for food; the long feelers help him find it. If discovered by an enemy such as an octopus, the lobster would swim hurriedly backward as at the top. He flips hfs tail underneath him to do this. During the day, the lobster usually hides in some crevice or in a burrow. Now you can see why the feelers arc so long. The lobster holds these outside the burrow and waves them around. If they toupji something that seems edible, the lobster jumps out and grabs it. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Check on a lobster’s'anatomy the next time you see one in a fish market window. If you live in thi country, look carefully in a creek bottom and see if you can spot a crayfish. They are much like lobsters in miniature. iTRipHti rock HUDSON ini 110VER COME BACK” 1 ”Come September” START! WEDNESDAY! ^•“CourtsKip Eddie's Father ANN AR^OR (if) - Eighty top ekeedtives of industry, education and government discussed the nation’s health problems yesterday pt the opening of the two-day National Confess of Environmental Health at the University of Michigan. Speakers included George Skinta, vice president of Owens-Illinois Glass Co., Toledo, Ohio; Dr. 0. L. Kline of the U. S. Food and Drug Administration, Washington; and Dr. John D. Porterfield of the University of California. Dr. Porterfield said, “The public wants a pushbutton situation in environmental health to obtain the use of all the bright products and processes, but to avoid any risk in the consumption of them.” ★ ★ ★ Skinta suggested a return to "the old town hall” type of meeting where scientists, businessmen and laW enforcement agencies could meet to develop constructive programs. ■ The staggering speed and Daughters' Control! Awarded to Actress LOS ANGHLES (AP)—Actress Dorothy Malone has won temporary custody of her two daughters. ★ *• A The gifls^ father, actor Jacques Bergerao!’ has lost temporary, custody of his passpor)kr-4o make certain he doesn’t try to leave the United States with the daughters. it ★ it Supenor Court gave Miss Malone custody of Mimi, 2, and Di-aHerT7THofiday~pending triar bf her contested divorce suit. The French aOtor was ordered to pay $250 monthly temporary support payments. At U. of M. Conference Execs View Health Problems quantity of new scientific de-vdopmeiits were stressed by Dr. Kline. He said, “There is a pressing need for better communications between regulating agencies and the regulated industries, and the public which both seek to serve.” ', ★ ★ ★ Tho Congress is being held-under the auspices of the Nafional Sanitation Foundation based at the U. of M. School of Public Health. Sale of Train Line Approved by ICC WASHINGTON (AP) -;The Marquette - Huron Mountain Railroad received authority from the Interstate (tonimerce Corn-mi s s i o n yesterday to purchase 23.7 miles of line operated between Marquette and Big Bay, Mich., by Lake Superior - Ish-peming Railroad. The transaction inyloves $90,-)0 — the estimated salvage value of the line. Ishpeming intends to abandon the line if the transaction is not consumated, the commission was told. Marquette said it plans to rehabilitate the line for f r e i g h t service and the operation of a seasonal tourist passenger Service to Thunder Bay. 'Edwards Still a Top Candidate for AppointiHent' WASHINGTON (UPD - Washington officials said yesterday the appointment of a Tennessee man on the federal 6th CiTcuit Court of Appeals will nk hurt'^the chances of Detroit police Commissioner George Edwards for a similar appointment. . "■ i W ★ President- Kennedy yesterday named Harry Philltos of Nashville to fill one of two vacancies on the court. Edwiffdrlias-ijeerTiaracd-as; ~ top candidate for another seat left vacant by retired Judge Thomas B. McAllister of Grand. Rapids. and at 8:48 CONNIE : mh mfils-K M^ANAVWONe d Mer/iocoLOTf THURSDAY only MSwujjw ‘‘SWiNEARTS” IMIIIIT EVER Him libr.aEONORAROSSlIlGOlGUYMDm Summ .. lEASTMiUttmMliiiiSCilPEl * PheiM FE 5-8331 EAGLE To kill a Mockingbird GREGORY PECK ALSO: SELECTED 8H0RT1 COMING 300N! STRAND THEATER run iiMwiAR-dC 19 ^ LANSING m-Striking verbally at Nbrthem wliite liberals who he claimed pay only lip service to the concept of racial equality, the labor secretary for the National Association for the Ad-vanceriient of Colored People said mass demonstrations' may spread through the North. Unless, the federal government uses its full power to insure Negro equaiity in the North, saW Labor Secretary Herb^ Hiil, demonstrations wouM be««tag»d. “In the South, we are witness-' ing an end of an entire social order because the Negro has cast off the brainwashing of the whites,” said Hill. . ★ ★ * “The whole rotten system of white supremacy in the South is finished because a whole generation of young Negroes, have had it.” Hill nccused Uie Kennedy Administration of refusing to act decisively in the'nation’s civil rights crisis. w * * “The full power and authwity of the federal government and th'! White House itself must be invoked on behalf of America's Negro citisens and on behalf of this country’s future,’’ he said. Marriage licenses 0*ry D. Utektr. IM« Hitcbery (n Lynn A. Buckman, Union Lakt Jamet B. Bcbler. Ann Arbor and Pi tricia A. bfoorbcad. Fsrmintton WllUam P. Badott, 1« 8, Edith an ! Plshwlld, ' * J^Herton L. vaaa,. m uiaina la E. Roafe. Parmlngton am j WInaa. ParmliMUin William H Oraham, York am aula A. AnulU, ,Dttrall__ Rollon F NUhole, m Wblttomoro am vpe WoinlandoT, Lako Prion * Geofff T Matthowa. Rocheatar aba, Inrala R Kraaaa. Bloomdald Hllll | William J Derier. Soulhlleld and DorlOi N««ab' F.*^8lanvli. Farmington and| llan B.'Solborg. Farmington Wllfrad Stewart, Hatwr Wooda and, *E"diard r'venna’rd': IM^W Rund.ll| ^d*^Haael O. Hylla, ■ lib Kenllwoijh David li. Crow, Keilt. Ohio and 4udllh 4amel?'ik.**rownrBTOheiter and Elma Rmhar’d^'F*' Brlggo, South Lyon and iridiyn Longwill, South Lyw ^ John E Smith. Caraoovllla and Sher- *J.S'n‘^F‘''‘'rarr,‘'5«c'’a and Velma M M*chi^ n iimn!*'i^cbard, Vaka and ,Oak and Mar,a “^.,fc"o'‘ c^r’!!!i'.«*'-and Su.an R. Aahbaugh. "ly,lh”Tai'l. lert Plumb Farmington ana Marla KS£'’r"’Hu?b*re,’’» «d Paula arren' t**Edmunda Jr . Farmington imam Book, ffadlaon »lghU and }?l*T Oai3J.'"wSiWird*ind Vivian ,er Court ^ _________ ? Woodrow Dunn. 8r.. father of aald rUtlOT^'havlng bean filed In thla rt affeglng that the preaent where-uta of the father h« imknowD »hd uld chlM nu vto d u Uw of the Sluto. ;ud thii d thould bo pJt^ UDdor the of Michigan, you are hereby --j. that the hearing^n aaldi petKion be held at the Cimrt 1 county Service Center, Pontiac In aald CdunP; of June. A.D. Ipo!. the of^rnoon. uod you^ urj imoDded to oppeor personilly ot sold ''bc*ng impractlcli ^ ' ,»iWd«r dfijMa; tha Hiinorrtla Norman R nord Judse of told Court, In Uie f of* Ponlfoc In Mid county, thli “%RMAN*g SyNAW^^ t maUer"of the petition concern, vid Freeman, minor. Came No rilllam Bcott Freeman, father of inor child. on having been filed itDOwn ond Mjd child hoo r»o- fis M‘‘«Vd*s?tr^^^ r lllobigan. you are hareby notl- ^fd^W^ioSrt Juna. A.D. JMJ, ai nine o-olock aW nttao Praia, ,a nawapaper prfntad k .. ..14 court. In the IN R. BARNARD^ Zifisr: ruMribrrJun* !•' MM*orchard take Road, Keogo Mlohlg OOr, VO eng*' rel oarburetor. »»•--(heavy duty), poal-, axle, heater (heavy ,af iSdl heavy duty generator, Sar.a,,« iKi and springe trout ma rear, sar* viow mirror. oU « roof rflLlfSN.. VANHORN^ all next winter witli service Positively protects you against unexpected heating eauipment repair bills _______ Assures you of maximum warmth and comfort from every gallon of fuel from September through May, or $29.97 for fhie entire hwting season (when you buy your season’s requirements of heating oil fronl us) no papents until fall Efficiency tune<«upy so yeur burner can deliver more heat per gallon like your car, your heating equipment needs an annual tune-up to get the most out of every gallon of fuel. Our specially trained mechanics do all these things: ^ Clean your oil burner Inspect flue and stack y Check filter cartridge ^ Lubricate burner motor y Inspect strainers and nozzle y Adjust air and oil mixture V^Af^iust^igiriti^ Clean-burning Gulf Solar Heat® Gulf Solar Heat is the world’s foiest heating oil, yet it costs no more. What’s more, we deliver Gulf Solar Heat to your home automatically, so you’ll always have an ample supply. Phone today, or mail the coupon Let the new Gulf Housewarming Plan take the worry out of winter for you! Phone ope;rator on duty 24 hours a dky. GULF OIL CORPORATION, Phone FEderal 2-9173 Check controls and switches y Checkdraft stabilizer y Cement air leaks y Lubricate blower or water pump motor y Vacuum-clean heating plant and exposed flue pipes as necessary On-call service, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, at no extra charge If your heating equipment should ever fail to function properly, day or night, we’ll come and fix it-fast -with no extra charge for service. Parts warranty (value up to $215.00) at no extra charge If any-or all-of the following burner parts should become defective, we will repair them or replace them-^t no extra charge to you. Stacker Standard Electrodes Circulator Relay 'Thermostat Circulator Motor Dnior 392 South ^ndford Pontiac, Michigair □ Yes! I want the Gulf Housewarming Plan. □ Send me more details about the Gulf Housewaraiing Plan, without any obligation on my part. Name—— --------------------------—^— ------ Street AddressL. -Phona_ Cily- JZoneu- Stata- heating oil ~ 1 ihoMivB heating servioo plan ia availabla only to rmidenta of tho graater Pontiac ■ Gulf Oil Corporation in ita Pontiac, Michigan tank wagon dalivery araa. I Equipment is Subjoct to our insptetion beforo contract is accepted. Thla lunMiaervad TWELVE JUNE 4, 1963 BTTER FIT These 2 Ways With Some 420 members of the ' Pontiac Parent Teacher Association Council and the 33 local PTA units will attend a mass installation and school of instructWn this evening at 6 p.m. at James Madison Junior High School. ‘‘Keys to a Succ’fess-ful PTA” wiU be the theme. Winners of Hhe two PTA four - yfear teaching scholarships, Nichdlie Kniffep and Lawrence Nichbls, Will be In-trod^bed alopg with past recipients. Also included in the pro- 1,. Mod* on tpociol lasts to ollow bottorfit. 2. Fittod by spociolty trainod ox-poits. (Shown) Bluo and whito saddU shoot in tiifos 4'A to 6. »6” _____..'..$7.99 “Where Fit Comer Flru’’ ui oLea/id Junior Booteiy 1060 W. Huron 3344)725 (Hukhi CmMot N«t to China City) Shop Doily 9:30 till 6 Fri. till 9 MINIATURE MODEL OF NEW HEARINfi AID GIVEN le free biter of special Interest true life. s6tual i ------------ ... _... __vertl««ment. Try It on In the privacy of yoiir "ime, without cost or obligation of Thesh replicas i vrlte for yours now. Again ,we repeat, there Is no cost and certainly ~o obligation. Franchitad MAICO Dealer Better Hearing Service 103 NORTH SAGINAW In with Pontine Optical Center Phone: 674-1581 Winners of the two PTA four-year teaching scholarships, Lawrence Nichols of Green and Nicolie Kniffen of Second, are greeted by Mrs. Robert Trachet of Mansfield, PTA Council first vice president. Might Wear Burlap Boxed in by ‘Jackie Look’, By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN dress Complete Laundry and Dry Cleaning Facilities Lakeland laundry & Drycleaning Village y-DELICIOUS FOOD- ^ In DalighHf' — N. Saginow FE 5-5591 6d)0 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Daily Carryout SenHce g DEAR ABBY: Could you please tell me what is the matter with the fashion world today? I am planning to be married this summer. I have been all over town trying to find a dressy fitted suit in Which to be marr ied and there is not one to be had. Everything I have seen has a short boxy jacket, which is too sporty. Now I am not ^ criticizing Mrs. Jackie Kennedy, because! she looks good] in short boxy! jackets, but^ why does every w 0 m a i) in the! country have tol dress like Mrs.f Kennedy? I am sure I only woman who feels this way. I admire her, but I don't want to dress like her. I will get married in a burlap before I buy one of those boxy suits. Please, Dear Abby, come to our rescue and get the fashion World on the ball so we can have a variety of styles to choose from. OUT OF VOGUE DEAR OUT; K a store doesn’t have what you want, ask the buyer to, order it for you. If he can’t order it, find yourself a pattern and make it. If you can’t sew — find someone who can. If you give up and-wear a ‘‘burlap bag,” you’ll STILL look like Jackie Kennedy. I understand that’s what she’s going to be wearing this summer. Don’t Throw It Away... REBUILD IT TODAY! DEAR ABBY: F am the treasurer of the 11th grade at my school and I sort of lost $42.69, and I don’t know what to do. Could you jilease give nne some advice? Thank you. worried DEAR WORRIED: As treasurer of the class^ the re-eiaXponsibility of the money is yours. Sort of “borrow” it from your father and pay him back if you have to work all summer. For a personal, unpublished answer to your letter, write to ABBY, in care of The Pontiac Press. Out axparti will Mgter* now comfort, highar quality Into your pratont mat-tratt or box gprii ~ ----- Guaranteed In Writing 7 Years OXFORD MAHRESS CO. : I 49T North Perry St., Pontiac FE 2-1711 g 1 Hair S^ling-Barber Service! FOR THE FAMILY WOMEN-MEN CHILDREN Elaine formerly of the “Elaine Barber Shop” is here to serve you . . - we have also expanded our facilities . . . Come in today! • NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Don’t put off writing letters. Send one dollar to Abby for her booklet, “How to Wi;ite Letters for All Occasions.” Of Churchwomen Group Elects President Mrs. Joseph C. Cook Jr. was elected president of the Episcopal Churchwomen of Christ Church Cranbrook today. She was selected at the group’s annual meeting. In the Bloomfield Hills church. Serving with her during 19M-64 are Mrs. Robert Flint, first vice president; Mrs. John A. Gilray Jr., second vice president; and Mrs. Frederick S. Strong III, treasurer. Other officers ale Mrs. Wal- demar Adams, assistant treasurer; Mts. Charles Guilford, recording secretary; Mrs. James P. Chapman, corresponding secretary; and Mrs. Robert A. Green, United Thank Offering (UTO), treasurer. Mrs, John H. Aibrecht . Is assistant UTO treasurer. The Rev. Gerald B. O’Grady, rector of Christ Church, conducted the induction ceremony. Retiring president Mrs. Willlaih Wiggins also took part in the program. NEW! y ^‘^EAVandlOSE TO 6 LRS. A WEEK MENT; AND COSTS LESS INCLUDING CAPSULES SUITED TO YOU INDIVIDUALLY BY LIC. PHYSICIAN, M. D. NO GASTRITIS OR IRREGULARITY WITH Medic-way CAPS. don'T diet —-)UST EAT! AS THOUSANDS HAV^E DONE, YOU CAN LOSE 5. 50 OR 100 LBS. AND KEEP IT OFF! MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 7 OFFICES IN OAKLAND AND WAYNE COUNTIES—ONE IN MIRACLE MILE •4-1 gram will be George Yansen, Madison' principal; .Mrs. 'nionfias Henson, council president; Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, superintendent of schools; Mrs. William Porter, director of district services for the Michigan Congress of Parents and Teachers; and Mrs- Wil-Jiam Wright, vice president of PTA Region D. . Officers who will be . installed include Mrs. Henson, president; Mrs. Robert Trachet, first vice president; Mrs. WilUam White, second vice president;r”Mrs. Le^ie Hotdikiss, Recording secretary; Mrs. Ervin Christie, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Fred Goines, treasurer; Mrs. Thomas Bar-tie, historian; and - Charles Hazel, auditor. , • ■ A. A . A , . Workshops wili be held on how to make and use PTA funds; how to have a more ’ active PTA ; how to promote the PTA; how to get and keep members; and how to safeguard our children and youth. Other workshops will include such subjects as how to build better junior and senior high PTAs; how to tell the council story; how school administrators can help build better PTAs; teacher’s role in PTA; how to start and strengthen preschool groups; and health. Pontlu Pren Photo Mc^. Fred L. Goines of West Rundell, treasurer, and Charles Haiel of Dixie Highway, auditor, attend the annual meeting of the Pontiac Parfp.t-Teacher Association CoUridi. General chairman for the affair is Mrs. Howard McConnell. Assisting her are Mrs. White, Mrs. Christie, Mrs. William .Coffing and Mrs. James Hartsock. Others are Mrs. Bartle, Mrs. Harrol Beebe, Mrs. Willis Schnekenburger and Mrs. Trachet. WoimnirSediMii Girls’ Ranch Honors 1st High School Grads DEAR ABBY: I am 18 and have been going with this guy for four, years. We planned to be married in June but he got his papers to take a physical and, after 21 days, they can draft him any time. I want to get married, stay home and work until he’s out of boot camp, save the allotment checks and then join him when he gets stationed. ’ He wants to wait two years and then"^et married. I say if he loves me as much as I love him, he’ll marry me now.. It’s not a money problem. He has a big sum in the bank. What do you advise me to do? Please print this. Many of my friends are having the same trouble. NOT SURE DEAR NOT; A girl who has to CONVINCE her boy friend that he should marry her is usually sorry if she wins. Buy Friend Presents for Setting Hair By The Emily Post Institute /Q: I work as a cashier In a beauty salon. As an employe, I have the privilege of having my hair set free of charge when we are not busy. I am particularly friendly with one of the operators and she usually does my hair ka she knows just how I like it • set. Will you please tell me if it would be proper to give her a tip? I have not been doing so as I thought she might be offended if I offered her one. What do you advise in this situation? The first two residents of Camp Oakland’s new Girls’ Ranch to graduate from high school were honored Sunday. Members of the Women’s Gommittee for the Oxford camp held open house at the 4-year-old home for girls who are wards of the Oakland County Probate Court. On hand with their hus- -bands to help graduates Eve Van Hentenryck and Diana Black welcome their friends were Mrs. Robert W. Chambers, Mrs. J. W. Shenefield and Women’s Committee Chairman Mrs. Ben D. Mills, all of Bloomfield Hills. the t h r e e graduates were Oakland County Probate Judge and Mrs. Donald E. Adams and Probate Judge and Mrs. Norman R. Barnard. ^ Other well-w i s h e r s were Oakland County Juvenile director and Mrs. James 0. Hunt, Circuit Judge and Mrs. Arthur E. Moore and Camp Oakland President and Mrs. Walter Gehrke. Eva, an honor student, will attend Wayne State University to study interior decorating under a Royal Oak-Fern-dale Zonta Club scholarship. WILL GRADUATE The girls will graduate Thursday from Oxford High School, along with 17-year-old Harold Howell, who has been a resident of Boys’ Ranch at Camp Oakland since he was 8 years old. Special guests Jnvited by ACCEPTED Diana has been accepted by Harper Hospital under a scholarship of the Women’s Auxiliary to Pontiac General Hospital. A number of women’s clubs in Oakland County have contributed to the Girls Ranch scholarship fund. A: Rather than give her a tip, it will be best to return these favors by buying her a little something from time to time to show your appreciation. / Honeymoon Jn, North Q: My wife died three years ago. A little over a year ago I met a very charming widow and we plan to be married in the near future. , I have'my first wife’s engagement ring (a tw'o-carat diamond) and I would like to know if it would be proper to ,thifLliL .my future wife Wed at St. Michael for an engagement ring. Louise Ann Steinbach of ^fcKinley became Mrs. Richard Collin Campbell in a ceremony performed by Rev. Charles E. Cushing in St. Michael Church. Parents of the couple are Adam Steinbach, East Run-dell, Mrs. .Kenneth Cooley, A; Most women would feel very strongly against wearing the engagement ring of another woman and my advice is to discuss this with your fiancee and see how she feels about it. If she has no objection, you should at least have the ring reset for her. Details concerning the announcing and christening of a baby are described in the new Emily Post Institute booklet entitled, “The New Baby.” To obtain a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Emily Post Institute, In care of The Pontiac Press. Lake Orion, and the CoUTn't. Campbells, Bellevue Street. A silk illusion veil complemented, the bride’s gown of white Rochelle lace, styled with basque bodice and chapel sweep. Yellow rosebuds centered her cascade bouquet of white carnations and Stephanotis. Sandra Rochon, her cousin’s honor maid, and bridesmaids Mrs. Carl Heichel, Mrs. William Donahue and Margaret Steinbach, her sister’s Junior attendant, wore pastel yellow sheer over taffeta. Janice Campbell was flow-_ er girl and Timothy Donahue ring bearer. William Donahue was best man for his brother-in-law. •Rodney Campbell ushered for ' ’ MRS. R. C. CAMPBELL REUPHOLSTER NOW Our expert creftsmen will edd years of nfw life to every piece, Choose from a complete selection of beautiful fabrics. ' FURNITURE "line furniture and quality carpetlns alnoe IBM” 5390-5400 Dixie Highwoy OR 3-1225 Birmingham Cuiflomera Call 334-0981—Fa Toll Charge hls cousin with Thomas Donahue. The bride’s m a t d r n a 1 grandparents, the William Rochbns, observing their 54th wedding anniversary, attended the evening reception in Waltz Hall. Returning from a northern honiyrtioon, the newlyweds will reside in Pontiac. Picnic Ends Program for Music Unit The Junior League of the Pontiac Tuesday Musicale c 10 8 e d the year’s program with a picnic Sunday. After their regular meeting at Oie North Lake Drive home of the Norman Cheals, the members had a beach supper, The young musicians who accumulated the highest number of points for their musical activities'during the year received trophips. Dale ChebL Beverly Patton and MartNNForniaH-placed^irst, second and third. Martha and Beverly reported on the National Federation of Music Clubs’ Junior Hay Convention in Flint May 4. Mothers assisting Mrs. Cheal were Mrs. William Cheal, Mrs. C u r 11 s Patton and Mrs. Nimrod Quist. Pair Weds Jn Miami Marriage vows were exchanged by Susan Jane Neph-ler and Jerry Vasco Griffin II, son of the Jerfy Griffins, Miami, Fla., at the C3iureh of the Resurrection in Miami. The bride, daughter of Mrs. William D. Besselieu, of Miami Shores, FM-, was given in marriage by her fathr er, C. J. Nephler Jr. of Wagon Wheel. Mary Cathrine Nephler attended her sister and Mr. Griffin was best man for hls Shower Held for Bride-Elect Bride - elect Lynne Anderson was honored Monday at a personal bridal shower given by Mrs. Thomas Simpson of DwighK Miss A n de r 8 0 n will exchange vows Aug. 10 with Willmnl James Ruth III, son of the junior Ruths of Geneva, Switzerland- JXeumode SEAMLESS [TISSUE SHEER rainforcad liael Bod lo» BOULEVARD nud* Itoal Bid dBmi-toB DELUXE MICRO fnloicad IibbI Bnd to# , 82 N. Saginaw St. Start Knitting Now FOR FALL The Knitlihg- Needle 2 W. Huron —FE 5-IS30 AfolU Hhco tniorlor D»eoratl$tgS»nlea 1666 S. Telegraph FE 4-0S16 Lady wishing inferesHng part or full-time pleasant work In studio. Ago Fint Claas-Bedroomi and ReaiweftM^ i Jer fWrtar fefhnwBlfiw Call Mr. Cwemaen I ^ , fE 8-^613 , ' ■ I T ponus mWEL SERVICE 702WmIHwil M. Saginaw S|., Between Lawrenee and Pika Sti., Aorosi from SirandTboater Vows were exchanged between Jacqueline Lee Vess and James J. Whitlow of Stout, before Rev. James Hayes in St. Michael’s Church. ★ w ★ • Parents of the bride are the Jimmy Cloutiers, Blajne. The groom is the son. of the Arthur Whitlows, North Perry. ★ * e’ Imported white organdy fashioned her street-length dress—jtyled with floating lace panel and off-shoulder bodice of Chantilly lace. Her veil of silk net fell from a pearl tiara. She carried white roses and carnations. BRIDAL PARTY Alita Vess, her sister’s maid of honor appeared In pale blue organza and Janice Strong, bridesmaid, wore pink. Blue and pink-tipped carnations accented their bouquets of white roses. the duties of best man. The bridegroom’s brother-inlaw, Charles Wheeler, seated guests with Dan Vess, brother of the bride. ★ ★ * After a reception in the Fraternal Order of Elks dub rooms, the couple left for northern Michigan, and later will live in Pontiac. The “Sllvercrest Baptist Church was the setting for the marriage of Pamela Louise Kesselring to Edward Herbert Friend Jr., followed by e church reception. Rev. Wayne Smith performed the can-dleli^t ceremony. A pearl-tipped petal caplet secured the bride’s veil of nylon net worn with a floor-length gown of white Chantilly lace over taffeta. Her semi-cascade bouquet included white rosebuds, Stephanot-is and ivy. ShrsDhe daughter of Mrs. Sidney Polan, Beechgrove and Roy J. Kesselring, Daytona Beach, Fla. . PALEORCHH) Sandra Kay Keasdring, her sister’s honor maid, appeared in a colonial gown of pale orchid chiffon. Their cousin, Patricia Ann Roudabush, was flower girl. Ernest Gehrke carried the rings. - ★ A ; Dennis Friend was best man and Gary Friend ush-ered for iheir brother. They are sons of the Edward H. Friends, Palmoor, White Lake Township. Alsq seating gueris was the bride’s brother James Kesselring; The newlyweds will live in Pontiac. Mm. E. H. FRIEND JR. The U.S. Air Force Academy p e n e d in 1958 at Colorado Springs, Colo. Nancy Ruth Rose Wed to Wilfred Stewart Dr. Milton Bank officiated at the nuptials of Naiicy Ruth Rose to Wilfred Stewart of Harper Woods in Central Methodist Church. ' A. ' A, Parents ot .thp couple are Mr. and Mrs. Percy L. Rdse, MRS. WILFRED STEWART Lakeside, and the late Robert R. Stewarts, Detroit. Re - embroidered imported French lace accented the bride’s gown of white silk organza, styled with serrii-dome skirt and chapel train. Her bouffant silk-illusion veil was secured by a pearl and crystal tiara. She carried cascading white roses, lilies of the valley and ivy. AQUAMARINE Wearing aquamarine mist peau satin with overskirts were Mrs. Charles Hoffman, her sister’s honor matron, and bridesmaids Beverly Brooks, GSil Mitchell, and Nancy Ruddock. They carried yellow roses and violets. On the esquire side were George Cutting Jr., best man, and David Rickett, who ushered with the bride’s brothers James and Jerry Rose. ★ A ★ The newlyweds left for a week’s honeymoon in northern Michigan, after the church reception, and will the summer in Colo^ rado. PTA to Hold School Fair Drayton Plains PTA-spon-wed: school (air will birheld^ Friday from 5 to 8 p.m. Fair chairman is Gale Scafe. Highlighting the fair will be rides and refreshments including hoqie-made candies cookies by Girl Scout >ps 518 and 28. he fair is open to the illc. Handy Catch-All A plastic shoe bag hung from the back of the car seat is a good place to keep, toys and snacks. Candid Wedding IN BRILLUNT NATUNAL COLON SPECIAL 34500 12-8x10 Color Candida From Up tjo 48 Proofa KENDALE'S 45 W. Huron FE 5-0322 YouHl Enjoy MORE CLOSfT SPACE and cQrofrww ga|iihant protactlon thic lummar with our guarantaad ARCTIC COLD BOX STORAGE PROTECTION PLAN No Limit! Wo fumiah oa many hompora oa you nood. Insured Up To $250 PAY NOTHINQ UNTIL FALL 941 JOSLYN AVENUE also .,« your furs deserve our guaranteed COLD storage PROTECTION FATHER i SON ClfMEIS FE 2-6424 B/utigk^Up KIWI couicTM ay iwe BAH awBEiL MOTOiaw —i Baby-otyla *dally with Juat anoiigh of their owe dozens” are pert broth for a wonderfully imooth, and parcel of your moist texture. , cel development. ^ exercise, like sweet sle^ end balanced meals, helps e baby grow and glow. "Setting-ups” your little gymnast, will love: Pre-bath workouts. Let baby kick to bis feet’s content, minus clothes to hamper his enthusiasm. Pull-ups. If baby is old enough to hold up his head, take his bands and gently pull him up and down for a minute or,two. Two-way gomaa. As baby gets older. Peek-a-BoO and Pat-a-Cake combine mild exercise with co-ordination, Salf-atyled gymnasia also need the helping hand of protein for strength, growth and muscle development. Gerber K-ivc- 4 Meat! i are high in pro-1 tein, low in fat and succulent as can be. Only caro-nens^ fully trimmed, Armour cuts ere used in these quality meats. Special processing results in utmost protection of Oayors, 9 varietles-all pure meat la the theme tong of the creeper. Here's exerciie at I its best, because I practically every I muscle in baby’s I body comes into f play. If your daring one hat turned I creeper, you can provide creeping incentive by giving him a bi^ bright ball to push and follow. A call from you, from the other side of the room, will set him off on a cheerful scamper to you. The betf<4raated creepers end lap-sitters wear Gerber Baby Pants for protection par excellence. (They I make baby ever j so socially acceptable on rugs and laps.) Made of I silken-sdft poly- I vinyl film that’s waterproof, leak-proof, acid-proof, they’ll stay soft through many washings. For baby’t comfort, Gerber Pants are amply cut for free *n‘ easy movement. (Creepers appreciate that.) Machine-washable. Qerber Products Co.. Box 72. Fremont. Michigan. tn addition too our eompMatlna ofZonllh LMng Sound" trunalstor hmaring uldm- • EYEGLASS HEARING AIDS IjionspieMeus models. They'll fit meet modem, attractive frame Iroals of your choice*... or your prasont eyegisties. • AT-THE-EAR HEARING AIDS Worn entirely at the ear. Full-powered, comfortable -no dangling owde. VCONVENTIONAL HEARING AIDS Convenient to ween..with powerful Zenith "Living Sound"ell tranale-tor circuitry. ■Si? 1 * *""*Wor hearing aM for omy tag af alictronicilly eometabis hearing tom- priced from 180.00/' ^ 10-0AY MONHY-BACK aUARANTBR 9 to 5 Dolly 9 to 12 Sotur^oy Ivat. by Appoinlment Cadillac Ho8ring Aid & Optical Cc. 11 Wait Lowrance St., Pontiac FE 8-2733 Special Selling De Liso Debs SUMMER SPECTATORS Famous-forTit Debs In high or mLcI heels... for now throOgh summerl Priced of excellent savings while quantities last! White with black, or loggage-tan Calf, also white with white moc-ltzard. Sizes-to 10. Reg. 19.95. y , ’IS 90 HURON at TELEGRAPH Mon., Thore., FrI. 10 to 9 - Tuae., Wad., Sot. 10 to 6 \ *7;’ ' ^ ■ :3^otnaTEEiT — ^ THE t^QN^UC PRESS^ TUESDAY, JUNE 4. 1963 / CUTS COSTS! PRICED me TO ^394* LESS ... CUTS RUNNING COSTS nOO A YEAR ieofl©^ln«^aviftg»^aft with^4hft^r4ces»$1SW^ below old-style panels! And owner reports show that, in a 16,600-mile year, savings on gas, oil, tire$ and maintenance can total as much as, $1061 M % CUTS TRIPS ! LOADSPACE UP TO 56% BIGGER THAN OLD-STYLE PANELS Ford's Econoline Van Is bigger inside-up to 56%-to let you haul more, slave trips. And, thanks to shorter length and sharper turning, Econoline saves time I % ton capacity; one-ton option available. COTS WORK! LOW, FUT FLOOR AND UP TO Low floor Cuts lifting, lets you slide In heavy items from rear or side. Big 4-foot door openings all around (left side optional) save time loading . . , ppt every part of your load within easy reach! 'B3 FORD IPiOLIil . BACKED BY 100,000-MILE DURABILITY TEST I Results of five-month test by independent research laboratory; Econoline Vans rah lOO.OOO miles each over city streets, gravel roads and highways. Total costs for gas, oil, tires, preventive maintenance and repairs averaged only 2.7 cents per mile. SEE AMERICA’S NO. 1 DELIVERY '... AT YOUR TRUCK TODAY. FORD DEALER S iw iinM rw imsoi»PCPtNOAsiL Fwoucit Man and Space V.-: Ambition fuming iff By ALVIN B. WEBB Jr. CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) The garland of a space hero’s fame once hang around hi shoulders, but that was two years ago. Today,-Alan^B, Shepard Jr; ' a dissatisfied man with a burning ambition. ★ ■ *' His hopes range into fhe future, to the day when the U n i^t e ' States launches its next man ipto space on the orbital path that started with John Glenn and ran through aa-erbits-with L. Gordon Cooper Jr. When the next rocket blasts from a firing pad at Cape Ca- But lH"""the meantime, the slender Navy commander simply never been one of A1 Shepard’s must wait.. A n d waiting has strong points. Even now, those who know him realize he iS mentally pacing the floor in almost grim, certainly impatient expec-m tation. ST. JOHN’S, Nfld. (AP). -A species of fish never before reported each * of Montreal Canada has been found.in a small pond on Newfoundland’s w e st The find was reported by the biology department of Memorial University here which says attempts are being made to find more of the rare fish. One specimen of the umbra lima — a species ofi mud minnow — was found in Noels Pond on the Earnest Harmon United States Air Base by^UJSnlivers working voluntarily with the university in its marine studies. 'The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): , Find Rare Fish in Small Pond in Newfoundland But the, name of America’s first space hero has steadily been overshadowed in the subsequent glamour of the orbital voyages. Many within the ranks of the Federal Space Agency itself rate Shepard “the best’’ of the original -s e veil JMertaify astronauts. And yet he had to stand on the sidelines four times while other astronauts made all the orbital trips for the United States. . Births Jphri C. Xenog, 2358 Jiyel Blvd. Ernest A. Priestley, 435 Rowe Arthur L. Oruenwald, 3250 HUl Side Harold Q. Kane, 016 Caroline Edward W. Poster, 743 E. Liberty Ronald R. Wlllls, 187 Hickory Rldoe Ro»«l Winiam P. BUrmelstfer; 701 Bunset James B. Williams, 346 Peters Gary 0. Boyd. 4610 Cooley Lake Road Robert W, cfharllck. 1800 Hickory Ridge Harold O. Brown, 3186 Hillside Raymond M. Poster, 1120 Oar-"-- np, 7365 Highland Mariln^tonj Jamer.p' ■ WHson7”ai64 Briggs*’' Shirley T. Spencer, 3684 Hatfield r O. Horton, 3150 V Petrie, 1*144 Point Harrison. 7270 Willow nruce u. Sutherland, 3211 Mandrake Lynn M. Hamp. 8470 Rustic Circle John K. Boas,'3l3(%*' 13 Mile Road Donald R. DIsbrow Jr., 1822 Washington Blvd. Percy W. Guest, 15600 KIrkshIre Macon C. Trabue Jr„ 23686 W. 13 Ml Joim H. Kay. 15056 Dlrwood, Charles T. Staley. 1542 Southfield Paul M. Sullivan, 1878 Maryland Bradley Nell Brown 612 Brookside James A. Welch, 2 Kenneth D. Enaor, 408 Common Victor C. KImmel, 3122 Glencove Eldon J. MacKay, 2840 Brisbane Phillip R, Hunter, 1723 Botkins Theodore L. Wlngert. 3784 Watuga ---- ‘ -lobb, 2.178 R---” Everett J. Durban I. Buston, 4268 Mlddledal, r, 424 Sparks Lane d L. Emmons, 1431 v Who doesn’t thrill to the performance of well-trained athletes—and who doesn’t adrriire their physical condition? But there’s serious concern today about the vast majority of our young people who are not athleticallygifted and whose physical capabilities erre steach ily declining. There’s only one solution to this problem. We must provide our children with balanced educational programs to foster full development—Intellectual and physical. All It takes are parents and teachers who care. Find out about the physical education program In your child's school. Don't judge it by varsity activities alone. Bather, find out what it offers average youngsters. For information about an activity program that could benefit your child, write to The President's Council on Physical Fitness, Washington 25, D.C. sprvlcs In cobpsrstlon With Ih* Adysiilslng | Council ami llw Nows- , pspor Advwtising bt- , r THE PONTIAC PRESS naveral, It is a cinch that A1 Shepard wiil be aboard. He already has, been promised the role as America’s next orbiting astronaut. PARADO?f------------- Some say the wait already has been too long — so long, in fact, that Shepard’s case is some- thing of a paradox: — He made this n a t ion’s first, and perhaps most dangerous jbecause it was the first, when he soared more than 100 miles aboard r Redstone rocket on an “up-and-down” silb-or-bitalride. ’ “ Now the W^ashington administrative head of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is ready to bury project Mwcury — and no of-ftcliry® has stepped forward to explain why Shepard, the man who made the first “textbook” flight, was never given a chance at the program’s main goal, the launching of men on orbital flights. There are a lot of things Shepard is not. He isg’t the ‘all American boy” type of human breed personified by Waiter M. Schirra Jr., not the fun-loving kind such as Gordon Cooper. He is, however, coldly efficient and confident where there are grounds for confidence ... A who seems at time§ almost devoid of emotions, who never seems to become ^frightened or jittery. ‘ICE CUBE’ To some, this adds up to.a description of AI Shepard as an ice cube” or a “human computing machine.” These aiso could be the qualities of what might be called the7‘prfect astronaut” — or, as hue put it, the “niperastro-naut.” It Jhas been a long time be- tween shots for Shepard, and the wait has cracked that ice-cold exterior. A strong and sometimes bitter fight is raging within the ranks of NASA over proposals for another Mercury flight. In the vanguard, of the “pro” side is Shepard himself. He already has-taken his House subcommittee on manned spaceflight. He told be gained from another Mer-cury shot between^how^anaTHe first manned launching in the two - astronaut project Gemini, now set for Octorber, 1964. The battle generally pits NASA Houston against NASA Washington, and Shepard’S action in getting his case straight to Congress t destined to win him many friends in the administrative “upstairs.” POPULARITY Shepard'never has particularly conOerned himself with winning popularitjf contests. His job is first dtid fofeihost that of an as- tronaut in the key role of proving that man can indeed survive and perform usefully in the space frontier. Right now, Shepard is simply anxious to get on with' the job that he can do as well as, if not better than, those who have gone before. JUNK CARS ANDTMKkS WANTED -HI9HJST PRICES PAID- WePickUp FE 2-0200 EnmnmBnHL Now's the time to arrange a contract for winter heating -get warmth, comfort plus savii^ by calling H. H. smith; FE 2-8343. } ° ^‘^"’'f"rDD0CKfT,P0ftTIAC.MICH. ( Or, rather, partially explained. (To protect all our hard work, there are certain things about the distilling and Wending of SofpWhiskey that we can’t rev^aj.^ To begin with. Soft Whiskey is as whiskey a whiskey as any whiskey you can buy. But it’s the first hju-d liquor that isn’t “hard.” That means no “hard” edge to sting-bite-burii you on the way down. (One of the revealable ways we take off that “hard” edge is by doi ng .some of our distilling in small batches, instead of the usual large batch method.) It’s a pleasure to drink this 86 proof whiskey straight —there’.? no heat in it to detract from your enjoyment. Just warmth. The flavor is rich and fqll, yet it SwAllows easy- In mixed drinks, it doesn’t fight the mixer, It blends smoothly, yet doesn’t lose itself. Distillers have been working on the Soft ' Whiskey Idea for yehrs. But Until recently it was only a pipe-dream. Nobody was able to produce it. At our distillery alone, there were more than 22,000 experiments before we hit it. That’s a lot of trial And error. (Anybody who wants to reproduce Soft Whiskey is welcome to try. Lots of luck.) To sum up—Soft Whiskey docs anything “hard” liquor can do. It just does it softer. Before ^ou sample Calvert Extra, the Soft Whiskey, there’s something else- you ought to know: you may never touch a drop of “hard” liquor again. $4.36 Fifth (BT.F.NDBD WHLSKEY • 8? PROOF • 65% CR/Ci1^NEU I’RAL SPIRITS • CAI.VERT ]DIST. CO,, LOUISVILLE, KY.^ , ^ ^ ...------‘ ' " , ’ ' " I ' THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1963 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. fifteen For Board of Trustees Here re Community College Hopefuls HaroId< J. Abrams, 37, of 100 Alice, is consultant supervisor of special education for the Oakland County Board of Education. He has b^n on the special education staff since 1955. The holder of degree from the University pf' Michigan, Alvams ia aictiye in numerous civic and profes-including the ABRAMS ATKINSON Michigan Federated Chapters, Council for Exceptional Children. I She was a candidate for the Pontiac City Commission in 1958 and managed. Republican headquarters in Pontiac during the |l960 election. A member of the Avondale Board of Education, David W. Hackett, 39, 1380 Ruby, Roches-ter^^.is a telephone technician. He is also lather vice president of: the Avondale High School PTSA. graduate, and 1943 law degree from the University of Detroit. Kavanagh was an unsuccessful Con-Con candidate In 1961. He was defeated by Richard C/ Van DUsen in District 4 of Oakland County. BROOKS BROWN groups, including tlie , Hazel Park Charter Study Committee on Community Coliegei He holds membership in th^ Michigan Reading Association,!.< American Society of Planning OH' ficials and is secretary of the Hazel Park-Jaycees.—l i ★ ' * ★ ^ ^ I John C, Brooks, 45, 4666 Char-' ing Cross, Bloomfield To*vnship, is manager of a branch of the National Bank of Detroit. He has been associated with the bank for nearly a quarter of a cen-Maintaining a private practice ilurv- in educa tional counseling, Abrams is married and the Esther of three children. Thomas H. Atkinson, 33, of 4150 Lanette, is assistant registrar at Oakland University. He is affiliated with many civ_Lc[' church and professional organizations. A former high school teacher, he received his M.A. degree in guidance and counseling from the University of Michigan this year. Married and the father of Brooks is a graduate of the American Iqstitute of Banking. He also attended Walsh Institute. Married and the father of three children, he has been active in numerous profrasional, civic and paternal organizations. He is a pasrMCfetary of theWarren^Ro* tary Club and past treasurer of thq Bloomfield Estates Improvement Association. Chairman of the legal subcommittee and the 1963 steering committee on Oakland County.community college study, Wendell three children, Atkinson is on thelBrown, 61, 29921 Ardmore, Far.n-Faculty Affairs, Committee ofiingtori Township, is an attorney Oakland University. He formerly taught at Pontiac Central High District. The University of Michigan Farmington Township Board fori years. HACKETT 4 HAHN , Hackett is a graduate of the University of Detroit and has taken courses in business hd-ministration at Oakland University. Married, he and his wife, Marion, have seven children. He belongs to several civic organizations and is a lay reader in the Episcopal Church. * ★ ★ Harry T. Hahn. 45. 23 Dela-ware Drive, is director of instruct tion for Oakland Schools, the intermediate school district of Oakland County—a position he has held for eight years. Active in many professional organizations, Hahn is past president of the Michigan Reading Association. He holds degrees from State Teachers College. Kutztown, Pa., and Tem-p I e University, Philadelphia, Pa. Hahn is married and has four children. He has been a-visiting with offices in Detroit. Brown is active in a, host of professional, civic and church groups. In addition, he serv^ six years on the hoard of edn- _____________ cation in the Farminj^n School professor of education to many ] universities. aCross thy nation. pal judge for the city of Oak Park. He has been judge there since 1957. An attorney in private practice, Shifman is a member of several bar associations and national professional organizations. He. is a former Oak Park school board member. _ J ud g.e Shifman has been referee for the Oakland Count y Juvenile Court since I960.. He is married and the father of three children. LEAK KUTIIY Coordinator of the business administration college of the University of Michigan, Dearborn campus, Eugene W. Kuthy, 32, 4114 Colonial, Royal Oak, is responsible for the cooperative .education program in business administration and liberal arts. Formerly with the controler’s staff of Ford Motor Company, Knthy has two yea« of-his law-degree completed at the University of Michigan Law School. Married, he and his wife, Jacqueline, havo three children. ★ ★ ★ , Keith L. Leak. 62. 6195 Middle Lake Road, Independence Township, has served on the Clarks-ton School District school board for 18 years. He has been president of that board for 12 years. Leak, who is employed as assistant superintendent in the Pressed Metai Plant, Pontiac Motor Division, has bwn active in school and church organizations. A resident of the county for 31 years, he is the father of two sons and a daughter. SDTES STORM two daughters. BALLARD BERRY C. Ray Bqllard, 62, of 101601 Kingston, Huntington Woods is an English and journalism teacher at Troy High School. He has a M.A. degree from Colorado University with graduate studies at Yale, Colorado and Wayne State universities. A veteran educator, Ballard has held executive positions in education and with commercial companies. He is married and has three children. He does some freelance writing for filpis, trade journals and other media. ♦ ★ * Daniel T. Berry. 32. of 4.124 Al-lingham, Davlsburg, is employed in the selling of plumbing —^ Postmaster of S o u t h f i e 1 d, Charles L. Curtis, 55, 25525 Edge-mont, Southfield, was chaimmn of the sites and housing commit* tee of the Oakland County community college study. Curtis is currently serving his second term as a member of the Southfield School Board. He is secretary of that board. . Active in school affairs and |nx>-fessionai associations, Curtis also building materials. He was an belongs to sevwal fraternal or- Publisher of the Rochester Married, he hasi News & Troy Tri-City Messenger, William B. Heaton, 33,2730 Charn-wood, Troy, is married and the father of four children. A resident'of Troy fob eight years, Heaton holds a bachelor of science degree in engineering from Princeton University. He is a former naval communications officer and research en-Igineer. * CURTIS EAVES unsuccessful candidate for Oakland County drain commissioner. Active in Wayne County Easter Seal campaigns, Berry Is a member of AFL-CIO Plumber’s ganizations. He is married and has two sons. Arnold R. Jones, 36, 672 Linda Vista, is a publio relations official with Michigan Hospital Serv-A native of Indiana, Jones resided in Qakland County for the past four years. He is past president of the Junior Advertising Club of Detroit and. the Detroit Academy of Advertising Arts. An^aiidlo^visuir^^ Jones previously was director of )ublic information for the Great :^kes Region of the Civil Air Patrol. MRS. MAY Former secretary of the Birmingham League of W o m e Voters and education chairman of the American Association of University Women, Mrs. Aimee S. May, 2092 Yorkshire, Birmingham, is former secretary assistant curator of anthrcj^logy of Cranbrook Institute of SciOnce. A graduate of the University of Michigan, Mrs. May was a, member of the steering committee of the Oakland County Citizens Advisory Council on community colleges. In addition, she worked on the sites and housing committee for the proposed community college. Mrs. May also has done PTA and Girl Scout work. Robert Willard Morse, 40, 507 Kendry, is a Pontiac high school teacher. He is a past candidate for the Bloomfield Hills school board. Active in various civic and Morse BRIGHT BROOK J. Russell Bright, 25780 Dundee, Royal Oak, is director of the office for research administration at Wayne State University. He taqght chemistry for 25 years, including 18 years at the junior college level. Currently vice president of the Board of Directors of Associated Midwest Universities, Bright received his Ph.D from Manchester College, Indiana. Married and the father of two daughters, he has lived in Royal Oak for 17 years and is active in several professional and civic organizations. ’ * ■' - A , A teacher In the Madison Heights School Systeni, .T o h n IVilliam Brook, 387 W. Madow, Hazel Park, has a masters degree In education. Brook has been active in many civic and : professional MRS. GORMAN Beecher C. Eaves, 37, 1406 Edgwood, Royal Oak, Is a manufacturer’s representative and a professional engineer. • Employed by the University of Michigan, Dearborn campus. Dr. Cedric V. Frlckc, 35, 18158 West, over, Southfield, has secured his doctorate degree from the same institution. Formerly in private industry, Fricke belongs the West-hampton Civic Association, the American Statistical Association and the Friends of the Southfield Public Library. He Is married and has two children. - h , W/ Mrs. Hope Gorman, 144 N. Genesee, divides her time between substitute teaching and her duties as a housewife. She is a graduate of Eastern Michigan University. The mother of three sons, Mrs. Gorman is former vice president of the Greater Pontiac Community Chest, past president of the Pontiac PTA Council, and on the Board of Directors of the YWCA. Colonial Hills Improvement Association. He has several fraternal affiliations. He received his bachelors degree from Michigan State University and his masters from Wayne State. He is married and three young daughters. KALUZYNSKI KAVANAGH Visiting teacher and vocational rehabilitation counselor for the Oakland County Board of Education, Raymond Kaluzynski, 37, 4620 Midland, Waterford Township, also teaches a course pi Oakland University. A member of numerous educational associations, Kalnzyn-ski received his bachelors degree from the University of Miami, Florida, and his masters from Michigan State University.^ : Married and the fajjier of two children, Kaluzynski served in the Navy during World War IL ■k k * k ^ Thomas, Giles Kavanagh, 45, 32865 Falrcrest Beverly Hills School Unit to Consider Tax Rate Establishment of a tax rate for 1963-64 for the Pontiac School District will be considered at 8 p-.m. Thursday by the board of education. School Supt. Dana P. Whitmer AC-ihA will propose a tax rate tl w ,______.„V practices law in Birniingham. _________, is a 1938 Notre Dame University ing his second term as munlci- An attorney for General Motors Corp., George R. Mosher, Jr., 42,. 551 Mohegan, Birmingham, is a graduate of the University of Oregon and the Columbia Law School. He is a former Instructor In law at New York University. He is active in bar assoela-tions and community activities. Married, he has two children. Mosher has been active in Boy Scoqts as a leader and also took part in the Citizen’s Curriculum Study Committee. ^k k Burton R. Shifman, 34, 24541 Oneida, Oak Park, is now serv- A lifetime resident of Pontiac, Howard A. Stites, 40, 1368 Stanley, has been a "building contractor for 15 years. He has attended O^land University to become a teacher. Stites is a former organizer tor the United Public Workers (AFLDIO). Marriprf and the father Of one son, he belongs to the Oakland County Sportsmen Club. k k k Raymond H. Storm, Stoodleigh, Rochester, is district commercial manager of the Royal Oak branch of Michigan Bell Telephone Co. A Michigan State University graduate, Storm is on the board of directors of the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce, the Urban League, and the Boy’s Club. He is married and the father of three children. k k k A principal in the West Blpom-field school system, Raymond A-Young, 3080 Dixie Highway, Waterford Township, spent seven years as a teacher in the Pontiac schools. A member c local, state a national professional organizations, Young h a s studied Wayne State and| Oakland versities. He is an elder in his churph. Young also is an honorary member of Phi Delta Kappa. DONALD POR’TER RICHARD LUEHMANN MRS. DOROTHY BARNINGHAN Three Seeking Two Posts in Waterford School Election Three candidates are vying for the two four-year term vacancies on the Waterford School Board in next Monday’s election. * A fourth candidate. Dr. Ev-Crette Gustafson, 3780 Lake-w^, was ruled iheligible May 14 when a review of his petitions showed only 49 valid signatiires, oqe below the required ninimum. Seeking office are incumbent secretary Mrs. Dorothy Barning-haffi, 2856 W. HuronTTRichard Luehmatin, 3611 Percy King; and Donald Porter, 3736 Mariner. Mrs. Bamingham, 55, is a gi uate of Albion College and a former speech teacher in the Pontiac and Royal Oak school sys- The mother of two, she is a past president of the Donelson IkhobI PTA. TMrs. Barnihgham also has served on the Parent-Teachers Board and the Parent-Student-Teacher Association Board. Mrs Barnrngham polled the highest number jat votes in IBO when nine candidates contested for two three-year terms on the board. k k. k' Luehmann, 46, Is personnel di-feetor-Of^ Ponfiae^ State““HoB-pital. He is a .graduate of Elmhurst College, Elmhurst, 111. A resident of the township for six years, Luehmann is married and has three children. Thik is his I first candidacy for public office.. ★ ★ ★ A five-year Army veteran, Luehmann servqd as an offjeet North Africa, Italy and France. k k k , Porter, 45, is sales manager for Michigan Bell Telephone Co. He is married, has four children and has lived in the township fiVe years. Also seeking public office for the first time, Porter is past president of the Pontiac Exchange Club-and president of the I^ke Qakland Heighta.xSubdivL' sion Association. , k k k An Air Force veteran, he is a member of the Citizens Advisory Committee on school needs, the Youth Assistance Committee and the Greater Waterford Community Council.” Sees Effect of Experinients, Trends Pontiac School Chief Views the Future YOUNG that takes into account the potential effect of the appeal by General Motors Corp. of its assessed valuation. ’The auto firmi has appealed to the Michigan Tax Commission on its assessed valuation. General Motors claims its valuation was assessed $32 million higher than it should be. Whitmer’s proposed tax rate wiU consider the effect of of $32 million in assessed valuation. This, in essence, means the tax base would be lower than anticipated and could raise the school tax rate. The school board will also receive bids on the purchase , of bakety and dairy products for the 1M3-64 school year. In addition, the school board will receive two reports on current school programs. Firstly, a on the purpose and objectives of the guidance and counselling program will be presented board members. Secondly, the /administration of Inter-scholastic athletics will be outlined,' to the seven-member school board. Election inspectors and their rate of pay for the annual school election June 10 will be determined by the school board. Workers must be selected for all 20 school precincto. Usually, or four workers are needed for each precinct. By GARY THORNE A lot of our problems today are rooted in ignorance. If people are really going to live as free men, they must have greater perception, insight, and understanding.” k k k This is the view of veteran educator Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, Pontiac superintendent of schools. Dr. Whitmer, who has nine years at the helm qf Pontiac’s educational mill, took a practical look at what lays ahead for public school systems. He indicated trends and outlined current experiments that may change what goes on in tomorrow’s classrooms. The school chief pointed to eral areas where Pontiac, education is in the midst of new ideas, radical changes, and pilot protouching nearly every pect of learning. kkk The concept of 30 students and one teacher is already on the way out, according to Dr. Whitmer. He pointed to two experiments, one at Pontiac Northern High School and the other Madison Junior High School that forecast a change in the 30-to-l classroom situation. / .★ * , ★ ' He said experiments have shown that some subjects can be taught in larger groups, while others need smaller numbers than even the 30 found In the average classrootp. ‘BEST PROCEDURE’ ‘.‘Whether it is by small or large groups,” Dr. Whitmer ex-olained, ‘‘the idea is to find the )est procedure to learn by.” ★ ★ ★ One experiment at Pontiac Northern features 90 seniors Who operate as a unit. These students, who constitute a three-year pilot project, may attend a lecture as a group of 90, then gather in small discussion groups of a dozen or so, and then go on to independent research in the library. A related trial program at Madison Junior High has an English and social studies teacher combining Instruction for two hours daily. Under this arrangement, Whitmer said, a written p a p e r is graded by the English teacher tor grammar, punctultion, and spelling, while the same paper is graded by the social Studies instructor for its content. k k Whitmer said other experiments in team' teaching are going on throughout the Pontiac system. "He expects the experi-Iments to continue. He cited the use of television c- ■ instruction, teaching machines, and foreign language instruction for elementary students as new programs that will be developed further in the immediate future. ★ ★ k The content of what is taught is constantly changing. Dr. Whitmer expects teaching procedures will become more scientif-. ic. This will change the content of textbooks and may mean the retraining of teachers. ‘The trend,” he explained, ‘‘is to pinpoint learning difficulties and arrange instruction to help the child overcome the problem.” MORE saENTlFIC Teaching, according to pr. Whitmer, is tending to become more and more scientific. Team teaching, he said, will spread teacher talents and in effect give the student an expert in the subject he is taking. k A ★ The former Ohio school principal saldT methods of teaching are always changing with new approaches being tried. He expects trend to grow and prosper as teaching becomes more scientific Dr. Whitmer said schools will exert even more effort in. the future on the most gifted student and the poorer pupil, lie said the role of vocational education has drastically changed and will continue to as jobs in industry change. Teaching will constantly change to give students the. skills to handle the jobs available. kkk On school administration. Dr. Whitmer expressed four forecasts. Firstly, he said the school year as it now stands is almost certain to be eliminated. k k k ' The Pontiac superintendent predicted summer vacations might be shortened to two weeks every few months rather than the long vacation under the present arrangement. ’The biggest obstacle tto> year-round school operation, according to Whitnjer, is money. He said expenses would rise in line with the greater use of school buildings and personnel. SUPPLEMENTARY TAXES Secondly, Whitmer qestioned just how long the property tax could carry the load of the school system. He guessed that supplementary taxes might be needed irl the future. A third trend, according to the Pontiac educator, is the consolidation of smaller school districts. Small schools, he added, are on the way out. ‘There will always be some,” DANA P. WHITMER Wiitmer continued, ‘‘but they will decline in numl^r.” A fouhh change in school administration related by Whitmer foresees the changing relationship between school boards and teachers. Whitmer said this \yas kicked off by the New York teacher strike. He said change is inevitable. ★ k ★ ” Although the matter is not a local problem, the school chief predicted that the relationship between .school boards and teachers would change to guarantee teachers thC right to be heard and their proposals considered. This “right of hearing” will vary between school districts, but is a definite trend. TWO GROUPS In most school districts, including Pontiac, teachers belong to> one of two groups, the National Education Association or the American Federation of Teachers. These two groups differ on their approaches to wages, hours, and working eonditions. The NEA calls its bargaining with school boards “professional negotiations,” while the AFT is more apt to take the industrial union approach. Poptiac has both groups and Whitmer said the two organizations have “right of hearing.” Whitmer expects the new relationships to extend to every school district. kkk Dr. Whitmer, after almost a decade as head of Pontiac schools and with more than a (juarter century in education, reflects an “exciting” outlook for public education. He appears to be thrilled and more than a little impressed with of the changes that lay arpund the corner. SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 4s'1963 Pope's Name ta LiveSorever4n-NofthJfalian Momelaod (EDITOR’S NOTE—Rennet M. Btatm, on AP Vatican has followed closely the reign correspondent for two years, of Pope lohn.KXIIJ. ,, By BENNET M. BOLTON VATICAN CITY (B - In the Bergamo region of northern Italy, they will never forget Angelo .Giuseppe Roncalii. He was the boy who walked 12 miles a day .to and from, school. He was I the tenant farmer’s son who went out into the world. He became Pope John XIII, Now his naihe is part of history. it -k Between Bergamo and the Alps in the village of Sotto il Monte (Under the Mountain)—his name will live forever. ★ ★ ★' It will live in a seminary built on farmland that once belonged to his family. It will live in' the house where' he grew up, VI'hich will be transformed into a museum as memorial ta him. His name will live in the hearts of the thousands'Of Bergamaschi who met Angelo Giuseppe Roncalii on his pilgrimages home before he became Pope, and on their 6wn pilgrimages to Rome after he became Pope. NEVER FORGOT They never forgo! him—and he never forgot them. A priest with a country pastor’ heart who suddenly found himself Pope, Angelo Giuseppe Roncalii all his life the attributes of his Bergamo upbringing. ★ ★ ★ It'seasoned his personality and marked him before all the world a man of humility and simplicity. The northern farms and green fields were vivid and constant Ih hiS thoughts. Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas CLIFFORD L. ERVIN, Service for Clifford L. Ervin, 56, of 19 Hibbard Court will be at 2 p.m. Thursday at the William F. Davis Funeral Home with burial in Pwry Mount park Cemetery... Mr. Ervin died Wednesday. He had been in a veteran’s ' for three years. Gurvivi^ is his father George Ervin. MISS MABEL E. HUBBARD (Service for Miss Mabel E. Hubbard, retired teacher of the Pontiac Public School System, will be p nr. Tbursd^^^^^^ Funeral Home, with , burial in Clafkston. Miss Hubbard, 82, of 79 S. John son, died yesterday after an ill-ness of several weeks. , A graduate of Eastern Michigan University and Columbia University, Miss Hubbard had taught in Washington Junior High School. She was a member of All Saints Episcopal Church, American Association of University Women and Episcopal Churchwomen. Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Maude Ashwin of Pontiac; and a brother. GEORGE P. McNALLY Service for George P.^cNalty; 50, of 105 E. Fairmont, will be at 1:30 p.m. Fridaay at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Mr. McNally died 3 after a long illness. He was an employe of Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Floy; son and daughter, Sharon and David, both at home; and brother. HURLEY T. PINNER Service for Hurley T. Pinner, 75, of 45 E. Montcalm, will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow in the First Church of the Nazarene with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Arrangements are by the D. E. Pursley Funeral Homife. Mr. Pinner died yesterday following a three-year illness. JOHN T. PUCKETT Service for John T. Puckett, 64, of 786 Stanley win be at If30 p.m. Thursday in the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Puckett, an electrician, Elect President of Catholic Group The election of Donald Mac-Kinnon, of 25686 Ridgewood; Farmington Township, a,s president of the Catholic Social services of Oakland County, was an-nounced last night at the agency’s annual dinner meeting at Stouffer’s Northland Inn. Also elected to first terms were Royal Oak residents Adolph F. Klein, 1st vice president; and Ivaii E. Garskc, 2nd vice president. Re-elected were Michael Capo of Royal Oak, treasurer; and Rev. John A. Trese, secretary. * ♦ w Rev. Trese is also director Of Catholic Social Services of Oakland County. * k it Retiring board members Dr. Z. F. Endress, of 1790 Tiverton, Bloomfield Hills, and John R. Slavsky, of 4730 Dow Ridge, Orchard Lake, received meritorious service awarc|s. Each served 10 years on the board of directors. 20"Year-OJd Girl Dies V in a Canoe Accident BERRIEN SPRINGS Iff) - Caf letta Denton, 20, of Berrien Springs, drowned yesterday in a canoe accident on Lake Chapin which is formed by a dam on the St. Joseph River. . ★ ★ k Berrien County sheriff’s officers said the girl was in a canoe with three teen-age compan-, Tons When the canoe capsized. 11w others made their way to safety. f died. unexpectedly this morning of Manhattan, Kan., will be 2:30 of a heart ailment. Surviving are his wife, Mayme; a daughter, Mrs. George Eilis of Royal Oak; a son Ralph C. of Pontiac; five grandchildren; four brothers, Elmer of Pontiac, Marvin of Waterford Township; Clyde and Holly, both of Winchester^ Ky.; ani a sister. Miss Goldie Puckett of Pontiac. FLOYD H. SMITH Floyd H. Smith, 57, of 150 N. Johnson, died yesterday after a brief illness. His body is at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. A member oLFirst CongreL tional Church, he was a member of s e n,i 0 r planning engineering group of Detroit Edison Co. / Mr.' Smith served in the Civitan Club. Oak City' Engineering So- ciety and pity zoning board of p.m. tomorrow at Roth’s Home for Funerals. Burial will be in Romeo Cemetery. Mr. Mclnnis died unexpectedly Saturday of a heart attack. Surviving are three sisters, irs. Mary Jane Cline of Romeo, Mrs. Delia peSot of Mount Clemens and Mrs. Rose Manna of Np,w York; and two brothers. JOHN W, MORGAN INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP - Service foKJohn W. Morgan, 53, of 5206 Oak Park, will be Friday at the Gray Brown Service Mortuary, Anniston; Ala., with burial, following in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Anniston Mr. Morgan died unexpectedly of a heart attack yesterday. Ifc wae ah employ^^^ Survivin ^re his wife Dorothy ; his mother Mrs. Henry Smith of Wichita, Kan.; a daughter, Susan at home; two sons, Phillip H. of Ann Arbor and Roger D. at home; a grandson; and a brother. GEORGE E. AULT MILFORD — Military service for George E. Ault, 72, of 3280 Oak Park, will be 8 p. m. today at Rich^rdson-Bird Fune Home.* Graveside service-wil 1 p. m. tomorrow in Evergreen Cemetery, Muskegon. Mr. Ault died Saturday after a long illness. His wife Eileen survives. MRS. RAY HAYES BRUCE TOWNSUlP - Service for Mrs. Ray (Marion) Hayes, 61, of 73303 N. Van Dyke, will be 1 p.m. Thursday at Roth's Home for Funerals. Burial will be in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. An Avon representative, she died unexpectedly of a heart attack yesterday. Surviving are a daughter, Gail, at home; a brother and four sisters, Mrs. Ralph Hartwig, of Romeo, Mrs. Stevie Pierceall of Imlay City, Mrs. Eleanore Clarke of Armada and Mrs. Pat Sirios of Roseville. MRS. JOHN KASPRZYCKI DRYDEN TOWNSHIP-Servic? for Mrs. John (Feliska) Kasprzy-cki, 61, of 6235 Hollow Corners, will be .10 a. m. tomorrow at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Imlay City. Burial will follow in Mount Calvary Cemetery, Imlay City, Mrs. Kasprzyeki died Sunday after a lengthy illness. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p. m. tonight at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Almonf, Mrs. Ka.sprzycki was a member of the St. Cornelius Catholic Ghurch, Dryddn. Surviving are a son, Joseph Ba-jur of Warren; a daughter, Mrs. John Maestri of Connecticut; two sisters: a brother; aiid two grandchildren. JAMES B, McINNlS ROMEO — Service for former resident James B. Mclnnis, 54, Pope Pius XII used to stand still before acclaiming crowds, his arms extended low and motionless in aristocratic pose, Pope John’s typical gesture was the gentle motion of upraised palms—the warm greeting of the Bergamo peasant.' * * * The molding of the “Pope of unity and peace” began in rustio surroundings among deeply religious epople 30 miles northeast of Milan where the lower Alps begin their dim into skyscrapers of icy rogk. k \ k k Upon ,Angelo Rondalli’s birth on Nov. 25, 1881, his uncle Zaverio carried him from the baptismal Motor Division and a member of the Walton Missionary Church, where service was to be held at 2 p. m. today. Surviving are his wffe, Lennle; a daughter, Mrs. Ralph Ostrander of Clarkslon; four sons, Earl of Anniston, Ala., Harold, in the military service, and Billy and Edward, both at home;,and five grandchildren. MRS. HERMAN SEE TlOMEO-SefvicFTofMfs. Herman (Helen) See, 64, of 454 N. Bailey, was to be held at 2 p.m. today at St. John Lutheran Church with burial in Romeo Cemetery under direction of Roth’s Home for Funerals. Mrs. See died Saturday at Community Hospital after a long ill-ess. She was a member of Romeo Chapter No. 19, Order of the Eastern Star. Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Florence Davison of Allen Park and Mrs. Arlene Sinko of Birmingham; a 1, Milton of Romeo; two brothers,Orville Ramin of, Romeo and Herman Ramin of St. Clair Shores; and five grandchildren. WILLIAM tOTTINGHAM WHITTE Lake TOWNSHIP-Service"^for William Tottingham, of 8300 Pontiac Lake Road, will be 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Sharpe - Goyette Funeral Home, Clarkston. Burial will follow in Lakeview Cemetery. Mr. Tottingham died Sunday after a long illness. He was a retired farmer. Surviving are his wife .Lillian; six sons, LaVern and Basil, both of Drayton Plains, Ernest and Harvey, both of Pontiac, Stanley o( Grand Blanc and Clyde of Or-tonville; and three daughters, M1.SS Louise Benjamin of Bay City, Mrs. Earl Warner of Milford anlMrs^FrMkJ5L?^^^^^^^ Clarkston. An amendment which would establish the city’s 1963 tax rate is slated for public hearing and adoption at tonight’s City Commission meeting at 8. Also surviving are four brothers, Andrew of Fostorla, Ohio, Arthur of Sheldon, N. D., Wallace of Grandby, Colo.; and Leon of Oxford; two sisters, Mrs. Albert Milky of Drayton Plains and Mrs. Robert Brauer of Thomas; '25 grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren. font to the Madonna’s statue^ in the Sotil Monte'parish church. WILL BECOME PRIEST? The story in the Roncalii. family is that the old man held out the newly christened infant in his arms and said: "This child will become a priest.”^ ' . k k. k Years later^^upon the proclamation that Cardinal Roncalii had been chosen supreme pontiff, his brother Alfredo exclaimed: With all the priests they get from this area'it had to hpapeh soeintlme:” In the 1500s Marino Roncalii had brought his family down from the high mountains to the edge Of Sotto il Monte — present population 1,800. He drain^ a bog below the hill, built a small home and tilled the reclaimed fields as a tenant of a wealthy landowner. k k ■ ★ His descendants did the same. Angelo Roncalii was the third of 13 children bom to peasant farmer Giovanni Battista Roncalii. Ten of them lived to maturity; Angelo was the quifet one in the big family. His outlook was happy, despite his seriousness, never one to lose his temper. His manner was open and coridal. He was robust, and before his final illness his brothers recalled that they had never known him to be sick. INFLUENCED BY UNCIJ: Uncle Zaverio was a well-read man with a collection of good books. He influenced young Angelo greatly. , Angelo at 6 was serving Mass as an altar i)oy. He spent three years in the Sotto il Mdnte elementary school,toett. bepn , to study under Don Bolls, pastor at the village of Carvlco close.'by. Fafter Bolls sent the Roncam boy to the diocesan school at Ce-lana, near Bergamo. Angelo Roncalii walked 6 miles twice a day, to and from the school. An enthusiastic stqdent, he narrated his day’s adventures to his mother, Maria Anna, each He began a habit he was to continue for years. He would read aloud to parents or relatives the day’s evenls from newspapers and periodicals, whenever he “ home on vacation. Commission Slates Hearing on Tax Rate ROBipfC. THICKER Insurance Man Dies at Age 48 Robert C. Tricker, owner and operator tit Tricker Insurance Agency, died late yesterday of a heart condition. He was 48. A memorial Communion service will be observed at 10 a.m. Thursday in All Saints Episcopal Church. Funeral service will follow at 11 a.m. with burial In Ottawa lark Centetery. Arrangements, are by the Huntoon Funeral Home. Mr. Tricker, a past president of Poritiac Civitan Club, had served the organization as lieutenant governor of the Civilan’s Great Lakes District. He was chosen president of the “ d^istfict at the Adhual stMe con^ Preparation of the amendment to Pontiac’s annual budg-et appropriation ordtoanee"was ordered by a resolution passed at last week’s meeting. The resolution autoorizei Glty Assessor Edward Bloe to estab-a tax rate on the city’s total assessed valuation as equalized -which would produce, a 1963 tax levy of 64,483,852. Tonight’s, amendment is expected \to set the tax r.ste at about $14.65 per $1,000 of assessed valuation. That would be about 79 cents per $1,000 higher than last year’s tax rate. , k k _ The proposed to^af tax levy is $169,612 higher than the levy originally^.^led for in the ap-proprjatton ordinance adopted in Jamiary. However, due to an irictease in the city’s tax base-, a $14 «5 tax rate would be about 33 cents lower than the $14.98 per $1,000 rate established in the original ordinance last January. In other business tonight, action is slated on a resolution approving an agreement with the Oakland" County Department of Public Works for sewage service to the new city wa- vention in 1960. Mr. Tricker of 204 Dick, Waterford Town.ship, was a member of All Saints Church and had been a member of the city’s civic improvement commission. Surviving are his wife, Jeanne; his father, Carl of Lotus Lake; and a son, Robert Jr. at home. Of Waterford Bodrd Lake Residents Ask Support Residents of Williams Lake last night appealed to the Waterford Towns^jp Board to support their efforts to raise th? present low water level on the lake. The request for assistance came after the board meeting had been adjourned. The lake level matter will be on-the agenda of next Monday’s meeting. Lee Kaincs, spokesman for a delegation of Williams Lake homeownfrs, suggested that a formal resolution by the board might be helpful In promoting cot^ action on what he termed an "emergency situation.” kalnes said the lake level is two feet below that of adjoining Maceday Lake and one foot below the absolute minimum standard. On May 24, some 75 Williams Lake residents dug a 50-foot trench, about 4 feet deep, tween Wiiliams and Maceday Lakes and were about to drill through a cement plug when police stopped the attempt to let water seek its level. Since then, a Circuit Court petition to prevent Oakland County officials from closing the drain between the lakes was filed by John E, McGrath, attorney for the Williams Lake group. Kalnes, who showed a movie on the layout of the lakes following the board meeting, said his group lias been trying for ten years to have the county remove a connecting plug between the lakes. Kaines suggested that the coun- ty could begin controlling lake levels by negotiating for a privately owned dam at Anderson-ville Road and Dixie Highway. k k k In other business, the board opened bids from three firms on. new police cfirs and referred the bids to the supervisor and clerk for study. A report Is due at next Monday’s meeting. Bids on three new cars with a trade-in of two old cars ranJied from $4,994.50 to $6,535.69. Bids on four new cars with trade-in ’of two old cars varied from $7,026 to $9,0,30.92. ' Action on a proposed amendment to the township food, handlers ordinance dealing with outside displays was deferred until next week. Under the agreement, the city would tap into county Fewer mains running near the site at South Boulevard and Opdyke. Public hearings are Scheduled on special assessment rolls for proposed resurfacing and curb repair projects on Menominee and Owego. A petition asking that the c|ty vacate an alley north of West Huron between Llnco.*:n and Thorpe will also be presented to commissioners for consideration. When he was 80, he could re-ill for his brother the' exact shelf positions of favorite books he had placed in his library during his young priesthood in north. IN SEMINARY AT 11 When he was 11, he entered the diocesan seminary at Bergamo. He was a model Mmhw-Ian. Bqt nothing pleased him more on hi|i visits home than to play cards with his brothers or go with them for a day’s picnic in the cool shade of the woods. k‘ ~k'"'k' ■ R] 1900, after eight yesfi at the Bergamo Seminary, Angelo Bon-calli was sent on a scholarship to Rome to the Orasoli College, the pontifical Roman seminary. To avoid losing three years to He was always hungry for news .of home when his three living brothers would make their annual visit to the Vatican. He would question them: How were things going at the farm? How were the crops and the soil? How was this aged--widow-=©F-4hat“= woman’s nephew who had juSt entered a seminary? : This trait reveakd not only strong familial ties but fondness for thr journalist’s life. Newsmen at one of the Pope’s early audiences heard him say: “If I had not become a priest I would have beer aTouro^flisnike you.’" military conscription in his preparation, for the priesthood, the seminarian from Bergamo volunteered in 1901 for a year in the Italian army. He was an infantry sergeant—with a flowing. dark mustache — when he left the service. . The church of Banta Maria in Monte Santo, a twin temple facing Rome’s Piazza del Popolo, was the scene of hls ordination on Aug. 10, 1904. ★ w" , ★ ' Father Roncalii went back to Bergamo. He left forever his seminary room, bverlooklng an ancient little square, in the Eternal aty that would one day know him as its bishop and as supreme pontiff of the world’s half billion Roman Catholics. - Angelo Roncalii kept hls love of study and books all his life. His brother Zaverio, 18 moqths younger, has said that Pope John’s memory for the names and faces of hbme was remarkable. The Pope once began a litany of surnames and family re-1 lationships, many of them from' 46 years in the past, at an audl-j ence for a group of his townspeople. , Centrally Located. Our fine funeral home Is located irt the center of our community ... easily accessible from all parts of the city. Traffic Is hot contested on our residential street and our larfe ^perking lot affords parking for 70 cars. Ouialaadiop in Pontiac lor Service and FaeilitloM 46 Williams Street^^__________________ . FE 2-5841 Call Us for >. e GAS or OIL I FURNACES 8 NEW IN$TALUTI0NSI TIMKEN SILENT ■ AUTOMATIC FUNNACES S ANNUAL SERVICE AGREEMENT 9‘ per dayl FOR PARTS and SERVICE CALLS AMERICAN BHAISD HEATING OILS FE 4-1584 TOM KIGER BURNER SERVICE COMPANY P5 W. PIKE STREET SHHNG BIG SPRING SPECIAL! We're overstocked and must gi 37,423 sq. ft. of material—eo NOW IS YOUR CHANCE TO BUY SAU H // iPrJSSLi Your Choice OF COLORS Completely Installed-** No Hidden Extias** All Label and Mateiials ESTIMATES Right in Your Own Home NO OBLIGATION CALL NOW Operatore on Duty 24 Hourl Including Sunday Cairn 4-4507 STERLING ENCLOSURE , V THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 4^^';i963 CLOSE DOORS — Swjss guards — one holdihg lance (left) —close the doors of the Vatican Palace yesterday following announcement of the death of Pope John XXIII. The closing (rf the doors and the booming belt over St. Peter’s Basilica signaled death of the pontiff to the estimated 100,000 on St. Peter’s Square. , Today In Washington Justice Douglas Flares on Wafer Rights Ruling WASHINGTON (AP) - In the news from Washington; SHARP DISSENT; Whatever may go’on behind closed doors, Supreme .Court justices rarely let their feelings slip into public view during the oral announcement of decisions. Monday was one such occasion as Justice William 0. bouglas ripped into the reasoning and ing of Justice Hugo L. Black, a fellow New Deal veteran < who, with Douglas, forms the nucleus of the court4-libeFal wing. ★ As the senior judge in poiht of service. Black was presiding^in the absence of Chief Justice Ekl Warren, who is in Spain. With evident pride. Black read the court’s" opinion—written by him-that upheld most of Arizona’s claims in a 40-year-old fight with California over the waters of the Colorado River. Douglas then read his H|s voice rising occasionally in near anger, he called Black’s opinion “a committee report rather than an opinion worthy of this court.” Noting that the decision was iZ pages long, Douglas said; "The advantage of a long opinion is that it’s very difficult to see how they fail to reach the right result. You get lost iaihe words.”. FALIX)UT; A Weather Bureau fallout expert says measurements through May point to a doubling of worldwide levels .of strontium 90 this year. The amount of the bone-destroying radioactive material that reaches earth. Dr. Lester Machta told the Senate-House Atomic En- ergy Committee Monday, depends Tompkins, executive director of greatly on rainfall. Because the east has''more rain than the western part of the country it has larger amounts of strontium 90, he said. Another witness. Dr. Paul C. the I^ederal Radiation Council, said there is no indication that fallout from nuclear weapons tests has reached a level harmful { to human life. JOHNSON; The Communists ean^f coiripele with the West because they put the value of human life below that of their system of government/ Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson said today.' Johnson said in a speech prepared for the presidential safety FROM EARTH’S HIGHEST POINT - ’This is Tibet as seen from the highest spot on earth — the top of 29,082-foot Mt. Everest. Barry Bishop of the National Geographic Society made the picture on May 22. ’Th^ society released it in Washington, D.C., yesterday. Bishop’s camera is pointed toward the northwest. Rongbuk glacier is serpentine strip at center. (Copyright by National Geographic Society). Moslem Sect Clash Kills 120, Injures 26 KARACHI, Pakistan m - Police reported that 120 persons were killed and 26 injured today in a clash between Shiite and Sunni Moslems Ira v north of Karachi. ’Die ShUte Moslems reject the first three caliphs — the first three rulers of the church after the Prophet Mohammed died -and recognize the propliet’s A police report aaid “miscreants” interfered with ju Shiite rfc ligious procession.' ^ enraged mob of Shiites then set fire to the villiage of ’Ihari, aiid followers of both sects rioted. The police fired teap. gas shells to restore order. EARLIER aASH Fire Fighters Plan Institute Emergency, rescue equipment will be demonstrated by Pontiac fire fighters Thursday at the fourth annual Oakland County Fire Prevention Institute at Pontiac State Hospital , The 7 p.m. program Is open to the public. .W ★ * In addition to the outdoor program, Capt. ’Theodore E. Peters, fire prevention chief for Delco-Remy Division of the General Motors Corp., will give a talk entitled ’The Chemistry of Fire and Techniques of Fire Prevention;” "k it it The institute is qonduct^ to promote fire prevention; anwng those responsible for the fire safety of v i 11 a g e s, townships, home and industry. It is Sponsored by the .Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce Fire Committee. V , ★ ★ ' ★ An acetylene cutting torch, a portable electric saw and a hydraulic jack will be used.by a team of four firemen, directed by Capt. A1 Rayner, to show the emergency methods sometimes required to rescue persons trapped in an automobile. ’Two people were killed and several injured in a similar clash yesterday in Lahore. Later 180 persons were arrested and a our curfew was impiwed. ★ k * In neighboring Iran, Shiite religious processions turned into anti-government demonstrations with between 15,000 and 29,000 marching on the university in Tehran. Troops kept them off the campus and also away from the royal palace and the government radio. There have been Sillte oh-, servances for the past three AP Phol»r»* ITERIM ADMINISTRATOR lenedetto Cardinal, Alois! olla, carmerlengb of the lan Catholic Church who ime interim administrator he church following Pope I’s death, is shown leaving Vatican grounds in a cajr night. . son-in-law as hi^ true sncces-soT.'^'Jlie Sunnis are Orthodox ing of die seeds month of ’The last head of the Shiites died in 1980 and the public observances were also inU^ed to proclaim Ayatullah Mbomainl as new head of the religious group. ★ w * Iranian goveiument sources said conservative Shiite clergy who oppose the shah’s land re-torm and lights for women programs were turning the religious observances into political demonstrations. Navy N-Ship Model on Display in City A 38-foot model of the Nav^s first nuclear-powered surface ship, the USS Long Beach, will be on display downtown through Wednesday. The replica of the 720-foot, 14,-000-ton cruiser .will be On View on H u r 0 n between Wayne and Saginaw during the daylight hours, according to Pontiac Navy recruiter. Chief Boatswain’s Mate Robert L. Scott Jr. ’The Long Beach Is powered by two reactors, allowing her to travel at better than 30 knots an hour. The almost unlimited-range cruiser is armed with two types of missiles, the Terrier and the Tales, To Issue Bike Licenses in Waterford Schools Sgt. Dave Putnam of the Waterford Township police department will begin issuing bicycle licenses tomorrow at the township’s elementary schools. Licenses, |priced at 25 cents, may also be obtained At the police gtotion.!. Growing pigs benefit from the addition of aureomycelh In their food, according to research by the Kentucky Agricultural Ex? periment Station. ALBANY, N. Y. (AP) — Gov. I^ckefeller said today he still considered himself among the ranks of potential candidates for the Republican nomination for president next year.— - He said he did not accept the view that his recent marriage had diminished his prospects of it* I^ARS FOR PONTIFF — An elderly Italian woman weeps as news of the death of the Pope passes through the crowd in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican yesterday. Death of the Pontiff was announced shortly pfter a special Mass attended by a huge throng of all faiths and nationalities. Barely Wins Race Treasury Keeps to Debt Limit WASHINGTON (AP) — ’The Treasury barely won the race to keep within the old $305-billion national debt ceiling. , Today’s Treasury statement disclosed that at the close of business last Wednesday, the debt had risen to 1305,046,825,924.55. ★ ★ ★ ’This was just-a few hours after President Kennedy had signed legislation increasing the debt ceiling to $307 billion for the re-of the fiscal year which ends June 30. The ceiling then will go up to $309 billion for July and August. In testimony before the Senate Finance Gommlttee May 23, Secretary of the ’Treasury Douglas DUlon predicted that the Treasury would be unable to stay within the $305-billion ceiling through last Wednesday. Officially, the old ceiling was not pierced until about 4; 30 p.m. last Wednesday, the close of the bookkeeping day. As one Treasury official expressed it, “we just made it by the scruff of our neck.” Burglars Get Away 'With Golf Club Loot Burglars suiprlsed by police at the BoG O’Link Golf Club in Novi early this morning absconded with.about, $1,200 worth of new golfing equipment. NpVi patrolmen Roy Hallock and Ralph Arbour interrupted the culprits in the pro shop of the chib house at Grand River Avenue and 12-Mile Road about 3; 45 this morning. As the police went in the back door, the burglars escaped through the front of the building, leaving much of their loot on the bacK" opreh, police said. Solons Okay Compromise WASHINGTON (JPI - The te Foreign Relations Committee today unanimously approved a compromise bill carrying a two-year, $20-million authorization for the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. ’Hie committee, at the request of Sen. Hubert R. Humphrey,. D-Minn., reconsidered last week’s apploval of a $15-million authorization for the two-year period. Humphrey said that he and other supporters of the agency had thought last week that they were voting for a $30-millioh authorization for jwo years — $15 million a year. He went along with the new figure of $20 million for two years, subject to appropriations by Congress. Humphrey said $15 million, spread over two years, “would nqt be adequate for the agency to do its job.” J'" An average lightning stroke carries about 20,000 amperes, about the same current required by an average city of 15,000 population. Remarriage Up to 'Personal Opinion' Rockefeller Slill Eyes GOP Ballot Spot The question of whether his marriage would prove a political liability was a matter for “the personal opinion” of individual voters. Rockefeller Said at his first general news conference since his remarriage.___ k k k ' But he also said that, in reaching a decision on whether he would wage an active campaign for the nomihation, he would consider “all the factors” and reach a decision he considered to be in best interests of the country. Denis OK Road Payments Over Romney's Objections LANSING UP) — The Democratic State Administrative Board today approved three State Highway Department requests for payments to contractors for overruns or extra charges, over the objections of Gov. Georgy Romney. ★ ★ ★ The three items amounting, to some $150,000 all involved work on the 1-94 expressway la Berrien Coiinty. The governor, in a dispute with Highway Commissioner John Mackii, had held up the paymentt since shortly after he took, office, asking for a extra charges. The governor did not vote in the matter. The members of the all-Democratic State Administrative Board swung the approval. 'Payments of such over-runs these can place in jeopardy our entire process of open competitive bidding on state contracts,” the governor said. In these cases, it appears that more than $150,000 of tax money is being paid to contractors where the state appears to have no obligations to pay and gets nothing in return.” Involved were the payment of $69,979 to a pair of Joint contractors the Canonic Construction Co. of South Haven and the H. F. Stukey Co. of Coldwater — and separate pay- ments of $59,865 and $21,064 to the Qaravalla Construction Co. of Warren. The first payment, to Canpni'e and Stukey, was for upgrading aggregate stockpiled over the winter and rejected by state inspectors as below standard. k k k Romney skid this kind of pay-lent was unheard of in Michigan until another fiem, the Hallow Construction Co. of Livonia, was awarded a similar payment of more than $100,000 last fall. The largest payment to Gara-vaglia was for hauling in more aggregate to replace rejected material in the same kind of a situation. The other payment to Garvag-lia was for premium time to expedite construction. Romney said he could not approve this, especially since the job was not finish^ until 14 months after the completion date specified in the contract. k. k '★ The U;S. Bureau of Public Roads has refused to approve such payments, the governor said, and he cannot approve thpm either. Set Arraignment for Bridegroom William R. Blevin, a 46-year-old bridegroom charged with armed robbery in connection with a supermarket holdup in Birmingham Satqrday, will be arraigned in circuit court Monday. Blevin waived preliminary examination before JUstlce of the Peace Edward B. Empry yesterday and was bound over to Circuit Court. \ The Detroit man was anpN)-hended by an off-duty policeman 15 minutes after the holdup at the Wrigley Super Market, 1855 S. Woodward—two hours after his wedding. The governor's marriage to the former Margaretta (Happy) Murphy—after the first marriages of each ended in divorce—brought on widespread contfbversy and some criticism. ' In an unusually candid 40-min-;e news conference, Rockefeller said that custody arrangements for his wife’s four children by bw previous marriage,"ranging,in. from 3 to 12, were being worked out by Mrs. Rockefeller aiid her first husband, and “things are going extremely well.” BteST INTEREST He said the discussions were being conducted in the best interests of the children and with the thought they should be kept out of public eye. At one ^int. Rockefeller said that his wife would not be with him On all his official trips because she would want to “stay home with the children part of the time,” indicating that Mrs. Rockefeller will have at least partial custody. The governor and his new wife returned to public life Monday. Her official appearance at a formal dinner Monday night won her such tributes as lovely, charming nd friendly. TTie governor and his wife each received standing ovations as they were introduced to an audience of 400 at the dinner, sponsored by a local committee working to rehabilitate the capital city 'Should Avoid Long-Term Mortgages' Goehler E. Ohmart, president of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Indianapolis, speaking before the Pontiac Board of Realtors last night, said that the time was approaching when lending companies should avoid long-term mortgages. k k k Ohmart said that the trend toward lower down payments an4 longer maturities was favorable during the housing shortage immediately following World War II, but was questionable on today’s balanced market. He pointed out that of the 108 institutional lenders that made, mortgalies in Oakland County last year,. 25 savings and loan associ-accounted for 40 per cent, or abot^ $60 million, of the total mortgage volume. EUGENE L, JOHNSON To Become Leader of School Heads Eugene L. Johnson, superintendent of Bloomfield Hills Schools for the past 10 years, will become president of the Oakland County School Superintendents Association tomorrow. Elected to the post last month, Johnson will begin a one-year term as head of the 40-member organization at a luncheon meeting at' the Birmingham Community House. He succeeds Dr. L. F. Greene, superintendent of Clarkston Community Schools. Married with two children, Johnson and hto wife, Helen,'live in Sylvan Lake. awards ceremony that Maj. L. Gordon (fooper Jr.’s 2iorlit flight gave the world a “34-hoilr short course” in hoW''much the United States values the life of a single individual. k^k “On that flight, the world’s strongest nation admittedly had ts prestige on the'line,” he said. Billions of dollars and millions of man-hours had been invested to make the flight possible. Yet among every man, wOman and child of our 180 million Americans, the first concern — the one concern — was for the life and safety of the man. “Is it any wonder that other political systems must build walls to prevent their people from seeking sanctuary in a free world led by a nation which values so highly the priceless life of a lone individual? These other political systems place the value of human life below the systems themselves —and they cannot afford to expose their people to the contrast < the free world.” !tyawardswentt(rthe-Nav3ri -General Services Administration, Atomic Energy Commission, Air , Force, Department of Gommerce and Railroad Retirement Board. Payroll Listed for AidefW State Senators- WASHfNG’TON (4V-Charles R. Perrin, administrative assistant Sen. Pat McNamara, D-Mlch., received $4,699 in salary for the first three months of this year. Senate payroll records show. ★ ★ ■ ★ . William B. Welsh, administrative assistant to Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., drew $4,298 for the same period. Hie report lists 18 employes on McNamara’s staff and 22 lor Hart. Other McNamara staffers, with their salaries for the 3-month period, include Edwin N. Winge, assistant clerk, $4,128; Harold D. Beaton, clerk; $3,818; and Lucille R. Wendt, $2,236. Other Hart employes, with their salaries for the. same period, include Fred B. Burke, executive, $3,987; Muriel Ferris, research assistant, $3,987; and Gerald J. Kgbel, press secretary, $3,621. Landry's Kin Struck by Car A brother of Mayor Robert A. Landry was severely injured yesterday when he ran in front of a car on a city street. k k k In serious condition at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital with fractures and abrasions is' Leo J. Landry, 58, of 86 Parkhurst. Landry was struck by a car driven by Mrs. Lloyd Seelye, 72, of Boyne City, when he attempted to cross Auburn near Center shortly before 5 p.m. Mrs. Seelye told police that she saw him walking across the street but when he got to the center line he ran ftitO the path of the car. , , Landry said he thought he could make it across the street. TTie car was traveling about 20 mile an hour when it struck Landry, according to police. Detroit Man Hurt in Auto Accident A Detroit man was seriously injured yestelfiay when his car hit a bridge abutment in Lyon Township. Floyd A. Tietz, 45, suffered a crushed chest and internal injuries and head and leg lacerations, according to a spokesman at University Hospital, Ann Arbor. , Brighton State police said Tietz was traveling north on Milford Road at 4 a. in. when his car left the jiighway and hit the concrete on the 1-96 overpass. Pontiac Man Fined for Reckless Driving A Pontiac man whose car overturned while leading police on a high-speed chase Saturday night , was fined $100 in Municipal Court yesterday for repktess driving. Gari L. Hart, 22, Of 656 E. Madison, pleaded guilty to the charge before Judge Maurice ; Finnegan. Hart also was ordered off the^oad for 30 days. EIGHTEEN THE FONTIAC^PRESS, TUESDAY. JUNE 4, 1963 Chfegg^ltoce-BtQblem Getting4^otter (EDITOR’S NOTE — Racial segregation Is not confined to the "deep south." in the north, cities across the nation have reported evidence of anger and frustration over the issue J By DAVro SMOTHERS CHICAGO WD-Racial tensions are nothing new to the nation’s second-largest city, but. this spridg, civil rights leaders sense a mounting tide of impatience in the air which could lead to serious trouble in the weeks ahead. ★ ★ ★ ~ If "racial cohlHets------r-— here, they are likely to do so during the summer, which Chicago Urban Leape Director Edwin C. Berry calls “the riot sea-. wn.” • “Chicagoans are sitting on a Under box and they very narrowly missed ah explosion in the last few weeks,” said Berry in a warning to the Urban Leape’s board of directors.-“The mood is more critical than at any time I’ve ever seen it. This mood will be very serious this summer as' long as we don’t do anything about it. IMMEDIATE ACTION 'We need to take immediate action in a erash type of propam related to equality of opportunity in jobs, housing and education. ‘We currently live in an unjust society, racially speaking, ■ ■ . " ■ ihiua- dal unrest are alwhys present. “When anything happens—like the Birmingham situation or like the gathering of the mob on the southwest side when there was supposed to be a Nepo moving in—any little thing like that can touch it off.” Berry was frankly uneasy as he looked forward to the summer months.. “Unemployment among Ne-poes is hip,” he said. “School will be letting out soon. To have any serious interracial problems, two things are necessary — sepegation. and. good Weather. Anyone would.be a fool to fight in the rain.” Berry and other experts in the field apee Chicago’s race problem is longstanding and it is growing. The pound roots of , the problem can be told in statistics: -OTRO^riffillro^^ of metropolitan Chicago listed ' the 1960 U.S. census,, 813,000 were Nepor —The 1950 U.S. census listed 3.6 million po-sons in Chicap, 492,000 of them Nepo. This meant Chicago’s Nepo popula- Somebody Has to Do Dishes I By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) -r Somebody has got to wash the dishes There’s no getting around that. Let us keepj this in m i n dl as we" proceed^ now to look fur-^ ther into t h e^ question of^ whether Ameri-|, can women are: victims of a con- ■ spiracy to keep! them “trapped in endless and empty housewifery.” In a recent debate before the Women’s National Press Club here, a strong case for the affirmative was presented by Mrs. Betty Frieddn, author of a new book entitled “The Feminine Mystique.” What I regard as an equally ^^trong^se forBie^gative^was made by Robert Stein, editor of Redbook Magazine and one of the targets of Mrs. Friedan’s attack. ★ ★ ★ It was the balanced weight of the two arguments that I found tion had climbed 65 per cent in 10 yeps while the overall population had.dropped. —Of the city’s 813,000 Nepoes, 520,000 live in the south side area nine miles long and^ three miles wide known as “the black belt.’’ Of the rest,' the overwhelming majority also live in all-Nepo pockets. This is, the situation which has led some to describe Chicago as the nation’s most seg-city. -Almost half of Chicago’s Negroes came here from somewhere else. -rBeventy-fiye per cent of the persons on county relief rolls are Nepo. These figures add up to trouble in the vital ureas of housing, education and jobs. The housing issue is touchiest. Chicap Negroes and whites may often work.side-^by-side, .but they rarely live side by side except in the tense neighborhoods where the “black belt” is powing.. And it is powing constantly as a steady tide of job-seeking Nepoes from the South purs into the slums at the Pre of the L*‘black belt.” ________________ disturbing. If this thing ends in a tie, the sink is going to get aw-fullyfull. As I understand Mrs. PriPan, she passionately believes that women should not have a choice betwee»-homemaking^4md=a-career. They should bave both. Mrs. Friedan charged that women’s magazines, such as the one edited by Stein, are trying to seli the ladies a bill of goods on staying at home to empty the ashtrays rather than working a 9-to-5 shift at the poolhall. ★ ★ ★ Or, as she'put it, “taking a fuii and equal place in society.” ‘NOT SO’ Stein said that wasn’t, so, He agreed “It’s wrong to try to convince every woman that she will find fulfillment in having babies and baking bread.” But he said, "IPs equally^ ] wrong to try to convince every woman that she will find fub fillment in practicing a profession or pursuing a career.” All of this started me to won- dering why it is that such discussions always involved the woman’s place jn home versus career. In case after case, Nepoes with the money to afford good housing move into white neighborhoods to find it. Over and over Doesn’t anyone ever'worry over whether a man can successfully mix marriage witfir a career ? In all my life I have never heard of a man giving up a job to get married. Oftentimes, the opposite is true. -— The magazines seem to take it for granted that men are capable of holding down a job without interference with their roles husbands and fathers. FOSTER ILLiJSlON We men may foster this illusion to keep from having to do the dishes, but down deep in our hearts we know it isn’t true. I myself probably would be president of General Motors today were U not for the fact that r chose to devote" myself to my family instead. I am not sorry I did It. I’m not complaining one bit. I just think the magazines should be more understanding, that’s all. CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY GAS YARD LAMP Initallation includes no more than 60 feet of copper tubing. Offer applies only to residential gas customers of Consumers Power Company. Charmglow qives a soft, welcome GLOW TO YARD OR PATIO* DISCOURAQES PROWLERS • REPELS INSECTS • MAKES STEPS AND PATHS SAFER Rugged, solid copper construction. 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In many casei;, Negro parents say they can’t' find the schools they want.-. ’ ' :Ttie issue of “de facto segregation”—schools which are all-white or all-Negro because the school districts follow neighborhood lines—has flared into lawsuits, sit-in demonstrations, and a mounting controversy on the Chicago school board. Katy Jurado Divorces Ernest Borgnine in LA LOS ANGELES ® - Actor Sriiest Borgnine was divorced by Mexican actress Katy Jurado in Los Angeles yesterday . The wife, sobbing, told the judge: ~ love him but complaining ... he complained that I loved my children and my career, more than him ... and nothing I did was right.” JFK Will Use 'Old Ironside! as Flagship BOSTON (AP) - The frigate Old Ironsides” reportedly , will be President Kennedy’s flagship udien he reviews an international array of sailing ships at the New York World’s Fair in 1964. The Boston Globe said yesterday ffiat the. USS Constitution, built in 1797 and the oldest commissioned vessel in the world, will be taken from Boston to New York next year by authorization of either flie Navy department or the President himself. • . Oldtime sailing ships will com-1 prise “Operatiwi Sail, 1964,” and will be reviewed by the Chief | Executive as they ply past the ^ Statue of Liberty in New York harbor. Twenty - one nations have been invited to send sailing vessels to the World’s Fair. The Constitution, which won its nickname during the War of 1812 because of its ruggedness, has been , the center of a month-long controvcry over whether it should tie taken to New York in a floating dry dock as part of the Massachusetts World’s Fair exhibit. tASTcrUMinral) (AdTerUumeBt) IS 0-JiB-WA REALLY AS. GOOD AS PEOPLE SAY? IT CimiMLT ISI radar, vvvrtv • •mitied sMtailwrs tator. 0-JI9-WA IITTIU Is sHII Ite fmorlta 0-JII-WA lITTIIU Is Mds from porary pmla klllsrs. 0-JII-WA •Wm briufs fMd rssslfs whsrt •tWr SrMtiMsIs «sd ■sdlelast iMvs MM. IT If TRUI wkta gaaph say 0-JII-WA IITTIRS Ii fb{t grtolasf, ba* daflaii speaks prove fbef geaeiae O-Jli-WA ■ITTIRS see kelp yea tea. CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY Iced Tea Glass with 7-gallqn gasoline purchase Here’s an offer too good to miss! Beautiful, gold^ecorated iced tea glasses absolutely FREE. These attractively designed glasses will add new beauty and charm to any table—you’ll want a complete set of eight. See your Good Neighbor Ashland Oil Dealer displaying the ’’FREE ICED TEA GLASS” sign right away! OFFFR EXPIRES AUGUST 4. 1963 Get this matching, gold-decorated, 60-0unce \%^jl K FLAME-PROOF GLASS 1 TEAMAKER for only 9322 Value with Oil change or lubrication at regular prices ^ ASHLAND OIL A REFININQ COMPANY • Auhlmid, Kentuoky THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 4; 1963 NINET^^N Palmer, Player, Nicklaus Not in Field Out . By BRUNp L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Big names from Hollywood will be in the field Wednesday afternoon at .Warwick Hills, but when ihe Bulcfe bpen officially opens Thursday, the biggest names in golf will be missing. Unhappy tournament officials have accepted the fact that flie “Big Three” of pro golf, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player did not have their entries in by the six o’clock deadline yesterday. Also missing are Billy Uasper and Doug Sanders. Casper was the winner of the first Buick Open in 1958. The tournament now resembles a Hollywood celebrities event. Much of the glamor will take place in Wednesday’s pro-am v^ich will have a pilrse of 13,5W. On the list of Hollywood per- sonalities are Bob Sterling, Qob Wilke, Jack Kelly, Ray Bolger, Phil Crosby, Dave and Ricky Nelson, Tom Harmon and Jon Arnett. Wilkie, of movie villain fame, have won the Entertainment Field tournament. Arnett, halfback of, die LA Rams, carries a seven'hanclicap; Kelly of thfe Jilaverick show has a 10 and Bolger gets 12 strokes. Crosby, is one of Bing’s twin sons. He and Bob Rosburg teamed to win the_ pro-am in the _ Seattle Open, while Sterling andlthie, A total of 141 amateurs, including the celebrities, are expected to compete with the pros for the pro-am Wednesdp, . lemafavored With the biggest names missing, the role of favorite rests with fiuqrent number -twcr money BIG THREE ABSENT - They may be caUed the “Big Three” of golf, but there’s no telling what Biiick Open officials are calling them today. When last night’s deadline for entries was reached, Gary Player fleft). Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer (ript) 'were mtssing=lPom=the=Tiettr:Muc|rto the dis* pleasure of tournament officials, the trio was replied getting ready for the National Open at Brookline, Mass., in two weeks. Hazel Paili Harness in Final Big Week Hazel Park Harness Raceway Wraps up’its 1963 season this ^eek saVbg the best for the last. The final week of the campaign marks the arrival of the Grand Circuit r- with six events scheduled for almost $40,000 in purses. Events include the Gahagan Two Year Old Pace on toni^t, June4. ^ / The older horses get their dckf beginning Wednesday, June 5 The Vic Fleming Trot, named for one of the nation’s* most memorable drivers, goes for $7,500 on V^nesday, June 5. ★ w ★ Speedy Scot, pre-season favorite for the Hantbletonian, is scheduled to head the field. Others tabbed to go, include Labelle Hanover, Express Rodney, Filter, Victor, Just Jamie, Lumber Rod and Careless Hanover. The Vllle de Trolt Three OU Pace goes on Thursday, June «. Nolaiiieea include Kuke Gamaun, Timely Beauty. Andy Adios, Meadow R., Keith Abbe hnd E. J. Direct. The older horses take over on Friday with The Cadillac Trot boasting a $4,000 purse. The field of older trotters Includes Cedar Crest Liner, Sophia Hanover, Highland Glen A., Where’s George, Ralph Abbe, Nile Shirt, Natchez, Canadian Intrusion, Demon Filly and Saul. iturdayTTheB^ will be raced for the older pacers. The event will go for $4,0M added money and concludes the Grmid Circuit compaign. Eleven ttt% expected to go including ChMolate Soda, Esa Hal, Chief Ainnbro, Trotwood Bob and Pride Woollen among others. Don Jarrard and Jim Tubbs of' Willow Wood Country Club near Flint won the weekly Pro -,Am golf ^tournament held at Ta m would have to take a sub-stand-O’Shanter yesterday combining ard team. I know the Russians Kiltiball Posts Upset to Win EMI Golf Royal Oak Kimball spoiled host Port Huron’s bid for a sixth straight Eastern Michigan League golf championship yesterday. ^Ihe Knights took 412 strokes. Port Huron 420, Mt. Clemens 429, Seaholm 430, Ferndale 434 and Roseville 442. Fcrndale’s Don Brooks was medalist with a 75. Flint Golf Duo Wins Pro-Am; Bone Fires 70 Eastern Loop Pulls Trigger on Feud winner, Tony Lema, enjoying his best year on the pro tour. 1Lema, in his 8th year as a pro, won the $9,000 first prize in .the Memphis Open two weeks ago and was runnerup ovw ttie weekend in the 500 Festival. This pushed his earnings to $47,696, second only to Nicklaus. Dow FInsterwald, winner of the Indianapolis tourney; Mike Souchak and Julius Boros, who a hot stoeak-^n the circuit and defendBig^cBapp Billy Collins ane among the other favorites. the tournament has been decorated with additional features this year, including a $50,000 for hole in one plus the $M,250-plus hole in one contest on Saturday, w ★ ★ The hole-in-one sweepstakes will be televisfd between 4:00-5:00 p.m. Saturday on Channel 4 and the finals of the tournament will be carried live from 3:30 to 5:00 p. m. Sunday. Tickets at the gate are $2.00 with free parking. bafest Move Threatens USSRMeef NEW YORK (AP)-The war for controi of track and field in this country exploded anew today, with the United States team that the Russians in Moscow in July caught squarely in the fall-out. In the latest move in thp alpha-bet .soup battle, the Nation’s largest college conferenceTThe Eastern College Athletic Conference, in effect ruled that its athletes should not compete in the National Ama.teur Athletic Union track championships, where the U. S. team Jor Russia will be picked. ' w * * In California, there were indications the powerful Big Six Conference would follow suit; and Payton Jordan, who will coach the U. S. team against Russia, said the move might cancel the trip to Moscow. Jordan. Stanford coach, said he Had not seen the ECAC announcement “but I consider it a possibility that our meet with Russia in July could be cancelled if we ST, ANDREWS, Scotland un-Bob Gardner, of Essex Falls, N. J. was beaten in the first round of the British Aniateur Golf Championship todi^r by Dick Smith of Scotland, 2 and\ in the first major upset of the toiirney. The match end^ ort the with a halved hole. PUTTED BADLY Afterwards Gardner said: “I putted very badly. I had about four or five three-putt greens and you don’t win matches that way.” Smith was 1 up at the end of nine holes and went 2 up at the 12th where Gardner three-putted. The Scot won another hole at the 14th where jhe American Walker Cupper was in “The a next of three bunkers—off the tee. ★ ★ * Smith had a fine qhance to close the match out on the 15th where he had a putt of only three feet. He missed it and the hole was halved^ Veteran Jack Penrose of Philadelphia and Miami, advanced to he second round with a 1-up vic- tor a 31-82- 68. Three other pairs were one stroke behind: Jim Picard and All Posen of Tam O’Shanter 31-38-64; A1 Redmond and Ed Guiseppe of Red Run, 33-81—64; and G^ Prieskom and F. De-Sellier of Pine Lake, 3044-64. At IS were Gene Bone of Pontiac and Dr. Joe Batdorf, 31-34-6$; Mel McHechteno, a n d Warren Sumner, Orchard Lake, 31-34-6$. At 66 were five pairs, Tom Tarkington-John Salverino, Washtenaw; Jim Champman-N, Fishman, Tam O’Shanter; Jim Picard, N. Surath, Tam; Preston Msesell and'T. Huighes, TSmih would not want a hollow victory. They want to meet our best. If we can’t send our best, I doubt the Russians would want us to come.” *4 AAU VALLEY The AAU levelled a charge that the colleges, who are battling the old amateur organization track fiowteol, are nut to wrecl^ Church of the Brethren 9-5 in the the American team and will be Hrst ington; Joe Factor - B. Adams, Red Run. There were 160 players in the field. The pro - pro combination had Chapman and McHeckteno with 66, aided by Chapman’s run of five birdiCs. The low pro field had Gene Bone, Joe Factor and Tpm Wa-trous all tied with 70’s. Bone fired four birdie? for a front nine of 31 and added 39 on the back. Asa Bushnell, ECAC commis-sldher, llented the and said his group wanted its-pth-letes to compete in aseba> league. The victors thus pushed their record to 2r0 while handing the union nine its first loss of the young season, The three-hit pitehlng of lanky Bob Readier And 16 er-irors by the losers were Instru-mental In the Clippers’ vk-tory. Four of the runs were unearned In the contest. Felix Brooks' went hitiess but had three runs batted In for the winners. Vllfirren Stephan^ had a triple and single, ancT Larry Douglas singled twice and both scored twice for the Clippers. Readier fanned five and walked none. He retired 11 straight batters Irt one stretch. Loser Charles City Handy, AB RH Johnson struck out six and also walked no one. LOCAL W4J0) clippers Lovell, „ - - - ........ W'dmoro, 3b 3 p 0 fltophane, ol W'dhull, r( 3 0 0 Brooke, rf Taylor, u 3 0 0 Thom'n, 3b Abel, lb 3 0 1 HonohOlt, ee. Kelly, cl 3 0 0 Ahnen. lb . . - I n 0* i 10 0 Readier, p 3 3r's I ilTtra-baBe'^hltt'’ —^ TrIplle:, Stephana. LIN* SCORE ooal m .............SS? 2?? •’-2 J ‘2 llppere ..V..........330 031 a-$ 0 1 Coach for BC Handy Mike. Budge, former coach at Alpena H|S;h Schqol and a principal at Coleman tor the last three years, hds been named head basketball coach at Bay with Gen. Douglas MacArthur March 12. ”1116 AAU also said that only one college athlete so far has. entered toe national championships, C. K. Yang of Formosa, the decathlon world record holder who is not eligible tor the U..S. team. The AAU also called for a new ruling on the dispute from Gen. MacArthur, who patched up the shaky peac? that exists between the AAU and toe U. S. Track and Ftold Federation, the rival group sponsored by the NCAA. [1st [l|Ket in British Aniateur tory over J. K. MacKay of land, but three other Americans went out in rapid succession. Arthur Nutting of Louisville, Ky., lost to J. G. Blackwell of Morns, bcottish junior cnampion Scotland, 1 up. John H. Ander- « touted as a big swinger with a tremendous future. sen of River Forest, 111., was ^aten 3 and 1 by Patrick Cros of France and John G. Hendrick-n of Philadelphia lost to D.. J. dmer of England, 4 and 2, Alex Kyle, who won the British Amatecr in 1939, turned back 17-year-old Finlay Morris, who is only one third Kyle’s age, 1 up. Morris, Scottish junior champion, Ne* York B&Ulmor* Stuart Murray, British Walker Cup player, defeated Peter born of England, 4 and 3. J^ycees Golf Tourney Set ...... „ '.426 S' n ,,,.17 35 ,327 14 MONDAY’S RESULTS ________lly 4, Minnesota , l. night Cbloago 4, Los Angeles 0, night ~ 'y games scheduled TODAY’S'DAMES cago (Bushardt S-2) at Los Angeles (Osinski 3-1). night • (Perry 3-3) at 2 or brant 34), night (Wilson 4-4) r‘ eney 44), night Ifork (Terry 6-4) '^we^esdIv’s games I at Los Angeles, 3.' twi-nll Detroit'at CleVeland. nlglit Boston at Washington, night New York at Baltimore, night NA'nONAL league Junior golfers competing in the district Jaycee tournaments this mdnth will have the advantage of playing tor the state cham{|ion-ship in their own back yard. The Pontiac Jaycee-sponsored tourney will be held at Pontiac Municipal, Monday Jhne 17to, Hurts Softball No-Hitter Jerry Banton started National League city softball off right at Beaudette Park last night by pitching a six-inning no-hitter to pace Bob & Larry’s Bar to a KM) win oyer G & M Constouction. Loc:al 653 outslugged First In a pair of practice softball games Bbrry Door whipped Po Poncas Market 10-3 and Buett-ner’s Cleaners ran to a 20-14 decision over Jet Bar. innings because of the time limit for first games. Three singles, a triple by Noble Lee and two errors produced four runs in the first inning for the winners. Itoey scored five more in toe fourth on three walks and four singles. Floyd Frazier, John Stoddard, Ed Marlow and Joe Wilson each had tWo hits for the union team. Gary DeVault had two foj the losers. In Buettner’s win over Jet Bar, both teams committed eight er- rnnner reached second -r losing hurler Gene Land on a walk and error in the third. B & L scored in all but the fifth inning. Bill LaRose got Banton enough to win in the first inning by drilling a two-run homer. He had three of the winner’s 10 hits. The game was terminated in thO last le sixth when B & L took a 10-run lead. ★ ★ * The Local 653-Brethren game was called at toe end of tour ''Bud'' Nicholle " ^ calling all II BOATOWNERS NOW you can •njoy___ . FULL BOAT COVERAGE . . . through our exclusive NEW'^' ' plan with-the 3rd largest marine writers in. the United SlaiesT~T1iD Is just beginning so start out right by j;;:;::; completely protecting your investment. “Bud" NICHOLIE INSURANCE . For COMPLETE San^roo Protociion ij;::;:, 49 Mt. Oltmen* FE 8-7889 Waterford Jaycee entries will conjpete' at Morey's 'feolf Club, Wed. June 19th. Winners from each district will qualify tor the state tourney to Jlje held at Morey’s, July 22nd. Prom here the winners advance to the sectionals and then to the National Jaycee tournament |n August. Boys living within the area of a district tournament must compete in that tiistrictv Howqyer, wbere there are no district-sponsored tournpys, boys can enter into another district. Any boy who will not be 18 rior to August 15th will be eligible to ciumpete. The tournament is conducted oh ah 18 hole medal'basis with classes tor open and novice entries. There is an entry fee "of $2,00 for toe' local tourney. Pontiac and Waterford district golfers can enter up to 9:00 a. m. on the day of the respective tourneys. f MUFFLERS GOSFIESS BECAUSE THE INSTALLATION IS FREE AND THE MUFFLER ISGUARANTEEDFORASLONGAS YOU OWN THE CAR ON WHICH IT IS INSTALLED Opan Monday thru Thuridoy 8:30 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. Friday 8i36 A. M, to 7 P. M. —• Saturday 8 A. M. to 4i30 P. M. 435 South Soginow FE Z-lOlO AMERICAN LEAGUE Woo I^at Pci. Bebted i City . .511 4'A jw York .r' ,. 20 .12 .385 MONDAY’S RESULTS niiton 2, Los Angelos 1, night TODAY'S GAMES ./llley 4-41. night Cincinnati (Piirkey 1-2) (Cardwell 2-6), night r Pranclaco (Sanford (Jackson 7-5) I Angeles (Miller 3 nnatl at Ptttsburgli' ___ PranclBCo at Chlcai Los Angeles ' " , York at Pittsburgh 7-3) at Chicago t>4 at Houston Colavito Back ifvGlevelafi4-Still a Tiger Indians' GM Paul Holds Trade Confab; Bengals Top Cards aEVBNALD Wi - Rocky CoL , avito is back in Cleveland, where , the Indian fans and general Inan-ager Gabe Paul love him dearly, but he’s still a Tiger. And toe Tigers are going to live for the rest of this season at least, said Jini Campbell,, Detroit’s general manager. /Campbell has been with the ’Tigers throughout their current road trip, talking trade at each stop. No doubt he’ll huddle with Paul while the Tiget? are in Cleveland for games tonight' and tomorrow night. Paul admitted publicly last week he’s made 50 recent bids to get Colavito back on the Indians. Campbell ha? turned down all 50. “We’re not thinking about trading Colavito,” said Campbell yesterday as the Tigers stopped in St. Louis iund defeated the Cardinals 84 in an exhibition. “He’ll play In Detroit this year maybe next year.” Campbell said the only thing ■/ichanger^^^ a fantastic offer for Colavito before the June 15 trading deadline. He didn’t say how fantastic the offer would have to^ to pry the ^236 hitter away from Defiroif. GB Rejects Turkey Game MILWAUKEE ’ (AP) -The Green Bay Packers will terminate the traditional Thanksgiving Day game with the Detroit Lions after the 1963 contest, Packer Coach Vince Lombardi said Monday. After 1963 the game against . the Lions will have to be rotated among other National Football League teams but wUli continue to. be played in Detroit, he added.^ “It’s not worth It to us,” lAimlWdi- said. He explained that tor the past two years the Packers got no more out of the nationally televised game than any other NFL team. Prior to that, they received an extra $16,000. FBEE INSTRUCTIONS NIGRTLT 7:30 to 10 P. M. CARL'S GOLFLAND 1976 S. TcUgraph Rd. All at this low, low price Oa hrihiiuwlih i mwly (btlfMil, ibnulni-. nilitant Cold Rubbormiul md nr* <~-proved lubbtr campoundi to «dd n dspcndiibl* bonni inUmigtl 0* Mtea—I005J nylon c^, mwiiwiiwi procossed by Mcluslvo Diyioa nwihod, *i sum positivn blowout protection—luuds iliuiiut bruise end lmpn(;t demagel And the l iter's new tread design adds extra non-skid ALL TIRES MOUNTED FREE ♦HliatotylliilniiidsHtlreejfynk isf ' ilructlon plus Nylon cord body gives you greoler resilience—-the "luxucy teel" of n softer, smoolhet ridel Set T/it Hew DAYm FLYTR Todty! StRONOESr ROAD HAZARD GUARANm * AU Dayton Paisengtt Tires st< gtttinntsed ■by The Dayton TIra A Rubber Company for tha Uft of tha original tread agali^ fallurot eaused by CHUCKHoLeS, oust!, NAIU. SPIKES, ties u well at DBPPCrS IN WORKMANSHIP AND MATERIAL. Adiustment made on » pro-rtU basis at current coda prlra. Ndrrn os MftiAoi iiMiri T 77 w. Huron mr^. Pontiac FE 8-0424 4R 1144 W. MAPLE RD.-Wallod Loko MA 4-4477 TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JUNE 4, 1963 Teeing-Off By BRUNO L. KEARNS Farrell Yields First Hit in 8th Inning Hiirlefs Corrtinue to Dominate Don’t be surprised if the Buick Qpen puts a ‘finis’ on the.tournament after the 6th annual event is concluded this weekend. Buick officials are fuming, just like the officials of the 500 Festival, the St. Petersburg and Azalea Opens, because the biggest drawing names of pro circuit failed to show up. There was a time when the PGA would jump at the .chance of grabbing a “big”!^ purse of $25,000 for a tour-‘ ment. Today, with tournaments scheduled every weekend, the pros are shunning the “miniature” $25,000 events and even the “small” purse tournaments of $50,000. One can hardly expect the pro golfers to keep up the pace WMk after week', but this is the fault of the PGA which ha^ the tournament circuit so much that the players are suffering from fatigue and the sponsors; taking bijgger risks and loss( CHANGE DATES When the Buick Open kept dates in July, names like Arnold Palmer and Jick Nichlaus, plus others were missing^The British Open complained and received support from the PGA and USGA Americans should be better represented in the tournament, When the cream of the crop decided to make the trip to Great Britain, the U. S. sponjiors started yeiling, especially the' Buick Open. So, the Buick changed its dates hij to.June and received the PGA KING EDWARD” Am»rlca‘$ L»rg9tt StHIng Cigat LLOYD MOTORS Lincoln 'jlr Mercury ■jlr Meteor English Ford 232 S. Saginaw FE 2-9131 By The Associated Press Hey—isn’t it about time the hitters started catehing up with the pitchers? This season’s trend wf the men on the mound dominating the with the bats continued Monday night as three right-handers strongarmed their way to impressive victories in the only jor league action. MISSES NO HITTER Fireballing Dick Farrell the Houston Colts became the latest threaten the no-hit Farrell, .picked off the roster by Houston for $125,000 in the 1961 expansion draft, allowed his former club just three walks before the no-hit spell was broken with'one out in the eighth inning, Dick Tracewski was the culprit, with a cledn single to center. Then in the ninth, Jim Gilliam led off with’a triple and eventually scored on Tommy Davis sacrifice fly, ruining Farrell’s shutout effort. The burly fast-baller, holding the Los Angeles Dodgers hitless for 7 1-3 innings in a 2-1 triumph over the slumping National League contenders. The 20-game loser of last season, backed by rookie Rusty.Staub’s first big league homer, finished with a two-hit job and the Dodgers finished with-their fifth straight Still, the big names are missing and even in greater numbers for the tournament this week. The players contend they are too ill to compete or they want to practice for the Open which ik slated in two weeks. General chairman of Hie Buick Open Jerry Rideout shook his head in disgust last night when the 6:M p.m. deadline for entries was reached and names like Palmer, Player, Nicklaus, CasperrSanders were missing. The tournament and governing body of the PGA should shoulder most of the’blame for unhappy sponsors. It should haye been and should be more discreet before filling every weekend with a tournament. And then as the official of the 500 Festival pointed out, "Why should Palmer or Player come here to go after $9,000 first prize when they can get $15,000 for doing a movie short with less work.” SHORT PUTTS Carl’s golf driving range on Telegraph road is celebrating its first anniversary with numerous activities this week. ' Pontiac’s Gene Boiie, former host pro at Warwick Hilis where the Buick Open is being held this week, will direct a clinic and exhibition, tonight at 8:00 p.m. at the range. loss. Eddie Fisher turned in a four-it shutout as the Chicago White Sox climbed to within five percentage points of the American League lead with a 4-0 decision over the Los Angeles Angels. And Dave Wlckerdiam also threw a four-hitter, pitching the Kansas City Athletics over the Minnesota 'I^vins 4-1. The Twins’ only run was unearned as they fell to the A’s for the sixth time in seven games this year. now 5-6, struck out five—getting Frank Howard four straight times. Staub connected for a 400-foot shot following a walk to Carl Warwick in the fourth for the decisive blow off Don Drysdale, who struck out 13 and gave up seven hits ii^ seven innings as his record fell to 6-6. , The loss dropped the Dodgers into a third-place tie with the Chicago Cubs, four games back of San Francisco and two behind St. Louis. Despite Fisher’s fine* pitching id their rise in the AL standings, the White Sox’ victory at Los Angeles proved costly. Joe Cunning-■iham, their slick-hitting first baseman, broke his right collarbone when he tripped over first running .out a grounder and is expected to be out at least two lontlis. ' Fisher’s shutout came in his first complete game in nine starts this year and boosted the White Sox into a second-place tie with Baltimdm, They are five points behind New York in the decisive Dow Heads for Buick Open Wins Speedway Tourney INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-A golf course with as little rough as a well-kept cemetery, a crisp putter and a dedicated caddy made Dow Finsterwald $10,000 richer today as he moved from the Spe^way Festival Open Golf Tournament to the Buick Open in Michigan. ■ ★ ★ ★ Most of the big money winners shunned the $55,000 event this year, but the 33-year-old Finster- wald boosted himself into sixth place among this year’s players on the circuit with $26,543. He had^been pinth. The Ohioan picked up his first tourney victory since the 1960 New Orleans Open by putting to-;ether rounds of 68, 68, 64 and 68 or a 268 total—16 under par. Carr's Tired, Knees Hurt, hut He Keeps on Running TomnM Aarc Dow Flnsten Tomy Lomti Bobby Nlcho........ Bob Dudon, 12.100 Fred HiwUns, S2.1 “ ‘ Thl Rodrt|uel. 12.100..^ Forider. il.700__ 70*70.01-71—272 r Bar&r, I1.4SO ......SMJ-TO-OO-gJ Colllnt, 01.430 ........ *W-71-BO-24 Carmlohoel. 21.450 . 66-70-70-«k-274 Jack Burke. 11.175 ... .... 70-M-67-70-275 He* Ba*ler,.-21.175 ....... 70-07-67-71—K5 Oay Brewer, 21.175 ........7O.71-06A0—275 Mike Souchak, 21.175 ....... 73-0720.87-273 ¥66 Bruno,- 2908 ..... .... 74^-07-88-OT0i Kel Nagle, 2908 - - - Ron Letellier. 29 ■ “elberger, 290 Talrfleldl 29 TEMPE, ^irz. (AP) - Henry Carr, one of the nation’s premier sprinters from Arizona State University, is tired and his knees hurt. But it will be a couple more weeks before the 20-year-old Detroit, Mich., sophomore takes the rest he believes he needs. He first will compete with A-State’s world record shattering mile relay team in the Compton, Calif., Relays Friday night, the U.S. Federation meet Saturday in Houston and the NCAA championships June 13-15 in Albuquerque, N.M. tition,” the 6-foot-3 Henry said. '“When we set that, we were primed to show those California people just how good we were.” The mark came in the Mt. San Antonio, Calif., Relays. -It’s in the NCAA show that Henry couid again better the world standard of :20.5 for the, 200-yard dash. He’s already broken or equalled the mark four times this year. His best is :20.3 around a curve. Jerry SteelsmlUi, 2517 .... 71-07-68^71-277 Mengert, 8!.. __tch Harrlaon Don January.,! percentage column although they have a one-half game edge on the Yankees on a won-lost basis. TURLEY NICKED ' 'The White Sox nicked Bob Turley for eight of thor nine hits and all four of their runs in five innings-plus, Sherm Lollar belted two doubles and batted across two runs, while Pete Ward and Floyd Robinson each ha<|[, a runscoring single. Fisher, loser of his first four decisions, now is 5-6. Turley is 1-5. A fifth inning homer by Doc Edwards gave Wickersham and Kansas City a 1-0 margin over Camiio Pascual and the Twine through seven innings, then the A’s pushed across three more against reliever Ray Moore—with the help of a costly error by right leldef^obAlIfson. Wickersham’s single with two out, a walk and Allison’s bad throw after fielding Johh Wojciks single produced two runs, and Ed Charles singled in another. An Error by Norm Siebern led to the Twins’ unearned run in the ninth. Ironically, the AL’s two losing pitchers — Pkscual and Turley-each was gunning for his 100th ii ii Expansion News... Soon nviTT TaoRSonosioNS BiruizD 1«H-» POWER-etIDE *81 CompMa M6IF Transmission FE 4-0701 Credit Terme—d-Ogy Bertlee ^enry doesn’t think A-State’s astounding mile relay team, which also Includes seniors Ron Freeman and Mike Barrick and sophomore Ulis Williams, can WYNHAM hish otylo for joiins men Forth* SMOOTHEST RIDE . YouVoEvorHadg LET US TRUEBAUNCEahd TRACTIOHIZE YOUR TIRES now in lightweight Dncron-Wool-Mohalr Up-to-th*-minute styling In a young man'o high 2-bulfon suit with ilant flat pockets and side vented coat-trim, pleatleso trousers. The fabric Is cool, lustrous and wrinkle-resistant. 'Sites 35-44 Regulars, Shorts, Longs .. .44.50 Our Pontiac Mall Store ii open every evening to 9 P.M. Technically, two ways. With a manual top. Or with an optional automatic top, as shown above with the snazzy Dart GT convertible. Either way, you have the top of the convertible news for '63. Dodge Dart! Low in price and upkeep like other compacts. But loaded with room and comfort. Dart's the large economyke compact) Its Six acts like a V8. ^nd you get a 5-year/50,0()0-i^e warranty* •Your Dod|« Ooilsr'i Wirrinly ii '- ...—.................— ‘■ bHfl *i|wnd6d |6 Inctud* pirli i labor lot 8vo ytari or 10.000 oiiloa. S ^IIM JVM Q V-JWMI/ Wv,wyw-|MMW nHIIMMI.J|S rinly iiiloit dilocti In inatorltl.tnd worknuMlilp\ii IMS eiri hw pitli riplioomont a topsir wltboul ohiri# Ipr tdoultad pitta or 0 fflilii, wnichovor ootnoi llril; on Hit oniino block, koSd ind Iniornal COMPACT lODtEDAItnil S«rvic« Managmr HUEY RAWLS Invites you to *ee him personally with your mechanical problems. "HI do my best to answer your questions and see that your car is ready fpr you at the appointed time." •-proviata int vtniciB Car Caro ichodulii. mRTAN DODGE ‘ 211® SOUTH SAGINAW STREET, PONTIAC — FE 8-4541 —....-SEE "EMPIRE", NBC-TV. CHECK YOUR LOCAL LISTINGS.- Tir* D«pt. Manager ■m GLEN MIGHT •uagesti that ummer It the most important time to keep your tires checked. Hot weather double-trouble with __ j • treadbare tires. See ouf com- ^ApprovedMojor of the finest in, new and retreads priced for every budget. Honor All Credit Cards MOTOR MART 123 Ea$t Montpalm SAFETY CENTER FE 3-784S THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE A, 1963 TWENTY-ONE Miss^Marple^Stdhn Actideht on Dev^opmenf (STORY SO' FAR: Miss Jfltie Marple, quaint elderly Si- Jtfflfy. Jtfead, her home for so long, is not, the same. It has lost its old charm because of the development md its moderation. Sending her nurse attendant, Miss Knight off on jenaugh errands to keep her away some time, Miss Marple puts on her walking shoes and goes to the development to observe the brand neib world that- is springing iip, a world foreign to all she has known, with its trous-povmg^uwmetfiinersinfs-ter-looking young men and boys.) By AGATHA CHRISTIE Installment H Nobody noticed Miss Marple as she trudgfed along. She turned out of Aubrey Close and was presently in Darlington Close, She went slowly and as she went she listened avidly to the snippets of conversation between motherii wheeling prims, td the girls addressing young men, to the^-slnisterJooking Teds (she supposed they were Teds), exchanging dark remarks ' to each odier. Mothers came oat on doorsteps calling to their children, who, as usual, were busy doing all the things they had been told not to do. Children, Miss Marple reflected gratefully, never changed. And presently she began to smile, and note(LJiown in her mind her “Usual series of recognitions. That woman is just like Carry Edwards — and the dark one slipped under the pressure of her body, sliding outward, carrying her with ftem. She screamed, trying to regain her balance. ^ STANDS MOTIONLESS “Bob!” The young man stood mptioh-!8s — a foot or two behind her. He took one step backward, Desperately, clawing at the wall, the .girl righted herself. “Oo!” She let out a frightened breath. “I near as nothing fell out. Why didn’t you get bold of-me?” “It was all so quick. Anyway you’r^e all right.” “That’s all you know about it. I nearly went, I tell you. And look at the front of my jumper. It’s all mussed.” Marple went on a little way; then, on impulse, she turned back. ■k k k Lily was outside in the road waiting for the young man. ..to lock up the house. Miss_ Marple wont-up to her and spoke rapidly in a low voice. If I were you, my dear, 1 shouldn’t marry that young man. You want someone whom you can rely upon if you’re in danger. You must excuse me for saying this to you, but I feel you ought to be warned.” She turned away and Lily stared after her. “Well, of all the-” Her young man approached. “What was she saying to you, Lil?” k k k Lily opened her mouth, then shut it again. “Giving me the gypsy’s warning, if you want to know.” She eyed him in a. ' CavanaghAsI^ ADC U Action will she put her arms round Miss Marple and tagged her to her feet _ ;; “No bones broken, I hope? ’There we are. I expect you feel rather shaken.” Her Voice was loud and friendly. She was "o plump, squarely built woman of' about 40, brown hair just turning gray, blue eyes, and a big generous mouth that seemed tb Miss Marple’s rather shaken gaze to: be far too full of white shining teeth. 'You’d better come ins.ide and __________ _____________ Shall I pour it_out Jor you? sit downVnd r^ of sugarT STUMBLES Miss Marple in her anxiety to get away quickly, turned a cor-stuinbled Over «ome loose stonies and fell. A woman came running out of one of the houses. ‘Oh, dear, what a nasty spill! I hope you haven’t hurt yourself?” ever, she thought guiltily. Miss jninistering angel, that’s me. T Knight need never know. She moved her arms and legs gfngerly. Nothing broken. If she could only get home all right. Perhaps, after a cup of tea. TEA ARRIVES ’The cup of tea arrived almost s the thought came to her. Brought on a tray with four sweet biscuits on a little plate. 'There you are.” It was placed on a small table in front of her. you a cup of h ★ Miss Marple thanked her. She allowed herself'to be led through the blue-paihtod door and into a small room full of bright cretonne covered chairs and sofas. “’There you are,” said her rescue^ establishing her on a cushioned armchair. “You sit ^et and I’ll put flie kettle on.”, hurried, out of the room, which seemed rather restfully quiet aftor her departure. Miss Marple took a deep breath. She was not really hurt, but the fall had shaken her. Falls at her age were not to With almost excessive good tbe encouraged. 4Vith luck, how- love helping people.” She looked out of the window as the latch of the outer gate clicked. ^‘Here’s my husband home. Arthur, we’ve got a visitor.” HUSBAND BEWILDERED went out into the hall and returned with Arthur who looked rather bewildered. He was a thin pale man, rather slow in speech.' “’This lady fell down, right outside our gate, so of ^ course I brought her in.” k k k ' ■ “Your wife was very kind, Mr. -V) , “Badcock’s the name.” “Mr,; Badcock. I’m ,afraid I’ve given her a lot of trouble." ' “Oh», no trouble to Hfeather: Heather enjoys doing things for 'people.” He looked at her curi- “Were you on your way anyvriiere in particular?” k k . k “No, I was just taking a walk; I live in St. Mary Mead, the house beyond the vicarage. My name is Marple.” “Well, I never!” exclaimed Heather. “So you’re Miss Marple. I’ve heard about you. You’re the one who does all the murders.” “No sugar, thank you.” “You mu s t have sugar. Shock, you know. I was abroad with ambulances during . the war. Saga r’s wonderful for shock.” She put four lumps in the cup and stirred vigorously. “Now you get that down, and you’ll feel as right as rain.” _^Miss Marple accepted the dictum. ' ■ “A kind woman,” she thought. ‘She reminds me of someone; now who is it?” k ,k k ‘You’ve beenlvery kind to me,” she said, smiling. ^‘Oh, that’s nothing. The little DETROIT (AP) - A plea to gp amend Michigan’s Aid to Depend-! g ent Children of the Unemployed*;::: act ADC-U was issued yesterday by Detroit Mayor Jerome Cav-j i;: anagh. x In a telegraim to Gov. George ] i? Romaey_Jmd-4t^Mstute~4efis--l4p lators, Cavanagh said, “efforts on your part to correct this im- i p 0 r t a n t legislation will be | S St-E th.rfi..p.r g.r^.sh.11 ■“ ' make a mess of her marriage " just as Mary Hooper did. * _ *1-- I, ’“’ He pointed out that Detroit’s ;: 1963-64 budget contains a crediti;: item of $2.23 million, predicatec |;: on the belief that Michigan Willi;: be eligible for federal ADC-U hi benefits. • THIS SUMMER YOU CAN ENJOY ’ Those boys, the dark one just like Edward Leeke, a lot of wild talk but qo harm in him, a nice Ixiy really. ’The fair one is Mrs. Bedwells Josh all over again. Nice boys, both of them. » The one like Gregory Binns won’t do very weli. I’m afraid. I expect he’s got the same sort of mother. SPIRITS RISE She turned a corner into Wal- I thj^ city a Michigan ADC-U act was pro-1 nounced illegal by Anthony Cele-! brezze, secretary of health, ed-i ucatioiii and welfare, because it! cool comfort AIR^ONDinONING allows benefits piily to children.^ curiici uiiu „a.-1 of persons who have received,! g singham Close and her spiritsjand exhausted, unemployment!::;; rose every moment. | benefits. . 'The new world was the same as the old. The houses were different, the streets were called Closes, the clothes were different, the voices were different, but the human beings were the same as they always had b^n. And, though In slightly different phraseology, the subjects of conversation were the same. By dint of turning corners in her exploration. Miss Marple had rather lost her sense Pf direction and had arrived at the edge of the housing estate again. She was now in Carrisbrook Close, half of which was still “under construction.” At the first-floor window of a nearly finished house a young couple were standing. ’Their voices floated down as they discussed the amenities. k k k “You must admit it’s a nice position, Bob.” “Other one was just a “This one’s got two more rooms.” “And you’ve got to pay for ’erp.” “♦Well, I like this one.” “You would!” “Ow, don’t be such a spoilsport. You know what Mum said.” “Your Mum never stops saying.” , “Don’t you say nothing against Mum. WHere’d I have been without her? And she might have cut up much nastier than she did, I can tell yon that. She could have taken you to court.” “Oh, come off it, Lily.” “It’s a good view of the hills.. You can almost see—” She leaned far out, twisting her body to the left. “You Can almost see the reservoir—” She leaned further still, not realizing that she was resting her weight on loose boards that had been laid across the sill. Thdy Celebreeze’s decision was sec-|:;:: ended by Stale Attorney General Frpk J. Kelley. Gov. George ii;' Romney contends toe law is all -i right as it is. American Giving Hits New Record § at $9,3 Billion NEW YORK (UPI) - Amcri can philanthropy reached an all-time high of $9.3 billion in 1962, | the American Association Fund-Raising Counsel yesterday. ’The association said the figure I’cpreMnted a $600 million increase over private giving for public causes in 1961. Individuals gave the largest share — $7.43 bil|ipn. Foundations gWe $706 million,, business $470 million, and $700 ^million came from charitable bequests. ★ ★ ★ ’The association said 51 per cent of the money goes to religious institutions and purposes, 16 per cent to education, 15 per cent to welfare, 12 per cent to- health,-4 per cent to charitable foundations and 2 per cent to other purposes. 40 Held by Mexico in Sacrifice Deaths VICTORIA, Mexico (iP)-Forty persons are bdng held for questioning in connection with a bloody sacrifice by a sect of fanatics resulting in five deaths. Two persons were burned at the stake and three others perished in a subsequent gun battle Friday at a cooperative farm 85 miles, north of here. Fifteen members of the soct and three policemen were injured. BRYAN F. FRENCH 151 N. Paddock St. Pontiao FE 9-6973 ZILKA HEATING 2599 Orchard taka Road oirtiao 192-1210 KAST HEATING and Cooling 463 S. Saginaw ontiao FE 5-9259 HEIGHTS SUPPLY 2665 tapoar Rd. Pontiao FE 4-5431 STANLEY GARWOOD HEATING 1505 Qropn Lake Rd. Orchard taka EM 3-2010 WOLVERINE HEATING 00. 1214 Baldwin Ava. Pontiao FE 2-2113 Be sure you get the finest equipment— installed by experts who know air-conditioning best! All work and systems “guaranteed in writing.” Call today for free estiinates — No obligation. Save! OAKLAND INDOOR COMFORT BUREAU JTe Specialize in Gas and Oil Heating Equipment! NOW IS THE TIAAE TO HAVE lA: TOP QUALIlY Gas ar Oil « FURNACE With the Wonderful Distributing System Initalled by Dependable GOODWILL nEM?N^CO. 3401W. Jw*t V* EWroboth lako Rd. GAS YARD LIGHT ON INSTALLATION ' FOR LIMITED TIME An added ’’golden'glow” is given to family fun when you prolong the enjr>vment of a pool, garden or patio with a,gas yard light. Outdoor I ^hting has so many advantages. It makes it possible-to entertain outdoors aflsr dark. Gives just the right light for patio cooking and dining. With a soft, mellow glow; gaslighting serves as a safety feature too. It illuminates steps and walking hazards while it dresses up a flower garden, accents a well-shaped tree, a path or a rock garden. The gas yard light is gaining widespread popularity among Aimeowners because it lends a plqasant note of grace and charm to even the most informal occasions. SEVERAL STYLES T9 CHOOSE FROM Slylai rang* from Old Colonial to ultra-modsrn. Chooia tha ityla that is In kaaping with tha archl-tactwra of your homa. See your gas yard light dealer .........’............. or on Employee of Contumert Power Compony 1 iPi'’ TFENTY-TWO THE I>QNTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY,. JUNE 4, 1963 MARKETS Average Loss Slight Tlie following are top prices covering sates of locally grown produce by growers aiid sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are iumished by flje Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of rjoon Monday, Produce Stock Market Settles Lower Applet, DeUekxu. bu. Apples. JoDsthsD. C. A. An>les. Northern 8pT, ( AppUs, Steele Red Sfimwberrles, ^16 oz: erst Atpsrscus. bet Chins, beh. . . l.W . 4.00 Csbbsfs. I Collara, bn NEW YORK m - Although the stock market setfled irregularly lower early this afternoon, aluminipns and selected issues posted good gains against the trend, trading was active. Gains and losses of fractions to around a point prevaile most key issues. The Ices on average was slight. Trading interest continued to spread among previously-neglectd ed secondary issues. Profits were taken on some of the erstwhile “glamour” stocks which have had big run-ups itl recent sessions. EQUANIMITY The newest installment of pro- ;S" posals from the Securities & Exchange Coimtiission was received with equanimity by Wall Sb^t spokeanen. Reports of tightening interest rates and the first drop in steel output in four weeks tended to dampen sentiment. Motors were v^ active and a shade lower on the balance. Steels, sugars, aerospace issues, drug$, chemicals and nonferrous metals were among the losers. Chrysler gyrated, erasing a 1-point loss, and trading a Shade to the plus side in the afternoon. General Motors dropped a ftac-tion. ON AMERICAN American Stock Exchange prices were mixed in moderately active trading, illectronic Sp^ cialty was up about a point and Technical Gyrations more than that. Ohio Brass also gained more than a point, losses exceeding a point were taken by Gulton In* dqstries and Rayette. San Carlos Milling dropped a point Fractional gainers included Canadian Javelin, Mead Johnson, Great Basins Petroledm, International Oil & Gas and Technical Materiel. Webb & Knapp was active but unchanged. Fractional losers included Creole Petroleum, Michigan Sugar, Barnes Engineering and UtaH-Idaho Sugar. ^irroCB AND MLAD OBEEN8 E»c»rol*. bu. ........... U LbUuc*. Bibb. pk. ....... 1 Lenuc«, BmIob, dot. . ......... 1 Luttuee. leaf, bu. ........... 1 Poultry and Eggs OrTROrr, Juu* t (APi-Prlen paid por pound at Oatrolt (or No. 1 quality live poultry; The New York Stock Exchange 1-10; heavy type roaatere over 5 Ibe. icockereu ; pnlleU 4S14-3T; broken and (ryere 3-4 Ibe. whIM 20-31; NB WTORK (AP)—rollowln* l« a ol eeleoted stock transaotloni on the York Stock Exchange with 1:30 p. prices: —A— hds.) Rtfh ttw Uet Chg. —R-~ ... .... — - Egg ______________n at Detroit by 11 cclvers (Including U.8.); Whltoe—grede A. extra large . large 30-33; medium 33-35; small 20H: browns -grade A extri ~ -arge 30-31; medium 32H-33; CHICAGO POCLTKT CmCAOO. June 5 (AP)-Uve poultry: Wboles'ele buying prices unchanged to ^ lower; roasters 36-26V4; special (ed-White ■t (ryers 30-31. Wirtz Enters Mediation Requested on Work Rules Issues WASfflNGTON MV-Secretdry of Labor W. WiUard Wirtz, at the request of both sides, stepped hi tbday to try to work out a settlement in the railroad work rules dispute. After,,«» hour-long meeting with hegotlatoFs fidfai the railroads and five operating unions, Wirtz told newsmen they had reported to him, “that agree- any point” In two weeks uif last-ditch negotiations. Because of this laclr^of progress, Wirtz said they had re-qupted tharhe, alpg with the National Mediation Board', step in “in the rote of mediator.'" He said mediation sessions would begin this afternoon. If BQ agreement is reached before June IJ!, F hatibn-wicle rail strike may result. .' Hie Kennedy a from the President has said repeatedly that it Will not tolerate a nationwide rail strike. Key issue is the removal of some 40,000 firemen from diesel-powered freight and yard trains. Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT, June 4 Cuttle 1,100. Blow. steers steudr to week. ____________ (ully steudy w.v ™ r._____s slaughter . eversl loads High cbolco *0 3L0^i utiuty cows is.DO-ri.ov: eanners am" -ters 13.00.10.50. Hogs' 400. Barrows and gilts 25 ........ lower: lOWs steady to 35 cents lower; Idw U.S. 1. 190-330 lb barrows and gilts 17 00, lew up to 10.00; 1 and '2 190-230 lb li75-J7.35; 3 and i 19^230 1b 17.^ 17.75; 1, 3 and 3 300-400 lb aows 13.00-14.50; 3 and 3 400-000 lb sows 12,00-13.00. Voalers 125, Unchangwl,^ choice and prime 30.l>0-36,00'. standard and goo< 22.00- 30.00; cull and utility 16.00-22.00., Bheep 800. Slaughter .......... -...-j.. 23.00- 24.00; good ‘ cull to good-"'"- CinCAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAOO, June 4 (API—Hogs (airly active, butchers mostly stet--, -weak, mnances 35 lower; aowa steady to 35 lower early; closed mostly steady; shippers took 66 per — —.................. ply; 1-3 190-236 lb (ully 500 bead at 18.00 sorted at 18.38; mixed 1-3 190-330 17.50-15.00; some 3-3 300-330 lbs dr to 17.36; 1-3 330-350 lbs 10.75-17.... mostly 17.00 up: 2-3 17,50, mostly 17.00 up; 3-3 280-380 lbs 16.80-17.00; 370-300 lbs 16.38-16.80; 1-3 3U0-35O lbs sows 14.50-15.35; 350-400 lbs 14 00-14.50:. 2-3 400-600 lbs 13.00-14.00; 6-0 lbs 13.813.00. , Cattle 3,000; calve* none; slaughter steers moderately active, steady; hellers rather slow, steady td 35 lower, decline mostly on good gradbs; cows and bulls steady; two loads high choice and prime , 1,360 lb slaughter steers 23.76; load_hlgh rholoe 000 1,350 choice 1,070 lb< The railroads contend that outdated work rules cost them $600 million each year, H. E. GilbO't, president of the AFLrOO Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and En-ginemen, said in Cleveland his ......... would be thaL as been made. A presidential emergency board last month recommend^ that Sign of New Boom? By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK-J-The glass sheath and curtain wall, the movable partition and year-around bF coi^itioning n o longer are the daytime home 0 n 1 y of office Workers in the nation’s largest cities. The modern of-i fice environment! is beginning toi mushroom in me-< dium-sized cities that haven’t seen a major new office building since the 1020s. And the changing face of these business centers may be the mark of the next construction DAWSON boom, If the biggest cities should take a breather. White many medlunHdzed cities have been making do wlUi;^office accommodations 30 or "more years old, their local Industries have grown mid so have the ranks of professional people, all looking for more space. Big corporations are locating plants in all regions of the United Stetes, and many now are sectionalizlng command and so are in need of regional headquarters. Drives to save downtown areas from blight also have started office building boomlets in many cities, large and small. Often this g; helped along by federal funds, uildings in smaller cities are expected to bring the total value of office construction this year to 8 per cent more than 19W, even if mNnve^JMi By ROGER E. SPEAR Q, “Please give me a complete list of Government issues which are exempt from Federal income taxesi I would like to have the highest security possible and, in: my bracket, 1 could use the tax exemption, too.” G. R. A. I am sorry to tell you that! A. This is pretty much of a gamble. Studebaker has made some di- New York construction should slow down. APRIL SPURT ^ F. W. Dodge Corporation, construction news specialist, reports contracts let for hew offices spurted to April.- The total, Involving all siz^ of cities, came to $158,208,000. TVe largest contracts, those over $1 million, are: One in Chicago for $5 million; one in Boston, ^ million: two to Washington, D;C.^ $2.5 million and $2 million; one to Spokane, $2.5 million— for a total of $59 million. This leaves nearly two thirds of the grhnd total going for smaller contracts scattered all over the map. One leader to the office construction and remodeling business Philip Heller, administrative vice president of FiscKbach awl Moore, electriiial wiring contrac-' tors — says that to many medi-um-sizedcities outside capital has breqk the Ice. ‘Once an outside investor puts up a modern office toilldtog to a city that has put off constructing new ones for 30 years,” Heller said to an interview, “others follow with local capital. And older veraificatioh moves; but its W-IraMngs 7^ of modernization.” FEEDPIG FIRE Fischbach and. Moore now is work%on,:orhas‘eompleterf;'Vriiv-ing for office buildings in Lake Charted, La.; Kalamazoo, Mich.; Topeka, Kan.; Kansas City, Mo.; Seattle, Wash.; Bartlesville, Okla., Torrance, Calif.; Bloom- ness is still largely automotive, and production in this area to the first four months of 1963 was below that of a year earlier. The earnings deficit to the Marck quarter was more than twice aS large, as in the same period of there are no Government issues' 1962. ■ outstanding — either ’treasury or studebaker makes a good car Savings Bonds — which arb ex- that has beep, hurt by styling re-empt from Federal toeome taxes.'jected by this iwblic. I am told Under present laws these issues are exempt only from State income taxes. There is available to you, however, the broad field tif state and municipal bonds, which do offer you exemption from Federal iiw^ the come taxes. Because of the wide e%res taxing powers of the issuers, ' ' these obligtoions are s^nd quality only to Federal obligations. I 8 u g g e s t that you consider that the ’64 models will be revamped with greater emphais sales appeal. On this assumption, and provided that you are to. a position tp assume risk, I would hold now the . 50-») chance that the may get ba6k to your cost irs.lpride tojhei^ngxtiew^kaonths .ln|wheintlie new , models are un? veiled.., ^ ■ (CpPyRIGHT 1963) the firemen’s jobs be eliminated commonwealth of Massachusetts gradually, as the men retire die 3,^ 2002 offered (when issued) or switch to other Jobs, with a provision for negotiation on each job. the railroads eliminate. Railway Says Earnings Up NEW YORK m - The Chesapeake & Ohio Railway, the first major railroad to report on May earnings, said yesterday they rose nearly 60 per cent from year earlier. The C&O said net income for May was $4.6 million or 61 cents a share, up from $2.9 million or 35-cents a share in the like 1962 month. Gross revenues rose to $33 million from $31 million. Weaken Soybeans by Profit-Cashing CHICAGO Ml - Profit-cashing weakened soybean futures with declines reaching a cent a bushel today in the first several minutes of transactions on the Board of Trade. Grains were steady to easier. Broka's said the pressure to soybeans appeared to have been related to a disappointing repSrt by the government on inspections of the commodity for export. , They amounted to only 1..1 million bushels. At least a few guesses were that they would be twice that total. on a 3.25. basis; or Cincinnati, Ohio, School District P/4’8 of September 1,1967, selling to yield 2.10 per cent. Q. “About 7 months ago, I purchased 1,000 shares of Studebaker at 8.1 The issue is now 6. Do yon think that I should hold these shares with the expectation thaty they will recover to price within a year?” J.D. Car Makers Still Driving for Records 'business Notes A mart who contributed much to the science of automotive en-apartmenl head, his present po-Dr. Lloyd L. Withrow, of 130 Tree Top, Rochester, retires at the end 6f this month, under provisions of General Motors retire ment program. He received the Horning Memorial Awardi twice from the| Society of Auto-i motive Engineers' for his technical! papers on engines and fuels, and received two] awards for pic-| tures of the combustion prQcessI and auto Igni-' on. WITHROW Withrow joined GM Research Laboratories to 1926, became assistant head of Fuels and Lubricants Department in 1948 and four years later was named de-aprtment head, hla presen sltion. By CHARLES G. CAIN DETROIT —The aUto industry will build its six millionth 196.3 model car today as it continues its drive to eclipse all previous production records. It also will turn out this week the one millionth truck unit of ite 1963 line. Auto production for May, which was estimated at 715,007 units by Automotive News, a trade publication, was the second highest May total on record. The high mark was 724,892 set to 1955. Ford M6(tor Co„ which lost an estimated 30,000 cars from Its scheduled May output, had 12 of its 16 assembly plants working last Saturday to make up the loss. The drop In Ford output resulted from a nine-day wildcat strike at a Chicago Heights stamping plant, one of Ford’s key units. American Motors, whose Kenosha, Wis., assembly plant had been on a 24-hour basis since last November, announced it would drop the third shift, but absorb it into extended operations at the plant. It said there would be no change In the company’s normal output. field, Conn.; and Hobart, Ind. Feeding the fire under the construction boom has been the build-u p to funds looking for investment. Richard W. Baker Jr., vice president of the New York Life Insurance Company, told the annual Eastern mortgage conference of the Mortgage Bankers* Assocto- Fide in thei^ngxLJfei^^nontiis^^ grand total of almost $62 billion of new investment funds available from all sources in 1962. as against, about $49 billion the year betore.” Is there danger of overdoing the office building spurt? Elmer C. Bratt, head of the de^ partnient of economics, Lehigh University, replies that by its very nature construction relates to local geographic situations, and tglk of excess office building to New York and Los Angeles needn’t apply to other places. He sees a large and Increasing need for office buildings. He notes that now there are two-and-a-half times as many office workers as duririg the last big building booih in the 1920s. He adds that each office worker takes more space on the average. He sees a “need in 1975 at least 50 per cent above present levels.” News in Brief to three cars at Lloyd Motors, 2023 Dixie Highway, lynterford Township, were reported broken yestepday. Damage is estimated at $^. Rummage Sale, Wednesday, June 5. 12 Mile Rd. and Gardner, Berkley, lOOF Temple. 9 a. m. —Adv. Rummage .sale Toes., Wed.,' and Thucs. 9-4. , -Adv. MOM’S rummage, Thursday, 9 to 1. Indianwood and Baldwin. -Adv. Roast beef dinner, Wednesday, June 5, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Grace Lutheran Church, Genesee and Glendale. Adults $1.50. Children 75c. -Adv. Asks Sweeping Overhaul (rain: WhcRt July H*r .. 1.85H 0*U 1.WV4 Sept. Deo M»r .. 1.87V4 July .. 1.02 Sept .. 1.9314 Deo ... 67 ... 07% .. 1.80 Mar Rye MOV, Dec.'..., ... 1.87% ::: Securities Legislation Sent to Congress WASHINGTON (AP)-A proposed overhaul and tightening of the securities laws — one of the most sweeping in the history of investor-protection legislation was sent to Congress today by the Securities and Exchange Commission. ★ ★ ★ The SEC asked enactment of the entire bundle during this stoh, and told the House Interr state Commerce Committee that it believes the securities Industry will support it as constructive and practical. The commission omitted some proposals ‘ which It said earlier would be transmitted this year, SEC Chairman William L. Cary Indicated these will be forthcoming later, probably for consideration in 1964. PROPOSALS The proposals filed today would: 1. Extend to thousands of corporations whose stock is bought and sold “over the counter”—Instead of on the organized exchanges — the full-disclosure and financial reporting requirements which now apply ohly to stocks listed on the exchanges. Wr ★ ★ 2. Tighten the standards of character, training and experience required of persons new^ entering the business as broker-dealer representatives or salesmen, and eip-large SEC’s disciplinary con^ls over broker-dealers and thelptem-ployes. ★.....4r Curb to some Mtent some abuses which havn/occurred 'hot Issues”—new stocks whose prices have'soFed beyond normal patterns/of toovement—by requiring that prospective buyers be furnished with prospetuses, giving full financial information, tor not less than 90 days after the stock is issued. The present requirement is 40 days. STRONG SUPPORT In New York, the New York Stock Exchange and the American Stock E^dhange, the two largest in the^ nation, quickly voiced strong supprt of the SEC Jiro-grqm “in principle.” / * * * They specifically praised the propsals for fuller public disclosure by corporations of financial information. Both ^exchanges already .enforce rather stringent re-w quirements along this line. G. Keith Funston, stock exchange president, and Edwin D. Etherington, president of the American Exchange, said they appreciated SEC consultation with securities Industry leaders during the formulation priod. -THE PQNTIAC PBESS. TUBSPAY, JUNE 4, 1963 TWEKTY-THREE Relief From Reality “Br Ne«l Adams Unger a While in Merhory's Rosy Glow By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)-'niey say anticipation is better than realiza-tion^but sometimes recollection is better than either. ■ ★ Softened’ by memory’s rosy glow, the images of the past offer the mind a pleasant relief from the dull realities of today and the harsh prospects of tomorrow. One of the greatest pleas-urea in looking back, of course, is that you don’t have to live again the bittersweet years as they actually happened. You can pick and choose among your memories. But you’re a real veteran of living—and entitled to wear your BOYLE combat stars-if you can remember when: Nice girls didn’t go out on dates until they were at least 16. The biggest sport in town was the fellow who had two striped silk shirts—and a charge account at the'local Uvery stable. Almost everybody got, paid on Saturday; and Saturday ni^t was heaven on earth — the rainbow time of the week when life reached its peak. . Ono mark of a man’s success was to be able, when he passed on, to leave a big gold pocket watch to his favorite grandson. Parents told their children, "Don’t be stupid.” Today it’s the chiidren wlio tell their parents. RACCOONS AND SQUARES There were more raccoon coats on college, boys than there were figure, not a teen-ager’s term for anyone unfortunate enough to be over 25. One of the greatest crosses of motherhood was having to wash baby’s diapers by hand. Anybody was considered well-to^o who made $4,000 a year and had more than a $5,000 mortgage on his homoi . JACOBY ON BRIDGE By OSWALD JACOBY When I mw^t-smaiyx^, I can remember my grandfather telling my father that he should never lead away from a king and that the lead oTanlniBulF ported king was even .worse. Since I am now a grandfatho^ I reaiize that was i quite some time back and condi-l tionshave changed. There is a time and place for anything at the bridge table and there are plenty of occasions for violating grandfather’s rule. If WiSliwys attention to the bidding instead of thinking how bad his hand is he wili npte both North and' South have shied away from no trump. In that case it will be most unlikely to find one with the ace and the other wiih the queen of hearts and JACOBY therefore a heart lead should not get West into any trouble. Once hrl&Hwrae-tatois-eoDf elusion, W^t will lead the kitig of hearts. East will signal with the eight, but it won’t really matter since once the king holds West is going to continue the suit. East took his ace and led another heart for West to ruff; Now it didn’t matto* vdmt West did. The defense had three tricks in and there was no way to keep East from making his.king of diamonds. Nobody contributed clothing to the Saivation Amy. You either wore it out yqurself or gave it to poor relatives •— and that’s th& only kind of relatives that seemed to be around in those days. Many old people would rather quietly starve—and did—than accept public charity. Every village had a harmless character known as the village idiot, but nobody wanted to send him away to a mental institution. Sometimes he was the best-liked fellow in town—and, in his own way, the wittiest. ' You could be arrested in a lot of places for mowing your lawn in a pair of shorts. ' ^ The biggest traffic m^blem #as runaway horses. A shUtless man was one who had more flea-bitten hound dogs than diildren in his backyard. An intellectual was anybody who had read three poems by Robert Browning all the way through—and claimed to understand what they meant. It was widely believed that Russians could never build airplanes that would fly, because they would surely forget to put the engines. A husband was regarded as henpecked if he did more to help his wife around the home than rake up the leaves once a year. ATSS ASS WXT , WASeSl aasss 4K7» «Q84S 4|JSS ♦ KQWi wjrss ♦ 104 ♦k^AKlOS Eut and Weft vulnerable MmDi Beat Beatlk West 1 ♦ Pae* 14 Paaa J4 1^ a 4 44 laad^t I Astrological ? * Forecast f-i nr rtdnet omaer r»r W«4n«t4»7 . "mawttrTBM-efawfW-W* Jj tft ?;r.*«Y.r R..P ■un tli«» «n r««d . . . and correctly InUrwotcd. Bo ipjomc. dear A word to too wl«# ibpuw b« lumclentl . . . ,,, OEMIMI (M»y 71 •« fsj; ss‘‘SiiY i!no today 1“ CON8ID*aATIO>«.'JBo Awr- bashful. what you muo» . . . — J? %^J|t*that Is NOT BNOUOf ---your pro- ireepUve- LIBRA^ . atltutes for quality. _TWa ab to human relatlonahlpa. Be *°'re0BP*0 (Oot. *3 to Nor. *»i Lunw cycle high./ only oppoe tlqn - or panic. Show of atrengto wins long- "siai^TABIUS- (Nov., M to !>•«.. Humor, varaatllltr " " PI^I’ (Febi M to Mar. SO).: imprjM aii^mllloa by remaining, calm under fl??! ffioWdSe family . memMm. ^ Wt scold. Dsnlo or “prsach.^ of approach wIm favor. VhDDOTBa>AT,M,|^^^ Vehtarea Oorp.) TWENTY-rOUK . THE PONTIA€ PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 4, . ilgned that o g'clock a NoncE or ptmuc ralb . .....hereby given by the uttder- ‘ -n June 6th. IMS at lOiOO l- 77 E. Huron St.^J^MlUae. tucB]«an.^euc-eale ol-a lUR Plxmsuth I l-Door beating aerial number' LP 2H5177 ..m K. k.iri fnr cash to the highest I thereof may be made Pontiac, Michigan The undersigned 'May'^l'ieer 'Associatet Discount Corp. Oakland, and State ................. Monday, the 10th day of June. IMS elect two (2) members of the Board JSducatloh for terms of four (4) years J. MIX (Advertisement) Richard H Donald W- Porter -and to elect six (01 mer and Lapeer tor which p lowing persons have been nominated: Harold J. Abrams Arnold R. Jones • Thomas H. Atkih- Thomas Qlles Kai .Ballard Daniel T. Berry ' Russell Bright Wendell Brown Beecher C. Bavei German Burton R. Bhlfman ..... W. Hackett Howard A.,Btltes Harrv T- Hahn Raymond H. Storm William B Heaton Raymond A. Toung 10 vote upon the following propo- a wonderful, wondrous world-in the heart of Chicago’s Loop 1500 rooms, all air ronditipned, all «nth free TV. The world famous Sherman House has set 5(nart, new standards with,;its completely renovated, fabulous "IHollittes. Diif owner-managers are always on the premises, ready to giva yoii just a little bit mdre than impersonal chain operations. Whether you want a Ipxuiy suite or a sophisticated single, you will enjoy our entertainment-centered accommodations. World-famous restau^nts, too. You will want to go to tin COLLmOm INN Dine 'n’ dance or just relax while fabulous, fun-loving fountains sing songs of romance. PORTBRHOUSB LOUNOR It’s bottoms up served by e bevy of bountiful beauties. And hors’ d'oeuvres are o WRI.L OP THii SRA , Neptune once came for dinner... never had it so good and decided to stay 'til he tried every sealriod delicacy. He’s been here lor 12 years. Fish! Does he eat! HCOTjeiB RetarvaMonar rUrnnkUm t-MlOO NOnCi; OF ANNUAL XLnjTTON Raymond Kaluayp- ....' per $1,000.00) of .... valuation, as equalized. foF a period of twenty (20) .years from 1063 to 1082. both inclusive. Notice is further glvCn, that the poll for said election will bo —--------------- ____________ „ _____ ___________ Eaatr ern Standard Time, and that the voting places will ----- Shall Waterford PROP(?BlfnOh lord TOOTshlt District, County .of. .Oakland, State of Michigan," borrow the sum pf not Million TPwo Hundred Plfty Thousand Dollars ($8,260,000) and Issue Its bonds therefor, for the purpose of „. ___.'aylng the dost of furnishing, and equipping a new junior High School building, new elementary echool buildings, a new bus garage, and additions to the Waterford 'l^wnshlp High l^horf Junior High School'building, and to existing elementary school buildings, remodeling the "A" building on the Waterford Township High School Site, and acquiring school " ‘ ■■ additions to sch— -school district? _ bond PROJEcrr opehatinq tax LIMITATION PROPOSITION Shall the limitation on the total ., Charles — ....., . Michigan, do hereby certify that according to May 8, 1883 the total of all voted Increaees in........—------.....------- --------- 16 mills established by Section 21 Of Article X of the Michigan Constitution, affecting taxable property in the Waterford Township School District, In aald County, as fallows. voted Years Increases Local Unit Increases Effective Waterford Township School District ............... MO 1863 to 1871 Incl. 1883 Incl! 1963 Incl. County Bchool Dlstrlct of Oakland County . .. . .60 1864 to 1969 Incl.. School District No. 1:2. Fractional of the Town- ... 9l sites, all In si Date May 8, 1903 OAKLAND COUNTY TREASURER’S STATEMENT AS REQUIRED BY ACT 293 OP THE PUBLIC ACTS OP 1947 I, Charles A. Sparks, County Treasurer of the'County of Oakland, of Michigan, do hereby certify that according *- ----*- ■ May 2. 1983 the total of all vr*-" ‘--- the'irnriTiristaWlshed’V'sertlon'u of'f^^^^ X of the Michigan Constitution, ‘ ----------------------... ‘^_the-^nt)r-Bchool-Dlst^^ct^of"Oak^and^eottnty^^^ j • all purposes except creased M provided 1^ *“”“**^ Voted Public Corporatlone > Increases County of.Oakland ............................... None Township of Bloomfield ........................... 2.00 - _____ ... the eRnt that Issuance 01 such bond! Is approved by the electors? SALARY IMPftOVEMENT TAX LIMITATION PROPOSITION Shall the limitation on the total amount of taxes which may be as-»«ph yekr against property Township School Dls- Townshlp of Commerce ....................... . 2.00 Township of Farmington ....................... 60 Township of Highland ........................ 1.00 Township of Holly .......................... .6o Township of Independence .................... 1.00 Township of Orion ................:......... 1.00 Township pf Oxford ..............................76 ?SwSSh{p of Muthtle?d*^ 6 ^ w. Schbol DistrlcU County School District of Oakland County.........60 Washtenaw County School District ........... .60 Alihont Community Schools District No. 12 (A^dl> ( 6.00 SOD Township) ............................ ( 7.60 ......d In Section 21 of Article X of the Constitution of Michigan, for ’ ‘ School District of the City of Birmingham . . period of six (6) years irom igej to 1968, both Inclusive, by 31/, mills on epch dollar ($2.60 per 61.000) of the assessed valuation as state equallaed. for the purpose of providing salary Increases for school district employees? STATEMENT OF PURPOSE OF ELECTION the purposes of the Community College Proposition and the Tax Rate Limitation Increase Proposition And e Election of Trustees a _________________________ College I provide instruction in Collegiate and nan-colleglata oourSaa of study em- Bglate work, and the acqulsl-oonstructlon, ownership, de* ent and maintenance of fa-of the Community College, ) provide funds therefor, i t?*o?T6 ly Act #168 of Public Experienced person, business background in bonking, educofion or insuronce work, to serve in executive capacity with new stote program. Age, no limit. Bochelor's degree required. Retired executive will be considered. P l ea se give educofion end business experience when opplying. Forward credentials to Box 31, The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Mich. YOUR COPY IS WAITING... a little booklet that may change your whole financial future. If you want more income—or a chance to keep pace with inflation—or an <>pportunity to share ih the growth of American industry*-you’ll he inter-cstt'd in “The Modern Way to Invest.” You may not be an investcr-or consider yourself a prospect—but if you have any surplus dollars or steady jiicome, you have an investment prob-l(»m. This booklet will tell you an effective way to help solve that problem. P-ltone or send for your copy today. It’s free. INVESTMENT BROKERS ANb COUNSELORS FE 2-9117 818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLOG. lAAMEDIATE QUOTATION SERVICE ' Our FocIIIHm Extend From Craif to Cooit COMkroNTTY COLLEOB QUEB'nON -'of 1986,.as amendtd, being Sections ........ to^^3MjW or ^th^e^ complied effective in a community College! District to bo known aa _tlw Com- Jountles ol( Oakland. Livingston and Lapter. TAX RATE LIMITATTION INCREASE Eball ■ the* U^Mtlon^on the total Amount of (axes which each year against property Community College District 1 of the Counties of Oakland. . Idf. the pAyment....(^ ....... principal - Incurred prior to Dece be Increased a Preeinct No. 1: Orayson School, 3800 What Walton Blvd., DrAyton PlAlnr By OAklAnd County School District: Mill: 1864 to 1969 Incl. « ' DOROTHEA J. OREER, ; PontlAc Lake School, . Precinct No. 8: Montelth School, 2383 Crescent Lake Road, Drayton — Michigan Precinct No 7 Leggett School 3821 Pontiac Lake Koad. Pontiac Michigan Precinct No. 8: Strlngham School. 4360 WASHTENAW COUNTY TREASURER’S STATEMENT AS REQUIRED BY ACT 283 OP THE PUBLIC ACT® OP 1947 I, Sylvester Leonard, Treasurer of Tashtenaw County, * Michigan h-*'"” certify that as of May 3. 1883, the ords In my office Indicate that the total of all voted Increases over and above the tax limitation established by Section 21, Article X of the Constitution- of Mlchl-In any local units affecting the tax- ___ property in that part of Oakland county School District lying In Washto* \Ja»w*WJniri7; min. 1.83-1M2 I, Pontiac, Michigan Notice IS further given, that the Board of Education of said school district has estirtiated that six Million Two Hundred Fifty' Thousand Dollars ($6,260,000) ’ the amount of money necessary to borrowed for the project for. which s bonds are proposed to. be Issued. The following statement has been eelved from the County Treasurer as previously vote 1988 Incl. 1 1972 incl, Ooodrlch Area School DIsI.rIct ot the Cou Oenesee. Lapeer and Oakland ................. Holly Area School District ................... 'ownshlp School District of Lyon Township, Oakland, Washtenaw and Livingston Counties .:.. -Valley ^chool District Oakland and. Liv- ingston Couniie Northvllle , Public Schools. Wayne. Oakland ,jrnd ( .., 1968. to 1974 Inc HS9 to 1976 Inc 1960 tp 1903 . Inc 3 Incl, Schodl District of the CHy ot Troy Township School District of Waterford Township 1966 to 1965 Incl. 1961, 1982. 1983 1963 to 1971 Int 1964 to 1973 Int.. 1969 to 1983 Incl. 1963 t ) 1983 Ii Vaterford Twp. Schools).; 1670 tl 6 Incl. 1 Incl. Township ai t Bloomfield 13.08 e Township of White 11.00 ' 1962 to 1986 Incl. 1961 to 1970 Incl. 1983 to 1963 Incl. OAKLAND COUNTY TREASURER'S OFFICE CHARLES A. SPARKS. Treasurer I By LLOYD M. SIBLEY. Chief Deputy LAPEER COUNTY TREASURER'! STATEMENT A8 RKQUIRED HV A 293 OF THE PUBLIC ACTS OF -I. Lyle Ooodrlch>Tr my office and LAKE and RIVER PROPERTY ALL OVER MICHIGAN 1. NORTHERN LODOE^and^mesI t. AimABLE RIVER hdmii and gi eollage 600’.on river. 86,000 de 8. PRIVATE I.AkK, 40 aeret ai . -jNKKR LdHi eollage oh i lug bend of Manistee River. I. ElOilTY ACRKM on Big Hal River. $,0(KI’ InniUge. $8,000 8. ONE HOUR from Ponllae - T. YEAR C)UNI)\^allfornir( AND MANY OtHIRS REALTOR PARTRIDGE 7f Bird to Soo' 1050 W. Huron FI 4-3581 LiVINOETON COUNTY TREASURER'S S'rATBMIlNT AS REQUIRED BY ACT 393 OF THE PUBLIC ACTS OF li Michigan. If the Constitution of V. iiended. ^In any ' Lapeer and Oakland. effective to be as follows: unit Lapeer County -Hosplt II: Years effective 1003 to 19 Unit Oakland County Sohi LYLE OOODRICII. Treosurer, Lapeei'County, Michigan I, Dorothea* J. Oreer, CoUhty Treasurer of Livingston County, State of Mlch- .— 1---.... —.‘ijy tint ,, of May 1983, th» records of this office Imli- ..........,.erty k............. School District, Oakland Counties, Michigan and ’... ship School District, Oakla luron Valley d Llvlngal Lyon To? ............ .......... Washte- ____ Livingston Counties, Michigan, Livingston County: None Livingston County Soliool : »/4 Mill / By Oreen Oak Township; I By Brighton Township; No iw Hiiriin Valley School .............. (0 1874 Incl. 7ik Mills, 1903 )1, District; I 1976 ll By -Lyon (nllmlted. . 1983 ’pn .Townshlji^^Soliopl platrkt; I Mills, I, 1883-1965 ’ Treasurer • DOROTHY B. BARNINOHAM. Secretary of the Board ol Education ,aUd: 16 M.y^I.63^ «.d Jun. 4. 198 Couhty of Oakland, In tl le Juris- It being impractical t( I be served by publication ol week previous to said heai . Pontlaii Press,,a newspaper printed - V - . .... County of Oakland, To Carl Wuoklla, father of Worker's report having been filed his Court alleging that the presi ereabouts.df the father of aald minor . _..l*ralnor. sgld child has II remain under the Juris- thV name of the people of the ol Michigan, you are hereby noU-rhat the hearing on said petition earing. It belL. . . rvlce hereol; ______A A. BOUOINE Deputy Probate Register Juvenile Dlvlslor ie§96! Charles Freenfl To William Scott Preoman, father i said minor Worker’ll -eport having been t ___ _______ alleging that the | .rhereabouta of the father of said child are unknown and s" " r the Juris- In the name of the people of Itate of Michigan, you are hereby i.,., led that the hearing on said petition dll be held at the Court House, Oak-.and county Service Center, In the Cltj of Pontiac In said County, on the 12tf. ' ’ of June. A.D. 1983, at 1:30 o'clock ... the afternoon, and you are hereby commanded to appear personally It being Impractical to make • -----„ r............, - copy ....... prevRiua to said hearing In The Pontiac Press, a newspaper printed and circulated in said County. Witness, the Honorable Norman R. Barnard, Judge of said Court, In the City of Pontiac in said County, this 23rd day ol May, A.D. 1963. (Seal) NORMAN R. BARNARD true copy) Judge of Probate DELPHA A. BOUOINE Deputy ProbaM Register Juvenile Division June 4, 1683 Death Notices M„ Allen L.. Russell B. and Dennis R. Bomsta: also survived hy one brother, two sisters and 14 grandchildren. Funeral service -wlH“b(m»l!f7(lfertfte5dayr'june-6«at” 3:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment ( in White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Bomsta will lie in state ariuAu, uuisiu i, isoj, HENRY ,, 7776 PowArs Court, formerly om Utica; age 76; beloved son Mrs. Victor J. Compau; dear tlior of Mrs. 'Victor McUlashen Id Henry Cumpkn: dear brother Mrs. Doris Redmond, Mrs. soda Martolla, Onleta, Alice and ugene Compau; also survived by X grandchildren. Prayer service DIener Funeral Home, Utica, followed by requiem mass at 9:30 at St. Isadora's Catholic Church. Interment ' ....... Cemetery.~'AVrangements were, Ey the DIener Funeral Home, Utlea. ERVIN, May 36, 1983! olifWjrd 1 Hibbard Court; - "■ beloved son of Oeorge Funeral service will be . ......... 8, at 3 i).m. Dav-ls Vun r'unorar'*servlce " will be** he 'nnirsday, June 6 at 1:30 u.r MIss^'iHfii'bbi Mcnally, June 3. loos, oiii6ii6B Palrlok, 106 E., Fairmont; ago 60: biiaved husband ol Floy. Mo-Naily; dear father ot Sharon . Patrlola McNally and David Oeorge McNally; dear biXithar ol Oeorge McNally; dear biXX .John H. McNally. Funeral .... will be held Friday, June 7, at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Chapel. Mr. McNally will lie In state at the Huntoon Funeral Home,____ ftoitOANTjWi J! imiomrvr.. 6208 Oak Park. Independence Twp.: age 63; beloved . husband of Lennle Morgan; dear fattier ■ of Mrs. Ralph Oatra.nder, Earl, Harold, Billy and Edward Mor-«. gen; also survived by five (irand-.Ahlldren. Funeral service will be held today at 2 p.m. at the Walton Missionary. Baptist Church with Rev. Fred Weldon officiating, alter which Mr. Morgan will be taken to tho Gray Brown Bervlee Mortuary In Anniston. *'-•-----------— .....- will ‘‘* rangeman Oofftta F - -"T'wUl. .......... iimiston "^ir” r"uia*’8iiarpo-n$, Olarkstop. Death Notices, KNNBH, JUNX-3, 1983r taURLKY TTentim.i4S e...Montcalm; age 78; - be'loved husband ot Maggie Pln-. ner; dear brother M Lester W. and Emery Pinner. Funeral aerv-lee will be .held'June vf at 10 • "> at the First Church of the tne with Rev. J. E. Van-._ otflolating. Interment' in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Pinner will lie In state at Pursley Funeral Home until hour before service — nU^e ( • ‘ - e taken to the church. PREBILCOCK, JUNE 3, 1983. : bcl L„ - Fostorla, Michigan;, age 08; diirklsteror Albart'RovMgn' and Mrs.'Lillian Blckls. Funeral servibe will: be held Thursday. June 6. at 2!30 p.m. at the Fostorla Methodist (Ihurch with Rev. R. Kyle Ballard officiating. Interment In West Deerfield Cemetery, Mrs. Prebllcock will He In state at the Blackmore-Tubbs Funeral Homm 8028 Lincoln. May-vllle after T:00 p.m. today. SMITH, JUNE 2, 1883, PLOYD H„ , 160 N. Johnson Ave.; aae 67; beloved husband of Dorothy D. Smith dear son of Mrs. Henry Smith; dear fabher of j’hllllp, Susan E. and Rogbr -F..Smith; dear brother of Albert F. Smith; also survived by one grandson. Jamln, Mrs. .Earl Warner^. Mrs. Frank Oreen, Lsvern, Baalal. Ernest. Harvey, Stanley .and Clyde Tottingham; diar brother AlkVw MIIVv IuTpr 'Rnh. of Mrs. Albert Milky, Mrs..R--ert Braugr, Andrew, Arthur, Wallace and Leon Tottingham; also ■ ■ ■ — grandchildren and mvlce will be held Wednesday, e 6 at 2 p.m. at the bhsrpe-Funeral Home, Clarkston V. H. B. Harris officiating, nt In Lakavlaw Cemelery. ttingham will He In state _.8har^^oyette Funeral Ooye with TRH3KEB. JUNE 3, 1883, ROBER'T Corwin. 204 Dick; ag-hiwband.^of. J«j“u* J 'Bt"the if Ckrl Tricker; dear father Ol- -atobert Trlbker Jr. PV— arrangements are pending a Huntoon Funeral Home wheu Tricker will He In state. TO MY NEIGHBORS AND I and apeclal thanka to the Fire Dept. Rescue Bquad and the -Inhalation Dept, Pontiac Osteopath-Ic’Hoapltal. and Rev, W. J Teeu- MICHIGAN CREDIT : COUNSELORS 709 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Pontiac's oldest and largeat budg-at assistance company. _ GET OUT OF DEBT vfltlf payments as low as 810.00. . BUDGET SERVICE 10 W. Huron___ FE 4-0801 ME~lcS0E8 731-3169. OTIC A "Muslo-for all occasions." . (iHOl/PS CHURCHES ORGAWlilUt- s, lie for selling? 7 FE 2-3053. Pay Off Your Bills -L Without a loan — ct your Job and Credit C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL Home, Keego Harbor. Ph. 682-0200. COATS FUNERAL HOME________ DRAYTON PLAINS OR I-77W D.E. Pursley Donelson-Iohns FUNERAL HOME *‘D88iKncd tor Funcralu** HUNTOON 79 oaaaiSf FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 90 Years SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Service" FE 2-5841 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME FE 2-8378 Established Over 40 Years Cemetery loH retsonable. OA 8-3522. PerMmii ANY OIRL OR WOMAN NEBDINO - . ---'vlser, pi"" . Or If I 1 occasions. OL 2-AINTY MAm^UPPLlESTwO may have been In the vicinity o Our Lady of Refuge Church in Or «K«>-8 t -la. Memorial Day ^ ^Mem^r Know u ie wollj^ IF YOU WOULD*XikE ilAllONS AND er. OR 3-9402, AOORE8SIVE K'A L K 8 M E N TO sell classic, vintage, sports and domestic cars. Oreat ground floor opportunity. Mr. O’Brian at 2182 B. Telegraph Rd. after 6 FM. FART TIMB-$2I»^ ‘ -----monthly lor qual- ■ neat appearing to start imme- and good worker - —.......... dlately working'3-4 hours per nlng. Call Mr. Frick for info B A C K H O E OPERATOR. ALSO crane, clam or drag Highest wages for top notch man. AUard Contracting Co. New Hudson, Mich, "B 7-&70 BARBER, YOUNO MUST BE O BAKERY DRIVER — SALESMAN, Crantoed irnlary. free hospltallza-. free Insurance, pension plan. '---------------- -equired. Contact Jack Ralph. 198 W. Howard, 1 BODY MAN. EXPERIENCED WITH tiwili; Mt#a4y, . Economy .Motor Dla-1 Dixie Highway. CAB DRIVERS. 36 OR OLDER AN EXCELLENT opportunity HAS several OPBNINOS AVAILABLE. GOOD PAY AND FUTURE FOR THE RIGHT PERSON. CONTACT MR. POST AT 483 S 8AOI- COLLEGE STUD1<:NT $76 per week. Men needed Immediately for full-time opening un- i$r. Pace, 6-7 p.m. tonight.. COOK EXPERIENCED, SHORT OR- Blood^ Donors URGENTLY NEEDED 86 Rh PotlUve. 87 Rh Nogatlva DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE 16 SOUTH CASS CITY OF PONTIAC ■ Minimum requirements: height—88 Inches, weight —142 pounds, age 21-31 years, excellent physical con- Clty of PonUae 1 year Immediately preceding the application. Apply Personnel, 39 S. Parke. AppHcatlona must be re- l^CTKICIAN ^resident,al_wir^. m3. experienced 4LUMINUM, SID-' Ing^^tsUeri. $12 per square, FE EXPEillEN^EO TREE TRIMMER. Between 7 and 8 a.m._______ EXPERIENCED. REAL, ESTATE salesman to >in’ expanding bouse sales department. Call Mr. Partr^e. for peraohal interview. Front End Man Experienced In front-end rebuUdIng, MONTGOMERY, WARD Pontiac Mali fthopping Cen O A 8 STATION ATTENDAN nights, good pay. Kast Burtoc Woodward and $guare Lk Rd. OA8 station ATTENDANT AN mechanic. Must be neat and honei only experienced need app^ In p< SHOE ..SALESMAN I ni':ed worker.s— NOT SALESMEN If you are married, under 49 and will follow our company program ot 30 low pressure demunsirktiunk dally. I can teach you to earn $8,. 900 to $7,500 the first yoarr Car and phone necessary. Phone OR LABOl 3-2241 IRERB. EMPIRE $8811 OR EM LIMOUSINE AND CAB DRIVERS wanted. Apply Waldron Hotel. Par-lor B. MACHINE BUILDER hydraullo, lube bending scrapper experience, prefer,^,., lathe and or broach machine build- DrfWjfffTROACH fc MACHINE CO, Rocheatei, Mich._____ OL 1.(1211 sUion^wHh large Sterne chanlcal apptifiide helpful but qot vantage. Phone FE 5.«I19.__ MAN'‘WITH TBACf0R~iQUlPPED ......... foj^ -BOX REPUES-At 10 a.m. Today thoro wore replies at The Press linxea: 14, 15, 16, 19, 21, 36, 3'4, 28, 44, 45, 50, 58, 61, 62, 63, 64, 66, 75, 78, 85, 87, 91, 96, 97, 99, 119. Tell Everybody About it with a" Pontiac Press Want Ad FE 2-8181 _ _ HIGHEST WAGES for top notch man. Allard Contracting Co. New Hudson. Mich. -B 7-2370.. luntry Club. f Commerei LLECTOR AND SALE) 1, we train. PE 28219. FE 2 RETIRED MAN FOR CARETAKER, apartment bldg., main floor live In. Call 873-6349 botwean 7 and 9 SUBSTITUTE BOY FOR MORNING _Roaolawjirrolffle.|_FE "-0.k3.”_ ' BERViCE STATION HELP’WANT-ed. Experlenoo on time lips, brakes, etc. Al’a Standard, 2411 Orchard Lake ltd., Keego Harbor. ___ SUMMEffi^WOltK’’ Single man 16 or ovor* to Jsselst In all around work In otflce and warohouaej^^ Bmt'*1m'*’ *bprlng^1^Il!, ROUTE SALESMAN ai/um stn» axperlenoe. Well-known wIUi advertlaod prod-■ve. hard-hltUnji oo^porstton ,r*p%“Jrn- r^ on stores, t-territory. . _,8 BONOS PLUS HOSPITALIZATION PLUS LIFE INSURANCE S-DAY WEEK 0 OVERNIGHT TRIPS For |op^arnlngs^ and^ an Ing organization, send ^reMjm- experience pine age and tineuhona number to Pontlao Presii pbx __ WANTAd, jDkY‘'CLiASBB ter, ^^erlenced. Herald Cleaners. H»l|i WaiitttJ I Saiesmart building’ Materials has an”openlng for an axperieneed, salesman who Is seeking s Job tt)»J offers-a secure future and plenty of opportunity. Excellent company benefits. Apply personnel Mflce. MONTGOMERY WARD itlac Mall iWflIa APPLICATIONS NOW BEING Accepted for full time employment Kresgea Miracle Mile. __________ ATTENTION, 4 LADIES PART time, work IS hours at own con-vertlenco front homo, no expei> enco In cosmetlca .necessary, 9 a.m, to 2 p.m, only. Wed. Thurs ARE YOU Interested in working 6 to 9 3 evenings a _week and earning evenings a...... ) to $757 Car necessary, canvassing, no party plan. C BABYSITTER AND LIGHT BOUSE- CASHIER HOSTESS FOR^ NXOH T shift, must be neat^and pleasant, ages between 25 and 39, Apply at Big Boy Drive In. - Curb glris, day or night shift. Apply at pig Boy Drive In. Telegraph at Huron. COUNTER WORK, OVER ?X- ' Krience not necessary, Brlmlng- m Cleaners, Ml 4862l»._______ DENTAL assistant,. POLL 'TIME. Waterford Township area. Writs 68, The Pontjac P—■ I OR eurb girl, lor appointment ei EXPERIENCED TELEPHONE BOlL 7*cltor,—salary—and—eommisalon.. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS WAN^- 171 W. Montcalm, OIRL FOB HELPER IN OmCE! ■ Also some housework. Slav in. child welcome. FE-48228. ' GREENFIELD'S tfeterli,-counter imd iilad C Cafeterli,-counter ilnd iilad depL good working condlllons. meals and unlfCmis' fumlahed, apply O re e a-flelds Restaurant. 725 S. Hunter Blvd., Birmingham.__________ “"housekeeper WANTWD m 3^34 after » P ■» AousekeAper, white! liVb In mothertosf home. EM after 9 pm. raARN ACCOUNTING accounting, audit and t portunity while learnlni IF YOU NEED A 'OOOD STEADY cosmetlca and ..Jcnce unneces-Box 91, Drayton toiletries. Mafns or phone I MATURE HOUSEKEEPER FOR EL-derljl JVido*. mm^e fojj^omejlhan ..MIDPLEAOED WHITE WOMAN TO NEED DEPENDABLE SITTER 2:16-10 pm, 5 days. Own iraosporla-tlon. Vicinity of Commerce. Call 'Sunday June 9. MA 6-2386 NEED MONEY?'. UiiE r-Kot-nisr Model and show our line Full or part time - It's new — It’s fun —It’s profitable After 8. F« •-«»’> NURSES’ AIDES^ til shifts, no phone calls. Oreen SALESLADIES OFFICE NURSE OR ASSISTANT typewrltlen repl|r erence, expected salary. Reply to perlenced in typing, filing and etc. Apply In person at Big Value Furniture. 47 8. Saginaw.___________ I. Clarks Drive In. ) POSITION OPEN FOR PART TIME hostess and gilt shop. ' -------------- ... -v...,_Apply In pi ...n Devon Gables, Telegraph a W. Long L-— POSITION OPEN FOR PERSON CA-pable of general otflce work. Experience in Inaurance desirable. Write box 87 staling qualtfica- peraqnal Intervl LIBRARY AIDES, PONTIAC PUBLIC LIBRARIES 2 to 4 full years of college re-qiilred. Preferably In liberal arts Excellent working conditions. Salary $4,318 — U.229 hi 4 steps. Apply Personnel Offlco, Pontlao hundred bed convalesceni _ opening June IS, exoellent salan For application Call Ml 7-3290. sportswear READY-TO-WEAR SALESWOMEN FAst«pac«d buRV -------9 Intorented In working tor Please apply if posslbla WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8 from 6 a m. to 8 p.m. at our store in Tel-Huron Shopping Center. You may also place your applloallon at any other time convenient to you Winkleman's SINGLE MAN IN TROY WANTS mlddlfaged hounekeoper, llvo In. Ml 6>0a^. ftftot* 8:30 pm. . hourly n you. Apply 1( 81., :n a year. W« train ... . , i p.m., 10 w; Huron ..Room 319. ^ "SPANISH SPEAKING SECRETARY Ford Motor Credit Gomdany Has an Immadlate opening for a Spanish speaking secretary In the .,'INTERNATTONA'L OPERATIONS Michigan Office. Re-Include typing, short-—_ — Jluency In Spanish and English, Experlenoe As an administrative secretary helpful. Apply In person or write to,^ TORD MOTOR CREDIT COMPANY Personnel Office Room 1121 2()000 Rotunda Drive.'Doarbom, MlOh. ^ Ei^ual^En^lojjment (TYPIS’T **AND OENERAL^ OifFICfc, bookkeephig experlenoe helpful, ■Pl^'^jxperlenos, eduoattoh, and \ ■I . TH® PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JUNE 4. 1963 TWENTY-FIVE :H»lp WOTf^tiiHlIt TTPUT STATISTICAl. KLBCTRIC IBM tTpewrltcr. Full time or poe- r£j^ WAC^M, OV*R^YEAR8 PhD, Welled Lake, 5I4.98B, » or « daye. WAITRUS FOR DAY aHIFT, B-3. eloeed Sundays. Oreg’e, 8171 Commeroe, 'Union Lake. Waitress wanted, no. ex- ------- -ceeeary. HOLIDAY l»a-M67. a wsmtsasHs' and b a r W a i b, ComSeroe*^ed“‘°“ WOMAN^R SEWINO. EVENING Shut. nM7tl. Wa'Wtb:^ hAi^siTrtiR,' dRToW-villa. Own traneportatton. NA 1- »i8i after e __________________ WB Wltx TRAIN OUALIFnCD FER^ eon o( eaeeptional Intelllgenee. (or S^y to *tart. 3908 BUeaheth Lake a WOMEN WANT CLEANINO AND " 1Hfll~:Wr81Hnt. ■ FE- e-»W3. i WAITRESS Pontiac 4398 BID Apply b WdklAN TO Cl 6 CARE FOR CkttDAStS. WATriliBSSBS WANTED APPty IN jereon, 800 Lounge. 100 Cats Lake A S W RM OPBNINO FOR COOKS and cuiT) glrlt In (our locatlonr For .totorvlow eaU 008A834, at (or Mr. Davie. diUlilWtS J^b DstoRS AFFLi Watorfo^&lvo In Fpntlac DrlV( 50UFLE llilERS ?sr«? BSTABLUBBO WATXlNg ROUTE earolng above averaao. FE 8-8088. ilAli OR WOMAN WITH CAR. 190 N. Perry. 8.88.<:30 a.m. [ppiy QUALMEb 1TACHBR8 NEEDED (or elementary grades. Sacred Heart School. Auburn Helghtt. Call 883-3738 ^e(ore June M. WANTED - MAN OR WOMAN IN Blrmlnghai--------- car. Mutt - '' * route delivery. -o Mr. Stier. Clr-, Pontiac ~ anpl0yi^ '*^1*^*__ CAREER GIRL^ iitd wroU trtlMt McrcUry. food typing a.._ — Doctor's receptkmlsl 'WSJSSfcirir- Baperteneed SecreMry Midwest Employment OOS’^bontlac Stele Bank Building W. Maple-Wabeek Bldg.. 321 HIrmtegham. Mlchlgaa CaU Kay $U-$m EVELYN EDW^ARDS "VOCATIONAL Telephone' FE 4-0584 M'/k East Huron . Suite 4 iRitructiom-ScliMit 10 3-9883;________________________ LEARN HEAVY BQOIPMENT. 4 weeks, on Dozers. Dyagt. Lines, etc. Free placement. "Key.” 8330 ... ,..o. Detroit 21. DI OARDBN PLOW^ AND MANURE. MA 51620 OB 3-0865 itOTOTILl4Na ” fOZS 1101)600 . ■ FB" 2-802(1 RQTQ TItUNOr* LAWNSy OAR> denis 662'1224s 1 ** jConvalwcent-sINursing ; 21 .*'e* CONVALESCENT NURSING CARS private home, exp. nUrae. OR 34264 LAWN WORN. HADLINO. MOVING WAN-fED;' CARPENTER f^dltlonss g °>37Pt!"' WORK. Hiding, roofing, etc. WAnIeD CEMENT WORK. 1 ‘Wlfll~:'We8liBir - - ....... z WOMEN WANT WALL WASHINO and house cleaning. FE 3-7981. 2 WOMEN......DESIRE wAlL WASH- Ing, M wori^ FE 4-1131. BUSINESS ' TtlACitfeli DESBIRES Job of >ny type. FE M375 after 4. WOMEN OR GIRLS - TO ASSIST ■ubervlior In telephone worje. No experienco ncc^sHary. Will train.. A LADY INTERIOR OECORATOR. Pairing. FE i0343 . _______ EXPERT PAINTINO, DECORATIlid. paper removing. OR 3-73M. Building SerWce-Sup^sMl BLOCK LAYING CEMENT WORK CEMENT CONTRACTOR Quinn'S Construction Co. FE 9 A. YOUNQ HOUSE MOVINO. Fully equipped. FE 4-8490. HASONRY WORK. GOOD WORK, reasonable or'— '— —‘ FE 2-8620. 331 ________________ COMMERCIAL building and remodoling. John W. Caplet. MY 3-1128. Butlnsii Service IS ALL MAKES ^ FOUNTAIN PENS repaired by tactory trained men. General Printing ti 0((lce Supply - Co:r1T YV: Lawreiica^St;— ____ESTIMATES ON ALL WIR- Ing, will (Inance, R. B. Munro Electric Co. FE S-tol ITILITY TRUCK - Installation CEMENT WORK. ALL KINDS, Dreiimaking 1 Tailoring T7 trimming. 779 Scott Lake 11 TREE TRIMMING . moval. landtc suing. loC teeding. get i mates FE 9-29t Garden Viewing' , iOravei*Tup Dirk 6824745 3060 HUler Road Loading peat and black dirt at Hiller Road Archftucturnl Drawing MIW BOUSE AND REMODEUNO Plana drawn, lit. 9858900. Aluminum SMIng ALCOAJKAISER SIDINO RlSuloELIN^ and Aimi^K^S Kraft Siding & Roofing FREE ESTIMATEB FE 52«l PONTIAC FENCE 8032 Dixie H«y. OR 56803 fiuor Snnding ^ AWNINOS; MODERNIZATION Comblnattens. SIdteg, Porchee BRADFORD WINDOW It SIDING Free Eel. FHA UL 52988 CARL L. BILLS llR., FLOOR Sanding. FE 59789, 032-5063. - JOHN TAVLOk. >LOOR LAYING sanding and finishing. 25 yea^s experience. 332*6d7&. Asplw^ ASPHALT PAVING. BONDED. PE 2-2814 R. 0, SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING. sanding and linlahing. P h o n,e FE , 50S92. DRIVEWAYS - ASPHALTED, RE-paired ehd eealcote. FE 9-9167 or 874-1731. ■. , EAR-LIFE BATTERY, 00.. 1 Oenerators—Regulatore—dtaricre Boat Batteries, $7.95 303 Auburn FB S-1014 Landicnping A-l LANDSCAPINO, SEEDING, SOD-'dliigT gfairaig, lop' sail'. OR 4-1761. A-l MARION OB KENTUCKY SOD laid. Seeding or redreaeliu old lawns. Free estimates. Breece Landscaping. FE 2-UI4I, l"E. 9-3302. MBRION BLUB SOD, PICK UP OR delivered, 26fll Crooks, UL 2-4643. SBEDINO, SODDINOr BACK HOE-In*, bulldoaihg. Free estimates. EM 3-2419 Building Modsmiiotion 5CAR OARAOE, $800 Inel, QH Doors, Concrote Floors PAul o'BAVfes'cONTOAC'flNa Free Billmates OH 4-1611 GUINN . CONSTRUCTION Homo improvemente. garages, ear-ports, addltloni. All types of cement work, patloe drlvowayi, and •Idwalki. FE 9-8122, Lawn Mowers SPEED'S pLaCE, 1214 N. Perry, moWera sbarpeiiad. Used bikes. LIconiad Bunaars NBIDRICK BUILDING SERVICE t-Home. Garage, Cablnate. Additions FHA Verms. fb t-eooo Lumbar OBNERAL CARPENTRY, KITCH-en oablaote, reertaUoD rms, FE 51818. TAtBOTT r,UMBER Glass atstelled In doors and windows. Oomplete building service. 1029 oaklaml Ave. FB 4-4909 Cnr|Wt Survicu ■CRWBITZBR CARPET SERVICE. iTlA o'rTrf‘*.7te Pointing ___ HOUSE PAINTING. WORK OUAB-anteed, FE 3-462:i or FE 4-1106. ' MOORE PArN’flN'o" Interior, Exterior Specialists UL 2.367I Free Estimate PENNY PAlfiTINO a'ND DEljbnAT-Itig Company. Expertenoed. Specialising In exterior painting. oaneriU 6-Ooil^ repalra. Free eatlmates. EL TU80N CARPET SERVICE. HAVE your carpote oleaned by experl-Ohoe. Call OR 3-8686. A-1 CEMENT WORK, PATIOS. -Walks, drives. Free estlkates, FE 54798 or OR 3-0080. ■ Piano ^Tuning ^ \ AAA PIANO TUNING ' , WIEGAND'S FB 2-4924 ■~i5T'SuSlNO“AND kilPAi|fi^, Oscar Sohmidb. Fl 2-9217 X-i.'fcBMEfiT WOkk, WALKS AND drivos. FB 8-4788 or OB 3-0980. ALL lUNDB CEMENT WORK, REA-sonable. Jenien. 662'2B29. CiEMiNT WORK, NO'THrad TOO large or small, commercial or rnsl-denllal, free eetlmatei OR 8 6173 or OR 3,0600. CiCENSED SIDEWALK COflTBAC-tor, all other typo oement work. FE 58840. Plnitarinj^arylco^^ Ai PLAS'IEBINO and ilEPAIRS ReaiionAme. Pat Lee, FK 2-7622.^ PUBTiitlNO. FUICIO'" BBTIMATO D. Meyers £M 3-0163 Ploviring FOR LAWNS AND GARDENS. Roofer roofs; new. REPAIR ------------eg FE 4-1 Televilion, Rndle and Hi-Fi Service REBUILT AND OUAHANTBED TVs tl9.9S up. Ob«l TV and Radio, 3480 Elfeabeth Ulte - FI TrM Trimming Service ACE TREE Ik STUMP REMOVAL Trlmniliig. Get our md, BILL’S TREE TRIVMINO AND rsrooYtl, Very low cost. FE 8;28M CUT-THROAf Tree Removal — Lowest PrlceG Hf/J-4070 or 332-3823 ■ beneral lice Service fm “*5J»b;________- r- -- ---liONTROSg THEE SER Tree removal—trimming. Trucking HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAMB price. Any time. FE 8-0099. LldHT AND HEAVY TRlfCKING. rubbish, (111 dirt, grading and gravel and (rout end loading. FE luP SOIL, PEAT, BLACK DIRT. road gravel, and 1111 dirt. EM 3-2419 VAN ‘s'^RVICi I ClasBincatton No. 22 WE HAUL DIRT, GRAVEL, TOP PILL DIRT, AND BUMISH. ' TOWINO. FE CALL PONTIAC Truck Rental Trucks to Rent Vii'Ton ptokuDG TUUCK8 — Dump Trucks — seml-Trallsra Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co, 82 B. WOODWARD_ 4.(M8i FE 4-Mt __Open Dally Including Sundgy _ Uphoittering KAKI.B8 CUSTOM. UPHOLSTlUl-bu|^.^3420 nurlelgb. Union Lake. EM MEiBR'“ & 0T50N“UftHMi™ FE, 9-3e93j,_Prss ftt. FE 8-1864 TiioMAs rfFHwS’iSniNB 4498 W. WALTON IlLVD. FK 5-8888 BLOOMFIELD WALL CEANERB. Walls and windows. Reas. Satis-(aotlbn guaranteed. FE>1691, BARGAIN HOUSE I TIZZY By Kate Osanti ,, ••NiivtgN.-kwTjs.aiatUlMiM “That’s a real pretty dress. My mother has one a lot like Hr Shore Uving Quarters 33 Listings on houses, (armg, oeraago. buy and aell land contracts. ‘'tontiAc realty " ra »<279 ^^ROB^H. IRWIN, H^LTOB. WANTED 4- OR S-ROOU B JOIN THE “BEST SELLER LIST” WnsygiPR tnm . fmil skindfl Af Reaftor, 77 N. Ba^ni^St. •— FD 9-8189. 2 ROOMS AND BATH. 63 Norton. >E BRIOHT ROOMS AND newly decorated, 3 clothes , storage apaco. Apply 190 ROOMS. ADULTS, 8 M E. Howard, alter 4. 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH AND entrance, W. Bide Couple only. FE 34)681. alter 8, 334-0849. > BATH, ' DETORATED, BY ---■ $18.89. 3344EI2, . KEEOO 3 LAROk ROOMS. .................... Harbor. . lakk privileges, children welcome. 829 per week. 830 deposit. ROOMS NEWLY DECoEwIS, — yird, Irwfi. Auburn Rd. Pre-^ ‘ I 33M30i " .. ROOMS -Alfi> BATH, UTItlTTES, .. — A p.m. 88 Dwlghti (umishod oacept uUlltles to r (mod oouplo. No ' objootloo _ small baby. 817.80 b«r week. " CLARK iRKBTON - NiW 3 ROOk te I contract. UL FLATTLEY REALTY 8 Commerce 383-8981_____ — ' D OARAOE. Lake area. PrieSd at 812.900 terms. ,8 years old. EM 3- HACKBTT REALTY._________________ 1-BEDROOM bl-LEVBL. 2-CAR rage, bulll-lns, hot water best ramie 1118, vanity In bath. ------------ gutters. ithing d dupllc. ?.9o?:'’% MYLES, BUILDER _______EM 30733 4 ROOMS and bath ¥ith BASk-ment and largo lot MOO dow"- — W^.W^alanco due^^oji^md o( 4-BBD^OM BRICK RANCH. I'M ROOMS AND^BAIH. OA^HBW. (ull basomont, 8800 down, FE 8-0473, Egoludlng lag and tnsuranco Immediate of Ponllao, orate to suit. LAKE PRoSTTI-ii bedroom, large onoloscd poreh, garage. Nice large yard, Lake priv-, lieges. Lower Straits Lilke. Quick EM 3-12«r_ ^-"Tm 9.7181 Homo U> tea*^mffy?^'mUes north o( Hooliaster 4 bedrooms,., oldv home with (Iraplaoo, oarpottng. F' car garage, (enood yard, .Closf to F&“ANK*'sHE?A»fl>** * BTTifHlRTlliSIESa O%0*“84,^'S jier iiioiitli Leaving , iy OWNER, SEVER apartments S-b^room bouses.. 3 large homes and lola 812,900, also houses to rent with option to buy, New and used W'owmn, libViLY bi-lSTvII, lie'lroums, 3 baths, 3 fireplaces. 2-car plus attaohed garage, beautiful ■ selling. West Blooml.leW Twp, Con- 14298.' SoletHoyMe' BY OWNER, NEAR ST, MIKE’S, 3-bedroom. gas heat, low. dam-pay-. jBent^-Muatrilwvw -gadir criieBr FE 90373. dbLORiD, HEW family HOUSES —nod Develo----* FE 8-1909 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK For Homo Ownership L^s_____ t’i Easy___________ FB 2-8171 em kitcb Jitebsn, (ull -.......... . (umacs.' sorssned porch, garage, (ull cement drive, large Ane’-"' (ended --------“ ' iiEC'v'llVE’S RANCH-’HOM*!' 8 rooms, tergs 2-csr attached gi roRa, 4 IRs, lake privileges, miles west of Birmingham. 89.500 FHA ot 01 terms or 81,000 ••— on land contract. Paul Jonci .ally, FE 4-8590. E. BLVD. — MT. CLEMENS AREA Attractive 3-bedroom brick ranch home. Full lasemCnt. Completely (bilsbed recreation--------■‘— kitchen, bar ^ ■ ■ edl landscaped lot. 9 Dlwood Realty INCOME SPECIAL WEST OF TOWN — A home In tl rental Income value d( 8U8 iw month. FuU ^Hce 41 ’Waterford Realty. OR 3-1273. labor four-bedroom HOME, large lot, priced (or dulf Waterford fmv. OR 3-9279, OOLFVIEW EBTATES - ggeep- ____ 3-bedroom brick ranch, 2 batbs; lovely carpeted Uvln« room with fireplace, — ..... dining ------------- -^’th Dum-ins. is a« m, beautifully land- kttchen family roon., -------------- - scapad yard overlooking. Lj--------- AngeluB.-- Private lake privileges. Owner leavmjf state — sacrUlced Tvlna state — sacrificed It Today, call WATERFORD REALTY, — ......... .....-HEkiE^F foV^'*you7'children —■***-'•- righta neST- .bjL—.............. —batB. easy to clem lUe Boom. No steps to climb. Lares 119al97 I"> Lowered price 810,»0. 8900 m< In W-13 tt)o. plus. tM. and 1 HAOBTROM REAL ESTATE. 4 W^ Hunm 0B^39S, eves, e IN UNION- LAKE .VILLAGE. and post office directly s street end surrounding stores, lieges te 3 Iskes. Ideal fi pric'CeYCr'offsred. EM 3-3054. LAKE Flk)NT completely TOR. nlshed. 2-bedroom, (Irwlsco Only $12,200, EM 3-6703. HACKET’T REALTY. LEAVING STATE: WILL .TAKE payment for equity In---- home. Assume payments of t month. Cah FE 2-9333 alter X E D NEIGHBORHOOD. 1>-•y, price reduced for quick ;. 02& down. Phone FE 8^74. 819.000 MODERN 2 BEDROOM HOME. ON 10 Acres, partially wooded. »•-tural llreplace. Owne South Lyon. OEnevs 7-MACEDAY LAKE PRO 3330 Homestead. 3 bedrL... ly decorated, carport, w^ Imd-•caped lot, nice beach. ,010,900. PH^ mtge. or La] er 303-8004 dr r take, o :e privileges. 8 n Bldg. Co. - 4 LAROK 'ull bseem t. Wooded no. R 3-8191 NO DOWN PAYMENT . Why pay bent when you your own homr-for as 8M0 te cover, prepaid ti room homes avsUabls witb these ed'”smt**awattb!g* your* ^soection. ASK ABOUT THEM TODAY. NEW MODELS OPEN Ssturday and Sunday 1:!» -- -— :00 p.m.: Friday. 1:30 to le.'a located b> Loebmoor Hills, sun. at 32 Shagbark Drive. (Shagbark Drive runs north oft Walton Bird. (University Drive), IH raHes west of downtown Roch- NEW MODEL 3 BEDROOMli plumbing. wlrWg, dry well. 80.890 ®“ aooomij NEW 3 BEDROOM RANCH. DINiko - m. 1% baths. Full base-------- >dsd lot. Lake privileges. OWN YOUR OWN HOMk. CALL US for assistance. Many te choose from. Custom building. 3 bedrooms, '---- 80.390 up. EM 3-6709. HACK- B’fr'REALTYf'_________ ON Walled lakI:. 4 BEDkboM Phone 340-9700.__________ OBION AND OXFORD A down payment _ i ROCHESTER, 3-BEDROOM BRICK with pool, basement, last ohsnet. tew price. OL 1-1770.' l-BEDROOM HOUSE, SMALL LOT; free and clear. FE 44447 SMALL HOUSE, FURNhokXll) SWEETHEART HOMES 3 _bsdroonris, j;o,. b*$«>b*i'tj’ .. ,.^a” . ___ of Walton Co. FE 2-0123. a monlh. With bassment. i IS* $oo”'dowm'’!Baidwln%' Horah Bld‘g“c ATTENTION WE BUILD ^ S-BEDHOOM tri-lbvEl FkATURlNO; buUt-ln vanity, cupboards galore, formica counter tops, oak floors, plastered walls, brick trim, 00,809 on your, lot, ■-SCO modsV oall H“— 34170 ob FE 4SII90. 11 Hiiior Rsalty, fb NO DOWN PAYMENT 337 B 6320 Harmans — 3 bedrooms tllo bath, large lot, brick fr~~‘ -Only ■-* 'ii'oo{* O’NslI Rsalty Compan: 282 S. Tclegrapli Call (or Roil O'Neil CHEAPER THAN RENT 'NORTH PONTIAC $69 Down, NEW 9-BHOROOM HOME $55 Month 'Everyone qualKWst, Widows, i FEATURING Wall to well oarpatlng All wood doors Permanent hot water Furnlturo finished osbinste 3-bedroOm brlck^ranoh md garage. * irge- l«t, 80,900. - 8500 t-1028. ■NEW HOMES north or vamtAc ■ Pavad Straete,— Oaa Heal 3-Bedroom Ranch $69 MONTH INCLUDING ALSO See Model DaUy 12 to 8 ASK ABOUT OUR TRADE-IN FLAN $9,950. NO MONEY DOWN Ranch typo 8-bedroom, homo Witt full basement, oak floors, gas beat, copper plumbing and full Insulaled. Ready to move la. We arrange fl- Big T IVA*N W*^sSSr'aM 042 jQslyn '*% 9-8471 THREE WAYS ...y we oan aatl you a borne tai any ■toga of oonitruclton. Completely (Inluied, or soml-flnlibod, wlU material (umlahad. or okterlor oom- & l^'^or tSS.’C ............... Frombea between Hatittory'Bd, Hbgtwayr You must A. C. Compton & Sons 4000 W. HuroF OR 3-7414 Eves. OR 3-4S88 FB 2-7058 Associate NO money; DOWN Mixed Neighfiorhoods Land Contract, VA, FHA ASSOCIATE BROKERS 835 MONTR -sdlate poesef .• Credit Che< 855 DOWN Nlcs_ modem Jiome In North part of Pontiac. REAL VALUE 828- COLORED 3-Bedr6om—Basement Formica counter topa Built-In vanity Birch cupboarda $100 Down CUSTOM BUILT HOMES YOUR LOT OR OURS Ross Home8> Inc. . FE 4-0591 , HAYDEN 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL $9,99S_$1,000 DOWN TVz Car Oaraga J. C. HAYDEN. Realtor EM 3-8904 10791 Highland Rd. (M-BO $9,500 2-3 Bedroom Ranch Homes Bulkins NO CREDIT CHECK SPOTLIGHT BUILDERS WEBSTER . l-bedroom and bath, full base-,nt. oil heat, City water. $9,000 th $790 down. r year-aroumi Van Norman frontj^ towering I. pleasant living la seldom "* HAC.STROM REAL ESTATE WILL BUILD On your lot or ours DONfeoNALD ___ ___________OR 3-2637 KEEGO BUYS KMl beaoh on C»m ifealni 9 qualified JACK LOVELAND JACK PRESTON USTUM BUaPER ' OR 3-11 TAYLOR (k)infif to Krtirc? N«Qt btingiUow, l«rir« living, rm>tn, •Qi'QtiMd poruh. utUity.jrooiiif gn-rftfdv iQiioetl ynra.- on ciirner lot across street from Wll-llamsi privileges. B^ng sold furnished for only 07,790. Terms, , Owner 'fran sfer red iroom ranch t White Lake ‘ifi I pHvllotfea. Feetiirei James A. Taylor ,, ......, ESTATE INSURANCE 7732 Highland Rd. (MOO) OR 4-0908 ----- ilftll* ft In Q Miiiiritkv M (n a Sale Huum^ Elbow Room Attraetivs 4.bedrooin bungalow on i iWr W sctnlfi ; rolling ground, dose to Clartston airdr-iMW- a*. prsssway. extra acreago* avallaUai $8,900 with 91,800 down on-land con-traot. Suggest you see It now, this one won't last. 49 Sale Hui^sus AL PAULY ’^nin? room. In llVtog ^^ffir”giB= Cozy A charming 4-room, bungilo clean pdvsd street close to Fisher Body, besuttful condition throughout Inel. well oared for lot, hardwood floors end gas best, asking WARDEN' .REALTY 3434 W. Huron_. 893-711 Last Chance No Down Payment No Mortgage Costs EHA Terms No Payment 1st Mo. 3-Bedroom Brick-Faced With or Without: Basement or Att. Gsrags - Optional: Oven and Range Storms and Screens Cyclqns Penes Model Open Dally From 1 F.M. Vor. Kinney end Corwin. 1 block east of Oakland. 3 blocks north of Montcalnl. FE 8-3763 1 tO 8 LI 3-7337 10 to 12 A.M. or Bros. WESTOWN REALTY NEW HOMES Full Basements ■ $00' DOWN ■ NIGHOLIE eSARKSTON .. ^ Three-bedroom bungalow, tiring and dining area.. Kitchen, Pull basement. Carport. Oil HA heat. Vacant. EASY TERMS. ROCHESTER Three-f-'- ■$68 per mo. and iniuroncs. model on Carllslo Fisher'Body. OPEN 10-8 DAILY OPEN YOUR HOME IS YOU! nvest In Dersonallty as wel IS pleasurable livability. ThI irand new "Beauty Rite" a ;906 SHAWNEE, situated o: today. Your porsonaUly will reflect Itself In tbs many beautiful appobitments in this home, partloularly the gorgeous Master bath with stall u.v... room overlooking &e lake, or the exposed, tiled and — - •---------*. Everyone tstmant te like holding t keeps on owing n », 1 or we’ll duplicate at $24!^. Mr. Prokesch wbl ba your host. OL 1-0575. TRADING 18 TERRIFIC EAST SIDE . t . A dandy Capo Cod typo, .six-room, 2-story, 3-bedroom homo — out—Fenced yard—Beautiful recreation room In basement — wall-to-wall earpethig and lots and lots of other nice one. TODAY 1 SUBURBAN HOME ... If you have a green thumb and like gardening this one Is for you. A nlo# Parmaslons — 2-bedroom home locilted on 2 $12,900 . OWNER TRANSFERRED — Beautiful Split-Level boms ....«, This one has everything, owner laorlflelng tor a quick sale, ^ulll In 1960, All new Ellxabelh wi^ake prlyflegi heat small" d , . Istlng mortgage. „ _ - AL PAULT. REAL’TOR 4516 Dlxte Hwy. , _ . OR 3-3800 ™ ^ n BUD // Tip-Top ■ Suburban Home j-bedroom brick rancher with attached 2-car garage, large tot. - . »s.'^bartraerv2 kitchen with eating space, tola of cupboards, full basement, rec-. reatton space with , ^fitonal ftoe-place outdoor grill, onsyed at ’, 823.900, by appointment only, >-:i Near Wisner School * Spacious older homo with Y 'b'Od- rooms (1 down, 2 up) near school and bus; Includes generous living room, separate dining ■ M*8SSTOc---------; “Bud” Nicholie, R,ealtor 49 Mt. Clemens St. ' -FE 8-1201, after 6 p.m FE 4-0773 . _____ „e^1c*tchen.^'l^E brte^^j^Oaa HA heat. Vacant., 8ASHABAW — Maybee Bd Area Three-bedroom bungalow. Living and dhiing area. Kitchen and ulU- 'iKv heaL’cLM^A'o COSTs“^OT^ YOU IN. Several to choose from. NORTH SIDE , ,. . "---- bungalow. Living ling ell kitchen. Full HA heal. Newly dec-U4T. About 1279.00 Two-bedroonj _ burinwt (-------— .^orated. VACANT. Eve. oall MR ALTON. FB 4-9238 NICHOLIE HAROEK CO. .ii'M W. Huron St. FB 9-0183 IRWIN BRICK RANCHER homo located In V full basement, aul eted ^ving ' and tile, floor b beauty, l-bedroom ,. Is Ideal (or’older couple. ’?Smpo';^”*i»icfiot'““ tmll^ bon i setup for anyone coirte. Terms. ANNETT Completely Fur»ished 3-bedroom with full basement and gas heat. Large living room and full size dining room. Bedrooms are Kooct size (or comfortsblo vlng. Convenient to shopping facilities and transportation In Keego Harbor, 010,900, easy terms. West -Side—4 Bedrms. sehool, within walking distance 0 f downtown and hospital. $12,090, reasonabla Upper Long Lk. ^states 7-room brick and frame rartch, excellent condition iughout, 3 bedrooms, 1- 15 baths, 3-car garage, gas heat. Large beadtifblly landscaped- lot. Only $33,090, terms. 3-ione heat control and Just everythbm built In, in the kitchen. Price reduced to 838.- ST. HUGO AND HICKORY GROVE Schools nearby — These nice people have bought to the city and want , a quiets deal on tlieir' Immaculate,, two-story brick — New wall-to-wall carpeting and rxoepllonully good deco- king IIO.OOC and deal," yard, closel.. Large living room, attracllve kitchen. 2 IS’xKl.' bedrooms. Home Is In tip-top oondltton No down payment. I YOUR TOTAL COST — ■ 7-room, Permastona —. Bast Side looatlun. iment, gas he«. On- .... „.J bedroom or family room. 2-oar garage. Fully landscaped. - Priced at only 812.900. buiigalo Full ba O’NEIL KEAI/I'Y CO. 282 S. tBLBORAPH ROAD OFFICE OPEN 0 lo 9 'E 3-7III3 OR 9-202 MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE STOUTS Best Buys Today Lk. Home—Brick Incoirie r Colonial bu ' large rooms a room and bath ’apartment on 2nd floor. Pull basement, paneled r e 0. room with bar abd fireplace. 2Vj. car garage, screened patio, dog kennel. LoU af shade. 820,090, mortgage terms. 40 Acres—Close In ........ —-.............. short drive to Detroit. 3 bedrooms, large olosets. living room, dining "L, ” stone (Ireplaoe, large kitchen, 1(5 FE 8-0466 LAKEFRONT CI.,EAN 2-BEDROOM collage on Woodhull Lake. Good solid beach, high shaded lot. Could bo converted to yeai’-aiound homii. Full pi’lco IIKRRINCTON 1111.1..^ -3 IIEDBOOM HRICK HOME, Blildio ceilings, carport, full basemeul. gas heat,>um-bi oven and range, snack bar. Full price only 812.000 ou FHA $55 PER MONTH INCI2UDB8 TAXES AND INSUR-ANCE. A redecorated 2-bedroom ROCHBS'TER COLONIAL^^ — ueted ilvliig and dining room, eue-^ tom kitchen with dishwasher, breaklast space, item walk^oul venlently located to siJiools and shopping. Only 120,900 with reason- R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FF. 4-35.H 349 OAKLAND AVE, OPEN 0-7 RENT, BEA'IER - For, the growing family with small Income, older 3-bedroom home In Laka Orton, large shaded lot 2-ear garage, baeemenl with oil heat, glaesed front porch. 1809 down.' 0M40 per month on balanoe. Immediate pos- LEBARON SCHOOL'Area — Attractive 3-bedriHim aluminum sided hwne, hasemenl, gas hsat, aluml- LAKB-rnoNT TRAUH ownir aooepi free and clear lot or tr{t.‘i,‘<;j^’,tvnr‘rK e. basement, oil heat ' — puflBQMHlun In Utn* for ACRBJft pnroplucloiiQ Warren Slout, Realtor r N, Saginaw St 1 FE 5,8189 Multiple Listing Bervloa ' i . GILES ONLY 010.90Q for this spMleis home >'» Northern High ares, Oae heat, ----- I itorms ami screeni, I'ti- l[e, eereenetl pallo. Dish- S^lfr^Tu........ Priced to go with easy terms. "OR COLORED 4 TIBDROOM.1, f basomnnr oil heat, laige llvl Only 07.06 mOI. ' GILES REAI/VY CO. FE 9-6173 221 Baldwin Avn. MUL%LB Lirrmo Service _ $5,900 vmo^tA^Mtf^kij EM 3-7114 TWENTY-SIX ” THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 4. 1963 Salt Howm ^ ° «9 COLORED Wo mODOT dom. na doting oo _BlQt > - bedroom home. $57 "^“ru^eLiTyoung $il« Hwlut SELL OB TRADE N1 NO MONEY DOWN +rWe»el oi ranch sUrter homea on your tot. Model open 10.6. G. FLATTLEY; BLDR. EAST SIDE R bedttooms. 2 down, living room, dining, and kitchen. Full basement, gas heat, escellent condition, paved street, sewjr and .water. $9,700. PHA Terms. _ _■ BL/OR REAL ESTATE OR 3-1708 JOHNSON » with $450 ^own. Quick posses- $200 TO $300 DO’WN We have several almost new horn Reasonable payments Including ta Ev^lngs^Uer^S call , PE 4-5254 A. IOJlNSO\>& .SO.N’.S ' REAL ESTATE-INStJBANCE FE 4-25.1.5 COLORED w Reconditioned I 'N^Plus mortgage i t modern faungalow ....... :ment, gas heat enclosed il for large family 23' living room with fireplace, IVi baths, gas heat; 3-car garage ”" cellent condition Priced lot LAKE FRONT — For only $17,900. ■ excellent value. 3-bedroom ;her with attached IMi-car ga-i. Large fireplace 24-ft living J.. II. BROWN, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lake Road ____Ph, FE 43.564 or FE 2-4810_ Templeton WEST SUBURBAN Id water. Price reduced f K. L. Templeton, Realtor 2929 Orchard Lake Road 682-0900 ' KENT Established In 1916 WEST sroE *’/ pried living roon'n^dlSng ell I lopped cupboards ^ in attra BATEMAN d bath, plus Xarge lot, $22,900. Terms, HIDEOUT — Nearly 5 acres, nor 'lovcl Kent liu',, ReHltor jaoo Dixie Hwy. at Tclc,{rap.i l-BEDROOM LAK? FRONT: Custom built brick bl-level laki Ironi home ou Lake Angelus, 15 x25' living room kl'Sien'^wllh 'bufu-lns, frtill wood cupboards. Iiilcr-conr system anr baths, caiijicted throughout. ^Lak with fireplace, kitchen, laundr ‘ balh"'ip. Hsipl'.'' ga^l'rTlAjv'ar af^MS.OQO w'iIIi'’T3W' down or ,, rilA^ terms.' Sliqwn ,by, B.UPQUU- Bloomfield schools:^ ■Condition Living room with llrr-j)lacr, dining L^. ^kjtchen' wIlli ^rl big -draiOT^ Uijouglioii|, John K.,Irwin »i Son? ’’^'■*'5"” Plioiir rrf) ll446 ~Eve. f'E '2-il5(i3 $j‘|)(ri w I, ^1,1, prlvlIcgTa,. ’selling Frushour tK: Struble •s Eljr.Hbeih Ukt, Road n-im, _ _ inc 2-1mi DORRIS" SPORTSMANS rARADISE; room* I'"" bKl'i^^ 2*' lirrtllacrs* only'$21 WKl"'*** OWNEIIS^^ TRANSrEIIRKI); uja’n *'apra^ ,*"l '4 "batlls, 2*' cai CRESCENT LAKE ESTATES: Iiiriil location for young cmipir. slmn. 2 bpdrtKini^ huiijialow jorated oij cJ>i^m?!" ,La|g^^ iamllj"”ltaX car gara*BV,'*$l'l).«i!"*''''’'* ' WXcLimfvE nosHiiinE court TERRACES: i Tlir nlllmale ol colivleiices with ^Ihls^ bricky tec a”nilnumln. 2’bedrooms? separ-nient. *” ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES: .5 beth /iX'l'irbell’rOonis' :si3''i,ri'ron.’i;to'’.:i‘n:i R’r*n*i I. Evenings- call OA paved St.,' basement t COLORED BEDROOMS A neatly decorated home with large entrance hall and sun rpom, hardwood floors, n'awTglrage^’sJs^^ -'cfTeJms [ -TERMS closing costs' only, 6 rooms and bath, neat and large 11 vtogTm.' Onfy $6l5()o!*$47 month covers everything. down payment. M-59 to W (Opposite City Airport) tun ... at big Bateman sign. MODEL OPEN, Dally 5-7:30, Sat. 2-6, Sun. YOU CAN TRADE ' ■t harming LAKEPRONTI approx 4-acre par-cel Wlth 350 ft. frontage. Beaullhally landscaped, brick ranch built. In 1952. Marvelous lake view from With extra large family ro<»n.> Lower level upen.s to outside patio. A four-car garage makes this comw plete. Priced at W9.500 with $8.-000 down. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. Perfect for Doctor or pro- °"the modern way Lake front 111 the rolling hills Just north pi 2 car garage. New carpet(ng find outside underground sprinkling sys-lein. $21,950, $2,200 down plus blos- .scaped. Brick with attached Lake privileges one blocl fall to .See Ihl.s. Price rec $15,5(10 with $1550 down pli TRADE YOURS iBick Terrace keep and a Budget Price. Only $7,500 with terms, LET'S TRADE lilizahcth Lake Estates BUDGET PRICED hiiiigalow , with garage ou big 141x170 II, coriirr gill-eel of ■ l-wo^^ A’^hpoFand alli'in CTinparabl'"'’ EHy!abeth*Tak* prlvL Priced lo Roll fe^t at' olily witir S930 aowu fjuis uosis^ expe'et MrcALFTODAv’’*’'' *“'**‘* .■ - TRADE lill'’. B.X'LliMAN \VAY call today for all anpiiliument in your eaiTlest convenience. fled loLMm:^ LawreiTce W.,Gayl6rd Broadway and Flint Lake Orion MY 2-2821 or_____FE 8-9693 ’ ■ 'l-g * u.lr Ranch Home hedronuIfi.*^'’AM STANDING vHOMEI Humphries Multiple Listing servile Homes-Farms 3-bedrooin, nice clea 1CR1C8 - froh.J?»gJe._LaIto^ Scenic ilonie Sites NEAR LAKE ORION rolling acres, 66.500, beautlfiil acres, 63,76ti. ^EABY TERMSi Call OLIve 0-0371 Maurice Watson 131 Uulvei'sHv ' Ruchestcr. Level Aid rcMy, 85x150', 61.9 ’ plus balance owing on paving. MACEDAY LAKE Beach and boat rights 75x150’, 6: ®°® HAOSTROM REAL ESTATE 4900 W, Huron OR 4-0356 Eves, OR 3-6229 or . 682-0435 ' Bloomfield Highlands WOODWARD SQ. LAKE AREA Over too large, wooded, rolling lot to choose from, most have an tn provemertts — Sohoolsr ohurcbci stores, etc. Priced from 6990 0 RORABAUGH C. PANGUS, Realtor ORTONVILLE 133 Mill Bt._____NA 7-381 Wanted!! Lett to the City of Pontlaie 8POTLITE RlDG. CO. ■ _____ IfB 4-0968 ___ ACREAGE Approximately 32 acres In Oric Twp. Just about a Mile east , U..S 34 and convenient to the ne exprgssway. Nice quWt area biuld your new' hdme. A plat you can also have a riding hors Plenty of land cleared, aom woods Good hunting. About 550 f of road frontage.. Good Inveatmen Purchase on land contract wli only I3J00 down. ' Brewer Real Estate ^E 4-5181___Eves; FE 6-0833 . per gent mortaage, ta - home of your dreams. 110xl60-foot sltag, low as $3,175. LADD’S, INC. 1835 Lapeer Rd. (Perry M34) FE 5-9391 or OB 3-1331 after Open Sunday 13 to 6______ Sale Farms WHITE LAKE AREA 'k mile of road 6JI 'WMt at Par. Sole 57 30x00 BLOCK QUILDINO. IS l^rlc^d for qulcli^ sale. '671 Orchard A CHOICE TELEORAPH RD. CORNER across from busiest shopping center. 138’xl85'. 40’ X 60’ C. B. bldg. Entire lot paVed. A truly "hot location" lor any type business. 2-fam. home rents for $170 mu. Included. Buy or lease. Reasonable. Call Ward E. Partridge. lopo W. Huron. Pontiac. way, price $6,000 OB 3-9110. 247’ H Kill WAY FRONTAGE on Dixie with approximately 7 acres of land with 3 buildings. Onl^ $6,960 tor quick sale.; Wo Y J. Toll realty 335-11857 — Salt or Exchange tlonal Northern Mich. Neat city. Retired or aggressive couple. Ml 6-3696. PROBLEM WITH A BUSINESS ' OR REAL ESTATE? PERSONAL ATTENTION TO ’ YOU AND YOUR PROBLEMS 50-ST ATE COVERAGE Call FE 4-1579 LU*V mi.KMAN, S.E.C. Reallor-ExcliatiKDr JOILW. Huron sy. Pontiac Business Opportunities 54 ,J^vsW«n "bS'm ime^ NATIONAI, Business Brokers Inc. 1B43 Orchard Like FE ^8-UNlT motel ON 1-75. BLACKTOPPED ----------- quarters. All State Wide—I-ake Orion 176 N. M24 OA 6-160C BEER -PARTY' B’TORE Nsar Union Lake, loaded with equlp-meiil. $60,000 year, very short hours. Bewitltul^ store, nmiM d(Un" CAIX*RYAN REAL'fY time. 065-1535. C()I''I''I’:E :m(i DONUTS Located In Waterford • Twp. aroi on main ^arlery^, ^ flood wliolOsBle polenllal. Ownni wishes to retire due to health ant age. Will seU real- estate, biiiilm’ai add equipment together or divide. Call J. A, Taylor, Realtor OR 4-0306 ;__________________ _ vicinity, (west $IBe) Excellent trey maker, Investment roiiul For Inlormalton call FE 1-4508. tor Mr ......- ■ WflRTilEKN BAR liquor, dancing, end take out license. Large seating oapacHy, Real eslat; and ail on easy terms, MICHIGAN llitHiii(’,sK Siik’H, Itif. JOim LANDMPSBER, BROKER ■"° Telegrapli Drive-In ... Busy locattoii -- oil M.')». I order business, counter booths. Owner will give loot. .... building and also give buyer op-Itoii to rent dwelling adlaoent. Here Is a chance lo go' mto a 'tlirtvlng busliitiss with everything you need provided I $4,500 cash fur the business. Call f<|i' detalli. Humphries _Membcr Multlj^e l,lslln(LServtce REHfAffiAFT"wn'HT‘i,OT8’W sale'. Reasonable. Low down payment, See Mr. John Worgol at 734 Joslyn or 236 W. Walton after 5 SPOltTlNC; GOODS SHOP , The finest operation In thla bilsy oily of Midland, Sbeolallios In bowling balls and eqnipmtmt’ Over 636,llbo gross aaloa. with a net of 611,005 plus. Full price $8,500 plus stock. REAT.TOR PARTRIDGE I Is (lie Bird to See ‘ / Mem: Partrldoe Assuc., Inc. .... want TO BUY A ' LIQUOR STORI';? , CONTACT PARTRIDGE iO' W. HURON FE ■ K3581 i-AkBgr’hiER, WINE T'AKlTiSO'F, ilack* t(ip"t'oa„.alef, ~EW~33Q51II; ' DOUBLE ROLL-AWAY BED Subj€cL4 , Money'anil People If you like lott of money and lol gif people and can raise 636,000 1 cash or equities. Then please com A package deal eoneliUng of a automatic olaundry ' (took In ove 638,000 last year) Dry cleaning cer. ter. trailer park, complete sport- ...................udlng boats money here llve't More ways opener. You won’t .. CaU f< GARDEN Sulu Land . l . 16 AN IMMEDIATE SALE -FOB YOUR Land Contract: Wawted ^ntrnct«-~IWtg. 50-A ABSOLUIWLY THE FASTEST Action on your land contract. Caali buyers walling. Call Realtor Par-triage, FE 4-3561. ,1050 W. Huron. LAND CONTRACTS W A N T E I Earl Parrels, EM 3-2511; EM 3- $$ AN IMMllDiA’fE SALE FOB YOUR Lanid Contracts CASH BUGKNER- FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN Drayton Plains — Utica LAke ---- $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE FAST, CONVENIENT (Licensed Money Lender) Auto or Other Security 24 Months to Repay Ilouie & Auto Loan Co, 7 N. PERR'Y ~ FE 5-6131 7-PIBCli LiVINO ROOM (BRAND ). davenport and chair, fo— lions, freue covers; 3 step LOANS 650 TO $500 —- 635 TO $500 COMMUNITY LOAN CO, 30 E, LAWr- - WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $500 We will be glad to help you STATE FINANCE CO. 508 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. J’E 4-1.574 21-IMCH TV. blnatlqn. 14 walt6s 1 $25\th $500 ON VOUU Signature AUTO or FURNITURE Up to 34 months lo repay PHONE PE 2-9206 OAKLAND LO.AN company 202 N. MAIN ROCllESTi'lR ROMEO - 214 E. ST. CLAIR IsOANR m TO $500 AUT08 LIVESTOCK ot PL 2-3518 PL 2-3&10 "Friendly Service'' CASH Loans to $2500 II your JgtoU .wiUi only one imal -jonWTy pnymeni; Family Acceptance Corp. -■ -----lal Bldg. 10 W. Huron -?phofie FE 6.4023 MORTGAC E ON ONi ....... . ““Mah’ll Cash Loans -$6e(Ct(r'$250Cr-’ on homes agy pigee In'Oakland County Voss & Buckner 303 NATIONAL BUILDING ]'1’ 4-4729 HOME'OWNihs CASH IJRLIMITED Exclusive * plan. Remodel yoi home. Pay past or current bill Consolidate Into I Bear C.onstructlon Co, Call anytime. If you ■ Big ALL HOMEOWNERS 2nd Mortgages Pay All Your Bills Cut Payments in IJalf Get Extra Cash Too r You Need Pay Monthly 00 Month! 61.600 $ 50.31 3.000 - 66.38 3,800 01.59 3,500 109.83 5.000 156.II No CliaUeis or Home Repairs Required 334-2231 INTERSTATE MORTGAGE • 3Vii B. Saginaw, Corner Pike Swap! AlH.%nl**r3.X; 16 roof CHRIS CRAIfT', '76 IIORSE Gray Marine Inboard i engine. Sell or trade tor 1000 or 1001 car. Call EM 3-3040 between 7 1055 FORD CdNVBRTiBLE, N B W ‘7P,'^re-toilg|^^312 jnotar, best offer ILBAN 5-1 Oak ftoow aluminum 'storms, door grill, pave' FBNClNO.^m •BOOM_ _ BUNGALOW II - baaemant. I, oai'iiatlii^, an6ho^ FINAL CLEARANCE SALE ON ALJ-MERCHANDISE ^ BRICB-REJ»: Beautiful living room and bedroom eultee, 670. $1.50 week. Bargain Houee, 103 N. “ .. TWIN SIZE, WHITE DACRON ruffled bedepread with matching duet ruine. 1 swivel rocking chair, I Speed Queen Ironer. FE 6-0005 after 5:30. singer SEWING MACHINE, ZIO xagger for designs, etc. Lovely caWnct. Pay off account in 6 months at $6 per month or $30 cash balance. Universal Company. ■_____________- "r'oUND glass china CABINET. $39. Bookcase, $6. Gateleg table, $9. Eleotrlc dryer, $31 Apt. electric atove, $24. Kitchen dropleaf table. 4 chairs. $15. Plano, $19. Chest type freexer. 22 cu. ft, $119. Kneehole desk. $10. Roltoway bed. $19. Maytag washer. $39. Sola, foam cushions $19. Gas and electric stoyes, $15. up. 21 In, TV, $39, Kenmore portable washer, $10, Refrigerator, $29. Odd chests, dressers, beds, sorlngs, etc. Pearson's Furniture. Orchard Lake 30 INCH GAS RANGE $50. APABT-,ment gas range .$25. 32 In. elec, range 159,65 clean guaranteed refrigerators, stoves and washers_aii alxes $10 to 1125. Sump pump $19. 17 In, table TV $35. China cabinet $22. 3 pc. sectional $15. sola $W 3 pc. bedroom $29. Wardrobe $0. Base cabtoet $0. Electrolux vacuum $15. Odd chests, dressers, chllfe-robes, beds, springs, bunk beds, lamps, radios, dinettes and rugs. Everything in used furniture at Bargain prices. Also BRAND NEW factory seconds. About ‘/t price, E-Z terms. BARGAIN HOUSE tJPEN AS USUAE durino btreet repairs BUY-SELL-TRADE -■---BAB6WH4-H0USE------ TO_ N. Cass at Lafayette FE _$:«M2 3 ROOMS FURNITURE BRAND NEW vmt RANGE, REFRIGERATOR $319^$15 MONTH BAROAIh HOUSE 103 N. CA» -■uV-BELL-TRADE-FE 2 r'YEAR^^CHIU RpOMS'^ INCLUDING MAT- .. .J. Ireeser capacityv 6 682-3194 after 4 p.m,__________ LARGE UPHIOHT FREEZER OB 3-7782 LYONS KITCHEN CABINETS, ~AUto. dishwasher, disposal and sink — Elelctrto range, Ironrlte Ironer, Hamilton dryer, 3 chairs. 2 daven— ports: Reasonable. MI 6-2800. MAYTAG AUTOMATIC WASHER. good condition. $28, 682-2863- . . SPEXIAL $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 HOOWB OF furniture —Conslstt of: 7-plece living room suite with -Aablea,'4 cocktail labMiand 7-plece^ bedroom suit* •'(‘h dresser, chest, full —-Innersprlng mattress and box spring to match with 2 vanity lampa. 5-plece dinette set, 4 XlawL ; double bell with w.. I bookcase. 1 9x12 rug Included.. All for $399. WYMAN 1'UPvN.ITURE CO. I E HURON / FE 4-4981 I w PIKE, • FE 2-2150 OR^iJEUJXE WA8HEBi.?S2? coiiultlon. 5 years old. 3,63-2004. new" lawn mower. ■ vaccum clesnerand amnllfier. FE 2-6411. PAY BALANCE~D U'e op $36.66. Sewing machine, *lg sag automatic. Beautiful console cabinet. Just dial for decorative patterns; button hojss, etc. Tike over pay-mentsFof 64.95 per month. .FE 6-9407. Capitol Sewing C REBUILT AND Dryers, gas A electric . , ■ Refrigerators. $46 and $56 Frigidaire automatic, mstalled and serviced $96 21” television new picture tube, ^OOOD housekeeping shop ® Of Pontiac 51 W. Huron SI. FE 4-1555 SINGER ZIG ZAO, $29.50, EI^CTPtO-lux Vacuum. $14,95. Console Chord Organ. $39.90. fecondlUoncd typewriters. $24.90. wholesale lo ell. ^rfs^^apDjlMces, 6481 Hatchery WASHING MACHINESi CONVBN-tlonal.. automatic pump, 6120.50 value. 660.50. scratohird. Orchard Li WYMAN’S _ BARGAIN STORF It. stte gas stov|B M»;05 lampa, warehoore $1 2S weekly. PEA TURf: 42 Orheard G fifcE outlet, h fV MaSillNTlP Sl-INCH COM-Ternis available. _________ ... .Tl 3-2257, Open 6-9, 515 E. Walton Joilyi 0x12 RUGo. foam BACK, —reds, $72 95 Oval braided.----- Axmlnlsters. *49,95. 12x15 nylon. Heavy rug pads. $9.95, PEARSON’S FURNITURE 42 Orchard Lake Ave._____ 40 INCH ELECTRIC RANGE, GOOD Chest and bookcase bed gray or walnut MANY OTHER BUYS BEDROOM OUTFITTING C-. 13 Dixie Dreyton Plains AUtOMA'TIC WASHER^,^ 2 cl'Otrlc ioiidm'nniir l?E 2-.5070 Teautiful singer swing needle. auloinallC. In console Have built In ZIg Zag for making button holes, blind hems, monograms, and an otnor automatic sewiTig. just by dialing. Pull orlce $60.50 or —■ extract i^^MicSlgah'NecohiEin^ X^foMATIC washed and DRI-' er perfect, washer needs ______ $00. EM 3-3730, ABOUT ANYTHING YOU SlANT FOB THE HOME CAN B----------— at I- a HAT.1RA L)i; L.......... birtfftjnfi. nv buy, Or uoiMc. v And look around. 2 acrCd parklnr. Phon'b FE 5*9241. pen Mon. to 6at^9 to'6, Fr 24 MONTire TO PAV nilloA E. of PoMtac pr E, of Auburn Hetgbis on MM tlL 2.3n00^ ^ BATHINETTB AND CAR BED -Call after 3:30 p.m. FE 8-1953. BLOOMFIELD H O M E. MAPLB 32?i&. * CLEARANCE I ‘ ). $:I0.05. Also maple or I CARPETING, SEVERAL CHAIRS, grknd piano, tables, 3 small commodes, decorated screen, patio furniture, lamps, lot? of ---- 850 Watkins, Birmingham. CHROME DINETTE SETS, ASSlfM-ble yourself and save, 4 chairs and table. $89.50 value. $29.05. New 11963 designs. Formica tops. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Or-chard Lake. CLOSING OUT , ALL FLOOR SAMPLES Gpen 9'HI 5;30_ Mon.'Ill 6:30 "edroom sets, box springs end — tress, living room sett, ol rqekers, lamps end lab'.es, obeets, dressers, beds, bunk EVBRVrHINO MUST GOI COMPLETE BE’d, COMMODE, Tortable fireplace. FE 4........... COMPLETE HOUSE FULL OP FUR-ijlture lor sale. OL 1-1480. DBAPERiiK 'CUSTOM MaM, lover delivered, aesorted slees amt jolors. Will alter, cheap for cash Aled heavy duty Singer 11L102. ---- 1865 Ruatlo Lane. IE IN MiiHidAN" nOMB DBLIVBRY-WHOLE8ALE MEATS AND GROCBRIB8 All nationally advcrllsed brandi. Savings up to 40 per cent. Soap, sugar, coffee, flour, butter, cake mix. cereal, soup, vegetables, fruit Juloei.^toMex, pdt milk. 0 UP TO 40 PER CENT F"r free catalog and lntor““''"" owing howjrou can buy a lone. 647-1577, 9-5. <'IX)OR'-MODErSALE l-Wot Amaiia Freeeor . 6199 “jM.TeVoraUi.hwaeh^^^^^ PAIR BLUE LAMPS, 2 WING Chairs, tables, rocker, marble dresser. love seat ahd other erticles. FE 5-1927. ANTIQUES, CHAIR. DRESSER A cupboard, hair trees, ice lor six Hevlland, lamps. Y-Knot Antiques. 10648 Oakhlll. .......... 7-5106. East ol Dixie. pt^-Rofttof 15-INCH UNlVEHsmf 3-WAY Ul-(axlal speaker, model 315. Also 15-Inch Woofer. FE M»86. 17-INCH WESTINOHOUSit PORTA-used 2i;i;..*5» SYLVAN 8TE1 Sal* MisMilaiaiMii BAG. GASOLINE CEMENT MIX-- $150. 615 Peeeock . HORSE DEEP WELL PUMP ■ — "5 336-1450. LOUVERED WOOD DOOR. / 1 .16X24 2-LIOHT. I 24X24 Andi»rw)n window comgleiR wUh Ktorm and Rcreftt, 01$ HT82. rwHEEL UTiliTY TRAILEH imH , recks end lerp, 665. 332-7663. I.ROOMTiOUSE, BATH. BAdEMENT* garege, '59 Rambler American. 2-noor wagon HotpiiInt eieclrlc Wove, (lining table and 6 chairs, aocot-(non and other mlsc. Items. FE •60.000 GRAIN. WATER S Iq ZIg Zag. fancy stltoh. slightly used III 4 MONEY DOWN FE 8-7471 CAST iRON RAlOiA’rdRSM E fTL enclosures. oH tanks, FE 3-4.366 CYLINBeR DORiiSfG iiAR. io' INCH lathe, Cigarette machine. Coca Cola machine, cash reglWer and aervlce station equip. FE M756. lllllngs.^ustom threading. Immediate service. Montcalm Supply, 156 Montcalm, FE 5-*"*’’ COLLECTOR SELLING , COINS, ft. ext. ladder., wheel barro' rocking horse, baby lenda, lav DINNER BELL. MOWER, LADDER, "vrs. aiioniirs, air horna. bench lilt, Reo motor, clothing and DR 1V I’lW/^Y CUI,VJ’;K-|' CORRUGATED STEEL PIPE 12 ” DIAMETER - ANY LENGTH Short lengths In stock for widening your present culvert •2.49 PER FOOT PICKED UP DELIVERY available BLAYLOCK COAL It SUPPLY CO 61 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-7101 BLECTlioLuX VaCUIInI CLEANER . Pay 6 paymenfs of 19 per _____I. Call FB 3-7633. Electro Hygiene C ELECTRIC LIGHT FDCrUBBB, ALL "192 designs., pi>» downs stera. Bedroc .561 Irregulars. ______ -.ily factory cat. Michigan Fluorescent, : ILBCTBIC STOVk, TTIUNOLE beds, llreplace mirror, bass Wood shades, traverse rods, drapes, bed-spread, FE S-’'""’ EVA NAtt»T_^>■' 62 66 GAL. FIttiburgh exterior paint, reg. 17.60 I, now only 65.96. OPDYKE * HARDWARE '■'7 Opdyke Rd. 1570 Opdyke. PE and poata, CABINET8. PLYWOOD OE. ALL XIND8 plastic pipe, new lower priced per hundred feet; »/«" 14.65; 62.23; IW 610.20; V/," 612.67; 3" 622.89. G. A. Thomp-aon, 7005 54-50 Weat. ' Paneling Specials Ak-' BIrCh 4-* •' w r------- - _____________jl 2nd 4x6 67.95 ..e fin-ibed maple 4x6 . .67.95 Drayton Plywood 6611 Dixie Wwy. OR 3-66U 5. piberfdaa la 0 I2-Incl> abc tra^, ti and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING 00.. 172 g. gagInaw. PE 5-2100. plugged and aanded . H" 4*6 ............. ..... 55’’ plugged and aanded . PONTIAC PLYWOOD ... 62.96 ROTARY 22 . INCH LAWNUABTER lawn mower, BrIgga and Stratton 3 hp motor, crank atart. 2 yearO > old. exc. condition. 625. 334-6627. , APACHE CAMP TRAILERS AND pickup camper 6325.00 and u" For the beat buy give Camper -----Ilao ■ try.-'6nehltM>*arlan. .pache dealera. Our Pontiac 301 Auburn. 332-6697. Other . ^ —_______________________ locatloha on j-epueat.____________ H0MP~WMP87 ^SSplEtFsET OPTIORStAN^rOP ■ itba at 67.90 per 1 balance. I/nlve Iveraal Company SCREEN DOORS. BABY BUOGY. lall PE . 3-71 Electro Hygiene Co, ______ BTOBY-CLARK PIANO. BLOND—3 TAKE ON moat new Makea I holee ana Iig aai • conaole. Only 633. alltchei, buttdh i-9407, Capitol TALBOTT LUMBER Olaaa Inatallcd In dopra and w 1025*Oakland Ave._ __FE_4-4599 TOiiLETS. CLOSE-COUPLED. 639 50 value. 616.85. marred. Large “ leciton of lavatorlea. batbuioa < ^owrr aMlla, Michigan Fluoi ...?cni. 393 Orchard Uke. - 36 ■ THk SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 116 WEST LAWRENCE Everything to meet your net Clothuig. Pupillufe. Appllancea. USED ALUMINUM WINDOW Inga. 65 to 610-'FE 4-6102 DSED 6 AND 12 aEI—“" -■ -end 4 a :ment blocks. lypewiitera. 649.99. Md'adJuateJTlli'lo,’ up'^ORBEs! 4900 Dixie Hwy, (Next to Pontiac Slate Bank). OR 3-9767. Alao In Birmingham at 419 Frank St., Ml WATER AND SUMP POMPS. NEW, GOING OUT OF BUSINESS Last Days Everything Reduced < for Final Days No Reasonable Offer Refused Mica 15c eg. ft. 4 X 6 xheet 64.76 Rubber Baae, 3c ft. HURRY!!! 102 S. Saginaw St. Camtrai—Ssrv|c^ 36MM PENTEX LENS. LI 6-61M.________ Small uted Lexter Spinet piano. Only 6450. Eaey termx. GALLAGHER’S THOMAS ORGANS Organs From $495 ALL STYLES and imnSHES TO PIT YOUR DECOR WIEGAND MUSIC CO. PONTIAC’S Shoot Muelo Hoadquartorx attenti(3n Teachets and Churches BeauUful. amall Klmhall grand piano. Llio now. Now finleh. Fully rooondltlonod with now plpatlo keye. A real bargain I CrALLAGHER’S II E. Huron____ FE 4-05W USED INSTRUMENT BARGAINS . Praotloo piano, reconditioned tuned aiM dellvei 61.006. Uee* I. 6195. I del B gulbranaen organ. Ueed band Inetnimente and ■ ____j at bargain nrlcC»._ _ MORKISJVIUSIC 94 g. Tolegrapli Rd. PE 2-0567 Acrosi ffom Tol-Huron Bummer Hre. 9.30-5:30 Mon.. Tuee.. Thura., Sat., cloacd Wed. afternoon, riri.n n'i.| eve. 9:30-0:00 5 Manual BALDWIN DELUXE 1 71 [ SELECT NOW , Otlnnella ftnoxt brand i-- plABoa tkm be uaad is thesnaht-gan Annual Mualo Foatlval at Dotrott'i Cobo Arena,, Sunday; Theae planoe wilt fo on Immedtatoly aftor the parf ance at-great reductlona. Rei youri now tor dollvery I and eeloct your pla GRINNELLS todaj for THUR8D3 HouBobo eated 4 “Dryden Hoaner ftMle.* Oeorgp B— HALLS,, AUCTION BALES EVERY Saturday at 7:30. 70S W. Clarkiton Rd. Lake OrloifT Cpnaignmenta ae-cejted dally. MY 3-1871 or MY 3- AUCTIONS. 7-30 P.M. WBDNB8-daya, Wlll-O-Way Country Mart, 613 .......— Lake Rd, Ml 7-3469. $2 Per 'Week Rental Purchase Music Lesaona Included Grinnell's SUMMER SPECIAL Join Gallagher’s accordion sehdol — use our’ accordion '— learning. I hour Tiand’ each week — No charge. Gallagher Music Co. Plants-Treyii^Slire^ |1 -A Conn Caprice ------»nd Spinet . Model 45 ADDING machines SpMUng GomIi 74 L E, hs UNDAMAGED Js: spinning, fly. cast’--■ casting regularly prii 5 to 619.95 now oner 9 16.46 until sold. 8d ...;e. see them now at 6 ) Drive, comer Alroort f ____________ 3 6125 afUr 5:00 BAND out® 8HOTOONS RIPl : . new and naed, buy aell or trado. ■Bui-rRheU. 375 5. Tolegraph. BRioOS SPORTING OOODK 3231 r Rd. .Conflating c »o buy’—eeU—trid’e71 Conaignmente w iS9 Dixie Hwy. EVERY SUb SPECIAL AUCTION ^ WBD.„ JUNE 5 AT 7 H.M. ' B& B AUCTION Tools-palnl (20o gal.) — garden tractor w)th all equipment - new bedroom and living room aultea — also 5 roome of noueehold ‘ at go. 5039 Dixie Hwy. Everything ao YOUR OWN ________ Uprlghtt and spreaders. llJTLesi than 10 $3 Lane Evergreen Parm, of Pontiac. 8070 Dlxlo U.8 10) MA 5-1922;_______. iNDiANwSob perennial OAR- - -I. 3550 Indian Wood Rd., Lake s' Hwy. (Old SEVERAL I''IILL ORQWN EVER-greene. Call aftor 3 p.~ St. PE-4-8740. 4 YEAR OLD SHETLAND PONY. Black gelding. PE g-0909.________ ARABIAN AT‘stud. ALL POALS .....rcgletor. NA 7-2931. ■OR SALE SHETLAND ____________ 1 yearling (Illy apoi. S7S 1 3--old dapple mare glOO. 1 Vyoar-Old spotted Stallion. 6100. 1 ' year-old Welsh mare, 1136, yearllngjbuckskln colt, $55. ___. 6176. bbth 'gbod‘ , Pour K Pony Parm, -ingway Road. Lake Or-If 3-1606. EVENINJ AND SATURDAY RIDING. LESSONS ALI( ^APPALOOSA HORSES 'Children^, Adults HORSEB BOARDED G0!-DI:N H CORRAL 1600 Hlher Rd.. Pontiac 3-0011_______ - -pEr4.974T------------3172 W Nay>Grai^F(^ EVERETT OO-kABT. BIjCIPPED for racing. 6325. PE 8-693S. Lawn and Garden Seeds Vegetable and (lower plente Pertlllxers and Gladoll bulbs Open 6 to 7. Sunday 19 to 3 Elarber’s Lawn Pet Supply. 4906 -Cllntonvllle Rd. 679-9331 8665 Hl;(hl.iud Rd (M59 ) 673-9162 MIXED HAY. ALFALFA AND TIM-.othy, no rain. *62 crop. MY 3-4901. (l) AAA AOORSOATK. BLACK dirt, nil dirt, land and gravel J. R. Trucking. FE«5-«8M. FE S-9113. i'A RICH FARM*~TOP SOIL. BLaIcK dirt, peal, etc. OR l A BLACK DIRt - TOP SOIL -Reas , Judd Ferguson. OB 3-6229 2'4 VXHiUS^TACKJQiaT OB PEAT. OR 1-9644. prompt delivery. ‘ Pqqhry , 250 WHITE HYBRID LEOHORNS, - 7‘/s mos. did. AU In production 987-4321. ’ A * TOP BOIL. BLACK DIRT, FILL. land, gravel. OR MS50. AL'8 COMPLETE "LANDBCAPINa Top aon. nil. black din and gravel. FE 4-422S. farm Producu _86 CERTIFIED SEED POTATOES. 62 75 and up. Jack Cochran, Lake Orion. MY 2-0931. CHOICE BEEP SIDES. 45c LB., V. 49c lb., boge 25o lb., many small hinds, (ranta, ildei and halves at great savings. Richmond Meat Packers. Inc., 4978 M-59, $'« mile’ east of the Pontiac Airport. Friendly people eervlng you with respect. Open 7 days, 5 ’til 5. 90 daya la eeah. For pay-menla call OR 4-1440, BLACK DIRT, ORaVeL, BAND A^O fill dirt. FE S>2817. CLEAN ’ fill, delivered, afao gr^lng. cid' anytime. OR 41M6 CRUSflEfa S’ibNE. 63 YARD itAN-ufactured road gravel 11. Pea gravel 91 yard 10-A atone 92. Top iol’ 91. Pin dirt JOe. Delivery ektra. Amenc' n Btone Prvduta, 93M Saab-abaw Rd f MA 5-2161. OAKliANir COUNTY MARKET, 2350 Pontla.- Lake Rd. Pontiac, now open Tuet. and Bat. from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m Thurs. 1 tp 7 p.m. PE 3-9(rg OOOD RICH. BLACK DIRt 9 yarda 910, delivered FE 4-6588. MEL’S TRUCKING A-1 top sou, bleek dirt, (111 dirt, send and grayel. PE 3-7774, RUSSET SEED AND BATING Potatoes. Also Alpine husky pup;. MA 5-4351. fWTinJgq|l^^^ 5-POOT CYCLE BAB AND PLAT-form carrier. like new to fit Cub International lO-boy. phono 673-2510. P6MT MOaS, TOP BOIL. PEAT moss and top soil mixed, (111 dirt, sand, and graVel. Also trucks, doxers and tractora rentals. Lahser Rd., I block north of Quartan. Ml 7-«Sa6. Res. MA 6-5962. SAND. GRAVEL, TOP SOIL. BLACS • 'airly IIU...PB, 4-6^. SAND. ORATOL. PILE; OBMEHt. trucking. Pontlae Lk. Bldrt. Sup* ply. 7655 Highland Rd. OR l-l^. FOR SALE FERGUSON PTO MOW-er, NA 7-3630. Davis Machinery Co. Your John Deere, and New Idea (arm equlp-■ment, OrlookWO,. NA 7-6202 or OA 0-J860. ' PAZER ROTGTILLSRB — BALES and service, L. W. Avle, 1500 Op-dVke Rd. PE 4-4800. TOP BOIL. BLACK DIRT. FILL, aand. gravel. OR 3-3475. 'xrffENS ■pMci ■■■■■._ ---- home. 8 weeks “oldv house broke: ~--------------afterN r " A POODliE rfnte., 11,29 Vr iWi of dogs ayalla All other breed AKC POODLES. SCOTTIES - AKC DACHSHUND PUPS. 6; down. Stud dogs. PE 6-956-AKC POODLE, PEMALE, QOOD breeder $50. PE 5-1352.___ AKC REOI8TERED COLLIES, 7 weeks old: OR 3-5180. CHAMPION SIRED ENOLBH MUo Rd- Walled Ls!U, 5hch. ^ ... 001® sIaMkse KtTTlbNi 7 WEEKS OLD, 615. PE 4-4603. DASCHUND. PBliiAti;' 'i DOGS BOARDED, BOOS TRAINED. Dave Qrubb*a Kennelt. FE 2-2646. PREE part angora KITTEitB. j«Na«QM2 G(i»iS’'nS®^i»"....PUPriits, KKC, t ..• ........ 2469 Auharn; UL 2----- ?ARAKEE’fsr OUAHANT’EED talk. 14.95. We raise them. We Rochester. OL 1-6372. ffi^IDER MONKSiy wfTM CAo'E iSsriR' SPINET PIANO, MAribG-any, exc. condition. PE 2-1740. FOINTIER PUPPIBB. 6 WKBK8 OLD 9i9. call after 6. OR 3-5545, ESwby holiday sPii®r"61t. gen, exoellenl oondltlon, M98. Orln-nellB, Ponllao Mali. 682-9$22. pb6'bi, E 8,""i3mai1,'"8" webkS: male 11 montha. atudti UL 3-2200; BEOitSTEHED 1 fiLACK AND^l brown French poodle* H weekF. F8 5-3458. ■ ' MAHOOANY SPINET .PIANO, 0150. Phono PE S-36U. ‘EVANS EQUIPMENT 6507 DIXIE HWY. ___62^711 NOT LISTED_ ‘ USfeirTRACTORS Ml sixes and mak..s KING BRO.S, PE 4-1112 Opdyke Air-Flo AIrcrart constructed, llfe-lli Frolic. Scamper. SlesU. Camper wMli boi.l Onod Since 1632. Ouaranteed I See ^Ihein and gel -tion *t Warner Trail. ........4.5’ CREE HOL'LT'^AVLm>C.„„, 210 H()lly L O R rb A CAMPINO“TRAll>b BUYERS WAITINOII Slop In and let lie sell your trailer for you! WE BUY-WE SELL—WE TRADE Hfdy Travel Coach Co. 13210 Holly Rd„ Holly ME 4S771 OXFORD ' Trailer Sales Yellowstone and Gem travel trall-ere, 12’ to 27’. Twenty to pick We are now taking orders on the new 12’ wide 33’ long Mariette coaches. Only 34.995. 4.’ xTcb.i';lp?r‘*.“" S:.*xS 50’ X 10’ Stewart .. $4995 55’ X 10’ Gardner .... 93995 No trade on spectate. Terms to {jee'd 10’ wide epeolals:_ 47’ X 10’ Zlr.imer . $2595 45’ X 10’ General .. 52395 45’ X 10’ Richardson . 52595 80’ X 10’ General .. 32795 30. Come out today. 1 mile south o' Ltefce Orion, on M>24. MY 2^)721. R«nt Trailer Space Avto Accessories Irand New*Oilg?nal Equipment tnsistor powered, push button I Pits all. ’60, ’61 and ’62 FORDS ___soieaiJLa 19 Dixie Hwy. Pile all. ■ ’62 PC__ MERCURY ). PARTS O^xW-m-ply ^".'’■®b Blemish iTRE?; iread : .w!90 ea] St. . 646.95 sa. 622.80 each. Recapping — .......... -- 1000x20 hwy. CALL PE 29251 Dick Curran Lugs 828x20 - 900x20 CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN ^ar. Cylinders rsbored. Zuck :hlns Shop, 23 Hood, Phoni 1-2503 Motorcycle! lOSO^HARL^V 45. 1963“ HONDA SUI'ER-HAWK. .103 CC, like new, $675 cash, OR 3-6803. NiB^963 TRIUMPH motor and trailer, 5678. PE_ll-l(i03. iTIi’bbT cffS’TbM buEI' bun- about, tarp. Alloy trailer, 33 b.p. 8^ HORSE 14 POO'T SPEBBfJNiit power. V deive liihuari err $580. Plberglae ueed fishing boat $140. 16 Henry ^Lajstrake with lop and , ■ ' ; -NEW-' Special l2 ft. Lone Star fishing boat. 1176 NOW ONLY 6150. TO" foot Lone Star fishing boat. $233 NOW ONLY 6200. 1663 Mercury mo’tors Cliff l)rpycr',s Gun and .Sports Oilier 15210 Holly Rd. .Holly, MB 4-0771 Bopts—Accetseries heat offer. UL 2- CHRI8-CRAPT, 27 FT. TWIN 66 H P. motors. Hardtop, flying e. Chrulse-o-matlc, radio ant mt. BeauUful Up-750 for quick aale: Partridge, — ___ RAY 000 DELUXE, 75 EVW- rude. elec, shift, boat '62, (uU top. *----OR 3-1165. BUY NOW—SAVE!. SCOTT—TRAVELER—WINNER ODAY SAIL BOATS CANOE8-PONTOON BOATS HOI8T8-DOCKS MERCURY-BCOTT WEST BEND MOTORS INBOARD—OUT DRIVES WE SERVICE ALL - AfcLOY“BTERUNO TRAILERS BUCHANAN’S 12’ alum, boats—6115. 15’ glas - 5595, 18’ fiberglas - 6725. New IS flberglai, 40 electric, trailer. complete rig—61.2U. Trailers, 989. New alum. Runabouts 6389. up. EM 3-2301, 9669 Highland Rd. EVINRUDE MOTOR" Boats and Accessories ____Wood. -Alumlniapv Plb»' ’ ■HARD TO FIND’ ’’EASY TO DEAL WIT DAWSON’S SALES TIpsIcd Lake ________M Because ___ We Sell More! PE 9-4055_________PE 5-405 BriVTNn and PAYING D CLEAN CARS. - BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH INC. ’ O. Woodward MI 7-1—. ca!rs TERRA MARINA HOUSE BOATS 02.995 to 65,895 < CARSON’S BOATS WE TRAl 23050 Telegraph a'.. “ * LOOMIS BOATS — YOUR DUNPHY Olaeamastey. Waterhird. and Johnson Dealer. Shoreline trailers. Open 7 days a week. 14015 Fenton Rd., Fenton, MA 9-2225.____________ 12-POOT ALUMINUM DURATECH $275. Call 5 - P(X>T PIBERGLAS BOAT — lights and many extras. 40 h.p. motor, trailer, ladder, cover add ekis and roope, $925. 674 Scottwood. 16-POOT CHRIS CRAFT WrTH____________ tlac V-6 engine, trailer, speed 55 ----------hour, 61.400. OR MW6 lies per ho R 3-4683 I HORSE POWER MOTOR. E KESSLER'S Carver camper boat! Mlrro Alum, (laherman Arroweraft caooea Complete parti apd service 10 N. Washington OA 0-14 Oxford____. STOP-LOOK—SAVE Pabulnus Hydrodyne Cpmboardx Lareon-Duo-Chetek-Peathercraft EVINRUDE MOTORS and TRAILERf Sylvan Pontoon Floats Alum and wood docks Grumman. Old Town Canoea "Your Evlnruda Doaler" , Harrington Boat Work.s 1699 S. T^egraph Rd. M2-9033 Open Frl. ’Ill 9 p.m , Sub. 10 to 3 TERRIFIC DISCOUNT AT TONY’S^MARINE Rf>pairs guarantecdi and backed by 7 yeais experience. Evlnrude mo> tors, boats canoes and Hupplle^. Opeh M phone 682-3660. Orchard Keegg Harbor WANTED TUtr-VO-UNG; Hie: n*f*Da*ys a Week**-^ "^’' Thompson cabin Cruiser with 75 h.p, Johnson and trailer, Alum. Mitchell with flberglai deck and 50 h.p. Evlnrude. ’ Glass Wolverins with 65 h.p. Evlnrude electric, 15’ Olasi^ Em|;>lre ^wllh 55 ^hp.^EvIn-14’ Glass runabout with 30 h.p. Evin- 10' Chrli-Craft Inboard with 45 h.p. Oraymarine and trailer. J8ED WOOD RUNABOUTS 6129 up. Pontoon Boala from $149 up 12’ Alum, fishing boats $129 rup. Alum, and (Iberglas canosi at reduced prices I MDT7 A. . YOUNG; Inc! OWEN’S M4R1NE aUiPPLIES WO Crehimo Lake Ave, PE 2-9020 MARINE iNSORANCE. $200 PER $100 and up. Liability $10,000 for $6. Hanaen PE :l-70ll3. _ must" 'aAciMPiciB BOA’T "MVitor fully equipped. All a WALT MAZUREK’8 LAKE & SEA MARINA “ ntlao’e Largest DIgplay New Oweni orulner t.T $4,809 and Chrli-Criift (Iberglas $705 MANY USED RIGS '63 BVINBUDB-PANCO TRAILERS B. Boulevard at Saginaw PE 4-11867 BORfffi' 18 kCSEtRICT*25 HOUSeT A-1 $400. Call 062-0390 eves. 470-4300 days.__ - _____ sPRiNd SALES sFEEffTmiw oo- .. - - •—"lie Boiti, 14016 Pehtem V “Ride hi t 9-2226. I you buy,’’ PlXTERLS BOATLAND • "After the Sale --Tt’a the Service That Counts." Port of Sea — Hay MPO --Skl-Blrd.— Aerocraft — Sea-Nymph Stag*'8k'll!' L'^e"saver Vei*li' - Ma* rine Paints. DeVIlIe Campers — •Portable Diving Boards — Boat 13W* nI' Opdyke ( 4-P024 Wqiited Curi-Tracfct 101 ALWAYS A BUY3BR OP JUNK CARS By Dlacount 2335 Plate H M&M MOTOR SALES "More Money P0R4IHARP LATE MODELS OUT-STATE MARKETS MANSFIELD Auto Sales 1076 Baldwin Ave. . - 335-5900 Are you HOylng n new or c tear car. Wo wlH buy your cl ........... $$ TOP DOLi.AR $$ FOR Clean \ i.ied Cars JEROME "Bright Spot" •ALWAYS BUYING” 66JUNK CARS-PREE TOW$6 TOP 616-CALL PE 5-8142 ___SAM ALLEN 6i SON INC. $25 MORE ^ For that nigh grade ueed car."iee us. before you Sell. H. J. Van Welt, 454(1 Dixie Highway. Phone OR LLOYDS BUYING Good Clean Cars for New No. 2 Lot 202S Dixie Hwx- I DOLLAR FOR J WANTED: *91-’W CARS Ellsworth -YVlTITrTArETr Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 FLAT DUMP E D WITH HYDRAUL- Pord.parto. PE ^2741. TRANSMISSIONS AND GEARS FOR iSso rmlker panels” Installed. $5.50 ea. 673-9989. Advance Auto Serv- WANTED: USED FRONT PENDERS and hooc.........— 7945 gftei New «Hd Used Trucks 103 1 DUMP BOX. 3 TO 6 YARDS. PE 1948 CHEVROLET W-TON PICKUP, runs .good, good tires and brakes. $100. W4-I244. __________ 1957 6-YARD DUMP. INQUIRE APT-er 4 p.m. 925 Sands Rd., Orlonv*"- ^ TON PICKUP. 682- ’50 Ford pickup ’51 Jeep pickup, new, motoi ’51 Wrecker, -all power HUTCHINSON SALES 6> JEEP "Your Authorised Dealer" OLIVER BUICK and JEEP 210 Orchard Lake Better Used Trucks GMC l''actorv Brandi' OAKLAND AT CASS 1954 FORD 195fi FORD ‘iiTON PICKUP. $29.5. rims good. Pearlman. 756 Oakland 1957 CHEVROLE’T 1 TON PANEL I960 CHEVROLET Vs TON PANEL. VOLKSWAGEN VAN 1968. ONLY 1326, 9269 Commerce 363-6981. 363-6992._____ J04 CANCELED? REFUSED? . YOUNG DRIVER Ovei 10 jira exp^lence^lniurlng Local Service-Terms FOR INFORMATION CALL 1*1'; ■4-3535 PRANK A. ANDERSON, ^EkCY 044 JOBlyn ______rk 4-3599 AETNA CASUALTY 625,000 llablllly. $1,250 medical. $L-OQO death I ineflt, $20,000 unlneured motorist coveragft. $11.00 QUARTERLY 2 care 917.00 — BRUMMETT AGENCY Miracle MUo PE 4-0869 Next to Pontiac State Bank Foreiga Curs 105 1961 ANOBLIA (ENGLISH FORD) It has radio and healer and In top condttic with weoki kSno AU’iS?'sALE8, 1) naw, PE 5-0402, _ iwi "s’rUDBBAkEC 0 R i sJfffBOPOl.rt'AN CONVERTIBLE, 1969, Call 646-2471,' after 9 p.m, dally, or all day wabkanda. i 958 TR3 ROADSTER, wTrB wheels. BXo. condition Inside and out, ho rust. Ml 4-3707. lOirfsPTrA r,'.......... fl95 1058 Mt'eo 60 MPO .....-V ovorfiau ed ..... WOS iT^fiTo'. 122 S, 4-DOpR, FACTORY offirtal «ar, low milRugc. A-1 con* dllloiv. C.aU- Pontiac Sport Car^ Inc.^^ r960 VOLKSWAGEN 2-door Solid black with radio, healer, whitewall tires, low mUoaft .and Immaoulatxl 11,199. , Crissliiaii Clievrolct Co. SaclieBtcr, Mich, OL 2-9721 Niw wjj Usod Cars T04 red flnllh. 6160 down $71.04 | month. LLOYD MO'TOBS, Lj coin, Mercury, Comet, Bngll Ford, 232 S. Saginaw St. J 2-0131. door. Full power. Exe. OB 3-2533. ) CADILLAC, 4 DOOR. HARD- , light blue, power ----------- t.-5370 Dixie Hwy, 639 SPECIAL ,1983 Chevy, 1935 Hud! Chevy, 1953 Dodge. Sa’ FE 5-3278. 1956 CHEVY good. EM : dealer. -0081 B. Conway, 6 CHEVROLET C»NVERTIBL xcellen|^^ondUlom loaded w 11 range all financing. UNIVERSAL AUTO SALES, 150 6. Saginaw St. FE g-4071._______________________ 1957 CHE3TY/ 4-DOOR. HARDTOP, clean. pE 8-5148. 2-5089 1957 CHEVROLET 4-D(}OHf HA-RD-top, black with red Interior. 1 owner. low mUeage, In excellent condition. $895. Suburban Olds 565 S. Woodward P CAR. only 6397, 64 down and ga per ttCek at UNIVERSAL auto: SALES. 150 s. Saginaw St. PE 8-4071. 1957 CHEVY 6. 2-DOOR. VERY NICE FE 3-75.42. H. Biggins Dealer. transmission, beautiful blue with while top. WhltewalLs., ope owpe., Birmingham- trade sale price this week only — 6795 with no money down, ae low as $36.06 monthly. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER .... 66 8, Woodward _______MI 6-3900 130 CHEVROLET SEDAN, 2-DOOR, full price only $395 with no money ENDABLE8" KESSLER'S ■ DODGE I N. Lapeer Rd. Oxford Next to world's largeit gravel pit OA 6.1400 or OA 6-1552 CLEAN USfiD CARS^^^ ^ OW"" t'*i957:i9(’j3’s All carry OW 2-year warranty See Them NOW SPARTAN . Dodge, Inc. 211 S. Saginaw FE 8-A541 lB50"CHEVBOi,BT, A SHARP 2-’>or Bel-Alr, V-6 engine and Superior Rambler 660 Oakland FE 5-64 CLEAN USED CARS Large selection of beautiful oin “T?)57-^1%3’s Sec Tliein NOW SPARTAN Dodge, Inc. ■GOODWILL SPECIALS 0 PONTIAC Catalina .... i.„n-n.„niio imni, . and white) niwtn 1950 |H)NTIAC Colnllna ells, iHiwer steering IW dOwn payment. 1950 PONTIAC Chieftain 4 door. ri dlo. lieoier.^whllewalls, hydramat Irii-nsmlNBlon. yuiir 35. ’56 or ’I will nluke do^n payment! 1650^ CHEVROLET ^Impala^ sedai heiiter. power steering Slid hriiko whlteworis. ' q Utile Jewel. III06. ITani>t Pontiac open Monday. Tuesday and Thursday unlll 9 p.m One Mils Noril) of U.t|. 19 on Ml! i960 CHEVROLET station wagon. 89.000. er. OR 3-4645. ! '________ 1600 CHEVROLET, 0. 4-DOOR Parkwood, automatic. All power. eonditlon. 11400. MA 4-1207. Bwergllde, cei: beige lor. Only ITER80N CHEVROLET CO., 1-------- WARD. AVE.. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 1961 CHEVROLET Iscayne 2.door, wlth a e-cyHnder >-■ glne wtth standard tranimUflloDs solid fai and a i— — price only $1145. SkL AIR. RADIO, neaier ................. Il$34& OPPVKE MOTOR SALES^^ »61 OTEVROLET COBVAIR Ym Series, ’ 6 - cylinder, automatic, radio, heater, whitewall tires, ex--,tra clean, $1,350. Easy terms. JEROME - FERGUSON. Rochester Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711._______ CLEAN mi CHEVROLET STATION 60 PALCON WAOON. HERE IS - one -UiW must be s’een to be appreciated. A deluxe O-pas-senger beauty. Fully • equipped, automatic, radio and heater. Suparior Rambler SPARTAN USED CAR SALE 1960 CHEVROLET Automatic trarloijilsslon, rado, healer whitewalls. Sale Priced $1295 PULL PRICE I YEAR OW WARRANTY J259J __...... — brakes, i whitewalls. Sale Priced $1495 $1395 .. f^LL-PRICK 2 Year Warranty 1961 Chevy Hardtop 4 door, automatic V8 engine. Sale Priced $1695 ' FULL PRICE 1061 Comet Deluxe Automatic trensmisslon, rad leater. exceptional sharp with $1295 I960 Buick Hardtop $1695 $1495 POLL PRICE 2 Year OW Warranty 1961, Chevy Impala >3iU factory power Sale Priced $1695 19.S8 Chevrolet Pull factory ewipment, $35 down 2 Year OW Warranty 19.S9 I-’ord Galaxie Timyiolse and^^whlto with auto Sale Priced $895 FULL PRICE Sale Priced $1495 19.S9 I’ord 2-Door Pull factory equipinent. Sale Priced ’ $795 FULL PRICE 2 Year OW Warranty ^ 1%1 l’>lcon Deluxe .Sale I’riced $99 down .Sale Priced $1445 $1895 FULL PRICE • 2 Year WaiTanly SPARTAN DODGE, INC. 211. S. Saf>iiiaw FE 8-454 Niw qiri Batii Cm. iM 1961 CHEVY 4 - DOOB/'WAGOW. .with power stcaniig and brakes. ■ Lik* new throughout. MOMown,;, 647.56 monthly, also 1660 Chevro- *** Bmii«S70HM?RAMBIJBH^ 666 g. woodward MI 6-3900 .........hp. 4 epe^, ^ stick. po'Wer iteertn'g and brakes, -radio, heatw, low mUeu«i I-own-er, 62.295. Phone PE 4^BM. 1962 MONZA C O.U P E_^ FULLY 1962 CHEVROLETS AU models to select (n»n NO MONEY DOWN $1495 36 MONTHS TO PAY For Information Glenrv’s Motor Sales 1959 Rambler custom 4-door 1959 Rambler American 2-door 1H61 Comet 2-door Deluxe Demon 1961 Pontiac 4-door sedan 1961 Tempest coupe, bucket seats 1962 Tempest coupe,, bucket seate 59 Pontiac 2^1oor hardtop iree 1959 Pontiac Z-doors 60 Ford Zdoor - , - L. e. Williams, salesman Glenn’s, Motor Sales. B 4-7371 y*±13! auio power iteerlng and brakes. 724 Oakland Ave., PE 4-3528. ^ Will Deliver New 1963 Newport 4-doqr eeden. Torque Fllte, power steering, heater, washer Including . all federal tax, 62964. plus state sales tax. R&R MQlORb *pSmoutb--Valf(mr 724 Okkland________ PE 4-3528 1W3 CHBYSLERr-Ne--R08T-^ArL condition, 9175. 339-9022._ 1931 C H E Vy standard. 1956 Plymouth 9 stick. Bwgaln. 8. Con- io.doo mlTcs. ' union. PE 2-9369 1961 COMET DELUXE 2 . tX^R with automatic transmission, radio: boater, whltewalle. a beautiful one owner, 6159 down, 658.81 per nwntb . Y*5^!£'?^’S|ilsh^'Krt" 2» s' FE^."m. ' . IWH uei nir, V power ateering and brakea. auto, healer, tinted wlndahleld. :, automallo tranimlsslon: Ifc; uuu owner certUled miles. $29$ down, or equal trade. Payments aa iniMmOHAM^AklBLM m 8. Woodward MI 6.3900 1M2 SPIDER CORVAm. TU^ bo engine. 7,000 miles. 51,995. OR bobOE CONVER’nBLE, CLEAN no rust, best reasonable offer.: 724 Cameron, after 4. , :_ excellent TRANSPOBTA’TION. 1955 Dodge, - ..... ".tterv. 0 DODGE 4-DOOR STATION WAO-wlth radio heater, eutomatio —...... ------------ throughout ced at $1,095. $95 down, and pay-mts as low as $36.98 inonlMy. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 665 a. Woodward Ml 5-3900 1998 kDSEL HARDTOP. 2-IWOR. 110 money down payments aa I u 10723 per month. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER I 8. Woodward )8 ED8EL CONVERTIBLE., SHARP SSi„.rpe'’/'r.ek’TtuS?VE'lffii: AUTO. SALES, 150 8. Saginaw Bt. GORDON’S, AUTO SALES 54 Ford btekup, ’55 Chovy Bel Ir, sharp. 20 more to choose from. 0 finance for you. 1001 Joslyn, E a-6390. 955 FORD wi’i'H OVERDRIVE. A1 motor. 9125. 1951 Olds. 145. 52 W. Tsnnyson.__________________ 936 POBfncSNVERTIBLE. CIOOD lop, tircs, make offer. 662-1062. 957 FORD 2-DOOR 500 HARDTOP. V-8 engine, automatic transmission, .radio. heater, power steering and brakea, 2-tone finish. Ex-, tra sharp. 5498. Easy terms. JEROME - FERGUSON, Rochester Ford Dealer, r~ 1957 FORD PAIBLANE 500 HARD-top coupe, V8 with stick shift that Just couldn’t run any belter, blue and white, no ruit. Jual a vary People’s Auto Sales 65 Oakland___________FE 2-2351 1937 FORD PAIRLANB 5»«. COS-vertlble, power, eesy lerma. 245 W. 1967 FORD WITH RADIO. AND heater end It le In real good condition, full price only 5197 wito at K*Na*'AOTo"8iLES. 115 8. “^ffl^DElHCyroiL SALES. INC. OAKLAND COUNTY’S NEWEST IMPERIAL CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH VALIANT DEALER 1091 N, Main OL 1-6589 Rochester BrilARk 2-DOOR SBD‘ANj,^WI'rH N McAULIFPB FORD WITH RADIO iirt In iin-top condith, le only U97 wltlt ( payments of 33 end CS‘ 956 >6ltb FAilU:AM'‘’‘500’' ’TW()-door. 1297 full price. No money limVElisAL’AUTO SAlSi's'! 150^8! Saginaw HI. FE 6-4971.________ 1098"p6'Rb 3-bOOR. RADIO. HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITE SIDEWALL TIRES, 119.78 PER MO 1395 PULL PRICK. Seo Mr. Parke at Uhrold Turner. Ford, ISSTpord 2-DOOR C^N^AR. ■ ■■ price 9407, no cash needed, IS . week. We hendle and arrange ' llnanoing. UNIVERSAL AU’1'0. E8, 160 S. Saginaw Bt. FE BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every used car offered for retail to tlie pulilic is a l)()uafid(5 1-ovvncr, low-mileage, sharp car. l-ycar parts warranty. and labor { Skylat C LejBabi I mm K eoiivertlble I lUnCK herdtop 3 FISCHER • BUICK 815 8. iVoodward ^ ■'1 TWENTY-EIGHT nm nd Usrt ^ New end Used Cera 106 as«R=ii*itOTOPiTliP idttion. P« S-M02, glne «nd «t«ndw FK 2-»m. 1»60 TOftD 4-DOOK STATION WAO-on. with radio, heater, automatic 'tranaialsalon, like ntw throughout! „— ' Sale priced tl,095 with only tl9S> lyn. davit, and paymenta aa low •• S3I..17 monthly. BIHMINOHAM BAUfiLER m 8 Woodward j Ml ( 1M» FORD __ aharp. full power, $1,395. Helghti,- Lakd Orion. Superior Rambler 55(1 Oakland , . FE 8-«< CONVERTIBLE SALE AT Suburban GUIs ■ •ei'S'ck “all‘’white. ‘ blue Interior and sharp .,,. ’60 Olds Dynamic 88. all While top, just beautiful . ■60 Olds 98, all black with f ■ er and sham .. ........ .......at •61 Cadillac Beautiful Jade On with green top, lovely coral i Interior with full power, 1 «i er ............................$3 •60 TR convertible, mint ^iret mint condition BR. WHITE SIDEWALL ' *nRES. 1961 Ford oaeaxie j door - k 390. $1495. 762 J ' FALCON DELOXE OTA’nON wagon, automatic, radio and. beat, er; 1 owner,‘ low mileage, real aharp. $1.39S,< 1 year warranty. Suburban Olds 565 S. Woodward_____ MI 4-4485 1961 FORD, K automatic, GOOD condition, $1,185. FE 4-*"”“* 1961 ENGLISH FORD, 2 real deal----""'•' ’ 10 MILES, TWO 1961 FORDS, ( with stick shift, fu $895 with no money down ............— "\LES, "Pi 1962 FORD PAIRLANE 500. HERE Is one that looks and drives 'Ulke .a new car. Beautiful ' Superior Rambler 5.50 Oakland FE 8-94 CLEAN USED CARS .. Large selection of beautiful oni owner trade-ins, 1957-1963’s All carry GW 2-yeat, warranty ,See Them NOW SPARTAN Dodge, Inc. ZING.. AUTO SALE£ LIQUIDATION LOT^ DiU.IVERS Vhex others cannot E\’EN II*' You Are New in Michigan ' EVEN IF Y'ou Had a Repossession EVEN IF You liave No Credit EVEN IF You Have Been Bankrupt ' AS LOW AS ' $5 Dowrl DELIVERY AT ONCE NO RED TAPE EO SIDE NOTEb NO SALARY NOTES NO CREDIT NEEDED NO CO-SIGNERS NEEDED BECAUSE TODAY'S BARGAINS '50 RAMBLER Wagoh . Extra oice. Payments •58 CHEVY 2-Door , '58 FORD 2-DOOR $19 Hardtop, nice. Payments $221 '57 DeSOrO 4-Door .. $29 '57 PONTIAC 2-Door . $197 Hardtop, clean. Payments $2.21 ’59 STUDEBAKBR Wagon , $297 (6 PONTIAC 4 l7 FORD “500" 4-Dr.. Nice $197 Over 200 Cars to Choose From Many Try to Duplicate This Offer One (We Think) Can Meet or Beat Our Prices and Call or Bee Our Credit Mahager. Mr. Cook KING AUTO SALES 7 P.M. Saturday JHE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY,. JUNE 4. 1963 li«w wfd UsmI Can 106 1963s THRU 1958s) Anv make or model , , You pick it..... We’ll finance; It ‘'“Au*PK'’'4-om Vs easy" ■ _ COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK 1950 OLDS 88 CONVERTIBLE,. HY-dramatlc, power steering and mte'uo'r.’only 81795. Easy’tterm’s' PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. lOQO S. WOODWARD AVE.L BIR-MINGHAM. MI .4-2735. I 1958 OLDS STARPIRE, LOADED. 1958 Buick special, like new. ; 1960 Dodge Polara hardtop ! 1958 Olds 88 hardtop. . : f 1959 Plymouth 6 stick. i t Ecotiomy Dlscomit 2325 Dtale Uwy. 1958 OLDS 88. 2;^DOpiR, " ”" ” 1859 MERCURY WAGON, AUTO-nfatlc transmlsalon. radio, heated wjritewUls, ona owner, new car trade, $150 down. $50,05 pet month. LLOYD MOTORS, Lincoln, Mercury, , Comet, ; English Ford, 232 B. Saginaw St. FE 2-9131. _________ ~ .. ' ' ."". DRY COMET, (JLEAN ___________5. 6129 Highland Rd. 1962 MERCURY 2-DOOB HARDTOP ,___ per "month. LLOYD,MO- TORS, Lincoln, Mercury, Copiet, English Ford. 232 B. Saginaw St OLDS HARDTOP SUPEI can be seen at 790 Joslyn oi 9493 Ext. 7. »1 Olds F-85, 4-DOOR. SEDAN IN excellent condition. 1 owner mlngham trade. $1,695. 1 year red interltr Fully equipped. Only $2.99,7,1 year warranty. ■Suburban Old,s ______Woodward_________MI 4-4485 1962 OLDS DYNAMIC 86 4-DOOR ----- ----- official car loaded ,,_.r____New spare. $2,495.' Suburlian Olds 965 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 19.99, BONNEVILLE 4 DOOR HARD-top, fully equipped Including power ’windows and seats. 1 owner, juSl like new. $1,495. Suburban Olds .965 S. Woodward__ Ml 4-4485. 1957‘. PONTIAC 4-DOOR, BLACK, exc. condition, clean. $395. 1957 Pontiac 4-door hardtop; 4-bbl. "nal-b. Clean, $395. 1957 Star Chief, 4-d()or hardtop. Pow-. er, motor overhauled. $495. ^tranahan Dealer OR .7-1391 :ertlfled 1960 PEUGOET 4-pOOR WITH 4-speed trahsmlssltW radio, heaf— whitewalls, 28.00o\wncr certll miles, plus summer sun roof 1 cost’s^MS ‘'oUr'VrICe'M95 a payments as low as $29,53 per mo. RTRMTWriHAM PAMRLER MI 6-3900 6 a. Woodwa $295. Priv. Owner. OR 1957 PLYMOUTH 2 DOOR HARD- 11958 PLYMOUTH CUSTOM WAGON I' with power steering and brakes, runs perfect!. Clean Inside! R.'YCE’S USED CARS 12546 Dixie Hwy. Elizabeth Lake Rd. rl-power, good t 1431 after 3:30. 1958 MERCURY SEDA) dlo and healer and -v.. of condition, full price only $197 with weekly payments ^of *" ■" KtW AUTO ^sales'' 115 Sj 1963 FOR© XL 500 hardtop, 406 engln^i 4-speed tr mlssloii. Save a ^ildle on $2895i ""lYIeiin’s Motdr 952 W. Huron • Your FORD DEALE...... ON DIXIE HWY. I IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-(291 Superior Rambler SURPLUS MOTORS Surnmer Give A-Way Sale BIG 1960 Plymouth station wagon. exc. condition, low mileage. OR 3-4567.___________________;____________ ’7IAC CLEAN. GOOD i. OR 3-8e47-ttfter^30. 1953 PONTIAC — $350 WORTH NEW 1956 PONTIAC STARCHIEF, HARD- i brakes, owner, and Is ex-) throu^out! $125 _____ .......... LLOYD MOTORS. Lincoln, Mercury. Comet. En^^UsH Ford, 232 S. Saginaw. FE $1495^ 'jEROiyE* "BRIGHT SPOT" Ordiard Lake at Cass , FE 8-0488 1958 Ford —$295 1955 Ford Convertible with red and whiti finish, leather .eats Full Prlvi Only— $195 I956Ghevy BflAlr Hardtop. Beautiful i-ec and white (mUh, Full PiTct ” $225' 1960, Falcon •Ion, radio, healer. *ruu'*"rlcor $695 1957Ford Falriane "SOO" Hardtop With V-l engine, radio, heatci Like new throughout. Full Price Only - $195 1955 Buick - $195' '57 Plymouth station •na'ne, '"ii95 1958 Chevy Imtrsla Convertible like new and “”$795 ■ 1958 Dodge I stick ahlft. Rur $395 '59 Plymouth ”nd ifisater. A-1 con Price— $495 1960 I\fenault Diiuphtne 4DoVr. Jhinn like new, Full PrUfP- 1957 Ifercury 4T)oor Hardtoi Beautiful yellow and white |tnlsh, Full Price $|95- 1956 Chevy Stntlon Wagod. with stick shift, V-8 engine, bWuUful yellow finish, radio, heater. Pull Price- $|95 1956 Fontiac station Wagon with full power. Ru«b like new. Full Price - $95 , 1957 Dodge Door with 6-C3iunder engine eeds a little work. Full Pile i $•75- NOTICE NOTICE NOBICE ]{^o\i h?ive no, credit, liad credit, bankrupt, receivership—y(4U|j|:an buy ; car with no nioncy down, Y’ou buy 4ier0—pay here, ' I , SURPLUS MOTOi 171 S. _ Saginaw FE 8ii036 I960 FORD Conyertibie with V8 onulnA. khnidtiid tmuKPiU. alon, whitewalls. Only $1395. BEATTIE ■Your FORD DEALER Since 1930 " ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT ■ OR 3-1291 1962 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE, A sharp 1-owner car with the popular 4-Bpccd transmission. This car Is exceptionally clean and all ready to go. Full price Superior Rambler II BUICK CONVERTIBLE. ELEC-ua ■■226". A real beauty of a car 1-owner and has low nillcaac, full power. Including windows and seats. A real prestige car with economy price In mind. Priced at only $2488. Superior Rambler CLEAN 1957-1963’s All carry GW 2-year warranty .See 'riiein NOW SPARTAN Dodge, Inc. ■^COUNTS^ GALORE ON NIAV 1963 PONT! ACS and RAMBLERS Buy Jm-0111 Stock! 963 Poiitl'ae Grand Prlif $369: 962 Mercury Comet $179 962 Chew Corvair Monza , $I91: mn Pmillao Catalina ‘lulnor . $176 961 Tempest waaon $1311 II Slambirr wagon .$1191 6 Chevy 3.(luor hardlop $1,761 6 J’PIlitSc l!-tloor Kcilaii . $1761 Ford 4-asor sedan $1181 636 Rambler 6-pass, wagon . $ 761 659 Chevy 2-door aeilan . $ 761 678 Chevy 4-door sedan $ 761 606 Cudinac 4-df. hardlop .. $ 661 RUSS JOHNSON .Pooliac-Rambler Dealer M 24 at the stoplight. Lake Orion • MY 3.6366 New jomi Uied Cun 106 ISEED ROOM! 9 'car a p e ml a 1 a. 1934 aild Chevys. Fords and BulcM. $ - • $95. Economy Motor Discount, ^335 niviA TTlirhwav iS^ONTIAC 2-DOOR WITH BA-dlo .and heater and hydramatlc transmlsslou, full price only $793 with no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES, count Lot,” 19! 1959 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOB sedan, automatic transmission, '* did. heater, power steering brakes extra nice throughout, — down, $60.06 pqr month. LLOYD MOTORS. Lincoln. Mercury, Comet. English Ford; 232 8. Saginaw St. FE 2-9131. _________ ’ 19,79 PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP, power- -steering and brakes, whtte- birminoham rambler 960 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-vertlble, automatic transmlsSloni power steering and brakes, one owner, $150 down, $78.57 per month. LLOYD MOTORS, Lincoln, Mercury, Comet, English Ford. . 232 8. Saginaw.St. FE BONNEVILLE 2-DOOR HARD" top. 1 owner low mileage trade, 1961 PONTIAC CATALINA HARD-•"“ ■•-'—ir. radio and heater., pow. . steering. Best offer. 626- 1962 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF. POW-er^rakes. Power steering. PE 1962 PONTIAC CATAUNA 2-DOOR hardtop, factory official car. low mileage, l owner. Real sharp, $2,-495. .Sliburban Olds Call anytime after 6 $1945 ' 1 Year Guaranteed Warranty JEROME "BRIGHT SPOT" Orciuird ,l,ake at, Cass !••!': 8-0488 1962' TEMPEST 4-CYLINDEB CON- WILSON PONTIAC CADILLAC TEMPEST 4-D(X)R, 4-CYL-der, stick, whitewalls, radio, iwder blue. FE 2-6978 alter 5:30. RAMBLER SKDAN. RADIO. EATER. ECONOMY ENGINE, 4.75 PER MO. $295 FULL PRICE !C Mr. Parks at Harold Turner, ........J4 Ford and......... each $45. Plenty other late , ■ -insporlatlon. We (I-leiit only. Economy 9.79 RAMBLER AMERICAN WAO-on. good tires, no rust, runs good. $.70(1 692-111.04, _____________I__________________ WILL ACCEPT Boats, motors, guns, eclio off a stci'rin whistle, sunsiiiue from a beanery, exhaust fumes from !in outboard motor, or almost anything mov-jilile, on a new or used BILL SPENCE , Rambler-jeep. f)f)73 Dixie llwy. at M15 6(173 nixie Hwy. at MI3 CLARKSION MA 5-96M HASKINS Late Mcdel TRADES 0(12 CHEVY Impala supef spOrl convertible, with v-a engine, radio, solid red finish.............. 062 CHEVY Btscayne 4-door with powerullde transmission, like new eimdltlon. beautiful illver blue 962 FOlID Falriane 4-door with V6 engine, stondai'd transmission, ladlu. heater, shuwioom new and a wlilte finish. 962 CHEVY II Hardtop, 6 oylindeir engliw, stiuidurd traniinlBslan, radio, beige and gold finish. HASKINS Ghevrolgt-Olds "Yoiy Crossroads to Bavlngs” New and Used Can 1959 RAMBLER, AMERICAN WAQ-on, ona owner, bargain, $425 "" 3-0679. $5 down, $49.24 per month. Marvel Motors 251 0( Id Ave. FE 6-4079 .COM PARE! 1060 Pontiac 4>dr„ hydramatlc $1159 1959 Pontiac 4-dr„ hydramatlc $ 895 1959 Pontiac wagon, power . .$1296 1960 Chevy 3-door, powergllde $1006 1959 Chevy wagon, power ..$995 1967 Ford convertible .....$405 1957 Ford 4-door, automatic $ 195 1957 Ford hardtop .........$ 295" Keego Pontiac Sales I960 STUDEBAKSa DARK 4>DOOR. radio and heater. V8 with r-— FORD .83 per month Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Aye. FE 8-407 RAMBJ,ERS June discount sale, alt models I stock. Immediate delivery. ROSE RAMBLER SUPER MARKET Union I>ake EM .3-4155 5___EM 2-41S -Special- , 1962 TEMPEST station wagon with radio' and heater a n d hydramatlc transmission. Has -a luggagh rack and •white-wall tires. A real fine car. $1995 PONTIAC. RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St. EE ,3-7954 Naw and Utad Can 1862 TEMPEST 4 DOOR SEDAN, -------adlo. beater, Coll OL 6 p.m. 961 RAMBLER STATION WAGON, with automatic trapimlsslon, like new condition, 8195 down and payments as low as 841.50 per month. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 1962 RAMBLER 2-DOOR CUSTOM with 3.000 owner certified miles, new car warranty, don’b miss It I .8295. down or equal trade and as JdW.as 847.56 per month. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER . 668 ft. Woodward Ml 8-3900 Marvel Motors 251 Oa^kland Ave. •V FE8-4OT9 ■ SUPERIOR RAMBLER Oakland County’s SPORTS CAR CENTER Authorized Dealers Jaguar Triumph Austin-Healey MG Morgan Sunbeam-Alpine Hillman Fiat IMMEDIATE DEUVERY ON CAR OP YOUR CHOICE 550 OaklaiKi Ave, FE 5:9521 TUESDAY SPECIAL .1959 VW.. Sedan This car Is a sparkling sllvei blue bug-wlth radio :and .heate and In the best ol condition 1 . and out. ■ $899 MATTHEWS-HARGREAVFS 631 Oakland Ave. PE 4-4547 John McAuliffe's - T-Bird Sale - SAVE-UP TO ON NEW AND Dk'.MO T-BIRDS $1000 Example: 1963 T-Bird Landau with full power, including windows. White wit|i black vinyl top Was $4,758 Now $3,824 John McAuliffe FORIU 630 Oakland Ave l-k: 5-41U1 No money down, payme..... ... as $9.83 per month, fulljtvlce BIRMINCHAM RAMBLER 66 S. Woodward Ml 6-3900 trade. $125 down. 135.03 per month. LLOYD MOTORS. Lincoln. Mer- a Comet, English Ford. 232 S. aw St. FE 2-9131. « ________ finish with beige Interior, Only 81,365. PATTERBON CHEVROLET CO., 1060 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM, MI 4-2735. •57 Ford “ ■ ■ com...... .1 ,u olf fiiudels . $50' up HUTCHINSON SALES ti SERVICE BUY YOUR NEW RAMBLER HOUGHTEN'& SON 26 N. Main b Rochester OL 1-9761 DON’T BOY ANY NEW OR USED dar until you got our dean ( pletely reconditioned used car low prices. HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. Chevrolet - Pontiac . Buick OltPORD OA 8 7. Ph ’673-6060 a! Week-Special \l tnodel and transportation, Also a few trucks. We finance very reasonable, tk per VOLKSWAGENS 1961 vw sedan, whitewall, white, 1960^^'^ Sedan, radio, whitewalls, Black, 81,145. , Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1957 VW KARMAN GHIA mis one Is red and black and has radio and heater and It U In real good condition In and out. $695 AUTHORIZED ^ LIQUlDA’nON PRICE ESTATE .STORAGE Co. 109 E. Blvd. at Auburn FE 8-7161 OUVER BUICK 1959 OPEL 2-Door ....................$ 199 1%2 EUiCTRA 225 Hardtop ...........$3077 1959 BUICK Invicta Hardtop"'.......$1475 1960 CHEVY Biscayne 4-Door ........$1299 1%1 BUICK .Skylark 2-Door .....'•...$1999 1%1 CHEVY Corvair 4-Door $1485 1962 INVICTA Convertible ..........$2878 1961 ELECTIL\. 225 2,-Door ...... $2375 1962 BLTCiv EeSabre Hardtop .......$2785 1960 CHEVY Impala 4-i)oor ....... .$1495 1%1 ELECTRA 225 Hardtop ...........$2478 1%2 TEMPEST Le.Mans, Stick ........$1787 -196a-OLDS- .Cou.y.firTible.J'98'.’ .$1895 1958 RAMBI.ER 2-Dbor ...............$ 49L 1959 ELECTRA 2-Door Hardtop .......$1495 1961 BUICK Special 4-Door .....:... .$16% 1959^UHEVY Bel Air 4-Door ........... . .$1093 1959 CHEVY Impala 2-Door, Sharp ...$1195 1959 CHEVY 4-Door Wagon, Nice .....$1288 1956 FORD 9-Passenger Wagon ........$ 29) 1958 CHEVY 9-Passei;ger Wagon ......$ 777 1962 skylark Convertible, Clean :...7. $2595 1957 BUICK Special 4-Door Sedan .......$ 499 i%l CHEVY Convertible Impala ......$1795 1959 OPEL Station Wagon,,Sharp .,.,...$1085 OLIVER BUICK 210 ORCHARD LAKE FE^-giof . ' Oaklanid County's'Only LIQUIDATION LOT "OFTEN IMITATED BUT NEVER DUPLICATED" . NOW YOU CAN.GHQQSE FROM OVER 100 CARS WITH NO MONEY DOWN We Have Just Taken Over the Complete INVENTORY OF A DEALERSHIP that is Going Out of Business and are .OVERSTOCKED WITH NEW CAR TRADES THAT MUST BE LIQUIDATED IMMEDIATELY lll'.RPLARE .SOME EXAMPLES TO CHOOSE FROM: 19.59 CHEVY BIzcayne 2-Door. Standard thlft. 8-cyl. . Full Liquidation price 8497. PAY WEEKLY $5.11 NO MONEY DOWN 1956 PONTIAC 3-Door Hardtop. Power steering . and brakes. Full Liquidation Price 8187. • ' PAY WEEKLY $2.21 No MOnIeY DOWN 1957 MERCURY Montclair Hardtop LIks dew throughout. Ydu must see this one. Full Liquidation Price 8387. PAY WEEKLY $3.13 NO MONEY DOWN 19.56 CMEVY.S We have five to choose from, •lies snd eights. Full Liquidation Price 1187. PAY WEEKLY $2.21 NQ MONEY DOWN 1958 FORD Falriane "600'’ with V-8 engine, Ford-0-Mat|o transnllaalon, power eteering and brakes. Full Liquidation Price $267. PAY ^WEHKLY $4.13 NO WfONKY DOWN Theet are not mis-ueed repos-eesslbna or eUsle etorage cars, but Good N e w • C a r Dealer Trade-Ins. HAVE CONFIDENCE. DON'T BE MISLED—BUY FROM THE ONE AND ONLY REGISTERED LMJUIDA'nON LOT. 1956 BUICK Century 3-Door Hardtop. Like maUo^and *"’“>■ Llqulda- PAY WEEKLY $3.09 NO Money town 1955 CADILLAC- Coupe beVllie. Beautiful let black finish, full power, mint condition. Filll Liquidation Pilot PAY WEKkI.Y $4.13 NO iMtONBY DOWN 1958 CHEVY 2“-Do6r Hardlop vrlfh standard^ transmission. Extra clean. Full Liquidistlan Price 8487. PAY WEEKLY $5.11 NO MONEY DOWN 1957 PLYMOUTH Savoy i^boor -with economical e-oyl. engine, etfsndard tranemls-elon. Pull Liquidation Price $197. PAY WEEKLY $2.21" NO MONRY DOWN 1958 IMPALA 2-DOor Hardlop with let black finish, standard sihift, ''348” engine and 3 oarbs. Full Liquidation Price 8687. PAY WEEKLY $7.20 NO MONEY TOWN 1955 STUDEBAKER Club Coupe. Standard transmls-elon. Excellent traneportatlon.' Full Liquidation Price $97. PAY Wl'iEKLY $1,13 NO MONEY DOWN NO CRIDDIT PnOBteKMa. PI-NANCBI MKN on DUTY TO OK YOU whll« othfrs will chftok your credlt~W«’» deliver OPEN DAILY t a m. to 8 p.m. Saturdays 8 a m. to 8 p.m. Phono Applications >■ Accepted ■ 1958 EDSEL citation 4-Door Hardtop with power steering and brakes. Full Liquidation Price $187. PAY WEEKLY $2.21 NO MONEY DOWN ' 1956 DESOTO ' Flredome 4-Door Hardtop. Beautiful fire engine red and black niijiih. LKluldatlon r>AY WEEKLY $2.21 NO MONEY DOWN 1958 PONTIAC atarchlef Hardttm. Looks and runs like new. Power steering, power brakes. Full Liquidation Price 8M7. PAY WEEKLY $6.06 NO MONEY DOWN 1955 OLDSMOBILR Super "88” Hardtop With automatic transmission and power. Exoejlenl^ oondR^. FuU Llq> PAY WEEKLY $2.21 NO MONRY DOWN 195^ CHEVY Bel Air 4-Door with 6-oyI. itand-ard InsnsmlBslon. Shsrp blue and while. Pull LIquIdaUon Price 887. PAY WEEKLY $1.13 NO MONEY DOWN PLUS MANY OTHERS; y ivpLD^^'M^ piuFferred LIQUIDATION LOT 185 OAKLAND AVE. AT RAILROAD TRACKS ■ PhbneFE 5-9231 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1963 TWENTY-NiyE -Today's Television Programs— Programi fumi>h«d by station! liitod in^ this column aro subjoct to chango without notice Channsta-WJBK.TV Chonn>U~WWJ-TV Chonn»l 7-WXYZ-TV Cham>«l9-CKIW.TV Chdtin»l S6-^WTUS TONIGHT 1:00 (2) News, Editorial, Sports, Weather (4) Deputy (7) Movie: “Beyond Mombasa.” (la Progress.) (9) Capt. Jolly and Popeye (56) American Economy 0:25(4) (7) Weather, News, 0:30 (2) Highway Patrol (9) (iuick Draw McGraw (56) French Through TV 7:00 (2) Hennesey (4) (Color) Weekend (7) Mike Hammer ,(9) Whiplash (56) Age of OverkiU 7:30 (2) Real McCoys (4) (Color) The Kremlin (7) Ck)mbat (9) Movie: “Wagonmas- ter.” (1950). Ward Bond ; (56) On America 8:00 (2) Lloyd Bridges* (56) Artist Concert 8:30 (2) Skelton (4) (Special) Life of Pope (7) HawatlM Bye 9:30 (I) Jack Benny (4) Dick Powell Theater (7) Untouchables (8) Front Page Challenge 10:00 (i) Garry Moore (I) News, Weather, Telescope UAW 10:30 (4) Chet Huntley Reporting (8) InquhT 11:00 (8) (4) (7) News, Weather, J8) Pioneers lliTlMf) Movie: “Love Before Breakfast.” (1830). Carole Lombard, Preston Foster. 11:30 (I) Steve Allen-Varhty (4) (Color) Tonight-God- (8) Movie; (1888). Lewis Stone. wbdnBsdat morning 6:15 (8) Meditations 0:20 (8) On the Farm Front 6:25 (8) News 0:30 (8) Spectrum 7:00 (8) Nows (4) Today --it. (7) Funews 7:-05 (2) Fun Parade 7:30 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:45 (8) King and Qdie 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (50) German for Teachers 8:30 (7) Big Show (50) Friendly Giant 8:45 (50) Spanish Lesson 8:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round TV Features Looks at Turbine Car THE KREMUN, 7:30 p. in. (4) Repeat of special on tour and history of seat of Soviet power. (Color). MOVIE, 7:30 p.m. (9) “Wagonmaster.” (1950). Mormon settlers on way to Utah run into stranded medicine show and gang of outlaws. Ward Bond, Joanne Pru. GARRY MOORE, 10 p.m. (i!) Emmy winner Don Knotts and opera star Eileen Farrell appear. CHET HUN^TLEY REPORTING, 10:30 p.m. (4) Look I at turbine engine car of Chrysler that will bum almost f anything from perfume to bourbon. CLOSE-UP, 10:30 p. m. .(7) Documentary about woman who has refused to allow blindness to limit her activities. 0:00 (2) December Bride (4) Living (7) Movie: “The Return of October.” (1948). Glenn Ford. Terry Moore. (9) Muffin and His Friends (56) Let’s Read 8:30 (2) To Tell the Truth (9) Window on Canada (56) English VI __ “8:1112) EdlibrlaT 10:00 (8) Connie Pegs (4) Say When (9) Romper Room (50) Our Scientific World 10:81 (4) News 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy > (4) (Color) P1 a y y 0 u r Hunch (56) French Lesson (7) Fati.er Knows ^ i8:40 (56) Spanish Lesson 12ia (2) Guiding Light m$f (4) News 1:00 (8) Star Peribrmanee (4) Leave It to the Girls (7) General Hospital (9) Movie: “Bringing Up Baby.:^ (1988). Wtharint "Tlepburn, Cary Grant. S:M (7) I ;»( (56) German Lesson 11:00 (8) McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jack La Lanne (9) Window on Canada li:05 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:30 (8) Pete mx! Gladys (4) Concentration (7) Seven Keys (9) Movie: “Lost.” (1955, English). (56) Dynamics of Leadership WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12.00 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (56) Basic Issues of Man 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Seardh for Tonunrow r r r r r r r" r il r II u IB 11 \i iH IS" w W w w r jr ST II R r nr 5? r 7T 4i r u HT ar BT 18 81 67 U gr IT 64 II' 4 - AOrArB 4« Roof tint nf •mcoo, 4B Totter - Royburn St BIbllcol B Ho oppotro 01 I £lo conducto I 13 ^ed’door mountoln 13 Kxpunfpid 33 Medley 33 Founottion 38 Toiletry colt > 13 Heolth reeort 14 Domeatlcoto 15 Lorleoon mountoln 31 Prepooltlon 35 PeuHono “ 38 Bverlftotlnir 40 Toothed wheel 33 Operotic aolo 34 Roll bird 38 Llarge borrel 33 Irelond 34 Leetern 14 Serpent 17 Wolfhound Anawer tt^fPrevlono Pboalo 30 Mlatokea 33'DbooF*'* 34 Hovoo (coll. 37 Obaervo WInRilko port Royol Itoflon fomlly nomo >el up 8* «Vftrt>led, II Indonetlia of Mindanao (4) Truth or ConseiiuencM Knows Be»t 1:10 (50) French Lesson 1:80 (2)' As the World Turns (4) Best of Groiicho (7) Girl Talk (50) World History 8:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Ban Jerrod (7) Day in Court (50) Adventures in Science 8:81 (4) (7) News A Royal Oak man who toid po-iici M was bahind in hia-sllniony payments and his brothar-ln-law stood mute on armed robbery charges at their Circuit Court arraignment yesterday. 8:80 (2) Home Party Doctors (4) (7) Jane Wyman (56) Young Artists at Work 8:00 (2) Star Ployhouse (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day (56) Discovery , 8:15 (0) News 8:30 (2) ABlIionaire ■ (4) (Color) You Don’t Say! (7) Who Do You Trust? . (0) Scarlet Hill (56) Memo to Teacher! 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) American Bandstand (9) Razsle Daszle 4:25 (4) News , 4:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) Mime Room for Daddy (7) Discovery ’08 (0) Mickey Mouse Oub 4:45 (60) French Lesson 4:51 (7) American Newsstand 1:00 (8) Sea Hunt (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Zamba.” (1949). Jon Hall. (0) Larry and Jerry (56) What’i New? 5:80 (2) whirlybims (50) Friendly Oiant 1:45 (0) Rocky and His Friends (SO) Industry on Parade 5:55 (4) Carol DuVall R. J. Brook. 26. 8343 Garden. Royal Oak, and Curtit McTumer, 32, 1605 E. Pearl, Hpsel Park, are charged with the May 18 hold-iip of a market at 2280 ’Telegraph, Southfield. Senthifeld police quoted Brooks as Oaying he was behind in paymMta for Support of his Police said he had Obtained about I2JSIW by holding up retail stores in a three-county area during a period of several weeks. PresideniElected for Holiday Group Robert C. Adslt, 410 First, has been elected president of t.h e Pontiac Memorial Day Association, effective July 1, He will succeed William Tunnlngley. Other officers of the orgOniia-bn are David MoGllUa, vice president; Eva M. Welch, secretary; Florence McCrae, treasurer; and Floyd Losee, trustee. The group is responsible for formulating and carrying p u plans for Memorial Day ceremonies. Half of Garage Roof Ripped Off by Storm MOUNT PLEASANT W’) ~ One-half of the roof of the Isabella County garage on M20, miles west of here, was ripped off last night in a sudden windstorm. Ernie Bruce, county road pervisor, estimated damage at approximately $1,000. —Today's Radio Programs^ WJR(70m WXYZO 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(930) WGAit0130) WPQNO 460) VVJBK(f SOoj VVHn-rM(94.yi R«rti».oi cathecism.” Bbiffbi' *■ "jlmmydl WISH ME LUCKI - Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller reaches down from the pdUium to ejasp his bride’s hand before making his first speech since their marriage last month. 'Their appearance at a dinner, of the Albany Civic Plan- : AP Phalofk* ning Committee capped a day in which the governor introduced the state’s new first lady to members of his administration, newsmen and civic leaders. 2 Stand Mute ANN ARBOR (AH - A grant 61 ll.fS liffllloh mm the Na-ttonat Aeronautics and Space Adminiitration (NASA) for c o n-struOtion of a space research lab-ratory at the University of Michigan “is the largest federal grant ever received by the universlW for conitructlon," leyd Dr. Ralph A. Sawyer, U. of M. vice president for research. McTumer, Brook’a brother-ln-Iiw, said he helped Brooks catch up with hla alimony and tiever shared in ttie loot, according to police. Both men were held In Oakland County Jail to await trial when they were unable to furnish bond, set at $10,000 for Brooks and $5,-000 fdr McTumer. Bakery Drivers Warn of Strike DETROIT — The Teamsters Union threatened yesterday to strike at four Detroit bakeries by June 10. Bakery Drivers Local 81 filed the notice of inteht to itrike against American Bakiito Co-> Continental Baking Co., OiMiera] Baking Co. and Ward Baking Co. Federal and state idediators said attempts will be made to arrange new talks in a contract dispute. U. of M. Gets NASA Grant for Research The fecllity will houSe most of the tulVIrsUy’s space re-seereh facltities. It is eipectod to be reedy for occnpancy by the fall of 1004. Approximately 800 persons wiU be employod in the new building, Sawyer jaU yesterday. Hje two - story, 56,000 - square foot building will be constructed on the north campus near the University cyclotron and Phoneix Memorial Laboratory with its nuclear reactor. William D. Haslett, 20, 280 E. Maple, Troy, was placed on five years! probation yesterday for his part in the Feb. 14 burglary of an Orchard Lake beverage store. John Hodges, 82, 1064 Nangh-ton, Troy, was ordered to serve one to five years hp prison for his March 8 daytime burglary of ■ power saw from a Troy Both sentences were handed out by Oakland, County Circuit Court Judgb William J. Beer., A second 20-year-old Troy youth, Wendell Johnson, of 02 Spoerton, who was implicated in both burglaries, is awaiting sentence for the Orchard Lake break-in at Wilkin’s Beverage Store, 4135 Orchard Lake. NASA officials said the university is engage in about $5.5 million in research projects with them. Detroit Youth Mute on Murder Charge DETROIT W Ralph Danie-lak, 17, of Detroit, accused of second-^gree murder in the stabbing of a friend over a $2 shortage in a poker pot — stood mute at his arraignment yesterday. A plea,of innocent was en-i tered for him and he was returned to Jail without bond, pending examination June 12. Police said Danielak stabbed Joseph Cassar, 21, of Detroit, Saturday night after what started out as a friendly poker game. Police said Haslett and Johnson were caught when their car smashed into a stone wall as they tried to flee the scene of the burglary. The two were convicted by Jury May 10. Johnson also had been charged with daytime burglary of a reii-denea at 1780 Westwood, Troy, along with Kodgds. But this charge was dropped whOn he waa convicted li) the Orchard Lake Commandment Debate Stirs Study of Bibk By EARL WiLSON NEW YORK-Broadway’s been reading the Bible. The people are still interested in religion. They must be—otherwise, I wouldn’t be getting all this about the Sieventh Commandment. It happened strangely. I was doing a radio Interview-v^ith.Hildegarde. Groping for something that Would be amusing, I asked Hildegarde for some of her fractured French. WILSON Usually frothy and frivolous, Hildegarde now was impatient with those guestlons^She wanted to talk about her book, “Over 507So What?” The last chapter, she said, was religious. In it she interpreted the Ten Commandments according to her own study, experience and contemplation. That was it! I .pounced in. “What’s your modem day interpretation of the Seventh Commandment—‘Thou Shalt not commit adultery’?” I asked her. “ ‘That’s not the Seventh — it’s the Sixth,’ ” Hildegarde exclaimed. “I beg your pardon, deaf,” 1 said. “It’s the Seventh!” “You'ea wrong, Bwl!” she fired back. “It’s the Sixth.” But auddenlv Hildegarde whs ao adamant that 1 dropped the rgument... tor the moment. At my desk At 8 a.m., I loolted Into my books... “Adultery ; Any leWdness or unchastity’ ot act or thought, as in violation of the Seventh Commandment. Matt, v, 27, 28,” said Funk 'ie Wagnalls. Pleased with myself, I went home. My mother-in-law, a Cath-illc, was up. ' "It’s the Sixto,’' she said to me. “Here it is in the Catholic Two Sentenced Tor Burglaries A jury of nine women and three men deliberated about four hours and returned the verdict shortly after midnight. Judge David L. Uilman deferred sentencing pending n filing of a motion for an appeal for a new trial. j Cohen and the others w^ la dieted in September 1959 or charges of looting the treasury of more than $100,000. Hoffa had stood by Cohen, who is Secretary-treasurer of Local 107. In addition to Cohen of Brigantine, NJ., the others on trial former public relations representative for the local; Edward F. Walker, recording secretary; Joseph Third Awaiti Action In thilft Conviction VU5h|5ll|| DWIw»4iS/f vvwpil AJ. • ■ < « a si a Hartiough, bookkeeper; Braham f D. Berman, business agent; and ‘ * John J. Eleo, a union member. Hodges was found guilty by a Jury May 21./ He was on parole from a one- to 15-year prison term for a 1962 burglary. To Set Committees for Boys' Club Aid Commltteei whose function will be to promote expansion of the newly formed Waterford B o y s’ Club will be named at tomorrow's 7:80 p.m. open meeting of the organisation at the CAI Building. Boys’ Club officers are chairman Richard Goldsworthy, 1420 Dundee; vice chairman Rudolph Chisac, 2113 Pompey; secretary and treasurer Thomas Harrison, |7S Marlington Boys 8 to 18 are eligible for membership in the club. -There may be as Wfany as 100 million fibers in a single pound of cottofl. Six Teamsters Found Guilty Named in Conspiracy to.Defraud Treasury PHILADELPHIA (flV-Raymond Cohen, secretary - treasurer of Teamsters Local 107 and a close associate of Teamsters International President James R. Hoffa, and five other men were convicted today of charges of conspiracy to cheat and defraud the local treasury. WASHINGTON (UP!) - Au> thor' • biologist Rachel Carson called today for strict control of aerial pesticide spraying as a first, step toward dealing with "contaminafion of the environment," said it was “one of the major problems of modem life.” Miss Carson, author of the best-seller “Silent Spring,” also urged a “strong and unremitting effort” to reduce and ultimately eliminate “pesticides that leave long - lasting residues.” She told a Senate government operations subcommittee studying pesticides that she could “see no other way to control the rapidly spreading contamination” of air, water and soil which she said threatened all human and other animal life. - Miss Carson gave the subcommittee, headed by Scp .Abraham A. Ribicoff, D-Conn., former secretary of Health, Education and Welfare (HElW), a rundown on evidence that poisonous pestl- 'State Image Has Improved in the Nation' ST. JOSEPH (A: - ITie national image of Michigan “is now favorable and one of praiae, not critical and one of hopeless doom and condemiiatlohi!” Harry Hail, executive vice president of the Michigan State Chamber of Commerce, said last night. Hall was speaking at 8t. Jo-seph> before the annual meeting of the MichigM Canners and FreezSrs Association. A new confidence in the state, he said, has caused existing firms to schedule unprecedented expan-sioti totaling close to $1.5 billion. ’This confidence; backed by this investment money, is the one single most important factor in the present economie.growth,” Hall said. It illustrates a renewed and revitalized-confidence in Michigan by Investors and employers.” No JFK N«wi Confab WASHINGTON (AP) - President Kennedy will not hold news conference this week, the White House said today. Kennedy’s most recent news conference was on May 24. Author Calls for Rein on Air Spraying in the atmosphere. ★ ■# She said they had .been, found 'the oil of fish That live far and that some detergents found in drinking water might affect the human digestive tract “so that it more readily 1 cancer ■ causing chemicals.” In prepared testimony Miss Carson declared that , the problem “is one that must be solved in our time” and “a beginning must be made on it now — in this session of Congress.” SACRIFICE SALE 1962 DRYERS COLOR TV SERVICE and SALES RCA — ZINITH CONDON'S Radio & TV 7M Wul Hurim Bt. ri M7M i)RAMA AT ITS FINEST DICK POWELL THEATRE "DAYS OF GLORY" Slarilag Charles Boysr, Lloyd Bochnsr, Suzonns PIsshsNt 9:30 P.M. ON NBC-TV hr CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY INEOieiDi CET OVR PRICES f BEFORE YOU BUT 1 • ' !j Auimu Fulll” i ★ SIDING ★ AWNINGS Alujmlnuo* jJ. ★ GOMBINA'riON COMB. 1 WINDOWS and DOORS DOORS 1 ★ STORMS for PICTURE WINDOWS and SLIDING $239B B DOOR WALLS NO MONEY DOWN with hardware ' |||| IVo Paymtintt ’til N«xt September Complete REPAIR SERVICE including Insaranoe Work ★ All Material WorhnuinBhlii FREE ESTIMATE AT OUR SHOWROOM or in YOUR HOME! FE 8*1809- 0pan Mon. ihru Friday til 8 P.M. or lator by requfot! Jlildegarde, a Catholic, was-right, and so was I! r WISH I’D SAID THAT: A nurse told a nervously expectant |5' father: “No, the fact that you’ve been kept waiting a long time loesn’t necessarily mean it’ll be e girl.” REMEMBERED QUOTE; “When adults act like children, it’s silly; when c h i 1 d r e n act like adults, it’s delinquency. That’S earl, brother. JWll LEO BOGERT, OWNER 919 Orchard Lk. Rd. I BIk. K. ofTricfraph (Near Tom’s Ilanlwarc) WRING and STORM WINDOW SALES THIRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 4, X963 JiNtiiour^^ Kalamazoo s Culture Bo&m Dates Back Over 30 Years By PHIL THOMAS Associated Press Staff Writer KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) -When it comes to culture, this . prosperous, little city’s got it-and' has tiad for a long time. f BACKGROUND . For the culture boom sweeping the nation got under way here more than 30 and it OF THE HEWiI shows no signs of slowing down. ★ ★ ★ The city of Kalamazoo has a population of less than 85,Q00 and • its metropolitan area miinbers Questions Rule of Civil Service Bars Political Activity by Employes of State Bronson Park might be considered the core of this cultural oasis. The park is located in the center of downtown Kalamazoo. It’s ringed by five imposing churches, a city hall, a county building, a . YWCA 'building and the Civic Auditorium. Not directly on the park, but just a step away, are the Art Center, Carver Center, the Central High School auditorium, the Ladies Lir brary club and the Kalamazoo Public Library and Museum. Kalamazoo College, Nazareth College and Western Michigan University lie a short way out on the outskirts of the city. Kalamazoo Col- LANSING m-A 1961 rule forbidding State Civil Service employes from taking active political roles has been challenged by the Michigan State Employes Union. ★ * ★ Robert Grosvenor, director of The "unltinTTited 'an-attomey gem eral’s opinion as he asked for the rule to be revoked. The opinion rendered by .Republican Herbert Rushton said “the Civil Service Commission is without authority to make any rules and regulations regarding political activity of those in State Civil Service outside of their hours of employ; ment any more than it has the right to " ing in his farm after hours.” Grosvenor said the opinion, which was made four months before the Civil Service Department adopted. the poliffcal activity rule, has not been superseded by court rulings or new attorney general opinions. ★ ★ * ■ “The rule has never been chal-langed before,” said State Civil Service Director Franklin De-wald, who said he would refuse to revoke it. State workers are barred from being candidates for offices other than school boards and charter commissions, and may not serve on either political committees or convention delegations, under the rule. Civil Ser’vice Comniission Chairman John Seaman said he didn't know what position the commission would take on the union request. The next commission meeting is set for June ■ 27. Troops and Students Clash in Viet Nam SAIGON, South, Viet Nam (UPlI — Government troops used bayonets and tear gas yesterday to break up a Buddhist demonstration and more than 60 student demonstrators were injured, it was reported today. Reports from Hue, ancient imperial capital of Viet Nam, said an estimated 1,200 Buddhist students demonstrated to protest what they consider government discrimination against their religion. BAKER and HANSEN Insurance Company INSURANCE -ALL FORMS- HOME OWNERS PACKAGE POLICY A SPECIALTY jPhond FE 4-1568 714 COMMUNin NATIONAL BANK BLDQ. PONTIAC 14O5OOO. But its people.have, and support, a fine theater whose plays draw consistently full houses; a symphony orchestra which entertains in a 2,500 beat auditorium; a handsome new building which houses a public bbrary, planetarium and m.uaeum; an art center which serves both as museum and school; a university; and two col- lege'has 900 studentaJ^Nazareft 600 and Western Mictiigan 11,000. PROMINENT ROLE Culture has played a prominent role in ^lamazoo since the city was'named the county seat in 1831. But its first major impetus came in 1931 with completion of the Civic Auditorium, which houses a 537-seat theat The $330,000 building was pai(j for by Dr. W. E. Upjohn, fodnder of the Upjohn Co., a pharmaceutical manufacturer and One of the city’srliiggest industries, employing 3,500. Norman Carver has been business manager of the Civic Players since 1929, and has’managed the auditorium since it was built. Carver Center, which houses the Kalamazoo Symphony, the Junior Civic Players, the Chamber Music Society, and the scenery construction operations of the Civic Players, was named in Carver’s honor. The $200,000 center was built with funds from the W. E. Upjohn estate, % JJpjohn Co., the Kalamazoo Foundation, and private contributor^. 8 SHOWS A MONTH The Civic Auditorium produces a different show of eight performances a month by the players. Tickets cost from $1.50 to $2 for dramatic works and $2 to ^$3.50 for ..musicals. The auditorium k a financial success, due in part to the use of»r„H,wfriA« » - ' dation from an office in the Upjohn Co. executive office building, feels Kalamazoo’s cultural growth stems in good part from a feeling of responsibility by the of the community. ‘The attractiveness of the community,” be said, “has resulted in the families who accumulated money staying in the community unpaid volunteer actors and helpers and the money derived from renting its elegant lounge for. te-ceptions, teas and meetings. The Kalamazoo Foundation was organized in 1955 to “administer gifts and bequests for philanthropic purposes in Kalamazoo County.” In 1932 it was given $335,000 worth of Upjohn Co. stock. By 1958 that stock was valued at $19 million, and at the end of 1962 the foundation had assets of $22,- 12,403. Harold B. Allen, foundation secretary, who administers the foun-' playing in our orchestra (theuum-ber varies between 85 and 90) are a living .part of the community, and this orchestra has grown out of. the community. It was not brought in.” The strikingly modmi^rt €eir-ter, complete in 1961, is control- the industries.’’ Gregory Millar, conductor ahd musical director of the Kalama-K) Symphony, Millar,' who served as an assistant conductor for the New York Philharmonic, said “the people “0Mat40,50,60f Man, Get Wise! Pep Up ThoiisBods are peppy at 701 So, If you feel weak, low in energy. at 40, SO or 60, ^it blaming it nn age. If you want to feel younger, tiy Oatrox Tonic TabloU M once. Aho for debility due just to rundown body’s lack of iron, tiic^'below-par” feelings you may '‘being old’’. Puts pep in boUi sexes. Try trex“feel|^)t*ppy,years ^oung^.^8-day /- lied by the Kalamazoo^Institute of Arts. . The land for the center was purchased with funds provided by the W. E. Upjohn estate and the Kalamazoo Foundation, which also set ■aslde“the'income "from a portion of its funds to provide an endowment. The $1.5-Mllion building was constructed with funds donated by the Donald S. Gilmores. Gilmore is honorary chair- ^. man of the board of Upjohn Co. ajjd-a.memb€F of a-fain0 which owns a large department store in the city. ’ A Summer with a Purpose Attend Pontiac Business Institute SUMMER SESSION Term begins June 10 ■ You con use your yacotion to: • Get a heod stort on a business course • Learn Typing and Speedwriting'Shorthand for preparing college papers. • Acquire office skills to get a start in the field you prefer Pbntliic Business Institute 18 W. Mwrence Pontiac, Michigan Phone; FK 3-7028 Monza Spyder Convertible Come hill.. or high water Monza Spyder Oub Coupe Vacations go smoother in a Chevrolet Corvair Bring on those mountains! They're not so high and mighty 'when you’ve got Corvair’s gutty six and rear-engine tractiojn 'working on them. You scurry right up the meanest grades. You move with sure-footed agility on wet pavement, muddy lanes, loose gravel' and other would-be miseries. And with most of Corvair’s weight bearing down bn the rear t^heels, you have an easy time steering, too. Fact is, the handling's so light and responsive we don't even offer poWer steering for the car.. , And there’s more to feel good about. No problems with your AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEAURIS i^SfJiator boiling over or going dry, because there's no radiator. Coryair's engine is air cooled. No concern about brake adjust-ipents, either, because the brakes adjust themselves. Nothing much to think about at all except the good time you’re having (and maybe the next mountain you’re going to flatten). Like to do that in a sporty bucket-seated Monza Club Coupe or Convertible? Like to spring into summer with ^ 4-speed stick shift* and Spyder package’* with its 150-hp Turbocharged engine, special instrumentation and insignia? Your dealer’s got just the Corvair and the Trade 'N' Travel deal on it tp put you in B holiday mood. * *Opliond at extract CHEiaf HIS INT DEALS ON CHEVROIET, CHEVY K, CORVAIR AND CjBRVETlE 631 OAKLAND AT CASS MAnNEWS-IIARGREAVES, INC. PONTIAC, MICH. FEderal 5.4161 The Weather V.8. WMther Bureku Fort) Warm! (Dtt^iii r»ft THE PONTIAC VOL. 121 NO. 100 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TU^ISDAY, JUNE 4, 1963 —30 PAGES Millions Around Globe Mourn Pope 8 From State Among 101 Missing Plane Debris Sighted ! JUNEAU, Alaska

~ The Coast Guard reported today that debris sighted off Graham Island, B.C, in the Gulf of Alaska definitely was from a missing plane with 101 persons aboard- The Coast Guard said no survivors nor bodies had been sighted At least eight persons from Michigan, including the wife and four daughters of an air force career man, are listed among those aboard the plane. The wife of Airman I-C. Robert Scott and his four daughters were among 29 civilians aboard the missing plane. The other three Michiganders are young servicemen. A Coast Guard cutter on the scene, about 60 miles west of the island, said life jackets, luggage and clothing had been positively ientified as being frbm a charter Northwest Airlines DC7 missing since Monday on a flight from McChord Air Force Base, Wash, to ElmendorfAFB, Alaska. NO SIGNS The cutler reported it saw no signs of any survivors or bodies, and the Coast Guard said earlier a person could not live for more than 10 or 15 minutes in the 40-degree waters. An albatross aircraft and the Japanese freighter Hosei Mam were also on the scene. They said that because no bodies had been found and there was no sign of the wreckage of the plane itself, the debris might have been cargo-jettisoned lighten the plane’s load. COOL, MAN, COOL — The party's over. The cool and com-■ • ■ dth M "• * ' A Canadian air force pilot reported sighting, uninflated life-rafts, torn pillows and suitcases bobbing in the water Monday night, but because of darkness the search could not be continued until dawn today. Ibe pilot said he thought the debris might have come from the ill-fated plane. There are some startling sim-ilaritiei between yesterday’s disappearance and a plane crash off the Alaskan coast last Oct. 22- fortable spring weather left with May. Since June i thermometers have reached 85 or higher every day with no change in sight today or tomorrow. Gordon Cashin, 9, of 110 Chippewa, seeks temporary relief in a lawn sprinkler. In each case the plane involved was a four-engine DC7 of Northwest Airlines, chartered to the Military Air Transport Service. Bloomfield Twp. Seeks Water Construction Bids Each carried 95 passengers. A crew of six was aboard yesterday's flight, while the plane last October had a crew of seven. Oakland County Public Virorks Director R. J. Alexander yesterday was authorized to seek construction bids to bring Detroit water into Bloomfield Township. . County engineers have estimated it will cost $2.12 -------------——-----------"♦million to install 23 miles Fair and Still Warm Forecast Tomorrow Generally fair and continued warm is the weatherman’s prediction for tonight and tomorrow. Temperatures are expected to drop to a mild 63 tonight and rise to 87 tomorrow. There’s a chance of scattered afternoon or evening thundershowers Thursday. Sixty-four was the lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The thermometer reading at 1 p.m. was 86. of transmission mains. Authorization to proceed was given by the County Board of Public Works. Alexander said he will advertise for bids July 22 and 25. The project will be split approximately in half for bidding purposes, he said, because the job is too big to be handled by any one contractor. In Today's Press School Elections Discuss Waterford, community college candidates - PAGE 15. Supreme Court New trial grante(^ in ■ damage suit against Wayne County—PAGE S. Christie Mystery ' Miss Marple suffers accident in her outing — PAGE 21. Area News ............4 Astrology ...........23 Bridge .............23’ Comics ..............23 Editorials ...........6 Markets .............22 I Obituaries .......... 18 I,;V Sports . Theaters . .......... 10 TV & Radio Progi'ams 29 Wilson. Earl ....\« - 29 Women's Pajjes....12-18 Construction is scheduled to begin in October, and is expected to take seven months to complete. COMMUNITY WELLS Bloomfield Township presently provides water for 3,000 customers from community wells. The supply is unable to meet growing demands. Customers are now paying the township 20 cents per thousand gallons of water. Detroit water will cost them ,30 cents per thousand gallons, according to James Scott, director of the township water and sewer department. Cu.stomers will be charged aii additional $5 quarterly for 25 years to pay off a county loan for construction, said Scott. New customers will be charged 3100 plus costs for laterals or ^ to connect into the System, he added. Russians Revise Plan MOSCOW (llPli - The Soviet Union announced yesterday it has revised Us .national seven-year economic development plan to emphasize the production of synthetic fibers and consumer goods. Authorities at Elmendorf, outside of Anchorage, held out some hope that the plane might not have crashed. LANSING (41 — The legislature prepared to reconvene today under threat of a referendum to l>e sought by Democrats i enacts a Republican-sponsored plan for congressional reapportionment. As lawmakers gathered in the capital for a scheduled three-day session and final adjournment, Democratic State Chairman Zol-ton Ferency made an llth-hour plea for a “bi-partisan meeting’’ on the Issue. Airline sources said even (he flight number, 293, was the same. Both planes disappeared in the same area. The pilot of the DC7 of last fall itched the plane skillfully in the ;ean off Sitka, and all aboard were rescued. ,, Where Debris * Sighted Fraud Charge Made Against Haifa, Others CHICAGO (UPI) - A federal grand jury today Indicted Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa and .seven'other men on charges of fraudulently obtaining $20 million in loans from a Teamsters! pension fund and using more than $1 million of It for their own benefit. •The indictment, the latest move in the Justice Department’s ebn-tinulng battle with the Teamsters boss, was announced simultaneously by the Justice Department in Washington and U.S. Atty. James P. O’Brien in Chicago. A 28-count indictment accused Hoffa and the others of obtaining 14 loans from the giant Central State Teamsters Pension Fund headquartered in Chicago. The Justice Department said the indictments capped a two-year Investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. High and Lowly File Past Bier VATICAN CITY — The high and the lowly paid homage to Pope John XXllI in a procession past his bier at the Vatican today, symbolizing the mourning of millions around the world. The body of the pontiff, 81, who died Monday night after four days of agonizing suffering from a stomach tumor and peritonitis, was to be transferred this evening across St. Peter’s ■ Square to St. Peter’s Basilica for wider public viewing. Prelates, diplomats and citizens of Vatican City, including the street sweepers and gardeners with whom Pope John liked to chat, called at the papal apartment in tribute while cnrdinals began preparations to chbose a hew supreme ruler for the world’s halfbillion Roman Catholics. PRAY FOR POPE - Women and children in Pope John’s home village of Sotto il Monte in northern Italy pray for eternal rest of the pontiff during solemn requiem Mass last night. The Holy Father was born in the village in 1881. Solons Reconvene Under Dem Threat But Gov. George Romney quickly reaffirmed his intention to stand by the redistricting plan in, its present form, and shrugged off the shgges-tion that a statewide referendum vote might result if it is passed. “A referendum is provided for in the constitution. It’s their right to have one if they want to,’’ he said. DISCUSS CHANGES Ferency asked the governor to meet with Lt. Gov. T. John Lesinski and legislative, leaders from both parties to disc|uss mak- ing changes In the reapportion-ment bill’s Wayne County por- tion. The redistricting plan, to set up the 19th district to which 120 Killed as Moslem Sects Fight KARACHI, Pakistan (41 — Police reported that 120 persons were killed nad 26 injured today clash between Shiite and Sunni Moslems in a village 250 miles north of Karachi. The Shiite Moslems reject the first three caliphs — the first three rulers of the church after the Prophet Mohammed died —and recognize the prophet’s son-in-law as his true successor. The Sunnis are Orthodox Moslems. A police report said “miscreant^’’ interfered with a Shiite religious procession. An enraged mob of Shiites then set fire to the village of Thari, and followers of both sects rioted. The Oakland County School Board might file an appeal to the State Tax Commission on the tenth-of-a-mill tax rate set by the County Tax Allocation Board yesterday. County School Superintendent William J. Emerson told fellow members of the lax allocation board that an appeal would be in order. School Board Chairman Frederick Beckman said an aopeal will be considered when his board meets June 13 to discuss a general education budget for fiscal year 1964-65. The school board had l eqiicst-ed a .16-mill rate to raise $370,- The police fired tear gas shells to restore order. EARLIER CLASH Two people were killed and several injured in a similar clash Monday in Lahore. Later 180 per-.sons were arrested and a 12-hour curfew was imposed. In neighboring Iran, Shite religious processions turned into antigovernment demonstrations with between 15,000 and 20,000 marching on the university in Tehran. Troops kept them off the campus and also away from the royal palace and the government radio. There have been Shiite ob-seryahees. for (he past three days commemorating the opening of the sect’s month of mourning for their founder. The last head of thq Shiites died in 1960 and the public observances were also intended to proclaim Ayatullah Mhomaini as new head of the religious group. Iranian government sources said conservative Shiite clergy who oppose the shah’s land reform and rights for women pro-grants were turning the religious observances into political demonstrations. May Appeal on Tax Rate County School Board Raps Allocation Ferency said the flresent plan —which was written by Wayne County Republican officials—has four major defects, chief among them the isolation of Negroes into a single congressional district. DILUTION’ He said its reshaping of the six Wayne County districts also would result in “dilution of the voting strength” of the area’s Polish community by putting Hamtramck into a district heavily Negro. Ferency also complained that the bill would “arbitrarily (Continued on Page 2, Cpl. 3) An allocation of •!(> mills would provide approximately $238,676. According to Emerson the County School Board was within its rights to expect any allocation required up to 4 mills. This or any lesser figure required to finance a school district’s budget is the minimum allocation according to state law. The allocation board splits IS mills among county and township governments, school districts and the County School Board. In setting the final rates, the allocation board awarded 5.19 miUs to county government, and 11 mills to local' school districts, less, whatever amount is ^located to the various townships tor local government. Requesting townships got anywhere from 1 to 1.64 mill.s. The County Board of fiiiper-visors had requested 5.94 mills to maintain and operate the county next year. The 5.19-mlll rate will o’ovidq the county $11.4 million in taxes, which means the budget will have to he pared $1.6 mtlUon. Michigan is entitled under the 1960 U.S.' census, has been hanging fire sjnee April 27, when a drafting error stalled its passage .before the legislature recessed. Democrats, counting on the possibility that the bare voting edge held by Republicans then may have diminished because of pressure from congressmen unhappy with the bill, have tried several times to compromise. They would let the Republicans divvy up outstate districts while keeping Wayne County, traditionally a Democratic stronghold, for thqmselves. Any plan, to pass the legislature, will need 18 votes in the Senate and 56 in the House. Romney says he expects the votes to be on hand. The cardinals, now administering church affairs, scheduled their first business meeting for Wednesday. The meetings, called general congregations, will be held every day tot- handling routine affairs and arrangements for the conclave that wil elect the new pope. Cecil C. Mullinix, president of Pontiac Motor Division Local 653, will go before the City Commission tonight to seek endorsement of plans for a drop-in center for Oakland County’s 40,000 retirees at the site of the old county courthouse. Vatican press officials said the formal nine-day mourning period will start Wednesday. The Vatican’s master of ceremonial set the date, they said, ‘This is step number one,” Mullinix said. “We are asking that the City Commission recommend to the Oakland County Board of Supervisors that the property be leased ' an association of retirdes for a drop-in center/’ he explained. More Stories, Pictures, Pages 8, 16, 17 and the cardinals are expected to ratify it in their opening busi-meeting. This would carry the period through the feast day of Corpus Christ! June 13, though it might be Interrupted for that occasion. IN RED ROBES The Pope’s body lay in slate in an antechamber. The body was dressed in red pontifical robes, with a golden bishop’s miter on the head and red slippers on the feet. The catafalque was low, resting only two feet from the floor. Pope John’s face was white. Hhis lipe had a pleasant expression—almost a faint smile. His hands, in red gloves, were folded over his pectoral cross. Two guards stood at the head of the catafalque and 10 Swiss guards and 10 palatine guards of honor stood along the walls. At three small portable altars (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) WillAskCity for Its Support Union Leader Seeks Building for Retirees “Once we get the land downtown, we’ll get the trioney for a building,” hq declared. He noted he has already received tremendous support for his plan, announced less than a week ago, including feelers from Pontiac Motor Division. Mullinix termed the old courthouse site, at Huron and Saginaw, an ideal location for a drop-in center. Retirees will be able to conduct their social activities and do their shopping right in the same area, he noted. In addition, because retirees generally lack transportation, the location right near municipal and suburban bus lines is also ideal, he, said. The property is currently being leased from the county by Sam L. Stolorow, head of the Outdoor Parking Co. of Pontiac, for a pay ) parking lot. The Pontiac man won a six-month lease in bidding last month. Step number two (or Mullinix (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Businessmen See JFK To Push Integration WASHINGTON (AP)-President Kennedy is expected to push for voluntary desegregation of hotels, restaurants, stores and theaters when he meets at the White House today with 100 businessmen who have outlets in the South. Whether or not his persuasive approach works, the President is likely to go ahead with plans to ask Congress to approve a heavy package of civil rights bills. Thus, Kennedy is bent on using both the carrot and the stick in hopes of soothing the Related Stdridi, Pages 9, 10 discontent of Negroes aqd heading off renewed racial violence in the South. Agreement in principle on a civil rights package was reached at a conference Monday between the President and Democratic congressional leaders. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D^Minn., reported. Humphrey, the acting Democratic leader, said the bills would include legislation to ban racial segregation both in private busi-jbehalf of ahy individual denied his ness and in public facilities. Onek‘''il f’ights. j objective, he said, would be to ./, n’®/ f I give the attorney general powerf'’^^ had. been called for this to start a federal court suit on' (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Glance at the Racial Scene FROM OUR NEWS WIRES BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Negro attorneys to ask federal appeals court for imtnediate injunction to strike down city's segregated school system. Justice Department attorneys press for order barring Gov. George C. Wallace from Interfering with scheduled enrollment of Negroes at University of Alabama next week. University trustees announce acceptance of third Negro student for summer session opening Monday. SAVANNAH, Ga — Three of city’s four downtown theaters integrate but two bow to public pressure and announce they will revert to former status. Crowd gathers and two shots fired into air as two Negroes enter one theater, but no injuries reported and police control crowd. PHILADELPHIA — Congress of racial Equality and National Association for the Advancement of Colored People announced they will cooperate in opposing alleged racial dis- ' crimination. Each had been conducting separate and sometimes conflicting campaigns on city construction project. I ‘i J TW TIIK rONTTA,C PRRSS> TUESDAY. JUNE 4. 1963 Violence Flares in Florida When Integration Dehied * From Our News Wires a formal order today prohibiting .Racial violence flared again «n‘*rference with the admission laft night in GaihesviUe, Fla. and Ifegroea in Savannah, Ga., where twp theaters backed out on an integration agreement, threatened new civil fights protests today. . Gronps of Negroes showered cars with stones and bricks in fiaimville, in|tfring several White persons. It was the second consecutive night of racial ■ disorders in the city, home of the University of Florida. Gaiiisville Mayor-Commissioner Byron Winn named a bi-racial committee to try to ease the tension in the city, where attempts tb integrate two downtown theaters first touched off the vio-Ibhot Sunday night. Four theaters in Savannah had announced they would drop racial j barriers. But a few hours later, ^ two rescinded the decision. I ‘Albert Weis, owner of the two f Rieaters, said he went back to j a" segregated policy under 1 “public pressure.” > Negro leaders announced they would resume picketing of the two theaters until Weis agrees to integrate them. Elsewhere in the South, a federal judge said he would issue ★ ★ ★ Expect JFK to Push for Integration ^Continued From Page One) morning by Sen. Richard B. Russell. D-Ga., to discuss strategy on civil rights measures was postponed. No new date was^v tomorrow of a second Negro to the University of Mississippi. Negro leaders la Baton Rouge, La., called a 30-day halt to integration demonstrations in the Louisiana capital, but new protests were promised for Danville, Va., where more than 2S0 persons picketed city hall. An 80 - year - old woman was among the scores of young Negroes who marched in Danville. Mayor Allen Thompson of Jack-son, Miss., said the Negro drive to crack rigid racial barriers in that city has run out of steam, but a Negro leader, said “A full day of activity is scheduled.” Thompson went a step further on two concessions he made for birlag Negro polieeman and the absence of a number of senators might make a postponement necessary. The delay until next week hi the submission of the administration’s program also ap-' peared to be a factor. 'All southern states except Alabama and Arkansas will be repre-.sehted at the businessmen’s meeting with Kennedy in late afternoon. Kennedy asked them to come to “discuss some aspects of the difficulties experienced by minority gfoups in many of our cities in securing employment and equal access to facilities and services generally available to the public. Kennedy’s special message on civil rights will be his second to Congress this year. The first was on Feb. 28. A great deal has happened since then; Negro picketing, rioting, and arrests in Birmingham, Jackson, Tallahassee, Philadelphia and other cities. These events have convinced Kennedy that more is needed than the mild proposals he sent to Congress in February. X nouncing the city would begin receiving Negro applications for the posts. In Los Angeles, Negroes prepared plans for achieving “total integration” in the area. A school to train young people and youhg adults in nonviolent demonstrations such as picketing apd sit-ins was formed. Another federal jurist said he would decide tomorrow Whether to hand down a similar order restraining Alabama Gov. George Wallace from blocking the enrollment of three Nbgroes in tl University of Alabama Monday. Judge Sidney Mize of Biloxi, Miss., said yesterday he would order Cleve McDowell admitted to the “Ole Miss” law sebow tomorrow despite a warning by Gov. Ross Barnett that such an act would touch off “Increased unrest and disturb-, ances.” At Birmingham, Ala., after an hour and a half hearing yesterday, Judge Seybourn Lynne Russell had said in adva^e that promised to rule tomorrow morn- ing on whether an injunction should be issued against Wallace, who has vowed to stand in the door to keep Negroes out of Alabama’s segregated public schools iThe other Negro student is David M. McGlathery, 27, of Huntsville. He plans to enroll at the Huntsville branch of the university. On another front, Negro attorneys are taking to a federal appeals court their request for an immediate injunction to strike down the segregated school system in racially troubled Birmingham. Attorney W. L. Williams Jr. said the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans would be asked for a preliminary Injunction pending an appeal of a lower court ruling. Notice of appeal was filed Monday. U.S. Dist. Judge Seybourn H. Lynne refused last Tuesday to order school desegregation but warned he would order submission of an integration plan unless school officials administer a state pupil placement law without discrimination this fall. The Weather mv Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Generally fair and continued warm today, tonight and Wednesday, High today 85. Low tonight 63, high Wednesday 87. Light and variable winds today, tonight and Wednesday. TaiIii; In Ponllnn »eat tcinpertturi preccdlni II i I *,m.; Wind valocity, 1 rn.ph, ectlon: West. 1 ritea Wadneaday al 4:48 a in. on aati Wadnetday al 4:10 a.m, on rlaea Tucaday at >:31 p.ni. On* Yaar A(o In Pantlaa tamparalura ........... II. I.owaat tamparalura .. ....... Maan tamparatur* lathar; Bain .03. Ill(haal and I.owaat Tamparati Thia »ata In PI Vilara In 1034 40 In 1010 NATIONAL WEATHER - S(;attcred showers and thunderstorms are expected over portions of the northern and central Plains tonight while rain is predicted for the north Atlantic Coast sfatM- B will be warmer In the eastern half of the nation as well as west of the Rockies; cooler in the Plateau states. Birmingham Area News . . -i;■ Alfernqte Parking Plans Presented Commission -* ' ■ r i t ''' % . CATAFALQUE,FOR POPE - A IMoot-high structure, draped in black and surrounded with lighted candles, dominates the* center-aisle are near the altar of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City. The catafalque, symbolic of the death of Pope John, will remain on display until the Holy Father is buried. VF Should Budget Its Agencies' DETROIT — A proposal that the Unit^ Foundation be allowed to establish the budgets of its 195 health and welfare agencies was made yesterday by Walter Cj Laidlaw, executive vice president of the UF. ★ ★ ★, ’The recommendation was made by Laidlaw at the organization’s 14th annual meeting at a Detroit hotel. Local agencies now submit their proposed bi^gets to United community services, administrative erganlzation for the Budget requests from state and national agencies are submitted to the Michigan United Fund, which is both the fund-raising and administrative agency for groups In the state. REQUESTED The United Foundation is requested to raise the funds after UCS and MUP decide hdw much money should be allocated to ’.heir agencies. The UF would deal with the budgets directly and they would bypass the state unit, under Laidlaw’s proposal-“I recommend that the budgeting of all Torch Drive agency funds become the function of the UF,” Laidlaw said. ★ * A Carl Bradley, director of the Pontiac Area United Fund, said this morning that the local UF follows the suggested procedure. “We budget directly,” he said. Storm Covers Most of East By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rainy, cloudy and foggy weath-;r covered most areas from the Ohio Valley to the Atlantic seaboard today as a coastal storm moved inland. Stormy weather hit much of the coastal region again Monday. Rain measured, nearly eight inches in Norfolk, Va. The storm weakened considerably during the niht and heavy winds diminished and winds subsided on the coast. Small craft warnings remained idsplayed fro Block Island, H I., to Eastport, Rain fell in the southern and eastern sections of the Ohio Valley east and northeast to Massachusetts. Fog shrouded much of the region. Globe Mourns for Dead Pope (Continqed From Page One) priests said Requiem Masses continually in hushed tones. . ★ ★ * President Antonio Segni and Premier Amintore Fanfant of Italy paid their respects at the catafalque. L’Osservatore Roman, the Vatican newspaper, said it would publish over the next several days a series of unpublished writings and thoughts of Pope John. MOURNING PURPLE Cardinals and diplomats walked in a steady stream up the royal staircase from the bronze door to the papal apartment. The cardinals were in mourning purple, the diplomats in formal dress. They knelt at the foot of the catafalque to kiss the Pope’s slipper. The prelates sprinkled holy water on the body as they knelt. ’The 1,900 citizens of Vatican City began to pass by the Pope’s body toward noon. Some aged and stooped, they wore their best dark suits. Prof. Antonio Gasbarrini, official papal physician vtrho had struggled for days to aid the dying ponti ,ffsat in one corner of the room. His face showed grief. Probable That JFK to Delay Italian Visit WASHINGTON (AP)-President Kennedy probably will put off a scheduled visit to Italy until after the College of Cardinals elects a successor to Pope John XXIII. ★ ■ ★ * Taking note of the pontiff’s death, Kennedy—first Roman Catholic to hold the U.S. presidency—said Pope John’s “wisdom, compassion and timely strength have bequeathed humanity a new legacy of purpose and courage for the future.” Kennedy originally was scheduled to fly to Italy on June 20. But the conclave to choose a new Pope must begin no earlier than June 18 and no later than June 21. ★ ★ A Since it is likely to last five or six days—the average length of previous 20th century conclaves— Kennedy would be unable to visit Italy until after he goes ahead with already firm plans to West Germany and Ireland. His tentative itinerary calls for him to leave Ireland on June 29. If a new pontiff is chosen by that date, it’s possible Kennedy will fly from Ireland to Italy instead of to Washington. Candles flickered at the four coineri of the catafalque, mounted on multiple-armed candelabra. #■ ★ Embedded in the floor was a mosaic reproduction of the coat of arms of Pope Pius XII, the predecessor of Pope John. Pope John’s oWh seal was in the floor ing of the room outside. FLAG OF VENICE The flag of Venice, the Italian city where Pope John had been patriarch before his election, hung from one wall. The mourners came and went without interruption. Among the first was Benedetto Alois! Masel-la, cardinal chamberlain who handies routine affairs of the Vatican' as adminlstfator until the conclave, to be called later this month, elects the next pope. The first meeting was attended only by cardinals who were to R®nie when the Pope died. Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, French-bom dean of the College of Cardinals, sent formal notice of the Pope’s death to the other 81 members of the sacred college and summoned them to Rome. ★ ★ ★ Major decisions left over from the reign of Pope John await the new Pope. He must decide whether to continue the Ecumenical Council which Pope John convened last fall and which was suspended automatically at his, death. The AIM OF UNITY The council’s aim was greater Christian unity, and it is considered almost certain that the new Pope will summon the church’s 2,400 bishops back to Rome to its work. uvn irviu IW wvim voi * iwRavasi. Kennedy’s proposed income tnx ent to meet to closed session on his request to continue the higher excise levies And corporate rate enacted during the Korean Wnr. Unless Congress approves the extension, these taxes will drop July 1. Although they originally were levied as “temporary” taxes, they have beeh extended repeatedly by Congress and apparently will be again. The temporary taxes now yield more than $4 billion a year in revenue. That includes, almost |2.4 billion from corporations and almost 11.8 billion from the excise taxes. The new Pope also must decide wheflier to move along the pnth of better relations with Communist governments which Pope John had opened in hopes ef erasing the plight of Catholics hehtod the Iron Cnr-tain. The cprdinals will vote twice dally in the Sistlne Chapel until two thirds of the princes of the church agree on a choice. Although neither a lesser prelate nor a non-Italton Is barred, the new Pope probably will be an lUlian and a cardinal. The favorite among the papa-blle”-those considered like y papal c'andldates-ls Giovanni Battista Cardinal Montinl, 05, archbishop of Milan and the first cardinal created by Pope John. Althoui^ he was not a cardina at the time, he was mentioned often as a papal prospect before the 1950 conclave that chose Pope .John to succeed Pope Plus XII. Legislature Returns (Continued From Page One) split” political subdivisions — such as (he city of Dearborn— and “destroy the concept of population as a basis for re-districting,” If none of these “deficiencies” were corrected,' Ferency said, the Democratic parly may be compelled to take this question to the people in the form of a referendum in order that they may determine u^hat is best for them.” ★ * A He termed thh calling of a referendum “a serious .step, rarely used and not to be taken lightly." By law, a referendum could not be held until the 1004 general election. To get the issue need petitions signed by five per cent of the total vote for governor In the last previous (|002) election, or about 130,000 A spokesman for the financially-distressed Democrats said he had "no idea” how much a petition drive would cost biit expected it would be primarily volunteer work. REBUFFED Romney, who has rebuffed Lcsinski and other Democrats In earlier attempts for a compromise on congressional reappor- tionment, met Fcrency’s charges head-on. He said the Democrats’ plan, which LesinskI drpw up, would create ghettos” to an even greater extent” than the GOP plan. “There is no all-Negro district n our plan” asserted the governor. “’file Democrats’ plan, however, would do exactly what they claim ours would do. 'Theirs obviously is designed to group races together for political purposes.” Romney defended the GOP-authored plan by saying It would "work both ways” and not simply to the benefit of Republicans, as the Democrats have charge. OK Expected on Extensiorf of Tax Rates WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House Ways ft Means Committee was expected today to approve a oito-yehr extension of fed^al tax rates on liquor, cigarettes, automobiles, telephone calls, airline tickets and corporation profits-The House group took time BIRMINGHAM ' - Alternate plans tar parking in the soutto west section wVe presented to the City Commission last night by the Central Birmingham Residents Association (CBRA). Robert Veryzer, spokesman for CBRA, collected 2,075 names on a petiton protesting the proposed lot in the block bounded by Bates, Merrill, Henrietta antf Townsend.' Three alternative parking plans were presented by Veryzer and Roiland Wilkening, consultant to CBRA. Of the three plans, the one vhich the CBRA favors concerns redeveloping the block bounded by Maple, Southfield, Merrill and Chester.. As outlined by Veryzer, the plan calls for acquiring the old Hill School property, the playground and northwest comer of Maple and Southfield for parking. The HiU School Dismiss Charge Against Henry A contempt of court citation against Pontiac City Commissioner Milton R. Henry, issued last March, was dismissed in Genesee County Circuit Court today. Circuit Court Judge Louis D. McGregor discontinued the contempt of court case, saying that he felt Henry had "purged” hii self. * -k -k 'The Pontiac city commissioner told the judge he Was sorry about the whole affair and promised it wouldn’t happen again. He was cited for appearing 105 minutes late for the March 14 trial of Harold Liston of Flint, whom he was representing in an appeal from Hint Municipal Court on an assault and battery conviction. ★ ★ * In April Henry was cleared of a contempt charge before a Flint municipal judge. The charge was dismissed. 165 Hurt In Troin Crash AUGSBURG, Germany m One hundred and sixty-five persons were injured today in the collision of two trains at Augsburg’s main railroad station. s. to Fight Hunger PrBiident Addrasses World Food Congress tioto boildiiig would be shifted to the comer of Maple and Soatbfield^est of B a 1 d w i n School, aeeordiBg to Bie plan, other suggestions were decking this lot for added Baldwin playground space now and eventually using it for parking. It * * Wilkening, who is associated with a Detroit contracting firm, estimated the CBRA-proposed lot would accommodate 475 to 500 cars, eventually 1;000. He said costs for a minimum structure range around 1850,1)00. Other plans introduced by the CBRA were to deck the mu- , nicipal lot off Pierce Street or purchase the north half of the i Community House block. This would include the Merrill right-of-way plus some library property and Community House auditorium expansion over the proposed lot. The city will assist this year's Birmingham Arts Festival with anywhere from $1,000 to $1,500, according to L. R. Gare, city ^ manager. The request was made at last night’s meeting. B. F. McLean, chairman of the arts festival, said the committee would appreciate any msiterlal assistance it coiihl get, namely a > truck and driver to transport WASHINGTON W) - President Kennedy said today no nation citizen can feel satisfied or secure as long as "half of humanity is still undernourished or hungry.” In an address at the opening of the World Food Codgress, Kennedy said the' United States pledges fjull support to a multination campaign to achieve freedom from hunger. 'We have it within our power to win this b^|)e,”*1ie told 1,200 delegates froin more than 100 nations. “It is a more iipportant, mdre glorious battle than any other in the history of man—for it involves the power to build, rather than destroy.” The President’s words are to be rebroadcast via the Relay satellite to seven European countries. k * * , Kennedy said the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, sponsor of the congress, “has embarked on a vigorous and Imaginative program which is now at the half-way mark.” During the past decade, Kennedy said, the United States, through its food-for-peace program, has contributed more than $12 billion of food and fiber to less fortunate peoples. He said the program now brings food to 100 million peirsons in 100 countries. The program, he said, can take care of emergency needs Stemming from famine, floods and other catastrophies, “but it is not a permanent solution.” The real goal, Kennedy said, must be to produce more food I the nations which need It lost. “Know-how is not the problem,” ~ said. "For the first time in the ry of the world, we do know to produce enough food— eliminate all hunger The Arts Festival, June 15-23, will be held at two locations. Accofdlog to McLean’s letter to the cmnnisslen, “the main events will occur nt the Birmingham Art Center on South Qraabroek Road and in the. history enough completely.” What is needled now, he said, is a greater, more systematic ef-lort to share this knowledge, to I help transmit and adapt new farm technology across the barriers of ignorance and suspicion.” OLD AND NEW - Maj. Gen. Clay Hodges, 103, oldest living U.S. Military Academy graduate, reaches to shakAonda with Cadets Colin P. Kelly III (left), of Media, Pa., whofll|j|ge^father was World War H’s first Medal of Honor winner, afl^chard E. Eckert of Carlisle, Pa., during graduation week exercises yesterday at West Point. The city spent $1,490 when the 1902 festival was staged at the Art Center; $354 in 1961 when the festival was held in Shain Park; and $1,297 for the 1960 fes-Uval, also at Shain Park. T. Ralph Alexander, 1975 Ship-man, has been elected president of the Birmingham Lions Club. Alexander is sales manago' of Oakland M ment of RoyalK Oak, a division | of Sheldon Gran-1 ite Co., Detroit, f Also to be in-t? stalled July 2 arek Harris Mpehus,' Machus Bakery,^ first vice presi-K dent; Frank W." Whitson, Bir- ALEXANDER mingham Insurance Agency, second vice president; and Donald L, Cummings, Wilson Drug Co., secretary - treasurer. Karl G. Linditrom Service for Karl G. Lindstrom, 81, of 990 Pleasant, will be 1 p.m. Friday at the Nelson Funeral Home, Chicago, lU. Burial will follow in Memorial Park Cemetery, Evanston, III. Mr. Lindstrom died early today after a long illnesO. His body will be at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home until tomorrow morn-•"8- . ^ Mr. Lindstrom was.a retired representative of the Taylor Firm, Chicago, 111. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Elroy L. Sandberg of Birmingham; two sisters; four brothers; and two grandsons. Mrs. Drayton Prebllcock Service for former Bloomfield Hills resident Mrs. Drayton (Mabel L.) Prebllcock, 68, of Fos-torla, will be 2:30 p.m. Thursday In the Fostoria Methodist Church there. Burial will be in West Deerfield Cemetery. Mrs. Prebllcock died unexpectedly yesterday In Marlette Com-Ty Ho^tal. Her body is at Blacttmore-Tubbs Funeral Home, Mayville. Surviving are a brother Albert Hoebiger of Hew Hudson and a sister. Union leader $Nks Retirees' Building (GonUntied From Page One) h a eowrt teJUMetioN stepping otpsrMtea ef m ptebiei lot, The locel UAW leader declared that the property is not being used in accordance with the wishes of its donor, who indicated that It dhouM be lised^or A pay parking lot does not n these restrictions, he ssid. Stott Mon Dito in Crooh COLFAH, Calif, (iti - A small car aareened off U.S. # west of nearby Weimar yesterday, killing Robert Clwlstian Wall, 20,. of I i^mouth, Mich., (he driver. I THE PONTIAC PRESS 'rtJESDAY, JUNE 4, 1963 PONTIAC, MICHIGAJf. For Board of Trustees Here's Community College Hopefuls Harold J. Abrams, 37, ol 100 Alice, is consultant supervisor of special education for the Oakland County Board of Education. He has been on the special education staff since 1955. The holder ' of a masters degree from the University of Michigan, Abrams is active in numerous civic and profes-sionai groups, inciuding the She was a candidate for the [graduate, and 1943 law (tegreeipal judge for the city of Oak Pontiac City Commission in 1958 and managed Republican headquarters in Pontiac during the 1960 election. " ★ ★ * A member of the Avondale Board of Education, David Hackett, 39, 1380 Ruby, Rochester, is a teiephone technician. He is also father vice president of the Avondale High School PTSA. from the University of Detroit. Kavanagh as an unsuccessful Con-Con candidate in 1961. He Dusen in District 4 of Oakland County. BROOKS! groups, including Park Charter Study Committee on Community Colleges. /He holds membership in' the Michigan Reading A.s.sociation, American Society of Planning Officials and is secretary of the Hazel Park Jaycees. I w * I John C. Brooks, 45, 4666 Charing Cross, Bloomfield Township, is manager of a branch of the National Bank of Detroit. Kc has been associated with the bank for nearly a quarter of a cen- Michlgan Federated Chapters, Council for Exceptional Children. Maintaining a private practice in educational counseling. Brooks is a graduate of (he Abrams is married and the I nth-' American Institute of Banking, er of three children. I He also attended Walsh In- w * A stitute. HACKETT HAHN Hackett is a graduate of the" University of Detroit and has taken courses in business administration at Oakland University. Married, he and his wife, Marion; have seven children. He bej Married and the father of three to several civic organiM- Thomas H. Atkinson, 33, of' children, he has been active i.. . trar at Oakland University. He is j numerous professional, civic and Episcopal Church, affiliated with many c i v i c froternal organizations. He is ~ church and professional organizations. A former high school teacher, he received bis M.A, degree in guidance and cou.isel-ing from the University of Michigan this year. Married and ‘the father of past secretary of the Warren Rotary Club and past treasurer of the Bloomfield Estates Improvement Association. A ★ A Chairman of the legal subcommittee and the 1963 steering committee oh Oakland County community college study, Wendell School. three children, Atkinson is on the Brown, 61, 29921 Ardmore, Farm-Facutty Affairs Committee of ington Township, is an attorney Oakland University. He formerly with offices in Detroit, taught ^t Pontiac Central Highj grown is active in a host of professional, civic and church groups. In addition, he served six years on the board of education in the Farmington School District. The University of Michigan Farmington Township Board for [three years. Married, he has jtwo daughters. BALLARD BERRY . C. Ray Ballard, 62, of 10160: Kingston, Huntington Woods is an; English and journalism teacher; at Troy High School. He has M.A. degree from Colorado Uni-' versity with graduate studies at Yale, Colorado and Wayne State universities. A veteran educator. BaHard has held executive positions in ediieation and with commercial companies. He is married and has tnrec children. He does some freelance writing for films, trade journals and other media. Park. He has been judge there since 1557. An attorney in private practice, Shifman is a member of several bar associations and national professional organizations. He is a former Oak Park school board member. Judge Shifman has been referee for the Oakland County Juvenile Court since 1960. He is married and the father of three children. LEAK KUTHY Coordinator of the business administration college of the Unicampus, Eugene W. Kuthy, 32, 4114 Colonial, Royal Oak, is responsible for the cooperative education program in business administration and liberal arts. Formerly with the controler’s staff of Ford Motor Company, Kuthy has two years of his law degree complete at the Uni-versity of Michigan Law School. Married, he an^ his wife, Jacqueline, have three children. STITES STORM Harry T. Hahn, 45, 23 Delaware Drive, is director of instruction for Oakland Schools, the intermediate school district of Oakland County—a position he has held for eight years. Active in many professional erganizations, Hahn is past president of the Michigan Reading Association. He bolds degrees from State Teachers College, Kutztown, Pa., and Tem-p I e University, Philadelphia, Pa. Hahn is married and has four children. He has been a visiting professor of education to rhany universities across the nation, A A A Publisher of the Rochester •News, & Troy Tri-City Messenger, William B. Heaton, 33,2730 Cham-wood, Troy, is married and the father of four children. A resident of Troy for eight years, Heaton bolds a bachelor of science degree in engineering from Princeton University. I He is a former naval communi-i cations officer and research engineer. A lifetime resident of Pontiac, Howard A. .Stites, 40, 1368 Stan? ley, has been a building contractor for 15 years. He hasattended Oakland University to become a teacher. Stifes is a former organizer for the United Public Keith L. Leak, 62, 6195 Middle ’ zworkerS (AFL-CIO). Lake Road, Independence Township, has served on the Clarks-ton School District schwl board for 18 years. He has been president of that board for 12 years. Leak, who Is employed as assistant superintendent in t h e Pressed Metal Plant, Pontiac Motor Division, has been active in school and church organizations. A resident of the county for 32 years, he is the father, of two sons and a daughter. Mrs Barningham, 55, is a grad-»f Alton a^n lor. rlimrtol manager ol themer opeeeh teacher in Ihe Pan-Royal Oak branch of Michigan CURTIS EAVES Daniel T. Berry, 32, of 4324 Al-lingham, Davisburg, is employed in the selling of plumbing and building materials. He was an unsuccessful candidate for Oakland County drain commi.ssioner. Active in Wayne County Ea.ster Seal campaigns. Berry is a member of AFL^IO Plumber’s Local 98 and the Pontiac and '.'.thite Lake Township Democratic clubs. He has 14 years in the plumbing and building industry. Postmaster of Southfield, Charles L. Curtis, 55, 25525 Edge-mont, Southfield, was chairman of the sites and housing committee of the Oakland County community college study. Curtis is currently serving his second term as a member of the Southfield School Board. He is secretary of that board. Active in school affairs and professional associations, Curtis also belongs to several fraternal ganizations. He is married and has two sons. briOht BROOK J. Russell Bright, 25780 Dundee, Royal Oak, is director of the office for research administration at Wayne State University. He taught chemistry for 25 years, including 18 years at the junior college level. Currently vice president of the Board of Directors of Associated Midwest Universities, Bright received his Ph.D from Manchester College, Indiana. Married and the father of two daughters, he has lived in Royal Oak for 17 years and Is active in several professional and civic organizations. A A A A teacher in the Madison Heights School System, John William Brook, 387, W. Maclow, Hazel Park, has a masters degree in education. Brook has been active in many civic and professional Married and the father of one son, he belongs to the Oakland County Sportsmen Club. A A A Raymond H. Storm, 40, 2746 DONALD PORTER RICHARD LUEHMANN MRS. DOROTHY BARNINGHAM Three Seeking Two Posts in Waterford School Election Three candidates are vying for the two fopyear term vacancies on the Waterford Township School Board in next Monday’s election. A fourth candidate. Dr. Ev-erette Gustafson, 3780 Lake-wood, was ruled ineligible May 14 when a review of his petitions showed only 49 valid signatures, one below the required ninimum. Seeking office are incumbent secretary Mrs. Dorothy Barningham, 2856 W. Huron; Richard .^j ^ graduate of Elm- Luehmann, 3611 Percy King; and j Elmhurst, 111. Donald Porter, 3736 Manner. The mother of two, she is a past president ..of the Donelson School PTA. Mrs. Barningham also has -served on the Parent-Teachers Board and the Parent-Student-Teacher Association Board. Mrs. Barningham polled the highest number of votes in 1960 when nine candidates contested for two three-year terms on the board. ‘ ' - AAA Luehmann, 46, is- personnel director of Pontiac State Hos- MRS. MAY MORSE HEATON JONES Arnold R. Jones, 36, 672 Linda Vista, is a public relations official with Michigan Hospital Service. A native of Indiana, Jones has resided in Oakland County for the past four years. He is past president of the Junior Advertising Club of Detroit and the Detroit Academy of Advertising Arts. An audio-visual specialist, Jones previously was director of public information for the Great Lakes Region of the Civil Air Patrol. Beecher C. Edgwood, Royal Oak, is a manufacturer’s representative and a professional engineer. Employed by the University of Michigan, Dearborn campus. Dr. Cedric V. Frlcke, 35, 18158 West-over, Southfield, has secured his doctorate degree from the same institution. Formerly in private industry, Fricke belongs to the West-hampton Civic Association, the American Statistical Association and the Friends of the Southfield Public Library. He is married and has two children. ' AAA Mrs. Hope Gorman, 144 N. Genesee, divides her time between substitute teaching and her duties as a housewife. She is a graduate of Eastern Michigan University. The mother of three sons, Mrs. Gorman is former vice president of the Greater Pontiac Community Ch^st, past president of the Pontiac PTA Council, and . on the Board of Pirectors of the YWCA. Robert Willard Morse, 40, 507 Kendry, is a Pontiac high school teacher. He is a past candidate for the Bloomfield Hills school board. Active in various civic and community groups, Morse is five . term president of the Colonial Hills Improvement Association. He has several fraternal affiliations. He receive his bachelors degress from Michigan State University and his masters from Wayne State. He is married and has three young daughters. KALUZYNSKI KAVANAGH Visiting teacher and vocational rehabilitation counselor for the Oakland County Board of Education, Raymond Kaluzynski, 37, 4620 Midland, Waterford Township, also teaches a course at Oakland University. , ' A member of numerous educational associations, Kaluzynski received his bachelors degree from the University of Miami, Florida, and his masters from Michigan State University. Married and the father of two children, Kaluzynski served iti the Navy during rod .40 0 34% 23% 23% — % DP .llg 7 10% 10% 10% Lud 2 X12 30% 37% 37% *' PW 1.00 0 40% 40 40% . ICh 1.00 34 «% MVe. «% - % Shaf‘^.60 17 10% 10% 10% — % Ltd .00 71 37 30% 27 + % bds.) High Law Last Cte. 122 73% 72% 72% -lb B 7 41% 41% 41% 4- % B ! § « - Vs “ omette 1.10a 41 34 OlenAW .80 " Ooodrch 2.20 Goodyear t Grace Co lb GrandD ,80b 34% 34% — - 60% 81 + ------------ 7? I 60 08% 60 4 I 23% 33% 33% I 18% 18 J 83% 63% 74 30% 20% -- . 30 46% 46% 48% 41 80 60% 88% w ^ fo ^ ‘S jjs "" 4 00% S% 00% 68 11% 11 11% 0 70% 77% 77% U 18% ISVs 18% ?3‘^'S%‘?0^4Vs a ! fo^i GUU 8 U1.13 Hslllbur 3.40 HamP 1.30b HercAdr^fog Herts 1.30 Hewlett Pk HeydenN .80 Hoff Elect • x36 80% 80% 80% . 10 36% 36% 30% — V 03 40'/s 48% 48% — 8 10 18% 10% 18% 4 8 13 308k 20% 30% — 8 7 48% 48 48% 4 8 13 84 83% 63% — 8 14 47% 47% 47% 4 8 7 30% 38% 30% 4 8 38 48 44% 48 44 36 % 36% 36% —8 —H— 1? iJS sa-? 3 84 83% 83% 4 8b 17> 0% 8% 0 4 % 1 40% 40% «% — 8b 10 36% 36 36% 0 W 3% 2% 4 86 88% 86 8 13% 13% 13% 10 7% 7% 7% (bds.) High Low Last Chg. 10 17% 17% 17% 4 Vs n 47% 47% 47% — % 8 0% 0% 0% ' 37 87% 87% 87% 14 31% 31% 31% 11 23% 33% 33% — % 8 JT/b 33% 33% 44 11% llVs 11% Livestock DBTBOR LIVESTOC-OETBOR, June 3 (APl-Cattle 3.300. B Bulk early supply choice steers, quality b rather attractive; large showing of Hoi- b stein steers and belters; oholee heifers -In small supply; cows In limited early supply; go^ and chMee steers «:t v-steady to strong compared with Is Wedneeday, or fuUy 38 cents high than last Monday; cows aetive. ful SX.i.«%'?“te‘pr.iroJtfi4S'‘tV'S isut" uSfitT \ ners and cutters 12.80-10.00, _ . „ \l35fr! adViJ?e-«.“3i.*‘(!1b;"iJw«; btsady to 38 cents higher; 30 bead 11.8. 1\306 lb barrows and^lte 18.38: couple l^s V-* 1. 'h •«> »1 >h Narrows a^ glUe 10.1O-I0.18: several lots l and 2mMSf lb 18.00; if.8. 1. 3 and 3 300-4008 »ows U.38- 14.80. Vealars 138 steady, choice and prime -----^*0; standard and good “ “ 183 10% 10 10 „■ St ifS tffii 3 34% 24% 34% 4 6 87% 87V« 87% i S% 82% 4 ?? rf7 - 10 20% 20% 30% 6 80% 60 60% 8 82% 82% 82% - 0 14 13% 13% - % 8 34% 34% 34% 3 101% lOOVs lOIVs 4 ' Ing' Rand 3a ^ InlaodSt 1.60 7 Interlak 1.60 * IntBusM 4 i a a ak-it ! .*» ft? S» ♦ » „_lrand 2 StdKolls 60t StdOllCsl 3b BtOInd 1.80b StOIINJ 1.30g SlOllOh 3.60b :_::..:^i''2o StauHCh 1.20 SterlOrg 1.08 SterlDnu wi Steven 1.80b 8 82% 82% 83% 88 38% 38% 38% - 14 68% 68 08% 4 .. 266 14% 13% 14% 4 % 16 30 30% 30% — % 14 46% 48% 46V4 - 13 70% 70% 70% - 80 17% 17% 17% 4 16 83% 63% 03% 41 88% 88 88% 4 . 67 66 % 66% 66% — % 2 63% 63% 63% 16 13% 13V* 13V* — > 34% 0 34% 34% 34% — % 3 70 70% 70 ' 2 36% 36% 36% 1 33% 33% 33% _____ 01 6% 6% 6% ly 1.40 41 33% 33% 33% • “ 4 43% 43 43 — % TcnnGas 80g 163 20V* 20 g». 38 17% 17% 17% 33 31V* 31 31% 43 40V* 47% 48 TexGPd .80a > 66% I 1 87 41 18% 18% 1 08 87% 88% b< - 4 88% 68% 68% 4 21% 21% 21% - 13 37 36% 36% 4 87 36% 28% 38% 4 iLqxan . ___lesAL 3. Joy Mfg 1 gtelserAl .00 88% i 34% 1 ^ i Wirtz Enters Rail Dispute To Meet Negotiators on Work Rules Issue WASHINGTON «PI - Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz steps into the railroad work rules dispute today, hoping to smooth the path to agreement before a June 12 nationaiide strike deadline. ★ ★ ★ Wirtz meets with negotiators for the railroads ^ five operating unions this morning, seeking a progress report. The Kennedy adminii has said repeatedly that it wiii dot tolerate a natioiiwide rail strike. Key issue is the removal of some 40,000 firemen from diesel-powered freight and yard trains. ★ ★ w The railroads contend that outdated work rules cost them |0OO million each year. H. E. Gilbert, president of the AFL«IO Brotherhood of |rterg*\ L S ^^^tfLoeoniotive^^F^^ ginemen, said in Cleveland his SMbAL' i.M 31 »% 33% 33% repoit to Wirtz would be that ....................'! “%1% “no progress” has been made. 7b 43% 43’ 43% - % , , ^ J2% 4 % A presidential emergency board “‘.7 Jast month recommended that Business Buildings Sign of New Boom? By SAM DAWSON AP Business Nem Analyst NEW YORK-The glass Sheath and curtain wall, tfie movable partition and year-around air-conditioning no longer are the daytime h o me only of office workers in the nation’s largest cities. The modern office enviromr is beginning mushroom in me-^ dium-sized cities that haven’t seen a major new office buildinif' since the 1920s. And the changing face of these business centers may be the mark of the next construction boom, if the biggest cities should take a breather. While many medium-sized cities have been making do with office accommodations 30 or more years old, their local industries have grown and so have the ranks of professional people, all looking for more space. Big coiporations are locating plants in aU regions of the United States, and many now are sectionalizing command and so are in need of regional headquarters. Drives to save downtown areas from blight also have started office building boomlets in many cities, large and small. Often this is helped along by federal funds. Buildings in smaller cities are expected to bring the total value of office construction this year to 8 per cent more than 1962, even if New Y(>rk construction should slow down. APRIL SPURT F. W. Dodge Corporation, construction news specialist, reports *4 #.*'*■*• By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “Please give me a complete list of Government issnes vMch are exempt from Federal income taxes. I would like to have the highest security possible and, in my bracket, I could use the tax exemption, too.” G. R. A. This is, pretty much of a gamble. Studebaker has made some diversification moves; but its business is still largely automotive, and production in this area in the first four months of 1963 was below that of a year earlier. The earnings deficit in the March quarter was more than twice as A. I am sorry to tell you that large as in the same period of the firemen’s jobs be eliminati^ there are no Government issues 11962. gradually, as the men retire, die outstanding — either Treasury or Studebaker makes a good car or switch to other jobs, with a savings Bonds - which are ex-1 that has been hurt by styUng reprovision for negotiati(>n on each empt from Federal Income taxes.'jected by the public. I am told Under present laws these issues j that the ’64 models will be re-are exempt only from State vamped with greater emphais on income taxes. sales appeal. There is availabie to you, how-j On this assumption, and pro-ever, the broad field of state and vided that you are in a position municipal bonds, which do offer to assume risk, I would hold now you exemption from Federal in-1 the 50-50 chance that the ffttne taxes. Because of the wide shares may get back to your cost taxing powers of the issuers,' price, in the next few mopths these obligations are second in when the new models are unquality only to Federal obliga- job the railroads eliminate. WWW ‘"Ilie railroads are giving only lip service to the recommendations of the emergency board,” Giibert said, “while telling the President and the public that they support the board’s findings.” In a radio interview last nij^t, Wirtz refused to speculate as to.tions. 31 36% 36% S%-% ,EMriBo x3 83% 83% 63% 4 %:Enin«cott Sx 3 1% 1% 1% „ EernCL 3.46 4 33% 33% 33%-7 %!K«rrMcG i •» * IS “6S IS 43 18% ” , 18 KorvelM Kmg* .606 KruiSR .406 Erogu 1.10 CdnPM 180 Oxrrlar 1.80 Corter Nd 1 aSrr? 1 30 I S'% %tS U 4?S 4SS 4^ f, r US U%1S 3 34% 34% 34% 31 43 41% 43 ‘Sf4SS%S% " s Lorau *2aJ LlbMoN .381 LlgqlkM 8 Joncl Uttonln 1.87t LockbA L30q 6 fJS 11% 38% \l 6^S .IS US 10 14 13% 13% LongILt 1.73 _I?&**El»atr Lorlllxrd 3.80 Luk^ 8tl 1 Mxdr? L4U H(d 8q Gar Magma .30h Magnab .70 % Maratb 1.60b 38 40% 40% 40% 4 % 14 13% 13% 13% 4 % o’js T 7ns -x^ oTS ^ SS t S X4 43% 43% 43% . 103 37% 38% 36% — % 8 23% 33% 23% 8 18% 18% 18% 4 % 3 £8% 38% 28% T- % 38 18% 16 18% iJ >?S *?S ‘TSIS 3 33% 38% 33% 121 84% 84% 84% - 3 18% 18% 18% 15 78 74% 74% - IM 7SS 7IS 7IS — % US fsS us = s ss ss ss-% I 3lS .mS 31% 4 % "I ils US iss: s 7 37% 27% 27% .. 13 63% 68 68% —1 17 41% 41% 41% — 34 43% 41% 43 — 12 46% 46 46% — 14 8% 8% 8% 4 11 28% 38% 28% — 18 33% 33 33% — ' 4 13% 13% 13% 4 6 30% 30% 30% 4 4 46 48% 48% — : 14 86% 88 88 4 ' 1 tinea 3b _ IP^wood 3 tra Rub 3.20 ni Smelt Ig U8 Steel 3 VnMatch .40 UnOllPd .00ft Upj(^ .83 V« Caro Ch V«EPw 1.04 ) moftlx idy; high alaughter .V— ....................J 31.io;23.0Oj good 300-1.300 Iba^ 31.00-33.80; atendr-* and low good 18.6().20.80: ehploa 800-1. •si| 33 83% US USi% aTsiS; saTS"“ ■■ MerrCh .18g MOM 1.80 Mid SU 1 10 MlnerCh .70 1,300 Iba 24.00; load^ 1.438, load 1,430 Iba 23.00: ohdoa » 22.60-M.28; 1.280-1.480 igivtar * haiferir’*33.»MJ.O^ io'[W c n.g» o..»lca 1,122 Iba at M.OO; load moat- q ly prima 1,233 Iba at M.OO: good 800- c 1,000 lb 20.io-33.00: utility and commas fi;i ^"waa^p’M^'amall WOPW aprlng sjaoth- S? ‘.•waV 5 WhWr te.“wkaT." ahoica and prlnia 88-08 l^prlng alaugh- 43 88% 64% 68_, 4 % M ss 5!i aliiiS „ “pi * % MlnnN ;>aUTS2r’a'yis 6 31 30% 31 , 3? 4IS T US i US US H ?3’S US SSS S US k g; ‘1 US u% n us n ;% l?' *8% U% 8% Stocks of Local Intorest riguraa altar decimal polnta are elghtha n "um" but D -0x1- B D 8% - S I7’% — % The following quotfttk :K‘tffly“^.^*Tu!da;irihi«pro-xl mate trading range ol the aacurlflaa.^ amt Oorp.................11-3 Doug A 1.3M Diamond Cryatal ............ Electronloa Capital ........ Elaetronlea International ... Frlto-W, Ino................ MoLoute Steal Co. .......... Mohawk Rubber Co - . , -MichiganjBeamleaa Tuba Co. flonaar_ nnanoe ............ Santa re Drilling • Tranacontinontal Oaa ripe tin wolvarne ®,jy,jBAL FUNDS Aimiatad Fund ............... Chemical Fund , ............. Commonwealth Stock .. . ..... Ecyatona Inconic K-I ........ Keyatona Growth K-3 . ....... MaM. invaitora Growth ....... Maaa. Invcatora Trust ....... i soa 4d;ii ■M g:|g m r s aU.3 . 7.8 8.3 : 304 33:4 Bid Aakad i 8.38 8.33 H 11.38 13.38 E _..fa*J"in“8t Emer B .SOg IB^Stgoka................ te rngbar gradia'raita' to Second grade ralla .. 10 Publla uUUUaa ........ 10 Induiirtaia........... . 140.43 4 0.00 . 380.8040.3(1 . 83.38+0.04 ; ; !S:Ur" 14 Flrealne lb • FatChrt l.Olt Fllntkt .80 Fla Pw' 1.04 Fla Pt 1.38 Fd Fair .80 „ “dST 1,30 241 M% Bii ForamD .40 13 10% loj - tw» .37g 0 38% 88« ahl 1.30a 10 33% 331 3 18% 18% 1 8 88 87% 6. .. X8 31% 31% 31% 4 % N U US US I US US US I iS US US US: ^ U US US USzS *J”3!ir5S%*U%=‘% 14 13% lJ% 52% 4 % •—-E-— s* a a *• >11 iF S ■5 K-B* » ; 7 14% U% hS 84 30% 37% 33% - % __P— 83 40% 30% 40, *1 loS l|S laS 3 U% 33 U% . - US US US::S uusuir^s is 74% 74% ir •' 18 Mj^ 33% 3i NatCan .Tit 4 NCaahR 1.30 4 NDalr y3.30 Namiat 1.M NaWucI 1.30 Nat Otn Natoypa 3h NEngEl 1.13 NYCent .32e NYChl 8 L3 igM i^W 3 I rloTkW Ba NoAmAvlft 2 NoNOfts 1.80 3*1 *1S ”.S *?s, .1 US US U'^-S 2 63% 82% 83% 4 % 3 33% 33% 33% 8 11% 11% 11% 44 13% 18% 13% 4 11 58% 58% 88% — 8 64% 64 84 — 1 41% 41% 4l% — . II 90 88% 80% —1% I I ‘,5S US ■■■' 2 38% 36% 48 M% 33% .... . .. 3rUS‘2?S‘«"IS:^‘S i 7?S tTS tTS •' 1 0% 3% 3% 38 83% 81% 63 7 33% 33% 33% 33 38% 36% 38% 33 71% 70% 71 —N— 8 14% 14% 14% 33 33,% M% 33% — V* 31 40 33% 33% — % -V- 14 14% 14% 14% 133 38 18% 38 7 36% 18 36 7 60 88% 88% 88 48% 48 48 —w— 18 14% 14% 14% » 38% 37% 38 - % II 38% 38% —' ■ ■' 43 30% 30 30 — % 4UUS US us:s WamPlo .80 CTa’Sep™! wi^Tal 1.40 -*ttgAB 1.40 'aalgEi 1.30 litrfCp l.OO X3 wna auy* au-m — ..Tllte Mot 1 XS8 08% 08% 00 4 Wllan Co 1.00 13 41% 41 41 — Winn DIx .00 xl3 30% 30% 30% 4 Woolwth 3.00 11 74% 74 74 - . ---““n 1.80 8 38 % 34% 34% — % «_Y— _____r 1 8 30% 30% 30% — % Yng BhT 8 13 103% 103% 103% -1 lanlth R la x334 03% 0)% 03% 4 % Salaa flgurai are nnofflClal. lmd'*te th'*f**** |''’**t’bf**"* ** '**'^*1' I on tho laat quarterly ilaratlim. Bpaolal or paymanti not datlg- NEW YORK (ffl - The Chesapeake & Ohio Railway, the first major railroad to report on May ■ _ , said yesterday they rose nearly 60 per cent from year earlier. '' WWW The C&O said net income for May was $4-6 million or 61 cents a share, up from |2.9 n 35 cents a share in the like 1962 Gross revenues rose to |33 million from |31 milli OtlaEIar 1.00 OutMar .30g Owanalll 3.60 OxfdPap 1.30 33 40% 34 81 .. . 30 13% 13V* 13V* S 3«JS ........... 48% 48% 40 40V* . . 80% 80% 4 ^ ParkaD 1 PaPwZt 30 Pa RR .3Be Phalpa D 3 njllaJ^ 1.33 Phiil]pVPe\*3 PltnBow .80 PItPlat 3.20b PH Steal Polaroid .30 ProctftO 1.00 PBVIQQ 2.40 Pubikin .33t Puriofl" 1.60 oUStSI 03% — % g US7,«| 32% - % {} lamSk 1.3tfa I Aocapt 1 j.n“W3 8*uri‘3*o J US US as 38% 38% us=s U sUS US sUS::' 70 40V. 30% 40V* — 3 40% 40% 40% - U US U% USz 7? r us US-. 1? us 03% US — 73 01% 61 01 - 0 34% 34% 34% - rir*T It 4*?s us USt 10 06% 68% 88% 4 48 13% 13% 13% ~ 163 104% 180 100% "4 11 70% 70% 70% JIM': IM So'* 30% aoS-^',. U T US UStS xU T US UStS U US US US:.! 136 30% Uv. 38% 4 % 1 US US US I ?^Sao.' 18^' a date, g—Daolarod or paid a» lar . Z roar, h—Daolarod or paid after att J dlyldand or split up. k—Daalarad or pi t “•* roar, an aooumulatlya lasua w dlvldandi In arraara. iCiMid tbla ya y. dlyldand'omlttad, date^ or no aot takan, at laat dividand maatlng. tv-l * qlarad or paid In 1003 plua atoek dl omih!yalua.*M*ax^ly^^^ Mon. xr-Bx righto, xw-without i rantx. ww-;Wllh warranto, wd—mian tributad. wl—Whan luuad. nd—Naxt Treasury Position WASHINGTON (API - Tha oaah pq-attlon of Iha Traaaury oompara THB SMA Neptune once came for dinner... never had it so good and decided to stay 'til he tried every seafood delicacy. He’s been here for 12 years. Fish! Does he eat! A3ST HCOXJSEl Aeaarvaffowar FRmnMIn »-»100 / THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. JUNE 4, 1963 Ray I (jllea Kav-[h aymond Kaluayn- *ufth *‘'*^*’^ Almee 8. May Robert Willard Morse Oeorgk R. Mosher Jr. , Burton R. Shifman Howard A. Btltes Raymond H. Btorm Raymond A. Young the following-------- BOND PROPOSITION Shall Waterford Township School District, County ot Oakland, State of Michigan, --- *— -— — — ....William Brook John C. Brooks Wendell Brown Charles CUrtls Beecher C. Eaves Cedric V. Prlckr Hope Qerman and equipping „ ______ ...... School building. new elementary school buildings, a new bus garage, and additions to the Waterford Township High School building, to the Isaac—ft-^rary Junior High School building, artU-te existing elementary school buildings, remodeling the "A” building on the Waterford Township High School Site, and acquiring school sites and additions to schoql sites, all In sold school district? BOND project operating TAX LIMITATION PROPOSITION Shall the limitation on the total amount of taxes which may he assessed each year against property In Waterford Township School District, County of Oakland. State of Michigan, for all purposes except taxes for the payment of Interest and principal on obligations JncUrred prior to December 8. 1832, be Increased as provided In section 31 of Article X of the Constitution of Michigan, for a period of five (8) years from 1884 to 1868. both Inclusive. by 2'A mills on each dollar (82.60 per 81.000) of the assessed '"sluatlon as state equalised, for the mrpose of operating t ----o«n ggg of 1----------- _ ............. event that Issuanc. of such bonds Is approved by the electors? SALARY IMPROVEMENT TAX LIMITATION PROPOSITION Shall the limitation on the total amount of taxes which may be assessed each year against property In Waterford Township School District County of Oakland, State qf Michigan, for all purposes except taxes for the payment of Interest and principal on obligations Incurred prior "---------*■* (82.60 per 81.000) of the assessed valuation as state equalised, lor the purpose of providing salary Increases OP The purposes of the Community College Proposition and the Tax Rato Limitation Increase Proposition and the Election of Trustees are to authorise the establishment and operation of .a Community College to provide Instruction In Collegiate and non-colleglate courses of study embracing not more than two years of collegiate work, and the acquisition, construction, ownership, development and maintenance of facilities of the Community College, and to provide funds therefor, and Experienced person, business background in banking, education or insurance work, to serve in executive capacity with new stote program. Age, no limit. Bachelor's degree required. Retired executive will be considered. Please give edu<;ation and business experience when applying. Forward credentials to Box 31, The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Mich. YOUR COPY IS WAITING. a little booklet that may change your whole financial future. If you want more income—or a chance to keep puce with inflation —or an opportunity to oliare in the growth of American iiuliiHtry—you’ll be intcr-chted in “The Modern Way to Invest.’’ You may not be an invester—or consider yourself a prospect —but if you have any surplus dollars or steady income, you have an investment problem. This booklet will tell you an effective way to help solve lliul problem. Phone or send for your copy today. It's free. INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS FE 2-9117 818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLOG. IMMEDIATE QUOTATION SERVICE Our FodllliM Extund From Coa,tt ta Coast affecting taxable property Public Corporation* County of Oakland ....... Township of Bloomfield . COMMUNITY COLLEOE QUESTION Shall Act #188 of the Public Acts of 1866, ae amended, being Sections 380.871 to 380.882 of the llomplled Lews of 1848. be adopted and be effective In a Community College DIetrIct, to bo known as the Community College District of Parts of the Counties of Oakland, Washtenaw, Livingston and Lapeer. tax rate limitation increase QUESTION Precinct No. 3; Donelson fichool, 1200 Weet Huron Street, Pontiac, MtChiOan Prectnet No. 3; Waterford Cient< 1021 Airport Road, Fonttai In the Community College District of Parts of the Counties of Oakland. Washtenaw. Livingston and Lapeer, State of Michigan, for all purposes except taxes lor the payment of Interest and principal on obltgatlone Incurred prior to December 8, 1032, be Increased as provided by Section 21, Article X of the State Constitution of Michigan by one-tenth ot one per cent (81-00 per 81,000.00) of ;the aseeseed valuation, as equalised, for a period of twenty (20) year* from 1963 to 1082. both inclusive. Notice Is further given, that the polls or said electlop will be open from 7:00 ■clock AM. to 6:00 o'clock P.M., Eastern Standard Time, and that the, voting places will be as follows:__________ 0400 Mai^day Drive, Waterford. 3 gan Preclnet No. d; Pontiac Lake B( 2616 wmiarne Lake Road, Pontiac. ) "gan Precinct No. 8: Montelth School, 3303 Crescent Lake Road.' Drayton Plains, Michigan Precinct No. 7: Leggett school. 3821 ■ “oad, PonUpc, Stringham 8 By Oakland County School District; 'A Milk 1864 to 1060 ihcl. DOROTHEA J. OREER. Treasurer Livingston County, Mlchliian _ -J;'May 7, Ifc63 - ___ WA8HTONAW qOUNTTY TREASURER' certify that a* of May 3, 1063. the records In my 'office Indicate that the total Pontiac I nngnam ocnooi, ^60 _______J. Pontiac, Michigan rther given, that thq Boarii of eaid school district ______________^t Six Million Two Hun Fifty Thousand Dollars (80,250,000 the amount of money necessary t borrowed for the project for which bonds are proposed to be lasued. The following etatement. has beet eelved from the County Treasurer i previously voted increases In the COUNTY TREASURER'S STATEMENT AS REQUIRED BY ACT 203 OP THE PUBLIC ACTS OF 1047 I, Charles A. Sparks, County Treasurer ol the County of Oakland. State Michigan, do hereby certify that according to the records In my office. »»., May 6, 1063 the total of all voted Increases In the tax rate limitation above t) 16 mllfs established by Section 21 of Article X of the Michigan Constitution, affCt Ing taxable property Ip the WTiterford Township School District, In said County, Waterford Township school District . Behoof District No. 1-2, Fractional of the 'Township ot White Lake and Waterford, Oakland County, Michigan (Annexed to Waterford Town- OAKLAND COUNTY TBBASUBER’S OFFICE CHARLES A. SPARKS, Treasurer By LLOYD M. SIBLEY, Deputy OAKLAND COUNTY TREASURER'S BY ACT 383 OP THE PUBLIC ------- -...... .. ^ , , Chafles A. Sparks, County Treasurer of the County of Oakland, State ------ - ......--Ify th ‘ ----- ' ------------------ of Mlchlgaijj^^do Jtereby ^ "r*aS of May 3, 1983 the 6 OF 1847 County of C------- e records In my o voted increases fn the tax rate limitation above 15 mills established by Section 31 of Artfcle X of the Michigan Constitution, cting taxable property In the County School District of Oakland County, 1s people of the re hereby rotl-1 said petition —— ________rf House, Oak- land County Service Center, In the City of Pontiac in said County, on the 12th day ot June, -A.D. 1803, at 1:30 o'clock In t hip of Farmington . ____Jhlp of Highland ... Township of Hoi Township of Inc . Township of Orton Township of Oxford ..................... Township of Royal Oak .................. Townshto of Southfield ................. School Districts County School District of Oaklsnd County... Washtenaw County School District ....... Almont Community Schools District No. 12 ( son Township) .......................... Oxford Area Commtmlty Schools ......... gchool District ot the City ol Birmingham . '1 Community School District . .. Pontiac located In the cities oi poniiac and Sylvan Lake and the Townships of Avon, Bloomfield, Orion, Pontiac, Waterford and West Bloomfield................... ' 8 76 School District No. 3 Fractional Royal Oak and ( 4.00 ------- —/nshlps and City ol Oak Park............ ( 6.00 9 Townships ( 6.00 being Impractical ti oe hereof, this eumi-------- be served by publication of .. week previous to said hearing in The Pontiac Preae, a newspaper printed circulated in said County. Jtness, the Honorable Norman Barnard. Judge of said Court. In the “ ty of Pontiac In eald County, this th day ot May, A.D. Hj63. (Seal) NORMAN R. BARNARD I true copy) Judge of Probate DELPHA A, BOUOINB Deputy Probate Register 1864 to 1068 Inc Years unlimited 1062 to .1071 Incl. 1066 to 1074 Incl. 1862 to 1064 Incl. 1866 to 1860 to ............ 1063 to 1072 Incl. School District Nd. -------- ol Royal Oak and Troy ............... School District ol the City of Royal School District of the City of Berkley . School DIstrldt of the City ol Ferndale . School District No. 10 Royal Oak Township (Madison Heights! .......................................... School District of the City of Clawson ................ Southfield Public Schools . 9 1073 fncl. 0 1860 Incl. 1965 to 1874 Incl. 1868 to 1984 incl. 1862 to 1871 incl. 1864 to 1973 Inc' , 1864 to 1873 Inc 1959 to 1871 Incl 1868 to 1874 Incl. 1866 to 1874 Incl. ' 1855 to 1964 Incl. 1961 to 1906 Incl. 1867 to 1866 II 1868 to 1866 II 1860 to 1868 II 1858 to 1863 Incl. 1883 to 1807 Incl. 1048 to 1868 Incl. 1863 to 1972 Ir-' 1864 to 1873 Incl. 1868 to 1863 Incl. 1861 to 1866 Incl. 1849 to 1863 I Fractional Bloomi _________ City ol Bloom! Bchdol District No. 3 .... Township (8/D #3 annexed to Bloomfield Hills (20.60 School District No. 2) ........... ........... 00.00 ownship School District ol Brandon Township. (14.00 Lapeer Public Schools Counties ol Lapeer and Oakland ........................................ < 3.00 county School District, Lapeer County ............ ( .60 Walled Lake ConsolKated School District ......... 00.80 I District Oakland a Goodrich Are* School DIstr Ocnesee, Lapeer and Oak Holly Area School District School District No. 4 ol tli Held (S/D #4 annexed District) ................. Clarkstoii Community Sclioc 1862 to 1970 Incl. I860 to 1973 I860 to 1864 1002 to' 1888 Incl. Township Sch land, Waslit uron Valley ------ Ingston Counties . School District ngston Counties . 1053.to 1868 I annexed to Waterford Twp. Schools).. School District No. 7 of the Township of White 11.00 1861 to 1970 In OAKLAND COUNTY*TREA8URERB*office” CHARLES A. SPARKS, Treasurer By LLOYD M. SIBLEY, Chief Deputy Dated: May 2 1863 LAPEER COUNTY TREASURER'S ♦------------------------------------------------- STATEMENT AS REQUIRED BY ACT 293 OF THE PUBLIC ACTS OF 1847 I, Lyle Ooodrlcli, Treasurer ol L*pe( bounty, Michigan state that I liai (earchod the records ol my office an,, liter Inquiry find that the^ total ^ of all at* limitation established by Section LAKE and RIVER PROPERTY ALL OVER MICHIGAN 1. NORTHERN LO»«B and guest I. PRIVATE L eoltage. Woa I. PIONEER L Ing bend of 1 eollsge Ol ACRES on Big Sable ..... ,(MKI' Ironlagr. $8,(KHI d' d. ONE HOUR from Pontiac - 85 scree, private lake, 110,(KS) do( YEAR 'ROUND Callloml* Red wood ranch on AuSsble, |28,8(S AND MANY OTHIRS REALTOR PARTRIDGE "Im lh» Bird to Sdd" 1050 W. Huron FI 4-3581 mbrr. Partridge A Aseoo. Ine. (cal Unit-Oakland County Schoo ...rlet, .60 Mill: Years Effective 1883 t« 1989, Incl. GOODRICH, Treasurer, Lapeer County, Michigan Dated; May 3. 1803. L1V1NC3STON COUNTY TREASURER'S STATEMENT AS REQUIRED BV ACT 283 OF THE PUBLIC ACTS OF U do hereby certify liiat ■“ - ■ )f this ............. all voted Increases over hml above Counties, Michigan and In Lye,, ship Bohool District. Oakland, Washte--*w and Livingston Counties, Michigan, as follows: - By Livingston County: None By Livingston Count.yO)Bchool District; lihf Oreen Oak Township: Non* By BrIghtoD Township: None By Huron Valley School DIetrIct: 6 ,lllls. 1803 to 1874 incl. 7fb Mills. 1083 tax limitation established by Section 21, Article X of the Constitution of Michigan. in any local units affsctlng the taxable property In that part of Oakland County School District lying In Washto--aw County la as follows: vyaehtenaw County: IVe mill. 186 »m. 1863-1806 fUT unlimited. 1068-1982 fnel. 8618,000 vnHmlted. I*'" 1860 Ihcl. 7 mills. 1003. Oakland County Bohool District: mill, 1064-1680^ May 3, SYLVESTEH^^i Michigan s Is given I Ba»d of DOROTHY B. BARNINOHAM. Secretary of the l^ard of lated; 16 May,, 1663. Maqr 28 and . STATE OF MICHIQAN~In the Fro-ate Court lor tl*“ nt nuiciftmi. juvenile Division. County of 0 petition c Inj^Olorla Lannlng. minor. Cai ir ^hSd. Worker's report having been filed Ih ..ils Court alleging that the present whereabouts of the father of said ml child are unknown i violated a law of t! said child shall------ diction ' ;her of said minor Id said child has 9 State and that State ol Michigan, you a — that the hearing oi be held a ' " afternoon, i STAT'E OF MICHIOAN—In the Probate Court for the County of Oakland, Juvenile Division. ■ " mattor of the petition concern-Wuaklla, minor. Cause No. ln|^^Nancy 1 To'carl Wuoklla, father o did. Worker's report having been filed In thle Court alleging that the pr— ----------- of the father ol said ) ,, father ol sah ____ unknown and '■''' violated a law of f said child shall remi ■■ of this Court. s State a people of the said petition Houie, ^k- ____ County,'on the fg't^ ’ of Juno. A.D. 1063, at 1:30 o'clock ... the afternoon, and you are hereby commanded to appear personally ‘ It being Impractical to make personal service hereof, this summons and not)— " be served by publication of a co week previous to said hearing Pontiac Press, a newspaper print and circulated in said County. WItnese, the Honorable Norman R. Barnard, Judge of said Court, Ir City ot Pontlao in eald County, 34tl|i day of May, A.D. 1063. (A t _______ BARNARD Judge of Probate DELPHA A. IBOUOINE Deputy Probate Reglste STATE OP MICHIOAN—In the Pro-.xte Court lor the County ot Oakland, Juvenile Division. In th* matter of th* petition concern-ig Charles Freeman, minor. Cause No. 6386. To William Scott Freeman, father of Worker’s report having been III chlgan, you i he nearing o laid petition House. Oak-In the City 12lh land County Service Cehtei of Pontiac In said County. . . . day of Junk, A.D. 1883, at 1:30 o'clock In the islternoon. and' you are hereby commanded to ai-----------------"—* It being Impractical to make personal service hereof, this summons r*'' — " be served by publication 1 hearing In d circulated in 'sald County. e Pontiac Press, a newspaper pi ...the Honorable Norman 1 nard. Judge of said Court, In th I of Pontiac In said County, thi • - ' " y, A.D. 1083. (ORMAN R. BARNARD Judge ot Probate DELPHA A. BOUOINB Deputy Probate Registi Death Notices BOM8TA, JUNE 3, 1863, REBECCA J., 2073 Orayham Road., Flint: age 83; dear mother of Mrs. Russell Beam, Hammond......... grandchlldron. Funeral ser will be held Wednesday, June 2:30 p.hi. at the Donelson-J( Bomsta will I Bi the Donelson-Joh Home.________________ COMPEAU, JUNE 1, 1083, HENRY L., 7776 Powers Court, formerly from Utica; age 76: beloved son of Mrs. Victor J, Compaui dear father of Mrs. Victor MoOIasheii end Henry Compaii; dear brother of Mrs. Doris Redmond, Mrs. Leona Martella, Onleta, Alice and Eugene Coinpau; also eurvived by elx grandohlldren. Prayer service was held at 0 a.m. today at the DIener Funeral Home, Utica, followed by requiem mass at 0:30 at St. Isadora's Catholic Church. Interment In Mt. Hope Cemetery. Arrangements were fay the DIener Funeral Home, Utica. ERVIN. MAY 20, 1083. CLIFItoRD beloved 17iursdn] 19 Hlbbnr<^ Court; ' O«or Davis WiicrsI Home, wim kbv, Robert W. Hoover officiating. Interment In Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mr. HUBBARD, JUNE 3. 18(13, MA- bel Elsie, lormorly of 78 H. Johnson: ago 82: (fear sister of Oeorge Hubbard and Mrs. Maude (Jackson) Ashwin; also survived by aeveral niecea and nephews, Funeral servloo will be held Thursday, June 6 at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home Rev. Oeorge WIddIfleld of->g. Interment In Clarkston. ____ ilubbard will lie In state at the Huntoon mcnallY, JUK_ — Patrick, 106 E. Fislrmo beloved hueband of Harold, Billy and Eds gan: also siivived by fi.. . children. Funeral service a *r which Mr. Morgan will Mortuary Death Notices PINNER, JUNE 3, 1863, HURLEY Trenton, 46 E. Montcalm: age 76; beloved husband of Maggie Pin-. , ner; , dear brother, of Lester W. /' and Bmery Ptoher. Funeral sery-~ Ice will be held June 6, at 10 ' a.m. at the First Church of .the Nazarene with Rev. J. E. Van-Alien officiating. Interment in the Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mr. Pinner will lie In state at \ the Pureley yhmertl Home until one hour before service wbqn he will be token to the church. bel L.. Fos'torla, Mlo'hlgan: age at; dear iilster ol Albert Roeblger and Mra. Lillian Bickle. Funeral service will be held Thursday, jorto Jie8»(>3ie” &ur'ch *wlth Rev,. R. Kyle Ballard oHlolatlng. Interment In West Desrlleld (Jeme-■ Mrs. Prebtlcopk w"' "* - I ot Mrs. Henry ...................lerjyf Phillip, Susan E. and Roger F. Smith; dear brother of Albert F. Smith: also survived by one grandson. Funer-,, al arrangements are pending at -the Bparke-Orlffln iSineral Home where Mr. Smith wlU lie In sUte. ....e Lake Two,: age 6»:„he- loved husband of Lillian Totting*, ham: dear father of Louise Beniamin, Mr*. Earl Warner, Mra. Ifi-ank Oreen, Lavern, Baslal, Ernest. Harvey, Stanley and Clyde Tottingham;. dear brother of Mra. Albert Milky, Mrs. Robert Brauer, Andrew, Ai^ur, Wallace and Leon Tottingham; also service will be heW Wednesday. at the Snarpe-O' Home, Clarkston. nUCKER. JUNE ,3, 1803. ROBEB'T Corwin. 204 Dick; aM^lOj beloved husband ol Jeanne TVlcker; dear aon of Carl Trlcker; dear father of Robert jr. Trlcker. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Huntoon F^er»l Trlcker wifi lie In state._____ TO MY NEIGHBORS AND^FRIENDS and special thank* to the Fire Dept. Rescue Squad and the Inhalation Dept. Fontlac Osteopam-Ic Hospital, and Rev. W. J wissen for their many acts of kindness In the ptssing of Mr. Weath- MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSF-LORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. GET OUT OF DEBT with'payments as low a* 810.00. BUDGET SERVICE 10 W. Huron FE 4-0801 LOSE W B 10 H T SAFELY AND economically with newly released Dex-A-Olel tablets. 81 cento at City Adjustment Service 714 W, Huron ' FE 6-9201 fiimral l)ir«ct*n^__4 C. J. OODBARDT F U N E RA L Home, Keego Harbor, Ph. 682-0200. COATS FUNERAL HOME ___ DRAYTON PLAINS OB 3-7757 D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME Invalid Car Service ________FE 4-1211____ Donelson-Johns FUNERAL ROME “Designed lor Funerals'* HUNTOON FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac lor 60 Year* 70 Oaklaml Ave.____FE. 2-0102 SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME “Thoughtful Ser(>lce'' FE 2-'l841 Voorhees-Siple FUNERaL ROME FE 2-2378 Established Over 40 Years r OIRL 0 friendly w (fore 5 p.n FE 2-0734. Confidential. ______ CENTRAL BOOKING AGENCY 1707. 11 occasions. OL 3- JOHNSON'a POPUL 3 FAMILY PLOTS, WHITE CHAP-el, 8 lots each, can be divided, reasonablk. OA 8-2622._______^ WHITE CHAPEL CEMETERY. 4 spaces, now CsIKornla Resident, Will trad* lor good used car,or best cash offer. Present value approx. 8860. Call FE 8-2686. ANT OI I IN T Y MAID SUPPLIES. 7l4 wBUomlnee, PE S.7806. IF YOUR BUFF COCKER SPANIEL may have been In the vicinity jof Our Lady of Refuge Church In Or-chard Lake on Memorial Day. Please call M3-1032 W* need to J5HEJ' dog Is well.____________ IF you' WcSulK'LikE TO PLAY In the local horshoe leagues pleasa - ■■B2-1228. t DANCE ENGLISH POINTER. WHITE, to™^"ke!*'reward. 1^*2^818?° ' *"*' FOUND; LITTLE DOG WITH BrS Identlly. FE 4-2831. __________________ LOST MALE GERMAN Moylolr 8W** Reward, Cost blue PARAkKET ell near ivy. FE 4-2667 JOS' OUAIUK I- u ^ VlViniJ Emerson School. FE 8-1817, LOST—ltallan miisalc link braoe-—_gtnjE_- —* were repllsg at The Press offloe In the followlDg boxes: 14, 15, 16, 19, 21, 30, 34, 38, 44, 45, 50, 58, 01, 62, 63, 64, 06, 75, 78, 85, 87, 01, 06, 97, 09, 119. Tell Everybody About it with a 'Pontiac Press Want Ad ■ FE: 2-8181 2 MEN WANTED WITH EXPERI-- Ang4«» for Benerftl lArmmff. N. ot. t Rocheate? Rt b 1 MASON K 2 >(A8C«8 AND er. OR 3-9402. , ^ aooBessive salesmen to . soil classle, vintage, sport* and domestic care. Oreal groun(l floor opportunity. Mr. O’Bflen at auto mechanic. ER EXPERIENCE preferred. Tel. Larry. 884-1&9. V-Camp Chevrolet, MUfe Mich. after 6 PM. PART TIMB-^ ' ‘ ‘"“0 monthly to and* good"'worker b r SdoiwL BAKERY DRIVER - guaranteed salary, li---- tlon, free Insurance, pension p No Investment required. Con Jack Ralph, IM W. Howard. 1 BODY MAN. EXPERIENCED WItH tooi*^ f® *■ CAB DRIVERS. 25 OR OLDER AN EXCELLENT . OPPORTUNITY EXPANDING ORGAN IZATION HAS SEVERAL OPENINGS AVAILABLE. GOOD PAY AND FUTURE FOR THE RIGHT PERSON, CONTACT MB. POST AT 4S3 S SAOI- COLLEGE STUDENT 875 per week. Men needed Immediately for full-time opening until Sept. Then continue part time It attending a Michigan college, call Mr. Pace. 6-7 p.m. tonight. FE 6-2243.__^______ COOK EXPERIENCED. SHORT OR- Blood Donors URGENTLY NEEDED 25 llh PoalUve. 27 Bh Negative DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE 18 SOUTH CASS CITY OF* PONTIAC 31-31 years, excellent physical condition. high school graduate, or equivalent credits. Must have been a resident of the City of Pontiac 1 year immediately preceding the appUeatlon. Apply Personnel. 36 8. Parke. Aprticatlona must be returned to Personnel by Pri. June ELECTRICIAN For residential wiring. EM 3-Atter 7 p.m. EM 3-2444. EXPERIENCED ALUMINUM 8ID-In^stallers. 612 per square. FE EXPERIENCED s: EXPERIENCED > REAL ESTATE _______de'?.HS?n..«‘ Pgrti^e, lor personal Interview, Front Enid i Man ■ ervlce garage. Excel y bencflto. Apply Perm OAS ATTENDANT WITH MUFFLkil and brake work Exp. 148 W. Huron' Street.___________________ gTs^STATTON ATTENDANT, nights, good pay. " Woodward and Squal OAS STATION ATTENDANT AND mechanic. Must be neat and honest. Only experienced need apply In person, 8 E. Auburn and Rochester siioi^ salesman” Part lime evenings and Sat. Some experience i-------- HAULING. MOVINO. LaWN WORK and odd jobs. Call FE 8-2633. HIOH SCHOOL BOYlCb WORK EVi-nines and week ends. Apply 1303 W Hur---- 1 NliED WORKER.S-NOT SALESMIiN wl/Toll^ om”comp*ny*'pro8r of 60 low pressure demonstrslli dally, I can toach you to earn i 600 to 27.600 the first ^ear, ( and phone necessary. Phone ' LikOUSINE AND CAB DRIVERS wanted. Apply Waldron Hotel, Par- MACHINE BUILDER with hydraulic, tube bending and ■cripper experience, preferable lathe and or broach machine build-BRo'aCH a MACHINE CO. 2 men wamou lor reasonaoie iiu-sltlon with large national appliance distributing organisation, soine mechanical applltude he pfnl but not MAN FOR furnace AND DUCT work Installation. Phone 68L310O 3101 Orchard Lake Hd. at side J. preferred 30 Experienced. MA 4-9426. men" wanted fob .sales and eervice work, apply 2397 Elisabeth Lake Rd„ Pontiac, Michigan. OLDER MAN FOB YARD WORK, fill time, call 33SJ1094 between 6 and 0 p.m. _______________________ PIPE LAYER. HlOHESir. WAGES for lop notch man.. Allard Con-traotlng Co. New Hudeon. Mich. OE 7-2370._____________________ PORTER FOR NIGHTS, ALSO ROUTE COLLECTOR AND SAUiS-man. We train. FE 2-0210. PE 2- HETIBED MAN FOB CARETAKER, apartment^hl^Jo T’^and'^S BSTl'Wl'rE I ree. Press •tor* experl...... ------------- ration with advertised prnd-' I aggreeslve, hard-hllllng with proven record seli- ............1 proven ing to food itores, to ‘ tabllshed territory. WITH COMMISSION For top earnings and an opportunity to advance with a solid growing organization, send resume of experience plue age and tclephona number to pontlao Press Box 08, wXNfii), dry, clIaWEr"'."'8p5t- t*^ experienced. Herald Cleaners. TREE TRIMMER. Salesman; For Building Materials salesman wiiu » •x»w»aix» • Offers t securo future and plenty of opportunity. BxceUent eompeny beneflU. Apply personnel^flce. MONTGOMERY WARD _________Pontiac Mall______ Hoip WantMl Femol* 7 venienfto from l ence In cosmellct -- llSSV.‘feed!n